Word: jans
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Today I got from my local newsstand the Jan. 4 issue of TIME, on the front cover of which appears the picture of "Woman of the Year," Mrs. Wallis Simpson. I wish to be among the first to congratulate you on your selection of this picture, for the first issue of TIME...
Week End Snow Train for White River Jet., Vt., Lisbon and Littleton, N. H. scheduled for January 16-17 Cancelled. Snow train scheduled for Fabyan through Crawford Notch Sunday, Jan. 17, cancelled...
...press which, having tasted royal scandal, lusted for more. Kent had got into the news, while nis Duchess was abed with her second child, by going with his orchidaceous friend Mrs. Allen to have his bumps read by a phrenologist and posing with Mrs. Allen on the doorstep (TIME. Jan...
...sure whether or not an imposing, glib U. S.-Canadian Jew with a machine for treating respiratory diseases was a medical knave or not. To be on the safe side Sir John Simon, head of the British Home Office, ordered David Fingard to get out of England by Jan. 15. Unless King George VI interfered, that last week seemed likely to happen. But the King's interference was not beyond the possibilities of David Fingard's career...
Highest-paid business woman was Ethel V. Mars, president of Mars, Inc. (Milky Way chocolate bars). More famed for her racing stable than her corporate connection, which she inherited (TIME, Jan. 4), Mrs. Mars was paid $120,000. Not far below Mrs. Mars came Mrs. Lillian S. Dodge, cosmetician president of Harriet Hubbard Aver, Inc. ($100,000). At that rate it took Mrs. Dodge more than two years to earn the $213,286 fine she had to pay in 1930 for trying to smuggle in trunkloads of French furs, silks, satins and jewelry...