BLUEJACKETS ' LAND IN CUBA Palma Said He Could Not Protect Americans and 120 Marines Went Ashore. UNITED STATUS HOLDS VLOOL Administration Orders Armed Men Back to Cruiser t uept Small Guard for legation. By Cable to The Dally Gateway. Havana. Sept. I*-—tine hundred and i twenty armed >atlor> and mat im - landed last night from the cruiser lK-nver and camped in front of 1‘resi dent 1‘alma's palace. This action was taken following a conference in which Palma told the American minister j terests in the city. State Department Explains Wa-homton. D. C., Sept. H The ,tate department issued a statement tom the Denver had been ordered tack to the cruiser except a small guard for the American legation. The | >tatemonr n:ost emphatically affirms that the landing was for no other pur pose than the protection of American ntetvsts and that the administration wa> not advised of the action until after the landing was made. The navy department today ordered a fleet of small war vessels to prepare to sail for Cuban waters. It is not the intention, however, to land any more j marines unless rioting begins which will call for the protection of Ameri cans and American property. The United States government has no in tention of taking sides. It is merely preparing to care for American lives and property. May Send U. S. Army Washington, I>. C., Sept. b"» The whole regular army of the l nited States is held in readiness for trans portation to Cnba at a moment’s notice, although the administration acknowl edges that it "ill not interfere in Cuban affairs unless the situation there makes intervention necessary to pre vent anarchy in the island. It is re garded as certain that intervention would drag the I'nited States into a worse war than that with Spain. It is estimated that rebels are now in the field and their number is increasing daily. The United States government will keep several war ves sels near the Cuban coast. The cruis er Denver reached Havana yesterday and the gunboat Marietta arrived in Cienfuegos. The Des Moines remains at Key West. United States Watching Closely Washington, D. C.. Sept. 12 It is admittoi by the administration that the cruiser Des Moines has gone to Key West, awaiting the course of events in Cuba. It is the intention to employ the vessel as an asylum for Americans in case conditions arise which threaten the safety of Ameri cans in the island. The president is keeping in close touch with Cuba by wire and the government is prepared to take instant action whenever needed. SAYS HERNDON TOOK OUT $93 PER MAN ONE DAY T. J. Jeter Writes That Miners on Kahiltna Creeks Nearly All Have Ounce Diggings. Herndon's men on Nugget creek took out #'3 per man in one day's work recently, according to a letter written by T. J. Jeter to Judge Hil dreth. just received this week. That was above the average but Jeter says the ground is yielding marvelously. Mr. Jeter is on Thunder creek and says In- i> taking out at least an ounce a day. He confirm* the reports brought down from the upper Kahiltna creeks as to what different miners are doing and says that nearly all of those w ho are working claims where any thing has been found are getting an ounce a day or better. The men on Poor Man's creek, he says, are getting from three to four ounces a day. Home-grown celery with stems two feet long. i* on the Dawson market. It was raised in the open air. The Indianapolis Sun says that school teachers are paid less than un skilled laborers in Indiana. FIGHTING AGAIN ON CUBAN SOIL Government Troops Meet Rebels in Battle Twenty Miles From Havana. By Cable to The Dally Gateway. Havana. Sept. 13 Fighting is again in progress in Dinar del Kio and Santa t iara provinces. A battle was fought vesterduy twenty miles south of Havana. More castle today signaled the ar rival ol the I’nited State", cruiser Denver. (Treat excitement prevails among the populace and the docks are crowded. Many people are trying to leave the cit\ and other'remain there to hear the news from the water, t on ditions in the capital grow more men acing every hour. The insurgents are blowing up the railroad bridges near Havana and railroad tratlicto and Irom the city is suspended. Rebels Defeat Government Troops Pa*o Heal. Sept. 1" Gen. Guerrera. leader of the