. V The Omaha -Sunday Bee; TAET TTTREE. HOME MAGAZINE PAOL3 1 TO 4 PAST THREE - CHILDREN PAGES 1 TO 4. VOL. ZLI-XO. 4. Astoria to Celebrate the Centennial mi . i BltfKSdZZa Or ASTORIA HUXDRED TEARS, when on attempts to pr Into ta future, appears to be a long, long itretch of road; yet, facing backward, it mtuurei but a abort syaca bitittn th hpBlnnlB ajid now. Tha ,. ' u i..r.'J' Tar of our Lord 1811 la sot what la commonly called ancient aiatory, yat tha char gea which cava taken placa during tha paat tea dacadea ara wonderful to behold In thia aatonlah lagly fertile land wa ara proud to call our own. - Had Jobs Jacob Astor, tha first, hare been born ia tha twentieth, Instead of the eighteenth century, he would hare been known aa a "hustler." a "lire Wire," an ln-adrance-of-the-tlmea young man. He vaa one of the captains of industry of early daya, but haa not been glren nearly the credit due him for the part ha took In preserving aa United State territory that wonderful country known in an eany day aa the Oregon region, comprising what are known now as tha atatea of Oregon, Washington. Idaho and Mon tana, the northwest Pacific country being that por tion washed by the great ocean. John Jacob Astor waa born in Germany, In 17(3, apent part of his youth in London and when about 20 years old aailed for America, taking up his perma nent residence in New York City. It ia recorded that during his first alx yeara of residence in hla adopted land thla young man accumulated 1200,000, which placed him prominently among tha wealthy men of that period. Hla shrewdness ' enabled him lo aee great possibilities in the fur trade and he became tha founder of an organlzatloa knows as the American far company, which, despite strong competition from English companies, continued to prosper and extend lta operations . , .", ,.." ,: Astor'a Two Expeditions. Ia the first yeara of tha nineteenth century! Aator conceived the idea of extending hla operations to tha Pacific coaat and with thla object la view, fitted cat two expeditions, one to proceed overland, tha other to go by water to the objective point, tha mouth of the Columbia river, tha fame of which wonderful stream with lta many fish had already reached tha Atlantic coaat. The history of each of these expedi tions la replete with thrilling tales, the one with tha onslaught of the wind and wavea, the other from op position by both red men and white, for the British trading companies were contending for the territory almost aa strenuously as were the Indiana for their hunting grounds. In the spring of the year 1811, the Astor people built a fort and established a trading poet upon a part of the present site of the city of Astoria. At first the little community was most pros perous and all went "merry aa a marriage bell," then came open conflict with England known aa the war of 1812, which for a time made it "hard sledding" for the American pioneers and at one time threatened tha very existence of the settlement. The great Columbia rolling in magnificent grandeur to tha sea remains -the same, while on Its broad waters the craft of all natlona float; the canoe of tha Siwash, the steam yacht of the multl-mlilion-alre, the dreadnaughts of powerful aatlona ara to be seen; but "men may come and men may go, I go on forever,"' aa the song recites old Columbia flows -onward aa In the beginning. A century ago tha red men with uplifted spear stood watching, from mid-stream rock, with keeneat of eye, for the wary fish, that kippered aalmon might land in hla tepee; today the yield of these waters to " commercial fish channels apella thousanda of dollars annually and tha employment of a host of people. Columbia river aalmon atanda for tha beat la the world and. although they are not all canned ia As toria, or even on the Columbia river, perbapa had they not been caught the fish would sooner or later have gone there. At any rate, Astoria ia a alee place to go for fun or fortune. Astor Money for Aatorta Centennial. In 1848, at the ripe old age of 83, John Jacob Aator passed from earth, leaving behind him the then considered stupendous fortune of $8,000,000, much of it Invested in New York real estate which to day constitutes the bulk of the wealth of the house of Aator. A literal donation waa made by the estate toward defraying the expanses of thla centennial cele bration which will occur at Astoria from August 10 to September 9 of this year. In 1S11 the Indian canoe, light ;aa a feather, graceful as a swan, was the only light craft known to the inhabitants of the woods on the banka of the Columbia. In 1911, at the centennial of Aatorla, mo tor boats, those swift-moving craft of the water, will compete for priaca aggregating $ It, 000. On it Atlan tic seaboard cities, and even Peoria, 111., will enter In the free-for-all class, in which a $3,000 caah prlia will be the particular attraction. Not only will there be demonstrated during this centennia celebration the auperiority of the motor boat over the canoe, but that intrepid navigator of the air, Mr. Glenn Cuxtiaa, will demonstrate that Darlua Green waa at least on the right track when he aaid: t ' Til light on the liberty pole and crow. ' An' I'll aay to those gappln' fools below, 'What world'a thla 'ere Fve come ao near?' " Mr. Curtlss may not attempt to light on a liberty pole or crow but according to the program he will, with a hydro-aeroplane, on three different and dis tinct days 'play duck." by starting from the surface of the Columbia river, soaring in the air o'er land and sea. returning to near the place from which he started and alighting again on thf rZTZ , , - . - . BSteat - - rfrt??Ti r ; . j f . ,. ,.