THE WEST SHORE. August. i r- 00 r 5 r-3 i I 8 As Eifht P Monthly tamnud Piper, puWiAi M PORTLAND) OMGOK, by L. SAMUEL, j Wuhingtofftt. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION, ( Including Pcmuic to wy put of tht United Sut:) Ou copy. re". ' Binflt Number. fO cenn. Printed by fiio, H. HlMlf, cot. Front k W-hington-m. SALUTATORY. In making our first appearance, it is ex pected that we should say a few words to the public, and particularly to those upon whose patronage we depend, respecting the objects of our paper and what our readers may look for inns columns. We are not inclined to herald our debut with a flourish of trumpets; we prefer yielding obedience to a time-honored custom rather than have the aim and purKse of our existence be the tubjttts of misconception. Above aught else, our efforts will be exerted to make The Wfst Siiork, thi literary jiaper of the Pacific Northwest to this end, we have secured contributors from the brightest in tcllccts and ablest writers in this Slate. We shall devote some space to Ilic subject of Horticulture, and this department will be under the direction of a Horticulturist of considerable experience. Our readers will lie furnished with a reliable Financial and Commercial Review from the pen of a writer conversant with all matters relating to those subjects. For the benefit of im migrants, we will publish gratis, a descrip tive list of farming lands for sale in this State and Washington Territory, We will secure information upon literary and other topics for such corrcsjmndents as may desire the same, In addition to illustrations of a general character, we will, from time to time, illus trate our public buildings, schools, churches, business blocks and resiliences, home man ufactures and inventions. In short, no pains will lie spared to make Tun West .Siiohk interesting to ils readers and profit able to its publisher, and we are convinced that should we succed in fulfilling these ob jects, it cannot prove otherwise than satis factory to all (Nirties concerned. "'ORTI.AND HOW IT CAME TO II K -T11K OKFXiON EMPORIUM. Prior to 1849, Oregon City, then com monly called Wallamet Falls, or The Falls, was the social, political ami commercial metropolis of the country west of the Kocky Mountains and north of Cali'ornia. Indeed, its supremacy might be said to have extended over San Francisco, then a straggling adobe village called Vuba Bucna, where lived nn enterprising merchant, liik'lit C. I.. Ross, who in Anril. 1818. ad vertised his country store in the columns of the Oregon im'lrowlitan press, and referred to its principal mcrchants-'-Kilborn, Law ton, Alwrncthv and others. Hut the discovery of gold in Calilornia 111 1848, soon dunned all this, and the oh leure Ycrlu lluena suddenly shot up into the famous San 1' ranciscn, ami overshad owed the whole Pacific Coast. This discover)- was soon followed by an active trade between San Francisco and Oregon, via the Columbia River, which brought prominently forward the question of where was the proper place for the future com mercial town of Oregon. Although Tort land had been located and named as early at 1844, it was tel a doulnlul experiment, ; and much known, as only " a place twelve miles below Oregon City." ! The trade and commerce of the country were based upon the agricultural products I iml the consumption of the Wallamet Val I ley. The ox-team and llie row-boat par 1 ticuUrly the former were the principal, if 1 not the only means of transport between 1 tide water and the interior. The tow-boat, carrying from 500 to 5,000 pounds, wis 1 low and laborious process of exchanging Oregon Hour for Sandwich Island sugar and coffee. The people on the eul tide of the river could draw moderate loads to and from Oregon City with their teams, but ow ing lothe height of the mountain range on the west bank of the river, it was difficult to get to it with wagoris below the mouth of the Yamhill. But Oregon City itself was above the head of ship navigation and the passage of the Clackamas Rapids was then very diffi cult and tedious for even row boats, except for a few weeks in the June rise. While the annual cargo of the Hudson's BayCom pany, and the occasional supplies of the Mission and a few independent traders, constituted the merchandise of the coun try, it was not so material whether the place of trade or exchange was at or above the head of ship navigation. But now the cxlernal commerce of the country was growing so rapidly that it became a matter of the first moment to bring the prairie schooners and the ocean-going vessels to gether. Of the northern part of the valley, the west side of the river was much the larger and more productive country. The Tual itin Plains and Yamhill District contained large bodies of arable prairie land, to which many of the earliest settlers of the country were attracted ; while the corres Knding section of the country on the east side was comparatively densely wooded and sparsely settled. Various attempts had been made to es tablish towns on the west bank of the Wal lamet and the soulh bank of the Columbia, with a view of commanding the trade of this west side country. Besides Portland, there were, among others, Linnton,' St. Helens and