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SEWARD GATEWAYi PUBLISH!D WLtKLY BY GATEWAY PUBLISHING CO. Knteml as Second Class matter August 2Ltb. I**, at the postofflco at Seward. Alaska, un der the Act of Congress of March K. 1ST3. SIBSCRIPTION RATES On* Yaar (In Advance) * * 33 Six Month* ,l-80 Kastorn offlce 312 Alworth Build ink'. Ouluth. i Minnesota. Chas. H. Axko. authorized akViit. , SATURDAY. CKTOHKR ' FOUND A REAL RAILROAD It was a happy thought of President Kara say of the Tanunu Railway Con struction Company to induce nearly « \erybody in town to go to the end of the track on an excursion to see what tKe Alaska Centra! has done and is doing in railroad construction. Strange it may seetn half of Seward s busi ness men knew nothing of the railroad line beyond the lakes except by hear ty. What they saw on the excursion trij» was a revelation to them anti they came back with a firmer belief in the destiny of Seward anti in the reality of the Alaska Central. The excursion convinced doubters that the railroad company intends to build to the interior a> rapidly as men and money can do the work. It dem onstrated that there is to be no '•hut ting down of construction anti pre sented clearly to the eyes of men who did not fully understand l>ecause they had not seen, that the cessation of track laying for half a year was due i solely to the great natural obstacles necessary to hr overcome in getting a 1’ i>er cent grade down a I per cent \ diey ami boring nearly 4000 feet of i tnnels to penetrate a narrow canyon. The ownership of the new Fairbanks! daily, the Miner, absorbed the News, aiui now publishes both papers from the same plant, the Miner in the morning and the News in the evening. The first issue of tin* Miner contained twenty-four pages ami carried 1 *-*— inches o paid advertising. The regu lar edition has eight pages, six col umns. The 1 veiling News has four pages, seven columns. President .los< ph F. Smith has been arrested ln*ca .»e one of his wiv s has presented him with his forty-third child in the midst of this crusade against race suicide. Maybe Ftah thinks L\J enough for one man. Maybe the czar will get used to ter rorists in his household just as a Cen tral American resident gets used to finding tarantulas in his bed and won’t mind them a> long as they don t get him. _ The .laps don't u ant to get too gay with Une'e Sam or they will find that his uavd gunners can shoot straight#!* l ban the czar's. When the }■ r• 'sale;it tvfus. d a rap kin at table or. !■ rd the battleship Missouri . • s • doubt with the \iewot respecting Missouri customs. Taft se. .s a I heavy enough o SOLVING P303LEV.5 The Faiib; ik- \Yu- -uy- tt an ed - toria): Th< (. >_gr! a- : - :itv u-t now pay ing in >■ < »r « \pe •itncm- which lit*?' will in- :: t:;oi’.* million- tor the Tanana. Their dive.’ - in the Dawson coun try have in ou< year taught the miner- - ti n c imp mureabout mining tl e f.« et* gtavel- of the north titan they had 1*ed in alt the years since tiie cat; p began. So far a- the Gug genheim.-ami t he r dredger.- are con cerned there <- no more frozen gravel. That quantity ha- eeased to Ik? an ob stacle and an expense. It ha- l>**en demonstrated that the dredge assimilates the frost-bitten pay st l eak as rapidly and painlessly as a kid doe- i blueberry pie. I’nele Hiram ploughing through the orchard couldn't make furrows faster than a Guggenheim dredge chewing its way] through the ice into the Klondike creek-. Strip the tundra, and running water does the rest, seems to be the formula. Reports by wire from the big camp up the river indicate that the process is entirely successful and that it has mad** of frozen gravels a problem no more serious or expensive than is t flawed ground. The Oregon Mining Journal has dis covered that "It is reported from Alaska sources, but not confirmed by any official statement, that tin* Hard man interests have taken over the Alaska Central railway, now under construction from Seward to the Tanana river." 