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Word: parted (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
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Usage:

...plot deals with the adventures of Tom Stewert, who for the sake of his friend, Dick Lockhart, plays the part of a long lost son. The developments are at all times obvious. Tom falls in love with a charming seamstress of good family, is besieged by a scheming adventuress, dashes heroically off on his horse to divert the officers of the law who are in pursuit of Dick, and returns to win his "heart o' th' heather...

Author: By W. H. M. ., | Title: The Theatre in Boston | 3/6/1916 | See Source »

...role of Janet Kirkaldy, Miss Gilda Leary is sweetly attractive as the seamstress. Miss Viola Gillette is a convincing Mistress Musgrove, and Mr. Barlowe Borland, as Geordic, plays the low comedy part of a Scottish simpleton in a highly laughable manner. The Christic Mucklebacket of Miss Eleanor Daniels, the Sir John Murray of Mr. Jack McGraw, and the Lady Murray of Miss Gilda Leary are all adequate characterizations. Walter Connolly is a competent Dick Lockhart and the minor parts are suitably cast...

Author: By W. H. M. ., | Title: The Theatre in Boston | 3/6/1916 | See Source »

...average American, if asked whether he thinks more college men are engaged in athletics in an American university than in a Canadian university, would invariably give the American university for his answer. And yet he would be wrong. Statistics were collected of the number of men taking part in athletics in the universities of these two countries a year ago, and it was found that, in proportion to the size, the University of Toronto led. This is explained by the fact that in Canada every child is trained to live outdoors in winter, and so it naturally follows that when...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: WINTER SPORTS GAINING IN AMERICAN COLLEGES | 3/6/1916 | See Source »

...following year, men from colleges all over the country were invited. It was made a week of festivities, and assumed the importance of Commencement week at Princeton or "Prom" week at Yale. There were dances and dramatic club performances in the evening, or basketball games, but the part that attracted the greatest number of people were the outdoor events. These consisted of dashes and long runs on skis and snow-shoes, of obstacle races on snowshoes, of ski-jumping, both exhibitory and competitive, of hockey games, and of skating races. That year, strange to say, the ski-jumping contest...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: WINTER SPORTS GAINING IN AMERICAN COLLEGES | 3/6/1916 | See Source »

Every year, the prominence of this event among the athletics of Dartmouth has been gaining, and more and more participants have been taking part in the Carnival from an increasing number of colleges, with better and better results. Last year C. G. Paulson of New Hampshire State College, broke the record of ski-jumping...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: WINTER SPORTS GAINING IN AMERICAN COLLEGES | 3/6/1916 | See Source »

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