July. THE WEST SHORE. 103 She m,ts jhwm, A Sixteen Page Monthly Illustrated Paper, published at Portland, Or icon, by L. SAMUEL, s Washiiicton-U. TERMS OK SUBSCRIPTION, (Including Postage to any part of the United Suite:) One copy, one year, . . - ...... f, J0 Single Number. . - . - . 30 cent. Postage to foreign countries, 25 els. additional T Subscription must be paid in advance, and all papers will positively be Mopped nt tbe end of tbe time they are paid for. Remittance can be made by registered letter, pwtofflee money order, or by order on any of (lie Portland business houses MOUNT RAINIER, Silent and stern, thou mighty peak, With snowy frosted crest, Anions thy canyons eagles Bhrick, Or soar from craft to uest. Through thy lone wilds the panthers roam In quest of sleeping prey, Or noiseless steal hack to their home, As morning heralds day. Great Mount, I see thy towering crest, By moonbeams straggling light, Like some great guardian in the West Who guards the world by night ; Thy glist'uing sides like sparkling dew My gaze un tired holds, For beauteous sights, each fuir, each new, Are in thy mantle folds. Oh silent peak, I wondering gaze Upon thy summit grand, I see thee through the moonlit hut As at thy foot I stand. 1 think upon the many tribes Who've seen thy towering form, Who oft have tempted thee with bribes To stay the mountain's storm. Hut now, though clouds below thee spread A mantle dark at, night, Thy snowy-white and glistening head Is wreathed with purest light. The stars seem nestliug iu thy breast, Or gems in thy bright crown, Thou like lomi great king, regally dressed - Some monarch of renown. We've seen the sun in beauty set With brightest huaveuly glow, And on thy aide he lingered yet As if he would not go. We've watched tho twilight chose his beams Far up thy shining side, From crag to crag, o'er frozen streams, Till each fair riy has died. Then, iu the quiet hush of day, Again thy watch thou'dst keep, Whilo twinkling stars around thee play, And earth seems all asleep. Oh silent one, like human grief, Thou'rt present every hour, Thou watchest on without relief, Nor needs Time's changing jiower. WatcbA'er Earth, thou mighty peak, Though lightnings 'round thee play; Or storm gods through thy caverns shriek And clouds shut out tho day. M.m sees thy feathery pine trees nod lly winds thus wildly dmn, And learns from thee, tint nature's Ood Km- Earth as well as beavon. Leutto. TO OREGON. HY WILLIAM ANGUS Merit KRson. I,aud where the rays of the sunset Hid adieu to a continent vast, And the moon iu the silvery circuit Sheds the sheen of her flood-light last, Thou art dear to my heart, though I wander Far away from thy golden shore, And I turn with a gleam of pleasure To glance back o'er the scenes of yore, Land where the forests are grauder, And tower the mountains more high ; Where the limpid streams meander 'Neath a purer and brighter sky, Thau that where the brave old Tiber Kvflecl back the starlit dome. Sweet laud of the West, I adore thee, And dream of my dear old home. My home, where the lake and the river Commingle their waters in one, ' And the bright-hued myrtle leaves quiver Iu the mys of the autumn sun. There, the song of the spring bin! is sweeter, And the air breathes a fragrant perfum", Hichcr far than the zephyrs of Ceylon, Waft seaward from orange-grove bloom. White Columbia sweep on to the ocean, And Willamrtte flows sparkting and bright Through the valley ; in anient devotion Will I treasure the glorious sight Of meadow and brooklet and mountain : Of river; e'en Pacific's blue wave Titer music in charms without equal. As the green shores its brif tit waters, lave. Dear laud, thou art mine; 1 inherit All the title to call thee mine own, And to share with the friends of my childhood Within thy wide limits 1 home. And when the last mandate is given, That bids me from labor to rest. All 1 ask, save an entrance in heaven. It to sleep on thy broad, peaceful breast MOUNT RAINIER, FROM BALCH'S From Photo by A. H. Wno PASSAGE, PUGKT SOUND. lAkn, f Ormpltt THE CITY OF VICTORIA, BRITISH COLUMBIA. It has frequently been asserted that in no portion of the plohc is there a city more beautifully situated than that, the name of which heads this article. Reposing on a gentle declivity the city presents to the traveler, as he ap proaches it by water, a view at once serene and grand. Immediately to the right, but separated from British Col umbia by the Straits of Fuca, rise the towering heights of the Olympian range, mingling their snow-capped heads with hovering clouds, whilst on the left the trappcan rocks of Vancou ver Island, surmounted by the Sooke Hills, lend to the scene an endless va riety of rich colors and dense foliage, The city, Itself, forms the background to the picture, ami, although not possess in; any unusual number of prominent buildings, contains r sufficiency to ex cite in