Skip to main content Collections MenuExpandMy CollectionView PDFA Sombrano MarketPreviousNext 300 x 300 (Download)A Sombrano MarketDate1904ClassificationsPhotographMediumalbumenDimensionsObject: 5 1/16 × 3 3/8 in. (12.9 × 8.5 cm) Sheet: 8 7/8 × 9 15/16 in. (22.5 × 25.3 cm)Credit LineGift of the American Book CompanyKeyword/SubjectstreetsceneObject number1991.377 Discover More Going to Market - Japanc 1890Market boats, Helsingfors, FinlandUnderwood & Underwood1904"Now look - International has a net quick of $15 per share. Its market price is $10, book is $36.65. Our net quick is $8; our book is$22, and at market we are selling for $25. So to start with we offer them one share of ours for two of theirs. That's five bucks premium. Can they turn it down? So they turn it down. Then we say, O.K., we'll buy the assets. We'll give you $1 million for your plant, which stands at $3,900,000 net. That wipes out all the water, gives them a fine tax carry-back. Then we give them 80 per cent of net inventory and accounts receivable - that's another $4 million. Another nice tax loss for them. So we pay 'em $5 million. There's nothing complicated about this except - say, where do we get the turn-around money"Alan Dunn1954To Market To MarketPaul Szep1974Market In A WarPeter Arnett1969Fruit Market, South Dixie Highway, Miami, FloridaBerenice Abbott1954Cambodian dock workers unload rice from Soviet ship Razdolnoye at southwestern port city of Kompong Som, September 8, 1981 (top); Free market in Phnom Penh seems to be thriving and well stocked as life in the city revives from four years of bloody rule by the Khmer Rouge, September 8, 1981 (bottom)William Branigin1981Camel market, Djibouti, AfricaPaul Almásy1939Hanoi Street MarketAlma De Luce1975Fruit Market, South Dixie Highway, Miami, FloridaBerenice Abbott1954Coolies Drawing Rice to Market in JapanStrohmeyer & Wyman1896Taking Piggie To MarketYvon Cornu1969 Powered by eMuseum