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...poor have their champions. The rich need none. The British middle classes had one in William Ewart Gladstone (1809-98) and today the U. S. is offered another by Walter Boughton Pitkin, 62, Columbia University publicist who discovered seven years ago that "life begins at 40." Last year prodigious Professor Pitkin explained "why we need a rabble rouser of the right" (TIME, Sept. 19). Last week he tried rousing Elyria, Ohio and so many people (over 600) went to hear him that he called for a League of the Middle Class...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: POLITICAL NOTES: Middle Rouser | 7/10/1939 | See Source »

Last week, John A. Casterline of Dover, N. J., a modest, patient man who loves trees, eagerly showed reporters four luxuriant chestnut trees on the New Jersey estate of Success Coach Walter Boughton Pitkin. Then he displayed two more in his own backyard. They had been struck with the blight, he said, but he had saved them with his new tannic acid treatment. Method of treatment is simple: on the theories currently held by tree experts, that: 1) the tannic acid of tree-sap is as actively disease-resistant as human blood; and 2) the circulatory system of a tree...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Tree Medicine | 9/12/1938 | See Source »

...stations. Purpose of this giant mass commencement was not to award diplomas but to hear four commencement speakers of a calibre that rural school boards could not hope to match. Commissioner Studebaker and Secretary of the Interior Ickes were piped through from Washington; Columbia University's Dr. Walter Boughton Pitkin (Life Begins At Forty) and Boston's liberal old Merchant Edward A. Filene spoke from New York...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Radio Commencement | 5/24/1937 | See Source »

...worldly goods I thee endow!" At the tomb of the Unknown Warrior in Westminster Abbey that evening, a late-straying canon found a bouquet with a royal card: "From the Duchess of Gloucester." In their own special train the new Duchess and the Duke left London to honeymoon at Boughton House, Northamptonshire, a favorite country seat of the bride's late father loaned by her brother Walter, the new Duke of Buccleuch. As they settled down with the headline, "HER GRACE ARISES EARLY TO RUN GLOUCESTER'S HOUSE," the Court of Appeals went on with Lady Alice...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: GREAT BRITAIN: Tiaras, Tusk & Tiff | 11/18/1935 | See Source »

...home is Bowhill in Selkirk, between which and Boughton House, the Northamptonshire residence of the Duke and Duchess of Buccleuch, her parents, she is often seen driving...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign News: Courtship in a Sunbeam | 11/11/1935 | See Source »

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