THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAN. PORTLAND. JUNE 17, 1906. JASON LEE'S PLACE IN HISTORY i . , : Address of H. W. Scott at the Memorial Services in Honor of Methodist Missionary Held at Salem, Friday. ADDRESSES by H. W. Scott and Al len Weir at the memorial services held at Salem Friday In honor of Jason Lee are' herewith published. Other addresses read at the services will be pub lished at a later time In The Oregonlan. Mr. Scott's address follows: That faith which foresees and believes and Is the substance of all things, was the Inspiration of the Oregon missions and the creative power of the growth of our great states of the Pacific North west. The history of the origin of each of our slates lies in the biography and character of the few who were first actors in the history. It is a record, therefore, "f the individual lives of men and women r:thcr than of great events. Such were the opening scenes of the history of Ore gon. 1 refer now. not to the first discoveries and explorations, .but to the conditions that started the permanent settlement and began the continuous social and po litical life of Oregon. But when we are able to take up the history of a com monwealth from its very beginning, and in particular when that beginning was in smallest things, of recent development, almost wholly under our own eyes, there is obvious advantage. We are able to see clearly, assign the rounders to their propeY places and to accord them sever ally their meed of fame. There is something unsatisfactory in beginning a history with the mature state of a country. As in biography, so' in history, we desire to go back to the cradle and see the growth -of social and political life from the first small be ginnings. There is. moreover, not a Ut ile difficulty in finding a later moment which will afford a real starting point. In a mature state each condition Is the result of what went before, and the hu man mind feels compelled to seek causes for this as for every other effect. The absence of written documents in the early ages obliges us to form all our Ideas of primitive history from oral tra ditions, handed down from generation to generation. These become more or less changed by laitse of time and are ac companied with superstition and a be lief in the miraculous Intervention of the divinity a doctrine which it enhances while it envelops the pride of a people with a halo of glory. But we have for the origins of the his tory of Oregon abundance of written and printed contemporary material; and . we know, therefore, we arc on the sure and solid ground of historical truth. Here, however, are disadvantages, because there is little room for play of the im agination. The poetry Is lost. One who stands as an actor on the threshold of such a new movement has great advantage in this, that though his labors may be arduous, he has a chance, a certainty almost, of reaching a place in the memory of posterity. And after all. fame Is something, and it is some thing to win oven remembrance among men. Though a great poet declares the desire of fame "the last infirmity of the noble, mind." yet the desire is one that justifies itself in. the lives of men, and even at the bar of human history. For none would live without notice or praise. If he could gain it, nor pass to the in finite unknown leaving no mention or memorials of his name. I am not now intending to give a sketch -of the early history of Oregon, but shall attempt some account of estimate of one of the leading actors in it, incidentally only referring to others. I avoid claims made for one and another, and all con tioversy as to who "saved Oregon": for In my conception Oregon was secured to the United States by a train of events in which numerous persons were important Hi tors. Nevertheless. I must give chief credit for our heginning as an American state to the missionary effort, of which Jas'nn Lee was the protagonist. Attempts were marie prior to the com .ng of Jason Ioe. but they were failures. I need not speak of Astor's unsuccess ful undertaking: nor of the failure of succeeding adventurers. Wyeth and Bon neville, whose enterprises were those of traders; nor of the attempted coloniza tion by Hall J. Kelley, which ended even more disastrously. It was not until the American missionaries entered and pos si sin-d the country neither as traders nor us secular colonizers, though in reality wi.Iing to become both, that a foothold w:i. Ruined for the occupation of Oregon liy American settlers. With exception JASON LEE AND THE STATE Al-l-ffl' WEIR, of Olympia, represent-in,- the Governor of Washington and t..c Washington State Pioneer Association, i.c.heied tlic following address on "Jason Lv.u :i.i the State of Washington" at the Ii.ciikh iul services held at Salem Friday: Mr. l'resident and Ladles and Gen t.emcn: Someone has said that a man's Jife history should not be written until .' years after his death meaning, I suppose, that if he had any animosi ties or imperfections during his life time they should be permitted to die out and be forgotten. Besides, the progressive and far-seeing statesman. Hie man who is ahead of his day and generation, is not always appreciated' until after events have justified his course. Be that as it may, while there was no lack of appreciation during his lifetime of the man whose memory we honor today, and no reason for post poning this event, still it is certain that as time rolls on he looms as a larger and yet more important figure m the horizon of the history of the l-ncinc Northwest. As we stand reverently near the dust thai was once. Jason Leo, I wish to say that, speaking in behalf of the State nf Washington, her Governor, and the Washington State Pioneer Association, 1 am honored In having been author ized to bear a message to you this evening. We jionor the memory of Jason Lea I cause of his noble, pure and conse crated life, the best years of which were given to the perilous duties of a missionary to our land before it could -lm;ist of many white settlers; because he it was who preached the first ser mon from tho Word of God ever ut tered within the bounds of what is now I lie State of Washington when his was literally the voice of "one crying in the wilderness," and especially be cause to his wise and far-seeing states manship, patriotism and energetic, happily directed efforts, more than to