Word: effecting
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...Railroad Transportation, p. 48.- (c) Waste of capital in useless roads, e. g. "Nickel Plate," West Shore, Chi. St. Paul and Kansas City, etc.; Bradstreets April 25, 1885.- (d) Monopolies have been fostered by unjust personal and local discrimination; Interstate Com. Com. rep. I, 503; Standard oil case.- (c). Effect of railway corporations on politics, case of Boston and Me. and Concord railways in New Hampshire...
...upon the defeat of the principles of the Democratic party.- (a) Free coinage would entail inevitable disaster.- (b) The American shipping interest looks to the Republican party for its encouragement and protection.- (c) The Democratic party continues its hostile attitude towards our National banking system and is incompetent to effect its necessary revision.- (d) Congressional business demands the suppression of filibustering: N. A. Review...
Yesterday evening Rev. George A. Gordon preached in Appleton Chapel taking his text from Rev., 5th chapter, 8th verse. He said: Some men build up the character of God as a florist puts together a bouquet of flowers. Just as the florist chooses the flowers that produce the best effect, and in this way makes out of nature something more beautiful than nature, so do these men picking out the noblest of human qualities form a character which they ascribe to God. This is the worst kind of atheism...
...significance of a close alliance which places all other colleges at a disadvantage. Apropos of the discussion of the dual league is the stand taken by the Harvard CRIMSON. That paper has for some time urged the consummation of the dual league with little regard to its significance or effect;" and the article ends by quoting entire a recent editorial of the CRIMSON on the final arrangement for annual track athletics between Yale and Harvard...
...Times has asked us to "explain the value of this dual league in track and field athletics and its probable effect on the intercollegiate games." The value in track and fiald athletics is much the same as in other branches of sport. Harvard and Yale are anxious to meet as rivals in every sport and prove the superiority. At the intercollegiate meetings, where the winning or the losing of the cup turns most frequently upon the points won by some small college, no chance is given to prove the real superiority between the two colleges. Take the last intercollegiate games...