insurgent army in Guhn. attacked a government train near here vcsteniay ami a pitched battle ensued with the government troops who were yuardiuj? the train, Gne ot tlie lattei was killed ahd six wounded. Guerrera is now tuarehiny toward Havana. , MARTIAL LAW RULES IN CUBA Palma Suspends Constitution in Havala, Pinar del Rio and Santa Clara. By Cnble to Tbe Daily aatcwiy. Havana. Sept. 11 President Palma j today suspended the constitution and proclaimed martial law in the provinces of Havana. Pinar del Kio and Santa Plant, lie also revoked the order made a few days ayo yrantiny amnesty to all who laid down their arms, and ordered the arrest of every revolu tionist and of every prominent liberal. The peace conference adjourned this mornitiy and most ol the members joined the revolutionists. Several liberal congressmen are in jail and the others have fled from the city. Rebels Surround Havana Havana, Sept. 12 Bands of rebels surround Havana and people living in the outskirts are begging for protec tion from the government. Only boo troops-are in the city. They paraded the streets yesterday but aroused no enthusiasm. Popular sentiment seems to be in different to the fate of the government and tin* Palma administration is re pressing open opposition. The editor of t he Liberal was arrested today and hi> newspaper plant coniiscated. No vehicles are -permitted to leave the city. _ Havana Much Alarmed Havana, Sept. 10—It is retorted to day that a iarge revolutionary force is concentrating in the outskirts of the city and preparing for attack. The people are greatly excited and the general alarm is augmented by all sorts of wild rumors, one of which is that the rebels have confederates in the city who are planning to make a prisoner of President Palma. Guerrera Standing Pat Havana, Sept. 8—Gen. Guerrera, leader of the insurgent forces, refuses to consider any peace propositions un less the Palma government will agree to annurthe last presidential election and call a new one. The insurgents have 3000 men in the field, well armed upd equipped. Guerrera refuses to I agree to an armistice of ten days pend ing peace negotiations. It is beieved ' he will precipitate a battle very soon. Steamer Dora Sails Westward Steamer Dora arrived on her west j ward trip Sunday night and sailed next i morning at 10 o'clock. She was crowded to the limit with passengers and was obliged to leave freight on the j Seward dock, which was left by the I Santa Clara to be taken to Seldovia. It was turned over to the Toledo. Japan proposes to subsidize a steam ship line from Dalny. Manchuria, to North Pacific ports on the American side. MASSACRE IN i POLISH TOWN Terrorists Attack Soldiers at Sied lee and Troops Retaliate on Jews. GENERAL SLAUGHTER FOLLOWS Hundreds of Hebrews Murdered and Mutilated Bodies Left Lying in the Streets. By Cable to Tlic Dally Gateway. Siodlee. Poland. Sept. 10 Terrorists attacked the police and soldiers on ji’uard here yesterday, killing several. The t roups were re-in forced and made an attack on the Jewish quarter, slaughterin'; all, including women and children. The streets are reported to Ik- running in blood and the town is in llauies. Jews Panic-stricken Warsaw, Sept, lo Jewish residents of this city are panic-stricken at the news from Seidlee. They realize that a general terrorist attack may l*e made an excuse for a wholesale massa cre of their race bv all factions. Slaughter of Jews Continues St. Petersburg, Sept. 11 The massa cre of Jews at Siedlee continues, (low Kngelke demanded the names of the members of the Jewish self-defense association but the Jews refused to give tiie information. The slaughter was then renewed with in creased violence. Soldiers and the rabble alike are engaged in the massacre. All the rioters are drunk and are committing unspeakable outrages, women and children being made victims wher ever found. Frightful scenes are be ing enacted but details are suppressed by the censor. Describe Seidlee Massacre Warsaw. Sept. 12 Newspaper cor respondents from this city who have gone to Seidlee report that the slaughter of Jews was horrible beyond descript ion. J n one st reet t hey counted l.