To install click the Add extension button. That's it.

The source code for the WIKI 2 extension is being checked by specialists of the Mozilla Foundation, Google, and Apple. You could also do it yourself at any point in time.

4,5
Kelly Slayton
Congratulations on this excellent venture… what a great idea!
Alexander Grigorievskiy
I use WIKI 2 every day and almost forgot how the original Wikipedia looks like.
Live Statistics
English Articles
Improved in 24 Hours
Added in 24 Hours
What we do. Every page goes through several hundred of perfecting techniques; in live mode. Quite the same Wikipedia. Just better.
.
Leo
Newton
Brights
Milds

Charles Davis Limited

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Charles Davis Limited
Company typePrivate
IndustryInvestment, manufacturing and interests
Founded1847; 177 years ago (1847)
FounderCharles Davis
DefunctFormally in 1984; 40 years ago (1984)
Merged in 1995; 29 years ago (1995)
Headquarters,

Charles Davis Limited was a department store company established in Hobart, Tasmania in 1847[1] and is one of Australia's oldest companies.[2] It had several businesses across the surrounding states in industries such as manufacturing, boating including yachts and races[3] and hardware and electrical equipment.

The company was founded by Charles Davis, an Englishman who had been transported to the Tasmanian penal colony as a convict. He established a hardware, ironmongery and tinsmithing business[4] which grew to become one of Tasmania's major business enterprises including moving it to Hobart's Cat and Fiddle Alley where it remained into the 1970s. Davis fully owned the company until in 1911, at age 87, when he limited himself to a chairman, and his family continued to operate the company until the 1970s.[5] Sir Donald Trescowthick took over control of the business from the Davis family in the 1970s[6] and the company embarked on significant expansion and diversification under his management. At various times, the company had investments in wholesaling, retailing, car distribution, property, hotels and motels and mining. In 1971, Sir Donald Trescowthick gained a majority shareholding of 54 percent through his company Signet Insurance Group, which was a company with assets of $27 million an annual turnover of $35 million and eventually renamed as Harris Scarfe Holdings Limited in 1995.[7] The company factory and original shop closed in 1984.[5] After the church change of name, the company focused on its department store activities and divested all other business activities.

At its height, the company was Australia's third largest retailer (November 1989), after acquiring many significant regional retailers, including Harris Scarfe, Cox Foys, FitzGerald's Department Stores, Lloyd's hardware stores, Campbell's hardware stores and McEwans.[citation needed]

In 1970, Charles Davis Limited negotiated with American-based Kline Iron and Steel to bring lightweight steel roofing trusses to the United States.[8] Philips Industries of Launceston, Tasmania was acquired in 1974, giving the company presence in each of the state's three main regions, south, Burnie, Tasmania in the northwest.[7] In 1975, Charles Davis Limited was a sponsor of the Melbourne to Hobart Yacht Race.[9] The McEwans hardware stores group was divested in a management buyout in 1988.[citation needed]

At this time, the company merged its Harris Scarfe and FitzGerald's retailing operations, which continued to grow to become Australia's third largest department store group. It also once owned interests in Perpetual Insurance and Securities, owner of Eastlands Shopping Centre which increased from 83 % to 91 % in 1973-1974 and also in Co-Operative Motors Ltd, manufacturer of Toyota, Triumph Motor Company, Mercedes-Benz and Rambler.[7][10]

After suffering financial difficulties, the company was placed in receivership in 2001 and the Charles Davis name was bought by Davis's great-great granddaughter for $A120.[11]

YouTube Encyclopedic

  • 1/3
    Views:
    608 319
    1 161
    4 228
  • Why bodybuilding at age 93 is a great idea: Charles Eugster at TEDxZurich
  • Holographic Universe Conclusion
  • Muramasa Kudo Paintings & Studio

