The Common. AUGUST, 1914 13 v E P1 h- w previous years In the expense of conducting the two branches of the Indian service. The controversy regarding the enrollment o the Mississippi Choctaws is compromised by omitting the Choc taws of Oklahoma from the per capita payment made to Chickasaw and Cherokee Indians of $100 and $15, respectively. A long contest regarding the water rights of the Yakima Indians is finally settled by giving these Indians a free water right to forty acres of their allotments in perpetuity. Another question which has been in dispute for a number of years is settled by providing for allotting the remaining unallotted Indians on the Bad river reservation and the distribu tion per capita of the remaining tribal timber to the unallotted Indians. Out of the funds of the confederated bands of Ute Indians in Utah and Colorado this bill appropriates about $800,000, $100,000 for the purchase of stock for the Navajo Springs band of said Indians in Colorado, $200,000 for the Uintah, White River and Uncompagre bands in Utah, and the balance to be expended among all of said Indians for the promotion of civiliza tion and self-support among them, one of the chief purposes of which is to protect the water rights of the Ute Indians from being forfeited within the period fixed by law, and all of which is to give them much needed help in industrial progress. $100,000 is appropriated for determining the heirs of deceased Indian allottees so that title to these lands may be certain. There are now 40,000 of these cases pending in the Indian office, in which land valued at $60,000,000 is involved. The $15 charged to each estate for the payment of this expense has during the past year recovered into the treasury $80,000, which is $30,000 more than the appropriation on which this work was accomplished by the commissioner of Indian affairs. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE BUREAU OF CORPORATIONS Parts II and III of the report on the lumber industry have been submitted to the president by the commissioner of corporations. Part II, continuing the subject of standing timber discussed in Part I, treats of the con centration of timber ownership in selected por tions of the timber area, in detail. The concen tration is illustrated by elaborate ownership maps of large regions in Washington, Oregon, California, Idaho, and Louisiana, covering 68, 000 square miles. The mapped areas contain 755 billion feet of timber, or one-third of all the -privately owned timber in continental United States, exclusive of Alaska. Ownership in the Important timbered regions covered, by the maps is highly concentrated. Thus, in the southwestern Washington map area two holders have 49 per cent of the timber; in the western Oregon area, five have 36 per cent; in the northeastern California area, six have 70 per cent; in the redwood aTea, ten have over half; and In the north central Idaho area, four have 59 per cent. Incidental to its study of the concentration of timber, ownership, the bureau has found a cor responding concentration of land ownership, which Is suggestive enough to merit presenta tion, and which is dealt with in Part III. The main fact Is that 1,694 timber owners hold In fee over one-twentieth of the land area of the entire United States from the Canadian to the Mexican border. In many states these 1,694 own no lands at all. In the 900 timbered coun ties investigated they own one-seventh of the area, which amounts to 105,600,000 acres. This is an area four-fifths the size of Prance, or greater than the entire state of California, or more than two and one-half times the land area of the six New England states. Sixteen holders own 47,800,000 acres or nearly ten times the land area of New Jersey. Three land-grant railroads own enough to give fifteen acres to every male of voting ago in the nine western states where almost all their holdings He. Lavish land grants and loose, ill-enforced land laws are the historical background of the con centration of land and timber ownership shown in this report. This marked concentration in the ownership of land has two important aspects. The first is the concentration of control of the natural resources, other than agricultural, in the area comprised in these great holdings. Besides its timber now standing, part of the land must be denpended on, together with the national forests, to supply future crops of Umber. Furthermore, some of it has valuable resources of ores, oil, gas, water power, etc. The second is tho possibility that these hold ings, which will form a considerable proportion of the future area used for agriculture In this country, may be retained under concentrated control. Such a condition suggests the following potential effects upon the public: High prices for land sold to settlers, increase of tho tenantry system, or direct farming by large corporations. Tho data obtained by the bureau, so far as land is concerned, are not sufficient for a study of the land problem as a whole. They cover only one class of owners, tho timbermen, and only part of the country. Thoy show condi tions only at tho time of tho investigation, aud do not show whether concentration is increasing or decreasing. They are not typical of prosent conditions in agricultural communities, whore tho average size of holdings Ib, of course, much smaller. Though thus incomplete, these data are nevertheless suggestive and worthy of se rious consideration. BUREAU OF STANDARDS For some time the bureau of standards has been working on safety rules to bo observod in the operation and maintenance of electric gen erating stations and sub-stations, and on tho overhead and underground distributing wireB in connection therewith, and a set of rules has been prepared for -publication by the bureau. In this work the bureau has consulted a largo number of operating companies, workmen actively en gaged in tho different lines of work covered by tho rules as well as state Industrial and public service commissions. Tho rules have been form ulated so as to be complete and simple, and as easily understood as possible. These rules have been highly commended by a number of very competent critics. It is believed that they will be of great valup to state commissions, city au thorities, and operating companies, and will tend to reduce accidents in this important industry. FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC COMMERCE The secretary of commerce and the secretary of agriculture have completed plans whereby their two departments