THE DALLES WEEKLY, CHRONICLE WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 4i897. The. Weekly Ghroniele. fcOCKTT OFFICIALS. County JaJffe..'. Bleritf. Clerk. Treasurer... ,. Commissioner....'. Assessor...... .'...Boot Stays T. J. Driver i.A SLKelsay ... C. L. t-hil)lps 5 a. n. Slower D. 8. Kimsey ..... W. H. Whipple Surveyor. .J. it. i.oit Superintendent of Public Schools.. .C. L. Gilbert Coroner.... W. H. Butts ' STATE OFFICIALS. --- ajrernoj. ............. W. P. Lord Secretary of Stale .. ; ...H R Kincaid Treasurer Phillip Metschsn Bupt.of public instruction. .......u. m. irwio AttnrnAv-AAner&l ....C. M. Idleman aw., JO. W. McBride Senators... ............ ...,..., ij. H. Mitchell - . a Hermann . ujiotujvu.. . ....... 1W. OElllg BUte Printer. '. ". ........ ... . W. H. Leeds ' Weekl? Clubbing-Kates. . Chronicle and Oregonian, . . . . ...2 25 ' Chronicle and Examiner. . . .'. . . . 2 25 Chronicle and Tribune. .1: . .11 75 Chronicle and N. Y. World.. 2 00 BITS OF HISTORY. t . ,1 : l nvj.:n. li iuriiuuca arc ov rcaunjr uuw&iuu . ble in the Northwest territory why . are so many men compelled to work j-'fdr wapes? - Why are Indians, who lucraino- freight for the white man co . s - over the Chilcat? Will it be con tended that the laborers of Alaska and Brituh Columbia are less liable " foot who sails on the Excelsior? Or will it be argued . that the Indian , packers, who are charging 1 other tenderfeet fourteen cents a ponnd for carrying meir "year a supply across the ranges do not know the value of money and cannot appreciate, a good thing when they find it? . " : Half a hundred "richest gold fields in the world" have been discovered since the first rush to California. Cripple Creek was one of these; the Black Hills was another; Reese river and Piocbe were rivals of the Corn stock; Bodie was a region where i . ill i very tunnel was a cave oi Ai'auin and " every drift a cavern of Monte : Cristo; up to ihe Frsser river went a suuuuug ujuu, every, uieiuucr ui ' which imagined himself a Dives, and came back a Lazarus; not a yeat has elapsed since the discovery of gold on this coast that there has not been one-or more stampedes to "the rich est gold fields in the world." And wnat naa oeen tne resuitr listen 10 the tales of the innumerable host of the disappointed the same tale that will be told when these sanguine treasure-hunters return from the Clondvke the story of Fraser river; the record of Cariboo ; the disheort er.ing narrations of "survivors." Klickitat Agriculturist. IT MUST BE MUTUAL. There is do doubt but that Canada intends to enforce the alien law, or attempt to, not only to keep citizens of the United States out of the Clon dyke, but also out of all British Col umbia and the Northwest territory. This she has on undoubted right to do. At the same time this country has the right to retaliate and should do so. Canadians in ibis country have every righ a citizen has, with the exception of voting. No .one objects to this, but at the same time this action must be met in a spirit' of fairness. The arrangement must not be all one sided. Of course this government would not, perhaps could not, under the treaties legislate against any particu lar nation, but it can legislate against all, and should Canada's action re sult in the prevention of foreigners acquiring or owning mines, or inter ests therein, the loss of all the gold" in the Clondyke would be a trifle compared to the mines that wonld in a" few' years be saved to United States citizens. . Canada has received much from the United States, and it has received but little from Canada. The fairy tale, gotten up by one "TTTT 1 . . . w eare, manager or presiaenc or a transportation company, about a plot being laid by Chinese pirates to at- . W J U 4..MAH I.J ' .1. vault auu i uu a akcauicr iaueu wim gold coming from the Yukon, is the latest picturesque, advertisement of the said transportation company. News of the Clondykeos only a con pie of weeks old here, and has cer- tainly not yet reacneq tne ignorant uurues ui vuina.- jxur uu uiuse vui nese pirates know anything of the routes by which the gold is sent out. The whole story is fishy, and to the minds of sensible people, whose intel- ligence has not gone summering op to 120 in the shade, would serve to throw discredit on some of the ; stories, While ; the Clondyke is undoubtedly rich, it is also undoubtedly of limited area and all located last year., c The Steamship and transportation com panies are ' making a big haul, and they- will make another bringing what is left of the crowd back. '.That vaat sums will be taken from the ground of Alaska no one will deny. but it will be hundreds of years be fore all of it is even found., Weare evident'y had it bad when a horde of Chinese pirates got inside of bis dream