The star. (Reynoldsville, Pa.) 1892-1946, December 07, 1898, Image 2

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    v
Rpnin has slowly bnt surely been
forced to abaudon its stand in consid
ration of prld and "glory."
The foreign demand for trnilHtuff
continue to be heavy, and the sup
ply in still equal to the demand. A
great country thin, nrnt the limit of ita
resources in not yet approached.
Apropos of Knglnnd'a warlike ac
tivity it is timely to recall OladHtone'a
famous reply in the House of Com
mons: "Xo, we are not at war; we
are conducting military operation."
Coal mining is now one of Mis
aouri'a chief industries. The annunl
report of the United States' geological
survey credits her with producing in
1897 2,fiG3,02 tons, the cash vatue ol
which is placed at 82,887,824.
The scheme of American popular
education will not reach its highest
development until every hoy and girl
shnll be fitted, before leaving school,
to use every power to its highest ca
pacity to rightly perform the duties of
family and civic relations, and to
"make a living" by some handicraft
the elements of which have been
learned. .
Time was when to have w ritten
book gave a person some degree ol
distinction. Men and women were
pointed ont as the authors of certain
books, and these books, once named
in educated circles, were recognized.
But that time has measurably gone by.
To have written a book nowadays is to
have done what thousands of others
have done, and are busily engaged at
this very hour in doing. The state
ment amounts to little more than does
the statement that a certain person
has designed an oflice building, has
invented a labor-saving machine, has
constructed a new kind of street-car
rail, or a wagon.
While Porto Rico is densely popu
lated, yet, in view of the great wealth
of the islnnd, there is still room for
thousands of immigrants of the right
sort. Under the stimulating effect of
American ideas Porto Kieo will soou
begin to astonish the world with her
growth. So long as she was fettered
by the tyranny of Spain she could not
do this, but now that she is permitted
to inhale the atmosphere of freedom,
she will speedily make up for what
she has lost. We will miss our guess
if Porto Rico within the next ew
years does not become one of the
most coveted gems on the breast of
the ocean, observes the Atlanta Con
stitution, After struggling for a long time
with the problem of over production,
the butter makers opened n central
warehouse at Sydney, New South
. uto imcio mcj nuuk nil IUVI1 uill- .
ter, and whence it was sold at whole
sale at certain fixed prices, varying
according to the season of the year,
but never falling below sixteen cents.
What butter is not sold at that price
. is shipped in cold storage to London.
In this way the price is kept up. Co
operation among farmers is admittedly
one of the most difficult of social
problems. Farming is generally car
ried on with insufficient capital, which
makes the farmer a long-credit man,
and places him largely in the hands
of the middlemen. Farming really j
requires ajiberal education and large
executive ability. Whut the farmers
of New South Wales have done, how
ever, might be done by American
farmers, especially since the London
market is much nearer America than
it is New South Wales. Bnt it en li t
be done with cotton, for the obvious
reason that the London market is
glutted at the start.
The Abstract of Statistics of the
Railways of the United States, for the
year ending June SO, 1897, just is
sued by the interstate commerce
commission, gives some interesting
figures. There are 181,128 miles oi
railway in the country j of seoond,
. .third and fourth tracks 12,705 miles,
ud of yard and track sidings 40,221
miles, making a grand total of 243,
444 miles. One-third of the rails in
yards and sidings are of iron, and 93
per cent, of all others are steel. There
are 10,017 passenger locomotives, 20,
898 freight and M02 for switching;
88,620 passenger and 1,221,780 freight
oars. There are 623,470 men em
ployed by the railways; the amount
paid them represents 61.87 per cent,
of the totaf operating expenses.
There were 489,445,198 passengers
carried, and 43,168 casualties oc
curred, of whioh 6437 resulted in
death; 1098 railway employee were
killed and 27,667 injured. O ie ont of
very 2,204,708 passeugei j was killed,
nd one out of every 175,116 was in
jured; of employes one out of every
486 was killed, ud one ont of every
9 vm injure J.
MESSMATES. 1
Be gsve ns all a goodby cheerily
At the flrst ilnwo of dsvi
W dropped him ilnwn tho side fnlMroarlly
When the Unlit died awny.
It's a dead dark wntch that he's a-keeplog
there,
And a long, long night that lairs a-eroeplng
there.