those of any other individual, is due the fact that the soil of what is now tile big, lusty young state to the north of us, once a part of old Oregon, be came American soil and not British. The State of Washington desires to acknowledge her debt of gratitude to him. and to add her tribule to his memory today. Life death. eternity! How vast, how deep, how solemn are these three words! Astronomy cannot tell us where the bounds of this visible uni verse are. Theology cannot determine the locality of that invisible universe from which no traveler returns. But we are told that somewhere, "in our Father's house," tare many mansions.' This we do know, that when a human being, endowed with the kingly quali ties of a free moral agent, capable of using his powers for the uplifting and bettering of humanity, does so use those powers Instead of wasting his ifo in selfish gratification or sloth, or of Felix Hathaway, who had come by ship in 1829. of Solomon Smith, of Clat sop, and perhaps one or two more who had come with Wyeth's first expedition in 1S32, there were, so far as 1 am able to ascertain, no Americans in Oregon when Jason Lee and his four companions came in 1834. Hall J. Kelley and Ewing Young coming from California, arrived the same . year, a little later. A word here about the members of this first missionary party of five persons, beginning with Jason and Daniel Lee. Jason Lee was a man of earnest and en ergetic character. He was devoted to ideals, yet' one could not nay that he was a man of great original genius. Such, indeed, are not numerous in our world. But he was sincere, strong in his con victions and in himself. He was a man of sincere piety, of settled beliefs and was fit for the work in which he was to en gage. It was a hopeless scheme, indeed that of educating and civilizing the In dians of that time, but he didn't know it, and therefore didn't trouble himself with doubts. He believed fully in the future of this great country, yet was scarcely aware that the Indian could not be a factor in it. On the contrary, he thought the Indian might be. This was a mistake. But what he did was to lead the way to American colonization. The second man was Daniel Lee, nephew of the former, thoroughly de voted to the idea of the mission, young and ardent, not idealistic, but practical, with a world of good common sense and with a willingness to works He labored In the missionary cause in Oregon till August. 1843. when he left the country, never to return. The ill-health of his wife required his departure with her. They left by sea. Daniel Lee continued in the ministry in the Eastern States during many years, and died in OklahomI in 1815. With the Lees from New York came Cyrus Shepard, from Lynn. Mass. He was thoroughly devoted to the work for which he had engaged, but had not the physical constitution necessary for Its hardships. After his arrival In Oregon he married a Mist Downing, who came out by sea In the Hamilton, with the White party, arriving in 1837. Shepard died in January, 1840. His wife and two children survived him. Jason Lee, Daniel Lee and Cyrus Shep ard were the original party. In Missouri they engaged two young men for their adventure Philip L. Edwards and Court ney M. Walker. Edwards was a native of Kentucky. In hi early boyhood his father removed to Missouri. Here at the age of 22 he Joined the Lee expedition to Oregon. He taught a school at Champoeg in 1835. and in 1836 went to California to obtain cattle for the settlers in Oregon. With Ewing. Young he returned with a band of nearly 1200, which laid the foundation for rapid accu mulation of the comforts of life andfut ture "wealth. In March, 1837, Edwards took the trail for the East, over the plains, with Jason Lee and two Indian boys. Returning to his old home in Mis souri, he entered the field of politics and was elected to the Legislature. He was chairman of the delegation from Missouri to the National convention at Baltimore in 1S44. which nominated Henry Clay for the Presidency. At Richmond, Mo., he practiced law successfully till 1850, -when he went overland to California and in 1S55 was in the Legislature of that state as a Representative from Sacramento. Wher ever he lived he was always a man of note. He died at Sacramento in 1869. The fifth member of this pioneer mis sionary party was Courtney M. Walker. He was engaged in Missouri, upon a eon tract for one year, to assist in establish ing the mission. He never left Oregon, but took an Indian wife, lived In Yamhill and left a posterity now, I think, extinct. As I remember him he was a courtly gentleman who. toward th end of his life, managed to dress well, and had the ap pearance of a man of culture and leisure. A daughter. Helen, married a lawyer in Yamhill, named John Cummins, who in 1862 was a Representative of that county in the legislature. Cummins and wife went to Washington City, where he prac ticed law. She died there, after a few years, leaving no children. The offspring of white marriages with Indians, though often worthy persons seldom were long lived. I give these detaita. picked up out of many sources of information not readily accessible. But they possess an Interest, since they lie at the basis of the -creation of the states of the Pacific Northwest: and the smallest details of the heginning of great things have human interest and historic value. , All accounts of the missionary move ment to Oregon begin with the story of in wrongdoing, his memory should be honored by those who follow after. Life is a glorious mystery, with a heaven beyond for attainment by just men made perfect. Jason Lee, from the battlements of heaven today, must look down with the never-ending sat isfaction of duty well and faithfully performed on earth. In one respect death levels all: "The hand of the King that the scepter hath borne; The brow of the priest that the miter hath worn; The eye of the sage and the heart of the brave, . Are hidden and lost in the depths of the grave." But not so with the splendid charac ter that lives in the. minds of fellow mortals after useless clay has served Its purpose and been laid away in the grave. Rather should it be said of these in the language of Lord Lytton: "There Is no death! The stars go down To rise upon some fairer shore; And bright in heaven's jeweled crown They shine forcvermore. For ever near, though unseen. The dear immortal spirits tread; For all the boundless universe Is life there is no dead." "The sweet remembrance of the Just Shall flourish when he sleeps in dust." As we contemplate the object and pur pose of this gathering tonight.