Word: sanborn
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...BROOKS. -- Evans, Bowers, E. E. Sargeant, Fotch, W. P. Eaton, Drake, Snow, Richards, Crane, C. L. Adams, Carter, Hall, Simonds, McCurdy, Southworth, J. P. Sanborn, Jr., C. R. Taylor, R. A. Sanborn, Atherton, Chadbourne...
...SMITH.--Boal, Bedford, Rockwell, Dixon, C. G. Fitzgerald, Humphrey, Harding, Drinkwater, C. L. Adams, Holland, Lewis, Sherburne, R. A. Sanborn, H. W. Dana, George, Saltonstall, Ewer, R. L. Mason, R. P. Dana, Cobb...
...DRAKE.--Bissell, Bolling, Wadleigh, Palmer, Arensberg, W. P. Eaton, Southworth, Chadbourne, Whitney, Williams, McCloskey, W. L. Shaw, Underwood, Crane, E. E. Sargeant, E. E. Wheeler, Spalding, Foss, Sanborn, White, Carter...
...WADLEIGH.--Chadbourne, Becker, Carter, Crane, Drake, C. L. Adams, Williams, Arensberg, Underwood, Sanborn, Garland, Palmer, J. A. Richards, E. E. Sargeant, Simonds, Burden, Foss, W. L. Shaw, Whitney, Robinson
...tales; but the story is clear, vigorous and wholesome. Two lovers quarrel and separate, but are again joined at a crisis in the life of the heroine. Simple and straightforward, "Ruth" is the type of story that the undergraduate reader thoroughly enjoys. Very different from "Ruth," is J. P. Sanborn's frail story, "Conclusions." Like Cyrano de Bergerac, the writer may be said to "set forth to capture a star and then to stop to pick a flower of rhetoric." In style and treatment, "Conclusions" is good and clever. But it has the tone of the over-done, and throughout...