Newspaper Page Text
Notes of the Northland - ITE' S CUPPED FROM OUR EXCHANGES FOR READERS OF THE SATURDAY GATEWAY E. V. McKermey, a former resident of Anchorage, is now a partner in the Ice Machinery Company, Seattle. The trial of Walter E. Apple, on a charge of embezzlement, while he was in charge of the N. S. naval radio sta tion at Sitka, is under way at Juneau. James Fish, old time mail contrac tor from Valdez to Eagle, is now in the insurance business in Oakland, Calif. Charles G. Wulff. an old time resi dent of Valdez, and one time editor of the Prospector, is now located in San Diego. Jes^e Martin, for many years agent | for the steamship companies at Val-! dez. is now located permanently in San Diego. A. E. Pretty, former Klondike and , Alaska sourdough, is in the real estate business in Seattle and numbers i many sourdoughs among his clients. | Dr. Zera Strong, long a resident oi | Dawson, who was veterinary surgeon in the boom days of that camp, is now a resident of Vancouver, B. C. Sam Feindle and Win. Donnenworth of White Pass & Yukon stage driving fame, have farms at Cloverdale, near Vancouver; as has also Grant Jen nings. Henry Deyo. old timer of the Prince William Sound district, is located at Tacoma, and is employed in road con tract work. Boyd Leedv, another old time Alaskan, is with him. Frank Lowe, William Radford and William Turnbull, all former Dawson ites, are running an electrical baker} in Vancouver, B. C. Miss Lilly Town send. also a former resident ot Daw*, son. is cashier for them. Harry McHenry, former owner of the Standard Pool Room at Dawson, is manufacturing envelopes in Seattle and has established a fine business. His old Dawson partner, Charles Drake, is now in business in Nanaimo, British Columbia. joe Isaacson, Henry Stragier and August Nelson were arrested recent ly and their gasboat raided by Fed eral officers. The men when appre hended had a small boat full ot white mule towing behind the gas boat. Hunters returning to Fairbanks from the upper Tanana report ha\ing seen a moose calf perish in the wa ters of that turbulent stream. The Jittle fellow was trying to cross on the ice which broke under him. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Ogburn and daughter, Mrs. Dorothy O’Keefe, for merly of Dawson, are now living in Seattle, in the Green Lake portion oi the city. Mrs. O’Keefe has charge of a department in Frederick & Nelson’s store. Claire Faulkner, formerly of Daw son. son of Dr. G. M. Faulkner, who still lives in the Klondike metropolis, is in charge of a big cement works in Seattle. Another son, Jack Faulk ner, is taking an engineering course at the University of Washington. H. S. Nash, who joined the great stampede to the Klondike in 1897, went to Nome in 1900, remained there until 1902; came outside and again returned to Dawson in 1913, remain ing for a year, is nowT in business in Seattle, running the Nome Transfer & Express Company at 1912 First Ave. John Gulliford, known as ‘‘Jack”, one of the old time business men of Dawson, died suddenly during Mai eh. He was one of the most expert res taurant men in the north and lor years was chef on the W hite Pass steamers and two years ago opened the Rochester Grill in Dawson. The Sea Otter of the U. S. biologi cal survey recently returned from the I west coast of Prince of Wales island, where they have been working for a time. W. G. Culver, who has been making a tour of the poison sets laid out last fall by J. S. Ligon, wolf ex pert, reports that the remains of nine wolves were found. Jupiro Wada, known all over Alaska as Wada the Jap, a celebrated dog musher and racer, recently returned to Winnipeg from Herschel island, where he had been on the trail of a reported gold ledge. He made his 2500 mile trip alone and with five dogs. Wada made his first journey to the Arctic from San Francisco over 32 years ago, and since then has been identified with the country. He nar rowly escaped hanging at one time by a body of 800 gold hunters whom he led on a stampede which failed to find the precious metal. Charles Kelton, former Dawson pio neer, is now in charge of a box lac tory at Kelso. Mrs. Dora K. Bennett, who came to Nenana from Marshal last summer, died recently at that city of tubercu sis. The Brown & Hawkins Corporation, Seward and Anchorage agents for Star cars, have sold seven and wired south for six more. W. E. Logemann, the Anchorage photographer, has sold his business <o H. S. Bragak, jr., but will remain with the company for a time. The breakup at Nome started May 16. Wednesday, and it is expected nav igation will open early this year. No ice movement has appeared but leads are appearing five miles out. Mosquitoes are making their ap pearance early this year in Fairbanks and citizens are dumping wood ashes in the ponds in an effort to kill the larvae. Owing to