Word: lloyds
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...Beal of Boston; Sub-Chairman, Joseph Humphrey Child of Westwood and Clark Hodder of Newton; George Wadsworth Burgess of Milton; Walter Leeds Chapin Jr. of St. Paul, Minnesota; Joe de Ganahi of White Plains, New York; Lewis Mills Gibb of New York City; Andrew Clarke Gunby of Sherman, Texas; Lloyd Onderdork Vernon Mann of Great Neck, L. I., New York; Charles Lawrences Peirson of Essex Falls, New Jersey; Boies Penrose 2d of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Otis Radcliffe Rice of Springfield; John Howland Ricketson 3d of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; Eric Sandquist of Concord, New Hampshire; James Bogert Tailer Jr. of New York City...
...like Lloyd George, Clemencean, and the Kaiser cannot get along without wars any more than a hen can get along without laying eggs," Syud Hossain, Indian journalist and descendant of the prophet Mohammed, told the Liberal Club yesterday in his speech on "Eastern and Western Ideals." "The war-maker cannot make peace...
Although Premier Baldwin has been the goat, the man who has brought British constitutional difficulties to a head, the coming of the crisis was only a matter of time. Since the break-down of Lloyd George's coalition government, the Conservatives and Liberals have been rocking more and more nearly to a balance; and with every rock the Labor party has stepped in from the outside and carried away an increasing number of split vote elections. The power of Labor grew tremendously under the impetus of the war. During the long and hard post-war period, people have seen unemployment...
...David Lloyd George, Liberal candidate for Carnarvon, made speeches in Wales and Lancashire. At Bolton, speaking with a microphone in his hand, he said: "John Bright's victory was a Lancashire victory." Then, in aside: "What about Cobden ? Was he a Lancashire man ?" The crowd, of course, heard him distinctly and hooted with mirth; whereupon Mr. George commented: "This is a mischevious instrument. I wondered if you heard it." He remarked that protection was useless, that the U. S. could not keep out British goods, that they would have to put a roof over the country in order...
Queried, he said that Premier Baldwin's Protection was a "quack political remedy " for unemployment. He expected Lloyd George would return to power. Asked about the much mooted payment of the debt owed by France to England he said...