152 



SALMON FISHERIES OF PACIFIC COAST. 



Exports, by Customs Districts, of Domestic Pickled, Fresh, etc., 



1900 to 1910— Continued. 



Salmon, 



Customs districts from which exported. 



1906 



1907 



1908 



1909 



1910 



Atlantic ports: 



Baltimore, Md 



Bangor, Me 



Belfast, Me 



New York, N. Y 



Philadelphia, Pa 



Portland and Falmouth, Me. 

 Gulf ports: 



Mobile, Ala 



New Orleans, La 



Mexican border ports: 



Arizona 



Brazos de Santiago, Tex 



Paso del Norte, Tex 



Saluria, Tex 



Pacific ports: 



Alaska 



Puget Sound, Wash 



San Diego, Cal 



San Francisco, Cal 



Willamette, Oreg 



Hawaii 



Northern border and Lake ports: 



Buffalo Creek, N. Y 



Cape Vincent, N. Y 



Champlain, N. Y 



Detroit, Mich 



Duluth, Minn 



Huron, Mich 



Memphremagog, Vt 



Minnesota, Minn 



Montana and Idaho 



North and South Dakota 



Vermont, Vt 



$11 



$7 



Total . 



RECAPITULATION. 



Atlantic ports 



Gulf ports 



Mexican border ports 



Pacific ports 



Northern border and Lake ports . 



15 



1,781,330 



105 



15 



14 



1,786,105 



11,298 



1,590,757 



" *i4 



128 



$31 



58 



11 



1,230,436 



6 



700 



276 

 134 

 '290 



",< 



13 

 'l54 



80 



44,436 



63,626 



44 



31,500 



451 

 44,492 



28,984 



803 



14,370 



28 



29,112 



992 

 3,954 



92 

 4,333 

 1,972 



1,091 



11,677 



4 



37,305 



743 



14 



3,069 



1,359 

 1,667 



2,079 



42S 



284 



52 



92 



3 



L61 



45 



20 



1,387 



59 



154 



N.-.S 



1,927,464 



1,878,743 



1,648,044 



1,288,560 



1,781,476 



14 



788 



139,606 



5,580 



1,797,411 



276 



424 



73,927 



6,705 



1,590,778 



7,226 



167 



44,313 



5,560 



1,230,542 



49 



25 



50,834 



7,110 



$12 

 1,479,625 



197 



212 



22,666 



12 



27,628 



3 



598 

 "68 



1,419 



1,532,640 



1,479,656 



74 



202 



50,521 



2,187 



IMPORTS OF FRESH SALMON. 



For some years it was the custom of the canneries on Puget 

 Sound, when fish were scarce on the American side and abundant on 

 the Canadian side, to import fresh salmon to fill out the domestic 

 supply, and the Canadian canneries would do the same when the 

 conditions were reversed. In 1904 the Canadian Government pro- 

 hibited the export of fresh salmon to Puget Sound for packing pur- 

 poses, and in 1910 an effort was made to have Congress retaliate by 

 enacting a similar law for this side of the line, but the bill failed of 

 passage. The reciprocity agreement with Canada now before Congress 

 provides for the free entry of fresh fish and would permit the can- 

 neries of either country to import salmon as they wished. This 

 agreement, if adopted, will undoubtedly be of considerable impor- 

 tance to the Puget Sound canneries in securing full packs in certain 

 poor years. 