water on the track in the vicinity of Mile 8 near Nenana, mon ey was refunded the passengers. The water is said to have covered the track to a depth of two feet. The Alaska Road commission has announced new rates for its ferry service at Salcha and McCarty. Au tos and other vehicles will be charg ed a dollar and foot passengers 50c. Animals will be charged 25c each. The Northern Commercial Company of Nenana will operate a fleet of gas oline launches and barges on the low er Yukon this season, the fleet mak ing connection with the government railroad steamers Davis and Jacobs at Holy Cross. George Markle has been transferred from Nenana to Anchorage <o add his strength to the commission team at the latter place. He was a star play er, and makes the third drafted from the Nenana team <his season by the commission. The radio station at Hot Springs is out of commission and the station at Circle is expected to be closed ow ing to flood conditions on the Yukon and Tanana rivers. Hot Springs is reported to be completely out of bus iness and Circle residents are prepar ing to move out. Walter E. Keon, a merchant of Ke lawik, died of heart failure at his home Wednesday. He was known as the “Jade King of the Kobuk.” Mr. McKeon was buried on the banks 01 the Kobuk beside the grave of an Es kimo boy who saved his life many years ago. Sam Marsh, an Anchorage resident, died this week from heart trouble. Deceased who was about 27 years of age, arrived at Anchorage in Decem ber. He leaves his mother, Mrs. A. ClarOlson, of Anchorage, two broth ers, Clarence of Anchorage and Ed ward of Seattle, and a sister, Mrs. Roy Cornelius of Matanuska. Edward Darling, 52, a merchant in Alaskan towns for 17 years, and hus band of Esther Birdsall Darling, au thor of “Baldy of Nome,” died May 13 at Carmel. He was proprietor of an iron works at Oakland. Mrs. Darl ing is owner of Scotty Allen’s mala mutes which won the sweepstakes at Nome for several years. Polk Directory enumerators who are working in Ketchikan, state that the towm show's a substantial increase over y. S. census figures of 1920. The preliminary estimate is based on the results of five days enumeration and checking; approximately half of the necessary work to be done. The direc tory will carry an illustrated write-up of Ketchikan, similar in scope to the folder recently issued by the Chamber of Commerce. The formal organization of the Ter ritorial Historical Library and Muse um Commission was perfected recent ly when the members of that body met for the first time in the office of Governor Scott C. Bone. The mem bers of the commission attending were Governor Bone, Secretary Theile, W. ! G- Smith, L. D. Henderson and John Rustgard. The highest salaried battery in the territory will appear at Anchorage to ; morrow when Col. James Gordon Steese, head of the Engineering com mission and Mayor M. J. Conroy of Anchorage will toss the first ball in . the opening game. An American Le gion team and Commission team will be rivals. A charge of 50 cents for adults and 25 cents for children will be made by the Athletic association ! this year. The steamer Alaska made a trip up the Stewart river to Mayo May 15th. A mail launch leit Dawson To;- down river points May 17. High water is reported to have done much damage to stock and household effects a* Hot Springs. F. F. Clinton, John Axton and John Paulde were arrested for viola tion of the National prohibition act at Fairbanks recently. Rail communication between Fair banks and the creeks has been com pletely interrupted by high water in Goldstream valley. The situation is the worst in years. W. F. Thompson of Fairbanks, is in receipt of an official communication advising him that the Fairbanks air plane will reach Seward the latter part of May. The heaviest fall of snow in many years is reported from the interior,-1 and it is feared that high water will cause much damage on valleys drain ing creeks and rivers of the Terri tory. Game Warden James G. Moore, who has just returned from a trip to the upper Chena district in the neigh borhood of the caribou ranch, reports that wolves are causing havoc among the calves. Game is very plentiful in that district and so are wolves. John H. Kelly, representative of the Northern Commercial ocmpany, left Nenana this week for his annual trip down the Yukon. He will go to St. Michael and Unalakleet with stops between, spending (the summer on the trip. The Healy river bridge over which coal is hauled to the government rail road from Suntrana went out recent ly and it is expected that it will be a week before repairs can be made. The miners were laid off until the bridge could be repaired. Many lives and ships have been lost in the Aleutian islands during the past thirty years, due principally to : the many uncharted reefs which some time spring up over night. On