Where the Trails and the tides roll over
Mm,
And the grout ships go by.
Bo's there alone, with green seas rooktDg
him
For n thousand miles round;
no's there nlone, with dumb things mock
Inn him.
And wx'ro homeward bound.
It's a long. Ions watch tbnt lie's a-keoplng
there.
And a dead cold night that lags a creeping
there,
Wnllo the ifionths and tho years roll over
him,
And the groat shlpj go by.
I wonder it the tramps fomo nsar enough,
As they thrnsil tn mid fro.
And the huttln-sliln's belts ring clear enough
To ba hsard down below:
It through all the lone wntch that bo's
n-keeplng there,
And the long, cold night tbnt lnjrs a-ereep-Ing
there,
Tho voices ot the sailor-men shnll comfort
him
When the great ships go by.
Horiry N'ewboit.
O30303C03S
jooooosoGoaooooo
oi ni mrnm nn n i mmnnnri a
i3
sjLrAUiururrAiiMsios
8
C03333OOOO3O3OO3OQ3O98OO&C
E was looking
at May's por
traita lovely
little miniature
when the
housemaid
brought the
packet to him.
The girl en
tered timidly,
with a furtive
glance at her mastor, for whom her
heart was bleeding. Bat if her timid
ity had nviseu from the fear of seeing
some exhibition of terrible sorrow,
she had alarmed herself needlessly.
No signs of tears, either past or pres
ent, was visible in the young man's
eyes. They were hard and bright.
Hard, also, was his face, and the
clenched lips like adamant.
He took the thick envelope off the
salver, glanced at the clerkly writing
and at the back, upon , which was
stamped in blue letters "W. Robin
son & Co." Then he flung it on the
table, and as the servant left tho room
the sound of harsh laughter broke
upon her astonished ears. She fled
to the kitchen and with scared face
whispered that she though poor Mr.
Ord must be going mad.
Small .wonder, perhaps, if he were!
lie had written a few days before to
William Robinson for those patterns
that he might choose the materials
for his wedding suit. What a weighty
matter that choice would have been I
May was so particular about what he
wore. He used to be a little careless
about his dress once going about in
coats with creases in them, and far
mer's boots. Then, in his endeavor
to gain May's approbation, he had
overdone it in the opposite direction,
sporting collars of absurd height, and
impossible ties, enduring like a
martyr the pinch of patent leather
shoes a size too small for him and get
ting himself a little chaffed by ap-
pearing in suits unmistakably in ad
vnilt'V VI luu tuauiuu
May, with gentle tact, had changed
all this. Novor hurting her ardent
young lover by open condemnation of
his apparel, but by artful suggestions
had first roused him to an interest in
his attire, then toned down his some
what crude tastes, and finally schooled
him into that quiet perfection of dress
ing whioh is the attribute of a gentle
man. He had written for the pattern
from Robinson's tew weeks before
the important suit should be needed,
as he wanted to have May's opinion
with regard to the materials. Already
the little, laughing, gay girl had be
gun to be more than a mere piece of
loveliness for his admiring eyes to rest
upon. , He consulted her about every
thing. He bad no sisters, and until
tho last year when the death of an
uncle and the inheritance of a fortune
had made him his own master he had
lived a solitary life in a remote coun
try town with the relation by whose
sndden death he was enriched. May
Carden, one of the first young ladies
i he came across in town, had taken bis
' heftrt bT torm. The mixture of
I 'riToli7 and onnd practical sense in
ed. The one broke the oruBt of a cer
tain moroseness born of an unloved
life, and the other steadied the pro
penalties to extravaganoe of taste and
living whioh unexpected wealth had
Dot unnaturally aroused.
After that laugh of harshness, whioh
had so startled his servant, Laurence
Ord went back to the study of May's
portrait. It was indeed a veritable
"May" faoe. Cheeks like young
roses, hair brown as hawthorn twigs,
lips which were akin to the deep pink
buds of the apple blossom, and eyes .
Tlnet with azure, like two erystal wells
That drink, the blue complexion ot the
skies.
