Newspaper Page Text
» I The~Great F" The Great ALASKAN ALASKAN DAILY _DAILY_ APVERTISKMKN I s HKIM. U.M . ^____ ALASKAN CIRCULATION v s , n SEWARI). THE GATEWAY TO ALASKA, FRIDAY, JUNE 2. 1916. ___Ten Ont» the Copy AUSTRIANS TAKE FORTIFIED TOWNS IN ITALIAN TERRITORY FRENCH ADMIT RETREAT PARIS. June 2.—It is officially admitted today that under the most violent attacks the oUkmt veterans ever ex perienced the French have retired south oi Cumiores to wards Chattancourt and have evacuated the first line f trenches south of the Caurette wooes. What is termed the most intense fighting of the entire campaign raged on the Verdun front all day yestordax ami grow more furious towards night. It was continued earn today between the Meuse and Headman's Hill. The C«< r ans repeatedly at tacked along a front of two and a iuef miles. Desperate charges In them we v shall* red agah .ml again until the trampled turf was littered with mangled bodies. It is ad mitted that the retirement south of Ctimu res expose our forces near Headman's and Hill bO«. Al STRIA NS \\ l.NMNtl VIENNA. June — The Austria army under the Archduke Frederick have conquered Tie fortified Italian towns of Asiago and Arsie upon w Ifgh rested the main Al pine defense, it was official it announce! by the war office j todav. Asiago is several rules into Italian territory and the Austrian forces are now wd! forward in their invas ion of Vcnetia. ( HI R( HILL ROASTS KITC HENER LONDON. June 2.—Winston Churchill, former first lord of the admiralty, during a discussion in the house of commons todav on a motion to reduce the s&iarv of Lord * * Kitchener, delivered the harshest critVism heard since the beginning of the war on Kitchener a.ui his aids. Churchill charged the British war oflice with the grossest mismanagement of the whole war and declared that in emcieney had boon shown all tit- way through. He des cribed the army organization dm clout t<> the point of; scandalous. "Fur exery six soldiers i > the Hritish army,"; he said, "we have onlv one rifle levelled at tlie enemy.” The speech has caused a sensation. NO HOPE FOR PKA(i; LONDON. June 2. —- Premier Asquith stated in the House of Oomnions today that the last speech made by von Bethmann Hohveg, the Gern an imperial chancellor, I left no hope of early peace. This statement by the prime| minister was made on a discussion arising from a resolu tion introduced to discover whether the allied nations are willing to consider peace overtures. V V V V t V V V V V V V ❖ SI NDAY St Hooi. V ❖ lUM'KKKM K roNU.lH v if * There will be a Sunday school con ference at the Methodist church to night at which Dr. W, U. Forbes, Synodical Superintendent ol‘ the Presbyterian church will be glad to meet all Sunday school workers oi any denomination, and all others in terested in work among children. Dr. Forbes has been m this work for tiie past twenty years, and it wilt be a splendid opportunity for parents, teachers and scholars to meet and dis cuss this interesting and important work among the young people ot our community. The meeting will com rnenee at 0 o'clock. — ALASKA GOLD MINES HAS TURNED CORNER SAYS LATEST REPORT BOSTON, May 13. — The belief of the officials of the Alaska Gold Mines Company that the property has du ally “turned the corner" now would seem to have a confirmation in the re ports just received from the mine that, during the first ten days of this month, treated an average of 6.000 tons of ore per day, the headings, (assay value) were $1.60 per ton, ac cording to the Boston News Bureau. For twenty days, including the last ten days of April and the first ten days of May, the average was very close to $1.50, the amount being treat ed being only a trifle short of 6,000 tons per day. ■ .■■■ ■■ ■ ————— i>i v i h >i s i i;m i or* ly\t 11 t h \Nt,i;i» n» riti>o.\ tkkm \\ AS|lt\4*Ti)\, May 20. Atneri ■ o- efin London wa; officially ii Armed this ; ternoon that the death sentence of Jeremiah Lynch, the American convicted by court mai tial f ir , *m * .. t\ in * i Hevo-.ution, and sentenced to be ex ecuted had b< *n commuted today to :• a ii ljit. mm it. T'..,.- ad vice \va> re. rived by the State I>e } partment this afternoon. I'A I'll Git il KNLLL CUMING Father Turned, S. J., F coming to take the place temporarily of Father Van del* Pol who will leave on the Mariposa fur a month's stay at Doug i las. Father Turned has been station ed at Skagway for many years and was the first priest in Seward where he lived in a tent city in the ear*y - days. Father Van der Pol will return to his duties here at the end of the ; month. BODY OF TYM IS FOt ND NK \K GRANVILLE Dawson News:—The body of 'Charles Tym, who disappeared from Granville last winter, was found to day by Sergeant Evans, on an old road leading out from Granville. It appears that Tym must have wander ed up the road an«i lo.