Report of the National Agricultural Conference, January 23-27, 1922, etc1922 - 210 sider |
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Side 28
... average . During the year 1921 the milk which was shipped into Boston was sold at a price below the cost of producing it and the cost of getting it there . As far as I can check this 28 REPORT OF THE NATIONAL AGRICULTURAL CONFERENCE .
... average . During the year 1921 the milk which was shipped into Boston was sold at a price below the cost of producing it and the cost of getting it there . As far as I can check this 28 REPORT OF THE NATIONAL AGRICULTURAL CONFERENCE .
Side 29
... shipped to Boston was $ 0.0752 . To this cost is added the can and freight cost of delivering 1 quart of milk to Boston- $ 0.0118 which gives the final cost of 1 quart of milk to Boston , $ 0.087 . The sale price f . o . b . Boston was ...
... shipped to Boston was $ 0.0752 . To this cost is added the can and freight cost of delivering 1 quart of milk to Boston- $ 0.0118 which gives the final cost of 1 quart of milk to Boston , $ 0.087 . The sale price f . o . b . Boston was ...
Side 51
... shipped in 1914. Cannon competition reduced the consumption during the fighting , as plants and cannon eat much the same food . In 1921 the agricultural upset reduced the demand and 4,500,000 tons were used . Manufacturers had ...
... shipped in 1914. Cannon competition reduced the consumption during the fighting , as plants and cannon eat much the same food . In 1921 the agricultural upset reduced the demand and 4,500,000 tons were used . Manufacturers had ...
Side 53
... shipped . The distributing season is usually a short , hur- ried one . Goods are either delivered through warehouses or directly from the car . The average farm purchase is about 1 tons in Ohio . 5 tons in New Jersey , Georgia , and the ...
... shipped . The distributing season is usually a short , hur- ried one . Goods are either delivered through warehouses or directly from the car . The average farm purchase is about 1 tons in Ohio . 5 tons in New Jersey , Georgia , and the ...
Side 99
... shipped 440,000,000 bushels of all kinds of grain to Europe last year . The amount that we receive for that grain is the determining element in the amount that we receive for grain here at home , because it is the exportable surplus ...
... shipped 440,000,000 bushels of all kinds of grain to Europe last year . The amount that we receive for that grain is the determining element in the amount that we receive for grain here at home , because it is the exportable surplus ...
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
adequate agencies agri agricul agricultural products agricultural research American Association banks better board of trade bushels canal capital cent Chairman Chicago commission committee commodities conference Congress consumer cooperative marketing corn corn belt cost of production cotton crop demand Department of Agriculture distribution District of Columbia economic efficiency Europe export fact Farm Bureau Farm Loan farm products farmer Federal fertilizer foreign forest freight rates Government grain growers handling important increase industry interest labor Lakes land economics land policy Lawrence River legislation live stock manufacture ment methods Muscle Shoals neutral countries North Dakota ocean organization period plant population present president prewar problems prosperity purchasing power railroad readjustment recommended reduced representatives Secretary of Agriculture selling shipped steamer supply supply and demand Sydney Anderson tariff tion to-day transportation tural United States Department War Finance Corporation waterway wheat York
Populære avsnitt
Side 112 - Land without population is a wilderness, and population without land is a mob. The United States has many social, political, and economic questions, some old, some new, to settle in the near future; but none so fundamental as the true relation of the land to the national life.
Side 139 - Federal intermediate credit bank, with its indorsement, any note, draft, bill of exchange, debenture, or other such obligation the proceeds of which have been advanced or used in the first instance for any agricultural purpose or for the raising, breeding, fattening, or marketing of live stock...
Side 139 - Board, to borrow money and to issue and to sell collateral trust debentures or other similar obligations with a maturity at the time of issue of not more than five years, which shall be secured by at least a like face amount of cash, or notes or other such obligations discounted or purchased or representing loans made under...
Side 172 - ... to advise their members as to the probable demand for staples, and to propose measures for proper limitation of acreage in particular crops," as pointed out by the President of the United States.
Side 143 - ... To enable ocean-going vessels to have access to all the ports of the Great Lakes would have a most stimulating effect upon the industrial life of the continent's interior. The feasibility of the project is unquestioned and its cost, compared with some other great engineering works, would be small. Disorganized and prostrate, the nations of central Europe are even now setting their hands to the development of a great continental waterway which, connecting the Rhine and Danube, will bring water...
Side 11 - Equally shocking is the statement that seven hundred million bushels of wheat, raised by American farmers, would bring them more money than a billion bushels. Yet these are not exaggerated statements. In a world where there are tens of millions who need food and clothing which they cannot get, such a condition is sure to indict a social system which makes it possible.
Side 116 - Land economics is that division of economics, theoretical and applied, which is concerned with the land as an economic concept and with the economic relations which grow out of land as property.
Side 11 - American plantations in a given year, will actually be worth more to the producers than 13,000,000 bales would have been. Equally shocking is the statement that 700,000,000 bushels of wheat, raised by American farmers, would bring them more money than a billion bushels. Yet these are not exaggerated statements. In a world where there are tens of millions who need food and clothing which they can...
Side 111 - My own conviction has long been that the land question far transcends any restricted field of economics, and that it is fundamental to national survival and national welfare. It is truly a problem calling for statesmanship of the broadest type.
Side 8 - He comes nearest to being self-sufficient; but precisely because of this he has not claimed for himself the right to employ those means of cooperation, coordination, and consolidation which serve so usefully in other industries. A score or more of manufacturers consolidate their interests under a corporate organization, and attain a great increase of their power in the markets, whether they are buying or selling. The farmer; from the very mode of his life, has been estopped from these effective combinations;...