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Word: tractional (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...easy," declared President Stout, "is to put a lot of weight in the back end. Four hundred pounds of cement in the back seat helps a lot, but if we can put the engine back there and save the weight of the cement we get a better ride, better traction and much more room available in the body of the vehicle. . . . This gives a much better art possibility for appearance than the old-type car. . . . Sweeping lines can be run clear from the front to the rear-no projections, no bumps, smooth contour, and the sleekness of line...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign News: Rear-Engines & Crash-Pads | 1/14/1935 | See Source »

...college Harry Payne Whitney once declared in a questionnaire that he could trace his ancestry "out of sight." To trace the fortune he left when he died in 1930 it was not necessary to go back farther than his father, William Collins Whitney, traction tycoon, Secretary of the Navy under Cleveland, who left him $24,000,000; and his uncle, Col. Oliver Hazard Payne, who left him about $12,000,000. Last week Harry Payne Whitney's fortune at the time of his death was appraised by New York State for tax collection purposes...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business & Finance: Gentleman's Estate | 7/30/1934 | See Source »

...unregistered securities. Chairman Dahl and friends took no chances. No advertisements were to be published, no prospectuses prepared. Each & every offer was to be by word of mouth. For any major corporation the preparation of a registration statement is a staggering task but for a New York City traction company, whose legal and financial involvements confuse even the best trained analysts, the job is well-nigh impossible. The bankers swore the deal was no evasion of the Securities Act, that they intended to consult the Federal Trade Commission. Nevertheless, many a bond dealer last week shied away from retailing...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Sale by Subway | 6/4/1934 | See Source »

Warren William, a veritable Thoth with a moustache, plays the part of a young man graced with personal at- traction, a propensity to love, and a desire to reach the heights on someone's else endeavors. He rambles through his part with a rhythmic ease that is restful to watch, now calling up a grimace, now elevating his voice, now twitching a finger or two. His is the center role, and he builds it up with a sort of vacillating adroitness--ever spurred on by vain ambition and pride, ever retarded by conceit and a weakness for cards--until...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Crimson Playgoer | 3/24/1934 | See Source »

...Cummings snapped up the invitation the same afternoon. His first job as a youngster was with the Illinois Trust & Savings Bank (whence the "Illinois" in ''Continental Illinois'') but since then he has been a traction man, a manufacturer, not a banker. Of his 25 directorships not one is on the board of a bank. One of them, however, is on the board of American Car & Foundry Co. of which William Woodin was head. That contact seemed to explain why Mr. Cummings was made president of Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. The RFC in its announcement listed among...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Act Out of Action | 1/22/1934 | See Source »

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