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®lu' &nuarft (Satrntaif_ Published Daily Except Sunday by The Seward Gateway Publishing Co^ BERNARD M. STONE, President. Subscription Kates: Daily—One dollar per month Ten cents the copy. By mail, $10 per year. Weekly—Three dollars per year. (Payable strictly in advance). Advertising Kates: Display advertisements, $3.00 per inch per month. Readers, 10c per line first insertion, 5c per line each additional insertion. Legal notices, 50c per line. The great war seems to he dragging out to the point of weariness. The news coming from the front is apparently so much the same that it will continue to lose interest unless some great change comes quickly. \et if we are gifted with the least imagination there is not a sentence of war news that will not come fraught to our minds with a dramatical interest which has never been equalled. It is true nevertheless that if Mars and the earth got into touch with each other and if the two declared war and if that war lasted too long we should even tire of that so long as the conflict did not a fleet us directly. Twenty years ago we should have been amazed it the sight of an aeroplane in action but today we would hardly travel ten miles to see one. They say wonders never cease hut certainly wonders soon cease to interest. Without using our imaginations the European war ;s too big for us to grasp. Ear removed as we are from it and taken up as we are with our own little narrow cares a hint of some local gossip causes more of a flutter in our dovecote than the thunder of a thousand guns the death shrieks of tens of thousands and the trampling of battling hosts who in their agony and travail are changing the map of the world before our eyes. Prejudice is an extraordinary thing. It is completely the master ot the human mind. Most of us while imagining ourselves quite sane are no more the governors of our own thoughts when prejudice once enter* our souls than lunatics. People of different religions firmly believe that the other religion is all wrong and those same people may he perfectly honest and perfectly desirous* of doing and thinking what i* right. In th*» pree«mt war people on different sides read the newspapers and writings of the different countries and each thinks what he reads in favor of his own side is absolutely true and what is written by the other side is a diabolical lie. This is an extraordinary psychological fact and many do not see it in its real significance. The outlook is actually colored by prejudice just as much as the point of physical vision is colored by tinted spectacles only we cannot realize the fact so clearly as we cannot recognize any mental phe nomenon as easily a** we recognize a physical one. There are times when we believe things with absolute credulity when, as a matter of fact, if we were on the other side we should just as absolutely believe the same thing to he an unmitigated lie. The human mind is limited, imperfect, impressionable, unreliable, fickle and misleading when prejudice controls it. News from All $Jarta of the tt North latth u i JXUEAU.—On the thirteenth o! last August the foreman at the beach camp of the Alaska Gastineau Co.’s Salmon creek development work found the decomposed body of a man in the tide wated a short distance above the power house. Some days prior to that time a fish- [ erman named Henry Schroebach, who lived on the opposite side of Gastineau channel from the mouth of Salmon creek in a cabin owned by his partner, “Taku Bill." whose true name is VVm. Smith disappeared. It appears that the deceased, who «s a German known as “Henry" has been in Alaska and around Juneau for per haps ten years past; that his rela tives live in Germany, and that last summer, while his partner, “Taku," was working at the Salmon creek dam and while out fishing in the channel, he was dragged out of his boat by a large halibut. As his partner was away and his neighbor was away part of th© time,' he was not missed, and the identity of the body found was not discovered un til some time later. The fishing line ■ was found in his hand or fastened to his body. JUNEAU.—One of the alleged vagrants rounded up by the city police has a bank account of a thousand dol lars: another has worked for the past six months and his credit is good, he says, while still another has only been out of work a week, his last job hav ing been for a period of three weeks. The case against five alleged vag rants collapsed like a canvas tent in a Taku storm when they were aired in the Municipal court, before Mag istrate E. W. Pettit yesterday. All t were dismissed, and the “clean up * has amounted to nil.—Empire. SEATTLE.