Word: telegraphe
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...alert United Press interviewed business leaders who attended the 1929 White House conferences, discovered an agreement among them that Industry, by & large, had lived up to its wage pledge. Pierre Samuel Du Pont (I. E. du Pont de Nemours & Co.), Walter Sherman Gifford (American Telephone & Telegraph). Jesse Isidor Straus (R. H. Macy & Co.) declared their companies had not reduced their wage scales since 1929. Walter Clark Teagle said his Standard Oil of New Jer sey had found it necessary to cut workers' weekly earnings by part-time employment but that the base pay rate had been maintained. Distinctly...
...King of Spain Trophy for annual competition in the eight-metre class held in U. S. waters. Alfonso's admiration for U. S. businessmen (he profited handsomely from the late Ambassador Alexander Pollock Moore's advice on U. S. stocks) helped bring Spain's telephone monopoly to International Telephone & Telegraph Corp. His enthusiasm for U. S. cinema is great...
...Osborne, transmission engineer for the American Telephone and Telegraph Company, will give the second of a series of ten lectures on telephone engineering this afternoon at 4 o'clock in room 202, Pierce Hall...
...hotly contested by the East Side, whence came Alfred dEmanuel Smith. Like most New York bosses, Mr. Curry is of Irish descent and distinguished himself by early physical prowess, in his case footracing. Until his election in 1903 to the State Senate he was a Western Union telegraph operator. He is a devout churchman, speaks quietly and?unlike Bosses Tweed, Croker and Kelly?prefers to remain out of the picture as much as possible...
Postal's Year. Bad business, perhaps also much competition from long distance telephone service, has flattened the earnings of telegraph companies. Last week the directors of Postal Telegraph & Cable (common stock 100%-owned by International Telephone & Telegraph) met, looked at the 1930 report, promptly passed the 7% preferred dividend. Postal's gross last year slipped from $40,258,000 in 1929 to $37,923,000. After expenses and bond interest, it earned a paltry $96,000 against $2,972,000 in 1929. Not so drastic was Western Union's decline which brought 1930 earnings...