Word: connors
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...letter calling your attention to the use of this abomination in one of your editorials on medicine, and I told you then that this phrase had been held to be "against the law" by the Appellate Court of Illinois in an opinion by Justice John M. O'Connor in the case of Preble v. Architectural, etc. Union, 260 Ill. App. 435. Since that time the Illinois Appellate Court has again condemned the use of this phrase in Tarjan against the National Surety...
Major Edgar B. Tolman, Editor-in-Chief of the American Bar Association Journal has repeatedly criticized this symbol, and when Senator Carter Glass in the United States Senate demanded an amendment of the bill to which you refer, he read into the record of the Senate Justice O'Connor's opinion along with the criticisms made by John W. Davis of New York and the Honorable George W. Wickersham. And again in May of 1935 the Illinois Appellate Court spoke on this subject in the case of City National Bank v. Davis Hotel Corporation...
...assume his House duties, and the New Deal had to get along as best it could without a floor leader. Part of those duties were assumed by goodhearted Speaker Byrns, part by aged Representative Edward Thomas Taylor of Colorado, part by un- popular Chairman John J. O'Connor of the Rules Committee. But of able leadership there was little...
...output; 15% goes into inks; the remainder is used in rubber heels, shoe polish, paint, other products. ¶ By Nov. 1 the American Telephone & Telegraph Co. had made 7,381 teletypewriter installations, compared to 5,419 as of Nov. 1, 1934. ¶ Comptroller of the Currency O'Connor announced an additional dividend of 10% to depositors of Manhattan's Harriman National Bank & Trust Co. Some 9,400 depositors got $1,636,000. Last week's dividend brought total payments of claims up to 76%. ¶ Union Pacific Railroad placed a $4,000,000 order...
...abed in his South Carolina home last week, Mr. Hutton must have sat bolt upright when he heard the reaction to his suggestion. Angry editorials burgeoned. Chairman O'Connor of the House Lobby Committee thought Mr. Hutton should be investigated. Mr. Hutton's trim, dapper figure appeared in a Rollin Kirby cartoon, soliciting Big Business support to "gang" Franklin D. Roosevelt. President Colby Chester of General Foods hastily disclaimed his chairman's ideas as representing corporate policy. A market letter of Weingarten & Co. offered Stockbroker Hutton some sage advice: "Interests and forces opposed to the Administration...