-t his way, and there perished in the cold. Capt. Tel- j ford is going to Granville to make an i investigation. <• •> «:• * **•:•**$ •:* JOHN SE1FFEKT * * is VERY LOW ❖ — * ANCHORAGE. June 2.—The little Seitfert boy is very low and is not ex pected to live. He failed to recognize his mother on her arrival. Gl N MAN IS ON TRIAL IN COMMISSIONER’S COI RT ANCHORAGE. — The case of the territory vs. J. Goodman is being tried this afternoon, Attorneys Stowe and Cotrey appearing for the defendant. Goodman was arrested Friday night by Deputy Marshal Harry Schultz on the charge of pulling a gun on G. B. Kennedy and wife and M. Nelson at j at the residence of Mr. Nelson, on Seventh anti G. streets. The trial v* being heard before a jury in the chambers of Judge Leopold David.— Times. ANCHORAGE NOTES George M. Campbell has sold his interest in the Montana Pool hull to Antonio Chimenlo. Son horn to Mrs. Jack Wilson on Willow creek. Railroad payroll for April was sino.ooo. The new daily newspaper, the Daily Alaskan, will start publication in the j beginning of this month. HARRY BVI.DERSTON TO STAY \T SEWARD i The board of directors of the Bank of Anchorage held a board meeting, last night at 7 o’clock in the offices of j the bank ami accepted the resigna-1 tion of H. S. Balderston as cashier. Mr. Balderston will remain in Seward in active charge of the Bank of Sew ard. Sidney Anderson, vice-presi dent, was elected to till the vacancy,! making him vice-president and cashier j of the Bank of Anchorage. Winfield Irwin, who has so com petently been looking after the inter ests of the Seward Bank at Brown it Hawkins local store, was elected to the office of assistant cashier. Miss Kversole was employed as hank book keeper, and D. Vueetich will have charge of the foreign exchange de partment of the bank. This person nel, in addition to the stockholders and directors, gives certain assurance for the Bank of Anchorage. — Cook Inlet Times. AL VSKAVS ROMANCE IS SHORT LIVED The many Alaska friends of Wil liam M. Wise, manager of the Hotel Granda, San Francisco, anti formerly a resident of Candle, on Seward peni nsula, will be surprised to learn that his wife has sued him for a divorce, after having lived together exactly thirty-five days. The wedding which took place December 5 last, was a social event and was the sequel to a romantic courtship. A few days after the wed ding the young couple discovered that there was not that temperamental af finity between them that they had be lieved existed during the courtship. In a few days the friends of the young couple, who had predicted much happiness for them because of their great love for each other, began hear ing the rumors of discord. According to the wife’s divorce action, Wise fre quently declared that he had made a mistake in getting married, as any man is better ofT single. Also he told her that his family hated her, and always would hate her. On several occasions he spoke harshly to her, particularly on December 24, when, she says, he addressed her in an insulting manner in the presence of friends, which greatly humiliated her. -Ex. Most Interesting School Exhibits School Rooms Open to \ isitors i his Afternoon and Tomorrow. The school exhibit opened today at 1 o’clock and from -hat hour until l> p. m., today and tomorrow, the rooms will be open to visitors. The examples of the work of the children are not only pleasant to view but are most interestingly instructive, show ing as they do the details of the juvenile exertions towards improve ment. Every bit of the work of the pupils for the year is represented and some original ideas of the children themselves are also brought out. Ex amples of the previous work of the pupils are shown side by side with ex amples of the improved work so that one may see the vast change that has taken place. In times to come, one can imagine, those examples j might be of infinite interest to the pupils themselves. A gl tnce at the exhibits show what a wo* Id of pains j and skill has been used in bringing j the children to a state of such ex- j cellence and it also teaches the les son of the advance Alaska has made. A visit to the exhibit ought to be a pleasure as well as a duty to oneself. _ BRANDEIS CONFIRMED WASHINGTON, June 1. — Louis; Brandeis was confirmed today, Thurs day, by the senate as member of the supreme court of the I'nited States. The final vote for confirmation was forty-seven to twenty-two. SAY CHRISTENSEN Oil) NOT GO WEST It has been stated by the railroad officials that Andrew Christensen did not go west on the Mariposa as stated but that he stopped off at Juneau and will come here on the Alaska. It is known that some of his freight was left here by the Mariposa. The in formation that lie was on the Mari posa when she passed by came through the purser. K LON HIKER TO BE CHAIRMAN NEW YORK, May 25.