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About The Oregon mist. (St. Helens, Columbia County, Or.) 188?-1913 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 10, 1909)
THE OREGON MIST vol. xxvur. ' " -j r ST. IlELEKOllEGOy, FRIDAY, BEPTEMBEIl 10, 1909. NO. 42. -r- COLUMBIA COUNTY, OREGON An Undeveloped Region Abounding in Natural Wealth-Good Homes for Homesters and Good Wages for Competent Men bplendtd Opportunities for Capital A county possessing a river! and Portland, a t.'istaneo of 30 froi.tagon Ui touiii. ,i r over hnil.., being 25 and f,o cent , wv-Mty;flv miles, with railroad- between l'ortlan.l A,i Ast Ha I paralellii.g the fiver for tlm en- distance of 100 mile ,t,mit ! r.,? ro distance .with te .lull..... feet Farmer, will at one, umlmtan 1 of me nesi aiainiing i.mocr in the world, with excellent iron (,rc in unlimited , quantity, with riml, marl, Ami other mineral, ami pottery elay, and with a xoil ami climate unit able to tlm nhumlaiit production of the vegetable ami fruit of the temperate one, ami with all these resource practically undevelop ed, border within seventeen mile, of the site of the city of Portland, and invite the attention of tlm thousand of homo seeker and capitalist who are daily passing through it gate. Tho climat of this favored region ia mild and equable, tho death rate, milling accident excepted, lieing leu tlniii four to tha thousand; and ii. i npot on earth i morn desirable f..r one who deainu to combine prosperity and longevity. Noth ing m gamed in an article of tlm rharaetrr ly exaggeration. ta object h to secure Iniliiigratioii of the heller cla and to attract the attention of thoKU who have it in their (tower to develop uur imlu tnm by establishing new indilrt- trie and thereby increasing the opportunities for tin employment of labor, elearing away our fur- ami making n possible or worthy ainl industrious people to make huiiicn upon the denuded litM.li. Thin I a heavily timbered remit ry, Jet throughout it length and breath there are favored spoU where small eleariligH ean he eas ily made and home ctahlihcd. The writer ha in mind many in l Jin. in of men who eaiue here in the early day and have Kteadily luck to the ami. They have stif-fr-d deprivation of omc of the luxuries of wealth ami what Illicit be thought hv aome a higher eivjlialion, but they have r.mel ami ediieated their families and in their old ag they are pos-n-iie I of good homes, surrounded With school house, churches, p.'t offices, tele.huiie ami tele graph line, rural mail routes, and all tin' neei'twnrie of eomfort and culture, and they have enough of tin Mull. I 'a goods to keep them the balance of their liven and leave something to their children. Tlu-y have done well-better, in nil probability than they could have done in the F.astcrn or Euro pean home. Hut the difficulties they have encountered and over come do not confront the home builder of today, and the man who Ric into tho woods to clear up a iiiriu out of the attimp will not have tu wait o loi.g for hia re- ward ai hnd the sturdy pioneer wliii came here hv ox team when tlie sliiles of Illiiiom and Indiana w.re but thinly settled ami he fore the dnv of the transcontinen tal railroad, A the deeemling Miowhull grow with ever greater proportionate rapidity o it de scends, until it overcome every thing in it path, so it i with the inarch of progress in thin western land. .Momentum ha hcen attain ed and from now on progress will l' made at ho rapid a rate as to bring the quickest return for every investment of lalmr or capi ll. The tiino ha i"mo when the Katcway of tho Orient will receive '' attention of capital. Our lum ber, our coal, iron, fruit, dairy product, mid all tho Article of '"'d and manufacture ean he rai K made, and ahipped from hero to better advantage and with Jtrcfttep profit to tho producer than '"mi any other portion of tho enmpeting world. Wo offer you '"clip land, river and rail trans portation, an unlimited market, "d a climato unexcelled in all tho World. It will eoat you but very "ttl to investigate, and every where you will find men upon whose word yon enn rely. "iiai an immense advantage thin give ii over interior eountiea, where there in no river competi lion and tho railroad tax tho pro ducer moro than doublo our rate, 'fhi natural advantage cannot be taken from u no long u the gravity of the earth canae water to run down hill. Portland, the inetropoli of the Northweat, with a population of two hundred thousand, in but thirty mile from St. Helena, the county aeat of Columbia county, and afford a market for our pro duct all the year, and also up pliea a large portion of the mer ehamlise lined by our merchant Bud farmer. It i a city with a year by year tho demand for it for that purpose increase. Many oven twelve feet in diameter, but of the tree measure eight, ten and they are not ho desirable for saw ing purpose a those of more moderate ai.e. Tho cedar fur nishes timber for finishing and for furniture maker. Tho cedar is also used in vast quuntitiea for shingles, which aro manufactured by a large number of exclusively shingle mill am shipped to east ern market to supply a growing demand. The dairy industry is confined mainly to the bottom land of the Columbia river district, although dairy produce is marketed from the valley of the interior, and especially of late years this in dustry ha assumed largo propor tion in the Nehujcm valley. Sev eral dairies along tho river front! of tho county. Those are the ce lebrated Columbia river Chinook salmon, considered to be tho best of tho salmon