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0. W. PALMER KNIK; ALASKA Some of Our Specialties: WELLMAN CANNED GOODS RED CLOVER BITTER [IP TOP EGGS SPERRYS FLOURS MARSHFIELD CHEESE And :» full line Of HARDW ARE. STOVES. HAY AND FEED No Better floods Can Be Bought At Any Price C. W. PALMER, Knik, AlaskaJ Lang's (Pal.) Hot Blast Smokeburning STOVES AND RANGES Are GUAR ANTI-ED to burn but one-half as much tluel as OLD ST* LI: R ANGES, Because they consume all gases and smoke In tuel. All tuel is burned from top. The “PACIFIC," as shown 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 Write uj for Catalogues, 2756 First Ave.. South, SEATTLE, WASHINGTON via "Milwaukee” FIRST IN SCENERY FIRST IN EQUIPMENT FIRST IN SERYICE and the onl> road operating over its o*n lines all the way from Seattle to Chicago The -"Olympian" The “Columbian” tno crack all-steel trains every da>. For information and literature write A. ». McDonald. Alaska Steamship Co., Seward, Alaska VN \>\t Bllf, The Admiral Line. Seward. Alaska Agents for the Chicago. Milwaukee ti St. Paul Railway v i. mums. Traveling Passenger Agent, Juneau, Alaska THE UNSURPASSED EQUIPMENT ^ OF THE --- Great Northern Railway Aiioras tit j »V Kimurn of Comfort from the Pacific Coast To California and ail points East and Southeast. Three Overland Trains Daily. The “Oriental Limited” holds the on time record between Chicago and Seattle. LIKE THE BEST HOTEL. A. S. DAUTRICK, Traveling Freight and Passenger Agent, Room 18, Valentine Building, Juneau. 1*. J MOORE. Citv Passenger Agt., Second and Columbia, Seattle. A. WHITNALL. City Passenger Agt., 607 Hastings St., Vancouver, B.C. Amuse— Yourself BILLIARDS POOL BOWLING FIRST-CLASS BAR o win no aq. ItUADD) Open Day and Night! I Pay from $1 to $2.50 tor Bear Skulls In good Condition J. R. STEVENSON Taxidermist Juneau bo* 731 Alaska CltAS. It. MUELLER Manufacturing furrier Honesty and Reliability Seud your Raw Furs to mo to be made Into Sets while Summer Prices prevail Remodeling and Repairing 1621 SECOND AVENUE SEATTLE, - WASH. ANDERSON & MURPUY THE TERMINAL Olympia, Rainier, Bad reiser and hemps 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 Rainier Beer ONLY MINERAL CABINET WHERE? AT JACK’S J. P. Stotko - Proprietor L The Commerce Newman & Powers Proprietors Wines, Liquors and Cigars BEST BRANDS Draught ana Bottled Beers Send Us Your Check ...ASSAYS... Falkenburg & Laucks Ore Testing and Milling Gold and Silfor. 11.00 Copper 1.50 Lead U<0 Seattle, Wash. “Analyze Anything’ USE THE PHONE ALASKA ELECTRIC CO. S. M. URAFF President and General Manager IN THE UNITED STATES COM MISSIONER'S COURT, THIRD DIVISION, TERRITORY OF ALASKA, ILIAMNA PRECINCT. IN THE MATTER OF THE) ESTATE OF OLE HOOLE.) Deceased ) I In Probate No. 1. TERRITORY OE ALASKA, j PRECINCT OF ILIAMNA \ ss NOTICE OF SETTLEMENT OF FINAL ACCOUNT. Notice is hcreoy given that Fred J. Kochi, Administrator of the Estate of OLE HOOLE, Deceased, has rend ered and presented for settlement to, and tiled in the said Court of Pro bate, his Final Account as such Ad mistrator, and that the Fifteenth day of May 191G at 10 o’clock a. m. at the Court Room for the said Court, in the Village of Iliamna, in said Iliamna Precinct, has been duly appointed by the said Court for the settlement of the Final account, at which time and place any person interested in said estate may appear and fde his excep tions, if any, in writing to the said final account. FRED PHILLIPS U. S. Commissioner and Ex-Oflicio Probate Judge. Iliamna, Alaska, this 27th day of December, 1915. First publication Feb. 23, 1916. Last publication March 29, 1916. # The Garstens Packing Co. Wholesale and Retail Beef, Pork, Veal, Mutton, Poultry Lard, Hams and Bacon. Butter and Eggs Orders from the NN estward and Cook Inlet Given Careful Attention Fourth Ave Seward C. C. BERG ladies' Furrier ITajiidermist Send your Raw Fur*. We do our own Tanning and Manufacturing. Twenty seven Ycar» In Seattle 1425 First Ave. Seattle, Wash. . SAFETY FIRST! - Ruhstaller’s Gilt Edge Beer Sacramento, Calif. SERVED AT ALL CAFES LUMBER! Alaska Lumber Made by Alaska Labor DIMENSION LUMBER hi Any Quantity Now DRESSED LIMBER in Any Quantity Soon -THE -— SEWARD SAWMILL CO. A. f. RASMUSSEN, Prop. Phone Kenai 2 PACINC ALASKA NAVIGATION COMPANY “THE ADMIRAL LINE” Sts!S?