THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN, PORTLAND, DECEMBER 8. 1913. 8 FISH AND GAME SUPPLY PLENTIFUL IN VAST SIUSLAW NATIONAL RESERVE Trails Being Built and Deforested Agricultural CffJcf cuns pontfrti. Sutefavs 9otonoJ 7Z nssC BY ALFRED POWERS. FLORENCE, Or.. Dec 7. (Special.) -Isolated and unfrequented, the Sius law National Forest is a vast scenic region of 821,000 acres that has not yet come into its own. Few of those who take outings are pioneers. Mostly they are content to fish in famous trout streams that have gained fame at the expense of their trout, to .hunt in hunted out repions, and to gaze upon ace'nery almost worn with being gazed upon. The conventional angler or re cuperating pugilist finds no beaten path to the Siuslaw forest and turns away; an occasional editor, surveyor, or hiking professor proceeds along its fringes, but in its remote interior, un snot at, pot-bellied ducks fly . skim mingly across the lakes, dragging their tails In the water; unmolested except by panthers, deer graze among the fernB and violets, and bears, ignorant of the sinister reports of guns, live Incautious lives, eating until Christmas time of the abundant harvest the ever present heath family provides thou sands of gallons of huckleberries, salalberries and blueberries. Mack Land Homeateaded. Of the 81,000 acres of the original forest reserve 45 per cent is now alienated by homesteads and timber claims. Nearly all level agricultural land has been taken, although far up near the heads of the tributaries of streams there are diminutive, but fertile tracts. These, far oft as they are, and even the sand plains seem worth while to the land-hungry home steader. Sometimes a serious-eyed school teacher mounted on a pony rides far out from the towns and settlements in search of a claim, less awed by the endless stretch of hills and sand and ocean than by the endless succession of oppressive days in the schoolroom. In the angle between the ocean and the Siuslaw River two men have taken homesteads on sand dunes without so much as a salt marsh, their shimmering gray unrelieved by a sprig of green, their unfertile depths affording sus tenance not even for a sand verbena. There are. three important rivers in the forest the Alsea, the Siuslaw and the Umpqua. Along these, their tributaries and the numerous lakes there live something like 5000 people, who earn an easy and plentiful living by lumbering, dairying, fishing, truck farming, stock and fruit raising, ami peeling chittem bark, of which it is said the annual output is 150 tons. Large Area li Barrea, A great deal of the area embraced In the forest reserve is comparatively barren. Millions and millions of char red spikes stick up, remnants of the great fire of JS46 which consumed enough lumber to build, homes for a nation. On thousands of acres where big firs once stood now grow useless alders thick as wheat. Hills and ridges once clothed with the green of trees loom out of the Fall mists red aa a briar pipe with their coverings of matted and dying fern. The third enemy to the second growth fir has been the sand. which, crawling far in from shore, has destroyed many square mtlea of vegetation. The barrenness of the forest has made It the field of much replanting. At present 3 men are at work on Mount Hebo planting Douglas fir. In the sand, in the snow on mountains, along the creeks and marshes, every where the forester is carrying on his few n f - :v Ji::;5 1 !Wf f . I V i 2-' VVM:- ill 4t -,'. m ', ik'tti H i?v 'H lt i h --if- Districts Planted Homesteaders Have Made Extensive Inroads on Available Area and Sand Is Yearly Destroying Much Vegetation. M II 3 "Vv picrrt)6 Xocj6as JZrSccaT n. tie 1 1 vi'i - . """jr 'III ill work of reclamation. A few years back Ranger C. H. Young, of Florence, was set to work with a large crew and detailed Instructions, replanting a large area. Skeptical of the instruc tions, he presumed after the planting was nearly finished to substitute a method of his own. Practical Method Tried. Ranger Young used to live in the Middle West and as a boy planted sod corn, which wa a simple process that consisted of a hole being made for the seed with a sharp stick or an ax ana covered by being stepped upon. In this manner, he planted a good sized tract which, of all the region seeded that year. Is now covered with fast growing, trees. Once too, courageous of consequences, this forest-farmer "swiped" three wil lows, and went way off. where no one ARABIAN NIGHTS