8 FROM Interesting Region Included in Thfe -Stretch of the Great River, By Marshall N. Dana. !- HOW time changes transportation methofls! ' A century ago, the Columbia river explorers port aged the rapids or rode them with fear trembling. They r lived' on 'horsp meat, or worse, on nothing. Sometimes they nearly died of thirst,- skirting the. precipices above the liver, beholding" the cool water un- derneath and suffering all the . pangs ' of Tantalus because it. meant- head lon fall and deajh to try to get down. If they left ..the river and went over th Cascade mountains by means of the pass .near what is now Govern ment Camp, they frequently came to places where wagons most either be raised or lowered by ropes, and the oxen to endure had to be more sure footed than goats. In 1812, a party left "the Astor expe dition at.. Astoria and started up the JwOlunbm gorge. A paragraph or two ;fronVfhe account of that trip, written ;ty ntes Cos and published in 1832, houUl interest all who are taking tli Imaginary trip down the Columbia . river in advance of the .fleet -of river . steamers that will carry the audience . 'ior all the programs celebrating the lomplction of the Celilo canal, from Let.'Iaton, .Idaho, to Astoria and the . i Pacific ocean, during the week of May ;J-k'. The book Is in the-collection of L-"the Oregon Historical society. Rosa ' . "Cox tells about the fleas, , the- -mos-' qui toes, the head .winds and other pests they endured "in getting up to the present site of Cascade Locks; then ' he continues: ' . "We commenced proceedings at 4 i'clock on the morning of the sixth .(July. 112) and finished the portage ibout two in the afternoon. During . - ur progress the Indians occasionally "aovered about the loaded men, and : niade two or three trifling attempts io rob them; but the excellent precau v . Hone - we had adopted completely kept . them in check, and deterred them from attempting anything like a forcible ; robbery. At the upper end of the port : ige and while we were reloading the ;anofS, a number of the natives,, sev ral of whom were armed, assembled ibout I us; they conducted -themselves peaceably, but our numbers and war 'ike Arrangements enforced respect. The jdress of the men does not Siffer materially from that of the lOwer Indians; bdt they are incontest- ibly more filthy and ugly. Their teeth . ire almost worn away." The greater .; lumber have very sore eyes; several save nly one; and we observed a few sld men and women quite' blind. The men are generally naked, and the . women merely wear a leathern belt, Mtli U .narroy piece of the same ma ;erial joined to the front, which very mperf ectly answers the purposes In tended. Some wear leathern robes ver the breast and shoulders; but' oth ers allow these part to remain naked. - ke observed,, no one who appeared to ' tssume the authority of a chief. Each Icemed quite Independent of the other, nd" complete master In his own house . tnd fftmily. Their unfeeling brutality , :o tlif few old blind people 1 have nentionod was really shocking: and I "nay safely say a more unamiable race . f democrats are not to be found in ,hat ciountrj' of republics." Koss Cox was a more literal chr'on cler than many others of eaNy days. It was jvhile the party was proceed- ng up river that heavy winds caused Jiem to give the name Cape Horn to : .he point of land in thia vicinity,, nam- ng it jfor the extremity of South Amer- ta. because of the dlficulty they had n. getting around it. j At .Cbenowtth Creek. , With new appreciation of whatsit . neant a hundred years ago -to -be a jraveler, we will resume our., safe voy ge dpwn stream, 'with hazardous rap ds . and falls circumvented by locks nd canals, with only scenic wonders .o admire and commercial possibilities. l develop. We were just leaving1 The Dalles and the Celilo celebration! last eek. Now our guide, Frank J. Smith, ' tails attention to Chenowith creek, tailed by the Indians, Kthno-a-creek," Tieaning vulture's nest. The flats at aie Jmouth were oftce "famous for amas; now rock lilies grow there ini ;rrnt prolusion. On the Oregon . shore opposite the nouth'of this stream, and under high iheiving rocks is one of the places' vhere Lewis and Clark camped more lian j a century ago. In the Interval, and has drifted until the place has - lecoms dreary and desolate, and above, tn the hillside the cactus flourishes. Captain Smith is saying: "Ait this point, evidences are atili xt be seen that this was once a great neeting point of the Indians. - You can e the rudely painted pictures of wild inimals and fish on the low rock tlutfs. "Many huge specimens - of stone ' jarving are found In the shifting nds. Spears and arrow points, mor ars, i pestles, stone' knives and idols re to?; be found In greater numbers tu Biat any other point on the river." .Crates .Point, not far below, on the .)regon bank, la the place where the "xplormg party had to land because of he "high winds. Here a niche In the ctkyi walls, plainly to be seen from asting steamers, offered the first 1 V : J ? s'"-''' '.,',;- ,-"sys. 4-;'cU ;, V "II iff i vA If , I : y' '' I---''''''i - VyA r j , H III 9 , f , " 7 '"- 4,,'w' '. --i-sixf.'