Word: deposit
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Thus last week no transatlantic line had its "Coronation sailings" yet solidly booked in any class. Out-of-town agents, by paying a small deposit, are permitted to book and hold any number of cabins in dummy names until about ten days before a given ship sails, do not lose this deposit in any case as it stands to their credit if the reservations are given up. This sort of speculative booking had by last week pretty well "filled" the Queen Mary, Paris and Bremen-all of which sail from Manhattan at just the right time for last-minute Coronation...
...bombs of Lewisite gas dropped on Berlin or Chicago would be enough to destroy all life in those cities." Chemical officers jumped on this statement as utter nonsense. Author Prentiss points out that to lay down any sort of effective (not lethal) contamination it would be necessary to deposit 10 Ib. of vesicant liquid on every...
Applications for these football tickets will be sent out with the spring sport notice and spring applications about April 1. They will be returnable immediately, and will be field, and set locations allotted in order of receipt. A deposit of $5.00 will be required on the $8.80 book, and one of $3.00 on the $5.50 book. Tickets will be ready for distribution on September 1, and must be paid for by September 15, after which date the H.A.A. reserves the right to reassign them. Schedule The 1937 football schedule: Oct. 2 Springfield at Stadium Oct. 9 Brown at Stadium
...Government was able to announce last week that over $100,000,000 has been restored to the Reich. One smart German not long ago had a set of automobile tools made of platinum, soiled these with grease and dirt, went motoring to Switzerland, locked the tools in a safe deposit vault. Up to last week he had not yet lost his head, but Nazi secret police were mercilessly" on the trail...
...possible U. S. loan to Germany as having been written by "one of those city slickers." Said he: "I think some country boy sold him the story." While Mr. Morgenthau was discussing bigtime money matters in press and private conference last week, Chairman Leo T. Crowley of Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. had something to say to the nation's bankers on distinctly smalltime money matters. Releasing his 1936 report, Mr. Crowley lit into the members of FDIC for dabbling in speculative bonds. Warned the man who has underwritten 14,000 banks: "Low earnings are making some banks reach...