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Erwin, primary author of the Gen. Jackson's Negro Speculations pamphlet, was mentioned in American Slavery As It Is (1839): "It is known in Alabama, that Mr. Erwin, son-in-law of the Hon. Henry Clay, and brother of J. P. Erwin, formerly postmaster, and late mayor of the city of Nashville, laid the foundation of a princely fortune in the slave ...
Gershon Legman was around the New York City erotic book trade in the 1930s, and he claimed that Rankin was paid $35 weekly to produce two eight pagers, delivering the work to Louis Shomer, a gadfly book trade personality and publisher of a line of cheap pamphlet-sized jokebooks, chiefly remembered today for testifying against Ben Rebhuhn at the ...
Theodore Newman Kaufman (February 22, 1910 – April 1, 1986), sometimes given incorrectly as Theodore Nathan Kaufmann, [1] was an American Jewish businessman and writer.. In 1939, he published pamphlets as "chairman of the American Federation of Peace" that argued that Americans should be sterilized so that their children will no longer have to fight in foreign wars.
Based on data from the Q4 2023 Small Business Lending Survey, the average rates for new lines of credit were 7.67 percent to 9.13 percent, depending on whether it was a variable- or fixed-rate ...
Inscription by William Friedman in the Marshall Library’s copy of the Riverbank Publications 15-22. [1]The Riverbank Publications is a series of pamphlets written by the people who worked for millionaire George Fabyan in the multi-discipline research facility he built in the early 20th century near Chicago.
The Wells Fargo Small Business Advantage® line of credit will help businesses newer than two years old, provided they have strong credit (a personal score of 680 or higher).
You may see business line of credit interest rates range from 8 percent to 60 percent or more. These rates can be higher than term loans from a bank, which can range from 5.75 percent to 12 ...
Many bookstores kept a book rack stocked with many Little Blue Book titles. Their small size and low price made them especially popular with travelers and transient working people. If a book sold less than 10,000 copies in one year, Haldeman-Julius would remove it from his line, but usually only after trying a new title, often creating a hit.