Word: gove
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Died. Mrs. Aroline Pinkham Gove, 81, only daughter of the late Lydia E. ("Vegetable Compound") Pinkham; in Marblehead, Mass...
Robert W. Frase, Madison, Wisconsin, B.A., 1934, University of Wisconsin, Social Security Board; Paul Cushing Howard, Rahway, New Jersey, A.B., 1935, Brown University, Social Security Board; Dayton Wood Hull, Rochester, New York, A.B., 1935, Harvard, American Trucking Associations; Gove Griffith Johnson Jr., Aurora Hills, Virginia, A.B., 1934, Harvard, Treasury Department; Oscar Mendel Lurie, New York City, A.B., 1935, Harvard, will remain for an additional year with the United States Employment Service, and William Augustus Waldron 2nd, Schnectady, New York, A.B., 1935, Union College, will spend next year in the field, probably with some state government...
Dayton Hull '35, of Rochester, and Gove G. Johnson, Jr. '34, of Aurors Hills, virginia, are definitely coming back here to complete Ph.D. requirements. Oscar M. Lurie '35, of Amsterdam, New York, probably will return. Theodore W. Taylor, of College Station, Texas, and a graduate with the Class of 1935 from the University of Arizons, has been nominated for a $1000 graduate fellowship...
...share of the original stock. Few months ago the grandsons, President Arthur Pinkham, Vice President Daniel Pinkham and Secretary Charles Pinkham, got a temporary court order restraining the distaff branch of the family from "interfering in the conduct of the business." Spry, 78-year-old Mrs. Aroline Chase Pinkham Gove, Lydia Pinkham's only living daughter, countered by asking the Supreme Court of Maine, where the company is incorporated, to appoint a receiver for the company, planning to outbid her nephews when the business was put on the block. Last month the first round went to the Pinkham grandsons...
...Lynn legend, Daughter Aroline got a letter in 1879 from her brother Charles, first president of the company, expressing the wish that when he died his wife should be made president. When Charles died in 1900, it was not his wife but Daughter Aroline's husband, William H. Gove, who was chosen. After 20 years, at Cove's death in 1920, the Pinkhams finally got the offices they wanted. But Mrs. Gove as treasurer and her two daughters as assistant treasurer and vice president continued to throw company counsels out of harmony. The final break came over...