Milton. The first named was situate about one and a half miles below the site of Springville. It was commenced in 1843 upon the site of an old Hudson's Bay Company landing, by McCarver and Burnett. Great things were expected of it. In 1844 McCarver wrote back to "the States" that Linnton would soon be one of the largest cities in America if thy could only git mill titough. Poor Mac I What drafts he made upon the rosy future. Surely he was the man of whom tho poet said : . , v - nopv.irinir..iDnini 111 uie numnn Drcut Mm usv.r it, but slway. to b bint." Within five years thcrcaflcr nothing rev mained to mark the site of this prospective city. Hut its hopeful projector and exalted prophet, through many mutations of for tune, slill dreamed of the great mart he should build on the Pacific shore, and just thirty ycars-from the announcement of the future greatness of the now forgotten Linn ton, he breathed his last, some nine score miles to the northward of it, where he had founded another city of the future the deep-water iori and terminal town, Ta-coma. In 1S46 a trail was cut through the woods from Portland to the plains along the comparatively low ridge between the Canyon and the Barnes' Road. This was the first direct communication between Portland and the interior. Gradually this trail broadened into a wagon road, and the ox-team found its way to the ships at Portland, while Linnton, comparatively Is olated from the interior by the height of the mountain in Us rear, languished and died. In the Spring of 184S Lownsd.de, who then owned the tannery back of town, dis covered the iass to the Plains, now called the Canyon, and soon after Wilcox, Carter and he explored it and ascertained lliat a good road could lie made through it to the Plains at a comparatively small cost. In the rail of the nine vear, I .owns- dale purchased the Portland Claim for 5,000 in leather, and commenced work, ing up the project of gelling a road to the interior and up ihe vallev through this Canyon. The plank road furore had lately swerjt over the Western Slates, and the farther wave of it had now broken upon the Oregon shore. The "Suck-road," as the natives called h, vat thought to be Just the thing for the emergency. Accordingly, on Jan uary to, 1851, an Act vat pasted by the immature incorporating "The Portland and Valley Plank Road Company, for the purpose of constructing a plank road trom Portland, in the county of Washington, to the town of Lafayette (via Hillsboro), in the county of Yamhill, to some point on Mary's River, to be be determined by said Company." On July 30, 1851, the Company was or ganized at Lafayette by the election of Hembree, f landers, carter, namoers ana Chapman as directors. Soon after the Cor-ner-nlank of the road was laid at the mouth of the Canyon with due ceremony and much rejoicing. Even the great political leaders and rivals of the day King and Dryer fraternized on the occasion, and united in apostrophising the American ea'le and lauding this hrst great internal improve ment on the Pacific Coast. What followed is soon told. The wood en way was not laid through the valley. Sundry Portland subscribers failed to come to time on the assessments on their stock, and the farmers and others along the line of the route who took stock with a view of getting the road through their neighbor hoods were compelled to make good the deficiency. But within a year the Canyon was cleared out and graded and a lair plank road of cedar puncheons constructed, to the summit. Thereafter the trade of the valley, both on the east and west side, was rapidly drawn to Portland. Persons coming from the East to engage in busi ness naturally stopped at the head of ship navigation; and within two years from the commencement of the plank road, most of tne present wealthy men ot Portland had commenced here, empty-handed, to make their start in the world. In the Winter of 1851-2 ihe seat of gov ernment was practically removed from Or egon Cay to Salem. At the same time its trade waidiverted to Portland, and the old Mistress V the Pacific gradually retired from the contest and shrank into the ways anu limits 01 a forsaken village. For a few years afterwards. St. Helen, through the interested aid of the officers and agents of the then powerful Pacific Mail Company, kept up a struggle with Portland for the commercial emporium of tne country, ilut with even tins great odds against her, the position of Portland could not be seriously affected; and in a few years the company gave up the unprofitable contest, and abandoned their wharves and warehouses at St. Helen. The problem of the emporium' was solved by the construction of a practicable wagon road through the mountains on the west side of the river. By this means 1 ortland was made the place where the ox teams of the interior and " the shis of the sea '' should first meet and exchange car goes, and frorn this circumstance she has grown to her present relative greatness. RAMBLING NOTES OX OLDEN TIMES. HV W. L. AUAMS, M. D., A. JI., U.. O, From twenty to twenty-seven years ago, our immigration, which came once a year, numbered from six to eight hundred. Now it amounts 10 nearly that every two w eeks. iTIien, it took us six long weary months