Word: seligmans
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Earle Bailie of Manhattan. Although really shouldering the job of Undersecretary, Earle Bailie was named merely a "special assistant." Hence he does not have to be confirmed by the Senate which might not look with favor on 1) a partner in the private banking firm of J. & W. Seligman; 2) the creator and head of Tri-Continental Corp., one of Wall Street's biggest investment trusts (original capital $100,000,000); 3) a man who likes nothing better than to spend two months of the year as lord of a funny old palace on the shore of the Mediterranean...
...article published in the maga- zine of the Columbia School of Journalism Professor Edwin Robert Anderson Seligman of Columbia made the following points: ''That the depression is ending; "That, for the first time in history, recovery from the bottom of an industrial cycle is being speeded consciously and effectively; "That fear of uncontrolled inflation has little basis in fact; "That we are not on the way to Bolshevism, Fascism or any other form of autocracy, but; "That we are in the midst of a social revolution, within the framework of capitalism, which promises lasting benefits...
...named Dewey Potter, who had been fined for poaching on the Price estate, and two others surrendered to peace officers. Before his retirement last year. Thomas Price was secretary of Union Pacific R. R., secretary or director of 18 other roads and utilities, mostly Union Pacific subsidiaries. Died. Arthur Seligman, 60, Governor of New Mexico; suddenly, of angina pectoris; in an Albuquerque hotel...
...Santa Fe, Governor Arthur Seligman last fortnight signed a bill legalizing horse racing with pari-mutuel betting...
Only through consignments will be accepted. To save time checking cargo, the load compartment will be sealed at the takeoff, remain sealed during fuel stops at Columbus, St. Louis, Wichita (where pilots change), Albuquerque, Seligman, Ariz, Among the pilots is famed Clyde Pangborn (round-the-World, 1931). Unbound by mail contracts or by required intermediate stops, the company may vary the planes' routes at will to escape bad weather, also to thwart possible attempts at robbery...