Ligonier Banner., Volume 44, Number 34, Ligonier, Noble County, 11 November 1909 — Page 3

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BU T AR SR BT e st SIS LR dULI SaitsS 140 av tun! citting is allowed to extend over several vears The amonurt of timber ¢6t and paid for during the vear, however, niore than doubled the eut of the K\l"'\f“il; ‘Year, with & total of not gquites 383 000000 feet. The receipts from timbher sales Were about 8850004, as against not quite 670,000 for trhe provious year, In addition there wits ont under froe ‘tge over 136000000 feet of titrher, valuerd at about $l5O 000, T Tre timber lands of the west, outside of the national foresks, are mainly In strong hands. ,Were the national forest timber offered on the market to every purchaser, the rmain seene .of western Jumbering would be quickly ‘shifted to the public holdings. It is sometimes asserted that the vreation of the national forests has plaved into the dands of monopolists of timber lands. It was, on the contrary, an eleventh-hour halting ©of the process ~which would have made the hold obtainable by such a monepely complete. To permit thre owners of standing timhe! to preserve their stumpage intact while supplyfpg their business needs through purchase from the goyernment would stmply invite the hoarding of private iimber for further high prices, while the public supply would be disposed of without an adequate return. Unier the timbersale policy now in force both the preseot dnd the future interests of the consumer are ‘botne in mind. The needs of those dependent on the forests are supplied up to the limit set by the power of the region to maintain a steady rield. It is recognized, also, that the removal of mature timber to make room for a new and growing cmq is the only way by which the forests can be put to work. Small sales are, how-

PETS THAT HAVE EASY TIME

Fortunate Indeed is Bird or Beast That Regiment Takes Strong Fancy to. : Soldiers are fond of pals. A dog attached to a regiment is sure of kind treatmnent. - He may be aobod;s's dog, but he is everybody's favorite, An eagle, “Old Abe,” wmas the pet of a Wisconsin regiment during the Civil war In the great review held

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Pmrine the calendar yvenr 1807 the loss of tinber by fire Was jess than half that of the previous serr. though this in turn was less than ever before Aboul pneseventh of one per cent. of the forests was burned gyer in 1807, with a damage so slight as to be pracileally negligible The ratlo of loss to the value of the timbor protected, allowing that it is worth $2 per thousand feot, was about. as four cents to $1.0060. The ‘entire vost of national forest administration was equivalent to a charge of onethird of one per cent. on the value of the timber protected—surely a cheap insurance rate. This {mmunity from fires must be ascribed chiefly to the results of consistent efforts piade in the past to inform the public as to the danger of carelessness in the use of fires in the forest and:to the recognized necesgity of vigilance to put out small fires. With reasonable co-operation on the part of the public to prevent fires and reasonable provision for discovering and fighting fires when they start, really ‘heavy losses are entirely preventable. The widespread forest fires of recent ‘months are a case in point. Relatively littie damage. was done to the national forests at a time when the alr - was thick with smoke from the Atlantic to the Pacific coast, and most of the national forest loss which was suffered, amounting to perhaps §1,000,000, was due solely ' to the fact that the area to be protected is so vastly out of proportion to the resources at the disposal of the forest service. - ; e Examinations of lands under the act of June 11, 1906, led to the listing for settlement-of about 240,000 acres of national forest land. o .

in Washington at the close of the war | many veterans were observed carry-| ing favorite crows and possums. { Perhaps the strangest pet that ever| attracted a regiment's fancy was a; pig. She attached herself :0 a Ken: | tuck regiment on the way to invade | Canada during the war of 18132, - As the men marched out from Har- | rodsburg one morning they came | across two pigs fighting. They haltédi

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to see it out. 'When the march was resumed the victorious pig followed the regiment. When they encamped at night the pig halted and found shelter. The next morning the pig started with the regiment, and when it stopped the pig halted. Day by day it trotted along, until the Ohio river was reached. A ferryboat ‘ransported the troops to Cincinnati, but the pig swam theé stream and waited on the other side until the regiment took up its line of march. : " During the long tramp to the lake

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an o eniarged timber sunply "Hrondeast sOGWings ~ were Umsade . during the vear fn 2% forests o elght states, i tesl by ex periment the gxtent . to which = refor w“station . may be hoped for through . the.

use of this method. The pational forest nurseries, in whirh sre belug grown stock f(or transclsrtice, were eniarged and sbout THO 00D trees were Nlanted.. Over £.000.000 trees will be ready. for planting = 1408 . The beneficial results of regulated grw'ng, shown 1o a decided betterment of much of the nartional forest range, made it possible to increase the allotment. of #lock on 8 number of the ovlder forests At the same time investigations in range improvement through re seading.. new methods of handling stock, the sradication of poisonous plants and the destructicn of prairie dogs brought imporftant progress toward still better future use of the forests by stockmien. The development of water--ing places is another means that is being. pursued to the same end, while the killing of preiatory wild ank mals by forest service hunters saved the stockmen losses probably greater than the entire amount paid in grazing fees. This amount was over $960,000. Through the enfarcement of ‘Quarantine regulations and the dis tribution of blackleg vaccine other losses from discase - were prevented. : _ L Through co-operation with private owners investigations in forest management and forest plagting were continued. It was possiblée to make field examinations of only about one-fifth of the total acreage for which advice concerning forest management was sought. Every tract of land on which the advice of the service is applied becomes a valuable experiment in practical forestry. The total area for which examipations have been made since co-operation was first offered is nearly 11,

piggy received her full share of rations. Occasionally the men were put on short commons, but no one thought of sticking the regiment's pet. When they came to the lake's shore piggy was offered a passage across to Canada. She refused to- stir from Anmerican soil. | v ; " -When the campaign closed the troops recrossed to American soil, where they had left their horses. As the line was being formed a familiar grunt was heard. There was piggy ready to resume the march. On the