-what mem ories crowd in upon us! The scenes, in cidents and individuals of the past crowd in and haunt the vision and fill the minds of those in this presence who took part in the doings of early pioneer days in "Old Willamette," or tnose who had con temporaneous existence with those days in the "Oregon country." I wish I might recall that past yet more vividly to your attention. I would like to hold before your eyes the old Chemeketa founded by the man whose dust rests In yonder Lee Mission Cemetery; the dwelling erected by him here when first he built a habita tion in the "Land of the Sundown Seas." "The shadows lie across the dim old room. The firelight glows and fades into the gloom. While mem'ry sails to childhood's distant shore, v- And dreams, and dreams of days that are no more." When Jason Lee came from the Eastern states to the "Oregon country," in 1S34, he came as a vigorous young preacher of the word of God. fired with enthusiasm in his mission and message to the native tribes of the Northwest his ambition to Christianize and civilize them, and im bued with a lively conception of the mag nitude and importance of this country and of his undertaking. Large and whole some, mentally and physically, of distin guished lineage, and having been well educated and trained to lofty ideals, he was splendidly equipped for the work that made him famous and left the stamp and the four Flathead Indians who, in 1832. made their way over mountains- and plains to St. Louis, on a Journey whose object the missionary spirit tells us was to obtain religious instruction for them selves and their people. I confess this story has always seemed to me to have a mythical element in it; and Daniel Lee In his book intimates that the later de velopment of the story was subject to doubt. Nevertheless, he tells us that Gen eral William Clark, of the Lewis and Clark expedition, told' him in 1834 that two years before that Is, in 1832 four In dians, probably Nez Perces had accompa nied a party of white trapper from tlfls mountains to St. Louis and had given him an interesting account of their journey and Its objects. From the trappers they had learned of the white man's God and the Book he had given, and they wanted to know. General Clark was not a doctor of theology, and appears to have answered them in merely conventional terms. The story carried by the newspapers to the East touched the religious imagination, and served the misisonary purpose Just as well as if the sole object for which the Indians had accompanied the trappers was to make these Inquiries. Certain it is that the cause which started the first of our missionaries to Oregon was publica tion in New York of this simple Indian story. Let no Incredulity smile-at the simplicity of the recital. This is the true beginning of the history of the making of Oregon. The missionary expedition did not find its resting place in the country of the Nez Perces or the Flatheads, according to the original Intention. It fell in with the Wyeth party and came on down to the Willamette, then the settlement of a few of the men of the Hudson Bay Com panyBritish subjects, most of whom had taken Indian wives. The Wyeth party was to meet at the mouth of the Will amette the little vessel which Wyeth had dispatched from Boston, with goods for the Indian trade. The destination of the Wyeth party determined also that of the Lee party. Both were recciid with kindness by Dr. McLoughlin, the chief factor of the Hudson's Bay Company. Shepard remained at Vancouver, detained by sickness. Jason Lee and Cqurtney Walker came on up the Willamette by boat, and Daniel Lee and Edwards took horses, for which they were indebted to the kindness of Dr. McLoughlin, and Joined the others at the site chosen tor the mission, on the Willamette, a few miles below the present city of Salem. It was not till after much deliberation that'the mislson was established at that place, for we are told that the merits of different portions of the country were considered the Flatheads, the Nez Per ces, the Cayuse and other tribes were carefully reviewed, but to the exclusion of all others the Willamette Valley was selected, chiefly because it was "strong ly recommended by Dr. McLoughlin and the rest of the gentlemen at Vancouver." How, in the face of the testimony like this, delivered by the American mission aries themselves, it could have been sup posed or told later, that the British peo ple in the country were enemies of our people, passes comprehension. Yet there was sharp competition be tween the subjects of Great Britain and the American newcomers in Oregon, for ascendency in the country. The claims of both countries extended to the entire area, from the 42d parallel to 54-40. In truth, however, neither party could hope to maintain its claim entire. Such was the situation that compromise was inev itable. Our claim to the country north of the 49th parallel was weak. As weak was the British claim to the Columbia and especially weak to the territory south of the Columbia River. Neither party, therefore, was able wholly to exclude the other, though for a time each bravely made an exclusive claim. The talk on our side of "fifty-four forty or fight" was merely the cry of a party among our own people. Say rather, it was the in solence of partisanship, for Great Brit ain's claims, through discovery, explora tion and occupation, to a standing below fifty-four forty rested on a basis too solid to be disposed of in this way; and besides our claim to "fifty-four forty" rested merely on a convention between the United States and Russia, through which the latter had named "fifty-four forty" as the southern boundary of her American possessions. But to this con vention Great Britain had not been a party, and she justly declared that her rights could not be concluded by any ne gotiation in which she had not partici pated, or in -whose results she had not proml.oed acquiescence. The question, therefore, was still open between Great Britain and the United States. Both countries had undoubted claims. Great Britain, by retrocession of Astoria to the impress of his personality upon all the Pacific Northwest