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Hamilton W. Wright, center, chief of the Industrial Salvage Branch, Salvage Division, War Production Board, is presented with a handsomely prepared jumbo book by Gordon Lament, right, of New York City, president of the Dairy Industry Supply Association. The book contains copies of the 250 pages of advertising and editorial cooperation contributed by the twenty-two trade publications in the dairy field in connection with special scrap salvage campaign sponsored by the Dairy Industry Supply Association, which covered 30,000 dairy processing firms throughout the country. It is worthy to note that twenty million pounds of critically needed materials were collected against an original objective of a million pounds. Truly a remarkable performance. Eric Webster, left, chief of the General Industrial Equipment Division, WPB, looks on

Signing New York milk marketing order Washington, D.C., Aug. 26. Sec. of Agriculture Henry Wallace Center; Commissioner Holton V. Noyes, right; of the New York Department of Agriculture, and F.R. Wilcox, director of the AAA division of marketing and marketing agreements, are looking over the Federal Milk Marketing order for the New York metropolitan marketing area. This order, which was approved by more that 70 percent of dairymen supplying the New York City market with milk in a referendum held recently throughout the New York milkshed, establishes uniform minimum prices to be paid dairymen handlers. The marketing agreement program affects about 10 million people who get an average daily supply of about 6 and a half million quarts of milk from the New York milkshed, 82638

Cows being milked in the dairy barn at Two River Non-Stock Cooperative, a FSA (Farm Security Administration) co-op at Waterloo, Nebraska. The dairy herd number sixty-seven, all papered Holstein stock, forty-six head is now being milked, all the whole milk is being marketed in Omaha through the Nebraska-Iowa Non-Stock Cooperative Milk Association. The herd ranks among the upper ten in herd production of the herds whose population is marketed through the association

Signing New York milk marketing order Washington, D.C., Aug. 26. Sec. of Agriculture Henry Wallace Center; Commissioner Holton V. Noyes, right; of the New York Department of Agriculture, and F.R. Wilcox, director of the AAA division of marketing and marketing agreements, are looking over the Federal Milk Marketing order for the New York metropolitan marketing area. This order, which was approved by more that 70 percent of dairymen supplying the New York City market with milk in a referendum held recently throughout the New York milkshed, establishes uniform minimum prices to be paid dairymen handlers. The marketing agreement program affects about 10 million people who get an average daily supply of about 6 and a half million quarts of milk from the New York milkshed, 8/26/38

Head of congressional bloc to help butter, cheese and egg producers. Washington, D.C., Nov. 8. Dairy State Legislators opened a drive today to force the House Agricultural Committee to include in the new Farm Bill a program of benefits for the nation's butter, cheese and milk producers. Headed by Rep. August H. Anderson, R. of Minn. a bloc of Congressmen plan to meet with representatives of the National Cooperative Milk Producers Federation to work out details for a proposed three point program for dairy farmers. The program includes: increased tariff on dairy imports as well as vegetable oils, regulation of imports so that the incoming products will have to meet the same sanitary requirements as the domestic - a provision that could amount to embargo in some cases, bloc members said. Limitation on the use of cotton and tobacco acreage for dairying purposes. 11837

Cows entering the barn to be milked. Two River Non-Stock Cooperative, FSA (Farm Security Administration) co-op, Waterloo, Nebraska. The dairy herd numbers sixty-seven, all papered Holstein stock, forty-six head is now being milked; all the whole milk is being marketed in Omaha through the Nebraska-Iowa Non-Stock Cooperative Milk Association. The herd ranks among the upper ten in herd production of the herd whose production is marketed through the association

Government regulation needed to insure Detroit steady supply of milk, Monopoly Committee told. Washington, D.C., May 2. Kenneth L. Vardon, President of the United Dairy Workers Union of Detroit, today told the Temporary National Economic Committee that some form of government regulation must be imposed to insure Detroit a steady supply of milk at a just price to the consumer, the distributor, and the farmer. He charged that the practices of George A. Johnson, independent dealer, serving six per cent of the city, were such that they 'are seriously endangering the supply of fluid milk for Detroit.' Vardon said that Johnson shops with various farmers to get the lowest possible prices but refuses to pay prevailing wage standards

This type of dairy stock at the American Red Cross Hospital Farm at Salisbury England. The photograph shows Captain Frank S. Peer, director of the Farm, with one of the Jersey cows which are now furnishing milk to the big Hospital. Mr. Peer comes from Ithaca, N.Y. The cows at the Farm include thirty Jerseys and 30 Guernseys all of which were donated by the farmers of the little Islands of Jersey and Guernsey, in the English Channel, as a mark of their appreciation of the American effort in the war

Cows being milked in dairy barn at Two River Non-Stock, Cooperative, a FSA (Farm Security Administration) co-op at Waterloo, Nebraska. The dairy herd numbers sixty-seven, all papered Holstein stock. Forty-six head are now being milked. All the whole milk is marketed in Omaha through the Nebraska-Iowa Non-Stock Cooperative Milk Association. The herd ranks among the upper ten in herd production of the herds whose production is marketed through the association

