Word: chelsea
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...position of Auditor of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, carrying with it a greater power of investigation than any other state office, necessitates a religious regard for truth," and James H. Sheldon, recently visiting Professor of Citizenship at Boston University on the Maxwell Foundation, in a speech given in Chelsea last night. "He is entrusted with the financial and administrative problems of state institutions, and he is expected wholeheartedly and disinterestedly to further their well being. In no case is he expected to engage in a journalistic or political campaign...
...rallied to the Governor and, in special session a fortnight ago, rushed through both houses an amendment to the election laws to allow for Joe O'Mahoney's appointment. In his youth Joe O'Mahoney knew oysters better than he knew horses. Born in Chelsea, Mass, he did not even see a cattle-ranch until at 24 he went to Boulder, Colo. He had worked for the Cambridge Democrat, had graduated from Columbia. At Boulder he became city editor of the Herald. A Bull Moose Re publican in 1912, he supported Woodrow Wilson in 1916 and that...
Undergraduate Engineering School scholarships have been awarded to Joseph J. Gianino 3E.S., of Medford, Thomas E. Gillingham, Jr. 4E.S., of Oxford, Pa., Howard M. Graff 4E.S., of New Canaan, Conn., Percy W. Perdriau 4E.S., of Chelsea, and Donald F. Wilcock 4E.S., of Brooklyn...
Week before, Administrator Hugh Samuel Johnson had "cracked down" on a Gary, Ind. roadhouse proprietor, a market owner and beautician of New Rochelle, N. Y., a Lowell, Mass, restaurateur and a Chelsea, Mass, dry cleaner. For violating wage and working time agreements, they were ordered to surrender their NRA insignia to their local postmasters. Under the President's order, General Johnson was now empowered to jail and fine such offenders, to "prescribe such rules and regulations as he may deem necessary to . . . carry out the purposes and intent . . . of this order." General Johnson's first prescription emphasized that...
...course, that a very large portion of his readers would take unreasoning offense, charging that the Herald had ventured, without provocation, into a field about which it knew little. He must have known that others would suggest, unjustly, that he had hoped to please thereby the good people of Chelsea, Dorchester, and East Boston. But Mr. Choate stoically disregards arguments so patently prejudiced. He prints what he thinks. He deserves his reputation in Boston's journalistic world...