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Slir £>?utarit (Satnuag Published Daily Except Sunday by The Seward Gateway Publishing Co. BERNARD M. STONE, President. Subscription Rates: Dally—One dollar per month . Ten cents the copy. By mail, $10 per year. Weekly—Three dollars per year. (Payable strictly in advance). Advertising Kates: TRANSIENT DISPLAY ADVERTISING—50 cents per inch. Contract rates on application. Readers, 10c per line first Insertion, 5c per line each additional insertion. Legal notices, 50c per line. SEWARD. ALASKA. SATURDAY, AUGUST 28. 1915. Juneau has very properly passed an ordinance to tax “itinerant” mer chants and every town in Alaska should follow its example. Why every city in the territory has not immediately grasped the opportunity to pass such an ordinance and so protect the regular business people is a mystery, hut it is a mystery that may be cleared up in our minds by the recollection that in every municipal council there is probably a member or two who thinks more about his personal relations with some local business man or men than about the general good. Really there is no other reason that one can assign for the delay of all cities in putting an end once and for all to the rushing in of men who rush out again without paying a cent towards the communal expenses and after having played the buying public for simpletons. If the people only took time to remember that “itinerant” podlers cannot possibly supply the same values for the same money as the permanent dealer everyone would be on guard. Those people affect the trade of the grocer, the drygoods man. the cigar dealer, the hardware man and everyone else. It would be to the best interest of the city, the business man and particularly to the general public to tax the fly-by-nights. Juneau has shown the way splendidly. There was a time when Theodore Roosevelt enjoyed something approach ing the worship of the people of the United States but it is gradually being learned that the real man was hidden behind the halo which surrounds the head of power. Nothing more thoughtless could be imagined than the use he made of the invitation of General Leonard Wood to address the citizen soldiers at Plattsburg. Surely a boy in his teens with an ounce of savoir faire would have known that he must have embarrassed his host by such a speech, but Roosevelt never seemed to be bothered in the least. Like all men who are caught in a disagreable position he got mad and answered the rebuke to Wood by another attack on the administration. In this respect it may be said that, if the advices received yesterday regarding the intention of Germany not to endanger any more American lives, is correct President Wilson once more comes out of the mess gloriously triumphant. It is the essential motif of ail political opposition to condemn the acts of those in power and those in opposition are often reckless, but one might have expected more from a man who had once filled the presidential chair of the greatest democracy on earth. President Wilson has apparently gained his end by thoughtful, careful and diplomatic work and his critics ought ever more to be silent. •FRISCO WOMAN SHOOTS SI FT. GEO. GEIGER. Dispatches from Reno, Nev., tell of the shooting there on July 28 of Geo. Geiger, assistant superintendent and trainmaster of the Southern Pacific at Sparks. Geiger was formerly sup erintendent of the Copper River Northwestern road, with headquart ers at Cordova. Geiger was shot four times by Ruth Reed, a San Francisco woman, at the Collins ranch four miles west of Reno. Geiger is at the Reno hospital and is said to have a fair chance to recover. The woman has not been apprehend ed, and Geiger is reticent about giv ing information that may lead to her arrest. They had spent some time at a roadhouse and left there about one o’clock to go to Laughton’s. At the Collins ranch the woman got out of the machine and disappeared behind some haystacks. Geiger says he went to took for her and was confronted with a revolver from which she fired four shots. One bullet went through his hip, another through his shoulder, one through his right arm and an other near the nose. Geiger walked and crawled to the roadhouse and from there SherilF Ferrell was call ed. Geiger has been at Sparks eighteen months. His wife died about three months ago. Baseball Results National League. PITTSBURG, August 27.— Pittsburg . 1 New York.2 Pitchers—Adams; Gibson. ST. LOUIS, August 27.— St. Louis.11 | 1 Brooklyn.? Pitchers—Perdue; Bell. CHICAGO, August 27.