Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, April 6, 1890, Page 20

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20 THF O\IAHA DATLY m,r,. SU 3S. DAY, APRIL 6, 18‘)0 --’1 \VI‘AN"Y ONE TICKRERT ; ONE TICRKRET With Every Doilar’s Worth of - With Every Dollar’s Worth of P R S S—. - 122 222 2 ASslole 20 MU =T e T LSS T — M cem 1o MR 1-do2 6 T e R L= A A UL = = SHORKRS. SHORS Guaranteced by C. S. RAYMOND to be worth $300. == = e n'e Pate v \r Shoes : gy S ', T AT - SPRING HEEL SHOES, ;\[U] S I (ltht I, dthu bh()("\' Diamonds ; s 1D iamonds| We make a special effort for the misses and children’s have just received an unusually fine line of Patent Leather : 1 ; trade, carrying a complete line of spring heels in Oxfords Shoes which are really the only dress shioe for gentlemen. Gi < and shocs at the ['J“N prices in the city. Misses -Il’”."! 8 e ven Given { 2. Larger misses’ spring heels in ladies Burt & Mears' Men's Shoes, BT DO e s 50’5 " Away. X 72 : Away. Ono Ticket with overy dollars worth of shoes. We have just added a full line of Burt & Mears' Shoes for ; C : i Men, which every wearer of good shoes knows to be A No. 1. f . PRICE. I) !) C\PIL“ on all Mail Orders gred that we now have ) @y and summer seating capacity for \ CD all who come, and 3 OXfl)Hl\ ‘ having increased the number ofsales- | we have just find |added a com-| ing in price from Customers We wish to say that we now have seating capacity for all who come, {ana having in- We have just re- |creased the num- for ladics, rang men -\"'”_ will plete line of Ed- £ there will be 114);m..c_nu.»urmo %1.00 mote_of that longi|shoes. FHurther ¢ N \n»u»mmomln- \ st Tiwi tedious waiting to |tion of this lineis to the finest dwin S unnecessary. C ceived a complete |berofsalemen you line of Edwin C,|will findthere will be no more of that long tedious wait- This is a shoe ing to be served. that you have|mendation of this|— heretofore paid $4 |Burt’s Fine Shoes. | Further recom- llineisunnecessary,| Wehavemadea be served. . Burt makes. | special effort to for. This week we ‘ - buy a very TAN COLORED OXFORDS. In all SI)‘[('\‘,SM s and widths. They come in plnn and patent leather lrnumul We have them for $1, hetter for $1.25, still better for $2, and the finest tan Oxford made for $3. ()LlI‘ 13()}78, alld Y()[lths’ SllOCS The Diamond Earrings Men’s Plain Congt Sf (’6IIERS Marked Down to '\) a Pdll et the 3 it Gl el O\for(l e H1508 pair, and give you three tickets onthe | and we have succeded. It comes in diamonds. both patent tip and plain. Ave the finest in the land, and our trade in this department is increasing so rapidly o A . that we feel very proud of it. We have the shoes and the people know it. We have adde Which we exhibit in our east to this department a fine line of Calf Tipped Spring Heel Shoes, in all widths, sizes 11 to e s o show window are guaranteed by T . A Youths’ T mont sapie hine i ous loys' C.S ) ) Men'’s Fdnu,y Trimmed Tl[)pod Cunqx ess Gaiters Marked Down B Raymond, the jeweler, to be . o ) & Uy From ¢ V CALE BUTTON SHOE e () BUTTON SHOE worth $300, and will' be given “5300 to 5?.00. Slzes11to? LK izes 1 to5) away to the Tiolder of the lucky — AN ke ol e B e i S A i i Men’s Cordovan, e . . MEN'’S By 20 5( number. We give one ticket with T T - every dollar \\mlh of shoes pur- ) ongress) { i i £ [1 J_/X l I{ l4 ] e e chased. Buy your shoes of us 250 ot IR LO\V SIIOLS‘ T The V Calf BOYS™ SHOES and you miy =l CEN ! tock of Low 81 4 Imported by s exelusively. The finest line Sizosit Py o Sub s 3 : ) G _Ourstock of Summer Low Shoes, in Wiole Quarter Button Shoe Dot Y ales Hnni-Mado Shoss =" ' o ' WEAR DIAMONDS. 2 ar tonny #shoe in the Y - 7 ']_}mll\"—;hv“m.