a ll GbvernmenttPursues Form of "Conserva--tionThat! Provides'Timber for Future Peoples WithoutTaking From the Present. Sowing Seeds on Barren Hills Cost of Planting Acre.of.Barren.Land. With' Fir Trees"Is.but'.$l,86, WHKX a man plants a ltO-rre farm h t coaaldcred a pretty ztcntlv farmer, and when an orrhardUt t out a crop of tre that will not bar and brln return for 10 or IS yeara, he I aald to be a man who 1 looklmr forward a condderab! time, but I'nele Sam la planttn; a-rden In Oregon, or rather orchard, which will rover an area of over 10.0a acres thta year, and which will not ba of value for 4 yeara, or even longer. Tht little 10. 000. acre orchard ! not the first one of this size that he has set out. nor will It be the last one: for every year the Government Is planting; with trees these vast areas, from which timber has been burned. This year fir trees are to be planted narly alto fether. but Isst year and the previous year hardwood trees, such as walnut nd hickory, were set out and are now lolnc weiL By plantlnc trees the Government hopes to clothe the barren hills that have been flreswept at dlffeernt times, from the period of the Indian to the present, and the vast areas which are aow worthless on the tops of the moun tains In the Coast Ranee will. In i years or so. become deep and heavy for ests, which will keep running; the Ore ton sawmill and which will maintain Oregon her place as the lumber center of the world. Conservation may have its good points, but the planting; of the vast burned areas, which are worthless aow, is a form of 'conservation that will give the future generations tim ber without depriving the present clil ten. rnMi laveeeieat. The planting of the forests Is not only a vaet and extensive undertaking. but Is to be a profitable one to the BT C B. LOOM 1 S- IWAS In need of an office boy. and bad Inserted a notice In the morning paper and had had the usual run of applicants In response, but none of them suited me until Billy "Moran put In his appearance. Billy was about It years old. short for his age. with fiery red hair and unmistakably New Tork accent. When he came to apply for the po sition and I asked him his name. I did not understand his reply, so I said: -Write It down." He wrote In an unusually good hand. "William Moran." "Oh. William Moran," said I. -No, sir: Mawren. me father called ll an" that's the way." I afterward ascertained that he was right, and that Moran. with the accent on tl.e last syllable, was purely Ameri can, and not Irish. "Are you afraid of work?" I asked. "t hee, no! I never was near enough to It to be afraid." aald he. and that answer made me resolve to engage him. -We want a boy to run errands, copy letter, go to the bank and do what ever he Is told to do." -I know." said he. spitting through its teeth on the hardwood floor. "Thai's what wie twin brother does." -WeiL if your twin brother does It. don't you do lu I don't want any pitting around here." He smiled cheerfully and said. "I meant me twin brother. Chamety, was ooldin down a Job like oat." I have always been Interested In twins, and I enquired: Ioea your twin brother leok like you?" It did not seem possible that there could be another boy as homely as Billy- Probably Ms twin brother was very handsome, in erder to pre serve the self-re pect ef his parents. "He's me dead ringer!" said he. "Any body ran see dat. He's wattln' en de comer for me." I made no answer, but as I was very deslroes of seeing Billys replica. I hurried out of the ofHce. after having sent Mm to the cashier with the news that be was engaged. Our office we are In the wholesale dry goods business Is on Thomas street, not fr from Broadway, and when I reached that thoroughfare I saw Billy's Mrlng Image smoking a cigarette with aa air that would have made a hit If he had been playing the part of a street boy on the stage. It was o fetchtngly nonchalant and 'devilish. 1 stepped up to htm. half expecting h.a to recognize me because he looked so like his brother, but he looked right past me. being interested In the efforts of , crowded automobile to run In be tween a trolley and a heatlly loaded drav. -Chee. I wish dty'd hit It," said be. thinking out loud, The Iran Tw ins Government. It Is really an Inveetmeni. aud the principal expended Is very small when compared with the Income, It costs II. fc to plant an acre of barren land with fir trees, placed at a distance of seven feet apart. It Is estimated by the Government authorities that In the Coast I'.ange. where rainfall is abun dant, with to SO Inches a year, and the fogs from the sea keep the trees damp the year around, that In 48 years every tree will contain between 80 and 1800 feet of lumber, worth at the present time fl a thousand feet as sturapsge. As they are being planted there are no less than to trees on the acre. and. taking an average of 1000 feet to the tree, this means a valuation of 1180 worth of lumber on an acre. And this Is to be taken oft land that today Is worthless and upon which less than 12 is to be Invested. And when It Is real ized that this year alone 10.000 or more arres will be planted, it Is seen that a revenue of no small