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gant [[?]]. wants to buy (or rent) expensive houses. hence [[red underline]] Dyer is always short of money. Dyer [[/red underline]] protested because company did [[red underline]] not declare dividends [[/red underline]] enough while Kirk Brown's policy was to declare [[red underline]] 5% on preferred [[/red underline]] stock. Mrs. [[red underline]] Aylsworth [[/red underline]] too seemed to be short of money, wanting to buy new house etc. Hence all willing to part with stock. But when [[red underline]] Kirk Brown heard of this he purchased all the interests himself and now only stockholders are himself, his sons, [[strikethrough]] Frank [[/strikethrough]] Von Vleck and Frank Presley. [[/red underline]] 
Brown says [[red underline]] Dyer never put a cent of cash in the company. [[/red underline]] Says if [[red underline]] Dyer wants to do him harm he has abundant record of the doings of Dyer whereby the latter is [[/red underline]]
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much committed
He asked about suit against [[red underline]] General Insulate and against Formica. [[/red underline]] told him we are awaiting a decision from [[red underline]] Chatfield [[/red underline]] before making our next move, and intend to resume testimony in Formica as soon as conditions warrant it [[red underline]] Brown [[/red underline]] asks to compromise our interference suit about [[red underline]] acetaldehyde [[/red underline]] resin, and to abstain from filing preliminary statement. Let case be awarded on record, the one of us two who gets it to give a free license, without pay to the other. [[red underline]] Told him that I want [[/red underline]] to submit first this matter to [[red underline]] Townsend, [[/red underline]] since I made the [[red underline]] mistake of compromising too easily on the varnish patents. Dyer afterwards taking unfair [[/red underline]] advantage

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