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fewar&$ttUt)#atenmu OF SEWARD, ALASKA — Established August 19, 1904 Published daily except Sunday by THE GATEWAY PUBLISHING COMPANY Entere(| in the postoffice at Seward, Alaska as second-class mail matter. " H. V. HOBEN and E F. JESSEN, Proprietors E. F. Jessen, Editor and Manager C. J. Lincke, Associate Editor ADVERTISING RATES Per single column, one to six issues, per inch - Per single column inch, per month .-. Legal Notices, per line per issue ...... Classified Advertisements, per line, per issue .. Ndtice of Final Proof Notices ... Notice to Creditors Notices .-.— " _ SUBSCRIPTION RATES Daily, by carrier, per month -----— $ 1.25 j Daily, by mail, per month —--‘--- j The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise in this paper and also . the local news published herein. \ All rights for republication of special dispatches herein are reserved. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS THE NEIGHBORLY SPIRIT The Anchorage Times of March 12, has this to say about the disaster which befell the salmon hatchery near Seward: - The destruction of the Seward hatchery, which is reported to have been burned to the ground this week, will save the Territory consider able money during the next biennium. The experiment of producing salmon by the hatchery method has cost the Territory a lot of money during the years the several hatcheries have been in operation and it has yet to be shown that the experiment has been worth while. There is suf ficient doubt, at any rate, to encourage the belief that the Legislature will be content to restrict further experimenting to the remaining plants in the event that it is deemed advisable to carry on the work even on a curtailed scale. t ji _ _i _ m-__i_:__t __• 1 „ j _$ .50 _ 3.50 _ .15 .. .10 _ 12.00 .. 15.00 1 in uuier wurus, me jumeo cmviaca me ucgioiatuxc nw to rebuild the hatchery because it would cost money; and not to operate it because it would cost more money. Of course the Times has in view the question of economy in Territorial expenditures. Let's see if it is consistent in its position. The delegation from the Third division have asked the Legislature for about $60,000, the sum of $50,000 of which will obligate the Treasury to eventually expend $200,000, and every dollar of it for the immediate benefit of Anchorage and nothing else The remaining $10,000, for airplane landing fields, was asked under the plea that it had been granted at the last session of the Legislature, but as there were at that time no airplanes in Anchorage, it was diverted to road and trail work. We know what went with some $5,000 of that trail money—it was wasted. In advising Territorial economies one should be cau tious in the use of the smoke screen. Sometimes there is a rift that permits of a scrutiny of the strategy lying be hind. If anyone wishes to see through the Times' smoke screen he only has to consider a few facts that sand out glaringly. The $50,000 appropriation mentioned is for the An chorage-Matanuska automobile road. This route paral lels the Alaska Railroad and traverses a country which is for the most part served by means of communication as far as there is any demand, which is principally in the farming district extending some ten miles north of An chorage, and which is served by the Eagle river road, which has a loop some 14 miles long, affording a pleasure drive for automobilists. Beyond this point northward any need of the adjacent country is served by the rail road. To extend this road from where the route would debouch upon the Eklutna river, into Matanuska would entail crossing it, the Knik and Matanuska rivers and their changing gravel bars. It would only serve as a pleasure road. The Matanuska farmers have a means of communication by railroad, and whatever other roads they require lie within that district north of the Matanus ka river, where there are many unfinished pieces of road way that the Alaska Road Commission is endeavoring to consolidate. mi m • r* i i i /»_ J CC* i 1 1 _ ±ne limes msi states as a xact tnat it lias yet tu ue shown that the (hatchery) experiment has been worth while.” It should be prepared to present figures to sub stantiate its position, which it does not do. Thus no one but the expert