!)c Dallco VOL. X THE DALLES, OREGON. MONDAY, JANUARY 2-1, 1898 NO 323 flHP Chronicle, FOOD STORES SEIZED (iovorimicnl Takes Posses sion ol' Supplies. MAIM'IAI, LAW !S PROCLAIM HI) nli ThrnntitiiiMl to Hulil His Wuri'lioiiHim W litirn Ciititlti Itny Ahhdi'II'U IIIh A ulliorlty. Si:atti.i:, Jan. 112. Tho lntust from Alaska is Hint Captain Kay, Unltod St ituH army, Iiiih tiikun charge o( tliu stores of the-Alaska Trading Company and tlio Vortti American Trading and Transportation Coinpiuiy, aud Iiiih pro claimed martial law in Fort Yukon, and placed itH fiUO inhabitant!! on rations, compelling those who have money to pay for tht'in, and thoHO who havti not to work (or them. I his step was ren dered necessary by thu Hinull stoek of supplied on liand, which, it was feared, would lit," exhausted Imforo lhi Yukon river opened next spring. After taking tlitH action, Captain Ray Hunt a special messenger to Dawson, with a letter to tin; commercial uoinpaniqe notifying thi'ii) that he hud taken possession of their Htort'H. It is Htated that the letter iiIko asked the commercial compitnieH to iihc tliuir influence in securing lcgielu tiou hy congress giving 10 the BoldierH in Alaska the sainu civil functions enjoyed by the Canadian mounted police. Tliu newB of Captain Kay's action reached here thlu morning on the steam er City of SeuUle, which brought forty live persons from Dawson City, and gold dust and drafts estimated at $500,000. TodayH nrrlvule hring advices up to De cember -1st. They contain no other late news of importance. It in the uuivcrtml expression ot thosu arriving today, that while there in no immediate neeu of a relief expedition, it will ho very aeceptahlo late in the spring. All nay that an expedition can not he taken in at thiH season, but that it would he a wise move on the part of the government to have It at the lakes ruaily to Htart when the lcerunH out. It will then read) Dawson in time to le- litive diHtreHH which now Hcenm probable to occur before boats can aecend the river. It is Htated that Captain Kay will ask the secretary of war for Hullieient troops to patrol the Yukon basin thin coming; season. It is also Htated that Major Kuckur, who is at Jtyea and Skaguay, aiuking preliminary pruparatioiiB for the government relief expedition, has recommended that troops he Htutiomd at these two placet) and along thu trails to preserve, order. W. M. Hank, of San Francisco, who arrived huru today from PawHon City, which place he left December 10th, givtiB the following particulars of an attempt hy a mob at Fort Yukon to sui.o tlio warehouses of the Alaska Trading Com pany and the North Americun Trading A Transportation Company. The par ticulars weru brought to Dawson by Fred GokcIi, October 28th. One htin 'Ired and iltty men went to the muling ttmipniilemuid demanded that thoy bo Kivon one year's provisions on credit. 'J'hey said that thoy would pay them with work in the mines in the Klondike next season. The companies refused, nfler a consultation with Captain Kay. Oil thu following day, the mob gave no tice that unless Its demands were com plied with, the warehoiiBOs would bo "sized. Captain Kay, whon informod ('f this, hoisted the United States Hag ovr both wurohouscH, and, placing Lieu- Royal make the fnoil pure, wliole.iomc and delicious. Iff POWDER Absolutely Pure MOVAL DAKINQ I'OWDCrt CO., htW YORK. tenant Riahardson in command of ono, took possession of the other, and pro claimed martial law. Cnptain Kay swore in a force of twenty-five men to aid hi.n in the potection ot the prop erty. A peculiar fatality occurred on the City of Seattle on her upward trip. A light fell from the masthead and struck a passenger named George, of Victoria, crushing- his skull and killing him in stantly. The commission appointed by the miners at a recent meeting in Dawson to go to Ottawa and ask for a modifica tion of thu mining laws, was among thu passengers on board the City of Se attle. How' Thlfc! We oiler one hundred dollars reward for any case of Catarrh that can not be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. Chunk v & Co. I'rops., Toledo, 0. We, the undersigned, have known F .1. Cheney for the lust 10 years, und be lieve him perfectly honorable in all busi miss transactions und financially able to carry out any obligations made by their firm. WuBt it Truux, Wholesale Druggists, To ledo, 0., Wutding, Kinnan & Marvin, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, Ohio. