Word: colts
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...Aqueduct, August Belmont's impressive three-year-old, Ladkin, easily disposed of Sinclair's Mad Play, and was hailed as the year's best colt. Ladkin's time, 1.49 4-5 for the mile-and-an-eighth, was but 4/5 of a second outside of Grey Lag's course record, set last year under identical weight (123 Ibs.). Moreover, it was said that Jockey Maiben pulled Ladkin up through the last sixteenth...
...have married: Walter Amory, to Elizabeth Lowell Hancock Cole, August 25, 1923; Aaron Morsey Angenitzky, to Rebecca E. Cherkassky, March 14, 1922; Dominick Bianchi, to Edith Tarossj, August 19, 1922; Thomas Morrison Carnegie Jr., to Dorothy Duncan, June 26, 1922; Tung Liang Chang, to Suzanne Wang; Charles Cary Colt, to Amy Lee, December 4, 1923; Thomas Roscoe Conklin, to Jane Elizabeth Waters, June 28, 1923; Newcomb Fuller, to Pauline Eddy, December 29, 1923; Lloyd Francis Harris, to Dorothy Harriet Daniels, June 12, 1923; Walter Hamor Piston, to Kathryn Nason, September 14, 1920; Otto Frank Reis, to Evelyn Helen Walz...
Senators and. Representatives conferred at the White House. Senator Colt of Rhode Island was one of those who went there. Le Baron Bradford Colt is distinguished because he is Chairman of the Senate Immigration Committee, because he was one of six Senators who voted against the present bill and because his nephew married Ethel Barrymore. He sees only harm in the Japanese exclusion provision. His tactful suggestions were listened...
...Senate Republicans?the venerable Colt, and Weller?voted against the Senate bill, and four Democrats, Bayard, Gerry, King, Walsh (Mass...
Secretary Hughes submitted the Hanihara correspondence to Senator Colt, Chairman of the Senate Immigration Committee. Its publication occasioned Senatorial thumpings, and oratorical flurries, including an effort from Senator Shortridge of California, who branded Hanihara's protest as a "spurious, verbose communication, unfounded on fact," Ex-Senator Phelan of California issued a statement demanding that the United States rescind the Gentlemen's Agreement and regulate its own immigration laws rather than delegate this authority to another country. He was supported by the American Legion, the National Grange, the American Federation of Labor, and the Native Sons of the Golden...