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|s|3 VOL S. STEWABT TAKES HOPEFUL VIEW OF OUTLOOK Cutler date of N< * York. Noveml.er ; H*. ihmeuu M. Stewart write* Ueorye’ Sexton in pari a* follows; **I am ylad to know that you had a yood summer in the way of tourist travel, and I hooe before another year i* over \t'U will have something ot a more permanent trade. I have into’* listed a yood many people in Seward ami have only ju>t returned from Washington today where, however, they are so taken up with Mexican matter* that it is difficult to yet any satisfaction regarding Alaska. Ail of vou people iu Seward well have to hope for tlie best, and 1 th»u* you may with some conhot\i#ce, while those of us who are in tills pari of tie* l tilled States will not oesse to work for oor yood wld town. 1 was prevented from yomy up to Sew aid uiissuimuef. to my very yreat reyret. vhrouyh t«he illness of Mr* Stewart., who w a> .aid up more or lo*' all still)over. She is heller now. and she, with Kathleen, joins ia* m reeip* rocaliiu the kind w i*fies of Mrs. Sex ton. Mi** Sexton and your.** . and we ail look forward to seemy you neat spriny in ihe meard tue, with all yood wish*** for yorrse f aid our other friends in Sevvaiu, 1 ml), very tru y u»ur>„ ! >. M. STKWAKT. FINE TRIBUTE TO PRESIDENT The ' pacity of P» ‘sidcnt v ‘-cn uuti In- Secretar•> of State to i tmd big things in a broad and s*ate-na( - like manner ha- been demonstrated a .jam. The delivery of the President > Mexican rue»age and the publicity that bus been giver to the adminis tration |>r>lie> to what Wilson and Bryan have been striving to accoinje lish have silenced the opposition to the administration • »-» as it- -upm rt* t*rs it would. All tin’*"' i and harass have adhered to American ldeais of govei nment: they have discriminated between right and wrong clearly; they have refused to permit their country's diplomacy P» be stained with w ith chicanery !Ii H.e slighest manner: they have been fair and unselfish, patriotic ami generous. At flu* -ame time they have h**en die* pitied, firm and strong, they have not quailed or flinched on Hr* one hand nor bullied or threatened on the other. They have done all that was honor able to avoid war. and have frankly shown that it ;- the r purpose to con tinue doing so. yet none can consider the tone of the notes that have been sent to President Huerta wit bout understanding that they know what the Pniteti States maintains its army and nav\ for, and that it will he used before principle will be sacrificed or barn permitted to American citizens. Alaska Km pi re. Mu-hers with two dog teams are due today from the interior. Joe Wil-un is coming in with a load o inoo-e meat. Fresh l.ake l rout at the Commerce Cafe. — .- ' 1 '• Meet me at the Branch * Lost One 50 share stock certificate; Alaska Fleetric t o. Finder please re turn to Samuel I. Silverman. * -- j Pabs^s b.ue ribbon beer at The iranch. _ * ; iudweiser beer at ?b« Er&acb. * A INTERPRETATION ! Of MINING IAW I i ! fhe mining la"' passed by the terri- ; torial legislature was the subject of discussion at a recent meeting of thej Noun* Bar Association. t oncerning j the discussion, the Nugget says: I n i he discussion ot i he mining law ihe principal question was as to whether after doing location work it was necessary tv* do assessment, and ! on that question the lawyers present ! were pretty well divided. Messrs, j Kodey and Brunei- contended that lo- ! cation work must properly stand for' assessment work, and Mr. Brunei-said ! that such was the intention of the leg islature. Messrs. Lomeu, Schotield and (hl lAiKua expressed grave doubts as to the correctness of such construction of the law and pointed section 1U ot the act providing that within 90 days from the date of the discovery and prior to fil ing the certificate of location the lo cator shall perform labor on such claim in developing the same which labor shall constitute location work, and that thereafter the cert ideate ot loca tion shall be tiled for record. TheJawvers w ho UK#k llus view ex pressed the belief that under such a provision it would seem that until the performance < ? >m*h labor Ur* location o' the claim wen d not have beet, per fected. amt tint assessment work has reietvm-e to work performed si h>** uuent to loca'ien. I hey believed he Oates thut t!u<- is lh;s distinction be i t• 11 lecat i?'i work and assessment wor k that the former must be dime in 90 pays and tie latter any time in the calendar year. 1 ! e location work, fi!