Word: exports
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Drifting foully across nearly every South American capital, the dread fumes of scandal left by the U. S. Senate's munitions inquiry settled most heavily last week on Argentina's Buenos Aires. Frantically officers of Curtiss-Wright Export Corp. cabled the city of Good Air that nothing was ever said to justify an implication that commissions had been offered to Argentinians or accepted by them...
...expected that Standley will serve as technician in the conferences and be the export on naval matters...
...that was not enough to soothe foreign pride. When over the categorical denial of President John S. Allard of Curtiss-Wright Export Corp.. it was proved that the latter's firm had paid "palm oil" to Comptroller General Lopez of Bolivia, protests continued pouring in. Within a few days Secretary Hull had no less than 15 on his hands. Secretary of Commerce Daniel C. Roper announced that it had been reported to him that Latin Americans, sensitive about bribe-taking, would cancel all U. S. trade contracts unless the Senate investigation was conducted more privately. Chilean Minister...
...unrest is stirring deep today in France. The National Millers' Association has openly defied the Government's fixed minimum price for grain and is buying below this price in unpunished violation of the law. Last week silk manufacturers of Lyons denounced the Doumergue Government for "sacrificing the export trade of France to promote an impossible policy of agricultural protection." The Cabinet's failure to fulfill its pledge to reduce the cost of living and growing public distrust of the Government as the Stavisky scandal continues to stink, made many Frenchmen turn last week with pleasure...
...little grocery store with $500 in debts. Creditors offered to waive their claims, but the boys insisted on paying, and within four years they did. Meanwhile a step-brother named Kaplan, onetime draftsman for Western Electric Co., had gone down to Santo Domingo where he started a company to export raw molasses to the U. S. to make industrial alcohol. He lost his first barge in a storm, but by 1919 he was handling nearly 100,000,000 gal. of molasses. That year he summoned Step-Brother Maurice Levin into the company and the next year they sold their Sugar...