Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 53, Number 36, Jasper, Dubois County, 16 June 1911 — Page 2
WEEKLY COURIER
BEN ED. DOANE, Publisher.
JASPER
INDIANA
SUly mad dog scares aro a little
backward this year.
These bo the days when the most
uncortaln thing In life Is the suro tip
The trouble with Luther Burbank's strawberries is they do not tnsto Ilka
trawberrles.
New Vorw proposes to boautlfy Us skyscrapers. .Might try some of the modern mllllnory.
Hereafter toach the children that the year has throe seasons summer, autumn and winter.
A woman pid 30 long distance telephone charges to talk to a parrot no, ono with feathers.
Notwithstanding It Is 20 yards lone, Queen Mary's coronation train will run in one section only.
Queen Mary's determined stand against rouge la a terrible blow to somo lovely complexions.
A baby. It is reported, has actually been born on Fifth avenue, New York. It has $5,000,000 a coming.
STATE AUTHOR
ORDER CLEANUP
System Must Be Changed.
Addressing the Indiana State Ass
elation ot Hllnd People at a banquet
ESTATE HAPPFMNfiS
the Indiana School for the Blind, j ...... w,
James McElroy of Albany. N . Y .de- nrftfinnm 111 finiPP
fltUUfiUtU IN MILt
I SESS0N OF SUNDAY TEACHERS
FOOD PRODUCING AND DISTRIBU
TING CONCERNS GET NOTICE TO SCRUB.
INSPECTORS DO REPORTING
List of Condemned Places Include Bakeries, Poultry Houses, Groceries, Meat Markets, Fish Markets, Restaurants, Etc.
When you are right don't argue. Somebody will be sure to get the Impression that you are wrong.
Taxlcab prices In New York are going up, but fortunately Joy riding 1 not ono of the necessities of life.
A common fly lays 900 eggs a seaeon, It Is said. Probably a purestrain Leghorn fly could do even better.
Among the year's divorces are to bo foung some of last year's romances. The latter seldom last over that time.
There Is also a shortage of farm labor In Austria, though the cities are growing. The bright lights attract, regardless of nationality.
A census of the hens In Ireland shows 24.COO.O0O present. Soon the old reliable potato will begin to be Jealous of the upstart egg.
Some men seem to delight In starting a bonfire In the back yard Just nftcr the next-door neighbor has hung out her washing on the line.
Queen Mary decides at the last minute against bobbles, elbow sleeves and collarless afternoon gowns. The American peeress division Is peevish. The Boston preacher who told hla congregation that women have forgotten how to blush Is wrong, but anyhow, the men ought not to make them blush.
Professor Arrbenlus knows of other suns 50.000 times larger than our sun. We could have used one of them a week ago, but our own sun Is doing better now.
Indianapolis. After about four
weeks of Inspection activity In this city
among food producing and distributing
concerns, field Inspectors for the food
and drug department of the state board of health have reported conditions in S7 establishments that have Jod to legal notices to owners to clean
up.
H. E. Barnard, state food and drug
commissioner, has Issued the notices.
In writing, to the owners of the places.
inclosing the Undings of the Held in
epeetors. and directing that the con
demned conditions be abated. Under
tho law. if the conditions are not abated by the time set out In the de
partment ordor, the owner of the es
tablishment Is liable to a fine and to an additional fine and imprisonment
In the event the abatement Is not
then made promptly .
I ue list of places condemned In
cludes ten bakeries, twelve poultry houses, seventeen groceries, six moat
markets, four fish markets, twenty
nve restaurants, five confectionery stores, seven drug stores and one hotel. Included In the list are some of
the best-known establishments In the city. Extraordinarily bad conditions
were reported In some of the places.
while In others there were only minor
violations of the sanitary food law, under which law all the notices were
issued. In one restaurant It was ordered
mat tne cook not only provide clean
clothing In the place of that in which the inspectors found her working, but that she clean her person as well. Employes sleeping In rooms where food was prepared or served ; chicken coops In food warerooms; foul and illsmelling cellars, windows and doors without screens, toilets In workrooms, toilets not screened, dirty floors, ceilings and walls and old buildings unlit for use as food producing or distributing places were among the things found by the inspectors. The department is continuing its work of inspection and other legal notices are In course of preparation.
