Al.Ai 



ALA 



Morrill Ull xml $11,000; the agricultural 



< annual. about 



normal vchouU recrivr annu- 

 ally fr HI aittfrtv 



- 



la **. of that of I8H. which was UM largest 



pruductjot, in UM history of i 



"...'., I .:. l-.l \.. ' . . ..'.. 



fer. a total ,,f 



.in the Mornll fund. $8,000 

 US, an.l t.. . A 



K'-OI, Dee. 81. 1808. the total sin- 





 3.643-39 The railnwt 



m in- 

 vestment in roadbed 



r intm-i ..n bonds over 

 and had net earnings of nearly 



...-*-, 



(otto. ..4 WeVkea Hlllv A. 

 and wo 





' , 



i, H *han -,-.-, in \. -. >-, , . . 



AlaUma had 86 mills, < M 



ii, -. j.:v, fa n. v mA ni mm i *.-.> 



t.ad a m; 



I bi km " r. ..: i- ' H . . 

 which was capitalist*! at fflflO.OOO. and ba 

 000 spindles ani 



and 7at from $800,000 to $100.00 



the mills then in operation, 11 other* 

 w.-r.- Urn- matnsoftad OM QdUan 



: i .: ' - .' :.' 



. .,;,.':, i ,'..-!: -. 



longing to Massachusetts corporations, 



tblr XsBOfar the fiscal year 



/UsAanM ruUtMiUiiid among the Statat tn UM rertow ajpajajad pUynMI ' ' 



I90ja; to- 

 ons, or 1 - .^.31 : fermented liquors. $88.451.4* : 

 |.nlu tion of i tea, valued oleomargarine, $5.609.60; and t<alti0s,$l JStt.- 



The same sonraes yielded a t.^ 



I I.. In. M I mlii-li . 



.'40.W5. Ml. 1.188388 t- 



TV- 19 per cent., wa* 

 ton*, or 80*81 per cent.. In-own h.-imitit. 



clow to the coal basin*, it ha* so far made no 



Bessemer pic iron, the ore* ex; 



rus. The Average value of thi- 

 ns in 1894 waft 88 cents a ton, somewhat 



lw tl-. preceding year, but greater at- 



i was being paid to the grading of ore 

 : fnnmivH. Manganese ores are found in 

 .rphre, -s n n 50 to 150 feet abore 



.1 Orange sandstone. Dr. 



.to geologist, believe* that 



the great i.ulk ..f these ores will .- foun.i in t h.- 



. ..n th- iiorthw.-st ,!. of fed 



liscoveries so far made are 



Ml: HII.I that prolmbl) the 



yet undisrm. rv.l. ! 



ulroad (' 

 oeired a telegram from the Carnegie Steel Com- 



llmt 5.0. N. 



of low Kilicon : \!abama red ore, 



had been thoroughly 

 - in every respect su 



iu of the same grade WAS 



< experiment rrmor* 

 i lake steel from 

 ' 

 uarr red ore n 



.5 was expected 



- output of -ar. as 



the mines were U-ni^- -h.-ir utmost to 



funiAf<>* and inilU writ* 

 tnd the railnwl* f< 

 *upplv car* for th pntli 

 ( mil. 



in <MoU>r. 1S1>.",. thnf. fr.-i- 

 !iee estimates on the pro. 



November and December, the output of ^ial for 

 the year would be 6,000,000 tons or 750,000 tons 



*..iin-.-- >: 



719.88 in the fiscal year ending Jane 80, 

 Then >4 was 47. 



of whi.-i, UNI 



mfaHoMofdM idapb - S M B irr 



nt.-.| li|uors, 



jr.- retK>rtel as follows on thr 

 ps of 1804: ( 

 '.311 busheU, value 



oats, 871.996 acres, 4JMC. 



$2.504.277; rye, 8.145 acres, 88^80 hashek, valor 



tons, raj .. *i -.v,-,r, . . . *.- .-,, r.. 



Tl.. HUM a ." r -. ..-.-.. -.-; ' 



the year as 885,746 bales, and thr N 



...i i , . | 



LIT* Stock.-In January. 1880. the Unitad 

 States Department of Agricultun estimated thr 

 number and value of farm animals in th< 



due$5.ttMM; 

 J value, $86,088,057. 



litlral.-At a conference in 



was decided that the Populist* 

 sjiJTothe 



other anti- 



\ I \ 



^ \ as Alaska 



wascetle*! by RuncU to the Tnitcd States hi a 

 -oocludrd March 80 and proclaimed June 

 20. 1867. in consideration of the payment of 



Bedarli*.-The main body of the Terri- 



tory in bounded on the eaM by the one hundred 



and fom fiiM meridian, on the north by the 



Ocean, on the west by Bering Sea and 



