Santa Fe New Mexican, 12-11-1909 New Mexican Printing Company

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Santa Fe New Mexican, 12-11-1909 New Mexican Printing Company University of New Mexico UNM Digital Repository Santa Fe New Mexican, 1883-1913 New Mexico Historical Newspapers 12-11-1909 Santa Fe New Mexican, 12-11-1909 New Mexican Printing Company Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/sfnm_news Recommended Citation New Mexican Printing Company. "Santa Fe New Mexican, 12-11-1909." (1909). https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/sfnm_news/87 This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the New Mexico Historical Newspapers at UNM Digital Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in Santa Fe New Mexican, 1883-1913 by an authorized administrator of UNM Digital Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. nta. H H NEW j VOL. 46. SANTA FE, NEW MEXICO, SATURDAY DECEMBER II, 1909 NO. 828 DUT-FLftN- BOARD OF 10 LARGE FURY OF IB AWARD COURT nsoi's ZELAYA KS TOME MEETING mmmm Ifl SAVANNAH HOUSE GONTRAGTS ESTRADA i Wide Awake to the Interests One an Improvement Con- - Failed to Avenge Heinous Seligman Brothers Company Attorney General is Bent on Superiority of Government and Needs of the City of cern and Other an Irriga- - Crime Committed Upon The Successful Vigorous Prosecution of ! Troops Over Insurgents Santa Fe tion Company Three Women Bidders Sugar Frauds I is Apparent CAPITAL QUESTION TAKEN UP CHANGE OF NAME CERTIFIED PEOPLE IN TERRIBLE FRENZY WHITE OAK FURNITURE REMARKABLE STATEMENTS WANT AMERICAN INTERVENTION Splendid Paper by Dr. James A. Total Capitalization of Both is Every Negro, Answering Des- - Everything To Be in Harmony Network of Corruption Not Con- - Unless Uncle Sam Interferes, Rolls on Sanitary Needs of Almost a Million cription of Suspect, Placed With Colonial Style Of fined to American Refining the Bloody Tyrant Will Santa Fe. Dollars. in Jail. the New Building. Company. Win Out. S. B. 11. ' 11. Harper Cunningham, L. lck j Two bin corporations, that are Savannah, Ga.. Dec. Although. After opening and going over the Washington, I). C. Dec. 11 That Wuefielils, Nicaragua, Dec. G. A. Hanson, J. D. Mulligan, ing for the improvement of New Mex- - hundreds of armed men assisted the bids of a representative number of the department of justice intends a There has been a sudden and un- the board of commis- Rev. C. F. Lucas, Bruce P. Williams ico, today filed incorporation papers. police last night in the search foi a firms, county vigorous prosecution in the efforts to pleasant realization here of the govern- The San Antonio Com- negro believed to have been the mur- sioners, this morning awarded to Sel-lgn.a- n recover all due the govern- ment and the weak- and Charles S. Rising were elected to Improvement money strength insurgent pany of San Antonio, Socorro county, derer of Mrs. Eliza Cribble, an aged Brothers Company, the con- ment as a result of the sugar frauds at ness. President Zelaya has outwitted membership at the meeting of the Mrs. tracts for the furniture for the new and the Portales Irrigation Company white woman, and her daughter, j New York and to punish all who may General Pstrada, and the hitter's chief Board of Trade last evening in the court house and for vault of Roosevelt county. The first is incor- Carrie Ohlander, and to have fatally county the have participated in them is shown hops lies in American intervention. It offices of the Santa Fe Water and - with a of $100,-00- 0 Mrs. the fugi- j doors. Seligman Brothers represented the Gen- turns out that the conference a which porated capitalization injured Maggie Hunter, by annual report of Attorney sought Light Company, meeting into be- tive is still at So frenzied did j the Ford Johnson Company of Chica- General Vasnuez of the most one of divided 1,00 shares and large. eral Wickersham made public today. by government proved the interesting go, the A. H. Andrews of in- gins business with $3,000. The Allaire the searchers become alter learning Company After briefly reciting the facts in the troops, which the insurgents had many interesting meetings held this Chicago, and the M. L. Nelson Com- Mclntyre Company is appointed as the that Mrs. Ohlander had been critically cases which are of public knowledge terpreted as a sign