Tho mocking bird is held up for emulation In modesty. This good point has been overlooked because of the number of whistling soloists who have been Inspired.
a narvara proressor says Gray's i EIegy" would be rejected by the edl- i
tor of any modern magazine. Some editor has probably returned one of the Harvard professor's poems. America's corn crop would rebuild every railroad In the land In eight years, but there Is no ready constitutional way in which the crops of eight years could be applied In that manner.
Sixty students working their way through the Washburn Law school at Topeka, Kan., earned 525.000 last year, an average of more than $413 each!
A good many lawyers would be glad
to get a chance of that kind. one of the sculptors explains that It la impossible to "show the majesty of the human form In trousers and skirts " Wo might, without assuming any risk of being considered ultra-conservative, add, "especially harem skirts."
Shoe Men Organize; Adjourn. At the final business session or the Indiana Retail Shoe Dealers' association, at Indianapolis, practically the entire program was given over "to the election of officers and a discussion of
dues to be levied on members of the
new organization. The following offl
cers were elected:
resident hdward E. Goldsberry.
iaiayette.
First Vice-President Clyde Warner.
-Munde.
Second VIce-Prealdent J. B. Walsh,
lorre Hauet'.
Secretary C. I. Sllpher. Indianapolis.
J reasurer Edward E. Stout. Indian a pol Is.
7.vMcn A-as made In the constitu
tion of the new association, adopted at
the morning session, and which was amended later, for a board of directors of live members to be appointed by the president. President Goldsberry Faid that he would not appoint the board for several days. The contest for the treasurer of the association bore the earmarks or a po-lit-.ral convention. Frank J. Kapps or Vlnconnes opposed Mr. Stout. The final vote showed 27 for Mr. Stout and 25 for Mr. Kapps. The latter withdiew from the race Just before the vote was announced, and the selection of the Indianapolis man was made unanimous.
clared that the present public school
I pyetem must be changed to meet the j growing demand of industrial training, i Ue said that industrial training will
keep pupils In school when threats of parents and officers of the law fall.
Tho banquet marked the end of the sixth biennial association meeting. Mr. McElroy said that statistics proved that students giving one-half their time to Industrial training did better work In litorary and mathematical courses. He said the school had a mission to fulfill in equipping boys and girls with a foundation of Industrial education, and asserted that schools which fall to accomplish that purpose were not fulfilling the true r.drpose of education. Industrial efficiency has not vet
reached Its height, according to Mr. McElroy, who expressed a belief that
early Industrial training in public schools would Improve the present
status of efficiency in shops. Bovs
and young men learn their trades In a haphazard way under the old conditions. Mr. McElroy contended, but in receiving elomentary public school industrial training steadily become finished. J Mr. McElroy left the Indiana Senool for the Blind 31 years ago. when he was principal of the literary department. He is a manufacturer at Al
bany, and formerly was a member of
the Albany board of school comrals-
NEWS ITEMS FROM INDIANA.
ALL OVER
BLAZE AT HARTFORD CITY
F.'re Resulting From an Overheated Producer Gas Tunnel Damage the American Gas Company to Amount of $15,000.
Forty-Seventh Annual Convention of State Association Opens at Fort Wayne With 700 Delegates In Attendance.
Hartford City, June 13. Dosplte a $15.01)0 fire damage, resulting from an overheated producer gas tunnel, the
big couth side plant of the American ' Window Glass company In this city s
will be In operation soon, according ' president
to a statement issued by Manager W
C. Niece, who arrived home from Pittsburg, whero be has been In conference with the head officials of the company. The fire started under the floor In the "batch" room, but was prevented from spreading, except to the engine room, where the heaviest damage occurred, all the electrical machinery and equipment which fur
nished power for both factories being put out of commission. One man, an Italian laborer, was probably fatally
Injured while fighting the fire, when
Fort Wayne. With about 700 delegates in attendance, the forty seventh annual convention of the Indiana State Sunday School association convened In this city for a four days session. The attendance Is considered by the officers to be gratlfyingly large. The opening meeting; was held in the First Baptist church, with the church packed. Charles II. Worden delivered the address of wel
come on behalf of the laymen of the
city, while Rev. J. F. Vlchert. pastor
of the First Baptist church, welcomed the delegates on behalf of the churches and Sunday schools of the
city. The response was made by V. C. Hall of Indianapolis, tho state
Tho principal address of
M ON PHOSST J!
