OREGON CITY COURIER, OREGON CITY, OREGON, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1917. 8 LIFE IS REAL ON THE YUKON RIVER llll WEEK (Continued from Page 1) over which travelers, miners and prospectors mush in and out during the long winter months. The upper river Indians live iouay as they lived before the first Rus sian ever came up the Yukon they exist. They care nothing for the white man's gold salmon is what they want, fish for their bellies and the dogs' before the long arctic night sets in. So they build fish wheels of logs and poles, anchor them near the shore at a point where the fish are likely to "run" and the wheel never stops turning while the summer lasts. The 'fish are dressed and dried. You will see hundreds of the red sal mon hanging from poles. When thoroughly dried they are stored in caches on the top of a framework of poles, six or eight feet from the ground, where the dogs and bears cannot get to them. The Indians trap some in the winter and if they can catch more fish than they need, they sell the fish and furs to the river town stores, or rather trade them for the few supplies they need. The most of the Indian villages are very old. The log cabins are rotting down and vegetation grows a foot high from the dirt roofs. They live in horribly filthy conditions. The boats never stop at the Indian towns. The purser told me that the boat would go through Five Finger Rapids and Hell's Pass at about two o'clock in the morning, so I set my mental alarm clock for that hour and was on deck. I wanted to see these two dreadful spots where so many men lost their outfits and lives during the mad rush down the river to Nome, when news of the big strike came up. It was light at two' o'clock in fact it is always light above Dawson in mid-summer and I stood at the head of the steamer (we were pushing a scow) and had a fine view of the rap ids before we reached them. They are rightly named, for they spread out like the fingers of a hand. Four of the channels mean rocks and wreck. One of them, the thumb, is safe. And I thought of the days when gold-mad men came down the river in a continuous string, riding frail boats, rafts anything that would float. And they carried with them their all, the grub stake and the few necessary tools and bedding. Few of them knew anything about the dangerous rapids, few even knew they were there until they were onto them, and then in a minute they must decide on which channel and take the chance. However, the most of them instinctively saw that the thumb, the big channel, was the saf est pass, and if they got their boats full in the current they were safe. If they did not, they were dashed against the rocks, and they tell me few ever came out alive who were overturned. Then came Hell's Pass a place where the Yukon runs down hill for a short distance. It was a scarey rapids to look at even from a steam er's dock. There were no dreaded rocks, but I marveled that any small boat could go through this whirling, foaming race and not capsize. But they did, thousands of them. And after I had seen these two rapids (and by the way, the only dnes between White Horse and Nome, 2200 miles) I quit finding fault with the mosquitos and the slow eight-mile speed of the boat. ' About every twenty-four hours the boat tied up at a wood camp for wood, and it takes a long time for the deck hands to carry enough of the four-foot sticks on board to last to the next camp. At Woodchoppers' creek, about 50 miles over the line in Alaska, we stopped early in the morning to "wood up" and wait for the fog to lift. I was about the only passenger up. The captain told me the boat would be there for two hours at least and if I wanted to stretch my logs I would find a good trail back of the wood pile that led to a deserted cabin half a mile down. I hiked. It was a miner's cabin, logs, with floor of whipsawed lumber. The old stove was there, the rough benches, table, bunk and other odds and ends. It was at the end of a draw, where a little stream ran down the valley and emptied into the Yukon. The desert ed mine was back from the shore and I did not have time to go to it. And now for the story the captain told it to mo. Two prospectors struck a prospect in the summer that looked good, so they built the cabin, caught fish and prepared for winter. It was late in summer before they had win ter preparations made, and could go on with the prospect hole. They struck bed rock at 12 feet and found a wonderfully rich pocket. They worked it out, thawed