Word: hoyt
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...concerned the relationship between Prince & Whitely and Prince & Whitely Trading Corp., an investment trust sponsored and managed by the firm. The Exchange found that Prince & Whitely partners, as directors of the trading corporation, had caused the corporation to lend $1,500,000 on an unsecured note of J. M. Hoyt & Co. J. M. Hoyt was the senior partner in Prince & Whitely, and the $1,500,000 was used to better the position of J. M. Hoyt & Co. on Prince & Whitely's books. Other findings concerned Prince & Whitely's failure to segregate stock belonging to the trading corporation...
Fortnight ago appeared the six-month statement of Curtiss-Wright Corp. showing loss of $5,560,410.11. As in the case of Avco, about one-third of the sum was accounted for by extraordinary charges for development engineering, inventory adjustments, etc.: $2,031,307.55. Board Chairman Richard F. Hoyt was optimistic...
...Famed persons divorced by Judge Bartlett in the last four years: Cornelius Vanderbilt Jr., Irving T. Bush (terminal), Mrs. Bainbridge Colby (diplomacy), Janet Flagg Harlan Trubee (judiciary), Claire Brokaw (Vanity Fair), Eugenia Bankhead Hoyt Butt Lee (Actress Tallulah's sister), Jessica Sargeant (now Mrs. Richard Barthelmess), Evelyn Marshall Field (department store), Walker Inman (tobacco), Delphine Dodge Cromwell Baker (automobile), Edward Delafield (finance), Louise Annette Thompson (railroad), John Bellinger Bellinger (Army), Lora I. Knight (aviation), Beryl Curtis Ward (bread), Dorothy Cochrane Karageorgevitch (Serbian royalty), Peter Arthur Drury Jr. (Washington, D. C.), Sidi Wirt Spreckels (sugar), Adelaide Rhinelander Chaqueneau...
...Noteworthy are the Persian treasures of these U. S. collectors: John Davison Rockefeller Jr. (rugs), the Metropolitan Museum's Havemeyer collection (most extensive and varied-glassware, pottery, earthenware bowls), Horace Havemeyer (rugs, pottery), Mortimer Schiff (pottery, including a famed Rhages bowl) and lesser collections owned by Charles B. Hoyt, George Pratt, Walter P. Chrysler, Mrs. William H. Moore, Mrs. Rainey Rogers...
...merger was ratified. The $800,000 loan by Bethlehem to Cleveland's Pickands, Mather & Co. for the purpose of buying Youngstown stock, which has been the King Charles's head of the suit, inevitably came up. R. E. McMath, Bethlehem secretary, when asked whether Partner Elton Hoyt II of Pickands, Mather had told him the money was needed to buy Youngstown stock, replied: "No, but I think he knew that I knew what he thought and for that purpose he needed the money...