PAGE TEN Lake Louise Beavers Are Pleasant Neighbors, C. F. Goeringer Thinks Only Remaining Local Couple Have Resided On Estate Three Years, Once Flooded Road The beautiful wooded shores of C become, quite by accident, so far as a retreat for discriminating beavers onrad F. Goeringer’s Lake Louise have any one has been able to determine, . . . and while the couple which have made their home out there also made considerable inroads on his stand of timber, Mr. Goeringer considers them very pleasant neighbors indeed, and will allow no traps to be set for the industrious little trespassers. They are something of a prize pos- session to him . . . for after all it's not every country gentleman who can have a pair of beavers in his front yard. A few days ago a reporter from The Post went out to Lake Louise to investigate the beaver situation, since the Goeringer beavers are about the only family in this sec- tion of the county and hence are really very prominent residents of the Back Mountain region. Mr. Goeringer himself wasn't home at the time, but the reporter followed up a couple of errant sheep and ran across one Joseph Gavek, who works about the Goeringer farm and knows all about beavers. “Beavers,” he explained, on the way down to the wooded shores of the lake . which incidentally, Mr. Goeringer created himself some nine years ago, because it seemed to be about the only pleasant geo- graphical features his estate lacked . “are destructive little beasts. The ones we have here cause more damn trouble than they're worth.” It was easy to see what he meant when the little party reached the lake shores, for all along the eastern bank it looked as if a twister had wandered aimlessly through the woods, knocking down trees in all directions. Beavers, you under- stand, are intrepid woodsmen and are willing to tackle any tree up to a foot in diameter. Not just any kind of tree will do, though, said Gravek, for beavers are discrimi- nating and won’t sink their cutting teeth into any but soft-wood growths. The toll on poplars and birch is particularly heavy, and bass- = MUSKRATS AND WATER SNAKES SHARE LAKE WITH BEAVER FAMILY Beavers, of course, are not the entire complement of wild life at Lake Louise. A thriv- ing colony of muskrats has lived out there on Goeringer’s estate for a number of years, too. There seems to be some affinity between muskrats and beavers, and wherever one ani- mal is found, the other is near by. The Goeringer musk- rats have their runs and homes adjacent to the beaver hutch and seem just as satisfied with the Lake Louise territory as the latter. There are a good many snakes about the lake, too, and one day last month Joe Gavek, an employee of Mr. Goeringer, shot 15 at the outlet of the pond. IN wood and soft maples are consid- ered toothsome, too. Are Good Lumbermen The Lake Louise beavers don't seem to care where they cut, either, and every so often Gavek has to take his axe and cut away trees which have been felled across the pathways of the wooded private park. Perhaps the beavers prefer to work around the paths, because it’s easier for them to get around. Their methods are fairly simple. A well-trained beaver will stand on Announcing . . . 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SUGGEST A RELIABLE PAINTING CONTRACTOR LET Us SHERWIN-WILLIAMS (YOUR BRANCH) Phone 3-111 84 S. MAIN STREET, WILKES-BARRE, PA. DALLAS POST COMMUNITY BUILDING EDITION { Typical Beaver Haunt It is in quiet forest pools such as this one that beavers prefer to make their homes, well protected from the inroads of humans, whom beavers regard with suspicion, and surrounded with soft-bark trees from which the busy little animals take their food. his hind legs, which brings him a foot or so from the ground, and chew around the trunk until an ade- quate cut has been made. And then he stands back from his work and waits for the wind to blow up and topple the tree to the ground. All the wild tales about beavers knock- ing trees over by slapping them soundly with their tails is strictly nonsense says Joe, who has made something of a study of beavers and knows what he’s talking about. After a tree has been felled, the beavers strip off its bark with their teeth and then cut off all the twigs and branches within reach. And then just to make sure that no one else makes off with the assembled debris, they take it into the lake and anchor it to the*bottom, where it’s money in the bank until winter time. Oh, yes, in case you've been won- dering, beavers do all this in order to get three square meals a day. Being herbiverous little beasts, they like nothing so well as a good chew of bark or mouthful of sapling. And for some reason or another they're always putting a little aside for a rainy day. A night in the summer hasn’t been well-spent unless a tree has been felled or a fallen tree stripped. Given a few more years . they've been there for three now . . . the Lake Louise beavers will have constructed a wicker-ware bottom for the entire pond, and perhaps then they’ll retire from the timber business and sit back to en- joy life. A year or so ago they constructed a dam, from force of habit, along the road which skirts the little lake, and succeeded in flooding a consid- erable portion of the eastern shore. In fact, so successful was their en- terprise that the road was impas- sible for quite some time, complete ly awash in the dam back-water. For two small creatures they've cre- ated considerable stir and roam in the period of their residence. Move To New Home After a year or so on the eastern bank, however, they decided that | perhaps their whereabouts would become known, so about a year ago they picked up their household ei- fects and traipsed across the lake into new territory. Their new home is just acoss from the