Word: mutuals
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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London was as worried as Washington was relieved. El Hombre signed with Viscount D'Abernon in Buenos Aires last year a $38,880,000 mutual trade agreement highly advantageous to Britain, distinctly menacing to U. S. trade. Does that still stand? Worried, the London Daily Herald, organ of James Ramsay MacDonald, called up General Uriburu to ask. Over a radio telephone span of 7,000 miles the General answered slowly, loudly in English...
...particularly impressed by something which did not figure in despatches last week because it had nothing to do with the award. This something is Article 89 of the Concession and consists of a single sentence: "The parties base their relations with regard to this agreement on the principle of mutual good-will and fairdealing as well as on reasonable interpretation of the terms of the agreement...
Died. Richard Delafield, 76, Manhattan banker, board chairman of National Park Bank and Mutual Bank; of an illness induced by a fall four years ago; at his home in Tuxedo Park...
...Scandinavians that they alone have set the quarrelsome world an example by almost achieving disarmament. As part of the observances at Reykjavik last week their representatives signed a treaty binding them never to go to war and to accept the arbitrations of the Permanent Court of Arbitration in all mutual disputes. To these advanced peoples, so boldly in the van of Peace, so highly educated, so progressive in politics, police methods, liquor control and social legislation, the grim, tremendous, deadly Rodney might well have seemed as incongruous, as curiously old fashioned as a dinosaur or brontosaurus...
...Quoth the Conference: "The position and mutual relations of the group of self-governing communities composed of Great Britain and the Dominions may be readily defined. They are autonomous communities within the British Empire, equal in status and in no way subordinate one to the other in any aspect of their domestic or external affairs, though united by a common allegiance to the Crown and freely associated as members of the British Commonwealth of Nations...