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken inter nully, acting directly upon thu blood and tnucotiB Htirfuces of the system. Pricet 75e. per bottle. Sold by all druggists testimonials free. 1.5-1) It's a Fact 1 thi't iiillamutlon from any cause can be speed ily reduced by thu gen tie application of Gut liMiriV'llHppyTlinuKlit" Salve, GO cunts Wortli double tlio money. For Sale by BUNNELL, The Dimist Ciiiluiiil if Hoimih for AIhhku. Hi:iTNKi:,.lan. 22. A carload of horses bought by V. D. Maddock for the Alaska trade, will bo shipped tonight. Mr Maddock also bought u number of multti which will be driven to Pendleton for shipment. He will he here again next March to buy up all he con find suitable. tor the puppose. llllMHI-Ullltl UoiIr. The Ancient Greeks believed that the Penates were tliu gods who attended to the welfare aud prosperity of the family. They were worshipped as household gods in every home. Tho household god of today is Dr. King's New Discovery. For consumption, coughs, colds und for all atl'ections of Throat, Chest and Lungs it is Invaluable. It lias been tried for a quarter of a century aud is guaranteed to cure, or money lelurned. No house hold should he without this good angel. It Is pleasant to take and a sufo aud sure remedy for old and young. Free bottles ut Blukoley it Houghton's drug store. 2 Trunin tiy A round tliu liupldx, Vii'ToitiA, Jan. '22. M. S. MauConly, who has just arrived from Alaska, has under construction u steel tramway around the Canyon und White Horse rapids. He Is nuilding four tracks, aud by Iho time the river opens, he says ho will bo iibhi to handle GOO tens daily, taking boats aud all. HoumtliiiiK to Know. It may be worth Bomothiiifc to know that the very oest medicine for restoring tho tired out nervous system to a healthy vigor is Electric Bitters. This medicine is purely vegetable, acts by giving tone to tho norvu centers in the stomach, gently stimulates thu Liver and Kidneys, mid aids these organs In throwing off impurities in the blood. Kluctrli! Bitters improves thu appetite, aids digestion, and is pronounced by those who have iried it as the. very beet blood purifier und nerve tonic. Try it. Sold for 50c or If 1.00 per bottle tit Blake ley & Houghton drill! store. 2 11 o ii n U I a K tho Morn. Kio t)K Jankiuo, Jan. 22. The steam ship Oity of Columbia, eurouto for Alas ka with a party of goldhuntere, bound I for the Klondike, arrived hero without J incident. Tho party hails from New i Yoik. ' When you can not sleep for coughine j take Chamberlain's Cough Kemcdy. It I always yives prompt reliuf. It is most excellent for colds, too, as it aids ex- I twHnrntinri. rHliovr.p Mm luncra niwl nrn. nents any tendency toward pneumonia. Fur tale by Bakeley fc Houghton. Snow In Illinois. Pkoiiia, .Jan. 22. The heaviest snow storm of tho teneon prevailed here eince e.iriy this moining, and there is no sign of its abating. Ilicy l.lve Nr Detroit, and Keprogent n I'sixt t.'t'iitnry. Out iii the region of the St. Clair flats, near Detroit, lici a peculiar triliu known in general as the mushrnl, French. No whore else in the United States is there n community Mich ns this in language and customs. Despite Die fnct that their ancestors have lived there for a century and a hnlf, says the New York Sun, they speak English that ih barely intelligible to the average citi :-en, while their French, it is said, is to tally beyond the ken of u Parisinn. In one respect they are particularly nota ble that is in their ability as story tellers. I lie Dctroitcrs understand them, and the mushrat Fjcnch know it, so that as raconteurs they are not ut their best before them, but let them get hold of a guilelcbs easterner and they will (ill him full of the most marvelous tales of hunting and iishingndventures that ever came from the mouth of man. As n means of earning money they hunt, and fish, selling their prey to the nmrkets. Their own staple food ar ticle is the musk-rat, called "mushrat." which abound out there; hence their name, mushrat French. Against all ridicule they will maintain that no beast, bird or fish is more delicate, sus taining and healthful than this animal. "Take coin fat," said one of them ton New Yorker, who spent part of his a cntion on the flats, "take eem fat, stofi" cem up with airb (herbs) an speece (spice), put eem on fire an' roast eem, un' sh! what will you? lie is pairfect. You shall not tll eem from duck. Cen tillium of New York come 'ere to eat duck. We give eem mushrat cook comme il fait. He say: 'Ah, heaven! Ah, Cod! Neva ire have I eat such n duck!' He thought it was a