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About The Oregon mist. (St. Helens, Columbia County, Or.) 188?-1913 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 10, 1909)
z ST. HELENS The county seat of Columbia ounty and the city that has made more progress during tne pasi year than any other city on the Columbia river below the Willam ette. Like St. Johns. St. Helens lay dorment for many years and deservedly had tho reputation of being one of tne slowest towns in Oreiron. The beauty or its ioca tion was admitted, but it requires pay rolls to make a town and these were altogether lacking. In the fishing season a little money was in circulation here and court house salaries and visitors on county business made up the rev enue on which the inhabitants ex isted. But a change has come over the scene, the principal factor in which is the development of the rock industry. The St Helens rocks, after being tneered at for many years for their unproductive qualities, have at last demon strated the faith of old Captain Lemont, who always insisted that the time would come when "some body will want those rocks." The time has come, but not yet in its fullness. The number of men em ployed in crushing rocks and cut ting Belgian blocks, is small com pared to what it will be in years to come. .As Fortland and other towns and cities of the northwest grow, the demand for this product must naturally increase greatly, for there is no other rock quite as ood for ravine streets for heavy traffic or for the construction of public buildings or churches. At the present time there are about three hundred men employed in the industry here, and those who are stone cutters earn from $5 to $7 per day. One large plant that of the Columbia Contract company is now being installed, while the St Helens Quarry com pany has been running several years. Phillip Bro. employ about forty men and Howard & Olsen about the same number, while yet another large outfit is at work on the opposite side of the river, un der the superintendence of Mr. Jack McKay. During the past year James and Charles Mnckle negotiated a sale ST. HELENS M. of their millsite to McCoraick & Sons, of San Francisco, and these gentlemen have become very im portant factors in the upbuilding of our city. They have caused to be constructed a mill that repre sents the highest development in mill construction, and, it is sup posed, will give the greatest out put at the least expense. Its aver age output will probably be 100, 000 feet in a ten-hour day, and it will employ from one hundred to one hundred and fifty men. The site is certainly unexcelled any where. The mill rests upon hun dreds of concrete piers and they upon the solid basalt bedrock, giv ing it a foundation that will insure rigidity for the machinery and a consequent saving in both time and material. The St. Helens Log ging company dumps its product into the Willamette slough, about half a mile above the mill, so that logs can be floated into the boom, thus saving the expense of rafting. The McCormicks own their own vessels six in number so that they can handle their own product and be sure of transportation fac ilities whenever needed. Under these circumstances it would seem that the St. Helens mill will be able to run continuously and give permanent employment to its men, and, as they favor the em ployment of married men, their presence means a direct addition of several hundred to our popula tion. They were so well satisfied with their first investment, and so thoroughly cpnvinced of the de sirability of the location for other manufactures that more recently they purchased a tract of land on Sauvies Island, opposite their millsite, and it is thought, in a year or two, a shipbuilding in dustry will be established there, jriving employment to a still . - r 5Jf m S - . . :!. -I: - greater number of mechanics. Foremost among the other im ' provements of the past year must ho placed tho three-story brick building erected by Mr. Charles Muckle. "We do not know of any other city in Oregon of a like pop ulation that has so flue, a commer cial building. It is three stories in height, the ground floor being entirely occupied by Jas. Muckle & Son as a department store, and the other two stories divided into thirty rooms for apartments and office purposes. It is steam heat ed, lighted by electricity, and has every other modem convenience, Its construction demonstrates Mr. Muckle '8 faith in St. Helens. The St Helens hotel is another building of which we are justly proud. It is three stones, contains eighty rooms, is handsomely fur E. CHURCa nished, and has all modern con veniences. It is the biggest and best hotel on the lower Columbia and, under the management of Mr. and Mrs. Jacob George, it is enjoying deserved prosperity. The Columbia County bank oc cupies its own building two sto ries and built of basaltic rock, and its