Word: republicanized
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Governor Small is also her enemy, her chosen enemy. Long ago she promised to overthrow him if no man could be found to do it. Yet in this primary, Small quietly helped her, figuring she would strengthen the Republican ticket he hoped to head next autumn. Mayor Thompson helped, too. Mrs. McCormick let them help. She learned party regularity long ago from her father, the late, sapient Marcus Alonzo Hanna of Ohio. And the law of party regularity is the law of the jungle: when the pack can help you hunt, do not be squeamish about the pack...
...actual, visible contacts went, however, Mrs. McCormick strove alone against the Messrs. Rathbone and Yates, with her own statewide chain of women's Republican clubs. When the returns came in, she was to be seen nowhere near the smoke-fouled headquarters of Small or Thompson. She had headquarters of her own in Chicago, full of fresh air, flowers, candy and lady friends. Her daughter, Katrina, helped answer the telephone. Her friend Mrs. Alice Roosevelt Longworth, the "Princess Alice" of Rooseveltian days at the White House and now the wife of the Speaker of the House, helped add up returns...
...Representatives Edith Nourse Rogers of industrial Massachusetts and Mary T. Norton of industrial New Jersey represent their home districts, are not Congressmen-at-large. At the New Jersey primary on May 15, a candidate for the Republican nomination for U. S. Senator will be Mrs. Lillian F. Feickert, forceful...
...Bremen, a coalition of Socialists, Communists and Democrats prevented the Municipal Council from sending the German fliers praise because the plane had carried Monarchist instead of Republican colors...
...Myers, writing on the Republican Party, is perhaps more profound. He seeks more after causes and issues, and naturally enough sometimes is rather hard put to find them. He tries to generalize on the principles and characteristics of one party as distinct from the other, differences perhaps more apparent than real. The presidents, from Lincoln to Coolidge, he considers both as individuals and as party leaders...