%\”l:.l”“:ull]l:":f Bl ow et The easiest shoe rth for either lady Somuing e o o NORRIS & WILCOX, ; e DR CE g§66 Do AND Up. | We pay express on all One ticket on tha Dia 0y "0 A bettor one tade W i.u'...n 1517 D jen aw ! i A be 1 ole Q ouglas St. monds given away with I b I -D 0 Mail Order S. fl};l_‘]{% = every $1 worth of shoes. | WE PAY EXPRESS ON ALL MATL ORDERS To the finest sewed goods into the villa. Of course this youne lover; he could not under should he inter AW aterd: » icl is ade o 5,0 0 ani 1 the potential suppl; - p T N " N N I | cipitatel, row materil from whioh o mads the | AN, VP oo b GRANT POPPED THE QUESTION [ it \d, outside the cotton belt, | A most competent authorit imates the i and Pacific distr reduction in the cost of grc wt, by i en's 1s in tho cast, its su wention and npletely out- | tof great- | e tion, when | mutton nuncrative f a state of a pletiora | farms and all staple products 1i van population. That was the | of the war until near the | est expansion v and produ de the fa all farm prody : prosperity. In_ mor CONDITION OF THE FARMER |stitict o middle of the ninth d; se of the self- it were U onected with the Gen- ighing fo s Seoteh ins It isa Continuous Struggle for Comfortable 1o ; of thrif ; e * to h are the crucical test of i ]'V- “\'h !Yl_'tx"]":i';_"‘”l' ian s A Pretty Story gnce I A . succeeded by one of unrvemunerati unhappy day t sucl PXeessive e his respec iere has been, during . s rescuc aouc_ the prop Subsistence. companied by much privation, W Yo et y twenty years, little if veduction eral's Engagement, properly—he 10 bide his_ time in the cost of producing wheat; and the re morning after breakfast, at which his idol did over vast aveas, wheat From 1530 to 1550 th its, oats at from 9 to 1 now the ¢ from 40 to the oth he sought the garden and mean duction in the cost of growin not appear ein, wondey vhat, tue WHY HE I3 NOT PROSPEROUS. | itiCih ol o cents s pounds ih Nobo: of pivnds ’)L‘]‘L;‘,’” s, ‘;‘"“ il slaples, o il aveingo wo moro than | WOULDN'T ANSWER HIM THERE. A Hoionah i o eard e Bl bk NS e eniog | SUneEof el WM'MMW$MW..mmmw“wmmww e St v bt b The Increase in the Number of Farms | jng in 1 population, farms, and the pro- SROChallotcoson ; kea Tt stands now alittle | FO8 SEEL TR, a1 et cent, and supposing | How Henry Gladstone Won Miss | jands in his and said, and in the Products of Farms duction of the more important staples in- in . S e ) R how ot rango a like reduction mnwl‘"[fl \:1““\‘:::‘[{:\1'\“‘: Rendel — Another Account of 1 \\\C\.‘ll:l”::xl: ARG crensed as follows S whent 0.4 R Hepdnntin GUIL St o % Gambetta’s Death—A Race insidious Aummer evonitg Rnd ofitnG pocbionl | 0> Outstrips the Increase in Perce. | - As yet statistics of ‘the number” of farms per acr ed that it .54 -a shrinkage of 85 per o of popu- | The l\pnxtllhm hus ranged from 22 to: 1 Slowing | cent for the five-year periods, and is nd that it was not Twould Tear in tho ¢ and, if this 50, L Per cent. for a Wife. turns per acre from corn » — i nable, but it is estim with the ve has been o gene re not att Lias not kept lation. T Population Number of farms e S Population. Reduction in rown luction in returns time if you love t fere from whe R down of the killing puce of the preceding de- | cent for the whole term. Dom o Gl SR | will tell you that Taim willing to give you my “The working force of the United States is | It ol qotion cade, except in the ease of cattle, and cven s vunged from 5.05 10 5.8 bushels per R0 |':m. et it viking incident in the lifo of (.‘lmn:l Tife and iny love X about 23,000,000 persons, of whom 10,000,000 | Bushels of wheat here the increase has been very slow since Ahe mean beins 506 a little less «_|‘m:. : T mentioned by an intimate fricud w, isi't this bit of truth quite as pretty et d'in agricultural pursuits, omploy- | Bushels of oats. . S fn being but 24 per " cent per | stimate of the department of agricul- | gidUetion i vilue tle T 44 | 1t related to the delicate subject of how the | as anything that could be culled from fiction ! AL B aia w0t R g i As the result of an increase of favms and | annumn, Iu the first half of this peviod the | : ; Reduction in value e farm prod- - ool popped the question. Those who - i ing a capital of §16,000,000,000 in d i} fuvm products so