Word: reading
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...economist and attorney at law. Since the first day I read a copy of TIME about a year ago, I have been intending to write about it. For a busy man, interested to some extent in everything, it is the best publication of this...
...best free press agents you have. Personally, if I could find time to read only one weekly publication, it would be yours. Keep it up. I love the style and satiric frankness...
...still take the Digest for its "Topics of the Day," "Fun from the Press" and "Summary of Domestic and Foreign News." It takes only a few minutes to read these...
...their Jackson day dinner last January (TIME, Jan. 23) in Washington, nationally important Democrats sat transported by the oratory of a mild-mannered gentleman from Manhattan. Some of them had read his most famed book, Jefferson and Hamilton. Some of them were in the habit of reading the editorials he writes for the New York Evening World. But few of them had realized what a whacking fine speaker he is. Last week, when nationally important Democrats met again in Washington, they elected the mild-mannered Manhattanite-Orator Claude Ger-nade Bowers, native of Indiana-to make the party...
...diseases are more undignified in adults than mumps and few adults are more dignified than U. S. Senators. It was with sympathy not unmixed with glee that readers of The Club-Fellow, jaunty "national journal of society," read last week that "Senator Joe Robinson has been suffering that undignified disease . . . and Senator Hiram Johnson of California has the mumps too." These two gentlemen sit well apart in the Senate Chamber, on opposite sides of the aisle. Mumps being most contagious, there was prospect of more mumps among the Senators. Near California's white-crested Johnson sit Indiana...