—H. G. Godfrey, 0. J. Eaton and Carl Harger, Americans, | who were bound from the Columbia river for Alaska in a sloop, on a hunt ing and trapping expedition, were ar-1 rested as German spies when their boat was wrecked at Pachena Bay, British Columbia. The members of the ill-starred trip arrived in Seattle this morning, hav ing been deported to American soil by order of the Canadian officials. There I boat and their outfit was confiscated, they say. Suit against the Canadian government is threatened. Glen C. Bartlett, manager of the Revilla Hotel, Ketchikan, who has made the Revilla a by word among travelers in the North,is wielding the long and sharp editor’s shears. Bartlett is at present the brain de partment of the Ketchikan Miner. Editor Richard Bushell wanted to go : to the Sound, for a trip over the holi ' days. He could find no one who want 1 ed to take his job, so Bartlett was elected editor of the Miner, for the next three, weeks, by a unanimous vote. NEW YORK.—Captain J. Campbell Beasley, formerly of Nome, has re turned from South America with the Story that he has discovered a lost city of the Incas on that continent. PORTLAND, Ore.—Unalaska, a town in the Aleutian archipelago, Alaska, together with the land around, it, is rapidly rising from the sea, ac cording to a report made today at the hydrographic office of Captain C. D. Peterson, master of a steamer that cruised about in the Aleutian islands last summer. Tw years ago residents of Hog is land, near Unalaska, could see only, the spire of the Russian church in the village. Now the entire building and much of the village are plainly' visible from Hog island, according to Captain Peterson. Clearance Sale of Men's Clothing! We have at this time on hand one of the finest lines of mens suits that has ever been brought to Seward. An ticipating a big rush from the Interior over the Seward Iditarod Trail we laid in a larger stock than we would have under ordinary conditions. We still have a couple of dozen of these suits on hand and more coming. On the last mail we received notice from the Stein-Bloch factory that they had shipped us another large shipment of high grade clothing and in or der to have room for the goods when they arrive we are forced to get rid of the stock on hand. To do this we are going to cut the prices lower than clothes of this grade have ever been sold in Seward. Beginning Monday, January 4th, we are going to of fer every suit in stock'at the following reductions. These prices are for cash only and if you can use a high grade suit at a low price DON’T OVERLOOK THIS SALE! All $45.00 Suits and Overcoats, Now $35.00 All 40.00 Suits and Overcoats, Now 30.00 All 35.00 Suits and Overcoats, Now 27.50 All 30.00 Suits and Overcoats, Now 25.00 All $21.50 and $25.00 Suits, Now 17.50 All intermediate priced suits reduced accordingly. Come early while the selection and assortment of fabrics and sizes are complete. Just Received A complete line of up to date hats in the latest Stetson and Hardeman blocks. Now On Display THE MINER’S STORE FRANK J. COTTER. Manager Phone Adams 131 “Don’t Forget the Parcel Post" SeWSrd, Alaska JUNEAU.—District Attorney Rea gan says: “In further explanation of the stat utory definition of gambling, gambling is defined by the lexicographers as fol lows: ‘To play a game for money or other stakes; to lose or squander bv gambling.* “Therefore, it is manifest, without further explanation, that any game of any kind played for a stake of any value of any kind, is gambling. This would include not only games for money but games played in saloons, pool rooms, cigar stores, billard halls or other places for trade or trade checks; the allowing of games to be S played even for the puropose of de- j termining who shall pay for the use of a table whereon the game is played,! is contrary to the statute; and those! participating in such games and the! proprietors of places allowing the same, are guilty of violating the law in this respect. “This statement ought to be suffici ent for the guidance of the citizens of this division with respect to gambl ing.”—Juneau Dispatch. Visiting cards, invitations, anything pretty is done by the Gateway just as well as outside. Meet me at The branch. HOW RUSSIANS FORCESJAARCH STRAGGLE ALONG WITHOUT AN ATTEMPT TO MAINTAIN FORMATION. (By The Associated Press.) LONDON, Jan. 4.