Word: humphrey
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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HARVARD YALE Howard, g. g., Hill Rogers, p. p., Train Whittemore, cp. cp., Barnum Holsapple, 1d. 1d., Taylor Rabinovitz, 3d. 2d., Downes Edmands, c. c., Crawley Murphy, 2a. 2a., Warner Lessig, 1a. 1a., McCabe Housen, oh. oh., Humphrey England, ih. ih., Whiteraft...
...California; Associated Oil Co. of California (controlled by Tidewater); three alleged subsidiaries; Standard's President Kenneth R. Kingsbury. who is a member of the oil code's Planning and Coordinating Committee, Vice President Oscar Sutro. nine other officers and directors; Associated's President William F. Humphrey. 15 other officers and directors, including Paul Shoup. vice chairman of Southern Pacific Co. Indictments were based on no less than 185 counts for Associated, 149 for Standard, including one for each day's violation of the oil code after it was signed Aug. 19. The charges: 1) Standard...
Died. William E. Humphrey, 71, Seattle lawyer, onetime Congressman, Federal Trade Commissioner removed last autumn by President Roosevelt (TIME, Oct. 16); of cerebral hemorrhage; in Washington...
...which France's King Louis XIV played a small part in 1664. The dialog has been jingled by Poetaster Arthur Guiterman and Guild Director Lawrence Langner. Guiterman has written neatly lyrical doggerels to be sung to songs based on old French folk-tunes and bergerettes. Able Dancers Doris Humphrey, Charles Weidman and assistants give a parody turn and little inspiration to some 17th Cen-tury dances. Pictorially it is nearly perfect. But even dour-faced Osgood Perkins as the tyrannical Brother Sganarelle and childish-voiced June Walker as his ward who is advised to "serve his meals all dank...
...stubborn Republican who was resisting President Roosevelt's effort to turn him out of office was revealed last week in squat, bearded Federal Trade Commissioner William E. Humphrey. Appointed as a stand-patter by President Coolidge in 1925, Commissioner Humphrey was reappointed by President Hoover in 1931. President Roosevelt wrote him two months ago that his resignation would be acceptable in the make-over of the Government for the New Deal. Commissioner Humphrey replied that he had no idea of getting out, that no criticism had ever been made of his work, that the President had no right...