OCR Text |
Show q45 r VJi'J 7 ,, jTi'H LIBRARY f .1Y r-.:- . ; i itiij' jLfxs1 cjr 'I The Utah Statesman Is Endeavoring To Give a Correct Record of Public ARatrsr Without Regard to Party Lines rsman nr. yol. 8. m ;:i s. SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH, JANUARY 31, 1929 11.00 A YEAR W allace Infers Utahns in Congress Blocked Public Power Plant Springvilles Mayor Pushes Court Battle Against Steel Co Law Specifying That City Water Cannot be Transferred Crux of Case. Abatement of Chamber Tax Is Under Guns Mayor George A. Anderaon ol and tho city council i Bprlngvlll The Salt Lake chamber of commerce succeeded in settling a 91.900 tax bill for tha um of 910 and tha county auditor, Jamea II. Sullivan and tha stats board of equalisation are beginning to look Into tho matter. It aeema that Joeeph H. Prcece, assessor, placed a certain valuation upon the property owned by the Salt Lake chamber of commerce. Tho chamber heads protested to th 1129 board of county commissioners and finally paid a sum of approximately 1500- The remaining 11,900 waa to bo "ad justed." After oma delay the adjustment went Ijito effect, the chamber of commerce giving The county tho princely sum of $10 and the board of county the commissioners okehlng deal. The rounty and state are contemplating moves to recover the 11,190. of Bprtngrlll ara at praaant push-in- f tha auit BprlngviUe CorporaUon va. Tha Sprinfvllla Holdlnf company and tha Columbia Steal Corporation. to retain title to approximately 400 acree of land and about alfht socond feet of water. Mayor Anderaon and tha council contend that tha trancferrlng of 'uch property is unconatltutlonul and ara basing thler claims upon that. Tho mayor and city council further claim that tha Columbia Stoel Corporation broke faith with Sprinfvllla and that tha holdinr company broka tho contract between tha city and tha holdlnf company. The Water Deal. Mayor Anderaon declarea that at tho preaent time the eight eecond of water, property of Spring-vill- a City haa been turned over to tha Columbia Steel Corporation ty actual deed, recorded Feb. 21, 1921, book 214, page 114, recordsof Utah county, Utah. Mr. Anderaon also claim that tha Columbia Steel Corporation haa been paying tax on tho Bprlngvlii pasture since 1125, and that in time will a tax deed to tha land. acquire Mayor Anderaon bases hla claim of Illegality Jn tha water tranafer on section six, article 11, revlaed atatutea of HIT, which makes it Illegal for any municipal corporation to sell Its watro or water rights. The ease'waa originally set lot Jan. 21 but was continued to a liter date. History of Case. Tha story in brief follows; In 1122 tha Sprlngvlllt holding com pany waa created and the 440 scree of land and tho water thereon wee turned over to thle holding company. Tha mayor at that time and some of tha members of the council at that time were member of the holding company. The land and water was turned over to the holding company for tho purpose of siding In getting the Colubla Steel corporation to locale on tho Sprlng-vill- e pasture. The contract entered Into between tho city and the bolding company specified certain sales prices, et cetera (contract) carried farther down). Tho contract declared that If tha Columbia Steal company located Its plant on tha Provo pasture the City of 25A and would get Springvlllo would get $250 an Springvlllo Nothing waa said about tho re malnlng 200 seres. Springvlllo Out. As tho matter now atands the Columbia Steel plant la built on adthe City ft joining property;never been paid SpringvUle has anything for tho land; the City or Springvllla hea not received any money from tha water which the mayor claims was Illegally transferred: and the Cltv of Sprlngvlllt at tho present time haa neither tho land or tha water. Tho following exerpte from the contracts and the record (aa well aa tha above facts) aro furnished tha Statesman by Mayor Anderaon: CITY WATER RIGHTS. Excrpt of Constitution of State of Utah. Revised Statute of 1I1T. Article 11. See. I. ffeet See. S.. (Municipalities for- bidden to sell waterworks or rights.) No municipal corporation shall directly, or Indirectly or dispose of lease, sell, alien water rights, any water-work- s, or sourer of water supply now or hereafter to lie owned or controlled by It: lint all water-rigsuch water-worand sources of water snpiriy now owned or hereafter to be acquired by any municipal cor. potation, shall ha preserved, maintained and operated by It' for supplying im Inhabitant with water at reasonable AGREEMENT BETWEEN TIOT.D-TNCOMPANY AND COT.VM-BISTEEL CORPORATION. An agreement, recorded April 2t. 421. In hook 239, page 492, and bearing date of Oct. in. 1922. made Holding