16 the 'M‘i#éfit"z;}fi_ for the use 9? the

oo Hoadoresting - of davge areas. Lol the . ety al . forast s ealled for pri Clamaniy o the Cdntereet of i wWiler supe wiy ot the : ifiw“*:é'{; Bat alse, - S crhepß lens onressingly, for Cthe make of

. HOW FUNSTON SWAM BAGDAG. . - Col. gfi%@fi“i;Authar of Naw Story on the Littie Gen ol Bl Lithe s said 1o e the muiline 6 thix story of bow Fumston swion 'he Rag Peg (tfw@fnfl"‘zuw e fellows i ahe Twelipth MHaosas & Divarde of Oil. Funston's . The regliaes t had reached oo mn e e b ek of the

; Fusston: “Halt, Sergl Oawald: bow degn s e river? : Oswald: "Eleven inches, Col Funston ™ “ s dvance, Sergt - Oswald” and the sergeant ad vanced. ; . . “Haw deep now, Berg! Oswald Y’ i aoeven nehes. Col Funston™ _ Fanstan (rising to his feet with his sword In hand): Lo atll ewim er, by I’k»-r~k"l" ~Kansas City . Timea ) ‘. THE RACK AND THE SWEATBOX. The modern police “sweatbox,” for which there is no warrant, either lay or ecclesiastical, replaces the rack, which passed out of use in Engismd soon after the assas{nation of that witty and wicked profiigate, the duke of Buckingham, at Portsmouth, by John Feiton. This noted assasination occurred on Saturday, August 23, 1628 Felton underwent several examinations, Always asserting that he had no accomplices, and when the earl of Dorset threatened in the king’s name to examine him on the rack he said: "I do again affirm, upon my salvetion, that my purpose was known to no man living; and more thag 1 have sald before 1 cannot. But if it be bLis majesty’s pleasure, I am ready to suffer whatever his roajesty will have inflicted upon me. Yet this 1 must tell you, by the way, that if I be put upon the rack. ! will accuse you, my lord Dorset. and none but yourself.This bold resolve astounded tie¢ examiners. They hesitated and cogsulted the judges, who unanimously replied that “torture was npot justifiable under the laws of England”

homeward way the pig suffered greatly from the cold weather. It crossed, however, the Ohio river, and then gave out. - Governor Shelby of Kentucky had piggy conveyed to his farm and there she passed her days in indolence and good living, bonored as the regiment's pet. : Pole Versus Equator, Unquestionably the polar circle is steacdily advsncirg toward the equator. From the time when the earth

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first took form and began {ts exis® ence as a planet it has been slowly cooling off, ard it is as certain as anything in mathematics that some time in the future the earth will be quite cold and barren of every form of life. The polar regions will continue approaching each other, and before them the various liviog ferms, animal and vegetable, will retreat, until finally the only home of life will be a narrow belt at the equator, which {tself will at last surrender to the cold, and the earth will be a “dead one.”

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e * » & % £ . - » % a Crossing the Charce v 3 Plank *» _.'\ .( ~. t V - vil ‘ : 5 27} ol At Japanese Abangdoning Farm Life. . vton, and s cuiting o of &ll réspon sty of overiord drove yisth of the farmisg* familics tnte the ¢itios tor factory or shop enpiesment, thus hifting gopulntion from the rural to the urban reglons,. precisely as - wWe fnd popplation shifting o the Unilied Srates, and for ;,"*&‘St?‘;"" cthe same cayse, 8o that out of the :z.";érr:.‘ of the farming poor, land speculathen in Tokyo, \"t‘;ku?’ii‘.!;;;fi. (szaka, _Kn?w,,‘_\'af gova and other cities profited enormously: In all those place ;"f.‘»;}’xlz{:lc':}; made amazingly rapid increasas; i While there is considerable : scaztered gentiment in faver of 2 small land-value tax, the poliitical power ol the country is centered in the hands of a comparatively few, and ‘the landed class <fin. for the present at least, hold thifigs as: they are—Henry George, Jr.. in Colller's Weekly. o : Wise Philadeiphia Cat. - _ A big black cat for weeks has been catching its breakfast of nice, fat sparrows along the Sixth street side of Franklin square, and can be seen there every morging. - The sparrows " feed in dense flocks and pussy seldom " has much trouble tn nabbing the un- | wary omnes. LR ‘ | The other morning the cat was at ' {ts usual occupation when a froliccome pup of the fox terrier varlely bounded ‘into the square. The animal ,dashed . up and down through the grass, and . the flocks of birds flew to the tree | tops. o ! The cat didn't liLe the actions of the | pup and crouched In the grass until | the dog was within a few yards. | Then the cat made a jump and land!ed on the pup Of course, it was suri prised and frightened and made a whd dash to get away from the cat's claws. { The cat returned to a place to walt for the return of the birds.—FPhliadel phia Times 25 L

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