G.W. PALMER
KNIK, ALASKA
Some of Our Specialties:
WELLMAN CANNED GOODS RED CLOVER BUTTER
TIP TOP EGGS SPERRYS FLOURS
MARSHFIELD CHEESE
And a full line of
hardware, stoves, iiav and feed
No Belter Goods Can Be Bought At Any Price
C. W. PALMER, Knik, Alaska
Lang's (Pat.) Hot Blast Smokeburning
STOVE3 AM) RANGED
Are (il VR AN I KED to burn hut one-half as much
tucl a> OLD STALK RAMIES,
Because they consume all gases and smoke in
fuel. All tuel is burned from top.
I he “EACH IC.“ as shown In cut, Is our Stand
ard Family Range made In three sizes.
Said at BROW N & HAWKINS*
We make Stoves from $1.00 to $300.00
Write us for Catalogues,
f. S. LANG MANUFACTURING CO.
2 f f>6 First Ave.. South. SEATTLE, WASHINGTON
Eastern Trips by Western People
\Rt MUU HUM TMt GRUUST COMfORT
- VIA THE -
GREAT NORTHERN RAILWAY
To St. Paul, Chicago and the East.
To Denver. Kansas City. St. Louis and the South.
THRO < s \ N » v R P A NO TOURIST SLF.KPKRS, DINING
\\ ) roM 'Aui’MKN V OBSERVATION CARS
To Portland anJ California by Rail and Ocean—
Steamships “Great Northern" and “Northern Pacific"
CV*nU\’ >r n afi from Local S’earn ship Agents, or
A. S. DAU TRICK Tra\cling Freight and Passenger Agent,
Room IS, Valentine Building, Juneau.
T. .T. Mt > >R!’, t*i?v Pa^mger Act , Second and Columbia, Seattle.
111,111111111111111 i 111! 11 i 1111 ? 111 i 1111 HI 11111111111 i i 11111 i i! 111 i 11111111111 i 1111111! 11111111111111 i
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
Hie “Olympian'' The “Columbian”
two crack all-steel trains every day.
For information and literature write
A. H. McDonald. Alaska Steamship Co., Seward. Alaska
WLTNf BLIT. The Admiral line. Seward, Alaska
Agents for the
Chicago. Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway
A. I. HARRIS,
Traveling Passenger Agent.
Juneau. Alaska
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Amuse—
Yourself
BILLIARDS POOL
BOWLING
FIRST-CLASS BAR
Open Day and Night!
-—
. SAFETY FIRST! -
Ruhstaller’s
Gilt Edge
Beer
Sacramento, Calif.
SERVED AT ALL CAFES
GERALD’S CAFF
Cl ykknueJ.Gerali>, Proprietor
824 First avenue
Seattle, Wn.
Seattle's Best
Eating House
Everything Fresh from the
Famous Gerald 1 lunch
CHAS. N. MUELLER
Manufacturing lurrier
Honesty and Reliability
Seuil vour Raw Furs to me to be made
into Sets while summer Prices prevail
Remodeling and Repairing
1621 SECOND AVENUE
SEATTLE, - WASH,
i . -- -- -
ANDERSON & MURPHY
THE
Olympia, Rainier, Budweiser
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. I*. Stotko - Proprietor
..—-r-nrr-r T~r-r ITTmiTI—Bfl
Seward Water
and
Power Company
John A. Nelson, Manager
Office Bank of Seward Building
SEW A HD, - ALASKA
The Carstens Packing Co.
Wholesale and R<. tail
Beef, Pork, Veal, Mutton, Poultry
Lard. Hams and Bacon.
Butter and Eggs
Orders from the Westward anti
Cook Inlet Given Careful Attentior
Fourth Ave Seward
Send Us Your Cheek
...ASSAYS...
Falkenburg & Laucks
Ore Testing and Milling
Gold and Silver. tl.OO
Copper 1.50
Loud 1.00
Seattle, Wash. “Analyze Anything’
USE THE PHONE
ALASKA ELECTRIC CO.
3. M. URAFF
President and General Manager j
I NOTICE OF FORFEITURE
To J. H. STEVENS and WM. II.
GUMMING; your heirs or assigns or
wnoin it may concern. You are here
i by notified that the undersigned has
expended the sum of Six Hundred
Dollars ($600.) in lubor and improve
ments on the following named min
ing claims for the years ending Dec.
