Search America's historic newspaper pages from 1756-1963 or use the U.S. Newspaper Directory to find information about American newspapers published between 1690-present. Chronicling America is sponsored jointly by the National Endowment for the Humanities external link and the Library of Congress. Learn more
Image provided by: Alaska State Library Historical Collections
Newspaper Page Text
SEWARD GATEWAY PUBLISHED WEEKLY BY GATEWAY PUBLISHING CO. Holered as Second Class mutter August Jlth. at the postofHee at Seward. Alaska, un* der the Act of Congress of March S. lS7v> SUBSCRIPTION RATES On« Year (In Advance' S3.00 Si* Month* ... SI.50 Kusiom oflii'P -l'l Alworth Huiiiiiutf. Ouluth. Minnesota. 1'ha^. U aut»iori/»*«l .i^rni SATURDAY. SKI'TKMRKR 1">. l‘.HW. MIGHT BE ACCOMMODATING The Alaska Uoast Company seems to have adopted the business motto of the late unlamented William H. Vander bilt, “The pub c >e damned. -VI* ;bouirh it lias a monopoly of the inside passage business to Southern Alaska i: carries paper mail only once a month. It is true that the contract calls for only one ma d a tnontl but as t he company carries all of it theta* is no reason w hy it should not allow it to be carried on both steamers. A re at many people living in the westward towns are trout Southeastern Alaska and subscribe for the papers published there. Inasmuch as all this paper mail is, or can be. placed in closed pouches at Juneau no reason exists why the steamer Bertha should rot brine half of t. instead of leaving it all to accumulate for a month to be. brought by the Portland. The only work involved ' in carry in.if a few sacks oit board and throw ing them off. There s no obligation on the com pany to do this except to accommodate the people who furnish its business. : it it could show thereby that there is :a Seattle como-at'.on which is not holly inoculatee. w th flu* Seattle - .rit of skinnir.- - - rythinif in si-ht. MUST ANNEX CUBA «>ut of one of tin's*1 chapters of Cuban » stress will comi* annexation to the Cniten Staff1'. Probably it will not come through tie present fit" but s' me time it must take place. The Cnited States dts's not need Cuba but t'uba is dependent upon the Cnited "fates and the big republic ha> the tile island nuisancp on its hands. ie only way to regulate this back y trd annoyance A to place it under, American law Cuban annexa,:.on bus been manifest * stiny for decades and so recognized by American statesmen. The oppor-. ■ tnity was almost ripe in the last i than rebellion against Spain if an awkward squad of frothy politicians o id yullow journalists had not rushed Cnited States nto premature in tervention. Then to make a worse nrvs^ of it congress perpetrated the unshakable imbecility of pledging the vumtry never to annex the island Fortunately the American government is not bound either by international law or common sense to pay any atten t on to this cheap grand stand play. Then it gels ready to annex Cuba the >i» will iff done for Cuba's own salvu t ion. « Many r.ewspap* : s and some promi nent educators r gard Andy < amegie’s spelling reform with disfavor. The Chicago Chronicle prints a cartoon showing that the new spelling origi nated with .h sh Hillings and that Car negie is only a plagiarist after all. \n impression seen,' Tt» prevail that he accumulation o; enormous wealth, by illegal freight rebates doe* not necessarily qualify a man to be an in structor in philology. The \ aklf /. Prospector is disposed lo ) >ok critically u|x>n the ambition of : ward to bid for the trade of the Ueynokls mines at Uoulder bay and Hand]<>ck bay atm inquires how the goods are to be taken to the mines. Hat Prospector, they will In* taken to the docks on steamers as they are tom other places, until Valdez cuts out competition with airships direct to the mines. _ Several Cuban congressmen are in ail, which shows that the island re public is more progressive than the United States. This country has a lot of congressmen who ought to be in jail but they art* permitted to run at large anil hustle for re-election. The cable news brings the import ant information that Seattle prohibi tionists nominated a full legislative ticket. The ••full" part of it is the only thing that makes the story inter esting to Alaska. It is time to advertise for Leslie M. Shaw. He hasn't been heard from since the Iowa republican convention sat down on the stand-patters. It won’t worry Bryan to hear that the Southern democra ts don’t like his olatform. He knows he has their votes corralled anyway. The suicide of Mr. Hippie of Penn sylvania seems to prove that it is about as unlucky a name as Mitchell. This General