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—__-j The Great ALASKAN ALASKAN DAILY _ . _ _Cltr-t SUNDAY _____LARGEST ALASKAN CIRCULATION — " SKW VRD. THE GATEWAY TO ALASKA, MONDAY, JANUARY 3, 1916. - \o\. 10. No. 39 ■ SPECIAL TRAIN RUSHING THE PRESIDENT TO WASHINGTON ANOTHER GREAT SHIP SUNK WASHINGTON, Jan. 1.—A cable message from Skinner, the American consul general at London, an nounces that the great British steamship Persia has been submarined by an unknown submarine in the Mediterran ean ami seventy-live to two hundred people have perish ed. The Persia was bound from London to Alexandria, Egypt, and was sunk last Thursday evening. With the exception of the Lusitania and the Arabic she is the larg est British ship submarined since the beginning of the war and at the time of her sinking she had aboard two hun dred and thirty-one passengers, including eighty-six women and twenty-six children. A large number of the crew is reported lost but several women and children are also among the missing. The most serious aspect of the affair from the American point of view is that the Ameri • can counsul at Aden, R. N. Nely, was aboard as a pas senger when the vessel sank, enroute to his post, and he has not been heard from since. His fate is unknown. Later word has been received that four boatloads of pas sengers have been landed at Alexandria but it is believed that no other boats were launched. There is no way of telling whether the Persia had been warned or had been fleeing but fears of the gravest international complica tions are felt in officialdom. BELIEVE McNELY DROWNED WASHINGTON, Jan. 3.—Advices which have been received by the state department and which are believed to have been authorized declare that McNely, the Ameri can consul at Aden, was drowned when the British liner Persia was sent to the bottom last Thursday near Alex andria, Egypt. When last seen he was struggling in the sea and as several days have elapsed since the sinking of the great vessel there is only too much reason to believe that he is dead. It is now believed that two hundred and fifty people went down with the ship. The greatest ten sion prevails in official circles. A special train has been rushed for the president to Hotsprings and he is expected to arrive before morning. Reports which were circulated that the Persia had struck a mine are denied by the res cued members of the crew. No one, however, saw the submarine but the second officer declares that he saw the wake of the torpedo. Most of the passengers were at luncheon when the terrific explosion came and the vessel sank in six minutes. The acting Austrian ambassador has already informed the state department that Austria will make full amends if it is found that an Austrian sub marine was responsible but all comment is being witheld pending fuller reports. PETROGRAD ALIVE AGAIN LONDON, Jan. 3.—The Russians have captured heights near Czernowitz. Bukowina, according to advices from Petrograd this morning and are now pressing the Austrians hard. The same advices declare that in the battle for the heights the Slavs captured eight hundred and seventv-five of the enemv and killed and wounded * _ * enormous numbers. This demonstration of strength on that part of the front by the Russians is believed to be meant to impress Roumania. DR. COOK ADVISES FORD PARTY COPENHAGEN, Jan. 3.—Another amazing bit of humor was injected into the story of the Ford peace ex pedition when Dr. Cook, of North Pole fame, visited the members of the expedition yesterday and advised them not to let ridicule bother them. A full third of the Ford party, mostly students, will leave the mission here and probably go home. The ostensible reason given by them for their departure is that they fear trying to make the passage of the North Sea. TEUTONS BUY NEUTRALS LONDON, Jan. 3.—The Teutonic empires have spent the sum of three hundred and sixty million dollars in fifteen different neutral countries to secure the neutrality or aid of those countries in the present conflict. The three chief methods of operating on the neutral nations by Germany have been intimidation, persuasion and brib ery. Roumania, Greece, and Sweden are the three nations now said to be receiving the most attention. MARTIAL LAW FOR GREECE LONDON, Jan. 3.—The government of Greece has decided to_declare martial law all over the country on January 15, according to the newspapers of Athens, but the reason is not given. Whatever negotiations might have been going on nothing has been published about them and the future actions of Greece are expected to depend on unlooked for circumstances which can hardly now be even guessed at R. R. Commission Man Dies of Grippe Ernest Boyden Ramsey Passes Away at Anchorage and Leaves a Family. ANCHORAGE, Jan. 3.—Ernest Royden Ramsey, a clerk with the railroad engineering commssion, pass ed away at 4 o’clock this morning after a very short illness. He was suffering from Grippe yesterday and ate green olives for dinner, after which he was taken violently ill. He was at once removed to the govern ment hospital but remained uncon scious until death came. He was re garded as a most capable man. A wife and two children are left to I mourn him. FLOODS DRIVE TWO HUNDRED FROM HOME COLUMBUS, Jan. 3.