--,r 1 . . - w . g4ia Ky '' '"' "" ' " ' "' " -- .. : -. a i i x a S ' : f J Sw A OmrmYA LM fV TTTm T-rsy i .A. I. t, " ' "This new wonder of the air," writes Mr. Curtlss, "ia popularly called "The Triad,' meaning the anion of three. It takes this name from the fact that It rep resents the conquest of three elements, vis., air, water and earth. The Triad can fly sixty miles an hour, skim the water like a racing boat at fifty miles aa hour, and run over the earth at thirty-five mllea aa hour. It can rise from the earth and alight upon the water, atart from tha water and coma down on the land, or be used exclusively on either land or water. The hydro-aeroplane la safer than an ordi nary aeroplane and for this reaaon It Is bound to be come thf most popular of all aerial crafts. The be ginner can take it out on his neighboring lake or river or even great bay and skim it over the .water until he Is sure of himself and euro he can control it in the air. He can fly It alx feet above the water for any distance with the feeling that even if something should happen to cause a fall he would not be dashed to pieces." Mr. Curtlss expresses himself as believing that the Triad will become the great seagull, the greatest fac tor In the development of aviation. He aeems to think that the day Is not far distant when a trip via the atmosphere acrosa the Great Lakes will be but the Jaunt of a summer day, while one will soon be able to go from New York to Paris by an air line. Proposed Show ia 'Well Planned. To make this centennial a succeas the state of Oregon put la the pot $50,000, Clatsop county $25, 000, Colonel Jacob Astor $10,000, Astoria busiueae men $50,000, transportation companiea and Portland buaineaa men $15,000, total $150,000; certainly enough to insure a good show. The Oregon National guard 'will hold its annual encampment at thia time and place while at Fort Stevena, not far away, the United States regular army artillery men will hold yearly target practice aad drilL There will be battle ahlps, great and email, galore, for not only will the United Statee be represented by the full Pacific aquadron. but England. 8outh American republlca, China and Japan have aignlfled their Intention to take part In the celebration. Old Fort Astor, Just aa It looked in the days of 1811, before the Indians owned "fire guns" or had quit taking acalpa, will be there, life-elae, aa it la to be rebuilt for the occasion. Paradea almost without number will aa a matter of course be given on land and water. Laat but not least, if the reader la thinking of coming to the Pacific northwest for the purpose of home-seeking or investment, will be the annual meet ing of Oregon Development league. Thia organization has associated cluba In 118 different towna In the atate and a man with a tongue In hla head can find out about every part of the commonwealth by just giving his talking machine an opportunity to work overtime If neceaaary. Besides, the secretary of the organisation, Mr. C. C. Chapman, manager of the publicity bureau of the Portland Commercial club and one of the beat blowhards, alias boosters. In the north west (Canada included), will be there with the glad hand and cheerful grin and the atranger la aura to feel at home lnaide the gate of any yard where C. C. C. chances to chase himself. Colombia a Great Food Producer. Astoria la far famed for it fishing Industry, the salmon having for unknown agea found favorite spawning grounds in the Columbia river. More than 3,000 Sahlng crafts make this city their home port and one of the most interesting sights for the tour ist, la a flah cannery ft operation. Aa the season doea not close until August 25, visitors to the centennial celebration will hare an opportunity to aee there great fish, often weighing seventy pounds each and averaging about twenty pounda, taken from the native element and placed la the eana which preserve them while being transported to all parte of the globe. If one la a lover of fish no difficulty will be found la fully appeaaing the appetite during the daya spent In tha city located at the mouth of thia great river. OMAHA, SUNTUY MORNING, JULY 16, tf -"Tnfe , ,M -.. j Speaking of the river