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Production of alcohol in Cuba. No. 88, April 15.

Production of asphalt from Trinidad Lake. No. 129, June 3.

Profits of the Lima Light, Power, and Tramways Company. No. 135, June 10.

Projected macadamized highways in Argentina. No. 118, May 20. Proposed aerial mail and passenger service for Colombia. No. 73, March 28.

Proposed aerial post for Peru. No. 114, May 15.

Proposed new water supply for Lima. No. 98, April 26.

Proposed public works for Trinidad. No. 107, May 7.

Radio station opened at Santo Domingo and Port au Prince. No. 106, May 6.

Railway development in Argentina. No. 91, April 18.
The railway situation in Mexico. No. 142, June 18.
Reduction in Mexican export duties on leaf tobacco. No. 135, June 10.
Removal of Cuban import and export restrictions. No. 143, June 19.
Reopening of banana trade in Frontera district. No. 139, June 14.
Reported telephone extension project in Colombia. No. 143, June 19.
Resolutions of West Indian Intercolonial Customs Conference.
129, June 2.

Resumption of parcel post to Chile. No. 117, May 19.
Revised enemy trading list for Latin America. No. 79, April 4.
Sale of sugar in northern Chihuahua. No. 61, March 14.

Samples of Ecuadorian woods. No. 82, April 8.

Samples of textiles desired in Colombia. No. 110, May 10.
Sanitation work in Uruguay. No. 112, May 13.

No.

Serious condition in the vegetable wax business in northern Mexico. No. 63, March 17.

Shipment of oil from Tampico to United States, for 1918. No. 54,
March 6.

Shipments of Mexican cattle for United States. No. 139, June 14.
Shipping instructions issued by a Mexican firm. No. 87, April 14.
Short-paid letters for Guatemala. No. 116, May 17.
Shortage of condensed milk in Trinidad. No. 57, March 10.

Shortage of material for Trinidad's petroleum industry. No. 78,
April 3.

Shotguns and ammunition for Trinidad. No. 90, April 17.

Small supply of cattle hair in Venezuela. No. 109, May 9.

South America will buy furniture. No. 80, April 5.

South American agricultural and industrial exhibition at Montevideo. No. 108, May 8.

South American markets for paint and varnish. No. 63, March 17. Special delivery in Mexico. No. 136, June 11.

Steamship service between Corunna and Havana. No. 83, April 9. Steamship service between Guaymas and Salina Cruz. No. 126, May 29.

Stock of sugar in Argentina. No. 59, March 12.

Strike on Guatemalan railway ended. No. 50, March 11.

Sugar crop estimate for Camaguey province. No. 69, March 24.

Sugar crops of West Indies in 1918.

Sugar mills in Salina Cruz district.

No. 91, April 18.

No. 123, May 26.

Sugar production in Jamaica. No. 69, March 24.

Id., in Nicaragua. No. 79, April 4.

Sugar statistics from Cardenas, Cuba. No. 68, March 22.

Supplies for water works system in Ciudad Juarez, No. 113, May 14. Supplies of Mexican pig iron available. No. 78, April 3.

Suspension of Brazilian consular invoice regulations. No. 112, May 13. Suspension of Mexican export duties on hides. No. 100, April 29. Tampico oil exports for February. No. 106, May 6.

The textile trade of Paraguay. No. 132, June 6.

Tin-can industry in Brazil. No. 90, April 17.

Trade and financial condition in British Guiana. No. 57, March 10. Trade conditions in Bermuda. No. 66, March 20.

Trade notes from Nicaragua. No. 61, March 14.

Trade in drawing materials in Peru. No. 80, April 5.

Trade of Mexico for 1918. No. 142, June 18.

Trade of Panama for April. No. 147, June 24.

Trade publications wanted for public reading rooms in Mexico. No. 129, June 3.

Traffic through the Panama Canal during April. No. 136, June 11. Trains in operation in Mexico. No. 54, March 6.

Treatise on silk industry in Brazil to be prepared. No. 79, April 4. Trinidad a market for biscuit products. No. 143, June 19.

Trinidad government acts against gasoline combine. No. 89, April 16.

Trinidad market for clothing. No. 137, June 12.

Trinidad market for glass show cases. No. 128, July 2.

Trinidad market for railway and telegraph supplies. No. 92, April 19. Trinidad sugar crop prospects. No. 72, March 27.

Trinidad supreme court enforces contract for steamship rebates. No. 53, March 5.

