Newspaper Page Text
G. W. PALMER KNIK, ALASKA . ._ _ „ _ Some of Out* Specialties: WELLMAN CANNED GOODS RED CLOVER BUTTER TIP TOP EGGS SPERRYS FLOURS M ARSHFIELD CHEESE And full line of HARDWARE. STOVES. HAY AND FEED No Better Goods Can Be Bought At Any Price G. W. PALMER, Knik, Alaska Lang's (Pat.) Hot Blast Smokeburning STOVES AND RANGES Are iM \R \N FEED to burn but one-half as much tuel as Ol.l) MALE RANGES. Because they consume all gases and smoke In tuel. All tuel is burned fiomtop. I he “PACIFIC.” as sho^n In cut, Is our Stand ard Family Range made In three sizes. Sold at BROWN & HAWKINS’ We make Stoves from $1.00 to $300.00 i Write ih for Catalogues, F. S. LANG MANUFACTURING CO. 2756 First Ave., South. SEATTLE, WASHINGTON via "Milwaukee FIRST IN SCENERY FIRST IN EQUIPMENT FIRST IN SERVICE and the only road operating over its own lines all the way from Seattle to Chicago The “Olympian" The “Columbian" two crack all-steel trains every day. For information and literature write A. H. McDonald, Alaska Steamship Co.. Seward. Alaska WAANt BILL. The Admiral tine. Seward. Alaska Agents for the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway A. t. HARRIS. Traveling Passenger Agent. Juneau. Alaska THE UNSURPASSED EQUIPMENT OF THE — Great Northern Railway Affords the Maximum of Comfort from the Pacific Coast To California and all points East and Southeast. Three Overland Trains Daily. The “Oriental Limited” holds the on time record between Chicago and Seattle. WINTER EXCURSIONS TO HONOLULU BY THE OCEAN GO INO PALACE STEAMSHIP “GREAT NORTHERN,” EQUIPPED LIKE THE BEST HOTEL. A. S. IMUTRICK, Traveling Freight and Passenger Agent, Room 18, Valentine Building, Juneau. T. J MOORE. Citv Pa»enger Agt., Second and Columbia, Seattle. A. WHITNALL, City Passenger Agt., 607 Hastings St., Vancouver, B.C. Amuse— Yourself V I BILLIARDS POOL BOWLING FIRST-CLASS BAR * Open Day and Night! I Pay from $1 to $2.50 tor Bear Skulls In good Condition J. R. STEVENSON Taxidermist Juneau Alaska CHAS. II. MUELLER Manufacturing furrier Honesty and Reliability Send vour ltaw Furs to me to t*o made Into Sets while Summer Prices prevail Remodeling and Repairing 1621 SECOND AVENUE SEATTLE, - WASH. ANDERSON & MURPHY THE TERMINAL Olympia, Rainier, Bud reiser and Letups Beer. Olympia Beer on Draught. All Beer and Wines Strictly Cold Storage, Try Us Once, then You be the Judge OLD CROW OLD HERMITAGE OLD WINES Blue Ribbon Beer Olympia Beer Rainier Beer ONLY MINERAL CABINET WHERE? AT JACK’S J. P. Stotko - Proprietor i iTIieCaislens Packing Co. Wholesale and Retail Beef, Park, Veal, Mutton, Poultry Lard, Mams and Bacon. Butter and Orders from the Westward and i Cook Inlet Given Careful Attention Fourth Ave Seward • j Send Us Your Cheek ...ASSAYS... | Falkenburg & Laucks p Ore Testing and Milling Gold and Silver. $1.00 Copper 1.50 Load 100 Seattle, Waah. “Analyte Anything* C. C. BERG Ladies1 Furrier ITaxidermist Send your Raw Furs. We do our own Tanning and Manufacturing. Twenty seven Years in Seattle 1425 First Ave. Seattle, Wash. The Commerce Newman & Powers Proprietors Wines, Liquors and Cigars BEST BRANDS Draught ana Bottled Seers NOTICE OF MARSHAL’S SALE United States of America. , gu • 3rd Div. District of Alaska j Public notice is hereby given, that by virtue of a writ of execution, dat | ed December 17th, A. D. 1915, issued out of the U. S. District Court, of the United States for the 3rd Division, District of Alaska, on a judgment rendered in Commissioner’s Court at Kodiak, Alaska, on the Tenth day of November, A. D. 1915, in favor of 0. j Kraft and Son and against Simeon Naumoir, 1 have, on this Fifth day of January, A. D. 1916, levied upon the following described real estate, situated in the Town of Kodiak and Territory of Alasku, to wit: One House and Lot, situated in the ! town of Kodiak, Alaska and known as the Simeon NaumofT prop erty, and located between the resi dence of Dr. Jos. 4- Silverman’s on the South, and Peter Iiesotr’s cn the; North, and with frontage on the Gov- j eminent road, and that I will, accord-1 best bidder, for cash, on the Tenth1 | day of March, A. D. 1916, at Two! o’clock P. M., at the front door of of- j fice of Deputy U. S. Marshal, at! Kodiak, Alaska. Dated, Fifth day of January, 1916. F. R. BRENNEMAN, U. S. Marshal. 