Word: digester
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Mr.H. Glynn-Ward, in the Literary Digest's International book Review, has put Canada's ease. Canada is, not a land of eternal snows inhabited solely by vicious French Canadians, officers of the Royal Northwest Mounted always in summer costume, and decrepit log cabins, Transportation, He asserts, is provided for a large number of automobiles and a network of very fair railroads. Eskinio dog teams, while still employed in the outlying, districts, are no longer the only means of communication between Toronto and Montreal. And it does not snow all year round...
American Magazine, American Traveller's Gazette, Annalist, Asia, Blanco Y Negro, Canadian Magazine, Century Magazine, Classic (Shadowland), Country Life (England), Country Life in America, Dial, Freeman, Harper's, Harvard Graduates Magazine, Illustrated London News, L' Illustration, Independent, Insurance World, International Studio, Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology, Life, Literary Digest, London Mercury, Nation, National Geographic Magazine, New Republic, Outing, Outlook, Overland Monthly, Punch, Quarterly Journal of Economics, Review of Reviews, Saturday Evening Post, Scientific American Monthly, Scribners, Theatre, Vanity Fair, World's Work, Yale Alumni Weekly, Yale Review...
More significant than the Collier's straw vote is a poll just taken by The Literary Digest. Granting (with most political vaticinations) that President Harding will be renominated by the Republicans, The Digest took a poll of leading Democratic politicians to see whom they favored for the Democratic nominations. They were asked to pick a first, second and third choice...
...doing its stunt thus early, Collier's has apparently forestalled The Literary Digest...
...Digest's famous polls on the presidency and on prohibition were of distinct value. The value was due to the tremendous scope of the polls and to the fact that they were taken at "psychological moments." Collier's poll is more properly a "stunt,' signifying?whatever editorial writers feel like signifying...