anaheim-gazette 1910-11-03
Searchable text
GREAT LOSS OF FORESTS
Fires in Montana and Idaho Destroy Much Timber
A rough estimate of the fire loss upon the national forests in Montana and northern Idaho, upon which the forest officers of the U.S. department of agriculture have been engaged since the fires were put out, puts the total amount of timber killed or destroyed in this one district at over 6 billion board feet, while the area burned over is put at over 1 14 million acres.
The heaviest losses were in two Idaho forests, the Coeur d'Alene, where over 3 billion board feet of timber are reported killed or destroyed and over 450 thousand acres burned over, and the Clearwater, in which 1 billion feet of timber were killed or destroyed and 300 thousand acres burned over. On the Helena national forest, in Montana, the loss in timber is said to have been 500 million feet, on the Cabinet forest 400 million, and on the Lolo forest 300 million.
A large part of the losses on the Coeur d'Alene, Clearwater, and Lolo were due to what became practically one great fire. The burn is shown on the forest service maps as extending in a northwesterly and southeasterly direction from north of Wallace, Idaho, to a point some 30 miles southwest of Missoula, Mont., or nearly 100 miles. At its widest point this burn has a width of about 40 miles, but its shape is very irregular.
It was really a union of a number of separate fires, driven to fury by the fierce hurricane of August 26th. To the west of the Idaho-Montana boundary in the region of this fire total stand of national forest timber. At the present rate of cutting from the national forests, 6 billion feet is equal to 12 years' supply; but it is less than one-sixth of a single year-cut in the entire country, or enough to keep all our lumber mills busy for something under two months.
LIFE WITHOUT SUNLIGHT
"Let in the light," is the slogan of the men and women engaged in tenement-house reform in New York. It is hard to believe, but it is nevertheless a fact that on February 13, 1908, there were in that city 101,277 absolutely windowless rooms, most of them bedrooms inhabited by the poorer classes, those who pay rent of $2 to $16 a month. Because of the strenuous efforts of the tenement house committee of the charity organization society in securing and enforcing the tenement house law the number of the windowless rooms were reduced to about 90,000. Think of it, you dwellers in spacious, sunny suburban villas, 90,000 rooms without any sunlight whatsoever save that which enters by the door which admits the person who goes into it to eat, sleep, to work, or to sit about and enjoy himself as best he can. Some of these 90,000 rooms are in cellars, some in attics and others are distributed about on intermediate floors according to the fearful and wonderful designs of that most hopeless of all human habitations, the dumb-bell or double-deck tenement house.
Most hopeless? Yes, because the man who lives in a cave can at least enjoy privacy and silence and air that is not contaminated by the exhalations and nuisance of his fellows; the man who lives in a tent can pull back ACUTENESS OF HE CAN ESTIMATE HERD OF FOUR DETAILS DEVELOPED ON THE HERD OF FOUR DETAILS DEVELOPED ON THE HERD OF FOUR DETAILS DEVELOPED ON THE HERD OF FOUR DETAILS DEVELOPED ON THE HERD OF FOUR DETAILS DEVELOPED ON THE HERD OF FOUR DETAILS DEVELOPED ON THE HERD OF FOUR DETAILS DEVELOPED ON THE HERD OF FOUR DETAILS DEVELOPED ON THE HERD OF FOUR DETAILS DEVELOPED ON THE HERD OF FOUR DETAILS DEVELOPED ON THE HERD OF FOUR DETAILS DEVELOPED ON THE HERD OF FOUR DETAILS DEVELOPED ON THE HERD OF FOUR DETAILS DEVELOPED ON THE HERD OF FOUR DETAILS DEVELOPED ON THE HERD OF FOUR DETAILS DEVELOPED ON THE HERD OF FOUR DETAILS DEVELOPED ON THE HERD OF FOUR DETAILS DEVELOPED ON THE HERD OF FOUR DETAILS DEVELOPED ON THE HERD OF FOUR DETAILS DEVELOPED ON THE HERD OF FOUR DETAILS DEVELOPED ON THE HERD OF FOUR DETAILS DEVELOPED ON THE HERD OF FOUR DETAILS DEVELOPED ON THE HERD OF FOUR DETAILS DEVELOPED ON THE HERD OF FOUR DETAILS DEVELOPED ON THE HERD OF FOUR DETAILS DEVELOPED ON THE HERD OF FOUR DETAILS DEVELOPED ON THE HERD OF FOUR DETAILS DEVELOPED ON THE HERD OF FOUR DETAILS DEVELOPED ON THE HERD OF FOUR DETAILS DEVELOPED ON THE HERD OF FOUR DETAILS DEVELOPED ON THE HERD OF FOUR DETAILS DEVELOPED ON THE HERD OF FOUR DETAILS DEVELOPED ON THE HERD OF FOUR DETAILS DEVELOPED ON THE HERD OF FOUR DETAILS DEVELOPED ON THE HERD OF FOUR DETAILS DEVELOPED ON THE HERD OF FOUR DETAILS DEVELOPED ON THE HERD OF FOUR DETAILS DEVELOPED ON THE HERD OF FOUR DETAILS DEVELOPED ON THE HERD OF FOUR DETAILS DEVELOPED ON THE HERD OF FOUR DETAILS DEVELOPED ON THE HERD OF FOUR DETAILS DEVELOPED ON THE HERD OF FOUR DETAILS DEVELOPED ON THE HERD OF FOUR DETAILS DEVELOPED ON THE HERD OF FOUR DETAILS DEVELOPED ON THE HERD OF FOUR DETAILS DEVELOPED ON THE HERD OF FOUR DETAILS DEVELOPED ON THE HERD OF FOUR DETAILS DEVELOPED ON THE HERD OF FOUR DETAILS DEVELOPED ON THE HERD OF FOUR DETAILS DEVELOPED ON THE HERD OF FOUR DETAILS DEVELOPED ON THE HERD OF FOUR DETAILS DEVELOPED ON THE HERD OF FOUR DETAILS DEVELOPED ON THE HERD OF FOUR DETAILS DEVELOPED ON THE HERD OF FOUR DETAILS DEVELOPED ON THE HERD OF FOUR DETAILS DEVELOPED ON THE HERD OF FOUNDATION IN THIS REGION.
