The Lancaster news. (Lancaster, S.C.) 1905-current, December 30, 1913, Image 1
% VEEKLY
? \/ini at
y IIULHI
| AUGU
* !.
WProminei
I ""
OWNS
F? 'I
X Chief (J,
X Cilve,
V
Columb
I i. server. I)?
> New Yorj
1 men in ni
in this co
a fine of
?> Carolina
i Jl I laws and
+ \ <r himself a
own pres
JL . in accord
Y :state.
? | Chief G
jL ! son tonlg
- |response
the case
X Mr. Be
the tract
Y he was h
A large tra
in that s<
Y a disposi
JL would hn
chief war
SY ed for th
c. OI i i
with Mr.
Y which th
- force the
I nont intc
who has
?<? ton ami
X winter In
Y Mr. I
% lows:
X "From
Y Estill. i
& hunting
I'aiiRrain
Y Oarnett.
H- W. Ill
X wald. V
plac e a I
% morning
[Inquiry a
Y jmont anc
?> vannah r
K They had
' just klllf
August I
X and C. O
: "My lr
me there
A> mont anc
X out Heen
Y would nc
property
X paid taxc
Y would 110
& distinctly
X South Ca
Y license in
?* fact that
X 'ioes not
Y quired to
?+ for Mr. F
X refuse to
Y 1 not do
? . to pay tl
.X. i it should
Y 1 matter ol
?* their lice
X "I told
Y laws of S
>% day a ni
X AM having PI
arate off
in the dh
t , nan proo
? ed 10 ,ia;
* and Mr.
\ would ha
^ bind thei
? court foi
. would be
; I "Mr. V
? to pay tl
> Estill. t
J ways pr
y y in past
/ ation of
, J court's
y Relmont,
1 for hiinsi
? , Weeks o
y 9, and th
% der the i
X -time his
V considera
1 ea<*h for
$ mont and
quired ea
> $10.25 a
1 "These
V Mr. Rein
& AURUBt F'
1 for $:ui
V the three
? Rave me
JL , procure
V Oastel of
y today. ?
2 more plei
t JZ, down hei
y heartily !
.< firame taw
j residents
M had sulTe
JL laws, as
had been
?
V About Fl
x ' pI?
y D. J. o
?++ . State pen
X about 50
-v ? , work in t
ber, he *
X creased s
V work. It
A been part
act of th
(Continued on Page Four.) m.^rket e
\
_ . ...
liAJNL'ASTKK,
ING GAME LAWS, PRESIDENT HEAR!
1ST BELMONT FINED A STRONG"!
nt New Yorker Pays Surprised Preacher an
Into S. C. Treasury. ' Ration of Little CI
LARGE PRESERVE. THE PREACHER'S
!
imp Warden Richardson Man's Accountability to
t Ou Statement in Re- Subject of Sermon by
Hard to Case. Herbert Jones
iia Special to Charlotte Ob- Gulfport, Miss., Dec.
;c. 28.?August Belmont of dent Wilson sat in a qt
c, one of the best known Presbyterian church hen
iiancial and sporting circles incon8picuoU8f humble w
untry and Europe, has paid v '
$3 00 to the state of South a conKrcgation of less thai
for violation of the game and heard a remarkable
has taken out licenses for the personal accountabllit
nd friends to hunt on his dlvldual to hls Maker
erves in Hampton county. The pPe8,dent and Mrs.
ance with the laws of the companled by Dr Cary ,
_ . . . _i u , came unexpectedly, avoid
"e Warden A. A Richard- that had co^llecte/at the ,
ht gave out a statement n t Pas8 Chrlgtlan el ht
to request, with regard to and th h Rev. Dr.
which ended yesterday. bert Jones was as surprise
lmont owns 6.000 acres in hl congregatlon at thPe ai
In Hampton county, where dl8tlngul8hed vl8itor; he
unting deer, and he has a prepared service only sli
inng camp for his horses gy ?olncldence he de;eIO,
potion. Had he not shown that hag , been Qnp
tion to obey the law he (#f thp Presldent ,
tye been arrested for the The Rey D t
den had a warrant prepar- t, His trembling
e event. n
. ,, ... Muciuiy noie u prm sea as
lTr Islin. Jr., on of those an(j fro j? tjle pulpit.
Belmont on tho hunt at i , . . .....
