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Ch. 11: Pearl Fisheries

Ch. 11: Pearl Fisheries Page of 358 Ch. 11: Pearl Fisheries Text size:minus plus Restore normal size   Mail page  Print this page
THE PEARL
He was about to examine his last small heap when a man standing by offered him fifty cents for the lot. The offer was accepted. From the first shell opened, the buyer extracted a ball pearl which was afterwards sold for one thou­sand dollars. Two of the finest pearls taken one season from the same section were obtained from a heel-splitter, carelessly dug out of the sand by a man wading in the shallows of the river. The heel-splitter is a large thin-shelled variety, so named by the natives because of the sharp, cutting quality of the shell which protrudes from the sand of the river. They rarely contain pearls, but when they do, the pearls are usually fine.
The largest proportion of fine pearls to the yield of any section since discoveries have been recorded, came from Wisconsin, and many of the best of these, especially of the fancy colored ones, were taken from Sugar river. Many of these were exceptionally beautiful in both color and luster and a good proportion of them were also round.
Much is written and told of the marvellous pearls found in our streams worth large sums
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Ch. 11: Pearl Fisheries Page of 358 Ch. 11: Pearl Fisheries
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