cn 3 k Jh 1 1P-' VOL. X THE DALLES, OREGON, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1897 NO 265 Kilr toi fn ffpi :i.f(u TO TRAIL THE INDIANS Prospectors Bent on Find ing Mines. FORTY-MILE REPORTED BURNED Portland Bridges for the Boad Between Skafnar and the Lake Secretary Alger's Orders. Seattle, Nov. 13. The Bteamer City of Seattle arrived here this afternoon from Janeaa and Skaguay. Anions the paeaengers was AddiBon Stewart, who was with the Thorp party. He left his associates eight days ago. They had juBt reached Lake Bennett with 36 bead of cattle. The lake and river were freez ing rapidly and by the time the cattle were butchered and sleds built it was thought the river would be sufficiently frozen to permit tue party starting for Dawson City with the frozen, beef. Waechter and Stenber of Spokane bad also reached the lake with their band of cattle. John McArthur of Seattle, who went to Cook inlet last spring in the interests of the Alaska' Gold Syndicate, was also a passenger. He make extensive explo rations in the country tributarv to Cook inlet. He discovered twelve rivers which had never been previously located. He described it as - rough, mountainous country, which he thinks is very rich in quartz ledges, the croppings of which show $7.40 in gold per ton. McArthur Bays that a party of twenty uen are now camped at Knick arm, awaiting the ar rival of Copper river Indians, who come down to trade at Cook inlet. The in tention of the men is to follow the In dians back, and, if possible, .locate the field from which they procure the gold brought out by them on their trading expeditions. Royal makes the food pare, .'wholesome and delicious. E1 Absolutely Pure ROYAL BAKINO POWDER CO., NEW YORK. mules used in the army bad been aban doned a few yearB ago out of humane consideration for the animals, but it has been found necessary to have eome distinguishing mark on these animala and branding With a hot iron is the only practical method of making it. Celebrated for Its great leavening strength and healthfulness. Assures the food against alum and all forms of adulteration common to toe cheap brands. Royal Baking Powder Co. New York. THE S1ICKEEN ROUTE. It Is Not What the British Claim Is to lie. Fort Wrangle, Nov. 5. A great number of persons are anxious for in formation as to the Stickeen route as a way of entering the Yukon country. There is no doubt that a person having gone any one way would wish he bad gone some other, but I have this to Bay : There is but one route to the Yukon and that is by Dyea. All the others are just as hard and ten times as long. The route is up the Stickeen river, 150 . miles. The river is frozen from Novem ber nntil April. From April 15 until July the water is too shallow to permit of anything but canoe navigation, and the Indians charge $100 per ton to take freight up in -canoes, and are raising prices all the time. During July, Au gust and September the river is a foam ing mountaiu torrent. The month of October, when all the high ground is freezing and before the ice forms in the river, is the only month put of the 12 that can be at all relied upon as practic al forgoing up the river in small boats. Kiver boats are subjected to the same general rule. No boat drawing over 18 inches would be of the slightest use cn the Stickeen, and the rapids are foam ing masses. For instance, the Indians carry blocks and long ropes (300 feet) fasten the ropes ashore to a tree and draw the canoes up over the rapids Such boats as the Eugene and those on the Willamette river could not make the Stickeen in one hundred years, Then after you are once at Telegraph creek, the head of possible navigation, it is 160 miles more to Tealin lake, over land. Some people say there is a trail over this country, but no .living man will say that he ever personally saw this trail. ' No, there is no trail. It is a ewamp, knee deep in water, and moss, and denselv covered with brash and pruce trees.. It looks like the fur thick ets along the railroad above Oregon City. You can't see six feet in front of you. There is no trail and none can be made without corduroying the entire distance. 