.v. , , ---X -,:-: -..- :... ....iv . . 1 vi-..i-; .. j y . " ? . '''y'-'"' i ; ' ' ''''''' ''"V '..' ' ... , ' ' ,. Faaa 8rEcH,. r Pans, ,'Krke PkoM.K. rJ - V :' " v ' i ' y'6lXi? ;XANO; Ni-;'. ll U tPOHTMND,'0K()X,- THUHSIUY, ArlL:-.S.' 1881. " ' TKh YKAR W Oft. fAoM TJIE HlioURS OFHi: PACIFIC. THE HKNIOR j:iI,TPIt AT - CANHV, ILWAtW, THK WKAT1IKR HKACK, lKA VIKW, AND, OYKTKKVIIJ.K. , BTKVEX8';AXI. .. OVSTKKVIIXK, W. T.,'AURUHt 21, 1881. ;To TUiRcitbw or thk JTew Nuktiiwemt: "". The morning of the 16th dawned with cloudier skies and balmy air, and the snug and stanch little steamer General Canby took a load of ex cursionists aboard, bound for Cape Hancock and Ilwaco, among them Mr. and Mrs. Merrill and the undersigned, bent upon a day of observation and enjoyment. The mighty river was as smooth .as a mirror, with here and there. a rippled surface like a lake of glaw that had cooled too suddenly, r6IneryTiellucM crystal that glittered like .burnished 'steel. The little engine worked away like a patent churn, and Cap tain Whltcomb stood at the wheel In the tiny pilot house and.. managed the rudder with the skill of a nautilus. The Can by is the favorite accommodation packet ou this line, being always ready for duty and always reliable and safe. We remember going over on this boat to Ilwaco some - lour or nve years aeo, alter -omln aboard at an angle of forty-five degrees on a ten-Inch plank 'without banisters. They have agood gang-plank K .now, with a guard, and you have more faith as youtrust yourself to its tender mercies. llutthe Captain won't forgive us for .having written up 'thentle'aTuiiH, in which we -returned In i a gale, and which we described as a "cockle shell about tie size ir an ordinary washing tub.' We meant the little craft no harm in depicting her thus minutely, but we confess we're, not sorry she got wrecketl afterward", seeing the loss to her en - terprislng owuer was covered by insurancu and " no lives, were lost. - Hope he'll" forgive us now that we'ver praised the Canby, for she skims rZ- the water like a duek and' njanMgeJhtl.iilereut degrees of her business like aaable woman. i , We touched at Fort Stevens, where a couple f . military ineiiin white gloves and brass-knobbed regimentals were on the dock, and a donkey cart - In' charge ot a soldier awaited the;UnittHl tjtajtes mail, reminding lis as thesteanier turned 'to leave of the ridiculous couplet, Nx If I Utl a donkey what ; wouldn't r, ' " you think I'd wullop tiliii ? 'Oh, no, no !" -"' Fort HtephVns as now eyuipiH-tl would be about as available as a defeuse in case of invasion as the the light-house sits, 'and a merry crowd of us made our way to It, our numbers augmented by a boatload of pleasure-seekers sojourning at Ilwaco, among them the Misses Ca pies', Mlss.Illn pertoivf. ; atiiTrrs; Wells, bf Portland, and Mr. Binl,'of The Dalles. The llght-houaethe grounds the batteries, and everything C4nnectel therewith are In the best of order, though the guns, like those of Fort Htevens, are 1m t of date by a-Mleeade,of years. One fifteen-inch Columblad, carrying a 4-jO-pound ball, is calkil 'The lUiby, and ,1s mounted usn the highest point, overlooking the ocean, mi a carriage ponderous as itself, painted a flaming red, and may be aptly described as a huge blaek baby with red petticoats. -This "baby" looks like across customer, and the old-fashioned .iron-cladhat-wmrtd "wake hitnjJ look out for squalls. . Hut we a rr told that the new. style men-of-war In' present use' would steam past and' scarcely mind it. Other batteries are stationed on the promontory's aide carrying smaller guns;two of which arc called 'Swamp angels,' though "avenging angels" would be the better name, if one should Judge, them by the work their prototypes performed at Charleston, , . V Ixxmiis, meet the eye, and what Is still better, the We paid the light-house a second visit to see the fun set l?V. the ocean, but the