comby pany party of tha first part therein. with L, F. Balna representing Cntumhla Steel Corporation, now In process of organisation, party of a tha second part therein, follows (with other recitals): 'Bald party of tho first part agrees and bind Itself that It will, upon tho payment to It for tho purpose hereinafter stated, of th enm of 95,000.00 together with an additional sum of I5.ooo.00, If raid additional 95.000.00 I necessary lo to the ,iwn-er- a tn th naym-b G A Proro-Bprlngrll- COLONY Utah No Longer Primarily Agricultural, He De clares in Talk. low-typ- road that aro graded and drained only, and hava no surfacing. Tha full text of tho statement, made public by tha Department of Agriculture, follows:large-scacomThe practicable mercial production tf I'ght road oils, so they may be purchasable on specifications for a certain definite use anywhere In the United States, la an Industrial and not a laboratory problem. The variety of adl'istmenta possible at the refinery are ample to develop the conversion of all crudes available Into products that will meet the market demands lor materials of the respective base conle stituents. Studies made by th Bureau and by soma of tlio states Indicate that tha usa of oil products .iromiaes to be th most successful and least expensive method for raising low-tyroad surfaces to a condition satisfactory to meet th publice demands. Improvement of roads, apeh as gravel, sand-claand graded and drained earth, U one of tho most serious problems facing the highway engineer and the iftevral states today. Th oil Industry has very largely confined It interests In highway construction to production of asin a phalts requlrod essentially limited range of hlgh-typ- o pavement In which It must compete with other materials aleo aultable only for auch pavements. Tho industry has left practically unnoticed this hug field In which It would havo almost no competition. pe low-typ- y, an Index to the possibilities for tho use of light oils, there aro I.- 1T9.000 miles of improved roads In the United States today, of which over 900,000 miles are graded and drained only and have na Over SOO.OOO miles are surfacing. of gravel, very little of which haa been surface treated. Waterbonnd macadam, most of which has undoubtedly been surface treated, and bituminous macadam represent another 55.000 miles In addition, miles of roads still unimproved, a certain fraction or which will ho advanced Into tho Improved dais annually, Tho estimated annual program of resealing th surfap treating Is set et 1,021.900 miles, 4.900 of which aro bituminous macadam. 10,000 water-houn- d macadam, 292.-50- 0 mile gravel, and 594.500 miles of graded earth nnd snnd-claThis mileage would require annually an estimated 5.470.000.000 gallons of surfaco treatment material, i Adding to this figure the amount of treatment needed on the estimated II,- 500 mllea nf unimproved road brought to some degree of Improve- ht of w.i. of the land. year would hr'ng the tee and water rMite. hereinbefore annual eatlm.t-- d consumption of pto occur to .bout referred to. In order ud wt H-- w. (Continued on Fag Four) Mr. Wi W. Seegmiller, In 1920 an article' carried herewith telling why he believes Utah should ratify tha compact, brings up th question of powerlalng Echo Dam. Mr. SeegmlUer's article is on peg three. Mr. Wallace's ' letter to Gov. Dern, wherein Mr. Wal-.la- o urges that the development of tho entire basin be done under a logical plan may be found on page two. Th special meeting of tha water storage commission was held ton 1st for a report in this issue. six-sta- te 761557,000 '58.067,000 c 1890 above chart shows: A, th e growth of a yeast colony: B. th growth of Utah and Idaho; C. th growth of Industry in Utah sketched from cherts used by Ralf Vlpolley, government engineer. In a talk to Klwanls club. the statement. between the growth of a yeast colony and th growth of a state. Note that Not the Under present conditions and Utah and Idahosimilarity havo both been fortunate to have something happen" to break th curve just beunless something happens. Utah fore th saturation point had bean reached. Note also the maximum growth which can be expected will hava its maximum amount of now unless happens." In C. note th growth of Industry in Utah. Mr. Wooley'e talk to th population when there are a lit- Klwanls clubsomething la carried in an adjoining column. tle lees than 6UU.00U In tha state. The walla of tha Klwenla lining room wer covered with placards producThe field of large-scaltion of light road oils to be used o for tho Improvement of surfaces haa been left undeveloped by the petroleum industry. E. W. James, of the Bureau of Public Roads, Department ef Agriculture, stated