Land Office, Frederick H. Newell, Chief Engineer of the Re¢lamation Service and Gilford Pinchot, Chief of the Bureau of Foresiry, has during tne course of two years made a study ot the public lands’ condition and has brought in a report which has been forwarded to Congress by the President with a special message recommending the repeal of the Timber and Stone Act and the substitution of a rational forest policy of seiling only the stump- age from the public timber lands, re- taining tle lands for future timber growth; recommending the radical amendment of the commutation clause of the Homestead Act and a like amendment of the Desert Land Act in such manner as to require actual resi- dence and improvement under bath of the latter named laws, amounting to their practical repeal. The provisions of this report are highly satisfactory to the Forestry and Irrigation Committee of the National Board of Trade, which believes that their enactment into law, strictly en- forced, would do away with land and timber grabbing and promote these pol- icies on this subject for which the Board has consistently striven, The present indefensible land policy of the United States is resulting in an actual money loss to the government of tens of millions of dollars annually, in the denuding of our watersheds and the destruction of all chances for a future timber supply, in the building up of lordly landed estates in the West of tens and hundreds of thousands of acres in single ownerships, instead of providing for the creating of thousands of small rural homes—in short in the mismanagement and waste of the greatest resource ever possessed by any nation on earth. The attention of our lawmakers in Congress should be urgently called to the fact that while they are attempting economy in the expenditure of money, they are allowing laws to remain in force under which by far the most valuable asset of the nation is being recklessly wasted. Under the Timber and Stone Act, the sales of public timber lands dur- ing the last five years have been as follows: Year, Acres. 396,445.61 545,253.98 . 1,765,2 1,306,261.3 696,677.06 4,709,860.38 A large _ oportion of these lands have heen in the heavily timbered belt of the far Northwest and is of the class of timber deseribed by the Secretary of the Interior in his report for the fiscal vear ended, June 30, 1903, in which he says: “The Timber and Stone Act will, if not repealed or radically amended, re- sult ultimately in the complete destrue- tion of the timber on the unappropriat- ed and unreserved public lands, The ra- pidity with which the public timbered lands are being denuded of their timber —and the opportunity offered under the Timber and Stone Act for the fraudu- lent acauisition of title to public tim- bered lands at the uniform price of 2.50 per acre when they are in many instances worth forty times that ($100) has been heretofore set forth in the pages of my annual reports and those of my predecessors.” Hundred Million Dol'ar Waste. But estimating the values only of the 4,700,860 acres of timber land disposed of in the last five years, and at only $26 per acre, the government has, in that time, parted with the title of iand worth §117,746,500. The price received for this land has been at the uniform rate of $2.50 per acre, or $11,774,650, a loss to the government of over $100, 000,000. Your committee endorses the recommendation af the President and his Public Lands Commission for the re- peal of this Timber and Stone Act and the substitution ef a rational forest poliey, by which the title to the public timber lands shall remain forever in the government, the stumpage only to he disposed ef, at its market value, Under such a plan as this, and under an agreement whereby one half the proceeds could be devoted to the For- estry Service and the other half to the Irrigation Fund, twe policies of great internal improvement and im- portance could he generously main- tained, while at the same time the forestry question would be to a great extent solved, public forest lands being lumbered in such a manner as to pre- serve the young growth and leave the ply from forest destruction is equally | as great. Large areas in the Southern | Appalachian and White Mountain | itanges should be created into ferest reserves, For Eastern Forest Reserves. In a speecn ai Raleigh, N. C., en October 20th, last, F resident Roosevelt, said: “It is the upper altitudes of the .orested mountains chat aie most valu- able to the nation as a whole, especially