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Speeches, Writings, and Related Material, 1887-1947 (continued)
“The Biggest New Naval Offensive of the War”
“The Plain American Sailor Who Saved a Ship and His Shipmates”
“Washington Belles Feared They Would Catch Measles from Prince Undine”
“If Germans Had Cut Every Cable, We Could Still Have Talked to Europe”
“Some Kings I Have Met”
“Balfour, the Philosopher”
“Which Helps Most? Your Critics or Your Friends?”
“What Is To Be the Fighting Craft of the Future?”
“Marshal Joffre More Than A Fighter”
“Who Can Censor the Censor”
“Building a Thousand Ships”
“Big Tasks That the Navy Accomplished”
“The Mobilization of Inventive Talent”
“Study Means Better Life,” The Young Man and Study, 1921
Syndicated articles for Twenty-First Century Press
Correspondence, 1921
Foreword to Anchors Aweigh, circa 1921
Syndicated articles, Woodrow Wilson, 1924
Correspondence, 1924-1925
BOX 730 List of articles
“Wilson the Mystic”
“House and Wilson”
“Wilson and Grayson”
“Wilson on Garrison”
“Fall as Diagnostician”
“Wilson and Ford”
“The Harvey Myth”
“How Wilson Met Lloyd George”
“Wilson and Lansing”
(2 folders)
“Wilson and Bryan”
BOX 731 “Wilson and Bill McDonald”
“Wilson and Lodge”
“Wilson and Brandeis”
“Wilson as Military Strategist”
“Wilson as a Political Leader”
“Why Wilson Went to Paris”
“Wilson and W. B. Wilson”
“Wilson and Education”
“Wilson and Teapot Dome”
“Wilson and Mexico”
“Wilson and the Irish”
“Wilson and the Germans”
BOX 732 “Wilson and Italy”
“Wilson and Neutrality”
“Wilson and Privilege”
“Wilson and Remarriage”
“Wilson and Newspaper Men”
Fragments
Proofs
“Wilson and Bryan,” Saturday Evening Post, 1925, Sept 5.
Correspondence
“At Last the Inside Reasons Given of William Jennings Bryan's Resignation From the Wilson Cabinet,” Liberty, 1925, Correspondence
(2 folders)
[Naval Disarmament] circa 1925
Articles for the Republic Syndicate
Behind the Scenes With William Jennings Bryan, 1925-1926
Correspondence
(2 folders)
“Goodbye, Mr. Bryan-God Bless You, Mr. President”
“When Wilson and Bryan First Disagreed”
“Bryan Ranks With Jefferson in Amending Constitution”
“Bryan-Man of Peace-as a Soldier”
“Preaching Bryan's Funeral' in 1904"
“The Famous Bryan-Champ Clark Feud”
“When the Commoner Was the Hon. Secretary of State”
“Did Bryan Throw Away the Presidency in 1906?”
BOX 733 “Who Was the Original Bryan Man?”
“Bryan and His Grape Juice Breakfasts”
“Was Bryan, as He Believed, Elected in 1896?”
“Wilson and Bryan Contrasted”
“When Bryan Got Mad”
“When Bryan Called the ’Figgers'”
“Bryan at Yale”
“The Great ’Silver Duel' Between Bryan and Hill”
“Bryan's Fight for ’One Term for President”
“When Bryan Was Actually a Dictator”
Fragments
Articles on Woodrow Wilson and the Cabinet
Correspondence, 1925-1926
“Progress in North Carolina,” 1926, Sept.
“The Naval Battle of Paris,” circa 1926
[Admiral Sims] circa 1927
Syndicated column
Proofs
1929-1932
(7 folders)
BOX 734 Undated
Correspondence, 1924-1932
(8 folders)
BOX 735 1930, July 12, “The Problem of Haiti,” Saturday Evening Post
(3 folders)
1933, Sept., “The New Deal Traces Its Ancestry Back to Jefferson,' Today
circa 1933, “Fifty Years of It”
1934, Sept. 8, “Navy Honors General Pershing on His Birthday,” Army and Navy Journal
1934, Sept., Review of The Idea of National Interest
circa 1935, Mar, [Haywood County] The Mountaineer
1935, Apr., “To Foster Patriotism and Secure Liberty,” The Note Book
1936, Feb., “Col. L. L. Polk as I Knew Him,” Progressive Farmer
1936, June, [Significance of July 4]
1936, July, “Chicken Itza and Uxmal,” American Foreign Service Journal
1936, circa Aug. “The Constitution Was Made for Man Not Man for the Constitution,” World Affairs Interpreter
circa 1936, Foreword to The Crusading Commoner
1937, Mar., “The Most Solemn Thrill of the World War: 4 July 1917”
1937, Foreword to The Republic of Czechoslovakia (includes correspondence with Vlastimil Kymal)
circa 1938, July, [The Southern Economy]
1938, Aug., “The American Navy in the World War,” Army and Navy Journal
circa 1939, [U.S. Entry Into World War I]
circa 1940, Nov., “Eyes North, Eyes South,” Hoy
circa 1940, “Benjamin Ryan Tillman”
1941, June, Article for the Edmund Burke American Memorial Committee, “Edmund Burke Still Lives in North Carolina,” and correspondence, 1939-1941
1941, July 4, [Pan Americanism] Democracia
1941, July, “This Is Our Hemisphere,” Mexican-American Review
1941, July-Aug., “The South and World Affairs”
circa 1941, “Who Was This Chapman and When Did He Crow?”
1942, Jan., “Our Bill of Rights,” Opinion
circa 1942, Dec., [Woodrow Wilson]
circa 1942, “Enemy Number One”
circa 1944, “Can a Southerner Be a Liberal?”
1945, Jan., "Who was Chapman and When Did He Crow?"
1945, May 20, Article for Associated Press [1918 Peace Plan]
1946, “North Carolina's Part in the Wilson Administration”
undated, “The Boy Is Father to the Man”
undated, “Bryan an Apostle of Peace”
BOX 736 undated, “Bryan and the Mexican Revolution”
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