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Page "Franklin (village), New York" ¶ 17
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toll and road
Whilst a reasonable road infrastructure has existed within Angola, time and the war have taken their toll on the road surfaces, leaving many severely potholed, littered with broken asphalt.
* the section of the Via Blanca from Matanzas to Varadero ( toll road )
Loan repayments will be from concessions for raw materials which China desperately needs: copper, cobalt, gold and nickel, as well as by toll revenues from the road and railway.
In the past few decades, much of the freight traffic shifted from rail to road, which led the Federal Government to introduce a motor toll for trucks in 2005.
Hoover's chief objective was to address the growing casualty toll of traffic accidents, but the scope grew and soon embraced motor vehicle standards, rules of the road, and urban traffic control.
All the freeways are tolled ( toll road ).
* See Trans-Java toll road
* Medan-Kuala Namu International Airport-Tebing Tinggi, 80 percent of the land needed for the toll road construction is owned by state plantation which it is easy to take over, whether the remaining 20 percent is owned by local residents which it is difficult to take over due to unreasonably high prices.
The toll road between Tanjung Benoa to Airport and from Airport to Serangan, all in direct line ( not curve ).
Although some sections of road have been built using private or public-private funds, and are operated as toll roads, they are owned by the Government of Ireland.
* 1975 – Dibbles Bridge Coach Crash near Grassington, North Yorkshire, England kills 33 – the highest ever death toll in a road accident in the United Kingdom.
The road toll has decreased over the 5 years from 421 in 2007 to 284 in 2011
In addition, the track was opened to the public in the evenings and on weekends, as a one-way toll road.
For purposes of international statistical comparison, the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development ( OECD ) defines a road as " a line of communication ( travelled way ) using a stabilized base other than rails or air strips open to public traffic, primarily for the use of road motor vehicles running on their own wheels ," which includes " bridges, tunnels, supporting structures, junctions, crossings, interchanges, and toll roads, but not cycle paths.
Thailand uses the expressway term for the toll road or highway network.
By this time, Waits was drinking heavily, and life on the road was starting to take its toll.
( Eventually, the highway system grew to include a parallel toll road to handle commuter traffic and an extension to connect to I-66 ).
* May 27 – The Dibbles Bridge Coach Crash near Grassington, North Yorkshire, England results in 32 deaths ( the highest ever toll in a United Kingdom road accident ).
In the summer of 1860, a local miner, Daniel Strong, had surveyed a route over the Sierras for a wagon toll road, a route he realized would also suit a railroad.
* Pike ( road ) or toll road, a course in which fees are collected.
Sometimes a historical name of what once was a toll road.
The Roman road was followed for centuries until, in the late 18th century, it became a toll road.

toll and spurred
The construction of a bridge ( originally a toll bridge ) between New Bedford and present-day Fairhaven in 1796 also spurred growth.

toll and trade
The death toll from four centuries of the Atlantic slave trade is estimated at 10 million.
Eventually this took its toll on Robson and he gave up his trade for full-time football.
Wide spread toll roads sometimes restricted traffic so much, by their high tolls, that they interfered with trade and cheap transportation needed to alleviate local famines or shortages.
Approximately 85 percent of the Jews in Poland during the 14th century were involved in estate management, tax and toll collecting, money lending or trade.
The oldest known settlement in the Kysuce region is Kysucké Nové Mesto, which was first mentioned in 1321 as a toll collecting place, which was part of a trade route between Žilina and Těšín via Jablunkov Pass, but otherwise the region was relatively uninhabitated.
Dominating the Malacca and Sunda straits, Srivijaya controlled both the spice route traffic and local trade, charging a toll on passing ships.
Moreover, the author spent a significant portion of his youth apprenticed to his father, experience that lent him the knowledge to write accurately about various details of the trade: from descriptions of the actual work, the physical toll it took on workers, the color and character of those workers, and the pride and satisfaction of a job well done.
While the illegal pet trade takes a toll on wild populations, the principal threat to the siamang is habitat loss in both Malaysia and Sumatra.
In order to trade from Hamburg to Austria, from Berlin to the Swiss Cantons, one must cut through the statutes of ten states, study ten tolls and toll barriers, ten times go through the toll barriers, and ten times pay the tolls.
Other Drew Carey videos for the foundation have promoted free trade ; criticized the government's raids of local poker games ; highlighted a ban on bacon-wrapped hot dogs in Los Angeles ; detailed abuse of eminent domain laws ; called for more toll roads to relieve congestion ; argued for deregulation of organ donation ( including kidneys and other organs ); and called for immigration reform.
The war also took a heavy toll on Deauville ’ s blossoming market and trade sector as merchants were forced to give many of their products to the war effort.
The conflicts and damaged trade relations with Europe took its toll on the port of Veracruz.
JDC also supported the Sarajevo Jewish community ’ s non-sectarian relief efforts in that besieged city, and helped the Belgrade community assist the many Jews affected by Serbia ’ s economic difficulties as UN-mandated trade sanctions took a growing toll.
Another hypothesis is that the Gallo-Roman name Camberiacum suggests the idea of currency changing ( cambium ) or trade ( camerinum: market ), or perhaps, a room ( camera ) where the toll taxes are collected.
The ability to toll and tax allowed the burgh to develop in commerce and trade.
In the 1990s, the building of a new toll road between Durban and Johannesburg which crossed the Tugela some 16 km to the west of Colenso led to further stagnation as trade from through traffic was removed.
Habitat loss and trapping wild birds for the pet trade has taken a heavy toll on their population in the wild, and as a result the species is classified as Endangered on the International Union for Conservation of Nature's Red List, and it is protected by its listing on Appendix I of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora ( CITES ).
The following year, £ 27, 266 was earned from the carriage of 667, 311 tons, and although a programme of toll reductions succeeded in restoring the trade, the income remained at a similar level for many years.
Sweden, however, achieved a major concession — the right of free trade through the Sound Strait, becoming exempt from the Sound toll.
In 1323, Willem III established a toll on the trade of beer from Hamburg.
She had specialized in 16th-century trade and in particular the extensive records in the possession of the Danish National Archives on the Sound toll collected at Kronborg Castle from the 1420s until 1857.
The latter in return collected a toll on its trade.
Frederick had the support of Brandenburg and Austria, but Holland had already agreed with England that preventing the western and eastern shore of Øresund from being controlled by the same country would in turn prevent future raises of the Øresund toll, which would cause disruption in the Dutch and English Baltic trade.

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