because of their effects upon the water supply. Neither state or nation ean af- ford to turn these mountains over to the unrestrained greed of those who woudd exploit them at the expense of the future. We cannot aiford to wait longer before assuiuing eontrol in tae interests of the public, of these forests; for if we do wait, the vested interests of private parties in them may be- come so strongly inwrenched that it may be @ most expensive task to oust hem. If the eastern states are wise, then from the Bay of Fundy to the wf we will see, within the next few years a policy set on foot similar te that so fortunately car: ¢d out in the igh Sierras of the west by the Na- onal government. 4)! the higher Ap- palachiang should be reserved. Such reserves would be a paying investment, not only in protection to many inter- ests, but in dollars and cents to the government, The importance to the southern people of protecting the south- ern mountain forests is obvious. These | forests are the best defense against the floods which, in the recent past, have, during a single twelve months, destroy- ed property officially valued at nearly twice that it would cost to buy the lage him in writing, and advised him NICK LONGWORTH'S FATHER.| PIGMY ICELAND PONIES. i Pets in Parlors of London Society Ohig- Twenty-Light Inches High, - London society has a bad case of the President's son-in-law, is a millonaire zo0logicals. = Tiger ari gentle Je of Cinginnati. His family is one of lemurs; Ze s i i the Vv yes; fretful porcupines and the oldest and most aristocratic of that | brown eyes; fre city, His father, Judge Longworth, was | anteaters have in turn been made as able a man as ever sal on the su-|pets, but they have all been dethroned preme bench of the State, and withal, | as rulers of petdom by the parlor ponies one of the youngest. He resigned this of Iceland. position as he did not care to take life These tiny creatures are the fun- .00 seriously after passing fifty. W hen| . t little things imaginable. They are he died he was a colonel on Gov. MeKin- no larger than a Newfoundland dog iey’s stalf, death resuiung from ex- their height is twenty-eight inches, posure on an inauguration day. slightly less than that of the ordinary Judge Longworth was a man not only : ; beloved, but brilliant. His courtship »f his wife, mother of the present Con- gressman, began when both were but six years old. She was then littie Sue Walker. Some years before the judge lied, he built a small steamboat for leaure trips on the Ohio river. He sadled it the “C—O”. It was an odd name, and people wondered what it meant. Some said it stood for Cincin- 1ati, Ohio, others said ® meant “Come >,” but the judge would not make pub- Was One of the First Men of Interesting Inciaents oi Lite. Congressman Nick Longworth, the lie the origin of such an odd christen- ing. Years later, ne told this gtory: As a boy, he had fallen in love with Sue Walker, and confided his affection to his mother, who wished %o encour- to express his love in a letter. He did so but did not know how to spell Sue. He pondered a while, then rea- soned that if d-o—spelled “do,” c-0 ought to spell Sue. That was the way he addressed his first love letter, and | Southern Appalachian Reserve.” +2080 IN THE SOU The importance of the Appalachian forest cover to the cotton milling in- dustry alone, in the Piedmont regions of North Carolina, South Carolina and Georgia is shown by the statistics of the mills operated by the water power derived from the streams having their sources in these mountains. In these three states there are 163 mills so operated, with a combined capital stock of $33,000,000, with 2,770,000 spindles and 50,926 looms and giving work to over 45,000 employees. The total an- nual preduction of these mills is ap- proximately $64,000,000, Virginia has intevests also, which are not included in the above figures, 2s have also Tennesee and Kentucky, on the western side of the mountains. A National forest reserve in the White Mountains of New Hampshire is also a matter of general concern and vital to the well being of the industries of all New England, We are upon the threshold of great industrial competi- tion with the producing powers of the world; to maintain our supremacy we must retain our hold upon our cheap forest as a perpetual source of income to the nation and at the same time conserve the water supply. If the $100,000,000 which have heen lost to the government under the above showing, were at hand, a seore or more