CO mm , VOL. VII. THE DALLES, WASCO COUNTY. OREGON. WEDNESDAY. AUGUST. 11. 1897. NUMBER 37. CLAIMS ALL TAKEN Clondyke Crowded With Dis appointed Gold Hunters. STARVATION IX STORE FOR MANY Wot a Single Location Within ' Mile of Da-veon City Kemalas Y to JJe Bad ISO San Francisco, Aug. 6. Speaking of ' the Clondyke output of gold, the chief clerk of the mint said : "All the gold brought to this city from the Alaskan mines will not exceed f 800, 000, and all that has been taken oat this j ear and sent to the other mints of the country will not exceed $2,000,000. The gold from that part of the country is generally from 700 to 800 fine and some ' of it rates 900, the average being- worth from $15.55 to $17 an ounce." J. C. Butler, of the Pullman Car Co, is in receipt of a letter from B. P. Tay lor, a financial broker of Seattle, few days ago Taylor received word from some men whom he sent to the Clondyke region last spring, in which tLey inform him that every claim within 150 miles of Dawson City has been taken op, and that men are rushing all over the conn try looking for locations. He says that starvation and hardship stares many of them in the face. Captain Niebaum, of the Alaska Com mercial Company, who has made a care. ful study, of the situation, fears there will be a great deal of suffering in the mining regions this spring. ' He-thinks the people going are far in excess of the supplies that have been forwarded. A letter from Hart Humber, a pros pector, dated Dawson City, June 18th just received, shows that the gold seeker needs plenty of capital. After reaching Dawson and paying the heavy doty on bis outfit, besides 30 cents a pound for getting it over Chilkoot pass, be will have to pay 25 cents a pound to get bis stuff from Dawson to the diggings. - The rush to the Clondyke gold fields is affect in k the mineowners of the mother lode in the vicinity of Sonora, Jackson and Sutter Creek, and if it con tinuee will cause the closing down of the mines in Calaveras, Amador and Tuo lumne counties, or their operation with depleted forces. In the past week 200 men have left Amador county alone for the gold fields in the north and others are preparing to follow. Some of them were hired by . mineowners in Alaska, bat many of them went on their own resources. The other counties have also sent expert miners in large numbers. An Expedition From Brooklyn. New Yobk, Aug. 6. A half dozen am bitions Brooklymtes are organizing an expedition to Alaska to search for some of the Clondyke gold. David P. Wat sons, of Brooklyn, clerk of the Repub lican general committee, is making np a party, of which he will be one, and which will leave early in February to seek fortunes in the gold fields of the north. Taeoma la Clondyke Mad. . . Tacoma, Wash., Aug. 6. Desire to rash off to the Alaska gold fields at once, witbont waiting till next spring, is in creasing all the time. Fourteen steam ers are scheduled to sail from this port between now and the 1st of September, Among those who start tomorrow is W, G. Seward, a relation of Hon. Wm. H, Seward, who effected the purchase of Alaska in 1867 for $7,500,000. Approved by Prince Henry. - . New Yobk, Aug. 6 A special to the Herald irom Alexandria quotes Prince Henry of Orleans as saying: . "I have just received the articles in the Figaro on the subject of the chal lenge sent me by the Italian officers, and I find the tone of those articles quite just. It is qnite right to state the prin- , ciple that the rights of travelers to re late, what they have seen and beard should be absolutely safeguarded. ' Leav ing aside the duelling question, as it stands apart, the Anglophile journals here grossly insult the khedive for hav- ' ing received me. We leave at once. I will accept no challenge at Marseilles on landing. We go straight to Paris." . Germany Again Protects. Washington, Aug. 6. The German government has again entered a formal protest against the application to Ger man sugar of section five of the new tariff act, by which German sugar would be taxed with a higher duty than that from other countries. VV The contention is made that the . addi tional duty imposed is in effect discrim- j nation against German sugar which is incompatible with the most favored nations rights that are secured . to Ger productions by treaties now in force and also with the provisions of the Saratoga agreement of August 22, 1891. BLOW PROGRESS AT PLTJAl CEEKK. Ulnars There Will Mot Be Easily Brought Oat. PrrrsBDEQ. Aue. 6. Whether or not the strikers will be able to get the Plum Creek men to stop work is becoming more serious Question than the strike leaders first thought. Unlike other dig' ging settlements about the Plnm Creek miners live in company houses on com pany land. The workmen do not have to leave the De Armitt property to get into the mines, and the strikers get no chance to stop them on the road. ' The wives of 20 of the campers are in the field now. They have access to the workingmen's houses, but deputies are stationed all along the property line with instructions not to