3rd Div. District of Alaska. By KARL ARMSTRONG, Office Deputy., First publication Jan. 26, 1916. Last publication Feb. 23, 1916. -——— Miller’s Barber Shop We make a specialty of removing warts, etc. Hot and Cold BATHS Always Ready jHOTEL SEWARD 511 THIRD AVE. Arctic Club BUI*. SEATTLE, WASH ZBINDEN BROS.. Prop*. SrU Special Weekly Rates We Design, Build, Install and Oper ate for a Period of 30 Days llllt Dredges Designed and Built to Suit Conditions under which they are to operate Hill Leading Builders of Smaller Sized Dredges with bucketsU to 5 cubic foot capacity Our Special Design fine Gold Saving Devices installed on Dredges of the flume type lllll We build light Drills capable of digging 4-in. holes 50 feet Two men can handle them lllll Write for prices and particulars AMERICAN GOLD DREDGES - TYPE OF AMERICAN GOLD DREDGE OPERATING AT NOME AMERICAN DREDGE BLDG. AND CONSTRUCTION CO. 503-504 Pioneer Bldg. B Bernard. Manager SEATTLE, WASH. ____ __ _ - .-_ TODAY’S ODDEST STORY Special to Gateway by United Press. AMSTERDAM, Feb. 2.—Germany is in tho throes of a sauerkraut famine and Ohio, U. S. A., plus the British navy, is partly to blame. In normal times Germany depended on Ohio for immense quantities of cabbage. T lio ; British naval embargo on German imports is therefore responsible for Germany’s predicament, together with the smallness of the German cabbage i crop, on account of the war. Star Naptha Washing powder makes washing 4fc*y. Twenty cents per pkg. Brown & Hawkins, “Quality First.” . ■->—■■■■■— ■— ■— — Black Diamond, second mined run coal. $10 per ton delivered from dock. Alaska Transfer Co. 2-1014 M II II — -.. — Diamond “W” and Mt.gnolia brands steel-cut coffee.—URBACH'S. NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION Department of the Interior. U. S. Land OUice at Juneau, Alaska, j December 51,1015. NOTICE is hereby given that' George Jemison Laugnlin, of Seward, Alaska, who, on December 15, 1015,! made homestead application, No.1 02/60, for NVaSWft, NWft Sec. 12 SVaSWft, Section 1, Township 1 N., Range 1 W., Seward Meridian, has fil ed notice of intention to muke five j year Proof, to establish claim to the j land above described, before U. S., Commissioner M. J. Conroy, at his of- j fice at Seward, Alaska, on the 6th day i of March, 1016. Claimant names as witnesses: J. H. Komig, Thomas llambright, George Sexton, H. H. Hildreth all of Seward, Alaska. C. B. WALKER, Register First Publication Jan. 25, 1016. Last Publication March 2, 1016. NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION Department of the Interior. U. S. Land Ofliee at Juneau, Alaska, December 31,1915. NOTICE is hereby ?ivcn that John Nash, of Seward, Alaska, who, 5? November 27, 1915,made Homestead Application, No. 02756, for Lot 1, Section 1, Township 1 S., Range 1. W., Seward Meridian, and the SVV^4 Sec. 36, SttNWK Sec. 36, NEKNWKj Sec. 36, T. 1 N., It. 1 W., containing! 