0 warden appeared to en-' 1 selected a oxt- 1,1
law. Is a son of the promi- knowing that it would b.
rnatlonal yachting expert f,u .H. ',>r. ,.prfa<,
raced with Sir Thomas Up- 1 resident ot the t inted
others. The Islins usually ^vanted to gise all of yo
helpful that would rem a
Lichard'son's statement fol- \n the days to come.
twelfth verse in the fourH
information received from *-er ot s letter to the
went to August Belmont's " 'So then every one
preserve Known as the give account of himself t
auga Club, seven miles from | "This principle of a<
accompanied by Wardens affects all of us, for God i
chardson. Jr.. and J. 11. Os- humblest man as lie d(
fe arrived nt the Belmont President of the greater
aout 11 o'clock Saturday earth.
and. after several hours of \ "This is the last Suit
nd hunttng. found Mr. Bel- year. What has the yen
1 his party down in the Sa- *U8? To some who are i
iver swamp on a deer hunt. ence. it has been the m
two line deer that they had year in American history,
d. The party consisted of pawned on the world's di|
telmont. Morgan Belmont fcin 8ee emblazoned ;
liver Islin, Jr. coronets of princes and tl
iformatton that had carried Emperors, the teaching <
was to the eiTect that Bel- terpretation of man's du
1 party were hunting with- The Rev. I)r. Jones di
ses and had said that they today was the Presidgnl
>t take out licenses, as the though his sermon was di
was Mr. Belmont's and lie flections on the passing 1
>s in South Carolina. This "Methuselah lived to 1
it exempt them as our laws 0|d(" saj,j the preacher
say that a non-resident of drowned in the flood,
rolina is required to have a these years, vet, as lie sat
order to hunt and that the parlance, he didn't knov
they own land in tills state oom(1 in out of tne wet."
exempt them from being re- {jen smiled.
have this license. I looked i .... .,
telmont to make a kick and . hpn, thP SP[ 1?' V'
pay the license, but he did choir 0l,SPVPn, iftP<1, th<
a. He said he was willing 8?nK: Then followed a s
ie license and thought that,conclud,n* the *?rv{<,ebe
paid and that it was a I The entire congregati
r carelessness in not having solemn silence until the P
nses. his party passed out. thim
that, according to the step the preacher thanki
outh Carolina, that for each their visit,
on-resident minted without "it was the second gr<
rocured a license was a sep. my life," he said,
ense which was punishable "And what was the fli
scretion of the court: that I ed the President,
f to show that he had hunt- "I preached once hefo
ps, his son Morgan two days Garfield." was the reply
Islin one day. and that 1 The presidential pal
ve to take them to Estill and away to Biloxi. 12 miles
ti over to th?> next term of along the coast before t
r Hampton county, which to Pass Christian. On
in February. president saw four aged
telmont asked to be allowed veterans in uniforms of
ie fine and not be taken to bling along the road, lea
>n account of his having al- on their canes,
eviously paid his license "How do you do?" sail
years and In consider- as lie ordered Ills car to
the fact that the clerk of "Howdy," they ans
books showed that August passed on withou treci
Jr., had taken out a license president.
i*lf and a friend. Harold H. Further along the ron
f New York, on December 8nw "Benuvoir," the old
at Mr. Belmont, Sr., was un- f,.rson Davis, with its
mpression that at the same m.arbv.
license in past years, and in The automobiles were i
it Ion to accent a fine of SI no > ?? ? -*
Ill 11(1 wilt'II 1 llt'y KOI UHCK,
Mr. Belmont. Morgan Bel- ra|n f?.fi during the nigln
1 C. Oliver Islin. Jr.. and re- zl,. continued most of i
icli to take out his license at ^ (jie cottage the Pre*
license. inanv telegrams congrat
i fines were promptly paid by on j,js fiftv-seventh hi
tout giving me a check on took a ?hoTt nap after li
telmont & Co.. of New York 8tarted for a walk late 1
to cover the three fines and noo|, n<1 hnd not Kone
licenses. Mr. Belmont also ntt1f. R,r, waylaid him wl
another check for $10.25 to Qf flOWers
a license for Count Veil ? Manv happy returns
Paris. France, who arrives sko sa|d.
