Annual Report on Tobacco Statistics

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United States Department of Agriculture, 1963 - Tobacco
 

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Page 66 - If at any future time the rate of ordinary most-favourednation customs duty chargeable upon tobacco, unmanufactured, unstripped, containing 10 Ib. or more of moisture . in every 100 Ib. weight thereof, does ! not exceed £2. 5s.
Page 15 - Disappearance for any crop year is the sum of the stocks at the beginning of the year plus the current crop minus stocks remaining at the end of the crop year. Exports are on a farm-sales-weight basis. Domestic disappearance is total disappearance minus exports, and includes leaf used by manufacturers in the United States, losses or wastage, and differences which may result from errors in estimates and conversions of weights. 2 Preliminary.
Page 32 - Prior to July 1, 1962, stocks from Brazil, Colombia, Dominican Republic, and Paraguay were not reported separately, but were included under "Other foreign-grown cigar leaf, type 84'* (beginning July 1, 1962, other foreign-grown cigar leaf is designated as type 88) . a Less than 0.1.
Page 71 - Total includes data for countries not listed. Foreign Agricultural Service. Official estimates of foreign countries, reports from US Foreign Service officers, results of office research, and other information. TABLE 44. --Canadian and Southern and Northwestern Rhodesian exports of flue-cured tobacco by country of destination, average 1950-54, annual...
Page 68 - Products. (1) Tobacco, unmanufactured, entered to be manufactured in New Zealand in any bonded tobaccofactory licensed under the Tobacco Act, 1908, for manufacturing purposes only, into cigarettes...
Page 69 - Under Republic Act 698, as amended by Republic Act 1194, the importation of leaf tobacco (excepting cigar wrapper tobacco for cigars or chewing tobacco) is limited to the amount which, added to total Philippine production, will be sufficient to assure the output of a quantity of manufactured products not less than the output of the previous fiscal year. The rates shown are equivalent to 50$ of the full rate; effective January 1, 1962, rates increase to 75% of the full rate. Foreign Agricultural Service....
Page 55 - Small cigars, 2 cents for each 10 or fraction thereof. Smoking tobacco: 1 cent for each 5 cents or fraction thereof of retail price. Snuff and chewing tobacco: 1 cent for each 3 ounces or fraction thereof. Cigars, cheroots, stogies, etc., retailing for-- (a) 3-1/3 cents each or less, $1 per thousand. (b) More than 3-1/3 and not more than 5 cents each, $2 per thousand. (c) More than 5 and not more than 9 cents each, $3 per thousand. (d) More than 9 and not more than 10 cents each, $5 per thousand....
Page 32 - TABLE 9. --Total stocks of leaf tobacco, as reported and on a farm -sales -weight equivalent basis for domestic types and unstemmed basis for foreign-grown tobacco, owned by dealers and manufacturers In the United States and Puerto Rico, by quarters, 1955-60, Types ll-90--Grand Total Stocks Compiled from quarterly Tobacco Stock Reports, Tobacco Division, AMS.
Page 42 - Mayf ield and Paducah, Ky., one set; Athens and Sweetwater, Tenn., one set; Columbia and Mt. Pleasant, Tenn., one set; Type 35 Franklin, Mayfield, Murray, and Russellville, Ky., and Springfield and Westmoreland, Tenn., two sets. * Same buyers used as for dark air-cured (Type 36), at Henderson, Ky. 3 Sales of Southern Maryland are in the year following production. Compiled from Tobacco Market Reviews, Tobacco Division, AMS.
Page 30 - Although Type 73 Is defined as all domestic types of tobacco not otherwise classified, the bulk of the stocks reported in this type consists of cuttings, clippings, and trimmings. This is the result, in most instances, of the inability of reporters to designate cuttings, clippings, and trimmings in the "S" group of the types to which they properly belong.

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