Guerrera of Cuba didn’t start a revolution merely to get to be a delegate to a peace convention. JAPANESE TURNED LOOSE The last butch of Japanese brought in from the I’ribilof islands because they had the hardihood to call in there for water, were turned loose by the r. S. district attorney when they readied Valdez. There was no evi dence that they were poachers when they were arrested, but the agent in charge at St. George island, overbur dened with zeal and understocked with (trains, gathered them in on sus picion. It is now up to the I’nited States government to apologize to the Japanese government. This agent at St. George islund is so fresh that lie ought to In* pickled in brine, as the salt sea breezes which fan him from four quarters seem in sufficient to prevent the contents of his lira in-pan from fermenting with the heat of official authority. He pulled the captain, and four fishermen off a little schooner .and sent them at con siderable expense to \ aide/.. 1 lie schooner disappeared and now the only way to square the blunder is for the federal government to send the men home in a naval vessel at still more* expense, apologize and perhaps pay damages. It may he highly important to pro tect the seals in the interest of the rich corporation which lias a monopoly of their daughter but Tncle Sam ought to have agents in charge with too much sense to kill subjects of a friendly power on suspicion ot simple trespass. __ A Muall suction of revolution has started in Russia again and once more hot It parties sidestepped the main is-.ue to engage in a massacre of the JeWS. ^ This Hryan-Sullivan debate logins j to lo<>k i ke perpetual motion a- Sulli van appears to be a pretty good single handed polemic himself. The Cuban revolution is becoming! hlomh. i >ne man was killed the other day. WRITING UP ALASKA Outside Papers and Magazines Now (living Notice to the Territory Alaska is getting more space in out-j side newspapers and magazines each year and even the Atlantic coast publi-1 rations have discovered that it furn :slit's an interesting theme. The staid Springfield Republican in its Sunday edition of August 12 devotes a full pag. to tlie territory, with a map and illustrations. The particular topic is Alaska railroads, and the writer, whose name is not given, shows Tamil- j iarity with his subject. A great deal I :>f space is given to the Alaska Central j arid Seward. An excellent three rolumn cut of the town is given. The Washington Magazine, pub :ished in Seattle, in the July number has an article on "Alaska affairs’ by losrph K. Smith, a clever newspaper j writer who once lived in Southeastern 1 Al aska. He also devotes his article j particularly to railroads in the terri tory and gives extended notice to the Alaska Central and to Seward. NOME BEGINS TO NOTICE Miners of Northern Camp Make In quiries About the Y entna. Nome miners have begun to sit up and take notice of the Y entna district, j Several inquiries have come to Seward men lately from acquaintances in the 1 t-. •!. n camp, where opportunities are steadily becoming more limited | . xcept to men with big money. In the last mail L. F. Shaw received a | letter from a Nome friend stating that 1 miners there are becoming much in-, terested in the reports from the Y'ent-j na. He asked for all the information; obtainable, saying* that a reasonable assurance that the Yentna is a promts ing Held will bring hundreds of miners from Nome t* the new district. Mr. Shaw i> correspondent for the j Nome Nugget and in his last letter to I that paper gave a long1 and detailed account of the situation in the Yentna region. The Nome papers have been regularly printing a great deal about the Y'ent na. copied from the Gateway, so that a great deal is already known there of the district. TANANA MAN LIKES YENTNA Says All New Gold District Needs Is Miners to Sink Holes. Kahiltna. Aug. 2S - Correspondence of the Gateway- J. R. McGovern, a mining man of Dawson and the Tanana. has taken a trip through the upper tribu taries of the Kahiltna. Lake creek and Tokositna. He says the country looks better to him than the Tanana country did three years ago. All the country needs, says Mr. McGovern, is some good miners to sink holes, 't here are very few holes sunk and hardly any to bedrock. The little work being done in that vast country is in the upper end of the creeks and that is carried on in a primitive way. Mr. McGovern is coming back this fall with a large outfit to cache at the head of navigation, and will spend the winter in the country. Mr. McGovern says he saw W. Wade and wife with three pack horses camped on a little lake near the head of the