200 
this area, not to exceed, however, $5,000, and if the Territory 
would pnt up $5,000 there would be altogether $10,000 to be ex- 
pended for this purpose. 
A discussion followed as to the details of this arrangement, it 
finally resulting in the request to the Superintendent of Forestry 
to take this matter up with Mr. Carter and report back to the 
Executive Officer. 
It was then voted that the Board authorize the expenditure 
from the money set aside for the fencing and tree planting on 
the Kohala Mountain a sum not to exceed $5,000 for tree plant- 
ing above Waimea village, on condition that the Parker Ranch 
expend an equal amount in cooperation. 
Mr. Hosmer submitted the manuscript of Mr. Louis Mar- 
golin’s report together with a letter recommending its publica- 
tion as a bulletin. No action was taken. 
ANIMAL INDUSTRY. 
It was voted that a salary of $50 per month, beginning May 1, 
1910, be alloted Dr. John C. Fitzgerald, the Deputy Territorial 
Veterinarian for the District of Maui. 
MILK ORDINANCE. 
The Board considered the Milk Ordinance and directed the 
Territorial Veterinarian to continue his work in the investiga- 
tion of the prevalence of tuberculosis among the dairy cattle of 
Honolulu and vicinity with a view to obtaining data upon which 
to base regulations. 
A meeting of the Board of Commissioners of Agriculture and 
Forestry was held in the Board room, at the Capitol, on Tuesday, 
June 7, 1910, at 2 p. m. 
Present — ^IMarston Campbell, President and Executive Officer; 
IMessrs. J. M. Dowsett and Albert Waterhouse, members; Alex- 
ander Lindsay, Jr., Attorney General of Hawaii; Dr. V. A. 
Norgaard, Territorial Veterinarian, and Dr. R. Glaisyer, until 
recently a veterinary inspector of the U. S. Bureau of Animal 
Industry. 
ANIMAL INDUSTRY. 
A discussion followed regarding the Territorial Veterinarian’s 
work of investigating the prevalence of tuberculosis among the 
dairy cattle in the Territory. Attorney General Lindsay stated 
the County had passed an ordinance that all cows must be kept 
clean ; that the Board of Health had power to have removed all 
filth and sources of sickness, and that the Board of Agriculture 
and Forestry had the power to condemn and to destroy cattle, 
when in the opinion of the Territorial Veterinarian there is dan- 
