Word: papere
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1929
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...kept silent for lack of precise information as to what the man really is and to what extent is true the charge made against him that he was not eligible to the presidency. Therefore I am sending to you the material proof and evidence in one single sheet of paper, that some one of your staff can translate from the French. (The enclosure quotes from Article 11 of the Haitian Constitution: "To be elected President of the Republic one must be born of a Haitian father"; and calls attention to the famed "Letter to Chancy" m which President Borno wrote...
...ahead of the boom Frank Gannett was when he made his plans, he alone could say. How long before the most provincial Americano will be thoroughly conscious of Winston-Salem's place in the sun, is also a matter of conjecture. But with a Gannett paper in town, Winston-Salem's light is in no danger of bushel-burial, despite a curious feature of that town which any friend of Mr. Gannett's would not fail to remark should he accompany the publisher down there some day to look things over...
Engaged. Virginia Dorothea Morris, eldest daughter of the Morris banking system* founder; to Lieutenant Earle H. Kincaid of Covington, Va. Engaged. Ruth Whiting, daughter of William F. Whiting, (famed manufacturer of letter paper) (When you thing of writing think of Whiting); to one Neil Chapin, brother of Alfred H. Chapin Jr., famed tennis player; at Holyoke, Mass...
...daily Wall Street Journal. What was this? Editor Kenneth C. Hogate, President C. W. Barren were getting after those bummers who undersold him yesterday! He called the fine news across the room to tell his secretary, found her tittering timorously and avoiding his look. Again he looked at his paper. Here was his name in print! What had he done? Dastardly impudence! Oh! . . . This was not the Wall Street Journal. He was reading the Bawl Street Journal, its gay, impish perfect imitation which the Manhattan Bond Club issues for its annual picnic. Now he could settle down to enjoy...
...turned in his story before 10 a. m. when the Stock Exchange opened, instead of waiting until almost noon? Thereupon, Kenneth C. Hogate, managing editor of the Wall Street Journal, announced that he had investigated Reporter Nicholl's story, that he was convinced of its accuracy, that his paper had plenty of market "tips" but did not consider it good ethics to use them for personal financial gains, that Reporter Nicholls would probably get a raise in salary. Later, a wireless message from Thomas Cochran to J. P. Morgan & Co. said: "I spoke with enthusiasm of the earnings, management...