NEW BERG GRAPHIC ni uw« K i r n o i u m NEWBERG GRAPHIC NEWBERG GRAPHIC. * •1 * JÍ ............................................. - - T®.r ...................................- Y ou th . .tK Month*. ............................ ........... • ■ b a r r lp t t s a P H « F a » a b l« • l>l> l a A d t a a o e . la v a r l Addrna*. GKat'Uiu, Newber*. Oregon. CIU RCll NOTICES. T.1RIKVD4* C H l’ RUH.— SERVICES E V E R Y J. Sunday at 11 a, m. and 8 p. m. and Thurs­ day at 2 p. m. Sabbath school every Sunday at 9:4.i a. m. Monthly m eeting at 8 p. m. the first Tuesday in each month. Quarterly m eeting the second Saturday and Sunday in February, May, August and November. W om an’s For­ eign Missionary Society meets third Saturday in each month at 3 p. m. ALFRED T. W ARE, Pastor. 1> \ PTIfcT CHURCH.—SERVICES, SU NDAY 11 JY a. m. and 7:3t) p. m. Sunday school Sun­ days at 10 a. ni. Prayer m eeting Wednesday evening at 7:30 o’clock. REV. G. F. JERARD, Pastor. P R E S B Y T E R IA N CHURCH.—SERVICES EV- _| cry two weeks as follows; February 7th and 21st, March 7th and 21st, and April 4th and 18th. J. E. D A Y, Pastor. M W ] A A The Shasta Route Sheridan passenger (daily except Sunday) 9:30 a. m. 4:30 p. m. Lv.... ....Portland..... 6:05 p. m. Lv ... .... N ew berg.... .... Lv 7:55 a. m. 7:40 p. m.¡ Ar ... .... Sheridan .... ....Lv 6:20 a. m. ♦Daily. fD oily except Sunday. C. B. FRISSELL, Agent, Newberg. K. KOEHLER, Manager. C. II. M A RK H AM , Gen. F. & P. Agent, Portland, Or. THE GREAT GOLD m SII i VEH C O U N T R IE S OF BRITISH COLUMBIA AND EASTERN OREGON ARE ALL REACHED ----V IA ---- T he O. R. & N. No Change of Cars Between PORTLAND and BAKER CITY SPOKANE Shortest Line to Spokane Connecting with A L L RAIL ROUTE to... TRAIL, ROSSLAND, MARCUS NELSON, and All Kootenay Mining Camps... Lc.<^ R a tes and Through T ick ets Eg, »- ? . ^iphlets and D-tailed Information, Writ* to W. M. HURLBURT. Cen. Pasa. Ajç’t O. R. A N. Co., Portland, Or. Ol.lVKR * COI-CORD. Agente, üiaario, Uatoo.v. K ill:» On© Column............................ .Twenty Dollar« H alf C o lu m n ............................... Ten Rullar« Professional Card« .. .. ......... One Dollar • B e a d l a g N o t i r r « w i l l fee Iw a e r t r d U l « ra te of T e a re a te p er M u a . VOL. IX . NEW BERG, .NEWS OF THE WEEK From all Parts of the New and Old World. BRIEF AND INTERESTING ITEMS C o m p r e h e n s iv e R e v i e w o f th e Im p o r t­ a n t H a p p e n in g s o f t h e C u r­ ren t W eek. A terrible explosion of nitroglycerin* occurred in Cygnet, O., resulting in tha death of Bix persons and the injury of a 1*1 REE METHODIST.—PR A Y E R MEETING J 1 every Thursday at 7:30 p. m. Sabbath large number. school every Sunday at 10 a. m. It is said that John W. Mackay, ths E. < Hi R< H. SERVICES SECOND, THIRD American millionaire, w ill lay a Cana­ . and fourth Sundays o f each month at 11 dian Pacific cable from Vancouver, B. a. m. and 7:80 p. m. Sunday school every Bun* day 10 a. in. At M. K. church, Fafayette, first C ., to Australia. and fitfh Sunday o f cac-h month. Count Okuma, of Japan, has notified R. A. A TKIN S, Pastor. his minister at Honolulu of tiie term* S A L V A T IO N A R M Y -M E E T IN G A T BAR- and conditions of Japan’ s acceptance of ^ racks on Main street as follows: Tuesday for soldier converts and recruits; Wednesday, tiie proposal to arbitrate the disputa public; Friday, holiness, tor Christians o n ly ; with Hawaii. Saturday evening, put lie: Sunday, all day, comm encing with 7 a. m., knee d rill; holiness A New York Herald special from m eeting 11 a. m.; fam ily gathering at 3 p. m., and grand free and easy in the evening. Ev­ Barcelona says that it is stated on the erybody welcome. highest diplomatic authority that the present Spanish government w ill go out within a fortnight, and that the SOCIETY NOTICES. liberals w ill come in. OF T IIE WORLD.—NEWBERG CAM P, NO. Customs inspectors at Laredo, Tex., , 113, meets every Monday evening. have found an unclaimed grip on a • f i r C .T . U.—BUSINESS MEETING TH E SEC- train, containing $¿00,000 worth of \ M • ond and fourth Wednesday in each diamonds, jewelry and other valuables. month. The papers in the valise indicate that 0. O. F.—SESSIONS HELD ON TH U RSD AY it belonged to a Spanish officer.’ It is • evenings in Bank of Newberg building. believed it was stolen by a man who AND L. OF 8.—NEWBERG COUNCIL, NO. r the courage to claim ownership. J L* 168, meets every Friday evening in Ma­ lacked sonic hall. W. P. Atwell, commercial agent ol F. AND A. M.