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Word: stationer (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1929
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Usage:

Results of the Yale football game are to be broadcasted over the entire country on Saturday by the American Telephone and Telegraph Company Workmen were busy on the roof of the Stadium throughout the day yesterday, preparing special telephone lines, both local and long distance to various radio stations in the Eastern part of the country. The nearest line leads to the sporting goods store of James W. Brine in Harvard Square, where a reproduction will be given during the game. One of the longest lines leads to a radio station at Washington. Other lines will be connected with various...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Yale Game To Be Broadcasted Widely | 11/22/1923 | See Source »

Alumni leaving for Exeter today to attend the annual Exeter-Andover football game called for 2 o'clock will be able to take trains leaving the North Station at 8.50 or 11.50 o'clock and arrive in Exeter in time for the game...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Annual Exeter-Andover Game Today | 11/17/1923 | See Source »

...members of the Freshman squad who are to make the trip, together with Coaches Campbell and Clarke, and J. R. Burke, manager of the team, will leave the South Station on the 10 o'clock train this morning. Reaching New Haven at 2 o'clock, the team will try out the Yale Freshman gridiron in a light practice from 2.30 o'clock until 3.30 before decamping to Derby for the night...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: FRESHMEN TO HOLD LAST PRACTICE AT YALE TODAY | 11/16/1923 | See Source »

William G. McAdoo. Arriving from Manhattan, Mr. and Mrs. McAdoo with their two daughters, Eleanor Wilson and Mary Faith, were met at the Union Station, Washington, by Mrs. Woodrow Wilson. The McAdoo's had an invitation to stay at the Wilson home, but declined it for fear the children might be disturbing to the ex-President, who is far from well. After stopping at a hotel, however, a visit to S Street was at once undertaken so that the two little girls could " see Granddaddy " who was equally anxious to see them...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: National Affairs: Booms | 11/12/1923 | See Source »

...several weeks no receiving station in North America was able to pick up messages from Donald Mix, radio operator of the Bowdoin, Dr. Donald B. MacMillan's boat now in the Arctic (TIME, Sept. 10). Fin- ally an amateur operator at Prince Rupert, B. C., 2,200 miles from Greenland, and later the station of the Calgary (Alberta) Herald, caught faint and fragmentary messages in Morse, reporting the Bowdoin frozen solid in the ice floes of Smith Sound, at about 79° latitude, some 706 miles from the Pole. This is the strait separating northwest Greenland from the large group...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Arctic Radio | 11/12/1923 | See Source »

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