J I. APRIL 30, 1903. THE NEBRASKA INDEPENDENT. 11 THE REDWOOD IThal Forestry Can do for Thli Noble Troo Bnlletln From Bureau of Forestry Forestry and irrigation are two en terprises fn which the Adam Smith theory of laissez faire does not hold good The private owner of a forest does not, following his selfish in stincts, act in such a manner as to in ure to the benefit of society in all cases. The whole future good is ruthlessly sacrificed for the sake of immediate returns. But one cannot blame the private owner. He cannot be expected to be any more . far sighted or benevolent than other in dividuals. - Forestry is a proper matter to bo conducted publicly for the good of the whole people. A private capitalist cannot wait for "the long run;" he is looking after the ' now." He can not wait thirty, fifty, a hundred years to reap his harvest Society can. Right now any further extension of the private ownership of timber lands should cease. They should remain public property whatever remnant may be left . A bulletin from the bureau of for estry contains an interesting account of the redwood, well worth the pe rusal of Independent readers: What is to be done for the Red woods of the Pacific coast is a ques tion that has not only agitated Cali fornia, but Is of sentimental concern to the whole nation. The. bureau of forestry, attacking the problem in a thoroughly practical spirit, has worked out conclusions that should appeal as reasonable at once to the lumbermen, who cut redwood on ac count of its commercial value, and to those who wish this ancient and marvelous type of tree growth pre served. The results of this study are given in "The Redwood," bulletin 38 of this bureau, by R. T. Fisher, recently is sued by the department The Redwood forests are, in point of merchantable yield, probably the virgin redwood lands, and to hold such lands for a second crop. The study made concerns Itself with youn;; second growth, rather than with ma ture trees; with timbered areas rather than with the virgin forest Where attention was given the old forests and methods of lumbering, It was only that a better knowledge might be gained of second growth and how to deal with it The bureau's is the first systematic study of the redwood ever undertak en by a forester, and it has made clear several points about the life and habits of the tree that are little known. The redwood of California belong: to a genus of which the Big Tree is the only other species now alive. Both are allied to the cypress, and their lumber Is often called by the same name, but they are botanlcally distinct from each other. They do not even occupy the same situations. The Big Tree occurs in scattered bodies on the west slopes of the Sierra Nevada, while the redwood forms dense for ests on the vest slopes of the Coast Range. The redwood is popularly thought to occupy a strip of country 10 to 30 miles wide, from the Oregon line to the Bay of Monterery; but these boundaries do not cover its act ual distribution. Two thousand acres of redwood, in two separate groups, are growing in Oregon along the Chetco river. South of the Chetco a continuous redwood belt begins. By way of the river valleys and lowlands it increases its width from 10 miles at Del Norte county to 18 or 20 miles and keeps on unbroken to southern Humboldt county. Here, for about a township, it thins out, but becomes dense again 6 miles north of the Men docino line, and after entering that country widens to 35 miles, Its great est width. The redwood belt ends in Mendocino county, but- isolated for ests of the species, are growing in Creek canyon in the Santa Lucia mountains, Monterey county, 12 miles south of Puuta Gordo and 500 miles from the northern limit of the tree along the Chetco river. The J redwood grows to a greater densest on earth, manv stands vield ins 150.000 board feet to the acre: i height than any other American tree, and , redwood logging represent? the Dut in sirth and in age it is exceeded uy uie oig iiee oi ine Dierras. un the slopes 225 feet is about its maxi mum height and 10 feet its greatest diameter, while on the flats, under better conditions, it grows to be 350 sheltered spots as far south as Salmon feet high -".wit'i a diameter of 20 feet Most of the redwood cut is from 40) to 800 years old. After the tree has passed the age of 500 years it usually begins to -die down from the top and to fall off in growth. The oldest red wood found during the bureau's In vestigation ha I begun life 1,373 years ago. : -: The bark of -the tree offers such a remarkable resistance to fire that ex cept under great heat it is not com bustible. " It is of a reddish-gray col or, fibrous in texture and gives to full grown' redwoods a fluted appearance. Moisture available for the roots is the first need of the redwood, as any hil ly tract of forest will show. Wher ever a small gully, or bench, or basin is ?o placed-as to receive an uncom mon , amount of. seepage,, or wherever a creek flows by, there the trees are sure to be largest. While moisture of the soil affects the development of the redwood, moisture of the atmosphere regulates its distribution. The limits of-tbe sea fogs are just about the lim its of the tree. The fogs, unless scat tered by winds, flow inland among the mountains Western exposures receive most of the mist they carry, except those higher ridges above their reach! which support, in consequence, only a scattering growth of redwood The wood of the redwood varies greatly. Th-3 softest and best trees usually grow in the bottoms, th-3 "flinty" timber occurs on the slopes. But tliis rule does not always hold good. All sorts of unexpected and un accountable differences in the qual ity of the timber occur. J A soft, fin -i-grained tree will be found close be side one "flinty" and less valuable. Even the practical logger is never sure until he cuts it What kind of lumber a reiwood will yield. The tree's vitality is so great, it endures so manv vicissitudes and suffers from so many accidents in the centuries of its existence, that the grain