recently. While the Industry haa concentrated on tho Ingredients of highway conetrnctlon, ha added, thero are In the United States more than 900,000 miles of 1.525.000 Wallace Letter, Seegmiller Talk On Pages 2--3 $156952.000 Tho humblo yeast plant haa don wonders In these dan of prohibition but it remained ' for Half Woolley, hydraulic engineer for the U. 8. Geological sksvey, to show tho similarity between th growth of a set of yeaat plants and th growth of tho sovereign state. And after getting his audience Interested by that unique demonstration, Mr. Woolley then proceeded to say that Utah waa no longer a purely agricultural atal and that th quicker Utah people realised this tha Quicker Utah would begin tocome Into its own. Mr. Woolley waa talking to th Kiwi nl club luncheon when ho made e there are some River Commissioner Answers Criticism of His Dealings on Pact 495.000 Type of Roads ' 588.000 GROWTH CURVE OF YEAST light Oils Win Favor On Some As ht k, Kiwanians Thinking This Over Th Califonua Using Utah As Summer BeeTasture Supreme Court Decision Clearly, School Publication Law carrying various charts. Tha Be keeping Is growing aa an first waa a chart showing tho deIndustry in Utah, according to Dan velopment of th yeaat plant, th H. Hillman, stale bee Inspector, chart takan from on mado by a who notes In ills report to th noted biologist. Dy.state board of agriculture that the Pearl- - Tha chart showed Raymond number of colonic in Utah haa Inthe yeast davelopjig for a few daya, the creased from 42,090 to 70.009 In curve going upward. untU ..finally tha past seven ayears and that the JSM." It Rent into a horisontal line. The brood- ham-f- lien from tb'er Oouuty Sohoel 'dlotriee and edwieKuil to cent to two per cent. to no th defendants yeast colony pubhas achieved Its Abbreviated and compel adequate plain, speedy, Financial Mr. Hillman continues in his ra maximum growth. remedy at law since the purpose Itohh the annual statement requlr-- 1 II next pointed to th compelling the publication of td by statute. From a Judgment port: Statements Get Offic- of chart Tho work of inspecting th bees writ of mandmua the statement wee to give infor- granting th showing th growth In Utah. Ho end th prayed for, defendants appeal. Af- ef tho state la performed by 21 called attention to the similarity of ial Rebuff in Test. . mation to th taxpayer, be Inspectors, who aro of a matter a county firmed. court cannot th curvt which showed th growth say C. C. .Dolby, ef Price, for appel- paid br tha county, --oir of the law that euch .taxpayer wee not of human population and that of counties do not appropriate sufth yeast. He showed what would beneficially Interacted In th pub- lants funds for this purpose and lor th benefit of those school lication. Appeal from District O. K. Clay, of Price, for respon- ficient have been the maximum growth receive only a partial inspection Dllworth dent. ( of thee states,, achieved years ago. board members,, members of the Court, Carbon County; each Th first inspection Is comC. year. state Plaintiff . J. Corfman,' had not "something happened" to leguutiuie, weekly puullaji-er- s Woolley, Judge. and others wha are interested break the curve and atart a new Application of R. W. Crockett menced this action in Him district .mads principally, If not entirely, of April, May one. The accompanying diagram in seeing how auuool money le for a writ of mandamus against court of Carbon County against th .during the months la a composite of four of Mr. Wool- spent the Utah (Statesman otters th Board of Education of Carbon defendants, as th board of edu- and June, and la then followed up with second a of the inspection cation of said county to compel ley's charts and shows plainly th herewltn th complete decision of in supreme court of Utah in th them to make publication of an apiaries where disease was found growth curves of yeast and of iaa annual statement of receipts snd upon th first visit. Following Is states. Mr. Woolley now argues concerning the Carbon coundisbursements of moneys during a summary of ber inspection: that there "must something hap- ty school district, ihla publications 1929. 