Charles Goodman Tex., and owner of herd bearing extraordinary cattle he knew. When came they would an advantageous past him the haferent men. After the calves had later, when the ing been mixed taken out to be which brand to noting at that each belonged.
on the forest service maps as extending in a northwesterly and southeasterly direction from north of Wallace, Idaho, to a point some 30 miles southwest of Missoula, Mont., or nearly 100 miles. At its widest point this burn has a width of about 40 miles, but its shape is very irregular.
It was really a union of a number of separate fires, driven to fury by the fierce hurricane of August 26th. To the west of the Idaho-Montana boundary in the region of this fire lies a very inaccessible mountainous country, into which, on account of the absence of trails and of forage, it was almost impossible for forces of fire fighters to penetrate. When the hurricane arose it drove the fires upon the parties which were hewing a way towards them, forced these parties to seek refuge wherever it could be found, and swept down upon the forests where the fires were up to that time generally well in hand. The extensive losses are ascribed to the combination of hurricane and lack of means to get to the fires and put them out before the storm came. On the forests which were best equipped for controlling fires the results achieved are regarded as a demonstration of the efficacy of the fire-fighting methods employed, even under highly adverse natural conditions.
Forester Graves believes that, as usually happens in the case of big fires, there will be found to be considerable areas of living timber within the regions now mapped as entirely burned over. Of necessity, the figures given are tentative, for it has been impossible to examine all the burned areas thoroughly. As fast as possible, however, the forest officers are locating and estimating the bodies of timber killed but capable of being lumbered, if taken in time. There will be an enormous quantity of fire-killed timber, both on the national forests and on private lands, to be disposed of as soon as possible, since if not marketed quickly it will not be worth cutting at all.
The department of agriculture will push vigorously to dispose of this fire-killed timber. As with all other national forest timber, it will be sold on the stump, to millmen who will lumber the land, paying a set price per thousand board feet for the timber, and conforming to whatever regulations are stipulated in the interest of the forest. Pending the disposal of this fire-killed timber, future sales of green timber from the national forests which were badly on the forest service maps as extending in a northwesterly and southeasterly direction from north of Wallace, Idaho, to a point some 30 miles southwest of Missoula, Mont., or nearly 100 miles. At its widest point this burn has a width of about 40 miles, but its shape is very irregular.
It was really a union of a number of separate fires, driven to fury by the fierce hurricane of August 26th. To the west of the Idaho-Montana boundary in the region of this fire lies a very inaccessible mountainous country, into which, on account of the absence of trails and of forage, it was almost impossible for forces of fire fighters to penetrate. When the hurricane arose it drove the fires upon the parties which were hewing a way towards them, forced these parties to seek refuge wherever it could be found, and swept down upon the forests where the fires were up to that time generally well in hand. The extensive losses are ascribed to the combination of hurricane and lack of means to get to the fires and put them out before the storm came. On the forests which were best equipped for controlling fires the results achieved are regarded as a demonstration of the efficacy of the fire-fighting methods employed, even under highly adverse natural conditions.
Forester Graves believes that, as usually happens in the case of big fires, there will be found to be considerable areas of living timber within the regions now mapped as entirely burned over. Of necessity, the figures given are tentative, for it has been impossible to examine all the burned areas thoroughly. As fast as possible, however, the forest officers are locating and estimating the bodies of timber killed but capable of being lumbered, if taken in time. There will be an enormous quantity of fire-killed timber, both on the national forests and on private lands, to be disposed of as soon as possible, since if not marketed quickly it will not be worth cutting at all.
The department of agriculture will push vigorously to dispose of this fire-killed timber. As with all other national forest timber, it will be sold on the stump, to millmen who will lumber the land, paying a set price per thousand board feet for the timber, and conforming to whatever regulations are stipulated in the interest of the forest. Pending the disposal of this fire-killed timber,future sales of green timber from the national forests which were badly on the forest service maps as extending in a northwesterly and southeasterly direction from north of Wallace, Idaho, to a point some 30 miles southwest of Missoula, Mont., or nearly 100 miles. At its widest point this burn has a width of about 40 miles, but its shape is very irregular.
It was really a union of a number of separate fires, driven to fury by the fierce hurricane of August 26th. To the west of the Idaho-Montana boundary in the region of this fire lies a very inaccessible mountainous country, into which, on account of the absence of trails and of forage, it was almost impossible for forces of fire fighters to penetrate. When the hurricane arose it drove the fires upon the parties which were hewing a way towards them, forced these parties to seek refuge wherever it could be found, and swept down upon the forests where the fires were up to that time generally well in hand. The extensive losses are ascribed to the combination of hurricane and lack of means to get to the fires and put them out before the storm came. On the forests which were best equipped for controlling fires the results achieved are regarded as a demonstration of the efficacy of the fire-fighting methods employed, even under highly adverse natural conditions.
Forester Graves believes that, as usually happens in the case of big fires, there will be found to be considerable areas of living timber within the regions now mapped as entirely burned over. Of necessity, the figures given are tentative, for it has been impossible to examine all the burned areas thoroughly. As fast as possible, however, the forest officers are locating and estimating the bodies of timber killed but capable of being lumbered, if taken in time. There will be an enormous quantity of fire-killed timber, both on the national forests and on private lands, to be disposed of as soon as possible, since if not marketed quickly it will not be worth cutting at all.
The department of agriculture will push vigorously to dispose of this fire-killed timber. As with all other national forest timber, it will be sold on the stump, to millmen who will lumber the land, paying a set price per thousand board feet for the timber, and conforming to whatever regulations are stipulated in the interest of the forest. Pending the disposal of this fire-killed timber,future sales of green timber from the national forests which were badly on the forest service maps as extending in a northwesterly and southeasterly direction from north of Wallace, Idaho, to a point some 30 miles southwest of Missoula, Mont., or nearly 100 miles. At its widest point this burn has a width of about 40 miles, but its shape is very irregular.
