Hate QfoUege of Agriculture Stifuta, ^. B. Cornell University Library HA 372 1915 Census of Iowa for the year 1915, comp. 3 1924 013 753 599 . :nsi ill The original of tiiis book is in tine Cornell University Library. There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text. http://www.archive.org/details/cu31924013753599 Census of Iowa FOR THE YEAR 1915 Compiled and Published under Direction of The Executive Council of the State of Iowa GEORGE W. CLARKE, Governor WILLIAM S. ALLEN, Secretary of State WILLIAM C. BROWN, Treasurer of State FRANK S. SHAW, Auditor of State Members Executive Council. A. U. SWAN, Census I^fanager. ORA WILLIAMS, Census Editor. DES MOINES KOBSRT HENDERSON, STATE PRINTER J. M. JAMIESON. STATE BINDER CERTIFICATE. State of Iowa, Office of Secretary of State. In accordance with the provisions of Section 176 of the Supplement to the Code, 1913, I, W. S. Allen, Secretary of State of the State of Iowa, hereby certify that this volume of the Census of Iowa for 1915 includes the publication required by law. In testimony whereof, I have hereunto set my hand and affixed the official seal of the Secretary of State of the State of Iowa. Done at Des Moines, the capital of the State, this third day of January, A. D. 1916. Signed, (SEAL) Secretary of State. PREFACE. The Census of Iowa 1915 is herein published by the Executive Coun- cil. The facts were gathered and reported by the assessors at the time of the regular assessment as of January 1, 1915. There is reason to believe the enumeration is by far the most complete ever made, and that the statistics not only as to characteristics of population but as to agricultural and other industries are accurate and reliable. Much information is given other than that derived from the enumera- tion, especially as to business and commercial affairs, manufactures and mining, educational matters, revenues and expenditures, public and private property, and all the larger activities of 'the people. The in- formation as to land and land values, farm crops and live stock, sup- plements the tables which have been compiled in other years and makes a continuing record of progress. So far as it has been possible to do so there has been careful comparison of the statistics for this year with similar information gathered in the past, and the analysis and discus- sion of the results have been with a view to showing the general trend of things and the changing conditions of life and of business. The enumeration for the first time included an inquiry Into the extent of education of the whole body of the people, and this happily confirms the claim of very ' high rank for Iowa in edupational standing and sustains the showing that only 1 per cent of the people are to be classed as illiterate. Analysis of the population statistics indicates that Iowa has enjoyed a steady expansion of population, as well as of increase of prosperity, this expansion continuing with only slight variation through all the decades; and if the record has appeared to show a general decline at certain periods, this has been more apparent than real. The charts and maps present graphically the changing relations of different groups of the population, especially as to general nativity and as to residence in the cities and towns or in rural communities. The general supervision of the collection and tabulation of the sta- tistics secured from the assessors and the careful preparation of the tables of enumeration and of agriculture have been under Mr. A. U. Swan, assistant secretary of the Executive Council; while the com- pilation of the miscellaneous statistics and the analysis of tables with comparisons have been done by Mr. Ora "Williams, state document editor. In the preparation of the book the policy has been followed of ad- hering closely to the statutory requirements as to the inquiry, but with emphasis on the things of greatest general interest, and to build upon the well laid foundation embodied in previous reports. Much new and valuable material has been added which the Executive Council has deemed worthy of a place in the records. fl s s^ §1, O O » 30.9 570 35.9 570 24.3 669 39.5 691 33.2 427 41.7 468 29.7 431 30.1 430 27.1 683 32.0 632 32.6 730 37.6 431 39.2 610 44.8 POPULATION BY COUNTIES xui Population s e. es a Population Per Mile Counties 03 a 03 « s 19,142 21,225 24,200 38,101 70,153 12,912- 16,120 1&,362 15,394 29,314 23,972 32,994 14,916 14,435 17,37a 25,906 17,297 28,663 18,682 10,169 24,773 14,965 23,767 15,635 129,121 56,896 19,965 13,280 17,089 65,645 16,692 25,340 25,787 22,806 16,549 17,168 14,907 37,980 18,277 20,004 16,243 38,811 13,564 22,238 82,315 11,188 19,664 8,061 8,969 8,519 26,632 62,774 5,302 6,908 6,807 5,122 14,050 10,291 20,366 6,982 6,654 6,362 e,2S7 9,486 19,804 8,939 3,663 13,751 6,014 9,968 8,347 112,648 381(666 9,460 4,434 7,309 52,980 ©,734 10,287 15,096 9,882 6,481 10,198 5,454 26,632 6,575 8,687 7,246 25,598 8,669 7,247 68,387 3,641 10,389 11,082 12,256 15,681 11,469 17,379 7,610 8,212 9,565 10,272 15,264 13,681 12,639 7,934 7,781 11,016 19,649 7.811 8,869 9,643 6,506 11,022 8,951 13,799 10,288 16,473 18,330 10,515 8,846 9,730 12,665 10,958 15,053 10,691 12,924 10,068 6,970 9,453 11,448 11,702 11,417 8,997 13,213 7,896 14,901 13,928 7,647 9,265 569 578 973 511 709 398 432 582 563 668 663 572 438 463 686 432 424 482 669 3se 631 561 856 576 682 942 680 540 674 449 689 760 567 720 634 427 477 428 570 569 524 714 399 686 864 399 575 33.6 36.7 24.8 74.5 98.9 32.6 35.0 26.3 27.3 51.6 42.6 57.6 34.0 31.1 26.3 69.9 40.7 66.3 %.4 25.7 46.6 26.6 27.7 27.1 221.8 60.3 34.4 24.5 29.6 146.2 28.3 33.8 45.4 31.6 30.9 40.2 31.2 88.7 32.0 36.7 30.9 64.3 33.9 32.4 95.2 28.0 34.1 19.4 Keokuk — - — 21.2 Kossuth Lee — 16.1 22.4 Linn _ _ 24.5 Louisa - Lucas - 19.2 19.0 16.4 Hadison — - 18.2 Mahaska Z6.8 Marion 24.3 Marshall - 22.0 Mills 18.1 Mitchell Monona _ Monroe 16.8 16.0 45.4 18.4 O'Briein 20.5 16.9 16.4 Page -- 20.7 Palo Alto Plymouth _ 15.9 16.1 19.5 Polk „ .- 28.3 Pottawattamie . 19.4 18.1 16.3 Sao - - 16.9 28.8 Shelby 18.6 19.8 Story 18.8 Tama -- 17.9 Taylori __ Union^ -- 18.8 16.3 19.8 Wapello - 26.7 Warren __ — 20.5 20.4 Wayne - 17.1 19.3 19.7 21.8 Woodbury 16.1 19.1 Wright 18.1 xiv CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 rms- — im — ieSs — m — ^r CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915. The State of Iowa, which came into the Union as the twenty- ninth State sixty-eight years ago, with 56,147 square miles of terri- tory, has a population of 2,358,066. Herein is made of public record the essential facts regarding the people, and their activities in the direction of securing comfort, happiness and prosperity for themselves and their descendants. It ig more than a listing of inhabitants. Much material is included that will afford a basis for comparisons relating to the past and the future of the State and its people. After what is now Iowa had been definitely located on the maps, 160 years elapsed before the civilized world decided that it was a good place for home making, and even then mining and trading continued for thirty years before the first school was opened. It was fifteen years after the Louisiana territory had been secured at a rare bargain before pioneer cabins broke the landscape on the west side of the big river on Iowa soil. But after the first sod had been turned to the sunlight, barely a dozen years sufficed to lay the foundations of a state and there was temporizing only eight years with a territorial government. In the second quarter of the Nineteenth century the frontiersmen of Iowa wrought an amazing miracle by turning the hunting grounds and the battle fields of the Indians into farms and orchards and open- ing the way for Christian civilization with schools and churches and colleges and newspapers. Before the century was half done home making was a reality for 200,000 sturdy people gathered from all parts of the world and engaged in conquest of the forests and prairies of Iowa. Progress has been sure and steady in all the essentials of civili- zation. The needs of the people in government were met with only two counties when the territory was organized. Eight years later the state was organized with twenty-eight counties. The functions of state government were assumed on the meager allow- ance of $7,452.42 for the first year. Schools and colleges and churches had already been provided by the people and courts of justice had been set up to meet all disputes; and soon there was established the various institutions for the wayward, the defectives, the criminal, and the unfortunates. CENSUS OP IOWA, 1915 The state makers put aside their zeal for early statehood long enough to resist the effort of a short sighted congress to give Iowa boundaries out of harmony with the geography of the land, and they found later they could do better than was done in the making of the first state constitution, for after 11 years a new one was framed which has sufficed with frequent patching. The geography of the State was finished in 1857 with ninety-nine counties marked off and the capitol located permanently. COMPONENT PARTS OP POPULATION. There was a net gain of 148,016 in the population of the State since the last state census ten years ago, or a gain of 6.7 per cent. As compared with the federal census of five years ago the gain was 133,295, or 6V2 per cent. Principal items of the enumeration for 1915 are: Enumeration 1915 Per Cent Increase or Decrease Ten Years Entire population — In places 1,000 and over... Urban population ..- Sural population Native bom persons Foreign bom persons Persons bom in Iowa Colored persons Males ot jnilitia age Males eligible to vote Persons under school age-. Parsons of school age Persons over school age . ,212,988 498,956 [,061,440 151,548 780,509 8,932 509,421 884,939 120,958 371,896 720,134 1,145,078 601,702 1,032,467 112,621 771,405 7,812 116,802 365,029 663,247 2,858,066 1,000,658 1,277,960 1,080,116 2,093,897 264,169 1,551,914 16,744 609,421 6S4,939 237,760 736,926 1,383,381 7.1 25.0 6.2 22.2 8.7 —2.7 12.6 11.7 8.6 -11.1 12.4 14.3 ■ 1.8 —1.4 13.2 1.6 —1.9 11.0 6.7 23.6 19.5 —5.3 8.6 —6.3 12.4 12.9 10.5 7.7 1.7 —1.7 12.8 POPULATION AT VARIOUS ENUMERATIONS. Following the first taking possession of the land for agricultural purposes in 1833 there was a great rush across the river and when Iowa territory was severed from all else in 1838 the count showed 22,859 persons in a narrow strip along the Mississippi river. When statehood came in 1846 there were 102,388. The expansion of popu- lation is shown in the following table, in which is given the total population at the several territorial, state and federal enumera- tions, with the annual increase per 1,000 of population: POPULATION CHANGES xvil Census a .9 +2 3 g 2 Census 1 03 3 03 a 1838 - 22,869 43,112 75,162 102,388 116,464 164,673 192,214 206,135 229,909 326,600 617,875 642,578 674,913 701,093 '"'443' 186 181 137 172 243 67 121 210 293 88 60 13 1865 756,209 902,317 1,045,205 1,194,020 1,251,340 1,350,653 1,624,615 1,753,980 1,911,896 2,068,069 2,231,863 2,210.050 2,224,771 2,358,066 39 1840 . 1867 96 1844 1869 79 1846 1870 - 142 1847 _ - 1873 - -- 16 1849 -- -- -- 1875 36 1860 18i80 44 1851 - - .- 188B 16 1852 1890 18 1864 1895 16 1856 1900 - 17 1869 3905 —2 1860 1910 1 1863 . „ 1915 12 GENERAL CHANGES IN TOTAL POPU!LATION. Analysis of the statistics now for the first time fully available is convincing that while the growth of population has not been as great in recent years as in the era of cheap land, there has been no decade, nor any 5-year period, without some increase in the aggre- gate population of the State. The last five reports of the State census count shows total popu- lation and increase as follows: Increase. Year 1875, population reported 1,350,553 Year 1885, population reported 1,753,980 403,327 Year 1896, population reported 2,068,069 304,089 Year 1905, population reported 2,210,050 151,981 Year 1915, population reported 2,358,0&6 148,016 The gradual decline but not entire disappearance of population expansion accords well with common observation. Comparing four United States Census enumerations the follow- ing result is obtained : > 'Increase. Year 1880, population reported 1,624,615 Year 1890, population reported 1,911,896 287,281 Year 1900, population reported 2,231,853 319,959 Year 1910, population reported 2,224,771 *7,082 The increase in the 1870-80 decade was 430,275. Taking the figures as a whole, the result does not fully harmonize with the more even transition of the State census figures. If it should be assumed that the U. S. Census report for 1900 was too large by say 100,000, and that of 1910 too small by say 75,000, and computation be made on this basis, the figures showing increase by decades would appear: '430,275, 287,281, 219,959 and 167,918. ♦Decrease. xviil CENSUS OP IOWA, 1915 The State Census is taken by the regular local assessors, at the time of property assessment; the United States Census is taken by enumerators paid according to the number of names reported. If the comparison is by five-year periods, alternating the State and United States enumerations, the result displays an irregularity the explanation for which is not easily found, and this is all the more emphasized by the fact of a comparatively large increase in the past five years. Again assuming that the count of 1900 was 100,000 too large and that of 1910 75,000 too small, and making a table of comparisons showing the population and change each five-year period as indi- cated by the record, and adding a column to show what would be the record if the change suggested was made, we have this result : Record Probable Increase Increase or or Year and Census Population Decrease Decrease State 1875 1,350,553 U. S. 1880 1,624,615 274,062 274,062 State 1885 1,753,980 127,365 127,365 U. S. 1890 1,911,896 157,916 157,916 State 1895 2,058,069 146,173 146,173 U. S. 1900 2,231,853 173,784 73,784 State 1905 2,210,050 *21,803 78,197 U. S. 1910 2,224,771 14,721 89,721 State 1915 2^58,066 133,295 58,795 The column of "probable increase or decrease" is given without any pretense of information on which to base the assumption, but to show how the change proposed would give a result very much more in harmony with known facts. If comparison is made as to the changes in county population, divided as between urban and -rural, the evidence is that there has been an increase in the total population of the State each five-year period, and that nearly all the recorded loss of rural population is accounted for by transfer to the cities and towns. Villages are counted as rural but when in- corporated go over to the urban population. The sudden loss of population which is indicated by the record and then unaccountable expansion of population more recently seems to be more apparent than real. POPULATION AND WEALTH. Expansion of private wealth has kept pace with increase of population. A comparison by decades, showing the assessment fixed for taxation purposes, affords a basis for comparison as fol- lows : •Decrease. EXPANSION IN GENERAL xix Population Year Assessment 102,388 1846 $ 9,939,221 517,875 1856 164,394,413 756,209 1865 215,063,401 1,360,653 1875 395,423,140 1,753,980 1885 488,953,127 2,058,069 1895 559,650,824 2,210,050 1905 2,490,954,700' 2,358,066 1916 4,055,607,770 IOWA EXPANSION IN ALL. THINGS. In all things needful to society there has been going forward steadily in Iowa and a wholesome expansion of the functions of government. Industrial development which was first directed to mining later grew to large proportions in agriculture and then commerce and manufacturing followed. The State manifests pa- ternal interest in agriculture and all industry, encourages business, safeguards health, provides for the public security, and maintains schools, libraries, museums, parks and playgrounds. There are twenty-one State institutions devoted to the higher education of the youth, the care and comfort of dependents, the relief of the afflicted or the punishment of offenders. Courts are presided over by fifty-nine district judges with an appellate bench of seven justices. Highway administration has been unified under an effective state commission. Over 27,000 teachers are annually certificated for the public schools. The proportion of adult persons is 58.7 per cent as against 55.5 per cent ten years ago. The increase or decrease of population according to age classes in the ten years was as follows : Inc. 1905 1915 or Dec. Population under 5 years of age 233,843 237,760 3,917 Five years and under 10 years 242,364 240,779 —1,585 Ten years and under 18 years 373,309 357,381 —15,928 Eighteen years and under 21 years 133.823 138,765 4,942 Twenty-one and under 45 years 774,899 856,373 81,474 Forty-five years and over 451,812 527,008 75,196 There was a decrease in the ten years in the persons of school age. There has been an increase in the number of persons over school age and under school age. The decrease in number of per- sons of ages 5 to 18 inclusive was 17,513. The increase of persons aged 21 and over was 156,670. Of those 18 to 21 years old there was an increase of 4,942. It is plain that the average age of the people residing in Iowa is greater now than it was. More than half the population of the state is 21 years of age or more, and there XX CENSUS OP IOWA, 1915 has been an increase of over 12 per cent in the adults at the same time as a decrease of .8 per cent in the younger persons. Iowa is one of the most American of the states. The persons native born comprise 88.8 per cent of the population. Ten years ago the proportion was 87.2 per cent. The foreign born number 11.2 per cent. More than a half million of the Iowa people were bom in Iowa. The proportion of married persons is increasing and now is 41.5 per cent as against 38.8 per cent in 1905. There are fifteen cities of the first class and ninety of the second class, and 788 incorporated towns. There are nine cities or towns for each county and one for every fifty-one square miles. There is one for every 1,200 persons on adjacent farms. The percentage of urban population is 54.1 as against 48.8 ten years ago. Illiteracy is indicated by 1 per cent. Ten years ago the percent- age was 1.5 per cent. There is expended for each person enrolled in school or college $45 annually. There is an ungraded or rural school for every ninety of rural , population. There were 519,814 persons who attended school or college in 1914 and the average public school attendance was 391,132. In institutions of higher education there were enrolled 20,275 students, or one for each thirty-five persons between the ages of fifteen and thirty years. ■ Newspapers or other periodicals are published one for each 2,350 of population. There are 245 free public and other general libraries, with over 3,350,000 volumes. Railroad mileage is 10,493, or one mile for each 224 persons and one mile for each five and a third square miles. An average of about $13 a year for each person is paid for insur- ance ; and the death and fire losses amount to about 48 per cent of the premiums. There is one bank for 1,800 inhabitants, on an average, with $350 in deposits for each adult person. Banking capital increased in ten years by 50 per cent and deposits doubled in the same time. Revenues available for public . purposes amount to over $25 per person annually. COUNTIES AND POPULATION xxl The people at the State have a permanent investment in property devoted to public uses of $75 for each inhabitant. The State owns 12,773 acres of land occupied and used for State purposes. There are 336,012 homes owned by the occupants. For every 1,000 married couples there are 680 who occupy homes which they own. The actual market value of privately owned property foots up about $2,761 per capita. Over six and a half billion dollars worth of property is situated in the State. The births in the State average 37,467 a year and the deaths 20,020 ; or, in other words, the deaths are but 58.7 per cent of the births. The average annual rainfall in Iowa is 31.97 inches, of which 71 per cent falls in the crop months. Iowa farms average 164 acres each in extent, and they are re- ported by the farmers as worth, including land, buildings, machin- ery and live stock, $22,043.80 each. More than 59 per cent of the farmers own all or a part of the land they cultivate. Iowa farm land averages more than $107 to the acre in actual value. Farm crops were valued at $437,225,662 for 1914, and manufac- tured products $310,954,000. The coal mined in 1914 was worth $13,364,070. The schools, the churches, the newspapers, the railroads, the market centers, the manufacturing areas, are in close proximity, and there is a more even distribution of population among all the counties of the state than in any other state of the union. COUNTIES AND POPULATION. There has been no change in the number or in the boundaries of the counties of Iowa since the Constitution of 1857 was adopted. The county of largest land area is Kossuth with 973 square miles, and the smallest is the adjoining county of Dickinson with 376 square miles. The county of largest population is Polk with 129,121 population, and the county of smallest population is Dick- inson with 9,465. In 1870, there were seventeen counties with either no nonulatiou or less than 2.000 each. CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 COUNTY AREA AND DENSITY . _ xxiii The center of papulation in Iowa is now but a few miles from the geographical center of the State, arguing an even disposition of the population throughout the entire state. There is, perhaps, no other state with the center of population and the geographical center so nearly at the same point. The fact of comparatively even and uniform conditions in Iowa as affecting population is shown by the joumeyings of the center of population. This has been worked out by the Federal Census Bureau. The chart shows that in 1880 the center of population in Iowa was on the south line of Marshall county, 1.8 miles south of the town of Laurel ; by 1890 the center had moved 5.2 miles north and a little to the west ; by 1900 it had shifted 14.1 miles to the west to a point 2.6 miles northeast by east ©f Collins in Story coun- ty. In 1910 it was computed to be 4.8 miles southeast of Colo in Story county, only 2.3 miles from its location of ten years before. In the thirty years the center of population had moved only about seventeen miles. The ninety-nine counties are all agricultural counties and the rural population is well distributed among them. There is no county with a total population density below eighteen to the square mile. There are only eight other states with similar record. In Missouri there are eight counties with less than 18 to the mile ; in Minnesota 27; in Nebraska 52; in Kansas 56; in Wisconsin 14; in South Dakota all but 12 ; in Colorado all but 4. The rural popu- lation in certain counties is large because of the presence in those counties of large camps of miners, who live outside of incorporated towns. The counties of largest and smallest land area, in square miles, and greatest density of total and rural population, are shown in the accompanying table. COUNTY AREA AND DENSITY. Largest Area Smallest "Area Total Density Eural Density Kossuth 973 Dickinson S76 Polk 221.8 Monroe .. 46.4 Pottawattamie - !H2 Emmet 393 Scott 146.2 Scott 28.8 Woodbury 864 Osceola 305 Dubuque 101.4 Polk 28.3 Plymouth fW Louisa SS)6 Linn 98.9 Appanoose 27.5 Clayton _ 762 Worth — - 389 Woodbury 95.2 Mahaska 26.8 Sioux 7fifl Winnebago .399 Black Hawk .. 94.6 Wapello .. 26.7 Jasper 730 Des Moines 409 Wapello 88.7 Linn- 24.5 Payette - 724 Montgomery ... an Des Moines 87.1 Marion _. 24.3 Tama — 7!!0 Union - 427 Lee 74.5 Boone 23.3 Webster 714 Wapello 428 Clinton 66.3 Muscatine 66.3 Henry -. 23.0 xxiv CENSUS OP IOWA, 1915 The population of the State is divided as between those residing in incorporated places and those outside of cities and towns so it is found that 54.1 per cent live in the cities and towns and 45.8 per cent outside. Ten years ago, there were only 48.8 per cent of urban population and some time within the decade the urban population passed the total of rural population. The accompanying table shows the relations between the urban and rural population for a series of years. URBAN AND EUEAL POPDLATION. Tear Number o OS Urban Rural t-l u 1890 1895 1900 1905 1910 1915 1,911,896 700,162 2,058,069 871,744 2,231,853 973,178 2,210,050 1,067,936 2,224,771 1,U8,769 2,358,066 1,277,950 1,211,734 1,186,295 1,258,676 1,142,114 1,106,002 1,080, lie 42.4 13.6 48.8 60.2 54.1 24.5 11.8 9.7 4.7 14.2 63.3 57.6 .56.4 61.2 49.7 46.8 —2.0 6.1 —9.2 — S.l —2.2 Minus sign indicates decrease. There are 105 cities in the State and these cities are located in eighty-nine counties of the State, leaving ten counties without any cities of first or second class. The rural population of the counties in which the fifteen cities of the first class are located showed a. net decrease in ten years of 8,630; the rural population of the ten counties having no cities showed a net decrease in the ten years of 5,573. The accompanying table shows the counties of greatest increase of population in ten yeafs and those of greatest decrease and the amount of such increase or decrease. POPULATION CHANGES TEN TEAES. Increase Total Population Increase Urban Population Increase Rural Population Polk 32,171 Woodbury 21,456 Black Hawk __ 16,852 Linn — 12,791 Ccrro Gordo 10,200 Scott _ 9,735 Webster 5,386 Pottawattamie 5,029 Mahaska 4,499 Appanoose 3,336 Polk 31,709 Woodbury 21,589 Black Hawk 16,312 Linn _.1S,713 Scott 10,444 Oerro Gordo _ 10,018 Webster 6,674 Pottawattamie 6,614 Marshall _ 4,438 Clinton 4,426 Lyon 1,101 Kossuth 945 Osceola 643 Bioux 601 Black Hawk 540 Hancock 5,% Polk 462 Buena Vista 387 Winnebago 375 Monona 353 POPULATIOX MOVEMENT XXV Decrease Decrease Total Population Urban Population 2,116 .- 1,054 .. 1,022 Des Moines 1,816 Union Van Buren _ 1,658 Des Moines 943 Jackson 1,806 Van Buren 626 Clayton 1,605 Keokuk 393 Union 1,498 Adams 183 Keokuk 1,442 Clarke 83 Madison 1,313 Jones __ „__ 81 Warren 1,298 Ringgold . 54 Jones _- __ 1,284 Decrease Rural Population Mahaska — 2,929 Clayton _— 2,665 Jackson 1,841 Davis - - — 1,750 Warren 1,684 Johnson __ 1.638 Jefferson - 1,612 Crawford 1,546 Pottawattamie -- 1,485 Dubuque 1,483 MOVEMENT OF POPULATION BY DISTRICTS. The population divided by Congressional districts shows a con- tinuation of the tendency to a wide divergence in the population of the respective districts of the State. When the census of 1885 was taken, the district of smallest population had 143,221 and the one of largest population had 186,621. Now, the most populous district has 279,532 and the least populous district has 156,309. The most populous district of the State made the greatest gain in total population in the ten years, while the district of least popu- lation made the greatest decrease of population in the ten years. Three of the districts lost population in the ten years — the First, Sixth and Eighth districts. Marked gains were made in the Third, Seventh and Eleventh districts. All of the districts of the State show an increase of the residents of cities and towns, the Seventh district showing the greatest in- crease in this respect, followed closely by the Eleventh. The popu- lation of the districts in 1885 was as follows : First District 149,818 Second District 169,012 Third District 186,621 Fourth District 162,626 Fifth District 161,570 Sixth District 147,209 Seventh District 147,013 Eighth District 167,890 Ninth District 171,694 Tenth District 161,883 Eleventh District 143,221 The following is the population movement in ten years in the different Congressional districts of the State, the minus sign in- vlicating loss of population: CENSUS OP IOWA, 1915 CITIES AND TOWNS xxvii CITIES AND TOWNS. The urban population of Iowa is 1,277,950, resident in 893 incor- porated places. This is two more than an average of nine to a county. The legal status of these incorporated places divides them into three classes, namely: Cities of the first class, having 15,000 or more population; cities of the second class, with 2,000 population or less than 15,000 ; towns, which have less than 2,000 population. There are fifteen cities of the first class and ninety of the second class, a total of 105; there are 788 incorporated towns of which 103 have more than 1,000 population; 220 have between 500 and 1,000, and 465 have less than 500 population. There were, in 1905, 790 incorporated places reported. Of these, eleven were cities of the first class, eighty-three cities of the second class and 696 towns. During the decade there were added to the list of incorporated towns 106, and three were abandoned, making a net increase of 103 in the incorporated places of the State. The present census raises four cities of the second class to cities of the first class, and also gives eight towns legal status as cities of the second class. There are, however, five cities of the second class with population now less than 2,000, having lost population but not classification. The following table shows the three classes of incorporated places with number of each and population now and ten years ago. CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 GROWlTH OP CITIES XXIX 1915 1905 Class ol Places No. Population No. Population Cities First Class Cities Second Class _ .._. 15 90 788 519,224 345,475 418,251 11 83 686 353,719 Towns 376,501 Total Urban „ 8M 1.^1,SS0 799 l,0Crt,9SB The accompanying table shows the number of cities and towns with total urban population, also the population divided as between cities of 2,500 and over and cities and towns of smaller population, for each of four enumerations. 1900 1905 1910 191S Number cities and towns__- __ 684 790 837 893 Cities 2,500 and over __ Places under 2,600. _ 572,386 400,792 831,605 436,331 680,054 438,716 814,977 462,973 Total Urban. ms,m l,067,9Se 1,118,769 l,Zn,950 GROWTH OF THE CITIES. A comparison of urban population as shown by the last three enumerations will show the relative growth of incorporated places of different sizes. The accompanying table gives a classification of cities and towns, according to the last census, with statistics show- ing the population of the same groups of cities and towns five and ten years ago. The fifteen cities that are now organized as cities of the first class show an increase from what they were ten years ago of 116,130. The eleven that were then cities of the first class had a population of 353,719. The cities that are now cities of the second class had a population ten years ago 43,017 less than now. The net increase of urban population by reason of incorporation of new towns was 20,628 in ten years. There were 106 towns in- corporated with a population of 21,330, and three towns gave up their corporate existence, having had ten years ago a population of 702. The towns that had 362,384 population in 1905 now have 392,764, an increase of 30,380. The general rule appears to be that the cities of the first class are erowine the most rapidly. CENSUS OF IOWA; 1915 SnHLINOIOH 1° 1.88S 1.890 1906- 3.885- ■OOOTCIL BtOFi- 3 L885- 1890- 1.895- 1.800- l9oS- 1915 HATERMO 1885 • L890 1.895—— 19o5- L910- OEDAH RAPIDS I.88S. L910- DUBUQUE 1885 1.890 190S 1910 1915 nAVESPORT 188 C 191P— — — — 1913- SIODX OIW 1900 19oS' ■ ' 1910 1915 DIS HOMES* 1885 1890 1895' 1908 1905 1910' 1015 To] OUIES ;i£st ClaBB . Con^iaratlTre a*oirtli In Thirty Idars Length of lines Indicate Fopulationi In the .years named 1890- 1895 191 5 KOSCATISE 1800- 19o&- 1910- 191 5 MAJiSKALLIOIlI 188 5 ■ 1880 189 5 1900- 1905- 1910- 1915- leaa lo 1885- MASON OITI 188S— 1890 1695-— 1900 190 5 1910 191 FORT DODGE 1885— 1895—— 1900- 1905- 1910- -=1915- OTTUTflKA 1885 191S- OOO ' I ..SOx'OOO GROWTH OF CITIES URBAN POPULATION GROWTH. XXXJ Cities or Towns Population 1915 Same Places 1910 1905 Cities of First aass Cities ol Second Class Towns 1,000 and over. Towns 500 to 1,000- - Towns under 600. New towns Total cities and towns. 619,224 346,475 864,699 135,969 150,5U 106,294 20,487 413,251 1,^11,950 446,760 306,726 753.4S6 121,848 135,154 108,281 1,U8,769 403,094 302,458 706.561! 123,675 188,610 100,199 362,384 i.oev.BSO The accompanying table in which cities are classified according to size for purpose of comparison shows that the cities of 25,000 or over now contain 30.4 per cent of the total urban population as compared with 22.4 per cent in 1900. While there are 465 towns under 500 population in the State, they contain only 9.7 per cent of the entire urban population. URBAN POPULATION CLASSIFIED. Groups of Cities o 'SSS II a. 2 ■S5 ■H O Is It III o a (^ 13 P4 1900 6 218,260 22.4 1905 7 277,624 26. 69,366 27.2 mo 8 330,091 29.6 52,467 18.8 1916 8 888,913 30.4 58,822 17.8 Places 8,000 to 26,000... 1900 1905 166,466 170,819 16.1 13 16. 14,363 9.2 1910 10 155,478 13.8 —15,346 —8.9 1915 11 174,589 13.7 19,116 12.8 Places 4,000 to 8,000 1900 1905 16 17 81,764 80,284 8 4 7.6 —1,231 —1.6 1910 21 104,477 9.3 24,243 30.2 1915 27 146,779 11.4 41,302 39.5 Places 2,600 to 4,000 . 1900 37 115,907 11.9 . 1905 33 108,933 9.6 —12,964 —11.2 1910 31 92,261 8.2 -10,6^ —10.3 191B 36 105,696 8.3 13,445 14.5 CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 URBAN POPULATION CLASSIFIED— Continued. Groups of Cities a W p a O O as 3 P. 1 a. 2 B a a ecorah _ - 11.9 Vinton 19.7 Maquoketa — Missouri Valley 6.7 11.8 Iowa Palls 32.8 4.7 Belle Plaine 17.5 Algona — — Waverly 23.5 11.1 Knoxville - 11. Indianola - . 6.4 Denlson _ _ 10.2 SheldO'n 12.9 Glenwood — -18.7 20.3 30. Jefferson 26. iManchester Pella _ 34.2 2.4 17.6 IS. 5 1.4 9.9 5.3 Osage -- 13.6 81.1 Eldora 36.3 12.3 Mystic 1.2 26.S 17.1 18.8 14.4 3.2 23.6 Sac Olty - — Bloomfleld 14.5 12. XXXVl CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 Between 1905 Between 1910 Population 1910 and 1910 Population 1913 and 1915 Name of City ^ Si S 4> S^ P s g S" g a flH S fn Lake City ___ 2,043 —279 —12. 2,224 la 8.8 Onawa 2,026 —34 —1.5 2,210 184 9. Leon 1,991 —36 —1.7 2.199 208 10.4 Tipton 2,048 -77 —3.6 2.176 128 6.2 Wauion 2,025 —11 — .6 2,168 143 7. 2,043 -113 —5.2 2,159 116 5.6 Seymour 2,290 227 11. 2,146 —144 —6.2 Villisca 2,039 —141 —6.4 2,182 93 4.6 Sigourney 2,082 68 3.4 2,109 77 3.8 Ida Grove 1,874 —156 -7.6 2,090 216 11.5 Hawarden 2,107 88 4.3 2,046 62 2.9 Marengo 1,786 —286 —13.8 2,037 251 14. Bock Bapids 2,005 226 12.7 2,081 26 1.2 Eldon 2,024 —283 -12.4 2.030 725 38.3 Bedford 1,883 —113 —5.6 1,941 67 S.B Coming 1,702 —241 -12.4 1.884 1S2 10.6 Stuart 1,826 —220 -12. 1.849 23 1.2 What Cheer 1,720 —811 -32. 1.805 86 4.9 Toledo 1,628 -198 —12.1 1,721 96 5.8 Audubon 1,928 164 9.3 2,084 166 8. Forest City — 1,691 28 1.5 2,135 444 26.2 Hamburg 1,817 30 1.6 2,204 387 21.8 1,809 172 10.5 2.061 252 13.9 Total Second Olass— 306,717 i,B59 14 S'i5,i7S S8,7S8 M.6 Minus sign indicates decrease in population. EDUCATION. . The information gathered regarding educational matters is more complete than anything ever before attempted and the results are highly gratifying. For the first time there has been secured in- formation showing the extent of education of the entire popula- tion and the results confirm the general belief that Iowa people rank very high in educational matters. The returns show a decline in the number of persons of school age and a corresponding decline in the school enrollment. The statistics as to colleges and college attendance make a gratifying showing. LITERACY. The canvass shows as to the education of the people that only one per cent are illiterate. In making this computation the plan adopted by the federal census was followed of reckoning the per- centage as against the total number of persons ten years of age and over. By literacy is meant those who can write and of course are able also to read. The following table shows the extent of illiteracy for 1915 as compared with 1905 : LITERACY xxxvii Census 1905. Census 1915. Age Classes and Sex 1 S S 3 -J 3 S o Persons under 21— Male - 375,265 371,324 1,894 1,457 .5 .4 248,923 245,448 1,069 716 .4 Female — .3 Total Persons 21 to 4S— Male Pemale 746,689 300,207 377,054 S,351 4,429 3,210 ■ i 1.1 .8 m,'l71 436,679 413,481 1,775 4,710 2,503 ■ ■} 1.1 .6 Total 767,X1 233,443 200,379 7,639 8,126 9,863 1.0 3.3 4.7 8Ji9,lG0 274,134 243,123 7, MS 5,611 4,140 .& Persons over 45— Male 2.0 1.7 Total m,822 998,915 948,313 17,989 14,449 14,630 «.9 1.4 1.5 S17,257 958,736 902,052 9,7S1 11,380 7,359 1.9 School age, or over 10- Male — — - Female 1.2 .8 Total — — l,9i7,S28 28,979 1.5 1,800,788 18,739 1.0 The percentage of illiteracy in 1915, among all persons 10 years of age and over, is 1. This is a lower per cent than that of 10 years ago, when the percentage was computed to be 1.5. This took into account, however, the persons between 5 and 10 years of age, many of whom were not yet in school. The per- centage reported by the federal census five years ago was 1.7 per cent and this computation was on the same basis as that now made by the State census. The United States census for 1910 reported for the whole United States 7.7 per cent illiterate. At that time, Iowa was reported as having a lower per cent of illiteracy than any other state of the Union, by .2 per cent and the report of the State census for this year, therefore, places Iowa far in advance of any other state in the matter of literacy. The number of illiterate persons of all ages found in Iowa is 18,739. Ten years ago, the State census found 28,979 and five years ago, the federal census reported 29,889. The number of males of voting age found to be illiterate is 10,324; the federal census five years ago found 14,204 such illiterate males of voting age. Ten years ago, the State census reported 12,555 illiterate voters. The decrease in the number of illiterate persons is, there- fore, quite as pronounced among the adults as among the popula- tion as a whole. Ten years ago, there was reported 13,073 fe- males over twenty-one years of age illiterate and now only 11,499. xxxviii CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 The number of persons found ten. years ago of school age illi- terate of both sexes was S',351. This year the number between the ages of ten and twenty-one of both sexes is 1,775. EXTENT OP EDUCATION. Information was secured by the enumerators as to the extent of education of the people in general. This included an inquiry as to the number of years attendance in school 'or in school and college of those persons over the school age, as well a.s the in-' formation as to the school attendance of persons of school age. The tables, therefore, show not only that the persons from whom the inquiries were made have some education obtained in schools, but the extent to which they pursued studies in regular way, given by years, and this regardless of whether the school attend- ance was recent or remote. The report as to extent of education, in percentages, shows as follows, the percentages being a comparison of those reporting school or college attendance as compared with the total popula- tion of school age or over : , Male Fema'.e Total Per cent who have attended grammar or common schools 78.7 73.7 76.2 Per cent who have attended high or preparatory schools 10.9 16.6 13.6 Per cent who have attended college , 6.8 6.4 6.6 The accompanying table shows the number of persons of school age and over who have attended school or college, with the num- ber of years of such attendance. Those reported as attending the high or preparatory schools and colleges were accounted as having necessarily attended the common or grammar schools first and are included in the latter list. The table gives the attend- ance divided as between the age classes — of school age and over school age — and then a consolidation of the two. The percent- ages given are a comparison of the number in any one class with the total number reported as having received education in schools, except in the case of the total who attended either schools or college where the comparison is between the two sexes. EXTENT OP EDUCATION 0£ School Age. Ovpr School Age. Years Attended. .2 s 1 i 01 a o 1 sa as ■4.3 o 1^ g Eh 1^ ^ bi NDMBEE WHO ATTENDED COMMON OB GEAMMAK SCHOOLS. Sour years or less... riye years Six years Seven years Eight years or more. 121,091 115,185 27,278 24,976 33,806 29,753 31,340 28.277 85,899 81,871 236.276 50,053 30,860 62,264 23,570 16,255 63,661 53,128 42,891 59,617 55,097 45,961 167,270 378,028 342,732 80,413 39,825 96,019 101,058 720,760 NUMBER WHO ATTENDED HIGH OE PEEIPABATOET SCHOOLS. One year Two years Three years Four years or more. 11,322 i3,m 10,401 13,781 7,276 10,393 6,632 11,9^ 25,033 15,056 16,472 24,182 22,736 27,169 17,669 14,340 20,772 18,626 30,769 66,296 31,528 49,896 36,112 87,065 NUMBEE WHO ATTENDED COLLEGE. One year Two years Three years Four years or more.. 4,642 6,113 1,718 2,106 611 558 338 386 9,665 23,340 21,249 3,824 16,366 16,869 1,064 8,165 7,042 724 19,165 12,546 44,589 15,207 31,711 TOTAL WHO ATTENDED SCHOOLS OE COLLEGE. Common or grammar. High or preparatory... College 299,416 279,562 36,631 49,878 7,109 8,168 678,978 559,876 478,199 85,609 82,901 120,699 15,267 67,086 57,706 1,038,075 203,600 124,742 School Age and Over Per Cent Tears Attended S OS '3 a 3 o i 1 ■a a g H a ^ h NUMBEE WHO ATTENDED COMMON OB GEAMMAR SCHOOLS. Four years or less... Five years Six years Seven years Eight years or more. 171,144 146,645 50,848 41,231 86,936 72,644 86,487 74,238 463,927 424,108 816,689 19.9 19,2 92,079 5.9 5.4 159,680 10.1 9.6 160,675 10.1 9.8 888,060 54.0 56.0 19.6 5.7 9.9 9.9 64.9 NUMBEE WHO ATTENDED HIGH OE PEEPAEATOET SCHOOLS One year - 26,378 33,137 21,616 37,401 30,183 40,940 31,165 68,289 66,661 74,077 52,781 105,890 22.3 28.0 18.2 81.6 17.7 24.0 18.3 40.0 19.6 25.6 18.3 Four years or more 36.6 NUMBEE WHO .ATTENDED COLLEGE. One year _ 27,882 18;tiS4 8,676 19,503 26,362 18,975 7,695 12,932 M,244 37,059 16,271 32,435 57.6 24.4 11.7 26.3 40.0 28.8 11.5 19.7 38.7 26.5 Three years — - 11.6 23.2 xl CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 TOTAI, WHO ATTENDED SCHOOLS OR COLLEGE. School Age and Over Per Cent Years Attended i 1 "3 I 1 3 o Common or grammar. High or preparatory.. College 869,292 118,532 74,145 757,761 170,677 85,864 1,617,063 289,109 140,009 6S.1 41.0 E3.0 46.9 59.0 47.0 The number of persons who have, at one time or another in their lives, attended common or grammar schools, preparatory or high schools, or colleges, number 1,617,053. Of these 859,292 are males and 757,761 are females. Included in this list of persons having attended school or col- leges are 289,109 who have attended a high or preparatory school and of these 118,532 are males and 170,577 are females. The enumerators reported 140,009 persons having had college instruction and of these 74,145 are males and 65,864 are females. Of those who attended schools 880,030, or more than half, at- tended eight years or more ; those who attended four years, or less, number 316,689, or less than 20 per cent; of those who entered the high schools or preparatory schools 105,690 attended four years, indicating that more than one-third completed the high school after entering. Of the 140,009 who have attended college, 32,435 attended four years. Of those who were reported as having attended common or gram- mar schools 1,038,075 are over school age and 578,978 are of school age. SCHOGl, POPULATION. The number of persons in Iowa of school age is smaller now than it was ten years ago. The number then reported was 749,496 and now the number is 736,925. There was an increase in the number of persons of school age among the native white of native parents and a decrease among the foreign born and the immediate descend- ants of foreign bom persons. SCHOOL ATTENDANCE PERSONS OF SCHOOL AGE. xli Number of School Age. Percentage. General Nativity and Color. 1900 1908 1910 1915 1 1900 1 1905 1910 1915 Native white, native parents Native white, foreign or mixed parentage 465,841 273,390 24,664 4,085 469,239 269,609 16,430 4,318 442,128 212,946 16,142 3,866 514,711 200,611 16,216 4,388 eo.7 35.6 3.2 .6 62.6 34.6 2.2 .6 65.4 31.6 2.3 .6 69.9 27.2 Foreign bom white - - 2.2 .6 Total 767 870 ■?/,!) M« 675,082 7S6,9«5 The number of persons of school age of both sexes among the native persons of native parents is now 69.9 per cent of the whole number of school age. The number of foreign bom persons of school age is only 2.2 per cent of the entire number entitled to at- tend school and this has been declining for a number of years. KIND OP SCHOOL ATTENDED. Information has been secured as to the kind of school or college attended in the year 1914. The general table No. 10 gives a com- plete exhibit of this information. The accompanying table shows general results. Of the 519,814 persons of school age attending school or college, there were 431,624 attending the common or public schools. These were in the schools of the eighth grade or lower or the ungraded schools. There were of those attending the private schools 18,429. This includes parochial and other schools. There were 59,630 who attended high schools. There were 10,081 who attended college. Of all the persons attending school 187,009 or 36 per cent were between the ages of five and ten years and the remainder were be- tween the ages of ten and twenty-one years. Of the 491,304 who in 1914 were in the public schools, not all the year, but k portion of the year, 12.1 per cent were in the public high schools. KIND OP SCHOOL ATTENDED. 1914. Schools or Colleges. 5 to 10 Years Age 10 to 21 Tears Age All of School Age Attended common school Attended private school - Attended high school Attended college Total attending school 180,490 6,519 187,009 261,134 11.910 69,680 10,061 SS2,S05 431,624 18,429 69,680 10,081 519,811) xlli CENSUS OP IOWA, 1915 SCHOOL ATTENDANCE. The number of persons of school age in attendance in schools and colleges in the year 1914 was 519,814, which is a reduction from 529,491 reported for 1904. This reduction harmonizes with the statistics gathered through the department of public instruction which indicate a reduction in the enrollment in the schools of the State. The report of the State Superintendent showed a total en- rollment in the schools for 1914 of 517,559. The tables elsewhere .'riving age classes for the population also confirm this, by showing- that the number of persons under twenty-one years of age has de- clined in the State in ten years. SCHOOL ATTENDANCE FOR 1904 AND 1914. Attendance and Per Cent Attendance and Per Cent of AtteHdance. 1904. 1914 Months a ■ ,2 a 1^ !B ■3 ■1 p S P^ n P4 a ft tH tu riVE AND UNDER TEN TEAE8 OF AGE. Less than 4 months Four and less than 6 montbs- Six and less than 9 months— Nine months or over Total in attendance... 6,799 9,256 35,559 40,302 7,195 9,682 33,668 40,155 13,994 18,987 69,227 80,457 7.7 10.4 S7.9 44.0 4,902 8,966 30,099 60,426 5,138 8,867 28,548 50,064 10,040 17,882 58,647 100,490 91,91S 90,700 182,616 9i,SS2 92,617 187,009 6.4 9.5 31.4 53.7 TEN AND UNDER EIGHTEEN TEARS OF AGE 9,969 19,111 66,244 76,000 5,106 8,976 58,276 85,639 15,095 28,067 114,520 161,639 4.7 4.376 2,366 5,081 45,121 98,269 6,734 14,129 93,424 190,846 2.2 Four and less than 6 months.. Six and less than 9 months Nine months or over 8.7 S5.7 50.9 9,098 48,303 92,087 4.6 30.7 • 62.5 Total in attendance Kl.SU W,997\ SW.SJJl'' 153, S6i 150,169 SOJi.eSS EIGHTEEN AND UNDER TWENTT-ONE TEARS OF AGE. Less than 4 months Pour and less than 6 months.. Si-^ and less than 9 months... Nine months or oyer. Total in attendance 3,880 3,220 2,477 5,928 1,128 1,666 2,263 7,086 6,008 4,776 4,740 13,011 18.6 17.8 17.1 47.0 1,446 1,790 1,729 9,038 660 1,661 1,596 10,352 2,106 8,851 8,325 19,880 15,503 12,032 87,5*5'. M,00S U.ieo 28,172 7.5 11.9 11.8 68.8 TOTAL OP SCHOOL AGE. Less than 4 months Pour and less than 6 months. - Six and le'is than 9 months... Nine months or over Total in attendance 20,668 81,686 94,280 122,228 268,762 18,429 20,214 94,207 132,879 260,729 34,097 .51,800 188,487 265,107 5«9,^i 6.5 9.8 85.6 46.1 10,724 19,853 80,181 151,551 8,166 16,4!i9 75,265 158,676 «57,65S 18,880 35,812 155,896 310,226 s.e 6.8 29.9 69.7 Si9,8lV The accompanying table shows the school attendance in 1914 by age classes, and also the number of months of such school attend- ance in each age class. The greatest change between 1904 and GENERAL NATIVITY xliii 1914 is among the persons between ten and eighteen years of age, there having been a decline of 14,608 in the number of persons of this age class attending school. There was an increase of the younger pupils in school and a slight increase among those over eighteen years of age. As to the number of months attendance in school, the comparison is favorable. Of all persons attending school in 1914, 59.7 per cent were in school nine months or more as compared with 48.1 per cent ten years ago. Those who attended less than nine months are proportionately not as numerous as they were ten years ago. This would indicate that, while school enrollment is on the decrease by reason of a smaller number of persons of school age, yet those who do go to school attend for a longer period in each year than formerly. The number of males attending school in 1914 was 262,259, and the number of females 257,555. The difference of 4,704 in favor of the males is not as great as it wa^ ten years ago when the differ- ence was 8,033. It will be observed, however, by the table showing school attendance that the male students do not attend school as many months of the year, especially in the older age classes, as do the female students. GENERAL NATIVITY. The proportion of native bom to foreign born population in Iowa is now almost exactly as eleven to one. The contrast is be- coming more pronounced. The American or native born population is now 88.8 per cent of the whole and the foreign bom 11.2 per cent. The native born white population numbers 88.1 per cent of the whole as against 82.5 per cent ten years ago. The colored population is about the same in proportion as in the past ; the chief change being in the proportion of foreign bom white persons. AMERICAN AND FOREIGN BORN. Native Bom. Foreign Bom. Color. S OS S 1 ■a 1 i i White - — 1,052,852 8,788 1,024,667 7,790 2,077,319 16,578 151,404 144 112,599 22 264,008 166 Total 1,061,U0 l,0S«,JiS7 S,09S,897 151, 5i8 112,621 2ei,m xliv CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 GENERAL NATIVITY CLASSES xlv The relative proportions in the population, as between native and foreign bom, are gradually changing in the direction of a more nearly native born population. The native born are divided into classes as follows: White of native born parents, 1,422,464 ; white of foreign or mixed parentage, one or both parents being of foreign birth, 654,855; colored, 16,- 578. The 264,169 foreign bom are all white except 166. Each enumeration for many years has shown an increase in the number of native bom white of native parents, and there are now more of the native bom white of foreign or mixed parentage than ever before. The colored population has shown slow increase and the proportion has remained substantially unchanged. The Indians living in Iowa are included with the colored. Since 1890 there has been a net increase of 507,099 in the number of persons native born, or 35 per cent. In the same twenty-five years there has been a net increase of 61,928 in the number of foreign bom persons, or 19 per cent. The number in each general nativity class is as follows : GENERAL NATIVITY GLASSES. Nativity. 1890 1900 1905 1910 1916 Native white, native parents Native white, loreign or mixed parentage _ Foreign born wliite 1,063,967 513,187 323,932 10,811 1,261,068 651,817 305,782 13,186 1,264,443 648,532 282,296 14,831 1,303,626 632,181 273,484 16,580 1,422,464 654.855 264,003 Colored _ 16,744 Total — 1,911,836 2,aSJ,853 g.no.oso i,m,m i,S38,06G The uniform and gradual increase in certain of these classes and decrease in the other is the marked feature of this table. It indicates a tendency which is permanent and likely to continue for some time. The percentages obtained from this table for the same years shows plainly this tendency. There is also given a column showing the general nativity percentages for the entire United States according to the federal census of 1910: xlvi CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 GENERAL NATIVITY PERCENTAGES. Iowa Census. 1915 D. S. Nativity. 1890 1900 190S 1910 1910 Foreign born white - Native born — ■ Of native parents — Of loreign or mixed parentage- Colored persons __ __ 16.9 55.6 26.9 .8 IS. 7 56.5 29.2 .6 12.8 57.2 29.3 .7 12.3 5S.6 28.4 .7 11.2 60.8 27.8 .7 14.7 53.8 20.4 11.1 Total native bom ._ .. 83.1 86.S 87.2 87.7 88.8 85.3 As compared with the federal census showing for the United States and for other states the Iowa enumeration shows that this state is in the class of states with relatively large proportion of na- tive bom persons. The proportion of foreign born is smaller in Iowa by 3.5 per cent than for the United States in 1910. It is smaller than for any one of the general groups of states into which the nation is divided except the southern states. It is smaller than any of the states outside of the southern group except Missouri, Indiana, Kansas and New Mexico. The census shows the Iowa foreign born to number 11.2 per cent foreign bom as against a New England proportion of 27.9 per cent; the Middle Atlantic states, 25.1 per cent; the Pacific group, 24.7 per cent. The states immediately surrounding Iowa showed per- centages of foreign bom as follows: Minnesota, 26.2; Wisconsin, 22 ; Illinois, 21.4 ; South Dakota, 17.3 ; Nebraska, 14.8 ; Missouri, 7. Iowa has a much smaller proportion of colored than the United States as a whole. The percentage in the United States for 1910 was 10.7 per cent for negroes and .4 per cent for Asiatic and other races, while Iowa showed a fraction of over .7 per cent for both. In the United States there were, in 1910, 53.8 per cent native white of native parents, while for Iowa the proportion was 60.3 ; the native white of foreign or mixed parentage was 25.5 per cent, while in Iowa it was 27.8 per cent. DISTRIBUTION AS TO NATIVITY. The tables on general nativity show some relation between geo- NATIVITY DISTRIBUTION xlvii there is a larger proportion of the foreign born and their descend- ants. PERCENTAGES IN GENERAL NATIVITY. Native White, Native Parents. Native White, For- eign or mixed par- entage Foreign Born White. Colored. Wayne 90.5 Davis - —90.2 Decatur 89.9 Clarke — 89.8 Van Buren .88.4 Ringgold - —88.4 Warren 87.9 Taylor 87.6 Madison 86.8 Fremont -86.6 WSnnebago 48.2 Sioux 47. Lyon 46.7 Worth 43.9 Winneshiek 43.S Orawlord —42.7 Hancock 41.9 Plymouth 41.1 Allamakee 41.1 Dubuque - .40.7 Sioux 2S.6 Lyon . 21.6 AudulDon 19.6 Winnebago 18.2 Woodbury 17.8 Crawford — .17.6 Buena Vista 17 Ida 17.3 Scott 17.1 Shelby - 10.9 Monroe 8.0 Lee 4.2 Polk 3.5 Maha&ka 1.8 Wapello 1.7 Tama 1.6 Appanoose 1.5 Henry 1.4 Page 1.1 Scott 1.0 The native white of native parents are to be found in greatest numbers along the southern border of the state. Of the ten coun- ties having the largest percentage of this class of general nativity, seven are on the southern line of the state, and the other three are in the south, central part of the Stale. These same ten counties show the lowest percentage of the foreign bom. In this respect, Davis county leads with only 1.8 per cent foreign born. Clarke, Decatur and Van Buren each have 1.9 per cent foreign bom. The highest percentage of native white of foreign or mixed par- entage is in Winnebago county, and this county with four others having a very high percentage in this general nativity class are on the northern line of the state. All of the others having more than 40 per cent of native white of foreign or mixed parentage are in the northern half of the state. The colored population is to be found largely in the southern half of the State, except in one county where the Indians increase the percentage. Monroe county now leads all others in the proportion of colored population. The largest percentage of foreign born in the state is in Sioux county which has more than one-quarter of its population foreign born. The adjoining county of Lyon comes next. Other counties in which the foreign bom constitute a large proportion of the popu- lation are well scattered over the state, including Audubon, "Winne- bago. Woodbury, Crawford, Buena Vista, Ida, Scott and Shelby. xlvlli CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 NATIVITY BY COUNTIES xlix PERCENTAGE OF GENEBAL NATIVITY AND COLOR BY COUNTIES. County > -S at bo OS t, o « S '^ wo' III ^ \ B o a 01 o o o County. 4J 1 bI bD Bfea O Pi E O •II 1^ 1 o O Total 60. S 27.8 U.g .7 .1 'i'E "'■! .4 "'i .2 .2 '".I '".I .1 .8 .3 .2 'i'.' .1 .1 .1 '.i "'.2 1.4 Jasper 69.4 79.1 60.3 59.1 79. 46.8 65.1 60.5 82.6 81.7 31.7 85.8 72.6 70.6 69.7 80.8 53.8 63.3 84.8 63.4 61.6 44.9 43.5 76.4 60.2 43.6 60.7 64.4 59.5 72.2 88.4 55.4 43.7 44. S 27.4 62.4 52.6 87.6 78. 88.4 76.2 87.9 78.7 90.5 49.5 33.6 42.2 52. 40. 63.3 20.9 16.5 30.1 30.1 16.6 39.3 24.1 25.7 14. 12.3 46.7 11.6 18.1 19.5 20.8 14.2 34. 26.6 24.7 26.6 27.6 38.7 40.4 16.4 36.9 41.1 36.7 21.2 27.5 20.2 9.4 32.7 38.2 38.3 47. 26.9 32.6 9.9 16.1 9.3 16.5 9.6 16.4 7.2 34.6 48.2 43.3 29.5 43.9 33.2 9. 4.8 9.2 10.5 4.4 13.9 6.6 13.1 3.4 5.6 21.6 2.7 7.5 9.2 8.9 4.8 12.2 10.1 12.6 10.9 10.6 16.4 16.1 6.1 12.9 16.3 12.6 10.9 12.3 7.4 2.2 11.9 17.1 16.9 26.6 10.7 13.3 2.3 6.6 1.9 6.6 2.4 4.4 2.3 15.6 18.2 14.5 17.8 16.9 13.6 7 Adair 72.9 78.3 47.1 73. B 41.2 64.2 SZ.l 60. 60.6 66.6 44.8 49.4 61.2 48. 66.7 60.1 S4.5 66.7 63.6 89.8 66.S 53.8 44.2 39.7 77.4 90.2 89.9 61.4 62.6 62.6 46.6 61.2 69.9 69.6 47.6 85.6 73.8 45.2 79.9 68.4 42.7 68.9 72. 77.7 48. B 45.4 45. B 58.6 B6.9 21.1 17.6 41.1 14.4 39.2 26.5 26. 27.9 37.5 25.9 37.9 35.7 28.7 39. 24.5 28.3 28.2 29.5 36.4 8. 31.2 36. 38.6 42.7 16.3 7.7 8. 29.9 34. 28.4 40.7 34.9 29.6 29.7 37. 11.4 20.2 38.1 15.6 32.7 41.9 29.3 20.8 15.9 39.7 38.6 87.2 30.7 33.1 6. 4. 11.8 10.6 19.6 9.3 11.2 11.7 12. 7.5 17.3 14.9 10. 12.8 8.6 11.6 16.6 13.8 10. 1.9 12.3 10.2 16.8 17.6 6.6 1.8 1.9 8.7 12.4 9. 12.6 13.8 10.5 10.8 15.3 3. 6. 16.7 4.6 13.9 15.4 11.8 7. 6. 11.8 16. 17.3 10.7 10. JnhnRnT) 4 Jonas .3 Appanoose Kossuth Audubon - Lee_„ - Linn 4 ? Benton .7 .4 Lyon _ - Buena Vista Mahaska - 1 S Butler .8 Marshall 6 Mills .3 Oass Mitchell Oedar Oerro Gordo Monroe — Montgomery Muscatine 8. .9. Ohlckasaw A 01 ay Osceola - Clayton 1.1 Palo Alto Crawford Plymouth Pocahontas Polk - Davis 3.6 Decatur Pottawattamie .7 .?. Binarerold Sac 1. Shelby — - Sioux - Floyd Story Franklin Tama ].« .2 Union .3 .4 1.7 Warren _- .1 Washington .5 Wayne — Webster .4 Woodbury .7 Ida Worth .2 Wright INDIAN POPULATION. The Indian population of Iowa is almost wholly in Tama county, where there are 357 Indians. They are of the Sac and Fox tribe with possibly a very few Iowa Indians. They occupy land pur- chased by them and held in trust for them by the United States. The federal enumerators reported 295 of them in 1910 and 376 in 1 CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 1900, and the state census for 1905 listed 346 of them. The federal census also reported 176 scattered over the state but no separate account has been kept as to these. Of the 357 in Tama county on the "Sac and Pox Reservation," 186 are males and 171 females. The age classes of the population are as follows: Males Under 5 years of age 23 Five to 10 years of age 19 Ten to 18 years of age 28 Eighteen to 21 years of age 7 Twenty-one to 45 years of age 82 Forty-five years of age and over .... 27 186 Females Total 28 51 17 36 26 54 16 23 51 133 33 60 171 357 No separate record was kept of the Chinese, Japanese and others, but all are included with the colored population. NATIVITY IN URBAN LIFE. The general nativity of residents of cities and the larger towns has been separated from other information as to nativity, and Table No. 17 shows the general nativity distribution in all incorporated places of 1,000 population or more. The accompanying table affords a comparison now and ten years ago as to general nativity of the population of all incorporated places of ] ,000 and over : GENERAL NATIVITY. Class! licatlon. Number Per Cenc 1906 1915 1905 1915 Cities of First Class Native bom white, native parents Native born white, foreign or mixed parentage. Eoreign bom white Colored Total - - -. Cities of Second Class Native bom white, native parents Native bom white, foreign or mixed parentage I'oreign born white Colored — Total - 209,276 126,660 61,672 6,4m JfiS.OOJ, 201,343 68,961 29,709 2,425 sw,m 147,049 73,740 9,606 S19,W, 234,411 75,686 32,408 3,070 SiS,i7B B1.9 31.2 15. S 1.6 66.6 22.8 9.8 .8 65.6 28.3 14.2 1.9 67.9 21.9 9.4 GENERAL NATIVITY Classification. Number Per Cent 1905 1915 1905 1915 Towns ol 1,000 or Over Native born white, native parents.. 64,028 27,577 12,468 235 85,524 34.640 15, sn 218 61.4 26.4 12.0 .2 62.9 Native born wbite, loreigu or mixed parentage 26.6 U.5 Oolored — .1 Total— - 10'i,S08 474.647 222,218 103,849 9,146 135,959 60S,764 267.275 121,725 12,894 Total oJ Above Three Classes Native bom white, native parents- 58.6 27.6 12.8 1.1 60.8 Native bom white, foreign or mixed parentage Foreign born white Colored 26.7 12.2 1.3 Total 809,860 789,796 426,814 178,447 6,633 1,000,658 813.700 397,680 142,278 3,8S0 Towns Under 1,(X» and Rural Communities Native born white, native parents . _ __ 5fl.8 30.5 12.8 .4 69.9 Native born white, foreign or mixed parentage roreign born white _ Colored 29.3 10.5 .3 Total 1, WO, ISO i,sei,m The proportion of native white of native parents to the total population is larger in the cities and towns than it is in the country and smaller towns. Divided on the line of places of population of one thousand or over, it is found that the percentage of native born white of native parents is 60.8 per cent against 59.9 in the rest of the State which includes the towns under one thousand and the rural population. But in both the cities and the country the proportion is now larger than it was ten years ago. In the case of the native bom of foreign or mixed parentage the situation is reversed. The proportion for the State is 27.8 per cent ; for the cities and larger towns it is 25.7 per cent ; for the country and small towns it is 29.2 per cent. In the case of the foreign born white, the percentage for the State is 11.2 per cent; in the cities and larger towns it is 12.2 per cent ; and in the country and small towns it is 10.5 per cent. This shows that the foreign born are proportionately more num- erous in the cities than in the towns and country. The decrease in the total of foreign born was greater in the small towns and rural communities, however, than elsewhere. In 1905, the pro- portion was 12.8 per cent and is now 10.5 per cent showing that the immigration of the foreign born is not directed to the towns lii CENSUS OP IOWA, 1915 or rural eommunities so much as to the larger towns and cities. The tendency of the colored population is to concentrate in the cities. The colored population in cities and towns over one thousand is now 12,894, an increase of 3,748 in ten years. The population in the other half of the State is now 3,850, a decrease of 1,835 in ten years. The proportion of foreign born white is largest in the cities of first class in Iowa, being 14.2 per cent of the population of those cities as compared with 11.2 per cent of the population of the entire State. In the towns of one thousand or over, the pro- portion of foreign born is 11.5 per cent or substantially the same as for the State, but in the cities of second class, the proportion is 9.4 per cent of foreign bom which is a smaller per cent even than in the country and small towns. It is, therefore, found as a necessary result of this computa- tion that in the cities of the second class, or between two thousand and fifteen thousand population, is the largest proportion of native born persons or more than 90 per cent of their population. It is in the towns of one thousand or over that we find the smallest percentage of colored population in the State, one-tenth of 1 per cent. The proportion of colored, however, in the small towns and rural communities is decreasing, as shown by the table. LARGEST PEOPORTION NATIVITT CLASSES. Native White ol Native Parents Allerton 92.91 Leon 91.60 Adel 90.88 Bloomlield 90.88 Humeston 90.43 Sidney 90.32 Bedford 89.85 Mount Ayr 89.64 Guthrie Center— 88.98 Corydon 88.62 OBceoIa 88.32 Winterset 88.25 Indlanola 87.87 Eldon 87.54 Brighton 87.00 Panora 86.99 Columbus Jet.— 89.27 Oakland 85.79 Hamburg 85.71 Olarinda 85.28 Woodbine 85.00 Native White, For- eign or Mixed Parentage Kemaen 60.73 Orange Caty 49.68 Dyersville 44.35 Guttenburg 43.63 Bellevue 42.33 Holsteta 41.95 Decorah 41.91 Aekley 41.12 Dubuque 40.85 Cascade 40.05 Forest City 39.81 Lansing 39.46 Manning 39.35 Jewell 38.18 Northwood 37.97 Le Mars 37.63 Beinbeck 37.47 Elkader . 37.43 Sumner 37.29 Davenport 37.16 Rock Valley 37.14 Foreign Bom, Larg- est Proportion Sioux Center.— 36.55 Orange Qlty 35.07 Bettendorl 34.88 Story City 29.32 Pella 26.62 Rock Valley 26.11 Alta 25.7 Holstein 24.86 Manning 24.40 Aekley 23.11 Remsen 23.5 Lehigh 22.56 W. Burlington- 22.64 Parkersburg 22.10 Madrid 21.19 Reinbeck 21.00 Sioux City 20.29 Foreign Born, Small- est Proportion Adel 1.33 Moulton ^- 1.33 AUerton l.K Leon 1.55 Humeston 1.64 Bedford 1.B6 Mt. Ayr ^ 1.76 Keosaugua 1.77 Bloomfield 1.8 Clarinda 1.88 Colored Keokuk - 7.74 Mt. Pleasant 6.89 KnoxviUe 6.34 Keosauqua 4.91 Centerville 4.38 Colfax 4.26 Des Moines 3.86 Albia 2.68 Oskaloosa 2.66 Ft. Madison 2.64 Ottumwa 2.60 Manilla 2.49 Oelwein 2.20 Washington 2.13 Mystic 2.03 NATIVE AND FOREIGN BORN liii An analysis of the nativity record for the cities and towns discloses some surprising things. Only those cities and towns of one thousand population or over are considered. There are twenty-one such places with 85 per cent or more of inhabitants native white of native parents. There were only seventeen such places ten years ago. The highest per cent of native white of native parents is in AUerton, 92.91 per cent. Ten years ago, the highest percentage was in Milton, 93.7 per cent. None of the places having such large proportion of native white of native parents is a city of the first class and most of them are incor- porated towns. There are twenty-one cities and towns with more than 37 per cent of native white of foreign or mixed parentage. The highest percentage is in Remsen, 50.73 per cent, whereas ten years ago, the highest percentage was in Marengo, 67.4 per cent. The cities of Dubuque and Davenport appear in this list, the only cities of first class in the list. There are seventeen cities and towns with more than 20 per cent of foreign born population, the highest being Sioux Center, 36.55 per cent. Sioux City is the only city of the first class ap- pearing in the list. Of towns having the smallest proportion 'of foreign bom, Adel and Moulton are tied for chief honors with only 1.33 per cent foreign bom. There are ten with less than 2 per cent foreign born. The largest proportion of the colored population is in Keokuk, 7.74 per cent, but there are fifteen places with more than 2 per cent colored. These include Des Moines, Ottumwa and Fort Madison of the larger cities. AMERICAN AND FOREIGN BORN. The proportion of native born, or those born in the United States, has been steadily increasing as compared with total pop- ulation. As would be expected, also, the proportion of those born in Iowa has been increasing, showing the decline of move- ment of population from other states and also the decline of movement out of Iowa of the native born. CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 AMERICAN BORN, WITH STATE OP BIRTH AND SEX. State Where Born. The State Iowa Illinois Ohio _. MisBOuri Wisconsin Indiana Pennsylvania . New York Nebraska Minnesota Kansas South Dakota Michigan Kentucky Virginia Tennessee Massachusetts. W. Virginia- Colorado Vermont Oklahoma New Jersey Maryland No. Dakota.. i ■3 s N t* i,miMo i.osi.isr g.ms.m 780,609 771,405 1,661,914 74,738 70,081 144,819 28,166 25,062 58,217 24,371 24,368 48,739 19,S11 19,236 38,547 19,388 17,023 36,381 18,744 16,168 34,902 16,635 13,767 30,302 13,289 13,904 27,193 9,176 10.079 19,255 8,W0 8,503 17,143 6,988 6,440 12.42S 5,010 4,571 9,581 4,491 3,639 8,130 3,550 2,832 6,382 2,524 2,034 4,559 2,002 1,603 3,605 1,928 1,469 3,397 1,670 1,672 3,342 1,776 1,648 3,324 1,504 1,519 3,023 1,553 1,290 2,843 1,657 1,239 2,796 1,008 1,119 2,127 State Where Born. S No. Carolina. Texas Maine Arkansas California ... Connecticut .. New Hampshire Washington ... Mississippi ... Montana Alabama Oregon Wyoming Louisiana Georgia Utah Idaho Rhode Island. Delaware New Mexico . So. Carolina. Florida _ Nevada Arizona Not reported. 1,166 841 1,000 839 920 753 774 839 867 714 886 684 656 523 655 515 488 384 426 421 449 361 409 386 332 335 301 261 312 240 234 229 220 221 213 187 162 138 141 124 138 99 102 123 60 56 43 45 3,189 2,588 2,007 1,839 1,673 1,613 1,581 1,570 1,179 1,070 872 847 810 7B5 667 562 552 463 441 400 300 265 237 5,777 The native born population numbers 2,093,897, of which 1,061,- 440 are males and 1,032,457 are females. Native born white of native parents number 1,422,464, of foreign or mixed parentage 654,855, and colored 16,578. The increase in the native born in ten years was 166,142, of which increase there were among those of native parents 158,021, of foreign or mixed parentage 1,798, and colored 6,S'23. The Iowa bom natives number 1,551,914, which is an increase in ten years of 171,933'. The natives born in states other than Iowa number 541,983, which is a decrease of 5,791 in ten years. The Iowa bom population numbers 74 per cent of the natives, and of the Iowa bom there are 780,509 males and 771,405 females. The native Americans came to Iowa in larger number from Illinois than from any other state of the union, though practically every state is represented. Other states contributing to the Iowa population follow in this order, namely; Ohio, Missouri, "Wiscon- sin, Indiana, Pennsylvania, New York, Nebraska, Minnesota, Kan- sas and on down the list. Ten years ago Pennsylvania was in third place among the contributing states but has dropped to sixth and Missouri has risen from seventh to third place. FOREIGN BORN Iv The Illinois contingent showed a larger increase than from any other state, but there has been a material increase in the number of natives in Iowa from Missouri, Nebraska, Minnesota, Kansas and South Dakota, the states near to Iowa. There is also immigration into Iowa from most of the western states, and a decrease in the movement toward Iowa from the middle and eastern states. FOREIGN BORN. 1905 1915 Country of Birth. Number Per Cent. Number Per Cent. S82,297 B6Ji,169 German group — Germany 110,167 4,040 9,098 551 18,262 22,578 5.693 2,621 14,306 28,395 23,953 17,269 53 4 39.03 1.43 8.22 .19 6.47 8.00 2.01 .91 5.07 10.06 8.48 6.12 .02 88,460 7,655 9,500 1,300 15,741 14,299 4,947 2,048 11,080 26,683 20,239 18,966 112 21 884 3,163 493 1,883 9,898 6,261 8,160 4,678 24 616 12,638 91 683 269 33.48 2.90 3.60 Hungary .49 British group — England - 5.96 Ireland - 5.41 1.87 .77 4.19 Scandinavian — Sweden 9.72 Norway 7.6fi 7.18 .04 Turkey .14 947 288 1,719 S,825 1,646 3,^8 .38 .11 .61 1.35 .68 1.36 1.20 Other Asiatic _ — .19 .71 Russia - 3.76 Italy 2.37 1.20 Greece 1.77 ._ 21 9,677 33 466 2,833 .23 Holland - —~ 3.43 .01 .16 1.00 4.78 South American _ ..— — Other countries .03 .26 .10 The total number of foreign born residents of Iowa, exclusive of the colored persons, is 264,169 — a net decrease of 18,128 since 1905. As in ten years ago, the largest number of foreign bom came from Germany, the number being 88,450 which is a decrease from 110,167. The German born residents of Iowa now comprise 33.48 per cent of the foreign bom population as against 39.03 per cent ten years ago. Next in importance in the foreign born population are those from Sweden, 25,683 and this, also, is a material decrease from ten years before. There are 24,239 from Norway and 18,955 from Denmark. The Scandinavian countries, Ivi CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 therefore, supply the largest part of the foreign population of Iowa. From the territory of the British Empire there came into Iowa from England, 15,741 ; from Ireland, 14,299 ; from Scotland, 4,947 ; from "Wales, 2,048 and from Canada, 11,080. From Austria the number is 7,655; from Bohemia, 9,500 and from Hungary, 1,300. There has been a material increase in the number of foreign born who came from Italy, the number being 6,261. Russia is represented by 9,896 and Greece by 4,678. The popula- tion from Turkey, Spain, Mexico, China and France is compar- atively small. There has been a decrease in the immigration from northern European countries and an increase generally from the southern European countries. YEARS IN THE UNITED STATES. The table showing the classification of foreign born by age classes and sex and years in the United States indicates that the immigration into Iowa from foreign lands has been slightly in- creasing in very recent years after a marked decline of a number of years. The proportion of foreign born white who have been in the United States less than five years has increased from 10.6 per cent in 1905 to 11.3 per cent in 1915. The proportion of foreign bom white in Iowa who have been five years and less than ten years in the United States increased from 6 per cent to 9.4 per cent. Those of the class between ten and twenty years in the United States decreased from 28.2 per cent to 10.8 per cent showing that the immigration into the United States, between ten and twenty years ago, either was in marked decline or the immi- grants did not finally locate in Iowa in large number. The class of foreign born white who have been twenty years and more in the United States increased in the State of Iowa from 154,364 to 180,204. This indicates that Iowa has become the final home of a good many who came to this country more than twenty years ago and that those who came into Iowa a good many years ago have shown no disposition to move out of the State. The enumeration shows that of the foreign bom white in Iowa, there has been a small increase in the number who are under eighteen years of age; a decrease of those who are between eighteen and twenty-one years of age ; and a decrease in all those who are older. AGE, SEX, NATIVITY TEARS IN UNITED STATES OP FOREIGN BORN. Ivii 1916 1905 Years in United States and Age Glasses 0? ^ rt 1 4^ 1 1 Less than 6 Years in United States- 671 908 1.391 2,784 13,342 1,253 20,249 704 1,424 681 12,110 1,263 16,102 1,200 663 12,313 2,497 16,668 80 22,233 76,066 98,319 2 6 4 77 128 216 571 1,614 4,021 4,152 60,075 81,115 151,548 547 926 1,108 1,090 6,128 836 9,634 682 1,262 469 6,812 835 8,900 1,136 642 8,017 2,105 U,900 48 20,843 61,496 81,885 3 1 26 89 184 302 547 1,621 8,614 2,272 39,189 66,478 112,621 1,118 1,834 2,489 3,874 18,470 2,068 29,883 1,898 2,693 1,160 ]S,722 2,068 26,002 2,238 1,295 20,830 4,602 28,683 78 42,676 137,552 180,204 6 7 29 166 310 617 1,118 3,236 7,635 6,424 99,264 146,593 264,169 "i'.i 1,000 1,521 2,666 2,908 17,184 6,006 30,305 429 1,111 667 10,887 4,125 17,219 8,677 3,391 47,282 25,767 80,087 '"37^388" 116,981 154,864 Five and under 10 years Ten and under 18 years— Eighteen and under 21 years. Twenty-one and under 45 years I'orty-tive years and over _. Total less than 5 years in U. S Five and Less than 10 Years in U. S.— Kve and under 10 years of age Ten and under 18 years ol age Eighteen and under 21 years Twenty-one and under 45 years Forty-five years and over— . 10.6 Total 5 and less than 10 in U. S... Ten and Less than 20 Years in U S.— Ten and under 18 years of age. Eighteen and under 21 years. . 6.0 Twenty-one and under 45 years Total 10 and less than 20 in U. S... Twenty Tears and More in the U. S.— Eighteen and under 21 years _ 28.2 Twenty-one and under 45 years Total 20 years and more in U. S Number of Tears in U. S. Unknown- Five and under 10 years 64.1 Ten and under 18 years . Eighteen and under 21 years Twenty-one and under 46 years Forty-five years and over "".3 ia' 1,000 1,964 7,609 6,972 112,861 151,990 282,297 Total with years unknown Total Foreign Bom in Iowa— Under five years of age.. 1.1 Five and under 10 years of age Ten and under 18 years of age Eighteen and under 21 years Twenty-one and under 48 years Forty-five years of age and over- Total all ages and classes :::7.. AGE AND SEX BELATED TO NATIVITY. The enumeration discloses some interesting facts regarding the tendencies of population as a whole with respect to the £ige classes and sex division. Comparisons are made as between the sexes for all the general age classes under the enumeration of 1915 and as between the total of all age classes, comparing 1905 and 1915. Iviii CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 H f3 < H S bH O 1^ ■»! W M (14 m P g 1 m Fi4 w O r/j rn w < F-1 W o P a [z; < S n Q H Z > <1 H H H f> H o! Z i B061 sas-a S06[ % fiiei SX6I raqnmij % S061 % SI6I 9161 jtaqoinii % S06I % SI6I 9I6I jaqmn^ it M 00 (N 1-H ■* (N M rNi CO O rH 00 5 i-( & CO ua Q Soo ® t- wc ;feg 04 OD -^l rH m O CO ej t-I CO eg * N«'^«i>iH 00 c4 a CO eq od lO rj CO CO eat« CO ca ad into Or 9 -^ iH Q %S^30g w 09 m m VI bI SS 03 iS 03 V V dj « iw >» C>» >» ^ fO 09 03 " ea Pt A 0> iQ CO 00 CO i-l CO lO 00 ■* CO C3 <*tt m cx> 00 CO i>odia cdcgoQ ■S S o ^ Q 00 (A la 00 cci> M th CO o la » tIco>OI>^t;^ M -(H CD <0 rH iH i>^ od ka CO eo o> a; OS QQ w » >» l>i ^ 3 (►■Sh H I * in S 3 D 3 g rg S3 S a n P^ gift OOO iH Its i-H iH ej "* AGE, SEX, NATIVITY lix c? I- r* ifS o 00 ■^ N 0> "* <0 lO SI E-l a 03 o n o o 1^ CO OOOO^ 0> 00 la lo c4 o 00 O ' iH c*3 cj ;* 00 ■ jigsgis; ^ ot- i>t» la ssfes JIj 09 03 » n ! ti> a> « 4> jj •H >» >» >^ >• V ® O 00 r-H Ift ^ n V 0) V V X S d a c3 a V T3 03 rt e3 B >> i-t «0 O »0 t- r-i 00 00 -^ (O CO O) M (NO (R^_^O0 iHiHDJ WIN in e^ 00 CO o (M seasssri! i-liHMQOa - H M rl 5 «* 55l-l oi a> w 4) ^ (i_i ^ >» ^ >i 53 (XI w 3 a> o) X S n a g s V fQ A 03 03 B K) to OiOS rH r-t -H o d to CO !S o 9 ea CO CO "* tH 5 **i Jr-co *- m iH ea M 00 CO ■* o o in kA CO M imm *• iH ft CO CO in d IH 1> CD lo'oi r^r-( iH CO IH M ■«'« iH COCO dduicd CO rH asss^i looo CO w a-« Ol l-l OS t* CO 1-4 Oid'Wiftsg w 1-1 i-l Co CS d> CO (u w vj « oa ea rt rt *** aj a> j! t^g a a g " L^'O fCO "O cd fefl fl g g« rg 03 o3 03 n ^ Ix CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 INCREASING AVERAGE AGE. The proportion of old persons as compared with young persons is increasing in Iowa. The average age of the people is greater than it was ten years ago. The older classes of persons are on the increase more rapidly than the younger classes. This tendency is more marked among the native born than with either the foreign born or the colored. As to the class of persons under five years of age, there was an actual increase in number but slight decrease in the proportion of the population. The only material change was a decrease of 2.7 per cent among the native born white of foreign or mixed parentage. As to persons aged five to ten years there was also a decrease of .7 per cent in the State. Again the material change was among the native white of foreign or mixed parentage, showing a de- crease in this age class of 3.5 per cent. "With the persons aged ten to eighteen years there was a decrease for the State of 1.7 per cent in the ten years. Among the foreign bom there was an increase of .2 per cent ; among the native born of native parents a decrease of .8 per cent ; but among the native born of foreign or mixed parentage a decrease of 5.0 per cent. "With those of ages eighteen to twenty-one years there was a dcrease of .3 per cent, but no great difference in the proportionate change as between different nativity classes. With the persons of ages twenty-one to fourty-five years there was an increase from 35.1 per cent to 36.3 per cent for the State. There was an increase of 4.0 per cent among the native white of foreign or mixed parentage and of 1.1 per cent among the native white of native parents. But there was a decrease of 2.3 per cent among the foreign bom of this age class and an increase of 1.3 per cent among the colored. "With the oldest of the age classes the increase for the State was 2.0 per cent, with decrease of .2 among the natives of native parents; an increase of 8 per cent among the natives of foreign or mixed parentage and an increase of 2.3 per cent among the foreign born. The figures show, also, that the largest families are among the native white of native parents, or at least that with them the surviving children are proportionally more numerous than with others. Of children, or all under eighteen years of age, the num- ber relative to the total of each nativity class is as follows : native PROPORTION OF THE SEXES Ixi white of native parents, 43.4 per cent; native white of foreign or mixed parentage, 31.1 per cent ; colored, 28.5 per cent ; foreign bom, 4.3 per cent. The fact of greater average age of the popiilation is shown again by the facts as disclosed in regard to the proportion of the total population under twenty-one years of age and those over that age. In 1905 the minors numbered 44.5 per cent of the total population and the adults 55.5 per cent. In 1915 the minors num- bered 41.3 per cent and the adults 58.7 per cent. NUMBER OF MALES TO EACH l.OOO FEMALES. Age Glasses. .rli ■gap. 65 Native white foreign or mixed parentage O.C 1 o o ■3 t l.(MO 1,030 1,020 971 1,020 1,080 1,033 1,020 1.030 1,030 947 981 1,100 1,014 1,040 98B 1,100 1,780 1,B36 1,2S7 1,844 992 937 1,004 876 1,150 1,479 1,148 1,086 1,025 10 and under 16 years— 18 and under 21 years 21 and under 45 years 1,025 989 1,058 45 years and over All ages 1,131 1,060 The preponderance of males in Iowa has been on the increase the past ten years. There are 67,910 more males than females in Iowa as against a difference of 57,517 ten years ago. This means there are 1,059 males to each thousand females, an increase in the decade of eight per thousand in the disproportion. The difference is greatest among those who are foreign born. There are 1,344 males to each thousand females among the inhabi- tants of Iowa who were born in foreign countries. Ten years ago the number was 1,229. The preponderance is most marked with those foreign born between the ages of eighteen and twenty inclusive which is an age when immigration is most common. With the native white of foreign or mixed parentage, the difference is represented by 1,014 which is less by three to the thousand than ten years ago. Among the native white of native parents, there has been an increase in the difference from 1,030 to 1,033 in the ten years. The colored males number 1,059 to the thousand females which is an increase of eight per thousand in the number of males. The age at which the conditions are reversed is that between eighteen and twenty-one years, at which age the number of males Izii CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 in the total population is eleven per thousand less than the females. The other classes where the usual conditions are reversed are the classes of younger colored and younger foreign born which are so small as to be of little importance. NATURALIZATION. There are of the foreign born white males between the ages of twenty-one and forty-five a total of 29,423 who were reported not naturalized, and forty-five years of age or over, 5,801 not natural- ized. There was also reported of the colored persons twenty-one years of age or over, sixty-two who are not naturalized. There are thus 35,286 foreign born males twenty-one years of age or over who are not naturalized. But 14,595 of these foreign born adult males are not eligible to naturalization because of not having been residents a sufficient time, and the accompanying table excludes them from consider- ation. NATURALIZATION AMONG THOSE ELIGIBLE. Number. Per Cent. Age Classes. ^1 a I 1^ 1905. 21 and under 4S years 60,542 78,944 6,411 4,199 55,953 83,143 90.3 95. 9.7 6. Total 21 years nnd over_.. 1915 21 and under 45 years 129,486 30,714 75,190 9,610 18,125 4,666 139,086 46,839 79,766 93.1 65.6 94.3 6.9 34 5 45 years and oyer _. 6.7 Total 21 years and over- Increase or Decrease, 10 years 105,904 —16,828 — 3,7S4 20,691 10,714 367 126,606 —9,114 —8,387 84.5 —39.2 —4.8 16.6 40 years and over. . 8 7 Total 21 years and over- —23,682 11,081 —12,501 —18.2 115.3 Not all of the foreign born males over twenty-one years of age are eligible to naturalization. Those who have not yet been here five years are barred from naturalization by law. In order to provide proper comparisons, these are excluded from consider- ation. NATURALIZATION AND VOTERS Ixiii The number of foreign born males eligible to naturalization and not naturalized has materially increased in ten years. "With almost the same number of foreign born in 1915 as in 1905 the number of iTot naturalized increased from 9,610 to 20,691. The proportion not naturalized among the foreign born eligible males increased from 6.9 per cent to 15.5 per cent. The increase in the foreign born eligible to citizenship but not naturalized was almost wholly among those who are under forty- five years of age, the change being from 9.7 per cent to 3'4.5 per cent. While there are in 1915 of the foreign born males, twenty-one years of age and over, 5,148 fewer in Iowa than in 1905, yet the number who are eligible to naturalization is 12,501 less. This is due to the fact that the present contingent of foreign born males of voting age has been in the United States a shorter time than in the case ten years ago. The failure to accept the respon- sibilities of American citizenship is most marked among .the younger persons foreign born who are of voting age and the table showing years of residence in the United States of the foreign bom indicates an increase in the number of those from whom naturalization might be expected but who are compara- tively recent immigrants. The table showing the source of the recent immigration and its changing character also throws some light on the increasing num- ber of those who are not naturalized. It is to be inferred from the tables, also, that the greater pro- portion of the foreign born males of voting age not naturalized remain alien by choice and not from necessity; for while there are 14,595 who have not been here long enough to secure their papers, there are 20,691 who have been here long enough but have not become naturalized. The more recent accessions to population show a marked re- luctance in accepting the responsibilities of American citizenship. VOTERS AND VOTES. The number of voters in the State is now larger than ever before, despite an increasing number of foreign born persons of voting age who have not qualified. The number of voters varies by reason of naturalization more than otherwise, and the number of actual voters is always much less than the number of males of voting ages. Ixiv CENSUS OP IOWA, 1915 Males ol Voting Age. Percentage. General Nativity and Color. 190S 1910 1916 1905 1910 1915 Native white, native parents Native white, foreign or mixed parentage - Foreign born, white Colored 320,814 163,944 146,220 5,230 333,621 177,413 146,880 5,758 367,667 2(6,222 141,096 6,157 50.4 25.8 23.0 .8 60.3 26.7 22.1 .9 51. 28.6 19.6 .8 Total ._ ._ eS6,208 ms, 672 720,134 The table showing the males of voting age takes no account of the foreign born males who are not naturalized nor of the Indians who by reason of their tribal condition are not citizens of the United States. The proportion of foreign born white males, as compared with the total of males over twenty-one years of age, is larger than in the case of actual voters, but shows a gradual decline from other years. Entitled to Vote. Percentage. General Nativity and Color. 1905 1910 1915 1805 1910 1915 Native white, native parents-— Native white, foreign or mixed parentage ^ ^. Foreign born, white _> 320,314 163,944 129,4S6 5,230 333,621 177,413 90,573 6,768 367,667 205,222 105,874 5,886 -53.8 28.5 21. .8 54.7 29. 15. .9 63.6 29.9 15. Colored _.. .9 Total - _ 618,97i 607,S6S 68h6SB The voting strength of Iowa in 1915 is 684,639, this being the number of males twenty-one years of age or over either natives or naturalized foreign born. This list excludes those foreign born males, old enough to vote but not naturalized, and also the Indians. Of the foreign born white males of voting age there are 35,224 not naturalized. There are also sixty-two colored foreign born males of voting age re- ported not naturalized. The 109 Indian males of voting age are excluded. Comparing the voting list of 1905 and 1915, both being state enumeration and the basis substantially the same, it is found that in the ten years there was an increase of 47,343 in the number of voters native born of native parents and an increase of 41,278 in the number of voters native born of foreign or mixed parentage. Of the foreign bom voters there has been a decrease of 23,612. The increase of colored voters was 656. VOTERS AND THE VOTES Ixv A comparison with the federal census of 1910 is not possible since the federal enumerators found 56,307 foreign born males of voting age in Iowa not naturalized, which accounts for the ap- parent reduction in number of voters in 1910. While only 11.2 per cent of the total population of the State is foreign born, yet 15 per cent of the voters are foreign born, despite the failure of naturalization of many who are eligible; and this is accounted for because of the very large excess of males of voting age among the foreign born. VOTERS WHO PAIL TO VOTE. Comparison of these tables showing actual voting strength of the State with the returns from the elections shows that over 60 per cent of the actual voters go to the polls and vote at the general elections. There was no election in 1905, bnt in the next year there was a general election and the total vote on governor was 432,405, showing that, if the number of voters remained as in the year before, there were 186,569 voters who remained at home. In 1910, the year of the United States census, there was an election and the total vote for governor came within 194,401 of equaling the number of voters. Therefore 30.3 per cent of the voters did not vote. If the vote of the State on governor for 1914 be compared with the census figures as to number of voters in 1915 it is found that 262,042 voters failed to vote, or 38.3 per cent. The largest total vote of the State was in 1900 on presidential electors, aggregating 530,353. This was the result of a spirited presidential campaign. The actual number of voters is not of record, but if there was the same proportion of voters to persons of voting age as now, then in 1900 there were over 73,000 stay at home voters, and only 87.8 per cent of the voters exercised their right. If the vote of 1912 is compared with the voting strength as shown by the United States census of two years before it will be found that 76 per cent of the vote of the state was cast. Ixvi CENSUS OP IOWA, 1915 Voters and Votes. Actual voters, 1905 Total vote, 1906.. _ Voters who did not vote. Actual voters, 1910 Total vote, 1910 Voters who did not vote Actual voters, 1915 — Total vote, 1914 Voters who did not vote. Number. Per Cent. 618,974 432,405 186,669 607,365 412,964 194,401 684.639 422,597 262,042 9.9 0.1 61,7 38.3 CONJUGAL CONDITION. The enumeration of persons with regard to conjugal condition is far from satisfactory or perfect, as indicated by the fact that the enumerators found more men who are married than women who are married, but aside from this, the figures afford a basis for some comparisons. According to the reports received, the proportion of married persons in the state is smaller than ten years ago, there beiiag S'8.8 per cent of the entire population married. As would be expected, the greater number of those who are married are be- tween the ages of twenty-one and forty-five years. Of the per- sons under twenty-one years of age, who are married, there are 2,795 males and 15,309 females. Among the older persons, who are married, the males predominate. There has been a slight decrease in the proportion of persons who are widows or widowers and a slight increase in the propor- tion of those who are divorced. OLASSinOATION AND COMPARISON. Age Classes. Male. Female. 423,822 412,098 66,?05 64,166 159,948 97,600 25,121 16,319 675,096 579,182 66.0 60.6 58.6 53.6 2,796 15,309 272,172 304,838 220,301 165,628 496.268 485,775 40.5 42.4 S7.9 89. 6 Total. Single- Under 18 years .. 18 to 21 years __- 21 to 45 years ... 45 years and over All ages Per cent, 1915 ... Per cent, 1905 ... Married— 18 to 21 years ... 21 to 45 years 45 years and over All ages Per cent, 1915 __. Per cent, 1905 ... 836,920 120,370 267,648 40,440 1,264,273 63.4 66.1 18,104 677,010 385,929 981,043 41.5 38.8 IOWA IN THE WARS Ixvii Age Classes Male. Female. Total. 14 113 127 6,184 9,624 14,803 80,992 63,638 94,630 36,390 73,356 109,565 3.0 6.4 4.6 2.8 6.0 4.4 18 14fi 164 3,086 3,922 7,007 3,3S1, 2,678 6,009 6,434' 6,746 13,180 .6 .6 .5 .7 .9 .7 423,822 412,098 835,920 69,032 69,733 138,763 440,389 415,984 856,373 279,7« 247,263 627,0(8 1,212,988 1,145,078 2,358,063 Widows and Widowers- 18 to 21 years- 21 to 45 years 45 years and over . All ages _j Per cent, 1915 Per cent, 1905 _ Divorced— 18 to 21 years , 21 to 45 years 45 years and oyer. AU ages Per cent, 1915 Per cent, 19(» Total- Under 18 years 18 to 21 years 21 to 45 years 45 years and over All ages IOWA IN THE WARS. There are in Iowa 13,059 survivors of the Civil War, living more than fifty years after the close of the war. The first regiment organized from Iowa was mustered in Maj' 14, 1861, and the last was mustered out June 22, 1866. In the sixty Iowa organizations there were men as follows : Infantry, 47 regi- ments, 56,067 men ; cavalry, 9 regiments, 15,822 men ; batteries, 4, with 920 men; miscellaneous organizations, 5,250 men; total, 78,059. There were killed of the Iowa men, in battle, 2,017 ; died of wound, disease, etc., 10,011 ; wounded, 8,282. Prior to this, or at- other times, there were enlisted from Iowa for Indian or border wars 1,281 ; also a number for the Mexican war and in the state militia for various purposes. For the Spanish-American war there were enlisted in Iowa four regiments of infantry, one signal corps, one company of immunes, two batteries, which with officers appointed to United States volunteers made an aggregate of 5,919. The casualties- were one killed, 38 wounded and 163 died of disease. Since publication of the State Census of 1905 there has been published a complete roster of the surviving soldiers and sailors living in the State. The compilation of facts for the present census brings the record to date, as to the survivors of the Civil War. Ixviii CENSUS OP IOWA, 1915 CIVIL WAR VETERANS SURVIVING. 1906 191S Service. S S a .1 o o 5 Ed's) 1" .1 43 to O a Inlantry 8,176 2,180 128 4 11,682 2,382 901 216 19,758 4,662 1,029 220 4,320 1,034 71 48 6,882 1,126 360 218 10,202 2,180 Artillery 431 Other service 266 Total lo.m 15,081 S5,569 S,i73 y,586 IS, OSS The number of veterans of the Civil War still living in Iowa in 1915 was 13,059. As compared with ten years before, this is a little more than 51 per cent, or in other words, more than half of those who were living in Iowa ten years ago are still living. The proportion of those living in the different arms of the mili- tary -service remains about as in previous enumerations. There are 10,202 of the Civil War veterans who were in the infantry service.. The survivors of Iowa regiments far outnumber those of regi- ments from other states and from the general service, there being 5,473 of the surviving war veterans living in the State who served in Iowa regiments. AGE OF CIVIL WAR SURVIVORS. Age 1 J- o '3 Age s o as O Eh Total S,f!S 7,S86 1S,0S9 Eighty-one years Eighty-two years Eighty-three years Eighty-lour years Eighty-live years Eighty-six years Eighty-seven years Eighty-eight years Eighty-nine years 113 106 83 69 40 22 26 22 13 5 6 4 1 2 1 133 203 es 63 51 35 SO 16 18 11 S 3 -- 2 2 1 1 1 246 Sixty-lour years Sixty-live years Sixty-six years Sixty-seven years Sixty-eight years ..— Sixty-nine years Seventy years Seventy-one years 1 61 90 148 294 374 581 466 822 495 462 394 291 233 231 179 147 4 89 188 302 466 589 790 623 743 606 840 530 363 313 299 232 162 5 140 278 460 760 963 1,371 1, . bji n g t-5 O iz; Q 3.48 1.46 .46 2.77 1.70 2.41 1.55 1.10 1.65 1.28 1.17 1.81 2.67 .92 .95 .47 1.51 1.63 3.13 1.83 .65 1.14 .66 1.65 3.66 1.60 .48 1.73 1.20 1.61 3.91 1.06 .46 1.99 .86 .98 2.54 2.13 2.23 1.95 .52 .41 1.67 .15 1.44 3.40 2.84 .52 1.9« 2.08 1.43 1.60 1.08 1.00 3.38 1.56 .57 2.22 5.39 2.19 .77 .34 .37 3.34 1.42 2.57 2.98 .96 .74 3.03 1.18 1.02 3.23 .22 1.30 1.81 1.94 .69 .88 1.57 1.80 3.56 7.76 1.16 2.60 2.15 3.18 6.39 1,20 2.22 4.75 8.77 6.19 1.39 2.14 4.21 3.45 3.91 .89 2.08 8.07 1.87 2.67 .49 .83 2.62 8.19 4.32 .71 1.10 5.02 6.69 3.11 .89 2.39 5.36 1.92 8.81 1.20 1.94 2.56 4.67 4.72 .89 1.62 2.40 6.23 5.04 1.30 2.06 2.67 3.31 3.98 1.01 2.64 1.79 2.35 3.71 .73 1.45 1.71 6.39 7.16 1.18 1.38 2.98 8.55 2.86 .41 2.18 3.63 3.78 3.46 1.67 2.04 3.03 5.95 5.53 1.29 2.34 2.42 8.64 3.92 .71 1.86 1.32 8.48 5.36 1.69 1.68 2.24 KM 6.66 1.64 1.63 4.68 4.84 6.41 .46 .17 1.48 3.41 1.99 2.76 .93 3J)9 8.76 1.82 1.21 2.01 2.66 3.38 2.74 .82 2.48 3.29 6.24 8.31 .87 1.69 2.62 3.81 5.67 2.93 .96 1.41 7.84 4.16 2.97 1.38 1.53 2.34 8.67 3.08 4.09 2.04 2.69 .93 4.98 4.77 4.36 8.81 2.78 3.91 4.16 2.75 1.20 8.68 3.69 5.12 3.98 3.81 7.88 6.03 VITAL STATISTICS Ixxiii AVERAGE MONTHLY AND ANNUAL SNOWFALL FOB IOWA IN INCHES. Tears. a 03 i S3 03 a 4^ 9 Eor the Winter 1892 1898 1894 1895 1896 1897 1886 1899 190O 1901 1902 1903 1904 1905 1906 1907 1909 1909 1910 1911 1912 191S 1914 1915 6.9 5.0 6.9 8.1 6.0 8.4 8.7 3.S 2.8 6.4 8.2 8.0 12.6 7.8 1.5 7.1 2.3 9.9 6.2 9.7 9.4 2.6 2.0 7.9 6.1 4.5 11.1 15.5 11.3 6.1 6.0 4.6 4.6 8.9 7.8 7.7 12.6 4.0 7.3 7.0 6.6 11.2 7.2 7.3 5.1 9.2 7.3 9.4 3.9 4.0 2.7 2.9 5.4 5.5 3.7 8.0 6.6 12.6 1.3 3.9 4.4 4.1 8.9 4.1 1.1 9.8 T 1.9 19.1 5.3 1.8 5.7 6.0 0.2 2.1 4.5 T T 2.0 0.9 2.0 T 0.8 1.4 1.2 0.6 2.7 0.3 3.1 3.0 3.6 1.1 2.7 0.3 T 1.0 'b'.i T 0.7 0.2 T T T X.6 0.1 '¥.6 T 0.1 0.6 T 1.2 T T 1.8 10.9 34.2 4.6 7.6 37.2 0.4 l.S 19.2 4.9 4.1 26.0 2.9 1.6 22.6 1.2 15.9 38.8 8.7 3.9 40.3 0.5 4.3 23.4 3.7 2.4 26.8 2.6 6.4 38.5 1.8 12.9 28.0 1.1 3.7 19.4 0.5 12.3 29.2 0.6 4.2 S8.3 4.4 1.4 32.8 0.9 4.7 24.0 1.4 3.8 22.7 6.8 13.7 49.0 0.7 3.0 23.4 1.6 12.6 35.3 T 1.1 38.0 0.4 1.3 25.4 a' 11.1 27.5 1.2 4.6 81.3 1898-1894 18B4-1885 1895-1896 1896-1887 1897-1898 1898-1899 1899-1900 1900-1901 1901-1902 1902-1903 1903-1904 1904-1905 1905-1906 1906-1907 1907-1908 1908-1900 1909-1910 1910-1911 1911-1912 1912-1913 1913-1914 1914-1915 37.7 29.6 18.9 27.1 26.2 41.5 34.8 24.5 36.6 21.3 29.3 21.2 44.7 33.3 24.3 20.6 36.3 40.1 24.3 51.7 23.1 19.3 36.6 ANNUAL DATA ON CLIMATE. Tears. Number of Days. o .9 Hi Tears. Number ol Days. >. t^'O Ss •a a a If o s a v ^■3 o M O PM O .9fl o £ >'s a 1891 1892 1893 1894 1895 1896 1897 1898 1899 1900 1901 1902 1903 RS 166 104 106 NW 86 149 102 115 NW 78 166 108 91 NW 66 183 109 73 NW 68 169 109 87 S 86 145 116 105 NW 77 168 106 102 NW 82 160 105 100 NW 77 166 122 87 NW 74 171 101 93 NW 70 183 101 81 NW 100 145 109 111 NW 92 156 100 109 NW 1904 . 1905 . 1906 . 1907 - 1909 . 1909 . 1910 . 1911 . 1912 . 1913 . 1914 _ 1916 - 76 164 96 167 92 163 88 188 86 176 102 151 68 194 88 165 84 181 87 182 91 166 103 144 87 99 96 89 102 105 105 101 105 103 94 119 84 101 89 94 97 116 NW NW NW NW NW S NW NW sw s s NW HEALTH AND LIFE OF THE PEOPLE. The birth rate in Iowa has been increasing in recent years and the death rate has varied but little. For every 100,000 of pop- ulation in the State there are annually 934 deaths and 1,588 births. The average number of deaths in the State for the past six years has been 22,020, and the average number of births 37,467 in seven years. Ixxiv CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 There was reported for seven years the following number of births in the state : 1908 33,425 1909 36,393 1910 35,615 1911- 36,728 1912 37,372 1913 38,521 1914 44,219 Average 37,467 The deaths in the State, from all causes, for a period of six years, as reported to the registrar of vital statistics, is shown in the accompanying table, which gives the deaths by years divided according to age classes. It will be seen that while the number of deaths fluctuates the average is about 22,000 a year and the number reported for 1915 was not as large as the number for 1911. DEATHS IN IOWA PBOM ALL CAUSES. Ages 1910 1911 1912 1913 1914 1915 3,103 1,227 544 984 1,423 1,445 1,674 1,979 2,763 3,629 2,623 223 41 3,257 1,147 525 9«6 1,635 1,524 1,590 2,015 2,951 3,951 2, MS 477 88 2,848 962 361 864 1,319 1,376 1,601 2,097 2,849 3,806 2,421 410 87 3,135 1,167 426 879 1,518 1,467 1,568 2,213 2,998 3,985 2,591 422 156 2,997 1.061 449 842 1,432 1,621 1,654 2,216 3,048 3,902 2,633 448 66 10 to 20 years ... ._- 20 to 30 years - 1,352 1,464 1,723 2,243 3,207 4,149 2,752 470 3 30 to 40 years 40 to 50 years __ __ 50 to 60 years 60 to 70 years __ 70 to 80 years . _. 80 to 90 years 90 years and over _. .. . Unknown age Total _ _. n.csa SS,S71 S0,S01 n,J,7S 22. U9 S2.S19 The table showing the number of deaths from various of the ' well recognized preventable, infectious and epidemic, diseases, indicates that health conditions in the State have been materially improved and are more favorable to longevity than ever before. There has been a decrease in the number of deaths from each one of the diseases which are most destructive and almost complete elimination of some that have been regarded as most dangerous. DEATHS FROM PREVENTABLE DISEASES. Causes 1910 1911 1812 1913 1914 1915 Pneumonia __ __ 1,662 1,486 383 106 205 60 128 1 1,962 1,560 317 90 176 126 93 3 1,49S 1,456 262 66 119 18 123 1 1,706 1,392 247 71 162 117 111 5 1,606 1,872 225 67 159 30 97 11 1,487 1,331 196 44 131 Tuberculosis (all forms) ._ Typhoid fever Scarlet fever Diphtheria and croup _ Measles .. Whooping cough Smallpox __ Total.. , Ji.OSl JxiVL^ S.SSO 1 S,810 »,5(S7 s.m OCCUPATIONS CLASSIFIED Ixxv It will also be noted that there has been a marked decrease in the number of deaths among the younger persons. Infant mortality was lower in 1915 than in any save one year of the six. There has been an increase in the number of deaths among old persons and this is in full accord with the statistics as to age classes in the State, which show that there has been an increase in the number of old persons. The number of deaths of persons under ten years of age in 1905 was 23 per cent of the total deaths for the year; for 1915 the deaths of persons under ten years of age was 18 per cent of the total for the year, OCCUPATIONS OF THE PEOPLE. The information obtained by enumerators as to persons engaged in gainful pursuits represented a canvass of 788,684 persons, which is 3,016 more than ten years ago. The comparison is not entirely accurate because of the fact that in 1905 the inquiry was as to all persons ten years of age or over and for 1915 as to all fourteen years or over, due to the effect of child labor laws. Table No. 13 gives the information in detail. OOOUPATIONS. Age tJnder 18 Age 18 to 21 Age 21 to 45 Age Over 45 I 1905 1915 1905 1915 1905 1915 1805 1916 Agricultural Pursuits- Male 20.150 1,106 21,255 89 269 368 427 5,800 6,227 3,261 1,050 4,311 4,279 1,791 6,070 7,762 443 8,205 6,133 89 6,222 40 197 237 488 2,522 3,005 3,733 1,746 5,479 1,685 1,105 2,790 2,915 46 2,960 23.917 1,038 24,956 928 6,902 6,830 1.016 8.628 9,644 7.071 3.821 10.892 6.961 8.601 10.562 12,117 689 12.666 14.550 119 -14,669 597 5,225 5,822 1.303 5,840 7,148 9.454 6.013 15,467 6,247 2,184 7,431 7,450 88 7,538 166,705 6,678 173,383 17,480 18,900 36,380 11,515 22,225 33,740 71,870 10,813 82,683 61,477 12,905 74,382 51,019 1,161 62,180 170,321 1,306 171,627 13,282 22,320 85,602 14,411 17,483 31,894 107,165 19,081 126.196 63.909 8.577 72.486 45,795 226 46.021 95,104 4,772 99.876 9.136 1.067 10.202 5,171 7,895 13,066 31,277 641 31,918 32,363 2,463 34,816 20,782 296 21,07'7 90,974 2. 