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Show SPm TOWN IS WIPED KM W DF EXISTENCE Heinzs, Morsa and Thomas interests Ars Eliminated and Institutions Ars Declared to bo 8ound. Appalling Accident in Indiana, Two jure Tenons Being Killed New York. At a special meeting of and Hundreds Injured. the board of directors of the Mercantile National bank Sunday afternoon Beth 51. Mllliken waa elected president of the bank to succed F. Augustus Helnze, resigned. At the same time Wiliam Skluner and Gerish II. Mllliken were elected additional Vico presidents, Gerish Mllliken being added to the board of directors. The clearing house committee met with the directors of the bank and ths two boards were in session for about four hours. I.a ter William II. Sherer, manager of the Clearing House association, on behalf of the association, gave out the following statement: A committee of the clearing house has ezamlned the several banks of the association that have been under criticism and find them solvent. The dear Ing house committee has decided to render them such assistance to meet their deposits as the committee may think necessary. The assurance waa given by the that the clearing house committee Helnze, Morse and Thomas Interests had been eliminated from the banking organizations of New York City ana In the light of this fact the clearing house association announced Its readiness to lend all necessary aid to any of the banka which have been under suspicion, the clearing house Investigation having established their solvency. It Is believed that this action will prevent any crisis In New York banking circles. Dupont Powder Works Elown Up and a Town of 1,000 People Wiped Off the Map Farm Houses Miles Away Wrecked by tho Explosion. Fontanet, Ind. By the explosion of the Dupont powder works on Tuesday and fifty persons between twenty-fivwore killed, COU Injured, and Fontanet, e 1,000 people, wiped out. The dead and more aerloutdy injured have been taken away. Five hundred inhabitants, all more or less wounded, remain to gather scattered household goods aud sleep under tents, guarded of the atale. by aoidk-rWithout warning, the powder mills, even la number, blew up at 9:15 on They employed Tuesday morning. 200 men, and of these, aeventy-flv- e were at work when the first explosion occurred in the press mill. In quick succession the glazing mill, two corning mills and the powder magazine blew up, followed by the cap mill, la the magazine, situated several hundred yards from the mill, were stored 4,900 kegs of powder. The concussion when it blew up was felt 200 miles away. Kvery house In this town was deFarm houses two miles stroyed. sway, and school houses equally distant were torn to pieces and their ocRECEIVER FOR STANDARD OIL. and Indianapolis cupants Injured. even Cincinnati felt the shock. A passenger train on the Big Four rail- Chicagoan Wants Affairs of Company Looked Into by Courts. road four nillca away had every coach ' window broken, and several Chicago. George F. Harding of this passengers were Injured by flying city on Saturday filed a bill in the suglass perior court asking for the appointThe mills were located one mile ment of a receiver for the Standard south of town. With the first explo- Oil company of New Jersey and the sion the employes ran for safety, but Corn Products company of New Jermoat of them were killed or wounded sey. Mr. Harding says in hla bill that by the quick following explosions In he la the owner of 500 shares of the the other mills When the beat from capital stock of the Corn Products the burning mills exploded the giant company, and thst Its management Is magazine, ninety mlnutea practically controlled by the Standard powder bter, destroying the town by the con- Oil company. cussion, many of those engaged in Charges are made that the Standard rescue work were badly Injured and Oil company, with certain Individuals, several killed. Superintendent Mona- conspired to wreck the Corn Products han of the plant was killed while In company, capitalized at 180,000,000, his office, and hla wife and alster-ln-laand for this purpose formed a pool, or were killed In their home, some trust, unlawfuly regulating and fixing distance away. and controlling the price of glucose, That the death list la not far greatand corn starch. Harding er ia due to the fact that the people grape sugar thirty-eigh- t factories were of the town had loft their houses at charges Inthat the this Joined pool by the first explosion and were not In them when the explosion of the 4,0tn. conspirators. kegs of powder In the magazine hurled CREDIT GIVEN TAFT. their homes to pieces and scattered household goods In heaps of debris. Among the buildings totally destroyed Policy Adopted by Him Proper Method In the, town were the Methodist and for tip Philippines. Christian churches, two school