dr. Belmont said game was president thankee
atiful than he had ever seen jv was a stmpie
re. and stated that he was singl,, evidence It seem<
In favor of enforcing the outside world recalled t
-s. I assured him that non- of the nation's Chief Kj
were not the on!y ones that was a striking contrast
red at the hands of the game ,,ratlon of a yOBr ago. wl
over ir,0 South Carolinians son Rtood at his hlrthpla
prosecuted this year." ton Va anil(, (hp brilliai
celebrating crowds, but li
Ifty Convicts Already Km- u J?"?t ? much, he tol
. . 1 U . afterwards,
yed in < liair Factory. | Among the many mess
rlfflth, superintendent of the gratulatlon received was
Itentlary said yesterday that lug from King Georg
convicts had been put to Britain:
he chair factory. The num- "I want to offer you
laid 'will be gradually in- congratulations on the
is the convicts learn the of your birth and trust
dore than 100 chairs have health has not suffered
tiallv finished and the prod- arduous duties of the yes
e mill will be placed on the It was the only cablegr
arly in the year?The State, made public.
S. C., TUESDAY, DECEMBER :i<>, 1<>K
! [saddened miners I
MilN R1IRY THFIR flFiM
? ? . . UVII I I 11?111 U l?l 11/
d Con^re- 59 Bodies, Including I I Children, W
lurch. Interred in Lakeside Cemetery. I
THEME. LARGE CROWDS ATTEND, n
His Maker, Hundreds of People From Other \t
Kev. I)r. Places Attend Funeral Service.
Meetings in Many Churches.
28.?Presi- Calumet, Mich., Dec. 2 8.?The
laint little Western Federation of Miners buried Qf
* to,lav in 'ts dead today. Fifty-nine bodies, in- I fi .
eliding those of 44 children, were 1 th
orshiper in carried through the streets, down a |
i a hundred winding country' highway and laid in a
sermon on graves in a snow-enshrouded ceme- ci
y of the in- tery within sight of Lake Superior. ! nd
Thousands of saddened miners form- | Hi
. .. ed the escort of the funeral parties m
Wilson, ac- an(j pa8Sed between other thousands I de
I. O ray son, wjjG as spectators testified to the in
ufi a urOWu grief that has oppressed the comlttle
church munity since 72 men, women and or
miles away. ?
ii h t ai tuiiurfu kiiumi 111 me uoribimab ha
3 as anv of Eve pan,c ln Itallan HalL I A,
-Hvni nf tho ^or hours the Sabbath calm was th
virio.1 ht? broken by the tolling of bells and an
? i? Y t the sound of voices intoning burial in
>ed a theme chants- In half a dozen churches \ he
the nreach and the mounerB went about the th
. ? ,f ' streets, passing from their homes to ' ar
reached fer- the churche8' back to their homes, ht
h-imi i> . after brief respites and again to the ai
, ?' churches to prepare for the last sad of
? ne NNa,kecl trip to the grave sides. th
Delegations of strikers began com- \Vi
e said, "not {ng jnto Calumet early in the day. es
b my distin. The special train of nine coaches r;i
i before the brought hundreds of federationists ?f
States but I from the iron mines of Negaunee and d(
u something Isliplieming and every town and min- ,?1
in with you ing location in the copper country
It was the sent members and friends of the U]
teenth chap- union to swell the ranks of marchers p;i
Romans: in the afternoon. n,
of us shall Ry noon the union host was as- js
to God.' sembled. Months of experience in jn
countability demonstrating their numbers by
cares for the parading had taught the men to form
>es for the ranks quickly and with little delay w
it nation on they lined up four abreast. of
The supply of hearses was inad. (J,
ulav of the equate and there were only 14 of
ir' done for these vehicles in the van. Rehind the j;
in this pres- hearses was a section of the procesost
glorious s'on whicli brought tears and sobs m
An era h;is from onlookers. Thirty-nine white OA
ilon,nev tli ?t coffins, their size testifying to the
iroiiiid the short life of the little forms within, ol
tie crowns of were carried by relays of strikers, u
if a new in- Four men bore each coffin and as cr
ty to man " their arms grew weary or their feet
id lint know slipped on the roadway, companions K
.it,,,; relieved them of their burden. ni
vote"to? Persons drawn to Calumet solely w
O months curiousness of the spectator, P<
Utrrtlllir IIMMII IM-I > uf> tuir* ruiiiill^nn \
}'ours passed them. Men turned away to
" "it was prush tears from their cheeks. Wo. jl;
He lived all men, especially th?? mothers in the b<
/ in common crowd, sobhed openly, and dozens. in
v enough to unable to endure the sigh, rushed tli
The Presi- from the streets taking refuge in
homes nearby. Other mourners, too, tli
s finished a were in evidence among the toil- tli
>ir voices in hardened men. who carried the oof- fe
hort prayer, fins. They bore the bodies of their
companion's children and many a ..
