THE 3IOKMSG OREGOSIAN, TUESDAY, MARCH 12, 1907. fUUBBCRIPTIOX BATES. ty INVARIABI.T IN ADVANCE. . (By Mall.) falls'. Sunday Included, one year $8 00 Daily, Sunday Included, six months.... 4 25 ttly, Sunday Included, three month.. IS LHtUy, Sunday Included, one month. 78 lastly, without Sunday, one year....... .O0 Ually, without Sunday, six montha 3.2S Tally, without Sunday, three month.. 1-7J Dally, without Sunday, one month SO Funday, one year Weekly, one year (laeued Thursday)... 1-D0 Sunday and Weekly, one year - BY CARRIER. Tally, Sunday Included, one year 00 Dally, Sunday Included, one month TJ HOW TO RKM1T Send postoffice money order, express order or personal check on your local bank. stamps, coin or currency are at the sender's risk. Give poJtoBlce ad are In full, including- county and atata, POSTAGE KATE). Entered at Portland. Orecon. Foatotllce as Second-Class Matter. 10 to 14 ? ceat 16 to 28 Pae cents SO to 44 Paie. c,nU to 60 Pages cent Foreign Postage., double rates. IMPOKTAJaT The poetal lawi are strict. Newapapere on which postage Is not fully prepaid are not forwarded to destination.. EASTERN BUSINESS OFFICE. The 8. C. Berk with Special Axency New York, rooms 43-50 Tribune building. Chi cago, rooms S10-312 Tribune building. KKPT ON SALK. Culra no Auditorium Annex, l'ostofflce XfWi Co.. ITS Dtarbom stri-et. St. raul, Minn. N. it. Marie. Commercial Station. Denver Hamilton Hendrick. 008-S12 (seventeenth Blrect; TYatt Book Store, l'Jl Fifteenth street; I. tVelnsteln; II. 1'. Han sen. Kaunas City, Ma Rlcksecker Cigar Co., Ninth and tYolnut. Minneapolis M. J. Kavanaugh, 50 South Third; Eagle Ncivs Co.. corner Tenth and Klerenth: Yoma News Co. Cleveland, O. James Pushaw, 307 Su perior street. Washington, D. C Ebbltt House, Penn sylvania avenue. Philadelphia, Pa. Ryan's Theater Ticket office; Komble. A. P., 3735 Lancaster ave . ntie; I'enn Nows Co. New York ity I.. Jones Co., Astor House;; Broadway Theater News Stand. ItufTnlo, '. Y. Walter Freer. Oakland, fal. W. H. Johnson. Kour ' teenth and Krsnkltn streets; X. Whoatley: Oakland Nfwi Stand; Hale News Co. Oajden D. 1.. Boyle, W. G. Kind. 114 Tfnt-rth street. Hot Spring, Ark. C. N. Weaver & Co. Omaha fiurkalow Bros., 1612 Farnam; Staaestrt Stationery Co. riarramento, lal. Sacramento News Co., 4.: K slreel. Salt Lake Moon Hook & Stationery Co. Roseneld & Hansen. Lrffa Ansreles 13. K. Amos, manager seven street waBons. San niesro B. K. Amos. Long Beach, C'al. B. K. Amos. I'atiHdrna, ( 1 A. F. Horning. 'art Worth, Tn.-Fort Worth Star. Han Franelwo Foster A drear. Kerry Xtwi fctsnd: Hotel St. Francis News Btand; L, rsrent; N. Wheatley. f.oltltield, Nev. I-oule Follin. KitrekH, fsj. Call-Chronicle Agency. Norfolk, Va. Krueg & Gould. Pine Beach, Va. tv. A. l-'ofgrove. PORTLAND, TIE8DAY. MARCH 12, 1907. JTAITRFVL. AMONG THE F.UTHXESS. The New York politicians who wish to muke Mr. Hughes President of the United States are like the girl who married a man to get rid of him. From one point of view she accomplished her purpose, for the man no longer popped the question every- time he saw her, but the reason for his silence was not en tirely satisfactory- He no longer en treated; he was now able to command. It is to be feared, or hoped, that the politicians, In making Mr. Hughes President, would suffer a similar dis illusionment. They would be rid of that iron Integrity which they find, so strange and disconcerting in the Cap itol in Albany, and they might possibly, though not probably, succeed in replac ing Mr. Hughes, by' some invertebrate puppet of the sort they so dearly love, but they would ultimately be sub merged in a rising tid-e of popular sen timent, which would sweep them and their puppet away to the drlftpile of dead grafters that has grown so rapid ly of late and Is certain to grow faster and faster. That is their predestined home and -they are bound to go there, whether Mr. Hughes becomes President or not. but his succession to Mr. Roose velt would undoubtedly accelerate the doleful consummation. The grartor.s' trust seems to expect two definite advantages from promot ing Mr. Hughes to the White House. In the first place, as we have stated, they expect to replace him in Albany by some gelatinous creature who would reinstate the ancient methods of back stairs government and serpentine coun sels, which Hughes has abolished, and whose loss is to the grafters a perpet ual cause of woe. In - the sec ond place. they believe that his unbounded popularity would draw after him into office a whole host of questionable shapes who have otherwise not the shadow of a chance 1o be elected. Thus they would make of his promotion a double advantage to themselves anil a double disaster to the public. Are their calculations cor rect? "We hesitate to pronounce them entirely fHllH-oiouy. but there are one or two considerations which throw more or less doubt upon them. Mr. Hughes was chosen Governor of New York, we may remark, not be rause of his polities but because of his well-known character. Those traits and faculties of his, which the grafting pol . lticinns detest, are vell-beloved of the ieople, and they availed to save him from the ccneral wreck of his party at the last election. Should the Repub licans nominate for bis successor some complacent simulacrum of a man, is it conceivable that the people would obediently go to the polls and elect him? Have