allow a solitary man to enter house range. Euzene V. Debs left todav for Turtle Creek, where he speaks this evening, Before leaving the City Debs denounced Judge Jackson, of West Virginia, for is-r suing and injunction restraining bim from interfering with the Mononagh company or its employes. Debs said: "This injunction annihilates the right of peaceable assemblage and effectually suppresses free speech." To Sell Whisky to '.be Venesuelans. New Yoke. Aue. 6. The republic of Venezuela has granted a concession giv ing a substantial monopoly for the estab lishment of the distilling industry in the republic wbicb was obtained in the in terst of the American Spirits Manufac turing Company. Representatives of that company have paid a number of visits to Caracas in the last twelve months, and the company since the granting of its concession has sent one of its practical men to supervise the erec tion of a plant, all the parts of which have been assembled in this city ready for shipment. The import duty is practically prohibi tory, amoanting to about 50 cents pound equivalent to $3.80 a gallon. The concession which is for Bix years, giyes the right to bring in all the necessary plant and raw material free, It is said that ' the American Spirits Company is conducting similar negotia tions elsewhere, which, if expectations are only partly realized, will result in very large extension of the business of the company. A Michigan Tragedy. Grand Rapids, Mich., Aug. 6. Last April A. H. Dailey, of Jennison, sent 1 letter to Mayor Swift, saying be wanted a wife. Tbe letter got into the newspa pers, and as a result Dailey received 500 answers, t rora among tne otters ne se lected Mrs. Hattie M. Newton, a Chicago widow, and they were married. They quarreled and finally separated. Dailey gave his wife three days to return. The time was np at midnight last night and she refused to return. Dailey forced bis way into ber bedchamber and shot ber with a musket. Dailey was arrested, and on his way to jail was allowed to go into a saloon to drink. He slipped strychnine into bis beer and fell over dead in a few minutes, Tbe woman will recover. ' Canada's Allen Labor Law. Tohonto, Ontario, Aug. 5. Canada has begun to take means to enforce tbe alien labor law against Americans, (Jommissioner llcureary us nere on business in connection with work on the Crow's Nest Pass railway through the Rocky monntains, and he informed the Canadian Pacific railway authorities that any American laborers engaged ' for that work should be deported to their own country again. .McCreary has in structions from ' the Canadian govern ment to strictly enforce the new law. A Lynching- Prevented. Ibgn Mountain, Mich., Aug. C Ap peals of leading citizens prevented a lynching at Crystal. Falls, last nigbt. The miners employed in the eurround- ng locations are now . making threats. A report is current to the effect t that they have formed an organization and invade the village tonight for the ' pur pose of lynching Bons. Meantime it is expected Seriff Waite will take the pre caution to move the prisoner to another county. : I ' , ' Baenola Miners OnL Monongahela, Pa., ' Aug. 6. Be tween 300 and 400 striking miner march ed on the Buenola mite this morning. beaded by the Grand Army of the Re public of this place. The Buenola min ers were brought out, ana the. strikers, established a camp to see that work is not resumed. . , Tbe merchant who tells yoa he has something else as good as Hoe Cake soap is a good man to keep away from. a2-3m THE RUSH CONTINUES bteamers" Leaying Daily for Alaskan Porte. 950 ON THE STEAMER WILLAMETTE The Walla Walla Has 490, Molt Whom Are Tery Poorly Equipped for the Lone Trip. ' Seattle, Ang. 7. -"Not since the be ginning of the Clondyke rush have there been such numbers of goldhnnters in tbe city. Apparently the Btampede to the northern goldfields is now at its height. Steamers and . sailing vessels will leave nearly every day for the next ten days, and from tbe wav berths and staterooms are eagerly reserved in ad vance by the throngs of goldhunters ar riving daily from tbe East and Middle West, it is probable that all of tbe ves sels in the list will be taxed to their greatest capacity. The North American Trading & Trans portation Company has raised the rate to St. Michaels on tbe last trip north of the Portland to $1000. The Portland is to sail September 10th. In selling a man a ticket at the prices named, tbe com panv will guarantee to land bim at Dawson City on or before Jnne 15. 