—MEETS E V E R Y 8ATUR- the United States at Robaix, France, • day night in C. V. Bank building. sends to the stato department a repoit O. U. W. -M E E T S E V E R Y TUESDAY on the short wheat crop in France. , evening at 7:30 p. ni. in I. O. O. F. Hall. He says the crop in France, and in fact all Europe, lias fallen much l»elow the average, and that it is estimated that EAST AND SOUTH the United States and Canada will be called upon to export from 120,000,000 to 180,000,000 bushels more than they exported to Eurfqie last year. France w ill require about 60,000,000 bushels to meet the deficit in that country. A Portland company has offered to —OF THE— build a sugar beet factory in La Grande. G. ,T. Layzell was killed and Claude Hawthorne severely injured by a tire on a launch in Astoria, Or. Falls Company, manufacturers of Trains leave and are due to arrive at Portland: cotton goods, in Norwich, Conn., have started up on full time, giving employ­ LEAVE. | A R R IV E . ment to 500 hands. f Overland Express.— "I Salem, Albany, Kug- The New Orleans health authorities ene, Koseb’g, Grants | have sent out notice of a death by yel­ I’a^s, Medford, Ash- 1 ■ ♦G:00 p. ni. < land, Sacramento, > * 9:30 a. m low fever in that city. Quarantine has Ogden, San Francis- 1 been declared by several Southern co, Mojave, I.os An­ geles, El I’aso, New | cities. Orleans, and East . .. J ♦8:30 a.m. Koseburg A way stations ♦ 4:30 p. m. A rich strike is reported in the (V ia Woodburn, fo r) Schroder mine, in Yreka, Cal., on tiie Daily Daily 1 Mt. Angel, Silver ton, | except ^ \\ est Scio, Browns-> except 1,200-foot level, the vein averaging Sunday. ] ville, Natron and I Sunday. four feet in width, and running $130 to [ Springfield...............J f7:30 a.in. Corvallis A wav stations t 5:50 p. m. the ton. |4:50 p. m. M cM innville & way sta's^f 8:25 a. m. Edward Lyons, a patient at the Ore A ll above trains arrive and depart from Grand gon state insane asylum hung himself Central station, Fifth and Irvin g streets. to a tree in the asylum grounds. He was committed from Multnomah county D in in g C ars on O g d e n R o u te . last March. In the Milford labor union, at its Direct connection at San Francisco with Oc­ cidental and Oriental and Pacific Mail steam­ games in Milford, Mass., H. S. Dono­ ship lines for Japan and China. Sailing dates van, of Natick, ran 100 yards in 9 % on application. Kates and tickets to Eastern points and Eu­ seconds, breaking the world’s record by rope. Also Japan, China, Honolulu and Au­ one-tenth of a second, according to the stralia, can be obtained from J. B. K IR K L A N D , Ticket Agent, timekeepers. 134 Third street, Portland, Or. George W. Clark broke the world’s high-dive record by jumping off the Y A M H IL L D IV IS IO N . railing of the Halstead-street life bridge Passenger depot foot o f Jefferson street. in Chicago, when the structure was raised to an elevation of 165 feet above A irlie mail (tri-weekly). the Chicago river. The diver was 9:40 a. m. L v .... ...P ortla n d .... .... Ar 3:05 p. m. .... Lv 12:15 p. in. taken out of the river uninjured, and ....Lv ; 7:30 a. m. 5:10 p. m .jAr........A i r l i e ......... was placed under arrest by the police. / i l l R 1ST! AN CHUR4 II UERVI4 B8 E\ ERY second and fourth Sunday at 10 a. m. and • 7:30 p. m. \ A IIV C K T IN Ii« THE Y A M IIIL L S T R IK E COUNTY, OREGON, F R ID A Y , SETTLED. MOWED M in ers A c c e p t th e P r o p o s it io n o f P i t t s ­ b u r g O p e ra to rs . Columbus, O., Sept. 14.— The great miners’ strike, which was declared on July 4, was brought to an end this evening, so far, at least, as Western Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana and West Virginia are concerned, by the action of the convention of miners which has been in session since Wednesday. After a day of voting and wrangling, the con­ vention voted to accept the proposition of the Pittsburg operators. The vote was 495 for and 31? against uccepting the terms of settlement, and 11 votes were not cast. The delegates from Il­ linois, who had 250 votes, were unani­ mously against the settlement; Indiana and West Virginia voted solidly to ac- eept the pro|>osition, but there were scattering votes among Ohio and Penn­ sylvania against it. The resolution is as follows: “ Resolved, That we, the miners of Pennsylvania,West Virginia, Ohio, In­ diana and Illinois, in coni ention assem­ bled, do hereby agree to accept the proposition recommended by our na­ tional executive council, viz , 65 cents in Pittsburg district and all places in the above-named states where a relative price can be obtained, to resume work anil contribute liberally to the miners