Word: republicanized
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...special train to Washington, where he arrived late in the evening. He and Mrs. Coolidge went to the Willard Hotel, which has been their Washington home. He held conferences on succeeding days in his old offices in the Senate building. He saw Chairman John T. Adams of the Republican National Committee, D. R. Crissinger (Governor of the Federal Reserve Board), Chairman Farley of the Shipping Board, Senator Cummins of Iowa, John Hays Hammond (Chairman of the Coal Commission), President Samuel Gompers of the American Federation of Labor...
...Coolidge's recent innocuous desuetude may be attributed to the office that he has held during the last two years. But he is an able politician; he has never been defeated in an election. It is not to be gratuitously assumed that he will not figure in the Republican National Convention next year...
Theoretically the field is open to all contenders for the Republican Presidential nomination in 1924. Mr. Coolidge is now in a position where he can make himself felt if he chooses. He had such a position before, as Governor of Massachusetts, and he went to the Convention of 1920 with many more strongly marked attributes than did Senator Harding. By forcing action on any one of numerous issues the new President may make himself a power to be reckoned with...
...chair can be mainly attributed to a strong feeling of confidence in President Coolidge, increased by his wise announcement that the late President Harding's policies and Cabinet would not be changed. The only uneasiness which the painful event created in business circles was in connection with the Republican nomination in 1924. Little important change in the wholesale markets occurred, although the downward price movement continued to some extent in cotton and sugar. Merchants and manufacturers continue more optimistic as a class regarding the business prospects of next Fall and Winter than do bankers and security buyers. This, however...
...kindly any Democratic ticket which includes the publisher's wife. The death of Congressman W. Bourke left a vacancy in the 16th Congressional District, Manhattan. Tammany is casting around for a candidate, and whomever Tammany picks is almost sure to be elected. The district went Democratic even in the Republican landslide...