down other holes, but never another sign of color, then one of them, being taken sick, they abandoned the place and went down the river on the ice, and the I sick man died before they reached Fort Dawson. Now for the rest of the story or rather the other version. As the boat passed the deserted cabin, a lady pointed to a peculiar - looking cache on top of a platform just below the cabin and asked a miner what it was. In the fog I had not noticed this when I was at the cabin. It looked from the boat as if a kyaek (skin canoe) had been put up there nnd wound with a tent. But the miner said it was a dead body, now only a skeleton, and had been there four or five years. He said the sick man died in camp, his part ner put him on the meat cache nnd beat it down the ice. I afterwards asked the pilot if the story was true. "That's the tale: I don't know. But it is the truth that ! you can't get an Indian woodchopper to get anywhere near the cabin," he answered, I have no doubt but that it was true, and that under the old canvas is ! the skeleton remains of a man, and that some father or mother outside is waiting and hoping for news of a venturesome boy news that will 1 THE BRUNSWICK, The famous all Record Phonograph An instrument at any price you wish to pay from $30, but the greatest dollar for dollar value no matter which one you select. H The Brunswick Phonograph has created a sensation. Everyone who hears it agrees that it is a combination of them all a supreme achievement. Until you've heard The Brans- wick, you can't realize the advantages of this instrument over ordinary phonographs. E On The Brunswick any record is given new tonal values. Tones hith- Heretofore phonograph owners have found that some of the greatest The makers of The Brunswick Phonograph have been famous for gen erto hidden are now brought out. This is due to the wooden walled tone records In the world (Fathe's, for instance) were barred from their homes. eration8 for tnj)ll. woodworking experts. They have been making the fin chamber acoustically perfect-built like a violin. In this one feature, The Brunswick removes all limitations. eg. pnonograph cabinets for years. All this skill, this know-how and this you gain all the previously lost overtones, mellow low notes, the clear, THE BRUNSWICK - experience go into the making of The Brunswick. . Judged by these things, vibrant high C and all delicate shadings. Metallic sounds are impossible Is equipped to play all records of ' all make8 ; J cor The Brunswlck shouM C08t more tnan ordinary phonographs, but to the EES because no metal enters into the chamber. $30.00 a tti ImkSmM mwmmV U $70.00 I 617 Main St. 1 ' iii 11 n 5 liwiSaii lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllH never come-. Alaska is full of such tragedies. Anywhere there is a white man the boat will stop that is if he has sent out for a box of freight grub. Often his cabin will be where the river is shallow, then he has to row out with a boat and get it. At one place we stopped and tied up to put ashore a little bunch of pro visions. There was one lonesome 'cabin, new, a half dozen "husky" dogs and the usual meat house. A man and his wife lived there, and they were mining right on the river bank. He was about 45, she about GO. They had cut down a piece about 30 feet square to the water's level. They had a rocker and a sluice. The dirt was shoveled in and then water dip ped up from the river and poured in one of the hardest and slowest pos sible ways of mining. I asked the old lady how it was panning out. "Oh, just fair," she re plied, but it is worth $18 an ounce." And then she looked at me a min ute and exclaimed: "Oh, it is so lonesome, so lonesome here." And if ever I felt heartfelt sorrow and sin cere pity, I experienced it when the boat pulled out and I saw this pitiful old lady standing on the bank with a great wish in her heart a yearning for her kind. Five years ago rabbits were so thick all over Alaska one could kill them with stones. Today not a one will be seen in a week's travel. Why, none can tell. Some say they were all frozen to death. And with the disappearance of the rabbits, tho owls, eagles wolves and other animals and birds they preyed on for food, have disappeared, and with tho exception of the bear, the North Land woods are silent of animal and bird life silent of any kind of life, depopulat ed, dead. The next letter will be from Fort Yukon, north of the Aivtic Circle, in the Land of the Midnight Sun. Marriage License A marriage license