reminds one that the Columbia aurpasses In scenery any other stream In seven states. To the lover of the beautiful nothing in nature can be found grander than ia to be seen from the deck of a steamer ascending the river. To the east are the lofty Caacadea crowned with eternal snows, Mt. Hood, the monarch of them all, loom ing up In magnificent grandeur. A mantle of green covers the country aa far aa the eye caa reach, for where the forests have passed away an almost per petually green grass has filled the gaps, fruits and flowera making brilliant patches on the landscape. Along the banks of the rushing river are many pic turesque rocka, the delight of every artist's eye and the despair of the amateur painter who endeavors to produce their likeness. The passenger service from Astoria to the Dalles is excellent, the meals being first-class and well served, hence the trip is enjoyable In every sense of the word. Recently a prominent weekly publication in the far east which, if I may be allowed to publicly ex press a private opinion, is fast developing symptoms of the swelled cranium, asked for articles advising how best to Invest capital for the benefit of one's children. An acquaintance of the writer, who haa no living children, but knows pumpkin pies from plum duff, eent a communication reading about a follows: Chances for Investments to Grow. "Be it understood in the beginning that the author of this article is in no manner or form directly or Indirectly interested financially in the real estate of the region described. That for nearly a half cen tury he haa observed the westward progress of civil ization carrying with it a steady, staple advance In land values In every locality where agriculture or hor ticulture can be successfully undertaken until the Would Whip More A RECENT Issue of the New York Tribune appears aa interview with Gov ernor Simeon E. Baldwin of Connecticut. He comes out firmly in favor of whipping for many petty offenders, and for muti lation of confirmed prisoners for certain offences, aa a new law now provides for In New Jersey. His long experience aa Judge of the superior and supreme courts aad aa chief justice of the state has made his field of observation extensive and his recommendations have the advantage of the combine! study and observation of mere than bait a century. Governor Baldwin haa been a delegate to three international conventions on penology and ia an inter national authority on penological methods. When asked for a atatement of his views on the subject in detail, he said: "Relief that pauperizes; punishment which con firms criminality and disseminates it; theae have cot always been unknown in the administration of gov ernments, even In the twentieth century. "Humanity readily sinks into humanltarianlam. Humanitarlanism readily sinks into sentimentality. The great danger (1 am tempted to say all the danger) in our day Is in the direction of excess In lenity, In openhandedness, in sympathy. . "One effect ia that the inmate of a public charit able institution today in Connecticut ia better fed and housed than be ever waa in his life before. The dietary la made up as well to tempt aa to aatisfy the appetite, and very often ao a to overload the stomach and foment disease. "Modern investigations aa to processes of nutrition satisfy our best physiologists that we all eat too much. A good many well-to-do people believe they are right and act accordingly, but I aee little consideration given to their advice in the kitchens of our charitable or of our penal Institutions. "Another point to which I would call public atten 1911. of an Historical Event: till . ..L-l-VIlU- 3 iZi so-called 'jumping off place,' the northwest Pacific coast, haa been reached. "Look backward but a generation. The father of a man today of middle age, would not have dreamed It possible that In se short a time New York City could attain the great eminence now held In the world, nor that every quarter section of good land in eastern Now York state for example, If held by the heira of the original owner would make them well off ere they reached man's estate. "No man one hundred or even fifty years ago could see that Fort Dearborn, surrounded by a slough, would become the center of a wonderful city which, passing through fire and financial panics, haa become the greatest metropolis but one of the Western hemi sphere. "Greater than all these happenings will be the development of the Pacific northwest. It would seem as If here Dame Nature did her last work and, in commemoration thereof, more perfectly laid the foundation for future greatness. "First, the wonderful forests were made to grow, covering this great expanse of country with a mantle, as It were, worth millions of dollars. Numerous are the men who by reason of these timber lands have become very rich, for one average merchantable tree la worth In the market today aa much as ai acre of such timber would