— First game— Chicago.4 Boston.$ j Pitchers.—Pierce; Ragan. Second game— Chicago.4 ! Boston. 1 Pitchers—Pierce, Babel; Tyler. CINCINNATI, August 27.— Cincinnati.* Philadelphia.4 Pitchers—McKinley; McQuillan. Americans _ NEW YORK, August 27.— First game— New York . * Detroit . ® Pitchers—Pieh; Roland. Second game— New York . ,0> j Detroit . ** Pitchers—Cole, Shakey; Dubuc. BOSTON, August 27.— o Boston.° Cleveland . ^ I Pitchers—Gregg; Mitchell. PHILADELPHIA, August 27.— Philadelphia . ^ 0 Chicago. Pitchers—Wycoff; Cicottee. WASHINGTON, August 27.— 1 Washington . 1 St. Louis . ® j Pitchers—Harper; Loudermilk. The Gateway can do any sort of printing done in the statea. Do not forget that No reader can afford to omit the Seward Gateway. NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR. U. S. LAND OFFICE at Juneau Alaska. August 16, 1916 NOTICE is hereby given that John I). Johnston, of Seward. Alaska, who. on July 2, 1915. made Homestead application. No. 0243X, for SMiSEVs StySW*4 S*c- 12 N'aNE'4 N^NW>4. Section 13. Township 1 N ." Range 1 W., Seward Meridian, has filed notice of intention to make five year Proof, to establish claim to the land above described, before U. S. Commissioner M. J. Conroy, at his office at Seward, Alaska, on the 30th day of September. 1915. Claimant names as witnesses: J. H. Romig. S. L. Caldwell, Don Carlos Brownell, jr.. Thomas Hambright all of Seward, Alaska. C. B. WALKER. Register. First publication August 27. 1915 Last publication Oct. 2, 1916. JUST UNPACKED KENYON RAINCOATS AND OVERCOATS Some nobby effects in unfinished Plaids and Cheviots—Weather-proofed NEWEST STYLES Kimono Sleeves Velvet Collars New Shoulder Effects PATRICK AND KENYON MACKINAWS Autumn and Forest Plaids Norfolk and Box Back Effects Distinctly Stylish We take pleasure in inviting* you to call and inspect these lines THE MINER’S STORE FRANK J. COTTER, Manager Phone Adms 131 “Don’t Forget theuParcei Post” Seward, Alaska HIE SEWARD GATEWAY Circulates Throughout the Whole ot Alaska The Advertiser gels Cir culation Without Waste The Gateway Prints THE NEWS ALL THE NEWS NOTHING BUT THE NEWS Job Printing ctlcr Kind When You Buy Space IN THE SEWARD [)AILY QATEWAY you get Full Value for your money simply because its cir culation represents an actual buying clientele. The Seward Daily Gateway PRINTED AND PUBLISHED AT SEWARD, ALASKA Subscription Rates: $ 1.00 per Month $10.00 per Year, in advance H. V. HOBEN A. F DAVIS I ALASKA TRANSFER H. V. HOBEN, Manager -Dealers In— COAL, WOOD AND ICE General Transferring Phones, Main 17 and 41 Machinery for Prompt Shipment Machine Shop Boilers and Engines Wood Working Shop Gasoline Engines blacksmith Machines Air Compressors Sheet Metal Works Hoists and Pumps BOTH NEW AND USED MACHINES PERINE MACHINERY COM PAM SEATTLE E,,:$ishedCommerce Cafe' m,N Dinner 1 1 a.m to 7 p.m Short Orders at All Hours Special Chop Suey and Noodle Kvenings Private Boxes Open Day and Night EK) g ALASKA •SUET W Steamers Alameda, Mariposa and Northwestern sail \ from Seattle at V p. m. the Oth, 12th, 18th. 24th. 30th of each month tor Ketchikan, Wrangell, Juneau, Thane, Skagway, Cordova. Valdez, and Seward. ALAMEDA and MARIPOSA qo to Knik Anchorage. I a! m Antli Iam llii il lr L 1 inH 2m if It# Ilirtfk I • 11 • SANTA ANA leaves Seward 15th of each month for tnalaska, and In May. June. July and August she goes through to Nnshagak. Regular freight service for Ketchikan, Wrangell, Juneau, Thane, Treadwell, Douglas, Skagway, Cordova, Ellamar, Valdez, Latouche and Seward Freight Steamers sailing from Seattle each month: S. S. Seward. 5th; S. S. Latouche, 15th; S. S. Cordova, 25th (S. S. Seward carries Explosives) dWRierht reserved to change this schedule without notice-^ F. B. TRACY, General Agent A. H. McDONALI), Agent The Bor gen Grocery Staple and fancy Groceries Handles the Best Canned Goods from the Pacific Coast—Best Treatment to Everybody and Prices Right—Goods Delivered to All Parts of the City GUS BORGEN, Proprietor Phone Main 134 Clays*n Building, Seward M FURNITURE AND HARDWARE COAL MINER'S AND COLD MINER'S SUPPLIES Doors &. Windows Lang’s Ranges I 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 Roofing Tar Paper Deafening felt Weather Strips Gasoline Gas Engine Oil Marine Engine Oil Valve Oil Elaine Oil Floor Oil Linseed Oil Cap Grease Paints Locqueret Paint Asphaltum 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 Forces Blacksmith’s Coal Bellows Wheel Barrows Cutlery Fire Clay Fire Brick Lime Cement Glass Hope Mercury Seine Twine J. L. GRAEF