the mind of the traveler a de sire to be informed as to those which at once catch his eye. Thai church, standing out pre-eminently conspicuous on the hill, L known as the Cathedral, whiph was erected some six years ago, on the site of a former edifice demol ished by lire. The building with a cupola surmounting its Mansard roof, is the Drlard House, one of the best hotels in the town, and from it an ex cellent view of the country, for a great distance around, is obtainable. As the harbor is entered, the brick building, which stands close to the waters edge. ; erected on a very substantial stone foundation, is the new Custom Mouse, constructed by the I lovcrnmeftt of i Canada at a cost of some $35,000, and fur I nished in every department with fire 1 proof vaults anil all appliances calcula 1 ted to preserve the many valuable docn , ments which naturally come, from time ; to time, within its walls. The long, red, I brick building, also fronting the water, 1 with the slate roof, is the main store of the Hudson's May Company, who trans act a very considerable retail and whole sale business in almost every article re quired, both in the city iind mini dis tricts. On the left hand side of the liar- bor, standing on the sligfitiy elevated rocks, is the Marine Hospital a new SWSHOSSf FALLS, MAU SJStt, and excellent building just completed, at an expense of about l 8,000, Its In terior is finished in the most approved manner, whilst the various large and airy wards are well lighted and venti lated. As yet, the number of inmates of the institution has not been very numerous, but the accommodation for the unfortunate marine is ample, both in point of medical attendance ami ail other requirements, The somewhat dilapidated looking structure iu the im mediate vicinity of this commodious building, is the Provincial Lunatic Asy lum; it has been occupied fot a number of years by the insane, but a new and expensive building has just been erect ed on the mainland of Britth Colum bia, near to the city of New West mi niter, and iu a very short time the unhappy inmates of the present institution will be transferred to this more Rtting abode. The group of red brick buildings, standing a few hundred yards back from the water, on James1 Hay side of the city, are the head offices of the local government Most of them were erected in the year 1858, during the ad ministration of Sir James Douglas, Governor of the then Crown Colony, In point of architecture they me most unique, presenting to the eye a similari ty to the paintings which one sees on the exterior of Japanese lea Cdddios, and, at the same time, calling to the mind a memory of something Sw,lss The largest of the group is occupied by the Provincial Secretary ami Minis ter of Finance and Agriculture, and, in one of its rooms, the meetings of the minlstr) are held and matters of a governmental nature determined. On one side of this, the main building, stands the government printing tlice, from which, issues every week the offi cial GatettCy and in which the various acts passed by the Legislature ami a vast amount of tabulated work, statis tics, etc., are printed by steam power, at a considerable public expense. Tito tWO buildings at the rear of ihc centre one are the Legislative hall and Su preme Court house, respectively, whilst the remaining one is the Lands and W orks office and Register Gencrali quarters, The grounds surrounding the peculiar, hut, nevertheless) pretty buildings, have been very nicely laid out, and the trimly kept grass plot, which slopes down to the road skirting the harbor, affords an agreeable contrast to the bright, red brickwork of the sev eral structures. Hut whilst the traveler lias been Cast ing Ins eyes on the various Qbjcctl Of interest which have been briefly at tended to, the steamer, on which he is supposed to be, has, by this time, landed alongside one of the wharves which extends from end to end of the city front. After the usual ordeal of the hotel-runner nuisance has beta safjtly survived, he lands, and, in all probabili ty, will walk to his destination in the city. If SO, one of the fust things which will strike him, is the "regular Irregularity" which chjuewterises build inj;s on the lower portion pf Yates1 street. They are all old in appearance, many of them in a state of decay, and others, not only unoccupied, bill threat ening to fall from tdicer weakness. Wharf skeet, however, which tuns nt right angles to Yates, contains a series of warehouses and offices of a most substantial character, and it is Of) this street that almost all the wholesale bus inesa houses of the city arc situated Continuing up Yatea1 street for a dis tance of two blocks, Government street the main thoroughfare of the city is reached, and many new stoies at once present themselves to the eye. The pOtt-Oflice, an excellent mgrawug of which appears unionist other views of