Word: dows
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...four of his bouts, personally accounted for half the challengers' victories. He trounced (5-to-4) 26-year-old Hugh Alessandroni, another left-hander who had won the U. S. foil championship week before. Best showing made by the U. S. team was the performance of Warren A. Dow, who won three bouts, lost only to Pearce. Each team won eight bouts. The score: 16-to-16. Epee. It takes the closest scrutiny of four judges and a director to call the touches in a foil contest. There is considerably less room for doubt in an epee match...
Once again Henry Ford seized his chance to use the industry for his sounding board. Others could do as they liked, said he, but the price of Fords would stay where it was. To a representative of Dow, Jones & Co. (financial news service) he declared: "When prices go up, business goes down. . . . There is nobody who can pay the increased prices except our own people; and if they have not the price demanded they simply don't buy. But this is all too simple for the great economic minds that direct our affairs. .. . ". . . We are making a part...
...Ethyl Gasoline Corp., predicted that extraction of the ocean's gold on a commercial scale would begin in ten years. Mr. Midgley pointed out that ten years ago no one thought it possible to get bromine from the ocean on a commercial basis. Today his corporation, with Dow Chemical Co., operates a plant south of Wilmington, N. C. on the Cape Fear River which every day sucks in 30,000,000 gal. of sea water from which, with the aid of chlorine and sulphuric acid, it frees 15,000 lb. of bromine (worth 36 cents...
Playing left defense for two years, Watts has been one of the most dependable and valuable players on the team. He paired up with Dick Dow this season and they have played a consistently good game, greatly aiding Paul deGive, veteran goalie and retiring captain. Watts scored one of the Harvard goals in the final battle with Yale, which the Crimson sextet lost in overtime, 5-4, and his play in the first two contests with the Eli team was outstanding...
...Henry C. McEldowney of Pittsburgh's Union Trust Co.-$165,000. The next nine were all to executives of Manhattan banks: Winthrop W. Aldrich of Chase National, $151,744; Charles S. McCain of Chase (since resigned), $128,488; Percy Hampton Johnston of Chemical Bank & Trust, $125,000; Harvey Dow Gibson of Manufacturers Trust, $125,000; Gordon S. Rentschler of National City. $125,000; the late Charles Hamilton Sabin of Guaranty Trust, $101,919; President William C. Potter of Guaranty. $101,069; Walter E. Frew of Corn Exchange, $100,000; George W. Davison of Central Hanover...