1898 and board bim all winter. It will also provide work at cutting cord wood at $4 per cord. The nigh rate is made De, cause of the chances of the Yukon freez ing np, compelling the company to feed the passengers all winter long at St Michaels. Tbe Queen sailed at 9 this morning with all her accommodations crowded From present indications no more tickets can be procured for St. Michaels via the steamer Humboldt after' Mon day. Nearly 200 tickets have been dis posed of already, and the company in tends to carry only 220 passengers, Tbe rush seems to be unabated, and with the Humboldt, as with all other companies, it is first come first served The schooner Loyal, which has been taking on supplies for several days, has sailed nnder command of Captain San, ger. She went heavily laden with lum ber, besides a good quantity of miners' supplies.' Captain Sanger is familiar with the Alaskan coast, and after die charging bis cargo at Sitka, will pros pect the islands of Southeastern Alaska PROTEST FROM BRITI8H COLUMBIA Gold-Seekers Disgusted With the New Mining; Regulations. Seattle, Ang. 7. A special dispatch to the Post-Intelligencer, from Victoria, B. C, says: All through British Columbia a storm of protest has been raised by the pro, mnlgation of new rnles for miners operations in the Yukon placers, and to day and yesterday the wires have been kept hot with messages urging the un, reasonable character of the laws pro. posed. .very practical mining man agrees that the ' regulations cannot be enforced by anyone of mining experi ence, for, as Chief Justice Davie advised the minister of the interior today, the 100-foot claims are ridiculously large for rich placer-ground proposition. To collect royalties on sales proposed can only provoke a collision between the miners, who will never pay such a pro portion of their output as proposed, and the miners will have the support of the public. Tbe reservation of alternate strips to the crown is also viewed here as quixotic and unworkable, and not a single miner of some forty-six inter viewed will admit that the' regulations are either practicable or justifiable by necessity of precedent." Public, meet ings have been called for Tuesday next at which the sentiment of this city will be embodied in resolutions, for presen tation to Ottawa. : i SAILIflG ' bF THE WILLAMETTE, Mine Hundred and Fifty Goldseekers Bound for the Clondyke, Tacoma, Aug. 7. The steamer Wil lamette 'sailed at 8 o'clock this evening, for Dyeaand Skaguay, Alaska. " She will carry to the nonth 950 men, bound for the Yukon country and 2000 tons of freight, all supplies, and 200 horses, be longing to the goldseekere. Two hun dred and fifty men boarded the ' Wil lamette here and took : with them - 200 tons of supplies and 57 horses. . It is estimated that 10,000 people visited the ocean wharf, where the vessel was lying today, to see the ship of the argonants and bid farewell to ' the intrepid ad venturers.' : The Willamette arrived at 9 :30 this morning from Seattle, having among others aboard 145 goldseekers from the Golden state. Visitors began pouring to the wharf early. They went in flocks and as individuals, forming a perfect stream of ; humanity, which, when ' it reached the waterfront, overran the docks, poured through tbe - warehouses and spread along the piers. Ropes were stretched to keep them, from getting the way of the stevedores and 'long shoremen who were loading tbe supplies and animals on the ship. Burros, mnles and horses were run aboard across gang' planks. Some of the more obstinate ones were lifted high in tbe air in ' port able stalls, and squealing, snorting, and kicking were dropped slowly into - the big collier's nold. ' vvnen tne ship got away , there were many pathetic scenes. . Men , who had resolutely set their hearts on a journey to beneath the Arctic skies, to seek for tunes amid hardships and possibly . pri vations, allowed the tender love of home. wiie or sweetnart and mends to ' over reach their sterner .qualities, : and, - for the time, expressions of human sympa thy forced visions of golden wealth into the background. As the ship drew away from the wharf cheer after cheer went up from (he argonauts and the ad miring multitude on the, wharf. .. Tbe big ship's upper works - were covered with prospective Clondykers, many of whom are .arrayed in ' typical frontier garb. ' ' A Poorly-Kqnipped Crowd. Pokt Townsend, Wash., Aug. 7. The steamer Walla Walla arrived this morn log from ban Francisco, with 420 pas sengers, 300 of whom are bound for Alas ka. Of the Alaska-bound passengers 120 are tourists, who will return in . ten days, while 180 are bound for the gold fields. Among tbe Walla Walla passen gers for the north were several members of the light-fingered gentry, and many watches were lifted and pockets picked. With tbe men of suspicious avocation were several women, who will accompany them to tbe Clondyke.; Many of tne prospective miners wbo arrived on -the Walla Walla are starting with less than 50 pounds of provisions. Many have not a pound of provisions, freight or change of clothes. They say they will not starve so long as there is a pound of food to work for, beg or steal. The pas sengers on the Walla Walla are the poorest equipped crowd to go north since the rush beaan. Prodnetion of Gold. , Washington, Aug. 7. Mr. Preston, director of tbe mint, estimates the gold production of the year 1896 to have been $205,000,000, of wbicb the United States contributed over $53,000,000: and for 1897, it is believed, the world's gold pro duct will reach at least $240,000,000, an increase