「LUMBER」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
該当件数 : 938件
he interior has been described as "a shrine to | lumber, a museum of wood, a smorgasbord of timber -- |
ghost ship, as if made from rags and rope and | lumber, a vessel from the end of the world, or someth |
quare three story structure built of dimension | lumber above a cut stone foundation. |
ansload operated by Gate Precast, and Harrigan | Lumber after its re-opening in 2010. |
nty, in 1907 and engaged in the manufacture of | lumber, agricultural pursuits, and stock raising. |
ast issues of access, water, harbors, logging, | lumber, agriculture and conservation. |
Tampa, Florida company, it delivered cargo and | lumber along the Suwannee River. |
was a wooden-hulled schooner that transported | lumber along the West Coast. |
84 | Lumber also follows a different business model from i |
The tool is turned away from the | lumber anchored at the Pivot point until the desired |
prosperous during the 1920s, hauling coal and | lumber and provided groceries and mail to residents a |
Spout Springs formerly produced | lumber and naval stores (, p. 469). |
ed in Newcastle, New Brunswick, the son of the | lumber and flour merchant James A. Fish and Elizabeth |
of cement, 2,000,000 board feet (5,000 m3) of | lumber, and 10 tons of paper. |
he British Columbia and Vancouver Island Spar, | Lumber and Saw Mill Company to establish a sawmill an |
He engaged in the | lumber and grain business. |
unding area produces tobacco, turpentine, pine | lumber, and pulpwood. |
vers of Oregon and Washington in order to load | lumber and logs. |
The Garfield transported | lumber and operated in and out of Apalachee Bay. |
Mayor Blackmore was engaged in the | lumber and coal business. |
called for the state to purchase land from the | lumber and iron companies and the lumber and iron com |
The only things not supplied were | lumber and labor. |
In 1905, | lumber and railroad baron William Zuber built a large |
Lumber and iron companies harvested the old-growth fo | |
His father, Yosef, worked in the | lumber and banking industries, and was a member of th |
He was a senior partner of the insurance, | lumber and general commission merchants firm of Primr |
916, he disbanded the railroad, along with his | lumber and logging enterprises, bringing the Carolina |
he free (slave) labor or the plentiful cypress | lumber and hand-made bricks produced on the plantatio |
prairie farmers was hurting British Columbia's | lumber and salmon packing industries. |
immigrants and was the owner of East Davenport | Lumber and Coal Company. |
Lumber and lumber products were carried out of the mo | |
The market was flooded with | lumber, and they could not sell the lumber that was p |
The railroad line transported | lumber and other supplies servicing the oil industry |
where he again entered business selling ships, | lumber and goods on a commission basis for merchants |
from Jasper County, Mississippi, in search of | lumber and lower taxes, building a dam on the Little |
argo, he found crates of arms hidden under the | lumber and consequently seized the vessel which he se |
Harrington developed a considerable trade in | lumber, and by 1859 contained two sawmills, three shi |
d real estate business in Detroit; established | lumber and supply companies in Hamtramck and Dearborn |
e lived in Stillwater, Minnesota, where hh had | lumber and manufacturing interests. |
, using the water to grind feed and flour, saw | lumber and more. |
named for the now-inundated town of Fontana, a | lumber and copper-mining hub once located at the mout |
e after George Hopkins died in 1925, supplying | lumber and building products for the building boom of |
They cut | lumber and exported it to the Hawaiian Islands, built |
o Wisconsin, he worked as a businessman in the | lumber and printing industries until his death at age |
The | lumber and other materials were sold at auctions and |
, cotton waste, vermiculite, peat moss, paper, | lumber, and chemicals, generating approximately 2,000 |
In contrast, the great brokers in rice, | lumber and other commodities operated sprawling shops |
the shipment of Pennsylvania anthracite coal, | lumber and agricultural products to the Erie Canal sy |
