December, 1881 THE WEST SHORE. would have cost him at least $5 in cash, five hours of hard traveling, at his own risk of person and team, and the loss of three hours for business, and much discomfort and exposure of health. With such facts the fares are over one hundred per cent, and the business opportunities are over one hundred per cent, more, and the personal insurance and comfort probably over one hundred per cent, more in favor of the railroads instead of against them. THE GAIN BY RAILROADS. This 300 per cent, gain in travel is a factor, which can be proved on any ordinary line. The railroad, as a rule, improves traveling facilities, safety and business power fully three hundred per cent. This per cent, can be measured up still higher by the opportunity to meet correspondents at stations, do business and move on by the same train or the next and repeat the opera tion for hundreds and even thousands of miles and return home from such long trips in a -few days, which cost half as mary months and twice as much money at a loss of three-fourths of the business power. These figures are below the facts, as applied to the era of no railroads, com pared with the present growing advan tages of them in the upper basin of the Columbia especially in the winter. FREIGHTS. The charge is made that freight rates are up to the old charges by teams, at least in the recent advances on the N. P. R. R. lines, and that the gain, if any, is only in time and safety of carriage, It would be well for any man, who knows how, to compare the former schedules with the present and show the public the exact figures and the ex act loss or gain under the three modes the pack train, the mule train and the railroad train. Grave charges ought to be sustained by figures and facts. It is lor the m tcrest of every town, family and person to know how the case stands, and it i of the same interest to the railroad companies who have come among u with their vast capital, and also to the mule trains and old pack trains, if they are to bo recalled by the commun.t.ci who begin to bewail their departure. KKHBCTATIO OF ITOKM AD CX n' - Tfio 'w ofclimate U said In t " known. Yqu VH ,a M experienced captain on one of the Co- lunibia river steamers, "what the weather will be any winter." Last winter it was cold early and long. The ice stopped navigation several weeks, even months. Snow covered the mountains and spread over the hill. Herds and flocks died for the want of food and water in the northern half of Eastern Oregon and in all of Eastern Washington. Hut there is a luw of climate fixed and sure as the tide, and it applies to our Northwest const, and to the interior. The air currents and cold or warm waves, and visible and invisible conditions of the vapor are all subject to the aerial law, as the river and ocean currents are subject to the law of attraction, rarefaction and revo lution. It is true that the entire details of the law arc unknown, yet we know enough to forecast seed time and bar vest, cold and heat, with certainty and regularity which successive years at test. More accurate and wider held of observation, will enable physicists to collate more facts to compare with those already known and to educe new factors, which are involved 111 the tiui venal laws of our climate and ccc ially those which apply to the ticr Columbia liasin. It is always true when a room is hi.ni.!) thai cold currents press in and condense vapors. It is sure that cold mountain air cur rents will flow into the wanned basin of the upper Columbia ami meet the ocean currents that flow in that direc tion. Changes will ensue quickly. A few hours will turn a warm day Into a sharply cold night. aprs invisible are apt, in spring, to be condensed sutl dculy into cloud burst and plough through the hill from "P I-'"0"' with a rush of torrent. 1 ht clear U mute sure in summer nd autumn to shade on into a iwuigni hare and cloud which vamshr with the rising sun ami recst itself va riant form in mild w.nicr also. 1 w beauty of thi process, which throw ..Ami vfiil over the setting un, am UlllS - . ! Hows only the passage of it red am. l-.st retracted rays, spreading royal w-r live western sky, 1 unsii passed in splendor, a. it i. brilliant with illustrations oi siM.nng pnniT.i-.. The railroad town of Sprague now contains oo ho"" nd more are Mng built M rapklty a the weather supply of lumber will permit, A IIIKDS'-EYK VIEW OF PORTUXHON CHRISTMAS EVE. The sun was fast descending toward the blue waves ot the ravine. A bower had just left pearl of rainbow tint, upon the green boughs of giant fir. The velvet carpet of green smiled agam, as. if returning thank for the blessing of rain. The sun ceped out among the fleecy clouds, that passed ike great flake of down, between heaven and earth, and dropjied hi brightest ray on the beautiful land. cape Mow. Standing on a spot 500 feet above the surrounding plain, I gazed Uxm a scene which would have made a landscape painter wild with Might. The time was Christina I've, the latitude 46" north, yet the air wa balmy as spring, and in my heart, with feeling of twrfect application, I hummed the old tune, M December's as pleasant as May." Tor the benefit of the dweller on the plain, to whom the grandeur of mountain scenery I unknown, who look upon a M green Christina" as an omen of ill, ami who isten, at such times, to the tinkle of the sleigh bell, and shiver In the chilly embrace of' old llorras," I will attempt riefiy to outline the picture before me, A range of hill attout Hon feet high, describing the arc of 1 circle, hound the view to the west ami I covered by a heavy growth of fir and vine-maple. At some place the descent I preclpl- tou, and the cove formed by this range of hills, slope from thence gradually to the bank of the Willamette river. In this cove, and along the west shore of the river, stands the city of Portland, with it beautiful street bordered by mansion where many prorou family revel In (usury ami wealth. Many an older city with ten time it population might well feel jeatotM of the giant stride toward f reatne, now Mug made by thi queen or the great Northwest. Though she I allowed In claim only Jti souls, the eye of lite world are ujkhi her, ami her rmsd to fiint I already paved. No city hi the t'nlon i spending proportionately on fifth a much money In beautifying ami improving her treet ami other fcilf tir for buimr a Portland. The Willamette sweej in a broad curve round to the east ami north to afford this mUtre rom In pt e-portWm to her prospective demand, ami bear upon It rippling surfacMh'P ,r7 Mtion