961 Total _.. Professional Service- Male - 93.955 7.202 Female - 2,666 Total 9.767 Domestic and Personal Ser- vice- Male 6,460 6,473 Total - 12.933 Trade and Transportation- Male — — 61,332 Pemale 1,602 Total - - Manufacturing and Mechan- ical Pursuits- Male - 52,984 33,638 Female 2,334 Total 36,872 Reported as Laborers Un- classified— Male - — 20,690 Female 44 Total - 20,634 Ixxvi CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 TOTALS AND PERCENTAGES. Industries. Total Occupations 1905. Total Occupa '3 •3 & .2 a Ph H h a t^ Agricultural pursuits Professional service ^ Domestic^ and pers. service Trade and transportation.. MIg. and mechan. pursuits Laborers unclassified Grand total 305,876 27,632 18,129 113,479 ia5,08O 91,680 661,876 13,593 26,138 44,548 16,325 20,760 319,469 63,770 02,677 129,804 125,830 94,118 781,668 40.7 6.7 8.0 16.4 16.1 12.1 100.0 281,978 21,121 22,657 171,684 104,379 76,760 678,569 4,495 30,307 32,318 28,392 14,200 403 286,473 51,428 54,975 200,076 118,679 77,153 36.3 6.5 7.0 25.4 15.0 788,68^ 100.0 The occupations are divided into five general classes. Each of these classes shows a smaller number of persons listed than ten years ago, except one. The persons employed in trade and trans- portation increased by 70,272 in the ten years ; those engaged in agricultural pursuits decreased 32,996; those in professional ser- vice decreased 2,342; in domestic and personal service the de- crease was 7,702 and among the unclassified laborers the decrease was 16,965. The report shows an increase of 16,720 in the num- ber of males engaged in gainful occupations in general and a decrease of 13,677 in the number of females. With special reference to the employment of women, it is shown that, while in 1905 there were 10,458 females employed under eighteen years of age, only 5,704 were reported for 1915. The de- crease in the number of females employed between the ages of eighteen and twenty-one was 4,060; the decrease in the numbel- of females employed between tM^enty-one and forty-five years of age was 3,739 and the decrease of those over forty-five years of age was 1,124. It is thus seen that the net decrease of 13,677 in the number of women employed was common to all ages. A striking feature of the report, as shown by comparison with 10 years ago, is the decrease in the number of persons under 18 years of age employed. The total number reported for this year is 20,693, which is a decrease of 25,733 from 10 years ago. A part of this decrease must be due to the fact that persons- between the ages of 10 and 14 have been left out of considera- tion this year, but some of it is probably due to lessened em- ployment of young persons in gainful pursuits. The decrease in the number of females was 4,754 and in the number of males 20,979. Among persons of this youngest age class, there was a STATISTICS AS TO HOMES Ixxvii decrease from 21,255 in 1905 to 6,222 for 1915 in the number employed in agricultural pursuits. This represents the major part of the, decrease in the employment of young persons. The number of females reported employed in agricultural pursuits 10 years ago was 1,105 and this year only 89. In some other lines of work, the conditions were reversed. In professional service there was reported for 1905, 269 females and this year 197; in domestic and personal service, there was reported 10 years ago 5,800 females and this time 2,522; in trade and transporta- tion there was reported 10 years ago 1,050 females, and' in 1915, 1,746; in manufacturing and mechanical pursuits, the num- ber of females employed decreased from 1,791 in 1905, to 1,105 in 1915. The number of women employed in all gainful occupations 10 years ago, between the ages of 18 and 21, was 23,529 which was reduced in the 10 years to 19,469 ; those between 21 and 45 years of age numbered 72,682 , and this was reduced to 68,942 ; the number over 45 years of age was reduced from 17,123 to 15,999. It will, therefore, be seen that the greatest reduction in num- ber of women employed was among those under 18 years of age. HOMES AND THEIR VALUE. The enumerators secured information with regard to 336,012 homes and their ownership and value which is S'5,237 more than 10 years ago. Comparison of the two census periods shows that homes owned are now regarded as worth more than twice as much as homes 10 years ago. The reported value of the homes owned 10 years ago was $1,449,456,274 and the increase of value in the 10 years amounted to $1,544,675,424. The report shows, also, an increase of 2,205 in the total num- ber of homes incumbered. The number incumbered has not kept pace with the total number of homes owned, as the per cent of the number incumbered was reduced in the 10 years from 32.1 per cent to 32 per cent. The amount of the incumbrance was increased, but not as much as the aggregate value, so that the percentage of incumbrance was reduced from 15.2 to 14.2. The number of homes owned, 336,012, compares favorably with other population statistics, since the number of couples of mar- ried persons is about 490,000 in the State. There is practically one home owned for every six persons in the State. Ixxviii CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 Age Classes. a 1 u 15 1 1^ O m si PirQ 1" if 1905 Under 21 years of age 282 112,768 187,739 71 64,043 61,389 25.2 47.9 27.4 % 814,109 526,096,964 922,646,2!01 $ 110,265 119,808,447 99,771,900 13.5 21 and UBder 45 years 22.8 45 years and over 10.8 Total SOO.'TSO 10B,50S SS.l %l.m,^56,^^ ms.iso.e]^ M.S 1&15 Under 21 years of age 291 114,711 221,010 91 64,785 62,882 31.3 47.7 23.9 $ 1,689,251 1,021,9S9,085 1.970,612,362 $ 274,298 227,607,176 197,909,704 17.2 9A find nnrlftr 45 ypj^rs 22.8 45 yeare and over __ 10.0 Total -_ sse,oi2 im.ws S2.0 %^,mii.isi,ms V,25,7U,17S 1J,.S PRIVATE PROPERTY AND WEALTH. Taxes are levied against property values as listed in the first instance by local assessors. These estimates being subject to review by various boards. The assessment for taxation in this manner is theoretically at actual value, the levies being generally placed against a taxable value which is 25 per cent of the assessed actual value. The market value of property, privately owned, is probably about six and one-half billion dollars. The per capita wealth of the state is over $2,760 on this basis. VALUE OF LAND AND BUILDINGS. The assessors secured information as to value of land and all other property for 1915 and reported the same to the proper officials for taxation and, at the same time, reported on separate cards to the State Executive Council the value placed on the property by its owners to be included in the census. The assessed actual value of farm land and the buildings thereon for 1915 was $2,337,300,000. This was on 34,507,000 acres of farm land, giving an average of $67.73 an acre adjusted to $68.01 an acre. For census use, returns were made on all tracts of ten acres or over including only 32,951,000 acres. The market value for census LAND, BUILDINGS, LIVE STOCK Ixxix purposes on this area including the value of buildings was $3,992,- 100,000. This gives an average market value of $121.15 for farm land and buildings per acre. If to the aggregate market value of land and buildings reported to the census is added the value at the same rate per acre of the 1,556,000 acres in tracts of less than ten acres each, not included in the enumeration, the sum is $4,180,600,000. This would indicate that the assessors fixed as actual value for the assessment a price about 56 per cent of that which the owners reported as market value for census purposes. The accompanying table shows a comparison of assessment and census figures for 1905 and 1915. VALUE OP LAND AND BUILDINGS. 1 Tear 1905 Tfar IBIS Assessment For Census Assessment For Census 34,630,000 $1,395,245,000 $ 40.28 33,228,448 $1,855,867,424 $ ■ 65.85 34,507,868 $2,337,304,000 $ 67.73 32,951,046 Value with buildings $3,992,100,158 $ 121.15 Average value per acre VALUE OP LIVE STOCK. The live stock values reported for assessment as actual value for 1915 is found to be about 75 per cent of the market value placed upon the same live stock for census purposes. This is in part accounted for by the fact that young animals are not listed for taxation but were included in the enumeration so that for census purposes report was made on a much larger number of animals than for taxation purposes. The following table shows the comparison between assessment and enumeration for the years 1905 and 1915. VALUE OF LIVE STOCK. For the Tear 1905. For Assessment. Number Value For the Census. Number Horses Cattle Swine Mules Sheep Goats 1,088,202 3,612,515 4,030,108 39,914 474,841 15,669 $ 62,602,252 71,638,840 21,077,286 2,«91,320 1,401,456 36,612 $ i5S,W,776 1,238,689 4,765,041 6,447,630 46,383 500,743 21,140 Value 79,280,695 91,019,763 34,464,153 3,626,768 1,987,384 76,993 210,SSt,7Sl Ixxx CENSUS OP IOWA, 1915 For Assessment For the Census Number Value Number Value Tor the Tear 1915. Horses Cattle Swine Mules Sheep Goats 1,279.625 3,088,821 4,641,761 62,139 661,670 7,929 107,544,617 98,463,673 39,716,066 5,701,480 2,194,305 g53,6«,J72 21,131 1,307,775 4,188,966 6,683,476 66,682 575,074 9.387 128,836,632 140,978,731 57,019,987 7,087,621 2,866,843 SSB,821,elS 31,793 PROBABLE MARKET VALUE OP PROPERTY. The market value of privately owned property is plainly much greater than the assessed actual value which for 1915 aggregated $4,055,607,770. As to two of the important elements in the list of private pro- perty, the above tables give definite information as follows: Reported market value, farm land and. buildings $4,180,600,000 Reported market value of all live stock 336,821,000 Total market value of land, buildings and live stock. .$4,517,421,000 The live stock was given an assessed actual value of about 75 per cent of the reported market value. If other personal property was assessed on the same basis, then its market value would aggre- gate $1,719,083,000. By adding this sum to the market value of land, buildings and live stock and adding also the value of money which is reported for assessment at $275,361,000, the aggregate reached is $6,511,876,000. A similar computation as to value ten years ago would show that the difference then, between assessed actual value and reported market value, was not quite as great as at the present time which would suggest that market values have risen more rapidly in ten years than the assessment thereon. The accompanying table gives the assessment value at principal periods since statehood with the percentage of the assessed actual value to the probable market value and the per aapita of wealth. ASSESSMENT OF PROPERTY EXPANSION OP PR6PEETT VALUES. Ixxxi Assessment Value s Probable Market Value Taxable Actual Total Per Capita 1S46 - f 9,939,221 22,623,334 J83,639,3S9 294,632,262 409,819,020 j23,862,S68 039,787,696 022,738,675 693,211,177 1,220,423,256 $ 9.939,221 22,623,334 183,639,339 294,632,252 409,819,020 523,862,858 2,159,950,384 2,490,964,700 2,772,844,608 4,055,607,770 "m" 65 60 40 SO 80 70 65 63 $ 10,000,000 28,270,000 2S2,0C0,000 588,000,000 1,000,000,000 1,760,000,000 2,699,950.000 3,415,000,000 4,265,000,000 6,511,000,000 $ 99 1850 ..- - 1860 __ _- - _-. 1870 — 1880 1890 147 418 482 615 915 1800 1905 1910 1915 - 1,329 1,545 1,868 2,761 The probable market value and the per c ta is a purely un- official estimate. The basis for this estima' as to 1915 is given above, but facts are not sufficiently avails ole to make the same definite computation as to all the other years. The per capita wealth given has relation to this estimated proba- ble market value and shows that the present per capita wealth is $2,761. This is a conservative estimate. ASSESSMENT OP PROPERTY FOR TAXATION. The value of private property assessed for taxation purposes is reported to the State. A complete showing of assessments since the beginning of state history is made in Table No. 40. In some instances, in the early years of statehood, the values made of record are evidently partly estimated. Separate assessment of railroad and similar property commenced in 1872. Figures for recent years, as herein given, differ in some instances from other tables given because of use of the values after adjustment by the state board. A table is also given in Part III showing the re- ported assessed taxable value of all property, by counties, for 1905 and 1915. The assessment of money and credits appears in 1915 separately. The taxable value given is 25 per cent of es- timated actual values, except in the ease of money and credits where the two values are supposed to be identical. The assessed taxable value in 1905 was $622,738,675, and in 1915 it was $945,061,505, exclusive of money and credits. The assessed actual value in 1905 was therefore $2,490,954,700. ■ The assessed actual value in 1915 was $4,055,607,770, which includes the $275,361,750 of money and credits. Ixxxii CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 In ten years the assessed actual value of all property had been increased by over 62 per cent. ASSESSMENT INCREASE IN TEN TEAES. ■ Property Classes. 1906 1915 Land, reported taxable value $ 348,811,402 108,164,164 456,975,566 108,666,065 61,719,402 622,738,676 $ 584,326,984 166,444,221 750,770,205 115,606,427 87,018,642 946,061 505 Personal property, reported taxable value _" Net taxable value of general property Money and credits, actual and taxable 275,361,750 AH property, assessed actual value 2,490,954,700 4,055,607,770 COUNTIES OF HIGHEST PROPERTY VALUATION. The relative position of the counties of the state of highest as- sessed taxable value of general property changed materially in ten years as shown by this table aifording a ten year comparison : 1905 Polk $22,807,760 Scott 15,726,411 Pottawattamie 14,193,933 Linn 13,997,090 Dubuque 12,913,389 Woodbury 12,348,967 1915 Polk $39,274,849 Woodbury 23,150,688 Scott 21,0'87,438 Linn 20,762,783 Pottawattamie 18,371,371 Dubuque 16,859,188 MONEY REPORTED FOR TAXATION. There was no separation of the assessment of money and credits in 1905, but this is now done, and the money and credits assess- ment, both actual and taxable values, for 1915, of counties show- ing largest assessment, was as follows: Scott $10,112,376 Polk 8,468,780 Linn 6,619,995 Clinton 5,529,900 Black Hawk 5,452,212 Jasper 5,124,566 Benton 4,971,844 Ceda? 4,918,687 Washington 4,912,929 Clayton 4,764,954 Johnson $ 4,542,784 Hardin 4,432,505 Keokuk 4,423,657 Story 4,391,834 Henry 4,369,746 Page 4,340,232 Iowa 4,193,424 Marshall 4,145,329 Woodbury 4,117,356 Des Moines 4,109,846 In comparing personal property assessments for the ten year period it should be observed that in 1905 the money and credits were included while for 1915 they are separated. Personal prop- PUBLIC FUNDS AND REVENUE Ixxxiii erty also includes live stock. The valuation of railroad and sim- ilar corporation property' is analyzed further in connection with other railroad statistics. REVENUE FOR PUBLIC PURPOSES. The revenue available for use in carrying on the various govern- mental activities of the State of Iowa and its subordinate divisions aggregates over sixty million dollars annually. Levies against property assessed for taxation provide the major part of the revenue. It has been officially computed that these levies average for the State, for 1915, 46.68 mills on the dollar of the assessed taxable valuation of property. The aggregate of the taxes levied for 1915, as reported to the State, was $50,676,033. Other sources of revenue for public use are the fees received by county, city and state officials, interest on public money; special taxes on insurance companies, automobiles, collateral inherit- ances, etc.'; fines, tuition and sales of produce. Tabulation of annual revenue makes a showing as below, the computation being in each case for the most recent year avail- able : FUNDS AVAILABLE FOR PUBLIC PURPOSES. Taxes levied, all purposes, 1915 $50,676,033 Cities and towns, miscellaneous, 1915 4,648,624 State, miscellaneous revenues, 1915 2,987,133 Counties, miscellaneous revenues, 1913 1,291,134 School funds, various items, 1915 770,185 Colleges, miscellaneous funds, 1915 491,114 United States payments to I. N. G 84,645 Total revenue one year $60,948,868 The average for the State of the consolidated tax levies for vari- ous years, as computed by the Executive Council as the basis for taxation of certain classes of property, has been as follows for ten years : 1906, 41.85 mills ; 1907, 41.5 mills ; 1908, 41.7 mills ; 1909, 43.8 mills; 1910, 45.12 mills; 1911, 46.1 mills; 1912, 47 mills; 1913. 47.7 mills; 1914, 46.8 mills; 1915, 46.68 mills. DIRECT TAX LEVIES. In Table No. 41 will be found a record of the reported taxes levied since statehood, so far as a record has been kept of the same. In the earlier years of statehood the State apparently kept no record of any taxes save those levied for administrative purposes, and the Ixxxi-v CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 printed reports sliow that the taxes were not all collected. Begin- ning with 1870 a different system prevailed and the counties were required to report to the State the assessments and the taxes levied for different purposes. From time to time new funds were added and many of these do not show in the table. The levies for insane support, the poor, railroad aid, court houses, etc., are not included. For a considerable period there was no separation of the highway and bridge funds from other county funds. In the first year of statehood the State called on the counties to contribute, by direct taxes, $7,454.42 to the support of the State, then with a population of 102,388, which made about 7 cents for each person. By 1871 the state tax levy was made to yield $967,252 and the total of all tax levies amounted to $11,267,562. Then there was a reduction of total taxes for a period of years, followed by a gradual increase, so that for 1915 the aggregate was $50,676,033. PER CAPITA OF TAXES. The following table shows a comparison oi taxes per capita of population for the different general purposes in 1871 and in 1915 : 1871 1915 State general revenue $0.81 $0.89 County general revenue 1.21 2.07 School funds .' 3.68 7.92 Highways and bridges .87 4.28 Municipal taxes .20 3.20 Other tax Items 2.67 3.20 Total all direct levies $9.44 $21.56 TAXES IN THE COUNTIES. In Table No. 42 there is a comparative showing of the taxes levied in the state for 1905 and for 1915, covering a ten year period, giving total for each, county, and with the assessed valu- ation of the property against which the levies are made. In the ten years the aggregate of taxes levied increased from $26,061,977 to $50,676,033, or a net increase of $24,614,056. This increase in ten years included for the state general revenue an increase of $195,826, for the county general revenue $2,110,399, for the municipal funds $3,303,860, for the roads $5,834,868 and for edu- cational purposes $8,548,144. The remainder is divided between various county funds for special purposes. There has been an increase in the amount of taxes levied by the counties paying the largest aggregate of taxes. The six with heaviest tax account for 1905 and the six for 1915 are as follows: DIVISION OF TAXES Ixxxv 1915 Polk $ 3,099,559 Woodbury 1,859,819 Linn 1,525,195 Scott 1,453,413 Pottawattamie 1,138,359 Black Hawk 1,102,231 $10,178,576 1905 Polk $ 1,576,877 Scott 738,559 Woodbury 731,486 Linn 718,958 Dubuque 669,106 Pottawattamie 667,393 $ 5,102,379 TAX LEVIES AND PURPOSES THEREOF. Tax levies are made for specific purposes and the money de- rived therefrom is mainly devoted to the purposes indicated. The table below gives the division of the tax levies as made for ten years, grouped into six general classes, namely: the State general revenue fund, much of which is transferred to funds for schools, roads, etc.; the state investments, which represent money used for purchase of land and erection of permanent buildings; the county general revenue ; the funds for cities and towns ; for roads and bridges ; for schools and colleges. GENERAL PURPOSE OF TAX LEVIES. Years - 3 a S> State in- vestments ] 1 County in general 1 Municipal purposes Roads and '' bridges ' 1 Schools and colleges 1 1905 .... $ 1,992,932 $ 311,409 $ 4,910,568 J 4,233,292 $ 4,457,606 $10,156,169 $ 28,061,977 1906 ._. 1,9«,174 317,382 6,002, eu 4,522,334 4,533,792 10,062,970 26,333,163 1907 .... 2,240,878 329,M8 5,828.914 4,008,682 4,877,123 10,610,649 27,886,794 1908 .... 2,334,«» 333,486 6,529,666 5,176,980 4,886,811 10,987,027 29,248,378 1909 .... 2,317,061 340,739 6,198,794 5,274,419 5,416,303 11,733,916 31,281,231 1910 .... 2,287,S33 346,607 6,448,884 5,376,152 5,746,214 12,295,053 82,500,545 1911 .... 2,602,446 379,156 7,364,945 8,088,447 6,780,952 13,081,276 36,197,222 1912 .... 2,510,911 369,223 6,622,289 6,997,938 6,669,027 13,978,718 36,148,106 1913 .... 2,274,633 1,409,408 10,447,320 6,477,654 9,436,796 15,976,244 46,022,010 1914 2,770,868 1,433,256 9,118,349 7,209,074 9,268,339 17,272,483 47,072,369 1915 ..:. 2,100,000 2,092,117 10,192,314 7,537,151 10,050,139 18,704,312 60.676,083 MISCELLANEOUS SOURCES OF REVENUE. The public revenue aside from tax levies forms an increasingly large item in making up the funds from which expenditures are rijade in all departments of government. These miscellaneous items go into general funds or for support and current expenses. They ^'include fees, interest, special taxes, special ' assessments, tuition ;'and similar items. The principal sums derived in this way in recent years, so far as information is available, are: Ixxxvi CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 STATE REVENUE, IkTISCELLANBOUS SOURCES. Some of the more important of the sources of this miscellaneous revenue, which goes to swell the aggregate of the state general fund, are the following: Tears 1| 1=^ Si a 11 III o 11 a m s 19C6 . .. _ . .. $ 190,748 163,073 188,286 231,706 216,473 240,964 249,846 281,766 255,376 332,190 $ 74,394 72,702 66,224 68,716 160,395 1:4,774 76,741 79,066 661930 56,544 $ 299,904 1907 $ 1,831 12,697 25,149 49,061 67,389 506,572 711,229 1,026,778 1,324,346 322,119 1908 - 303,324 1909 - 318,548 1910 $ 107,798 91,362 89,584 83,750 93,283 108,295 332,490 1911 -„, 1912 - 1913 344,827 365,419 390,649 1914 469,167 1916 494,663 INTEREST COLLECTIONS FOR PUBLIC USB. In recent years the policy has been adopted for the State, and all departments of the State, of collecting interest on public money on deposit as well as that loaned out. The income from this source is now considerable, as shown by the following partially complete table. Interest on school and county deposits has been in vogue only a few years. Tears II u la 1^ h OiQ !■- V g If 6' $ 19,417 17,370 10,426 10,207 15,245 21,514 21,664 22,621 20,671 ^.283 $ 49,336 50,836 60,337 60,008 51.881 61,681 50,843 63,619 62,840 53,812 $ 219,947 215,184 216,644 216,514 1910 -_ - $ 109,464 123,890 134,065 150,160 215,832 216,828 1911 — - - 1912 1913 - — 1914 _ _ $ 18,253 87,241 101,552 216,147 216,369 216,560 1915 __'_ _ Cities reported for 1915 $48,867 interest on municipal money. COST OF PUBLIC BUSINESS Ixxxvii FEDERAL AID IN IOWA. There is also revenue to the State from federal- aid given for specific purposes. There is received annually from the United States for aid in the work of the State College of Agriculture and the experiment station $90,000 ; the aid given by the United States for care of soldiers at the state home amounted in 1913 to $53,175 ; the apportionment to Iowa of the funds for the support of the national guard amounts for 1916 to $84,645. EXPENDITURE OF THE PUBLIC FUNDS. The money available for conduct of the public business and the enlargement and upkeep of the plant with which public business is done, is distributed through many agencies and for an infinite variety of purposes, and it is not easy to trace the money to its destination or to determine on an accurate classification of ex- penditures. Tax levies are for specific purposes but there is much overlapping of the uses to which these funds are put. Out of the state general revenue fund there are expenditures for educa- tion, militia, fairs, courts, bonuses, etc. County funds go to sup- port of dependents in state institutions and for educational and other purposes. Municipal expenditures cover a great variety of purposes. Of the more than sixty million dollars of annual reve- nues for public use at least a part is counted twice, as where one fund is transferred to another. A large part of the payments out of the State treasury represents merely disbursement of money col- lected and turned over to be used for special purposes. Besides the cost of administration there are payments for judicial salaries, college support and investment in land and buildings. The auto- mobile tax is collected by the State for the use of the highway funds used locally, but it appears as an expenditure out of the general revenue. The hunters' license fund also passes through the State treasury without really becoming a part of the general revenue fund. Expenditures or payments out of the general rev- enue fund of the State for the last biennial period and the one of ten years before have been as follows : Ixxxviii CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 PAYMENTS OUT OP STATE TEEASDEY— TWO PERIODS. 1904-5 State administration General assembly Iowa National Guard Salaries of judges Board of Control institutions . Educational institutions Investment land and buildings. Miscellaneous state expense Fairs and farmers' institutes _ Monuments on battlefields Repairs on capitol St. Louis exposition Aid to normal instruction Fish and game fund Automobile tax distributed .— 131. 152, 420, 2,665, 916. 1,718, 558 37, 91 ,671.98 ,773.31 ,091.61 352.40 451.41 ,598.71 ,445.77 ,7E6.39 say. 41 ,406.31 ,684.36 ,000.00 $ 7,542,601.66 218,996.62 312,475.97 482,325.82 3,731,823.02 2,682,640.97 2,638,931.97 448,609.98 120,942.69 133,977.95 185,873.21 1,621,045.41 $ 13,870,775.2 PAYMENTS OUT OP COUNTY FUNDS. Payments out of the county funds are easily grouped as to general purposes. As to much of this, the county acts as a col- lecting and disbursing agent only, the money going through other hands for final disposition. The state tax goes to the State Treas- urer for the state general revenue fund. The taxes devoted to state investments go also to the State Treasurer, thence into per- manent investment in grounds and buildings for the state and state institutions. The educational funds include, in addition to funds for schools and colleges, the taxes for agricultural extension work. The funds for bridges and roads and for municipal pur- poses are clearly defined. All else are grouped under the general head of county purposes. These payments or expenditures follow- ing this general grouping are fully shown in the reports of the county accountants to the Auditor of State for 1914, tabulated as to each and every county in Table 43. The aggregate for each group of expenditures for 1914 is as follows: State support, general state revenue $ 3,340,335.23 Municipal, all cities and towns 9,205,879.00 Educational, schools and colleges 17,585,341.88 Bridges and roads 14,408,812.96 State investments and land 1,397,968.84 General county and other purposes 14,017,526.54 $59,955,864.45 This aggregate of over $59,000,000 includes some duplication and therefore does not represent actual expenditure. It includes some transfer of funds, and probably the payment of debts or SUNDRY PUBLIC EXPENDITURES Ixxxix refunding of debts. But it indicates the volume of business done through county treasuries each year. INVESTMENT EXPENDITURES IN TEN YEARS. There are additions being made each year to the plant with which public business is being done, and especially in buildings and grounds and the equipment of the institutions of various kinds. These investments the past- ten years, partly estimated, show : Capitol ground purchase $ 613,067.84 At Vinton 80,446.95 State Teachers' college 538,616.88 State University 2,081,964.73 State college 2,483,565.42 Board of Control institutions 3,542,991.20 School sites and houses 11,298,853.20 City and town improvements about 30,000,000.00 EDUCATIONAL FUNDS COMPARED. The funds which are expended for education come largely from direct taxes, but also from interest on public money, fines and for- feitures, fees, rentals and federal aid. The following shows the major items for 1906 and 1915, the items for the Teachers' Col- lege being half of the biennial period and therefore only ap- proximate. 1906 1915 Schools, Teachers' fund $ 6,950,580.00 $ 11,799,559.00 Schools, Contingent fund 2,148,759.00 4,285,744.00 Schools, Schoolhouse fund 1,217,723.00 3,225.832.00 Schools, School Building fund 1,267,804.00 Total $ 10,317,062.00 ? 20,578,939.00 State University ? 530,724.00 ? 986,513.00 State College 539,641.00 1,296,943.00 State Teachers' College 92,991.00 295,699.00 Total $ 1,163,356.00 ? 2,579,155.00 College for Blind, Support ? 34,083.00 ? 47,962.00 School for Deaf, Support 34,105.00 60.000.00 Total ? 68,188.00 ? 107,962.00 Grand Total ? 11,548,606.00 f 23,266,056.00 EXPENDITURES FOR HIGHWAYS. The expenditures for highways and bridges in 10 years aggre>- gated $67,665,496 exclusive of money borrowed. Of this all but $3,400,000 was secured by direct tax levies. The following table shows the tax levies for highway purposes and for bridge pur- poses for the 10-year period, which constitute tha major part of xe CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 the funds available for these two purposes. In addition there is, also, the automobile fund and some others, and to secure informa- tion as to the actual amount expended there should be added the funds derived from bond issues and transfers: 1906 1907 1908 1909 1910 1911 1912 1913 1914 1915 OTHER REVENUE. The automobile tax, which is collected by the State and goes to the counties to increase their local highway funds, appears on the books of the State as an expenditure out of the state general revenue fund. In the biennial period 1910-1912 the amount dis- tributed to the various road funds was $334,739.69. In the biennial period 1912-14 the amount distributed was $1,321,897.09. For the year 1915, the first half of the last fiscal period, the amount collected in this fund was $1,324,344.54. The hunters' license fund in six years aggregated $465,784 which was handled through the state treasury but all used for game law enforcement purposes. Highways Bridges $ 2,325,263 $ 1,967,546 2,466,161 2,178,028 2,465,947 2,180,381 2,50'5,868 2,563,193 2,742,386 2,756,659 3,368,929 3,059,319 3,4711,036 2,932,959 4,418,967 3,750,165 5,209,352 3,851,298 5,935,175 4,114,964 $ 34,909,084 $ 29,354,512 EQUIPMENT FOR PUBLIC BUSINESS. The State of Iowa, of and for itself and through its various sub-divisions necessary for effective government, has a valuable equipment for the transaction of public business, and there have been large additions to this equipment in recent years. The value of public property can be stated only as an estimate, in most in- stances, though in others it may be fixed at its cost, but much of the property has value that is beyond any market price. The aggregate value, on a fair estimate, of the property publicly owned and used for the benefit of the people, is over $175,000,000. INVENTORY OF PUBLIC PROPERTY xci VALUE OF PROPERTY DEVOTED TO PUBLIC USE. State Institutions, Value of the land $ 1,927,199 Buildings 8,880,217 Equipment and live stock 1,679,734 $12,487,150 State Educational Institutions, Land 640,000 Buildings 5,595,000 Equipment 3,628,000 9,863,000 State Capitol and Surroundings, Land, est 3,000,000 Cost of Capitol 3,296,256 Heating plant, etc 200,000 Historical building 396,000 Historical collections 300,000 I. N. G. property 127,500 State libraries 325,000 State Fair property 1,188,010 8,832,765 Battlefield and soldier monuments, cost 421,870 Property of fish and game department 75,000 Historical Society, library and collections, est 200,000 Permanent school fund, invested 4,805,897 Total possessions of the State $36,685,683 Property of incorporated towns, est $ 10,213,000 County property, farms, court houses, equipment 12,426,892 City possessions, land, buildings, equipment 31,470,922 School property, land, buildings, libraries, etc 40,241,732 Land used for highways, 642,000 acres, est 44,000,000 Total value property in public use $176,038,229 The property owned and controlled by the State directly in- cludes real estate, buildings and equipment at the various state institutions for educational, charitable and correctional purposes listed at over 22 million 'dollars. This is located in 22 different places in the State, and includes farms, hospitals, colleges, quar- ries, factories, schools, cottages, libraries and other things. LAND IN PUBLIC USE. The acreage of land which is used for public purposes, not in- cluding streets in the cities and towns, nor county farm and court house sites, nor the lakes and lake beds, is as follows: State Institution farms and grounds 10,397 State Educational institutions 1,778 Fish and game department land 30 State Fair park 283 Land at State Capitol 73 ■Iowa National Guard camp ground and range 212 Parks in cities 5,101 School grounds, estimated 14,000 Highways, 104,027 miles (Av. 50 ft. wide) 642,162 xcii CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 The 12,774 acres of land owned by the State and devoted to various strictly state purposes have been gradually purchased as needed, but more than 4,000 acres have been acquired in the past ten years. The State has just purchased 40.1 acres at the capital for public buildings, monuments, etc., for $1,124,900. Many of the public highways are 66 feet wide but an average is taken, and the value fixed at the assessed value of land. POSSESSIONS OF CITIES AND TOWNS. The municipalities of Iowa have property that is valued at over forty-one million dollars, and this is by far the most extensive holding of property for public use in Iowa. All of the 105 cities of the state are lighted, either with gas or electricity. Many of them own their own light plants. Of 400 towns from which information was secured, 100 were reported as lighted by their own systems, there being 87 electric plants owned. The major part of the towns secure light from private plants. A few of the cities and about 50 per cent of the towns own their own water plants. The reports to the state from 400 of the 788 towns show town possessions of all kinds valued at $5,184,377, which would indicate a total value for aU the towns of about $10,200,000. The reports to the municipal accounting department for 1915 from 99 of the cities of the state showed city possessions of $31,- 470,922, distributed as follows: Municipal buildings and furniture $2,423,53^ Police equipment, markets, etc 2,936,132 Equipment streets and alleys 231,734 Cemeteries 615,746 Electric light works 1,167,886 Water works 1,259,596 Bridges 2,923,583 Libraries 3,716,638 Parks 6,196,074 POSSESSIONS OF THE COUNTIES. The va-lues last reported to the state officials by county auditors on county possessions show an aggregate of $11,346,679. The court houses and grounds were listed at $6,327,796; the county jails at $855,357 ; the county homes and farms at $3,504,532 ; and the other property of the counties, $658,993. IOWA NATIONAL GUARD xclii SCHOOL PROPERTY. Tlie most valuable property of the people of Iowa used for public purposes is for the public schools. The reports of county superin- tendents to the Department of Public Instruction, show that the school houses and grounds were valued in 1915 at $37,061,740. The apparatus of the schools was inventoried at $1,915,701. There were 1,264,291 volumes in the schools, a large part of which are works of reference, so that the average value is about one dollar per volume. It is estimated that about 14,000 acres of land is in use in connection with the schools. OTHER PROPERTY IN PUBLIC USB. The value of the libraries in public use is not far from six mil- lion dollars, which includes many buildings and the grounds, and the books and collections. The larger part of this is included in the value set on possessions of the cities and towns and school dis- tricts. The State owns property devoted to the use of the Iowa National Guard valued at $127,500, including the land for a permanent camp and a part of the rifle range. The State owns the land and buildings and equipment for the an- nual state fairs and this has been recently inventoried by the de- partment at $1,188,010. The monument to soldiers and sailors at the state capitol and the various monuments on battlefields were erected with appropriations aggregating $421,870. The public highways of the state make use of over 642,000 acres of land. There are also about 80 meandered lakes, the title to which is in the state, and all having value. The value of bridges in the cities and towns is included in the reports as to municipalities, but the value of bridges in the country is not included. MILITARY FORCE OF THE STATE. The Iowa National Guard, which is that portion of the militia trained and equipped for military action, is organized under a strict military code of the State and in harmony with the United States army regulations. It is supported by direct state appro- priations and receives federal aid. The governor is commander in chief and directs the guard through the adjutant general and staff. There is a brigade of infantry with a commander, a bat- xciv CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 lalion of field artillery, a squadron of cavalry, an engineer com- pany and medical department. Inspections are by regular army officers. The strength of the Iowa National Guard as shown by reports to the adjutant general as of December 31, 1915, was : Staff departments 6 Commander First Brigade and staff 6 Medical department • 176 Engineer company 72 First Squadron Cavalry 299 First Battalion Field Artillery 415 First Infantry 795 Second Infantry 870 Third Infantry 800 First Separate Company 64 3,503 The Iowa National Guard is equipped with the same arms as the United States army. The infantry and cavalry companies are sup- plied with regulation rifles, the artillery companies have mounted field pieces, and the hospital and medical departments are fully equipped. The members receive pay for drill and camp service. There are two rifle ranges owned by the United States in Iowa and the State pays $4,600 for lease of other ranges. The State makes an allowance of $60,000 a year for rental of armories. The prop- erty used by the Iowa National Guard has a value estimated at: Permanent camp ground $ 110,000 Equipment owned by guard 15,000 Horses and mules owned by state 2,500 Value of armories used 1,083,500 $1,211,000 , The Iowa National Guard is now on a basis of fixed state support of $165,000 annually. The Iowa proportion of the federal appro- priation for the fiscal year 1916 is $84,645. This makes the total available for use of the guard $249,645. The State requires each organization to have an armory or suit- able meeting place and there are now forty-eight of these in use in the State. This report was prior to the going into effect of the law of 1916 which contemplates material enlargement of the organized guard of the State. INSTITUTIONS OF THE STATE xcv The militia of the State includes the male citizens between the ages of 18 and 45 inclusive. MILITIA. Number ot Militia Age Percentage General Nativity and Color 190S 1910 1915 19(S 1910 1916 Native white, native parents Native white, foreign or mixed parentage 238,090 162,498 66,205 i.OtS 1 249,216 1 276,938 163 165 1 1«. 03 o 1899 . . 1,061 623 801 865 931 798 865 878 922 U3 85 79 89 70 50 87 74 78 1,520 1,724 1,065 931 1,124 961 1,049 1,164 1,287 1,280 1.039 1,248 ■ 1,371 1,402 1,221 1,340 1,313 1,288 1901 3,371 3,193 3,266 3,527 3,030 1903 - 1905 1906 - 1908 1910 — 3 341 1912 _. __ .. 8,429 3,675 1914 PRIVATE INSTITUTIONS. There are private institutions in the State making a specialty of eare of dependent persons or those ill of mental and other disorders. Reports show their inmates to have been as follows : Tears a .1 o, GQ a o > ^ S a o » S W Iz; P B 1899 427 433 474 524 49S 507 1901 . 1903 1905 1906 40 39 65 84 683 1908 - ^ - 15 645 1910 . . - — 599 570 687 52 51 S3 54 33 31 14 32 32 719 1912 686 1914 -_.. 783 CARE OP FRIENDLESS CHILDREN. The State maintains an Orphans' Home, and besides, there are twenty-seven private institutions caring for orphans and others left dependent. The reports of these private institutions for the care of children show the following : Tsars a u 'So ^iz; •a rt u . o 3| 1 Placed in homes 1 Total expendi- tures 1903 — 21 21 20 21 22 23 26 27 27 27 27 27 27 915 981 1,049 1,068 1,160 1,171 1,247 1,265 1,357 1,279 1,366 1,807 1,378 926 888 860 890 1,064 1,208 1,278 1,228 1,079 1,16S 1,234 1,644 1,417 220 268 333- 271 .312 374 393 358 307 169 2^ 186 130 2,061 2,137 2,242 2,229 2,526 2,753 2,918 2,843 2,743 2,603 2,842 3,037 2,925 41 52 47 66 7S 64 78 83 71 88 62 39 40 en 690 747 714 731 846 872 799 675 467 691 499 627 $188,106.77 1904 - 158,128.11 1905 . — - — 197,016.88 1906 - 214,737.30 1907 344,404.61 1908 - - 251,925.75 1909 . — — 277,181.04 1910 283,999.14 1911 - 277,784.28 1913 - 400,999.33 1913 - — 390,573,22 1914 402,713.88 1915 397,212.51 cii CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 In addition to the seventeen institutions, the State has recently purchased land for a stone quarry in Lyon county, and this acreage is included with that of the Reformatory. EDUCATIONAL FACILITIES. The pioneers who blazed the way for civilization to supplant the wild life and to make possible a great state looked early to educa- tional facilities for their children. They established and maintained schools before there was any organized government. Before Iowa was even named they authorized by law a college and seven semin- aries west of the Mississippi river. They provided for schools be- fore they had money with which to pay the teachers, authorizing taxes for schools to be paid in ' ' good merchantable property, ' ' and the first schoolmasters were compensated by barter. Schools and colleges grew with the young state and the zeal for education never slackened. School attendance for certain ages is compulsory. Only one per cent of the people was found by the enumeration in 1915 to be un- able to write. The State makes provision for training teachers for the school work, and for training persons for the professions and in some de- gree for the trades and vocations of life. There are secondary schools and institutions of higher learning, besides private schools and private colleges. THE PUBLIC SCHOOLS. The present public school system, modified according to the needs of the day, was adopted in 1858. It was based on the idea of the township being the proper unit for local school administration, but this idea was later departed from, and more recently there has been return to it in school matters. Prior to 1858 the schools were de- veloped locally, in part by taxation and in part from tuition. The first school had been opened in 1830, which was before the com- mencement of permanent settlement of the territory. When the school system was adopted, there were 2,200 ungraded schools in the State. The next year, when for the first time it was possible to secure complete information, the school showing included : Number of schools in 1859, 4,243 ; male teachers, 2,901 ; female teachers, 2,364 ; persons of school age, 240,531 ; number enrolled, 142,849 ; aggregate cost of schools, $617,632. PUBLIC SCHOOL STATISTICS ciil The number of men engaged in teaching exceeded the number of women thus engaged until the time of the civil war, which closed many schools ; but after the war there was a great impetus to edu- cation and by 1870 there were 6,919 ungraded schools and 213 graded schools, the aggregate cost of the schools being $6,191,633. In earliest years the log schoolhouses predominated and at one time there was reported nearly 900 in use. In the fiscal year 1915 there was paid two and a half million dollars for schoolhouses and sites. School property is in use of a value exceeding forty million dollars, in which twenty thousand teachers give instruction to over a half million pupils each year. The gradual growth of the public school system is shown in a table in Part III of this report. At no period in the history of the state has there been more sub- stantial growth of the schools and material increase of equipment than the present. The following table shows the main facts for the decade : PUBLIC SCHOOL STATISTICS. Tears Schools Teachers Enrollment 18,777 29,6B0 530,639 19,214 28,806 519,836 19,456 27,960 512,581 20,181 27,807 605,192 19,697 27,898 496,045 19,811 27,149 507,294 20,109 26,748 507,109 20,308 27,482 507,845 20,349 26,062 617,669 20,94fl 26,791 522,423 Expenditures 1906 1907 1908 1909 1910 1911 1912 1913 1914 1915 $ 10,317,062 n,242,598 11,936,363 12,702,299 13,711,466 14,399,299 15,330,652 16,442,528 17,867,026 20,578,939 In addition to the above facts regarding the status of the public school system, the reports from county superintendents to the superintendent of public instruction for 1915 show the following: Total value of schoolhouses $37,061,740 Total value of apparatus 1,915,701 Number volumes In libraries 1,264,291 Number of male teachers 2,628 Number of female teacher^ 24,163 Average school attendance 391,132 Total paid for teachers' salaries $11,174,715 Average compensation teachers 59.21 Average number of months of school 8.7 Percentage of attendance to enrollment 75 Number of schoolhouses built in last year 232 Interest on permanent school fund $ 216,550 Principal of permanent school fund 4,805,598 CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 CONSOLIDATION OF SCHOOLS. The number of ungraded schools in the state has been decreasing for fifteen years and the number of graded schools has been in- creasing steadily since 1870. In 1900 the graded schools comprised 31 per cent of the entire number in the state and now they comprise 41 per cent. The teachers employed in the public schools numbered 29,650 in 1906 and the reports show 26,791 in 1915, a decrease of 10 per cent ; but in that period there has been an increase of over fourteen million dollars in the value of sehoolhouses. The effort to secure return to the original plan of the township unit of school ad- ministration and a grouping of schools so as to admit of grading for rural schools as well as those in cities and towns has been pro- nounced in recent years. The first consolidated school was open- ed in 1897 and by the close of 1915 the reports showed 155 con- solidated districts in 59 counties of the state. This resulted in the closing of 429 one-room schools. Instruction in normal work to prepare for teaching in the rural schools is conducted under state supervision in 168 of the the high schools of the state. This work was commenced in 1913, since which time 1,738 certificates have been issued from these normal courses, and there are 3,500 students enrolled. The State gives from the public treasury a bonus for encour- agement of the consolidated schools that give special vocational instruction and for normal work in the high schools. In the fiscal period 1914-16 this aid amounted to: For consolidated schools, $134,750.00; for aid in normal training in high schools, $238,125.00. PRIVATE AND SPECIAL SCHOOLS. There are a large number of private schools in Iowa, mainly connected with church organizations, giving instruction to stud- ents both in the grades and in academic work. Reports to the Department of Public Instruction for 1915 show 155 of these schools with an enrollment for that school year of 23,628. The State maintains schools at tarious institutions, the chief ones being the following: Attendance School for the deaf .' 216 College for the blind 135 Soldiers' orphans' home 573 Industrial school for girls 178 Industrial school for boys 434 Institution for feeble-minded 1,467 COLLEGES OP IOWA cv These figures do not in all cases represent attendance, since as in the case of the institution for the feeble-minded, all the inmates are included whether in school work or not. Schools are also maintained at the reformatory and elsewhere. Included in the list of private schools are a number of business colleges and others giving special instruction, and private insti- tutions for training of young persons in special lines are found in many of the cities. There is ample provision for training for the professions and skilled trades. There is a law school at the State university and at Drake university ; a medical college is maintained at the State university with abundant equipment; dentistry is taught at the State university; pharmacy at the State university and at High- land Park college; veterinary science is taught at the State col- lege, as well as agriculture, dairying, animal husbandry and like specialties ; engineering is provided for at the State college and the State university. There are classes in theology at Drake univers- ity and at Dubuque college. HIGHER EDUCATION— PRIVATE INSTITUTIONS. The educational scheme for Iowa, as planned from the outset, included provision for education in the higher branches, and in fact, colleges were established about the same time as the earliest of the free schools. Denmark academy was established in terri- torial days and continued until recent years. Two years before statehood there was established at Mt. Pleasant a seminary which in 1855 became the present Wesleyan university. In 1848 Iowa college was founded at Grinnell. Others followed rapidly, Cor- nell at Mt. Vernon and Central at Pella in 1853, Lenox at Hop- kinton in 1856, Oskaloosa in 1861, and Tabor in 1866. Many of them have fine equipment and are accumulating large endowment funds. These colleges have land and buildings and equipment valued at over six million dollars and have an income of over a million and a half dollars. With 671 members of the faculty, including the instructors for special work, they enrolled in 27 colleges a total of 10,148 students in the school year 1914-15. Their grad- uates from liberal arts courses numbered 581. Their reports as to faculty and instructors, value of property and income for 1914-15 were as follows: cvi CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 COLLEGES IN IOWA. Faculty Students Income Valuation Drake University, Des Moines.... 47 1,061 ? 189,618 | 513,905 Highland Park Coll., Des Moines 31 994 126,000 275,000 Grinnell College, Grinnell 32 664 182,064 758,768 Cornell College, Mt. Vernon 40 683 132,079 388,000 Simpson College, Indianola 30 616 46,868 271,000 Morningside College, Sioux City. . 25 577 44,247 352,000 Dubuque (St. Joseph's) College, Dubuque 31 517 125,000 1,200,000 Coe College, Cedar Rapids 21 503 61,312 498,086 Ellsworth College, Iowa Falls.... 22 492 37,423 160,000 Des Moines College, Des Moines. 21 470 42,059 300,000 Penn College, Oskaloosa 15 369 29,800 115,000 Iowa Wesleyan Coll., Mt. Pleasant 18 346 31,926 256,250 Waldorf College, Forest City 11 302 30,386 100,000 Central Holiness Coll., Oskaloosa 27 266 34,389 75,000 Dubuque German College and Seminary, Dubuque 20 236 104,497 724,677 Upper Iowa College, Fayette 16 246 22,321 165,000 Parsons College, Fairfield 20 218 38,216 201,569 St. Ambrose College, Davenport . 17 212 Luther College, Decorah 18 243 37,173 248,700 Central College, Pella 16 195 15,767 110,000 Leander Clark College, Toledo... 16 182 24,081 107,000 Buena Vista College, Storm Lake 15 184 22,621 82,300 Graceland College, Lamoni 13 160 17,828 90,000 Grand View College, Des Moines. 10 130 18,000 50,000 Lenox College, Hopklnton 15 127 9,520 84,150 Tabor College, Tabor 14 79 8,000 190,000 Wartburg College, Clinton 10 76 19,800 85,000 State 571 10,148 $ 1,450,995 $ 7,401,405 HIGHER EDUCATION— STATE INSTITUTIONS. The state has established and supports three institutions of higher education under direction of the State Board of Education, in which institutions is given instruction in all collegiate and professional branches, and in normal, vocational and special work. The plan of state institutions of higher education approved by the first general assembly was for a State University at Iowa City with branches at Dubuque and Fairfield, and with normal departments at Oskaloosa, Andrew and Mt. Pleasant. Later the branches were abandoned and for a time the normal instruction was at the Uni- versity, but afterwards an orphans' home was converted into a State Normal school. Under stimulus of the Morrill law an agri- cultural college was organized. Formerly these institutions were governed by separate boards which were abolished in 1909, when the present State Board of Education was created. EDUCATIONAL INSTITUTIONS cvii Under this same board the state has a College for the Blind, formerly managed by the State Board of Control, giving educa- tional opportunities for blind children and including the second- ary or high school branches. These four educational institutions of the state have property, including endowments, aggregating $9,863,000. They have an annual income, derived chiefly from appropriations out of the general revenue of the state, but also from federal aid, endow- ment fund interest, tuitions, fees and other sources, of over two and a half million dollars. The State has invested in land, build- ings and equipment at these institutions in the past ten years over five million dollars. In the ten year period the number of members of the faculties regularly employed at the three institutions of higher education increased from 345 to 692 and the total enrollment increased from '5,694 to 10,127. The record of results as shown by graduation of students for the college year 1914-15 is as follows : Olassitication of Graduates. @ 3i Liberal arts courses Industrial science Normal courses Agricultural department Home economics ._ Law Medicine Dentistry Engineering Pharmacy Veterinary science other departments Certificates Total., 561 27 152 71 3S3 The following shows the record made for ten years by the educational institutions now under the State Board of Education, in the matter of members of the faculties, exclusive of part-time in- structors, and the total enrollment at each institution for the years named: evill CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 STATE EDUCATIONAL INSTITUTIONS, FACULTY AND STUDENTS. Tears University 1 ? ^ CO state College 3 154 Teachers College ^ S 3 3 ^ ra Col. for Blind ■3 1906 1907 1908 1909 1910 1911 1912 1913 1914 1916 151 1,815 192 2,072 191 2,3(15 207 2,473 205 2,S62 200 2,090 218 2,080 223 2,255 246 2,660 274 2,996 127 137 153 161 m 172 185 208 1,389 2,381 2,381 2,631 2,350 2,307 2,510 2,1882 3,458 3,629 106 115 2,490 3,671 2,478 2,545 2,648 2,500 2,426 2,698 2,978 3,602 183 151 164 167 139 126 138 121 1S5 The State has a large investment in property at the state edu- cational institutions. An inventory of this property shows as follows as of date June 30, 1915: INVENTORY STATE EDUCATIONAL INSTITUTIONS. Property Olassilieation. Iowa State College 1 > •el? '3 $ 210,000 2,300,000 60,000 624,000 227,000 152,000 $ 400,000 2,300,fO(» 25,000 666,000 ' SS6.000 146,000 $ 20,000 885,000 ^,000 200,000 50,000 75,000 $ 630,000 5,488,000 Residences Equipment of departments 110,000 1,390,000 General equipment - - - - 633,000 Furniture 373,000 Value of property July 1, 1916 $ 3,473,000 $ 687,000 $ 3,893,000 $ 260,000 145,000 $ 1,205,000 $ 8,571,000 $ 947,000 145,003 Gifts, etc. — — — — Total inventory , $ 4,160,000 $ 4,298,000 $ 1,205,000 $ 9,663,000 The figures as to real estate values are approximately correct, and also as to endowment fund. The last inventory for the Col- lege for the Blind showed a value of $200,047.78. In Tables No. 45 to 48 will be found a detailed report as to income of each of the institutions under the State Board of Edu- cation. The State University was established in Iowa City in 1847. Gifts of land provided an endowment fund. When the state capital v,'as removed, the capitol building was made the central structure of the university group. Additional land has been secured and LIBRARY STATISTICS cix buildings erected and equipped for all departments properly re- lated to a university. The State College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts was opened on a farm near Ames in 1869, has an endowment fund and receives aid from the United States for the college and for the experiment station and extension work. It has the largest and most beautiful campus in the state and an extensive equipment. The State Teachers College at Cedar Falls was opened in 1876 but there had been provision for normal instruction elsewhere. The name was changed from State Niormal School a few years ago and the scope of the work has been enlarged and extended. Since the board of education has been in charge, the College for the Blind at Vinton has been greatly improved as to equip- ment and in the matter of educational methods. The reports of these various institutions show income as follows : State University, year 1914-15 ? 986,513.56 State College, year 1914-15 1,296,943.43 State Teachers' College, biennium 1913-14 665,528.47 College for the Blind, year 1915 47,962.22 This money is used in part for buildings and improvements and in part for support. The State has provided by appropriation out of the general revenue of the state for support of the institutions under the State Board of Education $1,966,600 annually. LIBRAEIES. Libraries of reference books and popular literature, and col- lections of historical, scientific and other materials, are numerous in Iowa and more than 3,355,000 volumes are available to the public. The State library has a collection of valuable books, many of them rare and beyond price, and has an extensive law depart- n)ent and a legislative reference department. There is connect- ed with the Historical department library a large collection of bound volumes of newspapers, maps, autographs, portraits, charts, manuscripts and a historical museum. The old records of the state are preserved in the archives department. The State Li- brary Commission is engaged in encouraging library work and extension and has direction of a traveling library which circulates all over Iowa. There are entensive libraries at the state educational and other institutions and a historical library and collection under control ex CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 of the State Historical Society. The private colleges all have large libraries and there are in the small libraries of the schools of the state 1,264,291 volumes, the support of which is compulsory. There are ISl free public libraries, housed in buildings especial- ly constructed for their use and maintained by taxes in the cities and towns. Of these, 34 are in incorporated towns and the others in the cities. The following is the reported number of volumes in the libraries of the state : State, General, Law and Legislative Reference 139,615 State Historical Department library 18,294 State traveling library 32,368 State Educational Institution libraries 211,461 State Historical Society library ' 40,883 State Institution libraries 39,225 Miscellaneous or special libraries 100,000 Association and Subscription libraries 59,508 College and Academy libraries 323,761 Free public libraries 1,126,073 Public school libraries 1,264,291 Total 3,355,479 NEWSPAPERS AND PERIODICALS. There are published in Iowa 1,007 newspapers and periodicals, of which 849 are general newspapers, and the remainder are special publications. Of the general newspapers there are sixty-one that are issued daily. There are two other daily publications, one a live stock or market paper, and the other devoted to real estate and legal mat- ters. ■ Two of the daily papers are published in German and all the remainder are in English. There are 745 weekly newspapers, of which twenty-five are print- ed in foreign languages and one is in the interest of the Negroes. There are forty-two semi-weekly or tri-weekly general newspapers. The publications less often than once a week are devoted gen- erally to education, temperance, agriculture, labor or special sub- jects. There are sixty-three daily papers issued in the state, published in thirty of the cities. They are issued from fifty-seven different offices, there being six of the offices issuing two papers each, one IOWA PUBLICATIONS morning and one evening. There are seven daily papers issued exclusively morning and forty-four that are exclusively evening publications. PEEIODIOALS ISSUED IN IOWA. Class of Publications 1 it 1 , 1 1 is 1 P 1 General newspapers, in English language 59 2 m 25 1 11 18 1 3 6 36 6 814 General newspapers, in foreign language General newspapers, Negro 1 34 1 Educational and college 3 19 19 3 6 2 10 15 3 6 — .-- 1 1 3 7 6 2 1 ...... 48 Beligious, temperance, etc 48 Home, literary, historical 6 Agricultural, live stock and dairying 11 Labor and labor unions.. Fraternal societies 8 11 Trade and miscellaneous 2 2 Total es 785 iS TO US 19 1,007 There is included in the list, classed as semi-weekly, three publi- cations in English that are issued three times a week. One of the foreign language publications listed as semi-monthly is issued three times a month. DAILY NEWSPAPERS OP IOWA. Number Circulation Size of Cities Average Aggregate Published in cities of 100,000 or over I 6 5 [20 10 iJ * 1 7 20 9 J 5 1 16 [23 2 J 19.000 7,000 3,200 Published in cities of 60,000 to 10O,O0O_ — 380,000 Published in cities of 40,000 to 60,000.- Published in cities of 30,000 to 40,000— Published in cities of 20,000 to, 30,000 140,000 Published in cities of 15.000 to 20.000 Published in cities of 10,000 to 15,000- Published in cities of 6,000 to 10,000— — . 73,600 Published in cities of 4,000 to 5,000 — - Total— ■- - 63 8,180 693,600 A table showing the distribution of the daily newspapers with regard to the size of the cities in which published shows that they are well located in cities of all sizes. There are twenty of the papers published in cities of 40,000 or over and their average circulation as compiled from reports to directories is 19,000. In cities of 15,- 000 to 40,000 there are twenty papers published, with an average circulation of 7,000. In cities from 4,000 to 15,000 there are twenty- three published with an average circulation of 3,200. Only about one-third of the daily newspaper offices also issue weekly editions. CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 CHURCHES AND CHURCH MEMBERSHIP. The number of church congregations reported was 397 more than ten years ago. Statistics were sought directly from pastors by means of cards addressed to them from lists furnished by persons iuterested in the various church organizations. In many cases it w^as found impossible to secure responses, but all the facts are given as reported. The church membership reported is 928,417, which is 346,577 more than ten years ago. The aggregate value of church property is reported at $47,717,451, which is $22,894,852 more than ten years ago. The following is a comparison of the totals for 1905 and 1915 : COMPARISON OF CHURCH STATISTICS. 1905 1915 Number of congregations 3,821 4,218 Number of members 581,840 928,417 Number of Sunday school scholars. . . 322,262 441,768 Number of churches " 3,610 3,976 Number of halls 60 237 Seating capacity 1,155,648 1,312,90'3 Value of church property $20,918,960 $40,061,669 Number of parsonages 1,966 2,590 Value of parsonages $ 3,903,639 $ 7,655,782 Total value of church property $24,822,599 $47,717,451 Table No. 52 gives the facts reported in detail for the several de- nominations and for the various counties. A comparison as to church membership for the various organizations as between 1905 and 1915 is herewith given : MEMBERSHIP BY DENOMINATIONS. Denomniations 1905 1915 Adventiat bodies — Advent Christian Seventh Day Adventist Ohurch ol God in Christ Baptist bodies- Baptists, regular Baptists, colored —- Brethren in Christ Catholics Christan Union Christian (Christian Conn.) Church ot Christ, Scientist Congregationalists Disciples oJ Christ, Christians Dunkers — Brethren (I*rogressive) _. Church ol the Brethren Evang^ical bodies- Evangelical Association Grerman Evangelical Synod Swedish Evangelical Free Church- United Evangelical --. 33,620 1,577 U3,6SJ 1,620 SS,739 87,443 2,401 39,321 1,210 41 206,701 615 1,321 35,538 1,312 2,773 5,238 8,084 828 2,951 STATISTICS OF FAIRS Denomniations 1905 Friends _ — Jews ,--- Latter-day Saints, Ii«organized Lutherans - Mennonlte bodies— Amana Society Mennonlte - _ Methodist bodies- Methodist Episcopal — Methodist Episcopal, Atrican_. Free Methodist Methodist Protestant Wesleyan Methodist Pentecostal Church of the Nazarene Presbyterian bodies- Presbyterian Church In the United States.. Reformed Presbyterian (Covenanted) United Presbyterian Protestant Episcopal _ Reformed bodies- Bohemian Reformed _ „ Christian Reformed Reformed Church in America Reformed Church in the United States Salvation Army Spiritualists Unitarians _ United Brethren in Christ Universalists _ Volunteers o£ America. _ _ 8,60i 746 7,644 83,536 149,085 1,496 43,423 S.442 6,831 1,924 1,831 11,138 1,504 10,216 107,523 1,575 325,959 1,585 1,544 2,586 355 661 47,059 721 9,049 7,233 4,323 6,694 4,073 3,697 284 1,344 10,366 1,134 72 FAIRS IN IOWA. A State Fair was held and local fairs in nearly every county be- fore the State was ten years old, and they have continued to the present time. The State gives aid to all these fairs. The property used for the annual State Fair is owned by the State, which has appropriated for ground and buildings $514,111.47. County and district fairs receive a bonus from the State proportionate to the premiums paid, which amounted in 1915 to $48,085.98. The State also gives a bonus to associations conducting farmers' institutes and this aid in 1915 amounted to $5,219.38, and State aid for farmers' short course schools aggregated $1,432.24. The property owned by the State and dedicated to the use of the annual State Fair comprises 283 1-3 acres, which with buildings and equipment is valued at $1,188,110. The land alone is valued at $461,833.27. The attendance at the last annual State Fair was 245,066 and premiums were paid aggregating $69,598. The attendance reported at the county and district fairs was 1,115,605. Eleven short courses reported attendance of 23,095 and the farmers' institutes were at- tended by 157,214 persons. cxiv CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 STATISTICS OF FAIRS, 1915. County and Dis- State Fair trict Fairs Number of fairs held 1 93 Value of fair property $ 1,188,110 $ 988,128 Receipts for 1915 from fairs 165,604 516,849 Total receipts of associations 265,189 742,014 Number of live stock exhibitors 522 4,144 Total number of exhibitors 1,936 20,687 Premiums paid 1315 fairs 69,598 117,378 Attendance 245,066 1,115,605 AGRICULTURAL STATISTICS. The enumerators were instructed to return information as to farms and general agricultural statistics for all places of 10 acres or over. Ten years ago, the state enumerators followed the plan of the Federal census in including all places of 3 acres or over as farms. By reason of the change from 3 acres to 10 acres, as the minimum size of farms, the census for 1915 shows a decrease in the number of farms and in the number of acres included in farms and an increase in the number of acres per farm. This may be wholly due to the change in the minimum acreage of farms. Reports were secured from 199,755 farmers operating that num- ber of farms, as against 209,163 ten years ago. The number of acres reported as included in farms is 32,951,- 056, a decrease of 277,000 from the previous census. The average size of the farms reported upon increased from 158 acres to 164 acres, and the value of each farm, land alone being considered, increased from $7,420.55 to $17,582.47. K land and buildings are considered together, as is done in the matter of assessment, the average value of farms and buildings is found to be $19,984.98 as against $8,872.78 ten years ago. The increase in value of farms, buildings and equipment in the form of imple- ments and machinery has been even more pronounced and this now averages $20,287.91. The value of the land and buildings per acre as reported to the enumerators was $121.15 as against $55.85 ten years ago. There has been a slight increase in the number of tenant farmers and acres operated under leases as compared to 10 years ago. AGRICULTURAL STATISTICS FARM OOMPAEISONS. 1905 1915 33.9 41.0 40.1 48.4 158 164 $ 46.90 $ 107.21 55.85 121.15 7,420.66 17,582.47 8,872.78 19,984.98 9.069.91 20.287.91 Percentage of tenant fanners to total Percentage acres leased to total acres Average acres in each farm Average value per acre, land alone Average value per acre, land and buildings Average value of farms, land alone Average value land and buildings Average value per farm, with equipment... The total value of farm land and the equipment thereof is now reported at over $4,000,000,000, which is more than twice as much as it was ten years before. The major part of this increase has been in the value of the land alone. PARMS, EQUIPMENT AND VALUE. 1905 1915 Total farms _ Total acres in farms 209,163 33,228,448 $ 1,562,106,449 303,760,975 41,232,368 1,897,089,792 199,755 32,951,056 Value of farm land $ 3,612,196,460. Value of buildings . . 479,903,698 Value of farm machinery ... _. ._ 60,512,235 Value of land and equipment 4,052,612,393 The enumerators for 1915 secured information as to the num- ber of farmers operating only their own land, separate from those who not only operated their own land, ibut leased land in addition thereto. The number who operate their own land exclusively is 90,797 and those who operate their own land and also some that is rented is 26,951. A similar division is made as to the number operating land under cash lease and share lease. The total num- ber of tenant farmers is 82,007, as against 70,939 ten years ago. There has been a corresponding decrease in the number of acres operated exclusively by the owners and an increase in the number of acres operated under lease. FARM OCCUPATION AND TENANTRY. 1915 Number of farmers Farmers operating only land owned Farmers operating land owned and leased. Farmers of two last named classes Farmers operating land leased for cash Farmers operating for share crop Farmers operating for cash and share Total farmers operating only leased land — Acres owned by operator Acres leased for cash Acres leased for share crop Acres leased for cash or share crop Total acres farmed .- — 209,163 138,224 70,939 19,882,464 13,346,646 83,228,448 199,765 90,797 26,951 117,748 44,407 23,586 14,014 82,007 16,987,596 9,682,883 6,380,677 15,963,460 32,951,056 CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 LIVE STOCK AND FARM CROPS. The value of farm animals and poultry in Iowa is $350,621,975. This is $132,000,000 more than that reported ten years ago, an increase of 60 per cent. The value of farm and garden crops produced for the year 1914 was $437,225,662. This is $190,000,000 more than the value reported for ten years before, or an increase of 76 per cent. The value returned for cattle is greater in the aggregate than for any other class of live stock, but the value of horses, mules, asses and other draft animals is only five million dollars less. The fol- owing shows the values reported for 1905 and 1915 : VALUE 01' LIVE STOCK. 1905 1915 Poultry .. $ 8,083,184 82,817,016 91,019,753 34,461,158 2,063,362 ? 13,800,363 Horses", mules, etc. .. __. . 135,924,263 Cattle - 140,978,731 Swine .. 57,019,987 2,888,641 Total - .. .. $ 218,447,468 $ 350,621,975 The greatest increase in value of the farm crops is in the grain crops, the value for 1915 being almost double that for ten years before. A decrease in value is reported for potatoes, vegetables and fruit. Dairy products occupy third place as to value and eggs are fourth in value. The values reported for 1905 and 1915 are: FAEM CROPS AND PKODUOE. Grain crops Hay, lorage and other crops. Hay and grass seed Potatoes and vegetables Fruits and berries Eggs - Dairy products Wool Total $ 162: 28, 2, 6, 5, 10, 699,710 673,900 100,481 701,985 355,554 794,193 687,274 313,980 315,912,811 50,746,183 3,059,»47 5,898,440 1,664,418 20,593,720 38,779,889 5?0,374 $ 247,227,077 $ 437,225,662 LIVE STOCK AND POULTRY. The value of draft animals increased in the ten years by over $55,000,000 and is now reported to the enumerators as $135,924,- 253. A comparison of the statistics for the two census years in- dicated a steady increase in the number of horses, mules and ether draft animals and such an increase in the colts and younger LIVE STOCK STATISTICS CXVll animals as would assure no reduction in the number for the imme- diate future. The cattle are now worth $140,978,731, although the number of animals reported is less by over one-half million than ten years ago. The reduction has been uniform in various classes of cattle. The greatest increase in value, however, has been in the dairy animals. The comparative table shows a slight increase in the number of swine which is now reported at 6,683,476. The value of the swine has increased from $34,464,153 in 1905 to $57,019,987 in 1915. There has been a slight increase in the number of sheep and goats in the ten years and some increase in the value thereof. The value of the poultry of the state is reported as $13,800,363 as against $8,083,184 ten years ago. The increase in value of all live stock was about $122,000,000. LIVE STOCK. Animals Horses, Mules, etc.— Oolts under one year , Horses one year and under two.. Horses two years and over Mules and asses Other lann animals Total horses, mules, etc. Cattle— Calves under one year Steers one and under two Steers two and under three.. Steers three and over Bulls one and over Heifers one and under two... Milk cows two and over Cows not milk Total cattle Swine- Swine under 6 months Swine 6 months and over. Total swine Sheep — Lambs under one year. Ewes Earns and wethers..j... Total sheep Goats Fowls Total .. 1905 1915 Number 116,404 148,208 974,077 46,383 209 1,354,360 821,225 490,041 72,103 87,068 480,950 1,315,888 333,386 4,755,041 6,447,630 142,188 319,607 39,048 500,743 21,140 !,471,063 Value Number , 3,911,163 7,451,020 67,918,522 8,626,768 9,663 $ 82,817,016 $ 11,471,714 11,700,852 15,075,776 2,760,695 3,309,239 6,948,542 31,152,808 8,600,133 $ 91,019,753 $ 34,464,153 $ 458,076 1,359,541 169,748 $ 1,987,364 76,998 8,083,184 $ 218,447,468 164,690 182,681 1,060,504 66,622 696 1,464,1 1,300,682 481,687 323,307 36,827 88,426 46S,8U 1,099,680 2,026,913 4,666,663 6,683,476 167,940 363,684 53,450 675,074 9,387 1,115,683 Value 6,681,412 12,261,022 109,884,173 7,067,621 10,025 $ 135,924,263 21,977,654 16,016,988 16,902,380 2,379,380 4,701,344 12,986,972 48,416.139 17,697,894 $. 140,978,731 10,062,960 46,967,027 $ 57,019,987 723,139 1,857,344 286,365 $ 2,866,848 31,793 13,800,363 $ 350,621,975 CXVlll CENSUS OP IOWA, 1915 AGRICUL.TURAI, PRODUCTS. The value of agricultural products as reported increased in the ten years by about $190,000,000 and the aggregate for 1915, being the report on the crop harvested and used in 1914, is $437,225,- 662. This includes the value of wool, dairy products and eggs, but does not include any portion of the live stock sold or mar- keted or used during the year. The value of grain crops practically doubled in the ten years, all showing increases except barley and buckwheat. Corn still holds the first place with a value of $223,680,692, and next in value is oats and then wheat. The most pronounced increase was in the value of wheat which, in 1915, was reported as more than three times as much as in the previous ten years. In the hay and forage crops, the big value is still in timothy hay, $27,977,850. The alfalfa crop is reported as worth more than twenty-four times as much as it was in 1904, the value be- ing returned as $2,607,487. The value of silage is reported as $4,308,990, no report having been made on that ten years ago. There was only a slight increase in the value of grass seeds generally. There was a decliae in the value of garden crops and especially of vegetables. The value of fruit and berries showed a decline in the ten-year period. The report upon the value of eggs produced shows a total of $20,593,720 as against practically one-half that amount ten years before. The value of dairy products increased from $30,687,274 to $38,779,869. FARM. ORCHARD AND GARDEN CROPS. 1 1904 1 1914 Grain Crops— Acres Busbels Value Acres Busbels Value Corn 9,542,956 Wheat - ' 617,274 Oats ' 4,315,637 Barley Bye — Buclnvheat Total grain crops — 424,680 66,065 10,590 14,877,102 346,577,988 6,869,747 134,150.609 16,769,605 924,950 118,046 $117,688,099 4,787,042 34,225,390 6,334,820 480,080 84,279 608,400,844 $162,699,710 9,794,437 917,309 6,285,440 300,062 71,979 2,156 16,Sn,382 397,117,876 16,456,266 178,330,691 7,463,396 1,025,201 30,365 600,422,183 14,733,188 72,433,992 4,199,810 839,208 26.971 $316,912,811 FARM CROP STATISTICS 1904 19U Hay and Torage— Acres Tons Value Acres ■ Tons Value CHover Timothy Millet and Hungarian AlJalla Wild hay Other forage crops Silage Other farm products Total bay and forage 207,171 3,S14,149 66,821 10,351 996,122 4,594,624; 316,921 1.504,860 119,281 25,724 1,313,518 0,369,304 $ 1,319,592 21,647,150 416,601 107,144 4,220,151 771,128 192,134 — .. $ 28,673,900 699,982 989,366 $ 8,462,866 2,667,824 2,943,294 27.977,850 26,826 44,228 320,955 132,298 276,437 2,607,487 671,166 767,069 6,694,668 94,889 287,195 1,336,798 133,642 1,080,540 4,306,990 146,569 4,325,616 6,837,139 $ 50,746,183 Seeds— Acres Bushels Value Acres Bushels Value 24,997 30,138 332,275 800,943 43,632 1,357,382 52,398 $ 320,227 234,933 1,607,631 37,690 16,646 106,385 210,049 2,916 114,640 « 144.S54 Clover seed Timothy seed Other grass seeds 131,699 857,712 33,113 972,656 1,900,436 41,902 387,410 1,754,855 Si 2.100.481 334,894 1,137,064 « S.059.847 Garden Crops- Acres Bushels Value Acres Bushels Value Sweet com 1,684,395 16,668,728 284,624 $ 694,262 4,620,780 141,816 3,446,127 3,428 85,931 1,826 102,481 8,463,843 135,247 $ 78,687 Potatoes 4,422,438 93,487 Veeretablea 1,303,928 Total garden crops- 18,627,647 i 6,701,985 91,184 8,691,671 $ 6,898,440 Orchard— Value Value $ 2,697,039 118,477 329,164 520,288 - 54,744 $ 413,483 308,906 100,904 Oherriea 306,887 19,125 Tntnl trpn fnilfq $ 3,619,712 $ 1,149,305 Small Fruits— Value Value $ 276,708 ^ernes 221,377 17,033 ■ ~~ $ 1,735,842 $ 516,113 Other Produce— Value Value 79,456,462 $ 10,794,193 30,687,274 313,980 120,930,552 $ 20,593,720 38,779,869 Wool, pounds i,565,80i 2,688,246 sro,374 19,859,136 $247,227,077 21,123,076 $457,225,662 CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 MANUFACTUEES AND FACTORY PRODUCTION. Manufactured products, turned out from factories and exclud- ing hand work and tlie smaller establishments, amounted in value in 1914 to $310,954,000. The capital invested amounts to $233,373,000. Persons engaged in manufacture were 84,949. The United States Bureau of the Census compiled statistics for the year 1914 and from an advance copy of the summary the ac- companying facts are secured. The summary shows a consider- able increase at the census of 1914 as compared with that for 1909. In the order of their importance, from a percentage standpoint, the increases for the several items rank as follows : Salaries, 49.1 per cent; proprietors and firm members, 44.5 per cent; capital, 36.3 per cent; salaried employees, 23.9 per cent; primary horse- power, 23.0 per cent; wages, 22.5 per cent; materials, 20.4 per cent ; value of products, 19.9 per cent ; value added by manufac- ture, 19.1 per cent; wage earners (average number), 2.4 per cent; and number of establishments, 1.6 per cent. CAPITAL INVESTED. The capital invested, as reported in 1914, was $233,373,000, a gain of $62,154,000, or 36.3 per cent, over $171,219,000 in 1909. The average capital per establishment was approximately $42,000 in 1914 and $31,000 in 1909. In this connection it should be stated that the inquiry contained in the census schedule calls for the total amount of capital, both owned and borrowed, invested in the business, but excludes the value of rented property, plant, or equipment which was employed in the conduct of manufacturing enterprises. COST OF MATERIALS. The cost of materials used was $205,538,000 in 1914, as against $170,707,000 in 1909, an increase of $34,831,000, or 20.4 per cent. The average cost of materials per establishment was approximate- ly $37,000 in 1914 and $31,000 in 1909. In addition to the com- ponent materials which enter into the products of the establish- ment for the .census year there are included the cost of fuel, .mill supplies, and rent of power and heat. The cost of materials, how- ever, does not include unused materials and supplies bought either for speculation or for use during a subsequent period. STATISTICS OP MANUFACTURES cxxi The census inquiry does not include amounts paid for miscel- laneous expenses, such as rent of offices, royalties, insurance, ordinary repairs, advertising, traveling expenses, or allowance for depreciation. VALUE OF PRODUCTS. The value of products was $310,954,000 in 1914 and $259,238,- 000 in 1909, the increase being $51,716,000, or 19.9 per cent. The average per establishment was approximately $55,000 in 1914 and $47,000 in 1909. The value of products represents their selling value or price at the plants as actually turned out by the factories during the census year and does not necessarily have any relation to the amount of sales for that year. The values under this head also include amounts received for work done on materials furnished by others. VALUE ADDED BY MANUFACTURE. The value added by manufacture represents the difference be- tween the cost of materials used and the value of the products manufactured from them. The value added by manufacture was $105,416,000 in 1914 and $88,531,000 in 1909, the increase being $16,885,000, or 19.1 per cent. The value added by manufacture formed 33.9 per cent of the total value of products in 1914, and S4.2 per cent in 1909. SALARIES AND WAGES. The salaries and wages amounted to $56,232,000 in 1914, and to $43,514,000 in 1909, the increase being $12,718,000, or 29.2 per cent. The number of salaried employees was 14,132 in 1914, as com- pared with 11,402 in 1909, making an increase of 2,730, or 23.9 per cent. The average number of wage earners was 63,123 in 1914, and 61,635 in 1909, the increase being 1,488, or 2.4 per cent. The maximum number of wage earners, 67,856 for 1914, was employed during August, while the maximum number, 68,006 for 1909, was employed during September. The minimum number of wage earners, 60,670, reported for 1914, was employed during December, and the minimum number, 55,649 for 1909, was employed during January. CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 Census— o -« Manufactures 1914 6,615 84,949 7,694 14,132 63,123 61,060 60,866 62,146 62,988 62,990 63,670 63,530 67,856 67,095 63,652 60,959 60,670 191,141 $ 233,373,000 56,232,000 16,364,000 39,868,000 205,538,000 310,954,000 105,416,000 1909 5,528 78,360 6,323 11,402 61,635 66,649 66,081 67,912 60,328 61,440 62,581 62,215 66,408 68,006 64,097 62,895 62,018 155,384 $ 171,219,000 43.514,000 10,972,000 32,642,000 170,707,000 259,238,000 88,531,000 els 1.6 8.4 44.5 Salaried employees Wage earners (average number during the year) Wage earners, months: January February March — April 23.9 2.4 May June July October - November December Primary horsepower Capital Services _— Salaries Wages — - 23.0 36.3 29.2 49.1 22.5 Materials _____ ' _ 20.4 Value ol products _ _. Value added by manufacture (value of products less cost of materials) 19.9 19.1 MINERAL PRODUCTION. Mineral production in Iowa has steadily increased, in volume and value, and is making more rapid gain now than at any period of the State's history. The first settlement of Iowa was for the purpose of securing the hidden mineral wealth, by the mining of the lead and zinc ores from the "Mines of Spain." Aside from the fur industry, mining continued for many years as the sole source of support of the white men who opened the way for the agriculturist and manu- facturer. Lead and zinc mining commenced when what is now Iowa was unknown save for the great rivers that marked its boundaries, then followed coal mining, and later the gypsum beds were worked and now the clay and cement industries have grown to enormous proportions. The increase in value of the annual pro- duet is steady as to coal, but has fluctuated more as to clay and cement. There has h^en a decline as to stone production. The aggregate annual production of all minerals was valued at $26,282,275 in 1914, according to the reports to the Iowa Geologi- cal Survey, as against $15,903,044 ten years before. MINERAL STATISTICS A comprehensive statement as to mineral production in ten years follows : a cs Tear o s i O 6 CO a ►^ 1905 $ 10,495,693 $ 3,408,517 $ 533,609 $ 589,055 $ l.BOO 1906 — - 11,619,455 3,477,237 677.782 673,498 26,300 1907 - 12,258.012 3,733,476 648,135 730,883 68.400 1908 11,772,228 4,078,627 669,775 564,688 26,799 1909 12,798,628 4,916,513 609.922 665,602 6,876 1910 - — 13,903,913 5,335,036 639,831 . 943,849 12,128 1911 - 12,663,507 4,436,839 817.121 871,752 5,400 1912 13,162,088 4,524,492 998,236 845,628 6,e70 1913 13,496,710 5,675,581 863,202 1,167,939 4.150 1914 - 13,364,070 6,405,995 594.681 1,321,457 Year 1905 1906 1907 190S 1909 1910 1911 1912 1913 1914 a OS"" EC 38,642 38,255 65,618 42,881 48,210 31,269 25,300 .9fc 36,200 27,540 33.400 58,900 14,116 27.175 20,600 11.325 7,369 30,179 rO * 74,380 110,601 976,549 458,829 464,863 393,649 563,409 528,066 556,868 a 862,025 1,386,508 1.881,253 2,790,396 8,972,876 4,008,915 15,903,044 16,414.447 17,627,925 18,090.447 20,365,721 22,744,972 21,115,821 22,891,244 25,595,884 26,282,275 BITUMINOUS COAL. Production of coal in Iowa commenced in territorial days and iias grown steadily, witli no indication of exhaustion of the sup- ply. It was not until 1875 that the annual production was over a million tons, but by 1904 it had increased to six and a half million tons. The coal area of the state is mainly along the lower part of the Des Moines river valley, but it extends northward to Fort Dodge and there are a few mines in the southwestern part of the state. Coal is mined in 252 mines in 22 counties of the state. The coal is a bituminous coal of good quality, the veins worked being from 4 to 8 feet in thickness. "Working conditions in the mines are excellent and there is the besj of state supervision and rigid regu- lation for protection of life. There has been mined from the coal beds of the state about 200 million tons of the product, and it has been estimated, after careful study of the coal beds, that there still remains nearly 30,000 million tons of coal. CXXIV CENSUS OP IOWA, 1915 A large part of the coal mined in Iowa is used locally but there is some shipment to other states. The railway companies use it in large amount and several of them have purchased mine rights and have established extensive coal mines for their own use. The state has been free from controversies between the miners and opera- tors, and wage conditions are such as to assure steadiness of work. There has been an increase from about 15,000 men em- ployed in mine operation in 1905 to 16,057 in 1914. COAL PRODUCTION. Tear Tons > Is 1* Average number ol men em- ployed 1905 6,740,901 7,266,224 7,574,322 7,149,517 7,757,762 7,928,120 7,331,648 7,289,529 7,525,936 7,452,022 $ 10,495,598 11,619,456 12,258,012 11,772,228 12,793,628 13,903,913 12,663,507 13,152,088 13,496,710 13,364,070 $ i.c6 1.60 1.62 1.65 1.65 1.75 1.73 1.80 1.79 1.79 14,959 1906 . 15,260 1907 15,589 1908 16,439 1909 17,286 1910 - 16,666 1911 16,599 1912 16,370 1913 . 15,797 1914 _ 16,057 The table of coal production by counties shows that the coal producing area is changing from year to year and that there has been generally an extension of the area. Table No. 67 gives de- tails as to production by counties. STONE. Development of the stone industry was commenced early in the State's history. Originally the stone produced in Iowa was used practically all for building purposes. The increasing use of brick and concrete for this purpose has lessened the demand for stone. There is some compensation, however, in that the demand for crushed stone for various uses is increasing and the movement for highway improvement promises to greatly increase the demand for stone. The high point seems to have been reached in 1912 when nearly a million dollars' worth of stone was used. There has been a decline in the amount of burned lime produced, since cement has largely taken its place. There is shown a tendency to abandonment of the smaller stone quarries and confining the production to the few counties where operations can be carried on to advantage. The leading counties in production now are Scott, Lee, Jones and Dubuque. As there MINERAL STATISTICS cxxv is no requirement of a report on production, the statistics secured are imperfect but show the general condition of the industry. Thirty counties make reports on stone production and these re- ports, found in Table No. 68, show that the industry* is subject to very great fluctuations. CLAY. Clay products industries are possible in practically every county of the State and the industry appears to be at the beginning of its development. In 1895 there was reported a production valued at $1,870,000, which had grown to $3,487,000 in 1904. In- 1914 the total value of clay products reported was $6,405,995. The best development has been in the production of drain tile, which is in steady demand in every county of the State. The value of this product has more than doubled in ten years and com- prises half of the entire clay industry of the State. There has also been a considerable increase in production of fancy and face brick and hollow blocks for building purposes. There has not been the growth in use of brick for paving purposes that had been noted the previous ten years. GYPSUM. The gypsum industry continues to grow. The value of the pro- duct mined and sold Avas reported in 1890 at $47,000. In 1904 it was $469,000. Now it has gone up to $1,321,457. There is increas- ing use of plaster and stucco in the building trades and a better understanding of the usefulness of the product in the arts. The gypsum area is small, having been confined to Webster county and vicinity. Recently, however, a mine in Appanoose county has been opened with shaft 560 feet deep and a vein said to be 10 feet thick. CEMENT. There has been a very gratifying development in the industry of manufacture of cement from the abundant shales and lime- stones of the State. This is confined to two counties of the State — Polk and Cerro Gordo. It is possible to engage in cement pro- duction only in large mills and with abundant capital. All the mills that have been opened have prospered and are steadily en- larging their business. The first mill was opened in Mason City in 1908 and later, during 1910, the mill near Des Moines began operations. In 1911 it was reported to the Geological Survey that the pro- duction was 1,952,000 barrels sold for $1,881,253. cxxvi CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 In 1912 the report was a total of 3,190,000 barrels of a value of $2,790,396. In 1913 there was produced 3,623,000 barrels and there was sold of the product $3,972,876 worth. In 1914 the report showed a production of 4,233,707 barrels and the value of the product reported sold was $4,008,915. METALS. The report on lead, zinc and other ore production is not very- satisfactory, which fairly reflects the condition of the industry. There is only small production and it is not a steady and continu- ing business. It is confined to a small area in Dubuque and Alla- makee counties. Lead and zinc ore mining appears to have reached high mark for the decade in 1907 when the total value was reported at $58,- 400. These mines having been the first opened in what is now Iowa were worked out years ago. No production was reported for 1914. See Table No. 72. The report on production of iron ore shows that some business is now being done. For some yeeirs the surface mines in Allama- kee county were worked and then abandoned. More recently out- side interests have opened up the mines and in 1913-15 up to No- vember of the latter year a total of 30,240 tons of iron ore had been shipped. OTHER MINERAL PRODUCTION. In addition to the information regarding the mineral products indicated above there have been collected by the Geological Sur- vey statistics regarding other kinds o'f wealth secured from be- neath the soil. These minor industries are showing some material development and are being encouraged. The production of sand and gravel for ten years is shown. See Table No. 74. There is production of mineral water in Iowa at a number of places and progress has been made in developing a commercial business in the bottled waters. The table given shows the busi- ness done the past ten years. See Table No. 75. For the years 1905-8 inclusive there was reported with the min- eral water the mineral paint produced which amounted to from $3,000 to $6,000 a year, but this is not included in the given totals. The fluctuation in amount of business done is largely due to im- perfect reporting rather than to changes in the business. RAILROAD STATISTICS cxxvii Mineral gas has been secured in Louisa county in small quan- tities. In 1911 the value was reported at $70, the next year $100, then $120 and in 1914 at $200. There was a peat plant at Fertile and some peat was produced for use locally but no report has been received of operations. General tables on mineral production are in Part III, Tables 67 to 75 inclusive. TRANSPORTATION. In the little more than 60 years of railroad building in Iowa there has been constructed and is now in operation by steam pow- er ten thousand miles of track and by electric power nearly five hundred miles of track. There has been only unimportant extension of railroads in the past ten years, generally to close up gaps and connect detached portions of systems, the net addition of track for the steam roads being only about two hundred miles. However, every county seat has railroad facilities, as also has almost every town and village of a hundred or more inhabitants, and a 15-minute automobile .iourney connects every farm house in Iowa with a railroad sta- tion. First surveys for a railroad were made in Iowa in 1852 and by 1856 a total of 123 miles was reported in use, extending so far into the interior as the then capital of the State. The next year a railroad was built up the Des Moines river valley, and in 1858 rails were laid westward from Burlington and Dubuque. The Des Moines river was bridged in 1866, and the State was crossed in 1867, by which time the aggregate mileage had become more than a thousand, and railroad building was extending into new and un- settled districts. By 1885 the mileage had reached 7,496 and by 1905 it was 9,800. A part of the present interurban or electric mileage was for- merly operated by steam, but the major part is new. Over 477 miles of track is now in electric operation. The railroad companies make reports to the state in two forms, one report to the railroad commission, covering fiscal years, and the other to the executive council, covering calendar years. From the latter the main facts as to condition of the railroad business are obtained as follows, the figures being for the calendar year 1914 and mileage at the close of the year : CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 STEAM AND ELEOTEIO BAILEOADS. m o a g A m ^ 1 ° S 1 i § O K B 10,016 $ 88,950,216 $ 23,092,491 $ 78,880,876 $ 3,596,436 Interiirbans 477 2,996,366 980,810 1,810,491 101,746 Total lO.m $ 9S,m,5m $ 2i,022,801 $ 80,690,867 $ S,69S,m Tables showing in detail the growth of the railroad business are given in Part III. These show that in ten years the gross earn- ings, or aggregate receipts, of the railroads on Iowa business in- creased by $32,553,368, which was over 56 per cent increase. The reports to the railroad commission give additional information, and these reports, for the fiscal year ended June 30, 1914, give the following as to sources of income and as to employes; TEN TEARS' GROWTH IN RAILROAD BUSINESS. steam Railroads — Passengers carried, earning revenue Tons freight carried Revenue fiom passenger service Revenue from freight service Total revenue all sources Number of employes Compensation to employes Electric Railroads — Number passengers carried Revenue from passenger service Total operating revenue Number of employes Compensation to employes 10,378,087 19,222,692 $ 14,086,795 $ 38,982,905 S 57,692,098 38,009 $ 26,064,6W 1,602,163 278,350 342,559 73,623 26,470,389 64,828,620 22,128,381 69,266,792 , 88,537,813 49,877 37,980,967 13,851,214 1,662,843 2,658,096 1,667 1,033,202 STEAM RAILROADS. Leading facts regarding the business done by the steam rail- roads in the state the past ten years, with assessment and taxa- tion, are given in the following table. For more detailed state- ment of business, see Tables 53 to 59 inclusive. RAILROAD STATISTICS Years Gross earn- ings pre- vious year hit Sal Assessment for year named •a u V ffi « S £ 1906 - $ 62.792,307 69,791,318 73,081,792 67,767,032 72,169,276 78,444,296 77,984,683 81,697,971 87,815,83Sf 89,950,216 $ 19,258,953 21,880,793 18,919,330 17,939,211 16,144,683 16,028,007 16,986,695 17,282,849 20,663,997 23,092,491 $ 62,387.199 63,334,120 83,457,616 63,663,805 63,729,447 , 65,824,482 65,951,962 78,589,293 78,669,112 78,880,376 $ 2,068,351 1907 2,211,682 1908 2,312,742 1909 - 2,412,724 191Q — - - — 1911 — . - . . 2,505,373 2,627,609 1912 -_ 2,721,391 191S 2,862,488 1914 3,138,504 1915 3.596,436 . RAILROAD CONSOLIDATION. An analysis of the tables given will show that there has been much readjustment and consolidation of lines in recent years. Some comparisons of a 20-year period will show the tendency. There are four systems reporting over 1,000 miles of track each in Iowa and six others with over 50 miles each. The business of these groups in 1914 -was as follows: EAILEOAD BUSINESS SHOWN BY GROUPS. Groups 1,000 miles or more— Chicago & Northwestern Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul— . Chicago, Kock Island & Paeific- Ohicago, Burlington & Quincy— .. Total first group 60 miles and less than 1,000— Ohicago Great Western Minneapolis & St. Louis _ Illinois Central Ohicago, St. P., Minn. & Omaha Wabash Great Northern Total second group Total first and second groups Total for 15 shorter lines Total for state 1.611 1,867 •2,208 1,366 7,047 798 717 76 212 78 2,690 9,697 319 lo.om 19,626,030 16,488,681 18 •'36,440 U,tt69,210 $ 66,7('9,361 7,249,290 4,788,099 6,126,917 1,267,550 1,404,811 674,968 $ 21,401,625 88,110,987 l.ii39,228 $ 89,9S0,ei5 6,026,456 4,668,377 4,394,830 4,229,231 $ 18,303,894 1,344,417 1,164,618 1,028,092 449,290 242,181 149,964 $ 4,878,602 410,095 $ W,0X,i91 From this it will be seen that the group comprising the longest four systems, with 70 per cent of the mileage does 75 per cent of the business. The first and second groups, comprising ten roads, do over 97 per cent of the business. cxix CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 Twenty years ago the four systems in the first group had 4,517 miles of track, now increased to 7,047. Instead of 6 others with 50 miles each, and a total of 2,650 miles, there were then 19 others with 50 miles or more each and total of 3,S'18 miles. Then there were 15 shorter lines with an aggregate of 642 miles and now there are 24 shorter lines with 334 miles of track. INTERURBAN ELECTRIC RAILROADS. In recent years there has been such development of electric lines outside of cities that these interurban railways have been given a distinct standing in law and their reports are now kept separate from the railways operated by steam. In ten years their business has trebled. They are listed as belonging to 12 different companies. Their business, valuation and taxes are shovm below : m m P a UO S '^ ScdS 08 P no *< fe s; 1906 1907 1908 1909 1910 1911 1912 191S 1914 1915 810,941 913,087 1,2K,936 1,663,754 l,781,70e 1,991,381 2,255,163 2,714,213 2,996,366 303,420 302,337 466,914 578,477 616,692 581,667 768,659 923,258 930,310 483,073 616,719 $ 18,549 744, a?o 22,910 804,560 23,881 1,012,118 49,789 1,137,023 62,982 1,173,987 69,214 1,541,579 71,928 1,676,301 83,S6» 1,810,491 101,746 OTHER TRANSPORTATION. In addition to the railway and interurban business done in the state, there is business done by 29 car companies and freight lines, the value of the cars used in Iowa being assessed at $257,- 800. Ten years ago the assessment on all car companies operat- ing cars through the state was $143,525. The assessment on sleeping cars used in the state is $427,067 as against $224,526' ten years ago. The express business of the state is represented by the fol- lowing table of mileage operated and assessment thereon : Miles Assessment Great Northern Express Company 77 $ 2,180.08 Adams Express Compkny 2,289 64,113.03 Wells-Fargo Express Company 3,150 88,202.26 American Express Company 4,932 157,847.58 10,448 $312,342.95 BANK STATISTICS cxxxi Ten years ago there were six companies assessed at a valua- tion of $357,067.47. The state has only recently taken over control of the electric transmission lines for carrying electric power from one city or town to another. Thirty -three of these have now been assessed on 514 miles of wire, the taxable value being placed at $117,- 852.49. BANKS AND BANKING. The banking business in Iowa is done under four bank sys- tems. A small amount of banking survived the chaotic and stormy period of early Iowa history when banking as it was then known was under the ban of public condemnation. The first to emerge was the national banking system and June 29, 1863, the first national bank in the world was opened in Iowa and it continues to the present time. The old state banking laws were supplanted in 1874 by laws under which savings banks were provided, and in 1886 the banks which had been doing business under general incorporation laws were brought under rigid supervision as state banks. Many private banks also do business. There is in Iowa an average of more than sixteen banks to a county. Almost every incorporated town has a bank and there are many in villages. There are 373 savings banks of $15,000 capital or less; but the banks of the state have an average of over $40,000 capital each and deposits of nearly $300,000 for each one. The Comptroller of the Currency received reports as of June 23, 1915, from Iowa banks of the four kinds showing the following business: BANKS. CAPITAL AND DEPOSITS. Number Capital Deposits Savings banks 832 $24,996,200.00 $224,671,130.34 National banks 348 23,777,270.00 140,995,226.65 State banks 323 14,394,500.00 96,952,965.21 Loan and Trust 20 2,670,900.00 5,520,750.26 Private banks 102 1,893,716.67 15,381,367.59 1,625 $67,732,586.67 $483,521,440.05 The statistics regarding the state and savings banks given in the general^ tables elsewhere, are from the state bank call of July 6, 1915', and show a slightly different footing from the comptroller's figures, due to the fact that the manner of treat- cxxxii CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 ing the newly organized banks differs. On the state call the state banks and loan and trust companies are grouped together. The accompanying tables show the expansion of the banking business, in general, in Iowa, for the period on which reliable reports are to be had, and as to the different kinds of banks for the recent years. EXPANSION OF BANKING IN 40 TEARS. Tear •a o o 55 ■§■3 as 1" 4^ m Is si 1875 . . — 123 209 891 1.091 1,621 $ &, 415,402 14,696,043 34,206,132 44,806,966 67,505,787 74 132 30 50 $ 14,810,790 28,003,859 76,298;S84 229,685,318 482,189,306 1885 . ... — 93 1895 ■m 1905 ' ■ 201 1915 109 The Iowa bank record for ten years shows a decrease in the number of private banks but an increase as to all others, the number of savings banks having increased by 87 per cent. BANZ OOMPABISON. Kinds of Banks S d £ iiS o Ph Savings Banks — Number Capital Deposits __. State Banks- Number Capital Deposits National B^nks- Number Capital Deposits ... Private Banks- Number Capital Deposits -- $ 13,471,000 100,232,en 248 $ 10,626,800 46,261,287 $ 17,665,000 69,709,000 $ 3,046,166 13,482,355 8S1 $ 24,945,100 223,975,413 340 ? 