Trinidad's foreign trade in timber. No. 122, May 24.
Trinidad's trade customs. No. 127, May 31.

Trinidad's trade in hardware. No. 141, June 17.

Underground telephone system for Montevideo. No. 64, March 18. Uruguay East Coast Railway shows improvement in 1917-18. No. 50, March 1.

Uruguayan government increases salaries of officials. No. 81, April 7.
Uruguayan post, telegraph, and telephone budget. No. 142, June 18.
Uruguayan tax on parcel post packages. No. 113, May 14.
Uruguayan trade at the close of 1918.
Use of tractors on Cuban sugar estates.
Venezuelan commerce during January.
Venezuelan imports of drugs, medicines, and chemicals. No. 81,
April 7.

No. 81, April 7.
No. 110, May 10.
No. 82, April 8.

Venezuelan market for American cigarettes. No. 85, April 11.

Venezuelan railway traffic and revenues for 1918. No. 134, June 9. West Indian Customs Union Conference in Trinidad. No. 80, April 5.

Whaling industry of the Falkland Islands. No. 115, May 16.

Will the United States hold its present trade in Argentina? No. 83, April 9.

World's production of crude rubber in 1918. No. 65, March 19.

Monographs on various countries or consular districts of Hispanic America, written by consular agents of the United States and published recently as "Supplements" to Commerce Reports, are as follows: Brazil: Rio Grande do Sul, by Consul Samuel T. Lee. In annual series, no. 40b, March 4.

Brazil: Bahia, by Consul Edmund Higgins; Pernambuco, by Consul A. T. Haeberle. In annual series, no. 40c, May 3.

Colombia: Barranquilla, by Consul Claude E. Guyant. In annual series, no. 42a, May 5.

Mexico: Chihuahua, by Consul James B. Stewart; Ciudad Juarez, by Consul Edward A. Dow; Nogales, by Vice Consul Charles W. Doherty; Piedras Negras, by Vice Consul William P. Blocker; San Luis Potosí, by Consul Cornelius Ferris, Jr. In annual series, no. 32a, April 28.

Venezuela: La Guaira, by Consul Homer Brett; Maracaibo, by Consul Emil Sauer; Puerto Cabello, by Consul Frank Anderson Henry. In annual series, no. 48a, March 20.

PERIODICALS OF URUGUAY.

The following list of periodicals of Uruguay is reprinted from Barrett's Paper, Paper Products, and Printing Machinery in Argentina, Uruguay, and Paraguay (Washington, Government Printing Office, 1918), published under the auspices of the Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce, as "Special Agents Series," no. 163.

Principal Newspapers and Magazines in Montevideo

El Día, Mercedes 826; morning daily, established 1885; 6 to 12 pages, 18 by 26 inches; 361-inch rolls; circulation, 38,000. Equipment: Two Marinoni (French) 24-page perfecting presses; ten Mergenthalers. Foreign subscription price, $12 per annum; advertising rates, $1 to $2 per inch.

El Plata, Buenos Aires 666; afternoon daily; established 1913; 6 to 12 pages, 17 by 24 inches; 35-inch rolls; circulation, 25,000 to 27,000. Equipment: Marinoni (French) 24-page perfecting press; seven Mergenthalers; photo-engraving plant. Foreign subscription price, $12 per annum; advertising rates, $0.75 to $1.25 per inch.

La Razón, Rincon 853; afternoon daily; established 1878; 6 to 12 pages, 171 by 24 inches; 35-inch rolls; circulation, 25,000 to 30,000. Equipment: Marinoni (French) 32-page perfecting press; Marinoni (French) 8-page perfecting press; Duplex (Swiss) flat-bed perfecting press; one Augsburg (German) and one Albert (German) cylinder press; French ticket-printing press; three German platen presses; Krause (German) cutting machine; Brehmer (German) stitching machine; seven Mergenthalers. Foreign subscription price, $9 per annum; advertising rates, $0.50 to $1.50 per inch.

Tribuna Popular, Ciudadela 1426; afternoon daily (in normal times also publishes morning edition); 6 to 8 pages, 15 by 23 inches; 31-inch rolls; circulation, 25,000 to 30,000. Equipment: Marinoni (French) 32-page perfecting press; eight Mergenthalers; two monotypes; photo-engraving plant. Foreign subscription price, $14 per annum; advertising rates, $0.70 to $2.50 per inch (special rate of

$10 per inch per month on certain advertising pages).