they so soon forgotten their hatred of graft? Has the emergent power to discriminate between good r.nd Kid in candidates which the voters displayed at the last election been sub merged again? "We do not believe it. Thu American electorate is not a fickle mob, either in New York or in any other stale. The moral awakening was not by any means an evanescent con vulsion of public opinion, but a stead fast change of heart. It was an inward growth both of the intellect and tha v ill. It was the result of deep thought upon problems that had lonsr perplexed. This being the case, it is credible that disappointment awaits t ho- graft ers' truxt. Their hore of being dragged Into office at the heels of some honest man like Mr. Hughes is much less likely to be realized than such hopes were two or three years ago. The ehanees are that if be were nominated for President he would receive the hon est vote of the Republican party and perhaps of the Democratic party, too; but very few of the slippery gang who bope to profit by his Success would achieve their ambition. If his name ' stood among his fellow -candidates on th ticket tike a star of the first mag nitude among a shower of muek. the voters would give him their ballots, but tuo muck the- would reject. The time lu.s gone by. let us hope forever, when the honeiy of an upright and cour- ageous man can be made to serve the crafty purposes of the rogues' combine through the stupidity an indifference of the voters. Mr. Hughe may not be nominated for President. But if he were, the contingency would afford un mingled satisfaction to decent people and would be utterly devoid of consola tion for rascals. NORMAT. SCHOOL ABCSE3. Much of the discussion of normal school appropriations is based upon ( the assumption that the objection to the schools is their cost to the tax payers. That is the least of the ob jections that have been urged. While the cost in dollars is worth considering, it is of secondary importance. The most important criticism is that from the very creation of the schools they have figured in trades upon all sorts of legislation. No other department of state business is made the subject of trades to such an extent as the normal schools. Their distribution In four counties, away from the capital, af fords the opportunity for trading. ' If some member of the Legislature has a bill which he-is anxious to have enacted and finds himself short of the required number of votes, he threatens defeat of a normal school appropria tion for the purpose of "lining rip" a member from a norma! county for his bill. The trading once begun accumu lates as it proceeds, like a snowball rolling down hill. It affects legislation as far removed; from the subject of normal schools as peanut politics is from statesmanship. Distribution of state' institutions over the state gives rise to this feature of legislation, especially when the Insti tutions are conducted largely as local rather than as state Institutions, as some of the normals have been. Another objection to the normal schools is that they have been, in ef fect, local high schools rather than state normals. The locations of two were not such as to make them good normal schools. For the maintenance of a properly-conducted normal school, doing purely normal school work, the state can afford to pay a liberal sum. For the maintenance of a system that interferes with legislation of all kinds it cannot afford to pay anything. The amount of money spent is of minor importance. It has been asserted that because the people gave a majority In favor of the appropriation bill submitted to vote under the referendum last June, they indorsed the present normal school sys tem. This conclusion Is not warranted. That appropriation bill contained items for the maintenance of the asylum and other institutions at Salem, for college improvements at Eugene and- Corvallis and for other objects 'besides the four normals. Had the bill been for the maintenance of four normals it would have been overwhelmingly defeated. The people did not believe that all the state institutions should be left with out funds. The people believe in normal schools, but they do not believe in four schools so located and managed that they form the basis for trades on all kinds of legislation. Control of all the schools by one board will remove much of -the influence of local Interest. When nor mal schools stand upon their own merits and the members of the Legis lature from Douglas, Jackson, Polk and Umatilla feel it no more of their busi ness than of anyone else to look after appropriations, the evils of the system will be removed. SHERIFF AND COl'SIT COL-KT. The Sheriff Is the proper custodian of the county prisoners, and is such custodian in every county in Oregon except Multnomah. In this county a large number of prisoners are employed in a rock-quarry. When taken there from the County Jail they are removed from the control of the Sheriff and put under that of the County Court. The Legislature at its last session passed a law extending the Sheriff's authority over the prisoners at the quarry, to work them "under the direction of the Conn ty Court," thus taking away from the County Court the control it now holds. The County Court fought the bill in the Legislature, and will now fight it by referendum. It is rather strange that the County Court should consider