“V iKiinteo out, is also certitie*, o n the cert i acute of meat ion wh*< ie proof of i tie assessim ut woik may h* tiiee at any t;m * within'it* dav* aftei tpc tiisi of .1 anu.tr\ et tli succeeding y ear. U is Judgt ivdey's opinion that the 'new iocal mining law is a good one. lie also expressed ihe opinion that the legislature had power to pass if. The only doubt that in his opinion could arise is whether the $1<N> worth of lu * ea* u»n work thaf must be done on placet* cu.ims within 90 days alter dis covery can also Ik- collided as annual as-essment work under national law, amt he say> that his own view is that t can be ln almost all cases, but lie think* il may require the tiling ot two afaduvits in some cases, one within the 90 day* hum discovery and the other within 9o days alter the cio-e •»! the calendar year. it is reported iinotlicially that the Poitt'd States navy department, is con sidering the advisability ol erecting a LV>-k. w. plant at Ketchikan in the! spring to connect with fhe big station; at Bremerton and link the chain of ] Alaskan stations with the Sound. A 1 10 k. w. station at Juneau is included | in lilt scheme. i Phil. Hickey and Tom Finnegan, en-! route to mile 21 property, stopped at the i but galow last night and today] arc breaking trail to the summit.] They are making repairs to the long! distance telephone line, on the way j out. . William Hawkins, former superin- j tendent for the Kenai-Alaska Gold company, who left here badly crip pled with rheumatism, has about re- ! covered and is running a shooting gal lery, with tine success, in Seattle. Service for 10c up and meal tickets that last forever at $7. Commerce Cafe Long distance telephone booth at the Branch. * % ~~ ' “1 1 111 Community silver, Sheriton.La Hose and De Luxe parttras. George the Jeweler. Bill MINER, NOTED OUI LAW, ! MEETS DEATH Middledgevi lh\ Ga., Death has freed Hill Miner, notorious robber and ; jail breaker, from ins last j»i■ i-»«*ii tei in. His picturesque career, winch included clashes with the law* ut inure than a score of states and several C anadian provinces, ended Iasi night at theGeor gia slate prison farm. Miner's criminal career began nearly sixty .seats ago. He left his home in Jucksun county, Ky., before lie was lo years old. and w« nt \\ est. He admitted numerous stage coach robberies and train hoidups and was several times imprisoned for robbing banks. Three years ago he was brought to the state prison farm here fur robbing a train near Lulu, Georg ia. Hill Miner’s career is a matter on which there is little authentic infor mation, outside of the records of state’s prisons where lie has served sentences at different limes for enterprises of h.s which went wrong. During his long peroid of criminal operations, Miner used to noast. h»* never robbed the poor and needy, confining his plundering to express companies* and railroads. He declared lie has educated over twenty-live hoys and girls, and set on their feet many men who needed a helping hahd. Miner was a study in criminal psy chology. A man of iron nerve and desperate courage, he l ever look life in all his wild career, not even when the door of liberty would have < p- ned before him. ML course w;i^ marKeO l»> SJ K)t t a HeOll** deeds of kUlUhessuld C»eli evuience a> reckk ss as ins crimes .\ jilt .< inan. niulei sized anu »>; slight , build, wiih gr5//.l“d gray moustache and sh*eiy e; ♦ s, his isie story reads stronger than lid-ion. He possessed a spleniiu. seil-acquired education; a wonderful facility loi si inlying human nature, and had a tongue, wit and bruins second to none. Although ex ceedingly wild from the ageof sixteen, he never relaxed bis attention to re ligion and lie was as well versed on the Hi hie as many preachers. Appar ently he had a code of morals all his o w n. COMMUNICATION RESTORED TODAY The cub t ^hi|» Burnside has picked up and buoyed both ends uf the broken cab e line. Communication will prob ably he restored before the day i> done. He was an ardent lover, an Irish lover and a practically penniless lover. It was St. Patrick's eve and in fits hand he bore a pot of real shamrock. “They were raised of!’ the ould sod of Ireland. “Sure, now, Mr. Murphy,” cried his j lady in delight, “how really sweet of! ye. How perfect they are and how fresh. Shore and I do believe that there's a little due an em yet.” Murphy flushed slightly. “Begorre, i 1 know there is,” reluctantly confess-j ed Murphy, “but praise Hevan it’ll be paid tomorrow.” Manager Sauers, of the Seward Com- j mercial Company, was around today! handing out some nifty l!U4 calendars. ; K. H. Koch, reports a two-foot snow-1 fall at the bungalow yesterday. This ! forenoon six inches more fell. Twenty-gauge, 1913 model shot guns at J. L. Graef’s. X Sourdoughs and chechakos, you are Invited to the Commerce Cafe. Service every hour in 24. Sleds for boys and girls; sleds for men. At J. L. Graef’s. * KIISKOKWIM A VAST COUNTRY FULL OF PROMISE Captain Charles Penhody. a New York capitalist. who passed the! sum mer Season in il>'* Koxknkuim, is en 1 l hi! si as? ic over lie possiniii* o*s of that e iimi in and ihoiks a railroad hading ' from Seward to that region wonhi open a ureal »n min if* as well as agriculture count rv. The Kiiskokwim is a wonderfully proinisiiur look i r# jjf country, t uoc !'