The Tea and Coffee Trade Journal
URI permanente para esta coleçãohttps://thoth.dti.ufv.br/handle/123456789/8602
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Item Aftermath of the brazilian frost - 1954(1954-11) Aaker, john R.The year 1954 may well mark a turning point for the coffee industry in the U. S. Not only have substantial adjustments occurred in prices, production and consumption, establishing a new economic climate, but widespread publicity has cast the commodity into a completely new political and social environment. It is well to examine these changes in order to weigh their impact on the coffee market today and in future years.Item Among the coffee fazendas of Brazil(1934-11) Ukers, William H.Although coffee is not indigenous to Brazil, the Fates have made it the world’s greatest coffee-producing country. The area suitable for coffee cultivation covers 1,158,000 square miles, more than one-third the area of continental United States.”Item Best minds in industry to meer in Parana(1953-10) Aborn, EdwardOn behalf of the National Coffee Association, I extend sincerest good wishes to our friends in Parana on the forthcoming celebration of their one hundreth year of Brazilian statehood.Item Brazil coffee at the fair(1933-10) The Tea and Coffee Trade JournalBrazil has opened a heavy attack on the coffee consciousness of the millions of visitors to A Century of Progress. In its impressive exhibit space in the Travel and Transport Building at the World’s Fair Brazil has a long double-horseshoe coffee bar over which thousands of free cups of steaming, fragrant coffee-sugar and cream to taste- are hospitably handed every day to pleased guests of the Brazil coffee exhibit. The many inviting easy chairs in the adjoining lounges at each end of the coffee bar are always occupied by coffee drinkers, sipping their drink and inhaling its aroma.Item Brazil coffee exports drop as war closes additional markets(1940-06) Andrade, Theophilo deDuring the month there was held a meeting of the Consulting Council of the National Coffee Department, for the purpose of discussing the rendering of accounts by the Board of Directors, and for discussion of the percentage of the “quota of sacrifice” to be levied against the next coffee crop of 1940-41 to be started July 1st.Item Brazil Coffee imports on coast(1935-03)The drop in the price of Brazil coffees due to new Exchange regulations, which permit drafts to be sold to any authorized bank which in turn sells the Bank of Brazil coffees now more attractive in comparison with Central Americans, and from now on there will probably be larger importations of Brazil coffee on the Pacific Coast._C.C.Item Brazil coffee men consulted(1936-03)The outstanding coffee development of the last week has been the visit of Dr. Souza Mello President of the DNC, to São Paulo and Santos, and his remarks on coffee policies, according to a statement by U.S. Consul General Carol H. Foster, of this city._Paulista.Item Brazil coffee proposals(1935-05)A cable received by the New York Coffee and Sugar Exchange from Brazil, April 25, gives details of a proposed plan submitted to the Brazilian Congress, as follows.Item Brazil coffee prospects(1935-09)According to information received from the interior, the flowering of coffee trees is well advanced in some districts, such as the North of the State of Parana, lower Sorocabana and some parts of the Noroeste Railway. In warmer zones buds have already opened and in others the number of buds, although still unopened, is very large. Growers are annoyed by this fact as the first flowering will not give any result unless showers are present. A grower from Paraná, who has just arrived from a trip to Ipaussú, Mr. Luiz Pinto, Ourinhos (S. Paulo) and the districts us that the showers presently falling there will help the flowering and, as the trees are well prepared, in his opinion, the future crop is also expected to be good. According to this opinion, the present crop will be damaged due to lack of labor which is intense in the newer zones of the State, viz. Sorocabana. The plantations are more or less grown up with weeds and this will cause a great loss of coffee berries. In some plantations he has seen berries still on the opinion of another large grower, owning plantations in the so-called Old Zone and Sorocabana Zone, the future crop will be larger in the Old Districts and smaller in the Sorocabana Zone. His opinion is based on the present aspect of the plantations._Medeiros.Item Brazil exchange dealings(1934-10)A resolution of the Banco do Brasil reads: “In accordance