who w lil not receive the advance, over which the fight must be continued to a bitter end. “ Resolved, That the national officers of the executive board and district presidents act as an advisory board for tiie purpose of providing ways and means for the carrying on of the strike where necessary; provided, however, that no district resume work for 10 days, for the purpose of giving miners in other districts time to confer with the operators and get the price, if pos­ sible.” The Illinois men w ill be called in convention at Springfield,September 19, to determine what shall be done in that state. A resolution was adopted denouncing the action of the deputies in firing into the striking miners at Hazelton. L IV E S S ix V ic t im s SE P T E M B E R CRUSHED OUT. o f a T r a in - W r e c k In d ia n T e r r it o r y . in th e Memphis, Sept. 14.— A special to the Commercial-Appeal from Hatiburn, Ark., says: A most disastrous freight wreck occurred on the Iron Mountain railroad, at Hanson, I. T., a small sta­ tion 20 miles west of Van Buren, at 2 o’clock today, resulting in the death of seven men and the serious injury of £ix others, two of whom will die. The dead are: W ill Frame, Charles Frame, Douglass Anderson, John Johnson, Bose Henderson, Frank Hamilton and H. A. Walton. Of the wounded two suffered inter­ nal injuries. A ll of the dead and wounded were sent to Vian, with the exception of Walton’s body, it being brought to this place, where he has rel­ atives living. None of the trainmen were hurt. While the train was running at a speed of 20 miles an hour, the forward trucks of one of the cars near the en­ gine broke, wrecking 15 cars with wal­ nuts and baled hay. W ith the excep­ tion of two cars in front and three in the rear, including the caboose, every car of the 20 in the train was ditched. The middle of the train was a car load­ ed with heavy machinery, and it was in this car that 13 men were stealing a ride. The occupants of the wrecked car were a party of men and boys living in Vian, who were coming to Van Buren to find employment in the cotton fields. When the machinery car left the rails, it fell on its side, nearly all of the men The Washington Star says: It is Ruing caught by the heavy beams. stated that S. D. North, of Bosto.i, has been selected as superintendent of the Kansas City, Sept. 14.— A special to next census, and that his appointment will be made as soon as necessary legis­ the Times from Hanburn, Ark., says: lation can be enacted. The president Many sad scenes were enacted at Han­ is said to favor the establishment of a son. One of the dead, whose name 1 b permanent bureau on census, and is unknown, was found with his head likely to express some views on that mashed to a pulp between two heavy subject in his next message to congress. logs, his brains oozing out. Others were crushed and mungled in a horrible Wild horses have become a nuisance manner. Two of the dead were brothers, in Northern Arizona, and Attorny- W ill and Charles Frame. W ill was General Frasier lias been asked if they found on one side of the track and may not be legally slaughtered. That Charles on the other, both crushed al- vicinity has been overrun by several juost out of all semblance of human large bands, hundreds in number, un­ beings. branded and unclaimed oy any one. Tbe scenes at Vian, when the dead They have rapidly increased in number bodies of those who had resided there and have become wilder than deer and arrived, were affecting in tiie extreme. vicious as well. The matter has been The parents and other kin of the de­ referred to the livestock board. ceased were at the dejiot when the train A Phoenix, Ariz., dispatch says it i came in. It will probably be several expected that work w ill be resumed days before the wreck will be cleared within 60 days on the great Rio Verde away and the full extent of the dis­ irrigation enterprise which is to redeem aster revealed. Three men are still 200,000 acres of the finest land in the missing, accroding to statements of Salt river valley. Of the 150 miles of some of those who escaped. A large canals that w ill constitute the Rio force of men is at the spot, clearing Verde irrigation system, 22 have Ixsn sway tiie wreckage. dug. and a large amount of work, cost­ Q u a ra n tin e D e c la r e d . ing altogether $200,000, has been done Nashville, Sept. 14.