I 31st, 1014 and Dec. 31st, 1016, the
| above sum being the amount required
| to complete the anual lubor during
years mentioned above, and proof ol
lubor being recorded with the United
States Commissioner in the Recording
precinct of Iliamna, Territory of Al
aska. To wit: Reward, Reward No.
1, Reward No. 2 and Reward No. 3.
Said claims being situated about 16
miles westerly from the S. West arm
of kamishuk Bay, and in the Iliamna
Recording precinct, Territory of Al
! aska. The amounts claimed and due
the undersigned from the parties
. above mentioned are as follows: J.
H. Stevens One hundred and twenty
two dollars ajid twenty-five cents, and
Wm. H. Gumming the sum of seventy
two dollars and twenty-live cents.!
j And if within ninety days after the
serving of this notice by publication,
you fail or refuse to contribute your
proportion of such expenditure as co
owners your interest in 6aid claims
will become the property of the;
undersigned as specified in Sec. 2324 j
of the Revised Statutes of the United,
States and amendment thereto con-j
, cerning annual labor or. mining I
j claims. All amounts due to be de
! posited with Dexter Horton National
Bank of Seattle, Wash., to the credit
! of the undersigned.
CHAS. H. McNEIL.
Dated and signed at Ridgway, Colo.
Feb. 7, 1016.
First publication Feb. 29, 1916.
1 Last publication June 14, 1916.
—
The Seward
General Hospital
desires to acquaint the general hospi
tal interests of this country with the
facilities of this institution for giving
the latest devised methods of nursing,
care to persons requiring medical or
surgical treatment. Special attention
given to patients requiring gyne
cological treatment. Hydrotherapeu
tic treatments carefully followed.
This building, just complete, electric
lighted, steam heated, hot and cold
water. Physicians placing patients in
our care will receive every ethical at
tention. Prompt readiness for acci
dents, obstretrics and emergencies,
day or night. For further particulars
address,
SISTER SUPERIOR.
C. C. BERG
Ladies' Furrier lTa»idermist
Send voue Raw Furs.
We do our own Tanning and
Manufacturing.
Tw<nty »tV>n Year* In Seattle
1425 First Ave. Seattle, Wash.
THE SEWARD EIGHT AND POWER CO.
Incorporated November 1905 under the Law* of the Territory of Alaska
S. M. GRAFF, President and General Manager
Contractors and dealers In Electric Suppllesand Apparatus.
Office At the Station. TELEPHONE MAIN 12S
_ _ _——-—g
The All-Alaska Review
25 Cents the Copy
$2.50 per Year in Advance
Subscribe Now for the Journal that gives you News of
All Parts of the Territory of Alaska
NATION AND STATE INVESTIGATE WRECK
IN WHICH MORE THAN SCORE WERE KILLED
--—-1---“-1
r~5C£7VfS f)T RMHE/P.5T, O, RAILROAD WRECK \
(\V. II Eliot and F. B Wlegand, New' York Central signal engineers, who went with the Joint Investigating committee o<
the interstate commerce commission and the Ohio public utilities commission to the scene of the railroad wreck at Aio
herst, O., declared that Albert H. Ernst of Elyria, night towerman at Amherst, was not responsible for the wreck in
which at least twenty-seven lives were lost and fifty persons were injured, rhej also declared that defective signa.s did
not cause the disaster It is reported that II. A. McAdams, one of the Interstate commerce commission’s experts, also ex
onerated Ernst The reported exoneration of Ernst and the assertion that the signal system was In perfect working or
der made the case against Herman Hess, engineer of the second section of train No. S*l, look less favorable. Mr Eliot
asserted that the causo of the wreck was “mental waywardness’* of the veteran engineer, Mr. Eliot says that IIoju
must have passed two “stop" signals.!
New assortment or raney cookies.
Special “Kaiser Jumbles." Brown &
Hawkins, “Quality First."
