cn THE DALLES, WASCO COUNTY, OREGON. WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 15. 1897. VOL. VII. NUMBER 42. DISTRESS AT DAWSON A Terrible Tale Brought by the Steamer Cleveland. , LAWLESSNESS REIGNS SUPREME Frorialons Sufficient to Supply the Camp' Cannot Possibly Be Taken In Before the Closing of the River. Sas Frakcisco, Sept, 10. The Exam iner prints an extra edition containing the following news from Dawson City : "Otter Point. B. C, Sept. 10. The steamer Cleveland has arrived from St, Michaels, bringing with her from the Yukon gold fields a story of distress and disaster. The miners she has on board and officers in charge of the ship tell a story of disorder and distress at Daw son.. Winter baa set in at the mining city of the frozen north, and the two great stores of the place have closed their doors, for they have nothing to sell. Those who have been seeking gold most now seek for food or ttarve. v While there may be a tendency to ex aggerate the actual conditions of affairs, there can be no question that famine threatens all the venturesome men and women who made their way to the Klondike. Hundreds of nnrnly spirits are flock ing to Dawson. Threats of violence are being made on every side. Enormous prices are now being paid for food at Dawson, and it is impossible that more than foor vessels with provis ions can reach that camp before the riv er freezes. Indignation meetings, heavy with murmured threats of. vengeance, have been held at St. Michaels by those who see no hope of advancing up the river, and less of getting back to civilization. The first signs of winter are apparent on the river Ynkon , which is beginning to freeze, and in a few weeks will be closed against ail navigation. A mishap has come to the Excelsior, and from the frozen north cones the story of another disaster in which forty-two men lost their lives. On the Cleveland there are thirty. eiebt passengers who have come from Dawson City. There are few miners in this party that are able to tell perity. Most of them wish to of pros exagger ate their possessions, and if one were to believe the indefinite stories they tell he would say the treasure ship with which they come carried $3,000,000. Captain Hall, ot Cleveland, says he has (100,000 in his safe. The purser believes he can account for (150,000 on board. The Cleveland left St. Michaels August 29th. She has some of tBe passengers of the P. B. Weare on board. The Weare left Dawson City in time to connect with the Portland had she not met : with mishap and stuck on the flats above Or . cle City. ' The miners from Dawson report that on Jnly 25th the stores of the Alaska Commercial Company and . the North American Trading & Transportation Company closed their doors, and an nounced they had no more food to sell When the announcement was made con eternation seized upon the people of Dawson, with gold-seekers crowding in at the rate of 20 to 30 per day. Drunk, eness and dieorder, gambling and . idle, xiess were rampant. At St. Michaels the condition of affairs is also the cause of gravest concern. There are not enough structures iu town to accommodate the crowd, and scores of people are living in tents. Shortly before the Cleveland left St. Michaels two expeditions, those of the National City and of the South Coast, held indig nation meetings, threatening dire . ven- geance upon those who had brought them there and then were unable to carry them further. On August 26th the Excelsior left St. Michaels with a large number of miners and a large quantity of gold. Reports were current that her treasure amounted to a million dollars. Soon after 'leaving St. Michaels the Excelsior was caught on the dangerous flats of the Ynkon and broke two blades of the propeller. When the Cleveland reached Ounalaska she found the Excelsior undergoing repairs. It is probable she left Ounalaska last Monday. Shortly before the Cleveland left for Seattle on hei journey home the United States revenue cutter Bear put into St. Michaels to tell another story of death and disaster in the ice-bound - Arctic. . The Bear had on board Captain White ' side, his wife, the first and fourth officers and fonr seamen of the steam whaler Nevach. They are all that remain to J tell a terrible story of death in the Arc tic. The Nevach was caught in an ice pack. Of her crew forty-two were lost. Thirty-one were crashed in the ice and ten were frozen to death. The Bear saw the' vessel's signal of distress near Point Borrow, and went to ber as sistance. The Captain, his wife, two officers and four seamen were persuaded to leave the crippled ship, bat nine others positively refused to ' go. They were left in a desolate field of ice, and it is feared perished with their comrades. The terrible' tale of suffering told by Captain Whiteside and his officers forms but an incident in the story that the Cleveland brings. It was believed after she had left St. Michaels she was to learn no more of the Klondike, its dan gers and disasters, but " the