THE DALLES WEEKLY CHRONICLE, WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 18. 1897. Talking About Shoes 2 o Travel in Style 7 9 o Traveling Bags Giis &. A Complete Line of Leather end "Wicker Grips. Traveling- Bags and Telescopes Leather Grips at from $1.50 to 7.50 Wicker Grips at from 50 to 1.25 Wicker Telescopes at from 30 to 75 These goods are displayed in our furnishing goods window.! ... ALL GOODS MARKED IN PLAIN FIGURES. o We have decided to close out our entire line of Ladies' Ox-Blood and Tan Laee and Button Shoes, p That sell regularly for from $3 to $5, at $2.50 ... &'R;;PIR x - Until sold out. They will not last .long at this price, A and first comers have first choice. Displayed in f center window. . n O "" ifcssJSJ i j is i J if ' ; f : PEASE & MAYS 3 The Weekly Ghf oniele. THE DALLKst, - . OBIOON OFFICIAL PAPER OF WA8CO COUNTY. Published in tico and Saturday- parts, on Wednesdays SUBSCRIPTION BATES. BT XIII., PO8TA0B PREPAID, IN ADVAKCK. One year 1 5? -1X Three monthH 60 Advertising rates reasonable, and made known on application. Address all communications to "TIIF CHRON ICLE," The Dalles, Oregon. then prosperity is advancing with giant strides upon Skamania county.' Before the Board of Equalization, 'Wednesday, agents of the Oregon Lumber Company insisted' that the east side flame at Chenowith was practically of no value, and induced the Board to cut down the assessment from $1500 to $700 but the very next day the price of that same j flame jumped to $4000, as evidenced by a letter from them to a would be purchas 1 er. Surely prosperity is coming. Ska ! mania Pioneer. Telephone No. 1. LOCAL BREVITIES. Saturday's Daily. "Oh, hear my pleal" the lover cried, "And, II you do not yield, I'll pull my freight direct and straight For Klondike's frozen field. Mayhap in that bleak atmosphere, I'll perish with the cold, Or yet 1 may come back some day, With barrels full of gold!" "Go get the gold," she said, "and when You's got it, tackle me again." . Denver Post. The telephone to Goldendale was com plete this week. Wheat took a jump in Chicago Thurs- . day from 81 to 84. It Is rumored that President Chap man, of the state university, has re signed. Senator McBride is not in Portland, as has been reported, but is tinder his ' physician's care in New .York City. ' Umatilla county will send an exhibit to the Spokane fruit fair. Wasco county would be benefited by following this ex ample. The city recorder's office, that can usually be depended on for a small local or two, has gone back on the newspaper fraternity, and, like every other source of news, has run dry. ' The Populists of Ohio, by an over whelming vote at their recent state con vention, refused to fuse with the De mocracy, and nominated a full state ticket with "Keepoff-the-Grass" Coxey for governor. ' The Ohio Populists are getting particular about their associates. 'Chauncey Depew has written a "poem." As one peruses its baiting lines, doubt is forced into ones mind ' concerning his ability as an after din ner speaker, but perhaps Chauncey - wasn't full of champagne when be wrote the poem. He. certainly wasn't fall of ideas. .. It would be interesting as an experi ment to hold one of the D. P. & A. IT. " steamets here ail day, just to see at what hour the last passenger would go trot ting down the incline with a grip in one . band and a wildly waving handkerchief in the other. We have nickles that say the last straggler would hot be at the dock before dark. Three families arrived at Eugene Mon day evening, having come all the way from Nebraska by the wagon route. They left their old borne May 5tb, and hence made the drive across the plains in three months: ' '. Their horses and wagons showed the effect of their long journey across the plains. These people have come to cast their lot in Oregon, and expect to locate west of Eugene. If advance in the price of property is an indication of approaching good times Mr. Ezra ' Campbell, of Columbia county, has invented a device to fasten on the thresher by means of which all weeds and wild oats are completely re moved from grain. The arrangement is said to work to perfection, and saves a great deal of labor as well as money. It is a very simple contrivance, and he has had a large cumber of them manu factured and sold during the past two weeks. . 