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CHAPTER II PLENTY OF ROOM
There is plenty of room in the great Northwest. For twenty-five years to come Horace Greeley’s advice “Go west,” will hold good. Charles Dickens once said that the typical American would hesitate to enter heaven unless assured that he could go farther west. “Go west.” Surely these are words to with. “Go west,” thrills the blood of youth and stirs the blood of age.
 
The tide of immigration is turning this way. No matter what your trade or profession, there is room for you here.
 
Agriculture, the supporting pillar in the temple of wealth of any nation, stands in the front rank in Washington and Idaho, the soil being wonderfully productive. Stock raising, dairying and fruit farming are carried on with great success. But the great mining interest must not be forgotten. The annual rainfall varies from thirty-five to sixty inches. A[35] healthful climate meets one in almost every part of these great states. is practically unknown. As to scenery one may have here the of Switzerland, the of the Rhine and the beauty of Norway.
 
The beds of eastern Washington are wild and barren as to rocks, but the soil is very productive when . The lava is burned red in many places. Castle after castle with drawbridge, and soldiers on guard, all of solid rock, greet the eye. Column after column stand hundreds of feet high.
The mountains surpass the Rockies in grandeur and of scenery. We crossed on the Switch Back. This is by “tacking,” as a sailor would say. We had three engines, Moguls, one forward, the other two in the rear. There are but two engines in the world larger than these.
 
To explain more we went back and three times on the side of the mountain until we reached the summit, then down on the other side in the same manner. Going up we made snowballs with one hand and gathered flowers with the other, tiger lilies, perfect ones[36] one and one-half inch from tip of to petal on tiny stalks five inches high. Blackberry vines run on the ground to the summit of the mountains. They creep along like strawberry vines. They are in bloom now and the berries will in time.
 
The snowfall last winter on the summit was one hundred and nine feet. Miles of snowsheds are built over the road and men are kept constantly at work keeping the tracks clear of snow and bowlders. Five huge snow-plows are required, all working constantly to keep the sixty-six highest miles clear. The fall of snow for one day is often four feet. The Great Northern road is putting a tunnel through the mountains now, and will thus do away with the Switch Back. Eight thousand men work in the night and day. They have been at work two years and expect to finish in 1901.
 
For hours we traveled above the clouds and at other times we passed through them and were with rain. Magnificent ferns grow everywhere on the mountain sides and towns and villages are to be seen frequently.
 
the mountains we came to the Flat Head valley, the scenery of which is wild and rugged enough to suit the taste of the most imaginative Indian. The Flat Head river, a wild, raging, roaring which sweeps everything before it as it comes leaping down the mountains, flows peacefully enough in the valley. Here water nymphs bathe in purple pools, yonder fairies and fauns dance on the green.
 
On the trees we see such signs as “Smoke Red Cloud,” “Chew Scalping Knife,” “Drink Smoky Mountain Whisky,” “Chew Indian Hatchet,” “Chew Tomahawk,” “Drink White Bear.”
 
Wenatchee valley is famous for its irrigated fruit farms. A great variety of fruits is grown. Water is easily and cheaply obtained. Mission District is another fine fruit valley. The interest in agriculture is growing. Bees do well here. If you do not own all the land you want come west where it is cheap, good and plenty. The country is rapidly filling up with settlers. We passed fine wheat lands that stretch away across the country to Walla Walla. Men are now coming in to the wheat harvest just as in Illinois they come to cut broomcorn. But they are a better looking class of men. One sees no genuine tramp. There is no room for him here, there is too much work and he such districts as one would a infected region.
 
Seattle.—The first white men to explore this coast was an expedition under command of Juan de Fuca, a Greek pilot in the service of the Viceroy of Mexico. They explored the coast as far north as Vancouver island in 1592. Two hundred years later Captain George Vancouver, of the British navy, made extensive explorations along this same coast. The first overland expedition was commanded by Lewis and Clarke. The next was also a military expedition and was commanded by John C. Fremont. The first people to settle in the country were the fur traders. The first mission was established by Dr. Marcus Whitman at Walla Walla in 1836. It was Dr. Whitman who rode to Washington, D. C., leaving here in December, and informed the government of the of England to drive out all the American settlers and seize the country. The first town was Tumwater, founded in 1845 by Michael Simmons. These are some of the people who helped make Washington.
 
General Sherman said, that God had done more for Seattle than for any other place in the world. It is to be the Chicago of the West. The largest saw-mills in the world are located here. The population is about eighty thousand and the increase is rapid. The University of Washington, supported by the state, is grandly located in Seattle. The Federal government has a fine military station twelve miles out of the city.
 
 
At every turn Indian names meet the eye. We steamed down the bay on the Skagit Chief to the city park, where we lunched at the Duramash restaurant. In the shop windows Umatilla hats, Black Eagle caps and Ancelline ties are offered for sale.
 
Ancelline was an Indian princess, daughter of Seattle. Seattle was chief of the Old Man House Indians. These Indians had a big wigwam in which the entire tribe lived during the winter. They called this the Old Man House and the tribe took its name from this house. There is but one family of these Indians left.
 
The Indians on this side of the mountains have never received any support from the government. They are much more than their red brothers on the other side. There are many tribes here and many of them are quite well to do in the way of lands and money. All talk English but prefer to speak Chinook.
 
