href="@public@vhost@g@gutenberg@html@files@13748@[email protected]#VIII" class="pginternal" tag="{http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml}a">Norfolk Republican Club, Boston, October 9, 1916
Public Meeting on the High Cost of Living, Faneuil Hall, December 9, 1916
One Hundredth Anniversary Dinner of the Provident Institution for Savings, December 13, 1916
Associated Industries Dinner, Boston, December 15, 1916
On the Nature of Politics
Tremont Temple, November 3, 1917
Dedication of Town-House, Weston, November 27, 1917
Amherst Alumni Dinner, Springfield, March 15, 1918
Message for the Boston Post, April 22, 1918
Roxbury Historical Society, Bunker Hill Day, June 17, 1918
Fairhaven, July 4, 1918
Somerville Republican City Committee, August 7, 1918
Written for the Sunday Advertiser and American, September 1, 1918
Essex County Club, Lynnfield, September 14, 1918
Tremont Temple, November 2, 1918
Faneuil Hall, November 4, 1918
From Inaugural Address as Governor, January 2, 1919
Statement on the Death of Theodore Roosevelt
Lincoln Day Proclamation, January 30, 1919
Introducing Henry Cabot Lodge and A. Lawrence Lowell at the Debate on the League of Nations, Symphony Hall, March 19, 1919
Veto of Salary Increase
Flag Day Proclamation, May 26, 1919
Amherst College Commencement, June 18, 1919
Harvard University Commencement, June 19, 1919
Plymouth, Labor Day, September 1, 1919
Westfield, September 3, 1919
A Proclamation, September 11, 1919
An Order to the Police Commissioner of Boston, September 11, 1919
A Telegram to Samuel Gompers, September 14, 1919
A Proclamation, September 24, 1919
Holy Cross College, June 25, 1919
Republican State Convention, Tremont Temple, October 4, 1919
Williams College, October 17, 1919
Concerning Teachers' Salaries, October 29, 1919
Statement to the Press, Election Day, November 4, 1919
Speech at Tremont Temple, Saturday, November 1, 1919, 8 P.M.
HAVE FAITH
IN
MASSACHUSETTS
I
TO THE STATE SENATE ON BEING ELECTED ITS PRESIDENT
JANUARY 7, 1914
Honorable Senators:—I thank you—with gratitude for the high honor given, with appreciation for the solemn obligations assumed—I thank you.
This Commonwealth is one. We are all members of one body. The welfare of the weakest and the welfare of the most powerful are inseparably bound together. Industry cannot flourish if labor languish. Transportation cannot prosper if manufactures decline. The general welfare cannot be provided for in any