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

Frederick Alfred Martin 3L., of Manchester, Vermont, died at Stillman Infirmary yesterday morning from heart trouble. Martin has been troubled with rheumatism a number of times in the past two years, and the latest attack, commencing in February of this year developed heart trouble which proved fatal. He graduated from Dartmouth with an A.B. degree in 1911 and has been a student at the Law School since then. He was born September...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Obituary | 5/21/1915 | See Source »

Each member of the group realizes that they will be exposed to far more danger than if they were fighting in the trenches, for one bite from a louse, the vermin which carries the typhus, is considered fatal. The spirit and courage of the men who have volunteered to fight this pest which is now ravaging Servia, is, as Professor Sedgwick and others have remarked, nothing short of heroic...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: TO FIGHT TYPHUS AND CHOLERA IN SERVIA | 5/10/1915 | See Source »

...Tuckerman was running to catch a car in Harvard square. He was taken immediately to the Cambridge Relief Hospital on Prospect street, where he was found to have suffered a bad scalp wound, a broken collar bone and several broken ribs. His injuries though serious will not prove fatal...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Tuckerman Run Over by Automobile | 5/7/1915 | See Source »

Carl Anthonson, of Roxbury, the painter who fractured his skull by falling from a ladder while at work in the Widener Memorial Library on Monday died at the Cambridge Hospital yesterday morning at 12.20 o'clock as a result of his injuries. This is the first fatal accident which has occurred in the construction of the building. There have been several serious falls and injuries especially last spring, but in all other cases the men have recovered...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Painter Dies of Fractured Skull | 1/13/1915 | See Source »

...postal regulations. But the "Monthly" calls itself the "Harvard Monthly," and is circulated as a Harvard undergraduate magazine. Its responsibility to the University is clear, and the editors, whose action shows that they realize this responsibility, are to be commended, even if the suppression came with an almost fatal tardiness...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: EDITORIAL INDISCRETION. | 12/4/1914 | See Source »

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