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Cincinnati's chief knight, Col. William Cooper Procter, last week witnessed the dedication of his Children's Hospital Pediatric Research Clinic. It is a five-story, thoroughly equipped institution whose purpose is, in Knight Procter's words, "to provide for and carry on investigation, research and development, both medical and scientific, for the benefit of children, including investigation and research with reference to children's diseases, problems of children's nursing and children's social welfare." To accomplish all that and, further, to make Cincinnati the world's pediatric centre, he created...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Coffey & Humber Refused | 6/1/1931 | See Source »

...never attempted it. He was raised in Dubuque, went to University of Illinois where he studied pharmacy. For five years he owned and ran a drugstore in Chicago. This he found less to his liking than he had expected and his next experience was the general managership of Siegel, Cooper & Co., Manhattan department store. In 1914 he returned to Chicago, formed Consumers Co. (coal, ice, building materials). Later Consumers bought Hydrox Ice Cream Co. In 1917 Thomas McInnerney bought Hydrox away from Consumers and planned a dairy products combination on a scale that would have pleased even Paul Bunyan.* Contrary...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business & Finance: Milky Way | 5/25/1931 | See Source »

Colonial--"He", Alfred Savoir's latest with "Claude Rains, Tom Powers, and Violet Kemble-Cooper of "Applecart" fame...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: BOARDS AND BILLBOARDS | 5/20/1931 | See Source »

...Burly, brusque and boisterous, like a bluff sailor, always bringing a breeze of quarrel with him," Cooper had warm friends: one of them was his wife. After 30 years of marriage he wrote to her: "I do not think I am a bad father, and yet I love my wife a little better than any child I have, good as all mine are. Can this be because the wife is so good, or because I am a fool?" He loved to play chess with her, Pepyshly noted in his diary who won. He was a good sport. Once he sent...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: First U.S. Novelist | 5/18/1931 | See Source »

When he wanted to take his family abroad, he was given the agreeable post of Consul at Lyons, with no duties, some privileges. The Coopers stayed abroad seven years, got back to the U. S. to find times had moved. Cooper became didactic, not to say cantankerous. "His view of the world . . . had ceased to be genial. He disliked many things, and disliked them more each year-reviewers, Yankees, newspapers, kings. Englishmen, mobs, national timidity and national complacency. And there steadily grew upon him a taste for laying down the law." Editors made libelous fun of him; he sued...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: First U.S. Novelist | 5/18/1931 | See Source »

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