Frightful Disease That Attacks the Match Workers.
Caused by the Absorption of phorous Through the Teeth Gum and Agonizing Death
Often Results. Washington. In 1903 the An , Association for Labor Leghdat,. cooperation with the United bureau of labor, invest!
the evening was then given by Dr. Cor
nellus Woeikln of Rochester, N. Y., who spoke on "Religious Verifications."
slnnnrc IIa .u , , I - uns ufeouufe me lire, wutn ZTS, 1 ' " ' . "Per,mePls he fell twenty feet from the roof of
that had ban mnH T, the M- SeVen hBed 2SSJ?"d.e atA,bSny B" i employed in the factory.
The president of the association. Mrs. Olive L. Gleason of Muncie. introduced the speaker, and announced the following standing committees: Public Affairs J. Q. Donnoll. Greensburg; F. H. Toombs. Scoitsburg; Reed Beard. Lafayette. Program Miss Elizabeth Durst. Bluff ton; Noble Wilson. Terre Hautet
Benjamin F. Smith. Indianapolis.
Literature C. E. Neimeyer. Walla Walla. Wash.; Fred McCartney.
Blocmlngton: Zoa Hay. Elkhart.
Work Mrs. Cora Broka. Vallev
Mills; Miss Sadie Young, Canaan; Miss Adelaide M. Carman, Indianapolis.
Shows Reduction In Cost.
Figures compiled by the board of
state charities showing expenditures
Doctor Is Given Verdict. Noblesville. June 13. After being out IS hours the jury returned a verdict awarding the plaintiff $5.000 dam
ages for personal injuries in the case of Dr. E. E. WIshard. formerly of Indianapolis, but now of this city, against the Central Indiana Railroad !
company. The litigation was the result of an automobile accident. Dr. WIshard was answering an emergency call and while crossing the track
of the company was
freight car.
struck by a
Fractures Officer's Skull. Shelbyvllle. June 13 In a fight between Aroos Smith, a member of the police force, and Henry Farley, a cabman, the former was knocked down
Drowns In Deep Gravel Pit. Kokomo. Ed Cloud, eighteen years old. living at Buffalo. Cass
county, but a visitor ni Oak Ford, was drowned In the W. C. Cobb gravel pit. near there. With a crowd of men. women and boys he wnt bathing with his clothes on and asserted that he was an expert swimmer. When his death struggles began it was believed he was pretending that he could not swim, and he almost dragged Charles HolHns3worth to bis death. - Postmasters Finish Work. West Baden. The two days' session of the Indiana Association of Presidential Postmasters was concluded with addresses by Marcus R. Sulzer of Madison. John M. Johnston of Logansport. Robert H. Bry6on of Indianapolis. C. B. Hurrey of the third assistant postmaster general's office. E M. Norrls. post office in
spector, and Edwin M. Lee. chairman of the Republican state central committee.
at. i
Snatches Boy From Ralls. ConnersvIIIo. Emerson Hiaes. nine years old, was saved from death under a C, H. & D. engine by Vernon Doll. The Hlnes bov was rid-
IS..1".!!? ÜÜ? !Tm if?"? J6 lnS In a little wagon pulled by an old-
hr tnnmcKIn ... - - ,
j r li.-tiii it i i ii i title in iiiin v - ..a
door poor relief, or for relief to per- f Injury was Inflicted with a boaw club, c M T n i Jl2 cross,B& ho sons who are not Inmates of public in- which. It Is said. Farley always car-: la.r' ZT & Unl stitutions, disclose that in Cl of the 92 rles in his cab. The trouble starred ?JL .Ca.sine'
i
match Industry In America
May, 1910, the result was t,. :
In Bulletin SC or tho bureau , f The Investigation sho. : "phossy Jaw" has attacked Libers of match workers, and t;. per cent, or all employed In iL, i
Industry are liable to contra. disease, while 95 per cent of women, and S3 per cent of tt, dren are so exposed., And tr.H of victims is growing min-' month. The disease Is caused by the aHon of phosphorous through tiior gums. Inflammnion is s. ? which extends along the Ja, k:. the teeth and bones. The p :: . come swollen and purple, ttloosen and drop out. and t:..bones decompose, passlnr av. nauseating pus. which sor . breaks through the neck in tl,-
or an abscess, or oozes it: , mouth.