interior furnishings are second to very few even in the city ot CHAS. Portland. It is the oldest bank in Columbia county, and has deposits of about $200,000. During the panic it was one of the few finan cial Institutions thai kept its doors open, being closed but one day, L ikl&m iu i .. , "" j i i " it 1 1 ii U , lilt ,. and that on the theory that tho "holidays" wero compulsory. Its published statements show its sol idity, and, under .conservative though liberal management, its business is coutiuitlly increasing. Its directors are: Wm. M. Uoss. Martin 'White, James Dart, aud Edwin Ross. The city has a good school, three church buildings, crushed rock streets, electric lights, a wa ter system, for the improvement of which it recently voted to bond in the sum of $40,000, business bouses in all lines, good hotels, etc., and a beautiful townsite. Of private residences it has several that would be a credit to any town, and very many more are in course of construction. As it is only 28 miles from Fortland, on what is to be the greatest avenue of commerce in the world, and as the trrowth of the metropolis is sure to force manufacturing insti tutions down the river, it is safe to predict that St. Helens' rapid growth during the past year is to be followed by a still greater growth in the years to come Every available toot of water front will assuredly be occupied by manufacturing institutions and an electric road will give frequent and cheap transit between, Colum bia county and the metropolis. Inquiries for business opportuni ties will be courteously answered if they address their correspond ence to the Secretary of the Com mercial Club, St. Helens, Ore gon. THE NEHALEM VALLEY. Situated in the southwestern part of Columbia county is what is termed the Garden Spot of Ore gon. Dame Nature has played a lavish hand in the bestowal of so many good features on thh most secluded spot. Tho Nehalom river's source is found in the coast range of moun tains, situated in Tillamook coun ty, within a few miles of its mouth, Nehalem bay, also in Til lamook county, twenty miles south of where the great Columbia pays tribute to the facific ocean. A thousand little rills, trickling down the eastern slopes of the coast range, uniting occasionally with each other by mutual consent to form larger brooks, and by the time these small streams have reached the boundary line of Co lumbia county they have become streams of considerable conse quence, and along their banks the little valleys have,-widened out to greater proportions than is usual- MUCKLE'S NEW BUILDING, ST. HELENS. ly found in a rugged and moun tainous country. We will here state that in the above described region is found a virgin forest of thousands upon thousands of acres of the finest timber kuown to the Taciflo coast. Tho courso of tho Nehalem river may bo most easily described by taking a gignntnic home shoo and placing one of the heel calks on the crest of tho coast range of mountains aud the other on the ocean beach a few miles south of Tillamook head, with the too oalk to the northeastward iu Colum bia county. Trace the outlines of this mammoth hoino shoe and you have approximately the map of tho Nehalcm Valley, 4S C V t .W 2' 'V 1 - . Ml ST. HELENS MILL. Comparatively speaking, up to 1870 this most fertile valley was unknown, except by a few adven turers, whose only purpose was to pursue the game, which, at that time, abounded in immense herds. Elks as large as medium-sized horses were almost as plentiful as are cattle at the present day. The nimble deer could be seen on all sides, skipping about like so many phantoms; while the beasts of prey, such as bears, cougars, wolves, lynx and wildcats, might " :-:;rr:i7'. t ' . - y . .- ....... !- 'Is''- ' 1 L..,v'-'"-j r .U. Vim tjjjhi ar . iii r i . jbj i C C. MASTEN'S BUNGALOW, ST. HELENS. be found at any or all times of the day or nightpursuing their voca tion of destruction. The feath ered tribe was and is well repre sented. The native pheasant or partridge was very numerous and as tame as a domestic fowl, hence their rapid destruction. Tho na tive grouse are twin sisters to the ruffered grouse of the eastern prairies and are a fine game bird. The attention of the writer will now revert back: to tne imprint made by the hoof of the great equine monster above described and endeavor to give an account of the present condition of things. As before stated, the principal part of Nehalem Valley lies in Co lumbia county and the toe calk of this great horse shoo' marks what 1 should have been named Corvallis, or core of the valley. Generally speaking tho valley lands are al most entirely free from rocks, of a vegetable mold in character, un derlaid, as a rule, with a good - n quality of potters' clay f tho greatest fertility. Two free stone water abound- in tho great est profusion. Tho chief product of tho soil are