317.80 acres, has filed notice of in- j tention to make five year Proof, to establish claim to the land above des cribed, before M. J. Conroy, Com missioner, at his ofliee at Seward, Alaska, on the 6th day of March, li)16. Claimant names as witnesses: W. A. McNeiley, H. H. Hildreth, Louis Simpson, Charles Christensen, all of Sew ard, Alaska. C. B. WALKER, Register.1 First Publication Jan. 25, 1916. Last Publication March 2, 1916. LUMBER! Alaska Lumber Made by Alaska labor , DIMENSION LUMBER j in Any Quantity Now DRESSED LUMBER in Any Quantity Soon -THE Sf WARD SAWMILL CO. A. r. mSMUSSEN, Prop. Phone Kenai 2 ^ — ■ - - NEWSPAPERS WINA EIGHT CLAIM THEY FORCED BRITISH GOVERNMENT TO CHANGE THEIR WAR PLANS. (Special to Gateway by United Press) LONDON, Feb. —Eng.and s mer riest little internal war, the Govern ment versus ihe Press, is all over but the shouting. Looks will be writ ten aoout this inside rumpus alter the big war, but the preliminary hul labaloo already hu> begun News papers with sullicient intrepidity at the beginning of the big war to at tack tne government for alleged mis takes and to persist in the practise, are claiming complete victory. The fault linders early in the campaign were, principally, the London limes, The Mail, and Evening News, all con trolled by Lord Northcliffe; but when these papers crowned their campaign of criticism by opposing a great muni tions shortage alter the Battle of N'euve Chapelle and were joined by other publications in insisting on a remedy, the government began to take notice. The result W'as a De partment of Munitions of which Lloyd George, former Chancellor of ihe Exchequer, is the head. When the faultfinding newspapers leveled their guns of criticism on the alleged diplomatic fluke in the Balkans which allowed Turkey and eventually, Bul garia to join tl\e Central Powers; and when these papers were joined by the Manchester Guardian, England’s lead ing liberal organ, the Government took more notice. Reviewing their entire campaign, the newspapers that still criticize when they deem criti cism due, are claiming today the following reforms instituted by the government as the result of newspap er agitation: 1. formation of a coalition cabinet to eliminate polities from the ad ministration of the war. 2. Establishment of a Department of Munitions, apart from tho Waf Office, to adequately provide the arm> with arms and ammunition, especially high explosive shells. 3 CcriGffd internment of enemy aliens. 4. War Office permission for newspaper correspondents to visit the front in order to keep the nation in touch with its soldiers. 5. Measures to counteract exces sive food wastage in military camps. 6 Efforts to conserve financial and economic resources and to prevent public waste. 7. Retaliator use of poison gas against the* Germans. 8. Placing of cotton on the list of absolute contraband. 9. Relaxation, to a certain degree, of excessive censorship restrictions. 10. Recruiting of single men in preference to married men for army service. 11. Complete reorganization of the anti-aircraft defence of Ixjndon. 12. Official announcements from various government departments hav ing to do with the war, for the pur pose of counteracting public opinion based on enemy propaganda. 13. Placing of war trophies—cap tured guns, aeroplanes, torpedoes and mines—on public exhibition in London and other cities. 14. Following up the French in novation of equipping soldiers of the first line with steel helmets as pro tection against shrapnel. Dry goods at Butts. OPENED JAN. |JT, 1913 "SheHOTEl. thou BEST In all the WEST'' M7|1 I j®^OW.2NO ST,NEAR HILL W 5 NORTHERN HOTEL CO., PROP. [ 1 W f RANK L CRAMPTON. MGR. | RATE5 * I 00 PER OAY *«® UP PACIFIC ALASKA NAVIGATION CO. “The Admiral Line” STEAMERS SAIL FROM SEATTLE 9 P. M. 5th, 15th, 25th of Each Month For SOUTHEASTERN AND SOUTHWESTERN ALASKA PORTS Sailing of 15th calls liliamna and Kodiak. All Vessels call at Knlk anchorage During Open Season. --CALIFORNIA Seattle to San Francisco, evary Wednesday and Sunday, connecting With Steamers Yale and Harvard for Southern California Points. Right reserved to change steamers and satHng dates without notice RICHARD J. RINGWOOD, Manager. WAYNE BLUE Local Agent.