—The execu tive committee of the Progressive na tional committee has selected Ray mond Robins, of Chicago, as tempor ary chairman of the Progressive na tional convention. Robins made a stake in the first rush to the Klondike. CAPTAIN NOR D TO RETURN TO THE JEFFERSON Captain Nord, formerly captain of the steamer Jefferson and now on the Alaska, will return soon to the com mand of the Jefferson. The captain’s home is in Seattle and he wants to be there more often.—Ex. - H VZF.LET TAKES BOND ON MINING PROPERTY CORDOVA. — The McKinley lake quartz property controlled by Charles Canavan, this week was bonded by George C. Hazelet for a sum said to he in the neighborhood of $100,000. This property consists of a group of ten claims, about eighteen miles from Cordova and three miles from the Copper River & Northwestern rail way. It has been held for years by | local people, who have had an abiding faith in the future of the property.— Ex. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Ennis are mov ing their residence to the rooms form erly occupied by the preceding Com missioner above the office. \ * CARRANZA ONCE AGAIN SAYS ! U. S. TROOPS MUST WITHDRAW w vXr V W %/V •✓wv v'V w . ARE THOSE TWO GIRLS LIVING IN SEWARD? That two girls are living now in Seward, perhaps, who were the cause of a deep mystery is the story appear ing at present in outside papers. The following account of the case is from the Seattle Star of May 22: SNOHOMISH, Wash., May 22.— While Victor E. Innes and his wife were taken from their home in Eugene, Ore., to stand trial for the murder of Mrs. Eloise Nelms Dennis and Miss Beatrice Nelma at San An tonio, Tex., the two women were alive and well in Snohomish, according to the newest developments in the fam ous mystery case. They are today believed to be living in Seward, Alaska. The disappearance of the two; sisters two years ago under myster- j ious circumstances, followed by the discovery of human bones near San Antonio, led to the belief that they had been murdered. Marshall Nelms, a brother of the women, swore to the complaint charg ing his brother-in-law, limes, and his wife, with the murder. They were tried, but not convicted. Attorney Investigates The mystery continued as deep as ever until today, when Former City Attorney M. .1. McGuinness of Sno homish concluded a preliminary in vestigation begun at the request of a man named Britt Craig, of Atlanta. According to Craig, the Nelms sisters were close acquaintances of a man named Paul Buckley in the South, and he left about the same time they disappeared. Buckley has been traced to Sno homish by Craig. Left for Alaska On Saturday, Craig wired Mc Guinness to see Buckley and ask him if he knew the whereabouts of the Nelms sisters. The Buckley referred to came here about two years ago with a Mrs. Buckley and her sister. They left for Alaska about a year ago, after Buckley had been in the saloon business in Snohomish for eight months. ( ailed Her “Beatrice” McGuinness was Buckleys attorney. He knew Mrs. Buckley and also had heard her sister referred to as “Beatrice.” Buckley is described as a well-built, fine-looking man, weighing about 200 He was about 40. His height was about five feet 11 inches. Mrs. Buckley, believed to be Mrs. Nelms, is described as a woman of about 85, well built, vigorous vitality, dark complexioned. McGuinness is not sure whether the younger sister went to Alaska al so or not. A wire from Seward received by the attorney last July from B ickley said he was going prospecting. No reason is given for the inex plicable silence of Miss Nelms and her sister, if they are alive, when their brother-in-law and his wife were ac cused of murder. YUKON STEAMBOAT MAN PASSES AWAY ANACORTES, Wash., May 26.— [ Captain Henry Polis, a Y'ukon steam boat c .ptain, died Wednesday of heart disease. The funeral was held yes terday afternoc n.—Ex. KRAUSE SENTENCED Edward Krause was sentenced to serve three years for impersonating an officer and 10 years for forgery. Sentence was not passed on other convictions, which will go over for the term. WASHINGTON, June 2.