Word: fee
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Carpenter organized the National Chip Steak Co., set out with a trailer and a steak-making outfit to demonstrate and sell. Last week he reached Chicago having licensed the process en route to Western and Midwestern manufacturers (the largest at a $10,000 fee). In addition to license fees, National Chip Steak Co. collects ⅛? per steak royalty. Present output of "Chip Steaks" is at the rate of 30,000,000 a year, monthly royalties about $2,500. By the end of 1939 Carpenter expects to see royalties of $5,000 a month. Chip Steak Corp. of Illinois which began...
...admission price to 40? after 9:30 p.m. (a sop to grousing concessionaires who had demanded a 25? fee...
...Tomorrow." He talked about 40,000,000 customers and he figured on 60,000,000 (10,000,000 a month from May through October) to spend $56 apiece, bring a billion dollars worth of business to the Fair and New York City. Flamboyant Grover Whalen set the entrance fee at 75?. Last week he was learning something...
...enough for the biggest. Into executive session went major industrial exhibitors (investment: $35,000,000) and voted to ask the Fair to cut the gate to 50?. Concessionaires, whose girl shows have failed to turn the trick at the tills, went further. Their demand: a 25? admission fee at night...
Treading softly in the midst of the ruckus, Grover Whalen began by making a few concessions. For parties of 500 or more he cut the admission price to 50?. At the eight large parking lots he slashed the 50?-fee in half. To find out why more customers weren't coming in he planned a questionnaire. It looked as though Grover Whalen would soon have to cut the general admission to 50? a head to get enough People of Today to patronize his World of Tomorrow...