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SEWARD GATEWAY PUBLISHED WEEKLY BY GATEWAY PUBLISHING CO. ’ton’ as Second t'las> matter Auirust ’’tth. at the postolttce at Servant. Alaska, IIP* (' t 'he Act of Congress of March S. tSTv* siBscRirnov rates One Year i 1 A.ir.i ■' - - $3 00 Six Months " ... $1.50 Kastern oiV.ee 2ltl Ahvorth Huihlin^. l>uluth. >1 nnesota. Vitas. It. Askc, anthortr.cd aeon: s\ rrftivw. skitemukk s. !!*»>•*. PASSES EXPERIMENTAL STAGE The Ventna gold mining district has ussed the experimental stage. It re mires several years to make a new district a great producer but the Yent t i- com it g to the front as fast as any region ever did in Alaska. I hi* voice i>t the knocker is practically stdled. Ni> longer do the fortune hunters who s vim the lower creeks for a few days n the hope of finding gold nuggets as ng as goose eggs ly ing on the surface come back in the peevishness of fail ure and proclaim loudly that there is nothing in the whole region. The knocker is apt to he asked (minted • i nest ions now which invite answers unflattering to himself. 'The Tanana had no better nrospects three years ago than the Ventna has oday anil it was knocked much ha tiler* ;\»r experienced miners from tin* Klon dike went in and came out with the report that the Tanana was a humbug. Yet the Tanana will produce $12,000, 0<*0 this y< ar and the output has been curtailed several million by water shortage. The reg’on known as the Ventna is - large as the Tanana and the surface .lientions arc as good. In fact the <*ntna and the 'Tanana meet at the! \ r.ska range ami in all the expanse >. :ween the Ventna river and the Tanat i casual prospecting has di> < 1 is, gold near the surface. Vll th s area of many thousand - pure mi.li > is fretted with gold-beat* *’g channels. I»y mere surface scratching a few dozen miners this year will tak«* out from $.">0,000 toj sT"t.0»W>, while st-voral hundred other men are engaged in development work hich will product* larger results * *xt year. This great district is all tributary to Seward. From this port leads the only winter route over which large outfits van Ik* taken, although men can enter 1 the district at any time of the year from the Tanana. This town is now he only practicable outfitting point null its merchants -hould prepare at •r-.ce to supply the ranidly increasing demands of the increasing numbei* of .miners who will go in this fall and \ inter. The great advantage which the Yentna ha> over Nome, the Xanana and the Klondike i> its proximity to ;tie sout 1:era coast. The gold creeks ire within loo miles of Yook inlet: within -*>o miles of Seward, an ice-free :»urt every ilay in the year. The Yloska t "ei :. a » itlnn a few weeks will carry eger-and freight flfty ;ive miles trot; N'«:if and in another vear 1*iU miles. From the end of the rack t his w inter - ed- of all sizes can go over a trail almost level with tin* ■exception of a very -leep hut short climb to the sam.mi: <>t t iwv creek *a ss. The only time imm cannot go inside with their oiuiits is during tiic break up of the river ice in tin- spring, which stops travel for two or three weeks, n winter the trail is over the ice: in summer ‘mats take men and freight to the mouths of the creeks. The government agent at St. (leorge -land who arrested a squad of Japan ese merely because they called in to get a drink of fresh water and who had made no unlawful move, may not feel so gay if he gets jacked up by the gov ernment. The jKirts of the world are supposed to he open to peaceful ves sels on lawful errands. . James J. Hill says he is opposed to government ownership of railroads. While I’ncle Jim doesn’t say so a pop niar impression exists that he favors perpetuation of the present system of railroad ownership of the government. __________ And now New Yorkers in both par ries are threatening to depose the bosses after the people of the state have lived under boss rule so long that they would not know how to do with out it. The president says that if the new orthography does not suit popular taste after a sj>ell it will be discon tinued. _______ The Cuban administration must have a yellow streak, if it wants to patch up with the insurgents before a try-out. All the striking street car men in San Francisco got for their trouble was a rest from toil without pay. Russia is holding up her revolution to.give the Cubans a fair chance with their minstrel show. Cans and Nelson do not belong to any union but they certainly celebrated I^altor Day. The San Francisco Kxaminer of August IP has an alleged dispatch from Dawson telling of the larceny of *7S,»X>1> in gold dust from the Yukon stearner Ida May. As tin* theft was perpetrated in July, the story spread i broadcast and several men arrested on , suspicion before the Kxaminer seemed i to have heard anything about it, the presumption is that the llearst paper , lt.i> invented a new brand of up-to-date i new spa per work. t 'uban newspapers >ay it would ho ! better to have the island swept into the sea than for the I'nited States to intervene to restore order. If most of lite t’uha: > could he swept into the sea I it would be a good thing for the world, j Seattle “workingmen*'’ ar,e going to whoop it up for elean polities. In a few days it will In? made known how many of them are willing to run for office for the purpose of purifying politics. The time of the year has arrived w!;.