Word: flour
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...last week was enjoying an undeniable boom. By the light of burning coffee mounds, which when once ignited may burn for weeks, buildings were going up in the City of São Paulo at the rate of 500 per month. Cement mills were grinding 24 hours per day. Flour and sugar mills were unable to fill orders. Brazil is still a one-crop country but the Government's rigid control of foreign exchange has acted as a protective tariff stimulating domestic industry. Low coffee prices have encouraged cotton growing to such an extent that the Liverpool Cotton Exchange...
...serious critics of commodity exchanges deny the economic and social value of hedging. Example: a flour miller buys 10,000 bu. of wheat which will not be sold as flour for several months. To protect himself against a decline in wheat (and flour) prices he simultaneously sells 10,000 bu. for future delivery. While he is milling his wheat, the price drops and with it flour. Thus he makes no money on the flour he sells. But having sold wheat short, he now buys in 10,000 bu. to even up his short position, making a profit on the transaction...
...residents of the U. S. need to keep in normally good health Mr. Doane used a table of per capita food requirements prepared by the Department of Agriculture. In the course of a year this diet would, among other things, provide every citizen with 100 lb. of flour and cereals, 155 lb. of potatoes, 310 qt. of milk, 135 lb. of leafy and other green vegetables, 165 lb. of meat and fish, an egg for breakfast every day. Researcher Doane discovered that with 1929's good crops every citizen could have been provided with all the grain, potatoes, beans, peas...
Italians want their macaroni made out of durum?a hard-kerneled wheat. There is not enough durum in all Manitoba to feed even the macaroni-eating Italians in the U. S., and not enough wheat of any kind growing in Italy to fill her normal wheat and flour consumption of 300,000,000 bu. Into U. S. mouths normally go more than 600,000,000 bu. of wheat but this year U. S. farmers can raise only a scant 484,000,000 bu. Germans, who eat nearly 200,000,000 bu., have not had enough water to raise...
Twenty minutes after the bout began, Londos applied his favorite hold, a Japanese armlock. Browning broke it, retaliated with the "airplane scissors" which he learned by wrapping his legs around a flour barrel on his Indiana farm. Planning to become a professional fisticuffer when he ends his career as wrestler, Browning cuffed Londos on the nose. Londos whacked his opponent on the ear, adroitly tripped him, twisted his foot in a toe hold. Wrestling bouts continue un til one contestant or the other is too tired or too dazed to function normally. After an hour and ten minutes, Londos last...