—Two hundred families are homeless owing to the heavy floods which have come as a re sult of the rains of the past few days. The state generally is affected but the worst conditions are prevalent at Tiffin. In some places the water is five feet deep for great areas. _ -- ❖ WALDORF ASTOR * ♦ BECOMES A LORD ❖ * - ❖ LONDON, Jan. 3.—William Wald orf Astor and Sir Thomas Shaugh nessy have been made barons by King George. Both men are born Ameri cans but Shaughnessy became the head of the Canadian Pacific railroad and having made his home in Canada became a British subject. Astor has been known for years to have been seeking a title. NEW YORK HAS A WILD CELEBRATION NEW YORK, Jan. 3.—New Year’s Eve celebration was the wildest in the history of the city. Hundreds of thousands of people of all kinds and sexes turned the streets into pande monium until the early hours. Chief amongst the special celebrations was that of observing the fact that this is now the metropolis of the world. GREAT WAGE INCREASE BOSTON, Jan. 3.—The American Woolen Company has granted an in crease of five per cent in the wages of sixty thousand employes. The company runs three mills. SON OF DR. SUN TO JOIN REVOLUTIONISTS BERKELEY, Jan. 3.—Dr. Sun, the first president of the Chinese republic, has wired that his son is enroute from Japan to join the Chinese revolution ists. He had been under surveillance by the Japanese authorities for the past two years. FIXING RATES ON GOVERNMENT R. R. » ANCHORAGE, Jan. 3.—The Com mission has announced that the tariff rates have been completed for a por tion of the line towards the coal fields. The passenger rates are “ten miles, twenty-five cents; twenty-six miles, dollar fifty-five cents.” Freight per hundred ten miles, twenty-five cents, twenty to thirty miles, thirty-five cents. Per ton; fifteen miles, two dollars twenty-five cents; thirty miles, two seventy-five cents. (Note) That passenger rate does not look right but there was no chance to have it cleared up. SEATTLE DRIES LIKE A LAMB CITIES INSTEAD OF CELEBRAT ING GO TO BED AND SLEEP IT OFF. SEATTLE, Dec. l.-^Seattle is dry anil went dry last night almost as quietly as a lamb might lie down be side a well. The great uproarious celebration did not take place and it anything the New Yeor was more quietly ushered in than any New Year for years before. Snow first came to dampen the anlor of those who had prepared for a wild time. Then it was found that the stocks of liquor in some of the saloons had been exhaust ed and many of tahe places closed as a consequence in the afternoon and early in the evening. Indeed there was no unusual excitement and all obeyed the law. Similar reports come from Portland, Tacoma, Spokane, Boise and Denver. ^ CHINESE TROOPS *> NOW IN REVOLT ❖ ❖ - ♦ SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 3.—Sixty thousand troops in two provinces of China have broken out in revolt. Ac cording to cablegrams from Shanghai the new empire is once again facing a bloody period. TACOMA ATTY. DEAD TACOMA, Jan. 3.—A. H. Garret son, aged sixty-eight, a prominenet attorney and politician, is dead of pneumonia. TO EXPERIMENT IN ALASKA WINTER FISHING SEATTLE, Jan. 3.—The Maid of Orleans will leave this week for a cod fishing cruise in Alaska. The trip will be in the nature of an experiment in cod fishing in Alaska waters for the winter season. JUSTICE LAMAR PASSES AWAY SECRETARY LANE MAY SOON BE JUDGE OF U. S. SUPREME C 0 U R T. WASHINGTON, Jan. 3.—Joseph Rucker Lamar, associate justice of the United States supreme court, died last night at the age of fifty-eight after a long illness. Justice Lamar was a democrat and was appointed to the supreme court by President Taft in 1910. He was born in Ruckersville, Elbert county, Ga., October 14, 1857. He had been a member of the state legislature and also a member of the state supreme court but retired from office in 1905 because of ill health. Secretary Franklin K. Lane is be ing prominently mentioned as the most likely person to succeed Justice Lamar on the supreme court bench. His name, has ,indeed, been mentioned for some time in this connection and general opinion is that he will be ap pointed. ANOTHER HEAVY SNOW. COASTER KILLED SEATTLE SEATTLE, Jan. 3.—The second heavy snow fall of the season fell last night and the hills arc covered. While some boys were coasting near the city yesterday they ran into an auto. One boy was killed and others had legs or arms broken. A. B. MEET TONIGHT A meeting of the Arctic Brother hood wil ltake place this evening. Miss Frances Root has been confin ed to her rooms the past few days j with a severe attack of the grippe. OIL TANKER BLOWN UP RIGHT AT THE DOCK AT BROOKEYN Quakes Felt All Over the States Seattle Has One So Has California and Even Buffalo, New York. SEATTLE, Jan. 3.—A distinct shock of earthquake visited this city at 5 o’clock Sunday afternoon but no • damage of any kind resulted. I>ater reports came in from all parts ot the j country telling of quakes in various j places. SAN JOSE, Jan. 3.—A quake oc curred at five o’clock this morning and the instruments showed its center to j be from two hundred to a thousand miles away. BUFFALO, Jan. 3.—Two earth quake shocks were left here yester day morning. There was no damage. COMMITTED SUICIDE AFTER FOUL CRIME PORTLAND, Ore., Jan. 3.—The body of Evan Kemp, the assailant of Mrs. Mabel Myers, has been found. He committed suicide and left a note confessing the crime. ❖ ALASKA THIRD * + IN GOLD OUTPUT •> ♦ - * WASHINGTON, Jan. 3.