THE WEST SHORE. September, 1 88a traruportatlon to anl from point tributary to the conameroe of SeattU, are the steamers City of Quincy, Finny Lake and Gem, stern-wheelers, and the propellers Susie, Jessie, James Morty, Virginia, Fanny, Nilie, Rily, Phantom, Celilo, St. Patrick, Rip Van Winkle and the EvrilL Be sides these, freq lent visits are ma le to the city, for supplies, by the following named powerful lugt, belonging to mill companies on the Sound, tbe Taoom, Hiakely, Matick, Polikofsky, Fa vorite, GiJiah and Yakima. The Evangel, built fot the Alaska trade, is also one of the Seattle fleet In addition to all these may be mentioned Weill' line of tailing vessels, and the fleet engaged from time to time in the transportation of the products of the Renton coal mines. AdJ to these quite a fleet of scows, sloops and schooners, which run in and out of nooks and byways on the Sound, bringing produce from and taking supplies to the ranchmen, thakeand shingle cutters, and other producers in a small way on the Sound, and It must be apparent at a glance that Seattle has al ready achieved far more than the first step in a career of what promises well to be permanent and con.tantly increasing proiperity. In this statement we have presented to the reader the names of forty two (4) steamboats, ranging from 2,003 ton ocean Ucawert to the small propeller, all directly ' contributory to the com nerce of S.'a'tle, ami this lid is ttctusive of a long line of sailing craft, the tra!fi: dne by which is of no inconsiderable importance. Comment is superfluous. IIIIP BUILDING AND REPAIRING. The cxiitence ol to large a commercial fleet makei it a matter of necessity Ihu facilities for baillinj an r ipalrin; vessels should be found at this point. Three shipyards, owned respectively by J. F. T. Mitchell, Mr. Lake and Wm. Ham. m n I, alfjr I these facilities. Daring our visit, Mr, Mitchell was building a wooden propeller for the U. S. Gust and Geudctic Survey. The vessel will be 4? feet keel, U) feet beam and 5 feet hold, to le copper fastened, and will cost about $6,ojj. lie it also converting the sail boat Se attle into a propeller 3S feet keel, j feet beam anl i4 feet hold. At Like't yard, a new item- whjcler, to call $l5,0jj, it bein,; built for i,c Wftuco ntrad:. Slis will I 155 feet keel and 15 feel beam, and is inten led as a model fl)r c ) oforl an I sp:c l. Mr. Mitchell informs us that the outlook for an increase in the work of the tti.p yar.lt it in are favorable than for some time pait. rOIINDRIKS, ETC As necessary aljunots of the inlerettt jst mentioned, three foundtict, three boiler makers an! five machine .hips A.i I profitable J con. Want employment in thit thriving young city. MAS II FACTORIES. Senile, taking all thin-, into consideration is fully abrea of the time, in lhe mile, of Ma. factor We tabulate the lin j ,hjll n(a ( uch length a. our spice aj.nil. to a few of the mo.. l.l.ntl Kound,ie 3. breweries j ab.pyardt 3. tanneries ,, mAw and doors 6, machine thorn 5, fu,nilHre water 1, Ic. 1. florin.. ,, ( 1JW Bj p..!. 1 fiU, packerei, j. 6h cannery ,, rel I..O0.y I. la add.tior, to thete the mana'ac. I,.o.km, anUH.es. tin an . coPiver wlre .nJ thSUM.al smaller m la Jriet, which cw.ibute to muJi wd . Mtufaclonly to llw .eultuwa ol ,he vage question in young and thriving communi -ties, cut no unimportant figure in the general ac count. THE MATTULATH MANUFACTURING CO. Few, if any, of the Industrie of Seattle are more interesting or of more importance than the manufacture of barrels from eottonwood timber. For the present the company obtain the greater portion or their supply from the ruyallup river which empties into Commencement Bay. near New Tacoma. They inform us that they look to the Skagit river largely for their future supply. The process of barrel making as carried on by the company is an interesting study as showing the periectkw ot machinery and of skill in working it. A log two to three feet in diameter and thirty inches long is steamed until soft enough for the process, when a knife removes a section seventy- hve inches wide and seven-sixteenths of an inch in diameter, which, fier drying, is placed upon a table in front of eight or ten circular knives work ing with an eccentric motion which cut wedre shaped apertures about one-third of the length of the slab. The slab is then reversed and similar wedge-shaped apertures cut at the other end when after a slight additional manipulation the two sides are brought together, closing the apertures to almost an air-tight condition, th 3 hazel hoops are put on, the heads put in and the barrel is complete. I he works of the company are equal 10 me manufacture or 4,003 barrels per day, al though they have not as yet found a demand mual to their capacity. The permanence and impor- iance 01 tms industry can be inferred from the fact that the company are about completing a e..