Word: stewart
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...motoring public Stewart-Warner used to mean only two things-speedometers and vacuum tanks. As patents expired and vacuum tanks gave way to fuel pumps, the name Stewart-Warner began to mean radios, refrigerators and cinema equipment. Depression stifled the market for these new products no less than for automobile accessories. By last year the outlook for Stewart-Warner was dismal indeed. Last week the company published its annual report for 1933 revealing a thoroughgoing house cleaning from products to personnel. While Stewart-Warner was slowly slipping, one of its subsidiaries, which is better known under its own name, continued...
...pound class: George F. Fox, III, '37 defeated Stewart of Tufts by fall. Time, 8 min. 56 sec. Walker of Yale defeated Fox (H) by decision. (Overtime...
Although U. S. merchant tailors gross $80,000,000 annually (1932), they clothe less than one out of every 100 U. S. males. And tailors like Twyeffort and Bell of Manhattan, Dunne of Boston, Stewart of Philadelphia do only a fraction of that business. But the customers for whom they make $120 sack suits (1929 price: $150) are generally to be found sitting at the head of most directors' tables or behind ultra-modest little signs labeled "The President...
Married. Mary Gabrielle Campbell, 21, Long Island socialite; and William Stewart Thomas, 21, son of No. 1 U. S. Socialist Norman Thomas; in Huntington...
...list of churchmen who endorsed the Goodwin Plan, the Christian Century got Dr. Ernest Fremont Tittle of Evanston and Dr. Ralph Washington Sockman of Manhattan, both famed Methodists, to recant. Not to be shamed out of their support for this temple & trade hookup, however, were Episcopal Bishops George Craig Stewart (Chicago) and James Matthew Maxon (Tennessee); Methodist Bishops Francis John McConnell (New York) and Ernest Lynn Waldorf (Chicago...