The Tea and Coffee Trade Journal

URI permanente para esta coleçãohttps://thoth.dti.ufv.br/handle/123456789/8602

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    Rolling down to Rio in 1934
    (1934-09) Ukers, William H.
    Rolling down to Rio is very different in 1934 from what is was 46 years ago when Louis R. Gray of Arbuckle’s’ first made the trip; or in 1898 when Leslie C. Greenland came out from England. And the late Jock Mc Kinlay, Dean of the Rio Coffee brokers, who came out in the eighties, spun many a yarn about the hazards of the voyage.down to Rio is very different in 1934 from what is was 46 years ago when Louis R. Gray of Arbuckle’s’ first made the trip; or in 1898 when Leslie C. Greenland came out from England. And the late Jock Mc Kinlay, Dean of the Rio Coffee brokers, who came out in the eighties, spun many a yarn about the hazards of the voyage.
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    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.”
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    The leading coffee cities of Brazil
    (1934-09) Ukers, William H.
    Americans are beginning to understand something of the vastness of Brazil . If all Brazil’s twenty-one states were fitted into the United States there would be enough left over for a state larger than Texas. In area it is several hundred thousand square miles larger than the United States, without Alaska and the Philippines. Brazil’s coastline is so long it would take more than the distance between New York and Liverpool to cover it from south to north.