16,889,700 101,837,298 348 $ 23,777,270 140,995,227 loe $ 1,893,717 16,3S1,368 87 128 120 34 lOZ -37 18 The national banks in 1885 had more than twice as much capital in use in Iowa as all other banks. In the .next ten yeaxs the business being done under state laws had increased rapidly and the national banking capital represented only about 56 per INSURANCE STATISTICS cxxxiii cent of the total. At the beginning of the last decade the na- tional banks had larger capital than either state or savings banks, but the latter led in deposits. Not until in 1914 did the aggre- gate of savings bank capital overtake and pass that of the na- tional banks. In the ten years the banking capital in Iowa has increased over 50 per cent and the deposits over 100 per cent. The largest increase in deposits has been in the savings banks. The reports as to private- banks are confessedly imperfect as they opera,te under general partnership or corporation laws and are not re- quired to report either to state or federal a^thorities. In tables 60 to 64 the statistics in regard to the banks or- ganized under state laws are given from the reports made to the state banking department each year nearest to June 30. The statistics regarding national and private banks are as re ported to the Comptroller of the Currency. INSURANCE. Insurance business has steadily increased and does not now show the fluctuations incident to its early history in the state. Better law, more thorough supervision, careful management of companies, has placed the business on an enduring basis. The insurance business in Iowa of 1914 was: No. Companies Premiums Losses Life insurance 107 $13,533,564 $7,592,951 Other than Life 397 17,653,875 7,221,451 $31,187,439 $14,814,402 The aggregate of premiums received ten years ago was $14,- 315,028 and twenty years ago, $7,643,636 ; and of losses $4,901,563 in 1904 and $3,546,117 in 1894. A part of the apparent increase is accounted for by the fact that in previous compilations the assessment associations and the fratemaJs were ignored in life busi- ness, and only recently has there been complete reports on the miscellaneous forms of insurance. The tables in Part III have been compiled to correspond with the form of organization of the companies, as recognized by the Iowa law. It may be said, however, that of the other than life business the stock and mutual companies deal almost entirely with fire insurance, and the mutual assessment associations are chiefly fire insurance companies. The columns for tornado and CENSUS OP IOWA, 1915 hail business are only for the business done by companies or associations dealing exclusively in these classes of risks, but it does not include all of the tornado or hail business. The miscel- laneous column includes many other kinds of insurance. INSURANCE TAXES AND SEODBITIES. Year it Securities on deposit 431 • 444 441 444 444 463 465 472 493 502 504 % 341,999.62 365,756.06 377,152.98 384,918.67 377,906.96 408,797.30 436,476. IS 467,316.98 467,832.46 546,878,24 584,861.47 190B — $32,8a,310.33 37,772,021.62 1910 42,479,893.63 1911 46,406,651.39 1912 . ._ — 49,167,192.62 63,762,196.29 1913 - -^ 1914 — — 61,709,679.67 1915 - 68,868,601.73 There were, on January 1, 1915, 504 insurance companies or associations authorized to do business in Iowa, of which 107 write life insurance, 325 chiefly fire insurance and 72 deal with casualty, accident, compensation, burglary, fidelity and other forms of insurance. These companies and associations contribute largely to the revenues of the state by fees and taxes. The life companies organized under Iowa law, and others that have ac- quired business of such companies, keep on deposit with the insurance department securities at least equal to the legal reserve upon their policy obligations in force and this accumulation of securities shows a steady and rapid increase. The following table shows the number of companies and associations of all kinds authorized January 1st of each year, their annual payment of taxes and fees, and the securities of Iowa life companies on de- posit at the close of each year. LOSSES COMPARED WITH PREMIUMS. That the insurance business in the state is subject to great fluctuations is shown by a tabulation in which is given the per- centage of the losses incurred to the premiums received by each kind of insurance company or association on the Iowa business. This takes no account of the benefits to policy holders other than by reason of direct losses, nor of the income of the companies other than from policy payments. The table follows : INSURANCE STATISTICS FEB OENT or LOSSES TO PREMIUMS. CXXXV 1906 I 1906 1907 1908 1909 1910 I 1911 1912 1913 1914 Home Life Companies Non-Iowa Life Assessment Life Fratemals Iowa Fire Companies Non-Iowa Fire State Mutuals County Mutuals Tornado exclusively .. Hail exclusively Miscellaneous IB 12 18 17 19 20 34 SO 28 SO 28 27 29 29 29 28 28 32 78 76 96 97 104 86 89 125 123 104 40 123 S2 106 36 ■123 42 84 48 98 62 37 87 38 88 37 38 43 38 47 61 B« S5 72 66 80 71 (0 43 62 44 64 9S 97 99 89 94 93 100 91 95 9 39 7 51 27 57 42 27 B5 67 34 28 43 33 27 33 38 85 f9 33 42 42 46 41 2« 371 73 56 68 66 99 80 48 37 LIFE INSURANCE. Of the life insurance business done, as represented by premiums received, the major part was done in 1914 by the non-Iowa, or domestic, companies organized as stock or mutual companies. They had about 51 per cent of the business, the Iowa eompames about 22 per cent, the assessment associations 2 per cent and the fraternal beneficiary societies 25 per cent. There were 13 Iowa stock or mutual companies doing business at the beginning of 1915 as compared with 7 ten years before. This class of companies had increased their premiums received during the year from $1,060,193 in 1904 to $3,699,934 in 1914. The non-Iowa life insurance companies doing business number 46, as against 36 ten years before. They increased the aggregate of premiums received from $6,056,783 to $8,851,158. There were six assessment life associations in business, 4 of which were organized under Iowa law. The business of this class shows a decline and only $201,392 was reported as collected on assessments in 1914. The 42 fraternal societies, of which 12 were Iowa societies, in business, had collected in assessments during 1914 $4,357,827. The fraternals nearly doubled their business in ten years. FIRE AND OTHER INSURANCE. The fire insurance business is done by stock and mutual com- panies and by mutual assessment associations. Of the 325 author- ized to do business there were: Iowa stock companies 4, Iowa mutual companies S', non-Iowa stock companies 84, non-Iowa mutual companies 1, United States branches foreign companies 48, state mutual associations 29, county mutual associations 156. The stock and mutual companies do a small amount of business other than in fire policies. cxxxvi CENSUS OP IOWA, 1915 The Iowa stock and mutual companies decreased in number from 17 to 7 and in 1914 they received $1,237,816 in premiums. Their high point seems to have been in 1910 when they received $3,406,871 in premiums. The change has been due mostly to the absorjjtion of Iowa companies by stronger ones elsewhere. The non-Iowa companies increa.sed their premiums received to $7,326,952. Ten years before they received $3,317,658, and twenty years ago $2,251,956, at which time the business of the Iowa and non-Iowa companies was nearly on a par in the state. The state and county mutual associations increased business from $925,039 in 1904 to $1,477,821 in 1914. The statistics as to other forms of insurance are not now available for the entire time, but there has been a steady in- crease and new kinds of insurance are being added from time to time. PART II GENERAL TABLES CENSUS 1915 POPULATION— NATIVITY, SEX AND AGE S o U H ^4 o > < : ■♦J rh ^ H i ;zi <5 Eh & d 131 O O « o f^ 2 O P 9 !^ g O 1— 1 n M Tf V H >> <^ o3 S ^ CO "1 P-i .s a O o e ^ aT V P< Ch A 6 1 !z; H M i-j 03 PC •n < q H o O ^ bfi Ha IT3 ta P |8SSgSS3SgSS 3SSSS ;g gg^SS ■TOOi ■axBm^^ •9IBJI ■tsaoj, 'e[Bnraii ■8I«M ■a o ^« a® 3 § "IglsiSS^SSS^SsS gsgsg s ■"seesiss^isssefjgs gssss s «SSfcS|35lgSS8aeS8S SS^Soo s 1 SI383S a i«as^3SsasSfia3H=' e^t-og©rH §3 i n^iqcoo 1 «SS8'-|Sg§8|SSg8g8 feSSSJ!: s 1 ^tS&aii! s "as^^s^gffiss^i^sgg ^SSiS^ii o> ■"SfcSSgSeESKSSSSSg SS^glSS s "sas^sssssssssgag sassfes S ^^&&U'SS$^S^B&^®& giSSSf: « ^t SgS'°g!;?SES£;ESSg3^S gSSSSSsj I I I I t I I 1° I I 1 12 ' ■ lis ! ! I's!ssa i" s "as^^sgagggjasgsgg asssssg sg Cq CO jS CO CO 5l5Sa@te!SSSfl*g SqlfeSSS *-a S «"feS»gggfe!5)?3g8?aS8 "!5I85SS8 "S iioGOco(Mt«nu3^'^oona-«)iTHO io»-flor-&i I go^gc "■a '^a i-*io-* j-^iiHeq-^i-d-ixeM^N r^09©oeqoo ih-* 1 rrH«'*M«W»OeONia»Nt*t- "^OONt- lO IS I" HM &3 0-*10 W g^axgggaggF.^;] HSSSSS SIS ■^ iiMt«cor-ic4txnQo-^«H I I I'T^t s§ If IbL'C I 3 1-3 ||S 1 2 I '3 I 3 ,9 I i< ^ H ?, Z e P n. O O i Pi < n b a*S3S»S3SBSagBS3g S!3es883g 1 BY COUNTIES, TOWNSHIPS, CITIES AND TOWNS ^i C3 03 I? •IBaoi, ■eiBuiSKi ■epK •IB^oi, ■e[Braakj: ■appi •IBJOI, •etBXaaii •aiBPI •tB^oi *0[sta8^ ■91tBM g si§gs||||§§|§||| §§is|g S| sesg^; Sf^^Ss^S §ilg§i sg 5SI§s|m§§|ggSg rH lO iH H i-l rH tH iH iH iH iH M r-f r-l s "^sssai^iissssg^ssg ssgaas s!s "sss-^ggggiiffifcSfcsg sssssa ss g sSil^S^sligiiSi^ ^Siggg ^S 6 "'SSSagiggSSISSIg 88S88S S8 s '°s||S|gs|§§§SKgg s^gfegg Sfes^ssssisss^JSSjSis sssssas? "S '^issasa t-M iQ'^ rHttOs©© .-< 3;(Or!;©M«o ■"* 3**5^23*" "sa^ssas? t- H;*^©iHt^ iHC rotM is TBIOJ, iH TH iH OT r-4 iH ^-^ iH i-l tH rH •eiBUMii s isgs»"|!SS!seagssfess ^sga&a •e[BH s "ssis'sss^sassass sess^^ Ip ■moij ^6 •eiBraa^ U3 •atBH g ."Ss38?3E38gE!8eseft?2S SSggSSS 8 '"affi83"SSSS8g33Sfe!3S SgSiSSSg "^S 3SS;SSg?8S§SSS88S!3S 88S^8^ "°^ •i«?oa; E3 -"^seassfessfesssjes sssss ■Biuttraii 5S ^?3S3*85lS '*= S •8IBH a "g^g^s^sssffisssss assess "°g | Ob, ■3-6 SSggo « w3cB POPULATION— NATIVITY, SEX AND AGE bD z o o 03 60 I? ■OH 0355 a D s TBlOi •eiBina^ •apH ■re?ox ■a[Bnra,I ■atBu "IB^Oi 'aiBinSi^ 3!X •aiBW IBJOj; •QIBIU^ "9I«H '!«*<«; arBnraj: ■9IBW 'IBlOi aiBiraa ■STBW •3[Bia9a: •ai«W Qi 3 5^ S*t-i5wS«^^ Siofl ssssg gsa5ie|ssia§8sa g5issss§ ss^sfesaaSoS§S53 sssgs'-sig SS!SS39g3SSS3g S§8SJ2®SS SS8SeSSS§SSSgg3 §||8SSSS I— IrHr-l rHMiHrti—ltHl— IrH r-llQrHr-ii— ( iHO 8@85SSS5glSgSSS SgSSfc'-ga gjassssaasssa 3§ss83-*a5 3'»3'"ss'^sass® ssKss'^ss eQasotococQua-djaaiot- rtT-iO-wt-NiHoo CT-*fr-tiHW iHi-t ^{3SSI3fe!S«3fel3teS Bq-S?gS'=gs5 SqlSg:Sfe:$ISSS3S8 BgSfeSaftS fe§SS^»5S 5= &S5 SSSSqiS^SsSSSa SSJSSSS^SS i 32SS3SSSSSS&SS3 ^^^Si3»@S as;!S®8sts8ssssa S88ss»as 8sas83ftgs!sass asssa^ss 1 1=1 I Is ' I Fh I 03 • lo I I I io i \6 i I ^ I IS 'ft IS 'tis n.&S-a'l lie's h ■a S i o " a S § &« S ^i § i=i*?_,j,„ 611 < o M iS g h a Ph « SgiiSsSS i^iSSiSSi ssssss W^Jt- N IIO 1 I r-lpt- r^ !■* •* © N t* O) r "«;« ■*iot> ssa"-" ..gg^^u, «rHlftrH-*« WC5>iO jCOM "S" lea^ i i i !•§ I I lo .« I 1'-' I . I h '3j: h ft.gi ^aa BY COUNTIES, TOWNSHIPS, CITIES AND TOWNS i ccsssss CO aESSsea Sg:SS;l3«SS gSSSiSSSS f3g-3g8«SS s Sft»"-39 »gggo.^i>» V? CO ^ lO 01 00 SBSSS^^S Sisessss 9gSSS"S« g 3s?ass8" sgaas'^sss! 1 S8S"SS SSSS®^8I3 1 -^Cln \^r-i f- 00 (N «DiM t-')oi>eo -•t^Oir-tCO 1 W-iU-iW "^r-iC4rHN i (N 2^ "* OQ 00 ■* in r-t rH la-^Oi iH I I ; M»MiHr-l I U3»3NrH I l| 1? l| I I .'■§ IS 13 I 1 1° l| IS I 1^ Ifi |0 I ■•Ml I I I O llr; "«H I . I . !^ '" ' I ! 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Pk B< b DbB i^ T-S f^ ^1 hH "^^ T~l ^H i"H tH rH "^"^ ?^ r** ^H i-KrH iH rH rH rH rH i-IGJ T-H rH rH C^ OQ t-l rH rH i-t '~H rH ©1 S ggsssssiss^ssteaas^s^g ^ 8aSga«SS?SgS?SS388g|S!S5l 1 ggS8g||8g||SgSSg|ggs e S§38SS38PgsSSgS§3|f:|SS88 s g^!g^g5ggfegS^gS8g|g8188 s "S"°'l3°'SSS^-.a = 3SSg3B'°SS ^ (O'lnCQt'M-nicQOio.in-^t.co^iRo^tOTiunt- Ol««OUa«3giftOs«N^CONinOi«g»«Wt-« s sasssssss^gs^s^s^s^sa E^ '°"-'SE3S!3sa^S'°°'aas§'°S!S s 3S''SSSSflSg2«S83gas-*®S a9S''S'=SSS»SS'°28SSS-*S=' " eoCOrHOOCOrHC-lO'Jt.^t-iaaj^r-.Ot.. C>H>^ S g««t5O.g*«rH|5©rHgftgrH5.e0*-« i ^" "^ "^ fl " ■* •~' "* *- ;^ W "5 M «> 00 «^ « « »© H I I I I I I 1 '■S'£'|ftS I C t ',0 1 ,M 1 = ^ •H : 5 g.-li h.S3jat»*.8£aS3a!0Hfe -,'S « «a BY COUNTIES, TOWNSHIPS, CITIES AND TOWNS 11 a^^^lSssi sssgssssg g'^gggfeKgl CO gassgis^gg g'ssssgaa i S'OSS^SS^S? S^ssegggs m" SS3S88§SSg rH RSSSSSSSSea !- a-'SBS'-^gsa i teefloc-oiftirt-^o § OHOiootf' t-ij^&^g S3 SS^SSSSSSS i SflS8*"SS8 § s®s;2ia»-ji3SiS 1 googgowggj; Ift tOMr-HtOCflrHigOaOl OiiO(MCO'*iHiOO>;5; "=3ag««?3as |g «CS*-t- liH'«tlJ>0 eomiaiHneq03irac> fe ^ ! 15 I I o ^^I^^.SSfclBs ^^■s- Oh o > *Ofi o ■9 2*" < ;=! St ■l«;oj, •etBTnS4g; •epK s? •[BlOi ^11 00 ;3 SPoo s 0) ra •©rBtusiii s •IB^OX •stBta^ 03 1^ &H e| ■9tBK ■e[Bara^ •epjt •[BJOi ■etctno^ ■apw Sh « So •[BJOi •eiunrad: •ajBH o Eh >> »5 ssasa gSSSSBS giJSSS?! 8 «gSJ anss sag S38 sss^ssss S8 eggs ssggs SSsSS gq! s^gggi gSiS@S 8 s§s sgss sassaagaassg^sssgsasgisfess* 5gSSSSS3l3S?gS§g!aSSS!ggSS3!3aS ifl(N N i« i i «3"aa53SaSSg!5l§38SS8g8$3SS; r-r-t:^-3inOCOS»«aHHrHOSfi05 0'Ttc^i-((0'>*t-«*OWSlOiH"*«rt"**OSOJ^«iON»10N W«to WCO I rH 1 I H^®CO-*U5«DU5NUS^aOt-Wa5©IftgU5rHt-OiW I 1 A jo 3 I .. M I -^rHCO j3 5 "t;^ ^ 's a I i^ 1.9-1 ili|ii5i & 1 ( I I I =; ! n I s •1^ CM 12 POPULATION— NATIVITY, SEX AND AGE K t:SSS§S8i ^ < 4^ ■I«10Ji « •eiBOKiI ses-ggg •9pre Se§9SS6 a e iH SSSfSSSS U3 B H 1 o •IB^oj; •siBinaj: gS3®SS,5 s 1 SSfcSSSS % S tH 1 I l«W« S S ■a SI 11! s ;2i SfeftSSS^ % sss-^sasig £ •IB*OX C3 •aiBxoa^ jf5 !« h ■t> P S H 1^ j j j«e. 1^ « as ! 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I 3 '^ f-i -J^ lllip 03 O t. tH**t>( I U J t^ is i" i^- 'i igpliiH is ft £ B _., "S o >> "S P— ■ vj '-'J -n Mj BY COUNTIES, TOWNSHIPS, CITIES AND TOWNS 35 lsgS^"li3sSiSs?Ss®Si5SiS^ ^ tH ^ i-H r*n r^ rH rt ^ CO (^ ^ tH ^ iH i-H rH t-H ?-H T-tNi— 1 i—iiH tHiH Cn I— 1 (Ml— l(OdO©«rHgJg«©^« t,( '^ ITS OO 1 g SS8S;S'-«SS»ffigSS3S3te®38SqigSg338g i ?3g8?SS*8S'="^88S°'8"3«SS5lSgaa==33 S8S3'^SS'='^2SSSS'=S3''3S6^B'-S'"aS 5 8SSS'^SS'-"SSSSS3"»S''ISSaSgSSS''S 0<© epO iHWOi N» Oit-OoOflO iHOO 1 ■* Oi C> lA 1-H 60 t- 0> 1 1> tHiHi-Hi-H iHiH lr-lr-lr-l»3 1 i 3(MC*3r-0 M la I am jH N in © oQ a> J> CO (N © -ji *3 lO W10 ■ejBraaa 13 03 Sg5^ V tH 3 BS !^ WM -t< 2 tn •;!5T'0X Sgfe IS •aiataa^ ss3a 4^ S8S «>! 03 1 E^ e| CO g CO V -M S3" a Sz •=158 ■IBl'^JD 1 r-l-ii •ajBiuBa: 1 ICO g •erBH [r-.rH n •a K a IP •[BJOi it I-4M 1 •g ■epiv i r ta □3 ■afea 1-i •IBJOj; 1 rt ,-1 fl •oiBtaavi 1 1 1 EG •epEW jrHrH h ■IBIOI 1 1 r-4 •eiBcuajr I ] 1 •epM 1 1 '"' 1 ! 1 1 ! 1 1 ; i d o« ts 3£ !&: H <>< «3 3 41 ro g sse 36 POPULATION— NATIVITY, SEX AND AGE p o o H O O H S H pq a -lEjojD o •aietoai^ ■etBH ■■imon •eitBnra,ia; S SI § •moji a to a ■On ti a V bs ■(BWE -si«inekl •epBji ■IBiOJ, •eienraii ■ejBK ■IBIOI -•etBnraii •BIBH h C U) 2 ^< ■IB*OI, •eiBtoau •9[BM gSggS BSSSSgEg^gfeggg^SSSSI 300 NWNNOO g"°5!SSSaS88!5SS"«8SS§g!2S8fe s^gggssgfesgss^gfesggftsssfg g^gjg^NggNIBglgDt^NgtJJjgg^OggOgg 3 s^&g^°°sffia38feS'^ssu$gaffiss8 CO iCQM 1 < i-H 1 iWW 1 i-i 1 r-i i«rH WrHiHNrHrH 1 1 ! ! 1 III 1 1 ; 1 1 III .S S-'3e»-"Sg!553SS3S'^SSS8|53fe8«S N P 5«{ig'-''sss5;8ss°'ss ssgssss I I iH iH r-1 rH rH i-t rH « N rH rH 50 M rH rH ■*NCQ -^NNrHrH"* -*<«S«D'*rH00t- CO -^-^ I rj © » ■* QrHN(NCDflS(N©O«&»rHaia)l0rH0iCii>l»0il0 Sft^«0 a 3 o i-trlrH W !=> I'S !° l$i ef i-gi I I '•H '"3 '6 j^ i i^' 111 la T-t rH M Ci iJ< eo r ,0 l§ '2^ An 3^ iSS a s« >£■ ■ss+5 d gs s.a £ a.« <« soi BY COUNTIES, TOWNSHIPS, CITIES AND TOWNS 37 ■lB»OkL gggiilSili§KlSaii§gg|Sfii§| 03 bo ■9[8ai»j siS2"i§isiigs§sisigiiiigSii •»tBW i§ig§iiiii^§i§giiiiiiimii ■IB»<«; i-HtH T-t65 iH rH iH iH iO rH i-l S iH R « iH rt ■eiiBraiaij iH 93 to rH rH •eiBM a a ■IB»©-*»ogoioogr-je3e2aj« s"s»-g&as&as8s? T— I ^ rt ^H rH rn tH i-H rH C^ i-H r^ ^^ fH ^ ^ SSSaS3SSe«SSSSSSSE5SSi8t884Sg^S8 8|g«Sfe8iSiijeSSg§a8Sggg8fte8E9fe SS"?!? SSSSii ?0)iA aco9 ?^a°°5;®88as3ss!?ss8a='5iS55!!§s^sss |8SSSS6SS8SSSg«SS;2SapgaB858 S5!8S-*SS88''S;Sg38eSSSg«3E35SSS3SS aasssBSsssssiSfesssssss^ssssB »5 o l« if I lis 6; •" ^u '1 1 is 1 I a> I ■ I Pi I S 'a .- '•il 38 POPULATION— NATIVITY, SEX AND AGE 03 bo TB^OI •e/fvma^ iii3§i5iisg§iifs inmmi isiiifgi r-t r-t M B^ r-< W i-t ir5 i-t N N i-^ M 1-1 i-l i-l i-H N H « ©1 W SJ iH tH •moi tH I— I i-l t^ iH to i-l i-t rH i-l 1-1 rrt at 'BIBUIQ^ ■arew •IBlOi ■arBnra^ ■9IBW ■TOOi ■«IIBW ■3?" •IBIOI, ■exBtoa^ s •9IBH l« ■WOJD ■ateme^ ■9I«H £»> ■IB*oj, ■orBtcoj: r ■9IBK o ssssFisssssffissssssss SSS9&S3 esessssss aS5"SS;S83!S3SS8SSSS SS^g^Efe ggSfeCS^iS Hi— li— (t-lrHi-joiea'* i-H irHofli-lO^t-lftMOClMWNi-ii-l tOaXO-^e-fttO I> -«^^- CO 1-H I-l C OSWNrHiHOJfrqC«]ft"*J>»© I"* iH jH CQ CT rH i rH OOtfSi-'POOCO tOZ^AiaiACNtOC S«'*SS s'" la CO t I -« I i I I ■ I A ! I I I ri i i^ o, ■ 1 3>. ' 0>r(;WiHQ50Jl>ifti-iM-^ rHt-' M W CO Ua CO O CO rH -TtiffO (D n rH kO 9 C4 Ca '=^S^ i-^iWr r-t looi-tegt^Di I a ri ta-^eo irneo i MuscorHiA OSrH I iH(N U5 OCO eoa> I •<«< LA rH coco >(M H>I> -ti-V i-ir ? i 0-4^ 4,9+3 g a S 9 " 3- ■"*• rH rH t- r ;& ,^1 1 I 1^ Ij Hf n S'— is . SPio w E t- »-< w w s ^ I 40 POPULATION—NATIVITY, SEX AND AGE 00 1 •1«1sg«3o.*»;a^«=.ogpjOgnS^;;S^3 i •aisraaiii <£>r-i C- j»OCOiO03«) M t-W0000g->ttcO«) jt-«00«Ci9Nt-W' ^ i-t ' » o 1 1 i i i i i i i i 1 i i i i i i i I i"* i""^ i i i""^ i ■* 2 •ersH i i iH 1 1 rH iH C- . . ■ rH i i M 3 ■eiBDWii iH 1 '^ 1 1 1 1-" i 1 1 1" 1 I'" 1 1 i 1 1 i^'^ 1 1 i 1 1 : ^ •9[Bre ■"" 1 rH 1 1 1 1 1 1 > 1 1 ) 1 1 rH 1 1 1 rH 1 i rH ■»-( 1 1 i rH . i 1 1 1 1 ; 1 ', 1 : 1 1 1 III II 111 1 ; cc b •ie»ox "^^ ! i ! ; i i i 1 i i r 1 ! i i i i i i i r i i r i i , *e[Btiz3^ s e 1 I 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ; 1 p 1 1 I-' 1 1 rH •aiBKt 1-1 rH i i i i i i i i i r i ! i i i i i i i i° ! i i i i i eo In •IBJOi •oiBinaki "^ ; 1 I [ 1 1 1 1 1 1 p 1 1 1 I'" 1 ! 1 1 p : 1 1" 1 I ^ J-t 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 .' 1 1 .'" ,' 1 1 l'^ 1 1 1 1 l"< I-' 1 1 ' •BIBH iii iiiliiiiiiir !;i H •1 o i i <^ S, 1 1 i ■^ 1 o 1 ^ I 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 I 1 1 -1 i 1 1 r 1 III 1 : 1 1 1 '. 1 1 1 1 1 ."g 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 II i i id i 1 i i i i g ii i i i 1 i i ! i i g 1.^ li i| g !„ 1 1 l| 11 i i ^ Ml is i |§ i J it i ! 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S8^ SI3S55:gSS88SS ^Sfe' 8S SgSSaS 538S 888tSS5S9?SaS S5!S SS S53Sg5!SS SSfc g3ss"ss3asss8 sss as s^'ss^as ass 1-1 iH I— I 1-1 H iH rH r-1 i-l i-l i-l tH r-l rH i-H rH i-l rH i— I jfessessfe sse es 8sseisB pss; @SS!;S(8S3SgS SSSSS Eg83 PSSS^S ^n& SSSKSSegggfe 8888 S§ 838gBS 88^S sa^sstsasas* 3ig!ss isa ss^safe ass sag? g 5S9 3:S 3SS ggSfegSSSegg 8|| PS ff88§fe| S5ftl§ fea5!SS8^'5l5^fc 5Sl!;S Sa 5S18?Fl8S s§s 3feSSS3!S*SSS ggg SS? fcSSSSiS S8S 'g^l '■if I o is sg is I \< I I 'O 3 !! ^ fe O O 03 I I o Bo, -p ■S3.S"g| ' ft I'g i != I 1^ 1 ■' I ■^3 ^ i?aa JO'S' 5||p£|ga| 50 POPULATION— NATIVITY, SEX AND AGE 03 btt TB^Oi ■8IiBK[ I— lt-4 M r-tr-i i— C i— I T-40scg(NiHC^i~'ft^JMOa(0» 3 0JNC^ i-H^K ■siBura^ iH rH i-HOtH rH T-l i-( {-i r-1 (O r-* •9IBK &3->»-lcOC>Jiflr-i>t>00t'0' Q o -^i n CO CQ ass"- ■IB?OJi S85S2S ssagsftg SISgggiSgggSSfceiSS 88S8S P 03 ■at« p « 33S5S ■S53*SS<*51 s»s?§5!Sssgss5S3a sasss ■9IBH gags 3asss*g gS'SSSSSSSfcgSSSg 38888 •IBJOi e iz; s H ■aiBina^ qoit-oq CO Its ■* g? 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M - ■ 3^ St „o3 I ft K p. ft OH CO C3 ftp 2 o I 1 i^lsi .sps S I 11 d3" 'ig'aS '2'g'g^6;g° trig's, i^Hi i-5« oeS licJ I 'Isift -Pfi llali P O O OS 52 POPULATION— NATIVITY, SEX AND AGE t3 B a o cs •IB1<\L •oiBoraj; ■9IUH ■t«}0|I ■auBmaj; •IBlOi ■aiBtaaj; ■imoj, •i>IBraBa •BtBM H o g ■tBloj; ■eiBnraa: •BIBH ■[Bioj; •BIBtOSd; fH h bo ■IB»OlL S»8'°a"°'SS^S-*5!3®3SSSa'»a38S8^®feSS8 SH9ggS"'°SSSS'=SSSg3SSaS!!3gSSSSSK535S s"|'»s*'='sa°'a'»sssgssss95i|feSS!3ass«8 tOQffi c>«i-ioD">!ji->*S*"S*£5?5SS88Si55Sg CO ■<}<0Q CO GO IOCOL4 >ICD t— to OQ "^ CO 9J0^U3C0e0i-ICQC0Ud^C4lAe4Ot&t^r HOjHlftCOWS Hia lOii-nft-^iHaiHW ■^■*«a«WrH©rH-l M rH »-( r-l •? i-l i-i iH iH W t-l i-l to (H t-l T-l i-f rH r-l iH rH tH »i i-l iH W r-i iH rH rH W rH H sses; s'-K?8*-s ""^segsassssEs ssas sgass ffl'»8s s'^^sa^s 3flS •ajBUt ■oh TBiKU ■sr^nraa: •9ISH S3^s; 00 W«5 SOJBN jss'^s -'g»si?3?!ssssss 8^a as5as8 S:$gS: 8S3g9SfS^S ^ »3 rH rH iH i-H r-( iH rH N rH I sags fesssisssig i3S3!i ■*9 nn&s 8S5afe8sc! issg^8feS33^sfes saas sgss^s P e •1B*S»?S3^§ °SS3§S8S88gffiSS asS SKSSSS BroM aass; !s®°°^So°^ffi "a^'ssssssssssss 93^ jsssssss a 1 1 ij I I IS ■ • I -®i-we3 rH ^ 00 CQ lO -^ L) si ■a^H SaSSSaSSSSg eSSs SK3?3ggSS"=SS2S°'S88SSfeS •arBcDBj s^sss^ssss saa saaissssa^garis^ssasssis •aiBM ss^sgsss*- 88I8B asggssssa^sss^'^^sgasg^gs OS go SI 'VBiOJj S53§SS88!SS Sfcg scsaSgsss-^ssasssissgseK '3XBm8,I ^SSSKSSS aiSS JSSSS8Sa3"8IS''S'°So8S5S8E •9IBJI "l-aSSSS'- 8gS SSSSSSftSE3"fe8"3*^SS3^SSS "TBioi ■BIBnra,! •aiBII sa;|£sesr£:s sss SffiSg83i5!e»iSgSSSS8eSSS« 1 353^8388513 83* ISa°=S8feS8''SS*SS'='SiSSSSI3S i sasssesss Sg" 8SS8SS3a3'^ss«'ft«'ssaas5sg o nS a o 'SrHC^lCO-* po5* l*^ 1 I .. . 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S o te o 2S a o c § e &: an ■I® ill BY COUNTIES, TOWNSHIPS, CITIES AND TOWNS 55 iStiilSSS SS® §ssg|gg|sg0Si8 sgggg^g t-4 OO r-l i-HN N i-l i-H M iH rH i-H M iH tH Eo i-( cS rH i-l « 5S iH r-l IN i-H ^^si^gf^ sssssssas se^ gsaasssia!5'=ss3?3s ssss; "SS&SgSSS "S"" tcnDc>eBffiOoegN«>t-i;ooo> ffiOONNMt-rtja asses'- "OS OS M^LnnrHOoeoiocoN 00 CO lO CO N CD ooc3 ■* 00 r 00rH00;^WCOUJi-iMjg-*i-.lO lO©rHW 3383"^ sa" f- <5 »3 » rH 00 lO in eg Q-* to 00 rH o © eo N CO m Its ]-( M OS to eo RtSSS" ObOag-^mpPOgiA iON CO »o p CO loa; w ■* HNOiSOoeOiO I c: 00 iH -*Mft O 00 « t- 00 IOC ea iH 3-*i-tomioco-tHiHiai-ieot-» eowjiMi^QOOr-t |2-s^,s,Mi*. li 49 o o • IS - * I . rt ff t> o d-a e-3D ■ ■SoS d -4iLA iO»t-eOI>-OS'*'^- SSS' 69 03eo»»fcfr-©I>lOOlMai-*J>rj©e3t-i-lrHOOCOMOl©t-20Dtg5agQ - 05 t- m OS -* (N I -^NfiO® OCaOOOOM "^i-lr-ti-t i« IN I'^flflS eg 00 OS® ©OiOONio iflia itotOrHOcoos-i**- it-wcoi-~(©iftMt-a^-TfHO ° 3.^223° 13 03 I I ! So ! 9 S 63 I So S I ' '3 iH N « ■* K5i 03 w N rH W Irt i-Hlft HrHi-l«rH -* 5 Ig oS-o § - oio-«Koou3neo63CO j-oiftt-weomoNWrHmaa OSQOD-eHCOO^t-OOOa-^tiOift iH I— 1 iH rH CO r-1 Oit-«Di>t>'i>=OMOcOc'4N01rHeOOarH-*00 l©»W*MrHO-*rHa" Cq C4 rH 00 ica to e« i-g I Is a 1 1 1 1 1 1 J, 1 1 1 1 1 ^ \A 1 O i^i ■s io i 1 o ! M 11 1 '3 I g 1^ S I 1 cQdca ^■a g o «! s 3§ i-ss ft I 5 S "c ' .9-a' ■ lir 1 1. ■ ,8 'B ft ftg §1 o° IS 'a «.3 ^1 Sfe s bo 0] "I^lOi S3 S ■aiBcraj |SS 1 •efBW |S e s •IB^OIi g!S U 1 •aiBinaiC KS^ a •g H 1 ^1 CO IN CO 03 g85 !2i " ■XB}Hr-. •etBW £ -^^rH 1 Oi iP •IB^oj, «lrH j •aiBraaj: 1 1 1 g^? ■OPK ©1 rH 1 TS a 03 ! t O) •g a •s^« o I'E'S EH g s S << 60 POPULATION— NATIVITY, SEX AND AGE O U P o o m o a •l«10J, ■euBnra,! epBH ■JBIOJ, 'SIVUS^ eg. •IBWVL siBma^ d « S •IBJOi eiBraaa: •BtBH •tBlOi ■eiBtaaa •BTBM laPo •IB»OJ, •oXBxnaia; •BTBH •IB»OJi •eiBras,! ggiagSSS!Sg@S!Sf:!:S%£;!S&SfSSiS.S8 1 1 Sg8aa8933g'='SS8asa«3^SS3 8g 8S^E3SS?SSSS*Sq!fcSSa8l3S^SSSa SoSfegssfesassfltesassasssssss 5!fe2l«=SS°'SSS!"°^!SS="»3aSa8Sfl?3S 5S3SSS"*°'S'°'-8SS§S8S8SSS3aP sisasasa^ria^sss^ft^s^j^^s^ss U ®g©tN-*t-C0'^-*OS 3t-t-»ODr-(OlH3rHrjW©r CqOst-OiOM 00 W throws OOi»-iiftOsNrH*-t-t-00©iOr-< iMiftC^eOt-IO ,1-iiNr « « tH iTMUaiHNWiH a-*iat-oooooOi-noiaN©ioO)MOONC>N«nfSiftinina) ® oq iin f-i I lO 1 lMr-( I I ^N |C I I" r Mil I I : I .Mil ■g I I I I g I I I u I 3 I I I IB I g I I !a 1 T I ! i^ i 1 I I . r ail-,- 1 1 Hal I'g ■& ' '"ill aeon I I I I I I I I °^ ! ^ i I I I I I I I I I OS I ' [■si I i" I u IB ,1 : (fe 1'^ I i| I'M ! In \o I O 1 I o ca'S.S ^ral' '|«'a^ Si O g S Q J 3 Saa izE c'l' pg BY COUNTIES, TOWNSHIPS, CITIES AND TOWNS 61 TBlOi "eTBTIKiS ll§iig§giigiig|l§iiilHi§§§ |^§iiigiS|§§|g|||g|im§l^-|| •»FW ^§iiigiisiii§gg§i§ii§g^i§iii •moi IglllggsggpgssggggSRSISSps •erBOBj ■8tBH sgggssassssiggseggssKgsgfcggsss "O to |3S 'IBlOJi iiii§iiis§^giE§§g§i§s§iiis§§ •9[BniBjI Oi r-1 01 W N t-l i-t iH i-i r-( H N iH iH l-i i-l »H W iH ■eiBH "IBJOO; gsefeB:J5SSS»SS388S9teS88aS8S8^S8*aS3S ■9[Em8i,g: sstesssss^ssas^sssasssssfessssss "2 M ■HI 9 = S •B[BH safes5ss-*ss8s*5^assasi8sssss&8 ■IB^OJ, so H iH H H H r-( H H iH tH iH H H i-t r^ ■9iBnrai3" ggS8S88sa«ss*seB9sssssea5issss •aiBjS S§3gSg8a:*Sg3S8!3feS88g$aSf2S8SS^SS ■ra%ojj -*MH r-t rH rH »-t •erBtnea g8S9S5l8SaSgSS3S8SSSieSS^S«85S38 •arsM gSSfeS!8S88Sg8SSSSIi5feS;8a^SSS3l3!aSS I 8 TB^OJ, ^g§3gSSSSS!S§8S88SSg8§S8S8feSteg •aiBin^ g;S8SSSSSSSSS35lS3®SS?3S5S;3!SSSS8a§;S ■aiBJI 5?!5F!3S8SSgSSS35feaSSS£;58SS!S358S5S I I I I I I ^S5 a 3 & ! IB i ' 0. 1 f J I o ! '^ i.e iff ft l^^^^slll^ 62 POPULATION— NATIVITY, SEX AND AGE o o p H O S3 ba 'STBVJSi^ ■8IBII TB^Oi ■aroniaj ■8IBH fg ^USi-HCQiHQi-IC c5 CO 00 (M IM « i-H tH rH 1-t iH iH i-l iH 55 iH rH t-l CO i-i C-J -* « r-l ^SSSggSgSS'- SgSS8g!SS8SgS SS*S5g SSggagSg"^"" 3^S'^S83="SiSS S88*'=g .SSSffBSSSa'*-' S3!8§SSSgS5!gsS |8'="°S li •IB^OX •aiBnra^ •9I«W ■r«5oj, ■aiBOHa: ■9IBM •moi ■atBraaii •9I«M 11 ■rB%oi •9IBtn»,g; 1-1 N >0 rH iH 00QD«p«3 MO>0D0O»«2 S8S'' ssisigBsesiggi^ sissmssg^ssBfcss sesss g8£iSS3188SJ53SS SSfeSSSS^SSS^S gfeSSS ssissEsaasfesi asss^ssa^igs??! sssss^ SSSSSSSSSSS iSS98aSE3SS5;538 S@8S53 S3§388s°'sss aassssssssas ssass •3[BIT IS Si "PiOiL ■otEnraii ■9[BIl i&: 3S8gasissgs3ss sssgss3S585ss ssasss SS^9SeSS3!g?S KSag^lgSSSSSS SSS8S5; assasssssggs gaassssassss Ksssa ssssssssssss !Sas?3SS53gsa8«s saagfe 3 3 3. if 66 4 1 HO ft^ J3 I a I 1 •^ 8S^ fe.tr fe 3? Co o i 8 aS isilg "iss" '9*^«'a 3 s^afi il ■3,1- 03 BY COUNTIES, TOWNSHIPS, CITIES AND TOWNS 63 ga^gSliSSgi 3Sgisg5gsgg®g88|g3 § 2S!S^5!eS8!SSS8 !SSSSSSS?3SSa3§SS§SS -8sas S5SS'-'»s"°'a8'»®E3Sfts»' JO'S® asssK3«'?isas"s°'ss? iH'H rHNiH I— I T— I c3iH S38§S5^^:^:3ggS KSgSf283^S{:g3g§gSg353S^^ 5S§§!5^feS8SSf: gjS3aS2SKSggS?^BSS^g§5 0>a^r>Wt-O>O>CD£ oatto>t7iotDMcgb~ la-^vDt- J^^SS"^ ■* t- *3 00 lO lo ■* (o U3 a o> osrHwe ■HN ■wiHMt-.'*aih« lO £4 oa ^ CO 04 ift CO sss d>-lA a8S'-'°a3388SS ^S§S-S"8aSSSS!S8SS "S^^W'-SaSSa gcag^-^Mgoa^wgagu C»^»3-*,-lQD-*03g SSI3SS S53Sg *<© Tji t-t-OOOf! ■'flftaOtflfrl-^KlCOT-l'elH- l>"*t-M lift = ?3S5 w t- oi in CO OS OS lo oj C5 a loortooco-* 60 94 oS oS 1-lrHr-irH i-t LO ca oo CO ^ ea, gt-eot-e^MiQiamt' OOWi-liftWWcOOiOO'* fr^COOjO rH I f-i « iH a-^ to to t- ^ "^ •* lO W-*0 1-iJOOO 1-* -'3 6 1 1.9 3.2 5 a B ,? .S o * I •I8*0i gS|S =3 •^IBinaa assss 4^ •erBK spisa g V^oj; S^SSoS •^Bto^j: «S:?S te ^ S 4J SS^-S iS jiHtOfrl 1 « 1 %^%^ s •IBl<\t -SSS" H s •o^boioij: ^gj^co ^ h ^^^^ P 01 M So 03 15 |w;:.N o,g^^M •Oi,S •0iiJin3,a; 1^^ 1 fl -l 1 •arBM fn OJ Cd •IB^OJy 1 ■aiBorad: l-HCOdl 1 SPoO ■BrBH 1 1 ■2S§ ■moi "" 1 1 •orBui9ii 1 w ■ 1 >.Po •8PM rH 1 1 1 ■=„«. •IBJOi ; 1 1 ! -ereraaii . -eiTBH ■ T3 g B i1 1 1 li 1 la 1 1 IB 1 i 1 1 1 1 U 1 1 Ig 1 1 ifii ■SI?-' 1, 3 a 64 POPULATION— NATIVITY, SEX AND AGE tmox ■oiEora^ gggssgl ssesss?3saisss|ggg!s 385353833 *agSS3"S"SSS«gSS53 asssses ss *^ ?3 jas^as°o s^^** ssssgassa o u ciOcc«t^t-S >iH«"<*llOOl"*Mt-lN ©» "*ift ir-j'* C4 lO-^ 04 '4< a r •i ^ ^ 9 P5 "^ ■>H lftt-«^Q = 533 MOD I M rH rH ■>«< '^ lO C> t^ ^ CO L 2« S3 (M« i« Wi-iN A' gc3.gg H W iH iH 1-1 rH 04 |rHW , I WrH(N i>MOa H© I CO C<1 rt H1A(N -a-r-r-l I ! 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HI 'a ill IS o a*" 9 o I Is Im iB 8^|||. *g3?;ss^^| '°S;B®SS'^S5''Sn3g3@eS 1 NN je^i-i« j 1 iH rH 1 1 (M 1 i-t i-l 1 i*3» l«(NiH 1 11: 11 i 8 ■-ssssssi "sass^^s^Sflssaess" 1 BY COUNTIES, TOWNSHIPS, CITIES AND TOWNS 65 P 03 3 ■Pioj; •aiBVJSs. •OIKH ■moj. n^mmmmB nsuaum ii mim t- -^ Ci 0> ft i-i o (M l& *-< (M CO Til C ;siii ^ii§§gsi ii Srt mMN siig§iiiii§ gggi§is§ imu iiii§ Sig§i|S|e8| sg|gase.| gggg |||g8 if" ■OtH ^ -I s •aiBnra^ ■etBW ■I«aoi •orBtneii ■aiBH •Fioi ss5|g3S8|sss aggg^isss sgas gsstes esgsasassiss! ^g:?s^!858 gams ssess gi?2g§ii§ii 65 R S 63 rH W i-t K mm iiils to S8§|S2SI3§2I ggjsgagss Sg@S8 gK|SS 1 S|gs|ffi3ggsa gjsssegss S|88 ggggg 1> ^3g;S!SI^£>Sg!;tS3 !gSg3SSSS3S ^fe^iS SSSS^ ■Hi ^1 e "QIBni^ •9i«H ■Ib:>OiI ■eiBUKki •eiBH ■IB^oj, •aiBtOBj: •3[BK[ "tB^Oj: 'e];Bia^ •9IBH s!sgass?33ssss asss'-ssa ssas ssaas sss^asaasftssa ssag*ssia sssss ssssssa »-l iH Oi rH H iH 1-1 iH H R $SS£3S@:^^^^S SgiSSSeSSS^ iSS^$ S^SSfS ffiS!g888SS5:fess wisfe^^^sss ^s§s tesegs gg§SS$€&§^£te gSSSSS^sj^ sssss ^&SSS sg^:3^gfe;^qi$i3 ssissssss;;^ b8^& i^&n^ SSSSSS§S85!8 asSSSffiSSS 88a!8 SSSSS^ SS3g%!9@Sg«£S£!; 88$&S38^S $?S8 J£;SS ^SS^SEJ SS^gSS^^^Si'-;^ &3SS£3!8a^;3S Ss^EoS SS^SSeS O ■0-3 Pi a O i5 I CJ ! 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I I la 1.1 ■w t^ <5 a OS d e £^.s 3 a '53 ■Pop a o I l3 I l DO gQ ^ ■So, I ^1 o ; D, ^sl if .-.. . ■■Si.|° 66 POPULATION— NATIVITY, SEX AND AGE •DBIOJ, ii§§sisg la^^ggg issisiisgggsii ^m CbCM«4Mi-l SS bo •erwniaa rHWr^MCaWrH Hrt iH iH r^ i-t W r-* rH >0 M W © 00 rH rH iH i-( rt ■ejBW »OrH"rH rH»H 5g§g9|="- SSSSeg SS'=?SSgSB|||^|5iS SSS6 0)0 P V •moj; ■&[Biira,a[ ■arEH "IB^oj; •»rBIH8iI ■9IBM 1. •I«*oj; ^1 I": •apH fif, ■IBWIi aionraia: S ■9IBM ■IB*oj; safses"" !3S'°"8S S"5Sa8E3ggg||SSS S"SS 1 aggeee"" sa^x^ss S'«S38Sg|§|g8SS a"83S 1 S8S»SgS 39 3D 42 121 144 124 121 S,868 1,068 1,182 S!8 750 111 121 SiSgoS 3l3SS8Sg||§§S5 35S8S coaj^Ei ©i >H u5 ® ■^ ^ SE^ggastg^ Sft'^sss s^sssgsgigssass s«-{S8 **3 H W N i-t T~t r-i I i-H i-l 1-i «Qa©lfli-HrH :^£:®'^5r:JW o»©irioegi> *~'-'®*"S55 55Si iH Tjt J* a CO a ff3 ■« <« ssss SSte S 1*1 SON rH iH Fl •SSSgfeSSSS gg^'gSSS Ssa§8S§Sig8S888S SSS8 SS^S?!3SS Sft"S«S aSSSfcSS||g||Sfe 3S^8 I •aXBraaj ■31BW TBfJoj; •8[Biiraj •9rBH o «e o, '3 ssKssss^ s'-'^sag sass^sass S8§^g9SS ^esste^ 8SSSS i iSSggS3SS3° sa-^ssss sn^ss'-agggigas a"j38 1 1H asassKs^ sfl^gssa SS'°5tSS6||§§g8ii5 g'-SS IH BY COUNTIES, TOWNSHIPS, CITIES AND TOWNS 67 WNE'-tNiNWNi-l OTi-i i-HNN NrHl-l&5i-lrHi-ie4©Oi-la|||gsss s®8"= 9 at s 3 £ it a I *3 f-1 rH iH i-t 03lA<^u3^ ss^fcssssa essfi^is 5iasss58s|gg||ss ss^as In as^ss^ss esaass sssssBSiggggs^ ssbs Srt^SSSS*' S"""*-? 3'"»ssaNg6aFJ83» *-«"» c.(SS3A'4 10 g •* t- CO ID } o N i-«lHr-tQ pH^fr-Xt-t-iHOiC ijooia C4 I TptD esssesss ss"8feis saasassgssggfcii 8"fea gasrfSSS'^ g«>«SSS3 iS'-®fe'='S"SSS8fefcS s^ss aagaafsa" ss^sflg s'-s5as«"-§55!ssga a-^ss assssss" ss""as8 5a»Jj;*0.iocoj2g >0:)S coco lAOa ssssasa* s'=''sss sssss; '9§§8 ^sa ■* t- 00 ■* *3 -^ GO SSe HO % 0Dfr4 (&aS'-':2S 8 SSSSSSSS^gSeSRftSS TBIOI, 5ssssfessa;''a3'"ss3S sasssjasss "erBtos^ SSSfeftSS^a® C400e4iA OCC)I>cO>-iQcc>ia '^ *(s fri B I— ( © g| HQow lOtHoviacD «D t-C4 US CD 3S» jH lo iH Oi ui §11 set: •tB»OI "eiEnraii •SlIBUI St=oo ■mox •B[Btnaif •moi •eiBtnaa •9I!BW TBiox •aTBtnsii •8TBW P. iHSl i-liH •» E^pJ iH 9« C^U3 AUSrH la-J^«l-llH ieo ">»i f-i i-icc th -C&frOOom I «i iMC^ ?it-as©io« IN ^gg-'S'" S?8SfeS'°'- SfiW'-El'-' SSSgR' ii I Sgog S o .5 ^ « » *^ J^ S no p ^ is ft^ 'A I * ^+» m g 9 'S'-S' rHtolT- tDt- ] ! If I I o I I I I a I '■^^-mmmm^i MmhUhf I ti 03 a a.9f ' in- a St S! S8§S«« SS Sg»8!$8 -gasas!SSf|gg§s5 sassss S3S|^SS gS sa»s8ffi sfcfete W SSfSiSSS as ss-asa ai^ses^ssggggggis assfe i !33|^a;5 ns iSS^SSS asassasgigsgsss asss ! SS|S&S f5a SgSE!gS S£E38i^a@§||g§ss sstss M :3!S|$!Se;J S3 ffia^sss 83ssassm||S5 a^fes iH ^^^€^8 8fl sascs^ asss^ss||8g§s« S*-S8 I ^S a (Mb POPULATION— NATIVITY, SEX AND AGE >< ^ H [^ a p ^ O B O Ph H W •H ^ a o 'e tf 44 e w (9 u g n EHS SO p S3 a ^( t3 OS PS ■at" go •rmoi •erBtaa,! ■aiBH ■IB^oo, 'aiBuraii ■ai^W ■IB*OJi •arEniaic •eivji ■IB^OJ, ■aiBnraa ■8[BH 'IBlOi 'IBJOi 'aXBTIM^ ■9IBK TB^tu; •3[Bnrej: ■9t«H o ^& n 3 e ?gis§iigSSISaSgiii gsSigg isi lOOQMMMseo fflooifi r:HOcoi6*ai-j'*'5; <© iH Co 7* CO i-i « fh a-*-*«w-* JJlt>» 1 st-s^s^ssaa" 00 iH CO o> o i-H 00 C4 uacoumc S8@3SS5|§888S?geSSSS SS88^S SS* aS;8»S|8S!2SSSS!S;SS3SS S^SSSS gSgS ©1 i~H s5S8SSg|f:|S3gaseiS§ss sssss^ia ssg SQDfi A^>n fe^^ssas 353 8° b i> o> -^60 8i5SSS3F;8ssesass?3feE3 s^saas s'^s SS3:aSE;8BSSBSS88SS8 SSSS^iS 8S9 S§8*-ftgS83«85Sa885S?3SS S'^'Saa 8*-53 Sa5SflSiffiSfcS8g388?8!SS8 8«">3SS 8<*S IMH hI I H-I \€\i i -S ia l|ls 03 I e£ B ! s! ftfl [ 14 IS IB I .«; I I I, aa-S » I I _ gills ojgfe q S o ^ COS ■a aja - g to BY COUNTIES, TOWNSHIPS, CITIES AND TOWNS 71 rH sOCOi— IrHrHi— IrHr-t r-i Sg8Si8g|§|SS|SSS&SS gJSgSSa 85353 asssaags^SrfssssSB! oaoift-^t-o* lOiHy CO m «o i> n ci o -^i CO -^i lAiA Q &a ra Ag r^fg^n Lot-|dO to <%iA c^Atoooc^t- oi^to ass^gsigigggsssjses grussss s&is !;!SS3^aife!ggSSS5!£5S3SSS!g iSSSS? 5SS''se;saSg'r5gsestE38 8S"'8S3 s®; OOOO-iTN Ifl^SQt-"* WN ^ W« ift i-liat- OOCOi-HOOOO iH I lO sss'-fe^ssisssssssssjsss ^fts^ss "-"-a '-ss^sigssfeS'^assssass s°"'gss "^'- =s3'"S3§3'"aass8ass3s flOOb-lftOH "*Mt- ""SSi'^SiSSSSSS^aSa^SSS $3®"S3S3 3°°'' (OW«rji-II> "<*<>« Mi I" iM'^i r^^lil .3 C C « S fig 111 ■a a (SS o S aw 6a CP te'Ob- ^5 ll Ua t^rH-tiCO in ■IBIOJ, ■«IBin»iI assess OS o •eiBH J^^g^lSS ^iSESS^S ■I«loj, ^ ^^M^O. O •eiBnraj 13 CO^»-l>* s V H . 1 -^ N &3 ^ H s a SI tX>^^^ia « I2i S§S"i§ s •[B}0»I ■^v^a^ ■*a8"s -e '-SS'^'S i 03 s -a 'oi a* .§ a l^iz S3 S3 1 iHO liH pS3« •imoj, •aiunra^ 1 iHi-i 1 iH •erBju 1 1 IQ 1 1 10 and Under 18 Tears ■I«»CM ItHOOMW •eiiBnra,a: 1 1-1 "«t< W eo ■eFW 1 j-„,-1l& a ■[l!}O.I 1 (MrHl-l •eiooLajC 1 l« 1 tH •erBW 1 1 rHiH 1 ■IBJOi 1 1 tH 1 j ■aiEoia^ III 1 g-^o ■eiBre 1 t i-t 1 1 1 1 i ! ! £ ! ^ 3 ml! 6 g ill 1 ai !». s 5. ^^i^ So * •S a o ffiis ifl^ OS fe 72 POPULATION— NATIVITY, SEX AND AGE 15 O O I H ■fZ O o H H K o •[E}Oj; aiBma^ •aiBH •IBJOkL ■3lIBUI3J[ •tE}OiI H « •oiomaij: 3 1 1 S o e| '°ft'l •IBiOi ^i^ ■aiBinaj «^s •eiBM ■" "i ^fS ■ri!*o,i •ejBraaii yu„ •aiBM 111 ■TOOi •aiEcnaa (ftPo ■ei«K •^ qj ■18}oa Pl ■erenKii ■81BK f low i-lfH r-C t-H 1-1 I-l w ggss!38i§?8sa«a ssass^ssa | 3ss88ss88Sgs sssssaeg^s §34:$^se@gasss£9 sssssssipis^ ggS5SS«'Sflg«"-fe!9 SS*-3Sfe eDM^-<#r-it-ooi>a gssss^saggss^ assa88®"s ««(N>-i«C» iNNWNMi-l I I ^sa^ss^sas^ssa ssa^ss*"^ 388SSSg8?SS5(Sa :S'»SS='S{JS=° 00 s$ 0> 16 OllH ^ a OB ■§i ^ p< So, 11 O e8 •a I Si 60 IS POPULATION— NATIVITY, SEX AND AGE o o 02 cl o K o I? g e n s I? e s 03 U So a h 'O CO P 9 g •rmoj, ■eiBinaig; ■ajen TBlOi ■arBUKji arsre "IB^OJ, •aremaj ■aiBM •IB^Oi "SIBcn^ •9IBK 'IVWL •ersniad: ■9IBW "tB^Oi ■aiBine^ •atBH TBiOi ■aiBnra,! ■»tBH o ^f7 I o OS m « 3" Oi epr- J g3 g«"igi Sii SSgiSSgSgg s««' 5°'S5g^g ss** sasesssaa" &■= i eaiosDjpgsgg SES"* * SS2£3S3*°**' *^ [ 538 fcSSgSS SSS g^gK^S?S3S8 SS' ;g fesfesiss S3^ !S|!S3^!seigsss sg" sas ssssssssss an-^ I-IW W i-H iH i-t Ca -^iH i-H iH i-l i-l|-)i-l »-1 BIS s-^^asa sss !s^sa'-='ssss garH 1 ag gsasgs ggg ggosggeBesg 3SS IH 1 8B g-^n^Sfe S8SS s^83:55i55iga SS" i ^S gS-5;SS 388 5gSfeSS3S8g!S gg-* i SSS jjajsgNg SSSS si^issssGsesssg ■ IsS" 1 EScS 3; ""■ass sssss ^Sissssss^sji; Sfe»^ 3 3g n-'sssn ssas aS8^SSS3SS8 SS" 1 J23 s^sagga; «ss |2g3SgS8gSS §8" 1 a o2 ^ +3 rt O t° fl <" boJa n Q n p, 9 •a « M a E ■sii4ll°^«t"Jlllll| If- si ' +*,* fes ssassss ass sssasasssis sa" | ss s^^igss aas sssssajaasss e9« g BY COUNTIES. TOWNSHIPS, CITIES AND TOWNS 75 M g«3§8f| |g| giii§2ig|fe §H? 1-11— I f-il— li-Hi— IC^i— I ''^r^ rH rH H i-H i-H W rH is !j8,-!SSSg 8KSE;fcg«$SSS i&'S ss sssisss 8SSS SissgsGiSsa ssa aas S^i-SBS SS8 SS^SSiSSSSS^ S32" S8 fe'^PlS^S! gas 8|S5feSSSSSS; S«l« s'^ases g$s sgssg^sssssg sssa ss essssff 55S3a sssassss^sasB sts; iH H iH ^ Oi i-t r-l r-t rH tH iHOSiHiH i-l r-i ft I ^a 35'«^feg£5 S«!g S§SSg5r^K^lfi8 ?g?3g as ^ !'=^S5S3?3 S^'g^ g?5-J5S?5*='K^^?S 53** S'^^iS®^ ^<^i 9M QlfS lOrH lO o assis 33 S I OttD 0> § IS I d 11 I S I" I S ! . i •> * (^ ■ o el ^ s o S-p "SSS S8*-fe S^3S3-«8Sg«5 SS* Hint- 3 »a QD OS lO 1-1 © t- ift 3 ft®iO ■«*< ^ O in CO CO t- lO-^« !>-* l-^W^T-t I>Wr ° I 1.9 I n |3 . . , ■>» a t^ cQ IS IgBg l^- slat" ■§ 33895 IS I Hi ;p,.t 13-5 a 1 I I S I 1 sa I I p I I !>. O jas fcs^ sssss-'fisas &■*■" iMNt-CO H^S COg«t-OSC0« OJlftr-j |fi tP N It- I ■" iSJ ^Slfi ft , ■g ? .-K I I I I - ft I iS-g rtO fi febo ^*HiB" ^iz; ■mox 'Oiicraaii •areii f o ■IB^joj; •ei^nraii SI •1B*0^L ■oiBnrad: 3S JS ^& !S S!S S S3!, S ei 18 and Under 21 Years •IBJOJ, ■ailULaeii ■etBH SP05 •[BJOJ, •eisma^ •8IBW iBPo ■IBJOi ■BlBoraii ■exan Under 5 Tears of Age ■\^%OJj ■uiBoraa ■arBw m ®s I I I .' ! I I l« I ll 3 !« ^ P 09.3 E "So Si?s M D 76 PpPULATION— NATIVITY, SEX AND AGE O O Eh O O 02 OOnM00'eoOiO> flS as- liHOOlO -«fl«tO I I •[BlOi ■aiBmaj ■srBM ■IBWL ■ei[Bni9a •at'BH si «"3 n I H(M&1M C4 I I I I ; II III I I I I i'^ I .I'" I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I g I \i I r I I |i2i I I I I : i< I I I I I I I I IS I I I I |A I 1^ I I I •> I 1 I I Q, I i ' 'I i ill :lPl||ftllr''" / 1 11 c PI ■aS5 o t>>! ^S |-*S^S ^^^ ^S!5Si5®fi3J:5Sfe SS*^ z^eoi-ceo ihim iio we i ■a I t> 1 c3 ! i^i 1^1, -"CI W rt a *5 ." BY COUNTIES, TOWNSHIPS, CITIES AND TOWNS 77 E^g §1 oO •IB»rHiH lOOaO^OBW di-i'*i-(eo l6c-t- t-TtlW**©© a'^ss'-sss OOiHiOOlWM H"ssa i£3 jt-t-'^QiBW i» I09MO TH00(Ot-l>H w i ■H ! 1 l§ ■•Si \^ ! jS .. o ^ a g«g|s BY COUNTIES, TOWNSHIPS, CITIES AND TOWNS 79 S3SS|S^igSgSS9 1 "ssg^isftssas § ssa§sass3S89 % "sssssssasa i N I- 00 g-H IB UJ ^ 00 » 00 i-H t-e^OOg^MO^gt^r-j-i^ M «3a:r5isag58s i TjllBe-I^r-jM^OOlOigc ^S3 r-ia)»r»©M;5'iM«;5 0s Slft'*(Mi-l'* icoco2^eoeoiHi-iN I ^O ^-5I*G>J r COt-'^'H iftMM (M in rH ;o eO (N r H CJ CO lia "N iH N ■a -fl '3 ^-^ ^ d »35pwoicp"*TO opoicp j*c>c3 I I 'S'lHNOl leOlflfrjej-rfft-r-ICOPBINlO t-i-4i-H>.ii5NOCOeoOt-'3NT-HOOeOi-*-«tmor5»0'f*coooo g rH 1 l(55t-iCqCO 1 WM rH<=>0OM Oi iHCOtN CO 1 1 1 ®* '^ ft ©^^^^m1^Nl^^coH"*■* iH rH i-l i-H rl 1-1 iH -=5-i-l I-H H iS'-SSgaSSESSSSSSSSSSSS u iHrHi-H l-HiH ©SiHt-IiH 5'=gi«SSgSS8ta|gSSS;5i88 i 3"='8KSS^Se:ig|S^Sfe!8S8 § «SgSeffi3eSSC:?S8S«SSS ^«5SS3SSSS8fe6S§!Sa?3S3feaS; fs^gsfessssass^sssssssa sill gill a. i I I I I I I I I 1 1 I I I I i lj„ I I S '^iSltja laftftS I Biasi-|.9'i||;^ (5 sfiS" agaS e ^^ S'ggSSgggSSIg^fiSSS? 1 ««Ss3fegffiS8SS85SiS8S8S § 5!«88S5SSt8afeSg8E3feSSaS3 S •moj. i «!l S8S V.< •erBtra^ ^i SBS •erBH SSiS 1 TBIOJ, ■aiama^ gas «o s •OfBH 85S3 n "moi sss lll^ "arBoia^ g3 SfeS s •9IBW s •I«10i S'^S ■Oa. P§ •aiBiraii OD«ir- ■aH §fl 9«3 •BIBJt •IB} gS;8SSSS538!SSSB56S3S2S 9SS8SSSS3SS3853SSS5S gS5S8SSas?^S8SS8«5iS§3S l000^OHOrH©0arH;dNrHrH00QI>53** «DtO Mt-i-lCO 3l«l>"V-*iftlOOiO"* aeOiHO lt-rHr-H>©ir-l-t-MtOt-t*Q 8S8S-'S'=asgss3S5as5isg? t^iftt-coifl-^oicoaiwooeoot- s-iss S5S'r;S9S S"°^a^S«^88S8*SS3SSS saas^'S'^sssssasassis lrHi>TtiOt^-*01rH®-]Q4i&^iN^-*rC I I I I I 1 S ' a A •&a,l ■93 g ■S2 E 'S'SS e^fel Sfc g S2 POPULATION— NATIVITY, SEX AND AGE ■p^oj, ^5 so ■9 >~ ■oh e e •erBToaii •eXBjtt •EBioi •er»raai![ •9r8H a ■rB?4< j ©toiO^spt-N w eo jN IB lo t- CO N a 8gS!3i3S<*S -ssa8s-*s ss§gsssai-*8 cx< s.tf> o :* » « -* SNtDOOrH Pi 'C S lO jg M (© OO rj N to rH SS;3SS" 13 |g 85 CO > O ■a 5 isqioj, uiIBnis,]; •erBpt •IB}<\L ajBtoBj: •IBWI ■arsniBd: at,. £Sgf3SS^8E^SS8S 82i8K'»522aa3E SSSg^S^f^g^SSg JOM^gOOODr-(t-iCnnri(o sssg^'-si^ssasa s&sss-a^agsss asas'°s3ssiS3ss C^iAMOq lOaCDOcoiacql. H rH tH iH iHiHrHOJ iH H ^ S GS SPoo ■[BJCVI 'OiiBtnfeii •eroH ■iB?oj; 'aiBinSiI BIBH g.§§ I'*' ■lB*Oi •oiBnraii •ePM •lB»OJi •aiBmea: ■atspi lOOJ-^eOiH^IOIOAC^ ro> I>-^OiA'#OOUdODeDt-QOO> 3e4 1 I 4-1 I I I ft BY COUNTIES, TOWNSHIPS, CITIES AND TOWNS 83 faegss3S|.g|gsse i ssss^fiSisis^iaags B 9$:$(;ISSigg!B!Sgg;3S 1 SiaS^SIiSS3|8@§^ti!S g "ssaaasggags's 1 Si8aaS8S^fegJS83SS i i i 1 \s ssas8ss|ffiisssfla § 3lSfeSSSaiSSfcS®S as ^^wgej;*] 9s?aag«'«s giss«"»ssg5is!sa"s la-^Q IMlOiHGQ trOoeo^eqcD 3tB«e> « S u e n 03 tU) US B as TBiOI •0XBTI19lI •BIBH TB^Oi ■Brranrad: gi Ssigis tot- 0OQat-p "BIBH ■IB?oj; •eisnraa •BlBM ■JBlOi •BlBttBiI •BIBH •IBWL '8tBms,2 •9IBH ■I'8*OiE •gima»£ •BIBH ■tB*Oi ■BtBniB^ •BIBK 1^ o 3 ®S "t-S^S? sg sgggss SiS S3g|S*- «s SS«|3S s« fe^a^is- ?a s o^conoLo H*3 t^-^tDCptOW 3i !3iSt:§!SS gg Kagisa* is isssss;^ as rt'-S^S" se ssfessj" 3S SSftS«5® US K*-8!88» I ig ! ill Nig IP iS ■ I dec W o 5 BY COUNTIES, TOWNSHIPS, CITIES AND TOWNS 85 5 ©5 i-I i-H Mi-trH e5-*55 r-i 61 CO iH « »3 l-l i-H iH r-l W i-i « rH iH »-l iS i-H ^"55 aa"-"?^^^ gss s sfes" ssgssssss asfessa sssa™ (QCOrH cDia«4iioao ^(3^ ^ SS! S eq^otDcoGQ oOAiot--^ lO (0 » -^ t- ea (O ir-0) S5 ft 83'-'-' 838S385SS? a'"5tS33 «'^'°'^* 3558 fe :$Saa S5I2S883 SSSSggS 88883 SSSS !8;jSi "CIS SB'S 3 S I ! B !a o 1 I II O g o g S ■Ifri® ■ s si© sil 3(St9 •SS CoW si* I turn if' I I I IS I i I"' bos a f S3. ^ i i i i ^ i . i fA i & 1 ! c 1 u ! ^1 ^ ^1 ■ffe^ .1^ §■65 ^^- : SSS'S I ' It's P S a E S3 "fl'aS S E S6 ', Illi;:;§"| -|||p;l|i , lllllllli i |;eIs5|II° e S6 POPULATION— NATIVITY, SEX AND AGE P M o o o o o ■a WOi •aiBtaaj ■at«K •TOOJi ■siBtasu •9IBW •TOOi [3S ■ars^irsig: ■9IBH I ■moi •aiBtaaa: •9IBK ■TOJ lo lA lA ^;=!Si •vi< !© Oj frj t- taO s*a 2 tkoo eg 63 (DiAOa lO in (O r-i O*^ £2 op OrH WOl-- w« 40 1-1 CO m 00 a o a 1 Ad S S g l^^i >° 3*3 BSSSBtSS S8S -^ «S'«R AODA 0^ C4 lO 0> Sp OO 60 ^o rH nrH(N8 « |» gcgt-gj^j, ggg . ««N3 inrHM egrHiaiaooi>o» 9jAa lAiHOD LA r-< eo CO <0 CO CD 00 00 {;g&S$S3 @i^SIS& S$8S^iS SfSiegS'SS gSESSIS 88=»SS ^ss?sa3!e SoSise^s sssass Cgoj-^NMrH IB ^©0l©O>i« ©«■*»!>■ leooeoMntocQ oinwoa-^t&q Ai^MeqiH *Hr-* I IIBW gi-iiHt-mCO i " 8S »"^S98"S5°' o 1 ■ 85 S'^SSS^SS 6 i y INr-. r, rn |« 1 1 1 1 s^ 1 III SS S«gSS®S!S c3 ia ss s'^sas'""^ •IB» 1 1 1 i i 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ■eiBN 1 1 1 1 1 1 'l \A i^ i i i i i s f 1 I I 1 ® ! § a 1 S 1^ 15 1 1 Ig 15 i'S i 5^ iU JS o 5 o 1 '^ ; 1^ I C ■•J c « 1 gA b>,g ^4^ ODD POPULATION— NATIVITY, SEX AND AGE q^"S gS3gS3S%96«ii^^ s ss BY COUNTIES, TOWNSHIPS, CITIES AND TOWNS 89 :S83RS M SS""?" § S53°°g!;1 iH aassfe 1 sa"8* i MJjCO^O. rH i : 1 i 1 S ss»a°' i OS t- 1 g w % i i n lO^ lOON u l(M 1 -*rH s irt W 1 ■* rH 1 ! ! 1 1 ! ft 1 i 1 i i >o 1 1 1 1 i 3 11' 1 53 ■iii^l ir- 1 1 1 1 1 ^ 1 1 1 CO 1 3 i ii°' i CO i ir i iH 1 1 ! i 1 j 1 i 1 1 i 1 1 ! 1 Volga Tp., exc. of Eliport and Garber Eliport town Garber town Wagner township, exc. of St. Olaf St. Olaf town - 1 3 j5j3g S9S 00 s? (H iHiH rHr-i rHiHiHHCOrH !ss astesssssa ^isssssts kks a 5 ^8 S3S8!3'=^fe^S SSSSSteS S^n 8 4 38 !!5agSS93S2 3S«88S5S 8§!S 8 :? S38 S3S!SS°°S'-@ 33SSSBS iSSB 6« S«'853K-«ft»fe 8»SSgS @s ss?se»as3 «S«8SgfeS g§§ 8 B 8S^ SSSSftS^iS^^S a^s^ftsa SteS s s as «3'-S3S"f23S S3"S''S5!S SSfe S3 Si I !■* I I'S IS i I O I 5 m I g I ■a a B I iff gal 5|.3aS Ph§c6.; 90 POPULATION— NATIVITY, SEX AND AGE H P O O 'A O Eh O 03 bfl •iB;oi ■9[Bni8kI •sireH •IB^ox •erBraaa •3UBM P o •afBraad: as P » TSPK a S ■p^oj, ■OtH •eiBinsa: •epK Is •IBl'OI pg •e[Btn8d: s •81BK 1. ■IBIOI ■©[BtOXIiJ •TOOJi ■etBtiwd: •eiiBH .•a o Fi egiiSs :§SS3 8SS SSSSSSg 3S8SggS iSSSS 5 Tt< -If «o r-l €4 M 94 CO 09 lA 64 64 g3.= «g« g S"=8S ^ so 00 e ■* to gMjgjgffiO. C0C4G4OQ0 i-l « i gsg gl^SSSfc |8|888g sasga g 8"88 sssasass essnaa SS"!g"* 8^. g^K iSS^SiSE^SS css^ss -ji-cosa w S w SSg a^88:S8| sssees gSSJB" S'='a SBasass a^ss 363 5t<0 iftS IN S'=!3 SS883S^« ^'"SSffiSS S5 .». ^ >l w iH rH iH ^*!S ss^sssas a-'sass ig-o^s^ la ifi ■* «a r-l rH iH N to « esss* 11 5i I? IS I iSj ! ° O sg'2 1 '> I S I I I I S.9~ i la i I lo ]W 1 |f* L - IB I.B^ a - ■ ' 'eg^aiS-aliD'So goal s iziSS i-5aii,>'3 s5«i gsO sa > GQ IS fe BY COUNTIES, TOWNSHIPS, CITIES AND TOWNS 91 Z o o O z a s ^ ■§1 do SI ■I»?oi •arsni^ ■8IBK •TOOi •areniaij •OIBH ■IBioj; ■aiBnraa ■91BJH l„. ■IB^Oi i3y ■aiBtn^ s •8IBM f e •WOj, •aivma^ •BrBH •IB^'OJi •818018,1 •8[BK •IBlOJt ■818008,1 ■srBK o „-5 a MOT i-*i-l tj §ggesisigg§is WrH 1-1 3!3^S3iSgf?§g||gS -assas'-fgigg^ sssgsssg O N M rH i-l iH tH 1-t -*rHt5lOCON SSS&S;f2S§§||g& s?E3SS3ss3^i£S3%s3 ooooequseoNi-i'-HMi a eq loeoN ^^^^ '4toSSSiKf2ES3o6oSs ^^s3!g;3SS||S§gss Sia« ^SEJSSSSSggSggl ^ 8SS^SSS||^S|S S83a6*3Sa3gSl3g ssag-^sfiiisisgs •3* a "21 ■ail lis if IS ■ e8 16 :•§ "a 00 © r-l frlWi-i iH iH i-l i-i i-l i-i ri t-tOi-' CN^i-l iH iHiH i-lr-t tHiH IS'-' 383«'^85SSS'* <^]^-Nt-IHflONt-Qfr^ SK t-i-flftpNlftOSr-j-^tift fls^sggsss'^gaftBssssse ^a-'ss |gS"oSgSS«3 SSgSSiSSSSSSSS brH"*5fJWW)SDr-!CflOlJJ jpe^C^AOu!)^ |ei3l-tHiHtpMI001>OcD S5SH lassa^S'^ss i^s^^as" ||S'-|gig8e jSfeSSgSffiSES ES5"!8ffi3Sfe ISS'°93iSeSSiSS 3gS''Bf2SSS8 l8ffi"Sg;83a3{3 8S8"8aSS!S^SSSSe88S8S & r-) gs N a; ffi CO 2 SCieDcojDooeo^ 53^S?^gSS?3"=53'='^S-**-5n"Sg^ g|^*'Sgg§?;n5'»ggsg§^cS^©SS a ^ ea la JN « 00 » c t" Ch eg rH 00 M 6 g3S"Sgti=>8«^S58'^sa838S8SS I I 1^ o giogo o BO O go S3 ll 1^ lo OB Jig Iti Hi-) I I I I , , I'D I O ° is il 1:1 pg? .il6§l|^ »^0 O CQ 92 POPULATION— NATIVITY, SEX AND AGE "IB^OJ, S3 Ul ■siBDiaii ■eteji "moi So 'arenie^ •9IBH ■inoj, P -3paia^ •eiBjt •TOOJi b OS •OH as •aisnraa: ■»rBw O 03 is "m'Ojj •aiBraea ■etBK fC3 BQ P o go ■IBWI •aiBtnaij •aiBJt •IWOi 3< ■aivioBi •atoK e 2 o »6 S iSSIgsi^ ssssgsss ?|g!i ggoggj^^g. laOC^QOMC^OOCQ o COS© i« es» ^5!^3^gfe'" SSSS3gSSS3g^ ■at-toto usco'jj'N Oi <0 1~ '^ J— -^ ^ 3!Ss5e8SB"= SSSSSSii'" !3 i'S 6!^ 10, o I3 p, . asssgas" | ssssaas-' ^. fefeSSSSto*" SS^SSSS"' ^. S3"aS5SS ! ssssa'-g^ a. ssaagsss 1 g >a ■e s s 5 ei a « h S h « H ii§s£Sfiilgig SS«g8S|||?§|| g§egg8|gg|g|| SfeS§SSg||.te§S sassssssssass 00 rH l-t iH H 00 iH iHlHH Sf^ss8as|g|||| i-i O 10 ri W -v rH 1^34 ggE3«g§ 1^ !3«Sg Iggses ■go.ujr.i>-»Mggggg.g, |gg;g«jgg u>g-..o«©H ^ o Eh H 5 e ■a OBP 1^0 •[BIOJ, •sjBraa^ ■BIBM a S« S^S? •moj. '9IBra8,i ■IBJOsL ■9[Bnraj: ss !p •IB}«i •aiBnraj "^s -srupi •l«»oL •enBoraii: •ftrBTxr ■[Bjoj; ■aiBinsj; ■aran ■mojj ■exvTnaa •etBH 5„ «5 _ gsfeasfes S^SSSS 8§«S!3g sasssss ss^g^sss N i-t CO 1 CO j S^gS^g^ ^sass" SS-^SS" 2 eofr-os wifl CM Pa, P 03 ■OH IS •mox 'ei^oraiil •et«M ■IBJOJi ■9X^X119^ •appt ■t«lojt •eiBin^ :»IBH gglil§iiigg^i m ia§S§i§«6i3igl i§iiiiiiim§ s3SSIgSS§§g§§ S88S3§S||g§|| SBsasggmgll gassg|8||§§||g rH rH rH i-l i-H ■* W O © TO ^ •IBIOI •eisiirad: ■ei!BH •rB^oji •axama^ •spK •I^ioji •erBTnaki ■ajBUt II §s§iisi«i§i8§is la isiigggse^llg vs^" stateissssi §i S%§|SS!Sg^SSS%@S^ a"Sga' 11 §Sg|g*§a|.88SSS lOU) tH i-I W rH i-l iH i-i l-< SS;SaSS8||Sfe§S ISg s^sssss opQOotp&e ise 8'"S5;s'°!S'=as^sa= SSgSSIKSqlSSSi^g life aSS5l2S^8®S88Se!g «8382ag3g||gg|g l|| S«'8|8g8-*SgSSSS8 ^8S!sssssg§§ggs ig| ga§g@;s§«@3S^sss ESSS§88||||||g j|g SE®§gSSfe"S3gSi8fefe 3SgasE3as|g8e|8 igg iS'-sssfesss'^tsa^sssi 5i5g5sssg!||8S|S8 j|g s^ssss^s^^s^asss Sofas nn mo cq H MjJI So 96 POPULATION— NATIVITY, SEX AND AGE •art P O ■ah So •[B^OJ, 5^ •eiBtaaii si ■BIBW -a n ■[BlOl So •ereinaj s •BIBH TEiOJ, •BiBraa^ •8IBR •IBJOi •9IBTD3iI ■etEH •IB^OI *e[Bxasj3; •8FBH ■te%ojj •atBraaii •ejBK TBioi •erBTn^ o »5 siig iif§igg* iiil 6 CD t- rH a O -^ 3g3S S|||§|gg gg?!g S88gS5l8S ss^ssss g&isssss; i-i.h55ih w 1-1 iH i-i ■aiBiraia: 3 »s So •aiBM a sgs g 88 s •IB^oj; ^i g sa TlH •oi«ni8ia: gss 51 S3 C4 ■eiBw ng •WOi 3 "S Sa (o ® rt «iS ■8[Bnrai3: §S 00 M 00 a ■BtBH t4 s ^s ^1 ■TO'Oi •&[Bin9j: Si S3S3 s •BtBW s as s 515 s •IBWL So ■BIBKIBi a as Is •BIBM a aa S § ss S ■IBlJOi ■BIBIOB^ a 3S ^° a as 1^ •BIBH IH-I 1 a » 0) 1 ■^ i 1^ csl a iSi' ■§ 1 o tH S6 ^ BY COUNTIES, TOWNSHIPS, CITIES AND TOWNS 97 i3iiiSSggS8Sgi§g| S^iassg i^^^ss ^ag § r-l <^ 04 l-l (M t-i pH ,-(,_( iH HW IH H N i-i iH iH SSggSSSg^'^'" I'-SS^'^feS rHN«j5N,-,og gggjjtt. «s3S53 i^Sg3S»!9 i-ii-lN t M006 iM O rHiH I O ( asfegssB I ^O^CQpco iHOaiOQO .H« |-*§g5«ss :rH«f;«M« SaSS" "H^S ss|gg|sigssfeS8gfe°g| s^sssaag g^sg® ssss S|ete8SS*9'-'*S!3,8?"Sg *-"KSa"S ss asss §§S5Ssaa='ss='S553®!SS s^ssa^g sg*" as *'Sj!S$SS°'®'~'^S8"°"°f;S OOMrHgWrHOi jj ^ JJ ^^ « «> ^ -* ^ lO g O *^ W © •-< -W ■* N tH US rj lO i-t «> ** ©rHtH»»rH84 r-t © »0 © tH iaO«CD 9-^-^ OirirHrHlft-^ 1ft I Ifl OS ■»(< -^J) iH -«t-rK W IH l-H I t-H 400GO>Oe4 eoOOr-ieo 8|gCS^S!SS8aSfeS8SS 8'-gafeS«-8 S^P?" S8SS sg^sssssaaa^sagsssis s"sss*s sss^s" ns&^ s§fe?ss883S88ft'=^g8sa8g a-*9aa"a sss^" aass g 3issssi^8s«"^s;ssfes 8S{3iS^"s sa^^« 5SgS ^ss^fjis&ss^s |sspi£^;as a«S!gs^s s"as S3S3SS 1 ssssg^sass^sftsssss 3'-BSS'^ft ssaft'^ sg^^s 5;gS8{:88Sfie^"S^BaSEg ssass'^gs ssas ssss asfesssssgsss^sssssife s^KSS^a sass aa"s g s§8as§3asssi5-*saaas5! a^sas^s 8sssa ; ^EjSS^ i I I I I I I S.9.9 a ■ ■ I ■ I I I^J I § i il ! ■H I 1° I M "• i s 3 I ?^ I irrt I I . _ . I" I I l| I la i I |.S I I i-^ j i I IH I I |o I I ffl i> I I ■IS i« I I I 1^ I 1 fl I I I ■s Is I '■ ° Ig I I I ii-«» JI||g|i|i|B|ii:li^:|5||g|3|g:i iS p A40Q CQp 6:^ 98 POPULATION— NATIVITY, SEX AND AGE § » p M 1? 5 H a o s ix ■a H *1 !?; ^ C3 o o CJ a Q ^ « £ e b Ed ^ w jgrt 01© Oijatecoeo w ON "©meJ feCOOlOiOOrH-^i TliiHiC 51 8s:^gaege8fess'"8?-'SK^ gs^gsftg 8»e 3 !SSSS?3SSSSS88S 3?3'^553S gJ^SSSSS 3®S S3 !5l§s3iSSesafegSS«'88'^S5)S 5SS?5S8S'='^ ocooeocDe4 oiom HC4 GOQ -* SE3S^3gsa*s«s-'s=> I'-sa S'^SS!5'=S3 OCDCO .*- asss°>feS3SS&as'^8i9'='ss=» s-^ass^s 00 1^ O ;FHNaj«0 i ftfl9S'""SS'-a<*53"a?; |flS9 3*SS COrHin Oi»CO *~ 3rj;^glfllfltot>»rH«0(aNQOQ I O O t- t-l H ^- « N « C6 «D (S CM t-.I 3^$ag«S5Sg3g3gSS«a8S«>gg8S53g« •aiBnraii ®S8!3gssassang'=afl"gss?3S!i5s S "Sa3g8l38ga8S8"Sa'°SSs38a8S SI i-lSi'fltN|4NmiftM«NC'iOrH««NC0"!tit0jrtiMrHD0 i '>ssss§:3a5SftSte'-a'=^fla"S3ftSS<*fes •IBWL 1 IM i-H N -=MO so M iH eq CO 1 t-1 1 IH -45'M IrHiHi-HW ' 1 1 liH 1 1 '. SOog •IBloa 1 1 i-H 1 U3 "tHOJNH "* 1 irH irH jtMrlr-irH uaPo •IBIOJ, [ 1 1 llflirHMH rH [ I'M 1 1 ] ; 1 i i ;"' i •9tB 109,1 1 1 1 1 -!^ 1 » rH 1 1 iiM 1 1 1 I 1 1 1 1 rH 1 ■9I8K 1 1 1 1 '^l i-H 1 1 r-( 1 1^= •[BJOI, 1 1 1 i j 1 1 1 i 1 rH t 1 -M 1 1 1 *9^caB,I 1 1 1 i 1 1 1 ! 1 i 1 ! I ^ ! 1 1 •9tBK \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ II 111 3. a' \ ? 5 Boyer township Oharter Oak Tp., exc. of Charter Oak Denison tawcship, exc. of Denison. Denison city '- Ward 1 Ward 2 Waxd 3 East Boyer township Goodrich township Hayes township — -„, Iowa towpehip, exc. -o4 Aspinwall Aspinwall town Jaekson township Milford township, exc. of Deloit Morgan townshio -' Nishnabotny Tp., exe. ot Manilla — ^ Manilla town Otter OreeE- Tp. , exc. of Kiron & Schleswig Kiron to*wiL . Paradise townshia — ^t 100 POPULATION— NATIVITY, SEX AND AGE 9 ■TOOX ■8isin»ii O i s !3 •r«*oi •eiBinaij SI § ■IB»OJ, •9 ■eiBraad: 1 5 1 1 1 SI ^ 1 IM •IB^OX •erBmaii •epw TBIOJ, ■©IBUIS^i •erBw ■sfei •tBJOi -i^ "OrBIIl!^ «.Uo •9IBW t-a ■moi. •8IBK SSgSS^§S8g§S|| 8SaSSSSS^SS98 g !5lSSS538SS5!ggS 5S?ifl*aa-'a^8S | sisss'=3a'^ssss tH 1 OQtN r-t t-;^ -^^ SQOlg sa^a 33SSrtS3!''aaas s t^t-|ae4ioara«oe40)&iCD *T*- JS 23 * «- Sfi •© ?5 * t; ^ I eocMQCie^-^oit-N© HOT rH IM in I CO r H NrHi ■eiBraa,! •epK •IBjoi •arema,! ■eiBK •TOO I. ■BiBora^ •9IBJI wH •moj. •BIBtna,! •9tBK o •tBlOJ, ■eiBtm^ •spBK '> ■mocL tl •BiBnraj ■apBjt !i TBIOJ, ■erBraaii •8tBM 1^ i Sgi^gil §SIII3i 1-1 Ui i-ItH w SSS^g tH T-IUB i-l i-l « s sasssSs s feS8SgSS| «> S^lf^^gqiS s S3S|SSS 8 SSs§S§i iS gjs^iess S SSS|!2gg s g8e|S88g s g^ssgs^ss £3 t858§SIS8 @ fe8l2|gS| K iSisS^SEJS JS SSis^^SIS ! IS ■|^§« .-•§ ■ ■ ■ BY COUNTIES, TOWNSHIPS, CITIES AND TOWNS 101 ^§§iiii§iii^ g§§i§si §gg i^ mm mMMi^mmm.mim^i im s^ gisg 3 lA CD rH CO CO e< mi r^ C^ IH rtH r^ f-l iH rt r-t rr!9BiSH«>. !3;5!j:$gSga ql£SS!$!S;3S %g9S Sn 'SSS^Si !qlS:JSafeS5S3 88&8«ag 838 28fc it^ %mm^M^M^ g^eigsi ^^^ ^^ mm H iH iH H rH iH (R fl iH rH rH iH ^ r-( iH iH H r^r-i iH i-l W W 1-4 i-t rH iH iH S i-H i-H rH as^isjs^sssssss ssfessa^s 3ss 1!" seas sasas^as^saa s*-ai5a"a s'-ss s-^ sssa aa^sa-s 5S eS«9^S'^ia s^a sa^' »ass assasassssss gasgisae sss .ss sggig 5l3fe8gS«!3S?SS88 !8SS§SS''fe SSS 8® !SSS8 sBSsas^sesssss gssessg ess §* ssse ^SriSSS g'"SS8'°8S 398 S" S5!3?a^gsss8e gaia88"fe ssa 3'" ssss 55SgsgagE2si3S§ s^ssfessss sss 53« ss ■[BIOJ, iH ^1 s Mil ^5 •ersM g MU 1 So ■IBJOJO S SIS '•eisnraj g s^s •eiBM oS e|8 in tst^co ff ■IBJOi i i^ti "SS 4J i^S s gas it, T1>5 ■arBmej: < 1-1 h S 8g8 « •ejBw ; 1 •9I«H s sssa li -Oh "IBlOi § sga m 5 •atamaj s ^gs •9I8K S SSfcS J ■« s •I«*oj, 8 gae n fl 11 s e •atBtne^ $ 8S£3 n 1% > •eiBW a ^fefe ■V 1? s •I«*Oi J3 eag » Q •efsuiBd: s s^s fa feti & ■BIBH !g ggj; i^a i 1 'A 1 a a § ' 1 S ■3 ! t>m .a township wnship, € Center . fe g g-^S'sS ^ §■3-2 fi 102 POPULATION— NATIVITY, SEX AND AGE P o I: o o J ^JS^^©Mr-^ ■8TB Jt •[B^OX 3(Bmea ■srsK ■IB40X ■9IBW ■IB?OJ, ■aiBrro^ M M M *3 i-l Ift « W i-H M 55 tH !n i-H t> t- oi 60 rH SS 53 « «i-< oi oi 1-1 o 00 rH T-H -H us i-l ^ iH 1-1 Ol WW OS I-H 5 SeSfeS368SS|388SSSSIg|g||8« ^%n gSSSKS 3SSHS§S$3«g3Sg5^3St:SSS SSS C05g|0>iH Oljl:- «>i>COWC»0> ©aina'>*o©w«o55WfrJiAMO'tit-»3j-|i5;io«ee eoooto 0'>*0i">*i~ SSSEsS" gftg&8S8aSSfeS8SSS'-S|Sg8SIS SSS" J m CO 'tf *- CO OM O -^OiO ^SSg^g N (D ITS © eo t- CO Os OS ■* ■*« ffli t-r VO tj a ■* SD .H lo *ieoift I ■*»( l-l i-H (M « iH M jfi-H mcoiHiMwm I >.* CO CO ei CO m coco lO© I "* iH iH i-i O iH in •* -^ O) O Ol CO CO lO i-l l-l c-i c^ ' c^ 00t-»©t-.>»| t- CO (O IH 00 Ift CO O eO iH I-HOlr i-H iH 00 fr5 W -^ rH l-l i-H t-SO iH W CO W p r*lO -*r-)eo© 00 iH CO CO to "* tft 1^ to t- tO"*r CO *>«•* OS-iXCO OsNCO0Ci«_'-(00g3l>-'* "510 CO CO t i-< CO (O lOiHlHCOm W CO 04 03 CO Oi (M 00 Dl-( -rfi-feOT-lCOl ■>* •* I I (M W I-l tH CO Ol '^ 1-1 N © *0 lO -.Jl O W ej CO r (M I-H CO I i-( «P * 104 PCTPULATION— NATIVITY, SEX AND AGE < ■mo J, •etBrnSii i ■epK a ■IBIOI, o a[Biii3t9: iHi-lW H H Sa*^'"' ^ [ r-l N 65 lO '^ i-l .H t-l rH S«'"SSSfe"8°°ESE3SS"'"gS8eg!3SSSS S^^SSS aSS88*-^'°SSgSSSS"'^SgS88SSSS"°'!5fl''aaS i •111*00; ■atuoraii J 1 i ei e4t-oocoi-ift4ooeooiaQDCD-4|i>t- j^^l^S^gS'^^'^SS'^ iQtDneooQOD Q0®»nt-;^»fl'*«Oi©3!Pft3©t-Wi-'©ig III; i 1 i ■ ' ' OOlftlOt-TjtlO-^eqODlftgSOaeClWt-MiHQtt^W^CCiiHQJM 0«rHl>C « moo . O n S3 'JR c S Ojii S a -5.3 sops 5 .5 1 SPgOOaHlg^PH ft O Hi Hi m BY COUNTIES, TOWNSHIPS, CITIES AND TOWNS 105 _« 0) od fan ■moj, •ainnraia: ■epjw i iiiiiiigigliiSgigp.pgS Isl giliSg i §Sf§8|sg§g||^ggSi8iSiil §§§ aSgil§ gi§i3iiissia§iisi8ii§ii sii isgg? b OS P 0> S5 ■IBJOJ, |Si§feS5S8g|g8|2a88gg|§|g3 ||g S|SS8g ■91Bnre^ !3 ■ersjij la. •[BJOJ} •8[Bmi3|J S 9IBK g^ = 106 POPULATION— NATIVITY, SEX AND AGE E-i Z P O U 3 a B a I 03 tC •P!?0i •0rBni8,a; •8T8H SO 03'* P 03 •fBlOJ, ■8[Bni3J ■aivn •IBlOJi erBniBj •9H!M "IB^CVL ■aiBnraa •BIEM «f° ■IB?oj; Sg •atH s •»[Bma,I ■9IBW •r«»oj; ■aiBara,! ■9IEH ■aiBnraj: •aiBH 1 o ^^ -B a ta a S to -H thos 00 est- ua t- e! d! ri jSH? Bm§iliSi IgggssgsggfHdg^gagiigs S8§aS85!38S3^^S8gSf2K8e3 ggS2888Sfei:e88!SS5gSpeS8 iSgiis^SS§sSSg^SS|gm gsga8fe5:ss|S3gsS3?!Si|§sg| ®3 i-lrH ,-( pHr-i 1-1 rH r-1 i-t i-( .g^sg3SSSSissg5*sB;5**"S5;S53s; •ntae/io^iaco^cii-^t^aai^^cii-n^i-itDiatAto ass^saa'-sss at iH.— Ii-Hi-Hi-I ^r-lrHrHrH SS^S^SS^S^SSE^iSSSSSSSSg s§.SS5!3!55S3SKSaSSS;E388S8?:eS OScQ55-ttK H (M ■* ■>* -n' C •fssassssssssigigsassSaGiSSi sssss^sisgg^sassssss^igssig gSa38==SSq!fegH5 8saS«teSfeg 1 ° s » is IE 1 o "w « T) "O 'O -2 S sS ed 03 03 g M IS 1 I p,.=7 ;.&.& a'S If ^ to Q Ha PI to q 5 a+» 2 S^oS a d §35^8 SS ssgr Bssas ss SS8 sa 3*;S »-l i-l 00 CH WN 'S 1 ! i a t>. i !!a ? iig a^ Nm" 11 B'g'S ^^^ n i U BY COUNTIES, TOWNSHIPS, CITIES AND TOWNS 107 sssssgssffssisgisggss » Vrj A;#J^(0 ''Sft8i5''SflSS«g3fc?*8 NtOcOrHS^rOaoaOfi HN'*NiH©COrH'«ittOO«0!D»OCoei5tO (Oci3-^0}^OOCDrHir3't}i(NOOiaOCOC<99 Mio^o»ftt-«tc>M«>og5M(ooia.e W-^efiq&Wt- i0l>C^c0lf5O0Sift-*0i s°>s- i-ir-iOCC01>QWtoeotCiiMOOC31---t;iO« c^i-jjiocg I I a5 I !■= H iHOOt-iHOO O300 ■* )C0 NifflTjiecia> e^ Oi o3 I ■<*( I CO I i'g ! ,'E I C I 1^ I !9 i 1 n ! ^ 'H IS b9 aS H N 0>(M II> oOftOlMinMOO'^r P t- (O CO « iH '■(t ■^ in i> N rM t- t-dO0"ttHC5 ^ ■rmoj, •aiBma^ •9PK •[B40J, •aiBtos^ •IB}Oi ■B;Biaa,I SI •l«»oi •BlBcaa,! •eiBpi •moi •BIB mail •9IBH •IBlOi ■ei^ms^ •BtBK •I^ioj, •flTEnw^ ■etBrc o I ^ 1 ^rjt-M-* liHOai-llftV r IS» •3 W »-t iH I rH i-i ^ »« ^O-r ^ Stefefe'slg.s i:o.*b s s"* d SI 'i[ aft 108 POPULATION— NATIVITY, SEX AND AGE 3 =" {33"° '=&'-=■ i ^ ? ■IBlOi ■aiBnraj oe;a>««.HMM § 1 ■aren "as««s*r s •IBVJi ■«lt O lO CO IS ^ lO CD g g MOOM wo jM «n o ea ^ WgOiHN^iO'* § s 3 1 t* ^1 1 !-* 11 ! 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II II 1 II II 1 isi isle's •IBIOI " i ! i ! ! iH •eiBTn^ 1 I II II II 11 II I •eiBH -■1 II II IH II II II II II 1 1 1 ! i ! 1 i 1 s Si i i i i I (D j 5 t \ i i i i 1 { On •n \ 1 1 1 ! 1 O j 1 1 1 1 1 1 1^ g 1 \^B iftft „-s a 's||||| 1 « i i^liiiil •VWL ■aivws^ •erejn •1«}<\D IBiJoj; eiBma^ ■oven ■OtM osS •IB»Oi •a[sni8j; ■orBM ■dlx rB!JOJi aiBlUBjI •9IBM Si Of, •IBIOJ, ■9I8ni9,I •918 JI •IB*oj; siIBnraj: ■»[Bpi iifgiigiigii §i^iiSii§SI3 iiiessigiis S£jgiss£^!$^ssie^ >Hiflco»t>e QO iH "* CS r-l 6 rgill-SSSliS g8S; 93 I-( i-l r QcocQ oa in 63 iH rH (-1 1-1 iH r4i-l |!3%SS^3feSg«'» fcsasssssBss® ^ssaft^^ssss" g|&S|eS£;gg^gS gs^535as5esgs »€S'4i-^^^vSvvi- il^SSSSSSSSS^ feSfesa Sfl^iS^S" |SSiSS J^SCSSSS sssss "SBSSSS sssss »SS5l^SS I I I 1 1 i I •9 m '3 •S S A a DP fnpiiOti^ BY COUNTIES, TOWNSHIPS, CITIES AND TOWNS 109 §§il§§lig| ggl^Sislil giigliilii bSSSSfiSSSiSS aSSSSC^^ISgSiS is§gs§iiig se«Si3gsg§| g (K (O SB 25 r-l r $g8KSS^^SSSS ftlft'^OOt-OOJBHNJJ 3a9='sas3ss gS3^@S^§gg^ :!SE;3S!3@@SSSEg i:.Si^S'$.®Ssi&Ss SS^g^SSSI:^ 8§SSS5I^98S S8S&85l5ja*S SSSi^^S^SiSSg §■3 2 I I I '.S^B^l^l 5SaSI8SS?S?5lSS § 5l8SE3S5fS5SfeS g ■S'M ^^ E-1 ^; o p •a !5 |4f ra to d ^ P 0) el is Pe So i2"= •I«»oi •etBtnaa •9tBK ■[Bloi ■OtBOKId: ■atsre ■IBJOj; "sr^ine,! •9I«W ■t«;oji 'si^nze,^; •eiBK ■IBiOj; •arBniBd: •9IBH 'IBlOi '»I«(iia,i •9rBK ii§l§g§ggii UM%^ %^umm§im ggs^iS ggiSiS rH rH 1-1 iH iH W ®|^S8gS g'^ssftsssagss 8563^5^3 ^@£SS^9&!S|teg !S8S!E3S^ SSII|gS§gs8 SSStegSg KSsSSSSSSESgSS &sn^S'^ g3^!S^^S^83S!S3 SsS^SSSJ sssa^ssafess SS5'="»55" i>g> *:fiS*©t*^ flssas^as rH rH rH i-l N rH ^^iSiSSSStfS^^S; 8SSS5SSS BgSSggplSgSSS SSSSiSS? s8sees3s?iS8S seassa 51SS88SSSSK8S sss'-as® feS;35l^SgagS3® 88353; TBloj; "a^uiej; •ajBH o a SS@E:!SS§8g^8 S!S@$2I; ^SS35SS£8ftSS* SiJ essaifss^assa assssss i! 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S§g83S8S3SS8S OB i-t rH i-t rH 1-1 ssssiasfe^ss^ss ?-l-=l-iHrHCq l-li-i iH i-lN OJ S§8f:gfl*88teSSa igS^SSeqJSSSSSSS a?3S5l8e388eSS gSSSfegSSSS3S§S8 !3i8iS:«?SS3SB3S5 3§8 O ■s-^ 1^ d o ill 10 g S|gSa§g38S«fe a, S8 8|S8!§^S3«^ffiE35! 1 S|SSSS8SiS?5SSS g Ss3SS3S5IS§Sg 85nSt2°° gSS3S^§38SS;S aS^-SSg" =S3SSS"a@SGS i-H >!n -«»• f- Tji » (JO '^ lO eo o tDust-sioeo iHi— (iHrHrH rHHrHrHr-l i— ICfl Nr-I t^iOODO^LOGJOUSffOOCO OrHCOO^H TJH OS © 00 Oi iH 00 CO CO 00 i* *- -«ti -^Ji r-t Tfi CO r-JOsWt-ODOS gsgs*- gS^SS' HtOiniONCOr^dOcH'*'* t-tO'«t«B r-ift3 0&a» cot- naaw 1 -* to lOfrl es rH HCOp-* I « b 1-4 "* rH CQ rH M Ift l(j *Q (M IN rH NrH W 'rH £- I C<1 rHrHrHr h W ift rH Oi IQ lO -* rH « t-- I I M I'd Ills 10 ■ I o, s a ? »> p AM on S8sl S Is BY COUNTIES, TOWNSHIPS, CITIES AND TOWNS 111 eQ>c>a5-qtin-(tgC-C0iHO ©■*»**"* 00 H W N tH O) iH i-l i-( 1-1 iH iH ft-^-T-iiOOOQlfiirHtDi-i-Tmo ©J I-) iH H tH iH rH r tH liHN« C^ -^b- i-H CO ' (Tl 1(3 M IN"* Oi "W i-H "ff rH to 00 i-l rH - H -=?-eo I i-i m M -S ft' . 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SSSSSSSSSSs^agS SSS 3S«g!ffi5:gJ3 g < s SB a 5 s h e 2sa & sss ■* ssg OJ gsg I> SfcJS CO 8S5 ■* 8Sg t- 5!SgS SS§88 m «iHt- iM t-©CO M iOiftCi j sss -* ffiOD^ sss (N i>na !><»% fM x- ' a I 1 i i Q i i ij 1 1 1 'E >H 1 o i& SI p> ' f^^ If a" Uq III if ■0) 83 BY COUNTIES, TOWNSHIPS, CITIES AND TOWNS 115 3®§®SiaS?§SS3§g|| sgg isaagisg r-i QOiHi— li— IrH rH i— 1 t— IrH rHfl WiH iH OJ ri l-l iH i-l i-l iH i-t 1-1 i-f 1-1 iH «agS3!a|g8g85!SSfe5;55 sse se^ssssss sasass^sss^asas "ss s^^ass^a S2^S3^SaSS3ft83S3S S38 S3'^3ti!8$fe :g3SS|8|SSSS33a Sgg SSSggSfcS RSSS^g-SSSteSSSSS^S SSS3 S!5l"S8gSS S5SS5"»i«S£3tegSa!SS83 ""iiS 85®feSffiSS Ni-J^ODOObf-eoep hS5"S tDt~T~t 116© tj ■«*<«» 0»©'^ '(}irHCO;3'-^-^eoo3tnc&o-^eo iiaoo r-tc>)^iacooOLAV g ""''^"SfeSg^iS^S'-SS *'8S S'^°'S8S « rH WS iH iH r-i iM iH tH iH W CO i-l OJ (N iH i-H ^^j2j»03^*e^|£ig5«go^j5^ IS^ S^'-'SSS^S Oi rH I I-l iH CO eg m I so *»oo CO ft egw jftiH m -^ eoMginwaow*^ fl-'s° i-iNflON-^i^-^iHe^iia WrHOOCC^lOfrJi-lNOO I tm ■ ■ < 3 IS ° la I *.; '1-1 ' M 1° I aj 1 , I 1 I'Ko'o ec>r~ ri CO iH CO <0 CD M 10 E3S S3®^9S8'^S 00 fig ■« ludioe^e^co oeo -^Ni-ii^ootp "00 r-lT-l iH T-t IS II l« 1° e.3 J, ^ ij fl oQ § s S'^@~wa' 'silo fig^ ^ a !3 ■[sioj, 'sinina,! i •BIIBM s •IBlOi » •arBtnail s ^ SI 1 •tB^Oi •eiBUKii eg •I«»Oi ■aiBtnaa ■ai^M ■t«i03. •Bttinraj •BtBK ■IBJOJ, •epjinaj •srBM 1^1 •F*oi, •eiBraaj •BPBK i8E8 ii^Sg sas o o IIS III 116 POPULATION— NATIVITY, SEX AND AGE f o O H P O O H o 3 •IB?<«/ '©IBni^ •BIBH •IBJOJ, •eiiBraBd: ■IBJOO, •aiBraaj: el a»i •leioi ^5^ ■dlg«g*gg3^gg»gagu3 «SSSS^S8SSa 1 I "S'°£3''fe§as QQO w a u^-«ji «'°&=^g^asss"jj''ss wp l04^>poaoOt-«^-l^::5M ioMt*c4g'rHO>t-u>ooi-i:*»jHoi S"S = ifl I N -*C^I> = S!I'° I eoMcoeocoKC&ioo ssa eoooej iMMNpi-iw 00iOr-J«DT-KOrHC>-*00 O I I M P «J SP.S •- O tn to O >>«> «I « ed oiS ■ P f^ a' SO teWg . o ° l-sS a O ' S P H P-< ti o 5g i>^ . u O (-< O M WW BY COUNTIES, TOWNSHIPS, CITIES AND TOWNS 117 ■VWL im ^ iiii§iii§iig§i § uii m^iu im & H tH iH i-t r-i 1-1 r-i »H I888ff ggsasssssesssess 9 sse assssg ssb «■ sseassssegessas 8 sfep es^ss sss gftc -^ 8se3g5S^S5a*3S s !S«s sassss ss SSS ■' 8SSS'*SSS?SS5!8S3a K *ffiS 38*83 SSiS C$3 " s8gsess3ise88S888g s sgs S5SS8S see rH H ei rH rH I sss ® aasssgsaass^S!* s a^ss ssss'-fe^ ^sts ■eiBH aae « ffiSgSffi§8§8885J?=ig B 8«S 8S"SS 8SS §6 p. a 9 O Is !< I* 1 < tt BO ; . I ® IS I -s igg ig^- L, 'o.-s'^ S £ ' ' ' '§ i.'S '^3 'la @ 'a*3 q 'Sft ^ i ! !a ■ -e^L^6«S|Sii'grd"t SrH«» a |sB g § §■§ g §« |e „a is fels I :iaiililsSi:i:eii °* irfl;i^lili|s!^|i|il|iwi| a fSaoll s 3.11 so||| M-g ai2;i: PhmOQ 118 POPULATION— NATIVITY, SEX AND AGE 1^ D 03 ■OtM TBlOJt •aiBinaji go 3 •t«*0i •o[Bniaa •3tBM 8 £3 •tl!»OJt aiBtnai •8I«H 1^ ■IB»ox ■aiBnra,! •8IBM 'IBlOi •BtBoraj: •^BK •I^ioj ■axBoisi •aiBH ■I8*i i-l H I-* iH (H « ssi^gaisssss fees sssss^ssa gs 3QO«r csepg !g8a s^s ejsgasgsgg ss iss S3® sspssessfis sf J^ rt i-H ^ tH »H rt "•ag^fescsss"* s«"" S8 I CO O -^ oa GO <0 rj 00 c ^sgssss^gas" s"" i ssa3*B'°s^ g" ?£- ® So> 3^$SgSS3 ^8 Cii-trHrHi-tTHiHr-i i^i-II-liHr4t-Hi-li-l - ©4 r-< Ol Ot-t^ 5 38 ea*- sBssssssa ss SS8S8^ 98 SO i-l rir-l gg3gSS)S!Sfe ^S ^ eSfeSSBSSS io8 "gSS 3|Q ^<&x}< i^iS^SISS^&S ^s SS|38gg8S83 8"" gSSesSSSfe S83 I I I I I i!|! 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'• aalH ilfli ■IBlOOi iiiS sa »" Sill ns •9IBK sf^ll *i •IB»oj; B8|| fQ g >1 -aiBinaj asBg 9© •9IBK sssgg s •IBlOi «sii >H •eiBniBa: SS!S§S |o •9IBM ^S|g ■o 1 1 i a 1 1 1 o 4A 1 1 : Ob 'III ■■"S 1 1 ! 1 S 09 1^ ^5&i r° 1^ a a -^i^ ■p d-s tf 1 «!n BY COUNTIES, TOWNSHIPS, CITIES AND TOWNS 121 mm^M si§ a§s§sisig §i M CO 60 M CO '^ b ifl IS •* t- O iH MrH i3iSco65i-i sssss as fi lo 55 35 © o T-H S3 rH lO lo -^ "5ti iH CO 5S ■* H lA-. CD fi4 us a M tH CO S3? i-H ffl Ol 3! t r-l r-i i-( -f -* qs CO -P ilS8SS° 9 *^ ^ CO "^ up ^ ^ rH rH i^ rH iH igiiii^ i^^ Eiggsssig it B (S 05 1?S fS OD iH tH iH rH iH i-H i-l iH r-t tH aCOQpt- lAOQ r scsesg'- fe"' sassaasfla°' sa iilgSl'8 sss ggsssgsgs g| "S§iiii^ «^'- |S8S85!SSS 888 SSSgS 39" 8S8ff8g|lfi$ 88 5$||ggi!5 Sa*^ |8P8SgS|8 353 S33a!Sfes gs" ^g^sssass ss |3!||g3a ss" essjgisasas ss ssasaS 8sa ssgggssgScS gs 8888iSS gcgggga s-"" ssssassiss ssii i« I II I I . 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Ph 'O 1 1^ I - A a '- ■9g|&SS gag 1 fc 8a|8g38s388SS88 ^SfeS8ggSeS8g|Sfeg saas^ss^gg^^ss co»O^IO»©©©«»»lO0D» aa,^o=o«t-»ggg*i-^ ggg8!$S£;S^ggS%S sa^tiss^sssgsss^ Sj^SSSSSSieSESSSSS^i; <»'»B*-S"SS3SS''Sg 63-ifiit-6SC0Me^g S°"3SSSfegSSSSSS ■ »-°§sa»sssas-BS "■'aas'-BSssftSsa -'»feaasfe§S83ai'»"s p««3«»pH«j5g-,«B iH(NOaoONt-©.i-i»»"*-^®w ^io^ggj>«53jgg»©*-m 1 r-4 « (ft r-l OS -* ■* gt- pj ■* -* « W ^1 I ; ! I ''I ■a I l-S 1 !« H I r 03 *^ ^ ©'3 s ^"S I II ill d= i 1' §S i ig ■r.ggH,„ II SS"gi BY COUNTIES, TOWNSHIPS, CITIES AND TOWNS 123 SS«S§8Sg S3tSJ2 ssaes8 ! ^«g«,53 % iMioiNnt- iH inC0NIM|4| a snsss iH 53^333- S a-'sss a 8s§RS§3asg?sf2s5oS gssa^ii loeot-i-H «o 124 POPULATION— NATIVITY, SEX AND AGE ■alH as p o 3q 13 •lB^ sg|S^^!;9$9SSSS ssss^^ r^ rH IS H iH H r-l i-( tH H 65 1-1 iH N iH iH r-i sfegfcsggfesss sssse SSS^S^SSS^SSSHS ^?i^»3 sassas'^asassas a*""" 13S5iaS3!39S9a3S«3 ?3»!H''a sagssssegggsssg SSiSSIS 1 5lSg3SS8i585S!2S?8S SS8»« g ss|&$«as;@$!88ss 8S3i5S § I2E^§@8S8:|SSSS3S8& S5"^S!2 I a9Rasaa85is5i8ss s^sass SSS8)8S!S£3SS8£&S8 SS^SS 8S38a8S&S!SSS8Sa S"S3Sffl ssfiggsaasaaa 3S ^'^ ft og H § I 5 S e : n ■moi. % § •Bl^wsd: s 1 •0[BM 3 1 il ■moi, a s ■siBnrad: " g •e[BH *- s ■ls»oj; fc s •erBoraa s eo •9IBM 1 a ■tB*OJi a So *&[BTI]9^ ■" SJ •3IBM c- jg S3 S ■IB^OiL s s ■eiBnrait 8 s •aiBM s s il la •moi 3 S 'eXBIGB^ Sj !S ■e[BM S3 ft i 1° B •TOOj, S g •aiBnra^ g S ■9IBH s « °3 O BY COUNTIES, TOWNSHIPS, CITIES AND TOWNS 125 SSi3|8| ^|§| § ^ssags gsfas |sa^||g|||8a | § ^ss^ssg gs|g gsa"§5! gs^as isssmggifea^ |S|S g s-- OS tHiH rH(M*J I I CO I I hgcog im^si tr it^t-oo i i ig? §g"r 9 ^ i«« US I &q I CO rH W i-l 55 iH I B^S" SO W -5MX1 r-l '^OiS i§||Si38 8 § f88»SS8 8|S8 is 53«OMg IS ii'o i^ 'III ^11 i I o o o o (5 fi^ .9n o ® I I nrH N« ^ in O c^ ft!3 ■"•"sSizi 1.^ Ig I IS I B I i| is I ■rig J ■SO' .2 OS o 5 ■H I S'p V P 'O 'O '^ a dS -ill i> o g _ «i 5 91?° S3 C3 126 POPULATION— NATIVITY, SEX AND AGE |4J t5° Bio a ■gtM TB^oi 'eTBTna^ •SIBH ■TOOj, •9[snra,I »<1 g •aiBH ■I«»oi 'siBtna,! •aiBM ■IB^OOi s 8 gs ■* i S; gg 1 ss t- srs i 3 ■^ «o« i Sj CO 00 t- g ■siBnraj ■«BK mooi '^rBiTOiff •9IBK ■JB^OiT •OTBOiSa •9IBW IWIU 'e^VTOBil •atBM &<£; I 1 53 ifl lori lo CO oa c t-; Oi 9453 g » °°8 S '' -^3 i§ !S i i «jl I" Id faOoa .gi-a . O Si .A 3 ID n l« «o cosi°0t>"3C> aS32?$9E9 cot^.-H«B(N t- if5(?l -JitN otoocSnco i>i-ico>-ij> ©I iH iH rH « r-( i-l >H W r-IC^OlT^ r-l iHSJi-HN Oi ^ ;a ss i^^si SS3"g S"Sf? 5 i §S!Sfl « nJifli-l*tT StigSS SfeSiS? ^ § - iHia -^ Eo t^ ss gsass 3 S § 3' a s o& )A (M CD OS c^ ja N H fl t- I> 00 ■* IM lO Zx GO r OS 3 !«- I 11 SI io 9 '■» I o h •I-- la iS5S| i S!l i s« as85''a s t- jH M lO OS tN CO •* osc^ M ina> i ;=| OS-* &q "dtg ITS U5 ■* 5S T-l 00 iH :o 5^ ^, 00 31 M c Oi-l Oi-P g'^a igS; t-TH-jijiH© Cn-1 i»55 •" - 5 5 c^ e* a ■g S s (3 '2 h g-B>n ^ iti ' rt !? l« j^ i a* I Si so H 50iJ BY COUNTIES, TOWNSHIPS, CITIES AND TOWNS 127 S S SS§S3g«| i^^i V ^^ tH fH "^ ^^ i^ rH rH »-H rH i~l t- Cs ift to C 00 H t- W "-1 r-lrHC0»3iHr-iT-lrH i-t r-l l-H N 04 iH iH i-l i-l ^IS^JS 5S g §3S"^'°B gS!Bg!fe " -^S SWrSiQS a S38S5 |5I3S8S$ S WSS 3 <0 C) 9 C^ 0{ gg-»»lOg J; g 2«»r^grtffl «^B»g ^^ii'""" in ■^co CO COiHlArdlAHlN C4eQU3lAi> UB N CO I lO It- ■* T-H iH CO 0> M I I a^^|a"s s s 53'"S5^a"s s'^sas N«t-IO> I O inrHOM" Sag^S'^fe 8 9 :?"S S|||°°'^S S a S |8 ssgl'O'^a speoiHo P p g It- :a§S'°'-'S S S 55^3 r:*®i-trHQO OS «0 OO rH 0» ! ! 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'■IS is 1^1 § ii i.g 15 sa a ? & S yy - ".H o-g2S ^ ^ g II if ^^ •[BIOJ, ■eisraM ■BtBK ■> o s V §11 •IB^OJ, ■Brsraa^ ei •TOOiI •e[BTirail •IBJOi •BIB mail •eiBK •fBioj: •BiBinad rt«0 i^ eS@ SS% S!S K 03 3 •BIBH laPe M h 60 •IB*Oi 'BTffniBJ ■BIBJT •IBJOJ, ■eisina^ •BtBJt o ,.-3 o Id. 16, SOB o POPULATION— NATIVITY, SEX AND AGE ■[B^oj;, •aiBinaka: •ffpspi CO 2^t-'^rorH"«TH CJ6J yt-->li(M O ■* O -l jr-t jHWMOJgJt- sss^a jgS'^9 s g IftS-* Si !S H-*SPi-lOi O ^gfegggg*"-- S I" H t- M 00 OM (N i-tt-N OO ■>*<« H«0OOi^«Dr-JiJtDCO00 ''gfeSfeS? £j I "TOOj, •aiBtasia: ^t-rH •ersH I O I-* t^ Cs fc CO iS; ■* lO «DVH rt SSo, ■gfeS BntM mPo ■moi ■ 81-BnisM •lB?o,L ■arBinaa •eiBH HtsH"* •iBgoji ■eiiJH IS53' r 25 i-t I rH CO 00 I I I I e Di 3 s is o 6 I ■§52 ? ^ oa - P I 03 W IN « ft i5«^ 5 o S3, Si §!5 a ail R S i^fefi BY COUNTIES, TOWNSHIPS, CITIES AND TOWNS 129 !2«=E!!<2aSiBSaK'' ■»£ S'^sssssas" "S a-*s;8sass ■*fi:SHa255N ws 2fe3iw wjj s^asptss'-'^ «a I I r" IS I I II ill ' ' ' ' ' ! il ! 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I I 1.9 J 'ft.. 2 1^ ,SrH«Mi* j ii|l|l|f him i^'^issse, g BY COUNTIES, TOWNSHIPS, CITIES AND TOWNS 137 o •IBJOJl ■ejBnra^ BJBH «0 iH iH g35!gS3"SS83SSS8§SgSS?i83«'S8gS§885l!SS5!SSg •IB»0J1 feS«SS5'°S88§E3SS35:SaSS33i'-g5SS|g^«fcSS;^g •eiBoiBa: 8'-fcSPl"S3IS3*°°SS3?3SaS3'-'^48a9888SSS"S g S !$ S5«'85aS"a3isSfe3«'aS8"SS^='S8S?fe888SSJSSS''S M H^i-i'*oaiCoooi^r-t]-H©ifljo E3'°a§8SS3fegS8?38"S s •tav>Jj 03 ^ -aisnia^ ^ i a ^ o ■3 eg -sas Qco eocoo ^Ttt^l-jC- I ', I 1 » ■*;^P'* •IB^OJ, I I •aiBtaaia: •eii?jl to iH W i-i tOOOO^MtD««OOtD»ON^Mft3aMOjffiiC9iHiHi-i-*ooiftj> iH c5oo©qB3t- ssaaa" ^^fcpJjHS t-i-^iOrHO rH i-H CO iH N ea i-i 1H i-l i-» "ax rnl-'og •[BJOJ, •eiBuraj •BTEM isPo •IB}OI 'eXBin^ ■spBM M h bo ■IBJOJi •stBnra^ •9[BM On I o IS 1^ « IS if 8 It: g Hi ,P= i'S I •H I . I ■=■ 8 ! .2 1^ 5 . - _S - 3SS'- I O 00 t- Sa e^ rH CO r-IJ5COOi-< Oi iH2>M'«in«D I torHO CDCQ iHgNOS-*t- «-t OS M iH ©a ** I1 I O « I I I •3 I I ' la £t ■ ■ ■ 138 POPULATION— NATIVITY, SEX AND AGE •[B»<»j; 'a([«nraiig: •erBH •tBl<\L •eiBcna,! s •VB%OJ, ■9[VULd^ a o 03 ■I«}oj, ■3IBni9i ■epjH ■a K S ■IB*Oi ■erBtaaji SUg •8tBK •S-r? •IBJOJ, yj^ ■eiEmM •OIBM •IBloa, •e[Bm9,i •etBK S^388Se (SI o CO t> t- H rp frJ i» W i-l rH « « rtoo wc5« -*S oj qo CO ■<*< eo u 'ssa" T-i oa ift« iH 1-1 O CO CO M r-l«0 V> i-l 00 ■* CO i-i CD O IS +^-Sh «« a , .^ +j so CO w ^ ^ f4J IS C3 OS ■OtM 3 rotH •lB»OiI •siiBni^ •erBit •IB^eu •eiBH ■IBijoj; ■8i8tns>i ■aiBH •IBJOJ, •OtBH "IBiJOi 'a[Biiii3^ •erBH ■IBlOiI aiBinSij: •9tBW •[B^oj; ■ffliBcra^ eiBH a CO5O0O0Qt-i-Hffi-*«OQ0OS -V ?3 03 CO (N6 soasjas^s S^ESSSggSS 3ifca 8SSS588SSftteE 8SgggS8gg|fe S0t)C0t-;t~;mgr-«cS® -*S M "tjt© ■*© cc-*OQOt-^corH(oooeo CO K rH rH iH CO M t-( |feg|g328S3S SSS rH lO Ift in iH Ifl T 8SS;183»'S ssefessssssa 8°>SSS8*S3ffi3S s-^ssss^sssss SSJ3^ S, - tn eft 2 -fs J ji; o] a c] H P 63 Ao 5 am BY COUNTIES, TOWNSHIPS, CITIES AND TOWNS 139 |gsgi§§sii§iHgg§gglifiigSiS§i a^ii^Sif^lSiiSiiiii^iiSSiliiS H (N «0 rH i-H rH r-1 iH tH *3 H rH H rH !2||gS?8SS?Sggg|8SPSSSS@eg|fe8888 mm Hr-ll-lH H iH i-H»3M65W65i— ll-li-li-Hr-ii-(i— Ir-ieirH i-Hr .gg§|sg8gsg|||§|s3ss§g8g|38^aa S8gS353aSSlgg?i3S58f8^S^g!3SS2-8aSSg 18 as!5ssa*ass'-?S35ssq!aftg?3sasss;3Ssss sa3g"'?33a'»ssiS^fc8S8asss§ssesssas ift65SS83S35Sg8ii8Saifc33f3SS3S;83^§5g iHi-lrHiH i-H r-^ rHOO^-fSo^fMr-lH rH(-lrHiHrH©Jr-« rH 8§§3SS8SS;Sg^|3a§8S8833Sg|SS63S5! -*^ i-( iH iH i*i M 33f:88SS383g|gSS|S88Jg3S8S33SSSS5SS «JaK^SSSS^iSS5SS33SSSa®83!SSS^S3SgSS g83^Sa$SSaSSS12|2 38gSS!SS^K^S8SSSSS SS8gSSSS§a!|gS||S§8S8{:g®g5SS^S?! | Bga5lSg533°'iSfSS3SS3Si5^88S88l3g?3SS SS8SS8S8S?|C|SE28SSS3S;fe6Sg8aS}!Sa I J 1 1 1 I ■S3 s i o 1 ft^ s 1 1 q Mi-<^ I M I I a Id 5.L roP IS. i-(NM 03 « ra = &: o o Q o S S3 bo •moj> sgs§§ SSSS5! t^< •e[BnBd: ^i gss$s& ■9BBH Si8gS«5 ■r»*oa. sgssss «A 'wlTfLUW,! So ■SIBH s^ssss ggsgg S3 ■IBJOJt ii Bases r,>s §!$ fesigas N •eiBH "9 n •IB}OJ, si3*sa as ■eiBmSki »-s"*-s Ss^ cooiOi'^'f ss ■ersM. ■afH ' -IBlOi efe^SS ■efBtnaj 885SgiS s •OIBK «S888 SSS5I83 I; •tB*Oi ■9[Binej sgaaa ITS •9IBM SSSSiSc:! s sg^isa a •TBftOJi Sa sssss «T3 ti tf IS a |l^ i °s 1 o i^ is ^ ^6 ~A ' ' g °2«i^ 1 ►"O&'^S g l&lls oS ? s 140 POPULATION— NATIVITY, SEX AND AGE ■moji ^i ■©rBni©ii •9IBH •rB*«x as •BiBinsd: •arBM "IBIOX e ■arBnuSii i^ ummMmu^m^ ill l§3§miiiSgiS 11 §i3Slg|||§SSig SIS| :3|^S&gg3gg3SS^ I' iiSg S|;!3l3gggSSS3l:%'°gg sag asssggisssgaqiig mi S|SS83|||g|§S§g SSSg ^Si«^S|ggSgg%Sg ■^BJT ■I«Joj; ^1; ■9IBaiBiI •9IBTI ■l«10i •9rBiiia,j ■I0» V a li*=ili§i SI sg^giegsg eg sgsglSag ss assgssssa ss «gfc3"Sfl® PliS "sss^sas m sgsgfessi gg S^SSSSSiSS sg sssgessas sss oj5»05«g»3 ="3 MOOGQaOQQlOOO 04 C- ^0. latopjcoio t-'* sg"3saas KS P||g«3»j5«g eeea ss'^ssas" Sfl ^a^feasss S3S M Q 64 a> ifi OD lO m a*- ■* 0> rH 00 t- O^J «) g »« "s«sasss *-s 09l>NOOI>t>|>C- -*-* «tD |i>oonocii> «« I I Bn I i i1 is I ! is 1^ ! i j^ P ! 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Ill Mill ■e I !2 6 I i*^ "56 ^-g «SgiH B OB BY COUNTIES, TOWNSHIPS, CITIES AND TOWNS 171 d':^5S**SC°0P'i?oi>o-*-«TH OiC>t-«3t--* coot CSlftMiT-OrHSOi^OM O O rH iH O ?!< r-1 r-( COM iH rHCq i-H i-H ■^frfl W iH i-H iH i-H tH S5iS$?3Sga8g.s^S5S '-^s^sisK lias iH iH iM iH C^ t- CQ^oat-i-l r-1 iH i-l sas^as'sisess «'"sas°> ""s® r-ie5i-l -<^C^ r-l rHt-t I-l Oi i-( rH •* C4 5^ "* <0 g lA "tjf Ol Oj ^ -gi CO T-H CO I© CO C-S rH i-1 a"»*sgis3''*aE3a53 ^--sssa i>W*®i;-69t-M«M6DOr H COift-* (M rH 3?H53S588ggSS:«q!gS3 "^^Sggg (N eooofrsoQ CO ico S'-flSSS^lS^SSS M leOMWOO CO asssssiss^a HOci»S ■'ssass Bssassasisssasa I &im ■^ S Wft OH i-sPhR 00 s e O n a if e &< oc d s § S55g8S3£:« . S ft !8^.& gS g fi e 6 ft e 172 POPULATION— NATIVITY, SEX AND AGE H O O t—t Q a •[B*Oi ■ai[Bura,i[ •»IBH •[BJOJ aXBinaa •l«?0JCi 'Gtcnis^g; aloa !i' •IBJOJ, •eilBtro^ «^a •eiBH ■IB»Oi ■sitBinBa: aug •e[8H « M *2 •IB^OJi §f^^ •ejBnraj: "^S •eiBjs "b® •IBJOO, ■»[Bnra^ yny ■8IBH '■s eS iHe5rH oai-iiH i-i i-i S^S3SSS3SS35IS;?S^SS^'^SSS^'^"*'^ l3ggSSSS5S:iS3SS53SS5S"'"eSi3S*a°' Sgg8!8^S58sS!3S3fefcg8«'=gg3p;S3 '='SStiSSgf^a3aSBS53S3'^°'B!SS3"°^»" 00 »-l 5S r-( ©q i-lO 1-iCs jioisoiii-i r CO ■( =S «> "tf -!t< iO r- IrH o I-I gj IN CO 1-1 1 t) o S« i3S»'(»e>acQ'^ic)«'*coQOWco6 iS§i ii§§§l 00 00 i-i (© fc; ©4 GO a" tr fS Mooooao^ -rrcpin J;r '^ Q>S00OO» CTi»a5 & '"< & •"< E! t-l S rH n 00 (K 00 -* -0 IM « ^'^QSalSo roO^ 5 * •moj, &5(J5(N iH r-l 5q p-i OS iH CO W 5^ M c>S -v C-l o 'arBtoo^ l-t iH H "-J^* iHr-tiH iHO^rHrHt-COCOr-li-H rH i—t i^ iH ■apH gS§5§8£8§.SgSS««|Sg|||g§ TB^Oi ?8^SSSggS^gSSSSSF:&5Sa;Sg5!g ass?8?s sa= ■eiBtna,! eD to wt-o Oi a ■9tBH 1. •IBJOi ■■dtx •eiBinaj: ■BIBK TBlOi *e[Biti3^ in ■9IBH s TB^oj, *eiBUE),jI r •9FBW Mj-20i«o>r!as2;!SldS£! !jSg3SSSS8SS38gSSag 3SSS S? i-lrH iH iH 03 i-H THi-li-liHl-t'^c4 •rmoi ■erBm^iI •apH •tBioj, •efBiiraii ■arBjt ■IB*OJi ■»[Bniaii •9IBM I" •tBi. I O !.& Is « SB, l''n^^'''E,2 B3« BY COUNTIES, TOWNSHIPS, CITIES AND TOWNS 175 iS^ !23B S8Sg as" 00 S8S 3 588S 1-^ S5SS ScS; I.B !■§ 32a O OQ V u ill a a g e n a 1? go a o oS(KlA9U3^CSOc&LACqo6oS^ Sc5^§ScON-^ COJl^SS"*TOrH"*'* sft®sss''as88ssg?isa sasss'-s agssssssss i-i©5 i-H -^ iH CO iH t-i iHOoMclW RSSSSSfeSSS g;iS8S38SS eS5S§88i;S8&3 ss^s^a'-s^sasssss gssssass sgg?;$g3ssea ja^SSSSKS »5B»ai£2«'a SafeSSiS" S%fcS CD flvl Ift sg OD ■^HlOO OiCOlOt- Wl> OsNO tH»(N 00 iM O (N a « i-t 00 »3 (M i> -+j j> lo oa 0> iH iH rH l-l i-t r-i T-4 iH iH i-H i-l Cq rH iH ^ r-< i-H CO i-H rH M CO "* »O00 ■* (M « o •[BJOJ, ■eHBoraji •9IBH •t^^OlIi "a •[E^oa; •oiEora;^ SSgSSS-SSSa"S62)5a'-SS'"^°>8|3lfcS«"°S§S i S!SasSI3SS38S"S!85!Sg53SS'»'='Sg3|!8g3aS5!SS !- SBSg3SS3°=a«8S'"ftS553SS25SgS"53a§§9gSS2S38g! l-lc-«dN04^oo«*'ONcoe-^oc3D^^ccl^XlO^^'!J^t-os©iMW-fi>■^fflC't»c -« ON O«00M^ 00 iM cowtr^DOioliVi-IrHUS&StOJS 3:31 g '^ i-t (DM to jrjWN ICO j I » i-f fr> S"SS S S «0®-*t-«-*iH(-tNN-*«OW-*S cd q; 03 •[Ejoj; •aiECTO^ •ejBH I I I I •§83 i-t^^op iH MN pH rH •01'Bma^ •3TBH IftDc •[B^Oi I ( I I •aiBuraii •BTBW ■i«vyi 'eiEins^ §^ I' Pi 3 I ^ •a 3 I .9 !■ I I s ia o^£i d K « 6 « a 3n DOBSfiW III 5g ^ ■Sa5 ;s ■a-^i MO 3cjS§ .33 .,» all a^S o a S s Is i i" A I |3 I H K to S PIP BY COUNTIES, TOWNSHIPS, CITIES AND TOWNS 177 03 bo ^3 ■I0?Oi eiBraB^ •eiBH iQt- ssssasas5;s?3s '="«'s"asa sssssss'^ggs* s 11 H* CO ■IB*<\L r-1 iH ^ iH iHiH^ WC5l-tiH rH r-t rH >Q iH iH (N iH l-l •axBma^ SSS3SS8S!$S3SS8g3 9SSS5S385 §868S9^aesa •eiBH IH I-H iH 64 i-H ■HI e •[EIJOJ, (HtH iHT-lrHrH iH COl-li-tt-i 'eiBms,g: 5 10-* ■*« •BrEK •IBItlOiL gS|S9gS8a§e§8||S {:SgSSffiS |§|fe|g8gSS •gilBtOBii SiSSaSSSSSISSgaSSSS SSS^feS^S B|Bg8S53igSS ■aien 3S3sisssgs5ee8s®S5! ssgsssa sgsssasss? o o (''3 I I O I ill I " I ■ . ' I " 1 !o iv. 1=1 I !i ||§llj||ll|l |llli||||l|s I 15 ■5 3 ii.s.| "S^ I M « ■1^ S g, o P 3 @ « a °.g-2 IS S I iiiilj>r^^fiiii M s s& 12 3S8SSSSa:S8?88ef:8!« !§5SS3g;§3S gggB8S8S83,S 178 POPULATION— NATIVITY, SEX AND AGE « «1 to A IS s a O O Pi K iS •p^oj, 1^ •BTBina^ •e[8H •tB^oi 3^ •efBinsji 3 a la da ■i«»oj; ■arema^ •ajBH ■l«*oj; ■s[Bni^ •oi«H •IBJOi ■erBtnad: •^»K •mcu; •9iBnra,I •3IBH 'moi e ■BrBniBiI •9rBM ■o O a o »3 1-1 ig^lgSili rn>op CO IN <: 300 2? tr ^i-iS ?5S?«e!'-'?5 11 s 8Sa Sg|g8|g3g? >H IQ JN iH 1-1 i-liH rH 8S3Sg8S3S88 S 3 ??§!« SSSSSSSSteS'- iHi-H COttOTOgNWrH i— I r-li-H &JC0&4I— ICQCS]^ r-(rH 2E SS iH «S rH H ss^'SsssSmSs 8 a ^§s ssssssss^'-sa" ift CO iH o oi Q Ci t- CO OS ^ ">* «fiftcn eo .H (N ira 00 Q ee <0 <© o N 8SSfe§3g8883 S 13 SSSS g§?gS§8S3Sffi9gE sasgggg^sa s s ^5!s 8gp:sss8°=ess ^SSSS3SS3S K S !:iS8 SSSSSSSS"?:?'- S 15 ■3 1. §1 W I •- ,a "o - ™ n S & fi IS I o I <5 ^1 i §.s ■s iS -a S •9sr H.9 gS3SS§§§3SS« g to »a§3 sssaasss'^ses" i ssasgsisagg! s « ■^ft5S SSSS83S?S'*S8" g sssa|3gS98 1 lO ^s& ssfefeagsssegj? Ol gs^sgsssss^ s ■* "^^HtS 53S5lSS5a«°'g!8'- g ss3°°s|3?sssgi g " ■»as fcSSS3SSSS&fe"= s BY COUNTIES, TOWNSHIPS, CITIES AND TOWNS 179 n i-i •« 1-1 rH iH oq iH i-l r-i r-i rH r4 rH iH CO "■gss SKiSssgssass «!ess|ss5S5;s I " -^se sesssss'^sia SSSg|3g35;S S ^ ^^83! S^SEJa^iS'-SS'* CO 00 CO om a5.ssas'=* SCO MOO Oi O iftOiOO-* C: -f CO E3fe°'5ssssag33 a ■■ss aasssss^sa'" gssssiss^ssg ■SS S8SS8gS'"gS£3 «P jHoOCOaoSi <>) oi EJ S3S S3S'"3aj3"SSS asssss^ss ^ CO H "^ '* '^ Too^peC^iAMOifS aiAiHl-OlOOCbiMM^ f-ico iioa "* "* ftq i-l-* HNrHeia'^lfi) tlM» iiOi-H ia00COi-iCO*iK ©J N I rH -+ iH CO iH -tfl CO CO CO I CM CO CO I CO O ■4-+H>r-1fNOlCOr4SDC&(D gt-rngjc •*OJ(N(MOiir-CO'a«lO i-SCOi-H lOOSlCiHOSt-COTHNCO'^ CO 00 1- -^ ■<*< eo Nift(M ICO N O N lO 1-1 ■»H lO O) CO i-H CO »H (N Oj Ifl (M ft-l I W ^ "iti I- CO N ip i-H t-1 C<1 r* CO 00 CD r-i I !> ^ , iH VaOO NlMCOCO § ■0 a 1 1 WO ^ 1 > ■ ^ C-l O W "* CO <3l " M 1-1 M 1 ©(D©t- rH« lO Ifl-^iHffa Q^ 8 •eiiBni9^ O^QOr-lCOlM 1 CJ 1 1 llOlNCO 1 iH -* lO CO j 1 IQ i-< i i 1 j 1 : i" & 1 +3 g^ us t- « -* -H rH W . j!OrH^-*r-lNT-lOrH.-l 1 1 li-H 1 fr- •srBK 1 ©J 1 t-i 1 j j « 1 1 j j j 1 1 1 j tH 1 1 1 j 1 1 1 til 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 t 1 1 1 1 1 to BsDo •IBWU ^-^ ,M ,W , » J , |« I 1 1 1 1 J 1 j 1 I j s •eiBnraj; "■^ 1" 1 1 1 " ) ; ;■=" 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 r 1 1 in •BrBjt 1 03 j IN { rH j «g j { ; 1 1 1 ! 1 1 [ I I I 1 [ to ill •IB^Oi 1'*^'" 1 ;«^ 1 1 1 1 ; 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ■>*< •aitEma^ i 1 1 ! 1 1'^ 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 i 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 CJ •eiBK l'"^" 111 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ! 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 e^ H 1 s k 1 Center township, exc. of Mount Pleasant- Mount Pleasant cdty Ward 1 — Ward 2 Ward 3 Ward 4 Jackson township _ _ — Jefferson township, exc. of Ctoppoek and Wayland Ooppook town, part of (see Washing- ton County) Total Ooppoick town in Henry and Washington Counties Wayland town Marion township _ New London Tp., exc. of New London New London town - — Salem township, exo. of Salem. Scott township, exe. o* Winficld Winfield town Tippecanoe township, exc. of Eopue Rome town — Trenton township Wayne township, exe. of Olds Olds town 1 BY COUNTIES, TOWNSHIPS, CITIES AND TOWNS 181 ■IB:>0Ji •eiBnraa •e:BK •■tmoi *e([Qai342 ■eiBW igiSi^isgl I ^ S§g glilil§§ii§ l-l-i^r^ i-H §il2SiSlli 3 i.sa COM 25go® IOC §1 ii§liS|ss|s rt iH ■^ "^^ MWOJrH iH l—li-t I— IMWNi— »> CO ■* "* N 65 -"T in -^ ■* 'eiUTUB^ H M CO ■<* OS -*M Oi a « t- Oi lO rH t- 6 •&IBH T^rH rH «i "* CO rH 03 r 38S c:!0 <» t;« CD OS ■OtM 'TB^JOJi StUS&C^ §3 ggg ISgsgaSSggss ■eiBnra^ gsssggsags g s S3SS g!3Sg5S8esss2;5 •8[BH s8SfeS8S5!SiS 8 S ?3SS3 g8E2Sfe8S="Eoe°' •Iis^ojG ;E!S388||P!!Sgg g °' =i^S 9|3?gg8S88S 11 P <» •atEHB^ g3SSS§SSfeS95 '-SS SS88SS$S«S8' ■orBw q;sa3i^s«S34; s CM -=T-Oi sa gsssssissssss •IBJOi ;lSS.8Sa«S ?Sg f23§8853Sa«gfeS B ■e(EHia,I Sg^SSsaSSS^ g '^ ""SS 3S;!S3S;SaSS8°° fH loob^ ■B[BW Dm ■ •a „-5 ■3 ■ i I i|l mo H SB il -a 6.3 5 a i il|^i«lai ^t.goacBcsoaSfovp.osrt'D'- g I .& 1 •a I i„ I 10 I fillli "- IS ! 1 • ^ «> S a) mi's e 1;^ §5 .9& h2 182 POPULATION— NATIVITY, SEX AND AGE TBloa •afBtna,! •BJEK TBIOJ, So •erBjI 'imoj; ■8[sniaa: •^«K ■lB»oji ^ 03 ^ OJ I53 '3[«ai9ti •eiBK •pnoi ta 03 •»IBM P 3H TB^Oi •ff[BniBj •»IBM •a' OIBUlBi •aisjl t-U3U5 G cam ««ih55^--* t-« §o8!nS3 S^^-^* ^®'^3°^*^5 5N'(SEo 56ji-lrHi-l i-ir-H?SrHrt i~t i-i i-l r-t H CO (M &3 (T ssasa iS5*ga ©=■ 00 <0 00 O CO ?SSSa 3§3"°S O CO go c^ rji itqcot- OS -* ^ 2^ 10 »0 C- * "* 21 S&St-oggOjcOo -SfeSSS O S 5© 10 I© -^oOr^So t-S a5 -^ -v Oi Oir-t S ^ ssssss 8S3S3: sa- JSSSteSS s^^ss sssss sss-'.suss^sss D«t-i-l itlOO»Q0ffie2 SeOiOcO'* lOWtOir-a (N lOiMOOOco OJOte ssa HOCO-*» o5 -!ii W CO T-i Si o5 ■* gtes^a ssggis sa"=sfeS8agaE 3§{jas ssiiggs a^^ssss^ss^ss 3sJcS«S^ ^! 3S s? I? o « / ItJ IS 1 15! 19 1 '.ffi ■6 jo 1 1%* ! cj 1 |9 jS 1 1 I - is ! Is 1 is +3 +^. I I l<]j !c ig l|8 i^ ii^ ioJ"° 'IbI: i - if ite ^iiS^ g§l sgsss Ss§ |S§SS gsl S§5SSI3 §E3 S8sa"* SSft :$382a ass fegspa 3?:8 gigsas BISg sggsss 5I§| SSSS"" ©Clt~«D-* (CmSQQ a^s"" iHJ>i-( H IN feSSSSS !gS^53 to OS 00 1— t- SSS; eaas'- §ss g^as'- SiSiS 00 lOt-KO-* S^i3 (M iq « CO CO ©Jg O) <0 t-( ©rllO CO® IQ CO "It OirtjO i 1 t^ s 1 lii H ^ 16 5 i' "W \S i" . is g g Bl ei -t-" A ii'Tir f, 1 ta A •ash •fa BY COUNTIES, TOWNSHIPS, CITIES AND TOWNS 183 "lS8§|g§|Sig coeOsOMja-3tir-j«;*««) 58 gi^estesigss ■4 iH M 51 iH r-i-*r-4 iH i-l SffllOMrta?-S SS 3S'=^'°S"53iSe8 9>Si>OQga!£iVar 3 frl B W ri 03 1-1 "ON 5- © tH t-H OJ i-l as sgssggtegsee fflilM (MM M ■* rH © Soft. t- OS "# O 3*00 W M I '2 f^ tD<0 jS'Nsass^sss i 33 «c3»,t-j.-5«g.3,o> i gs "ssasssssas i Sn ■°8"s«aa53sa i S3 "iS'-s^ajs^fesa 5! gg "S'-ssssssaa § >gr- 1 i rHM U5 fH M i-H QO OS ■* 'I J> O OD signs'! sag a OojHH dJ ^^ OS 04 OJ 4> ^ i •[Bf»Oi egs^assss r-l I— 1 iH SO i-H I— 1 1— < i •sjEnraa s^assassgssgagsss^sss g 1 e[sw asssasssassgsssssassssg i o 1 ■■IBJOJ, iH >-* &i s • aiBraa^: ■SSaS-*3aS;S3SSS'-Si3S|Sg5S S -f3 S§SS"S5S?8aS°'fe8S8Sa5^^fe i 4 1 i-H 1 1 iHM 1 .HC4 1 M r-( Ifr) 1 iH -* l(NW 2 i s38lfiS*-g5gS3°'32S3SS§.S3l8 § 1 P •lB}.Oi SJSS2SISSSSS'^S'"SS88SSa3 1 •aivma^ t-C»t0i0S0C0<00>aiWC00JTH(Mif3O00Q0-) i-< (N CO O) >-1-*-*i-lll O s ■§si ■jB^oj; III ll-fl S s •^IBmej 1 1 1 j |A ^ Ol rH tH T-H iH iH iH rH i-« rH rH rH Oi W 63 M SS8SS S8S3S sssassi; stsgs 56S8S^ J2SS8S SS&^Sg 5o|g|| sgss^ sa|8| gsssas siSi 3SS8SS ggSgg ggS3SS8 S§8g3 8«sss sssfes sg^ses 5!fsse gsa°"=° ssaaa sss-'sas ssess^ jgjoooaoc. assaa '"51'sss ssssSK r-i r-i rH 04t-H rH r g^5Esa sss^s assess s§sgs 3gSiSa SSSSS8 ESSS^gS sgssss 8SSSS S5!85:g ssaggs ssggs r-l r-t rH H « rH m«i?lrH COr-isoK-* rH-*JtrH0 ''^ ^ "* 53;ss3 gs3i2S3g asaass ssgsas aseas sssss ss"»saf2 gsass rH ri r-i r-t &t ssga^ ss^sss ssicfeg esjsas saess ss isss sgsss 3 rt' \A ■S '§« S.1 I, 1=30 i§Afe5 'ill ills ^asat^. 5 i^a^'Sfeiiggg^^ rt!3.ag'-E'g< S'siil^^ I BY COUNTIES, TOWNSHIPS, CITIES AND TOWNS 185 QS bo us ■t«?0JD ■aj-Btaaa -eiBut Ol CO in QQ O lo y ;s s £3 i-ii-i i-H>-trH <0 i-i rH iH i-J « 1—1 rH rH i-l iH rH i-l i-l iH U3 rH ©5 i-i Oi it 01 I? SI h n a a e « « Pk ^° •mojt 3?s"5!ss'"S5S8e53-*°'ss| s ""isa" a e s* •aiEUiaj I ■9IBH Is Do "IBIOJ, sgsssasiigs|sssss| e sasss s § ggs •811! rasa 3!aaSS3'^5lq!®SS"»g3S 8 ®SS3 18 a ss O2WiOO>3;^t;:HJ^-*0QM» ■9TBH iS^S^ S"" e K KS •IBlOi S'"53SSa"'gS53S'-'»S'"5 E3 "SS** S S 11'° ■atBtnaj CO oq o o a> U3 I OS 01 A T-H lo -o* ea OS i-l«Ot-l Oi w S""* ■ersH Ococoi>t-OioqrHJr-eqOi(NiHOO-*iH OJ u3OC0e>l «o ««« g s *- •erBM a''8SSS'^SSs3cSS'°g'-S 8 ■^ Oi CD CO Oi I ■1B»0J, iS{3!§gS!SS«S!5!gS°'S'-S S SSSS ?J 3 ss •9[BCDa^ ^ OS 00 CO ;^ OS t-( ® C>1 -tit r-( t^ lO ■eiBH o n 3 IJ I I -^ o ! 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I iS.3 its i ig W1H >3 >-^<^ O) 6 I rHNMHut^-^aggorHeoeoa -S^SS °RB a s a fe sap g^l « 3 i gg fe.pllli°*^ 1^ ssslla 1 o^oio go tt la u S tS 6 H- wi iplilll BY COUNTIES, TOWNSHIPS, CITIES AND TOWNS 217 Eh O o I H ■ it s 3 •tBlOI, ■arBinad; •8tBK go •I'BIOI •9[Bni8i[ ■8IBH (1 •IBJOi •arBiiK)^ ■aiBK •I«lojt ■aioraaj: •eiBK asi^is gjwgwggJ g-Si'Si5!||S|g8|8|agS3 iSiIsS is^ggg g^iisggisgggsigimg S3S|S§ gSBgSSS assess KSSfflSffi 2*gSSigSgSSS§PS8S5S;S8SS SSSgasS fcggagS g^gS*gEl5SS|S3!SS;BfeS88 Mggte{;g m^m^ §sg|^aSal^§Ss§«S^S|s g!Sfe|S3 ssssss Bag§3|8g8SgSSSoSg8S83SS s^ggas sasssg 8l3Si8853 !S3'°teSS S'»S5!'-5®&8SSSSSSS8SUSfe s"ass» S«"°fta'^ S''^?3"a'°fta*KS"SSSPlSSft t-r*t-«jeOiN rH<0rHOU5i> CO N L ■9[Bni9i r •9IBPt •a " OS o ^« „-o a 3 rH rH •r\ i-H rH iH rH rH »i rH iH rH g3@S31g Si3SSSS g38S8*SSg8SSSSSSSSI88S SaSSSS S5ft-*6SS gSSffiS^SSSSfegfeSSSsSSSSKS SSeSSS SSSSSS SSE:S5a$SSS!i5gtSSS8SlgGSeSf 3Jiga?as ^a^sss gssss^asssgaaasssssss JOOWMt-MOiOOMtr wSc-JrHCiC^r-ieOr-lCQi-ICCMf-l ffiSSSSS SS'^SSS SISSffiSSSSiSSISSSgSSSSSSS SSSSSSS SS-^SS^a !SSgS"S13aSS8SS3"?,"SS8 gSSfcSSS SS'^SSS SSS3'-3S3SSSSSS3ftSS!3SJ3 j.W 1 I «4 la = ( |2| §1^ I ja 03 o 03 >,S ' &S3 ) ■ I I bn I I ™ I is I QQ 1.9 OS JH l\ 2 .SB WM.fiM S no >P 218 POPULATION— NATIVITY, SEX AND AGE P^ TBiOI 'a[BnK,j ■I«*oi, •ai^K MBlOi •ei-Bnraii ■a[BH 00 ■r«»oj; ■9IBra»,I •8IBH s ■[B^Oi ■eiBorajr ■9IBH ■oiEtna^ ■8IBH IBJOi srBnraj: •»IBW a g 1 rHC4 -H CO 0> -sj M 04 QOO ODQO O '* lO Q t£)CQCQUaC>1-' is frS (M ^ ooq oooiO" Wi-i-^ei^"* jiQiHi-t OJ ■* "* « iH t- r ©J iH rH T-1 CO CO CO iH lO rH *< w Br-t I ODlMrHiHJO ICO | OC0Or4t-e0 CO I I "' ri rH I ^r i-i iOOJINrH INiH t;cooDiA^ini-ia I C4 rH la BO ta a ■ co i i-HOiN 00»«lQCX)i-liOi-ICO-*rHOQ4'*JHtO SS'-'3^SE3g« 1 Q»r-ieaioMi>iHc^-*nrti>ooiAmooc O •e[Braaa ■o a t? S a fr< 1 el ■a •[B^Oi sssass '-'"°'fe"'-s3s omOoos to "'"^g-'^SSIS s-^^-sss «■* fe-'-'SSS S'-SSSH t-t-t- e'*'*-3!3S O/MO^USglo ^■*l- 83 "SSS t-©t-r-JgjOO w» SS'^'SfcS i i i i"' ! i i S 1 1 n 1 ii i i t-«.^plg«, WM g^-'SIgS 'eiBm8ti TBlOi •9IBni8,I "BrBK rl S G8 SPoo TBiOi •evsma^ ■etBH S V oa F^ C bi: ii « o lo !=) rM oj o c» lo CM * !»< a. 3 , •" ti-r oOHfrJOsioOrejoco aa° iM -* gi CO * eo (N N CO i> eo i-i eo th o 1° 13 is ^ ft o Is 1 I I I I I I 1 I I I I i i.& i 'I J il - _ ^ -, oa 3 o o CO >■(> JS 1-^ PU EQ tn S J-S OS o3 03H ^ BY COUNTIES, TOWNSHIPS, CITIES AND TOWNS 221 •IB1i iH rH iH l-l fH H r4 rH rH rH rH rH sa-^sasisas^ffi sss'-^s « Bssssa^ssjssssssaa OaeocoCQ^t-ajt-iaMcQ QDU)0> 6404 0) S Sfl?3fl'=^'°S*""3"S»-S Xt-COt-lfiOSCaO>rHaDO OOrHQlA'.Jifig j-J gptS co&^i-HOOi>pqt-oo«oo« sasssss^ssssg SBsa^a e §egg;ss8sgs83s®as aaassssssisss s§?sa«3S s gis^gssassgsss&s sassaagis^ssg ssssss; s ^ssssassfesas <rti^i>D-a osooooooio ^- r^ rH HrHBOrHiH C4 r-i r^r^i-t rH 4rHMQ0iOLai:-t-too-^ t-eoio-^coooai-HOi-utc; 3S = -infMcoooi T-i ^co n ^ass*s (X>^_OiOiao'4s - I I I I \^ I \s I I to I I V I . • I u - • ft 1 I g . ftja -am ' - ■ssi'Salss.i s gs Bo a a g o-t> o S g £ o 5 n S tl "" •H I a r. 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Titonka town Burt township, exc. ol Burt Burt town 224 POPULATION— NATIVITY, SEX AND AGE ■(BlOi aienid^ •OIBH go CO so © W 00 O 55 r-< rameOOlOCO SD <» W c* T-H i-lt-O -**-OCQ r*e3pjiB rH iH i-l rH iH 1-1 i-i i-H iH iH iH rH i-( i-i rH i-li-l i-H f-1 iH H i-i iH (N i-t rH rH rH tH iH f-i t-H il rH rH fH iH rH r-t i-l rH i-l i-l iH i-i iH ■I^iox s°°2a8ssse3S'='a sssase s gssssissg^sssaas ai'Bniaji •otBK 400 i0C*O^I>CQ «Otti OaiaMOOX;- CO oiiaMo as pa, OS-* •ie!|Oi rH iH hH rH ^ rH ^ rn rt ^ rH rH rH •afBinaia: assssisaijgsesg ss^ssss s gfegfessssssss^sass •STEW ■IB^OJ, arBnraa HflO ■m rHCO C> I C4 CO (M M (M ■«- s sa'-feisa s g^sfesssassBsssg °=^3 jas^sas^s" WRMgeoM a ??"S9SSS5Jft9*'!S*S'° 1 -'■^s-'sassssBas g®-»sas *~ «-'338Sssss"'n'*as § sas^sssssasss rH rH -41 O 00 la 00 °°SSa8SSa88^SS8S i Miocsiocaoioooooiiot'M t-"*MeqpOs cc «^l003gogmMellgw•*J«!j«>^;5» o '^«'3"SSSS^9"°"" 3t.«<3^o « «'>S='SSB^SS"fl"SS 3 6„ If ;ph 2-aS a o g o o aS- y » O rt' I 0,A -■33 I l"^ 1 ° I I 'g I ■ ' 'a- ! 3iia.B. i3» l+a S'C rt I bo cs c p, ' en f^l S'lsT'es-s „8ggW I SCO'S B^ Hi O HI S ■"is 33^ I U I eO lift I s is 3.2 &■§ So ^ 3 ^ I I iiBJii gg Lb a n^s BY COUNTIES, TOWNSHIPS, CITIES AND TOWNS 225 B a 3 oj set; a » ? 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'- A 1 1 1 i-i«4e9 *s« 1i BY COUNTIES, TOWNSHIPS, CITIES AND TOWNS 227 iisiig§§iii§isg mmis n liiis^ssgiis m §sis§iiisisigai MBi ii^sg^iii^^iggg mmm i ggMigiiiieg^i %i &S85i|8g8as3|essa SSS£;Se^ § gsagcKsassssg 8g aesssassasgssss SoiiSSSiSoS g SIJSi^^gSES^S^SS;^^ S3 !$S8gJ9!3S:3:SE3!SS!S^igS &S3S!!giSq! s SS^gS^^SlSgSigSS ^e 1 «" SS§SiH3SSSiS§S§ § ?g^|gSSg§iSS§ as 00 sfeg^gsggssgsass SfcSSgff- g ssKgseggfesgsgg 8g CO ggssgisgg&ssggs^ asisess 8 SeSrtSS8S6S88f: ^H rH 1^ ^H )^ rH ^H ffig i isseSS^nssiiEisasissfes;^ g^aSi^Si U SSS$%;9SSS$S»«g9i3 3S i ssa*-assi?ss'8aass3 as^ssa 03 ^aasBSSSssssss a" i ass^a^assssfsffiss? ss"ssa s SSSS^S3e3^SS^S33 as i gggsgsggisgggssg la^^Ba s §53§S8§SS||68 IS i -# ss^seasis'ssgffisss^ S^&U^U E3 ^g3:3;8eS;SS&%$;^!3S s$ CO e 3!8S8SSte?:S3egSS5 S^SSSSS £S sgssfcssasaes^ p^ N S8SS8£^&rH^ |S8g |g? ^«e4ca oi i-i iH H W o5 iH i-lrH 00 iH i-t i-i i-t «a i-i ph I<- iH rH i-lrH rl -* iH i-* iH-Ej c5 I-t pH i-i rH rH ^- «« SSS8 iss^^gssss^^aasssssBeggggsgs^-'ssag ■J •-*< iH -* t- 5 3issfessfe^sssas rH ihS iH r-( iH rH pH rH « rH« seas S;3-*ggS38§S|lSSS!S|SSS88g^-'5!SaS SSiSSSS 3ft'=SS8§SSS8SPi2g§Sg«8S3!"58SSS «sB|i| ....... .5^- .... ., o .^+sa"p^«co■^t^lf5^^^>.+*^r^l^>»■*lO I lrorp4J: (O E^ >) -H _ rt rh EQ ^ 1^ S9 BY COUNTIES, TOWNSHIPS, CITIES AND TOWNS 229 ggi a" ggs g CO m% 5sas 1 3S2 ea S3S « gss o" sss ss^ 8 USS 3»S s 33" ggiS ^ "P 5^ S5 sat; I a IPh ■^ fc "o 2^: ;^ 3 iS t< in V e s ?l§3 g|ss§g|||§gg||g||§g||§3gsgsg§g i-l i-H Oi 1-1 M 65 iH CQ M (N *-iiHrHl-(Ci r-^ i-H r-l Co I-l C^ C^ CM C^ 173 IN O iH rH 65 CO i-l i-l i-i r-l i-l i-H l0003eO©CTtico a>iAC4C0i> S§^g3SS8SS"=§®^S^^'° 0^1^ I— ( wNrHW OS Nin t-L4C^O C0MrH"*WOS0pt-00-M0*©J^-t^o^^-eOlH•^t-eo^5®•*c^I «« I® oorHi-ioaiH05i»ooJ>in©«)»t-oi"*i-iiotDg H I iH 00 iH C«l H 1-1 CO I-i T-lCO I icoi-icooocoM-'iiTifiHCDt- 13-coeoNt-cp I I c^rH ICO CO iH leo lOsco io«OMOOcoco'*3'Uicoioioci I 11-^ I-l rH *S r •9 ^a -g la a^ PC'S ■"lias •a ^ P ° £ g a-" oj" a 22«-9a ' A ^ R a « ■o S a «i 03 M o I a '1.9 ^afl3' gS2| « M I 1^ i? j°. !.9i i«. IS ^ |a.9=; aaaa*''^'0'0'a'ap'a'oaS'p'0'a'0'0-P|iigo W ■H W lA CO O W -* ft eo (N o ft CO 1-1 "* N I-l rH OS 00 fc lO rH rH lO O 00 00 ■tH I Os M •>* OOO tM 04 COW CO OS i^-iH coooirs ua I-l CO I mw -* COiHCO ININiH (M I lO H>COCO « I CQ I a pO I 1^ I 1=1 Ph 230 POPULATION— NATIVITY, SEX AND AGE •VBVOX 33 ^SlcSS^SHS^S^^ -ij,..g|Seg|5SSSSBeSS II •9IBniS|,I •apH ■lB}OJi SSSS E3aSaSS|S|53E2SS3S|t:SSS:gS«'SSS8SSa t» rH f-l iHlHrH -* i-H i-l 35 ■eUBCcra^a: tO «0 tA 00 CO GO CO gsss8^sgessss§ses!=is"'-sssa s s30sa!5gaiSfeg®sig«'|ass8ffi?3"g"fess3ss gl H rH » >* iH iH i-l I »3'=^s sisssa!S!gaasss£;i§"^sssgga"'5i'-ssKais; ■*«-*co wrH '*«*-a*;3g33S22^"{gH"^*" 3'J5 '^ [ "* »■ e A g a B ■^^ o ts-n fOM n n OS 03 es S3 63 «SrHrHi> t- « -^ ^^ » g | ^ g ^^ g? ^ ^f ^ «> | g ^ ^ ^ fe » ft-WOlOt^OI© | BY COUNTIES, TOWNSHIPS, CITIES AND TOWNS 231 S 03 i g ■moj, •9[Bca9j: -BIBM •JBIOX ■eieraa^i •erBjt •[«»r- i-( esss aese?JS§ag|§g||8|g||gg8S|8Sfc8 ss »S58S^eMS|ff|gfffp|fgfgpsffsff-s¥ gill §SSig|igSiiiiilgililg§s||gs| g| SSIS gS33ll^iiSlli§|g§S§§i|S|ggsg |g T— liH rH I— ( I— lr-(i— lOlWO'^CQ'^^Mi-l^'^NW^tOlH i— IrHrH tH tH 3SS:| !«n'»SSSgta^||g|Se8gl2tS£g|SS»$^£9SS $g !-;»«©■*«<=. 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"|aisl r |g I I I 1 IS^A^f^-S « 03 O OS pis O « 232 POPULATION— NATIVITY, SEX AND AGE moj- OS em ■arsraaa ■»IBK TEJOi *9[«nra^ ■»FW Scq I- CO eg '3> t ?P S? 00 "5 C- yS 00 QQSrVSS^ OS -* eq N -* oiQQ M iH q5ai« t- cOM-^vq (M W r-l 00 Ift DJ 00 ^ lO ^ -m Oa r-t -i* t- M -«I C '9^uxa^ '&IBK SSS3|SSggeBS3S 3S«5S|SS3!8gSg38 eSBgSSlg3S3§|gSS3|S8SS 'VS% lO »0 lo -1* CO t- 1-H o c» Q eo CD i-H tt •* us eo S3SSSS •9TOt ■""s^gs^a^^asas" 3S3asBsasssssssss"s •IBqoj; ■9[En]Bi ■?IBJI ■lojoj; S«S°°2:SaS?33!SgS9 sssssassssssiisfesss-'ssa S3"§agSi3S5g83Sfe8S SggSSgS8Sq!g|8fe8effi''S" S"gS88«S§3;ee8Sa gSSSi3aSB88g|S8|S|'SS aiBCOBit a'"S'°S3SSSS83SgS 8a5SS8S?agS8eg3fcS=S!5''s3'' "»IBW ■IK> l-s I I ! 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COrH-.HCOINttS'^eo I 1 m IS i.a % I Pi is I'o Ifi O 'M A as I'SS pH u en K « ^ tf e ® S . esiiaoi'a I 1 l» S 2 a a nil Hffi M ® „ OM«SO "g as OB H O ° goJS 3 as . a 03 n o S 3a , -fs W □ O o o hs a 234 POPULATION— NATIVITY, SEX AND AGE a o o I— I So 'SI SI e a •TOOJG 1^ ^3 •BTBinSii •8[BM •(fBlOJi •oiBnraj ■aiejl ■lB?oj; 'eiBins^ •8IBJI ■[Bioj; •9[BaiBki •8IBK ■I«*OJi '3tBIII9tI •8[BH •IBJOJi •fflBtnojff •9IBHI ■t»l<\L ^3 1 'd[vn]9^ •aiBH II I o ?|sS3sgs«>s3§S|||g|||||||5|E= sa rHS* 00 r-l N r-t N i-i i-H iH W r-l !Sa3S88E3Sa'=S'°*'»§Sg8SS8g888g:S '^S >-l QO I-l iH i-H (I -* CO OS *- i-H C 1-t »3 rH llSSan 5S gs SSa|8fe8g!5"S;^S83gfegS|§fe^§||Sa ss •I 40 C~ 00 00 0> * jS''|3:£2:S38S§6a38'' © ■* rH TH t- •* "* can I 0> rHM 05.^ taiMOM I'^iHOOD'oO ssssassg.^^ lA CO ^ W * i5<»oot-coTiico itn naM«OQ-« c^ I ! ! ° d fid S iS 1 I Is _ rt *H M H >H d-r cs ti ea 08 10 il t i r|| " I Ebbs !a | 'mSS o 'O'O'a'O'a'O'O'O'a'O'Oo'S M I o SOS OS o BY COUNTIES, TOWNSHIPS, CITIES AND TOWNS 235 •iB*oa. •SIBCCBd; •9IIBPI •IBlOi 'ei^xns^ fN i-H (N rH SScaSSSlft iH 1-1 M (M 53 fHl-t iH C4 rH i> >2 CO W 63 CO iH 1 S •IB1i-l«lH(NrHi-*0!lH«|HrH 55rHr-1>-HiH iH 69 iJS rH i-l i-H rH iH W M H »3 M ««■* « »-H r-i to © 55 1- iH F- lO t- © OJ © B M fH M gggfeggs ssg*ss8sgs§|ggg|gags!5sg||||gm§l|g gg isfesssss s|pffiS|8g|||g|g|Hsgssa§|§|||||^||g3 ss ^rHNiHMrHTHrHrHHHH ;ii Si (NiHrHHiH i-tiHWH H Mr-(r-l«ci5cg65eaWrH iH 2»®C^00i-lVU>t~VO@u:irH rHiH q iH iH rH PI iH ea H iH H OT iH » QO r-t r-1

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S88aSS5SSS"g S&aSE3*S*S8 coa-4io^M«'vko^e4 co(MeQLa^e4rHio(N CO liHMlO lf-IC4 I cQMeacoatM ic^d M I o I o |0 I Iti I : 1 |a lo ! !° I 1° 2-9 S »•§ I" 1 1 K I a a 3 o*' s 2I« BY COUNTIES, TOWNSHIPS, CITIES AND TOWNS 247 a sssSSggggssggssaig 5; asase^isgsssgfcsfe S3 ?i3iS88ae£SS8SgSgS 5!8SSSg5lSS M Oi M CO t- M ssssssasssass^ s aasssssasssggs&g Hl-teOiaiOmrHC-t-»(M(NlHlftM !3 sassasftsssassass s S'"P)8ssia5!S'^s8aga 88 !J?3»S&s3!o:SgSSi;S!S83 irHiH0001C0®QOiHrH(0i-H00r I G4IA I M(M i-l H rH rH «0 ■* CO CO W IQ iH f-^ I rH « WWOO^-^iHOlMWQOr l< lOcg th cot l"*OC»t--*tHWUS". NHCOlNrH I b- "* tH iH N i-l (N iH S I ll i M I iH I I I •H I I I I I I I I I Mil II I I ' I ' .1 ill; 1 I I I I I I I ' I 0} I igf I i . I its I is i I io I I . 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SSaaSg3f:S;Kft3SS8SE; ssa S'^«sss'°sas"°'^3:3feas IS I ! I fills o I ; aO s S^i , 1-3 »^ i = o L I lo l„ 1.9 '■Sj oa O ft ^-s S O O 5r +=• goa §€« 3 a !62 POPULATION— NATIVITY, SEX AND AGE & 03 t- ^ ■^ «g33S8PSS S89St5g 5!gS3ggg8S gSS^ISg :■§ !>. ■a n oS "O "O '0 13 'O d CQ S3 S3 C3 C3 03 o I . ^ ! « i \b 3 13 a 'g ags 5§sses§ 8 •O I— t 1— t r-l I— 1 I O] *H W Ol N H iH O ! OU .So S'=S8S^S ■*»« lOrHt>M©Ol«#t-eO (M;*Os "* t-^ "* lOtt® "JM ses ss^ssssss "oaa s«-ss?9<»ssia!? S S'°S'-"6SSS »e^ ia>r- ■ t06a t- lO .-j lO »-t H BO ft iH iTOrH t- t-l » rH rH t- ■* r^ O ■* IQ-* I "^ l«DCO lO SO t- iH CO ffl CO V io3iH Oiioeo irHoSeacgco IMIM OfHiHrHi-IMOto-* 5 pi ®^ « ( i^ i' I K 1 1-3 M BY COUNTIES, TOWNSHIPS, CITIES AND TOWNS 263 »H i-t »-t iH iH « ® S bo lO ""f W i-iSS WiHiM IH Z^ CC CI3 -^f ipl N rH rH i-l Wa « (>] CO W N i-t rH iH r-H 5Ja"3-'8SSSS||Sgg!JS'" ssssss Bt. ; I 5 1 s"»gi; loi I M L V o .9 i§li R . _, O QQ fito.gaH a. 11 ■• o S o \a-^Oiia ^ &: S t,-a fl o S&.S.2a "WCM •91810^ ■9IBH •IWI<\L •aiBUtaiii 1 ^ a a| X a •mojD ■stBtnaa SI ■St!? ■lEtoji :g^ •aroniM -^s •ei«H '-a 2aH „u„ •ersM S (U S3 •moi •ajBtnaiia: •91BK ^1 h bo •moj; •sisni^ ■arPH '«S §'•6 feS a>Au^TH C5 1-1 W H iH OS t- 35 iH ■>* fr- i-l iH lO 1-1 r 3CQi-lQOr-lM-:li-*OS<3s>HO 2*Oi-icosocoOt-o3 carM-*-*;;2<:C'C0-tfHXi» ^1* a S a '-'Moo •imoj, •siBoiaa: •aiBW ■OT'Oj, •eiEtnaa ■oPo ■[BlOi •oi-Bca^ •ei^H ax's 'HHOj, •3IBai9lJ •9IBH o »5 lNrN<33x)(CMi-l-P(?J C^ iH CM 04 i--' VJ i-( CO N r M CO iA«£5 00 Ka SSB Oa CO 00 r-l 00 lA imora COCO ift ft4 2?9 i-« i-l GO "* (S coo in la I 5 rt S " 6 s * ■ rt P O *"_ p |S§CSo ■so I »a o oO to lA iCi - IN t- weo Co SJ 00 i-t CO « M iHiHOSOOCOl-IOO" Sfl iH iH ''='S'-SS'^'»8'-'^SSfeg§?:S38ge'"'^'-£°'gSS 1 II 1'^ 1 1 I-' 1-^ ,"^ .r^g^OWgN l^rt rH.. ,U5 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 : g ^"S'-SS'-'^S^ |SStiS|ggggS'»'"'°S'»SSS i -*M«>f-g->=DU5;*^ rH i-H H OS « H « Ift r-l 3S iSS8Sg8SfcfeSS§i§fflg3gSH§5S5 ? 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O I Fh I M I CD * i^ I .,- !1 I . r IS I "I 1 no.' 5&1 P, ' ■ 13 v tn O « fe '^ OJ ■ai -C « 3 >> CQ P BY COUNTIES, TOWNSHIPS, CITIES AND TOWNS 271 3iias sags ISSSS (-(c^mc^ao -Soigs 'sessa -*^«»o w CO "^t-eo JJ3S IH'^ t-ti-H -sass -jt CO CO t- O s I I ^ 1 M ° I r 'i'Sg°«o Ss .£.9'H la ff^ o ;o oi CO sags p: g as eaasasgsstessasa ssss asssa « QlO W O Ift ^ gS 8SaS3=°8S8SgSSSSg 9?gg5 '"8^83* ;g3c o o oj ifl M iHco •* O) c^ C) 0050 i-ieo t- 'sHt^ 3<5!SM "* th o co iv 00 t- Cj -* lOCJ iH (M N ^ ^ t- 55 Ifl -TH "* .H CD -"^iSOt-) iHwiSww CO lOlH 5S 01 OaWlflQjMCOSi 8S3iS88eS« SSSEg ■'SSSS ises 5 s ^8 aa"i8s*5:;8ss§isess sssbs ssssas ootooo o CO *Ht- »-i-^iHoococo'^oiooMNojceQ?(0 ^-t-«et-- i-iM^i&eo I>CCU3iN iCS W <0« MN»HitirH">ii»3«(i;*®gSg3g3S M us Nl>0sO C0MO3N '83 CO CO fo oiw r-«D nn-^osoot-d'^co -< a» noSrHOO C4OCD03 «"*COI> iH eO **1© icnorHOt^»'-'CO«3CO'»pQOOtOgJ oaiOCOi-t t-HOWC0»-i CO T-l H rH I-l Cq -*M-i I-l ^ iH iH ej iH r-* ©q oa 03 CO N th « CO ■* JO ■* "" Oi o o> o eO<© O "* r-i ■* ri f ca ■* q'ljiWttifflWrH'^rjOst-e rl ^IC3 -V -i CO U3&I r-l t-cgt-w 1-1 J> 01 iH 00 ">*< -^ti tr ■^ ^ °o ^ <3* 99 ■*** S ^ ?5 S9 " -^moco r eo eo c (NOOlOrt W CO "^00 HC S o o 3a O - oj logo ;z; o !^ ° I o I « ^ I I I I .M M 03 ■ ■-((NM-* ° a S C t; K K ao n 03 03 03 03 -w +* q * ■'^ <8 5; ., C3 P K,g >.§ a Ma|o 272 POPULATION— NATIVITY, SEX AND AGE H O a I H O O h:i H W o •r!!^H -^ rH ■* i-lQOrH 3e0rHeoN>0'^0llMl0l0--l 55 N r-l-* Wi-I iHi-iWlM M tococa CO _ OlO -iOO iM OS a a- 4J a I (13 T3 I .Si o a 1 ° ^' S ^ -t-* . 3° o c; sit 3 ' §§§.§§ Z>.rHCNO^ t; S tS S n n. hn C3 n « » z; o !|.9|S - BY COUNTIES, TOWNSHIPS, CITIES AND TOWNS 273 assaa 2 1 03 Aim (MOO _iH lO'^lO-*'* ■.*< lOXr-00 "<*< g i r^^ 1 1 ^ •* io 1 1 1 1 1 " ■ III! " i i i ! 1 " Wayne township, exc. ot Bailey, Mclntire and Meyer Bailey town Mclntire town West Lincoln township, exc. oJ Orchard 1 r ! 1 41 it ■TOOj, ■etuniM: Ha •erBw •a •I1S!tOJ, il •aiBtnaa lO ■ersii -SG 5l« no ■moii •eiBniai[ •OIBK 1. ■OTOl ^1 ■9[Braaii[ •arept •1^*0^1 •aiBinaii: ■SIEJI 'IBiOJ, ■oiBiIraa ■aren 'TOOi •eiBtnaj; is o H>. 3 o IS o t4 SScO r-l s s 3p ssesesssass -5POJ « iH IM i-H 'arCO Co ■* c 1-1 rH i-> i-l i-i &i Oi cll N 55 N 1-1 r-l S ■M »0 I-H IH T-l iH 1-1 8 S3 Sags a § 3-SgJJg||||g||8g iaS® s rH ^^ »« rH rH i-l r^ i-H 8i§S 3 g Sf: g§lSSS3Si88SCS38Sg SiSS'^ S^ s 83 g-*'--S"gSfcgSS85S°'g3 ssas S t- =IS CO 00 CQ rH 1-1 o -*M CO CO o © Oi a> eo i-i r-l rH 1* T-1 rH oq I-H ©q 1-1 rH sSSS S ss §8 ggSS83SfSegg|8^8 iScS^^ 3 3! ?3i3 §sss8s8gsssses;sg s^ss 8 3 S5S ssss e gs gg SS^SSSSSSSSfeSSg ssss s; OT S8 ^'-"^"tfSSlSSSSSB S388S & S gss ss"3S==§gs«ss;ass 8SS6 s S gs ga'oassgasssss^s t^ -*fO ro O ^ M l>COC> CD W CO CDCO *q ■-¥« SpH (Sa S ^ rH OJ ■* rH CO a 0,3 o. ^5 s « CD +a ,a a o"^ S3 es-o 10° £ -f C S « 2 ' ri tr ?; pH d +a ' S P SR > ? s « a .on ^t^ta s <« a s v o n s MOQW(-= is! I o ! .ad, h^a Hfe|.-gwc.»^S§t.M +j p O +^ G o3 m OPSic !a O 274 POPULATION— NATIVITY, SEX AND AGE •mtvE 03 ba Is •o o s 15 « I •atBmaki ■SIBRE "IBTOJt ■arBtnaa •srBH r- rnrai-i 'moji ■sroniski •ei^H ■IB^oj, ■aiBniaia: •9i:Bn ■TOiH MNt-iOMrH«0t sgsasissg sasassss ssffiaaafes igagssgfcss )SS«»fcffi ss> asss-'SfcSs s IS « I - 3 o ^ b o ■" o OS «i.s i ' no sass S g 00 I 111 S O e3 (4 BY COUNTIES, TOWNSHIPS, CITIES AND TOWNS 275 ^ 65 Z> iH i-l W r at- ■*ji ^ ^ rl Ol 1-1 iH Cq *1 •* 00 rH COCOCOC>ieOO-^Ol^OO(NLaMC£>0-MCDO q iH I-l 1-1 I-l 1-1 N lo iH iH 1-1 iH I-l 1-1 r-( rH r-l ■ssgfW3¥f88eWslMW^°=s¥g¥ S*SSS8ggg8l5SgS?;sa8SSS*'3S5SS 3SS8SS3SS!2S§SSgaSS5!SS8^5S888 fcsMlssl^sMWssft¥a¥sM5¥ ss'-asassassssesaasssa^sss s°'sas3a§!sgssas5sasRsss'-sas?3 S3SS3^SE:S3g3SSS§9eSSSS8SS5?2 | S'- (N I-l CO (N '^ S5SSli ©3rHrH(NCO«S-^0OlMCq5 -H le ig s'o g OS S S p,5 oi>l*P^i=^ S O'O S ti'^ o as ■S E OS'S Jrf ^ ' e u M 8 g s Ph ■a M ta ui o » ?! 41 Ph l-HrH iHWlHi-ll-( WlH iH ggasgsBsssBSSogm a a a H sfi » iP « a s 583? USS i>OC4C4OiAt>Ot0egMC0 iacocDkncoTtie£>i^oocotooiAiao> O>c00>9gt-00tOC0C-iOlO(0C-t-O> S5^S^gS^^S^SS2^?g5l^ SE3£5^S?8SS§^^"'£3 5a^SS s^fiSSa^ssKS^^s^Hi; ooJt-oqNMOieooociWrSC'OOOXW H tH iH T-i 1-1 N 1-1 IftCOt-iHt-OliOCOOS B'^liDr-ICDOOOMC^OQfrlVC^iaC »"-g"SSSS'-'°SS"S"* ««>a«assss ■* -^cot-i- oi«o •4itaooMiiAni>(MooeaosNrHT«'*00iQ meOIXMJ>-40 1-1 i-l i-H iH iH r-l 1 i ■eiBH Sin S3 ■m<\E 8|gSiSji3g3S!8S3g5;§3§S|' ! •eiEtasa; SS§3§8^3S5SSS3S§Sa5! i •BI«H SB?:9SS§!gag'-seS3SSSS s as •l-Btoj, Se3S'=-'S^3'^3"SSSS'-"°S i ■arcniEia: -* op ^eCi-i lOiOift -*iis r 00 « O r-4-°'fegs{5a'='ss i •m'Oj, S3sa»'="asg3ss§ss°'ss 1 ■ar«ni8j gOJj«,H«.Bg.3«,»j5gOOO.U=I-3 1 •ai^W MQOgM'<4it&i>OCDc£)'440:>(M i H e a; i •I^iojt ?353^'*"^°^g5S«'^Sferig3'-^S i •aiBtaaj: coco»5^^(^na^^^^>r^M©t^■^»lc;^(^J^Hoo § ■e[EH[ 1 ED L f OCO^«r-lCO'*ftq-<*iOfHiOOt- Oslo lot- S f I i i i i l§ i i i| i j i Ml ^ ii .H ^ 1 ! 1 : 1 1^ la 2 § s 1^^ iiiiiwi 1 o s jai 1.& 1 1 1 1 1 o 1" 1 « te las 1 ! ! !"■ . 1 o ° « ilfilll-»li^i aii. i i i if ijii sg ra a on 00 oooQ CO t>l> ! j a 1 e ■IBrjoj; giSS^SS •SIBtdM SftSSSS •9ISPI 03 1-t 0> Hi V) t~ »H (N -^H iH CO CO 6! o 1 ■WOi 8SSSS83 •B\vriag, t-ggacg *2 S°',8*S?3 ^1 WlH-* IW T—t 00 CD (O Co n ■i 1 •moi ^^^^^^ ■ajEtoaa; «*5S">S3 o Eh ®SS^^I3 (3 a el eoeoe^iHiM© 1 CO 00 CO coin JO "moj ^ 1 liHlOHr-i •etBniaa 1 1 ', 1 ! I •arBH 1 HH»Ol-lH 111 •IB^oj, [IN.H liHM ■aieniaig: r ir i •eiBpt r-^ 1 r Pi ■aiBttiaa ! nil ! 1 I ! 1 ■BTBM 1 III! tea •m 1 j ! T3 g 1 a P H Ashton township, exc. ol Whiting Whiting town Belvidere township, exo. ol Turin „. _ Turin town Cooper township BY COUNTIES. TOWNSHIPS, CITI3S AND TOWNS 277 5!SSS?5SSSS(asass5;ggS5SSissssKssp; ig sss^ss'^sagsgsgssasss^sssssss saa^sssssssssssssqisassggsass s^as!Ssssas8§as;^g*5S8a8?ssaa^ agoO-*OD«SS3?3a"'-5l 3SS^SS«°'S='85§ISSSSSS4;"'aSSgSS& t-iO^0l-^{DC&^OpTt^agt-.g^HcO^-05CpcSlTt1'<}1C0C0r-^^^■^r-lN WX>N • I ■* W ^ <0 M Cvi N i-lTd CO itDt- leOrHiOca NioinT-i-MO"*ot)iTfH"*Qoini-iiot-iQWtH-t»iiMr-<'Hiocooc 1° r .9.9 bUHK ©iiH I M l:.S' s «« S3 S o 6 g t) ^ S+'oS a'P'P'P'P.! I : o j ba i^ 1 « 3 23 _, 'O'D'o "O PnbO h;M ' d S ^ « 03 !S 03 ■g g «3ao » I IS ^ ft QSkS i S nS ^60 ■9" 1=1 rH S3 *^ OJ S3 IS giS Ho •IB^OJ, •arBOiM ■9IBH 'IB^Oi •BiBimii ■arBK h "=! s a H § 'S Sj • 1^10 J, •eiBni^a ■erBH •TOOj; 'ai[Braa,i ■eiBM •moi •BiBina^ •IBl'OJ, •aroniatj: •eiBH •I«?Oi •aiBtaa^ ■OIBH -"S s S «6 SS -iti §S u sssssss gilPgi essas; SwSoSs^Si sssss«§ ooa tat-i SSSSJ sssa^s 5l5!SSS« iSS^S^S 3!SSiS3^£g saa^a^ SISSSSg ggSSSigSS gss^^s 0.0" 3 £ • I 1 I I I 1 an S.g a B^^ill 53affe| >! « DO 27& POPULATION— NATIVITY, SEX AND AGE EH o Q I •O O < o z o S a la -13 W P « CI *^ CD I-Bioj; •8I8raB|£ •»IBW ■IBioj, •315109^ •9IBK ■isjoa. •3[Bnra^ •BIBK ■IB*OJ, •aiBina^ ■aiBH ■isaoj; ■9tBin9J iSgSiS3iisiiiiigg§tiiis ggii Sia^iiiiimi^SSSSiSiss iiSI rt tH rH iH rH CC * r-» iH iH i-l i-t i-i SS^@OlSn'«SS€t-Oi@oiSI^S£~^'4*U3L3cO iA-3 t- r-l iH C5 iH 01 iH « i-ie5 «i-li-l« Sg|Sg§8S2&SSggSS|?2S|SgS88S5 SSKS r-1 r-l I-i I-I iHlHW®3 i-l rl »H i-l S38g3 Sfesssqissasisgassaisa^sasss isss SSS SSc3r1rH«-*»«iHi-tiHr-lrH rn i-t c5 S t-i rH IS saS*gSSSSS3S§SSS3S '^c!SSSaSS"5e!S3SI®3='»»=' rH rH iH iH iH H »3 i— I i-l I-l i!BgSS«S?SSgS8SSSgg!ggSS3Sa S3SS S5SS8SgSSf28?S9S83^SSSaSSS s§ Is •o o iS ■p^oi SSS8S3SS3£ogg^!Sc;53i$SS££;?gS SteSfc ■9lEni9d: SSiS^^SSS^ftSSSSSaSiSJSSSaS^?! 8SS3S5 •9IBH nfl5l§3SS5Sa§S3Sg^5!SSSSS9 5I3S 'IBJOi ;IS|£HS3$^&SSg^S^3S;:Ss233gS. ss;S88 ■9iBni9j; (M 04 S -^ OJ CO N ■* IQ •* QO r-( iH (N (M CO N -* 35 OS TH rH rfl i-IM -* ■eiBK jsg^aasggissgassssssssss sass si I I I i \^ I Its l-g ! I . ! 63 ill S ? a J >»*^ o a ^ * « oj IS o ^ £■0 c3 « 00 „■? 3 CD g a s < 5 a^ ijj IS O |o a. Is a if fao ^PS« a 03 ■ lid I O I I'D I u lo I g |aj |» I" I,- 10 I Pi ■ 3 s i r. ii 1 1 Km 1 ajfO s M f* *• g P+» as ® QQCO OQ '-' M '^ 03-2 o BY COUNTIES, TOWNSHIPS, CITIES AND TOWNS 279 a I? s n a 1? "3 ^ 03 -^ !3 OS 03 (M a M ^ (D P <0 go •[8*0 JO •aiBni3,f[ •eiBW •IBIOJG ■aiBtaaa •SIBJI ■IB*o,l ■aiBraa^ •aiBW ■mojj ■3[Bni3,S[ ■aiBW ■rB*oi •aiBinaa: •9IBH •mojt •BiBnra,! ■8[BM •tB^joj, ■epuiaa n a i§li§iii^ft8BIS§§§§ *3 r-l iH ggs cot--u5e3i-(rH5QOi-ioM eO->»IOOll3"*W©«MMCO q iH iHrH0O(r4C 8SS8g'°SSi8'"S6^iS8gS§S3ga 1 1.- a> 1-1 CQ iH 1-1 iH to r-l 1-1 R (M sssss H to t-H I-' i-i w 1-1 ss?esa3s°=ggs3ft5!S3;s2 girt-^'t'MQOtON ©a 00 to e i-i -^ti 1-1 5assa»-s8 sss S CO A inm n ^es^-tTjesa |SS. S^SBS^&JSgSfeSSSgfeS isg^gssgss Bsass?^ ggSSeSSfe^SfeS ss3sasa£g»'e8iS5;sgsss5g CO (N cq iHiHOBlH iH tH JMMOJMCO I>.I>.to'*COiHI>"*W-*tD PQtJfeC a M *a t-( 3S w L aa 5&^ e^Sfe ►. A a s o n a 00 rH CO rHtHQ^ iH ss^gass gSS|a£| 8^6S5gS SSSfeSfea S^^iSESSSS ggagssa |S!S|S^g ass§sg| gWCjJOttg g««|g«-,lO00^rtJ3 Bluff Greek township Cedar township ___ Franklin township Guilford township Jackson township, exc. of Melrose- Melrose town Mantua township 2S0 POPULATION— NATIVITY, SEX AND AGE OS U ■otS e •[B^OJ, ■9[Bre ■ 18*00, ■»tBH •[B»Oi •atBtaa^ ■91BM ■IB^oi ■eioH ■moj. •aiBina^ •9[BP|[ ■tB*Oi •aiBTnaa ■eiBM ■moil ■eiBcra^ o gsiliigggs^Si r-t^lOWr-tiHinS 88||5g|ggS8&SS « 3"38g§gfe3feSSiS i ■°'='53SgaS3?3aS-'S g «"^ss|agss3ssg 8 "W iH W »3 00 ■^^ r-1 O -^oa 00 >-i Ci © i-l CO W OO '^ o5 lO -Ji rH SCoSSw-^-^i-li-l 00 t- CO CI M cOD]t-a^«oooo>J>cac3 "63 afcfcSS5'-iri£ s ;s8g°'fta§=> I3S '£^&!g '•tesstasas^'-'e?-: laio ®3i-f 3"seR'^asa® is°= >J2pOfteDc0i-(0)c0 I I m f « I O I 6 I ! ! i ^ 1 -S ^ a "o -* la fr- ift g w •* ift CO lo rosiB oi t- r-l m r-J -^ CJ 00 3S3 ^ tH !3SE2g^sss8sassai tH 8'='5fSgss5SSa'-''S t^i-i-^NUs iMiMr-f ■1 OJ i^ t*CO CO gS3 IS CDininc^iioQOiOit^iOiHO-* 00 a> to '-I iN -^ i-i M 1-1 1-1 ii t- i^ i-i •[B^OJi •eiflnraa: •9tBK ■P^oji ■31T3ni9,I •aiBW •IBq.oa, •atmro,! ■8IEH ■IB^oj; •8[BnK^ •9tBK •moi, 9[Enra^ ■aiBUi ■TOO J, ■9[Eln9£ •eiBjii ■mo J, •aiuma^ •9tBH tH N WSiH iH Srt« iSwiMN '5 00 1-* to ^ w -5t t- « N CO -* 9i©52«!MMM (jai-iqb»iinC5cHcooo" -1 OQ«'34«NNCO 1-lr fS (M rH i-l i-l Us rH 1-1 i-i "«l » Ni-I i-i oq So rH 1-1 1-1 1-1 O (M lA rH ift Q U 3 00 1"! in 00 u 3 m i> i-< « IN iH IN -,-1 lO CO 1-1 « fiS Oj 53 « rH 6g 1-1 i-iT-l OOt-1 m -Wi-l «lCOOirH'»^'0'^®^SSSSS*3li2 -00l>rain'*«5i-ti-l(Ni-l-=P'N(NCO-*00'*O>'^ 3 CO COt-1 (NCO-^iHtH rH r-i ; -J r , a a o« oa — fHiJ gSa S 3aSJ3aSgg®teS^S5S5aSS'-38 s a .9 282 POPULATION— NATIVITY, SEX AND AGE ■d a o n V >■ V a a, m a e E^s •alH 'W>J, •9IBi3ia,i •»IBW •IB*0J| *&IBina,a[ SB ■atx e •9IBM •IS^OJ; ■aiBinaa: "WW •[8?oi •»[Bt3ra^ •aiBpi •lB*oi •siBnraa: ■arsK •IB*oi •8[Binaii ©BlHpHiH -I 1-4 Cfl I-* iH i-l OO CO iH gg5c»g3«>|3g«»aa|^gM»«g3ggg ga8ssas|2ge'-5isggg3a''5!3ss i iH iH tH »-i oi to g^ogoa|H«>Mg55M|3<,ag<0 5JggtD»©530oo C4W09lOMeO t tisOS -M M >* 00« »3 O iH ©eO ■* 05 iH O Ift iH i-l i-l lUSl-li-IW rH H OS « Oft M i-l iH i-H ©i iH iH Ui CQ iH ^ ?S8SSSS==§S? isa;fiafc»s3&»E2gssf;g3!3g g 5c^r-19J'*tNlA(N-T'0 g3SSSffi^S|8Sls§ie5!ggSS5?§gSeB gi-li-(tOOOMt-?^a>000*^t^002tH^C-JM(M . n I sa.i 3 ' .dJ I a o 11 o o S a not x)+3 ^. 3 K ft -^ 3 W B C3 I d I la i 5 "^ u P « O ■a g^a'aO'C g I a ija o E " 3(OM-*^oor-«oadt-Ci-*gQco.Henoco 51 3iHo5(NcooaT-ieo^pH«oQcoi-iojQOio-'Hc5i-icoi-HTjiSS ci SCO OQI> M «D N ca aft « t-O Q DO-* O 00 (P O CO (M Q t-t- lA I I a" 55 O O fl+3 n a O' o a, -a ^'^ m 3Sfe5; SSSigg ocutra VCD C^ 10 it 8SSg «! h p ssas 3°>g3E ^ 6 » ,003 ^ « l^fj 1 10 l-«CO S 8^as h e S jSS «"^a5; a a-'^s H b ^-eqooo^ t4 t-«^j3 h e n S 1"°® 3 (O jnirH a S5 1 » •= rs a 1 e 1 i 1° h a ^CG CB •^« ^-- ■sss <1) «ft gs 3 -rt ^^32 °2g-B V WW BY COUNTIES, TOWNSHIPS, CITIES AND TOWNS ' 283 S|3gS8Sg|S|g||§§S|gg g8!S|gl8«aSS|Bg|gSfe«igj s§a3-sagSoSsssg2|sste|a aa"'5sssssa^sa88'°ssass ejiOMgugigacoggggjig^Hgt-pjao "»»l85JSSS'»9|SSg'"»aS'-3 g§a§:|S^83S|gSggg8SS12 S^'°SE3SK3Sa|SteS8SSSSS§ as'^g^^sssaBsagiggasg^ij; «S'^s5'"s"fl'^aisSiSS!SS-"°a*- 3533 NN rHCOW ■*USHOT'*COC0- m t- oi 00 '^NKS tH Oi ■^ lO IM I I I I I I I I \h 1.9 I 2 \a I ° I n o i .1" la ■fngS •H O o K OOt^i-H jH^ cq IN =0 53 W C4 to iM i-HM 0QlO(?^COSl©T--jlOS*'^MMi-l La(MOsaoooeDMOc2au)co-^c>] 3i-li-t i-tlSS Mt-MODWit-tncOlJ-ti-t-'* sfeft'^-'as Ol to -cX O CO CO CO CO O 00 C4 II>03 rHiH';rHOsr-t--OSlO'*lOO> O I'M I o is -^ o s f^ g Is 3 1 1 i*i ^ 0) o s 5 3 to I O M I "So K o a 11 g S385SSa8S3a{: <) ■TOOi s«ssss^''as'°as •3 •4-3 o •8[Eni9J •8I«H S°°888SS*:?g°'SS g3''aSS9'°8S9S3l > •I«?oj: 00 lO 00 g C31 « W 3-N 63 OS 00 o a 03 ■BiBinaa ^ J^^g^fSSJ-^^J^^S^S in i2 1^ e| 1 1 i-mcqi-i 1 1 1 1 ii-H ill 1 1 i i 1 la a''ss3g''gft='Sg S'"-si!5S'-°"^'^'°s; B OS •TOO J, ■orBniaia id IWOO'W IN-!?- I«(N0S 1 C^rt 1 1 i ® ■* »a gj r^ 03 lo "^ es) icojg e ,a> ■ hi • _^ rH H-l 00 ^^ l>(N «l rH 1 rH i> S M ^ ^^z; 03 lO ^ '^ og 00 to « »3 i-l jMOO 12; "IB^Oi ! i 1 1 1 I 1 ■eiBtaa^ riii-ii-Iiiiiii(H ill 1 1 ; ! 1 ! ■etBpi 1 Ir-fCO Nt- 1 Q WftOffl 1^ 284 POPULATION— NATIVITY, SEX AND AGE P M EH o o I o o Pi H § o ^ ^ 1 * S? y Oj OS S t3 "0 »H (H bo 'I^^OJ, •ersoKii ■918W ssf|g^g|g?gss II ^ 1* Ci cc t-os CO c ■m"*a3 SSggfeSJ I I-4U3 ta I ii£> lAcO SS§&SSSS°°SS!: &5!^igSg6S!3'-Sg3 ;2;ss:as;ssss'=»a SI •IB*Oi •»[Bnraii ■aveji 'm<\L •eiBinsa •9tBK •I«1<\E ■arEor^ ■eiBji "IBjOJi ■eisnra^ •afBK a o E6 OJQS5i-igu5'*;^C^i-INli3 cgio»Ht»t-t-mi— oawt-^ HZ^ rH CO CO •-* I IN HS CO I IM CO J- COCO r CO " .5 3 < >s I I 1 03 bo 12 1^ so ■gtH 18 ■afi ■[B^oj; •aiBraOij ■9IBW ■rB^oj, •9[Bra3|ii ■StBJT •fioi •arB'nraj: ■aiEjj ■[K?ojt ■9IBra9j ■8IBK "TOoi •aiBmOii ■9IBHI •EBloi •aiBuraj ■aiBRr ■I^*o>l ■aiBcaad: ■aiBK Ste §SSIs|S§i SM eg -* tH 00 »0 CO rj o l> ^- 1- f^ oo H coco (^] IM ^ -5! coi-!o555KcoS^ gsefeggsss a8StS5ifes^s SSSSS33§35S ssssssags s »H i-lf-(rt s SSSSg -•^s a ''SS3S "gg &"Se3SS '^SS 1 fesssaE «Eg t^ moo CO os-«* lO ^ ■"»( iH 03 t^ jeocgO^^g cOMOJt-CDt^cocoeo O0COt-00l-i-HO50O0Q 3 r-i Ci in 1 Icj 1 1 1 III i^ § >"' lo a ' O ° ' o a , ^ gs«s BY COUNTIES, TOWNSHIPS, CITIES AND TOWNS 285 WMi imi i iH iH us ">J< W in i-l 55 rHiHr PMwSSiS o38SSSSggSS8§3lg? imm S tH OT r r^IHl-lr^OlCOM(^ll-l^-tlHr^r^^-( s 8SSSS*gS|8S8J3S?3S sasaassssssssafl S sasss%S5;S£3sssss 1 E333!§i8gggS&S^SSS 1?J »3 iH I— 1 ■^ ^ Sg8S8@gSSSSSieSS53 !■ aqlS§8|8g£;SS6;Sg3 1 s^sssgassEsasss^i s CO in c » OllA CO >A CO JM 3" ° Ih I I n a, I p, -d3 ij vj zr "o 'u 3-^-w 03 SiH M 03 (M t- J r-t T-H 5Cot~rt*5ggiau5j_ 1(3 iH I 13 o IS li IS IS (*^ i<< CO ! o a !.» S.9S p.a.»a o 9 ° I I moii( °S.a aSo-"! ° a Iji 3 ' &.aS -OS" a h O SrHNCO^ 0-3 ^ SS U l-t U U a o o3 2S6 POPULATION— NATIVITY, SEX AND AGE es an goo ^ o •TOOJG ■3[B 010,3; •a[BH ■IBJoj; •3tBni9^ ■at^H ■|>noiX. •a[Bni3,I 3 ■mo J. 