of yielding on too year. Dr. jonn jp. wagner, presmea pany of also New Mexieo asent The flirectOT3 an1 assaulted, that a white man who by ac- Chicago. They represent- he of Zelaya, was a blind intended to Secretary" J. A. Rolls, Corresponding ed the Diebold Safe and Lock Com- s?.;'s: part n. cident had scratched his face, came secure until the government W. Frank Owen and Treas- - "cuipuraiuis are. aSu Amure, of Ohio. "The evidence has disclosed a net- delay Secretary - pany Canton, The Santa Fe R - Weber, P. A. Allaire, Powell Stack- near being torn to pieces when the army completed its Hanking move urer Carl A. Bishop were the other Hardware and Supply Company rep- work of corruption not confined to the ana an crowd saw the blood. Fences were ' ment toward Bluefields. This has officers present. nouse, jr., wuiiam watson. resented the Milwaukee Chair Com- American Sugar Refining Company, of San Antonio and each torn down and doors broken in. - been and three thou- subscribing Every and the Mission Com- extending over a period of years, af- accomplished, Corresponding Secretary Frank looked--lik- pany Chicago to six shares. The Portales Irrigation thing that e a probable both sand well armed. he answered pany, while Herman Ilfeld of the fecting and officers of j Owen reported that had importers men on Blue-field- Company appoints Thomas J. Molinari place ofJJM" fugitive was leveled. is The are marching fourteen letters of inquiry. A motion Company of Las Vegas, repre- the government it as yet premature j its Xew Mexico and is EvewrTiegro who answered the de-- As soon as Estrada learned was passed, pledging the board to agent capitaliz sented the Carpon Furniture Com- to state the precise extent of the con- for divided into 25,00f ription of the has been sent this he got into communication with take a advertisement in the spe- ed $875,000, suspect pany of Chicago. Other firms repre- spiracy of the amount of the revenue page shares'. It commences business with to his aide at Bluefields, declaring the cial edition of the New Mexican. jail. sented were the Gunn Desk Com- of which the government has been de-- Accused Her Own Husband. Americans should send their marines Dr. offered a resolution ad- $38,920. The incorporators are: Seth pany of Grand Rapids, by Herman Il- frauded. j Wagner in Mrs. Hunt- ashore. He also told the aide that dressed to the committee of terri- A. Morrison, 80 shares; George L. Later the day, Maggie feld; the Herman Safe Company of "While it is feared that the statute ; a request should be made for protec- tories of that the Reese, 100 shares; Hobson F. Jones, er, who was attacked and left for dead San Francisco; the Carey Safe Com congress, asking Grab- of limitations mav have run in favor of tion of the huudred and fifty Ameri- so as to re- 40 shares; Washington E. Llndsey, yesterday at the same time Mrs. of N. Y.; Mosler Safe j enabling act be amended pany Buffalo, many of the malefactors who are re-- , Bluefields. The aide 1C0 John A. 240 ble and were murdered, said cans at rushed tain the at Santa Fe until shares; Fairly, shares: daughter Company of Hamilton, Ohio; Herring. - capital sponsible for these frauds yet no ef- j to United States Consul Moffat and 1925 before the can come l nomas J. Molinari, lUb shares; koi it was her husband, J. C. Hunter, Hall, Marvin Company of Hamilton, question fort will be spared to ascertain the the counsel assured him that the for contest. Dr. Paul A. ert Hicks. 120 shares. her. Hunter was Immediate- Ohio; Victor Safe and Lock Company up Wagner, precise amount of which the govern-- j marines from the cruiser Des Moines, F. and Dr. s were! of Name, ly arrested and placed under strong cf Cincinnati, Ohio; Sweetser and Walter J. Change Corporation ment has been defrauded, recover all with six rapid fire guns, would be a committee to transmit the ' Allbritton Brake and and Apple, guard. Baldwin Safe Company of Los Ange- appointed moneys due and to punish all those able to control the situation here in and add thereto a request today filed a certificate in les; Parcelles Safe Company of San corporated, who be j event the should Trumbull may found to have participated government army for a provision that will make clearer the office of Territorial Secretary FIERCE STORM DEMANDS Francisco; Safe and Vault the in any