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Word: beare (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1900-1909
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Usage:

...enclose his tickets later on; and this requirement is particularly emphasized by the use of capitals. The writer believes that the requirement involves unnecessary postage to the amount of two cents on every application--assuming the registration fee to be eight cents and that two cents will bear the weight of the envelope and its contents...

Author: By R. W. G. ., | Title: Communication | 11/4/1908 | See Source »

...forefathers fed keeps up the continuity of the stock. The methods of Mr. Norton were superbly out of date in our specialistic time. He saw in the Fine Arts the embodiment of man's deepest and most durable ideals; and with almost a religious fervor he brought these to bear on every aspect of the petty and careless life around him. He has been a preacher of reverence to a headlong age. And if sometimes a despairing note has been heard in his voice, it has been perhaps a necessary corrective of overconfident America...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: CHARLES ELIOT NORTON '46 | 10/23/1908 | See Source »

...trouble, much to the impatience of some of us younger brethren, who were too apt to think that "something must really be done about this case." But when he wished not to save you, you were always made to feel that your punishment was not greater than you could bear, and that you could make it serve you to something better; for he was one of those who could say, in the verse of another of our lately-departed colleagues...

Author: By M. H. Morgan., | Title: PROF. NORTON'S FUNERAL | 10/23/1908 | See Source »

...Hamlin grouped the issues under five heads: the Philippines, militarism, economy in governmental expenses, encroachment of the executive, and reform of the tariff. In dealing with the first he said that the Philippines were taken unjustly, and were promised freedom in the distant future only through pressure brought to bear by Democrats and the sugar and tobacco trusts...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Hamlin Outlined Democratic Views | 10/15/1908 | See Source »

Several of the pamphlets bear the autograph of William Adams, who graduated from the College in 1671, and was afterwards settled in Dedham, where he died in 1685. An inscription on the pamphlet, "God's Terrible Voice in the City of London, wherein you have the Narration of the Two late dreadful Judgements of Plague and Fire inflicted by the Lord upon that City," shows that it was bought of a printer. Samuel Green, February 29, 1667, at which time Adams was a Freshman in College. The volume was bound in its present form by William Adams's son, Eliphalet...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Gifts to University Library | 9/30/1908 | See Source »

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