Word: campaign
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...Breaking his campaign silence, President Coolidge made public a letter last week saying that both he and Mrs. Coolidge expected to go home to Northampton, Mass., to vote for Senator William J. Butler and Governor Alvan T. Fuller. Of Senator Butler he said: "He stands on the Senate floor independent, beholden to no one, a Senator of Massachusetts, serving the people in the public interests. His presence there is of great importance to me in my efforts to discharge the duties of my office." Well might President Coolidge break his silence, for Senator Butler's re-election is seriously...
...answered, and he reported the uncertain whereabouts of his superior. As always, a democrat (Note to type-setter: lower case "d" on that. I shouldn't want my influence tossed on the scales against that of our calm, cool, conservative Calvin Coolidge in a crucial hour of the campaign), I engaged in converse with the underling at the other end of the wire and told him modestly...
...results of Tuesday's ballotting will almost certainly decide the availability of Prohibition as the national issue in 1928, it is expected that the speakers will describe in detail the battle between the Wets and the Drys without respect to party that has distinguished this year's campaign...
...Walsh will present the Democratic campaign issues in the second of a series of three talks by members of different political parties. Yesterday Alfred Banker Lewis. Socialist senatorial nominee spoke in support of his candidacy, and tomorrow, at 1.30 o'clock, Mr. Eliot Wadsworth '98, prominent in Republican affairs in Massachusetts, will present the views of his party on the coming election...
With the disclosures of the recent primary campaign expenditures in Pennsylvania and Illinois, and the use of the primary by a candidate not in sympathy with the party, there has been brought into the public eye an important and nice question. Should the direct primary be retained as it is; should it be modified; or, finally, should it be abolished altogether...