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...speak. Accompanied by his faithful Mrs. Sarojini Naidu carrying a thermos bottle full of goat's milk and a bag of nuts, he arrived in a small Wolseley saloon upholstered in scarlet leather. Dignified Sir Samuel Hoare attracted no little attention by popping suddenly from the interior of a small Baby Austin. Despite the secrecy of hotel employes, reporters discovered that St. Gandhi had had a secret conference with Scot MacDonald in the swank Dorchester Hotel...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign News: Landing Gandhi | 9/21/1931 | See Source »

...properties were in the following hands: Publisher Howard Myers bought back his Architectural Forum, aristocratic journal published in two semi-annual volumes with a yearly subscription price of $20; Reuben H. Donnelley Corp. of.Chicago (classified telephone directories) bought National Cleaner & Dyer; Industrial Press (publishers of Machinery) bought Heating & Ventilating; Interior Architecture & Decoration bought Good Furniture & Decoration; a newly organized Chicago group called Neyocy Co. bought the 13 other periodicals (Motorship, Diesel Power, Fishing Gazette, Canning Age, Butchers' Advocate...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Odds & Ends: Sep. 14, 1931 | 9/14/1931 | See Source »

...river-&-harbor digging over to private hands. Other governmental activities which, as "private business," the F. of A. B. would have to abolish: printing by one of the biggest plants in the U. S.; ship-building at Navy yards; operation of the Alaskan Railroad by the Department of the Interior; the U. S. Shipping Board's fleet;* helium production for the Navy by the Bureau of Mines; Post Office banking in the form of postal savings accounts; lumbering in national forests by the Department of Agriculture; real estate sales by the General Land Office. Private educators could...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: INDUSTRY: Government Out of Business? | 9/7/1931 | See Source »

...interior of Mr. Carroll's $4,500,000 cathedral was obviously not the work of restrained Architect Joseph Urban, who built the Ziegfeld Theatre. It was done by George Keister and Joseph J. Babolnay. Tier upon tier of colored stone ribbed with twinkling metal rose like the bulge of a gigantic layer cake. A loudspeaker in the lobby urged latecomers to hurry...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Theatre: Flesh Cathedral | 9/7/1931 | See Source »

...Curtiss Airport, thousands of sight seers marveled at the size of the DO-X (157 ft. 5 in. wingspread, 131 ft. 4 in. long), at her aluminum body, her interior arranged like that of a Pullman car with well-cushioned seats, which can be converted into berths, facing each other on both sides of a central aisle. Experts made allowances for the extraordinary series of delays and postponements which had made her long flight almost comically slothful. Engineering and operative problems, in creasing in proportion to the size of a plane, could only be solved in actual flight. Captain Hammer...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Aeronautics: Dough-Icks | 9/7/1931 | See Source »

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