—Alaska took third place in the gold produc tion of the United States and its ter ritories last year, according to the of ficial statement made this morning. California was first and Colorado was second. Alaska’s output was sixteen and a half millions. California and Colorado produceded twenty-three and twenty-two millions respectively. SLEIGHING AT STOCKTON STOCKTON, Jan. 3.—The first sleighing since 1882 was indulged in here yesterday. Stockton and Sacra mento have each three inches of snow on the level. SAN FRANCISCO HAS A TREMENDOUS STORM Nothing Like It For Twenty-Seven Years had Swept Though the City. SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 3.—The worst storm for twenty-seven years raged over this city and all the region around the bay last Sunday. Los Angeles was also visited by the gale and in that city some lives were lost. A falling sign killed at least two. At one time a ferry was running from this city to Oakland the pasengers came to fear that the end had come and began to pray. Many ships had to put back wdth their passengers for safety when the wind rose to its worst and traveled at the rate of seventy miles an hour. One two story apart ment house in the city was blown down and hundreds of plate glass windows were smashed by the sheer fury of the gale. THE RELOCATION PARTY DISBANDS FOR WINTER The relocation party, under George W. Colwell, has been disbanded for the rest of the winter for the lack of funds. The party has been relocating the Old Alaska Northern railroad in the vicinity of Kenai Lake and will probably resume w’ork there again in the spring. W. C. T. U. MEET The W. C. T. U. will meet at Mrs. Cook’s tomorrow afternoon at 3 o’clock. Everybody cordially invited. SINK SHIP AT DOCK NEW YORK, Jan. 3.—What is regarded as the most daring and sensational act of the alleged teutonic plot ters occurred here this afternoon when a Norwegian tanker was blown up while she floated at her dock in Brooklyn. The vessel had been carrying oil to the allied nations and the authorities have no douot hei destiuction was intentional. One man is known to have been killed, seven are missing and believed to be dead, and ten others are in the hospital. The tanker went to the bottom at once. The two tanks aft were blown up. ANOTHER LEVIATHAN SUNK LONDON, Jan. 3.—The big British freighter Glen gyle, a vessel which might be regarded as in the class oi the Lusitania, Arabic or Persia, was torpedoed Sunday morning in the Mediterranean and sunk but with the loss of only a few lives. Although mostly used l'or freighting the Glengyle had a few passengers aboard ah of whom were, however, saved. JAPANESE SHIP SUNK LONDON, Jan. 3.—The Japanese steamship Ken kon Maru has been torpedoed and sunk in the Mediter ranean but all aboard were saved. This is the third ship sunk in those waters within a week and the fact has caus ed people to assume that Germany is shipping submarines overland and launching them at Constantinople. FORD PARTY CROSS GERMANY COPENHAGEN, Jan. 3.—The German government has given the Ford Peace party permission to cross Ger man territory by train on the way from this country to The Hague but with the proviso that no member of the party leave the train on German territory. A special train has been chartered and the party will leave soon. BRYAN MEETS FORD NEW YORK, Jan. 3.—Ford arrived from Europe to day and wired Wiliam Jennings Bryan to meet him im mediately, which he did. After the conference neither would speak but Bryan declared that he will not go to Europe very soon. Ford seems to be recovered from the nervous effects of his expedition. KING AND KAISER SICK AMSTERDAM, Jan. 1.—The kaiser is now reported to be suffering from virulent carbuncles and blood poison ing and it is believed that he is confined to bed. King Constantine of Greece is also sick and will undergo a min or operation tomorrow. WILSON TO APPEAL TO WORLD WASHINGTON, Jan. 3—The next statement to be made by President Wilson regarding submarine warfare is expected to be an appeal to the whole civilized world in favor of what is coming to be known as the “Wilson Doctrine." PASSENGERS SAFE NEW YORK, Jan. 3.—The passengers on the Greek ship Thessalonica which had been crippled have been transferred to a Greek liner which is now towing the ves sel. The liner and her tow are proceeding slowly. ALL FRONTS QUIET PARIS, Jan. 3.—Fighting on all fronts remains al most at a standstill. Nothing more than local skirmishes and artillery exchanges are reported. RUSSIANS SINK SUBMARINES AMSTERDAM, Jan. 3.—Russian warships have sunk two Bulgarian submarines at Varna, Bulgaria. TURKEY TOUCHES GERMANY ZURICH, Jan. 3.—Turkey has applied to Germany for a loan of a hundred million dollars. BOMB KILLS THREE IN SACRAMENTO SACRAMENTO, Calif., Jan. 3.—A bomb which was hurled through the window of the residence of an Italian family here last night killed three members of the faimly and wounded another. It is supposed that the act was due to a quarrel with another family. Several suspects have been arrested. k ❖ HUERTA BELIEVED ❖ ❖ NEAR TO DEATH ❖ ❖ - ❖ EL PASO, Jan. 3.—General Huerta is now in a serious condition and is not expected to recover. He has just undergone an operation for gall stones and the operation brought out the fact that he is also suffering from a complication of diseases which make it almost impossible for him to live long.