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Seward Weekly Gateway VOI .111. NO. 7. ' ~ SEWARD. ALASKA. SATURDAY. OC’TOKKH Li. I9IM.1 - M 3000 MEN IN SPRING Mai. Ballaine Announces That President Frost Mas Made Extensile Plans. WILL KEEP GOING THIS WINTER Intention Is To toy Rails Beyond Knik by Ind of \e\t Tear and liet Tanana Trade. By Cable to Tlie Daily Gateway. SonttV. » vt. h> .lohu K. Hallaine . . ' V\Kli ' ■ ' „ ■ where !i ; - 'i ee'; n ; 'ice with l'ivs wav. Ht report- th at Fr«»t i- rota* olefine arrany ment- to increase the construction S'orct-s oi Up railroad to 3Uoo men a: rl»> opeulm.' of spring. It.. is the intent Ion ' * construct from !-•> to 1*>" mile- next year, which will place ti e t.Tinian- in the heart of the Su> ■ valley l*\ the etat of l‘-*0>. It i» planned to take from 10.000 to ■J0.0**> -el a*s into tie Su-itna valley to ho -’* ;n. the ae'i cultural lands th* re - - m as tin ra iroad reaches Knik arm. and to handle all the Fair ' bank- winter freight. Maj.• Hallaine state- a;-> that President Frost has wired instructions to Treasurer Stewart. • in act am genera! manager of the road, to keep the present force of men at work through tin* winter. Maw Hallaine says President Fro-t authorized him to state that the Alas ka Central will-pend $k*f>.000 upon an exhibit at the Alaska-Vukon-Pacitic j opposition in liH'7. DR. FREDERICA. COOK ARRIVES IN SEWARD Man Who Scaled .Mt. McKinley Over Long Slope of Ice and Snow Now on Way Outside. Dr. Frederic A. Cook, the man who ascended Mt. McKinley last month and stood on its topmost pinnacle. 20,400 feet above sea level, in a temperature of lt> degrees below zero, arrived in | Seward Sunday on the steamer Dora. He will >ail for the outside -tomorrow on the Bertha with the re mainder of his party, who are await ing the steamer in Seldovia. Dr. t ook, as already told, reached the top of the mountain, the highest in North America. September 15, ae- j companied by Edward Barrill. The ascent was made from the northeast side, instead of the southeast. a-> was surmised when the news first came. He and his companions went up the Tokositna river to the head of one of its branches, where the\ found a huge glacier. Proceeding directly acres- it they found a long -lope, which proved to be free from precipitous declivities. It was covered with deep ice and snow Put Dr. Cook says no unusual obstacles to mountain climbing in frigid regions were encountered. So far as Dr. Cook could observe from occasional projections of rock which were too sharp for snow to cling to the mountain seemed to be almost wholly composed of pink granite.* Some observations of the altitude were j taken, and these with triangulations j made previously by the topographer of the expedition. Mr. Porter, indicate that the hight calculated by govern ment topographers and railroad engi neers. 20,300 ~Yeet. is very accurate, although Mr. Porter's calculations may finally put it at 20.400. The east erly pinnacle, which Dr. Cook climbed, is 200 or 300 feet higher than the west- j erly one. LIKES COOK INLET COAL W. W. Atwood, Government Geolo gist, Hakes Favorable Report Cook inlet coal will receive a favora ble report from \V. W. Atwood, a gov ernment geologist working under the ; Alaska bureau of Alfred II. Brooks, | who returned from the Inlet on the Bertha and went on through to Seat tle. He had just spent a month around Kaehemak bay and Tyonok, following an examination of the Kayak coal' fields, and stated in Seward that he found the Inlet coal of very good quali ty, particularly that at Port Graham Prof. Atwood is connected with the geological department of the univer sity of Chicago and also with the Brooks Alaska survey, spending about half of each year with each work. The man who did not have a large shipment of goods on the Oregon is a rarity now.—Valdez Prospector. NEW RESERVOIR NOW COMPLETE Water From Fresh Source Will Be Turned Into City Mains Next Week. W'ui t will ho turned into the eitv mains from the new reservoir on tin* Brow noil homestead tomorrow. This wilier > from a constantly livimrsprin" and is of the purest quality. The re st . is at at an elevation of T»0 feet and the water is carried to the town site through a ld-inch pipe. The lino i> calculated to nave a pressure of ldd pounds. The distributing mains through the city a■ d-inch ami 1-inch, the larger ones I •.