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Word: marketably (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Since all the speakers at the Home Market Club dinner in Mechanics Hall on April 30, are Harvard men, the Club has decided to reserve one table for Harvard students who may wish to attend. The speakers are Governor Roosevelt, Senator Hoar, Senator Lodge and Mr. Curtis Guild. Governor Crane, Mayor Hart and Senator Hanna will also be present and a reception will precede the dinner. Tickets are $3.00 each, and include two tickets to the spectators' gallery. Men wishing to attend should call at 2 Hollis Hall tonight between six and seven...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Home Market Club Dinner. | 4/22/1901 | See Source »

...afford the best immediate opportunity for liberal legislation; although it must be confessed that progress towards world-wide trade is more likely to come through the logic of events than than through legislation--that is, through the increasing superiority of American industries and the manifest insufficiency of the home market." The other passage, concluding the paragraph, modifies the assertion concerning Republican capitalists...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Communication. | 10/24/1900 | See Source »

...petitioner contended, however, that the former view was the correct one, and, being so, that the respondents had gone beyond the law by expending more than $200,000 this year, leaving nothing with which to play its claim for damages for the land taken, the market value of which...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Petition Denied. | 4/30/1900 | See Source »

...account of the various means of saving expense and of using to the best advantage the labor and capital employed, the combinations might sell their products below competitive rates. Experience, however, has shown that in most cases the larger organizations have secured sufficient control of the market to enable them to raise their prices, thus making consumers suffer for the benefit of stockholders. This has been the result of the organization of the American Sugar Refining Co., the Standard Oil Co., the American Tin Plate Co., and the American Steel and Wire...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Effects of Trusts. | 3/27/1900 | See Source »

...form of trust does not combine competition companies. The Federal Steel Company, for instance, bought up mines, manufactories dealing with the product in its various stages of refinement, and steamship and transportation companies. Such a system simply insures to the corporation a constant supply of raw material and a market for the finished product, but does not remove the healthful element of competition...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Organization of Trusts. | 3/24/1900 | See Source »