*»0 mutilated Jewish corpses. Many houses were riddled with bullets and Jewish shops were looted and burned. It i* related that a crowd of drunken soldiers invaded a hospital and fired upon the wounded Jews who had been taken there, killing several. Other appalling scenes are described. VEGETATION THRIVES IN CENTRAL ALASKA VALLEYS Cereals and Tubers Mature Well and Wild Fruits and Flowers (irow in Profusion. Kahiltna, Aug. 28—The spontaneous growth of hardy wild vegetation and ! experiments made with agricultural products show that great jiossibilities exist for profitable cultivation of the soil in the valleys* of Central Alaska. Although the season is short the long hours of sunshine cause vegetation to grow and ripen at an extraordinary rate. The climate of the interior is ! warmer and the season longer than around Cook inlet. On June 15 I planted some seeds here to test the fertility of the soil. It was then rather late in the season but the barley is now matured, the crats in the milk and the beans growing well. I' believe any kind of crop could be raised in the Yentna valley. At Susitnu station last year F. A. Churchill planted potatoes early in May and raised a splendid crop. Through this region many species of wild flowers bloom in profusion: red raspberries, currants and cranberries fire now ripe, and wild birds of many descriptions are numerous. The land for about 100 miles north from Cook inlet is low, of a gla i cial sedimentary formation, with an I occasional glacier gravel bank running sixty or eighty feet high as the foot hills of the Alaskan range are ap proached. All gravel in the river bars carries gold, varying from colors, along the lower ends, to coarser gold as higher elevation is reached. Extending from the mouth of the Yentna to the foothills, or about eighty miles, there is a dense growth of ■ spruce, birch, cottonwood and alder. It is common to see spruce trees two and a half feet in diameter and twenty feet to the first limbs. Birch will run as large as two feet. The prices of all metals continue 1 stiff. / GOV. HOGGATT VISITS SEWARD Welcomed by Citizens’ Commit tee and Taken out on Railroad Line. — EVENING RECEPTION IN TOWN Large Number of Citizens Meet Territorial Executive in Club Rooms. Gov. lloggatt reached Seward last Saturday morning on the revenue cutter McCulloch and was met by a committee of citizens. Deli ('larks band was at the dock also to give the executive of the territory a musical greeting. Arrangements had already been made to run a special train to the end of tlie Alaska Central track in order to show the governor the results m> far accomplished in railroad con struction. The train started from town about '.CIO with Gov. fioggatt. several rail road officials, the officers, sailors and marines of the revenue cutter, and a large number of citizens aboard. The train returned late in the afternoon. The railroad excursion was directed by President Ramsay of the Tanana Railway Construction Company. An ample supply of refreshments was taken along. A foamal reception was given in honor of Gov. lloggatt in the rooms of the Kenai cluband Arctic Brotherhood Saturday evening. It was managed by the ladies, to whom the task was assigned by tin* men because most of the male population went out on the excursion to the end of the railroad line. The excursion was strictly a stag party. The evening reception was given both to honor tlie governor i>e > i ,•* the Judies am; everybody else an opportunity to meet him. Capt. Cantwell and other officers of the rev enue cutter McCulloch were present. After an hour spent in introductions Dr. Gibbons read a poem dedicated to the governor. In response to insistent demand Gov. lloggatt then made a short speech. This was followed by dancing. Music was furnished by Mr. Shankland on the violin and Ernest Hyde on the pitino. A stock of claret punch with champagne trifhmings was compounded by Jack Deyo and served by the ladies^ Governor lloggatt sailed for Valdez on the McCulioch early Sunday morning. MINERS BRING GOLD FROM KECHATNA RIVER Three Prospectors Come Out With Dust and Will Go Back With Winter Outfit. Kahiltna, Aug. 28—Correspondence of the Gateway—G. Keller, Ben Fish and O. Heiseter have returned from the north. During the past two months they have prospected the Ke chatna river, going nearly to the source, where they