of enermous irrigation projects could be immediately eonstructed, reclaiming from 2000,000 to 8,000,000 acres of desert land, and enormous areas of Eastern forest reserves created through the purchage of meuntain timber lands east of the Mississippi, In this eonnection, y-ur committee is much impressed with the importance of the creation of federal forest re- serves to preserve the water supply of eastern steams, upon the continued flow of which depends much of our manufacturing agtivity, Ths western half of the United States has ever 100,- 000,000 acres set aside in national forest reserves, as a source of future timber supply and for the preservation of the flow of streams .for irrigation; but the east has no such an advantage, water power, which, through electrical invention is being utilized as never be- fore and greatly aiding to our national prosperity, The creation of the Appalachian and White Mountain Forest Reserves can- not be left to the states; the question is an inter-state and therefore a na- tional one. Nearly all the rivers of New Fngland head in the White Moun- tains of New Hampshire and it is of supreme imnortance to the industries of all the New England States, repre- senting tens of millions of dollars, that the forest cover at the river sources shall be preserved and improved, National delay in the acquisition of these “reserves” would be dangerous and wasteful. Timber land which a few years aro could have been pur- chaged at $1.50 to $3 an acre has now trebled and quadrupled in value, Ad- ditional delay will mean a further in- crease In cost. Congress should act at once and preserve from destruction one of the greatest resources of the whereas, the menace to her water sup- nation. TH CAROLINA APPALACHIANS, when he was a man grown, “dear C. O. LOOKS LIKE A BIG TOY. table, are as woolly as sheep and quiet as lambs. Seven of these little fellows were imported by Mr, Jamrach, the natural- ist, and he insists that they are quite at home and well mannered in the house and that a baby might safely play with them. Two of the herd are chestnuts, two mouse, one bay, one black, but the “pick of the bunch,” the smallest of all, has a long cream- colored coat and a tail that sweeps the floor. All seven were bought at $75 each on the first day of their exhibition. One of the customers is an intimate friend of the Queen, so that it is quite probable that a pigmy pony will find a royal mistress. —— Stoker in First Locomolive, Letchworth Cox, who was a stoker on the first locomotive that ever got up steam in America, celebrated his ninety-first birthday at his home in Jamesburg, N. J, on Christmas Day Mr, Cox was the son of Joseph and Hannah Cox and was born in Chester county, Pa., in 1814. He is still in possession of all his faculties. eee eee eee They Must Gnaw. Rats, mice and squirrels unceasing ly gnaw at something, not out of pure mischief, as people generally imagine, but because they are forced to, Animals of this class, especially rats, have teeth which continue to grow as long as the owner lives, This being the case, the rodent is obliged to continue his gnawing so as to keep his teeth ground off to a proper length, The OId Folks Were Absent. tel in Kansas City, saying with enthu- siasm: “Well, sir, I enjoyed your lecture very much last night” “I didn’t see you there,” remarked the lecturer. “Oh, I wasn’t there.” “Well, what do you mean by telling me you enjoyed my lecture, and you were not present?’ “Oh, I bought Judge Longworth was once travel- tickets for my girl's father and mother, ing in Italy. He was in a forward car and they both went!” with a friend; and when his wife sent became his wife and the mother of his son, the present congressman. The mother still keeps and prizes her first declaration of love. A man came up to a lecturer in a ho-{ Latest Copyrighted Imperial Size Portraits of the President's Daughter, Mrs. Nicholas Longworth (nee Alice Roosevelt). A Magnificent Souvenir of the Greatest of White House Weddings. Published by authority of Miss ROOSEVELT, These exclusive photographs have been reproduced in copper engravings and inted 1n sepia on special tinted paper, suitable for framing, > Das in Se panels as £m in accompanying illustrations. 