‘ti the political orator takes the people into his confidence and tells them the country will goto tlfe devil if his crowd doesn’t carry the election. Mrs. Karly of Seattle, who was shot and killed by a revolver discharge when she lifted the lid of a lodger’s trunk, demonstrated that the early bird most always gets something. If Col. Henri Watterson and Col. Wilhelm Bryauget into an argument 1 over government ownership of rail road" all other dramatic attractions will sutler eclipse for one while. A Spokane undertaker has con tracted to bury paupers at one-tenth of a cent eaeh just to spite his rivals. At ten for a cent nobody can say that he i' making a "titT charge. ! Yubably Mr. Bryan is going south south to tix up a plan to retain *‘Jim Ciaw" cars for colored citizens under government ownership. Mr. Bryan issues a defi to Mr. Sulli van for another tight in the same ring and at the same weight. r— Nelson "ays he was jobbed in his tight with Cans, but perhaps he means jabbed. This Cuban revolution is almost as exciting as a game of ch- ss. Seward Temperature :r. August The mean temperature in Seward in August was 54.89 degrees. It duly the mean temperature was degrees. The maximum in each month was 68 degrees. The m. xitnum in August occurred on the l.'lth. The minimum « a" 42 degrees on the 2‘lnl. Neither .1 ,i \ nor August attained the maxi mum temperature of May and June, in each of which months it was 72. August had hut six clear days. July only three. Delegate Vote on Cache Creek Cache creek precinct held a delegate j < 1 ction and cast *J7 votes for Frank Youngs for the short term and 2s for J Slump for the long term. They did ! not know that both Youngs and Shoup hub withdrawn a month before the election. Commissioner Uoodoll he-j signated Jam* stown. at the mouth of Lake creek, as another voting place but no election was held there. To Hunt Railroad Laborers Frank Kelly, foreman at camp l'-*. j sailed on the F.xcelsior to search for railroad met. at Valdez and Cordova. J Ci atractor Welch has an order at Sc-, attic for men hut they are not coming j ver\ fa>! arul the force al work is sev eral hundred short of the number wanted. _ Miss Kurtz Visits Seward Miss Louise L. Kurtz, who taught Seward's school in 11X4-11*05, came up on the F.xcelsior on her wav to Kodiak, where she will teach next year. She will remain in Seward until the next westward boat. Her home is in Missouri. The United States grand jury at Albuquerque, New Mexico, is investi gating reports that the Indians at the Zae Pueblo, the most isolated Pueblo tribe in New Mexico, feed a certain number of new born babies to a big snake each year. The snake is wor shipped by the tribe as a god. The interior department will doubtless be asked to take a hand in the matter. The Illinois Tunnel Company has \ just completed forty-five miles of tun nel under Chicaga to carry freight in S car load lots. The tunnels have oc- j i cupied five years in construction and j with the tracks cost $30,000,000. This : underground railroad is an electric system with overhead trolley. The contributions that are supplied ! to moraines by glaciers themselves, j from the abrasion of the rocks over which their ice passes, are minute compared to the accumulations which are furnished from other sources. These great rubbish heaps are formed almost entirely from debris which falls or is washed down the flanks of moun tains, or from cliffs bordering the glaciers. GOV. HOGGATT COMING TODAY Alaska’s Executive Now on Way to Seward on Revenue Cutter McCulloch. (lov. Hoggatl will In* in Seward to day. He sailed yesterday morning from Valdez on the cutter McCulloch for tids port, l»nt the exact hour of her arrival cannot be tixed. The governor came to Valdez on the Hertha and was given a public reception there last Thursday night. This news was brought by passen gers on the Hertha yesterday They have no information concerning the governor’s intentions as to his future movements. CRUISER BOSTON GOES ON ROCKS Grounds in Fog Near Bellingham and Reported in Sinking Condition. By Cable to The Dally Gateway. Bellingham, Wash..Sept. 