located claims. The boys say the country looks good to them. The samples of gold they bring with them from their claims would certainty look good to any one. They intend to sled in a supply of pro visions next winter and develop their property next summer. The Keehatna Hows into the right limit of the Yentna river about thirty miles above here and is about seventy five miles long. Puts Lake creek at 3>/uuu Henry Anderson, manager of the King River Mining Company, which is putting in a hydraulic plant at the lower end of Lake creek, estimates that $7000 will be taken from the bars of the creek by individual miners. Caswell Running Again. The river stoamer Caswell, which was caught in a storm while taking on coal below Tyoonok, sustaining some i damage, has been repaired and is again on her run on the Yentna. On August 22 she called in here and took on the .\L E. Davis drilling outfit for Hope. The drill reached the upper end of the claims, stopping at a glacier bank about four miles up the Kahiltna river, it is understood that the dredger which is toTollow will commence oper ations at that point in the spring. The city of Budapest, the capital of Hungary, will unveil a statue of George Washington September 16. Whales are numerous off the Colum bia river bar lately, according to the Portland Telegram. TO BUILD ROAD FROM KENAI i At Request of Alaska Commis sion Railroad Sends tn^i neers To Make Survey. At the request of Capt. Hillsbury of tne Alaska road commission a prelimi nary survey for a government road from Kenai to reach the Alaska Cen tral will be made by the railaoud com pany. \V. A. Keel, of the Alaska < 'en tral engineering corps, and Jerome | llatchey sailed on the steamer Dora to j go to Kenai and begin the survey from 11 here. Capt. I’illsbury cabled a few days ago to know whether the railroad officials would be willing to undertake the sua* I vey, and an estimate of the co>t was I promptly cabled buck. The request ' that the‘work Vie done came back yes terday and the men were ;it once de tailed. Mr. Keel is the engineer who re cently investigated and reported on a trail from Hope and Sunrise to the railroad. He recommended the im provement of the Johnson creek trail from Sunrise. *i’he trail front Kenai i> j expected to lead along Turnagain Arm | to Hope. SAYS MARINES WERE MISUSED Admiral Evans Complains of Treatment of His Men in Portland, Maine. By Cable to The Daily Gateway. Washington, D. Sep . 14— Admi ral Evans writes to the navy depart ment that sailors and marines of the North Atlantic fleet wen clubbed by the police and refused admission into places of amusement because they wore the naval uniform while in Port i land, Maine, recently. legislation for the protection of the navy blue jackets on land is 'urged bv Evans and he expresses the hope that his command may never be required again to visit cities which treat the men as they were treated in Portland. Dust from the Skwentna Kahiltna, Aug. 2&-(’orrespondence of the Gateway—W. E. Lennox and A. W. Purdy, who have been on the Skwentna river this summer, have gone down the river, carrying with them two modest pokes of bright gold. Mr. Lennox is one of the old timers, hoving lived in Alaska continuously for 18 years, and is a well known hunt er, trapper and prospector. He goes to Anchor point, where he located a homestead three years ago. Both Lennox and Purdy intend to return this fall to the Mt. McKinley country and take up their quarters in the foot hills for the season’s trapping. Guggenhelms Buy Heavily A Dawson dispatch says: The Gug genheims have begun buying Hunter creek claims. Already they have 90 per cent of Bonan/.a creek and are about to take over Lovett gulch. All this means the expenditure of millions in the purchase price alone. The com pany is building a giant water system to hydraulic the hills and installing fifty miles of electric line to convey power from Twelve-mile river to Bonanza, where three big dredges are being assembled. Alaska Farm Sells for $30,000 The Yukon Valley News reports the sale of a farm at Baker creek hot springs for $30,000. It was owned by Dad Karshner and sold to Frank Man ley, a Fairbanks mining man. The warmth from the subterranean springs causes vegetation to grow at a marvel ous