tribe. After being cuught at different points they aro collected by el.ictric launches and taken to the canneries on the lower river or to the immense cold storage plants, wnere they are canned or frozen, and thence transported to the markets of the world. So important is this in dustry considered that a great portion of the time of the Oregon legislature is taken up in passing fish legislation, a great deal of which is worse than useless. Fish ing in an attractive occupation, as a good outfit ean be purchased for about $400, and the returns are sometimes quite large, though not infrequently the season proves a disappointment, and the man who has invested his small means and his labor, finds at the end of the season that he has very little to show. "Work at good wages is plenti ful in Columbia county, and the young man who comes here with afPeen fixed purpose to succeed and bends his energies to the accom plishment of that purpose, never fails, and we can point to numbers of men who came here fifteen or twenty years ago penniless, who are now among our oubstatial citi zens; but the great need of the cate his children without constant worry regarding the cost: when he is made to understand that all these advantages are within the compass of his individual energy and intelligent effort, the honest, sober, indastrious citizen will hes itate no longer regarding the ad visability of a permanent settle ment in the country where nature is so kindly to those who know how to compel her best product." If you wish to come to Columbia county to investigate after you ar- rive at 1'ortland, yon wul find the trip a pleasant one and it will cost but very little. Take the Colum bia River It. R. to any town on the river front, or, if your hurry is not too great, take one of the numerous river steamers sand en joy a ride down the great Colum bia to your destination. There in vestigate for yourself. There are plenty of reliable citizens who will give you correct information, but they could do that by letter, and you should come to see for yourself all that is to be From a recent publication we re produce the following: The Climate. The Columbia is a river of the north, and the lines of latitude from this region touch the ex treme north of Maine, yet here Topography and SoiL This is not a mountainous coun ty; there are no mountain peaks and the general elevation is but a few hundred feet above the river. Along the river are some tide- lands, a little level higher up, then a line of abrupt hills facing the river, and back of these low roll ing hills, with brooks and basins sloping hillsides and rounded hill tops, all easily traversed and very picturesque, and here and there some fine little valleys. In the interior is one extensive valley, the Nehalem, but the country, as a whole, is made up of hill slopes and low ridges, rarely too steep for cultivation, and providing from a thousand points a charm ing landscape. The drainage is almost perfect, Nearly a score of small rivers and creeks intersect the county, all liv ing streams are of pure, clear wa ter, fed by unfailing springs. A better watered region cannot be found. The larger streams are subject to the ocean tides and these is no serious overflow, the Columbia rarely leaving its banks and then covering only a few acres with bank water. The soil is a clay loam, some what mixed with sand in places. sometimes light and porous, and with a dark clay subsoil. It ab sorbs moisture well, and does not . . " ' ' i::' S : i- - ' P'C ' . i ' " .. . ' ' J. ' '' - ,; ... V ', ' ' pY' i I - U?ric' 'HIT ' """Y" -: . ; ' ' " V..,. KM..-. S JSJ 'iT rf- a i - -1 - - iSiNmi.'' "': ii . nil "in mi '" jlTr -."' !-'- -" '.'f .i - i -. ; ' hi 3 I a n i "rw.-.-, . m iflllii''IW ! COLUMBIA COUNTY COURT HOUSE. Location. Tho location of Columbia conn Jy m tho most advantageous on no mnp of Oregon. Tho. Colum hia river is the Missiasinpi of the 'ifie slopo, and on It bosom '"mts tlm commnrco of all nations J" 'rlh, which comn hero largely ',,r the iiroduets that cannot bo ""Pi-lied elsowhero. This great water eoiirso is parallelled by a fftilrimd from 0 g0ft oonst t0 '''nlnnd, mid theroforo transpor rales, through rivor and " 1 iMpctition, is very reason 8,)U'i Hio faro between St. Ilolens prosperous present and a magnifi cent future, being the natural sup ply point and railroad center of the treat Northwest. I here are ten steamers plying daily between 1'oitlaml and Columbia county points, all touching at St. Helens, besides the regular train of the Northern Pacific railroad. Astoria at the mouth of the Co lumbia river, a city of 10,001) in habitants, afford an excellent market for lumber, hay, butter and beef produced in the western part of Columbia county, to which it is tributary. Thus it will he seen Hint, for transiHirfatiim facilities and a choice of markets the pnsi lion of this county cannot well be surpassed. One of the principal causes of die lurue immigration to l alitor uia during the pt few years has been the supposed mildness of tho climate, and yet it ran bo safely said that in this respect Columbia county, Oregon, is far superior to hiiv iiart of California, lor, wnuo it may bo a trillo colder in win ter, the summer heat is not near so oppressive. Hero tno gras green throughout tho year and severe drought is not known. Our Industries. Chief among tho industries of Columbia, county aro sawmuimg, i .lnipviiiff and fishing. Hi" count v contains a largo number of sawmill, varying in rapacity from 15.000 to 150,000 feet per daw This industry is yet in its infancy, and