extent will be net ted Uncle Sam if he plants this much every year. Rewlaatlaa; Grew "Barm." la the Sluslaw reserve, which includes the timber on the Coast Range. In Douglas. Lane and Lincoln counties, over 1000 acres will be planted. The most of this acreage Is on the Neatucca River, near Tillamook, where the great Are of lt swept the hills barren of any plant life for many miles. There are places here where one can stand on a high place and look for mllea and see no green tree. Furthermore, this county la not Isolated, and In the val leys below Is now one of the greatest dairying centers of Oregon. So when Tl'ncle Sam's crop of timber Is harvest ed It will not be very far rrom tts mar- -James." said I, and he turned and looked at me in surprise. "Did you speak said he. in a tone that was if anything tougher than hla brother's. "Tes. Are you James Mawren?" said I. careful to give the Irish pronuncia tion. "New. I'm Chames Moran." said he "I'm Amerlkin." He gave me a searching glance. "Are you tlier feller that advertised for a boyr "Tes. and I've Just engaged your brother, but he told me that Mawrea was the way to pronounce his name." Vhee. he makes me sick to me stum nilck." said he with a weary expres sion. "He's as Irish as Bl'.ly Bedam but Tm Amerlkln from der wold go." "But you're twins." said I. wishing that Billy would come up and Join his brother, that I might compare them. This boy's hair was a little redder than hla brothers, but his nose was Just as tip tilted and he was precisely as homely. -Yea, we're twins, but he makes me tired Jus" de same. Say. wens he comln' ?" "He ought to be right along now." I looked hack as I spoke, and thought I saw him comtng out of our store, but Just at that moment I was hailed by a business friend on a Broadway car. and as I wanted to talk to him on a matter of Importance, I Jumped upon the car with a hasty goodby to the little tough. Next day Billy began work, and he proved to be a bright, happy little chap. He was respectful, reasonably heedful of what was said to him. and very quick, on bis feet. The cashier reported on him favorably, and I was glad to have at last found a boy that suited, as we had been having a succession of stupid or vicious or lsxy boys, and a boy of either of those types takes a good deal out of a man In the way of nervous force. But Billy waa Just the boy for the place, for at least two weeks. And then one day at noon he came to me and said: "Me brother Chamsev ta out of a Jon. Is dere a chanst here?" I shook my head. "No. Billy. I don't believe there Is." -Well. If I was took sick could Cham sey take me placer' -Why. yea. Are you expecting to be took slckr- said I. He started to spit and remembered. He was always starting to spit and remembering. "No. I'm all right, but sav I wanted to go to a ball game or to Cooney fer a day would It be all right If he earner1 I thought it over a minute. "1 can't see that it would make any great difference." said L "But Is your brother as quick and at as reliable as ypoT "Aw. he s nre twin. said he In a tone that seemed to settle the question, and so I told hlra that If he wanted now and then to go he might, but as his ket and worth proportionally more be cause of location and accessibility. The process of planting is Interest ing. It Is done by the Government Forestry Service. The same supervi sors who are now directing the work of fighting the destructive fires In two months will be planting seed on the regions burned before there was aiy Forestry Service. The work of planting really begins first wlph the gathering of seed. This year Is a very productive seed year and in the Blsuslaw reserve and about the hills of Springfield and Eugene from 10.000 to 15.000 bushels of ripe fir cones will be gathered byan army of men and boys, who will be paid 15 cents a bushel for the seed-hearing cones. Every small tree will be stripped of its cones and even the siulrrels nesta will be robbed. This theft is not as cruel as It sounds for the squirrels have a mania for gath ering cones and will hoard In a hol low tree many times as many as they can use. Often there are found piles of cones six feet high, laid carefully oroiner wuuiun w ijuno " w . , I wouldn't want It to happen ften. "How will you get him to work for yoi?" said I. "Oh. I'll give him me wages fer the day he comes. Y'see since he was out of a Job he's go'n" to Cooney or some yres 'most every day an" he makes me crazy to try them loopln' the loops an' the other things, an" I thought, me .comln' so late In the Spring. I wouldn-t have any vacation, an" I could take it that way." Then, in his mercurial way, he changed the subject and said. "Say. boss, did youse ever see Mansflel' In "Dr. Jekyll an" Mr. Hyder" -Yes. a good many years ago." said L His face lighted up. "Say. ain't he a peach? Me hrudder an' me was to see him las' night up In der nigger heaven, an' he's a honey cooler fer fair. Every time he comes to N'Tork we go." Well. you show good taste. Billy. Now that Booth is dead, he comes near being our greatest actor." "Say. doe he wear a false face, or is it muggln"?" "I guess It's muggln . said I. wonder ing where he could have picked up so English an expression. A day or two later, when I arrived at the office. I heard someone sing ing "Bedella"' In a very loud, but not unmusical voice, and I soon discovered It to be Billy. As he wss usually very quiet I was surprised, but I said noth ing, as he seemed to be on the last verse. The verse ended, he spat on the floor. This called for sharp reproof, and I said. "Billy. Tve told you not to spit and I don't want you to sing." He walked right up to me and said with, an assumption of camaraderie that was amusing: "Mr. Larktn, wofs a little ring like that between frlen'sr' Something In his tone caused ma to look at him keenly. -Why. are you are you James?" 