Word: cooperators
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...Behrens '34, L.A. Cook '34, E.N. Cooper '34, H.H. Englander '34, C.H. Hageman, Jr. 33, H.W. Hart, Jr. '33, T.K. Jenkins '34, G.K. Mateyo '34, Isador Miller '35, R.B. Schlatter '34, C.K. Seyfert '33, Samuel Sonenfield '34, A.W. Todd '35, R.W. Vilter '33, Israel Walzer '34, Joseph Walzer '34, B.A. Winter...
HERBERT B. FREDERICK County Solicitor, Criminal Court of Record Daytona Beach, Fla. Upon Captain George Washington Courson, prison guard found guilty of manslaughter in the death of Prisoner Maillefert, Florida Justice (Judge George Cooper Gibbs) imposed a sentence of 20 years in prison (the maximum).-ED. Appeal to a Husband (Making exception for an extraordinary case. TIME prints the subjoined letters without names, address or obligation. If enough readers desire such service, TIME will establish a special lineage rate for "personal"' advertisements, to be printed in a fixed position in the magazine each week.-ED.) Sirs...
...March President George Cooper of Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp. of Louisville, Ky., reduced the price of a 15? cigaret called Wings to 10?. Production of Wings doubled in a month. Although White Rolls and Paul Jones had fallen off a little. Wings' sales boosted the ten-centers' average to 5% or 6% of the national total. By May Wings had slowed the decline in national cigaret production which had been going on all year. Wings did not advertise in newspapers, but blurbs on the cheap brown paper package told smokers that they could not smoke Cellophane. In June...
This company had not been gathered by its host to ponder a class crisis. The meeting was purely social. Each guest was a member of Miami's Committee of 100, a group organized by Clayton Sedgwick Cooper following the 1926 hurricane to raise Miami morale. From a civic body it evolved into a social one with more than 300 members, mostly winter residents. Four times during Miami's season the Committee meets at some member's house for dinner and to talk about those things tycoons like to talk about when the plates are cleared, the liqueur...
While thousands of comrades hopped up & down on Mother Dnieper's brim, U. S. Engineer Colonel Hugh L. Cooper received, the Red Banner of Labor as did five of his U. S. assistants. Russians, although they have heard of Colonel Cooper, give most of the credit to Soviet Chief Engineer Alexander Winter, whose name few U. S. citizens have ever heard...