**a ! h »dy sayand isfairlx tilled with min eral zones catrx int? <ill kinds of meials, i 'ph ere is, a* yet, nothin!? known of tot values that max he found in these veins ; that traverse the country, and noesti ' m;lte can he placed on t lit* possibilites. It will require considerable xvorit, he sax s, to demonst rate what is there, hut the field is very lar*?e and looks temptinx?!y ;?ood. Cantain Peabody, who is associated with Frahk Harvey with offices at Ido | Broadway. New York, and enj?a*?ed i in business as j/eneral fiscal a iren's, is not unknown tot lie North, having heen at one time master and manager ot several Yukon river steamers. He helped to found the city of Fairbanks. His present mission North was to join Mr. Piute, the well known minin’? engineer on the expedition to the Kus* koKxxim. PILOT BULLENE Tju/re a PUAMPr I A^lo « uSIArsuL Captain Harry Bullone. pilot «>n the *ie:»inot* Alameda, lias got an attack of i|n» wold i‘»*vt*r, am! h*»s purchased an interest in a claim in (»»<* ShuMiauna | diggings. Not being able to give up his very desirable position, the captain j has sent his brother, tin* well known ! Thomas Bullene. to represent him in the new camp. The Morningside insane asylum, j which harbors I he demented from Alaska, is to he investigated, follow ing the alleged mistreatment of one Anderson, found insane at Iditarod »pity and taken there for treatment. All the steamers of the Alaska Steamship company now call at \\ ran irell The new service is being i >■* 1" welcomed b\ tin* residents of that j town._ The Prince Rupert Kmpire is au thority for the statement that the C. [M.ife St. P. railway is nlanning to ! build through British Columbia to Alaska. Marshal Faulkner, of Juneau, has recommended to the department that federal prisoners he placed at work on i toe roads near Juneau. The scheme | has been endorsed by Governor St rong, I Judge Jennings and other federal ofT I cials. The Hazelet party the trail builders ! haue returned to McCarty after hav-J ing completed the trail to theChisana. They report the road in good shape with teams passing over it every day. j The altitude at the sum it s;s 8,500 feet above sea lovel. W. A. Kastman, an ex-convict evan-! gelist, who has been so frequently! j stopped from stjeet speaking, has! ! turned his attention to mining in the j Fairbanks district. -:— Three meals for One Dollar. Open day and night. Commerce Cafe Field glasses at J. L. 6raef’s. Ice creepers and ice skates at J. L. Graef’s. TIN DEPOSITS ARE FOUND AT A, * >. A inh'i'M»ii. uit* t■ i* u*ers (> f .Alaska, has «ii-*i***v ♦*t,* t* ! in•» e t m njf quart*/. iu lfi<* Lffan lt* bed of the Hot Springs (11 s! r i e I. I’:i r iii:i .alley, which accord in.vf t'» assays, one of the most valuable made in a! Ih* not them ten ilory. Nile- claims have been Nitrated by Anderson and his partner*, covering in arva all of Moose Mountain, which rises about eighty miles from the mouth of the Tanana in vein and speci mens were brought toSeauie lor assay from the lb-tout level of these claims 11 ran $14b to a ton. Anderson made his discovery three years ajjo and ha* kept it secret until assays have made eerta n Us value. When Sullivan creek was first worked tin nutlets were found thickly interm insfl in if with the jfold nujisfds, ar»(. not recoLfnizine the placer tin. the miner* for a lon*j time tluevt it away Now many valuable shipments of placer tin, running in value up to tfhdd ja ion, are sent to Swansea, Whiles, from the Sullivan Oeek placer diy^inffs. The- operations of Anderson and his partner* have not jfone entirely un* known. Anderson is known uinunif practically all tin* old t niursin Alaska and hi* work in tie* vicinity of Moose Mountain ha* been watched. **At litsi ” Andeoon told a Seattle paper. “1 was laughed at. Now tiiey j are all kicking themselves for not vvakii.tf up sooner. •• f his summer 1 had w o* kin£ vv ii h me Sam ilokley, who periiup* is kr.owr. as well as any one of tie «»»u Kiondik ! ers remaining in Alaska. He h is chased tlm-ead <1 the rainbow neatly , all his life and was amotiL'the first into the finite conn*i v t olorad**, the f ( otter d'.\ ne d ?iCT. He A;is skep tical and would not believe my quartz contained tin until l broke up some roCK and burnt out the tic na ifold , pan. Now !)♦• believes M >ose Mountain ! is all i in.’* ALL URGED TO ATTEND CHURCH The***4 U t ime for everything under the Min in Seward but attending church. We are spending our rime all on pur suits that are tempura), hardly thinking of the eternal. Most of you have proven successful C sour hiisi* t.ess. then Use some ef tnat common sense and look afiei that which will i never pass away from you. We will I do the best we canto show you the j way to the higher life. We extend you a cordial welcome to the services I at the M. K. Church each Sunday. The 1 themes for next Sunday will he. morn ing, “The C’o-Workingof Providence.’* Kveiling, “No Room for Christ.’* Morning services at 11: evening, T:.)0. < T. Cook. I ’astor. C L. Way land, a postofliee inspector, well known in Alaska, where he was stationed for some considerable time, died recently. Juneau democrats have organized a club and are urging other towns to get busy and do likewise. Seward demo crats organized a club before the dele gate election, and it is a live number, too._ Fairbanks democrats are advocating the holding of the next democratic convention in that town. Col. Revel le, carrying the Sunrise Rope mail, reached mile 12 last night, after a hard day’s going. Bread for sale—10c a loaf or 12 for $1. At Commerce Cafe For reliable information write Can non, Pioneer hotel, Knik, Alaska, t Meet meat the Rrancn.