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“...from Barahona to Lake Enriquillo. The existing railways, of which there are 175 miles in Haiti and 500 miles in Santo Domingo, are narrow gauge and give very poor service. INDUSTRIES. In Haiti, sugar, tobacco, coffee, and cocoa are cultivated, and the island is supposed to. possess valuable deposits of coal, copper, and other minerals. Sugar is ex- tensively cultivated in Santo Domingo, and tobacco, coffee, bananas, and cocoa are also exported, together with mahogany, lignum vitae, cedar, and satin-wood. No attempt has as yet been made to develop the deposits of iron, gold, copper, and salt which are known to exist. The island has much savannah country suitable for cattle, but very little use has so far been made of it. The trade of Haiti and Santo Domingo is mainly with the United States, which supply 60 per cent, of the total imports of both republics. In 1907 a treaty with the United States was ratified, under which the latter country now collects the Customs duties and acts as an in...”