lorida, 11 September bringing a cargo of coal, | lumber, and whaleboats. |
moved to the town and conducted the implement, | lumber and grain business until August 1890 when he o |
ny rivers and brooks provided power for paper, | lumber and textile industries, and the town quickly e |
ro ventured into the bay to offload a cargo of | lumber and shingles. |
igan in 1862 and engaged in the manufacture of | lumber and salt from 1863 to 1878. |
e species is a valuable source of charcoal and | lumber and the leaves and fruits are also food for go |
ork City to Matamoras, Mexico, with a cargo of | lumber and petroleum. |
cluding oil, copper, nickel, chrome, platinum, | lumber and grain. |
Lumber and iron companies had harvested the old-growt | |
of Finance and Secretary-Treasurer for Bennie | Lumber and Building Materials Ltd.. |
Principal industries were | lumber and feed farming for the 30 or so horses and m |
h America in 1966 acquiring Balfour Guthrie, a | lumber and poultry business, and in 1970 it acquired |
in 1870 as a business office for his charcoal, | lumber, and quarries interests. |
dbury settled in Burlington and engaged in the | lumber and hotel businesses. |
A sawmill for | lumber and maple syrup production were soon introduce |
The Mill made rice, along with | lumber and cattle, an important commodity to the earl |
white pine was the first inspection system for | lumber and the model for many other systems. |
conomy are resource based - coal, natural gas, | lumber, and building products. |
rovide miscellaneous goods (in including food, | lumber and tools) and public services for the settler |
-cost materials, especially of their trademark | lumber and wood products. |
He entered the | lumber and oil businesses at New Milford in 1879. |
or, a lumberman and President of his R. Connor | Lumber and Land Company. |
Kempt was a | lumber and grain merchant. |
Hershey (10 April 1813 - 24 August 1893) was a | lumber and farming magnate in Iowa and Nebraska durin |
e drag-chain rumbled as it carried trash, cull | lumber, and sawdust up the conveyor to the blazing fu |
He was also involved in the | lumber and construction businesses and the president |
(born 18 January 1958) is part of the Goodyear | lumber and railway family of New York and Pennsylvani |
By 1885, he and a partner had opened a | lumber and coal business. |
He also sold fish, | lumber and rum. |
rchant in Ottawa and then Pembroke, trading in | lumber and furs. |
4, around the same time as the collapse of the | lumber and mining industries in the area. |
sculpts and creates most of his art from scrap | lumber and other materials that he can find . |
In Glens Falls, lime, marble, | lumber, and agricultural products were shipped from t |
Construction materials such as cement, | lumber and fertilizer make up a great deal of the Por |
as constructed of stone, brick and framed with | lumber, and included several large porches. |
The highly profitable Babcock | Lumber and Boom Company, operating out of Davis, West |
resources on Estonian territory of Oil shale, | lumber and, later, uranium ore, as part of the postwa |
nd Bucksville produced 3 million board feet of | lumber annually by 1850. |
uces over 3.5 million board feet (8,300 m³) of | lumber annually. |
She also carried motorboats and | lumber as deck cargo. |
1860 by local Cree craftsmen using locally cut | lumber as well as hardware and stained glass that Hun |
In 1836, the Ottawa | Lumber Association was created with Aylen a member, w |
ding lakes and streams to either be sawed into | lumber at local mills, or transported elsewhere by ra |
Beveridge was involved in the trade in | lumber at Tobique and Andover, retiring from business |
ed doughnuts in 8 minutes) and a win in the 84 | Lumber baked bean eating championship in Chandler, AZ |
ff the coast of Mobile, Alabama while towing a | lumber barge; the fate of the crew is unknown. |
His father, Joseph Bourque, was a successful | lumber baron and one of the founders of the Gatineau |
f land with mature trees that once belonged to | lumber baron Frederick Stimson, who used it as a hunt |
The house was built by | lumber baron John R. Booth in 1906, and it was design |
In 1902, the | lumber baron and businessman John Henry Kirby purchas |