PALED BY PLANT MENS WORK Vast Sums Contributed to National Wealth by Inventions and Discoveries of Agricultural Scientists Uncle Sam Eakes World for New Plants. WASHINGTON, Dec. T. (Special.) Results more wonderful than those attributed to the genii of Aladdin's lamp are being achieved through the work of Uncle Sam's ex perts in discovering, originating and introducing new and wonderful food products for the American people. Though attracting comparatively little attention they are putting the results of achievements more remarkable than any narrated in the Arabian Nights Into the ordinary city majKet ana cor ner grocery. Few persons realize the tremendous value of any new crop or food product that comes into general use among the people of the United States. A long list could be made of these, each one of which has added millions of dollars to the wealth of the country. While the names of Edison, Bell and other wonder-workers In the .mechan ical field are familiar to 'everybody, probably not one American In 10,000. for instance, ever heard of Fphraim Bull. The Rumph brothers are un known, and the name of William Saun ders means nothing . to the average would see him and planted them be side a little stream that flowed through the sand. It was a theft almost as beneficial In Its results as the far famed theft of Prometheus, for now in the Siuslaw forest are growing some thing like 15,000 willows. But unlike the altruistic Greek, Ranger Young did not "get in wrong" with the gods. On the other hand, they put him In charge of two range stations, being half the forest. Little by little, trails are being built through the forest. There is now a good pack trail from Florence, on the Siuslaw, to Toledo, on the Yaquina; a distance of 80 miles. This has side trails leVding to the beach, wagon roads and other trails. The hiker along these trails in Winter would find near ly every physical feature of the earth colored with an artistry and Inhabited with a life not spoken of in books. man. And yet these are all men whose inventions have been as valuable to the country as those, of their more famous fellows, and they were the forerunners of others who are contin ually adding millions to the wealth and resources of the Nation. Their dis coveries in the agricultural world are comparable to the Inventions of the telephone and the typesetting machine In the world of technology. They reaped no profit from their discoveries. But the American farmer has gained through them many millions of dollars annually. Coacorda All From One Seedtime The vines of the Chautauqua grape belt, producing annually 200,000,000 pounds of grapes, come almost entirely from the cuttings of a seedling planted by Ephralm Bull In Concord, Mass., 68 years ago. His discovery was the famous Concord grape. The Rumph brothers evolved, from a single tree of an imported Chinese cling peach In Georgia, in 1870, the famous Elberta and Belle varieties which have since earned fortunes for growers. And Saunders, from the importation of a single bunch of scions from Bahia, Bra ill, became the discoverer of the navel orange and the founder of groves such as the world never saw before. The sclentlflo breeding of plants Is startlingly new. Of course the older nations suceeded in improving their plants to some degree. Wheat, for In stance. . as far back as we know, was an "improved grain." The original wild wheat from which it Is derived has long since vanished from the face of the earth. But 80 years ago tne way in which the plants were built was so imperfectly understood that tne cell organ called the nucleus, which has come to play such an Important role in plant hybridization, had not oeen discovered. Common principles of heredity in plants which today are truisms to every agricultural scientist were not even suspected. Plant breeding haa progressed rap Idly, has gone far. It has given us the sDineless cactus, the seedless orange and apple. One of its latest triumphs is the seedless grape. It is recognized as the basis of progressive agricul ture. Back of the farmer stands the scientist with test tube and Jar, the modern substitute for Aladdin s lamp, and with his theories of fertilization and cross breeding. Every state in the Union maintains its corps of scientists to improve its grains, its vegetables. its fruits. And the National Govern znent spends millions of dollars a year conducting breeding experiments lor nlanta on a scale never attempted DO' fore. Uncle Sam rakes the