Word: learnning
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...meeting in Holden Chapel this evening the aims and purposes of this Northfield conference will be fully explained, and an opportunity will be given to learn more of the intentions and work of the men who are affiliated under the Young Men's Christian Association...
...commercial activity is so great that it extends to all parts of the world.- (b) The natives soon imitate the conduct of traders who come among them and-(c) Traders do all they can to bring education in some form to them in order that they may learn to trade fairly and to the best advantage of all concerned.- (d) The hunt for new fields for investment and for colonization carries with it Christianity and civilization which the surrounding natives will eventually, of their own accord, and consequently more effectively, adopt...
...time ago that the remarkable discovery was made by Professor Rontgen of Wurzburg of a means of obtaining on a photographic plate, images of objects covered by wood or other material impervious to rays of light. It must therefore be a matter of great interest to the University to learn of the experiments now being carried on in the same line, and it would seem with much success, by Professor Trowbridge in the Physical Laboratory. An account of the experiments is given in another column. It is interesting to note how quickly the attention and study of scientists the world...
...when there is a redundancy of the currency, prices rise, imports come in and gold flows out. The outflow of specie in 1893 and 1895 is generally looked on as a proof of the superabundance of currency. But this is not at all certain and economists have much to learn about such occurrences. One of the other evidence of too much currency is the accumulation of cash in commercial centres, especially New York...
...learn from the Postmaster of Boston, in whose charge the Cambridge post office is included, that a change of the hour of closing is prevented by a rule of the department. The CRIMSON recommended the change because there was some demand and no apparent objection. Now, however, that one has been raised, the matter does not appear to be of such weight that it should be urged any further...