11 I- "Sure. I fought you was on. Billy had a chanst to go wld St. Peter's ex cursion up to Iona Islan" an" he ast me to hoi' down his Job." -Oh." said I. "Well, try to hold It down as well as he does and remember to keep quiet and don't expectorate." "Pon't what?" "Don't spit." "Chee, w'ere's a feller to spit? Te can't do It In der cars or on der side walk. Nex- t'lng dey won't allow it In a feller's home." There are some homes where It doesn't go trta now, James." said L -You're no better off for spitting." "Feels good." said he. and I turned away to hide my face. That was a noisy day. Black Is not more different from white than wss Jsmes Moran from Billy Mawren. He was nothing short of Impudent to me several times, but he was Impudent In such a whimsical way that my sense of dtg-nlty was not as stout as my sense of humor and I put up with things that . i 1 .T . V n n CXZT 4Z2S3J-& 'v ' I III V ; In layers. rir.sentln; the 6t"fringrs l.f several years, which have been un touched bv the rodents for food. Preparing -the Seed. These cones are gathered from th8 pickers by A. K. Cahoon, supervisor of the Sluslaw reserve and by Supervi sor C. R. Seltx, of the Cascade reserve, and their deputies. The picking season lasts from September 1 to September 15. The cones are then shipped in sacks to Wyeth. Or., where the Gov ernment has a cone-dryer. Here arti ficial heat Is applied by which tho cones are forced to give up their seed, which are collected and put in pack ages. These are sent back to the ranger for planting. The seed is very small and two bushels of cones' make a pound of seed. By the time it Is returned to tho supervisor for planting It has cost the Government $1.50 a pound. One pound will plant one acre by the "spot method and only one-fourth of an acre by their "broadcast" method. Planting begins during November, if the 'spot" method is used, and lasts until the end of January. In the THE 5T2RY QP AN 2FFICE would have won a discharge In many offices. When he went home that evening so the shipping clerk told me after ward he broke out into a song and dance of the most abandoned descrip tion. "I hope Billy won't take another day off." said he. Next morning: I saw by the paper which I read on my way into town that a boy had been lost from St. Pe ter's excursion and that up to the time of going to press he had not turned up. and it was feared he was drowned. I was sure it was Billy, and felt a real depression, for I had learned to like the quiet little fellow. To my relief 1 met him coming out of the store as I went in. "Hello, you didn't get lost, thenr' He slapped a copy of the Sun in his side pocket and said: "No, that was on'y a kid about nine years old. He ll toln up all right." "Well, Billy, I hope you had a good time yesterday, but I think that the plan won't work very well. .Your brother is rather noisy." Billy's expression was sympathetic In the extreme. -Che. boss. I tol' him to keep his mouf shut- He's been brought up bsd." "Why, how's thatr' said I. -You both had the same bringing up. didn't you?" 'Yes. but me mudder had a favorite en" it was him. She hadn' time to train us bot" an' she let him do as he pleased. I'll have him quiet nex time. Say. we had a great time. I hit der nigger free times out of five wit" a baseball. Chee, wot a hard nut Plunked him right on der place w'ere his bald spot'll be." I opened the door to go In. "Well, I'm glad you had a good time. You look burned." "Chee. I'd ought t'be. I never wore me hat lost It overboard before we got to Twenty-thold street-" It was a week before Billy felt the need of another outing, and then as soon as I reached the office I knew he was away. "You lika-me an' I lika you." was being sung at the top of a tuneful vbice. and if I had not had ears I could' have traced my quarry by a line of expectorations. I found James in the private office, standing before a mirror "mugging" while he sang. "Now that will do," said I, sternly. "It was Just go'n' to do," said he, in a mimicry of myself that I recognized as being; capital. My handkerchief came out and I left the private office to ob tain command of my features. -Pond of actln'. Boss?" said he. when I went In again to open my desk. "James. I must decline to talk thea ter with you. I've got my letters to look at." "It aln" so hard to do that Imertatlon of a bass Tl"l that Mansfiel' does in Prince Karl," said he, pertinaciously. "I seen him la night- How's dls?" "broad-cast" planting it is done