Word: welshness
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...ways. First by holding public meetings at which eminent civil service reformers may address the club, and secondly by enabling students to obtain readily the current literature of the cause. The public meetings have been largely attended and have met with great success. No one who heard Mr. Herbert Welsh's address last week, could fail to be inspired by the speaker's enthusiasm, or could help seeing the necessity of the reform which he advocated...
...without any central issue or any recognised leader. The Home Rule Bill, too, the affirmative tried to show was unpopular and undesirable. The negative rested their claims on the principles of the Liberal party. They maintained that it was the party of social reform. They also supported Home Rule, Welsh Disestablishment, Reform of the House of Lords and the other principles of the Newcastle Programs...
...spite of the bad weather a large audience assembled last evening in the lecture room of the Fogg Art Museum to hear Mr. Herbert Welsh, editor of "City and State." The subject of Mr. Welsh's talk was "The College Graduate and the Civil Service." The address was full of interest and very much to the point. A summary of it follows...
...University students and the public are invited to the address on "College Graduates and Public affair," by Herbert Welsh of Philadelphia, in the Fogg Museum, Tuesday, Oct. 15, at 8 p. m. The president of the Civil Service Reform Club, Louis A. Frothingham, will preside. The speaker is editor of a political weekly of Philadelphia, and is thoroughly conversant with his subject...
Harvard Civil-Service Reform Club. The College Graduate and Public Affairs. Mr. H. Welsh, Editor of City and State," Philadelphia. Lecture-room, Fogg Museum...