vben the disease Is ono
ii-i i . .
usuea. a surgical operation is ... . the only means of arresting tire Jaws have been cut out a-1
Izing deaths occasionally result stench from the decomposing r.Is Indescribable, and is so na'.-- tthat dentists and physicians r. aviid patients suffering ron :S Jaw." There are several cheap zti h less substitutes or ttie po. phosphorus. Probably the (ti; and best of them Is sesquisuiph: phosphorus, an Invention of Frr chemists, the patent being owr.f 5 tJl recently in this countrr bv
xjiamonc aiatch com par. . Tbl
Of
IQ
It
a
' 'T l.r
f.f . h !J-
counties the sums expended were less
than the amounts expended in the preceding year. Of these counties 19
showed decreases of more than SSOA
Jenning3 county showed a decrease of
HM. 13. and Lake county showed
decrease of J3.C31.13. Between these
started
because of
have
garalng the conduct of the officer.
told Chief of Po. ce umlove re-! tne ,lttle wBOn was overed b
engine wheels.
Burns Cause Woman's Death. I Blooralngton. June 13. .Mrs. Josenh
Ward, living three miles northwest of
two extromos lie the following coun-1 this city, and the wife of a leading ties: Howard. Laporte. Clinton. Gib- farmer. Is dead from burns received son. Law nance. Tippecanoe, Clark. St. In attempting to start a kitchen fire
A 'rovldencc Judge has decided that a husband Is Justified In slapnlnc his
wife's face If ho catches her going
tnrougn nis pockets. Next some disgruntled court will rule that a woman has now lost her time-honored right to chango her mind.
Twenty thousand toothbrushes and aa many packages of tooth powder have been presented to the school children of Philadelphia. Wo hope the school children of Philadelphia aro also receiving Instructions concerning tho Inadvlsablllty of picking their teeth In public
A landlady In New Jersey, finding Ehe could not get objectionable tenants to leave, set tho house on fire. She wna arrested for arson, but she gained her point, and proved again that when a woman really sets her mind on any given object, mere masculine opposition is bound to go as straws befuro tho wind.
A Iloston school teacher Itemizes a yearly minimum expense account for a woman and puts In two umbrellas. This dthor Is extravagance or an acknowledgement of absent-mindedness.
To Ask Murderers' Parole.
J.rJ- Gillette of Lagrange, formerly a member of tho mate board of pardons, will ask the board. In the approaching meeting, to parole Joseph Barcelona, an Italian who. In a fight at a dance In Lagrange two years ago. killed Alva Trltch. Barcelona was sentenced to prUon for life on a charge of i.mrder. Mr. Gillette will seek to show tho board that the sentence was
unjust, as. he contends, Barcelona
killed Trltch, believing that Trltch
was Peeking to kill him.
öamuei m. Mench of Fort Wayne
win aRpear lor a parole for Thomas Davidson, sentenced from Whitley county In 1S90 for tho murder of his unclt-. The murdered man's body was found In a stable, and Davidson's defense was that his death was accidental Parole was refused Davidson by tho board In April of last year Barcelona's case has been before the boara a number of times.
judepn. neioy. Fountain. Park.
Wayne, Daviess, Marlon. Madison Al
len and Grant In Marlon. Madison.
Allen, Grant and Lake the decrease for outdoor poor relief was more than SLOWL The amount expended In the state In the year for needy or such poor relief was $13.756.15 less than for the preceding year. The total amount expended was
52CÖ.1S1.16. Iu 50 townshlns no ih i
with coal oil. The can exploded, throwing the fluid over her dress and body. In attempting to smother the
blaze, Anstln Thompson, a traveling
Painter Falls to Death.
j Vlnconnes. George Jonos. thirty
; years old and married, white j painting the third story of the Meisr
i store on Mala street, was precipitated ! to the street by the breaking of the ; scaffold ropes and killed, almost Instantly. He alighted on his face and chest while a ladder fell across him
ana oroxe his back. Edward Aber-
man who bos a suburban home adjoin- i V, Z, . wa'a Aoer' ing the Wards, badly S ? 'V
himself.
hands.
