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About Washington County hatchet and Forest Grove times. (Forest Grove, Or.) 1896-1897 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 12, 1897)
W A S H IN G T O N COUNTY nATCHET. THE WAZlRia. A W ild and W a r lik e Tr lbe 0 t a b I n d i a n Frontier. ** i» A laska H E United Staten G o v e r n meat in 18G7 paid Kussla * 7 , 2 0 0,0 0 0 for Alaska. The terri tory has paid hack her purchase mon ey in «old four times, having pro duced during the time it has been a part of the United States about $30,- 000,000 of the pre cious yellow metal. To-day the eyes of the world are turned toward our frozen acquisition in the north, for within its borders has been dis covered an Eldorado. The word Klon- d.vke, literally translated meaning Deer Hiver, is on every tongue and is known as the designation for a gold-bearing district greater in area and richer in character than any the world has ever known, with the possible exception of California. Klondyae is the uew open sesame to Aladdin's cave; it supplants “ Pike's Peuk or bust" iu the gold-seeker's vernacular. “The days of '97" may become as cele brated a phrase ns "the days of '49,” for the same fever that seized upon the people IKH(l dotted the Western prairies with em igrant trains bound for the Pacific coast is claiming victims by the thousands, all eager to brave the perils of the arctic cir cle and wrest a fortune from the frozen zone. 'Ihe ie|silled gold discoveries of the Present day iu Alaska and the reported gold discoveries of ’49 in California afford many parallels. To the average man the treasures or the coast State were seem ingly ns inuiceaailde as are the riches of the Yukon and its tributaries. One was more thun 2,000 miles ucrosa a trackless desert and over snow-bound mountain passes, beset by savages, whose deadly attacks marked the trail with bleaching bones across the Western States; the other is nearly 7.000 miles by water, through n rigorous climate, or almost 4,000 miles by land and water, with moun tain passes in scale as dangerous as those of ihe Swiss Alps. '■'he Alaska and California gold fields are alike nbo in being pin er mines. Placer ininiug is commonly called "poor man's mining," for the reason that it is done without machinery, while the implements required in the work are few and of small cost. A placer miner can get along very well will) a pick, shovel and gold pan. I f the dirt is nut rich lie can accomplish PLACEE M IN E E S P A N IN O of “tenderfeet,” who, aguinst the adviee of the old-timers in the district, wuudered "over yonder in the Klondyke’’ and struck it rich. From Klondyke conies much of the gold and front Klondyke seems to come all the excitement. A few "tender- feet,” going it blind, have stirred up the nation. Out of the region of their dis covery has cone, it is estimated. $2,000,- (SKI worth of gold during the present sum mer. Nearly all of that gold has found its way into the United States. It is hard to tell where the Alaska gold fields are located except that in a general way the la st of them nre along the Yukon. There are ii few "lode” mines near Ju- neau and along the southeast const of the territory (the most accessible part of itt, hut the one is of low grade and mining is made profitable only by the most careful management. In all the immense country over which the placer mining extends it is estimated that lip to last year there were 2JNHI min ers. The districts iu which most of them worked were in a broad belt of gold pro ducing toc.k, through which quartz veins carrying gold occur frequently. Through the gold-hearing rocks the streams have cut deep gullies and canyons, and in their beds the gold which was contained in the rock is comentruted. The mining of this country miisists, therefore, in washing out the gravel of these hods. T o Reach th e H o ld F ield*. • riM)«PKCTlXt» IX AI.A SKV. better resulta hy ruuuing it Ihrough a sluicc box, bul wdiere tbe vichi Is in nug- gets liisieail of tille gold he prefers to “pan” it. The grent Klondyke strike was mude lnst year, lint nothing was known of it in the United States tiutil June lo of the preseut year, when a Vessel called the Excelsior a ir i ved in San Francisco luden with milicrs from tile Klondyke. w lio in turn were luden with gold. The.v