El Siglo, Rincon 853; morning daily; established 1863; 6 to 12 pages, 17 by 24 inches; 35-inch rolls; circulation, 10,000 to 12,000. Equipment: Same as La Razón. Foreign subscription price, $16 per annum; advertising rates, $0.375 to $1.25 per inch.

Diario del Plata, Buenos Aires 666; morning daily; established 1910; 6 to 12 pages, 17 by 24 inches; 35-inch rolls; circulation, 10,000 to 12,000. Equipment: See El Plata. Foreign subscription price, $16 per annum; advertising rates, $0.50 to $1 per inch.

El Telégrafo, Rincon 853; afternoon daily; established 1850; 6 to 8 pages, 17} by 24 inches; 35-inch rolls; circulation, 8,000 to 12,000. Equipment: See La Razón. Foreign subscription price, $9 per annum; advertising rates, $0.25 to $1.25 per inch.

La Mañana, Ciudadela 1478-90; morning daily; established 1917; 6 to 12 pages, 17 by 24 inches; 35-inch rolls; circulation, 8,000 to 10,000. Equipment: Mari

noni (French) 24-page perfecting press; seven Mergenthalers; photo-engraving plant. Foreign subscription price, $10 per annum; advertising rates, $0.375 to $0.75 per inch.

El Pueblo, Plaza Independencia 703; afternoon daily; established 1917; 6 to 8 pages, 17 by 24 inches; 51 and 70 inch rolls; circulation, 6,000. Foreign subscription price, $10 per annum; advertising rates, $0.375 to $0.75 per inch; printed by El Bien.

La Democracia, Ciudadela 1399; morning daily; established 1916; 6 to 8 pages, 17 by 24 inches; 51 and 70-inch rolls; circulation, 6,000 to 8,000. Equipment: Four Mergenthalers (press work done by El Bien). Foreign subscription price, $16 per annum; advertising rates, $0.375 to $0.75 per inch.

El Diario Español, Ituzaingo 1487; morning daily devoted to the interests of the Spanish colony; established 1914; 6 to 8 pages, 17 by 24 inches; 35-inch rolls; circulation, 4,000. Foreign subscription price, $9 per annum; advertising rates, $0.25 to $0.50 per inch; printed by La Razón.

El Bien, Ciudadela 1469; morning daily; established 1878; 6 to 8 pages, 17} by 24 inches; 35, 51, and 70 inch rolls; circulation, 3,500. Equipment: Duplex (Swiss) flat-bed perfecting press; one Marinoni (French) and one Italian cylinder press; one Fenix (German) and one American Gordon platen press; four Mergenthalers. Foreign subscription price, $10 per annum; advertising rates, $0.25 to $1.25 per inch.

La Defensa Comercial, Av. 18 de Julio 1017; afternoon commercial journal; established 1917; 8 pages, 13 by 19 inches; circulation, 1,800. Foreign subscription price, $16 per annum; advertising rates, $0.25 to $1.25 per inch; printed by José M. Blanco.

Montevideo Times, 25 de Agosto 410; morning daily in English; established 1888; 8 pages, 13 by 19 inches; circulation, 1,000. Foreign subscription price, $16 per annum; advertising rates, $1.25 per inch per month; printed by Angel Lasagna.

Diario Oficial, Florida 1178; official daily of the Uruguayan Government; established 1849; 44 to 60 pages, 9 by 12 inches; circulation, 3,000. Equipment: Marinoni (French) semi-duplex cylinder press; Albert (German) cylinder press; eight Mergenthalers. Foreign subscription price, $9 per annum; legal advertising only.

El Debate, Sarandi 430; daily organ of the German colony; established 1917; 4 pages, 11 by 16 inches; circulation, 3,000. Foreign subscription price, $6 per annum; printed by José M. Blanco.

Uruguay Sport, San Jose 1118; sporting triweekly; established 1916; 6 to 8 pages; 17 by 24 inches; circulation, 6,000. Foreign subscription price, $9 per annum; advertising rates, $0.25 to $1.25 per inch; printed by El Bien.

El Amigo del Obrero, Mercedes 947; labor semiweekly; established 1898; 4 pages, 16 by 23 inches; circulation, 3,000. Foreign subscription price, $3.60 per annum; advertising rates, $0.10 to $0.25 per inch; printed by José M. Blanco. El Estanciero, Avenida General Rondeau 1685; semimonthly stock and agricultural journal; established 1910; 28-32 pages, 9 by 12 inches; circulation, 2,500. Foreign subscription price, $2.50 per annum; advertising rates, $10 per page per month.

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