Word: contractions
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...Nine (44), is director of WACs in the Army Service Forces. Before she joined the Corps she kept house in Hartford, Conn., tended her flower garden, zipped through murder mysteries and pampered her Siamese cat, "Ink Mink." When she leased her house she put a clause in the contract that the tenants would also have to care for Ink Mink...
...repair shop did a brisk business even in 1930. The partners bought one plane which had dived into a lake until only its tail was visible, for $450. They fixed it up and sold it for $20,000. They also made aluminum trailers, and finally landed their first Navy contract for two amphibian floats...
...floats, in an unconventional design, the Navy said they were too light, would collapse. Roy & Jake staked their lives on their design. They climbed into a Navy plane behind a Navy pilot, were catapulted successfully from a battleship. The Navy ordered six more floats, and then gave Grumman a contract for an experimental fighting plane. This turned out to be the first Navy fighter in the world with retractable landing wheels, and it dazzled the Navy with a speed of 206 m.p.h. Grumman landed its first big Navy order for 27 fighters, worth...
...corporations to hustle bigwigs around the country.* By 1937, Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corp. had so much business on the books it almost went broke. The company had run out of working capital, and owed the banks $450,000 (mainly because it had lost $100,000 on an amphibian-plane contract). To raise cash, Grumman got ready to float his first public stock issue. Then the market crashed. Wall Street's famed Bernard E. ("Sell 'em Ben") Smith, who was trying to buy an amphibian, saved the company by helping underwrite the stock issue...
...Payoff. Grumman is certain that his realism pays. The company has made money and paid dividends every year since it started. From its first year's sales if $110,000, the total swelled to $278,500,000 last year. On this, the company netted $6,598,200 after contract redetermination, including a postwar refund of "1,955,000. This year the company has turned out an estimated $156,000,000 in planes, including its new twin-engined fighter, the Tigercat, in the first six months. After renegotiation and taxes, Grumman expects to net a little more than last year...