buildThere was an enthusiastic Manila. ings, the depot, all business blocks, for Secretary Taft at demonstration comblock a including Just large In hla honor Saturday a a given 500 banquet pleted, large warehouse and homes. night by William Morgan Shuster, a Governor Hanley ordered the Terre member of the Philippine commission. Haute company of Indiana national Leading representatives of callings guards to patrol the ruined district and nationalities were present The and to protect life and property. The Included Senor Osmena, the governor arrived Tuesday evening. He speakers elected speaker of the assemnewly brought with him 700 tents and cots General Smith. GenGovernor and bly, for the care of the hemeless. Three school buildings were de- eral Smith confessed in his remarks stroyed at Fontanet and Coni Bluff, that he was one of those who haa two miles away. All were filled with doubted the wisdom of the policy Inschool children, and every one of them augurated by Secretary Taft eight was more or leas Injured by the colhe now realized that but ago, years lapse of the buildings. A four-roomethod to bring school building was torn to pieces, this had been the only common ground. and not one of the 200 children es- the two people to a the to one were if said He that Judge none waa caped unhurt, though fatally school building future by the past, the success of Mr. Injured. A two-rooat Coal Bluff waa turned over ami Taft's policy would be unbounded. collapsed. The teacher and ninety puCost of Peace Conference. pils were more or less injured. The force of the explosion destroyed al: The Hague. Now that the internatelephone communication with outconference haa closed It side towns, and It waa with great dir tional peace to study some of the Is Interesting Acuity that aid was summoned. Terre Haute and Brazil sent physicians aur figures which have been prepared on curses with supplies tn carriages u.t' the coat of the four months session. antomobiles. while special trains wire The general expenses of all the delemade up and run on the Big Four gates Is estimated at 93,970,000, of railroad for the care of the injured. which 9523,000 was spent to pay the cost of 317 dinners. The amount spent ' RUN 8TARTED ON BANK. by the various delegations, the press newspaassociations and individual Belief Expressed That Attack on the tolls amounted to per! for telegraphic Banks Credit Was Premeditated. 9225,072. More than a million words of press matter concerning the conferGoldfield, Nev. The return of a $12 ence were sent out check marked No funds, which was at bank of John S. Cook the presented Trouble Over a Transfer A Co. Tuesday morning, by a woman, San Francisco. As a result of trou-olcaused a run on the bank which lasted over a transfer slip on a Polk until noon. Depositors were paid as street car of the United Railroads sysfast an possible, and the bank contin- tem. one man was shot and killed, anued to do its usual business. About other so seriously wounded that death noon the excitement died down and will ensue, and two other probably the run was over. less severely Injured. The slain jnen U Is believed In some quarters that was Otto Moss, aged 34 years, a the attack on the credit of the bank nian by occupation. Otto P. was prearranged, and some color is waa shot through the neck ana lent to this opinion by rumors which die. John have been persistently circulated for left eye. and will probably was shot a Monger, the past tea days that the bank was through the left hand. Inaolveat. Low Wants a Million. Charged With Dynamits Outrage. Washington. Seth Low of New Joplin, Mo. Five persons have the treasurer of the Industrial York, been held under 9500 bond each for has reported to Secappearance In Justice Rgells court for pence foundation, of Commerce and Labor Straus a preliminary hearing, when formal retarycontributions are being received charges of having dynamited tht that foundation. to .the Secretary Straus News-Heralplant on the night ol that this fund trustees the hope ays Bept. 1.1 may be preferred against by contributions them. The suspects were arrested will be Increased laborers as well as from capitaland subjected to a sweating process, from is about 540,000, and but without Important developments. ists.Is The fund the foundation that It hoped by The suspects are Minnie St. Claire, It at least 91.000.000, as the to will grow formerly keeper of a resort; W. & Interest on this amount will be reMartin, known as Kansas City Kid; of Hazel Reed, Bos ile IMuln and Chariot quired to carry out the purposes the foundation. fits' a city of s d , hod-carri- d VILLAGE MINES AND MINING UTAH STATE NEWS WASHED r BY Jl CLOUDBURST Unprecedented Storms in Southern Europe Causing Death and Desolat- Fear of Run on Institution Cansei One of the Strongest Bunks in Montana to Gose up. The Statement is Made