.a- : 1 I ' ' 1 W ' ' V k vft 1 f . ' ' - . J Jill Tmmiji asiif j - I ; - r.-AM - ; rf THE DALLES TO THE CASCADES OF r - i - VV z-'- ' jy III I I YZZM-:. ij , VKV TXJw W IN.'VJv'V v , -irj. r v..., XX in fill r-'',1 ,"7-- mm.- j - f"x ' ' ""fy ' f j I -vvb vv - r "4 . pfos III I v- Ns. If lit'- v3"v:.'v rw & r-vuvwi -v 7 vStl. vi'c :rAJ& h -:-t - - - i:j comers comfort and shelter. At thia same place, ' the O. S. N. company in later years found a harbor for steam ers when the run of ice was danger ously heavy. Now look again over to the Oregon side Of the river. First yon see. follow ing the line of the pointing finger, the great chute called the Devil's Slide. His sulphurous majesty surely bad hours of frolic suited entirely to his tastes if this was his playground, . It extends from the top of the mountains to the river, and for a portion of the way is tined on both sides with slabs of basalt. ' i Look a little way below, still on the Washington side. The massive rock bulk you see is called Grant's Castle. It reproduces in form the feudal cas tles of bygone ages. Its foundation is a shelf of the mountain 300 feet above the river. The roof of its watch tower, surmounting six distinct stories, is 800 feet above the river. Its color is steel gray, exaqtly the color in vogue today for battleships, fortifications and uni forms. It has windows, portholes and terraces almost as regularly planned WHY YOU ARE (Dr. Woods Hutchinson, president elect of the American Academy of Medicine, and theauthor of this ar ticle, is a former Portland physician whose popular writings on medical topics have brought him wide renown.) By Dr. Woods Hutchinson. THERE is one consolation about being thin it's always fashion able. No matter what chameleon changes in the styles may be or ered 'by the stern ukase of fashion for spring, or fall, or winter, a bitter and despairing wall goes up at once, not merely from the rotund and corpulent, but from the svelte and the plump: "Why, they're perfect horrors for stout people!" "I'd look like a fright in those skirts or that tunic!" It makes no difference whether it be the pitiless and revealing scantiness of the sheath skirt, or the flounces and furbelows of the new crinolines, the plump and comfortable are "it" every time. In -the language of the day, the styles "catch 'em, going and coming." Thinness, like almost everything, is a question of degree. The first ques tion to be settled is that of definition. In the language of the day, "Whadda you mean, too thin?" "When Worry is Unnecessary. The best view to takgst any situa tion is the pragmatiffSne: "How does it work?" The only kind of thinness that need cause any concern is the kind that is accompanied 2y restlessness, nervous ness and a general sense of discomfort and sdlsatisfaction with yourself and your, surroundings. , If you are distinctly and undesirably underweight, the thing you should first worry about ia usually not so much your food although this is Important as certain chronic bad conditions, mild diseases sometimes, or . bad habits of working, playing or sleeping, which are causing your lack of appetite or your failure to assimilate the food that you do eat. ; Cure for Zraa People, - This, statement applies, of course, only to adults who are in receipt of a decent wage or Income and who are not experimenting upon themselves with some patent health ryatem of diet. The only cure for. lean-and-hungry ones is to forget absurd superstitions THE OREGON as If by man, rather thaa Architect. " We pass Lyle, a flourishing town, where a branch of the S. P & S. starts the climb to Goldendale, an auto visit point of the trip already mentioned. Here also is the mouth. of the Klicki tat where the Indians found medicinal waters that they claimed increased their stature. . r High on a basaltic cliff below Lyle is a woman's figure, the natural stone statue of Sacajawea. t "See," invites Captain Smith. "The form of the woman with her baby flung on her back ' in the position of crly Indian mothers, is perfect. The image was hewn by the forces of na ture, and seemingly with jgreat" care, for, from the deck1 of the steamer we see the flowing tresses, theshort dress, the blanket and the 'profile ' of mother and child silhouetted against the sky. "In the evening the setting su,n casts its rays on this point' bringing out In bold relief the figure of Sacajawea and her child as $they ;fac the west? the goal of 100 years ago. Of the many rocks in the Columbia gorge, resemb ling man, bird and beast, no other is TOO THIN AND WHAT TO and legends, to throw aside the obses sions of medieval ignorance - and be guided by their own, rational prefer ences and good sense, checked by their personal .experiences of what agrees with them jtnd what does not. ' Those who show a. marked condition of thinness and underweight really have in a very large percentage of cases some defect of health, or condi tion, or habits outside of dietetic ones, which destroy their appetite or powers of assimilation. To clear the- ground of possible misconceptions. It should first be briefly stated that the normal