MOUNTAIN TREES 



Mrs. Eliza Donner Houghton, one of the 

 few remaining survivors of the ill-fated 

 Donner party, tells me that, as a little 

 child, she noticed that the holes were al- 

 ways bored at a downward angle so that 

 it was impossible for the squirrels to get 

 a straight pull on the nuts, the acorn's 

 points always turning up when an at- 

 tempt was made at extraction, thus lodg- 

 ing the nuts in tighter than ever. Ques- 

 tion Does the wood-pecker know his 

 business? 



Particularly noticeable for beauty is 

 the trunk of the Ponderosa with its 

 great plates of salmon-red bark. These 

 noble, smooth, richly-hued shafts stand 

 like colonnades and pillars in the great 

 temple of the out-of-doors. Happy and 

 fortunate is that man who worships in 

 quietness in this cathedral of God's de- 

 sign with its sun-splashed and carpeted 

 aisles of rare scented needles. 



Would you know peace, would you 

 learn gentleness, do you long for rest? 



It is here for you in these quiet woods. 

 tt 



