Word: senors
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...Felipe Urzua, onetime President of the Chilean Supreme Court. Another is Senor Rafael Luis Gumucio, Vice President of the Chilean Conservative party, and onetime President of the Chilean Chamber of Deputies. Still another is Senor Enrique Caballero, so "Red" that Chilean Capitalists have elected him President of the Association of Employers of Chile...
Therefore, the Calles womenfolk were in a delicate position, last week, on the eve of Senorita Natalia's wedding to Senor Carlos Herrera, a minor government official. Would big, burly Papa Calles insist that his daughter should have only a civil marriage, demand that she live out of wedlock in the eyes of Roman Catholics...
...President brought the "rightness" of U. S. recognition of Senor Diáz down to a specific point. Was or was not Dr. Sacasa (the duly elected Vice President of Nicaragua) in Nicaragua on Nov. 10, 1926? He was not. Very well. Article 106 of the Nicaraguan Constitution provides that in the absence of the President and Vice President, the Congress shall designate one of its members to complete the unexpired presidential term. The Vice President was absent. The President, Se?r Solorzano had resigned. Therefore the Nicaraguan Congress acted constitutionally on Nov. 10, 1926, when it elected Adolfo Diaz President...
Seven weeks ago, Secretary of State Kellogg was pleased to hear that Senor Adolfo Diaz had been elected President of Nicaragua by that republic's congress in joint session. With startling speed he sent U. S. recognition to President Diaz, a Conservative, an oldtime friend of the U. S. Department of State, who was recently employed by a U. S. mining company for a few dollars per week. Headline readers in the U. S. said: "Isn't it nice that those Nicaraguans are fixed up at last?" But shrewder observers in Washington and all of Central America knew...
Death, clad in an assassin's cloak, sprang last week at Senor Adolfo Diaz whom the U. S. has recognized as President of Nicaragua (TIME. Nov. 29). The President was riding alone in his carriage at 11 p. m. when two men armed with machetes rushed upon it from an alley. Quick-witted, Senor Diaz leaped out of the left-hand door of his carriage as the men wrenched open the right-hand door. A machete hurtled, split the leather of the President's left heel, bit into his flesh. The coachman, faithful, sprang from his box, fell...