Word: crediteer
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...still more rousing during the coming session. The Senate Munitions Investigation Committee planned to reopen hearings, summon J. P. Morgan & friends, try to prove that the bankers drove the U. S. into the last war, try to dig up enough headline scandals to win committee members headline credit with headline-reading voters...
...must give the Emperor credit for having lent prestige to moral values in his country and for having made courage, work and persistence respected in a land where only physical force had any value. . . . The numerous Ministers are generally more or less related to the Emperor and the Emperor considers the granting of a Cabinet post a simple method of calming a noisy cousin or a belligerent vassal. . . . Disorder and misadministration make each Ethiopian Ministry a bottomless barrel into which money flows. . . . Emperor Haile Selassie inherited a savage country. . . . He will never be a leader of men, the chief...
Because he is an expert on Japanese consumers', producers', credit and medical cooperatives, a seminar on Consumers' Cooperation, sponsored by the Federal Council of Churches and to be held in Indianapolis over New Year's, was planned with Dr. Kagawa as its featured member...
Four times a year, says the law, representatives of the twelve Federal Reserve Banks shall meet as an open market committee to give their advice on credit management to the Federal Reserve Board. Last week, for the fourth time in 1935, the members of those august bodies met in Washington, looked at one another with sad eyes. They had met to part but even their parting was not allowed to be sweet sorrow. A grave problem and bitter issue was on hand to discomfit even their valedictory...
...Great Northern's three-year deficit, the terms did not appear onerous-except to RFChairman Jesse Jones. Mr. Jones noted that on a when-issued basis the proposed bonds were already selling 8% above par. Evidently the public put a higher value on Great Northern's credit than did the bankers. So Mr. Jones wrote to Mr. Kenney as follows...