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a hr §>nuarh (Satnuay Published Daily Except Sunday by The Seward Gateway Publishing Co. BERNARD M. STONE, President. Subscription Kates: Dally—One dollar per month . Ten cents the copy. By mail, $10 per year. Weekly—Three dollars per year. (Payable strictly in advance). 1 1 E *■' Advertising Kates: TRANSIENT DISPLAY ADVERTISING—50 cents per inch. Contract rates on application. Readers. 10c per line tirst insertion, be per line each additional insertion. Legal notices, 50c per line. SEWARD. ALASKA. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 15. 1916. It is reallv a fact that federal officials in Alaska have % too much power. Recently in one of the other divisions a judge made decisions which should really only he in the power of properly elected legislatures and in many min or instances official interference has been too apparent. In one sense such a condition can hardly be avoided until Alaska fully governs itself. The refusal of Roosevelt to support the Progressive candidate for governor of New York shows clearly that the former head of that party has quit, but the story shows that the Progressives are still to be reckoned with in the present campaign. The fact that a man could have started a national party and become its head and then abandon it while it is still alive is probably unprecedented. The addition of the attorney generalship to the offices to be filled by election is sure to make the campaign in Alaska this year more interesting than usual as it brings to the political stage some of the most prominent and abl est law vers in the territorv. Previous! v there was onlv the % * % % inevitable Wickersham and one or two others, most of whom had not been trained speakers, but now we shall hear the Grigsbys, Schofields, Cobbs roasting each other and Wickersham or the opponents of W ickersham. And then will come the redoubtable James himself, and when it comes to roasting lu* shines. Indeed he is accused by his enemies of depending rather on roasts than arguments. Nowadays the chief political argument seems to be con nected with carpet-baggers and what Grigsby called hy penated Alaskans, but one remarkable circumstance about this is that very many of the men running for the office could be called one or the other. Grigsby admitted having first come to the territorv that wav but he can sav that he % % % has become the real thing. It is just the same with W’ick ersham but, after all. since that railroad work started the population is made up of quite a lot of such carpet baggers and the territory is the better for their presence. It really ought not to be a crime to use a carpetbag. If it were most men might hv called willing to be criminals. Of course, living outside the territory and trying to run its politics is another matter altogether. CO EAST UNION PACIFIC SYSTEM SECOND-TO-NONE SERVICE LOW ROUND TRIP FARES or ITTI r DENVER.$55 00 \U A II I h OMAHA or KANSAS CITY . . 60 00 OLA I ILL CHICAGO,. . . . two THROUGH SERVICE SEATTLE CHICAGO, Omaha. Kansas City, Denver ami intermediate. Direct eonneetions to t!i«‘ Atlantie Coast. 1:.torn.a’. ticket*. WTfrT^TT^W v n m *\ \ 1.1> ASit>k.i S S eo . or write H. A. LAWRENCE TKWKLINU FKKIUllT AND lWSSKNOKH A(5KNT. I* i> U.-\ (• II ; S''W r J S’ j .ll*N'F.\r TRY “THE KEY" EVERYBODY'S STORE CLAUDE MATHISON. Propr. POOL AND BILLIARDS CIGARS & TOBACCOS ICE CREAM FROM FRESH MILK Candies and Confectionery JUST ARRIVED AND UNPACKED The New Fall Suitings in Fashionable Fabrics Novelty Plaids Hairline Serges Ottoman Cloth Khiva Cloth Eden Cloth Devonshire Cloth Just what milady has been waiting for PATENT LEATHER BELTS CROCHET HOOKS ALL WOOL YARNS OUTING FLANNEL NIGHT GOWNS TABLE RUNNERS SILKEN HOSIERY MUNSINGWEAR H4LLETT& SCOTT THE SHOP OF EXCLUSIVE STYLES PLAN. NAVIGABLE CHANNEL FROM HUDSON BAY TO GULF OF MEXICO (Special to Gateway by UnUed Press) BEMIDJl, Minn., Sept. 2.—A navi gable channel from Hudson Bay to the Gulf of Mexico that would put the water that covers 1,250,000 acres of land near there in the Gulf, was plan ned by a committee meeting here to day. A committee of All Minnesota De velopment Association and citizens of Beltrami country, most seriously ef- j fected, met here. The proposed cost ( is $25,000,000. The Mississippi river is navigable to St. Paul and it is plan ned to bring the channel of the canal to that point. The canal also would pass through the region of Red Lake, the largest lake in the nation entirely within one , state. This lake gradually slopes in to vast expanses of swamp land with out a shore line and it is primarily to drain this huge territory