Word: clevelands
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...offered and over-subscribed), and four other theatres which the Guild habitually leases. A gradual expansion policy, including tours through small towns and seasons in cities other than New York, has built up large, supplementary subscription lists: Chicago, 7,000; Boston and Philadelphia, 5,000 each; Baltimore, 3,500; Cleveland, 2,000. Last fortnight's anniversary news was the addition of Washington, Cincinnati, Detroit, St. Louis, as Guild cities. Among plays to be offered are: Caprice, Major Barbara, Pygmalion, Wings Over Europe, R. U. R., Strange Interlude, Marco Millions, Volpone. A rotational system among the actors will assure each...
...everyone knows, there is a, giant pattern business apart from, that of the magazines. Paris Pattern Co. has not only signed up the Ladies' Home Journal; it is out after contracts with the great department stores, has agreements with Manhattan's Lord & Taylor, Newark's Bamberger, Cleveland's Higbee, Philadelphia's Wanamaker, Washington's Woodward & Lathrop, Pittsburgh's, Home, Detroit's Crowley Milner, San Francisco's Emporium, Boston's White. Paris Patterns has also enlisted Wall Street, issued 30,000 shares of common stock...
...Steel Co. Cleveland's steel company earned nearly $4,000,000 in 1928, its $3.82 per share showing marked improvement over $1.02 in 1927. With the automobile industry a leading customer, the company has enjoyed a record first quarter and expects soon to resume common dividends...
Engaged. Charles Jacob Young of Schenectady, N. Y., General Electric employe, Wartime ambulance driver and aviator, eldest son of General Electric's Board Chairman Owen D. Young; to Esther Marie Christensen of Cleveland, Junior League poetess and black-and-white artist, daughter of Niels Anton Christensen, airbrake inventor, Danish vice-consul...
Died. Arthur Morgan Smith, of Cleveland, secretary-treasurer of Gas Machinery Co.; in Manhattan. Early one morning Mr. Smith left a party in Manhattan's Hotel Marguery with Oilman Samuel E. Bell of Baltimore and Mrs. Robert L. Brown, wife of a Kentucky bond salesman. What apparently happened: Mr. Smith wished to escort Mrs. Brown home. So did Oilman Bell. In a tussle Oilman Bell shoved Mr. Smith, who fell in the gutter. Next afternoon he died at his hotel, supposedly of diabetes. Autopsy revealed a fractured skull...