on stood in rol,*h sleeve was brushed hurriedly V
resident and arross down-turned faces, the eyes
tt the door- of which were concealed hv peaked j
ed them for oaPs- drawn far forward. Fifty '
singers chanted hymns in the wake Ei
of those carrying the children's cof- ]
' honor oi pns Most of these men were Eng- !
lish miners, who had learned in j
st . mqulr- fornwell to chant Christmas carols
in the streets and years ago brought fa
re 1 resident njrj custom to the copper coutitry.
Today, however, they did not ()I
rty motored s|nK songs of a new life horn. "Jesus o.
further east ]^OVPr 0f My Soul," "Rock of Ages," '
urning hack !lIuf "Nearer My God to Thee," came
the way the from throats thick with emotion, but j..
Confederate j^e harmonies were full and rich.
grey, hob. u1P singers turned into Illne :
nlng heavily street, which led to the cemetery vv
road, the open ranks of marchers
1 Mr. Wilson wheeled into line. Ishpheming and j,
slow up. Xegaunee men came first, followed |
wered, hut j)V ? brass hand of the members of n
agnizing the tbe copper miners' union.
The cemetery is in two sections.
id the party on(> Is consecrated to the dead of the ...
home of Jef- 'oman Catholic faith, the other to !n
tiny ofllee tbose belonging to Protestant denominations.
In the former three ,
covered with trenches had been excavated and in (1,
for a heavy these 2T> bodies were laid. ,,,
1 and n driz- On the Protestant side of the ,
he morning, burial place two la'ge graves re- f.
ddent found celved 28 bodies. The other six
ulating him were laid in familv nlots. Onlv brief
rthday. He addresses worn delivered in the comeincheon
and terv. En gene A. McNally, a local ol
In the after- attorney, eulogized the dead in Eng- 0]
far when a usj, and George Strezich of St. I,onis. ai
th a bouquet Frank Altonen of Negaunee, and y
other federation leaders delivered ad- ,,,
of the day," dresses in Austrian, Finnish and w
Croatan. pi
1 her warm- MeN'ally made only passing refer- rf
tribute?the pure to the deportation of President
Ml, that the p. II. Moyer of the federation, pre- (jj
he birthday dieting that his absence, wnether terncecutive.
It porary or permanent would result irf
to the cele- the development of leadership as ef- jn
?en Mr. Wil- fective as his. All the speakers
ee at Staun- termed the victims of the Christmas ?
nt glamor of Kve catastrophe martyrs to the cause in
le appreclat. of unionism. They argued that had to
rl his friends the managers not refused to recognize st
the union, the industrial warfare ty
ages of con- would have been settled months ago to
the follow- and there would have been no need st
;e of Great for the celebration In Italian Hall. ee
, Nine of those who were killed have dc
mu oin ooro ?w? * ?K ? ? u
nj n.iiwic nut wren LTiaiiT-ta. r ?iin;in UJltl r?*
anniversary bands who left the copper country to fii
. that your seek work In Arizona and Montana ui
I from your have not arrived In Calumet, hut It
ir." is expected that Tuesday will see the b?
am that was last of the funerals. Four were held is
yesterday. The coroner's inquest pc
*. ??
f
5. " $1.50
lGINS probe of igreatest
CAUSE OF DISASTER! HIST!
