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Word: lumbering (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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What further thoughts Franklin Roosevelt had were not disclosed. Felix Frankfurter, who was credited with advising the President to postpone a court test until NRA was an established success, and Mr. Richberg, who had declined to make the Court test on the Belcher lumber case (TIME, April 8) and then picked the Schechter case as the best way of taking NRA to Court, must both have felt distinctly sheepish. New Deal lieutenants on the House Ways & Means Committee fiddled around fruitlessly with a new bill to plug the holes the Supreme Court had dug in the Recovery...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: RECOVERY: Out on Chickens | 6/3/1935 | See Source »

...Paul to Seattle the name needed no exposition. There the abduction of George, great-grandson of Frederick Weyerhaeuser, caused the same kind of sensation the East would feel if Miles, great-grandson of J. Pierpont Morgan, were snatched. For the Weyerhaeusers are the royal family of the U.S. lumber business. Their kingdom, sprawled from Wisconsin to Washington, is a broad 3,000 square miles of the country's best timberland supporting 94 Weyerhaeuser-operated or affiliated corporations which gross $20,000,000 a year. The fact that the Weyerhaeusers and associates have lost up to five million dollars...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: CRIME: Snatch by Egoist | 6/3/1935 | See Source »

...weeks later the Albers (FlapJack) Milling Co. plant made a roaring fire with a $300,000 loss. Seattle's ball park spiraled in smoke. Executives and their underlings opened the morning mail to find printed notes threatening fires. Factory after factory burned. Lumber yards, stacked high with fir and cedar from Washington's forests, became kindling pyres. A boxcar, filled with new Buicks specially built with right-hand drives for shipment to the Orient, became a pile of ashes and twisted steel. Seattle's nominally low 60? per capita fire loss zoomed to $1.40 in four years...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: WASHINGTON: Skidroad Avenger | 5/27/1935 | See Source »

Died. John Philip Weyerhaeuser, 76, president of Weyerhaeuser Timber Co., eldest son of Founder Frederick Weyerhaeuser who built it up to be leader in the $10,000,000,000 U. S. lumber industry; of pneumonia; in Tacoma, Wash...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones, May 27, 1935 | 5/27/1935 | See Source »

...unhappy because Jack & Jean, the farmer's children, dislike milk. Orgets Bee & Baw retire to a dell to ponder Cow's plight, come upon two starving baby foxes. Back to the farmyard they flit, persuade Cow to lumber off to the dell with milk for the foxes. On the way clumsy Cow catches a hoof in a railroad track, is nearly killed by a train. Jack & Jean, overcome by Cow's bravery, agree to love her, drink milk...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Orgets | 5/20/1935 | See Source »

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