THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND. SATURDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 1906. GHOSTS there be (boats of past achievements who steal from tbs shadowy depths of nowhere, and. In serried ranks, pass for silent review alone the paths of memory. Their buries ring no cheering melody, their drumheads give no sound, their voices have no tones and their footsteps fall with noiseless tread on the misty roads of an Imagination that grows with age. The old constable at Fort Brie, dozing In the sunrays of a warm October day, shifted uneasily as the slats on the hick ory bench msde ridges In his back, and. with eyes still closed, gently murmured. "Ten rods more and all la safe." The a-hosts wVre walking for him. He is himself an old soldier a soldier f the crown, with flowing galoways of a vintage long antedated and a memory that serves him well. Clothed In the uniform of the Canadian militia black. with natty red trimmings he keeps his dally vigil on the sits of old Fort Kris and passes bis days In peaceful Janltor shlp of the bloody plot. The site of Old Fort Brie ths scene of many a san rulnanr conflict has been Inclosed and made a part of the Canadian National Park system. It Is opposite Buffalo, on the Canadian aide, at the head of Ni acin river, and atands as a grim specter of the British barracks that guaraea ins river In the days when there was en mity between America and Great Britain. On the American side of the river la the sits of old Fort Porter, now a beauti ful barracks where soldiers are aent to rest up after bard service, and S6 miles away, at the mouth of the river, glaring across at each other (in peaceful rivalry now) are Forts George and Niagara, the former In Canada and the latter In the United States. When the day la elear and the glasses are good all thla Ions frontier stretch between may be seen by tourists from ths top of Brock's monu ment, marking the site of the battle of Queenston heights. But the old con stable at Fort Erie needs no wearisome climb to view the panorama. The his toric ground of the Niagara frontier la familiar to him. Slumber doea for him what travel doea for others. The noon day dose not only paints in realistic colors the landscape of the historic Niagara frontier, bat summons by com panies, by brigades, by armies and per haps sometimes alone and unattended the almost forgotten heroes of a bygone day. As he shifts his position and mur mur "Tea rods mors and all la safe," who can tell what he Is seeing. Ths ghosts are walking for him. Perhaps they come In overwhelming numbers, those stojVhesrted, rsd-coated oldlers, driving fas colonists before them and cheering for Kins George and the dragon. Perhaps It la a mighty race to see whether the small, detached body of redcoats out on a foraging expedition shall reach the fort before the body of American patriots shall aucceed in cut ting them off. Perhapa the ghosts are those of the War of 1812, and the sleep Ins constable sees the rout that attended the British In the first attack on Buffalo, July 11, 1H. Perhaps his slumber Is lighted by the blase of the burning of Buffalo when the village waa destroyed by redcoats and Indiana In a later and successful attack on December II and 14 of the same year, when but one resi dence was left in the ruins. Perhaps the scene stands out In strong contrast to any of these. Mayhap It I a bright June day. with flower-scented air and balmy breesea. There la no sign of war, nod all Is still except for the flying foot steps and the heavy breathing of the soli tary figure In the constable's dream a young girl with wavy hair and burning cheeks, whose journey is beset with many difficulties. Now ahe is flying along a secluded roadway, now climbing a, prickly hedge, anon struggling through Swamp and morass, proceeding with un daunted determination toward her desti nation, passing along by circuitous routes, avoiding here a figure that car ries a gun and looks like a soldlsr with oat uniform and now hiding until aome suspicious traveler has passed. And thsn all Is changed. Wet and dirty, with the aauck of lowlands and barnyards cling ing to her skirts, she dashea tato a British camp. There la the call to "arms, the quick and silent preparation, the Jtni sil march, the terrtbls battle, and sain balmy June