190 THE WEST SHORE. EDUCATION IN PIONEER DAYS. T OOKTNO Vmck to tit enrly dnys of Oregon I reenl J J one" fact worthy of' note. Coming over an nlmost untravcrsod region, and traveling by the alow process of ox tennis mostly, and encumbered with only the absolute necessities for the route and a very meagre supply for present need after arrival, it is not to be wondered at if not ninny lxx)ks were brought The missionaries and others who came by the " Horn" and the "Islands" were more fortunate, for they could lxx up Bnd bring what could not Imj hauled over the "Plains." Well do I rememlHir the first stove shipped direct from the New England home, arriving some time after the owner did, who came overland It cost him only $8 for transporting Hint luxury. And n luxury it wns. But I digress. Like the pioneers of Pennsylvania, the founders of society in Oregon made uso of the means within reach, and laid deep and well tho foundations for as good an education for all as could at that time be had The Wil lamette University at Knlom was started Common schools came in as soon as ixissiblo, and all were anxious to have tho rising generation obtain knowledge suflicient for all ordinary duties. The Oregon Spectator did a gixxl work through its columns. George Abernothy, the proprietor, issued an edition of Webster's Elementary Hpelling Book in 184(5 or 1817. This helped along the good work very much. And those few recollections show the wishes of tho enrly settlers. Labor wns then . fifty cents a day, payable in wheat, then selling at fifty cents a bushel. This wheat was to be delivered at tho landing, which meant where " batteaux " could tnko it to mill or market Tho school teacher received orders on some store or took his pny in wheat Tho writer had. an agree ment with the lamented Dr. Whitman to go to his home at Waiilatpu, in tho f.ill of IS 17, an I t-vioh school for $14 Vancouver orders or 1G McKinlny orders. Thus did our builders lay n grnxl foundation. What a Hiiiorstrueture lias boon reared I Oregon and Washing ton win offer opportunity for ns complete an education at this timo as any portion of our newer settled regions. Our Ktato and our Territorial universities, and our young but flourishing colleges, are worthy to receive full endow ment, and to lie put on such a basis as will make them worthy tho patronage of our rapidly growing iopulation Wo aro not ashamed of the building which has been done upon tho foundation laid by the pioneers. Caulos W. Shane. Last year the semi-woekly Etut Oreyonum of Pen dleton, Oregon, issued a Fourth of July nuniler of the x.r, uxui which tho Ktors and Strips were tinted i red and blue. It received much favorablo notice from tho press throughout tho Union. This year a mammoth nu.ulH wdlbo issu.Hl.ornninenUHl in tho same manner. 1 he edition will be 5,000 copies. It will contain matter of general .uterest, stories, sketches, etc, and carefully prepared descriptions of the counties and towns of East ern Oregon. U will I a splendid publication to send way to fnends. rr,oe, 25 cuts per copy, or five for 1 ALASKAN EXPLORATIONS. 4 LETTER from Dr. Willis R Everette, ivho recently 1Y left Vancouver for an exploring tour into the interior of Aluska, thus speaks of his experiences after leaving the mild atmosphere of the coast: "I went up Lynn Channel from Juneau, and was four days and nights in an open boat. What a weird looking country 1 AH mountains and glaciers and snow-covered peaks. I am sketching some of the glaciers and scenery to be exhib ited on my return. Imagine yourself at the foot of an immense wall of solid ice, 130 feet high, six miles wide, and extending back into the interior 150 miles. In olaces the glacier narrows down to one mile in width, but the mouth is over six miles wide. There are crevices in this solid Ixxly of ice in which a plummet let down 4.000 feet touches no bottom. Specimens of gigantic algae, or sea- weed, will bo sent by the next steamer." He expects to pass beyond the lintits of communication about the 1st of July and plunge into the untrodden interior. His report will be an interesting one. A steamer has been built in San Francisco bv raivata parties to be employed in exploring the great Yukon. She has a screw propeller and is brig-rigged, and is about 5JSU tons burthen. She is under the command of J. Hardy, late mate of the bark Alden Bess, and will carry as passengers the four owners of the craft and two others. Among the owners are the Schieffelin Brothers, who last year spent so much money in prospecting Alaska, and reported the minerals rich but the season too short for successful mining. This new venture seems to indicate that such was not their true opinion. PICTURES. DON'T purchase a picture in a hurry. They stand alone. A dozen other articles of adornment or use may be put aside, thrust into quiet corners, draped with tins or mat, or even entirely hidden. A picture once put on tho wall is a decorative landmark. It asserts itself loudly and perseveringly. Whatever you miss seeing in a room, you never miss the pictures. The first golden rule of the picture buver is not to bnv a dunk Danbs which are cheap are generally so hideous. They have uiso me m-gotten and most annoying merit of putting all other tastef ul and quiet arrangements of a room out of harmony. One bad thunder and lightning, red and blue and yellow nightmare, on canvas, will do more to make a room look hideous than any other article on the prem ises. What you buy let it be rood. A siimle fair engraving of some famous picture, an autotype, or a uiroiuo-iitnograpli from the works of an acknowledged master, will do more to beautify your parlor or bedroom than a dozen muddled, ill-colored, ill-drawn transcripts- o cnueu-ouocal or other scenery. "That's not what I IT! fin nf " raanAnlorl 4-1 a nwtfaeanr. In ancient days knowledge was confined to a few learned ...!, uut nowadays almost every donkey knows as much aa a professor." The students looked at each other, nodded, and whispered, "That's so."