Word: wallingforder
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...Latin School; C. S. Houston, Hotchkiss School, Lakeville, Conn.; L. R. Houston, Milton Academy; Alvan Hyde, Jr., Taft School, Watertown Conn.; Myer Kadish, Brockton High School; A. M. Kelley, The Phillips Exeter Academy; K. R. Kimball, Thayer Academy; H. M. Kowal, Boston Latin School; Ten Eyck Lansing, Choste School, Wallingford, Conn.; J. P. Lardner, Phillips Academy, Andover; P. F. Lawler, Boston Latin School; J. P. Learned. The Phillips Exeter Academy; Nathan Learner, Boston Latin School; Sears Lehmann, Jr., St. Louis Country Day School, St. Louis, Mo.; M. V. Loventritt, Riverdale Country School, Riverdale, N.Y.; W. H. Lewis, Jr., Morristown High...
...cold changed to bronchitis, the bronchitis to ''pleurisy with effusions." All pleurisies are grave matters. They very often indicate a latent or incipient tuberculosis. Footballer Booth at the end of last week was taken to Gaylord Farm Sanatorium, a tuberculosis rest cure operated at Wallingford, Conn, by Dr. David Russell Lyman, lung specialist...
...life is not his dismissal from Princeton in 1907 for hijinks, not the period in which he bummed about on ships, not even his long association with the Provincetown Players. It begins on Christmas Eve, 1912, when drink and irregular habits sent him into the Gaylord Farm (Wallingford, Conn.) sanitarium, a tuberculous patient. His biographers note that he went in a boy and came out a man. At least, that was where he started writing seriously. Up to that time his sorely-tried father, Actor James O'Neill, thought his son was just "crazy." Eugene O'Neill...
...Morton Downey and the article giving his history. Everything you said about Morton Downey is true and more could be said but why refer to his father as a "day laborer"? It is true that he has an ordinary everyday job as driver of a fire engine in Wallingford. Conn, and that he has brought up a large family on a small income...
...Downey success story, rewritten in such episodes, had been started in a chapter already partially forgotten five years before. A pudgy Irish youth, the son of a day laborer who raised a large family in Wallingford, Conn, and Brooklyn, he had stopped going to school when he was 15, sold candy on trains, acted in small time vaudeville, been an agent for Victrola records. There was nothing then to confirm his impression that he was a singer except the fact that his mother, annoyed by his childish caterwaulings, had often given him a nickel to keep quiet. Tammany Politician James...