itself the only body fit to operate the rock-quarry. Even the most efficient man is not in dispensable to a business. He may think he is, but always finds he is not. Other men come forward to manage quite as well or better. The County Court nor the Sheriff is warranted in thinking that the quarry would be poorly operated If it or he were out of control. We take it. also, that the Sheriff is not absolutely necessary for managing the jail or controlling the prisoners therein. U But the Sheriff's natural duty is that of guarding the prisoners and holding them under his power during the period of their imprisonment. That is what he is elected to do in every- other county of the state. And that is really what he Is elected to do in Multnomah Coun ty. The county will not go to ruin if some other authority shall perform this duty nor if some other authority should perform the functions of the County Court. But the Sheriff and the County Court have certain distinct functions. delined by law and by custom. The function of guarding county prisoners, naturally, belongs to the Sheriff, as chief executive officer of the county, whether in the County Jail or else where. That of guarding state pris oners is vested in the chief executive officer of the state, the Governor, for the same reason. The Sheriff should be recognized as fit to have custody of prisoners from the time they are committed by the Circuit Court or Justice Court to im prisonment by the county until they are released or given over to the state authorities. While there are some County Judges and Commissioners who might look better wielding policemen's clubs, the framers of constitutions and of laws generally have not seen fit to vest them with such authority. The County Court serves as a board for "transacting county business." the quoted words being those of the state constitution. This business is that of making and maintaining roads and en tering Into, contracts therefor, building bridges, purchasing supplies for the county and generally administering Its afTalrs. Its duties are not executive, as those of the Sheriff. It is rather presumptuous for the County Court to claim to itself the sol' fitness for managing the fock-quarry. The work of crushing stone is no essen tial part of the road-building duty of the County Court. The County Court built roads many years before it had a rock-quarry, and other counties are. doirg this now. The County Court of Multnomah established the quarry for the purpose primarily of affording work for county prisoners. The crushed-rock product of their labor, while valuable to the public, is not the real object of the quarry. Confinement of the prisoners, with healthful em ployment, is the main consideration. If the quarry were operated by free labor instead of by prison labor, as a strictly money-saving plant, the County Court would be the proper body to manage it. But it is conducted as a prison, and the stone-crushing plant is operated for the purpose of affording its inmates employment, a manner that win yield the county some return. For this reason the Sheriff should conduct the plant under the direction of the Coun ty Court." The legislative act, which the County Court is fighting, provides that the Sheriff shall collect fiom the county 12V4 cents for each meal fed) to each county prisoner. The County Court al leges that this price is too high and that the Sheriff would make J4000 a year "graft" out of it. That, however. was about the graft of Sheriff Storey and Sheriff Word when they collected 17',4 cents a meal from the. county. That was 5 cents more than Sheriff Stevens would receive, and was paid by the county whert the Sheriff did not have to pay as big prices for provisions as now. Under, these circumstances it does not seem reasonable to assert that Sheriff Stevens would make 14000 an nual graft. He .might make a small margin of profit, but certainly nothing to approach that which accrued to other Sheriffs. ' The 12tfc-cent meal price is not ex cessive, and the Sheriff claim that he should have custody of the prisoners is reasonable. The legislative ' act should become a law. The county court prob ably, however, can prevent the act from becoming a law during the pres ent term of the Sheriff, since a referen dum will hold it ud until the election of Juno, 1908, when Stevens' successor will be elected. - In the acTimoTrious fight between the County Court and the Sheriff, this in itself will be a triumph for the County Court, and the latter evi dently thinks it worth trying. BRIMSTONE IN FARAIIS. The odor of boiling -brimstone which permeates the atmosphere of the Wil lamette Valley is not to be taken as evidence that this beautiful region has any .characteristics in common with those infernal regions, where brimstone forms the land:and sea and fills the air with Its deadly fumes, far from it. In -Hades brimstone bums; in the Wil lamette Va-lrey it bolls. That is a dis tinction with a difference. And yet, if reasoned out toy far-fetched arguments, there might foe found some distinct re lationship 'between the conditions. wihleh give rise to the noxious odors floating over the hills and dales of this garden-spot of America, and. the con ditions which are supposed to exist in the lower regions. An illustrious American .warrior is authority for. the assertion that "War is hell." And there Is war in the Wil