Transcription

Let me start first with a brief story. Before attending a dinner at my rowing club, I went into the bar. Seeing an attractive young lady... (Laughter) I thought that I would chat her up. Suddenly, there was an influx of people, and we were pressed together. My nose was squashed in the cleavage between two magnificent breasts. My embarrassment made me realize how tall the lovely lady was. (Laughter) I had, in fact, been introduced to one of the many continuing rapid changes related to our human bodies. The increase of height of 10cm during the last few hundred years seems to have peeked in 1970. Here I am, rowing at the age of 91 with a 15 year old, who is already well over a head taller than me. There is continuing increase in girth. Obesity is now a major world health problem. World obesity has doubled since 1980. 12% of the world's population is obese. In the Americas, it is even 26%. Obesity can cause diabetes, heart disease and cancer. Already 10% of the world's population suffer from diabetes. A world pandemic of diabetes is already a reality. By 2030 it is estimated that 50% of the US population will be obese. In obesity, it is the prefrontal part of the brain that shrinks. The prospect of the most powerful nation of the world with 50% of the US population having shrinking brains is frightening! (Laughter, Applause) Never in human history have so many humans been so overweight and so obese. The world's population is now 7 billion. Very soon there will be 8 billion people inhabiting the Earth. If at this point, a pandemic were to destroy half of the world's population, there would still be double the amount of people that existed when I was a child! The continuing aging of the population is one of the most remarkable success stories of the human race in modern history. There will soon be more people over 60 than children under 15. But man has destroyed the wonder of aging by transforming it into an age of degeneration and disease. 92.2% of the over 65 in the United States has one or more chronic diseases. 40% of the 60+ take 5 or more medicaments a day. 45% of the 85+ have Alzheimer's. Natural, healthy aging is unseen, covered by a blanket of disease. In fact, it is falsely assumed that disease is a natural consequence of aging. Lift up the blanket and there could be surprises. (Laughter) Lifelong work, continuous education, competition in strenuous sports, beauty queens in old age could be a reality. The aged now, however, are over nourished, over medicated and physically and mentally inactive. Inactivity is a major cause of death. How did this happen? Our bodies are still those of the Paleolithic era. When we were hunter-gatherers, food was scarce, that as much food as possible was consumed and the excess stored as fat, so that we could survive the next famine. As physical and mental activity was enormous, unnecessary activity was avoided. Today, with an excess of food, and survival no longer dependent on huge physical and mental effort, our instincts still tell us to consume an excess of food and avoid activity as much as possible. Those instincts that in the past enabled us to survive are now destroying us. But successful aging is possible. There are three factors that contribute to successful aging. They are work, diet, and exercise, in that order. (Laughter) I will address each in turn. Work. The aged suffer from inactivity, poor diet, overweight, diabetes etc, just as the general population does, but in addition, this is severely compounded by retirement. Retirement is voluntary or involuntary unemployment for up to 30 years. We know that unemployment causes chronic disease and mental problems, as well as poor health, disability, more medical consultations, more medication, more hospital admissions. Work, on the other hand, is therapeutic, good for health, and is an intrinsic part of improving and maintaining health. Work is a determinant of self-worth, family esteem, identity, and standing in the community. This graph shows the energy expenditure at different ages. One can see that in retirement, the physical energy expenditure for occupation is removed, and the pensioner is left with little or no physical or mental activity. Remember, inactivity kills! In the UK, retirement was reduced from the age of 70 to 65 in 1946, when life expectancy was 65 years. The retirement age was never intended to be earlier than life expectancy. Today, however, retirement can start 25 to 30 years earlier than life expectancy. Our pension schemes are financially unsustainable. It is that destructive effects of retirement on physical and mental health that have not only been ignored, but vastly underestimated. It is essential that the aged be integrated into the workforce, not only for financial, but also for health reasons. Retirement is not the end, it can be a new beginning, a chance... (Applause) ... a chance to build a new body, develop dormant talents, and start a new life for the next 30 years. Start a new successful company. The 55 to 65 decade is the highest decade of entrepreneurial activity, with the highest long-term success rate. You have nothing to lose except the chains of convention. (Applause) Retirement is a massive health calamity and a future financial disaster. Diet. Fast, processed and junk food together with soft drinks take advantage of our cravings. Consuming these foods can lead to nutritional imbalance. Exercise. Vanity is a huge asset. (Laughter) Even at 87, I wanted an Adonis body in order to turn the heads of these sexy, young 70 year-old girls on the beach. I wanted a six pack, but my coach said, we must first work on my bottom, which, she said, was a catastrophe. (Laughter) Exercise is both a preventive measure and a treatment. The success rate of exercise therapy for a number of conditions is well over 40%. The number of diseases that are treatable by exercise is continuously increasing. Research has shown that those who participate in strenuous competitive sports live longer. Obviously, training for competition is more intense, and in addition, competition gives valuable adrenaline rushes. At present, longer life expectancy means an ever-extending period of state-supported or company-financed retirement, more disability and more health costs. This was never anticipated. By 2025 it is estimated that the cost of interest payments, Medicare, Medicaid and social security will consume all US federal income. The economic consequences of chronic disease are so substantial that if present trends continue nation states could be bankrupted. In the near future, it will be those countries that have the healthiest populations with the healthiest brains that will rule the world. What can you do? Save your health and save humanity. One of the most interesting developments is the fact that we can rebuild old bodies. The body of an 80-year-old has lost about 50% of his muscle mass since the age of 50, which has been replaced by fat. By removing the fat and regenerating lost muscle, we can give the 80-year-old a body composition similar to that one of 20 or even 30 years younger. Two men. The first is 20 years older than the second. Not the other way around. A beach party at 90 is no longer a dream but a real possibility. I have little time to tell you more, but you have no time to lose. You can rebuild your body at any age. It's like trading in your car for a new one. When I was in Chicago in 1950, I traded in my Chevrolet, list price $3,000, for an Oldsmobile 98, list price $5,000. I asked the salesman: What is the difference between these two cars? He said two words: more car. What do you get when you trade in your body for a new one? More body, more mind, more spirit! Go for it! (Applause) Dania Gerhardt: This was wonderful Charles. I mean, I don't have to add anything, the reaction is so obvious. I really love it that bodybuilding will save humanity, I guess. So, I can also imagine that after this a lot of people will, in the next break, maybe go for the fruit rather than for the cake, and maybe run home instead of taking the train. Would that make you happy? Charles Eugster: Well, as far as fruit [is] concerned, I would just like to say that in the Garden of Eden, if Adam had refused the fruit offered by Eve, and instead eaten the snake, protein, (Laughter) the world would be different. (Laughter) (Applause) Dania Gerhardt: Thank you, Charles. Thank you so much. Thank you. Wonderful. (Applause)