will in time employ thousand where now "" deeds aro cnRnKfll. The timber is I ho very best in the world, con sist ing of spruce, cedar and fir tho latter being famous tho wovhl over lor its size, slrenglh and d ir aliilitw N' bettor timber than Oregon fir, says nn eminent wri ter, was over put into a sh.p, and are operating with from forty to eighty cows the year round, and the product of cream, butter, veal and hogs finds a ready market in Portland, with cheap transporta tion both ways. Dairying is nn industry that is destined to in crease rapidly as the country, im proves and tho soil placed in a good state of cultivation. Indeed, it is not disputed that dairying has, in past yeiuw, been one of our most profitable industries, and while other lines of industry have fluctuated, dairy produce has com manded a fair price with a steady market, and it possesses the ad vantage of enriching instead of impoverishing tho soil. Fruit of all kinds, except those varieties peculiarly adapted to a tropical climate, is grown iu abundance here. Particularly is our soil adapted to apple-raising, and large quantities of our prunes find readv sale in the markets of i he world'. Recently the growing of English walnuts has attracted considerable attention, and it has been fully demonstrated that they can be made a profitable crop here, the quality being superior to tho California English walnut, which has long been a staple ar ticle of commerce. Successful ex periments have also been made with tho Italian chestnut, and, in fact, it is being rapidly demon strated that our soil and climate n n.innied to the perfect growth of all tho fruits and vegetables of tho temperate zono. Ono of tho prominent industries which furnishes remunerative em ployment for a large number of men during the season is salmon f!.,i.;, The nriee raid tho fish ermen this year is five cents for fish under twenty-fivo pounds and six cents per pound for all over iilf ;,n This industry is carriod on along tho entiro water front county is capital. AVe want men the grass grows green all the year ot large and ot moderate means. ' and roses bloom in the open until Great projects are awaitiug devel opment. Ihe waste and destruc tion of the Russo Japanese war will make a market for vast amounts of structural iron, rails and timber, and the manufactur ers who establish themselve in Co lumbia county, Oregon, will have a great advantage in competing for tho Oriental trade over their less favored competitors else where, for here they will have the advantage of raw material at their door, a decreased distance over a peaceful ocean, cheap fuel, abundant waterpower for the gen eration of electricity, and a cli mate that never interposess the delay and hindrances of a rigor ous winter, As Others See Us. Tho San Francisco Bulletin con tained the following regarding the Oregon climate and soil: "There are thousands of American citi zens wearing their hands to the bone upon the stony fields of New England or the clay benches of the Alleghenies endeavoring to feed their babies and keep a shin gle between their little heads and the storm, who, with the same capital, with less labor and with far pleasanter surroundings as to climato, scenery and markets, would readily accumulate a com petency in western Oregon. When tho homeseeker has satisfied him self that the soil and climate of western Oregon aro superior to thot of any other with which he has been hitherto familiar; when ho has ascertained that tho crops aro larger and the profits surer; when ho finds that it is easier to procure the luxuries in this land than to lay hold of tho necessities in other regions ; when it is proved to him that he will be able to edu- the Christmas holidays. The se cret is hidden either with the Japan current which carries a warm river 400 miles wide through the Pacific ocean, or the southwest wind which blow from the far off region of perpetual warmth. Experts refer tho win terless climate nowadays to the winds, and because they brought warmth into the heart of the win ter calendar, and blew over a camp of Chinook Indians near the mouth of tho Columbia, these southwest winds were early call ed "Chinook" and today mean molting snow and comfort even in Idaho. These soft southwest winds are the great feature of the Pacific northwest, and if with them come rainy days, the rain means green meadows, pasture all the year, and unfailing crops. The rain fall is not excessive and in amount does not exeeed that of the gulf coast of Mississippi and Louisi ana, and is not so great as several other states in the union. There are a good many rainy days, but the ram does not "pour.' One of the villages in this coun ty is called "Mist" and the Ore gon rain is often called mist, so gently does it come. Fields are not washed; hillsides not gulled; land is not washed by erosion, and work is not stopped by the rain fall. Early summer may have showers, but harvest time is with out rain or clouds. During Sep tember of the present year there were but two rainy days. The people themselves are the best evi dences of the healthfulness of the climato, and in Oregon the sea son freest from physical ills is the ramy" season. The death rate of Oregon is the lowest of any state in tho union, t-Mi, , dry out in summer, insuring per fect development of crops and full harvests. Along the streams lands show rich deposits of alluvium, and everywhere there is produced an excellent quality of natural grass, and under cultivation heavy crops of grain, fruit, and vegetables. It is rich in plant food, centuries