It was really a union of a number of separate fires, driven to fury by the fierce hurricane of August 26th. To the west of the Idaho-Montana boundary in the region of this fire lies a very inaccessible mountainous country, into which, on account of the absence of trails and of forage, it was almost impossible for forces of fire fighters to penetrate. When the hurricane arose it drove the fires upon the parties which were hewing a way towards them, forced these parties to seek refuge wherever it could be found, and swept down upon the forests where the fires were up to that time generally well in hand. The extensive losses are ascribed to the combination of hurricane and lack of means to get to the fires and put them out before the storm came. On the forests which were best equipped for controlling fires the results achieved are regarded as a demonstration of the efficacy of the fire-fighting methods employed, even under highly adverse natural conditions.
Forester Graves believes that, as usually happens in the case of big fires, there will be found to be considerable areas of living timber within the regions now mapped as entirely burned over. Of necessity, the figures given are tentative, for it has been impossible to examine all the burned areas thoroughly. As fast as possible, however, the forest officers are locating and estimating the bodies of timber killed but capable of being lumbered, if taken in time. There will be an enormous quantity of fire-killed timber, both on the national forests and on private lands, to be disposed of as soon as possible, since if not marketed quickly it will not be worth cutting at all.
The department of agriculture will push vigorously to dispose of this fire-killed timber. As with all other national forest timber, it will be sold on the stump, to millmen who will lumber the land, paying a set price per thousand board feet for the timber,and conforming to whatever regulations are stipulated in the interest ofthe forest.Pendingthe disposalofthisfire-killedtimber,future salesofgreentimberfromthenationalforestswhichwereadilyontheforestservicemapsasextendinginanorthwesterlyandsoutheasternlydirectionfromnorthofWallaceIdaho,towasthepointsome30milessouthwestofMissoulaMontanaboundaryintheregionoftheselfireliesaveryinaccessiblemountainouscountry,intotheforestwherethefireswereuptothattimegenerallywellinhand.Theextensivelossesareascribedtothecombinationofhurricaneandlackofmeanstogettothefiresandputthemoutbeforethestormcame.Ontheforestsewherethefireswereuptothattimegenerallywellinhand.Theextensivelossesareascribedtothecombinationofhurricaneandlackofmeanstogettothefiresandputthemoutbeforethestormcame.Ontheforestsewherethefireswereuptothattimegenerallywellinhand.Theextensivelossesareascribedtothecombinationofhurricaneandlackofmeanstogettothefiresandputthemoutbeforethestormcame.Ontheforestsewherethefireswereuptothattimegenerallywellinhand.Theextensivelossesareascribedtothecombinationofhurricaneandlackofmeanstogettothefiresandputthemoutbeforethestormcame.Ontheforestsewherethefireswereuptothattimegenerallywellinhand.Theextensivelossesareascribedtothecombinationofhurricaneandlackofmeanstogettothefiresandputthemoutbeforethestormcame.Ontheforestsewherethefireswereuptothattimegenerallywellinhand.Theextensivelossesareascribedtothecombinationofhurricaneandlackofmeanstogettothefiresandputthemoutbeforethestormcame.Ontheforestsewherethefireswereuptothattimegenerallywellinhand.Theextensivelossesareascribedtothecombinationofhurricaneandlackofmeanstogettothefiresandputthemoutbeforethestormcame.Ontheforestsewherethefireswereuptothattimegenerallywellinhand.Theextensivelossesareascribedtothecombinationofhurricaneandlackofmeanstogettothefiresandputthemoutbeforethestormcame.Ontheforestsewherethefireswereuptothattimegenerallywellinhand.Theextensivelossesareascribedtothecombinationofhurricaneandlackofmeanstogettothefiresandputthemoutbeforethestormcame.Ontheforestsewherethefireswereuptothattimegenerallywellinhand.Theextensivelossesareascribedtothecombinationofhurricaneandlackofmeanstogettothefiresandputthemoutbeforethestormcame.Ontheforestsewhere,thefireswereuptothattimegenerallywellinhand.Theextensivelossesareascribedtothecombinationofhurricane和lackofmeanstogettothefires和putthemoutbeforethestormcame.Ontheforestsewhere,thefireswereuptothattimegenerallywellinhand.Theextensivelossesareascribedtothecombinationofhurricane和lackofmeanstogetto.thefires和putthemoutbefore-thestormcame.Ontheforestsewhere,thefireswereuptothattimegenerallywellinhand.Theextensivelossesareascribedtothecombinationofhurricane和lackofmeanstogetsto.thefires和putthemoutbefore-thestormcame.Ontheforestsewhere,thefireswereuptothattimegenerallywellinhand.Theextensivelossesareascribedto.thecombinationofhurricane和lackofmeans.togetsto.thefires和put.themoutbefore-thestormcame.Ontheforestsewhere,thefireswereup.tothattimegenerallywellinhand.Theextensivelossesareascribedto.thecombinationofhurricane和lackofmeans.togetsto.thefires和put.themoutbefore-thestormcame.Ontheforestsewhere,thefireswereup.tothattimegenerallywellinhand.Theextensivelossesareascribedto.thecombinationofhurricane和lackofmeans.togetsto.thefires和put.themoutbefore-thestormcame.Ontheforestsewhere,thefireswereup.tothattimegenerallywellinhand.Theextensivelossesareascribedto.thecombinationofhurricane和lackofmeans.togetsto.thefires和put.themoutbefore-thestormcame.Ontheforestsewhere,thefireswereup.tothattimegenerallywellinhand.Theextensivelossesareascribedto.thecombinationofhurricane和lackofmeans.togetsto.thefires和put.themoutbefore-thestormcame.Ontheforestsewhere,thefireswereup.tothattimegenerallywellinhand.Theextensivelossesareascribedto.thecombinationofhurricane和lackofmeans.togetsto.thefires和put.themoutbefore-thestormcame.Ontheforestsewhere,thefireswereup.tothattimegenerallywellinhand.Theextensivelossesareascribedto.thecombinationofhurricane和lackofmeans.togetsto.thefires和put.themoutbefore-thestormcame.Ontheforestsewhere,thefireswereup.tothattimegenerallywellinhand.Theextensivelossesareascribedto.thecombinationofhurricane和lackofmeans.togetsto.thefires和put.themoutbefore-thestormcame.Ontheforestsewhere,thefireswereup.tothattimegenerallywellinhand.Theextensivelossesareascribedto.thecombinationofhurricene和lackofmeans.togetsto.thefires和put.themoutbefore-thestormcame.