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 PI BlISH! D WEEKLY BY GATEWAY PUBLISHING CO. Knteml as Second Class matter August -tth. ’eM. at the jiostoffie* at Seward. Alaska, uti d« r the Act of Congress of March S. 1STV. SIBSCRIPTION RATES On* Year (In Advance) $3.00 Six Months ... $1.50 Eastern office Alaorth Building. Duluth. Mlanesota. t’has. B. Aske. authors-ciOu-ciit^^ SATURDAY. oi'TOHF.U 13. PHki. GOOD RECORD FOR YENTNA] Fifty thousand dollars in gold tiust the lir>f season after its discovery is an unusual record for a new mining district. That is the output of the Yentna this year, achieved by a few dozen men engaged in actual mining, none of them working more than sixty days at sluicing and a majority merely ex|>erimenting. The Yentna looks as promising to day :t" the Tanana did three years ago. A dozen creeks have lteen work mi sufficiently to show that by hand work men can make wages on them several times over, hxcellent indica tions have been found on other creeks. Kvery stream that has been prospected m the whole region known a> the Yentna. extending over many thousand square miles, shows colors. On only one ct/ek last summer was mining done with persistence. On this in sixty days of sluicing, with le>s than half a dozen men working. #20.000 was taken out. The creek is only a > small gulch. The yield for actual wot king days wa> at least $t<o a day fH'r man and in pockets was more than #100 per man. Many small nug •• 's were taken out. the biggest con taining $21. .1’holographs taken in •Seward atte-t printed statements. It is time for mining men of thei north * i * keep their eyes on the ,t entna j | ilist ric* • THE STATUS OF CUBA With admirable discretion Secretary Taft meutionsthat the Cuban flag w ill float in that summer isle of hden so lot g a> he is there. He is going to get oil the Kith of the month and he can’t j help what happens afterward. This i uban republic moving picture "how has been a serio-comic exhibi-; tion for nine years and it i> about due j to be relegated to the husbeen class along with Hoyt’s farces and Have Headers'm’s extravaganzas. Cuban independence has been a i>o- ^ lirieal shuttlecock. In the latter part j of l*b7 the democrats In congress, who had losi out on every issue they had framed up for half a dozen years, mined in with the yellow newspapers to put ilo- McKinley administration in the hole tin the Cuban question. Aided by the blowiug-up of the Maine they "ucceeued. The McKinley administra tion never had any backbone except in standing pat on the privilege" of the predatory rich, and allowed itself to be scared into a "illy war. Then to make a v. ot "•• mess of it congress followed the lead of Crandpa Teller in a declaration of perpetual t uban in dependeme. As earn to withstand the laws of gravitation :i" Cuban annexation. It i" coming because there i" no other vay to govern the island. An embezzling hanker at Havana has given a pointer to the American ex ponents of that industry. He invested part of the money in a steamer and when he made the big haul carried it away in his own boat. Such genius as that ought to have been able to main tain the Cuban government if it had been directed to politics. The llearst light in New York is worth while a" a show, and a lot of people who have no admiration for llearst are tickled almost to death to see him stir up fossilized respectability of the kind which consists wholly in the possession of wealth, mostly ill gotten. Se ward will appreciate the coin pi i ment bestowed upan the town by the Northwestern Steamship Company in giving it> name to the first steamer to be constructed especially tor the Southern Alaska run. There are no leaks in the Seward cable office. The trouble at Valdez niu>t be due to the associations and temptations which surround the operators. '[’he colored brethren of the South have joined in with the >mall white politicians to make Jim Crow cars a national issue. liearst says he won’t spend a million to be elected, but he’d In-tter. The other fellows will spend more than that. .Mr. and Mrs. Longworth promise to put up a lively scrap to get back to congress. And now Addicks comes again and denies that he is dead. HEARST ROASTS RIG DEMOCRATS Makes Tierce Attack Upon Parker, Jerome and Towne and Defends Himself, By Cable to The Dally Gateway. Buffalo, < >ot 9- William R. Ilearst bitterly arraigned Alton B. I’arkei here today. He compared him to a cockroach under a sink in a laundry. He denounced William Travers Jerome as a political Croton bug crawling into corpora*ion favor when the democratic party applied Rough on Rrts to rid itself of vermine. Charles A. Towne, he said, had crawled out of democracy. Hears: asserted that the recent democratic state convention was a politieal clearing house, where assets had been reckoned up and bogus pre tensions had been cast out. Hughes Criticises Hearst New York, Oct. t» - -Charles K. Hughes, republican nominee for gov ernor, opened the state campaign last night by a speech in Carnegie hall. He said that a corrupter of public, opinion through the newspapers or any other way is an enemy of the state, and eompared the reckless and indis criminate abuse practiced by Hearst and his newspapers with the fair criti cism of their