1 Jotin Thomas, the prospector who en gaged in a pitched battle in a crowded street at Spokane with the police Toes day afternoon, died at 9 o'clock Thurs- day night from bullet wounds received in the fight. O'.e Oleson, one of his vic tims, lies in a precarious condition with a fighting show for life. C. A. Day is, who received one of Thomas' ballets in the shoulder, Is doing well, and will be out in a week. A Mrs. Davis of Virginia, whose first child was puny and died, vowed she would spend her life in devotions if an other child should be spared to her, Upon its birth she began to pray for it to grow, and her prayers were so power ful that .in two months it weighed fifty pounds, in two years 103 pounds, and at 13 years 584 pounds. A sister aged 9 weighs S80, and another daintv little sister, aged 7, weighs 286 pounds. - And now comes a man named Webb, who has been up to Dyea - and insists that the name of the. new landing near that town is Shkagway and not Skaguay. We have patiently followed the vagaries of the Klondike spell, but we do not propose to stand this spelling by ear of every man anxious to see his name in print. Skaguay it was and Skaguay it shall remain for us. We knew a girl back in Illinois whose ; name was Swigart, bat her parents spelled it Schweigckhardt and she. stuck to it, until she married a - banker . named Fansnansen. Plain Skaguay is worth staying with. - , . " The first consignment of winter wheat from Latah, Idaho, was made Monday by J. G. White & Co. A portion of the consignment, 1935 bushels, was grown on the A. A. Bell farm, one mile east of Latah. The wheat was grown on thirty- five acres, and yielded over filty-five bushels to the acre. This - wheat is known as the , Jones Winter Fife, and averaged 143 pounds to the sack. - Local grain merchants say it is the finest qual ity they ever saw. . . ' John Crow, a prominent farmer on the Umatilla reservation, met with a bad accident Wedneeday morning at the Charley Warner ranch, five miles from Pendleton. . He was driving a young horse, which was wild and restless, and finally ran away 'with its mate. . The wagon went into a ditch and upset, throwing Mr. Crow benecth the wheels. They ran over bis shoulders and face, breaking his collar-bone in two places. His face was badly scratched and peeled. ' ; ; Monday's Daily. ' .; The. thermometer yesterday stood at just 100 and today it went up to 102. At 3 :30 it was standing at 100. W. C. Allaway has found a pair of gold-rimmed spectacles, which the owner can get by calling on him. - The ewja of section 34, township 2 north of. range 14 east, was sold by the sheriff today to satisfy a judgment ob tained by Ann E. . Vanatta against Al bert and Mary Kuykendall and Grace P, and George W. Buchanan, loe prop erty was purchased by the plaintiff. Mr. Wm. Chambers came up from Portland yesterday and will have charge of the work of putting the Bteam heater in Pease & Mays store. We beg oar readers' pardon for mentioning steam heaters with the thermometer trying to lift Its top off, but items are scarce and this has to go. - ' "I suppose," remarked the sarcastic housewife, "that in the coarse of time ice will be worth as much as diamonds." "Well," replied the iceman, reflectively, "diamonds are pretty good in their way, but you can't rely on their melting down so as to keep np the steady demand." Washington Star. C. W. Stone, manager of the M. C. Stone Jewelry Co., leaves tonight for Wasco, taking with him the finest stock of jewelry ever shown in - Sherman county. Mr. Stone is an expert, thor oughly reliable, and our neighbors in Sherman may rest assured that they will find his goods just as he represents them. .' ' - Wheat has stiffened here considerably and today 75. cents was freely offered. The price seems to be going up steadily and it would be no surprising thing to see it yet go to a dollar a bushel. .The price is assured to be not less than 75 cents, and the result of the harvest in this country and Europe will determine the price. The highest bowling scores last week at the Commercial Club alley were: Monday, F. P. Mays 61 ; Tuesday, M. A. Robin eon 53; Wednesday, Vic Schimdt 49; Thursday, P. DeHnff48; Friday, V? Schmidt 40; Saturday, M. A. Robinson. 47; Sunday, G. Mays 53. . The O. R. & N. Co.'s boats will from and after August 11th make six trips weekly to Lewiston. The steamer Al mota will alternate with the Lewiston in the transportation of - the increasing freight. The river traffic has greatly increased, and the year's business will be double any other year in the history of the country. The funeral of Mrs. Christina Gosser took place" yesterday afternoon at 3 o'clock from the family residence, and, though the heat was almost unbearable, a large concourse of friends gathered to pay their-last tribute to one who had the reputation of being "not only the best of mothers, but a neighbor and friend who was every ready to do some act of kindness. .Saturday evening the 10-year-old eon of Oscar Angell, who lives on 8-Mile, while shooting blackbirds with an old shotgun, met with an accident that came near being fatal, and which will leave him badly- disfigured for life. Either from weakness of the gun barrel or from overloading, the gun burst, and a piece of the metal struck the boy in the face, tearing away the upper teeth or nearly all of them, all the front ; lower teeth, the end of the tongue and both lips. He was brought into town early Sunday morning and Dr. Hollister put him in ae good shape as possible.; .Barring un- forseen complications, the boy will re cover. '' :"', Word waB brought to town this room ing that F W. L. Skibbe's father, who lives with Mr. Brune on the other side of the Colombia,? went bunting yester day morning and has not been seen since-. .Search was begun for him yes terday evening, and this morning at daylight it was renewed, the whole neighborhood engaging in it. It is feared that be has met with an accident caus ing his death.' . , v - A carious accident occurred nesr Pome roy one night last week, daring a light ning and thunder storm. 