4—Cruiser Boston, llagship of the Pacific squad i eon, on the way to Blaine with the re* mainder of the fleet for target practice, I in a fog struck Peapod ruck, two miles 1 from thi*. city. She struggled free after the gunboat Paul Jones failed to ■ pull herotT, but at midnight was in a sinking condition two miles otT shore i with seven compartments tilled with water. The crew were then working with buckets to help the pumps anti try to keep her atloat. Tugs have been ordered from Seattle to help haul the vessel upon the bench. Cruiser Boston Kept Afloat Bellingham, Sept. •*> Divers found six holes in the cruiser Boston, which struck Pea pod Bock in a fog Monday night, but the pumps are keeping her atloat and she started this morning for the Puget Sound navy yard at Brem erton. TRANSPORT SHERMAN HELPLESS ON REEF 3y Cable to Tbe Dally Gateway. Honolulu. Sept. I—The l'. S. army transport Sherman broke a main steam pipe and drifted on a reef otT Honolulu and is now lying helpless in a heavy surf. Small boats are trying to get close enough to take otT her passengers. Pnless the vessel is re lieved soon site will be pounded to pieces on the rocks. Transport Sherman Abandoned Honolulu, Sept. 2 The tugs aban doned the transport Sherman today, Ruling it impossible to pull the vessel j off the rock and she is a total los>. She is already half full of water. The passengers were saved. Sam Blowers Missing John A. McDonald brings word that Sam Blowers started up Lake creek alone three weeks ago and lias not since been heard of. Blowers was well known on the railroad, having been timekeeper at 4'J and It i> reported by men coming to Seward on the Toledo that three men who went up the Inlet to locate min ing claims near Turnagain Arm and were known to have started hack-three weeks ago, have not since been heard of. _ It is asserted that many Nome mines are again being tied up by injunctions without number. The mine owners complain that the court will grant an injunction upon the most flimsy show ing, and without the least investiga tion as to the merits of the case. SEWARD STEAMERS Bertha: sailed for Seldovia at 4. p. m. Santa Clara; in Valdez; sails for Seward at 8 a. m. today. Oregon: sails from Seattle 8th. Portland: sails from Seattle 10th. Excelsior; sailed for Seattle 3rd. Dora; sailed from Seward for Valdez 1st. WEEKLY WEATHER RECORD Weathei record for the week ending September 8: Temperature. Max. Min. Saturday 52 45 Rain Sunday 60 45 I’t cloudy Monday 58 48 Rain Tuesday 63 45 Clear Wednesday 64 52 Clear Thursday 67 40 Clear Friday 63 48 I’t cloudy You become independent when you establish a system of spending less than you make—not until then. Get something ahead. Remember it’s the dollar you do not spend that does it. * BANK OF SEWARD. YENTNA DISTRICT HAS THE GOLD Six Miners on Poor Man’s Creek Cut Up 204 Ounces for Few Weeks’ Work. Six miners on Poor Man's creek re cently cut up 204 ounces of yold dust as the result of u few weeks of irregular work, in which so much dead work was done that it was impossible to tell how much time was devoted to actual taking out of metal. One of these men, Carl Larson, came to Seward Saturday evening with his share of the dust—34 ounces. He quit work and came out for the sole reason that his boots were cut to pieces and he could ; not work hare-footed. As he had to! come out to the Inlet lie came on to Seward, but will return in a few days. Although mining by the crudest I methods the men on Poor Man’s creek ; take out several ounces each whenever ' they get in a full dav and their dig gings are showing better all the time. Larson Is reticent about talking but to an acquaintance in Seward he admitted that he and his partners have a bo nanza. Judge Hildreth has a letter from T. j .1. Jeter, who writes that he is taking out an ounce a clay on Thunder creek, i on a claim upon which he has just bi‘-' gun operat ion». “The Yentna district is no longer an experiment,” said H. H. Hicks, one of the best known mining men in the took inlet region, who came in last week. “livery experienced mining man who has spent several months there is satisfied that it is a permanent district and a rich one. It is likely to be another Tanana. Gold colors are found everywhere at the surface and on every creek where much work lias been done wages or better are taken out.” Mr. Hicks believes that the Sk went - na river and its tributaries will show up as well as any part of the district. Prospectors have just begun to go in there hut the first experiments with t he ground look good. Mr. Hicks located several copper claims back of Iliamna this summer, which he has great faith in. He thinks the Iliamna copper deposits are of vast extent and great value. TO CONSTRUCT NEW RESERVOIR Seward Water