That the Bank la Solvent and That the 6,000 Depositors Will Receive Their Money Within ths Next Sixty Days. Butte. The State Savings bank of Butte, one of the largest Institutions sf tbe kind In Montana, which was generally spoken of as the Helnze bank, dosed its doors shortly after o'clock Thursday morning. This proceeding was the result opa meeting of the directors, who posted this notice on the door: Because of unsettled rumors thst cannot be verified that may cause unusual and excessive demands by depositors, and owing to a shortage of currency and Inability to secure additional currency Immediately with which to pay demands which may be made, the management baa decided it advisable In the Interests of all depositors to suspend for the time being. 10 The bank Is solvent It ie stated that tbe bank la solvent and will pay out Inside of sixty days. Otto Helnze ft Go. did not owe tbe bank a dollar, and F. A. Helnze owea It less than 9300,000, which Is amply secured. 'Mr. Larger, president, owes It about 97,500, and hu is able to pay many times that amount The bank bolds on hand about and Ita deposits amount to about Tbere are about 6,000 de93,000,000. positors, and of this number 675 are commercial deposits; the others ars savings of working men and women. The director! announce that they will proceed with the building of the new bank, which la nearing completion, and which will coat 9200,000. State Examiner Collins will take charge of the bank. 8300,-00- TROUBLES OF HEINZE. Former Foe of the Amalgamated Resigns From Mercantile Nat Bank. followed New York. Sensations each other In rapid succession In ths financial district as the result of the collapse of the projected corner In United Copper and the suspension of a prominent brokerage firm Thursday. The firm of Otto Helnze ft Co. waa suspended on the stock exchange. F. Augustus Helnze, the Butte copper magnate, resigned the presidency of the Mercantile National bank of New York. The. Amalgamated Copper company, at Its directors meeting, cut the quarterly dividend from 2 per cent to 1 per cent F. Augustus Helnze Is one of ths most picturesque and remarkable figures in American finance. A graduate of the Columbia School of. Mines, he went west, without capital, and began the development of copper properties, which brought him into conflict with the great Anaconda Copper company, now a part of the Amalgamated Copper company. This conflict lasted for years and was fought out, from court to court, until, a year or more ago, a compromise was effected. The terms of the peace agreement were not made public, but ft ts knowa that Helnze received enough, as his share, to make him several times a millionaire. BARBARITIES OF MANITOBA. The 8ick and Helpless Are Burned it the Stake to Save Trouble. Winnipeg, Man. That Indian tribes living within a few hundred miles of Winnipeg have reverted to the most brutal savagery was brought out at the trials of chieftains of the Saltenx tribe. Just ended at the Hudson Ray companys fort at Norway. Sick and helpless members of the tribe were strangled or burned at the stake for reason than to relieve tlieir no C relatives of raring for them. Chief Joseph Posoqnan was convicted of murder and sentenced to die. Chief Jack of the Sucker baud of tbe sane tribe, strangled himself to death in his cell the night before the date set for his trial. t Hamburg Bank Fails. Hamburg. The old private backing firm of Haller, Soehle ft Co. failed on Thursday. The liabilities of the Arm d are variously stated, and ft waa early In the day that they were In the neighborhood of 95,00Q,0tn. but the Hamburger Nach rich ten says It is informed by s banker who is in a position to know that the liabilities will reach 97,500,000. This will make the crash of this firm the biggest bank failure In Germany since the Ur ms breakdown of the I.eipzlcgcr bun tn June, 1901. The assets of the firm have not yet been ascertained. i.ii-mate- Record Price Paid for Hay in Cli'kigo Chicago. No. 1 timothy hay .xdd here on Thursday at 921 per ton, which Is the highest price ever paid here for that commodity at this season of the year. The high price Is said to be due to scarcity of hay In Chicago, notwithstanding this year's crop Is larger than the average crop for the last ten years. The railroads maintain that they are unable tn furnish enough ears to transport the h iy. Most of the hay handled In Chicago comes from BMnols, Wisconsin, Iowa, Nebraska and Kansas. ion-Cliff Threatens to Top- ple Over on Town. Paris. Southern Europe Is In ths grasp of a tremendous storm, accompanied by torrential rains. This, com ing on the heels of unprecedented rainfalls and floods of the past three weeks, is causing very great distress. The storm area extendi from Morocco northward, over Portugal, Spain and southern France. Warships off the African coast and