-,,u.ii sneu 503 leet long, 50 feet wide and 16 feet high, for the storage of material, their fnrmr ..xiensive accommodations being found inadequate ....r rapmiy increasing business. The pre pared slab, referred to are shipped to San Francisco in shooks or boxes to be put together only a sufficient number (or ri. v..: up at the Seattle factory to hold the heads to l.eused in San Francisco. The sugar refineries of San Francisco are the principal customers of ...company, allllough (he barre,s " '"""i uicui, tic. FURNITURE. A stroll ,h,ough the manufactories of the Hall, I aul!n Company, and Clnrb amj- D , - ' "l "nuciauil OC LOiTl' f . ' " ""K seated some very taste- f" and excellent work. The company uL i s:f;vcol,onr'spruce'fir-d- laurel, all native wovlc Tk and ins. i use aiso walnut set 2 .. 01 thebed roomand Plor ariWnrICOmreyi'hPwork larKe " capacity for m.Br.rt., ' X LUMBtR MANUFACTURE. Six saw millt are reoo,,, , . 6e cut.inrr c,.,.. If " I! wun 7 "Bgre- 'he mill, ha e been unTw ' Md naonth, , ... J. 0 "nabl fcr the past . clud,. .. I ' " DOme demi"d, which in. .1 1 ' u"'ne aemand eludes, we beli. .a.: a' altle . k "-Mciuring mtereU of Ss. being done. It ought to serve, however MlB instructive index to what is going on in this vo", and enterprising city. Activity and prosM,;,, Are evirlpnr nn V, i " V . u. w.wty iiaiiu. THE COAL TRADE. An important element in the prosperity, both present and prospective, of Seattle, is her cd trade. Two localities contribute at present to this industry, the Seattle coal mines at Newcastle, and tne laiDot mines at Renton. From Mr. Romer, the cpurteous manager of the Seattle company, re siding in this city, we learn that the Willamette, Umatilla and Walla Walla, the three steam col liers at present engaged in the trade, average fiv trips per mdnth, with an average cargo each of 2,200 tons. ; The distance trom the wharf to the Newcastle mines is about twenty miles over a well equipped narrow gauge road, which Mr. Romer informs us is with but little, if any, delay to be extended twenty miles further to new fields, However great may be the demand for this coal. the supply can be kept up to .the demand. The narrow gauge road in question and its opera. tion in connection with the coal mines is Dart or the great system of development of which Mr. H. Villard is the head, and the extensive operations now being carried on, as well as other proposed enlargement, are due largely to his foresight and energy. This narrow gauge road, althouzh it hat passed out of the hands of the original builders, is a durable monument to the 'sagacity, foresight, public spirit and liberal minded enterprise of the people of Seattle. , At a time when its industries were languishing, its future uncertain and business dull, they put their hands in their pockets and at a cost of $400,000 constructed this road, and by this one act gave the world assurance that if they could not find a way to make their town a com mercial center thev would make one. As before stated it has been purchased by and is now operated as part of the Villard system. The shipinenti from the Renton mine are carried by sailina ves sels, the Seattle company's narrow gauge road be ing utilized in the transportation of the coal from the mine to the Sound. RAILROADS. The coal road above alluded to constitutes at present Seattle's completed railroad system. A new day in this respect is, however, about to dawn on her fortunes. In Octnlvr. 18S1. Mr. Villard assured the people of Seattle that so soon as the right of way for the N. P. R. R. was secured along the city front of Seattle, to the lands of the railroad company, in the north part of the city, the work of connecting the citv of Seattle with that portion ol the N. P. R. R. having its present terminus at Kalama, would be pushed to an early Completion. On the 7th nf Inlv nf the nresent vetr ' JJ r (1882) Mr, Villard was notified by telegram that the asked for rirrhr nf U I'icl nhfita --- w ttmj niH VVUIVU till. - cle removed. , On the following day the 8th of July, (1882) Mr. Villard telegraphed to Mr. A. A. Denny that "the promise which he made to the citizens of Seattle that their town would be con nected with the main line of the Northern Paci&c would be strictly fulfilled." And so the matter stands. That thU assurance will materially benefit Seattle it would be folly to deny. Vjuite recently , the Seattle, Walla Walla Baker Citv R.i niTPfl for tilt! mirnn&A nf .. i j :irnfid to Walla Walla and bcyonj. The advantages to accrue from the construction ol such t road art