'Jake the best ground on the entire route and after leading three head of horses across it' a person, would go in all over trying to follow. The people in Victoria say the British are going to build a road from Telegraph creeek to Teslin lake. If they ever do it will be on piles driven to bedrock the whole distance. . Victoria is booming the Stickeen route. You hear clerks in etores and little, pale-faced steamboat agents whom one breath down the Stickeen would freeze to stiff for a pike pole telling tenderfeet about the easy Stickeen route. It is all wrong; it 1b scarcely less than accessory to murder. Out of the thirtv well-equipped parties who left here, twelve of them loBt their outfits by the boats upsetting, one man was drowned and one party of two men reached Telegraph prior to October 15 , the rest all came back. Since then they have all gone through, and they all had Indian guides and helpers on fcoth occasions. Choate for Attorney-General. San Francisco, Nov. 13. A Washing ton dispatch says it is considered likely that Joseph Choate will enter the cabi net as attorney-general. , If he doee, it will be as the representative of the in dependent element of the party in New York. Mr. Choate'a name has been presented to the president for the poet to be va cated by Mr. McKenna. who is to take Justice Field's place on the supreme .court bench. It has been under consid eration by Mr. McKinley and his most intimate advisers tor several days, and if the expectations of tboBe who are urg ing it are not disappointed, Mr. Choate's appointment will be " made public as early as next Monday. NAMED BI THE PRESIDENT. OLD SORES. The cures of old sores effected by Garland's-"005, Happy .Thought Salve are marvejons some say tniracu lous.. Cleanse the affected part two times a day, using good Castile soap with warm water. Then apply the Salve and cover with robber gauze CO noia toe moisture. . 50 cents a jar"""??852 at'Donnell's Drugstore. Brands for Army Horses. Washington, Nov. 13. The old prac tice of branding animala belonging to the Uuited States with a hot iron will be resumed under a regulation just is sued by Major-General Smith. It pro vides that all public animals shall on the dav received be branded with the letters US" on the left foreshoulder, the let ters to l?e two inches bigh. Cavalry horses assigned to organizations will also be branded on the hoof on one fore foot and one and one-half inches before the coronet. The practice of branding horses and Edward Branton to Be Postmaster at Walla Walla. Washington, Nov. IS.' The president has appointed the following . postmas ters : Utah Eureka, James P. Driscoll. , Washington Walla Walla, Edward L. Brunton ; Meyers Falls, Arthur B Keeler. - ' , The appointment has been determined upon of Assistant Commissary General William H. Bell, now on duty in this city, as commissary general ef subsist ence, to succeed General Sullivan, who retired today. The Carter Case. Washington, Nov. 13. The chief of engineers, beneral Wilson, has.received from Colonel Gillespie, the president of the board of inquiry ,a report in the case of Captain Oberlin Carter, corps of en gineers, cnargea with irregularities in the conduct of river and harbor work in Savannah harbor. The board took over a thousand pages of testimony from con tractors and other persons cognizant with the character of the work. General Wilson will send the papers to Secretary Alger in a few days. . NOTICE. I have a stray horse, a roan, 9 years old, branded with a figure 2 on the right hip, at my place on three mile. The owner can have the Bame bv Davine the cost of this advertisement and proving SEr'.SSi&S cSKflWSSnJS Skth Morgan I in the above entitled action on or before - The Dalles, 2 our Clothing with any other make in the $ 1 . county you will find that the word "cheap" y P Is not written all over our garments. The A 2 buttons and linings are not glued on, nor 6 2 ' Is the cloth cut out with a saw. I-'' A Guarantee Ticket with 'y'rjf'-'','. -' - A Z avary garment bearing this label... - Ujf:(. jjL C" ffi' ' f SUMMONS. rK THE CIRCUIT COURT of the State of Ore- property. $2000 OO We ve heard pi people en- joying . poor health guess some ot them enjoy poor baking powder. Good food for good health T X gon for Wasco County. The Oresron Railroad & Navigation Company, a corporation organized under me laws ot tne State oi Oregon, Plaintiff, vs Thomas J. Bulger and Bulger, his wife, "wnose given name is unknown to piainun; I. L. Cates, George Gardiner and Fannie E. Gardiner. Defendants. To Thomas J. Bulger, Bulger, whose given name is unknown to rjlainuff, George Gardi ner and Fannie E. Gardiner, defendants. IN THE NAME OF THE STATE OF O&F.GON ap- you the first day of the term of the above entitled court