day. This sweet girl of the old redcoat's dream thla Canadian Joan of Arc Was named Laura Secord. A monument has been erected to her memory In the Old graveyard near the battlefield of lundye Lane, on the Canadian ride of the Niasara frontier. Not satisfied With perpetuating her bravery, the people of her race, with the characteristic Brit ish bombast and, vanity, have included la the tribute to her memory a touching advertisement of how a mere handful M British defestsd sn American army Ays ths inscription on the Record mon ument: ,- "To perpetuate the name and fame of Laura Secord, who walked alone nearly to miles by a circuitous, difficult and perilous route, through woods and Swamp" and miry roads, to warn a Brit ish outpost at De Cows Falls of an ln- attack, and thereby enabed I.lau- t Fits Gibbon, on the 24th of June, with less thsn 60 men of her ma 's Forty-ninth regiment, about 16 tamen and a small force of Six Ns aad other Indians, under Captain Ham Johnson Kerr and Dominique rme, to surprise and attack tho amy at Beechwoods (or Beaver Dam). after a short engagement capture Hoerstler of the United State Bay, and hie entire foroe of 141 men, th two fleldpleeea" As our tittle party of tourists ap- hod Fort Erie's sleeping caretaker with a start and asked: "What that noise? Did I hear anybody lit" And then a smile rippled ems the wrinkles on his seared old atonance. '1 remember now; I was Ming I waa dreaming of the battle bake Brie, whan" your Commodore ry you are from across the border. an your iss, i Know u. mere er girls as pretty as American K as I was aay ins, I waa dream -0 battle of Lak Brie, when pedore, with boats that h had himself, captured and destroyed fleet It was on September 19, 1112, a relet l of sains Ions sines dead - - " aaw" LSS ji jdkhi IvDL iai'i iVsk. 1 l HEflB tfS BnanBasaasnnBsBn served one of the suns on a British ship that went down. He often told me Of that battle, and In mv dreama T him training his sun and lighting his fuse for one last ahot before the water should run into the nossla of the run on the badly careening ship. Just aa ho fired I woke up, and I thought that the noise of the Mot had awakened me. But the bottle was fought too long ago and the scene of ths engagement was ar away ror ma to have heard the snoi. it must have been something else, I am an old man now and thinars in n always clear to mo, Thla. ladles and sanuemen. is old rort Erie. Here we sos remains of ths old British store house or bullet-proof retreat, and there are the earthen breastworks thrown un at snglee that enabled the defenders to meei me attacking force with a terrible fire. Here on the other aide you see" And so he wandered on through the Intricate maaea of the lecture long ago learned by heart, while we aometlmea listened and aometlmea lost ourselves In pleasing (?) coniectura tn what the place might have looked like In the days mat ne 1010 aoout in the days when frontier fights, revolutions, interna tional squabbles of sll kinds snd nu merous bands of treacherous Indians made the tenure of life all too uncer tain. To properly Inspect all the points of Interest all the battlefields, scenes of ambuscade and terrible slaughter along the banks of Niagara rlvsr on both aides should take about a week. The Niasara frontier fairly breathes with historic Interest. From the days of ths great explorer. La Salle, and the time of Father Hennepin the first white man to sss the falls of Niagara, down on through the yesrs that wltneased ths war of 1812 and the burning of Buffalo tne shores of the river have con tinually been trodden by the makera of natlona. Blood letting there waa. too. and here the British and French have clashed, redman has fought and scalped we white brother and Ameri cana ansasod in revolution have grap pled In deadly conflict men of their own flesh snd blood. Soldiers of tho mother country have engaged the In diana to swoop down upon the settlers along the shores of Niagara rlvsr and raised no hand to stop ths savage cruel ties upon men whoso blood was as red. if their own costs were not aa scarlet, aa the hirelings In the pay of King George of England. Through years of peace we come to tho time when the eaglea of war agalA flapped their wings, and countless slaves escaping from the South during ths dvH war, wors rowed across Niagara