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About The west shore. (Portland, Or.) 1875-1891 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 1, 1885)
32 THE WEST ' SHORE. 31,858, indicating a population of 127,432 at four to one, or 159,290 at the old ratio of five. That portion of Idaho which it is proposed to include in the State of Washing ton cast 3,300 votes, showing a population of 13,200 or 10,500, according to the ratio used. It is evidont that the proposed State hod last fall a population ranging between 140,032 and 175,790. Sovoral thousand have coine in since, and before a State government could be organized the altove figuros would be increased fully one third. The value of assessed proporty in Washington in 1884 was $51,008,484, as compared with $44,107,507, in 1883. At that rate of increase it would exceed $00,000,000 bofore the earliest moment when it could be called upon to support a State government It cortainly requirod an export to discover that for 400 milog along itu courso the Columbia has no tributary offering all the requisites of a salmon hatchery. This stroain, which fairly teems in the early summer with the most royal of all salmon, has no place upon its banks whore tlioso fish may be choaply and successfully propa gated by artificial means. The export, Mr. Livingston Stono, requires the whole side of a newspaper to impart this information. He found one place, he tolls us, where the conditions wore all favorable but ono, which was the trilling matter of the absence of tho salmon proposed to !mi propagated. Ho finally winds up ly telling us what wo all know Ixiforo that the site of tho old hatchery on tho Clackamas is as good as can be found, sinco tho diffi culty of obtaining pure water may bo overcome at no great expense. Lot some regulation be made whereby a Bufliciont number of breeding talmon can manage to run the gauntlotof the two thousand nets spread for thorn on the Lower Columbia, and Clackamas will again be fillod with the royal Chinook as in days of yoro, and artificial propagation of thorn be commenced under favorable con ditiona This we have always known; but now that an export has told us bo we will know it hotter, perhaps, and do something. Tiiehb is a wealth of suggestion to the Oregon Immi gration Board, and any other organization which may be effected in the Northwost for indnciug and aiding immi gration, to lw found in tho orations of the California Excursion Association. For sevoral years tho association has town running monthly exoursion trains from Chicago to Urn Angeles, and carrying immigrants and intended settlers in emigrant cars and at emigrant rates, but with nccommmlations hardly inferior to those to bo found in a Pullman. They have brought to Los Angeles every month 150, 200 or even a larger numb3r of immigrants, priuoiHly from tho Bo-callod Western States, ami most of whom havo settled in Southern California. The asso ciation has now turned its attention to the northern por tion of tho State, and hag perfected arrangements for similar excursions over the Union and Central Pacific roads to Sacramento, to begin early in the spring. The uocesa of this association is worthy of consideration by those who aim to accomplish the same end. A coitiiEsroNDENT urges upon us the importance of shade trees, not only for the private residence but the public highway. The white maple of Oregon and Wash ington, he contends, is of quick growth, and superior in beauty and wealth of shade to the favorite maples, oaks, chestnuts, elms and locusts of the East. "With its shapely trunk and branches and its large leaves," he says, " I jean conceive of no tree giving more shade or of greater beauty. The fallen autumn leaves furnish a natural mulch. The teamster and the farmer enjoy the shade in summer, and all kinds of stock find beneath its protection a retreat from the piercing rays of the sun." It is a valuable suggestion. Beautify your homes and line the highway in front of your farms, and you will add ten times as much to their market value as the time, labor and expense amount to, besides rendering yourself more contented, your home more attractive to yourself and children, .and doing much more to bring sunshine into your life than you can now be made to believe. It is the treeless, barren, desolate farm whose occupants are never contented, and from which the younger generation floe as from a prison. More trees and comforts at home moan less pedro and poker in the neighboring town. The military authorities at Fort Keogh have decided to liore an artesinn well at that point This makos the third in tho Yellowstone Valley. If good flowing wells can bo hired one of the problems of the West has been solved There are millions of acres of splendid soil in regions where the rainfall is too light for agricultural purposes, and so situated as to be beyond the reach of irrigation ditches taken from the watercourses and natu ral raservoirs of the country. If such land can be suc cessfully irrigated by means of artesian wells, the cultiv able area of the country will be widely extended. It is lack of water, and not sterility of soil, that renders Nevada so valueless for agriculture. Supply Nevada with water and she will furnish homes for a million of people in a few years. A reduction of emigrant rates between Si. Paul and Portland, from $45 to $30, has been brought about by the Northern Pacific, whose officials strongly urged it before tho Transcontinental Association. The company wisely belioves that immigration into this region should be fos terod, and that it is good business policy to offer it all the encouragement possible. Agents of the company are now in Europe, and it is confidently predicted that for eign emigration direct to the Pacifio Northwest will be much larger this year than ever before. The daily and weekly Walla Walla Statesman, pub lished by Colonel Frank J. Parker, is a model newspaper in every respect The Statesman has been identified with Walla Walla from its infancy, and much of the prosperity of that city is the result of its enterprise and energetic championing of every progressive publio meas ure. It deserves the liberal support it receives from the citizens of the Inland Empire.