Word: sues
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Fearing that a quick,, highpoint summary for advertising purposes would leave them wide open to sue-or-settle shysters, bankers clung to the "tombstone" (matter-of-record) announcement. Meantime they asked SEC for better definitions. Last week for the first, time since the Securities Act became effective, an advertisement for a new issue appeared in the oldtime form of a one-page prospectus. The firm that plunged with an offering of $45,000,000 Illinois Bell Telephone bonds was Morgan Stanley & Co., underwriting offshoot of the House of Morgan. Meticulously the Morgan advertisement referred readers to the offering prospectus...
Please send me several stickers of your school which have the seal of your school on them. Our class needs them for their Latin notebooks. Respectfully, Mary Sue...
...been at Saratoga, N. Y. where the horseracing season opened early this month (TIME, Aug. 12). Day & night at the race track, at baseball games and on the spa's Broadway the hard-working youngsters played spirituals, sweet ballads and hot arrangements of tunes like Dinah and Sweet Sue on their rusty cornets, trombones, French horns, drums. Bystanders were especially taken with Band No. 2's impish 12-year-old leader who juggled his baton, shimmied vigorously...
...This temporary injunction will issue for the purpose of allowing time for the court properly to consider the constitutional question involved and to ascertain whether a taxpayer's present right to sue at law to recover taxes illegally exacted from him will be taken away by Congress." No Christmas? To have its income from processing taxes cut off would prove a knock-out blow to the Roosevelt farm policy. The packers suing in Chicago alone pay taxes of some $95,000,000 a year. All told, processing collections reached $495,000,000 in fiscal 1935. Under its old contracts...
...last week, Buenos Aires correspondents shivered over a decree from big, harsh, faultlessly attired President Agustin P. Justo which seemed likely to cost many of them their jobs. The President's skin is tissue-thin. In a fury last year he ripped out an order to "sue the Government of the United States for reparations for besmirching Argentineans' reputations!" after the U. S. Senate's munitions probe charged the acceptance of bribes by Argentine Army munitions buyers (TIME, Oct. 8). Scared underlings finally broke to General Justo the extreme difficulty of persuading the U. S. Government to let itself...