respect in the frauds, whether j surprise city. the clause relating to the payment of Nathan Jaffa, changing the name to LIVES AND PROPERTY. Company of Chicago. as officers or of the j If President Taft, has determined territorial and county indebtedness, The Store The The board examined all bids care- agents importers Department Company. or as officials. I i that Zelaya shall be deposed, it is be- so that there will be no legal ques- - are at Raton, Colfax Great Havoc Reported Frotn Lake fully and after lengthy deliberation government, earnestly headquarters - j lieved here that the United States decided to award the contracts to request a special appropriation of $50,- tion as to what part of the Santa Fe county, and those that participated in Erie on Which Four Boats Were forces will find active in Brothers as 000 to enable This work to be effective- - participation county debt is to be paid.
Recommended publications
  • Congressional Record-House House Of
    1932 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-HOUSE 565 one thing, somebody is going to do the other, what is the The motion was agreed to; and Cat 4 o'clock and 40 min-· use of sitting here trying to pass this kind of a bill? utes p. m.) the Senate took a recess until to-morrow, Sat­ What is the use in it? I do not see any use in it. If we urday, December 17, 1932, at 12 o'clock meridian. are going to sit here and work and slave and argue and plead and beg and compromise, and think finally we have people agreed on a compromise and then at the last minute HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES somebody says, " You can not do that, because if you do the President will veto the bill," what is the use of going FRIDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1932 on through with this kind of business? The House met at 12 o'clock noon. I do not propose to be under that kind of a lash. I The Chaplain, Rev. James Shera Montgomery, D. D., do not want to see anybody else under it. I think thor­ offered the following prayer: oughly and fully over these questions as I see them with such light as I have before ine. I see only one solution of 0 Thou High and Holy One, who dwellest in the high and any of them, and that is for us to pass bills such as we holy places, we thank Thee for Thy manifold deliverances. would pass if Franklin D. Roosevelt were in the White Help us all, dear Lord, to rise upon the stepping -stones of House.
    [Show full text]
  • The Pioneers-Establishing the Concept of Forestry in the Southwest, 1905-24
    Chapter 6 - The Pioneers-Establishing the Concept of Forestry in the Southwest, 1905-24 Ranching, lumbering, and mining were well established in the Southwest long before the earliest foresters or conservationists made their appearance. Ranchers grazed their cattle and sheep, loggers cut timber and chopped firewood, and prospectors explored for gold, silver, and copper on the public domain, almost as a right with no one disputing their course. The General Land Office of the Department of the Interior, which had jurisdiction over the Federal lands, was primarily interested in selling them. Anyone could buy land, usually at the minimum price of $1.25 per acre, either in large or small quantities. Homestead laws were generous, and settlers could claim 160 acres for each adult member of their family. Various special laws, such as the Timber Culture Act, and even more subterfuges enabled businessmen and corporations to acquire large blocks of land without paying even at the minimum price. Ranchers, accustomed to free use of the range, preferred to retain open access to the resources of the public domain-grass, water, timber, and minerals. They protested bitterly when Federal regulations curbed their frontier attitude. In like manner, ranchers, loggers, and others also invaded the railroad lands, taking what they wished and giving no thought to the long-range future of the region. The railroads, particularly the Santa Fe and the Southern Pacific, had few men to patrol their lands and found local opinion solidly against them when and if they attempted to prosecute trespassers for misappropriating property. This state of affairs was normal in the territories of Arizona and New Mexico for the last 50 years of the 19th century, from American annexation in 1848 to 1900.
