Word: biscuits
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...Vagabond prefers the present to the past, because the Steward was required "to provide at the common charge only bread or biscuit and milk for breakfast." For this reason, and others, he will remain in the present to go to the New Lecture Hall at 11 o'clock this morning, and hear Professor Mark lecture on the American Revolution...
...idea, the course of Shredded Wheat Co. was profitable and untroubled. Many a visitor to Niagara Falls was shown through the model bakery by Shredded Wheat's Miss Blumreich and went home to add more dollars to the profits of Lawyer Perky's successors. In 1928 National Biscuit Co. bought Shredded Wheat, threw its huge organization into an effort to sell even more shredded wheat biscuits. Breakfast Food Manufacturer Will Keith Kellogg sat up, took notice. Soon Kellogg Co. was also making "shredded wheat biscuits" (Kellogg's Whole Wheat Biscuit), shipped thousands & thousands of them...
...months ago National Biscuit Co. filed suit against Kellogg Co. in Wilmington, Del. Valuing its trade mark at $5,000,000, N. B. C. said it had been damaged to the extent of $250,000, asked an injunction against the manufacture of "shredded wheat" by Kellogg. Last week Kellogg retaliated. In New York's Federal Court it filed a complaint under the Sherman anti-trust laws, charging unfair competition, coercion, monopoly. Kellogg claimed that patents on the shredded wheat process have long since expired, that it has been kept out of competition by efforts...
...expression of innocent astonishment when caught in some particularly outrageous roguery. And they are banjo-like. He indited his first novel. No! No.' The Woman! to me thus: "To Dort." Actually he calls me "Dorit Biskit." Philosophic, I take it as a tribute to my mild feats at biscuit-shooting, voice no anger...
...Bennett Biscuit Co. was changed to Wheatsworth Inc.; two years ago it was sold to National Biscuit Co. for $5,300,000 in N. B. stock. A prime advertising stunt of Mr. Bennett's was the Wheatsworth "Gingerbread Castle" at Hamburg, N. J., designed by Joseph Urban after the opera Hansel & Gretel, visited by 500,000 people yearly...