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Seward Weekly Gateway " ” SEW \KI>. ALASKA. SATURDAY. APRIL J7. I!)07. VOL. III. NO. t* _____. TANANA MINERS GO ON STRIKE Operators Refuse Demand for $6 Wage. Eight-hour Day and Two Shifts. WORK GENERALLY SUSPENDED tmployers Say they Will Never Yield and Output of District Ytay Be Curtailed. By Cable to Tbe Dally Gateway. ruirbanks. April -7 I'nion miners, throughout the Tanana district struck yesterday, the day they had fixed. tor. ft. » day. an eijrht-hour day and two. shift* a day. The operators refused j the demand and say they will let the j mines «ro unworked alt summer rather than concede it. Water is running freely in the creek* and conditions are favorable for a larjie output, but if the strike continues Ions? the yield of the district " ill be seriously curtailed, a* many of the largest properties are suspended by I the strike. NOME MINING TROUBLES END Operators and Miners A^ree on Settlement and Veil £0 Back to Work By Cable to The Dally Gateway. Aome. April -J All labor troubles were settled today on account of the three hi if new j^old strike* and thej miners went back to work upon terms j satisfactory to both side*. It is estimated now that the output ; for the winter season will be i non. A coal famine which ha* pie-: vented the u*e of some machinery, and ; the labor *tiike* have cut the output ! down somewhat but it i* expected to be larjfer than last year nevcrthele**. NAVAL REVIEW AT EXPOSITION! Jamestown fair Starts Off With Pageant Afforded by Mar fleets of World. Norfolk, April 2*» The Jamestown exposition opened yesterday with the greatest naval review ever seen in American waters. Fleets from all leading nations were assembled, to gether with nearly all ships of the American navy on the Atlantic. Im mense crowds thronged the grounds, all nations l>eing represented by the diplomatic corps from the capital and by numerous visitors. It will be two months before the buildings are com pleted and all exhibits in place. At the opening ceremonies Presi dent Roosevelt made a speech for the nation and Henry St. George Tucker, president of the exposition, for the fair commission. 60LDFIELD MINERS LOSE AND RETURN TO WORK Goldfield, Nov., April 22 -The mine lockout is over; the operators win the tight over higher wages and the men returned to work in all the mines this morning. _ FERRY FOUNDERS AND THIRTY-FOUR DROWN St. Petersburg, April 22 - A ferry boat foundered in the Neva river yes terday and thirty-four persons were carried under the ice and drowned. The other passengers were rescued. John F. Stevens, who recently quit the job of chief engineer of the Pana ma canal, is home and says the ditch will be dug oy 1915._ •jphe Treadwell mine paid $tf,J85,(X)0 in dividends up to last October. TAKES CATTLE ~~ HERD TO KODIAK Prof. Georgeson Goes to Island With Twenty-two Black Galloways The Portland brought twenty-two head of black Calloway eatttlc. all destined for Kodiak island, "'hiel* will bo made a breeding and e.\per-j intent station by tin* government for j cattle. Several head were taken there last year ami w it It this year's increase and the new arrivals will make a herd of about thirty head. Prof. Ceorg» son. chief of Alaska, agricultural experiment stations, came, upon the Portland to supervise t lit* | initiation of the stock in their new j home. A herder "ill he placed in | charge there. During the last year. C p. foe. superintendent of the Kod- i iak orphanage, has taken care of the cattle already on the island. Kodiak island was selected for the cuttle experiment station because it h is a milder climate and less snow than any other available locality along the southern coast. It has the advan tage of Kenai in both particulars. The eat tie brought up on the lort Uuul are all thriving in spite of their long s»>a voyage. Several small calves are in the herd, including one little fellow who was introduced into this vale of tears a few hours before the steamer >ailed from Seattle, in spite of seasickness in the early stages of the voyage he U a very healthy calf. The cattle were purchased in Cham paign county. Illinois, and near Red Cloud, Nebraska. Prof. Ueorgeson is optimistic is ever regarding Alaska