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Pawnbrokers find the goods that cross their counters a reflection of the times. In 1932 business was rotten: the U.S. had run out of things to hock. Now pawnshops-like the nation-are on a queer, priority-ridden, psychologically insecure spree. Despite typewriter freezing (which has stopped loans on a pawnshop specialty), despite the fact that no workman today would think of hocking his irreplaceable micrometers, calipers and toolbox, most U.S. pawnshops are in the money...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Life in Hock | 10/12/1942 | See Source »

...Skittish civilians are sweeping hock-shop shelves clean of shotguns, rifles, pistols, revolvers...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Life in Hock | 10/12/1942 | See Source »

...Beautiful Bums. Then he moved in on Brooklyn, whose seventh-place Dodgers were in hock to the Brooklyn Trust Co., creditor for half a million dollars. MacPhail-who is never better than when talking hardheaded characters out of important sums-actually sweet-talked the Brooklyn Trust Co. into putting up $300,000 more and giving him full authority to spend it. He brought Red Barber on from Cincinnati; he put on all the stunts he had learned in Columbus and Cincinnati and added a superb new one which became the greatest drawing card in baseball history: he got every team...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Baseball's Barnum | 10/5/1942 | See Source »

Most Detroiters could hardly believe it. The company lost $12,000,000 and most of its customers in the depression; it was $1,000,000 in hock to RFC; it was on the auction block only two and a half years ago. Yet last week this same outfit was sprucing itself to receive the Army-Navy Production Award, highest U.S. recognition for excellence in war-goods production. Its name: Continental Motors, manufacturer of engines for tanks, airplanes, trucks, industrial equipment. Its boss and spark plug: husky, harddriving, cigar-chomping Clarence ("Jack") Reese...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: MANUFACTURING: Comeback at Continental | 8/31/1942 | See Source »

...knottiest problems that had ever plagued a bequest-hungry U.S. art museum. He asked Congress for $195,000 so that Washington's palatial new National Gallery could get its latest rich bequest-that of Philadelphia's late Peter Arrell Brown Widener-out of hock. The money was owed for a Pennsylvania gift tax which the Widener will laid on the beneficiary...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Out of Hock | 8/31/1942 | See Source »

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