Word: inces
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...have to replace dogs as often. Dr. Morris' line of prescription foods now sustains almost 50,000 dogs, extends their lives as much as six years. Competitors have sprung up, all selling foods specifically designed for dogs suffering many afflictions of civilization. For overweight dogs Atlas Canine Products, Inc. (a Laddie Boy affiliate) offers Obesodiet, which cuts calories per meal to a Spartan 300. Atlas also has Geriodiet for older dogs, Nephrodiet for kidney sufferers, Protodiet for protein-hungry mothers...
...called the Lark. It is 175 in. long (v. 209.1 in. for the '58 Chevy), but roomy inside because the company saved space by slicing down the front end and the rear bustle. "Everybody likes the pictures," said Salesman Jim Hockney of Manhattan's Studebaker-Packard Salon Inc. "We have orders, with deposits, for 40 cars-which is just 39 more than we had last year at this time." The new American Motors Rambler is almost the same as the '58 model, which rang up a company-saving 171,000 sales. American expects '59 sales...
...savings gone and dependent on her job in a bakery, she sued Budd Howard, operator of the Denver studio. The court ordered him to give back $15,890, the value of her unused lessons-but only because of a technicality. The contract she had signed was with Arthur Murray, Inc., a New York enterprise, the Manhattan mother studio of Arthur Murray and Kathryn, his wife. Although Murray picks all the local studio managers, who operate under a franchise, and takes 10% of their gross receipts, each studio is a separate entity for legal liability purposes...
...Frank Lloyd Wright's S.C. Johnson & Son, Inc. (wax) headquarters in Racine, Wis. (1936-50), whose mushroom columns and cantilevered floors are admired as Wright's simplest statement of his basic principles...
...appease the hunger in 1953. As a vice president of Walter E. Heller & Co., Gordon worked on movie financing, helped launch United Artists (TIME, April 28), saw the need of small stations for television films. Teaming up with Hollywood Producer Edward Small, Gordon formed Television Programs of America, Inc. as a production and distribution company. Into T.P.A. Gordon and Small put $125,000 apiece, bought their first series. Ramar of the Jungle, for $100,000. In the era before Hollywood features became standard late-show fare, stations snapped up Ramar; eventually it grossed...