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Last January the grandson, Wilfred Chester Leland Jr., walked uninvited into an "old times party" at the Ford Laboratory in Dearborn and slapped into the lean hands of Henry Ford a long-delayed subpoena ordering him to appear and testify in a suit brought by a onetime Philadelphia Lincoln agency. Henry Ford never testified, but he and his son Edsel furnished depositions in which they denied, as they have always done, any agreement to pay off Lincoln's former creditors and stockholders. Last week an eleven-man jury (one was dismissed for expressing his opinion of Henry Ford ) ordered...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business & Finance: Old Fight | 10/23/1933 | See Source »

With details in the production one can quarrel endlessly. It is easy to be shocked at the idea of Harvard as an intellectual Sargasso Sea in some years to come; one may point out that Dearborn, Michigan, hardly has the ingredients of a scientific oasis for the decade of mental famine; it seems a little chauvinistic of Mr. Wells to plunge the Irish deeper than any other nation into the abyss of economic collapse; he takes a malicious joy in attributing the ruin of New York to its jerry-built skyscrapers. Yet these are but minor points--some well taken...

Author: By J. H. S., | Title: The Crimson Bookshelf | 10/9/1933 | See Source »

...National and Guardian with two new banks. That plan failed because Manhattan refused to do its part. Last week's plan was less ambitious. Edsel Ford and associates raised capital with which to merge four suburban banks (Highland Park State Bank, Peoples Wayne County Bank, Guardian Bank of Dearborn, Dearborn State Bank). The R. F. C. agreed to lend $17,000,000 on the assets of the four banks, also to lend $25,000,000 on the assets of the big Guardian bank permitting payment to its depositors of 20% (in addition to 40% already paid) through...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Ford Bank | 8/7/1933 | See Source »

...friends range from Admiral Richard Evelyn Byrd to Accordionist Phil Baker, he owns the quiet, fashionable Ambassador East, the gayer Ambassador West where Ernie Byfield entertains leading stage and screen folk, the Sherman where Ben Bernie is master of ceremonies in the College Inn night club, and the Fort Dearborn, a low-priced house catering to railroad workers. Ernie Byfield is president of College Inn Products, Inc. (not in receivership) which claims to have invented the tomato juice cocktail. Last year as a publicity stunt he imported 20 dozen penguin eggs. The Customs House promptly impounded the eggs for violation...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Chicago Hotels | 6/19/1933 | See Source »

...Church of hoodlum Cicero, Ill. he got himself photographed in an impromptu hymn sing (see cut) with four other gangsters turned evangelist: Bert Baker, onetime Capone man, Fred Jacover, "high class confidence man," Fred Ingersoll, "slickest automobile thief of them all," and Ralph Teter, "brains of the $350,000 Dearborn Station mail robbery...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: Gangster Evangelist | 5/29/1933 | See Source »

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