for the molding of character of the white population coming to these shores, fostering patriotic citi zenship, and building up a heritage price less to humanity. The little band under his leadership were the first to raise the Stars and Stripes in these ends of the earth, the first to put forth a successful effort to establish a local self-government here, and the first to bring to the atten tion of the Government of the United States the importance and desirability of extending National protection to the people and exercising National authority over this vast domain. Born in Stanstead. Can., in 1803, he was nevertheless a thorough American. His ancestor. John Lee, was one of the first 54 members of the Massachusetts Bay Colony to settle at Cambridge, Mass., in 1634. The names of his ancestors appear In every war of the colonies and of the United States prior to his time and in the Pequot war. in the old French and In dian war, at Concord and Lexington, at the siege of Boston, at the batttle of Ixng Island, at the storming of 'Stony Point, with Washington crossing the Delaware, at Princeton and Trenton, Germantown and Monmouth. Colonel Noah Lee raised and equipped at his own expense a regiment In Vermont and led them to the aid of Ethan Allen in the attack upon Tlconderoga. Captain Na than Hale, Washington's scout, executed at New York as a spy by order of Gen eral Howe, was a descendant from Tabi tha, youngest daughter of John Lee, as was also the celebrated divine. Rev. Ed ward Everett Hale. Among college presi dents in this same lineage we find the names of William Alien Lee, of Bowdoin and Dartmouth, and John Parker Lee, of Los Angeles. Cal. Among statesmen Is Thaddeus Stevens, of Pennsylvania; among jurists. William Strong, a Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States; among soldiers of the Civil War, Kirby Smith, the last Confederate Gen eral to surrender. His father was a Min ute Man, and hastened to the defense of Concord and Lexington, and was with General Washington at the siege of Bos ton, and In all the campaigns In New Jersey. At the close of the Revolutionary War the elder Lee settled in the then almost impenetrable wilds of Vermont, In a location that! was afterward divided bv the boundary Tine between the United Cats r.A - -J 'T-1. . 1. - . , . I uimco tutu .auoua. iits w ll, 11 K II lies on both sides of the line, is called Rock Island on the Canadian side of the line and Derby Line on the American side. By the location of the boundary the Lees were left a stone's throw from the line on the Canadian side. i Converted In 1826. Jason Lee entered Wilbraham Academy at Wilbraham. Mass., the following year, and spent the remainder of his life in the United States. Upon his arrival in Oregon, accompanied by his nephew. Daniel Lee. and Cyrus Shepherd and P. S. Edwards, he began United States, after the' War of 1S12. had acknowledged our right in the country, and still was acknowledging it; though she was occupying the country, and we were not down to the arrival of the American traders and missionaries, in 1832-34, Yet Great Britain, through eer channels of diplomatic intercourse what ever her people here may have said or claimed never made any serious preten sion to the territory south of the Colum bia River, but had insisted on that stream as the boundary line. But we had. through Gray's discovery, the exploration of Lewis and Clark and the settlement of Astoria even though Astoria had capitulated a chain of title that made It Impossible for us to consider this claim. Still, there could be no termina tion of the dispute till the slow migra tion of our people to the Oregon country gradually established American Influence here; and finally the large migration of 1843 gave the Americans decided prepon derance, especially In the country south of the Columbia. Into this competition our missionary people were plunged. In deed, they led the way in it, and to their efforts, mainly, was due the agitation that led to increase of American immigration from our states and gave our people the ascendency. That there were no colli sions here, of serious character, between the representatives of the different coun tries, was due to good, common sense on both sides, to mutual forbearance, and to common language and kinship. The re ception accorded to our people by the English was uniformly considerate. We have-seen how they interested -themselves in the-settlement of our first missionaries, and remembrance of the benevolence of Dr. McLoughlin to our people, shown many long years. Is a possession that will be cherished in our history forever. In every sketch of the early history of Oregon it is necessary to make some statement of the controversy between Great Britain and the United States over rights of sovereignty here, I shall not pursue the subject, but must mention It. for it is the key to our pioneer history, and the fact must ever be borne in mind when dealing with any part of the theme. As missionaries to the Indians, the little band and those who came after then can not be said to have been successful. After few years not many Indians remained to be educated and civilized. This was not the fault of the missionaries, but the in evitable and universal consequence, re peated liere, of contact of the white and Indian races. But. as settlers and colo nizers, our missionaries "came out strong." They, with the reinforcements sent out during the next ten years, became the chief force that Americanized Oregon and held the country till the general immigra tion began to arrive. The Presbyterians followed the Meth odists in the missionary effort. Samuel Parker was sent out in 1835. Whitman came In 1836. Reinforcement to the Meth odist mission arrived by sea In the Spring of 1837. Its leader was Dr. Elijah White. Dr. White and wife sailed from Boston in the ship Hamilton, July 2, 1836. They came by way of the Sandwich Islands. With them came a dozen persons, for work In the mission, including three young women, who became wivea of mis sionaries. Of these details I can give no more in so brief an address as this must be, than are necessary to the main pur pose of a short and rapid narrative. With in a year after this reinforcement ar rived, Jason Lee, realizing the need of a still stronger force for the work, started East over the plains. This was in 1838, more than five years before "Whitman's ride." undertaken for a similar purpose. Passing through Peoria, 111.. In the Win ter of 1838, he delivered a lecture on Ore gon. This started a party of young men from Peoria for Oregon in the Spring of 1839. The party disagreed and divided. A portion of it passed the Winter at Brown's Hole, on Green River, some miles below where the'main line of the Union Pacific Railroad now crosses that stream. In the Spring of 1840 it came on to Oregon, ar riving at Vancouver in May. 1840. In this Peoria party were Joseph Holman, Sidney Smith, Amos Cook and Francis Fletcher, all of whom lived to old age and left de scendants, now living in various parts of the state. Before he had arrived at the end of his journey eastward, Jason Lee heard of the death of his wife ,in Oregon, shortly after he had left her. Bowing: as man must to so great a grief and loss, yet his purpose was not shaken. He bestirred himself with all energy to obtain further help for the mission in Oregon, and in October, 1839, with a large party that included many names which became widely known In our pioneer life, sailed from New York OF WASHINGTON work by opening a school for Indian chil dren In a log house they erected a few miles below the place where we stand tonight. Mr. Lee had an adequate conceptipn of the country, its importance, and his great work, even before he left the Atlantic States, because he had visited Washing ton, D. C. prior to his coming, where he interviewed President Andrew Jackson, to whom he unfolded his plans and from whom he secured executive indorsement and a promise of assistance. On his way West he held religious services at Fort Hall In what is now Southern Idaho, July 27, 1834, preaching from the text: "Whether, therefore ye eat or drink, or whatsoever ye do, do all to the glory of God." I Cor. x:31. On the following day he conducted the first funeral services west of the Rocky Mountains by a Protestant Christian minister. On September 28, 1S34, he preached at Vancouver, now in Washing ton, then a Hudson's Bay Company trad ing post, and on October 9 following he preached at Gervals. Among the missionaries coming within the next few years, Lee was easily the foremost in leadership. He was aggressive and resourceful, plan ning with wisdom and executing with the firm, manly tread of a conqueror. Hl3 consecrated. Christian manhood, strong in body and mind, hopeful and helpful, enabled him to accomplish things. He survived all dangers Inci dent to crossing the plains, the main part of the continent then being unin habited save by wild beasts and hos tile, treacherous Indians. He blazed a pathway for oncoming civilization. Weary and footsore, trudging beside an ox team over desert plain, through swamp and forest, never hesitating in his purpose, immediately upon his ar rival he began his work with the zeal 6f one who felt that he must be "about the Master's business." In 1838. when Mr. Lee returned to "the states" after reinforcements for his missions, and to bring the- impor tance of this country to the attention of the Government, he carried with him a memorial to' Congress, which he had prepared, and which was support ed by the settlers, that was significant and important, prophetic of our future greatness, and which described the needs and possibilities of the country, its conditions, and the earnest desires of the petitioners. One paragraph alone from his pen will suffice to in dicate the strength of his grasp of the situation. He said: "We need hardly allude to the com mercial advantages of the territory. Its happy position for trade with China, India and the Western Coast of America. The growing Importance, however, of the islands of the Pacific is not so generally known or appre in the bark Lausanne for the Columbia River. The vessel arrived in the river just as the Peoria party' which had start ed a year earlier came down the Colum bia to Vancouver, that Is, in May, 1840.' The party that came by the Lausanne became known in missionary annals as "the great reinforcement." White left Oregon in July. 1840, by sea, for New York. In 1842 he came out again to Oregon, over the plains. With him came a large party, among whom were persons afterwards well known In the his tory of Oregon as J. R. Robb, S. W. Moss, Medorem Crawford, the Pomeroys, An drew and Darling Smith, and many more. White himself went back over the plains in 1845; came again to Oregon via Pana ma In 1861, with a commission from Pres ident Lincoln for an Industrial scheme among the Indians, but, finding it im practicablemost of the Indians having passed away remained but a short time and departed for California. He spent tue last years of his life In San Francisco, where he died in 1879. Of course, it is known and acknowledged on all sides that the missionary enterprise led by Jason Lee was not the only one in the early history of Oregon that left its impress on the life of the country, direct ed its course and determined its destiny. There were other similar undertakings, but this one was the first, and, on the whole, more powerful than any other. After the Whitman massacre, all Protes tant missions in the Upper Columbia re gion were abandoned, and the people came to the Willamette Valley. But it was not merely to obtain a rein forcement for the mission that Lee prose cuted his work in the Eastern States. His work was the first work done by a resi dent of Oregon, to Induce the Government of the United States to aid in colonization and support of the country, to settle it with American people, and to establish here an American state. Knowing also that commerce must attend the settle ment of the country, he maae representa tions to the Cushtngs of Massachusetts, which interested them in commercial ef fort In this direction; and this brought John H. Couch to Oregon In 1840. in the bark Marylandi with goods for trade, and again In the Chenamus, in 1844. The Catholic missions in Oregon were started in 1838, four years later than the Methodist, and two years later than the Presbyterian. Jason Lee, leaving Oregon In 1838 and reaching the Atlantic States early in 1839, at onco directed his efforts to the pur poses he had in view, and for which he had made the tedious Journey over the plains. Before he started for Oregon he and P. L. Edwards, who had come with him, drew up a memorial to Congress, which was signed by Lee and