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About St. Helens mist. (St. Helens, Or.) 1913-1933 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 21, 1917)
)S "n WIST, FRIDAY. SEPTEMBER 21. 1917 5 jobrtuciB, thousands and thousand,!, .1 A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A I A A A MOUS DAWSUIM IS NEARING END jj Ntwrly Kahnuated People Are (M. . Hrown) D,won City mining man ur dying on "'V ,cu: didn't Imvo n woman nurse, .i.Hn 't have I lie price; . "our dough" ant boaldo him. Hit dying ')" '., ,i in It 1m dvlnit word And wlc,l,,,1 wl'"8 ,,e fr0"' Itlillko stutT Hint give tlm people L mprl"" t,,ttl tho Klondike skof It ox i""? '"inn 11,0 ""I j f Hihorlu bh a country of ter- U itorms, ' Intense cold and ,,r only the hardiest can survive, inj I funnel tho city with a tem- Litura of about 66 and everything b,my aa nn Oregon numrnw. But I arrlTfl In Dawson In itiiin- ,,r Thorn are only two seasons In Limn winter, July and August. The boat landed u In the night tit ll Hlgni lieiil, iur imrw in iiiuu LrkneM In inldHummnr north of 60. tnt ashore at ahout 3 o'clock, and L three hours I walkod the atrnets. i length of one and hack tho other. hi llkn a cemetery. And a I Lued cabin after cabin In the real ign wctlon, on itreot after atreet, mllK'd that the moat of I law son uld nr atlr aguln for there r none to tlr It. Cabin after cabin waa deserted, cki of them In atrlngi. Many had r doors and wlndowa broken, roofs t falling In. There a big log tel of two ntorlea atood vacant, :h the booze algna recalling the Id old gold mad daya. A carpen- w iliop with the work benches a ownnr left them; a vacant atore HJtng. a big dmico hall where onco i md women, drunken on both Iwu and gold, took part In revel 's that were equaled nowhere on Lrtb; and so on, atreet after atreet, th abandoned home, bualnesa jtn and shops. I remember of hearing passengers tho boat aay, "Dawson la very t," "Dawson la on the bum," and it eiprxssiona, but I had no Idea -.on waa aa nick aa alio wua. I iod itie waa paat help dying. Then the nun, aftor a three bourn' it. not back on the Job, and what ii left alive of thla moat famoua intng camp on eurth begun to atlr 1 i ik (or uourlaliment. Hnioko be-, ii to come out from tho roofs of a of tho homes; tho aaloons, res urinls and business placea began I to opon, nud what woh loft ,,ilv tho gold city opened for what I.iihI neaa wua yet brnutiilng. Five ycura from now there will be no Dawaon nothing ,t ,!ltnA buildings. Tho reaaon la the gold liua pluyed out. The one. richest dirt evr known bun ,een punned, rocked, Kluleed and dredged nbout clean. A -id when once the yellow atuff In cleared out men leave the diguing,. Bi: rii'n leaving a alnklng ship. In 1896 "ToglHh Charlie," nn In dian, while fliihlng nt the mouth of the Klondike river, found nom largo gold nuggetn in the amid and showed them to a trndur. InveHtlKiitlon allowed the vulley, the atreum bid and the mountain aide wuro full of tho yellow metal, and aoon tho nev.a of tho wonderful strike went up tho river anil to the outalde. The men went mud. They poured up to fikugway from Benllle by bout, went over the White Horse pass! thousand and thousands of them, month after month. They came with their outnta, very few of them know Ing anything about the terrible White Home and Dyea trails over tin mountains, and the more to bo dread od White llorso ruplda after the push hud been made. There were no steamers on tho Yu kon then. If It was summer the mob wont down In bouts and on rafts or anything that would float. In wlnl; 'hoy went down on the Ice. Many who went by boats wero caught by the Ice before they reached Dawson and were frozen In, and many who went down on tho Ico In the winter wero caught In the break-up and found death la the Yukon rather thnn fortunes In the Klondike, while the rapid claimed many a life and outfit. There were pilots at tho rapid i who would taku bonis through the whirlpool for $30 apiece, at owner's risk, hut there were thousands ol men who bud put their last dollar Into outfits and they had to do their own steering A bualnesa man In Duwaon, one of tho first to reach the Klondike, Waa a passenger on our bout Into Dawson, and he told me niuny Interesting atorlea of the mud rush. He said In remembered one man In particular He came in from 8ea'tle with a bout and a good outfit and the rapids gol them. He got ashore and at once started back for Seattle, for another. The second time a pilot took the bout through and lost It. Then the owner put a gun to his head and ended it all as hundreds of others did. Hut notwithstanding tho terrlbtu obstacles thousands and thousand, reached the Klondike