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Show Bradstreets Report. NEW YORK, Nov. 7. Bradstreets tomorrow will say: The trade and industrial effects of the coal atrlke In Its early stages resemble very much those of Its unsuccessful predecessor In the steel Industry. Actual effects upou distribution distribu-tion ate, except In purely coal mining regions, almost negligible. Concern verging upou uneasiness un-easiness is expressed, whereas In some cases supplies of coal for future manufacturing needs are small, but reports from large consuming centers jtolnt to thirty to sixty days' supplies of ftt.l being available and confidence 1. ex pressed that the strike will end before the ex-trom, ex-trom, pinch comes. The heartening effect upon business men of the strong stand taken by the government to l.elp order anil to Insure- the nonnnlon mines, which employ a third of the soft coal miners, running, and the results of tho Massachusetts ele.-tlon cannot he underestimated. It 1. felt that the tide ha. definitely turned In lals.r matters, and this view Is buttressed by the failure of the steel and longshoremen's strikes while many smaller labor trembles have also disappeared. Commerce at the ys.rt of New York tins been actively rvsmnfsl. and the Heaps ut New- Orleans and San Francisco nrx expected to shortly disappear. Weekly bauk clearings. $9.027.SSP.0OO. |