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...said: "The tax is an encroachment of national government upon the states. Twenty of our states have already taxes on inheritance, incomes or corporations. If you put an additional tax of two per cent on this same property, and this is what the income tax does, there will follow injustice and evasion and the state law must be repealed. The income tax law contains three points of unjust discrimination. First, savings banks. It exempts six hundred and taxes three hundred. One class divides its profits-in a particular way and is exempt. Second, between insurance companies. Of two insurance companies...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: PRINCETON WINS. | 5/2/1895 | See Source »

...have a place in the undergraduate's enthusiasms, each is awarded a share in his respect which is denied to the mere athlete. Football, baseball, any of the sports, is more exciting and attracts a more intense interest than can fairly be asked for intellectual work. No outsider can follow the processes which lead to literary or scientific success, or can feel with him who wins it all the eager joy of victory. It is difficult to appreciate and generally impossible to grow enthusiastic over the competition in which the brain prevails. We believe, however, that even now the sober...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 5/1/1895 | See Source »

...fifth shoot in the handicap series was held yesterday afternoon. The scores follow: DuPont 24, Dorr 22, Fincke 21, Sargent 20, G. Kinnicut 19, Sterling 18, Byrd 18, Prescott 17, Harris 16, Shepard 15, and Knoblauch 11. The next shoot will be held Monday...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Shooting Club. | 4/27/1895 | See Source »

...will then adjourn to the plantations and the nurseries of the Arboretum for an informal outdoor study of the plants. It is not proposed that the instruction given in these meetings shall be technical, and a knowledge of descriptive botany is not essential for persons who wish to follow them. The intention is to indicate by comparison the easiest means of distinguishing the common native trees and shrubs as they appear in this part of the country, and of recognizing the foreign species which have been introduced into our gardens. The ornamental and useful properties of these trees and shrubs...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Lectures at the Arboretum. | 4/26/1895 | See Source »

...question is too often dismissed in this way merely to avoid the personal inconvenience which it is well known would follow upon a really fair decision. The strict application of theory to practice in the college world demands a disregard of one's temporary convenience which to many students would seem little less than brutal. An ideal is such a persistently determined affair that one shrinks from encountering it. When a man knows he is honorable, why expose himself to the unpleasant suggestion that he is not? The hint that his estimate of himself has been too high...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 4/26/1895 | See Source »

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