IS .WE MQRHING- OBEGOMAN,. TUESDAY, JANUAEY 1, 1901 m ROSSINQ the California-Oregon lln6 and proceeding north-wards I a great change takes place In forest life. The giant redwooa gives way to the Oregon pins end the California post cedar to the red cedar. Tide-land spruce, hemlock, sugar pine 4nd yellow pine also appear. Nearly all these species attain their maximum development between the Columbia River and Puget Sound, and each In Its own pe culiar environment may be found on through Oregon, "Washington, British Co lumbia and into Southern Alaska. Here they are crowded close to the coast, and northward and above them to the line of everlasting snow extends the Alaskan cedar. The great forests of the North Pacific are nourished by the Japanese current, .Near the entrance to Puget Bound the rainfall averages nearly low Inches annually. The climate Is mild, enow seldom falling. The -vegetation is very dense, valleys, hills and mountain ridges, are one -vast forest, the trees stand ing close and high. Beneath, covering the ground, are-dozens of varieties of brush, large and email. Farther back from th coast the rainfall decreases, the woods are less dense, and when the summit of the Cascades 4s reached open pineries re place dense fir forests. Of these -varieties She trade known as the Oregon sugar and yellow pines, the Ted cedar and, to a sight extent, the tide-land spruce. Oregon has 234,653,000,000 feet, board tneasure, of standing timber, and WashT tngton 114,778,000,000 feet. In Oregon the timber Is mainly found in the Coast Range and on the west slope of the Cas cades. Lone County has more timber than any other county in the state. .It 5ias 23,800,000,000 feet. Douglas Is a close second with 23,854.000,000 feet. Clatsop, with 15,476.000.000 feet, follows, and from hat on the stand runs to 400,000,000 In Gil liam and none In Sherman. The following table shows tho geograph ical distribution of timber in Oregon: Feet Board Measure. Coast Ranges .102 10S 000 000 "West slope of Cascades 87.0S3 000,000 East slope of Cascades 27,534,000,000 Eastern Oregon 17,92S,000,000 Total 234,C33,000,000 Coincident wjth Eastern interest In Or egon forests, "the Government is paying ji&wtm .tWt JeWiPWtS-P&tvfKlj!s3k i vviiue nr a si jmw.yiiifcjuu . ySSlflMk ' Afflne":::::::::::::: 5.1 :o2 T " ",injw vitrt, , -,-.".. -3OT i KtWfl. Western hemloc'c ... .1 0 n - J. i Ma sr-J3 vyg jms-$4ftki& y&.&lffl$liy& ! Alnine hemlock 6o 1. A . .& nl J 6 3&6 5k sTh PiJnh'LMiM. :- Engelmann spruco... .6 .23 J Alss, k& I $ J&&frk2k ska WW$MWi. ' Incense cedar 06 .75 m 5 - $&&. $ JRK. M l & MfttSM HI MWJmWmmSm. I Western juniper 35 1.00 C " - 4.-5S,rfc ff$f3- "H r Mm&frmt P03 B'f I Tne yellow PJne easily ranks above all J -.- JjSlsfS rlMOn n t 1 MttSm&MsM frU WfrTr-frTW"mWTii I of the other species on the Eastern slopw. 1 'ii&-ffijt 1 I I 1 Jl 1 S4?JfaWlBfl ff The reason for this lies chiefly In the SElHHPSSiEaK JBK!I!&3C3S!iEMil&sg 733bAs&JBaK!BBSB ? j TmrilMCT JffltlJMMrT Irani iiu-lFi Si T s ,uaftjt:x mil aSilMsffqgEcjcySi iWRWSp M$.HraaW T HHRf- W Wfc:flwP!!fi CWXUSiJBlM raliMrasraM --m -m m , I , , , .mi t--- i - - - -- . aBTF jP" -X v TTTI W nM iTmT frafMTWMTMMraraMraMrarar ll MM W M M A . u W BsHV IT IPWtSsnHlHllVB 4- X JWfc Srf' 7 Tt,V v XKere are no forests HKe those of Oregon and "VasHington. The Doug' las fir, of tese endless forests, is tKe most valuable for general merchant able purposes in the -world. more attention to them. Last June A. J. Johnson, forestry expert of Oregon, for the United States Geological Survey,. wa sent East of the Cascades and he spent nearly six months investigating forest areas. He located and reported 1.000 000.000 feet of the timber the existence of which had not heretofore been known to tho Government. The principal varieties of this discovery are jellow pine, tamarack, lodge-pole pine, white flr and mountain spruce. Much sugar pine is scattered over the buttes of Southern Oregon in districts visited