tnld slniost incredihle tales of the richness of the ncwdy discovered ilistrict, where for tunes liad liecn accumulnted íu n fcw tuonths. Experieuced miners and "ten dorfect” si ciued to lis ve sha red good for tune nlike, and with sume justice. too, for the «-redil of the dtseoverv of the new gold fields is due to the luezperlenced men. Anothcr vessel brought to Seattle a sec- The best way to reach the Klondyke district'/ One goes from Seattle by ocean steamer west and a little north, and pass es through Dutch Harbor, at tin* ex treme «ml of the Southwest Alaskan pe ninsula. From there the steamer turns north and continues on to St. Michael's Island, a little above the mouth of the Yukon, iu Behriug Sea. At that point passengers ale transferred to the river steamers to begin the long journey up the Yukon, which winds northward anil east ward, and finally brings the traveler to Dawson City, now the principal town in the district, although sixty-five miles from the Klondye tielils. The tost of the trip from Chicago this way, ns prospecting miners usually travel, in $251 .no. It is divided as follows: From Chicago to Seattle (second class), $51.50; from Seattle to Dawson City, $2tK>. In time the trip o«»sts thirty days— four from Chicago to Seattle, sixteen from Seattle to St. Slichnel'a Island, ami ten up the Yukon to Dawson City by the fast OUT” NUGGETS IN THE I AT THE FO O T OF C H 1 LK O O T PASS. oi«J party of successful prospectors ami a boat. The distance in general Hgnrea is ton ami n half of gold. These men had 2.250 miles front Chicago to Seattle, endured peril and undergone great hard 2.500 miles to St. Michael's Island and ahips gn s o inniilatliig tbe fortunes they l,gg0 miles up the Y'nkon to Dawoon, a brought, nmt they told a atory that had a total of about 6,000 miles. dark aa well aa a bright aide. To follow Anothcr way. tbe “mountain route," la tbeir example means a riak of wealth, shorter in miles, but equally long in the health t.nd even life, but for those who time It requires and a great deal more are willing to take the cham'rs the proa- difficult. By this route the traveler aaila pect they bold out la alluring. more directly north to Juneau, which la T k t K lo n d y k e D istrict. HOP miles from Beattie, and then goes hy The rieheat of the mines n the Alaaka lake and river and over the mountains region seem to be In tbe Klondyke, a few 1,000 miles to the new mining territory. i over the British border. They were The cost of the trip this wny cannot be as has been aald, by • party defleitel) stated beyond Juneau, because Cl HOUSE D IS T E lt T. sometimes even a little bit hot. but not for long. In that time, too, there is al most continual day. for that end of the earth (if it may be so called) is the one that is isiinted directly at the sun. But as the summer brings warmth and daylight it also brings mosquitoes. And such mosquitoes! Creatures that buzz and bite iu such a way us to make the dreaded Jersey variety seem by compari son like the silvery, angelic, sweetly, hum ming fancies of a peaceful dream. 1 lie travelers v. ho return from the Yukon re gion tell stories of how brave and strong men, courageous enough to undertake the perils u journey to that country involves, actually bleak down and sob in utter des peration and despair under the torments of these terrible pests. The ice and the “magnificent distances"of the country are not the only drawbacks to its explora tion or to journeying to the gold tielils; the mosquitoes must ever he remembered. Of course, in the southern part of Alas ka, where Juneau and Sitka are situated, the winters are not so rigorous. there the weather is comparatively mild, and in summer is said to la* delightful. But r r r T f f l l K H A N , A T Y P I C A L WAtm Juneau and Sitka are infinitesimal us com pared with the whole country, ami they have in form er years received are not an index to what is furnished far than one exem plary lesson for thel ther up and farther inland. provement o f their manners. In | In d u s tr ie * of A la sk a. Sir Neville Cham berlain w a s _ When travelers were asked as late as two or three years ago what were the punish them, and passed almost i It was in ] principal pursuits in Alaska they replied, through Wa/.iristan. that they again became troub.