Word: dumps
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...winters' snows, Felled, carted, quartered, sawn, a metamorphosis within a week. And then a century buried deep within the White House walls, Unseen, unsung, but one of myriads holding firm together the storied structure. Until, a new age came and replaced steel for wood, then months upon the dump, The dump cart actually arrived jor one last ride- And then a rescue...
This being so, the ability of the Soviet State to dump foodstuffs abroad is not spaciously limitless but definitely limited in 1930. Much as docile Russians will stand from their Dictator, eagerly as they swallow what Stalin tells his press to print, he can still take just so much grain and no more out of their mouths to sell abroad for ready cash...
...Miller. Not in the least excited last week were millers, middlemen of wheat, who like to see it as cheap as possible. The Miller, organ of Great Britain's milling industry, waxed cheerful even over Dictator Stalin's policy of taking food out of Russian mouths to "dump" abroad...
...tariff would run the delivered price up to 72¢ per bu., exclusive of freight charges. The Soviet sales were reported at about 95¢ per bu. for May delivery. Delivery would be easily possible if Russia, as has been charged, were ready to take a loss to "dump...
...sundry war materiel. Overhead, Red planes swung across the sky, on land there were military maneuvers, at sea Red warships wallowed in sham battle. Paradoxically, the parading crowds carried banners not praising war but decrying it; the Red planes dove, not to loose steel and nitroglycerine eggs, but to dump fluttering leaves of peace propaganda. The occasion: International Anti-War Day, held on the 16th anniversary of mobilization for the World War (Aug. 1). At Moscow the climax of the day came when the Volunteer Society for Aerial & Chemical Defense presented the army with 51 Soviet-made fighting planes, purchased...