following the expiration of the time prescribed in the order for the publication of this sum mons, to wit: on or before the 8th day of No vember, 1897, that being the nrst day of the n-xt regular term of said court, and If you fail to so appear and answer the complaint of the plain tiff, for want thereof the plaintiff will apply to the court for the judgment prayed for in said complaint, towi For the condemnation and appropriation for a right-of-way for a railroad of a strip of land one hundred feet wide over and across the following described lands: Commenc ing at a point 1190 feet north from' the southeast corner of the southwest quarter of section six, township two nortn, range ight east, in "Wasco county, Oregon, thence north 70 feet to a point; thence north 86 degrees 34 minutes east, 2s0 feet to a point in the north boundary of the right-of-wav of the Oregon Railway and Navigation Com- nauroaa ana navigation t- , I- i I nanv. now Oreeon OCMlling S JDeSC DaKing pOWaer Company's right-of-way: thence southwesterly and tea. A Schilling & Company San Francisco 2219 IS 1 Li a Ei BtilMO Tuesday Evening Npv. 19th. The Celebrated lecture by W. H. ILIFF, World of fJit." Tickets of Admission, 25c. t Lecture to commence at 7:45 o'clock. to the place of beginning, containing 22-100 acres. Also another tract of land sl'uated in said sec tion six. described as follows, to-wlt: Com mencing at a point in the south boundary of tne ricrut-of-wav of the said Oreeon Railroad and Navigation Company, which point is 1175 feet north and 290 feet east of the southeast corner of tbe southwest quarter of section six, township two nortn. range eigne east: inence norta so de grees end 34 minutes east, S15 feet to a point on tne sou in Dounaary oi tne saiu ngni-oi-way; thence on a curve to the left with and along the said boundary of said right-of-way in a westerly course to the place of beginning, containing 4-1UU acres; saia una to oe usea xor tne xe-ioca- tlon ot the railway of said piaintin s across saia premises as provided by section 3241, Hill's An- notatea i.aws oi tne state oi uregon. Ana plain tiff will also take judgment for its costs and dis Dursements in tms action. This summons is served upon the defendants above named by -publication thereof in The Dalles Chronicle by order of Hon. W. I. Brad. shaw-. Judge of the Seventh Judicial District of tne state ox uregon, maae at cnamuera in issues city, uregon, mis 'otn day ot tsepiemoer, is. W. W. COTTON, J. M. LONG and W. H. WILSON, eeptti - Attorneys for Plaintiff. eesos? jriDuiie FOK Farmers and Villagers, FOB Fathers and Mothers, FOB Sons and Daughters. FOB . - . ..' All the Family. With tbe close of the Presidential Campaign THE TRIBUNE secoenizes tbe fact that the American people are now anxious to give their attention to home and baainess interests. To -meet tins condition, pontics win bave lar less epace ana prominence, until another State or National occasion demands a renewal of the tight for the principles for which THE TRIBUNE has labored from its inception to the present dav, and won its greatest victories. Everv possible effort will be put forth, and money freely spent, to make THE WEEKLV TRIBUNE pre-eminently a National Family Newspaper, interesting, instructive, entertaining and indispensable to each member of the family. . We furnish. "The Chronicle" and N. .YTWeekly Trib une one year for only $1.75. Write your name and address on a postal card, send it to Geo. W. Beet, Tribune Office. New York City, aci a sample copy of The New York Weekly Trib une will be mbiled to vou. - , Uascoweh ouseloiii piny FRENCH & CO., BANKERS. TRANSACT A GENERAL-BANKING BU8INES I Letters of Credit issued available in the Eastern States. Sight Exchange ' and ' Telegraphic Transfers sold on New York, Chicago, St. Louis, San Francisco, Portland Ore gon, Seattle Wash,, and various points in pregonrxti JVashington.' ..." ' - Collections made at all points on fav orable terms. Headquarters for Seed Grain of an kinds.'. Headquarters for Feed Grain of ail kinds. Headquarters for Rolled Grain, au kinds. Headquarters for Bran, Shorts, oPmTL'lfed Headquarters for "Byers' Best" Fendle- y ft'i'i y This Flour is .manufactured expressly Jor family AJ1. J. XJ W-A . . use: every sack ia guaranteed to give satisfaction. We sell our goods lower than any house in the trade, and if you don't think so call and get bur prices and be convinced. Highest Prices Paid for Wheat, Barley and Oats.