Search Details

Word: partnerized (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first (reverse)


Usage:

...dissolution of a copartnership, whose members-James Roosevelt, the President's eldest son, Douglas Lawson and John A. Sargent-did business as general life insurance agents. At the time of the announcement Son James was in Cleveland with his wife dedicating a swimming pool for crippled children. Said Partner Lawson: "We put together the partnership in February 1933, and after a little more than a year we mutually decided we should dissolve. It just did not work as we had hoped." On the South portico of the White House the President's mother, Sara Delano Roosevelt, surprised...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: National Affairs: Family Matters | 5/21/1934 | See Source »

...above information is derived from sources which we believe reliable but is not guaranteed." As all member firms must, Frazier Jelke had to submit Thomas Jefferson's text to the Stock Exchange's business conduct committee for approval before it could be run as an advertisement. Partner Victor G. Paradise declared that he expected Washington charges of "propaganda...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: In the Senate | 5/21/1934 | See Source »

...captive. The Crack Up. Such disgrace followed, by only a few years, public honors. In 1931, on the 50th anniversary of Insull's arrival in the U. S., Owen Young, John Barton Payne, Charles Gates Dawes, Reginald McKenna (chairman of Britain's Midland Bank), Charles Steele (Morgan partner), Frederick H. Ecker (insurance). Gerard Swope and James A. Farrell sent tributes to the English-born immigrant who had achieved great things in his adopted country. But even then Sam Insull's pedestal of fame and fortune was tottering. His trouble dated back to 1928 when Capitalist Cyrus Eaton...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: CRIME: Old Man Comes Home | 5/14/1934 | See Source »

...leafy Ardmore, paying 13 men & women some $250 per week to prepare and serve dog meals. He was remodeling a onetime Japanese beetle quarantine station at Oakmont for use as a wholesale plant, to be opened next week. For seven weeks he had been incorporated, with a socialite partner, as Canine Catering Co. of America, with branches established in Hewlett and Reading and others budding in Boston, Manhattan, White Plains, N. Y., Orange, N. J., Baltimore. The meat platter is only the piece de resistance of Caterer Goff's menu. The company modestly recommends its table d'hote...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Animals: Canine Caterer | 5/14/1934 | See Source »

...deducted for expenses. Another $102,000,000 was dropped in bad accounts. Including the six odd-lot houses which handle orders for less than 100 shares for other brokers, Stock Exchange houses cleared $833,000,000 for their 3,500 partners. The average profit per partner was about $40,000 per year. Stock Exchange members operating as individuals cleared $72,000,000 and had the distinction of making a profit in each year. There are supposed to be over 10,000,000 security owners in the U. S. but in 1929 only 1,371,000 had accounts with Stock Exchange...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Brokers' Profits | 5/14/1934 | See Source »

First | Previous | 2049 | 2050 | 2051 | 2052 | 2053 | 2054 | 2055 | 2056 | 2057 | 2058 | 2059 | 2060 | 2061 | 2062 | 2063 | 2064 | 2065 | 2066 | 2067 | 2068 | 2069 | Next | Last