Word: sicklied
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...Sick Convict...
Former Governor Warren T. McCray of Indiana, brother-in-law of George Ade (humorist), unsuccessful farmer, K. K. K. enthusiast, now lies sick in the Atlanta penitentiary, where he was sent two years ago for using the mails to defraud. In April, big Senator Watson, politically powerful, pleaded before President Coolidge for the convict's release; last week he tried again (bringing along the other Indiana Senator). But the convict's term of ten years, despite the convict's friends, remains unabbreviated...
Next day, Senator Reed, (Dem.) of Missouri, stood up again: "The attempt to pass such a bill as this makes me sick all over-I hope to God that the Dawes' plan which he worked out for Europe is not so rotten economically as this...
...that 20 years ago I was a very sick man and I went to the best orthodox authorities, and except for such matters as surgery and dentistry, they did me no good whatever, and they charged me many thousands of dollars. Bernard McFadden taught me how to keep well and charged me nothing. So whenever I see "vicious" attacks upon him I rise to tell what I know...
Buffalo has two other publishers and newspapers of note, both in her evening field. There is Publisher Norman E. Mack of the Times, onetime (1908) national Democratic chairman. And there is energetic Publisher Edward H. Butler, Yale graduate, Republican, who so far from being "sick of ink" runs his Evening News in a model establishment and has lately accepted the office of vice-president in the American Newspaper Publishers' Association (TIME...