—A letter from Warsaw says that in marching Rus sian soldiers present an odd picture. “The Russian regiments on the march are the most informal organi zation in the world/’ it says. 4 Ahead ride a few officers, and then, in no par ticular formation, come the troops, some on one side of the road and some 1 on the other. Toward the rear they straggle ofT in dwindling streams, wandering about the fields and plod ding here and there, just as though each was ofT on an individual tour. “For miles after a regiment has pas sed one pecs little groups trudging along, apparently contented and with- > out a worry in the world. Yet at night they all appear for rations, and in the morning start off again in a solid formation. Mail THE GATEWAY to your friends and advertise SEWARD DAILY GATEWAY, $1.00 per Month, $10 per Year WEEKLY GATEWAY, $3.00 per Year STRICTLY IN ADVANCE IT DA VC TO GET IT I 1 KAY O from the SIANDARD FURNITURE CO. SEATTLE— "It’s Better and Costs Less” 1 1 '* ' ”i Standard Special <E1VI 75 Kitchen Cabinet' PRACTICAL KITCHEN CABINET; exactly like picture; light shellac finish; practically arranged drawers on top; also sugar and flour bln; this cabinet Is the. most practical low-priced kitchen cabinet made; price $14.75. Standard gfomitnreCo Second Ave. at Pine St. SEATTLE “I am told that this method ofj marching has proved a great puzzle to the German airmen in trying to esti-j mate the numbers of troops that arej moving. When th • columns are so. strung out, it is almost impossible from any height to tell whether what one sees is a battalion in close for mation or a company strung out. Most armies march in solid masses j which can be seen and estimated ac curately from a great distance. “The more one sees of the individ ual of the Russian army the more one becomes to like the common sold- ( ier here. He is the most good matured ? child-like, playful person in the world and in the month I have been with the army I have not seen any disorder. On the road and in the camp, all seem contended and happy as long as the weather is fine. It must be admitted they look a little dismal in the rain.” “Colonel Skinner’s Chutney, estab lished 1841. Especially fine for meats. Brown & Hawkins. “Quality first.’’ By suberibing for the Gateway you get all the real news of the world through a great press service. You may not get all the details but you get all of which a knowledge is necessary. 1915, January Fifth, Our I’EM H Anniversary of Business in Seward WE wish to thank the public in general for their liberal patronage in the past and trust our business meth ' ods have been such as to merit their greater con fidence in the future. We are most optimistic for Seward in the year lhl5. We predict a wonderful improvement in a business way. We predict the selection of Kessur rection Bay as the Ocean Terminus of the Government Railway by President Wilson, not later than February H), that actual construction work will begin not later than April 1st; that Seward will have a population of 5000 people by December Both; that real estate in Seward will advance fully 300 per cent by September 1st, and that our business will increase accordingly. SEWARD COMMERCIAL COMPANY FURNITURE AND HARDWARE COAL MINER’S AMD COLD MINER’S SUPPLIES Doors & Windows Lang’s Ranges 1 X L Parlor Heaters Gasoline Stoves Cook Stoves Camp Stoves Air Tight Heaters Oil Stoves Alcohol Stoves Spark Plugs Jump Coils Batteries Granite Ware Aluminum Ware Asbestos P & B Paper Malthoid Rooting Tar Paper Deafening felt Weather Strips Gasoline Gas Engine Oil Marine Engine Oil Valve Oil Elaine Oil Floor Oil Linseed Oil Cup Grease Paints Lacqueret Paint Asphaltutn Paint Brushes Varnishes Turpentine Japan Denatured Alcohol Coal Tar Lamps Lanterns Tents PHONE BLACK 4 Rifles Shot Guns Ammunition Fishing Tackle Giant Powder Caps Fuse Bench Forges Blacksmith’s Coal Bellows Wheel Barrows Cutlery Fire Clay Fire Brick Lime Cement Glass Hope Mercury Seine Twine J. L. QR AEF ALASKA STEAMSHIP CO. ® | Steamers Alameda and Mariposa sail from Seattle g every eight days tor Ketchikan, Juneau, Cordova, | Valdez and Seward. S. S. DORA leaves'Seward 15th of each month for Cook Inlet points and Dutch. 11 arbor. Regular freight service for Ketchikan, Wrangell, Juneau, Sheep Creek, Treadwell, Douglas, Skagway, Cordova, Ellaniar, Valdez, Latouche and Seward Freight Steamers sailing from Seattle eajh month: S. S. Seward 5th; S. S. Latouche, 15th; S. S. Cordova, 25th (S. S. Sew ard carries Explosives) Right reserved to change this schedule without notice‘s p. B. TRACY, General Agent C. B. GUPTILL, Agent Hotel Seward W. a/M'NEILEY. Pnop. MODERN CONVENIENCES RATES S1.00 TO $2.50 PER DAY HOT AND COLD WATER BATHS ELECTRIC LIGHTS The Bor gen Grocery Staple and Fancy Groceries Handles the Best Canned Goods from the Pacific Coast—Best Treatment to Everybody and Prices Bight—Goods • Delivered to All Parts of the City GUS BORGEN, Proprietor Phone Main 134 Clayson Building, Seward Pioneer Hotel F. B. CANNON, Prop. Knik Alaska ! KNIK’S LEADING HOTEL \ NO BAR > ! Accommodations for Ninety Guests Large General Lobby Private Lobby for Ladies ! Best Rates : : Best Treatment i Best Accommodations i