1937. law th deala year ending June 50, 1920, as Number of diseased apiarwith school disor Utah will soon have achievcounty pen" 4114. section for by tricts and provided not with dissenool ed its maximum growth. diy ies found 249 -Comp. Laws Utah 1917. It is. in Number Mr. Woolley declared that on the tricts The .10 whom and for what" of colonics treatcomsubstance, alleged in lb face of figures Utah was growing la clearly apeclfiad. ..... .. ...... .. ed ...79 Th plaint: supreme court decision, but that scrutiny of the record That the plaintiff Is a resident, Numbrr of colonies dewhich carries .tha history of th proved that on th exchang of case stroyed Carsaid of taxpayer, and rltlsen follows: population Utah was losing ground Expense of county inspection for bon county. That the defendants, as Crockett va. Board of Education . there were more moving out uch b.oard, caused to b pub- 1929. S2.9S0 20; for 1927 $2. of Carbon county school district. than there were moving in. Utah's It would appear from the fig' a In a lished having newspaper (No. 1947.) source of growth then must bo its In said county "res given that tho state Is gettingHouse Bill N. 7, by Burton, de- - ageneral circulation birth rat and this had to make up (Supremo Court of Utah, Juno. 14, efficient result, in bee in.pecstatement (aa speclfl- - wry pretended lose In emigration before It for eay mentioned and eet forth in Mon ' a decidedly nominal cost. to make It possible ..I. Schools and school districts signed would begin to count as growth. Car bhlpmcnts Increased boards of education to print an the eomplaint) of receipts and dl Mr. Woolley then called the at- Iublkatkis of general statement the said year during The transient car lot shipments of receipts and disbursements docs abbreviate! statement, omitting bursements , wee which tention of th members of ll20f Juna fnd of bees from California aro inthe Klwanls club to tho charts showing uot substantially comply with sta-tu- th very Important part' to whom ot ln compn.nr with said atatute, creasing each year. Tut re were waa sub- - in that it failed to show: and for what Utah's means of affording a purpose 10,29V colonies of bees, which Is Laws 1117. 4114, rsqulr-I MonTha lower part of the ac- IngComp. thirty car loads, approximately th publication of a state-- j Jected to a rather sever teat before I Issue. At The Point companying chart show th growth ment by tha school board in troin California this day morning at th hearing shipped showing the In agriculture, mining and manu- In detail education commit lea of the year. There were about nineteen ted facts, various El ret. the amount on hand house and th father of th bill facturing. It will b noticed that its not substantiallydesigns car loads in 1937 and thirteen car complied with wasn't on had to the date of the last reat thee Industries kept a pretty even by th his loads in 1921. If this la to conproudof the port. of a statement child. were pace for many years but eventually , which publication Neither any tinue at the same rate of Increase more contained sinkof amount nothing tlie Second, each went along Its own line. The I than In fact It will soon overstock the bee re- many uncles or aunts. summaries of invested. general liow fund and ing results up to 1920 are shown on ceipt and disbursements for th the bill seemed very much like an pasturage along the railroads. nabl out. Third, th money th chart. Manufacturing 1157.000 year under various About ninety per cent of the orphan all through the hearing, WHAT AND FOR to headings. WHOM, one with newspapermen, district a Statute Construed wtlti (approximately); Mining 179,000.-lent bees are shipped back to cui PAID. and the state Ifornla during th winter months. (approximately); Arglculture. superintendent to be to of acoompl-laliebalance object the Fourth, 959.000.000. of public Instruction This, he explains, This is a new condition affecting . on school hand,. moneys would Indicate that Utah waa priat it. A statute the Industry that ahould be remust be construed shooting Fifth, the number, date and C. N. Jensen, sute superintendmarily a manufacturing state, but with reference to the object way to protect bond issued gulated In some owners amount of every he ent of public Initri'dion, spoke who keep asks that the matter be again th resident bee lo b accomplished by It. and redeemed, and the amount unlooked Into. Of the manufactured ought . In Burton no bill a. School and school district. against the bees on their own larms. Although reed ved and paid thm-forrarticles a large part of them are Statute requiring He terms. declared: local certain beekeepers are That at tha time of said publl- some of the of publication for agricultural derlvltaves First He, as a nubile official cation of said pretended statement complaining of being crowded out. and report of school board I mandawelcomes anything which will help Demand was mad upon th de- - some of the alfalfa seed growers another largo rart is due entirely to tory. mining products. Theiefore, ho Comp. Law 1917, 4414, requir- him keep hla Part of tho public fendant board of education that It welcome the bees aa an aid to finances in euch a wav that the argued, with knocking th agri- ing sc!wol board to publish