Word: address
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...every one at sight. Simple as flour. Sells like hot cakes. Profits 300 per cent. Families wishing to practice economy should for their own benefit write for particulars. Used every day the year round in every household. Price within reach of all. Circulars free. Agents receive sample free. Address, Domestic Manufacturing Company, Marion. Ohio...
...every one at sight. Simple as flour. Sells like hot cakes. Profits 300 per cent. Families wishing to practice economy should for their own benefit write for particulars. Used every day the year round in every household. Price within reach of all. Circulars free. Agents receive sample free. Address, Domestic Manufacturing Company, Marion. Ohio...
Applicants for membership should address T. W. Harris, Divinity Hall, Cambridge, Mass., not later than June 1st. Before their enrolment on June 15th, they will pay a tuition fee of thirty dollars ($30). Each student will bear his own living and travelling expenses, but these will be reduced as much as possible by special arrangements with hotels and railroads. The cost of the session cannot be exactly reckoned beforehand, but it is estimated as follows: Six weeks' boarding and lodging $40 to $60; travelling expenses with the school...
...every one at sight. Simple as flour. Sells like hot cakes. Profits 300 per cent. Families wishing to practice economy should for their own benefit write for particulars. Used every day the year round in every household. Price within reach of all. Circulars free. Agents receive sample free. Address, Domestic Manufacturing Company, Marion, Ohio...
Sanders Theatre was well filled last evening at the meeting in the interest of the negro and Indian education. The meeting was opened with music by the Hampton Quartette, which is composed of students of the Hampton Normal and Agricultural Institute. Dr. McKenzie made a somewhat lengthy introductory address, in which he said that the institute, whose representatives were to address the meeting, was founded on a principle and for a purpose essentially the same as our own university. He was followed by W. H. Daggs, a graduate of the school, who spoke of the advance of the negro since...