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Word: pulp (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
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Usage:

...instead of $5 per gallon on whiskey aged four years or more in the wood; half off on lumber with an annual limitation to 250,000,000 board feet on Douglas fir and western hemlock. In addition, the U. S. agreed to keep on the free list wood pulp and newsprint, crude asbestos, wood shingles (with limitations), lobsters, telegraph poles, undressed mink, beaver, muskrat and wolf skins, nickel ore, cobalt and quahaugs. Other items on which the U. S. duty was reduced: electric cooking stoves, lacrosse sticks, swordfish (if not frozen), eels, chubs, saugers and tullibees, pipe organs for churches...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE CABINET: Consumers' Deal | 11/25/1935 | See Source »

...copper. When the Canadians asked whether the U. S. would take Canadian fish, potatoes, butter, cattle, the answer was: "Unfortunately, we have enough. But we might take a little lumber and some liquor." Even on Canada's one big export to the U. S., newsprint and wood pulp, there could be no concession because that already comes in duty-free. In return for lumber and liquor Canada was not willing to take any greatly increased

Author: /time Magazine | Title: National Affairs: Pleasant Thing | 11/18/1935 | See Source »

...bulky food in the intestines has ever been demonstrated," claimed Drs. William Harwood Olmsted, 48, & Ray D. Williams of St. Louis, in telling why they fed three medical students such bulky foods as carrots, cabbage, peas, wheat bran, alfalfa leaf, corn germ meal, cotton seed meal, sugar beet pulp, cellulose flour and agar agar. How do such bulky foods make the bowels move? Drs. Olmsted & Williams decided: "The sum and substance of this physiological experiment goes to prove that the so-called 'bulk' of the human diet is not inert material going through the intestinal tract unchanged...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Clinicians in Chicago | 11/11/1935 | See Source »

...when Theodore Dreiser was editor of all three Butterick magazines (Delineator, Designer, Woman's Magazine), it was decided to publish a "pulp" for intelligent readers. Adventure started as a monthly, was later issued three times a month, became a fortnightly in 1926. is now again a monthly. Longtime (1911-27) editor was Arthur Sullivant Hoffman, a Phi Beta Kappa from Ohio who boosted circulation to nearly 300,000 (now: 100,000), built up a unique and loyal following which included many a lawyer, statesman, physician, college professor...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Press: No. 1 Pulp | 10/21/1935 | See Source »

Year ago Butterick Company sold Adventure to Popular Publications (Dime Detectives, Dime Sports, Horror Stones), one of the better companies which serve 10,000,000 U. S. readers with 100,000,000 words of pulp fiction per year (TIME, Sept. 16). Last week Adventure's Publisher Henry Steegar and Editor Howard Bloomfield had an adventure of their own. Off Massachusetts their 49-ft. schooner-yacht Mariana was picked up by a gale, hurled through a granite breakwater, beached by raging seas close to Plymouth Rock...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Press: No. 1 Pulp | 10/21/1935 | See Source »

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