— Today, the at and. near the head works. state l>oard of health issued quarantine ‘ ‘ We are on the verge of a great min­ orders against all points along the gulf ing era,” remarked Clarence King, coast, extending from Mobile to New former chief of the United States geo­ Orleans. This was done as a measure logical survey, in Denver. “ The time of extra caution, because of the receipt is not far distant when a man can start of unfavorable reports from the gulf out of Denver and travel to Klondike, coast. stopping every night at a mining camp. Already two American stamp mills are Memphis, Sept. 14.— The board of pounding away on the border of the health of this city today issued a proc­ Straits of Magellan, and the day is ap- lamation enforcing a strict quarantine proaciling when a chain of mining against New Orleans, Ocean Springs, camps will extend from Cape Horn to Mobile and other towns on the gulf St. Michaels.” coast. A Philadelphia A Reading wrecking P resid en t tr ia l’ M essage. engine crashed into a wagon at a grade Mexico, Sept. 14.— It is not believed crossing at Frush Valley, a few miles above Reading, Pa., and three lives that the president will in his message announce aDy radical change in the pub­ were loet The manufacturing and The Marquis of Salisbury’s proposal lic policy. for the constitution of an international agricultural interests are unanimously commitee representing the six powers in favor of the silver standard. to assume control of the revenues, with T h e G u a te m a la R ev o lu tion . which Greece w ill guarantee the pay­ ment of intereet for holders on old Berlin, Sept. 14.— Dispatches from bonds as well as payment of the indem­ Guatemala say a revolution has broken nity loan, bat been accepted by the out against President Barrios in tbe powers. western part of tbs republic. H a z le to n 17, 1S07. DOWN. S t r ik e r s A r e S h o t M a n y S h e ep . L ik e So Hazelton, Pa., Sept. 13.— Tho strike situation reached a terrible crisis on the outskirts of Latimer this afternoon, when a band of doptuy sheriffs fired into a mob of miners. Tiie men fell like so many sheep, and the excitement NEWS HEARD AT MARY’S ISLAND has been so intense that no accurate figures of the dead and wounded can be obtaind. Reports run from 15 to 20 T h * S te a m e r C a r r ie d 1V5 P a ss en g e rs killed and 40 or more wounded. One man who reached tiie scone to­ F r o m S e a ttle . R o u n d fo r night counted 13 corpses. Four other t h e K lo u d ik e . bodies lay in tiie mountains between Seattle, Sept. 14.— Another story of Latimer anil Harleigii. Those wiio the wreck of the Eliza Anderson reached were uninjured carried their dead and this city today. It came on the steamer wounded friends into the woods. Esti­ George E. Starr. Captain Harry Struve, mates are baffling. one of the best-known men in Seattle, Three liodies were found tonight on was a passenger on the Starr from Skag- the road near Latimer. uay bay. A t Mary’s island he was told The strikers left Hazelton alniut 3:80 | by the customs officers there that a o’clock this afternoon, and it was schooner had touched that port from their intention to go to Latimer. As Kodiak island, reporting that the Eliza soon as this became known, a band of Anderson was wrecked in the vicinity of deputies was loaded on a trolley ear and Kodiak, with all hands lost. The went whirling across the mountain t* steamer carried 125 passengers from the scene, where the bloody conflict Seattle for St. Michaels. followed. Captain Struve did not learn the After reaching Latimer, they left tiie name of the schooner which brought tho car and formed into three companies, news. The statement was made by under Thomas Hall, E. A. Hess and the customs officer with apparent con­ Samuel B. Sercy. They drew up in line fidence in its truth. at the edge of tbe village, with a fence The Anderson was last seen by the and a line of houses in tiieir rear. tng Holyoke near Kodiak island. She Sheriff Martin was in entire com maud was headed that way for fuel, and to and stood in the front of the line until j get out of the way of the furious gale tiie strikers approached. They were that was blowing from the southeast seen coming across the lidge, and Mar­ While the story told Captain Struve tin went out to rseet them. The men may not estahlsh the fuct of the A n ­ drew up sullenly and listened in silence derson’s wreck, it gives rise to grave until he had once more read the riot fears for her safety. aot. This finished, a low muttering arose among the foreigners, and there wus a N EW K L O N D I K E D IG G IN G S . slight movement forward. Perceiving tliis the sheriff stepped toward them S u lp h u r C re e k t h e S cen e o f th e L a te s t and forbade them to advance. Some E x c ite m e n t. Seattle, Sept. 14.