•ini: on the principal streets. The total length of mains in the city now is nearly h 1,000 feet. The hi" pipe Mum the reservoir reaches from the reservoir nearly lddo feet to the town site at the corner of Madison street, at the toot of the hill. The reservoir is 10x24 feet and s feet ddep. Its capacity i> Id,000 "ad-ms. It was finished this week and is now full of water. The mains are all laid. The new reservoir and piping have been put in at "real expense by the > ward Water ,v Power Company in order *o "ive the city the best possible water supply. With the pressure now guaranteed a much larger town than Seward is now can be supplied, and an ample stream for tire ti"htin<r pur poses s assured at all times. Water for the generation of power will also be furnished. The reservoir built up Lowell creek canyon last year did not prove satis factory as the pressure is sometimes too low and in very wet times the water is not quite clear. The new reservoir will remove l»oth of these drawbacks. EXCELSIOR OUT OF COMMISSION Sprung a Leak as Result of Rough Trip from North-— Tug Equator Coming. By Cable to Tbo Dally Gateway. Seattle. Oct. s The steamer Excel sior sprung a leak a> a result of her rough trip down from the north and will go out of commission. The Northwestern Steamship Com pany has chartered the tug Equator ti> carry the Seward-Valdez mail, in lieu of the Santa Ana and Excelsior, j and sht* left this morning, via the out- j side route. The Equator has no freight j or passengers. When tht- Nome Meet is released | the steamers Saratoga and Northwest ern will join the Santa Clara on the Seat11 e-Seward-Vaide/, route. President liosene of the Northwest ern Steamship Company has gone east to secure more steamers for the Alaska t rade. Santa Ana Off the Beach Seattle, Oct. 8 -Steamer Santa Ana has been pulled off the beach at Clal lam bay and is expected here today. Rich Gold Specimens J. G. Marx brought with him from the Shumagin group of islands to the westward, the richest specimens of sylvanite ore and quartz ever found in this or any other part of Alaska. The quart/, is sugar-grained, live-looking, i impregnated with gold plainly dis cernible to the naked eye. The gold ore in the sylvanite form is even rich er than the gold quart/., and when treated with acids the specimens look like nuggets of gold, George Dutton Goes Outside George W. Dutton, who is develop ing copper property at Iliamna, came to Seward on the Dora with fifteen men and eight horses, bound for the outside. He transferred both men and stock to the Santa Clara here. He left three men and two horses at the mine and expects to return in December for the winter. Messrs. Sargent and Gerdine, topo graphers of the geological survey north of Knik arm this summer, with their party of ten went through on the Santa Clara, and were joined here by the geologists, Messrs. Knopf and Paige, who had been in Seward about ten days. TYONOK GETS ! WINTER MAIL Contract Let to Anton Eide to Carry in January, February and March. FIXES LIMIT AT 100 POUNDS Chief Clerk Fames Finally Secures Service for Interior Points Durinq Close of Inlet. Mail will lie carried from Seward to Knik and Tyonok by Anton Kide in the months of January, February and March. l!K)7. The weight limit is 100 pounds. Mr. Kide will receive £1100 for the three trips. An effort was made last year by Alvah Karnes, chief clerk of the rail way mail service for Southern Alaska, to obtain a monthly mail service from Seward to Knik and Tyonok. but it failed because tIn* government would not accept the bids ottered. This service will give the people of the camps alnne ('oojc inlet a mail ser vice which will he of great advantage to them, limited as it may seem. Here tofore in the winter these people have sometimes been cut oft' from all com munication with the'outside world for several months. Last winter they were a little more fortunate because of the frequent, though irregular travel between Seward and the Yentna dis trict. Prospectors carried letters but the letters were often carried a long time before they were delivered. The route necessarily traveled by the mail carrier