Cleveland bad hardiy gone 35 miles when she passed a vessel that told of evils to come, of dangerous spirits ready for any out rage, of excited and angry men who have left a black record on the coast on their own pathway to the Yukon. The Cleveland and Humboldt had met, and new stories of tne abandoned adventurers the latter vessel is convey ing to the gold fields were sent back to the world. When the Humboldt stopped at Ouna laska on ber journey to St. Michaels, the passengers were in open rebellion. They began to realize that it would be impos sible to reach Dawson before next spring and they knew that misery awaited them at St. Michaels. There were open threats against W. D. Wood, organizer manager of the expedition, and it is feared he may lose his life at the hands of his passengers. UINEBAL NKWS. It is unofficially announced that Dr, Andrews will insist upon the acceptance of his resignation by the Brown univer sity. ' By the explosion of 120 quarts of nitro glycerine in a gas well at Cygnet, Ohio, six persons were killed and many in jured. Joseph Simons, town marshal, was shot and killed at Almosa, Colo, Tues day night by O. P. Brown, who mistook him for a burglar. Customs inspectors at Laredo, Texas, have found an unclaimed grip on a train containing $200,000 worth of diamonds, jewelry and other valuables. A Philadelphia & Beading wrecking engine crashed into a wagon at a grade crossing at Frush Valley, a few miles above Beading. Pa., Tuesday night, .and three lives were lost. W. P. At well, commercial agent' of the United States at Bobaix, France, says the United States and Canada will be called on to export from 120,000,000 to 130,000,000 bushels of wheat more than they exported to Europe last year, Secretary Wilson predicts a further advance in the price of wheat, due to the fact that there is not only a short crop abroad, bnt also because of the fact that, according to his observation, the crop will not be so extensive in this country as has generally been antici pated. Indigeston is often taken for con sumption. The word ' consumptoin means wasting away, and dyspeptics often waste away as badly as consump tives. The reason people waste away is be cause either they don't get' enongh to eat, or they don't digest what they do eat. ( If the latter is your trouble, take Shaker Digestive Cordial. This will help you to digest your food and stop your loss of flesh. Shaker Digestive Cordial is made from herbs, barks and the juices of fruit, by the well-known Shakers at Mount Lebanon. It possess great tonic and digestive powers. Shaker Digestive Cordial has cured many supposed consumptives (who were really dyspeptics), by simply help ing their stomachs to digest their food, thus giving them nourishment and new strength. Sold by druggists. Trial bottles ten cents. My boy came home from school one day with his hand badly lacerated and bleeding, and suffering great pain," says Mr. E. J. Schall, with Meyer Bros.' I Drug. Co., St. Louis, Mo. "I dressed the wound, and applied Chamberlain's Pain Balm freely. All pain ceased, and n a remarkably short time it healed without leaving a scar. For wounds, sprains.- swellings and rheumatism I know of no other medicine or prescrip tion equal to it. I consider it a house hold necessity." The 25 and 50 cent izes tor sale by Blakeley & Houghton. Cash In Your checks. All county warrants registered prior to March 12, 1893, will be paid at my office. Interest ceases after Sept. 7, 1897. C. L. Phillips, i County Treasnrer. THE STRIKE ENDS The Miners Have Accepted a Compromise RECENTLY MADE BY OFFICERS They Will Return to Work Soon-- Twenty-one Corp.es at Haz elton, Pennsylvania. Columbus, O., Sept. 11. The miners' strike, which was declared on Jnly 4th, was brought to nn end this evening so far at least, as ' Western Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana and West Virginia are concerned, by the action of the conven tion of miners, who have been in session since Wednesday.. Alter a day of voting and wrangling, the convention voted to accept the proposition of the Pittsburg operators. The vote was 495forand317 against, accepting the terms of settle ment, and eleven votes were not cast The delegation from Illinois, which had 250 votes, was unanimously against the settlement, and Indiana and West Vir ginia voted solidly to accept the propo sition, but there were scattering votes among the Ohio and Pennsylvania men, against it. The resolution is as follows: "Jtetolved. That we, the miners of Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Ohio, In diana and Illinois, in convention as sembled, do hereby agiee to accept the proposition recommended by our nation al executive committee, viz : sixty-five cents in the Pittsburg district, and all places in the above named states, where the relative price can be obtained, to resume work and contribute liberally to the miners who will not receive the advance, over which the fight must be continued to the bitterend. "Retolved, That the