Word: proudly
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...news in these United States, and they, to say the least, have their limitations. So a few ambitious and wealthy newspapers have set up their own foreign news services. Not the least of these services is that of the Public Ledger (Philadelphia). Of this service the Ledger is very proud, speaks of it frequently and devotes a special page of its paper to featuring...
...sometime in the future, unless there comes some change in tactics. And that change can never be looked for so long as this country keeps locked up at home the guarantee of help which France has wanted so badly. The veterans of the war are no longer proud of America. One of these veterans, writing in a recent issue of Collier's Weekly, has demanded to know what kind of recompense this isolation is for the immense sacrifice that they made. How in fact have these veterns been repaid? By promises of a bonus which a large number of them...
...redemption which finds in the whole world thousands of admirers and proselytes. A great part of the Spanish Army and people? indeed, almost all of them?realized that the example of Fascismo in Italy could be imitated and they performed the same work of redemption. This I am proud to proclaim today before the head of the Italian State, who is also head of Fascismo...
...them Japan, who followed " the example of the U. S." "The U. S. agreed that if Korea should be unjustly or oppressively dealt with it would exert its ' good offices.' Yet we find Korea absorbed by the very power which guaranteed its independence, and a people once proud to call themselves Korean citizens now reduced to ' people without a country,' with no one to speak in their behalf...
...chiefly the common sense of humor which guffaws at any joke smacking of anything alcoholic, which seizes on any case of drunkenness it may, and spreads the story as fast as it may, that is responsible. Perhaps this tendency reacts to make some few men proud beyond the average of their drunkenness, and so further encourages publicity. Certain it is that daily papers, as a rule, exaggerate the importance of the evil, in their attempt to cater to public taste.--The very fact that illicit liquor is so increasedly expensive prevents much drunkenness--but, it seems, Harvard, Yale and Princeton...