Word: ince
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...Your issue of Dec. 7 failed to mention that the S. P. C. P. G.* is a trifle more than a "joke," that it does everything in its power to help "George," that its last known public appearance was in the U. S. Patent Office in July 1930. Electromaster, Inc., manufacturing cleaning and scouring powder, intended to market the product under the trade-mark of "Let George Do It" and for that purpose filed a trade-mark application. Opposition #10833 was filed by the Society. The Notice of Opposition recites that the society is "unincorporated under the laws...
...answer, Electromaster, Inc. reserved "advantage of exceptions which can or may be had or taken to errors, insufficiencies, uncertainties, misstatements, ambiguities, witticisms, and imperfections in the Notice of Opposition contained." The answer continued to state that "Respondent denies that Opposer has a place of business at in West Monroe Street, Chicago, Illinois-the address given is in a respectable section of the city. Respondent has made due and diligent search to locate Opposer's place of business on the B. & O., the D. L. & W., and the Santa Fe, said search having covered all except the draw bars...
Meanwhile, TIME, Inc. was launching LIFE from Manhattan as a picture weekly. Conferring with LIFE'S editors, Mike Cowles saw no reason why Look should not find a lower, broader field as a picture monthly. He put up $300.000 of his own and his brother's money to find out if he was right. Friends like Fred Bohen came in for $200,000 more. In spite of his big circulation plans (400.000 first issue). Publisher Cowles announced that, for the present, Look would solicit no advertising. To tradepapers he announced that Look would have "reader interest for yourself...
...exhibit of reproductions of works of twelve American painters, selected by Living American Art, Inc., of New York City, and now being shown at 300 points throughout the United States, opened today at Robinson Hall...
Until last week Mrs.Millicent Hearst's chief medical philanthropies had been her Free Milk Fund for Babies Inc., which she finances by means of prize fights, tennis tournaments and indoor rodeos; an annual Christmas morning cinema for crippled Manhattan children, which she failed to hold last week; and the New York Infirmary for Women & Children, to which she has long contributed handsomely...