Deserted; Seeks Divorce. Hartford City, June 13. Proceedings for divorce and $5.000 alimony wore instituted In the circuit fnrt
made a like record for the precedlns t here by Mrs. Nora Allmon nsrafnst hw
year. In 440 townships the aid given , husband. William Allmon. who last amounted to less than 5100; in 402 t November deserted her and eloDed
with Mlas Katie Cain, former deputj
was given. 23 of this number havtntr i
c I
saved
A Victim of "Phossy Jaw."
townships the amounts were between 5100 and $500. One of the Interesting reports wa3 received from Vincennes township, Knox county, where Vincennes is situated. In that township, an Increase of 14.SS1.04 was noted, the total amount expended being IS.467.3S. The township trustee attributed the increase to a large number of case3 of sickness, and to a large number or Indigent persons "shipped in" irom other town-ships.
county auditor. Allmon and Miss
Lay Blame on Boiled Ham.
unsnviue. bieven persons suf
fered from ptomaine poisoning here, and on? may die from the ef- i fects. Each of the eleven persons ate
cold boiled ham during the day. and i cry of "monopoly was rats-! xt. . it is believed to have been the cause j threatened the suc:ss of 'egislatfnr of the trouble. Adolnhus Cameron ' against the notsan. be Asoriar;i
peny. following Its promise to th United States bureau of labor, prar. od the use of the patent to oth manufacturers at cost price. Hut .i
Cain are now believed to be In North ' was taken sddenIy near Hender- for Labor Legislation then induo !
Dakota, whero he owns a farm.
son and Is in the hospital In a critical
condition.
Two More Poison Victims. Rnshvllle. Two more victims of ptomaine poisoning were Fred
Will stock Henry Streams. Newcastle, June 13. Jacob Sottong, fish commissioner for the southern district of Indiana, haa writton tn
Henry County Fish and Game Protec- Conde aBd Robert Helm, both off of Labor. As even this ex'.raordir.n-
tne Diamond company to assign
patent to three trustees CharlNeill, commissioner of labor. K A. Sellgman. professor of Cohr..1 university, and Jackson H. Ra
attorney for the Americac Fede'a
Prize Essays on Forestry. Charles C. Beam, secretary of the state board or forestry, has announced the following winners of four Sio prizes for essays from tho common and high schools on "To What Extent Should Indiana De Rcforestlzed ?" Gladys Jones, senior class, Attica high school; Mabel Adair, sophomore class. Lebnnon high school; Cora E. Dough crty, eighth grade, countrr sehnn!
Bedlord. and .Mary Mason, seventh
grade, country school, Mecca, Parke
county.
Assistant Deputy Inspectors Chosen. Through Governor Marshall. John
J. Walsh, denutv in chsrrn nf ihn
inspectlun or buildings, factories and workshops In the new n.
spectlon bureau, and John Galllvan. deputy In charge or the Inspection or steam boilers, announced the appointment or two assistant deputies in
each department. With the appointment or the four additional assistants, the organization of the new Insnection
bureau was completed.
W alsh's assistants are Harrr Breetz
New Albany, and Nelson Kyser. South Bend. Galllvan's assistants are J j
Ryan. Muncie, and Philip Bonjerz. Laporte. All are Democrats. The statute establishing the inspection bureau permits the appointment or additional men. but it will be the policy of Chief Inspector Elliott R. Hooton to start with the men already
appointed and to add addltonal men as they are n.ded to make the department more effective. Breetz, who will be assistant deputy In charge of the department or buildings, factories and workshops, is a member of the machinists' union. Articles cf Incorporation. Articles of Incorporation have bees filed In the office of the secretary of
state for tho following:
Indianapolis lodge No. 1. Mystic Or.
der of Moses. Indianapolis; tratorn.il; no capital stock; Charles Becker, chief
counsel. .
Independent Cooperage company. In-
corpomjed, Fort Wayne: dealer:
capUal stock. 135.000; dl-cctors, G. F.
uassett, f. T. Ilenoy and H. G. Hogan. The American Garment company of this city filed notice of increase of capital stock from $25.000 to $50.000
live association that he will come berc and bring 500 small-mouth bass to plant In the streams of thl vicin.
lty. This is the starter of an ttrnrt
to restock the streams of Honry coun-! sta,e aam-
ty witb desirable fish
wflom had eaten cold boiled bam, were taken suddenly III with the poison, which physicians say beyond
a doabt has been caused by eating
Drowns With Aid Near By. Newcastle. June 13 Walter Shade, twneiy-slx years old. unmarried, of MontpeMer. wa drowned In the lake
Board Visits Evansvllle. Evansville. C. C. Matson. Fred A. SIsas and Daniel M. Link of the Indiana board of tax commissioners were In Evansvllle In conference
with the county board of tax review.