world for new fathers and mothers for his plant stock. A missionary up some remote stream In Central China gets a letter from the Denartment of Agriculture requesting him to ship home seeds oz some fruit known to exist in his lo cality. And these seeds become the mothers of a new American fruit or a hardier breed of peach, pear or plum. The American Consul in some distant tronlcal island is impressed into serv ice to send In slips of some bush or shrub of value which may subsequently spread over our Southern States. Sot Bean Varieties Multiply. One of the plants Uncl'e Sam went after in connection with the forage crop Improvement Investigations was the humble soy bean. In 1907 there were known In this country only '28 varieties of this bean. In a recent bul letin of the Bureau of Plant Industry 300 are mentioned. These forms have been gathered in the last five years in the bazaars of Oriental villages or bought from peasants In Japan, India, China, Siberia, Corea and the Dutch East Indies by trained explorers, Amer ican Consuls, missionaries or special corresDondents. A fruit on the breeding oi wnicn Uncle Sam has expended much time Is the persimmon, which in a few years will probably be for sale at every cor ner grocery. The Department oi Agri culture collected for its experiments over 200' varieties of the persimmon and allied species from all parts of the world, including one place In the exact center of the Chinese Empire and an other on an island a few hunred mires seaward from Madagascar. The e suit is a delicious fruit the size of an nnnle and entirely free from puciter. The new persimmons irunea last year In North Carolina and were so popular that the call for young trees by or chard men has overwhelmed the de partment at Washington. In Japan th nnrslmmon la esteemed aouvo uw orange. It Is eaten dried, stewed, sliced freah like a peach, or may De irozen. when thoroughly ripe, to produce some thing like a delectable snerpei. in order to bring about these re sults, however, the sugar beet requires unusual care in lis cultivation. iu nead is drilled In rows, several beet seeds being planted to the Inch. When the beets are up laborers go through the fields with a hoe and "block" them out, leaving a single small bunch every eight inches. And here the trouble For a beet seed is rarely a single seed. It normally contains sev eral beet germs, pernaps as many a six. So the little beet clusters must De thinned. Laborers go through the Airi on hands and knees, grasping one harrtv heetlet between the thumb and forefinger of the lelt nana, wnne wnn the right hand tney pun oui me re maining beeUets. If this operation is nnt narformed at a certain period in th riavelonment of the plants those left to grow will die or will become useless, spindling roots. The task of tnlnnlnir the beets is tne moat iaDo- rlous and expensive that confronts the beet farmer. Task Is Laborious. Truman G. Palmer, an authority on sugar beet culture, Interested Secretary Wilson In developing the single-germ beet seed In 1902. By great labor the Government scientists secured zooo single-germ seeds. For this over 200, 000 beet seeds had to be examined, for only 1 per cent of the seeds are nor mally single-germ. The first generation of the plants seeded In two years (the beet is a biennial and tne oesi piani yielded 26 per cent of single-germ seeds. In -the second generation one plant yielded SO per cent single-germ seed. The fifth generation has Just been reached and shows one plant yielding over 80 per cent of single germ seed. Probably In a few more generations the constant single-germ seed will be a reality. The beet farm er will save from to to o an acre m hand labor and It Is estimated that his average tonnage will be increased from one-third to one-half, thus add ing from S23 to J26 to -his profit per acre. On tneir present acreage mo beet farmers would gain from 111,000. 