Word: mckeon
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...John C. Grady, Alexander L. Grant, Jr., Charles C. Graves, 3rd, William S. Harrison, Peter G. Harwood, George H. Hill, Ellis D. Hodge, Paul C. Kelly, Osmund O. Keiver, Jr., John C. Loos, Jr., Charles G. Loring, Jr., Leonard S. Lunder, Robert L. Matters, Willard H. McDaniel, John C. McKeon, Kennedy B. Middendorf, Thomas C. Moseley, Thaddeus E. Mroz, Henry F. Noonan, Frank H. Powell, Francis R. Powers, Stephen M. Quigley, James A. Robinson, Donald H. Stone, Thomas Quintin Sullivan, John F. Walsh, Lewis G. Warren, Jr., James F. Waterhouse, Thomas G. Wilson, and Manager Joseph A. Minott...
Possibilities as starting forward combinations are Johnnie Crocker, Bob Feloney, and Dave Farrell, with Bill Ayres, Bill Hamlin, and Lou Preston as alternates. However, two other lines of Tom Mosely, John McKeon, and Sid Greenly, and Dave Key, Art Lee and Wally Sears are strongly in the running...
...lineup: re, Bresnahan, McDaniel, McKeon; rt, Waterhouse, Middendorf; rg, Powell, Draper; c. Loring, Grady; lg, Byrnes, Stensrud, Noonan; lt, Kiever, Gale; le, Fitz, Carnes; qb, Harrison, Stone, Lunder; lhb, Farrell (capt.), Brady, Mosely, Warren; rhb, Sullivan, Kelly, Harwood; fb, Hill, Powers, Grant...
Daniel Manning McKeon, a member of the New York Stock Exchange but a partner in no firm, was not summoned to Washington during the recent bear-hunt. Nor did his name appear upon the Senate's list of big shorts. Although his brother, Robert Manning McKeon, is known in Wall Street as an important independent floor trader, Daniel McKeon had little fame in the financial district until last week...
...morning 20 minutes after the market had opened President Richard Whitney mounted his rostrum, rang the electric gong. What trading there was came to a halt. Gravely President Whitney announced that Member McKeon had been suspended from the Exchange for one year. The charges were that on April 28 (a day when prices were falling) Member McKeon "made offers to sell securities for the purpose of upsetting the equilibrium of the market and bringing about a condition of demoralization in which prices would not fairly reflect market values, and thereby was guilty of acts inconsistent with just and equitable principles...