river by Abolitionists to freedom Id Canada. And than when war was declsred with Spain during the administration of McKlnley, and the Spanish ambassador, De Lome, was given a polite intimation that bis room was more desirable than his company, ho mads for Niagara, and. crossing to Niasara Falla. Canada, attracted the eyes of the diplomatic world In that direction, while ths stats department at Waahlngton was demanding of the Britlah government that he be dis lodged from his point of van tags. Again In ths city of Buffals, on ths shores of ths mighty rivsr, snterprlslng cltl sene reared in the year 1101 the beauti ful pan-American exposition, where la the month of September President Mc Klnley met death by assassination. Niasara rlvsr is virtually a strait asperating ths United Stats from Can ada and connecting Lake Erie with Lake Ontario It Is sbout a mils wide and S5 miles Ions. Its entire length 1 dotted with island, which aggregate In all 17,000 acres. One of these called Goat Island la right at tits brink of Niasara Falls, and separates ths rlvsr into two channels, each one falling ovsr a preclph I 10 fast high. Early ex plorers from ths East followed the waterways Inland, coins along ths St Lawrence river to Lake Ontario, in ceaeeloas efforts to dlscovsr the west ern country and thea along tho hanks of Niasara rlvsr to Lake Erie and far ther wsst. Thus Niagara river early be came the acene of battles between the whites and Indians, snd being regarded as ths water gateway of ths wast was th scans of a continual son test be- lBsassaa ann-k. I ssvt ' asBsasal an sat SI assassaaJilSawesBi swam Bar I Sal ' W B I 8 I asBPsBBBT''4r H ! I asaaaaj BT annas ananas, Wans! fipsw' BBBBBBBBsV tween' the French snd English for con trol. The French in the early stage were tho moat enterprising, snd history shows that ss early as 107 a French officer, De Nonvllle, threw up earth works on ths alt of what la now Fort Niagara, on ths American side of the river right at its mouth. In fact. This barricade waa held and lost with varying fortunes until 1725, when the French, after a tricky deal with the Indians, secured their consent to erect a stone messhouss on ths slta This was ths foundation of ths permanent fort there. It wm captured by ths British In 1760 snd was used by the English ss a post for tbs maintenance of an open road of trade from the Interior to the settlsd portion of the land near the coasts. The fort played an important pert in me revolutionary war and waa used aa the headquartsra from which the bands of Indiana that ravaged the colontas dur ing that awful period were sent out. After the wsr of 1771 it cams Into American possession. This story perhaps srtlcle would be a better word does not pretend to be a complete history of the Niagara frontier. It ia rather the faithful chronicle or what a party of tourists saw traveling up one side of the Niagara river and down the other a trip of about 70 miles There sre many points along the trip equally as Important aa that of Fort Niagara. The march of progress the advance of civilisation has wiped out many of the spot a stamped with the mark of history, and It ha remained for a most worthy organisation tho Niag ara Frontier Landmark' association to rescue them from the apoilng hand of commerce and mark them with appro1 prists tablets. Some Ides of the high standing of this organisation can b gained from the fact that It was organ ised and includes In Us membership rep resentatives from the following truly American Institutions: The Sons of the American Revolution, the Sons of tho Revolution, ths Buffalo Historical society, the Society of ths War of .1812, the Society ol Colonial Ware, the Daughtera of the American Revolution, the Children of the Ameri can Revolution and the Niasara Frontier Historical society. Truman G. Avery Is the president of the Niagara Frontier Landmarks' asso ciation and George D. Emerson ths sec retary. It was Mr. Emerson who kindly made out the Itlneraryfor our party of tourists and thus guldsd them through on of the most historic territories on the continent today. The society In question has only been In existence from November of '1000. but since that Its members have located and appro priately marked several sits noted for events that had an Important bearing on th history or development of the na tion It will b new to many people to know thst ss early as lilt newspaper In the Indian languase was printed In America. Such la a fact, however, and I saw ths house in which It was printed. On of th first places we visited was th Seneca mission-house, which was erected prior to ths year 1111, and Is still standing on Buffam street, in the city of Buffalo, our starting point. It is In good prsservstlon. 