the Spanish peninsula have sought shelter. The village of Olet, near Barcelona, Bpaln, was literally washed away by a cloudburst, and the river Llobregat, Just south of Barcelona, la described as being a raging torrent, constantly claiming new victims. The city of SL Sebastian, In the north of Spain, has , been ravaged by a hurricane. The recently flooded riven In the outh of France are again rising. In the department' of Savoie, a great overhanging cliff of 800 cubic meters, is reported to be moving and In Imminent danger of toppling over and crushing the village of Tormery, 1,000 feet below. A dispatch from Brest says several macks have capsized and their crews have been drowned. GAVEL WIELDED BY TAFT. The Philippine Assembly Formally Opened and Ready for Business. Manila. Secretary Taft formally opened the Philippine assembly In the National theatre at 11:15 Wednesday morning, in the presence of a large crowd of people. In his opening address Mr. Taft declared that hla views announced two years ago regarding the Independence of the Philippine people were unchanged. He did not believe that they would be fitted to govern themselves for at least a generation, but he added that the matter waa entirely In the hands of congress. The secretary denied emphatically that the United States had any Intention of disposing of the Islands; said he had absolute confidence In the Filipinos, denied that he was disappointed at their inability to legislate conservatively, and asserted his belief that they felt their responsibility and acknowledged the necessity of supporting the American government Mr. Taft refrained from suggestions regarding specific legislation by the assembly, but recommended that attention be paid o the civil service. PERMANENT ARBITRATION. Question le Finally 8sttled Favorably fThs Hague. The Hague. Tbe ninth plenary alb ting of the peace conference, held on Wednesday, voted upon the question of the establishment of a permanent votes court There were thirty-eigh- t in favor of the project Belgium, Denmark, Greece, Roumania, Switzerland and Uruguay did not vote, and Mexico, Brazil, Greece, Colombia, Salvador, Persia, Guatemala, Hayti, Venezuela, San Domingo, Paraguay, Panama and Ecuador, China. Bolivia and Nicaragua voted favorably to a permanent court but with tbe reserve that in such court and the negotiations thst direction should be conducted on the basic principle of absolute Judicial equality. Four Men and Three Women Foully Murdered by Indiana. El Paso, Texas. Four men and three women, one of the former being a government mall carrier, were ambushed and killed between San Jose de Hila and La Colorado, east of in the lower Sonora country, by Yaquls. The killing was discovered a short time afterward by a party of American mining men, who were traveling over the trail with an escort of Mexicans. Her-mosil- o Five Million Acres of Land Opened to Settlement Next Year. Washington. As the result of the construction of Irrigation works by the government and private parties. It Is expected that 5, 100,000 acres of land In the west will be opened to settlement in 1908. The office of experiment stations will make a special effort to aid settlers In adopting the most economical and effective methods. It has made plana for the drainage of 2,000,000 acres, principally in states east of the Mississippi river, during the past year. Railway Telegraphers May Strike. Denver, Colo. A vote- of the telegraphers employed on the Denver ft Rio Grande railroad is being taken by mall on the question whether they shall strike in consequence of the refusal of the company to reinstate R. H. Skegge, former wire chief at Grand Junction, Colo, who waa discharged wnen he refused to test Western Union wires. It Is reported thst the votes already received are practical unanimous for strike. About 400 operators are employed on the road and 95 per cent of them belong to the Order of Railway Telegraphers. Russia's Red Record. statistics SL Petersburg. Police published regarding terrorism during the month of September show that thirty-fou- r persons were executed; ofthat 207, Including seventy-thre- e ficials, were murdered, and that 172 people were wounded in various affrays. The figures do not Include - Tbe aggregate market valne of Bosr ton'! copper shares at yesterday's 10) low quotations was 5610,045,-77- 0 less than ft was nine or ten months ago, says the Boston., Journal. Mining men will do well to keep an eye on the Marshall lake section, Idaho. In addition to the richness oi ita ore, ft la free milling and can be worked cheaply. Timber and water for all purposes is convenient. Advices from Boston are to the effect thst a prominent copper producer who Is In close toueh with the situation says Calumet ft Ilecla is shipping copper to Europe In large quantities in anticipation of a big buying