percentage of fat In the organism varies considerably with different in dividuals, as it does in different ani mals. ; Tht Tat We Carry. We humans, for. instance, carry about one-fifth (18 per cent) of our weight In fat, while the cat and the dog carry only 3 per cent and 6 per cent respectively. In adult life we are 17 per cent or 18 per-cent fat, in childhood from 22 per cent to 25 per cent . ' ' Some hnman "plants" appear to have the capacity of doing business and remaining solvent on comparative ly narrow margins of reserve. , Others require considerable 'amounts of fat balance in order to make s themselves safe, 80 per cent of us being better off with a trifle too much' rather than too little. . j ;. So that, one of the first things to.be considered in case of -leanness or underweightVis the general tendency in this regard, of theX other- members of our family and: neat relatives, particu larly in earlier generations. ' Some fam ilies tend to be portly and dignified; others, lean and wiry; and yet both live to a good, aid age and maintain ex cellent working efficiency. ? ; 't May Be Family Trait. If our spareness be a family trait. even though it may distress our- es-J tv...i. n.ti:.i " t. . jt us any very serious uneasiness as to its possible health implications. ' So, clear the ground" by a considera tion of your family tendencies in the matter of gauntness or portliness be fore you begin to worry , seriously about your underweight. Instances of this sort of distinct underweight, say IS or 2a pounds in an average adult, are most likely to be due to a variety SUNDAY JOURNAL, PORTLAND . SUNDAY MORNING, the Great 111 I 1 1 ,C5f 1 .11 vM IV U .AW I Points of scenic and historical cades' of the Columbia; A close view of the Trevitt monument on Memaloose Island. i Bottom, left to right --Giant's Castle; Wind Mountain and section of-submerged forest (photographs by Weister); Victor Trevltt,! Island (photograph by courtesy of the Oregon Historical Society). ...-? so near perfection as this." Uemaloope Castle Worn by Weather. Memaloose castle, a counterpart of Grant's castle, Is, another of the inter- esting rock formations, but showing' more the wear of time and weather. The top Fas cr-imbled and the frag ments have fallen jipon the ' terraces below, so that it has a dome shape. These castles are blurred with the face of the gorge in coming up stream but are so distinct as to command- atten of causes which have little direct con nection with diet. One of the commonest of these, and among the most frequently overlooked, is bad teeth. These operate in several ways. First of all, by making it diffi cult to chew the firmer and more re sisting kinds of food. The results that 'gradually and un consciously these foods are avoided by the sufferer, or else If eaten, they are bolted almost whole, given just a hasty "lick and promise," as the Yorkshire saying goes, with the jaws, and then gulped down; in either, case his nutri tion suffers. Bad Teeth Cause Disease. Another way in which bad teeth pro duce malnutrition and thinness is that ,the same groups of bacteria which pro mote caries ofthe teeth also attack the gums and produce the familiar ul cerations and the more recently famous socket abscesses about Nthe tips of the roots. These conditions are astonishingly "bad medicine" in several different ways. Partly, by mixing witbS every mouthful of food chewed or attempted to be chewed, droplets of pus contain ing thousands of and even millions of germs, which, to say the least of it, do no good to the stomach and alimentary canal when they are swallowed In fact, a large and increasing share of cases of chronic indigestion and dyspepsia are now directly traceable to this form of self-poisoning. Infecting our stomachs from our own gums. Have Teeth Examined, r Last, and by no means least, these accumulations of pus, literally robbers' -caves of bugs around the roots of tfee teeth, soak Into the blood and give rise to an astonishing . brood of rheuma tisms, gouty joints, neuritises, neural gia, headaches and anemias. One of the first and most practical steps to be taken to cure thinness is to go and have a thorough jiexamina tlon made of your teeth, including in bad cases, an X-ray picture of the jaws, to detect concealed pockets ef pus, and have your dental mill put in good condition, so that It will grind your food, instead of poisoning it. Another ' cause of poor appetite and consequent thinness that is often over looked is chronle inflammation of the ,nose and throat, . with or without pus interest alongthe Columbia. tion on the ride down the river. For many years these crags,' the basaltic pillars, the domed rocks, and the spire like peaks have been adding to the scenic fame of the Columbia gorge. The fleet paucts. The vessels hold- against th current. In- middle river is a rocky island. Upon it is a monu ment which the fleet salutes. It is the grave of Victor Trevitt, noted pio neer. About him are the bones of count less Indians, in this the Columbia DO ABOUT IT formation, popularly known as "ca tarrh." ' This works in two ways, partly by the swallowing down into the