is prepared to say whether artificial hatch ing of salmon is a success or not. The question is too in tricate for the layman to grasp. But laying aside the question of the merits or demer its of the hatchery, why is the Times so solicitous lest the Territory should decide to rebuild the hatchery? Why has it not exercised this evidence for Legislative economy before? It would appear to the observer that its present atitude is actuated by selfishness and egotism in the belief that the Third division is bounded by Turnagain Arm on the south and Ship creek on the north. Now that the screen has laid bare all of the sordid aspects of the lives of the morons and sex-inebriates they might give us a few glimpses of real American life. A Philadelphia man must wed within 30 days or for feit an inheritance of $100,000,000, which leads the cynic to remark that there's always a catch somewhere. Ml DIES ENTRY ialls king an undesirable. CHARGES HE MADE ACCUSA TIONS, PRESIDENT WASHINGTON. March 24. (/P)— n a note charging United States Senator King with having made of ensive and false statements concern ng the President of Hayti, Camille .eon, Haitian Minister of Foreign Affairs notified the United States hat his country would not allow the Senator to land. The note arrived ifter the Secretary of State’s office lad closed Wednesday and has not ret been presented. Hayti’s action in barring Senator King is considered as serious and is i threat against the Senator’s pres ;ige. State Department Officials xmld not say what attitude Secre :ary Kellogg would take, but feared :hat a serious precedent might be jstablished. owing to the anger that would be aroused in the Senate jver the closing of the friendly door to one of it’s members. • The Foreign Minister’s cable said that Senator King was ’persona non ?rata’ in Hayti and that his presence In the country would arouse the worst element of disorder in Haitian politics and cause a general unrest and consequent insecurity. The Haitian Minister in Washing ton said that Senator King, in 1926, opposed further American interven tion in Hayti and attacked President Louis Borno. FOREIGN DECORATIONS TOOOOED BY 0, S. ARMY WASHINGTON, March 24. (/P)— Decorations of Foreign Governments are tabooed for officers of the Unit ed States Army, by Secretary of War Davis, in a report made to Con gress on a bill that would authorize Colonel William Chadwick of the Chemical Warfare Service Reserve Corps to accept the Order of St. Sava, from the King of the Serbs. The halibut schooner Yukon, Capt. Ed Ongstad, arrived in port last night from the banks with 4,000 pounds of halibut. Today’s sun light was the best since the first of the year for taking photographs, Otto Schallerer, of the Alaska Shop remarked. SIGNS OF SPRING Kids are fighting, Fleas are biting Dogs along the spine; Roosters crowing, Cows are lowing, Grandad’s feeling fine. Snow is melting, Hives are welting, Woolens ’gin to itch; Lovers lying, Maidens sighing, As they sit and stitch. Fancy dingbats For their spring hats, Doodads, iks and sich. Brooks, are splashing, Sunlight’s flashing, Birds beginl to sing; Dad is wishing For the fishing— Bet your life it’s spring. Just received fresh Aplets in bulk and boxes. Delicious! Candy Cottage. LIBERTY THEATER 8 O'CLOCK — ONE SHOW — 8 O’CLOCK HOUSE PETERS in A thrilling story of the Great Northwest A BEAUTIFUL OUTDOOR PICTURE WANDA HAWLEY IS THE BEAUTIFUL GIRL And with it we will give BEN TURPIN in “REEL VIRGINIAN” A laugh-getting two-reel comedy And a Reel of Jokes » OVERLAND GRILL Next to the Overland Hotel Open Day and Night Private Boxes Gabriel Santos Proprietor and Chef Better Groceries ■^l^rE ONLY handle Groceries that are better than usual—in fact ours are the , best you can buy. Wholesome food-stuffs pro ductive of tasty, enjoyable meals—that’s what you get here. Low prices are our usual ones. Seward Trading Co. Inc. Telephone Main 135 for Quality Goods - ■■■ ; Seattle Ice Cream High Grade Candies Framed Pictures, Curios arid Photographs Sylvia’s Phone Adams 128 > Three sets of twins have been bora to Mr. and Mrs. Paul I. Rey nolds of Poughkeepsie, N. Y., in the past five years. Before trying the ease of Frank Glendon of Chicago for picking pock ets, Judge Bimey ordered that the prisoner be given a bath.