Edwards, by every member of the mission at Wil lamette station, by 17 other American cit izens, nearly all at that time in the coun try, and by nine French Canadians, who desired to become citizens of the United States. The object of the memorial was to induce the Congress to extend the protection of the United States over the Oregon Country, and to encourage its set tlement by American citizens. It was dated March 16, 1838. Lec carried this me morial to Washington. It was an elab orate statement of the merits and value of the Oregon Country, and the first ap peal made to the Government of the Uni ted States by any body of the American settlers in Oregon, for assertion by Con gress of the rights and sovereignty of the United States. "Our Interests," said these petitioners In Oregon," are Identi cal with those of our own country. We flatter ourselves that we are the germ of a great state, and are anxious to give an early tone to the moral and intellectual character of its citizens. We are fully aware, too, that the destinies of our pos terity will be deeply affected by the char acter of those who emigrate to this coun try. The territory must populate. The Congress of the United States must say by whom; by the reckless and unprinci pled adventurer, the refugee from Botany Bay, the wanderer from South America, the deserting seamen, or by our own hardy, and enterprising pioneers." Fur ther, the position of Oregon, on the Pa cific Coast, and its necessary relations to future commerce, were explained, and strong appeal was added, that the United States should at once "take formal pos session." It is not my intention to claim merit for oife at the expense of another. All our pioneers did well. All performed their part. But It Is due to the truth of his tory to show that Jason Lee was the leader in colonial as in missionary work in Oregon, and that his Journey to the East In the interests of Oregon, and his appeal to Washington, antedated the Journey and the appeal of Whitman by five years. ciated. As these Islands progress In civilization their demands for the prod ucts of more northern climates will increase; nor can any country supply them with beef, flour, etc., on terms so advantageous as this." This memorial reads like the argu ments, of expansionists in Congress within the past decade. It was pre sented to the United States Senate by Senator Linn of Missouri on January 28. 1839, in connection with a bill to create a territory south of latitude 62 and west of the Rocky Mountains, to be called "Oregon Territory." Mr. Lee also enlisted the active sup port of Caleb Cushing in his plan to add more stars to our Naational em blem from the far Pacific Northwest. On January 17, 1839, he wrote to Mr. Cushlng from Middletown, Conn., re ferring to the memorial and to the "Oregon question": "you are aware, sir, that there is no law in the country to protect or control American citizens, and to whom shall we look, to whom can we look, for the establishment of wholesome laws to regulate our infant and rising settlements but to the Congress of our own beloved country," "The country will be settled, and that speedily, from some quarter, and it de pends very much upon the speedy action of Congress what tbat population shall be and what shall be the fate of the Indian tribes in that territory. It may be thought that Oregon Is of little import ance, but rely upon it there is the germ of a great state. "We are resolved to do what we can to benefit the country, but we are con strained to throw ourselves upon you for protection." During the year 1839 Mr. Lee traveled extensively throughout the East, deliver ing lectures at many points, awakening great interest and enthusiasm in and over the subject of far-away Oregon, its con dition and its wonderful natural re sources, mild and equable climate and its advantageous geographical location with reference to the growth of civilization and the aggrandizement of the United States among the growth and development of the nations of the world. He attended the Methodist Episcopal Conference at Alton, 111., and captured the rapt atten tion of all there in his theme and his personality. From there he went to Peoria, and lectured, and at that point was organized the first company of Amer icans who were not missionaries to seek permanent homes in Oregon. While in the East, Mr. Lee met and married Lucy Thomoson, of Barre, Vt., a lady 'of rare culture and attractiveness, who accompanied him back to his Far Western home. Here in Old Chemeketa was their family fireside, here was set up their family altar; here, on February 26. 1842, their daughter, Lucy Anna Maria Lee, was born; here that daughter grew We have said the contest between our own people and the subjects of Great Britarn for possession of the Oregon country was the key to our pio neer history. It stimulated the early migration and hastened the settlement. The missionary stations were outposts on the line of colonization. It was through their appeals, chiefly, that the Oregon country was brought to the at tention of the pioneer spirit, ever mov ing westward; and it is not too much to say that most of those who came to Oregon during the first 20 years of set tlement and growth were moved to come by the agitation begun and car ried on by those engaged in the 'mis sionary cause. There is a vague instinct which leads restless spirits to leave their native country in early life, to try fortune elsewhere. Each thinks, no doubt that beyond his visual horizon their lies new moral space, .with large, though un known, opportunities. Change of place is the natural demand of this restless ness of spirit. The world, through all ages, has received the benefit of it; it has been one of the great moving forces in the history of our race. Our Oregon of today is a product of it. The Indian races of Oregon, and in particular of Western Oregon,' rap idly melted away. But among the white settlers, fast increasing in numbers after 1840, there was a growing field for religious, moral and, educational work. Jason Lee had remarried; and again his wife was called away by death. Sore as was his bereavement, he pursued his work. New demands were constantly arising, and to meet these he deemed it necessary to make another Journey to the Eastern States, for ad ditional assistance. Parting with his co-laborers in the missions, and leav ing his infant