Word: maclin
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...SomervilleMalcolm P. McNair Elise Pickhardt, West NewtonWoodbridge Marshall Margery Wheeler, Pasadena, Cal.Allen W. Mathis Louise Barr, WorcesterAlton Meister Ruth Garlen, New YorkSanford Menter Rosalie Goldstein, New YorkAlan Miller Boris Sawyer, AndoverLawrence S. Munson Polly Saltonstall, SherbonLester J. Murphy Marjorie Pitten, BostonHomer S. Musgrave Nelly Frogus, Mount Lebanon, Pa.Walter Nichols Maclin Bococh, Williamsburg, Va.Oliver S. Oldman Alice Walker, Woodmere, N. Y.Myron Oppenheimer Harrict Wolfson, Wilkes-Barre, Pa.John Ordway II Dorothea Thomas, Portland, Me.Donald Ottenstein Delphine Wofsey, Stamford, Conn.Thomas C. Peebles Patricia Taylor, Newton CenterRobert E. Pittis Sally Bradford, Washington, D. C.John D. Philipsborn Elizabeth Monigomery, ChicagoJames E. Price II Ann Tarbell...
Since 1933 the morning and evening Nashville Tennesseans, relics of the financial empire of Promoters Luke Lea and Rogers ("Bank on the South") Caldwell. have been operated by a receiver. Last week, on a Nashville sidewalk, the receiver sold the Tennesseans to Nashville's home-grown Financier Paul Maclin Davis, long-time Lea & Caldwell foe. who was sole bidder. Price of the Tennesseans: $850,000. Liabilities...
...defrauding a North Carolina bank of $1,384.000 (TIME, May 21, 1934). When, at 55, Luke Lea put on the striped suit of Convict No. 29,409 to begin a six-to-ten-year term, he laid all his troubles to "persecution" by a Nashville banker-politician named Paul Maclin Davis and his elder brother, U. S. Ambas- sador-at-Large Norman Hezekiah Davis. Last week Banker Davis and RFChairman Jesse Jones, who, though a Texan, was born & bred in Tennessee, found themselves in water heated to the boiling point by the Tennessean's troubles...
...secretly acquired a third of the Tennessean's outstanding bonds from a defunct New Orleans bank which had put them up as collateral for a Federal loan. After denying the transaction for weeks, RFC sold the bonds last week for their purchase price-$200,000-to President Paul Maclin Davis of American National Bank, which already held another $250,000 of the bonds. What made this set-up look bad to vigilant publishers was the fact that American National Bank's preferred stock is held by RFC which came to its aid few years ago with...