Word: pay
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...were connected with the celebration Wednesday night should each subscribe $1.00 to help pay fines...
Secondly, the service these men rendered to their country was absolutely disinterested. No professional interest in war influenced them. No pay, or prize money, or prospect of pension had the least attraction for them. They offered their services and lives to the country, just for love, and out of the determination that, if they could help it, the cause of freedom should take no harm. No mercenary motives can be attributed to any of them. This disinterestedness is essential to their heroic quality. The world has long since determined the limits of its occasional respect for mercenary soldiers. It admires...
...Mott Haven. Team leaves Cambridge for New York, where they are to stay until after the games on Saturday. Captain Bremer deserves unstinted praise for his hard and faithful work during the season. Starting the year with an almost depleted treasury, he has succeeded in collecting money to pay all the expenses of the training table and the trip to New York, and has put a team into the field of whom Harvard has every reason to feel proud. The Mott Haven team is probably the strongest single track team that any college can offer this year. How it will...
...dues will be returned. The applicant must be indorsed by a member of the Association, who shall make himself responsible for the indebtedness of the student member. The quarterly dues are payable Oct. 1, Jan. 1, April 1 and July 1, and a student who does not pay before the 10th of the month shall be no longer considered a member; if he wants to join again he must apply for re-election. A student member who sends in his notice before the 10th of the month can resign in good standing and may enter the club at any future...
...state. Altogether the University holds about $1,350,000 of preferred and common stock of the road. A general meeting of the citizens of Baltimore will be held tomorrow for the purpose of starting a subscription list, with $250,000 in view. Should the Baltimore and Ohio receivers not pay the stock interest due July 1st, it is certain that the university will be embarrassed probably to the extent of $50,000 a year unless outside aid should be forthcoming. It is likely that tomorrow's meeting will result in ample financial assurance for the university trustees...