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Word: contracts (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1929
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Usage:

...another far-sighted man who was young when the automobile industry was an infant, he hitched his wagon to the horseless-carriage. In 1898 he went to Europe, brought back two European-made motor cars, sold both at a profit. Then he went to Detroit, came back with a contract giving him the New England territory for the Packard car. As the Packard car prospered, as more and more motorists began to "Ask the Man Who Owns One," Alvan Tufts Fuller prospered also. Today he is rumored to be worth 40 million dollars; is considered the wealthiest of Massachusetts citizens...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: RADICALS: Pardon? | 4/25/1927 | See Source »

...laws, that the stone corporations were entitled to relief by injunction. Associate Justices Louis Dembitz Brandeis and Oliver Wendell Holmes, the two great liberals of the Supreme Court, dissented vigorously from this decision. Said Justice Brandeis: "They [the union members] were innocent alike of trespass and of breach of contract. They refrained from violence, intimidation, fraud and threats." Old but Able. Before the Supreme Court last week, a stocky 93-year-old gentleman with neatly trimmed snow-white beard and abundant snow-white hair, looking a bit like the late Viscount Bryce, pounded a desk and argued a water power...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: JUDICIARY: Supreme Court Doings | 4/25/1927 | See Source »

...arithmetic last week engaged the attention of U. S. citizens interested in the question of what commercial aviation company shall be Uncle Sam's mailman on the New York-Chicago leg of the transcontinental air mail route. "Why," asked figurers, "did Postmaster General New award the New York-Chicago contract to the National Air Transport Co.'s bid of $1.24 a pound when the North American Airways Co. bid $1.23 a pound, and when Capt. Earle F. Stewart of Manhattan bid 35¢ a pound?" Computers added also that U. S. Comptroller General McCarl had previously ruled that the Government should...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE CABINET: $1.24 v. $1.23 v. $0.35 | 4/18/1927 | See Source »

Rogers Hornsby, slugging second-baseman, had been manager of the world champion St. Louis baseball Cardinals; had demanded a three-year contract, calling for $50,000 per year. Owner Sam Breadon had refused this demand; had traded Hornsby to the New York Giants. Negotiations concluded, it became known that Player Hornsby's earthly possessions were made up of incompatible elements. He owned a contract to play baseball for the Giants, also 1,167 shares of the capital stock of a rival team, the Cardinals. League heads, fearing scandal, said that he must dispose of one or the other...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Shrewd | 4/18/1927 | See Source »

...PEACHES" said black type more than an inch high, in a Pittsburgh newssheet. Frances Heenan Browning, blonde, buxom, onetime darling of the tabloids, had signed a contract to expose her nether limbs to the gaze of Pittsburgh's night-clubbers. Pittsburghers, righteously indignant, "canned" "Peaches," forced the cancellation of the contract. Meanwhile, Dr. Henry J. Schireson, Chicago plastic surgeon, surveyed the aforementioned nether limbs with interest; gossip said that "Peaches" agreed to pay him $10,000 to remove her acid burn scars and bring slender shapeliness to her amply-built legs...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Trivia | 4/11/1927 | See Source »

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