Word: dawson
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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From Mr. Dollar and from Kenneth D. Dawson, Seattle's potent shipmaster, the Chapman interests got assurance of fresh capital to salvage their enterprise by a private loan. The arrangement made to secure it was not made public...
From Portland (Ore.) came Kenneth D. Dawson representing the powerful Dollar interests of the Pacific and Herbert Fleischhacker, San Francisco's burly banker. Cautious Mr. Dawson studied the situation. Last week Robert Stanley Dollar arrived in New York to see for himself what might be done to help the tottering Eastern interests. Large, spectacled Mr. Dollar, son of 87-year-old Captain Robert Dollar, believes, like his father, in a U. S. merchant marine even if it must be founded on Government subsidy. Should the Dollars become the eventual purchasers of U. S. Lines it would mean new faces...
Fortunately the question remained purely academic. Lloyd George did not die. His urethra was explored by skillful Dr. John Swift Joly (author of Stone and Calculus Disease of the Urinary Organs). While King George's physician, Lord Dawson of Penn, nodded sagely over the operating table, the learned medicos removed his prostate gland. Next day David Lloyd George was sucking tea through a goose-necked tube...
Professors G. H. Parker '87, A. B. Dawson, and Leigh Hoadley, all members of the Department of Zoology, will spend much of the coming summer at the Marine Laboratory at Woods Hole, Mass. Professor Parker and several of his students will work on problems in marine zoology, Professor Dawson on the cytology of the erythrocytes of fishes, and Professor Hoadley will have charge of part of the course in embryology; some of Professor Hoadley's advanced students who have undertaken research in the development of marine animals will accompany...
...heavy-jowled Mr. Denison returned to New York from a junket to Panama. Under his freedom-of-the-port privilege he brought in much luggage without inspection. Several weeks later Prohibition agents visited his quarters in the House Office Building, found an Army locker trunk marked "B. B. Dawson." "E. D. Denison" might easily be altered to "B. B. Dawson," but Congressman Denison in- sisted the trunk was not his. The agents opened it, found 18 bottles of Royal Sprey Whiskey, six bottles of Gilbey's dry gin. When Mr. Denison, a consistent Dry voter in Congress, was indicted; Wets...