    [Show full text]
  • 1. Sugar Pines. Sequoia National Forest, California
    1961-1975 1. Sugar Pines. Sequoia National Forest, California. I 42 Keeping Up With The Times, 1961-1975. Highlights On July 1, 1876, the population of the United States, environmental values and of the need to protect them, as then constituted, was roughly 46. 1 million. * On July 1, achieving expression in the National Environmental Policy 1975, our population was estimated by the Census Bureau to Act of 1969, which profoundly influenced Forest Service be 213.5 million, including the Armed Forces overseas. planning and programs. In response to the heightened public With this increase of 167.4 million men, women, and awareness of federal activities, the Service launched a pro- children in 100 years, and with our natural resources less gram in the early 1970's to "inform and involve" the people abundant than a century earlier, there was need to stretch in the decisionmaking process as it affected their interests in these resources, especially the forests, to their greatest possi- the forests. The goal was meaningful public involvement in ble, practical use. To accommodate the demands of the ever- developing better land and resource management. growing population (there were 34.7 million more people in The most ambitious planning initiative of the Forest the country in 1975 than in 1961), the National Forest Service involved 3 years of extensive effort culminating, in System was called upon to yield more wood, more water, mid-1974, with "A Long Term Forestry Plan (Draft> more recreation, more range forage, and more wildlife habi- Environmental Program for the Future." This was a compre- tat than ever before.
    [Show full text]
  • An Environmental History of the Middle Rio Grande Basin
    CHAPTER 3 HUMAN SETTLEMENT PATTERNS, POPULATIONS, AND RESOURCE USE This chapter presents an overview, in three main sec- reasoning, judgment, and his ideas of enjoyment, tions, of the ways in which each of the three major eco- as well as his education and government (Hughes cultures of the area has adapted to the various ecosys- 1983: 9). tems of the Middle Rio Grande Basin. These groups consist of the American Indians, Hispanos, and Anglo-Americans. This philosophy permeated all aspects of traditional Within the American Indian grouping, four specific Pueblo life; ecology was not a separate attitude toward groups—the Pueblo, Navajo, Apache, and Ute—are dis- life but was interrelated with everything else in life. cussed in the context of their interactions with the environ- Another perspective on Native Americans was given by ment (Fig. 15). The Hispanic population is discussed as a Vecsey and Venables (1980: 23): single group, although the population was actually com- posed of several groups, notably the Hispanos from Spain To say that Indians existed in harmony with na- or Mexico, the genizaros (Hispanicized Indians from Plains ture is a half-truth. Indians were both a part of and other regional groups), mestizos (Hispano-Indio nature and apart from nature in their own “mix”), and mulatos (Hispano-Black “mix”). Their views world view. They utilized the environment ex- and uses of the land and water were all very similar. Anglo- tensively, realized the differences between hu- Americans could also be broken into groups, such as Mor- man and nonhuman persons, and felt guilt for mon, but no such distinction is made here.
