WEST SHORE. Early this year the Pacific Coast Elevator Compa ny was incorporated, and immediately preparations were made for the erection of a system of elevators in the Columbia basin. During the season there were built, at various points on the line of the Oregon Rail way it Navigation Company in Oregon, Washington and Idaho, thenty-five grain elevators, each having a storage capacity of from 40,000 to 75,(XK) bushels. These all act as feeders for the big elevator in Portland, or, rather, on the opposite side of the river at Albina, w hich has a capacity for Btoring 1,000,0(K) bushels and is the largest establishment of the kind west of Minne apolis. The first vessel loaded at that elevator last week. This terminal elevator in Albina, illustrations of which appear in this issue of the West Siioiik, is a thoroughly modern structure, equipped as well as the bent in the world. It is 315 feet long, sixty-eight feet wide and 150 feet high. On either sido under the cu- HAOUINO AND HIlll'I'INU (MAIN, pola are Bixty-five deep bins in which grain is stored. In the top of the cuHla a five-inch shaft runs the whole length of the building, and on it are sixteen large gear wheels, any one or all of which may Ik run at any tinio to move grain through the various connec tions. Power is communicated to the main shaft from a MMiorse power engine by means of a rubW Mi thirty inches wide and 325 feet long. In the engine room is a dynamo capable of running '2X eighteen 'audio ineandescent lights, by which the building is lighted. There is also a Worthington fire pump, with river connections, with a capacity for throwing half a million gallons a day. Tanks in various Mrtions of the institution, and a large reservoir outside, also fur nish fire protection. (rain is received by rail inside the building, let from eight cars at a time into hoppers, from which it is elevated by means of cup belts (shown in the cut) in the boot leg (the top of which is illustrated) to the top of the house, weighed, spouted down to the first floor, where it is cleaned and properly graded, and then hoisted and dumped into the proper storage bins. To this Hiint the grain is handled entirely in bulk, except as the farmer may deliver it to the line elevator in sacks, which ho there empties. Hut the same diffi culties in the way of foreign shipments in bulk that have always existed and will continue until ships cross the isthmus at Nicaragua are still present, and grain must l bagged loforo vessels can carry it safely. It is difficult to so load a ship that a bulk cargo can not shift in rough weather. From the storage bins in the elevator, the grain descends in shiu(s and is easily and rapidly bagged and sent down the slide to tho vessel's hold. I,ooso grain is run in directly through the marino leg to fill tho spaces lietween the bags piled in the ship. This method of handling is a great deal more rapid than the old one, and it also saves wear and tear of bagging. Hugging ami shipping may Ih done at the same time grain is being received and cleaned, so there need 1st no cessation in either process for tho other. This is the only terminal elevator on the Pacific coast worthy the name. There are numerous ware houses on the sound and in California, and steps are being taken for supplying the need for conveniences of this sort that will give the sound prH-r shipping fa cilities very soon, Preparations are already Mug made for the erection of a duplicate of the Portland elevator on the same dock, so strong are the evidences of increase thus early apparent. It may be two or three years licfore the new structure is built, however, for the handling capacity of the present one is enor mous. The gold brick disease broke out in Port Townsend last week and but for tho accidental Interference of the police would have added another victim to its long list. When a man's selfishness and cupidity so far de throne his reason that he thinks ho can buy I,XX) in gold for 1500, it is a pity that ho is not permitted to realize what a Ul ho is by actually paying tho money and getting his brass brick for a erpetual Instructor in the fundamental principles of 'iiso. Business seems to 1st looking up in the internal rev enue department, tho receipts for the past year exceed ing those of tho previous one by fi.lXXI.INXt. It Is ulsmt time I'nclo Ham went out of tho lbUor business the same as be did the cigar business, Tho govern ment does not need tho money and tho tax cannot lw considered a restriction in the sense that a high license law is. Abolishment of the Internal revenue laws would rid us of a set of useless officials ami stop tho inhuman work of man hunting by serial deputies.