opponents by the republi cans. Denies Election Story New York. Oct. b William K. , Hearst issued a denial today of the published statement that he intends to spend $1,000.0150 to secure ids election as governor. He says, however, that if he should spend that much In* would l»e doing no more than Cleveland and! Bryan did in their presidential cam paigns. He denies that In* ever em ployed <’hinvs** labor and says he has made no promises to he fulfilled after election. Will address Big Ratification Albany. N. Y.. Oct. b W. K. Hearst | announced today to the state commit- j tee that In* will addrees the big demo-j cratic ratification meeting in Madison ! Square Garden < krtober 22. Says Hearst Dodges Taxes Mt. Vernon. N. Y., < »et. b Charles K. Hughes, republiean nominee for governor, spoke here last night. On . ms appearance ne was cneerett contin uously for fifteen minutes. He said' that while Hearst had been abusing eorpor.itions for many years bis own ! t.**w spa per cor|K>rat ions ever since their J organization have been evading just taxation. Fighting Over Judiciary Now York, Oet. 11 - The county demoeratie'convention nominated a full judiciary ticket today. The Inde pender.ee League intended to indorse \ live of the nominees on the democratic j ticket, which includes only three of! tie* Im • -prudent nominees. The league j issued a statement saving that it will | watch the republican county conven tion. The republican state chairman | issued a statement toilay saying that j his party will have nothing to do with ! the Hearst organization. Hearst re plied that the only reason fusion was oth-red on the judiciary was for the sake of good government. Hearst Addresses Union Labor Corning. N. Y., <>et. lb William R. Hearst addressed a meeting of union lal*or men last night. He told them that heavy advertisers had withdrawn i their patronage from th^ Examiner in San Francisco because he had fought ! the battle of union labor in that city : in just, one election for mayor. QUARTERLY POSTAL FIGURES Stamp Cancellations Show Increase Over Same Period Last Year A statement of postal business in the Seward post office during the quarter ending September 30 has been prepar ed for the Gateway by the post mis tress, Miss Lillie N. Gordon. The stamp cancellations, the truest index of the volume of business, show an increase over the corres|>onding quarter of 1905, the figures for the third quarter of 1906 being $400.61, ; while for the third quarter of 1905 they were $369.44. The stamp sales for the quat4er were $454.os. The number of registers 're ceived was4.38. Outgoing register were 547. The total amount of money orders issued was $9660.14: paid and re paid. $1998.29. Money order fees ag gregated $39.66. Seward became a presidential post office October l and the salary of the postmaster was fixed at $1300. Notary Public at Rahiltna II. P. Gallagher, who is running a roadhouse near the mouth of the Ka hiltna river, has received a commis sion as a notary. Mr. Gallagher was formerly freight clerk of the steamer Portland and is an intelligent business man. $ $50,000 JUST IN FROM YENTNA DISTRICT Hip API I nilTCITC We sell anything in our lines at reductions from 20 to 40 per cent discount. This £ OtLL UUIllld is not a MRC SALE, but an eye opener to the people of Seward. We simply need the —— -- money. This is your Chance to spend it.—Look at the following prices: Great Sacrifice Sale j Centennial Host Flour, the sack-$1.40 Dixie Queen, Gold Crumb. 5c Rolled Oats—10 lb.. 40c Westovor. 35c All Canned Reef. 25c Star. 45c Full Cream Cheese. 18c Climax. 45c Perfection Soda Crackers, the pk£.. 10c Spearhead. 45c Shredded Wheat Buiscuits, the pkjj 15c Dry Goods 25 per cent off All Reliance Table Fruit, the can... 28c Gents Furnishings, 25 per cent off Cardinal Coffee. 45c Heavy Wool Socks 25 percent off White house Coffee. 40c Ladies’ Silk Waists 25 per cent off Conqueror Coffee. 40c Ladies' Wash Waists 25 per cent off .'15c Coffee. 25c Muslin Underwear 25 percent off All T?as. 60c . Men’s’Women’s and Children’s Dress TOBACCOS Shoes 25 per cent off Lucky Strike, Seal of N. C., Curve _ ' 4l Cut, Pedro, T. & B., Durham,.. 10c Everything at same proportion Begins Monday Oct. 8th I Seward Brass Band plays “Marchinq Through Georgia” every night in front of SEWARD COMMERCIAL COMPANY | WHITE HOUSE ON THE LEVEE A TR1I? TO MATANUSKA Sight-seer Describes Valley Leading to Coal Fields. The Matanuska coal Helds are within forty miles of tide water and only a few hundred feet above sea level. From Knik, the head of navigation on Knik arm, the trip to the coal Helds is made overland. Knik is a pretty village of about three do/.en houses on the west side of Knik arm. It lias a F. S. com missioner. and recorder, post office, two stores, two restaurants and (only) one saloon. The soil is rich and gar dens thrive well. From Knik we traveled in a rowboat to Cottonwood, the tide carrying us seven miles in less than an hour and a half. From Cottonwood our route was northward, along the crest of the blulT that seems to run parallel to the Arm about two miles from its shore. The low land between the bluff and water is a dead level, covered with grass and cut by sloughs. The upper ten miles of the Arm is simply a mud Hat