    [Show full text]
  • Forest Service Administrative Sites in Region 4, 1891-1960
    United States Department of Agriculture WITHIN A DAY'S RIDE Forest Service Intermountain Forest Service Region Administrative Sites in June 2004 Region 4, 1891-1960 A Contextual and Architectural History Cover: Top left: New Peck Mountain Lookout, Payette National Forest. Top right: Great Basin Experiment Station, Manti-LaSal National Forest, 1924. Bottom: South Fork Ranger Station, Bridger-Teton National Forest, 1918. The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) prohibits discrimination in all its programs and activities on the basis of race, color, national origin, sex, religion, age, disability, political beliefs, sexual orientation, or marital or family status. (Not all prohibited bases apply to all programs.) Persons with disabilities who require alternative means for communication of program information (Braille, large print, audio tape, etc.) should contact USDA’s TARGET Center at (202) 720-2600 (voice and TDD). To file a complaint of discrimination, write USDA, Director, Office of Civil Rights, Room 326-W, Whitten Building, 1400 Independence Avenue, SW, Washington, D.C. 20250-9410 or call (202) 720-5964 (voice and TDD). USDA is an equal opportunity provider and employer. WITHIN A DAY'S RIDE Forest Service Administrative Sites in Region 4, 1891-1960 A Contextual and Architectural History By Richa Wilson Regional Architectural Historian USDA Forest Service Intermountain Region Facilities Group 324 25th Street Ogden, UT 84401 801-625-5704 [email protected] Acronyms AEC Atomic Energy Commission APW Accelerated Public Works AWS Aircraft
    [Show full text]
  • Zuni-Mountains-Railroads
    ZUNI MOUNTAIN RAILROADS CIBOLA NATIONAL FOREST, NEW MEXICO By Vernon J. Glover and Joseph P. Hereford, Jr. Cultural Resources Management Report No. 6 September, 1986 First Printing March, 1990 Second Printing USDA Forest Service Southwestern Region Reprinted by Historical Society of New Mexico, Inc. TABLE OF CONTENTS FIGURES TABLES PUBLISHER'S NOTE ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS HISTORIC OVERVIEW Introduction Atlantic and Pacific Railroad THE LOGGING COMPANIES Mitchell Brothers American Lumber Company McKinley Land and Lumber Company George E. Breece Lumber Company Prestridge and Seligman The McGaffey Company Lutcher and Moore Lumber Company CONCLUSION APPENDICES A. Locomotive Rosters B. Photographs C. Apache National Forest Railroad Extension REFERENCES CITED LIST OF FIGURES 1. The Santa Fe Railway Station at Guam, New Mexico (omitted from the online edition) 2. Map of the route of the Zuni Mountain Railway as laid out by S.M. Rowe 3. Plan of the American Lumber Company plant in Albuquerque, New Mexico 4. Sawmill of the American Lumber Company at Albuquerque 5. Map of American Lumber Company rail connections to Albuquerque 6. Locomotive No 4 in the snow at Kettner in 1908 7. One of the American Lumber Company's steam loaders at work (omitted from the online edition) 8. Santa Fe Railway locomotive Number 826 9. An overall view of the main logging camp at Kettner (omitted from the online edition) 10. Zuni Mountain Railway locomotive Number 6 leaving Kettner for Thoreau (omitted from the online edition) 11. Climax locomotive Number 8 of the Zuni Mountain Railway (omitted from the online edition) 12. Zuni Mountain Railway Shay locomotive Number 10 (omitted from the online edition) 13.
    [Show full text]
  • An Environmental History of the Middle Rio Grande Basin
    CHAPTER 6 OVERVIEW OF EARLY SCIENTIFIC WORK, RESOURCE DATA COLLECTION, MANAGEMENT, AND CONSERVATION 1812–1982 Historic Native American and Hispanic resource use degradation that subsequently were addressed in ever- and conservation prior to the Anglo occupation and domi- increasing degrees by governmental agencies. nation of the Middle Rio Grande Basin was documented Most notable is the characteristic evolution from virtu- in Chapters 3–5. Various Indian groups exploited water ally unregulated resource use on the frontier, especially and a range of faunal and floral resources, arable soil, on the public domain. Driven and supported by federal and rock materials. They developed strategies, in some and local legislative acts, policies, agencies, and monetary instances, for sustained use of these resources on a sub- remuneration, the pattern shifted to a relatively well- sistence basis. Their relatively low populations and low regulated and reasonably balanced resource management levels of technology generally ensured an ongoing relative system emphasizing self-sustainable and wise use pro- abundance of most of these resources. In rare situations grams and policies, involving an array of public agencies where intensive local use or climatic events depleted a and “watchdog” environmental groups. A few legislative needed resource, Native Americans moved to a new area acts from the early exploitation period, such as the 1872 or traded for the scarce commodity. In the colonial pe- Mining Act, remain in effect. The 104th Congress has at- riod, the Spanish generally interrupted such strategies. tempted to modify many resource management laws cre- Hispanics brought not only an array of new technolo- ated in recent decades.
