The West Shore. VOL. 8 No. 10. I L. Bamuet, Publisher, I I Washington Bt, Portland, Oregon, October, 1882. RuUtntd st lha riMUiMot, rr Annua, Mute mdU, 4 10 SPECIMEN NUMBER. Any one receiving this copy of. The West Shore will please consider it an invitation to be come a regular subscriber. COMPLETE FILES NOW READY. Complete files of The West S hore from Jan uary to September, inclusive, can be had, postage paid, by remitting $1.50 to this office. THE QUEEN OF THE PACIFIC. The illustrations furnished in this issue, will give our readers but a faint idea of the real splendor of this floating palace, owing to the im possibility of reproducing in simple black and white, the effect of combinations of the various kinds of wood and kaleidoscopic glasses, that have been used in constructing the Queen oi the Pacific. To one whose business compelled him to make frequent trips to San Francisco, which occupied from five to seven days in those dilapi dated old. concerns, of the Holladay , regime, known as the Ajax and Oriflamme, it seems like a fairy tale to step aboard of this, the latest acqui sition to our fleet of magnificent steamships, ply ing between Portland and San Francisco with a regularity in time .that, is really surprising when the wind and weather of an ocean voyage are taken into consideration, Thirty-five dollars was the fare charged for those five day trips and none com plained;, since then the comforts have been in creased and time has been reduced to two days, the fare to twenty dollars cabin and ten in steer age. The general public, especially those who recollect old times, are pretty well satisfied with the present facilities: now and then, however, we hear a growler complaining that $30 for a two day's trip is too high. , The complaint always bring to our mind a Chinaman when selecting boots; he in variably takes the largest in the box, being deter mined to obtain the most material for his money, irrespective of fit oi comfort. The Queen is the property of the Pacific Coast Steamship Company, represented in San Francisco by Goodall, Perkins & Co.. and In thin citv hv Tohn Muir. E. Her , j - j j . cost is a trifle over five hundred thousand dollars, and to one familiar with values she seems cheap a' that price. The company owning her, as well as Messrs. Cramp & Sons, her builders, have every reason to feel proud of their production. The Nautical Gatettt, perhaps the best authority on such subjects, saysi " The Queen is the finest spec imen of naval architecture ever turned out from the establishment of the Cramps, taken as a whole; the saloons, staterooms, social hall and bridal chambers have no equal in this country of in the world, for that matter, for exquisite or artistic dec orations in its peculiar style, and the ship will attract much attention wherever she may go. Her crew consists of 94 men under command of Capt. E. Alexander, with C. F. Hall, as first officer, John Patterson, chief engineer, Geo. W. Edwards, chief steward, and M. M. Bucknam, the popular purser, formerly of "The Stale, as Dtirser. Th Ouwn is X& feet long, 3s-6 fcrt beam, 22.6 hold, 30 feet to awning deck. She is 2,727.80 tons custuin house measurement! with 1,200 tons of freight and 400 tons of coal in her bunkers she draws 16 feet. Her masts are of iron, all in one piece, and she is hall brig rigged, carrying a good supply of canvas. She has sn in verted and direct acting compound engine, 4$ and 90-inch cylinders and 48-inch stroke of piston. Her eight boilers, each u feet in diameter and 12 feet long, consume about 60 tons of coal every 24 hours to keep up loo pounds of steam. When everything gets to working smoothly, loo lbs. of steam will give her engine a maximum speed ol 80 turns per minute, and this her friends assert will force her through the water at the late ol 16 knots an hour, or about 33 hours from bar to bar. The propeller wheel of the Queen is 16 feet in diameter and 23 feet pitch; the blades and a spare set aboard, were made in England of Magnese brontc and cost with freight and duty $15,000. Her steering gear is worked by steam and she has a steam windlass for handling her anchors and a steam capstan aft. In case of casualties she is one of the lst pro vided with life-saving apparatus that we ever seen. In fact nothing has been left undone to attain speed, safety and comfort, and her rating for transatlantic service is of the very highest class in Bureau Veritas. Two hundred and fifty Edison s electric lights ate distributed throughout the ship with connections for placing lights on the wharves whilst loading or discharging. Every stateroom has an electric light, and is connected with the pantry by an electric bell. Whst will lie mos appreciated by families are her 29 