Word: buying
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...There are three classes. The first can buy, for example, one and one-half pounds of bread a day; the second three-quarters of a pound; the third one-quarter of a pound, no matter how much money they may have. The first class includes soldiers, workers in war, and other essential industries, actors, teachers, writers, experts and Government workers of all sorts. The second class is of all other sorts of workers. The third is of people who do not work the leisure class. . . . The children are in a class by themselves: class A1. They...
...There was nobody left outside. The Union either to concede or refuse the demands of the National Program, so the General Strike began. Everybody in the country stopped work, and everybody drew Strike Pay. But there was nothing to buy with the Strike Pay, for Nobody was making anything, so Nobody could sell anything...
Following the usual plan, subscribers of last season will have the first opportunity to buy tickets, and may receive the same seats by filling out and mailing the blanks which will be furnished for the purpose with a check for $7, payable to George H. Kent, University Book Store, on or before Tuesday, Oct. 7. On receipt of check, tickets will be mailed...
...members of the University delegation to the Northfield Conference will meet at track 13 in the North Station next Friday morning at 10.45 o'clock. If 40 men buy tickets for the train leaving a half hour later, special car will be attached and reserved exclusively for the delegation...
Messages have been received from C. A. Morss, Governor of the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, and C. S. Hamlin '83, member of the National Federal Reserve Board, at Washington, urging undergraduates to buy notes...