movement Excitement is running high ever a report of the richest strike ever made in the Goldfield dlstrlcL The strike was nisde In the Frisco Goldfield mine, two and a half mllea south of the city, and the ore la said to assay 9150,009 to the ton. W. H. Clark of the Nevada Hills hu another bonanza at Round Mountain, thirty mllea north of Manhattan, the Sphinx. It Is strictly a gold property, and absolutely free milling, and a mill la to be Installed at once to manufao-turgold bricks. adda. aqua regia, or alkaline solutions. It can be drawn Into fine wire, having a tensile strength greater than soft Is now employed teeL. Tantalum principally as a filament In an electric incandescent lamp, which wu pot on the American markec in 1906. The Amalgamated Copper company on tM 14 th declared a quarterly dividend of 1 per cent, compared with a dividend of 2 per cent, for the lut previous year. This makes the annnal dividend rate 4 per cent, as compare! with 8 per cent tbe previous year. According to advices from Goldfield, a shoot of rich ore hu just been encountered on the third level of the Rea Top mine In s drift which wu started south in the big vein on a sum of good ore. Samples of the new find re semble the high grade of the Mohawk. Thera is a disposition In certain mining circles to contest the legality of the law passed by the last legislature regarding the special mine corporation tax. It Is claimed by companies owning ipertlea, but not now operating the ume, that their organizations are subjected wrongfully to double taxar (Oo-tobe- u tlon. Pessimism on copper, both as to the inetal and to the different corporation stocks based on that great commodity, is apparently on the Increase, notwithstanding that sentiment has ben con tlnuously advene to copper for many months. The copper metal mdrket shows no signs whatever of Improve ment. The capacity of the Sunnystde min at Round Mountain hu been more than doubled within the lut month and the dally run is something like forty tons, with a proportionate larger output In bullion. On the 2 level a fine body of very rich ore hu been opened up which shows free gold 50-fo- plainly. The Ubehebe district, to tbe north of Death valley, la to have a railroad. The road will run through Willow Springs wash to Sand springs and wlh be accessible to all the mines on the south side of Gold mountain. It will also be within striking distance of Tule canyon, Revenue and the old Uncle Sam mine. During 1907. according to statements emanating from Wall street, twenty-severailroads have depreciated 1891, Industrial 319,720, and twenty-thre- e . depreciated to the extent of 8343,765,-018The Boston News Bureau now states that during the same period forty-sicopper companies have den x preciated 8526,000,000. Some remarkably rich ore hu recently been discovered In the Dead-wooBasin district of Idaho, assays showing as high as 9121 In gold and silver, tbe veins being large ones. Specimens of the ore show rich In lead and silver, some of It containing almost native lead. The claim Is 90 miles from Boise, 40 from PlacervlIIe and 22 from Knox. Ij. A. Friedman, the "father of the Heven Troughs district' In Nevada, is to build mill of ten or twenty stamps In Seven Troughs canyon- - The construction of the mlir will be pushed with all possible vigor. Sufficient water - ih" enarstlnn of such s plant hu been developed, and the development of tec district will be materially tded upon Its completion. One of the most important strikes nade In the Goldfield district during the past six months developed n few days sen on the Victor, adjoining the Gold Bar on the east and ths Hat, one nf the Blue Bull company's claims, on the west, the ore running 560 to th ton. One thousand tons of ore averaging 5100 per ton Is the shipping record of the Montgomery Shoshone for the month of September. This menu n valuation of 8100,000 in n single month and If the same shipments are main-- , talned an annual valuation of d ,- The Little Florence Mining company hu found the extension of the rich lead beyond the fault line on the t level, adding thereby an ore rhute 100 feet In length and 250 feet vertically tn the already large wealth of gold blocked out, says the Goldfield Chronicle. nur Tbe Independence mine, riots Kctchum, le now connected with Halthe casualties in the anti-Jeley by telephone. The line le four al Odessa, Rostov and Simferopol. miles long from the mine boarding 1G5 attacks also The police report made by armed men on estates, build- house to the lane near Kctchum, and ts of standard quality and hu long ings or representatives of the authoridistance connections. It cost about ties, and the discovery of thirty-fou- r 980 mile. stores of bombs and explosives. I! 400-foo- Two cases of smallpox were placed und-t- r quarantine In Ogden last week. Tne new Swedish Lutheran church at