Word: cashes
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...shares in some or all of the 512 firms with assets of $7,000,000 or more, which, the report says, account for almost half of all profits earned by British private industry. One way would be for the government to accept stock in these companies, as well as cash, as death duties...
...Mboscorro Creek were aswarm with men, women and children panning gold dust. Local French authorities moved in, set up a buying agency that had instructions to pay out 170 French African francs (about 80?) for each gram of the metal as it came from the pan. The rush to cash in nearly demolished the office. Within half an hour, the agency's 5,500,000 francs were gone, and it had to send a hurry call to Paris for more. By last week, more than 125,000 grams of gold had been sent to France. During one month alone...
...seemingly respectable Nippon Institute was now Communist-controlled. Last week, confronted with the facts, Murai confessed that the party, hard pressed for funds after General MacArthur drove it underground in 1950, had decided to set up a string of phony companies on credit, sell goods quickly for all the. cash they could get, and funnel the money into the party chest. Their first move in what they called "Operation Truck Corps" was to get control of the Nippon Institute, chiefly through Murai. Then they set up a network of trading firms, all using the institute's reputation to drum...
...Trailsend. Publisher Cox allowed his papers to keep their own personalities, gave free rein to his local publishers-who sometimes showed more concern for the cash register than the crusading journalism for which James Cox stood. (All Cox dailies are Democratic except the pro-Ike Dayton Journal-Herald and Springfield Sun.) Overall management of the seven-paper group and a string of allied TV and radio stations fell increasingly to James Cox Jr., the twice-married publisher's son. But the governor still showed up at his Dayton office, held frequent long-distance powwows with Atlanta Constitution Editor Ralph...
...refinance $24 billion worth of maturing securities bearing coupons ranging between 1½% and 3¼%, the Treasury had to offer investors a choice of three separate issues, one at 3⅜%, the other two at 4%, with an option permitting buyers of one four-year issue to cash in their notes two years hence if rates meanwhile have gone still higher. The new interest rates were the highest in 24 years, but as a Treasury official said, "the lowest at which we could sell these securities...