 
Nokomis was an old Indian woman who did laundry work for a family in Seattle with whom I have become acquainted. Nokomis was exceedingly stubborn. She would permit no one to tell her how to wash for had she not washed in the and rivers all her life? This old woman was somewhat deaf and when directions were being given her she could not possibly hear and continued the work her own way. But when the mistress would say, “Come Nokomis, have some coppe (Chinook for coffee) and muck (Chinook for ‘something to eat’),” she never failed to hear, though this was often said in a low tone of voice to test Nokomis’s ears.
 
Wheat in this section easily goes fifty bushels per acre. The root crops, potatoes, , onions, carrots, and parsnips yield enormously, with prices fair to good. The fruits are fine and prices good. Strawberries sell here now three quarts for twenty-five cents. The fruits go to Alaska, Canada and east to Montana and Minnesota. Stock and do well here and supply eastern markets at good prices. Another industrial resource in which many are engaged is fishing. The , halibut, , , , whale and fur seal yield fine profits. Canned fish go to the Eastern States, to Europe, Asia and Australia. The timber, coal, iron, gold and silver industries are well represented.
 
There is one industry that is not represented here at all, and that is the window-screen industry. There is but one fly in Seattle; at any rate I have seen but one. Meat markets and fruit markets stand open. The temperature has averaged sixty-two in the shade for several days. It is quite hot in the sun, however.
 
If you are out of a fortune and would like to make one, come to Washington.
 
Mount Rainier is the highest peak of the Cascade Range and the most beautiful. Though on American soil it bears an English name, that of Rear Admiral Rainier of the English navy. The local name was for years Tacoma, but in 1890 the United States board of survey that Rainier must stand on all government maps.
 
The people of Washington speak lovingly of this splendid peak which was smoking so grandly when the Pathfinder found his way into this country fifty years ago.
 
From its summit eight radiate like the of a wheel down from which flow[42] as many rivers. Its ice formed by sulphur holes in the , its steam jets, its draped pines, its dainty vines and , its vales, where wild flowers are swayed by the breath of the glaciers, its beautiful lilies, remind one of “Aladdin’s” journey through the wonderful cave in search of the magic lamp.
 
Here blows the heather and the shamrock.
 
“With a four-leafed clover, a double-leafed ash, and a greentopped seave,
You may go before the queen’s daughter without asking leave.”
There stands fair Daphne, changed to a laurel tree.
 
In the legends of the Silash Indians Mount Rainier has always been held as a place of regard. It was the refuge of the last man when the waters of Puget Sound swept inland, drowning every living thing except one man. Chased by the waves, he reached the summit, where he was standing waist deep in the water when the Tamanous, the god of the mountain, commanded the waters to . Slowly they , but the man had turned to stone. The Tamanous broke loose one of his and changing it to a woman, stood it by[43] his side, then waving his magic wand over the two, bade them to awake. this strange Adam and Eve passed down the mountain side, where they made their home on the forested slopes. These were the first parents of the Silash Indians.
 
In the very center of the Cascade range stands another mountain of equal beauty, Mount St. Helens.
 
Washington is the home of the genuine sea serpent. He makes his headquarters in Rock Lake, where he himself in the water, every living thing that ventures into it or dares to come on the shore. Only a few years ago he swallowed an entire band of Indians.
 
Expansion seems to be the law of our national and commercial life. Beyond the Pacific are six hundred million people who want the things we produce. China and Japan furnish a market for our wheat. The cry now is for more ships to carry our produce to Asia, Australia, to islands of the Pacific and to Alaska, not to speak of the Philippines. Manila is the center of the great Asiatic ports, including those of British India and Australia. Our trade with[44] the Orient is growing and Manila will make a fine distributing . These eastern countries use over eighty-six million dollars’ worth of cotton goods and nearly forty million dollars’ worth of iron and steel manufactures. This we can produce in this country as cheap if not cheaper than in any other country. Seattle is the best point from which to export, as the route is shorter than from San Francisco.
 
The battleship Iowa is in dry dock here. I should liked to have been a myself and have stood behind one of those big guns when Cervera left the harbor of Santiago. And now I’d like to train that same gun on the anti-expansionist and send him to the bottom of the sea, there to sleep with the Spaniards and other useless things. Officers and marines alike are proud of their ship and delighted to explain the of the guns.
 
We took a steamer over to Tacoma one morning, where we had the pleasure of seeing the North Pacific Glenogle, which had just arrived from Japan, unload her . She brought two thousand tons of tea, over two thousand pounds of rice, two thousand and twelve of matting, two hundred and eighty-six bails of straw braid, one hundred and thirty-nine cases of , two hundred and eighty-five packages of curios, three thousand packages of bamboo , silk goods and a multitude of small articles made the load. She had forty Japanese passengers for this port, and left forty-five at Victoria.
 
The air was with the odor of roses and beautiful pinks.
 
On the street we met a party of Indians in dress, wearing closely cropped hair and moustaches.
 
Tacoma pays ninety dollars per ton for ore from Alaska.
 
Returning across the bay we met a flock of crows on the flotsam and jetsam which floats down from the saw-mills. Their antics reminded me of a party of school boys playing tag. At the steamer’s approach the leader gave a warning caw and they were up and away before the steamer struck their floating playground and it to the waves.
 
At sunset the reflection of the sun-lit clouds on the waves and the fire and glow of the sparkling water, now red, changing to and emerald greens, make a scene to the eye of one who loves the sea.
 

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