that the can-1 al is proposed. River traffic from the gulf to Winnipeg also is to be consul- j ered. __ Rest cigars and refreshments at Terminal Bar. See ad. 11-1-tf Oyster Cocktails at **T»o branch.” j California and Cast via Seattle Portland San Francisco DAILY 3 TRAINS on SCENIC SHASTA ROUTE SHASTA LIMITED SAN FRANCISCO EXPRESS CALIFORNIA EXPRESS Connecting at San Francisco with Four Limited Trains over the Sunset, Ogden and El Paso Uoutes to all Eastern points SUNSET LIMITED OVERLAND LIMITED PACIFIC LIMITED GOLDEN STATE LIMITED Cull or write for information C. M. ANDREWS, District Freight and Passenger Agent 712 SECOND AVE., SEATTLE, WASH. Southern Pacific Lines Oct it at Then Don’t Worry We have what you want We guarantee the quality Not how cheap—but how good That old money-back guarantee that goes with all of our goods is still in full force and effect Underwear Stag Shirts Flannel Shirts Dress Shirts Soeks (doves Caps Shoe Pacs—Boots-Rubber Hip Boots $6.o0 pr. C O T T ER’S PHONE IN FOR ANYTHING Buy a Home in Woodrow The Beautiful Suburb Of Seward WOODROW is located 6% miles from Seward. The Govt. Railroad runs through this beautiful tract. Woodrow lies near Bear Ijake the famous fishing ground of Seward. Woodrow may be said to be in the warm belt as the hills are so situated as to shelter this tract from the winter winds. Woodrow is situated just this side of the Bungalow and plotted on the most desirable portion of the Johnson Homestead. A tract in Woodrow is equivalent to more than 12 lots in Seward. The price is so low that no one can complain. You can buy a tract of about one third the size of a block in Seward for $125. — Some fractional tracts are selling as low as $25—$50 and $75. > The title is clear—A warranty deed, first handed. Woodrow is plotted in tracts situated each on a street and corner on an alley. Each plot is easy to access. Woodrow is a beautifully wooded tract and a veri table park. ROMIG & ROMIG are handling this property and will be pleased to interest you in the best offer for a suber ban home ever made in Seward. ADDRESS:— >r ; i.fe/ Fourth Avenue, •' Seward, Alaska. i i' ”• PHONE ADAMS 48 PHONE ADAMS 93 4* H. V. HOBEN A. F. DAVIS ALASKA TRANSFER H. V. HOBEN, Manager -Dealers In COAL, WOOD AND ICE General Transferring Phones, Main 17 and 41 Seward Water and Power Company John A. Nelson, Manager Offlca—Bank of Saward Building SEWARD, - s. ALASKA HOTEL OVERLAN I H L. WhlTTEMORE, PPOP. Headquarters for Mining Men SEWARD, - - - ALASKA 1 A Rainier Buffet THE BEST IN EVERYTHING WINES LIQUORS CIGARS LOUVRE BLDG. OPP. A. B. HALL ALASKA •XSST 4H SEATTLE SAILINGS NORTHWESTERN, Sept 12 ALAMEDA Sept. 18 ALASKA, Sept. 24 HARIPOSA, Sept. JO All ships via inside passage. The Alameda and Mariposa touch at Skagway. i4TRight reserved to change this schedule without notice-va F. B. TRACY, General Agent A. H. McDONALB, Agent THE SEWARD LIGHT AND POWER CO. Incorporated November 1905 under the Law* of the Territory of Alaska S. M. GRAFF. President and Genera! Manager Contractors and dealers In Flectrlc Supplies and Apparatus. Oftlca* At the Staiion. TELEPHONE MAIN 123 L. FURNITURE AND HARDWARE COAL MINER’S AND COLD MINER’S SUPPl IES Doors &. Windows Land’s Ranges I X L Parlor Heaters Gasoline Stoves Cook Stoves Camp Stoves Air Ti>fht Heaters Oil Stoves Alcohol Stoves Spark Plutfs Jump Coils Batteries Granite Ware Aluminum Ware Asbestos P & B Paper Malthoid Rooting Tar Pa|>er Deafening felt Weather Strips Gasoline Gas Kntfine Oil , Marine Kngine Oji Valve Oil Blaine Oil Floor Oil Linseed Oil Cup Grease Paints Lacqueret Paint Asphaltum Paint Brushes Varnishes Turpentine Japan Denatured Alcohol Coal Tar Lamps Lanterns Tents V1\m VUDISO.M 87* Rifles Shot Guns Ammunition Fishing Tack If Giant Fowder Caps Fuse Bench Forges Blacksmith’.-* Goal Bellows Wheel Barrow* Cutlery Fire Clav Fire Brick Lime Cement Glass Hope Mercury Seine Twine J. L. GRAEF AOELMAN & QUILTY SEWARD DAIRY MILK & CREAM Why Not Try Our Buttermilk? MILK STATIONS AT BOTH BUTCHER SHOPS _^ --—-— Open Day and Night! OPENED JAN. I3T, 1913 "5k«H0TEL tkMj BEST In all the WEST" STOP at the ■EUROPEAN 00 OOT5IOE ROOMS 150 WITH BATH W.2NO 51,NEAR HILL NORTHERN MOTEL CO.. PROP. THANK L CRAMPTON. MGR. RATES #1.00 PER DAY—®UP REDUCED RATES VIA THE (re made from SEWARD to many Eastern Cities To get benefit of reduction tickets must be purchased wit lx steamship ticket I Full information and tickets from A. H. McDonald, Alaska Steamship Co., Wayne Blue, Admiral Line A. S. DAUTRICK, Traveling Freight and Passenger Agent, Room 18, Valentine Building, Juneau. T. J. MOORE, City Passenger Agt., Second and Columbia, Seattle. :