while the snow Is on the ground. The Epot planting Is the cheapest and has proven the most successful and ef ficient. When the Beed is planted in this way it is taken by a crew of 15 men. each armed with a heavy four pound hoe and a bag of seed. They work in a line, each man seven feet from the other and sweep over acreage at a rapid rate. Like the farmer drop ping "spuds" in each potato hill, these forest planters plant the - trees in "hills." Each "hill" Is seven feet apart and In 40 years each fir tree will be standing as regularly as in an orchard. Planting Crew at work. Tlth the heavy hoe the planter scrapes off the dirt until he reaches the mineral soil. Then he drops his seed, 12 or 15 of the little seed in a hill, and stamping them into the earth with his foot he moves on with the line of planters to the next hill. A very large area can be covered in this fash ion in a short time. The crew that will plant'the 2000 acres of land in the Siuslaw reserve this Winter will num ber 30 men and It will take them not more than six or eight weeks. The and m The next instant there was the plaintive and nasal boom of a 'cello and James was giving an Imitation of a master, mimic that bettered his mas ter to speak in a paradox. "You and Billy seem to be fond of the theater," said I. "We'd have a chanst to do a toln as a twin team on'y we haven't got a good ac' yet. We was at Miner's for one night. Got a recall, too, but I gave an imertatlon of der way der stage manager talked an' he got hot an' chased us." "James, will you please go and ask Mr. Wilson to . give you something to do outdoors. I haven't opened my mail yet." , "Aw, tell me you're sick of me an I'll skate. You can't hurt my feelin's." He went out of the office, dancing a double shuffle, with his head very affectedly on one side and an extra tilt to his snub nose, and I dived Into my desk to hunt for something. After he had gone I relieved my pent-up feelings by laughing. A step on the threshold made me look up. There stood James, a grin on his face. "I fought I'd get a smile out of you, 1 can deliver de goods every time. Aw, I never was cut out fer business." "Leave me," said I sternly, and he went out I had founds Billy to be perfectly honest, and he waa In the habit of car rying the deposit around to the bank on Broadway. On the occasion of James' first day with us the cashier had taken "the deposit up himself, but today, being very busy, he called the boy In and told him to take it and to be very careful, as there was over 200 in bills, to aay nothing of the checks. "If I'm not back In half an hour sen me a MarconL I might go to Eu rope." With a cheerful grin be took the de posit and slid out of the office and then took to his heels and ran the length of the store, singing "Bedella" as he went. "That boy is Incorrigible," said the cashier. "Oh, yes. We can't have him another day. It's queer there should be truch a difference between them. He seems Just as smart as Billy, but he's pos sessed of a devil." "Did you hear him say he was going to Europe with the depositr" said the cashier, coming out from behind his desk. "Yes. but that doesn't worry me. He looks honest enough." But if "Chamesy" looked honest he did not turn out so. i He had one to the bank at half-past two, and he should have been back by a quarter of three, as he had nothing else to do, but three and four came without bringing Billy's brother. We sent a clerk around to the Danlc men are paid 12 a day for the work and their board and expenses costs the Government less than a dollar. It has been found by actual demonstration that the actual cost of planting, not counting the cost of the seed, is but 36 cents an acre. The broad-cast method of planting is used less than in the past because it requires more seed and has proven less efficient. In planting in this way the work is done in the early Spring when the snow is on the ground. Then the sowers cover the burned-off areas, scattering, the seed right and left. When the snow melts the water car ries the seed into the ground and an early start is given. Setting Out Young Trees. Still another way of planting forests is by setting out the young trees, as the orchardist does. These are started in green houses owned by the Govern ment at Wyeth. When they are six in ches high, they are pulled up and sent to the various forestry departments, which transplant them on the forests. Dm and learned that our deposit had not been brought in. but that the checks and the slip had been found on tne mar ble floor near the paying teller's desk. James had said that Billy was going to Coney Island. Could the two be in league? I would have gone at once to the home of the twins, but I understood that Billy had taken his mother with him to Coney Island, and they were go ing to stay to see the tower lighted. I would therefore wait until morning; be fore doing anything. Perhaps James would turn up. Next morning I was at the office early and found not James, but Billy! He was waiting to get in, the porter not having put in an appearance, although it was 7:30. Billy looked worried. "W'ere's Chamesy?" was his first Question. I looked him