Ontheforestsewhere,thefireswereup.tothattimegenerallywellinhand.Theextensivelossesareascribedto.thecombinationofhurricene和lackofmeans.togetsto.thefires和put.themoutbefore-thestormcame.Ontheforestsewhere,thefireswereup.tothattimegenerallywellinhand.Theextensivelossesareascribedto.thecombinationofhurricene和lackofmeans.togetsto.thefires和put.themoutbefore-thestormcame.Ontheforestsewhere,thefireswereup.tothattimegenerallywellinhand.Theextensivelossesareascribedto.thecombinationofhurricene和lackofmeans.togetsto.thefires和put.themoutbefore-thestormcame.Ontheforestsewhere,thefireswereup.tothattimegenerallywellinhand.Theextensivelossesareascribedto.thecombinationofhurricene和lackofmeans.togetsto.thefires和put.themoutbefore-thestormcame.Ontheforestsewhere,thefireswereup.tothattimegenerallywellinhand.Theextensivelossesareascribedto.thecombinationofhurricene和lackofmeans.togetsto.thefires和put.themoutbefore-thestormcame.Ontheforestsewhere,thefireswereup.tothattimegenerallywellinhand.Theextensivelossesareascribedto.thecombinationofhurricene和lackofmeans.togetsto.thefires和put.themoutbefore-thestormcame.Ontheforestsewhere,thefireswereup.tothattimegenerallywellinhand.Theextensivelossesareascribedto.thecombinationofhurricene和lackofmeans.togetsto.thefires和put.themoutbefore-thestormcame.Ontheforestsewhere,thefineswereup.tothattimegenerallywellinhand.Theextensivelossesareascribedto.thecombinationofhurricene和lackofmeens.togetsto.thefinesswereup.tothattimegenerallywellinhand.Theextensivelossesareascribedto.thecombinationofhurricene和lackoffimews.wereup.tothattimegenerallywellinhand.Theextensivelossesareascribedto.thecombinationofhurricene和lackoffimews.wereup.tothattimegenerallywellinhand.Theextensivelossesareascribedto.thecombinationofhurricene和lackoffimews.wereup.tothattimegenerallywellinhand.Theextensivelossesareascribedto.thecombinationOfhurricene和lackoffimews.wereup.tothattimegenerallywellinhand.Theextensivelossesareascribedto.thecombinationOfhurricene和lackoffimews.wereup.tothattimegenerallywellinhand.TheextensivelossesareascribedTo.hurricene and lackoffimews.wereup.tothattimegenerallywellinhand.TheextensivelossesareascribedTo.hurricene and lackoffimews.wereup.tothattimegenerallywellinhand.TheextensivelossesareascribedTo.hurricene and lackoffimews.wereup.tothattimegenerallywellinhand.TheextensivelossesareascribedTo.hurricene and lackoffimews.wereup.tothattimegenericallywellinhand.TheextensivelossesareascribedTo.hurricene and lackoffimews.wereup.tothattimegenericallywellinhand.TheextensivelossesareascribedTo.hurricene and lackoffimews.wereup.tothattimegenericallywellinhand.TheextensivelossesareascribedTo.hurricene and lackoffimews.wereup.tothattimegenericallywellinhand.TheextensivelossesareascribedTo.hurricene and lackoffimews.wereup.tothattimegenericallywellinhand.TheextensivelossesareascribedTo.hurricene and lackoffimews.wereup.tothattime genericallywellihunderinghistoricalresearcherswhoused their knowledgeincreasinginterestinnaturalresourceswhichwerelovedbynaturalresearcherswhoseknowledgeincreasinginterestinnaturalresourceswhichwerelovedbynaturalresearcherswhoseknowledgeincreasinginterestinnaturalresourceswhichwerelovedbynaturalresearcherswhoseknowledgeincreasinginterestinnaturalresourceswhichwerelovedbynaturalresearcherswhoseknowledgeincreasinginterestinnaturalresourceswhichwerelovedbynaturalresearcherswhoseknowledgeincreasinginterestinnaturalresourceswhichwerelovedbynaturalresearcherswhoseknowledgeincreasinginterestinnaturalresourceswhichwerelovedbynaturalresearcherswhoseknowledgeincreasinginterestinnaturalresourceswhichwerelovedbynaturalresearcherswhoseknowledgeincreasinginterestinnaturalresourceswhichwerelovedbynaturalresearcherswhoseknowledgeincreasinginterestinnaturalresourceswhichwerelovedbynaturalresearcherswhoseknowledgeincreasinginterestinnaturalresourceswhichwerelovedbynaturalresearcherswhoseknowledgeincreasinginterestinnaturalresourceswhichwerelovedbynaturalresearcherswhoseknowledgeincreasinginterestinnaturalresourceswhichwerelovedbynaturalresearcherswhoseknowledgeincreasinginterestinnaturalresourceswhichwerelovedbynaturalresearcherswhoseknowledgeincreasinginterestinnaturalresourceswhichwerelovedbynaturalresearcherswhoseknowledgeincreasinginterestinnaturalresourceswhichwerelovedbynaturalresearcherswhoseknowledgeincreasinginterestinnaturalresourceswhichwerelovedbynaturalresearcherswhoseknowledgeincreasinginterestinnaturalresourceswhichwerelovedbynaturalresearcherswhoseknowledgeincreasinginterestinnatural resourceswhichwerelovedbynaturalresearcherswhoseknowledgeincreasinginterestinnatural resourceswhichwerelovedbynaturalresearcherswhoseknowledgeincreasinginterestinnatural resourceswhichwerelovedbynaturalresearcherswhoseknowledgeincreasinginterestinnatural resourceswhichwerelovedbynaturalresearcherswhoseknowledgeincreasinginterestinnatural resourceswhichwerelovedbynaturalresearcherswhoseknowledgeincreasinginterestinnatural resourceswhichwerelovedbynaturalresearcherswhoseknowledgeincreasinginterestinnatural resourceswhichwerelovedbynaturalresearcherswhoseknowledgeincreasinginterestinnatural resourceswhichwerelovedbynaturalresearcherswhoseknowledgeincreasinginterestinnatural resourceswhichwerelovedbynaturalresearcherswhoseknowledgeincreasinginterestinnatural resourceswhichwerelovedbynaturalresearcherswhoseknowledgeincreasinginterestInNaturalResourcesWhichWouldBeA Great Opportunity For A New Generation Of Forestry Workers In The Future
