Word: ltd
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Fluent had been Owen D. Young's arguments that British Cables & Wireless, Ltd., was a "menace" (TIME, Jan. 20). Cocky had been Newcomb Carlton's assertions that the "menace" was a "bogy." Because I. T. & T. controls Postal and because a merger with Radio would mean less competition, it was expected that Mr. Mackay would agree with Owen D. Young. This he did, but neither to the deflation of the "menace" nor the inflation of the "bogy." Shrewdly he said: "If there were no British merger we would still wish to coördinate cable and radio...
...Havilland Aircraft Co., Ltd. ("Gipsy Moth," "Tiger Moth," "Hawk Moth"): $238,000 as against...
Midland Bank, Ltd. (London), £2,665,042 as against...
General Electric Co. (No stock interest in General Electric, Ltd. of Great Britain, but large holdings in the Associated Electric Industries, biggest British company in this field. Between these two English companies an eventual merger rumored): $448,802,519 (orders) as against...
...fact was that neither cat liked to eat game with dirty, sooty feathers on it ; they preferred clean cooked meat." On Jan. 1, 1929, Sir Wallis contributed to the Conservative Evening Standard the obituary of Mike which became the basis of the present monograph, printed by R. Clay & Sons, Ltd., Bungay. Suffolk, and obtainable from Sir Wallis at his chambers, 48 Bloomsbury Street, London. W. C. I. The pamphlet also contains a funeral ode of extreme delicacy by Bibliophile F. C. W. Hiley. M. A.. Assistant Keeper in the Museum's Department of Printed Books, concluding: Old Mike...