000 to 813,000,000. from the production of single-germ balls In quantities suf ficient for general use. Actually the saving would undoubtedly be far great er than this. Under the encouragement afforded by the tariff on foreign sugar the beet sugar industry has grown very rapidly and agricultural experts pre dict that If present conditions are maintained the time will come when all the sugar required by the Amer ican people will be produced in the United States, a result to which the evolution of the single-germ Beed un doubtedly will contribute greatly and which would maKe tne total Bavin g to the farmers of the country amount to nearly $100,000,000 a year. Probably no better illustration than this could be found of the vast sums which an ap parently slight Improvement in an Im portant crop will save. Melons Are Hybridized. Sometimes Uncle Sam has to Jump into the plant-breeding business in an mergency, as when the watermelon disease laid waste the melon fields in the South some years ago. The Gov ernment plant doctors found that the so-called pie melon or cow melon, ut hard, inedible variety used only for pickling, was not subject to the dis ease. These were hybridized with the regular watermelons ana tne re sult was a thousand varieties oi hy brids of all shapes and colors and Bizes, some soft as custard and others that could have been used a cannon balls. From these six which most re sembled watermelons, but proved able to resist the disease, were selected for perpeuatlon and after several years of further breeding and selection a type was secured which was thoroughly edible and immune from the disease. Plant breeding in its commercial phases is of such recent growth and has progressed so rapidly that the aver age man scarcely dreams of the possi bilities it opens. What Burbank suc ceeded in doing on a small scale the Government is developing on an im mense scale. The new vegetable 'gen eration bids fair to be a remarkable one and with the development of new and remarkable forms of plant life the American corner grocery of the fu ture will contain an array of vege tables and fruits strange and exotic like the product of an Arabian. Nights garden. NEW SENATOR FROM SOUTH DAKOTA UNKNOWN AS PUBLIC OFFICE HOLDER Democrat, Who Followed Bull Moose Leader, Offers Paper for Sale Adolph Lewisohn Generous Contributor to Philanthropic Cause George T. Oliver Benefits by Treatment for Kidney Trouble. - fir . v f jfV ' Hit N H "Si W x .v . j li ;'2 lx - i" - u ! - " I V5 - A-- -1 - . " Hivp ..K'T"-: i' w I fc, . . B3 PL ' Pfr 'if-; . I T , ... ; j T ; r fLrrrrrr m mrmiiMmmii.Miirin-ri k2& fcimrnirm ifcwiiiiiiWiitMrihwmiWiii'if - j syWtHiif 1 N' EW YORK, Dec 7. (Special.) Thomas Sterling is the newly chosen Senator from South Da kota. Mr. Sterling is a lawyer and lives in Vermillion. He was born in Ohio and admitted to the bar in Illi nois. He went to Dakota when it was territory and was a member of the Constitutional Convention of the State of South Dakota. He has been a mem ber of the Legislature, but has held no other public office. Gilbert D. Paine is going to sell the Memphis News Scimitar, one of the liveliest papers in the South. Mr. Paine has always been a Democrat, but he was persuaded to follow Roose velt in the last campaign and his was one of the few Bull Moose papers In the South. He was so disgusted with the failure of the Roosevelt campaign that be has advertised to sell his paper STRICT CURFEW LAW ENFORCEMENT IRRITATES GOTHAM RESTAURATEURS Poe Cottage in Pordham in Danger From Proposed Skyscraper New Series of Tests in Motor-Car Industry Are Planned Orphanage Keports Show Extensive Charitable Activity. BY I-IOYD F. LONBKGAN. . . N' EW YORK, Dec 7. (Special.) The restaurant men on the Great White Way are complaining bit terly because the police insist upon en forcing the curfew law. On Sunday at midnight the sale of liquor stops and strict enforcement has reduced tne profits of the restaurant men neaviiy. In each lobster palace when the witch ing hour of midnight arrives announce ment is made that the season of wet goods is over, but that food and enter tainment will still be served. However, the patrons apparently recollect that they must get up early in oruer to bo to Sunday school and hastily vanish. Police Commissioner Waldo insists that he is going to enforce the law and that the sooner restaurant men realize it the better it will be for them. Tn "PnA cnttae-A in Fordham. where the poet lived from 1846 to 1849, and where his wife died, is in danger of being seriously damaged by the erec tion of a tall building beside it, and Borough President Miller of the Bronx has asked for an appropriation of $5000 with which to buy the cottage and re move it to Edgar Allen Poe Park. The little story-and-a-nair Dunams in which Poe lived out the most Heart breaking experience of his life, now stands on the east side of Kingsbridge road at the road's Juncture with Val entine avenue. It Is not quite where it was when Poe lived there, as Dr. E. J. Chauvet, the present owner, moved n back a short distance when Kings- hrlde