References

  1. ^ "CHARLES DAVIS, HARDWARE MERCHANT, CONVICT, LAY LEADER in HOBART". Australian Postal History. Retrieved 8 February 2014.
  2. ^ "Retailer has diversified". The Age. 29 May 1973. Retrieved 14 July 2015.
  3. ^ "Top-Notch Top Hat...That's Ilga". The Age. 6 June 1969. Retrieved 14 July 2015.
  4. ^ "Biography - Charles Davis". adb.anu.edu.au. Retrieved 14 July 2015.
  5. ^ a b "Charles Davis". utas.edu.au. Retrieved 14 July 2015.
  6. ^ "Sir Donald waves the Games flag for his home town". The Age. 24 November 1980. Retrieved 14 July 2015.
  7. ^ a b c "Charles Davis Group growing". The Age. 25 June 1974. Retrieved 14 July 2015.
  8. ^ "Grubb's truss goes to U.S." The Age. 30 April 1970. Retrieved 14 July 2015.
  9. ^ "Eighteen yachts to compete in West Coaster race". The Age. 19 December 1975. Retrieved 14 July 2015.
  10. ^ "Charles Davis Group". The Age. 29 May 1973. Retrieved 14 July 2015.
  11. ^ "Name of retail pioneer to grace the city again". Australasian Business Intelligence. 23 December 2001. Archived from the original on 24 September 2015. Retrieved 14 July 2015.
  • Harris Scarfe Holdings Limited Annual Report 2000.

External links

This page was last edited on 27 November 2023, at 17:03
Basis of this page is in Wikipedia. Text is available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 Unported License. Non-text media are available under their specified licenses. Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc. WIKI 2 is an independent company and has no affiliation with Wikimedia Foundation.