Forester Graves believes that as usually happens in Northwestern and Southeastern regions where trees have grown rapidly due to favorable weather conditions during recent years they would be able to grow faster than any other location where trees have grown rapidly due to favorable weather conditions during recent years they would be able to grow faster than any other location where trees have grown rapidly due to favorable weather conditions during recent years they would be able to grow faster than any other location where trees have grown rapidly due to favorable weather conditions during recent years they would be able to grow faster than any other location where trees have grown rapidly due to favorable weather conditions during recent years they would be able to grow faster than any other location where trees have grown rapidly due to favorable weather conditions during recent years they would be able to grow faster than any other location where trees have grown rapidly due to favorable weather conditions during recent years they would be able to grow faster than any other location where trees have grown rapidly due to favorable weather conditions during recent years they would be able to grow faster than any other location where trees have grown rapidly due to favorable weather conditions during recent years they would be able to grow faster than any other location where trees have grown rapidly due to favorable weather conditions during recent years they would be able to grow faster than any other location where trees have grown rapidly due to favorable weather conditions during recent years they would be able to grow faster than any other location where trees have grown rapidly due to favorable weather conditions during recent years they would be able to grow faster than any other location where trees have grown rapidly due to favorable weather conditions during recent years they would be able to grow faster than any other location where trees have grown rapidly due to favorable weather conditions during recent years they would be able to grow faster than any other location where trees have grown rapidly due to favorable weather conditions during recent years they would be able to grow faster than any other location where trees have grown rapidly due to favorable weather conditions during recent years they would be able to grow faster than any other location where trees have grown rapidly due to favorable weather conditions during recent years they would be able to grow faster than any other location where trees have grown rapidly due to favorable weather conditions during recent years they would be able to grow faster than any other location where trees have grown rapidly due to favorable weather conditions during recent years they would be able to grow faster than any other location where trees have grown rapidly due to favorable weather conditions during recent years they would be able to grow faster than any other location where trees have grown rapidly due to favorable weather conditions during recent years they would be able to grow faster than any other location where trees have grown rapidly due to favorable weather conditions during recent years they would be able to grow faster than any other location where trees have grown rapidly due to favorable weather conditions during recent years they would be able to grow faster than any other location where trees have grown rapidly due to favorable weather conditions during recent years they would be able to grow faster than any other location where trees have grown rapidly due to favorable weather conditions during recent years they would be able to grow faster than any other location where trees have grown rapidly due to favorable weather conditions during recent years they would be able to grow faster than any other location where trees have grown rapidly due到 favorable weather conditions during recent years they would be able to grow faster than any other location where trees have grown fastest during recent years they would be able to grow fastest during recent years they would be able to grow fastest during recent years they would be able to grow fastest during recent years they would be able to grow fastest during recent years they would be able to grow fastest during recent years they would be able to grow fastest during recent years they would be able to grow fastest during recent years they would be able to grow fastest during recent years they would be able to grow fastest during recent years they would be able to grow fastest during recent years they would be able到 favorable weather conditions during recent years they would be able到 favorable weather conditions duringRecent years they would be able到 favorable weather conditionsDuring Recent years they would be able到 favorable weather conditionsDuring Recent years they would be able到 favorableweatherconditionsDuring Recent years they wouldbeable到 favorableweatherconditionsDuring Recent yearsthey wouldbeable到 favorableweatherconditionsDuring Recent yearsthey wouldbeable到 favorableweatherconditionsDuring Recent yearsthey wouldbeable到 favorableweatherconditionsDuring Recent yearsthey wouldbeable到 favorableweatherconditionsDuring Recent yearsthey wouldbeable到 favorableweatherconditionsDuring Recent yearsthey wouldbeable到 favorableweatherconditionsDuring Recent yearsthey wouldbeable到 favorableweatherconditionsDuring Recent yearsthey wouldbeable到 favorableweatherconditionsDuring Recent yearsthey wouldbeable到 favorableweatherconditionsDuring Recent yearsthey wouldbeable到 favorableweatherconditionsDuring Recent yearsthey wouldbeable到 favorableweatherconditionsDuring Recent yearsthey wouldbeable到 favorableweatherconditionsDuring Recent yearsthey wouldbeable到 favorableweatherconditionsDuring Recent yearsthey Would Be A Great Opportunity For A New Generation Of Forestry Workers In The Future
Forester Graves believes that as usually happens in Northwestern and Southeastern regions where trees have grown rapidly due to favorable weather conditions during recent years they wouldbeable到 favorableweatherconditionsDuring Recent yearsthey Wouldbeable到 favorableweatherconditionsDuring Recent yards他们 Would Be A Great Opportunity For A New Generation Of Forestry Workers In The Future
Forester Graves believes that as usually happens in Northwestern and Southeastern regions where trees have grown rapidly due to favorable weather conditions during recent yards他们 Would Be A Great Opportunity For A New Generation Of Forestry Workers In The Future
Forester Graves believes that as
The department of agriculture will push vigorously to dispose of this fire-killed timber. As with all other national forest timber, it will be sold on the stump, to millmen who will lumber the land, paying a set price per thousand board feet for the timber, and conforming to whatever regulations are stipulated in the interest of the forest. Pending the disposal of this fire-killed timber, future sales of green timber from the national forests which were badly burned last summer will probably be greatly restricted, if not entirely suspended.
