Word: trusts
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1929
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...There is no coal trust, no sugar trust, no oil trust, no beef trust, or any other kind of trust, so far as Mr. Butler has ever heard. All the trusts are gone. Harry Daugherty smashed them...
...Coal, according to Mr. Butler, is selling for less than cost, Standard Oil is a philanthropic institution, and the 'Big Five' packers are dead broke. Only the tariff, says Mr. Butler, is protecting the innocent beet sugar trust from the terrible Cuban cane sugar trust, when everybody knows that both are controlled by the same bunch of American financiers...
...Republican Party, which he now repudiates, was satisfactory to him when it had shrunk to a minority fragment dominated exclusively by its conservative element. He said in 1912: "If they [the leaders] are recreant to their trust, the party may suffer the temporary defeat of its purposes. But what abject folly to seek upon such a basis to destroy a great political party. . . . with a clear progressive majority in its ranks, within which there has been builded up a progressive movement that promises to make the Republican Party the instrument through which the government will be restored to the people...
...Stop"; Lewis Parkhurst, treasurer of Ginn and Co.; Henry B. Thayer, president of the American Telephone & Telegraph Co.; Albert O. Brown of the Amoskeag Savings Bank; Prof. John K. Lord, former professor of Latin; Dr. John M. Gile, surgeon; Henry L. Moore, retired treasurer of the Minnesota Loan and Trust Company; Harry H. Blunt, treasurer of the Wonalancet Company; Clarence B. Little, president of the First National Bank of Bismark, N. D.; Fred II, Howland, president of the National Life Insurance Company; ex-Gov. Fred H. Brown and Charles G. Du Bois, president of the Western Electric Company. That such...
...time of registration each student is given a bill for the amount of the first instalment of his tuition. Bills are payable at the Harvard Trust Company in Harvard Square and checks should be made payable to the order of Harvard University. The Bursar's office suggests that students will save time by making their payments by mail instead of in person, inclosing the bill with the check...