by Mr--Johnson. There are hun dreds of thousands of acres bearing noth ing but Juniper and mountain mahogany. These trees have value for fencing and fuel. The Juniper Is very durable and makes a good fence post. The mahogany grows to five or six inches In diameter and Its -value as fuel is said to be equal to nut coal, So great Is the demand for timber that timber lands have advanced in price lOu per cent In the past two years Quarte. sections "which af ew years ago could have been bought for5 an actehave advanced to $10, while land for which $10 was asked has risen In some Instances to $25 Prices range all the way from $600 to $4500 pei quarter section, according' to the amount Of timber the cruiser reports, together with ltd accessibility to navigable streams. "WatUington' Merchantable Timber. The area of merchantable timber in Washington Is little less than half of that of Oregon "While the wooded areas of the two states do not differ materially, Oregon's being 54 300 square miles and Washington's 47.700 square miles, a much larger proportion of the wooded area of Oregon Is covered with timber of mer chantable size and species For example, the Cascade Range In Washlntgon Is much broader than In Oregon and at a much greater altitude, thus cutting out a larg er part of the wooded area. The 01 j m plc Mountains also subtract another large part of the wooded area. The lumber industry of Washington has, especially in recent Tears, attained a much larger development than In Oregon, consequently a more extensive area has been cut over. In 1890 the cut of Wash ington was more than double that of Or egon, the alues of production standing at $17,007.06 and $7,065,425, respectively. Washington is naturally divided into " ' fKEgBFggqMI y W'S HxHIJlEME IlEIEHl -rr't m I r v?Nr ' THT-i N niilil mK i '"'Ii i IHEIEIEP E.s?jr??s mh. : -- ! -lrr,,:-. I .r - - zm "iHBgacaEHKa r two parts, which differ widely from each other in respect to timber growth. The line of division is the crest of the Cas cade Range, running north and south through the state. West of the range the country is heaUly forested, or was be fore lumbering operations began. In this part of the state the areas naturaally de void of timber are few and small, and altogether trifling in proportion to tho total area. East of It the land Is mainly without timber, and where timber exists it Is sparse and its quality Is Inferior. Moreover, there Is a vast difference in the species. West of the Cascades the pre vailing species which forms nearly two thirds of the entire forest Is red or yellow flr. This, with cedar, hemlock and spruce, composes the forest. Fir Is found In al most all parts of. this region, and through out the Sound valley little of any other species is found, the forests being almost pure fir. East of the Cascade Range the forest consists mainly of pine, principally jellow pine, though In the northeast coh ner of the state a little white pine Is in termingled. Red fir is found scatterea through the pine forests in considerable proportion and In the nbrtheastern part of the state larch Is abundant. Small proportions of hemlock and cedar are found and a trifling amount; of spruce and oak. Stand, by Species. The following table gives the stand of timber of the species recognized by lum bermen, with the percentage which each bears to the total amount. Feet Per Cent Species. board measure, of total. Red Fir r.63,338,421,000 60 Cedar 16 309,453 000 14 Hemlock 14848259.000 13 Pine 6.5S6520000 6 Spruco 6,419,215,000 5 Larch 2,078,601.000 2 White Fir 24550000 Oak 3.700,000 The entire area of Washington Is 66,880 square miles Of this, 23,165 square miles, or 36 per cent, are covered with mer W&m K Yellow pine 27 5 68 fii HjS b Sugar pine 2 8 .9 65a. SI Ifl White pine 36 .05 Lafi".. J SB!I1PIK I White bark pine 03 01 oSswrS SnS &2S?8,j$W. I Lodge pole pine 6 3 22 6 rkfMW EsM 8Ja?T5fW I Red fir 44. 