daughter, he sailed from the Columbia River in November, 1843, just after the arrival of the great Im migration of that year. Passing through Mexico, he reached New York in May, 1844. Thence he went again directly to Washington to urge once more upon the Government the neces sity of terminating the Joint occupa tion of Oregon and of establishing quickly and definitely the sovereignty of the United States. But Jason Lee was never to see Oregon again. Confer ences with his missionary board, and work of preparation for larger efforts in Oregon occupied him during the re mainder of the year 1844. But his arduous labors, the privations and sac rifices of more than ten years had broken his constitution, and in March, 1845, his mortal part passed from earth. But his spirit is here, and the work he set in motion is a possession here for ever. It is fit 'that Oregon should re cover the dust and that her soil should hold it, as the life of her people holds his spirit. Yet human glory was not his aim. His object was a higher one. and he achieved it. His name lives; yet of such mould was he that, assured as he was that the Almighty Judge could not forget, even the oblivion of man could have been no matter to him. He was still young not yet 42 years of age; but "virtue, not length of days, the mind matures"; and, "that life is long which answers life's great end." A great nature is a seed. The spirit of life and of action which springs from It grows and will grow among men for ever. Thus it is that man is the only being that cannot die. The poet tells us in mournful cadence that the path of glory leads but to the grave. But this Is true only in a superficial sense. The path of true glory does not end in the grave. It passes through It, to larger opportunities of Bervlce Into as spirit that it stimulates and feeds, and Into the spirit that survives It, in men's minds, forever. Not long remembered would Jason Lee have been we may suppose but for the fortune of opportunity that sent him to Oregon. With all men of action It Is so. But for his opportunity, given by the Civil, War, General Grant would have no name. How slight the original incidents that have linked the name of Jason Lee inseparably with the history of Oregon! The Protestant missions failed, as missions, but they were the main instruments that peo pled Oregon with Americans. That Is, they were more successful than their authors ever dreamed they could be. They established the foundations of the sovereignty of the United States in the Pacific Northwest. The mission was the first low wash of the waves where now rolls this great human sea. ADDRESS DELIVERED AT BY ALLEN WEIR, to womanhood and developed into one of the most lovely and lovable of Christian characters ever known on the Coast. Wherever he was, Jason Lee was abund ant in labors. In his chosen field here, from the California line to Puget Sound, his activities were incessant. A great many trips were made by him up and down the Columbia River, with no con veyance except an Indian canoe, and no shelter when overtaken by nightfall but the friendly earth and the forest and 6ky overhead and round about. On the 9th day of October, 1839, a company of mis sionaries and their families, some 52 per sons In all. sailed from New York in the ship Lausanne for the "Oregon Country," to reinforce the work of Mr. Lee. These were recruits, enlisted through his ef forts. They arrived at the mouth of the Columbia River June 1. 1840, and 12 days later met at Vancouver for consultation. Mr. Lee, as superintendent of tho mis sion work, assigned them to their differ ent stations. On June 15 he appointed Dr. John P. Richmond, of this party, to es tablish a mission at Nisqually. near Puget Sound, now in Pierce County. Washington. Dr. Richmond was the first Ajnerican man with a family to become a resident north of the Columbia River. Mr. Lee had visited and selected the place for this mlsslcm in 1838. The first American child born In the Puget Sound country was a son of Dr. and Mrs. Richmond. The en try in the family Bible reads: "Francis Richmond, son of John P. Richmond and wife, America, was born at Puget Sound, near Nisqually. Oregon Territory, on the 28th day of February, Anno Domini 1842, and was baptized by Rev. Jason Lee, Supt, of Oregon Mis sions." It seems inexpressibly sad even yet that the beloved wife of Mr. Lee should have so prematurely ended her earthly career in 1844, and that his own life ended .early in the following year, just apparently In the beginning of his great usefulness., Jason Lee would have graced any posi tion of honor and responsibility to which the American people might have called him, and would have risen equal to any emergency. .The splendid Institution of learning here In Salem, with its long, hon orable and highly useful career, is a fit ting monument to the man. No mauso leum erected here to mark his resting place could be too elegant or costly to properly express the love and appreciation of the people for him and his memory. But his grandest monument is the splen did character he bullded, of which we get an occasional glimpse for our edification and Inspiration. He was modest, unas suming, one of the quiet, forceful souls, devoted In every fiber to a great work. The everlasting snows qn Mount Hood are not purer nor fairer than the unsul lied personal character he left behind. While his work has been carried on by other devoted and able men, and Its sphere of usefulness will go on broaden ing like the waves rippling from a stone to increase in power,y we may believe throughout all ages. Jason Lee. though a preacher of, pow er, relied not on the graces of pulpit eloquence. Deep was his earnestness-, but he was not a showy man. His Journey to the West and his work herein vastly extended his spiritual and Intellectual wision. Bancroft, in his study of the character of Lee. says: "No discipline of lecture-room, general ministration or other experience, could have been so val uable a preparation for his duties as the rude routine of the days of his overland Journey. It secmd to him as If his theological sea had suddenly become boundless, and he might sail unquestioned whithersoever the winds should carry him. It was delightful, this cutting loose from con ventionalisms, for even Methodist preach ers are men. Not that there was present any Inclination toward a relaxation