Word: inc
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...Haven Emerson of Manhattan, and strode out of the presidential mansion. He loaded a respirator on the rear end of his rebuilt Buick, and with his wife went peddling respirators in competition with Harvard's long, lean Professor Philip Drinker. Professor Drinker, through Warren E. Collins Inc., the cautious Boston manufacturers to whom he assigned patents on the respirator which has saved hundreds of chest paralyzed cases, sued rambunctious John Haven Emerson for patent infringement...
...striking contrast to Mr. Davis's statements were the remarks made by Maleolm Greenough '25, of crusader's, Inc., on of the outstanding repeal organizations. VI heartily endorse Governor Ely's desire to have Massachusetts the first state to ratify the repeal of the Eighteenth Amendment. It is most encouraging to those interested in repeal to find the enactment by Congress coming so unexpectedly...
President Kerwin Holmes Fulton of Outdoor Advertising, Inc., Publisher Albert John Kobler of the Daily Mirror, Banker John Edward Young, silk merchant M. C. McGill are among the residents of Manhattan's fashionable Upper East Side who keep their expensive automobiles in the Carlyle Garage on East 76th Street. One morning last week they heard that three armed thugs had held up the garage's night attendants, slashed and acid-burned 27 cars, including their own. Otto W. Peters, owner of the garage, said he had been threatened for weeks. He appealed to police and the District Attorney...
...John D. Rockefellers paid $125,000 for the League's report through their Bureau of Social Hygiene, Inc. Since he hails from the U. S., Chief League Investigator Bascom Johnson was happy to report that U. S. white slaves, who were very numerous in the Far East 20 years ago, have almost disappeared, having been "rescued" and crowded out by White Russian refugees...
...Chicago's in 1930 ($30,000). On the strength of its success, Cleveland persuaded the National Aeronautic Association to let it keep the races for five years beginning 1931, with option to renew for five years more. Each year National Air Races of Cleveland Inc. would pay the N. A. A. a $12,500 "sanction...