    [Show full text]
  • The Mapping of Our National Forests
    THE MAPPING OF OUR NATIONAL FORESTS By Peter L. Stark This essay was written during my term as a Grey Tower Scholar-in-Residence in the Winter of 2014, supported by a generous research grant awarded by the Grey Towers Heritage Association. Brief excerpts of copyright material found herein may, under certain circumstances, be quoted verbatim for purposes such as criticism, news reporting, education, and research, without the need for permission from or payment to the copyright holder under 17 U.S.C § 107 of the United States copyright law. Copyright holder does ask that you reference the title of the essay and my name as the author in the event others may need to reach me for clarification, with questions, or to use more extensive portions of my reference work. Also, please contact me if you find any errors or have a map that has not been included in the cartobibliography THE MAPPING OF OUR NATIONAL FORESTS By Peter L. Stark CONTENTS Part I Mapping of the National Forets………………………………………….… 3 1. Early U.S. General Land Office Mapping……………………………… 6 2. U.S. Geological Survey Mapping, 1897-1905………………………….. 6 3. Proclamation Diagrams and Executive Order Maps………………….… 9 4. “Type & Title” Mapping by the U.S. Department of Agriculture………12 5. Forest Atlas of the National Forests of the United States……….............13 6. The decentralized administrative organization and its effect on early Forest Service mapping…………………………………………….. 20 7. Defining a Cartographic Program: Forest Service Mapping, 1910-1922………………………………………………………...... 21 8. Forest Service Mapping Between the Wars, 1922-1941………………...32 A. Topographic Mapping………………………………………….. 34 B.
    [Show full text]
  • Geologic Literature of New Mexico by Thomas Peltier Wootton
    STATE BUREAU OF MINES AND MINERAL RESOURCES NEW MEXICO SCHOOL OF MINES STATE BUREAU OF MINES AND MINERAL RESOURCES E. H. WELLS President and Director BULLETIN NO. 5 Geologic Literature of New Mexico By Thomas Peltier Wootton SOCORRO, N. M. 1930 NEW MEXICO SCHOOL OF MINES STATE BUREAU OF MINES AND MINERAL RESOURCES E. H. WELLS President and Director BULLETIN NO. 5 Geologic Literature of New Mexico By Thomas Peltier Wootton SOCORRO, N. M. 1930 CONTENTS Page The New Mexico Bureau of Mines and Mineral Resources ............................. 3 Board of regents ........................................................................... 4 Officers of the board ..................................................................... 4 Publications ...................................................................................... 4 Introduction .................................................................................................. 5 Plan and scope of bibliography ................................................................... 5 Acknowledgments ............................................................................... 5 How publications may be obtained ....................................................... 6 Abbreviations used ........................................................................... 7 Serials ................................................................................................. 8 Part I. Bibliography ........................................................................ 13 Part II. Index ................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Cartographic Records of the Forest Service
    PRELIMINARY INVENTORY OF THE CARTOGRAPHIC RECORDS OF THE FOREST SERVICE (Record Group 95) Compiled by Charlotte M. Ashby The National Archives National Archives .and Records Service General Services Administration Washington: 1967 National Archives Publication No. 67-5 Library of Congress Catalog Card No. A67-7213 FOREWORD GSA through the National Archives and Records Service is responsible for administering the permanent noncurrent records of the Federal Government. These archival hold­ ings, now amounting to about 900,000 cubic feet, date from the days of the Continental Congresses; they include the basic records of the three branches of our Government-­ Congress, the courts, and the executive departments and independent agencies. The Presidential Libraries.. - Hoover, Roosevelt, Truman, and Eisenhower--contain the papers of those Presidents and many of their associates in office. Among our holdings are many hallowed documents relating to great events of our Nation's history, preserved and ven­ erated as symbols to stimulate a worthy patriotism in all of us. But most of the records are l~ss dramatic, kept because of their continuing practical utility for the ordinary proc­ esses of government, for the protection of private rights, and for the research use of students and scholars. To facilitatethe use of the records and to describetheir nature and content, our archivists prepare various kinds of finding aids. The present work is one suchpublication. We believe that it will prove valuable to anyone who wishes to use the records it describes. LAWSON B. KNOTT, JR. Administrator of General Services iii PREFACE The first step in the records-description program of the National Archives is the compilation of preliminary invento­ ries of the material in some 380 record groups to which the holdings of the National Archives are allocated.
