. Coffee. Coffee. 862 INTERNATIONAL BUEEAU OF THE AMERICAN REPUBLICS. States, Germany, France, Belgium, Austria-Hungary, Turkey, Hol- land, and the United Kingdom. The last-named country is remark- able for the great quantities of coffee which it reexports to all parts of the world, reexporting, for instance, in 1904 two-thirds of the 118,- 186,000 pounds of coffee which it had imported in that year. Statistics show that the total quantity of coffee delivered in the United States from all sources last year, amounted to 929,754,540 pounds, of which there were imported from Brazil 753,840,648 po


. Coffee. Coffee. 862 INTERNATIONAL BUEEAU OF THE AMERICAN REPUBLICS. States, Germany, France, Belgium, Austria-Hungary, Turkey, Hol- land, and the United Kingdom. The last-named country is remark- able for the great quantities of coffee which it reexports to all parts of the world, reexporting, for instance, in 1904 two-thirds of the 118,- 186,000 pounds of coffee which it had imported in that year. Statistics show that the total quantity of coffee delivered in the United States from all sources last year, amounted to 929,754,540 pounds, of which there were imported from Brazil 753,840,648 pounds, or somewhat over 81 per cent, which was about the same proportion as during 1906-7. The deliveries in Europe have remained stationary ESTIMATE OF COFFEE OF THE T^O F< I 1,500,000 BAGS OR KILOGRAMS 1,500,000 BAGS OR 90,000,000 KILOGRAMS 950,000 BAGS OR 57,000,000 KILOGWMS. PRODUCTION WORLD 1908 G97,00O BAGS OR A\,aZO,000 KILOGRAMS 350,000 BAGS Of? £1,000,000 KILOGRAMS 50,000 BAGS OR 3,000,000 KILOGRAMS for the past two years, or about 1,386,000,000 pounds annually. Thus, the total consumption for Europe and America is approximately 2,310,000,000 pounds annually. With the ever-increasing consumption of coffee in the world, a be- wildering variety of beans has been evolved, but, among the most popular and widely used are the Java, Sumatra, Mocha, Rio, Mara- caibo, and La Guaira. There are many substitutes for, and adul- terations of, coffee, and some authorities assert that in the United States, for example, very little true Java and Mocha coffee is sold, owing to the skill with which many planters and dealers have been able to approximate in color, appearance, and aroma the Dutch In-. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original International Bureau of the American Republics. Washingto


Size: 1218px × 2052px
Photo credit: © The Book Worm / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookauthorint, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, booksubjectcoffee