NOTICE OF FORFEITURE
10 K. L. H. Marshall, Hilda Marshall,)
diaries H. Haven, F. G. Mailer,,
iwiiey L. LhU, John irwine, G. H.
iiernuon and Geoige Kabenl, de-,
ceased s heirs, executors, adinims
uuiors or aligns;
lou and each oi you are hereby
notihed that the undersigned Co
Owner has expended the sum of One
hundred dollars ($1UU.U0) in labor and
improvements upon the Blank Associ
ation group of placer mining claims,
consisting of 100 acres, located on the
Bight Limit of Nugget Gulch, a tri
butary of Cache Creek, in the Cook
inlet Precinct, Third Division, Terri
tory of Alaska, in order to hold said
placer mining claim, for the year
ending December olst, A. D., 1015,
and if within Ninety (00) days from
the service of this notice upon you, or
the complete publication thereof, you
fail or refuse to contribute your pro
portion of said expenditure as Co
Owners, your interests will become
the property of the undersigned,
under and pursuant to the Revised
Statutes of the United States.
Dated at Susitna, Alaska, this 20th,
day of March, A. D., 1916.
AL. STINSON.
First publication March 2,7 1916.
Last publication July 12, 1916.
200 AMERICAN GIRLS
TRAINING FOR WAR SERVICE
AT “FEMINIST PLATTSBURG”
(Special to Gateway by United Press!
WASHINGTON, May 10. — Sister
Susie has ceased sewing shirts for
soldiers.
Today, all decked out in a ducky
uniform, she is learning how to wig
wag a heliograph, make a bandage,
decode a wireless message, and cook
for invalids, as a part of the program
for the first encampment—a feminist
Plattsburg-—which the Navy League
is conducting here to train women for
their part in case of war or national
calamity.
Two hundred volunteers, including
many women from Washington, New
| York and Philadelphia society, are
among those present. Their encamp
HOW LONDONERS ARE
DRESSING THIS SPRING
/
V \FKOM ^NGL^Ko]
I [Cut of white gaberdine with set-in sleeves,
slit pockets and a V neck, this one-piece
gown of English demureness is smart,
with its sAsh of crimson silk hoavily
tasseled. About the nrmscyes and neck
is a bit of hand embroidery in crimson,
and the tarn is white corduroy.]
meat is out near Chevy Chase, Wash
ington's fashionable suburb.
They arise at 0:30, do a lot of calis
thenic stunts before breakfast, then
train, under military discipline all
day long.
They are instructed and drilled,
under Red Cross and other expert
teachers.
Miss Frances Whitaker Baker of
Wildwood, X. J., daughter of ex
Congressman J. T. Baker, insists on
becoming a chauffeur. Her sister
Miss Katherine, is equally positive
she could he an aviatress if the War
Department would send her a
machine.
Mrs. James M. Thomson of New
Orleans, daughter of Speaker Clark;
Mrs. William Cumming Story, presi
dent general of the D. A. R.; Mrs.
Frank G. Odenheimer, president of
the United Daughters of the Confed
eracy; Mrs. John Hays Hammond, of
New York; Mrs. George Dewey, wife
of the admiral, and Mrs. Hugh L.
Scott, wife of the army chief of staff,
are among those interested in the
camp.
NOTICE
The business of the Seward Club
has this day been taken over by Frank
L. Torrey,—H. E. Hopkins retiring.
All obligations of the business art
assumed by Mr. Torrey and all ac
counts due the Seward Club are pay
able to Mr. Torrey.
FRANK L. TORREY.
CATHOLIC CHURCH
Sundays: Communion Mass at 8:31
a. m.
Mass and Sermon at 10:30 a. m.
! Sunday school after Mass.
Rosary, Instruction and Benedictior
at 7:30 p. m.
Weekdays: Daily Mass at 7:30 a
m.
Oyster Cocktails at “The Branch.’
No advertiser can afford to oral!
the Seward Gateway.
Waterfill & Frazier whiskey af
“The Branch."
Get“More Money” for your Foxes
Black. Silver, Cross, Red, White and Blue, Lynx,
Bear, Marten and Other Far hearers collected in your section
twin voi’lt FI’KS DIRECT to•‘SIIUBERT** the braes!
htSi bVe wodd dcillng rxdnsively In N0R1B AMERICAN RAW rtRS
n reliable—responsible-safe Fur House with an unblemished rep
Sutioan existS for “more than a third of «c«ntury/ a lon^ae
caasfttl record of sending V ttr Shippers prompt^SATISPAC1 OR\
AND PROFITABLE returns. Write for #tje •fcahrrt »!MPPtr.
the only reliable, accurate market report.and price list published.
Write for It-NOM'-it’e MIKE
a r> CUIIDCDT 25 27 WEST AUSTIN AVE.
A. B. SHUdLK 1 , Inc. Dept.73 CHICAGO. U.S.A.