Kt An rflrf nnf cfiMofr enm a rAAn1
owners were Induced to cancel "e patent In order that "paossy Ja might be abolished. Realizing the terrible raetace to thhealth, comfort and safety of a match workers J realizing the mai-
J to public safety afforded by easr ; cess to so deadly a poison, kn ire
the unanimous experience of lead vz European countries, that has led tr aHcotntolir tn nmhlhlf tta nca nf '
at iianrer s rark. west of tho rit-e
while a baseball gnrne was being ' coniS at the Invitation of George E. J Psn; and knowing l.ow r-a? played within fifty feet. Two hour? c,ark' secretary of the Taxpayers' available are cheap and harm:
later the body was located. Shade : roiecuve league, which Is endeavor-
was ronMdPred an ntrert pwlmimr i ,nS to increase
and hi? death In believed to be due to countJ"-
a seizure of cramps.
valuations in this
Blare "He Rallwav Eystm. Lafayette. June 13. A wooden wng. on brlt'ge 33 feet long, spannlrg the Tabarh railroad a mile wcat of Attica, caught fire ard droprd on to the railroad tracks below. The road's ties were burned ?nd the rall bent and twisted ty the heat. Tho railroad rysten was tied tip for 16 hors until th dehrls could be rcnxTcd ty a wreck train.
Inlurerl Man's Funds Gene. KrndallTille. Jtre 13. A passenger
on an east bound Lake Shore train glTlng his name a A. T. Davl3 of Chicago. cUhrr fell cr was thrown from the train near th dpol here. II! was picked up Immediately and his watch and porfjetrcok wore found to be gone. H u reriosly Injured and taken to Clarke boiplta! at ElkharL
Eight Thousand See Flights.
aus inc. üism inousana peo
ple gathered at Tristate Fair Grounds to see Lincoln Beachey, aviator of the Glenn Lurtiss organiza
tion. maKe two flights. He circled
the city In one flight, but did not try
lor records.
Kit ty Street Car; Killed. Fcrt Wayne, Jane 13. Dan J. O'Neill. Tony Vernes and Mrs. Mary Clcary were serlowOy hart when an Interurban car crashed into a city car. John Wliklnson. forty-nine yeirs old! was hit hy a clly street car and Instantly killed.
Apoplexy Claims Lawyer.
.Marion. r. . Manley. a prominent and wealthy Marlon lawyer.
aropped dead on the porch of his home In this city, the end being due
to apoplexy. Mr. Manley was fifty-five years old and Is survived by his widow.
car WIN
his
Touring Car Turns Turtle. Rochester. A big touring driven by William Hunter of 'lamsport and accompanied bv
daughter. Bertha, and her friend. Miss
Martlndale of Rensselaer. left the road at Cblppewanuck creek a few miles north of this city and turned over. The occupants were burled beneath the car. Hunter suffered several wounds, and. It Is feared. Is Injured Internally. Miss Hunter suffered a revere bruise on the hip where the car rested on her. The other girl suffered no Irjuifes.
substitutes, the Association for I-a' " Legislation urges that the use f white phosphorus In match coaror Hon be restrained by means of a prohibitive tax.
Wilted 60 Years for Pay. San Francisco. Cal. Aftar waiting 60 years, A. G. Lafferty, a California pioneer, S2 years old, will be recompensed by the state of California fr mules and supplies advanced Calif r nla soldiers who fought under Captain Liscom in the Indian outbreak 'n Trinity county In 1S51. For 20 r1 he saw his claim turned down by legislature after another. Once 't jissed both houses, but was vetoed by the governor. In addition to his loss of fortune t" becarce crippled, suffering an InJ'.'T which cost him an arm. and not I 8g his bouse burned down. The I' 000 which the state will now give ht Includes no Interest. He did not that.
Alaska's Fishing Industry. Alaska's fishing Industry, next In iri
portance to mining, gives eraployroer t to 12.5SS persona, of whom 2.F21 ar
natives. In the last five years f territory has sent us a wealth of 14 " 050.000 in salmon alone. The total
output of fiah la 1910 was worth HL
1S1.3SS.