'Its heavy bswn black walnut beams snsmlns to be good for many years to come. In this house, from KM to 1144, dwelt the Rev. Ashes Wright, missionary to ths Saneoas, who, with especially prepares, tft. printed part or the Scriptures, hymnala, spell Ing books snd s newspaper tn the Seneca language. It Shall be my aim In th remaining nafses of my manuscript to refrain from mfhUonlng facia and. fifurs that ar of lntsrsst only to th particular locality we are now vlsltng. Of mors than pass ins interest perhaps Is the McKlnley monument, ttandlng In Niagara squars berore the home of President Millard Fillmore, who resided there from th time of hi retirement from office until hi death. In th year of 1674. During hi administration, If memory serves, ths nation gained cheap postage, the en largement of the national capital and the Perry treaty, which opened Japan to the world. From here we went to Fort Porter, and In Its wiHnlty found many spots where cannons and batteries had been stationed, especially during ths war with Great Britain in 1611. Coming down Into more recent history, we found sn Immense boulder marked with a commemoration of the fighting Thir teenth regiment that captured San Juan hill In the Spanish war and later did lie role service tn the Philippine. Part of a brigade had been atatloned at Port Porter before the war, and was gtvsn a, great asnd off when It went to tbs front. Ths send off, however, Was nothing compared to the reception It met when the company came back a little handful of tattered and battered heroes. The Thirteenth, It will be remembered, was also oae of those regiments that did such remarkable service preserving order in San Francisco after ths r scent earthquakes there. Farther down th river Is the sits of an old terry aeroa Niagara rlvsr. at a point where formerly there was a great hlsck rack. This rock was destroyed In the building of the Erl canal In Its tlms the most famous of artificial wa terwsys but the name atlll clings, snd a large part of Buffalo Is known todsy as Block Rock. The ferry has Ions since disappeared, but before It ended Its dsy of usefulness thousands of Im migrants ,to Michigan and ths, mlddls wsst passed over It to their destination. A little farther down we came to the It ol the old Black Rock shipysrds. where a portion of Perry' hat waa fitted out, and where, in 111. was built th Walk-In-th-Water, the first steam boat on ths lakes. At thl point Sca Jaquada creek enter into th river, and it was on th bridge crossing this that in 114 on Auguat to be exact the second battle of Black Rock took place. Twelve hundred British attacked 160 Americana ami made three assaults; the Americana held tho bridge nobly and repulsed the British, saving their supplies. The first battle of Black Rock was fought near by, and It waa also a victory for the Americana. . There are few sites, howsver, of greater interest or of more historic va.ue than the spot where. In 171, La belle, the noted explorer, built ths Grif fon, the first vessel other than a birch bark canoe to ever sail on th Great Lakes of America. Near thia spot a little settlement bear the name of La Salle, and the Niagara Landmarks as sociation, to which I have frequently referred, ha erected a monument on th spot. Midway on the road between the city of Niagara Falla and Lewlston ' ar Bloody Run and Devil's Hole. Here the Senecas ambuahed a British supply train on the first return Journey oyer a newly reconstructed road that ran from Fort Niagara, at the mouth of the Nia gara rives, to Fort Schlosser, on the baSiks of Niagara river, a little to th south of ths present town of Niagara Falls. Both forts wsre In the chain of posts used to keep open the line of trade along ths river. Only three men out of 100 escaped. A little farther north the same Indians ambushed a British ' re lieving force, which hurried sfter them on news of tbs massacre reaching Lew