as a Held for hardy cattle, and he intends to add sheep from northern climates within a year or two to his stock farm. Prof. Ceorgeson will return from Kodiak on the Dora. SEVEN DEAD IN MINE EXPL0SI0N| four Men killed and Others Fatally Hurt by Disaster at Black Diamond. *y Cable to The Daily Gateway. Black Diamond, Wash., April 1M Four men are dead, live fatally injured and fifteen seriously injured by inhal ing gav s which formed after an ex plosion in the Morgan mine w hich was caused by a cave-in this morning. The explosion occurred just as the day shift wa» starting to work at 7 o'clock. The mine is badly blocked by the debris from the cave-in. Two More Miners Dead Black Diamond, April 27— Two more victims of the explosion in the Morgan mine yesterday are dead, making seven deaths. The jury at the coro ner's inquest returned a finding that the explosion was caused by the cave in, which generated gases. CAR SHORTAGE CHARGED AGAINST ALASKA FREIGHT Olympia, April 25—A protest pre sented to the state railroad commis sion today asserts that the car shortage is due to the fact that large cargos of Alaska freight are stored in freight cars and held for shipment until navi gation opens to Bering sea. JURY ACQUITS HERMANN AFTER LONG DELIBERATION By Cable to The Dally Gateway. Washington, D. C., April 27—Bin ger Hermann, former commissioner of the general land office, was acquitted by the jury of the charge of conspira cy to defraud the government. The verdict was returned at 12:45 this after noon. The jury went out at 3 o'clock yesterday afternoon. Hermann is much pleased. Valdez Keeps Standard Time The city council of Valdez has ondered that cable office time shall be official in that burg, and also requests citizens to get in line. Nome is figuring on ice boats for Bering sea to keep up ocean communi cation with the outside during the winter. PLACER STRIKE IN KUSKOKWIM DISTRICT four Men Take Out $600 in Coarse Cold in five Days on Rim Rock, Including Two ! Nuggets Carrying Over $100 fach. Arthur Eaton Brings Report of Discovery on Tributary ot the Innoko, fifty Miles from Junction of Tachatna With Main Rivcr--has Petition for Post Office Signed by >00 Miners to Be Located at McGrath, Where Townsitc Has Been Platted. Placer gold from which $000 was taken out by four men in live days on rim roek was found late last fall on Caines creek, an easterly tributary of the Innoko river, which flows into the Yukon between that river and the Kuskowim. The gold is coarse and two nuggets carrying over $100 each were picked up by the discoverers. I lie news is already spreading and a rush is on from other parts of the Kusko wim region. The report was brought to Seward yesterday evening by Arthur Eaton, who mushed out by way of the upper Kuskowim. and over tin* divide to the Yentna, thence to Knikand from there to mile 70 on the railroad. He came alone with four dogs in sixteen days from Caines creek and he said he could have made ft in less timej if he had known the trail. Backed by Chicago Capital Ha ton was sent into the region last fall from Nome with a party of men j out titteel by a Chicago capitalist to follow up viigue reports of gold dis coveries in the Kuskowim region. He went on the steamer May H from Nome and up the river The only important discovery made j so far i* the original one by a party composed of Haines, Spencer, Mackey and one other, but color* are found in the surface gravel everywhere and quart/, indications are visible in all the hill*. About L’oo miners are al*j ready in the region and are satisfied1 that it will be a great district. When the Haines party made their discovery they were out of grub and they worked five day* with nothing to eat but graylings caught in the creek. Then they mushed to Anvik, on the Yukon, to get a winter outfit, which | they obtained and returned. Haines! was stricken with scurvy and had to; go outside. Petition tor post umce So confident are the miners that the i district i> a remarkable out; for pros-1 pectors that Eaton brings a petition signed by 200 men asking for the establishment of a post office with Eaton as postmaster at a trading station called McGrath on the Kusko kwitn at the mouth of the Taclmtna river. This station is 