«” "S m* 5th’ ,5th’ 25th 0f EaCh Month for SOUTHEASTERN AND SOUTHWESTERN ALASKA PORTS mailing ot I5U1 calls iiliaiiina and Kodiak. All Vessels call at Knik anchorage During Open Season. ..CALIFORNIA Seattle to San Francisco, every Wednesday and Sunday, connecting with Steamer* Yale and Harvard for Southern Californli Point*. Right reserved to change steamers and sailing dates without notice. RICHARD J. RINOWOOD, Manager. WAYNE BLUE. Local Agent. The All-Alaska Review ___—- : 25 Cents the Copy < $2.50 per Year in Advance j Subscribe Now for the Journal that gives you News of All Parts of the Territory of Alaska REIGN OF FRANCIS JOSEPH ACTUALLY LONGEST IN RECORDED HISTORY EMPEROR. FRANCIS JOSEPH |' (Francis Joseph 1.. emperor of Austria, apostolic king of Hungary, king of Bo hemia, of Croatia, of Galicia, etc., was born Aug. 18. 1830, and ascended the throne Dec. 2. 1N4S, In succession to his uncle. Emperor Ferdinand I., who abdicated on that date Ilia reign of sixty-seven years Is one of the longest in history, being exceeded only, it is believed, by that of Louis XIV. of Frnnce, who sat on the throne seventy-two years. But Louis was a child of five when he ascended the throne, whereas Francis Joseph had attained the comparatively mature age of eighteen, so In reality Francis Joseph has had the longest actual reign. The heir to his throne is Charles Francis Josoph, nephew of the murdered Archduke Francis Ferdinand, who was the nephew of Francis Jost-ph.) NOTICE I. J. LINDLEY GREEN, announce my candidacy for eloetiou to the ci lice of City Attorney at the coming City Election. I was City Attorney for the Town of Seward during the year ending in, April, TJlo. While City Attorney I gave written opinions on all import-; ant legal questions involving the! rights of the city. I gave a written opinion in regard to every important feature of all proposed franchises stating Uic legal effect of every point involved in such proposed franchise. These written opinions were Tiled with the Municiual Clerk and became pub lic documents open to the inspection of the public, thereby enabling both the Council and the Public to know where they were. During my term the question of electric lights for our Public Schools; became an acute issue, and the lights were furnished, and a flood of light. streamed forth from our Public j Schools and across the placid waters1 of Resurrection Bay, proclaiming to the world that Seward possessed an institution of learning. These lights j were furnished at a reasonable rate. This year our public schools are shrouded in darkness through the short dark days of winter. I say, j “Let there be light." I stand squarely on my record made while in the office of City Attorney. I am an independent candidate. Most Respectfully J. LINDLEY GREEN. Paid ad. Fox’s Oyster Cocktails at the Branch. Hi Press white rubber boots and shoe pacs. URBACH’S. A great many people outside and inside Alaska are now anxious to get any nows they can of the place where the government railroad will be. To save writing letters you couid send the Gateway, ePher your own read copy or get an^ .'’her. Visiting cards, invitations, anything pretty 1 • done by the Gateway just a* well as outsidu NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION Department of the Interior. U. S. Land Office at Juneau, Alaska,] December 31, 1915. NOTICE is hereby given that John Nash, of Seward, Alaska, who, on November 27, 1915,made Homestead' Application, No. 02756, for Lot 1, Section 1, Township 1 S., Range 1. W., Seward Meridian, and the SW}4 Sec. 36, SVaNWK Sec. 36, NEttNWk Sec. 36, T. 1 N., R. 1 W., containing * 317.80 acres, has filed notice of in tention to make five year Proof, to! establish claim to the land above des cribed, before M. J. Conroy, Com- ; missioner, at his office at Seward, Alaska, on the 6th day of March, j 1916. Claimant names as witnesses: W. A. McNeiley, H. II. Hildreth, Louis Simpson, Charles Christensen, all of Sew- j ard, Alaska. C. B. WALKER, Register.; First Publication Jan. 25, 1916. Last Publication March 2, 1916. ____ — NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION Department