wheat, oats, barley, rye, vetch, peas, clover, and all kinds of nutritous grapes, of which tho farmer invariably expects to reap an abundant harvest. Vegetables of all kinds common to this climate yield excellent crops. While fruit of the various kinds does well, it has received A. only a limited amount of atten tion. The chief export, consists of shingles and cednr lumber, of which there are millions upon mil lions hauled by teams to the near est available shipping points, Clatskanie being the principal one. Nehalem ranchmen enjoy the distinction of producing the best quality of cream of any locality in Oregon. The product in former years 1ms if one to the Ilalcwood creamery j in I'ortlaml, but now tho valley i has it.s own creamery, located atj Mist, and, under careful manage ment, it is achieving success, and will douhtlcHS soon secure the en tire Nehalem product. A before stated, about tho year 1870 the first actual settlers begun to locate in the neighborhood of Vernon ia ami what was then call ed Riverside, now Mist, Fish hawk, Jewell and Mishawauka. Those sturdy pioneers struggled along for from twenty-five to thir ty years in the vain hope of seeing a railroad being built through this lovely valley. While it few have become discouraged and have east their lots in other climes, many of the more patient have passed to that great beyond with out realizing their most sanguine expectations. The writer has experienced the many tips and downs incident to a life of over thirty years in what was at first a dismal wilderness, arid has noted tho material pro gress that was evident at the close of each succeeding decade, It might seem strange to see men making of themselves, as it were, a beast of burden, and pack ing heavy loads upon their own backs a distance, at times, of more than twenty miles. Later on, when trails were opened, horses and mules were used instead of human beings for such purposes. Later on roads were opened, so that sleds and carts drawn by ox teams were used for freighting purposes. It is only within the last fifteen or twenty years that wheeled vehicles could bo used with any degree of success, but at the present time thi majority of tho roads are either corduroyed, planked or graveled. Whilo they seem pretty rough, it is a decided improvement over primeval con ditions. If tho reader will pictiiro in his mind's eye an impenetrable jungle in tho wilds of Central Africa, in habited only by wild animals, ho can understand what Nehalem Valley was thirty years ago; but now it is difierent. Think of a dense forest without a mark of eiviliiittimi and through .whose tangled boughs tno sun a 01 .k-v tvs had scarcely, been able to iicn Irate for num. icon '"" ...,.l l he irri'ii r c conl rust. Tho i.... mi. v now drive. with wmpanitivo comfort. Iron, end to end of this most fertile valley aud view on every hand tho many coy cottages hat Btloru siicucr the patient tiller of tho soil, whilo in tho field the luxurient young 1 Hill fiii'i ( , - - sea of emeralds waiting for ..aitk nun irriiMM in notn . ;.. i.'iii iiuf likn a tho 'I 1 4i' 1 tJSLt fir ttn1' RESIDENCE OF J. W. Hit 1 V Ao To Laws THE REAL ESTATE MAN St. Helens Oregon Logged-Off Lands Timber Lands Fruit Lands Dairy Ranches If you want to buy or sell property in any of these classes, or any other kind correspond upon A. T. LAWS St. Helens reaper a ekle, wh.le tho lary eow forages along tho miy and the sleek, frinfcy h..i S j! over the field. Tho far r, K luippy ram.ly ru realm,,,, tl. fruits of their labor. O.i nil aides there ar0 to b (,ca iiatakablo tokens f p,,,,,,,,,. ity, happiness d co,,tl(tm'((1, where so recently it Was but ' howling wilderness. WARREN. To the north of Scappooso Wl(i possessing the sama general chir aeteristiea, is the Warren cotmtr stretching away from the 8cir pomo bay to tho blue footliilln lnj closely settled by a prosperous and industrious neuple,. Itttt ffi ycara ago tho heavy timber cn,, down to the bay and logglu camps were busily engaged in cut. ting it off and dumping it ,,t,, water. Now the eye rnugi f0P miles over a succession ()f heut, fill cleared fields bearing u.SVy cropa or corn, oaU, wheat Ami other grains and grasses, tmj cord wood must bo haulixl a tlit. tanco of four miles down knuU from tho hills to the landing pin,. at the water side. Corn i 0f (he chief crops at Warren, ,( though, it is generally cut gtm for ensilage, yet an excellent qi1(,j, it v is produrod. AH tho grnwut and fruits do well here, ami, in fact, there is no material diflVr Ciiee between this lllld the fictip. pixwc country. You can buy land in Columbia county and let it to apple tr for $100. and in ten years it will be worth 91,000 per acre. Columbia county has building stone and pottery clay. The fruit industry U in iu in. fancy in Columbia county. Thert is big money for the men who start commercial orchards. POMEROY. SCAITtXME. of realty, with or call Oregon