Oleomargarine Tax Repeal: Hearings Before ..., 80-2, March 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 19481948 - 515 pages |
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Page 3
... less than the annual average of 1935-39 . The supply of oleomargarine for United States civilians in 1947 amounted to about 5 pounds per capita , nearly 2 pounds more per capita than in 1935-39 . In a survey of food consumption made in ...
... less than the annual average of 1935-39 . The supply of oleomargarine for United States civilians in 1947 amounted to about 5 pounds per capita , nearly 2 pounds more per capita than in 1935-39 . In a survey of food consumption made in ...
Page 5
... less than $ 6,000,000 , which compared with approximately $ 5,000,000 in 1946. Throughout the 1930's , total annual collections from this item ranged around $ 2,000,000 . Until the prosperous postwar years , virtually all of this ...
... less than $ 6,000,000 , which compared with approximately $ 5,000,000 in 1946. Throughout the 1930's , total annual collections from this item ranged around $ 2,000,000 . Until the prosperous postwar years , virtually all of this ...
Page 6
... less effective in pro- tecting the public preference for butter . Tax - paid withdrawals of colored oleomargarine increased from less than 1,000,000 pounds in the prewar years to approximately 10,000,000 pounds in 1944 and 21,000,000 ...
... less effective in pro- tecting the public preference for butter . Tax - paid withdrawals of colored oleomargarine increased from less than 1,000,000 pounds in the prewar years to approximately 10,000,000 pounds in 1944 and 21,000,000 ...
Page 7
... less expensive foods . While the imposition of these burdens through tax- ation is always undesirable , it is especially objectionable at times when high prices threaten the living standards of important groups in the population . The ...
... less expensive foods . While the imposition of these burdens through tax- ation is always undesirable , it is especially objectionable at times when high prices threaten the living standards of important groups in the population . The ...
Page 13
... less for their milk , would you ? Mr. WIGGINS . I think you and the other gentleman know that I am very much for the farmers . Mr. MURRAY . Certain ones . Anyway , here is what this paper says . The margarine lobbies have worked ...
... less for their milk , would you ? Mr. WIGGINS . I think you and the other gentleman know that I am very much for the farmers . Mr. MURRAY . Certain ones . Anyway , here is what this paper says . The margarine lobbies have worked ...
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Common terms and phrases
ABERNETHY American ANDRESEN average Babassu oil BAGSHAW BARKER bill butter group butterfat cents a pound cents per pound CHAIRMAN coconut oil colored margarine colored oleomargarine committee Congress consumer consumption COOLEY Cooperative Milk Producers CORBETT corn oil cotton cottonseed oil cows creamery CREDICOTT Cudahy Packing Co dairy farmers dairy industry Deuel diet domestic DOUGLASS fact farm fats and oils fatty acids favor Federal tax Food and Drug fraud garine grocers growth HOEVEN HOLMAN housewife Internal Revenue Lard laws legislation license fees margarine group margarine tax Milk Producers Federation MURRAY National Cooperative Milk nutritive value oleo oleomargarine PACE Palm oil Peanut oil percent POAGE present question rats record repeal represent retail sell skimmed milk sold soybean oil statement stearine TARWATER taxes on margarine Total uncolored United vaccenic acid vegetable fats vegetable oils vitamin weight wholesale WIGGINS witness yellow margarine
Popular passages
Page 36 - The conferences were sponsored by the Committee on Public Health Relations of the New York Academy of Medicine, with the assistance of the Josiah Macy, Jr.
Page 236 - The products of the territory of any contracting party imported into the territory of any other contracting party shall not be subject, directly or indirectly, to internal taxes or other internal charges of any kind in excess of those applied, directly or indirectly, to like domestic products.
Page 91 - THE QUARTERLY REVIEW OF ECONOMICS AND BUSINESS is published by the Bureau of Economic and Business Research, College of Commerce and Business Administration, University of Illinois. Subscription rates are $6.00 a year for individuals and $8.00 a year for organizations and associations.
Page 29 - The CHAIRMAN. Are there any further questions? If not, we thank you very much, Mr.
Page 19 - What is sauce for the goose should be sauce for the gander.
Page 165 - Pa. Dairymen's League Cooperative Association, Inc., 11 West Forty-second Street, New York 18, NY Denver Milk Producers, Inc., 945 Eleventh Street, Denver 4, Colo.
Page 137 - The Council on Foods and Nutrition of the American Medical Association has...
Page 347 - The nationals and merchandise of each High Contracting Party within the territories of the other shall receive the same treatment as nationals and merchandise of the country with regard to internal taxes, transit duties, charges in respect to warehousing and other facilities and the amount of drawbacks and bounties.
Page 322 - I am trying to be very fair, as you understand, Mr. Truitt. I do not want to embarrass you with any questions, and I am sorry I did not get a chance to meet you before. We might have put you on the staff up here with the kind of work you are doing. That is all, Mr. Chairman. The CHAIRMAN. Any further questions of Mr.
Page 165 - Producers Creameries, Inc., 224 West Jefferson Street, South Bend 2, Ind.; Milk Producers Federation of Cleveland, 1012 Webster Avenue, Cleveland 15, Ohio; Nashville Milk Producers, Inc., 901 Second Avenue North, Nashville 3, Tenn.; Nebraska Cooperative Creameries, Inc.. Fifteenth and Webster Streets, Omaha 2, Nebr.; Nebraska-Iowa Non-Stock Cooperative Milk Association, 402 North Twentyfourth Street, Omaha, Nebr. ; New Bedford Milk Producers Association, Inc., 858 Kempton Street, New...