„ of course, that fishing and hunting fur nished otenpation for the greater part of and this led to General Kennedy 1 the population. What else was to be ex sent among them with a retrlbL, pected from a population made up in the force. Sir W illiam Lockhart hat| nuiiii of Eskimos and Indiuns'/ In the be sent to W azlrlstan only three j Sitka ilistrict there are magnificent for ests and lumbering is an industry, but in ago with an expedition, and at thel the barteti, icy north the occupation of Me made arrangem ents that were] the Indian was to shoot and trap the perted to preserve law and order ini bear, the fox, the otter and the other ani locality. From these previous etpf mals whose fur would bring ti price in ences it seems likely that these nzti the markets of the world, to catch the will probably receive a severe punl seals u’ld spear the whale and catch the ment for their most recent outb other fish or game that could be turned into money. Salmon canning is the great T W I N A S H TREES. industry of the Kadiak district, and has been ¡’or yiars. They Joined T o geth er Fifteen O f late, however, the other industries of A b o v e tt e Ground. Alaska have sunk almost out of sight be A rem arkable tw in tree gro* cause of the new gold flurry. Mining, of course, is the industry of the white man. shown in the accompanying cut t Virgin gold might have lain in plain sight ditceil from the Scientific An The original photograph was taken| I ’rof. W illiam W erthner, of the ] ton high school. The tree stands t W aynesville, O. It is a very sytnm ileal coalescence o f two blue asbt five feet apart at the ground andatj teen feet above joining to form a j feet trunk that extends to a hel*btj some seventy feet. Each tree Is I much more than that of a ward division in Chicago. FACTS ABOUT ALASKA. In acquiring the Alaskan territory, though tin- United States moved its cen j n t f H A S K I ) In 1807 from Rus ter, Hguied iu geographical mines, not ill sia for $7,200,000; purchase negoti ated by W illiam H. Seward. area or population, as far west as San Area 1.« square miles. M l. 4011. Francisco. The country now extends Population (census o f 18001. 30.320. from about the 415th degree of longitude of whom but 4,41« were whites. 8,400 up at the far east corner of Maine to the Esquimaux and 13,7:« Indians. Estimated present population, 40, 122d degree up at the far northwest tip Onn. of the A-uakan mainland. This is taking Principal cities. Sitka (the capital). no account of the little island of Attn, Juneau. W rangel. Circle City. Principal rivers, the Yukon (more l.tXKJ miles out in the Pacific, beyond the than 2.000 miles long!, tile Kuskok- Hawaiian group, which, since the pur wlm, the Colville and the Copper. chase of Alaska, has really been our west Principal mountains. Mount Logan, altitude 19,500 feet: Mount St. Ellas. ern land limit. The United States, there 18,100: Mount Wrangel, 17.500 feet. fore, may almost say with England that Governor o f the territory, James I>. the ami never sets on its possessions. Brady; residence at Sitka. Principal productsbesldesgold, furs, The G reat Yukon River. fish and lumber. The principal river iu Alaska, the Yu Principal occupations o f the people, hunting and fishing. kon. tip which prospectors have to work Gold first discovered In 1879. their weary way to reach the gold fields, Estimated product o f gold to date. was culled by Schwatka, the Alaskan *30.000,000. Product o f gold In I NISI. *4,070.000. Nile. It rises a little more than 200 miles Klondyke In English Is Deer River. above Sitka, in the southern part of The river is so designated on the Alaska, and then strikes northward, fol maps. Klondyke gold Helds partly In Am er lowing broad circle to the west before ican and partly Iu British territory, it empties into Behring Sea through an and the prodm-t is disposed of in the extensive delta. Six hundred miles in l'nlted States. from the coast it is more than a mile Scene of the present excitement Is along the I'p p er Yukou and Its tribu wide and the volume of its water is so taries. great as to freshen the ocean ten miles Distance from Chicago to the Klon- out from land. dyke gold Helds, via the Yukon. Is about 0.500 miles; via Chllkoot Pass, Ihe principal cities of Alaska are Ju about 4.000 miles. INDIAN RIVER. neau and