tank. ' , ' After all there are some places more dangerous than Alaska. . Harry Gauldier made a siakc in the Clon dyke, and to celebrate the event went to New Yoik City, being tbe first of the oewlv rich to tackle the sinful East. Ho very wisely put most of bis money away and started out with $200 in Ins pocket to see what there was to see. In the law less Clondyke he would have been safe with all bis money on him, but in less than two hours after bis start in the reform-ruled city of New York be was beaten into insensibil ity and robbed of his money. The borean blasts of the Cbilcat pass and the swirling waters of White Horse rapids are less dangerous to tho hardy miner than the foaming beer glass and the human hyenas of civilization The coal mine operators se ;m dis posed to make some concessions, but they are of a nature that they should have been conceded ". long ago, or the things complained of should never nave been establishei. , une of"lhese is the doing away with the company stores, and ; the other the guaranteeing of honest weights. It is monstrous that with the peon wages paid tLe coal miners that the operators .should have still further reduced the pittance paid them by cheating them in weights. Whether enough will be conceded to avoid more serious trouble remains lo be seen, but tne chances of tnere being bloodshed before a settlement is reached, are yet very good. The fatal accident on Mt. Rainier that cost .Professor S. E. McClure his life Wednesday, should be . a warning to mountain climbers not to attempt the climbing of snow peaks without a. competent guide. Mc Clure came to his death by losing the trail, just as the Portland . man did a short time ago on Mt. Hood With a competent guide neither of these accidents would have occurred. Even the United States govern ment has grown wild on the Clon dyke, and will send a warship to convoy the steamer . Portland from the Yukon. ; The owners of the Port land have represented to the govern ment that Chinese pirates have' con cocted a plot t6 capture the Portland with her alleged cargo of $2,000,000 worth of gold, and the official suck ers at Washington have taken the bait. It is true that the Chinese at one time knew more about the sail ing dates of the Portland than any one except - the owners of the old smuggler; but it is preposterous to even presume, thai the' Chinese pirates know anything about the dis covery of the CIondyke. Mr. Weare ha s 'succeeded in getting a further advertisement of bis transportation line, for which the government, do donbt, has his sincere thanks. The grand total made by trifles is something astounding when one be gins to make calculations concerning them. For instance, theie- are 75, 000,000 people in the United States. The expenditure by each of these persons of one cent would make the SDUg sum of $750,000. Basing its calculations on this fact, the New Orleans ' Picayune makes some esti mates as to what causes hard "times. It will be seen from the above that the curtailing, of expenses, amount ing to five cents a day, by each per son in the United States, would stop the expenditure of $1,369,750,000. This alone taken from the volume of business of the country would cause hard times. ' ' " ' .! - The , correspondent of the Enst Oregonian, on . his way to Alaska, writes that .paper from Astoria, and shows his fitness for . the position by saying in closing his letter:. "Late reports are to the effect that no one is safe unless he has enough for one vear.' He must also have a familiar ity with boating on mountain streams. The passage over the Dyea route is extremely dangerous." As the newspapers of the coast have - been filled with these statements since the beginning of the excitement, one is forced into admiration of the perspi cacity of tho correspondent who caught on so . readily. We really think be has missed hts calling, for in the realms of ancient history he would prove a bright and shining light, '. ' " ' ' " ' ', ; WHAT IS RIOUTT The study of finance is well calcu lated to cause dissenting opinions and diametrically, opposite conclu sions, according to which foot the student gets foremost. For instance, an exchange makes some estimates as to the vast amount cf money- put in circulation by parties leaving for the Clondyke. It estimates that 10, 000 people have already started, and that each haa spent $500. This, it thinks, has improved the trade of the whole country, and yet 10,000 peo ple spending $500 each would put in circulation only $5,000,000. It does not seem reasonable to suppose that this would cause any great rush of business, since it . would mean only seven cents apiece for the people of the United States. - : ' - ; On the other hand it is expected the Clondyke will produce $50,000, 000 Dext year, or