lamette Valley war .upon San Jose scale, moss and other enemles'of Ore gon fruit. Hence the odor of brim stone, which is boiled in making the solution with, which the trees are sprayed. No sinful soul that ever went to the lake of fire was more certain of destruction than is the hapless scale insect that falls victim to the lime-sul phur bath. If man could see this di minutive insect and -understand his language as the shower of spray falls about defenseless head, beyond a doubt the last audible despairing cry would be, "This war is hell." A few years ago an enterprising city up the Valley issued an advertising pamphlet, entitled, "Adam and Eve Lost Paradise We Have Found it." To be more in accord with truth, the assertion should have been, "we are finding it." Paradoxical though it may seem, the fact is that- liberal" use of brimstone is necessary to make a para dise out of the Willamette Valley. Dis eased and dying fruit trees, gnarled and scrubby, have no place in the Eden of Holy Writ and of Milton's - poetic description. There was no San Jose scale in Eden, else the apple tree would have borne no fruit that could have tempted Eve or her conscienceless spouse. The Willamette Valley can lay no claim to possession of the conditions that prevailed in paradise until it has exterminated the pests that mar the beauty and productiveness of its fruit trees. When vigorous use of the prun-ing-knife has removed the tangled twigs iu the tree-tops, and liberal ap plication of lime-sulphur spray has loosened the long drapery of moss and cleansed the limbs and branches of scale, then it will be time to put forth the claim with some assurance that the people of the Willamette Valley hLve touno paradise. In the meantime let -the odor of boil ing brimstone be wafted on every breeze throughout the length and breadth of the Valley. It may be an unpleasant odor to the casual passer by, but to those who know that it means the regeneration of Oregon or chards It will not be offensive. Tjet us have some of the fumes of Hades to day, in order that we may enjoy the fruits of paradise tomorrow. THE EVII OF BOILED WATER. Many communities in stress of epi demic or menace of typhoid have had recourse to -boiled water as the only known means of safety from Infection through water-borne germs of 'that most justly dreaded filth disease. That water thus created Is rendered- unfit to drink from the standpoint of taste everybody knows who has .been forced to use it. as a means of safety. In addition- to its Insipidity and- unsatis fying qualities as a beverage, it is now asserted, upon French medical author ity, that many troubles of the stomach and intestines have been traced to its use. This Is absolutely startling. The general belief hitherto has been that boiled water was absolutely safe, and that its flat, insipid taste was atoned for in its hygienic qualities. Now we are told that boiling the water, while it sterilizes it, makes It unfit to drink, first, because It is thus totaiiy deprived of the air which water normally holds in solution, and is made heavy and in digestible by this lack of aeration; in the second place, the carbonates of lime are precipitated, which injures its flavor, and finally, the earthy matters in suspension are also precipitated, making it insipid. To obviate these many disadvan tages, a French scientist tells us that we must discard the water that has been boiled and use water sterilized by heat under pressure, "which, is alone able to answer all hygienic demands. Numerous devices have been invented, by means of which it Is possible to raise the water to a temperature of 302 degrees F.. preventing escape of the dissolved air and not allowing the sep aration and precipitation of the soluble compounds.- When these conditions impossible iu the ordinary home are fulfilled, then and only then, we are told, will water, sterilized from the micro-biological standpoint, retain its or ganic properties, remain drinkable, easily digestible and perfectly harm less. The belief that boiled water ia ab solutely safe as a beverage is thus rudely dispelled, though a choice be tween typhoid and other "enteric troubles will favor taking chances with the latter by drinking the insipid stuff. A writer in a current medical mag azine, in discussing the Importance of the pre serration of' hearing and the need of (giving attention ' to the first sign of a failure of this sense, says that one cause for neglect in this matter is that Nature has given to man many times the amount of percep tion of sound In a normal con dition of hearing ' that is needed in densely centralized oomtrwinitles. It Is even asserted that a young: person may lose 99 per cent of this fac ulty before he is conscious of its Im pairment. Noise toeing one of the great accompaniments of strenuous life to day, some dullness of the acute, native endowment of hearing can scarcelyi be reckoned as a misfortune. Just Imag ine the Impact upon one's nerves If the noises of a great city were 99 per cent more distinct than they are now! Confusion rnore confounded would reign, and the person with quiet, med itative mind would be fain to flee to the very ends of the earth if thereby he could flna respite from the infernal din. ' In this view, a moderate degree of deafness is not to be considered a misfortune, but a blessing, rather. At the "middleman" many hard blows