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The VOL. I. __ ' MlNIPs 'IRAN, ALASKA, FRIDAY, MARCH 8, 1907, _-_— " 1 R. HECKMAN, Vice Pres. ANDREW CH1I.BERG, Pres. MINERS & MERCHANTS BANK Of Ketchikan, Alaska Transacts a Genera! Banking Business The easiest way to establish your credit in a community is to open an account with your home Bank. Small accounts are welcome M. A. Mitchell - = “ Cashier V -===========1 Many Lives Saved I By buying Drugs at the Neatest Drug Store in Alaska ^B The Revilla Drug Co.M New Goods Arriving fl We wish to announce to the Ladies of Ketchikan that we have just received 0^| FLEECED FLANNELS, OUTING FLANNELS C|H HENLEY’S SHADOW PLAIDS, CHEVIOT SKIRTING, HEAVY TWILL TOW- gH ELL1NG, TURKISH TOWELS 0 I DRESS GOODS, Etc. 0 B by one of the last boats which we are 0 fl offering at figures hitherto unknown in Ketchikan. That fact, however, makes @■ it imperative that you come soon if you 0fl wish to get any of them. They re going gH J. R. HECKMAN & CO. 1 The Department Store fB Ketchikan - - Alaskajj —— I_ ibi i■ - —am m Rates; $1-00 to $3.00 Steam heated H Room with Bath H Hotel Stedman I European H • fl Ketchikan fl JOHN W. STEDMAN Alaska 1 Proprietor B I ■ 1 I Green Goods I |! x x . x | For St. Patrick's Day and the latest and I: bestof everything in Wearables for Men < > 1 < > j p. J. GILMORE : % Only Exclusive Gents Furnishings ‘ I Store in Whole of Alaska < 4 4 Electric Lighted Stea n l4 eate J The Hotel Revilla ^ * J. F. Dubail, Manager KETCHIKAN I ! ■ t ., D , ALASKA ^ * Suit63 with tjatn^a,———>■w—■ - superintendent U1 IflU iillUK, l solidated mines, returned on the Cot tage City, and informs Tho Mining. News that work at the mine will I resumed at an early day. The Hadley consolidated is one of the dividenc paving mines of the district,the tem porary suspension-of which was en forced by recent weather condition and the lack of coal and coke at tin Hadley smelter to which all Us pro duct has heretofore been delivered a ; it probably will be in the future ! At the Sea island property, abor k four miles above Kasaan village » _i from the Hydah, sun I ing anil drifting is in progress in a* l body of high grade copper ore, whicn* i also carries some gold. This property* I which was located by “Davy Niiol* I together with a number of other* is under bond to the Pacific Coa* 1 Securities company, of which Mr. > * W. Steffner is manager, and b* which operations are being proseeui* ed with the most encouraging pros« poets for a successful issue. ■ S. D. Colvin, who is elsewlierH mentioned as being in town awaitin* a south hound steamer to take him t* Seattle, having received news tha« his contemplated trip would be one om pleasure only, if made, has taken ta the woods again with a view to loca« ting something that will comraenB —» itself to the favorable attention <■ men on the lookout for copper proper ties, in which to invest. He will In heard from, and that at no distant day, W. T. Fink, assayer at the Niblaei mine for the past two years or more, has resigned and gone to Nevada, to enter the employment, in a respon sible position, of the Nevada Smelting tnd Mining company, whose property is located at Silver Peak about thirty miles distant from Tonapali. It is not publicly known who will succeed Inin at the N ibl tek. The steamship Farallon, which irrived up on Wednesday last, took US tons of coal and 200 tons of coke o Hadley. It is doubtful, however, unless the management has more •oke in sight, for early delivery, if tin smelter will he started up again foi svhat would otherwise necessarily be a short run. The barge Potter is at Nibalck tak ing on a cargo of from 1800 to 200< ons of ore. Her loading has beer lelayed by some custom house co.npli ■ations, involving a fine of S100C .vhich had to be paid before she eoulc be allowed to take on cargo and proceed on her way. Williams and Harris, old and ex perienced miners, have taken a con tact to sink the main shaft at tl e Nfiblack mine 80 feet deeper into tin lowels of mother earth, and wart oms) experienced machine men tc issist in pushing the work. M. L. Bell, who has been engaged die past several months in the con struction of the surface tramway, at lie Ilydali mine, is in town, having jompleted the work to the perfec satisfaction!! of the company. The Gold Standard has sent dowi from its mill at Helm bay, for ship ment to the Tyee Smelter, ten tons if concentrates which are expectei lo, and probably will, yield returns jf not less than $150 per ton. W. H. Archibald, the well knowr ■nigneer lately in the employ of the 3rown-Alaska company,'has transfer) - >d his affections to his old love, and ,'one to take a similar position at che Valparaiso. The Reason Why.