Tokositna. The lake they had named Lady Wade lake. They were traveling westward. SULLIVAN HITS BACK AT BRYAN Illinois Politician Raises Issue of Veracity With Democratic Leader. By Cable to The Daily Gateway. Now York, Sept. 8 Roger C. Sulli van replied todav to Bryan’s speech in Chicago, attacking him. Ho says the speech means that Ihyan would rather have his own way than to have a dem ocrat. elected president. Sullivan then takes up the specific charges made against him by Bryan, denying each separately. He denies that Bryan ever wrote to him person ally asking his resignation from the national committee. He denies that ; Bryan has letters from 500 delegates | to the St. Louis convention of 1!HH I repudiating Sullivan. He denies that Bryan has received statements repu diating Sullivan from half the dele gates in the recent state convention at | Springfield, as claimed by Bryan. The offer is made by Sullivan to sub mit the charges and evidence to the chief justice of the supreme court of Illinois, J. H. Cartwright, a democrat, as referee. He proposes if Judge Cartwright finds after a full canvass of the delegates of both conventions that Bryan’s statements are true that he will retire from the national commit tee: but demands also that, if Judge Cartwright finds that Bryan's state ments are untrue then Bryan shall an nounce his retirement as a candidate for the democratic presidential nomi nation. Sullivan closes his letter with the challenge, ‘‘Please call the roll." Alaska Magazine in Boston The Boston Alaskan issued its llrst number in August of this year. It is published monthly by the Bo$ton Alaskan society at -7 State street in that city. Kx-Gov. Brady is president of the society. The first number of the Alaskan carries on all of its sixteen pages well written articles concerning the territory. It is printed on heavy paper, which permits excellent im pressions of cuts. Bee Man Lost but Bees Remain Late arrivals from Tyoonok report that the bee man, Morrell Warren, left his bees iu Tyoonok late in the spring and disappeared up the ‘Su^itnu valley. Since then he has not been heard of. The bees are fighting for existence with the voracious ants which infest the locality, and are get-j ting the worst of it. The ants crawl I into the hives, chew the honey and the | bees also. SEWARD STEAMERS Oregon: sailed from Seattle Sth Portland: sailed from Seattle 10th. Santa Ana: sails from Seattle 10th. Bertha: sailed for Seattle 0th. Santa Clara: sailed for Seattle 10th. Dora sailed westward loth. WEEKLY WlATIUK RECORD Wealliet record for the week ending September 14: TKMI’KKAITUK. Max. Min. Saturday 00 47 Clear Sunday 70 44 Bain Monday 70 17 Bain Tuesday oil 4i Bain Wednesday ;>s 4»> t lear Thursday 7.7 44 Bain Frida v .»s 4*» Pi cloudy — You become independent when you j establish a system of spending less than you make not until then, (let something ahead. Uemember it’s the j dollar you do not spend that does it. BANK OF SKWABP. SEWARD PLUMBING & HEATING COMPANY J. W. SPENCER, Proprietor Basement of New Halo Bldg ST. CHARLES EVAPORATED CREAM is superior to the best ordiqprv cream for any purpose. For many purposes it is indispensable—the feeding of in fants, for instance, and of invalids. For making ice-cream, confections, desserts, etc., is unequalled. It brings out the aroma of coffee and the flavor of chocolate better than ordinary cream. It nerver curdles. Its use is economical It is always pure. When you use St. Charles Cream you take Handsome booklet of valuable In formation to mothers and nurses sent F R & £ upon application. Sold by TOtJt Groctrj ExJtrytvhtre. ST. CHARLES CONDENSING CO.. St. Charles. III. BRYAN ROASTS SULLIVAN AGAIN 9 Says “You Can Expect That Kind of Attack From That Kind of People. By Cable to Tbe Dolly Gateway. Lincoln, Nob., Sept. 10—“You can expect that kind of an attack from that kind of people,” is the wa.v Mr. Bryan disposes of Roger C. Sullivan’s statement regarding Bryan's criticisms in his Chicago speech. Mr. Bryan denies lie ever said that he wrote to Sullivan asking the lat ter’s resignation from the national committee. He says what he did say was that lie wrote to Judge Thompson a demand that Sullivan resign, and asked Thompson to show the letter to Sullivan. Notes Show He Said It Chicago, Sept. 10 — The notes of Bryan’s recent speech in this city show lie said that he wrote to Sullivan ask ing him to resign. Bryan Issues Formal Reply Lineoln, Neb., Sept. 14 Bryan’s reply to Sullivan was given out for publication today. He refuses Sulli van’s offer to leave the dispute be tween them to a referee. Mr. Bryan says he cannot arrange for a with drawal of his name as