about seventy cents per' capita for the people of the United States.. A southern paper estimates that the saving of a cent a day," by eveiy person in the United Slates would amount to more than five times this sum, or about $270,- 000,000 in a year,' while our esti mate yesterday shows that the cur tailing of expenses by every family in the United States in the sum of twenty-five cents a day, or five cents each, would amount to, in round numbers, $1,400,000,000, a sum near ly equal to all the money in the United Spates. One person figures that the saving of a cent a day will make the nation prosperous; another that the saving of five times as much will paralyze business. One con cludes that saving makes prosperity; the other that squandering makes prosperity. And there you are. " WITS . A LITTLE SALT. Mr. P. J. Jennings, according to the Oregonian, has a small Clondyke of bis own in the Excelsior district, Douglas county. He has kept the yielfe of the mine quiet,' because he bad to perfect the title, but now that this is done, he - unbosoms himself. He says that he went to work Febru ary 5th last, with three men and a hand mortar and - working the de composed quartz and porphyry with rockers, and that they averaged $300 per day ' during the .month, some days getting $800 or $900, and but of one pan $400. We( really believe Mr. Jennings has a ciniature Clondyke, or at least that he cut the cloth for his story over a Clondyke pattern. It has many of the sinuosities of a Yukon tale, and some of the discrepancies that ' will creep ; into such, tales. Where the Alaska symptoms crop out is in the statement.that notwithstand ing this big body of ore which paid nearly $100 a day to the man with a rocker and a hand mortar, Mr. Jennings sold a one-fifth interest to Chicago people for $25,000, an amount equal, according to the out put from the rockers, about one day's run with a five stamp quartz mill. The story is strong enough, but un fortunately the mine is not far enough away or difficult enough of access to create any excitement In other words the tale has not traveled far enough to get a proper polish. - - The dispatches show that a regular panic prevails in Havana' since : the insurgents made their successful at tack on the suburbs. Citizens who have heretofore .been : confident of Spain's ultimate success, are fleeing from' the city, Virtually confessing that the cause of Spain is lost, and the liberty of Cuba, only a .question of a short timer; It may be possible that Cubans themselves 'will settle the question of Cuban independence without interference by the- United States. Whether it does or not, it Is possible that Spain will force a war with this country, laying the blame for Cuban success upon us. This will be done solely for the : purpose of solidifying Spain and ' preventing the overthrow of the monarchy.- , Several of our exchanges note that harvest hands are -scarce and : wages higher on . account of the Clondyke rush. As tew of the grain-raising counties of Oregon have furnished more than a dozen Clondykers, and as most of these wore men who never worked in the harvest fields, it is fair to presume, that the corner grocery, where fabulous wealth may be talked about and wild day dreams indulged in, has a greater attraction for some people , than, the i. golden, but hot, grain fields. Of ' one thousand in dustrious men who stay at home and another thousand who go to the gold fields, the former collectively will have more money at the end of the year than the latter. " - " ' Mr.. Scott, of the Oregonian, aud Mr. D. P. Thompson are comparing records. Ssott says Thompson was a director, of the 1 Portland Savings Bank when it broke, and asks that gentleman, while delivering his lec tures on finance, to explain bis theo ries of finance in connection there with. Mr. Thompson denies being such director. Mr. Thompson charges Mr; Scott ' with, being a director of the . Oregon National Bank at the time it failed. Scott denies being such director. Each has invited the other; to "produce the ' books." Honors seem to be easy. .' ; " ' "Jimmy tne Diver," who returned to Tacoma . from the . Clondyke a week or" two ago, is having a fine time with his money, and, if reports are true, will be ready to be grub staked again long before spring. - He amuses himself by giving away nug gets, and imagines the inexhaustible health .of the Incas is his. Bret Hartc describes the career -of just such a character in the tale of "Mil ton Perkins, late an owner, in White Pine." , ' . The Pioneer Fireproof construc tion ' plant at Ottawa, Illinois, the largest of its kind in the world, was partly - destroyed ' by ' fire Sunday. This'is one of the sarcasms of cir cumstances, "only equaled ' by the burniDg several years ago of the fac tory that