Word: milnor
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Though the Farm Board would buy no more wheat - it is already about $15,000,000 in the red on its current holdings - George Sparks Milnor, president of Grain Stabilization Corp., the Board's market agency, did declare: "The grain trade need have no apprehension of competition from wheat held by Grain Stabilization Corp. during the coming months when farmers will be moving the 1930 crop to market, unless in the meantime prices rise to the level at which purchases were made [$1.15 to $1.18]. In no event will this 1929 stabilization wheat be thrown on the market...
...profit, helped to produce the next slump, arouse the ire of growers. This month Stabilization Corp. held its first annual meeting, reduced Mr. Kellogg to a vice president. Selected for president after a vain search among big grain men for a No. 1 executive was one George Sparks Milnor, an able, honest, small-scale miller of Alton...
...bought $120,000 worth of wheat through Continental Grain Corp. of Minneapolis but had failed to demand a warehouse receipt. Not until Continental went into bankruptcy was it found that the receipt had been hypotheticatecal as collateral by Continental for its own speculative trading. President Milnor's first announcement was that Stabilization Corp. had recovered the receipt for its grain...
...Kraetzer, Jr., Chairman, and Ruth Harvey; N. J. Beisel, Jr., and Grace Powell; J. D. Bowersock, III, and Jessica Matlock; A. H. Donahey, Jr., and Barbara Rollins; A. S. Farnham and Julilly House; W. R. Faulkner and Marion Milnor; D. S. Greer and Charlotte Mason; K. W. Hooker and Mary Etta Williams; F. M. Mitchell and Hazel Duncan; S. B. Roberts and Ethyle Hansen; H. W. Rubsamen and Ruth Pearson; G. A. Sawin, Jr., and Doily Harris...
Some of the poems, moreover, have the same quality throughout: as "Spring Song," by Hugh McCulloch; "The Serf's Secret," by William Vaughn Moody; "Frustra," by Henry Milnor Rideout; "Epicureans," by Warren Seymour Archibald; the second of Hermann Hagedorn's "Songs of Sunlight"; and the really beautiful first of Joseph Trumbull Stickney's sonnets "To F. L. P.," unusual in thought as well as finished in expression. Several of the longer poems, although somewhat conventional in content, are unusually good for undergraduate work, such as "A. Journey Long Ago," by Alanson Bigelow Houghton; Henry Sheldon Sanford's "Ode to Death...