These latter laughod back as if in
mocking merriment to the hard gray
ones whioh were looking down on
him. A sob of anguish broke in a
groan froia Ord's lips. He tried to
realize that these danoing eyes were
closed forever. Tried tried as many
and many a bereaved one bad striven
in vain to do to grasp the fact that
the dear lips would never speak again;
that no more until the day of resur
rection would so much as the faintest
color tinge the still white faoe, The
picture before him, bubbling over as
it was with life and mirth, gave the
lie to snch a thought. The idea of
May May, the merriest little person
in the world, lyiug cold and silent was
too muoh for the young man who last
had Man bur having a wild game with
kitten ou the deck of friend'
'"Wix
He had trended that little orutse
more than he could say. He had
all but asked her not to go; but
from this he had refrained, deeming
it mere selfishness.
"You don't mind me going, Lnnrle,
do you?" she had asked, when the
trip had been suggested, and with
little pleading look in her eyes wbloh
was irresistible, especially as he had
not jret the absolute right to give or
withhold permission. "I'll only be
gone three weeks, dear, and then il
you s ill have a mind to you may
take me and keep me forever, and for
ever! A large order, Laurie! Shall
von want me for so long, do you
think?" '
Ord, never a backward lover, had
answered that question by' a quietus
lo the sweet lips which spoke it.
He had gouo to seo hor off on board
the Orchid; and she had stopped in
tho middle of one of her airy whirls
with the kitten and a piece of scarlet
ribbon, to whisper, "Mind yon have
the patterns ready by the time I come
baokr
Tho patterns were ready, bnt never
more, thought poor heart-broken
Laurence, would May come back to
to him again.
"The yacht Orchid, which was
wrecked Inst night on tho dangerous
reef outside Alwyn Bay, is the prop
erty of a Mr. Griffiths, of London.
All on board were saved except the
unfortunate, whose body was washed
aoliovn early this morning. It has
been identified as ibat of Miss May
Carden.
This was the paragiaph which had
caught the eye of Laurence Ord as ho
had run over his morning 'paper at
breakfast. Afterward he had come
upon the first and longer account, but
this was evidently a little paragraph
inserted when further information
had been received.
It was evening now, and as the slow
hours passod young Ord began to
writhe beneath the weight of anguish
which crushed his heart. His senses
had at first been blunted by the
shock. Now they were awakening to
full consciousness of the immeasurable
pain. He laid the miniature down
and began to walk about the room.
He moved things here and there. He
wound the clock then his nerveless
fingers dropped it with a crash. He
lot it lie where it had fallen. He
pulled up the blind and looked up at
the starry heavens. Bnt it was of no
comfort to him to think of May as
dwelling among their mysteries. The
sight of them did not bring tears to
his scorching eyes, or soften one
atom the hard agony whioh held him
in its merciless grip. He had sort
of feeling that little May would rather
be with him. He began mechanically
to settle the things on the table, to
fold up the nowspapers and open his
neglected letters. He was fighting
his pain. The letters were read with
out his being a whit the wiser as to
their contents. The pocket of pat
terns vras the only thing that re
mained. With nnother of those piti
ful .laughs ho gripped open the en
velope The laugh changed into an
indescribable cry. i There was no pat
terns in the euvelope. Iustead there
wore three thick sheets of note paper,
eaoh of which had "Walter Robinson
& Sou, Solicitors, Alwyn Bay,1' printed
upon it. The writing was a peuciled
scrawl a dear, familiar scrawl.
Laarenoe read it on his knees, sob
bing out his thanks to Qod. Threo
sentences and the'iiignature will suf
ficiently explain.
"I was brought ashore half-drowned.
' J l Mr. Robinson, a lawyor, has
kindly given us shelter. . Mr.
Griffiths is addressing this
Your loving May.''
POINTED PARAGRAPHS.
Money is the root of the manufac
turing plant. .
Gossip is always short lived unless
it is properly ventilated.
Wise is the famous man who doesn'l
overwork bis popularity.
The present is the child of the past
and the father of the future. .
The more vanity some people pos
sess the easier it is to make them
happy.
Time may be suceess as a wound
healer, but it seldom removes the
scars.
An old baohelor says the average
wait ot women is until they are asked
to marry.
Money brings ' happiness to soma
men because of the interest they de
rive therefrom.
We never heard ot husbsnds and
wives quarreling about which loved
the other most.
The bigger tho bore a man is the
smaller the hole ho leaves when his
days are numbered.
The courting of an heiress is a
business suit, but the courting of
flirt is'merely a masquerade suit.
Many a man who wouldn't think of
making a wife of his cook - has no
scruples about making a oook of his
wifo.
