Word: plainly
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...Tremont St., Boston.RAILROAD ARRANGEMENT TO SPRINGFIELD. - There seems to be a misunderstanding as to how application for railroad tickets should be made; men should simply address a stamped envelope to themselves and enclose it together with $2 in a plain envelope, which should be left at Leavitt & Peirce's or sent to 22 Perkins Hall by Saturday evening, Nov. 3, the time having been extended to that date...
...Tremont St., Boston.RAILROAD ARRANGEMENT TO SPRINGFIELD.-There seems to be a misunderstanding as to how application for railroad tickets should be made; men should simply address a stamped envelope to themselves and enclose it together with $2 in a plain envelope, which should be left at Leavitt & Peirce's or sent to 22 Perkins Hall by Saturday evening, Nov. 3, the time having been extended to that date...
...Student Volunteer Committee have now commenced active work. It is plain that to have success, such a movement must have organization; and that to have organization it must have money. Mr. Birtwell is a man who commands a large salary in his present work, and he has consented to undertake the direction of the work here for a comparatively small sum. Eight hundred dollars could not be better spent...
...injunction was illegal. (a) Transcends the fundamental purpose of injunctions: Abbott's Law Dict., I, 611. (1) It was primarily issued to protect public rights: Alb. Law J., L, 147. (2) "It is necessary to the obtaining an injunction that there should be no plain, adequate, and complete remedy at law:" Bouvier's Law Dictionary, I, 711, Section 5. (b) Infringes upon the rights of citizens: Nation, Sept. 13, 1894, p. 190. (c) Is without precedent: Pub. Opinion, Apr. 19, 1894, pp. 67-68. (d) Writ could not be served personally: Alb. Law J., Sept...
...other hand, it is plain that, with due regard for business management, it is practical to approach the ideal more nearly than has been done in the past. The games in New York are recognized to be of very questionable value to college athletics, and the innovation, suggested by the Harvard management this year, of playing a tie game on the grounds of another college, was well made. The success with which this was realized will, we are confident, cause many other college games to be arranged on the same plan...