Various

The Apple


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" 19 6,497 1,048 6,294 135 " 26 7,730 4,368 299 Apr. 2 7,142 2,921 4,296 " 9 6,863 2,163 2,077 685 4,999 " 16 5,783 293 1,258 " 23 3,093 379 682 " 30 1,190 519 1,270 May 7 1,500 June 11 1,500 Totals 361,894 176,322 163,313 126,261 55 3,943 78,038 4,170

       Table of Contents

      By J. G. Thompson, of Edwardsville, Kan.

      Often the title of a book or essay gives little information as to what will follow, and under "The Apple Business" there are a variety of subjects, on any one of which an essay might be written. In this short paper I shall speak of our foreign markets. A Kansas apple in London is a long way from home. But it is there, and not at all disconcerted by its strange surroundings. What is our apple doing there? Was it imported as a curiosity? Is it there as evidence of some venture or speculation? Neither; it has passed the experimental stage and is on a perfectly legitimate errand. It has gone over for English gold and will send the same back to its Kansas home. Now comes the interesting part, which makes business of the transaction. If profitable, it means prosperity; and a wave of prosperity is what the whole country needs, and when the wave comes there will be a lot of folks who will want to make the inundation permanent. Apples, on arriving in London or Liverpool, are sold at auction on the docks, immediately on arrival, usually in twenty-barrel lots. Of each lot two barrels are opened, one is poured out on a table, and one has the head removed so that the faced end may be seen. This is called a "show," and in the account of sales the "shows" are charged for at the rate of one shilling each.

      AMERICAN APPLES ABROAD.

      European receivers of American apples, represented by Chas. Forster, 76–78 Park Place, N. Y.

Ports of Import.
Date. Figures given represent barrels.
Liverpool. London. Glasgow. Hamburg. Various. Total.
1897.
Aug. 7 168 33