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Word: bushelful (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...came to a standstill in many lines. Prices began to fall on raw materials and are being reflected in wholesale quotations. The following table will give you an idea of the effect of this readjustment on some of our staples. Commodity. Jan.1920. Present Price. Percentage. of Jan. Price. Beans, bushel, $4.65 $3.50 75% Cocoa, .22 .10 45 Coffee, .15 1/2 .07 1/2 48 Cotton, .40 .22 1/2 56 Cotton Yarns, .85 .45 .53 Flour, 16.75 11.00 68 Gingham, .27 1/2 .20 74 Hides, .55 .24 44 Leather, 2.90 2.40 83 Lard, .25 .19 76 Potatoes, 7.50 3.25 43 Rice...

Author: By Roger W. Babson., (SPECIAL ARTICLE FOR THE CRIMSON) | Title: FORESEES 25 TO 35 PERCENT DROP IN PRICES BY SPRING | 11/17/1920 | See Source »

...Harvard Engineering School has not received the publicity it deserves. Handicapped by starting in a war-time year, and lacking proper space and equipment, it has been forced to hide its light beneath a bushel. Next autumn., however, the school should be entirely ready to function on a permanent basis...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE McKAY SCHOOL. | 5/21/1919 | See Source »

...fact has recently been impressed upon us that the Allies need 600,000,000 bushels of grain. Last year America only reaped 639,000,000. It is difficult for us to realize how strenuous the food situation abroad is until we consider that 300,000,000 must be fed, and that 40,000,000 have been taken out of productive forms of work. Each bushel produced here now means a great deal to the progress abroad and makes the disposal we are to make of the summer seem very vital. We are not planning a summer lark, but the most...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: YALE MEN PLANNING TO ESTABLISH FARM CAMPS | 5/19/1917 | See Source »

...more than merely pass his examinations. An exceptionally good book relieved for the instructor the monotony of the reading, but brought little recognition for the writer. Now, by means of this list and the Phi Beta Kappa trophy, the spur of an honor, which is not hid under a bushel lends interest even to the ordeal of entrance examinations...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: HONOR FRESHMEN. | 10/27/1915 | See Source »

...trophy to be competed for by the preparatory schools of the country, with standing in the entrance examinations as the basis for awarding the trophy, the Philadelphia Public Ledger says, "The scheme displays a praiseworthy concern that scholarly merit should not hide its mute, inglorious light under a bushel; it remains to be seen whether it is able to develop even a respectable rivalry with the natural interest boys and young men feel in competitive physical exercise. The hero in school or college life today is the captain of the eleven, the nine, the crew. Sometimes it happens that...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: A CUP FOR SCHOLARS. | 2/3/1915 | See Source »

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