Park' City waa dedicated lut Sunday. The output of Utah's ' mines this year will reach the enormous sum of 542,000,000. During the 6,000 head of put six months fully cattle have been shipped from Modena. Nine attorneys were granted permission- to practice before the Supremo court one day last week. Friends of Earnest Williams of Salt Lake City, who haa been missing since Osuber 8, fear he hu met with foul pla? John C. Henderson, who shot and killed Oscar E. Otto In Los Angeles a few daya ago, was formerly a resident of Ogden. Scattered over the state of Utah, are many dairies, whose product of butter and cheese this year will exceed 53,000,000. A fight Is being Inaugurated on ths eastern mall order houses by the Manufacturers' and Merchunife' association of Salt Lake City. Frank Bowden, 25 years old. wu run over by a threshing machine engine at Clover Creek and crushed so badly that he died. Frederick Sorensen, of Kcphl Is raising a second crop of strawberries, which la regarded quite a novelty In that community. Utah day wu celebrated si the on October Jamestown exposition 15th, Governor Cutler and Thomas making addresses. Two Salt Lake boys about 17 years old are accused of holding up. a Chinaman. Tbs youthful highwaymen secured only 52 for their trouble. sn I, B. Wilder, employed by the State Mining company at Mlnersvllle, wu atruck by lightning and Instantly killed on- the 17th. The state convention of the Womens Christian Temperance Union was held in Ogden last week Mrs. K. E. Shep; ard of Ogden was elected president On tbe Utah Arid Farm company's farm located in Dog Valley, the big team plow Is beiug run night and day, and an average of seventy-fiv- e acres per day Is being turned over. Ambrose GreenwelL while mounting a horse at Huntsville, wu thrown and kicked and stamped on by the vicious brute, and sustained a fracture of several ribs. He Is expected to recover. A receiver hu been appointed to take charge of the Ogden canyon sanitarium, at the mouth of Ogden canyon. The resort hu been a losing proposition ever since it wu thrown open to the public. Tne products of the metal and coal mines and the clay products of Utah will this year aggregate . 550.9(10,000, while the agriculture, horticulture and livestock industry will reach a total of 875,000,000. Frank Pierce of Salt Lake City wih become first assistant secretary of the interior department on November 1, succeeding Judge Thomas Ryan of Kansu, who hu boon moved to a leu responsible position. The same distressing condition with reference to the prevalence of typhoid fever In Salt Iotke which existed lut year is reported again this fall. Thera Is an amazingly large number of esses of this dread disease. Paul Angell, a collector, attempted suicide in Salt Lake City while Intoxicated, but was prevented by s spectator who knocked a bottle of carbolic acid from hie hand snd held him until the police arrived. On the Levan bench a atrip of land three miles wide by eight miles long, in Juab county this year 60,004 bushels of wheat were raised, as against 50,000 bushels last year, upon absolutely dry farms. The settlement of the telephone strike has had the effect of placing a crew of men at work In Park City. Tbs company has been unable to make any Improvements since the trouble began but now it Is rushing things. G. G. Gregg, the oldest member ol the Independent Order of Odd Fellows In Utah, died at hla home In Salt Lake City last week. He was elghty-fou- i years old, and hu been prominent In Odd Fellowship for a good many years Thomas Coughlin, an Iron worker, was crashed to death by a falling dee rick, while at work on the Newhouse building In Salt Lake. Other workmen had narrow escapes, but succeeded In getting out of harms way. William F. 8trickley, an electrician of Salt Lake, le dead as the result ol having a tooth pulled. Blood floweo profusely from the gums, and hie now also bled freely, all efforta to stop ths flow of blood being unavailing. Strlck ley died five weeks after the tooth was u u extracted. To move the cattle out of Utah would require 17,160 cars, or nearly 600 trmlnloads of in cars each; tc move the horses tn the state 6.604 care, or 220 tralnlonds; to move the sheep, 10,400 cars, or 250 tralnloads while 400 rare would be necessary tc move the hogs. Albert O'Brien of Ogden, while riding hla bicycle across the rallmno tracks, was struck by a train and dragged for a distance or thirty feet He was uninjured, except for several slight bruises. His bicycle was thrown under the wheels of the engine snd ntlrely demolished. The yield of sugar beets In the fer ritory supplying the Amalgamated Sugar company's factory at Uwlston will be. It Is estimated. 2 ier cent lighter than thst of last year, figuring upon the same acreage. It Is claimed, however, thst extra acreage will more than replace the deficit. |