Word: campaign
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...connection with your editorial of March 16 I should like to call attention to the series of informal talks on politics arranged for by the Political Club. The following speakers are to address the club: this evening, Mr. Seward W. Jones, who managed Mr. Draper's campaign for Lieutenant-Governor last fall; on Wednesday, March 28, Mr. E. C. Mansfield, the executive secretary of the Massachusetts Republican State Committee; on Wednesday, April 4, Mr. W. Rodman Peabody of the Massachusetts State Legislature...
...Seward W. Jonos, who managed Mr. Draper's campaign for Lieutenant Governor of Massachusetts last fall, will speak before the Political Club in the Randolph Hall Breakfast Room tomorrow evening at 7.30 o'clock. His subject will be "Some Experiences of a Campaign Manager." Opportunity will be given after the lecture for question Mr. Jones upon his work, and refreshments will be served...
...Guild went on to illustrate the main defects of a "stump" speaker, showing what trivial details may spoil the most finished address; as, for instance, the effect of a tactless introduction or the sensation caused over a brass band. In closing be related several interesting experiences of his campaign tour with Roosevelt through the western states...
...become editor of the Commercial Bulletin. During the Spanish War he served in Cuba as inspector general on the staff of General Fitzhugh Lee. Mr. Guild has been prominent in politics, and in 1896 was delegate-at-large from Massachussets to the National Republican Convention. In the presidential campaign of 1900 he accompanied President Roosevelt on his western tour. He was first elected lieutenent-governor...
...Bonaparte went on to show how it is that so many office-seekers persist in believing him a "spoils" man, although he has spent his life in active reforms. This is in a measure explained by the noticeable part which he took in the recent presidential campaign, and the fact that President Roosevelt employed him in investigating several abuses in the Civil Services. It was therefore naturally believed that he was an office-seeker, and his reform principles were consequently considered mere party abuse and ridiculed as the sounding catch-words of a public impostor...