The E. I du Pont de Nemours & Company minute books document an important era in the history of the company from just before the turn of the twentieth century through the 1930s. The DuPont Company in this time went through many changes in structure...
Hendrick orders a two seated automobile. He adds that if he likes the carriage he might sell them and encourage the young men who work with him to sell them, too. There is a handwritten postscript.
Bogue called to Mayor's office in Georgetown, Washington, D.C. and questioned amount of powder at the magazine and on selling powder to the South, mentions he does sell to stores in Virginia, needs advice of DuPont to stop selling. Mayor mentions...
Hendrick asks if the company would sell him a condenser for his automobile. Hendrick doesn't care a snap about the cost. He also mentions the specifications of his compound engine and asks if they make a four passenger surrey and if so, what would...
Handwritten on front: "No 74. Dwarf 10 high x 12." Handwritten on back: "Dwarf box specimen. This is a perfect specimen. Located near Gettysburg, PA. I cannot give a definite price on this but the owner, after 3 years careful work on my part, has...
Periodicals; Chemical industry; Hosiery; Velcro (Trademark); Air conditioning industry; Factories;
Table of Contents: A lot of lively leg work; What's for dinner; Industry's uninhibited hang-up; Lifeguard in the backyard; The inconspicuous air conditioner; Harwood sell at hershey; Million-gallon solution for San Jose; To get a good start, get a...
Periodicals; Chemical industry; Plastics industry; Paint industry; Dyeing;
Table of Contents: It's not dream-stuff today; Man versus river; Aluminum's all-weather topcoat; Fast friend for wool; Chemicals against fire; The color guard; I travel with problem children; Forecast for fall; The drug that hunts for trouble; New...
Table of Contents: Discovery days in Alaska; Summer dress bulletin; New beauties for interiors; Duco gets a new job; They sell on sight; Cooperative ditching; The truth about Tontine; Unusual blasting problems; Treat me rough, I like it; A mighty...
Table of Contents: The story of gunpowder; Lincoln-Orinoco furniture; Gold mining, from prospecting days to the present; Waste materials disposal; More attractive silent salesman; Du-lite has been improved; Early days in high explosives; Cellophane...
Table of Contents: Borrow, tax or save more; Painted Caterpillars; Arms and two men; Cellophane at play; Shirt shrinkage can now be controlled; Keep your White House white; Little accessories before the fact; Show window of industry; Those slipping...
Table of Contents: The story of sulphur; Youthful and progressive; Alice in a modern wonderland; Powder puff muslin; And now hosiery in a humidor pack; Uncle Sam, timberman and trail builder; The new Webster's International Dictionary;...
Table of Contents: What's ahead in farming; Introducing Ti-Bar and Ti-Cal; A can of perfection -- Zerone; They inform and help sell; Decorative fabrics of Rayon; Ruffed-Grouse research; Taming the Tennessee River; What's new; Building long-life...
Table of Contents: Exit, wearing halo; Fifty years of service to sportsmen; Skeet is in the air; America's well-dressed women; Continuous logging and lumbering in the Pacific Northwest; A stellar attraction in plastic; Beware of the moth; Conquest...
This family of slipper makers in Tokyo manufacture all their own goods and sell them direct to the retailer trade. The six persons in this picture are supposed to belong to one family.
Delivers message with its goods. This gaily painted truck delivers insecticides and weed killers in Chicago's Loop twice a day. To create more business for itself, it tells Chicagoans and nearby residents just what it is carrying. The starboard...
Delivers message with its goods. This gaily painted truck delivers insecticides and weed killers in Chicago's Loop twice a day. To create more business for itself, it tells Chicagoans and nearby residents just what it is carrying. The starboard...
Mitchel & Shepard write that they cannot sell du Pont powder at the price the company requests because of competition from the Baltimore manufactory. They have sold powder to storekeepers in surrounding counties.
Hastings reports on demands for powder in his market and informs company that due to the prospect of peace he prefers not to sell powder on account to the company but rather on commission.