The West Shoee. VOL. 9 No. 7. I k Smnt. Futiltshsr, ( U2 from, 81, Portland, Oregon, July, 1883. Bnltftl t th fr Annum, Mhtgl opl, Loo, I 1 u, Craigie Sharp, Jr., Is fully authorized to transact business for this publication. SPECIMEN NUMBER. Any one receiving this copy of Tug West Shore will please consider it an invitation to be come a regular subscriber. of civilization, and has united It with the great industrial and commercial centeis of the woild, It should be observed as a general holiday, Great preparations are now being made for the coming state fair. It will be in every respect the best and most satisfactory ever held In Oregon, and will no doubt attract thousands from all over the coast. Our country Is full of strangers who are here to "spy out the land." They want to see what inducements we have to offer them to bring their energy and capital here and aid in de veloping our great resources. Hundreds of these will visit the fair, and we can promise them they will not be disappointed in the display. Hitherto the Pacific coast has received but a small proportion o(.the foreign immigration direct, though many have finally reached us by gradual progression westward from state to state. Now, however, the conditions are changing. The ad vantages of the coast are being recognized In Europe, and with the completion of the Northern Pacific better facilities for reaching the extreme west will be afforded. Advices from both Sweden and Norway are to the effect that large numbers are preparing to emigrate to America and settle upon vacant lands on this coast. The Scandina vians are industrious, honest and peaceable, and no class of immigrants can be more desirable. They invariably bring money enough to start themselves well in a new country, and seldom seek to alter the moral, social or political customs of the people who offer them homes in their midst. The third of September is the day set for driv ing the last spike that binds the rail uniting the two ends or the Northern Pacific. President Villard with a special train of officials and Invited guests will he present at this completion of the most important undertaking ever carried to a sue cessful termination in America. That the road will he finished at the appointed time there can scarcely be a doubt, as the moderate rate of a mile per day on each end will accomplish this with several days to spare. About the fust of August the line from the east will reach the mouih of Little Blackfoot, the point of junction with the Utah and Notthern, md then eastern Montana will have nil connection with San Francisco, to be followed a month later by a route to Portland and Pugct sound. It is the expectation to run President Villard's special train clear through to Seattle, and In order to do this, great exertions are being made to complete the road fiom Port land to Kalama and the extension from New Tacoma to Seattle. It will be a joyful da throughout the northwest when this great enter prise Is consummated, an enterprise that has trans formed it froaa a frontier wilder nswe to the COLUMMA RIVER BAR. Much has been said mil written about the bar at the entrance to Columbia river, its effect upon the commerce of this region, the duty of con gress to make ample appropriations for Its Im provement, and the character of work that should be done upon it, but we now propose to consider it simply from a historical and artistic point of view. For several centuries after the discovery of America, it was the general opinion that there was a northern passage from the Atlantic. It was at first supposed that Columbus had simply stumbled upon a large Island, and that this could be circumvented by going either to the north or south, Gradually the Cslxiis and other explorers, coasting along In both directions, increased the knowledge of geographers, and It was realized that America was a vast continent. The belief In the existence of such passages be came stronger after the discovery of the Pacific ocean by Vasco Nunes de Ilalhoa in 1513. Guided by an Indian to the summit of the mount ains, he gazed westward uon those waters " be yond America," of which so much had been said but whose existence had, till then, Ircrn simply a matter of conjecture. Magellan, the Portuguese navigator, started in 1 5 19 on thai famous voyage which added more' to the knowl edge of geographers than even that ol Columbus himself. Three years later his vessel, the A'V torin, returned, with a log bonk containing a record of the commander's death at the Philippine Islands. It had passed through the Straits of Magellan, called by the discoverer the Straits of the Ten Thousand Virgins, had sailed nut uimn the Pacific and completely circumnavigated the glole. It was by him the ocean was named, After struggling for sixly-thrre days off tae Horn, where the tides rose and fell thirty feet, beset by tempests and I willed by adverse currents, he sailed out upon an unexplored ocean so quiet and calm that he called it the " Pacific." Many a p or shipwrecked mariner has since doubted the propriety of the title. Now that a southern passage had been found, opening up the long sought route to the Indies, the Cathay of Marco Polo and the Island of Ciango, the belief in a similar one to the north was considerably strengthened. The English on the Atlantic coast and the Spaniards on the Pai:iic, starting from the Mexican possessions conquered by Cortes, sought in vain for the fabled Straits of Anisn. For three centuries the search wss pros- edited intermittently with long srawms nf lnc- tivity, until It resulted in the knowledge that the nearest approach to such a pswoge was the Co lumbia river. Disappointment, which he named Cape San Koqur, and ohcrved Immedialcty soulh of it, in latitude 46, an opening In tlie land which ha believed to be either a harbor or the mouth ol a river. He made noell'.nl to enter it, but from his reKrt the place was variously noted on the Spanish charts as Entrada (! Ilccela (llerela's inlet), Entrada de Asccnrlon (Ascension Inlet), and Kio d San Roque (San Kngtie river). The point south of the entrance known a Point Adams, he called Cne Frnnduso (Ixafy cape), During the next few years Spanish, Portuguese, English ami American vessels visited the Pacific, but none of them sucrceded In finding the Klo le San Koque, nf the existence nf which thry all entertained serious doubts. In 1741 Capt. Kobt. Gray, in the ship t'.vWAi.i from lliwton, visited the Pacific for the second time, and observed a ' latge Indenture In the coast line, llellevlng It to be the mouth of a river he walled nine days fur a favorable opportunity to enter, hut was unable to secure it. About the same lime Captain Van couver, of the English navy, suw the same place, but because of the breakers on the bar formed the opinion that no river existed, A few days later Gray returned, and on the eleventh of May, 179a, sua ceded In safely crossing I he Iwr, and dropping anchor at the mould of the stream gave to the mighty river the name "Columbia," In honor of his vessel, which had been the first to enter It. Later one of Vancouver's vessels entered and sent a boat's crew up the stream as fsr as Vancouver, The same year another American vessel enleied and anchored In the hay, which has since borne the name of llskei'i liay, In honor of the captain, Though the mouth of the Columbia bad now been discovered, nothing was known of Its esltnt or the country through which it passed. That it drained an immense area was evident from the volume of water It carried. To the memorable edlilon nf Captains I wis and Clarke we are Indebted for the knowledge of the vaslnesa of this great watercourse and the exent of country tributary to it, Their mop, made from their observations in 1S04 5 6 and Information gathered from the natives with whom they came In contact, la wonderfully accurate. From that time until I he government eaplorallous, the first of which waa conducted by Commodore Wilkes in 1S4I and the nest by Fremont In 1C4J, gave us accural mspi, all knowledge of the river and Its lrllm laries was derived from the tiapwrs of the Hud son's llsy Company ami the American companies, who traversed the country in all directions, but kept few notrs of their Journeys that could be of much sen Ice to geographers. In till the Pacific Fur Company, at whose hesd was John Jacob A.ior, fiunled Astoria on the sou'h Unk of the river ten miles sUe the her, and from thai tine vessels Kgan making regular trips to I he f.ver In the Imvicts of ihe I'salV, Northwest snd Hudson's II iy enisriifs, Ihe successive pro prietors nf Astoria, and with the sviil. nienl nf On Ihe fourteenth of August. 1775. Span. isa explorer, Bruno Hcceta, duumred CaptiOieguo a general cuwukics gradually sprang up.