ar Heinrich married Hilda Mueller, daughter of | lumber baron Chris Mueller, and they raised two child |
The local | lumber baron changed the town's name from Nippon to A |
ashington) was an American football player and | lumber baron in the Pacific northwest. |
Donated on January 2, 1922 by | lumber baron Paul H. Hoeft, the heavily wooded park s |
as built in 1876 for prominent businessman and | lumber baron William H. Perry. |
It was built by C. Jackson Booth, son of | lumber baron J.R. Booth in 1916. |
01, Byrant sent his associate, John Toomey, to | lumber baron Justus S. Stearns in Michigan and convin |
y 1883, Chase returned to Florida and became a | lumber baron. |
Lumber barons were Aaron Streater and Pete Reimers. | |
The offspring of wealthy Maine | lumber barons, Peirce attended Phillips Academy, Ando |
Some have noted the "irony" in a | lumber baron's home being built of stone rather than |
ter power from the streams, mills manufactured | lumber, barrel staves, shingles, chair parts, bobbins |
nt was a prosperous manufacturer and dealer in | lumber, based in Thessalon, Ontario. |
gates, crushed limestone, calcium bicarbonate, | lumber, beer, chemicals, plastics, and paper. |
metallic legs are welded and with hot coal or | lumber below it's easily transformed into a very effe |
A | lumber boom began not long after the town was laid ou |
The | lumber boom era was not to last, and soon all the tre |
manufactured at various water power mills into | lumber, boxes, shingles and clapboards. |
This storm barely missed the town of | Lumber Bridge, before weakening as it passed through |
dal lord Date Masamune from 1604 onwards using | lumber brought from Mount Kumano in Wakayama Prefectu |
the 1850s, when a church was constructed from | lumber brought by canoe from Traverse City and then p |
His business interests also included | lumber, building supplies and banking. |
Arlington Coal & | Lumber, built in 1841, is a historic building at 41 P |
traffic includes paper, agricultural products, | lumber, bulk plastics, steel, scrap metals, cottonsee |
In 1976, upon the request of Beaver | Lumber, Busey travelled to Whitehorse to set up the f |
He established his own | lumber business after moving to Winnipeg in 1892. |
He engaged in the | lumber business in 1887. |
Rock Island, Illinois in 1851, working in the | lumber business until 1858. |
In the early 1880s, Stark's expertise in the | lumber business would soon land him the position of m |
nty, Pennsylvania; he was also involved in the | lumber business in North Carolina. |
Taliaferro engaged in the | lumber business and other commercial enterprises; he |
While commencing the | lumber business in Florida, he completed a drainage c |
d to the United States in 1856 and entered the | lumber business in Port Deposit, Maryland. |
He engaged in the | lumber business and as a contractor in 1882. |
returned to Saginaw in 1878 and engaged in the | lumber business with his father and also was connecte |
then worked as a bookkeeper for Adam Oliver's | lumber business at Ingersoll. |
Like his father, he engaged in the | lumber business and banking in Camden from 1903 to 19 |
settled in Cincinnati and was employed in the | lumber business until 1849. |
Afterwards, he started a wholesale and retail | lumber business in Winnipeg called Boyd and Crowe, wh |
For a time, he was involved in the | lumber business in Ancaster with his brother-in-law J |
California, in 1851, and there engaged in the | lumber business until 1858, when he moved to San Fran |
sident and director of the Flemming and Gibson | lumber business in Juniper, New Brunswick. |
August 1900, where he engaged in the wholesale | lumber business and as a contractor at Jenkintown, Pe |
He went on to own and run the leading | lumber business in the Penn Yan area of western New Y |
n the creation and development of the family's | lumber business which led the couple to the small com |
Corey entered the | lumber business in his early twenties, first working |
Camden, New Jersey, where he continued in the | lumber business and also engaged in banking. |
is brothers continued to expand their father's | lumber business from its base on the lower Ottawa Riv |
in 1901 and established a wholesale and retail | lumber business in Brandon on 10th Street, between Ro |