—Much resent ment, some of it aimed in the wrong direction, was manifested here when the steamship Jefferson—the fastest Jiip plying in the Southeastern Alaska trade—arrived here on bet last voyage up without In inging any nail. Those who had not been nade aware of the reasons were in dined to blame the steamship com pany, and comparativly few knew that the fault lay entirely with the postal authorities, who had preferred a request that no mail should be handled on that trip either north or south hound, for the reason that the company had already exceeded its contract for carrying the mails during the months of January and February. This request, while not wholly pro hibitiory, was equivalent to an order implying that, if the ship handied the mails on that trip, it must do so without hope of compen sation from the government, and the management was averse to establish ing a precedent of that kind. The fault is, therefore, that of the govern ment and is likely to occur again, not once alone hut frequently, unless the people of the sections most directly concerned bestir themselves in an effort to secure regular mail service on each an every one of the fast boats plying on the route. If proper repre sentations are made to the postal authorities a Washington, The Min ing News has confidence in the belief that a recurrence of such annoying breaches in the service can be pre ven ted. Have You Registered?—If you haven’t, and fail to do so before 4 p. m. 30th inst., if you vote at all at the municipal election to he held on the 2nd of next month, your ballot will have to he cast in the air instead of tlie ballot box. All voters, no matter how long they have resided in the fcown, must register as a prerequisite to being allowed to vote. Registra tion officer canJieJoun£jtt_the^ouncil SALMON PACKING A More than Usually Profitable Season Anticipated--No Idle Concerns This Year As the salmon canning and salting season approaches, more than wonted activity prevails in making prepara tions for the season’s work. The indications are that all the canneries in Southeastern Alaska, without ex ception, large and small, will be run to their full capacity the coming season, limited only to the extent of a possi ble failure in some cases to secure the supply of fish necessary to keep them in steady and uninterrupted opera tion,. This last mentioned contin gency is not likely, however, to iccur in this part of Alaska, inasmuch is that contingency is one which operators will consider of primary importance and take every measure to provide against. The canneries in this district, only a part of which were operated, made an output last year of 260,000 cases, in round figures, a product which bids fair to be largely increased the coming season. All those that were operated last year will make strenuous endeavors to increase their output, which will be further increased by | (hat of two concerns which were idle last year, and one which had ts product curtailed by fire which lestroyed its plant and occasioned a urther loss of 10,000 cases previously packed. This has reference only to lie canneries embraced in the Ketchi can district, and does not take into he account those tributary to Wran gell, those on the west and north side >f Prince of Wales, or those further lorth and west, but within the dis .rict of country generally designated is southeastern Alaska. Taken al ogether these canneries give promise if an increase of not less than 50 per cent, over last year’s pack. Mr. J. R, Heckman, manager of he Loring cannery, will go below shortly to tit out a ship with supplies ind full force of Chinamen for putting jp the season’s pack, witli the ex pectation of having everything in readiness to take full advantage of whatever the season may afford in the run of salmon. The cannery will be operated to its full capacity, sub ject only to limitation in the supply if raw material, 'and therein no difficulty is anticipated, the manage ment having a way peculiar to itself of always being able to gather in all the fish required. The Northwestern Fisheries com pany will operate the Hunter’s bay and Boca de Quadra concerns and, as mentioned elsewhere, the Kasaan cannery will he rebuilt in time to engage in business the coming season. So far as The Mining News can learn there will not be an idle cannery in southeastern Alaska this season, while there will be the usual activity at the s.alteries, at which it is expected large quantities of dog salmon will be salted to fill the Japanese demand ior that article. In addition to this there is likely to be an added impetus given to the business of dry salting