Word: clevelands
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...months and years, one Sachs, said to be a private detective, said to be a German-American, has been puttering about Germany, announcing now and then, "I'll get something on Grover Cleveland Bergdoll...
...Calvin Coolidge for vice-president, and the second to characterize Theodore Roosevelt as un-American in the presence of a senatorial committee. This interesting opinion was drawn from him by Hiram Johnson, who has never liked the Judge since the latter violated his pledge to support him at the Cleveland Convention. The California senator chortling with glee at the result of his cross-examination, then glanced significantly at his colleagues. And their subsequent decision proved to Mr. McCamant that his denunciation had indeed been inexpedient...
...announced that the President would contribute an article for a memorial number of the Michiganensian (University of Michigan) to be published next June in honor of the late President Marion LeRoy Burton, friend of the President and onetime neighbor at Northampton, Mass., who nominated him at Cleveland in 1924. ¶Following the passage of an appropriation of $50,000 for the expenses of U. S. delegates to the League of Nations preliminary disarmament conference, the President notified the League Secretariat that the U. S. would participate in the work of the Preparatory Commission, as it is called. Hugh Gibson...
Electric welding is not new to machine shops, especially locomotive works, but for structural steel work a new type of welder had to be evolved. The "Stable-Arc" welders used by the Morgan Co. were built by the Lincoln Electric Co. of Cleveland and mounted on hand trucks. The process: a high frequency arc up to 300 volts is applied to a bar of steel corresponding to a bar of tinsmith's solder, which is pressed along the crevice between two surfaces that are to be joined. The bar is melted, as are both the girder surfaces along the line...
...court stenographer in Manhattan. At 23 he was acting as principal of a preparatory school. Entering the service of the state through a minor post-office job, he somehow became stenographer to President Cleveland in his 33rd year. President McKinley made him his Assistant Secretary. President Roosevelt appointed him the first Secretary in his newly created Department of Commerce and Labor. Two years later he became Postmaster General, and at the end of another two years he was appointed Secretary of the Treasury. During the latter part of his cabinet career, the great corporations which he now heads recognized...