Word: malley
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...news periodically all last spring by picking up investment trusts, adding them to his growing Equity Corp. Last week he stepped into another field. Missouri State Life Insurance Co. with $1,000,000,000 of insurance in force was taken over by Missouri's Insurance Commissioner O'Malley who charged that its $155,000,000 assets needed to be written down, perhaps as much as $27,000,000. On hand was Equity Corp. with a prompt offer: It formed a new firm, General American Life Insurance Co., with paid-in capital of $2,000,000, offered to take...
...well known as Ivy Lee is able Thomas Joseph Ross, Jr., 39. Fourteen years ago he quit the New York Sun, on which he had been a steady-going "wheelhorse" reporter of the Frank Ward O'Malley period, to work for Publicist Lee. Not only did he rise to No. 1 man on the Lee staff, devoting most of his time to Pennsylvania Railroad and Chrysler, but he became a private relations counsel between his temperamental chief and the rest of the staff. When Mr. Lee would abruptly summon his staff to meet him in his uptown suite...
Dapper, florid Ed Hill, whose wife and newspaper cronies call him "Bill." is distinctly of the Frank Ward O'Malley school of news reporting. Born 48 years ago in Aurora, Ind., he attended University of Indiana where his English professor would emphasize examples of journalism by pointing to the New York Sun. Hill determined to get a job on the Sun and, after pestering the city editor for weeks he finally did get a "temporary"' assignment, which lasted 22 years...
...Birth Control issue, which flits from State to State like fox fire, flared up last week in Wisconsin. A legislator named O'Malley had offered a bill stringently forbidding any advice or device preventing parenthood. Debate on the measure was customarily vigorous and. as is also customary, came to no conclusion last week...
Miss Hawkins sent the story to the two most blatant advertisers, Daniel O'Malley Co. Inc. of Manhattan, and Universal Scenario Co. of Hollywood. Universal thought the tale "admirably suited to talking picture presentation," offered to print a 500-word synopsis of it in its Scenario Bulletin Review, copyright it, submit it "personally to those producers whose current production demands call for this particular type of story"-all for $10. Daniel O'Malley Co. Inc. (proprietor: Daniel S. Margalies) was equally enthusiastic, would perform approximately the same service...