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''«■=» 5igs ■a 1^ i ""98"" 4 rH« 1^04 j i 04tt>gj^-*» 111 •IB»OI iHpHrHOllH 1 •etBiosj i i r- i •aiBH rtr,W 1 . 1 d S 09 •IB!K)j; i ! r" i •aiBura^ 1 1 l***^ I 1 1 > 1 aiUK B*OJ, i i r i i T ^ 1 jtCC4f-< •a[Eni3j[ 1 i-q-eqtH ■SIBW 1 iri 1 1 fell •[B((Oi t l-=frH(M ■eiBOIBiI 1 i»a r^&4 •eiBK 1 (*H 1 j i 1 1 1 Booth township . Emmetsburg township, exc. ol Emmetsburg j ! 1 i 1 I j BY COUNTIES, TOWNSHIPS, CITIES AND TOWNS 303 5SS!S*-S'=SS3:«S:S13gSSSiSS;a^©S35 § 5S3!as8ass3i8gej22asgsa8SS83 iH ggsas^asafflssssasssgasi^is § g3a3'°s"«"»gsa8"'a*-ftas°'ssssfe § s!Sss'»E3"S9a«8asg'°ssftsass3S i 1 II 1 1 1 ; 1 III 1 g gss"a"aflsg!SS98'"sssssg?3S 1 30Q««C'Cftat---l;r-J J3S!5fta«'SS'"3Sg« J>'*il01000 I I '«»i-(»o»ft^t-jge)t-gt-t-'^oo'«*«oog30so ! l*-" I I i« LM rH l-i "TJI I lAt- i-li-l iCO CO 69 r (N-«JI il If \i il I O 1 ^ " la I 15 I \^ I I'S I l§ I I I la I ill ! fill IP'S 1 IB .1 i !1 I lO 'S'S C8 SS - >,(:l O DgH 5ai Sog O CS V p fid pHon 1-3 a. 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IS -; aS ^S Im - ' 1 I" o, I*" a • s o q. o ■" i 1 id 6 iv s-S'S.s '■Ssl ;ss S*^| jB|||i 9 ^■^ 3i IS 1=1 s s ill BBS r o I 3 ft i " d 2 f h OiP g » "S .^ Cfi w » BY COUNTIES, TOWNSHIPS, CITIES A.ND TOWNS 307 •fBHOJ, •aisniea; •81-BH ■IBJOi •eiBora^ IBJOX •BIBraBii ■{^loa. •9[B'nraia ■stBH •I'8*o.-L ■aiBnraa; OacgoqeQiH r-t i-i r^ r-{ r^ r-l H W 8§.g§8gS38SS8!g'-«-SI3rttegS8S'-agS8§3Sgg5SSSSa S8g|a|g33883!|8aSfeSgS88feeS8iS8SS&SSg^SS ?!||g|SSfeSS^S8SSSSSSSSSeS«SS;e3gS3SS58 s§gss§s®a^ag«"='sa''Sssfe®ssa§S5issssss Sgg8gSSa533SS^«>gSiagSt?S»-8S!S58g3&aSSS eogCO^a->^^ inn i« hHW iiOMiHiH-^M i IW iH Hlft Weo©rHr-(N sgBsss°°ssa3a'°«'ssagS3ss'^sss8fes8S8gaag ^gscsjs'-sseas^i'-^sssasa^ssssgssfess^ssss 2t-00-*rHO«C»"»JJ©01 g?3=»a!« =>ae;rs«Has 5SE3S8 3S"as ^cbo^oo icoeoo-^to&i I eo r-i lo « CO ■**> o> »( •** © (N rH © CO t- t- eO It- 1 'gSS3S°°'""S3"'°S-'°'§3S'*§°'SS°'S!3S'^Pl8SSS'"9S I to I CO CO -^ •srBM •IBJOJ, •©[U'lnaa •9IBM s|! •[B(»oj; •aiBtna,! ■ei-BH OS r^■*^■*<^loo i- ISu III •I-BIOJ, "-' 1 1 g -- 1 j s ■eiBK « j 11 s " 1 1-' s SP^ •[Bjox i-H 1 1 1 0> ■»[Bni8,I •9rBm "11-^ s "^S ■IB*Oi " !" i '£ •aiBmaj =^ ; 1 s ■aiBK 0, |rt 1 M ■I«V)X iH l(H 1 » 1 1— 1 1 w 'ff[Bniaj ■8IBW '"ill " (Bill 1 ^ ["S 1 I 3 IS ! 1 ■o S ! « ! g « 1; i S o -M 1 ; B s„ s « i i .-■B 1^ S ii 1 ^& IH i^ ^S|l 1 e g' §3^2 ' 3 Ills 2 e «„g^ 1 IS •[Bioa; •aiBraaa •31'BW ■l«*cuG 'dj-Bina^ •aiBH ■r«*«i '3IBUI3|I •9IBJI •OH OD ■l«*oi ■9[Bara,I •aiBw ME _. * ■giJi •lB*OJt •eiBraeij •erBH 'd CO ■dN So •8IBH •IBlOJt •8[Bnra.i ■aiBW -v. »-3 ilglsiSSSiigSa§ giiiii^imissi sSiii3=«sseiS8i35r! ^iiSi Sg|gg&;SSSS^SSS33 11111^5^1 giiiis^ gssg|iS£;S §tiSS§^ g2§g3S«S s|S88gs'°sase3'-3!a Q -* O t* fc ■* ■* 00 ■* o e! «- eJ H »M«p(aejHrtOOWl3 5-MrjN ssassass!sssss° a*SSi38"S3?lsa8SS3^SSdS-g'- 1-H H i-l t-IHtH (N ^ i-( (H i-i iH rH sss!SS5"'ss{SSS83E:gS3Ss°'ea ssa8SS*sei8JSssssBs^sa"ss ssssa? sssssss'^assasssssssas'-gs sssss^i^SteSBsessiSiSiSJSS^ss* 1 1 SgS5S|3"gS? iisgsss'^isassassssassgsss? 8SfeSg8§"SSSS§Sg«S!gt o a I a "E o y ia a M « I*. o |o .9 '3 '9, ■g a Pi o, ^ llllelf ^es g g g 3 g g'mO ^ g I 1 I I I I I I 12 I I at I I I ■H )■ O I g 'k : eg boa a ^aaa ass « 3a ' '.9 ' -3% ■''la a O'S.S.p.S . P 2|s°|2iQ|'o2 a « - S-S C3-" 9S =" ,9 to B S B P O m C 9>£ E-i P o o 01 O H Z O K < o o it «! ih 1^ •IBIOJ, gS^lgSgg •epraaj g^S|l3|| •8IBM es||S3g 1 •lB»0Jt -«g^-g§ •afBicraj: SS8'°5l!g •9IBM »:;''E5S"5;S 1^ •io;oi !39es;^ss •OIBTOO^ SSsSS'^'SSS •aiBjt a^ss^ss? f Belleville township, exc. of Palmer.. Palmer town .. Oedar township, exc. of Fonda Fonda town Center township, exc. of Pocahontas Pocahontas town .. t £ i s S o 310 POPULATION— NATIVITY, SEX AND AGE •I«?Oil CO "Si •aiGicrai y^ •ai^H 9io ■OlM §53 ■HE eg ■at" ^1 ■rB*oji •9iBni3,i •etBut •l«»oj; •exBinaa •STBW ■IBIOJ, •eiBjd •le^oi ■aimno^ •arKK •IBJOX ■aiEinaa: •oiBK "IBWL ■aiBtaaa ■BIBJJ SiilsigS isli§ii§S^S rH rH rH i-i t-i iH tH rH (-1 04 t-t i-i 09 i-tiHWiH rHi-lr-4 T-* IH 05 l-i rH W M H aas9S@8ss ss3'°sissa32^s3 00 0>^iat-M«^ e^t-C<90>gt-rH£ge3g '>SS*-"8ftS S*-°'ag*-SS!S"^8 sSS8gSS^S:!S $sj3Sg!Sggg°°& :3sss?!S8s ssssseasiss"? a^isssfegs ssssessss^a "ft"" "rtSSfeSsJSS'^S -OW rH IC- O5M-*C-a0l-igr :i IM ^ ICCO 9 CO CD la 00 OS <0 OJ U5 r-( © r- iH p i-l i-l r-( iH t-H r-tiHiH 1-4 ^SS^mSES?^'"^ 38°'SS8 aasj sssess^ss sasssesssss^ft sssssass aaasssaasj'- ^s I ssssasas 3*sgs?3gse''§ asss-^sss asaasftsas'^s 1^ I I I p, cj .:7 m tags «S2S fl'3 ■" p, 'g ? a - S a ! I ' Pi ■Sgo. 'sa ill 1 |M - JSb OOPQ o psal jsaaass ass83aa!3S"s i I i 03 I ■3 i 4A r4 >u.fj v * a ^ p s > ilii|3 IsSi^ggll |S8Sa|Sg8 CO -^OS OQlHJt laiOt-f t- fefc'-eisfss OOC^eOCQ-^KCOMMQ t-e*3 ■^ajM 33" ss&asssfre gass-^ssas t- 00 r-i ig 0> iH 00 >=o.g = Hifat-*-i-tpj>ot- gssa-'BSg? SS^SS^SSS 8-*9a'«8SSS S3"S'-'aS8fe I » eo ■* ■* sH eg g gj ^ gaao fsssa g««w .pl<»gl> 300410 it^oot;* I 1 1 I ^ Ch In llj ass n o a \A O I Q, ■a i-s 10 •M ^ H O C S tt 03iM ^ P o oo BY COUNTIES, TOWNSHIPS, CITIES AND TOWNS 311 ^§^IS| 5Sggg§gg35S«=S sssssss sateSfcssais is jgcpHOt-g goa^Mt^ONjj ap'^tOOsaD M |P C;4 o CO to a cq c ggsffiss gggsssssatr^s fcsssss aessasg^ife^s aa»-ftaffi "ssssssjsss**" tO-^MOOrjQO COr-ieom«OOi>t-OTHN CO Oft -^03 -41 O i!^'"^, 5<='!^**'-'r assssss sssssssss as'-ssa asssgsaaat; SS^SSjS "8SSSSSSS sa°>s OiiH (DOi Mg sassssa MOlOOOOO 04 CO M 09 03 CO U3 t- 03 ■"JHO ■* W ® OS I QCPOOO t-W rH W 1-i^ iHtH I « iH i-l i-l 1-4 H«(M « r 3aa (if; 1 'Oft lO 33 SsB-S'.-S-uS'BBsEB o ^ ^■g § S'Iflos g II °2 i ° s .9 5a' lis|°5ag:Sa«3t;o CO '*t4 rH 0» t^ O rH » O op lO lA CO CO ;0 i CO O iH iH rH rHlHrH r-l I W 2 •[B?OJ, SS5;s°>S5|S8g8gg ■atBraaa S!SSS"gg6{3S3«SB!S ■3IBK 863ft»Sg|88Ba5;S 1 o 03 in ■|B?OJ, §§ss«eseasas5is •arBmaii ^aS3'^8?8SflS»-'"!2S 1 1^ i asss-'SSiisss'^ss SI -HIN leo l«iH»0 104 1 1 jrH i 1 ! iii 4^ SSI3gg''ffig88S5S3'*Sg s •IB^OX Sa3S"S5SSSSSSeS •3[Bni3a; a« la^a^sssa-as 1 a 1 gsss-'sssaas^ss ^1 0> CO Ofl lO iH -* ig gl 10 ■* lO H>iH 4^ i 111 ■CB^Oi III 1 1 ! •9tBni3ia: ^ i" i r i" 1 i i 1 ! ■etBK i-t jrH j j jrHlO 1 1 ji-(»H ■rB*oj, rH [ IN li-(N10 1 1 100 1 •BrBtna,! " ■ r i i^-^ i i r i •BIBH i i i" r-^ i i i i i •(B*oi i iir r ii ir i ■eiBtaaj: 1 1 1 ; 1-' 1 1 1 !'' 1 1 .1 1 1 1 II II 1 •e[BH 1 1 r I 1 1 1 1 i-^ 1 •[B^Oi 1 1 1 1 1 1 : 1 Mil 1 1 1 1 1 1 r 1 1 1 1 1 •eiBraaj 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 •aiBM 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 r E 1 1 1 1 1 E a f s 3 Belleville township, exo. of Palmer Palmer town Cedar township, exc. ol Fonda Fonda town Center township, exc. of Pocahontas Pocahontas town KollA town (Clinton township) CoIIax township Cummins townshin Des Moines township Dover township, exe. of Varina Varina town Garfield township Grant township 312 POPULATION— NATIVITY, SEX AND AGE 1 ■IBJOj; fS S8g§§S6teS8-'S i r-l •aiBtiKM a assqiaas85i«" S ■a o ■8IBM -* aSSS8883g"°' CO :; sesssssss""" s? i •TOoj, •8[Eniaj iS sagssssss'^" 1 1 g g sssssaaas'^' 1 1 ^ 9 '!? 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I ' ^ I ! « !d 3 ' I'M ifh ! ii asBSSB i ill till m on a 5 !a d ii u I O 13 if S£:3S;:iSJS!SS^& ^ lis SgS3i;3St9^E2!S$SS !g 1$ I o3 03 (S OS O o I J? to d s3 §11 C O d .aOo n a 328 POPULATION— NATIVITY, SEX AND AGE lEJOJ, < 03 oiBuraa: "3 ■M ■arsK Eh •I^ioi £ > o ■a[Bin9i a 03 t^ ri 03 I ■IB^OJ, 9[Bni8J ^ &H o ."S a ^•5 ■[B^OIi ■3[Bnraia: ■9IBII e 35a •I»loi ■8[Bni8J ■SIBJt ■i«»<)i •siBtoaj ■»IBM ■[BJOX ■8[Bnra,i •aiBjl II g«0 iM wco r^ vO oo r- raM "* O eo I* I r- OMgiftccai-^oot- r~rH00lO00-4IC4AO0)'r laoooorHiaoiaoeo ^O1iQ0"*(NeCf-ClOrH oa-^Ot-oge-'^'^c-i a I s ■ 'iS^S s o m o q S fe is I ° JO O g aoeogr-jt-gra^^^-*i-trHgeO"-H 1 •[BlOi •9tBUI8^ ■3[BH 1 •IB»0X •eiBtna^ s ■aivn 1= •moj. ■aiBmaa •OIBH Ii 15 a •IBIOJ. •aiBcas,! •3IBW IS s •I«l«i ■BlBrnaa •3IBII SI OH ■[BlOIi •oiBtna^ •aiBH •IB*oi •8[Biue,j •SIBRt 3 a CO '^i >o to to S|8§S SgSfeg S§S88 §gs3s Sgggt: sgasa sao'ss ssass SS%!S{3 SS^SSS SS ■'t'oJ » I St I o I K a -SB'S h C ED A O) n on BY COUNTIES, TOWNSHIPS, CITIES AND TOWNS 329 r- •*< 30 M ira lo "i§3gsssiiSigi§g §i 'iissf^iimiiisi s| %mu§ I ^ii'8g§siaigsi2ii *s =ssss8ssss!8sass8s as Sg?ISSs5 iH ^- IN r-f iH t-1 SSftSSSSiiSgS^SSSSS ss 5§§8seS|g||||8| "ggsgasssssg; ?C3(2 f-1 cocoincoiOM SSgSS?ig3S38; sggcse s ^a88"'a'=3ss8sss3s?°°ss 3 i-llSi-i-*ga'*gt-THiOcOiaOj'^0Dr s^gass s jsJa'^s-^saflsssa-'fts •-'s r-l «0 tH iH iH rH iH iH i-l H l-l i-l r-i j-i i-H iH SgSSiSS 3 -'S8»feSS85SS5!SfeSSS "^g '0Sg*ga«-«IS;S83gSS88 "S § '"UrnSinio^S '^gS-'gSigsSSiJSSSiSiSS "S; sggsss $ "ssssssasssssssffs S3 r-c S^SiSSSS 3! 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SO O-P o^tH fc g CO t>|S P 82 338 POPULATION— NATIVITY, SEX AND AGE § ^ 5 o o m e n s ■IBlOi ■s[Bra9ii •81«W ■IBlOi '3[eniaii •8IBH •IBIOI, •8[Braaii 1^: ■aiBH •IBJOJ, •8[Bni8i ■aiBK •IB^ox ■8[Bin8,I ■aiBW fr! •a 03 e§ -OtM So lO ■[BIOI '3[1!ni3A •OIBK •injoi, ■3It!in3,2 ■SIBH k Pi M 5Sr-ii-i Me5« ca t- ift i-H to t^ ca o6 o i> c3 »l«« W M lO ti t-l r-l i-liHrH i-l W c5 OJ 65 55 ift & "W CO iH WW rH iH (N r-l iH csi-1 WMi-H« e ^^u ,;sss rHrHi-t iHeOW©*0100«50>l003iH dOl M i-l«r-li- c& i-i o3 CO in o) 00 eoLAi-l iOI>- I »0 i-lrH«'5i'* >Oi-H oa •* t- SgS*"^S85SSSS ^fe &%«3 3^g £SS^ rHrH»O00& ffiSf 3S" gas ?ias I CO o oa jH -JO o lo « o t- © >-i as -.ji lO 00 o iSo JlO»2t-C-]QC05(CO5 ra^ Si M -^ la ffi 58 a I Q I t-t-«CO ^3 t~ lArrcoOD CO lO laGOF-OS 3K S-*SS§S S ?- W c5i>co C 5SS5S SS^SS S^S8S3S 3toio leocoacocoeOrHC lr-i(Nr-l«se-i-lO0'' MrHOQ C 55SS IS rH CO ■*}< m m O CD t- gS3 2^ 65 53 w 5) M « fe3S SS3B* s:!o io got--* •* (oe SS-'SS S'»3iSSg3 Wt- OS rH CO so W>H«©t-J«QQO TO Ttt^-;-^ sss sga"gsgsn§|g||i3.iS3S s"Sfes gas ss^ 5;igs'-g§g|S|||5|!g'=^sg 5»sesis ^S35§gi|S|gS«S3 g»^ g"3 SSa"=e!lSS5pK|g||S JSJ3 S-^ftSSS S 1 ■s i " i S_» a IS I A; I IS 3 I IS I j i i ■^ I Sa, o H ? > O O s a n«.g§ ffl ■3g! ill if CD 5o I e I I la I I'd I I P ! d is 3 eS I H jo 'A ;-* rH rH t-H PH iH CO (SI -ap"* OQOOQW'iHrH i-H iHi-1 WW rH i-< CM iH 1-1 « ©i Q rH *5 ■* oO i-l « rH & ^e;qiAOi«CMe>)Ma Co ] CO rH O^ '^ 03 I> C^ C4 C4 rH iH rH rH rH N N i-l gS3 ess ssg'^sss^sgssais"ss3 sssssg^asass rH rH t- t- W OT «5l> © rH rHrH rHrHU) infiSOO rHOOt^OiS&COeOOsi&Ol *< «rHlO lOO'^eO'*'* OiiMfM O) ' »0 iHrH OSrHCOlAOSrHCOrHCDrH ^|§g|Ig°^E3S S-*S8S3« 3 toco CO lOtrW H M (M rH rH rH rH Wrt°?5::'~'5312*~*3®^ >4««rH rH (N SrHM QrH s^s- COrHrH aHO^^C0<»00S0Q^^>e0<^150Ml0Qe0rHO OsOQ-* T-H (M CO fc^ rH rH li^rHCDC4 O rH ■* Ift rH •* Wa M 64 -^ -^ O in t- csl S rH rH rHCO(r5f- OlAo -*&rH bSrH rH rH rH s^as COrHrH 00 rH go W lA 0'^M'ffl'c5'oO~ o c go* i i i S i 1 1 ICI 1 II III i i 1= i ^ 1 Id 1 31131 IS ! - ' nwiooocpcoooocoiaco CO(?5»«C5T-H>CO"^OOrH ■g I S ?i (a, gg'aOg = .Sooffl, n all "*- ■ " a« o S P ft ?. CO p, 1;^ a I p, .WJ - as S n a „ 00 |3 . to u 5 -Sft n 1^ >4 >^fliph lis o . a a S« 340 POPULATION— NATIVITY, SEX AND AGE *» b-'s ^P SS BY COUNTIES, TOWNSHIPS, CITIES AND TOWNS 341 gsgs i ssss s in ScSSa ^ © sess a ! « O ^iS i 5 g: M kI ! o o 1 'i s i Id 5" m> CO 1 li *E3 IF! el •gtH ■IBlOJi '3tBin9,2 ■aiBM •I«*0I ■8[Bni9J •3IEH "IBJOi ■8[Bni8^ ■eiBH •lB*OJi ■9[oniaj ■aiBjt "TBJOi ■aiBtaaj ■8IBW •toojI •8IBin9|I ■9IBH ■mOJQ ■9[BtaBj[ ■81BM ^s i^s ii iH iH OO © 00 00 *> CO 00 -^w ^oe S i-l COlHO s^« ssi iiisiii§igiB§s n^ii -fl-co-* -^eo •*■* 3gs gag §a§83S3|||i||p_ gags arHNNi-Tw'iH 31^® SaS S'SS^SS|g|g||§§| 5^3S XS rHiH iHlH fcas sssa8g8|§g§||g SOS t- I-l eg O0C4 Ci Wi«63»- |sssg^|||g|g§g g"S; sse 1-1 l-i iHCO^»3«CD00C-rHia rH rH rH r««CO"#"^^^'^ 3 lADQ OitO-^ i^mi rH rH rH r-l rH S5 rH © 5S rH o5 00 00 W rH rH SSS SS8"S8Sg||||S| 3«S8 SS" ess egS^SISIIlim g«^S5 sa°° ess s!ss'^s|g|§gg|g| g*~BS ■"' 8°>s S53a'^s8S|g§|g|| s-aa ^S"" ^S§3 SSB^^SSIIglgl 883 ssa 8sssge§p§g|sgs a"E3g rHrHC~tOr"tO^>«*^ OO cO CO C4 C4 C4 CO 11 CJ 1 M I 1 ■ < U i I S3 I i1 i Ra sg OS SO.! 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Kirkman town Pairview township Greeley township, cxe. ol Irwin Grove township Harlan city (township) Ward 1 Ward 2 — Ward 3 Ward 4 ■Hi POPULATION— NATIVITY, SEX AND AGE ^1 •[BIOJ. •9IBra9,I •8IBM ■teioi '8[snieil ■8[8H •8IBni9|I •3IBK 1 ■IB»OX sienraj 00 •3IBIJ •qtH imox •8[Bnia^ •aiEH fe ■IBIOI is aiBraa,! •3IBH ■imoji ens ^ S 3SS||gfeSSS|S|E3 tOQt-OSMCQOO ©r-;(Mt.l&COO> C>li-1B ifl'^r^OOOirHNOt* O Om iNdJ lH<0«OlH»C^OrH'*1COl~0^''- |SS8gS|8gSg58f gSSS;gS;SS3gS8S3 p-^N-^sSSwSSSSofS Sco®cog»sNiaN©eqiacoio i » Wi-lC0Q0inia^.rHO'^K5-*iO00 jDc-eoaomgin-wcawir-i-iMt- c--osQ"riie^oocONo>-»ji->jiNt-ia SS°'gS?SSS?5a''^3°' -« WOJOOt-cn t-NlO» rHOOvO CO aWiHoj^t-.ifttooO'a >0 CO C4 rH CO t~ m TO rH T^ (N I £« 00 NiH iHrHCO iH rim g!:i*aa§'-'^s»'a»ft'* u i„a§.g'9g3 .g ■ 0*3 P- P- P- 00 +3*^ o o o a I o a p- -Is- « In * oo * « HI •e o « s ssssa S u ■ [BJOX i-iw tfi ■oiBtaaj: , ,_. •aiBW rH jOOlNS •[BJOi i •aismaa: I 1 i"*"^ r-i II>i-t©. •OIBH ; loPo ■IBIOX iH llHtt Cv •8[Bra9,I i-J ji-lt-ti- •8IBH iir^ « p •imoi i ; i'^'^ IF ■8[Btn8a 'ill ■BIBH 1 i i^"^ i ^ L s i i is 6« S iia fll ^ i 1° 1^ §£• U-h s° .•" Oi .^ ill 1 g oKi^W 1 D OO BY COUNTIES, TOWNSHIPS, CITIES AND TOWNS 345 " f"! ^r i-*r-ICg I— IrHi— IrH rH flO s^sas^fe^^gsasassagsaassss 1 3!Se8SgS53SSgS83|8t3'-SSgS^gg 1-H g-'s^gsiegsgsgssssgsgggjsasgs a -r 5- CO jfl 00 iH aasgsssasa? S"'gSftS;gSS5S8SSS««S!;S?IS8Sg 63 IM I 1 r-l ITO» s^sasisssssssss^ssftsassft^ a'»SgS§£3l5S3iSgSS3!SgS'^S?flS"'S3; q ■* a §Din CD rH« go 3 to C<1tH00M">»(iH 5 ITS W W OOi-)i>-^eO^-*CO©t-'flm I a il \^ ' o •s>. a o S ".a ■tiiq C « © h 3 ' J .1-1 03 O "— ' us lO iH Oi Oq fH 00 ■* t- ) iH iH CO CO 1 I iH I >S el!" 5.2 ""^S ■IBIOJ, „» K •BiBtna,! •aiBK •a •IBJOJ, il ^o •aieiaa^ •8IBH Si 1^ •IB^oj. •aiBraa,! SJ •8IBH •lB*ox •BIBtna^ 00 f-l ■BIBM 1= •IBlOJi •B;Bm8j •eiBM li •IBJOj;, ■BIB 1118,1 US •81BW r ■lejox •BiBnraa •BIBJH Of? »6 s^i^ii «gi le ggsgaa Esag SSSSSSISSS gssi;; S^sSS!; SSSSS SSiisS s|i seggjsgsgs gsggss 8SSj sasssss <»!gSg ssssss^gs a^sass «8S .asgsss ssa SS^ES^S tiSfe 2«^S?ESS asiis sgssssss assa gisssas »8K gs^sss sas |8g|38 scs .sassas "=8S sassiss "SS S 346 POPULATION— NATIVITY, SEX AND AGE P Z M O Z o o m w •imoj, •8[Em8i ■8I«M *l5rHt-03 §$ifiiiisiii fssiisss iiS3igsis§3iiississi «SSSS8S$3^3SS!SSSSS$3SSi eg ■QtM as •IB}Oi ■Qivuiaj£ •8I8W ga •a(H •I^IOlL •eiBraajc o5 OS IM rH i-t I-* IM (M IN tH N ©q i-H rH CO Pg is "IBJOJ, 2^ S i-f (N iH &q ai 'a[snra,S ■9IBM •O o ■IB^Oi ■8IBni9iI •9IBH rH ©^ tH ^ fH rH rH rH rH rH rH V El§gS5ffiF2gSgSSSgSS18Ses SgffiSSSSSS8?SSSlSS?gS§ag3'"SS ;g!SSagSSSS33SSSgS 5=^33 t- T^ P S"-* WtSPco COOoSSMHrnSiHrH'* feSSSHSSSfcSSSSSSSg'^SSS «5 a' 1 1 I I o. S d a S'3m g'Q o'^ OE-1 g oSeaososSp dfl ?+a 6^^ ^ 0J.« ^-Sa i-ji-5 h^aPHOo O l> l> Eh P O O X !=> o •IBiOJi sgg * s ■»i SIS o-3f •8ioca8|i ^^ •aiBK ■^a.ea ts •IB^Oi •aiBinai *g8 "§S s •aiBK 8«S •I«»0J. ■=1 ■aiBraaj[ §" ^ «s!g agis ,p •aiBK <8 M ^1 ■Otw •l«l«i K (MOilO 5 •aiBinaj ■^HCOOO S •aiew 1 Z r: §g5 a ■IBIOI *8[Bniaj s§a Z s ■ersH e fl^B et 13 •IBlOi e n •aiBnia,I S§3 1 gs ■aiBH •^S53 s Sg§3 1 •IBJOJi •aismait " "gg ES'H •oo ' •9IBK ■=gs : 1 s ^ 1 CS i H ■H w«, il >> -+j ^5 *«'-' a fl'Sc SgS a BY COUNTIES, TOWNSHIPS, CITIES AND TOWNS 347 5gSigi§§Sis^gi§S Sggg||gg|S68ag88|8 m g|8S§S3aElgS38g8Ss 3Sg8gg$$gl3|gg8a5iSg^ as ggSPaSSgSSfeSSrtffiS ss 2 « gj;t-»f5««^«,g,„„g^„ 3S ! !?3 i^SSSg^-'S**®^ ! .ill 1 ICSSSS'°8'- "=■53 gi;^53i:;;3SS;$S^?3§5SS ?l*Sg3fe'*8S^gS°*ftftSS'"^"= "=S - o» t- oa t- M o 03 I ^sw00"*t-O-*■-^McQ(^^fr3«&^e*^^ i8eSSaBgE:!S58g=^SSS9 "SgiSsSSSSSgasSSSSSSqia 3S8 S«'S?;aSSSS^8SSa ^»3aSSSSSS'»S*53S!=lg3S "ft 3?a-^lMl-ta'=^a3SS ooojoo(MrHgj252®2*****S®'*®® 38 i S3SSaaSS3Sft"8l3SS '"'S3SE3as'*s5'°g*'as*aa ?!S5 i m «3 to ■* TO t> CO t- M rH (N r-i to CO ^ eg N ■* -^ -ji CO w 55 &q ira S ■* i-i S rH iH ■* 35 K^ o IS .S -^ bo 3J ^ -^ « ^gSgilg 3&^SS o> ^ t- y? OS iH t r-l 00 CO 03 rH -^ U ea .H rH(N r - t- «0 » lO Os 04 J3 rH TH flS rH rH •-* «0 OS t- © OS SD o5 rHi-lrH y rH i5 ■<»( QO iS «*?33SS$S IQCDCPOOOSC) M ^OOOOOt e3-«sse3S ■^ CO 00 A rH W lOM cagt--* oog -t 1-S CO t- rH Ob 6 »ass6 ei iQ eo to CD i> u «g(»3 cs sa OS ti 348 POPULATION— NATIVITY, SEX AND AGE "mcu iaIiiggsiliS §sgs||gs|ss|g|2gg§ nil si •aismaa sga§3S3«iSii ^sg||gsgsg5gs3S|s| ■arBK i|a!s§^gag§|3 ss$g|g33fe|«gsggssg. || ssassss'°sg''s "saggssssag-'aaassga as •IBiOi ol-.- •aiBuaz iH iH 1-4 i-l tH rH H IQ i-i i-l ■* iH CO -W H 6 •erBK as8sas3"a8''a "'=Bi2s?"8s°°s'^'-"a!3gS'° °=s '■mojj rH i-i T-i rH*»»-i»H iH rH r-t r-4 rH f-i i-i J:c!£::Sr'SS3 fcs ■aiBinsa sS^^SSSS^SoSS^SS^iS f^S ■e[BM 5l8SS8S883£:Sga8iSg SS •wu a8ssj3ss«SFis8 a^gsaasss3ggss'-ssg sg ■OH 'st^nia^ Ha"ssa®"^gisssg *- ia§sas"'38*a°'«'"B'*a s^ •B[BK ogjoogegg igsss «'^Hsa&a*-'»a'"9"a''S9g as §2 D OS S5 •[Kt<*Ii i-l I-* r-t I-I rH , iH IH »H rH -ei^nis^ 3IS383a-*^88S S«5!i3Sl3SgSS'-5asgte3g 3g SSSSSSS'^SefJfe a°'«S5;SSSS33SSaS!3^5 S8 § ■WOj; sssassa-^esg^i a^^gsssssssfesesissssos as ^1 ■aimaag. s;s'°asas isssa '°"'gss!sa'=»s8'-3°'sssss $§ | ■arBW ^ss-^sass a-^sas^assa^a^ssa^s; gg t ■moi iH rH flO •aiBni»,I t-rt Tji !2!:i asgsa5!sssas*8aB ss e a; aiBPI 5S*'=§?saa^asiss '=«sssa3"s?§'°isi3s=>s°'5i as i o O Mm ■Si P _0 a l|gll Oh o ■rt CO .S +3 +a O)-*^ O 03 CO O-^ o ■ ir ■a ^ '.& I I I Bf I O 1 g s Hi t> ! I* I U I l<|H IS lo I'M I j O ° i lg eg ,li o P M ? lU o A O In J oca 'aar- Jill D „ BY COU.NTIES, TOWNSHIPS, CITIES AND TOWNS 349 > o ^ 9 •a s 'meoioiMiNOso««)Coeqi-i "S9E3«SSSS5i^iSSSS5'°SSSi3e S-*a51SSSSas-'3E3aB Obuooeg tA^ ^ ^ M ^ nH r** fH ^ ^^ '{JSc ssas i3!3iS5i "^-^scssftass^ssjjs ='*"aa3Sss°°ss8S'^s$g3s 'sssesssfesasss ■^S-«*-!S?SS8*-"8B?ia'^a«gS 3g"'5 lA ^ LQ o»ca ?5t>r SDo 1«l 5Po •[B^Oi 'e<[i3ara^ •ajBitt •2rHrHiHg>koeow-eo i^-ooto-^ m iiaiaco^ ieqiniHCQt--<>t49a i J I ■ ■ icoAseo la ai iH rH iH lO SI HC^C^-^ itO I i-^U3CDeLO I •erBK i-j >i iH I I « © 00 i-t I I A tool egt-iaao loq jor^; H CO (N t li-l ■* I I iH rH I I 1-1 rH C^OOe^eO I C4e4CbLQ ii>niaM M j-^eotooeqiHgaob tpc4-*t< i "I'B^OJi IJ^-iHCOM-^tpfM l(NOqOOU3I>(N N r l-liH-^ t-rH j i-^i -^ lu) va n M ! W l(N-T*< r iH (M l«i-t NCO i I N O rj •* ■* M O •* ^sa i^tO^eoM'^eo N«0lO liHiH(M I On s S ca M i i I I I I I I I I I I ^■s i S _ ' ' if IS l-H I . I o !! ins isi iw 1 O I" O I I o -a I I I r r a o +j ■s il i« ■S'S'PSSoSoc-r: 3) oon:^ Pi OO M f! i^ !||||S2 MP A I a ' , 5 "^ n g a " ffi OQCO GQ 350 POPULATION— NATIVITY, SEX AND AGE 1 •moi iSiiS •siBinau: ss^sii ^ f-j w +3 §sg3i S •3IBK *£ ■IBlOi 8SSS| i 1 •aiBinaa S3S3SS 43 o !SSSSg s s 1 &< r-l i S"SSS3 aassg OD a ^ TB^Oi assess i H ■arBtaaj SS8£SS iS 3 1 ^ S OS o eases 1 a^S ssssas ^ a -'iz; 8»SS8 1 13 •TO>> a a ro ; € *i i S3 a" • O (jfl d> tH c3 1 e § mtS IS is c3 bo •tB*c\L ■aiBinaa: "IBlOJi •arBinaa: ■BIBJI eg •WOj; •eiBora,! as •TOOj, •eiBM sisiliiiiigilis 8iiiisgii§igi§5 agsgigssegsgi ;:jgq:SaiSSSig£;€!3gS'° -iHc-JCOWO^Ni-li-KNrHWW 3SSSg8SSS8feSBSa »a iH i-t iH 1-* tH iH rH T-li-( °§SS3:3^S83ftS5«So'^ ?-SS538l3S8gSftSS'^ eascipba"! •BfH •WOi ■8[Binaj: ■aiBW ■mS!3 38 g fJSSS S3SSSSSl?SSSSIS!Sgl3!oS38 8E3 rHrHi— 1 iH I— 1 rHiHHr-t i-HrHrHi-H eaas s"sss3883!g38ssBgse es g gsss s'-3S3esa5;8ssssss3538 se >> ! ! a I 1 " y ■" '1 till tm PI I S3 I'M (H I O o 1° ■" Is o J S ] ^ 6 i-^ aS 1 i< ^« l«-9 OS ca o 1-4 I Is •w I o ° IW I '^ In |o jo I 1 9 li , !a ! I t-tt-t I I El Idg S 5 £ o 2.&3' V Q s Sg.H o B5 I I o •> la"! |3°| .si® lb 3^ rags ^ °^^S .,0 41 Id H P O O •I«iOi ■atstn^^ •eiBH S3 igtH rot** ■IBlOi •9tBia8ij; •etEjd isa 'IB^Oi •8tBnia,a: •eiBH •IB^cVE •9tBinM •eiBK 3 10 C» rH sir l-H H W SSfc'- ^ Oap 04 "ISIOJ, •eiBcaai •ejBH •WOi aiemsd •BIBH ■moj; ■9iBni^ ■»I«H o ^& § egj^*;** l*«lOi-< E:iS8i n^T 1^ s a ■Sana ^000 044 43 4-> pOgO 352 POPULATION— NATIVITY, SEX AND AGE ■TO<\L as bo ■aiBDiaa •eiBM "TOOi 1° 'srsoiati •8IBH iSSMSi§i§iSii5IISg !« ««ilSiSS3 iiil §s-igi§Sissiii§gss a« ss§igg«^s §§§1 gssisgssgsgiisissg &« sigggiss gm 386 * i °'*8ailSSftS SS3S g^'^BgSSgSSSSIKSSSS? "^ ! •ssas*-" saas sassassassssffs^ " i ■^"sagsgs*- ssss 61 13 ■i«i04M Si:?'' ag-sss •aiBH 30.,o.«ooj5rjag«<^ggt-;go>o5 co.a rn wapjra^gt--. ogggg 5' 1=1 Si •moi f:SS^%!:3|SiSSg|sS8S3E3gl ^U '°S|S£33Sa S|.g| •srBinaii •8IBH ■[«*oj. :3^S3S3!SSS3$S3^S%!S^SS£3 S" «SiS888SlS3 8|S8 SS3§5!S5:SgSS§8S8S^3IS gS "ssssssa" SgSP gSSSe!Sl8S86S|3SS8efe %s "gfcSSSSE; 8gPS8 •9[«inaa sssg&sgsassgasaqtgs aa "Sisssss*' sjgs; ■9i«rc e m3 »H s hn BY COUNTIES, TOWNSHIPS, CITIES AND TOWNS 353 &M m^ s^s §ga iS^§ 3S'=> g M ■CO 33 asssgasgssgs^ssggissees gS sgsggsss tgs ssKaaBgsssBgesgsgssesgs IS ftSS33SSS8 s§.e SSai°'SS!Sg3S?SSSSgS|5leS3SSS 8S "gSSSSSS ij^s; Pjaoo«»3»3gM«,g«,«g».gg«55,p!.g .-(iH [ -* 00 us O M t- eo sss "*-s''assssss'^s«°'8Sflsa8g ss "S3'-SSSS'° s^s feS S|gSoS3Bffi gssg S?35SSS38S8SSSg8g3SSg33SSSgS p^ »-es;sssi:s a|S8 SSS3Sg5S^SSSSg?^8g5%S2S^^5; 28^ SSSSS^lSSa S|fe i-tU3winost-ooiODT-iSOS<05«g3'*!-lt-oi; "as iHed-^iHiaj^oaooiootjr H c> CO 00 eo ui 05 lo t» t- c* r^ 00 lo in i-t tr*" *^fcS2S!22£i 2S^ 3ff»"a'-& i>a«iHi>oqg«-*e H O CD U3 Oj C4 I i 0009 kA03 a mpH Oau; CO fr] 00 uar Ht-KS"* CO OOi > I I I 00-* ■* t- CO 0> lO rlt 1-4 tK lO 04 CO O TjtOO I MiH i-IOJ OCiQ LA «0 lO Oa «0 e^ CO 0)9 iao>NOi'*t-« in;?-M a 5 Hi S3 ° S "^ e £ a £ ._ „ ©■a Mm 3* 3(i< CO, W Q . p to I ■a 3 - g K is g giii:-»^» •■ ■oaS'C 3u "'2 ■SaaoTSoia «mC3 P is 354 POPULATION— NATIVITY, SEX AND AGE 03 bO 1^ 9e "* i-f •a S p « B e ■paoi •9tBin3,I •even •piioi ■9tBH ■IBJOiTi •etBoiaa •8IBH ■I«*oi ■aiBtaSii •BIBH "tB^Oi •aXBTiraii •eiEH •reioj, ■8[BmS|i •ai^re ■I»»ox ■8[Bra3a ■9IBH so-* w 3j ES8S 'S&SSS ess^ M C6 fH pa » <0 OCD i-l ■ « -N M Tj* O (-■ fc- n b« fx a IOU3C~rH^C-il-iCOO »-t M t^ I— 1 OJ t» r rH i-l i-irH tA £- 1-1 rH fri © i-l C i-l I CO -^lA A O ^ Ot-C :KSSSSa"g ■ro*)lAOOOIOCOrH >-T'OQOCOO-«j<'DieoO(MOSOQ iHi-t COCO i-l®r-4 Cl r-l CO i-H CO in O M eoo3 O O (O ( O) io3eo£«nMoot-ir-ioooc£icoa> S o o D,-0 3 ° 3 o ^ So (0 g ft 5 m te a ° l»° Oft S°2u« c? 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W 1 •lB40i gss^ssaa-^sas § t- t-J-lO-*t-i-(eOKlNr-rD"* ■SIBUigj ^« ^^ ^M ^ ■-JI OJ *; gcgt-iococbwr-icmt-g S O Q> ^ ■* gtcuscawcoooi-ifriin i-f S| 1 a (W ^ 0! ia g^ ;"-"H 1^ l« IS 6 ''3 h § r1 09 CS •IBIOX s- i i i i r i i i i s ■3IBH to 1 i.-11-ii-i 1 1 IN ii-i i lis rHpOO omcMco 1 1 i<-i icoiH 1 •IBIOI g •aiBmaa Sr~Gl3 7-t > 1 l!r4c ■IB*Oi -Otllllillll-lrHI g en's •9IBm9i CO 1 1 lr-1 1 o •aiBW '"' 1 ! 1 ! 1 ! 1 I'^ 1 1 -* ! 1 ' 1 1 I ! 1 13! i i : ii i i i iS i i ill 111! iili 1 1 1 1 O 1 1 I 1 Q) 1 i : i il i il i i&j 1 i jsii'iiiii"! 6„ 1 l| |0 1 |W 1 |o 1 m 4 ' 1^ &^ H e .9 .a 1 ii '11 13 ill? ■OT) £-" o-g gS'gS h 5 o.gog|W|=» oO P 03 ?5 ■tB*Oi •ajBrae^i •9rBH •I8»oi iiB^^iii TB^Oi *9[BII19t2 •9IBJI •[BJOJ, is ■OH •rB^oi *9tBI119({ •arBK ■otx •Woj. •siBraaj •9IEK r •lB*oi ■aiBora^ •9IBW »6 sssssss^ sessss^i ggssssse oSkooSmS^S^ sss-* sgs SgS" asa sss less ^ LoSs i-iia ■<* « 3SS g3:K'°ai!i8 cqcQ cS TO-^ M 83§"S9S I I ■^ n t4 4^ I I A ' ' Saa gal o e: ^ ^ V Ho* BY COUNTIES, TOWNSHIPS, CITIES AND TOWNS 409 'i m 1^ )> in ^ 00 t^ 00 t^ rH Sii§ SSSSi i iigiSsi igiiSis isiiggisiisiiigisissi li se4(M(oeoe3-#eq OjCOM*-'*'*'*Mr 8 sssisssa ggasssasa ssgagrssssssa^sssssssss >-(iHi-fiO©t™T— I li— < r-( ^. l88SS3«8g t- W i-i M in i-H t- CO M o N iH M T-H N DJ T-l CDiA os«M®-^THMeq 9 SggSSgl SaSSSoSS gSS3||||§g|||$S|g3SS8 ss »^^^IH^3fr^IHIHI-^ 5 ssgssag SS28SSS sasss^aspss i-l T-l 1-t i-H rH rHrHr-lrH r-l rH OH.~I>to"*C ?g3SSSSSg H CO (M 5t-eocos sgsgesssgsas a 3gag!5S8 3§S|S|S ^®se§||g|§g|gsgg|ggs 3 ss^ssss sasi35is?3 sss§||S|||§g|ss5sess5 sa 3 3S8SSSS sssfesss ss5!S*as3g8§sfsa9!sgsss8 sa us -* c5 ro CO CO so "^ iH -cSwSS*p? ' jr-cS^ "«''^ gfc rt t^ggcortF-ioSo S oSSa B 3 S3S sass||8g^|§igs3S5Ssaas ss •^ CO T-i <0 N G^ "V CO & gg^ssss ssss; ^ lii f-1 en (B c Ji >!»< t- Cb t- TH g SSSaSSSS SSSSsSSS gSSSg|Sg||S|8SSS5:SSSS sg ^ i-( M 1-1 -*tD ■>*<■* u3 2 ^ OOCOtHt-(NC 5 CO (N iH oot- I It: as u o a •So te P 2 rt 5 o S S *^ o o S « C3 3g f^ 1-1 I.&P"-, •a S £■ ra o o20 aaao S I «3 i»' Jm' 'a « 03 ffis o i.2 iH r O I ° lOn Id S ■=55 o I ss -^ - lusea ■9 'gas-s raoJ-ODp g • oil g 'p'0'a'a'a'c'a'aS-''|5'-go*' 'S(ac3o3caesia«8^E_£"fe w ^^ .X jr M : il ™ : O a B lOja eB p 'SoMg op M •16 410 POPULATION— NATIVITY, SEX AND AGE •d K cs u ^H ■♦* ^ a ^ S U h ^ « ^ W ? s? o o is O s Hi Mm OS ■OH •OH ■r8»oi '9ISni3j[ •arsK -EBloi 'S[SIIEhI ■eiBM IBlOi 'dfe 1110,1 ■8I«M TB^Oi ■ 3iBiii»d: •eiBji . Vnoz ■aiwna^ •9IBK gs us ■ViOZ 'eiB 013,1 ■8IBM "tB^Oi 'OfSQIS^ •8IBH _-5 e a 6- "* © Co W & OS O tOt^ pO? 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"^•'SS'^a S''ss3a-*sas'*a« a i ssassss s^ssassssss*"* '3 ^1 a B?o,L aCO-*0000«M g»Wrt ©K*rH©oggrtrH s rHT-1 I— It-H NrHi— IrHi-H g p S a •I [rHrHCO-«i«l-t j Ifl j [IflW j (N WtN W 1 s •G[Bni8^ 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 -■ 1 i« 1 ; mill -* •91BH t r-l i-l CO ■^ i-l 1 Tt* 1 ICCCO 1 (MrHC^lM j s •IBIOI •aiBraa^ j j jM« jrH NrHrHt-« r m t-i rH [ j [ ?3 1 iH »-t 1 l®iH 1 tH rH r-1 1 1 1 1 t i ! r 1 II ! ill (M •3IBH I 1 IC0« 1 1 iHrWr-IMW 1 1 1 1 1 1 r III II 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 I— ■[«»oj;, iH 1 1 1 1 1 1 j I 1 N j 1 1 rH j 1 1 1 1 1 1 ! 1 1 III III 1 1 I i -* •aiBcaaj rHIillll jlli-llllf-lllli CO •8IBK 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1"^ 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 '-' •IBJOJQ II 111 1 1 1 1°^ 1 1 1 (M ■3[Btnai[ II 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 I" 1 1 1 r-" ■aiBH i i 1 ! 1 1 i i i i i i i i"' i i i '"' E E -3 1 IS s i1 f a 3 - iJ iiil§liiiilll ill 1 j i P i M i i i i i i i i i i i i ! i ° ! 1 '2 i ! J 1 ! i i ! i i ! § : i y i § ■i § iS i is i il ii i i 11 IS 1 1 Ml i! ^ i^ 1 i* i • i '^ i 'o ! j'^' { . i° i ! o ' M ' « I . 1 1 H 1 M ft u 1 IP-°iif| l-ol III:!- nm fqp pph o hCji4 h^ oSD 412 POPULATION— NATIVITY, SEX AND AGE E-i P O O w El O '='1 b Ed I® -oh •fB^Oi ■oiBtnSii ■ayen 'eiBcasj •9IEK •I«*oj, •aivma£i •ai-en •tBlojt •aiBniBiI •«IBH ■moji ■arama^ •OIBJI ■pijoj; °a[Bin3^ •eiBM ■IBJOi •eiBinaa •BIBW §^ a 5 a If o 5 «Ol> 1-1 i-i^iisg gsggiggiiigs 33 oS8e r-tWC-O31N 00 « *- t~tDiN QM !-*■* ION iHMM s^'assassssss -SsSua l3c?hScd lo^usSlSCiS SSSSSS^^gSKiSSPlft ifltgaUro iHco l> i-C TO :s33iP3sges? SSs-^iSSSSS -coiS5c^i-»fi-^-^T 3§g8S8^aSSS «LOC4 © M ■* 1-lSC S ■« S S S ft r 3SSSSSS ^3SSSSSSS35 ft ft I S (3 ■** +a 4J O 0,« ■£ mO CQCa 1 o d o rS 1 M ■ gsa - £ "— » £ ° a X) -w +» S 2 S w5 g O ^1 BY COUNTIES, TOWNSHIPS, CITIES AND TOWNS 413 O O (^ a a SI tl ">! t» •a u S OS BD a 5 e n s Ena 0,0 '2 .* E3 Si •oH •Pi •moj; •atBnisa •SITSPI ■IBJOj; •aiBcnaa •arBK ■IB^ojt 'eTBme,! •OIBK •mox ■oiBcnSii •arsw •rB*oi ■9[Bnraii •aiBH ■[BIO J, •oiBaia,£ ■9rBW •IB^OJi •aXBnra,! •9rBit ■■c iU ^ S3g»ISi§l §?il§ligi5iiig|gi 1-1 r^ Cq 04 r-< 00 W i-l i-i N iH i-l ^ W M W W t-J iH r-t r-i ri N iH rH SS°°S gSgggggH |'€§|§||ggS8||S88| sn B gasi|geaes sg3§E:ss«^S!3sg'°sgs as fe 4l3tt85lSSSg=° ?3S3SS5l8SaasSG3-'"SoS 3SS^5!aS^S SSSSSE:?5SS3SaS8-"°$S3 gS^^SiSSg^ ?5SSE:SS^5S§3§S^S^ggi S S3 S -*i-lr-(0O(MiHi-(CO(M T-Hi^-NeCKNfiSrHiMi-ufS^ftqtSi-HHiSrH '-iOOt— OOC-lOlOSCOOs !5ooosO;03i--(Otc.r-(rcoO'"t-«'f-"-'-*t*-t-goo @S oS |ss|ss5!sa B|gs§8a3Ssef:egRas5 , §?3 §"a|S53SSi5S s^ss^giKSssgggssss fSS O 8SS3§SS33S ftgssftsssssassgsass 1^ ©J , iH SS S ^^aSSSSaS 3SgSSS2SS2SgS8aSS 38 3 S'°E3S8ai3{3!3 SS8a§3S§8aSgSfeftaS?; ffiS SgSg83f:gsS33S3feS§S r- in Ci CO 00 S t- t- i-n so (Q im rH O CQ rn t- CO P N iH MN rH •:• ' es CS 03 ■♦^ £ i?. '2'S ?«a o.So|nS 414 POPULATION— NATIVITY, SEX AND AGE u Si .9 IS ^ _ ift-4 "t^ioj; ■aiBraaj ■8IBK 1 •IBJOJi So ■aiBraaj: « ■eiBH S •lB!»H ®* , »0 1-1 1-* i-l i-H ;a s r:sag§ss!ss siases^sss &^S§SSSS!$ s^ssssg^ng aa a !9"»asa'»'"='S3 ssss^asa^a -l«o f~tt-ii-i »tseoes'ttU3»«e^r-j aaa^osot-iOiHgco^; ■* i-iiH i-(i-* us C> CO (S O rH«0I>O 00 91 04 td M 3? tA °I2 BO iH »a rH lis Co IN »H iH S w<=)?ii ©^>1 3-^ S a"** -^f « ® S S53 ?3 ;^«SS?S53»-*S SgSJeSSSSS*"^ coco 14 CO T-l CO Z^ ^ 00 04 n (Q iH ei t- rj QD (D 14 O 44 T-j oowgooo^orta ujat-cggwggujg coo t> ArHsqCoOCOCDCOt^ 03^AC>cqOC064e4O Qia to t^ a^' ■a I a a si" .■H-w a ^ - £1 . ,M 1 :&'! i 0-*oeqcocoiflOcoio \a o o Hio'O'ct'd P ft JH t^ fi _j O M . wo P.51 32 gCB-g > jy iH M M '^ I ! I I I I ^ ■gao H rt So & nn ogo a P,3 03 OS OS OS F4 35'a.9 ■li 5 flo BY COUNTIES, TOWNSHIPS, CITIES AND TOWNS 415 sssssssBssas r-t H i-i Oil »-l' iH ssasasssasis O«pHQI©t--tflO0at- gt-^ggt Q0tre«0>MeDC0C400>AO "fta^sis SSgSSSSSSSSs^ ;3$SSf:Sg3qiSS2» iSSSRiSgSS!?^" JSS" OQLOLAcOOaoOt*eOiN tOC^OOAMCOrHOOXNeO AMCOrHOOXNO SqlSaS^igSStSS® 3ss«s8ssaa« ss'='sa«s55ss« a»*ssss'-ss'^ tpoioaoiss 't!®o»^'-H 3S ^-^ eo iHi-iM S I t o ■ ■ s . I s I S i I |2|ii ■gSoSm S e> u P a soa os g I, ,.9„ '■SK CO IQ l-t Oi M CO W OS lO t- I CO rt rt M rH 1 S 1.9S -P 4 t(>l>l> •a 1 1 ■JB^OJi as| |s§gs5issig efgg|8 •aiBnra^ ea« g»-!33asS538 8|S!S85l •aiBH sag RSSgSSSoaS 5ig§S§S 1 sa ■moL SiSS S3S|SSE3Sql sgesgi; ■aiBoiaa sss ^^s^fs^ssa s|sssss ^ S g E3S3 3"aSS?5SSS SgSS8S ^1 1 1 1 i fa ass ^'"ssssass a|sss8a a B •a 53 •lB*> N •IBlOi THW(NrH ■9iBre i-HII I t-«iHli-4ieQ iHgW^Wr-' 111 lOpO ■IBJOJi iMiH 1 1 iH 1 1 1 1 1 1 l-«^IHlH(M II 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 •aiBraO;! iHii )ii-t iMiieqi II II 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 II 1 •ai«H rHiHI lllllllll lOJi-lrHll 1 1 ! 1 1 i ! 1 ! ! 1 II fell ■lo^oji III I 1 I I 1 1 1 1*^ 1®* 1 1"^ 1 •eiwarafl i i i i i i i i i i r r\ri ■9IBM iii iiiiiiiii rir, 1 i •s g Belmond township, exc. of Belmond Blaine township, exc. of Dows and Gait Dows town, part of (see TranMin Oo.) - Total Dows town in Wright and Eranklin Counties Gait town Boone township .. Clarion city (township) Ward 1 Ward 2 Ward 3 Ward 4 Dayton township Eagle Grove township, exc. of Eagle Grove and Goldfield — .. ■Rnp-lp flrnvft r>itv _ _ __ i j : 1 i j 1 I 1 1 1 I 1 93 ce 03 s: 416 POPULATIOiST— NATIVITY, SEX AiSft) AK^S n a U 03 "3 1 ■TO o S •TB1 1 . 1 1 1 1 .^ 1 '*-' . ^ ! o ! ffifpliifl^i: "3 1 •[BUOJi ■sa 03 *0[«Txia,i •giBTO il N •I850J, ■Biemaj ■9IBW OH 53 •I«V)i ■etBnraj: •BIBH 2 Viox •eiBnraj •9PM Si as S TB^Oi •sprasa •9IBH ■OtH •ie*oi •a^Btcraj •BIBM ■[«}0i *9XBni3J •9rBK if i ll§ lg § IS §i ^ I.S g| ,i gs . ss i §s Sfe §^ §s S§ i |8 SS8 C3 gs gs g- gs 53 s B& ftS u as ss V «■> S3 CO' gs ss g s?; ssg s 8S §§s s ss ss s to to sg s «" ^s s ss ^'S s ^s S8 s J-M w ^--^ OH « u O ^ l'3> I 1^ I ■"« l( 'i OS t< O BY COUNTIES, TOWNSHIPS, CITIES AND TOWNS 417 ipiiSg iigiii§iii§gigg3§§5Sg iiftiig§ iiii§feg|ss :§iiiiggiii »0 i-l i-l r-l i-l O) 1-4 &4 CA C^ (H iH i-H i-( iH 1-1 ^ sgsssss 5S|a|§gss5fe§ss?iSSBsasgs9 isgesssss !5ss|§33;g!S3S5fe£5aggsssgg gSiiiii 3e§i§s« «3i-llHtHiH r- T-l 1-1 iH frq r-i rl iH fiq r r-ltoiHr-lr-fr-li-l HOOWirHrHiH iH i-< iHi-(i-l CNr-liH rH 3|ga8S3 83fl383SS?8aa?SgS«aSfe8aS § sgs^ssasa ssgssaaaassssssasass'^s 3g B§gSS3S53SS5SS8S^S85lS3aSIS" iHSa l(5i— ir-li—li^ r-t rHr-lrHrHi-IHiH 3§SSgS9 8|SS3SS5iS8835SSKSte5iS!S?3 ssisasss 3gSfc3«SaegS88Seg3SgS :fS85Sa Sgffig|S85;{3SSg3!8SS;§gSSeS sssessa si F5S5!SS?S55l888S8g8a§5S sgsassjs 3SS8S8^sssss8S!5i5es^asj SS^SSS SS88£2S§&3S8SSSSfeSSgSS&Si3S3!S 355S333 SSgaaagSSSa^SSiSSBSSgSgSS ;SS3JSSSS S§!iSSIsa?SS85lgag3gS;5lSSS IS 3 tx S2 i i '.9° i i i ISO I I I las : I -gas I I I I Is ! U ' if"?" I I I lo, - ' 'ag' W 0« CSS rih^ 27 O ^ tH fO ^ OS a a ; „ a S n lis o o r o . 418 CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 TABLE NO. 2— By Counties, According to Age, Sex, Color and NOTE— N. B. W.— N. P. denotes Native Born N. B. W.— F. or M. P. denotes Native F. B. W. denotes Foreign Born White. Colored includes all Persons other than Under 5 Years of Age 5 and Un 10 Tear 3er 3 10 and Under 18 Tears 18 and Under 21 Tears Counties and General Nativity s 1 ■3 es7,7m 188,415 46,952 1,128 1,265 i ,3 "3 "3 180,950 124,510 51,371 3,999 1,070 '3 ■3 1 S57,S81 246,463 101,243 7,639 2,136 ffl 69,032 42.931 21,685 4,104 412 i 3 Total for State . ... N. B. W.— N. P N. B. W.— P. or M. P. p. B. W — - m.iios 23,686 577 630 92,350 23,266 651 635 m,9ii 91,746 27,879 1,626 663 / 118,865 89,389 27, U4 1,666 707 21,0,779 181,133 64,993 2,281 1,370 n6,m 121,953 49,872 3,540 1.066 69,73S 44,1&! 22,790 2,291 470 a8,765 87,113 44,376 6,396 Colored 8% Adair — Total . 8J,S 736 107 S21 749 72 i,66.i 1,486 179 8o2 723 107 1 1 029 582 44 2 1 835 644 190 1 SOT 699 106 1 1 619 661 58 ¥16 630 186 1 i.ess 1.422 213 2 2 1.2iB 1,143 102 2 1 1,651 1,271 375 2 1,159 929 226 3 1 917 784 132 1 "Y.l^'i 1,002 476 13 1,139 909 223 5 2 85i 731 119 1 '1^37^ 940 425 9 2,298 1,838 449 8 3 1,768 1,615 261 2 "¥,865 1,942 901 22 . ^33 324 101 8 '"sue 246 66 4 BIS 302 212 5 m 677 106 101 10 379 140 194 46 '~m 482 180 32 T«7 954 869 lis 6 800 497 279 20 4 m 281 188 20 m 1 '"F06 263 42 1 "Toi 314 188 1 "Tio 627 120 60 13 378 143 214 21 "TsJ, 462 207 15 'Z'b'sI 1,045 437 W 12 &}5 497 318 28 .7I 243 222 8U N. B. W.— N. P N. B. W.— P. or M. P. P. B. W. .. 624 2U 9 ArtaTTiR — Tntftl 61S 581 38 5S1 509 21 1 I.ISO 1,090 69 1 61i N. B. W.— N. P N. B. W.— P. or M. P. P. B. W. 609 93 5 Allamakee— Total N. B. W.— N. P. N. B. W.— P. or M. P. P. B. W. SOT 716 141 1 S72 729 140 3 1,7X9 1,444 281 4 i,08« 616 398 a Appanoose— Total N. B. W.— N. P. N. B. W.— P. or M. P. P. B. W i,m 1,365 416 9 18 739 422 311 6 1,786 1,304 446 13 23 750 413 334 3 3,59 J, 2,669 862 22 41 l,Ji89 835 646 9 J, 857 1,421 354 63 29 7i0 384 341 15 1,889 1,395 406 60 26 7i7 361 341 16 s,7ie 2,816 762 113 55 l,t57 745 682 30 i,506 1,915 432 121 38 1,066 460 673 33 2,^89 1,970 356 122 42 i.ots ii7 OTO 26 ^,995 3,886 787 243 80 2,109 907 1,143 69 i,70J 1,304 226 Ifil 23 Audubon — Total N. B. W.— N. pT N. B. W.— P. or M. P. P. B. W... ... 757 283 40S 66 Colored Benton— Total 1,S50 1,162 196 3 1,269 1,063 202 S 1 B,Slg 2,027 463 13 9 1,U0 1,148 284 6 3 875 686 186 3 S,61S 2,216 397 6 1 5,ftS9 4,071 909 41 18 S,9iS 2,367 660 14 12 1,783 1,415 360 8 1,268 1,001 260 7 "2^35] 1,825 483 36 10 i,eJi9 1,253 379 13 4 89i 661 229 4 1,2m 969 235 6 2 2,m 1,906 463 44 12 1,62S 1,222 367 25 9 875 667 203 b 2,^80 1,970 495 13 2 ;„778 3,730 946 80 22 »,«72 2,476 746 38 13 Jt,769 1,328 432 9 1,81,9 1,358 466 25 "l','w 2,517 823 88 17 2,m 1,663 730 37 12 1,1,06 941 447 18 1,709 1,277 413 18 1 S,i99 2,668 840 80 11 2,28i 1,663 681 28 9 l,SiS 886 441 16 3,558 2,635 879 43 6,9U 5,069 1,663 168 28 i,72S S,WS 1,411 65 21 2,7^9 1,827 888 34 J, 378 N. B. W.— N. P N. B. W.— P. or M. P. P. B. W.- . . . 944 387 47 Black Hawk— Total .... N. B. W.— N. P N. B. W.— P. or M. P. P. B. W. 2,ssn 2,044 446 28 9 l.SOS 1,209 276 9 9 908 729 174 5 3,001 1,999 806 ire Colored 18 Boone — Total l,6t6 N. B. W.— N. P N. B. W.— P. or M. P. P. B. W . Colored 994 697 46 8 Bremer- Total 96J N. B. W.— N. P. N. B. W.— P. or M. P. P. B. W .- m 29 Colored Buchanan- Total N. B. W.— N. P N. B. W.-P. or M. P. P. B. W. 862 102 9i6 852 90 4 1,910 1,714 192 4 9iZ 795 144 953 813 139 1 1.895 1,608 283 4 'i.m 1,168 307 6 i,m 1,170 309 7 2,967 2,338 616 13 56^ 406 149 9 568 410 154 4 i,m m m IS Colored _ .. POPULATION STATISTICS 419 CHAEACTBRISTICS OF POPULATION. General Nativity of Inhabitants and Parents. White of Native Parents. Bom White of Foreign or Mixed Parentage. White of Whatever Nativity. 21 and Under 45 Tears 45 Tears and Over Total All Ages Male 1 i Male i 1^ ■a 1 i 1 Nat; Nat. Total Nat. Uu- Nat. Total +9 Eh U0,S89 23i,Wl 142,2(y? 90,137 4,088 us.m 228,496 144,841 39,14fi 3,602 856,S7» 462,602 287,048 99,283 7,540 YsTLm "5^801 18 m,7i5 133,660 63,016 80,961 2.119 2i,t,ms 123,186 67,229 66,416 1,432 5Z>,008 266,838 .120,244 146,377 8,651 l,2m,9S8 722,909 329,743 151,404 8,932 i.iis.ms 699,556 325,112 112,699 7,812 2,858,066 1,422.464 'so'ni "^^423 44 664,855 264,003 16,744 2,S8S 1,700 745 136 2 IMS 1,390 492 59 4 2,9S0 994 1,702 224 '"i'.sss 3,627 616 1,060 80 g,sp 748 887 712 ""i.mo 2,540 1,633 445 2 u,m 6,408 3,079 1,943 .164 S,W, 3,058 1,930 767 39 8,982 1,146 1,606 331 2,5m 1,712 681 118 1 i,m 1,375 459 49 4 991 1,692 157 3,688 567 655 83 z,om 744 834 434 ""j,',m 2,382 1,586 323 lO.VA 6,193 3,484 952 116 s.m9 2,731 1,899 428 21 8,893 1,095 1,571 226 2 1,925 1,124 172 5,095 3,412 1,426 254 3 S,8S2 2,765 961 108 8 5,660 1,985 3,294 381 "io'iie 7,315 1,183 1,716 163 J,,S59 1,492 1,721 1,146 "l^sii 4,922 3,119 768 3 2S,SS8 12,601 6,663 2,895 279 10,S>S 6,789 3,829 1,196 60 5,875 2,240 3,077 556 2 . 6,S9i 3,850 2,189 364 1 i.rsi 1,046 336 349 1 l,SSt 885 279 187 6 2,sno 456 1,047 867 2,377 331 640 76 1,SW 494 180 652 9,osn 1,676 673 785 3 5,856 2,874 1,630 1,421 31 a,SIB5 1,570 621 1,126 8 2,0S1 628 668 742 3 1,311 760 602 6 l,i65 909 297 269 ""ijeli 809 214 136 6 427 828 748 2,711 2,086 249 339 37 1,09S 429 150 514 ""¥,m 1,606 583 617 1 5,51S 2,837 1,475 1,187 14 g,915 1,414 511 977 13 1,798 699 646 649 4 2,S50 1,238 668 466 1 S,196 1,954 633 608 1 2,521 1,694 493 322 12 hS7S 883 1,876 1,616 ""e'.isi 4,463 680 979 112 2,il9 923 330 1,166 '"T,7ii 3,082 1,256 1,402 4 11,869 5,711 3,005 2,608 45 6,2Ji0 2,984 1,132 2,108 21 S,S29 1,227 1,204 1,391 7 5,0S5 2,543 1,418 1,067 7 7,581 5,4S! 1,622 497 5 5,77S 4,468 1,041 263 11 8,991! 4,113 3,768 1,111 "'"is'.m 11,382 2,264 1,984 260 6,597 2,648 2,486 1,463 7,155 5,278 1,489 384 4 S,S58 4,248 913 187 10 8, SOS 4,031 3,356 919 ""ii'Si 11,070 2,146 1,239 224 S,99S 2,637 2,443 1,013 U,7S6 10,735 3,111 881 9 85 61 330 19 11,131 8,716 1,964 440 181 - 47 12 17,898 8 144 ""835 32 7,124 176 48 2,030 80,5^ 22,452 712 4,399 3,223 474 111,590 348 496 "~"i97 145 65 379 ""333 5,185 4,929 2,476 12,718 8,109 3,307 1,297 5 W,82S 16,622 6,730 3,634 237 15,51S 9,260 4,216 1,972 76 8,710 4,385 3,202 1,120 3 9, SOS 6,467 2,527 802 7 ii,8rs 7,659 3,226 982 6 86,8^6 16,576 7,162 2,336 173 u,m 8,675 4,060 1,489 59 8,858 4,176 3,169 907 6 9,530 6,40a 2,474 653 1 2i,591 16,768 6,533 2,279 11 SS,i69 33,197 257 188 741 44 "iyioi 115 3 13,892 627 1,816 3 6,970 410 29,696 n.s&s "i^oeo 66 ""436 ""331 8,276 3,461 136 16,968 8,661 '"'126 6,371 2,027 ""ioB 712 SO s,ns 1,925 1,06.5 182 1 19,SSS 12,889 6,001 1,465 8 42 ""iio 582 20 420 CHARACTERISTICS OF POPULATION Under 5 Tears 5 and Under 10 and Under 18 and Under Table No. 2 of Age 10 Tears 18 Tears 21 Tears Counties and General "3 •2 1 "3 1 •3 I i rj Nativity 1 ■a 4^ ea ■i 4J Buena Vista— Total 886 8^ i,rs8 916 875 1,791 1,S71 l.su 2,715 495 m 99S N. B. W.— N. P 616 563 1,179 567 653 1,120 692 731 1,423 242 227 469 N. B. W.— F. or M. P. 267 276 643 337 309 646 660 583 1,243 217 266 473 p. B. W.- 0»^1/\t*m1 3 S 6 12 13 25 19 30 49 36 15 Bl Butler— Total "i'.Os'i 951 1,985 "T.m " 937 "2I0O7 "I'so's "i',W 2,9^7 554 508 "im N. B. W.— N. P 665 632 1,297 660 644 1,204 801 770 1,571 266 261 627 N. B. W.— P. or M. P. 360 311 en 386 359 746 639 620 1,269 239 227 466 P^ B. -^ 9 925 6 2 15 2 1,87S 24 m 34 ""m 58 "i',m 63 "i',Wi 64 117 49 20 69 Colored Calhoun— Total 'T,¥9l ""2"S75 '~5Vi "T^ ''i,m N. B. W.— N. P 737 790 1,627 728 668 1,396 996 967 1,962 343 367 700 N. B. W.— P. or M. P. 186 166 342 245 226 470 466 410 876 179 180 359 ji_ B_ -^ 2 2 4 9 7 16 20 17 37 'l>T^¥l 1,995 19 1 628 288 10 2 en 298 29 i^rtlm»prl 3 ^uiuicu — rtQi-Tnll Tntal 946 "T,m 855 'Y.rne 1,801 "i'sio 852 "i'.m 831 'T,m 1,683 '~1,W "i7>S2 1,001 1,269 ^jirroii — Aui>w N. B. W.— N. P 686 N. B. W.— P. or M. P. 237 259 496 352 366 717 738 713 1,451 303 324 627 F. B. W- 3 6 9 6 4 9 16 18 34 36 17 63 Colored 1 1 1 1 1 2 3 flaaa Total - "i'.W 894 98S 834 B,OSB 1,728 1,105 892 1,003 814 2,J08 1,706 i,m 1,098 l!093 2,950 2,191 51,7 364 567 384 1,1H N. B. W— N. P 748 N. B. W.— P. or M. P. 150 144 284 200 181 381 365 362 717 164 172 336 p. B. W 4 1 5 11 5 16 19 18 37 18 10 28 Colored 1 4 5 2 S 6 4 1 6 1 1 2 Cedar — Total 917 SSi 1,751 882 850 1.7S2 i,«27 l,S9i 2,621 502 478 980 N. B. W— N. P 742 658 1,400 661 658 1,319 908 883 1,791 294. 303 607 N. B. W.— P. or M. P. 175 176 351 213 186 398 379 382 761 191 160 351 ■E. B. W 8 7 16 40 28 68 17 15 32 Onlored 1 2,m 1 4,2-18 1,030 ~'m Oerro Gordo— Total — "i',m "T,S6S "s',2S9 "Y,5J,9 "ZVsd "¥,005 '"2^07 "1^951 N. B. W.— N. P 1,198 1,093 2,286 1,097 978 2,076 1,414 1,420 2,834 527 649 1,076 N. B. W— P. or M. P. 446 433 879 383 396 779 586 620 1,206 236 298 634 y B "W. 28 10 22 14 60 24 61 8 73 9 134 17 96 11 93 8 189 19 269 8 68 6 327 Colored 14 Cherokee— Total 861 SS9 1,700 89S 825 1,718 l.SU i,200 2,5M 495 494 989 N. B. W.— N. P 639 652 1,291 632 601 1,233 861 774 1,636 274 286 660 N. B. W.— P. or M. P. 213 181 394 249 206 455 416 388 804 168 186 354 P. B. W 9 6 16 12 18 30 37 38 76 53 22 75 /^r\^m*(>fl ^UlUlcU. — — — — OhlekasaT— Total '""ssfi ""815 "i'mi 8^8 ""s'fs "i',¥9s 1,J,29 "¥.s¥i "2,Tss ""m '"485 965 N. B. W— N. P.-_-.- 722 696 1,418 646 644 1,290 983 916 1,899 290 281 571 N. B. W— P. or M. P. 164 117 281 197 198 395 428 403 831 175 197 372 P. B. W Colored Clarke— Total ""s's'i 2 S},8 2 "T,099 6 ""ei's 3 "'"'597 8 "T,i¥s 18 91S 5 ""¥15 23 '"i'72S 16 7 22 "'Tn ""m 654 N. B. W .— N. P 536 525 1,060 602 569 1,17: 860 778 1,638 294 314 608 K B. W— P. or M. P. 14 22 36 23 25 48 49 35 84 26 17 42 ji_ B. -^ 3 3 6 4 1 6 2 1 3 finlnred 2 _ 3 1 1 1 1 Clay— Total 77J 800 1,571 ""w'l ""m "JVs'si "i',m 1,16S 2,«24 487 '"417 ^ N. B. W.— N. P 577 698 1,175 566 549 1,116 740 724 1,464 282 239 621 N. B. W— P. or M. P. 191 201 392 217 231 448 399 418 817 176 162 338 P. B. W - 3 1 4 8 11 19 20 21 41 27 16 43 nnlnrpd 2 S,12i '~i,m 2 ■{,108 2 706 '"751 2 Clayton- Total "T.m ~T.m "i^s "T,m "T,m "i'595 1,457 N. B. W.— N. P . 1,162 1,069 2,231 1,030 1,069 2,099 1,574 1,425 2,999 454 491 946 N. B. W— P. or M. P. 176 138 313 244 230 474 633 551 1,064 238 254 492 P. B. W .. 11 8 19 14 7 21 14 6 19 Colored i 1 2 3 3 1 4 1 1 Clinton— Total "¥,086 2,009 4,086 i,962 i,986 »,9i8 s,m nil 6,560 "i"s55 1,448 2,805 N. B. W— N. P 1,506 1,406 2,912 1,277 1,325 2,602 1,763 1,956 3,719 636 688 1,324 N. B. W— P. or M. P. 559 667 1,126 667 624 1,281 1,294 1,374 2,668 610 674 1,284 ji. B. W 12 9 16 11 28 20 23 5 25 12 48 17 79 13 64 17 143 SO 98 11 77 9 176 Colored 20 Crawford— Total i.m 1,109 2,216 1,118 i,089 2,207 1,7S8 1,651 S,S69 629 6S8 1,867 N. B. W— N. P 789 753 1,542 878 676 1,354 800 769 1,669 223 237 460 N. B. W.-P. or M. P. 316 356 671 436 400 836 908 826 1,729 376 376 762 P. B. W 2 1 3 4 10 14 31 33 64 30 26 65 Colored ..-~_ 8 3 i 1- 3 7 GENERAL NATIVITY, AG(B, SEX AND OOIX)R 421 21 and Under 45 Tears 45 Years and Over Total AU Ages Male 6 ■3 2 § Male i ■a 1 Nat. Un- Nat. Total Nat. Un- Nat. Total ■M g s,sei 1,232 1,435 667 "'s',olib 1,268 1,252 518 2 3,262 1,765 1.165 331 11 S,7S8 1,344 1,879 500 15 S,S17 2,040 1,164 306 7 s,2n 1,729 1,110 376 8 7,S15 3,293 1,906 2,047 69 S,2S7 1,653 969 615 '"Fed's 1,110 1,331 224 1,567 186 35 7 8,829 1,412 984 433 'i,sss 1,886 2,112 336 4 8,998 3,343 3,979 1,616 60 S,9S2 1,144 2,092 686 10 2,990 1,137 1,422 431 '"FFoi 1,261 1,206 441 1 S,0S8 1,663 1,133 237 5 3,528 1,366 1,879 277 6 s,m 2,097 1,115 245 7 3,076 1,646 1,163 277 1 6,756 2,909 2,025 776 46 2,9^3 1,458 1,120 365 """ilm 1,175 1,326 170 '"i'.m 1,692 194 20 6 2,522 1,289 952 280 1 i.lSl 1,740 2,167 221 3 S.SOi 3,174 4,022 1,066 43 S,U1 1,044 1,890 500 7 e.sii 2,369 2,857 1,088 ""5','9i9 2,529 2,458 959 3 6,300 3,428 2,288 568 16 7,2Cfi 2,710 3,758 777 21 6,981 4,137 2,279 551 14 6,293 3,374 2,263 652 4 IS, mi 6,202 3,931 2,823 115 6,180 3,111 2,089 980 ""5^336 2,285 2,657 394 "'s',i96 3,149 380 55 12 S,S51 2,701 1,936 713 1 8,^69 3,626 4,279 557 7 17,S02 6,617 8,001 2,681 103 7,373 2,188 3,982 1,186 17 i,986 616 397 972 2 2.18S 941 446 796 1,685 547 345 793 ~""l',Wl 822 390 669 s,en 1,162 742 1,766 2 4,084 1,763 836 1,465 8,978 3,984 3,313 1,699 2 9,384 4,601 3,322 1,469 2 9,250 5,582 2,643 1,009 16 io,7gr 6,113 4,087 1,661 26 10,121 6,675 2,496 931 19 9,101 6,431 2,516 1,148 6 17,11S 9,039 4,426 3,520 129 8J>98 4,880 2,454 1,362 2 8,256 4,336 3,018 902 8,234 3,768 3,191 1,285 a'es'o 4,290 3,113 1,224 3 8,558 5,318 2,454 778 8 10,210 4,960 4,108 1,132 10 9,666 6,534 2,350 766 17 8,5«2 6,166 2,474 890 3 U,621 8,242 4,620 1,762 97 7,893 4,629 2,440 924 17,212 """272 7,722 6,504 2,964 ■ 2 18,011, "l85 " 921 " 698 51 1 9i 8,893 6,436 2,683 318 202 2,058 1,014 412 628 4 2,276 689 678 1,001 8 2,1,17 1,387 463 573 4 2,256 1,097 448 706 3 3,/;S5 1,516 868 1,029 23 J, 898 821 439 636 2 i,m 585 723 640 ""uw 1,200 163 78 6 1,628 713 343 670 2 3,197 858 1,318 1,018 3 5,82i 1,609 1,708 2,474 33 2,278 665 450 1,290 3 1,729 873 350 505 1 1,989 609 568 810 2 2,185 1,312 386 486 1 1,990 1,008 418 663 1 2,785 1,293 748 730 14 1,592 7K 359 476 3,787 1,887 762 1,133 5 4,265 1,298 1,146 1,811 10 1,,602 2,699 839 1,059 5 4,246 2,105 866 1,271 4 «,220 2,808 1,616 1,769 37 S,i90 1,579 798 1,111 2 S,6Jil 1,169 1,322 1,160 2,281 296 135 14 2,921, 1,309 638 974 3 5,955 1,611 2,401 1,940 3 11,H0 3,174 3,266 4,639 61 1,056 814 2,276 8 17,808 10,900 6,0GCr 1,787 24 217 114 60O 28 to,99n 10,073 8,195 2,693 36 305 195 966 35 i9,7S7 13,200 4,846 1,696 36 17,623 94 1 212 543 30 , 10,586 4,990 679 29 278 97 2,038 9 31,734 17,281 8 945 516 1,631 1 834 196 6,282 226 16,591 9,409 4,894 2,286 2 298 317 578 58 1,693 674 590 520 '"""i^TO 1,081 133 67 8 1,296 596 295 404 1 2,758 753 1,083 922 7,833 4,288 2,840 707 16,089 8,622 6,858 616 24 170 64 1,609 5,646 5,048 460 122 16 7,667 4,290 2,310 1,061 6 i2,98S 6,964 4,620 1,393 11 23,374 10,134 8,807 4,302 131 10,802 4,199 4,573 2,013 17 5,382 4,859 426 82 15 6,989 3,995 2,259 733 2 M,H1 6,647 4,423 1,163 8 22,465 10,114 8,819 3,412 120 9,779 3,970 4,211 1,586 13 11,028 9,907 10 26 74 4 204 31 U,6S6 8,286 ~ 535 35 4,569 290 143 1,794 8 25,129 13,511 9,043 2,566 19 is, 839 230 106 1 '""983 36 S,Mfi 1,565 1,558 2,165 28 1,871 491 384 1,016 20,248 17,628 " ' ""2^366 "'"169 881 735 7,714 251 20,581 8,169 8,784 "i,m. 60 479 207 3,598 30 422 CHARACTERISTICS OF POPULATION Table JTo. 3 Uoder 6 Years ot Age G and Under 10 Tears 10 and Under 18. Tears 18 and Under 21 Tears Counties and General Kativity S at S OS "3 1 '3 1 '3 o S CS .2 a 3 o t1 i 1 ■3 I tirIIar ^Total 1,366 1,163 185 6 13 673 666 15 1 1 1,01$ 985 26 1,338 1,135 191 6 6 668 644 21 3 922 902 18 2 962 818 139 5 ~'l',S86 1,156 215 7 8 526 436 87 3 2.70i 2,298 376 11 19 l,3il 1,300 36 1 4 1,935 1,887 44 2 2 1,977 1,669 298 10 "i'rai 2,331 435 8 17 1,030 841 186 4 1,336 1,152 154 17 13 728 695 31 2 1,006 975 27 2 2 968 rra 188 2 "i.m 1,161 328 12 13 552 405 142 6 1,238 1,081 137 16 4 710 673 35 - 950 909 41 "~i,m 865 196 7 " 1^556 1,198 337 12 9 S26 398 130 3 2,57^ 2,233 291 33 17 l,iS8 1,388 66 4 1,956 1,884 68 2 2 2,036 1,643 384 9 "s',mo 2,359 665 24 22 1,078 798 272 8 1,831, 1.662 224 33 15 1,103 1,039 62 2 i,m 1,398 84 2 2 1,600 1,188 400 12 "¥,'iim 1,626 732 62 16 81,7 693 243 11 i,862 1,608 204 37 13 1,009 943 63 - 1,331 1,269 64 4 4 l,i86 1,055 414 17 1,646 760 54 13 778 664 218 6 3,696 3,170 428 70 28 2,122 1,9^ 125 5 2,827 2,657 148 6 6 3,086 2,243 814 29 ^,888 3,271 1,482 106 29 1,625 1,147 461 17 690 550 93 42 6 3i3 317 24 2 ""m 448 31 2 1 55^ 397 173 14 ""922 529 350 28 5 303 190 110 3 722 574 103 27 8 370 346 23 1 ^99 465 29 4 1 526 370 149 7 "i,m7 643 400 27 7 288 190 95 3 1,« 1,11 1! ( ] 7j N. B. W— N. P N. B. W.-P. or M. P. •P. B. W Colored N. B. W— N. P N. B. W— P. or M. P. P. B. W Oolored Decatur— Total N. B. W— N. P N. B. W.— P. or M. P. 6( 9f 91 f Colored Delaware— Total N. B. W— N. P N. B. W— P. or M. P. P. B. W Oolored Des koines— Total N. B. W.— N. P N. B. W.-P. or M. P. P. B. W- Oolored Dickinson— Total N. B. W.-N. P N. B. W.— P. or M. P. P. B. W 2 1,015 851 169 6 "T,id5 1,175 220 1 9 50i 405 98 1 2, Of 7S "iTsi 1,11 7i t 1 5i 3! a Dubuque— Total N. B. W— N. P N. B. W.— P. or M. P. P. B. W. Oolored 2,893 2,335 641 16 1 697 495 199 3 '~i~,569 1,281 274 14 ""Vis 765 144 6 2,889 2,329 645 11 4 667 475 187 4 1 1,529 1,230 286 14 ""808 683 119 6 5,782 4,664 1,086 27 5 1,361, 970 386 7 1 3,098 2,611 659 28 "'l,72S 1,448 263 12 2,885 2,197 649 35 4 es7 414 216 7 "i,s¥i 1,167 338 21 1 886 711 170 6 2,81/2 2,119 707 16 1 61S 401 210 7 1 i,m 1,129 312 20 ""S89 722 157 10 5,727 4,316 1,356 50 6 1,256 816 426 14 1 2,988 2,296 650 41 1 1,775 1,433 327 15 ll,ll7S 3,026 1,374 66 8 955 656 381 17 1 s.ans 1,608 632 66 2 1,368 982 364 22 -S,527 3,069 1,365 76 7 911, 521 381 10 2 2,295 1,554 613 27 1 l,32i 980 324 19 1 2,272 717 518 36 8.990 6,095 2,739 141 16 2,S69 1,077 762 27 3 i.50S 3,162 1,246 93 3 2,692 1,962 688 41 1 2,652 1,444 1,121 86 2,8^0 1,091 681 65 3 336 178 141 17 "~916 679 268 66 3 .f8» 304 149 29 1 520 233 226 60 2 1,37 383 50 4 ""1,97 398 81 18 8,058 1,194 822 40 2 336 186 141 9 ""w 564 260 20 '"In 296 169 6 1 VI6 199 218 18 1 PI 424 46 - 376 97 6 S,8i 2,2f 1,6( 1( N. B. W.— N. P N. B. W.-P. or M. P. P. B. W Oolored Payette— Total N. B. W.— N. P - N. B. W.-P. or M. P. p B W. 3< 2i i "Y.7i 1,1* 6i j Colored - . Floyd- Total - N. B. W.— N. P N. B. W.-P. or M. P. 91 6( 31 Oolored Franklin— Total N. B. W.— N. P N. B. W.— F. or M. P. p B. W. SS5 599 281 6 95S 891 59 3 85i 584 267 1 2 877 830 46 2 1,739 1,183 548 6 2 1,830 1,721 104 6 900 620 363 16 1 921 m 60 2 2 925 ■ 822 100 3 862 639 309 13 ""838 776 59 3 ""868 763 99 6 2,762 1,069 672 29 1 2.759 1,643 103 5 2 2,79S l,6&i 199 9 1.380 727 603 60 9. 4J 4^ Oolored Fremont^-Total N. B. W.— N. P N. B. W.— F. or M. P. F B. W. 2,326 1,202 122 2 "Y.m 931 234 13 2,292 1,177 100 6 "i72i7 1,026 217 4 2,627 2,379 231 7 'Y.'iis 1,967 451 17 91 81 Greene— Total N. B. W.— N. P N. B. W.-P. or M. P. P. B. W 956 871 86 SS5 846 89 1,891 1,717 174 P 7 1 Grundy— Total N. B. W.— N. P N. B. W.— F. or M. P. P B W 9U 621 289 4 862 657 296 8 1 i,776 1,178 685 12 1 785, 795 4611 491 .?05 290 Ifi 13 3 1 2,580 952 595 29 4 l,li5 587 499 57 2 1.01,1 540 448 52 1 2,286 1,127 947 109 3 392 167 184 41 ^27 189 196 38 3 S Oolored ^ _^ GENERAL NATIVITY, AGE, SEX AND COLOR 423 21 and Under 45 Years 45 Tears and Over Total All Ages Male 1 ■a ■ 43 Male 93 i ■3 1 Nat. Un- Nat. Total Nat. Dn- Nat. Total 08 1 J,, 801 3,376 851 627 47 2,1S1 1,901 199 23 8 n,65S 2,356 271 30 2 3,0611 1,665 1,228 271 3 6,585 3,169 2,716 603 97 i.m 940 579 186 'lH'.'iOB 4,466 6,380 1,588 21 !8,i65 973 804 386 3 S,«8I8 2,727 1,796 746 13 s,m 1.652 1,312 367 3 S,0S1 1,222 1,197 606 6 s,m 2,184 406 79 3 S.Sil 1,976 793 173 4.m 3,285 841 . 262 46 2,102 1,858 204 32 8 2,m . 2,409 274 31 5 2,899 1,544 1,160 194 1 6,808 3,137 3,072 510 83 1,571 878 570 129 .. u,ssn 4,528 6,038 951 10 1,91,0 864 827 245 4 •4,973 2,687 1,868 433 5 3,325 1,718 1,370 236 1 8,669 1,112 1,-146 409 2 2,6iS 2,172 402 67 2 2,755 1,864 773 118 9,»5 6,661 1,692 788 93 i,23, 8,971 7,230 1,378 362 1 9 6,324 3,280 1,217 4 6,590 2,880 2,802 9M 4 10,919 8,485 3 1,165 4 11,681 8,661 2,429 679 12 8,900 6,964 1,447 370 119 6,775 3,317 2,715 738 6 6,204 2,883 2,495 825 1 5,504 2, SIS 2,140 790 1 9,042 6,409 2,814 818 1 10,089 5,7« 3,382 943 13,418 9,484 2,775 1,087 92 8,S85 6,690 1,: 46 13,573 8,201 4,111 1,224 Jff 426 CHARACTERISTICS OF POPULATION Fable No. 2 Counties and General Nativity Under 5 Tears of Age S OS i 1^ 5 and Under 10 Tears- 10 and Under 18 Tears 18 and Under 21 Tears rones— Total N. B. W.— N. P N. B. W.— P. or M. P. p. B. W Colored Keokuk— Total — N. B. W— N. P.— - N. B. W.— P. or M. P. P. B. W Colored Kossuth— Total N. B. W— N. P N. B. W.— P. or M. P. p. B. W Colored Lee— Total N. B. W— N. P N. B. W.— P. or M. P. P. B. W Colored ijnn— Total N. B. W— N. P N. B. W.— P. or M. P. P. B. W - Colored - Louisa— Total N. B. W.— N. P N. B. W.— P. or M. P. P. B. W Colored - TiTicas— Total N. B. W— N. P N. B. W.— P. or M. P. P. B. W Colored Uyon— Total N. B. W— N. P N. B. W.— P. or M. P. P. B. W Colored Madison— Total N. B. W.— N. P N. B. W — P. or M. P. P. B. W Colored Mahaska— Total N. B. W.— N. P N. B. W.— P. or M. P. P. B. W Colored Marion— Total N. B. W.— N. P N. B. W.— P. or M. P. P. B. W - Colored Marshall— Total — N. B. W.— N. P N. B. W— P. or M. P. P. B. W Colored Mills— Total N. B. W.— N. P N. B. W— P. or M. P. P. B. W ^ Colored Mitchell— Total — N. B. W.— N. P N. B. W— P. or M. P. P. B. W Colored ^ ,-,, 919 720 195 4 1, 1, 64 2 1 1, i,(ns 441 5 1, 1,439 129 2 62 3,085 2.411 20 081} sn 813 58 1 928 466 458 14 1 SW 768 32 1 1,S75 1,121 223 6 •!6 1,S02 980 206 7 12 l,61i 1,354 242 8 8 797 740 64 762 616 143 724 216 2 1 l.iOO 981 410 8 1 l,S2i 1,366 112 57 S^OSS 2,350 653 28 24 SJlO 61S 27 78S 725 57 1 9911 613 471 70S 757 36 l.SSS 1, 217 12 13 1,2S6 1,023 192 9 10 1,S08 1,271 217 9 11 TTl 725 46 «/,9 514 132 1,861 1,444 411 2,078 1, 112 2 2 2,92/, 2,069 851 13 1 S,1S6 2,794 241 2 119 e,m 4,761 1,279 54 44 1, 1,256 70 1, 1,638 115 2 1,920 22 1 i.sn.i, 1,526 68 1 2,710 2,214 440 18 38 2,JiS8 2,003 397 16 22 S,120 2,626 469 17 19 1,5I!8 1,465 100 l.Jjll 1,130 275 6 1,097 i,,03i 696 16 1,2U 788 420 13 'F,SOS 2,281 196 8 21 i,m 1,299 412 10 3 2,662 1,941 712 9 1,781 447 1 11,8J,3 8,954 2,473 74 342 5,605 4,375 1,184 19 27 1,995 1,728 261 4 2 i,m 1,422 46 1 5 and Under 10 Tears 1,015 755 256 4 l,6i0 1,017 459 49 116 947 720 207 I,' 1,1 232 16 7 1,006 661 406 560 324 223 13 'T,m 1,087 119 7 10 951 646 299 6 1 l.SSS 826 494 13 85^ 584 265 5 5,892 4,370 1,217 133 172 S,006 2,207 737 47 15 1,036 873 137 25 1 787 761 23 3 1,027 726 297 4 1,621 1,007 460 36 118 891 637 218 32 4 217 17 4 912 620 27 616 376 227 13 "I'm 1,116 140 2 17 870 697 263 10 1,2 767 461 22 877 582 291 4 5,i 4,319 1,21S 133 198 2,877 2,131 699 37 10 1,018 855 143 18 2 71,1 717 24 10 and Under 18 Tears 2,0^8 1,481 553 8 S,S61 2,024 919 85 233 1,8S8 1,367 426 62 4 2,558 2,066 449 33 11 1,918 1,081 771 1,176 700 460 26 'il^si 2,203 259 9 27 1,821 1,243 662 15 1 2,583 1,593 965 1,7S1 1,166 656 9 il,7to 8,6{i9 2,435 266 870 5,SSS 4,338 1,436 84 26 8,05^ 1,728 280 43 3 i,528 1,478 47 3 1,500 509 12 2,87S 1, 613 116 186 1,2U 847 374 22 1 1,979 1,440 486 47 6 l,5i9 774 696 77 2 960 478 444 38 ~i',8i9 1,558 258 9 24 i,m 840 544 17 1,9 919 37 1,SS6 780 531 26 S,iS5 6,778 1,831 327 259 J,,Jl27 2,1 1,346 86 28 1,520 1,234 263 21 2 I.IU 1,1 964 450 8 2,082 1,247 572 98 166 1,8^0 836 379 25 8,018 1,445 516 48 9 1,5S1 732 734 855 417 1,7S7 1,433 287 5 12 1,265 748 497 20 1,891 884 19 1,807 767 644 16 S,//90 6,061 1,869 ■ 273 297 i,388 2,921 1,365 78 24 1,^/59 1,168 264 26 1 1,012 956 8, 1,943 969 20 ^,S55 2,605 1,185 214 361 s,m 1,683 753 47 1 S,997 2,885 1,002 96 15 S,OS0 1,506 1,430 142 2 1,815 896 843 77 '¥,586 2,991 545 14 36 2,666 1, 1,041 37 S,8SS 1,974 1,803 66 S,6JiS 1,547 1,075 41 16,685 11,829 3,700 600 566 8,815 5,890 2,710 163 52 2,979 2,402 627 47 3 2,156 2,046 104 6 18 and Under 21 Tears 560 366 179 15 "to 432 222 61 61 i69 287 851 552 261 36 2 279 42 Si2 145 170 27 ""706 567 126 9 4 m 236 207 21 360 40 266 246 21 3,570 2,344 818 314 94 1,635 981 654 424 132 22 2 396 367 28 1 GENERAL NATIVITY, AGE, SEX AND COLOR 429 21 and Under 46 Years 45 Tears and Over Total All Ages Male S OS ■3 1 Male OS .2 Nat. Uu- Nat. Total Nat. Un- Nat. Total 1,796 9SS 385 2 i.sss 2,182 1,049 952 405 S,090 1,824 988 819 9 5,li5 2,942 1,622 666 26 s.m 1,296 1,431 670 4 1,906 641 860 406 ""i.m 3,144 1,018 244 48 2,628 1,105 1,156 367 1 i,SS9 1,684 2,157 794 4 2,9se 1,225 1,283 428 "27^389 16,379 6,801 4,135 1,074 10,551 6,626 3,260 1,567 108 s,m 2,280 903 304 7 g,B10 1,879 277 63 1 £,8£0 1,668 863 294 i'.m 2,147 1,067 eo2 st& s.osir 1,899 924 207 7 5,096 2,906 1,751 413 26 S.IBB 1,287 1,371 624 589 776 269 I' 356 3,194 938 173 51 2,«a 983 1,115 274 1 S,9fi7 1,443 2,040 483 1 2,^93 1,085 1,170 290 16,547 6,611 2,903 1,080 10,517 5,778 3,469 1,181 99 3,552 2,422 918 209 3 B,190 1,925 239 26 S,S60 3,458 1,821 679 2 8,779 4,329 2,116 1,664 780 6,m 3,723 1,862 626 16 io,m 5,848 3,373 968 52 fi,582 2,582 2,802 1,194 4 S,SJi0 1,230 1,635 676 8,810 6,338 1,966 417 99 5,001 2,088 2,270 641 2 8,506 3,027 4,197 1,277 5 5,^29 2,310 2,463 718 "s4,6sd 32,926 12,412 7,038 2,1M 21,068 11,404 6,719 2,738 207 7,046 4,702 1,821 513 10 i.m 3,804 616 79 1 l,Si5 989 298 668 1,528 810 244 474 S,S7S 1,799 642 1,032 9,053 6,686 2,389 977 2 13,619 7,285 3,289 1,932 1,113 8,8^2 6,669 2,099 1,066 19 14,489 8,866 3,879 1,684 60 9,689 4,295 3,672 1,715 7 6,385 2,259 2,173 953 12,623 9,633 2,074 874 142 7,936 3,946 2,886 1,10a 4 12,505 6,344 6,004 2,153 4 8,170 4,092 2,931 1,146 1 6^,862 41,316 13,219 8,066 2,273 28,9^6 17,097 7,728 3,889 232 10,150 7,229 2,061 837 23 6,917 6,052 689 176 1 8,326 G,802 2,239 781 276 109 626 32 2,80^ 1,309 494 744 267 2,200 1,239 284 671 6 3,921 1,818 1,062 1,026 16 2,083 2,1^ 1,154 363 487 138 1,989 1,153 287 644 5 3,71i 1,775 1,099 826 14 1,674 599 400 676 4,946 2,463 857 1,231 395 ^,189 2,392 571 1,215 11 7,635 3,593 2,161 1,852 29 3,757 1,294 908 1,564 1 1,762 614 438 810 r,95d 3,960 862 1,060 78 2,860 824 846 1,190 12,287 6,921 3,116 1,292 968 8,455 5,546 2,067 826 17 i4,m 8,771 4,013 1,333 57 8,893 4,044 3,614 1,334 1 ■(.784 2,160 1,935 689 li'iso 9,389 1,983 651 127 7,029 3,661 2,639 827 2 11,262 6,020 4,767 1,474 1 7,465 3,838 2,808 818 64,259 41,777 14,162 6,105 2,215 27,950 16,778 7,892 3,085 195 9,815 7,184 1,981 637 13 6,S6S 6,689 661 113 435 517 631 113 222 97 641 30 335 220 973 63 695 608 879 1 989 273 254 462 3,123 2,025 4S1 601 46 1,606 460 470 686 409 261 797 82 773 241 184 348 """W27 1,925 411 459 32 1,25^ 374 376 504 232 174 427 36 .... 664 37 176 68 266 101 660 26 2,m 592 726 1,266 2,076 619 633 924 4,660 1,111 1,359 2,190 506 288 1,108 68 1,636 683 386 666 1 13,778 7,873 2,301 3,108 496 6,ei8 3,093 1,263 2,105 67 2,^8? 1,509 605 463 10 1,615 1,215 285 115 i,m 495 360 497 3,040 1,078 746 1,163 1 26,622 15,668 4,636 6,681 837 12,1^6 6,826 2,412 3.820 88 h7U 2,999 889 839 14 2,980 2,291 492 m 155 273 621 45 12, SU 7,696 2,236 2,573 341 5,628 2,733 1,149 1,715 31 2,25^ 1,490 384 376 4 1,365 ■ 1,076 2»r 82 "2^773 """'335 6 1,684 2,451 10 ~"i^9i7 '""U8 826 731 151 153 392 71 1 20 1 33 107 8 430 CHARACTERISTICS OF POPULATION able No. 2 Under 5 Tears of Age 5 and Under 10 Tears 10 and Under ]S Tears IS and Under 21 Tears :!ounties and General Nativity 1 .2 "3 "3 S m ■i i s 1 § P4 ■i o a i ac — Total 92S 746 175 1 1 2,788 2,m 702 20 19 981 676 299 6 "T,5i8 686 821 31 9S8 746 191 1 "11665 1,962 666 19 19 SS9 696 289 4 "ilFie 714 866 36 1,861 1,492 366 2 1 5,^3 4,009 1,367 39 38 1,970 1,372 588 10 "s',isi 1,400 1,687 67 890 640 243 7 "279U 1,908 899 57 20 9^7 696 338 13 'T«57 623 817 117 898 646 243 9 "1^865 1,922 862 58 23 858 529 318 11 "T,519 598 806 113 i,788 1.286 486 16 5.809 3,890 1,761 115 43 1,805 1,126 656 24 "s',m6 1,281 1,625 230 1,293 774 497 20 2 ■J.-M2 2,561 1,706 143 32 l,SSi 622 672 40 1,S10 882 471 17 ^,^2o 2,469 1,610 104 37 1,351, 694 631 29 2,663 1,656 963 37 2 8,662 5,030 3,316 247 69 2,688 1,316 1,303 69 509 289 2W 16 'l~so[ 911 748 129 14 53), 186 288 60 494 273 211 10 "il9i7 976 862 77 12 478 192 266 21 1,003 N. B. W.^N. P N. B. W.— P. or M. P. P. B. W Colored cott— Total N. B. W— N. P N. B. W.— P. or M. P. p. B. W 562 415 26 ""S^29 1,887 1,610 206 Colored belby— Total 26 1,012 N. B. W— N. P. N. B. W.— P. or M. P. P. B. W.- 378 663 81 2,3fi« 786 1,346 234 1 1,821 1,240 664 27 2,i59 664 1,283 212 "ul'il 1,365 543 14 1 i,7I0 1,089 611 32 28 1.2U 1,163 83 3 6 1,332 1,163 m 6 2 1,091 1,034 64 i 2,772 2,272 425 27 48 J. 507 1.415 85 4 3 I.m 1.282 168 12 7 i,296 1.232 66 8 1 S.OIS 1,816 1.099 100 4 4,525 1,449 2.629 446 3,731, 2,695 1,097 41 1 3,507 2,110 1,271 69 67 2,550 2.371 165 4 10 2,6il 2,265 358 12 6 «,2i7 2.092 116 9 5,663 4,633 880 66 94 2,980 2,797 170 7 6 2,9S9 2,611 364 20 14 2,653 2,620 117 18 3 5,957 3.636 2,235 174 12 883 233 466 124 ""'783 476 263 42 2 CT2 338 279 48 7 465 424 38 \ ),n 382 87 6 2 381, 368 14 2 1,087 838 177 63 19 5« 487 49 7 1 533 462 75 4 2 465 424 29 11 1 1,165 688 461 113 3 Si6 203 518 95 '""788 486 279 14 3 686 319 268 23 16 466 426 36 1 3 43i 353 75 2 1 368 342 23 3 1,117 873 208 22 16 54J 494 43 4 ""660 479 73 3 6 470 442 28 "im 646 538 46 4 1,6S9 N. B. W.— N. P. N. B. W.— P. orM.P. p. B. W.- 436 984 219 Colored tory— Total - - - N. B. W.— N. P N. B. W.— P. or M. P. P. B. W. 1,SS0 1,101 227 2 i,275 1,021 251 3 2,605 2,122 478 9 I.m 1,005 298 11 1,259 1,000 263 6 2.573 2.005 551 17 1,565 962 642 66 6 1,BH 914 272 6 23 SUi 783 30 i.m 824 256 6 28 785 757 24 I 755 70O 54 1 ""did 624 19 - 1,756 1,649 ISl 4 22 896 870 26 ""9i8 884 68 2 4 775 737 36 2 "2^068 1,600 638 20 4 2,328 1,738 528 11 51 1,599 1,640 54 3 2 1,557 1,446 107 4 "i7m 1,345 31 - S,511 S,UO 351 B 42 i,799 1,738 60 1 "1^957 1,832 113 4 8 1,566 1,496 67 3 "iVim 2,971 1,088 39 9 1,185 833 318 16 19 897 862 34 . «52 776 71 5 802 780 22 "'1,909 1,630 234 10 35 9i0 908 36 2 1 1,0S9 940 86 6 7 876 840 34 1 1 2,093 1,436 607 44 6 I,iZ2 781 306 8 17 890 857 29 1 3 825 748 70 4 3 775 741 33 1 'T905 1,637 230 16 23 937 901 32 4 993 914 72 2 5 850 805 44 1 "I'm 1,451 605 66 8 2,297 1,614 624 23 86 i,787 1,719 63 1 4 1,677 1,624 141 9 3 1,57! 1,621 65 1 "'s',8lJ, 3,267 464 25 68 1,S8» 1,809 er 6 1 2,032 1,864 168 8 12 i,726 1,645 1 1 i,212 2,887 1,212 99 14 1,797 i,on 660 37 28 1,S06 1,218 82 1 5 1,S09 1,112 187 6 4 1,1B6 1,(M8 62 6 2,891 2,361 455 29 46 l,i7S 1,382 85 3 3 , 1,5S0 1,329 186 8 7 i,357 1.288 68 5 2 2,938 1.720 1,136 74 8 i,898 N. B. W.— N. P N. B. W— P. or M. P. P. B. W Colored 657 547 71 23 931 N. B. W.— N. P N. B. W— P. or M. P. p. B. W. 860 74 2 Colored - fnion — Total 1 802 746 53 3 '""ras 721 12 "i,7SS 1,561 170 4 20 90S 868 34 1 T,do9 948 56 2 4 791 759 31 1 'i'.OiS 1,471 560 19 6 6 908 N. B. W.— N. P N. B. W— P. or M. P. P. B. W. 736 162 8 Colored 'an Buren— Total N. B. W— N. P N. B. W— P. or M. P. P. B. W Colored yapello— Total N. B. W.— N. P. N. B. W— P. or M. P. P. B. W Colored Varren— Total N. B. W— N. P N. B. W— P. or M. P. P. B. W Colored Va«liington— Total N. B. W.— N. P N. B. W.— P. or M. P. P. B. W. Colored Vayne— Total 3 752 710 37 6 2,204 1,711 383 76 35 1,085 XI 92 11 1 1,093 931 148 7 7 936 N. B. W— N. P N. B. W— P. or M. P. P. B. W Colored Vebster— Total N. B. W— N. P N. B. W— P. or M. P P. B. W. Colored 866 m 11 1 2.399 1,234 159 7 GENERAL NATIVITY, AGE, SEX AND COLOR 431 21 and Under 45 Tears Male Nat. Un- Nat. Total a •v ■a o 45 Years and Over Male Nat. Un- Nat. Total s,m 1,667 1,307 397 2 is.sm 5,233 5,901 2,616 175 S,M9 1,086 1,430 703 8,896 1,392 1,240 263 1 is.ou 4,891 6,296 1,717 140 2,77^ 1,023 1,870 880 1 i.oss 918 1,962 1,165 6,169 2,969 2,647 660 3 26,858 10,124 12,197 4,232 815 5,99S 2,109 2,800 1,083 1 S,iS7 1,778 8,930 2,729 1 234 163 1 675 48 1,244 1,271 4 3,182 171 1 369 334 846 39 860 1,968 1,674 889 685 1,348 242 i.SSS 2,711 1,603 5S2 9 J,, 257 1,829 1,772 571 85 e,7is 2,S34 389 89 1 2,9^6 2,210 605 119 12 2.359 2,061 268 89 11 6,857 4,904 1,270 656 128 e,m 2,403 423 68 s'.s'ss 2,472 736 114 16 «,65« 2,363 216 73 •4,567 2,595 1,614 863 6 S,89i 1,744 1,684 413 63 2,768 2,376 864 33 4 S,062 2,242 704 107 9 2,W 2,099 268 49 8 6,89^ 4,993 1,421 366 124 2,989 2,552 383 41 4 S,i58 2,606 743 90 19 2,709 2,425 236 47 1 e,8ii 2,960 2,940 916 36 9,^2 6,306 8,217 886 14 8,151 3,573 3,456 984 138 5,^79 4,709 693 72 6 e,008 4,452 1,809 226 21 4,160 526 88 19 IS, 751 9,897 2,691 911 252 5,86/, 4,965 806 99 4 6,796 5,078 1,479 204 35 5,S61 4,788 452 120 1 M,9J,S 6,254 6,052 2,668 83 288 244 869 61 330 241 979 04 __ 33 6 164 4 76 43 1 361 22 1 85 4 in 2 " 289 2 266 790 42 31 27 152 20 " 75 39 323 17 29 44 127 11 8,101 3,304 8,112 1,638 47 774 864 1,56B 114 344 873 16 2,1S8 1,691 826 113 8 hSgl 111 i,m 1,962 273 172 5 2,620 1,718 556 340 11 2,08.? 1,721 223 138 1 S,919 1,287 954 1.669 9 Total All Ages 1.91J, l,6Jil 768 717 426 361 718 663 2 7,fiS9 7,J,S5 1,893 1,840 2,367 2,468 3,368 3,066 76 61 1,756 1,1,68 611 568 268 235 885 664 2 1 2,502 2,007 356 303 666 494 1,590 2 .1, 022 1,210 2,876 1,626 1,659 5.W 507 930 810 2 2,809 2,-4i6 1,213 1,090 62Z 457 1,043 834 81 85 2,220 1,98S 1,748 1,660 'm 293 168 127 K 3 2, .115 2,062 1,683 1,391 336 326 10 2,061 1,1 301 84 11 ^,2/6 2,858 690 690 78 2,26.} 1,884 286 140 4 2,507 1,717 480 298 12 1,919 1,1 172 86 1 «,275 1,063 838 1,376 8 «,555 1,486 787 1,281 2 15, m 8,783 4,836 6,419 137 »,m 1,179 493 1,549 3 4,509 658 1," 2,800 2 5,888 3,084 1,062 1,740 2 5,225 2,808 979 1,877 68 .4,203 11 .4,377 2,974 26 •4,. 8,366 627 197 19 9,037 6,947 1,479 1,422 ■4,1 3,786 669 312 9 5,i27 3,430 1,1 I 28 224 2 7,: 2,340 1,792 3,046 17 8,802 8,23? 4,784 4,656 2,862 2,717 1,169 863 7 1 33,^89 S2,i56 14,618 14,060 12,323 12,763 6,217 6,041 336 292 8,771 7,921 3,777 3,702 3,285 3,106 1,707 1,109 2 2 13,188 12,152 3,642 8,400 6,973 6,931 8,670 3 2,821 13,115 i2,672 8,056 8,016 3,500 3,447 1,644 1,200 18 9 ll,93Ji 10,872 6,198 6,797 3,823 8,682 1,719 1,316 194 177 S,.4i5 8,m 7,369 7,128 819 819 209 168 18 19 8,701 8,.je7 6,809 6.687 1,347 1.409 612 446 38 25 7,6i2 7,365 6,669 6.605 694 698 162 134 27 28 i9,320 18,660 14,383 14,182 3,095 8,163 1,483 1,014 869 311 9,15S 9,125 8,000 8,066 899 866 243 193 10 11 10,069 9,9SS 7,864 7,882 1,694 1,EB4 474 407 47 62 8,22i 8,019 7,395 7,301 595 571 229 144 5 3 20,267 18,650 9,806 9,416 6,820 6,698 3,567 2,512 78 61 432 CHARACTERISTICS OF POPULATION able No. 2 [bounties and General Nativity Under 5 Tears 6 and Under of Age 10 Tears s ^ •§ '3 ■s 5 O a ft 8h s N E^ 10 and Under 18 Tears S 18 and Under 21 Tears Winnebago— Total N. B. W.— N. P N. B. yV.—¥. or M. P. F. B. W Colored nnneshiek— Total N. B. W.— N. P N. B. W— P. or M. P. ¥. B. W Colored Woodbury — Total N. B. W.— N. P N. B. W— P. or M. P. P. B. W Colored forth— Total N. B. W.— N. P N. B. W— P. or M. P. P. B. W Colored Wght— Total N. B. W.— N. P N. B. W— P. or M. P. P. B. W Colored SOS B06 292 6 "I'.m 86S 199 7 I'oss 2,765 1,224 44 15 607 423 18S 1 1,063 258 1 707 454 260 3 i'C 852 228 1 1 s.sss 2,635 1,133 46 19 m 435 158 1 794 291 3 1,510 959 642 9 '¥,156 1,720 427 8 1 7,87i 5,390 2,357 90 34 1,S01 858 341 2 2,151 1,596 849 4 79S 431 355 9 '1,155 832 316 7 "S^96 2,405 1,169 122 10 678 389 221 1 1 1,0S1 705 330 16 786 425 348 13 'i','m 810 312 3 1 S,68S 2,371 1,171 125 16 es7 413 219 1,581 856 703 B,g81 1,642 628 10 1 7,479 4,776 2,330 247 26 l,2i9 802 440 4 3 2,075 1,403 647 26 l.BSl 631 676 25 1,223 697 19 1 5,S19 3,069 1,! 21 446 11 l.iH 552 661 21 1,088 721 10 2 5,S19 3,166 1,820 322 21 955 498 446 12 i'sii 616 43 «,■ l.< l.i 46 "sTrei 2,311 1,418 29 3 10,638 6,215 3,760 631 42 1,917 1,004 S,097 1,794 1,228 75 467 159 279 28 1 703 351 325 27 2,U5 1,: 785 384 8 S80 160 192 26 2 ess 326 276 407 142 251 14 '695 335 346 14 2,6SS 1,383 14 sar 136 167 4 1 679 300 258 21 874 301 671 41 5,078 2,861 1,734 671 22 687 295 369 1,IS$ 634 70 GENERAL NATIVITY, AGE, SEX AND COLOR 433 21 and Under 45 Tears 45 Years and Over Total All Ages Male |. i Male 1 i i ■a 1 Nat. TJn- Nat. Total Nat. Un- Nat. Total 506 1,457 486 4 3,639 1,047 2,192 395 5 i9,ns 9,361 5,318 4,797 237 S,11S 614 1,161 333 6 3,8^8 1,841 1,332 674 1 2,m 494 1,324 312 2 SMi 1,076 2,199 269 "leVm 7,970 5,446 2,856 138 1,859 617 1,122 217 3 s,sm 1,592 1,341 393 1,000 2,781 797 6 7,183 2,128 4,391 664 5 S6,1SS 17,331 10,764 7,663 376 3,972 1,131 2,283 650 8 7,m 3,433 2,673 1,067 1 i,m 209 33S 876 1,130 163 307 670 i.BSO 362 642 1,546 7,168 2,341 3,393 1,429 5 11,S21 4,773 4,815 1,726 7 ^3,685 22,431 12,220 8,690 844 5,SS1 2,307 2,622 1,012 10 io,m 5,425 3,265 1,680 8 6,396 2,220 3,141 1,033 2 10,917 4,620 4,802 1,491 4 38,630 20,400 12.061 5,931 238 S,S87 2,173 2,386 771 7 9,376 5,055 3,251 1,070 13 4 6 273 212 1 808 68 2 2,810 462 1,086 1,271 8,m 3,583 1,8M 3,034 53 i,in 215 320 640 2 2,107 851 454 797 5 2,6^9 469 996 1,194 ""67>S2 2,885 1,642 2,295 30 985 175 276 634 1 1,818 775 431 612 5,^59 911 2,082 2,465 1 15,226 6,463 3,346 5,329 83 2,162 390 695 1,174 3 3,925 1,826 886 1,409 5 22 9 9 270 126 1,202 69 3 82 42 24 1,734 3,063 5 2,646 388 5 14 11 4 4 183 150 591 49 1 19 W 6 313 361 1 748 49 2 2 28 434 CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 TABLE NO. 3— At Various Bnuinerations The Terri- tory THE STATE OouDties U.S. Oens's 1840 State Oens's 1847 U.S. Oens's 1850 State Oens's 1862 State Oens's 1864 State Oens's 1866 State Oens's 1869 U.S. Oens's 1860 State Oens's 1863 State Oens's 1865 State Oens's 1S67 State — Total 24,355 18,757 116,651 m,2u ioi,(e2 91,162 829,909 S2e,600 120,091 170,893 109,818 155,607 278,684 239,29a 6Ji2,m\67i,91S 337,720|3M,498 3M,868|320,420 701,093 355,007 Me.oee 756 .409 383,272 373,987 90e,S17 Male 468,436 435,881 Adair— Total Mate 160 78 72 339 199 140 4,266 2,247 2,019 6,266 3,217 3,048 863 364 289 1,019 685 434 7,709 4,110 3,599 9,075 4,760 4,325 288 lao iss 8,247 3,350 2,8^ 5,638 3,042 2,496 3,618 1,881 1,637 3,188 1,760 1,428 5,123 2,793 2,327 "ITiS 1,189 958 119 77 42 251 139 112 81 i9 448 367 9,481 9,073 4,406 632 • 377 SSB 1.011 529 488 1.413 769 647 10,843 5,689 5,144 11,449 6,038 S,411 365 198 167 8,063 4,306 3,767 7,096 3,717 3,378 4,018 2,095 1,923 4,336 2,316 2,020 6,918 3,662 3,266 '1^604 1,886 1,619 136 78 58 260 130 120 1,489 795 694 12,175 6,498 5,679 856 4a5 440 85 51 34 3,816 2,083 1,783 5,006 2,613 2,398 984 696 448 1,683 822 711 12,237 6,411 5,826 11,931 6,242 5,689 464 239 215 8,496 4,482 4,014 8,244 4,291 3,953 4,232 2,233 1,999 4,915 2,623 2,2K 7,906 4,166 3.740 67 38 21 3,724 1,978 1,746 147 84 63 281 142 139 1,612 913 699 12,9*9 6,9(e 6,0i47 «0 BOB 435 68 35 23 4,336 3,263 2,073 5,427 2,818 2,008 900 467 433 1,626 830 795 13,461 6,728 6,733 U,860 6,013 5,847 388 IM 194 9,555 4,897 4,668 10,005 5,050 4,956 4,607 2,218 2,389 6,404 2,786 2,618 8,292 4,23.5 4,057 100 69 41 4,142 2,1^ 2,000 170 92 78 297 198 139 1,623 819 804 13,281 6,6B7 6,574 1,007 510 497 20 10 10 4,396 2,309 a.oe? 6,687 2,804 2,8B1 ■ 1,097 5TO 518 1,818 928 890 13,957 7,11S 6,842 10,748 5,373 5,375 ElO 240 270 11,245 5,8S7 5,388 12,306 6,201 6,105 5,288 2,661 2,SB3 7,224 3,790 3,434 10,087 6,069 4,948 100 80 40 0,006 2,M7 2,499 228 129 99 400 208 194 1,896 962 983 13,991 7,088 6,953 1,311 883 648 64 35 29 5,355 2,711 2,«4 5,718 2,SB1 2,8* 1.694 839 765 Adams— Total 2.317 1,217 Female 421 356 3,131 1,659 1,472 1,100 950 4,243 2,264 1,979 1,100 16,008 Male Female Appanoose— Total — Male Female '""wi 8,283 7,720 13,084 6,726 6,339 790 400 Female — 312 672 346 327 136 75 60 735 422 313 ""i^250 643 607 316 183 132 1,024 538 486 309 172 137 1,023 550 473 38 35 ""2^623 1,462 1.171 2,514 1,402 1,112 1,678 893 785 1,095 605 490 2,299 1,256 1,W3 '""420 225 195 390 14,Tr2 7,7M Female Black Hawk— Total _ Male — 7,018 16,C86 8,229 7,807 9,881 5,119 4,689 9,337 Male - 4,982 4,405 ■Rnohanan — Total 250 617 266 251 12,231 Male 6,315 6,916 Buena Vista— Total _. Male Female — 151 87 84 6,S42 Male 3,365 Female — 3,177 546 Male Female 298 248 688 SiO 338 416 232 184 7,643 4,072 3,67] 2,479 1,301 1,178 Cedar— Total __ Male 1,253 717 536 2,809 3,Sl 2,141 4,971 2.656 16,076 8,323 1,800| 2,416 7.7S3 Oerro Gordo— Total . 1,988 ' 1,000 . _ 1 988 Cherokee— Total Male — 1 [" 309 US 96 Chiplcasaw Total 300 160 140 548 287 961 588 • 819 2S9 1,626 868 7B8 2,651 1,466 1,185 3,978 2,124 1.854 6.220 Mile g 237 Female 79 41 38 3,988 6,244 Male _ - Female 8,140 MM POPULATION STATISTICS 435 POPULATION OF COUNTIES According to Sex, with Totals for State. THE STATE U.S. State State U.S. State U.S. State U. S. State U.S. State Census Census Census Census Census Census Census Census Census Census Census 1870 1873 1875 1880 1885 1890 1895 1900 1905 1910 1915 i,m,ow l,S51,SiO i.sso.ssa 1M0,6U 1,753,980 1,911,896 2,058,069 2,SS1,8SS 2,210,050 2,22I„m 2,s58,oee 625,917 647,221 7001,180 844,136 911,759 994,453 1,066,130 1,156,849 1,132,244 1,148,171 1,212,982 ses.ioa 604,119 650,873 776,479 842,221 917,443 992,989 1,075,004 1,077,806 1,076,600 1,145,134 3,9S& 5,2^ 7,045 U,6e7 14,102 U,iU 16,504 16,192 16,110 14,420 14,786 2,178 2,815 3,771 6,208 ' 7,535 7,613 8,069 8,399 7,864 7,469 7,681 1,801 2,449 3,274 6,464 6,667 6,881 7,415 7,798 7.246 6,961 7,166 4,eu 6,865 7,772 11,888 12,146 12,292 12,984 13,601 12.282 10,998 U,1S1 2,470 3,039 4,015 6,368 6,426 6,285 6,739 7,069 6.312 6,624 6,773 2,144 2,826 3,757 6,630 5,720 6,607 6,196 6,532 8.960 6,374 5,358 17,868 18,3014 19,168 19,791 18,335 17,907 17,981 18,711 18,222 17,328 17,298 9,319 9,SS8 9,936 10,293 9,541 9,303 9,314 9,785 9,466 8,964 8,982 8,549 8,772 9,233 9,496 8,794 8,604 8,667 8 926 8,766 8.364 8,306 16,466 16,474 17,405 16,686 16,941 18,961 25,383 25,927 27,193 28,701 30,648 8,4Se 8,487 8,980 8,615 8,745 9,721 13,299 13,401 14,211 14,861 15,870 7,958 7,98? 8,428 s,om 8,196 9,240 12,084 12,526 12,982 18,840 14,67? 1,213 1,878 2,S70 7,448 10,825 12,413 12,886 13,626 12,937 12,671 12,69C es9 977 1,268 4,034 5,733 6,501 6,720 7,099 6,723 6,n7 6,587 .563 898 1,102 3,414 5,092 6,911 6,116 6,627 6,214 6,954 5,993 22,4Si 22,068 22,807 24,8% 23,9«S 24,177 24,244 25,177 24,117 23,166 24,691 11,846 11,810 11,877 12,948 12,369 • 12,498 12,189 13,1^0 12,350 11,968 12,7X8 10,606 10,668 10,9S0 11,986 11,518 11,684 11,756 12,027 11,767 11,188 11,873 21,706 23,136 22,913 23,913 23,860 24,219 28,941 32,399 36,617 44,886 68,469 11,381 11,980 11,821 13,269 12,81j 12,323 13,717 16,476 18,386 23,040 27.223 10,325 11,206 11,098 11,644 11,546 11,896 18,221 15,923 18,232 21,825 28,216 14,584 15,167 17,351 20,838 2±.972 23,772 27,089 28,200 27,604 27,628 29,696 7,377 7,884 9,019 10,807 13,166 12,314 14,180 14,976 14,246 14,267 16,503 7,007 7,283 8,332 10,031 11,806 11,458 12,869 13,625 13,358 13,389 14,183 12,se8 12,517 13,220 u,flei 14,320 14,630 15.40S 16,308 15,973 16,843 16,968 6,647 6,501 6,863 7,805 7,443 7,644 7,896 8,413 8,134 8,090 8,710 5,881 6,016 6,357 6,776 6,877 7,086 7,507 7,892 7,839 7,763 8,258 17,034 16,329 i7,ais 18,646 17,726 18,997 20,639 21,427 19,134 19,748 19,833 8,809 8,398 8,997 9,666 9,078 9,815 10,678 11,078 9,777 10,097 9.803 8,165 7,967 8,318 8,961 8,648 9,182 9,961 10,348 9,857 9,651 9.530 1,685 2,668 s.sea 7,637 11,630 13,648 15,029 16,976 15,907 15,961 17,212 907 1,463 1,902 4,007 6,088 7,154 7,902 9,100 8,289 8,891 8,978 678 1,216 1,669 3,580 5,442 6,394 7,127 7,878 7,618 7,590 8,234 9,951 10,760 U,734 14,298 14,623 16,463 16,966 17,955 17,686 17,119 18,014 5,268 5,680 6,223 7,600 7,6ffi 8,088 8,868 9,421 9,112 8,790 9,334 4,683 8,080 5,611 6,698 6,885 7,sr8 8,108 8,534 B.SfH 8,329 8,630 1,602 2,92e 3,185 8,S95 9,836 13,107 15,788 18,669 17,308 17,090 17,808 834 1.529 1,691 3,000 6,20i 7,026 8,332 9,923 8,999 8,983 9,250 768 1,398 1,494 2,596 4,632 6,081 7,456 8,«e 8,308 8,107 8,668 2,45a 3,600. 5,780 12,351 16,329 18,828 19,498 20,319 20,512 20,117 20,997 1,332 1,961 3,067 6,658 8,567 9,921 10,081 10,503 10,492 10,224 10,787 1,119 1,640 2.673 6,698 7,772 8,907 9,412 9,816 10,020 9,898 10,210 5,464 7,660 10,562 16,943 18,019 19,646 20,928 21,274 20,2SS 19,047 19,787 2,923 4>,cea 6,682 9,022 9,439 10,246 10,817 10,980 10,365 9,750 10,121 2,M1 S,6S1 4,970 7,921 8,680 9,399 10,109 10,284 9,867 9,297 9,666 19,731 17,089 17,879 18,936 17,832 18.253 19,008 19,871 18,368 17,765 17.623 10,297 8,568 9,207 9,802 9,206 9,467 9,792 9,998 9,372 9,200 9.101 9,434 8,521 8,672 9,184 8,626 8,786 9,216 9,373 8,996 8,665 8,522 4,728 5,686 . 8,686 11,461 12,688 14,864 18,902 20,672 21,634 29,0U 31,734 2,634 2,906 6,616 6.126 6,640 7,848 9,531 10,917 11,000 13,315 17,113 2,088 2,7S0 8,169 5,336 6,048 7,016 8,771 9,re5 10.534 11,696 14,621 1,967 8,297 4,24£ 8,240 12,684 16,669 15,664 16,870 15,962 16,741 16,691 1,156 1,807 2,284 ■ 4,441 6,680 8,348 8,238 8,654 8,319 8,872 8,696 811 1,490 1,961 3,799 @,894 7,311 7,481 7,916 7,647 7,869 7,893 10,180 10,298 11,400 14,584 13,899 16,019 15,696 17,0»r 19,928 15,876 16,089 S,2S8 5,880 9,928 7,305 7.148 7,768 8,089 8,745 8,164 7,755 8,266 4,952 4,912 6,472 7,029 6,751 7,256 7,607 8,292 7,774 7,620 7,833 8,735 8,975 10,118 11,518 U,369 11,332 11,616 12,440 11,639 10,788 . 11,0® 4,4f7S 4,636 6,14$ 6,981 5,857 6,782 6,978 6.484 e,999 5,487 6,646 4,288 4,339 4,96g S,63S 6,612 i,m 6,642 6,966 6,640 6,249 6,882 436 POPULATION OF COUNTIES The Table No. 3 Terri- THIS BTAT15 tory Ootinties U.S. State U.S. State State State State U.S. State State State Oens's Cens'B Cens's Oens's Oens's Cens's Cens's Cens's Cens's Cens's Oens's 1840 1847 1850 1852 1854 1856 1859 1860 62 SI 1863 100 56 1865 17E 9! 1867 Olay— Total Mate . 369 21 20,728 44 21.230 7S 21.928 165 Clayton— Total l,Kn 2,176 3,873 6,318 9,337 16,187 18,669 22,879 Male — — — m 2,148 3,428 4,892 8,227 9,983 U,«84 10,862 11,405. 11,851 327 ^1 "1^70 1,725 2,822 2,890 3,822 4,445 7.306 6,960 iS,441 8,686 17.3B5 9,644 18,908 10,368 19,818 10,613 22,405 11,028 Clinton— Total 27,234 Male . 475 1,484 2,004 3,848 7,474 9,281 10,014 10,121 U,U9 14,309 Female SiS 1,338 1,818 3,468 9,967 8,1B4 S,894 9,697 11,286 12,925 235 131 KM 3,991 429 244 186 4,668 383 201 182 5,2414 466 247 209 S.0B7 574 812 262 5,886 1.070 Male rni 493 Dallas— Total 164 854 1,216 2,392 7.688 Male — — 473 666 1,267 2,149 2,041 2,779 2,602 3.O0O 3,925 Female 381 650 1,125 1,842 2,117 2,468 2,685 2.886 8,618 Davis— Total 4,464 7,264 7,553 9,787 11,628 12,323 13,764 13,956 18,133 i3,a7 Male 3,819 3,890 5,096 5,984 6,877 7,U6 6,990 6,^4 6,S7S Female 3,445 3,663 4,691 5,M4 6,446 6,648 6,966 6,479 6,639 Decatur— Total 9m 1,184 8,026 6,280 8,238 8,677 8,370 8,052 8,501 Male - 527 438 644 540 1,587 1,439 8,334 2,M8 4,305 3,933 4,609 4,168 1,094 4,276 3,986 4,067 4,270 Female 4,281 Delaware— Total 162 1,111 1,759 2,664 4,637 8,090 10,024 11,024 11,666 12,608 14,463 Male 100 938 1,370 2,513 4,336 9,303 5,788 5,980 6,315 7,447 Female 62 821 1,284 2,124 3,763 4,721 e,236 5,736 6.198 7,016 Des Moines— Total — 5,577 10,071 12,988 12,412 16,700 20,198 20,781 19,611 21,168 19.894 28,444 Male 3,086 6,938 6,398 8,696 11,069 11,061 10.239 10,632 9,998 12,061 Female 2,621 6,050 6,014 8,004 9,129 9,720 9,872 10,686 9.901 11,363 121 71 SO 30,681 ISO 113 m 31,164 189 94 95 30,763 800 162 138 33,078 609 Male 274 235 Dubuque— Total 3,059 7,440 10,841 12,508 16,630 25,881 38,860 Male - 1,778 6,799 6,689 8,867 14,343 15,918 16,206 15,509 16.687 20,282 1,281 6,042 6,819 7,773 11.548 14,663 14,^8 15,294 16,391 18.678 Emmet>-Total 103 160 368 708 60 45 12,073 6,389 88 72 12,737 6,427 205 163 13,124 6.7U 405 803 826 460 1,965 1,103 5,142 2.742 8.3S7 4,501 11,39 S,9t. 14,902 Male . 7,70S Female — 376 862 2,400 3,856 5,43 5,684 6.810 6,418 7.28? Floyd— Total — 2,444 1,343 1,101 780 3,4& 1,87: 1,681 1,15! S,74i4 1,98? 1,757 1,309 4,018 2,067 1,961 1,448 4.886 2.638 2,348 1,889 6,731 Male 8,470 3,261 Franklin-Total' 2,821 Male - 436 844 3,368 64^ 516 4,32! 716 508 3,074 74B 705 4,779 1,048 856 5,698 1.213 Female 1,106 Premont — Total _ _ 1,244 2,044 3,006 7,013 Male 6S7 687 1,083 961 1,576 1,430 1,790 1,578 2,417 1,910 2,780 2,294 2,446 2,880 2,869 2,839 8,642 Female — 3,871 Greene — Total - - 1,089 eeo 629 4SS 1,421 7S0 en 680 1,374 738 638 798 1,416 709 707 1,024 1,659 860 809 1,332 2,363 Male 1.229 1.124 Grundy— Total 2,119 Male — 227 354 428 614 692 1.100 Female . 208 326 365 510 640 1,019 Guthrie — Total 299 772 2,ise 2,754 3,058 3,205 3,239 S.90S Male — - - 170 432 1,161 1.469 1,626 1.661 1.682 2,019 129 122 340 998 1,295 1,655 890 1,432 1,699 906 1,544 1.602 822 1,607 2.023 1.019 1.887 Hamilton — Total 3,154 Male — 63 1,628 59 766 121 798 179 780 240 1,004 1.S2S Hancock— Total 897 Male . _ - ee 99 128 140 186 Female 69 3,m 84 6,440 112 G,S69 152 6,793 171 Hardin— Total — — 300 1,265 4,033 9,m Male : 160 680 2,214 2,748 2,830 2,774 3,413 4,844 Female 140 665 1,819 1,900 2,675 3,132 2,610 3,621 2,685 8,380 4,501 Harrison— Total 1,065 3,663 4,2% E,83a Male — 690 1,054 846 1,690 1,974 1,872 2.220 3,139 Female 475 1,442 1,647 i.7ai 2.04S 2,697 ACCORDING TO SEX 437 THE STATE U.S. State State u. s. Stat« U.S. State U. S. State U.S. State Census Census Census Census Census Census Census Census Census Census Census 1870 1873 1876 1880 1886 1890 1896 1900 1908 1910 1916 1,623 8,685 8,669 4,248 0,438 9,809 11,277 13,391 12,711 12,766 14,096 868 .1,904 1,894 2,281 8,432 4,993 6,988 7,170 6,629 9,97B 7,697 6S5 1,681 1,675 1,967 8,009 4,314 3,309 6,221 9,082 6,091 6,989 27,771 29,649 37,184 28,829 26,853 29,733 28,670 27,760 29.734 25,676 29,129 U,4S9 13,820 U,185 14,869 13,797 13,726 13,730 14,192 13,787 13,117 12,988 13,819 12,829 18,049 18,960 13,066 18,007 12,840 13,658 12,987 12,458 12,141 85,357 33,691 84,295 36,763 38,661 41,199 43,398 48,832 42,798 45,394 45,839 18,694 17,368 17,627 18,941 20,088 21,078 22,005 22,604 21,467 23,439 23.374 16,663 19,228 16,968 17,822 18,673 20,121 21,383 21,328 21,328 21,955 22,465 2,630 8,777 9,038 12,418 16,131 18,894 20,069 21,685 21,000 20,041 20,681 1,387 2,008 8,223 9,789 8,601 10,01S 10,618 11,411 10,880 10,542 10,802 1,143 1,799 2,818 0,674 7,630 8,879 9,556 10,274 10,120 9,489 8,779 12,019 12,689 14,386 18,7« 20,(e0 20,479 21,023 23,068 23,038 23,628 25,610 6,392 6,592 7,527 9,799 10,409 10,638 10,869 11,941 11,779 12,276 13,197 6,687 9,097 6,859 8,977 9,641 9,841 10,164 11,117 11,256 11,353 12,413 15,566 16,434 15,757 16,468 15,183 15,258 16,015 15,620 14,266 13,315 13,177 7,898 7,808 7,862 8,362 7,632 7,689 7,848 7,873 7,284 6,744 6,724 7,667 7,626 7,895 8,106 7,651 7,569 7,468 7,743 6,982 6,571 6,453 12,018 11,598 13,249 15,336 15,083 13,648 16,639 18,115 17,044 16.347 17,148 6,197 5,978 6,826 7,980 7,797 7,977 8,484 9,181 8,650 8,268 8,808 6,821 5,620 9,424 7,859 7,286 7,666 8,155 8,934 8,384 8,079 8,342 17,432 16,522 19,890 17,950 17,438 17,349 18,103 19,188 18,761 17,888 18,564 8,998 8,668 8,724 9,248 8,976 8,938 9,419 10,002 9,650 9,186 8,448 8,434 7,964 8,166 8,707 8,460 8,411 8,684 9,188 9,111 8,702 8,116 27,259 34,691 35,106 38,099 35,733 35,324 37,629 36,989 87,481 36,143 39,699 14,191 18,124 17,804 19,815 17,708 17,818 18,899 18,007 18,749 18,150 17,691 13,065 16,567 17,302 16,284 18,026 17,606 18,730 17,982 18,732 17,998 17,985 1,389 1,743 1,748 1,901 8,213 4,328 6,023 7.985 8,180 8,137 8.408 74e 9a) 929 1,020 1,696 2,308 8,179 4,259 4,281 4,312 4,879 644 828 819 881 i,a7 2,025 2,844 8,739 3,849 8,825 4.486 38,969 41,900 43,846 42,996 46,496 49,848 60,177 66,403 61,471 67,460 90,976 20,013 21,269 22,4431 21,7S9 28,126 26,245 31,624 28,785 30,473 28,901 30,943 18,966 20,631 21,4021 21,240 22,370 24,603 28,553 27,618 30,998 28,549 80.4S2 1,392 1,618 1,436 1,650 2,781 4,274, 7,619 9,936 10,109 9,819 11,390 757 86? 782 831 1,496 2,332 4,102 0,407 5,814 6,184 6,876 635 782 664 719 1,285 1,942 8,517 4,629 4.791 4,632 5,384 16,973 18,796 20,518 22,268 22,422 23,141 24,794 29,846 28,692 27,919 29,257 8,744 9,779 • 10,618 11,441 11,563 11,971 12,763 15,897 14,650 14.442 16,105 8,229 9,017 9,900 10,817 . 10,859 11,170 12,082 18,948 13,902 13,477 14,192 10,768 11,271 13,100 14,677 15,862 13,424 17,114 17,764 16,779 17,118 18,213 5,706 5,817 6,763 7,606 7,909 7, 90S 8,658 8,979 8,363 8,769 9,297 5,063 6,434 9,337 7,071 7,453 7,521 8,456 8,776 8,416 8,363 8,916 4,738 5,669 9,658 10,249 11,324 12,871 18,679 14,996 M,595 14,780 19,841 2,560 8,007 3,428 6,447 6,934 6,771 7,180 7,990 7,619 7,772 8,381 2,178 2,682 3,130 4,802 5,390 6,100 6,490 7,ooe 6,976 7,008 7,450 11,174 12,394 13,719 . 17,662 16,921 16,842 17,176 18,646 16,279 16,623 16,097 5,980 6,673 7,221 9,388 8,367 8,923 . 8,977 9,707 8,359 8,083 8,276 5,194 S,821 6,498 8,264 7,694 7,919 8,199 8,839 7,923 7,540 7,791 4,627 5,769 7,087 12,727 16,923 18,797 16,298 17,820 16,089 16,023 10,839 2,462 2,964 8,678 6,977 8,348 8,176 8,406 9,389 8,228 8,250 8,400 2,165 2,791 3,359 6,060 7,67a 7,622 7,893 8,461 7,861 7,773 7,839 6,3981 7,154 8,134 12,639 12,804 13,215 18,418 13,757 13,607 18,574 14,091 3,472 3,823 4,384 6,943 6,762 6,969 6,976 7,219 7,072 7,138 7.228 2,927 3,331 3,760 6,696 6,042 9,246 6,443 6.841 6,685 6,435 6.823 7,061 8,017 9,628 14,394 16,489 17,380 17,968 18.729 18,013 17,374 18.416 3,758 4,196 6,087 7,634 8,542 9,160 9,427 9,652 8,268 8,868 9,446 3,303 3,821 4,541 6,760 7,897 8,230 8,631 9,077 8,790 8,415 8,971 6,059 6,672 7,701 11,262 14,075 15,819 18,614 19,514 19,381 19,242 20,514 3,208 3,467 3,987 5,890 7,3041 7,942 9,672 10.140 9,979 10,062 10,689 2,852 3,218 3,714 6,392 6,771 7.877 8,942 9,374 8,402 9,180 8,8® 999 1,897 1,482 3,453 6,089 7,621 11,141 13,762 12,987 12,731 18,886 524 724 770 1,924 2,720 4,111 6,986 7,368 6,839 6,669 7,296 473 673 712 1,629 2,369 3,610 e,155 6,394 6,148 6,062 0,690 13,684 1S,865 15,010 17,807 18,529 19,003 20,376 22,794 21,856 20,921 22.484 7,060 7,176 7,730 9,373 9,474 9,928 10,687 11,986 11,156 10,788 11.665 6,624 6,679 7,280 8,434 9,052 9.07S 9,879 10,858 10,700 10,138 1)0,819 8,931 10,348 11,818 19,649 20,660 21,356 28,091 25,607 23,792 23,162 24,327 41,769 0,379 6,198 8.859 10.886 11,143 11,993 13,288 12,231' 12,039 12,648 4,172 4,972 6,6Sia 7,790 9,694 10,213 U,098 12,298 11,681 11,123 11.68^ 438 POPULATION OF COUNTIES Table No. 3 The Terri- tory THE STATE Ootmtles D. S. Oens's 1840 State Cens's 1847 U.S. Cens's 1850 State State Cens's Oens's 1S62 1854 State Oens's 1856 State Cens's 1859 U. S. Oens's I860 State Cens's 1863 State Cens's 3865 State Oens's 1867 Henry— Total Male 3,772 2,029 1,743 6,769 8,707 4,550 4,167 9,633 4,947 4,686 - 5 2 10,169 5,184 4,975 "17307 1,206 1,101 12,166 6.193 5.973 3,466 1,823 1,643 11, U7 6,666 5,451 8,467 4,44i 4,026 6,076 3,197 2,S78 7,293 3,763 3,530 15,396 8,212 7,183 441 252 192 IIIZII "17873 2,662 2.2U 14.077 7.462 6.615 7.490 4,060 3,429 13,305 6.795 6.510 13,457 7,88ll 6,973 9,836 e,288 4,647 10,616 5,566 5,060 397 237 160 27,273 14,716 12,658 14,70e 7,9U 6,791 9,668 6,206 4,362 4,408 2.330 2.078 16,298 8,311 7,996 3,017 1.601 1,416 519 290 229 38 22 18 7.088 3.787 3,3U 18.710 9,381 8,319 9,197 4,878 4.319 14.478 7,422 7,056 18.900 8,620 8,280 18.4TS 6.733 6,742 12,329 6,401 6,928 610 ais 31,242 16.333 14,909 17.720 9,418 8,302 10,805 5,666 6,140 6,287 2,707 2.480 18,701 9,601 9,100 8,168 1,890 1,478 332 188 144 43 25 18 8.029 4.304 3.726 18,493 9,633 8,860 9,888 8,270 4,613 15,088 7,786 7.a5a 17,673 9,071 8,502 13,308 7,086 6,240 13,271 8.918 6.323 416 232 184 29,282 16,126 14,107 18,947 9,980 8,967 10,370 6,451 4,916 S,7B6 3,016 2,721 ie,ar4 8,201 8,470 3,382 1,778 1,6W 391 211 183 66 35 20 8,513 4,339 4,206 19,152 9,617 9.686 10.686 5.451 5,147 14,639 7,323 7.306 17.177 8,469 8,718 13,190 6,927 6,668 13. 4M) 6,879 6,SSL 365 .181 28,061 14,865 13,198 18,698 9,669 9,124 10,639 6,378 5,264 6,267. 3,160 3,097 "77934 3,972 3,962 16,242 8,106 8,136 17.294 8,720 8,674 7,621 3,923 3,696 6,283 3,2ia 3,067 3,6B8 1,876 1,710 17.786 8,750 9,036 8.871 2.021 1,«7 606 321 28B 63 36 28 10,258 9,229 6,029 19,097 9,628 9,469 12,096 6,253 5,842 14,772 7,408 7,870 18,778 9,829 9,449 14.376 7.365 7.oei 18.998 7,010 6,986 704 872 332 29,061 14,673 14,388 20,764 10,556 10,199 10,918 6.807 6.341 6,332 3,241 3,111 '"87214 4,169 4,016 17,082 8,666 8,526 18,719 9,446 9.274 8,760 4.491 4,268 6,218 2,684 2,631 4.176 2.178 2,001 20, UO 10,249 Female . Howard— Total Male Ffiimale Humboldt^Total — 9,861 4,4m 2,855 2.016 1.307 722 Female . ... 685 90 Male 435 iii 409 413 7,210 3,857 3,363 1,280 669 621 9,904 4,986 4,91fl 4,472 2,269 2,213 3,007 1,627 1,380 4,822 2,502 2,320 "17323 682 641 8,231 4,332 3,899 1,674 903 771 10,226 5,169 5,066 6,779 2,921 2,858 4,201 2,286 1,916 6,306 2,733 2,673 61 Female ._ — 39 12,390 Male — - 6,103 6,987 Jackson— Total Male 1,411 807 604 4,689 ""wo 19,970 10,266 Pemale 9,714 16,239 Male . 8,641 7,698 Jefferson— Total Male 2,773 1,516 1,256 1,491 965 626 471 299 172 8,463 "z,ms 16,420 8,809 Female Johnson— Total Male - - 8,111 21,641 ii.m Female 10,577 Jones— Total Male 16,228 8,898 Female Keokuk— Total Male Female Kossuth— Total Male 7,830 15,129 7,811 7,688 1,673 633 740 Lee— Total Male ... .... 6,093 3,355 2,738 1,373 796 577 1,927 1,077 860 13,231 18,861 9,911 8,950 6,444 2,914 2,630 4,939 2,624 2,316 471 258 213 20,360 10,660 9,800 6,870 3,644 3,226 6,476 2,876 2,600 1,016 680 . 466 22,690 11,596 10,996 10,802 6,691 6,211 7,341 8,922 3,419 1,921 1,024 897 31,417 16,920 15,487 Linn— I'otal Male 21,519 12,580 Female _ 11.960 Louisa— Total Male . .- -. ... 11,8» 6,168 Female 6,732 7,746 Male Female Lyon— Total Male :z~'i 4,023 3,723 ""57i08 2.928 2,680 18,050 6,892 6,168 14,160 7,426 6,735 4,460 2,401 2,019 8,102 1,696 1,106 1.901 1.119 780 ""77on 3,734 3,337 14,516 7,606 7.007 16.167 8,361 7,806 5,713 3,000 2,713 4,381 2,421 1,980 3,291 1,79* 1,497 ""tTs^ 3.771 3.568 14.816 7,978 7,138 16,813 8,721 8,092 6,016 3,189 2,848 4,481 2,461 2,030 s,4ioe usee 1,651' Madison — Total 1,179 620 569 5,989 3,164 2,836 5,482 2,875 2,607 338 174 164 1,832 964 878 7,479 3,901 3,678 6,282 3,266 3,026 710 381 329 1,463 773 690 3,112 1,692 1.520 9.093 4,686 4,408 9,315 4,770 4,545 1,607 846 762 2,171 1,173 998 9,781 Male 6,067 4,707 Mahaska— Total Male Female 3,771 18,893 9,486 9,198 2,330 20,181 Male 10,820 9,861 Female Marshall — Total 11,513 Male 6,072 6.441 Mills— Total .-._ Male Female MitcheU— Total Male Female ----- 6.891 8.680 8.314 6,160 3,200 2,950 ACCORDING TO SEX 439 THE STATE U.S. State State U.S. State U.S. State U. S. State U.S. State Census Census Census Census Census Census Census Census Census Census Census 1870 1873 1875 1880 1886 1890 1895 1900 1906 1910 1916 21 ,-463 20,754 21,694 20,986 17,862 18,886 18,278 20.022 17,722 18,640 17,807 10,964 10,517 10,983 10,633 9,010 9,431 9,184 110,246 8,912 9,854 8,907 10,499 10,237 10,611 10,353 ■8,852 9,464 9,094 9,777 8,810 9,288 8,900 9,28B 7,459 7,875 10,837 9,305 11,182 13,221 14,512 13.523 12,920 18,929 3,399 3,908 4,217 6,743 4',903 5,839 8,854 7,5Br 9,990 6,923 7,154 2,888 3,6S1 3,958 6,091 4,408 5,848 9,367 9,885 6,683 8,297 9,776 2,689 2,890 3,465 5,341 8,095 9,839 11,431 12,667 12,1K 12,182 13,013 1,40S 1,548 1,807 2,859 4,253 8,235 6,074 9,830 6,284 8.387 9,809 1,188 1,842 1,948 2,482 3,812 4,601 5,357 9,087 5,838 5.796 6,204 22a 449 794 4,382 9,012 10,706 11,423 12,327 11,646 11.298 11,656 12* 245 888 2,451 4,888 5,798 6,124 9,698 9,097 5,963 6,168 102 201 411 1,981 4,119 4,909 6,301 5,734 5,549 5,383 5.604 16,644 16,870 17,458 19,221 18,190 18,270 18, 9«, 19,544 18,977 18,409 18.666 8,671 8,540 9,064 10,078 9,435 9,443 9,883 10,268 9,891 9,591 9,624 7,979 8,080 8,392 9,143 8,765 8,827 9,081 9,282 9,086 8,818 9,042 22,619 22,284 23,062 23,751 22,839 22,771 23,471 23,916 22,210 21,258 20,604 11,688 11,519 12,003 12,279 11,777 11,7215 12,074 12,066 11.260 10,786 10,515 10,931 10,765 11,069 11,472 11,092 11,046 11,397 11,549 10,960 10,472 10,089 22,116 22,340 24,128 25,963 25,247 2*, 943 26,891 29,976 27,156 27,084 27,496 11,601 11,518 12,523 13,448 13,039 12,808 18,341 13,928 18,863 18,934 14,078 10,515 10,822 11,605 12,680 12,211 12,011 12,530 13,054 18,178 13.100 13,418 17,839 16,774 17,127 17,472 15,995 15,184 18,405 17,437 16,488 16.951 16,922 9,248 8,S14 8,746 8,865 8,067 7,888 8,271 9.068 8,313 8,069 8,687 8,591 8,260 8,882 8,907 7,988 7,491 8,134 8,389 8,180 7,882 8,385 24,896 24,814 24,9W 25,429 23,049 23,082 23,583 24,817 24,683 26,914 27,330 12,899 12,689 12,727 18,065 11,795 11,764 11,908 12,580 12,474 18,144 18,757 11,999 12,125 11,927 12,894 11,281 11,318 11,960 12,287 12,209 12,770 18,573 19,731 18,980 19,168 21,058 19,954 20,238 20,088 21,951 20,427 19,050 19,143 10,278 9,682 9,886 11,062 10,143 10,580 10,437 11,732 10,688 10,022 10,088 9,458 9,288 9,281 10,000 9,611 9,943 9,851 10,222 9,829 9,028 9,114 19,484 19,874 20,488 21,2a 23,318 23,882 23,738 24,979 22,667 21,190 21,225 10,OTO 10,058 10,569 10,836 12,096 12,178 12,116 12,827 11,479 10.728 10,827 9,S56I 9,916 9,919 10,433 11,223 11,984 11,918 12,168 11,191 10,432 10,898 8,851 4,252 3,765 6,178 9,837 13,120 18,346 22,720 21,983 21,971 24,200 1,824 2,244 1,932 8,238 4,992 7,015 9,797 12,109 11,451 11,581 12,837 1,527 2,008 1,833 2,940 4,875 6,105 8,548 '0,611 10,612 10,390 11,883 37,210 33,644 38,914 34,859 34,024 37,715 39,528 39,719 38,006 36,702 38,101 19,825 19,878 17,112 17,659 19,971 19,228 20,117 19,980 18,919 18,438 19,267 17,686 16,666 16,802 17,200 17,058 18,487 19,411 19,799 19,067 18,264 18,834 31,080 30,019 31,815 8r,237 40,720 45,308 49,905 55,392 57,362 60,720 70,153 . 16,283 15,419 16,284 19,111 20,672 22,817 25,128 27,774 28,838 30,629 85,379 14,817 14,600 15,681 18,129 20,048 22,486 24,776 27,618 28,729 30,094 31,774 12,877 12,377 12,499 18,142 U,926 11,873 12,786 13,516 12,893 12,866 12,912 6,743 6,421 6,000 6,802 6,168 6,123 9,668 7,029 9,669 6,702 8,709 6,184 5,gS6 5,888 6,340 6,758 5,750 6,124 6,487 6,224 8,163 6,203 10,388 10,742 11,725 14,580 14,791 14,563 13,546 19,126 15,599 13,462 16,120 5,388 5,466 8,084 7,587 7,714 7,486 7,019 8,281 7,928 6,788 7,810 5,020 5,276 6,701 6,948 7,077 7,077 6,686 7,846 7, en 6,67* 7,310 280 966 1,232 1,868 4,007 8,850 11,684 13,166 13,494 14,621 15,368 ISl 523 678 1,088 2,246 4.713 9,339 7,089 7,165 7,809 8,215 9C 443 059 886 1,761 3,937 6,346 8,089 8,839 8,815 7,147 13,884 14,698 16,030 17,234 16,240 15,977 16,597 17,710 16,707 15,621 15,394 7,325 7,701 8,416 8,937 8,460 8,267 8,696 9,168 8,931 8,122 7,900 6,559 9,9S7 7,914 8,287 7,790 7,710 8,001 8,544 8,079 7,499 7,491 22,908 22,004 28,718 25,202 27,131 28,805 32,4fl6 34,278 31.430 29,880 29,314 11,490 11,806 12,146 12,880 14,095 14,880 16,878 17,763 16,089 16,229 14,941 11,018 10,746 11,673 12,848 13,066 13,905 15,618 19,510 15,341 14,931 14,373 24,436 21,272 24,094 26,111 23,419 23,068 23,191 24, ISO 24,107 23,995 23,978 12,679 12,888 12,486 12,765 11,895 11,725 11,779 12,327 12,320 11,900 12,266 11,857 11,889 11,658 12, M6 11,524 11,383 11,412 11,832 11,787 11,096 11,717 17,576 18,272 19,928 23,752 26,088 25,842 27,320 29,991 28,495 30,279 82,894 9,381 9,674 10,272 12,274 12,871 . 18,467 14,300 16,750 14,607 15,851 17,117 8,196 8,688 9,867 11,478 12,165 12,875 i8,oa« 14,241 18,888 11,428 18,877 8,718 9,694 10,563 14,137 18,727 14,518 15,187 16,794 16,058 16,811 14,916 4,806 6,191 5,572 7,644 7,232 7,700 7,968 8,816 7,840 . 8,2U 7,684 8,910 4,473 4,981 6,498 8,405 8,848 7,216 7,948 7,213 7,600 7,232 9,68Z 9,663 11,623 14,393 12,885 18,299 14,481 14,916 14,180 13,436 14<,43E 5,068 0,006 6,051 . 7,476 6,601 6,807 7,676 7,958 7,191 9,807 7,896 4.514 4.867 5,472 6,888 6,224 6,498 6,856 7,258 6,989 0,928 7,039 440 POPULATION OP COUNTIES Table No. 3 The Terri- tory THE STATE Counties U.S. OenB's 1840 State Cens'a 1847 U.S. Cens's 1850 State Cens's 1852 State Cens's 1854 State Cens's 1866 State Cens's 1869 U. S. Cens's 1860 State Cens's 1863 State Cens's 1866 State Cens's 1867 Monona— Total Male 222 109 US 4,677 2,360 2,217 233 127 106 9,665 5,101 4,454 459 280 179 6,860 S,OT3 3,287 872 470 402 12,669 6,707 9,862 885 B16 369 8,377 4,330 4,047 1,094 571 523 15,603 8,112 7,391 832 454 378 8,612 4,423 4,189 1,256 660 696 16,444 8,605 7,839 8 4 4 924 498 426 9,320 4,636 4,684 1,218 603 915 16,889 8,608 8,381- 40 20 20 1,096 683 513 9,436 4,769 4,676 1,535 777 758 17,241 8,619 8,622 30 17 13 1,941 1,037 Female "i'.i^ 1,602 1,382 '1^430 1,764 1,666 904 10,206 Male 5,186 6,023 Montgomery— Total _ Male 2,072 1,098 974 Muscatine— Total Male 1,942 1,089 853 3,010 6,731 3,068 2,663 6,812 3,649 3,163 20,699 10,572 10,127 O'Brien— Total Male 20 12 8 Male 651 290 261 ""'636 325 311 "ia48 602 546 Female ___ i,9e4 1,015 949 3,674 1,924 1,7.TO 131 78 63 112 65 47 126 76 60 11,238 5.944 5.291 5.012 2.757 2,2ai 5.338 2.84S 2.493 2.507 1..342 1.166 269 1.51 IIS 25.861 13.517 12.344 7R4 4.3S 351 "3'826 1,948 1 S7S 5.346 2.847 2,499 8.469 1,878 1,591 2,003 1.048 955 15.879 8,232 7,847 4,419 2,384 2,035 132 75 57 148 82 66 103 51 S2 11,625 6,064 6..W1 4.«!8 2 finl 2,.717 6,6«8 2.995 2.R73 2.887 1.5B9 1,348 246 136 110 25,959 13.600 12.3n9 818 443 375 10 9 1 4.051 2,096 1.055 S.285 2,796 2,489 3,. 590 1.903 1.687 2,012 1.072 940 17.081 9,069 8,012 4,6(57 2„3e3 2,294 142 73 69 98 .50 43 122 68 W 12.925 6.42.3 6.5n2 4,728 2.393 2.335 6.360 3,264 3.096 3.038 1.531 1.607 234 126 108 ''«.277 IS.I.'W) 13.127 828 4Xn 398 25 19 6 4. 368 2.217 2.151 7.000 3.600 3.400 3.759 1,984 1,771 2.420 1.216 1,2 6,981 16.292 8.271 8,0Bl ACCORDING TO SEX 441 THE STATE U.S. State State U.S. State U. S. State U.S. State U.S. State Census Census Census Census Census Census Census Census Census Census CensuE WO 1873 1875 1880 1885 1890 1896 1900 1905 1910 1916 3,651 1,989 5,967 9,065 12,178 11,015 19,005 17,980 19,857 18,633 17,3 1,995 2,675 3,115 1,871 6,691 7,821 8,581 9,617 8,833 8,705 9,0 1,659 2,314 2,822 1,181 6,611 6,691 7,124 8,363 8,021 7,928 8,3 12,724 12,302 12,711 13,719 12,321 13,666 15,790 17,985 21,391 25.129 25,91 6,671 6,378 6,670 7,264 6,320 7,059 8,191 9,142 12,888 13,442 13,9 6,053 e,921 6,141 6,455 8,001 6,607 7,596 8,543 11,503 11,987 12,2 5,931 ■8,801 10,839 15,895 15,901 15,848 17,119 17,803 17,021 16,604 17,2 3,366 1,556 5,690 8,558 8,289 8,237 8,810 9,180 8,721 8,568 8,8 2,578 1,016 5,149 7,337 7,632 7,611 8,279 8,813 8,300 8,036 8,4 21,688 21,882 21,623 23,170 21,320 24,601 25,339 28,212 28,171 29,506 28,6 11,178 10,869 11,089 11,842 12,478 12,666 12,979 11,183 14,368 15,219 14,4 10,513 10,513 10,584 11,328 11,842 11,938 12,360 13,769 13,808 11,286 14,1 715 1,865 2,840 4,155 8,389 13,060 15,809 18,985 19,710 17,262 18,5 101 1,010 1,239 2,230 1,528 7,051 8,285 9,017 8,931 9,006 9,6 311 825 1,110 1,925 8,861 6,009 7,321 7,988 8,079 8,254 8,8 1,409 1,778 2,219 3,995 5,674 7,377 8,725 8,827 8,966 10,1 779 931 1,179 2,141 3,041 3,917 4,857 1,638 4,649 5,3 630 811 1,013 1,851 2,583 3,430 4,068 4,189 4,307 4,7 """"9^W5 11.731 14,271 19,667 20,938 21,311 23,028 21,187 23,608 24,002 24,7 5,282 6,172 7,680 10,461 10,881 11,170 12,293 12,417 13,038 12,316 12,6 1,683 5,682 6,744 9,206 10,057 10,171 10,733 11,710 11,668 11,656 12,1 1,336 2,617 2,735 4,131 8,387 9,318 12,100 11,354 14,132 13,845 14.9 756 1,108 1,151 2,202 3,393 1,976 6,469 7,657 7,369 7,221 7,9 680 1,214 1,281 1,929 2,991 1,312 6,650 6,697 6,763 8,621 7,0 2,169 3,881 5,282 8,666 16,181 19,668 21,991 22,209 22,818 23,129 23,7 1,215 2,117 2,777 4,637 8,318 10,W9 11,760 11,841 11,960 12,891 12,6 961 1,767 2,505 8,929 7,163 8,^9 10,231 10,368 10,858 10,788 11,2 1,419 2,175 2,219 3,713 9,162 9,653 12,112 15,339 14,679 11,808 15,6 785 1,202 1,181 1,924 3,269 5,119 6,979 8,172 7,853 7,822 8.1 661 973 1,115 1,789 2,883 1,131 5,868 7,167 7,026 6,986 7,4 27,857 30,892 31,558 12,395 51,907 65,110 72,888 82,6911 98,950 110,138 129,1 11,627 15,113 16,228 22,096 26,610 33,387 37,344 41,853 49,088 66,327 61,8 13,330 15,179 15,380 20,300 26,297 82,023 35,511 10,711 47,882 51,111 61,2 16,893 20,171 21,665 39,850 li,866 17,130 18,012 54,336 51,876 55,832 66,8 9,189 10,611 11,516 22,169 25,037 25,486 23,809 28,381 26,489 29,176 26,9 7,701 9,657 10,149 17,691 20,829 21,914 22,233 25,972 25,107 26,656 27.9 15,681 15,245 16,182 18,936 18,208 18,391 18,521 19,114 19,445 19,689 19.9 8,456 8,031 8,739 9,928 9,868 9,511 9,636 9,982 9,887 10,122 10.1 7,125 7,214 7,748 9,008 8,835 8,883 8,989 9,132 0,668 9,167 9,8 5,691 8,850 7,646 12,085 12,730 13,658 11,065 15,825 13,965 12,904 13,2 2,917 3,542 3,903 6,118 6,685 7,058 7,361 7,951 7,204 6,841 6,9 2,711 3,308 3,843 5,667 6,04S 6,198 6,701 7,371 6,751 6,263 6,3 1,111 1,698 2,873 8,774 12,711 14,6221 15,868 17,639 17,065 18,555 17,0 775 89S 1,510 4,800 6,793 7,718 8,217 9,295 8,801 8,663 8,8 636 803 1,363 3,974 5,948 8,771 7,651 8,314 8,261 7,992 8,2 38,699 88,936 39,736 11,32« 41,966 13,191 15,860 31,568 65,910 60,000 65,e 20,157 20,102 20,261 21,027 21,378 21,^7 23,116 26,3M 28,536 30,799 33,1 18,442 18,834 19,476 20,293 20,683 21,337 22,753 25,231 27,374 29,201 32,1 2,510 3,762 6,684 12,696 18,306 17,611 17,798 17,932 17,097 18,652 16,« 1,358 1,989 3,089 8,951 8,720 9,171 9,423 9,485 8,937 8.717 8,7 1,182 1,773 2,825 5,715 7,586 8,137 8,375 8,177 8,160 7,836 7,8 576 2,872 3,220 5,426 11,681 18,370 21,106 23,337 24,025 29,248 25,i 32C 1,661 1,782 2,979 6,282 9,975 11,398 12,333 12,690 13,454 13,1 256 1,3U 1,438 2,147 6,302 8,395 10,010 11,001 11,335 11,794 12,1 11,651 11,519 13,311 18,906 17,627 18,127 19,990 23,159 23,660 21,083 25,7 6,088 5,966 6,840 8,775 9,008 9,154 10,269 12,185 11,996 12,306 13,1 5,569 5,553 6,471 8,131 8,521 8,673 9,681 10,971 11,694 11,777 12,e 16,131 18,343 18,771 21,685 21,622 21,651 22,966 21,585 23,291 22,156 22,£ 8,596 8,687 9,943 11,357 11,261 11,298 11,882 12,917 12,011 11,486 11,8 7,53« 7,766 8,828 10,228 10,358 10,358 11,081 11,868 11,280 10,870 lO.f 6,989 8,191 10,118 16,836 15,973 18,381 17,317 18,781 17,021 18,312 16,E 3,635 1,323 5,434 8,212 8,231 8,169 8,960 9,628 8,873 8,298 8.4 3,354 3,868 i.m 7,393 7,712 7,925 8,387 9,158 8,318 8,019 8.1 5,986 6,911 8,827 14,980 19,602 16,900 17,043 19,928 18,666 18,916 17,1 3,19fl 3,672 4,699 8,099 8,811 8,705 8,696 10,665 9,122 8,336 8,1 2,787 3,239 41,128 9,881 7,8OT. 8,185 8,317 9,383 9,241 8,281 8,4 17,972 16,890 16,980 17,043 16,170 16,263 16,829 17,351 18,685 15,020 11, £ 9,068 8,652 8,686 8.709 8,219 8,281 8,599 8,788 8,118 7,685 7,£ 8,613 8,208 8,282 8,334 7,951 7,969 8,230 8.686 8,147 7,156 7.! 442 POPULATION OF COUNTIES Table No. 3 The Terri- tory THE STATE Counties U.S. Cens's 1840 State Cens's 1847 0. S. Cens's 1850 State Cens's 1852 State Cens's 1854 State State Cens's Cens's 1856 1859 U.S. Cens's 1860 State State State Cens's Cens's Cens's 1863 . 1866 1867 5,660 8,471 4,396 4,075 961 606 456 4,957 2,667 2,390 340 195 145 8,896 4,664 4,332 1,488 767 721 5,881 3,059 2,822 794 447 347 243 135 108 10,621 5,431 5,090 4,446 2.394 2,062 7,660 3,967 3,693 1,663 887 776 90? 487 420 i8,ai6 6), 844 6,402 7,500 4,089 3.46S 11,113 0,029 e.084 4,183 2,221 1,962 3,068 1,75T 1,331 15,056 7,^0 7.216 9.150 4,707 4.443 13.366 7.(M8 6.318 6,860 3,077 2,783 2,686 1,396 1,200 188 97 91 12.211 6,638 5.673 1,100 645 455 759 407 362 ess 342 290 14,618 7,972 6.946 10.281 e,2f79 S.OO0 14.2K 7.486 6.737 6,409 3,399 3,010 2,604 1,319 i,isg 168 93 75 13,M2 7,470 6,472 1,119 606 513 756 395 361 6S8 350 303 16,675 8,304 8,371 10,926 5,448 5,478 14,971 7.689 7,372 6.5K1 3,266 3,256 2,8Sr 1,447 1,410 204 97 107 15,4141 7,917 7,497 1,106 975 531 895 4i57 438 693 368 335 18.847 9,469 9.381 11,150 5.665 B,S6S .15,777 8,193 7,582 6,327 3.202 3,125 3,772 1,846 1.926 298 143 155 16.4S1 8,562 7,869 1,293 648 645 1,143 974 569 908 495 413 18,930 Male — - Female -. . - 9,725 9,206 13,162 Male 6,699 6,463 Washington— Total - Male 1,694 893 3,518 17,676 9,086 TOlj 8,689 Wavne — Total 7,697 Male 3,911 Female 3,746 Webster— Total Male 5,681 2.917 2,714 785 7.506 4.128 S,S78 950 5S5 415 413 372 182 546 300 246 1,523 833 690 3.815 1,811 1,504 170 90 80 19.302 Male - _ 10,192 9,110 1.969 Male 1.097 912 Worth— Total ___ Male 1.643 794 749 Wrieht— Total 427 229 198 1.332 Male 710 Pemsle 622 ACCORDING TO SBX 443 THE STATE U.S. State State U.S. State U. S. State U. S. State U.S.. State Census Census Census Census Census Census Census Census Census Census Census 1870 1873 ■ 1875 1880 1885 1890 1895 1900 1905 1910 1915 23,348 22,261 23,865 29,286 25,808 30,488 33,293 35,426 36,624 87,743 37,98 ii,ea9 11.443 12,366 13,023 13,382 15,652 16,988 17,876 18,597 19,195 19,32 10,fl77 10,818 11,499 12,262 12,421 14,774 16,305 17,550 17,927 18, RB 18,86 17,980 17,400 18,528 19,678 17,868 18,269 18,506 20,376 19,976 18,194 18,27 9,2SS 8,872 9,636 10,168 9,190 9,429 9,386 10.371 9,868 9,101 9,16 8,eM 8,628 8,843 9,410 8,878 8,S40 9,120 10,00® 9,709 9,093 9,12 18,962 18,97B 19,269 20,374 18,604 18,4168 18,845 20.718 20,116 , 19,925 20, DC 9,766 9,610 9,761 10,8W 9,299 9,344 9,681 10.660 10,035 10,132 10,06 9,189 9,365 9,508 10,007 9,206 9,124 9,284 10,158 10,081 9,798 9,93 11,287 11,787 13,978 18,127 15,49* 15,670 16,135 17,4i91 18,905 16,184 16,24 s.sss 6,071 7,211 8,333 7,830 7,987 8,266 8,882 8,461 8,182 8,22 5,484 5,728 8,767 7,791 7,664 7,683 7,889 8,509 8,444 8.002 8,01 10,484 11,608 13,114 15,961 19,987 21,682 26,946 31.767 33,425 34,629 3S,S1 5,508 6,159 6,910 8,370 10,497 11,298 14,041 18.6614 17,380 18,298 20,26 4,886 5,444 6,204 7,681 9,490 10,284 12,904 15.108 18,040 16,331 18,66 1,862 2,488 2,987 4,917 5,579 7,325 10,707 12.72S 12,043 11,914 13,56 8M 1,312 1,681 2,620 2,920 3,^8 6,747 6.699 6,314 6,127 7,16 742 1,176 1,406 2,297 2,659 3,497 4,960 6,026 5.729 5,787 6,39 23,670 23,061 24,233 2S,9S8 ^,680 22,528 22,748 23,731 23.107 21,729 22,23 12,424 11,916 12,715 12,307 11,671 11,621 11,701 12,137 11.811 10,918 11,35 11,146 11,145 11,518 11,631 11,009 10,907 11,047 11,594 11.296 10,811 10,91 6,172 6,988 8,668 14,996 32,289 55,632 46,202 54,610 60.869 67,616 82,3] 3,477 3,820 4,604 8,207 18,638 31,259 24,028 28,447 31,900 36,207 41.65 2,695 3,168 4,064 6,789 13,651 24i,g?3 22,174 28,163 28,969 31,409 38, a 2,892 3,913 4,9C6 7,953 8,267 9,247 10,285 10,887 10,635 9,960 ll,li 1,518 1,994 2,948 4,219 4,332 4,873 6,421 5,746 6,627 5,181 8,8J 1,874 1,919 2,360 3,734 3,925 4,374 4,864 5,142 5,106 4,769 5,3S 2,3% 2,826 3,2414 6,062 9,380 12,057 16,024 18,227 17,629 17,951 19,66 1,275 1,486 1,731 2,763 5,015 8,47B 8,685 9,604 9,212 9,391 10,2! 1,117 1,33S 1,513 2,299 4,366 5,eB2 7,489 8,623 8,417 8,560 9,81 444 CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 TABLE NO. 4- At Various Enumerations, The Terri- tory THE STATE Counties 1840 1850 1862 1854 1866 1860 1863 1865 1867 Total White Total Colored . — *8,9« ai.SBl Bil9,m }S8 SSS SS5 S26,0S0 517,600 678,779 699,773 7SS ,6011897 ,60B m etS l,m 1,SW 5,608, i,71B Adair - .. —White- 160 "'""339 ""47266 ""67256 9 ""27623 2,614 ""17678 "'i7087 8 2,299 663 ""i7ffl9 ""77706 3 9,065 10 283 ""67247 ""57529 9 3,517 1 3,188 ""57^5 964 "127231 6 11,918 13 454 8,495 1 8,226 18 4,232 ""47910 5 7,904 2 67 '"37^3 1 147 281 90O "i76i2 13 13,467 4 11,854 6 388 "97549 6 9,996 9 4,607 5,404 ""87290 2 •100 ""47142 170 ""~297 1,097 "i78oi 16 13,951 6 10,717 31 510 iiiiiE 10 12,297 9 5,236 1 7,216 8 10,030 7 noo 5,004 2 228 '"""406 1,694 Adams — Colored -.White — Colored AUamakee _ White 777 «2,050 15,977 26 Colored- - Appanoose —White 3,124 7 ""m ""im '""'735 4,237 6 '"i7250 sis ""i754 " 309 13,024 40 790 "147765 7 16,024 12 9 868 Audubon ___ Benton Colored - —White Colored White Black Hawk Boone Colored -White Colored White ----- Bremer Colored —White - 3 9,327 —White- 517 1,023 12,224 7 Buena Yista Butler —White Colored -White- 73 "So ""27141 119 " 261 151 ""67k9 3 646 m Calhoun - Carroll Colored -White Colored -White Colored Cass —White 416 '"77642 1 816 '"97481 632 '27661 ""§7976 2 1,612 '127937 12 940 6i 4,331 6 6,427 52 1,623 "137248 13 1,007 26 4,396 ""57681 6 *100 1,892 3 14,017 24 1,310 1 64 ""57S60 5 6,686 SO ♦176 2,477 Cedar ... — Cerro Gordo — Colored -White Colored —White '1^253 "37939 2 "47968 3 2 16,035 41 1,988 Cherokee Chickasaw __ Colored -White Colored --White :::::: '""•306 """'eii 688 ""i7626 """"209 "67216 Clarke Colored -White — 79 4 6,208 Clay Colored -White — 36 369 Clayton Clinton Crawford -White- Colored -White- Colored -White 1,094 7 811 10 3,871 2 2,802 20 6,311 7 3,815 7 9,332 5 7,291 15 15,181 6 13,441 """"235 20,703 26 18,925 13 S83 21,226 6 19,816 3 466 21,903 19 22,387 18 B74 22,864 15 27,165 69 1,068 2 Dallas White-. 