An old baohelor aays there is bnt
one thing sweeter than love's young
dream, and that is to wake up and
find yourself still single.
Nothing disoonoerts girl more than
to braoe herself to meet the shock of
a marriage proposal and the shook
fails to materialize. Chicago News.
Tba Child's Candid Opinion.
A widower, says the Chioago News,
who had at five-year-old son, married
seoond time, and bis ohoice was a
rather plain woman of about fifty.
After the wedding they came home,
and the father introduoed her to tba
little fellow, saying: "Charlie, this is
the new mamma I promised to bring
yon." After taking a long and ateady
look at her Charlie vent over to his
papa ana exoleimed in an audible
whisker: "Papa you' ve beta iwiu
ew at ail,"
irt j j ; ( i j ; . r v7 V-T7
new york
Ixi THE LATEST DESIGNS
Nw Yoiik City (Special). There
never has been a season when so iimtiy
different styles were in fashion, par
ticularly for cloth gowns, according to
Harper's Hazar. It would almost
seem impossible for a woman to be
nnfashiouably dressed, provided the
sleeves of her gown are small, and the
skirt has no particular fulness except
at the back. Velvet and cloth are
combined in many of the new gowns
with very satisfactory results. A
T.ADIKS' AFTEIINOON TOILETTE.
favorite combination of color is the
light wood-color with dark brown,
and a very charming gown of wood
colored cloth, the cloth with a satin
finish, is quite odd in design, and is
trimmed with deep brown velvet.
The cloth is in an over-skirt or polon
aise, while the under part of the skirt
and the upper part of the waist and
sleeves are of velvet. There are four
rows of narrow velvet ribbon outlining
the cloth. There is apparently no
way of gottiug either in or out of this
costume, but the gown is fastened at
the left side with invisible hooks and
eyes. The sleeves are small, with a
cuff of the velvet at the wrist, and are
cut so as to give the effect of a very
long shonlder seam.
A smart cloth gown that is simple in
design is made of blue Venetian cloth.
The skirt is out with a circular
flounce effect, fitting very olosely over
the hips: The flounce is not scant, as
is generally the case, but, on the con
trary, is exaggeratedly full. It is
made in clusters of pleats at equal
distanoes apart, and the pleats are
only fastened a short distance, leav
ing the flounce to flare out above the
foot. The waist has three rows of
tucks put on to give the effect of
pleats below a plain square yoke of
the deepest blue velvet that is finished
with stock-collar and side tabs. The
sleeves are very nearly tight-fitting,
but have some fulness at the top, with
rows of tucks across the fulness.
There is no finish at the wrists aud
the sleeve is very long. The belt is
ot fancy metal.
A Favorite Willi Glrla.
The pretty combination of plaid and
plain dark blue lerge, shown in the
large engraviug, is attractively dec
orated with rioti ruby velvet, a color
ing shown in the plaid. A narrow
frill or satin ribbon matches the vel
vet edges of the graceful Bertha that
flare apart iu front and back. The
stylish waist has a full front that is
gathered top aud bottom on eaoh side
of a centre box pleat. The baoks are
gathered in like utauuer, and close iu
centre with buttons and buttonholes.
The front and baoks are "arranged
ver comfortably fitted linings faced
OIRL'H C03TUME.
t"t wtt t-wt t-vt
Fashions.
FOR -WINTER COSTUME'S gj
at the top to round yoke deplh with
the plaid. A stmiding collar of plaid
completes the neck. The JJertha is
interlined with light-weight canvas
and finished at the lower edge before it
is applied around the yoke outline. A
belt of velvet flninhes the waist, over
which the front pouches slightly, and
three decorative buttons are set at
evenly snared distances on the box
pleat. The closely fitting sleeves or
plaid have a gathered pnff of the
plain goods gracefully disposed at thn
top, the wrists being completed with
bands of velvets and frills of ribbon.
The skirt shows tho very popular
graduated circular flounce, a favorite
with girls as well as with their mam
mas. The skirt is somewhat of circu
lar shaping mid may either reach to
the lower edge or terminate at the top
of flounce. The front and sides lit
smoothly, gathers causing a pretty
fulness in centre bank. The skirt is
sewed at the lower edge of wnist and
held easy at the front and sides;
it closes with the waist in centre back.
