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Word: stockmarket (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...insult to his wife, the Major proceeded to ruin the remiss millionaires, one by one. When Susie discovered that one of them had resorted to suicide, she not only determined to halt her husband's vengeful program but succeeded, thanks to some pretty shrewd manipulation of the stockmarket...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The New Pictures, Oct. 30, 1944 | 10/30/1944 | See Source »

...current stockmarket boom has furnished a plushy cushion for seats on the New York Stock Exchange. Last week, an exchange membership sold for $75,000, up $3,000 in three weeks. The price of seats has almost doubled in a year, is now the highest since November...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: WALL STREET: Hot Seats | 10/16/1944 | See Source »

...flop. He flopped again as a comic until he got the idea of telling his Jewish stories in blackface, clicked in vaudeville, climbed to George White's Scandals. Later Holtz abandoned cork for a cane, made vaudeville history by playing the Palace for ten straight weeks. The stockmarket crash dropped him "from a million to $732"; the decline of vaudeville drove him to pastures new; but after a dozen years of musicomedy, radio, Hollywood, show-producing, real-estate trading, today he has most of his million back...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Theater: New Vaudeville in Manhattan | 9/25/1944 | See Source »

...later on life down through all Christian minstrelsy." Old Parr, Campbell and Robinson explain, was the grand old man of Shropshire who finally trembled into his grave at the age of 152 (1483-1635). Parr and wallstrait are puns ("par" and "Wall Street") on the rise & fall of stockmarket values. The immense polysyllable that fol lows the word "fall" is the voice of God's wrath over the fall of man, the crash of Finnegan from the ladder, and the thunder clap that inaugurates a new period of history...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Clues to a Nightmare | 8/7/1944 | See Source »

Ivar Kreuger, who shot himself in his Paris apartment twelve years ago, was second to no man in his ability to parlay a bunch of match companies into an international stockmarket bubble. But Fairburn, a slower, solider worker, was the man who could almost always beat Kreuger at the match game-at least in the U.S. market, which is all that Mr. Fairburn ever cared much about. In sundry Kreuger forays into Diamond's bailiwick, Fairburn had a way of selling him U.S. match interests at a fancy price, but ending up with Diamond still in the saddle...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: MONOPOLY: The Match Game | 5/8/1944 | See Source »

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