'A-horse frightened by the noise and v flash of light, was so scared a mile from that place, on Rabe Bender's farm, that he struck a pole in his flight and it ran en tirely through him from -the shoulder to the hip,' and broke off in the wound. No one eaw the accident, but ' death must have been instantaneous. .'.' Walla Walla is taking a deep interest in the Spokane fruit fair, and Saturday those in charge selected a. "Goddess of Plenty" for- the occasion Miss Rose Bla- lock, daughter of Dr. Blalock; being chosen unanimously. That might be done in Walla Walla, but in The Dalles there is such a plenty of fair divinities that a selection could not be made un less as an evidence of good faith we Bhould send at least a hundred. ' Tuesday's Daily. t Baker county produced more gold last year than the Klondike, and there was no rush either. "Far fetched and dear bought pleases the ladies," also the miners. ' - : Ine fruit shipments are increasing steadily, prunes being the staple just now. Prices have kept up pretty well, bat as the shipments reach their best, it is probable lower prices will prevail. The duel between Prince Henry and the Italian count had some amusing features. The dispatches state that the swords used had been rubbed with an anti-septic solution, so that if either got scratched there would be no danger. St. Mary's Academy for young ladies and St. Joseph's school for boys, opens August 30,h for ths fall term. This is one of the best private schools in the state, and Its liberal patronage shews that the public are familiar with this fact. The wool-buvers inform us that less than half a million pounds of the wool received here now remains in first bands, and that most of this is below the aver age in quality, the best lots having been sold. There are some choice lots yet the growers are "holding for better prices. For four weeks the name of Joe Er hart ornamented the board at the Uma tilla house bowling alleys, as being the holder of the highest score, 61. Satur day bis name came down and that of H. Maetz took its place, he-having raised Earhart's score one point, and the rec ord is now 62. ' A dispatch from Tacoma says the Klondike rush is abating, and that in quires for tickets is falling off. And yet, in spite oi toe reports that - not 20 per cent of those now at Dyea and Skaguay will get across the mountains this win ter, hundreds are still going, and others will continue to go as long as the steam ers run. The Paget Sound University Clef Club will give a music and literary en tertainment, nnder the auspices of the Ep worth League, in Jbe M. E. church on Wednesday evening, September 1st, Miss Harriet E. Caugbran, instructor in elocution and oratory of the university, will give humorous, dramatic and pa thetic readings. .. wasmngton politicians are stirred up over the recent sale of the Seattle Post Intelligencer, each wondering who the purchaser is and what course the paper will pursue. The Ledger says it can set all doubts at rest-rand that Levi An- keny of Walla Walla has bought the paper, and intends to use it to further his desire to get into the senate. The weather was unreasonably hot yesterday, but it was -what the hop growers the other side of the mountains wanted, as it killed the pests that infest their vines. As it very accommodating ly beta on until the wheat was all ma tured, there is no kick coming. We have the crops and we have the prices, and by jingo -we will have the money too. Today the fcore at the Umatilla House bowling alley was again broken. H. Maetz held the record until this morn ing, with 62. but Mr. C Porter put it 3 points higher and now holds the cham pionship with 65. , The ecore for last week was: Monday, Everding, 49; Tuesday, Blew, 53; Wednesday, Maetz, 56; Thursday. Throup, 49; Friday, Maetz, 62, and Saturday, Champlin, 46. Around the paper mill in Lebanon is the busieet place in all of Linn county just at this time.. There are sixty men at work on the big straw stack, and over 100 wagon loads of straw, that will average ovar 4000 pounds per load, are unloaded every day. The paper mill is certainly a great thing for Lebanon, and pays out many thousands of dollars each year to the laboring men of that place. '. v Sheriff Jackson of Tillamook county did ' not hand in his resignation upon leaving for the Klondike, but left the matter for the county court to adjust. The law provides that when an officer ehall remove from the state, county or district in which his office" is'eitnated, the same shall be deemed vacant, and