122 jm3lBB.3 KP fiAjjggmi A in.;, ii mi - K chantable timber. Only one-half of the wooded area of the state is regarded as containing merchantable timber, 'in oth er words, out of an area of 15,858 square miles formerly covered with merchantable timber, 20 per cent haa been cut; 22 per cent destroyed by fire, and the re mainder, 57, per cent. Is still covered with standing timber. In the entire area theie are only ,833 square- miles which are naturally tlmberles,s. Assuming that the logged area contained on an-average tho same amount of timber per acre as is still standing In other areas, it appears that since lumbering began in this region there has been cut from it 36,000.000.000 feet. Making the same assumption re garding the burned area, it appears that there has been destroyed by fire, without the least benefit to the world, the enor mous amount of 40,000,000,000 feet of lum ber. Distribution of the Trees. The distribution of the different species recognized as lumber In Washington, fol lows a few definite and simple laws. On tho west shore of Puget Sound the for est Is practically pure fir. Southward as far as the Columbia River, tnrougnout the vallev of the eastern slope of the Cascade Range, more than three-fourths of the forest Is composed of this species. The proportion diminishes as the Racine Coast is apprbached, and on the Coast and la an area or belt extending rrom 10 to & miles. Inland, there Is practically no red fir to be found. On the east coast of Puget Sound and southward, between one Jialf and three-f ourtHs of the forest Is composed of fir. The proportion Increases somewhat away from Puget Sound, but at an altitude of 3000 feet In the Cascade Range the flr disappears The distribution of spruce Is equally characteristic There Is practically no spruco on the Cascade Range or on Us eastern slope. It Is mpro abundant im mediately upon the Pacific Coast and at mlnlshes thence inland Of cedar there Is scarcely any to be fA Rvm-wy for log's in sm OregToiv Forest- Motive nisKed through FROM PHOTO. BY L..J.t1lCIS9 HUKTLHNU, found on the islands and the west coast of Puget Sound, and but very little In the valley to the southwara. It Increases westward; towards the coast and reaches a maximum Immediately upon the coast. The east coaSt of Puget Sound contains a large proportion of cedar, ranging from one-fourth, to one-half of the forests, and the proportion diminishes as one as cends the Cascades. Hemlock Is almost entirely wanting on both shore! of Puget Sound and in the valley to the south. It increases westward and forms a no ticeable proportion of tho forests in the Cascade Range and in the northwestern part of the Olympic peninsula. It In creases also as one ascends the Cascades, its habitat extending nearly to timber lino. Oregon Forest Reserve. Of the 38 forest reservations In the United States, created by Presidential proclamation under the act of Congress of March 3, 1891, the Northwest has five. Three, the Cascade, the Bull Run and the Ashland, are In Oregon, and two, the Rainier and the Olympic, are In Wash ington. The Cascade comprises 4.49Z.0U0 acres, the Rainier 3,594,240 acres, and the Olympic 1,923,840 acres. Both the Bull Run and Ashland reserves are small They were created to protect the water supplies of Portland and Ashland. A re cent examination of 8000 square miles of the Cascade reserve by the United States Geological . Survey disclosed that on the west side, of the Cascades, where .the rain fall is ample, the forests are aense and the undergrowth luxuriant. On the east side, where more arid conditions prevail, the forests are open? with no under brush. On the wit slope the red fir pre dominates and on the east tne yellow pine. Of the SO00 square mlies examined, 65 per cent Is forested and the remainder not forested. The non-forested areas He mainly In the extreme west and In the eastern part. The following table shows the percent age of coniferous species of the forested area on both slds of the Cascades. West slope. East slope. per