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...Burlap is the "wrapping paper of the wholesale trade." The U.S., even in normal times, consumes more than 500,000,000 lb. of burlap a year. Bulk foods-grains, raw sugar, coffee, salt, livestock feeds-are bagged in burlap; so are cotton, wool, fertilizers, chemicals, countless industrial products. In wartime it is also needed for sandbags and camouflage fabrics. As raw jute, or as manufactured burlap, 99% of it originates in India, and 85% of that comes from around the steaming Ganges Delta in Bengal Province. In no other part of the world where acceptable jute can be grown...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Jute, Hemp and Bedlam | 3/30/1942 | See Source »

Since Pearl Harbor, the U.S. has made herculean efforts to conserve burlap, to get in as much more as its thin line of groaning ships can bring. By Government order, two-thirds of all burlap is earmarked for military needs, the other third for essential farm needs. Non-essential users, like carpet and furniture makers, have been denied any burlap at all. Yet U.S. warehouse stocks are now less than a third of consumption in a good year; Calcutta stocks (if the U.S. can get them) are about the same...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Jute, Hemp and Bedlam | 3/30/1942 | See Source »

What's To Be Done? Best substitute for burlap is that lately over-produced U.S. staple-cotton. Since late January, the U.S. Government has been salting away a stockpile of osnaburgs (heavy cotton) by draining off one-third of all production. Hoped for, and far from achieved, total: 200,000,000 yards (one-fifth of normal burlap consumption...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Jute, Hemp and Bedlam | 3/30/1942 | See Source »

Last fortnight, bag makers got A-2 priorities on cotton bagging but, with all the other demands on cotton mills, the rating so far has turned out to be about as good as Confederate money. Up to now, burlap-starved farmers have got by somehow with emergency allocations, used-bag collections, etc. With mounting cries from bag-starved Lend-Leasers and Good Neighbors, best hope is that such makeshifts-together with stepped-up production of Latin American substitutes-will continue to keep the hand and the mouth connected...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Jute, Hemp and Bedlam | 3/30/1942 | See Source »

...worst comes to worst, paper wrapping, or wood-packed shipments in bulk, can still substitute for a lot of burlap. But last week, hemp was in such a parlous state that the agricultural fantasy of the century was being seriously pushed in Washington. Commodity Credit Corp. hoped to obtain 240,000,000 lb. of home-grown hemp, 14 times the U.S.'s peak production in World War I. CCC has barely taken its first baby step in the program: persuading U.S. farmers to plant 35,000 acres of hemp for 350,000 bushels of seed. To achieve that goal...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Jute, Hemp and Bedlam | 3/30/1942 | See Source »

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