duck, that mushrat." IN DEADLY COMBAT. Wnpltl anil the Ki'tl Deer In Central Park I'lKlit ii Duel. War was proclaimed in Central park. The wapiti and the red deer bucks were spoiling for a fight. It is a way they have at this, season of t lie year, says tho New York Ueeordcr, and in the forests many a duel to the death is fought, with no seconds standing by, and with no human or other appreeiativeeyeto wit ness'thu valor displayed. For the past few days the wapiti and the biggest of the red deer bucks have glared at each other across the barbed wire fence w hieh separates them. Then they began charging at each other, and their antlers came together with many a resounding crash. After much ma neuvering Keeper Snyder got a rope over the horns of Mr. Wapiti, but the buck did not mind it in the least. Tan a do.en keepers got hold of the lariat, and with great difficulty forced the wapiti away front his panting rival, and lie was put into a paddock- where there were only young fellow bucks whose antlers had scarcely begun to sprout and w hoiu, of course, lie w ould not con descend to attack. The blood of the led stag, however, seemed boiling, and having no longer a foeinan worthy of his horns he chased and prodded the poor ladies of his harem. The keepers, at the risk of their lives, sawed off his antlers and his martial spirit seems to be knocked out of hint forever. .GHflS. FHHJiK. Butehens and Farmers Exchange.. Keriis on ilraucht tlic celebrated COM'MWA ilEKIt, neknnwl cilRtil the best beer In The Dalles, at Hie tisiiul iirlce. Come In, try it anil be fonvlnrcd. AIo the FIiifM brands ot Wines, Liquors, mid C'lsari'. anduiiehes lot all Kinds always on hand. Tlie CoMia Packing Co., PACKERS OF PORKand BEEF MANUFACTURERS OF Fine Lard and Sausages. Curers of BRAND HAMS & BACON DRIED BEEF. ETC. FRENCH & BANKERS. CO., 1'KANSACT A GENERAL BANKING BUS1NES Letters of Credit issued available in Eastern States. the Sight Exchange and Telegraphic Transfers sold on New York, Chicago, St. Louis, San Francisco, Portland Ore gon, Seattle Wash,, and variouE points in Oregon and Washington. Collections made at all points on fav orable terms. THE NEW YORK WORLD THRICE-fl-WEEK EDITION. 18 I'liecN Wrok. 150 I'jiikt a Vr BEES AS LETTER-CARRIERS. Trained by A j;rlciilUirltii 10 Act thu l'art of Carrier l'lueoin. An apleulturist has commenced train ing bees for letter carrying purposes. After n few preliminary trials, he says, he took a hive of them to the house of a friend four miles distant. After some t'ays, when tho bees had become fa miliar with their new surroundings, some of them were liberated in a room, where they soon settled on a plate of honey which had been specially pro pai ed for t hem. While t hey were busy eating it their trainer placed on their backa the tiniest of dispatches, fastened with the thluuest of thread, mid so ar ranged them us to leave the head and wings absolutely free. They wero then thrown Into the nlr and soon arrived at their homo with the letters on their baoK'i, The writing was magnified and quite legible. Here, then, says the London Telegraph, Is an opening for a new Industry. In time of war bees would have the advantage over pigeons ot invisibility, und might go through tbe enemy's line with impunity, It stands first among 'wceklv" papers in eme, frequency of publication freshness, variet and reliability of con tents. It is practically a dailv at the low price o a weekly: and its vast list of subscribers, extending to every state and territory of the Union and foreign coun tries, will vouch for thu accuracy and fairness of its news columns. It is splendidly illustrated, and among its Bpecial features are a fine humor page, exhaustive market reports, all the latest fashioiie for women and a Ion series of stories by the greatest living American and English authors, Vnnaii Doyle, Jerome K. Jerome, Stanley Weyiimn, ftlury K. Wilklna Anthony llot, Itret llurte, Jlranrier Matthew, Ktc. We offer this unequaled newspaper and The Dalles Twice-a-Week Chronicle to. gether one year for $2.00. The regular price of the two papers is $3.00. Sheriff's Sale. Notice n hereby Rivim Hint under and by vir tue of mi execution und older of tide ifcoued out of tho Ciiouit Court of the State of Oregon for the County of Wmm-o. and to mo directed mid delivered, tijioa a Judgment and decree rendered and entered in mid court on the Mh day of No vember, ls'J7, in favor of A. II. Jones, pluiutiH' and iiKtiliiht It. K. l'ewol, defendant, for thu Mini of two Iiutuliul and teventy-fclx and 'Jo 100 if.'Tfi.'JS) dollars, together with Interest thereon, hiiico May 1, lS'Jii, at thf rate of tea iHTt'cnt ix;r annum, aud thlity (f.'W) dollars attorney fees; ii ml thu further sum of eleven (til) dollars ro&ta, wiilun miki judgment was enjoin i d ami docketed In the olllc.e of thooleik of said eon it in tald county oa tho bth day of November, 1M)7; and wheeoy it wan farther ordered mid decreed by the Court that the following det.ciibed property, to-wlt: Beginning at a point 18.