Atka island the remains of a Japanese junk can be seen; the U. S. revenue cutter Tahoma struck an uncharted reef some years ago and went to the bottom; the schooner Letty sank in 1917, and in 1918 Capt. Summerville lost a vessel. Fairbanks is threatened with high water acocrding to late reports, the Chena slough being a swollen torrent, with the water alomst to the level of Front street. The dock in front of the N. C. company building is sub merged and the water is flowing thru the drains and flooding Fourth ave nue. Many residents have been forc ed from their homes and others are vacating. Three Minnesota students are in Alaska soliciting subscriptions lor na tional periodicals in hope of securing a $500 scholarship at the Minnesota State university. They are Mable Reed, of Badger, Minnesota; Eugene Ellison of Duluth, Minnesota, and Ed ward J. Tuscany, of Minneapolis. Alfred Strom, an employe of the Fairbanks Gold Mining Company on Fairbanks creek, was painfully injur ed this week while operating a pneu matic riveting machine. A rivet llew to pieces while being flattened, strik ing him in the mouth anu breaking two of his front teeth. He was forced to go to a physician for medical at tention. J. E. Wilson, a veteran prospector and trapper who arrived in Anchor age recently brought with him a hide of a large lynx, which he called a “Su sitna leopard,” and tells an interest ing story of a hand to hand struggle with the animal, declaring i< was only through the presence of mind of his partner who killed the animai with a club, that his life was saved. N. E. Bolshanin, of Unalaska, who for the past twenty years has been deputy collector of customs at that point, started a fox farm in that vi cinity in 1916. As a beginning he had three pairs of blue foxes. As an in dication of the increase and profit in the business, Mr. Bolshanin in 192! sold 172 fine pelts; in 1922 he sold 152 pelts and sold ten pairs at $300 per pair to the other farmers, retaining twenty pairs for breeding purposes. The natives at the mouth of the Tolovana river are seriously ill with influenza, it was stated in a dispatch received by Judge Cecil H. Clegg, oi Fairbanks, this week. The wire says that all the Indians are down with the malady, and that Teddy Anderson, roadhouse keeper at that point, is ill. The governor when wired author ized that aid be extended. Dr. F. de la Vergne, who is making a trip to the Lake Minchumina district, will have charge of the Tolovana situation. Louis Lauritsen, foreman lor ihe Canyon Creek Development Co., left this morning for Canyon Creek. Mr. Lauritsen has just returned from a visit to the States. WILL LEAVE FOR INTERIOR Miss Frances Witherspoon, repre senting Sussman, Wormser & Co., San Francisco, who has been demon strating the S. &. W. brands of cof fee and fruits at Borgen's Grocery for the past few days, will leave for An chorage and interior points F'iday. This is Miss Witherspoon’s first trip to the Territory and she is very en thusiastic in her praise of Alaskan towns and their climatic conditions. She is the first demonstrator to enter Alaska. Miss Witherspoon will make Fairbanks, and from there will go out by way of the Yukon and Skagwray. •— Deft Touches that make the house a home It may be only a chair, rescued from long oblivion in the attic, that lends a bright spot to an otherwise colorless room; or brilliant basket holding a bowl of flowers. But surely it is the little touches—the feminine touches — that make the house a home! Women who are anxious to beautify the interior of their homes are devoted to such Fuller products as Silkenwhite Enamel, Decoret and Fullerwear Var nish. Decoret, a varnish and stain in one, imitates various natural woods—oak, mahogany,walnut, etc. Whatever your painting need, W. P. Fuller & Co. makes a paint for the purpose. There is a local Fuller agent or dealer who carries Fuller Products. Why not see him today. Write, too, for our " Home Service” booklet. W ■ P • FULLER & CO. 301 Mission Street, San Francisco 21 Branches in Pacific Coast Cities Factories: San Francisco and Los Angeies THE FOLLOWING FIRMS CARRY FULLER PAINTS AND VARNISHES: Brown & Hawkins Corporation, Seward, Alaska BFJ OF SEMI KILLED BY VISITORS George E. Mann, clerk for the Ter ritorial board of steamboat inspectors, who is visiting in Seward awaiting a boat to the westward, in company with H. E. Kristensen, a member of the crew of the Canyon Creek Develop ment Company, bagged the first bear of the season as a result of making a trip to Spruce creek yesterday. The hunters made (their way up the moun tainside and near the top they sighted Mother Bruin and her two young cubs 200 yards away making for the sum mit. One shot was sufficient to down the bear and the two cubs were finally captured after they ran into a hole nearby. Soon after the hunters killed