380
THE POPULAR SCIENCE MONTHLY
said to have reflected any war influence. In most places, the decisions reached were about the same as were anticipated before the war broke out.
From a Lexington, Ky., publicist comes the observation that
This letter brings up a question that has no doubt occurred in connection with the other testimony so far adduced. To what extent is the difficulty of marketing bonds and therefore of undertaking improvements, and to what extent is the demand for retrenchment and greater economy of administration, to be attributed to the war; and to what extent to the financial stringency and hard times that existed before the war? That the war has accentuated the difficulties of the situation rather than caused them is the opinion of many students of the drift of municipal conditions and opinion.
New England's testimony is remarkably like that which comes from the. Pacific coast and the central west. Only in the south does the war seem to have been directly responsible for a greater stringency—and that has been due to the fact that it has in the past so largely depended upon a few crops, mainly cotton and tobacco, rather than upon diversified industries.
writes a Portland, Maine, editor,
and Springfield, Mass., reports that
In New Haven, Conn.,