Since the amount to be disposed of is doubtless greater than can be marketed in any event, and since it is better for the country that the timber should be utilized than that it should go to waste in the woods, the price at which it will be sold will be lower than would be asked for the timber under ordinary circumstances. Generally speaking, Secretary Wilson does not regard it as a wise public policy to sell off the national forest timber except when it is in reasonably good demand, for the country is sure to need the supply badly later on. But with the fire-killed timber it is a case of now or never. Consequently there is an unusual opening for lumbermen who are ready to buy national forest stumpage at bargain prices.
How much of the 6 billion feet which was either killed or burned up in Montana and northern Idaho can eventually be salvaged it is of course impossible to predict. If it were all a total loss, and if its stumpage value were put at the average price at which national forest timber was sold last year, it would be the equivalent of a money loss of about fifteen million dollars.
It is believed that last summer's fires either burned up or killed between one and two percent of the day we pick the apples; tomorrow father starts for the cider mill at 6 o'clock. The apples are shoveled into a grinding machine, ground into a pomace and shoveled to one of the latest style hydraulic presses, from which the juice is extracted in a very few minutes, ready for the apple-butter cooking, under the same roof. The cider is then cooked and boiled in large barrel-shaped receptacles, the steam running through copper coils that nicely fit in barrels.
The sweet apples the farmer just brings along from the tree, and there is no snitzing party on the farm beforehand. They are brought entire, and are first nicely washed, then placed in a barrel, cooked by steam until they form a thin, mushy paste. Then they are placed into a copper sievelike instrument, over which is operated a rubber lever separating the skin from the apples, cores and seeds, so nothing but pure apple juice goes into the apple butter. This nicely sieved pulp and the boiling cider are placed together in another barrel, the spices are added, within forty-five minutes the steam that runs through another set of the copper coils will have completed the trick and the apple butter will be all ready to pour into the farmer's milk cans or crocks in which he usually hauls it home.
Grouty—See here, you've had my lawnmower a whole hour. Do you think I ought to be kept standing around here all day wasting my time waiting for it? Prouty—Certainly not. I'd be glad to have you rake my lawn in the meantime.
Rusty Rufus—Say, Tom, wouldn't it be great ef youse could git all de eat an' drink youse wanted by jist pressing a 'lectric button? Tired Thomas—It shore would—of I hed somebody ter press de button fer me.
When at last disappeared in stitious and care that the evil s did with it. So filled with this reinforcements a few hours, attack the island.
That night, credulous thaner the ice to proaching ther found that it simply an open feet into the turn and came.
There was gle camp fire, and not an In clever Plegan circuit of the island seceived his pu time necessary.
THE
"Fetch the man of a Texas"
The body w
The jury made
and questioned
"Whar was
Square three
Dead in th
Right in th
Who shot
Jake Daniel
A dozen whi Jake fired them admitted it. "ly for some t
Well, gentl
the coroner,
"Waal, jedg
man, "we've that Jake Dan
in these parti it."
ANAHEIM GAZETTE
ACUTENESS OF CATTLE BUYER
He Can Estimate Number of Head in Herd of Four or Five Hundred—Also Detect Sickness
Herders on Texas cattle ranches become so expert in their scrutiny of cattle that in buying them on the hoof they often rely for enumeration upon a glance at the herd as they ride past. Their passing estimate practically never varies more than a very few from the actual number in the herds of from 50 to 100 and in much larger herds of from 200 to 500 their estimates will preserve the same proportion of accuracy.
In some cases this ability to estimate is carried to a higher degree of accuracy even for very large herds. In the early 70s, before the days of weighing scales and railroads, cattle buyers in the southwest would buy cattle at so much a hundredweight from their owners. This estimate of weight was based on what the cattle would weigh after they had driven 200, 300 or 400 miles to the Kansas City market. Nevertheless, the error would only amount to a few pounds, but not enough to affect their profit.
Charles Goodnight of Goodnight, Tex., and owner of the famous buffalo herd bearing his name, told some extraordinary things about a negro he knew. When the round-up time came they would place this negro in an advantageous position and drive past him the herds belonging to different men. All these cattle except the calves had their owners' brands. Later, when these calves, after having been mixed up in the corral, were taken out to be branded, he could tell which brand to put on each from having noted at the time to which cow each belonged.
PRANKS OF CUPID
Celebrated Men Who Married Their Domestic Servants
Many celebrated men have married their domestic servants. Sir Henry Parkes, premier of New South Wales, is an example. One night when dining at a friend's house he was struck by the appearance of a servant girl who waited upon the table and persuaded his host to allow her to enter his employ. This she did and for a short time held the position of cook in Sir Henry's household. Then he made her Lady Parkes.
But more illustrious than this is the case of Peter the Great. One day he was dining at the house of Prince Menshikoff. He noticed one of the servant maids particularly, and though she was not handsome, she caught his fancy. Her name, the prince told the czra, was Martha. She had been a servant in the house of a Lutheran minister of Marienburg, and when that city was captured by the troops of Russia she had been taken prisoner by General Bauer, who had passed her over to the prince, whose servant she was. The count politely made a present of her to the czar, who eventually married her.
William Cobbett, the great writer, when he was only twenty-one years of age, one morning chanced to see a buxom servant girl busily engaged in washing the family linen. The girl was pretty, so Cobbett spoke to her, learned her name and the same evening called upon her parents and said he would like to marry their daughter. The parents of the girl informed the young man that they had no objections to him as their son-in-law but that he would have to wait...
extraordinary things about a negro he knew. When the round-up time came they would place this negro in an advantageous position and drive past him the herds belonging to different men. All these cattle except the calves had their owners' brands. Later, when these calves, after having been mixed up in the corral, were taken out to be branded, he could tell which brand to put on each from having noted at the time to which cow each belonged.
This astonishing acuteness is even more clearly demonstrated in their detection of diseased or defective animals in herds which they are inspecting for purchase. In this discrimination they equally rely upon a rapid visual sweep of the cattle while grazing, the inspector merely riding through the herd.
