August, 1882. THE WEST SHORE. 145 brother therV. "Why did you leave Kansas?" we next asked. " Well I were ther' three year. The first year everything was all right; the second I got a bad dose 01 grassnoppcii.. They jess clean'd me out totally. The next vear things looked better; but I got to thinking, 'what if the hoppers come agin; so Hat, (projecting his thumb to wards his wife) "an, I talked the matter over and writ' to brother Hiram, an, he advised us to come, and so fur I hain't no cause to regret, so long as thirty bushel is better' n ten, an, in the off year none at all." The next one we spoke to was a gnarled thick-set man, with a firm de termined look and red whiskers on his face. To the question why he came here he replied: " I've had it purtty rough this last year, sure. I'm from Iowy, nna nf th hest farmin states in the world if it wasn't for them blizzards. Well, sir, they fairly blew me out of Iowy. You never was in one of em ole pards up here, as is doin' well, got I lineaments or form, act or purpose, we . mareea, settieu down an' got chicks; have not the dimmest shadow or even,., an' I ain't got nobody to leave my pile legend. Who shull mark the hour, the to when I strike it." And the man day, the century, or age that old Hood walked down the aisle in search of a first aroe nnd looked nronnd over all; chew of tobacco. discerning on one side an ocean, on the We had by this time passed the fish other a continent lost to vision only by wheels where the warir.ess of the sal- the earth's round form? Silent Recip- mon is circumvented. We had passed lent of the sun's first morning kiss ot the scene of Phil Sheridan's first fight welcome, and last to note the day's fare- ..... . . . ... r, .. .. C 1.1 r his "baptism of fire" and reached a welil serene, senueni, ocpuicuic ui point abreast the ruins of an old block creative purposes, mighty Monitor of house where in the Fifties a handtul ot memory s unci spam nu . ,v,it mpn had defended themselves I tell the story of Inland Bca, of the Cas- against a horde of renegade Indians, cades cleft in twain, of Rainier's rage and we reflected, what an ample re- ana lire, 01 01. neicn .anger vence the American people now enjoy of Adams' rumbling roar? Calm Co- b ... .1. t -II 1... nt all having placed the wards of the nation temporary 01 uu u..u 1. on reservations so large that each In- that is, of alt that is to be; giving dian is dying of abject loneliness. Think neitncr n.ni, nor. worn, - ot four hundred Indians trying to iind us creation, m pu, i - I 1 . l". !t U.4 rt emu ami each other on the Umatilla reservation mg augiu 0 nuui .1 ... ' ,"v , of nearly six hundred thousand acres!! rail, 01 tnings creaicu ... Is it- any wonder that in prowling mighty works begun and fiimhed.before I take it? No; well then you can t imagine what they be. First thing its a sudden turnin' cold, then a blow, a how with rain an' hail an' snow, an' things goin so" and the speaker began to cut the air with rapidity in a horizontal direc ' ,1 L 1 -LL- k.A tit A Of I tion. seeing tnai ne auraticu ic tention of several sitting near him, he became earnest and continued : " These blizzards are the darndest things yuh ever see; they try to blow yuh away; they rip and tear things; they freeze yuh up; its drift here and bare ther' and when ther' done, what ain't blowed away is frozen stiffer'n a crow-bar. I was a little afeared to come here first, so I went to Californy, but, twixt shapral an, Mexican land grants an' jumpin'yerland, Icould'nt git aright down good spot. So, while nuntin aroun' I come across a man from the Peloose country. He had gone back after his family, an' after talkin' with him I 'cided to come up here. I've read a good deal about up ther' an' if I don't hit it ther' I'll try the bpokain countrv. Thev sav "I'm from Nevady," interrupted a muscular fellow in a monkey jacket and blue shirt. " That state's played petered out we've got down to the last level, and I've come up here to sink a shaft fur wheat and sich. I've been minin' fourteen year an' was purty well fixed twic't, but stocks knocked the bottom out ov my pan. I've got some .rounding for hi, bhe,, poo, j m wa, -J -- a botto o UuSl wl"l' " . ... . . t. ....t.. r Tiimr 1' 00 cai) Lo, should stumuie over a uuu, . ... . oir anJ whiskey, which a low down wh.tc man r ' placed in the brush at three dollars a - . stand,ngclear.yout,snowM.8 , . - . Surc 0 labor of subterranean convulsions couU, accUKe me of not having .and. upheavals during volcanic eruptions a - once anJ whh most equaling a congressional debute J nd on the tariff, between Robeson and "d. But to judge Blackburn, with an occasional rock hurled by Wm. D. Kelley. We wm . . - - along over long trestles; we hoo g ce w,h , of red through dark tunnels; w pajs u flnJ g Bnoaring;cIam.eater from precipice, and arrive a, over us. supper. ' . , . we iW0ke t0 wit. Above The Da e. we w of ferryln, . triln surging, angry, r . T - - Snake Rivcr whcre it join. magnificent and awe..nsp,n..B ndin8 w toned by the smell of sa whch W" . or ih.ke, not are here caught oy in. h - drcam broUcn, numbers. . . , . five minutCs eittht cars were the finct view of Moant llol . . cr0.- w have yet had. Ainworth allowed us time to examine How grandly it looms! low ma- BilIlng, She is the largert and Imtic. and cold, and white, and impres- ferryboat in the Pacific ' .. 1. I inuirnnir i iiw i - sive! Stretching wiae -.. Northwest. She has a tonnage 01 to the skies, the silent witness 01 eve.. . jmmcnM) power-io.inch of which no record stands; of event. j wJth g fuct rtroke. The ma forged by ages and shaped by centuries J fcy gnhh & wt. -of events notched only m eternity, d thc Urgcfct ever put together events the smallest detail of which . shc COIllro!led by Oates' noted the rise and growth, the prime opewtw and decay of races of being of whose