officers of the ex ecutive board and the district president, act as advisory board for the purpose of providing ways and means for the carry on of the strike where necessary, pro vided, however, that no district resume work for ten days, for the purpose of giv ing the miners in other districts time to confer with the operators and get the price if possible." While ten days is provided for the miners to resume work, it is probable that manv Ohio and Pittsburg mines will be reopened on Monday. The Illi nois men will be called in conven tion at Springfield, on September 19th, to determine what shall be done in that state. A resolution was adopted denouncing the action of the-deputies in firing into the striking miners at Hazelton. The Wounded and Dead. Hazelton, Pa., Sept. 11. Twenty-one corpses lie tonight in the frame shanties scattered, about this hilltop town. Forty maimed, wounded and broken figures are lying on the tlie narrow cots of the Hazelton hospital. Of these it is almost a certainty that five will be added to the death list before another day dawns. Such was the execution done yesterday, by the deputies sheriff, armed to the I teeth, upon about about 150 ignorant foreigners, whose total armanent con- sisted of two . little penkniveB. These facts are undisputed. . A Proclamation. Harrisbubo, Pa., Sept. 11. On a count of the horrible slaughter yester day afternoon at Latimer, in the coal region, Governor Hastings tonight is sued a proclamation, calling on all good citizens to preserve peace. MORS GOLD PROM ALASKA. Steamer South Coas, Has Returned With a Crowd of Lucky Miners, Seattle, Sept. 11. The steam schoon er Soath Coast, from St. Michaels, ar rived this afternoon. She brought down twenty-six passengers, but most of them went ashore at Port Towneend, and took boats for different sound pointe. Cap tain Zaddart places the amount of gold brought down bv the South Coast, at (350,000, but from information gathered trom miners, returning here, it is be lieved that this amount is to high by at least (200,000. The miners will not say how much their clean-UD has been, but it is safe to place the amount aboard the South Coast, at less than $100,000. The most imoortant news broueht bv the South Coast, is the safe arrival at St. Michaels, of the river steamer P. B. Weare, which stuck on a sand bar for over two weeks below Circle City. The arrival of the Weare will be good news to the people of Dawson City, who are threatened with a famibe this winter. When the South Coast left the Weare was loading supplies,. and it was expect- ed8he would leave up the river in a day or two, with a 500-ton cargo. Her voy- age up should not consume more than twenty-five days, which would put into! Dawsqn City by September 25th. 1 he Weare's cargo consisted almost entirely of provisions and the 500 tons she will take in, will materially assist in reliev ing the threatened famine. . C. T. Bnpel, one of the South Coast passengers, brought down (8,000 in dust and nuggets. J. H. Light (18,000. Bupel says, not one man in a hundred. of those who have gone in this season will get claims as all the country is staked off. One of the passengers on the South Coast was J. T. Lea. of this city. Speaking of the amonnt of money which the South Coast bronght down he said: " "The actual amount has been greatly exaggerated. I am acquainted with every man on board, and bad a good knowledge of what they brought back, and I am certain the total amonnt is not over (60,000. There were not four men on board who had as much as (5000 each. In fact, the most of the passen gers were men, who had worked small claims, and a majority had from (300 to $1000 in ?old." A Small Craft. Pobt Townsexd, Sept. 11. At 7 o'clock this evening the schooner Janus an eight-ton cralt from Astoria, tied up at the wharf here. She carries twelve men and seven tons above ber registered capacity of provisions, and is bound for Copper river. The passengers all hail from San Francisco and Oakland, and are outfitted with provisions for a two years' stay. The Eliza Anderson Safe. Seattle, Sept. 11. Captain J. B. Lib- by, manager of the Paget Sound Tugboat Co., today received a letter on the South Coast from Capt. Frank W. dinger, of the tug Holyoke, who has in tow the barge Politofeki, bound for St. Michaels The letter is dated Dutch harbor August 31st. Begarding the sidewheel steamer Eliza Andereon, which was in company with the Holyoke and reported to oe in distress, tne letter says: "lne Anderson reached St. Panl harbor in perfect safety, and ber detention is oc caBioned by ber taking on coal there." THE EUrOBIA TRAIN WRECK. The List of Victims In the Wreck Num bers Sixteen. Ehpobia, Kan., Sept. 11. Tonight it is believed that the number of deaths doe to the train wreck of Wednesday will be sixteen. Engineer Frisbee died in the hospital at Topeka today. To night, a force of 100 men engaged in the work of removing the debris of the wreck, recovered the charred remains of two more bodies. They