Word: illness
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...great many rather unlovely characters of history have been compared to Nero, but that President Coolidge should be spoken of in the same breath with the ill-famed Emperor seemed, until last week, almost incredible. The feat was performed, however, by Editor Basil M. Manly of People's Business, a journal which voices the views of LaFollette Progressives...
...fact remains, as every physician and many a patient knows, that the doctor's fees are fitted to his patient's purse. Those Illinois doctors may charge the double fees to neurasthenics, cranks and flustery mothers with ill-natured babies whose night calls are unwarranted. The rich, too, may be charged double. But the needy and the veritably sick will be charged in proper measure, for medicine is still a profession in Illinois...
WILLIAM ELEAZAR BARTON, 66, Oak Park, Ill.; retired as clergyman, active as writer, father of Bruce Barton, famed advertising agent...
Died. Keith Preston, 42, able colyumist of the Chicago Daily News; of pneumococcus meningitis; in Evanston, Ill...
...months ago, well-meaning Mr. Forrest, whose years of scrivening and dubious golf game have not dulled his sensibilities and his imagination, stood outside the offices of a leading Paris newspaper and watched the posting of bulletins about ill-fated Flyers Coli and Nungesser. Several thousands of Frenchmen surrounded Mr. Forrest and when a bulletin was posted saying that the flyers had been falsely reported safe in the U. S., Mr. Forrest interpreted the Frenchmen's noisy grief and disappointment as an "anti-A m e r i c a n demonstration." Other U. S. correspondents in Paris soon...