LUTHER BURBANK 



certain amount of water. But cells that thus take 

 in water at once give up a portion of it to their 

 neighbor cells, and these in succession pass it on 

 to their neighbors. Thus, through an endless 

 series of reactions between the cells the water is 

 carried up in the living wood next to the bark of 

 the tree and ultimately to the leaves. 

 Nature's Bucket BriIqade 



The process is not altogether unlike the activi- 

 ties of a fire brigade in the rural districts, where 

 a line of men is formed from the fire to the near- 

 est well, and buckets are passed from hand to 

 hand. 



If the fire is in the upper story of a building, 

 men on the ladder may similarly hoist one bucket 

 after another from hand to hand. And in this 

 case it is obvious that there is ijo question of a 

 column of water to exert pressure. The water is 

 transported in individual buckets each one inde- 

 pendent of the others. 



And it would appear that the case of the water 

 in the plant cells is closely comparable. Each 

 pair of cells constitutes a system more or less in- 

 dependent of all the others. 



The forces of osmosis, operating between each 

 pair of cells, are in command of the situation and 

 so break the continuity that all semblance to a 

 continuous column of water is los't. 



[286] 



