Word: cottons
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Gold Dust had similar trouble with the cotton seed oil, feeds and other derivatives made by the American Cotton Oil Co. which it absorbed in 1923. The cotton oil business did not pay. Gold Dust abandoned it and pushed the sale of cleansers made by the American Cotton Oil's subsidiary, N. K. Fairbank Co. Those cleansers are Gold Dust, Fairy Soap, Sunny Monday Soap and like products. To them President Morrow late in 1925 added by purchase the shoe polishes of the F. F. Dalley Corp.-Shinola, Two-in-One, Bixby brands. Early this year he was negotiating...
American Linseed has not tried to abandon flaxseed products. But ten years ago it began to develop a sideline. Just as American Cotton Oil (now Gold Dust) pushed its soaps, American Linseed began to make and push a line of foodstuffs-Nucoa Nut margarine, Best Foods mayonnaise, relish spreads, thousand island dressing, shortening, Bread & Butter pickle relish. On the Pacific Coast its Gold Medal mayonnaise is the favorite salad dressing. Of these food items American Linseed, said Chairman Robert H. Adams this spring, last year sold $17,000,000 worth. Last February the Atlantic & Pacific chain groceries alone sold...
...recent practice encounter, the Crimson poloists, playing with Shaw McKean of Myopia at No. 2, defeated a Myopia squad 9 to 4. The University players lined up as follows: Shaw, No. 1; McKean, No. 2; Cotton, No. 3; and Mandell, back. Two more practices will be held here before the departure for Rye, both matches to be played off at Myopia. The team makes its final appearance for the season in its tournament contests...
General office work with a large moving picture corporation, general office work combined with production work in a jewelry manufacturing concern, production work in a southern cotton mill, and general real estate business in New York City are among other positions still available...
...Cotton Jr. '29 was the first to score, driving the ball between the uprights early in the first period. J. H. Phipps of Yale, a member of the family which donated the playing field, was the outstanding Blue horseman. He shot the first Eli goal in the second chukker, while L. A. Shaw '30 tallied for the Crimson. Cotton crashed the Yale defense for his second score in the third, giving Harvard a 3 to 1 lead...