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4 results for North Carolina Historical Review Vol. 30 Issue 4, Oct 1953
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Record #:
20598
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This article identifies court decisions in the state that involve trade unions. An introduction explains the author's research into the movement and the cases, and the cases themselves are organized by subject and include strike injunctions, criminal cases resulting from strike or union activity, civil actions resulting from strike or union activity, insurance cases, unemployment compensation cases, arbitration and contract cases, railway labor cases, National Labor Relations Act cases, and non-labor cases mentioning unions or strikes
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Record #:
20599
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This is the second and final installment in a series of articles looking at the development and use of fertilizers in the southeast from 1840-1950. This installment looks at the state of agriculture at the turn of the century, at steps toward more intelligent farming, the role of fertilizers in the rejuvenation of agriculture, specific treatment for field crops and pastures, the use of lime, minor nutrients, more profitable use of fertilizers, of volume sold, factors responsible for increased use, fertilizer prices, how fertilizer is sold, inspection, and recommended fertilizer brands all during the period between 1900 and 1950.
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Record #:
20609
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This article is a supplement to two articles: \"The Diary of Joseph Gales, 1794-1795,\" Vol 26 (July, 1949), 335-347 and \"The Editorial Experience of Joseph Gales,\" Vol 28 (July, 1951), 332-361, and provides some brief additional information on Gales' publications.
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Record #:
20610
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This is a reprint of Quaker teacher and Northerner Margaret Newbold Thorpe's 1869 memoir of her experiences teaching in the newly established \"public schools for negroes\" in Warrenton, North Carolina. Richard Morton's introduction provides biographical information on Thorpe as well as excerpts from some of her other writings. Morton also attempts to make a case for the people described in Thorpe's memoir, suggesting that her impressions of their attitudes towards people of color was tempered by her lack of understanding of the hardships of war suffered in that part of the South.
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