He resumed the | lumber business at Tacoma, and in 1914 retired from a |
After attending school, he entered the | lumber business with his father in Berks County, Penn |
41, William Hurdman and his brothers started a | lumber business under the name Hurdman Brothers. |
He engaged in the logging and | lumber business at Stevens Point, Wisconsin, in 1875. |
rovidence, Rhode Island, where he worked for a | lumber business that he became the owner of a decade |
He was in the | lumber business in Upper Canada and moved to Quebec C |
Wisconsin, he worked as a farmer and founded a | lumber business in Hudson. |
returned home in 1872 and became active in the | lumber business before dying from pneumonia in 1873. |
e district of Maine in 1811 and engaged in the | lumber business and served in the War of 1812. |
up in Hudson Falls; as an adult, he managed a | lumber business there and wrote various literary work |
renomination in 1876 and again engaged in the | lumber business in Bay City and also was instrumental |
ally took over the bookkeeping of her family's | lumber business in Vienna; mornings were given to ska |
He engaged in the | lumber business in Canada. |
Barkhouse operated a wholesale | lumber business and a general store. |
Pleasant, Virginia (now West Virginia) in the | lumber business until the Civil War when he became a |
after most of the remaining partners from the | lumber business sold their interest after the 1946 se |
elected mayor in 1900 and 1902, engaged in the | lumber business, the tile and brick business, and the |
He joined his father's | lumber business, eventually becoming a partner. |
ng of 1818, ran a hotel, and also carried on a | lumber business, and in 1831 entered the mercantile b |
First he went into the | lumber business, cutting trees and building a sawmill |
in the 19th century as a commissary for Buck's | lumber business, and the ruins of a sawmill (such as |
n Coons and his partners, a local family-owned | lumber business, bought the land on the undeveloped s |
d the common schools; later, he engaged in the | lumber business, banking, and manufacturing. |
acoma, Washington in 1888 and continued in the | lumber business, and also engaged in coal mine operat |
demise to competition of trucks and dwindling | lumber business, which hurt the company's bottom line |
n Augustus Reitz, who amassed a fortune in the | lumber business, built the house in 1871 in the Frenc |
settlement featuring two inns, three shops, a | lumber business, mechanic shops, and a church. |
ft office on January 4, 1881, returning to the | lumber business. |
In Brandon, he worked in the | lumber business. |
ultural pursuits while managing a partly owned | lumber business. |
1833-1912), had made the family fortune in the | lumber business. |
to Johnson City, Tennessee and engaged in the | lumber business. |
sport, Pennsylvania in 1878 and engaged in the | lumber business. |
crat, in 1833, and later became wealthy in the | lumber business. |
He moved to Boston at age 20 to engage in the | lumber business. |
nt the rest of his years working in the family | lumber business. |
about 1855, and engaged in the mercantile and | lumber business. |
aldo migrated to Missouri where he entered the | lumber business. |
after retiring from football and worked in the | lumber business. |
ly company towns) in the course of growing his | lumber business. |
hort time later, he engaged in farming and the | lumber business. |
aul, Minnesota in 1873 where he engaged in the | lumber business. |
moved to Ellenville in 1864 and engaged in the | lumber business. |
nsin, in 1882 and continued in the logging and | lumber business. |
on resumed his former business pursuits in the | lumber business. |
Dartmouth College in 1929 before entering the | lumber business. |
Pensacola, Florida, in 1820 and engaged in the | lumber business. |
mondville, Quebec, where he also worked in the | lumber business. |
He moved back to Durham where he worked in the | lumber business. |
sconsin, in 1852 and engaged in the timber and | lumber business. |
the manufacture of staves and in the wholesale | lumber business. |
Fox's family was in the | lumber business. |
sconsin in 1845 where he became engaged in the | lumber business. |
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