was issued here on Saturday to Marie Wigmore, of Clackamas county, and James T. Campbell, of Vancouver, Wash. Catarrh Cannot Be Cured With LOCAL API'MCATIONS, as tlioy cannot reach tho sent of the disease. Catarrh Is a lmal disease, Kroatly ln tlui'in ea by constitutional conditions, and In ordor to cure it you must take an Internal remedy. Hall's Catarrh Medi cine la taken internally and acts thru the blood on the mueous surfaces of tho system. Halls Catarrh Medicine was prescribed by one of the best physicians In this country for years. It is com posed of some of the best tonics known, combined with some of the best blood purifiers. The perfect combination of the ingredients n Hall's Catarrh Medi cine Is what produces such wonderful results in catarrhal conditions. Send for testimonials, free. F. J. CHUNKY CO., Props., Toledo, O. All DruKtflsld, T;"c. Hall's Family Pilla for constipation. Tone construction of The Brunswick tone In The Brunswick we offer a far better phonograph at a slight reduction in cost. And our terms make it easy for you to have a Brunswick today and enjoy It. We are always glad to play The Brunswick for you and explain its merits. This does not obligate you to buy. We are anxi ous for everyone to know about it and tell others. Come in today and ask to have your favorite records played. "SO $90.00 1 1 mm i mm ; mmm liVB ' - 9 ('! KXi, ' ' Rl " it I' m fJTl 1111 kU "MIT K tf'-r-'kTM 1 tt i' ?. II 11 1 U ICT. .TTPrp TWRW-WI Iff ft . 3 a ir .1 i rrtir-rrr- j .wth m ?f . i it, h n h ?h v - n Si 'I But' l 44lU 3 a in Wit i fUff-'" lilt f i r (SIB i li'lfp 1 mmm mm if' i ?h.v -if. "T L f 1 VT f f Jr I I li"- ' i f'-'Hfi-" nth I 41 4 r PS m MM I Mil MOlfc W"H H tVVi V 4 Ml 1 jtoim LAD CAUGHT WITH BEER Suitcase Full of Home Brew Would Have Helped the Party With a suitcase full of home-made beer, Melvin Mahlun, a young farmer living near Canby, was headed under full steam toward the county fair dance at the Canby band auditorium on Wednesday evening, when he ran afoul of the law. In Justice of the Peace John N. Sievers' court Thurs day, the young man pleaded guilty to transporting liquor and was let off with a $20 fine upon his promise to refrain from again engaging in the brewery business. Motorcycle Patrolman Meads made the arrest. He found Mahlun wandering toward the dance hall with his cargo of li quor, part of it aboard and part in the suitcase. Summons In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon, for the County of Clack amas. Lillian Irwin, Plaintiff, vs. John M. Irwin, Defendant. To John M. Irwin, the above named Defendant: In the name of the State of Ore gon you are hereby required to ap pear and answer the complaint filed against you in the above named suit within six weeks from the date of the first publication of this summons, and if you fail to appear or answer said complaint, for want thereof, the plaintiff will apply to the court for the relief prayed for in the complaint: For a' decree dissolving the bonds of matrimony now existing between plaintiff and defendant. This summons is published by or dtr of the Honorable J. U. Campbell, Judge of the Circuit Court, which or der was made on the 27th day of September, 1917, and the time pre scribed for publication thereof is 6 weeks, beginning with the issue of September 27, 1917, and ending with the issue of November 8, 1917. J. J. FITZGERALD, Attorney for Plaintiff. Sues to Recover Hotel Cassie Evans Fuller brought suit Thursday against S. J. and Florence Vuughn, asking that the court force them to restore to her possession of the Cottage hotel property at Canby, of which they are the present operat ors. Mrs. Fuller formerly conducted the hotel. She asks in addition to the restoration of the property, which she charges the Vaughns are withholding forcibly, $75 as damages. Boers Charges Cruelty George E. Beers charges his wife, Ethel Beers, with cruelty in a divorce AND SEE OUR PRESENTATION Adaptability furnished. Any needlo may be used, ball, steel, etc. All without extra OUR RECORD DEPARTMENT We have the exclusive agency for this county of the Famous PATHE Records. We invite you to hear .a won derful combination Pathe Records played on The Brunswick Phonograph. $110.00 complaint filed here Wednesday. The couple was married at Vancouver, Wash., on December 24, 1914. Mr. Beers says his wife kept late hours and many times was absent from their home without explaining such absence. SEE PICTURE HEROES Miss Walker Meets the Great Charles Cad m a n While in Los Angeles