Word: pharmacists
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...Cabana Fortress' 21-gun salute to the New President at the count of nine. Gently he began to move his troops into Havana, to police stations, doorways, roofs. His chief opponent, ex-President Grau's ubiquitous Secretary of War, Navy and Interior Antonio Guiteras, a onetime pharmacist who had somehow got Cuba's 1,000 sailors in his pocket, fled to a Cuban gunboat in the harbor. A few amiable soldiers and civilians stood guard around President Hevia's palace. Getting the heavy scent of trouble, the ABC revolutionary society boys handed around a fresh shipment...
...often that a forester's name appears in TIME and when it does, it seems too bad to have him labeled a "pharmacist" (TIME, April 10, p. 40). The acting president of the University of Washington is Hugo Winkenwerder. no pharmacist, but a forester of standing and dean of its College of Forestry...
...Bellevue Hotel and in front of old Granary burying ground. The Athenaeum's interior was remodeled in 1913 but it is still mellow, musty. Its most famed room is the Scruple Room, so-called because the large collection of pornographic books it contains is catalogued with a pharmacist's "scruple mark." To draw books from these shelves one must go to the librarian and boldly name the book. The Athenaeum has a creaky elevator, manned by kindly old Thomas, who wears black gloves in summer, drinks his tea daily in the elevator at half-past four...
...friend of the head pharmacist of the U. S. had a sore foot. He bought some bichloride of mercury tablets for an antiseptic footwash. Several days later he took several "Aspirin" tablets, died poisoned by the deadly bichloride. Therefore last week U. S. manufacturing druggists and editors of pharmaceutical journals had on their desks copies of a sharp letter from Dr. Ernest Fullerton Cook, chairman of the revision committee of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia and the dead man's friend. Dr. Cook's letter reminded every one that it was just to prevent such accidents that the Pharmacopoeia...
...Rusby, 75, retiring after 26 years as Dean of Columbia's Faculty of Pharmacy. An old-school man to the end, in his age a bitter crusader against what he calls the Drug Trust, Dean Rusby wrote: "Instead of manufacturing his galencials as in times past, he [the pharmacist] now depends almost wholly on the manufacturer. . . . With his legitimate professional occupation thus reduced, the pharmacist turns to merchandising and carries it into lines that are professionally degradinG...