Word: bonding
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
This squares with what M. Herriot calls "my doctrine of the inviolability of contracts." He demands that Germany be similarly held to the letter of her bond, but not in pound-of-flesh fashion...
...reduction will save the corporation about $30,000,000 in operating expenses for the remainder of 1932. Theoretically, $30,000,000 would about equal depreciation and depletion charges for the rest of the year should U. S. Steel cover its running expenses. Or it would be sufficient to pay bond interest and preferred dividends should earnings cover depreciation. On news of the wage cut. Steel preferred shares rose 10 points and the common...
...giving him the circus." Circus victims, part of whose money goes to the taxicab driver who steers them to the evil retreat, are usually so ashamed of themselves afterward that they fail to report to the police. This racket, Police Commissioner Edward P. Mulrooney told the New York Bond Club two months ago, is one which the police are particularly anxious to stamp out. His speech did not fall on entirely deaf ears. Last week one New Yorker with the courage of his indiscretions, Henry C. Murphy of the Curb Exchange, appeared before the Prohibition Administrator with the information that...
...loyal person, a citizen of the U. S., of good moral character, shall be permitted to trade with any Indian tribe upon giving bond to the U. S. with at least two good sureties...
This scene occurred in 1931. Kreuger, failing to get a match monopoly in Italy, needed funds. From an Italian engraver he got copper plates that bore the likeness of an Italian Government bond. On a piece of paper he sketched the way he would like an English-worded statement printed. He furtively took the plates to a Stockholm printer. The printer, knowing Kreuger's affairs were vast, did not become suspicious when he was asked to print 42 bonds, each of ?500,000 denomination. Kreuger took the counterfeits, forged on them the name of E. Drelli, gave them...