are aimed these days, but not many effective hits are made. The. lat est movement against middlemen, is the organization of hotel and restaurant- keepers in New York for the purpose of buying supplies without paying- a profit to the middleman. The prune grower and apple grower and ' fruit can ner can see some sense in that. Here's hoping that the' New Tork Co operative Hotel and Restaurant Associ ation, or whatever it may be called, will buy direct from the organiza tions of Oregon producers, thus saving at each end of the line some of the profits of .go-betweens. A Justice of the United States Circuit Court in - New Tork has ruled that in , a libel case the article complained of must be tak en and considered as a whole and that it Is not permissible to base the charge of libel upon isolated extracts. And such a rulinier is no more than common sense. To .pick out a- single sentence of a publication to show the libel would, in many cases, he a direct misrepresentation of the general thought andi purpose of the whole ar ticle. In the New Tork Legislature a bill has been introduced foi- the establish ment of a closed season for frog-hunting. The newspapers are inclined to treat it as a joke, but the author as serts that the frogs kill mosquitoes and other injurious 'insects, and should be protected from depletion by the merci less ' hunters 'who find a market for them at fashionable restaurants. There is more merit in the bill than in many measures that find their way into leg islative records. If it IS true, as Mr. Trill declares, that he did not - read Senator Bever- idge's address prior "to the day upon which be was to deliver his oration, then it is up to the faculty of Willam ette University to apologize for the resolutions adopted condemning their representative in the intercollegiate de bate, or else explain how the Beveridge expressions got into the Trill oration. If part of the Beveridge speech, was stolen and Trill did not do it, who did? . If the newcomers from the East will stay here 18 months and then go back to their old homes for a Winter's visit with friends, they will return to Ore gon to remain as long as they live. In the enjoyable climate of Oregon peo pie sometimes forget the .rigors of Eastern W'inters, but a short renewal of old experiences is enough to con vince the most obdurate that Oregon cannot be excelled by any Eastern state as a pleasant place to make a home. In undertaking a war upon the opium vice, the United States is leading a movement that should, and undoubted ly will, have very beneficial results. Upon Great Britain this work would most Justly fall, for to the cupidity of that country is due thei introduction of the opium habit, where 1t has its strongest hold. Co-operation in an aggressive campaign against this eiil affords the most promising outlook for success. If this should prove to be an off-year for the hopgrowers, owing to a large carry-over stock, most of them are in a position to stand it, for there have been -profitable crops in recent years. But it is yet too early -to predict. The sprouts ara barely out of the ground, and there is nothing- upon which to base an estimate of the crop in foreign countries. , Germany's upper-tendom refuses the efforts of leading ladies to pledge them not to commit immoral acts for a perl od of one year. They deny that they have committed or intend to commit any immoral acts. That settles it. The right way to find out whether the aris tocrats of any country are immoral is to ask them. The woman who entertained a crowd on the streets Saturday night by try ing to take her husband away from the company of another -woman will remember that there Is still in exist ence a system of ethic long ago de scribed as having two principles, "hate your neighbor and- love your neighbor's wife." A Salem woman complained because the law requires her husband to pay more for a dog license thah he did -for a marriage license. She might get some Consolation out of the fact that it will cost less to kill the dog han to get a divorce. On March 21 the world's greatest cir cus will leave its Winter quarters in New Tork and start on its annual tour. This is merely to . let the small - boy know it's coming. Twenty-nine ele phants, count 'em, twenty-nine! It may be safely assumed that most of the homeseekers now crowding transcontinental trains into Oregon will stay. Men don't travel for pleasure in March. . NEW FOREST RESERVES DESCRIBED Additional Withdrawals as Made in Northwest States, by Order of President Roosevelt, March 4 OHT3SONIAN NEWS BUREAU. Wash ington, March 6. (Special Correspond ence.) The President, on -the day that Congress adjourned, created permanent forest reserves, which embrace all pub lic timber land in Oregon, Washington, Idaho, Montana. Colorado and Wyoming, known or believed to be chiefly valuable for forestry purposes. There may be other land of this type not included, but if so, the probabilities are that it will never be included within a forest reserve, because the agricultural appropriation bill, signed March . prohibits the crea tion 'of further reserves in the six states named, except by act of Congress. Adding the area of reserves just created to the area of those created in the past. it is found that the total reserve area of Oregon is now 16.552. 