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...money which enabled Sir Thomas heroically to champion Music was realized from the sale of the world-famed Beecham's Pills. Sir Joseph, the first baronet, began life as a farm boy, ended it the "third richest man in England," leaving a fortune...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: COMMONWEALTH: Beecham's Pills | 7/20/1925 | See Source »

...musical talent in her grubby young son. Se bought the piano because her sister-in-law had one. There it stood, big and shiny; it had cost a lot of money, and no one in the Gershwin family-not even Ira, the oldest, who was certainly a smart boy- could make music on it. George would have to learn. For some time the neighbors suffered; then they advised him to study in Europe. His first teacher died when he was still torturing Chopin's preludes. Max Rosen, famed violinist, told him he would never be a musician. When...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Gershwin Bros. | 7/20/1925 | See Source »

KINDERHOOK, N. Y., July 10.-Sought by state troops, Boy Scouts and posses of citizens since his disappearance Wednesday, James Wynkop Roney, nine-year-old son of Garner P. Roney, an assistant city editor of The Herald Tribune, was found drowned in Kinderhook Creek here today...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Pathos | 7/20/1925 | See Source »

Early Thursday, however, Boy Scouts searching along the creek came upon the boy's bicycle and clothes on the bank. Divers at once went to work to locate the body, and after hours of effort it was found by Frank Gearing, chauffeur for Mrs. Franklin Townsend of Albany, who repeatedly risked his own life in attempts to bring it to the surface, so tightly was the body enmeshed in underwater weeds. A rowboat and grappling irons were brought overland from Kinderhook Lake and the body was secured...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Pathos | 7/20/1925 | See Source »

...instinct and by virtue of long training in the practices and traditions of his profession. He recovered the body of his only son from a creek near Kinderhook yesterday; but even while he was broken by the greatest sorrow of his life, he realized that the finding of the boy's body was news and that his paper should have it. So he went to the telegraph office and wrote the story for what it was worth as news, wrote it as calmly and as dispassionately as if the boy had been a stranger instead of flesh...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Pathos | 7/20/1925 | See Source »

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