Possibilities for remodeling dresses
tbnt have been "grown away from"
are suggested by the mode; the dress
may also be all of one material in silk
or wool and trimmed with velvet,
gimp, insertiou, braid or ribbon, plain,
ruclieil or frilled.
Fine tucking or all-over lace may be
used for yoke, or the dress may have
a low, round nock and short pulV
sleeves to wear with or without vari
ous stylos or guimpe.
To nmke this costume for a young
girl will ictiniro threo and one-half
yards of mntcriul forty-four inches
wtde.
Hljlrs III ilnlrilreaalng.
It will not bo the fault of the Paris
hairdressers if finger pull's aro not
worn this winter. One of the models
they show has the huir nrranged a la
Fompadonr over tho forehead, with
three small linger pull'H above the
ears. The hair will be dressed high,
as it has been, which gives another
chance for the uso of the finger puffs.
1'laln Hklrl l-'avnred.
Already the reaction has set iu in
favor of plniu skirts. Home- of the
most eminent fashion designers and
autocrats have emphatically deolared
against so much trimming and the
consequence is that the death knell ot
the ultra-elaborate skirt is sounded.
We may indulge in a moderate amount
of frills, but the line must be very
sharply drawn, and under no circum
stances is fashion to tolerate anything
that has the appearanoe of fussiness.
There is also some objection to tho
skirt that is made in two lengthwise
sections. Very few women, and surely
no prsctioal ones, like to cut hand
some material into suoh shape that it
is absolutely worthless after the stylo
A HKIBT WITH I'IKC'ULaU FLOVNCB 09
VNIPOHX DEPTH.
of the moment has passed by. There
fore, the out-in-two skirt is always
short lived; iudeed.it has scarcely at
taiuad the prominence with whioh it
has been accredited.
THI MARKIT3.
PITTHIIfJIta
Craln, Finn and Fecit.
WHEAT No. lMNl
No. 8 red
COllN-Nn. 3 yellow, ear
Nn. 3 yellow, sbe.lwl.,..
Mined ear
Oath- No. 1 white
No. 8 white
IIVK No. I
Fl.OUlt Winter patents 8
Fancy strnlKht winter 8
live flour 8
HAV-No. 1 timothy 8
rinver, No. I 7
FEKD -No. 1 white mlU., Ion.. HI
llmwu middlings IB
llrnn. bulk li
BTltAW Wheat, S
Ont a
SKF.UF Clover, CO ms. 8
Timothy, prime I
Hairy Product
BUTTER ElRln creamery.....!
Ohio creamery. ,
Fanny country roll
L'HEKHE Ohio, new
New York, new
Frnlta and Vegetable!,
HEANR-I,lmaTit
1'OTATOKH Kani-v White. V bn
f,f
SH ,
89
m
Ri
60
9U
BO
84
7
53
60 17
00 II
7 l:l
75 6
7S 6
60 8
20 1
!lr
n
14
10
8!l
oo i
CAHHAGE Per 100 heads .... 1
ONIONH Choice yellow, V ba
1'onltry, Ktr,
CHtCKENH I'er pair, small...
Tl'KKEVS Par H
KOUH I'd. and Ohio, froth....
45r?
n
81
CINCINNATI.
Ft.ocrt..' a I0f 3 no
WHEAT No. 8 red (13 70
IIVE-No. 8 47
COHN-Mlxed 84
OATH 8 81
EOOH , 1!
11UTTEU Ohio creamery.. ... .. 80
PHILADELPHIA.
FI.OOT 8 60 3
WHI'AT Nn Q rl 7-1 7.1
4'OllN- No. 8 mixed 8 !
UA'IN No. 8 Wblte 83 34
IIUTTEll Creamery, extra.... ..
tuua-1 enoByiTania nrsis... m
NEW YOIIK.
Fl.OUn Patents 8 81? 4 81
WHEAT No. 8 red 70 77
COIIN-No. 8 40
OATH-White Western .. 8J
lll'T'l Ell -Creamery. 18 8-1
EtlOH b'.ale ot l'enn 83 M
LIVK STUCK.
Central Stock tarda, East Liberty, Pa.
CATTLE.
Prime, l.SOOto 1403 tbt t 4 SOW 5 00-
(loud, 1200 to 1.S00 lbs 4 ) 4 70
Tidy, 1000 to 1160 U.S. 4 8) 4 60
lulr IlKht steers, WH) to 1000 lbs 8 70 4
lommou, 700 to 000 lbs 4'J
nuos.