5 poses in Ball Dress, size 12x36 inches, 5 poses in Street Dress, size 12x34 inches. Now selling in New York City for $1.00 cach. Our special offer (edition limited), Either panel 25¢c., or both panels 4ac,, postage prepaid. Address. NATIONAL PHOTO-SOUVENIR CO. Lock Box 61, WASHINGTON, D. C. SARE TRIES BOYS send us your name and address. We send yon 9 only 24 packages of BILUINE to sell at 10c. a package. Just as soon as youreturn our $2.40 received f from the sale, we will send you this splendid Baseball Out- fit. It is the best one ever given away. You can easily carn it. Every housewife will buy BLUINE. Write to- day. We give you the suit absolutely free and exactly as de- scribed below. Handsome gray flannel, wide hich collar, broad shoulders, full SHIRT. 2 long, Ei front, double-sewed throughout. Will wear like iron, ad « Padded or unpadded; take your choice, Padded ones are thor. PANTS, on hips and full I ngth of thighs. L npadded can bey ‘orn to school. Both fit welland lack fine, Sewing is double and triple and very strong, Wide belt.straps, large hip.pocket, elastic at knee, fly front. Will last several seasons, : i i — Y . Same material as shirt and pants, Fits CAP —GOLLEGE §TYL. ong visor, eight.piece top with button. BELT, new style, bright.colared, sirang; has patent nickel buckle. ; , Ry returning our meney in ten days, which you EXTRA PREMIUM, as an extra premium three large felt letters for the front of your baseball shirt. We furnish any letters you desire. WE SEND BASEBALL GUTFIT ALL CHARGES PREPAID BLUINE MANUFACTURING CO., 2 Mil Street, Concord Junction, Mass. The Old Reliable Firm. On This Genuine 1906 Chatham Incubator OU see we make more incubators than Y any other concern in the world. We have two big factories equipped with every up-to-date labor-saving appliance. We buy lumber in immense quantities. And turn out from six to seven hundred Incubators a day. This means high grade machines at low cost. Now we are after the trade with an Incu- bator of up-stairs quality at a down-stairs price. And to prove to you that Chatham Incubators are the best made, we are will- ing to let you try one 84 days FREE, You can take off four hatches, and, if '§ the machineisn’t ex- actly as represented send it back at our expense. Could we make a fairer offer? But we go further even than this and guarantee every In- § cubator we sell for five years—a direct iron-clad guarantee, Send for one FREE og to . Cqjalog today, address on a post card mailed at once gets the whole story by return mail. The Manson Campbell Co., Ltd. £77 Wesson Avenue, Detroit, Mich. Let Me Tell You the Special Price word for him te come back to her, the judge remarked, “We had best take all ! our things as the dago marquis here | might swipe them.” This remark was made concerning a swarthy looking man in the opposite seat. The judge was only joking, thinking too, that the stranger did not understand English. When the train stopped, the Marquis handed the judge a card. He was a sure enough marquis and he knew English, The card meant a duel, but Longworth was equal to the occasion, for he responded, “Why hello Marquis, glad to meet you,” The offended noble. man had to laugh and the two be. came good frineds. At another time the judge conceiv- ed the plan of living a few days with the bandits in Thessaly. With sever- al friends an expedition was organ- ized and the party went into the moun- tains of upper Greece, They found a famous robber chief and told him they wanted to have a social visit with him and his men. A bag of gold was giv- en the outlaws and for two weeks Longworth and his party ‘saw much of a section and people which had been a sealed book to even the near- est inhabitants. They hunted and played games, but the robbers com- mitted no crimes during the visit. When the stay was over the chief escorted them to the frontier and saw them in safe hands. There was a price on his head and beyond a cer- tain line he dared not go. The judge often remarked that he never enjoyed a trip more. \ oh Sunda Friniing NE [ In 2% machine, The wearer of this hand. some picce of jewelry will be tho envy of her friends SihinEa Ar oor Watkay owning a fine Ge! a This_watch, locket and pin, 14k. ul pate is all he fashion and & beaut Do not confuse it with t one year, given for sc 82 Handkerchie: ag eee. Only hardshell nuts should be fed to park squirrels. The teeth of a squir- rel grow so fast that he needs hard shell nuts to keep them at the proper | length. A squirrel’s teeth will grow so long that he cannot eat. I A Prints {rculars from’ h FE or cards TO, | them for us at only Ie, of all a toy, but a practical Beary Becareted Gina Dinner i FREE": This Large China Tea Set is the Tovely ourertife a opportunity, and nothing will del A Ras ornamental % luded, ° 7 {Siting only Bi of our special soft a cent Ee arch or . o oe EL hy ae ASAT Ep | Premiu SEND KO MONEY-Wo for 82 of our extra high stitched He rekiefs w exXpoRse cCostl; d Jour Shite from ou 5 'n 1 waaters, t | Makers, ete. whioh wa w what is unsold an: - iums y 8S Te] and Vi promptly. o, £ "ROARWAY, Ww 02-We0B 6, PT. g5 NEW YORK. Greatest premium you ever saw Be RY full jointed imported Dol. wiih Bisque head, hat, shoe ings; a comp oto w clothes that can be taken off on again, Most of the Dolls wi to sleep. A fine hand painted C he ext Ea fs Tr " ven for se 82 Handkerchiefs at only Bl ol FRE FH ami Ae for any one to wear. Those watches are guaranteed for oue year. given for selling 32 hdks, IMPORTED SEWING CABINETS © boxes are lar, i burnt leather, red leather Ra howe beautiful effects. ) h box is Exactly as Described. atter is nner or ‘Tei as a large , and it will ornament the most bounteous table. ONLY seadde resort ong, miles Letter, Post OfMen lescopc by mall add 10 cents Objects Way are broneht t hr on patil tout by mal prepaid for y a and you should not miss it, Mone, Interesting Booklet, entitled “Telescope Talk, Ld 4 al : ; 4 8 large powerful achramatis Teloscope for Torrestrial and Celestial nea, This Tele . pro- ie Deitch [ adie Hains mg ne Wh this wonderf pleas you look wn alee {Rione ix pro. the b orl and » td a study ita face as you do t noo at night, 1 student, male or female, onda Sit terval ta un (a Bolinses, also the myste § roourrent Bun Spats which appear and di- ppear at inl 1 pd tin di a out looations of the Bun, You wi 1618 you neglect to secure nae bh Ca i of ¥ No was never sold for this pe before, ‘These Telescopes are in ad Dt +3 tt 8 Autacturery 0 Tre no sau ne « ad 12 ne and open 8 1-8 feet in five nd 3 che A © roumistence. Hoyt {ras Ro \ Bras Safety Cap on each end to exclud: ¢ @round and adjuster nn pe pretos OF this ‘Ton have been wold for fram BA Sans Win Gaorantecd by the Maker, Hereto he country or a fhould certainly secure ene of these instruments 1nd ne » view witl: astonishing cleamess, Sent by ! 10. Our new ¢ talorue of Guns, ete..sent with © warrant each Relescope Just as represented A Express Money Order, or Bank Draft payable to ostage, EA, FARM, RANCH OR IN THE SCHOOL, '’ FREE with each order, or sent on request. ‘This booklet tells all about the care of Telescopes, 100.” SPECIAL 50 DRY OFFER T0 INTRODUGE OUR NEW EXGELSIOR SOLAR TELESCOPE. WANTS ANOTHER, Brandy, V. randy, Va. Gentlemen—Please send another Telescope. Money enclosed, Other was a bargain, good as instruments costing many times the money, . ] y R. C, ALLEN, SUPERIOR TO A $15 GLASS, Fred Walsh, of Howe Tsland, Ontario Canada, says: Gentlemen—1 have jusy received your tolescopo, and must gay It surpasses all expectations, It is far superior to one which we have had, which cost $16.00 some years ago, Just a few sights I have seen with it are worth more than double what it cost me. COULD DISCERN BOATS FROM FIVE TO TEN MILES, Mr. 0, M. Medley, of Duluth, Minn,, who purchased one of these Telesoo he expeoted thag weather Le could pes, gays they are superior to anything with it he could discern boats on the Great Likes at a distance of 5 to 10 miles, and in clear read the names of steamers and other craft at a distance of one-half mile away, and about Eclipses of the Sun and Moon the evening and morning for year, where visible, THE WONDER OF THE AGE. A Telescope brings now brain cells into play, opens np new avenues of thought and broadens the soope of the mind, w ORTH MANY TIMES THR RICE, Messrs, Kirtland Bros. & Co, he Saxon, New York, Nov. 4, 1005, Gentlemen :—1 had with me on my recent European trip, one of your Excelsior Solar Telescopes, with h obgerved an Rolipse Of the Rib At he Ansiinn yrol it was almost 80 per cent. concealed ir Solar pil is a great thing, its value to me on this Was man, Sie a Iv r than the Shine outlay for the Telescope, s ' Thousands of others are Saying good things about these Telescopes. In numerous ways it will repay its cont 0 hundred times over, Geb one and try it. SECURE THIS TELESCOPE AND TAKE A LOOK AT OLD SOL, ever before sold on any Telescope for leas than $8.00 or $10,00, ow 1s a chance to secure one for , This Eye-plece alone is worth more than we charge for the entire telescope, to all who wish to Rehold the fun ju itd Franquil Beauty, move tho Solar Eye-piece lens end you have a good, practical telescope for and observations, “KIRTLAND BROS. & ©0., Dept. am. 00 Chambers st, N, Y. ete. { — ng