statea statement In compliance lentsatlon of the blossoms, and cultural and mining articles ofr the ments containing certain Informa- pubile may ae it at any time. free of chu with the said statute, but that said give apiary manufactured list, and adding them tion therein prescribed. Is mandaSecond He believes that publici- board then, and ever since has. American foul breed la the most to the agriculture and to mining, ty la one way of arriving at econ- wholly disregarded and refused to Injurious and expensive disease in its requirements we find th three Industries advanc- tory 4. Mandamus Ides to compel omy and stated that many a board comply therewith and threatens to known to the beekeeping Indusing very much on a parity. publication of report for which no member would hesitata about buy- continue to do so. try. It la a apore forming germ An alternative writ of mandat Thus Mr. Woollry argued to th definite time was fixed. ing if he knew that sooner or latthat will Uva for years under ault- Defendcourt. said er some out traued of of be would tho Klwanls dub. that Utah could no taxpayers Mandamus can be issued to appeared and filed a demurrei. (Cortlnucd cn Pag Four) longer be called an agricultural compol a school board to publish ablo to put tbelr finger on a par- ants both general and special, and also elate, byt that the three industries ith statement containing tha par- ticular Item and aav Why. admitThird He believes that th tax- an answer to tho complaint must develop together. He referred ticulars required by Comp. Laws mors and ting that a demand had been made again to h charts, called attention 1917, 4914, after the board had payers are becoming mors desirous of knowing what has upon them, and that th statement to th limit of asrlcultnral water, published a statement which did Jn. 'he complaint we then asked the Kiwanians to look not substantially comply with become of their money and that;00 the at tha yeaat line, and finally lo th stature, over the board's ob- they should b give,, thle informs-- 1 published, notbutm den ylh " rT?u1LrJT 15 look again at th similar curve jection that- tha time within Uon In th beet poas.iil manner. statute. Th Fourth That ho appreciates boon which thoy could showing that Utah would tairi ran.cH ta teach Its maximum limit of growth with th Mature had passed, since value of the press, especially Brings Views J lUOlVlOUEl unless something happens. He th stature fixes no deflnlta time country presa and that he does not I I? "it!,-!!!.- Or Ola siikkln reeuch of for th publication suggested that this hi i relation of th. state, and that the something" ?o, tnony. many A divergence of views was might be that which would bring port. and therefor only requires !w?a court had no Jurladletion ot tha ! more payrolls to tlio state of Utah. Ita publication within a reasonable rubject-msttaction. Th various th of expressed by th time under th circumstances. .. looking at ths publications law demurrer waa overruled by the at th Joint session speakers revenue. ot He S Mandamus Taxpayer has sufcourti and thereupon the plaintiff Monday si which the speak.U SENATE ADDS LAND In Mated that the press, through Ite morfd for and beneficial ficient interne ers from Arisons. Nevada waa granted a Judg-neTO IDAHO FOREST -. PIt had columns to md school board nf trial The und California wer present. compel report meilt upon the pleadings. albl for th schools to stag event , court found that the statement a WASHINGTON Tho Benal bib Ita publication. Ralph L. Criswell, California A resident taxpayer of a school after event and make money to add certain lands within a accused Arisons of trying not dd substantially area In tha Silver moun- district can maintain mandamus to auch events, and that all of this comply with th statute, and by ite to hold-u- p th people of dewas the to given cheerfully by space tains of Owyhe county, Idaho, to compel the school board pubCalifornia. Dwight B. Heard .judgment commended that thmeri- La Gust th Boise national forest In that lish th statement required by newspaper. statement, of Arisons fendants publish and John Five That the complaint that (ng the requirements thereof In tho discussed th legality end th state, was passed today by th Comp. Law 1917, 4914, though h House. The measure now goes to had no Interest In such publication school boards ahould keep each particulars called for In th sJainprotection offered under th different from that of other tax- - J teacher In the dark about another uffs complaint. th president. els state compact. Georg W. -' eblllack nf In was Defendants appeal. They assign W. Malone of Nevada, declarTh proposal view nf section 7391. teacher's salary ehrws opposed by payers on th authorising mandamus' to com- Ity on the part of ths school heard- m errors the overruling of their (le- lb Interior department ed that hto stale wax ready th of can murrer speand school ths an boards ths set to do anything posslbla to intcring ha of If. the pel say, performance 7"ni0ra tonSXZ cially enjoined a duty resulting not give a good reuon for a dlf-- . Judgment upon th finding made th other two together. bring ""S from an office, and section 7393 J on Pag Four) (Conlibutd providing that th writ must hs I ' Jensen Endorses Publication Of a ..,..914 School Expenses . 