Word: restricting
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...only to details of the "cracking" process. Five companies, the Standard Oil of New Jersey, the Standard Oil of Indiana, the Standard Development Co., the Texas Co., the Gasoline Products Co., are accused of controlling these minor patents, pooling them, and licensing them to other companies under contracts which restrict trade and increase unnecessarily the cost of gasoline by heavy royalties. Forty-five companies are accused as "secondary defendants," as having entered the allegedly illegal combination by securing licenses to "crack" oil under these patents. The suits were hardly filed when the cry of "Politics" went up from...
...Dutch gave the "Stevenson Scheme" its coup de grâce by refusing to restrict their considerable rubber production, and unloading their product on the syndicate. Rubber, instead of remaining at the pegged price of 30? a pound, has declined to 22?. Even on the best British plantations the cost of production is something like 18? a pound. The chief solution proposed to the rubber growers' dilemma is to increase the use of rubber in floor coverings, and to amalgamate plantation companies so as to get a real control over their operations...
...physician's license to prescribe alcohol. It is well-known that most of the liquor dispensed by druggists on physicians' prescriptions is not intended for the treatment of the sick. Whatever we, as individuals, may think of the Volstead Law, we are morally bound to restrict prescriptions to medicinal purposes. Selling one's prescription blanks to the druggist is worse than fee splitting, and should be cause for exclusion from membership in the American Medical Association!" Subcostalgia. The surgical section heard Dr. Marshall Clinton, associate professor of surgery in the University of Buffalo, describe a condition called...
...believed in Washington that if the Dawes report is soon accepted in Europe and if the bill for the eight new cruisers is passed, the President would call a new arms limitation conference to set limits on lighter vessels and air craft. The present treaties restrict only craft of more than 10,000 tons. With eight new 10,000-ton cruisers authorized, we could go to such a conference prepared to bargain by giving up something. Otherwise, we should go to such a conference asking other nations to limit their cruiser strength, but with no similar sacrifice to offer...
...bill to restrict immigration which carries a provision excluding all immigrants not eligible to citizenship (that is, Japanese; other Orientals had been previously barred out) was approved by both House and Senate and sent to the President. The provision making the Japanese exclusion clause effective July 1 (which had been altered by the joint conference to March 1, 1925, at the request of the President) was restored at the demand of the House (TIME, May 19). Thus the bill was passed. Congress. Both houses wanted the Japanese exclusion section made effective almost immediately-regardless of the President's demand...