cent, per cent. m ,m r i-ower is lur- long steel cables. zsasjscfuijuitmKwmm smaller precipitation on the sub-humla areas of the eastern slope. The large pro portion of lodgepole pine Is chiefly due to forest fires. At least SO per cent of the species owes Its growth to this cause. The age of the timber utilized, in sawmill consumption varies from 100 to 350 years. Most of the yellow pine falls below 175 years. The higher limit is reached chiefly In the sugar pine- Most of the sugar pine In the region is of great and mature age. Comparatively little red fir Is cut. It varies In age from 10d to 500 years, and some of the very large trees are believed to be older. The noble fir and white pine of mill-timber size varies in age from 100 to 350 years, most of it falling below 180 years. The alpine hemlock' runs from 80 to 250 years. The white fir, with suf ficient clear trunk development, varies In age from 73 to 120 years. The most serious defect of the timber consists of fire scars In the yellow ana sugar pines, usually occurring as spots la the lower third of the trunk denuded of the bark ana with the wood charred or burned, more or less deeplyr Thes, defects are very common In the yello pine east of the Cascades, where the wood ot the species Is more highly resln iferous than west of the range and where In consequence, injuries of this- nature are apt to extend over a larger proportion of the trunk. This defect often dimin ishes the lumber contents of the trunk In scaling by 10 to 20 per cent. Large Sugar Pine Trees. Most of the very aged sugar pine ana red flr have rotten covers or gum cracks In their trunks. The Incense cedar on both sides of the mountains rarely haa a sound center. It is seldom cut except for shingles The Alpine hemlock is usu ally sound, even where trees have at tained a high old age, provided fire has not swept through the stands. The sugar pine west of the Cascades reaches a greater diameter than any oth er trees in the reserve, a maximum ot 96 inches having been noted. The yellow pine varies from 14 to 50 Inches in Its base diameter, the white pine from 20 to 36 Inches, red flr from 14 to 84 Inches, while the other trees range all the way from 10 to 72 Inches In base diameter. The red fir has the clearest trunk, often reaching a height of 120 feet before branching. The white pine reaches any where from 40 to 100 feet, the sugar pine' from 15 to 70 feet, and the other trees range anywhere from the ground to (W or 65 feet, according to the species. West of the Cascades 145,460 acres have been logged and east of the mountains 57,000 acres These operations Involve the removal all the way from. 100 per cent t the timber to the culling of the sugar pine alone. The most extensive operations have been in proximity to the Rogue River "Valley settlement, and the placer diggings of the southwest In the spurs ot the Siskiyou Mountains. Fires have widely ravaged the region examined. There Is not a single town ship in which the timber is not more or less fire-marked. Without much doubt the present agricultural areas, once grass- ' covered and carrying scattered stands ot oak, were burned over quite as extensive ly as the timbered tracts. The only tract that have escaped are the swampy sedge and tule-covered areas bordering the Klamath lakes and marsh, end sucn spots in the higher elevations where base lava or pumice fields made the apread or. fires impossible Of the forested area ex amined, comprising In round numbers 3, 00,000 acres, a total of 2,975,000 -acres, or $9 992 per cent are fire marked. The re maining 25,000 acres which have escaped He mostly In the swampy bottoms of the Rogue River forks and isolated tracts along the higher summits of the Cascade main range. Ralpler and Olympic Reserves. The Rainier reserve Is marked by a large variety of trees, prominent amon& them being the white, yellow, lodgepole , and mountain pine, the noble, lovely Al pine, and white fir, hemlock, spruce, rea cedar