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...Enlarged prostate gland," wrote Author Davis on the authority of Dr. Hugh H. Young, noted Johns Hopkins urologist, "occurs in-about one third of all men over 50." But Miss Davis has reassurance for all wives who, like fictitious Joan Carson, find their husbands have taken to sleeping in the guest room "after 26 years!" Get your husband to a doctor, is her advice for women whose mates are embarrassed with frequency and difficulty of urination. "Naturally such a condition affects any husband's marital life. That's easy to understand. And he approaches any treatment...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: No Cause for Alarm | 12/27/1937 | See Source »

Having investigated the Portland uproar the local Council of Churches wired President Roosevelt: "The local situation has reached an intolerable stage, and national influence ... is necessary to save the situation from serious consequences both to labor and the public." Portland's usually mild Mayor Joseph K. Carson, in Washington for the Mayors' Conference, dashed off a letter to Chairman Madden of the Labor Board demanding immediate intervention or "that you admit your inability to handle the situation or power to alleviate the workers...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: National Affairs: Northwest Front | 11/29/1937 | See Source »

Arranged for Chicago's Arts Club by pert, attractive Mrs. Robert S. Pirie when she and Mr. Pirie, whose father is president of Carson, Pirie, Scott & Co., drove their trailer to Mexico City last year, the show numbered 54 paintings, 36 of them new, by 14 first-string Mexican artists...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Mexicans & Friends | 11/22/1937 | See Source »

...outstanding contribution, I think, is Mr. Laughlin's story, "The River." The backnoyed theme of the Middle-Western boys with the vision of "a better, richer life far, far away" from Springfield, Wisconsin, is handled with maturity of perception and of style. The single incident of the story, where Carson and Craig pick up two girls in Paris, is deftly made the turning point in the action. The sense of drifting is given reality both by an expert use of detail, and by long idiomatic sentences, winding into patterns of thought, half speech, marked by the use of participles...

Author: By Walter E. Houghton jr., | Title: On The Rack | 11/17/1937 | See Source »

...does differ-as Esther Blodgett is supposed to differ from her competitors-in essentials. Trenchantly directed by William Wellman who, with Robert Carson, conceived the story from which Carson, Dorothy Parker and Alan Campbell wrote the screen play, handsomely photographed in the Technicolor which its producer, David Oliver Selznick, is pioneering with increasingly fortunate results, it emerges as a brilliant, honest and unfailingly exciting picture which, in the welter of verbiage about Hollywood heretofore contributed by stage and screen, stands as the last word and the best...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: The New Pictures: May 3, 1937 | 5/3/1937 | See Source »

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