Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 178, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 December 1933 — Page 3

DEC. 5, 1933.

—Let’s Go Hunting—--5 MORE FOREST CAMPS OPENED IN STATE TODAY 24 Centers Will Be Occupied With Conservation of Lands. BY LEFTY LEE Timea Huntini Editor The nineteen civilian conservation corps camps have been working consistently along conservation lines for six months. Five more camps are authorized for the second period. All are to be occupied today. Os the twenty-four camps which will be in operation twelve will be working on state forests and state game preserves, and twelve will be conducting soil erosion preserves. Indiana is in a fortunate position to take advantage of this important program because the forests and game preserves are comparatively new and undeveloped. The state forests have increased from 3,500 acres in 1926 to 24,000 in 1933. During this period funds available have been used to establish three state nurseries with an inventory of 20,000,000 trees, to establish forest fire protection over 1,000,000 acres of state and private timber lands and wastelands, and each dollar which could be devoted to state forests has been used chiefly for buying land. Accomplishments Listed Roads, trails? administrative buildings and recreational facilities are being developed now with the camps. A report of the work accomplished by all of the camps for the last two months includes the completion of the following projects, in addition to a large amount of work devoted to incompleted projects: Five miles of fire breaks were constructed, fire hazards were removed from 227 acres, seven miles of roadside were cleared, forty miles of truck trails were cleared, nine and one-half miles of truck trails were constructed, 450 acres were improved according to scientific forest practice, three miles of existing highway were maintained. During the same two months three headquarters buildings, five toolhouses and three office buildings were constructed. Nursery work, chiefly in growing black locust trees for reforestation eroded lands, received 13,000 man days of work. Insect and pest control for forest trees was carried out on 660 acres of state and private lands. Seventy-five miles of boundary line were surveyed and marked, two bridges were completed, four acres were cleared for public camp grounds, one and one-fourth miles of stream were improved, two reservoirs were constructed covering eight acres, for fish, birds and forest water supply. Fifty-six miles of trails were mapped and 76,000 board feet of timber was sawed to provide lumber for state forest and game preserve buildings. This is an impressive total for two months.

Check Dams Built An estimate was made, supported by field research investigations, to show that southern Indiana has lost enough top soil to cover a county the size of Fountain county twenty inches deep. This is a terrific soil loss for the first century of land utilization! The soil erosion camps are building check dams for gullies of logs, brush and stone to hold back the soil until reforestation on these lands completely will revegetate the area and afford a permanent soil cover. It is planned to plant 25,000,000 trees next spring. Black locust is a useful tree to the farmer as it provides a good cover for game, and because its fruit is similar to a bean pod with several edible seeds, it makes a good food tree for birds and small game. Under the new public works employment plan projects have been submitted for approval to use 3,000 more men in the state forests and game preserves, and 5,000 more men on soil erosion work. If these projects are approved, as there is good evidence that they will be, this large force of men materially will supplement and increase the splendid work being accomplished by the forest and erosion camps. The fish and game, park and forestry divisions are co-operating closely in every manner to develop the lands under the supervision of the department of conservation for forestry. recreation and fish and game purposes in order to best serve the public. In use in an English city is a motorcycle with a sidecar which paints that useful white stripe along the middle of highways as the operator drives along.

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NEW AIR SERVICE LINKS CITY AND WASHINGTON

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Modern trimotored planes, carrying eleven passengers and a stewardess, have been started on anew air route from Washington to Indianapolis by the American Airways. Shown above are Ada Huckeby, stewardess, and L. B. Van Meter and M. G. Beard, pilots. The schedule will provide four trips daily between Washington and Chicago.

Two Protestant Sects Plead for Temperance

Warning to Episcopalians, Presbyterians Issued as Repeal Nears. By United Press NEW YORK, Dec. 5. —Two Protestant sects, the Episcopalians and the Presbyerians, cautioned adherents today to observe temperance and prevent the legalized liquor traffic from becoming a national menace. The Presbyterian pronouncement, issued in Philadelphia by the Rev. J. A. Stevenson, termed repeal “a defeat,” and warned members ‘‘to look to God in earnest prayers rather than to politicians in Washington.” The Episcopal statement, an encyclical issued by the House of Bishops, and read in all of the denomination’s churches throughout the country, urged “a finer type of Christian faith and courage” to aid “the establishment of the new economic order.”

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‘Meat’ Dealer ‘Sausage Dough’ 0. K. in This Case.

By United Press Farmington, Mass., Dec. 5. Charles W. Floyd, president of the Farmington Chamber of Commerce and clothing merchant, today inserted in a local newspaper an advertisement for his store which read, in part, as follows: “A1 Smith says our money is baloney dollars, but A1 was defeated at the convention and it may be possible he just is a mite prejudiced. We are gambling he is wrong. For a limited time we will accept baloney dollars for our good marchandise.” He then listed “bargains in baloney dollars,” including men’s overcoats for "ten baloney dollars.” There are between seventy and eighty known species of squirrels in the world.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

FLOWER MISSION HOSPITAL PLANS ARE DISCUSSED Building of Tuberculosis Center Detailed at Luncheon. 9 Details of plans for the construction of the Flower Mission Tuberculosis hospital were discussed yesterday by members of the advisory board of the mission and city officials at a luncheon in the Lincoln. The finance committee, appointed by Mrs. David Ross, president, and William J. Mooney of the advisory board, will meet with Earl C. Wolf, business manager of the city hospital; Dr. Herman G. Morgan, secretary of the board of health, and Otto P. Deluse. chairman of the advisory board of the federal public works administration in Indiana. This group wall confer on details of the plan proposed at the luncheon whereby the hospital will cc erected as public works administration project. The plan is to erect it as a city hospital unit. Members of the Flower Mission finance committee are Mrs. James H. Lowes, Mrs. James D. Ermston. Mrs. W. C. Smith and Mrs. Edward Ferger. Advisory board members include Mansur Oakes, Edgar H. Evans, Paul Buchanan, Murray Auerback, Eugene C. Foster and Mr. Mooney. Boards members who attended the business meeting and luncheon were Mesdames Ross, Lowes, Ferger, Ermston, Smith, Robert Elliott, C. J. Buchanan, Lloyd Bowers, F. H. Cheyr.e, A. C. Rasmussen, Robert Geddes, Arthur Heiskell and Samuel O. Dungan. Arthur Abele Jr. wall receive a complete course of instruction in aviation during his two-year trip to the south pole with Admiral Byrd.

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