evening was cloiufy and the orb of dy was veiled In mist -and gloomy. TheJtateut -California, steamed past, a lid twilight gathered into darkness, and the lights of Tilla mook " Itock, Pol nt ' Adaiiis and 1 Ca'peJJIuii- 1 i tt lleineiM aiirt gi TOt-w Mtyn H . v. .... A ' X the Shubrick would be in 'warding off the ad vances of a Merrimac. If your correspondent were a foreign power bent upon the conquest of America, she'd want no better prospect of a. vic tory over coast defences than can be found at this most accessible polut for attack. It serves as a haven for the country's professional defenders in times of peace, though, and is good for something, so It shouldn't be utterly-condemned, we stipjtose. Leaving this frowning fortress of decaying ram parts and Its tarry-coated ordnance of u dead -decadcf-we'stcam onucross the 1 1 verlir f uil view of the liuge ironrwllecls and mammoth walking beam of the Great Hepublic the ghost of a k paried ship and cruising past Sand Island on the outer edge of . linker's Hay, touch at Fort Canby, in a charming rove under the lee o'f Cape Hancock, where, your corresisandent and her friends- alight, tp 'spend the intervening, hours while the steamer Is absent at Ilwaco. Evidently. the governhient Is partial to Fort Canby, lor its bulldiiigs', parade grouuds, ramparts and lawns dre far more beautiful than "those of Fort Stevens. The natural site Is far prettier also, overlooking as it does the' foot of the baj', and sloping back toward rugged promontories. Clothed In a shaggy fur of huge evergreens, washwl upon their farther side by the Pacific's planken walk-way. slopes from the bay h rough a pretty. ravine, In which Is the lleht- kcepers' residence, a handsome double house .with white walls and, green shutters, wUh garden and . flowers around it, and altogether a beautiful place to look at or live In. There are three llirht-keer- ers Mr.. Atidersoii, the first, or 'flxr,'' livfnr lived litre for sixteen- Jrra is. This gentleman has recently married a new wife (the second), Import ed frtni Germany fr the purjMwe under a contract that a Ke n t uc k I a n wo u Id 1 i ken t o ''buy I ng a pig In a, poke." Hut the bride and groom apear quite. as happy Jiv, their honeymoon as though they had burned cords of wood and cans of coal ell in the courting season while making vows that. re seTdoWkeptTMl?Holbeith gootHorq'tiatlenorta4he dangerous eddyr ' keept r4 is a bachelor ami does his owu housekeep ing. The third keeper Is Mr. 'Woodruff; with whose pleasant family we spent a day and night of solid comfort barring the rheumatic twinges that still remind us of that crippling buck board jrlde between Palouse and Colfax, for which wc ought yet to sue for damages. . ..-A'-iiarrow-alduwalk w UHwlys heaving waters as if to salute her with a grand display of pyrotechnics? Wo intended to walk .from-the fort to Ilwaco, but Al. Hotmail's assertion that the distance was "seventeen ml Up" deterred us," so we gave ourself over to the hospitalities of Mrs. Woodrutrs pleas ant " ho'me.. till, the General Caidy came by the nextmoriiihg, when a flfteen-inlnute ride laulel a cnwd of beach-seekers on the .Iwaco dock, wliere-we-were-met by another croWd, soino of them homeward bound,!1nd others U-nt upon ill-; .Version.- "Among the camper are Mayor iCP. Thompson's family,, Mrs. M. ). MKre," ftf JLlnk vllle, nod Mr. and Mrs. Meldrom, of Oregon City. Mr. and Mrs. Hrazec and -.their flvechlldreitl Mr." and Mrs. Hell, and the Misses Caples, are- at the hotel, which, though small, 'Is welt-kept and comfortable, and evidently docs a thriving Jbul nes. Mr. J. D. Holman and family and quite a number '.of others-occupy cottages, and numerous j erection, and a school-house is soon to be built. The place is exceedingly pleasant as a Summer resort, and will increase in' favor as the country gets older. ' U. - . v'"" ' '. We sjent the night at the house of Mr. and Mrs. Wh'ealdon, on the Iwautlful hillside, where kwe feel that we. must visit every Hummer, else Vhere is a stitch dropped in our year of days which ravels downward ever after. - The dear old couple . n re rest I ng-oon fideivt I y- i pn-1 he- bordcrs-of t he Mystic Hiver that laves the shores of the Hummer land.ltwteto:1lvehenilfe brings to us In Its waning hours the promise that Heath is Wallowed' up In Victory, . -Mrr.SVheahloh has mnrcvlm left at. his seventy xll years than many a young "man ever, had.'