with the proposal of the Director of the Exchange Department of the Banco do Brasil and the approval of Federal Foreign Trade Council, complying with the terms of Decree No. 24,432 of June 20, 1934._Carioca.Item Brazil offers coffee bonus(1933-05)The National Coffee Department, in its endeavor to meet foreign coffee-price competition without reducing prices, has conceived and put in execution, as of April 17, a 10 per cent bonus in kind on all coffee exports.Item Brazil's best coffee propaganda opportunity(1934-05)Recent issues of Medeiros‟ Bulletin contain some interesting comments on Brazil coffee propaganda by Mr. Carl Hellwig, a Santos coffee exporter, who reviews Brazil‟s propaganda efforts in various countries, analyzes the opportunities to increase the use of coffee around the world and concludes that „instead of spending large sums in a country where consumption was already at the high figure of 5I/2 Kilos per capita, a more promising result could be obtained by establishing or subsidizing plants in the adjacent Canada.Item Brazil’s coffee financing policy forms threat to colombian income(1955-03) Delgado, C. PuyoRecent decisions in Brazil in connection with her foreign exchange rates have been a cause for considerable consternation to the coffee industry in Colombia. While it is understood that domestic politics played a part in the formulating of the new policies, it is feared that any day there may be additional corrections in this field.Item Brazil’s coffee policy in wartime(1939-10)Rio de Janeiro Sep. 15 – The European war to date affects four of Brazil’s best customers, two of which, France and Germany, may be classed as first class coffee buyers. For Brazil this is of extraordinary significance, because coffee represents more than 50% of the total value of Brazil’s exports.Item Brazil's president notes gains made by coffee trade during 1951(1952-05)Addressing a joint session of the Brazil Chamber of Deputies and the Senate on March 15, President Getulio Vargas outlined concretely the gains, problems and setbacks registred by Brazil’s economy during the first year of his administration.Item Brazil: the fabulous coffee giant(1954-11) C., Andres UribeOn the night of July 5, 1953, great blasts of freezing air swept the southern expanses of South America. They thundered over the snow-covered ranges of the lofty Andes and churned across the rolling coffee lands of Brazil. The worst calamity to strike the coffee industry in two decades began that night.Item Brazilian frost giving coffee importers chills(1972-09)The coffee trade people in Europe were finding the going pretty rough. Most of them were hoping for a break and looking back on „the good old days‟ of the 1960‟s.Item Brazilian trade parleys open(1933-09)Following the negotiations inaugurated between the State Departament and the Minister from Colombia, last week, for the first of a series of new commercial treaties with our neighbors to the south, exploratory conversations were opened today by the Brazilian Ambassador, Dr. R. de Lima e Silva, with Assistant Secretary Jefferson Caffery, as a preliminary to the hoped-for adoption of a new treaty between Brazil and the United States that will sweep away many or all of the present barriers to normal commercial relations between the two countries._N.W.Item Brazilian warrant agency(1935-09) Lane, MincingThe Brazilian Warrant Agency and Finance Company, Limited, according to the statement of Mr. A. Whitworth, Chairman, at the annual meeting, paid for the year 1934 4 per cent on its Ordinary Shares, made possible through the authorization to reduce the nominal share value from ten to two shillings. On the Preference Shares an interim dividend of 31/2 per cent and a final dividend 31/2 per cent were paid. Total payments amounted to 26,500 the profit and loss account showing a balance of 41,994- 14-9. During the year advantages were taken of the relaxed rules on Brazilian exchange control, with the result that certain surplus cash balances were transferred to London. Like favorable conditions held also for the Cambuhy Coffee and Cotton Estates, Limited.Item Brazils coffee picture confused by ship unloaders strike in U.S.(1971-11) Delaval Filho, TorinoRio de Janeiro, October 22 – The coffee picture is confused considerably at this time largely due to the fact the coffee ports of the United States continue to remain closed, or at least no cargo can be landed due to a continuing longshoremen’s strike. The Pacific Coast ports are now open again, at least temporarily, but the Atlantic and Gulf ports are not accepting cargoes.