12 THE MORNING - OREGONIAX; THURSDAY, 'JANUARY' 1, 1920. 'jmuuuuuiMimtnitimiiiutuumiiv utuimfuuiwiraituuiuiu OREGON HISTORY REPLETE WITH CHAPTERS OF EVENTFUL, CHARMING ROMANCE! State Which Embodies Recapitulation of Old World Stories Has Rich Fund of Legend and Tradition and Is Teacher of Need ful Lessons in Government and Industry Stirring Scenes and Heroic Deeds Recalled 1 ijmiwimiirniiimmjmriiiiiiriiniimjiirHiiimiimnniitintniiiTnuniriMiiiriiti By John C. Almnclc. OREGON is a great state the whole 96,000 square miles of It. There Is a. Camas valley,-a Grass valley, a Paradise valley, and the Val ley of Content. To know Oregon one should know something of the ro mance of her history, the beauty of her scenery, the promise of her indus tries and the enterprise and happiness of her people. It Is an eventful history. Oregon Is the saga of the Pacific the re capitulation of old world stories, the storehouse of tradition and legend. She was the mother of the other west ern states, and yet teaches them need ful lessons in Industry and govern ment. "What stirring scenes, what deeds of heroism her past calls up! What ex citing events she has witnessed Drake in the Golden Hind, Meares off Cape Disappointment, Gray flying the stars and stripes inside the line of breakers marking the mouth of the' River of the "West, Lewis and Clark! "Who does not recall the story of the founding of Astoria, "Whitman's mission, the "Wolf meeting, Indian -Wars? Whose heart does not thrill at the sound of the stirring slogan 01 ne campaign of '44: "All of Oregon Or None! Fifty-four-forty or Fight!"? Tea, history has need of Oregon. It Is a history that has all the ele ments of romance. The first Orcgonlans followed the "lure of little voices" that called them forth" to adventure and to dare. We cherish their memories; their courage, fortitude and faith gave us an em pire. There is romance In the recollec tion of the eimple faith of the sav apres who went forth in eearch of the "White Man's Book," the coming of the first white women, the ride of Dr. Whitman, the quart of seed wheat, the great emigration, and in the life of the most noble and heroic figure of all Dr. John McLoughlin, the "Fath er of Old Oregon." There is scarcely" a locality without its historical associations. In a little Sieen park in The Dalles stands a monument marking the end of the Oregon trail. Just a short distance above this spot, a spring of cool. clear water flows from the rocks. Here the pioneers made their camp, and from one of the great boulders called "Pul pit Rock," Jason Lee preached to the wondering savages. , Ancient Village Replace. The Dalles stands on the site of the ancient village of Wishram, the greatest aboriginal mart in the west.. According to Washington Irving, these natives ' were appropriately named the robbers of Wishram, after the title of the hamlet, and a preva lent practice of fleecing the unwary traveler. To their rock-built warehouses came Indians from the plains and Indians from the coast, and from them all the traders of Wishram exacted tribute. From their dwellings in the cliffs, they could see the mighty Co lumbia as it plunged through the black walls of the long narrows, and westward the foaming rapids where salmon fell an easy prey to their spears. Below The Dalles is Mema loose, the island of the dead, a grim reminder of the fate of the robbers of Wishram. Many other places are equally worthy of the notice of those inter ested In history. In Canyon City, the most famous mining town in the state in the old days, stands a house built hy Joaquin Miller. Here the poet lived while he was judge of Grant county. Above the little village can still be seen the red terrace where lay the (anions Humbolt mine, from which over $13,000,000 of placer gold was taken. In the narrow valley may be seen a huge gold dredge, an ugly monster devouring the land. Then there is Astoria, founded In LS.iS; Oregon City, the home of Dr. 