Word: limited
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...sooner had trading ended in May contracts than speculative attention shifted to July and September contracts, both of which carried on the corn boom by spurting the full 4?-per-bu. limit allowed in one session. No matter how tall the corn grows this year, the 1937 crop will not start to market until October. July corn got above as the high as $1.25 per bu., nearly 10?above the same wheat delivery. And the terrific demand for grain in hand for settlement of May contracts continued to be visible in a 13?to 14? premium on cash corn...
Unhappily this was not all sweet music to the New Dealers. First, Mr. Robinson is 64, four years older than the President's arbitrary age limit for judicial appointees. He would not be eligible to retire with pay until he had served ten years and reached 74. Having made a fuss about judges retiring at 70, Franklin Roosevelt would make himself look foolish if he appointed Senator Robinson the first time he had an opportunity to name a Justice to the Supreme Court. Second, as New Dealers well know, Joe Robinson has on many occasions been a New Dealer...
Still jolting downward last week were two British-dominated commodities, rubber and cocoa. In Manhattan, following one of those perennially disastrous revisions in the estimates of the Gold Coast crop, cocoa broke the full 1?-per-lb. limit, dropping well below 7?. There were strong suspicions that British cocoa interests had given U. S. speculators another thorough whipsawing, the British having the advantage not only of controlling the biggest source of supply but also of controlling the statistics. Only a few months ago the figures indicated a shortage, and cocoa was merrily bid up above 13? per lb. Last week...
...Howard or Robert McCormick, Associate Editor Benjamin ("The Coast Kid") Benson of the Hobo News indignantly declared that things had come to a pretty pass when a journalist could not sell his own paper on the sidewalks of New York. Ready to back his editor to the limit of his resources, the News's Publisher Patrick Bernard ("The Roaming Dreamer") Mulkern and his associates furnished $10 bail when the judge refused to see the case in its broader aspects, issued a ringing statement...
...founder and that B. F. Goodrich Co. had once been known as Goodrich, Tew & Co. His first job was to clean and roll liners at 15? an hour, ten and a half hours a day. When his boss told him two years later that $75 a month was his limit, young Tew walked over to Diamond Rubber Co. and got a better job. The first successful cord tire made in the U. S., Silvertown, was produced by Diamond as a result of a study Tew made in England of the Palmer cord tire process. In 1912 Goodrich and Diamond merged...