were found not far from where the body of a woman was found this morning. Owing to the stench coming from the wreck, it is thought more bodies mav be there. One 0f those found today was burned beyond identification, but with the other body was found a short bosom pin and a stud This is thought to be the body of an en from the East who was riding in the cab of the westbound train. The Grandest Remedy. Mr. B. B. U reeve, merchant of Chilhowie, Va., certifies that he had consumption,, was given up to die, sought all medical treatment that money could procure, tried all cough remedies he could hear of, but got no relief ; spent many nights silting np in a chair; was induced to try Dr. King's New Discovery, and was cured by the use of two bottles For past three years has been attending to busines, and says Dr. King's New Dis covery is the grandest remedy ever made, as it has done so much for him and also for others in his community. Dr. King's New Discovery is guaranteed for Coughs, Colds and Cosumption. It don't fail. Trial bottle free at Blakeley &Hough ton's Drue store. (2) How's This! We offer one hundred dollars reward for any case of Catarrh tbat can not be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. Cheney & Co. Props., Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and be lieve him perfectly honorable in all busi ness transactions and financially able to carry out any obligations made by their firm. West & Truax. Wholesale Druggists, To ledo, O., Walding, Kinnan & Marvin, Wholesale Drnggists, Toledo, Ohio. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken inter- "ally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Price, 75c - bottle. Sold by all druggists. Testimonials free. 1-5-9 NOTICE. To Holders op School Warrants : All outstandings warrants of this school district (No. 12, city) will be paid on presentation at the bank of French & Co., The Dalles, Oregon, on Thursday Sept. 9, 1897. Interest on outstanding warrants ceases after Sept. 8, 1897. By order of the board. Geo. P. Morgan, e8-4t. District Clerk. ANDERSON NOT LOST The Ancient Side-Wheeler Is Safe at Dutch Harbor. A SERIOUS CRISIS AT DAWSON PrcTioos Reports Regarding a Short ate of Provisions Confirmed Details of the Anderson's Perilous Voyage. Seattle, Sept. 13. The steamer Hum boldt arrived this morning, eleven days from St. Michaels, and brought news tbat the Eliza Anderson is safe. The Anderson is anchored in Dutch Harbor, where she arrived on the 4th inst., and where she is now detained by revenue officers. Her passengers have bv this time entered Behring sea on the schoon er chartered for that purpose. Two passengers' of the Anderson were so frightened that they gave np their search for gold and returned south on the steamer Humboldt. ' The Humboldt brought back fourteen passengers and about (15,000 in gold. Mayor Wood, who chartered the Hum boldt, is still at St. Michaels, but letters ! J 1 .... .. ... receiveu irom mm inaicate tbat all is well with him and tbat stories of dissen sion and strife on the part of members of the expedition are untrue. me uumDoiat ormgs back news which reiterate the stories of the untold wealth of the Klondike and Yukon, and verifies the previous rumors of a short' age of the food supply in the interior, "There will be privation, sickness, star vation, scurvy and death on the Ynkon this winter" is what returning gold hunt ers say. Only seven of the passengers on the Humboldt have money. It is impossi ble to get them to eay what they have, but the purser of the Humboldt who knows about the amount of gold brought back, gives the following figures: G. A. Wagner ( 900 E. Turner 500 J. F. Crieder 2.000 W. Urquhardt 900 J. D. Koeers 2.000 D. F. Atkins 4.500 Captain J. Whitesides 4,200 CONDITION'S AT DAWSON. J. N. Secretan, who came back on the Humboldt, and who has but very little cash, says he came out to avoid starva tion at Dawson. He said : "Thus far upwards of 1500 men have pushed their way over the passes from Skaguay and Dyea, and have arrived at Dawson City. The influx of miners over the passes has frightened old-timers in the interior, and all tbat can com mand money are coming out to winter in the states, and thus avoid what tbey believe to be a winter of hardship, suf fering, perhaps mnrder and thievery. A SERIES OF MISHAPS. "We left Dawson on July 26, on the the steamer P. B. Weare. At midnight on the 27th the steamer ran on a bar be low Circle City. After waiting seven days we were transferred to the steamer Healy, and arrived at St. Michaels on August 25. "On the next day we took the Excel sior for San Francisco. on the morn ing of 27, the Excelsior went aground in ten feet of water in Behring sea, twenty miles from land. The passengers moved twenty tons of coal from ' her hold . to lighten her, and af midnight she floated, having broken two wings of her propel ler. She reached Ounalaska on Septem ber 1. On the 2d they tried to beach her, and on the 3d encceeded. On the 4th they took off her propeller, and on the 5th put on a new one. On the 6th she sailed via TJoger for Dutch Harbor, where we took the Humboldt for Seattle. 