Word: rateness
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Dates: during 1930-1930
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...tariff battle then wheeled squarely into Schedule Five-the sugar sector, which was passed over earlier because of its especially controversial nature. The four-cornered sugar lineup: domestic beet producers, led by Utah's Senator Smoot, for a 2.75? per Ib. import rate (Cuban: 2.20?); domestic cane producers, led by Louisiana's Senators Ransdell and Broussard, for the House rate of 3? per Ib. (Cuban: 2.40?); unorganized consumers, led by Mississippi's Senator Harrison, for the existing rate of 2.20? per Ib. (Cuban: 1.76?); scattered farm Senators, led by Idaho's Senator Borah...
...only journal to carry department store advertising. The Post-Gazette had been boycotted when it demanded that Kaufman's, second largest store advertised in town, retain its daily back page through 1930. Advertisements were withdrawn from the Press because the paper refused to lower its milline rate (rate per line per million circulation...
Professor Fay believes, however, that the Young Plan, like the Dawes Plan, will ultimately have to be revised, for several reasons. "Germany hitherto has paid all Reparations only as a result of the foreign loans made to her. These foreign loans cannot go on at the same rate in the future as in the past. In the long run, Germany can only pay the interest on these loans together with the Reparation payments by a surplus of exports over imports. But for the last twenty years she has always had a surplus of imports over exports. It will be impossible...
...Furthermore, if the United States continues to pay off her own internal war debt at the present rate, she will have paid it off in about fifteen years. When this happens the Allied Powers are likely to raise objections to making further payments on their war debts to the United States for they would seem to be paying the running expenses of the United States instead of helping her to pay off Liberty Loans. Finally, the United States tariff policy, and the inevitable economic laws relating to international trade may make our worthy Senators and statesmen realize the futility...
...have made plans calling for a widespread sales promotion of their product through college centers throughout the East. As one of these youths laconically pointed out last night. "Harvard men don't cut up much. We've got a bigger market in less educated educational centers". At any rate, Arthurs, Inc., have taken up the Harvard monopoly on the cards, which are now on sale in the tobacconist's shop in the Lampoon Building, a dime apiece, three for a quarter...