Word: chryslers
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...Bethlehem was down from the year's high of $105.50 to $76.50 per share; Youngstown Sheet & Tube from $102 to $74.75; Republic from $47.25 to $31.25; Inland from $131.25 to $94.75. Yet U. S. Steel was also off from its high of $126.50 to $92.50 per share and Chrysler sold below $100 for the first time in more than a year. Most spectacular break was in Auburn Automobile, which crashed from $23 per share to $13.50 in four days...
...Government buys quantities: Bethlehem Steel Co. (20 copies); Automatic Voting Machine Corp. (12); Monolith and Medusa Portland Cement Companies. Hammermill Paper Co. (10 each); California Portland Cement Co., Deere & Co. (8 each); The Carborundum Co., Inland Steel Co., Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp. (4 each). Other bibliophiles: Walter P. Chrysler (50 copies), Amalgamated Meat Cutters and Butcher Workmen of North America, International Association of Machinists, American Federated Hose Workers of Philadelphia (4 each); Charles M. Schwab...
...industrial issues the current downswing appeared even clearer than in the averages. Leader of the booming winter market, U. S. Steel has sold off from a high of $126 per share to a low last week of $93. Chrysler was down from a 1937 high of $135 to $106; Radio from $12.75 to about $8.75; U. S. Rubber from $72 to $52, Nash-Kelvinator from nearly $25 to $18; U. S. Gypsum from $137 to $107; General Electric from $64 to $50. Even such a symbol of stability as American Telephone & Telegraph was off 24 points from its 1937 high...
...chairman for several years. It was named Lea Fabrics, Inc. after its onetime president and General Johnson's great friend, Robert WT. Lea. Lea fabrics is a $1,500,000 company with a plant in Newark, N. J., where 20 employes turn out automobile carpets for General Motors, Chrysler, many another motormaker. Last week a letter from Chairman Johnson outlined for Lea stockholders the difficulties their company was in as a result of the undistributed profits...
...When Chrysler directors met in Manhattan last week they received from President K. T. Keller the corporation's first quarter report showing a 56% increase in the sale of Chrysler cars over last year despite interruption of operations during a five-week strike. Net sales were $183,207,000, compared with $148,464,000 during the first quarter of 1936. Net profits, however, decreased from $11,453,000 to $10,914.000. These figures studied, Chrysler directors upped the quarterly dividend rate from...