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Show Don't borrow subscibe today and have a paper of your own and you j won't become a nuisance to your j neighbors. w!'..i s--:tuati.-n from one of scarcity '. o ":e of abundance. '.'cuiation may cany the price io.i h;gh and thereby overstimulate ptt!uetion, but it will take more than one year's crop to turn the balance. I expect, therefore, to see at least reasonably profitable wheat prices for certainly another year. end the fields, and that is a danger dan-ger signal. Similarly, winter conditions condi-tions have not been satisfactory in Europe, particularly in Russia and trie Danubian territory, while so far a-; figures are available there is r.u increase in acreage abroad; the increase in-crease in total acreage is all in this count i y. Two-dollar wheat and the? improved improv-ed financial condition of the !orth-'.vosl !orth-'.vosl will insure an effort to seed just j as large an area of spring wheat as i possible, but in the end it will be the j spring weather that will determine. It is much too soon to calculate tlu yields. Finally, as to next winter's prices if the world is really as hard up i for bread as S2 plus in Chicage would indicate, then we may confidently believe be-lieve that a single crop, upon the very moderate acreage now in sight, will not be enough to change the WINTER WHEAT CONDITIONS B. W. Snow, writing for the Farm Tournnl of the wheat condition, snvs: Briefly, the prospect is for irasiri-' rable winter-killing, possibly enough 0 offset the increase acreage sown last fall. East of the Missouri river a month or more of ice-sheet has cov- |