outstripping the increasc in | whe cased 1489000 i s | The price received for that portion of the [ uets... i o 20|k s (e i 1 Tue cditor of L'Tutr ity In Purls, farms and theiv equipment, writes C. Wood | population, the only staples the i si 5 wheat erop sent abroud is generally supp = : ®i, i i el [ professes to have discoy last the truth Davis in April Forum. Thatthe greaterpart | Which is even faivly remun In nine ye col that consumed Les reduetion i costof ‘maintenance 10yghio oL SEOLILEDALL GUGK { concorning the death of Gt v s < and cotton. This The increase in the munber of cattlc carly always seen to ad- | 55d production 12 | tery of artillery, or lead a forlorn hope in | finie provious to his death, the. editor siys of this host of work and this i se Ie for the hand [ Gambetta had lived openly with u cert sho battle easicr than he could t crop, and to fall by our moi o AR W e (23 spoly of th ind beef Iy day; and SRIHLGS, ‘““;';“‘*"»‘ ‘“‘ YO ‘:‘, R0y QL ply of cotton, and by the fact that the num- | while the ing s to wo above the aver- | The farmg r-...\14;.\”(‘,,4\.»,“'\“n-w of the woman he loved. The occasion when | Mme. L. His friends trcated the woman question; and this state of unt as pro- d swine increasc en question with the of . American th mich consided ceventt by 4 UG08 DK LOSHAGS WG NN Juestian kL Lh s the aren in | the young lieutenant in the army and Julia | With much cousid 1 eventunlly f swine has not kept pace with the in- | we must begy in population; but it does not follow | pe ceding decade, and that proof favoring the afiivmative, cided that pirblic gressed so far as to d urage great numbers in brief, th I roth was not oneof those he product | Dent plight of those so employed, that there is a def for | fa ; an abundat suy 1 whether it is not the extent and pressure of sreduct position required th 1d 3 Phis stato of affairs is not duoe to uumber of swi was greatly | The ine D he production of oats wore | our sury ich dotermines the price of ipitas decliniug | jjeal moonli s nor were the stars | fpy th, . however, tho Marquis A. - e ; oy excess of requirements prior to the civil | thi n the increase of | wheat in Great Britai tern Burope. 5 and diminish : S Rkling fover 1o S itot davir|iReen e S YIS 06 l Industry or frugality on the part of the favmer; - the ¢ increase in g In this counection 1 quote from the leiter of in the period onding 13 B gt e 1h thialybo0a 0L AACla L i ki A ) he works more hours and is more spaving in 1 periods, the pricesof cattle | foy uning i still_wore rupid than in the | a grain merchins in the. Chicago Tribune of | supply of 62 to 100 people, the supply ol corh § 508 s I s et [ ey Gambetta, . and_communicated her xpenditures than any considerable num- tinucd remunor Ui to the middle of | anlmals that consume it 1500 8 thaw a6bushiols per caplia;thatiofwhent Jithe Bitladolghin Buguiror, S HORISHALK fyishito hm" throug third person. Gam A R AR Ry ninth decade, when the new farms of the | During twenty years the exportation of e and Novem roadints |fand oatd less Whan_ 80 USRI MUCUELC (iwas vislking . Bis Ly Coom ido and | hotta . rejected © the . proposal’ with AR R e the open range regions of Fexus, the | com has thaui five per cent. of (L in the north o far ConsUmpUORQr ROHCTO L former classmate, Fred Dent. He had driven | th romark that he widow had Sl 58 IR i plains, and the mountain aveas furnished a | tho p 5 1 than one per omonts Lt iy mutiols we allin (nts of e | futo town in bugzizy with his comrade’s sis- | al quired an unenyiab) i evident from the increasing quantities of pro- | Supply far in excess of demands, Swamping ) 2 lai 4 i movnent pec ) meat, DEQYuIIcR) | NG I Penplo wero on their way | tion o aceount of y lovers, and_had ducts put upon the warkets of the world at | the wirketsand reducing prices to a level pre- | almost wholly upon the home reg S LR ! wers fully aud promptly met, it bs auito ap J ; I akon t felped the marquis into Tis grave. Somo prices