72S acres, in Wash ington 12,076.600 and in Idaho 20.015,768 acres. The Forest Service has issued a state ment giving a general description of those recently created, as follows; ORKGOX. Cascade "Reserve. The recent additions to the Cascade National forest are comparatively small, 614.000 acres, consisting of a number of mountainous, timbered and burned-over areas on the high spurs running out from the Cascade Range. The lands, except about 1 per cent, are of such 8. character as to make settlement impossible, yet they are capable, with proper protection, of producing heavy stands of timber. The smalt additions on the northeast and east sides will be of value In- pro tecting the Irrigation projects which are developing near The Dalles and in the valley of Des Chutes River. Ininaha Reserve. By the President's recent proclamation creating the Imnaha Reserve the National forests formerly known as the Wallowa and Chesnimnus have been combined. Be sides the area included in them, approxi mately 780,000 acres of new lands have been added. These lands consist of the extremely, rugged region which consti tutes the breaks o'J the 'Salmon River Canyon. The lands rise precipitously from the Snake River with an altitude of about 1000 feet to one of 6000 feet at the summit of the range. The entire area Is cut up Into canyons with very steep slopes. Timber is found over the whole area on the protected slopes, in the coves and in the canyon bottoms, but the con ditions are such that under a proper sys tem of management the forest area may be greatly extended. What little agri cultural land is included has already been taken up and settled. This is a rugged mountain region which will never be settled, and it is very advisable that lit be placed permanently under the Gov ernment management. Tillamook, Umpqua and Ooquille Reserves. These three National forests are sit uated in the ns ct nanff. t. - - - -1 vicuit n i iii extend in the form of a narrow, broken tJ'-" ' i '.in imamooK V oun r y to Curry County. Their areas are: Tillamook. 165. 000 acres? fTmnniia Sn9 mn oa i ... quille, 119,000 acres. The lands embraced wiimra mem are -either heavily timbered or lie within extensive old burns. The slopes are very steep, the soil rocky, the country is cut up by numberless canyons, and Is thus unsuitable for agriculture. As factors in the future lumber industry of Oregon, these National forests are go ing to be very important. Practically all of the land included within them is cov ered with the hpAviV v-in -. i of young timber, and most of it bids fair cxwirent quajiry. xne (Joquille In particular contains a great deal of young Port Orford cedar, which is prob ably the best timber on the Coast. Siskiyou Reserve. The recent addition of 446,290 acres to ueiiiuu .-vauonat j? orest Keserve in- ciuaes tne area which it was orielnali in tended should be reserved and which h been withdrawn from settlement since jwjs. wnen the district was carefulK- n amlned in the field and the lands classi- nea. mis is primarily a timbered resrinn and certain portions of the Siskiyou con tain splendid stands of pine, fir, hemlock and Port Orford cedar. Considerable areas, however, lie within old burns and contain only young timber. Some of these latter areas nave great prospective value Less than 2 per cent of this national for est consists of agricultural land, for the lines were drawn with a view to exclud ing everything that would support a nona nae settler. ' There was considerable opposition to the creation of the. Siskiyou National forest on the part of the people who de sired to obtain title to the valuable timherlands. The southeastern portion of the Siski you is of great importance in protecting and encouraging irrigation development in the Rogue River Valley and up the tributaries of this stream. Wcnalia Addition. By the President's recent proclamation there have been added to the Wenaha National forest approximately 70.000 acres. The lands added form - a atrip varying rrom lour to eix miles In width lying between the former boundary and the Umatilla Indian reservation. With the exception of two or three iirks situ ated In the interior ao that they could not well be excluded, the lands are all forested, and on a portion of It the timber is very valuable. The entire area -lies on the headwaters of streams which fur nish the water for the Umatilla project of the United States Reclamation Service, and the protection of the lands from over grazing and indiscriminate and careless lumbering- operations is considered abso lutely necessary by the Reclamation Serv ice for the success of the project Ashland Reserve. , By the recent proclamations app-roxt roately 154.000 acres have been added to the Ashland National forest. The en- tire area added consists of mountain land. not valuable for agriculture, but of an extraordinary value for growing timber. Like all Western Oregon, the climate is mild, the seasons very long and the precipitation great, exactly the condi tions under which timber grows most rapidly and reaches the greatest develop ment. A very large portion of the area has been burned over and the timber de stroyed, which accounts for the fact that It has not yet been taken up under any of the land laws, under proper adminis tration. such as the Forest Service pro poses to give it. these lands will be pro tected from further destruction by fire and conditions necessary to reforestation secured. Under good management the burned-over areas -will, after 40 years. yield commercial timber, and the area will thereafter bring in a permanent in come, to the community and to the Gov ernment. If it is not properly managed, the probability is that fire will practical ly prevent the production of a commer cial crop of timber. . WASHINGTON. Washington Reserve Extension. The addition to the Washington Na tional forest is a very larg;e one, 2.275.