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Word: cornes (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...then, of course, there was Halloween. After I dumped the candy corn and apples, I'd have all those neatly packaged morsels to parcel out, day by day, bite by bite. Sometimes three or four a day, even. I had very little willpower. Besides, Mother always knew how many I had had; I'd have chocolate breath. Also, that was before anyone had to worry about what the neighbors might have injected into the bar. The special neighbors always saved a big candy bar for their good little friends. That certainly solidified their neighborhood reputation...

Author: By Lou ANN Walker, | Title: The Rise of the One-Bite Bar | 5/31/1974 | See Source »

...thus the disillusionment, the rude awakening, the shaking shoulders. The candy companies have succumbed to the scandals of modern-day industry. And you know it takes milk to make milk chocolate--or at least powdered something. And corn syrup is surely made out of something surplus sold to the other side...

Author: By Lou ANN Walker, | Title: The Rise of the One-Bite Bar | 5/31/1974 | See Source »

Jack Guy Folk Toys are little constructions of wood, corn cob, and cane which come in little bright boxes, either already assembled or as kits. In the shop, they were stacked up under a couple of large color photos of Jack Guy himself, wearing an outlandish shirt of more colors and materials than Joseph's coat, bibbed over-alls, and an immense sort of Hoss Cartwright style black hat with bead-work band. The hat suggested a renegade Indian trader. Jack Guy's hair is cut rather too neatly for a hill person, but his face is pretty convincingly weathered...

Author: By Phil Patton, | Title: Pennies for the Old Guy | 5/17/1974 | See Source »

...made of a short length of cane something like an Indian peace pipe with a wire basket instead of a bowl. The basket has two wire rings, one higher than the other. Hanging from one of the rings is a little ball made from the light core of a corn cob, with a wire hook in it. The idea is to gently support the ball with your breath, and raise it from one ring to the other and back again without it falling...

Author: By Phil Patton, | Title: Pennies for the Old Guy | 5/17/1974 | See Source »

Contracts for July delivery of wheat, which sold in February for as much as $5.85 a bushel, are now down to about $4.10. Corn has dropped from $3.50 a bushel to $2.55; and soybeans have fallen from $9.03 to $5.35. A dive in demand for red meat at supermarkets, reflecting consumer resistance to high prices, has hit the cattle market. Steers last week sold for $41.50 per 100 Ibs. v. more than $50 in late January...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: COMMODITIES: Cropping the Price | 4/22/1974 | See Source »

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