854 1,216 2,392 3,991 5,244 6,086 1 13,953 3 8,367 3 11,665 1 21,123 45 189 5,872 14 13,116 18 7,968 84 12,498 10 19,778 US 800 7,520 18 Davis -White 7,257 7 964 1 1,759 "127963 26 7,653 ~i7i7i 10 2,664 "127408 10 9,787 ""sToS 1 4,637 18 11,524 4 6,276 4 8,099 "207i82 16 13,762 2 8,670 7 11,023 1 19,583 28 180 13,487 30 Decatur White 8,467 Colored 34 Delaware Des Moines Dickinson -White— - Colored -WhltcL Colored -White OolOTBd 168 17671 6 14,446 17 20,251 198 'Estimated. POPULATION STATISTICS 445 POPULATION OF COUNTIES. According to Color, with Totals for State. THE STATE 1870 1873 1875 1880 1886 1890 1915 l.JSS.fXrt 5,81S B,iS2 i.m.srr 5,976 3,981 1 4,690 24 17,860 8 16,421 S6 1,211 1 22,430 24 a. 688 18 14,572 14 12,610 18 17,0a5 9 l,i "'97951 2,451 5,469 5 19,689 42 4,718 4 1,961 8 10,177 3 8,709 26 1, 27,744 27 35,226 131 2, • 1 11,994 25 15,535 30 11,977 41 17,411 21 27,029 227 1,389 6,264 49 18,302 2 16,433 41 1,872 1 22.060 8 23,116 20 15,166 11 12,506 11 16,328 1 2,669 "io776o '~"2'922 3,600 1 7,652 8 17,070 19 5, 4 3,297 10,289 3 8,947 28 3,^5 26,629 20 33,360 231 3,776 1 12,667 g2 15,385 49 11,667 31 16,500 22 34,427 264 1,743 1,6U,600 lO.OXS 9,S10 i.Boi.ose 10,685 7,045 ""77716 56 19,168 10 17,377 28 2,370 "^7788 19 22,897 16 17,340 11 13,199 21 17,304 11 3,661 "117718 16 3,185 6,768 2 10,540 12 17,820 69 6,668 17 4,245 ~ii7 1 10,079 39 3,669 27,178 8 34,144 151 6,030 8 14,349 37 15,718 39 13,183 66 18,881 9 34,759 347 1.748 11,669 8 11,799 89 19,753 38 16,562 74 7,446 3 24,868 20 23,876 87 20,685 2^ 14,W4 7 18,517 7,1 1 14,262 81 6,693 2 12,341 10 16,922 21 18,879 57 11,438 28 '8,238 2 14,634 11,455 58 4,246 2 28,828 1 36,673 190 12,390 23 18,692 ■ 54 16,404 64 15,207 129 17,948 2 32,674 425 i.g«o 1 14,099 3 12,142 4 18,298 37 16,873 68 10,822 3 23,885 17 23,847 13 24,898 74 14,346 4 17,704 2S 11,621 9 14,528 ~'97833 3 16,312 17 18,019 17,808 24 12,675 13 12,684 13,899 11,293 76 26,844 9 38,501 160 16,124 7 20,026 24 15,128 55 15,030 63 17,436 35,497 236 S,210 S i4,n2 22 12,247 45 17,895 12 18,816 145 12,412 "iiTisB 23 24,206 12 23,678 93 14,623 7 18,976 20 13,532 16 15.462 1 is,m '"ii7799 29 19,631 12 18,216 37 14,855 9 15,664 5 15,018 11,271 61 9,309 26,722 11 40,981 209 18,879 15 20,441 37 15,198 60 15,687 66 17,346 2 34,940 381 4.827 1 2,01,6,180 11,889 2,218,667 1S,075 2,195,558 14,881 2,209,191 15,580 2,Sil,S^2 16,m 16,464 16,179 15,096 14.398 14,727 40 IS 14 22 9 12,903 13,573 12.262 10.986 11,110 31 28 13 21 17,980 18,692 18,201 17.308 17.298 1 18 21 20 24,934 26,569 26,735 28.215 30.074 449 368 468 486 474 12,833 13,623 12,937 12.665 12,590 3 3 6 24,229 25,155 24,102 23,147 24,580 15 22 16 9 11 26,929 32,375 36,611 44,820 63,059 12 22 6 46 410 26,909 27,964 27,488 27,518 29,56] 130 235 115 108 135 15,399 16,299 15,962 15,837 16,959 4 6 11 6 9 20,514 21,401 19,108 19,730 19,325 25 26 26 •18 8 15,020 16,970 15,903 15,979 17,210 9 3 4 2 2 16,963 17,951 17,636 17,117 18,000 3 1 1 2 5 15.783 18,665 17,308 17,078 17,784 5 3 4 12 24 19,434 20,285 20,488 20,086 20,981 69 S2 24 31 36 20,921 21,262 20,504 19,026 19.751 5 9 7 22 36 18,967 19,323 18,349 17,744 17,614 41 47 19 21 9 18,267 20,613 21,483 24,863 31,608 36 58 61 148 226 15,661 18,553 15,946 18,736 • 16,589 3 17 18 5 2 16,693 8 11,470 17,032 3 12,371 15,926 2 11,697 15,375 16,089 10,693 '"157997 45 69 42 43 31 11,275 13,399 12,711 12,766 14,648 2 2 8 26,662 27,747 26,734 26,649 26,110 8 3 27 19 43,166 43,649 42,692 44,967 46,688 232 182 201 437 251 20,061 21,670 20,977 20,016 20,651 8 . 15 23 26 30 21,009 23,085 23,017 23,497 25,405 14 23 18 131 205 14,972 15,681 14,238 13,271 13,lSr 43 59 -28 44 40 16,698 18,057 17,001 18,312 17.123 41 58 43 35 25 18,096 19,184 18,761 17,886 18,560 8 1 2 4 37,156 35,557 36,991 35,706 35,301 474 428 490 439 865 6,028 7,991 8,121 8,182 9.486 4 9 E ......._.- 446 POPULATION OP COUNTIES Table No. 4 The Terri- tory 1840 THE STATE Counties 1850 1852 1854 1866 1860 1863 1866 1867 Dubuque Emmet .-White Colored -White 2,987 72 10,813 28 12,452 56 16,603 27 "s'.m 96 '"2'994 12 25,835 36 "s.m 44 2,444 '"'"780 "sl368 10 1,080 435 31,083 81 105 'ii'oii 64 3,744 'Y,m "i'.m 6 1,374 """7S 80,687 76 •160 "12^736 2 4,018 "i^448 "4^772 3 1,416 1 1,024 32,958 120 368 13,001 123 4,883 3 1,895 4 5,652 46 1,659 2 3,237 2 2,029 3 292 38,761 99 707 ..White 825 2,065 14,961 Floyd Franklin __ Fremont ..White Colored ..White. Cplored White. - ------ "i',2U "T.m 12 6,725 6 2,319 2 6,995 Greene Grundy .-White Colored ..White 2,352 1 2,119 299 ""122 772 2,149 3,068 "1^699 179 3,205 "i^602 240 3,903 3 3,151 3 357 Hamilton Colored White .. Hancock Colored —Whitfl Hardin White •300 1,26B 4,033 5,440 6,342 17 3,663 6,793 20 4,265 9,331 14 . - White 1,065 1,900 3,620 1 18,677 24 3,167 1 . 332 5,835 1 Colored - Henry , Howard ..White Colored ..White Colored..— ..White 8,756 16 8,696 12 9,619 14 - 10,144 IB 15,387 8 444 16,568 106 3,382 ""394 17,816 262 3,869 2 606 19,709 401 4,397 4 1,307 Colored.. Ida -.White- Colored 43 •55 •63 90 -White 821 1 7,201 9 1,280 "9'm 1 4,450 22 3,006 1 4,822 1,322 1 8,223 8 1,674 '10^225 "5^768 20 4,201 "'5^306 2,307 '12460 6 3,466 'iiyiie 1 8,446 21 6,075 "7^293 4,873 "14^077 ""7^489 1 13,305 '14^439 18 9,830 5 10,646 """'397 8,029 "5^482 11 9,882 1 16,030 8 17,530 30 13,200 "lilm """416 8,542 1 19,146 6 10,569 29 14.629 10 17,170 7 13,485 5 13,408 2 366 10,268 '19^086 11 12,077 18 14,742 30 18,669 79 14,361 15 13,994 2 694 12,381 Jackson —White Colored -White 1,401 10 19,956 14 16,180 59 16,375 45 21,562 79 16,200 28 Jellerson Johnson Jones Colored ..White. Colored- — ..White Colored -White Colored '2^773 i~488 3 471 White- 15,425 4 1,572 Kossuth Colored ..White. Lee Linn , Louisa .-White Colored -White-,— Colored -White Colored -White- .. 6,082 11 1,372 1 1,910 17 18,809 52 6,441 3 4,923 16 471 20,318 42 6,867 3 5,427 49 1,046 22,524 66 10,795 7 7,290 51 1,921 27,271 2 14,696 6 9,537 31 4,408 28,987 245 18,936 11 10,276 94 5,764 2 27,599 462 18,686 7 10,605 34 6,267 28,008 1,043 20,714 40 10,888 60 6,343 9 30,052 1,365 24,500 49 11,840 45 7.724 22 Lyon — Colored ..White. Colored .— Madison White 1,179 1,832 3,112 5,608 7,339 7,934 8,211 3 16,998 84 18,677 42 8,714 45 5,188 20 9,757 7 Colored 5,988 1 5,453 29 338 7,755 4 6,249 33 710 9,093 "9',^ 16 1,607 13,b47 3 14,158 2 4,460 14,800 16 16,780 33 6,015 16,235 7 17,270 24 7,492 29 6,279 4 18,681 112 20,172 9 11,448 65 Colored White -. Marshall Colored White.. - Colored Mills -White 1,463 2,171 3,089 13 4,462 19 6,973 21 •Estimated. Colored ACCORDING TO COLOR 447 THE STATE 1870 1878 1876 1880 1885 1890 1895 1900 1906 38,802 41,744 43.690 42,837 45,487 49,712 60,072 56,283 61,364 167 156 155 169 9 133 105 118 115 1,389 1,614 1,432 1.547 2,781 4,270 7,611 9,929 10,094 3 4 4 3 4 8 7 11 16.903 18,673 20,492 22.136 22,364 23,066 24,721 29,766 28,602 70 123 26 122 58 75 73 89 60 10,765 11,267 13,098 14,872 15,360 15,419 17,113 17.787 16,762 3 4 2 5 2 4 1 16 17 4,733 5,669 6,568 10.237 11,324 12,871 13,679 14.988 6 14,689 6 6 12 11,144 "~12^373 il'.ws 17,588 16,908 ■"iil™ 17,131 18,481 16,218 30 21 28 64 13 43 46 64 81 4,624 5,755 7,036 12,711 16,923 15,786 16.294 17,808 16,086 3 1 16 11 6 11 3 6,389 '""7^64 8,132 12,639 12,803 13,200 13,414 13,754 13,606 2 1 15 4 3 1 """7^M6 '~'8',oll 9,635 ""14^392 16,437 17,351 17.950 18,719 18,010 6 2 3 2 2 29 8 7 3 6,062 6,672 7,699 11,251 14,059 15,299 18,468 19,472 19,358 3 2 1.477 1 3,453 16 5,088 19 7,619 46 11,131 40 13,741 23 12,978 994 "'""il392 5 5 13.825 6 14.971 1 18,491 2 18,922 10 20,566 8 22,736 9 21,841 13,651 "'i¥,m 33 30 39 111 35 80 21 65 15 8,930 10,348 11,818 16,632 20,660 21,328 23.061 25,568 23,742 1 17 26 30 39 20 20,980 '"26^296 "~2ili23 20.477 ' 17^482 18,483 17.920 19,655 17,480 483 464 471 609 380 411 368 367 242 6,270 7,438 7.846 10,817 9,304 11.172 13,213 14,497 13,500 12 21 29 20 1 10 8 15 23 2,596 2,890 3,465 6,339 8,065 9,832 11,427 12,665 12,121 2 4.382 '""9"oi2 4 10,704 1 18,268 4 11,421 4 18.962 2 , 12,324 3 19,540 1 11.646 226 449 794 "'"is'ess '"16^565 '"17^446 "'19^206 ""18490 """18^977 11 6 10 15 2 2 2 1 22,594 22,276 23,050 23,792 22,833 22,758 23,460 23,613 22,210 26 8 12 9 6 13 11 2 22,047 22,291 24,053 25,842 25,117 24,839 25,742 26,786 26,893 69 49 75 121 ISO 104 149 190 264 17.786 16,726 17,055 17,897 15,961 15,125 16.366 17,366 16,403 63 63 72 72 44 67 39 71 90 24,800 24,763 24,654 25,328 23.023 . 28,024 23.517 24,753 24,630 98 61 100 106 23 58 46 62 53 19,699 16,896 19,147 21,017 19.636 20,199 20,051 21,896 20,414 32 34 19 35 18 34 37 68 13 19,431 19,967 20.485 21,243 23.305 23,838 23,702 24,945 22,658 3 7 3 16 13 24 30 33 9 3,351 4.248 3.762 6,177 9,336 13,108 18,344 22,717 21,968 3 32, 4«) 3 32.486 1 33,178 1 32,573 12 36,044 1 37,922 3 38,084 5 37,919 '"S6~M 1,663 1,244 1.428 1,681 1,461 1,666 1,606 1,633 1,587 31,032 29,938 • 81,709 37,027 40,506 46,069 49,643 65,134 97,110 48 80 106 210 214 234 262 268 252 12,818 12,323 12.456 13,077 11,911 11,848 12,756 13,507 12,885 59 64 44 66 15 25 31 8 8 10,357 10,707 11.701 14,490 14,355 14,243 13,433 15,932 15,494 31 36 24 40 436 ,319 112 194 105 221 966 1,232 1,968 4,007 8,680 11,674 10 16,586 13,165 13.493 1 16,702 '"ii^iii '"ii'.m '~i6"02i ""'17^212 '""16^233 '"'161966 """i7;706 3 6 9 12 7 11 11 4 6 22,868 21,814 23,457 24,678 25,566 27,211 30,356 32,532 30,768 160 240 261 624 1,575 1,592 2,138 1,737 662 24.400 24,226 24,066 25.667 23,404 23,014 23,136 24,114 24,069 S6 46 28 44 16 38 65 44 38 17,536 18.237 19,666 23,627 24,931 25,698 27,173 29,822 28,362 40 36 64 125 105 136 147 167 133 8,713 9,66'] 10,646 14,113 13,689 14,527 15,151 16,720 15,019 r 4 9 24 38 21 36 44 34 57,347 103 9,797 19 27,812 107 17,101 18 14,768 12 16,683 40 16,022 1 13,662 12 17,371 3 19,203 39 12,716 15 20,875 46 23,147 15 18,376 264 12,908 12 12,178 4 11,294 2 18,404 6 21,268 ""26^862 182 16,871 80 26,838 76 18,967 83 21,143 17 21,966 6 35,224 1,478 60,497 263 12,837 18 18,379 83 14,619 S 16,602 19 29,178 682 22.902 93 30,131 148 15,764 47 448 POPULATION OF COUNTIES T/iWe Tfo. 4 The Terri- tory THE STATE Counties 1840 1850 1852 1854 1856 I860 1863 1865 1867 Mitchell -White Colored -White Colored White "i'iiii "iim 1,901 3.409 3,686 4,176 «,148 2 Monona 222 "4^77 " 233 "9^487 68 "1448 ' 469 6,869 1 872 "12^669 "i^964 828 4 8.610 2 1,245 3 16,332 112 « "4^418 1 132 917 7 9,318 2 1,218 1,079 17 9,409 26 1,B3S 1.914 27 10,156 Montgomery Colored White . 62 2.072 Colored -White Colored -Whiter Colored -Whits Colored White 'lis? 26 69 BBi "6'754 58 ""636 "6^346 "I'M 902 Muscatine O'Brien __ Osceola _ Page 16,789 100 *40 "4^652 6 142 17,127 114 •30 "6, ih lo CO ^ CO O ta i>iOQ0»*t- OiH(M O O "* M M iHrHOiNt- CO t- CO lO (N lO t- •* 00 O OS lO iH (M CM IN O r-! 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C8 O C a aaaaa bSSSs SSSSs 5|gi| ggg^g BY MONTHS, AGE AND SEX S15 040403064 CQ 00 ri 01 i^ss ^^m f-ii-t iH 04iH iil§§ III C4 0ptOt- iiiii mg Siiil illi U^IH g|l^ ;ii3ess SS83 SaSSSSlS ISSiS^ -Sawt-N SSSco im r-liQ t-t lesis 3 CD OCO fSSfe ^^C4^M »M^04 sgiii ill eSSSSS 3SS3 MiA tOlQ t<- IS8S 3&S -« t-^t SSSS3 SSSSSS I I I I I I II' J3 S §§11' 03 n c8^.: •as OS O fOOs (o5 tn o •*s a > o o CO o 'SOS •IBJOJ, ■sivua^ •aiBM •3[Bni9J[ •8[BII •aiBBia,! •aiBJt •aiBraa,! •a[BH •aiBtaaj ■3[BK •IBlOi ■aiBinaj •81BH ■aiBinaj •91BH •aiBtna,! ■8[BJI •ajBaiaj ■8[BK •3[Bra3iI •3[BH Isg^g ?SMia III M04«i>cg looeoco-^ co'*'^--*'* co f-J»H iH M tH ■^MCOoBiH iggis 01t> ACO H c4 04 eg oa H OQ rH rH i-l H 00 P3 2 5 -^ Si 1-1 o> CO to oj q> tH iH u5 lo Co Oi tH Oj oi ■* i-4iHeTj(COi>'* »0 OQ 55 Tjl « ^ SPSS t *" ■* ra 00 OS « q C0O3CO 5 53Scq H M r-l i-H i-l iH iH iH T-H 1-1 i-l r J>COCX)o5i> b-t^r-itSia g eocogc i^s&s r-l U3 U eg iH e ggSSa g?3gg8 S8SS8 SSiSSffi I-l "* H r-*NpHrHrH rH i-« iH r^ iH i-l »-i W H ma^ S3f:^SS 3&^S 3S3 ^3S£2S SSoSE 853sgs ssssg sssas esss b A LA M A H t-** SOi-H ii-ioq iH 04 »-l H i-hSS i-l O^ TO-* t- N SSS3S: g|3$^ ^'S'^ s® 8S|8 5B|§§fe SSSfeS 3SKS8 ■*rtSSo S CO S u a'-ss'- SS3 coifjeoo® D-xinoD'* sssaas <*'*ri'* i>t*eqoa a^s oq OiO CO -Ml O CO -Ml o o ■«•« '40stDi>ia 5::2E22"* 31^1:^3:51 ^irirS^SlS o&Ni-Hooeft tH rH r-i iH iH CO 04 H ri iH t-1 04 i-l rH 04 r-i Oscooiaoo cAh-iHi-ice ooQoq-^oo ooosi-ieq^ T-trH0404 iHeaOfli-irH iH 04 i-5 i-t iH *-i l-t M i-i H i>^tf)0£<- t~Oi^ino O»0ir-J^i0 o Id o o S3 ? ft-a 5^ 1^ 'w I" *^ 'a P 3 d rt 03 fflMDDO 516 SCHOOL ATTENDANCE, 1914 21 ■OS CO JS ■si •IBJOl ■3IEin8iI •aiBW •aiBtnaii ■3[BH[ •a[Eni3j ■3IBII •8[«ra3j[ ■mm ® :* ^ P »" CO 00 O CD lO CO lO oi"-* lO CO •* -"iHO W in nq 00 t- (N W ■* CO Co CO ^ ^ ■* lO t- Oj Q tHC* t}4 Cp ® ■* Oi-I OJ CO 03 10 (C coco eg O OT cS MO-os CO CO «D i-l u in -^ ^- tfl o CO lo 00 ft a lO eg op rHi- goot-o r-l&iHlQ CO -* CO CO CO gc- eg CO Tji & intr ■* CO ft CD CO ^ Sft t: 03 ofi TjlOoSQOt- iigil ■3 O in CO LQ M ai lO 00 00 14 CO N CO 3 CO o 3 mftOCDop t- CO w CO ffi ■JOOCOOO OSftt-CO^ "<* CO OJ lO o O OS O >»| CO rH CO -tfi QO l5 N 00 t- ft OS &CD C0i;;-0 Ji-i CO lO M Q0l>t-CO ^ r-i 23 CO in iac^c4to» ■"H-^ftftt- Bot-c-oc H«P SSeo^S Sooc CO ©00 eg ssss eg 00 iH t- eg r-i iH eg i-i eg CO CO cor* to i> e-i u5 1^ iH eg 00 1-1 iH t-i 3 CO ft coin Stn lA m t^ 10-* c 1 iHri eg c fe«2;=;* CO Olt- lO s ss^ss -s ■Oft to o CO 03X3 o ■8IBin8ii H "*"*ceH eg ■« CO eg CO •8IBM gmgo r-i lo (M ft la 00 CO eg i-H ft -^ rn ia i-i eg iHrHi-i 1-1 iHMCg i-tritHCOi-i COt-rlOD"* O CO ■« CO -^ S^SSl*^ ftOCO^"* OlOOtOtO *8IBIlI8jJ •91BK •aiBinS;! eg eg ft ■« lA OftftOOCO -^-^i-HOt* rH iH rH iH i-l rH iH iH r-1 13 CO ft OC OS O to CO CO HCOt* ICO 0Dr-l-*Or COiOIO4i<0040 l> 04 04 IQ 0) i •aiBw SQCQft t-lftlOO 563 35g DO oiSlaa CTSjf-ja o».g'hS o.9St.j- ^«»--Jni^ >"a^rtoa SSld^H RtHMa^ cSw'Sw.H saoa^S S£^S°3 sseScsSo fififiOO OWftPHfH PhOOOW WWWWW m o M ID BY MONTHS, AGE AND SEX 517 ^SagS g5!3SS gSSSS gSgSS Siiil giifiS S"H§ gSS^ LrSkncof-oq c<5 cm oil oo ih -^Iioe^oocM SiO»C>iAe>3 AOC^co^- OaoooiOiH <0'<4iH ScS So-giScoop i^fflOioSo &a!a©»r! eSQP'*'-' eOrH©^rt m5 oin rHoq&ooio oo'^N© feoooooo ^»3S^-TH S5mcK'*i>- ■^sS MC-rHHiH hWNMiH THNMi-tN OgrHOgiHN iH M «D OQ rH t-H lO iH CO M N rH iH iH tH N N pH ■>* i-t a U3 lo ig CO CO C4 rl O) rl 3383 §8S rH«0 iH W05 i-ICOlNCOi-l iH(MCOi-lCN W iH (N i-( Oq W Cfl «0 N i-i «l-(l-)lH'* NNW^lH OCO O t- tA "«tu>ff5 CO T-l CO ■*o>oi5o CO coin ■*!> CO u5i> CT X CO t- t- r-ir- r-l ff cott>3^ in CO CO 00 aot« I-lpTlfrH lH Irt iH Cq M b-(N U3 O CO lO 1-1 m I> l£3 o th c6c-os CO lO (M 0> 3 LA O C CO g ffl o>«o Si>-S t- oirS c-coei l>f © CM ■* M O m coio »o CNi-i iH 1-t w T-if-1 eq ©q i-H t^ OT lO aasf OS lO 3 iH t»m •* i-H CO O (M Ci cocooocq(> 88 828? t-J>»fteD>* g US CO 00 CO i-liaTtt&qiM rH iH CO rH oqw f-ii-t SI 85J«8-e 388^88 5 rH Ot^r-j H C-CO t-H l-( esssss issaes gasas ssas N »-l 1-i O T-lHrHrHrH i-i i-l N cq i-i Cq ■* rH iH ssssas sssass (NOqi-tHr-i tHffScqr-ifH T-1 tHCq iH oOnSa m^T 05 CO o CO ^ COCOiDlOCq A^CSQ i-l(NOO(Nt- 001>r-l2 i-ICOrH CO in th j> THrH oScOrH assss H03U3 CO^OCOm t-eqt^-^ lo !S 8«5Sig SSaSSS 38 ssssss sssfcs ssses got ™f~ '^ 00 ra fH iH r-i t—iO m O ^ 00 C^ CO ]>10 (NC3SD COrH q lo cs o> MootMo^ ^ iH iH «* ©q i-H (N cq m OQ C- 5; rH UJ ^ S d oift il 06 00 -til 10 3oi Sen fiSineqS ^SSoq8 iH H CO 5eOi>r-. (N CO >A rH CO coSd! MOD :)iji iHoaosco tOiNOco qrH iH iH i-l iH »-l T(t i-( W NCONODCO 3§§S la-^coiN-* »fli>cqifioo ^tPS rHjIji^aico cqQiAiot- woo iH M I-l iH CO H cq iH rH iH iH 04 C io-*t*j>iN cooqcocoiO rflcoco-*"* t-oqcor-jco cooeOLcam cocO'^-vfO -^^cqAcoeo Caeot^co-^ lo^okco aa'-*s sss W t- O^ U5 t-0 -*H CO IN O 10 hSi-IM ewffl-am 2S«» ogsSo U.S O S t>i cd G9 03 s3:;d ago u ffl u d fl a m ■^0000 I- tr « ca oSpS" o op 0.1 m I S ' ' (n I CQ I 03 I -tJ w fl i«.2a (-1 /-\ ri n .« ■4-37=1 D M w o « o o &1] E. ( .■=0000 r* s ca os,r? 000 o.k SS^ow ososarf,* ,?'^,?,?!r Saaaa oop^ph^ o<£iihs<« ^SSks &Bei>^ ^^^^^ I I i ' ' I as ' 518 CENSUS OP IOWA, 1915 TABLE NO. 10— KIND OF SCHOOL ATTENDED. Attendance in Schools and Colleges in 1914, by Counties, Acpord- ing to Age Classes. Counties 5 and Under 10 Tears Class ol School a a " •U O OS o 10 and Under 21 Tears Class of School as ■al >ja fl« w"- Total Class of School Sn „ ^1 goo P The State Adair Adams Allamakee Appanoose Audubon Benton Black Hawk ... Boone Bremer Buchanan Buena Vista Butler Calhoun Carroll Cass Cedar Cerro Gordo Cherokee Chickasaw Clarke Clay Clayton Clinton Crawford Dallas Davis Decatur Delaware Des Moines Dickinson Dubuque Emmet Payette Ployd Pranklin Fremont Greene Grundy Guthrie Hamilton Hancock Hardin Harrison Henry Howard ISO.JfiO 6,S19 2Sl,ai 1,262 9S6 1,155 2,941 1,042 1,794 3,809 2,436 1,300 1,460 1,: 1,549 1,492 1,473 1,578 1, 2,211 1,221 1,132 978 1,' 2,084 2,915 1,681 1,964 1,109 1,514 1,515 2,272 806 3,002 877 2,166 1,300 1,322 1,317 1, 1,210 1, 1, 1,183 1,797 2,206 1,373 1, 74 2 16 51 154 20 40 284 195 1 72 134 41 3 124 47 15 6 4 4 8 1,! 1,450 2,090 3,851 1,629 2,347 4,623 3,496 1,886 2.262 1,954 2,156 2,136 1,971 1,813 3,018 1,875 1,778 1.419 1,784 2.947 4,659 2,447 2,806 1,833 2,246 2,221 3,315 1,336 4,719 1.390 3,167 1,871 2,146 1,960 1,911 1,618 2,267 2,381 1,861 2,497 3,278 2,042 1,604 182 8 46 114 299 61 159 73 3 4 494 6 14 108 116 346 5 184 461 124 6 lis 163 19 236 77 3 28 S 34 15 24 9 27 207 247 232 312 630 182 707 412 442 427 600 466 676 484 766 380 358 350 436 496 665 333 697 187 399 492 736 242 1.109 208 566 422 249 436 335 299 410 319 333 623 606 437 316 m,6ti 28 20 61 49 37 114 379 73 63 78 79 72 47 48 41 181 51 64 176 82 75 67 64 81 78 12 406 26 109 63 64 76 86 57 32 119 27 ISO iB.m 3.188 2,386 3.246 6.792 2.671 4,141 8.432 6,932 3,186 3.712 3.286 3.704 3,627 3.444 3.771 3,178 5,229 3,096 2,910 2.397 2,877 6.031 7.674 4,028 4,770 2,942 ^3,760 3,736 5.687 2.141 7,721 2,267 5,322 3,171 3.468 3,277 3.300 2,828 8,805 3,973 3,034 4,294 5,483 3,416 2,672 S9,680 13 266 10 165 463 81 199 79 HI 4 4 778 8 16 161 184 641 256 685 165 8 22 158 239 25 3.178 6 104 18 31 5 49 20 28 13 36 312 M.OSl 247 232 312 630 182 698 1,383 707 412 442 468 427 6-0 466 576 484 765 380 368 360 436 496 666 333 697 492 735 242 1,109 208 555 422 249 436 336 299 410 319 333 623 605 437 Slfi 28 20 61 49 37 114 379 73 79 72 47 48 41 181 61 49 64 176 82 75 67 64 81 78 12 406 26 109 63 64 76 86 67 32 119 27 130 46 82 go EDUCATIONAL STATISTICS 519 Table No. 10 5 and tJnder 10 Years 10 and Under 21 Tears Total • Counties Class of School Class of School Class of School a go So a o §° p o So o g> §■3 B o ,So 03 O o goo 1 Humboldt Ida _ 1,054 959 1,641 1,451 2,413 1,412 2,103 1,442 1,649 2,137 2,371 4,839 1,073 1,345 1,457 1,277 2,311 2,056 2,418 1,224 1,002 1,591 2,580 1,414 1,896 1,522 874 1,812 1,304 1,731 1,235 9,164 4,769 1,628 1,214 1,439 4,183 1,29? 2,204 1,941 1,749 1,430 1,350 1,198 3,120 1,527 1,434 1,353 3,039 1,099 1,391 5,300 923 1,607 12 9 24 118 19 7 83 18 20 54 205 168 1 2 38 4 26 7 22 2 69 10 10 1 47 65 48 8 100 167 78 233 145 " i 18 336 8S 306 14 7 4 4 22 20 34 1 236 257 241 2 1,474 1,258 2,147 2,019 2,956 1,931 2.625 1,974 2,638 3,032 3,360 6,349 1,436 1,887 1,883 1,920 3,143 2,777 3,116 1,644 1,499 2,085 3,234 1,768 2,422 2,082 1,274 2,648 1,884 2,377 1,807 11,211 6,2S) 1,895 1,760 1,873 5,421 l.POP 2,631 2,634 2,467 2,002 2,008 1,830 3,842 2,006 2,000 2,091 4,145 1,767 2,438 6,867 1,466 2,206 32 438 19 335 56 44 36 48 47 109 184 56 48 89 169 468 37 32 42 34 188 64 126 68 58 46 23 65 88 83 21 79 65 106 48 1,015 216 143 29 48 353 48 101 156 79 30 67 41 106 114 77 41 210 202 118 409 3? Ill 2,528 2,217 3,688 3,470 6,368 3,343 4,728 3,416 ■4,187 5,169 5,731 11,188 2,609 3,232 3,340 S,197 5,464 4,833 5,634 2,768 2,501 3,676 6,814 3,172 4,318 3,604 2,148 4,460 3,188 4,108 3,042 20,376 11,044 3,523 2,964 3,312 9.6IH 3,106 4,836 4,676 4,216 3,432 3,358 3,028 6,962 3,532 3,434 3,444 7,184 2,866 3,829 12,167 2,388 3,812 44 28 106 314 39 16 262 66 48 160 532 465 1 4 142 15 78 8 91 3 241 42 18 2 167 162 191 46 312 466 275 649 423 6 46 85" 212 769 26 23 2 10 4 50 106 98 6 618 659 63S 6 8 438 336 479 428 666 484 1,047 544 606 680 972 2,037 450 354 334 338 879 429 966 380 639 477 393 678 617 672 207 646 817 576 637 3,872 1,39: 850 36; 610 1,27- 392 611 943 617 430 499 442 1.072 946 826 492 792 341 872 2,243 243 622 66 44 36 Jackson Jasper Jefferson 196 20 9 179 48 28 106 327 297 2 104 11 62 1 69 1 172 32 8 1 120 107 143 38 212 283 197 416 278 6 28 516 12'> 463 12 16 2 6 ""28 86 64 4 882 402 394 5 6 428 666 484 1,047 644 606 680 972 2,037 460 364 334 338 879 429 966 380 539 477 393 578 617 572 207 646 317 575 537 3,872 1,392 860 365 610 1,277 392 611 943 617 430 499 442 1,072 946 826 492 792 341 372 2,243 243 622 4S 47 109 184 Jones Keokui 66 48 Kossuth Lee Linn _ 89 169 468 37 Lucas 32 42 Madison __ 34 Mahaska 188 64 126 Mills 58 MitcheU 68 46 Monroe _ 23 Montgomery Muscatine 65 88 O'Brien „_ 83 21 Page _ Palo Alto — 79 65 106 Pocahontas _ ___ __ 48 Polk 1,015 216 Poweshiek 143 29 Sac Scott __ 48 363 Shelby _ 4« 101 Story 156 79 Taylor - 0nion _ 30 67 41 Wapello- _ 10S 114 Washington 77 41 210 Winnebago 202 Winneshiek 118 409 Worth Wright - 38 111 NOTE: The columns headed Bural or Graded Schools. 'Common School" include all persons who attended 520 CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 § as EX) 6D a o o < pi o U u o > o SI t>0 <; O cii o 2 8}i!i8j!ia ?n80 raj |wO IB^oj, pnujo •aiBnraa •818H •8[Bnraa; •aiBK •aiBoiaj •8IBM •3tBni8ig[ •atuH 39 i OS •aiBtnSii H S' a s ■aiBH a ■aiBnraa P 4S d ts ®i-iU3 ^ 3 i-IOJOO 00 t-tea eoooc ^QoBcO'* lO-^t-rHio oeat-*-ooi> t-co©©** coooaooo lOAcocooo (MOamxm 5 iH CO eg ■* rHOQ 3S8 S3 oigooou ■4< iH a la S S *GOt- CO Mio eg iH M ogSS oqe^MOOt- rHi-irHiHCq i-H (M i-! 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(S ID -* Oi 3 ID CO CO iH -=? g r-1 00 ■* CO ^^ 1- Cico O e CO CO e^ CO o c5 lyq Its CO r lA rH CO U N Tf CO OS UJ -^ th CO OQ 00 OQt 9C0 CO eg c CO O CO rH in CD cocqio o « as ID frg I^ CO col«- fig r-Jaa 9 «0 &1 CO C CO eg in iHrHW o a S < y gpHBapHH «>■. .. « © S °S ffl M t3 1 03 _& ■ill gp^ o « O Cm BB ■5° o S OCLj 03 03 O o ■*^4J O ri 00 a o infM III o o 552 CENSUS OP IOWA, 1915 TABLE NO. 13— Persons 14 Years of Age or Over Engaged in Classified Agricultural Pursuits Professional Service Domestic and Personal Service Counties and Age Classes 1 3 "3 i ■3 1 S 03 1 1^ State— 14 and under 18 years 18 and under 21 years */1 nnrt ^inrtpr 45 yeftrfj 6,133 14,550 170,321 90,974 89 119 1,306 2,981 6,222 14,669 171,627 93,966 40 697 13,282 7,202 197 5,226 22,320 2,665 237 S,822 36,602 9,767 483 1,303 14,411 6,460 2,622 6,840 17,483 6,473 3,005 7,143 31,894 State Total 281,97S 4AS6'286,m 21, m S0,S07 Sl,i28 22,657 32,318 5^,675 Adair — 14 and under 18 years 50 117 1,721 810 """"17 26 60 117 1,738 835 3 17 57 3 IS nnf! pnHpr ?"] yearp 5 44 34 43 147 10 48 191 44 5 46 16 22 36 Total 8,698 25 73 1,292 667 2,W 67 196 1,699 1,086 ■}2 1 '""19 23 is 7 5 10 71 2,7iO 26 73 1,311 680 is 200 283 68 98 10 18 41 28 m 10 Adams— 14 and under 18 years 18 and under 21 years _. ""I9 29 45 111 7 45 160 36 1 35 26 19 76 45 years and over 53 Total 2,090 74 201 1,609 1,167 68 2 79 49 163 1 70 177 16 2S1 1 72 266 65 61 1 8 62 30 97 16 42 116 46 158 Allamakee— 14 and under 18 years. 17 21 and under 45 years 167 75 Total . 43 133 1,384 985 93 1 8 22 3, OH 43 134 1,392 1,007 ISO 6 144 68 26i 4 60 199 13 S9J, 4 66 343 81 91 1 9 103 47 218 37 52 103 73 S09 Appanoose— 14 and under 18 years. 18 and under ?1 years 38 21 and under 46 years. 206 45 years and over 120 Total 45 116 1,534 606 31 - 16 2,576 45 116 1,643 621 218 i 44 25 266 '""is 99 5 m ""si 143 SO 160 2 31 19 265 9 36 74 16 1,25 9 Audubon— 14 and under 18 yearsl. 18 and under 21 years.. 21 and under 45 years. 106 35 45 years and over.. . Total H.SOO lis 208 2,318 1,017 25 5 24 s,m 118 208 2,323 1,041 70 10 159 64 m 1 62 212 28 207 1 72 361 92 52 1 6 101 46 131, 30 63 170 61 186 31 69 271 107 Benton— 14 and under IS years 18 and under 21 years.. . £1 and under 46 years.. 45 years and over Total 3,661 64 147 1,921 1,057 29 1 1 25 25 S,690 55 148 1,946 1,082 213 1 9 429 166 SOS 2 70 700 77 516 S 79 1,129 243 17 44 364 164 SgJ, 74 169 506 135 91 213 860 299 Blaei Hawk— 14 and under 18 years IS and under 21 years 21 and under 45 years ■io years and over.. Total s.m 133 217 2,002 1,012 S2 13 25 3,231 133 217 2,016 1,087 605 - 122 51 8Ji9 2 68 1S6 27 2 65 308 78 57S 4 11 170 68 88i 58 70 186 64 Lies 62 81 355 122 "loone— 14 and under 18 years 18 and under 21 years. VI and under 46 years.. 45 years and over Total s,m 38 s.m ISO 273 iSS 253 367 620 GENERAL STATISTICS 553 OCCUPATIONS. Gainful Occupations, By Counties, According to Sex. Trade and Transportation Manufacturing and Mechanical Pursuits Reported as Laborer — Dnclassified Grand Total i ■3 1 1^ o GEJ •3 ■♦* o OS i 1 1 3,733 lOT.ies 61,332 1,746 6,013 19,081 1,602 5,479 15,467 126,196 52,934 1,686 6,247 63,909 33,538 1,105 2,184 8,577 2,334 2,790 7,431 72,486 35,872 2,916 7,460 45,795 20,590 45 88 226 44 2,960 7,538 46,021 20,634 14,989 38,601 414,883 210,096 5,704 19,469 68,943 .15,999 20,693 58,070 483,826 226,095 mm 28,S92 200,076 10Ji,S79 U,200 118,579 76,750 m 77,15S 678,569 110,115 788,684 6 19 338 201 17 70 4 6 36 408 205 1 10 161 116 32 13 1 13 193 128 4 24 169 74 4 24 169 74 61 180 2,479 1,249 3 80 823 73 64 260 2,802 1,322 66i 7 91 2 7 48 11 655 9 23 324 185 287 4 14 119 82 ■is - 23 11 SS5 4 17 142 93 ^1 271 3,969 36 135 1,880 1,027 i79 13 73 242 80 i,m 16 276 174 31 119 60 31 119 60 208 2,122 1,107 47S 6 35 428 261 68 5 14 99 6 11 49 627 267 B19 6 61 364 209 S7 1 4 61 23 2S6 7 65 425 232 210 14 37 244 127 - 2 2 210 14 38 246 129 3,078 94 339 2,766 1,762 m 30 136 464 163 s,m 124 475 3,230 1,925 7S0 161 370 2,807 l,3il 14 63 1B9 14 85^ 176 423 3,066 1,366 eio 11 41 396 260 89 49 30 729 11 49 445 290 m 30 69 268 147 5 427 30 69 268 147 i,961 246 628 6,182 2,848 793 66 164 618 152 5,751, 301 792 6,700 3,000 ^,769 10 16 237 138 S/fi 3 13 37 1 5,009 13 29 274 139 70S 11 226 78 87 2 6 32 4 795 2 17 267 82 50i 9 17 118 47 50i 9 17 118 47 8,90/, 64 , 163 2,189 912 889 14 87 251 42 9,79S 78 260 2,440 954 m 14 38 904 480 Si 4 27 112 12 1,55 18 66 1,016 492 SU 12 26 486 319 H 1 3 46 31 S58 13 28 681 350 191 30 38 391 199 191 30 88 391 199 3,328 176 325 4,338 2,125 39i 36 166 546 166 3,722 211 480 4,883 2,281 X,iS6 71 280 3,591 1,375 ISS 73 293 913 47 1,591 144 573 4,604 1,422 8U 46 218 3,189 1,160 81 14 43 250 51 922 60 261 3,439 1,201 658 57 201 1,612 482 658 57 201 1,612 482 6,9e» 246 899 11,096 4,394 892 164 576 2,394 336 7,855 410 1,475 13,490 4,729 s.sxr 49 157 1,947 788 i.see 11 64 182 16 6,6iS 60 221 2,129 804 i,60S 32 64 855 363 S58 16 35 69 15 i,961 48 99 924 378 2,352 39 74 463 170 2,352 39 74 463 170 ie,6S5 257 530 5,569 2,452 3,i69 87 227 6S5 137 20,104 344 757 6,194 2,589 X,W 274 S,21i l.Sli 135 l.W 7^6 7i6 8.798 1,086 9,S8k 554 OCCUPATIONS OF PERSONS Table ]Vo. 13 Agricultural Pursuits Professional Service Domestic and Personal Service Counties and Age Classes i S '3 1 i ■3 1 •i S IS ■3 Bremer— 34. and under 18 years — 18 and under 21 years 80 162 1,585 810 8 7 15 80 170 1,592 825 2 94 59 1 33 113 5 1 36 207 64 6 67 ,53 40 70 92 12 40 76 Total 2,6S7 42 169 1,726 1,032 SO 12 37 2,667 42 159 1,737 1,069 155 3 97 68 152 3 77 246 33 S07 3 80 343 101 116 3 42 21Ji 8 49 117 141 sso Buchanan— U and under 18 years— s 52 179 183 8,958 44 140 1,740 818 i9 9 27 3,007 44 140 1,749 845 168 4 92 48 359 1 43 180 6 527 1 47 272 64 m 2 2 67 22 3i5 8 40 127 43 10 Buena Vista— ]4 and under 18 years 194 65 Total 81 147 1,714 862 S6 2 10 30 2,778 81 149 1,724 892 m 230 S7J, 93 2i8 15 26 84 38 311 Butler— 14 and under 18 years 18 and under 21 years 15 9 86 00 59 163 7 68 249 67 4 46 24 29 130 62 Total . - Calhoun— 14 and under 18 years — 18 and under 21 years ie,80^ 67 129 1,741 761 _ 13 38 2,S^S 67 130 1,754 799 US 229 SSi 7i 3 6 69 31 162 10 31 92 38 236 13 3 94 48 48 183 18 51 277 66 37 161 69 Total 2,698 100 168 1,764 743 52 1 9 40 2,750 101 168 1,773 783 U5 2 12 106 68 2^9 60 171 25 S9i 2 72 277 93 109 2 13 127 65 171 32 44 204 34 280 Carroll— 14 and under 18 years 18 and under 21 years 21 and under 45 years 45 years and over 34 57 3S1 89 Total 2,775 56 161 1,818 867 60 2 1 22 27 2,S25 68 162 1,840 884 m. sse m 3 85 319 80 i97 2 17 118 64 SU 21 69 136 4» 511 Oass— 14 and under 18 years 18 and under 21 veare - 101 54 3 79 218 26 23 76 21 and under 45 years 263 103 Total — — - H.SBl 53 170 1,898 862 S2 15 10 8 25 «,9« 68 180 1,906 887 161 5 77 45 sea """"36 130 16 41 207 61 191 6 73 37 26i 16 66 108 45 ^55 16 61 Cedar— 14 and under 18 years ]8 and under 21 years 21 and under 45 years 181 Total 2,983 102 182 1,829 822 58 ' 13 19 S.OJa 102 182 1,842 841 127 1 22 236 76 182 74 327 40 S09 1 96 663 116 116 26 36 238 112 22i 60 104 276 99 SiO Cerro Gordo— 14 and under 18 years 18 and under 21 years 86 140 21 and under 45 years 514 Total - - 2,935 75 142 1,729 611 S2 2 ...... 17 2,967 77 142 1,740 628 SS5 - 119 49 Ul 1 45 188 12 776 1 60 307 61 1,12 2 4 63 23 539 11 39 104 19 95i Cherokee— 14 and under 18 years.. 18 and under 'il years 13 43 21 and tinder 45 vears 167 42 Total 2,557 SO 2,587 m 2^6 il9 92 ns 265 BY CLASSIFIED PURSUITS 555 Trade and Transportation Manulacturing and Mechanical Pursuits Reported as Laborer — Unclassilied Grand Total i ,2 1^ o a s & ■a 1 i ■i 0) i o 9 39 471 220 6 26 82 3 15 64 553 223 '26 340 176 1 7 30 6 1 32 370 182 8 41 298 97 8 41 298 97 97 276 2,845 1,415 48 143 324 41 145 418 3,169 1,466 7S9 9 49 478 362 116 2 27 105 21 855 11 76 583 383 5Jil 4 24 326 250 U 2 6 48 24 585 6 30 374 274 19 65 301 197 1 1 1 Wl 19 66 302 198 i,6Si 74 293 2,989 1,961 556 15 160 629 257 5,188 89 453 3,618 2,208 808 7 41 660 245 155 6 18 96 8 1,053 12 59 652 253 GO/i 6 22 359 173 SO 1 6 51 16 68^; 6 28 410 189 572 13 32 331 113 s 575 IS 32 331 113 5,307 71 241 3,145 1,419 961 15 107 463 100 6,268 86 348 3,608 1,619 8^9 10 2 18 63 11 876 12 56 514 279 559 7i 633 ;/S9 19 66 269 101 19 66 269 101 ■4,876 110 288 2,832 1,616 685 17 111 360 104 5,561 127 38 451 268 24 266 201 7 40 18 31 306 219 399 3,192 1.620 767 16 46 679 365 9J, 3 23 95 8 861 18 69 774 373 m 6 21 326 169 65 3 6 44 12 556 8 27 369 181 i55 19 46 231 106 - 3 y,55 19 46 236 109 ^.7-i6 109 261 3,139 1,480 592 16 109 431 117 5,338 126 360 3,670 1,697 1,105 20 69 690 329 iS9 11 37 127 9 i,m, 31 106 817 338 520 8 36 410 209 65 3 7 44 16 685 11 43 454 224 m 28 67 413 146 7 1 10 24 1 m 29 77 437 147 160 365 3,610 1,550 67S 48 168 679 ■ 124 5,6S2 208 623 4,089 1,674 1,108 6 B3 602 324 m 6 21 108 14 i,m2 12 74 711 338 663 6 16 342 217 69 1 8 61 26 732 7 23 403 243 65i 17 64 326 154 se 1 io 6 690 18 64 335 160 5,585 87 306 8,306 1,660 309 34 168 655 148 6,m 121 474 3,861 1,808 985 3 21 424 236 150 3 10 69 6 1,1SS 6 31 493 242 660 1 17 289 174 S6 5 35 16 m 1 22 324 189 550 15 57 282 148 17 567 16 m 282 148 5,359 72 276 3,043 1,602 905 84 116 360 107 6,264 106 382 3,393 1,609 68i 41 134 1,896 70S 88 36 126 363 26 . 772 77 260 2,259 736 Ji81 19 60 1,288 517 65 8 22 119 30 536 27 91 1,407 647 502 63 294 1,169 283 502 63 294 1,169 283 4,893 262 737 6,656 2,519 607 104 326 1,098 214 6,500 356 1,063 7,754 2,733 2,780 551 S 23 67 7 S.SSl S 49 B56 265 1,89S m 2,072 1,80S 6 60 345 109 J, 809 6 60 346 109 10,16^ 85 241 3,025 1,201 1,7^2 17 113 393 61 11,906 102 26 488 2B8 14 281 151 6 23 6 20 304 157 354 3,418 1,262 77^ 100 m ue 35 m SIO 510 4,552 584 5,136 556 OCCUPATIONS OP PERSONS Table No. 13 Agricultural Pursuits Professional Service Domestic and Personal Service Coimtles and Age Classes . 1 "S i S o i 1 i o EH Chickasaw— 14 'and under 18 years- 29 68 1,335 848 ""11 46 29 58 1,349 894 1 9 73 35 9 38 66 32 10 ift RTifi iinripi" ?T years 3 66 40 60 168 19 63 234. 69 47 45 years and over 67 Total — 2,270 49 107 1,(«6 640 60 Z.SSO 49 107 1,046 640 109 237 sie 118 m 4 11 132 26 Clarke— 14 and under 18 years 4 18 and under til years 21 and under 46 years 46 years and over 3 49 33 39 91 10 42 140 43 ""as 12 11 166 38 Total _- 1,8J,2 64 189 1,455 678 9 7 12 26 l,8i^ 73 146 1,467 703 S5 1 4 78 86 HO 1 32 128 10 225 2 36 206 46 ■is 4 5 54 26 m 13 36 106 28 218 Clay— 14 and under 18 years 38 and under ?1 years 21 and under 45 years 17 41 159 *5 years and over 53 Total . s.sse 100 260 2,346 1,362 es 21 21 105 81 2,SS9 121 271 2,461 1,433 119 1 14 108 65 171 1 68 188 11 290 2 82 296 66 88 B 8 96 39 182 38 72 183 46 270 Clayton— 14 and under 18 years IS and under 21 years 'n and under 45 years 43 80 279 46 years and over 85 Total i.OJiS 83 196 2,244 1,218 ess 1 '"'25 38 ■{,276 84 196 2,269 1,266 178 6 241 149 268 at! MS 20 27 465 197 SS9 74 128 402 146 m 94 165 867 342 Clinton- 14 and under 18 years 18 and under 21 years 21 and under 45 years 45 years and over 7 94 446 72 7 100 686 221 Total S,7il 49 130 2,187 919 6i 47 24 S.SOS 48 131 2,234 943 S9e i 87 54 618 1 40 205 18 l.Oli 1 41 292 72 709 9 101 45 7/,9 24 68 114 45 l.iSS 24 63 215 Crawford— 14 and under 18 years— 18 and under 21 years 21 and under 45 years 46 years and over 90 Total S,2S5 70 141 1,872 1,085 72 16 27 S,S57 70 141 1,888 1,112 m 26.4 m i55 7 12 123 63 31 62 131 81 397 38 Dallas — 14 and under 18 years 18 and under 21 years 21 and under 46 years 11 116 82 48 238 34 6£ 364 llfr 74 254 144 45 years and over Total 3,168 42 106 1,363 968 2 2 14 31 S,U1 44 108 1,377 999 209 S20 SS9 205 2 1 35 18 SOS 2 10 24 14 510 Davis— 14 and under 18 years 18 and under 21 years 21 and under 45 years 45 years and over 16 74 34 27 99 8 43 173 42 11 69 32 Total 2,^/79 65 113i 1,551 1,078 ■49 - 22 40 2,628 66 117 1,673 1,118 mi - 90 68 ISi 1 67 164 11 258 1 60 254 69 56 1 5 60 27 SO 4 23 68 39 106 5 28 118 66 Decatur— 14 and under 18 years 18 and under 21 years 21 and under 45 years 45 years and over Total Delaware— 14 and under 18 years— 18 and under 21 years 21 and under 45 years 2,807 140 209 1,750 980 s,m 66 ""36 43 2,873 140 209 1,786 1,023 161 ""re 42 23S 1 41 164 16 m 1 41 239 68 9S - 60 34 MJ, 30 52 116 26 217 30 69 175 60 46 years and over Total .- 79 s.iss in 222 SS9 101 223 Sti BY CLASSIFIED PURSUITS 557 Trade and Transportation Manufacturing and Meclianieal Pursuits Reported as Laborer —Unclassified Grand Total 1 03 "3 1 '3 '3 o S as 1 ■i o ,2 1 i ■3 o 10 28 409 233 2 25 68 9 12 63 477 242 4 26 278 158 1 8 39 12 5 33 317 170 21 36 208 108 21 36 208 108 ' 66 159 2,369 1,422 12 121 354 118 77 280 2.723 1,640 680 2 lOi 2 11 51 7 78^ 4 31 334 196 J,65 60 525 srs 8 30 99 70 373 8 30 99 70 i.ois 59 167 1,624 1,028 605 6 61 286 61 ■4,620 65 20 283 189 7 114 84 12 8 7 126 92 228 1,910 1,079 m 4 27 485 222 71 i 18 84 10 565 8 45 569 232 205 i 13 296 140 20 2 4 48 4 ■ 225 6 17 344 144 207 7 42 299 92 8 1 297 7 42 307 93 2,878 230 2,667 1,193 m 29 97 385 78 3,282 113 327 3,052 1,271 73S 17 39 635 397 m 8 26 101 17 85i 25 66 736 414 J,5S 6 26 502 290 58 13 27 77 19 511 19 B3 579 309 UO 18 57 404 248 9 «9 18 57 404 248 147 394 4,091 2,381 589 81 214 654 174 ■4,763 22S 608 4,745 2,556 J, 088 70 216 2,449 1.24S 46 136 513 25 i.m 116 3B2 2,962 1,268 m 99 216 1,983 1,039 1S6 48 133 291 61 960 U1 349 2,274 1,090 727 77 182 1,192 637 1 8 12 727 78 190 1,204 637 7,0i3 349 843 8,574 4,483 i,m 177 499 1,688 331 8,136 626 1,S42 10,262 4,814 S.978 7 46 539 29B 7^0 6 24 93 9 i,698 13 70 632 804 s.sm 3 8 347 180 523 1 6 42 18 8,860 4 13 389 193 2,088 18 63 337 122 21 2,199 18 53 337 122 M.2i9 77 247 1,615 2.S95 32 120 601 114 16.m 109 S76 4,099 1,729 887 49 126 1,640 640 ISS 7 51 148 32 1,019 66 176 1,688 672 S3S 14 39 633 317 66 4 7 49 34 60J, IS 46 682 361 530 22 77 433 210 530 22 77 433 210 5,537 162 405 4,617 2,397 776 42 168 582 208 6,313 204 573 B,199 2,605 6 21 286 176 SS8 2 6 33 15 2,59« 8 27 319 191 90S 2 12 163 107 9Ji 21 22 997 2 12 184 129 7/,2 4 14 93 47 ;;;;;; 7^2 4 14 93 47 7,581 56 170 2,014 1,360 1,000 6 46 191 90 8,581 62 215 2,205 1,440 m 8 30 425 286 56 2 19 73 10 5i5 10 49 498 296 m s 17 242 160 iS 2 35 21 S27 3 19 277 181 158 10 27 131 75 158 10 27 131 75 S,590 87 195 2,499 1,684 332 7 105 362 121 3,922 94 300 2,851 1.805 7^9 6 28 447 326 m 3 14 58 11 85S 9 42 505 336 m B 17 272 169 58 Si 23 1,80 6 18 303 192 2iS 18 40 290 124 — 2/;3 18 40 290 124 ■{.■465 169 301 2,804 1,674 585 34 108 404 119 5.050 aoe 409 3,298 1,793 sue se Sim m « sis ^72 m 5,038 665 5,703 558 OCCUPATIONS OF PERSONS Talile No. 13 Agricultural Pursuits Professional Service Domestic and Personal Service Counties and Age Classes 1 i a ■3 O S s 1 i 1 t o EH Des Moines— 14 and under 18 years 38 and under 21 years 21 and under 45 years 45 years and over 51 77 1,375 046 ""is 34 61 77 1,388 980 5 172 134 1 42 S07 74 1 47 479 208 2 10 232 160 44 96 325 104 46 108 5W 261 Total 2,«9 40 83 838 397 """"ii 2,^86 40 83 838 409 sn - 50 23 m 1 17 75 7 7SB 1 18 126 30 m 7 49 19 569 8 22 45 56 97S Dickinson— 14 and under IS years— 18 and under 21 years 8 29 94 45 years' and over 74 Total X,SS8 71 169 1,664 1,179 1 '"""i7 104 i.sro 72 159 1,681 1,283 7^ 2 14 891 188 100 8 108 689 104 m 10 122 980 292 75 29 48 498 181 ISO 160 278 851 295 205 Dubuque— 14 and under 18 years — 18 and under Jil years - 189 328 21 and under 45 years 45 years and over 1,849 476 Total s.ors ■ 56 1C6 982 607 122 6 8 s,m SS loe 988 515 585 3 62 26 809 19 116 8 i.m ""'"22 178 34 756 3 5 69 24 l,5Si 8 35 64 24 2,SiO Emmet— 14 and under 18 years 11 40 21 and under 45 years 45 years and over 133 48 Total Fayette— 14 and under 18 years 1,C50 63 166 2,149 1,304 U " is 67 i.eei 63 166 2,167 1,361 91 US 2SJ, 101 6 6 125 62 ISl 21 40 136 45 232 26 9 151 72 81 276 19 90 427 91 46 21 and under 45 years 45 years and over„_ 261 107 Total S,6S2 27 86 1,464 788 75 """"12 18 S,757 27 86 1,476 806 2S2 S7e 608 198 1 5 76 48 2^2 16 47 110 38 m Floyd— 14 and under 18 years 17 2 95 60 41 193 26 43 288 86 62 21 and under 45 years 45 years and over 186 r 86 Total 2,ses 66 lis 1,936 757 SO 1 ii 29 2, SOS 67 116 1,947 786 1S7 3 66 29 260 1 42 123 10 U7 1 45 189 39 ISO 6 16 69 32 211 12 44 78 30 Sil Franklin- 14 and under 18 years 18 and under 21 years 18 60 147 45 years and over 62 Total 37 98 1,667 893 il ii 1? 2,916 3' 9E 1,678 91( 98 , 2 11 58 > 60 m 1 46 158 11 m 1 4f 2ie 7] 123 3 4S 2C MJ, 1 17 32 22 287 Fremont— 14 and under 18 years— 18 and under 21 years 7 20 21 and under 45 years 45 years and over 80 48 Total 2, (.5.3 2[ 9t 1,67S 2S li ■h 2,72. 2i 9< i 1,69( 86 i M ) i ) 7i J n git : V ! 15' 11 SSi . 2 23, 6 7" S 4 j 6S 5 2, 7i i t i Iff S 1< ISB Greene— 14 and under 18 years 18 and under 21 years 21 and under 45 years 8 r 31 175 45 years and over I 37 Total 2,C5 3 9 1,46 <30< s 7 mil 1 1 3 2 > 2,68 a 9 4 1.48 5 63 5 12 ! m ! S2 r 9 7 s 9 1 ; 15 * 1 7 31 4 T 5 2 ) 251 Grundy— U and under 18 years— . i 18 7 3 6 2 a 5 3 3 9' S 1 I S 7 16 I 4 3 45 3 137 45 years and over 7 42 Total 8,80 5 i 2,2i 5 le 6 11, 2J, 9 15 8 2^2 BY CLASSIFIED PURSUITS 559 Trade and Transportation Manufacturing and Mechanical Pursuits Eeported as Laborer — UnelassiHed Grand Total S 03 1^ i 3 i aj * S -3 i s 1 a 1 110 162 2,037 1,118 34 114 387 33 144 276 2,424 1,151 68 167 1,660 1,017 84 126 285 54 142 293 1,945 1,071 42 80 690 507 9 6 13 4 51 86 603 611 263 501 6,066 3,882 172 383 1,330 SOS 436 884 7,396 4,185 29 336 163 568 1 17 63 5 3,995 1 46 389 168 2,902 4 9 219 107 5Ji9 2 6 21 2 ' 3,i51 6 15 240 109 1,219 9 36 171 66 31 2 2 1,250 9 36 173 68 10,71SS 63 165 1,663 765 2,188 12 62 196 83 m,900 65 227 1,869 848 154 384 3,218 1,392 7fi 115 321 740 62 601, 269 705 3,958 1,444 339 134 291 3,122 1,669 31 133 237 688 94 370 267 628 3,710 1,763 272 179 248 1,795 1,044 J, 276 179 248 1,795 1,044 2,6^6 569 1,144 10,688 6,663 S5S 417 944 2,785 649 2,999 986 2,088 13,473 6,302 11 35 595 229 l.SSS 3 20 64 6 6,376 14 55 649 235 5,216 1 26 270 125 1,052 5 6 47 5 6,268 6 32 317 130 3,266 7 34 136 S3 3,266 7 34 136 33 13,05i 77 209 2,114 944 4,795 16 80 287 61 22,849 93 289 2,401 996 870 35 83 1,049 618 83 7 48 134 16 953 42 131 1,183 534 i22 26 65 781 441 63 1 4 78 18 i85 27 69 858 469 210 39 123 718 265 1 3 6 1 210 40 126 724 266 S,3ii 168 462 4,973 2,662 434 SO 176 648 156 3,778 19S 628 5,621 2,818 1,685 6 51 604 321 SOS 6 36 1S7 9 1,890 12 87 741 330 1,313 3 34 678 294 101 1 8 56 18 l.W 4 42 634 312 l,li6 16 73 329 161 11 1,156 16 73 329 161 8,255 63 261 3,146 1,672 1,010 23 132 508 109 9,265 76 383 S,654 1,781 082 11 22 278 227 i88 4 22 70 7 1,170 15 44 348 234 909 1 22 293 144 S3 - 20 10 992 1 26 S13 154 579 211 66 579 17 54 211 66 5,1Z2 101 232 2,853 1,265 772 18 111 302 86 5,89^/ 119 343 3.156 1,341 538 5 18 361 225 103 2 16 59 6 6Jil 7 34 420 231 460 1 11 179 168 33 1 2 27 13 2 13 206 171 3^8 10 32 246 100 3i8 10 32 246 100 i,W 53 164 2,559 1,462 517 11 81 287 69 ^,958 61 245 2,845 1,531 UllO 6 24 419 244 83 2 61 11 692 7 24 480 265 Si9 1 16 285 153 i3 B 3 36 12 392 6 19 321 165 S8S 23 34 289 121 „__ 388 23 34 289 121 ^,238 58 178 2,811 1,440 448 18 57 379 60 ^,686 76 236 3,190 1,600 692 5 15 404 151 7i 4 12 41 3 766 9 27 445 154 ^55 3 12 246 86 S6 1 4 26 6 511 4 16 272 92 ^67 26 40 237 116 il9 ^67 / 26 40 237 116 •4,W 71 176 2,483 1,012 5U 19 86 251 73 5,001 90 262 2,734 1,085 S75 60 635 S/,7 37 38^ U9 3,7^2 429 4.171 560 OCCUPATIONS OP PERSONS Table No. 13 Agricultural Pursuits Professional Service Domestic and Personal Service Counties and Age Classes i a '& 1 OS 1 •3 o i ■3 o Guthrie— 14 and under 18 years 18 and under 21 years 70 139 1,793 923 ""u 31 70 139 1,807 964 - 101 63 1 65 174 15 1 62 275 7S 6 72 32 8 24 61 46 8 29 133 45 years and over- - -, 78 Total 2,925 66 184 2,046 938 ^5 2 1 10 31 2,970 68 185 2,066 969 ni 3 84 55 2^5 3 46 199 20 3 49 283 76 109 3 123 41 139 20 41 152 45 20 44 Hamilton— 14 and under 18 years., 21 and under 45 years 275 46 years and over 86 Total HancocS— 14 and under 18 years.. 18 and under 21 years 21 and under 45 years 3,m 24 88 1,486 764 U J 16 31 3,278 .24 89 1,601 795 M2 "i 69 31 268 2 42 126 3 410 2 46 185 34 167 - 46 22 258 3 16 68 13 m s 20 114 35 45 years and over Total 2,S€1 68 144 1,666 836 11 9 8 3 2,m 79 153 1,673 839 9i 173 267 72 9 10 133 64 100 16 42 88 39 172 26 Hardin— 14 and under 18 years 18 and under 21 years — 21 and under 45 years 3 153 63 43 231 26 46 384 89 62 221 93 Total 44 161 2,199 1,169 31 13 13 2,7U 44 161 2,212 1,182 219 1 1 115 eo SCO 2 66 191 46 519 3 57 306 106 206 6 10 78 44 185 13 41 113 44 391 18 61 191 88 Harrison- 14 and under 18 years.. 18 and under 21 years '.. 21 and under 45 years 45 years and over Total 3,573 68 106 1,371 876 ...... 15 S,S99 58 106 1,382 890 177 295 .472 137 6 7 122 47 211 18 37 109 22 3.JS 23 Henry— 14 and under 18 years IS and under 21 years 6 99 78 29 159 20 34 258 98 44 231 69 21 and under 45 years Total Howard— 14 and under 18 years.. . 34 6Q 1,086 737 26 7 22 2,J,36 34 60 1,092 769 182 208 390 181 3 5 46 32 186 22 54 118 41 367 25 18 and tinder 21 years. 21 and under 45 years 45 years and over 3 61 32 38 160 18 41 211 60 59 163 73 Total Humboldt— 14 and under 18 years. l,9t6 24 99 1,336 624 29 8 20 IMS 24 99 1,344 644 96 206 302 85 2 21 48 40 235 17 26 93 46 329 19 18 and under 21 years 21 and under 45 years.. 45 years and over 3 72 32 35 125 9 38 197 41 28 141 86 Total Ida— 14 and imder 18 years 1,98S 62 168 1,457 523 28 - 21 2,011 62 168 1,461 644 107 m 276 92 2 8 88 29 182 26 48 101 22 27;, 18 and under 21 years 21 and under 45 years 2 74 21 30 126 9 32 199 30 56 1S9 51 Total - - S,210 33 208 1,803 905 25 3 4 9 20 2,236 36 212 1,812 925 97 1 3 82 51 m 2 39 164 9 261 3 42 246 60 1S7 2 5 64 33 196 62 70 137 41 Iowa — 14 and under 18 years 18 and under 21 years 21 and under 45 years 64 75 201 74 45 years and over. . Total 2,9i9 S6 2,985 137 21/y 351 Wi sia m BY CLASSIFIED PURSUITS 561 Trade and Transportation Manulacturing and Mechanical Pursuits Reported as Laborer — tlnclassilled Grand Total i s i 1 ft- o i o5 ■3 ■3 i i •i o EH S 03 03 •3 o 9 27 517 336 3 12 90 10 12 39 607 346 16 267 179 2 2 41 21 2 18 308 200 13 46 297 122 13 46 297 122 92 239 3,047 1,655 14 93 380 123 106 332 3,427 1,778 889 16 47 610 333 115 11 39 139 14 1,001, 27 86 749 347 8 24 412 191 66 2 12 72 26 528 10 36 484 216 • 477 24 58 ?51 . 136 3 2 10 4 477 27 60 361 140 5,0SS 114 319 3,626 1,694 610 41 141 682 139 S,6iS 155 460 4,208 1,833 1,006 3 26 312 187 20S 2 11 53 3 1,209 5 37 365 190 6S5 5 15 232 89 111 20 7 \ 7^6 5 16 262 96 569 5 24 229 85 19 588 6 24 229 85 5,75» S7 161 2,363 1,178 90S 7 71 283 57 6,656 44 232 2,646 1,235 S28 4 62 768 440 69 8 27 112 7 597 12 79 880 447 S^l 9 32 424 227 28 2 7 60 16 S69 ll' 39 484 243 «4S 42 120 547 f27 3 4 5 S4S 45 124 652 227 S,7S9 132 361 3,690 1,847 40 132 604 91 i,157 172 493 4,194 1,988 i,m 17 49 661 373 15i 27 124 8 l,'ll8 17 76 785 381 69« 9 46 485 239 85 1 2 37 10 777 10 48 522 248 9S6 31 91 562 213 12 948 31 91 662 213 6,0S0 107 358 4,100 2,098 767 16 126 478 121 6.797 123 484 4,578 2,219 1,100 10 36 584 307 159 4 15 103 10 1,Z59 14 51 637 317 779 4 29 333 207 50 50 23 829 13 38 383 230 897 21 36 201 111 897 21 36 201 111 6,66S 98 219 2,660 1,625 7il 31 90 432 90 7,404 129 309 3,092 1,715 887 IS 19 344 236 lae i 14 50 8 1,019 22 33 394 244 573 9 20 242 161 91 - 55 27 664 9 28 297 188 S69 19 44 197 86 S69 19 44 197 86 Jt,602 83 151 1,974 1,283 64S 26 114 380 116 5,2i5 109 265 2,354 1,399 617 3 37 319 200 76 4 23 66 7 693 7 60 385 207 4SS 1 17 231 141 90 2 6 31 17 522 3 23 262 158 SJi5 24 60 304 80 ----- Si5 24 50 304 80 S,i91 64 208 2,310 1,017 636 23 90 323 99 4,127 77 298 2,633 1,116 559 3 26 271 165 100 13 36 7 659 3 39 306 172 S90 1 7 206 115 56 - 20 8 U6 1 11 226 123 458 4 32 133 74 458 4 32 133 74 8,589 72 243 2,229 927 535 25 95 285 67 i,m 97 338 2,514 994 Jl65 24 42 452 252 55 16 64 3 520 24 58 516 255 SS9 24 33 263 277 SS 1 2 35 11 S61 25 35 298 288 2iS 22 54 268 232 S4S 22 64 268 232 8,47i 106 345 2,932 1,750 472 68 131 409 . 84 S.9iS 174 476 3,341 1,834 770 SS 85S 597 -S9 646 576 576 5,m 692 5,825 36 562 OCCUPATIONS OF PERSONS Table Ho. 13 Agricultural Pursuits Professional Service Domestic and Personal Service Counties and Age Classes '3 1^ ■3 S 03 a 3 i a oj "3 En Jackson— 14 and under 18 years 18 and under 21 years 21 and under 45 years 45 years and over 63 140 1,812 1,060 ' 14 24 63 140 1,826 1,084 4 103 60 2 67 164 22 2 71 267 S3 1 5 94 45 26 64 184 107 26 69 278 152 Total Jasper— 14 and under 18 years 18 and under 21 years ___ s.oes 48 151 2,323 1,391 • SS - 14 46 S.IOS 48 162 2,337 1,437 IffT 1 9 142 68 255 1 76 203 16 ^22 2 84 345 84 MS 4 13 106 67 SSO 19 47 136 75 525 23 60 241 142 Total Jefferson— 14 and under 18 years— 18 and under 21 years 21 and under 45 years 45 years and oyer 3,S1S 61 118 1,304 888 61 i 6 23 S,97i 61 119 1,310 909 220 - 105 08 295 2 29 157 11 515 2 36 262 79 189 1 6 63 34 277 18 44 142 142 ^66 19 60 205 176 Total S,S69 41 104 1,867 1,143 SO 8 30 2,399 41 104 1,875 1,173 ISO "I 266 116 199 2 57 313 64 379 2 61 669 169 JO^ 1 10 173 103 W 43 103 414 184 UO 44 113 587 287 Johnson— 14 and under 18 years— 18 and under 21 years- .. ... _21 and under 45 years '45 years and over Total Jones— 14 and under 18 years S,155 74 181 1,806 698 38 . 38 49 3,193 74 182 1,844 1,047 S75 m 801 287 1 6 97 74 7M 18 66 123 52 1,031 18 and under 21 years 21 and under 45 years 45 years and over 1 83 54 48 164 16 49 247 70 61 220 126 Total 3,059 63 122 1,910 1.131 88 13 19 3,U7 63 123 1,923 1,160 1S8 9 119 67 22S 2 60 172 27 366 2 69 291 94 177 6 8 100 52 2^9 21 29 115 63 i26 27 37 215 116 Keolnik- 14 and under IS years 18 and under 21 years 21 and under 45 years Total Kossuth— 14 and under IS years 136 334 2,543 1,149 S3 """"19 86 3,259 136 334 2,662 1,185 105 261 ^56 166 4 3 78 39 2128 14 62 124 30 39i IS 18 and under 21 years 21 and under 45 years 45 years and over 3 109 49 73 190 11 76 299 60 65 202 6» Total - i,ie2 86 158 1,634 1,171 55 10 45 i,217 86 168 1,644 1,216 161 - 218 143 """"37 297 72 ^5 ~""u 516 215 m 15 37 396 222 230 60 96 367 155 S5i 65 133 763 377 Lee— 14 and under 18 years __. 18 and under 21 years Total SM9 6S 204 2,620 1,549 55 a 17 60 S,10Ji 63 206 2,537 1,699 SfiS 3 18 488 289 ^06 8 131 889 145 m 11 149 1,377 434 670 35 71 618 227 6«S 112 199 661 198 1,338 147 270 1.179 425 Linn— 14 and under 18 years 18 and under 21 years 21 and under 45 years ■ 45 years and over Total Louisa— 14 and under 18 years 18 and under 21 years 21 and under 45 years 45 years and over hsse 40 86 1,091 790 69 3 14 i,W5 40 86 1,094 804 798 4 64 42 i.ns 1 22 126 12 1,971 1 26 190 64 951 1 2 50 22 1,070 2 10 26 33 2,021 3 12 76 55 Total 2,007 n 2,mi 110 161 271 75 71 m BY CLASSIFIED PURSUITS 563 Trade and Transportation Manufacturing and Mechanical Pursuits Reported as Laborer — Duclassilied Grand Total i S a a 2 i ■a to S 03 i o 03 i ■ ■i 15 48 610 371 9 20 105 17 24 68 615 888 6 35 433 313 11 61 24 6 49 494 337 26 70 410 254 26 70 410 254 101 302 3,362 2,103 36 166 528 194 137 467 3,890 2,297 9ii 36 102 072 661 151 6 4S 133 21 1,095 41 147 1,106 582 787 1 27 600 287 99 1 4 40 21 886 2 SI 640 308 760 37 108 576 288 ------ 760 37 108 576 288 5,868 126 410 4,618 2,602 923 27 172 626 179 6,791 153 682 5,144 2,841 /,CTO 4 28 642 204 «05 5 24 88 9 1,875 9 62 630 273 815 7 28 461 222 66 3 7 50 16 881 10 35 611 238 1,009 16 60 330 118 2 4 1,009 16 62 334 118 7,8i6 89 247 2,805 1,692 904 28 107 447 201 8,720 117 364 3,252 1,793 838 20 70 906 439 126 25 69 274 31 96i 45 139 1,180 470 7iS 6 37 632 361 76 ' 9 99 26 79^ B 46 731 387 524 36 46 682 893 6 530 35 45 682 393 ^,733 102 270 4,516 2,564 783 70 238 1,108 326 5,516 172 608 5,624 2,879 l,iS5 2 26 469 299 S99 3 20 92 20 l,83i 5 46 661 319 J, 035 3 20 286 229 131, 3 11 55 23 1,169 6 31 341 262 1,155 16 43 326 211 596 20 42 302 167 1,155 16 43 326 211 7,442 96 276 3,067 1,865 1,741 24 136 472 160 9,183 120 412 3,639 2,025 796 18 62 594 359 135 4 28 94 9 931 22 90 688 368 638 6 20 303 228 92 1 4 68 33 630 7 24 361 261 6 596 20 42 308 167 5,304 113 263 3,328 2,004 792 28 122 468 151 6,096 141 386 3,786 2,155 1,033 18 41 614 310 135 S 31 89 6 1,168 21 72 703 310 557 6 29 404 184 96 1 7 45 19 653 7 36 449 203 531 31 76 342 135 6 537 31 75 342 136 5,708 195 485 4,090 1,866 759 18 173 467 102 6,^67 213 6S8 4,667 1,968 98S 110 268 2,094 1,145 129 41 132 435 50 1,112 161 390 2,629 1,195 623 59 167 1,669 965 72 48 67 186 43 695 107 234 1,865 1,028 583 36 122 666 416 2 2 10 2 5S3 38 124 676 418 6,636 306 749 6,677 4,0S2 760 141 334 1,305 367 7,396 447 1,183 7,982 4,449 3,607 171 389 4,709 2,110 ess lOO 353 877 60 i,265 271 742 6,586 2,170 2,880 92 294 2,824 1,420 73 143 381 86 S,22Ji 165 437 3,205 1,505 1,240 IS! 313 2,318 845 16 1,256 137 313 2,318 845 11,814 501 1,289 13,477 6,440 ^,^7 293 828 2,726 538 13,961 794 2,117 16,202 6,978 7,379 3 31 361 241 1,390 1 12 47 12 8,769 4 43 408 263 4,630 1 20 236 178 fi8g 32 16 5,312 1 24 268 194 3,6i3 6 61 266 141 3,613 6 61 266 141 21,707 51 204 2,068 1,414 •4,38^ 4 48 234 87 26,091 55 262 2.302 1,601 6SC 72 708 ^35 62 ^87 m 474 3,737 373 4,110 564 OCCUPATIONS OP PERSONS Table No. 13 Agricultural Pursuits Professional Service Domestic and Personal Service Ootinties and Age Classes .2 1^ ■•a i S i i ■s 22 90 1,210 781 9 18 23 90 1,219 799 19 20 65 34 19 13 and under 21 years 21 and under 45 years 4 53 59 30 121 16 34 174 75 3 45 25 23 100 69 Total . - — 2,10s 38 119 1,551 677 87 2 16 28 2,m 38 121 1,566 705 its 1 50 4Q im 47 118 3 WS ' 48 168 43 73 1 10 58 22 128 9 70 105 28 201 Lyon— 14 and under 18 years 18 and under 21 years ^— 21 and under 45 years 45 years and oyer 10 80 163 50 Total 2,S8S 70 194 1,670 973 8 49 i,J,SO 70 194 1,676 1,022 91 6 56 45 MS 1 43 137 12 259 1 49 193 57 91 1 4 49 16 212 10 9 36 40 SOS Madison— 14 and under 18 years 11 IS 21 and under 45 years. _._ __ 45 years and over 85 S6 Total Maliaslca — 14; and under 18 years 2,907 125 220 2,080 1,347 55 9 15 49 2,962 126 229 2,095 1,396 m ISS SOO 70 6 20 161 78 95 31 84 226 148 165 37 18 and under 21 years - 21 and under 45 years 45 years and over 5 171 12a 51 277 35 66 448 160 104 877 226 Total Marion — 14 and under 18 years - 5,772 48 109 1,832 1,100 73 """10 28 S,8Ii5 48 109 1,842 1,128 SOI ses 66^ 255 1 6 93 44 i89 12 38 64 38 7U 13 18 and under 21 years 21 and under 45 years 45 years and over 4 101 62 41 147 16 46 248 78 43 1S7 82 Total Marshall— 14 and under 18 years—. 18 and under 21 years — 21 and under 45 years S,089 72 186 1,969 1,166 S8 8 9 S,W 72 186 1,967 1,175 167 - 186 127 2OJ1 5 63 334 55 S71 6 66 520 182 US 17 31 283 126 152 41 89 268 117 295 58 120 651 243 Total S,S8S 49 99 1,457 726 17 1 6 31 s,m 46 99 1,463 766 sm w 763 ^57 1 6 67 32 515 10 34 122 49 972 11 18 and UTider ^1 yea^s , 2 67 46 31 164 14 S3 231 60 40 21 and under 45 years 189 81 Total 2,SB6 52 92 1,^4 746 - 22 2,S61i 62 92 1,401 768 115 209 S2i loe 1 4 47 19 215 4 30 115 41 Mitchell— 14 and under 18 years _. 5 18 and under 21 years 21 and under 45 years 45 years and over... — 6 71 42 29 166 13 35 237 55 34 162 «0 Total Monona— 14 and under 18 years 18 and under 21 years 21 and under 45 years _ 45 years and over __ 69 228 1,944 966 29 ""n 19 2, SIS 69 228 1,956 985 119 i 77 34 208 1 47 121 8 327 1 48 198 42 71 3 8 65 29 m 21 S4 69 34 261 24 62 134 63 Total S,207 71 148 1,024 820 SI 2 28 S,2SS 71 148 1,026 848 m 1 3 62 44 177 ""'"48 147 6 289 1 49 209 60 105 - 62 42 178 34 74 119 39 283 34 78 181 81 Monroe— 14 and under 18 years 18 and under 21 years 21 and under 45 years 45 years and over Total _. 2,0GS SO 2,093 no J99 S09 108 266 •W, BY CLASSIFIED PURSUITS 565 Trade and Transportation Manufacturing and Mechanical Pursuits Reported as Laborer —Unclassified Grand Total i i ■a 1 a i 1 ■i EH i S 03 ■3 60 88 766 308 3 23 76 6 63 HI 831 314 5 17 212 149 4 3 46 20 9 20 268 • 169 13 42 207 127 13 42 207 127 100 244 2,482 1,449 26 76 307 94 126 S20 2,789 1,543 l.BU 6 33 375 208 168 2 16 61 3 1,S19 8 49 436 211 SSS 1 9 285 132 73 1 4 19 8 .456 2 13 3(M 140 SSS 29 83 316 100 SS9 29 83 316 100 .4,275 75 256 2,635 1,179 SOS 12 139 318 70 .4.778 87 394 2,963 1,249 622 7 29 377 245 82 11 22 ■64 8 70^ 18 51 431 263 .427 4 10 176 171 32 35 21 iS9 4 14 211 192 528 9 30 187 82 528 9 30 187 82 i,m 91 273 2,515 1,532 539 22 78 268 130 .4,683 113 351 2,783 1,682 658 36 126 1,301 761 95 7 64 230 17 753 43 189 1,631 768 S61 10 40 512 380 60 6 31 103 36 iSl 16 71 615 415 SOS 39 105 466 284 - 308 39 106 472 284 i.ill 216 516 4,680 2,965 .498 43 239 868 284 .4,909 269 7H 5,538 3,249 2,2« 66 128 1,130 667 S18 7 24 97 15 2,5S1 62 162 1,227 582 9.42 14 34 392 237 m 3 10 76 19 i,m 17 44 468 266 893 22 65 307 179 7 900 22 65 307 179 8,376 140 346 3,856 2,189 l.iSi 22 113 394 116 9,800 162 468 4,249 2.305 i,880 85 127 1,625 892 US 21 96 346 29 2,625 56 223 1,970 921 677 26 105 1,063 767 108 17 29 91 48 785 43 134 1,154 815 573 42 116 627 433 3 3 11 573 46 119 638 433 6,529 192 668 5,743 3,511 6iS 87 270 1,057 268 7,m 279 838 6,800 3,769 2.679 8 40 448 254 in 6 18 66 6 S,170 13 68 604 269 1,961 2 13 207 134 185 6 37 16 2,1.46 2 18 244 149 1,U8 10 39 254 107 J7 1,2SS 10 39 254 107 10, OH 66 199 2,600 1,298 1,672 16 88 386 114 11,686 82 287 2,886 1,412 756 8 33 S78 231 Si 3 17 94 10 m 11 50 472 241 356 4 19 243 208 57 2 10 53 21 iis 6 29 296 229 HO 17 47 243 102 HO 17 47 243 102 .4,063 82 201 2,376 1,348 60S 9 86 435 107 i,666 91 287 2,811 1.465 650 9 46 376 213 6 11 65 6 77;, 14 57 431 218 3 14 234 142 86 2 27 6 560 3 16 261 147 i09 29 46 243 loe i09 29 45 243 108 .4,007 113 342 2,939 1,492 637 27 114 284 71 i.6ii 140 456 3,223 1,563 6U 285 404 2,767 1,151 76 7 45 106 13 720 292 449 2,873 1,164 S9S 6 21 280 165 Si 2 29 13 .427 6 23 S09 178 .425 11 28 237 106 #5 11 28 237 105 i,886 374 608 4,432 2,327 .496 41 167 403 99 5,382 415 776 4,836 2,42« ■4,607 171 ■i.778 ^72 a 516 38J S81 7,7il no 8.^51 566 OCCUPATIONS OP PERSONS Table No. 13 Agricultural Pursuits Professional Service Domestic and Personal Service Counties and Age Classes 1 i 3 1 ^ ■3 a S OS ■3 CO ,2 ■3 Montgomery— 14 and under 18 years 33 105 1,568 402 6 14 33 105 1,574 606 -.V... 4 4 72 27 16 33 107 36 20 18 and under 21 years. 21 and under 45 years 45 years and over_._ _ 4 86 40 42 160 14 46 236 64 37 179 63 Total 2, Its 31 107 1,368 933 SO 2 - 21 2,218 33 107 1,375 954 129 2 8 140 97 S06 ""'eo 234 41 SSS 2 68 374 138 107 7 14 156 83 192 SO 48 148 67 299 Muscatine— 14 and under 18 years. 18 and under 21 years £1 and under 45 years 46 years and over 37 62 304 150 Total 2aS9 57 166 1,693 766 SO '"""27 2,i69 57 166 1,693 793 2^7 SSS SS2 2G0 ^93 SSS O'Brien— 14 and under 18 years. . 3 7 82 38 11 43 96 17 14 18 and under 21 years 21 and under 45 years. 45 years and over 1 96 47 63 208 8 64 304 56 60 178 55 Total . 2,6S2 35 85 1,083 436 27 - 16 2,709 35 85 1,087 451 m 279 i23 130 4 6 60 17 167 6 38 79 11 897 Osceola — 14 and under 18 years 10 18 and under 21 years 21 and under 45 years 45 years and over 3 46 22 33 98 4 36 144 26 44 129 28 Total l.CSS 44 128 1,826 928 SO 9 41 i.ess 44 128 1,935 969 71 6 156 85 ISS 1 57 241 18 206 1 62 397 103 77 2 13 162 67 m 15 53 180 68 211 Page— 14 and under 18 years 18 and under 21 years 21 and under 45 years. 45 years and over 17 66 332 135 Total .. S,026 3' 74 1,362 749 2,216 59 169 2,380 901 SO 11 18 3,076 31 75 1,373 767 2i6 317 S63 SSJ, 1 6 59 sie 11 21 '7Q SSO Palo Alto— 14 and under 18 years.. 12 18 and under 21 years 21 and under 45 years _ 6 51 42 50 164 9 66 215 51 27 138 57 45 years and over.. .. . 27 af> " Total .- SO '"""12 45 2,2i6 59 169 2,392 1,006 DO 5 106 55 223 1 80 236 13 sse 1 85 342 68 93 3 8 103 69 m 33 75 160 40 2Si 36 83 258 109 Plymouth— 14 and under 18 years.. 18 and under il years 21 and under 46 years. .. 45 years and over Total . 3,5« 78 193 1,790 831 57 2 8 31 3,626 78 195 1,798 862 m SSO i9G 188 1 3 48 24 898 17 26 60 44 18 Pocahontas— 14 and under 18 years 18 and under 21 years 21 and under 45 years 45 years and over 5 72 37 45 168 21 60 230 58 29 108 68 Total 2,8(1 105 230 2,094 1.396 41 2 20 47 2, 933 107 230 2,114 1,443 lU s 38 1,138 554 S2J, 6 136 1,365 . 203 ses 8 174 2,603 757 76 75 196 1,816 700 m 140 327 1,779 532 883 215 623 3.695 1,232 Polk— 14 and under 18 years 18 and under 21 years 21 and under 45 years . 45 years and over Total Pottawattamie — 14 and under 18 years 18 and under 21 years 21 and under 46 years... 45 years and over S,82C 107 307 3. HE 1,573 r,,ws 6S ""is 64 79 S,89i 107 307 3,133 1,637 1,7SS 4 16 266 176 1,709 4 122 640 75 8 138 806 250 S.787 11 26 366 230 8,778 55 118 417 96 S,S6S 66 143 773 328 Total 5,18;, Jfil 7il 1,202 62S 686 1.S08 BY CLASSIFIED PURSUITS 567 Trade and Transportation Manufacturing and Mechanical Pursuits EeporSed as Laborer —Unclassified Grand Total i 1 '3 "ea '5 gs 1^ i i ■3 to i i ■3' 15 41 688 228 6 24 117 3 21 66 806 231 9 28 377 175 13 27 81 17 22 55 458 192 12 34 368 143 — 12 34 368 143 73 216 3,168 1,106 36 126 461 84 108 342 S,619 1,189 972 34 111 1,196 708 150 33 104 242 22 i,m 67 215 1,438 730 589 76 171 1,382 624 1S8 105 154 236 38 727 181 325 1,618 662 557 48 108 573 505 ----- 557 48 108 573 605 ^,552 198 519 4,815 2,960 706 170 366 867 189 5,258 368 885 5,682 3,139 2,0I,S 19 62 684 308 mi a 24 74 6 2,1,50 22 86 768 314 2,253 17 24 419 211 5SS 3 9 30 7 2,786 20 33 449 218 i,23i 2S 66 224 85 ------ 1,234 28 66 224 85 S,/,82 124 326 3,198 1,465 1,592 17 139 408 65 io,m 141 465 3,606 1,520 i.ms 4 31 270 131 im 1 10 35 3 1,180 6 41 305 134 fi7i 1 11 169 73 •49 4 25 2 720 1 16 X84 75 16 34 174 68 — W3 16 34 174 68 5,10S 60 170 1,782 736 629 7 85 241 36 5,732 67 255 2.023 772 23 76 880 607 ■}9 10 61 190 19 ^85 33 127 1,070 626 2U 10 38 499 330 SI 4 14 78 25 275 14 62 577 855 282 62 116 540 280 282 62 116 540 280 2,7^,8 141 376 4,153 2,197 S69 30 176 698 171 S.W 171 651 4.851 2.363 14 27 392 200 870 6 32 70 6 1,756 19 59 462 206 877 3 12 243 120 1^1 1 2 30 16 998 4 14 273 135 998 11 66 260 110 998 11 66 260 lie 6,807 60 181 2,367 1,248 i.onji 17 106 354 78 7.9^i 77 287 2.721 1.326 ess 6 61 634 300 US 9 36 133 7 7^,6 16 97 767 307 378 6 24 469 193 ■iS 6 10 48 16 ^26 11 34 617 209 29 93 531 161 4 JiS7 29 93 586 161 3,856 102 360 4,228 1,739 555 49 201 S83 121 ii.m 151 561 4.811 1.880 1,001 34 421 217 1S5 6 14 56 2 1,186 6 48 477 219 691 1 26 228 126 80 1 4 50 9 m 30 278 136 81Ji 16 36 176 75 •i 818 16 36 176 75 6,.j29 96 297 2,735 I.SIC 951, 24 91 332 107 7.S85 120 388 3,067 1,417 672 531 1,167 12,75« 5.200 78 333 926 2,830 18S 750 864 2,093 15,586 - 5,382 SSI 167 434 6,129 2,328 6i 110 141 838 162 US 277 576 5,967 2,490 SOS 134 339 2,804 1,118 SOS 134 339 2,804 1,118 i,iSS 1,015 2,4W 25,737 11,296 55i 590 1,530 6,832 1,126 .i,992 1,605 3,934 32,669 12,422 19,e5i 170 281 8,687 1,650 ae 26G 636 4« ss.m 23£ 646 4,329 1,696 8,058 62 158 l.Wl 918 1,251 46 76 220 68 9,S09 106 233 1,891 976 i,S95 79 183 999 414 4,S95 79 183 999 414 40,i5i 43C 97C 10,09' 4,96( lO.ffTS 173 580 1,828 339 50,5S0 606 1,550 11,925 6,299 s.tm i,01S e.soa 2,809 S99 S,S08 1,S!5 1,S!5 16,m 2,920 19,380 568 OCCUPATIONS OF PERSONS Table No. 13 Agricultural Pursuits Professional Service Domestic and Personal Service Counties and Age Glasses ■5 JO 03 +» O 1 S -3 ■ 1 i •3 Poweshiek— M and under 18 years.. 18 and under 21 years 21 and under 45 years 45 years and over .. . 78 158 1,855 878 1 2 21 24 79 160 1,876 902 1 5 143 71 ""Id 220 35 1 54 363 106 3 6 75 48 13 30 116 81 16 36 191 129 Total 2.969 45 108 1,469 881 -iS 6 21 S,017 45 108 1,464 902 sso SOJ, S2i m 2 3 67 29 2^0 6 8 31 31 S72 Ringgold — 14 and under 18 years 8 18 and under 21 years 21 and under 45 years 45 years and over 4 66 36 37 105 8 41 160 44 11 88 60 Total 2,J,9S 76 180 1,866 722 26 """is 26 2,519 76 180 1,879 748 9S - 91 47 ISO 2 49 168 10 2^5 2 56 268 57 91 6 66 37 76 17 44 115 25 167 17 18 and under 21 years 21 and under 45 years 45 years and over , 50 181 62 Total 105 181 1,787 1,048 SB 8 39 g.SSS 105 181 1,795 1,087 MS 6 24 478 201 229 """"is 493 128 5 82 971 329 109 17 48 768 319 201 116 214 766 315 SIO Scott— 14 and under 18 years 1 18 and under 21 years 21 and under 45 years 133 282 1,529 Total . . .. S,1Z1 66 160 2,036 781 •47 1 8 33 3,168 57 160 2,043 814 708 8 74 38 S79 '"■"S7 131 3 1,SS7 45 . 205 41 - S7 23 l.J/ll 26 68 101 19 2,558 26 m 168 ' 42 Shelty— 14 and under 18 years 18 and under 21 years 21 and under 45 years 45 years and over Total S,0S2 124 209 2,295 870 •42 1 3 9 33 s,m 126 212 2,304 903 120 - 102 68 171 87 81 226 6 29J 87 S8 328 63 5 23 106 47 199 8 114 179 18 283 ■ 13 137 287 65 Sioux— 14 and under 18 years 18 and under 21 years 21 and under 45 years 45 years and over Total S,Ji98 75 167 2,017 904 i6 e 4 S,5U 76 167 2,023 908 lev S99 566 18S 3 16 133 87 S19 SO 58 231 129 502 33 Story— 14 and under 18 years 18 and under 21 years 21 and under 45 years 8 438 108 61 32Q 50 59 758 158 74 364 216 Total s,m 66 204 2,302 1,007 10 8 30 33 s,m 66 212 2,332 1,040 • SSJj m 975 239 W 19 44 99 30 687 19 Tama— 14 and under 18 years 18 and under 21 years 2 97 76 64 192 23 66 289 99 6 76 31 49 175 61 45 years and over Total Taylor— 14 and under 18 years 18 anrf under 21 years 21 and under 45 years S,578 60 144 1,578 983 71 13 16 S,6^9 60 144 1,591 999 US - 86 50 279 43 156 9 60 241 69 112 i 60 28 192 5 8 40 31 6 9 90 59 Total Dnion— 14 and under 18 years 18 and under 21 years 21 and under 45 years 46 years and over 2,755 24 104 1,146 791 S9 12 19 2,78i 24 104 1,168 810 1J,S - 96 05 207 2 32 176 9 350 2 38 271 64 79 5 10 114 55 84 6 S3 125 43 163 11 43 230 98 Total 2,065 SI 2,096 i57 218 S75 18J, 207 391 BY CLASSIFIED PURSUITS 569 Trade and Transportation Manufacturing and Mectianical Pursuits Reported as Laborer —Unclassified Grand Total 'a 03 ■3 o B i a S 03 09 O i 1 ■s 1 12 47 685 396 3 27 140 21 16 74 72S 416 8 23 416 279 4 8 70 37 12 31 486 316 15 57 259 149 11 35 162 88 15 57 259 149 117 296 3,333 1,820 21 116 667 198 138 412 3,900 2,018 1,039 6 22 279 181 191 1 1 44 3 1,2S0 6 23 323 184 786 4 9 121 99 119 1 2 23 5 8^5 6 11 144 104 i 11 36 152 88 5,568 67 181 2,123 1,314 902 8 48 208 68 6,468 76 229 2,331 1,382 8 sa 526 262 Jf9 25 80 16 536 8 63 606 277 2S9 4 24 340 186 31 - 40 8 86^ 4 29 380 194 286 20 45 256 93 - 3 286 20 46 256 96 3,685 108 300 3,145 1,347 SS2 19 124 416 87 4.017 127 424 3,661 1,434 83^ 212 410 3,750 1,696 120 160 368 966 46 95^ 372 778 4,706 1,640 55^ 130 297 3,696 1,616 SS 83 167 487 90 607 213 464 4.182 1,706 W 128 261 2,116 968 •4 9 12 28 6 418 137 273 2,143 973 4,900 687 1,221 12,688 5,747 646 868 809 2,737 622 5,546 965 2,030 15,326 6,369 5,967 6 28 384 188 l,SiS 5 22 62 6 7,^95 11 6Q 446 194 5,738 7 21 260 130 gi7 39 6 6,555 7 24 299 135 S,Ji72 5 26 291 60 Si 3,S26 5 28 291 60 20,153 74 247 3,101 1,220 4,SS6 32 115 341 66 24.689 106 362 3,442 1,286 60C 22 70 633 337 95 2 36 73 8 701 24 106 706 345 il8 13 44 279 489 8 36 9 ^65 13 62 315 498 382 41 68 366 164 382 41 68 366 164 4,642 206 421 3,782 1,966 554 98 242 623 73 5,196 303 663 4,306 2,088 i,om 20 76 91Q 529 119 8 60 226 23 1,181 28 126 1,136 662 S85 13 28 802 326 SS 1 9 92 28 878 14 37 894 353 638 25 66 332 157 ------ 638 26 66 332 167 6,373 136 361 4,632 2,110 9se 39 168 875 234 7,309 176 629 5,507 2,344 l.SSS 4 39 678 378 307 3 18 99 7 l,8i2 7 57 777 385 1,168 1 25 368 136 ISO 1 7 38 16 i,298 2 32 396 151 586 30 80 486 215 S80 30 80 486 216 7,«S9 100 355 3,997 1,843 1,»16 28 141 458 108 8,555 123 496 4,466 1,961 1,099 12 32 464 296 3 15 77 10 1,226 16 47 531 305 120 2 20 228 171 61 1 2 31 21 SSI 3 22 259 192 811 11 38 133 82 811 11 38 133 82 6,295 75 242 2,629 1,609 730 9 68 316 87 7,025 84 310 2,846 1,696 79a 20 73 800 427 105 11 34 125 8 898 31 107 926 436 4 39 380 274 55 1 1 46 10 6 40 426 284 26i 17 46 258 145 466 26i 17 46 258 145 ■4,^55 70 278 2,794 1,747 480 20 100 483 89 4,9S5 90 378 3,277 1,836 i,m 178 i,m 697 58 755 m 4,889 692 5,581 570 OCCUPATIONS OF PERSONS Table No. 13 Agricultural Pursuits' Professional Service Domestic and Personal Service Counties and Age Classes ■i S ,5? 'a a ■3 1 i C3 Van Buren— M and under 18 years.. 18 and under 21 years. 21 and under 45 years 45 years and over . 43 102 1,326 976 8 18 43 102 1,334 993 1 8 68 32 7 11 29 51 s 6 76 64 44 122 12 49 198 66 19 97 83 Total 49 108 1,294 976 26 8 23 49 108 1,302 998 135 3 8 188 119 m 2 54 260 25 SIS 6 62 448 144 109 13 23 182 114 »S 21 69 226 96 297 Wapello— 14 and under 18 years 34 92 21 and under 45 years 45 years and over.. 406 210 Total 2,m 58 161 1,723 1,169 H 1 14 35 2,J,57 63 162 1,7S7 1,194 S18 6 86 61 Sil 4i 178 12 6B9 ""ll 264 76 SS2 2 8 47 SO 4 32 69 22 lU Warren— 14 and under 18 years 18 and under 21 years 21 and under 45 years 6 40 116 62 Total 3,101 44 120 1,800 976 50 10 33 S,1S1 44 120 1,700 1,009 156 2S1 Sg) 87 3 3 67 39 i27 8 24 83 77 2U 11 Washington — 14 and under 18 years 2 105 70 62 191 34 64 296 104 27 21 and under 45 years 45 years and over 150 116 Total 2,&S0 39 125 1.397 915 ■4S 13 36 2,S7S 39 126 1,410 951 in """"io 82 62 287 27 117 12 m """"37 199 64 112 1 3 67 31 192 5 16 71 32 S0^ 6 19 133 63 Wayne— 1* and under 18 years 18 and under 21 years 21 and under 45 years 45 years and over Total 151 239 2,414 1,115 3 17 57 a, 525 151 242 2,431 1,172 Mi 1 3 196 87 156 2 102 366 31 300 3 105 662 118 102 11 37 334 102 m 49 98 314 81 826 60 135 648 183 Webster— 14 and under IS years 18 and under 21 years 21 and under 45 years . 45 years and over . Total Winnebago— 14 and under 18 years SMS 45 125 1,261 742 77 """io 33 S,996 45 125 1,271 775 2S7 501 7SS m 3 9 61 21 51,2 11 37 98 9 1,0m 14 18 and under Jl years 21 and under 45 years .. 5 63 39 61 154 5 66 217 44 46 149 30 45 years and over Total Winneshiek— 14 and under 18 years 2,m 101 169 1,982 1,281 - 26 91 2,216 101 170 2,008 1,372 m 220 S27 SJ, 155 37 105 275 88 2S9 SJ' 18 and under 21 years 21 and under 45 years 2 76 75 61 205 19 53 280 94 4 78 31 109 363 119 Total Woodbury— 14 and under 18 years. 18 and under 21 years 21 and under 45 years 45 years and over.. i,5SS 70 178 2,619 1,328 118 1 ""'"io 36 s.esi 71 178 2,629 1,364 152 6 32 662 301 275 8 147 1,080 112 ^27 14 179 1,742 413 US 17 106 1,286 363 505 77 271 1,094 236 618 94 377 2,S79 699 Total 1,001 l,Si7 2,SI,8 i.ni 1,678 s,m BY CLASSIFIED PURSUITS 571 Trade and Transportation Manulacturing and Mechanical Pursuits Reported as Laborer —Unclassified Grand Total i a ■i o i ,2 1^ •3 +^ o CO CO i •a 1 3J a "3 12 31 359 236 2 8 45 30 14 39 404 266 6 16 210 6 33 21 6 21 243 188 13 63 222 169 13 53 222 159 76 214 2,261 1,623 9 69 237 132 84 283 2,498 1,765 638 139 260 2,629 1,200 85 51 131 369 27 723 190 391 2,888 1,227 S98 73 169 1,464 817 60 71 97 226 32 458 144 266 1,680 849 447 99 181 913 572 2 6 4 4 447 101 187 917 576 4,173 376 749 6,560 3,797 447 147 357 1,083 207 4,620 523 1,106 7,643 4,004 Ji,m 9 41 477 307 568 2 15 70 11 4,696 11 66 647 318 B,51S 7 16 218 172 2 26 11 2,939 7 18 244 183 1,765 8 22 119 68 16 i 1,781 8 22 120 58 11482 84 264 2,670 1,790 1,794 6 91 368 91 13,276 90 345 3,028 1,881 8 28 561 364 98 3 30 119 23 9S2 11 68 683 387 J/IS 3 16 406 256 SO 7 13 64 30 10 28 469 286 207 24 66 ,326 168 1 3 6 9 208 27 72 334 168 4,798 82 234 3,156 1,873 546 21 136 476 197 5,344 103 369 3,632 2,070 964 38 68 690 367 Its 2 17 88 9 i.m 40 85 678 376 679 4 18 223 181 m 1 2 37 33 793 6 20 260 214 583 16 29 186 73 18 eoi 16 29 186 73 5,345 98 253 2,646 1,619 829 8 62 326 122 6,174 106 315 2,871 1,741 l.OSS 9S 256 2,326 836 m 37 160 355 19 1,17S 130 416 2,681 865 Ji26 35 120 1,319 521 73 31 62 172 29 i99 66 172 1,491 650 SOi 64 188 1,211 407 SOJ, 64 188 1,211 407 4,515 355 843 7,800 3,068 518 119 415 1,224 217 S,0»S 474 1,258 9,024 3,286 S,5J1 8 36 387 177 ill 4 14 48 4 hOSl 12 60 436 181 1,995 3 16 323 107 2 10 32 7 2,279 6 26 365 114 1,870 21 32 164 63 1,870 21 32 154 53 12,066 80 223 2,239 1,139 1,975 17 122 342 68 14,041 97 345 2,681 1,197 60S 8 23 488 278 70 5 39 122 13 678 13 62 610 291 W 11 21 351 217 51 58 24 500 11 30 409 241 260 29 53 ,327 167 260 29 63 327 167 3,681 149 272 3,301 2,049 539 42 205 686 235 4,220 191 477 3,987 2,284 797 294 6O0 7.266 2,644 J79 213 460 1,401 75 976 607 1,060 8,666 2,619 660 138 416 4,433 1,664 91 76 144 477 81 691 214 559 4,910 1,735 576 130 314 2,704 815 7 20 43 4 576 137 334 2,747 819 5..771 655 1,646 18,968 7,006 1,168 382 1,042 4,106 544 6,9S9 1,087 2,687 23,073 7,549 10,765 n,m m,85B 6,6iO 778 7,418 S,96S 74 4,037 28,273 6,073 34,346 572 OCCUPATIONS OF PERSONS Table No. 13 Agricultural Pursuits Professional Service Domestic and Personal Service Counties and Age Classes .33 1 3 o •i S 1 1^ ■3 ■♦a a! i i 3 g 34 103 1,213 688 2 2 25 34 105 1,215 614 2 3 26 18 7 21 73 23 9 18 and under 21 years 21 and under 45 years 45 years and over 1 43 17 23 83 3 24 126 20 24 99 41 Total Wright— 14 and under 18 years 18 and under 21 years 21 and under 45 years 45 years and over 1,9S9 63 199 1,830 822 29 8 20 1,968 63 199 1,838 842 CI 2 97 47 X09 2 58 203 14 170 2 60 300 61 i9 5 4 85 49 m 14 40 102 42 17S 19 44 187 91 Total 2,9« 28 S,9Ji2 lJl6 277 m US 198 Sil BY CLASSIFIED PURSUITS 573 Trade and Manufactaring and Reported as laborer Transportation Mechanical Pursuits —Unclassified «3 6 e i o Id a C3 •3 ■3 'a a 03 a « i t e i ■3 ' § « a Ph H a ^ t< a • f^ B a ^ &< 1 1 2 3 3 17 17 67 8 65 26 10 36 17 2 19 24 2 26 173 60 233 836 62 3S8 236 34 270 136 2 138 1,990 246 2,286 122 3 126 82 6 87 40 1 41 868 60 92S m fig 650 SS8 ii S79 2T> 5 m S,088 m s.m 7 3 10 2 2 9 9 86 19 105 41 28 69 27 11 38 43 ■ 43 316 137 463 994 110 1,104 452 60 602 263 263 3,721 473 4,194 449 6 455 192 18 210 86 86 1,646 100 1,745 i.m M7 1,6S8 m 79 752 m m 5,7fi8 729 6,^97 574 CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 t-i OQ o O a O CC O el § o a bo a OS 03 bo BlS^OJi 93IAI3S ijanniy il[BABO iUHBini IB^oj; 33IAI3S jaqjO iiaiiwry iSllBABO ijinBjni IB?Oi isqJO &iB]i\iiY illBAEO Ai^aBjaj aggea gs^ss ssssa assss 1-1 i-l i-HrHrH'iH iHrHrH T-\ i-l HC0C0(M "*Cii> !■* NOOIO It- -*iOC0«O 00 iM 00 mo tfcocanco u3£«i>cDO •400 r-t 1 T-i Oi ! rH Icq jiH ^^ 3S liH ll>-iH'* omcooDin 00 rHlAt>in SSS"" rH rH CO rH ^rHODjC. 8S9SS qi3sss §8s§533: S8fe3a ss'^sgjs asasa sgssss e3BS|s sasf^s esss" i;'°sas feS'^siS! '"essss S'='gs:g sssss ases-^ eas;ss3 sssss I— I I— I r-l(N r-frH-* rH ■ till I 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 tA 1 1 1 t 1 1 1 O rH 1 rH C> 1 1 1 1 rH l I I iin ( 1 1 1 i 1 1 i i i i i i i i i i i i i i :"' i i i i i i"' i i i i 1 i ! i i 1 rH IrH 1 cq 1 1 1 1 rH III 1 rH rH I r^ 1 rH -^oOeq cOrHooTHco rHin-^r-t- rHOiiOcoin coiArHtoo frcoixioco cocpooqio eooco<^oo cqooeocom s" saag" on On M O {H =2 m 3 3 ilMl Hill iilll llll Liii 11 Hi .Ills i|-i|i OnPQP BMPHiiiPH ftOOfflW WMWWM WSfi>^i? i^i^>?MM hIhIi^i^kI 3333^ « B a S S * o '-C S 9 o Ma HO H qm S o o o s 576 CIVIL WAR VETERANS I sa bo op, 03 BIBJOj; ijainiiv iHVAVO ii'iwajui I«»oi aojAjgg jaqJO irfnBJV £JXBA«0 AjjnBjni T-t iHcgrHrHdcDC4 MSDTj(i-t N M « eD ^j^UBjni laoor-ioos lQtt^rcg^a ihosioooo o>ioojmco ootp^oco ■*e30i> ^g ^■9o So ma i" - - 6" 4S H bo »oa ■SJ^SSM '^Smi". sign? gaP-sl 815 S SiSSiSf „-s^3>" a^'ao S»Rb9 «^^ oooo-S SSSoO gg-g|M Sae§a fittL^^k P4(i((i4M£i kSSsS bSSi*^ ^^^^&; ^^^^ .a o o c CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 577 TABLE NO. 15— URBAN POPULATION. Cities and Incorporated Towns with Population in 1915 and at other Periods. County Population City or Town State Cens'B 1885 D. S. Oens's 1890 State Oens's 1895 0.8. Cens's 1900 State Cens's 1905 U.S. Cens's 1910 state Cens's 1915 Ackley Aakworth Adair Hardin 1,473 115 463 l,lfl& 1,112 6U 377 1,286 722 995 1,045 442 4m 1,458 111 853 1,091 1,144 402 304 810 2,588 429 602 146 2,487 750 436 875 """"947 309 276 1,893 2,006 soe 1,018 """'S 603 490 """lie 1,445 1^ 879 1,213 1,178 408 404 1,029 "'2^8i9 440 '"""709 ""ilgii 950 463 861 179 1,009 328 249 2,428 2,891 273 968 ' 437 427 405 198 ' m 9OT 251 162 513 1,481 147 •961 1,338 1,055 390 421 1,155 20a 3,957 424 """"775 267 3,047 903 603 961 205 1,043 591 271 3,292 2,878 3O0 976 806 606 441 462 126 194 140 837 706 229 182 526 1,244 119 900 1.289 1,014 322 408 1,130 261 4,969 467 699 262 2,908 862 495 969 356 1,046 438 283 4,223 2,983 307 1,118 449 635 448 390 351 168 156 678 686 273 215 518 1,288 Warren Adair 113 1,011 AdeiE Dallas 1,425 Alton Agmey . .. .. Ainsworth Akron Albert Oity ' Union Wapelto Washington Plymouth 1,007 374 432 1,235 417 2,142 459 '""ms "ilie 791 336 764 "'""sis 465 2,359 384 ""ms 807 """768 """"706 326 6,138 Albion - Albumett Aldee Alexander Alg'ona Allerton - Marshall Linn Hardin I^aaklin Kossuth 477 169 806 302 3,693 1.015 Butler ESS Alta Alta Vista . _ Alton - . Altoona . Alvord Buena Vista Ohickaaaw Sioux Polk 1,078 384 968 5aj S64 Story Jones 1,317 1,874 329 616 """'"379 464 1,276 2,078 307 696 ""427 463 5,091 "2,822 Andorer . Andrew Anita Ankeny Anthon Aplington Clinton Jackson Cass Polk Woodbury Butler 68 332 1,210 S26 758 610 OarroH 381 O'Brien — - Crawford Onioo 139 Arion I.- Ajiape Arlington Armatrong.^ Arnold's Park . Arthur . .. .. Ashiton AspIniwaH Atalisaa Atbeilstan Atlantic Auburn . Audubon , Aurella Aurora Avenarius Avoca Ayrshire 237 127 Payett« Emmet 576 S9S 722 631 ' i^ 417 787 7ES Dickinson Ida - Osceola Crawford '~"ao9 408 269 697 108 MuBoatine Taylor 286 e,«6 298 1,869 esu 331 ""1^627 329 187 157 5,180 314 1,764 634 316 iliis 331 220 148 4,560 399 1,928 625 287 "i,m 337 205 164 OasB — .i. - — Sao - - 3,842 4,351 174 I.SIO 663 4,964 243 1,583 607 5,039 410 Audubon Cherokee 1,152 9S8 2,084 654 298 Dubuque Pottawattamie — Palo Alto "i^607 ""1^598 94 1,648 800 •335 inmates of State Eeformatory were included in the tricts. Had these been credited to Anamosa, the population 87 enumeration of other dis- would have been 3,1B7. 578 URBAN POPULATION Table No. 15 County Popiflatlon City or Town State Cens's 1885 U.S. Cens's 1890 State Cens's 189S V. 8. Cens's 1900 State Cens's 1900 U.S. Cens's 1910 State Cens's 1915 Badger Webster . 120 356 240 355 242 338 289 273 160 149 528 540 520 455 637 176 227 1,996 3,322 1,686 1,208 278 256 210 201 212 488 226 229 830 307 154 130 560 527 527 539 623 148 220 1,883 3,121 1,776 1,224 222 Bagley - Guthrie .. _ . 466 Bailey Mitchell 226 BaWwtin - - . Bancrolt - Jackson - . Kossuth' 239 22r ear 277 936 184 433 473 4©r S42 974 87 S8 2,070 3,256 1,538 1,173 270 254 839 274 175 149 533 U2 427 494 953 177 266 ""i"9V7 3,283 1,607 1,234 " 238 192 254 """'lis ~"6^ ' 592 '"""526 279 704 2,105 257 893 Bames City ... 381 Barnum Bassett BataTia Battle Oreek Baxter Bayard . Webster Chickasaw Jefferson Ida Jasper . Guthrie 292 313 era 2ii "11742 2,092 1,398 727 ""'"276 307 387 348 WO ""1^643 2,623 1,394 803 iis 152 132 606 688 672 706 Beaoom Beaconsfield Beaman . .- Mahaska Ringgold GTniTldy 489 168 239 Beaver Bedford .. Belle Plaine Bellevue .. Belmond Beloit . Boone Taylor Benton . Jackson Wright ... Lyon Oedar Ringgold Van Buren Boone - .. Tama IXibuQue . isr 1,941 3,668 1,708 1,419 Bennett Benton -- 243 191 141 320 213 Bentonsport Berkley 117 Berlin Bernard .. 106 S70 551 1^ 594 347 458 266 668 2,eei 191 436 968 287 9,500 " 96 909 572 241 532 344 408 283 648 2,028 223 419 597 287 10.347 143 Bertram . Linni Scott . Van Burea Hamilton! Benton WapeOo Page . "So " a3 387 645 683 629 181 563 '"""506 299 479 2,M7 BettendorJ Birmingham Blairsburg 1.376 681 298 Blairstown Blakesburg Blandhard Blencoe 584 339 422 307 Blockton BloomUeld _ Taylor .. "1^527 "i'.ms 649 2,28a Blue Grass Sooitt . 287 Bode Bonaparte Bondurant . Humboldt Van Buren .. Polk -""-- ""m 353 923 172 8,84S 409 898 297 8,880 428 643 302 Boone Dallas 4,331 6,52!) 12,253 204 Bouton . BoKholm Boone """"277 175 "'"'301 202 222 """'3^ 238 223 312 306 229 364 283 176 225 394 Braddyville Bradgate _ - Page Humboldt 196 326 207 Brandon Buchanan - 349 Brayton . . __ _ Audubon . .. .. 124 """"sel 257 818 1.202 ""sis """892 355 1,245 1,244 141 395 """"§67 317 1,540 1,188 196 431 '"""i89 348 1,410 1,207 137 778 291 197 Breda Bridgewater Brighton - Bristow ■ Britt Brooklyn Brunsrilte Carroll Adair ... ^ ... Washington . Butler . .. Hancock Poweshiek Plymouth 278 """"852 218 639 1,217 413 882 1,023 338 1,445 1,485 111 Buckeye Hardin Crawford Scott 122 140 193 Buck Grove 92 Bulfalo - _ 408 879 865 488 372 875 397 701 456 753 Buffalo Center Winnebago 908 ENUMERATION AT DIFFERENT PERIODS 579 County Population City or Town State Gens' 8 1885 U.S. Oens's 1890 State Oens's IS95 V.S. Oens's 1900 State Oens's 1909 U.S. Oens's 1910 State Oens's 1915 Burlington DCS Moines Kossuth Marion Oainton Webster Winnesihiek O'Brien Clinton 23,459 "217 9m ""76O 473 3SB ""sii IK' 1,885 486 787 413 15,428 ""lee 3,434 22,565 206 813 "~"763 432 856 lie 2,448 391 956 452 "1^469 18,020 210 619 3,668 467 3,122 2,802 " 567 318 3,441 26,246 343 " 220 296 1,056 ""loi 441 350 23,2ffl 504 SSO 287 399 1,003 113 713 667 356 """ks 25,318 529 7*4 •272 360 939 131 664 849 416 352 637 128 3,203 677 1,314 603 2sa 407 5,329 28,759 214 8S3 5,967 607 '1'049 4,549 359 785 132 508 3,998 287 172 598 1,282 391 992 4,020 1,885 997 149 697 1,689 164 184 605 144 vs.'rss 190 ""'iso 187 606 24,324 495 669 270 231 849 242 620 696 445 249 592 121 3,549 940 1,268 735 230 364 8,012 32,811 199 802 6,936 558 3,794 5,892 356 734 131 007 4,884 296 181 967 1,355 299 660 3,832 2,069 895 145 625 a,014 186 213 510 99 25,577 178 189 177 471 24,261 Bussey — Oalamus OaUender — - . Oalmar 635 393 398 952 Calumet . Oamanehe 208 647 Oambrlage Oantill Oarbon Oarllsle . CarpeQ'ter „. Story Van Buren AdamH Warren Mitchell 683 465 304 633 144 Oarroll Carroll - Pottawattamie Dubuque Guthrie Winneshiek Monona Black Hawk 2,839 474 1,123 533 "4^506 21,555 253 596 S,ei54 594 '1)^322 4,201 2,882 esa 1,298 568 359 5,319 25,656 256 874 5,259 923 "3I989 4i.227 4,081 Oarson — Cascade — , Oasey 656 1,316 801 Oastalia Oastana ■... Cedar FaUs 282 441 6,284 Cedar Eapids Center Junction Center Point 40,697 Jones T,1n;n 232 910 CtotarvillB Appanoose Linn 7,808 Central dty „ Oentralia 735 EmbuQue Luca« „ . Ployd OlintoJi Crawford 2,973 98 Ohariton 6,235 Ohailes CMty 9,374 384 778 401 3,oee 772 419 3,895 799 Ohatffwarth Sioux — Tama Cherokee Howard Wapello Greene Appanoose Webster Cfedar - 324 1,909 214 207 266 135 Chelsea 682 Checroikee •4,704 Chester 290 Ohlllioothe ._.. Oliurdan 214 877 4^ 229 552 1,208 239 6B9 3,0» 1,390 830 218 628 1,21a 374 675 3,2W 1,475 849 193 694 1,629 CJarB Clarence 284J 671 2,808 624 929 3,262 744 735 671 darittda Clarion' Page Wright Appanoose Clayton _ 4,478 2,553 darlijsiv'ille -- 965 daytoiii - 141 Taylor 270 998 ' sis 858 12,003 92 452 1,130 ""m sm 13,609 609 1,507 5® 128 17,375 177 """m 621 998 1,709 513 202 22,999 218 '"""i«4 49S 695 Clear I/^e Oerro Gordo Charokee Marshall Payette 2,741 ClefirhoTn __ __ demons 220 245 714 Cleveland Lucas CHlntoOj 65 29,091 264' OlIOi Wayne Polk Tama Montgomery Linnj ClOTBrhlU OttiaWer 201 276 Oobuxg .- Ooggon 151 60 176 669 *920 inmates of Hospital for Insane were included in the enumeration of other dis- tricts. Had these been credited to Cherokee, the population would have been 5,6S4. 580 URBAN POPULATION Table No. 15 County Population City or Town State Cens's 1885 U.S. Cens's 1890 State Cens's 1895 U. S. Cens's 1900 State Cens's 1905 U.S. Cens's 1910 State Cens's 1915 Coin - Page 404 537 316 1,606 684 889 291 485 1,0*8 574 274 2,053 693 540 391 388 1,099 546 286 2,K3 667 568 502 423 1,127 591 271 2,624 626 621 463 375 1,185 665 320 Ctolfax College Springs ■ Collins Jasper Page Story 952 632 957 491 2,607 585 568 Colo Columbtis City Oolumbus Junctjoa — Co-neevillS Story Louisa .. . . . Louisa Muscatine 264 519 969 261 459 953 638 390 1,107 332 Conrad Conway Coon Bapids Gnmdy . Taylor Carroll • 385 729 240 1,488 721 157 379 873 ' 173 1,682 869 334 962 322 343 1,043 '""iao 1.769 904 567 1,058 483 318 1,017 123 2,145 985 651 1,477 530 359 1,087 141 142 1,W3 956 523 1,680 549 288 1,084 105 151 1.702 893 4661 1,669 620 277 1,218 Ooppock Henry Johnson HI 148 1,881 1,056 697 OorrectiomvlUe Oorwlth. Woodbury HIancook Oorydon Cotter Wayne Ijouisa Franklin 820 1.757 131 307 Council Blulfs Oraig — Pottawattamie „ Plymouth ai,5OT 21,474 20,189 25,80e 25,231 29,292 31,354 135 Orawlordsville Washington Howard Union Union Hancock Cass „ - 7,398 "aims 7,200 266 2,529 6,630 205 516 142 216 348 " 538 263 2,806 7.752 208 248 S81 '"""237 118 362 480 336 2,981 8,382 238 202 6Sr 171 235 141 357 ""m 553 241 39,797 658 322 2,658 6,9^ 208 143 552 161 254 129 39a 769 668 283 43,028 489 717 Sll 3,592 356 467 411 548 208 728 3,133 224 326 86,368 356 323 3,199 7,972 179 177 5714 Oteston Cromwell Crystal Lake — Palo Alto 173 Oushing Cylinder Dakota City Woodoury Palo Alto Humboldt Marion — . Dallas Greene Woodbury . Des Moines " 366 """499 """353 445 286 161 447 329 86A 213 Dallas Dallas Ctenter Dana — Danbury Danville 283 423 399 S78 280 Davenport Scott Decatur Dallas „ Webster 23,830 519 551 204 2,692 la 26.872 594 30,010 80O 35,2M 617 *4S,48S 638 306 Dawson Dayton Decatur _. 659 215 2,801 273 291 323 721 269 3,141 285 896 323 '"""439 429 545 2,256 758 387 3,246 374 40S 387 "'""692 """"eS 2,771 102 742 328 3,918 376 448 332 624 227 675 3, ITS 163 334 75,626 343 806 341 4,021 486 516 401 438 553 268 721 3,456 478 323 105,652 298 Decatur Winneshiek _ Carroll Poweshiek Decorah Dedbam Defiance Delhi .. Shelby Delaware _ 308 OQinton 456 518 Deloit . Crawford . Delta Denison Keokuk . . Crawford 449 1,633 409 1,782 Denver Bremer „ - Derby _ .. Lucas ... Des Moines De Sotoi Polk -. Dallas 32,469 364 S0,09a 828 66,350 355 62,139 346 *459 inmates of Soldiers' Orphans' Home were included in the enumeration of other districts. Had these been credited to Davenport, the population would have been 48,942. ENUMERATION AT DIFFERENT PERIODS 581 County Population City or Town State Cens's 1885 u. s. Cens's 1890 state Cens's 1895 U.S. Cens's 1900 State Cens's 1909 U.S. Oens'8 1910 State Cens's 1915 DeWitt I>exter dintort — . Dallas Ringgold Clay Grundy 1,395 651 1,359 607 1,W4 740 1,883 79e 383 1,508 80O 469 '"I29 1,634 767 509 ""286 1,877 SIO 492 291 879 Dike - Dixon Scott ._ . Dolllver Emmet 120 2S4 668 162 541 B04 ■220 41,941 562 427 1,825 107 337 681 171 462 892 ^9 38,494 550 US 276 1,155 108 85 425 612 Donahue Scoitt Lee """'2S6 490 " 270 B45 Cerro Gordo Dow Oitv — Crawford Wright Davis Dubuque Butler 424 "iio 26,330 451 303 30,311 450 637 263 40,674 462 818 238 88,287 433 350 217 1,355 B71 1,001 Dows .Dubuque 41,795 582 476 SOD Webater .. 164 '1^230 Dunkerton Blaek Hawk - Harrison 1,408 "i^osi Dunlap 1,398 69 Dubuque .._ Cedar _ ' 641 1,055 8W 1,217 287 mr, 1,272 775 1,881 302 539 1,301 867 3,006 835 364 613 459 560 1,323 902 3.5S7 830 340 618 979 6' 9 1,446 889 3,122 826 304 671 553 132 289 1,127 "'""688 363 2,316 2,278 196 609 1,255 114 ^ 623 232 418 944 172 638 2,542 571 779 3,650 400 829 492 628 5,009 S09 195 1,342 720 1,511 906 S,387 749 323 552 600 729 1,885 987 4,088 749 307 582 534 Dyersville • Dubuque Tama Wright . Dysart Shelby Earlville I 586 177 569 277 Early Sac East Elkport (Garber) Clayton . - Madison — 252 1,230 ""'565 344 1,850 2,233 207 685 1,321 sai me 242 319 976 602 2,361 549 710 3,237 S71 1,085 448 555 338 2,024 1,995 217 564 1,181 132 m B28 205 406 807 161 478 2,325 620 776 3,404 392 787 660 618 4,970 676 259 1.166 300 1,046 451 eizs 339 Eddyvllle 1,009 815 847 eii EdenviHe (Rhodes PO) Edg6w0'0!d Marshall Clayton Elberon -. Tama — Eldon Wapello 1,288 1,644 1,725 1,577 1,867 2,096 2,030 2,720 236 611 1,213 161 Eldora Hardin Seott _ -__ Eldridge Elgin 369 745 £7 577 796 """440 282 939 Elkhart Elk Ham _ _ Polk Shelby Clayton Montgomery Ringgold Hamilton 304 Elkport ElMott Ellston _ 210 658 Ellsworth ___ 530 871 182 Ely Linn . Mills 397 1,264 387 701 404 1,584 348 661 1,47B 481 2,104 499 607 2,498 Emmetaburg . Epworth Essex . Kstharville Everly Exira . . Palo Alto. Dubuque Page , Emmet 2,647 45B 797 *,123 472 Audubon 552 575 76 448 3,391 582 "i'.m 748 101 548 4,026 561 "i'.m 851 644 1,689 513 "i'.m 651 929 6,113 729 280 1.194 Palrtield Jefferson 3,264 466 Parley ParmersbuTg Farmlngton Clayton Van Buren 582 URBAN POPULATION Table No. 15 County Population City or Town State Cens's 1385 V. S. Cens's 1890 State Cens's 1895 U.S. Cens's 1900 State Cens's 1903 U.S. Cens's 1910 State Cens's 1915 "PamTia^vnTo Calhoun 137 406 1,062 281 469 1,173 348 514 1,315 330 541 1,108 179 431 1,112 211 S55 611 1,175 3W 161 Farragut Fayeftte _ Fremont Fayette 366 892 Fenton Ferguson _ Kossuth Marshall Fertile - — W'orth 232 Floris Davis ""?m 1,180 853 1.758 264 "12, 162 9,278 205 """"331 1,009 847 1,665 288 8,7m 374 332 97S 789 1,691 289 "is^iis 8,900 276 253 Floyd Fonda Floyd -. . Pocahontas Adair Winnebago Winneshiek 5s mi 830 893 480 "s,m 7,901 """"942 859 1,292 341 ""8"756 10,022 4814 362 1,106 8% Forest City — Fort Attinsoe _ . 2, IS 305 Fort Des Moines Fort Dodge Fort Madison Foster 1 Fostoria Polk , Webster Lee Monroe' Clay Lee _ . 4,925 638 19,372 •9,507 129 146 133 '620 635 204 620 185 478 128 Franklin 333 iil 234 """"415 "'""562 """"ai 210 """"S65 170 542 ""'"466 198 1,248 480 171 528 ""389 138 537 558 149 501 897 Fl-azer Fredericksburg _ Bo»ne Chickasaw Bremer Mahaska Wright Ida . ""m Fremont Gait — - Galva Garter (E. Elkport).. Clayton .. Garden Grov« Gamavino . Decatur Clayton Hancock "'""438 322 554 """"OT9 SSI 601 ""i.iii 482 522 """"S43 246 ""m 404 785 2,1J3 731 60« 262 651 630 611 741 368 Garner . Garrison 1,28S 482 470 ""m 384 """"468 687 842 3,040 733 628 254 l.?00 504 440 190 463 331 230 604 679 882 2,5r5 818 576 245 1,028 438 4K 199 606 436 235 430 689 869 4,0'2 850 618 240 1,226 489 513 205 704 426 252 477 985 959 t3,291 91S 748 241 113 Garwin Tama Gen«va George Germania _ _ Franklin Lyon — Gilbert Gilman Story Marshall Pocahontas 5B0 602 """"47s Gilmore City Gladbrook Glenwooid Tama Mills .. 541 1,375 622 556 1,890 532 343 Glldden Oarroll Wright Hancock .. Clinton Goldfietd Goodell . Goose Lake .— Gowrie Graettinger Graf Webster Palo AJto Dubuque 451 526 628 681 388 787 478 829 559 955 743 Grafton Worth 156 1,113 355 326 249 ^1 549 161 1,058 40S 834 278 195 386 559I IK 1,012 428 .'33 374 162 400 475 199 984 481 Grand Junction. 948 213 932 217 1,011 323 Grand Mound Grand Eiver . Clinton Decatur Grand View Granger Grant Louisa Dallas Montgomery Sao Sioux . 229 "'""373 366 375 275 Grant City Granville 4JS 649 Gravity Taylor 224 216 *289 inm -.tes of State Penitentiary were included in the enumeration of other districts. Had these been credited to Ft. Madison, the population would have been 9,796 ^ fl,062 inmates of School for Feeble Minded were included in the mumerntinn nf other districts. Had these been credited to Glenwood. the poStiSiwouldTavebSn 4,343 ENUMERATION AT DIFFERENT PERIODS 583 County Population City or Town State Oens's 1885 tJ. S. Oens's 1890. State Oens's 1895 U. S. Ceus's 1900 State Oens's 1905 U.S. Oens's 1910 State Oens's 1915 Gray . ""780 1,101 "s'ko 671 1,209 845 1,0148 752 1,167 172 890 1,168 1,244 178 3,232 987 1.822 180 488 1,192 1,300 186 3,860 900 1,322 191 416 1,224 1,445 112 4,fe 992 1,373 148 383 1,150 1,879 128 733 5,038 949 1,364 Greeley Greene Greenfield Grean Island Grimes Grinnell Griswold Grundy lOenter Graver Delaware Butler Adair . Jackson Polk Poweshiek Oass Grundy 370 1,315 1,624 127 351 5,061 1,148 1,629 110 Guernsey Guthrie Center Guttenbeirg . Poweshiek _ , Guthrie . Olaytoo 847 1,123 "i.'m 1,160 1,634' ler "i'.ia 1,424 1,905 2,527 2S8 1,620 2,ff79 638 2,727 276 192 2,422 269 1,006 404 307 1,810 618 500 1,035 244 118 2414 175 stro 115 145 767 284 415 676 %9 626 1,474 946 "i.m 296 3,836 3,261 477 306 7,987 2,840 1,978 1B8 1,787 512 2,800 28S 158 233 2.645 287 280 235 1,015 417 314 2,019 535 518 1,009 266 127 223 '"""159 906 147 136 816 263 906 694 352 728 1,637 888 190 2,029 281 3,838 3,386 613 318 8,497 3,049 ~il337 1,873 147 1,817 391 2,817 250 129 247 2,sro 232 297 239 1,106 346 393 241 2,107 510 444 978 240 110 "15 """"168 936 143 lOB 797 243 581 668 372 668 1,809 1,008 336 1,874 311 3,517 3,283 595 296 10,091 2,797 177 1,678 1,886 168 2,204 398 Halbur Hamburg- . Oarroll Hamilton . Marion Hampton Hancock Franklin 1,715 3,025 264 Hanlomtown Harcourt Worth Webster . 180 303 Harlan Harper Harpera Perry Harris . .. Shelby Keokuk .^ Allamakee Osceola 1,728 231 1,765 253 2,2BC 292 2,825 257 315 308 Hartford Hartley Hartwiek Harvey Hastings Haveloek Warren' O'Brien Poweshiek Marion Mills Pocahontas _ 388 619 ffi2 806 """366 1,725 """"462 1,081 255 80 " m 775 238 1,116 113 400 432 278 Hawarden Hawkeye Hazelton Hedriok Henderson Hepburn Hills . Sioux Fayette . Buchanan Keokuk -,. . Mills Page Johnson' Mills Plymouth Grundy Ida . — 929 "soo 218 99 2^ 430 1,363 201 75 m ■ ES9 2,045 614 507 926 238 112 210 Hillsdale . — HintOD Holland . """"291 152 1,137 Holy Cross Hopeville . Hopkinton . _ Homick Dubuque Clarke _ 91 Delaware Woodbury 621 668 715 836 309 Hoflpers _ __ Hubbard - Sioux 313 741 296 687 1,240 720 1,720 272 9,142 2,825 308 225 7,526 2,234, 057 Hardin Black Hawk 316 452 863 411 Hifll Humboldt Humestom Huxley Ida Grore Imogene .-• Independence Indianola Sioux Humboldt .. . . Wayne Story Ida Fremont — Buchanan Warren - "i'.m 684 "ilSz 216 3,32* 2,081 566 1,079 «2 ""i^56S 279 3,163 2,254 768 Z,08l 1,084 357 2,090 314 3,683 3,495 Ionia - - Chickasaw 291 Iowa City towa Palte Johnson Hardin 6,718 1,731 7,016 1,798 12,083 3,716 584 URBAN POPULATION Table Xo. 15 County . Population City or Town State Cens's 1885 U.S. Cens's 1890 State Oens's 1895 U.S. Oens's 1900 State Oens's 1909 U.S. Oens's 1910 State Oens's 1915 Sioux 412 663 329 " 251 2,260 646 6125 54S 296 171 iii 2,601 680 947 699 SIS 169 413 299 2,456 680 631 278 160 379 269 2,477 697 941 670 Shelhy Winneshiek Guthrie m Jackson Junction Jamaica , _ 151 403 313 Jefferson Greene Buchanan Hamilton 1,730 651 385 1,876 573 414 8,103 Jesup 789 1,074 Worth Oalhomi Washington Hamilton _- Hancock 172 Jolley , Kalona 2U SBO 130 ' Se 640 390 as 14,287 1,283 759 ' So 819 185 403 "'"isi 2,862 387 228 2,053 973 421 529 1,153 681 234 1,2819 416 269 eso 223 653 459 ii 14,611 1,117 996 405 720 132 2I0S 402 89 262 ""l67 3,131 496 239 2,708 1,298 591 1,540 636 272 'T438 1,419 490 125 239 file 2S9 281 sao 179 692 435 161 319 14,604 1,144 1,024 356 857 169 212 322 189 292 199 273 3,194 550 214 2,322 1,348 614 685 1,683 680 201 172 1,680 1,347 429 147 398 168 788 637 107. 250 466 262 398 603 231 610 360 1S8 376 14,008 1,009 988 412 977 14a 180 299 207 306 220 198 3,190 517 260 2,013 1,214) B52 614 1,541 671 288 268 1,512 1,233 434 158 878 179 817 601 138 246 614 268 518 Kellerfcon RinggoM Story Jasper _ 2«1 725 "is'isi 883 661 480 277 700 lie 14,101 831 777 ms 714 301 224 1,160 6(M 194 1,668 1,052 684 KeUey 22a 619 Kensett _ _ Worth Unioiu Linn Lee .. 430 Kent 169 Kenwood Park 558 15,239 Keosauqua - Van Buren Keokuk 1,018 Keota 1,071 Keokuk _. Bentoni Audubon Plymouth Keokuk Shelby . Wapello 359 Keystone 488 Kimballton 390 Kingsley Kinross 1,0S 152 Kirkman Kirkville 198 278 Kirou Crawford Hancock 239 404 Knierim Oalhoun Einggold Marion 2,575 253 248 608 378 ""m. 1,054 193 181 Knoxville •3,541 626 Ladora . . Lake Citv — Iowa Calhoun Winnebago Dickinson, Sao Decatur Buchanan Jacksonj Carroll Allamakee BlaiSk Hawk Lyon Cherokee Praniklin - 219 2,221 Lake Mills .. _ 1,480 Lake Park T09 Lake View LamonI _ 814 1,778 Lamont 8912 La Motte Lanesboro _ Lansing 298 309 1,656 La Porte City Larchwood Larrabee . 1,541 478 192 Latimer . 397 Lattners Dubuque _„ Marshall 46 Laurel 191 Laurens Lawler „ Lawton ___ Pocahontas Chickasaw Woodbury . ""'56 318 m asr 483 853 646 848 656 190 LeOlaire Scott _ '190 Inmates ol Hospital lor Inebriates were included in enumeration of other districts. Had these been credited to the city of Knoxville, the population would have been 3,731. ENUMERATION AT DIFFERENT PERIODS 585 CbuQty Population City or Town State Cens's 1885 a. s. Cens's 1890 State Cens's 1895 U. S. Cena's 1900 State Cens's 1905 U. S. Cens's 1910 State Cens's 1916 Ledyard - Kossuth 371 381 782 257 4106 808 227 342 937 222 338 928 %u> LeGrand Lehigh I/eighton - MaishaU Webster Mahaska . _ '"""625 870 364 i.isao 129 Leland _— LeMars Lenox Leon LeBoy - YiBmebago Plymouth ... Taylor Decatur Decatur Lyon Loiulsa Oass - 3,808 629 1,423 307 6919 4,088 708 1,422 325 579 m 1,951 """"ioo 348 611 215 4,116 1,014 1,905 '""'225 387 613 201 6,041 1,016 2,027 196 288 410 648 188 4,1S7 1,274 1,991 185 241 433 603 188 5,070 1,320 2,199 221 Lester Letts , Lewis • .- 274 456 652 Lidderdale OarroU: 176 Lime Spring Lhiden Llneville .. Lton Grove . Lisbon - Liseomb Uttleport Little Eock Little Sloiux Ldvermore Lockrldge Howard - DaBas — Wayne Bu«na Vista Linn Marshall Clayton Lyon . Harrison Humboldt Jefferson 448 586 70S 830 424 328 560 60S ' 313 " 4TO 459 551 265 656 " 817 378 20O 4'46 681 605 314 6B0 """ase 338 399 427 618 460 329 813 ' 948 366 882 427 589 498 315 eoo 846 354 4.T1 390 578 547 324 752 320 879 307 206 634 452 634 203 Logan Lohrvilte Harrison Oalhoun 787 2« 867 435 1,102 526 m 488 499 371 670 "~"s5a 1,377 667 600 587 " 544 S18 '""ssi 169 347 """iS 235 l.OBl 404 292 ""iaei 2,887 773 339 1,189 1,424 1,089 3,777 669 573 718 2,007 1,379 828 827 722 607 473 612 285 "i',m 134 652 iei 463 " sra 223 1,073 427 341 146 1,288 2,978 •m 327 1,382 1,305 1,184 3,666 526 532 832 2,072 1,453 674 782 645 623 562 584 253 '"""666 130 BOl ""'"160 370 197 1,191 377 831 127 1,1S4 2,758 875 316 1,434 1,^6 1,100 3,570 682 480 896 1,786 1,841 696 809 Long Grove Lorimor Seott' Union aiinton Monroe Oedar Olinton Clayton Lueaa Boone Ecssuth " 470 "{'.ma iis 405 "1^320 116 711 577 Lovilla Lowden Low Moor Luana Lucas Luther 621 630 262 1(58 625 141 680 DubuQue _ 120 Benton _ 161 357 " iii 572 37S ""m 2,388 zei ' 188 565 872 "l^ 2,^4 526 '1^233 822 782 3,077 817 243 804 442 156 "1^091 2,683 6B9 "iiiii 1,214 1,118 3,448 458 G03 728 2,027 Lytton Macedonia Sao - Pottawattamie — Madison 238 390 304 Madrid Magnolia Malcom MaUard Maloy Malvern Manohfister Boone . Harrison Poweshiek Palo Alto Ringgold Miito Delaware 1,449 297 426 384 119 1,234 3,102 1,124 Manly Marnilne - — — Manson' Mapleton Maquoketa Worth OarroU Oalhouni Monona Jackson Buena Tfata Floyd Oherokea Iowa ""'isi 763 3,028 982 1,811 1,309 1,200 3,778 581 Marbla Eock Marooa Marengo 438 525 1,982 433 671 1,710 63S 987 2,037 586 URBAN POPULATION Table Tio. 15 County Population City or Town State Cens's 1885 u. s. Cens's 1890 State Cens's 1895 D. S. Cens's 1900 state Cens's 1909 U.S. Cens's 1910 State Cens's 1915 Linn . 2.673 "8^2^ 3,0M "8^914 322 348 4,007 3,766 439 10,(M9 347 360 5,627 4,10a 410 11,544 158 332 32a 8,746 4,112 375 12,04S 161 use 363 8,357 289 466 116 254 881 470 ""305 4,400 266 13,374 178 28S 319 11,230 282 480 118 382 309 iii 1,259 487 817 8S8 423 469 195 382 246 620 193 387 ""ssi 67B ""519 913 388 423 246 s,i»r 231 869 38r 420 44 221 792 800 1,172 2,043 383 7oe 366 137 682 4,676 Mame — Cass Marshall 297 16,069 Maxtelle __. Martinsbarg _. Marvsvill© Jones Keoloik 181 286 Marion 383 3,519 216 17,162 288 Maeon Oitv — Massena Oass Sioux Sioux StoiT _ ""So 279 ' 453 371 1,160 ""612 489 389 241 318 643 '"'287 "¥,m 309 704 288 257 366 228 690 479 eii 6B6 348 435 163 '~'SS7 403 ""ioe 731 280 329 "s'm 255 eer 338 ■ 276 282 "ilisi 2,079 449 764 475 94 280 810 495 546 7« Maurice Maxwell ._ — 307 856 Maynard Pavette 426 Maysville McOallsburg MoOausland Scott Story Scott Pottawattamie .. Clayton Mitchell Cedar .. "1^447 68 2sa "iris 427 70S 725 366 400 428 432 S89 19S 486 '"'585 840 317 328 "V,m 245 768 383 384 281 674 917 1,210 2,104 902 748 aoo 71 1,431 689 754 852 365 482 135 399 256 438 234 375 ""369 665 '~'m 1,107 386 409 262 3,330 258 766 468 898 69 291 800 836 1,284 2,1M 719 254 152 694 144 1,244 579 818 Mclntyre MecbanicsvIUe Des Molnas Marshall Marion Monroe Osceola Guthrie . Cherokee Plymoiith Oerroi Gordo Mitchell Des Moines .Tackson Dickinson Iowa Warren Van Buren Dallas Potta.-attamie .. 454- ieo 416 287 ""361 951 887 399 560 469 278 437 283 636 2V7 421 108 318 823 197 807 947 430 429 Melbourne Melvin Menlo Meriden Merrill Meservey Meyer Middletown Miles Milford .. Millersburg Mllo Milton Miuden^ Mingo _ .Tasper Harrison . Mitchell . "2^305 327 625 274 218 Missouri Valley Mitchell ... 3,764 225 •816 408 4B2 88 224 968 926 1,326 2,159 413 702 381 197 741 Mitchellville Modale . Polk Mondanun Harrison O'Brien Jackson Clayton' •Tasper Poweshiek Jones Tama I/ce ..... . Moneta Monmouth Monona Monroe "1^649 984 1,826 399 1,010 460 952 1,062 1,938 409 778 Montezuma MonticeHo Montour Montrose Moorhead Moorland Monona Webster Moravia Appanoose iia 311 438 ""6K rtistriiV" w1*,?%Sf/°K°*"''*'„?/^'],°?' l°T '^'■'■'^ '''"''' '"eluded in the enumeration of other distncts. Had these been credited to Mitchellville. the population would have lieen 933. ENUMERATION AT DIFFERENT PERIODS 587 County Population City or Town State Oens's 1885 U. S. Cens's ISUO State Oens's 189S U.S. Oens's 1900 State Oens's 1903 U.S. Cens's 1910 State Oens's 1915 Morning Sun Morrison Moulton Louisa Grundy , Appanoose Benton . .. Ringgold Henry Van Bureii' 880 202 823 3,837 8S1 16o 769 3,9i97 987 214 1,123 "lliie s,9ao 948 176 1,420 4,109 981 1,235 897 173 1.223 904 218 1.352 273 Mount Ayr Mount Pleasant 1,608 3,576 1,646 3,874 1,708 4,089 243 Mount Union Mount Vernon Henry 85» 490 10,388 ""1^259 299 em 11,404 875 1,240 917 1,662 411 5i0 '""iso 320 "1,178 399 708 12,237 2,300 1,3081 841 2,107 477 694 ""iieiS 452 "'""762 545 265 1,263 3,213 007 949 14,073 1,758 1,268 9a 2,472 543 762 'lyiS B70 "ilooi 600 268 1,252 3,682 245 398 "i,m 192 1,661 551 834 15,067 2,056 1,333 1,041 2,262 561 660 "zlm 574 'Toii 660 240 1,234 4,398 307 358 390 sse 1,142 205 835 m ""m 1,373 353 543 983 317 607 1,431 5,632 1,068 150 679 278 2.061 " 274 1,6*5 """iii 67 2,677 195 1,532 652 796 16,178 2.683 1,102 926 2,138 588 728 ""2;275 482 "iViu 678 248 1,122 4.616 18S 396 396 323 985 197 '~"m S8S m 1,264 316 479 "i^ioe 389 595 1,283 6,028 1.298 165 659 289 2,096 ""207 1,374 373 105 2.445 200 1,568 MO'ViUe Murray Muscatine — Mystic . — — Woodiyury Clarke Muscatine 801 847 15,783 2,695 Nashua Neola Nevada New Albin Newell - NewhaU New Hampton New Hartford New Liberty New London Ohiokasaw Pottawattamie ._ Story Allamakee Bueoa Vista Benton Ohiokasaw Butler Scott :.— HeU'ry 1,208 477 1,409 iis 277 "eoi 307 1,282 977 2,686 613 787 5M8 2,681 474 116 1,162 New Market New Providence Taylor Hardin 737 249 New Sharon Mahaska 927 2,902 1,029 2,564 1,225 5,165 211 New Virginia Nichols - — Warren _ __ Muscatine - 237 297 270 "1^081 409 425 Nodaway Nora Springs Northboro Adams Ployd Page riayton ""m sm 1,148 219 North Buena VSsta.. North English " "599 ""i'iss 912 87 293 1,400 1,928 897 618 218 1,675 """"243 1,480 ""'"248 ""2^509 '""683 " ew "i'.in 287 533 '""ffli 599 1,432 S,142 998 692 238 1,933 " 2^ 1,457 """"^9 92 2,734 164 933 North Liberty North McGregor - - .Tohnsom Clayton _ W8 ~"79i B09 "859 m ""m 830 689 519 """237 1,246 " 130 186 975 North Tabor Mills 160 North Washington — Nortiiwood _ rhickasaw Worth 123 1,525 Norwalk NO'rway - Warren Bentoa _ 359 493 Appanoose Pottawattamie — Louisa Osceola Sae . — — 435 954 738 Oakland' OaJcvUle Ocheyedan Odebolt - 1,196 416 725 1,2SS 7,137 Boone Henry ■ Jones Keokuk Monona Delaware Jones Sioux Mitchell - Adair . . Dickinsoni 80« 486 1,106 947 '~'m 1,403 OldB - Olin Ollie Onawa 183 706 S41 2.210 Oneida — Onslow Orange Oity Orchard Orient Orleans Osage 148 231 1,417 141 496 • 135 Mitchell 1,86? i,91S 2.779 588 URBAN POPULATION Table Ho. 15 County Population City or Town State Cens's 1885 D. S. Cens's 1890 State Cens's L395 U.S. Cens's 1900 State Cens'B 1909 U.S. Cens's 1910 State Cens's Clarke 2,158 6,012 ei9 a, 120 6,558 609 247 S15 752 714 2,176 8,631 638 301 "16^761 553 726 643 219 2,603 9,212 670 ' 396 'i¥,m eei 780 732 281 2,717 10,208 742 104 329 20,181 617 800 189 301 171 ""m 965 1,114 391 381 179 672 2,946 1,173 359 482 461 333 "'"iis 33V 204 238 708 361 £83 361 915 """"766 60S 649 813 432 279 1S9 852 416 2,416 9,466 749 97 268 "22^2 614 822 501 26^ 177 2^ 1,080 938 369 358 117 796 3,021 1,630 3S8 180 416 317 """"212 288 200 174 691 358 997 SIO SIS ""m 962 """"748 426 642 733 S79 274 163 382 894 2,714 Oskaloosa 10,485 Ossian Winneshiek . 893 97 366 Oto. . Woodbury ... ^ Ottosea Humboldt Wapelo . Johnson Jones "io^Boi 402 908 153 Ottuimva. Oxlord Oxford Junefcion 22,437 sm 8S2 Oyens . 82 Pacifio Junetioin Packwood — Mills . ... Jefferaom . 638 660 295 Palmer 222 Paio Panama Linn Shelby Guthrie Butler 859 796 """379 809 760 '"Isr 908 999 228 316 168 5159 2,606 3,970 339 608 324 221 958 1,161 318 328 163 617 2,623 3,986 361 621 358 315 222 168 1,107 1,027 380 Parkeraburg PameOl - Iowa Patoo 236 214 255 2,292 2,573 215 133 510 2,108 2,880 sn Patteraon 132 875 3,096 5,153 PaulUna Pella " O'Brien Marion . Perry Dallas . Per^a .__ Karrisoni Clay 882 SSI 499 Petea-BOn . . Pilot Mound Pioneer Boone Humholdt Harrison izim 347 108 403 Ptesrah PlainBeld Pleasanton Bfemer Decatur ._ — 227 ""est """291 410 758 """295 997 330 164 280 738 '"""eig 138 910 316 981 """soi 446 me 814 456 136 3oe 325 2m Pleasant Plain Pleasantville — Jefferson Mariom a4 406 m " 150 794 '~'m.b 246 446 481 250 884 172 825 Plymouth Oerro Gordo . .. Pocahontas Polk 374 1,194 SS7 985 238 338 1,003 227 817 452 654 923 428 278 185 456 466 286 Pocahontas . Polk Oity Pomeray _ Pop«!ioy ._ Franklin Shelby Portsmouth .. PostviUe _ Prairieburg Allamakee Linn Prairie City Jasp€ar 666 681 519 398 759 434 8B9 381 209 Prescott Preston Adams Primghar ^ O'Brien Scott 454 Princeton Promise City Protivin Wayne Howard Pulaski Quasqueton Davisi Buchanan 282 Qulmby Cherokee """'ira "~'i5 119 488 108 849 109 629 70 660 """175 123 804 882 227 77 729 Raddiffe . ... Hardin Winnebago Rake ^. ' Ralston Carroll 159 119 349 270 93 200 141 820 622 319 206 Randalla . .. Payette 117 373 270 Randolph Rathhutt . . 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CO i?3 ^ o5 lA g5 SD N iH rH CO ins ft — „ (N CO "* CO CO CM 3 04 C<] CO ||gS| !3S| ■1 rH eg rH C<1 IM is :* ^ t- CM o in in ■^n rH i-t eg ■* I5 *^ 2 S 9 I> rH eg rH CO ssses e^isss a^ssg s^sss Co tH fH rH ^ ^ W rH rH t^ ^ tH ■* « l-J JH CO CO CO 00 CO op ^i ^ma ami &^i ss§§3 ^§§11 ISalS g^l^S aiiSi ii^iS ii§§^ 3 MCO sa^ii ilSgs gggsg s|||o TO ft ■* tr C>3 rHt-COCOrr! eg W rH-* SSiSs 1100 rH CO t- eg ft a C^t- So CO ^ lA ft iH rHOg""-* Qin tHSO ^ '^ «o£-o6oS to « rH ^85SSS iSggS SPiS§ wcooo<3 C4 ra us t- so * t^ ^ i-H U3 <|t£~ 03 QO M A 00 -* t- O to Cfl ITS W S5 "53 1^ £■0 o o 1^ ggSSS ages? aiSgS SgSSg ^iSSS 3S8gg -SSPSo woSoiS N-Sit-Wvo OToifoi-iW eq-^cgiHi-i cOmcgt-O T^ioji 4igl| _. eocaeoeoi-H laiHiHiHW «rHi-ii-ir-i H iH Co iH iH iH iH eo eq •8[«ra8^ CICO 00 U3 U «P ^ lO M -^Jl M i-t ■* CO M 00 u3 m to oO S S CSi t- S 00 SS S CO i-H CO S (M t- -^ ooino5@3 rHx>a>{]Ot* in u5 CO iH 00 w t- to o in i> to la m o ■8IBH p ^ to OJ C- p S S u5 t> ira (M r* (M (N g(N in cOl> 3 N lA A O 00 CO to OO 03 "IB^OX •aiBPI GO S I W 00 i-( r-i ElSSSS TB^oj, r-i OQ ri CM ^ oq o -q* r-i to c^ S CO 00 « to CO in (N t-O tot- CO O O CO t-H rH CO C*l C4 -itl -^l to IM eg 00 in in in in 00 in CO I- P ■* r-i eg < ■siBraa^i •atvn toootp !-< in ■T (^ to to ■* m iH 1-1 mtjtoto-* ^'"'o i to m ■^ I-H rH -* H «* to ©« e^ in M op CO ©I> 3SS ?b- -^^ O ■T«10X 1 to rH eq &CO t- c- CO to CO to eg 2 COQ to 3 CO in & 23 CO OO CO to o to to i-i « -^Jt rl to CO •8IBniai£ CMCOto"*-* " CO to^ -* t- o to M c< i-i «o i> t> O eg ® ccLt- eg oq •3lBtn»a •aiBK to to t-in •* eg in o c- fH £- 00 (M eg eg 11 M iH r-J" ES^SS iglii ilill s-*in O"*oocgo 5oop5 S&SErfcP 5 T-i CO eg CO 00 6o ^ in O 00 c<3 c q in CO CO to 5 eg "* in og 5 -* ■^jfccS) sill o rH eg eg i-t O 00 •41 CO in ^ vi in o CO Sot g to§ COCO -^ eg O OOPH a 03 03 c3 ■O ^ ^ a o o S 03 03 « > >i4 la -^ bn M O O O a O - - V V d} >S d d C3 Baft f^;^^ ig;g;5^h5 Saaaa lllal ■a a 1 bp a s 2 B e "H s; t „ saggM o'S.aga » ® S » O « OS O « 03 O -, i» BY GENERAL NATIVITY 603 SS.gfe p IQ to CO us Ift i-l i-H c i-l iH rH M rH tf] C i-i r-i Oico 2 O (N t> 1-1 iH » i-l Ift t- <0 SaSE£5J ^^SSS So^Si^M 8§^?58 ^g§gS2: S8i5 OMO 00 CO t- O CO en <« SSS gSepS SSSSg§ e«S8g^ SggSSS SSSSfea SBSSS fess^s sssess s^sse sgss?^ ssses sssss ^SSSS £SSS ■I t-oS i-io lO cq iH (N w rH rH lO iH rH ^SaSS ^?3SSS SgiS? rH (H ITS iH OiHininco t-ONooqo Qcoeocooi '^ t- c l> "* 25 (M CO NOd"<^iH iH rH l>rHrHrH St-oot- & CQ CC CO sSsas ip in r C» r-< o 8§SSS rH(N (N iHiH (M CO Bg CO ^g^r^rH 1 r CO C) W g IS 1 i i \^"^ 1 5 incc -^ (M i-H COr-liMrHin OOiClOit^ I^-^d ■*Tiici5cot»- -rKcomcooo a <-i t o5rH(M (NiH(Mi-l -^CO ^SSS? O ■* ■* 00 I-H -* 03 W in rH r-1 in W M rH sgass S"SSE (O w in pq (N rH NtO (b M oo in 00 CO ;o poo to ot- |SSS?S HLni-(U3 c^rHoapm cqcNooe^o ^in-tiHinTH rHrHoginm t^ae^^fo SrHrH rHrH rHt-rH C^lrHCOO rH^rH 04rHrH fr-^ rHC OON Mt CO ■* rH in M in p CO -^H Oi r4 rH 00 (M m ©PinOi'Sr -dJl-ICOrHM PM^ct^pO «o3ln^-ia pSoiap rHt-w^t rH ■^iH:- -in «* ^ £• IN CO to rH CO eC to W £3893 ■^t-(M 1(1 rH in to in p rH CO CO rH St^to incQptow poo-^Min iHincoc •KM-* •«*« rH CO NOOCTM CO CO rH rS £3 96 93 ii^ rH in tntoiaSji> rH jHCp S « OJ "* ^ H fH §5 S i-H •* M P e SpE--«op coco-*pf- iftinp-^co in CO c Ilea mmpMto topt>-eoN 7P rH in m rH 00 CO rH p CO in 5f- rHtoMto>-H laMinpn -«o 35 (M u Tin ■* rH o ■^ S in S J:- K K pTOWOTTO p 00 -* -* S OT S "* CO is ^ eq S '<4rHtoto'-^^-4om c^pg •r 2 DO oa fl ^ ^ ^ .S o * § I ^4 0} M ,£J O 4a +3 +3 ^.2 5 n <» QQ I 03 03 oahj CD V IZiS IZiIZi I I A o S a ^ ■g Pro 03 n m8s 3 «8 'S.S'T'f^ »«oii^+3 "taf^fc^SJ OOOOO OOOOO PMfithhC^ aa-ij "■o^ a " 604 CITIES AND TOWNS paio[00 oioq nSiajo^ JO nStgjoj «3 CO OS lO ro in IM O lO M MsDt-Ot- M to » lO ■* 00 506 to t^ CO (I f«H M Ogifti-lCOrH H o 00 CO cococloia - M th i> *oaiH)Neq ea « I-* CO iH CO CO iH SigiA-ijiifi fttr^t^o r:!ri:50S'» g'i>ciodoi '-^'t'-i^S ?5*?