Word: boomingly
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Whatever its origin, the problem child was finally discovered by the night watchmen and, amid the mingled cheers and boos of Dunster-men was unceremoniously wheeled out through the gate, specially opened for the occasion. Its ears ringing with the echoing boom of a regular cheer for the Austin, the infant was trundled off to points unknown...
...more at any gainful or productive activity. That would open jobs for at least 8,000,000 young people.* The pensioners must be required to spend their doles within 30 days, in the U. S. That would put nearly $2,000,000,000 into circulation every month. Trade would boom, wages soar. Each $200 would keep one worker busy for a month supplying its demands. It would be Utopia. Every young person would be busy and good and free of fear for the future; every oldster would have ease and plenty without effort...
...British financial prophet and weather-man who has the interesting habit of producing periodical manifestoes, predicting with unfailing accuracy important pending events in the world of international finance and commerce. He predicted, some months in advance of the actual date, the rubber market collapse of 1926, the English boom in the fall of 1931, and the world-wide rise in the price of gold shares. Now he is again gambling his reputation, this time with a booklet entitled "The Coming American Boom...
...standing at home will depend on what he does for huge Brazil's huge coffee output in the trade treaty negotiations pending in Washington. It was Strong Man Aranha who guided the Departamento Nacional do Café, whose wholesale destruction of coffee has brought Brazil something of a boom...
Divine punishment for such wholesale annihilation of natural resources may be only delayed but the fact was that Brazil last week was enjoying an undeniable boom. By the light of burning coffee mounds, which when once ignited may burn for weeks, buildings were going up in the City of São Paulo at the rate of 500 per month. Cement mills were grinding 24 hours per day. Flour and sugar mills were unable to fill orders. Brazil is still a one-crop country but the Government's rigid control of foreign exchange has acted as a protective tariff...