— Sulphur creek, a one struck the sheriff, and the next branch of Dominion creek, which is a moment the command was given to tho tributary to the Indian river, is the deputies to fire. The guns of the deputies instantly scene of the latest great excitement in the Klondike. From accounts of the belched forth a terrible volley. The new district brought down on the rejiort seemed to shake the very moun­ South Coast, it seems that the new dig­ tains, and a cry of dismay went up gings will rival even the famed Bonanza from the people. The strikers were taken entirely by and Eldorado. Gold was found just below the surface running $34 to the surprise, and as the men fell gver each pan. Two men took out $300 in a day other, those who remained unhurt in simply prospecting their claims. stampeded. The men went down be­ A stampede followed the reports of the fore the storm of bullets like tenpins, new finds, which reached Dawson City, and the groans of the dying and wound­ August 15. In a week 500 men had ed filled the air. The scene that followed was simply crossed the mountains between Eldorado creek and Dominion creek. They indesc-iliable. The deputies seemed to traveled day and night, and in two he terror-stricken at the deadly execu­ weeks the whole stream was staked out. tion of their guns, and seeing the liv ­ The first authentic story of Sulphur ing strikers fleeing like wild men and creek was given today by John E. others dropping to tho earth, they went Light, of Chicago. Ho left Dawson to the aid of the unfortunates whom City on the steamer Bella, August 18. they had brought down. The people of Latimer ruhssd pell- He owns a claim on Sulphur crock mell to the scene, but the shrieks of the which he located himself. He says: “ Sulhpur creek w ill equal Bonanza. wounded drowned the cries of the sym­ T^.ere is no doubt about it When I pathizing and half-erased inhabitants. A reporter who soon afterwards first heard of the strike there, I went over the mountain to investigate it reached the scene found the road lead­ myself. I spent one day there with ing to Latimer filled with groups of Some sur­ two brothers, the McKinnon boys, of frightened Hungarians. Wellington, B. C. I saw them tako rounded dying companions, and others, out $300 in one day from simply sink­ fearful of pursuit, clung to the new­ ing two prospect holes. The formation comer and begged his protection. A t Farley’s hotel were two men lying is the same as at Eldorado creek, and Sulphnr creeks hears the same relation on the porch. Both ha^been shot in to Dominion as does Eldorado to Bo­ the head. One had threo bullets in the His groans and appeals for a nanza. The streams empty into In­ thigh. dian river. They are just across the doctor wore heartrending. A ll along the road the wounded men divide from tiie Klondike, and the same process that brought millions in gold who were able to leave the field of bat­ into tiie beds of Bonanza and Eldorado tle scattered themselves and Bought the creeks deposited as much wealth in Sul­ shade of trees for protection, but there was no need of that then. phur and Dominion. Approaching the place where the “ One old German, whose name I did not learn, located the creek, ami from shooting occurred, people were met Discovery claim lie took out $30 to the wringing their hands and bemoaning They could not talk pan. Of course, when the news of the the catastrophe. new strike reached Dawson there was a intelligently, and it was with the great­ great stampede, and hundreds left the est difficulty that information could ho Klondike for Dominion creek. It is all gleaned. A ll along the bank of tho trolley staked out now. Mark my words, you road men lay in every |Nisitioii, some w ill hear of big strikes there." dead, others dying. Three bodies, face downward, lay along the incline, while A W O M A N 'S STORY. others were but a short distance away. On the other side of the road as many M rs. H e n d e r s o n T e l l s G o ld e n S to r ie s o f bodies lay. The scboollioiise was trans­ th e K lo n d ik e . formed into a temporary hospital and Tacoma, Sept. 14.