- Hejs. deeply Interested In the equal rights movement, - and . engaged a house for us to lecture on the subject, exacting our promise to return for that purjsiso on the fol lowing Welnelay. -.' - rOuT next destination was Hea View, across' the promontory 'and theTWeather Heaclu. The road runs, over a rough corduroy grade up hill and down, .through a dense hemlock forest, crowded with undergrowth and hung full with salijl-berries, for a distance of three miles, and, then we emerge from the timber and meet the ocean face' to face.' He shakes his hoary locks in several lot (lncluling water front). at fair prices. It Is more' than probable that! the North Reach of the Pacific will equal that of the Atlantic as u Hummer resort in the near future. Hunting, fish ing, boating and bathing are all to le had at con venient distances, accompanied "by salt sea air and the healing power of Its Invisible wings. AtH-mile drive on the level Weather Heach Iu-tings Us from Stout's hotel to the cozy! and happy home of Mr. and Mrs. A. L.-Loomis, comprising a farm of a thousand acres, and everything else that In desirable In like 'proportion. Mr. Lnomls is connected with many important enterprises; is President of two steamship companies and pro prietor of a stage line, and withal a genial gentle man, hospitable and progressive, and. of course a AVoraanrsatrrsglstr- KvcrjmaiihorTearstirat the love of liberty would cause women to neglect! their homes should -visit this one ami see the superior housekeeping of the woman who wants to vote." OnIerwuTiout friction and luxury with out extravagance greet you at every turn. Rugs, t idles bcdquttt7plaher, picture frames, cush ions, all fashioned by the skillful fingers of Mrs, lady is a reader and thinker, and of course a kind and capablewlfe and jnother. She waa disap pointed three years ago' when we were oyer this way because her negro rook a voter-r-abandoned his Nst and left her to hold the kitchen fort while h" went ' to" town to "liquor up," soldie couUFnot cwtashcdmittheir-ThCTry radiance Ihrt sherhas arwTjlte gTrT for help now, tind ho, after a twenty-four hours' visit at her home, we all went together to Oyster yijle, ten mlleijMwey, and ensconced ourselves at Wirt's hotel.; M,r. Wirt had previously arranged J the .MliKd-house for our use, and here we met a niuclMM'tter audience than we thouglrfMhe place would afford, seeing it has hist Its former trade it) tile oyster line and acquired -the reputation of a deserted vll!age.xTj-day (Sunday) we are' enjoy ing the refreshing quietude that a racking head ache reiidt-rs hjiperative.-r; There is but one "sight" to .which 'visitors are dlrecletl as"a relic of the town's era of prosperity, and we thought to go with Mrs. Wlrtjo see it a while ago. This Is a somewhat pretentious mansion, now deserted, which Is offered for sale at less than one-tenth Its cost.. Hut when a boy was wnt for, the key for the, purpom,'irewus informed by Its custodian, a re cently converted squaw man, that "At respected Jthe Sabbath, if wt didn't," so the project of going "Well," was his reply, "I don't consider thai, milch would be gained by letting the women vote. They would do as their husbands told them' JWith this jiew 'and conclusive argument, bo- withdraw. , ,' "Shall such a fossil make laws for me? Other can be- sent who will better represent the people. . Mrs. G. hastily called upon one gentleman after another, until she