Word: paid
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...these companies were also given instruction in the assembling, dissembling and firing of the machine guns which the Corps has obtained. Target practice with the Colt machine, the gun which is being paid for by the subscriptions of the companies, resulted very satisfactorily. These company subscriptions should be made to the first sergeants, who will turn the amount collected over to P. P. Goold, Persis Smith A22. It will be necessary to raise $600 from the two battalions now in Cambridge...
Travelling expenses up to 200 miles will be paid, but it is necessary that the candidate buy his own ticket for New York, obtaining at the same time a receipt for the amount spent in the purchase of the ticket. When this receipt is given to the proper authorities in New York the candidate will be reimbursed for the purchase price...
...special arrangements with the Cambridge Trust Company, a deposit of two dollars must be paid on application by June 15, and weekly instalments of two dollars thereafter for 24 weeks. Interest at the rate of at least two percent, will be allowed on the deposits as made...
...previously announced in the CRIMSON, special arrangements have been made with the Cambridge Trust Company, which will render the bonds more accessible to the undergraduate. By this scheme a deposit of two dollars must be paid on application by June 15, and weekly instalments of two dollars thereafter for 24 weeks, until November 30. Interest at the rate of at least two percent will be allowed on the deposits as made, and the bonds will be delivered ex the December 15 coupon...
...There are various reasons for buying the bonds. These bonds are the promise of the richest and the strongest Government in the world. They cannot fail to be paid, principal and interest; will rise when the war ends, and are, therefore, a desirable security. They are the promise of your 'firm,' the United States, and are issued to help on the cause of Freedom and Civilization, which we believe in, by which we live, and which we must have or disappear as citizens,--though we might become subjects of a superior power. In short, we are all glad, as honest...