*«otri- Seg CO o Ml ^ CO 00 tA i-H CO & ia i-h t> 10 ci i-l iH rH iH oq i-T CO (N r i-ii-H w»a ?5i g"*!^fiB?B SCfS^oocg moioOTt'ps csicj3it-oo oacoojct'S'j _uj-^iO"* SsK-^mtD i-iiHoioF- ocoCbwrH oi-^iniAai ocooiiac^ r«ou?to£~ Oi to Oi Si h' ioc>ooibiA i>u300i>^ OJ CO CO I m rH CO CO CO I lO O i-( t- CO tH "' fi I I CO I 1 r^rHIMt-pO t-i-(CftcptO t- ;^ "TtH 1-1 F- t^TjlCoSt- §^§|P ggSirijjg Sroi:jg!^ 00 B3 "S •-< o5s irweofcto BI>- O 00 l^ M Oi n oj 6- CO fessas l^M§ §§iEi OOM (M 12??SSSfe 285Sfl5S lOtasDcoig ot-cooM t-ooir-'*!M iSJiaSJS^ S^ftSJSS *:S2a=»s tSiaSFiS ©ooSS-f- lOtMtopioi -^oooqcoeo ■«jii3oo •* (Ncowcoo Scof-eo!^ islis mmi HiH sis§s siiia O o O o S « ass a 9 >'S S S S a o a a P 2-=. « o S o DQWCCtCtH BY GENERAL, NATIVITY 605 ta [t-« OS S« OS i-H r-i 10.76 6.20 4.94 16.68 6.11 3.42 4.78 18.66 S.IS 3.90 10.95 9.46 11.71 8.38 22.64 «*" to JH 0^ 00 C- O tH iniN Oi 23.77 35.60 30.86 18.32 41.80 14.38 20.64 23.66 30.86 28.66 ess sn^ss S8t-as 8SSS8 S3S8t-S? *S8 sseige sessses safejsg sksss sss 3i-Ht-(AO rH O) © Ifl lO Or pacqr-tHM (MMi-tiH-^ S«CC5N"*0S iHrtCO-^M QCJCOt- c^r-iooSs-* OOlB.t-'* iSi-lOOOSlO OSOSOaW rHr-4 1-4 THci' (N ©"rHHcJ jt-c-Ln fc? U5 oS tH « 04 rH i-t (N CO -^ CQ ggg lsi?ii S2SSH 88828 C?*tpOO H 1-1 lAOsco ncsiMvos iScoO SS 3S O CM I ; 8.0 +? a *-* "* t. 9 K ^ 03 .? O ^1 03 E.2S g lllli Bills Ip^E:^ ^^^^^ &:^^^^ ^^^ 11^ 606 CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 TABLE NO. 18— URBAN POPULATION OP COUNTIES. Proportion of Population living in Cities and Towns at three Periods. Counties 1910 Adair 15,110 Adams 12,262 Allamakee 18,222 Appanoose 27,19S Audubon 12,937 Benton 24,117 Black Hawk 36,617 Boone 27,604 Bremer 16,973 Buchanan — 19,1S4 Buena Vista 15,907 Butler 17,636 Oalhoun - 17,308 Carroll 20,612 Oass 20,217 Cedar 18,368 Cerro Gordo 21,634 Cherokee 15,962 Chickasaw 15,928 Clarke 11,639 Clay 12,711 Clayton 26,734 Clinton 42,793 Crawford 21,000 Dallas — 23,035 Davis ___ 14,266 Decatur 17,044 Delaware 18,761 Pes' Moines 37,472 Dickinson __ 8,130 Dubuque 61,471 i:mmet _ 10,105 Payette 28,562 Floyd 16,779 Franklin 14,695 Fremont 16,279 Greene - 16,089 Grundy 13,607 Guthrie 18,013 Hamilton 19,381 Hancock 12,987 Hardin 21,856 Harrison 23,762 Henry 17,722 Howard 18,523 Humboldt _ 12,122 Ida — 11,646 Iowa 18,977 Jackson 22,210 Jasper _ __ 27,156 Jefferson .' 16,493 Johnson - _ _ 24,683 Jones - 20,427 Keokuk 22,667 Kossuth 21.963 Lee ' 38,006 4,197 3,259 6,419 12,142 2,979 10,382 25,321 13,390 6,601 7,558 5,673 6,571 7,669 8,665 9,207 6,152 12,090 6,465 6,620 4,124 4,185 8,657 27,794 7,661 10,138 2,608 6,667 5,984 27,648 8,087 46,510 4,733 12,817 7,930 4,49S 6,120 6,691 4,243 6,329 7,948 4,863 10,371 9,301 7,146 5,183 4,601 4,056 6,144 8,656 10,642 6,076 10,315 8,142 9,382 7,232 25,171 I 14,420 10,998 17,328 28,701 12,671 23,166 44,866 27,626 15,843 19,748 16,981 17,119 17,090 20,117 19,047 17,765 25,011 16,741 15,375 10,736 12,766 25,676 45,394 20,041 23,628 13,315 16,347 17,888 36,145 8,137 57,450 9,816 27,919 17.119 14,780 15,623 16,023 13,574 17,374 19,242 12,731 20,921 23,162 18,640 12,920 13,182 11.296 18,409 21,268 27,034 15,951 25,914 19,050 21,160 21,971 36,702 4,465 2,767 5,404 14,756 3,271 9,983 33,686 14,133 6,621 7,257 5,904 5,990 7,374 9,015 8,777 6,228 16,259 7,673 5,452 3,735 4,282 9,140 30,545 7,429 11,111 2,659 6,430 6,187 26,651 3,074 43,103 4,410 12,615 8,901 4,885 5,740 6,949 4,243 6,380 8,350 4,036 9,486 9,411 7,594 4,746 5,067 3,909 4.862 8.663 10,739 5,975 12,459 7,976 8.705 7,141 24,723 14,736 U,131 17,298 30,548 12,590 24,591 53,469 19,333 17,212 18,014 ,17,808 20,997 19,787 17,623 31,734 16,691 16,089 11,028 14,656 26,129 45,839 20,581 25,610 13,177 17,148 18,664 35,666 9,465 60,975 11,360 29,257 18,213 15,841 16.067 16,339 14,061 18,416 20,514 13,886 22,484 24,327 17,807 13,929 13,013 11,666 18,666 20,604 27.496 ]6,fl22 27.330 19.143 21,225 24,200 38,101 3,076 6,946 16,423 3,657 11,870 41,633 16,405 7,637 8,032 7,592 6,676 8,110 10,200 9,7ll 6,601 22,103 7,738 6,147 4,041 6,116 9,717 32,220 8,687 12,494 3,284 7,302 6,914 26,605 4,317 47,497 5,729 14,518 10,005 6,687 6.482 6,658 "4,879 7,126 9,512 4,729 11,615 10,803 7,948 6,440 5,772 4,652 5,673 8,8.90 12.107 8.117 14,600 8,061 8,969 8,519 URBAN POPULATION OF COUNTIES 607 1905 1910 1915 Counties 1 ■g 4J "3 1. a ■3 1 a B +3 Unn Louisa liucas Lyon Madison . 67,362 12,893 15,B99 13,491 16,707 81,430 24,107 28,495 15,063 14,180 16,857 24,376 17,021 28,171 16,710 8,827 23,606 14,132 22,818 14,679 96,960 61, 8W 19,445 13,965 17,065 55,910 17,097 24 021 23,660 23,291 17,021 18,660 16,665 36,624 19.576 20,116 16,906 33,425 12,043 23,107 60,869 10,635 17,629 89,061 4.929 6,400 B,040 5,128 1S,237 9,237 16,007 6,124 6,163 5,699 6,289 8,327 18,663 7,312 2,964 11,773 5,550 8,736 4,478 80,939 32,062 8.402 4.488 6.446 42,636 5,046 9,569 12,380 9,349 6,117 11.220 5,980 24,678 6,189 8,182 6,816 18,924 4.623 6.996 46.798 2,464 8,007 68 38 41 37 31 42 38 56 41 43 34 22 49 66 44 34 50 39 38 31 83 62 43 32 38 76 30 40 62 41 36 60 28 68 32 41 40 57 37 30 77 23 46 60,720 12,855 13,462 14,624 15,621 29,860 22,995 30,279 15,811 13,435 16,633 25,429 16,604 29,605 17,262 8,966 24,002 13,845 23,129 14,808 110,438 65,882 19,689 12,904 16,555 60,000 16,662 25,248 24,083 22,166 16,312 16,616 16,020 37,743 18,194 19,925 18,184 34,629 11,914 21,729 67,616 9,960 17,951 43,457 4,979 5,457 5,220 4,991 12,473 8,919 17,440 7,319 5,668 5,689 6,266 8,227 20,102 8,061 2,877 12,272 6,304 8,753 4,662 92,681 36,990 8,776 4,206 6,392 46,834 4,927 9,962 12,942 9,100 6,184 9,665 5.339 26,060 6,965 7,972 6,879 20,020 4.643 6.543 63.683 2,489 8,499 71 39 40 36 32 43 39 57 46 42 34 25 49 68 47 32 61 38 38 31 ^ 61 45 32 89 78 30 39 64 41 38 er 35 69 33 40 42 68 39 30 79 26 47 70,153 12,912 15,120 15,862 15,394 29,314 23,972 32,994 14,916 14,435 17,378 25,906 17,297 28,663 18,682 10,169 24,778 14,965 23,767 15,635 129,121 66,896 13,965 13,280 17,039 65,645 16,692 25,340 25,787 22,806 16,649 17,168 14,907 37,980 18,277 20,004 16,243 38,811 13,664 22,238 82,316 11,188 19,664 52,774 5,302 6,908 6,807 5,122 14,060 10,291 20,365 6,982 6,664 6,362 6,257 9,486 19,804 8,939 3,663 13,751 6,014 9,963 6,347 112,648 38,566 9,460 4,434 7,309 ^,980 5,734 10,287 16,096 9,882 6,481 10,198 5,464 26,532 6,575 8,587 7,246 24,698 6,669 7,247 68,387 3,720 10,389 75 46 46 38 R3 Mahaska Marion 48 43 Marshall ._ Mills Mitchell 62 47 46 2+ Monroe 24 Montgomery 55 Muscatine O'Brien __ Osceola Page Palo Alto -_ 69 49 36 65 40 41 M Polk ._ Pottawattamie 87 68 Poweshiek _ Kinggold 47 3,1 Sac 43 81 Shelby Sioux 34 40 Story Tama _ 58 43 39 Union _ _ 69 Van Buren - _ _ _ .'W 70 Warren Washington 36 43 Wayne Webster 45 63 Winnebago - 42 32 Woodbury «i? 33 Wright — - 63 608 CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 TABLE NO. 19— COUNTY POPULATION CHANGES. Increase or Decrease of Total, Urban and Rural Population of counties in ten years. Counties Net Increase or Decrease i Per Cent Increase or Decrease Adair Adams . Allamakee Appanoose Audubon Benton Black. Hawk ... Boone Bremer Buchanan Buena Vista Butler Calhcun -_ Carroll Oass Cedar Cerro Gordo ._. Cherokee Chickasaw Clarke Clay Clayton Clinton Crawlord Dallas Davis Decatur Delaware Des Moines ___ Dickinson Dubuque Emmet Fayette Moyd Franklin Fremont Greene Grundy Guthrie Hamilton Hancock Hardin' Harrison _. Henry Howard Humboldt Ida Iowa Jackson Jasper Jelferson Johnson Jones Keokuk Kossuth Lee STi —1,131 —924 S,355 —347 474 16.852 2,092 99E 199 1,305 378 496 485 —430 —745 10,200 629 161 —611 1,945 —1,805 S,046 —419 2,575 —1,069 104 —197 —1,816 1,335 -496 1,2B5 705 1,434 1,246 —212 250 444 403 1,183 565 85 406 891 10 —311 -1,606 340 429 2,647 -1,284 -1,442 2,237 95 790 —183 531 4,281 678 1,488 16,312 3,016 1,C36 474 919 4 541 1,635 504 449 10,018 1,273 527 —S3 1,931 1,060 4,426 1,126 2,366 661 735 1,230 987 996 1,701 2,076 1,189 362 967 636 797 1,564 366 1,244 1,502 802 307 1,271 696 429 235 1,466 2,041 4,286 —81 1,292 1,461 -1,164 —948 -1,465 —826 -1,025 -1,014 '540 —923 —41 —275 386 sr4 —45 -1,160 -934 -1,194 182 —644 14 -2,m5 -1,380 -1,645 219 -1,760 —631 -1,127 —873 105 -1,483 269 —996 -«41 67 —574 —717 —192 —394 —431 533 —616 —937 —717 99 —380 —586 —740 -1,841 -1,125 -1,612 -1,638 -1,203 -1,049 945 -1,366 —2.5 —9.2 —6. 12.3 —2.7 1.9 46. 7.6 6.2 1. 8.2 2.1 2.8 2.4 —2.1 —4. 47.3 10.2 1. —5.2 15.3 —6. 7.1 —1.9 11.2 —7.3 .6 —1.2 —4.8 16.4 — .8 12.4 2.4 8.6 8.6 — l.S 1.6 3.3 2.2 6.8 6.9 .5 3.0 7.3 .08 — 1.6 —7.2 1.2 2.6 10.7 —6.3 —6.4 10.2 .2 18.8 —6.6 9.8 35.2 22.7 14.3 64.4 22.6 16.6 6.3 13.7 .06 7.1 19. 6.5 7.3 82.8 19.7 9.4 —2. 46.1 12.2 16.9 14.8 23.2 25.4 11.2 15.5 —3.4 39.8 2.1 21.0 18.3 26.2 26.4 6.9 17. 14.9 11. 19.6 8.4 11.9 16.1 11.2 5.9 28.2 14.7 8.3 2.7 IS. 7 33.6 41.6 —1. —4.2 17.8 6.8 610 CENSUS OP IOWA, li915 TABLE NO. 20— COUNTY POPULATION OHANGBS. Licrease or Decrease of Urban and Rural Population for two 5-year periods. Counties Adair A-dams Ailamabee : Appanoose Andubon Benton Black Hawk Boone Bremer Buchanan Buena Vista Butler Oalhoun OarroU Oass • Cedar Cerro Gordo Cherokee Chickasaw darke Olay Clayton Clinton Crawford Dallas Davis Decatur Delaware Des> Moines Dickinson Dnbuque Emmet Payette Ployd Franklin Fremont Greene Grundy Guthrie Hamilton Hancock Hardin Harrison Henry Howard Humboldt Ida Iowa — Jackson Jasper 1905 to 1910 Urban —492 —11 2,614 292 —399 8,265 748 —80 —581 —195 450 —430 76 S,169 1,206 —168 —389 97 483 2,761 —132 973 66 —137 203 —897 —13 -3,407 —323 —202 971 887 —880 51 402 110 448 55d -147 —2 87 6.S —15. —.2 21.6 9.8 —3.8 32.3 5.5 —1.2 —3.9 —11.5 —8.8 —2.6 6.2 —4.6 1.2 26.2 18.6 —2.9 —9.4 2. 6.5 9.8 —1.7 9.5 2.1 —2.0 3.3 —3.2 — .4 —7.3 —6.8 —1.5 12.2 8.6 —6.2 4.6 .8 6.0 —7.6 -8.5 1.1 6.2 —7.6 12.8 —8.6 —5.4 —0.0 Bural 03 ut -772 -1,106 —558 —662 —17 —721 —60 915 843 64 -23 —845 —740 —679 308 —429 —385 —514 —42 -1,641 —160 —827 —380' 1,007 —660 -1,076 —430 20 —614 84 —431 — eai -202 —276 —324 —33 —690 —541 72 —60 —710 470 —216 —496 —950 —219 —8.8 ^.0 —6.9 -7.S —6.6 —4. — .1 --5.0 — .5 7.9 9.1 .6 — .2 —7. —6.7 —6.6 3.2 —4.5 -3.7 —6.8 — .4 —9.0 —1. —6.1 —2.9 8.6 —5.8 -8.4 —4.3 .3 —4.1 .6 -2.7 —7.1 —2.0 —2.7 —3.1 — .3 —5.9 —4.7 .8 — .4 —4.9 4.4 —2.5 —6.5 —2.6 -2.0 —7.0 —1.3 1910 to 1915 Urban o o a) o eg m IB 542 1,667 386 1,887 8,047 2,272 1,116 775 1,688 585 736 1,185 934 373 6,849 65 696 306 1,834 677 1,676 1,268 1,383 605 872 727 —46 1,243 4,394 1,319 1,903 1,104 802 742 709 636 746 1,162 694 2,129 1.392 354 695 715 T43 711 237 1,368 1.6 11.1 10. 11.4 11.8 18.9 24. 16. 17.1 10.6 28.5 9.7 9.9 13.1 10.6 6.9 44.8 .8 12.7 8.1 42.8 6.3 5.4 16.9 12.4 22.7 IS. 5 11.7 — .2 40.4 10.1 29.9 IS.O 12.4 16.4 12.9 11.9 14.9 11.6 13.9 17.0 22.4 14.7 4.6 14.6 14.1 19.0 14.6 2.7 12.7 Bural ft « —206 —176 ISO —467 557 -1,190 —457 310 —22 —305 —194 —516 —126 —215 19 —14 56 -1,024 -1,230 —718 690 —748 —71 —51 —443 85 —566 —10 259 —159 296 110 461 —666 —227 -1,187 314 116 -883 —464 —891 —906 COUNTY POPULATION CHANGES 611 Counties 1905 to 1910 1910 to 1915 Urban Rural Urban Rural o O o a o o o o •e at 03 " fej. 1 il 4A |S 1 ^ a'° ^ h4 —101 —1.6 ^41 —4.2 2,142 85.8 —1,171 —11.7 2,144 20.7 -913 — 6.S 2,141 17.1 —726 -«.3 —166 —2.0 1,211 9.8 85 1.0 8 0.0 -657' -7.0 -850 -6.3 264 3.0 —199 —1.6 —91 —1.2 99 .6 1,378 19.3 861 6.7 -448 -1.7 -866 —6.6 1.909 7.7 -510 —4.2 4,396 11.2 —1,088 —6.6 9,817 21.4 116 .7 BO 1.0 -88 —1.1 323 6.4 —266 —3.3 —943 —14.7 —1,194 —12.9 1,451 26.5 207 2.5 180 3.5 960 11.2 587 11.2 151 1.6 -137 —2.6 —949 —8.1 131 2.6 —358 -3.3 —764 -6.7 —806 —4.4 1,W7 12.6 —2,123 —12.2 —318 -3.4 —794 —5.3 1,372 15.8 —395 —2.8 1,433 8.9 351 2.8 2,916 16.7 —200 —1.6 1,195 19.6 —437 —4,8 -837 —4.6 —658 -7.0 —495 —8.0 —260 —3.1 986 17.8 14 .1 —10 — .1 —214 —1.9 673 11.8 ■72 .8 967 18.2 86 .4 1 O.O 4V6 2.4 —100 —1.2 -317 —3.6 1,269 15.3 —566 -6.7 1,639 8.2 —205 -2.1 -298 —1.4 —644 -5.7 739 10.1 -187 —1.9 888 11.0 482 4.6 —87 —2.9 216 3.6 786 27.3 427 7.0 499 4.2 —103 - .8 1,479 12.0 -708 —6.0 —246 —4.4 —41 — .4 710 13.3 410 4.8 18 .2 293 2.0 1,215 13.8 -577 —4.0 74 1.6 65 .6 795 17.4 82 .3 13,488 13.9 1,746 10.9 19,967 21.5 —1,284 -7.2 3,938 12.2 27 .1 2,676 7.1 —1,612 —7.6 374 4.4 —230 —2.0 674 7.6 —298 -2.7 —282 —6.2 —769 -S.l 228 5.4 148 1.7 —64 — .8 -466 —4.2 917 14.3 —433 -4.2 4,298 10.1 —208 —1.6 6,146 18.1 -601 -8.8 —119 —2.3 —426 —8.5 807 16.3 -667 —6.7 393 4.1 834 5.7 326 3.2 —233 —1.5 B62 4.6 —139 —1.2 2,154 16.6 —450 —4.0 —249 . —2.6 —886 —6.3 782 8.6 —132 —1.0 67 1.0 -776 —7.1 297 4.9 —60 — .6 1,656 14.7 -395 —5.3 633 6.6 —81 —1.1 —641 —10.7 —904 —8.5 115 2.1 —228 —2.8 1,382 5.6 —163 -1.3 472 1.8 —235 —2.0 —234 -3.7 1,147 8.6 620 10.4 —637 —4.3 —210 —2.5 19 .1 615 7.7 —536 —4.4 63 .9 —784 -7.7 367 6.3 -308 -8.3 1,096 6.7 108 .7 4,578 22.9 —396 —2.8 120 2.5 —249 —3.3 1,0126 22.0 624 8.5 -453 -6.4 -926 -6.7 704 10.7 —195 -1.2 6,785 14.4 -28 — .1 14,804 27.8 —105 — .7 36 1.4 —720 -8.8 1,231 49.4 7 .1 492 6.1 —170 —1.7 1,890 22.2 —187 -1.9 Jefferson Johnson Jouea Keokuk Kos&uth Lee Linn — , Louisa Lucas Lyon Madison Mahaska — Marion Marshall — - Mills - — - Mitchell Monona Monroe Montgomery ... Muscatine O'Brien - Osceola Page Palo Alto Plymouth Pocahontas Polk -.- -. Pottawattamie . Poweshiek Ringgold Sac Scott Shelby Sioux Story Tama Taylor -. Union Van Buren Wapello Warren Washington — Wayne Webster Winnebago Winneshiek Woodbury Worth Wright — 612 CENSUS OP I0WA, 1915 TABLE NO. 21— HOMES OWNED. Number and value reported, number incumbered and amount of incumbrance reported, by counties, according to age classes and sex. PART I— PERSONS 18 AND UNDER 21 YEARS OF AGE. Homes Homes Incumbered O ^ ■1 Ooiinties It > 1 O lis 1 " State— Total S9i 189 102 1 1 3 1 2 6 6 $ 1,689,251 1,116,016 473.235 5,600 5,600 91 63 28 $ m.S99 221,923 52,370 Sl.S 33.S 27.4 i7.« 19.9 11.1 I'emale - Male Female — 12,000 5,000 7,000 5,400 5,400 900 9o6" 400 40O 33.3 "m." 16.6 16.6 7.5 12.9 7.4 iifala 7.4 1 2,200 2,200 4,900 8,100 1,800 2,600 2,600 36,700 4,300 32,400 25,800 800 25,000 13,600 9,000 4,600 7,100 600 S,500 30,500 19,600 11,000 2 2~ 1 1,000 iyooo" 1,160 650 600 450 450" 100. Im." 40. 26. 100. 100. i66. " 45.4 1 5 4 1 2 2 8 2 6 2 1 1 3 1 2 3 1 2 4 3 1 46.4 23. 3 21. 27.S Black Hawk— Total Male Female ,-.,«.—' — 18. 'is.' I'einale 16,500 50. 'loo""" 63, <> Female 1 16,500 66. Male Female Buena Vista— Total 2 1 1 1 i 1,200 200 1,000 8,C0O "~Too6" 66.6 100. 50. 26. 'ioor" 16.9 33.3 16.4 26.2 Female 72.7 HOMES OWNED 613 PERSONS 18 AND UNDER 21 YEARS. Homes Homes Incumbered Ik Oounties j la 03 H 2; •t-t a < .as Calhoun — Total _ 1 i 1 1 3 1 1 6 5 1 2 -- 1 1 2 2 3 1 2 4 4 3 3 4 4 40,000 io^ooo" lOO 100 39,000 39,000 100 100 20,400 19,200 1,200 10,600 ioiioo 1 .. 3 3 5 4 1 1 i" 3,600 10,000 10.000 7,800 7,600 200 1,020 100. "ioor' 100. 100. 83.3 80. 100. 60. 8.7 Male Female _ Carroll- Total Male . Female .-_ Cass— Total Male 25.6 25.6 Female .. Cedar— Total Male - Female Oerro Gordo— Total 38.2 Male - 39.6 Female Cherokee— Total Male Female Chickasaw— Total Male ..- Female 16.7 9.7 Male Female Clay— Total , Male - "m Clayton— Total - Male 4,600 4,600 15,000 ii^ooo 18,000 2,000 16,000 18,700 18,700 9,100 9,100 17,300 17,300 - Female Male Crawford— Total Male — - - Female T>n11ns Tntn.1 Male Female Davis— Total Male 2 2 2,900 2,900 60. 50. 15.5 15.5 . Female Decatur— Total Male Female Delaware— Total Male Female 614 HOMES OWNED PJIRSONS 18 AND UNDER 21 YEARS. Table No. 31. Homes Homes Incumbered CD s •H to o g i| •a a ^ 3 > .so Si P4 Counties a a O sag 2 2 18 4 14 3 2 1 6,400 6,400 83,380 28,100 55.280 4,650 4,000 650 Male Female Dickinson— Total Male Female Dubuque— Total : Male Female 3 2,600 2.3 3. 3 3 2 1 2,500 960 860 100 21.4 100. IOO. 100. 4.5 Male - Female Fayette— Total Male - Female ..— Floyd- Total Male 20.6 21. S 15.4 Franklin— Total Male Female Fremont — Total 1 -. 1 i" 1 1 s 2 1 2 2 1 1 600 500" 2,600 ileoo" 9,000 9,000 61,800 60,300 1,000 8,300 8,300 S.OOO 8,000 1 1 '. 1 1 III 1 i 1 1 ', II 1 100. "io6r" 50. Male Female Greene— Total Male - Female Gmndy — Total — Male . Female _ .. .. Guthrie— Total Male . Female Hamilton— Total Male Female Hancock — Total .. Male . - — - Female . .. .. .. .. Hardin— Total : Male Female Harrison- Total 1 -- 2 1 1 800 ioo 13,500 8,0QO — Male . Female Henry- Total Male , Female . .. 5.500 INCUMBRANCE OF HOMES PERSONS 18 AND UNDEB 21 TEABS. 615 Homes Homes Incumbered s a a. •3 5 ^ p > a o ii 1* Counties 3 Iz; 3 p S o ■SaS Howard— Total Male . • 1 1 6,000 6,000 60,000 60,000 1 1 2 — .- Female Humboldt— Total Male 45,000 45,000 900 lOO. 100. 50. Female Ida— Total Male . Female Iowa— Total Male . 1 1 75. 75. Female 4 2 2 4 4 7,700 6,B0O 1,200 24,000 24,000 11. R Male . Female 2 1 1 900 12,000 12,000 100. 25. 25. 25. 33. 75. 60. Male . 60. Female _ _ Jefferson— Total Male 4 3 1 8 4 4 1 1 13,050 4,600 8,460 70,600 65,600 16,000 20,340 20,340 1 1 600 60O 4.6 13. Female 3 3 14,600 14,600 37.5 75. 20.7 Male 26.3 Female Jones— Total Male 1 1 15,000 16,000 Keolralc— Total Male -. Female 100. 100. 100. 100. 41.6 33.3 66.6 16.6 25. 73.7 73.7 1 1 3 2 1 12 » 3 6 4 2 3 8 2 2 40,000 40,000 21,460 20,460 1,000 20,600 13,400 7,200 89,900 38,900 1,000 2,700 2,700 114,000 114,000 1 1 9,000 9,000 E,70O 2,250 3,450 5,000 6,000 22.5 Male Female - Lee — Total 22.5 Male Female Linn— Total .. Male . -. Female Lnniaa Total 6 3 2 1 1 27.7 16.8 47.9 12.5 12.8 Male Female Male . ... _ Female 2 2 30,200 30,200 100. 100. 26.5 26.6 Male Female 616 HOMES OWNED PEHSONS 18 AND DNDEE 21 YEARS. Table No. 21. ^^^_^ Homes Homes Incumbered a o 1" as Counties S f g 1" o IP Madison— Total Male . _ Female . __ Mahaska— Total Male 1 2 2 2 2 19 13 6 7 i S 1 1 3 3 2 2 3 3 i 3 1 2 2 4 2 2 26,500 S,60O 21,000 7,800 7.800 42,200 32,300 9,900 13,9B0 11,800 2,150 10,000 10,000 II • — ~' Marion— Total Male Female _ Marshall— Total Male . „ Female Mais— Total ... 2 2 5 2 3 4,200 4,200 4,5C0 1,050 3,460 lOQ. 100. 26.3 15.4 60. 63.8 63.8 10.7 3.2 34.8 Male . Mitchell- Total IIIIIIHI 1,868 1,868 66.6 66.6 Male ... Female Monona— Total Male Female Monroe— Total Male III. Female . .. .. Montgomery— Total . Male . Female r^ --, Muscatine— Total Male 13,600 13,600 3,800 8,800 21,500 21,500 45,750 44,400 1,350 34,000 34,000 44,000 26,000 18,000 2 2 1S.7 13.7 Female O'Brien— Total Male Female ... . Osceola— Total . Mate '" "■" Female .. Page— Total 1 1 10,000 10,000 33.3 33.3 46.5 46.5 Male . Female Palo Alto— Total „ Male Female Plymouth— Total Male Female Pocahontas— Total Male . 1 1 1 1 6,000 6,000 100 100 60. 60. 25. 60. 17.6 17.6 .2 .4 Female . .. INCUMBRANCE OF HOMES 617 PEHSONS 18 AND UNDEK 21 TEAES. Homes Homes Incumbered •1 Counties 1 15 1 •32 1 Amount ol incum- brance i ^ .so Polk— Total Male Female Pottawattamie— Total Male Pemale IS 10 3 8 7 1 2 2 10,805 8,600 2,306 19,300 9,300 10,000 19,850 19,850 9 8 1 2 2 5,045 4,995 50 600 60O 69.2 80. 33. S 25. 28.6 46.7 68.8 2.2 3.1 6.4 Poweshielc- Total Male - 2 2 12,175 12,175 100. lOO. 61.3 61.3 ^ Female Einggoia— Total Male - „ Female _. Sac- Total 2 -- 11 8 3 33,000 33,000 30,966 22,766 8,200 Male ._ - Scott— Total 1 1 660 660 9.1 12,5 2.1 Male - 2.R Shelby— Total Male __. Female — '".Z- Sioux— Total 1 -- 2 1 1 3 2 1 50,000 so^ooo' 1,200 700 500 63,000 53,000 10,000 Male Female . Story — Total __ _ Male - Pemale . 2 1 1 19.000 12,000 7,000 66.6 50. 100. 30.1 Male Female Taylor— Total 22.6 70. Male - :: Female Union— Total . 2 2 7 4 S 3 1 ? 5,620 5,620 24,660 19,160 6,500 2,650 1,000 1,650 Male — - Female Van Buren— Total Male - Female Watiello Total 3 3 2,600 2,600 42.8 76.' 10 5 Male 13.6 Warren- Total Male Female Washington — Total _ — I — i: Male Female -.' 618 HOMES OWNED PERSONS 18 AND UNDER 21 TEARS. Table No. 21. Homes Homes Incumbered 1 o g ■"a fli Counties 1 1 .g o Wayne— Total Male Female ..— Webster— Total Male — , Female Winnebago— Total Male 6 4 1 13 7 6 22,260 -20,450 1,800 17,600 7,800 9,800 3 3 (l 2 2 6,025 6,026 2,400 1,400 1,000 60. 75. 30.8 28.6 33.3 27.1 29.5 13.6 17.9 10.2 Winneshiek— Total Male - — - - 1 1 13,180 13,180 1 Woodbury— Total Male Female 1 10 5 6 1 1 2 2 23,700 11.400 12,300 5,800 6,800 20,000 20,000 4 3 1 1 1 1,800 1,200 600 80O 800 40. 60. 20. 100. 100. 7.6 10.5 4.9 14. Male Female - Wright- Total - _ — 14. Male - - Female PART II— PERSONS 21 AND UNDER 45 YEARS OF AGE. State— Total Male Female Adair— Total Male Female Adams— Total Male Female ._ Allamakee— Total — Male Female Appanoose — Total _ Male Female Audubon- Total _— Male Female Benton— Total Male Female Black Hawk— Total Male Female m.yti 99,975 14,736 i l,0gl,9S0,08S 945,367,983 76,662,102 St. 785 50,706 4,079 $ rrr.eoy.m 217,300,447 10,316,729 J,7.7 60.7 27.7 72V 649 78 7,741.785 7,406,721 333,064 445 421 24 2,406,517 2,358,757 47,760 61.2 64.9 30.7 661 690 61 6,462,185 6,096,330 365,855 379 366 13 1,738,095 1,724,645 13,550 58.2 62. 21.3 1,021 9S3 88 7,278,863 7,008,278 270, m 479 464 15 1,750,415 1,724,265 26,150 46.9 49.7 17. 1,644 1,523 121 6,229,897 5,972,686 257,201 691 669 32 1,466,838 1,438,695 18,243 42. 43.3 26.4 724 657 10,224,633 9,442,735 781,898 514 480 34 3,303,205 3,127,005 176,200 71. 73. 50.7 1,267 1,137 130 17,017,467 16,170,101 847,366 575 542 33 3,058,240 2,998,228 60,012 45.4 47.7 25.3 2,780 2,390 890 17,610.209 15,685,211 2,024.998 1,881 1,516 166 4,295,668 8,967,728 337,940 60.5 63.3 42.6 INCUMBRANCE OP HOMES PEESONS 21 AND DNDEB 45 TEARS. 619 Counties Homea ■si Homes Incumbered £ ^ o ■°T1 °V> •"■2 a a "1 t. a ^ Boone— Total Male Female Bremer— Total Male Female Buchanan— Total — Male — Penlale Buena Vista— Total Male female Butler— Total . Male Female Oalhoim- Total Male Female Carroll— Total . Male Female Cass- Total Male Female Cedar- Total — Male Female Cerro Gordo- Total - Male Female Oherokee— Total - Male Female Chickasaw— Total Male Female Clarke— Total Male Female Clay— Total — Male Female Clayton— Total Male Female Clinton- Total Male Female — 1,478 1,284 194 1,1B9 1,016 143 922 816 710 106 873 746 127 82S 670 155 919 810 109 1,090 936 154 939 814' 125 1,477 1,314 163 670 697 73 900 809 91 548 719 638- 81 1,619 1,415 204 2,189 1,804 12,767,824 .1,109,175 12,366,449 11,329,100 1,037,349 9,138,CS6 8,798,806 339,281 9,687,423 9,156,445 630,978 9,814,922 9,239,338 575,584 10,482,629 9,573,754 908,875 11,194,600 10,668,460 626,160 11,881,139 11,162,849 718,290 12,886,796 12,335,821 649.975 10,085,250 9,151,775 933,476 8,816,832 8,538,327 277,506 9,791,719 9,269,835 621,884 5,167,433 4,459,698 707,835 9,932,336 9,344,646 587,790 14,811,052 13,322,950 1,488,102 14,731,116 12,803,055 1,928,061 616 553 416 392 24 461 18 S46 825 21 436 401 381 334 47 401 385 16 646 518 458 430 28 793 729 64 318 301 17 453 429 353 323 30 415 384 31 660 585 65 795 708 2,243,197 2,036,566 206,631 2,057,570 1,976,085 81,485 2,034,485 1,989,185 46,300 2,032,667 1,958,017 74,660 2,325,874 2,266,264 70,610 1,956,915 1,808,375 • 148,540 2,407,190 2,351,525 66,665 3,016,835 2,964,900 51,936 3,006,730 2,940,240 66,490 2,423,000 2,240,286 182,715 2,318,260 2,277,410 35,869 1,872,415 1.799,486 72,930 1,479,441 1,365,616 128,925 2,338,239 2,269,089 79,150 3,195,976 2.902.407 293.668 3.059,876 2.726.648 334.21!8 41.7 43.1 32. B S5.9 38.6 16.8 50.8 42.1 20.4 42.4 45.8 19.8 49.9 53.7 27.6 46.2 49.8 30.3 43.6 47.6 14.6 60. 66.3 18.2 48.8 62.8 22.4 53.7 55.6 47.5 60.4 23.3 60.3 63. 26.4 65.5 58.9 34.1 57.7 60.2 40.1 41.3 31.4 36.3 39.3 22.3 620 BOMES OWNED. PERSONS 21 AND UNDER 45 TEARS. Table No. 21. Counties Homes Crawford— Total Male Female Dallas— Total Male Pemale _— Davis— Total _ Male Female Decatur— Total Male Female Delaware — Total _— Male Female Des Moines— Total . Male Female Dickinson — Total Male Female Dubuque— Total Male Female Emmet— Total _ Male Female Fayette— Total . Male Female Floyd— Total „. Male Female Franklin— Total Male Female Fremont — Total Male Female Greene— Total _. Male Female Grundy— Total Male Female Guthrie— Total Male Female 1,026 922 104 1,294 1,032 262 775 729 46 871 789 921 767 154 1,394 1,212 182 76 1,715 SIO 610 663- 47 1,512 1,311 201 920 801 119 813 726 87 704 605 711 638 73 560 442 108 991 866 125 as Homes Incumbered 14,694,290 13,942,095 652,195 11,183,779 9,926,344 1,257,435 4,800,289 4,685,619 114,770 6,087,393 5,813,443 273,950 9,287,480 8,760,430 527,060 7,734,986 6,974,866 760,120 4,249,001 3,992,801 256,200 12,801,108 11,186,945 1,114,163 5,707,933 5,612,695 195,240 13,604,401 12,297,041 1,307,360 7,149,699 6,591,189 558,510 10,027,773 9,462,093 565,630. 6,226,233 5,677,933 547,300 9,088,465 8,582,26S 496,200 8,990,619 7,992,976 997,643 9,393,146 8,713,645 679,600 672 649 23 584 604 80 482 610 484 26 429 396 33 541 504 S7 22 777 701 76 377 364 13 709 666 64 439 405 34 499 471 28 331 30O 31 209 23 618 493 25 3§i o « S 3,842,667 8,766,667 87,000 2,368,206 2,207,075 161,130 1,268,490 1,241,464 17,026 1,628,400 1,583,979 44,421 2,357,635 2,283,510 74,025 1,696,426 1,621,485 74,940 963,996 942,665 21,431 2,611,716 2,455,746 166,970 1,512,236 1,486,980 26,265 2,974,276 2,841,966 132,310 1,762,007 1,661,897 110,110 2,568,231 2,464,696 108,635 1,799,308 1,694,578 104,730 2,084,717 2,048,617 36,100 1,725,400 1,699,060 126,360 2,612,133 96,850 66.7 69.5 W.2 46.1 48.8 30.5 62.2 64.2 30.4 S.5 61.3 31.7 46.6 51.6 21.4 38.8 41.6 20.3 56. 60. 28.9 38.4 40.9 24.6 61.8 64.6 37.6 46.9 60. 26.9 47.7 60.6 28.6 61.4 64.8 32.2 47. 49.6 31.3 61. 54.6 30.5 42.2 47.3 21.8 62.8 66.9 20. INCUMBRANCE OF HOMES PERSONS 21 AND UNDER 45 TEARS. 621 Counties Homes IZi MS 03 n Homes Incumbered fe.a ft Hamilton— Total Male remale Hancock— Total , Male I'emale Hardin— Total .. Male Female Harrison— Total Male I'emale Henry— Total ... Male Female Howard— Total . Male Female Humboldt— Total Male Female Ida— Total Male Female Iowa— Total Male Female JactBOU— Total Male Female Jasper— Total ... Male Female Jefferson— Total Male Female Johnson— Total . Male Female Jones— Total ... Male — Female Keokuk— Total . Male Female Kossuth— Total . Male Female 967 881 733 818 115 871 115 1,230 1,077 163 780 105 729 885 64 603 557 46 528 481 47 ses 896 72 1,189 1,042 347 1,317 1,204 lis 757 75 1,562 1,311 251 1,000 814 186 1,343 1,233 110 1,299 1,122 177 12,969,774 12,160,634 809,140 7,376,933 6,SeO,653 1,056,380 10,741,650 10,161,160 590,600 9,825,262 8,987,921 887,341 7,545,653 7,182,879 862,874 6,481,410 6,232,990 228,420 8,995,192 8,849,010 146,182 8.663,926 8,249,876 314,060 10,618,365 10,301,631 314,834 9,685,056 9,236,670 428,488 14,302,098 13,874,098 428,000 6,915,894 6,719,748 195,948 16,818,611 16,132,910 1,685,601 11,869,178 10,704,811 1,164,367 12,090,103 11,763,823 826,280 16,982,310 15,135,875 1,846,936 335 47 462 427 25 721 667 64 340 320 20 335 327 8 349 334 15 284 275 9 604 491 18 672 644 28 712 687 25 328 817 11 619 479 40 417 360 48 644 609 85 712 663 49 2,980,975 2,904,775 76,200 1,780,872 1,584,272 198,600 2,834,079 2,274,449 2,848,136 2,684,371 163,765 1,416,140 1,349,540 86,6D0 1,344,465 1,333,490 10,975 2,162,130 2,142,980 19,160 2,262,345 2,213,696 48,650 2,713,273 2,681,723 31,650 2,413,310 ,2,369,866 63,445 2,978,307 2,926,832 49,476 1,428,622 1,420,322 8.S0O 2,696,138 2,626,166 168,983 2,639,572 2,316,582 222,990 2,712.341 2,848,269 64,062 3,910,690 3,879,440 231,160 57.5 60.1 30.2 52.1 64. Z 40.9 46.9 49. 21.7 68.6 81.9 35.3 39.8 42.1 19. 45.9 49.2 12.6 57.9 60. 82. 6 63.8 67.2 19.1 62.1 64.9 18. 48.1 62.2 19." 64.1 67. 22.1 39.4 41.9 14.6 33.2 36.6 16.9 41.7 45.3 25.8 47.9 49.4 S1.8 64.8 69.1 27.7 622 HOMES OWNED PEKSONS 21 AND tJITDEE 45 TEARS. Table Xo. 21. Homes Homes Incumhered a o o| Counties II > 1 o sii Lee— Total . Male — - r- Female 1,507 1,312 196 7,010,999 6,462,375 548,624 570 627 43 1,276,690 1,229,705 46,885 37.8 40.2 22. 18.2 Iff. 8.5 Linn— Total Male Female 3,607 3,059 548 30,030,184 27,997,274 2,032,910 1,474 1,318 166 3,750,494 3,526,144 224,360 40.9 43.1 26.6 -12.5 12.6 11. 644 604 140 5,103,958 4,378,810 725,148 275 234 41 1,281,010 1,201,130 79,880 42.7 46.4 29.3 26.1 Male Female . .. 27.4 11. Lucas — Total 822 707 115 4,497,841 4,112.676 385,165 344 33a IS 1,094,540 1,062,420 32,120 41.8 46.8 11.8 24.3 Male - Female . .. 26.8 8.3 Lyon— Total Male Female , 621 513 108 9,059,998 7,W6,198 1,383,800 351 302 49 2,068,192 1,827,842 240,850 66.6 68.7 46.4 22.8 23.8 17.4 Madison— Total Male Female , 965 786 179 19,307,332 8,288,674 2,018,668 654 445 109 2,655,790 2,147,320 508,470 57.4 66.6 60.9 25.8 25.8 25.2 1,302 1,124 178 13,638,571 12,652,909 886,662 686 651 34 3,433,686 3,322,940 110,746 44.9 49. 19.1 26.4 Male Female 26.2 12.6 Marion — Total ._> 1,138 1,087 101 8,452,056 8,258,556 193,500 479 464 15 1,800,889 1,795,354 6,636 42.1 44.7 14.8 21.3 . Male ... Female 21.7 2.9 Marshall— Total Male 1,670 1,360 210 744 684 160 13,121,470 12,379,650 741,820 7,186,487 6,305,687 880,860 647 605 42 304 271 33 2,648,497 2,608,462 40,035 1,233,842 1,166,202 68,640 84.8 S7.1 20. 40.9 46.4 20.6 20.2 21.1 6.4 Mills-Total Male ... Female 1 17.2 18.6 7.8 Mitchell— Total .... 781 677 104 6,765,120 6,369,826 395,294 369 34« 23 1,768,302 1,698,802 69,500 47.2 61.1 22.1 26.1 Male ... Female 26.7 17.6 Monona— Total Male Female . .. 798 706 92 8,461,738 7,600,478 961,260 463 439 24 2,093,929 2,081,839 62,090, 68. 62.2 26.1 24.7 27.1 6.4 Monroe— Total _ 1,039 955 84 4,573,100 3,889,953 683,147 462 404 68 1,084,617 924,620 109,997 44.5 44.6 69. 22.6 Male ... Female .". 23.2 16.1 Montgomery— Total Male Female . .. 836 765 80 7,823,975 7,415,726 408,260 449 431 IS 2,031,745 2,008,270 23,475 53.9 67. 22.5 26.3 27.2 6.7 Muscatine — Total .. 1,169 1,021 148 7,009,075 6,489,725 519,360 399 381 18 1,279,340 1,268,740 20,600 34.1 37.S 12.2 18.2 Male Female 19.2 4. O'Brien— Total . 818 730 88 10,966,900 10,624,600 442,300 331 311 20 2,010,320 1,972,670 37,660 40. 5 42.6 22.2 18.S Male Female 18.7 8.£ INCUMBRANCE OP HOMES PERSONS 21 AND UNDER 45 TEARS. 623 ' Homes Homes Incumbered m 9 -. 1 ^ •w « fj O Counties "O o 1 > f Hi I-^ ii 1^ Osceola— Total Male _ Female Page— Total — Male — Female Palo Alto— Total Male Pemale — Plymouth— Total Male Female Pocahontas— Total -. Male _ Pemale Polk— Total Male Pemale Pottawattamie— Total Male Pemale Poweshiek — Total .— Male Pemale EInggoW— Total Male Pemale — Sac— Total Male Pemale .-, -— Scott— Total — - Male - Pemale Shelby— Total Male Pemale Sioux— Total Male — Pemale — Story— Total Male - Pemale Tama— Total — Male - Pemale Taylor— Total Male Pemale ,-,,,, 390 S60 40 1,101 66S 519 144 »14 795 119 80S 716 5,693 643 2,644 2,268 1,079 947 132 851 743 108 742 665 77 2,681 2,267 414 90 957 882 76 1,187 1,060 137 1,241 1,085 156 941 848 93 6,114,425 6,856,115 268,310 10,664,310 10,049,180 616,180 7,058,259 5,684,829 1,373,430 13,191,463 12,060,898 1,130,565 11,870,629 11,312,436 558,194 23,362,163 21,084,478 2,267,675 17,640,072 15,805,110 1,834,962 12,643,944 11,971,706 7,489,419 6,646,799 842,620 10,643,641 9,846,571 798,070 13,675,595 11,916,662 1,769,033 11,447,473 10,650,976 796,498 13,668,999 12,940,100 748,890 13,167,430 12,363,580 808,850 17,345,131 16,469,671 876,460 8,665,277 8,107,897 4Sr.8S0 183 167 16 630 810 49 446 421 25 2,804 1,299 1,177 122 627 575 671 616 66 354 333 21 472 444 28 446 428 IS see 33 613 682 31 564 628 36 1,004,670 954,446 60,226 2,543,368 2,441,578 101,790 1,877,171 1,419,937 157,234 2,009,117 1,926,267 83,860 2,096,610 2,ca4,610 71,900 4,786,878 4,455,674 331,204 3,621,176 3,383,823 187,363 3,812,945 3,699,145 113,800 1,362,090 1,108,965 243,126 2,126,717 2,046,425 81,292 2,651,711 2,463,646 198,065 8,127,808 2,980,953 146,860 2,997,140 2,905,840 91,3fl0 3,321,036 3,279,736 41,300 3,860,898 3,781,148 69,760 2,500,701 2,227,348 73,368 46.9 48. 40. 61. 63.6 28.6 54.3 69.7 34. 37.5 40.4 18.5 65.4 68.8 28.1 47.9 49.2 36.1 49.1 61.7 31.8 68.1 60.7 39.4 67.1 66.3 51.9 47.7 50.2 27.3 40.5 43.6 23.7 69.5 63.1 31.1 46.6 4S.5 24. BO. 5 53.9 24.1 49.4 68.6 19.9 59.9 62.3 «8.7 624 HOMES OWNED PERSONS 21 AND UNDER 45 TEARS. Table No. 21. Oounties Homes a Homes Inaumbered a oai fe.n o " a Ik Union— Total . Male Female Van Buren— Total Male Eemale Wapello— Total Male — Female Warren— Total Male Female Washington— Total -- Male Female. Wayne— Total ' Male Female - Webster — Total Male Female Winnebago— Total Male Female Winneshiek— Total Male Female Woodbury— Total Male Female Worth- Total Male - Female Wright— Total — Male Female 800 651 149 815 170 1,857 1,440 417 987 824 163 1,067 944 123 942 844 2,001 1,745 256 729 640 1,250 1,159 91 574 520 54 870 745 125 4,965,845 4,430,150 685,695 5,683,593 5,874,931 307,662 7,276,836 6,282,798 994,038 7,713,931 6,808,339 905,592 11,268,640 10,628,960 739,680 6,673,610 6,314,250 269,360 16,324,532 16,089,892 1,284,640 6,885,667 6,811,305 674,252 11,734,254 11,309,680 424,574 18,572,329 16,683,573 1,988,756 5,708,303 6,462,163 246,140 8,390,273 7,790,273 600,000 427 402 26 766 652 114 618 456 57 458 426 636 27 79 494 475 19 1,526 1,373 163 234 273 11 437 405 1,248,876 1,169,720 78,655 1,462,809 1,422,884 39,925 1,740,796 1,620,666 129,140 1,710,065 1,579,855 130,210 2,666,876 2,433,076 133,800 2,002,841 1,974,621 28,220 3,113,331 2,973,015 140,316 1,640,463 1,570,708 69,760 2,123,427 2,063,902 69,625 4,136,997 3,908,472 227,525 1,094,116 1,066,916 27.200 2,192,845 2,100,365 46.9 49.9 28.2 43.3 49.3 14.7 41.2 45.8 27.3 63. 66.3 36. 42.9 45.1 26. 59.6 63.4 27.5 48.2 60.8 30.9 66.6 61.2 22.5 89.5 41. 20.9 47.9 61.1 80.7 49.6 52.5 20.4 50.2 26.1 54.4 26.9 25.6 15.4 PART III— PERSONS 45 YEARS OF AGE AND OVER. State— Total . Male Female -. Adair— Total . Male Female Adams— Total Male Female 168,639 52,471 1,460 1,133 327 1,141 906 235 1,970,612,362 1,708,986,160 266,626,202 14,804,675 18,104,015 1,700,660 10,811,108 9,871,168 1,439,940 Stl,8SB 46,024 467 408 49 884 346 ? m,9O9,70i 182,376,612 16,684,192 1,992,577 1,S34,868 168,219 1,435,000 33.6 1,367,600 88.2 67,400 16.? 27.8 IS. 81. 3 16. INCUMBRANCE OF HOMES 625 PERSONS 45 TEARS AND OVER. Counties Homes Homes Incumbered o ^ 1 1"- - 2,096 1,646 449 14,951,477 13,137,996 1,813,481 467 413 54 348,360 271,295 77.065 22.3 26.1 12. 2,544 2,065 479 12,053,933 10,947,118 1,106,815 543 50O 43 1,261,372 1.229.489 31,883 21.3 24.2 9. 1,162 193 15,720,122 14,319,347 1,400,775 446 402 44 2.551,586 2,396,410 155,175 38.7 42. 22.8 2,551 1,944 607 29,065,064 25,897,118 3,367,936 604 438 66 2,282,201 2,173,291 108,910 15.8 22.5 10.9 4,327 3,282 1,(M5 31,769,763 26,286,920 6,482,843 1.165 967 198 3,018,896 2,654,691 3W,205 26.9 29.6 18.9 2,725 2,107 618 23,800,343 18,877,368 4.922,985 5K 461 97 1,970,255 1,634,107 336,148 20.5 21.9 15.7 1,788 ' 1,395 393 13,756,953 12,107,709 1,649,244 299 269 30 920,169 865,986 54,184 16.7 19.3 7.6 2,213 1,671 642 18,540,812 16,067,873 2,472,939 463 416 47 2,440,460 1,688,0Y5 . 752,385 21. 24.8 8.7 1,548 1,205 343 17,063,970 16,127,310 1,936,660 324 292 32 1,599,710 1,479.485 120,225 21. 24.2 9.3 1,889 1,400 489 16,459,468 14,273,683 2,186,786 394 364 40 1,761,675 1.626.210 135,465 20.8 26.3 8.2 1,743 1,286 467 21,321,548 18,813,028 2,508.520 450 389 61 2,170,426 1,989,050 181,375 25.8 30.2 13.3 1,985 1,521 464 23,591,760 19,702,698 3.889,062 369 324 45 2,013,395 1,819,395 194,000 18.6 21.3 9.7 2,171 1,608 56S 21,050,240 18,218.270 2,831.970 496 429 67 2,448,180 2,246.606 202,675 22.8 26.7 12. 2,005 1,495 510 23.420.497 20,834,404 2,586.093 444 S95 49 2,178,080 2,100,260 77,770 22.1 26.4 9.6 2,286 1,842 444 20.506,604 17,663,709 2.842.895 650 586 64 2,166,621 2,038,731 127.790 28.4 31.8 14.4 1,432 1,157 275 18.768,447 16,597,767 2,170,680 330 295 25 1.846.534 1,765,874 80,660 22.3 25.5 9.1 Allamakee— Total ... Male Female Appanoose— Total .. Male Female Audubon— Total Male Female __ . Benton— Total Male Female Black Hawk— Total. Male Female Boone — Total . Male — Female .-. Bremer— Total Male Female Buchanan— Total .. Mal^ Female Buena Vista— Total , Male Female Butler— Total Male Female Calhoun- Total Male Female Carroll— Total Male Female Cass— Total Male Female Cedar— Total Male Female Oerro Gordo- Total Male Female Cherokee— Total ... Male Female 40 626 HOMES OWNED PERSONS 4S TEARS AND OVER. Table No. 21. Oomitles Homes Chiclcasaw— Total Male Female Clarke— Total Male Female Olay— Total Male Female Clayton— Total .. Male Female Clinton- Total — Male Female Orawlord- Total - Male Female Dallas— Total Male Female Davis— Total Male Female Decatur— Total -— Male Female Delaware— Total — Male Female Des Moines— Total Male Female Dickinson— Total - Male Female Dubuque— Total — Male Female Emmet— Total Male Female Fayette— Total — Male Female Floyd— Total Male Female 1,764 1,336 418 1,S45 1,001 334 1.212 1,004 20S 2,817 2,187 4,832 3,616 1,817 1,820 1,451 1,871 811 1,581 1,273 308 1.798 1,432 361 1,899 1,897 602 2,747 882 785 685 170 4,638 3,324 1,214 8B6 720 136 3,010 2,178 1,905 1,404 601 38 OS M 17,491,964 14,998,006 2,498,968 9,727,841 8,383,176 1,344,665 17,983,790 16,289,260' 1,644,630 21,989,969 19,089.548 2,850,426 30,920,136 25,255,459 5.664,677 23,071,945 20,711,935 2,360,010 28,684,683 23,661,698 6,082,986 10,838,199 9,896,683 941,616 12,055,514 10,872,284 1,183,280 17,980,041 15,542,647 2,437,394 19,146,882 15.770,814 8,876,068 6,982,095 6,273,835 708,260 26,968,239 21,290,488- 4,672,801 8,872,580 8,053,905 818,676 24,916,360 19,605,665 6,810,696 18,821,611 11,616,961 1,804,560 Homes Incumbered S5 401 864 47 831 38 48 432 395 37 760 630 120 637 492 46 677 650 127 474 421 53 617 557 577 106 194 26 788 634 154 840 309 31 661 72 870 816 54 ■S'S h a 1,656,488 1,461,783 94,755 1,283.107 1,209,532 73,676 2,166,882 2,072,368 94,514 1,640,817 1,452,212 83.106 2,703,086 2,361,201 341,885 2,786,952 2,660,595 136,367 2,328,264 2,125,314 202,950 1,223,271 1,176,945 46,326 1,764,371 1,641,458 112,918 1,846,800 1,729,690 116.110 1,660,604 1,434,244 126,360 966,654 981,797 83.857 1,898,084 1,639,626 263,458 1,282,070 1,224,805 67,766 2,009,245 1,795,625 218.620 1,306,140 84,080 22.7 26.( 11.2 27.4 82.7 11.4 38.9 36.6 20.7 16.8 18.1 5.9 16.5 17.9 9.1 29.6 33.9 12.2 25.2 29.4 15.6 SO.. 38.1 17.2 34.4 31.9 16.6 20.8 26.9 18.8 21. 12. 29.1 33.2 16.3 17.4 19.1 11.9 89. 7 42.9 22.8 20.7 25.3. 8.6 19.4 22.6 10.8 INCUMBRANCE OF HOMES PERSONS 45 TEARS AND OVEB. 627 Homes Homes Incumbered S 1" Counties ll 1 o III d o fit Franklin — Total 1,380 1,127 263 18,245,768 16,009,218 2,236,540 445 390 66 2,160,236 2,004,160 156.076 32.2 34.6 21.7 11.8 Male -_- Female 12.5 6.9 1,543 1,143 400 13,861,193 11,909,843 1,951,860 436 382 53 1,714,828 1,693,641 120,687 28.2 33.4 13.2 12.4 Male Female 13.4 6.1 Greene— Total Male Female 1,515 1,176 339 21,453,745 18,679,376 2,874,370 428 366 62 2,082,172 1.875,078 207,094 28.2 81.1 18.3 9.7 10.1 7.2 Grundy— Total _ :_ Male Female _ 1,203 895 306 20,084,832 16,989.827 3,096,005 276 237 39 1,926,700 1,766,300 161,400 22.9 26.5 12.7 8.6 10.4 6.2 Guthrie— Total — 1,939 1,490 449 2,102 1,624 478 17,882,455 16,106,696 1,776,759 26,170,874 23,278,634 2,892,240 641 478 65 627 659 68 2,000,000 1,905,949 84,051 3,059,306 2,914,006 145.300 27.4 31.9 14.5 28.8 34.4 14.2 11.2 Male __ 11.8 6.3 Hamilton— Total 11.7 Male Female 12.5 5. ' Hancock— Total Male __ Female 1,219 971 248 14,249,117 12,339,843 1,909,274 402 331 71 2,078,147 1,851,822 226,325 32.9 34.1 28.6 14.6 15. 11.8 Hardin— Total „ - 2,321 1,798 523 23,016,715 20,304,640 2,712,076 490 432 58 2.106.620 1,995,896 109,725 21.1 24. 11.1 9.1 Male Female 9.8 4. Harrison— Total 2,809 1,768 641 16,887,087 14,224,608 2,663,479 763 644 119 2,330,476 2,086,667 244,909 33.1 86.4 22. 13.8 Male Female 14.7 9.2 Henry — Total 2,170 1,602 668 16,061,987 13,919,614 2,142,373 424 367 67 1,348,915 1,226,310 122,605 19.6 22.9 10. 8.4 Male Female 8.9 5.7 Howard— Total Male Female 1,622 1,213 309 13,027,988 11,766,738 1.271,260 364 324 30 1,297,496 1,201,806 65.690 23.2 26.7 9.7 9.7 10.2 5.2 KiiinhnMt— Tntftl 1,165 931 234 14,544,232 13,101,747 ■ 1,442,485 381 339 42 1,877,207 1,704,262 172.945 32.7 86.4 18. 12.8 Male Female 13. 12. Ida— Total - Male — ^- Female 1,064 874 190 16,946,005 14,679,855 1,366,160 287 266 21 2,192.360 2,092,400 99,960 27. 30.4 11. 18.7 14.8 7.3 Iowa— Total 1,730 1,349 381 2,531 1,871 660 17,687,662 15,917,160 1,770,612 16,669,026 14,392,694 2,176,831 445 411 34 478 421 67 2,109,653 1,947.345 162.210 1,864,662 1,248.685 115,977 26.7 80.6 8.9 18.9 22.5 8.6 11.9 Male 12.2 9.2 8.2 Male Pemale 8.7 6.3 2,810 2,174 636 29,119,317 26,777,062 3,342,265 629 661 68 2,661,637 2,523,836 137,801 22.4 25.8 10.7 9.1 Male - Female 8.7 4.1 628 HOMES OWNED PEESONS 45 TEARS AND OTEE. Table No. 21. Counties Homes Homes Incumbered 1 a 12! «M o 111 ■M :zi h f4 Wright— Total . 1,692 1,311 18,597,628 16,606,862 474 2,237,457 28. 12. Male 429 2,147,748 32.7 12.9 Female 381 1,990,666 45 89,709 n.8 4.5 PART IV— TOTAL OF THE THREE PRECEDING AGE CLASSES. State— Total SS6,012 Hale Female Adair— Total ... Male Female Adams— Total ... Male Female Allamakee — Total Male Female Appanoose— TotaJ Male Female Audubon— Total — Male Female Benton— Total Male Female Black Hawk— Total. Male Female Boone— Total Male Female Bremer— Total Male Female Buchanan— Total .. Male Female Buena Vista— Total Male Female Butler— Total Male Female ... Oalhoun— Total Male Female 268,703 2,188 1,783 405 1,792 1,496 3,119 2,680 539 4,194 3,694 600 1,877 1,616 261 3,823 3,086 738 7,100 6,672 1,437 4,211 3,393 818 2,412 637 3,lS8 2,606 2,367 1,916 461 2,766 2,149 617 2,669 1,956 613 ■,S9i,XSl,e98 1,660,470,169 343,661,639 22,552,060 20,618,836 2,033,724 17,273,293 16,467,498 1,805,795 22,242,330 20,151,274 2,091,056 18,289,230 16,926,214 1,364,016 25,946,966 23,762,062 2,184,873 46,087,411 41,870,319 4,217,092 49,382,472 41,872,131 7,510,341 37,698,042 31,639,482 6,068,560 26,149,202 23,487,609 2,711,593 27,692,348 24,875,678 2,816,670 26,758,493 24,284,866 2,474,138 26,304,890 23,532,521 2,772,369 31,844,177 28,386,782 3.457,395 107,f08 96,793 10,915 902 829 73 763 712 51 947 877 70 1,235 1,160 76 961 882 79 1,081 981 100 2,848 2,482 1,174 1,014 160 716 661 867 65 672 618 54 831 765 76 723 109 Ji25,791,ItS 399,897,882 25,893,291 se.o 36. 16.2 4,399,094 4,193,115 206,979 41.2 46.5 18. 3,173,095 8,092,145 80,950 42.6 47.6 17.2 2.099,676 1,995,560 104,115 30.4 34. 13. 2,718,810 2,668,481 50,126 29.4 32.3 12.5 5,865,790 6,523,416 832,376 51.2 54.6 30.3 5,841,591 5,172,169 169,422 28.3 31.5 13.5 7,315,014 6,612,419 702,696 40.1 48.7 25.6 4,213,452 3,670,673 542,779 27.9 26.9 19.6 2,994,239 2,842,070 162,169 24.3 27.4 10.2 4,474,946 3.677,260 797,686 29.7 84.6 10.3 8,633,677 3,487,702 195,Sr5 28.4 32.2 12. 4,095,649 3,881,474 214,075 30. 36,1 12.3 4,130,840 3,797,425 333,415 32.4 36.9 17.8 16.1 7.6 19.5 20.4 10.1 18.4 20. 4.5 9.4 10. 6. 14.0 15.8 3.7 22.6 23.2 16.2 11.6 12.3 4. 14.S 15.8 9.3 11.2 11.6 8.9 11^4 12.1 6.6 16.1 14.8 13.6 14.1 8. 16.6 16.6 7.7 12.6 13.4 9.6 632 HOMES OWNED TOTAL OF PEECEDING AGE CLASSES. Table No. 21. Homes Homes Incumbered a o OSS n Counties 1 i2i if > a o Hi .5° fit Carroll — Total 2,905 2,332 673 3,264 2,647 717 2,945 2,310 635 3,769 3,161 608 2,102 • 1,754 348 2,654 2,145 509 1,983 1,659 424 1,981 1,642 289 4,437 3,603 834 7,023 5,319 1,704 2,846 2,373 473 3,979 2,904 1,075 2,360 2,006 364 2,667 2,224 443 2,824 2,168 656 5,026 3,961 1,064 34,786,480 30,371,248 4,415,212 32,970,379 29,420,119 3,650,260 36,306,393 33,170,325 3,138,068 30,612,254 26,834,684 8,777,670 27,684,279 26,136,094 2,448,186 27,283,683 24,262,841 3,020,842 14,905,774 12,842,774 2,063,000 27,866,128 26,633,806 2,232,320 36,755,521 32,416,993 4,338,628 46,666,262 38,058,514 7,607,738 37,666,235 34,654,030 3,012,205 39,786,412 33,480,042 6.308,370 15,657,188 14,«),902 1,066,286 18,152,007 16,694,777 1,457,230 27,284,831 24,320,877 2,964,464 26,888,288 22,752,080 4,136,188 770 709 61 1,045 960 95 902 825 77 1,448 1,319 129 638 696 42 864 783 71 728 654 69 826 752 74 1,082 980 102 1,646 1,339 206 1.109 1,041 68 1,261 1,064 207 968 891 87 1,127 1,041 86 824 758 66 1,224 1,081 143 4,420,585 4,170,920 249,666 6,475,015 6,220,405 264,610 5,184,760 6,040,600 144,280 4,697,321 4,286,616 310,705 4,159,794 4,043,284 116,610 3,428,903 3,261,218 167,686 2,763,668 2,665,048 198,620 4,606,121 4,331,467 173,864 4,736,292 4,364,619 381,673 5,782,962 6,QS6,849 678,113 6,628,619 6,406,26? 222,357 4,686,469 4,332,389 364,080 2,484,661 2,421,309 63,352 3,382,771 3,225,437 157.334 4,203,336 4,013,200 190,135 3,267,029 3,065,729 • 201,800 26.5 30.4 10.6 32. 37.8 13.2 30.0 35.7 12.1 38.4 41.7 21.2 30.3 34. 12.1 32.2 36.5 13.9 36.4 41.9 16.3 42.8 45.8 22.1 24.4 27.2 12.2 22. 26.2 12.1 39. 43.6 14.4 31.7 36.3 19.2 40.6 44.4 18.9 42.2 46.8 19.4 29.1 35. 10.1 24.3 27.3 13.4 12.7 Male . 13.7 Female Cass — ^Total 6.6 16.6 Male 17.7 Female Cedar— Total Male 7.2 14.3 15.2 Female Cerro Gordo— Total 4.6 15. Male ._■ • Female ^ Cherokee— Total 16. 8.2 16.1 Male 16.1 Female Chickasaw— Total 4.7 12.6 Male ._ 13.4 Female Clarkfr— Total 5.5 18.6 Male — 20. Female „ 9.9 Clay— Total . 16.1 Male .,. 16.9 Female Clayton— Total 7.8 12.9 Male - ._ 13.4 Female Clinton— Total Male Female Crawford— Total Male . - - ._ 8.S 12.6 18.4 8.9 17.6 18.5 Female Dallas— Total Male Female - 7.4 11.8 12.9 5.6 15.9 Male Female _. 16.6 6. Male Female Delaware— Total Male Female Des Moines— Total Male 10.8 16.4 18.5 6.4 IZ.l 13.4 4.9 Female INCUMBRANCE OF HOMES TOTAL OF PRECEDING AGE CLASSES. 633 Homes Homes Incumbered 1 o a B i Counties 1 ■a S U 1 ill 1 ^ •SB 11 1^ 1,224 978 246 6,681 5,043 1,638 1,466 1,283 183 4,525 3,491 1,034 2,826 2,206 620 2,194 1,863 341 2,248 1,748 600 2,227 1,815 412 1,766 1,339 417 2,932 2,368 574 3,070 2,506 564 1,952 1,589 363 3,307 2,669 638 3,640 2,845 695 3,037 2,363 674 2,252 1,879 S73 11,231,096 10,266,636 964,460 38,347,727 32,605,483 5,842,244 14,580,613 13,566,698 1,013,915 38,625,411 31,906,706 6,618,705 20,471,210 18,108,160 2,363,060 28,274,031 25,471,S11 2,802,720 20,089,026 17,587,276 2,601,760 30,651,200 27,180,630 3,370,670 29,126,751 25,083,108 4,093,648 27,283,900 24,828,641 2,465,269 89,133,648 35,482,268 3,701,380 21,626,060 18,660,396 2,965,654 33,768,365 30,455,790 3,808,575 26,714,049 23,162,429 3,561,620 23,621,040 21,110,493 2,510,547 19,495,398 17,995.728 1,499.670 478 430 48 1,668 1,336 233 717 67S 44 1,336 1,208 127 809 721 88 045 861 84 766 682 84 791 714 77 608 446 62 1,069 969 90 1,183 1.089 94 784 666 118 942 859 83 .1,484 1,311 173 764 687 77 689 651 38 1.929,650 1,874.362 55,288 4,607,300 4,095,372 411,928 2.794,305 2,711,285 83,020 4,984,481 4,688,451 846,030 3,162,227 2,958,037 194.190 4.718,716 4,468,856 259,860 3,613,636 3,288,219 225,417 4,166,889 8,923,695 243,194 3,652,100 3,864,350 287,760 4,608,983 4,418,062 190,901 6,040,281 5.818,781 221.600 3,869,019 3,436,094 422,926 4,439,699 4,270,344 169,355 6,178,612 4.769,938 408,674 2,765,055 2,575,860 189,206 2,611,960 2,635,295 76,665 39. 44. 19.5 24. 26.6 15.1 48.9 62.4 24. 29.5 84.6 12.3 28.7 32.7 14.2 43.1 46.5 24.6 84.1 39. 13.2 36.6 39.3 18.7 28.9 33.3 14.8 S6.1 41.1 15.7 38.5 43.4 16.7 40.2 41.9 32.6 28.6 32.6 13. 41.9 46.1 24.9 25.1 29.1 11.4 30.6 346 10.2 17.2 Male - Female Dubuque — Total 18.2 5.7 11.7 Male ..- Female _ __ — _ _ „ _ 12.3 7. Hmmet— Total 19.2 Male — Female . - - Payette— Total Male - Female Floyd — Total 20. 8.2 12.9 14.5 5.2 15. S Male - Female Franklin— Total 16.8 8.2 16.7 Male ... Female Fremont— Total Male ... Female 17.5 9.3 17.5 18.7 9. 18.7 Male Female ._ Grundy— Total Male 14.4 7.2 13.4 13.4 7.2 Guthrie— Total 16.9 Male Female Hamilton — Total — 17.8 7.8 15.4 Male - - Female 16.3 6. 17.8 Male ... Female Hardin Total 18.4 14.3 13.1 Male Female . - U.2 5.1 19.4 Male Female 20.« 11. E lO.f Male 12. S 7.1 Howard— Total Male .— Female 13.4 14.1 6.] 634 HOMES OWNED TOTAL OP PRECEDING AGE CLASSES. Table No. 21. Homes Homes Incumbered S Counties 1 13 m O I' 1 •M O III if SB si Humboldt— Total Male __■_.. Female 1,768 1,488 280 23,539,424 21,950,757 1,688,667 730 673 57 4,039,337 3,847,242 192,095 41.3 45.2 20.3 17.1 17.5 12.1 Ha— Total Male Female 1,593 1,356 237 24,569.930 22,889.730 1.680.200 672 542 30 4,499,705 4,351,095 148,610 36.9 40. 12.6 18.4 19. 8.8 Iowa— Total Male Female 2,698 2,246 453 28.304.027 26,218,681 2.065,346 949 902 47 4,822,828 4,629,068 193,760 40.2 40.2 10.4 17. 17.6 9.3 Jackson— Total 3,724 2,915 809 26,241,781 23,635,764 2,606,017 1,052 965 87 3,778,772 3,608,460 170.322 28.2 33.1 10.7 14.4 Male Female 15.3 6.5 JaBper— Total Male Female 4,131 3,382 749 43,446,415 39,675,150 3,770,265 1,342 1.249 93 5,649,944 6,462,668 187,276 32.5 36.9 12.4 IS. 13.8 5. Jelferson— Total Male „. Female 2,684 2,195 489 22,496,311 20.482,444 2,013.867 670 636 34 2,757,348 2,687,348 70,000 26. 29. 6.9 12.2 13.1 3.4 Johnson — Total 4,619 3,509 1,110 60,913,764 43.311.696 7.602.059 1,006 901 106 6,006,312 4,603,238 403,074 21.7 25.7 9.4 9.8 Male Female 10.6 5.3 Jones — Total 3,076 2,389 687 ?4,S16.379 30.187.209 4.129,170 847 744 103 4,792,460 4.316,286 476,174 24.2 31.1 15. 14. Male Female _ 14.3 11.5 Keokuk— Total Male ._. ..._ Female . 4,006 3,2Tr 729 35.831,207 33.167,266 2,663,942 1,186 1,095 91 5,165,90E 4,885,741 270.162 19.6 !3.4 12.6 14.4 14.7 10. Kossuth— Total Male -.: : Female _ 3.336 2,752 684 41,491,300 36,331,565 6,169,735 1,366 1,264 111 6,974,081 6,526,132 447,949 10.9 45.5 19. 16.8 18. 8.7 Lee — Total 5,206 3,967 1,239 24,470,909 20,886,874 3,686,036 1,164 998 166 2,466,280 2,287,832 167,448 22.3 25.1 13.4 10. Male ... 10.9 4.7 Linn— Total .. Male —- Female 9.780 7,570 2,210 69,899,048 61,622.624 8.376.424 2,739 2.345 394 6,820,919 6.275,760 645,189 28. 31. 17.8 9.7 10.2 6.5 Louisa — Total 2,204 1,692 612 17,384,940 14,840.086 2.544.864 620 521 99 2,777.068 2,571,428 205,625 2,000,960 1,917,990 82,970 28.1 32.7 16. . 17.3 Male Lucas— Total . Male .— Female . „ 2,394 1,913 481 14,596.797 12,986,292 1,610,605 660 621 39 27.6 32.3 8.1 ■13.7 14.8 6.1 Lyon — Total __ 1,813 1,475 338 32,856,340 28,682,490 4,272,850 800 699 101 6,046,369 4,689,549 456.820 44.2 47.4 29.9 15.3 16. 10.7 Male _- Female .L Madison— Total Male Female 2,802 2.193 609 28,767,644 23.371,704 6,395,940 1,094 901 193 4.788,059 4,042.184 716,876 39. 42.9 31.7 16.3 17.3 13.8 INCUMBRANCE OF HOMES TOTAL OF PRECEDING AGE CLASSES. 635 Counties Homes 3 S5 Homes Incumbered ° S K s o •H O ■"■2 g a ti a a,— Mahaska— Total Male —'. Female Marion— Total -. Male Female Marshall— Total Male Female Mills— Total Male Female Mitchell— Total Male Female Monona— Total Male Female Monroe — Total Male Female Montgomery— Total Male Female Muscatine— Total Male : Female O'Brien- Total Male Female Osceola— Total Male Female Page— Total Male Female Palo Alto— Total .. Male Female Plymouth— Total — Male Female Pocahontas— Total Male Female Pollc— Total Male Female 4,069 8,210 S,707 2,975 732 4,465 3,533 932 2,135 1,601 534 2,470 1,899 671 2,199 1,820 379 2,968 2,430 628 2,702 2,214 488 4,255 3,349 906 2,445 2,074 371 1,177 994 183 S,B13 2,820 1,944 1,483 461 2,925 2,362 568 2,151 1,775 376 14,588 12,120 2,468 41,278,403 37,361,646 3,916,757 27,306,239 24,721,841 2,594,398 38,303,788 83,381,676 4,922,110 19,848,945 16,885,145 2,963,800 19,586,558 17,509,095 2,077,463 22,039,896 19,519,418 2,520,478 14,888,683 12,465,174 2,373,609 24,801,661 21,876,081 2,425,580 25,187,703 21,851,308 3,286,395 31,484,415 29,203,085 2,281,330 17,770,674 16,126,309 1,644,265 32,312,822 28,680,152 3,632,670 20,861,304 16,835,668 4,025,636 39,693,552 35,273,669 4,419,883 32,540,343 29,565,857 2,964,486 85,852,464 75,778,980 10,073,524 1,237 1,112 126 918 66 1,069 944 125 585 624 61 686 628 67 926 852 73 831 132 926 864 777 81 746 698 47 426 386 1,191 1,074 117 765 634 121 743 966 877 78 5,418 4,771 6,102,577 5,844,310 258,267 3,566,477 3,388,272 178,205 4,652,439 4,417,394 236,045 2,208,128 2,099,908 103,215 8,065,859 2,913,904 151,456 3,907,473 3,787,933 119,640 2,065,881 1,849,479 216,402 4,206,486 4,104,071 102.415 2,466,620 2,373,142 92,378 4,236,631 4,180.631 105,900 2,380,110 2,178,835 201,276 4,905,967 4,627,362 278,606 3,037,016 2,708,762 328,264 4,504,048 4,253,756 260,293 4,601,995 4,283,220 218,775 80.4 84.6 14.5 26.5 30.8 9. 23.9 26.7 13.4 27.4 82.7 11.4 27.7 83.1 10. 42. 46.8 19.3 32.6 34.1 ?5. 34.3 39. 12.7 20.2 23.2 8.9 30.6 38.6 12.7 36.1 88.8 21.3 33.9 38.1 16.7 38.8 42.7 26.4 25.4 28.8 11.2 44.4 49.4 20.7 8,624,458 37.1 7,W2,716 39.4 861,742 26.0 11.3 12. 6.7 18.8 14.5 7.3 9.9 10.1 a. 4 636 HOMES OWNED TOTAL 0¥ PEEOEDING AGE CLASSES. Table Jio. 21. Homes Homes Incumbered a '1 ■°« 5 ^ -o o Counties ffi o s s S iff 1-"- si 11 Pottawattamie— Total Male Pemale PowesWelc— Total Male , Female Binggold— Total Male Female Sac— Total Male Female Scott— Total Male Female Shelby— Total Male _. Female Sioux— Total Male Female Story— Total Male Female Tama— Total Male Female Taylor— Total Male Female ._ Union— Total Male Female Van Buren— Total Male Female Wapello— Total Male Female Warren— Total Male Female Washington— Total .. Male Female Wayne— Total Male Female 7,409 5,871 1,538 3,227 2,538 2,281 1,869 412 2,729 2,273 456 7,755 5,946 1,809 2,277 1,878 2,906 2,601 405 3,837 2,996 841 3,607 2,924 2,869 2,345 2,727 2,100 3,131 2,310 821 5,437 3,983 1,454 3,251 2,601 760 S,537 2.791 746 2,780 2,235 645 51,883,246 44,112,086 7,771,160 35,673,273 31,721,378 8,961,895 19,571,801 17,381,616 2,]S0,285 38,180,370 33,910,770 4,269,600 41,018,447 33,810,434 7,206,013 32,026,674 28,998,207 3,030,467 39,051,799 36,231,444 2,820,365 40,987,656 35,861,986 5.075,670 44,477,081 40,667,167 3,809,914 24,326,579 22,147,900 2,178,679 16,879,809 14,769,128 2,110,681 16,399,666 14,778,281 1,621,384 20,840,692 19,626,092 1,316,500 25,117,378 21,268,732 3.848,646 36,586,664 32,275,305 4,311,349 19,720,606 18,216,046 1.605,660 2,429 2,136 293 1,262 1.097 165 1,160 1,031 119 772 705 67 2,029 1.783 246 903 8S2 n 893 847 1.647 1,407 140 1,138 1,058 80 1,117 1,023 94 814 737 77 799 728 71 1,660 1,262 1,137 981 166 807 75 1,160 1,073 87 6,666,419 6,079,311 487,108 6,749,973 6,305,973 444.000 3,206,615 2,848,090 368,425 4,484,330 4, 155,658 308,672 4,669,750 4,259,655 410,195 5,968,413 5,620,538 347,875 5,637.006 6,482,796 154.210 6,012,630 5,701,666 310,975 6,663,921 6,435,546 218,376 4,261,672 4,092,369 169,213 2,691,684 2,653,689 138,095 2,443,977 2,863,672 90,306 3,264,868 2.972,898 281.960 3,666.941 8,314,701 352.240 6.063,627 4,833,372 230.265 3,952.292 3,840,539 111,753 32.8 36.4 19. 39.1 43.2 23.9 50.4 55.1 28.9 28.3 31. 14.7 26.2 30. 13.6 44.3 17.8 30.7 33.9 11.3 40.3 47. 16.6 31.6 36.2 U.7 38.9 43.6 17.9 29.8 35.1 12.3 25.5 31.0 8.6 28.5 31.7 19.8 35. 39.2 20.8 25.2 28.9 10. 41.7 48. 16. INCUMBRANCE OF HOMES TOTAL OF PEEOEDING AGE GLASSES. 637 Counties Homes 5& Homes Incumbered IZi 111 Webster— Total - Male Female Winnebago— Total Male Female Winneshiek— Total Male Female Woodbury— Total Male Female Worth— Total — Male Female Wright— Total — Male Female _. 4,998 4,078 926 1,968 1,637 331 3,766 3,135 621 7,973 6,356 1,617 1,504 1,376 128 2,5«4 2,058 506 47,653,396 40,834,691 6,818,705 17,428,881 15,264,709 2,164,172 32,059,262 29,250,687 2,808,575 58,306,964 48,464,728 9,841,236 15,468,840 14,854,828 614,012 27,007,801 24,417,185 2,590,666 1,724 1,628 196 817 79 1,871 1,608 523 505 18 911 834 77 6,181,399 5,728,938 402,461 84.5 37.5 21.2 3,423,172 8,248,152 176,020 45.5 49.9 23.9 3,313,567 3,189,692 123,876 23.8 26.8 8.4 8,558,237 7,984,322 573,915 36. 39.4 22.4 1,984,179 1,896,554 37,625 34.8 36.7 14.1 1,430,302 4,248,108 182,199 35.5 40.6 15.2 12.9 14. 6.9 19.6 21.3 8.1 10.3 10.9 4.4 14.7 16.5 6.8 15. i2.8 6.1 16.4 17.4 7. 638 CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 CENTER OF POPULATION. The United States Bureau of the Census made a computation as to the location of the center of population of Iowa for each one of four different enumerations and in the last published report gave a chart showing the same. The chart shows that the center of population has not been moving rapidly in any direction and that it has for many years remained substantially near to the geo- graphical center of the state. The United States Census Bureau chart on center of population is reprinted below: Movement of Center of Population of Iowa. PART III AGRICULTURAL AND MISCELLANEOUS TABLES CENSUS 1915 CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 641 AGRICULTURAL AND MISCELLANEOUS TABLES TABLE NO. 22— PERSONS OPERATING FARMS. Number of Farmers operating owned or leased land, and kind of leases. Counties ii 111 ^1 ill it Oras3 S.9S 1^ ^1 o §.0 2 ill E u iH Farmers operat- ing land leased lor cash and share crop s State Total 90,797 m,9Bi ihiffr 2S,58fi ii.ou 199,755 Adair 855 691 1,575 1,060 786 918 934 861 1,153 1,016 740 816 657 864 929 1,056 701 526 1,022 684 688 1,850 1,280 1.022 878 986 1,000 1,046 891 310 1,621 371 1,601 707 772 662 888 667 872 907 658 86S 1,125 842 787 262 275 220 869 219 378 218 361 179 295 176 266 219 205 281 213 261 231 263 190 238 302 216 283 308 432 281 207 306 113 221, 152 300 256 209 SOS 218 140 349 260 205 171 401 306 223 618 368 166 190 462 796 ©70 609 402 643 602 676 290 668 eu mi 461 824 417 218 338 322 883 860 374 215 209 362 233 189 368 243 533 492 664 134 394 674 S92 426 277 W5 423 ?49 317 240 233 168 233 140 218 192 333 132 273 184 199 299 164 154 128 266 142 180 233 121 304 113 122 363 264 327 398 214 131 82 IST 372 202 168 694 312 155 276 331 267 246 615 206 208 87 80 9 66 81 103 S7 176 13 66 173 96 453 87 84 38 169 69 40 120 866 25 48 60 284 75 101 60 98 209 32 150 40 132 143 107 344 94 367 230 2S1 lOB 186 193 ' 53 2,062 1,632 Allamakee _ 2.129 1,898 1.688 Benton I-ilflGk Hawk 2,413 2,071 Boone _ 2,343 1,879 Bi chanani 2,193 1,875 2,043 Calboun 1.918 OarroU — — — 1,978 2.092 2.099 1,848 Cherokee Chickasaw 1,792 1,922 Clarke - aay - 1,445 1,661 2,80S Clinton . Orawlord Dallas — . - Davis - 2,640 2,337 2,207 1,971 1,918 2.063 Des Moines — 1,741 952 Duhuque 2,223 1,073 2,846 1,788 Franklin 1,946 1,800 Greene - 1,966 1,630 Guthrie 2.245 2.144 Hancock Hardin - Harrison '— Henry Howard - ~ - — 41 1,688 1,983 2,660 1.796 1,688 642 PERSONS OPERATING FARMS Table No. 22 Counties ^'S " a is i^ to ca go's eg,s a* si's ers oper land lea aash an re crop a ° tu fen »■§ » m ila m ft ft ft ft ft B 486 236 270 241 140 1,373 499 116 688 118 66 1,376 1,058 320 492 127 78 2,075 1.602 139 292 114 21 2,068 1,366 S78 479 ^8 233 2,874 941 262 302 163 120 1,778 1,400 315 447 157 69 2,388 1,167 176 479 140 33 1,986 1,300 439 296 275 181 2,491 1,008 388 517 284 622 2,729 1,035 354 307 227 100 2,023 1,618 462 760 234 115 3,198 623 193 195 188 142 1,341 760 332 207 203 94 1,605 565 152 696 96 ' 154 1,663 1,037 347 382 260 141 2,167 1,175 490 460 313 218 2,646 1,081 365 298 479 171 2,394 866 281 400 303 166 2,104 642 20r 183 348 120 1,500 791 266 280 249 56 1,^2 804 263 284 579 174 2,094 832 271 269 139 64 1,666 638 228 3^ 230 111 1,658 785 215 486 133 93 1,712 647 190 762 107 97 1,812 368 114 386 119 176 1,163 896 S26 376 336 187 2,120 558 258 321 171 338 1,646 878 298 1,161 138 122 2,687 788 262 269 189 388 1,896 982 452 606 326 342 2,607 1,310 416 1,070 330 172 3,297 901 315 387 326 166 2,084 961 308 230 264 114 1,877 767 179 579 262 72 1,849 1,026 118 911 73 13 2,135 895 214 710 198 98 2,146 862 314 1,148 117 106 2,647 774 2Sr 443 426 Wl 2,160 1,106 361 626 220 167 2,470 967 361 436 220 118 2,102 705 239 372 129 89 1,634 1.061 336 192 221 78 i,8sr 806 315 805 223 118 1.767 1,100 369 298 361 192 2,320 1,035 342 298 275 161 2,111 1,017 267 211 263 88 1,84^ ^ S78 464 366 339 2,471 690 232 250 182 143 1,497 1,818 367 385 280 31 2,779 1,086 3U 722 438 232 2,789 674 173 188 243 114 1,392 62S 241 283 280 328 1,760 Humboldt — . Ida Iowa Jackson Jasper Jeffeison Johnson Jones Keokuk Kossuth Lee Linn Louisa Lucas Lyon Madison Mahaska Marion T Marshall Mills Mitchell ._ Monona Monroe __ Montgomery .. Muscatine O'Brien - Opceola - Page — -. Palo Alto — . Plymouth Pocahontas .. Polk Pottawattamie Poweshiek Ringgold Sac Scott Shelby Sioux Story Tama Taylor .... . Union Van Buren ... Wapello Warren Washington .. Wayne Webster Winnebago -. Winneshiek Woodbury ... Worth Wright CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 643 o u o I— I > O - i o o m < . i-i -Boi nu«; JO eniBA B}nein -SAOjdmi 10 miBA pnBi JO aniBA BaiDB IB}OX (I0J3 ejBqs loj jo^Biado P3SB3I saiay qsBO joj lO^Bjado P3SB8[ B3J0V J0}BJ3d0 iq psnuo B3J0V SOIIBa joqnmij sg^gi igiis i§ggi ig"ii§ SgilS Hglii" sss 0^ CO in 4 n (« o> N £~ n o ^- 9 E^SSS^S igSi^ sstsgs S^S_^S_ ttiseSoi S^_Koi3_S ©r^^OeS© Kr^H®*P iaea'^eDt> qmSvq uSoSorH eSoQpSi> SdsBS© -*Sost-G e«oeift > O C& 9 '^ 00 Q n o t- ^04'^(M-« b.tO-^iaU3 ■#-«10iaU9 i>C>LOinc(] ■«|4i>t*oS>«55 F*^o4cooS oqcoi>eocq giiig iiiit ^ggfcS ss jgsggte §iiS§ iiSal 63rHi-l03>) OOOflSHiH OOlH'^CO SSSS3 gSSSSS S"§S?SS tow no to ;^«rMOc3 t-t iH pH pH »-l I-1««C^H qiHi-tr-HiH »M««(M« III o a o o a s S I O O) 03 nmnnn a 3 O » a bSooo o !S.o. OS d.; 555 E=5 DP 644 CENSUS OF rOWA, 1915 -Bin miej JO 9niBA §gg5§ si^si m^in mn^ iHig ii§i§ n^iiu iiiii iiiii iiiii iiiii iiiii iiiii iiiii 1-1 iiigi iiiei igiii u%mn iip.i si.isi iisgi ggssg g|e.|s sisss isssffi isftss sssss islli MweeoeJ oofe^-^io w-i^-^^-dTio ■«*iO'^'*eo M'^-^'^io cot^ioiot-^ moowih^ 2Sfc3S S3'~'"*Sfc ^'feSS*" *feSacS* *SSS5 ^'SSSS SS?'**'S iooco^^ S;0r-i5-io Srac-ooE^ oSt-c^in F-«SiHa Oi-h^oco -^ <« o *$ a .sisoi^ ^isaig ?:gie:S IPiis sgiiii Ssssigg ssi^g ftSSSS" SSa'S^" SS"«8S 83SSS3" SSSgS" SSSSS ftiSSSS" siSil lissi siigi §igii gii^g issii giiii fegSSS feSSSS SS§Sfi ggssg SfeSi^ sisgsg sssss" aSigS SSSSS gSfegS gsaig 353SS3 iSS98 iigSs ssssbs sssss s"s!sss" SSS3B s"gg"a§ fcggsss" sasfes" ^§af=S §i=3SS agsss sgggs ^^ssg sss^s £S8§g OSrHOird'^ 63LSe ih co os Oi o25^«SS ScSSSoo© frjeSeoeoH sssss 3"g"s"ss5 asass ^&s^9 sssss spsas asgss gSgqig SSgiSS iSgS3 SflSSffi gSESSS gSSSg 8S5lgS ateot-^os oaoobtioi o5os«ScirH «5«cD£C-i3 SomSSso KmSSse- SSSflSaS rHrHfrJrH Mt-lNrHr^ »HrHrH«Og i-Ki-HNHrH iHiH^ejNN iHcfrHOaN N M iH IH* i-I -aAoidmi JO 9n[BA pnei JO 3ni«A BajOB [B^OI, dOI3 3j«qs joj jotsjsdo P38B3I S3J3y qSB3 JOJ jo^Bjado P3SS3I ssjoy jojBiado ^q psniio ssjay jeqcccn^ o i o S SllJ •g o 1 1 a o g ' mA w X' Otd OlO •3+J js ■! '«|| is gig BSa'Sh SSgsS SSSSo goifr'Sf s,aso» fiHftse essigw Kwwww wBfl^^ «5i?Im 3 9 « o FARM LAND STATISTICS 645 mm^ mi%^ iisii mm eigii §ii§ iiim mii giiss iigii i§gis iimii siiif iii iS^is li§§s Mm^ issis giisi iiilS ilis^s ^gg§ ssggs sssas sMsss g"SS§s" 9S3SSS gssss" gissa gsgg rHStCn-^SS lHr-l£>04pH C^OCQ^O COlN-^Or-l -lii C- lO rH C^ & ^ O O fH ZSOSOOCQ ^ <« !SM> ^USMtOCO •*WrH'^-* lfaW"*MI> ■*IOOO^M lOeOlOOlO (O-^MWOS eoiftMlo"« ©OOCO-* 'OOusiKjoQ !ee-^$^ or-<^oo9 sidsc&@ Samw oocboooS-^ So-^ooioc4 oo'^uSooS H-^ojt-SS jOe5ej ©t-Hoo OOit-iHrH Q55ofti>P- «oo»ooo5 obSSaSaSt-. w»oc*565 ssfisss ssssg s^'gss" I'sseas" 83!8S| ssfisi gfcgss sgss liiis iiiss ii§ii g§sii iiiii n^m iggii iii§ esssis ssBgs Kggss" gsags" 8S355g" ss'seig" 3"s«"ss ss&s iiilg iiiii liilS iiiii i^i^l eSSSi 5§iiS igi§ isiga iiiii mn iii^i imii imm i^ssi iibs IIPJ. P.P.S p.SH l§l|S ip.SS P.p.H iSISI e.ii S S o .t: o o '5 g » 00 oo j J-il US M*^ Op PhPhr t bo SB 1 I I I u o g GQnos CQOQ <6 o a o §■&■§ a o Id bu tH 03 SS 93 03 o (S I §11 £46 CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 TABLE NO. 24— CORN AND WHEAT. Acres, Bushels and Value of Com and Wheat, grown in 1914, by Counties. Com Wheat Counties Acres Busbelfl Value Acres Bushels Value State Total 9,79^,^57 S97,m,S76 $ g2»,680,692 9ir,S09 16,i55,S65 $ U,73S,1S8 Adair Adams Allamakee Appanoose 99,346 69,294 44,409 52,785 88,860 133,667 98,123 126,250 61,097 96,143 123,314 106,859 184,101 122,529 103,233 103,752 99,328 124,477 68,232 65,023 104,456 78,454 117,866 144,321 121,413 55,757 66,761 88,240 68,842 66,063 65,955 65,967 94,456 87,777 113,018 120,094 131,340 102,842 107,722 127,022 102,233 115,360 165,723 70,723 59,473 88,653 103,172 94,329 65,125 141,940 3,892,416 2,002,369 1,693,066 1,607,320 3.555,357 6,523,355 4,067,662 5,480,018 2,641,667 3,668,213 5,420,648 4,185.016 6,285,443 6,628,636 4,0n,064 5,135,142 4,239,812 5,077,386 2,745,004 1,357,666 ' 4,424,361 3,866,288 5,663,992 6,686,207 4,977,610 1,976,182 2,123,716 3,396,865 2,207,788 2,044,974 2,709,306 2,397,419 3,969,808 3,669.903 4,800,767 4,494,090 6,053,518 4,214,738 5,226,463 5,688.828 4.230,220 6,002,966 6,394,732 2,247,919 2,154,191 4,434,824 4,941,405 8,797,494 2,850,675 6,930,401 $ 2,111,487 2,105,506 1,026,057 1,068,471 2,100,562 3,793,298 2,051,923 3,138,172 1,309,040 2,000,860 3,093,701 2,295,916 3,624,137 3,170,660 2,248,332 3,«6,S69 2,286,697 2,653,325 1,301,213 867,357 2,322,362 2,124,636 3,345,029 8,304,212 2,696,930 1,213,022 1,248,165 1,879,968 1,351,402 1,106,224 1,450,253 1,305,156 2,149,362 1,942,157 2,791,762 2,419,986 3,668,442 2,303,960 2,680,107 3,071,307 2,250,170 2,719,173 3,666,364 1,268,403 1,081,030 2,466,198 2,875,859 2,141,371 1,807,127 3,364,255 18,952 20.624 1,617 6,410 7,163 1,146 1,396 6,272 1,105 556 1,896 1,272 2,313 8,036 82,873 1,649 1,094 976 2,237 13,849 2,035 2,444 3465 12,563 16,734 6,168 16,644 262 6,230 2,116 1,284 1,818 1,173 1,515 2.218 38.345 3,673 889 8,944 1,634 2,453 1,084 46,479 3,295 1,262 2,433 2,824 2,877 1,839 12,010 169,^2 425,041 26,770 105,465 107,510 31,047 81,750 126,659 25,065 13,574 86,986 24,108 40,728 125,600 614,462 32,344 19,211 22,997 28,713 207.929 44.040 46,723 64,271 138,391 362,383 93,426 248,505 4,410 152,572 "31,700 23,234 51,992 20,000 22,167 68,907 813,068 73,012 25,071 254,277 26,286 33,784 17.278 . 710,773 70,394 14,081 45,119 34,158 60,081 30.018 205,249 $ 176,688 421,148 23,136 99,784 Audubon 90.765 20.152 Black Hawk Boone 27.992 97,222 16,948 10,054 Pnena Vista 22,018 Butler 17,337 30,581 Carroll 105,411 Cass _ . 571,484 29,678 Cerro Gordo Cherokee 14,673 13,004 28,705 Clarke Clay - 194,127 28,267 Clayton Clinton - — 43,112 62,342 Orawlord . Dallas 125,916 285,902 84,844 Decatur — 223,201 4,433 Des Moines Dickinson Dubuque 122,281 21,730 20,979 Emmet — . Fayette 25,475 19,875 Floyd 19,112 29,892 Fremont 608,217 69,083 Grundy Guthrie , 16,916 164,679 Hamilton 20,894 Hancock Hardin 23,661 16,107 Harrison Henry 618,680 70,194 13,458 37,000 Ida - Iowa Jackson 49,968 29,881 188,311 Jasper AGRICULTURAL STATISTICS 64 T Oo unties Oorn Acres Buahels Value Wheat Acres Bushels Value Jefferson Johnson Jones ... Keokuk . Kossuth Lee Linn Louisa Lucas Lyon Madison Mahaska Marion .. Marshall Mills — . Mitchell Monona Monroe Montgomery Muscatine — O'Brien Osceola Page Palo Alto . Plymouth . Pocahontas Polk Pottawattamie Poweshiek Einggold Sao Scott Shelby Sioux Story Tarns Taylor Union Vnn Bureu Wapello Warren Washington Wayne Webster Winnebago Winneshiek Woodbury - Worth Wright 97,785 79,641 96,466 165,222 68,362 115,980 63,997 49,944 126,868 83,615 106,602 94,080 113,970 87,5»7 67,584 145,204 41, '682 84,664 74,625 117,623 75,382 104,772 99,141 198,693 124,121 103,981 196,666 110,039 72,011 127,899 75,252 128,442 169,i88 144,442 130,219 88,897 62,699 66,043 57,908 80,068 94,533 70,044 146,968 63,625 83,291 206,146 66,248 117,501 2,202,813 4,292,406 3,837,940 3,585,628 6,634,968 1,592,273 5,280,438 2,199,174 1,677,999 5,421,780 3,167,788 4,196,546 3,593,810 6,188,917 3,431,978 2,871,347 4,797,723 1,442,874 3,249,761 2,953,307 4,793,904 2,969,416 3,906,802 3,578,141 5,014,717 5,885,734 4,049,739 8,289,413 5,258,265 2,019,383 6,205,777 3,487,492 6,244,209 6,105,474 6,146,820 6,072,917 2,765,486 1,781,595 1,627,926 2,312,782 3,660,518 2,837,919 6,496,311 2,614,283 3,669,344 6,770,805 2,827,027 5,708,370 1,288,663 2,473,556 2,244,190 2,142,627 3,476,607 974,660 2,916,022 1,327,718 1,004,060 2,841,405 1,880,893 2,470,276 1,962,863 2,877,924 1,896,665 1,453,218 2,682,816 855,581 1,928,182 1,809,456 2,637,730 1,597,189 2,322,367 2,034,275 2,768,663 3,169,667 2,219,005 4,813,680 3,042,116 1,213,912 3,693,306 2,044,136 3,667,909 3,261,447 3,502,830 8,379,068 1,635,819 1,086,562 1,029,021 1,371,420 1,385,965 2,151,654 1,612,006 3,605,979 1,820,953 2,838,768 3,375,099 1,267,2(B 3,258,039 4,920 1,927 448 5,081 2,248 ■U,604 1,345 7,818 8,769 5,690 20,595 7,613 16,949 3,423 28,854 2,636 47,667 9,288 30,401 3,912 2,129 532 34,127 638 40.163 1,281 28,660 51,620 1,862 17,513 1,306 7,489 11,438 25,714 2,668 26,379 6,454 5,898 10,892 29,306 2,163 9,089 2,953 6,633 4,680 22,230 4,145 1,629 36,108 9,685 90,408 23,984 198,390 26,849 160,311 147,623 83,032 429,989 156,845 366,002 76,867 607,736 46,670 905,279 155,246 637,675 87,669 44,274 6,994 728,460 10,524 402,142 81,966 686,260 932,613 36,081 263,281 27,847 165,517 121,940 277,6C6 52,718 45,852 464;484 116,115 110,979 591,360 46,427 151,368 60,352 74,427 54,448 841,752 48,030 26,006 93,819 36,161 9,922 85,381 23,599 189,463 25,557 145,606 186,651 83,316 402,972 147,517 851,572 71,465 545,668 44,201 825,998 147,176 691,233 86,494 44,293 4,970 642,316 8,234 426,314 676,287 831,456 85,307 240,170 26,765 162,425 113,964 264,183 48)097 40,357 449,670 108,20e 108,874 207.771 646.932 42,47))- 143,163 55,172 68,803 51,517 291,491 41.363 22,488 648 CENSUS OP IOWA, 1915 TABLE NO. 25— OATS AND BARLEY. Acres, Bushels and Value of Oats and Barley, grown in 1914, by Counties. Counties Oatg Acres Bushels Value Barley Acres Busbels Value State Total- e.BSSMO It8,SS0,S91 P2,iSS.99i Adair Adams Allamakee Appanoose Audubon „ Benton Black Hawk Boone Bremer Buchanan Buena Vista Butler Calhoun Carroll Cass Cedar Cerro Gordo Cherokee Chickasav Clarke Clay Clayton .. Clinton _. Crawlord Dallas Davis Decatur Delaware — Des Moines Dickinson _. Dubuque . Emmet Payette .. Floyd Franklin . Fremont . Greene Grundy _. Guthrie _. Hamilton Hancock . Hardin — Harrison . Henry _„ Howard . Humboldt Ida Iowa Jackson .. Jusper __, 40,736 25,522 36,266 22,234 54,664 55,101 66,855 51,692 61,844 64,668 76,851 98,732 69,414 39,370 38,046 84,962 80,600 64,033 21,769 79,693 62,047 43,600 68,714 66,078 24,367 24,405 49,602 28,980 45,057 51,232 61,286 68,695 76,794 83,534 30,722 64,660 67,313 53,260 83,645 80,711 70,394 25,848 33,386 56,279 6e,(m 52,611 42,622 30,926 64,926 1,768,2M 750,219 903,188 666,781 1,6»,3SS 2,958,951 2,123,806 2,446,714 1,712,614 2,079,305 3,187,556 2,676,855 3,943,357 2,096,540 1,431,490 1,391,096 2,762,786 3,145,285 1,866,472 467,424 2,835,134 2,122,229 1,311,281 1,953,292 2,146,808 629,353 603,136 1,632,062 932,062 1,338,767 1,673,027 1,740,992 2,286,116 2,338,620 3,016,780 363,512 2,286,567 2,672,907 1,708,389 3,092,241 2,821,789 2,473,070 651,605 1,154,241 1,806,814 2,760,399 1,917,667 1,423,090 884,383 2,355,000 1 471,134 342,829 358,691 218,680 691,107 1,276,567 873,671 1,005,590 678,710 783,126 1,247,228 1,122,533 1,611,198 847,272 639,686 636,446 1,246,604 1,167,010 674,084 189.161 1,161,178 773,120 541,190 767,057 876,079 273,412 240,629 691,872 349,868 662,029 707,693 744,493 996,945 979,883 1,243,261 143,741 925,327 1,282,460 600,782 1,299,402 1,136,322 1,123,878 255,838 441,185 741,696 768,481 676,025 370,119 917,016 soo.oes 7,ies,s95 $ i.m.sio 1,815 487 6,813 21 10,015 9,874 2,776 643 1,413 762 1,128 919 987 2,898 3,706 14,412 1,666 2,641 3,693 54 2,440 8,331 8,514 6,283 1,160 67 1 4,737 1,788 1,773 3,127 894 836 4,224 1,966 2,788 gl2 1,869 226 5,669 6,477 1,310 1,296 335 37,889 11,712 137,891 560 282,484 264,926 87.779 13,102 39,998 20,094 25,710 30,334 72,624 107,220 345,952 47,609 55,760 77.129 490 70,681 227,290 216.597 141,836 27,966 1,265 24 136,606 9,978 49.891 52,376 39,643 103.018 24,293 23,133 4,908 16,342 126,867 44,364 8,800 70,826 21,416 49,665 2,840 134,796 30,673 188,298 18,988 33.991 20,370 6,992 75,766 280 145,795 167,?fO 49,311 7,481 21,622 11.240 19,248 15,120 15.828 38.940 61,809 202,664 26,043 39,900 44,609 364 127,668 118,442 72,892 14.782 891 14 76,205 6,00* 28,476 30,470 22,238 60,648 15.178 12,827 8,114 69,164 23,846 4,780 SS,SS4 10,949 24.448 1,644 74,805 15,018 98,254 12.113 19.48? 6.418 AGRICULTURAL STATISTICS 649 OountlM Oats Acres Bushels Value Barley Acres Bushels Value Jefferson Johnson Jones ... Keokuk . Kossuth Lee Linn .. Louisa Lucas . Lyon _, Madison Mahaska Marion Marshall Mills Mitchell Monona Monroe Montgomery . Muscatine ... O'Brien Osceola Page Palo Alto . Plymouth . Pocahontas Polk Pottawattamie Poweshiek Binggold Sac - Scott Shelby Sioux Story Tama Taylor Union Van Buren Wapello ... Warren Washington Wayne Webster Winnebago Winneshiek Woodbury . Worth Wright 31,864 44,819 35,273 49,903 140,642 23,696 69,7«0 24,871 23,201 98,772 29,406 45,276 36,832 66,260 15,200 72,565 27,234 14,279 17,963 20,944 84,129 68,337 20,606 77,610 90,772 99,073 44,435 43,846 52,475 27,164 73,663 24,060 64,243 95,360 69,711 72,051 24,493 26,ese 21,618 23,065 27,365 47,342 32,213 108,849 46,664 70,992 65,002 59,278 d7,234 1,112,607 1,421,641 1,176,089 1,328,746 6,079,452 649,764 9,133,531 869,483 641,580 3,502,304 982,907 1,641,741 1,269,434 2,317,065 631,310 2,712,821 728,932 370,951 676,361 718,793 2,955,053 2,151,266 706,524 2,760,410 2,662,932 3,763,110 1,618,840 1,466,606 1,770,084 757,399 2,801,978 719,446 1,551,298 3,198,966 2,648,069 2,510,122 760,792 715,909 552,801 732,042 732,257 1,602,533 816,019 4,027,164 1,547,821 1,710,909 1,858,684 1,819,033 3,135,996 436,238 616,446 513,381 639,052 2,032,449 277,238 840,793 835,469 242,393 1,366,912 378,949 634,063 463,839 979,101 188,826 1,113,692 276,585 150,884 269,160 313,422 1,244,266 736,911 282,911 1,129,313 1,070,961 1,611,954 660,344 612,809 687,618 1,214,388 302,024 639,329 1,366,950 1,042,721 1,037,018 808,764 279,619 228,538 278,909 345,172 681,324 313,656 1,602,297 632,378 691,337 747,928 766,236 1,247,063 1,631 3,694 457 2,109 861 1,186 333 3 9,526 1,636 896 2,298 6,006 1,345 84 316 6,601 9,391 6,769 321 1,026 4,180 465 1,060 47 5,698 25,430 9,735 16,393 133 8,373 368 153 188 138 672 671 73 496 2,973 15,878 2,751 3,786 1.224 6,901 40,900 109,970 8.792 51,801 15,413 36,160 6,446 33 263,827 27,004 21,642 21,920 19,866 7,362 126,447 81,763 1,840 9,344 148,240 91,208 8,782 23,052 94,817 12,254 3,834 185,418 29,318 1,780 174,686 696,210 251,817 388,890 3,900 269,640 6,085 3,062 2,171 3,188 9,229 15,643 1,336 14,478 58,379 272,920 61,298 92.111 35.891 3,828 23,386 67,963 6,066 9,126 22,491 3,939 22 135,747 20,112 12,031 12,317 9,880 4,218 71,164 17,680 980 6,238 91,378 130,833 79,073 4,902 11,482 66,160 7,466 2,695 96,751 18,811 740 100,160 362,494 131,542 185,697 1,747 147,514 4,111 1,683 1)587 1,918 4,962 9,059 793 8,259 34,279 149,161 32,460 48,786 19,187 650 CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 TABLE NO. 26— EYE AND BUCKWHEAT. Acres, Bushels and Value of Rye and Buckwheat, grown in 1914, by Counties. Eye Buckwheat Counties Acres Bushels Value Acres Bushels Value State Total ll.mi 1,025,201 $ 8S9,B08 S,155 S0,S55 $ g5,mi Adair — Adams Allamakee 56 2S2 566 2,0TO 34 897 2,389 96 1,339 1,467 66 2,476 16 29 220 690 109 19 792 95 159 2,233 1,510 98 100 1,881 628 2,966 2,334 132 771 172 1.690 1,239 224 626 64 75 24 3 323 64 346 2,248 523 109 40 409 1,418 326 1,171 3,682 6,599 29,568 693 12,776 24,177 1,440 18,507 17,857 1,111 34, sn 480 60O 3,877 10,734 1,707 403 10,614 1,862 3,042 30,815 23,156 1,303 1,548 25,220 6,899 40,204 39,220 1,605 9,664 2,688 24,952 20,807 3,216 10,639 1,111 1,610 410 50 6,852 1,224 4,991 24,291 7,399 795 620 6,072 19,424 4,997 $ 861 s,oes , 6,346 22,474 623 9,236 18,633 966 16,003 14,571 744 26,349 343 412 3,337 8,591 1,329 244 9,314 1,112 2,745 27,881 16,621 901 ■ 1,146 20,640 6,770 36,625 29,967 1,110 8,018 2,185 22,351 16,090 2,286 7,242 816 820 303 25 3,623 714 s,mi 28,686 6,063 972 492 6,437 16,234 3.662 "si" 2 690" 2 - „. Audubon 3 21 45 447 45 402 Boone 32 162 440 2;841 368 2,589 Buclianan Buena Vista 126 1,677 1,403 Calhoun Carroll Cass -. Cedar Cerro Gordo r.herokee 12 61 122 966 100 693 301 8,531 3,226 Clarke . - Olay Clayton ___ Olinton . Orawlord . .. Dallas IS 24 21 6 260 302 320 48 200 306 240 38 Davis 4 80 64 Decatur .._ Delaware Des Moines _ 65 12 65 1,148 266 1,122 1,069 219 1,235 Dickinson . _ 39 161 86 85 345 2,192 1,097 1,227 Payette , I'lovri Franklin Fremont 260 1,761 870 1,027 Grundy Guthrie ._ Hamilton _ Hancock 1„ Hardin , 2 8 8 80 37 30 220 50 1,361 396 80 165 60 836 Harrison _ 363 Howard ^ Humboldt , " 183" 2,302 1,972 Ida ,. ^ Iowa Jackson .^ Jasper 13 14 192 208 AGRICULTURAL STATISTICS 631 Counties Eye Acres Busbels Value Buckwheat Acres Bushels Talue Jefferson Johnson Jones Keokuk . Kossuth Lee Linn .. Louisa Lucas . Lyon . Madison Mahaska Marlon Marshall Mills Mitchell Monona Monroe Montgomery ... Muscatine O'Brien Osceola Page Palo AJto i Plymouth Pocahontas Polk Pottawattamie Poweshiek Einegold Sac Scott Shelby _ Sioux Story Tama Taylor Union Tan Buren . Wapello Warren Washington Wayne Webster . Winnebago ■ Winneshiek Woodbury . Worth Wright 1,821 2,142 854 1,255 124 6,96S 1,174 2,140 259 132 121 450 237 139 142 265 197 2,918 47 41 666 558 55 211 247 486 202 201 31 3,136 319 45 53 358 3S9 194 2,464 1,858 435 434 494 27 14 707 103 165 29 29,445 30,733 12,836 17,284 2,724 101,995 15,802 25,139 3,724 2,760 2,432 7,667 6,531 1,662 4,820 1,781 1,752 4,221 3,404 34,803 1,270 4S0 10,180 6,551 817 4,825 3,697 8,822 2,733 2,485 650 49,330 4,296 1,025 790 5,663 6,657 2,987 38,809 20,945 7,532 6,721 8,Z13 475 184 10,461 1,085 2,087 28,497 25,488 11,348 14,257 2,502 80,989 11,798 24,516 2,512 1,754 1,860 6,454 6,059 1,107 3,618 1,491 1,451 3,268 2,873 788 470 7,796 3,734 im 2,704 2,673 7,669 2,224 1.972 40,183 3,446 640 619 4,270 6,827 2,316 34,601 16,377 6,319 6,775 6,756 379 174 8,357 911 1.693 122 10 1 16 314 493 22 365 42 62 32 1,774 150 20 60 200 40 708 118 715 313 C52 CENSUS OP IOWA, 1915 TABLE NO. 27— CLOVER AND TIMOTHY HAY. Acres, Tons and Value of Clover and Timothy Hay grown in 1914, by Counties. Oounties Clover Acres Value Timothy Acres Tons Value State Total .. Adair Adams Allamakee — Appanoose . Audubon Benton Black Hawk Boone Bremer Buchanan Buena Vista Butler Calhoun Carroll Cass , Cedar Cerro Gordo. Cherokee Chickasaw _. Clarke Clay Clayton Clinton Crawford _ Dallas Davis Decatur Delaware Des Moines, Dickinson -_, Dubuque Emmet Payette Floyd : Franklin Fremont Greene Grundy Guthrie Hamilton __ Hancock Hardin Harrison Henry Howard Humboldt .. Ida ._ Iowa Jackson Jasper 699,988 $ S.iSg.i e,S67,m 2,459 1,580 18,824 2,259 6 600 6.818 6,148 1,817 1,319 987 6,598 4,770 3,213 8,936 S,68S 11,898 8,833 13,056 1,430 2,581 9,427 31,008 12,137 14,297 3,674 1,586 814 5,617 6,332 2,716 12,173 4,401 10,994 5,915 9,366 1,689 3,906 9,304 4,718 6.210 5,942 8,181 4,909 11,026 3,608 8,691 8,407 7,068 7,625 12,763 2,813 1,447 34,723 1,739 30,830 10,859 10,392 2,234 2,685 1,626 9,898 6,014 12,948 11,016 6.373 15,764 12,335 17,281 1,971 1,498 12,479 75,294 15,022 16,188 3,827 1,654 788 9,548 5,552 3,755 19,592 5,695 19,306 9,409 12,632 2,707 4,720 14,500 5,216 7,629 7,441 10,868 6,339 13,513 6,046 12,180 11,168 8,056 11,769 1.'.377 26,488 14,799 212,596 17,665 93,667 22,449 22,340 15,326 86.129 64,186 41,618 100,122 62,061 143,776 113,935 157,361 18,376 15,932 104,624 414,M5 164,664 131,608 44,151 15,480 8,598 84,129 64,276 30,531 147,0n 44,006 152,880 74,885 108,291 26,164 47,659 133,921 51,656 78,420 63,393 108,642 44,885 134.880 44,050 113,228 98,162 78,226 112,419 137,465 36,514 24,691 34,877 41,288 21,854 43,066 27,236 23,093 16.527 38,566 16,338 23,337 16,984 19,883 19,853 13,456 26,796 31,356 15,063 37,633 49,630 36,177 22,204 46,689 29,079 40,014 16,865 9,883 48,296 n,627 44,239 24,028 22,401 10,718 22,.5 78 796 3,082 2,985 612 328 2,983 33S 236 2,040 404 263 26 966 203 703 69S 749 2,236 1,876 790 «1 411 116 602 14,474 1,673 767 312 1,063 142 1,347 959 546 9,213 433 2,186 617 87 685 748 274 1,007 466 4,947 109 686 1,607 676 629 158 1,662 4,664 2.308 $ 4,266 2,119 Adams lis" '$ iii" 24 16,784 2,673 '"ir 6 29 401 10 168 1,397 Benton Black Hawk Boone Bremer ._ -.- 16 225 1,296 75 917 '~ 42' 82 isy 1,520 126 1,160 12,953 3,458 1.428 156 3,248 Buena Vista 2,578 Butler Oftlhnnn 6 143 Carroll 6,676 Cass Cedar .... 20,341 Cerro Gordo 407 17 180 8,177 150 1.189 3,967 150 1,342 5 965 Cherokee _ 2 175 Chickasaw - 2,385 Clarke CJay 723 22 6,633 42 "■ 8,407 84 4,430 Clinton Crawford 12,854 7,636 Dallas- 1 10 10 3,033 Davis 6,051 76 10 228 20 632 160 Delaware 10 896 Des Moines 8,474 Dickinson : . Dubuque 885 6 776 S3 220 76 5,622 44 3,346 283 1,877 669 7,204 58 4,238 303 2,726 623 4,640 61,170 Emmet Payette 3,205 15,182 Floyd 5,260 Franklin 706 5,935 Greene m 26" 85 1,6?4 66 150 ""'90' 27S 0,490 390 149 ISO 800 10,489 420 .... 6,788 Z,6SS 6,865 Grundy Guthrie 2,365 7,201 Hamilton 4;6Z6 Hancock 8,866 Hardin 1,380 HarrlBon 6,064 Henry 12 719 313 18 5,490 2,288 14,657 Howard Humboldt 2,701 6,637 Ida Iowa 1,624 9,306 Jackson Jasper .. 34,402 2i,4ge AGRICULTURAL STATISTICS 659 Counties Plax Seed Clover Seed Acres Bushels Value Acres Bushels Value Jefferson Johnson _. 5 20 20 3,777 2,223 1,341 2,806 739 2,190 1.215 1,107 68 65 1,700 4,444 1,891 936 514 1,364 274 377 1,290 1,298 635 292 987 599 15 720 209 2.772 2,662 64 170 1,763 1,967 54 174 930 621 ire 1,709 1,661 326 4,247 281 140 282 1,406 404 346 777 3,521 3,045 1,818 2.975 699 1,217 2,395 1,210 49 38 2,013 3,731 1,568 1,109 626 2,610 207 279 1,746 1.403 668 197 1,123 732 45 888 197 3,365 3,338 122 186 2,065 1,816 59 161 1,230 696 86 1,219 1,358 293 4,645 262 135 378 1,892 494 289 621 29.189 23,202 15,866 24,711 6,251 7,529 17,042 10,666 453 Jones . " Keokuk Kossuth 1,205 9,540 11,770 Lee T/Inn . Louisa Lucas Lyon _ 43 364 433 360 19,720 Madison Mahaska . 28,283 Marion .. 13,070 Marshall 10,496 Mills ..... 8,738 MitcheU ... 819 80 7,931 450 10,842 450 9,784 Monona 1,810 Monroe 2,279 Montgomery Muscatine . 2 7 14 16,143 12,033 O'Brien Osceola .. 122 438 r.lir' BS 443 ... 1,631 3.620 10,912 36Q 3.964 60" 2,334 8,972 13^893" S40 4,674 50' 4,875 1,798 Page Palo Alto 9,242 6,082 Plymouth Pocahontas Polk Pottawattamie . Poweshiek Einggold .. 460 7,029 1,739 29,646 22,476 SS5 Sac 33 200 280 1,219 Scott 16,876 Shelby 16,483 Sioux 678 Story 1,710 Tama 10,779 Taylor Union Van Buren 15 40 80 B,837 698 9,970 10,207 2,3re 38,960 Wayne 2,465 Webster Winnebago Winneshiek 154 1,152 627 ""'"1^957" 209 730 7,883 3,471 n^iS" 2,069 1,015 10,406 4,349 22 Ire" 2,611 1,326 2,201 12,ffi6 Woodbury Worth Wright 5,211 2,267 6,07l 660 CENSUS OP IOWA, 1915 TABLE NO. 31— TIMOTHY AND OTHER GRASS SEED. Acres, Bushels and Value of Timothy Seed and Other Grass Seed Grown in 1914, by Counties. Counties Timothy Seed Other Grass Seed Acres Bushels Value Acres Bushels Value State Total.... glO.Oia SS7,7i2 $ l.SOO.kSS i.SlS SS.llS $ 42.902 Adair A/Iaina 2,926 1,056 4,706 6,840 1,558 2,134 939 1S9 !>00 1,394 214 811 135 793 1,102 2,024 401 216 9,108 1,489 1,426 3,431 699 834 123 12,940 4,702 1,632 269 792 1,414 188 6,260 2,176 618 352 219 616 10,393 229 72 324 160 295 10,234 228 454 14,080 1,100 784 11,149 1,683 26,121 14.317 8,369 11,218 3,936 1,138 1,018 8,153 1,162 3,730 531 3,937 4,039 10,877 2,386 998 43,409 3,966 5,717 18,142 2,381 4,868 547 37.702 14,723 8,796 466 3,319 5,339 1,318 32,217 12,593 2,399 861 1,182 4,138 80,970 822 603 1,168 641 1.000 44,389 1,042 2.637 65,332 4,308 8,078 % 21,997 3,521 81,310 38,492 17,112 27,318 10,472 3,320 2,227 15.406 2,889 7,615 1,136 8,463 9,530 22,288 7,128 2,495 88,266 8.547 13,697 38,421 6,106 11,179 1,396 87,814 31,749 20,216 1,431 8,449 12,046 3,007 70,932 23,168 6,873 3,920 3,009 9,414 72,198 2,496 1,331 8,010 1,626 2,629 96,300 2,073 6,566 137,867 8,780 7,118 1 1 5 67 1 20 26 20 30 189 1,095 85 45 300 $ 12 25 Allamakee 85 Appanoose 902 Audubon Benton Black Hawk 46 26 205 Boone Bremer Buchanan 6 1 34 308 1 95 10 214 7,235 30 89 4 Buena Vista ... 619 Butler 7,273 Oalboun 15 Carroll „ CasB ■ 4 u 2 16 27 47 1 13 5 20 100 308 68 523 155 121 25 98 210 130 100 Cedar 138 Oerro Gordo ' 40 Cherokee Chickasaw Clarke Clay . 636 259 200 13 Clayton . 124 Clinton . 146 Crawford 35r Dallas _ Davis - 413 115 47 1,467 2,012 349 2,132 Decatur 1,702 Delaware . _ 837 Dubuque Emmet Payette Floyd TSYftnlrUn _ ... _,., 1 9 21 616 4 35 2 8 18 15 1 64 165 218 6.026 110 17£. 7 50 16S 176 100 39 120 230 7,307 80 Fremont Greene 415 14 Grundy Guthrie 100 182 Hamilton 130 80 Harrison Knnry 94 742 1,198 Howard Humboldt , Ida . Iowa . 53 1 2 88 279 2 35 441 471 16 23 403 Jackson .. Jasper - — 46 670 483 AGRICULTURAL STATISTICS 661 Counties Timothy Seed Acres Bushels Value Other Grass Seed Acres Bushels Value Jetfeison .. Johnson Jones Eeolmlc Kossuth Lee Linn Louisa Lucas . Lyon -. Madison Mahaska Marlon .. Marshall Mills — . Mitchell Monona Monroe Montgomery Muscatine O'Brien .. Osceola — Page Palo Alto Plymouth Pocahontas Polk Pottawattamie Poweshiek EInggold Sac Scott Shelby Sioux Story Tama Taylor Onion Van Buren WapeUo — - Warren Washington Wayne Webster Winnebago Winneshiek - Woodbury . Worth Wright — — 2,177 1,934 813 1,573 287 2,21S 998 411 0,579 45 1,626 357 491 1,717 208 5,780 103 650 464 318 1,285 1,863 407 191 229 194 62 1,000 6,983 3,650 S50 817 2,864 1,509 2,989 3,726 786 804 909 21,694 124 218 12,603 693 1,066 170 8,481 7,605 4,385 6,703 1,082 7,120 5,268 1,497 21,174 176 6,214 1,329 1,776 10,160 25,967 369 1,604 1,815 897 5,175 6,061 1,147 489 734 807 385 3,149 34,184 11,210 5,107 1,071 4,078 289 1,518 15,240 6,291 9,035 13,665 2,798 2,880 2,892 70,358 367 991 65,237 2,298 4,253 19,029 16,221 10,234 13,496 2,179 18*349 10,896 6,224 44,148 454 13,369 2,988 4,066 20,167 1,730 56,IS3 1,176 3,355 4,313 2,466 11,859 12,904 2,986 1,299 1,772 2,090 1,008 8,481 77,120 22,891 13,972 2,652 8,573 813 4,184 32,206 12,970 19,377 26,061 6,484 5,802 7,066 146,849 838 2,138 150,121 6,091 9,363 1,956 11 — -. 'los' 2,736 33 SI 150 60 24 16 206 106 378 70 116 6 825 66 56 42Q 122 25 110 164 160 340 13 515 116 172 114 324 150 640 U2 "ii ('212 49 m 101 36 168 100 414 148 207 195 30 U6 1,825 375 290 215 406 1» 18 220 146 121 680 680 1,230 139 170 272 900 570 6C2 CENSUS OP IOWA, 1915 TABLE NO. 32— SWEET CORN AND SILAGE. Acres, Bushels and Value of Sweet Corn and Acres, -Tons and Value of Silage Grown in 1914, by Counties. Sweet Com Silaee Counties Acres Bushels Value Acres Tons Value State Total s,m lOS.m $ 7S,S«7 lM,64g l.OSO.BiO $ i,SO8,990 Adair .. Adams Allamakee Appanoose Audubon Benton Black Hawk 6 1 6 19 128 329 41 06 11 268 4 21 7 198 60 84 538 799 7,093 1,362 1,028 293 4.B51 140 B9S 201 i 214 28 71 658 667 5,678 96S 90S 268 3,746 90 367 158 893 1,358 1,240 664 863 4,576 6,064 920 3,058 1,903 1,506 1,039 621 418 1,628 2,381 1,784 997 1,562 565 416 1,898 782 295 1,477 742 668 3,666 1,222 334 635 1,363 3,267 1,653 S,240 1,193 629 1,041 397 714 1,638 998 382 1,117 2,349 1,462 245 2,680 941 1,549 6,540 9,866 11,464 4,882 20,422 29,362 47,200 8,969 24,379 21,018 12,121 15,484 3,992 4,295 14,246 13,987 15,169 7,943 14,097 3,414 3,460 18,895 8,775 2,724 17,760 4,984 3,879 28,276 8,367 2,452 6,663 10,934 26,848 14,219 22,887 8,334 6,070 9,193 3,636 6,397 13,685 5,824 3,718 6,127 18,634 12,163 2,427 21,670 8.210 11,847 $ 28,600 41,282 49,865 21,515 127,410 134,6U 165,039 Boone ._! Bremer Buchanan Buena Vista Butler 32,937 90,760 68.784 48,465 28,979 16,724 17,470 Cass Cedar 6 21 44 7 6 16 7 17 30 3 17 60 26 6 90 29 79 1 18 16 27 19 6 4 28 11 7 7 28 74 9 1 154 713 1,264 150 196 371 99 750 853 90 873 1,685 827 165 3,535 820 2,519 10 760 275 807 512 20O 118 1,490 209 360 243 1,065 1,148 443 30 8 485 25 193 102 470 1,078 US 128 469 61 619 70S 62 633 1,422 545 130 2,691 693 1,878 6 474 171 567 394 182 111 1,115 125 176 226 em 1,010 643 22 10 365 16 151 63,538 69,604 60,920 Cherokee 35,289 47,523 Clarke Clay __ 16,838 14,740 Clayton __ 74,195 Clinton 32,606 10,624 Dallas - 61,401 Davis 20,907 Decatur 15,147 98,483 32,017 Dickinson 10,678 DubuQue 30,817 Emmet Payette Ployd 39,824 107,896 66,888 Franklin 89,357 Fremont ._ 43,534 24,180 32,419 11,980 24,230 49,149 21,102 12,400 25,239 71,476 64,324 U,637 86,730 33,611 47,107 Grundv Guthrie Hamilton Hancock » Hardin Harrison Henry Howard — TTnTpboldt Ida Iowa _ 5 1 4 Jasper AGRICULTURAL STATISTICS 663 Sweet Com Silage Counties Acres Bushels Value Acres Tons Value Jefferson 20 42 16 10 6 105 277 30 4 6 12 33 4 15 12 46 180 7 12 88 3 2 68 2 9 6 213 28 24 6 18 88 20 ... 24 16 11 89 67 41 S 28 26 21 4 117 1 4 689 1,246 737 367 295 3,062 10,877 849 78 240 420 1,220 354 440 600 778 6,062 311 600 970 106 45 2,648 109 ssr 193 7,171 1,809 846 265 466 3,332 615 'r.in 1,316 424 985 1,070 1,833 466 134 980 669 205 366 4,712 60 182 S93 829 670 284 216 2,396 , 6,201 630 SI 120 305 1,148 349 348 323 691 5,018 197 337 800 86 39 1,718 73 2Ba 113 6,821 1,663 537 217 478 2,893 416 ... .... 890 327 791 790 1,448 143 116 787 608 144 S02 3,912 83 99 571 1,911 1,605 1,336 2,143 1,490 2,874 1,663 684 406 1,435 989 664 2,C23 D45 1,986 1,043 797 1,313 749 1,001 878 809 665 1,073 628 1,399 619 2,241 1,487 1,088 1,331 633 1,605 891 1,469 2,411 949 2,236 672 1,238 1,289 1.000 666 1,304 2,276 1,872 835 862 4,383 16,346 14,414 11,811 16,584 8,366 25,189 10,638 4,634 3,789 12,626 8,880 5,776 14,172 6,929 8,651 7,642 6,640 9,695 7,009 7,114 2,138 6,581 S,303 7,289 6,898 10,481 4,634 18,841 10,093 7,667 12,349 5,237 11,078 8,294 10,468 14,731 6,418 14,630 6,716 14.343 10,570 8,020 6,678 10,085 20,399 13,727 7,156 8,073 16,496 74,803 61,694 44,694 6S,874 38,488 95,484 Johnson Jones - Keokulc Kossuth Lee Linn Louisa . 45,302 Lucas — Lyon Madison 17,899 11,120 62.972 38.280 Marion Marshall Mills 24.562 69,583 17,634 MitcheU 52,S14 30,620 Monroe 26,011 41,218 32,695 O'Brien — - 28,088 Osceola Page Palo Alto 7,637 24,075 14,062 Plymouth Polk .— _ Pottawattamie 30,035 28,272 39,177 22,740 82,465 BInggold Sac Scott _ 88,077 39,151 61,345 Shelby Sioux Story Tama 22,082 45,405 34,767 48,193 69,309 Union 28,477 69,694 Wapello Warren — Washington 23,125 86,800 88,905 Wayne 31,882 Webster 24,610 Winnebago - 32.977 Winneshiek' — Woodbury Worth Wright 92.779 69,050 22,648 29,167 664 CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 TABLE NO. 33— POTATOES. Acres, Bushels and Value of Potatoes and Sweet Potatoes, grown in 1914, by Counties. Counties Potatoes Sweet Potatoes Acres BusbelB Value Acres Bushels Value SS,9S1 S,iSS,8iS nhm.w i,S2S 135,447 $ 9S,48? 866 70,104 $ 48,890 3 105 $ 76 327 33,015 21,486 1,070 106,307 46,385 8 870 587 210 20,079 13,821 3 166 196 8»4 106,218 50,372 17 306 260 1,225 122,107 58,179 89 2,604 1,352 973 97,743 57,611 43 970 616 445 44.006 25,771 6 209 178 960 94,824 50,422 4 355 226 861 86,369 48,196 12 442 268 1,084 116,870 50,037 e 210 120 1,309 98,501 48,105 10 743 361 515 51,633 31,629 ■c 3(B 223 1,716 169,666 77,865 722 71,826 44,913 7 263 177 949 94,837 44,424 B 595 239 1,204 109,562 63,196 i> 462 283 831 76,083 39,063 2 155 62 656 65,434 36,476 36 mi 163 106 10,512 7,385 3 38 43 708 70,094 40,486 2 131 95 1,966 784 185,165 78,944 91,316 40,441 10 1,308. 1,111 1,582 157,858 78,069 _ , 6 5 503 35,993 24,294 19 524 493 311 31,067 22,008 20 1,203 1,005 141 13,674 10,879 8 664 565 867 85,287 .47,646 13 605 275 457 46,149 S2,«47 26 946 800 409 43,994 25,875 2 52 63 2,698 224,433 107,544 8 415 330 357 35,690 22,864 1 27 10 1,286 127,624 64,S67 3 207 110 1,328 132,738 57,600 8 625 329 1,180 117,941 67,210 S 642 339 492 49,189 34,874 s;- 1,804 1,609 339 33,750 20,307 20 20 1,880 167,980 72,025 1 100 40 697 68,749 41,680 IS 653 621 655 56,430 30,702 1 48 84 1,191 118,846 53,806 6 623 331 704 70,324 34,101 1 145 106 973 96,417 55,132 2 175 201 287 28,694 21,781 22 327 311 766 75,016 35,857 16 1,702 897 672 677 67,280 67,422 86,014 31,118 2 6 6 11 1,086 103,546 59,730 5 575 545 1.048 106,1*2 64,248 1 115 58 823 81,920 60,^ 2 161 201 State Total— Adair Adams Allamakee _. Appanoose . Audubon — _ Benton Black Hawk Boone Bremer Buchanan _. Buena Vista Butler Calhoun Carroll Cass Cedar Ccrro Gordo Cherokee __. Chickasaw _. Clarke Clay Clayton Clinton Crawford Dallas Davis Decatur Delaware Des Moines . Dickinson __. Dubuque Emmet Payette Ployd Franklin Premont Greene Grundy Guthrie Hamilton .. Hancocic Hardin Harrison Henry Howard Humboldt _. Ida Iowa Jackson Jasper AGRICULTURAL. STATISTICS 665 Potatoes Sweet Potatoes Oountiea Acres Bushels Value Acres Bushels Value Jefferson Johnson 317 1,108 879 576 1,427 603 1,503 363 121 2,041 550 464 424 ■962 510 2,425 731 131 432 1,059 1,597 904 486 657 1,135 844 9S8 1,845 702 169 716 3,473 1,144 1,610 244 1,292 453 435 188 476 279 672 187 654 1,114 1,178 1,108 798 710 81,477 110,477 87,639 57,290 161,857 60,709 149,752 35,663 12,293 202,983 54,856 45,394 86,866 96,919 51,361 242,362 72,613 13,126 43,034 105,700 159,585 90,760 48,209 55,334 113,404 84,492 93,292 185,434 70,063 17,398 71,461 348,149 114,383 180,803 24,708 130,109 45,251 42,868 18,705 47,697 28,237 66,119 17,649 65.760 111,681 117,587 111,006 79,692 70,898 21,576 60,872 46,683 38,225 70,165 40,808 88,165 22,869 7,968 83,621 33,955 29,536 21,704 52,595 32,067 88,062 45,177 8,663 29,710 52,418 75,527 35,343 34,905 30,851 69,909 48,602 58,960 103,633 40, .W 12,021 39,326 140,457 55,282 74,357 15,892 68,661 35,013 28,452 13,929 30,413 19,378 37,265 13,135 34,021 43,010 ,'!b,723 66,112 32,537 38,729 2 22 1 4 8 286 24 80 7 4 4 4 6 3 9 4 13 2 6 607 1 6 15 8 154 2,011 51 263 770 28.701 2,099 6,488 2S5 270 168 380 694 78 882 436 1,470 133 379 62,187 47 485 1,446 250 17 20 3,865 2,227 439 176 1,003 100 1.279 600 4 15 355 81 562 740 55 398 178 181 60 900 409 163 1,618 63 Keokuk 261 850 Lee - - 18,754 1,854 2.822 Lucas 313 160 252 Mahaska — .412 639 95 Mills Mitphpll 885 155 1,368 Monroe 130 Montgomery Muscatine 461 .34,209 40 285 Page ■- Palo Alto Plymouth Pocahontas ^ Polt 1,491 133 11 1 63 24 4 4 31 1 14 6 SO 3,372 Pottawattamie Poweshiek 1,645 824 247 Sac - Scott 639 80 Shelby 689 Bioux 300 8 21 Taylor , 6 1 5 17 1 3 6 2 2 9 4 524 90 Van Buren Wapello Warren Washington Wayne Webster 528 637 90 429 232 86 37 Winneshiek Woodbury Worth Wright . 682 265 - 666 CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 TABLE NO. 34— FRUITS. Value of Apples, Peaches, Plums, Cherries and Small Fruits, grown in 1914, by Counties. Tree Fruits Small Fruits Counties ii t 1, 1^ 111 ' 1 » -1 n 1^ State Totals ms.m tS08,906 V.m,m ^0fi,S87 5 a,w $l!76.rOS musn % It,OSS Adair Adams 2,870 8,03 2,727 2,288 S,17Q 1,387 794 1,531 1,473 1,482 1,152 1,06» 4,632 1,310 1,665 2,746 1.018 1,800 2,861 1,404 600 1.003 2,648 5,542 12,990 586 8,630 4,041 , 1.337 2,080 2,314 185 807 36,010 470 2,029 1,987 283 1,870 1,879 15,815 5,000 1,092 1,000 665 5,S24 1,48S 1,914 6,732 3,952 7 16,270 92 489 39 296 49 20 15 20 15 14 1,076 4,397 .- 5,884 35 2 1.424 21 6.760 11.268 10.267 41 6.662 12 19 1 28 18 e 5,416 35 93 1,017 60 27 120 213 9,663 11 41 2,817 364 S,543 1,881 827 66 1,876 1,146 1,271 1,540 2,128 408 979 324 468 788 560 1,077 1,495 1,062 867 203 843 768 »13 960 564 1,350 1,298 565 396 727 648 412 364 529 205 845 2,878 872 712 628 803 628 773 1.862 1,220 143 1,817 637 891 227 2,43S 2,063 3,476 136 4.209 2.784 9.763 2,781 8,867 608 2,447 415 845 1,116 1.791 2,529 7,570 379 1.361 770 800 278 1.265 4.968 1,320 6,390 3,660 1,432 555 6,121 93 i.re9 107 49 2 716 240 26 62 2 30 729 65. 12 1 16 . 175 6 22 39 12 187 76 22 666 378 44 1,049 6 3.088 1,647 674 1,839 2,241 2,347 3,968 7,054 2,700 3,119 2,836 434 1,485 1,189 801 1,816 2,361 2,682 247 1.973 363 500 2.432 6.046 160 1,745 602 392 1,295 9,358 1,112 10,221 124 2,688 4,582 3,077 531 489 1,639 1,797 1,125 618 1,101 6,883 1,9U 3,021 474 Wi 7,106 67a 1,696 1,994 1,870 844 1,796 1,187 2.852 1.018 2.992 467 1.284 143 169 914 1.023 2.717 8.227 186 264 325 496 172 2.204 2.955 793 2.627 1,695 1.882 716 9.193 80 6,486 64 906 123 m> 1,468 1,086 1,291 1,348 1,278 SS 1,288 3,466 3,672 26 438 709 3,796 1,237 3,406 68 28 Allamakee Appanoose Audubon .. .. . Benton Black Hawk Boone _ 9 316 194 261 439 262 Bremer Buchanan Buena Vista Butler Calhoun Carroll . .. „ Cass Cedar 398 1.074 27 90 41 79 167 188 Cerro Gordo 10 3 Chickasaw Clarke . Clay . 23 4 92 Clinton 8 58 Dallas .... .. 41 Decatur . Delaware .... — __ Des Moines __ 14 66 180 Dubuque Emmet .-^ 847 18 Fayette Floyd Franklin Fremont 919 198 653 2,266 1,709 1,170 3,037 1,^6 ise 2,037 6.168 6.839 68 778 1.336 6,722 1.684 5.312 12 65 1.019 6 So 40 507 487 5 57 16 334 28 184 137 Grundy Guthrie — 61 23 Hamilton . .. Hancock Hardin Harrison Henry 58 38 101 699 lis 46 Humboldt Ida 16 15 71 Jackson Jasper . 3 184 AGRICULTURAL STATISTICS 667 Ciountiea Tree Fruits as ]>§ 3 > &4 o Small Fruits n Jefferson Johnson Jones Keokuk Kossuth Lee Linn Louisa Lucas Lyon Madison Mahaska Marion Marshall Mills Mitchell Monona Monroe Montgomery Muscatine O'Brien Osceola Page Palo AJto Plymouth Pocahontas Polk Pottawattamie Poweshiek Kinggold Sac Scott ... Shelby . Sioux .. Story ._ Tama Taylor Union Van Buren Wapello ... Warren Washington Wayne Webster Winnebago . Winneshiek . Woodbury . Worth Wright 11,242 16,429 445 2,790 6,811 21,775 1, 981 4,144 2,277 6,065 4,162 2,952 1,185 6,017 SSS 1,W2 4,720 2,002 2,397 3,023 1, 13,638 '2,813 1,354 2, 16,917 16,511 1,819 2,632 2,073 4,47] 4,641 2,283 927 5,091 6,893 2,610 12,022 11,798 3,962 7,168 4,942 2,299 3,140 2,134 660 168 8,300 2,643 282 13,187 20 10,265 607 2,167 8,183 96 13,110 14,661 16,262 1,119 710 2 12 1,219 3,171 9,295 92 3 20 3, 1,241 1,171 7,770 7,110 166 69 197 T07 9,691 6,266 17,074 8,156 10,981 8,602 11,901 10 11 10 19 785 1,276 l,i 1,750 1.1 1,116 266 676 111 917 2,483 1,816 1,773 133 68Q 1,620 807 146 356 1, 153 979 778 2,662 1,209 3,704 1,117 1, " 710 2,015 1,056 899 1,087 942 859 718 3,687 1,365 976 830 970 833 791 373 3,395 148 10 1,017 6,607 2,501 7,815 731 7,1 16,060 2,460 1,367 3,425 9,936 7,167 5,896 1,632 365 2,230 1,728 3,688 3,096 128 91 1,920 242 1,066 620 19,242 9,867 4,802 1,630 1,328 5,640 2,278 138 2,758 6,197 2, ' 2,685 7, 3,290 7,113 3,016 1, 109 197 7,717 16 673 131 8 210 7 20 ISO 104 81 23 1,139 27 179 1 10 305 816 493 10 5 1,077 67 6 8 121 52 1,150 121 77 1,176 3,737 1,326 1,097 808 18,273 22,671 1,085 613 21 1,173 8,135 2,128 6,861 16 3,494 171 603 1,655 2,266 185 25 2,691 180 12 16,672 9,692 1,672 144 1,071 7,921 1,127 23 2,889 8,575 1,177 911 933 16,671 116 1, 111 2,160 963 967 631 1,168 1,: 3,662 966 6,692 618 1,918 7,851 3,268 919 10 2,290 3,612 3,886 3,917 749 107 684 659 1,776 1,919 167 18 2,328 130 370 911 21,718 28,814 2,182 516 60 7,706 290 1,661 100 86 1,391 126 2,338 36 1,434 121 2,306 91 1,791 166 4,856 1,777 2,173 4,632 115 1,698 76 1,72{ 201 167 127 10 1,31C 8 U 60 668 CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 TABILE NO. 35— POULTRY, DAIRY, VEGETABLES. Number and Value of Fowls, Quantity and Value of Eggs, Value of Dairy Products and Vegetables, 1914. OouBties Fowls Number Value Eggs Fioduced Dozen Value Dairy Products Value Other Products Value Vege- tables Value The State.. Z8,115,eSS Adair Adams Allamakee Appanoose Audubon Benton Blaci Hawk Boone Bremer Buchanan Buena Vista Butler Oalhoun Carroll Oass Cedar Cerro Qordo Cherokee Chickasaw ^ Clarke Clay , Clayton Clinton Crawford „. Dallas Davis Decatur Delaware Des Moines Dickinson Dubuque Emmet - Fayette Floyd Franklin Fremont .„ Greene Grundy Guthrie Hamilton Hancock Hardin Harrison Henry Howard 293,611 221,704 302,349 21»,4S6 222,377 345,274 818,058 368,343 293,687 340,424 243,776 323,860 268,538 329,849 280,478 313,655 257,928 233,061 267,982 192,455 200,106 394,755 331,888 320,259 332,172 275,879 282,596 312,366 252,874 120,525 285,984 140,772 430,696 2n,810 803,297 185,501 294,711 277,175 291,432 325,143 256,06] 314,064 331,518 267,289 211.638 $ 1S,800,S6S no,»so,ssi 140,914 114,405 142,384 110,140 110,981 173,081 165,750 173,937 135,459 170,492 116,127 166,306 126,630 138,832 165,104 166,497 130,920 103,642 125,235 96,399 107,384 189,819 163,978 142,095' 162,549 143,732 143,645 151,828 123,632 65,868 143,337 76,442 212,823 193,124 138,929 91,851 145,323 181,486 142,142 154,523 117,243 150,004 167,342 129,670 100,688 1,170,456 1,257,499 985,149 967,111 1,425,768 1,406,447 1,288, 1,494,050 1,144,139 1,322,296 932,192 1,810,922 952,645 1,199,385 1,194,' ■ 1,836,864 1,081,277 968,702 1,140,653 885,227 959,410 1,729,069 1,345,160 1,306,200 1,481,611 1,237,: 1,262, 1,078,829 1,050,576 .484,448 1,081,574 647,880 1,952,724 1,305,461 1,129,439 1,102,944 1,155,239 1,172,286 1,196,348 1,207,860 1,134,570 1,841,106 2,302,316 1,082,101 $ m,5SS,tiO 197,540 197,343 157,273 169,746 190,812 822,145 289.242 262,887 197,147 159,910 226,700 170,082 193,917 200,565 235,181 240,644 164,803 184,561 145,826 163,999 298,426 240,603 202,632 236,300 207,622 225,169 204,840 180,440 83,284 194.578 91,790 339,893 220,090 190,247 113,723 181,183 217,813 164,608 207,030 207,812 240,339 354,382 194,303 166,773^ $ 48,779,869 313,618 188,760 651,967 310,249 463,529 460,506 658,928 889,925 863,923 447,781 268,814 496,214 244,371 324,946 360,698 345,688 606,778 253,328 542,831 156,810 304,879 824.949 644,428 413,385 284,991 277,328 219.577 688,186 271, 4S8 199,609 439,457 23^,422 892,146 859,591 848,775 201,841 214,8n 852,774 832,508 836,777 453,927 401,817 410,510 212,800 561,884 $ m,S6S 125 4,653 1, 1,150 1, 3,524 2,334 2,659 3,588 111 1, 797 1,; 7.925 2,090 1,786 598 841 508 1.081 6,191 1,733 1,670 683 1,946 1,708 671 51 1,417 4,244 638 5,270 6,265 972 960 204 184 1,129 619 706 476 2,940 <.,sos,m 3,197 1,408 5,714 11,628 8,287 6,108 23,156 7,493 4,910 15,383 2,109 4,999 2,470 6,117 3,063 2.708 17,979 1,948 3,440 1,645 2,669 14,633 8,225 1,909 8,266 9,831 2,243 7,524 18,415 6,004 33,612 1,062 8,964 6,217 4,628 4,883 1,152 6,769 2,828 1,619 9,958 27,028 7,763 2,623 AGRICULTURAL STATISTICS 669 Counties PowU . Eggs Produced Dairy Products Other Products Vege- tables Number Value Dozen Value Value Value Value 202,088 197,657 832,033 264,340 421,653 260,799 374,106 297,852 400,432 414,013 272,798 401,871 170,219 235,742 208,725 297,574 397,246 388,923 311,245 180,414 252,502 217,687 177,266 223,787 219,315 224,563 145,148 299,952 212,703 360,347 276,446 393,322 464,996 287,662 267,383 268,484 312,383 294,823 362,282 355,582 376,918 270,237 209,758 283,321 219,070 271,744 333', 037 244,748 319,318 219,434 338,148 308,178 187,920 262,564 104,589 97,368 154,352 133,460 215,895 130,898 177,536 168,666 180,191 196,773 128,097 199,168 85,805 108,351 97,120 166,869 189,676 180,617 142,777 81,797 120,441 101,896 85,204 114,607 114,094 110,518 71,962 143,686 101,354 161,748 138,979 219,803 219,083 135,868 133,460 130,182 166,931 140,499 187,660 179,004 194,439 138,012 100,780 144,613 109,147 141,799 162,es6 138,985 152,993 95,849 147,700 144,716 84,893 136,489 798,400 751,414 1,293,140 956,630 1,782,211 1,170,555 1,388,609 1,396,450 1,874,517 1,681,763 1,068,603 1,497.242 795,480 941,263 750,112 1,600,011 1,824,842 1,641,771 3,245,364 797,709 1,130,768 914,663 791,952 999,633 942,546 980,657 622,230 1,263,880 851,251 1,233,130 1,188,272 1,334,349 2,266,665 1,243,451 1,158,645 1,111,877 1,287,541 1,323,014 1,377,728 1,454,198 1,601,801 1,367,887 901,091 1,478,836 964,418 1,035,649 1,377,252 1,023,312 1,138,698 897,307 1,524,306 1,284,614 762,040 895,738 137,319 185,870 223.052 166,397 326,022 200,0^1 231,485 240,948 308,447 278,721 188,832 269,250 136,267 174,882 121,947 279,903 312,968 267,686 242,666 122,648 193,676 162,876 147,390 172,709 162,444 181,353 117,890 220,864 161,325 215,116 216,542 3Z5.650 380,396 210,530 191.818 194,999 276,079 214,037 219,865 237,926 324,146 219,427 162,928 264,083 171,348 174,258 224.814 169.660 192.866 160.503 262,706 216,076 130,231 145,360 260,903 238,764 271,999 873,193 404,069 813,168 282,692 619,214 338,203 631,101 241,840 583,461 247,028 198.475 267,355 279,615 492,963 287,123 382,781 252,449 414,984 334,787 217.684 301.266 294,608 368,049 717,742 347,945 392,179 391,927 334,931 682,740 677,360 366,816 228,972 324,602 772,256 379,007 643,624 368,272 456,054 271,338 202,422 365,491 424,403 287.417 245,123 a07.82O 868,216 382,494 1,020,897 481,077 420,608 818.315 391 268 966 678 2,360 1,122 1.176 1,770 2.026 347 BOS 2,917 857 4,880 1,449 1,949 2,098 1,616 1,188 327 1,442 455 819 2,331 862 473 22 1,799 668 270 288 2,043 497 537 360 230 923 2,234 268 48T 1,918 4,270 90 818 1,016 923 1,278 676 1,039 714 3,662 2,767 475 131 2,206 Ida . — Iowa Jackson 877 16,318 907 Jasper 4,900 1,075 11,641 Jones Keokuk — 6,890 6,681 5,493 Lee 48,409 Linn Louisa — 81.397 46.847 Lucas 3.127 Lyon 674 4,611 22,640 Marion 11.660 Marshall 14.199 Mills - Mitchell 2,020 24,463 2,916 8,241 Montgomery 8,701 Muscatine .. _ O'Brien 191,622 2.728 Osceola 954 Page 10,898 601 Plymouth Pocahontas 4,115 5,397 Polk Poweshiek 86,081 14,820 4,024 1,769 Sao .- 66,807 Scott 178,927 Shelby — 6,000 Sioux 1,109 Story -- -- 8,552 12,138 Taylor - Union 7,207 8,123 5,685 Wapello 12,676 4,132 Washington 5,006 Wayne u 4,487 Webster 6,930 Winnebago 2,396 Winneshiek 6,988 Woodbury Worth 24,488 835 Wright 1,167 670 CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 TABLE NO. 36— HORSES, MULES AND ASSES. Number and Value of Horses, Mules and Asses and other Farm Animals, by Counties. PART I. Oounties Colts Under One Year Number Value Horses One Tear and Under Two Number Value Horses Two Tears and Over Number Value The State .. Adair Adams Allamakee _. Appanoose . Audubon .„ Benton Black Hawk Boone Bremer Buchanan .. Buena Vista Butler Calhoun Carroll Cass Cedar Cerro Gordo Cherokee Chickasaw _ Clarke Clay Clayton Clinton Crawford Dallas Davis Deeatur Delaware .__ Des Moines . Dickinson __. Dubuque ._. Emmet Payette noyd PranMin .