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Cincinnati's exchange is a two-room affair on the second floor of the Dixie Terminal Building. In size it ranks 14th among registered markets, which means that the total value of transactions amounts to about $400,000 per month. The Cincinnati Exchange provides large, deep couches for its members, who spend a large part of their time on the floor playing pinochle...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Little Markets | 6/1/1936 | See Source »

Gradually the work of the Legislators' Association won recognition. The American Bar Association patted it on the back. Finally, in 1930. Mr. Toll got financial aid from the Spelman Fund of New York. He moved the headquarters of his Association to Chicago, set it up in a two-room office near the University of Chicago. Today the Capitol of the U. S. is still in Washington, D. C., but so far as the states individually have any point of contact, it is Mr. Toll's office building in Chicago. There now are the headquarters of 17 organizations serving...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: STATES & CITIES: New Machines | 4/27/1936 | See Source »

Evalyn's mother, known to Leadville as "a rather refined lady" because she changed the name of one of her husband's strikes from Sowbelly Gulch to St. Keven's, had gone West to be a schoolteacher. Evalyn was born in 1886, can still remember the two-room log cabin that was one of her early homes. Father's system was to buy up abandoned mines, undeveloped claims. He kept after it for 20 years before he made a big strike: then, in the abandoned Camp Bird Mine, he found the gold-bearing quartz vein that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Poverty Flat | 3/16/1936 | See Source »

...came to the U. S. at 17 from Smorgon, Russia, was successively steelworker, housepainter, restaurant singer before he got friends in Omaha to stake him to a year at the Chicago Art Institute. Since then the voluble little intellectual has won three Institute prizes. Unmarried, he lives in a two-room, cluttered studio, sometimes sings in vaudeville, has a government commission for a mural in the Fairfield, Ill. post office...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Arts: Seven in Chicago | 8/5/1935 | See Source »

...most encouraging is Mr. Poor, who, with "In Defense of Democracy," makes a stirring though somewhat verbose appeal for liberalism against both Fascism and Communism. Mr. De Veaux Smith, with his playlet "Good-Luck," endeavours to meet the challenge of unemployment in a two-room flat on Third Avenue, where Mary Young and her son, Rob, eke out their days, Rob having had no work for thirteen months. To them, bearing a Thanksgiving day basket, comes a woman of wealth who turns out to have been a childhood playmate of Mary Young; Mr. Smith avoids the most obvious inducements...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Advocate Shows Pessimistic Students Trying to Find Place in the Social Scheme, Says Miller | 5/2/1935 | See Source »

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