fields and went mad with tho gold fever, (every where along the river the ground WH. rich with precious metal. Men fought for it, killed fr t um, Ue( U)f u (J')ld was rich In nlnioHf everv ,.. I f ground. Great fortunes were made i ln n fHW WB,)1( al fabulous priced j worn paid for claims. Then Dawson sprang up and be Icuino a roaring, crazy bell. Today It Is dying a natural death. (inly a few men ore working claims inow-u pitiful few of those who came too lute und who are picking the bones. After the clulms gradually I played out, the Guggenhelms put j dredges In and took untold wealth j out of the river. They ure yet work i Ing, Just marking time for the finish. Two and a half years ago a well j equipped outfit went Into the un j mapped wilds northwest of Dawson. I They went with supplies for thr-o I years. Nothing baa been heard nt them since. Home figure they mum j have made a strike or they would j have returned, but old prospectors, l the old "sour dough" boys, shake! j their heads and aay the expedition Is 'either a failure or tho men have per I lulled. I talked with an old-timer about It one night and he said In bis 20 yearB In lli.ltl..l. ..!.. .1.1- li t I'liund v.uiuiiium ami Aiusaa ne had never known a, strike to be hushed. "When they muke a strike they Blake, work It for a while, then some I of them come In," said he. "I never j ;kncw It to fail. They want to start . a stumpede. They want company, I want the rush to come and a camp to I follow. Of all the God-forsaken lives j prospector is the worst." There la hardly a building In all j Dawson that sets level. When they j wero built they were plumb and j square enough, but they aro built on Ice, and the succeeding summers have heaved them and twisted them untfT one would think an earthquake must have jarred the whole city, i Cnder a mid-summer sun that , works a shift of about 20 hours a day, vegetation springs up everywhere and grows wonderfully fust and luxuriant, j and one almost doubts the Ice box , stories told of tho Klondike. Hut dig I down three foot and the ground is frozen solid. It has been frozen io for centuries and It never will thaw . until the climate of Alaska changes, j Almost anywhere along the Yukon I from White Horse to Nome, gold can ; he panned from the river brink. It I can ho punned from nearly every Hotel Barber Shop HEWITT I1LDO. H. T. BENNETT, Propr. MOHT B ANITA It Y SHOP IN KT. 1IKI.KN8 A ItEA h 8HOK SHINE CHILDREN'S HAIR CUTTING A Hie'iulty GEORGE WILSON Cattle Buyer ST. HELENS, OREGON Phone D-98 We Serve Only the Best Our place has gained a reputation for serving the best Meals and Lunches. Then, too, we handle Cigars, Candies and Soft Drinks. Some morning try our Waf fles ; many people tell us they are very good. MASON'S A nice lunch at any time ; prices reasonable. YOU ARE INVITED to visit us today at the Fair. We are dem onstrating Red Ribbon Canned Goods Come around and take lunch with us. Our booth is in the Exhibits building. For Your Sunday Dinner t : canyon and creek. It can be found in sufficient quantities to make day wages. Gold Beems to be almost everywhere In Alaska. Hut places that could and would be worked In California or anywhere else are worthless In Alaska, for the reason that the expense and hardships are too great. One might make wages for three months sluicing on the river, but what Is he going to do the other nine months? The ground is not rich enough to pay for the expensive win- j ter thawing process, one cannot take out enough during the three months to live on the other nine. The day of the gold pan, the sluice ; box, the rocker und the windlass and I bucket baa said good night. The fu- j ture mining in Alaska will be by hy- draulic, quartz mills and dredging,: and the outlook Is none too bright for I even these big business propositions. 1 With the exception of Juneau, every : mining proposition I have so far seen ! or beard about Is running out, and ; the companies operating them are quitting them. ! An old-time miner told me that in ! Ogilvle mountains, northeast of Daw- son, be had some of the richest quartz claims that laid out of doors. "I j have had many assays made; I have plenty more samples or I will take I any man to the mine and let him Dick his samules." Bald he. "It Is j richer than the Treadwell ever was," ! he continued, "yet It Isn't worth a dollar. I couldn't give anyone my ' claims if they had to do the assess t ment work on them. When I made I the strike I thought at last I bad ! found my luck. And I can't give it away." The reason of this is the great expense of putting ln the neces sary mill equipment to run bucIi a mine. SWEET POTATOES BEETS We have CARROTS CHOICE CABBAGE ; LETTUCE CELERY EGG PLANT PEACHES TOMATOES And other Fruits and Vegetables We will appreciate a portion of your patronage and promise GOOD GOODS and GOOD SERVICE St. Helens Mercantile Company IN THE RUTHERFORD BLDG. Phone 80 If vou don't trade with us we both lose money ilAINECvM I vjvrir'K nw WHKItll-K'S 8AI.K IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THB STATE OF OREGON FOR COL ! UMDIA COUNTY. , S. M. Mann & Co., Bankers, a cor-. ! poration, Plaintiff, ! I vs. I Elmer 3. Smith, and Agnes W. Smith ; hia wife, C. L. Bullard nnd Ethelyn ; I N. Bullard his wife, Fred J. Vance ; I and Salome Vance his wife, De-' fendants. 