Word: marketer
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...will usually take his small boys out around the haycocks, the mangers, back of the pigpen, under the icehouse, the wagons and the currant bushes, to show them all the nests and how to collect the eggs, carry them carefully, set them down uncracked in the dairy ready for market. After the boys know their job, the man is free to go off and saw wood or milk his cows...
...automobile traffic. The only automobile gales admitting to Soldiers. Field will be Gates 12 and 13 on the Metropolitan Parkway at the southwest corner of the field. These may be reached from Boston by Commonwealth Avenue to Brighton Avenue to Union Square, Allston, to North Beacon Street and down Market Street to the Speedway...
...clock, and at the end of the game from 4.30 until 5.30 o'clock, the Cottage Farm Bridge will be "one way" going toward Boston and the Temporary Bridge "one way" going toward Cambridge. Automobiles coming from Waltham and Watertown should come via North Beacon Street to Market Street to the Speedway. Taxis and other automobiles which do not park, if coming from Brighton may unload their passengers at the corner of North Harvard Street on Western Avenue about two hundred yards from Gate No. 8. If coming via Cambridge by the, Parkway from Boston they will be required...
...Wickens family furnishes the medium of delivery. There is the Father, Sir Thomas, self-made, a figure in the stock-market, and knighted for his services to the government in backing up the front. Lady Wikens rather flounders through the chapters, endeavoring to find out what it's all about. She does and she doesn't. The three children are Dick, Tom, Madge. Reading from left to right they are a D. S. O., a "conchy,' and a V. A. D., a fairly representative crib of the sort of thing one could or could not do back...
...frequently as not, the cattle owners would fail to sell their steers' at the market and would return about sundown with the whole contingent again. They would return about sundown with the whole contingent again.. They would held them through on to the Arlington road, only to eappear the next morning with undiminished vigor. The steers were a constant source of excitement, better than a big fire, if one of happened to enter a mercantile shop...