of $35,000,000, over 1896. "That the world's net product will continue to increase for a number of years to come," says Mr. Preston, "is self-evident, as new mines will be opened up in all parts of the world, and, with the improved appliances and methods of extracting tbe gold contained in the ores, it is believed that by the close of the present century the world's product will exceed $300,000,000. . The Pension Roll. Washington, Aug. 7. The pension roll of the United States has almost reached the 1,000,000 mark. Commis sioner .fcvans has lust issued a state ment, showing that at the beginning of this fiscal year the pensioners numbered 983,918, an increase of 12.S50 for tbe past year. During the year 50,101 new pen sions were granted and 3971 persons were restored to tbe rolls. Old age and disease, however, is working inroads into tbe list, for there were 31,960 deaths during the year.' Other sources of loss were 1074, from remarriage of widows ; 1845 orphans attained majority; 2683 failures to claim pensions, and 3560 losses from unrecorded causes. A Fugitive From Justice Shot. New Orleans, Aug.1 9. Ex-Secre tary of State Will A. Strong, who is now serving in Ouchita' parish as deputy sheriff, shot and mortally wounded A. B. Cook on the street at Monroe this morn ing. "Cook is a fugitive from justice, and Strong arrested bim. While the warrant was being read to bim Cook made a dash for liberty, but Strong ran after bim for two squares, and : then fired, bringing bim down, mortally wounded. 1 ' A Negro Murderer Lynched. '' Vicksbdeg, Miss., Aug 9. John Gor don, tbe Negro wbo murdered William Allen at Brunswick July 15th, by club bing him with a gun barrel, and wbo was captured in Louisiana yesterday, was hanged by lynchers last night. . Bucauen'a Arnica oalve.' The best salve in the world for cuts, bruises, sores, ulcers, Bait rheum, fevei sores, tetter, chapped handB, chilblains, corns, and all skin eruption", and posi tively cures piles, or no pay . required It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfac tion, or monev refunded. . Price 25 cents per box. For sale Jy Blakeley and Houghton, druggists. HIS LIFE A FORFEIT Anarchists Ordered the Kill ing of Premier Canovas. PIDAL TO SUCCEED TBE PREMIER He Will Probably Be Appointed After . the Usual Mine-Days' Period of Mourning- Has Elapsed. Madrid, Aug. 9. The assassination of Prime Minister Senor Canovas del Castil'.o, who was shot and killed by an Italian anarchist, Whose name is be, lieved to be Michelo Angeline Golli, at tbe baths of Santa Agueda, yesterday afternoon, was undonbtedly cold- blooded and premeditated. Golli deliberately watched for an opportunity to kill the Spanish statesman, and he only fired when he bad no chance of missing. : In fact, the assassin, who was arreated al most immediately when the premier fell dead at the feet of his wife,' declared as much to the examining magistrate. Further details of the assassination show that Senor Canovas del Castillo and his wife were present yesterday morning at tbe celebration of mass in tbe chapel attached to the baths. After mass the premier was reading and con-t versing with some reporters when' tbe assassin approached and fired three shots at him with a revolver, hitting him in the forehead, chest and left ear. Tbe wounded man fell to the ground, crying, "Assassin ; long live Spain!" The premier was carried to his room and expired at 1 :30 p. m., after extreme enction had been administered -to bim by a priest of the Dominican order. The murderer was immediately seized by the people in the vicinity, and would have been killed had it not been for tbe protection of the civil guards. . The prisoner, who declared he bad killed the premier, "in accomplishment of a just vengeance," gave the name of Rinaldi and claimed the . deed was the outcome of an extensive anarchist conspiracy, Later, however, ths assassin confessed his real name was Michelo Angeline Golli, that he was twenty-six years of age, a native of Boggi, near Naples, and left Italy and came to Spain in 1896. After reaching Spain Golli, according to his confession, resided at Barcelona and participated in the doings of various -anarchist societies of that place and vi cinity. After sojourning at "Barcelona for some time, Golli visited France and Belgium and returned to Spain in July last.. After his return the anarchists seemed to have completed their plana for the as sassination of the' prime minister. He left Madrid for Santa Agueda at the same time as Senor Canovas del Castillo and waited an opportunity to assassin ate the statesman. He says he is satis fied with having done "his duty" and asserts be has no personal grudge against the premier, and was merely obeying orders received from bis superiors in the secret society to which be belonged. He frankly : professes anarchist doctrine, says be was sentenced in 1895 to eighteen months' imprisonment in jail at Lucera, Italy, and claims he escaped from there to Marseilles, from which port be made his way to. Paris. - Senora Canovas, wife of the