Word: nelsons
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...Josephine L. August, night operator at Cassopolis, Mich., frustrated an attempt to rob the First National Bank; how Miss Ruby LaVerne Wilson, at Washington, Ark., tried to stop some bandits; why Emory Daniel Stine, lineman, waded into an icy stream at York, Pa.; what Repairer Everett C. Nelson did on top of a 45-foot pole near Niagara Falls. But most extraordinary of all was a curt report concerning a certain Mrs. Mary Regina Smith of Fabens...
...additions to the chairman, the jury award includes Mrs. J. Borden Harrison, chairman of the National Consumer League: Dr. Melvin T. Copeland, of the Harvard School of Business Administration: Nelson B. Gaskill, former Federal Trade Commissioner: G. Bartlett, ex-President of the National Association of Wholesale Druggists; A. W. Shaw, publisher or "System;" Frank Stone, president of the National Association of Retail Druggists: and Herbert Tily, president of the National Re Dry Goods Association...
...following men were elected to membership in the Dramatic Club after a six weeks' competition: art department, George Francis Robinson Heap '28 of Grand Haven Mich.: Walter Egan Trevett '27 of Cleveland, O.; subscriptions. George Lane Glasheen ocC. of Cambridge; James Rayner Harper '28 of Ottumwa, Ia.; Theodore Nelson Stensland '28 of Chicago; properties, Donald Kuinm Howard '28 of Edgewood Pa.; James Carey Thomas Flexner '29 of New York City: stage, Marvin Fiske Burt '28, of Freeport, Ill.; George Wing Dryer '27 of Birmingham, Ala.; electrical, Murry Nelson Fairbank '28 of Cold Spring Harbor, N. Y.; George Sutro Lowenstein...
...Reports which newspapermen gleaned from White House attaches last week affirmed that the President would summer in northern New York either at Saranac Lake or near Lake St. Regis at the camp of Irwin R. Kirkwood, whose wife, the daughter of William R. Nelson, founder of the Kansas City Star, recently died (TIME, March 8, THE PRESS...
...which yachtmen's young sons and younger daughters dabble and pull ropes and get wet-soon these, and all the other bright pleasure craft of the Sound will be brought out of boathouses and moored at the ends of private jetties, ready for summer racing. Bronzed Captain "Juggy" Nelson, who was in charge of the races, said that he liked the new sloops. One called the Bandit, owned by Samuel Wetherill, crossed the line first; the Ardelle, with the water boiling under her side, won in the "R" class...