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. Indian curios at the A. B. Drug Co., corner drug store. OUTLINE FIGHT IN NEW YORK Hughes and Hearst Each Makes j Declaration of Issues From Party Standpoint. By Cable to TUe Dally Gateway. New York, Oct. 4 -Charles K. Hughes delivered an address last night accepting the republican nomination for governor, in which he said the issue in the present state campaign is not partisan but that of decent govern ment. The question, he said, is whether the unholy alliance made at HutTalo which gave the democratic nomination to the candidate of the In dependence League shall capture the >tate. He asserted that the democratic management is depending for success j mainly upon noisy demonstrations. Hearst's letter to the Independence League accepting the League's nomi nation for governor was given out to day. It say s the question of the hour is to eradicate corporation control of government. which is now practically absolute. He promises to war for the extermination of Imsscs and to put in operation direct primaries for the nomination of candidates for office. | He also favors making the term of all public offices so short that the occu pants will not have time to become corrupt. Hearst says Hughes is simply a great corporation lawyer and that all his sympathies are with the corpora-1 lions. GASOLINE BOAT EXPLODES AND WOMAN IS CREMATED By Cable to The Dally Gateway. Seattle. Oct. 1 The gasoline J schooner Vera went on a bar at the j mouth of the straits yesterday after noon and was overturned. Her gaso line tank exploded and the schooner burned, cremating Mrs. Dick Schaupp. (i. A. RAMSAY TO LEAVE Head of Railway Construction Com pany Will Sail on Santa Clara Gordon A. Ramsay, president of the Tanana Railway Construction t om pany, who lias been studying the situ ation here for six week", will leave Seward on t^ie Santa Clara to return to his home in Chicago, lie has al ready remained much longer than he intended when In- came up on the Port land in August. During his stay Mr. Ramsay has led | a somewhat streuous ht<\ He has. spent a great deal of time on the rail-1 mad line, going as far as the Chicaloon j real fields. He has studied every mile ! of the railroad line a-, far as any work j has been done, and will be able to give j an accurate description of the road to j President Frost from his own personal i observations. Mr. Ramsay is a good “mixer and | although he is up here simply on busi-j ness he has formed as extensive a per-J M>nal acquaintance in Seward anil in , the railroad camps as a candidate for Santa Clara Arrives Su ar or Santa Clara arrived Tue-day r;m-n'u. :■) s o'clock from Seattle.1 Si. ■ ban . » ' > : - of livi-ht for Seward, tv - lies L’ i.o.M fe»*t of bridge timber for j tlx railroad. She -ailed westward at i 5 o'clock ■ *. the afternoon for SelUovia j and I’yak. (’apt. Schage expects to be gore to tlx- westward four days, as it will require twenty-four hours to load tlx canned -almon at I’yak. Accord in- to this calculation the Santa Clara ■ wii sail for Seattle from Seward Sat urday evening. S. A. Dice, of the engineering force at it*, is in town to make a trip to the states. He will visit his old home in Indiana and return to Seward in the spring. He ha> been with the Alaska Central for three years without a vacation. Handbills arriving on the Santa Clara announce that the steamer Cor win will sail from Nome October ,15. She i> booked to reach Seward Octo ber *Js;. _ SEWARD STEAMERS Santa Clara; sailed for Seldovia anil Uyak 2nd: due returning 6th. Bertha: sailed from Seattle 26th. Excelsior; arrived in Seattle 5th. Cortland: sdiled for Seattle 26th. Dora: sailed westward 10th. WEEKLY WEATHER RECORD Weathet record for the week ending 1 October 5: Temperature. Max. Min. i Saturday 57 42 Clear I Sunday 48 42 Rain 1 Monday 53 43 Cloudy Tuesday 54 43 Cloudy Wednesday 40 42 Rain Thursday 56 i>4 Ft. Cloudy Friday 51 38 Clear Sourdoughs and chechacos are in vited to attend the services at the Commerce cafe. * SMITH CHARGED WITH POLYGAMY Mormon President Arrested on Accusation of Having Five Wives. By Cable to The Dally Gateway. Salt Lake City. Oct. 2—Joseph F. Smith, president of the Mormon church, was arrested today upon the charge that he is living with live women, four of them j)olygamous wives. His forty-third child was born a few days ago. of a plurai wife. Smith gave hail for his appearance in the district court to answer the charge of polygamy. The arrest of Smith is expected to add great bitterness to the local and state campaign. It was instigated by the American, or anti-Mormon party, which making a strenuous fight against all Mormons in politics. BATTLESHIP MISSOURI LEADS TARGET PRACTICE By Cable to Tlie Dally Gateway Barnestable, Mass., Oct. 1 The gun ner’s crew of the battleship Missouri won lirst place at target practice among the vessels of the North At lantic Meet, not missing a single shot on any of the ranges. President Roosevelt had agreed to