Word: walks
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...appears that the perfect existence is one in which nobody is required to walk. Many persons like to look into the future and prepare out minds for the wonders that we shall see if we live long enough. We have never observed a prophecy of that kind that did not describe the happy circumstance of movable sidewalks to relieve the human legs of virtually all exertion. The seer of the movement is the fire chief in New York city. He foresees a city in which streets will be free from vehicular traffic, such streets as there are being devoted exclusively...
...Edwards and Walker, the visitors have excellent pitchers who may give the Crimson trouble this afternoon. The former struck out 12 batters, did not issue a walk, and allowed but five hits in the New Haven game. The latter was at his best against Colby when he fanned ten and allowd but five hits. Stevens, the visting second baseman who has been out of the last two games on account of an injury, will be back in the line-up today. Captain Montgomery, Bjorkman, and Upton, all of whom have been batting a high average this season, may give...
...walk in the ninth with three men on was responsible for the 3-2 Freshmen defeat at the hands of the Andover Academy team at Andover on Saturday afternoon. The yearlings played almost an errorless game and the Academy players had seven errors scored against them, the schoolboys were able to gain the lead early in the game and to hold the Freshmen scoreless until the eighth when both the 1925 runs were made. Superior hitting was the keynote of the Andover success for the victors pounded out eight timely hits against the visitors' three drives...
Well, the line was constructed and operation started. Again the natural thing happened. Most people in the city had to walk to and from work--at three miles an hour. The lucky fellow who got near this new transit line--the moving street--could travel six or eight miles an hour. Of course, as many as could, moved near the routes. They were attracted, just as a magnet attracts. Just as the iron filings flow to the magnetic lines, so the people swarmed along the new line of travel--along the first horse-car line. What was the result? Congestion...
...previleges granted to labor in accordance with the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution. The second point noted from last year's speech is vitiated by the admission that the central unions have no control over the actions of the local labor organizations or their members in regard to walk-outs. When men refuse to obey the commands of their leaders or to accept the offerings of the employer, there seems no way left to offer justice to either side or preserve the advantages of collective bargaining...