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Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 34. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), chapter 1.37 (search)
en together can grow anything produced elsewhere in the entire world—the tea of China, the coffee of Brazil, the indigo and rubber of Africa, the wine of France, thefee carries to Brazil, and five times as much as tea and silk combined bring to China. In fact, the total value of all the tea and silk exported from the ChineseChinese empire is not quite sufficient to pay China's bill for the manufactured cotton goods which she imports. The Secretary of Agriculture, in his report to Congress a China's bill for the manufactured cotton goods which she imports. The Secretary of Agriculture, in his report to Congress a few weeks ago, made the declaration that the National welfare has been promoted by a few revolutions in agriculture and economics to the extent that it has been, andf cotton cloth, or enough to furnish a suit of clothing to each of 100,000,000 Chinese, or other Orientals, at seven yards per capita. The mighty development in t sent them manufactured products valued at $1,723,000. In 1906 our shipments to China aggregated $29,814,075. The diversification of Southern manufacturing intere