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Word: travell (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1880-1889
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Usage:

...article in one of our columns taken from a Chicago paper. It is indeed flattering to have such homage part to Harvard students, and it may be the real feeling of many who profess to think otherwise. The young lady was evidently much surprised that she could travel alone out to the wilds of Chicago and Athol, and went prepared as some Europeans who expect to find Indians in Boston...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 1/27/1885 | See Source »

...centred around any one place, be it in New York, in Boston, in San Francisco, but it is one vast organization which will continue to exist, even of some of those parts which seem to us the most vital are lopped off. We enjoy some of the benefits of travel, even while anchored in one place. We meet fellows from all parts of the country who differ from each other in ideas, in customs, in manners, and even in dialect. Our country is so large that we are like the nations of Gaul, of whom Caesar says,-what school...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Whence we Hail. | 1/20/1885 | See Source »

...high wind of Sunday night blew down many telegraph poles on Main street obstructing horse-car travel. Some of the seats on Jarvis field were also blown over...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 11/25/1884 | See Source »

...Haven proposing either Thanksgiving day or Nov. 29 as dates on which to play. Mr. Albert S. Cook, manager of the Yale eleven, also named two dates, the 12th and 15th of November. Word was sent at once that on neither of those two dates could the Harvard men travel to New Haven: on the twelfth, because contrary to faculty regulations: on the 15th because the Princeton game came on that day and some freshmen were detained by our university eleven. The Yale men, thinking to frighten Mr. Palmer, sent a telegram saying Harvard must come on the 15th...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Trying to Settle a Date. | 11/22/1884 | See Source »

Harvard men who are intending to go abroad next summer, will do well, before they make up their minds irrevocably to the step, to pause and read the following statement upon the evils of foreign travel, taken from an article in one of the German magazines. It is written, of course, from a German standpoint. "The passion for foreign travel," says the writer, "constantly stimulated as it is by improved means of communication, involves the grestest danger to the nation-moral as well as political. No less than $40,000,000 to $60,000,000 are annually thus lost...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE SIN OF FOREIGN TRAVEL. | 11/14/1884 | See Source »

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