Word: zeros
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Reports late last night showed that there was a great deal of snow in the northern regions and that the temperature was generally around zero. In Woodstock, Vermont the temperature was 6 degrees with 40 inches of snow, in Canaan, New Hampshire--6 degrees with 30 inches, in Gorham, N. H.--6 degrees with 55 inches, in Warren, N. H.--8 degrees with 60 inches, Peterborough, N. H.--18 degrees with 36 inches, in Franconia, N. H.--6 degrees with 45 inches, in Chocorua, N. H.--zero with 50 inches, in East Jaffrey, N. H. 18 degrees with 40 inches...
...areas, the cyclone passed over Georgia resulting in much damage of property and loss of life. Travelling up the coast, the gale collected moisture from the ocean. This vapor rose into the upper strata of the air and congealed there, at a temperature of 30 or 50 degrees below zero...
...matter of fact, the arctic region does travel southward during the winter but this has very little part in producing these frigid temperatures we are experiencing. At a height of eight or nine miles above the surface of the earth the temperature is about thirty degrees below zero...
Members of the paper's staff bought in desks, typewriters and office equipment of the Transcript for $15.84. Another bought in the Transcript's $18,500 press for $41.93, deeded it right back to Editor Baker. In zero weather, Sheriff F. H. Brandt went about the town selling out other Susquehanna concerns. A house fetched 81? a lumber yard, $7.98, automobiles, 25?. Because Susquehanna townsfolk were united allies of Editor Baker, all the properties went back to their original owners. The Canawacta Water Company lost $800 by the sales...
...which broke in the Moscow Press last week. Peasants in a dozen villages of the Soviet Far East were reported to have broken collective contracts signed not by them but for them by the local Soviets. The contracts bound the peasants to go out into the woods in sub-zero weather and stay there in lumber camps until they had cut specified quotas of wood...