stomach, particularly during sleep, of the often extremely offensive mucous and puru lent discharges from the nose or from the Cavities of the tonsil; and partly by the formation of small pockets of matter or pus, either In the hollows of the bones of the skull which open into the nose on both sides" and above, or in the pouches in and around the tonsils. "Soil Cleaning" Beneficial." A thorough medical house cleaning and antiseptic sanitation of the nose and throat, literally putting a good face on yourself, will often make a marked improvement In your general health, increase your appetite and com fort, and add 10 to 15 pounds to yeul body weight. . , The - next thing to be suspected in cases of chronic "My leanness, O, my leanness!" is what might seem at first a very "far cry," clear out' of hailing distance in fact, and that is eye strain. This is particularly well worth looking into when other causes appear to be lacking, because, by an Odd para dox, if is often the mildest cases of eye defect that cause the, greatest amount of nerve and nutrition disturb ances.' The reason for it however, ;is fairly obvious. 1. e., that the worst cases of eye defect, severe short eight -or long sight, or high grades of astigmatism, as the case may be, cripples the eyes for practical purposes so-'badly; inter fere with vision .o unmistakably, that their victim is compelled to go to an eye doctor or an eye hospital and get relief in the form of glasses. Watch the Eyes. The mlldef cases, which are so slight that their possessors think that they have fair average vision and can make shift to do their work without the as sistance of glasses are the very ones which y thejr constant slight nagging strain and tension, tear the nerves to blts, as we say,, and produce, all sorts of disturbances of appetite, sleep, com fort and even temporary mental un balance. ' They may not even give us pain in the eyes or headache, and yet be rasp ing our entire nervous system into a state of chronic irritability and dis comfort. - ; Another potent cause of poor appe APRIL 4. 1915. THE COLUMBIA BY BOAT Top, left to right Memaloose Island, on which Is seen" the monument gorge's most famoa burying place of the dead. Victor Trevltt asked to be burled with the Indians oji Memaloose island. He was somewhat of a skeptic. He said he wasn't sure there would be aj resurrection, but if there was. he would consider his chances for heaven best with the Indians, who called the island, Mem-a-loose-il-a-hee, land of the dead. Captain Smith once slept two nights on Memaloose island, sheltered from DR. WOODS tite ;and thinness, is lack of oxygen, foul air and bad ventilation. Particu larly is this the case with the first meal of the day. A lack of appetite for breakfast, that willingness to compromise on , a cup of coffee and a cracker, or a satreerf ul of sloppy cereal, as a substitute for a real meal, which is so common 'among women and children, is very often due to a night spent in the foul, stuffy, infected air of a bedroom with all the windows hermetically sealed, or with a mere slit-like chink at the top of one sash. Oxygen Zata rat. To get more oxygen, which is sup posed to burn up fat. In order to make yourself less thin, sounds like a con tradiction. As a matter of fact, the stimulus that you" get both from the cool fresh air and from the burning up of your poisonous body wastes by oxy gen, gives you so much keener an ap petite and so1 much better nutrition, that you gain strength and weight, even if you do burn up more fuel. . . Another thing, which I mention last, because fortunately It Is one of the rarer causes of abnormal thinness, and I do not wish to make the vast ma jority of comparatively wholesome lean and wiry people apprehensive without cause, is that continued and progres sive underwelghtednese. especially if accompanied by easy fatigue and short ness Of breath upon exertion, is one of the symptoms of Incipient or mild tu berculosis. But this consideration need not worry anyone who is In vigorous, active condition and feeling well up to their work. . , i Oet Plenty Sleep. Incidentally. lack of a proper amount of sleep Is another not infrequent con tributing cause" of thinness and under-: weight, particularly In the case of chil dren. Who can often be made plupper and healthier by being kept in bed until 10 in the' morning and given their breakfast 1n' bed. - i As for the regulation of diet Itaelf. this playS almost as unexpectedly a small part in the cure of thinness as it does in the reduction of fatness. Most chronically and .unhealthily thin people, it is true, do not eat enough. But this is due to lack of appetite, rather than of opportunity; and the only effective way to relieve them is to improve that appetite by the storm by . the dead house. He tas all alone. He had come on Saturday to-remain over. Sunday searching for curios. Before he slept he moved the bones up toward the wall out f the way. During the night the rain leaked In, the bones slid down upon him, and he awoke with a start, in the drear, uncanny early morning hours under the pressure of fleshJess limbs." But let him tell the story: "The first night I pitched my camp HUTCHINSON such means as have already been sug gested. To stuff them against their Inclination, even with the most nour ishing and digestible of foods, is usual ly worse than useless.. Varied Diet for Healthy rat. It will usually either make them bilious, or else load them up with a few pounds of flabby fat, which is of no particular benef it to them ana , i sure to promptly melt away again as soon as the forcing process is stopped. Broadly spe&king, there are no foods or classes of foods which are in and of themselves specially fattening. And if there were, the fat accumulated by forcing one's self to eat them would be no great addition to our health and vigor. A good mixed, varied diet, contain ing .a proper proportion . of the food elements required, meats, fats. starches, sugar's, fruits and vegetables, is the only one which will put on healthy fat. that is to say, will bring the underweight individual up to his or her normal weight and vigor and keep him there. . Xf Ton Xdke It, Zat Xt. When ltcomes to going beyond this normal condition, then, starches and fats, as already stated, do lend them selves a little more readily to the for mation and storage of surplus fat than do meats, i And, of course, vegetables and acid fruits supply little out of which fat can be formed. But to bring thin Individuals up to the normal weight, a good variety of all kinds of appetising food, particularly .- those kinds" which appeal most strongly to their natural tastes and appetites. Is decidedly the best, without much re gard to whether these foods are more largely- meat or fat or starch and sugar, f - " What many thin people really. need Is not so much more fat, as a general Increase in the volume and vigor of all their tissues, particularly their mus cles, lungs ' and heart; and this will not b brought about by any mere stuffing process with cream and eggs. Get plenty, but not too much, won, under wholesome conditions, plenty of sleep, plenty of play in the open ar, and a good variety of wholesome food to match the appetite thus created, and you will usually . either come up to normal weight or get into a condition of comfortable vigor where you don't care whether you are thin or sot. I to Victor Trevltt; At the Can pioneer ' i who is burled on Memaloose -it- cm the! rock, bleak land'he cold wind that Was blowing became mixed with sleet Bind rain, I had not expected, nor was I prepared, for such weather. In the darkness I spread my bed on the lee stde Of a dilapidated dead house In whlt-h were 20 skeletons. I was soon asleep. About 11:30 I was awak ened by the splashing of oars. To be truthful I thought the crew of the steamer had toM the Indians of my presertce.and that they were coming to get me. I didn't feel friendly toward fighting-Indians, and with' more haste than dignity I jumped from .my rudely made bed, grabbed my gun, and pre pared to take aim and order them to halt. Just then I heard one of the men say he bad found a place to fasten his line. It proved to.be a woodscow that the four men were trying to pull off a eand bar. Chilled by the night air, I returned to my couch among the bones of the aborigines. "I arose early. My night visitors pt thej woodscow had disappeared. At noon ai sudden snow storm covered the Island with a mantle of white, robbing it of its weird beauty and preventing me -from photographing any of Its un canny scenes. "The second night I decided to pre pare among the dead a more suitable resting place for the living. I gathered a number of the skulls and bones that were strewn in confusion In the shelter of the dead bouse and plied them to one side so that I could get still fur- ther away from the storm- Night came on, black and cheerless. The only sounds I could hear were the roaring of the river, and the beating of my own heart. I curled myself up and was entreating Morpheus to give me slumber, when I experienced a vivid demonstration of the saying that the bones of the dead shall rise again,', "Without a second's warning the entire heap of skulls and bones tum bled down upon me. The shock-was so great I was afraid ta breathe. I really felt the presence of something more than lifeless bones and gaping skulls. - The crush of their tumbling was like a new kind of dead march. I Wished for morning. "Tre swishing of a river boat would have been sweet music to hie. Pres ently I heard the distant yap of coyo tes on the Washington hills, enduring the six hours until the dawn. My! how glad I was when -morning came and with It the steamer. Dalle City " In the Mte Salmon Neighborhood. The surrounding of Memaloose Is land are ghostly to say the least., It Is cheerful to pass on to the every-day world of towns and homes and living people. One of the .-ommunitles we now pass is Mosier, center of a rich fruit producing country, On Eighteen Mile Island a thrifty farmer has started a chicken ranch. The town of White Salmon just below Is marked by Its hills, and distinguished in the Celilo celebration plan through having alone chartered the steamer Tahoma to Join the fleet and to carry the members of (Continued on Following Pagej.