Monday, September 3, 2012

Open for business: Phoenix develops Sky Harbor International Airport. Carl and Walter Bimson open Va




In a 1987 interview with The Arizona Republic , Adam Goettl described how during one particularly cold Mansfield winter, he had designed and built a transformer that he and Gust had taken door to door, melting furniture cheats for habbo hotel the frozen pipes in each neighbor's home for a $10 fee.
The Goettls went on to become internationally known pioneers in the mass production of evaporative coolers, and the Phoenix sheet-metal company furniture cheats for habbo hotel they formed in 1939 went on to develop dozens of innovations in heating furniture cheats for habbo hotel and cooling furniture cheats for habbo hotel technology.
Open for business: Phoenix develops Sky Harbor International Airport. Carl and Walter Bimson open Valley furniture cheats for habbo hotel Bank and Trust. Future Arizona Rep. Isabella Greenway opens Arizona Inn in Tucson. Hotelier Fred Harvey opens the La Posada furniture cheats for habbo hotel Hotel in Winslow.
News of the day: Valley Bank and Trust rose to prominence under the leadership of its shrewd and unconventional president, furniture cheats for habbo hotel Walter Bimson. Bimson built his home atop a downtown office high-rise, authored a book on fly fishing, and with an $840,000 loan from the Reconstruction Finance Corporation, he launched a consumer and small-business loan program at the height of the Depression under the slogan, "Yes, Mr. Jones, we will gladly make that loan!" Valley Bank, later renamed Valley National Bank, is now part of JPMorgan Chase.
Economic drivers: President Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal created dozens of programs to put Arizonans to work. The nation's first agricultural subsidies paid Arizona farmers not to farm portions of their land in an effort to drive up deflated prices.
furniture cheats for habbo hotel Prevailing prices: Arizona's three main sources of income - mining, produce and livestock - all suffered huge decreases in price. Copper fell from 18 cents a pound in 1929 to 5 1/2 cents in 1932. Cotton went from 19 cents a pound to 6 cents, furniture cheats for habbo hotel and beef prices fell from 9 cents a pound to 3 cents.
Quote: "The Judd case has dropped like manna upon the Arizona desert," from a Jan.19, 1932, Chicago Tribune article describing a media frenzy created by the Phoenix murder trial of Winnie Ruth Judd, convicted of killing two female rivals and shipping the bodies to Los Angeles in travel trunks.

No comments:

Post a Comment