Page 89 - Our Vanishing Wild Life
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 GUERRILLAS OF DESTRUCTION 67
very common method for illegal game birds, all over the United States. In Oklahoma when a man refuses to open his trunk for a game warden, the warden joyously gets out his brace and bitt, and bores an inch hole intothelowerstoryofthetrunk. Ifdeadbirdsarethere,thetell-tale auger quickly reveals them.
Three years ago, I was told that certain milk-wagons on Long Island made daily collections of dead ducks intended for the New York market, and the drivers kindly shipped them by express from the end of the route.
Once upon a time, a New York man gave notice that on a certain date he would be in a certain town in St. Lawrence County, New York, with a palacehorse-car,"tobuyhorses." Carandmanappearedthereasadver- tised. Veryostentatiously,heboughtonehorse,andhadittakenaboard thecarbeforethegazeoftheadmiringpopulace. Atnight,whenthe A. P. had gone to bed, many men appeared, and into the horseless end of thatcar,theyloadedthousandsofruffedgrouse. Thegamewardenwho described the incident to me said: "That man pulled out for New York with one horse and half a car load of ruffed grouse!''
Whenever a good market exists for the sale of game, as sure as the world that market will be supplied. Twenty-six states forbid by law the sale of their own "protected" game, but twenty of them do not expressly prohibit the sale of game stolen from neighboring states ! That is a very, very weak point in the laws of all those states. A child can see howitworks. TakePittsburghasacaseinpoint.
In the winter and spring of 1912 the State Game Commission of Pennsylvania found that quail and ruffed grouse were being sold in Pittsburgh,inlargequantities. Thestatelawswerewellenforced,and it was believed that the birds were not being killed in Pennsylvania. Some other state was being robbed!
The Game Commission went to work, and in a very short time certain game-dealers of Pittsburgh were arrested. At first they tried to bluff their way out of their difficulty, and even went as far as to bring charges against the game-warden whom the Commission had instructed to buy some of their illegal game, and pay for it. But the net of the law tightened upon them so quickly and so tightly that they threw up their hands and begged for mercy.
It was found that those Pittsburgh game-dealers were selling quail and grouse that had been stolen in thousands, from the state of Ken- tucky! Between the state game laws, working in lovely harmony with the Lacey federal law that prohibits the shipment of game illegally killed or sold, the whole bad business was laid bare, and signed confessions were promptly obtained from the shippers in Kentucky.
At that very time, a good bill for the better protection of her game was before the Kentucky legislature; and a certain member was vigor- ouslyopposingit,ashehadsuccessfullydoneinpreviousyears. Hewas told that the state was being robbed, but refused to believe it. Then a signed confession was laid before him, bearing the name of the man who was instigating his opposition,—his friend,—who confessed that he had

























































































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