and Power Com pany Begins Work To Obtain Better Supply. Work on a new reservoir for Seward began Monday by the Seward \\ ater*!fc Power Company. The water is to he taken from the spring that comes down the hill on the Brownell home stead back of the ice house. From this a large supply of the purest water can be obtained the year around. The new reservoit will be 10x24 feet and 10 feet deep. It will be much larger than the present reservoir up Lowell creek. The water company began hauling lumber today and digging will be prosecuted rapidly. The Lowell creek reservoir has proved inadequate in dry times and the pressure falls so low when the water supply is light that it would be wholly useless in lire light ing- In the early spring floods, it was discovered this year, the water carries , sediment. For these reasons the new reservoir will be constructed, and coming from a never-failing spring ample quantity for a much larger town than Seward, and of the best quality, is insured. MRS. L. L. BOWERS DEAD Deputy Harshal Reaches Kodiak Two Hours After Wife Is Buried Mrs. L. L. Bowers, wife of Deputy Marshal Bowers of Kodiak, died there August 29, and was buried the next day, two hours before her husband ar rived from the westward on the steam er Dora. She was in good health when he left home early in the month. Mrs. Bowers was a native of Ohio but had lived in Alaska with her hus band nine years. Besides her husband she leaves one child, Mrs. Harry Baehr of San Francisco, whose husband is auditor of that county. Alaska gold shipments for 190b up to the first week in August reached $10,562,870—nearly as much as they did at the close of last season. A total of twenty-two shipments has been made from the territory. Of these half came from the vessels sailing to Nome and St. Michael direct, and gold aggregating $4,618,000 was brought by them. From the southeastern sec tion. eleven shipments were received, totaling $5,944,870._ Recent forest fires wiped out 5000 square miles of timber in Oregon. , THE BEST ARE THE CHEAPEST Why buy any old kind of OVERALLS and CORDUROY goods just because you have never been able to get anything better! Carhartt’s Are the Best CLAYSON THE CLOTHIER _ Agency For’ TKe tARHARTTOVERALIT THE ALASKA TRANSFER CHRISTIENSEN&. LAUBNER, Proprietors Pianos and Safes Moved spccl>l attention to city Trade n , _ . Giya us your orders for Coal & Wood General rorwarders main-s'...,., GOLEM A N HOUSE Electric Lights and Electric Bells in Every Room Rates from 50c to $2.50 per Day ABSOLUTELY FIRST CLASS Fourth Avenue Seward, Alaska C. S. HUBBELL Civil fimdncer U. S. Deputy Land and Mineral Surveyor Coleman House Seward H. S. WATERMAN MINING ENGINEER Assajt Office. Valdez. Alaska. (•old - • $1.30 Cold ami Silver - - Copper - - - 1.30 < '.old. Silver and Copper .'{.30 It |K>rts and examinations of mine'. Cash should uccompnny all samples. H. E. ELLSWORTH SBWAIUA, ALASKA. ASSAY OFFICE Reports on mines. Ore Analysis Cold. $130 Cold and Silver. - Copper. l.'.i , Lead. 1.30 j Cold. Silver und l«ead. :i vi , Cold. Silver and Cop|»er. 3.3» Cold. Silver. Cop|H>r and Lead. L3o Cold and Silver Umpire. .Vou Iron. L00 Sulphur. Aluminum. Tin. Platinum. Quicksilver. Zinc, Nickel. Cobalt. Chromium, etc. 600 Mill tests. $13 to $30 Ore analysis.$10 and up Cold refined, melted, assayed and bought i REMODELED THE RAINIER-GRAND HOTEL SEATTLE Popular Prices-New Management Central Location-European Plan Greatest Cafe and Bar Service in the City Wilson & White Co., Prop. Chas Perry, Mgr' Seward Bowling Alley Fourth Avenue, Seward. BILLIARD AND POOL TABLES In Connection Ladies’ Day Friday Afternoon A Good Place to Spend the Evening. E. L. WHITTEMORE, Proprietor Mrs. J. S. Campbell has opened a first-class restaurant at Glacier creek mile 75) and is prepared to furnish meals at all times to travelers as well as residents. * DR. C. T. DAGGETT DENTIST Rooms 2. 3 and 4 A. B. DRUG BUILDING SEWARD - - ALASKA -- * DR. C. L. HALE DENTIST Over Brown & Hawkins' store SEWARD - - - ALASKA C. H. GIBBONS, M. D. Physician and Surgeon Office ami residence: Carsten's builditur Office hours:1! to 41>. m. and when not other wise en mured. CECIL H. CLEGG ATTORNEY-AT-LAW :i-:!i Avenue. - Seward, Aka. L. V. RAY ATTORNEY-AT-LAW • IShawhanBld, Washington St. SAMUEL M. GRAFF ATTORN EV-AT-LAVV Next to Bank of Seward SEWARD. - - ALASKA E. R. GRAY NOTARY PUBLIC SEWARD - - ALASKA H. H. HILDRETH NOTARY PUBLIC ano CONVEYANCER Abstracts of Title to mining and town property furnished—Examination and reiwrts made on any property. SEWARD - ALASKA FRANK H.LASCY U. S. MINERAL and LAND Surveyor for the District of Alaska. ano NOTARY PUBLIC Addres Seldovia, Cook Inlet, Alaska, or care Mail Aerent, Steamer Dora w. j. STONE ^ Architect SEWARD - - - ALASKA