at low tide. Westward is a light forest of hemlock, spruce, birch and cotton wood. with a rich growth of grass among the trees. We passed over low hills, across corduroyed swamps and ravines, bridged and unbridged. Along the north end of the Arm the country was much the same, but after leaving tidewater the hills were larger and more rolling, and interspersed with beautiful lakes, clear as crystal and full of tish. We stopped for lunch at a cabin where two enterprising young men had taken up H40 acres of land and can see a confidence in the near future. Soon after leaving the pioneers we struck the north bank of the Matanuska river, and after a diffi cult descent of several hundred feet reached tb‘‘ narrow bench along which the stakes of the survey mark the line to the mines. A walk was the best gait our horses could make* and the gnats and mosquitos were at their worst. Some grumble at this trail but it i> a peach compared with many along the Yukon, for the tundra is not thick enough to impede travel. After thirty-three miles of interest ing misery we camped for the night, and slept in a “mosquito tent,” the first I had ever seen. This has a floor of canvas sewed to the lower edge of the sides and a door like the mouth of a sack, so that after entering we could draw and tie the “puckering string” and laugh at the gnats and mosquitos. The next morning six miles brought us to King’s river and we followed its west bank six miles more, crossed it on a substantial bridge and went over the summit, along ridges and through several swamps, where we had to dismount, pick our way through the brush and let the horses llounder along the miry trail as best they might. Down the moun-1 tain's side we came and at 10 o'clock reached Coalville in the Chicaloon valley sixty miles from Knik and 185 from Seward by the railroad survey. The coal fields lie in a flat half a mile wide, between the Chicaloon river and a blufY some 800 feet high, where coal croppings first attracted the attention of prospectors. About $25,000 has been spent in development work lure. Good log houses have been built for bunks, eating house, blacksmith's shop, stables and com missary. Fourteen tunnels have been run into the blutY. along a distance of two miles, and all show the same formation. A short distance from the face of the blufY a fourteen foot vein is struck, then comes seventy feet of slate, then twenty-six feet of coal. At intervals for ten miles exploration has shown the coal to be equally abundant, and it has been traced for seventy miles. Tests show the quality to be better than any yet found on the Pacific Coast, and 400,(KX) tons are oi-dered as soon as it can be laid down at Seward. The railroad will run down hill most of the distance and the few miles of up grade are all less than 1 per cent, except one half mile which is 2i per cent. C. H. G. Every person in Seward shpuld at tend the concert next Tuesday. 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 OAWLEY FOUNDRY & MACHINE WORKS Tacoma, Washington, U. S. A. Pounders, Machinists, Blacksmiths. Designers and Builders of Sawmill Machinery, Wood Working Machinery, Marine Machinery and Stcamhoists. Seward Bakery Opposite Postoffice F* esh horae-made Bread. Pies and Cakes every day. Whole Wheat. Graham, Rye Bread and Pompernickle al ways on hand. C. WERNER, Prupr itflor Seward Water & Power Company JOHN. A. NELSON. Manager Office- Third and Washington streets SEWARD PLUMBING & HEATING COMPANY J. W. SPENCER. Proprietor SEWARD STEAMERS Tug Equator; sailed from Seattle 8th. Portland: sailed from Seattle 10th. Jeanie; sails from Seattle 13th. Saratoga; sails from Seattle 16th. Santa Ciara; sailed for Seattle 8th. Bertha; sailed for Seattle llth. Dora: sailed for Valdez 8th. WEEKLY WEATHER RECORD Weathei record for the week ending October 12: Temperature. Max. Min. Saturday 49 32 Clear Sunday 50 36 Pt. Cloudy Monday 50 42 Rain Tuesday 47 44 Rain Wednesday 50 40 Cloudy Thursday 49 39 Cloudy Friday 46 42 Rain A. H. Wheatley Goes Out A. H. Wheatley and Mrs. Wheatley sailed on the Bertha, bound for their home in Spokane. Mr. Wheatley will return in February to go into the Yentna district, where he has acquired interests. He came here last winter as bookkeeper for Frank Watson, and was at Knik until active work was suspended in the summer. Since then he has been in Seward looking after | the coal company’s affairs. 1 PACIFIC COAST TRADING I j 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 hare just outfitted and take our medicine. Respectfully, T. D. CORLEW, Mgr. THE BRANCH J. E. FITZPATRICK &. CO. The New Up Town Resort for Everyone HE COMMERCE FOURTH AVENUE A Gentleman’s Resort and Club Rooms. FURNISHED ROOMS First Class Cafe in Connection PETERSON &. BROWN, Proprietors NORTHERN SALOON: ' E. L. WHITTEIVIORE, PROPRIETOR WINESs LIQUORS AND CIGARS FOURTH AVE. SEWARD. ALASKA 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 HOTEL McNEILEY Completely Renovated. New Management. Hot and Cold Water. Modern, Plastered Rooms. Electric Lighted. Baths. Reasonable Rates. HAWKINS & WHITTEMORE, Proprietors Fourth Avenue, .... Seward, Alaska THE LOUVRE EIDSON &. DOBSON Proprietors A Gentleman's Resort. Gold Dust Bought Cor. Fifth and Washington streets Seward, Alaska