Tiffany & Co. Advertisements and Information
Re: Tiffany & Co. Advertisements and Information
Tiffany & Co. - New York - 1908
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Re: Tiffany & Co. Advertisements and Information
New York
Tiffany & Co. last Monday obtained permission to place an electric clock in the east wall of the Twenty-second Regiment Armory at their own expense.
Source: The Jewelers' Weekly - 9th January 1895
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Tiffany & Co. last Monday obtained permission to place an electric clock in the east wall of the Twenty-second Regiment Armory at their own expense.
Source: The Jewelers' Weekly - 9th January 1895
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Re: Tiffany & Co. Advertisements and Information
Tiffany & Co. - New York - 1906
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Re: Tiffany & Co. Advertisements and Information
Tiffany & Co. - New York - 1990
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Re: Tiffany & Co. Advertisements and Information
John D. Maynard, for sixteen years a salesman at Tiffany's, died on Saturday.
Source: The Jewelers' Review - 29th January 1895
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Source: The Jewelers' Review - 29th January 1895
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Re: Tiffany & Co. Advertisements and Information
Tiffany & Co. have filed a judgment for $470.98 against Henry Vogel.
Tiffany & Co. have entered a judgment for $141. 44 against Franklin Morehead.
Source: The Jewelers' Circular and Horological Review - 21st August 1895
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Tiffany & Co. have entered a judgment for $141. 44 against Franklin Morehead.
Source: The Jewelers' Circular and Horological Review - 21st August 1895
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Re: Tiffany & Co. Advertisements and Information
Tiffany & Co. - New York - 1931
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Re: Tiffany & Co. Advertisements and Information
Tiffany & Co. - New York - 1932
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Re: Tiffany & Co. Advertisements and Information
Tiffany & Co. - New York - 1912
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Re: Tiffany & Co. Advertisements and Information
There has been on exhibition during the past week at the Fifth Ave. store of Tiffany & Co. the Astor gold cup, which is offered as a prize for sloops, and 12 silver dinner plates, which are the prizes for schooners in the yacht races.
Source: The Jewelers' Circular - 16th August 1911
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Source: The Jewelers' Circular - 16th August 1911
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Re: Tiffany & Co. Advertisements and Information
Tiffany & Co. - New York - 1931
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Re: Tiffany & Co. Advertisements and Information
A cigar-box by Woods & Chatellier, New York, for Tiffany& Co.:
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Re: Tiffany & Co. Advertisements and Information
Tiffany & Co. - New York - 1981
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Re: Tiffany & Co. Advertisements and Information
Tiffany & Co. - New York - 1932
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Re: Tiffany & Co. Advertisements and Information
Judgments obtained by Tiffany & Co. for sums aggregating $1,631, were filed last week in the county clerk's office against Mrs. Adelaide K. Hoag. Mrs. Hoag arranged to pay her account last February with three promissory notes, each for $514, payable in April, June and August. The notes fell due and were not paid, so suit was brought.
Source: The Jewelers' Circular - 13th September 1911
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Source: The Jewelers' Circular - 13th September 1911
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Re: Tiffany & Co. Advertisements and Information
Frank F. Braillard Commits Suicide at His Home in Brooklyn, N. Y.
Frank F. Braillard, who was for years connected with the leather department of Tiffany & Co., New York, and was later in the leather goods business for himself, selling to the fine retail jewelry trade, and who also traveled for a number of jewelry and leather goods houses in New York, committed suicide Saturday morning at the home of E. E. Miller, a gauger at the Custom House, at 1820 Church Ave., Flatbush. He left a note for the Millers, with whom he had had a room for several years, saying that he was ill and never expected to get well and wanted to die. Before that he had sent a note to Ward I. Flancher, Jr., a retail jeweler, at 772 Flatbush Ave., Brooklyn, telling him that if he came to the Miller house he would find him dead. Mr. Flancher got the note Saturday morning and hurried to the house to find Mr. Braillard dead on the bed in his room.
Mr. Braillard had not been living with his wife for 10 years. She and a son live at 601 Cathedral Parkway. A daughter and another son also survive. It is said that Braillard had not been on good terms with his family for years.
He left an incoherent letter in which he tried to describe what he considered were his troubles, principally financial. He was a member of the Atlantic Lodge of Odd Fellows.
Source: The Jewelers' Circular - 20th September 1911
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Frank F. Braillard, who was for years connected with the leather department of Tiffany & Co., New York, and was later in the leather goods business for himself, selling to the fine retail jewelry trade, and who also traveled for a number of jewelry and leather goods houses in New York, committed suicide Saturday morning at the home of E. E. Miller, a gauger at the Custom House, at 1820 Church Ave., Flatbush. He left a note for the Millers, with whom he had had a room for several years, saying that he was ill and never expected to get well and wanted to die. Before that he had sent a note to Ward I. Flancher, Jr., a retail jeweler, at 772 Flatbush Ave., Brooklyn, telling him that if he came to the Miller house he would find him dead. Mr. Flancher got the note Saturday morning and hurried to the house to find Mr. Braillard dead on the bed in his room.
Mr. Braillard had not been living with his wife for 10 years. She and a son live at 601 Cathedral Parkway. A daughter and another son also survive. It is said that Braillard had not been on good terms with his family for years.
He left an incoherent letter in which he tried to describe what he considered were his troubles, principally financial. He was a member of the Atlantic Lodge of Odd Fellows.
Source: The Jewelers' Circular - 20th September 1911
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Re: Tiffany & Co. Advertisements and Information
Tiffany & Co. - New York - 1932
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Tiffany & Co. - New York - 1907
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Re: Tiffany & Co. Advertisements and Information
Henry C. Korler, a former clerk of Tiffany & Co., who shot himself in St. George’s Church, Jan. 31st, was arraigned in the Yorkville Police Court, Feb. 13th, charged with attempted suicide. He claimed to have been suffering from the effects of the grip, and was discharged.
Source: The Jewelers' Circular and Horological Review - 21st February 1894
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Source: The Jewelers' Circular and Horological Review - 21st February 1894
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Re: Tiffany & Co. Advertisements and Information
It was learned last week that a part of a valuable gold cup which Tiffany & Co., are making for a customer in California, was stolen from their factory at Prince and Mulberry Sts., Monday Feb. 26th. The part is worth $3,000, and the cup when completed, it is said, will be worth about $25,000. A number of workmen were assigned to the task of building it in sections. Monday, when the men quitted work in the evening, one of the pieces was locked up in a cupboard in one corner of the work-room instead of the safe. Tuesday morning this piece was missing and it was discovered that the lock of the cabinet had been picked. The matter has been placed in the hands of the police.
Source: The Jewelers' Circular and Horological Review - 7th March 1894
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Source: The Jewelers' Circular and Horological Review - 7th March 1894
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