Word: postes
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...priest, whose bishop had apparently not been consulted before the contest began, said that he had promised 75% of gross receipts to Promoter Clifford. But this was denied by Clifford, also under arrest last week in Cleveland. Post Office Department officials declared they had warned Father Cox he was subject to investigation when his contest started. Since no one ordered the contest stopped last week, "Garden Stakes" employes continued sorting names suggested for the garden of St. Patrick's Church...
Brash, racy Walter O'Hara sat quietly by in a Providence court last week while Judge O'Connell smoothed the way for cash sale of the Star-Tribune. Among prospective purchasers New York Post and Philadelphia Record Publisher J. David Stern had the inside track in this week's bidding because he and Son David III had already offered orally to satisfy a $122,000 mortgage, pay $20,000 preferred claims, give general creditors 20? on the dollar. Well Mr. Stern knew the property he sought, for he was general manager of its ancestor, the News...
...financing (TIME, Nov. 22). According to the Department of Justice, their monopolistic methods cost the public $60,000,000. Having listened to evidence from 263 witnesses in Milwaukee, a Federal grand jury last week was ready to announce its findings when crusty Federal Judge Ferdinand A. Geiger suddenly post-poned them. Judge Geiger in his 25 years on the bench has become known as one judge who will tolerate no legal shenanigans. Last week he had just got wind of considerable shenanigans...
...Airmail rates have been drastically low ever since the notorious air mail contract cancelations of 1934 and the abortive Air Mail Act it produced. Airlines are generally considered a heavily subsidized industry, actually are barely so, since sales of stamps almost equal Post Office payments to the lines ($12,000,000 for domestic lines for the fiscal year...
Except to churchmen, the name of Henry Benjamin Whipple now means little. But for almost 40 years this energetic, squarejawed, hard-traveling Episcopal bishop of Minnesota was a U. S. figure to be taken seriously: a man of affairs who exerted his influence from the poverty-stricken, remote frontier post of Faribault, Minn.; a missionary who was denounced by Senators and generals for his defense of the Indians after the Sioux Outbreak in 1862; an ecclesiastical leader who conferred with Queen Victoria and Abraham Lincoln, preached in most of the cathedrals of England and turned down the bishopric...