The meeting of such noted artists as Charles Wakefield Cadman, author of several of the most delightful musical selections on the market, and Schuman-Heink, the famous songstress, are not the least of the pleasures Miss Louise Walker en joyed at Los Angeles, from which city she has just returned to her home here after a six-months' ab sence. Miss Walker, who is an accom plished musician herself, took a special teacher's training course at the Art institute of Krotona. There Miss Walker spent most of the morn ing hours, but the afternoons were as pleasantly spent at tho moving pic ture studios in Los Angeles and at Hollywood. At such places she en joyed meeting such screen stars as Mary Pickford, Theda Bara and Douglas Fairbanks. Miss Walker will resume work with her piano classes this winter. jV'W.I'v.H'JJ trola 4 -Cpk! Victrola IV $15 Other styles t to VSQ. It's easy to JMjlearn the new steps with" the music of the Victrola. V ine rox irot, Polka, and all the other new dances played loud and clear and in perfect time. 4 Huntley Drug Co. OREGON CI T EB k'HS fa i m wm DRUG CO. including the jewel point, sapphire cost. $125.00 DRUGICO HfflfflHBfflHSSiS HHESHHSaS ffl H 11 SCHOOL REPORT CARDS H Report cards and envelope g carriers approved for Clacka- H mas county schools by Superin- H tendent J. E. Calavan, are for ffl sale at Tho Courier office. The ffl envelopes are made of strong H manila paper with a metal IB clasp and the cards are print- H 10suq Auaq 'oaiiobjb uo pa g board iaper and are undoubt- 11 edly the most serviceable cards 11 11 to bo had. The card, which H 11 folds into a four-page booklet, II U contains not only the space 11 fi for grading results in daily H H and monthly work and examin- 11 B ations, but rules and regula- H H tions for children. School H H teachers and district clerks de- H H siring such cards will do well 11 H to order them at once before 11 11 the supply on hand is exhaust 11 ed. H HI H 11 HE fill! SB IS II 11 11 SSI ffl 11 EH Joint Grange Meeting The Clackamas county Pomona Grange will meet with Central Grange at Beaver Creek on October 10. YOUTH JOINS FLIERS Former Oregon City School Boy Goes to Aviation Camp in Texas The list of energetic young Ore gonians who have enlisted in the avi ation corps of the United States army was recently lengthened by the addition of the name of Elmore A. Johns, of Portland, who has been as signed to squadron 66 of the aviation corps, stationed at San Antonio, Tex. The young birdman enlisted on August 1. He is 21 years of age, the son of Mrs. M. B. Johns, of Port land. He was born in Oregon City, and received his education from the schools of this city. Going to Port land six years ago, he has been cm ployed as a shipping clerk with the firm of Clossett & Devers. Young Johns was widely known and popular among the younger folk of the city. MANY CARS SAVED Loral Agent Party to Competition for Espee Company W. E. Satchwell, local agent of the Southern Pacific, has been notified that, as a result of the car loading competition in which he and other agents of that company are partici pating, 6,402 cars were saved dur ing the month of July, 1917, as com pared with loading in July of last Yyear. OF- Beauty contrary, value considered, It costs less. $50.00 Hill m iilill?i;:f Rf mm! $150.00 Keeping Up the Quality and $ Keeping Down the Price-- Ta TTT 1 if. T-V 1 s Yveiworm mouses arc Miu $z,uu s i 4 New Welworth Models on Sale Tomorrow H ERE'S a good example of prices down to the lowest of how our patrons benefit from our close, intimate co-operation with representative manufacturers. Welworth Blouses were al ways exceptional values now their supremacy is more pronounced than ever before. i Just a Limited Quantity of Charming g t New Styles for Tomorrow's Selling js WELWORTH BLOUSES Masonic Bldi -. Of particular note is the com pany's accomplishment in the loading of merchandise. By increasing the load 1,400 pounds a car, a saving of 1,626 cars was affected. GOES TO WASHINGTON Miss Elizabeth Aldrich has gone to Washington, D. C, where she has se - I M $175.00 Oregon City fJ.i11 l C fA Conceded to be the Finest $2 Blouse in all America how this store always tries to keep possible level as well an illustration ARE SOLD HERE ONLY y cured a position in the war depart ment Miss Aldrich is well known in Clackamas county. She is a daugh ter of J. H. Aldrich of Canby and a sister of E. B. Aldrich of the Pendle ton East Oregonian. j The Oregon City Courier and the ' Oregon Farmer, both for $1.00. ! ! V