Word: profit
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Orphaned at ten, Mrs. Roosevelt was left some $30,000. She is a partner in Manhattan's Todhunter school for girls. Profits go back into the business, which is operated by her boon companion, Marion Dickerman. With her other inseparable friend. Nancy Cook, a tousle headed. unfeminine. effective woman who often dresses mannishly and smokes cigarets in a holder at the side of her mouth. Mrs. Roosevelt operates Val-Kill shops, an enterprise which manufactures antique reproductions at Hyde Park. This is a non-profit concern. In the past five years Mrs. Roosevelt has picked up some...
Those in favor of public ownership vociferously pointed out that the Public Works Administration was willing, even eager to lend money, that service rates would be lower since the plants would not operate for profit. Those in favor of private ownership declared just as loudly that the cities, already in financial straits, could not afford to risk deficits in the utility business; that though rates might be lower, city treasuries would sharply miss the taxes now levied on privately-owned plants. After last week's voting, neither side could claim a national victory, but both had things to cheer...
...Scottish lawyer, son of a Scottish parson, Hugh Pattison Macmillan, Baron Macmillan of Aberfeldy, co-author of the brilliant "Macmillan Report" of the British Treasury Committee on Finance & Industry. So sound and lucid was it that it became the only Blue Book ever published in Britain to net a profit. Second member of the Commission was another son of a Scottish parson, Sir Charles Addis, onetime director of the Bank of England. These two Scotsmen Premier Bennett balanced with two Canadian bankers, Sir William Thomas White and Beaudry Leman. To give Western Canada a voice he threw in Premier John...
...gravest concern to Chief Impresario Rufus Dawes last week was the final profit and loss standing of his enterprise. Estimated total amount spent on the show was $32,529,000, but a considerable part of this was spent by exhibitors and concessionaires. When the Fair opened, its total liabilities were $13,202,000 of which $9,750,000 represented a bond issue subscribed by Chicagoans. Three days before closing, revenue from admissions was $8,913,000, from concessions $3,055,000. Expenses were $4,913,000. With adjustments for lesser items net operating profit was $7,454,000. Remaining liabilities...
Should stabilization be announced and a return to a gold basis authoritatively forecast, there would be an instantaneous change for the better. Even an issue of $3,000,000,000 or more of bonds would be accepted as within the government's credit capacity for the profit on gold held by the Treasury would enable the Federal Government to issue large sums of money which would have back of it a metallic reserve instead of an empty promise...