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Others who are visiting their own, their native land, include Theodore Bretano (Minister to Hungary) and Cyrus E. Woods (recent Ambassador to Spain, new Ambassador to Japan...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Whitlock Returning | 6/25/1923 | See Source »

...Everett, Boston; Mrs. Charles Hamlin, Miss Hamlin, Washington; Mrs. Frederick Manning, daughter of Chief Justice Taft of the United States Supreme Court, New Haven; Mrs. Percy Morgan, Miss Kathleen Gelshannen, Miss Philippa Wendell, New York; Miss Mary Murray, Miss Helena Caperton, Virginia; Miss R. L. Abernathy; Kansas City; Mrs. Cyrus H. K. Curtis, Philadelphia; Mrs. Harvey Norman, Washington; Mrs. W. L. Walter, Mrs. W. L. Rice, Miss Rice, New York; Miss Sylvia Lathrop, England, formerly of New York; Miss Rebecca Smith, Mrs. E. T. Sweeney, Columbus, Ind.; Miss Elsie Sweeney, Miss Elaine Ulman, Miss Margaret Emmett, Miss Lennihan. (The home...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign News: At Court | 6/4/1923 | See Source »

...Cyrus E. Woods, slender, gray-suited, American Ambassador to Madrid; Colonel George Harvey, tall, horn-spectacled, with square-topped derby; Alanson B. Houghton, clean-shaven, florid and grave, Ambassador to Berlin, came down the gangplank of the George Washington together, back from Europe with the usual Ambassadorial truisms...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: POLITICAL NOTES: Ambassadors Three | 5/19/1923 | See Source »

...Cyrus Hermann Kotzschmar Curtis started life with three cents. He accumulated a fortune. All his life he founded or bought papers doomed to failure, but never once did he fail. He hates details but can easily grasp them. He is a master of business but it has not enslaved him. He loves big things. He works hard. He enjoys vacations. He has always been scrupulously honest. He is a perfect judge of men. His associates and employees adore him. Cyrus H. K. Curtis is public-spirited. He is spiritual-minded. He never took music lessons but can play the organ...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Sermons In Curtis | 4/14/1923 | See Source »

Diagnosis of high blood pressure-a disease largely confined to middle age-has hitherto been based chiefly on the assumed presence of incurable hardening of the arteries (arteriosclerosis). Now come Dr. Henry A. Higley, pathologist of the Brooklyn Eye and Ear Hospital, and Dr. Cyrus W. Field, of Bellevue, Manhattan, who say that a large majority of high blood-pressure cases are due to other causes, particularly to abnormal conditions of the blood due to inactivity of the kidneys. They are using a formula of Dr. D. D. Van Slyke, of the Rockefeller Institute-a method of determining the functional...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Kidneys or Arteries? | 4/7/1923 | See Source »

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