rate while the surrounding country is still frostbound, and the practical results of summer are evident four months longer than in other localities of the district. Nearly $10,000 wort! of vegetables was sold from it last year. __ Convict Jap Poachers Five Japanese poachers, arrested at St. Paul island, pleaded guilty in the U. S. district court at Valdez. Severa others were tried and found guilty, One jury hung but the second con victed the men after deliberating thirty hours. L. V. Ray of Seward J. Y. Ostrander and .1. W. Leedy o: Valdez, defended the Japanese. GETTING GOLD ON KAHILTNA Each Report of Output on Upper Creeks Adds to Previous Estimate of Yield. ONE MAN BRINGS OUT $I7l Miners Working Steadily in Produc ing Region fxcept Those Who leave for Supplies. Kahiltna. Any. IP < bi t • :!' ■ of the Gateway Reports hum tii>■ p|r creeks, which are cor ny l most daily, indicate that ih>- yob ,, I put of tlie Kahiltna f -k. to* ti | season will b< laryer than h i- '•< ! anticipated. The men at work app> 1 to he doiny better al t lie •; > >. lulyar Davis cam'1 dow; .nu I creeks a few days ayo a * ' . I here from the Inlet today on W o >. | launch, the I lat. with two '■»; - i visions which he will each here sled up the river next wint< r. Mr. Davis yives data ot op-•••■.it: in his vicinity this stitnim r. IF operatiny on Thunder anti Frl- e; t. which How into the Kahikn ... brouyht out --^1 Too. Hilly Peterson, ou Tliund« . ' >ok ■ o nine ounces in seven days. Due. if* - don. on Nuyyet. ha- taken o il a- 1..: ’• as £s0 per day to the man. On Pool Man's creek ('one.Iluddleson and < -.w son took out forty-oiyht ounce, in ibn days. Carl-on. on Peters creek. b* low the canyon, istakiny out one ouno per day. Gus. Peters i- workiny on Do lar creek and takiny out about ore ounce per day. Kherhart is workin. on Falls creek and takiny out yo< money. Gadiyan and Hammersmith, on Falls creek are takiny out H I to '*-•» per day. Dick Richardson is workii . on Cache. Thunder and Xu y yet cm and domy well. COPPER DEVELOPMENT IN PRINCE WILLIAM SOUND V Bxtensive Prospecting Done I his Ve.i and Active Work in Progress flany Places. Copper developments around lVinc William sound are multiplying a g. metrical ratio. Extensive prospectin and locating have been done durie. the present summer, induced by ti favorable results of development work, and it is the opinion of mining experts that the copper deposits in the island* and shores of the Sound are of incalcu lable extent and value. This summer the Reynolds mine a' Boulder bay has been added to the li* of producers and another Reynolds property on Latouche island will soon bo a shipping mine. This and other properties near the famous Beat son mine indicate that Latouche island is nearly all copper. Knight island is believed by the mining men who have examined 'ft to be a copper bonanza. Copper lodes of good value have been found in all parts of the island and a great many claims have been located this season. Considerable development work has been done also and every effort in that line has been rewarded with an excel lent showing. Various promising claims have been bonded to eastern capital. On both sides of Mummy bay, at the southern extremity of the island, cop per sticks out every where. The Iver son brothers are driving a tunnel on a lode which carries copper value of * > a ton and has the appearance of being very extensive. On the opposite side of the bay three Seward men, E. R Gray, W. M. Sauers and E. E. Hale, recently located a ledge and brought specimens of the surface rock back with them which assayed $13 a ton. Other islands of the Sound have been prospected less, but copper indica tions are visible on all of them, as well as on the mainland on both sides of the Sound. On the eastern shore is the great Ellamar mine, which has been shipping for several years. A wide copper belt, beginning at the southern end of Kenai peninsula, ap parently embraces the whole area of Prince William sound, extending northeasterly to the far interior. Copper outcroppings are found almost at random throughout this belt. The Circle City commissioner’s dis ■ trict has been divided by Judge Wiek ersham. The new district is called ' Chandler and the commissioner is Samuel L. Marsh.