from Seward to Tyonok is by way of Susitna Station. Below the Station the river is danger; ous to cross and the ground on both sides is swampy and treacherous. A request has been made of Mr. Karnes that he take up with the postal depart ment tile importance of erent.im? •» i>rw.t office at Susitna Station, for the con venience of the miners in the Yentna district. A large number of them will winter on the creeks, or at the Station. Before next summer a post office, perhaps several, will have to be estal) lished up in the Yentna district, but during the present winter Susitna Station will he the most convenient place for the miners to get their mail. The overhaul service does not begin until January because many lakes and streams that have to be crossed on ice are not certain to be frozen as early as December 1. RECEIVER GETS HEALY COMPANY Affairs of Kuskokwim Venture Badly Tangled and Taken Into Court. By Cable to The Daily Gateway. Seattle, Oct. 8—The Central Alaska Company, organized by Capt. John J. Healy to explore the , Kuskokwim and establish trading posts along its course, went into the hands of a re ceiver last week. Hugo Beyer was appointed receiver but Healy objected and had Beyer ousted. It. A. Wright was then appointed with instructions to close out the company. At last re port the company had only sixty tons of provisions in the district and its employes have been hampered by a shortage of food all summer. The stockholders charge that Healy spent too much money on himself. It was on the petition of men who put up most of the money that the receiver ship was granted and Healy ousted from all control. Today he sued the company for $19,000 damages. The most valuable asset of the company is the steamer Nunivak, now in the Kus kokwim river, which will be sold. NORTHWESTERN STEAMER TO BE CALLED SEWARD The Seattle Times says: The new steamer to be built by the Moran Company for the Northwestern Steamship Company is to be called the Seward, after the town of Seward, on the southwestern coast of Alaska and the sea terminus of the Alaska Central railroad. The keel of the new ship is soon to be laid and the vessel will be ready for the northern trade next year. GETS GOLD ON TONSINA CREEK Alfred Lowell Sluices $10.23 in Eleven Hours Shoveling* by Himself. CLAIMS JUST ABOVE FALLS Will Build Winn Dam and Prepare to Work the Property by Systematic Method. Kleven hours shoveling In Alfred , Lowell on his placer ground on Ton ! sina creek live miles from Seward, produced in gold. Mr. Lowell | was simply doing assessment work on j two claims which he located on the i creek two years ago. lie put in sluice boxes and then shoveled a day to see what would happen. The claims are a short distance above the falls of Tonsina creek, which are a mile and a half from the bay. The creek is very short above the falls. Ilotli ground and creek were partially frozen, the ground about six inches deep. Mr. Lowell is so well pleased with the result of hi> shoveling experiment that lie will go hack to the property and work as long as hi* can. He will put in a wing dam and prepare to work the ground on a larger scale. TWO CONVICTS MAKE ESCAPE r / ~ Thornton and Hendrickson Cut Through Stateroom Wall of Yukon Steamer. By Cable to The Dally Gateway. Dawson, Y.T., Oct. 10—Thornton and Hendrickson, desperadoes and hold-ups under sentence to prison, escaped from the Yukon river steamer Lavelle Young last Saturday near Eagle, as they were being taken out to serve their penitentiary terms, by cutting the wall of their stateroom and jump ing overboard. Today all wires are down beyond Eagle and it is believed that they have been cut by the fleeing convicts, who are supposed to be traveling westward. Several posses are scouring the coun try in search of the men. fugitive Convicts Recaptured Dawson, Get. 12 Hendrickson and Thornton, the convicts who escaped from custody on the river steamer La velle Young last Saturday, were capt ured today near Eagle. They had been wandering through the woods several days without food and submit ted when covered with guns. freight for interior PILES UP AT TYONOK Such Quantities of Miners’ Supplies Sent in that Part Will Fail to (let in this Fall. Kahiltna, Sept. 21—Correspondence of the Gateway—It