Vietnam or Thailand ? Vote for the TOP Country of the Week !
Updated: June 17, 2025
According to the rule of increase, by 1916 we shall be using 104,000,000 tons a year; by 1925, 208,000,000, and by 1934, 416,000,000 tons, and if the same rate of increase should continue, by 1940 we should have required for our use in the meantime, six billion tons. Unlike coal, the forests, and the soil, there is no great and entirely useless waste of iron.
On the 22nd of November, 1925, that memorable and sacred day in which the Bahá’ís of the Orient celebrated the twin Festivals of the Declaration of the Báb and the birthday of ‘Abdu’l-Bahá, Dr. John E. Esslemont passed on to the Abhá Kingdom. His end was as swift as it was unexpected.
Feb. 1, 1919: Arrested in Los Angeles County charged with suspicion of a felony. Los Angeles County No. 14554. June 31, 1924: Arrested in San Francisco, charged with uttering fictitious checks. No. 35570. Oct. 5, 1925: Los Angeles Police Department issued notice that Allen was wanted for uttering fictitious checks. Bulletin No. 233.
I want the people of all the earth to see in the American flag the symbol of a Government which intends no oppression at home and no aggression abroad, which in the spirit of a common brotherhood provides assistance in time of distress. State of the Union Address Calvin Coolidge December 8, 1925
The expenditures of 19161 the last pre-war year, were $742,000,000, and in 1925 over $3,500,000,000, or nearly five times as great.
He will be accompanied by our dear Bahá’í sister, Mrs. Lowell, who is returning to America via Germany and whom you will be glad to welcome in your midst. Assuring you of my affection and prayers, I am your brother in His service 26 October 1925 To the esteemed editor of the “La Nova Tago”, the International Bahá’í Esperanto Gazette
"This isn't 1915, when political and civil rights still existed, and we weren't hunted outlaws. This is 1925, and conditions are all different. It's war, war, war to the death, now; and if war is Hell, then they are going to get Hell this time, not we." Nobody spoke, for a little while; but Marion and Craig smoked contemplatively, and the others sat there in the dusk, sunk in thought.
Funded loan of 1891 continued at 2 per cent . . . . . . . . .$ 25,364,500 $ 25,364,500 100.00 Four per cent funded loan of 1907 . . . . . . . . . 545,342,950 478,195,600 87.69 Five per cent loan of 1904 . . . . . . . . . 95,009,700 64,615,650 68.01 Four per cent loan of 1925 . . . . . . . . . 162,315,400 117,997,200 72.70 Three per cent ten-twenties of 1898 . . . . . . . . . 168,679,000 109,450,060 55.09
I had three brothers and two sisters. My brothers older than I, and my sisters younger. Their names were Silas, Carter, Rap or Raymond, I do not remember; my sisters were Jane and Susie, both of whom are living in Virginia now. Only one I have ever seen and he came north with General Sherman, he died in 1925. He was a Baptist minister like myself.
If we subtract expenditures for debt retirements and interest, veterans' relief, increase of pensions, and other special outlays, consisting of refunds, trust investments, and like charges, we find that the general expenditures of the Government in 1925 were slightly more than twice as large as in 1916.
Word Of The Day
Others Looking