Hamilton W. Wright, center, chief of the Industrial Salvage Branch, Salvage Division, War Production Board, is presented with a handsomely prepared jumbo book by Gordon Lament, right, of New York City, president of the Dairy Industry Supply Association. The book contains copies of the 250 pages of advertising and editorial cooperation contributed by the twenty-two trade publications in the dairy field in connection with special scrap salvage campaign sponsored by the Dairy Industry Supply Association, which covered 30,000 dairy processing firms throughout the country. It is worthy to note that twenty million pounds of critically needed materials were collected against an original objective of a million pounds. Truly a remarkable performance. Eric Webster, left, chief of the General Industrial Equipment Division, WPB, looks on

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Public domain photograph of American trade card, no copyright restrictions image - Picryl description

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new york state new york safety film negatives hamilton hamilton w wright center industrial branch division war production board war production board gordon lament gordon lament new york city president dairy industry dairy industry association copies cooperation twenty two trade publications twenty two trade publications field dairy field connection scrap campaign firms country note million pounds twenty million pounds materials objective million pounds performance eric webster eric webster general equipment general industrial equipment division wpb 1940s 40s united states history 1940 s library of congress
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01/01/1941
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Smith, Roger, photographer
United States. Office of War Information.
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Library of Congress
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http://www.loc.gov/
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Public Domain

label_outline Explore Firms, Dairy Industry, Million Pounds

Citation winner. Certificate winner, George Smolarek, employed in the Aircraft Engine Department, Packard Motor Car Company, Detroit, Michigan, at the luncheon tendered by Donald M. Nelson, Chairman of the War Production Board (WPB), following the White House ceremony

Citation winners. Donald M. Nelson, (extreme left) Chairman of the War Production Board (WPB), and William G. Marshall (extreme right) director of the WPB, are here shown outside the White House with certificate winner Stanley Crawford, (second from left) and citation winner Edwin Curtiss Tracy, both employees of the RCA Manufacturing Company, Camden, New Jersey

Static Test Firing of Saturn V S-1C Stage

Donald M. Nelson, chairman, War Production Board (WPB)

Nelson congratulates a blind worker. For her work in training blind persons for war industries, Miss Helen Hurst, founder of the Helen Hurst Foundation For the Blind, was congratulated by Donald M. Nelson, War Production Board (WPB) chairman. Miss Hurst, herself blind, tries out the various types of jobs to see if they can be done by blind people before she places them in industry

Dairy industry, egg industry - Knight's pictorial gallery of arts

Farmers in warehouse during the auction sale. Two bookmen on each side of the row follow the auctioneer and buyers calculating the amount of the sale by multiplying the price times the number of pounds. Mebane, Orange County, North Carolina. See subregional notes (Odum) November 9, 1939

Johnnie, Carrie and Jim Davenport picking cotton for MR. J. P. Daws, Route 1, Shawnee. Johnnie picks 75 pounds, Carrie 100 pounds and Jim 150 to 200 pounds a day. Get $1.00 a hundred pounds. No School yet. Mother is a renter; moves about a great deal. Lewis W. Hine. See W.H. Swift Report. Location: Potawotamie County, Oklahoma

6-year old Warren Frakes. Mother said he picked 41 pounds yesterday "An I don't make him pick; he picked some last year." Has about 20 pounds in his bag. See 4574. Location: Comanche County, Oklahoma. Lewis W. Hine

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. – The first stage ignited on NASA’s Ares I-X test rocket at Launch Pad 39B at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida at 11:30 a.m. EDT on Oct. 28. The rocket produces 2.96 million pounds of thrust at liftoff and reaches a speed of 100 mph in eight seconds. This was the first launch from Kennedy's pads of a vehicle other than the space shuttle since the Apollo Program's Saturn rockets were retired. The parts used to make the Ares I-X booster flew on 30 different shuttle missions ranging from STS-29 in 1989 to STS-106 in 2000. The data returned from more than 700 sensors throughout the rocket will be used to refine the design of future launch vehicles and bring NASA one step closer to reaching its exploration goals. For information on the Ares I-X vehicle and flight test, visit http://www.nasa.gov/aresIX. Photo credit: NASA/Sandra Joseph and Kevin O'Connell KSC-2009-5987

Ralph P. Tittsler, Associate Bacteriologist Bureau of Dairy Industry. Method for preserving cream. 5. The Department of Agriculture is experimenting and testing daily to determine the bacteria contained in cream that has been preserved by means of salt. In the photo is Ralph P. Tittsler, Associate Bacteriologist for the Bureau of Dairy Industry, 1-26-39

Three Thirds of a Nation. Here's the Three Thirds of a Nation Orchestra in motion. Leith Stevens, veteran radio musician, handles orchestrations, directs the orchestra for this War Production Board (WPB) radio series presented Wednesdays on the Blue Network

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new york state new york safety film negatives hamilton hamilton w wright center industrial branch division war production board war production board gordon lament gordon lament new york city president dairy industry dairy industry association copies cooperation twenty two trade publications twenty two trade publications field dairy field connection scrap campaign firms country note million pounds twenty million pounds materials objective million pounds performance eric webster eric webster general equipment general industrial equipment division wpb 1940s 40s united states history 1940 s library of congress