i
i itnesses
Say Man Wore Button Record of 191.1
.ike Citizens' Alliance Badge In F
IE CORNORER'S INQUEST. $5,000,000,000
torney Hilton Says Identity of Mis- Long Line of I)
creant Who Started Rush is of <lleinen in Po
Paramount Importance. | vantngi
Calumet, Mich., Dec. 29.?Two out Washington, ]
a score or more of witnesses testi- , dollars' worth ol
d before a cornoer's jury today that dollars of cash
e man who caused the Christmas year in spite of
re disaster in Itlian Hall here wore setbacks?is tin
white button like the badge of the 1 million America
tizen's Alliance. Immediately after I The United Si
journment on the hearing O. N. j year of husband
Uton, the Western Federation of i 000,00U worth
iuer'8 attorney, stated that futher $2,896,000,000
ivelopment of tuis feature of the in- cereals alone;
the vestibule of Italian Hall for an i worth of anlmi
The union lawyers did not comment' tered and anima
i the fact that the president anil of the 1913 cr
ilf a dozen members of the Women's , 1899; more thai
uxiliary of the Federation, swore 1909 and subst
at they saw no insignia on the man | 1912. Of all t
id that union members who stood j mated that 52
the vestibule of Itlian Hall for an on farms and tl
>ur before the panic started, said animal product
e alarm came from within the hall On that basis tli
id no person wearing such a button mated at $5,84
id passed them. In the opinion of , PRODUCTIC
uthony Lucas, prosecuting attorney 1 Despite a rec<
Houghton County, who conducted' although the
ie examination of witnesses, facts jias fsliion an
ell established today were that an nu'mj,pr of fari
:citahle member of the audience JH,r ront sj,K.,'. ]
ised the cry, that there was no .,ro estimated t
'tual tire in the hall and th,it the the countrv'
jors were ojien and the stairway agricU|ture. in
ear when the panic started. subject made p
"All we want is a finding based take the view
on facts developed at the inquest," ]fvjnjr wju rf?sul
t?l\Ir nil#..., "Til,, 1.1.
iscreant who started the mad rush , ""wpvor dc
of paramount importance and we duction on fan
tend to do what we can to clear up consumer s
,js ? not follow that
Testimony concerning the button duction would i
as given at the hcgining and end '.'10 r:,s'1 i,ir
the afternoon session of the in- raP'ta farm
iest. prices paid by
Jolin Burcar, who gave his age as an? lower, say
>, and ssiid he had lost a sister in Had the loc;
te disaster, told of seeing a man otiualled or ex<
uffled to his eye is a fur-collared duction it seen
,-en-oat. enter tiie hall. cash income pel
"He hollared 'Fire* and then ran J)pf'n greater a
it," said the boy. "I ran out too. '<>ss ,aan 'n
e had an Alliance button on his doubtful whetln
>at." snmer would hi
Another witness, Mrs. John II. rPta" prices ar
oski, said she was 20 feet from the a ProsP?ct of 1
an, who wore a dark blue coat, on ar'' s'mv ,0 dec
hich was a white button. "It look- production.
1 like an Alliance button," she said. The long lii
>ut I was too far away to read it." middlemen bett
On or two witnesses said there fo'isumer
id been some confusion in the hall tal{0 advantage
?fore the panic started but women to n r,'r,a'n ox'{
charge of the celebration denied VOLUME I'
lis. "Corn value*
Almost all witnesses agreed that comprised 2 8 ji
le first alarm came from a man and of all crops, altl
iat it was taken up at once in dif- under the recoi
reiu parts 01 tne nail. crops, with va>
order In which
HEATHER TO BE ihU't?
GENERALLY FAIR
toVscro *
nir Weather Promised in Practical- $<16,000,000; s
ly All Parts of tlic Country Kast 000,000; sugar
?? ' the Itockv Mountains. Louisiana can si
... , . . ' _ ,, $26,000,000; ri
Washington. Deo. 28? Generally spp(j $21000.00
ir weather is predicted for the next buckwheat $10,
w days In parts of the country Kast "V O'lnnfity
tlie Rocky Mountains and over the 'lttction the rer
luthern plateau region. Rains are by wheat, rye. i
cpeoted in the Southeastern stiites P,tg?>r and the t
id probably snows In the Middle At- s,tgnr. Ibe
ntie and New Kngland states, up- barley cotton
r Ohio Valley and lower Lake re- exceeded twice
ion. The weekly bulletin of the . ] 'H> 1 ?ie i
eather bureau issued tonight says: 's high. A net
"A disturbance of moderate in. value Is mad<
nsitv central Sunday morning over cereals, and se
ouisiana with advance Nortelieast cottonseed
ard and cause rains Monday in the s' oi
DUtheastern states and cloudy !|cnor estimate
eather and probably snows Monday potatoes, li
ud Tuesday in the Middle Atlantic , ''' iU1'. ' "
ud New Kngland states, the upper has the est mat
bio Valley and the lower Lake re- :m ' "
ion. With this exception the weath- ,s! estnn t
r will lie fair during the next sev- SUKi" "
ral days in practically all parts of "airy prodi
ie country Kast of the Rocky Moun- J\,n,'''t ?> inor!