the bear another was sighted a good distance away, but the hunters were unable to get close enough to shoot it. The cubs were brought to town and are being kept at the Sexton Ho tel. The hide of the female was in prime rondition. L. V. Ray recently purchased a val-! uable oil painting of Sidney Laurence ; for the sum of $1800. Mr. Laurence is one of Alaska’s foremost scenic artists j and his paintings are eagerly sought! after. FORMER OWNER OF FAST CLIPPER NOW AT KODIAK Capt. W. J. MacDonald, one time master and owner of the old clipper ship, Glory of the Seas, which held the record between New York and San Francisco, recently went through this port to his old stamping grounds at Kodiak. Capt. MacDonald w^as gen eral manager for (the Alaska Explora tion Company at Afognak years ago, and is one of the oldest navigators on the Pacific coast. He is also one of the charter members of the Pioneers of Alaska, and is well known to many Sewardites. The Glory of the Seas was burned at Tacoma this month, for her old metal. She had been used as a barge by fishing companies, for the past several rears. _ _ Bartley Howard, who is in charge of the bridge and building construc tion for the Commission, came in Tuesday night for the purpose of mak ing arrangements for having the de pot repainted. Mr. Howard will also have necessary improvements and re pairs made on the government build ings here. Dan T. Kennedy, who has a permit from the government to guide parties through Mit. McKinley national park, was an outgoing passenger on one of the last steamers for the states. Mr. Kennedy will bring back thirty head of pack horses and other equipment to be used in the park. Woodbury Abbey will assist him in the work. P. C. McMullen left on a short bus iness trip to Anchorage. Louis Simpson left this morning for Divide after spend a few days in town on business matters. Dr. O. A. Braafladt and Henry Lar sen returned recently from Bear gla cier on a five day bear hunt. Dr. Braafladt reports that no sign of bear was seen during the whole time and that the weather was execrable, it raining every day. Harry Hoben received a wire from A. F. Davis today stating that Mr. Davis and family would leave Seattle for Seward on the steamship North western sailing June 2nd. Mr. Davis is a member of the firm of Hoben & Davis, who has been in the States vis iting his family, who will return with him. Miss Cecil Leslie, who has been confined to her room under the care of Dr. Baughman, for the past week, is now convalescing from a severe at tack of itonsilitis. Bud Whitney, a rancher near An chorage, -who just returned from a trip to the States, left for Anchorage on this morning’s train. ■ «•>« Mrs. Prosser, wife of Jack Prosser, who is employed at the depot, will ar rive on one of the next boats from the States. They will live in one of the government cottages. Henry Burge, an oldtimer in the north, left this week for Fairbanks where he will spend the summer pros pecting in that district. Eric Owens, widely known mining man in the early days of Nome, who had charge of Dr. Derbyshire's claim on the third beach line, is now’ living near Arlington, Washington. He has a model dairy ranch there. Mrs. Ralph Reed, president of the local Woman’s Club, returned to Sew ard last evening, after spending the past week at Anchorage. While in the interior city Mrs. Reed was a guest of the Anchorage Woman's club. Miss Frances Witherspoon, demon strator for the S. & W. brand of can ned goods and coffees, left this morn ing for Anchorage and interior points where she will demonstrate the pro ducts of her firm. Sale ARMY SHOES Sale WE HAVE just bought a tremend ous stock of ARMY MUNSON LAST shoes to be sold to the public direct Price $2.75. These shoes are 100 per cent solid leather with heavy double soles sewed and nailed. The uppers are of heavy tan chrome leather with bellows tongue, thereby making them waterproof. These shoes are selling j very fast and we advise you to order at once to insure your order being fill ed. The sizes are 6 to 11 all widths; Pay Postman on receipt of goods or send money order. Money refunded if shoes are not satisfactory. THE U. S. STORES CO., 1441 Broadway, New York City Public sales WE HAVE PURCHASED 122,000 pair U. S. ARMY MUNSON last shoes, siz es 5 1-2 to 12, which was the entire surplus stock of one of the largest U. S. Government shoe contractors. THIS SHOE is guaranteed one hun dred per cent solid leather, color, dark tan, bellows tongue, dirt and water proof. The actual value of this shoe is $6.00. Owing to this tremenduous buy we can offer same to the public for $2.95. SEND CORRECT SIZE. Pay post man on delivery or send money order. If shoes are not as represented we will cheerfully refund your money prompt ly upon request. NATIONAL BAY STATE SHOE CO. 296 Broadway, New York, N. Y.