Word: bond
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...sold off everything on these properties which was salable, and with the money thus saved and raised, he bought priceless emeralds for Mrs. Simpson. These emeralds were the property of Queen Alexandra who left them to Princess Victoria, who in turn sold them to Garrard's of Bond Street, where King Edward bought them...
...stock appeal to their better selves-that by hushing their high-priced lawyers and registering under the Public Utility Act they could take advantage of the easy money market. Last month SEC's old argument gained new point with Judge Mack's decision in the Electric Bond & Share case (TIME, Feb. 8), which enabled a utility to register with SEC without thereby admitting the constitutionality of the Act's more dreaded provisions. Not slow to underscore this ruling was SEC's Chairman James McCauley Landis. In a long press conference he again called on the holding...
...money matters in press and private conference last week, Chairman Leo T. Crowley of Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. had something to say to the nation's bankers on distinctly smalltime money matters. Releasing his 1936 report, Mr. Crowley lit into the members of FDIC for dabbling in speculative bonds. Warned the man who has underwritten 14,000 banks: "Low earnings are making some banks reach out and deal in more or less low-grade bonds. They are in and out of the bond market, as you or I would be in or out if we were dealing...
With Negro Johnson in tow the mob stomped out, drove off toward Tumbleton in 25 automobiles. After day broke City Editor Joseph David ("Red") Brown of the Dothan Eagle received a telephone tip that Negro Johnson's body could be found near the Tumbleton farm home of Rupert Bond in which the alleged attack had taken place. Editor Brown grabbed his camera and dashed off for Tumbleton. There on the brink of a sparsely wooded ravine, 50 yd. from Farmer Bond's house, he found the bullet-riddled body of Negro Johnson. Tight-lipped farmers, who seemed...
Celebrated for arresting and jailing Communist Presidential Nominee Earl Browder when he attempted to campaign last autumn in Terre Haute, Ind. (TIME, Oct. 12, 1936), Mayor Sam Beecher and his wife, Terre Haute's controller, were indicted on charges of misfeasance, re-leased on $2,500 bond each...