Word: unitarian
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...Palfrey Perkins, First Unitarian Church, Buffalo, N. Y.; Dec. 7, Dean Willard L. Sperry; Dec. 14, Rev. Prof. Harry E. Fosdick, Minister of The Riverside Church, New York, N. Y.; Dec. 21, Rev. Prof. Howard Chandler Robbins, General Theological Seminary, New York, N. Y.; Dec. 28, Rev. Thomas L. Harris, Harvard University; Jan. 4, Dean Willard L. Sperry; Jan. 11, Very Rev. Philemon F. Sturges; Jan. 18, Rev. Albert B. Cohoe, First Raptist Church, Montclair, N. J.; Jan. 25, Rev. J. R. P. Sclater, Old St. Andrew's Church, Toronto, Canada; Feb. 1, President Clarence A. Barbour, Brown University, Providence...
...party names, call themselves Personalistas Irigoyenistas, paraded through the streets. Just what they were parading for few seemed to know. Told to shout, they shouted Viva Irigoyen! Viva La Dictadura!* till they were hoarse, then varied the monotony by reviving century-old civil war tocsins: "Death to the Unitarian Savages! Long Live the Holy Federation!" A few wags cheered "El Torito de Matadoros," champion Argentine Boxer Justo Suarez, now attached to the Argentine consulate in Manhattan. Five anti-Irigoyenistas ploughed through the crowd, fired a score of shots which brought down Parader Manuel Varela. At week...
...rich. His grandfather was James Buchanan Eads, builder of the first bridge across the Mississippi at St. Louis, builder of the Mississippi jetties just below New Orleans. His father was James Flintham How, vice president and general manager of the Wabash Railroad. Young How entered Meadville Theological School, Unitarian institution at Meadville, Pa. Fellow students termed him eccentric, "crazy," because he gave the poor his allowance, his possessions, everything but meagre necessities. He made his room a hermit-like cell. He wanted to live the life of Christ, he would say. He entered Harvard, where he played football and baseball...
...through their communities. Hobo "kings" bragged that they would carry on his work, that hoboes were hopping on freight trains for his funeral in Washington, that he was a good "stiff" (man). Washington police prepared for an influx of hoboes at the funeral last week in All Souls' Unitarian Church (whence William Howard Taft was buried). After the services the body was to be cremated and sent on to the family home at St. Louis. Only one tramp, and he but a nominal one, was there-Harry W. Johannes Jr. of Baltimore, representing the idealistic International Brotherhood Welfare Association...
John Haynes Holmes, Unitarian minister, editor of Unity...