Word: johnson
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Docket number 83 is the Marshall Club (Leggett, Shay) versus the Fultton Club (FitzGerald, Monahan). The meeting will be at Phillips Brooks House with W. D. Johnson 3L as chief justice...
...planned guise of death, has signed away his coffersful to his servant, Mosca throws into his teeth the question: "Who are you?", and there is no real answer. Volpone is no longer Volpone, for Volpone made a will and died. But he never was anyone; even to Johnson he never was more real than the idea of greed...
...Secretary of State (1927-28), Mr. Olds was well-nigh indispensable to Mr. Kellogg. Today there is really no "favorite" among the four men on whom, the secretary chiefly leans:1) Under Secretary J. Reuben Clark Jr., and Assistant Secretaries 2) William R. Castle Jr. (Europe); 3) Nelson T. Johnson (Far East); 4) Francis White (Latin America). Among veteran Washington correspondents the consensus is: 1) The President and the Secretary of State are "close friends," but not quite "intimate friends"; 2) Relations are close and cordial between Mr. Kellogg and Messrs. Morrow, Houghton, Hughes; 3) Senator Borah probably prefers...
...foes" were "hurling" questions, suggestions, criticisms. The Senator passed from the oratorical into the conversational; galleries and stenographers strained ears to catch low-toned thrusts and parries. Relatively in the background remained Senator Reed of Missouri, big anti-treaty gun still to be shot off. Meanwhile Bruce of Maryland, Johnson of California, Robinson of Indiana, Bingham of Connecticut, many another smaller gun popped, snapped, sputtered. The Senator from Idaho began somewhat to resemble an Horatius at the bridge, a Leonidas at Thermopylae. It was a sham battle, inasmuch as there existed an almost universal opinion that the treaty would easily...
Senator Hiram Johnson of California referred to the Spanish War, asked whether the U. S. could have gone to war over the Maine had the Kellogg Pact been in effect in 1898. Senator Borah replied that the U. S. could then have gone to war, since its ship had been blown up, its sailors killed...