— Mrs. E. A. Hen­ some of the wounded were taken there. derson, the first newspaper corres|iond- The colliery ambulance Was sum­ ent to make the trip to Dawson City, moned to the place as soon as possible, returned on tiie steamer Cleveland from and U|>on its arrival, two men, bo* St. Michaels, and is visiting friends in shot through the legs, were loaded ii, this city. With her little 8-year old the wagon. A ll along the hiilsiu, daughter she 8|>ent some months in the wounded men were found, on the road­ mining districts, and gives the Ledger side and in the fields. Many miners some interesting experiences in the far who had been carried to distances coulJ north, not be found. She confirms the report of the find­ As soon as the news of the shooting ing of a $583.25 nugget, the largest yet reached Hazelton, there was consterna­ discovered in the Yukon country, tion. Within 10 minutes, the streets which Nick Knutson picked up on No. were blocked with excited |>e<>ple. The 36, Eldorado, and is bringing to San Lehigh Traction Company immediately Francisco on the Excelsior. When the started a number of extra cars on the Excelsior witli its reported, but prob­ Latimer line, and doctors and clergy­ ably exaggerated, cargo of nearly $1,- men responded promptly. 000,000 in dust, reaches San Fran­ cisco, she believes the fever will prob- I During the excitement, the deputies turned their attention to tiie wounded, ably reach its height. “ Y e t,” said Mr. Henderson, “ the anil oarried many of them to places excitement is all on the outside, in where they oould fie more comfortably the Klondike country, even this huge treated. Martin Roski, an intelligent Hun­ nugget, which is as large as your hand and almost a perfect hatchet-head garian from Mount Pleasant, who was shape and seemingly pare gold, did not shot in the arm, was seen by a re|iorter, and gave this version of the affair: greatly excite the miners. “ I have been up the Yukon all sum­ “ We were going along the road to mer. From Apirl to June 1, four men Latimer, and the deputies were lined took out from No. 18, Eldorado, from across the road, barring our passage. but a small part of the claim, a strip We tried to go through them, and did only 25x?0 feet, $42,628, and have re­ not attempt to hit or molest them, when cently sold the claim for $46,000. This they fired upon us. W e ran, but they is, so far, the highest amount got out kept on shooting at us while we ran. of a Klondike mine— nearly $90,000. It is all their fault.“ “ I am asked scores of times, ‘ Is the Crtizens’ meetings were held at vari­ Klondike country as rich as reported?’ ous parts of the city tonight. Opinion I was prepared to say, ‘ It can scarcely wae divided about the responsibilty for be exaggerated, ’ but since then I have the shooting. A t one meeting held in seen newspapers, and I reply more cau­ Van Wyckle’scaeino, attend***! by hank­ tiously. in several papers I saw the ers, coal operators and prominent men, statement that somebody had seen ‘ five resolutions were adopted calling on five-gallon coal oil cans filled with gold Governor Hastings to send m ilitia here. in one winter.' No one in that coun­ A t another mas* meeting, attended by try ever heard of such a cabin. The thousands of people, the sentiment was truth is, I lifted less than $13,000 of against bringing the troop« here, and it dust in a granite l«owl with difficulty. is asserted by these that there w ill lie Gold is heavy to bear in more senses no real necessity tor having deputies than one. kept here. Reported That She Went Down With All Hands. NO. 43. S H O E S TRAIN WRECK al ▲drorUalnf Billa Collected Monthly4 D IS T R E S S AT DA W S O N . T e r r ib le T a l e o f S u ffe r in g B r o u g h t F rom K lo n d ik e b y th e C le v e la n d . San Francisco, Sept. 18.— The Ex­ contain­ Dawson Caused by the Disobedience aminer prints an extra edition ing the followin’» news from of Orders. Oity; “ Otter Point, B. C., SepL 18.— The steamer Cleveland has arrived from 8L FORTY PEOPLE LOSE TH EIR LIVES Michaels, bringing with her from the Yukon gold fields a Btory of distre i and disaster. The miners she has on r u s a e n irc r t 'u l l i i l e i l W it h a S tu ck T r a in board and officers in charge of the ship tell a stroy of disorder and dis­ Svnr D en ver R a iiin g ln g Itu th tress at Dawson. G r e a t l y —K u lp u r ia W r e c k . Winter lias set in at the mining city Denver, Sept. 13.— A special to the of the frozen north, and the two great News from New Castle, Colo., says: stores of the place have closed their Rio Grande passenger train No. 1, run­ doors, for they have nothing to sell. ning one hour late, collided with a Col­ Those who have been seeking gold must orado Midland stock extra, 1|# miles now seek for food or starve. west of New Castle. Both engines are While there may be a tendency to s total wreck. | exaggerate the actual conditions of There are in all probability 40 affairs, there can lie no question that j human beings in the burning mass. famine threatens all the venturesome Shortly after the collision occurred men and women who made their way | the