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Show SUGAR FINE I HELDJJNLIKELY (B) IS l SPAP1 i: ENTERPRISl i WASHINGTON, Mar. 7. No dan-' gar of sugar becoming scarco Or hlgh-prlced hlgh-prlced In l ! 2 1 Thf.t's the way government experts sl7.p up ti'e situation. Rumors have been set nfloat In some Cities that another sugar famine is coming, officluls brand these '', mors a sheer propaganda with nothing' to back them up. j The 180-1921 beet sugar crop In I the United Slates is the lurgest. In the country4! history. It totals about 991,-1 000 long tons, says the government Crop Reporter. The previous crop was only o .'. 1' . 9 6 7 tons. DAROIG CI BAN I HOP NEW YORK. Mar, 7 The Cuban sugar crop, now coining to market I practically a.s large as the 1 ! 1 9-1 ffjo ;rOp 1 1 IS est, milled ;,t ."OO.imhi loim tons by the American Sugar Kefinlngl company. The American Sugar Bulletin sa.s I "Very heavv loielpts oi l7n.:Js i"ns of sugar at Cuban ports are reported j for the week This figure was only) exceeded In o, week during the 1919-1920 1919-1920 crop." "Raw Cuban SUgai i .i four and a half cents a pound and no prospects of a rise In the near future." says: ! Manuel (ionaih . duel ol I ..itln - Amer-llcan Amer-llcan division of National Association of Manufacturers. "The statement that sugar prices will be raised It utter nonsense," says iFranck C. LOwry, chairman of l'nlted Stales committee of the Cuban Gov-jernment Gov-jernment ComuuSslon, whh h now coti-itrols coti-itrols the Cuban raw sugar crop. |