A NUMEROUS INDIAN
A member of the Canadian mounted police tells a good story of the cleverness of an Indian. One snowy morning a band of Crees awoke to find that about a dozen of their ponies had been stolen during the previous night. Pursuit was immediately organized, and in the course of an hour the trail was struck. The band followed it for thirty miles or more, till it entered a river, and then headed for a little wooded island.
Smoke was rising from the trees, and an opening, apparently the mouth of a cave, was in plain view. Presently a Piegan Indian showed himself in front of the opening. He was in war-paint, and at his heels was a dog.
Pretty soon the dog scented the Crees, who were lying low, and began growling and barking. The Piegan looked up, glanced about him a moment, and then instantly entered the cave. In about ten seconds another Piegan came round the rocks and also went in; then another, and another. The Crees all lay silently in the bushes, counting, till upward of fifty Piegans had come round the rocks and gone into the cave, and still they kept coming. And each carried a rifle.
When at last seventy men had disappeared in the cave, the superstitious and cautious Crees concluded that the evil spirit had something to do with it. So thoroughly were they filled with this idea that even when reinforcements arrived, which was in a few hours, they were reluctant to attack the island.
That night, however, one Cree, less credulous than the others, crossed over who eventually married her.
William Cobbett, the great writer, when he was only twenty-one years of age, one morning chanced to see a buxom servant girl busily engaged in washing the family linen. The girl was pretty, so Cobbett spoke to her, learned her name and the same evening called upon her parents and said he would like to marry their daughter. The parents of the girl informed the young man that they had no objections to him as their son-in-law, but that he would have to wait until their daughter was of marriageable age. Five years later Cobbett, true to his early love, married her.
REFORMING THE CALENDAR
How greatly would the labors of the calendar makers have been lightened if the heavenly bodies had but been accommodating enough to revolve in periods integrally related. If the moon took precisely thirty days to circle about the earth, and the earth precisely three hundred and sixty days to travel about the sun, how simple and convenient it would be.
Astronomers and mathematicians and statesmen, as well as less gifted mortals, have puzzled their heads over the problem for ages, and still our calendar falls to satisfy every one. The latest suggestion for its improvement comes from an Englishman, who suggests that Christmas have no weekday name and no month number, and stand by itself, apart from the rest of the year. Thus we might divide the year into thirteen months of exactly four weeks each. A new month—Sol—would be added in midsummer The extra day in leap-year would, like Christmas, have no week day name. It would be called Leap day and be a public holiday.
By this arrangement each month would always begin on the same day of the week; each date would fall on the same day of the week, year after year, and most of the need for consulting one's calendar pad would disappear at once.
There is no doubt of the convenience of reckoning time in this way. Its chief drawback would lie in the confusion between historical and current dates which the introduction of a new month and the shortening of the old ones would cause. Moreover, it would be very difficult to secure the assent of all the nations to so great an innovation. It took nearly two hundred years for the civilized world to adopt the sensible Gregorian reform of the calendar. Russia has not done so even yet.
C. E. RUDDOCK
For Sheriff
L. A. WEST
For District Attorney
W. B. WILLIAMS
For County Clerk
CAL D. LESTER
For Auditor
J. C. METZGAR
For Treasurer
W. M. SCOTT
For Assessor
J. C. LAMB
For Tax Collector
GEO. E. PETERS
For Recorder
THEO. A. WINBIGLER
Coroner and Public Administrator
R. P. MITCHELL
County Superintendent of Schools
J. L. McBRIDE
For Surveyor
H. E. SMITH
Supervisor First District
T. B. TALBERT
Supervisor Second District
H. H. HALE
Supervisor Third District
FRED W. STRUCK
Supervisor Fourth District
GEO. W. ANGLE
Supervisor Fifth District
J. S. HOWARD
Justice of the Peace, Anaheim Township
D. W. HASSON
Justice of the Peace, Buena Park Township
H. E. INSKEEP
Justice of the Peace, Fullerton Township
WILL R. McALLEP
Justice of the Peace, Los Alamitos Township
AUGUST LEMKE
Justice of the Peace, Yorba Township
JOHN KELLENBERGER
Constable, Anaheim Township
I. D. JAYNES
Constable, Buena Park Township
CHARLES YOUNG
Constable, Fullerton Township
GUADALUPE R. MANZO
Constable, Yorba Township
When at last seventy men had disappeared in the cave, the superstitious and cautious Cree concluded that the evil spirit had something to do with it. So thoroughly were they filled with this idea that even when reinforcements arrived, which was in a few hours, they were reluctant to attack the island.
That night, however, one Cree, less credulous than the others, crossed over the ice to investigate. On approaching the supposed cave he found that it was no cave at all, but simply an opening leading some ten feet into the rock, where it made a turn and came out on the other side.
There was the remnant of a single camp fire, the ponies were gone and not an Indian was in sight. The clever Plegan thief, by making the circuit of the passage and the end of the island seventy times, had so deceived his pursuers as to gain the time necessary for his escape.
THEIR VERDICT
"Fetch the body," ordered the foreman of a Texas coroner's jury.
The body was laid before them. The jury made a careful examination and questioned the attending surgeon.
"Whar was he shot?"
"Square through the heart."
"Dead in the center o' the heart?"
"Right in the center."
"Who shot him?"
"Jake Daniels."
A dozen witnesses declared that Jake fired the shot, and Jake himself admitted it. The jury consulted softly for some time.
"Well, gentlemen of the jury," said the coroner, "what is your verdict?"
"Waal, jedge," answered the foreman, "we've come to the conclusion that Jake Daniels is the dandiest shot in these parts—and don't you forget it."
Notice of Special Stockholders Meeting of the German American Bank of Anaheim, California.
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that a special stockholders meeting of the stockholders of the German American Bank, a corporation, having its principal place of business at the City of Anaheim, County of Orange, State of California, was at a meeting of the Board of Directors of said corporation, held on Thursday, the 15th day of September, 1910, called to be held at the office of the Board of Directors of said corporation, in the banking rooms of said German American Bank, in the bank building No. 109 West Center Street, in the City of Anaheim, County of Orange, State of California, on Thursday, the 24th day of November, 1910, at the hour of 7:30 P.M. or said day, then and there to consider and act upon the proposition of increasing the capital stock of said corporation from $30,000.00, divided into 300 shares, to $50,000.00 divided into 500 shares, to comply with the requirements of an act of the legislature of the State of California enacted at the session of said legislature for the year 1909 and commonly known as the "Bank Act."