over growing less. lndeed, our farms | cludi 1 profit. The time of war excepted, | and tho extent of the supply ¢ would doubt Jiaeany e L o s EIEO8 e TG QYEFHASEN - timeatterward arenariably handsone womin ave so numerous and productivo us to reduce | e increaso in population has_been quite s follow enlavzed supply is ey i eatised by the 10 8 O ot boot. 18 aufclontTor 71,000, in had fallen in torrents and the vonds | visited Gambetta at Ville 0’ Avray and con of American agricultureto a g | uniform in v whil ho iner in 1o medium or even hort ¢ brit northwestern provin I UL SUDDIVIORAILE S £ 7 axle-decp with . The lightning | versed privately with him for two hours. 4 A AT b0 BRI | tho production of the staples Tus been by AT le i America, 000 people, of swine for 76,000,060, of wheat ] R a reason profit, and to lessen - hu 3 Love i \ el nore. mone Here we have the Europeans correctly | 0,000,000, of corn for 0,000 and of | flashed and the thunder pealed ont of the | 5 bk il the farms and farm products of | | 1eaps and bounds,” as appeurs from the fol- | gross, than does a full or lurge onc oo, W ¢ the Europeans correctly . Mk Lo nieht which followed. A | We widow of the mavquis, and that she was Cunad At Britain. and westorn Burope, | 10wt summagics, showing the rates st w clearly shown in the Tollowing tabl offdatiof iour suniun unon thcly shin 1L oo of. | lickuoss of the night which followed. A | talking over der matrimonial scheme with Janady il i orn Burope, | (E R e 5 : 1 (R R markets, and indicating plainly th is the conelusion from the evidence of- 1 qyollen stream and a frail bridge stood in | Gambetta, Just as th e Clearly, the unprofitableness of American g- | Populit wion ucts have wes far toward explaining why the fi 0 ; : ) Just_as the widow rose to bid R At e | CreREaD Hot prosperous. To illustrate: the corn crop | extent of such surplus that mikes. the price is that the troubles of th their way. As they reached the dung Gambetta good afternoon Mine. L. burst_into Heulturo s n y degree due to insw 1880 axceadad | that: of 1887 by anore thin to this surplus and |nl}u»~y\\uu‘ul are dio y';n..- cb Illl\l‘lu‘\“: spot a sudden flash of electric light the room with a drawn revoly ambettn ¥ 3 . L 1 "+ 3 4 rise. he ar in oats, in twenty | too many farms, too many jumped between the women and received tl nthe f find that the retwrns | Population i | 650,000,000 bushels, ye imting the cost of | 1 irfsies : s N Jushels of co v the terrors of the flood and the i and ved th v labor do not afford | Numberof favis 31 | the oxtra amoun® handled, it will bring the | YOurs, has increased fre | to0_ many hushels of coi, Y0 ey s e e, T an instant | 1o shots of which o died. Mume, L, wis L Cattle b i HeAs 21000000 to 27500000 wcres, ve- | barley, buckwheat and Go many | dangers of the b 1 An et B R A e e S i T m o fair sk o by 1 3 rowers S100,000,000 Less, in, the crop of b o A I ) murder becuause she knew ¥ SPerity, | Sywine &' e A irns diminishing from §12.78 to $7.24 per | ton hay, and too gr production of | availing himse of this omenb ol | Rarath y hoit ob b that af- | ales of cotion 1§ | 1378 was 64 per cont. thau that of all other farm products for the num- fiicer urged the good | 10 Y AEORE ERien -1 oin g , and that “the M corn H ad, allowance made ost of - b AR RS L JyEollather i fllcor w he ool | s fearod she m @ pros- times e of joint.” 2 tho reasons o wheat 7 hrought th S141,000,000 | Hu'_ [‘»'l\‘w\.\mfi.‘l‘m“ 1:' ya population, . -p.lw; umers. B 0 O || AP oL assizned for this lack of prosperity wre mono- | Acres of outs i five crops of corn grown iv REEOL 0 AIdFato of cuth RHOINO S RESER IR The £ maide ! % ervals of five or ten years since 1860 D tions of the earth. The young maiden, who e 3 : wetalli deficit or defective “cireulati Tatinis e wine. cotton. corn, | 8ocond half-dec tabulated, e intery 1Y op/ten, your e s A e e tly before noon today Jacob I bl P v ekt et ot raged |/ <t L8 GO0 Yaiaty thim pome | the five crops of the pe Numbor | No. Cattie What are O 157 Biad th avely fuced the torrors 0L | sprankl®, a furmer of Mogadore,” drove up t) beef combinations, speculation in farm pro- | lution, the uerea R Bl 00,000 bushels, vet the v Year, Popuiation.