Word: posted
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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Major Marshall holds the post of cavalry instructor for New England with headquarters at Hartford, Conn. He is one of the foremost authorities in the country on the functions of cavalry in modern warfare and is at present issuing a series of bulletins on this subject. He has made a study of the application of aeronautics to war and has been instrumental in the progress of this science under government experiment. Major Marshall is the author of numerous books pertaining to military matters...
...selections of seven newspapers from various parts of the East--namely, the Boston Post, Boston Herald, Boston Globe, Boston Journal, New York Sun, Brooklyn Daily Eagle and Providence Journal--Brickley, of Harvard, and Thorpe, of Carlisle, in the backfield and Bomcisler and Ketcham, of Yale, at end and centre respectively, were unanimously chosen for the All-Eastern football team. Felton was given the other end position by four of the seven papers. For the tackle positions Storer is the leading candidate, all but two of the papers favoring him. Pennock, of Harvard, and Brown, of Annapolis, are both chosen...
...been for several years prominent in the literary and dramatic world. When in college Mr. Biggers was an editor of the Lampoon and the Advocate. Following his graduation in 1907, he accepted a position with the Bobbs-Merrill Publishing Company as a book-reviewer. He resigned this post to edit a humorous column for the Boston Traveller, in which capacity he was so successful that at the end of a year he was appointed dramatic critic for the paper. Last year he was a prize-winner in a short-story contest conducted by one of the prominent magazines. He recently...
...Modern Drama" in the Lecture Hall of the Boston Public Library this winter. The lectures are a part of the free public lectures which are given each year at the Library. A series of six lectures on "The Opera", by Mr. Olin Downes, musical critic of the Boston Post, two of which have already been given, will complete this year's series. The lectures will be practical rather than theoretical, and frequent references to current plays in Boston will add local interest...
...Cambridge post office will be closed...