'On the way from Dawsen City I have paid three fares. First to the N. A. T. & T. Co.. (150 for passage to Seattle, then (120 to the Excelsior, and again (75 to the Humboldt. I cannot say too much for the Humboldt. It is by far the best ea nipped steamer on the route." the akdersos's voyage. W. B. Price, of Danville, 111., who went op on the Eliza Anderson, and who left the vessel at Dutch harbor, returred on the Humboldt, and is in this city. He said : The entire trip was one series of mis haps. The third day out from Dixon's entrance bad weather came on, and the wind blew terrifically. The waves would lift the guard up and leap under it. During the first night after the storm be gan the rudder chain broke five times. Of course after this broke there wa9 no controlling the boat. Every minute it seemed that it would go over. The pas sengers were thrown ont of their bunks, and it was possible to stay in bed. The crew was insufficient to man the pumps, so the passengers toik the pumps in Absolutely Pure. Celebrated for its great leavening strength and healthfulness. Assures the food mrninst alnm and alL forms of adulteration common to the cheap brands. , Royal Baking Fowdbb Co. New York. charge. I myself was placed in charge of the pumps. I divided the passengers up into squads of four men each. Each squad worked two hours. - I aleo did sounding to see how much water there was in the hold. We kept this up for 48 hours and d nring that time the boat drifted back 100 miles. "The second day of our trcuble the other boats of the fleet were in eight. Then the Merwin, which was being towed by the Holyoke along with the Bryant and Politofikv, broke loose and the captain of the Holyoke turned about with the other two boats in tow and picked up the Merwin.1 NO COAL TO BE HAD. "The next place we reached was St. Paul, on Kodiak island. We should have taken on coal enough there to get her to Dutch harbor, but could not get ' it. After leaving St. Paul the sea was very heavy and we were forced to cruise along the ' shore. We got within 160 miles of Dutch harbor when the coal gave out. We were rigging a small boat to send out for relief when we sighted a small fishing smack with one man in it. He told us we could reach at, abandoned cannery- about twenty miles distant, where coal bad been lying for five or six yeais. We just had about enough coal to reach that point. All day long the passengers worked in a drizzling rain to take, on coal. , "Finally, on September 4th, we reached Dutch harbor. Captain Cooper, of the Northern revenue squadron, boarded us at Dntch harbor, and seeing the unseawortby condition of the An derson, forbade her to go further. It was not necessary for him to go below deck, but immediately upon seeing tbat we had an insufficient number of life boats, he gave the order to tie up there. The passengers , of the Anderson, with the exception of George Scott and my self, raised (1000 to charter the schooner ' Barinoff, to take the passengers from there to St. Michaels. The conditions of the trip of the Anderson from Dixon's harbor cannot be pictured too vividly!" . It was a remarkable statement that Captain Chiicoot, one of the incorpora tors of the company which runs the An derson, made to Captain Bonifield, of the Humboldt this morning. He said : "We knew the Anderson was nnsea worthy, especially for an ocean voyage, but we were bound to get ber there any way. We put her in charge of one of the best sea captains on this coast, Captain Powers. If anybody could get her there he could." the humboldt's passkngebs. . There were ocly two passengers who went np on the Humboldt who decided to return and make the trip again from Seattle in the spring. Tbey were Dr. A. C. Posey, of Oakland, Cal., and J. A. Williams, of San Francisco. The Humboldt's complete passenger list is as follows : Dr. A. C. Posey, Mrs. E. Cronister, G. A. Wanger, E. Turner, J. F. Crider, W. Urquhardt, J. F. Will- . iams, Captain J. Whiteside and wife, W. B. Price, George Scott, J. N. Scretan, Mrs. Woodward and five children. J. B. Rogers, D. F. Atkins, Mrs. A. Clark. Something; to Know. It may be worth something to know that the very best medicine for restoring the tired ont nervous system to a healthy vigor is Electric Bitters. This medicine is purely vegetable, acts "by giving tone to the nerve centres in the stomach, gently stimulates the Liver and Kidneys, and aids these organs in throwing eff impurities in the blood. Electric Bit ters improves the appetite, aids diges tion and is pronounced by those who have tried it as the very best blood puri fier and nerve tonic. Try it. Sold for 50c or (1.00 per bottle at Blakeley j& Houghton's Drug Store. (2) Andrew Keller has just received a shipment of fresh oysters, which he will serve in any style to his customers. From now on oysters can be had at his bakerv and cafe. . 7-2t