and such deciduous trees as the ash, maple, Cottonwood, aspen and oak. About & per cent of the forest stand Is composed of dead snags scattered through the green and live growth. The cause la I not only final maturity to the trees. Many of them diecV for lack of light and air, killed by their most vigorous neighbors. In areas where the soil Is excessively moist a common defect Is ground rot. Timber- Is thickest in the Wind River watershed, where the stand is 3,749,605,000 feet. In both the Lewis, and White River sections nenrly 8,000,000,000 feet are esti mated, and on the Puyallup, Cowlitz, CIs pus and Klickitat Rivers between 1,000,000, 000 and -2,000,000.000 feet are said to ba Btandlng. The total estimate, arranged by species of trees, is as follows: Feet Red or yellow flr , 8 555,218,750 Hemlock J....... 3,533,684.000 Yellow pine 2,062,371,750 Red cedar 1,317.078,500 Noble fir 1,247.883 500 Lovely flr 74B.267,t00 White flr 533.753.000 White pine 519,S18,00O Tamarack 512,385,000 Mountain hemlock...,...., 250,677,000 Engelmann spruce 271,7S5,'O0O Mountain flr .' 200,130.000 Alaska. cedar 151.326 009 Lodge pole pine 73,267,000 Total 2O,013,2S5,O0O Only about 45000 acres of the reserve are fair farming land, and of this amount over one-half Is under adverse cllmatlo conditions, due. to altitude and exposure. Of the favorably situated areas in West ern Washington, the most Important are in the Cowlitz watershed, where the Big Bottom affords about 3000 acres of cleared lands'. Along the Nlsqually there are about 1Q00 acres, of rich lands, while the south, fork oft the Puyallup and Mowttch River bottoms,- Carbon River canyon, Cls pus Valley, the "Vailey ot the Lewis River, Little White Salmon "River and other lo- calltles all offer small areas of valuable farming land, while many settlers havo gone in on about 8000 acres in the WIna Jttver Valley. ' Around the headwaters or the Klickitat are also found some val uable arable lands. Taken as a whole the Olympic reserva tion is the most heavily forested region of" Washington. The densest forests are found near the Pacific Coast In the north- western part of the reserve. In the moun tains, as the altitude Increases, the for ests become of less value for lumber. The total stand of timber upon an area of 2100 square miles is 37106,830.000 feet, an average Of 24,000 feet per acre. This timber Is divided among the different species as follows: Feet Red fir : 9,551.750,000 Cedar 3,786.330,000" Hemlock , 16.534.760.00Q Spruce 2,280,500.000 Stiver flr , 5.433.500,000 Total -. 37,106,850,000 In that portion of the reserve In Clal Jam County the standing timber amounts to 23,822,500,000 feet, hemlock pre dominating. NEW LUMBERING PROCESSES. Steam Haa Superseded Animals at the Great Bridal Veil Campa. Steam has completely superseded cattle and horses at the camps of the Bridal Veil Lumbering Company. Bridal Veil, the name of a beautiful waterfall, is lo cated on the line of the O. R. & N. Railroad 30 miles East of Portland. The Bridal Veil .Lumbering Company's camps are located on Larch Mountain, a magni ficently timbered section sevelx to ten miles out from the railroad station. Trees, many of them of tremendous diameter and height, . thickly stud the mountain side. These trees are felled and cut Into logs in the ordinary manner of these West ern lumbering forests, after which donkey engines, mounted upon heavy sleighs made purposely for them, gather the product in from all directions. Long cables are em ployed for this purpose, and they can strip an acre or two of saw logs at a single setting This process Is called "yarding," and when a section has been cleared the donkey and sleigh are moved, by using the cables, to another place. "Bull" donkeys of greater strength than "yarding" donkeys, with their endless cables, haul the logs from the "yard" to a logging railroad, and this latter deliv ers them at the mill. The "bull" donkeys use a skid road, but the railroad, upon