    [Show full text]
  • THE EARLY DAYS: a Sourcebook of Southwestern Region History
    THE EARLY DAYS: A Sourcebook of Southwestern Region History Book 2 Compiled by Edwin A. Tucker Supervisory Management Analyst Division of Operations Cultural Resources Management Report No. 11 USDA Forest Service Southwestern Region March 1991 TABLE OF CONTENTS Cover: Forest Supervisor K. C. Kartchner on Ranger Flake's horse in Rinconada on the Mt. Taylor Division, September 23, 1925. Figures Editor's Foreword SECTIONS Interviews Fred H. Miller Robert Ground Lee Beall In The Newspaper Wild Horses More Interviews Ben Keap Gilbert W. Sykes Oscar McClure Roger Morris Jesse T. Fears John D. Jones C. A. Merker Harold Hulbert Perl Charles Hollis Palmer John Mims Robert Leonard Arthur J. "Crawford" Riggs FIGURES 1. Smokey with Chief Watts 2. One of the original Forest Service flags 3. Mogollon Ranger Station on the Gila 4. A treed bear in Rustler Park, Chiricahua Rational Forest 5. An early-day bridge constructed by the Forest Service 6. A Ranger meeting - 1916, Coronado NF 7. A Forest Ranger and Supervisor on a camping trip 8. A grazing reconnaissance outfit, October 31, 1914 9. CCC tree planters in June 1941 10. George D. Russell with the Showboat 11. The 1926 Hanger Training Camp 12. The 1911 Coronado Forest Supervisor's Office 13. The 1908 Apache Forest Supervisor's Office 14. Cochise Stronghold Ranger Station, Coronado 15. Nogales Hanger Station, Coronado 16. Capuline Hanger Station, Santa Fe 17. Bear Cubs on a Santa Fe Sign 18. Running Sheep Through A Dipping Vat 19. Sheep Driveway Committee 18. Smokejumper crew based at Deming EDITOR'S FOREWORD In this volume we continue the story of the early days in the Southwestern Region.
    [Show full text]
  • Monthly Catalogue, United States Public Documents, July 1912
    Monthly Catalogue United States Public Documents No. 211 July, 1912 ISSUED BY THE SUPERINTENDENT OF DOCUMENTS WASHINGTON GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE 1912 Abbreviations Appendix...................................... ...... app. 1 Page, pages............................. ___ P. Congress......................................... ...Cong. Part, parts............................. pt., pts. Consular......................................... ... .cons. Plate, plates.......................... ____Pl- Department................................... ...Dept. Portrait, portraits.................. ___por. Document...................................... .......doc. Quarto............ ...................... ____ 4° Executive...................................... ........ex. Report.................................. Facsimile, facsimiles...................... ..facsim. Saint..................................... ........... St. Folio............................................... ........... fo Section, sections.................... ..........sec. House............................................. ......... H. Senate................................... .............S. House concurrent resolution.......... H. C. R. Senate concurrent resolution. ...S. C. R. House document........................... ..H. doc. Senate document.................. ....S. doc. House executive document........... Senate executive document.. S. ex. doc. House joint resolution................... Senate joint resolution.......... ...S. J. R. House report.................................. Senate
    [Show full text]