Word: cashier
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Banking has always been Al Wiggin's trade. The son of a Unitarian minister in Massachusetts, he went to work in the local bank at 17. At 26 he could really call himself a banker: he was made assistant cashier. In 1899 ne went to New York and became vice president of National Park Bank. In 1904 he went to the Chase as a vice president, became its president seven years later...
Some Viennese remained panicky. One day last week a woman entered the Bank of Austria with $2,000 worth of Austrian gold schillings. To the astonished cashier she said: "I want to exchange this for American dollars...
...profiteers but certainly wealthy men have supplied "Handsome Adolf" with the wherewithal to pay each member of his Gang eight marks per day ($1.90). When Storm Captain Stennes went to the Hitler bank in Berlin to cash a check for further storm funds a very mild but very firm cashier refused his check...
...Asking the question was Robert L. McReynolds, counsel of a committee looking into the alleged misuse of Tennessee funds, last week looking especially into the affairs of Col. Luke Lea, publisher, politician, crony of bankrupt Rogers Clark Caldwell (TIME, Nov. 24 et seq.). Answering was M. D. Johnson, assistant cashier of the defunct Liberty Bank & Trust Co. of Nashville, whose president, Ridley Edward Donnell, shot himself after the bank closed. Witness Johnson also testified that Col. Lea opened his bank account in 1925 six days after the bank was formed, deposited $11,430,373.82 between then...
...Posterity Will Curse!" When the till is short the cashier is supposed to feel guilty. With an almost religious fervor Mr. Snowden cast the onus of this guilt upon his predecessors at the Exchequer. He directly faced and was seen to point an avenging finger at Conservative Leader Stanley Baldwin (who as Chancellor of the Exchequer negotiated the Anglo-U. S. debt settlement) as he said...