Word: democrats
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1929
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...ready for producing goods on a large scale capacity, greater than any other nation. A high tariff is the only protection the United States has to offset, for, if it is lowered, the high-waged American worker will meet the direct competition of the low-waged German. "As a Democrat, I think it is impossible to change the present tariff...
...Wadsworth Jr., went on and on in a way that would have given any social secretary the willies. Midway in the long second paragraph Mr. Root's meaning became clear-he, Republican, was writing an endorsement of Mr. Wadsworth, Republican, by quoting the late Thomas R. Marshall, Democrat...
...Court would be a factor in the peace of the world, but if I had that vote to cast over again, I would vote against any Court that is a party to the League of Nations." Most significant of all is the case of Senator Park Trammell of Florida, Democrat. He announced last week not only that he had changed his mind, but also that he would start a movement in the next session of Congress to have the U. S. withdraw its resolution for entrance into the World Court. Said he: "I feel that it is more apparent...
...morning last week, Manhattan Democrats arose, glanced as usual with real pleasure at their copy of the New York World. Knowing from experience that the World would let no day go by without chucking the Administration under the chin, they turned confidently to the editorial page, ran expectant gaze over a column captioned "Author! Author!" Could it be true? The opening paragraph ran, ". . . Mr. Coolidge really ought to think twice about making such a speech as he made Tuesday evening. Another speech like this one, and first thing Mr. Coolidge knows he may have a suit for plagiarism...
...piscatorial encounter, but his merest fishing experience has been nationally recounted. Mr. Dawes intends to capture trout in the Rocky Mountain streams, unseen, unpublished. Four years come and go, and again sweltering delegates in some hot metropolis cast their state's several votes as a unit for some Democratic Presidential candidate. Again they cast them, again and again,* until in desperation they compromise on some one who can attain the two-thirds majority necessary for Democratic nomination. Last week John W. Davis, one-time nominee (1924), corporation lawyer emitted a dictum and a prophesy for his party: The dictum...