searchingly in the eyes and what I saw in their honest depths made me hate to tell him the truth, but I had to. I tactfully acquainted him with what had happened. "Oh, wouldn't dat make you sick to your stummick," said he, and walked with bowed head in at the door. The office force assembled in course of tlme much surprised to find one of the heads there before them and we held a consultation and decided to do what we should have done the day before tele phone the police. Billy, the picture of melancholy, went about his work for a while, and then he went downstairs to the shipping de partment, and the various clerks said pleasant things about the little chap whose brother's rascality had made such a deep impression on him. "When the detective came, the first thing he wanted' to do was to have an interview with Billy, and I sent down stairs for him. He was not there.. For a short moment I suspected he had fled, and then the shipping clerk told me he had sent him around to Tifft, Howells & Co. on an erarnd. "Where does his mother live?" was the next question. We found her address, and he and I were soon on our way to her home, in Mulberry street, not far from Houston, and not very far from police headquar ters. She lived In a rear tenement, whose hallway approach was noisome in the extreme. We found her engaged in hanging out clothes, for she was a washerwoman. "Is this Mrs. Moranr said the detec. tire, -with the accent on the "ran." A startled look came into her eyes. -Sure it is. What's happened to Billy?" "It's happened to Ja-mes," said the policeman. ""An- who the divvle's James?" said she, with a long-drawn breath of re- Ue-Jamesy. Billy's twin brother." said L This method is the surest, for every tree grows. But it is more expensive. When planting the men use the hoes and carry a bucket of water. Before setting them in the hole, the roots are. moistened, and this insures their start ing. But even from the seed, when the "spot" method is used, the young trees grow very rapidly. Seed that was planted in February of this year is now in the form of youns fir trees, over a foot high. The percentage of trees that grow from the "hills" in the "spot" method is very high, and out of the several seeds planted in each "spot" one is nearly sure to grow. The work that has been done in the past three years in the Siuslaw forest has been highly satisfactory up to this time, and it is probable that the work will be continued by the Government each year until every acre of the vast areas that were burned by the great fires In the early days will be re-covered with green forests. FRANKLIN S. ALLEN. thinking she had not understood th officer's pronunciation of James. "Feth, an" Is it twins you're talkin' about? Sure me twins died when thej) was babies an' it's only Billy I have, in' care enough at that wid his play-i actln' ways." I looked at her In astonishment, a light began to break on me. '"Do you mean to tell me that you have but one son?" "Yes, that's all. What's happened himr' said she, her anxiety returning. The detective explained what had hap pened, and the poor woman's apron was over her head in a minute, and for the first time in my life I heard real keen-., ing. "Oh, he was always actin', but I didn't fink he'd do anyfing dirty. Him gtaleln', an' the father he had." I have never been more depressed by; anything than I now was at the out come of this incident. And I found! that much of my sororw came from the thought that the Billy who had made such a good impression on me had never existed: that he was really Jamesy all the time, and acting a part to lull my suspicions. His bravado in coming1 back was all of a piece with his whole conception of the part. By now he had really decamped with the picayune 20u. I left the detective questioning tha distracted mother, and went back to tha office. I would never put confidence In a boy again. As I turned off Broadway to Thomas 1 thought I saw Billy-James going up tha steps of our store. I hurried after and found; to my great relief, that I waa right in' my surmise. Quite Irrelevantly the thought of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde came Into my mind and then I saw that Billy himself had been playing the double part suggested by the play. Into the office I hurried, wondering; whether be were going to make resti tution or brazen It out. There I found not Billy, but Chamesy, for he was spitting through, his teeth and laughing gaily and flour ishing a bank roll. "Didn't I do it fine?" he was saying to the cashier. The cashier, who thought that James had been overcome by qualms of con science, held out his hand for the money; and said: "Boy, do you know that your brother Billy is all broken up over what you did?" Chamesy-BIlly roared with laughter and hunched his shoulders with delight. "Better"n an' better," said he. Then he turned to me. "Did I fool you. too, Mr. Lark in?" "William-James," said I, solemnly, "you've lost your position with this house. You'd better apply to Richard Mansfield for a position. The dry goods business is not the proper place for the display of your histrionic talents.' (Cony right by Shortstory Pub. Co.)