| * of |l 1 What avo ovehids? asks the Boston | Situttiat st o b o e | o conrt house, s tarmout “eovered with Anta Ly e el S R Mlokp ISR HLSaUAR Ale hRa kb 000 less thevetiom. | it 2 Advertiser. A plant who me 18 in | \gith affrighted force id, pogin iGN ian ‘H\‘-h Jard " driving runsp S G . : ud, especially during the Crlmean war, | [ty De contended that this is a vesult of | (50 | the tropical forests, and yet a plant | to yield to the ur ‘...- mof the | AKron HaphiciL 1 g oW v ovall of these may have affected ton growing took its greatest strides at | the transition from an inconvertible pajx 331000 hich is not dependent for its sustenunee | ragng tore it scemed to sinke awiy 4 i oL cultural interest unfavorably, and yet | this time, incre from i | currency to one redeemable in golds but th 166,78 [EAan "1 Jicinied l.[ e TR [ : 00w ko | i Miss Laieioda Sngtleof Mogudoro, Afes ed the present depression, is [ 1830, to BOST.000 in 1 and then falline | swme conditions are found to obtain in a thne | | | 42 18 [ uponithe eavslp R AEFAR AABEL R [l oct S o Faply from | Tocalvin tho ‘prociaun idoougont h““i' d ¢ for the farmer has been p o 5,000,000 in 1570, Not until 1550 di poecie payment, when, in the third and L forms, It is n curiosity of the the heart, f f o1 fhich beatin thay | Wheth ther lieonso could he issued fo nonetization of silver, and thero AN ety Nears bos | forth peridds, an‘addition of 45,000,000 neves | 1 ot | world which, perched “in - the 1S 3 iave young breast thinc it nten 0 clse to murry tho samo girl, Being tlcient money in cireulation to buy | f to the wrea iy corn udds 1 5000 bushels | rep out its lon | root i [ LAY YOO B e cara (0f vt Ae iMrmative ho grow very ox b ks s’ tho community | fom 1800 to 1870 ¢ 1¢ o | to1ne pr i rducos Tho farmer's g So many are the ¢ odi- | §y e | imely su ol tho texsibls arted for Mogador current Protective taeifls Fwere us foll | rovenue 1 (uite 10 per cent rovse the prices, thut it is impract ) I 4 e R fis newhen another anxions ing the most prosperous erus | e R rhe addition 1 capital account to i different elass B ) T i o the person of Samuel | \ cultuve. Tvu: while new per ., | of the cor v N this un- | show the cha from time to tim 1 as s« ] | can mt a license for himself > in principle older than the pres- [ Population A v | vesult 3 W ¢ Dorbtless | value of this great product; but th cerned, it is very i A | e, Hearing of Sprankle's - put depression, und the maleficent infiy | Nuwiber of fur “ result would have acerued had these | the line in vidies may ina med the valuation which® its ¢ und | i A consultation with the diessed boef combination will hay Acres fueorn | 000,000 bushels been converted into fuel | ferred from cortat facts, "Thus raisers put upon plar re y have boarded =outh less offec prices when the favimer Avres in wheat i filrms, us is being done with part of | price of cattle sold in the New Yor varieties. The experts in thi ineh bound V Krumroy station, thre Prospen Could the speculation in fa Acres In out 0 | the surplus of 188, during the week engding December of hortioulture say. thitt 80INE oot niles fron It ho e I by men who are thus in a la DECREASE e taventy vears of corn-production, | W8 85,02 per 100 poimds net. But : X S e \ mishap Cr . W able & teasure onubled to fix prices without owni Por sovering twonty vews of com-praduction, | woport of the depictnent of _ageicy b L yrenihy 8,000 cnohy fi¥edesl Ty AU . . ' 1 { b 1 - M by Mk GOCAGE Ve QY ner 3 he wee o 1 fo apparen nar o controlling the r s i which they T s | 8 what less thun one ucre of corn, or 244 Tant o difficulty with P aan ‘\'H ) 1 “‘.