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...susceptibility to dental caries (decay) have been traced through four human generations. But most dentists agreed last week that diet is of prime importance, especially in childhood. They were interested in the report of University of Chicago's Biochemist Milton Hanke on a three-year experiment at Mooseheart (Ill.) Orphanage. He found that large amounts of orange juice (at least eight ounces per day) tended to decrease tooth decay by one half. Dr. Henry Aria Honoroff reported that orphans in Chicago's Marks Nathan Home with institutional diet & care and periodic examinations, had teeth 85% healthier than those...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Dentists in Chicago | 8/21/1933 | See Source »

...celebrate Rosh Hashanah, the Government had concluded its case. It had tried to show that in 1930-31 several Moose charity balls were held throughout the land, the tickets to which entered purchasers in raffles for sizeable cash awards. During the two years $2,200,000 was taken in. Mooseheart (Ill.) orphanage, for whose benefit the balls were ostensibly staged, got $250,000. Of the remainder, some $400,000 went to promoters Bernard C. McGuire & Theodore G. Miller of the Moose "propagation Department," $200,000 was refunded in prizes, $173,000 went to Moose Davis, the balance to local...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: CRIME: After the Ball | 10/10/1932 | See Source »

...council nor Moose Davis had any cognizance of Promoter McGuire's contract. Case for the defense was that although almost every other Moose in the country was aware of the lottery, Moose Davis was in total ignorance. True, he had attended a banquet and personally presented lottery profits to Mooseheart, but he did not necessarily know whence the money came. True, a consignment of lottery tickets had reached his Pittsburgh office, but Moose Davis was rarely there. Since 1930, when he sold the organization department to Moose Fred W. Jones (his financial agent) and Moose Joseph A. Jenkins (his secretary...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: CRIME: After the Ball | 10/10/1932 | See Source »

Senator Davis became director general of the Order of Moose in 1906 with a contract that gave him all initiation fees for his promotion work. The order's orphanage at Mooseheart, Ill. was his special charity. When he became Secretary of Labor in 1921, he talked Moose to all- comers, signed up Senators and Congressmen. Smart politicians took care to join the Secretary's order when they wanted favors at the Labor Department. When Moose Davis resigned from the Cabinet in 1930 to take a Senate seat, he sold his promotion contract to other members of the order...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: CRIME: Moose, Eagles | 8/29/1932 | See Source »

Secretary of Labor Davis wanted to divide his free time this summer between politics in Pennsylvania where he is the Republican Senatorial nominee and Mooseheart, 111., where he is head of the Loyal Order of Moose...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE CABINET: Vacations | 8/4/1930 | See Source »

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