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

...Club theatre on Tuesday, March 25. Tickets will be given out to Union members as will be announced later. The other performances will be: at the clubhouse, Wednesday, March 26, and Friday, March 28, matinee at Copley Hall, Boston, Saturday, March 29, Music Hall, Quincy, Thursday, April 3; Town Hall, Andover, Saturday, April 5. The arrangements in regard to the sale of tickets will be published later...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: MUSICAL COMEDY BY PI ETA | 3/6/1913 | See Source »

...Victorian turns to the verse: here surely will be comfort; he can understand. Mist, Water-Lilies, Dusk, Evening in the Town, To Snowflakes Dancing Before My Window, In Memoriam, Their First Ride Together; Wordsworth, Herrick, Tennyson, Browning! The mantle of the great upon the shoulders of another generation of poetic youth! Poetry is not dead, whatever may have been one's feelings after reading Number 1 of the new Poetry Journal...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: HARVARD MONTHLY REVIEW | 2/3/1913 | See Source »

...town of Edmonton, from which Mr. Hall comes, is one of the most prosperous in the vicinity of the fertile Peace River country. A short time ago the city adopted the interesting experiment of the single tax. Mr. Hall has recently been lecturing at several eastern universities, and will be prepared to answer questions on the industrial and economic possibilities of the Province...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE CANADIAN NORTHWEST | 12/16/1912 | See Source »

Lafayette G. Blair '78, a noted lawyer and orator, died at his home in Water town on Saturday morning at 11.45 o'clock. He was born May 8, 1849, in Cumberland. Md. He entered Phillips Exeter Academy in 1870. graduating from there in 1874. He received the degree of A. B. from Harvard in 1878 and afterwards studied law at Boston University, being admitted...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Obituary | 12/9/1912 | See Source »

...twenty-four. The multitude of private clubs have undercut its clientele, Freshmen who live in the Union transfer their haunting grounds in their Sophomore and Junior years. In spite of a popular impression to the contrary, Cambridge is a place where young men are astonishingly busy. The town has the distinction of providing more attractive places of loaf in, and less time to loaf in them, than any other spot in the world. And the Union is only one of many...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Fact and Comment | 12/6/1912 | See Source »

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