Word: bronsonism
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...because he is chairman of the Senate's Agricultural Committee. He heard Mr. Roosevelt's wish that the Domestic Allotment plan be limited to wheat, cotton, hogs and tobacco, that it be enacted by this session in time to be effective for the 1933 crops. Cultured Senator Bronson Cutting of New Mexico came because he was a boyhood friend. Hiram Johnson was there out of Republican cussedness. The Press-as smiled off with the comment that its questions were "very intelligent and very embarrassing." At this point occurred the journalistic event...
Married. Carolyn McDonald Walters Bronson Burgess Chevallier Garden White Luigi Hatfield Willis Paschal, 57, Louisiana's most-wed woman (TIME, May 18, 1931); and Robert McManus, 50, wholesale fish dealer; in Columbus, La. Widowed three times, divorced eight times, mother of 16, the bride uses the name of Hatfield, her ninth...
...recent election at the Dental School of Officers for the Senior Class. A. J. Gemgras, Jr. was chosen president, J. K. McDowell vice president, and W. C. Bronson secretary-treasurer for the coming year. The senior members of the Student Council, also elected, are as follows: Richard Wasgatt, K. I. Starbird, and D. E. Hunn...
...last week of the Roosevelt tour was made up largely of bold bids for insurgent Republican support of the Democratic ticket. At Lamy, N. Mex. in the station crowd. Governor Roosevelt spotted Republican Senator Bronson Cutting whom he had known "since he wore short pants." The Governor invited the Senator up to the rear platform of his private car. Senator Cutting clambered aboard, shook Governor Roosevelt's hand, waved to the crowd, said nothing. Three days prior Senator Cutting had lost control of the G. O. P. State organization to Albert Gallatin Simms, new husband of Mark Hanna's daughter...
...bearing the portrait of Japan's Puppet Henry Pu Yi, others illustrated with Manchurian scenes. During the week Manchoukuo paper money made its first appearance. Also Japan made a bow to U. S. public opinion by appointing as an "adviser" to the Manchoukuo Government enterprising U. S. Citizen George Bronson Rea. "He is the publisher of The Far Eastern Review of Shanghai," remarked the Associated Press, "and is a stanch defender of Japan's policy in Manchuria...