941-95- . e. livll-hoo- d. . 0l d. jnJ th!1"; legally-compl- rS K1 er er - - thMJ Open Hearing On Boulder Dam William Peterson Scores State For Helping Others Divide the Pie. - WanU to Know Why Utah Was Left Out in Cold; W. R. Wallace Replies. An intimation that th Utah delegation In Washington waa In- strumental In stopping any government development work on the Green River In Utah waa uad by William R. Wallace, Colorado river commissioner, at a meeting at the water storaas commission Friday afternoon. Mr Wallace's atats-mecam In rsply to a pointed and admittedly sever criticism offered by William Frierson director of txtenslon w ork at Utah Agricultural collage. Mr. Wallace did not amplify his statement other, than as follows: Your criticism, Mr. Peterson, shows plainly that you do ' not know as much about this matter aa you should or aa you think you do. Every phase of this matter has been gone into carefully. All ' f your suggestions hav been taken Into consideration as 'my made to th governor in December. 1924, will show. Kvery avenue of ptocedure wee followed. If you better understood tho temper of th Utah dategaiion in Washington jou would understand nt ''N ra-p- then the imiossibllity of getting Into th MU tho thing you suggest." In 'answer to a critie'em from j-- FiDssiamawimtuaa4rtuNMp;f9 report of th Colorado river prsb-'-- -, lems to the water storage commission Mr. Wallace called attention to th fact that he held tw positions with the state of Utah-Oof theso was chairman of th water rtorage commission. Tho other was river commissioner for the stats of Utah. Mr. Wallace stated that under hla status as r.ver commissioner that ha was responsible only to Governor Dern awl that ha had made full and complata report of hla activities as river commissioner to Governor Dern. Mr. Peterson denounced the policy followed by Utah In the Colorado river controversy in no un- certain terms. I am very- he began, tn think that Utah haa been so solicitous about th welfare of California. Nevada and Artxona and ha, been so careful to see that each ono of those states got its proper share of th power pis that It seems to have completely forgotten that Utah bal a share of that pla coming. At this point Mr. Wallace interThat rupted with the statement. to pretty sever on tho river comn . . dlsap-point- ed. missioner. Mr. Prierson replied that ha meant nothing personal but said, 1 will now proceed to mako myself more clear, but possibly non the less severe." Mr. Peterson then spoke about th electric smelter et Great Falls, cited, the (act the cheap electricity made this plant noealbla and asked if It wer not fenaibl for Utah to mek usa of eomo ot tho many nf power sites within tho state Utah. He declared that there was no reason why the development of the upper basin s'tes should b delayed fifty years In order to give the Boulder Dam the right of wav. He Intimated that provision should have been attached to the bill to give Utah a power plant and help put Utah in tanks of theso states having cheap power. It was in answer to this that Mr. Wallace informed him that every avenue had been followed and that the Utah delegation In Congress would not hav permitted any such action. Mr. Wallace did not go further . than te nuke the bare statement, he left the rest up to tho minds of the hearers. Receipts Smaller At Warm Springs Receipts at Salt Lake's municipal bathe at the Warm Springs deIn 1929. as creased $4,153.03 compared with 1927, while the expenses Increased 91.971 .50, makIn ing a difference of 19,734.13 the red," City Auditor Alvin to Commissioner reported Charles N. Fehr. Friday. Th decrease In receipt waa attributed to a drop ot $5,091.59 in bath receipts for 1921 aa compared with th previous year. A major Increase In expenses was attributed to the installation of an automatic stoker costing 12.411.55, but by reason of the stoker there was a taring ef nearly 11.009 In the coal bill. The total receipts for 1923 were $19,917.99. aa compared with for 1127. Ths expenditures for 1921 wer $43,959.25. as compared with $41, "37. 41 for the previous year. Ked-dlngt- $44.-470.- 19 |