is reported here by Mr. Wolsey of the launch Bat that con siderable freight is likely to be left at Tyonok because of his inability to carry it in before the close of navigation on the river. Large quantities of miners’ supplies are coming in from the out side on the late steamers and the Bat is the only boat on the river now. A light frost was visible here the morning of September 15, the first of the season. It has been very dry and pleasant for several weeks and the Yentna is running low. A. Wanberg and four other men came up on the last trip of the Bat with a year’s outfit. They imme diately built a cache and began whip sawing lumber for a boat to go up th^ river. They are going above the rapids to work until the freeze-up and will then come back here and wait for the snow, after which they will go up near the mountains. Gallagher’s roadhouse is now open for business. It is well supplied with provisions, and has ample accommoda tions for man and beast. He has also arranged to have ten tons of miners’ supplies in stock when navigation closes on the river, which will be about the middle of October. Copper ore from Beatson’s Latouche mine averages 11 per cent. BRING $20,000 IN GOLD DUST Steamer Dora Carries to Seward First Far^e Lxliibit From Kahiltna Creeks. The steamer Dora brought to Seward 'about $20,000 in gold du-t from the creeks of the upper Kahiltna. A* ' nearly as can be learned this belongs to three men ami is less than half the ! total production of the group of creeks 'which produced something this year. ! The owners of the dust deny that they : brought out so large an amount but a I man on board the Dora saw between • $10,000 and $20.(too in Purser Spring i stun’s safe. He was not told to whom I it belonged but so far a* can be learn* led the only men who has any dust on J the Dora were L H. Herndon, If. i Jacobs and William Morris. “Doc." Herndon says the three ; brought out only $11,000 and that was {their entire production for the season | but other men say they exhibited '11. 1 non at Susitna Station and they wen* i known to have several thousand dol bars besides. The yield of the claims worked by Herndon. Jacobs and Mor rison Nugget creek is estimated by j comparison of information received I from various sources at $21,000. Mr. ; Jacobs told nil acquaintance yesterday that they put in only about sixty days of actual productive work. Mr. Herndon is very conservative in hi-, statements. Hi* puts the total out put of the district at $25,000. Ashe admits only $11,000 for Nugget that would leave $14,<H)0 for other Kahiltna creeks. Mr. Herndon deprecates any attempt to “boom" the district and says he sees little to induce the pros pector to go in there. He says bed rock is shallow and has been struck wherever actual raining work lias been done. T. J. Jeter says several miners fig ured the creeks at $.45,000 before he it,it. mis uoes nut mciuuo Liuk.< creek. Other miners who spent the summer in the district stick to the previous estimate of $50,000. Not more than half of this will come to Seward as Frank Churchill is buying large amounts at Susitna Station. CHARGE CABLE OFFICE LEAKS Valdez Men Say Their Messages Are on the Street Before They Get Them. By Cable to The Daily Gateway. Seattle, Oct. 11—Numerous heavy mining operators, steamship company representatives, railroad contractors and business men arriving here from Valdez charge a leak in the cable serv ice at that port. They assert that the contents of private messages are known on the street before the mes sages are delivered to the addressees. Complaints have lieen sent direct to Washington and informal complaints have been filed with Col. Glassford, which he says he forwarded to Washington several weeks ago. The men making the complaints say that private information contained in the messages is given to outside parties resulting in the destruction of nego tiations for property sales. Other complaints are made. Story Reaches Capital Washington, D. C., Oct. 11—Informal complaints of leaks in the Valdez ca ble cfllce have been coming here. The department has been waiting for the tiling of direct charges before ordering an investigation. Photographs Nugget Gold . •‘.Doc” Herndon consented before he left town on the Bertha