of its wood becomes uneven in proportion as its life has been eventful. Th wood fibres formed under different rates of growth sometimes get up a tension so great that when the log is sawed (he wood splits with a loud report. The seed of the redwood will not germinate in shaded places; the small seedling demands plenty of light The crown is almost as thin and open as that of a larch, another sign that the tree is not naturally tolerant of shade. In a mixed stand the red wood'3 branches die off more rapidly highest development of the lumber ing business that has ever been at tained on the Pacific coast The to tal supply of redwood is estimate! to be 75 billion feet The amount cut in 1900 was 360 million feet, with a value of $3,645,608. Although only one-tenth of the forests of the United States is owned by; lumbermen, ac cording to the last census, one-fifth of the redwood is in their hands, and the stands they own are the bandP somest and most valuable in the Red wood belt. , Ever since the Spaniards began to cut redwood along San Francisco Bay the range of its growth has been di minishing; it now occupies an area of about 2,000 souare-miles. During the last 50 years several hundred thou sand acres of timber have been cut over, and the good lands put into cultivation or turned into pasture. A3 year by yea1 the Redwood forests have dwindled, it has come to be pretty generally believed that the tree is doomed to extinction. This popular idea that-the redwood has no chance of survival is not well founded. The studies of the bureau of forestry have proved that possibilities of a new growth of redwood after the old trees have been removed are ex-r cellent. Given half a chance, the red wood reproduces Itself by sprouts With astonishing vigor. - Measurements taken by the bureau-on cut -over land show that in thirty years, in a fair soil and a dense stand, trees will be grown 16 inches in diameter, 80 feet high, yielding 2,000 feet board meas ure to the acre. With the knowledge that the Red wood as a type need not become ex tinct, it is possible to consider the impending fate of the giant redwoods in the old forests with a more "cheer ful mind. Occasional parks and re creation grounds, such as the Big Basin Redwood Park of the Santa Cruz mountains, may preserve small areas of virgin redwood lands; but the richest, the densest, the most beautiful of the forest are owned by lumbermen, and will inevitably be cut The trees represent invested capital; they are merchantable and will yield a profit now, small as it is. .Besides, in the virgin stands most of them are past maturity, and the growth put on is inconsiderable. Ev ery consideration, then, induces the redwood lumberman, reasoning from his standpoint to cut his trees. Realizing that the fate of the old trees cannot be stayed, the bureau of forestry, instead of wasting itself in attempts to check the cutting, con fined itself to proving that it is worth while to the lumbermen to do less damage to the young trees In logging than those of it? companions, and the crown bends eagerly to places where the light enters the forest canopy. But In spite of these signs of its sensitiveness to light, the redwood forms one of the dsnsest forests that grow. The reason for this is that the stand is maintained chiefly . by suck' ering from old trees. Supported and nourished by full-grown roots and stems, young trees grow under shades that would kill the small seedling. The sprout will endure an astonishing amount of shade. In stands "of sec ond growth, sc. dense that not a ray of sunlight can enter, saplings G or 6 feet high are to be found growing from stumps, bare of branch, or fol iage except, for a few inch es of nal green crown at the top. In very dark, damp places in the virgin forest ono may find clamps of shoots as while as sprouts from a potato. Redwood possesses qualities whicn fit it for many uses. In color It shades from light cherry to dark ma hogany. It is easily worked, takes a beautiful polish, and Is one of the most durable of the coniferous woods of California. It resists decay so well that trees which have lain 500 years in the forest have been sent to the mill -and sawed into lumber. The wood is without resin, and offers a strong resistance to fire, as the record of fires in San Francisco, where it is much used, indicate. Insects seldom Injure It, because of an acid element it contains. In sea water, however, the marine teredo eats off redwood piling as readily as other timber. Redwood timber, says Dr. Hermann von Schrenk of the bureau of plant industry, possesses lasting qualities scarcely equalled by any other wood. Although very light and porous, it has antiseptic properties which pre vent the growth of decay-producing fungi. So far as is now known, none of the ordinary wood-rotting fungi grows in redwood timber. It is be cause of its resistance to most forms of decay that the redwood reaches such a great age. The Abdication cf Reason Editor Independent: Clarence S. Darrow, counsel for the miners, in a speech in Chicago said: "We have been trying the case as to how much wages, how much of the coal that the miner brings up shall be taken by him and how much by the operator, who has confiscated the earth. "The public has not yet been con sidered. The public never Is consid ered and hardly deserves considera tion. They let other men do their thinking; they let other men do their voting; they let other men make and enforce the laws, and, of course, they have no right to say anything about t ,The great public sits still while seven or eight railroad companies de- iberately take possession of all the anthracite coal which nature has placed in the bosom of the earth all of it They sit quiet while said com panies are organized into one heaJ and pass under one management; they Bit still while these same companies take possession of all the soft coal fields there are in this country. They raise no murmur while railroad com pany after railroad company is con solidated into one, until a single per son in Wall street may not