CHAS. A. BOEGE,
Secretary of the German American Bank of Anaheim, California.
Proposals for Street Sweeper
Notice is hereby given that the undersigned will receive at his office in the City Hall, Anaheim, California, up to 8 o'clock P.M., of November 10th, 1910, sealed bids or proposals for furnishing the City of Anaheim with a Horse Street Sweeper. All proposals must have enclosed on the envelope containing same "Proposals for Street Sweeper."
Bidders must accompany their proposals with full and complete specifications of the sweeper they propose to furnish, and also state in their bids the time within which the sweeper can be delivered. The successful bidder will be required to give a bond to the City of Anaheim, with satisfactory sureties, in the sum of one hundred dollars, conditioned upon the faithful performance of his contract.
The right is reserved to reject any or all bids. There are approximately two and one-half miles of paved streets in said City which it is desired to sweep.
By order of the Board of Trustees of the City of Anaheim,
EDWARD B. MERRITT,
october 31st
City Clerk of the City of Anaheim.
Notice to Creditors
Estate of John D. Swan, deceased.
Notice is hereby given by the undersigned, Executrix of the last will and testament of John D. Swan, deceased, to the creditors of, and all persons having claims against the said deceased, to exhibit the same with the necessary vouchers, within four months after the first publication of this notice (which publication was first made on Thursday, November 3).
Notice to Creditors
Estate of John D. Swan, deceased.
Notice is hereby given by the undersigned, Executrix of the last will and testament of John D. Swan, deceased, to the creditors of, and all persons having claims against the said deceased, to exhibit the same with the necessary vouchers, within four months after the first publication of this notice (which publication was first made on the 6th day of October, 1910), to the said Executrix of the last will and testament of said John D. Swan, deceased, at the office of Melrose & Ames, at No. 112½ West Center Street, in Anaheim, Cal., the place where the business of said estate is transacted in the County of Orange.
Dated this 6th day of October, A.D. 1910.
MARCIA A. SWAN,
Executrix of the last Will and Testament of John D. Swan, Deceased.
NOTICE OF ASSESSMENT
Anaheim Union Water Company
Location of Principal Place of Business,
Anaheim, Orange County, California.
Notice is hereby given that at a meeting of the directors, held on the 22nd day of October, 1910, an assessment of two dollars per share was levied upon the capital stock of the corporation, payable on or before November 25, 1910, to the Secretary of the corporation, at the office of the corporation, on East Center Street, Anaheim, California. Any stock upon which this assessment shall remain unpaid on the 26th day of November, 1910, will be delinquent and advertised for sale at public auction and unless payment is made before, will be sold on Friday, the 16th day of December, 1910, to pay delinquent assessment, together with costs of advertising and expenses of sale.
H. S. ARMSTRONG,
Secretary Anaheim Union Water Company.
Location of office, East Center Street, Anaheim, California.
In the Superior Court
Of the County of Orange, State of California.
In the Matter of the Estate and Guardianship of Sadie Holzhauser, Incompetent.
Greeting: By Order Of This Court you are hereby cited and required to appear before Z. B. West, Judge of this Court, at the Court Room thereof, in the City of Santa Ana and County of Orange, on the 9th day of December, 1910, at 10 o'clock in the forenoon of that day, then and there to show cause if any you have why you should not be removed as guardian of the estate of Sadie Holzhauser and that you then and there be prepared to said that you do file your account as guardian of said estate.
Witness, Hon. Z. B. West, Judge of said Superior Court, at the Court Rooms in the City of Santa Ana, County of Orange, this 24th day of October, A.D. 1910.
Attest my hand and the seal of said court, the day and year last above written.
oct27t6
W. B. WILLIAMS, Clerk.
In the Superior Court
of the County of Orange, State of California.
In the Matter of the Estate of William. H. Harrison, Deceased.
Notice for Publication of Time for Proving Will, Etc.
Notice is hereby given that Friday, the 11th day of November 1910, at 10 o'clock a.m., of said day, at the Court Room of this Court, in the City of Santa Ana, County of Orange, State of California, as time and place for
In the Superior Court of the County of Orange, State of California.
In the Matter of the Estate of William H. Harrison, Deceased.
Notice for Publication of Time for Proving Will, Etc.
Notice is hereby given that Friday, the 11th day of November 1910, at 10 o'clock a.m., of said day, at the Court Room of this Court, in the City of Santa Ana, County of Orange, State of California, has been appointed as the time and place for bearing the application of J. E. Harrison praying that a document now on file in this Court, purporting to be the last Will and Testament of said deceased, be admitted to probate, that Letters Testamentary be issued thereon to him at which time and place all persons interested therein may appear and contest the same.
Dated October 26, 1910.
W. B. WILLIAMS, County Clerk.
By J. C. Burke, Deputy.
H. V. Weisel, Att'y for Pet.
PLUMBING
Plumbing Materials
WATER PIPE
SEWER
All Plumbing Repairs
We Contract to Furnish all the Materials and Do the Work, or Furnish the Materials only
Get Our Prices
JAMES W. HELLMAN
Hardware, Stoves, Etc.
157-161 N. Spring St.
LOS ANGELES
THE FALL TERM OF The Orange County Business College
Is now in session. Eighty students entered the first week; more are applying daily. This school is fast taking first place among business colleges. Investigate. New equipment. Strong courses. Experienced instructors. Satisfied students. Successful graduates. Catalogue free.
J. W. McCormac, Pres't,
SANTA ANA, CALIFORNIA
O. LAGMAN BUILDER.
Graduated as Architect in 1885
Will Furnish Plans, Specifications and Estimates Free of Cost
Will Build Mod. 5-R'm House, $1,000
" " " 7-R'm " 1,400
If you have a lot I will Build a House
On Monthly Payments
Pacific 1111 406 E. Center St