&) chains west of the linu between Mictions thirty-live and thirty-six, in township three north ot rtiugo tea vast of thu Willametto Meridian, being tho western term inus of the north boundary lluo of tho James Benson Donation Laud Claim; thence iortli (.&' cliaiuti, tlieui'o vast S.sO chains, thence south I1.S5 chains, aud thence west K.so ch tins to place of beginning, containing six acres, uioie or less, and being tlio same premises sold by thu said A. B. Jones to thu said H. I'., 1'ewel, in W'lisco County, Oregon, bo sold to satisfy s ild Judgment, attorney foes', costs aud accruing costs, 1 will, on Tuesday, the bth day of i-ebnuiry, lsys, ut 'i o'clock p, m. of said day, at tbe front door of thu courthouse in Uallea City, WaseoCo.,Or.,sell ull the right, title and IntcicM of the said it. K. Kcwel in and to thu above desorIlvi property, at imbllo auction to thu highest bidder for cash in liuu l, tho pro ceeds arising from said sale to bo applied to the satisfaction of said judgment, attorney's fee, costs aud accruing covin, mid tho surplus, If any there bo, to bo paid into court, and there to re main until the further order oi this court. T. J. DRIVKK, dcc'.M Sheriff of Wasco County, Or. A. M. WILLIAMS & CO. Third Great Offering of Our Clearance Sale.. Ml Ml Sooes If you are in need of good Shoes at less mono' than has ever before been placed on the market, now is tUe time to pur chase. We offer the tions for this week. ' following Reduc- MENS' SHOES. Former Wine, Box Calf, calf lined, heaw winter shoe $5 CO Ox Blood, Coin Toe, Russian Caif " 4 50 Dark Green, Bulldog, Willow Calf " 4 50 Ox Blood, Seal, Coin Toe, heavy sole 3 00 Black Calf, Square Toe, Cap, lace and congress 4 50 Kangaroo, Narrow Square Toe, Cap, Dress Shoe, lace and congress 4 00 Calf, Square Toe, Cap, lace and congress 3 00 Satin Calf. Plain Square Toe, lace and congress 2 50 Satin Calf, Coin Toe, lace and congrass 2 50 Satin Calf, Plain Toe, Tap Sole, lace and congress 2 25 Sale $3 40 2 95 2 95 2 30 3 45 3 05 2 25 1 85 1 85 1 45 BOYS' and YOUTHS' SHOES. Glove Grain, Bal., medium heavy 1 75 1 35 Grain, Narrow Square, Tap Sole 1 50 1 15 Youths Glove Grain, medium heavy 1 50 1 20 Youths Grain, Narrow Square, Tap Sole 1 25 1 10 LADIES' SPECIAL. See Cur Bargain Table. Cleaning up of old style (3, $4 and $5 Turns and Welts, very finest and best of quality, to go at 1 00 Lace, Dark Green, Box Calf, Welt, Coin Toe 4 00 2 60 Lace, Dark Green, Kid, Welt, Coin Toe 4 00 2 60 Lace, Ox Blood Russia Calf, Welt.Coin Toe 3 50 2 40 Lace, Ox Blood Russia Calf, McKay.Coin Toe 3 00 2 10 Lace and Button, Black Kid, Welt.Coin Toe, patent tip .... 2 75 1 95 Button, Plain, Common Sense Toe 2 50 1 70 Lace and Button, Coin Toe, Patent Tip 2 00 1 55 Lace, Box Calf, Bulldog, Heavy Welt Sole 4 00 2 95 Lace and Button, Spring Heel, Coin Toe, Patent Tip 1 50 1 30 MISSES' SHOES. fetso2. " Kid, Button, Coin Toe, Patent Tip 1 25 1 00 Grain, Button, Common Sense Toe, stock tip 1 25 95 Kangaroo Calf, Coin Too, Patent Tip, school shoe 1 45 1 10 Kine Kid, Cloth Top, Square Toe, Patent Tip 1 90 1 40 Fine Kid, Kid Top, Square Toe, Patent Tip 1 90 1 40 CHILDRENS' SHOES. Kangaroo Calf, Button, Coin Toe, Patent Tip, 5 to 8 1 00 65 Kid, Button, Coin Toe, Patent Tip, 8 to 11 1 00 75 Kangaroo Calf, Com. Sense Toe, stock tip, school shoe, S-ll. 1 15 85 Cloth aud Kid Top, Button, Square Toe, Pat. Tip, dress shoe 1 50 1 15 This list does not cover all discounts on Shoo Salo, as wo have specials on most every line in stock. Also specials previously offered, on this Clearanco Sale still continues. As wo must reduce stock so as to make room for now goods, now boing purchased by our two representatives in New York. We wish to call tho attention to Lady customers that on Saturday next, from 10 a. m. to 4 p. m., wo will place on saio at a great "Reduction something to their interest. See advertisement later. A. M. WILLIAMS & CO. 4& WHO has the best Dress Goods has the best Shoes has everything to he found in a flrst-olass Dry Goods Store. C. F. STEPHENS. ESS