thought of a Mr. G rover. ; Pew men possessed more mental culture iand truV worth. She proce'eileil Immediately toa printer and had tickets prlntel, substituting Mr.'Grover's" 4 ie Hf-M rrll V,-w hiclnMied 1st ri butet -at thew m11s the followlug week. Men smiled, but not -lisapprovlngl3 at the novel sight, anri generally, uccepted the .revised, ballot. The consequence was a great majority for Mr. G rover.. Mr. H went asirbsTrifrrineii. di course tiiTi iy Woman Suirruge. Hut he our faces, and roars In baffled rage ere he retreats for another onslaught, as Impotent to harm us as the first. Hut how he tempts the dwellers In tents, as heslhgs seductively of his cooling waters. . The Fast Portland camp Is a miniature elty of tent's, and its denizens, nothing (lauuted by the late drowning disaster, look like so' many' sea. Tnew as they cling to a floafing life-line, liard Ijy the hidden channel in which other lives were lost. Tlie danger here Is created by converging currents forming-an eddy of meeting waters, which, over borne Ly lhe iuconil ng lireakers,. JiecaaarUy -form a hidden Channel for the rushing under-toW. A mile or two-iahe-nortbwaMrtppTO hofel, Is a bathing place where. the lcach. is as IeYl'1 as a inresning noor ami me sun ejuaiiy as voter isoppoed inay flatter himself that he has every used-up rake in the cuntry for company. They all "think too much of women in their place" to be willing to see theni free; and could they have their way, ft. 'womaii's place", would never be a reputable or selfsuppxrting one. ' As this must be mailed on the morrow, we have no time to write upTOystervlJUj from more ex tended obser vat loii;and must postoi)e particulars uutli -next -wwk. To-morrow (Monday! we are going on an excursiou up the Witlupa, to be Imck J at nlfcht. A. H. 1. - - Mrs. H. T. Clarke says in the' WUUimcttc Fnrtn cr: "TLe la-st twenty years have not passed without great progress in matters adventitious t women. Avenues of lalAtr. have been oja'iied to tjiem, and they have filled. wituibiUty posts that would have liiadel our decorous grandmothers shudder, as overstepping that line of womanly re tiremeut that' was so rigidly drawn between the occu)ationa 'proper for men and women.. Mar riage now is not considered the absolute destiny of a girl, and she does not sit waiting for a husband to come to her. If she has not a father's home, the young girl of ambition chooses a trade or a business of some sort, and fit Tts duties, amOiearTy always site Mr. and Mrs. Stout have built a good hotel, commodious and summery, where gxsl beds and the best of board can be had for ten dollars per week. The rooms are yet unfinished, but will be finished In good style by another year. They have laldofTa portion of the place In a town plat, and have sold several lots and Mckl At flur rra- brother or boy cousin in quickness of perception and deftness of action." ',' Vlscouutc'ss lUblerton, who astonUlKMl KigU4i society a few mouths ago by saying in a magazine article that a senJiple girl , tieedfU' a chajerou h Utile. ;'.'a--i4L'nible boy, recently i.organled !a "rational dres-weiety4 The hivinbers lrtisse" to lnaugurate-tbiuiiiany ceformatiry changes whose value is so mUyersally profosned but so seldui utilized. The outeY aisx'tt cf women's dfvfa 4s iMtr-to-le-al temf,-ewnt thafgarmChti will hang more loosely. The weight Is tit Is! "bor.rieby the sliouMe rs." " 1 '. -X Hev. Roltert I Stevens says, In a communication o thfr Albany Tk r.ionr4-tV wnH Jifc, fa 'WHAT ONK WOMAN DID. - ,. '-'4- " " To thk Kditom or tub New 'kthwekt: " CiUess,we see Immediate results, wear nolvtft to put forth our energies ; yet how great our possl-1 " blllties often are. Iiet me tell you a story of wnat was accomplished, by one of that class from whom w'e expect so little. r-;f' T : ' ; j "" " ""-' Many years ago, when equa) suffrage was aub mittet to the people by the legislature of Kansas, , a Mr. R - wished to represent the town of W , near Iawrence. His way seemed clear, and, bat for an event trivial In Its seeming, though all lmKrtant in its results, he would;have rcpro sented the town In the next Legislature. He had occasion to call at the house of a neighbor, Mrs. Georger few-day before tlielectlon. fcbe care lessly said : ' VI suppose you will vote for us next week?" home Jantent lug that one woman, at least, had her ownjplnlon. Mr. i 3 rover astonishment can well ttelmagliuHl v hen he found himself a candi date for Senatorial honors, and he was sent after ward to represent a well-satisfied constituency , ' . This Is a true story, "a part of which I was." . 'i : ' J JKM. : Han Jose, Cal., August 13, 1881. THK PKNDING AMKNDMF.NT- f Kroin Ih A tor Is n. J . '"" Mrs. Aj Dunlway's Monday evening lecture on the j pending suffrage amendment, In .the Yung Men's Christian Association Hall, was largely -attended by our best class of citisens, many being obllgeil to retire In-cnuse unabla jo, obtain seats. Tm sjs aker re'Hpirulatil the works accompllslieil by the Woman Huffrage agitation in orcgou uurnig me pnsi icn years, ana nlgltfy eulogized tho Voters ofl the State who had not been unmindful of woman's plea, but had gracious ly accorded her every solicited right, not except ing the elective franchise, which was now. In a fair, way lo final victory. The pending amend ment had been offered In the State Senate by Hon.. LV..W. Fulton, of Clatsop, who, the said, would be eutltled to the laurels of leadership iu tho annuls pf coining JiUtoryTbie nbjectluna urge4 by some men against the constitutionality of tho pending amendment were explained away by quo tations from Rlackstone, aud by what she called 4,a common sense Interpretation of the. organic Uwr'Tltat m i'iiHling amendment"; could bo inddinltcly K)stsned, from one legislative. ses sion to another, by renewed projswitions to amend It while thus ndlng, was a fixed fart There was a neissary limit to human notions in all things, and there were men who would move to amend pending amendments ,to the archives of Heaven, If there were uo restrictions to limit their wfcjl-m.eauing desires. Tho- pending suffrage amendment Is to go before the next Assembly Tor ratification. Tlx speaker had no fear of there- s herself to fill ,",t, ,vncod thinkers had ceased to op- "wlllxiT TAV1In sowatle: fate of "fiTYor VTnffle 1 ti sml ALV1-X, yrrmi-Viiiy, of Portland, ha also sold for which It Is fighting." fW.RTlfUBseyrbrTJrant's Ps. "ends fjjl "wt.tti "ffc vnsnes ior ius gooi cause would then follow when It would go before tho voters of tho entire State ; and to tho men present she now appealed to carry the banner for woman' liberty iuto quarters Avhero she would not go. She told several new stories, some amusing and some pathetic. Illustrative-i'f her theme, and held Jier audience fairly sindl-boWl while appealing t- vot.cjs to "place, prcgoirin the lead In th great galaxy of Htatesyfhat rre sure to fill inU line when she shall have set the example." . Her plctureof 4otnestlo Jlfe und'UilOi!111 ixallou of" eqgaliglts--the "rejects tho term WDUian'n rlghtnAwss enoHglt-tu wmut lhe Ico,' around tho heart of a bachelor, or turn the frowns of a crusty husband Into smiles of gladness. r 'm r Ij"i."t.. T. ; . i the drunkard who beats his wife whipped at the w. i' V. , " ,.: t " ,, v " - w"", . it . , . . . ... Ounaiaska Island, Is spemllng a goott portion of whliIng post, when he becomes sober. We A n..i u . J , L ,,,,r ; , . ' . nertlmeln teacnlng the little half-breeds.' Bho would like to have the man who refuses to civo r... . , K u .' 1 1 i i. . . Li , , fc. ha formed a class, the members of which are his wife a Just share of his wages, In order that ,, . ,, TL. . . . Count for what he receives." .... . " ' ..; .. ... J months ago, Is now conducting that paper suo--cessfully. , ; ., ... , . - j. former proprle- - ' Uo died few - j 1 jf TP"