'John McLoughlin; Silverton, French Prairie,- Tualatin, Champoeg, all re plete with early associations. Salem is the site of the old Oregon institute; C'orvallis, at. one time the capital, the seat of the state agricultural college; Xehalem, with Its legends of the treasure Bhip, Indians and beeswax; near Eugene, the seat of the state university, is the donation land claim of Joaquin Miller; at Rickreall, the second oldest flour mill built in Or egon. Roseburg was long the home of General Joseph Lane, the first gov ernor of Oregon. West of Roseburg, on the Umpqua, stands historic old Scottsburg, the third oldest town in the state, marking the head of nav igation on the river, and the begin ning of the military road to the Cal ifornia mines. Jacksonville Romantic Spot, Jacksonville, in Jackson county, too, has historic Interest in its stories of the days when It was the center of the placer mining region on the Rogue river. Most interesting of all is the collection of relics, books, pa pers and other material made by the state historical association, and stored in the public auditorium in Portland. The value of this collection cannot be estimated. Apart from its historical worth, it furnishes the basis for a great literature. Not that we have no literature. A good beginning has been made. The Willamette is the Wabash of the west; it includes within its confines more openly avowed writers than any section on the sunny side of the Rock ies, not counting those who have used Oregon materials and settings for their literary masterpieces. Among our real literary celebrities are numbered Markham, Balch, Dye, I.IIllCr, Victor and Higginson; among those who have drawn upon our state for material are Bancroft, Irving, Kipling, Sharp, Putnam and Bryant. There is no more delightful read ing than "Summer" and "Where Rolls the Oregon," by Dallas Lore Sharp; "Letters From an Oregon Ranch," by Louise G. Stephens, and "In the Ore eon Country," by George Palmer Put nam. Nor are these all. Hood River boasts a genuine poet in Anthony Euer, and no list of books would be complete without Mrs. Dye's "Mc Loughlin and Old Oregon," and Balch's "Bridge of the Gods." There is the proper literary backgrounds in our legends, history and beautiful scen ery. " Scenery la Taxied. In her scenery there is Infinite va riety, as well as great beauty. There are mountains and mountains! The rough, Irregular chains, the precip itous cliffs of the Blue mountains; the soft-rounded, green-forested slopes ol the Coast range; the tumultuous Sis kiyous; the solemn grandeur of the Cascades! In the last are the great peaks, towering Mount Hood, around which so many legends cluster of the days when it was a pillar of fire and cloud until that lurid night when .the. Bridge of the Gods fell crashing into -the wild waters. South are Mount Jefferson and Mount McLaughlin, familiarly called Pitt, from whose summits one can see the whole course of the Deschutes and the Valley of Content. Easily reached from the broad road over the McKen zie pass are the Three Sisters, "three silent pinnacles of aged snow," the rainbow peaks of the Cascades. Ore gon !s the land of shining mountains. XSere is a . reaepiblaaca lu these I T I - - - . - 1 ' - I MB .. fry"'- vjj. , "r I- - - irt -a I yt vx mid-afternoon. Far below were the In the woods and natural meadows I Is " . wZJ- l ""l". , lA L: : -zzz?m jt ;gon t is assured. One reference .lone is sufficient to illustrate. Eco nomic history tells us that the lum ber' Industry began in America along the coast of Maine; the timber there being adjacent to rivers and near the coast. The tall fir trees were used to make the masts of ships. Many vessels were constructed In America. ford cedar and Coos, the beautiful myrtle. It is out of the question to enum erate, the various kinds of trees of commercial value, but the oak, maple, fir, yellow pine, sugar pine, spruce, and many others are found in quan tity. The conditions of the industry in Oregon accessibility of large loaded with lumber, taken to Europe tracts, markets, transportation, qual- and sold with their cargoes. A brisk ity. etc. guarantee that the business trade with the Indies also arose, .will continue an exceedingly profit Other Industries sprang up, and there able one. was an era of remarkable prosperity. People Drtvrmlnlnic Force. Finally the forest resources were But after all it is the people that .practically exhausted in that region, determine whether a state is to be and the timber section bordering on really great. There is no lack of the Great Lakes became the center enterprise, as witness any communitv, of the lumber business. Allied in- any city. There are differences, it is dustries kept pace with the growth of true, but only in degree, never In lumDering; an otner lines ot enoeavor spirit. were stimulated1. Many of our larger cities owe their prosperity to their proximity to the forests. " A feature of war industry was the powerful stimulus given to lumbering in the south. It was nat ural that timber adjacent to the great centers of population should be first utilized. But the forest re sources of the north and the south are rapidly diminishing. The more re mote and least valuable tracts In these sections are now being drawn upon.