baggage, day coaoh and tourist j to the Klondike. sleeper caught fire, while one Pullman Hundreds of unruly spirits are flock­ and a special car from the Hannibal & ing to Dawson. Threats of violence are St. Joseph railroad remained on the , being made on every side. track. Enormous prices ure now being paid The fault is said to lie witli the train for food at Dawson, and it is impos­ crew of the extra. sible that more than four vessels with Details of tiie wreck are hard to ob­ provisions can reach that camp before tain. It is known that A. Hartman | the river freezes. and wife and two children, of Harshun, Indiguition meetings, heavy with 111., are among the dead; Engineer murmured threats of vengeance, have Gordou, of the passenger train; R. H. lioen held at St. Michaels by those who Bed ley, postal clerk, and Robert Hew­ see no hope of advancing up the river, lett, passenger fireman, are fatally in­ and less of getting back to civilisation. T # j first signs of winter are apparent I jured. Engineer Ostrander and Fire­ 1 man Sutliff, are missing, and are be­ on the river Yukon, which is begin­ lieved to be buried in the wreck. ning to freeze, and in a few weeks will So thoroughly are the trains demol­ lie closed against ull navigation. A ished that Imt few of those caught es­ mishap I ibs come to the Excelsior, and caped alive, those not killed by the from the frozen north comes the story shock of tiie collision being burned to of another disaster in which 42 men | lost their lives. j death in the ruins of the cars. A Rio Grande spociul, just arrived On the Cleveland there are 88 pas­ from Glenwood, brings doctors and sengers who have come from Dawson comforts for the wounded. ! City. There are few miners in this The wreck occurred on what is called party that are able to tell of prosperity. the Rip Junction road. This runs from Most of them wish to exaggerate their New Castle to Grand Junction. It I hj - possessions, and if one were to lielieve longs jointly to the Denver & Rio the indefinite stories they tell he Grande and the Colorado Midland, be­ would say the treasure ship with ing used by both roadB. which they come carried $5,000,000. Two cars of stock were completely Captain Hull, of the Cleveland, says lie demolished, and the right of way is lias $100,000 in his safe. The purser be­ strewn with dead stock ami debris. lieves he can account for $150,000 on Conductor Burbank’s explanation of board. the wreck is that in looking at the The Cleveland left St. Michaels passenger’ s leaving time on the card he August 29. She has some of the pas­ looked at the wrong column of figures. sengers of the P. B. Weare on board. Two Italians caught in the act of rob­ The Weare left Dawson City in time to bing trunks have been placed under connect witli the Portland had she not arrest. met with a mishap and stuck on the Tho latest information from the flats above Circle City. wreck makes it almost certain that 25 Tho miners from Dawson riqiort that persons are dead, and a dozen badly in­ on July 25 the stores of the Alaska jured, fully half of whom will die. Commercial Company und the North American Trading He Transjiortation T H E E M P O R IA W R EC K . Company closed their doors, and an­ nounced they had no more food to sell. F u r t h e r D e iu ils o f th e A c c id e n t In When the announcement was mude con­ K ansas. sternation seized U |K in the people of Emporia, Kan., Sept. 18.— Twelve Dawson, with gold-seekers crowding in known dead, one missing (probably at tho rate of 20 to 80 per day. Drunk- inoiuerated) and 14 injured, two of enne s and disorder, gambling and whom w ill likely die, is the record of Idleness were rumpunt. A t St. Michaels the condition of the terrible hend-ond collision on the Santa Fe, as known tonight. It is not affairs is also tho cunsc of gravest con­ positively known that tiie list given is cern. There aro not enough structures complete, and it is believed that several iu town to accommodate the crowd, were burned to death and nothing left and scores of the [>eople are living in by which they could be recognized. tents. Shortly beforo the Cleveland The bodies of 11 have been taken from left Bt. Michaels two expeditions, tlu.se the debris, threo burned beyond recog­ of tiie National City and of the South Coast, held indignation meetings, nition. Nothing could be found of tho re­ threatening dire vengeance upon those mains of the VVells-Fargo messenger, who had brought them tiiere and then J. F. Sauer. A handful of charred were unable to carry them further. On August 26 the Excelsior left St. bones taken from the