picnic clearing on the eastern shore, and fits snugly into a little cove before a well-nigh. impenetrable section of the woods on the west bank. Woods, however, mean nothing to The Post reporter, and he plunged into the dense underbrush behind the sturdy back of Gravek to get a bet- ter look at the beaver haunt. As he and the woodland youth ap- proached the new beaver hutch, he éould ‘see a number of smoothly worn trails heading towards the lake . . . Beaver slides they're called . along which the couple navigate in their travels. Incidentally, the beavers had the good judgment to i build just beyond a stone fence, which was calculated to keep out- siders from prying into their pri- vate lives. That fence, by the way, must be a hundred or more years old and was a feature of a farm that used to cover the one-time meadows now flooded over by the lake waters. The top of the beaver hut looks like . . . and is . . . a huge pile of cut twigs and branches, with moss and clods of earth pushed into the intercesses to make it watertight. The real living quarters, though, says Joe, are under water. Probably the beavers have tunnelled under the lake bottom for quite a space, to make sure that they would be free from interference. There is one opening above water, but the main entrance is located® somewhere be- neath the surface. Gervak has seen the beavers oc- casionally. They're nice, plump, lit- tle animals, he says, with luxuriant, glossy fur of brownish-black. They weigh somewhere around thirty pounds, and their pelts or blankets, as they are sometimes called, would bring fifteen or twenty dollars on the open market. But perhaps the beavers understand how nice they would look around a pretty girl's neck, and so whenever they see some one coming they make them- selves scarce. Now there, says Joe, is where their tails come in handy; when a beaver hits his stride, he uses his tail for leverage. You can hear a good, husky beaver thump his tail a mile away, when the wind is right. How long the beavers will stay around the lake is purely a matter Agriculture Had Heyday In 1915 Farm-Crop Value Was Higher, Problems Less Records of the Pennsylvania De- partment of Agriculture show in- teresting conditions existing in farming in this state 25 years ago when agriculture was enjoying a heyday as compared with the mul- tifarious problems of 1941, Secre- tary of Agriculture John H. Light asserted today. In 1915 there were approximate- ly 219,000 farms in Pennsylvania compared -with about 169,000 at present, acreages devoted to the various grains were greater, yields ‘were as high and in some instances higher and yet prices received by the farmer were above those of to- day. Livestock, poultry and milk prices, however, were lower and the same was true of wages, but more people were employed be- cause farms had not reached the present high state of mechanization. In 1915 the estimated wheat har- vest was 24,928,000 bushels from 1,312,000 acres: which had a total value of $26,174,000 compared with the 1940 production of 18,789,000 bushels from about 900,000 acres which had a value of $15,219,000. The total estimated production of of conjecture. They are more or less nomadic, and whenever the best has been taken from the forests, they are very apt to set out for other Elysian fields. That's prob- ably how they happened to move to Lake Louise to begin with, al- though there has been loose talk to the effect that the State Game Commission planted them in the neighborhood. Whether or not the Lake Louise beavers have been raising children on the side is not known. At least no one has seen any young beavers about. It might be a good thing for the beaver population if they have, however, for the breed is rapidly falling off in these parts. A colony that used to make its home on North Mountain has fallen on hard years, and the beaver situa- tion has been so critical in Wyo- ming, Sullivan and Columbia Coun- ties of late that no trapping is al- lowed in these regions at all. corn was 54,792,000 bushels which had a value of $41,641,920 com- pared with a production of 53,640,- 000 bushels valued at $38,621,000 last year. Hay shows little change, the production 25 years ago having been 3,558,000 tons compared with 3,238,000 tons, but the value of the crop a quarter century ago was placed at $56,752,200 compared with $31,850,000 last year. The average price received by the farmer for his milk was $1.76 per hundred pounds, 33 cents for a pound of butter, live chickens 12 cents a pound, 80 cents a bushel for potatoes and 38 cents per dozen for eggs. Milk retailed at an average of seven cents a quart. The average farm wage with board by the year was $235 or $1.20 a day with board and $1.60 a day without board. The last general report showed the average wage rate per month with board was $29.50 and the daily wage $1.80 Warning A warning has been issued by the Department of Agriculture to all un- licensed livestock dealers to pro- cure their licenses at once to avoid prosecution. Several prosecutions have already been made for failure to procure 1941 licenses and in each case fines have been imposed in addition to the costs of prosecution. Tobacco There is a total of 113,841,000 pounds of Pennsylvania seedleaf to- bacco in storage in the warehouses of the country. This compares with 112,788,000 pounds stored a year previous and 79,260,000 pounds held January 1 this year. with board and $2.35 without board, but considerable advances will be shown from those figures when the present survey is completed as a result of the defense industry wage appeal to farm labor, FHik 427% developed residential eligible. desired. homes on other terms. 3 your proposition is not qualified BETTER HOUSING W. A. 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