of salmon and halibut for both domestic and foreign markets. The New England Fish company, which recently purchased a plot of ground here at Ketchikan, is understood to be preparing the plans for buildings and a complete cold storage and fish curing plant, of which Mr. Pratt, former superin tendent of the Fidalgo Island company cannery, will have charge. It is given out that this plant will ho one of the largest and most complete of its kind on the Pacific coast, and that Mr. Pratt is now in Boston consulting with the company in regard to plans gives reasonable assurance that this promised industry will ere long take on permanent form and substance. Since the above was put in type the large ocean going tug Kingfisher, belonging to the New England fish company, arrived in this harbor and after a short stay left on a prospect ing cruise to the west coast of Prince of Wales, intending to go as far north as Coronation island. She has on board a crew of 40 fishermen, and will look out for the best halibut fishing grounds, taking on board such’fisli as she may be able to secure, and in case of failure of a full catch, will com plete her cargo at the fishing grounds in Dixon’s Entrance. It is the avow ed purpose of the company to estab lish a station here which will be made their headquarters for all this part of Alaska. Some Young Salmon. -The Fort mann hatchery will turn out ninety million young salmon this season. One hundred and five million eggs were secured, but an unexpected freeze up which cut off a part of the water supply for the hatchery caused a loss of fifteen million, and will re duce the production of small fry tc that extent. These young fish are all from spawn of the red salmon and. taken with the millions heretofore turned out of this hatchery, with the other millions to follow, if indeed il bo true that the salmon always returr to their native waters, ought in time to replenish and maintain the supply 1 collency, the governor of Alaska, without unnecessary delay. j Esther Mitchell and Charles Johnson are being held in jail at Juneau to insure their attendance as witnesses in the murder case sent up from Ketchikan. In the case of the salacious Esther there is’no place she is better fitted to adorn than the in-' side of a jail, provided it is not cleaD enough to be easily soiled. 1 The Alaska Packers’ cannery at Wrangell is to he enlarged to a capacity for 200,00!) cases, which the Sentinel says will he double that of the Loring concern. We think the Sentinel is a litte bit mistaken: the T.oring cannery has certainly packed very nearly, if not quite, 300,OOo cases in a single season, and can do so again- the raw product being avail able and the market calling for them. A silver lining is forming on the cloud of dullness which has been hovering over Wrangell for, lo, these many years. Increased capacity of the ajdacent canneries forces an increase in the output of the sawmill. The new cannery buildings will require a great number of good shingles, and the Wrangell shingle mill will prob ably he called upon to furnish them. All this will create a demand for labor, and by the time next winter's snow Hies we will hear the jingle of coin in the pockets of all.—Sentinel. Some people’s idea of heaven is a place where they will have nothing to do but sit around in the sun am plunk a golden harp. They may be right, but we can't, help admiring tlu crowd that got busy, even if they were thrown over the back fenci afterward. Those people who live ii Alaska and are so blamed well satis fled with present conditions that the, dread a change, like a tramp dread a bath, have no business in tin country. They should all move t< Connecticut, and take up the busines of whittling out wooden nutmegs —Douglas News. ; “By the way,” queries the Skag way Alaskan “what progress di< Juneau’s governor make with tha $200,000 appropriation for a capito building at Juneau'”' The Alaska) don't seem to understand that con gross dosen't provide for the erec t.ion of capltol buildings for unorgan ized territories, and that the bill t which it alludes was for a “public’ building such as congress is wont ti provide it) all the states and organ ized territories wherever needed b lie requirements of the public ser vice. It was introduced in hot houses by members who are in favo of a territorial organization fo Alaska, at the instance and reques of an advocate of home governmen by whom it was drawn. Perhaps, th governor lias been too busy lobbyinj against a recognition of the express ed will and wishes of the people in th matter of home government to perrpi of any attention on his part toanotlie of so much Importance to his hom town,