Word: reaps
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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Professor Smithies believes Britain can reap most of the devaluation benefits, but he isn't quite sure how much good will result. "We can't be certain Britain will be economically independent of the United States when the Marshall Plan ends in 1952," Smithies says, "but the important thing is that progress can now be made...
...average. Rice and tree nuts set records. Cotton, wheat, oats, tobacco, apples, peaches and pears were above average. Nature had been kind; improved technology had increased yields by a whopping 50% an acre in the past 20 years. And men had worked hard for the bounty they would reap. As Mrs. Barbour pointed out: "People look at our apple trees and say, 'My, my, just look at all those dollars hanging on the trees.' They think we just sat on the porch and watched them grow. They don't know that a lot of good hard work...
...banished slot machines and pinball games-though most of them reap peared outside the city limits. He abolished other municipal evils-the sale of civil-service promotions and the use of the city zoning ordinance to squeeze bribes from commercial enterprises...
TOMORROW WE REAP (384 pp.)-James Street <& James Childers-Dial...
Between installments of the Dabney saga, Author Street, a onetime Baptist preacher and former newspaperman, wrote a novel of contemporary Mississippi, In My Father's House, and The Gauntlet (TIME, Dec. 24, 1945), which sold 800,000 copies. In the midst of writing Tomorrow We Reap, which carries the Dabney clan beyond 1893, he bogged down, doubted that he could finish the book. Alabama-born James Childers (Laurel and Straw), an Air Force colonel in World War II and a Dabney fan, volunteered to help him. The result is unspectacular, although followers of the Dabneys will want to read...