Word: collections
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...businessmen not to cut wages and lengthen hours, to uphold code standards. A. F. of L.'s William Green warned workers to resist any changes attempted by employers. All denounced the chiseling which "had been begun in many places." NRA ordered defunct code authorities to wire it collect reports of all code infractions. The reports were withheld from the public but compiled in a great dossier so that they might be recited as a magnificent funeral oration to make the U. S. sorry that NRA had died. Hundreds of concerns announced that they would not cut wages...
...million tourists into the city before Armistice Day; 2) to put to some practical use 1,400-acre Balboa Park and the many permanent neo-Hispanic buildings by the late Bertram Goodhue left over from the Panama-California Exposition of 1915-16.* Accordingly, the citizenry passed the hat to collect $500,000 for organization expenses, concessionaires were invited to participate, the U. S. Government appropriated $125,000 for a building, Henry Ford and Standard Oil erected two more, 32 foreign governments are represented in the House of Pacific Relations, and "a city of magic in a land of dreams" became...
Offering an opportunity to four or five students who have already taken Geology 1, a fossil collecting party is being formed by the Museum of Comparative Zoology. The object of the trip is to collect fossil vertebrates in the rich Eocene deposits of southwestern Wyoming and northeastern Utah...
...Chairman Warner owns 310 shares of preferred. Both he and President Noah have a contract to collect from 2 ½% to 6% on all American Woolen earnings over $2,000,000. Last year American Woolen lost $5,000,000. Mr. 'Warner also receives $134,553 as president of McCall Corp. (McCall's Magazine...
...Japanese had 1) sold bulbs which infringed upon G. E. patents, and 2) caused G. E. serious damage by marketing these bulbs under the trademark T. E. at ruinously low prices. Last week the court handed down a decision which may make history. First it authorized General Electric to collect from the defendants "such damages as may have been caused by the past sale of the Japanese lamps in this country in violation of the patent." Then it directed General Electric to apply for a blanket injunction prohibiting the defendants from ever again selling such Japanese lamps...