Word: republicanized
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...case with the candidates for Governor. Reports last week had it that Governor Smith would seek a fourth term-and he is as Wet as all of Tammany; and reports had it that Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler, President of Columbia University and noted Wet, would be the Republican choice for Governor...
...issue, it is as a farm leader that Mr. Dawes is most likely to be a candidate* in 1928. This has made the Vice President some curious friends. One of them is Mr. Brookhart, who was defeated in 1924 because he denounced Mr. Dawes as part of the Republican ticket. Now Mr. Brookhart is quoting Dawes on farm relief in Iowa. Another is Senator Watson of Indiana. Senator Fess of Ohio, hoary onetime college president, launched a bitter attack on "this Dawes-McNary-Haugen plan...
...political situation in the state with the largest population last week began to clarify in complexion and assume very vivid colors in makeup. Some time ago the Democrats, whose stronghold is New York City, discovered that it was good policy to be Wet. The Republicans, much of whose strength is in upstate Dry regions, have heretofore been arid. The leaders to be chosen for this year's electoral battle were eagerly awaited. The one sure contestant had been Republican Senator Wadsworth, who comes up for reelection. He is the representative of a "landed family," the members of which have...
...suggested that the Republican organization in Iowa should promptly repudiate him and his "Bolshevism...
Buffalo has two other publishers and newspapers of note, both in her evening field. There is Publisher Norman E. Mack of the Times, onetime (1908) national Democratic chairman. And there is energetic Publisher Edward H. Butler, Yale graduate, Republican, who so far from being "sick of ink" runs his Evening News in a model establishment and has lately accepted the office of vice-president in the American Newspaper Publishers' Association (TIME...