Word: clevelands
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...meeting a success. The meeting will be called to order at 7.30 o'clock and will be addressed by prominent Democrats of the University. Mr. Cecil F. Bacon, president of the Sound Money Democratic Club of Williams College will be among the speakers. He is a nephew of President Cleveland...
...would mean, if carried out, that a state can withdraw from the Union, (4) The plank is not a theoretical idea, but part of a practical programme. (a) Its idea was carried out as vigorously as possible by Gov. Altgelt in Chicago Riots, 1894, (Gov. Altgelt to Pres. Cleveland, July, '94. II. Mr. Bryan is not a fit man to be President. (A) His political tendencies are against the best American ideas. (1) He and his party show a lack of reverence for judicious authority, (a) The Chicago platform earnestly menaces the Supreme Court (Dem. Plat., '96.) (b) Mr. Bryan...
...University. Not only will the name of the institution be changed, but almost $1,000,000 has already been promised to help the institution to assume university dimensions. Many of the most prominent men in this country and abroad have been secured to speak at the celebration, including President Cleveland. Professors Fine, Frothingham and Marquand have been abroad to secure prominent men from the universities of Germany, France and England, and have met with great success. France not only promises to be represented, but the entrance requirements of her universities have been made such as to be most advantageous...
...Chittenden, S. H. Chapman and E. A. Caswell, the originator of the movement, for Yale; P. H. Butler, John Greenaugh, J. J. Higginson, Edward King, and H. W. Poor, for Harvard; W. Royal Cutting, G. L. Rives, F. A. Schermerhorn, and W. O. Wilson, for Columbia; and Cleveland H. Dodge for Princeton. The cost of the cup was five hundred dollars. Columbia won the trophy in '92 and '93, but in '94 surrendered it to Harvard. The '95 tournament held in New York city, was won by Southard and Ryder of the Harvard Chess Club, and the cup will remain...
...June Atlantic begins with another installment of the letters of Dante Gabriel Rossetti, edited by George Birbeck Hill. This installment contains the letters for 1855. Striking features in this issue are an article upon The Politician and the Public School, by Mr. G. L. Jones, Superintendent of Schools, Cleveland, Ohio; Restriction of Immigration, by President Francis A. Walker; and Lord Howe's Commission to Pacify the Colonies, an important historical contribution, by Paul Leicester Ford, embodying a hitherto unpublished manuscript...