‘”“k i tend o deal, bo put und 1 b, the f Cotton i | bushels, per capita, was sufficient to’ meet all PAX YR i dawn a0 Jest 0F BIQ KO0 ARG R AVRILY tions of the law of supply and demand would | Again farnis and acre ¢ and oats ore | de In the sccond half decado the corn | awe iguted, tho exqu pair of logs against . good horse und bu be restored. Middle : 1 ALl the persons concerned are well-to-do wid e restored. Middle men, if an evil, are ! found to i pidly than | area was inereased to 1.1 acres per capita, the ! strange forms and great va i ) i seemingly necessary one; and time will | populatio ey or_tho | diminishing prico indicating thi e the table soms are the reasons given for t ¢ I tin their comn y oubtless puto the positive and erying | fove | for each berson wa: than was nee oaLtle, Prave traordinary valu Before the windo v > wron 4 tion between Edward | tie, an engin Ala WIONES portation ¢ oW v and w | This addition to the supply redueed th . of a Tremont flovist, not far 0 r b e ing out of an enormous fctitious ¢ t farm products sold at such price o | age returns from $18.52 to §10.10 per acre, | tie: snd sho Hasldateant a thro i & Great Southern vl killed » Iude 9 « - Ane ary 00y ( ' « ¥ aps remembe hat rt 1 « on that e ‘ehriuary ) Whilo we may conclude that new or | bring great prosperity to the agricultural in- | During the third peviod the aves A, was gathered to look \ cluster of Yoy wi Yon -t Fron i Bir N G uite all the causes named affect unfavorudly [ tevests. The iction in the uumber of | 1 acres por capita, th WL affevt pr e hick oceupy s0 b agol gave you'tho partioylare gf tha | save & BUmingham, Al ¢ AT the welfure of the farmer, yet w wine and cattlo was largely due tothewasto | of 1851 diminishing | tho In 1800 catt re low in | WRIoD 3l BRUDY ling of Mr. Henry Gladatone, son of th o St. Louls Globe-Democrat. A them in our search for the contry e | and destruction following In the wake of the [ supply T cattle to population then beiy place in t populur mind x-premier, and Miss Maud Rendel writes | weeks later his widow, Mes. J of the p unprosperous condi war, and this diminution in numbers nuudo | effcct of this one short This rutio fe 1570 to 62 to 100, and in form, of a delicate, pearly, | E: ¢ Field to the Chicag The | Doolittle, filed in the probate court letters of abers nuulo | off t th o A u N e most important indu: production of the m profitable | to advance the ay price f gradually until the beginning of 1830, whe ness, daintily lined with pink | story of the wooing hus jus It { wdministiation odi vs, .\..:v olfttlo \ det the farming che v Th At redue- | years 21 per cont. In fourth half-decade | the proportion again reac S to 10, So | upple, they presented an unusual 8 thut the tw t 1 e Qb D SHEOH IR HER BLATIGY te s depress must i during the civil war [ there was no change in the area per capita, | 1ong he supply of cattlo remained below | (40,8500 4 unacquainted 0, th fis at | notice of conts Cof the Jetters of adini ably pursued his vocs in the p not reachied | e supply waits | the per capita sup nd an aceumulating | Sheir in pad ples u lov illa. O de i i < o ! vait I pr Al how, why and to whit exte cently plus of such dimensions us to force 4 1 [ t wrden il laye given place to others 1570 to 150 the increase was to the low nt known. The price of corn | Wo ire warranted in suyin A Florida A u s A 1 we mu view the rut b " 1 in the ply be 1 to 1 1 1 ¥ 1 g Per 0. | iu the how rkots, December, 1859, was 11 K L s 0 ; x tion to population in t spet Populat cont lower than ever before repo lati lepress p ) " A g ( ro | L notice of W ! ced not « N has been the effect of the ey ) v . e A | o1 3 t cly Nuuiber following one of nearly eq; wmine v find f | A A us may i t s X Nu i eotton ' \ Low ses prod A R t 00k important aited 4} | ; g e e ent depie were in ope ng prior to | 4. Y 3 | product roduct take g at anced [ n t 1t W suspend thely action and to postpoue the During the elghth decade the iucrease iu du 1 cott It is the | w chunk, ¢ L L 1 tled pre fox Coslul.

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