„ Fremont Greene Grundy Guthrie Hamilton .. Hancock Hardin Harrison _._ Henry Howard m.em %e,68i,im X82,581 1,998 1,557 1,440 1,515 1,444 2,165 1,517 1,781 1,299 1,666 1,WS 1,685 1,663 1,602 1,636 1,719 1,477 1,627 1,609 1,410 1,800 2,206 1,820 1,320 1,957 1,602 1,765 1,331 1,030 756 1,867 853 2,079 1,369 1,812 1,050 2,042 1,253 2,0U. 1,688 1,469 1,547 1,130 1,402 1,222 67,326 61,055 61,612 68,418 91,389 68,394 86,468 49,502 68,390 45,754 W,623 80,677 68,824 83,071 69,685 62,533 70,289 70,519 69,049 62,144 100,639 69,326 53,169 89,964 62,762 76,668 66,777 43,908 33,982 66,136 36,821 93,144 54,993 77,623 44,296 88,948 65,313 79,647 89,270 62,564 62,404 47,213 78,032 65,838 1,985 1,459 1,775 1,667 1,690 2,216 1,808 1,924 1,663 1,980 1,573 1,987 2,067 1,766 2,282 1,744 1,653 1,669 1,874 1,693 1,439 2,492 2,481 1,846 1,866 1,554 1,997 1,817 1,303 1,029 1,815 1,300 2,497 1,597 1,862 1,420 2,107 1,712 2,176 1,931 1,996 2,014 2,293 1,689 1,504 $i8,26i,028 l,060,m $209,88^,178 99,878 86,607 130,357 106,871 121,566 125,615 131,946 144,545 106,076 131,610 102,088 126,6a 174,392 117,267 168.826 102,455 101,073 112,096 132,961 102,075 98,188 182,426 143,462 123,604 132,943 87,325 137,965 134,763 85,413 74,071 185,393 99,180 182,839 100,434 127,641 95,647 149,787 127,516 126,049 160,297 127,010 138,299 191,879 94,897 111,293 11,366 8,218 8,268 7,910 9,662 15,628 10,802 12,216 9,372 10,935 10,838 10,868 11,767 11,447 11,184 12,524 11,099 11,060 9,415 6,975 10,303 12,302 13,663 12,947 12,493 8,323 8,716 9,941 8,519 6,634 9,121 6,182 12,734 9,549 11,766 8,242 12,135 9.783 12,652 12,821 10,611 10,061 11,566 8,434 7,710 995,781 763,464 844.813 772,621 980,423 1.605,600 1,267,780 1.410,439 967.833 1,138,666 1,049,230 1,052,768 1,469,365 1,149,462 1.175,871 1.260,722 1,119,023 1,216,713 1,040,632 661,641 1,182,262 1,311,110 1,201,830 1,318,675 1,404,231 899,412 1,060,947 807,647 591.264 1,013,103 660,456 1,398,467 983,097 1,232,840 763,989 1,423,679 1,060,76T 1,227,698 1,679,271 1,063,948 1,047.887 1,132,467 847.785 862,341 AGRICULTURAL STATISTICS 671 Counties Colts Under One Tear Horses One Under Tear and Two Horses Two Tears and Over Number Value Number Value Number Value TTiimhnlflt. 914 982 1,710 1,216 2,192 1,592 1,722 1,521 2.362 2,333 1,356 1,824 1,226 1,458 1,434 1,864 2,075 1,762 2,024 817 1,079 1,022 1,209 931 892 1,726 989 1,787 I.'iOO 2,012 1,310 1,111 1,899 1,920 1,958 1,683 805 1,707 1,946 1,894 2,248 2,308 1,606 1,562 1,170 2,031 1,7a 2,223 1,653 1,072 1,856 1,701 783 1,641 46,191 49,841 68,223 53,710 110,626 62,146 70.076 69,387 91,071 97,821 65.930 69,055 60,790 61,560 61.167 89,097 95,918 60,519 85,732 37,446 13.074 43,862 63,559 45.674 33,186 100,961 40,013 80,014 66,039 77,108 67,878 66,089 90,114 74,927 90,464 75,336 83,950 73,931 81,083 80,217 95,161 100,768 69,681 68,376 44,641 80,940 72,016 91,716 72,657 41,803 83,162 72,061 32,507 69,902 1,326 1,151 2,088 1,984 2,816 2,239 2,111 1,912 2,110 2,655 1,725 2,199 1,395 1,567 1,696 1,728 2,116 2,130 2,282 1,116 1,369 1,332 1,121 1,191 1,167 2,110 1,011 2.065 1,766 2,479 1,612 1,809 2,756 2.321 2,201 1,788 1,236 2,065 1,859 2,201 2,630 2,069 1,689 1,628 1,106 2,102 2,135 2.110 2,159 1,012 2,298 2,101 1,036 1,891 109,616 91,639 118,367 138,702 168,168 116,851 110,050 111,638 160,625 168,602 109,202 126,332 88,017 95,918 126,167 116,937 177,773 137,743 153,221 79,017 87,711 82,003 70,006 86,171 86,810 166,710 70,966 150,886 130,211 166,860 110,983 121,070 221,823 136,280 112,672 136.115 80,716 150,377 111,375 118,805 180,105 181,411 87,985 116,397 61,106 125,018 129,023 121,902 163,711 62,302 165,295 113,681 67,217 138,674 8,568 8,872 11,822 8,509 16,516 8,838 12,053 10,022 12,371 17,059 8,213 14.196 7,682 7,371 10,237 10,678 12,881 12,160 13,155 7,362 8,917 10,910 6,575 8,632 8,710 10,168 6,998 11,711 9,188 15,939 n,4C6 13,362 16,939 18,246 9,111 11,731 9,670 12,511 11,941 13,139 11,178 10,927 8,201 8,326 7,588 11,211 12.042 9,646 18,221 8,327 12,893 11,835 7,021 11,061 1,011,250 1.012,862 1.012,619 822,576 1,671,879 836,229 1.223,821 1,076,862 1,266,9S1 1,731,687 773,825 1,891,233 761,188 Ma Iowa Jackson Jasper Jefferson Johnson Jones Keokuk . Kossuth _.. Lee Linn Louisa 716,722 Lyon 1,121,279 1,117,833 Mahaska 1,113,171 Marion . Marshall 1,221,669 1,369,799 Mills . 727,969 Mitchell 859,336 Monona 1,087,971 666,323 Montgomery 913,328 867,725 O'Brien ._ _ 1,111.791 Osceola 750,213 Page 1,206,813 Palo Alto 1,007,957 Plymouth Pocahontas 1,660,233 1,221,187 Polk Pottawattamie Poweshiek 1,110,116 1,707,329 1,318,124 916,728 Scott -^ Shelby 1,428,691 971,150 1,361,968 1,515,291 1.518,877 1,580,889 Taylor Union 1,128,871 764,020 Van Buren . 822,016 Wapello Warren Washington Wayne Webster Winnebago — _ Winneshiek Woodbury Worth 712,821 1,069,174 1,191,886 901,614 1,436,430 826,676 1,212,068 1,586,354 697,205 Wright 1.266,105 672 CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 PART II. Table No. 36 Counties Mules and Asses Number Value Total Horses, Mules and Asses Number Value Other Farm Animals Number Value The State .. Adair Adams Allamakee „ Appanoose _ Audubon Benton Black Hawk Boone Bremer Buchanan Buena Vista Butler Calhoun Carroll Case Cedar Oerro Gordo Cherokee Chickasaw . Clarke Clay Clayton CMnton Orawlord Dallas Davis Decatur Delaware ___ Des Moines . Dickinson Dubuque Emmet Fayette Floyd ^ Franklin Fremont Greene Grundy Guthrie Hamilton Hancock Hardin Harrison Henry Howard Humboldt — Ida Iowa Jackson Jasper Jeflerson Johnson Jones Keokuk Kossuth 66,6S2 1,362 ;,201 113 945 378 631 116 441 407 80O 710 770 243 439 127 284 97 269 787 772 1,077 1E6 282 206 140 305 2,103 580 301 407 466 1,587 656 1,008 266 843 1,010 349 910 p,osr,62i 114,328 123,687 10,040 8S,426 45,620 70,608 26,966 89,155 11,306 43,463 39,965 31,427 101,272 71,27t) 151,549 so,8oe 23,981 SI, 946 12,463 34,617 9,325 22,949 89,804 122,680 75,461 94,994 29,747 44,913 25,093 14,440 33,212 23,150 12,167 34,704 236,571 71,720 36,172 66,644 65,893 87,118 48,901 170,966 61,354 14,160 36,955 70,866 94,831 24,399 86,712 88,678 106,916 38,162 103,376 60,304 i,m,sm 16,701 12,435 11,596 12,087 13.064 20,640 14,360 16,619 12,450 16,012 13,891 14,879 16,287 15,525 16,391 16,757 14,372 14,771 13,025 10,746 13,326 17,097 18,233 16,900 17,315 12,161 13,545 13,366 11,290 7,628 12,449 8,622 17,616 12,665 16,745 12,815 16,864 13,049 17,498 16,968 14,483 14,088 16,666 12,087 10,660 11,077 11,561 36,678 12,014 22,667 13,584 16,896 13,804 18,083 22,550 $/W,91J,«Z8 1,277,313 1,034,713 1,W6,822 1,033,236 1,214,647 1,893,107 1,494,085 1,730,597 1,133,720 1,382,129 1,237,027 1,278,369 1,815,606 1,406,823 1,569,317 1,513,665 1,306,610 1,451,044 1,256,476 885,133 1,377,109 1,603,500 1,437,067 1,685,152 1,749,818 1,068,074 1,209,039 1,281,224 961,886 724,410 1,229,072 829,669 1,697,600 1,150,671 1,472,808 1,140,503 1,734,134 1,279,758 1,499,088 1,894,731 1,290,628 1,297,431 1,542,525 1,082,068 1,»43,632 1,237,012 1,226,210 1,309,060 1,039,386 2,087,370 1,108,197 1,540,863 1,326,949 1,614,953 2,060,694 596 $ 10,0185 201 i" 248 186 300 241 "25 82 129 26 600 AGRICULTURAL STATISTICS 673 Counties Mules and Asses Lee Linn Louisa Lucas Lyon Madison Mahaska Maiion Marshall Mills Mitchell Monona Monroe Montgomery .. Muscatine O'Brien Osceola Page Palo Alto Plymouth Pocahontas Polk , Fottairattamie Poweshiek Ringgold Sac Scott Shelby Sioux .^ Story Tama Taylor Union Van Buren Wapello Warren Washington ... Wayne Webster Winnebago Winneshiek Woodbury Worth Wright .^. Number 768 £63 ISl 751 95 l.Ml 1,196 1,016 679 1,198 107 1,173 647 372 199 1,615 332 627 557 1,015 2,376 807 1,578 605 646 SOT- SIS 779 637 1,299 859 713 (SI 731 979 1,323 664 isr 124 447 Value Total Horses, Mules and Asses 76,181 55,212 47,873 72,290 9.913 11S,49S 134,136 107,761 79,607 128,753 10,611 169,921 78,680 146,203 64,792 44,305 16,332 170.190 40,064 62,814 64,107 99,389 863,723 85,726 151,820 71,951 66,846 87,463 48,860 104,641 62,679 128,367 76,446 69,084 69,716 64,968 116,724 124,864 74,671 14,971 10,833 160,022 12,641 61,249 Number 12.090 18,772 10,784 11,160 13,481 15,311 18,600 17,068 18,140 10,563 11,472 14,863 9,744 11,827 11,636 14,406 9,177 17,071 12,926 20,957 14,886 17,587 23,968 18,297 14,855 15,707 12,266 17,098 19,297 1B,313 19,902 16,587 12,167 12,227 10,488 16,108 16,907 16,301 17,697 10.668 17,153 19,900 8,967 16,040 Value Other Parm Animals Number Value 1.015,138 1,644.832 947,«8 946,620 1,318,816 1,442,386 1,821,028 1,536,582 1,678,862 973,234 1,000,732 1,363,760 867,668 1,190,379 1,042,613 1,453,770 877,644 1,607,933 1,233,294 1,937,016 1,454,406 1,686,663 2,285,969 1,645,337 1,800,684 1,712,426 1,144,991 1,673,737 1,789,650 1,846,240 1,918,834 1,487,405 978,182 1,076,873 878,286 1,330,096 1,612,596 1,240,085 1,736,472 948.761 1,601,153 1,902,071 809,600 1,611,130 800 200 180 25 180 1,290 740 422 460 2,720 65 180 ""io 43 674 CENSUS OP lOWlA, 1915 TABLE NO. 37— CATTLE. Number and Value of Cattle, According to Age Classes, by Counties. PART I. Countlea Oalves Under One Tear Number Value Steers One and Under Two Number Value Steers Two and Un- der Three Number Value Tbe State .... Adair Adams Allamakee Appanoose Audubon Benton Black Hawk . Boone Bremer Buchanan Buena Vista . Butler Calhoun Carroll Cass Cedar Oerro Gordo Cherokee Chickasaw ._ Olaike Clay Clayton Clinton Crawford Dallas Davis Decatur Delaware Des Moines — Diddnson Dubuque Kmmet .. Fayette . Floyd Franklin m,S77,e5i m,SS7 pe,oie,988 Fremont . Greene Grundy Guthrie Hamilton Hancock Hardin Harrison Henry Howard 16.T03 11,362 18,812 s,m i£,8eo 17,882 13,494 JB.0117 9,782 14,402 14,076 15,467 10,007 14,940 15,308 16,48S 14,711 14,038 14,026 8,819 13,871 18,118 17,722 20,801 12,871 8,484 9,969 14,422 6,699 7,981 13,646 8,616 20,362 12,660 15,419 7,278 12,454 13,202 15,196 11,982 13,878 13,564 11,991 8,197 13,897 331,620 236,652 234,505 184,010 298,474 300,296 199,699 212,692 U7,602 234,677 lS3,9es' 183,707 163,134 213,670 336,404 297,143 189,837 241,591 163,391 181,913 227,573 255,325 243,719 341,448 225,498 175,889 220,077 225,769 132,649 U7,345 837,434 114,080 300,629 .168,478 224,318 142,029 232,718 182,116 296,337 181,708 161,781 196,629 195,906 188,628 186,651 6,520 4,041 6,591 8,219 5,310 8,284 6)238 4,201 2,318 4,985 6,344 6,311 3,097 4,629 4,767 7,912 5,925 6,022 4,417 5,932 4,724 8,861 8,331 6,250 2,683 3,238 3,940 1,962 2,824 4,218 3,235 6,503 6,163 6,588 4,659 3,691 6,966 5,492 4,637 5,098 6,028 4,668 3,116 4,407 199,606 132,767 185,182 128,648 207,049 254,517 180,297 138,944 69,296 160,124 143,529 142,147 102,369 139,108 178,896 292,348 163,397 209,686 113,968 95,823 195,671 124,769 234,969 310,413 214,523 83,674 116,399 131,498 69,016 87,761 131,754 89,431 198,687 162,809 196,269 179,143 135,613 176,170 194,087 142,861 130,898 147,008 180,806 122,128 131.208 S29,S07 3,615 1,863 2,386 2,056 2,846 5,321 3,049 1,915 1,097 3,808 2,420 1,395 1,769 3,844 5,946 4,516 6,190 2,304 1,768 4,326 1,686 9,661 7,220 6,627 2,636 1,970 1,8M 1,791 1,620 2,676 1,887 3,779 4,347 4,893 4,389 2,822 2,6U 2,746 2,067 4,490 2,218 2,279 ^6,902,160 190,693 102,973 95,800 136,818 166,521 262,661 144,634 106,993 43,215 175,932 124.714 90,024 73,210 74,833 204,220 374,330 244,085 346,437 91,271 78,629 234,126 61,358 384,666 408,809 370,064 1^,186 96,487 96,364 96,982 72,412 149,600 88,644 169,910 179,289 224,429 174,084 120,806 240,002 181,017 126,268 116,076 99,862 248,120 160,461 96,768 AGRICULTURAL STATISTICS 676 Cauntles Calves Under One Tear Number Value Steers One and Under Two Number Value Steers Two and Un- der Three Number Value Humboldt Ma Iowa Jackson -. Jasper Jefferson Johnson Jones Eeolnik Kossuth Lee Linn Louisa Lucas Lyon Madison Mahaska Marlon .. Marshall . Mills — . Mitchell Monona Monroe Montgomery Muscatine ..- O'Brien Osceola Page Palo Alto — . Plymouth — Pocahontas Polk Pottawattamie Poweshiek BInggold Sac — Scott . Shelby Sioux - Story . Tama Taylor Union Van Buren Wapello — Warren Washington Wayne Webster Winnebago . Winneshiek . Woodbury . Worth Wright 10,809 12,227 15,762 18,199 17,243 8,28S 14,359 16,642 13,870 20,264 7,880 15,627 6,685 9,173 13,549 14,633 12,747 12,018 14,387 7,663 13,011 10,838 8,388 10,708 8,922 15,018 8,019 18,463 12,263 18,979 11,242 9,676 20,705 16,430 11,798 16,661 10,732 19,285 20,816 10,606 20,168 12,467 10,428 8,760 7,968 11,640 12,3n 12,166 12,664 11,725 19,881 14,947 10,896 11.740 1 170,483 238,671 241,330 274,008 313,670. 168,431 269,425 293,165 292,447 246,962 123,644 265,118 137,622 192,573 179,029 294,956 264,014 226,767 250,080 142,348 165,110 206,771 224,016 141,172 238,278 103,972 268,326 162,310 309,649 171,498 163,6i23 388,390 288,640 231,678 266,497 152,702 420,144 816,712 177,621 344,724 269,037 212,856 208,779 163,161 224,100 288,636 280,600 168,480 154,674 243,635 276,479 123,887 179,946 6,208 5,330 5,657 6,964 7,283 3,764 6,247 7,228 4,184 7,900 6,136 2,S18 2,718 6,981 4,356 4,099 6,689 3,343 6,338 3,779 2,446 6,426 8,175 4,770 2,472 6,396 3,736 6,619 4,404 4,391 9,163 6,884 4,185 5,344 3,249 6,478 6,176 4,624 9,377 4,057 2,970 2,645 1,969 4,139 4,667 3,299 4,179 3,676 6,793 6,033 4,279 4,769 161,340 212,780 172,982 240,483 272,408 132,976 187,124 241,522 171,520 218,761 71,882 202,262 111,989 98,773 109,461 221,687 171,676 139,817 209,341 117,443 137,748 130,878 94,360 244,784 101,734 161,409 69,414 243,319 109,426 215,476 142,172 121,721 347,732 226,484 141,239 194,666 87,419 248,186 164,666 142,000 346,225 156,820 116,687 106,449 70,866 148,800 202,282 129,146 116,791 173,310 224,353 100,993 147,971 3,160 6,887 3,908 5,859 6,439 2,012 3,^8 5,370 2,978 6,298 1,136 3,761 1,818 1,621 1,525 4,142 1,966 3,046 4,184 2,661 6,922 2,856 1,782 4,205 2,966 8,071 1,376 3,706 2,026 2,268 2,976 9,255 6,203 2,095 3,329 2,748 8,178 2,699 2.877 6,872 2,417 2,168 1,594 965 2,472 4,246 2,384 1,782 1,438 2,632 4,850 2,649 3,028 164,140 S4S.873 178,740 268.406 316,062 104,433 180,788 290.940 184,817 230,454 61,392 204,447 100,684 89.60S 63,798 239,212 115,908 164,617 243,955 146,637 264,037 133,917 151,221 146,764 64,191 219,663 83,654 223,386 107,440 148,491 672,059 361,664 108,446 172,748 116,730 182,033 118,485 153,493 409,617 140,606 113,644 90,861 49,164 133,245 273,154 124,646 77,603 69,096 109,288 273,732 103,400 164,764 676 CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 PART II. Table No. 37 Counties Steers Three and Over Nomter Value Bulls One and Over Number Value Heifers One and Under Two Number Value The State ... Adair Adams Allamakee ... Appanoose -. Audubon — Benton Black Hawk Boone Bremer Buchanan Buena Vista Butler Oalboun Carroll Cass Cedar Cerro Gordo Cherokee — Chickasaw .. Clarke Clay Clayton Clinton Crawford ... Dallas Davis Decatur Delaware Des Moines .. Dickinson ... Dubuque ... Emmet Fayette Floyd Franklin ... Fremont - -. Greene Grundy Guthrie Hamilton .. Hancock ... Hardin Harrison ... Henry Howard Humboldt .- Ida Iowa Jackson Jasper Jefferson ... Johnson — Jones Keokuk Kossuth ss.ssrt $2,S79,S8fl 340 239 142 622 29 922 406 212 263 667 365 329 98 272 135 562 679 461 289 199 356 238 969 190 240 122 267 170 518 288 114 MS 307 1B2 428 143 295 423 320 809 977 641 178 525 1,144 51S 23,488 20,968 6,329 37,920 2,520 57,232 25,099 12,566 12,182 35,439 18,362 17,226 7,630 23,869 8,763 41,826 41,268 36,645 14,941 13,996 25,716 10,625 51,110 23,929 11,756 23,632 15,108 7,040 19,685 48,110 4,850 21,990 7,963 30,502 20,024 7,150 18,545 19,406 12,150 8,645 14,468 38,380 11,176 14,309 24,785 46,653 74,388 41,615 11,028 31,128 70,581 SS,78S 27,668 697 977 432 1,002 1,098 1,133 838 1,096 1,074 1,081 1,184 772 1.045 976 1,131 1,012 942 1,167 877 1,517 1,449 1,861 4^ 499 1.177 390 496 1,134 608 1,429 1,141 1,085 417 760 991 838 i.eoe 1.028 793 411 907 710 788 1,024 947 1,008 767 1,639 M,701,W 49,660 36,396 60,173 19,345 69,724 B9,3S1 75,272 45,039 43,402 49,830 61,661 49,407 39,660 65,445 58,053 72,026 64,507 56,060 62,142 26,185 51,623 71,819 65,781 91,975 40,390 19,322 27,892 58,943 17,672 27,956 56,417 28,327 70,238 46,121 58,937 21,170 45,640 48,039 65,176 60,125 62,185 49,917 41,604 23,632 45,657 66,587 52,449 47,482 81,281 57,ffil6 66,740 41,978 73,018 .458,811 ?i0,986,972 6,660 3,^9 6,274 2,921 4,946 7,085 6,388 4,412 6,512 5,329 6.196 6.657 3,256 6,389 4,662 5,708 5.640 4,849 5,733 2,743 6,243 6,860 6,516 7,007 3,680 2,844 2,943 6,972 2,420 2,797 6,497 2,675 7,918 4,528 5,797 2,471 4,014 4,723 6,072 4,264 4,619 4,965 4,550 2,635 6,U5 3,778 4.423 6,346 5,568 6,407 2,963 4,796 6,968 4,299 7,719 168,845 126,494 200,268 89,265 173,778 187,193 180,702 124,498 126,425 143,240 121,484 130,288 93,068 138,689 157,089 174,863 128,846 136,169 123,367 86,662 144,995 177,006 151,901 212,823 118,081 85,278 98,087 164,420 66,320 74,089 152,636 64,140 211,170 92,602 147,042 70,459 132.101 117.383 163,440 117.575 103.324 123;18S 158.404 78.773 134,282 124,874 147,752 136.122 140.643 168,662 92.196 142,894 166,974 145,190 190,976 AGRICULTURAL, STATISTICS 677 Counties Steers Three, tnd Over Number Value Bulls One and Over Number Value Heilers One and Under Two Number Value Lee Linn _-. Louisa Lucas . Lyon .. Madison Mahaslca Marlon .. btarsball . Mills .... Mitchell Monona Monroe Montgomery Muscatine O'Brien .- Osceola — Page Palo Alto Plymouth Pocahontas Polk Pottawattamie Poweshiek Einggold Sac Scott Shelby Sioux Story Tama Taylor Union Van Buren Wapello — Warren Washington Wayne Webster Winnebago . Winneshiek Woodbury Worth Wright 790 178 62 581 155 630 406 483 610 1,282 92 102 867 S34 96 864 407 192 167 443 941 1,065 321 72 320 211 299 322 474 243 489 74 241 255 713 381 220 210 120 387 314 1,806 60,189 15,155 8,482 3,168 46,210 11,873 37,004 21,615 88,205 28,119 64,011 6,138 7,980 52,060 15,453 6,605 25,361 17,626 13,578 9,450 26,191 69,240 82,140 26,895 4,165 17,080 16,879 15,105 21,640 19,200 26,207 5,040 I3,esi 15,934 61,672 t6,508 14,925 4,260 9,899 8,772 19,523 16,801 449 518 1,010 687 686 692 964 478 906 644 S82 651 681 1,003 636 795 1,068 1,307 812 675 1,324 1,007 605 1,134 1,489 1,227 1,405 844 1,401 657 696 466 451 661 702 641 1,018 894 1,445 953 879 19,278 60,680 18,31S 27,705 50,576 40,953 86,693 81,231 61,615 27,815 45,872 31,211 18,697 39,890 66,923 84,271 62,916 40,295 77,873 87,679 27,665 75,985 68,730 33,167 78,327 65,505 88,318 76,212 44,637 87,636 38,472 80,681 23,582 21,186 80,408 41,677 30,251 47,708 41,882 70.936 57,223 38,661 47,979 2,815 5,683 1,712 2,589 4,799 4,071 3,989 3,487 4,893 2,729 6,191 3,492 2,626 3,629 3,011 5,787 3,188 4,033 4,497 7,865 8,621 3,887 7,783 6,194 3,727 6,8li 4,999 6,287 6,801 3,778 7,446 3,964 8,121 2,B11 3,719 3,718 8,718 4,437 4,149 7,390 5,484 4,324 4,295 72,741 163,384 64,103 82,661 119,3M 132,266 135,494 107,468 150,463 77,977 114,768 89,687 77,553 126,667 78.038 179,260 76,189 127,848 112,155 207,362 98,976 120,807 244,344 206,215 114,978 lffr,061 129,478 220,602 177,641 101,194 209,877 183,163 97,841 82,872 82,087 114,466 130,274 123,619 106,117 98,465 165,855 167,984 93,171 114,179 678 CENSUS OP IOWA, 1915 PART III. Table No. 37 Counties Milk Cows Two and Over Number Value Cows Not Milt Number Value Total Cattle Number Value The State Adair Adams Allamakee .- Appanoose -. Audubon Benton Black Hawk Boone Bremer Buchanan Buena Vista Butler Oalhonn Carroll Cass Cedar - Oerro Gordo Cherokee Chickasaw . Clarke Clay Clayton Clinton Orawlord .. Dallas Davis Decatur Delaware Des Moines -. Dickinson .. Dubuque ._- Emmet Payette Floyd Franklin Fremont Greene Grundy Guthrie Hamilton __. Hancock Hardin Harrison Henry Howard Humboldt .. . Ida .. Iowa Jackson Jasper Jefferson Johnson Jones Keokuk Kossuth 1,099,680 W,4ie,lS9 10,160 6,068 14,735 7,444 10,513 12,8S5 16,008 12,448 20,969 15,751 11,376 14,439 8,914 11,839 8,688 10,993 14,249 8,215 17,074 6,153 10,835 23,591 16,858 12,652 8,940 8,126 7,405 ao.OTS 6,827 6,325 17,170 7,231 24,668 11,397 14,791 6,631 8,511 11,875 10,914 10,964 12,593 11,623 10,236 6,521 14,462 9,644 6,249 9,782 15,118 10,948 6,433 7,966 16,807 9,279 20,318 417,327 284,168 604,686 334,637 640,972 624,355 647,248 653,657 850,313 626,924 453,973 650,972 445,749 517,223 451,698 500,067 695,000 387,931 731,941 496,619 1,036,675 606,007 605,283 458,808 348,096 329,501 862,786 270,886 268,725 769,675 312,144 1,108,744 425,629 673,436 265,619 431,744 471,779 612,256 504,130 491,220 610,726 601,233 274,996 ao,i6i 429,038 328,865 892,781 669,106 506,288 302.116 364,974 752,087 442,262 S13,ffl.0 S99,6S6 ^rr.ssv.m 7,335 5,787 2,009 6,007 2,641 1,486 1,927 3,989 3,867 2,216 6,346 6,559 7,736 3,084 6,889 1,958 2,923 3,914 2,840 4,263 7,092 3,965 2,181 3,775 1,767 1,984 2,121 3,074 1,757 2,203 2,633 3,164 3,081 4,569 8,071 5,566 2,400 2,457 3,562 3,836 2,987 1,880 1,917 6,995 8,579 4,125 7,083 1,983 10,124 2,694 5,972 3,198 $ 296,787 271,828 86,453 106,978 247,734 309,541 149,860 115,146 65,746 77,452 153,209 144,625 104,500 222,219 314,335 346,308 126,807 300,782 79,671 128,085 167,774 113,483 160,153 362,U3 186,630 97,166 167,432 75,594 78,338 96,076 113,342 74,133 98,279 96,608 126,933 124,094 222,353 130,305 249,673 101,577 89,806 142,883 169,038 141,266 80,131 284,448 352,379 180,440 306,200 90,395 442,836 116,669 282,854 129,632 i,m,9S6 50,209 33,607 49,805 27,010 45, 5U 61,416 49,012 39,644 42.513 47,843 44,297 48,664 29,764 45,235 44,929 56,473 49,716 47,616 46,965 25,398 45,353 59,673 66,292 65,848 41,414 27,479 30,039 49,391 22,186 24,431 47,970 26,099 67,250 42,939 51,746 27,093 36,325 44,662 46,226 38,002 42,639 42,060 40,991 26,228 42.742 35,649 40,719 50,767 66,057 56,033 26,201 47,418 66,749 41,364 66,819 m0.978,7Sl $ 1,667,916 1,210,136 1,463,396 1,037,016 1,686,772 1,956,146 1,602,711 1,308,435 1,308,081 1,493,618 1,250,920 1,308,296 1,019,230 1,384,946 1,703,363 2,098,901 1,642,637 1,716,281 1,380,682 877,485 1,643,086 1,860,465 1,898,195 2,366,293 1.648,289 963,366 1,073,407 1,619.482 738,80B 763,998 1,767,964 776,649 2,164,647 1,169,449 1,681,855 1,827,624 1,384,879 1,661,479 1,245,882 1,153,936 1,282,066 1,631,391 990,847 1,299,246 1,199,432 1,639,631 l,Sr3,4S6 1,784,960 1,974,76H 922,869 1,666,783 1,986,628 1,687,842 1,931.064 AGRICULTURAL STATISTICS 679 Counties Milk Cows Two and Over Cows Not Milk Total Cattle Number Value Number Value Number Value Lee -_ _ 8,521 17,029 4,974 6,441 10,867 8,203 10,301 8,901 10,844 4,725 11,658 8,803 7,209 6,239 7,859 11,707 7,336 8,636 12,200 13,414 9,614 10.613 13,954 10,061 8,425 9,362 14,846 9,416 16,888 10,609 12.766 8,845 6,833 7,128 7,329 9,125 8,070 8,545 12,416 12,841 21,129 11,303 12,694 10.516 354,776 711,029 235,668 286,607 462,562 391,745 522,326 421.994 665,430 221,030 476,005 409,836 323,236 336,838 314,136 533,451 328,614 427,918 488,226 614,149 408,788 538,939 684,519 481,161 3-74,178 464,438 809,138 626,124 772,579 461,862 586,937 416,650 300,300 337,385 342,842 385,076 393,231 396,635 524,894 604,508 792,601 577,312 473,848 448,324 1,814 3,983 2,539 3,280 4,373 6,178 3,264 3,622 4,626 8,696 3,089 2,873 1,304 4,483 S,404 4,522 3,364 5,815 1,566 8,645 ?,917 2,694 10,018 6,215 3,424 7,761 2,016 11,109 5,439 2,241 8,867 4,275 4,529 2,352 1,960 3,662 5,690 4,049 2,801 1,619 3,423 6,355 1,441 2,847 77,033 188,904 114,151 151.618 175,026 286,549 - 156,492 161,995 210,202 163,512 117,630 123,291 59,673 228,007 122,614 210,661 149,390 261,789 63,993 372,012 123,039 110,877 464,930 292,133 163,189 385,260 91,171 664,063 238,281 98,111 378,682 189,682 196,170 108,437 94,946 157,535 278,045 182,729 113,903 59,064 122,686 265,483 46,538 130,241 24,978 64,187 21,072 26,399 40,013 44,381 37,413 36,244 46,993 25.778 46,725 34,667 24,129 35,345 30,834 48,210 26,468 43,200 37,743 60,304 35,046 35,166 73,133 63,059 34,580 47,874 40,399 67,138 60,523 85,701 87,370 36,916 81,134 25,618 23,810 36,673 40,176 35,183 39,420 36,430 62,903 49,046 37,449 38,396 772,652 1,866,003 787,680 Lucas 932,924 1,162,914 Madison 1,652,528 Mahaska Marlon Marshall 1,404,476 1,270,773 1,702,691 MillB Mitchell Monona Monroe Montgomery Muscatine _, O'Brien 934,967 1,343,067 1,127,941 882,844 1,600,472 992,997 1,541,189 Osceola _ 822,646 Page Palo Alto . : 1,627,140 1,077,683 2,033,386 1,099,039 Polk Pottawattamie 1,247,114 2,847,208 1,997,067 1,193,765 Sac Scott _ - - 1,733,059 1,268,223 Shelby 2,265,353 1,878,681 Story Tama Taylor Union 1,200,460 2,398,404 1,368,632 1,094,886 Van Buren 982,355 Wapello - Warren 827,862 1,200,664 1,668,770 Wayne 1,296,233 l,171,i)21 Winnebaeo 1,021,262 Winneshiek Woodbury Worth Wright — 1,688,010 1,851,338 999,721 1,238,194 680 CENSUS OF lOWlA, 1915 TABLE NO. 38— SWINE. Number and Value of Swine, According to Age Classes, by Counties. Counties Swine Under 6 Months Swine 6 Months and Over Total Swine Number Value Number Value Number Value The State 2,(K6,91S P0,06B,S6O ^,656,568 Ue,S57,027 G.ess.m $ 57,019,987 Adair 25,846 20,807 14,lffir 16,230 16,017 19.790 21,783 16,388 17,824 29,643 17,393 19,178 11,962 14,796 23,657 36,801 17,015 20,628 21,907 18,877 15,894 23,898 17,816 27,599 23,127 17,987 25,510 24,185 18,260 9,282 12,301 10,120 27,044 17,4oa 16,999 15,725 16,814 ■ 12,896 30,375 13,461 15,933 17,491 30,426 19,912 20,194 12,865 12,107 22,122 11,926 29,629 105,194 86,163 ■n,&75 76,707 72,552 97,047 109,701 88,290 83,942 145,781 97,052 98,295 74,499 71,247 111,264 168,659 88,829 85,026 1U,327 77,820 93,277 160,050 116,682 137,672 111,317 74,187 126,077 123,499 82,464 51,397 76,573 61,273 144,607 84,657 82,974 83,064 88,089 73,189 142,013 65,922 107,815 104,646 171,710 87,343 111,204 62,768 68,907 106,016 73,812 1^,474 57,884 37,446 69,552 11,754 47.663 80,851 56,166 46,726 47,189 45,634 67,080 36,978 29,350 49,658 61,785 89,287 43,908 75,015 29,806 19,180 47,933 66,683 80,813 03,073 60,026 15,966 20,434 60,444 28,842 19,283 46.913 19.391 53.266 36.947 55.102 32.912 36,644 48,118 51,048 48,284 29,163 40,284 67,169 30.204 28,883 37,430 66,414 67,227 46,340 80,942 509,542 353,639 417,167 129,455 483,521 719,440 687.253 451,202 433,654 451,693 612,662 337,729 330,906 472,966 623.209 884.070 435,617 712,310 307.439 188,084 514,871 789,517 673,707 881,198 610,299 163,335 230.837 623,960 294,860 233.064 483,654 211,612 581,979 336,216 536,938 333,282 380,098 426,428 509,008 481,575 289,341 390.878 672,766 319,443 343,551 888.900 638.082 607.181 462,500 834.509 83.230 58.252 73.719 27,984 63.670 100.641 77.949 62.114 65,013 75,177 74,483 66.166 41.312 84,454 85,442 126,088 60,923 95,543 61,712 38,067 63,827 80,481 98,629 120.672 83,153 33,943 45,944 74,629 47,092 28,565 58,214 29,611 80,310 64,349 72,101 48,637 62,958 61,014 81,423 61,745 46,096 67,775 87,595 60,116 49,087 50,295 78,521 89,849 68,266 110,571 614,736 439,802 488, &[2 205,162 Audubon Benton Black Hawk Boone 556,073 816,487 686,954 539,492 517,596 597,374 Buena Vista - 609,714 Butler 436,024 Calhoun 405,405 644,212 Cass' Cedar 734,473 1,042,729 Cerro Gordo Cherokee . 624,446 787,835 Chickasaw 418,766 Clarke Clay . . Clayton _ Clinton 265,874 608.148 949.667 790,388 Crawford _ 1,018,870 Dallas Davis 721.616 237.622 Decatur Delaware Des Moines _ 366,914 647,449 377.324 Dickinson Dubuque 284,451 559,227 Enunet _ __ ...^ 272,885 I'ayette 726,686 Floyd ■prnnWin 420,873 619,910 Fremont 416,346 Greene Grundy .. Guthrie .. . Hamilton 468.187 498.617 651.021 547,487 Hancock 397,168 Hardin Harrison Henry Howard _. Humboldt 496,324 844,466 406,786 454.755 449.668 696.989 712.197 635,812 066,9S3 Ida Iowa Jackson Jasper AGRICULTURAL STATISTICS 681 Counties Swine Under 6 Months Number Value Swine 6 Months and Over Number Value Total Swine Number Value Jefferson Johnson Jones Eeoloik Kossuth 1/ee Linn JjOUisa Lucas Lyon Madison Mahaska Mailon Marshall Mills Mitchell Monona Monroe Montgomery _. Muscatine O'Brien Osceola Page Palo Alto Plymouth Pocahontas „. Polk Pottawattamie Poweshiek Einggold Sac Scott Shelby Sioux Story Tama Taylor - Union Van Buren — Wapello Warren Washington — Wayne Webster Winnebago Winneshiek Woodbury Worth Wright 24,444 8S,886 20,901 38,117 26,451 20,970 34,965 21,844 20,683 14,306 34,678 33,044 28,7S9 22,238 14,433 15,420 20,216 14,497 15,441 17,144 16,392 8,M7 24,177 15,983 26,922 12,949 19,513 30,824 23,731 24,713 18,320 10,261 19,876 18,951 21,6!i4 19,134 '22,477 19,937 22,137 18,733 26,656 35,968 22,616 15,408 11,023 24,397 29,778 9,813 15,267 119,727 145,002 114,836 158,592 126,035 80,766 156,627 101,381 95,342 80,066 197,908 144,379 128,377 113,819 83,678 80,014 99,548 68,295 69,311 88,272 96,374 51,490 123,448 86,016 131,754 63,600 95,481 151, (M8 105,873 126,466 98,974 103,182 129,827 101,271 112,408 83,945 97,160 84,936 107,045 162,882 96,692 85,429 60,140 128,980 155,367 52,166 72,138 24,013 61,010 69,441 64,895 63,043 15,038 57,386 31,568 16,108 42,224 48,964 57,013 46,570 66,230 "35,960 36,021 48,613 11,145 87,910 39,449 45,633 21,165 66,818 25,496 88,717 35,713 31,622 118,254 69,924 25,609 63,485 49,732 82,180 87,701 36,298 42,713 27,184 17,346 21,862 35,708 58,951 23,149 34,7^ 27,366 64,289 70,549 27,069 43,017 271,790 643,288 700,152 626,951 509,903 159,556 672,046 307,810 178,641 406,211 506,431 674,344 488,380 634,661 399,007 316,358 473,589 119,016 677,698 354,285 494,007 231,058 628,464 266,870 984,501 862,533 329,022 1,080,829 720,004 268,709 673,890 490,962 895,901 889,389 389,611 830,083 468,086 254,541 208,053 238,733 349,902 641,002 238,925 334,063 268,259 677,in 759,295 265,814 412,490 48,457 94,896 90,342 93,012 79,494 35,608 92,Sn 63,402 36,791 66,530 83,642 90,057 75,369 78,468 50,393 51,441 68,869 25,642 73,351 56,593 61,925 29,202 80,995 41,479 116,639 48,662 51,135 149,078 93,665 60,322 71,805 59.993 102,065 106,852 57,822 104,455 65,190 47,121 39,483 40,696 62,361 94,909 46,665 60,192 38,»?9 88,686 100,327 36,882 68,284 8ffl,B17 788,290 814,988 784,543 240,322 728,672 409,201 273,883 488,277 706,339 818,723 616,757 748,480 482,685 573,132 187,311 646,909 442,657 590,381 282,518 751,912 362,886 1,U6,3« 426,133 424,503 1,231,877 S25,877 395,175 666,149 543,474 994,876 992,571 519,468 931,3^ 580,494 338,486 305,203 456,947 834,517 419,512 806,151 914,662 317,980 484,628 682 CENSUS QF IOWA, 1915 TABLE NO. 39.— SHEEP, GOATS AND WOOL. Number and Value of Sheep and Goats and Value of "Wool, by Counties. PART I. Counties Sheep Lambs Under One Tear Number Value Ewes Number Value Bams and Wethers Number Value The State — Adair Adams Allamakee Appanoose - Audubon Benton Black Hawk Boone Bremer Buchanan Buena Vista Butler Calhoun Carroll Cass Cedar Cerro Gordo Cherokee Chickasaw _. Clarke Clay Clayton Clinton Crawford Dallas Davis Decatur Delaware Des Moines _. Dickinson Dubuque Emmet Payette Floyd Franklin Fremont . Greene Grundy Guthrie __. Hamilton Hancock . Hardin Harrison . Henry Howard .. m,9io $ 72S,1S9 S5S,6Si $1,SS7,SU 1,929 1.200 670 2,480 1,012 1,502 619 109 160 713 1,818 136 2,133 6,3QS 943 1,639 314 716 921 718 2,664 1,724 16,372 1,998 608 201 480 828 6,225 ?,807 736 644 S2C ?53 483 4,141 4,488 646 8,357 6,739 2,947 10,068 4,616 4,867 2,449 620 668 3,410 2,327 4,376 6,122 747 7,608 28,631 4,418 6,462 1,400 3,374 3,627 2,877 2,396 11,193 9,887 69,792 8,934 10,601 579 2,211 2,761 949 2,095 3,421 25.816 147 9,458 1,906 2,490 1,634 1,321 3,873 18,040 19,730 2,124 5,096 3,767 3,803 11,005 1,642 2,760 1,742 993 916 1,664 2,323 1,180 1,004 4,867 4,874 1,929 867 1,696 2,210 2,047 4,103 2,880 8,902 2,821 36,541 4,691 2,298 1.490 2,205 2,740 986 2,668 3,166 3,303 468 2,436 2,961 2,829 1,443 2,431 646 8,716 2,739 27,771 24,230 18,655 64,618 8,643 11,861 10,397 6,631 4,480 17,661 7,633 12,026 7,077 6,705 21,973 25,630 12,284 4,981 8,678 11,090 12,661 19,466 11,537 19,668 18,339 168,162 28,902 12,462 7,176 12,075 16,110 6.062 14.347 15,596 16,843 2,617 13.521 10,175 13,720 8,167 6,W6 16,086 3,482 42,282 14,517 S9,i60 281 469 358 736 317 871 266 223 113 80 209 364 605 3,115 140 1,669 216 174 215 119 1,710 1,595 238 136 in 134 194 211 667 3,886 148 ,407 734 250 290 166 224 85 1,637 194 $ iS6,S65 1,833 8,199 1,829 '3,695 1,357 3.331 ■1.230 1.431 541 2.189 4,020 620 1,432 2,194 3,016 14,787 718 7.256 1,094 1,024 3,364 947 78B 16,895 7,612 1,153 711 1.068 1.101 3,061 16,20e 795 1,986 2,952 1,696 1,176 1,1S3 2,837 622 8,655 1.33S AGRICULTURAL STATISTICS €83 Sheep Countiea Lambs Under One Tear Ewes Bams and Wethers Number Value Number Value Number Value Humboldt - 228 1,080 667 689 1,640 2,369 1,161 413 2,772 690 3,618 532 1,055 3,311 252 3,866 4,241 7,215 3,606 4.352 i85 1,289 3,865 438 386 383 594 1,895 574 282 538 1,126 3,051 1,094 1,043 789 128 1,822 1,701 218 474 2,025 1,143 9,634 3,803 4,087 1,050 2,503 138 190 784 1,360 371 738 1,111 6,470 3,086 2,350 8,661 9,166 s,6eo 2,083 11,781 3,821 11,763 2,690 3,489 13,843 1,026 19,757 26,062 28,956 15,614 13,114 2,021 4,837 16,450 2,090 1,339 2,052 2,785 9,265 2.662 1,384 2,773 4,311 10,826 6,170 6,822 8,990 477 12,787 B.WB 1,483 2,789 9,898 3,832 40,661 14,775 17,485 6,234 10,410 484 778 8,892 6,818 1,094 ' 4,293 855 293 2,478 2,316 3,867 6,728 4,302 2,123 3,932 3,110 15,298 4,752 1,328 8,266 1,729 6,649 8,387 6,675 4,479 1,202 2,299 138 6,021 783 1,138 1,840 1,483 2,873 1,088 1,939 799 1,987 2,684 3,800 4,906 2,668 813 5,047 1,192 721 8,447 6,818 2,142 •20,083 6,878 4,658 3,929 6,617 617 765 4,192 2,319 817 2,689 6,330 1,720 10,460 10,484 20,800 38,381 22,924 12,333 20,370 16,347 63,976 23,310 6,622 42,347 7,142 33,693 47,107 33,466 30,408 6,243 11,245 722 80,610 4,782 8,205 11,217 9,688 18,081 6,482 10,603 4,328 11,612 11,636 18,331 81,768 18,410 8,690 M.661 8,065 4,883 21,688 45,840 11,203 106,358 38,830 22,482 21,681 28,973 2,838 3,741 22.260 18.336 8.320 16,201 152 96 732 706 811 218 693 738 634 274 1,182 1,045 228 169 100 218 1,307 4,794 403 186 308 54 849 95 294 874 221 896 121 293 61 204 339 201 410 143 297 758 141 185 434 902 229 1,362 608 690 241 407 266 188 1,016 1,633 21 204 912 Ida Iowa Jackson - 432 8,630 2.991 Jasper ^— Jefferson . Johnson - Jones 2,006 1,813 4,131 8.983 Keokuk Kossuth Lee Linn — - Louisa - 2,363 1,886 8,870 5,992 897 Lucas 1,012 Lyon Madison 669 1,747 Mahaska 7,176 Marion Marshall 26,554 2,338 Mills _ 807 Mitchell Monona - 1,845 681 Monroe Montgomery Muscatine O'Brien - 1,781 490 1,406 1,793 Osceola Page Palo Alto Plymouth _. Pocahontas Polk Pottawattamie _.*— Poweshiek Ringgold „ 1,200 8,907 791 1,627 412 1,160 1,744 1,892 8,662 Sac ... .- Scott -., Shelby 942 1,299 4,31? Story Tama ' Taylor Union 927 2.206 6,729 1,808 7,026 Wapello Warren Washington Wayne Webster Winnebago WlnneahJek Woodbury Worth Wright 2,469 8,180 1,496 2.202 1,268 929 5,652 7,801 86 1,178 6S4 CENSUS OP IOWA, 1915 PART II. Tabic No. 39 Counties Slieep The State .. Adair Adams AUamakee -. Appanoose . Audubon — _ Benton Black Hawk Boone Bremer Buchanan __ Buena Vista Butler Oalhoun Carroll Cass Cedar Oerro Gordo Cherokee _— Chickasaw _ Clarke Clay Clayton Clinton Crawford .— Dallas Davis Decatur Delaware Des Moines . Dickinson Dubuaue — Emmet ... Fayette Floyd Franklin ... Fremont ... Greene Grundy Guthrie Hamilton .. Hancock Hardin Harrison ... Henry Howard ... Humboldt . Ida Iowa Jackson Jasper Total Number sre.m 7,305 5,426 4,831 14,220 2,971 5,142 2,516 1,325 1,188 4,340 3,172 3,207 1,504 7,510 13,497 3,012 4,065 2,126 3,165 B,m> 5,607 3,879 6,781 4,664 8,184 6,232 1,771. 2,936 3,382 1,381 3,349 4,650 12,414 664 5,649 4,430 3,723 2,053 1,395 3,138 4,872 14,740 3,478 1,233 1.469 3,877 3,711 5,808 Value Goats Number 37,966 33,168 23,331 68,371 14,616 20,060 14,076 7,582 6,699 23,160 13,880 17,022 13,631 8,646 32,597 17,420 18,689 11,172 15,488 16,484 26,687 14,880 31,646 28,992 243,849 45,448 24,216 8,466 15,172 19,756 8,099 17,643 22,078 58,860 3,559 24,964 16,032 17,906 10,977 9,030 21,796 22,044 70,567 17,977 7,353 8,622 17,176 15,826 31,356 9,887 402 431 162 10 61 2 40 21 322 9 65 143 295 17 368 1 22 21 1C2 2 60 87 136 146 16 146 11 28 14 47 43 20 430 12 19 19 S4 61 2 169 Value Wool Pounds Produced $ S1,79S 1,515 612 33 122 13 27 640 11 136 121 1,163 40 365 410 113 1,150 2 16 159 194 52 207 642 320 71 105 176 32 212 84 114 88 569 217 6 42 102 1,200 67 521 37,264 28,588 24,798 63,690 13,381 16,977 10,307 3,712 5,244 25,094 2,315 15,258 7,022 6,244 35,616 46,S99 9,288 3,263 13,254 12,842 13,579 34,930 6,680 7,093 23,960 361,193 41,848 15,431 12,990 14,098 22,735 1,622 12,261 19,009 18,297 2,500 11,868 11,271 18,397 12,209 6,526 16,889 10,647 87,639 22,561 12,238 2,257 17,551 13,164 22,690 AGRICULTURAL STATISTICS 685 ■Sheep Goats W Oountlea Total DOl Number Value Number Value Pounds Produced Value Jeflerson 9,315 8,158 3,274 7,238 4,07i 20,093 8,329 2,611 11,746 2,081 9,731 18,935 18,684 8,488 5,740 3,100 1,481 10.235 1,318 • 1,818 2,687 2,298 6,664 1,783 2,614 1,398 3,317 6,974 4,696 8,369 3,600 1,238 7,627 3,034 1,074 4,365 9,746 3,614 31,079 10,989 9,336 6,220 8,627 921 1,143 5,991 6,212 1,209 3,631 49,360 82,616 18,899 34,614 20,654 82,108 31,992 10,908 67,202 8,837 55,097 79,346 88,965 48,360 19,164 14,811 6,640 48,741 7,362 8,949 15,062 13,673 29,303 9,9^ 13,414 7,611 16,983 24,206 24,893 40,687 23,342 5,366 37,760 13,239 7,273 26.651 61,465 16,343 152,944 50,864 43,157 28,311 41,686 4,580 S,448 31,494 31,755 4,499 21,672 78 33 107 718 77 249 17 47 226 2 7 79 182 5 165 10 237 866 13 39 79 17 408 27 73 18 10 76 20 298 3 42 26 131 ISO 84 165 146 84 17 246 7 89 82 17 3 46 26 26 2S7 234 418 1,790 369 718 36 94 370 8 12 814 359 27 362 39 661 597 44 88 289 74 1,100 118 262 84 27 377 47 627 7 200 131 424 889 665 476 223 271 40 608 18 319 252 68 11 366 93 166 44,636 34,802 19,227 25,971 24,798 108,697 24,662 9,637 64,795 6,868 27,933 89,190 60.968 36,227 21,028 14,291 540 37,332 8,092 6,639 18,228 8,791 19,743 12,698 9,378 7,123 9,719 85.876 18,478 34,921 18,389 5,869 7,966 6,698 6,601 29.010 78,116 18,832 222,731 65,007 39,285 18,888 37,334 1,612 6,590 30,472 13,253 4,787 10,230 9,482 Johnson _ Jones Eeokuk .: Kossuth 6,967 4,476 6,185 6,095 Lee Linn - Louisa — Lucas Lyon 22,421 6,085 l,9Ge 13,546 978 6,019 18,660 Marlon - 10,627 Marshall 7,217 Mills 4,698 Mitchell _ Monona — 2,833 104 8,218 Montgomery Muscatine O'Brien Osceola - - — 1,642 1,207 3,216 2,168 4,052 Palo Alto Plymouth 2,269 2,801 1,311 Polk „ — Poweshiek 2,018 7.025 3,231 Binggold Sac Scott . - 7,261 8,661 1,178 Shelby 1,362 Sioux Story Tama 1,122 1,218 5.605 Taylor Union Van Buren Wapello 17,885 3,652 a.075 11,786 6,912 8,687 Wayne Webster Winneshiek Woodbury Worth 7,942 286 1,216 6,997 2,972 887 Wright 1,885 686 CENSUS OP IOWA, 1915 TABLE NO. 40— ASSESSMENT OP PROPERTY. Valuation of Various classes of property for Purposes of Tax- ation, 1846-1915. Tear 1 > 3 Railway, telegiapb. telephone, express 1- 1846. . $ 9|939,221 1817- 13,278,146 16,818,029 21,398,668 25,403,^4 34,635,108 47,336,990 75,032,071 117,7SS,B4B 146,627,888 168,577,183 164,643,0«8 153,591,481 141,936,718 12.270.929 1848. $ 2,071,504 2,664,977 2,940,783 3,666,967 4,744,679 7,110,470 9,326,168 12,494,406 16,804,973 $ 3,965,506 4,068,961 6,607,821 6.940,841 10,492,304 12,813,120 19,228,349 24,287,^7 34,785,597 45,439,664 26,662,553 .33,174,282 30,147,868 33,615,2Sr 14.449,920 1849 18.508.767 1850 1851. 22.623.334 28,461,550 issa. 38,127,376 1853... _ 49,540,304 185*... 72,327,204 185S._ _ 1856. _..:.. .. 1857. 106,895,390 164,394,413 210.044.533 1858... 214.626,730 18B9. 197,823,360 1800 193.385.530 1881 _ 177.451,006 1862. 176.000.000 1S63 1864. 186S 134,645,868 "167^^" -- 32,468,106 """67y57i^iie' 167,108,974 180,000.000 215.063.401 1866 220.000.000 1867. 189,550,825 222,661,061 222,561,061 273,836,460 273,836,460 278.688,019 278,686,019 294,318,868 284,318,868 302,277,661 302,277,661 803,881.493 303,381,408 303,870,906 303,870,805 336,328,081 S36,8eS,oe4 353,614,887 3i;3,614,88T 359,982,066 359,982,088 374,758,812 374,763,112 376,161,278 376.181,2{» 408,058,626 4O3,06s,628 413,970,688 413.970,688 414.228.421 411,558.621 391,618.881 383,250,888 29,823,516 29,679,601 33,506,861 34,735,366 88,257.690 85,871,89r 86,621,340 38.856,507 40,922,784 42,828,766 40,914,386 41,417,451 40,650,682 45.484,287 48,872,911 61,145,872 62,732,439 61.800,888 66,016,801 65,101,712 64,234,119 64,274,340 67,001,280 66,894,039 66,209,338 66,207,434 62,382,983 46,982,240 38,228,141 38,076,156 37,808,446 83,383,616 30,072,742 41,931,721 66,966,359 71,971,191 71,971,191 75,201,886 73,880,076 71,683,367 71,039,734 79,032,896 84,288,071 79,971,680 77,486,822 79,618,995 82,638,655 89,827,400 96,186,476 98,809,203 97,653,463 108,872,905 101,651,942 101,665,098 100,794,562 103,564,136 105,643,261 109,746,flal 112,882.W7 112,816,831 106,865,951 100,493,479 96,776,721 96,609,523 88,084,167 90,299,001 98,856,185 256.617,181 1868 1869. 260.000,000 294,532,262 1870. 294,682,252 1871 349.038,364 1875) , ,.. 187a. 18,369,661 18,865,626 21,724,081 22,076,896 22,662.939 22,420,703 21,724,666 22,663,652 23,798.867 26,117,895 26,274,171 28.972,846 30,532,069 31,966.385 31,270.681 39,303,415 11,130.232 11,249,229 13,666,482 46,171,559 16,697,902 16,660,011 45,723,766 45,186,767 46,288,240 16,828,420 15,537,432 46,764,915 17,616.686 366.076,206 369,124,212 1874 187S. . . 374,340,834 895.423,140 isre. 1877 .. 1878 ._ 101,261,378 404,670,044 401,488,149 1879. 405,664,045 1880- 409,819,020 1881. . 419.316,200 1882. 126.281,552 1883 464,105,133 1884... 464,608,636 1883. 488.963.127 489.640,460 600.960.699 1886 1887.„ 18881. 1889. 1890. . 1891 1892. 522,567,477 623,862,858 531.368,526 634,661,755 666,529.971 660.643,346 559,650.824 655,984.649 555.661.274 545.179.720 626.639.050 539.737.596 1894 1895. 1896- _ 1897- 1896- 1899- 190O... MISCELLANEOUS STATISTICS 687 Tear •a o a** 1 > -.1 §1 il aUway, telegiapb, elepbone, express i i O w uj s s « ~ tH 1901 106,S11,07S 43,340,933 104,030,797 48,890,746 658,462,618 1902. 410,189.788 41,908,103 109,1«8,678 53,481,980 672,840,391 1903. 466,697,810 43,848,016 112,043,999 69,296,777 637,987,886 WOi. 471,488,811 40,069,516 110,171,711 60,784,036 642,445,336 1905. 4fi6,97B,566 89,861,694 108,666,055 61,719,402 622,738,676 i9oe..... 458,491,406 42,339,017 114,097,762 66,142,191 634.687,379 1907....- 470,915,912 45,994,826 119,527,564 67,622,766 658,083,232 1908.. 477,668,768 43,765,942 124,423,141 68,267,419 666,926,216 190O-. _ 487.210,286 48,971,724 125,904,108 68,606,718 681.835.827 1910. _.-_ 620,281,489 46,764,138 134,485,20a 69,467,746 693,211,177 1911 551,023,096 48,295,568 134,452,986 71,843,617 757,336,279 1912. _ 653,666,329 46,748,586 96,786,880 72,872,256 718,673,202 1913.-.- -... 784,699,133 64,397,866 104,648,634 84,916,651 917,181,166 1914 741,040,145 60,675,896 112,126,407 85,836,495 932.476,812 1916 750,770,205 63,407,793 115,606,427 87,018,642 946,061,505 Note— Totals represent not only the items listed but others, and the live stock assessment is included in the personal property. 688 CENSUS OP IOWA, 1915 TABLE NO. 41— TAXES LEVIED. Annual Levies of Taxes for State and Principal Other Purposes 1846-1915. STATE LEVIES ONLY PEIOB TO 1870. 1846 1847 1848 1849 1850 18SI 1852 1853 1864 1855 1856 1857 $ 7,454.42 24.732.89 37.774.33 "'"""' _ _ __. 47.295.86 "_ '_ 66,558.33 Yestimatea) — 57,000.00 57,067.06 '(estimated) 65,000.00 109,191.48 196,243.06 196,243.02 1868 1859 1860 . 1881 1864 1866 1867 1868 420,089.06 1869 290, 364, 350, 334, 330, 430, 560, 641, 660, ,938.60 ,734.81 ,078.30 ,901.92 ,000.00 ,217.90 ,000.00 ,126.83 ,000.00 ,292.88 ,000.00 064.44 STATE AND PRINCIPAL OTHER LEVIES, 1870 TO DATE. State 1870 .. 1871 .. 1872 1873 - 187* -. 1875 - 1876 - 1877 „ 1878 .. 1879 .. 1881 1882 1883 1884 1885 1886 1887 1888 1892 1893 1805 ... 1896 ... 1887 -. 1898 ,.. 1899 ... 1900 ... 1901 ... 1902 1903 ... 1904 ._ 1906 ... 1906 ... 1907 ... 1908 ... 1909 1910 1911 ... 1912 1913 1914 1916 611,207 967,252 909,464 733,046 745,021 793,739 805,890 804,980 803,653 795,547 831,882 841,196 ,075,822 146,682 ,148,396 201,791 ,202,519 ,237,646 248,100 299,939 ,297,872 ,060,772 061,102 ,124,791 383,226 384,704 ,490,923 535,033 ,738,175 624,817 404,828 608,467 ,007,326 917,162 919.633 992,932 904,174 240,878 334,409 317,061 287,633 602,446 610,911 274,698 770,868 100,000 County ! 1,341,862 1,448,984 1,460,734 1,414,865 1,568,063 1,800,421 1,859,129 1,766,388 1,812,605 1,866,815 1,889,511 2,230,463 2,254,667 4,476,867 4,721,223 6,018,993 5,076,877 4,967,043 6,041,491 6,036,636 5,107,000 6,110,429 5,326,370 6,646,483 6,538,886 6,666,366 6,365,840 5,137,030 6,151,655 6,117,183 6,461,284 5,669,983 6,026,647 2,661,382 2.644.036 2.763,496 2,776,693 2,917,111 2,094,181 3,349,190 3,478,619 3,721,092 3,475,789 3,822,618 4,022,271 4,873,896 School Highways $ 3,711,471 4,396,829 4,356,646 4,397,137 4,387,646 4,661,999 4,729,352 4,469,794 4,198,014 3,837,223 4,171,668 4,640,078 6,091,818 6,655,179 5,904,088 6,092,499 6,013,981 5,953,210 5.931,682 6,966,487 6,021,758 6,422,930 6,722,027 7,427,860 7,401.175 7.628.603 7.551,249 7,289,340 7,399,878 7,817,583 8,153,276 8,670,430 8,976.412 9.686,716 9.962,063 10.156.169 10,052,970 10,610,649 10,987,027 11,733,915 12,295,355 13,081,276 13,978,718 15,976,244 17,272,483 18,704.812 Bridge $ 268,137 348,092 360,700 414,610 468,483 443,449 438,206 632,732 543,676 394,332 447,047 486,454 477,389 ? 618,884 695,791 705,446 672,300 680,266 839,668 962.948 946.788 866,338 764,747 828,442 970,238 1,089,294 $ 2,824,438 2,298,805 2,291,839 2,325.263 2,466,161 2,465,947 2,505,868 2,742,386 3,388,929 3,471,038 4,418,967 6,209,852 6,986,178 1,628,720 1,947,423 1.923,431 1,967,546 2,178,028 2,180.381 2.56S.19S 2.766,669 3,060,819 2,932,959 8,750,166 8,861,298 4,114,964 Municipal 209,589 262,360 340,359 401,446 360,524 661,780 642,310 728,920 1,260,933 620,916 642,644 741,603 912,643 985,364 1,517,923 1,680,694 1,627,428 1,434,908 1,848,586 2,293,740 2,405,166 2,613,391 2,666,192 2,697,015 2,871,423 a,m,722 2,908.108 2,878,466 3,127,782 3,004,289 2,476,002 3,265,382 8,819,785 3,858,753 4,021,626 4,238,292 4,522,334 4,098,682 6,176,980 5,274,419 6.376.152 6,068,447 6,997,638 6,477,654 7,209,074 7,537.161 Total $ 8,761,703 11,267,662 10,711,925 9,360,461 9,647,408 10,288,721 10,699,762 10,661,694 10.763.602 10.146,041 10,467,982 11,183,576 12,201,493 13,261,251 13,978,912 14,430,647 14,953,060 14,278,817 14,732,286 15,483,328 16,663,974 16,043,081 16,889,671 18,297,497 18,497,483 18,786,907 18,684,429 18,353,994 18,692,480 18,891,742 19,726,789 20,600,044 22.642.280 25,657,913 25,093,643 26,061,977 26,333,163 27,886,794 29,248,378 31,281,231 32,500,045 36,197,221 37,148,109 46,022,009 47,072,369 60,676,083 Note— Prior to 1873 the State did not secure information regarding taxes other than for state purposes. This whole table Is of taxes reported as levied, and in the later years the total is for the taxes levied after the same are spread upon the tax books for collection. MISCELLANEOUS STATISTICS 689 TABLE NO. 42— ASSESSMENT AND TAXATION. Assessed Taxable Value, as Adjusted, of Property and Taxes Levied, by Counties, 1905 and 1915. Assessment Taxation 03 'O ■a Counties >i p.. > 1 sal •3^ O f- Wirt .2 1" e3r-i CS O H &H Total Adair Adams Allamakee - Appanoose Audubon .. Benton Black Hawk. Boone Bremer Buchanan __. Buena Vista- Butler Oalhoun Carroll Cass Cedar Oerro Gordo. Cherokee Chickasaw __. Clarke Clay Clayton - Clinton ... Crawford Dallas ... Davis Decatur Delaware ..- Des Moines Dickinson _. Dubuque . Emmet .. Fayette . Floyd -. Franklin . Fremont - Greene ... Grundy .- Guthrie — Hamilton Hancock Hardin Harrison - Henry Howard 41 4,470,968 3,909,366 3,905,928 4,747,493 4,021,267 9,211,363 10,326,908 6,901,003 4,768,409 5,692,441 5,762,973 5,939,1B0 5,863,868 6,716,779 5,931,975 7,408,953 6,619,980 6,526,068 4,461,200 3,552,996 4,661,969 6,694,008 10,626,540 7,224,415 7,277,324 3,886,900 4,226,239 5,639,244 7,471,212 2,8^,218 12,913,389 3,238,844 6,801,762 5,067,867 5,316,208 5,080,187 5,645,337 6,413,296 6,396,658 5,905,792 4,161,270 6,867,252 6,569,006 5,300,706 4,064,799 ,738,675 piS.Oet.SOS 1 6,807,239 6,549,595 6,410,810 6,781,115 6,767,906 11,944,835 16,838,485 10,248,389 7,337,212 7,961,573 9,689,069 9,446,826 9,522,199 ■ 9,729,221 9,209,200 10,196,965 11,191,067 9,262,463 6,697,277 4,696,024 8,233,904 9,467,726 14,892,666 12,680,482 10,218.490 5,206,010 5,882,610 8,301, 1» 10,480,342 4,884,487 ^5, 861,750 16,859,188 6,288,231 11,141,772 8,054,745 8,999,686 6,728,8^ 8,833,095 8,666,888 8,268,879 9,286,373 6,890,027 10,041,079 9,766,718 7,235,693 6,739.176 2,209,210 1,565,322 1,705,679 2,006,445 2,362,086 4,971,844 6,462,212 2,874,091 3,497,780 3,287,100 1,604,356 1,311,922 2,894,310 4,918,687 2,523,518 1,511,966 1,996,943 1,669,934 1,244,528 4,764,954 5,529,900 1,669,328 2,906,393 2,010,062 1,788,186 2,538,900 4,109,846 688,773 1,222,524 837,920 3,481,909 2,471,899 1,756,311 1,705,464 2,128,715 2,363,200 2,490,013 2,207,296 788,715 4,432,605 2,268,904 4,369,746 1,576,064 ',061,977.03 173,260.19 146,322.09 143,152.11 235,334.79 147,263.16 313,078.11 464,694.87 297,434.79 169,203.42 212,980.83 191,178.27 213,048.17 264,609.28 237,049.86 235,813.83 233,228.02 330,208.00 203,316.56 162,331.96 137,463.93 184,677.56 226,486.92 488,381.36 252,346.26 302,165.74 139,969.61 161,242.64 187,271.14 417,360.89 120,942.54 669,106.13 143,844.39 -256,769.76 196,237.04 195,007.52 202,122.12 213,005.61 176,887.02 216,632.94 217,742.00 174,569.12 246,176.60 273,783.46 200,648.77 141,170.60 I,676,0S».|8S 326,044.89 261,060.61 331,491.61 437,844.41 279,283.45 601,972.03 1,102,331.65 563,681.93 320,742.58 410,191.37 452,174.70 346,618.62 461,661.86 462,476.90 432,814.17 423,500.63 806,861.06 394,848.78 306,836.92 232,031.28 403,734.04 470,167.21 909,382.42 546,501.95 534,901.12 247,660.86 331,002.46 381,403.62 809,263.86 326,471.64 748,319.02 286,286.68 667,712.19 445,324.86 622,046.95 359,234.84 409,616.75 361,896.10 376,668.17 447,313.48 331,679.48 611,210.77 731,628.98 363,398.37 239,078.70 690 CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 Table No. 42 Counties aS Taxation oatH Humboldt Ida Iowa Jackson .1 Jasper Jefferson Johnson Jones Keokuk Kossuth I/ee Linn Louisa Lucas — Lyon Madison Mahaska Marion Marshall Mills Mitchell Monona Monroe Montgomery .. Muscatine O'Brien Osceola Page Palo Alto Plymouth Pocahontas ... Polk Pottawattamie Poweshiek Ringgold Sac Scott Shelby Sioux Story Tama , _. Taylor Union Van Buren Wapello Warren Washington _. Wayne _. Webster Winnebago Winneshiek Woodbury Worth Wright 3,965,447 3,966,318 5,818,298 5,471,871 8,848,341 4,879,987 8,461,620 6,298,025 6,667,666 7,059,285 7,976,670 13,997,090 4,280,435 3,687,181 4,835,724 4,898,638 7,033,988 6,033,858 8,301,103 6,058, B76 4,296,991 4,881,000 4,139,664 4,960r070 7.466,052 6,305,212 3,052,189 6,852,076 4,144,^1 7,412,220 5,028,986 22,807,760 14,193,983 6,770,139 3,939,170 5,884,625 15,726,411 5,271,431 7,493,647 7,469.548 8,497,664 4,815,648 4,202,682' 3,971,069 6,258,880 6.980.991 7,083,001 4,790,424 8,876,710 2.996.868 6.062.815 12.348.967 3,087,599 5,319,676 6,354,883 7,278,733 9.313.227 8.133,764 12,453.710 6.420.104 11.378,089 8,329,070 9,554.490 11,413,520 10,739.208 20,762,783 6,453,701 4,715,605 9,371,424 7,371,736 10,393.746 8.428,791 11.506.235 6,453,061 7,306,468 8,883,716 5,120,169 7,195,402 9,895,195 9,965,679 6,612,727 9,741,848 6,768,553 13,835,80S 8,840,157 39,274,849 18,371.371 10,093.228 5.8W,968 9.835.072 21.067,438 9.375,677 13,336,318 10,904,212 11,980,433 7,051,673 6,180,552 5,375,719 9.168,612 8.416.110 9,860,608 6,669,094 14,455,920 4,975,984 7,913,796 23,150,688 4,915,499 9,275,476 1,467,917 1,230,556 4,193,424 8.084,990 6.124,566 2,718,850 4,542,784 3,914,432 4,423,657 2,214,282 2,075,199 6,619,995 1,^06,161 1.320.656 919.979 2.425.346 3.919,696 3,948,872 4,145,329 2,169,125 3,619,822 887,662 1,176,798 2.763.917 3.977,810 1,607,694 349,794 4,340,232 1,042,162 1,661,650 1,127,763 8,468,780 3,496,696 5,232,065 1,399,566 1,706,213 10,112,376 2,302,658 2,286,865 4,391,834 901,764 1,746,023 2,580,281 3,529,126 4,912,929 2,327,901 2,370,136 1,285,040 3,169,066 4,117,856 1,652,829 1,727,065 140,754.61 147,773.44 204,843.24 206,024.02 315,352.88 183,424.15 313,934.35 212,962.16 222,607.66 281,635.20 449,631.72 718,958.89 148,295.96 155,357.17 202,628.99 189,661.99 357,681.08 248,109,60 332.923.98 192.695.81 169.199.53 199,672.69 228,173.80 214,309.97 332.740.54 203.816.97 126.372.01 279,044.87 161.270.11 240,095.23 189,500.80 1,576,877.91 667,393.16 247,024.19 156,733.74 206,342.78 738, 559. ST' 210,130.80 250,814.46 270,479.47 297,395.61 1S5,071.57 202,338.57 156,257.30 376,818.68 214,382.64 265,866.29 180,403.22 374,296.33 121,794.25 219,491.18 731,486.13 119,722.77 244,667.76 320,811.69 277,441.38 427,495.91 396,416.80 600,803.21 327,820.63 589,189.41 394,721.26 457,065.60 690,961.09 796,891.62 1,525,195.96 239,667.00 263,803.36 400,915.44 327,051.04 519,666.85 483,884.75 674,679.42 309,511.68 298,424.12 387.376.85 327.198.66 374.103.72 634.659.13 433,947.03 294.547.43 693,212.67 367.668. V2 512,360.92 376,368.30 3,099,559.18 1,138,369.53 4S0,6S6.61 273.066.10 411.857.47 1. 453.413. 67 373.164.63 470.047.02 696.920.77 629.993.61 353.365.28 ■ 339.676.28 280.642.65 , 694.915.93 374,805.23 4OT.101.26 327.288.31 810,514.47 287,171.45 390.467.98 l,8ee,S19.45 218,440.29 569,895.23 MISCELLANEOUS STATISTICS 691 O o o != i o» egMMrHri -Jweo^M ust^eg©© n■«c<)^-u3 t-ec4iacD &eeSS 8S23&S a!*^93 S3s3£iS ^nSSS o-§a I I ens 692 CENSUS OF lOWIA, 1915 ;S§S 3S5SS S!33!SS Sg3S3 SSSSK S'SSSS SSSSS >H ■« rH C Slg£ §s sSli o> -Si iQ -* CO •csi & e 'g«OiHiH lo^-cor^io lo-^MipCi iH'd^t-r-oO 5i-l.-lrH l>itl(M'^00 T-lin&Clfij rHd,HCQ*- is M< -^ I> CO lO ijl tH O lfl±— OOOICO ^ViftCOCQ ssBSS gasss fesgggj sssge B^gsfe sgssB MCOOOOA i-l CO -S* ub CO (MOoeor-rH i-H CO «3 in -tji 04 c I>OMi-li-l Si^iS §iiii .-w...,^ gSSSS dS883 ss'sss SSSSSg SggSS gSg^S: SSSiSS ggSSg ^gfegS 8SSBSi Sisgfc S)rHl>lhe? d4t3<»00^ mCOlAi-JS IM A O A OD iH iH i-i iH -^*lOO SS3S8 isfesa igfces ssEHggg es 5g ssggss sassg ©iQONJP OsWrHf^C* ?S'd^"3'* £3<3S'5f-ie sliii siiiss Isiga siSsi S'gSSS" SS83i 3SS?2g88 SSfeaSg" ssgii SfllBl flSSs§ la inQj ^e ■* t- » ea » rH So CO a Ln iH i-i CO CO so OS w i-i o op r-l iH tH iH i-l rH IH i-I i-H OS teSSPS 88feS3 g!38SS 85!538fe 8SSSS iSagSS 888gS§ iiiii rniii uiiii iiii^ iisii giiii iiiii gg|8g gggfegg S8SSS SgfeSSS SSSSSi i'SgfeS! ggsss" sfegfcs gasss g^gfeg ggS3:e sssESg gssss sssss S o 4A Pi 03 S ^S g^^- 5 rHM-* C arHtDC^- Sir — n §8 feasSs sssiss sssas ssass sajsas S8S3S?8 asssa sss e ilasa H t3 M p ? "^ 03 03 S o O g 3 03 &B m S3 a o p. a i eg ££5^3 SSSSS go3S'3S' aaa'3» «gB§5 'S-asia i;SS25« QOOOOeOeO MiflOSrHt- rHCOt-M gfegss ss«sgs8 ssaas fessss s^ssss se^ss seas 0-*i-J©M Cb'^iQt^S ©Sfi-^lHlrt SOoOCOjH asaiss ssiss iisSs sssS sg|g8 888|a igssi 3318 SasaS 38883 SnSfeg SgSSS SSS88 gfegfeS §S§3Sg ssiis iisi§ iiiii iiiii Miii iiiii mi ssssa sasss sssss ssssssis sssss Bsaas'g sgss" I I 9 § ^ a o Mb s a a g a .t3 o O O It DO oi ca.^ a o o o 0.5 PL|fl(frlP4B S3n B'K 03 U fj ^ JJ oa B'R.Sai' h t" "^ ' sj^ss sse^g g^llg u^^^ 694 CENSUS OF IOWA, 1916 g on ■< iH H ^ a> O) f) P^ j^ cS H fe s o Ti CO PI h-l o o fl ffl w O) ( ) +j 3 <) M PI P a> fM Tt T< p— ( o o o M o rr> 1-1 o ^ s (SO JSOO 1«}0J| SiaqoBS} epimojS pne sasnoq looqos sssnoq looqag ean«pn3}4y jnaomojaa 10 enosjea sieqaBe:^ aiBtne,! SJ3q3B3} BIBM BTOoqss papBjSDii siooqoB epsjg sm N ■^ oa <© »a ocs 3 3 1 i S 8 K « fe i S si 3 ff S i i i 8 K S iS 8 in ^ rt « « » a g g « {; « g § a gCs a a ss g s s" a fe" o3 1> ^ -* i; M t- -^ OS r- 1- o :*(3si^t-Od; CQlOt-tpkA'^Cpf*f>rH00(N-<*<0SrHe^S>{S -^"^ ®'-"ass a as aa s" s ss a a a" a" a is s a iHi-tHi-irHi-irHi-li-lp-li-tr-lr-ii-lHHrHr-ft-lrH siiiiEiiip.iiiiisiiiii o6ooa pOmoifiOiOO'-'frjM-^M 50 i-<«MHl »0 B tt ft ft S oj Oa MISCELLANEOUS STATISTICS 695 ID 02 § H H-s O ^1 5 cS g it 0) t>H H M 1— 1 «H Ph O ■^ FR > -4 o H CO H <^ FH fl ^ ,iij 1 (U IQ a Tin .Hi ■, s O ^ TS w ca 1-1 OS •c ft o ft ft r in la 00 1^ go 8SSgSE^88SS a :*"i> o lo eo aj Mrd 09 a O 0> 03 03 A Ob 696 CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 t^ U3 < 5? o eg s i-ifticocoW'^ifloBoOOJ S (6 o6 to e^ ES^ e^ c:^ ^ 55 S* « *Q * ■S IB "N* 00 lO ?|-H0&3l0®9c40l0 3S88SSg§ge ilSIE§i feSSSSSfeSSS N -^rH&s a 00 35 ici oa to iH rH iH rH rH OO Ifl 1>'^ 8888888888 ft tfl £- l> W CO Oi Oir^iatOeicqcosOr-ico rHi-HC0N"*t-O**r-l- M sajnjipnad -xa iB^oj, saajpiinq Btnoms sno iiBjqn ^naSnnnoo pnnj ,8I9qoBai spnnj Smpifng spnnj IB pads ^loddns 9?B}g iScSSSS lft*T® CO fc- ^ tH OO 55 CO afeS9S oj u5 lO O iH 'm 8SfeS8 ■*50 t-rH -tH 05 ^t-iJ» i-i CO ^ o CO oi iiim I I I I I SON ■* - ft rH LO 02 o o m M EH O I O o 00 O pq < E-i "3 -ipn9ax5r sjdiaaaH $ 38,412.70 48,264.00 121,834.43 63,378.02 1 sainj -ipnadxa sjaraasH $ 2,071.76 3,931.33 71.618.78 2.925.0S O g sani} -ipnadxa: $ 36,932.85 36,469.62 41,773.66 45,037.14 sjdiaoaH $ 38,412.70 37,881.06 47,382.82 50,445.19 1 03 a iH I-l i 1 698 CENSUS OP lOWiA, 1915 TABLE NO. 49— EXPENDITURES FOR STATE INSTITUTIONS. Total Expenditures for biennial periods, arranged by groups. HOSPITALS FOB THE INSANE. Tears Mt. Pleasant Olarinda Independence Cherokee Total 1906 1908 1910 $ 174,446.11 369,806.21 449,078.12 409,797.51 427,761.01 $ 168,629.44 389,616.68 368,251.93 396,210,46 429,133.16 $ 170,765.64 372,464.05 604,786.35 451,329.13 601,957.38 $ 164,682.16 293,368.86 432,482.88 358,368.15 489,897.42 $ 678,512.35 1,426,243.69 1,754,599.28 1912 .- 1,615,705.25 1914 1,798,748.97 HOSPITALS FOE INEBEIATES. THE TUBERCULOUS AND EPILEPTICS. Tears EnozTllle Mt. Pleasant Cherokee IndependeacE Oakdale Total 1906 1906 $ 117,177.22 105,203.62 84,886.90 88,696.22 139,227.00 $ 9,379.20 4,176.00 3,168.00 8,666.00 $ 4,024.80 $ 2,880.00 $ 107,968.91 163,116.18 132,406.20 114,779.83 $ 133,461.22 217.348.53 1910 241,121.03 1912 .. 1914 Woodward 126,625.71 224,768.42 380,632.64 PENAL A2«) CORRECTIONAL INSTITUTIONS. Tears ¥t. Madison Anamosa Eldora Mitchellville Total 1906 - - . — $ 144,898.84 237,881.19 268,416.25 288,169.22 383,975.93 $ 137,763.88 231,669.44 240,885.19 311,382.44 413,400.34 $ 79,007.65 167,524.86 161,919.74 201,947.73 185,702.01 $ 38,681.69 104,604.20 113,109.67 103,299.77 106,321.65 $ 400,261.91 741,669.69 784 380 85 1906 .. 1910 1912 1914 904,799.16 1,088,399.83 CHARITABLE INSTITUTIONS AND SCHOOLS. Tears Marshall- town Davenport Ootmcn Bluffs Vinton Glenwood Total 1906 1906 1910 1912 1914 $ 155,447.95 390,547.55 3.36,691.88 ■ 360,150.22 829,617.08 $ 88,002.25 167,628.99 164,920.63 190,790.56 208,682.36 $ 170,916.34 210,197.24 134,980.18 132,147.84 l»,a?2.80 $ 34,083.45 76,168.39 70,392.56 61,800.48 $ 224,916.13 636,064.05 465,102.98 472,836.16 608,110.27 $ 673,365.12 1,370,506.18 1,172,088.15 1.197,725.26 1.276,282.61 NOTE— The hospitals for inebriates at Cherokee and Independence in connection with the hospitals for the insane were discontinued after 1906. The finances of the department for inebriates at Mt. Pleasant are no longer kept separate. The school for the blind at Vinton was transferred. The institution at Oakdale for treatment of tuberculosis and the epileptic colony at Woodward are new ones. The 1906 period is one year only. MISCELLANEOUS STATISTICS 699 TABLE NO. 50— STATE INSTITUTION EXPENDITURES. Disbursements of Institutions Under State Board of Control, by Biennial Periods, classified. Periods Support ITunds Support Salaries Total Special Funds Total All Expendi- tures HOSPITAL FOE INSANE, MT. PLEASANT. 1906 1908 1910 1912 1914 109,942.38 199,334.35 209,691.61 230,074.78 260,192.84 57,160.00 106,607.49 112,876.04 127,609.08 134,779.08 151,102.77 306,841.84 322,667.65 357,682.86 384,971.92 13,312.34 63,963.37 126,510.47 52,114.65 42,789.09 174,445.11 369,805.21 449,078.12 409,797.51 427,761.01 HOSPITAL FOE INSANE, OLAEINDA. 1906 1908 1910 1912 1914 102,805.34 206,143.02 205,882.24 232,843.51 262,180.36 45,808.56 98,132.86 106,916.19 119,137.74 137,826.91 148,813.90 304,275.88 311,798.43 351,981.25 400,007.27 28,015.64 85,339.70 56,453.30 44,229.21 29,125.89 168,629.44 389,616.58 368,261.93 396,210.46 429,133.16 HOSPITAL FOE INSANE, INDEPENDENCE. 1906 $ 104,581.14 114,708.98 231,359.38 231,987.92 269,884.49 $ 61,8K.20 111,717.05 125,669.96 130,731.01 152,725.88 $ 166,441.43 326,426.03 357,029.33 362,718.93 412,560.37 $ 14,314.21 46,028.02 147,767.02 88,610.20 89,397.01 $ 170,765.64 1908 372,454.05 1910 504,786.35 1912 461,329.13 1914 601,957.38 HOSPITAL FOB INSANE, OHEEOKEE. 1906 1908 $ 82,912.13 161,944.93 186,844.85 202,792.88 235,923.47 $ 1910 1 1912 1 1914 : 1906 190S 1910 1912 1914 43,777.34 95,046.33 104,612.27 118,091.14 137,091.37 126,688.47 266,991.26 291,067.12 320,884.02 373,014.M 37,992.69 36,377.69 141,425.76 37,484.13 $ 164,682.16 293,368.85 432,482.88 368,368.15 439,897.42 HOSPITAL FOE INEBEIATES, KNOXVILLE. 1 15,737.98 $ 6,765.14 % 21,603.12 $ 95,674.10 % 117,177.22 48,519.26 29,866.06 78,375.31 28,828.31 105,203.62 47,900.43 31,041.18 78,941.61 5,896.29 84,836.90 45,647.91 84,679.20 80,227.17 7,969.05 88.696.22 59,182.93 43,683.01 102,765.W 88,461.06 139,227.00 HOSPITAL FOE INEBRIATES, MT. PLEASANT. 1906 1908 1910 1912 7,503.35 8,340.80 2,534.40 2,692.80 1,876.86 836.20 673.20 9,379.20 4,176.00 3,168.00 3,866.00 $ 9,879.20 4,176.00 3,168.00 3,366.00 700 CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 Table No. 50 Support runds Special Funds Total AU Periods Support Salaries Total Expendi- tures HOSPITAL FOE INEBRIATES , OHEEOKEE. $ 3,218.85 $ 805.95 $ -4,024.8 4,024.8 HOSPITAL FOE INEBEIATES. INDEPENDENCE. 1906 ,_. $ 2,304.00 $ 570.00 2,880.00 2,880. CO STATE COLONY FOE EPILEPTICS, WOODWARD. ? 126.626.71 $ 126,625.71 STATE SANATOEIDM FOE THE TREATMENT OP TUBEEOOLOSIS, OAKDALE. 1909 1910 1912 1914 9,870.87 :0,999.76 75,606.26 64,665.30 2,754.78 26,877.24 34,665.65 39,402.05 $ 12,626.15 97,877.00 110,271.91 104,067.35 95,343.76 65,239.13 22,134.29 10,712.48 107,968.91 153,116.13 132,406.20 114,779.S PENITENTIAET, FT. MADISON. 1909 - $ 66,682. S2 107,603.74 107,725.17 121,679.96 157,976.78 $ 60,910.01 97,373.98 95,317.17 99,427.64 128,743.13 $ 116,592.93 204,977.72 203,042.34 221,107.60 286,719.91 $ 28,805.91 32,903.47 65,373.91 67,061.72 97,266.02 $ 144,898.84 1908 1910 237,881.19 268,416.25 1912 . - 288,169.22 1914 - — - 388,975.93 STATE EEPOEMATOET, ANAMOSA. 1806 1908 1910 1912 1914 48,160.49 96,692.98 115,691.14 156,881.71 216,268.90 43,485.96 86,199.26 92,060.66 108,742.16 145,786.46 91,646.45 182,792.24 207,751.79 265,623.87 382,045.36 46,117.38 48,867.20 33,133.40 45,768.57 51,364.98 137,763.83 231,659.44 240,885.19 311,382.44 413,400.34 BOYS' IND0STEIAL SCHOOL, ELDOEA. 1906 1908 1910 1912 1914 41,822.82 99.370.79 90,786.15 f3.079.00 95,448.59 20,587.39 45,733.94 48,229.64 64,768.61 61,304.97 62,410.21 145,104.73 139.515.69 147,847.61 156,763.56 16,697.44 22,420.13 22,895.05 64,100.12 28.948.45 79,007.65 167,624.86 161,919.74 201,947.73 185,702.01 GIHLS' mDUSTEIAL SCHOOL, MITOHELLVILLE. 1906 1908 1910 1912 1914 22,945.55 61,630.95 56,448.67 68,748.92 81,799.64 11,344.62 26,324.53 25,929.99 28,626.42 31,887.76 34,290.17 86,965.48 82,378.66 8rr,375.84 93,687.40 4.291.42 17.648.72 80,731.01 15,924.43 11.634.15 88,681.59 104,604.20 118,109.67 103,299.77 105.321.55 STATE INSTITUTION EXPENDITURES 701 Periods Support Punds Support Salaries Total Special I'unds Total All Expendi- tures SOLDIERS' HOME, MAESHALLTOWN. 1906 1908 1910 1912 1914 107,826.87 209 ,'838. 66 230,567.45 224,34S.54 214,909.78 42,808.54 89,797.91 98,250.84 105,427.14 106,336.25 160,630.41 289,638.47 328,818.29 329,775.68 321,246.03 4,817.54 90,911.06 7,873.57 20,374.64 8,371.05 $ 166,447.95 390,547.65 836,691.86 360,160.22 32S,617.08 SOLDIERS' ORPHANS' HOME, DAVENPORT. 1906 1908 1910 1912 1914 44,947.88 89,800.00 98,005.21 119,367.64 98,232.20 25,283.82 60,594.63 53,183.47 62,435.57 67,243.64 70,231.70 140,394.63 151,188.68 181,803.21 165,475.74 17,W0.55 17,134.35 13,731.95 8,937.35 88,002.25 157,628.98 164,920.63 190,790.66 208,682.36 SCHOOL POK THE DEAP, COUNCIL BLUPPS. 1906 $ 34,105.37 59,858.06 60,447.19 65,851.66 64,624.19 $ 26,147.14 51,812.26 49,640.52 64,401.82 66,767.28 $ 60,252.51 111,665.32 109,987.71 120,263.48 121,381.47 $ 110,662.83 98,531.92 24,992.42 11,894.36 8,491.33 $ 170,915.34 1908 210,197.24 1910 134,980.13 1912 . _ - 132,147.84 1914 129,872.80 COLLEGE POR THE BLIND. VINTON. 1906 $ 18,662.42 41,464.65 40,873.82 19,187.36 $ 14,176.03 28,440.27 26,908.11 14,363.41 $ 32,838.45 69,904.92 67,775.93 33,500.77 $ 1,245.00 6,263.44 2,616.62 18,299.n $ 34,063.45 1903 — 76,168.36 1910 70,392.55 1911 51,800.48 INSTITUTION POE PEEBLE-MINDED CHILDREN. GLENWOOD. 1906 $ 107,173.44 230,416.20 242,744.90 264,387.64 282,460.92 $ 60,334.07 121,922.03 133,138.90 146,268.83 163,131.60 $ 167,607.61 362,338.23 375,883.80 410,666.47 445,692.62 $ 57,406.62 183,725.82 89,219.18 62,179.69 162,517.75 $ 224,916.13 1908 — - 536,064.05 1910 465.102.98 1912 - - 472,836.16 1914 608,110.27 Note— In all cases the 1906 period Is for ono year only. 702 CENSUS OF IOWA, 1916 TABLE NO. 51— POPULATION STATE INSTITUTIONS. Average daily Population for each biennial period, of each, insti- tution under Board of Control. Institutions 1891 1893 1896 1897 1899 1901 1908 1906 1908 Hospital for Insane— Mt. Pleasant Olarinda Independence Cherokee Hospital for Inebriates— EnozviUe — Mt. Pleasant Cherokee Independence State Penitentiary— Port Madison State Relormatory— Anamosa Boys' Industrial School— Eldora Girls' Industrial School— Mitchdlville Soldiers' Home— Marshalltown — Soldiers' Orphans' Home- Davenport _ School for Deaf — Council Bluffs— College for Blind— Vinton Institution for Peeble-Minded- Glenwood — Total i.SH 793 284 810 402 220 380 115 321 371 2«S 140 440 849 S75 878 964 417 277 39S 133 148 461 424 142 885 430 297 161 492 494 B67 478 166 612 479 340 164 i,9Si S.BIB 6,$S7 870 757 1,005 620 496 476 153 726 fi,576 943 907 1,030 973 1,002 J 574 925 477 481 466 164 591 447 265 187 S42 79 49 30 441 417 613 459 241 155 90S 45 24 28 496 383 499 206 725 481 247 157 e.w 7,681 988 965 1,046 761 175 57 21 20 472 218 794 479 247 160 1,016 7,W s.sie Institutions 1908 Hospital for Insane — Mt. Pleasant Clarinda Independence Cherokee Hospital for Inehilates— KnoxTille Mt. Pleasant State Sanatorium — Oakdale State Penitentiary- Port Madison State Reformatory— Anamosa Boys' Industrial School— Eldora Girls' Industrial School— MltcheUvIIle Soldiers' Home— Marshalltown Soldiers' Orphans' Home- Davenport School for Deaf — Council Bluffs College for Blind— Vinton Instit'n for Peeble-Minded— Glenwood Total., 588 679 643 472 129 13 443 341 440 646 298 130 79 668 ,SS9 1910 460 466 472 13 219 192 199 114 72 481 s.oer 1,048 1.034 1,116 825 129 23 27 443 354 440 219 8,m 576 676 493 304 109 5,757 456 469 476 121 ""vi 36 41 487 412 25 38S 196 156 226 129 66 647 1,032 1,062 1,162 876 121 17 76 487 437 196 819 630 238 145 1,152 8,725 648 671 122 70 664 ,811 4m 165 19 37 61 606 556 87 356 152 186 257 95 54 611 S.SU 1,051 1,126 1,167 165 19 606 693 366 162 778 686 217 124 1,266 9,^25 1914 673 576 174 47 640 395 536 S16 122 498 436 14 36 148 196 217 93 5,961 S,3i8 1,093 1,162 1,171 1,012 174 14 106 875 148 732 216 1,850 CHURCH STATISTICS 703 TABLE NO. 52— STATISTICS AS TO CHURCHES. Reported number of Congregations, Clmrclies, members and other facts by Denominations. Denominations The State . as OS o| O bo Adventist bodies- Advent Christian -— — Seventh Day Adventist— Church ol God In Christ Baptist bodies— Begular - Colored Brethren In Christ OathoUcB — Christian Union Christian (Christian Connection) Church ol Christ, Scientist Congregatlonalist ' DlsclDles of Christ. Christians - — Dunkers— Brethren Church (Progressive) Church ol the Brethren — - Evangelical bodies— Evangelical Association German Evangelical Synod Swedish Evangelical Free Church United Evangelical Friends Jews Latter-day Saints, Beorganized Lutheran Mennonite bodies— Amana Society — - - Mennonite -■ Methodist bodies- Methodist Episcopal Alrican Methodist Episcopal - German Methodist Episcopal Swedish Methodist Episcopal Methodist Episcopal Church, South Free Methodist Methodist Protestant Wesleyan Methodist Pentecostal Church ol the Nazarene Presbyterian bodies- Presbyterian Church In the U. S Relormed Presbyterian (Covenanted) — United Presbyterian Protestant Episcopal Eetormed bodies- Bohemian Belormcd Christian Relormed Relormed Church in America Relormed Church in the United States. Salvation Army Spiritualists Unitarians United Brethren In Christ [Jniversallsts Volunteers ot America. 4,^:18 n 89 11 307 16 3 469 i 11 65 233 291 13 65 60 10 35 m 16 71 432 7 11 1,053 17 17 12 4 48 21 10 17 4 34 65 29 20 6 7 114 9 1 ol to ■Si ms.Jin 2.401 1.210 41 206.701 615 1,321 35,638 60.720 1.312 2,773 6,236 8,084 828 2.951 6.629 1,604 10,216 107,623 1,676 2,168 1,586 1.699 892 329 1,554 2,636 47,050 721 9,049 7.23S 380 4.323 6,694 4,073 3.697 284 1.S44 10.366 1,134 72 m.'^es 265 2,423 216 31,262 665 93 36.112 363 900 26.849 46,876 1.425 2,969 6,966 2,869 874 3.267 4.443 218 4,869 27,841 2,196 150,660 847 1,625 904 295 2,039 1,788 459 759 41,817 664 8,620 2.864 2,885 6,809 3,149 43S 9.838 72 :i S,97S 58 3 301 14 2 468 4 11 21 229 290 10 26 49 10 35 51 11 57 410 7 9 1,016 19 17 12 4 46 21 10 10 1 7 111 9 231 28 NOTE— As to Chtirch ol Christ, Scientist, it was reported to be the policy ol the church not to report membership. 704 CENSUS OP IOWA, 1915 TABLE NO. 52— Continued— STATISTICS AS TO CHURCHES. ADDITIONAL FACTS. DenominatioDS The State Adventist bodies- Advent Ohristian — Seventh Day Adventist-- Church ol God in Christ Baotist bodies— Regular Colored Brethren in Christ Catholics . — - Christian Union — Ohristian (Ohristian Connection) Church ot Christ, Scientist Oongregationalist Disciples of Christ. Christians DuQkers — Brethren Church (Progressive) Church of the Brethren Evangelical bodies — Evangelical Association German Evangelical Synod-— — - Swedish Evangelical Free Church United Evangelical Friends _ Jews Latter-day Saints, Reorganized Lutheran - Mennonite bodies— Amana Society Mennonite -- Methodist bodies- Methodist Episcopal African Methodist Episcopal (Jerman Methodist Episcopal Swedish Methodist Episcopal Methodist Episcopal Church, South Free Methodist Methodist Protestant Wesleyan Methodist Pentecostal Church of the Nazarene Presbyterian bodies — Presbyterian Church in the U. S Eeformed Presbyterian (Covenanted)-. United Presbyterian Protestant Episcopal Reformed bodies — Bohemian Reformed Christian Eeformed Eeformed Church in America Reformed Church in the United States. Salvation Army Spiritualists ' Unitarians United Brethren in Christ Universalists Volunteers of America pro- >. CO 1 P «j fa. ofs >. 03 U ft Oo O 03 :■§§ ■goft > tc > B W, 061, 669 i,sm,90s % 7,655,782 f P,111,1,S1 13,100 2,000 2,500 15,600 84,700 4,200 2,338,785 9,309 1,705 9Z,4d0 84,700 4,200 364,490 2,693,275 41,375 3,685 5,300 46,675 19,000 360 5,000 24,000 10,700,025 191,935 1,741.966 12,441,990 21 000 1,150 2,975 21,000 32,200 2,300 34,500 325,000 10,860 325,000 2,810,660 70,662 464,681 3,275,231 2,466,410 110,662 227,165 2,693.576 78,600 3,600 6,000 83,600 159,600 8,170 9,700 169.300 370,550 16,350 125,650 496,200 268,960 14,950 107,800 376,750 50,000 2,925 21,100 71,100 161,400 8,660 49,450 210,860 196,900 13,840 53,200 260,100 148,000 146,368 3,599,230 2,660 14,011 148,000 146,358 149,135 1,092,600 4,691,830 15,000 3,150 15,000 63,700 3,779 9,600 63,20? 9,081,660 333,397 1,755,400 10,837,060 68,250 4,525 19,600 87,860 88,476 3,470 34,100 122,675 67,100 2,725 27,300 94,400 10,700 900 2,100 12,800 76,900 9,960 43,660 119,460 89,600 7,020 19,800 109,400 12,850 1,770 10,400 23,250 28,000 4,614 7,500 35,500 3,201,076 93,285 627,950 3,829.026 32,000 1,945 15,900 47,900 068,100 21,636 183,600 861,700 949,290 13,979 167,512 1,116,802 13,100 80O 2,500 16,600 160,300 9,533 82.500 242,800 384,870 18,035 146,250 531,120 186,360 7,966 66,860 243,200 47,500 4,812 47,600 38,225 2,360 38,225 152,600 2,185 18,000 170,600 475,400 27,310 131,669 606,969 115,800 2,425 26.000 141,800 lO.OOO 200 10,000 CHURCH STATISTICS 705 TABLE NO. 52— Continued— COUNTY REPORTS. Denominations 1 ^.■35 (fl o o III 02 1 .a o s s >> MS as ^« > 1 fl ea P. •H V O bo li ADAIE OOUNTT. Total SI i,606 B,7Ja S8 S 8,155 $ m,600 18 $ 38,281 $ 181,881 Baptist Catholic _. 2 3 3 2 1 1 4 12 2 1 164 820 383 200 85 30 802 1,788 344 20 135 "'"293 265 65 36 93 1,500 342 12 2 3 3 2 1 " 4 10 2 1 "i ""2 4Q0 600 950 850 150 30 950 3,250 900 75 $ 7,600 25,000 7,500 10,600 1,800 1 2 3 1 1 ? 800 5,500 4,281 1,200 800 $ 8,300 30,600 Congregational Disciples ol Olirlst 11,781 11,700 Prlends Latter-day Saints, Eeorg'd. Lutheran Methodist Episcopal 2,600 24,500 41,300 25,000 500 3 5 2 7,500 10,700 7,600 32,000 52,000 32,600 Seventh Day Adventist 600 ADAMS OODNTT. Total 23 2,rr9 1,801 21 2 S.BSJ, $ si„m 10 $ 22,300 $ 116,700 Advent Christian — - Baptist Catholic . Oongregational 3 2 1 1 2 1 7 2 1 3 no 208 270 185 850 60 1,306 208 29 61 65 150 106 290 80 914 155 22 25 2 2 1 1 2 1 7 2 ""3 1 i 800 650 200 600 800 176 2,060 650 29 400 $ 2,flOQ 5,800 4,500 1,600 7,600 2,000 46,600 20,600 % 2,000 6,800 1 1 1 '"I 2 ? 1,600 4,00Q 8,000 8,800 4,000 6,000 6,600 Disciples of Christ __ _ 10,600 Dunters— Ch. ol the Breth'n 2,000 66,300 24,600 Seventh Day Adventist United Brethren in Christ 4,100 1 1,000 B,ioo ALLAMAKEE COUNTY. Total — ■42 8,620 2,701 ■JJ 1 13.091 $ ^180,700 25 $ 83,300 $ 504,000 Baptist 3 12 2 3 2 7 4 1 3 2 3 240 4,93a 166 60 425 1.283 607 30 325 492 63 190 832 148 30 70 366 343 22 366 260 76 3 12 2 3 2 7 4 1 3 2 1,060 4,860 400 600 460 2,600 1,000 100 900 925 316 $ 27,000 243,700 9,000 3,000 5,000 38,600 22,600 2,800 31,000 37,000 2,000 S 10 1 1 1 3 2 $ 7,500 45,600 3,000 1,000 1,500 11,000 5,600 $ 34,600 Catholic 289,200 Congregational Evangelical Association German Evang. Ch. ol N. A. Lutheran 12,000 4,000 6,600 49,500 28,000 2,000 Presbyterian 2 2 3,S0O e,ooo 34,300 Reformed Oh. in U. S Seventh Day Adventist 42,000 2,000 APPANOOSE COUNTY. Total Baptist , Baptist (Colored) Church of Christ, Scientist—, Oongregational Disciples of Christ _ Dunkers, Prog, or Brethren. Free Methodist Latter-day Saints, Eeorg'd.. Lutheran Methodist Episcopal Presbyterian Seventh Day Adventist United Brethren in Ohrist- 46 i2 7,01Jt 835 126 259 2,968 200 36 85 160 1,809 261 27 26S B,irt5 609 74 181 2,198 100 40 20 40 1,740 171 27 275 39 3 13,100 1,640 25Q 160 650 5,250 250 150 300 150 3,160 500 150 600 2Si,m 30,100 3,200 16,000 82,900 600 2,000 3,000 3,000 88,100 29,000 60Q 6,000 $ 2S,iOO $ 4,600 1,000 1,200 1,200 10,300 4,000 706 CENSUS OF IOWA. 1915 Table No. 52. Denominations u BD C>i <^ZS t^^S O hi 03 O O f) o£ 3 03 Is Iz; a CD O w, cc ■3'3 ^ Pr a «s li iS Ph t> AUDUBON COUNTY. Total . 2S s.oze l.iSO Bl £ 5,589 $ 109,000 U $ S6,S00 $ UiS.m Baptist . 2 2 1 3 1 6 S 1 3 1 64 413 75 2 2 i i 300 650 60 860 200 1,682 860 500 307 300 $ «,600 12,500 $ 3,500 Catholic 2 $ 3,000 16,600 Church of Christ, Scientist- Disciples ol Christ 360 86 1,127 646 220 117 95 267 90 269 390 120 129 90 3 1 6 3 1 2 1 14,000 4,000 38,800 15,700 15,000 2,500 3,000 3 1 5 1 1 6,500 2,000 13,300 5,000 5,000 20,500 6,000 52,100 20,700 20,000 2,600 Evangelical Association Methodist Episcopal Presbyterian Seventh Day Adventist . United Brethren in Christ 1 1,500 4,600 BENTON COUNTY. Total JiS 7.698 J,,S91 •}-} 3 tS.SSJ, $ m,^o 29 $ 9S,700 $ 57^,900 Baptist 4 9 1 2 3 3 14 6 1 . 2 2 1 478 1,802 293 901 224 2.533 1,080 65 22 230 70 320 303 178 405 294 2,140 790 75 16 220 160 4 9 i s 3 13 6 1 1 2 1 i 1 i 1,400 2,760 100 600 1,150 675 4,026 2,000 250 84 800 260 $ 45,000 87,000 3 5 9,000 22,600 $ 64,000 109,500 Catholic Church ol Christ, Scientist- Congregational 18,000 15,500 40,000 165,600 76,700 8.000 600 22,000 3,000 1 2 1 10 5 1 3,000 4,000 5,200 28,600 17,100 2,800 21,000 19,600 45,200 194,100 93,800 10,800 500 Disciples of Christ Evangelical Association Methodist Episcopal Presbyterian Presbyterian (United) Seventh Day Adventist United Brethren in Christ 22,000 United Evangelical — 1 1,500 4,600 BLACK HAWK COUNTY. Total Baptist . Catholic Church of Christ, Scientist. Congregational Disciples of Christ Dunkers, Prog, or Brethren. Dunkers, Ch. of the Breth.. Episcopal Evangelical Association Free Methodist Jews I/Utheran _ Methodist Episcopal M. E. (African) Presbyterian Presbyterian (United) Salvation Army L Seventh Day Adventist United Brethren in Christ— Dnivcrsalists _L 7^ m.ies lS,m 67 6 SB, 610 $l,5S/,i25 SO ^li.SiO n,7i5,665 7 9 I 4 2 2 2 2 6 1 1 10 11 1 6 2 1 2 3 1 2,575 6,361 2,178 1,286 7 9 i 1 3,775 4,260 300 1,093 700 1,000 1,560 660 1,866 400 $ 168,600 394,676 5 9 $ 15,600 72,340 $ 184,000 466,916 889 670 498 725 280 892 100 50 2.969 3,839 100 1,686 273 350 27 379 300 . 716 490 591 786 90 1,244 100 3 2 2 2 2 6 1 110,260 25,000 41,000 67,600 13,600 70,600 2,500 1 4,000 114,250 25,000 1 2,600 43,600 67,500 1 5 1 3,600 16,100 2,000 17,000 86,700 4,500 638 2,690 40 1,492 258 65 34 486 100 10 10 1 6 2 '"i 1 2 3,626 5,780 300 2,660 425 160 27 870 400 128,300 292,000 3,000 126,000 14,500 8 9 23,200 35,600 151,600 327,600 3,000 4 2 14,000 7,000 140,000 21,500 35,900 38,000 3 1 6,900 12,000 42,800 60,000 CHURCH STATISTICS 707 Denominations A «» o o a'S'i 1 ^ 1 i. IS '5 o *« S3 CS to a ^ CO o M m l> PM F- B BOONE COUNTY. Total Baptist Catholic -. Church ot Christ. Scientist. Congregational Disciples ol Christ Dunkeis, Oh. of the Breth.. Episcopal Jews Latter-day Saints Heorg'd— Lutheran Methodist Episcopal Methodist Epls'l (Swedish). Presbyterian Salvation Army Seventh Day Adventist Swedish Ev. ITee Church United Brethren in Christ... Universallst SJ, 5,455 125 115 60 42 125 20 135 1,940 1,' 140 600 100 25 58 84 78 S,75S 108 15 145 76 75 46 80 588 1,800 135 450 30 32 45 90 40 29 l,9S0 $ 26i,S25 20 200 200 100 300 200 200 $ 260 2,275 2,800 400 450 20O 120 326 400 250 2,200 3,000 4,000 2,500 1,500 10,600 5,025 78,600 89,500 7,000 30,000 4,000 800 7,600 3,500 15,000 $ 2,000 61,000 $ 325,525- 1,000 25,000 17,000 2,600 5,000 3,000 600 BREMEE COUNTY. Total iS 8,S2S S,795 Jl6 2 U,0S5 $ S65,m S5 $ 99,650 $ Ji65,050 Baptist . i s 2 1 8 6 16 5 2 1 1 480 776 285 12S 509 945 4,014 874 106 20 195 440 108 460 60 643 2S1 637 870 30 4 3 2 1 8 6 15 5 2 .... i 1,260 1,200 660 250 1,700 1.550 4,925 1,600 400 150 550 $ 24,000 54,600 9,000 13,000 34,200 39,200 141,900 36.600 3,500 3 2 2 $ 7,200 6,00C 6,500 $ 31,200 Catholic — Congregational 60.500 15.500 13,000 Evangelical Association German Evan. Ch. ol N. A.. 3 6 12 p 2 11,000 15,500 31,200 14,050 3.700 45,200 54.700 173,100 Methodist Episcopal Presbyterian 50.650 7,200 United Brethren In Christ 266 1 9,600 i 4,500 14,000 Total Baptist — Catholic Church ol Christ, S Congregational Episcopal Lutheran Methodist Episcopal Presbyterian . - Total Baptist — Catholic Church ol God Congregation ol God Congregational - — Disciples ol Christ German Evan. Ch. ol N. A. Lutheran Methodist Episcopal Methodist Epis'l (German).. Presbyterian Seventh Day Adventist Swedish Evan. Free Church- BUCHANAN COUNTY. 7 11 1 4 1 5 13 5 624 3,246 4.954 430 639 11 5 12 1 I 12, m $ 29i,900 29 $ 69,200 $ S6i,100 1,575 3,700 20O 800 160 625 3.525 1,600 % 28,000 141,700 5,000 10,500 6,000 9,000 60,100 34,000 4 8 $ 5,700 33,800 $ 34,300 175,600 6,000 209 100 625 1,844 660 230 66 125 1,736 1 1 3 8 4 1,600 1.000 2,600 16,600 8,900 12,100 7.0O0 11,600 75,700 830 5 42,900 BUENA VISTA COUNTY. il 6,732 410 560 18 48 349 110 160 2,631 1,616 35 632 28 158 140 12 20 228 140 46 608 1,530 26 610 16 194 il m.m $ 320,850 l.S 500 120 200 470 300 300 3.430 3,160 150 1,460 150 8?5 19,100 25,000 1,600 2,500 13,000 6,000 4,r" 69,500 113,500 2,500 47,500 1.000 16,600 SO $ 90,000 $15,000 3.0OO $ no, 850 8,000 2,000 26,700 17.S0O 3.000 11,000 2 4.000 708 CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 Table No. 52. M .,ol >> el Denominations S g 3 II l§ 3 a a s o w K > Ph > &H BUTLEB COtiNTT. Total .1 Baptist Catholic ' Ctuistian Reformed Congregational Disciples of Christ Dmikers. Ch. of the Breth.. Evangelical Association German Evan. Ch. ol N. A Latter-day Saints Eeorg'd. Lutheran Methodist Episcopal Presbyterian Reformed Ch. in America. Seventh Day Adventist United Brethren in Christ... Wesleyan Methodist is i.iis S,S66 •M 1 ll,Jit5 4 444 290 4 1.200 6 775 139 6 1.450 1 86 40 1 20O 3 198 160 3 66Q 1 116 200 1 300 1 120 140 ll 300 a 208 393 2'- — 600 2 271 102 2! 600 a 42 16 2 20O a 231 38 2 40O 6 1,022 889 6 2,400 s 279 217 8 800 6 242 374 6 1 1.075 1 7 12 1 150 4 339 326 4 1.000 1 35 50 1 150 r? 2S0,150 25,000 38,500 4,600 14,000 6,000 3,500 13,000 8,500 850 10,100 59,500 22,000 12.100 2.00O 11,000 1.20O % 66,500 5.800 6,600 2,000 4,000 2,600 6,000 2,900 3.860 10,700 2,600 13,400 5,050 1,200 CALHOUN COUNTY. Total . *8 7,289 USS U 1 12, sm $ SOO, 800 2S $ to, 100 $ 576,900 Baptist 1 3 3 4 1 1 9 1 11 5 1 2 107 975 275 770 60 250 1,572 160 2,308 664 20 128 70 136 270 435 65 80 336 180 2,141 £86 30 105 1 3 3 4 1 1 8 1 11 5 1 2 'i 140 1,070 450 1,230 250 300 2,350 350 4.090 1,550 200 360 $ 3,000 50,000 12,600 28,000 2,000 8,000 30,400 5.00O 105,300 50,000 1,000 6,600 $ 3,000 3 2 $ 16,000 5,500 Congregational Disciples ol Christ 18,000 23,000 Evangelical Association German Evan. Ch. o( N. A.. Lutheran Mennonite _ .- 1 1 6 1,800 3.000 16,600 3,800 ii;ooo 45,900 6,000 Methodist Episcopal Presbyterian 9 4 21,300 11.600 126,600 61,500 1,000 Seventh Day Adventist United Brethren in Christ 2 2,500 8,100 CARROLL COUNTY. Total SS 9,989 S,199 J5 •f 12,719 $ 550, iSO 88 $ 90.750 $ 6il,l00 Baptist 1 11 2 1 1 1 1 i 6 S 2 3 72 6,757 125 19 76 60 42 780 1,269 478 36 285 75 1,111 142 40 30 24 158 915 60Q 19 185 1 11 2 1 1 4 6 5 1 3 .... 1 i 350 5,760 600 116 260 60 100 880 2,350 . 1,200 154 900 $ 6.000 400.500 9,000 3,460 SOO 1 11 $ 1,600 62,000 $ 7,500 452,600 9,000 3,460 1,060 Catholic Disciples of Christ Episcopal .. Mends German Evan. Ch. of N. A.. 1 260 Latter-day Saints, Reorg'd.. Lutheran 24,500 62,000 34,000 1.500 8.700 4 5 4 7,000 16,000 10,600 31,500 78,000 44,500 1,500 Presbyterian Seventh Day Adventist .. . United Brethren in Christ 2 3,600 12,200 CHURCH STATISTICS 709 Denominations §1 ■ss 1 E 1 II CQ II > 03 a •H S o tn si OASS COUNTY. Total Baptist Catholic Church ot Christ, Scientist- Congregational Disciples ol Christ German Evan. Ch. ol N. A. Lutheran Methodist Episcopal Methodist Protestant Presbyterian Presbyterian (United) Seventh Day Adventist- United Evangelical 111 7,068 384 1,205 i.l^ 687 899 331 847 2,163 60 331 92 11 486 718 74 64 1,929 61 301 78 14 76 ii 12,700$ 2S9,900 1,200 860 200 1,100 2,050 1,100 1,000 3,275 275 l.QOO 260 150 260 17,800 28,600 27,000 30,000 12,600 10,000 79,000 3,600 21,600 6.000 2,000 8,000 SO 7S,i00 $ S1S,300 2,600 4,200 11,000 4,000 6,300 11,500 19,300 800 9,000 4,000 1,800 CEDAR COUNTY. Total S5 USl s,(m H 1 9,800 $ 173,100 m $ 56,900 $ 280,000 Catholic ■_-_ 1 1 1 3 1 3 14 2 4 1 1 1 1 1 20O 26 1 i 150 100 200 1,460 700 1,000 3,600 460 950 200 160 50O 150 200 $ 7,000 1 $ 2,500 $ 9,500 Church ol Christ, Scientist.L Episcopal Friends 23 424 SOO 743 1.674 160 433 156 163 200 20 75 36 293 60 133 1,479 190 299 126 166 160 60 82 1 3 1 3 14 2 4 1 1 1 1 1 2,000 17,000 11,000 16,000 80,500 4,500 19,300 6,000 3,000 6,000 1,200 1.600 1 1 1 3 8 1 3 1 1 1 1 1 2,00Q 1,500 6,000 8,500 16,200 1,600 8,000 3,600 4,000 1,200 800 1,200 4,000 18,600 German Evan. Ch. ol N. A.- 17,000 23,600 Methodlst Episcopal Methodist Protestant - 96,700 6,000 27,300 Presbyterian (United) Belormed Church in U. S.— United Brethren In Christ United Evangelical 9,500 7,000 6,200 2,000 2,800 OEEEO GOBDO COUNTK. Total Si 10,57^ 6,SS8 •48 6 15, m $ 61^,000 28 $106,200 $ 720,800 3 S 2 6 1 1 2 3 7 14 1 2 1 1 1 2 708 2,922 480 676 3 8 1 5 1 1 2 3 7 11 1 2 1 .... 1 1 "'i '"i ~i 900 3,000 300 1.950 1,000 20Q 600 600 1,560 3,957 120 410 300 200 200 200 % 40,600 203.000 10.000 76.200 40,000 15,000 18,800 6,000 31,300 144,200 4.600 13,500 6,600 2 4 $ 7,600 30,000 $ 48,000 Catholic Ohureh ol Christ, Scientist.. 233,000 10,000 84,100 985 900 116 217 88 1,464 2,679 60 237 76 176 24 40 705 600 67 622 157 340 2,680 22 240 90 46 44 70 4 7,900 Dfsplnlea of Christ . 40,000 1 2 2 3 8 8,000 7,200 4,300 12,000 24,000 23,000 Evangelical Association TPrPR Methodist 26,000 10,300 43,300 Methodist Episcopal Methodist Epis'l (German). 168,200 4,500 13,500 Reformed Ch. in America 1 3,500 10,000 Seventh Day Adventist United Brethren in Christ 2,500 2,000 2,600 1 1,800 3,800 710 CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 h Table JVo. S2. gg S E & So "g « a s .fO^ s 31 It o-g a °^ Denominations u M « 1 gas 02 1 "rt ■3^ P o ^25 a o W CQ t> Ph (► ^ OHEEOEEE COUNTY. Total iO 4,996 S,281 S8 S 11,8S5 $ SS9,900 29 $ 88,900 $ iss.soo Baptist 2 3 1 4 2 1 6 13 4 1 1 1 1 206 1,675 60 394 390 11 592 1,265 276 32 60 50 6 152 190 30 410 600 136 1,490 260 40 60 23 2 3 4 13 700 2,350 30O 1,200 800 160 1,076 3,725 880 250 IBQ 75 200 $ 18,000 123,000 3,000 35,300 19,000 1,400 16,000 99,500 16,800 3,00Q 2,600 1,500 900 1 3 1 4 1 $ 2,B0O 15,000 3,000 17,000 3,600 $ 20,500 138,000 Children of Zion Congregational 6,000 62,300 Disciples of Christ Dunkers, Prog, or Brethren.. Lutheran _ . . _ . 22,600 1,400 3 9 3 1 1 1 1 9,000 22,000 6,900 2,000 2,500 6,000 600 25,000 Methodist Episcopal Presbyterian 121,600 23,700 Presbyterian (United) Swedish Eyan. Tree Church.. Unitarian 6,000 5,000 6,600 Wesleyan Methodist 1,400 CHICKASAW COUNTY. Total S9 7,75« S,828 S9 .... 11,675 $ il9,S0O «^ $ 75,900 $ ^B»,IMO Baptist - S 10 6 1 1 1 1 9 8 286 4,408 603 36 12 73 24 1,642 771 246 1,086 240 40 ioo 25 372 720 3 10 5 1 1 1 1 9 8 860 4,260 1,100 400 125 300 150 2.425 2,075 $ 16,000 262,300 28,000 1,500 500 7,000 6,000 66,000 43,000 1 9 3 $ 3,000 33,400 10,000 $ 19,000 Catholic — 296,700 Congregational Dunkers, Oh. of the Brethren 38,000 1,500 BOO Evangelical Association German Evan. Oh. of N. A.. 1 2,000 9,000 5,000 6 4 16,000 9,600 72,000 Methodist Episcopal 52,500 CLARKE COUNTY. Total Baptist Catholic Disciples of Christ Lutheran Methodist Episcopal Methodist Epis'l (African). Methodist Protestant Presbyterian Seventh Day Adventist United Brethren in Christ... SO S,6S2 «,566 189 1 8,6W s 123 20 2 1 620 1 260 1 150 7 1,354 1,100 7 2,275 1 127 23 1 200 8 823 850 8 2,100 1 16 1 100 4 275 260 4 1,000 1 86 100 1 300 2 75 63 2 275 2 605 160 2 .... 1,600 $ 92,S00 1 81, 19. 11 9 $ i7,800 $ 4,000 1,600 6.700 300 1,600 8,000 80O CLAY COUNTY. Total Baptist Church of God Congregational Disciples' of Christ Rvangelieal Association Friends Uitheran -- Methodist Episcopal Heformed Oh. in America. SO ■,m 303 26 625 250 60 125 451 1,262 41 205 40 665 240 IOO 120 136 1,556 SO 6,S0O 660 160 1,376 400 160 176 1,000 2,760 160 169, m SI $ 50,000 17,800 1,000 3 $ 8,000 48,900 4,000 1,600 8,000 10,600 86,800 1,400 4 1 1 1 3 7 1 12,200 2,500 2,600 1,600 6,600 15,800 1,000 $ si9,m 26,800 1,000 66,100 6,500 4,000 4,600 17,000 102,100 2,400 CHURCH STATISTICS 711 Denominations O bo as O O d u CI 3 « w > ■as CLAYTON COUNTY. Total .. is 8,m S,686 is 5 12, ins $ m.ioo SI $ 88,500 $ 610,900 Baptist ." 1 12 1 5 1 12 10 1 T 4 37 3,699 40 602 1 12 "i 1 1 1 i 200 4,200 75 985 76 3,708 2,335 20O 150 500 $ 3,000 210,100 1 9 $ 1,600 32,700 $ 4,600 242,800 Catholic Church of Christ, Scientist— 474 16 2,680 916 120 114 160 434 4 38^600 4 13,000 51,600 Bunkers, Prog, or Brethren- Lutheran - 614 723 80 118 75 11 10 1 1 S 75,300 79,600 8,000 5,000 3.000 7 7 1 1 1 19,600 15,800 3,000 1,600 1,600 94,800 96,300 Methodist Epis'l (German)— 11,000 6,600 4,500 United Brethren in Christ CLINTON COUNTY. Total Baptist Catholic Church of Christ, Scientist Congregational Disciples of Christ Episcopal Evangelical Association German Evan. Oh. of N. A Lutheran Methodist Episcopal Presbyterian Presbyterian (United) Reformed Church in U. S.. Latter-day Saints Beorg'd. Salvation Army Seventh Day Adventist Spiritualist 56 437 1,905 315 228 434 2,438 1.1 825 175 20 150 5,091 266 235 233 100 1,79« 561 76 247 45 35 21 20 5S 17,S85 $ 50i,100 1,100 3,290 200 600 260 660 260 16Q 2,850 400 1,400 95 150 20 1,400 33,000 132,000 10,000 22,000 8,000 21,400 S,7TO 1,000 66,500 102,500 60,000 7,000 16,000 4,000 Si $Kfi,8S0 $ 1,500 43,600 37,000 4,600 2,1 , 60O 26,600 22,600 3,800 3,600 8,000 OBAWEOED COUNTY. Total - ss 6,1805 2,769 SS 9,695 $ 806,050 2< $ 68,800 $ S74,S50 Baptist 3 8 6 6 2 i 366 1,676 460 209 3 8 6 5 2 1 "" i 1,025 1,990 200 30O 160 20O 2,000 2,000 1.180 400 250 $ 28,300 116,000 6,000 3,000 1,200 3,000 50,000 41,060 47,000 4,000 7,500 3 3 $ 6,200 12,600 $ 34,500 128,600 Ohurch of Christ, Scientist— 5,000 3,000 42 34 150 1,880 972 756 350 30 45 18 90 263 951 583 110 50 1,200 German Evan. Ch. of N. A._ 1 7 5 4 — . 3,600 18,100 12,800 11,700 s.m 6,500 68,100 Mpthfidist EDisconal 53,850 68,700 Latter-day Saints Eeorg'r- Swedish Evan. Free Ohurch 4,000 11.000 DALLAS COUNTY. Total 55 8,^87 6,711 5S 2 16,1)8 $ S51,S50 19 $ 78,900 $ iiitSSO 2 1 3 1 1 232 IS 1,205 140 200 23 75 2 jT 3 1 "'"i 628 100 950 275 75 $ 11,000 1,000 28,000 3,000 1 $ 8,000 $ 14,000 1,000 Catholic S 1 5,600 ' 1,600 33,600 Christian (Christian Conn.)— Ohurch of Christ, Scientist— 4,600 712 CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 Table No. 52. 4 •wts CD friO^ s "f •1 ^4 63 o to Denominations ".g a fl'S'S i s •|& II i "3 13 a M u w OS > Ph > B DALLAS OODNTT— Continued. Church 6f God „ 1 2 9 1 2 1 1 2 18 3 7 40 192 1,288 160 339 81 74 350 3,279 328 768 1 200 500 2,600 500 1,060 200 100 600 6,250 1,500 Congregational Disciples of Christ Dunkers, Prog, or Brethren. 175 1,299 100 380 60 92 3,357 378 632 2 9 1 2 1 1 2 18 3 7 10,600 42,160 16,000 19,600 1,000 2,000 10,000 161,700 24,600 21,000 1 3 1 7,000 8,200 700 17,600 60,360 16,700 19,600 iYiends 1 2,000 3,000 Latter-day Saints Eeorg'd Lutheran _ Methodist Episcopal Presbyterian United Bretliren in Christ 2,000 2 3 3 3,500 28,200 7,300 6,000 13,600 180,900 31,800 27,000 DAVIS COUNTY. Total .. 2B 8,790 i,m S 6,959 $ 87,190 6 $ 13,300 ¥ iflo,.iOO Baptist . 4 6 1 9 2 2 1 265 1,035 225 1,075 56 125 9 190 525 200 873 62 63 IS 4 6 1 9 1 2 .... "i 1,050 2,160 300 2,350 600 500 9 $ 12,000 22,300 5,000 43,300 1,600 3,000 1 1 $ 1,00C 2,600 $ 13,000 Disciples of Olirist . . . 24,800 5,000 Methodist Episcopal Pen'l Oh. of the Nazarene^. 3 6,800 49,100 1,500 Presbyterian . Seyenth Day Adventlst 1 4,000 7,000 DECATUR COUNTY Total 41 7,-}i6 •J ,728 S7 6 12,673 $ 193,500 12 $ i7,750 $ 21i,S50 2 I 1 8 6 3 1 1 8 9 60 82 150 176 116 704 190 16 122 3,760 1,791 36 60 60 104 546 340 21 30 1,768 1,445 2 2 2 1 '"i 1 1 1 7 9 1 1 3 1 '"s '"z i 600 406 360 300 650 1,700 776 100 150 2,768 3,775 100 150 736 130 $ 2,600 2,000 3,000 1,500 500 27,600 10,000 2,000 1,800 47,700 82,000 400 1,200 10,500 800 $ 2,600 Baptist . 2,000 Catholic Christian Union . Church of God .. . —- 3,000 1,600 500 Disciples of Christ Dunkers, Prog, or Brethren. 1 450 27,960 10,000 Episcopal — . 2,000 Friends 1 1,500 3,300 47,700 Latter-day Saints, Eeorg'd- Methodist Episcopal Methodist E. (African). 9 13,600 96,600 400 Methodist E. (South) Presbyterian Scyenth Day Adventist 1 3 1 10 226 36 40 256 24 .„. """2^206 1,200 12,700 800 DELAWARE COUNTY. Total U 6,1895 3,m sr S 10,691 $ SSt.500 26 $ 75,700 $ ^63,200 Advent Christian 1 2 9 2 6 1 3 11 3 1 1 1 1 25 131 2,446 Baptist Catholic 128 455 1 9 1 '"2 300 3,350 125 1,200 160 666 3,100 1,050 250 160 200 160 $ 5,800 223,000 1 4 $ 3,000 18,100 $ 8,800 241,100 Church of Christ. Scientist.. Congregational Disciples of Christ Lutheran Methodist Episcopal Presbyterian Presbyterian (Eeformed) United Brethren in Christ Uniyersalist 611 120 690 1.614 684 87 86 12 40 416 76 157 1,393 346 40 60 «n 6 1 3 11 3 1 1 1 1 30,700 2,500 9,500 62,000 33,000 10,000 4,000 6,000 " " 4 1 2 8 3 1 1 8,700 3,000 4,000 23,700 10,000 3,000 1,000 39,400 5,600 18,600 85,700 43,000 13,000 6,000 6,000 Wesleyan Methodist . 1,200 2,200 CHURCH STATISTICS 718 Denominations f 03 O o a « « ■3€ ii 6 03 « DES MOINES COUNTY. Total Baptist Catholic Church of Christ, Scientist.. Oongregational Disciples of Christ BSplscopal I^ee Methodist German Evan. Ch. of N. A.. Latter-day Saints, Keorg'd. Lutheran Methodist Episcopal Methodist E. (African) Methodist E. (German) Methodist E. (Swedish) Presbyterian Presbyterian (Reformed) .._ Presbyterian (United) Salvation Army Seventh Day Adventist 1S,089 813 3,700 618 400 205 70 530 160 2,263 2.779 70 50 61 752 187 160 350 41 7,//3S iS 579 292 464 60 106 1,103 2,712 45 60 70 650 194 176 50 81 i9,fiS2$ 810,550 S5$116,00\l 2,000 400 960 800 360 550 826 150 3,000 6,175 300 150 250 1,200 500 45Q 200 41 44,760 179,000 15,000 81,600 10,000 23,200 6,600 18,000 2,100 70,000 235,600 6,000 3,600 10,000 81,400 6,000 12,000 8.000 if 7,700 25,000 $ 986,550 2,000 5,000 2,600 6,600 20,000 26,200 2,000 2,000 1,600 10,000 4,000 2,500 62,460 204,000 15,000 83,600 10,000 28,200 9,100 24,500 2,100 90,000 260,700 7,000 5;500 11,600 91,400 9,000 14,600 8.000 DICKINSON COUNTY. Total — 19 IB,S.i6 i.sn IS •} i.lSS $ 121,500 12 $ «9,500 $ 151,000 Catholic 2 1 1 1 10 3 1 714 100 140 110 2 1 " i '~2 1 60O 150 75 160 2,650 450 150 $ 16,000 6,600 2 1 $ 7,600 3,000 $ 23,600 9,600 Church of Christ, Scientist 58 1,065 307 12 179 1,191 321 36 1 8 2 1 1,200 67,000 30,000 800 1 6 . 2 1,250 13,600 4,250 2,460 Methodist Episcopal 80,500 Presbvl^rian 34,250 Seventh Day Adventist 800 DUBUQUE DOUNTY Total — 66 S2,ies 9,100 6S S M,775 %2,165,t00 U %252,yOO %s.m,w Baptist Catholic - 2 31 280 25,645 165 5,772 2 31 5 1 i i 1 400 23,160 400 1,400 1,000 300 260 2,260 2,150 600 1,400 250 200 26 $ 9,500 1,583,700 40,000 62,600 82,000 8,000 20,000 100,000 164,000 13,000 76,900 6,000 $ 9,500 1,748,600 27 $164,900 Church of Christ, Scientist- 40,000 1,021 680 82 160 1,805 1,389 178 986 188 125 33 626 130 70 645 744 140 751 188 50 25 2 1 1 7,000 26,000 2,800 69,600 Episcopal Evangelical Associatioin 107,000 10,800 20,000 4 3 2 3 1 14,500 16,600 7,500 14,000 1,600 114,600 Mpthodisit EniscODal 179,600 Methodist Episcopal (Ger.) — Presbyterian .... Ref. Church in the U. S Salvation Armv 20,500 90,900 7,500 Seventh Day Adventist EMMET COUNTY. Total _- 2S s.esr x,ni 25 6,805 $ lJii,800 15 $ n.ioo $ 185,900 1 1 1 1 250 350 200 77 1 1 1 1 ~. 400 320 200 600 $ 8,400 1,300 6,000 15,000 1 1 $ 6,000 2,000 $ 14,400 Catholic Church of Christ. Scientist — Disciples of (Jhrist 3,300 6,000 20,000 350 aw 1 6,666 714 CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 Table No. 52. Denominations ■3S i to 111 1 O K It DQ 1^ •3^ t-i B3 O bo Ph > EMMET COUNTY— Continued. Episcopal Free Mettiodist Lutheran Methodist Episcopal Presbyterian 1 45 SO 1 100 2 58 49 2 300 8 1,218 344 8 2,216 5 626 660 5 1,480 5 770 495 5 1,360 2,800 1 2,000 3,600 2 1,800 31,600 3 9,500 35,500 4 9,600 41,800 2 5,300 FATETTE OOIINTY. Total Baptist Catholic Church of Christ. Scientist. Congregational Disciples of Christ Episcopal Evangelical Association Latter-day Saints, Beorg'd— Lutheran Methodist Episcopal Presbyterian Salvation Army Seventh Day Adventist .. United Brethren in Christ United Evangelical Universalist Wesleyan Methodist ss 9,586 Ji,ei7 SO S iceso 2 323 260 2 750 10 S,417 629 10 S,600 1 2 1 75 500 219 128 2 2 676 600 2 1,260 2 95 90 2 30O 1 130 125 1 260 1 68 38 1 68 10 2,3S1 429 9 1 , 3,225 14 1,887 1,936 14 4,700 2 267 240 2 700 1 76 60 i 200 2 87 67 1 1 186 2 41 80 2 300 1 1 34 12 SO 1 1 — -■ 100 225 1 25 25 1 — 200 f 5SS,S75 16,600 242,626 12,000 35,000 10,000 3.500 64,000 116,600 18,000 460 S.30O 1,700 8,000 1,700 $ 82,275 $ 61S,6S0 $ 6,600 24,625 4,000 20,000 18,850 3,000 FLOYD COUNTY. Total Advent Christian Baptist Catholic Church of Christ, Scientist.. Congregational Disciples' of Christ Episcopal, Lutheran Methodist Episcopal Methodist Episcopal (Ger.).. Wesleyan Methodist 29 5,SS5 ^,180 28 1 9,781 1 6 3 1 3 3 1 1 7 s 1 60 436 922 60 286 252 1 6 3 '"i 400 1,176 1,400 200 1,400 1,060 125 400 2,655 876 200 704 405 68 230 1,830 640 60 692 265 14 300 1,815 646 60 3 3 1 1 7 3 1 3,000 19,500 58,500 54,000 15,000 3,040 10,000 72,500 33,175 1,800 18 62,612 2,000 3,200 10,000 10,000 3,000 1,712 3,000 21,600 6,600 1,600 FKANKLIN COUNTY. Total Baptist Catholic Congregational Evangelical Association German Evang. Ch. of N. A. Lutheran Methodist Episcopal Eeformed Church in America Seventh Day Adventist S2 i,m 2,6^5 SS 8,2^5 3 339 236 3 830 2 210 37 2 660 3 686 233 3 890 3 168 154 S 676 2 195 82 2 360 6 1,047 166 6 1,660 10 1,848 1,551 10 2,760 2 126 145 2 300 . 1 21 41 1 — - 160 m,8w 25 $ 62,700 17,600 3 $ 6,800 17,600 1 6,000 35,300 2 6,600 7,500 2 3,600 7,300 2 3,800 23,000 5 15,600 70,900 8 18,800 4,020 2 3,700 1,800 $ 2.47,520 CHURCH STATISTICS 715 Denominations m t-i 2 s ol I 03 P. 1 1^ 03 o O 111 S a « ■■3 9 ll li 4A ^ CO o IK m l> Ph i> H PEEMONT COUNTY. Total il 5,508 S,12i SS 3 11,295 $ 2Si,850 22 $ Ji6,850 $ 281,700 Baptist Oatholie 6 S 1 2 6 5 1 12 1 6 695 780 386 89 5 3 1 '"i 1,325 860 60 1,100 1,606 665 200 3,760 20O 1,650 $ 27,000 29,000 ""'"36lo66 30,900 4,260 3,600 66,000 1,000 38,200 4 3 2 $ 9,100 6,600 7^600 $ 86,100 34,600 Ohuroh ol Christ, Scientist Congregational 683 825 3S4 101 1,746 85 460 255 486 143 20 1,350 80 317 2 6 3 1 12 1 5 43,600 Disciples of Christ : Latter-day Saints, Eeorg'd-. 4,260 Lutheran 1 8 1 3 2,000 16,400 600 6,760 5,600 81,400 1,600 43,960 Methodist Episcopal M. E. (South) . Presbyterian GEEENE COUNTY. Total Baptist Catholic Disciples ol Christ Episcopal Evangelical Association- Friends Free Methodist Lutheran Methodist Episcopal Presbyterian Si 5,260 «,7S7 33 1 5 513 372 5 4 1,330 130 4 3 574 635 3 1 22 I 2 91 135 2 1 140 96 1 1 .31 55 1 1 125 18 1 11 1,768 1,678 U 5 676 668 6 — - 9,i02 $ 222,000 22 $ 52,^50 $ m-iso 1,176 $ 27,000 1 $ 2,000 $ 29,000 1,400 64,000 8 11,600 75,600 1,106 a, 500 2 4,000 86,600 22 400 400 350 6,400 2 2,600 7,900 200 1,600 1 1,800 3,300 160 1,000 1 800 1,800 260 2,500 2,500 3,160 61,700 8 20,100 81,800 1,600 27,000 4 9,760 36,760 GEUNDY COUNTY. Total Baptist Catholic Christian Eelormed Congregational Dunkers, Ch. ot the Breth... German Evang. Ch. of N. A. Lutheran Methodist Episcopal M. E. (German) Presbyterian - Presbyterian (United) — Reformed Chi in America 26 5,862 • 2,767 25 1 1 251 175 1 2 318 64 2 3 312 236 2 1 1 260 20O 1 1 225 260 1 1 120 60 1 6 782 168 6 6 935 990 6 1 90 60 1 2 375 260 2 1 100 110 1 2 104 216 2 7,855 360 660 860 500 400 200 1,220 1,760 126 860 250 80O $ 20i,600 16,000 7,600 8,000 25,000 15,000 6,000 22,400 48,500 3,000 26,000 11,600 15,600 2i $ 72,600 $ 277,200 6,000 3,800 7,000 3,600 6,000 2,000 11,600 18,100 2,000 6,500 3,100 4,100 $ GUTHEIE COUNTY. Total " -- S6 S,9SS S,5S7 SJ, 2 12,2SJ, $ 278,560 22 $ 56,800 $ SS5,S60 1 6 2 1 6 1 1 1 1 128 1,366 145 232 670 100 59 60 100 66 lOO m 680 160 SO 60 1 5 2 1 5 1 1 1 1 " "i 150 1,300 650 400 1,810 300 250 200 $ 1,600 77,000 2,000 15,60» 28,560 2,000 2,000 1,600 4,500 $ 1,600 Oatliolic .— Christian (Christian Conn.). 4 $ 9,000 86^000 2,000 1 1 3,500 1,000 ]fi,000 29,660 Dunters, Oh. of the Breth.— 2,000 1 1 1.000 3,000 Free Methodist 2,500 Lutheran 160 1 2,000 6.500 716 CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 Table ]Vo. 52. if s >> ft 1 OS a i h Denominations "n III GQ 1 -. II OS "1 ■s o 15 a o a m t> Ph > Eh GUTHRIE COUNTY— Continued. Methodist Episcopal Pen'I Ch. of the Nazarene.. Presbyterian Seventh Day Adventist United Brethren in Ohiist Wesleyan Methodist 2,333 U 617 28 180 10 1,811 8 20 472 i 29 1 160 2 26 1 4,700 1.365 260 625 70 102,600 "sT.m 3,000 8,600 1,000 26,300 "iiTooo "i^ioo HAMILTON COUNTY. Total ■42 6,19S S,96S S9 S 1S,590 $ S09,800 22 $ 67,250 $ sn.oso Baptist 3 8 1 1 6 1 11 11 2 1 1 1 1 462 684 410 100 8 3 1 1 5 "i — . 1 860 960 150 500 1,420 10 3,9«0 3,200 400 400 800 200 260 $ 22,000 31,700 3,600 36,000 81,000 2 2 $ 7,260 9,000 $ 29,260 Catholic 40,700 3,600 Congregational 455 855 10 2,025 1,145 129 48 90 190 lOO 400 635 1 1 5,000 2,000 40,000 33,000 Episcopal — Lutheran Methodist Episcopal M. E. (Swedish) 631 1,374 121 S& 60 124 30 11 10 1 1 1 1 1 73,100 72,200 6,800 4,000 6,600 6,000 20,000 6 6 1 17,000 12,600 2,000 90,100 84,700 7,800 4,000 Presbyterian 1 1 1 1,600 4,000 7,000 8,000 United Brethren in Christ Universalist 9,000 27,000 HANCOCK COUNTY. Total Baptist Catholic Christian Eelormed Congregational Evangelical Association Lutheran -L Methodist Episcopal M. E. (German) Presbyterian (United) Reformed Church in U. S United Brethren in Christ S8 i,999 S.9iS S8 2 164 110 2 6 956 144 6 3 218 166 3 4 470 365 4 1 30 60 1 5 930 216 6 -— 10 1,456 1,127 10 ^ 2 196 240 2 1 138 146 1 — — 2 250 180 2 2 193 203 2 9,i95 $ 1S7,150 SI $ 52,150 $ 476 1,500 720 850 200 1,950 2,226 350 460 450 4.000 21,500 9,500 14,200 2,650 28,800 36,800 6,000 1,200 8,500 4,000 9,650 4,800 5,600 1,200 7,500 10,000 3,000 2,500 6,000 2,600 $ HAEDIN COUNTY. Total 59 8.2S0 5,808 58 1 17,889 $ m.soo a $110,900 $ 559,200 5 3 1 6 6 1 5 6 4 6 16 3 1 662 772 560 159 5 8 .... 1,565 1,260 60 1.580 2,175 105 1.214 1,276 1,800 1,525 4.450 800 100 $ 34,600 58.800 2 3 $ 7,000 10,800 $ 41,600 69,600 Catholic Church of Christ, Scientist Congregational Disciples of Christ 90S 854 46 394 534 947 1.012 1.763 287 66 654 863 20 430 528 340 187 1,860 202 75 5 6 1 5 6 4 6 15 8 1 58.600 62,000 4,600 37.500 19,600 26,600 43,400 73.700 38,000 1,200 4 3 10,000 8,500 68,500 60,500 Episcopal 4,600 Evangelical Association . — rriends „. ._ German Ev. Church of N. A. Lutheran ? Methodist Episcopal 4 4 8 6 10 • 2 1 10,500 8,300 10,300 11,800 26,200 6,500 1,000 48,000 27,800 36,900 65,200 99,900 44,600 2,200 Presbyterian United Evangelical CHURCH STATISTICS 717 Denominations 1^ t>,o » 03 O O a a a u I si 2 a m o & > Ph l> Bi HAEEISON COUNTY. Total— iV 7,657 s,m U 3 ii.evs $ SSS.OSO Si $ B9,76S $ ZS7,81S Baptist Oatholie . 8 5 2 5 1 11 8 13 3 1 272 1.810 213 1.125 49 1,638 421 1,786 833 10 178 300 196 685 74 678 40 1,479 272 8 8 5 2 5 1 9 3 13 3 2 "'"i 1,040 925 360 2,610 300 2,380 460 2,800 800 10 11,760 46.000 10,500 46,500 3,100 18,400 7,500 ffl,800 32,500 s 2 2 , 3 1 '~3 8 2 $ 5,760 5,500 4,700 5,766 1,050 7J0OO ,21,000 9,000 $ 17,500 51,600 15,200 62,265 4,150 18,400 14,600 82,800 41,500 Congregational Disciples ol Christ Evangelical Association Latter-day Saints, Beorg'd— Lutheran . Methodist Episcopal Presbyterian _.. Seventh Day Adventist HENET COUNTY. Total Baptist Catholic Church of Christ, Scientist., Congregational Disciples of Christ Episcopal Friends Latter-day Saints, Eeorg'd. Lutheran Mennonite Methodist Episcopal M. E. (African) Methodist Protestant Presbyterian Presbyterian (United) Seventh Day Adventist United Brethren in Christ Universalist — , « 7.SS0 6,2il H 16,685 $ i50,500 ,26 $ 8S,700 7 930 688 7 1,776 $ 43,100 2 $ 4,300 1 450 100 1 600 30,000 1 3,000 1 1 150 4,000 2 228 226 2 760 34,600 2 4,500 3 260 342 8 „ 1,200 17,600 1 1,600 i 65 32 1 200 8,500 1 4,600 2 215 225 2 — _ 400 6,500 1 1,000 1 1 35 533 26 288 1 1 200 400 60O 20.000 1 6,000 4 935 1,076 4 1,460 20,600 2 6,600 22 2,764 2,649 22 6,600 166,000 8 31,300 1 30 36 1 -.-._ 250 900 1 500 1 327 176 1 560 22,000 1 2,000 2 386 280 2 860 32,000 2 7,800 1 70 90 1 700 35,000 1 8,000 1 38 31 1 160 2,000 2 60 61 2 360 2,400 1 800 1 35 18 1 300 6,000 1 3,000 HOWAED COUNTY. TotaL 28 7,938 2,SS2 sfr 1 9,n5 $ SS2,i2S 17 $ 58,900 $ S9i,m Baptist Catholic 1 7 1 3 1 1 6 6 2 170 4,302 100 693 1 7 "i 260 3,950 76 1,100 100 300 1,200 1,850 300 $ 4,000 211,825 1 7 $ 3,500f 31,000 $ 7,500 242,825 Congregational 510 30 80 864 962 130 415 9 90 180 770 75 3 1 1 6 6 2 39,000 3,500 4,600 18,000 47,400 4,200 1 3,600 42,600 3,500 Evangelical Association Lutheran 1 3 2 2 3,000 9,000 6,000 2,800 7,600 27,000 53,400 7,000 HUMBOLDT COUNTY. TotaL S2 Ji,06B 2,259 m 2 7,510 $ iSfi,95fl 20 $ 50,950 $ 2S7,900 4 2 1 1 1 333 637 309 45 4 2 1 ] 1 936 760 SUM 300 200 $ 14,500 33,600 15,000 22,000 3,000 3 1 i 6,750 5,500 ? 20,250 Catholic Church >pf Christ, Scientist- 39,000 15,000 372 69 160 75 1 1 3,500 2,000 25,500 Evangelical Association 5,000 718 CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 Table No. 52. Denominations O 60 15 >,o,5 03 O O □ o o p OQ W £f -1 1 P. s .ag ■g s QD g ?! r] 03 CO D w > Ph > HUMBOLDT COUNTY— Continued. Lutheran Methodist Episcopal Presbyterian Salvation Army Seventh Day Adventist Unitarian 9 1.314 304 9 1,980 9 986 1,076 9 1,995 2 8C 154 2 300 1 150 24 1 20O 1 25 22 1 160 1 200 lOO 1 40O 43,500 38,250 4,000 1,200 12,000 16,000 13,700 1,600 3,000 IDA COUNTY. Total 20 2,610 i,m IS 2 Catholic Congregational >_ 2 2 6 7 2 1 550 126 711 805 384 34 75 105 107 760 399 35 2 2 4 7 2 1 Lutheran Methodist Episcopal Presbyterian 2 Swedish Evan. Free Church.. — - 1,,S25 $ se.mo 700 360 975 1,575 600 125 22,000 7,800 17,500 37,600 10,000 2,000 $ U.ioo 6,000 3,300 10,800 14,500 6,600 IOWA COUNTY. Total . . - Ifi s.oos s.m SI 8 ll,65i $ M9,SS0 85 $ 66,m $ SM,2S0 Amaia Society ■ 7 7 1 3 1 1 1 7 5 5 3 3 1 1,575 2,005 7 '"I 700 1,960 60 492 . 600 20O 200 •2,600 2,060 976 1,026 700 300 % 15,000 76,000 $ 15,000 94.600 Catholic Church of Christ, Scientist- 427 7 4 $ 18,500 Congregational 276 322 66 12 1,355 1,050 343 623 382 60 205 325 60 228 990 360 404 137 68 3 1 1 1 7 6 6 3 3 1 13,100 15,000 3,000 2,200 43,600 46,600 8,100 21,000 4,700 1,650 2 1 3,900 1,600 17.000 18,500 3,000 Disciples of Christ Dunkers, Prog, or Brethren.. Episcopal 2,200 Lutheran _. Methodist Episcopal Methodist Protestant Presbyterian . 6 5 1 3 2 1 12.600 12,600 2.000 9,700 3,800 1,800 66,100 69,200 10,100 30,700 8,600 3,450 Eeformed Church In U. S... Wesleyan Methodist JACKSON COUNTY. Total Advent Christian ._ Baptist Catholic Church of Christ, Scientist Congregational Episcopal , Free Methodist German Evan. Ch. of N. A Latter-day Saints Beorg'd. Lutheran Methodist Episcopal Presbyterian Beformed Church in U. S.. Salvation Army 498 96 50 100 163 1.313 872 101 91 40 i.m 140 855 329 90 60 116 258 980 112 125 12 is IS.OOO $ ioe.eso SO $ 99,150 $ 505,800 160 450 5,460 160 1,350 160 300 150 460 1,300 2,600 200 lOO 200 $ 1,000 15,000 269,100 $ 1,000 16,000 11 ¥ 68,000 317,100 30,000 8.0OO 2,000 1,000 1,750 36,800 42,600 8.000 5,000 1,600 2 1 1 1 3,300 3,500 800 600 33,800 6,600 2,800 1,500 1,760 5 7 1 1 11,200 16,860 3,000 2,000 48,000 69,350 11.000 7,000 1.600 CHURCH STATISTICS 719 Denominations , u §1 ^ ^oS MS ol 1 a O tU) A « Oo § ^ q II II O !zi S 00 u a m > a. > JASPEE. COUNTY. Total Baptist Oatholic , Christian, Betoimed Congregational Disciples ol Christ Dunkers, Ch. of the Brethren Friends Free Methodist — Lutheran Methodist Episcopal Presbyterian Presbyterian (United) Betormed Church in America Reformed Church in U. S Seventh Day Adventist Wesleyan Methodist 60 9,180 7, ISO 58 2 460 658 190 538 1,18« 62 280 27 380 4,109 380 386 241 262 7 26 178 440 1,052 40 190 36 175 3,341 305 685 343 86 14 4C 17,2Sr 1,460 60O 500 1,110 1,800 20O 260 20O 460 7,325 700 1,200 875 450 7 150 $ Jise,s50 20,500 22,000 7,000 29,600 51,000 1,900 2,000 2,500 25,600 192,600 22,000 28,S0O 8,350 18,000 1,000 S8 S0,Z90 3,240 6,600 3,500 6,200 5,800 1,500 2,500 3,900 27,400 7,C0O 9,600 9,660 3,000 600 JEPFEESON COUNTY. Total -, Baptist Catholic Christian (Christian Conn.). Church of Christ, Scientist- Disciples of Christ Bunkers, Oh. of the Brethren Friends Free Methodist Lutheran Methodist Episcopal M. E. (Swedish) Presbyterian Presbyterian (United) Seventh Day Adventist 145 1,024 100 635 110 262 95 487 2,327 75 694 50 25 i,m 122 117 110 420 138 120 140 140 1,885 lOO 825 75 19 86 9,908 $ 195,m 560 960 175 75 900 600 400 560 1.060 3,125 250 1,070 200 113 7,000 19,600 4,000 17,000 2,700 6,000 4,000 18,300 61,300 2,600 42,800 10,000 900 21 3,000 10,000 4,500 1,200 3,000 8,000 13,900 2,500 6,600 JOHNSON COUNTY. Total ',0 8,658 Ji.in 38 2 11,79J, $ m,500 26 $106,500 $ 596,000 1 9 2 1 3 1 3 9 6 1 1 1 1 2 150 4,146 387 176 885 245 ■ 1 9 2 .... i 350 3,714 600 100 60O 300 850 2,975 1,240 20O 300 5 160 400 $ 1,200 196,200 42,000 1 8 2 $ 4,000 44,000 8,600 $ 6,200 240,200 50,600 Oatholic - Congregational Ohurch of Christ, Scientist Dificinlps of Christ 640 175 643 1,486 578 70 211 5 69 199 300 75 300 1,256 469 86 169 10 80 196 3 1 3 9 5 1 1 .... 