Word: cashiers
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Meanwhile three others of the five carousers had held up the cashier and swept $10,000 into a little black bag. They started to flee through the now deserted mezzanine. "Texas," however, stopped to call on the house detective. The detective stuck a revolver out of his office door and fired, hitting the Cherokee in the shoulder. Then Texas joined the others in flight. His falling blood incarnadined the marble steps as he ran down. The other cowboy lost his way, ran into the kitchen and, after a little miscellaneous gunplay, was knocked on the head...
...Women. It is not often that this department grows actively angry and recommends sudden death. Men and Women is so bad that the Famous Players headsman ought to decapitate someone. It is the ancient tale of the honest bank cashier, temptation, stolen bonds...
James Simpson. He furnishes the funds. He, aged 50, is President and General Manager of Marshall Field & Co., great Chicago merchants. Born at Glasgow, he came to the U. S. at the age of six, had a brief education and, when he was 17, became a clerk in the cashier's office of Marshall Field & Co. Within a year the discerning Marshall Field had made him his confidential clerk. At Mr. Field's death, Simpson, then 32, became Second Vice President of the firm in association with such prominent men as Potter Palmer, Harlow N. Higinbotham, John G. Shedd, Henry...
...banking in Montreal, Manhattan, Halifax. The directors of the Bank of Nova Scotia, struck by his distinguished bearing and demeanor, engaged him as paying teller, and, aged 30, as branch in spector. They sent him to Minneapolis to open a new branch. There the Northwestern National Bank made him cashier and he in turn made the North western one of the strongest institutions in its territory. Chicago heard of James Berwick Forgan; Lyman J. Gage, President of The First National Bank of Chicago, made him his Vice President in 1892. In 1900, soon after Mr. Gage became Presi dent McKinley...
...large trading in Sears, Roebuck shares on the New York Stock Exchange, brokerage houses, financial bigwigs evinced interest. Mr. Kittle, now 44, began his rise to fortune as a waterboy to a railroad section-gang when he was 14. At 17, he was a telegraph operator, then cashier, chief clerk, superintendent. He was general manager of the Illinois Central Railroad. During the War. he managed the Illinois Central and three additional railroads...