lston, Only eight escaped from the sec ond slaughter. Th Devil's Hoi Is a natural sort of tunnel through the great rocks, for which Niagara gorge Is notsd, and a spot most admirably suited for an ambuscade. It Is 'a sort of a gulch, and through It a little stream finds Its way to Niagara rlvsr. Ths little stresm ran blood-red on the day of tho massacrs, and has ever since borne th title of Bloody Run. The ambuscade occurred en the 14th of Sep tember, 171. Father Hennepln'e nam I associated with history. He was th flrt white man who ever saw' the mighty cataract of Niagara- and the Niagara Frontier Landmarks association ha discovered what It believes to be the alt of Hen nepin's landing and th cabin'whlch he built. It 1 near the present village of Lewlston On ths height seat of Lewis ton I still located a Tuscarora Indian reservation, and near by, below th mountain, 1 th site of General Van Rensselaer's cam a the first , military camp on thl frontier during th wsf of 1112. On th hill above the Lewlston ferry landing la the sits whr General tthen colonel) Wlnfleld Soott planted hi battery which protected the Amor loan troops In the first American in vasion of Canada, on the morning of October I, 1111. From iowioion we numwiio run Ni agara, which Mr. Emerson told us was ths most historic point in tne wnoi rsi agara frontier. On the road between Lewlston and TounStown, th town nssrest to th fort, we passed a place known' as Five-Mils Meadow, where, on the nlsht of December II, 111, tne Brit ish landed for their attack on Fort Nl asara. History tell us that thsy won. and then proceeded at thslr lelsurs to devastate the whole frontier, their oper ations Including the burning of Buffalo. Earlier In my article I hsv referred to the establishment of Fort Niasara, From this place the French and English hsld sway ovsr a vast empire rrom ai bany westward, first one and then the othr Ming In control, in I7t it bo cam an American stronghold. On of th principal features of Fort Niagara Is tho msaaslns built In 174. It came Into the public eye In 1626, by reason of ths Incarceration thsr of William Mor san, who conducted an antl-Masonio orusade. He disappeared from the dun geonnobody knows how and was never seen slaos. There was dispute as to whether he hsd be'ir spirited away by Masons and killed, or had been sl owed to eteap. Still stsndlng on th ground of OTort Niagara now an im portant United State army barracks ars two old blockhouses, built la 1771 and 1771. They, It will bo thus en, antedate the revolution, and are pro nounced by experts to be the most per fect sSeclnsns of their kind. Opposite Fort Niagara la Fori George, built orig inally as an auxiliary to Fort Niasara at a time when all that territory waa Brit lah Farther up ths rlvsr, about appo site Laariston, w come to the sits of the bottle of Queenston Heights. . As Niagara Is the most historic. SO Queenston Is the most Impressive spot on all the Niagara frontier. A grassy knoll, resembling lh some respeots the land side of Quebec, is crowned with the Brock monument, a tall and graceful shaft which marks the site of the battle of Queenston Heights, on October 13, 1111, when an American force of 1,600 militia and a regiment of regulars at tacked the Britlah under the command of General Isaac Brock. The Americans were dsfeated, and their commander, Cnlnnal WU,i.l Ua a, . , u - A .A "Every other commissioned officer- was either killed or wounded. On the Brit ish side General Brook lost his Ufa, and many a British soldier found hie last rearing place. The view from Brock's monument is superb, the tourist being enabled to ass aa far as ths sys can raoh, almost to the head of the Niagara river on the south, and seven miles along Niasara rlvsr to its broadsnlng mouth and Lake Ontario on the north. The foot of the monument la surrounded with cannon, and a stairway on ths In side enablea those who desire to reach the top of It It ia 16 feet high and was erected In 116. From it base a general descent takes ths tourist to ths cenotaph, which waa erected In 110 by the present King of England then Prince of Wale who visited thl coun try In 11(0. Th cenotaph mark th ex act apot where General Brock fell dur ing the baitle. On the heights near th monument may atlll be traced th out lines of Fort Drummond, snd on ths very edge of