the county:, couft is given power to fill the vacancy in ihie sheriff's office when one occurs. -" -' The Klondike -craze caused . J. H. Jackson, sheriff of Tillamook county.to reeigrr his office. Surely there mast be something "powerful fetching" In that disease. - - , . " :- A story reached Chehalis from Cen tralia last week to the effect that Editor Gavitt, of the Centralia News, had found a fabulously rich gold mine near Lthat town. Commissioner Degeller told the Nagget last week that Gavitt bad shown him. a sample of free milling ore containing gold in flakes and layers, and asserting that he found the mineral a few miles from Centralia. It was re ported that George Rhodes make an assay of the stuff, which showed that it would yield $60,000 to the ton. . . A It Is At Dyea. , . .- Mr. George L Fish, a prominent gro cer of Oakland, California, who returned on the steamer Elder from Dyea, gives a very plain and concise statement of con ditions there. Among other things, he says? ' -. . "You can form a faint idea of the ex tent of the present freight blockade up there when I tell you that when we teft there were strewn along the beach, on the rocks, and in the two camps of Skag uay and Dyea, not lees than between 4000 and 5000 tons of outfits and mer chandise, all waiting transportation to the Yukon. As 4 result of this, there is no doubt that fully 80 per cent of the people now at the pass will be compelled to remain there until spring. From now on the weather will be rainy and until the river and ground freeze the roads, by reason of mud, will be almost impas sable. AH this has discouraged a great many woold-be-gold-hantere, in conse quence of which outfits in abundance at Dyea can be purchased today from 30 to 40 cents on the dollar. When I was there flour was being offered at 50 to 75 cents a sack, beans as low as 75 cents a sack, and bacon went begging at from 8 to 10 cents a pound. These are offered by people eager to get rid of the surplus goods, in order to avoid the heavy tax of transportation, which is beyond their limited means. This slaughter of ex pensive outfits is the result of some of the following exorbitant charges: First, it costs $5 a ton to land the goods at either Dyea or Skaguay from the rocks where left by the steamers ; . from the shore to the mainland another $5 a ton is taxed ; from the. settlement of either Dyea or Skaguay to the head of naviga tion on the Dyea or Skaguay creeks an-' other levy tf from $6 to $10 a ton, and over the Dyea pass, the grand hold-up when I was there, was $400 a ton, with the White paes not "yet ready for busi- FROM SKAGUAY TOWN. iohn Parrot Writes HI Opinion of tks - Existing- Conditions. ness.' An Oft-Told Tale. When Johq Allen of Willow creek re turned to his home from a trip to the timber last Wednesday, he found a note in his wife's handwriting saying that although she had nothing particular against him; she bad made op her mind to have a change and had left him for good, adding that she had taken the boy along (the youngest in a family of three) and'wonld raise him for his father and send him back when he grew up to be of any help. Mr. Allen discovered later that the fellow with whom Mrs.' Allen eloped is a freighter named Chamberlin, but from whence he came ie not .known at this writing.' It is known, however, that the elopers started northward tow ard The Dalles, and at last accounts the injured husband was following their trail with blood in bis eye and a big Smith & Wesson in convenient reach of the hand he shoots with; . Parties knowing Mrs. Allen are great ly surprised at her elopement. She was generally known as a kind, good-hearted woman, if somewhat rough in manner, and it was the common opinion that she and her huBband got along together as agreeably as the average married cou- ple.-s-Crook County Journal.'" Fatal Fire at Wasco. from Wasco to the Ore date of Sunday, August A dispatch gonian, under 15th, 6ays: Last night, about midnight, fire broke out in a sleeping-tent in which the small children of Mr. C. Hacks' family were Bleeping. One little one, about 6 years old, was burned until only the charred trunk remained. . The fire originated from a lighted candle which was allowed to barn too low. In trying to save the child, Mr. Hack was overcome -by smoke, and came near "losing bis life. His bande, feet and legs were frightfully burned. . For the Tournament. Members of the executive committee for the firemen's tournament are hereby requested to be present at the council chambers this evening at 8 o'clock, for the purpose of arranging a program. AH members of the' committee are requested to be present; also the --committees on music and advertising". , ' G. G. Giboss, (Jbiet V. t . U. Cash In Your Checks. All countv warrants registered prior to March 11, 1893, will be paid at my office. Interest ceases after Aug 5, 1897. C. L. Phillips, - '.