Word: mutuality
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...Years ago they had been married in this church. There was a separation by mutual consent. The woman felt she could never forgive...
...Press sniffed a good railroad story last week. A committee to look into railroad problems was appointed by the National Association of Mutual Savings Banks, the members of which own 13% of all railroad bonds. And vague rumors were afloat in Wall Street that Calvin Cool idge, Alfred Emanuel Smith and others whose voices could command the respect of investors and legislators, would soon look into the railroad situation. There was truth in the story, though its exact nature was probably to remain nebulous for some weeks. It was apparent that the railroads, a blight on the U. S. economic...
...influential stockholder Errett Lobban Cord. United, which currently flies Fords between New York and Chicago, is getting ready to install new high-speed Boeings capable of crossing the U. S. in 24 hours. Transcontinental & Western Air is expected to patronize Curtiss-Wright, to which it is related through their mutual holding company, North American Aviation...
...composed of a commission of three experts, two from the medical or scientific professions and only one from the legal profession to give it legality. Discordant couples would come here instead of lawyers' offices. If an effort to reconcile them failed they should have an honest divorce by mutual consent because of incompatibility. This would apply to about 90% of all such cases, many of whom would be reconciled. . . . 4) Alimony and support with reference to economic status of the woman and the facts in each case (instead of being an arbitrary right, as in so many States) with...
Club members pay monthly dues of from $1 to $3.50. For $1 an individual member is assured full medical attention. The $3.50 takes care of an entire family. There are two great divisions among the clubs?the Spanish and the Cuban. The Cuban are strictly mutual benefit societies, admit only those who cannot afford to pay for private attention. The Spanish clubs maintain great social halls and schools. They resemble U. S. fraternal societies like the Moose...