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Word: tells (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
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Usage:

...Delegates are expected from all the important colleges of New England and all who attend will be entertained without expenses if they send their names to C. H. Ricker, 41 George street, Providence, R. I., on or before Thursday, February 20. They are also asked to tell him to what fraternity, if any, they belong. Last year the conference was held here with great success. A provisional program has been announced for the conference which includes addresses by Professor Everett, acting president of Brown University, the Rt. Rev. J. D. W. Perry, D.D., bishop of Rhode Island...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: New England Student Churchmen | 2/17/1913 | See Source »

Major Henry Lee Higginson '55 will speak in the Living Room on Tuesday, February 25. He will tell informally some of his personal reminiscences and recollections...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: FOUR LECTURES IN UNION | 2/15/1913 | See Source »

...return from lunch. The intruder attempted to simulate a student, but betrayed himself, and Sturgis detained the thief while he called the police from the telephone in his room. The man arrested gave a fictitious name at the police station, claiming to be a student, but refusing to tell the name of his college...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THIEF CAUGHT IN APLEY | 1/29/1913 | See Source »

...Then perhaps the foreigner strikes against his starvation wages, as he did in Lawrence where the average man's wage was $9 a week. Instead of tact and reason, clubs were used by the police in the Lawrence trouble and naturally this only intensified the feeling. The labor leaders tell their men that the troops, sent to protect "life, liberty and property," are protecting property alone; and the men, used to a centralized police in their native lands, blame the United States government for their condition and cherish bitter hatred toward...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: CAUSE OF LAWRENCE TROUBLE | 10/29/1912 | See Source »

...verse which was always the Monthly's strongest point is in this number unimportant. Gilkey's "Tripoli" is not of his best; it seems perfunctory, and has not beauty or strength to save it. "At a House Party," by Clarence Britten is an attempt to tell one of the author's too-subtle, evanescent short stories in verse; it does not "get there" enough to make it quite worth while. Mr. Thayer's "Adieu" is graceful and meaningless; the "Thoreau" of Rollo Britten is the best verse in the paper. It says something with force and phrasing. Paul Marriet...

Author: By R. E. Rogers ., | Title: REVIEW OF JULY MONTHLY | 6/20/1912 | See Source »

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