of the Interior. U. S. Land Office at Juneau, Alaska, December 31, 1915. NOTICE is hereby given that George Jemison Laughlin, of Seward, Alaska, who, on DccemLer 15, 1915, made homestead application, No. j ^766, for NViSWK, NWtt Sec. 12 S&SW&, Section 1, Township 1 N., Range 1 W., Seward Meridian, has fil- j ed notice of intention to make five year Proof, to establish claim to the! »and above described, befor^. U. S. j Commissioner M. J. Conroy, at his of- j flee at Seward, Alaska, on the 6th day of March, 1916. Claimant names as witnesses: J. H. Romig, Thomas Hambright, George Sexton, H. H. Hildreth all of Seward, Alaska. C. B. WALKER, Register First Publication Jan. 25, 1916. Last Publication March 2, 1916. All ladies calling at Brown & Hawkins after March 1, will re ceive a souvenir plate* Dry fcoocu at Butts. OPENED JAN.I5T, 1913 "5hc H0T£X th«j BEST lrvall the WEST' LOST LEGION OFJjALLIPOLI GREATEST MYSTERY OF WAR / STILL PUZZLES PEOPLE OF GREAT BRITAIN. By WILBUR S. FOREST (Special to Gateway by United Dress) LONDON. Feb. 22.—“Nothing more was ever heard of them. They charg ed into the forest and were lost to sight and sound. Not one of them ever came back.”—Sir Ian Hamilton's report. It is the talk of England, the great est mystery of the war, the charge of the Fifth Norfolks, the King’s own servants, at Anafarta. The story of how these 260 “anient souls” charg ed on through the village of Ana farta and completely vanished into the “forest of death” beyond, is his tory that some day may take its place besides that of the immortal talc of Balaklava. The “Lost Legion,” it is called to day, but until the war is over the fate of the men who went to battle from the King's Sandringham c. tatos cannot be told. The king personally has instituted every pos ible inquiry. The American embassy in Constantin ople has asked the Turkish govern ment. The forest through which the “Lost Legion” swept on in Gallipoli has been searched time and time again. There have been found no bodies, no graves, no sign, except two small pocketbooks, the property of Captain William Beck, who commanded the Legion. Captain Beck is missing with all of his command. Meantime scores of cottage homes in the royal Sandringham estates of West Norfolk are in mourning Wives, sweethearts and mothers are wearing crepe, but despite all this there is ever the hope that some day the boys will come marching home. “Perhaps they are prisoners of the Turks; perhaps they weren’t killed at all, and perhaps”—its the hope against hope of the women of West Norfolk. The “Ix>st Legion” received its baptism of lire before it set foot on Turkish soil. It arrived oil Sulv*a Bay August 10th aboard the palatial Aquitania from England. Turkish machine guns and artillery ploughed the water about them as they were being transported to shore, where they landed safely and dug them selves in. Two days later the men were ordered to clear the Turks from Anafarta. Colonel Beauchamp was at their head with Captain Beck. The attack developed rapidly. Enfiladed by Turkish fire, many of them dropped wounded or dead, but the others swept on through the village and in to oblivion. News has filtered through via Switzerland that thirteen of those who charged through Anafarta arc prisoners in Constantinople. But it has developed that these men fell wounded before the mysterious dark ness of the forest was reached. Long before Gallipoli was evacuated the Mystery Forest was retaken by the Turks. This event sealed the puzzle tighter than ever. Among those who charged with Captain Beck, organizer of the Legion and for twenty years the King’s S estate agent, were the King’s plumb er, gardner, gamekeeper, woodman, golf foreman and scores of men in lesser positions. Like their fathers and their fathers' fathers they had been born royal servants. Every Sunday in aU the parish churches now prayers are said for the safe return of the missing ones. In every cottage is a recent message from the king: “I heartily sympathize with yrou who are left in suspense but I am protad that the battalion fought so splendidly.” Smoke the Key special. Always good. Sold only at the Key. Best cigarc ana refreshments at Terminal Bar. See ad. 11-1—tf I STOP at the NE\^