Word: ve
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...ve got until March 4 to pass this bill. Well, this bill won't go through before March 4. You can put that in your pipe and smoke...
...York Herald Tribune: "This bill is a package of dynamite quite sufficiently charged to wreck the Democratic party and blow up the Roosevelt administration. The opportunities for corruption are infinite. The appearance of favoritism, injustice and scandal is certain. . . . The sponsors of this bill are very naïve indeed if they think that a billion dollars in taxes can be levied upon necessities . . . without provoking violent resentment in the industrial sections of the country. . . . If this bill goes into effect, Mr. Roosevelt will be in for trouble compared with which Mr. Hoover's experiences in farm relief will...
Mayor O'Brien to the Men's Hat Trade & Allied Industries: "You men who have risen to the pinnacle of industrial success know that you have been helped to success by faith in yourself. I've got some of that...
...Mayor Bliss announced that the city's merchants would draw their shades but keep their doors open during the funeral. Said he: "I'm not going to ask them to close because I don't think Calvin Coolidge would want that. He knew what they've been through. Every nickel counts with them. He wouldn't want them to lose a sale...
...more than sanctity about Mr. Chilvester's house. Yes, drains! First to notice it is not any inhabitant of the house but the Dean's nephew, young Christopher, who as an architect takes an interest in such things. He also takes an interest in naïve young Emily Chilvester, a more academic interest in Invalid Sister Lilian's mystical drawings...