Sitka. They are both thriving Tim e to make the trip by either towns, and probably they will thrive route, thirty days. from now on. for a time at least, as the.v in the rocks to a limitless extent and in Cost o f the trip, about *300, • have never thriven before. Alaska is ruled all probability the Indians and the Es T ravel poaslble only In June. July and August. by a territorial governor, who now is J. kimos would never huve touched it. Food Climate in winter severe In the e x G. Brady, recently appointed by President and furs arc the standard of value with treme, winter beginning In Septem McKinley to succeed James A. Sheakley. them. Gold fills no Eskimo stomachs and ber. The Governor's residence is in Sitka. keeps no Eskimo body warm. During June and July continuous Among the things Alaska has done for daylight; during December suit Janu W orkin g Placer Mine*. ary continuous night. this country aside from stirring up the The Klondyke mines are placers— the present gold excitement one of the most most easily worked mines of any, and forward was to involve it in disputes with requiring the least expenditure. The after that point it dependn somewhat on England on the boundary question and methods of washing out placer gold are the bargain made with th«‘ Chilkoot In the seal fisheries business. Both of these known as "sluicing” and "panning.” The dians, who pack supplies through the pass, disputes threatened war. hut white-wing former is employed where the yield is of and the length of time the overland part ed pence settled over the situation in each ordinary value, while all old-timer* pre of the journey r«‘quires: hut the Indiana case and brought the suggestion of that fer the latter in rich ground. who act as guides and pack Hupplica do newly invented Engliah-Ameriean institu In sluicing the dirt is shoveled into the not work without big pay. tion arbitration. However, the boundary sluice box, through which water is rapid question is not settled yet. D aw son CttT. ly running. The box is of varying length. Dawson City, the center of tbe new mining region, although sixty-Hre miles distant trom the Klondyke. is said to lie a typical mining town—minus the guns. The British Government enforces its laws in Dawson, anil those laws prohibit the use of firearms, so few men carry guns. The laws of the camp are enforced hy mounted police, whose «-aptain is a civil officer. Though there are said to be 3.000 pimple in Dawson, few houses have been built, for the principal reason that lumber is $100 per 1,000 feet. The general fear is, of course, that there will be great suf fering there this winter, and it will be in creased, It is expected, by the rush of miprepuied prospectors who sailed for the new Helds immediately on learning what luck had befallen those who have but recently returned. To give an accurate Idea of the cost of living in Dawson City, the price list of a general store there is herewith given: Flour, per 100 lbs.............................*12 on 00 Moose him. per lb............................ i 1 no Csrtbou meat, per lb................ tt* B onus , per lb............................ 10 Rice, per lb.............................. 2* Soger, per lb........................... 25 Bacon, per lb........................... 40 Rutter, per roll........................ i » Eggs, per doseu............................... i 1 50 Better eggs, per tlosen....................... 2 2 00 00 Salmon, each..............................*1 to > 1 50 M A P S H O W IN G T HE A L A S K A GOLD Potatoes, per lb........................ 25 FIELDS. Turnips, per lb......................... 15 The census enumeration of 1S90, Ten. per lb............................... t oo and has holes bored in t h e le ñ t ^ T T w the population of the terri 51» gave Coffee, per tb............................ Dried fruits, per lb................. Ä5 tory as 30.329. of whom 4.41« were whites, hole, are hlled with q u ic k s ilv e r -V dirt 50 gravel and « a l l bowlders are w a f f i Canned fruits ......................... 20 N2 blacks, 1.508 half-breed Indians and Lemons, each .......................... Oranges, each ......................... 5i» Tobacco, per lb........................ 1 5«) diansl, 2.125 Uhinese and 8.4(84 Eskimos. times every sometimes , P' a wdp * ° me' 51» Liquors, per drink................... a . night, w w u in e s once L- The number of whites has probably been ♦k Shovels.................................... 