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This is a book about avoiding mistakes when making basic business decisions—the kind of mistakes that can result in catastrophic expenses, lawsuits, losses, and bankruptcies. As a veteran private investigator and business consultant, Christopher Eiben has witnessed firsthand how frequently these avoidable mistakes can wreak financial and personal havoc on businesspeople. Through in-depth analysis of authentic case studies, and insight born of his years of experience in the field, Eiben explains how certain prescriptive measures—more careful hiring practices, improved security, effective and thorough due diligence, and others—can limit risks and improve the odds of business success. In the current business climate, with the ever-increasing strategies available to the unscrupulous, the devious, and the outright criminal, this kind of “paranoia” isn’t just a necessary tool—it’s a virtue.
Pulling Up Roots: Book One follows a remarkable line of descent of Edmund Rootes, an educated gentleman who died penniless on September 13, 1613 in Ashford, England, leaving his young family in desperate financial circumstances. The Rootes family suffered but persevered. In 1635, Edmund’s three sons, Puritans, after enduring years of religious oppression, left England for the Massachusetts Bay Colony. Upon their arrival in America, the Rootes boys settled in Salem, then more shantytown than village. Over the next fifty years, Salem grew into a commercially important seaport—and a troubled community that would become forever infamous for its witch trials and public executions in 1692. Amo...
A history of the Hugh M. O'Neill family of Cleveland, Ohio.
Theodor Joseph Kundtz (1852-1937) was born in Metzenseifen, Hungary to Josephus and Theresia Kesslebauer Kundtz. Theodor's father died while he was still young and he was forced into working at a young age. In 1873 he immigrated to America and settled in Cleveland. In 1874 he married Agnes Ballasch. They were later divorced and he then married his niece, Maria T. Ballasch (1867-1946) in about 1885. They were the parents of nine children. Theodor became a prominent businessman in sewing machines and other manufactured goods. In 1902 he was knighted into the Austro-Hungarian order of Franz Joseph. Descendants live in Ohio and other parts of the United States.
Includes, beginning Sept. 15, 1954 (and on the 15th of each month, Sept.-May) a special section: School library journal, ISSN 0000-0035, (called Junior libraries, 1954-May 1961). Also issued separately.