Word: woole
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...some tailor in whom you have confidence, are more economical in the end, for there is a good "tone" to them, even when they are old. In buying the highest grade of garments you are not paying for "name," but you are getting the best of everything from the wool to the finished garment. The wool used in the finest English cloths, is allowed to lie over two years, after being dyed, before being used; you can readily see how much more reliable the colors would be than when the wool is transferred from the sheep's back...
...some tailor in whom you have confidence, are more economical in the end, for there is a good "tone" to them, even when they are old. In buying the highest grade of garments you are not paying for "name," but you are getting the best of everything from the wool to the finished garment. The wool used in the finest English cloths, is allowed to lie over two years, after being dyed, before being used; you can readily see how much more reliable the colors would be than when the wool is transferred from the sheep's back...
...October number of the Quarterly Journal of Economics, Professor Taussig has an article on the "Duties on Wool and Woolens...
...Flaws in the existing tariff make some changes necessary.- (a) Wool. (b) Reduction to tobacco tax. (c) Flax. (d) Sugar. (e) Minimums: Taussig's Tariff History, pp. 258-9, 277, 289, 275-7, 81-104, 270, and Robert Donald in Contemporary Review. Oct. '92, p. 496. (f) Financial results of the existing tariff: N. Y. Tribune, Sept. 4, Boston Herald, Sept...
...industrial condition of the country forbids an immediate reduction of the tariff. Boston Herald, Sept. 20, 1893. N. Y. Tribune, Sept. 16, 18, 21, 1893. (a) Wool and woolens. N. Y. Tribune, Sept 21, 1893. Boston Herald, Sept. 14, 1893. (b) Glass. Boston Herald, Sept. 19, 1893. (c) Mining. N. Y. Tribune, Sept. 21, 1893. (d) Iron and steel. N. Y. Tribune, Sept...