Word: moneyed
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...clock this afternoon. Application blanks may be obtained at the office of the Athletic Association and at Leavitt & Peirce's, in Cambridge; and at Wright & Ditson's, in Boston. The price of tickets is $2.50 each. They will be mailed not earlier than Monday morning, June 26. Checks and money orders should be made payable to the Harvard Athletic Association. Applications for one or two tickets will be given preference over those filed for a greater number, and no application will be received from any person whose name is on the blacklist. A stamped envelope and postal card, each addressed...
...open only to members on Commencement. A luncheon will be served from 12 to 2 o'clock. Since the Union cannot undertake to furnish luncheon for more than 500 people, preference must be given strictly in order of application. The price of luncheon will be 50 cents, and the money must accompany each application, which should be made at the office of the Union, or by mail addressed to the treasurer, before Monday, June 26. In case more members apply than can be accommodated, the money will be returned. Tickets will be held at the office of the Union, where...
...medical practice there, to estimate the probable interest of government officials in such an institution, to determine the best city in which to establish the proposed school and laboratories, and to ascertain the amount of cooperation which could be secured from existing institutions maintained by American or European money...
...agent selected for this exploration was Dr. Martin R. Edwards, one of the young men who had from the first felt a strong interest in the undertaking. Money was raised to defray Dr. Edwards's expenses; and he devoted seven months to diligent inquiries and observations in the chief cities of China, and especially among the medical missionaries and practitioners already established there...
...cent, of their accounts through the summer is a disgrace to every Harvard man personally and to the name of the University. Shopkeepers allow credit as a favor, and they are met by indifference and ingratitude. It is difficult to ascribe any real reason for the prevalent carelessness in money matters except that the student who is able to run up a large bill has not come to the full appreciation of the value of credit. Being careless about the manner in which he spends what is his, he is unable to realize that prompt payment is an essential...