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Kellogg, Frank B. (Frank Billings), 1856-1937

36 Results

Letter from Theodore Roosevelt to Frank B. Kellogg

Letter from Theodore Roosevelt to Frank B. Kellogg

Theodore Roosevelt asks Frank B. Kellogg to notify him when he comes to visit New York, and invites him to lunch some day. Roosevelt mentions that a government committee has been threatening to call him to give testimony relating to the Steel Trust matter, but Roosevelt does not believe he ever discussed the matter with Kellogg and is indifferent to whether they call or not.

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1911-06-19

Telegram from Theodore Roosevelt to Frank B. Kellogg

Telegram from Theodore Roosevelt to Frank B. Kellogg

President Roosevelt hopes that Frank B. Kellogg is not moved by the clamor surrounding the injunction plank, as it has been stirred up by the Manufacturers’ Association. The plank will try to call the attention of the courts “to a bad habit into which some judges have fallen,” and Roosevelt expects that they will neither satisfy the extreme labor agitator nor the extreme representatives of the Manufacturers’ Association, but will be seek to be fair to all American citizens.

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1908-06-16

Telegram from Theodore Roosevelt to Frank B. Kellogg

Telegram from Theodore Roosevelt to Frank B. Kellogg

President Roosevelt believes that officials of the Great Western road have not informed Frank B. Kellogg of the effects of their actions, and that representatives of the labor organizations feel the result is a deception. He advises Kellogg to have the action held off until he can investigate further and advises him to meet with Charles Patrick Neill and Martin A. Knapp of the Interstate Commerce Commission.

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1908-03-16