WEST SHORE. An IUuttrated Journal publiihtd entry Saturday by the Wat Shore Publuhng Company, Portland, Urtgon. I SAMUEL, Oenorul Manuger. SubKriptioH Price, 00 per Year. Single Copy, 10 Centt. Portltnd Offlct, Ipokint Falls Office, Ntw York Offlct, 171 Second 8lrrt. 3Ealt Miin 8trl. TrlbuM BuHdiog. Th WilT Ihori offer the Best Medium for Advertiser, of any ' publication on the Paolflo Coatt. Intone! to Ikt FoH Offln in Portland, Onto, or (ranmlHim (Arose fit maili at Mcond clam rattt. SATURDAY, JANUARY 31, 1801. Shall we have a state flower? California has adopted the beautiful em blem shown on the drat page, and the- states of the northwest ahould each elect from the flora of their plains, moantaina and forests some fitting and beautiful emblem. Wiht Biiori cilia upon the lovers of nature to express their Tiewa on tliia aubject, and deacribe the flowtra each would have for the state In which the writer Uvea. Oregon, Washington, Idaho and Mon tana should each choose a floral emblem of It own. In these columns will be produced engravings of the flowers receiving the greatest endorsement from the varioua atatea, and an opportunity will then be given to all to vote on the aubject. If 70a know a flower native of your state and in other ways deserving of apecial honor aa It emblem, write about it. A full and enthusiastic expression of views and preferences is invited. Ingalls Is in gall and wormwood Just now. The wisdom of childhood ia laughable, but the laugh of age Is wisdom. The American Federation of Labor has wisely decided not to Join the third party movement of Powderly and the farmers' alliance. tk l,n hive read and admired that great poem, "The Light of J'Ztto Arnold'' ? Tt' "5",W 1 . W 1 l will he published in this country on the sixteenth of Feb ; l e ; d I has sl,on the buutie, of tbe Chn,tiM W igioa fu iy M b. did thU of Buddhism, Christianity will (ram much by h "bore. The volume will doubtless have a remarkable sale. A portage road around the cascades will not open the Columbia to traf fic farther than The Dalles, and the greatest portion of the producing coun ry to ha lx-uefi.ed lies above that point. A echeme to be practicable should include some means of opening the upper river as well. It congress be depended upon to do this, relief will come no sooner than if we wait for the casc ades canal to be completed. The portage at the cascade. I a good thing and will relieve The Dalles and tributary country, but the larger re gion beyond calls loudly for help. Oregon is peculiarly blessed in a chief executive who is opposed to all new-fangled notions; who believes the machinery of government prepared for a handful of people is adequate to rule a multitude ; who feels confident of his ability to manage all things himself j who believes that because na ture clothed this region with forests it should so remain-wlth the excep tion of enough logs to run his saw mill ; who sees the life-giving tide of im migration and capital flowing by and will not open the gates to let it in; who, in fact, can see nothing in the future for his state, but a great deal for himself. Oregon enjoys the distinction of being the only state to import European song birds. Two years ago a large number of skylarks, bullfinches, chaf finches, goldfinches, linnets, nightingales, blackheaded nightingales, starl ings, song thrushes, black thrushes and singing quails were brought from Germany and turned loose. They have increased rapidly and demonstrated that the scheme is a success. This spring 1,000 more will be imported. The legislature will pass an act protecting these foreign and native song birds and their nests. Such actions as this make us realize that there is some thing in life besides the selfish struggle for gain. Kupertnlendent Porter ia a very busy man. He find the job of prov ing hla census worth anything a great deal harder than the work of taking It. Those who have thought but lightly, or not at all, of the persecution of the Jewa in Russia, are advised to read Mr. Cohen's address, on another pan The Pennoyer boom resembles smoke. It started very dense all in one place, but as It rises it spreads out and gets thinner and thinner the farther It goes. . Winter has but a few days more to put in an appsarance, or the case will go agalnat him by default. Already the aweet violet are blooming In tli garden. If senator drop into poetry on appropriation bills, what a flood of mel ody may be looked for when the mortgage tax law cornea up. There will be music In the air, II tli Oregon legislature fall to pas an adequate world's fair bill, every member voting against It will b filled with vain regret in 181)3, when hi eye are opened to the light he now persistently refuse to ave. Willi tli monkey and parrot at Helena hare stopped a few days to take breath and an Inventory of lost feather and hair, the pot and kettle at Olympla have entered upon a campaign of criticism of each other's com plexions, Th Immunity from snow storms and billiards anjyed by tli Missis sippi valley this winter 1 credited to tli fanner' alliance having assumed charge of tverythlng , Meanwhil tli deluded gold bug of tli Atlantic Slate are being battered by Old Korea moat unmercifully. Purely, th least tli legislature ran do In response to tli almost unani mous dsmand for consolidation Is to pas th bill and let th cities vote on the question. Neither city bonds nor charter should b imposed upon a city by tli legislature direct, but should always be subject to approval by ballot, taxpayer only being tllglhl to vol on tli question, Wist mom Word ContMt oIom January 31. Th name of prli winner will be .nnounoed next week. The movement on foot in the house for calling a constitutional conven tion for Oregon meets with the approval of every citizen who realizes how the state is retarded in its development by a constitution framed to meet the exigencies of 'entirely different social, commercial and industrial condi. tions. We need a modem constitution, The only reasonable objection to the framing of a new one is the fear that the tendency of the day to put legislation into constitutions will be too strong to be resisted, and that tem porary " Isms " will be engrafted upon the organic act of the state. This danger Is a real one, and calls for vigilance on the part of those who would prevent it, The Australian ballot bill baa passed the house and been amended in the senate. If the senate had kept its hands off, we would have a law that would deal a death blow to political corruption and bos role In Portland. But that la too much to expect, where the interest in changing it is so great. Under the pretext of purifying the primaries an attempt is made to draw its sting, . Friends of purity of elections will oppose all efforts to tinker with this bill. Under its provisions the primaries lose much of their importance, since it is easy for any set of, men who object to Die manner in which a nomination has been secured to have an opposing candidate's name placed on the official ballot, where trickery can not affect it and where it will be as prominent and as easily voted lor as that of the corruptly secured nominee. Give us the law just as it is, without one word added or taken away, and the cause of genuine relorm will have gained a lasting victory. The visit of the legislative committee to the cascades to examine the condition ol work on the locks hu revealed two things, viii The work is being done in a most thorough manner, and under the moat favorable con ditions possible it will take four years more to complete it. In view of these facta it become an interesting question what the state ahould do aboot It, Certainly it should do nothing to interfere with the progress of th work, nor anything that will have a tendency to cause congress to delay still more Hie necessary appropriations. It ia equally certain that the conditions of transportation must be changed before the four years have passed that are set as the earliest p mible limit of completion, or the eight years which our experience teaches ns will bs the actual time cansumed. W can not en dure the present aituaUon even four years longer without a loss ten time " u' e0" Cmporary measure of relief. Portage railroads built jointly by Oregon and Washington, can supply a measure of relief un- of Tl,h-"iI TrltV 01 verM 0,lled th department of Poet ol the Paclflo Coat," on page 7.