will combine in a con structive study of the supply and exploitation of timber In the United States, which has now become one of the big conservation and indus trial problems. The study is to be undertaken in the belief that the methods used in exploiting timber resources and the restoration of normal and healthy conditions In the industries which convert their timber into usable products, vitally concern the public at large. One of the conditions which, in the opinion of the secretaries makes this study of Immediate importance, is the fact that the United States, which conalns some 3,000 billion feet of stand ing timber, is now reducing its stock of stump age at the rate of sixty or more billion feet annually. In spite of this limited timber supply, lumbermen are now unable to market much of the poorer, grades. Thoy therefore leave in the .woods or burn in their mills from one-third to one-half of the material in the trees. Poor varieties of timber often are not cut at all, but are left to be burned In the slash fires which usually follow logging. Some of this waste, it is believed, Is preventable, and much more, it is hoped can be saved under improved conditions of marketing and use of wood. The studies will seek to establish tho essential facts relating to supply, exploitation and market ing timber at home and abroad, and to analyze thie underlying causes of present unsatisfactory, conditions. The studies will be conducted di rectly by the forest service of tha department of agriculture and tho bureau of foreign and do mestic commerce, with the cooperation of the bureau of corporations and bureau of stand ards of the department of commerce, within their special fields. All the information hitherto gath ered by these different agencies as to the stand ing timber, the manufacture and marketing of lumber, tho quality of various timbers, and the more economical and more profitable utilization of wood will be correlated with any new data gathered and used to Indicate improvements. The inquiry has to do not only with the thrifty use of the present timber supply, but also with the possibility of applying forestry in the future management of private timber lands. Reports from the four branch offices of the bureau of foreign and domestic commerce, which are already in operation in New York, Chicago, New Orleans and San Francisco, recently re ceived, indicate increasing interest among busi ness concorns in tho work oLthe bureau and Its branch officos. Results tend to show that the branch offices will bo of oven greater benefit to American manufacturers than was at first an ticipated. Many who heretofore havo made n offort to ongago in tho export trade, now appear anxious to ongago in that business, and tho lists maintained at tho various branch offices of busi ness houses which are to receive the information distributed aro being augmented daily by the ad-, dltion of now names. Socrotnry Redfleld has authorized tho estab lishment of branch offices of tbo bureau at Boston, Mass., Seattle, Wesh., and Atlanta, Ga., undor commercial agents experienced in the work of tho bureau. These aro additions to the four branch offices already established which have rendered such usoful sorvico in promoting commerce. Mr. F. L. Roberts will direct the work at Boston and Mr. William B. Henderson will supervise tho office at Seattle The office at Atlanta is to bo in charge of Mr. W. A. Graham Clark, who has had long experience in tho bu reau and with tho former tariff board, and who is an expert in foreign markets, especially for cotton textiles. It will be his duty to make investigations for tho promotion of commerce in all tho southern territory from Richmond to Now Orleans. Probably other offices in Important commer cial centers will also bo established at a later date. Tho bureau has sent ono of its commercial agents, Mr. Ralph M. Odoll, an expert on cotton textiles, to the Orient, India, Straits Settlements, Java, Sumatra, French Indo-Chlna, Australia and New Zealand with a view to promoting the in terests of that important Industry. BUREAU OF FISHERIES Tho socrotary has boon informed by the com missioner of fisheries that advance reports re ceived from the fish-cultural stations of the bureau in all parts of the country Indicate that during tbe fiscal year which closod June 30, 1914, the number of food and game fishes prop agated and distributed by the bureau was con siderably In excess of that of any previous year. Tho output was approximately four billion, of which 485 million represented" the migratory fishes of tho Atlantic coast streams, one billion the commercial fishes of tho Great Lakes, two and one-quarter billion the important food fishes of the North Atlantic coast, over 200 million the salmons of the Pacific seaboard, and the re mainder the fishes of the minor interior waters. Distribution of flBhes suitable for stocking barren public waters, or for restocking public waters which have become depleted, were made In practically every state of tho union and In Alaska, while thousands of small Inland ponds and lakes, the majority of them located on farms, were stocked with black bass, crapples, sunfishes, catfishes, and other desirable species. Of the enormous output for the year, 98 per cent represents the commercial food fishes .and a very large percentage of these were hatched from eggs which would have been entirely lost had it not been for the activities of tho bureau of fisheries. Coincident with the augmented output there has been a decided improvement In the effective ness of various branches of the fish-cultural work, as an example of which may be mentioned tho rearing to the finererllng and yearly stages of many millions of fish formerly distributed as fry. Ths feature of the work is to receive even greater attention hereafter, as most decided ad vances may be made along this line. TRT3 SILENCES The silences are these: The twilight gloom, The calm before tho dawning when earth waits The lifle-flood surging through the morn's pearl gates, The solemn brooding of a cell of doom, The slumber shrouding round the crumbling tomb Of some great queen of long ago, who mates No 'mor6 with conquerors, whose loves and hates Are ono with her dark hair's rose-sweet per fume. In silence of the peaks white-crowned with snow, Of mountain lake whose midnight mocks the sky There weary hearts a silence sweet they know; But more than these, far more serene, sublime The restful sleep of those who nobly die! Arthur Wallace Peacm, 4 ,r. . SU u.. V CSSi.'