tins and over the Southern plateau KR,RS "I"1 ,my 1
,pjon value of more t
"The next disturbance of inipor- jT'i'V,?oja Janice
to cross the country will appear ni:i ,
ii the North Pacific coast Monday m,r $.?!.' ' ",ui
r Tuesday attended by high winds AVKRAtiK
ad rains and cross the great Central "The prices
alleys about Thursday and the Kast- average about
*n states Friday. This disturbance than a year a
ill cause local snows in the North- higher than tv
n states. Another disturbance will total values ai
sach the North Pacific coast about cent higher tha
hursday and prevail over the Mid- P"r cent highei
le West near the end of the week. "The value c
his disturbance will he attended by ?f domestic pri
neral rains and snows and he fol- year 1913 was
wed by decidedly colder weather." amount which
equalled. The
trade in agricv
to the casualties of the tragedy is favor of the exp
i convene tomorrow. According to products by $2
atements of investigators for coun- "The quantit
officials, witnesses will he produced and its productt
i show that the cry of "fire" which 964,000,00ft po
arted the panic came from near the is exceeded by
nter of the hall instead of from the preceding 22 ye
>or way, as the first accounts had it. ceptlons, by th<
?arch for the man who shouted the of these years,
st false alarm has thus far been "The census
^successful. It was intimated, how- in 1909 the tc
'er, that clues to his identity were wages paid to f
dng worked out and that an arrest 611,287. This
something more than a remote cost in 1899. f
issibility. are indicated sii
PKli YEAK.
yUN
)RY OP CROPS
is $10,000,000,000
'rod nets,
( ASH INCOME.
Ustributors and Midsition
to Take Ad.
* of .Market.
Dec. 29.?Ton billion
ijiuuucis, nve dm lion
income?a bumper
' droughts and other
i 1913 record of six
n farms.
tateB' most successful
Iry produced $6,100,of
crops, of which
were represented by
and f 3,650,000,000
lis sold and slaughil
products. The value
ops is twice that of
i $1,000,000,000 over
antially greater than
the crops it is estlper
cent will remain
lat 20 per cent of the
ion also will remain,
le cash income is esti7.000,000.
)N HAS FALLEN.
3rd year of crop valu ?
record of production
d the fact that the
nis has increased 11
1910, until there now
o be 6,600.000 farms
mo <i "
a discussion of the
ublic today, does not
that a lower cost of
It.
sirable increased proms
may appear from
standpoint, it does
such increased proresult
in any increase
ome per farm or per
population, or that
consumers won! 1 he
s the report,
at production in 1913
ceded the 1912 proas
probable that the
farm would not have
nd might have been
12 but it is extremely
?r the cost to the conive
been less, because
e raised promptly on
under production but
line if there is overle
of distributors and
Veen the farmer and
are in a position to
of the market and
But control it.
rXDKR RECORD.
a fit ti c^nnnnnn
ier rent of the value
lough the volume was
rd. Other prineipal
ties, are given In the
thev come. Cotton
hay $707,000,000;
pest crop ever raised
? $010,000,000; oats
potatoes $228,000,122,000,000;
barley
weet potatoes $43,heets
$34,000,000;
ugar $26,000,000; rvo
ce $22,000,000; flax0;
hops $15,000,000;
000,000.
of estimated proord
has been broken
rice, sugar beets, beet
otal of beet and cane
remaining crops, oats,
and nops have been
in production.
r?f the crops of 101.1
v record in estimated
> by the total of all
parately by corn, cottobacco
and sugar
nee has there been a
>d value for oats, rye,
lav, hops and the total
le sugar. Only twice
ed value of wheat and
le sugar. Only twice
ed value of wheat and
ceil exceeded,
icts of 1013 are estib
than $814,000,000.
s have an estimated
nan *:? i x.uuu.ooo.
oduction of 1913, estl100,000
pounds, was
in.
MUCH HIGHER,
of 14 principal crops
20.2 per cent higher
go and 4.0 per cent
t'O years ago. Their
'erage about 3.8 per
n a year ago and 7.6
than two years ago.
if agricultural exports
nduction in the fiscal
3 $1,123,021,469, an
before has not been
so.called balance of
iltural products is in
>orts of domestic farm
96,000,000.
;y of exports of beef
i in 1913 amounted to
unds, a quantity that
the average for the
ars and with three exs
exports of each ono
reports indicate that
>tal amount of farm
arm labor was $651,is
almost double the
Jonsiderable Increases
ace 1909."
>
i