The Centralia Conspiracy eBook

Ralph Chaplin
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 146 pages of information about The Centralia Conspiracy.

The Centralia Conspiracy eBook

Ralph Chaplin
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 146 pages of information about The Centralia Conspiracy.

When Columbus first landed on the uncharted continent these trees were already ancient.  There they stood, straight and majestic with green and foam-flecked streams purling here and there at their feet, crowning the rugged landscape with superlative beauty, overtopped only by the snow-capped mountains—­waiting for the hand of man to put them to the multitudinous uses of modern civilization.  Imagine, if you can, the first explorer, gazing awe-stricken down those “calm cathedral isles,” wondering at the lavish bounty of our Mother Earth in supplying her children with such inexhaustible resources.

But little could the first explorer know that the criminal clutch of Greed was soon to seize these mighty forests, guard them from the human race with bayonets, hangman’s ropes and legal statutes; and use them, robber-baron like, to exact unimaginable tribute from the men and women of the world who need them.  Little did the first explorer dream that the day would come when individuals would claim private ownership of that which prolific nature had travailed through centuries to bestow upon mankind.

But that day has come and with it the struggle between master and man that was to result in Centralia—­or possibly many Centralias.

Lumber—­A Basic Industry

It seems the most logical thing in the world to believe that the natural resources of the Earth, upon which the race depends for food, clothing and shelter, should be owned collectively by the race instead of being the private property of a few social parasites.  It seems that reason would preclude the possibility of any other arrangement, and that it would be considered as absurd for individuals to lay claim to forests, mines, railroads and factories as it would be for individuals to lay claim to the ownership of the sunlight that warms us or to the air we breathe.  But the poor human race, in its bungling efforts to learn how to live in our beautiful world, appears destined to find out by bitter experience that the private ownership of the means of life is both criminal and disastrous.

Lumber is one of the basic industries—­one of the industries mankind never could have done without.  The whole structure of what we call civilization is built upon wooden timbers, ax-hewn or machine finished as the case may be.  Without the product of the forests humanity would never have learned the use of fire, the primitive bow and arrow or the bulging galleys of ancient commerce.  Without the firm and fibrous flesh of the mighty monarchs of the forest men might never have had barges for fishing or weapons for the chase; they would not have had carts for their oxen or kilns for the fashioning of pottery; they would not have had dwellings, temples or cities; they would not have had furniture nor fittings nor roofs above their heads.  Wood is one of the most primitive and indispensable of human necessities.  Without its use we would still be groping in the gloom and misery of early savagery, suffering from the cold of outer space and defenseless in the midst of a harsh and hostile environment.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Centralia Conspiracy from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.