Word: cols
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...less strategically arranged by the two parties. Will Senator Norris plump for Smith in his nationwide hookup? What of Wisconsin's young La Follette: is he pro-Smith or just anti-Hoover? Cyrus McCormick, great-named oldtime Chicago Democrat, has not yet spoken. It is known, now, where Col. Lindbergh stands (pro-Hoover) and Bridegroom Tunney (pro-Smith). But where are the John Davison Rockefellers? Who gets Scarface Al Capone? Is Aimee Semple McPherson on the side of salvation and, if so, which side is that...
...answered police questions, then went to his work as clerk at the New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad. When news of the accident reached Washington, D. C., President Coolidge despatched his personal physician, Major James F. Coupal, to New Haven to attend the Venos. Also to New Haven went Col. Edward W. Starling of the Secret Service to watch over John Coolidge. Only a week before, for the first time in three years, John Coolidge had been allowed to go about without a Secret Service...
Soon fiery Count Kuno von Westarp, leader of the second largest political party in the land, Die Deutschnationale Volkspartei introduced a still more rabid Monarchist, Col. von Struense, who proceeded to utter things which Count von Westarp, because of his political status, dare not say. Bristling and bellicose, Col. von Struense roared: "A turning point in German history has arrived-this evening marks the beginning of a fight which can end only in the coronation of a German Kaiser...
...each rally Col. von Struense repeated that the turning point had now arrived, and explained that Monarchists should busy themselves with drumming up 20,000,000 votes, the legal number required to make effective a referendum on the question of whether Germany shall remain a Republic or revert to the status of Empire...
...parachutes, jumped. Lieut. W. L. Cornelius was too hasty. His parachute caught on the instrument board and he was dragged to his death with the two machines which crashed, locked together. So died the second of the army's famous "Three Musketeers" (TIME, Sept. 24). At Mines Field Col. Charles A. Lindbergh was for a time the leader of this group of which Lieut. Irving A. Woodring is now the sole survivor...