Word: tradings
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...Mellon noted a decline of 3% in the physical volume of all business transacted but an increase of 7.7% in dollar-volume. The Hoover report had showed that just the opposite was true of the country's foreign trade, taken separately. U. S. exports & imports increased in physical volume, decreased in dollar-volume...
...team may have saved the University from the wails of the Black Shirts. Stald Sever may continue to enjoy its annual laugh; the provisions dealer will not lose a profitable Black Shirts. Stald Sever may continue to enjoy its annual laugh; the provisions dealer will not lose a profitable trade; the prophet still has a potential wall for dull seasons. The three chorus their thanks to Allston and to New Haven, and silence settles over the fields and the fraternity houses for another ten months...
...pioneer stuff. He has never worn a silken robe that she could cling to, nor has she ever tried to restrain his bold and virile Daniel Booning. He leads and she presides over his private army-a band of 150,000 pioneering soldiers, each one of whom knows a trade...
...foreign trade situation is as discouraging as the domestic. During the first six months of 1928, U. S. locomotive works had shipped to foreign countries only 75 locomotives. Even this meager figure represented a rapidly falling market. On Aug. 1, 1928, U. S. locomotive builders were constructing 73 locomotives for foreign roads. On Aug. 1, 1927, they had been building 209 such locomotives, and on Aug. 1, 1926, there were 517 U. S. locomotives under construction for the export trade. Thus the 1928 export production has shrunk to about one-seventh of its 1926 figure...
...hardware store on Lake Street, Chicago, had for a messenger boy 15-year-old Arthur Cutten. Soon Arthur Cutten, still a messenger boy, was working for a commission house. From messenger boy he became a clerk for A. S. White, onetime president of the Chicago Board of Trade. Later he was one of A. S. White's pit traders. Then he entered the grain market for himself, and during the World War is said to have made more money than any other individual operator. He once accumulated four million bushels of corn, bought at 80? a bushel or less...