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FRESH SUPPLY OF STOCK FISH. 8EWARD TRADING COMPANY. C. R. R. CLOSES DOWN The Copper River railroad is ex i periencing a seige of snow conditions ' - i the worst in years, at the present time, arrivals in Seward bring word. In the region of Mile 50 it is said a washout has occured which necessi tates closing down the line until the ! • spring. • j TOMORROW’S TIDES First high water Second high water First low water Second low water 12:45 a. in. 12:15 p. m. 6:05 a. m. 7:53 p. m. ARONERICSON \ i Signs Wall Paper PAINTER & DECORATOR | JACK OTIS Licensed guide King Cove, Alaska In the heart of the BIG Alaska Brown Bear Country OTIS TRADING CO. Outfitters for hunting parties— everything furnished. Write for open dates. THE PALACE John Mattlch, Prop. POOL, SOFT DRINKS AND CIGARS Furnished Rooms Phone Main 55 ! THE PANHANDLE Soft Drinks and Candies Cigars and Tobaccos CARD TABLES J. A. Eamon Proprietor Phone -?* Madison 54 Next Door to Liberty Theater Cleaning and Pressing Ladies’ Work a Specialty 3hone Adams 120 Shoe Shining WM. SLEDGE, Prop. FUIIIItIiCHIIII!IIIIIiCa!i!llll!IIII»llllll!IIIIIC3lllll!!IIIIimi THE BEST PLACE FOR CLEANING—PRESSING AND ALTERATIONS At C. Henning’s TAILOR SHOP iiiuiniiiinmniimiinniiiimiinaiiiifiiiniiciii For any kind of GENERAL REPAIRING G. THORKELSON Leave Call at The NORTHERN Typewriters and sewing machines made as good as new , j iiRramiinmniaiiiiii!iiiiinn!iiii!i!ii F1ATERIAL ORDERS ! .« > SEWARD POST NO. 5, AM*: flPS&ERICAN LEGION, meets 2nd | ! 4th Tuesdays each month \ : at Odd Fellows Hall. CLYDE R. ELLIS, Commander. HERMAN DUMARCE, Adjutant, j SEWARD CHAPTER NO. 10, ORDER OF EASTERN STAR Meets the second and j J fourth Mondays of each ! U month in Odd Fellows’ Hall at 8 p. m. Visiting ! V f/ members always wel-j | come; Mrs. Anna Les-, !lie, W. M.; T. P. Graham, Secretary.! SEWARD LODGE NO. 1425, L.O.O.M. Meets every first and third Fri day each month at 8 p. m., at Odd Fellows’! Hall. All visit-1 i n g members welcome. PETER N. ANDERSON, Dictator. M. A. HORNER, Secretary. IGLOO NO. NINE PIONEERS OF ALASKA Mee,ts every Second and Fourth Fri day nights in Odd Fellows’ Hall; Chas. Crawford, President; C. M. Brosius, Secretary. SEWARD REBEKAH LODGE NO. 6 A., I. O. O. F. Meets the first and third Mondays of each month in Odd Fellows’ Hall at 8:00 p. m. Visiting mem bers are always wel j come. Mrs. P. N. Anderson, N. G.,! i Ludvig Larsson, Sec’y. RESURRECTION LODGE NO. A-7t I. O. O. F. j Meets every Thurday at i i 8.00 p. m. in Odd Fellows’ j | Hall. Visiting brothers welcome. I i Gust A. Peterson, N. G., Ludvig Larsson, Sec’y. SEWARD LODGE NO. 219, F. & A. M. ! • Stated communications first i and third Tuesdays of each /Nr \ month. Visiting brethern wel-! come. Henry Frost, W. M.; T. P. Gra- i ham, Secretary. ALASKA GUIDES INCORPORATED Subsidiary of ALASKA GLACIER TOURS ASSOCIATION Anchorage Seward Big game hunting expeditions to all parts of Central and Southwestern Alaska Andy Simons, Fiefici Mgr. CITY EXPRESS Agent for The American Express Go. Sample Room in Connection Baggage Stored Connection made with all steamers, trains and hotels. “We never sleep” Phone Main 122 Harold Painter, Prop. Successor to Billy Patterson D Hi SECOND-HAND CARS FOR SALE at OGLE’S GARAGE Oils and Gasoline, General Repairs Storage Pete Ogle, Prop. Phone Madison 66 WILLIAMS INFORMS i ! ID BUILDERS AT i SESSION, ALASKA; | ALASKA DELEGATE TO CLEVE. ! LAND CONVENTION MAKES j INTERESTINK TALK Road builders from Maine mingled i with road builders from California, as I well as from Mexico and Alaska, in ! fact from just about every State in; the Union, at rhe recent 25th conven-j tion of the American Road Builders, at Cleveland, the forepart of last, month. The delegate to the convention from Alaska was M. D. Williams, district ; engineer of Alaska, Bureau of Public Roads. And that he served Alaska | well is evidenced by a copy of the Cleveland Press, which reached The Gateway office in the last mail. Extracts from the convention bear ing on Mr. Williams, and Alaska, are republished: Altho handicapped by every natur al handicap, great progress in road j building is being made in Alaska, Wil liams reported at the opening session, j ‘,A discussion of road construction methods in Alaska before a group of men like this,” he said, “is very much like demonstrating kindergarten meth ods as