Answer: Catalogs
Explanation:
In 1872, Aaron Montgomery Ward took advantage of the growing shipping business in America to establish the Montgomery Ward Company.
The company's modus operandi was to showcase goods in a catalog and distribute it to people who would then order the products they liked. The company would then deliver it by rail.
Starting with a single-sheet catalog that offered only 163 items, the company grew to serve 3 million customers by the year 1904 and are still in existence today.
Answer:
The First World War (1914-1918), also known as the Great War due to the profound impact it caused, was characterized by showing changes in the economic situation, political alliances, the distribution of territories, social conditions and the nascent nationalist ideology in Europe. Besides having consolidated an important arms race, it meant the search for hegemony on the part of nations, thus causing an enduring rivalry.
Explanation:
The winning Europe Powers, such as Great Britain and U.S. benefited and took the least blame and was compensated, while areas, especially Germany, took the blame during the World War.
Peasants grew the crops and tended the livestock. They generally rented strips of land from th elrod of the manor, and paid rent in in the form of labour on the lord's own farm (demesne). Peasants made money by selling their surplus produce. In time, this labour rent was replaced by cash rent, which was more convenient for both lord and peasant. some peasants worked as paid labor on the lord's demesne, or sometimes poor peasants with little or no land of their own worked for wealthier peasants as servants or laborers.
The correct answer is "pressure from anti-communist republicans."
After World War II, the US and Soviet Union emerged as global superpowers. Their difference in political ideology lead to a battle for global power and influence. This battle caused for the US to get rid of any possible communist influences or Soviet spies within the federal government. This pressure, put on by Republicans who felt that Democrats were "soft" about getting rid of communism, lead Harry Truman to put into place the loyalty program (also known as Executive Order 9835).