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Examples

  • Among the number of those who drop in upon us at every beat of the steady pulse of time, was a redfaced, wee baby who came nearly four month ago into the Reband household, to the satisfaction of all and the intense delight of the grandmother who rejoiced over a son and heir to inherit the brightened family prospects.

    The Market Woman 1870

  • But something more than marketing is evidently in the minds of the over-coated and stove-pipe hatted representatives of the Reband family this evening.

    The Market Woman 1870

  • If their lamps at the Reband homestead are early out on a Sunday evening, while Monday mornings the family are astir betimes, yet the people expect as much punctuality in market hours as in their Monday morning papers.

    The Market Woman 1870

  • But something more than marketing is evidently in the minds of the over-coated and stove-pipe hatted representatives of the Reband family this evening.

    The Woman's Advocate Vol. III No. IV %0AApril, 1870 1870

  • If their lamps at the Reband homestead are early out on a Sunday evening, while Monday mornings the family are astir betimes, yet the people expect as much punctuality in market hours as in their Monday morning papers.

    The Woman's Advocate Vol. III 1870

  • But something more than marketing is evidently in the minds of the over-coated and stove-pipe hatted representatives of the Reband family this evening.

    The Woman's Advocate Vol. III 1870

  • Among the number of those who drop in upon us at every beat of the steady pulse of time, was a redfaced, wee baby who came nearly four month ago into the Reband household, to the satisfaction of all and the intense delight of the grandmother who rejoiced over a son and heir to inherit the brightened family prospects.

    The Woman's Advocate Vol III No. I January, 1870 1870

  • Among the number of those who drop in upon us at every beat of the steady pulse of time, was a redfaced, wee baby who came nearly four month ago into the Reband household, to the satisfaction of all and the intense delight of the grandmother who rejoiced over a son and heir to inherit the brightened family prospects.

    The Woman's Advocate Vol. III 1870

  • If their lamps at the Reband homestead are early out on a Sunday evening, while Monday mornings the family are astir betimes, yet the people expect as much punctuality in market hours as in their Monday morning papers.

    The Woman's Advocate Vol. III No. IV %0AApril, 1870 1870

  • Reband said his parents, who sometimes caddy for him, were proud of his victory.

    unknown title 2009

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