--'- .. County Treasurer. Yellow washing powder will make your clothes the same color. Avoid this by using Soap Foam. It's pare white. - a2-3m . " ' Lyba, Aug. 7, 1897. Eoitok Chbomclk : . No pen or language can describe the excitement-of the two mining camps, Skaguay Bay and Dyea., .There, are thousands of wild excited men rushing of the other. We had to organize and pat out guards before we could get onr phip crew to work unloading. Every man wanted his goods first, and no one could get anything. It is simply im possible for -over fifty per. cent to get over the- pass before winter. Dr. Sid dall and toysell expect to 'reach Lake Bennett in about three weeks. It will take us until winter, if we have good luck,o reach Dawson City. Men are , making $20 per day here with a wheelbarrow. ,' Only one man has a team at Skaguay Bay: : He makes from $100 to $150 per day. . : ' , The George W. lllder cast anchor at Skaguay Bay at 8 :30 o'clock yesterday evening. There was a queetion as to which would suit better, the Skaguay Bay and White Pass or Dyea and Chil coot Pass. Cbilcoot is about 3500 feet above sea level and White's is about 2400 feet. The latter has a good pack trail for horses, while the farmer has only a foot trail, and is very ' steep and difficult to cross. The majority of this crew will go the Skaguay. The distance is about thirty-three miles from water to water. One horBe can pack . 150 pounds and make the round trip in fonr days. '. ' v . The shores here are shoal and our ship is anchored about half a mile from land and is unloaded by lighters. The horses are pushed overboard and have to swim ashore. The Cascade mountains are as potato hills compared wKh the scenery between Jueneau and Dyea.- The num erous glaciers can only be described by seeing them. There are several tourists on board that have been in Switzerland and the Yosemite and all other noted places in the world and they say this far surpasses anything they ever saw. I do not think we are going to have any difficulties in getting across, only we will be delayed some. This is Sun day morning and we are still on the ship, bat expect to get off today. Some outfits are not going to try to cross the pass until winter and then go over in sleighs. , There has been two men drowned since we landed here, on ac count of carelessness on their part. I will close byadvising my friends who wish to come to the Klondike to wait and start about the 1st of March and come by the ' way of 'Skaguay bay and. White's pass. John Paebott. ' CLEANED UP MEMALOOSE. Eastern Men Gather 88 Skulls, Wnlel They Are Forced to Betnrn. ' . Saturday a coupie oi umcago men, ,.) r,. n... -c.ia.j mt Allen, visited Memaloose island and pro ceeded to gather the skulls so plentiful . there. In the evening the Regulator ran ho fha Island hnf. navino nrnmiaAfl j f o to pick them up, went back three or four' miles after them. They brought on board nine sacks of skulls and bones, and were delighted with their find. ' Western people perhaps have ideas about Borne things that are not shared by the denizens of the East.- One of these is respect for the dead, and the average westerner would no more think of robbing . an Indian burying ground than he wonld of robbing that of the white man. These men. however, loaded their sacks full of . bones. ' procured "boxes and straw,' and were proceeding to pack to eighty-two Indians. Someone, in the mean while, had lodged a complaint' against them, and about 9 o'clock Night Watchman Wiley arrested them and took them before Justice ill loon, who fixed bail for their appearance Monday at $100 each. When arrested the men were disposed to think : there was' a scheme to twist a fine of $10 or $20 out of them, but when the statute was read to them and they learned that the least penalty was conbnement lor montns in the county jail, and might amount to -two years in the penitentiary, the petu lant annoyance which they had exhibit ed gave place to genuine alarm. Of ' course they did not know it was against the' law, for they went openly at, work, and this, while in . their favor, did not ; .. . rt .- T"T . excuse tneir onense. nowerer, iue affair was settled in some way, the Bkolla were returned to the island Ibis- morning, the costs were paid by the de fendants, and they were discharged. It was a lucky thing for.them that the Indians did not catch, them at their ghoulish work, or there might have been a couple of other skulls, found at . no remote date bleaching in the drifting sands of Memaloose. A few days ago Charles H. Bryant of Copalis, Chehalis county, picked op. a remarkable-looking fish at the mouth of the CopHlis river. It was about the eiae of a porgy, had enormous pectoral fins, out in place of the back fins were well developed hind legs. The mouth was beak-like, and there was a flexible horn, toothed at the end, and fitting down into a socket in the head; and at the commencement of the first dorsal fin was a horn. Acting upon advice the gentleman boxed the specimen and sent it to the curator of the Washington university.- '.' ' '