be photo graphed with the victorious crew, which was done. The president dined with the jaekies of the Missouri yes terday and was cheered when he re fused a napkin. DR. BURNS TO LEAVE Railroad Surgeon (lives Up His Post and W ill Travel In Europe Dr. Arthur K. Burns, surgeon of the Alaska Central Railway Company since construction began, has given up the position he has held for three years and will sail with his family for the outside late this month, probably on j the Portland. After visiting at sever- • al places in the states he and Mrs. i Burns will sail for Kurope, where they j will travel during the winter and probably for a year. Dr. Burns is one of the original band of pioneers who landed on the beach of what is now Seward from the steamer i Santa '\na August* 28, 1903/ He toas^ remained here ever since except for a few months during the first winter. In March, 1904, he came back and! organized the medical and surgical j department of the railroad, remaining at its head ever since. He has had as many as 1500 men on the rolls at one j time and the department has required j several physicians on the stall besides attendants. Both Dr. Burns and Mrs. Burns will be misled in local society, in which they have been important factors. Dr. Burns is also one of the Ihjys and his speeches and stories have helped to enliven all stag parties. To Succeed as Chief Surgeon Dr. W. A. Richardson succeeds Dr. Burns as chief surgeon of the Alaska Central. He has been tir.st assistant tin a long time and has had charge of the hospital at camp 19. where most of the work has been done during th,e past year. Dr. David will assist him. FIND RICH TIN DEPOSITS Active Development Work in Pro gress at Ear Mountain X. J. McNeil of the Nome-Ear Mountain Tin Mining Company inis arrived in Nome from the north. Tie has been prospecting in the tin coun try for three years with considerable sucee.-s. He says he lias discovered a large body of ore there. Liu* tin is contained in quartz ledges which run along the mountain side and can he easily traced. Three tunnels have been driven into the mountain, and assays of the ore brought into Nome show 54.1*4 per cent tin, or $581 a ton. A crew of men have been working since April. Stream tin has been found in considerable quantities in the Ear mountain region, and there are placer tin mines in the creeks, but the Nome-Ear Mountain Company is con lining its attention to the quartz tin. The ledge on which the company is working is 1,600 feet in length. Ear mountain is fifty miles north of Teller and ten miles south of Shish mareff inlet.- Nome Nugget. Please come and carry away a suit of clothes from Clayson's store. You can take a cravenette rain coat also if you like and anything else that strikes your fancy. The expense don’t cut much ice. Smokers will do well to examine the new and complete stock of Wellington pipes at the Owl Drug Co. before buy ing elsewhere. They run in price from 75c to $5.00. Don’t suffer the annoyance of being unable to obtain a Sunday Times. The Owl Drug Co. are exclusive agents. Step in and have one reserved. * THINKS SNYDER > GOT OUT SAFE (Continued from page 1) came down they saw this [ oat tied on the other side of the river, showing that somebody had crossed. Snyder had to go thirty-two miles to Conklin’s from the place where he reached shore. Snyder reached shore in the even ing. Lie made a fire and camped for the night and next morning started up the river. If he reached (kmklin’s camp and come down with a rescue party they might have arrived at the rock after the men had been taken off, and gone hack up the stream again. When the miners left Susitna Station September 22 with Dr. Cook, no one had come down after the Richardsons and Jeter. When the lw>at struck the rock one end of it was smashed and it was sucked down, emptying everything out. The men managed to scramble upon the rock with a few articles,—one blanket, a rabbit-skin robe, a saw and hammer. All their provisions were swept away. Made Sawed-off Boat The river current held the boat against the rock hut the* lower end was so deep they were unable to pull it up. They sawed off the upper end and with pieces of board and nails managed to box up the end of the sawed olf por tion. In this craft Foster and Snyder safely made their way to shore, intend ing to throw a line back. They took the saw, hammer and matches with them. They had a rope fifty feet long, which they raveled out into strands making a line 150 feet long. This proved