Medium 8 43
Heavy
llotiKns and stags 8 73
SHEEP.
Trlme, OS to 103 lb 4 43 4 r0-
Oood, 86 to 0 lbs 4 85 4 .10
Fair, 70 to B0 lbs 1 8 HO 4 10
Common 8 00 8 si&
Veal Calves 8 00 7 80
LAMUS.
RprlDfter, exlra
8 10(? 5 83
HprliiKer, L'ood to cbolce 8 111
a 3
1
4 70
4 S3
4 ar
3 i
Common to fair 8 60
Exlra yearling. Unlit 4 63
Oood to cbotco yearlings. 4 40
Medlnni 8 88
common. 8 00
TRADE REVIEW.
Surprisingly Few Failures In Novtmbtr Ores
Demand lor Btetl Kails.
n. Q. Dun & (.'o.'s weekly review of
1 1 tide reports as follows for Inst we-l;
The report of failures for the month
of November Is extremely gratlfyliiK,
because It shows not only a decrense
In number und a smaller amount of
liubllltles than In any month, excepting-
three summer months, since the
monthly record began, but because
ru refill anulysls shows a striking Im
provement both In the small and In tho
Inrge failures, and In nearly nil rlasses
of Industry and trade. Considering
that failures are usually smaller In
summer months than In- November,
the monthly return may be ronsldered
about the best ever made and shows a
condition tit llnanciul soundness ru re
ly surpussed. t
Nobody can estimate the gain for
the Iron and steel Industry which will
result from the past week's trknsaur
tlons In steel rails, which are said tie
exceed 700,000 tons. The makers hav
il 6.1
8 ll'l
3 00-
ing failed to agree, and to complete: -y
the consolidation under which a singlo
wiling agency was expected to sell all
the rulU for domestic use or for ex
port, the western works entered Into
on agreement by themselves and fixed,
their scale of prices at $17 for Pitts
burg, $18 for Chicago and $18 for Colo
rado, und the Illinois steel works are
Bald to have taken orders In a Binglu
week covering much the greater part
of next year's capacity.
Hut eastern concerns have not been
Idle and have taken such large orders
that tho output of the year Is now ex
pected to exceed 8,000,000 tons.
Uessemer pig Iron is stronger at
Pittsburg, where purchases of 30.0tH-
tons have cleared out stocks held out
side the association, but is selling at
$10 40 there, while the association d
nmnds $10 at Valley mills. Gray forge1
Is steady, and other pig is In better de
mand at Chicago and Philadelphia.
Finished products of Iron and ateel
are unchanged in price, although;
plates and bars are In remarkubl
heavy demand, especially for car
building.
Bales of wool have been large In No
vember, 39,876,800 pounds In live weeks
against 34,122,400 pounds last year an
26 831,000 pounds In 1892. but they hav
been effected by Important concession
in price. Manufacturers nave sonu
what larger orders and are met
hopeful, but a considerable share at th
machinery must Inevitably remain idll
until material Is cheaper in comparlso
with the .cost of wool and goods 1
other countries. - ,
The rise of cotton to 6.62c, which h
no other basis than an Impression th
cold weather and storms late In P
vember might do much harm, reac
a sixteenth, but rose Friday and ylis
m wiv iup price, wun improvement
tne goods market. While prices
rrlnt cloths are unchanged the prlc
oi some neavy goods and bleach
shirtings are a trine higher.
The wheat- market has been weak'
w 1th heavy western receipts, and r.
declined toe Atlantlo exports hu
been 6,123,056 bushels, flour lnclud
for the week, against 6,187,633 busli
last year, and 1'aclflo exports 1.810,
pusnuis, against 1.867.808 bushels
year, and for five weeks the total
(.oris have been 28,304,863 buv
against 26,122,708 bushels last year
ntv nine nolo tura
have been 14,490,283 bushels,
12.881, 032 bushels last, year, uf
price has risen hie. It is a mil
nlflcunt fact, which all Interest
keep well In mind, that expV
wheat about equal the great
known In any crop year thUsV
ere accompanied by corn expdV
but slightly exceeded In the ym i
greatest movement heretofore. I
possibility that foreign dependency
American food supplies Is pennant
Increasing may b worth oonsldel
79
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