of forest waste being mixed with it I lie great lorest ot tui region testify to the quality of the sou, REUBEN AND GOBLE Are practically one community with two post offices. At the lat ter is the plant of the Warren Cold btorage company, an ex tensive institution where fish are frozen for transportation to the eastern markets. Here, also is found the immense ferry of the Northern Pacific railroad, which conveys the trains across from the Washington side of the river. Goble has its full share of busi ness houses and is quite a live and prosperous community. . It has considerable land in the neighborhood that is especially adapted to fruit culture, and the Yellow Bellflower apple does par ticularly well there, the fruit be ing smooth, free from Mooches and of excellent flavor. SAUVIES ISLAND. Located in Columbia county, but not having its proper recog nition as an integral part thereof, is what is known as Sauvies Is land, a wonderfully rich tract of land lying between the Willam ette slough and Columbia river, and extending the entire length of the slough. It is a veritable garden spot, capable of producing vegetable wonders to astound the the eyes of our visitors. The chief industry is running milk ranches or dairies, and a great portion of the cream and milk used in Port land comes from the Columbia county ranches on Sauvies Island. It would seem from the nature of the soil, that more attention would be paid to market gardening and fruit raising, and especially tha cultivation of asparagus, which, grows there to perfection, and in the canning of which, a great industry could be established. The island has many fine homes and a pros perous and industrious people. It is one of the most important sec tions of Columbia county. . MAYGER. Mayger is a bustling and very prosperous little town of Colum bia county, situated on the Co lumbia river, near the center of the north line of the county, and on the line of the Astoria and Co lumbia River railway, and is about equally distant from Portland and Astoria. The town is the shipping center for a large scope of terri tory, generally designated as "Mayger," and contains the post office, railway station, boatland ing, business houses and head quarters generally of all the busi ness enterprises of that section. The town and postoffice are called after Charles Mayger, its oldest settler and founder of the chief business enterprises of the place. me county surrounding and tributary to Mayger has many na tural advantages that make for the prosperity of a community, among which the chief is, the dense growth of (valuable fir and cedar timber, which onginally reached to the margin of the Co lumbia river. Since this part was settled, however, vast quantitiea of this timber, in the shape of lumber, logs, shingles, telegraph poles, piling and cordwood, have been taken from a strip of this territory along the river, varying in width from two to three miles, the preparation for which has given for more than thirty years remunerative employment to hun dreds of men, and, judging from the showing made, there is timbev enough tributary to this place to iurnish employment for genera tions to come. Timber products will -doubtless, therefore, remain the chief source of revenue for Mayger 's population for some time, at least. Bnt Tamable as this resource may be, it is only the foundation for a more permanent source of income, for this district is rapidly being transformed into a thriving; agricultural district, and although. it is conceded that nature s crop is the most valuable single crop this land will ever produce, it has been demonstrated that this land, when cleared of its crop of tim ber, will produce anything raised in the temperate zone, and it is proving itself much more valua ble for farming purposes than it ever was for timber. Large tracts have already been cleared and put under cultivation by the enter prising residents, and here one can see, as in a dissolving view apparatus, the wilderness chang ing to cultivated fields that give promise of permanent homes and! revenues, both for the present and for future generations. Some of the cleared lands have been set out in orchards and small fruits. and the fruits, etc., raised thereon are not excelled by any on the Pacific coast. Being on the Columbia river, the salmon fisheries also furnish a source of revenue for a goodly portion of the population, and adds considerably to the resources of the place, as does also the rock quarries nearby, from which a large proportion of the rock used! in the jetty at the mouth of the river is taken. The peole of Mayger and sur rounding country are, as a class, very good citizens. Industrious, honest and energetic, who appear to have no misgivings as to the future of their part of the coun try, and are proving their faith by their works. They maintain good! schools for the rising generations, and now rejoice in the ownership of a neat little church, built and equipped by themselves, which now has a large membership, and the services in which are well at tended. Fraternalism is represented atj Mayger by a tent of the Knights of the Maccabees, which is in at flourishing condition, and is prov ing itself a power for good in the land. Mayger and vicinity offer splen did opportunities to those seeking homes, and wul ever ?emain as rot the past one of the heaviest con tributors to the prosperity, of the county and state. Columbia county has ten billion feet of the best standing timber. in the world. Columbia county has seventy- five miles of frontage on the Co lumbia river. ' j