Word: inc
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...Vermont Avenue near K Street, well off-centre in official Washington, stands the inconspicuous, yellowish little Denrike Building. Its ninth floor is occupied by Federal Laboratories, Inc., whose business, according to evidence lately presented before the Senate Civil Liberties Committee, consists largely of furnishing employers with arms and tear gas for use against striking workers. On the fourth to seventh floors are housed the National Labor Relations Board and its no employes. Since October 1935, obscured by a cloud of uncertain legality, hedged about by injunctions, its authority doubted by Labor and challenged by Capital, the Board has labored inconspicuously...
...month of March, interspersed with brief summary articles in a "snappy" vein, and with astonishingly crude line drawings and maps. Hope for Re-Vue's surviving resided chiefly in its list of financial backers which included William Hale Harkness, President Thomas R. Coward of Coward-McCann, Inc., William Gilman Low III of Charles Scribner's Sons...
...attention of the Securities & Exchange Commission in Washington last week came two of the most remarkable registration statements ever filed. Having reshuffled the major provinces of his tangled empire, William Randolph Hearst proposed to borrow $35,500,000 from the public-$13,000,000 for Hearst Magazines Inc., $22,500,000 for Hearst Publications, Inc., which included two radio stations, nine dailies and the Sunday-supplement American Weekly. By no means did Mr. Hearst tell all. Although the registrations took in the entire string of Hearst magazines they covered only one-third of the Hearst newspapers, included nothing on such...
...Magazines. Supposedly the Hearst enterprises are being put through a stiff course of corporate simplification. When the proposed financing is completed all Hearst magazines will be lumped in one package, Hearst Magazines Inc. What may look like simplicity to Mr. Hearst and his chief legal lieutenant, John Francis Neylan, would still look complex to the layman. But in the case of Hearst Magazines one thing is crystal clear: Mr. Hearst needs cash...
...issue. The disposition of the rest is a complete lesson in Hearst finance. First comes the payment of bank loans amounting to $1,900,000. To get these bank loans Hearst Magazines had to have them guaranteed by its parent company, Hearst Corp., by its grandparent company, American Newspapers, Inc., and personally by William Randolph Hearst. Mr. Hearst's name is also on a $2,000,000 printing bill due Cuneo Press, Inc. This bill will also be paid from the proceeds of the new issue...