2 17,000 15,000 38,600 117,600 41,000 2,000 2,000 1 1 1 6 3 6,000 6,000 3,200 17,800 9,600 22,000 20,000 41,700 135.300 50,600 2,000 6,000 Episcopal Keformed (Bohemian) Beformed Church in U. S.- Sevsnth Day Adventist 1 3,000 Unitarian — 14,000 3,100 1 1 6,000 1,600 19,000 4,600 720 CENSUS OP IOWA, 1915 Table Jio. 52. "n ^ "1 s &-ol S II 1 Denominations "_g ja '2'?,-§ 3 CO 1^ o §s 1 ^ i5 3 CD U w QQ t> fU > &H JONES COUNTY. Total Jjg Baptist - Catholic Church of Christ, Scientist. Congregational Disciples of Christ Episcopal Lutheran Methodist Episcopal Presbyterian Presbyterian (United) Reformed Church in U. S.. Seventh Day Adventist United Brethren in Christ.. e,189 120 1,862 ~ "443 169 65 970 1,271 579 65 272 12 381 S,S72 345 176 14 195 1,159 526 25 60 16 460 il JU,9»5 $ 368,700 300 2,700 150 1,025 325 200 1,000 2,960 l.i 150 360 100 1,150 10,000 130,200 48,000 6,000 5,000 26,500 82,000 45,700 2,000 1,600 300 11,500 $ 89,900 $ 2,500 23,000 9,200 1,1 4,000 12,500 18,000 12,500 1,500 1,000 4,100 KEOKUS COUNTY. Total Baptist Catholic Disciples . of Christ Dunkers or Ch. of the Breth Friends Priends (Orthodox) German Evan. Ch. of N. A Lutheran Methodist Episcopal Methodist Protestant Presbyterian Presbyterian (United) Seventh Day Adventist Spiritualist 56 8,5SS 748 1,745 1.875 307 100 150 100 262 2,253 273 513 160 17 50 5,767 228 ..820 215 90 16 98 1,886 126 490 150 22 17,696 $ S0i,0S0 2,230 1,725 4,100 650 30O 300 200 490 4,700 700 1,450 600 16Q 200 35,000 70,800 54,000 4,000 1,000 5,000 1,200 8,500 78,600 4,000 26,560 15,000 1,200 1,200 SI $ 81,200 4 $ 5,600 5 23,000 3 8,70Q 1 2,000 1 1,500 2 4,300 9 19,600 i 2,000 7,500 2 7,000 KOSSUTH COUNTY. Total Baptist Catholic Congregational Evangelical Association German Evan. Ch. of N. A. Lutheran Methodist Episcopal — Presbyterian Reformed Church in America Reformed CJhurch in U. S... Seventh Day Adventist J,S 7,802 342 3,675 470 102 90 1,: 1,376 338 81 50 40 S,78S 1,2 278 967 275 130 20 334 1,253 375 90 25 38 11,778 682 3,936 700 250 130 2,050 2,600 876 300 130 126 $ ^SS,780 18,000 289,000 21,200 2,600 1,500 49,280 81,700 12,000 6,000 1,500 1,000 SStlOO,700$ SSS.iSO &,500 29,000 8,000 1,800 700 18,700 20,800 8,000 3,000 1,200 LEE COUNTY. Total Baptist Catholic Church of Christ, Scientist- Congregational DlBdples ol Ohrirt ,_, ^,6^e 735 6,736 501 706 7,009 437 1,178 410 900 57 8 22, SSI P, 189, 800 SS $117,800 $1,407,600 1 1,750 6,990 275 850 1,750 $ 75,100 5.}6,000 h;6o6 44,600 $ 75,100 "2. 9 """2 1 $ 4^,600 iTooo 9,000 680,600 69,000 47,600 CHURCH STATISTICS 721 i.p E w 4J •w 2J I Denominations •ntS h ».o« M2 O'S n O M 6 bo S ago CI o o a 10 S 3 •9 a S3 03 M O S5 § m o w t» > P^ > EH LEE COONTT- -Continued. Episcopal Friends German Evan. Oil. of N. A. Jews 4 1 3 1 2 4 1 11 1 1 1 8 1 1 2 1 541 59 879 14 146 342 169 1.787 66 200 21 1,072 220 260 63 160 187 49 363 100 200 lOO 1,709 35 110 30 910 160 22 69 50 4 1 3 1 2 3 1 10 1 1 "'k 1 i 1 "" 1 1 i 1 1,000 125 1,200 260 276 1,000 400 3,060 150 600 150 2,650 400 150 206 200 115,000 2,300 40,000 5,000 1,600 17,300 4,000 108,000 2,600 23,000 4 1 2 19,500 700 9,000 134,500 3,000 49,000 5,000 Latter-day Saints Eeorg'd— 1,600 Lutheran 1 4,000 21,300 4,000 Methodist Episcopal M. E. (Swedish) 6 1 16,000 2,500 124.000 5,000 Methodist Protestant 23.000 Presbyterian _ Presbyterian (United) Salvation Army ira,ooo 25,000 5 1 16,500 4,000 117,500 29,000 3,500 25.000 3,600 25,000 LINN COUNTY. Total — - 117 w,ni 15,891 111 6 jfi,ms $1,865,950 55 $183,551 $l,Si9,500 Baptist 7 1 10 1 5 8 2 2 S 1 6 1 1 3 29 1 1 12 2 3 2 1 1 4 9 1 1,026 46 4,885 741 26 1,020 7 1 10 1 6 7 2 2 3 1 6 .„- 2,160 300 5,700 600 2,211 3,600 400 860 800 360 1.260 $ 47,600 3,500 347,200 60,000 77,200 158,500 11,000 99,200 18,500 3,000 8,600 4 $ 9,300 $ 56,800 3,500 Catholic Church of Christ, Scientist 6 ""3 2 45.950 ""9^506 9.600 393,150 50,000 Congregational 824 1,763 105 438 20O 215 186 75 20 67S 6.955 76 23 2,628 182 81Q 263 200 47 626 606 40O 676 2,042 160 165 240 313 86,700 Disciples of Christ- 168,000 11,000 Episcopal Evangelical Association 1 2 5,000 7.500 104,200 26,000 3,000 Free Methodist 6 4,200 12,700 Latter-day Saints Eeorg'd— 11 446 5,327 48 46 2,510 181 335 371 ""i 28 1 1 11 2 s 2 1 — .. i 1 20 950 11,226 260 200 4,500 450 600 550 260 47 1,160 1,950 300 60,000 426,300 8,000 760 179,100 26,800 11,100 26,000 1 19 1 400 59,260 2,200 60,400 Methodist Episcopal M. E. (African) — 485,560 10,200 Pent'l Ch. oJ the Nazarene— 750 179,100 Presbyterian (United) Eelormed (Bohemian) Heformed Church in U. S.— 2 1 1 6.200 2.500 1.600 32,000 13,600 27,500 Seventh Day Adventist United Brethren In Christ 55 400 741 150 ""'4 9 1 43,000 46,800 15,000 3 4 9,700 10,860 52,700 57,650 15,000 LOUISA COUNTY. Total Baptist - - Christian (Christian Conn.) Church ot God Congregational — Free Methodist — Methodist Episcopal Presbyterian Presbyterian (Keformed) — Presbyterian (United) United Brethren in Christ — United Evangelical S2 S,680 s,m 40 87 24 60 50 1,846 729 140 403 221 80 35 75 85 66 90 1,612 625 100 356 170 110 SI 8,7iO$ UO,JiO0 200 160 300 200 500 3,715 1,650 225 950 650 200 2.200 2,000 400 2,000 1,400 58.200 22,600 4,500 37,000 8,200 2,000 18 $ iO.OOO $ 180, m 1,000 800 16,600 11,000 2,500 4,000 2,600 1,500 2.200 2,000 400 3,000 2,200 74,800 83,500 7,000 41,000 10,800 3,500 40 722 CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 Table No. 52. = ho^S S .1 1 CO Denominations J2 a 03 O O a « w a I& ^xa o lg a rO 08 w o iz; , s to o M 0E3 t> lU > t< LtrOAS COUNTT. Total. Baptist Baptist (Colored) Catholic Christian Union Church ol Christ, Scientist- Disciples of Christ Latter-day Saints Eeorg'd-- Lutheran Methodist Episcopal M. E. (Alrican) Pent'l Oh. of the Nazarene— Presbyterian Presbyterian (United) Seventh Day Adventist United Brethren in Christ United Evangelical Si S,999 2,796 642 IB 400 40 216 21B B30 60 21 350 193 350 140 40 125 497 40 11 300 175 SI 9,m 1,275 350 350 150 160 1,100 500 300 1,650 lOO 400 1,: 300 21 875 600 $ 169,ZtS IS 28,600 875 15,000 1,000 13,400 1,500 9,000 47,000 400 5,200 31,600 6,000 6,500 S,SOfl 518,000 4,500 'i'.m 7,000 7,900 1,000 2,000 3,000 1,600 2,000 mi.eis 33,100 875 18,000 1,000 13,400 1,500 16,000 54,900 400 6,200 33,600 9,000 8,100 5,300 LYON COUNTY. Total Catholic Christian Beformed Congregational Disciples of Christ Lutheran ■ Methodist Episcopal Presbyterian Peonies' Church Betormed Church in America 25 2,9S8 2,075 24 1 5,679 2 5S0 80 2 550 2 166 70 2 460 4 C71 485 1,074 1 178 160 30O 4 662 203 865 5 484 616 1,076 1 45 65 200 1 25 32 100 6 287 375 1 1,065 128,000 20 $ 65,700 19,500 2 $ 14,000 6,000 2 5,500 18,000 4 10,000 4,000 1 3,200 14,000 3 10,500 44,000 4 8,000 3,000 1 3,000 2,000 17,600 3 11,600 198,706 83,600 11,500 28,000 7,200 24,500 62,000 6,000 2,000 29,000 MADISON COUNTY. Total Baptist Catholic Christian (Christian Conn.) Christian Union Disciples of Christ Priends _ -Methodist Episcopal Presbyterian Presbyterian (United) Seventh Day Adventist S2 5,7/77 S.SSO S2 8,500 3 385 262 3 925 J 250 1 200 2 290 175 2 600 1 lOO 100 1 200 3 482 606 3 800 1 305 216 1 360 15 2,716 1,923 IB 3,500 2 654 365 2 1,160 3 375 417 3 675 1 21 18 1 .... 100 $ 172,500 MAHASKA COUNTY. Total Baptist Baptist (Colored) _ Catholic Christian Reformed Church of Christ, Scientist. Congregational Disciples of Christ PMends 7,901 600 471 260 1,426 849 215 20 160 1,040 671 5S 22,000 8,000 9,200 1,500 15,000 6,000 67,300 46,000 8,000 600 18 $ 47,000 $ 3,200 1,600 2,300 2,600 13,300 8,600 5,700 209,500 25,200 9,500 9,200 1,600 17,300 8,600 70,600 53,500 13,700 500 I7,OT ? m,s5o « $ 66,500 $ W.OBO 1,200 400 226 1,160 200 30O 1,600 1,860 $ 11,600 2,200 16,000 27,600 12,000 30,000 32,500 45,500 « $ 4,200 $ 15,700 2,200 16,800 40,600 12,000 30,000 33,500 GS.OOO 1 3 1,800 13,000 1 2 1,000 7,600 CHURCH STATISTICS 723 Denominations n 6^ 1 ea o o 1 >> fcji'S 1 m o Pi MAHASKA CODNTY-Continued. Free Methodist Latter-day Saints, Reorg'd. Lutheran Methodist Episcopal ... M. E. (African) M. E. (Swedish) Pent'l Oh. of the Nazarene. Presbytertan - Presbyterian (United) Reformed Ohurch in America Eelormed Ohurch in U. S.- Salvatlon Army Seventh Day Adventist .._ "8 81 110 3 51 16 70 14 1 21 2,434 2,111 21 47 20 1 22 8 1 82 45 1 460 350 2 150 160 1 294 370 8 110 £60 1 100 30 26 29 — - 600 61 200 6,276 300 100 400 600 700 960 200 260 26 4,000 4,000 142,860 3,000 3,000 2,600 39,000 18,000 20,000 4,000 7,000 3,600 14,300 1,600 4,000 4,000 8,000 3,600 MARION OOUNTT. Total Baptist Catholic — _ Ohrlstian Eeformed Congregational Disciples of Christ Pree Methodist Latter-day Saints, Eeorg'd- Methodist Episcopal Methodist Protestant Presbyterian Eeformed Ohurch in America Seventh Day Adventist , 60 S.BOl ■ 6,806 58 3 4 463 410 4 1 SOO 70 1 4 986 316 4 1 62 62 1 8 1,490 876 7 1 1 50 46 1 1 50 20 1 27 3,166 2,990 27 6 600 163 6 2 333 330 2 5 1,477 1,510 6 1 34 36 1 -— 18,S75 $ su.sso 27 $ 83,i50 $ m.soo 1,350 260 1,400 300 2.600 200 160 7,360 1,425 400 2,950 200 $ 27,500 12,000 19,300 3.000 46.760 2,000 '""97^200 11,000 17,000 103,600 2,000 1 1 4 $ 4,000 4,000 15,400 $ 31,500 16,000 34,700 3,000 3 1 ""9 2 1 5 7,600 1,260 64,260 8,260 18,300 4,500 4,500 24,000 116,500 15,600 21,600 127,600 2,000 MARSHALL OOUNTT. Total eo lO.iSfl 7,092 58 e 19,835 $ 693,150 36 %110,SOO $ 803,i50 Baptist 11 450 80 1,627 253 518 38 416 210 11 1 900 100 1,900 625 360 1,500 2,800 260 240 850 1,050 260 1,870 4,260 200 500 1,200 250 200 160 300 300 300 $ 65,000 1,500 107,760 7,500 15,000 83,500 96,800 2,400 22,000 3,700 11,500 7,000 51,000 108,600 1,600 6,000 73,000 2,600 6,000 2,000 1 '"I 1 4 3 $ 6,000 "12^000 800 "'¥,m 7,000 $ 60,000 1,600 Catholic 139,750 Christian (Christian Conn.) Ohurch of Christ, Scientist— Congregational 8,300 15,000 92,300 103,800 933 1,660 62 178 77 536 156 1,380 1,866 40 113 660 100 140 43 19 76 70 730 1,425 48 60 212 275 45 295 1,837 25 120 536 50 30 46 Dnnkpra Oh of the Breth. 2,400 Episcopal Evangelical Association Friends German Evan. Oh. of N. A. 22,000 4,900 15,000 10,000 63,300 1 2 1 6 8 1 1 2 1 1,200 3,500 3,000 12,300 21,200 1,60Q 3,000 7,500 1,500 Methodist Episcopal Methodist Protestant Pent'l Oh. of the Nazarene 129,700 3,000 9,000 80,600 Reformed Ohurch in U. S.— 4,000 6.000 2,000 Seventh Day Adventist Spiritualist United Brethren in Christ United Evangelical 70 120 21,000 8,000 21,000 10,000 1 2,000 724 CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 Table Xo. 52. g o +3 •HI 03 2 ■&^l S ^1 1 a O 60 DenommatloDfl fl f It o 1 "3 » S CQ O Uj M f* (l4 t» ri MILLS COUNTY. Total .. Baptist Catholic Congregational Disciples ol Christ Episcopal Latter-day Saints, Eeorg'd. Lutheran Methodist Episcopal : Presbyterian ., Presbyterian (United) Seventh Day Adventist United Brethren in Christ— ss a.ioo s,m 85 2 iS6 204 2 40 168 116 350 272 24 6 SB 34 310 20 9 1,421 1,208 9 3 376 28Q 3 2 68 100 2 1 26 19 1 2 37 40 2 S,9S0 $ 116,600 U $ so,m $ U6,100 450 160 360 50O li» 100 300 2,900 685 280 76 100 $ 7,000 1,000 10,000 3,400 2 1 1 $ 4,600 60() 2,000 % 11,500 1,600 12,000 3,400 2,000 1,000 6,000 68,600 14,200 1,000 500 2,000 i 7 2 1,500 17,100 4,500 2,000 1,000 7,600 86,600 18,700 1,000 — - 600 2,000 MITCHELL COUNTY. Total S6 e.sss 18,705 82 i 9,651 $ SOS,i50 25 $ 76,S00 $ m,7so Baptist CathoUc . Church ol Christ, Scientist- 7 6 2 4 2 8 6 1 1 694 1,891 687 453 7 6 .2 "i .... 1,750 1,600 100 $ 30,100 104,860 4 4 $ 6,800 13,000 $ 36,900 117,850 Congregational . . Pree Methodist Lutheran . Methodist Episcopal Seventh Day Adventist 430 39 2,266 1,066 26 .122 280 80 471 760 20 64 4 1 8 6 .... 1,625 160 2,660 1,600 26 260 51,000 i;5oo 63,000 48,000 4 1 6 5 10,300 2,000 23,000 17,200 01,300 3.500 86,000 65,200 Universalist 4,000 1 4,000 8,000 MONONA COUNTY. Total 28 i,!!ieo 8,526 27 1 7,382 $ i85,250 T> $ i0,700 $ 225,950 Catholic Congregational 1 6 3 1 1 6 6 1 5 526 656 488 30 420 1,296 685 64 67 100 730 600 40 134 185 685 36 117 1 6 3 1 1 6 6 1 4 i 400 1,326 1,100 250 150 1,900 1,400 260 607 $ 36,000 61,700 11,000 10,000 1,500 21,700 36,000 3,600 3,850 1 3 2 1 5 6 $ 4,000 7,200 4,000 2,000 "ii'soo 9,000 $ 40,000 68,900 Disciples of Christ Episcopal Latter-day Saints, Eeorg'd. Lutheran ... Methodist Episcopal Presbyterian . Seventh Day Adventist 16,000 12,000 1,500 36,200 46,000 3,500 3,850 MONEOE COUNTY Total S6 5,^86 i,eV9 Si 2 10, BIS $ S16,S00 17 $ S6,ie9 $ 252,769 Baptist . .. 3 2 4 1 1 1 2 1 S 1 s 5 3 1 2 3 287 439 1,600 409 224 330 3 2 4 .... — . 760 885 1,925 160 $ 6,300 6,300 80,000 $ 6,300 Baptist (Colored) 6,300 Catholic Church ol Christ, Scientist.. i % 14,000 94,00a Ch. ol God, Indp. (Colored) Congregational 18 70 720 30 137 237 202 774 235 166 310 367 10 125 690 160 167 46 1,110 200 178 376 366 1 1 2 1 3 1 3 4 3 1 2 B 60 360 800 300 500 260 550 1,175 80O 300 600 830 700 2,000 18,600 6,000 4,400 2,600 9,000 18,600 7,600 12,000 20,000 26,600 ._. 700 700 2,700 18,600 Disciples ol Christ . Episcopal Friends Latter-day Saints. Eeorg'd. 2 2^160 6,000 S;660 ^,500 Lutheran , : 9,000 24,600 11,100 12,000 Methodist Episcopal . M. E. (Alrican). Presbyterian .. i 6,000 3,600 Presbyterian (United) United Brethren in Christ 2 2 6,o66 6,019 25,000 80,519 CHURCH STATISTICS 725 Denominations 4 ol 1 .=1 1-° s 1 s as a 1" -1 il 1 I 03 O bH lg d to > MONTGOMEET OOUNTT. Total 28 5,66^ 3,1161 2i i 9,7S5 $ 367,100 u $ K.SOO $ .^2,900 1 8 1 2 2 4 3 9 2 1 60 91 210 30 110 1 a 1 2 '"i 200 90O 20O 135 $ 2,000 21,000 6,000 $ 2,000 Baptist . ._. $"Tmo 21,000 Catholic Church of Christ, Scientist 6,500 Congregational Disciples ol Christ 245 1,067 1,906 1,444 491 160 190 797 676 1,113 406 140 2 4 3 7 2 1 600 2.075 2,050 2,750 625 200 91,500 62.000 69,500 68,100 37,000 10,000 2 1 8 4 2 1 4,800 4,600 14,600 19,600 7,600 8,500 96,300 66,600 84,000 Methodist Episcopal Presbyterian — Presbyterian (United) 88,600 44,600 13,600 MUSCATINE OOUNTT. Total i9 9,6S1 6,058 ■}2 7 u.m $ 697,900 2Ji $ 69,150 $ 767,056 Baptist _ 1 3 1 1 3 2 1 1 3 1 1 1 6 11 5 1 2 1 3 2 976 1.680 14 750 195 1 3 1 i 1 i 2 600 1.416 30 100 1.620 626 300 150 425 300 100 126 1.360 4,150 1,460 130 600 150 185 700 $ 40,000 111.000 $ 40,000 Catholic - 3 $ 11,000 122,000 ""sii'.m 9.100 22,000 1,000 5,600 8,000 6,000 60O 105.000 172,000 95,700 8,000 10,600 "1 1 ilioo 3,500 465 323 200 60 239 400 160 39 982 2.199 8^4 109 269 22 7,0 660 300 250 126 65 20Q 100 18 42 330 2,089 710 44 304 3 2 11 2 92,600 Discioles ol Christ 12,600 EDiscoDal 22,000 Evangelical Association 1,000 6,500 German Evang. Oh. of N. A. 1 3,600 11,600 6,000 Latter-day Saints, Eeorg'd.. 000 4 5 4 '"2 11,000 10,400 13,600 ""i,7B0 116,000 Methodist Episcopal Presbyterian Reformed Church in America Reformed Church in U. S. — 1^,400 109,200 3,000 15,260 Seventh Day Adventist United Brethren in Christ 62 484 1 2 1,600 21,000 1,600 2 6,000 27,000 O'BRIEN OOUNTT. Total 37 1,661 S,S1S 37 10,960 $ S7S,150 28 $ 78,300 $ 351,450 Baptist - Catholic 1 2 1 1 3 4 1 1 1 1 6 10 2 3 1 70 71OQ 141 30 80 1 2 1 1 3 4 1 1 1 1 5 10 2 3 1 400 660 350 250 1,050 876 125 200 300 350 1.600 3.260 600 8S0 160 $ 7,000 62,000 4.60Q 4,000 36,000 7,800 1,600 2,500 4,000 3.000 29.500 89.260 12,000 18,500 1,600 1 2 1 ""3 1 $ 3,000 11,000 3,000 "~6^3o6 2,600 $ 10,000 63,000 7,600 4,000 42,300 10,800 1,600 4,600 4,000 Church of Christ. Scientist- Congregational Disciples of Christ — Dunkers, Ch. of the Brethren 617 246 30 100 103 130 1.123 1.910 342 240 9 426 222 40 86 33 35 219 1,430 325 278 S Evangelical Association Friends 1 2,000 Ger. Evang. Oh; of N. A Lutheran Methodist Episcopal Presbyterian Reformed Church In America Seventh Day Adventist 1 6 S 2 3 3,000 14,000 21,000 6,600 6,000 6,000 43,500 . 110,260 18,500 24,600 1,600 726 CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 Table No. 52. Denominations 4 O bo 1 i to 03 O O 111 ■« >> "1 - II I 03 a o3 o bo li a '^ s tn o w is > h t> ^ OSCEOLA COUNTY. Totai Baptist Catliolic Cliristian Beformed Congregational Lutheran Methodist Episcopal Methodist Protestant Presbyterian Reformed Church in America %1 i,m i.m U 6,180 1 90 66 1 30O 2 816 1S6 2 860 ?. 110 130 2 325 2 218 168 2 600 4 4S6 178 4 900 6 1,124 1,066 6 1,945 1 260 160 1 400 1 80 60 1 350 2 40 25 2 — - 600 $ JtS7,200 J9 $ 51,000 $ 9,00Q 1 $ 2,600 23,000 2 7,000 6,600 1 2,000 17,000 2 4,600 16,600 4 10,000 53,500 5 17^000 4,000 1 2,600 7.000 1 3,000 2.70O 2 2,600 $ iss.too ? PAGE COUNTY. Total Baptist Baptist (Colored) Catholic Church of God.— CJhurch of Christ, Scientist. Congregational Disciples of Christ Episcopal Eree Methodist Latter-day Saints, Beorg'd. Lutheran Methodist Episcopal M. E. (African) M. E. (Swedish) Presbyterian Presbyterian (Reformed) Presbyterian (United) United Brethren in Christ-- J£ 8,690 s,no ■45 S IS.ffTS 2 4S7 360 2 1,260 1 36 39 1 100 1 306 1 30O 1 1 40 1 1 40 75 1 401 105 1 600 3 780 565 3 1,200 1 40 30 1 128 5 169 109 6 ; 925 1 lis 20 1 200 8 1.537 273 7 1 2,610 12 3.107 2,876 12 4,326 1 52 30 1 160 1 12 20 1 100 3 654 633 3 1,000 2 221 240 2 550 S 710 560 3 1,375 1 66 90 1 250 $ w.eoo 43,000 2.000 10,000 60,000 32,500 7,000 7,100 3,000 52,000 135,000 2,500 1,500 46,000 6,000 40,000 5,000 SIS $ SSl.i 800 1,200 8,000 2,600 'Elioo 22,000 26,600 BOO 2,000 4,600 4,800 9,600 1,800 PALO ALTO COUNTY. Total- Baptist Catholic Congregational Bunkers, Ch. of the Brethren Free Methodist Latter-day Saints, Reorg'd-- Lutheran Methodist Episcopal Presbyterian Seventh Day Adventist S5 5,762 8,970 «2 S 7, i860 2 104 165 2 350 3,148 923 7 2,745 266 140 1 — — 400 86 40 1 2SQ 23 40 1 1 250 70 86 1 150 11 943 805 9 2 1,655 976 1,160 8 2,010 160 110 1 800 48 62 1 160 $ SBi.SOO 5,300 134,700 18,000 1,600 1,000 3,000 25,800 69,600 4,000 2,000 IS 66,200 : 1,500 34,000 4,000 1,200 8,000 14,600 3,000 PLYMOUTH COUNTY. Total - - Baptist Catholic Congregational Disciples of Christ- Dunkers, Ch. of the Brethren iB 8,m S,i56 ■(8 8 lS,9Si 2 182 193 2 750 12 4.698 792 12 2 4,734 2 316 226 2 800 1 30 20 1 150 1 74 65 1 200 m.eso ss $ 99,OB0 31,000 232,600 19,200 1,250 2,600 2 9 2 1 $ 6,000 38ie00 6,500 1,750 i £81,700 CHURCH STATISTICS 727 Denominations 8.| o in .2 t» m S >.o5 « o o -c) j3 jg 1 3 s .« 1" s ll !25 a CIS o w > So PLYMOUTH COUNTY— Continued. Episcopal Free Methodist German EvauR. Ch. ol N. A Lutheran Methodist Episcopal Presbyterian United Brethren in Christ 1 7Q 45 1 260 .4,000 1 4,000 1 2S 25 1 160 2,500 2 261 116 2 400 10.600 2 6,600 8 1.405 330 8 2,850 65,700 7 15,600 tf 1.183 1,282 V 2,876 101.900 6 17,600 1 46 40 1 125 2.000 1 1,600 2 210 304 2 — - 650 9,600 2 8,300 8,000 2,500 16,000 81,200 119,400 3,600 12,800 POCAHONTAS COUNTY. Total Baptist Catholic . Disciples of Christ _. Free Methodist Lutharan Methodist Episcopal Presbyterian Swedish Evang. Pree Church. e,70S 55 3,404 260 26 931 1.609 408 110 S,19S 40 692 176 294 1,466 506 120 SI 9,760 $ SW.ISO gg $ 69,500 $ S89,6B0 80 2,790 600 500 1,125 3,240 1,176 260 $ 90Q 167,600 9.000 80O 21.400 86,850 81,700 2,000 6 $80,600 $ 900 198,000 9,000 6 I 1 11,500 17,700 7,300 2,500 800 32,900 104,550 89,000 4,600 POLK COUNTY. TotaL... - m Baptist Baptist (Colored) Brethren In Christ Catholic Ohursh of Christ. Scientist- Congregational Disciples of Christ Dunkers, Ch. of the Brethren Episcopal Evangelical Association Friends Free Methodist Jews Latter-day Saints, Reorg'd.. Lutheran Methodist Episcopal - M. E. (African) M. E. (Swedish) Methodist Protestant Presbyterian Presoyterian (United) Reformed Church In U. S — Salvation Army Seventh Day Adventlst Unitarian United Brethren In Christ. United Evangelical .— Unlversallst Volunteers of America m i7.002 SS,6iS tgl 6 52.811 $!l,SOS,S50 S9 %m,6oo 7 2.228 1,183 7 2.900 $ 160,000 3 $10,600 1 1 25 25 36 70 1 1 —- 250 260 1,500 18,000 1 6,000 i) 11,860 1,392 9 3,900 175,000 8 42,600 1 1 760 50,000 14 2.439 1,785 13 1 4,690 221,800 6 18,300 17 10.470 5,202 15 2 10,832 458,000 1 2,000 2 2 227 654 220 185 2 2 600 726 16,000 125,000 2 7,500 3 280 310 3 660 18,600 3 10,200 1 361 200 1 800 16,000 1 3,600 1 6 2 8 90 630 668 2.371 160 160 260 1,091 1 6 2 8 ---- 260 1,400 800 3,769 4,000 75,000 15,000 157,750 6 28,000 21 7.887 6,973 21 9,775 409,000 16 45,000 2 667 220 2 476 15,460 1 3,600 1 165 160 1 200 8,000 1 3,00c 1 108 125 1 220 2,000 1 1,600 9 3.435 2,-469 9 4,380 176,600 4 10,600 3 521 660 3 1,060 41,600 3 10,600 2 207 261 2 500 20,000 1 S,60O 2 2 700 163 75 122 '"2 2 60O 460 21,000 7,000 1 927 75 1,040 1 6 -T— 450 1,476 40,000 39,050 8 10,500 1 167 188 1 3flC 8,600 1 4,000 1 1 75 72 70 72 1 i 260 200 3,800 10,000 •,,517,950 160,600 1,600 23,000 217,600 60,000 235,100 460,000 16,000 182,600 28,700 19,600 4,000 76,000 15,000 185,760 454,000 18,950 11,000 3,600 187,000 52,000 28,600 21,000 7,000 40,000 49,550 12,600 8,800 10,000 728 CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 Table Ho. 52. ■=" n i "1 i-( Si 09 F-l &-°5 s ^ li DO H ~4 li Benominatioiis ".1 .g s OS II o m (-1 o 13 ;§ CO o w CQ t> f^ > B POTTAWATTAMIE CODNTT. Total Baptist Baptist (Colored) Catholic , Christian (Christian Conn.l. Church of Christ, Scientist.. Congregational Disciples ol Christ Episcopal Evangelical Association Ger. Evang. Ch. of N. A Jews Latter-day Saints, Reorg'd.. Lutheran Methodist Episcopal .„ Pent'l Oh. of the Nazarene__ Presbyterian Seventh Day Adventist-. United Evangelical SB u,.m 8,S99 65 4 20,817 2 1.200 640 2 800 1 125 26 250 « 4.U?. 661 2,500 200 76 300 1 300 966 735 2,200 4 1,200 1,126 1,450 275 125 500 146 170 6O0 530 210 1,460 175 20O 546 290 1 1,172 12 1,391 521 11 1 2,255 11 2,501 2,787 11 4,680 60 34 30O 779 960 1,586 2 6S 82 1 175 1 65 69 — 300 $ S97,000 51,000 1,000 104,500 3,000 64,000 40,300 38,000 13,000 18,500 16,000 8,700 65,800 142,000 2,000 26,700 3,000 5,000 S6 m0,750 $24,0CQ 101,500 3,000 10,000 4,960 4,0OQ 18,100 23,000 11,200 "i^ooo POWESHIEK CODNTT. Total- Baptist Catholic Church of Christ. Scientist. Congregational Disciples of Christ Dunkers, Prog, or Breth Dunkers, Ch ol the Brethren Episcopal Friends Lutheran Methodist Episcopal Pent'l Ch. of the Nazarene. Presbyterian Presbyterian (United) Seventh Day Adventists S9 e,6i5 i,89i 36 S 11,700 2 364 216 2 675 2 600 70 2 650 1 1 75 4 1,305 819 4 1,900 5 720 695 5 1,400 1 25 40 1 160 1 73 67 1 300 2 25 1 1 300 3 305 287 3 550 1 10« 50 1 250 9 2,364 2,15Z 9 3,650 1 26 26 1 260 3 464 330 S 750 3 240 216 3 760 1 15 .28 1 — - 160 $ sis.m 20 17,600 33,000 86,200 15,800 1,600 1,000 3,600 8,600 4,000 131,300 28,000 16,000 1,800 $ S9,S00 $ 3,500 8,000 9,000 3,000 1,500 20,000 8,600 6,000 RINGGOLD COUNTY. Total Baptist Catholic Disciples of Christ Methodist Episcopal Presbyterian Presbyterian (United) United Brethren in Christ United Evangelical _ SI 5,m S,921i S2 1 10,1,75 3 282 272 4 1,300 3 584 4 650 6 902 645 6 2,175 11 2,768 2,220 10 1 4,040 1 135 125 1 1 300 4 623 498 4 1,310 1 90 69 1 2O0 9 100 96 2 — - 600 210,800 is $ ss,fm 26,600 1 % 4,700 8,000 1 1,500 38,800 1 3,500 100,900 9 12,600 1,000 1 2,000 30,600 4 8,200 2,000 1 800 3,000 SAC COUNTY. Total SS 11,91,8 S,296 SO S 8,905 $ 251, 9SS 2S $86,000 $ ST!,9SS Baptist _. Catholic Congregational 1 3 1 210 840 99 200 126 75 1 I .... 400 920 260 $ 20,000 49,000 8,000 1 3 1 $ 5,000 16,000 2,000 $ 26,000 64,000 10.000 CHURCH STATISTICS 729 Denominations i 1 "3 bj] 5 is ol II 1 o u O u '3 I^ 02 U w m > FM > B SAO OOUNTT— Continued. Disciples of Ohriflt. Latter-day Saints, Eeorg'd— Lutheran Methodist Episcopal Presbyterian Belormed Church in U. S 3 450 480 3 76Q 16.500 1 5,000 I 4 60 604 1 70 1 8 1 200 1,000 1,133 30,000 3 7,800 n 1,823 1,665 10 1 3,526 91,400 7 16,500 V 763 669 6 1 1,510 ,31,760 6 11,200 2 209 120 " 360 5,160 2 8,600 SCOTT CODNTT. Total S7 9,m 6,06S S5 S U,9S0 $ 79«,ffi5 as $114400 $ m.iBs Baptist - Baptist (Colored) 2 1 4 1 8 2 2 1 1 4 3 1 6 2 1 1 1 1 554 lOO 2.000 670 76 295 2 1 i 1 8 2 2 1 1 4 3 1 6 2 — . 1 i 1,250 200 1,810 450 1,000 1.50O 760 250 80O 1.290 1,600 360 2,330 650 160 260 250 550 $ 81,600 7,000 96,000 40,000 66.000 48.000 82,600 8.00O 1.60O 53,300 104.000 8,000 186,200 22,000 ilooo 25 85.000 2 1 8 $ 9,200 3,000 38,600 $ 90,700 10,000 134,500 40,000 Catholic Church of Christ. Scientist- Congregational .. 701 850 476 60 60 1,172 1.222 86 1,113 237 260 41 36 160 515 295 210 60 5ft 492 1,378 60 1,616 265 ■40 58 3 2 1 11,000 7,000 4,000 77,000 66,000 86,600 8.00O Disciples ol Christ- Episcopal Jews - Latter-day, Saints, Eeorg'd— 1,600 Lutheran 4 2 1 4 2 12,000 12,600 2,000 8,000 6,800 65,300 116,600 Metiodist Episcopal M. E. (Alrican) Presbyterian Presbyterian (United) Salvation Army Seventh Dav Adventist 10,000 144,200 28,800 4,000 Spiritualist 25 Unitarian lOO 1 85,000 SHELBY OOUNTT. Tfttal ■— •- Baptist Catholic Congregational ., Disciples ol Christ Episcopal German Evang. Ch. ol N. A, Latter-day Saints, Eeorg'd.. Lutheran Methodist Episcopal Pent'l Oh. ol the Nazarene.. Presbyterian Seventh-day Adventist United Brethren in Christ United Evangelieal u 8,290 S,S07 V 6 879 636 6 6 3.660 396 6 1 298 160 1 8 190 255 3 1 83 52 1 45 10 ] 76 17 4 1.346 267 9 1,318 1,207 1 21 42 1 187 125 4 80 86 !! 49 35 2 1 68 180 1 10,905 1,760 1,800 460 800 176 240 300 1,250 2.640 300 360 426 275 UO WB.SOO 84,200 46,600 12,000 13,000 7,000 2,250 2,SC0 22.000 48,200 400 6,500 2,650 8,200 2,600 $ 57,000 $ 13,500 4,000 500 4,000 3,600 8,000 16,400 1,600 2,600 1,500 1,600 $ 259,900 SIOUX OOUNTT. Total — , Baptist Catholic - Christian Belormed Church ol Christ. Scientist. Congregational Disciples ol Ohrist 5S 10,29S 6,80e 124 2,805 l.( 170 655 120 106 19,568 336 2,625 3,618 260 400 SOO $ BS2.S00 4,500 209,000 68,500 3,500 6,000 i,a» .42 $UO,iOO ? 6718,700 $ 16,000 26,300 1 B.OOO 1 4,000 730 CENSUS OP IOWA, 1915 Table No. 52. Denominations i| O tU) C3 1 a o c3 ■i in >> I 1 "« .a es 03 " o ^ ^ «! o W CQ !> PM l> ir^ SIOUX COUNTY— Continued. liUtheran Metbodist Episcopal Presbyterian Presbyterian (United) Eeformed Churcb in America. Seventh Day Adventist 6 88!) 208 '6 1,510 5 S21 775 6 •1,725 4 356 415 4 1,130 2 114 151 2 375 14 .'i.227 2.807 14 7,200 1 10 11 1 ICC 24,500 6 12,600 30,600 4 10,700 24,200 3 7,000 8,000 2 5,500 152,600 14 53,400 600 STORY COUNTY. TotaL . SJ, lo.sie S,600 SB B le.ff/s $ 391,000 S9 %ioi,eoo $ m.ooo Baptist Catholic . 1 5 1 2 I 1 1 1 16 6 1 3 1 5 5 2S0 1.06S 176 1.072 75 145 25 70 4.764 1.078 60 480 920 381 473 134 157 Si 746 43 30O 25 50 1,328 1,0S6 65 459 160 380 464 1 5 "'i 5 1 1 1 1 15 6 1 2 1 6 6 i i 600 1,460 200 326 1,700 126 500 150 200 5,100 2,300 226 1,100 300 1,150 1,260 $ 21,000 50,000 1 3 $ 4,000 9,000 $ 25,000 Church of Clirist. Scientist 8,500 36,000 3,900 15,800 2,000 2,600 115,800 63,000 2,000 19,000 8,000 20,000 23,600 1 3 3,000 10,600 11,600 46,600 3,900 Disciples of Clirist- Episcopal Evangelical Association IMends . Latter-day Saints, Beorg'd.. 1 3,600 19,300 2,000 2,600 163,500 76,300 2,000 8 4 37,700 13,300 Methodist Episcopal Methodist Protestant 2 8,000 27,000 8,000 Seventh Day Adventist United Brethren in Christ-.. United Evangelical 3 3 7,100 6,500 27,100 80,000 TAMA COUNTY. Total SO 6,86// s.ou P S 18,200 $ m/ioo SI $ 93,060 $ im.iso Baptist ... Brethren in Christ 2 1 9 1 8 '1 1 1 1 2 16 1 4 2 6 260 3 2,003 160 2 .... i 1,000 10 2.700 75 430 300 250 650 250 325 3,780 400 926 466 1,760 $ 29,600 ""'"i7l600 1 3 $ 2,400 $ 81,900 Catholic Church of Christ, Scientist.. 337 9 13,660 101,160 Congregational Disciples of Christ 864 lOO 132 282 7Q 248 1,764 150 882 812 804 309 96 194 37S 8i 66 1,849 200 40O 300 735 3 1 1 1 1 2 15 1 4 2 6 22,100 3,000 4,20» 8,300 S,00« 4,000 109,400 6,000 28,600 60,000 47.600 3 12,300 34,400 3,000 6,000 11,7Q0 6,000 7,800 138,600 10,000 84,600 58,000 59,000 Duniers, Prog, or Brethren. Evangelical Association . Ger. Evang. Oh. of N. A. I/Utheran 1 1 1 2 10 1 2 2 4 1,800 3,400 2,000 8,800 24,200 4,000 6,000 8,000 11,600 Methodist Episcopal _ . . M. E. (German) Presbyterian Presbyterian (United) United Brethren in Christ TAYLOR COUNTY. Total SO 6.023 i.sie S9 1 10,088 $ g2i,IS0 17 $ S7,250 $ m,m Advsnt Christian . ' J 38 685 349 1.163 27 26 666 866 60 1 4 1 5 1 1 200 1,300 360 1,900 360 $ 1,600 29,800 20.000 38,600 3,000 ' s Baptist Catholic Disciples of Christ . 1 1 2 1 $ 2,000 1,600 3,800 Free Methodist CHURCH STATISTICS 731 Denominations O bo >>o5 cs o o P WW •■S9 S3 ^ * a 5o TATLOE COUNTY— Continued. Metbodist Episcopal M. E. (African) Presbyterian Presbyterian (United) Seventh Day Adventist United Brethren in Christ—, 8 1 4 2 2 1 2,326 6 965 411 38 16 1,736 6 636 • 306 32 25 8 1 4 2 1 1 1 S,125 IBO 1,460 900 183 20O 71,000 1,500 Sa,600 18,500 6S0 1,200 6 18,150 4 1 8,600 1,600 1 1,000 UNION COUNTY. Total Baptist Catholic Christian (Christian Oonn.). Church of Christ. Scientist- Disciples of Ohrist Episcopal Evangelical Association Free Methodist German Evan. Ch. of N. A. Lutheran Metbodist Episcopal Presbyterian Presbyterian (United) Seventh Day Adventist United Brethren in Christ United EvanRelical is 6.m 453 1.224 106 630 85 173 24 SCO 337 1,861 672 202 16 92 100 4,955 425 65 703 21 177 50 76 82 1,405 368 160 29 250 65 * S 12,280 $ MS, 100 1,260 1,160 200 160 1,200 176 700 75 260 660 3,660 940 640 15Q 900 260 25,000 47,000 1,500 19,600 3,000 6,600 60Q 2 ' loiflOO 69,300 14,860 13,000 1,500 6,000 6,000 21 $ U,950 1,350 6,500 2,400 4,000 5,500 13,300 4,000 6,000 2,000 90O VAN BUEEN COUNTY. Total - Baptist Baptist (Colored) Catholic Congregational Disciples of Ohrist Friends (Orthodox) Free Methodist Latter-day Saints Eeorg'd. Methodist Episcopal Pent'l Ch. of the Nazarene— Presbyterian Presbyterian (United) Seventh Day Adventist— is 10 75 184 680 90 50 62 2.065 830 12 10 161 .608 80 15 615 26 47 10,8iS $ iJ,5,eoo 1,350 50 150 460 1.: 160 360 124 5,000 260 1,350 140 150 $ 14,200 800 4,000 9,500 19,000 3,200 2,500 1,200 60,000 28,600 1,500 1,200 10 SO.J/OO 1,000 2,000 1,600 5,000 1,600 1,000 14,800 8,000 600 WAPELLO COUNTY. Total _ — Baptist Baptist (Colored) Catholic Christian Beformed — Church of Ohrist, Scientist- Congregational — Disciples of Christ— Dunkers, Ch. of the Brethren Episcopal — 10. lie 1,438 116 1.885 28 791 6,0!B7 1,167 216 17 460 675 4S 135 18,61S $ Uf,676 2,450 250 1.160 150 350 1,300 3,900 220 489 56,500 9,000 59,000 16,000 52,200 46,200 1,200 44,000 67,1850 2,000 1,600 19,800 1,000 1,200 6,000 732 CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 Table IVo. 52. Denominations 1"^ 1 1 >> il is II I a 03 S a o i? 1 o M £ > Ph P- &H WAPELLO OOUNTT— Continued. liiends I^ee Methodist — Jews Latter-day Saints. Eeore'd— Lutheran 10 2 1 167 113 10 79 946 2,669 150 32 22 610 17^ 52 30 60 135 36 464 1,845 62 20 27 618 36 82 1 4 i 3 9 1 1 1 3 '" 1 i 1 — - 1 1 1 260 800 200 1,002 3,660 500 200 20O 960 260 132 200 ' 2,600 6,300 T,m 28,600 91,300 5,000 9,000 650 21,026 206 1 2 6 1 1 1,050 2,200 '"" 6^000 20,000 1,000 4.000 3,550 7,500 1,000 34,600 111,300 M. E. (African) M. E. (Swedish) .. . 6,000 13,000 660 Presbyterian Salvation Army _ _ 1 1,600 22,626 200 Spiritualist WAREEN COUNTY. Total Baptist Catholic Christian trnion Disciples of Christ Dunkers, Prog, or Brethren. Friends Free Methodist Latter-day Saints, Eeorg'd. Lutheran Methodist Episcopal Pent'l Oh. of the Nazarene Presbyterian Presbyterian (United) Seventh Day Adyentist United Brethren in Christ- t.OSO 470 1,642 200 436 15 462 8 29 160 3.680 34 609 313 33 22C S.iSSS 484 144 150 26 1,784 40 515 278 31 160 IS, SOS 900 1,! 600 1,000 150 800 200 20O 30O 5,060 260 1,260 60O 92 750 29,600 36,600 17,000 8,000 1,000 12,000 800 2,260 6,000 107,000 41,500 24,000 70O 7,000 28 61,700 6,000 14,600 "T.oob 4,000 600 2,000 20,000 5,000 6,800 2,800 $ SSO',9S0 32,600 61,000 17,000 9,000 1,000 16,000 1,400 2,260 7,000 127,000 46,600 29,800 700 9,800 WASHINGTON COUNTY. Total Baptist Catholic Church of Christ, Scientist- Congregational Disciples of Christ German Evan. Ch. of N. A Lutheran Mennonite Met.'iodist Episcopal M. E. (African) i Presbyterian Presbyterian (Reformed) .. Presbyterian (United) United Brethren In Christ-. 9,1S6 762 1,670 97 701 110 124 679 3,114 60 623 86 1,072 158 7,079 SI 846 373 80 717 60 66 641 2,604 40 601 80 916 177 ir,09i $ m,!S50 2,364 1,300 200 20O 1,450 650 275 1,279 4,866 160 1,250 420 2,000 700 39,350 96,500 5,000 4,000 35,000 11,000 2,700 19.200 146,000 3,000 42,000 6,500 73,000 8,000 $ 8^,000 6,400 17,400 1,600 6,000 1,000 4,000 19,800 1,600 6,000 1,600 15,800 4,000 575,850 46,750 113,900 6,000 5,600 40,000 11,000 3,700 23,200 166,800 4,600 48,000 8,100 88,800 12,000 WAYNE COUNTY. Total - «> S,S1] Ji,81S •JO 1 11,890 $ 189,i00 16 $ SB,000 $ S21,i00 Baptist Church of Godl 9 1 1 8 1,082 15 115 977 843 10 '"i 2,700 15 400 2,860 $ 29,400 1 $ 1,600 $ 30,900 Congregational 90 946 1 7,600 63,300 -_-___— 7,600 60,800 Dlsdples of Christ 8.... '"i ""7^600 CHURCH STATISTICS 733 Deno. ninatlona E 1 s I..0 5 03 O O III XI ^ (Ill's is ll a o S Is •3 ^ a l» o a CO . t> Ph > tH WATNB OOUNTT— Continued. Methodist Episcopal M. B. (Soutli) Presbyterian Presljyterian (United) United Brethren in Christ- 14 2.731 2,413 14 4,200 68,200 8 16,400 2 234 175 2 550 8,500 1 1,600 2 118 102 2 475 10,000 1 1,000 1 124 120 1 __— 300 8,600 1 1,600 2 115 125 2 40O 4,000 2 3,600 WEBSTEE OOUNTT. Total ea IS.OIS 7,250 5.4 B 17,985 $ eso.wo U $152, a)0 $ 832,m 4 1 6 1 4 2 1 1 1 1 16 15 2 1 1 1 429 26 4,630 693 260 174 108 20 70 3,723 2,207 159 600 88 42 293 38 924 813 88 100 3 1 6 1 i 1,200 300 2,600 260 900 700 260 250 $ 81,700 3,500 174,000 8,000 38,800 17,000 20,000 8,000 3 $ 11,300 $ 43,000 Baptist (Colored) Oatholio OhUTCh of Christ, Scientist— Congregational , Disciples of Christ Episcopal Evangelical Association Jews Latter-day Saints, Heorg'd. 3,600 6 30,500 204,600 8,000 4 I 1 1 8,800 700 3,500 4,000 47,600 17,700 23,500 12,000 47 1,110 2.882 160 300 120 90 16 14 — 200 6.290 4,660 476 450 360 100 1.200 148,500 168,200 11,800 60,000 2.000 2.600 "'l4 9 2 1 1 1 "Ei^ioo 27,400 3,300 7,000 2,100 1,300 1,200 196,300 Methodist Episcopal M. E. (Swedish) 196,600 ■ 15,100 57,000 Swedish Evan. Eree Church- United Brethren in Christ 4,100 4,300 WINNEBAGO OOUNTT. Total — S8 i,7Bl 1,S79 25 2 e,7Si $ m.sBo IS $ (6,150 $ 166,950 Baptist Catholic Congregational Lutheran Methodist Episcopal Seventh Day Adventist 1 3 1 18 4 1 140 453 60 3,390 677 11 76 73 70 760 60O 1 3 1 16 4 — - 200 650 120 4,475 1,275 $ 5,000 8,000 1,200 75,800 30,800 1 2 $ 2,300 7,050 $ 7,300 15,060 1,200 6 4 24,800 12,000 100,600 42,800 WINNESHIEK COUNTT. Total S9 177,185 2,5.i9 S7 2 1S,S60 $ m,900 Bi $ 95,100 $ (97,000 Advent Christian ' OathoHc - - 1 10 IS 2 1 66 4,348 50 866 1 10 "'i 150 4,200 50 400 100 300 5,800 1,460 400 30O 210 $ 1,000 200,200 1 7 $ 600 31,700 $ 1,500 231,900 Church of Christ, Scientist— 232 45 65 4,783 454 160 33 59 166 IB 35 829 375 130 25 60 1 1 1 ■ 12 7 1 2 1 14,000 5.O0O 2,400 135,600 31,600 6,800 2,600 3.000 1 1 1 8 3 1 3,600 3,600 1,100 44,0OC 6,800 3,000 17,600 Episcopal 8,600 3,500 179,500 Methodist Episcopal M. E. (German) Seventh Day Adventist United Brethren in Christ.. 37,300 9,800 2 600 1 2.000 5,000 734 CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 Table ]Vo. 52. il „ & -1 1 Ut t»»o,5 "§ = ■§ ou Denominations s CS o o 5SS i s II o 11 ■3 55 s OS ° w CD t> fM > Eh WOODBURY OOUNTT. Total Baptist OathoUc Church of Christ, Scientist-. Congregational Disciples ol Christ. Episcopal 1 Evangelical Association German Eyan. Oh. of N. A.. Jews Latter-day Saints, Beorg'd. Lutheran Methodist Episcopal M. E. (African) M. E. (Swedish) Pent'l Ch. ol the Nazarene. Presbyterian Eeformed Church in America Eelormed Church in U. S... Salvation Army Seventh Day Adventist Swedish Evan. Free Church. Unitarian United Brethren in Christ United Evangelical "Wesleyan Methodist sit.osr IS, no 1,163 680 628 79 77 150 2281 2,426' 3,539 101 52 43 2,108 35 100 300 100 300 426 653 1,187 964 510 161 129 103 84 850 4,225 40 75 40 2,201 165 100 110 45 45 88,978 $1,565,100 1,760 3,860 660 2,oeo 1,200 950 400 275 200 250 .3,120 7,76Q 260 200 400 3,300 140 300 175 378 600 350 140 200 150 113,900 4»,000 10,000 88,000 29,000 76,600 3,000 4,200 20,000 3,000 144,000 335,800 4,000 6,000 5,000 176,200 4,000 15,000 1,000 11,000 25,000 3,600 3,000 1,000 $m,-i50 $1,806,550 3,450 72,500 7,000 5,900 21,800 2,600 1,000 30,200 46,600 1,000 4,000 2,000 31,000 3,500 5,000 1,000 1,500 1,500 117,350 666,500 10,000 95,000 34,900 98,300 6,600 5,200 20,000 3,000 174,200 382,400 6,000 10,000 7,000 206,200 4,000 15,000 1,000 14,500 30,000 4,500 4, SCO 2,600 WOBTH COUNTY. Total Baptist Catholic Disciples of Christ German Evan. Ch. of N. A. Lutheran Methodist Episcopal United Evangelical IT s.sss i.m 16 1 5,970 1 169 110 1 400 1 250 23 1 350 1 70 76 1 30O 1 79 42 1 120 10 2,836 848 9 1 3,850 2 270 210 2 560 1 160 140 1 400 $ 118,000 18,000 10,000 3,000 2,000 62,000 8,000 15,000 11 $ iS.SSO $ 2,500 4,000 6 1,800 29,050 4,000 2,000 m.sso 20,600 14,000 3,000 3,800 91,060 12,000 17,000 WEIGHT COUNTY. Total 38 167, SOi 3,S19 SI 1 10,95$ $ SSO.SOO B5 $ 80,000 $ JiOO,SOO Baptist -. 4 4 1 4 2 1 5 7 1 2 1 402 1,117 25 641 415 40 1,195 1,670 94 380 76 315 280 25 621 276 22 403 . 1,495 136 332 115 3 4 1 4 2 1 6 7 1 2 1 1 915 1,260 200 1,075 700 133 2,180 3,100 300 650 450 $ 12,700 70,800 800 38,000 10,000 6,000 102.000 53,000 6,000 12,000 10,000 2 8 $ 5,500 16,000 $ 18,200 86,800 800 Catholic - Church of God Congregational Disciples of Christ 4 2 12,800 7,000 50,800 17,000 6,000 110,000 72,700 8,000 17,500 12,600 Episcopal Lutheran 3 7 1 2 1 8,000 19,700 8,000 5,600 2,500 Methodist Episcopal Presbyterian Presbyterian (United) Heformed Church in America RAILROAD STATISTICS 735 03 a 03 PI l-B t3 -e o ft oj o I — I P^ a 03 CD as O m 6D CS g iggsgisssiqisssg iaSs; isss isss issss I -tjt ■* <0 CO OQ ? ' t- « O to Oi t ss gg {SS •* CO CD g am o3 CO O P) .l±; « cQ A ;"?52tftfit- Irt ii t- tH Q rH j> » m Tji ift o SS51SS 3rtl?oe3rH CO di CJ t- CO O i rHSgr-5Pacot-i-tiH coOie^c-LnoOinSEo i>liaeoe!50sp'*e^i> i-l g r- g g g £- rH rH wScOC-SooSScD 00 r^ 00 Lft O ■*lieOlOCOWi-l'*QrH COaOCQiSLf300U310<0 ^WnSioSinScO t-COrHMftOO-^t^lt- 35t-ooiR o coOTCor^tn3iSSG t-«OrHC5ftO'*(M^ l-itSlftSS&fflr-HrH se ss 03 Sis cu ^ o s , - - -. -^ Eooooooo veScdcSRieaasricS OOOOOOOQO a O Ci o«i jo -^-^ 80 (s o M t- eo O ® O ® iH (N 8g I8SSS 3 e> h -tj" -*' eg «o .9 3^ ■^3 2 m £ « §e ■§£■« '2§S .3 e o'o as B CO (M -^ ■* OO (MOCO S i-HOr-( t eSc4 Sm W «p ' 00 « 00 S '"IS I:-(M So eo g '"IS CO S uS ^ jS « « "•S 9 " V E^ S b fiOfiO oSIzi . ■gga OS o o *"S Olzi«=3,B! o o o 5^S I^I^S 736 CENSUS OP IOWA, 1915 1S8E e »5 S8B S8& ?Sfe SSS ^SS£ gsgs laco coco SS8 sss y'3 S -* 00 CO i-i e ■* OOM r-te CO CO tHMSJ CO CO* r-i eq g -D «■! ■^ (i> C S o g'-' W a O O OtjQCC ■^^O M W S ^fSS o.hS i^S a ^'oi ■^s SSI ffl . VOQ ■-'3 fl^i . o fl 3 et 2 o oo ■e" asPh ? . u qj (U'O t. . a-S P-ST o ^^ ■72 tH .a C3 c3 a n n Q n 35335 3 1 o g'SB'iJ'B e « u "a » H-, e»« .^ ^ RAILROAD STATISTICS 73: tH tH 02 tH 10 02 >H rn "! ':^ y, 1— 1 1 < 0) 1— s C/J c8 u ft PI o ft 47 m CENSUS oP IOWA, iSlS A § ^ |"I8 go IMUJ eeeor 1^1 t* leooo 03 in eg p 00 og TO o ■* ^ ^ 50 CO MOW in "O cp lO t- O I-H S ^ CO M i-( « Cl O N "* OS u ■9 2 = a&Jp H it « B ■&"''§ i Md g d a as 5§«53g| CO O 05 (32 ,£3 H += It; >. R ,". g -s 02 cw fl w OfJ i^ r/j o1 !» TJ cS P O <1 O (3 (_^ d ^ s P^ 02 in cS in «H O O eoiMe<]GO N 00 t^ tC O t-T CO N ?0 CO O NtO C S M ^ t-t (M rH C 3 I>COOg«Ot-S (Nl>tOcOQ0©cJMMt- ? qO A in ^ r-*t^ c (M«DU3C0 g in jcocBia«oO«DegM«l>c»IIOgiA Of I ftp si ^63 g S M BO M t- ^a g fi S S S M"«0"iO»J>S0rHM»fr^M lift US So ^ o. «l IS' 3asB "St o" o o 6 e o o "O S -a tobdtuibobabiittoMS Q2 (fl OS 03 03 03 c3 03 OS'S gS OOOOOOOODfiQ fl P d 00*0 RAILROAD STATISTICS 739 Qgj l« IS8S ICQ©-* III oef'ijreJ i-^iog r. 1 iTn I 1 I I®-* I 1 1 \ III IS" sissi 09046004 jQia O 'ill! |lOMe4W04 IS" ^"»g"g% iU3Meae>9 04NOU3CD I i ■ 0003 IftO] [O OKOrHOD loJeflgJoo-Hir i 1*1 I I 1-1,'° ^."l' j j ooicoe^e !« jNoo'^ ta 1 I I 1 M CO eq M r* lo t lo | 1 o tj (N 5 (5 ©O rHOT S I M oa 00 th la &! 03 I li oS_ ! fiOS I •M& I I I a a 1 1 I 1 ^ i i i §> I i OS a cd oS cS OS oS ooooo '11 I '3 . 2^g,.S , , \^s I J ^ I o 5 1 ag go I aea I" I „ P B I'D C ffi C "O g S _. to fc! ? *C S 5 S ^ 'g"sSo|| S^Ocoaaaaaiai I ■a [^ 740 CENSUS OP IOWA, 1915 o I — I CS JB ,a CO o T3 l-H fTl H Ph (■/; t— 1 CO H 0) i-(i-(i-1i-liHWf-ooiHia Hc^CQdeqdC^C^eqMcoeo 4COCOO3COC4c0C 3 CO CO "* O st-oiMSS^PKrilSE qtO-*i-HCOO>iH«D"*iHiao 2COOmOQO(^M-<«OOtrCi0U5OrtWfr-eooocD^. t«5Su3uS60e40ti9'4<«DoOxKc«3CoOoaoco^i-(-4iSDco%03M)oOc ^-«)i-^<4it4iu3io-4-i>(ei>i>t-ooQoao [gS|^lS^3^<^>$(M§ScO00OSCO^0DC< iiii§iiiiiiisgiiiisgig§iigii SSftfe3!3l?SSSg5lSS53SSSfe§8f2Sf2esgSg .HMiHeO»5S(MM(M gcooiO-^noOoocjco'^-y^QStOSJODoOQO iftgOOWlt'^^OQi-((0<>qCsSlA«0>F-r-HlOOJCniOi-)i-liHi--lCOCiO^'*^«Hff IpTHopQos<5?^'0]-^mcooooIH^-^T^lOO^-■^^s.cooi■^MOiC&c> ;=^g:3gi8ii^joM£5§ggisSgSgsi§ig|giii & 2 rH ea «j tH iri § ^S Cb S o> A RAILROAD STATISTICS 741 W I rH i tH isssa&sss S CDCOMrH lESSS IS g^eot-t>B !3 8SS 8S3!§ae O -* fiO t> t> » SS: 8S8S ° ! o I ■? I 3 I 3SS S£S SoS M O Ift 1^ •*«« t- a a s .s « s e^'eooDO "BIB'S So-e^ 1^ J3 "O -J I* izil., « PS «& S« ^ >> "S 15 5 TS 03 ■a02 3 " s S " a +3 +3 ^ ■* OS S ^ fen « fe^ bad go K SO 742 CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 an rH \n o 03 2; Oi * l>iO CD 1& 00 04 I u •*_o5 cfl US 05 « w et'^ - « . r-& (toe a. ifl CO oe^ I CO 1-1 lO eo TiT I m i-i»oeaos t iH ■* M i I N ^ (N fiS t-Teoo •Sli §si iisa a>i-io (MOW M M ro 3 to CO lO OS -* .'3 is ; ^f_. O^g O ie:«.2g eg 3 58S;ft 8e ■*pa DiA « igg"! •3 a ea S *r " t>."3 bo t^ " « 03 -5 o o I g§'g'Sg|fe^||ga'gi« RAILROAD STATISTICS 743 EH (Ti '<^ iH w ^ 'S CQ tS m g ¥ rS a> 03 < PI cd < o ^ M "S 1- 1— 1 ^ o p^ •^ ^^ o 1— 1, f— 1 pci ^H g O w a 1-1 Fl w ;h 1 OJ 05 P. in (1) !3 O -3 ^ ;> 03 W % ^ H Ti 0) QQ CO ^ll§i oocoe^neocoeoco'^cQ cocooqco"«M'rtM''*« " ■ teOWoJcoeq eocoM «*« I 04 04 M t- e itn t- 15 t- eq &3 W I CO « N M Q l5 I S u3 q l5 *q m of I w" oj frJeo' (Nffseq iNwoiM NM (fa I in lA lA V eq n c4 I iH rH N » I CO N I i-H rH W CO ^ 5 03 C8 a W H boa J3 £ ^ ^ £f=< dQ ( I a ^ Is a 3 Orrj-C) fl * ^ .S mBODOOPfHiSwiSHOfi* a d o 13 2 " 744 CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 ^ nj m tH O rn m m xn W ca r-H 5^ h- 1 rn , — 1 p pq M a> ^ ti) 1/2 W O n ;? aJ i-l O UJ uj o) c tfo ia"q(j N » coo iH * © "* « o 3 :S^Sg igsi r-tCONNNCOrHCQNiHNH Op as o M CQ o ea a^ rH >* ca ift 31>t- CO U (Mc<3St«comS'4<&q&^ us (M 3 i3i4 55 S CO © S S SS 8gg OOGO l-H ^ f- ® 1-1 i> u ggOrH(NMC0C0 ■>*.« «D » O O OrH N M CO tH rH iH rH l-H T^ i-H 881 Sggg is iisa ii iiil ii III! $12,173 13,471 14,914 16,027 16,661 17.800 ii Ills §2 3*3 '^ 3*° ^ Os A O) A Cs 03 BANK STATISTICS 745 O to o i§ i I Eh cS ^ «4-l O 6 S -S 03 ft e^assB iB)Oi, S^ISOdSQ ao|)B[n9jio s^ijoid: sniams IBJldBO ■a»a qsBO syaos •i)}S 'sauoT: E^aBq JO -ON SS"s§Sg"Si an ee- llii§iii i^Ss^SSggS |g^3 m- O of M M ^ (D «t^ CO ofoo 00 l^'aQiSiT=iP,Z t-t-OOflOpOOrHMMeo iHr-(r-li-lS3«&l&lC^(NiM a CD i>«r a ft.is O Ni MC4 t-tr o -ijTioj^roQ'od'co woTos cft o> r-li-irHi-HrtiHrH<-li-li- O) d 746 CENSUS OP IOWA, 1915 moji IBQOsjad sijBjpjaAO SHP3J0 qsBO aiqe sj[nBq JO OiJ 3 CO 03 n w ^ 2 trint-^ eo lA CO i-i iH s ississssiii r- CO ^ r- ■* eS^r^ C9 eo oT Su5otat?oe£-ict-(Xi t^THOO-* OS AU iHp-lrHrHiHrHrHeMCQe.* S-^rHrHCieoeOi-tOit-Ht-l t^ rt TllO^J gS»'« IBJOi si^liojd papiAipnn snidjns sj3q:io pnB s-[aBq ana aiojisod -9p ana 3t30»S IBJldBO s}[aBq lo -ON gssiisgsiii N cJ« « CO « ■* ■*" la us lo eg (N M M It" U5 UitOti »2<3'«tAiooooopf-ia'« oooo c SLAtOt-COrHr^e ^i-ir-ii-iSegMe Il§§l§§ slssil 2§li ^fJs'J^s'^^^^j 03 n o, a 03 ^, aa1 e5[nsq fo -ox S n 5»0«D--«M ^ 00 00 b6 o oTi^" t^ >£ eg i> ta 00 Q 1-1 ■<*-*<: 5r-t ^OiO S^ee THr-lMiHrH r-ti-l iHiH 6P weaM^io 5 % A A 0> A Q> o 9 .a .9 ■§1 ■3? BANK STATISTICS 749 « w ■A 1-1 o M H CM a O o « M E^ O O W H M o PM I m « FM Ph O w M n t-S WOT Ci fit- Cl ''S P S ■* OS •* r TOOSX>0>5'*uR'*lACO{M(y]t-- Si-IJ>.©(NOONCOO><5W gicjsC sis ii§ sggg%i§ i-lWNiMfl iz; S 1— 1 iij ,13 w +-> M ,^2 1-1 c3 ^ o in M CD fl ■ PH O S 'A -§ H S tS s Eh pq IBlOi S[BIUa4BJ£ snonsiaoBBB sa[iz«(Inio3 giS ;hs I-<1« OlHCQ iiiiigii^i iiiiiasiis CDCfikOiatfiCOO^ODOD samsdaios einoH ie»oj, s[«iue)Bj£ snonBiaoBse Si« 00 ^ *r s iH ■< o •* lo lO « ID e^ «o *> *- liiiil^iii 004-^ C^U M *i ei" « « « -^ « c*s CO §iiig§§iii Bspi^dinoa soincdnioo amoH ^llgiimg §§ii§§§§§i Siig'Siilli '4rHiHC4D1Q4 q Ol Oj Oa w 0> IBJOI, s[eni3:)«j>I snoitBposss (^asmsBasBV ssinednioa BilOI UON 83inBdni03 emoH IB^oj; e[SIU9)BJ,I saoi4B|0oess 4n3inBS3Bsy saiQBdmoa BAOI QO^ BsjaBdinoa einoH S|§|§|§§§§ liiiiigm llglggs iiiiiiig'is §g§g§g§ii§ t 1 I I 1 I I ! 1 I : 2§as§22232 Hr^iHiHtHfHrnr^r^n INSURANCE STATISTICS 751 ID •a es Ph B o , o w U-( o o w 00 ^ l-< p^ ^ l-l p ^ ^ cc w ^ Ti B 1— 1 ;-! 14 03 f4 M ^. w DQ o H 03 o O -HI >. M rO 15 03 1 g H P^ a P HH w Pq o *! fl d o tc fT-l ^ CO H d .•a e ;z: hj ^ w S g 1-1 rll ^ fe s Eh o BjOiL pnBjg So So a| 8^ IIBH opBnjoj, •3 B IB*01 Annoo 91B»S i 1 o 1 ■3 1 IB»0J, BJVOI-UOil BJIOI ua pjoo 00 sp »o o o o i-T iHiHrHf-lr^i-iiHiH *o 00 ss B CQ^ "5* c^ :*' 00 © SiSSiiiiii JtHW bQr-ID)e4 rH rH -^ t^ « Ift t^tToo 00 a o o cjco CO ■« t? t- St- CM r rHi-Ti-HlHM ■J 3 t- U -I (MCQ Cl H iH Ol O Ofl rt 5 ifl CO go CO -31 ? ©q CO -^ in ro locoCO-^COtSObrHWrH t-t-fiOfeoOOi-Hi-Ilft'^ 5 ift -* m £2 -5 t 6 CQ c^ otto m f q 00 ^ mcQ CO agssi ffi t- ^ e (M -* »o 2 cocoeonco-^i-^iAincO msDCO©cOt-l>t-O>00 lla C0ciSCOW>*-»*(-»t("*i>t- rf Oi t-i t- I-* i-fO No4ci5coCgcoeoc4iHr4' bOrn M CO-* ^ ^ A A Ok A ScoNt-raOicaoo®'-^ t-rHGoASo40Dra<6Oa incoMcoco-^inin i> t- S S 5 00 c^ iQ S K 2 to |C CO CO t>^ CO so 59 c tHcaegtoco-^iaeooi -oimM*rHeom(ScoooiftOC>-CO o i > •a pi o bo a •rH o § aT PI o 02 ew O o 2 34 Is»oa, eaofspnns easn J3q40 ami] psafng; ESuSSSSqSSoSodS i-ioeoNoJi-TgiH (ft 00^ rH"« Or 9ao)9 paqsruo pus oiqfltia 3BB paB Sniqjno Soipiina r-ll-ti-( iHlHH H cass gw ^ ^ w* ^rf ^^^ MINERAL STATISTICS 755 TABLE NO. 69.— STONE. Production of Stone, of all kinds, Value given, by Countieis. Oauutles 190S 1907 1908 1910 1911 1912 1913 1914 TotaL iSSS,i99 ^^,1S5 $569,775 i6S9,m ^n.m ^98,gS6 $85J,«» ^a,!19 Allamakee 4,667 431 11, U4 17,010 2,400 12,747 2,261 9,611 1,473 34,600 28,029 1,358 1,375 21,246 571 384 64,339 92,919 1,071 25,184 17,200 1,788 32,624 23,674 1,196 58,805 1,169 24,651 3,057 30,266 4,371 366 20,770 19,075 1,138 11,025 8,847 903 479 24,942 33,212 2,490 2,362 34,621 1,555 "eo^iis" 72,408 895 36,399 45,325 1,145 27,607 iieioM' 563 24,960 589 70,841 242 491 13,406 30,776 1,346 9,801 1,870 ""'"iio' 18,798 39,017 5,665 1,850 37,852 578 1,454 49,760 53,707 023 33,472 75,006 6,623 29,428 88,450 492 18,150 1,701 50.242 1,915 0,235 'li',m' "i',m' 880 ""'iss' '44^824" 6,679 3,745 44,267 03,741 48,284 26,518 006 48,559 990" 134,061 167^734" 5,572 12,316 10,898 50,598 "1^964" 24,277 16,73J Black Hawk 11,389 11,529 ""3I265" Clayton _ dintOQ 13,382 Decatur __ "70^951" 1,867 "loliei" 73,333 "86^' 4,217 59,806 Payette Floyd . - - Hardin - -- 28,301 3,880 40,343 119,654 62,865 "60I224' ""eii" 121,080 'iil474' m.m' 'si'.m' 327,917 65,570 42,301 128,b23 Jones Keokuk Lee 105,230 80,906 62,218 80,006 51,192 Linn Madison 86,926 "s'.m' 171,040 Marshall MltcheU Scott "117^^ 8,900 mesi' 277.603 292,987 Production by counties not given lor 1900 and 1909. for 1909 $609,922. Total for 1900 was $877,782 and 756 CENSUS OP IOWA, 1915 •t-t O pi o O ^ Td 05 o t-i I" 3 ^ ! I \m \ 5gS i ilii I I / IS I I 3SgS 1 1 1 w ,' I I ! I S IS rt I I O I I ^ ) I ,H- I I I I I I In' It e I Iwo loOrt 'S I i I 11 \mm •^ 3 I I I I (M M iH 1-1 O la" ISS I I iSfe fegS SmS I 11 ig^ i I SCOCO t- rH I> ^ill jliiilSJ.Iill ga| l'>"89^""<»'ss'»"'-"fe i I o ■E o O as OS© •SisSlSI !S o Igoo 1H S I o- 1 SfeS IS I I 'I I Ml 11518' in§ is i I I I s ! i is I i ! Sn!S SC8 I I I I §^3 |@ jsss Sii I I gift tH ilis 00 O \i !o I SS IS;S I ess iffas5» iag" 8 iise»'"ss"°"ssa ©MO th ca S I ISKS 5sa i?s isg^s^s^^^ssg s ? I ! CO oa iH I mi CO I>| ft P m 1905 1906 . . $ 1,367.742 1,125,009 1,085,383 896,890 1,072,340 1,088,266 1,025,011 1,017,097 1,052,039 1,0W,746 $ 68,187 101,796 96,316 86,232 138,218 100,911 114,178 142,637 181,911 148,394 $ 180,003 186,990 223,193 185,112 198,780 223,273 103,384 197,035 222,105 211,905 $ £60 930 796 304,398 94,366 $ 1,531,376 1,721,614 2,011,793 2,522,363 2,830,910 3,457,455 2,468,962 2,293,084 2,798,816 3,180,836 $ 90,000 114,241 1907 103,369 1908 . 211,044 1909 1910 1911 1912 282,637 313,430 284,817 291,672 1913 1914 CLAY AND CLAY PRODUCTS; VALUE OONTIKUED. Tear P 1 a 6 ^ 1905 1906 $ 134,418 162,664 176,864 129,003 $ . 68,659 $ 21,466 5,084 12.200 S9,273 19,423 25,647 25,675 15,406 •1,298,115 ♦1,760,114 $ 3,408,647 3,477,327 1907 - 1808 18,882 18,710 61,990 17,685 36,319 30,141 20,698 32,760 3,733,476 4,078,627 1909 .. $ 17,817 5,152 3,965 2,166 1,900 4,250 4,916,613 1910 5,335,036 1911 1912 1913 _ - 1914 374,628 636,254 4,436,839 4,524,492 5,675,581 6.405,995 •Including fancy brick, sewer pipe, lireproofing. etc. TABLE NO. 72— LEAD AND ZINC PRODUCTION. Tear 1 1 1 lO 1 1 > "3 1906 _ ... .. ¥ 1,600 19,800 49,400 3,614 1,290 1.760 300' 476 35 245 $ 6,600 9,000 23,183 5,686 10.368 i 1,600 26,300 68,400 26,799 6,876 12,128 6,400 6,670 4,150 1906 300 650 63 15 25 1907 ._ 1908 1909 , 1910 1911 ... 1912 „ "■ 1913 MINERAL STATISTICS 759 TABLE NO. 73— GYPSUM INDUSTRIES. Gypsum and Gypsum Products, Amount in Tons, according to use. 1^ Crude Gypsum Sold Sold Oalclned Tear- a i s a s Is CD O i ii ll 1 1 1905 286,857 esi.sw 210,270 819.677 322.713 361.201 111,186 156,031 180,101 8,890 11,295 18,960 8.162 16.178 13,300 1.777 866 2,728 3,761 1,662 1,128 9.676 6.169 11.032 12,113 8,767 12.251 1.867 1.172 1,200 123,818 116,626 153,865 156,049 188,389 229,312 221,775 225,038 811,761 311,132 131.106 1906 160.139 1907 9,000 181.799 1908 . 178.987 1909 ., ._ . 206.617 1910 1911 11,359 1.600 8.116 18,078 21,698 20,633 267,623 210.922 1912 316,669 1913 886,111 1911 62,981 100.250 VALUE OP SAME IN DOLLARS $ 2.723 6.922 1,278 2,067 11,633 8.312 11,165 10,821 10,266 11,920 $ 9.357 3.111 1,200 """17^160 $ 676,976 651.162 666,268 686,610 629,608 892,819 887,611 712,778 1,063,662 1.211,718 i 689.065 1906 $ 199.222 $ 11.973 21,860 26,128 ll,4«e 21,224 15.000 T606 92,031 18,806 16.263 B73.196 1907 - — 1908 1909 $ 1,777 1,632 730.383 561.flas 666,602 1910 913,819 1911 .. 871.752 1912 816,628 1913 35,286 16,666 1.167,939 1911 1.321.457 TABLE NO. 74— SAND AND GRAVEL. Tear |1 1? 1 CO 1 tf 5 1906 $ 6.162 7.606 5,051 35,810 9.90O 1,682 3,672 1,660 3,365 $ 16,118 60,866 206,121 260,727 302,186 226,676 328,882 231,781 272,116 $ 2,100 6,286 6,ail 6,280 7,038 5,627 1,556 3.162 3.250 $ 6.263 10.971 11,911 11,202 9,521 81,842 68,613 91,536 72.968 $ 15.707 16.881 66.611 116,280 135,920 126.023 167.856 200.021 205.820 $ 71.380 110.601 1908 280.111 168.829 1910 1911 __ 164.863 393.619 1912 1918 1911 663.109 628.066 566,868 760 CENSUS OF IOWA, 1915 TABLE NO. 75— MINERAL WATER. Tear Gallons Value 1905 _ .- SOS.BOO eil.BOO 127.200 4S3,500 184,000 253,100 176,0QO 84, SCO 48,666 303,SB7 i 30,40Q 23,700 30,540 65,3S0 1906 - 1907 1908 — -. 1909 - . , 1910 _ __ _ .. 1911 : 1912 1913 . ... .. 14,116 27,176 20,600 11.325 7.S69 1914 30,179 INDEX Flgnres in Parentheses Indicate Table Numbers A Page Abandoned towns, in ten years xxxlU Acquisition of land ; early historical data xv, xvl Acres: farm crops, grown in 1914, by counties (24-33) 646-665 Owned or leased by operator, value, improvements, machinery, by counties (23) 643-645 Advent Christian; church statistics for state and by counties (52) 703-734 African Methodist Episcopal; church statistics, state, counties (52).. 703-734 Age and sex related to nativity; table of comparisons, 1905, 1915 Ivii-lix Age classes ; analysis and statistics Ix, Ixi Conjugal condition, by counties, according to sex and (8).... 491-511 Extent of education, by counties, according to sex and (12).. 523-551 Foreign born, years in United States, by counties, sex and (7) 468-f90 Homes owned and incumbered, by counties, sex and (21) 612-637 Kind of school attended, 1914, by counties, according to (10) 518, 519 Number and value of horses (36), cattle (37), swine (38), according to 670-681 Persons engaged in classified, gainful occupations, by counties, according to sex and (13) 552-573 Persons in schools and colleges, 1914, by counties and (9, 10) . . 512-519 Persons literate or illiterate, by counties, sex and (11) 520-522 Persons of general nativity, by counties, townships, cities and towns, according to sex and (1) 2—417 Persons single, married, widowed or divorced, by counties, sex and (8) 491-511 Population according to sex, color and general nativity, by counties and (2) 418-433 School attendance, 1914, by counties, according to sex and (9) 512-517 Agricultural and miscellaneous tables (22-75) 641-760 Agricultural products ; general statistics and table cxviil, cxlx Agricultural pursuits, by age classes and sex, 1905-1915 ; table Ixxv Persons engaged in, by counties, according to sex (13) 552-573 Agricultural statistics, general and special (22-39) cxiv-cxix, 641-685 Agriculture and Mechanic Arts, State College of (46); tables cviil; 696 Alabama, persons born in, by counties, according to sex (5) 450-461 Alfalfa; acres, tons and value of, 1914, by counties (28) 654,655 Amana society ; church statistics for state and by counties (52) 703—734 American born persons ; statistics showing state of birth and sex liv, Iv Ames, State College at ; finances (46) 696 Analysis and comparisons; tables and other data and deductions x-cxxxvi Anamosa, reformatory; expenditures (49, 50); daily population (51).. 698-702 Apples grown in 1914, value of, by counties (34) 666, 667 Appropriations and other revenue, State University (45) ; State College (46) ; State Teachers College (47) 695-697 Arizona, persons bom In, by counties, according to sex (5) 450-461 Arlcansas, persons born in, by counties, according to sex (5) 450-461 Artillery service, survivors Civil War Veterans, enlisted from Iowa and other states ; residence by counties (14) 574-576 Asiatic countries other than named, persons born in, by counties, according to sex (6) 462-467 Asses and mules ; number and value of, by counties (36) 670-673 (761) 762 INDEX Page Assessed value per mile of steam and electric railroads (55, 59) . . . .738, 739 ; 740 Assessment, aggregate, steam railroads, 1888-1915 (56) 740 Assessment and taxation of property, 1905, 1915, by counties (42).... 689,690 Assessment associations, life insurance, 1905-1914 (65) 750 Assessment increase in ten years; property classification; table Ixxxii Assessment, money and credits, 1915, by counties (42) 689,690 Of property for taxation ; tables and other data Ixxxi— Ixxxlii Of property of various classes for taxation, 1846-1915 (40).. 686,687 Assets and liabilities, banks and loan and trust companies (61-64) 745-749 Attendance at school; tables, etc. (9, 10, 44) xli-xliii; 512-519; 694 Austria, persons born in, by counties, according to sex (6) 462—467 Automobile licenses as revenue for state fund, 1906-1915 ; table Ixxxvi Banks and bank business (60^64) 744-749 Banks and banking ; tables and other statistics cxxxi-cxxxiii Banks: National (61) ; Savings (62) ; State (63) ; private, and banking firms (64); assets and liabilities, 1904-1915 745-749 Baptist; church statistics for state and by counties (52) 703-734 Baptist (colored) ; church statistics for state and by counties (52) .... 703-734 Barley, acres, bushels, value, 1914, by counties (25) 648, 649 Berries, 1914, value of, by counties (34) 666, 667 Births In Iowa, 1908-1914, table Ixxiv Blind, College for the; receipts and expenditures, 1912-1915 (48) 697 Board of Control of State Institutions; disbursements under (49, 50) ; daily population of inmates under (51) 698-702 Bohemian Reformed; church statistics for state and by counties (52) 703-734 Bohemia, persons bom in, by counties, according to sex (6) 462-467 Boys' Industrial School, Eldora; expenditures (49); funds (50); population average (51) 698-702 Brethren in Christ; church statistics for state and by counties (52).. 703-734 Brick, value of product, 1905-1914 (71) 758 Bridge purposes, annual tax levies for (41) 688 Bridges and roads, distribution of public funds for, 1914, reported by counties ( 43 ) 691-693 Buckwheat, acres, bushels, value, 1914, by counties (26) 650, 651 Bulls, number and value of, by counties (37) 674-679 Bushels: farm crops (24-26, 30-33) 646-651; 658-665 C California, persons bom in, by counties, according to sex (5) 450-461 Calves, number and value of, by counties (37) 674-679 Canada, persons born in, by counties, according to sex (6) 462-467 Capital stock of banks, 1904-1915 (60) 744 (jathoUcs ; church statistics for state and by counties (52) 703-734 Cattle, number and value of, according to age classes, by counties (37) 674-679 Cavalry service, survivors Civil "War Veterans, enlisted from Iowa and other states (14) 574-576 Cedar Falls, State Teachers College at ; finances (47) 697 Cement industry; counties producing, 1911-1914, barrels and value .. cxxv, cxxvi Census comparisons, state and United States; changes in population; deductions xvi-xvlii Census, state and United States, at various enumerations, according to sex (3) 434-443 Center of population, at four periods ; map 638 Center of population ; density, land areas, etc., of counties xxi-xxlil Certificate, census of Iowa, 1915, by Secretary of State ii INDEX 763 Page Changes in population, cities and towns ; per cent increase or de- crease, 1885-1915 (16) 593-598 Cities, for two 5-year periods, table xxxiv-xxxvl Counties, in ten years (19) 608, 609 Urban and rural, for two five-year periods (20) 610,611 Changes in total population, general ; comparison State and United States census xvli, xvlil Characteristics of population, by counties, according to age, sex, color and general nativity of inhabitants and parents (2) 418-433 Charitable institutions and schools. State; expenditures, 1906-1914 (49) 698 Chart: Cities of first class, relative growth and size, 1885-1915 xxx Chart: Population growth, 1870-1915 xlv Taxes, classified as to general use, 1905-1915 xlv Cherokee, Hospital for Insane and Inebriates, at ; expenditures, 1906- 1914 (49, 50) ; average daily population (51) 698-702 Cherries, 1914, value of, by counties (34) 666,667 Children ot Zion ; church statistics, by counties (52) 705-734 China, persons born In, by counties, according to sex (6) 462-467 Chinese, Japanese and others, included with Indian population 1 Christian (Christian Connection); church statistics (62) 703-734 Christian Reformed; church statistics for state and by counties (52).. 703-734 Christians, Disciples of Christ ; church statistics (52) 703-734 Christian Union; church statistics for state and by counties (52).... 703-734 Churches ; tables and general statistics cxii, cxiii Church of Christ, Scientist; statistics for state and by counties (52).. 703-734 Church of God in Christ; statistics for state and by counties (52).... 703-734 Church of God, Indp. (Colored) ; statistics by counties (52) 706-734 Church of the Brethren — Bunkers; statistics: state; by counties (52).. 703-734 Church statistics, by counties and denominations (52)'' 703-734 Cities and towns> at three periods ; proportion of population living in, by counties (18) 606, 607 Changes in population 1885-1915 (16) 693-698 Incorporated places of 1,000 inhabitants and over, according to sex, general nativity and- color (17) 599-605 Number in specified classes ; tables of comparative population . xxvii— xxlx Cities, growth of the ; table and other statistics xxlx-xxxl Of first and second class; changes in population, 1885-1915 (16) 593-598 Of first class, relative growth and size, 1885-1915; chart.... xxx Population according to general nativity, sex and age, by counties (1) 2-417 Population, 1915 and other periods, by counties (15) 677-592 City population changes ; percentage increase and decrease xxxii, xxxiv-xxxvi Civil War Veterans, number and per cent surviving, by age classes ; table and comment Ixlx Civil War Veteran survivors, age of, by enlistment (Iowa or other states) ; table Ixvlii, Ixix Comparison 1905, 1915, by class of service ; table Ixvlii Enlisted from Iowa and other states ; class of service (14) 574-576 Clarinda, Hospital for insane at: expenditures (49, 50) ; average dally population (51) 698-702 Classes, general nativity, 1890-1915 ; table. xlv Classes, number cities and towns In specified; tables of comparative population .' xxvli-xxix Classified gainful occupations, persons engaged in, by counties, accord- ing to sex (13) 562-573 Clay and clay products; value 1905-1914, by counties (70, 71) 766-768 Clay ; development of industries ; general statistics cxxv Climate, annual data on, general observations, 1891-1915; table Ixxtli Clover hay, acres, tons and value, 1914, by counties (27) 652,-653 764 INDEX Page Clover seed, acres, bushels, value, 1914, by counties (30) 658, 659 Coal, bituminous; general statistics, 1905-1914; tables cxxiii, cxxiv Coal ; production in tons, 1905-1914, by counties (67) 753 Collateral inheritance tax, 1906-1915 ; table Ixxxvl College for the Blind, Vinton; finances (48) expenditures (49, 50); average daily population (51) 697—702 College, Iowa State, Ames; statistics, 1906-1915 (46); table cvili;696 College or school, years in, by counties, age classes and sex (12).... 523-551 Colleges and schools, attendance in, 1914, by counties, according to age classes (10) 518, 519 Colleges in Iowa, private ; table ovi Colorado, persons born in, by counties, according to sex (5) 450-461 Colored persons, all nativities, by counties, according to sex and age (2) 418-433 All nativities, in incorporated places of liOOO and over, ac- cording to sex (17) . 599-605 At various enumerations, by counties (4) 444-449 Percentage of, by counties xllx Proportion as to sex, by age classes ; table Ixi, Ixli Proportion in cities ; table lii, liil Sex and age classes; number, percentage 1905, 1915; table.. Ivlii, lix Color classification, population, by counties, according to age, sex and general nativity ( 2 ) 418-433 Color, persons of whatever, according to general nativity, sex and age, by counties, townships, cities and towns (1) 2-417 Colts, number and value of, by counties (36) 670, 671 Companies, Insurance statistics by (65, 66) 750-752 Companies, railroad statistics, by (53-59) 735-743 Component parts of population ; census comparisons xvi Congregationalist ; church statistics for state and by counties (52) .... 703-734 Congregation of God ; church statistics by counties (52) 705-784 Congregations, number of, by counties and denominations (52) 703-734 Congressional Districts, population movement by ; table xxv Conjugal condition (8) Ixvi, Ixvii ; 491-511 Connecticut, persons born in, by counties, according to sex (5) 450-461 Corn ; acres, bushels, value, 1914, by counties (24) 646, 647 Corporation filing fees as revenue for state fund, 1906-1916; table.... Ixxxvi Council Bluffs, School for the Deaf at; expenditures (49, 50) ; average dally population (51) 698-702 Counties and population ; land areas, density, center of population, etc. xxi-xxili Counties, greatest population increase and decrease ; table xxiv, xxv Of highest property valuation, 1905, 1915 ; table of comparison. Ixxxii Population of, according to general nativity, sex and age (1) 2-417 Producing clay ; value of industries 1905-1914 (70) .756, 757 Producing coal, quantity in tons, 1905-1914 (67) 753 Producing stone, all kinds, value 1905-1914 (69) 755 Public funds and their use, as reported for 1914, by (43).... 691-693 Table showing percentage of colored persons, by xlix Table showing percentage of white persons of general nativity, by xlix Taxes in the; comparison 1905, 1915, six showing heaviest account Ixxxiv, Ixxxv Total and urban population of, at three periods (18) 606, 607 Countries other than named, persons born in, by counties, according to sex (6) 462-467 Country of birth, foreign bom, by counties, according to sex- (6).. .. 462-467 County area and density, table xxill County funds, payments out of; aggregate for 1914; table Ixxxvili County homes and farms, inmates cared for at; 1899-1914, report.... c, ci County mutual assessment associations, 1905-1914 (66) 751,752 INDEX 765 Page County population changes, for ten-year period (19) 608,609 For two 5-year periods (20) 610, 611 County purposes, distribution of public funds for, 1914 (43) 691-693 Cows ; number and value, by counties (37) 674-679 D Dairy products, value of, 1914, by counties (35) • 668,669 Davenport, Soldiers' Orphans' Home at; expenditures (49, 50) ; average daily population (51) i 698-702 Deaf, School for the, Council Bluffs ; statistics (49, 50, 61) 698-702 Deaths in Iowa, 1910-1915, by age classes; from specified causes Ixxiv, Ixxv Decrease of population, in counties, in ten years, percentage of, map.. viii Per cent of, in cities and towns, 1885-1915 (16) 593-598 Total, urban and rural, in ten years (19) 608, 609 Decrease of urban and rural population of counties for two 5-year periods (20) 610,611 Delaware, persons born in, by counties, according to sex (5) 450-461 Denmark, persons born in, by counties, according to sex (6) 462-467 Denominations, church statistics reported by (52) 703-734 Density, land areas, center of population, etc., of counties; maps . . xxi— xxiii, xxvi Depositors in banks, amount due, 1904-1915 (60) 744 Development of general and special interests xix-xxi Disbursements of institutions under State Board of Control (49, 50).. 698-701 Disciples of Christ, Christian; church statistics (52) 703-734 Distribution of population as to general nativity and color xlvi— xlix Distribution of public funds, 1914, as reported by counties (43) 691-693 Divorced persons, by sex and age classes (8) Ixvii ; 491-511 Domestic and personal service, 1905-1915, by age and sex; table Ixxv Persons engaged in, by counties, according to sex (13) 552-573 Dunkers — Church of the Brethren; statistics, state, by counties (52).. 703-734 E Earnings, gross and net, steam railroads, 1888-1915 (56) 740 Gross, per mile, of electric interurban railroads, reported 1905- 1915, by companies (58) 742 Gross, per mile, of steam railroads, reported by companies, 1905-1914 (54) 737,738 Educational facilities, for teachers and students; tables cli-cix Educational funds compared, 1906, 1915; specific and total; table.... Ixxxix Educational purposes, distribution of public funds for, 1914 (43).... 691-693 Educational statistics (9-12) 512-551 Education, extent of, by counties, age classes and sex (12) 523-551 Extent of ; number attending school or college, by age classes and sex ; table xxxviil-xl Persons literate and illiterate ; census reports by age classes and sex ; table , . . xxxvi-xxxvlil Eggs, quantity and value of, 1914, "by counties (35) 668, 669 Eldora, Boys' Industrial School at; expenditures (49, 50) ; average daily population (51) 698-702 Electric interurban railroads; mileage (57); gross earnings per mile (58) ; taxable value per mile (59) ; by companies 741, 742, 743 England, persons born in, by counties, according to sex (6) 462-467 Enumeration of population, 1840-1915, by counties, according to sex (3) ; color (4) 434-443, 444-449 Enumeration of population, 1915, principal items of xvl Epileptics, hospital colony for, "Woodward; expenditures, 1914 (49).. 698 Equipment for public business ; tables, etc xc-xciii European countries other than named, persons born in, by counties, according to sex (6) 462-467 Evangelical Association; church statistics, state, by counties (52).... 703-734 766 INDEX Page Ewes, number and value of, by counties (39) 682—685 Executive Council, consolidated tax levies, 1906-1915, computed by.... Ixxxill Expansion in all things, Iowa ; general and special statistics xix-xxi Expansion of property values, 1846-1915 ; table estimating Ixxxi Expansion ; population at various enumerations xvi-xviii Expenditure of the public funds, tables, etc Ixxxvll-xc Expenditures, highways and bridges, 1906-1915 ; table Ixxxlx, xc State Institutions under Board of Control (49, 50) 698-702 State wards, 1906-1914 ; table xcvl Experiment Station at State College, national and state support for, 1906-1915 (46) 696 Express business of state ; table cxxx Express property, valuation for taxation, 1846-1915 (40) 686,687 Extent of education, by counties, according to age classes and sex (12) 523-551 School attendance, by age classes and sex ; table xxxviii-xl P Fairs in Iowa, State, county and district ; short courses and farmers' institutes ; table of statistics, 1915 cxiii, cxlv Farm animals other than named, number and value of, by counties (36) 670—673 Farm comparisons, 1905, 1915 ; table cxv Farm crops, 1904, 1914 ; table cxvi, cxviii, cxlx Farmers operating land owned only ; owned and leased ; leased for cash; for cash and share crops (22) 641, 642 Farm land statistics ; number of farms, acres owned or leased, value of land, improvements and machinery, by counties (23) 643-645 Farm occupation and tenantry, 1905, 1915 ; table cxv Farms, equipment and value, 1905, 1915 ; table cxv Farms, persons operating owned or leased, by counties (22) 641, 642 Federal aid for state ; statistics showing Ixxxvii Feeble-Mlnded Children, Institution for, Glenwood; statistics (49, 50, 51) 698-702 Female population, by counties, townships, cities, towns (1) 2—417 Female population ; classification according to country of birth, by counties (6) 462-467 Finances, public schools, statistics of, 1847-1915 (44) 694 State College, 1906-1915 (46) 696 State Teachers College, 1906-1914 (47) 697 State University, 1906-1915 (45) 695 Fire and other insurance (than life) ; Iowa business, by the several classes of companies, 1905-1914 (66) 751, 752 First class cities; chart showing relative growth, 1885-1915 xxx Flax seed, acres, bushels, value, 1914, by counties (30) 658, 659 Florida, persons bom in, by counties, according to sex (5) 450-461 Forage; acres, tons, value, 1914, by counties (29) 656,657 Foreign and native born persons, according to sex and color ; table . . xliii-xlv Foreign born persons, according to country of birth and sex (6) 462-467 By counties ; map showing percentage xliv By counties, townships, cities and towns, according to sex and age classes (1) 2—417 Table and other statistics Iv, Ivl rears in United States, by counties, according to age classes and sex (7) ; table Ivl, Ivli ; 468-490 Foreign born white persons, by counties, according to sex and age (2) 418-433 In Incorporated places of 1,000 and over, according to sex (17) 599-605 Proportion in cities ; table and analysis 1I1_ im Sex and age classes, number and percentage 1905, 1915 ; table Ivlli, lix Foreign or mixed parentage, persons native born of ; map showing percentage, by counties xlviii Ft. Madison, penitentiary at; expenditures (49, 50) ; average daily popu- lation (51) 698-702 IN*dEX 767 Page Fowls, number and value of, 1914, by counties (35) 668, 669 France, persons born in, by counties, according to sex (6) 462-467 Fratemals, life insurance business done in Iowa by, 1905-1914 (65).. 750 Free Methodist ; church statistics for state and by counties (52) 703-734 Friendless children, private institutions for care of, 1903-1915 ci Friends ; church statistics for state and by counties (52) 703-734 Fruits (tree and small) grown in 1914, value of, by counties (34) 666,667 Funds, distribution of public, 1914, by counties (43) 691-693 Funds for public purposes, table and other statistics IxxxUl G Gainful occupations, classified, persons engaged in, by counties, ac- cording to sex (13) 552-573 Gallons of mineral water, 1905-1914 (75) 760 Garden crops, 1904, 1914 ; table cxvlU, cxix General nativity, American and foreign born, by sex, color ; table .... xliii-xlv And color, persons of, percentage, by counties xlix Of inhabitants and parents, by counties, age, sex, color (2)... 418-433 Of urban population, 1905 and 1915 ; table 1-lii Percentages, 1890-1915, and federal census 1910, according to color ; table xlv, xlvi Sex and age, population according to (1) 2-417 Georgia, persons born in, by counties, according to sex (5) 450—461 German Evangelical Church of N. America; statistics by counties (52) 705-734 German Bv. Synod; church statistics for state and by counties (52).. 703-734 German Meth. Episcopal; church statistics, state, by counties (52)... 703-734 Germany, persons born in, by counties, according to sex (6) 462-467 Girls' Industrial School, Mitchellville ; expenditures (49); support and special funds (50); average daily population (51) 698-702 Glenwood, Institution for Feeble7Minded Children at ; expenditures (49, 50) ; average daily population, (51) 698-702 Goats, number and value of, by counties (39) 682-685 Grade schools, number reported 1870-1915 (44) 694 Grapes grown In 1914, value, by counties (34) 666, 667 Grass seed, other than timothy; acres, bushels, value, 1914 (31) 660,661 Gravel, value of, 1906-1914 (74) 759 Greece, persons bom in, by counties, according to sex (6) 462-467 Gross earnings, electric interurban railroads, per mile, 1905-1914 (58). 742 Steam railroads, per mile and total, 1888-1915 (56) 740 Steam railroads, per mile, by companies, 1905-1914 (54).... 737,738 Growth and size of cities of first class, 1885-1915 ; chart showing relative xxx Growth of the cities ; table for comparison at three enumerations .... xxlx-xxxl Gypsum and products ; tons, value, 1905-1914 (73) 759 Gypsum ; value of product mined and sold 1890-1914 cxxv H Hall companies and associations ; 1905-1914 (66) 751, 752 Halls; number reported by church denominations (52) 703-734 Hay, clover and timothy; acres, tons, value, 1914, by counties (27).. 652,653 Health and life of Iowa people ; tables and other statistics Ixxiii-lxxv Heifers ; number and value, by counties (37) 674-679 Higher education ; state and private institutions cv-clx Highway purposes, annual tax levies for (41) 688 Historical . data, early, state of Iowa xv, xvl Holland, persons born in, by counties, according to sex (6) 462-467 Hollow blocks, value of product, 1905-191^ (71) 758 Home companies, life insurance, 1905-1914 (65) 750 Homes and their value, free and incumbered; tables and other data.lxxvii, Ixxviii Homes owned, number and value, and incumbrance, by counties, ac- cording to age classes and sax (21) 612-637 768 INDEX Page Horses and other farm animals, number and value, by counties (36).. 670-673 Hospitals for Inebriates: Knoxville, Mt. Pleasant, Cherokee, Inde- pendence; expenditures (49, 50); average daily population (51).. 698-702 Hospitals for Insane : Mt. Pleasant, Clarinda, Independence, Cherokee ; expenditures (49, 50); average daily population (51) 698-702 Hungarian, see Millet and alfalfa (28) 654, 655 Hungary, persons born in, by counties, according to sex (6) 462-467 Hunters' licenses as revenue for state fund, 1906-1915; table Ixxxvl Idaho, persons born in, by counties, according to sex (5) 450-461 Illinois, persons born in, by counties, according to sex (5) 450-461 Illiterate and literate, by age classes and sex (11) xxxvi-xxxviii ; 620-522 Improvements, value of, on farms, by counties (23) 643-645 Incorporated places of 1,000 inhabitants or over, according to sex, general nativity and color (17) 599-605 Incorporated towns, population as to general nativity, sex and age (1) 2-417 Population in 1915 and other periods, by counties (15) 577-592 Increase of population, in counties, in ten years, percentage of ; map . . viii Of counties, total, urban and rural, in ten years (19) . 608, 609 Per cent in cities and towns, 1885-1915 (16) 593-598 Increase of urban and rural population of counties for two 5-year periods (20) 610,611 Incumbrance on homes, amount of, by counties, according to age classes and sex (21) 612-637 Independence, Hospital for Insane and Inebriates at; expenditures (49, 50) ; average daily population (51) 698, 699, 702 Indian and other colored population, by sex and age classes xlix, 1 Indiana, persons born in, by counties, according to sex (5) 450—461 Indian or border wars Ixvii Industrial School for Boys, Eldora ; statistics (49, 50, 51) 698-702 Industrial School for Girls, Mitchellville ; statistics (49, 50, 51) 698-702 Inebriates, Hospitals tor: Knoxville, Mt. Pleasant, Cherokee, Independ- ence; expenditures (49, 50); average daily population (51) 698-702 Infantry service, survivors civil war veterans, enlisted from Iowa and other states, by counties (14) 574-576 Insane, care of; hospitals and county homes, 1899-1914; table xcix, c Insane, Hospitals for : Mt. Pleasant, Clarinda, Independence, Cherokee ; expenditures (49, 50) ; average daily population (51) 698, 699, 702 Institution for Feeble-Minded, Glenwood; expenditures (49, 50) ; aver- age daily population (51) 698, 701, 702 Institutions under Board of Control, State (49, 50, 51) 698-702 Average number inmates and employes ; expenditures ; table . xcvi Establishment or opening; property value, 1898 and 1915; tables, etc xcvi, xcvii Insurance, life and other ; companies, premiums, losses cxxxili Life; by the several classes of companies, 1905-1914 (65).... 750 Life, Are and other ; general statistics oxxxv, cxxxvi Other than life ; Iowa and Non-Iowa stock and mutual com- panies ; state and county mutual assessment associations ; tornado and hail companies ; casualty, fidelity, burglary, compensation, plate glass, etc. (66) 751, 752 Per cent of losses and premiums, 1905-1914 ; table cxxxv Statistics (65, 66) cxxxiii-cxxxvi, 750-752 Taxes as revenue for state fund, 1906-1915 ; table Ixxxvi Taxes, securities on deposit ; table cxxxiv Interest collections for public use ; table Ixxxvi Interurban railroads, electric ; statistics (57, 58, 59) 741, 742, 743 Investment expenditures in ten years, state and other Improvements. . Ixxxix , INDEX 769 Page Icwa City, State University, at ; flnances, 1906-1915 (45) 695 Iowa expansion in all things ; statistics showing development xix-xxi Iowa In the wars, tables and other statistics Ixvii-lxix Iowa National Guard ; strength, etc. ; tables Ixxxvii, xeiii-xcv Iowa, persons born in, by counties, according to feex (5) 450-461 Iowa physical characteristics ; statistics and comment Ixix-lxxi Iowa population, urban and rural, 1915, by counties xii, xiii Iowa regiments, survivors Civil War, enlisted in, by counties (14)... 574-576 Iowa, State of ; early historical data xv, xvi Iowa Stock and Mutual Insurance Companies (66) 751, 752 Iowa ; summary of statistics x, xl Ireland, persons born in, by counties, according to sex (6) 462-467 Italy, persons born in, by counties, according to sex (6) 462-467 J Japanese, Chinese and others, included with Indian population 1 Japan, persons born in, by counties, according to sex (6) , 462-467 Jews ; church statistics for state and by counties (52) 703-734 Juvenile offenders; commitment, 1906-1914; table o K Kansas, persons born in, by counties, according to sex (5) 450-461 Kentucky, persons born in, by counties, according to sex (5) 450-461 Kind of school attended, 1914, by counties, according to age classes (10) table xli ; 518, 519 Knoxville, Hospital for Inebriates (49, 50); average population (51). 698-702 L. Laborers — unclassified, by counties, according to sex (13) Ixxv, 552-573 Lambs, number and value of, by counties (39) 682-685 Land, acquisition ; early historical data xv, xvi Land and town lots, valuation for taxation, 1846-1915 (40) 686, 687 Land, areas of counties, density, center of population, etc xxi-xxiii In public use, acreage ; table, etc xci, xcii Owned or leased, farmers operating, by counties (22) 641,642 Land statistics, farm, acres, improvements, machinery; value (23).... 643-645 Latter-day Saints, Reorganized ; church statistics for state and by counties (52) 703-734 Lead production, tons, value, 1905-1913 (72) 758 Leases, farmers operating leased land and kind of, by counties (22). 641,642 Levies of taxes for state and principal other purposes, 1846-1915 (41) 688 Liabilities and assets, banks and loan and trust companies (61-64)... 745-749 Libraries : state, public, college and school cix, ex Life insurance ; statistics, 1905-1914 (65), 750 Limestone, kinds or use, value, 1905-1914 (68) 754 Literacy, by counties, according to sex and age classes (11) .xxxvi-xxxviii, 520-522 Live stock, poultry and farm crops, 1905, 1915; table of values cxvi, cxvil Live stock; valuation for taxation, 1846-1915 (40) 686,687 Loan and trust companies, assets and liabilities, 1905-1915 (63) 747 Losses paid by insurance companies (65, 66) 750-752 Louisiana, persons born in, by counties, according to sex (5) 450-461 Lutheran; church statistics for state and by counties (52).., 703-734 M Machinery, on farms, by counties (23) 643-645 Maine, persons born in, by counties, according to sex (5) 450—461 Male persons, by counties, townships, cities and incorporated towns (1) 2-417 Male persons; classification as to country of birth, by counties (6)... 462-467 Manufactures and factory production, 1909, 1914 ; table cxx-cxxii Manufacturing and mechanical pursuits (13) Ixxv ; 552-573 49 770 INDEX Page Map : Center of population, at four periods 638 Density of population, by counties xxil Density of rural population, by counties xxvl Percentage foreign born, by counties xliv Percentage native bom of foreign or mixed parentage, by counties xlviii Population, percentage increase or decrease viii Population, total and rural, state and by counties iv Urban compared to total population ; percentage by counties . . xxviii Married persons, by counties, according to age classes and sex (8) . .Ixvi; 491-511 Marshalltown, Soldiers' Home at; expenditures (49, 50); average daily population (51) 698, 701, 702 Maryland, persons born in, by counties, according to sex (5) 450-461 Massachusetts, persons born in, by counties, according to sex (5).... 450—461 Membership of churches, by denominations and counties (52) 703-734 Mennonites; church statistics for state and by counties (52) 703-734 Metals : lead, zinc and other ore ; statistics cxxvl Methodist Episcopal Church, South; statistics, state, by counties (52) 703-734 Methodist Episcopal; church statistics for state and by counties (52) . . 703-734 Methodist, Protestant; church statistics for state and by counties (52) 703-734 Mexico, persons born in, by counties, according to sex (6) 462-467 Michigan, persons born in, by counties, according to sex (5) 450-461 Mileage, steam and electric inter-urban railroads (53, 56, 57) . .735, 736 ; 740 ; 741 Military force of the state ; Iowa National Guard ; tables, etc xciii-xcv Millet, acres, tons, value, 1914, by counties (28) 654, 655 Mineral paint and gas cxxvl, oxxvii Mineral statistics (67-75) cxxii-cxxvii ; 753-760 Mineral water, gallons and value of, 1905-1914 (75) 760 Minnesota, persons bom in, by counties, according to sex (5) 450-461 Miscellaneous statistics (13-21; 40-75) 552-637; 686-760 Mississippi, persons born in, by counties, according to sex (5) 450-461 Missouri, persons bom in, by counties, according to sex (5) 450-461 Mitchellville, Girls' Industrial School at; expenditures (49, 50) ; average daily population (51) 698, 700, 702 Money and credits, assessment of, 1905 and 1915, by counties (42) ... . 689, 690 Money reported for taxation ; table Ixxxil Montana, persons bom in, by counties, according to sex (5) 450-461 Months in school, 1914, by counties, sex and age classes (9) 512-517 Mt. Pleasant, Hospital for Insane and Inebriates at ; expenditures (49, 50) ; average daily population (51) 698, 699, 702 Mules and other farm animals ; number, value, by counties (36) 670-673 Municipal purposes, annual tax levies for (41) 688 Distribution of public funds for, 1914, by counties (43) 691-693 Mutual assessment associations, insurance other than life, 1905-1914.. 751 N National banks, assets and liabilities, 1904-1915 (61) ." . . . 745 Capital stock and amount due depositors, 1904-1915 (60).... 744 National Guard, Iowa ; statistics and tables Ixxxvii, xciii-xcv National support. State College, 1906-1915 (46) 696 Native and foreign bom, according to sex and color. Table, etc xliii-xlv Native born, by counties, according to state of birth and sex (5) 450-461 Native born, of foreign or mixed parentage, percentage of ; Map xlviii Native bom white of general nativity parentage, by counties, according to sex and age clases (2) 418-433 In incorporated places of 1,000 and over, according to sex (17) 599-605 Proportion in cities ; table, etc lil im Sex and age classes; number and percentage, table Iviii, lix ^.tivity classes, general, 1890-1915, table xlv INDEX 771 Page Nativity, distribution as to general ; percentage of population by counties and color ; table xlvl-xlix General, American and foreign born, according to sex and color ; table, etc. . . . , xliii-xlv Of urban and rural population ; table and deductions 1-lii Persons of general, according to sex and age classes, by counties, townships, cities and towns (1) 2-417 Naturalized male population, by counties, according to color and general nativity (2) ; table and analysis Ixii, Ixiii ; 418-433 Nebraska, persons born in, by counties, according to sex (5) 450-461 Nevada, persons born in, by counties, according to sex, (5) . , 450-461 New Hampshire, persons bom in, by counties, according to sex (5) .... 450-461 New Jersey, persons born in, by counties, according to sex (5) 450-461 New Mexico, persons born in, by counties, according to sex (5) 450-461 Newspapers and periodicals ; tables, etc ex, cxi New towns, in ten years, list by counties. . .• xxxiii, xxxiv New York, persons bom in, by counties, according to sex, (5) 450-461 Non-Iowa insurance, 1905-1914 (65, 66) 750-752 North Carolina, persons born in, by counties, according to sex (5) . . . . 450-461 North Dakota, persons bom in, by counties, according to sex (5) 450-461 Norway, persons born in, by counties, according to sex (6) 462-467 O Oakdale, State Sanatorium for treatment of tuberculosis, at ; expendi- tures (49, 50) ; average daily population (51) 698, 700, 702 Oats, acres, bushels, value, 1914, by counties (25) 648,649 Occupations, persons engaged in classified, gainful, by counties, accord- ing to sex (13) Ixxv-lxxvii ; 552-573 Offenders, care of, at state institutions ; 1897-1914 ; table xcix Ohio, persons bom in, by counties, according to sex (5) 450-461 Oklahoma, persons born in, by counties, according to sex (5) 450-461 Orchard crops, 1904, 1914 ; product and value cxviii, cxix Oregon, persons bom in, by counties, according to sex (5) 450-461 Parsonages, number, value, by denominations and counties (52) 703-734 Peaches, 1914, value, by counties (34) 666, 667 Peat, plant and production, reference to cxxvii Penal and correctional institutions (49) 698 Penitentiary, Ft. Madison; expenditures (49, 50) ; average daily population (51) 698, 700, 702 Pennsylvania, persons born in, by counties, according to sex (5) 450-461 Pentecostal Church of the Nazarene; statistics, state, by counties (52) 703-734 Peoples' Church ; statistics by counties (52) 705-734 Per capita of taxes ; comparison 1871, 1915 Ixxxiv Per capita of wealth, 1846-1915, table showing estimated Ixxxi Percentage, by counties, general nativity and color ; table xlix Foreign born, by counties ; map xliv Increase or decrease, county population, ten years; map vlii Native born of foreign or mixed parentage, by counties ; map xlviii Per cent, homes incumbered and incumbrance to value, by counties, according to age classes and sex (21) 612-637 Illiterate persons, by counties (11) 520—522 Increase or decrease, county population, ten year period (19) 608, 609 Increase or decrease of population in cities and towns (16).. 593-598 Increase or decrease urban and rural population of counties, for two 6-year periods (20) 610, 611 Urban to total population of counties, at three periods (18).. 606,607 White and colored population, in incorporated places of 1,000 and over, according to general nativity (17) 599-605 772 INDEX Page Periodicals issued in Iowa ; table cxi Personal property, valuation of for taxation purposes, 1846-1915 (40) 686,687 Persons engaged in classified, gainful occupations, by counties, ac- cording to sex (13) ; .- 552-573 Persons, native or foreign born, of general nativity parentage, accord- ing to age and sex, by counties, townships, cities, towns (1) 2-417 Operating owned or leased land (22) 641, 642 Plums, 1914, value, by counties (34) 666, 667 Policies an"d certificates, life insurance companies, 1905-1914 (65).... 750 Population, according to general nativity, sex and age, by counties, townships, cities and towns, including persons of whatever color ( 1 ) 2-417 American and foreign bom, tables, etc liii-lvii At various enumerations ; expansion and wealth xvi— xix Center of, at four periods ; map 638 Changes, county, for ten year period (19) 608, 609 Changes, county, for two 5-year periods (20) 610, 61L Changes, ten years ; table showing counties of greatest increase and decrease, and amount of same xxiv, xxv Characteristics of ; by counties, according to age, sex, color and general nativity (2) 418-433 Component parts of ; census comparisons xvi Counties; land areas, density, center of population, etc xxi-xxiii Density of, by counties ; map • xxii Enumeration for 1915 xvi General changes in total ; comparisons State and United States census ; deductions xvii, xviii Growth, 1870-1915 ; chart xiv Indian and other colored, by sex and age classes xlix, 1 Institutions under Board of Control (51) 702 Movement, by Congressional Districts; statistics and table. .. .xxv, xxvii Of cities and incorporated towns, 1915 and other periods, by counties, (15) 577-592 Of cities of first and second class and towns of 1,000 and over, 1885-1915, changes in (16) 593-598 Of counties, at various enumerations, according to sex and color (3, 4) 434-443, 444-449 Of counties, proportion living in cities and towns, at three periods, (Ig) 606,607 Of Iowa, urban, rural, total, 1915, by counties ; table xii, xiii Proportion as to sex, by age classes ; table Ixi, Ixli Rural, density by counties ; map xxvi School, general nativity and color, number and percentage, 1900-1915 ; table, statistics xl, xli Statistics (1-8) ; 2-511 Tables of comparative; cities and towns in specified classes .. xxvii-xxix Total and rural, state and by counties- map iv Urban and rural ; table l_lli Urban and rural; table showing relations for series of year.. xxv. Urban, classified, and changes xxxi, xxxii ; xxxiv-xxxvl Urban compared to total; percentage by counties; map xxviii Possessions of the cities, towns and counties xeii Potatoes, acres, bushels, value, 1914, by counties (33) 664,665 Pottery, value of product, 1905-1914 (71) '758 Poultry, quantity and value of, 1914, by counties (35) 668, 669 Precipitation (rain and melted snow), 1890-1915 ; table Ixxil Premiums and assessments, insurance companies, 1905-1914 (65, 66).. 750-752 Presbyterian Church in the U. S. ; statistics, state, by counties (52).. 703-734 Private banks and banking firms; assets, liabilities (60, 64) 744; 748 749 INDEX 773 Page rrivate institutions for care of dependents, 1899-1914 ci Professional service, 1905-1915, by age classes and sex; table Ixxv Professional service, persons engaged in, by counties and sex (13).... 552-573 Property and wealth ; tables and deductions Ixxviii-lxxxi Property, assessment and taxes levied, 1905 and 1915, by counties (42) 689, 690 Assessment, for taxation purposes, 1846-1915 (40) 686, 687 Assessment, for taxation; tables and other data Ixxxi-Ixxxiii Devoted to public use, value ; table xoi-xciii Valuation, counties of highest, 1905, 1915; table Ixxxii Protestant Episcopal; church statistics for state and by counties (52) 703-734 Public funds and their use; distribution, 1914, by counties (43) 691-693 Public schools of the State, statistics of, 1847-1915 (44) 694 R Railroads, aggregate assessment, gross and net earnings and taxes paid by steam, 1888-1915 (56) 740 Assessed taxable value per mile of steam, 1906-1915 (55).... 738,739 Business shown by groups; mileage, earnings; table cxxix Electric, assessed taxable value of interurbans, 1906-1915, by companies (59) ; table cxxx ; 743 Electric interurban ; gross earnings per mile, 1905-1914 (58) 742 Electric, rnileage of interurbans, 1906-1915, by companies (57) 741 Gross earnings per mile of steam, 1905-1914, by companies (54) 737, 738 Steam and electric ; table showing mileage, gross and net earnings, assessment, taxes cxxviii Steam ; mileage, 1906-1915, by companies (53) 735, 730 Steam ; table of statistics, 1906-1915 cxxix Table showing growth, 1904, 1914 cxxviii Valuation of property for taxation, 1846-1915 (40) 686, 687 Rain and melted snow ; see precipitation Ixxii Rams and wethers, number, value of, by counties (39) , 682-685 Reformatory, Anamosa; statistics (49, 50, 51) .' 698-702 Reformed Church in America; statistics for state and by counties (52) 703-734 Reformed Church in the U. S. ; statistics, state, by counties (52) 703-734 Reformed Presbyterian (Covenanted) ; church statistics for state and by counties (52) 703-734 Regiments, Iowa, other state and United States ; survivors Civil War veterans enlisted in ; by counties (14) 574-576 Revenue for public purposes ; tables and comparisons Ixxxiii— Ixxxvii Revenue, sources of, State "University, (45) ; State College (46) ; State Teachers College (47) 695, 696, 697 Rhode Island, persons born in, by counties, according to sex (5) 450-461 Road and bridges, distribution of funds for, 1914, by counties (43)... 691-693 Roster of Iowa Soldiers and Sailors Ixvil Rural and urban population ; table showing relations xxv Rural population, map showing density of, by counties xxvi Rural population of counties ; increase and decrease and percentage (19, 20) ; table and deductions 1-lii; 608-611 Russia, persons born in, by counties, according to sex (6) 462-467 Rye, acres, bushels, value, 1914, by counties (26) 650, 651 S Salvation Army; church statistics for state and by counties (52).... 703-734 Sandstone, value of, production, 1905-1914 (68) 754 Sand, value according to use, 1906-1914 (74) 7,51) Savings banks; assets and liabilities, 1905-1915 (62) 746 Savings banks; capital stock and amount due depositors, 1904-1915 (60) 744 School attendance, by age classes and sex (9) ; tables xli-xliii ; 512-517 School attended, kind of, 1914, by counties (10); table xli; 518,519 774 INDEX Page School for the Deaf, Council Blufts ; expenditures (49, 50); average daily population (51) •. 698-702 School or college, years in, by counties, age classes and sex (12) 523-551 School population; general nativity, color, 1900-1915; table xl, xli School property, reported to Dept. of Pub. Instruction, 1915, value.... xciii School purposes, annual tax levies for (41) 688 Schools, colleges, attendance in, 1914, by counties, according to age classes (10) ; table xxxviii-xl ; 518, 519 Of the state, statistics of public, 1847-1915 (44) 694 Statistics and comparisons cii— cv Scotland, persons born in, by counties, according to sex (6) 462—467 Seventh Day Adventist; church statistics for state and by counties (52) 703-734 Sewer pipe, value, 1905-1914 (71) 758 Sex classification of population (1-3, 5-9, 11-13, 17, 21) 2-443, 450-517, 520-573, 599-605, 612-637 Sheep, number, value, by counties (39) 682-685 Silage, acres, tons, value, 1914, by counties (32) 662, 663 Single persons, by counties, age classes and sex (8) ; table Ixvi; 491-511 Small fruits other than named, 1914, value, by counties (34) 666,667 Snowfall, average monthly and annual, 1892-1915; table Ixxlii Soldiers' Home, Marshalltown ; expenditures (49, 50); average daily population (51) 698,701, 702 Federal aid received annually by Ixxxvll Soldiers' Orphans' Home, Davenport; expenditures (49, 50); average daily population (51) 698, 701, 702 South American countries, persons bom in, by counties and sex (6) . . 462-467 South Carolina, persons bom in, by counties, according to sex (5).. 450-401 South Dakota, persons born in, by counties, according to sex (5).... 450-461 Spain, persons born in, by counties, according to sex (6) 462—467 Spanish-American War ; Iowa soldiers in Ixvil Spiritualists; church statistics for state and by counties (52) 703-734 State and other purposes, annual levies of taxes for, 1846-1915 (41,>.. 688 State and United States Census, comparison ; deductions xvil, xviii State banks, assets and liabilities 1905-1915 (63) 747 Capital stock and amount due depositors, 1904-1915 (60).... 744 State Board of Control, institutions under management of (49, 50, 51) ; tables and other data xcv-cii ; 698—702 State Census, at various enumerations, 1847-1915, by counties, accord- ing to sex (3) 434-443 Cities and incorporated towns, population 1915 and other peri- ods, by counties (15) 577-592 State College and experiment station, federal aid' for Ixxxvil Finances, 1906-1915 (46) ggg State educational institutions; statistics (45-47); tables cvii-cix • 695-697 State Institutions under Board of Control, 1906-1914 ; expenditures (49, 50) ; average daily population (51) ; tables xcv-cii ; 698-702 State investments; distribution of funds, 1914, by counties (43) ' 691-693 State of birth; persons native born, by counties, according to sex (5). 450-461 State of Iowa, early historical data xv xvl State, population at various enumerations, by counties and sex (3)... 434-443 State property at Institutions under Board of Control ; table xeviil State purposes, annual tax levies for (41) goo State revenue, miscellaneous sources of, 1906-1915 ; table Ixxxvi State Sanatorium for the treatment of tuberculosis, Oakdale; expendi- tures (49, 50); average daily population (51) ' 698,700 702 State support, distribution of funds for, 1914, by counties HZ) ....... . ' 691-692 State Teachers College, Cedar Falls; receipts and expenditures 1906- 1914 (47) ^^j State, total and rural population, by counties and ; map '.'.'. \y INDEX 775 Page State treasury, payment out of, two periods ; table Ixxxviii State University, Iowa City ; revenue, 1906-1915 (45) 695 Statistics, summary of ; Iowa x, xl Steam railroads, statistics, 1905-1915, by companies (53, 54, 55) 735-739 Steers, number, value, by counties (37) 674-679 Stone, leading counties in production cxxiv, cxxv Stone, production and value, 1905-1914 (68, 69) 754,755 Summary of statistics ; Iowa x, xl Sunday school scholars, number of, by counties and denominations (52) 703-734 Sweden, persons born in, by counties, according to sex (6) 462-467 Swedish Evangelical Free Church; statistics, state, by counties (52).. 703-734 Swedish Meth. Episcopal; church statistics, state, by counties (52)... 703-734 Sweet com, acres, bushels, value, 1914, by counties (32) 662,663 Sweet potatoes, acres, bushels, value, 1914, by counties (33) 664,665 Swine, number and value, according to age classes, by counties (38).. 680,681 Switzerland, persons born in, by counties, according to sex (6) 462-467 Taxation, assessment of property for ; tables and other data Ixxxl-lxxxiii Taxation of property, 1905-1915, by counties (42) 689, 690 Taxes, annual levies of, for state and other purposes, 1846-1915 (41).. 688 Classified as to general uses, 1905-1915, chart xlv Comparison, 1905, 1915 ; table, etc Ixxxlv, Ixxxv Levied, 1905 and 1915, by counties (42) 689,690 Paid, by steam railroads, 1888-1915 (56) 740 Per capita of, for public purposes; comparison, 1871, 1915. . . . Ixxxlv Tax levies, 1905-1915; tables and comparisons Ixxxiii-lxxxv Teachers, male and female, number and amount paid, 1847-1915 (44).. 694 Telegraph and telephone property, valuation for taxation 1846-1915 (40) 686, 687 Temperature for Iowa, monthly and annual mean, 1890-1915; table... Ixxii Tennessee, persons born in, by counties, according to sex (5) 450-461 Texas, persons born in, by counties, according to sex (5) 450-461 Tile, value of product, 1905-1914 (71) 758 Timothy and other grass seed, acres, bushels, value, by counties (31) . 660, 661 Timothy hay, acres, tons, value, 1914, by counties (27) 652,653 Tons, hay and silage (27-29, 32) 652-657, 662, 663 Tornado companies and associations, 1905-1914 (66) 751,752 Total and rural population, state and by counties ; map iv Total and urban population of counties, at three periods (18) 606,607 Total assessed taxable value of property and taxes levied, 1905 and 1915, by counties (42) 689, 690 Total assessment various classes of property, 1846-1915 (40) 686,687 Total persons, all nativities, by counties, townships, cities and towns, according to sex and age classes (1) 2-417 Operating farms, by counties (22) 641, 642 Total population, by counties, age, sex, color and general nativity (2) 418-433 By sex and age classes, 1905, 1915 ; table Ivlli, lix Cities and towns, 1885-1915 (16) 593-598 Counties, net Increase or decrease of. In ten years (19) 608, 609 Counties, per cent increase or decrease of, in ten years (19) . . 608, 609 Urban compared to ; percentage by counties ; map xxviii Total school attendance, 1914, by counties, age classes and sex (9)... 512-517 Total survivors Civil War veterans, enlisted from Iowa and other states, according to class of service; by counties (14) 574-576 Town lots and land, valuation of for taxation purposes, 1846-1915 (40) 686, 687 Townships, population of; general nativity, sex and age (1) 2-417 Towns, Incorporated, population of; general nativity, sex and age (1) 2-417 New and abandoned, in ten years xxxili, xxxlv Towns of 1,000 Inhabitants and over, population changes, 1885-1915 (16) 593-598 776 INDEX Page Trade and transportation, 1905-1915, by age classes and sex; table.... Ixxv Persons engaged in, by counties, according to sex (13) 552-573 Transportation ; steam and electric interurban railroads ; tables and other statistics cxxvii-oxxxi Tree fruits unclassified, 1914, value, by counties (34) 666, 667 Tuberculous persons. State Sanatorium (Oakdale) for treatment of, expenditures (49, 50); average daily population (51) 698-702 Turkey, persons born in, by counties, according to sex (6) 462-467 V Ungraded schools, number reported 1848-1915 (44) 694 Unitarians; church statistics for state and by counties (52) 703-734 United Breth. in Christ; church statistics, state, by counties (52).... 703-734 United' Evangelical; church statistics for state and by counties (52).. 703-734 United Presbyterian; church statistics for state and by counties (52) 703-734 United States census, at various enumerations, 1840-1910, by counties, according to sex (3) 434-443 Cities and incorporated towns, population 1910 and other periods, by counties (IB) 577-592 United States, years in the, of foreign born persons, by counties, age classes and sex (7) 468-490 ' Universalists ; church statistics for state and by counties (52) 70'3-734 Unknown countries, persons born in, by counties, according to sex (6) 462-467 Unknown state, persons born in, by counties, according to sex (5).... 450-461 Unnaturalized male population, by counties, according to color and general nativity (2) 418-433 Urban and rural population ; table showing relations xxv Urban compared to total population ; percentage by counties ; map .... xxviii Urban population, 1915 and other periods, by counties (15) 577-592 Classified ; table for comparison xxxi, xxxii General nativity of, 1905 and 1915 ; table, etc 1-lii Of counties (18, 19, 20) 606-611 Utah, persons born in, by counties, according to sex (5) 450-461 V Value, farm crops and live stock (24-39) Ixxix, Ixxx ; 646-685 Land and buildings (21, 23, 52) Ixxix; 612-637, 643-645, 703-734 Mineral products (70-72, 74, 75) 756-700 Property devoted to pubhc use ; table xci Property, probable market ; statistics Ixxx Railroads, taxable (55, 56, 59) 738—740, 743 Vegetables, value, 1914, by counties (35) 668 669 Vermont, persons born in, by counties, according to sex (5) 450-461 Veterans, Civil War, Iowa and other states, by counties (14) 574-576 Vinton, College for the Blind, at; expenditures (49, 50) ; average daily population (51) 698, 701, 702 Virginia, persons born in, by counties, according to sex (5) 450-461 Vital statistics ; tables and comment Ixxiii-lxxv Volunteers of America; church statistics for state and by counties (52) 703-734 Voters and votes cast ; tables and comparisons Ixiii-lxvl W Wales, persons born in, by counties, according to sex (6) 462-467 Wards of cities, population, by general nativity, sex and age (1) 2-417 Washington, persons born in, by counties, according to sex (5) 450^-461 Water, mineral, gallons, value, 1905-1914 (75) Y50 Wealth and population, comparative expansion, by decades xviii, xix Wealth, per capita, 1846;1915, table showing estimated ixxxi Wesleyan Methodist; church statistics for state and by counties (52) . . 703-734 West Virginia, persons born in, by counties, according to sex (5) 450-461 INDEX 777 Page Wethers and rams, number, value, by counties (39) 682-685 Wheat, acres, bushels, value, 1914, by counties (24) 646, 647 White persons of general nativity, proportion as to sex, by age classes ; table and analysis .* 1x1, Ixii Widowed persons, by counties, according to age classes and sex (8) .Ixvli; 491-511 Wild hay, acres, tons, value, .1914, by counties (29) 656, 657 Wisconsin, persons born in, by counties, according to sex (5) 450-461 Woodward, State Colony for Epileptics, at; expenditures (49, 50) 698-700 Wool ; production, value, by counties (39) 682-6S5 Wyoming, persons born in, by counties, according to sex (5) 450-461 Y Tears in school or college, by counties, age classes and sex (12) 523-551 Years in United States of foreign born persons, by counties, according to age classes and sex (7) Ivi, Ivii ; 468-490 Z Zinc production, tons, value, 1905-1913 (72) 758
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