wreck, however, are supposed to he his. Near them Michaels with a large number of min­ ers und a large quantity of gold. Re­ was found his watch. Human ghouls delved in the burning ports were current that her treasure wreckage and plundered the baggage amounted to a million dollars. Soon and mail sacks which strewed the after leaving St. Michaels the Excelsior ground. One man tried to snatch a was caught on the dangerous flats of diamond from the breast of an Etnnoria the Yukon anil broke two blades of her doctor who, weak and nervous, wus p r o file r . When the Cleveland reached creeping slowly out of the debris. Hu Ounalaska she found the Excelsior un­ had strength enough left to hit the dergoing repairs. It is probable she brute a blow in the fuoe, which made left Uunalaska last Monday. Shortly before the Cleveland left (< r him turn with a curse and sneak away. Mail sacks were dragged into the corn Seattle on her journey home the United States revenue cutter Bear put in:o field and rifled. The rejiort of the Kansas City jiost- St. Michaels to tell another story of office is that practically all of the mail death and disaster in the ice-bound on both the wrecked Santa Fe trains Arotio. The Bear had on hoard Cap­ was destroyed. One pouch, however, tain Whiteside, his wife, the first and for Southern California, on the west­ fourth officers anil four seamen of the bound train, is said to have been saved. steam whaler Nevach. They are lul This train oarried a large mail from that remain to tell a terrible story of New York oity to California. Colorado, death in an ice pack. Of her crew 42 New Mexico and Arizona. No official were lost. Thirty-one were crushed in the ice and ten frozen to death. The report has been received here. Trains over the Santa Fe w ill lie run Bear saw the vessel's signals of distress i by way of Ottawa for a few days. The near Point Barrow, and went to her cost of the wreck to the railway is esti­ assistance. The captain, his wife, two officers and four seamen were |iersuaded mated at $100,000. As the passengers and trainmen re­ to leave the crippled ship, hut nine covered from the shock of the explosion, others positively refused to go. They they looked for the injured and dead. were left on a desolate field of ice, anil Far down ia the heaps of debris sound­ it is feared perishedwith tiieir comrades. The terrible tale of suffering told by ed wailing voice« of men pleading for aid. While the rescuers were working Captain Whitesides and his officers to get at the unfortunates, fire broke out forms but an incident in the story that in the wreckage of the forward coaches, the Cleveland brings. It was believed and a cry for water went up. Water after she had left St. Michaels she was tanks were torn from their fastenings to learn no more of the Klondike, its In the coaches that oould he entered, j dangers and disasters, but the Cleve­ ami blood-besmeared men carried them land ha*l hardly gone 35 mies when she over broken timbers to quench the fast- passed a vessel that told of evils to Spreading flames. The dead and come, of dangerous spirits ready for mangled bodies of four victims were any outrage, of excited and angry men dragged to the grass lieside the track. who have left a black record on the After herculean efforts, the flames were coast on their own pathway to the finally subdued, and the work of rescue Yukon. The Cleveland and Humboldt hail made more easy. met, and new stories of the abandoned A merchant In Copenhagen was fined adventurers the latter vessel is convey- 10 crowns for having used the American j ing to the gold fields were sent back to flag as an advertising medium. the world. When the Humboldt stopped at Oun­ K x p l o r « r W e llm a n R e tu rn s. New York, SepL 9.— Walter W ell­ alaska on her journey to St. Michaels, man, the journalist and Arctic explorer, the passengers were in open rebellion. was one of the passengers on the New They began to realize that it would bo York, which arrived today. He has impossible to reach Dawson before next been to Norway and Russia to consult : spring, and they knew that misery with Dr. Nansen to arrange for a awaited them at St. Michaels. There steamer and a largo^ number of «logs. were open threats against W. D. Wood, He said efforts would be made to reach organizer ami manager of the expedi­ the north pole until tha feat was ac­ tion, ami it is fear.**l he may lose his j life at the hands of his passengers. complished._________________ Russians make a pleasant drink from The new Yerkes telesooj»? brings ths ■ap of tbe walnut. I muon within about 300 miles.