premier. wbo was but a short distance from ber husband when tbe crime was committed, bitterly reproached the murderer for his crime. - UolU in reply ,to tne agonizing words of the distracted wife, said : . . . "I respect you because you are an honorable lady, but I have done my duty, and I am now easy in mind, for I have avenged my friends and brothers of Mont Juices." ' - -., Mont Juices is the' fortress of Barce lona, outside of which anarchists who have been sentenced to death for recent outrages have been executed by being shot in the back. The'anarchists re cently executed outside Mont Juices were tbe last batch of friends who, were guilty of throwing a bomb on the occa sion of the Corpus Christi celebration last year. Twelve persons "were in stantly killed' and ' about fifty others, several of whom , have since, died from their wounds,, were injured. , For this crime twenty-six anarchists were sen tenced to death. " " WILL EBCEIVB HO PAY. The Rew York and Cleveland Company .... v ' j. : so Declares. :, ' Pittsburg, Aug. 9. Ail the miners of the New York & Cleveland Gas Com pany, who are still at work, were paid to day, but those who struck did - not re ceive any money, the company insisting upon tbe terms of the contract by which the men agreed to forfeit all reserve in isL;"'-? Ej Absolutely Pure Celebrated for its great leavening strength and healthfulncsa. Assures tbe food Kgninst alum ' and all forms of adulteration common to the cheap brands. , Royal Bakihq Fowdeb Co. .New Yobk. case they quit work. All the miners who can give . a reasonable excuse for attending the meetings , will . be paid. The company has the names of all the men who took part in any of the dem onstrations. Unless they can give a satisfactory explanation they will get no money. , Owing to the carelessness of the guard about the Sandy creek mine, 40 - men - went into tbe mine this morning, and are now at work. Last week there' were ' but three men at work. ' Some of the details for the march on the mines in West Moreland county and Pennsylvania have been arranged It will probably be made. Tuesday. It ' is intended to take a small army of ' men from Pittsburg district and march to the mines that are in operation. 'Sev eral brass bands have been engaged. Tbe strike is begining to cause hunger among the miners' families along the Wheeling division and in the Panhandle district. ' At the mines where company stores have been in operation the desti tution is more marked. . . An application for an injunction to re strain tbe . miners from congregating near the mines of the Ntw York & -Cleveland Gas Coal Company,' which was to have been- filed in tbe United States court today on behalf of non-resident stockholders of the company, had not been presented to court up to ad- . jonrnment at noon. . Her Boy Was Ugly So She Killed Him. Quitman, Ga., Aug. 9. Fisherman discovered the body of a 6-year-old boy floating on the surface of a pond near this place and'later identified it as the : son of Mrs. Idella Powell Banks, a widow owning a farm just outside of Quitman. The actions of the mother when noti fied of tbe discovery aroused the sus picions of tbe coroner and she was sub- sequently arrested and placed in jail. Here she was visited by a minister, . to whom she confessed 'having murdered ' ber child. The reason she gave was that be was too ugly to be permitted to . live, and was a constant source ; of em barrassment to her on that account.' She said that she walked by the pond, and when she tried to push him in. he resisted with all bis feeble strength. She has broken down completely in jail. and says she wants to be hanged as soon as possible. " ,- . Tbe child's face was disfigured by a birthmark. From Mew York to Alaska. New York,, Aug. 9. The first ship sailing from New York diiect to the Clondyke gold fields is advertised to leave about August 21st. It is to be sent by the New York & Alaska Gold 'Ex ploring & Trading Company. ; The com has has not yet selected its vessel, but it promises to dispatch a steamship capable of carrying 200 passengers and 1500 tons of freight. It says the ship will make the voyage around Cape Horn to Juneau in 50 pr 60 davs. More than 50 names have been . listed for the voyage. Not more than 200 pas sengers will be allowed to embark. , The cost per passenger, including bTth, meals and transportation of 500 pounds of baggage direct to Juneau is to be $175v More Steamers for Alaska. ' . San EbanciscOj Aug. 9. Two steam ers will sail for the north - to day with their carrying capacity taxed to the ut most. The Umatilla will be sent to Seat tle by the. Pacific Coast Steamship Com pany, and the South Coast will be also dispatched. The Umatilla will ' take away about 400 passengers and transfer, them to the City of Topeka at some Paget sound port. -..",' . :' Although the South Coast is not yet loaded she Is very low in the water, and seafaring: men say that with her load In : a rough sea she will have great difficulty ; in getting through. - ' . , : . ' ; -. ' Subscribe for The Chronicle.