1 By virtue of an execution issued i 1 out of the above entitled Court in the i above entitled cause to me directed, I and dated the 20th day of August, ! 1 1917, upon a judgment order and de-1 croe, and order of sale, rendered and I oniorod In snid Court on the 27th ! day of July, 1917, in favor of S. M. Mann & Co. Bankers, a corporation, and against the above named defend ants, for the sum ot Twelve tiunarea , nniinrti with Interest thereon at the rate of eight per cent per annum from ; the twelfth day of Juno, 1916, and tho further sum of One Hundred Dol-, lar8 Attorney's fees, and the costs of ! and upon this writ, commanding me ! to make sale of the following de- scribed real proporty, towit: ! All that portion of the Southwest I quarter of the Northeaat quarter of section two, township three north, range two west of the Willamette i Meridian, lying south and west of ', the right of way of the Portland, Southwestern Railroad Company as the name Is now located, excepting therefrom the right of way of the I said Portland and Southwestern Rail road Company, as the same is now I located, also excepting a strip of land najaceni io me riBiit ui nj m iu said railroad now owned by Gus Ru docn as the same shall be located after the transfor between said Gus Rudeen and Elmer J. Smith shall be recorded, tho sr.ld strip containing about two acres more or loss. Now, therefore, by virtue of said execution, Judgment order and de cree and order of sale, and In com pliance with said writ, I will on Sat urday, the 22nd day of September, 1917, at the hour of oloven o'clock in the foronoon, at the front door of the Court-house in St. Helens, Col umbia County, State of Oregon, sell at public auction (subject to redemp tion) to the highest bidder for cash in hand, all the right title nnd inter est which the abovo named defend ants or either of them had on the 6th day of June, the date of the mortgage herein foreclooed, or since had in or to the above described prop orty and every part thereof to satisfy snid execution. Judgment order and decree, interest, attorney's fees, costs and accruing costs. Dated at St. Helens this 23rd day of August, 1917. E. O. STANWOOD, Shorlff of Columbia County, Oregon. I By CHAS. BROWN, 36-5 Deputy. TRAD EAT HI Our work and service is as good as you can get in Portland. Let us call for your laundry. St. Helens Steam Laundry Geo. Watkins, Prop. A HOME INDUSTRY Mortgage Loans On Improved Farms at the lowest rates and on long time. Repay able ln such installments as the borrower may wlBh. Liberal prepay ment terms arranged. No commissions charged. Loans closed promptly. Mortgages purchased. WM. McMASTER 701 Corbett Illdg. Portland, Oregon An Ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure. INSURE WITH ME AND PROTECT YOURSELF AGAINST I. W. W.s AND ACCIDENTS General Insurance HAROLD P. ROSS Bank Bldg., St. Helens H. M. TERRY THE MOTOR TROUBLE MAN Expert Machinist. Bring your auto troubles to me. Marine work a sieclulty. Shop at St. Helena garage. Phone 57 PRICES ALWAYS REASONABLE R. CONSTANTIN PLUMBING, STEAM HEATING and SHEET METAL WORKS Stationary Wash Tubs and Bath Room supplies. St. Helens, Oregon CITY GARAGE Agency for The Chevrolet $630.00 F. O. B. St. Helens Sold on easy terms Hupmobile Service Station Keep a Full Line of Firestone Tires OIL, GASOLINE AND ACCESSORIES Best equipped Machine Shop in the town for Auto and Marine Work St. Helens, Battery Recharging Oregon J. L. WILLIAMS & SONS A Full and Complete line of General Merchandise Dry Goods, Shoes and Groceries SCHOOL BOOKS, INK, PENS, STATIONERY Our customers receive dependable goods at reasonable prices. Give us a trial and you will be satisfied. Phone 34 WEST ST. HELENS, ORE. i A A A AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAi CENTRAL MARKET RAY MORTON Phone 60 The Market of. Purity and Quality , of Meats both Fresh and Cured. Greatest assortment of Lunch Meats in town. Highest cash price paid for Hogs and Veal. A trial will be appreciated. Prompt Delivery