only fix the price of every pound of coal we burn, but may determine absolutely whether we shall freeze or not." It was declared long ago by word of God: "My people are destroyed for ack of knowledge; because thou hast rejected knowledge I will also reject thee." (Hosea iv., 6.) Again: "The ox knoweth his owner and the ass his master's crib; but Israel doth not know, ray people doth not consider. Oh, sinful nation, a people laden with iniquity, a seed of evil-doers, children that are corrupters." The great material distinction be tween man and the brute creation is that of reason. Because of It the gos pel of eternity can be preached to the former. We are somade, and history and the present time shows the sure disaster that follows man's refusal to exercise his reason. Because man cannot be his own butcher, baker and candlestick maker he is led to be lieve that it is right in every partic ular (except his own trade, perhaps) to seek and submit to mental author ity. He does this in spiritual affairs, and his folly cannot be measured by its results in this life, nor leave an ex ample to warn his children who yet live. He does this in material mat ters, and lives a slave,- often worse off than the ox and the ass. The man who reasons becomes the master. It will always be thus. The man who reasons will wear the crowns of those who refuse to reason. There Is no sin of greater enormity in heaven's sight than that of. mental abdication to men or organizations. As a man sows he shall reap. The edict that shall stand for ail time has gone forth .- Refuse knowl edge and live of necessity the brute life that has not knowledge. The man who refuses knowledge has no right to pray. The mass of children abhor the school life because it entails the exercise and development of the men tal powers. In like manner the teach er who prods the public into intellect ual effort is detested. It is so much easier (?) to pay someone to do our thinking for us. We prefer sleeping to waking. Don't mal;e me think is the demand until we lose the power to do so and become so dead that the fir ing of a cannon of the caliber of that of Clarence S. Darrow fail3 to arouse us. I will strain my arms and break J Jttvfc 4i iitUJtUmi CaXUitr AiUUl BliU " rise to sunset, but I will not at all exercise my. mind further than the mere skimming of the surface of things. . ' "Knowledge is power." If In us it is for us, and will make possible the life that now is and that to come. If we intrust to others' generosity or honesty the knowledge that should be our own the power of it will accrue to them at an expense to us that is fatal. To know is half the battle, the other half lies in doing. LEVIN T. JONES (237). Baltimore, .Md. Experiments In Orchard Culture The Nebraska experiment station has just issued Bulletin No. 79, In which are reported the results of ex periments showing the effects of vari ous methods of culture on the growth and winter-killing of young orchard , trees. It was found that careful cultiva tion during spring and early sum mer conserves soil moisture and pro-. duces a thrifty, growth of young trees. Good cultivation in early summer can often be given by growing some cul tivated crop like vegetables or corn, in the orchard. , Uncultivated crops . like grass or small grain dry the ground early in the summer and in jure young trees very seriously. Cultivation continued late , in fall , may cause growth to continue very late and is often responsible for win ter-killing of tender trees. Cover- crops sown in midsummer cause trees to ripen their wood early, in prepara tion for wintr, and do not injure them like grain crops grown in early summer. ' Late cultivation, by leaving the ground bare, may increase the ten dency toward root killing in severe. winters, while cornstalks, cover-crops, etc., protect tree roots against severe freezing. Late growing cover-crops . or any method of culture that leaves the ground very dry In fall will in-, crease the danger of root injury. R. A. EMERSON, Agri. Experiment Station, Lincoln, Neb. W. E. Curtis has at last found out . and publishes the fact in the Record- Herald that "for some reason or an other there seems to be an impression prevailing in various quarters that this (trust) legislation was intended for political purposes to satisfy pub lic clamor against the trusts, and that the people are to be humbugged . by a demonstration that will amount to nothing and have no serious effect upon the adherence of the railway companies to the republican party or. diminish their contributions to its campaign fund." . , ' WANTKD SKVKRAI, INDUSTRIOUS PER- sons in each sta'e to travel for house estab. :shrd eleven years and w;th a larire capital, to call upon merchants and upends for successful and profitable line. Permanent enpafrement. Weekly cash f alary of fi8and all travelintr ex penses and hotel bil's ad' a' ced in cash each week. Experience nrt ewntial. Ment'on ref erence and etic'ose self-ad 'reed envelope. THE NATIONAL, 334 Pearborn St.. ChicKO. THE HANDY POCKET ACCOUNT BOOK. A SKLy-ivsTRt-CTOR In keeping private accounts In irstematle form, a business refkkknck and aocwnt book coiiibinrd, far pocket ase. i irssiy, nicely bound Pocket and flap. fOc postpaid. Fend M. O. or 2o stamps. If unatlsfactory and returned at once un damaged, money rctunded. Address F. O. Johnson, Pub., Marlon, Iowa. The republican party has got back ip its national, state and municipal legislative bodies to the status of the credit mobilier times which many men now living will distinctly remem ber. Turn th rascals out Readers of The Independent should write for the spring catalogues now offered free by advertisers. Buying by mail is as safe and more economi cal than buying over the counter. Try it and always mention The Indepen dent when writing. Good paint Is cheap. It will pay you to paint your house and barn this spring. See the special paint bargains offered by the Farmers Grocery Co. of this city in their ad. this week. Write for color card and mention The Inde- ' pendent I T""'f 77" 1