road was widened, ine roan itT self passes over the original site. A seven-story apartment house Is shortly to be erected adjoining the his toric little house, and it is feared that the cottage may be injured by the debris incident to the work of building. The new building will shut off the view of the north side of the cottage. Dr. Chauvet has 'offered to sell the cottage tn the citv for $3000. The other $2000 is needed, President Miller says, to pay for moving the cottage, providing h.Hgiinn for it in the nark, and re storing the cottage as near as possible to its original condition. Many of those who visited the Poe cottage have believed that it was there he wrote "The Raven," but the famous poem was written while the poet was living at Brennan's farm, which stood . . . V. . m wt nm A m in the open neias nwi wua.i sterdam avenue ana jsignty-iounu street. ' ... n.ol eatate ' experts say that about one-third of the 141,186 lots in Man hattan hold modern buildings. The other two-thirds are antiquated struc tures and are regarded as more of a detriment than a help to the land they cover, and the property about them. Most of the modern buildings are to be found in the new sections of the city. It is In tne oiaer sections mm. the "antiques are to be found in larger numbers. , Down south of Fulton street in tne financial district, in Broadway, waii street, William street and along the water-front, a territory that is more valuable in many ways than in any other areas of similar size In the world, will be found some of the old est buildings in Manhattan. More will be found in Greenwich Village, a sec tion that has recently awakened from a lethargy that has lasted for more than half a century. . Old - timers will be found in the costly the atrical district in upper Broadway, where every inch of space is valued; through Fifth avenue, which will pres ently be the leading shopping street of the world; in through the East Side sections and the West Side sections; in at auction to the highest bidder with in two months. Adolph Lewisohn has given $100,000 to the Hebrew Sheltering Guardian So ciety. Mr. Lewisohn is the president of this society. It maintains a boys' and girls republic, which President Taft visited a few days ago as a guest of Mr. Lewisohn. The society now has 500 children under its care, but it needs more cottages and money for hospital and other buildings. Alto gether $300,000 is needed and Mr. Lew Isohn has promised to contribute one third of this amount. . . Herbert P. Bissell, of Buffalo, who has been for some time a member of the Up-State Public Service Commis sion, has been named by Governor Dix a Justice of the Supreme Court of New York. Mr. Bissell has been long a Harlem, on Washington Heights and through the Bronx, Brooklyn and Oueens will be found buildings of com paratively little value standing shoul der to shoulder with modern buildings and on valuable land. An organization has been formed of men interested in the motor-car indus try for the purpose of promoting and conducting competitive contests De tween cars. It is planned to re-estab lish a splendid sport that for a year or so has suffered because the right kind of people and the proper motives have not been behind it. Hill climbing, endurance tests, fuel economy runs, non-stop events, long-distance con tests, racing and other competitions calculated to demonstrate the weak and strong points in the motor vehicle are planned by the promoters of this new organization. Its membership wm be composed of "boosters" in the real sense of the word, and everything will be done with the main object of help ing the industry by stimulating pub lic Interest through these proposed contests. At the annual meeting of the Chil dren's Aid Society, Charles L. Brace, the secretary, reported that 605 or phans or deserted children had been rescued and placed out in homes dur ing the year. The total since the so ciety was established in 1853 is 28,961. Of these, two have become Governors, two Representatives in Congress, and one a Supreme Court Justice. The cost was $50 a child. A new industrial school in Harlem's Little Italy was reported to be one of the most urgent needs of the soci ety. Already $14,330 has been raised for this among former pupils of the society's Italian school. In the year Just passed the society received a total of $118,747 In gifts and bequests. Its current expenses amount ed to $521,024 and current receipts were $418,369. - The Supreme Court of the United States is to settle once and for all next January the question whether a man who deserts his wife and children may be extradited after a five years' resi dence in another state to answer in a New York County Court a charge of desertion. In 1897 Jacob J. Brenner, a barber. left his wife and two Infant children Success depends largely upon Good Health In your race for success don't loose sight of the fact that only through good health can you attain success. The tension you must necessarily place upon your nerves, and the sacrifice of proper exercise you have to make at times must be balanced in some way. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery is thm balancing power a vitalising power. It acts on the Btomacb and organs of digestion and nutrition, thus purifying the blood and giving strength to the nerves, indirectly aiding the liver to perform its very important work. Dr. Pierce' Golden Medical Diicovery has been successful for a generation as a tonic and body builder. Sold by medicine dealers in liquid or tablet form trial box of "Tablets" mailed on receipt of 50 one cent stampB. If in failing health write Dr. R. V. Pierce's faculty at Invalids' Hotel Buffalo, New York. Je7ztz?or G&p.T'.OZzye-r'. member of the State Hospital Commis sion. United States Senator George T. Ol iver, of Pennsylvania, recently was a patient at Johns Hopkins, Baltimore, undergoing treatment for kidney trou ble, having been operated on. Joseph Pennell, who has Just pub lished a wonderful series of art studies of the Panama Canal, is a native Amer ican, though be has made his home in London for many years. With his wife, Elizabeth Robblns Pennell, he has written and illustrated a number of books and he is best known to the American public as an Illustrator. Yet he has been honored in every country of the world for his painting and his work hangs in all the great galleries, public and private, in Europe. He and his wife were chosen to prepare the authorized life of Whistler. and went to San Francisco, Poverty overtook the wife, Mrs. Sadie Brenner, and her children. Brenner rose from Journeyman to proprietorship. Mrs. Brenner's case was taken up by the National DeBertion Bureau of the United Jewish Charities, at No. 866 Second avenue. She was established in a little room at No. 318 Second street, where she does hairdresslng. The Desertion Bureau located the husband in San Francisco. He was in dicted here, but fought extradition. He appealed to Governor Johnson, to the United States Circuit Court and finally to the United States Supreme Court. FRANCE DEEPENS RIVERS Banks and Private Corporations Will Help Pay Expense. PARIS, Dec. 7. (Special.) An extra Parliamentary Commission has come into existence charged with the duty of studying ways and means for the development of the internal water ways and the ports of France. In 80 years more than $150,000,000 has been spent by this country on its harbors, and an even larger amount on river works and canals. Apart from the fi nancial side, the project represented by this commission is extremely interest ing. A congress wil shortly be opened, in which the plans of the Ministry of Public Works, which is really the soul of the enterprise, will be discussed. It is proposed to undertake large im provements at ports such as Havre, Marseilles and Bordeaux. At the last named place a sum of $27,600,000 has been allocated. Instead of taxation, local and Na tional, to meet this expenditure, the Minister M. Jean Depuy, proposes to enlist the support of private com panies and banking corporations. Thus capitalist and industrial enterprise will be stimulated by government lor the benefit of the community. M. Depuy Is one of the most able men in the present ministry, and has that concep tion and grasp of detail necessary for the accomplishment of large projects. He is considered by some as a likely candidate for the presidency. The energy displayed by the Public Works Department in the improvement of harbors, etc., is particularly inter esting. It Is a sign that the progress of the mercantile marine is to go hand In hand with that of the battlefleets. DR. PIERCE'S GREAT FAMILY DOCTOR BOOK, Th People's Common Sum M odical Advisor nwir revised up-to-date edition of 100ft pages, answers kotte of delicate question which incte or married ,ou ght to biow. Seat FREE in cloth binding to mny addreaa on receipt of 31 one-cent stamps, to cover cost of wrapping and mailing onlv. r. . . . v ' : : 'r- : . - : : . ' I