have coat three decade ago. "The forests are disappearing but the land with Its almost Incredible fertility is certain for all agea to remain. There ara millions of acres of the land that can be purchased almost for a song and thou sands of acres which may be had practically tor the asking, providing one is willing to live for a little while the life of the frontier. "The first settlers of the eastern coaat had a and Imprison Less tion ia the right way of dealing with children who are caught In crime. In Scotland if a boy commits a crim inal act he ia not let off with an apology or a sus pended sentence. An appropriate penalty ic provided. It is a sound whipping administered by order ot tha court. That ia a deterrent to other boys, and to him when temptation comes to him the next time. "I believe whipping, hard enough to be a thor oughly unpleasant experience, but not hard enough to break the akin, is a far more appropriate penalty to impose than sending a boy to the reform school. It would leave plenty of room for the probation officer. He could supplement the whipping, but his work. I believe, should not displace it altogether. "Putting the wrongdoer in confinement, to be sup ported at public expense, after applying the fruits, so far as they may go, ia a very costly kind of a punish ment for the state. It waa much cheaper to dispose of him as they did a hundred years ago. They generally fined or flogged him and let him go, unless It waa a atate'a prison offence. Very few were sentenced to confinement in jail. In 1830 we abolished the whipping post. Before that our courts had sent only about fifty to Jail each year. The next year, 1831, there were ninety-two commitments, and five years later they bad risen to 270. "One ot the persons most closely connected with the state reform school of Connecticut stated a year or two ago that of the boys kept in the principal build ing of the institution not one, a far aa they could dis cover, led aa honest life after bis release. A better showing is made by the statistics put forward by the Elmira reformatory, but I do not hesitate to avow my conviction that whipping would often furnish a mode ot punishment far more appropriate than fine or Im prisonment for young offenders and for some minor offences by full grown men. It might also be as use ful a substitute for or addition to imprisonment for . certain graver crime." SINGLE COPY FIVE CENTS. I l 1 : 502Ztf ACQ3 ASTOR; vigorous climate with which to contend; those who dwell on the Pacific coast live in a clime simply sub lime. - "Even as the automobile is swifter than the ox cart, the telephone surpasses the pony express aad progress In general of the present age Is more rapid than that of a hundred years ago, so will Investment in land In the northwest more rapidly make the chil dren of today wealthy and there will never be tha least danger of loss." Tomorrow's Children Can Be Rich. This reasoning Is entirely correct and tha man who is looking for a safe Investment that will placa his children on Easy street cannot do better than spend a couple of weeks lu the Astoria, Ore., vicinity next August. The photographs from which the pic-' tures on the page were made are good as far aa photo go, but do not show the beauty and grandeur of tha great Columbia any more than the picture of John Jacob Astor shows that he died a multi-mlllionalra. The panorama doea not show that Astoria Is a modem city ot more than 10,000 inhabitants, full of energy and vim, surrounded by a country of unsurpassed fertility, the point where Oregon soil was first touched by a white man. When the good ship Tonquln first entered tha mouth of the river her captain, aa aeeda he must, saw the beauty and wealth of the land, wherefore ha ordered preparations made for a permanent trading post and a fort built. The original fort no longer exists, but at the centennial celebration a reproduc tion of the original atructure will be ahown, giving thoee who see it perfect knowledge of how the pioneers prepared for protection against the peopla of the forest. There will also be a series of pyrotechnical dis plays, consisting of a water pageant ot two hours' duration ia which a ballet of 200 foreign vaudeville artists will perform, exhibiting what will be known as the early daya of Astoria or the destruction ot tha Tonquln, which will make even the salmon In tha Columbia sit up and take notice. On exhibition will also be. It la said, a number of state governors, with their staffs and other erl denee of greatness. One of two of these exalted per sonage are real curiosities and will be worth cross ing the mountains and wind-swept plain to behold. Thus It will be seen that the Astoria centennial will be a regal affair replete with pleasure and op portunities to gain valuable Information aa free aa the oceaa breeaes and aa beneficial. v JAMES MTER3. as j V ! vV 'J S I .--If . lta ' ST ha ; to X " t I i. a - I I l I 4 t