FEBRUARY EXPORTS OF FARM 
~ PRODUCTS. 
_ February exportations 
- products show a marked increase 
when compared with those of the 
' corresponding month last year, ac- 
_ cording to figures just received by the 
_ Bureau of Statistics, Department of 
- Commerce and Labor. Corn, wheat, 
flour, other breadstufis, and meat 
‘and dairy products all show 
"a very large increase in Feb- 
ruary, 1911, compared with Feb- 
-yuary, 1910. The quantity of corn 
‘tically 1034 million bushels, against 
4% million in February of last year; 
of wheat, 11-3 million bushels, against 
i million a year ago; of flour 839 
thousand barrels, against 523 thou- 
sand in February, 1910; meat and 
‘dairy products 1034 million dollars 
in value, against 934 million one year 
ago; and cotton, 410 million pounds, 
against 169 million pounds in the 
_ corresponding month of last year. In 
the 8 months ending with February 
corn exports show also a_ large in- 
crease, being for that period 3534 
million bushels against 2214 million 
in the corresponding period a year 
earlier. Wheat exports, however, 
- show a marked decline, being in the 
‘IgII period 18 1-3 million bushels, 
ponding period of 1910. The outward 
“movement of flour in the 1911 period 
is about the same as a year ago, while 
other breadstuffs, show a total ex- 
port of 6% million dollars in value 
in the 1911 period, against 4% million 
in the corresponding period of the 
prior year. Meat and dairy products 
_ exported in the 1911 period differ but 
a little from those of 1910; and cot- 
ton exports aggregated 501 million 
dollars in value in the 1911 period, 
against 348 million a year earlier. 
Cattle, hogs and sheep form the sole 
_ class showing a decline in both the 
_ month of February and the 8 months 
“ending with February, the value 
i exported in February, 1911, 
eing 824 thousand dollars, against 
I 1-3 million in February, 1910, and 
in the 8 months ending with Febru- 
ary, 1911, 7 million dollars, against 
10% million in the corresponding 
period of the preceeding year. 
One notable feature of the recent 
exports of breadstuffs 
value of corn exported is far in ex- 
cess of that of wheat, being in the 
month of February, 1911, 5 2-3 mil- 
lion dollars, against a little over I 
million dollars’ worth of wheat, and 
3-4 million dollars’ worth of. flour. 
‘or the 8 months’ period, however, 
bination are larger in value than corn 
of farm - 
against 38 1-3 million in the corres- . 
is that the . 
exports of wheat and flour in com- 
_ exports, the value of wheat exported 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
E. J. Fabens, President 
N. A. Very, Treasurer 
13 
Robert Osgood, Vice=-Pres. 
William O. Chapman, Sec. 
DIRECTORS 
Gordon Abbott 
George H. Allen 
Roland M. Baker 
Henry P. Benson 
Stedman Buttrick. 
Arthur F. Estabrook 
. Eugene J. Fabens 
Francis R. Hart 
Jeremiah T. Mahoney 
Robert Osgood 
Francis Peabody, Jr. 
George Lee Peabody 
David Pingree 
Frederic G. Pousland 
Charles S Rea 
Charles W. Richardson 
Nathaniel G. Simonds 
This company solicits your account whether it is large or small. 
Interest paid on deposits subject to check. i 
EG. A. KN@ERR, Electrical Contractor 
Electrical Wiring, Telephones, Bell Systems and Fixtures 
Agent for the SANTO 
Rowe’s Block, Central Square, 
in the 8 months ending February, 
1911, being 17 million dollars, and of 
flour 3234 million while the value of 
corn exported is 1934 million. While 
the exportation of wheat during the 
8 months ending February, 1911, has 
been much léss'than that of the corres- 
ponding period last year, and far be- 
low the annual average of the past 
decade, the figures will not make the 
lowest record of our exports of that 
article. The total exports in the 8 
months ending February, I9II, are 
18 1-3 million bushels, and in the 
single month of February, 1 1-3 mil- 
lion, indicating that for the fiscal year 
ending June, 30, 1911, the total will 
range between 20 and 30 million 
bushels, while the exports of wheat in 
the fiscal year 1905, following the 
very short crop of 1904, amounted to 
only 4 1-3 million bushels, the lowest 
record of wheat exports in many 
years. It seems probable, however, 
that the-exports of the fiscal year 
1911 will, with the single exception 
of 1905, be smaller than in any year 
since 1869, when the total was 17) 
million bushels. 
J. Sumner Draper of Milton con- 
veys to Lillian T. Nutting of Welles- 
ELEGTRIG VACUUM GLEANER, the latest improve- 
ment. For Sale or for Rent. 
TEL.—OFFICE 53-2 RES. 
16-14 [lanchester, [las 
OXFORD 
GARAGE 
156 Broad Street 
LYNN, MASS. 
Telephone 1720 
Second Hand Cars 
1910 Oldsmobile seven pass- 
enger touring car overhauled 
and repainted, fully equipped. 
1907 Winton Model M, seven 
passenger overhauled and re- 
painted, fully equipped. 
1910 Cadillac Demi Tonneau 
overhauled and repainted, fully 
equipped. 
1910 Overland Double bucket 
seat with glass front and speed- 
ometer. 
ley land and buildings Haskell street, 
Beverly Farms, 400 feet by Webster 
avenue, 267 feet. 
