Word: effecters
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...standards which they have made for themselves, and which are, accordingly, sure to be misleading. It is not difficult for a man to find fault with the deeds of his ancestors and to blame them, on the ground that every evil thought and action had transmitted its effect to him. But it does not so often happen that this man realizes how careful he should be himself to try to counteract the evil influence he may have inherited and to take good care not to add to the store which he must transmit to future generations...
...most interesting picture in the collection now on exhibition at 401 Tremont St. is Millet's "Angelus," which is too familiar to need any comment. The paintings of Verestchagin immediately impress the spectator with their remarkable power. Many of them cover enormous canvasses, and give a wonderful effect of distance. Among the military scenes, "The Conquered" and "The Road of the War Prisoners" are the most striking. The painting of "Jesus in the Desert" gives an extraordinary sense of loneliness. The faces in the large groups and small portraits alike are executed with great care and individuality. Among the smaller...
...annual fall shooting match between the Harvard and Yale shooting clubs took place Saturday morning on the grounds of the Springfield Gun Club at Springfield. There was a strong heal wind which had its effect on the shooting, but the light was good...
...reports to the effect that the majority of seats for the Yale-Princeton game at Eastern Park had been turned over to the speculators are found to be untrue. The management was particularly careful to protect the public in this respect and gave only a very limited number of tickets to the speculators, and these were confined for the greater part to out-of town dealers. The bulk of the tickets were put on sale at regular prices...
...hotel mode of conducting Memorial Hall is carried into effect next year, as the recent vote of the Fellows infers, the place will become hardly bearable. The noise and odors arising from the cooking of food for seven hundred men, and the hurry and disorder of its distribution, make the hall now only endurable because it is cheap. Most men are obliged to board at the cheapest place, but that is no reason why they should be forced into eating in the midst of nearly all imaginable discomforts. And, moreover, it is only putting off the difficulty for a short...