360 



Total Oahu Hawaii Maui Molokai Kauai 

 Articles: 



Lemons 418 418 



Limes 2357 707 1300 .. 350 



Oranges 4896 460 4436 



Papaia, pounds 66 66 



Peppers, sacks 1 1 



Pigs, dressed 9 . . 9 



Pineapples, pounds ....1720 1720 



Pohas, pounds 1158 . . 1158 



Potatoes, white, sweets 



sacks 149 149 



Pumpkins 112 109 3 



Taro flour, pounds 30 30 



Turkeys 12 6 . . . . 6 



Tomatoes, pounds 940 940 



Veal, dressed, carcasses 25 6 2 16 1 , . 



Yams, red, sacks 10 10 



How the work of the Forest Service was realigned to meet 

 war conditions is described in the annual report of the Forester, 

 made by acting Forester A. F. Potter. The report also states 

 that practically every form of use of the forests was greater than 

 ever before, that the receipts again touched a new high level with 

 a total of $3,457,028.41, and that the increase in receipts over the 

 previous year was $633,487.70. 



Under the provisions of the national forest section of the Fed- 

 eral Aid Road Act approximately $1,410,000 of Federal Aid road 

 money is available during the next ten years, at the rate of 

 $141,000 a year, for the construction of roads and trails within 

 the national forests of California. In each case, under the 

 terms of the Act, the road funds must be derived partly from 

 local sources. 



A 14-lb. Christmas box for each member of the Forest Service 

 from California in France with the 10th Engineers, the Lumber- 

 jack and Forestry regiment, was shipped from the San Francisco 

 office of the Forest Service. Each box contains candy, tobacco, 

 cigarettes, toilet articles, raisins and dates, a pipe, deck of playing 

 cards, a book, and a waterproof match safe. These boxes are be- 

 ing sent by former associates of the men in the Forest regiment. 



The yucca plant or Spanish bayonet, common in the hills of 

 southern California, is 'now being used for the manufacture of 

 brooms. Another species of the yucca is used for the manufac- 

 ture of 'surgeons' splints, and is being experimented with for 

 use as artificial limbs. 



The common manzanita bush, grown everywhere in California, 

 may be of value in dye-making. A carload of stems and roots 



