The E. I du Pont de Nemours & Company minute books document an important era in the history of the company from just before the turn of the twentieth century through the 1930s. The DuPont Company in this time went through many changes in structure...
Report by the U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Employment and Occupational Outlook Branch. Discusses the disposition of plants built on government contracts during World War I, with significant attention given to DuPont's Old...
Transcriptions of outgoing correspondence from the E. I. du Pont de Nemours and Company to customers, sales agents, and other business associates. The letterbook covers a period from July 23, 1836 to September 28, 1838
on front of card: "Al's Tourist Court and Country Dining Room, On U.S. 1, U.S. 23, U.S. 301, Callahan, FLA." on back of card: "Al's Tourist Court and Country Dining Room. New, Modern Tourist Rooms all with private baths and Simmons metal...
Handwritten on back: "Royal Oak Boxwood Farms, Roanoke, Va. English yew - 23' high, 23' spread." By another hand: "488L - Seeds and Gardens - Trees - 1930. Attached to letter dated July 1 1930."
Includes only page 2 of the Minutes of the 08/09/1999 meeting and full minutes and materials of the 10/11/1999 meeting. Materials include agenda, memos, and presentation materials with handwritten notes. Page 23 is loose.
Although the tiny part in this veteran’s mike looks insignificant, its variation from perfection may mean a jammed gun, faulty landing gear, a stalled engine. This machinist in a large western aircraft plant has had 23 years of experience....
Five million dollars in gold, sent by American bankers to Ferris Brothers, Paris bankers, to help stabilize French currency, being loaded aboard the S.S. Mauretania.
Rudy Blesch, probably the most distinguished jazz authority in the country and author of many books on the subject, drops in on Editor Bill Grauer of the Record Changer Magazine to discuss old ragtime piano records. Blesch is at the present time...
Noon hour scene at the Commodore Music Shop where many record collectors spend their lunch hour. Business men, doctors, lawyers, writers etc. find a common ground in jazz record collecting.