Word: goldings
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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California Gold. Trainer Molter was crowded off the plane, and Peters arrived alone just before the race. "We got to settle this right now, Doc," said Horse Trader Hancock as Round Table headed for the starting gate. "The price may go up after the race-or I might not sell at all." Veterinarian Peters quickly agreed to buy ("soundest horse I ever examined")-and then sat back to watch Round Table finish out of the money. When Trainer Molter finally showed up, he thought the colt looked discouragingly small. Says he: "If I had been there on time, I might...
...GOLD FUTURES TRADING is growing brisk for first time in U.S. as some speculators bet that gold price will be boosted from $35 per oz. U.S. traders buy 90-day gold futures from British and Swiss, pay 2% premium. British and Swiss sell short, i.e., borrow gold to sell to U.S. traders, because they figure chances of price rise are dim. Trading volume runs close to $1,000,000 a week...
...crisis, the trend is toward increasing demand. Since Suez the fund has passed out in hard money loans some $2.7 billion, or two-thirds of all its outlay since the IMF was organized. Moreover, quotas have become unrealistic. Booming West Germany with $5.8 billion in foreign exchange and gold reserves is assessed only $330 million; the United Kingdom, with reserves of only $3 billion has a $1.3 billion quota...
Philip Morris (Parliament, Marlboro) and Lorillard (Kent, Old Gold) test all cigarettes down to a bare inch of butt. Other companies criticize this system because it produces higher tar yields for longer cigarettes. Another argument rages over what to report. American Tobacco measures "total solids" in smoke. Competitors have found that "solids" include tar, nicotine and some moisture; thus the advantage goes to American Tobacco's Hit Parade brand, whose tissue-paper-like filter absorbs more moisture than competing cellulose acetate filters. Hit Parade also claims "over 400,000 filter traps"; Lorillard says it could claim millions of traps...
...this sociological theme, British Novelist Colin MacInnes has fashioned a book that for most of its length is as jaunty and bitterly Jumble-joking as the Spades themselves. Johnny MacDonald Fortune, 18, is the lad in from Lagos, Nigeria, wearing a white and crimson sweater, a nylon shirt with gold safety pins on each collar point, and a sky-blue gabardine jacket. The first thing he does in London, for the sky-blue hell of it, is to clamber up a down escalator. And in a sense that is what he does in rundown London for the rest...