SECTION SIX Pages 1 to 8 Automobiles, Road Trips and Northwest Highway News VOL. XXXIX. v rOKTLAAD, OltEGOX,- SUKDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 14, 1920 , NO. 46 COLUMBIA HIGH WAY NOW OPEN FROM HOOD RIVER TO ASTORIA . . . Laying of Last "Hot Stuff" West of Westport Completes Lo we r Highway Pavement and Adds Another 100 Miles to Oregon's Incomparable Scenic Automobile Road. : . : : ' ,j I. vrf . ' rj v Jmy S " BT II. "W. LYMAN. OREGON, last week, through the completion of the paving in the vicinity of Westport, on the lower highway, added another 100 miles to the already incomparable Co lumbia. River highway. Pavement now extends in practically an un broken line from the city of Hood River, on the east, through Portland to Astoria, on the west, a distance of 173 miles. When the last of the paving wa laid late Saturday afternoon, Novem ber 6, and the road pronounced opei for uninterrupted travel beginning Sunday moralng a week ago another important milestone in the great move tor a scenic road along the Co lumbia throughout the breadth of Oregon had been passed. During Sun day and throughout the past week travel over the lower route to As toria has steadily increased, as the news has spread that the way Is now open through to the lower Columbia liver city without detours. a result of the hard surface laid this past summer and fall on both the upper and the lower roadways the Columbia river highway has been extended for a distance 'n both direc tions from Portland which a few ' years ago was undreamed of. Dur ing the early summer work of pav ing the stretch from Cascade Locks to Hood River w-as carried out and approximately 20 miles had been added to the upper road by the first of August. Paving work on the lower highway, from Scappoose to Deer Island and frm Clatskanie to Sven een. was delayed during the fall be cause of co'ttiueA rains in September and early Octbr, and but for this fact woul have Veen completed much arlier thnn November 6. The two stretches of paving laid on the lower highway this year total 41 miles in length, and this with the 20 miles on the upper highway, makes a total or over 60 miles of hard surface added to the Columbia River highway as a result of 1920 paving operations. Short Cap at Rainier. In the- entire length from Hood River to Astoria there are but three points at which the motorist jogs off of pavement, and in all cases he hits hard macadam. These are all euch short distances that they scarcely need to be mentioned. The first, be ginning at the east. Is a block at the city limits of Hood River, where the highway joins the city pavement. This is kept in excellent condition by the city and will no doubt be paved shortly.- The second stretch is about 4000 feet through the city of Rainier. A fill through the city has been made here which it was the intention to pave through a joint agreement be tween the state, county and city. However, a decision of the attorney general, handed down after the agree ment wu entered Into, prevented tae state from aiding in this work. This i decision held that the state highway commission had no authority to per form any work or aid in any work I through an incorporated town. As a result pavement was held up and the fill at Rainier is not used. Motorists are forced to follow the old macadam road for about a mile through the city limits. No action toward pav ing this gap can be taken by the state highway commission, it is stated, unless some authority is granted by act of the legislature, and In the meantime it is hoped that the city or county may go ahead with the work. The third nnpaved gap Is one block long In the city of Astoria, where the highway drops down to Bond street. This gap will have to be used until the city of Astoria completes the magnificent work which it is now doing of tearing a route along the hillside for the highway from the easterly edge of the city to the busi ness district. " The present unattrac tive entrance to Astoria can. then be done away with and in its stead will be a scenic entrance which will take its place as one of the features of the lower road. i Plane for 1921 Under Way. No sooner was the present stretch from Hood River to Astoria nearing completion than steps were under way for further paving on America's most scenic automobile road for 1921, and next year should see the hard surface extended from Hood Stiver to The Dalles on the east and- from As toria to Seaside on the west, adding about 45 miles more of hard surface and boosting the Columbia River highway pavement over the 200-mile mark in length. Probably one of the first cars over the new lower highway last week, after the completion of the paving, was a roomy Jordan six. with Frank Brandenburg, service man for Mitch ell, Lewis & Staver, Jordan distribu tors in this territory, at the steering wheel, and the writer alongside. The upper highway is already so familiar to Poruanaer mat needs no- a- scription, but the lower highway is unitnown LU mauy, hiiu iiavo uvi looked upon it as a scenic road. Be cause of this, and also because the final pavement had just been laid on the lower highway, this stretch was chosen for the, tr'.y. The distance from Portland to As toria totals 105 miles and the trip is an excellent one in five or six hours. While the road cannot claim the scenic distinction of the upper high way, it will easily rank as one of the most beautiful roads of the west. Particularly scenic points are found in the vicinity of Goble, west of Rainier, at Clatsop Crest and along the lower Columbia nearing Astoria. On a clear day Mount St. Helens stands out as a guardian of the road and seems to follow the motorist throughout the entire trip, only sink ing away in the distance when As toria is reached. Careful Driving; Necessary. The lower highway is liable to be the scene of frequent automobile ac cidents, if drivers fail to use precau tion, and careless driving or speed ing should be carefully guarded against. In the first place the high way is not as heavily traveled as the upper road, and this fact alone tends toward fast driving. Then the road, particularly the western section is replete with curves. As the high way winds among big trees and along a north hillside for mucn or tne ais tance there are many points where the Bun scarcely ever penetrates, at least in the winter, and the pavement at these places will nearly always be wet and slippery. A driver approach ing such a point over dry pavement would be liable, unless he exercised care, to swing into a slippery curve at a greater speed than is saf3. An other fact that makes care necessary for some time is that the graveling work along the edges of the highway. where the new pavement has just been laid, is not completed and a jog off the edge of the hard surface at high speed might have serious re sults. As the pavement is only 16 feet wide not a great deal of bpace fs provided for passing another car. On the Widby loops and at a number of other curves the width has been lncerased to 20 feet, however, and this does away with danger to a large extent at these points. Los; of Lower Road, A complete log of the lower high way from the county court house in this city to the court house at As toria has been prepared by R. Walsh, en-gineer in charge of road signs, of the state highway department, and is as follows: TMat. Dint. From From Portland. Aotorla. Portland. Multnomah county court houte 0.0 Foreistry building 2.8 Beginning St. Helens road., a.t St. Jonns ferry ............ 7.5 Llnnton postofftce ......... 8.7 Portland city limits iO.l Cornelius Pass road 13.6 Multnomah-Columbia line... 18.8 Scappoose 21.4 Road to Spltzenberg 2.1.0 Warren 25.8 Trenholm-PlttBburg road, left road on right to St. Hel ena, 1:5 miles 29.0 Deer Island S4.5 Goble, Kalama ferry........ 41.1 Little Jack (alls 44.4 Rainier 47.8 Summit Rainier hill 50.7 Road to Mayger 54. .1 Zelena , .-. . -. . 55.7 Qulncy-Mayger road 63.8 Clatskanie 63.5 Road to Mist 65.4 Mamhland 70.2 Kerry 73.5 Columbia-Clatsop county line 74.4 Westport 75.1 Road to Wauna 77.2 Clatsop Crest 80.3 Road to Knappa 88.9 Road to Svenaen ........... . S3.S Astoria city limits 102J. Astoria court Uoue.-i. 105.5 102.7 102.4 118 0 Hi. 8 95.4 91.9 88.7 S4.1 82.5 78.7 7.5 71.0 64.4 61.6 67.7 54.8 51.0 4.98 41.9 40.2 40.1 85. 3 82.0 81.1 80.4 28.S 25.3 li 12.2 8.4 VO