Documents of the City of Boston, Volume 3 |
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Page 10
... suppose that such things are designed to please the taste of the sane members only of the establishment , and are not among the legitimate means and appliances for improving and restoring the insane . " To what extent does the site in ...
... suppose that such things are designed to please the taste of the sane members only of the establishment , and are not among the legitimate means and appliances for improving and restoring the insane . " To what extent does the site in ...
Page 9
... suppose , for instance , that the poor people , the common class of society , could leave the depot in Summer street , go out over the Hartford and Erie Road , and then cross one mile to the Providence Railroad and return to the city ...
... suppose , for instance , that the poor people , the common class of society , could leave the depot in Summer street , go out over the Hartford and Erie Road , and then cross one mile to the Providence Railroad and return to the city ...
Page 39
... Suppose ten miles or so of double track railway should branch off from the Boston and Maine , a little beyond the present Medford branch , leading up one of the valleys to Spot Pond , crossing over the eastern edge of that beautiful ...
... Suppose ten miles or so of double track railway should branch off from the Boston and Maine , a little beyond the present Medford branch , leading up one of the valleys to Spot Pond , crossing over the eastern edge of that beautiful ...
Page 40
... Suppose it costs twice as much to carry a cubic yard of mud up four miles as to bring a cubic yard of gravel down nine miles , then it will cost seven cents and four mills to put two cubic feet of fertile soil on a square foot of rock ...
... Suppose it costs twice as much to carry a cubic yard of mud up four miles as to bring a cubic yard of gravel down nine miles , then it will cost seven cents and four mills to put two cubic feet of fertile soil on a square foot of rock ...
Page 41
... suppose they have a monopoly of the great inventions of Watt and Stephenson . The wit of the dead belongs to all the living . The people have a right , as against either paid - up stock or watered stock , to breathe pure air and see ...
... suppose they have a monopoly of the great inventions of Watt and Stephenson . The wit of the dead belongs to all the living . The people have a right , as against either paid - up stock or watered stock , to breathe pure air and see ...
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Common terms and phrases
100 A parcel 25 feet 50 feet avenue Back Bay Beacon street bounded as follows bridge building Castle street cent channel Charles River City of Boston committee commonwealth containing eight hundred containing nine hundred containing one thousand containing seven hundred containing six hundred described as taken dollars Dover street East Boston eastwardly Edward Tuckerman Eliot street Emerald street filling flats foot formerly belonging formerly of George formerly of Henry formerly of James formerly of John formerly of Mary formerly of William heirs of Edward Indiana place land belonging legislature less Lucas street measuring twenty feet Middlesex street Northeast northeastwardly by land Northwest parcel of land park Sarah SHATTUCK side South Boston Southeast southwest square feet Suffolk street tidal basins Tremont street trustees twenty and feet wardly by land Washington street West Boston bridge westwardly by land wharf