a presidential candidate because he has not an nounced himself as a candidate. Be refuses to leave the question of Sulli van's election as national committee man from Illinois to the delegates in the convention because the convention has adjourned. Bryan says he will leave Sullivan to tight out the issue with the democratic party of Illinois in the future. Will N'ieltl on Railroad Plank liOuisville, Sept. U—In his speech at the armory last nj^fht Mr. Bryan said that while he was in favor of govern ment ownership of railroads he had never yet sought to force anything on the voters of the democratic party. He said the question of the party’s attitude on the subject is wholly in the hands of the democratic voters and no platform is yet made. Mr. Bryan’s reception was a volcanic eruption of enthusiasm. Henry Wat terson introduced him. saying. “Here he is. May God bless him and give him wisdom Oppose Government Ownership Richmond, Ya., Sept. 10—Southern democrats in congress cannot swallow Bryan's proposition for government ownership of railroads. John Sharpe Williams, minority leader in the house, says the south is unalterably opposed to the project. Nevertheless he asks that the democratic press j make no parade of democratic ditTer encos on party platform. Opposes Bryan’s Railroad Plan Louisville, Ky., Sept. 14 -Through the editorial columns of the Courier Journal Henry Watterson reiterates opposition to Bryan’s demand for gov ernment ownership of railroads. He says the remedy is worse than the disease and that the evils of railroad management can be cured by legisla- ; lion. Bryan to Mump .Nebraska Lincoln, Neb., Sept. 11 Mr. Bryan announces that after bis return from his southern tour he will stump Nebraska and several other northern states. He says the result of the Nebraska election this year will have an influence on the national campaign j in 1908. Bryan Speaks at St. Louis St. Louis, Sept. 12—Twelve thousand people greeted William «T* Bryan in the Coliseum last night. In his speech he said it would be better to trust democratic principles to the demo cratic party than to a man who is re pudiated by his own party for indors ing them. He declared that President Roosevelt's tight on popular issues was taken from demands made in the democratic platform of 1904, ‘‘which planks 1 wrote myself,” staid Bryan. BOUND FOR THE YENTNA Men Outfitting Every Day to Go to the District Before Winter Men are outfitting every day in Seward to go to the Yentna district. Several sailed on the steamer Bertha for Seldovia, and a dozen will go on the Dora. Brown & Hankins and T. D. Corlew announce that the demand for prospectors’ supplies has again be come an important factor in their business after a midsummer lapse. Prospectors can go up the Yentna river with their supplies until late in October. The freeze-up is liable to come any time after October 20. Water travel will then cease .but' in a short time the river will be frozen solid and the easiest kind of winter traveling will be available until the snow gets deep, which will not be until Decem ber. Sleds and footmen can go in all winter but deep, fresh snow occasion ally makes traveling difficult. i THE BEST f ARE THE CHEAPEST Why buy any ohl 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 (arharttOverallt D. C. BROWNELL THE ONLY EXCLUSIVE Hardware Store THE SEWARD LIGHT AND POWER COMPANY (Incorporated November, 1905, under the laws of Alaska) Office Next to Bank of Seward. Seward, Alaska THE PALACF Clark & Co. Fine Line of Wines, Liquors and Cigars CATE IN CONNECTION. THE LOUVRE EIDSON & DODSON Proprietors A Gentleman’s Resort. Cold Dust Bought _ Cor. Fifth and Washington streets Seward, Alaska WAGNER’S PLACE I FRED WAGNER. Proprietor WINES, LIQUORS AND CIGARS A (lood/Time and Right Treatment for Everyone Our Brand “WEIGHT GUARANTEED" When you see a tent set up look at the brand and it is a safe bet it was made by us. THERE MUST BE A REASON, j Seattle Tent and Awning Co. i Our goods are on sale by all reliable merchants in this neck o'woods. We m&ke mining hose of all kinds | Seward Bakery Opposite Postoffice Fresh home-made Bread. Pies and Cakes every day. Whole Wheat, Graham, Rye Bread and Pompernickle al ways on hand. C. WERNER, Proprietor G. W. PALMER GENERAL MERCHANDISE Prospector's Outfits—High est Prices Paid for Furs. .. Knik P. O. Alaska 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 GAWLEY FOUNDRY l MACHINE WORKS Tacoma, Washington. U. S. A. Founders, Machinists, Blacksmiths. Designers and Builders of Sawmill Machinery, Wood Working Machinery, Marine Machinery and Steamhoists. 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