manufactured the hand gren ades for extinguishing fires, at which time it was stated more than a mill ion of the grenades were burned. ' When -Governor Tanner of Jlli nois appeared in the parade at Chi cago upon the unveiling of the Logan monument, he was greeted every where with hisses and cries of "Allen bill!" "Gas bill" - "Yerkes,".. etc. Chicago people think . the governor sold out to the. street-car and gas trusts. There is some hope for American institutions yet. : If the Oregonian and Telegram would give the country a rest on the gold standard and ' Billy Bryan it would be appreciated. " We have the sold standard, and will continue to have it indefinitely, and as for Bryan, why continue to. write daily his obit uary ? , ' ' ' ' - ' Fifty years ago the United States compelled Japan to open her ports to the world, and now Japan pro poses to make the United States keep the ports of Hawaii - open. Such are the changes time in its rounds brings. : . ' Since Prof. Andree sailed away in his balloon from northern Norway, abonttwo weeks ago,nothing has been heard from him, and the 'chances are at least even that he has vanished forever from the knowledge of men. Mr. Sean Saw the Gold. ' George C Sears was in Seattle and witnessed the recent landing of the forty-five Clondyke miners irom the steamer Portland, with (700,000, and became completely carried away with tbe sight. . He states that be saw men coming down the gangplank of the 'steamer staggering under tbe loads of gold which they carried. The largest fortune brought down by any one man was $65,000, and the smallest $7000. The gold was in canvas sacks, and was quick ly removed to the express office for shipment to the mint. These sacks were rolled in the blankets of tbe own ers, and carried on their backs.' v " Mr. Sears was favored with an in spection of some of the precious metal. Tho specimens- shown ranged in size from a peai to large nuggets. There was no fine gold in the lot. Pan from $50 to several hundred were said to be com monplace events. The miners stated that winter in the Clondyke country is severe, and ' that at times a man will freeze to death almost withont real -zing what is happening, if he ia Dot careful. The first note of warning ts that be finds himself becoming drowsy; which is a well-known sign. They - also "reported that gnats and mosquitoes are . very troublesome,, and ; that they have seen strong men cry because of being so bad ly bitten by the pests. ' .: The timber was reported, to be scatter ing, and wood to make fires to thaw out the ground in the winter months ha9 to be carried a distance of a mile Or two. Oregonian. v " 'another baker mine sold. Henry Cable and Cabell Krothors Sell the California Mine for 830,000. Yesterday W. J. Connors, of Deliver, purchased of Henry Cable and John D. and F. E. Cabell the California mine, the consideration being $30,000. Mr. F. ' . Cabell informed a Demo crat reporter that the terms of the sale are that full payment is to be made in side of eighteen months, and a 10-etamp mill roust be in operating condition by Dec. 1, 1897. The gentlemen also brands as a fairy story . the statement that $1000 is to be paid each month, as stated by an evening paper, for it would at that rate take two or three years to complete the settlement, while by tbe real contract it will be settled in possi bly less than a year.". Another error by the evening sheet. so says Mr. Cabell, is that three veins are-cat' vertically. Six tunnels, from different levels, have reached one vein showing an ore chute of 800 feet or more in length, tbe vein being five to six feet wide, with a paying ore body about two feet wide.' An Act Co Prevent Forest Flree on tbe Foblio Domain. Be it enacted by tbe senate anil house of representatives of the Cnited States of America in congress assembled : ' ' That any person who shall wilfully or maliciously eet on fire, or cause to be set on fire, any timber, underbroab, or grass upon tbe public domain, or shal carelessly or negligently leave or suffer fire to burn unattended near any timber or other inflammable material, aha'!' be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, nd, upon conviction thereof in any district court of the United States having juris diction of the same, shall be fined in a sum not more than five thonsand dol lars or be imprisoned for a term of not more than two years, or both! Sec. 2. That any person who shall build a camp fire, or other fire, in or near any forest, timber, or other inflam mable material upon the public domain, shall, before breaking cam p or leaving said fire, totally extinguish ' the same. Any person failing to do so shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and, upon conviction thereof in any district court of the United States