-- But one great body of stand ing timber is to be found in the United States, and that is located in the great northwest. Oregonians are distinguished for hospitality, good nature, versatility, patriotism and faith in their insti tutions and the future. Oregon had a larger percentage of her men in the volunteer military service than any other state. Port Orford sent every man of mili tary age to the army the'week after war was declared, and the exercise o( the draft was scarcely necessary. Every community exceeded its Red Cross quota: the liberty bond appor tionment was largely oversubscribed. The problem of the alien is practically negligible; only one state in the union has a smaller percentage of Illiteracy. Oregon leads all the states in the number of colleges and college stu- streams, yet each has individuality. They drop like flashes of silver out of the blue glaciers and flow in a pleas ing succession of cascades, riffles falls and stretches of smooth, quiet water to the level where the tide hur ries in to meet them. The Deschutes is wild as any moun tain torrent in Scotland; the Willam ette is as placid as its broad valley except in the rushing upper reaches. The Wallowa twists and turns among the pine-scented hills of the north east, sweeping from bank to bank In its tortuous course. Along it in the days before the white men came dwelt the Nez Perces who called the place "the land of winding water." Emptying into the. Willamette near Oregon City is the Clackamas, and only a few miles above their junction Rudyard Kipling caught his famous salmon. Flowing into the sea are the Siuslaw, the Umpqua (mean ing crooked water), the Coquille, and the Rogue. All of these are famous fishing streams none better. More than once I have but this is not a fishing story. The lakes are as famous as the rivers. In the southeast are the great inland seas, Malheur and. Klamath, lined with tall tules, and frequented by a myriad of water-fowl. In the Blue mountains is Wallowa, "the gem of the mountains." For genuine beauty, this lake is not excelled by Lucerne or Geneva. Along the summits, and on the benches of the Cascades are many deep, cold lakes with so heavy a growth of willows and vines about their rims that the , fisherman can scarcely cast his fly. Most wonderful of . all; Oregon wa ters is Crater lake "the sea of: si lence and mystery." I saw it .first from near the point of discovery, a steep eastern promontory. It was Oregon has the greatest and finest dents, according to population; her RATH KEY BATTERY CO. Phone Bdwy. 2604 389 Oak Between Park and West Park STORAGE BATTERY Service St a Hon with the Dreadnought Plates Expert Battery Repair Work 'All Repair Work -Guaranteed 12 Months' More Service out of your old battery is Dollars Saved Step in and see us first before purchasing1 or having your bat tery repaired and learn the truth. " ' TheRayfield Carburetor FOR Gas Economy and Power We Guarantee Results Our Men Are Carburetor and ignition EXPERTS We carry a full stock of parts for your electrical equipment. Factory Service Station FOR Westinghouse Atwater Kent Dyneto Simms Magneto Berling Magneto Teagle Magneto Disco Electric Ford Starter Rayfield Carburetor Van Sicklen Speedmeters Electric Service Auto Co. Kxperts Phone Bdwy. 1764 391 Oak St. level glories of the lake, the colors emerald, as the water rippled and the long shadows of the walls grew deeper. It was as if one floated in space over a great, magnificent spar, kling jewel in a golden cup. The color sensations were over powering; the blue sky, where float ed a few crimson clouds, the straight shafts of the sun, the fringe of dull green forest, the flashing brazen walls, and the depths of the strange ly luminous lake it was as if one- to the outdoors. giimpsea anotner worm. truly this nounced Oregon ia mo iaKe oi magic, ana one can easily understand the superstitious awe in which it is held by the Indian. From the red lava debris of Wizard island there springs a peculiar flower; a fringed bell of deepest red, with exserted stamens, the anthers like furry silver balls. The plant is al most leafless, and one wonders how it can blossom in such riotous color ing from the sterile soil. In spots almost -as barren-looking throughout