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textile and trade
Gradual, controlled expansion of the world's textile trade is what President Kennedy wants.
The nation's international economy was based on the wool trade, in which the produce of the sheepwalks of northern England was exported to the textile cities of Flanders, where it was worked into cloth.
Glasgow, on the river Clyde, was the base for the tobacco and sugar trade with an emerging textile industry.
The government is trying to modernize the sugar and textile industries, which in the past were overly dependent on trade preferences, while promoting diversification into such areas as information and communications technology, financial and business services, seafood processing and exports, and free trade zones.
Jewish merchants from the Hormuz brought their Indian textile and fruit to the Somali coast in exchange for grain and wood, Trading relations were established with Malacca in the 15th century with cloth, ambergris and porcelain being the main commodities of the trade.
For China and other WTO members, however, textile quotas under the MFA expired at the end of 2004 as agreed in the Uruguay Round of trade negotiations in 1994.
The products of Sana ' a and Aden are especially important in the East-West textile trade.
Their wealth and influence initially derived from the textile trade guided by the guild of the Arte della Lana.
The 16th and the 18th centuries brought prosperity to the town through the textile trade and the increased use of the port facilities.
Monza is the third-largest city of Lombardy and the most important economic, industrial and administrative centre of the Brianza area, supporting a textile industry and a publishing trade.
The town developed the textile trade and the liquor trade.
Analysis of the records of the later trials show a wide range of occupations, covering craftsmen and small tradespeople, especially in the textile trade, and also a variety of church employees, at a fairly low level.
There were 3, 335 sheep, a reflection of the prodigious wool business in the town as a result of trade barriers erected by the United States against British textile imports that spurred considerable domestic demand for woolen products.
In the 1950s, free trade policies with Japan, which had modern equipment shipped to them by the U. S. as part of post-war reconstruction enabling them to produce fine cotton goods much more cheaply, resulted in the death of the New England textile industry as cheap cotton goods flooded the U. S. market.
This is the period of the ‘ Teuten ’ a traveling trading people, who were touring from village to village with artisan and merchant services, like coppersmith, wig-maker, also some veterinary surgeon like horse, ram, bull and pig castrating, and trade in goods like pottery, kitchen-utensil, bed-clothes, linen, lace, silk and other textile manufactures.
The Albemarle region ’ s early economic growth was fueled by agriculture ( with cotton as the primary crop ), regional mercantile trade and a short-lived gold rush in the nearby Uwharrie Mountains, all later supplanted by textile manufucturing.
It is mainly dominated by small businesses in the service, trade and industry sectors: textile industry ( Wolford AG ), iron-fittings manufacturer ( Julius Blum GmbH ), glass processing and machine construction.
In the 13th century the population of Belgium rose sharply, thanks to the great heyday of the textile trade which penetrated international markets up to the Far East.
The Clarks were a wealthy Scottish family with roots in the textile trade ( the " Clark " in Coats & Clark threading ).
New applications of engineering principles, the manufacture of rubber goods, plastics, chemicals and packaging materials were all introduced, as well as the addition of synthetic fibres to the textile trade, reducing unemployment.
During the 15th century, the city's textile trade boomed and it became an important supplier of tapestry.
Initially, a textile trade began developing in the area and it was first mentioned in 1232 in a document, in which one merchant is described as a business partner to William de Bermingham and being in the ownership of four weavers, a smith, a tailor and a purveyor.

textile and between
There are considerable differences between the requirements for textile and hard-surface cleaning.
The rivalry with Liverpool is rooted in competition between the cities during the Industrial Revolution when Manchester was famous for its textile industry while Liverpool was a major port.
The loss of silver during washing varies between textile technologies, and the resultant effect on the environment is not yet fully known.
Similar abilities often transfer well between different varieties of needlework, such as fine motor skill and a knowledge of textile fibers.
Wolfgang Grape has challenged the consensus that the embroidery is Anglo-Saxon, distinguishing between Anglo-Saxon and other Northern European techniques ; however, textile authority Elizabeth Coatsworth refutes this argument.
The final straw between Haywood and the Socialist Party came during the Lawrence textile strike when, disgusted with the decision of the elected officials in Lawrence, Massachusetts, to send police who subsequently used their clubs on children, Haywood publicly declared that " I will not vote again " until such a circumstance was rectified.
There are also substantial cultural similarities between the various groups, especially in terms of social organisation, childrearing, as well as horticulture, building and textile technologies ; their mythologies in particular demonstrate local reworkings of commonly shared tales.
Cramer is credited with designing and equipping " about one-third of the new cotton mills in the South " between 1895 and 1915, and simultaneously acquiring extensive holdings in textile mills.
: * after the loss to Germany of most of Alsace in 1871, the Belfort population was boosted by the arrival of large numbers of refugees from " germanisation ": the years between 1871 and 1914 saw the development of large factories, with the mechanical and textile sectors prominent growth areas.
Honea Path was site to a fight between textile union workers and textile management on September 6, 1934, which led to the deaths of six picketers and the injury of approximately twenty more at the hands of textile factory guards.
A new growth period took place between 1850 and 1914 thanks to the forestry, agricultural ( breweries, mills ) and textile industries.
He was purchased at a yearling auction for $ 15, 000 by Beejay Stables of Oshawa, Ontario, a partnership between harness-racing trainer / driver John Hayes and Montreal, Quebec textile executives, the Shapiro brothers, Robert, Conrad, and Leo.
Ashton's textile industry remained constant between 1865 and the 1920s.
The textile industry collapsed between 1920 and 1939.
Secular buildings also often had wall-paintings, although royalty preferred the much more expensive tapestries, which were carried along as they travelled between their many palaces and castles, or taken with them on military campaigns — the finest collection of late-medieval textile art comes from the Swiss booty at the Battle of Nancy, when they defeated and killed Charles the Bold, Duke of Burgundy, and captured all his baggage train.
In nineteenth century, the growth of the textile industry in western Europe, the introduction of mass production methods, the Capitulations signed between the Empire and many European countries and the forestalling-always by European merchants-of the raw materials needed to produce goods in the Empire's closed Economy, were factors which all together provoked the decadence of the Market.
Although the leather and textile trades were still major features of the Birmingham economy in the early 16th century, the increasing importance of the manufacture of iron goods, as well as the interdependence between the manufacturers of Birmingham and the raw materials of the area that later became known as the Black Country, were recognised by the antiquary John Leland when he travelled through in 1538, providing the town's earliest surviving eyewitness description.
To the north of the B6033 Bath Lane, there is a disused textile mill, built between 1822 and 1831, which used water power.
The emerging Swedish textile industry was also threatened by the trade, so that the new company soon promised to refrain from shipping textiles: of sixty-one successfully returning voyages between 1733 and 1767, only three ( of 1735, 1740 and 1742 ) carried cotton and silk textiles, and raw silk from Bengal.
) These applied at first only to parts of the textile industry ; between 1845 and 1863 several other industries, notably baking, were brought under the purview of these acts.
In 1869 Cristoforo Benigno Crespi, a textile manufacturer from Busto Arsizio ( Varese ), bought the 1 km valley between the rivers Brembo and Adda, to the south of Capriate, with the intention of installing a cotton mill on the banks of the Adda.
; Convertible or cabriolet: A body style with a flexible textile folding roof or rigid retracting roof — of highly variable design detail — that can convert between open-air and enclosed modes.

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