Word: sicked
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Anxious to learn how the pool profited $4,925,000 on an investment of $12,683,000, the Committee called Broker Meehan. He had sailed for Europe the night before, "a very sick man." They also called Pool Manager Bradford Ellsworth. He was reported to be in Canada. Though he had been ill in Florida during the actual operations, Co-manager Thomas E. Bragg confirmed the facts & figures that Counsel Gray adduced...
...surgeons at New Haven Surgeon John Fraser, Edinburgh specialist, said: "If my wife or any of my children are sick I call in our family physician, and rely upon his judgment. Even though I am a physician, I would not attempt to select a specialist for a member of my own family...
Health insurance seems to promise adequate medical attention for everybody and adequate livelihood for the physician. Exclaimed Dr. Fishbein, spurting to the end of his long discourse: "People know that death is inevitable. In teaching preventive medicine, we have emphasized that sickness may be prevented. Today we know that some sickness for every family is just as inevitable as death, and unless obstetrics continue to be inevitable there will be no population for the future. Let us, therefore, teach the worker that 2,000,000 people are sick every day in 120,000,000 population, and that this number...
After six years of "sick-leave" from direct command of Cities Service and Henry L. Doherty & Co., he decided to celebrate his 62nd birthday by returning and becoming again the active executive head of both. Coincidental with his birthday was the opening of his new building in Manhattan, "Sixty Wall Tower" (at No. 70 Pine Street). The building cost $7,500,000, stands on land of the same value. Its 67 stories and 950-ft. height rank it as Manhattan's third tallest. Notable innovation in it are double-deck elevators, one compartment of which stops at even floors...
When little Ko-sen falls so sick that no pellets from his family's traditional medicine-chest seem to help, his family sends him to the temple, the traditional cure-all for human ills. Recovered, Ko-sen is now a temple-boy, belonging to the pot-bellied gilt gods. Though given to the gods, he feels no dedication in himself, contrives after a time to run away with Fah-li, another temple boy. In the first town they come to they hear a revolutionary orator recruiting volunteers. Ko-sen is much impressed by the new ideas of liberation from traditional...