to plow through the sage plains, climb over mountains, and swim or ford rivers that intervened between the "starling point "on the Missouri River and Philip Foster's, the "first house" in the Willamette Valley. men, our women were heroes, they washed, cooked, mended, nursed babies while at rmli, besides walking much of the entire distance from Ft. Hall through, with out a murmur of complaint. They also as sisled in driving the loose stock, took turns with their husbands, when necessary, in driving the four yoke of cattle that luuled the wagon in which llicir effects were being conveyed to iheir new home towards the silling sun. My own wife did all this, besides assisting me in carrying our entire load by piecemeal on our backs up long muddy mountains, an empty wagon being all that our jaded skeleton cattle could haul through the mire. It took us ten days of uinauni naru travel to crass the Cascade Mountains, from " Barlow 't Gate " to Fos ter's. It rained on us in torrents, and some of the mountains were so sliroerv that on. caide could not maintain a foothold in descending before a wagon. We unyoked drove the cattle down loose, and then took our wagons down by hand, after rough locking three of the wheels with lor-eK;,,. nd tying a small fir tree, top foremost, be hind the wagon, to keep it from stampeding: down the mountain. The Rev. Mr. Kelly, who died a few weeks ago in East Portland, and myself, with the assistance of our women, brought our three wagons down Sandy Mountain in this way alone. The ten days we spent in the Cascades were days of struggle. It was October. The . "rainy season" though a month away, ' threatened to set in. Occasionally the floating clouds sent down rain, as they did after Bro. Hammond's "snails" and the rest of the animals were housed in Noah's ark. These ten days of struggle were the last ten throes that ushered us into, to us, a new world. We had been so long accus tomed to the wilderness, that the cackling of Foster's chickens, and the squealing of ' his pigs, was more musical to our ears than would have been the singing of the best trained choir, executing "Old Hundred," accompanied by a ten thousand dollar organ in a forty thousand dollar church. Our faces were literally pealed with the alkali of the sage plains, our wagon-covers were torn into shreds, our cattle were little better than dry bones, our women were wake siah halo eltau. our commissariat re united, halo muchamuck. But Foster's po tatoes, when roasted in our camp fire, made us Wonder why an epicure should desire anything sweeter than Oregon potatoes and salt especially when washed down with' pure crystal waters that fed a beautiful river, which had never yet been defiled by , a city sewer. At Oregon City.the then seatof government and commercial emporium of Oregon a small village of perhaps two hundred souls we were pressed to dine with Mrs. Hood, a good Samaritan lady who kept boarding- , house, who in feeding us probably antici pated the double pleasure of imitating Christ and having a talk with live immi grants of '48. The news ran like wild-fire through the city that an immigrant wagon was in town. Among others who sought us out was Doctor Locey, father of the late J. D. Locey who was killed only a few weeks ago by the accident to the Senator. Like his son, the Doctor was a man of large heart and generous impulse. He took us into his house to spend the night, drove the team into his yard, and turned the cattle loose to a whole wagon load of oats. Here our friend's table fairly dazzled my eyes with a display of salmon, potatoes, bread and butter, with coffee, milk and sugar. A young squaw served Mrs. L. as a servant. How she had been able to acquire a know ledge of the Indian language, so as to en able her to talk with that maid of the forest, was a matter of wonderment to me. The way the Siwash responded to "Mum pin chuck-hiack " by bringing from the stove a pot of aqua bullion with which to replenish the tea-pot, filled me with astonishment, and begat in my heart a strong desire to master the beautiful lan guage. I remembered after that, that "chuck" was water, and supposed of course it was a generic term, embracing liquids in general. During the following winter I paid considerable attention to the studyof Indian classics, and soon flattered myself that I wa quite a Siwash linguist; though perhaps if I had been fortunate enough to get hold of McCormick's Key to the lan guage, I should have found out that my expressions were often inelegant, if I didn't really "coishul" some very essential rules of Indian grammar. For want of a gram ma and .McCormick s dictionary, I couldn't see very often just where the laugh came" in, when, in answer to some question I put in our native language to my scholars, I was responded to in a roar o( laughter as I was one day in asking my young lady pupils for a glass of milk" Xca hiai ticky moomou chuck." That school house was in Yamhill, where we had pitched our tent, after ferrying our t wagon over the Willamette, and swimmirw- the cattle with the yokes on to save ferriage money, which I dtdn t happen to have. After settling my ferriage, I had just ten cents left, out of two dollars loaned me by O.. .. , . . ' ofagt agv.j