an educational feature before j a class of calculus. ‘‘Many of the methods which circum ! stances and conditions force upon us ; have long been superseded in the j greater portion of the United States, i Ours is an archipelago comprised of thousands of islands varying from a j few square feet to a million acres—all I heavily timbered and interspread J with navigable waterways. “The saturated condition of the j ground,” Williams pointed out, ’’makes the use of heavy equipment impossi ble.” In practically all cases subgrades are allowed to settle and drain for one year before an attempt is made to apply surfacing. ‘‘The maintenance and construc ; tion of all roads during the winter months offers a number of unusual ! problems,” the speaker declared, j “First, the very short period of day 1 light practicaly precludes .all con struction should weather conditions 1 permit., and in the higher and inland portions of the territory glaciating of small streams and heavy nowfall make snow removal and winter main tenance impossible. “Coast roads are open at all times, altho the maintenance is made diffi cult because of the varying frost con ditions in the saturated subsoil. These j roads' are maintained by the U. S.! Bureau of Public Roads under the’ Federal highway act. Approximately $500,000 of Federal forest funds are expended annually by this organixa tion in co-operation with the Territor ial Board.” THE FIRST NEW FORD Seward Ford fans caught their first glimpse of the new Ford automobile Saturday when a sedan arrived from j Seattle on the S. S. Yukon. Throngs were about the fine looking car con tinuously. The sedan is for the Samp son Hardware Co., in Fairbanks and is the first of the new models to pass over the Seward dock. Snow drifts from four feet to 15 feet deep covered a stretch of 120 miles along the railroad Saturday in the Cury and Broad Pass region, it is reported. The longer you deal with this old established market of Carstens the better you will like it. SECOND STOMP MILL IS BEING SHIPPED TO MINE ! Albert P. Marrion, head of the Marrion Twin Gold Mine Co., in the Willow Creek district, was' among the well known Alaskans arriving in Seward Saturday from the South. On his way up from California, where he spent a number of months this win ter, he stopped off at Juneau to com plete arrangements for shipping a five stamp mill to his mining prop erty. He already has one five stamp mill in operation at the mine. Accompanying Mr. Marrion is T. J Doogan, one of the' company’s of ficials. Mr. Marrion is an oldtimer in the Territory having arrived 25 years ago. QUAKE ROCKED THE CITY An earthquake shock struck Seward yesterday morning at 12 minutes to 11 o’clock setting everything to swing ing in residences. No damage resulted as far as can be learned. Twenty-one hours were required j before the northend rotary could cut i^s way thru the snow bound area be tween Curry and Willow, on Satur day, it is reported. WE DELIVER ANY TIME OF DAY YOU WISH. FRYE-BRUHN CO. RECORD SALE, 3 FOR $1. TAKE ’EM, NO PLAY ’EM. SCHALLER ER’S ALASKA SHOP. Manthey & Son DEALERS IN COAL &. WOOD. PREMIER, LUMP, OR MINE RUN HEALY LUMP OR NUT . Let haul' your garbage we furnish the cans and save you money. OFFICE PHONE, MADISON, 145 RESIDENCE, ADAMS 35 «S»3!lllllill!l!C3lf!IIIIIIIIIC3lillllIllillC2illll!lllll!C3limillllllC »> 3llilllllllll[3llll!!IIIIIIUilli!IIIIIIOIIIIIIIIIIIC3llllililtlllC:illllltllIlliUIIIIIII!lllinifMIIIIIIl!t3lll!lllllliinilllllllllllUII!ltlIllllia!IIIIIIM10JIU(l SEWARD WATER SUPPLY SEWARD, ALASKA “Good Water a Necessity in Every Home'’ John Nelson, Mgr. Wayne Blue, Agent Office* Arcade Building. Phone Main 81 <3>3>innmii!C3iniii!miic3ii(iiiuiiiiC3iH!iumiiuiim(!iiuir^ I ! MORE THAN AN AUTOMOBILE MORE THAN A NEW MODEL The new Ford is the advanced expression of a wholly new idea in modern, economic transportation SIMPLE, GRACEFUL, YET UN DENIABLY A STURDY AND CAPABLE MOTOR CAR. Twenty to 30 miles per gallon of gasoline is one of the outstanding economies of the new Fords. SPEED, SAFETY, BEAUTY, RELIABILITY, ECONOMY AND COMFORT Models are arriving shortly Write Or Call On Us For Particulars Electric and Acetylene Welding, Plumbing, Heating, Sheet Metal Work "General machine work and boat repairs. Ford Sales and Service Agents for Fairbanks Morse Station ary and Marine Engines FIRESTONE TIRES AND TUBES CHAS. LECHNER, Proprietor Seward Machine Shop