Word: rental
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...mission property. In Peiping Japanese Chargé d' Affaires S. Nakayama announced last week Japan's willingness to make reparations. It had already made a cash settlement for the bombing of a French Catholic Mission south of the Wall ($600, silver) and had paid rental for the occupation by Japanese troops of the U. S. Methodist Mission at Shanhaikwan ($22, gold...
...main feature of the program will be the rental of a club room to be used for occasional meals with speakers and as a gathering place where club members may converse and react intellectually with other club members of contradicting beliefs. Under the new plan, neither the conservatism of the Inquiry nor the radicalism of the Liberal Club will be suppressed, but both will meet and enter in discussions...
...less are considerably in excess of the number available, while the demand for rooms priced at above $260 is less than the supply. For this reason a notice was posted in the Union on Tuesday asking all Freshmen who could afford to do so, to increase their stated maximum rental to include rooms priced above $260. Even when students cannot raise their maximum above $260, they are urged to relieve the demand for rooms at the lowest prices, by increasing the maximum amount by as much as they can afford. It was pointed out that men who complied with...
Prong No. 1 of the Wallace pitchfork authorizes the Secretary to reduce production by contracting with farmers to rent the land they leave idle. What that rental will be has yet to be determined but estimates have ranged around $3 per acre. In theory the farmer who last year harvested 1,000 acres of wheat will get more by raising only 700 this year and collecting Government rent on 150. Declares Secretary Wallace: "The taking out of acreage on a wide scale is one necessary line of attack. I don't contemplate such reduction of acreage as meaning that...
...Elder Statesman Bernard Mannes Baruch, called for the Secretary of Agriculture to lease lands which farmers agreed to leave fallow. Previous estimates were to the effect that farmers would collect about $3 for every acre they left uncultivated, though the bill allowed the Secretary to set his own rental. Conceivably a shrewd farmer could rent enough of his land to the U. S. to remain idle all year...