to he too short to reach the rock. Then Snyder proposed that Foster camp while he went for aid. Foster refused, saying: “I'm not going to sit here by a camp fire for two or three days with those other men out there in the water.” Then the two decided to go back in the little sawed off boat and try to rescue the others one at a time. In approaching the rock the little craft was smashed as the big one had been. This left all five men on the rock in a worse strait than ever. In Swift Rapids The rock is in the midst of very swift rapids. On one side the bould ers are so thick that it is suicide to at tempt to navigate among them. On the other side a skilful boatman can pass. When the Richardsons and Jeter came by they steered their boat on th<- safe side as close as they could without great risk and threw a line to the men, who stood in a row. Rich ardson says one man could not have withstood the jerk when the line tightened but the rope swung round the group like a whiplash and they managed to hold it and pull the boat back into the eddy below the rock. When the men were first stranded the water was knee deep over the rock, but by the time they were res cued tbe stream bad gone down and they were in only to their ankles. The men are the party known as the Foster crowd, who had been working on (’ache creek. They were on their way out. The river was higher than j it bad been during the summer, owing to warm weather which thawed the glaciers and snow which feed it. I bo boat was wrecked in the rapids just below Peters creek. The four men taken from the rock were Foster, Dennison. Frye and Dan is. Snyder had been missing twelve days when tin* men came out who brought the news to Seward this week. J. S. Hofrnan has rented the rail road bunkhouse and will conduct it hereafter. A large sitting room is one of the many inducements he bolds out to the boys. The house will be known as the Madison. Please give him a call. ___ Ladies, you can wear tailor-made skirts this winter, (live your order to ■Brown & Hawkins, select your mater ials from samples, and they will do the rest. They represent “The Royal Tailors” of New York and Chicago, makers of high grade clothing. We still add another feat ure—the key-hole above the knob so as to facilitate opening—on the inside I when the key is turned and the door locked the key cannot be abstracted with out unlocking inside—in suring absolute safety from ' burglars. PACIFIC COAST TRADING COMPANY We are very much surprised at the amount of outfitting we have done this fall, and after looking over our books and finding the names of the miners we outfitted last fall and spring, we find that we have outfitted the same men again. If the miners of this district desire any better information in re gard to which is the best place to buy their outfits then we refer them personally to the men whom we have just outfitted and take; our medicine. Respectfully, T. D. CORLEW, Mgr. THE COMMERCE FOURTH AVENUE A Gentleman’s Resort and Club Rooms. FURNISHED ROOMS First Class Cafe in Connection PETERSON & BROWN, Proprietors COLEMAN HOUSE Electric Lights and Electric Bells in Every Room Rates from 50c to $2.50 per Day ABSOLUTELY FIRST CLASS Fourth Avenue Seward, Alaska CHAS. A. TECKLENBURG THE SEATTLE BAR -ONLY THE BEST Wines, Liquors and Cigars Bohemian and Olympia Beer FURNISHED ROOMS WITH STEAM HEAT Fourth Ave. and Washington St. Seward. Alaska. THE BANK THEATRE Del Clark, Proprietor Entertainments Every Evening Best of Wines Liquors and Cigars at the Bar — HOTEL McNEILEY Completely Renovate t. New Management. Not and Cold Water. Modern. Pe stered Rooms. Electric Lighted. Baths. Reasonable Rates. HAWKINS & WHITTEMO R E, Proprietors Fourth Avenue, .... Seward, Alaska THE BRANCH J. E. FITZPATRICK &. CO. The New Up Town Resort for Everyone 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 Seward Water & Power Company * | JOHN. A. NELSON. Manager Office—Third and Washington streets ^ SEWARD PLUMBING & HEATING COMPANY J. W. SPENCER, Proprietor Basement of New Hale Bldg fraser’s Smoke Shop A fine line of choice Cigars, To baccos and Pipes. CLUB HOOMS IN CONNECTION H. h. FRASER Fourth A*e. and Mashinoton.St. TROY HAND LAUNDRY Don’t worry about your flannel shirt collars and cuffs when you can have them returned as new Next to Moon's Hall Fifth A*e. Seward Seward Bowling Alley Fourth Avenue, Seward. BILLIARD AND POOL TABLES In Connection Ladies’ Day Friday Afternoon A Good Place to Speno the Evening. £. L. WHITTEMORE, Proprietor