Word: jointly
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...rich coal and farming country, near the Susquehanna River within a few miles of Shamokin Mountain, it will be the first Federal penal institution in the northeastern quarter of the U. S. Not casually was Lewisburg selected for the honor. Abundant fuel and water supplies, the joint accessibility by many railroads from Detroit, Cleveland, Cincinnati and the eastern seaboard, healthful climate, a long agricultural season for working convicts and the persuasiveness of Senator David Aiken Reed were all factors in the choice. Also, Lewisburg is the seat of the Federal Court in the Middle District...
...still the Wet cry of "sumptuary legislation," a dozen potent Drys representing the Anti-Saloon League, the Women's Christian Temperance Union, the Methodist Episcopal Board of Temperance, Prohibition & Public Morals and the Committee of One Thousand last week issued a joint declaration of policy through the Christian Herald...
...rakes, hoes, pitchforks and such other humble tools is American Fork & Hoe Co. with plants in Ashtabula, Ohio, Wallingford, Vt., Fort Madison, Iowa, Harriman, Tenn., and many another rural centre. About 5% of its-gross comes from golf shafts, fishing rods, snowshoes, skis; another 5% from railway appliances like joint shims and rail anchors. Yet its chief income is from farm tools, in which it handles 60% of the U. S. trade. Last week this business was expanded when a merger with Kelley Axe & Tool Co. of Charleston, W. Va., and Skelton Shovel Co. of Dunkirk, N. Y., was proposed...
...Army & Navy unexpectedly found themselves involved in the farm problem last week when complaints reached President Hoover that these services were contributing to the general agricultural depression by purchasing from foreign producers food for soldiers & sailors stationed outside the U. S. The President promptly ordered an investigation by a joint Army, Navy and Agricultural Committee headed by Nils A. Olsen, Chief of the Bureau of Agricultural Economics...
...French Gov- ernment stresses the necessity of approaching European problems from the political side, leaving economic issues to be dealt with after certain political prerequisites have been fulfilled." The German Government considers economic issues paramount, holds that "it remains the task of Governments to bring their joint economic policies into harmony." Clearly the German reply harked back to the original idea of an European tariff consortium...