—That a continuation of the occupation of Mexican territory by the United States troops will be considered an unfriendly invasion is the warning received today by the state department from General Carranza. This is taken to mean that if the i Americans do not withdraw war will be declared and the ! forces which Carranza has been mobilizing will be sent I against our forces. Carranza opened the statement by re i questing that as an evidnece of good faith the troops be i ordered home. He also asks for a definite explanation of the reasons for the continued stay of the Americans in his country and then he asks to be informed as to the pur pose of keeping our troops in Mexican territory any long er. If there is no explanation, he says, he will regard the Americans as unfriendly invaders. PRESIDENT UNION PACIFIC | NEW YORK, June 2—E. E. Caluin of the Oregon Short Lin/ was elected president of the Union Pacific to day in the place of A. L. Hosier who has resigned. WANT SUFFRAGE PLANKS CHICAGO, June 2—The members of the Woman’s Suffrage Union are now pestering the delegates to the ' convention to have suffrage planks incorporated in tin* Republican national platforms. HUGHES IS SILENT | WASHINGTON, June 2.—Justice Hughes was asked today for a direct statement with regard to his becoming ' a candidate for the presidency but he had nothing to say | to any of the inquiries. i __ j KILLED IN ACCIDENT AT BEAK (KEEK DAWSON, May 19.—John Hudson, an employee of the Canadian klon dyke company, met his death at four ; minutes after three o’clock yesterday l afternoon, while working about the pond of the company’s dredge No. 2, near Bear creek. A large pile of tail ings on which Hudson ar.d three other workmen were handling some of the dredge lines at the edge of the pond gave way suddenly and unexpectedly. Hudson was on the side of the pile, and was carried down with the grav el. The water in pond near the edge of the gravel was twenty-eight feet deep. No trace has been found of the body. It is feared the gravel slid over him in considerable quantity and that possibly he was buried at consid erable depth. The pond has been dragged extensively in that region, with no trace of the man having been obtained. The pond is so deep and the tailings so extensive there, says General Manager Boyle, that it seems impossible now to pump the water from that pond, where a constant seepage is coming in in large quanti ties from the river, but it may be that later in the season lower water will make it possible to get to the body. Everything possible has been done, he says, and will be done in hopes of recovering the body if possible. BODIES OF CAMPBELL AND LARSEN DISAPPEAR The bodies of Tom Campbell ana John Larsen, who were drowned near Barren Islands, have been washed away and could not be found by E. H. L. Mitchell, one of the survivors of the wreck of the Success who re turned yesterday. After the drown ing when the bodies were washed ashore Mitchell and Captain Hansen dragged them up some distance on the beach. Captain Hansen was badly frozen and Mr. Mitchell was probably weakened from exposure, and | they were no doubt unable to haul the j bodies far enough from the water, j Mr. Mitchell was sent west by the authorities but on his return he an nounced that he could find no trace of j the remains. I COLLECTED FARES ON GOVERNMENT RAILROAD T. L. McDonald who was arrested some days ago at Bird creek and taken back to Anchorage is, according to the charge against him, a sort of reproduction of our departed friend Soapy Smith. Deputy Marshal Ike Evans got word last week to look out for Mr. McDonald who was said to bo making a retreat from Anchorage this way but later Mr. Evans learned that the gentleman had been arrested. Some time ago the train on the gov ernment railroad was standing ready at Anchorage to pull out. All at once a* man * jumped aboard. “Fares, please,” he shouted and the passen gers one after another handed out their coin. He took the money, ex amined it carefully, handed back the change when there was change and then he disappeared. This gentle man of parts is said to have been Mr. T. L. McDonald who has now been ar rested at Bird creek and taken back on the charge of larceny or some thing. It is said that he was standing near the car, noticed that the con ductor was absent and a brilliant idea struck him. The result of the trial has not yet been learned. WORLD'S RECORD BROKEN BY A CORDOVAN Theodore C. McCauley, formerly an employee of the Copper River & Northwestern railway, and a resi dent of Cordova, has attained the dis tinction of breaking a world's record in aviation, evidenced by the follow ing from the Literary Digest of May 13: “April 30.—In the flying boat H-7, of the super-American type, an American aviator, Theodore C. Mc Cauley, breaks world’s records for speed and passenger carrying, taking six passengers to an altitude of 1,000 feet in a seventy-minute flight at a maintained speed of 88 miles an hour. Another American, Victor Carlstrom, in a twin motor military biplane, takes a passenger to a height of 16, 500 feet, breaking the world’s record for altitude with a passenger.” C. E. Robinson, of Brown & Bigelow, St. Paul, is in the city on business for his Arm. •