Word: fourths
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...Lind '29 on the violin, and P.G. Anderson on the piano, will render their fourth program of the season in the Living Room of the Union tomorrow night at 7 o'clock. This performance will mark the close of the Union Sunday evening entertainments for the year...
...this morning his weary marathoners will have covered approximately 1800 miles, or a little over half their trek. They are now in the state of Missouri, having plodded steadily onward ever since the fourth of March. It is hardly to be supposed that the reading public, long-suffering as it is, could have stomached a daily blurb as to the progress of the caravan. This, too, is as the A B C to Mr. Pyle. But only wait until the final sprint breaks loose somewhere in the vicinity of Pittsburgh, and the handful of hardy soles left cuts loose. Then...
...Baumes Act, which has given rise to a great deal of discussion of late, provides among other things that a fourth conviction of felony automatically entail a life sentence. It is felt by a great many eminent jurists that there are individual cases for which an exception to this law could beneficially be made. The Baumes Act was passed in New York State in 1926 and has subsequently been adopted by several other states...
...presentation tomorrow night will be the fourth to be given in Cambridge, two public performances and a private showing before the club alumni having been held preceding the trip. Tickets for the four performances on the 18, 19, 20, and 21 of this month may be purchased at Leavitt and Peirce's or at Herrick...
...passing, 220 to 0, a measure calculated to save them some $13,585,000 per annum in postage stamps. It was the long-awaited Griest bill, named for the Pennsylvanian chairman of the House Post Office Committee. It provided for a lowering of postal rates on second, third and fourth class matter. On the advertising sections of their magazines, for example, publishers would save from .25? to 2? per pound, according to zone, when they mail their publications out to subscribers. On postcards, which are used as much for placing orders as for "dropping a line," the rate...