323 



Livingston County, Mo. — Au average crop. 



Be Kalb County] Mo. — A very large crop will be harvested if frost 

 liolcls off twelve days. 



Holt County., Mo. — Will have an average of 45 to 50 bushels per acre^ 

 of excellent quality, on deep-plowed laud. 



Cass County, Mo. — A good two-thirds crop. 



Macon County, Mo. — Best crop in twenty years. 



Linn County, Mo. — Late corn is doing well. 



Scott County, Mo. — The best crop ever seen here. 



Lafayette County, III. — The prospect is by far the best we ever had in 

 this county. More than double the usual amount will be raised. 



Edicards County, 111. — Excellent. 



Stephenson County, 111. — Our crop is both forward and heavy. 



Schuyler County, III. — A full average. 



McHenry County, III. — Three weeks more forward than usual at this 

 season, and nearly beyond the reach of frost. 



St. Clair County, III. — Promises to be unusually good. 



Lawrence County, III. — Unusually promising. 



JacJcson County, III. — A good crop. 



KanMl-ee County, III. — Prospects never so promising. 



Boone County, III. — Xot more than an average yield. 



Brou-n County, III. — The yield is enormous. 



Page County, III. — The acreage is greater than ever, and the yield 

 unusually large. The product will be doul)le that of any year since 

 18G0. 



Livingston County, III. — Good. 



Grundy County, III. — Drying up, and ripening twenty to thirty days 

 earlier than usual. 



Clay County, III. — The largest crop ever raised in the county. 



Winnebago County, III. — The crop is very forward. 



Williamson County, III. — Better than for several years. 



Jo Daviess County, III. — An average crop. 



Hendricl's County, Ind. — The crop is almost without precedent. 



Cass County, Ind. — Corn is out of the way of frost, and is the most 

 abundant crop ever known. 



Blacliford County, Ind. — An unusually good crop. 



Kosciuslo County, Ind. — An unusually line crop. 



Fountain County, Ind. — A ver}' heavy crop and ripening fast. The? 

 acreage is large. 



Floyd County, Ind. — The crop has not been as good in twenty years. 



Ohio County, Ind. — The August drought has reduced corn from aft 

 average to seven-tenths of an average. 



Benton County, Ind. — The prospect is that the crop will be the heaviest 

 ever known, notwithstanding some injury from drought in July. 



Jennings County, Ind. — A very hot and dry summer has shortened 

 the yield of corn as well as that of all other crops. 



Marion County, Ind. — The prospect is excellent. 



Miami County, Ind. — Drought is affecting late-planted corn. 



Jefferson County, Ind. — A hundred per cent, better than usual. 



Athens County, Ohio. — Corn suffered severely from drought in Juljr 

 and August, and the crop will bo light. 



Meigs County, Ohio. — The crop will be a short one. 

 Williams County, Ohio. — The crop is above an average, and at this date 

 (August 26) is nearly ripe, the season being two weeks earlier thaft 

 usual. 



Noble County, Ohio. — Corn was never better. 