- 000 acres, and includes the country be tween the old Washington and the ML Rainier National forests. It covers the mala range of the Cascade Mountains and extends down the heavily timbered eastern and western slopes to approxi mately the upper limit of agricultural land. Less than 2 per cent of the area is suitable for settlement. That por tion lying west of the divide is of value chiefly for the production of timber and the protection of streams which will be extensively used for the gen eration of power. It is for the most part covered with a heavy stand of mature fir, cedar and hemlock, though there are large areas of barren land upon the higher portions. - The eastern slope, is also well tim bered, but with timber of a different kind, there being a great deal of pine and larch. This portion is of exceed ingly great value for protecting the irrigation projects of the Yakima, We- natchee. Chelan, Methow and Okano gan Valleys. The creation of this National forest has long been contemplated and the lands have been withdrawn from set tlement for several years. It would probably have been created two or three years ago had it not been for the arge amount of alienated land which. previous to the repeal of the lieu se- ection law, might have been used as base for scrip. Both the Great North ern and the Northern Pacific Railroads cross the area. A great deal of the timber, therefore, is accessible and will at once come into the market, to be cut under appropriate regulations. Rainier Reserve. The additions that have been made to the Mount Rainier National forest. 730,000 acres, are the Ashford and the Mount St. Helens additions on the west side, and a number of small areas on the south hear the Columbia Kiver, also a Bmall area on the east near the Tieton reclamation project. The lands included are all either heavily timber ed or covered with dense stands of young timber. Most of the new area lies within burned-over regions and is situated on steep, rocky spurs of the Cascade Range. There is less than 1 per cent of agricultural land Included for the boundary was - drawn with great care to exclude all lands suit able for Homestead settlement. The addition on the east is of value in protecting the reclamation project. but the protection of the timber Is the main reason for the additions. Olympic Reserve. The additions to the Olympic National Forest are merely a few small areas gregating 119,000 acres which have been withdrawn from settlement for some time, They are heavily timbered, but for the most part lie within old bums. The lands are absolutely unfit for agricultural purposes, lying as they do on high, steep slopes of the Olympic Range. All of the additions carry a great deal of dead cedar and a dense stand of young fir, cedar, and hemlock. The additions on the western side were formerly included within the Olympic, but were thrown out together with a great deal of similar heavily timbered lands, the unfortunate elimination of 1900. The main reason for the additions Is to protect the young timber, which is in dan ger of being destroyed. Colville Reserve. , The area embraced within the Colville National Forest is 857,200 acres.. It lies immediately north of the Colville Indian Reservation and includes only the higher portions of the three groups of mountains which extend southward from British Col umbia in that locality. A very careful examination of this territory was made during the Summer of 1905. when the tlnr ber was mapped and the lands classified Less than 2 per cent of the area is agri cultural. The greatest care has been ex ercised in drawing the boundaries so as to exclude practically all of the agricultural land which in this part of Washington is already quite valuable and will ultimately be In great demand. The Colville contains a large quantity of excellent timber, including yellow pine, fir, and larch, which becomes immediatcly avallable. The higher portions have thick stands of lodgepole pine, Engelmann spruce, and alpine fir. The timber will largely be needed for local use when the country is settled up. for It is expected that the rich land under irrigation will support a heavy population. Only a small area in this locality is under irrigation at present, but many small projects are un der way and there is every Indication that all of the streams, and there are a great many of them which rise in these mountains, will be used to Irrigate grain and fruit ranches in the lower valleys along the Columbia and the Okanogan. The Okanogan project of the Reclama tion Service will depend in some measure on this National forest. Priest River Additions. By the President's recent proclama tion there has been added to the Priest River National Forest approximately 300,000 acres, lying In the State of Washington. . This covers the western slope of Pend d'Oreille Range, which extends northward about BO miles from the line of the Great Northern Railroad to