of , principles, as is the case with so many on leaving home and all its healthful in fluences; on the contrary, he felt him self more than ever the chosen of God. as he was thus brought nearer him in nature, where he was sustained and guarded by day. and at night enfolded in his starry covering. Fires, both phy sical and mental, blazed brightly, and he was not a whit behind the most efficient of his company in willingness, ability and courage." This Is the testimony of a writer who, throughout his monumental work on the origins of the Pacific States, has shown little disposition to laud the missionaries, or to accord them more than their due. It is small business either to disparage or flatter the ministry. But we may. even at the grave, speak of the minister as a man. Theology, like conscience, be longs to the private property of each communion: we shall not Invade its pre cincts nor call its devotees to question. But putting aside the doctrine of the priest and considering only the sacerdotal calling in Its relations to the world, we must acknowledge the moral superiority and exalted privileges which this profes sion offers to the man of genius, spirit and virtue who devotes himself to its exercise. On this basis the missionaries to Oregon, of all denominations, Protest ant and Catholic, are to be Judged with out loss to them of any clement of worthy reputation. Of the two women who shared with Jason Lee the labors of his life in Ore gon the annals of the time are full of appreciative notice and description. Each was a type of devoted womanhood. Though they gave all for the opportunity to labor in this then unknown field, and sacrificed their lives In it, they are for tunate In name and fame. The first wife. Anna Maria Pittman, died in May 18.18; the second, Lucy Thompson, In March. 1842. Sorrowful fatality, dun to the con ditions of remote pioneer life. In which woman bad to bear more than her part, and yet in her hour of need could not have the assistance that her sisters in more favored circumstances receive. Such were some .of the sacrifices of the pioneer time, through which this country was prepared as a dwelling place for the succeeding generations. It is difficult for any generation to esti mate rightly Its contemporary men and women of real worth. There are many mistaken estimates. After the Restora tion in England, John Milton was over looked and forgotten. Though the liter ary defender of the Commonwealth and regicides, he was regarded as too un important for notice. His obscurity se cured him immunity from prosecution, and he died unnoticed. But so great Is he now that Kings and Princes and nobles of his time walk abofit under his shadow; the very ag that neglected him is now known as "The Age of Milton." and receives its luster from his name. Mind and spirit are the controlling forces of the world. Men of pre-eminence can be estimated only by their peers. Equality of judgment is too scantily bestowed in any living generation to Insure a correct decision, to settle the scale of preten sion, to arrange the gradations of favor, or the definitive place or title which each Is to occupy In the ranks of fame. Con temporary men often pronounce that to be greatest which approaches nearest to themselves, since they are able to look upon it with the distinctness of close proximity. But the Judgment is with the future time. We get no proper sense of the majesty of our mountain peaks when near them. We must draw back a little, if we would take in their full grandeur. On. this view the work of our mission aries In Oregon rises to proportions more and more majestic, as we study It from the standpoint of history and of conse quences; and though others bore lofty spirits and did great work, no name stands or will stand above that of Jasou Lee. MEMORIAL SERVICES OF OLYMPIA capt Into placid waters, yet the Impetus given to it all by the man himself who laid broad and deep foundations will con tinue as an abiding example for all who follow. Jason Lee undoubtedly felt the respon sibility of being an instrument in God's hands in working out the higher destiny of the race. The oncoming civilization of which he was a forerunner swept across the continent, subduing the savage races and changing conditions and over coming all obstacles, and now at the dawn of the new century it has passed ail for mer boundaries and is crossing the ocean to repeople the Philippines. Hawaii, Porto Rico and other "Islands of the Sea," and the new order of things has become a part of tha world's history. He would doubt less feel that the unfurling of the Stars and Stripes and the playing of "The Star Spangled Banner" and "America" on these new shores, accompanied by the roar and rattle of our artillery, were but incidents in the onward march of our Christian civilization; and that when w say "Forever float that standard sheet. Where breathes the foe but falls before us, "With Freedom's soli beneath our feet And Freedom's banner streaming o'er us?" We should do so In a spirit of humility born of the responsibility placed upon us by the all wise arbiter of destiny who holds the fate of nations as in the hollow of his hand, and who desires to use us as instruments In working out the uplift of the human race. He was one of our no bility. His life would say to succeed ing generations: "Look up, my young American! Stand firm on earth; Where noble deeds and mental power glva places over birth." Young Schoolteachers' Plight. When a young schoolteacher, whose home Is in Southern Oregon, married Herman Short, of Portland, it appears that she made a sad mistake. Raised in comfortable surroundings and liberally educated, she could reasonably have ex pected a somewhat different type of man from Short for a husband. According to Detectives Kay and Hill. w,ho have taken the couple. Short has forced his wlfo to earn a livelihood in various menial ca pacities, and lately. In order to secure' larger revenue, has driven her to a sec tion of the city where the prevailing color scheme Is red. Now she is tired of the wretch and wishes to go back to the home in Southern Oregon. The two officers have communicated with her father, and hope to get her reinstalled in her home. They likewise have an ambition to get Short installed in the penitentiary. "Always tired" describes a dangerous condition. Hood's SarsapartUa will give you strength.