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

Each road will have only two tracks, making it impossible to run both local and express trains, as is done in the New York subway. No definite conclusion has been reached as to the number of stations. It is probable, however, that three of four exclusive of the terminals will be built. As much of the preliminary work as remains to be done can be finished before spring, when the actual construction will begin. The subway will cost about $5,000,000. The city has the right to buy the plant at the end of 20 years...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: CAMBRIDGE SUBWAY ASSURED | 12/15/1905 | See Source »

...Editorials;" "The Summons," by W. Goodwin '07; "A Nice Sort of Fellow," by E. B. Sheldon '08; "His Question," by E. L. Sheldon '06; "Mr. Dooley on Kipling," by E. D. Biggers '07; For Gleyre's "Les Illusions Perdues," by H. W. Bell '07; "The Wreck of the Cromer Express," by F. M. Gunther '08; "On Getting up in the Morning," by W. M. F. Perkins '07; "Ambition," by J. Hinckley...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Contents of Current Advocate | 12/9/1905 | See Source »

...second team squad of 30 men will leave for Philadelphia this afternoon also by the Fall River line, and will return tomorrow night on the Federal Express with the University team. The following men will be taken: Ball, Barney, Blair, Brown, Burnham, Cavenee, Craft, Davie, Fraser, Giddings, Gilmore, Greenebaum, Grant, Harrison, Heilborn, Horkheimer, Hurd, Inches, Irving, Jones, Kempner, Mason, Pell, Quigley, Sortwell, Stephenson, Shurtieff, Timmins, Wead, Witherbee...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: TEAM LEFT FOR PHILADELPHIA | 11/10/1905 | See Source »

...leaving New York for Philadelphia at 9 o'clock by the Pennsylvania railroad. While in Philadelphia they will stay at the Aldine hotel. Tomorrow afternoon the team will have light signal practice on Franklin Field. The men will return to Boston in a special car attached to the Federal express, leaving Philadelphia at 8.55 P.M. Saturday...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: TEAM LEAVES TODAY AT 4 | 11/9/1905 | See Source »

Permit me to express a wish that no member of the Union will miss the opportunity of hearing Mr. Horace Fletcher's address tonight. The subject on which he will speak is of fundamental importance both to the individual and to the State. If his observations on diet, confirmed already on a limited scale, should prove true on a universal scale, it is impossible to overestimate their revolutionary import. Mr. Fletcher is one of the most original and "sympathetic" personalities whom Massachusetts in our day has produced. His teaching and example have been of such vital benefit to certain persons...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Communication | 11/7/1905 | See Source »

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