having juris diction of the same, shall be fined in a sum. not more than one thousand ' dol lars, or be imprisoned for a term of not more than one year, or both. - , . Sec. 3. - That in all cases arising under this act the fines collected shall be paid into the public school fond of the county in which tbe lands where the offense was committed are situate.. ' Approved, February 27, 1897.; CAJOLED THE JU RY. Aa Interesting Incident of a Memora- blc Lawsuit. The jury in the Martha Washington esse, a famous trial, of 40 years ago, wherein ithe captain of the steamboat Martha Washington and others were charged with burning the boat to se cure, insurance,-was chosen with diffi culty, says McClure's Magazine. Dur ing their five weeks ervice the mem bers of it were assailed on every side by the zealous feminine sympathizers of the accused. By every aTt possible to youth, beauty and wit and the reckless abandon, of lives largely spent in the companionship of adventurers were they approachedt "If you do not go into that jury room and vote 'not guilty' in an hour you will be a dead man, said the wife of the captain, confronting an aged juror' on the-staircase. ". Sprung from- an old! and respectable .-Massa chusetts family, she wps a singularly beautiful; 'brilliant,' dashing "woman. She had gone in early girlhood to the west and became enamored of the pic turesque river captain, who did not see fit io marry her and went off to Mexico and opened his gambling house on tbe Eio Grande. One dby as he sat dealing faro there his affianced- presented her self. Disguised in a man's attire and armed with a brace of pistols, she had made her way without . detection to the Eio Grande. She was a skilled, shot and could hit a dollar across a room Level ing a pistol at the recreant lover's head, she saidlin a short, sharp voice: "Marry me, or take this in-your head!" The astounded . captain ' replied: "Why, Ollie, my dear, is that you?" . The mar riage ceremony was performed , that day. ' -V--. ' Hundreds of thousands have been in duced to try Chamberlain's Cough Rem. edy by reading what it has done for others, and having tested its merits for themselves are today its warmest friends. For sale by Blakeley & Houghton. , Regulator Line Tie Dalles. Portlaiia ' and Asteria ; ' Navigation Co.' sti Regulator it Dalles City; FREIGHT AND PASSENGER LINE . ' ..' ;. " -';:' .MTWZSM . n'. The Dalles, Hood River, Cascade Locks and Port land daily, except Sunday. '. GOOD SERVICE, LOWEST RATES MM THE VALLEY ". ; on to EASTERN OREGON? Are you going 11 so, ave money and enjoy a beautiful trip oa the Colombia. The we t-bound train arrives at The DaUea in ample Ume for pafcaenpera to take the steamer, arriving In Portland in time lor the outgoing Southern and Northern tr.in; Eaat tound passengers arriving la The lales in timo to take the East-bound train. For farther information apply to J. n! HARNEY, Agent, ' urn. uAliuanAl,ura.gl,, ! ' . .. . The Dalles. Oregon - TO THE ' GIVES THE CHOICE OF TWO Transcontinental ROUTES ! GREAT NORTHERN RAILWAY. OREGON. , SHORT LINE. -VIA- Spokane Salt Lake Denver Omaha Kansas City . Minneapolis St. Paul Chicago Low Rates to all Eastern Cities OCEAN 8TBAMEK8 Leave . Portland Sverr Fle Days for . SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. For full details call on O. K A Co. s Agent at The Dalies, or address .' . W, H. HURLBURT, Gen. Pass. Apt " Portland. Oregon , A. h. MOHLEE, Vice President. - ; ', TIME CAKD. No. 4, to Spokane and Great Northern arrives at 6 p. in., leaves at 6:06 p. m. No. 2, to Pendle ton, Baker City and Union Pacific, arrives atl:15 a m., departs at 1 :20 a. m. No 8. from Snokane and Great Northern, ar rives at 8-80 a. m., departs at S:3S a.m. No. 1, from BaJnr City and Unio. Pacific, arrives at 3:55 a. m., departs at 4:00 a. m. . Nos. 23 and 24, moving east of Tbe Dalles, wilt carry passengers. No. 23 grrives at 6:30 p.m., departs at 12:45 p. m, . . , Passengers for Heppner will take train leaving here at 6:05 p. m. ORTHERN j PACIFIC RY. n : ;'':'V" ;-. n Pullman Elegent Tourist Sleeping Caxs Dining Cars , Sleeping Car. V , - ' . ST. P4HU " , MINNEAPOI.I - - , DULTJTH ' I . KAKGO GBAN0 FOB --. CKOOKSION WINNIPEG . HELENA an . BTJTTK TO Through Tiekets CHICAGO V WASHINGTON-.',- ;. I."" PHlLAtmruPHIAV i ' :' ntffTORK - BOSTON AND ALL : , POINTS EAST and SOUTH ' For Information, lime cards, maps and tickets, ' cat on or write to - . ;: . , ' - W. C. ALLAWAY. Agent, . The Dalles, Oregon A? D. CHAELTON. Aest: G. P. A., , , 255. Morrison Cor. Third. Portland Oregon SURE CURE tor PILES Itobinc ud Blind, Bleeding or Protruriinr PII-i vUld ti mm 'a DR. BQ-SAN-KO'S PILE REMEDY. Stop .u:h- Lr, ab4ro tuiHora. A positive curv. Circulars neoC fTM. PritM tils. lrulsue nail. ItU. KOAAJkMb f hilmm Pfc .