the cliff the redan battery of their period. General Brock wae first burlsd In a bastion of old Fort George, previously referred to, th ruins of which are atlll tn a remarkable atats of preservation. It was built in 17. en larged later, and played a moat Import ant part Irf the war of 1112. In th Canadian town of Niagara ars many points of lntsrsst. Among ths old buildings art) Navy Hall (built In 1720), where was hsld ths first sssslon of ths parliament of Upper Canada, and ths old barracka uaed by Butler' Rangers during .th revolutionary war as a bass for their raids into American territory when they, with the aid of Indians, msde the lives of frontier resi dents for miles around a constant source of worrlmsnt. We also find Fort Mlesla saraugua. built by the British In 114, Coming along the river from Brock' monument south or, to be more strict ly speaking, up stream, we, having gons down stream on the American side we come to the battlefield of Lundys Lane, which Is marked by a monument, a pic ture of which appears on this page. Thla monument was erected in 16. and commemorate sddrsply the "Victory of the British-Canadian forces on the twenty-flfth of uly. J114," and Is In "Grateful remsmbfanM of the brave men who died on that day fighting for tho unity of the empire." The monu- ment waa erected by the Canadian par liament. Passlngup the river still, ws ooms to ths site of Fort Chippewa, built in 170, and the battlefield of Chippewa. Then on to old Fort Erie. Here we disturbed the (lumber of the old Brit ish soldier and listened to an Interest ing description of the historic site. Fort Erie was built by MontreaOor In 174, built again In 1778, rebuilt in 17(0, again in 17(1 and a fourth tims In 107, though none of the latter times on ths exact former location. Near the fort are tho sites of three British siege works, a Una Of earthworks, protected by abatis, ex tending inland for nearly half a mile, and still further strengthened by block houses of ths 112 period. , Nearby Is the scsns of tho famous battle of Rldgeway, ths really closing Incident of the ridiculous Fsnlan raid, when a handful of Ill-advised fanatics, after gathering on sn island In Niasara river, landed on Canadian soil, prepared to tsks ths country as a protest to Ores t Britain for ths way In which ths em pire treated Ireland. Th engagement soon became a disgraceful rout Thl was In ll(. A short distance away Niasara river broadens out, snd ths widening of the stresms expanse Into the bosom of Lake Erie marka the termination of the historic Niagara frontier and trie end of our story. ' "AMUEL WILLIAMS HIPPLER. RABBITS STOP TRAINS N Texas ths Jackrabblt I no longer looked on aa a means of good sport He hss Increased by the million un til he threaten to not only devour all th vegetation of hundreds nt - mile in th southwestern Motion of th state, but her lately, spurred on by desperate hunger, he has Maun hold ing up railway trains by the simple pro cess of getting himself killed by the thousands, and ao greasing up ths rails and blocking ths engine wheels that ths moat powerful locomotives have been forced to come to a Mop while th train bands have god forth and cleaned up th right of way. Hunger I forcing millions of Jack rabbit to com close to the more thickly Mtttad sections of Texas, and whsrs th wlr fence are used to keep them out they have started burrowing underneath. The brlsht glare of the locomotive head light has attracted them along th rail road line at nlsht Thla Is proved by the fact that the railroad hav had no trouble with their trains from th Jack except at night. During the day tho rabbits attend strictly to making n trance into th farm lands The Texa leglslsturs has decided tn an.nH tlOO.OOO next rnr In an endeavor to stem "m or tne jackrabbtt Invasion It I hoped to And soms disease germs with whloh the rsbblts csn be hnn .i.h ,A o moat of thorn M swept away. Th i.mi.u auiii government will also b ssked to ssslst In ths sclsnUflo sear oh for soma method of killing off th peats. A Quorum la Always T IIHIIJ. rteej the New York Obnmsrclsl MIh Laara B Psyse, Dominated tot con grass hy soclsllata in Tsxss. ssys sat will OriT tta grafters sst of ths aatloa's Usls latnre, If sleeted Perhaps shs targets that eontrsss ssaaet trasssrt MslawaO wtthsat s eneraav I f I I HMMsnssBBajBsswaM