to have sam ples of gold from Nugget gulch photo graphed, and several pictures w’ere taken by Robert Evans. A poke con taining $3600 was emptied into a gold pan and $200 in nuggets piled on top of the heap for one picture, which looks good to sore eyes. Another photo graph was taken of the gold extract from three of.the best pans taken out on the Herndon and Jacobs claims. These contained $53.75, $47.50 and $18 respectively. Each is shown in a separate pan. A large numbor of fine nuggets are included in the production of Nugget gulch, the biggest contain ing $21. • YENTNA OUTPUT TOTALS $50,000 Earlier Estimates Corroborate' by I.ate Arrivals From Gold District. INFORMATION HARD TO REACIi Results of Season's Work Obtained by Compilation of Reports by Reliable Men. Later reports from ' n K• ol ' ereeks confirm the m*tima’" wndt !: been mad» for several monM > • ; a -<• . son's out pu’ of >oii,POO. vit i • • turns are inohtuinahh’ ;nr .-«■ many mim i > who took o ; an i; •. dred dollars each have not <■ n ther than .Susitnu Station. • ■ th liave invested their grubsta;- o m • out fits. The amount wliieb till tie- si., pokes total can only in* appi - m 1 >ut all tlr- well-informed mim - t he region who are candid mmugi talk say that the aggregate for r • producing creeks will not fa; ! . -hut of sop.ooo and may have L < n fully that. Lake creek i- e>timut< o at frou. j .*.*>000 to >7000. so that the total of tie Vent mi district undoubtedly exceed >.'>0.01111. Small quantities ha < !>< * I taken out tiiso the Skwentna ereeks George Kberhardt went tbr<* igh the Bertha this week with a fa po which he declined to exhibit, but ! land his partner. Anderson, are er< ited with several thousand dollar Anderson is not coming out. Kl>< i hardt displayed the (|ueer reluctance about talking shown by some other mm. who have done well in the district, but finally admitted that the general e>t mate of the output is about tin* tmil thing. He was one of the first men in the district, having spent tie* l!*0.j smi | sinn nn /• roul/ u*Viai*a th,, ♦ * discoveries were made, taking out a grubstake then. He worked mostly on Bird creek, a tributary of Peters, this year. Another through passenger on th • Bertha was M. Schautl'en, who had been working the Millar bar claim on Lake creek. He had a poke weighed by Harry Ellsworth which contained $1300. Other men who came in on the boat say he had about $2000 altogether. Several of the men who were the most fortunate in the season's work have exhibited reluctance in giving information which has aroused criti cism. It is felt by people who live here that the public at large is entitled to accurate information regarding tin district and that the best way to obtain a truthful statement of the situation A for those who know most about it o tell what they know. The statements which have been published in the Gateway have been secured by a good deal of unnecessary labor, a few facts being picked up from each of many sources. The authority for all of these statements has always been given and as the gen eral results tally closely it is believed by well-informed men in Seward that the published estimates of the yield are very accurate. PIONEER MINER TO LEAVE VV. C. Girdwood, Discoverer of Crow Creek Placers, Going Outside. Girdwood. Oct. 2—Correspondence of the Gateway— William C. Girdwood will leave for the states on the Bertha after a visit of one month to his Crow creek property. Mr. Girdwood, for whom the new town at mile 75 on the Alaska Central is 'named, was one of the early prospectors in the Cook in let country. In the spring of 1895 Mr. Girdwocd began prospecting upper Crow creek and soon foresaw the value of the property. Andrew Williamson, Lid burn Arthur, Oliver Skoyen and William Kllis were with Mr. Girdwood when the original locations were made. Since that time Mr. Girdwood has spent three years on the claims. He is a civil and mining engineer, and has done extensive prospecting in Nome and the Tanana. During his absence from Crow creek the property has been in control of his brother, James Girdwood of New York. *> H. H. Hicks and Mrs. Hicks came up on the Bertha and will sail for Iliamna on the first boat that goes to that port. Mr. Hicks is interested in copper there.