Word: fare
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...required to pay in advance and must make a deposit with the Bursar for this purpose. At Memorial Hall the membership fee is $5.00 and at Foxcroft House $3.00. The price of board at Memorial is $5.25 a week. The prices of extras are indicated on the bills of fare. The charges for single meals are 30 cents for breakfast, 35 cents for lunch, and 50 cents for dinner. The members of Memorial Hall are organized so far as possible in club tables, which are assigned upon the application of members wishing to eat together. Tables of different sizes...
...this year, and possibly more than that number will attend. The men will be lodged in Gould Hall, a new building which is to be opened for the first time this year. The total expense for the ten days will amount to $21.00 as follows: round-trip railway fare, $4.00; registration fee, $5.00; board, $9.00; and lodging, $3.00. Arrangement will be made to send a number of delegates with their expenses part-paid, and an opportunity will be given any man to apply for free board if he is willing to wait on table during the ten days...
Passengers arriving at this station on surface cars which enter the station may transfer to subway trains without checks or payment of additional fare to continue their journey toward Boston, and returning may in like manner transfer to surface cars. No transfer checks will be needed at Park street...
Conductors of outward-bound cars reaching Harvard square from Boston, Central, or Kendall square, will issue to passengers, upon request, at the time of payment of fare, checks for admission to Harvard square station for a ride on any outward-bound car, provided that such checks shall not be issued to persons paying fare with transfer checks issued from Scollay square, or Adams, square station, or from any station of the Cambridge subway. "Outward" and "inward-bound" are here used with reference to Boston. Some convenient arrangement for the continuation of certain trips on the surface after covering part...
...entire amount of taxation is therefore apportioned among the various states. The railroads always appeal for protection under the Fourteenth Amendment. An instance of this is shown in the case of a railroad against the State of Minnesota. In 1907 the State of Minnesota passed a two cent fare law and a railroad issued an injunction. The case was finally decided in favor of the railroads...