commodious family rooms; they are 10 fret deep by 6 feet 4 inches in width, and each have 3 berths the lower one being 38 inches in width. The rooms are finished in flat white, with trimmings of mahogany and oak. Each room has a sofa, and each berth is fitted with a Saratoga spring bottom, and best of hair mattresses and pillow; the washstands with marble tops are enclosed in wood standing on fluted columns highly decorated, and when not in use are covered by a highly polished mahogany top, forming a neat side-table. The dining hall nr and saloon is 37 feet long, 37 feel wide, and nearly 8 feet height. It is lighted by la side posts and contains seven t.bles capable of aaomrnodal 7 . Th viand tta rway to the social hall is beautifully c.rved, and the social hall Itself ". finished in mahogany panels, relieved by rnouhl. ines and carved woou. ai u - r1' L,?r. -1... mirmr. and at the other is a piano, While on "! book-c,M' wnttMn a volumes of choice literature. At each end of the hall Is a bridal chamber 12x12 feet, gotten up in most exquisite taste and Itvfc finished In mahogany and oak, with dellc.lt ,tyle, Imisneu i n "V .? . , lied,teldi , Ursf wardrobe sofa, table, etc. fill the appointment, of nv nuarters. 1 ne covered with bronre par-er of a Japanese pattern. V".. .u. .,li.r features of the Interior ar- rangements is the dome covering the grand stair r" K ' Li. i. 1- fr,i in diameter, end 6 kel "i-'I, aoex is M feet the n.gn " T7'.,.!d ,U- i. set In th. side. AtZ T the apex hangs a teauliful chandelier of and from the apex mK .rtift,ui lM-inc Merits ana rruw All the chandelier.!", of bron. very fi.:,erV " J .ml the dwlW effect, when all rJL" Li .7... Turned 0. at nighC describe U i simply a .alter of tapoUh.,. THE LUMBER TRADE OF PUGKT SOUND. The great lumber producing port lun of Wash ington Territory Is contained in Ihe area lying north of the Columbia river and bounded on Iht east by the Cascade range of mountains, on Iht noith by British Columbia and the Strait of Fura, and on the west by the Pacific ocean; containing round numliers aliout 30,000 square miles. The principal portion of this great region' is covered with a dense growth of timber trees, of which Ihe most abundant and most Important be. ing used almost exclusively in the manufacture of lumber, are red fir (Abut Douaiii) and yellow P.- I II.'.. J' i nu. - .1 - I f I ur Irow (jroifimi, incomer x mm 01 cornier w found at the mills are Ihe cedar (Thuya Gipmlni), Ihe spruce (AHa MtntUtii) and hemlock (Ahiit MrUndtintt), A secies of white pine (1hui Allm) is occasionally found, and used fur inside finishing work. The yellow pine (Vnm JSmJf rata), which grows to' majestic proportions in Eastern Washington, is not found on Tuget Sound. The other cone-bearing trees an lh arbor vil.e ( Thuya Pilitua), which grows along the borders of the Strati of Futa, 'and tht yaw Tiixui Hrifioliit), a lough but small wood, used mostly by the natives for tht manufacture of bow's; but of no use as a limber Ire from Its small site. Careless and Ignorant writers term the whole of the conifer of I'uget Sound, Ore gon pine, which is as much of a misnomer as lo all all deciduous trees oak. Full ninety per cent, of all the lumber, limber and spars produced on Puget Sound I. fir, and Is so known and classed by all lumber dealers and millincn. Of Ihe deciduous trees the most common b tht white maple (Atrr All), a beautiful wood capa ble of a high polish; vine mapU (A. CiWiW); Ihe alder (Alum Ortpma), which atlainl a bight of sixty feel. The wood being white and soft la good for carving and for furniture, and tha bark t furnishes a red dye, wed by the Indians tot color ing cedar bark. The whltf ash (fraxm Ortpma) it larger than the ash of lite Atlantic state and Is light and clastic. The beautiful laurel tree Ar butm MtHiiflt) extends from California lo Van couver's Island, and Is common on the Immediate shores of Pugel Sound, Fuca Strait and iht west coast. Three specie of poplar are found, the most abundant is Iht aspen (ftfului Trmulm). Several varieties of Iht willow grow along tha river banks, but only Iwo ( W Sfl4 and S. SioulrraHa) attain iht six of tree, they being generally about thirty feel high. Tha crab-appla (Pynii Ktvularii) Is a hard and tough wood smc1 for many purpose, Tht oak ((W'" Ortfma) Is found in soma localities, but la quilt Inferior la tht oak of Iht Atlantic slain. Bui few of Iht deciduous wood havt been awed al Iht mills, but they will bt In demand, and will furnish important article of export bf fort many years havt elapsed. THE riaST MILLS. la 1845, CnL Michael T. Simmons, who bad coat to Ortgoo from Missouri, and who ha bee) termed tht LWtl Boom of Washington Territory, caata to Paget Sound white it Wat yet a potlio