2 50 the water is turned off and the s lu ic l^ * more than doubled since then, however, 5 <8» Picks .............. . ....................... holes are cleaned out. Ul^ Cost oil, per gallon................... 1 00 ss the Alaskan gold fe T e r set in in mild In Iwmiing, the dirt i. put into „ Overalls ................................... 1 50 • — * "on a gold t'nderwenr. per suit................... *5 to i T 51» form three or four year* ago. One would M n - k .,,,, , k “ ; *,x* of a * * im “ • ** » dishpan. Sboea ....................................... n 01» hardly th.nk of going to Alaska for the -phi, ' filia l n.i r>t• iziw n f tko t \ l ' P®H 18 IllHtli1 rtf (NiDfWis Rubber boots......................... . * : 15 00 • social advantages of the place. ~ I ' ““ pa" '* ma<h' of copper. 'PL The mine. A la sk a and Its R rso siv e s, Neither could that , reatona reason, *k' ! L * « a t te e r r into couiu it u be n«- said «mu m at a ,,, * y “ 1’ U,P » w In the purchase of Alaska, the United h ly constructed individual would go there . . n * ? ’ £ ? ***!_!!■ W,,h * *»otlon that States ncqnired a territory more than for the climate. In winter the thermome- m d u * by * * * * * * * , and ------- sloughs out the ’ na half a million square miles in extent, a - *' ter • fa “ ll, ----- so ; ■— low - «------■ in olaee* no unp one will [ gradually --- — 1 ---------- that **'» o-aroi . . —- w. "*»irr, Ater- dirt. part of It within the arctic circle and la recount*e it; that it *nea down to 70 fTV, ¿J U' r?iin,n* th* *>M in the pi the region of everlasting ice ami snow, * 7 ? end low er During .1) ,hi. kin„ of , »«balance, it i. «h ere, during part of the summer, there winter a;» in the lukon region little can Is continuous day and during the winter be done b it ait about a Ore in a vain i - - r— , continuous, dreary night. TTi« Alaskan dearor to keep warm* for dirkncs* exiar« « -f ? * ! * * * ' I ° M ar* th* only eaapn- coast line la greater than our Atlantic sea most of the time, and the life |,kp lin in g. Machinery i, only board. but tbe entire population of whiten, that of • man uncomfortably seated . « < . —T ? in P'*cer mining where larve Eskimos and fierce Indians who are the bottom of a well. ~ * f' d « ground that yield, only mode? called the Apaches o f the North, is not D u r i* « the summer season tbe day. SS onl-T power tn washing down the dig*. «* STONE KLONDYKE A few weeks ago a strong } W azlris beat back a column of troops ami native a u x ilia ry "1 A fghan frontier o f India. ThewJ are a tribe on the borders of th*.! tier, and are one of the wild,,.] most w ar like tribes on the fa, Their character has long Bailed for m urder and robbery ' TREES OKOWN FA8T. fifteen to eighteen Inches in and each trunk, as well ns the lade, is perfectly normal, nor doe* fork show any signs o f a ridge or one-sided coalescence, the union must have taken place the trees were saplings. Is this a ‘natural graft," or Indian possibly use the saplings i of his w igw am support, and tie so tightly as to Induce a The size of the trees (considering slow rate o f grow th of the bine seems to make them antedate white settlers In Ohio. State P a p e r * Mutilated. In the files of the House no urea of W ebster, C lay or Lined* main. W h ile there should be of letters from these men in evidence, all have and there is no trace of their abonts. President Lincoln tn cottrse o f his official career In ton sent hundreds of original meuts bearing his signature to House and Senate, but on all original papers filed In the Ho*** signatures have been cut off. are other Important document* I* House files which have been mutilated. t o Parttcntar. "They seem quite »«id an attache o f the state ment, "about having the Frêne) guagp used by any représentatif* the l'nlted State«.” ^ "Yes." replied Mlaa Cayenne: ^ derstand they go so fa r as to l> putting French labels on w ine»."—W ashington Star. G ettin g at th * Root of * Lea isadly)—I io n ’t know^ with that boy o f mine. He’a years at the medical he keepa at the foot of hie Perrins (promptly) — Make a diet of him.—T td -B Its. . Posatbly It la the mea etart the bad “rtorlea,” K . «copie keep then going.