eastern Oregon grows the Mariposa lily, a flower with- five pink petals, spotted with black and spurred with clusters of white hairs. are all the common flowers. In the heavy shade by mossy springs bloom the fragrant waxen bells of the Shas ta lily, while along the sandy coast the rhododendron flames on every hillslope. - Many hundred varieties of flowers, trees and shrubs -have already been classified; every year new ones are discovered. Oregon is a paradise for the lover of nature. The roads and trails call always Joaquin Miller pro girls more beautiful than any others because of the de lightful climate with its equable tem perature. Certainly we should aid that only the open air can give that freshness and charm -characteristic of Oregon 'women. There are pleasant walks every where; walks that would have drawn from Stevenson the slncerest ex pression of appreciation. I have had few experiences I would not willing ly part with -A- Tarn, ons TzsTiin? srresm-TjzSTcjfeTfz.ie body of timber to be found, anywhere The period of its development has al ready begun. Undoubtedly the next 50 years will see a growth in the lumber industry of . which we can hardly conceive. It will in turn mean progress and . prosperity in every other field. Our forest resources are abundant; the totals for the state are so stu- public school system ranks with the best. What is the best part of the state? Well, this all depends upon what one wants. Opportunity is everywhere. 1 have my own opinions about thete matters. For example, I think I know the names of the three most beauti ful towns, the three best in which to bring up a family, and the three with Another is of the long trip from Bend to Burns when the white rib bon of a road unrolled before us and on either side was presented a wide expanse of gray-green sage, stretch ing to the juniper-clad hills and bare, black buttea looking like mountains of iron. Then there are some fair lanes In western Oregon where one feels good Just to be living when the wind is on the hills and there is a flash of red along the brook. And last there forward to to ride over the highway which is to be built from Astoria to Gold Beach along the Pacific But it Is not for pleasure alone that good roads are important they are inti mately related to the development of industries. Certainly the industrial futurp of ll, pendous as to be. almost incompre- -the best economic future. But opin ions are only opinions, and I know some thousands that would not agice with mine. This is as it should be, for community pride is a virtue worth fostering, and worth recognizing. I love the whole state. It is a land of homes, churches, schools, in dustry and good government a land of happy, contented people in fact, typically American. hensible. Lane county alone has 60.000.000,000 feet enough to make a fence 100 miles high: In Coos, Cur ry, Douglas. Lincoln. Clatsop and Klamath are magnificent bodies ot timber, the value of which must ba expressed in billions. Harney county has a fine quality of mountain mahogany; Lake. -the se quoia; Curry, the celebrated Port Or is the Columbia highway. I know of but among those worth but two men who could do it justice. cnensning are memories or some and unhappily they have never seen hours spent on a trail up the San- this marvel of the west. And even tiam. with the June sun overhead, in these days of high costs of every and a good, hard path under my feet, thing there is one pleasure to look ill 48 of the First Fifty Pierce-Arrow trucks have lasted 8 years and are still running. The average life of the average truck is much less Compare costs on this basis. Be sure the make of truck you buy has behind it years of service. If the present model differs from last year's model, it . is , still an experiment. Tf - - lias served the City of! J Seattle since August, 1911,! and covered more than 90,000 miles.! Conditions under which it operates are' particularly severe, but it has stood up: and rendered such dependable service, that three additional Pierce-Arrows have; been purchased for similar work. Iti paid for itself several years ago, but; shows no diminution of power, and 'there is reason to expect years of additional service. fee MOW Deliver more work in a given time. Loses less time on the job and off the job. Costs less to operate and 1cm to maintain. Lasts longer, depredate lei and command a higher resale price at all time. - CHAS. C. 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