Word: cleveland
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...President Cleveland...
...Griffin, 80 Broadway, New York City; Briton Hadden, 236 East 39th St New York City; Edith Harkness, 4 East 66th St., New York City; Edward S. Harkness, 25 Broadway, New York City; William H. Harkness, 4 East 66th Street, New York City; Louise H. Ingalls, 11808 Lake Shore Boulevard, Cleveland, Ohio; Robert L. Johnson, 236 East 39th St., New York City; Seymour H. Knox, Marine Trust Bldg., Buffalo, NY; Roy E. Larsen, 236 East 39th St., New York City; Henry R. Luce, 236 East 39th St., New York City; John S. Martin 236 East 39th St., New York City...
...calculated with the Crossword Puzzle Magazine in mind. The cross-section of the U. S. press examined by TIME on Jan. 5 , showed but two changes. The following newspapers were still publishing crossword puzzles last week: Washington Post, Atlanta Constitution, Detroit Free Press, Omaha Bee, Chicago Tribune, Buffalo News, Cleveland Press, Cincinnati Enquirer, New Orleans Times-Picayune, Philadelphia Public Ledger, San Francisco Chronicle, Boston Transcript and nine Manhattan dailies. Crossword puzzles had ceased to appear in The Kansas City Star, The Minneapolis Tribune...
Four venerable men advanced slow into the dining room of the Hotel Holenden, Cleveland, sat down to dinner. The affair did not look, at first glance exciting. Yet President Coolidge and Chief Justice Taft were sorry not be there; they sent long telegrams. Other messages from famed U. S. men* poured in: "Congratulations," they said; "Many Happy Returns of the Day." For these four old men?J. A. Smith, Congressman Theodore E. Burton, Harvey D. Goulder, Probate Judge Alexander Hadden?had all completed 50 years of law practice in Cleveland, were being dined in consequence by the Cleveland Bar Association...
George B. Siddall, toastmaster, welcomed the four, read telegrams, handed them in sheaves around the table. His hair was white as the table napery, but these gentlemen ? Messrs. Burton, Goulder, Smith, Hadden?were among the older men at the Cleveland Bar when he came there in 1893, he said. He called upon them each in turn and they rose to reply. The well-fed lawyers of Cleveland, fathers of the law, bent forward, giving ear to the forefathers of their association...