Word: partnered
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...practiced law in Chicago he has become known as one of the city's best appeal lawyers. He has attracted outside attention through his treatises on the 18th Amendment in which he emphasizes State sovereignty and the point: "A man's home is his castle." Of late, with his partner Thomas D. Nash, he has defended many a gangster...
...Sears, waving his thick-framed racket at Newport and on the smooth lawns of the Longwood Cricket Club, near Boston, held the championship for seven years. He might have held it longer had he not hurt himself, so seriously that he was compelled to retire, by colliding with his partner during a doubles match. The injury was still noticeable, in the form of a slight limp, when Richard Dudley Sears went to Forest Hills. N. Y. last week to attend a Golden Jubilee Ceremony, the 50th U. S. Lawn Tennis Championship...
...Glen Cove, L. I., Mrs. Henry Pomeroy Davison, American Red Cross central committee member, widow of the late great banker, mother of the Assistant Secretary of War and of a Morgan junior partner, made an exemplary gesture against infantile paralysis' second worst ravage...
...manager of the company's business in Canada. He became part owner and vice president of Raymond & Whitcomb Co.. travel agents, and then assistant to President Seward Prosser in Liberty National Bank. At 34 he was president of Liberty National. In the War he served under Morgan Partner Henry Pomeroy Davison as general manager of the American Red Cross in 1917 and Red Cross Commissioner for France in 1918, for Europe in 1919. When Liberty National consolidated in 1921 with New York Trust Co., Mr. Gibson became president. When he left this Morgan bank...
Early in his career Flagler was a partner of John Davison Rockefeller. More than that they were close friends, worked in the same room, lived only a little distance from each other. Rockefeller called Flagler's friendship "valuable above all other possessions," and credited him with the scheme of controlling the oil supply of the country. "I wish I had had the brains to think of it," Mr. Rockefeller once said on a witness stand...