the Canadian boundary. The range is from 6J00 to 8300 feet high and much of It is above timberline. Along the Pand d'Oreille River, outside of the lands reserved, there is a small area of agricultural land. The lands re served are without exception suita-ble IF THIS "BRAIN-STORM" (SCENE IN A CERTAIN NEW YORK THIS I CgSSS. TZ'sTOMIZ "B j" rV 5L25fi2 nilLc ill e ja LiJ lj .mKW . , . only for forest purposes. The condi tions here are very similar to those of the western slope of the Cascade Mountains of Oregon and Washington and the forests are very dense and the stands very heavy. The Summer season Is dry, and owing to the ex posure of this mountain range the lands have been badly burned over. After severe fires in this region tne lands grow up to a species of chapar ral which effectually prevents repro duction of the forest. The area is not valuable for grazing or agriculture. and Is a purely timber-producing tract. If it is ever to be of any value to tho community or to the Nation, the remaining forests must be protect ed from fire and the burned-over lands reforested. This work can best be done by the Government, and under good management there is no doubt that these lands can be made a permanent source of income. Welscr Reserve. By the new proclamation for the Weiser National Fortst. three changes in boundary are secured. The most im portant is the elimination of 14.40.1 acres of grazing and agricultural land along the east slope of the canyons of Salmon and Little Salmon Rivers, in townships 23, 24 and 25 north, range 1 cast. This area was unsurveyed when the National forest was created, so that it was impossible to determine exactly the location of the proposed boundaries. A narrow strip of timbered land, aggregating about 8000 acres, ly ing along the south slope of Cuddy Mountain, is added to the reserve area. Also the Snake River is for a long dis tance made, the west boundary of the Seven Ievils Division. This will greatly simplify administration, since . the line as previously established fol lowed along the breaks of the river in a country almost impassable on account of its steep and rugged char acter. The change will be. of advan tage equally to tha stock Interests and to the Government. IDAHO. Big Hole Reserve. The lands recently added to the B!g Hole Notional Forest amount to approxi mately 2?O.0CO acres located in the. north eastern portion of Idaho on the conti nental 'divide. The lands are. wholly mountainous and without any value what ever for agricultural purposes. The sup ply of timber in this region is very lim ited. The- water rising in the area is used for irrigation and the interests of the set tlers living adjacent to the reserve de mand that protection of the timber nnd water supply which Is given by the Gov ernment in its adininistraton of the -National forests. Port Neuf Reserve. The Port Neuf lies in Bannock County 15 miles east of Payette, and covers. about 100,000 acres. The highest peaks run up to over 9000 feet and the Port Neuf River circles around the reserved area on the east, south and west. The average pre cipitation is about 12 inches and part of this is snow. An open growth of lodge pole pine, red fir and quaking aspen oc curs in strips, usually above the flOno foot level. The timber is of value ehieny for fuel, house logs and fencing. The reserve is a most important part of the water shed of the Port Neuf River, in the valley of which the ranches are entirely de pendent on irrigation. The protection f the forest cover on the mountain Is there fore of vital importance. Palouse Reserve. The Palouse National fiorest contains approximately 180.000 acres on the head waters of the Palouse River in Northern Idaho. These lands are natufal forest lands of very high value for their timber and of no value for agriculture. This National forest covers the headwaters of the Palouse River, whose waters the Reclamation Service proposes to divert to desert lands in Washington. The en tire watershed of the Palouse River lies in a comparatively low altitude and the stream flow is very irregular, since there are no snow fields above timber line from which It is fed during the Summer. It Is, therefore, more than usually im portant to secure those conditions which tend to provide a steady flow, and the preservation of the forests on the head waters of the stream and the protection, of the lands from overgrazing is the only practicable means -of accomplishing this end. Under the management of these tim herlands under the regulations of the De partment of Agriculture, the mature tim ber will be removed but without injury to the forest or to the water supply and' the lands grazed under regulations which will insure the greatest protection to tho Water supply and to the stockmen a . range whiqh will be kept permanently 1n good condition. IDAHO, MONTANA, vVTOMIXG. Yellowstone Reserve. The lands added to the Yellowstone Na tional forest by the recent proclamation of the President amount to about 34. 000 acres situated in Montana, Wyoming and Idaho. They are identical in charac ter with those already within the reserve, and the same conditions which led to the creation of the original reserve, the necessity of the protection of the water supply and the timber, brought , about the addition of this area. INVESTIGATION KEEPS UP From the Denver Republican. COI RT ALONG ABOUT 1935 A. IJ. '