070 miles from j the mouth of the river and can be reached by river steamers. It is fifty miles by trail from the Gaines creek strike. In traveling from McGrath to THINKS HUGHES MAY BE NAMED _ I Watterson Considers New York Governor Coming Man in Republican Party By Cable to Tbe Dally Gateway. New York, April 22—Henry Watter son, editor of the Louisville Courier Journal, expresses the belief that Gov ernor Charles E. Hughes of New York will be the republican candidate for president in 1908. Although a democrat Col. Watter son is an au admirer of the New York governor, whom he characterizes as an able and independent man. He believes Gov. Hughes is the strongest man the republicans can nominate. Western mining stocks stood the shakedown on Wall street last month better than railroad stocks. It is reported that seven beilers are working in the Chandlar. dairies creek the miners go overland most of the way. Medrath was named for I’eter Me drath, t'nited States commissioner for that district. A townsite has been platted there ami it is so located that i; will probably be the chief center for the region. Want Mail from Seward Kalon expects the winter mail to be carried from Seward. He says he can mush from Medrath to Knik in five days, since lie knows the route. On tiie trip tliis time be made several false starts and bad to retrace his way. On the Kuskokwim lie traveled a long distance on glare ice. The weather was mild and after crossing the range to the Yentna side lie found a good deal of soft snow and broken ice. The most dillicult part of the trip was through a box canyon tventy miles long at t he upper end of Happy river, the tributary of the Skwentna which leads from the pa-s in the mountain range. In this canyon be traveled part of the way on ice at the edge of the river, but in some places where the walls rose sheer from ihe stream the ice was broken ofT and lie was obliged to go into the water. He j thinks that in winter the ice is proba- j 1*1 y linn al! the wav through the 1 * canvon. To (let Large Outfit Eaton will go to Seattle on one of1 the next steamers to get a large outfit and may go to < hicago to confer per- { sonally with his hacker, H. M. H. j lfolunder, a millionaire manufacturer of Chicago, who is largely interested at j Nome. He expects to induce Holander to huy or build a tirst-elass river steamer for the Kuskokwim. In win ter. he says, the trail to Seward offers by far the best outlet. Eaton met fifteen men from Seward bound for the Kuskokwim. He gave two of his dogs to the Newcomb part\, as they were too slow for him, al though the six he started with were the pick of thirty-two. With the re maining dogs he came through. The four are huskies and look well in spite of t heir long, fast mush. The strike reported by Eaton is not that reported by ('apt. Geiger of the steamer Quickstep, in Nome last win ter. The Quickstep party are much farther down the Kuskokwim. C'apt. Healy’s steamer Nunivak is at Mc Grath. RHODE ISLAND “ FAILS TD ELECT; Deadlock Over Senatorship in Legislature Continues to End of Session. By Cable to Tbe Dally Gateway. Providence, R. I., April 24—The Rhode Island legislature adjourned yesterday without electing a United States senator to succeed George P. Wetmore. As a result the state will have but one senator until the legisla ture to be chosen next fall can meet and elect after January 1, 1908. The failure to elect was due to the inability of the republicans to agree upon a candidate. Senator Wetmore was a candidate for re-election and the Aldrich wing of the party was divided between him and Samuel Colt. The anti-Aldrich candidate was R. H. I. Goddard, who was also supported by the democrats. T. G. Quinn is now mayor of Valdez, elected by the city council. GIANT POWDER RUNS AT LARGE Lighter Breaks Loose in katalla “harbor” an I Sows 9(H) Cases Broadcast. Dynamite strews the bottom of the high sens olT shore at Katalla and sticks of it are piled over the beach of adjacent islands, as the result of thrj escape of a lighter at Katalla. laden J with giant powder. The story brought on the Portland that the lighter was I cleared by the stevedores when part of t tie powder slid oft’ was incorrect.! The lighter broke loose from its moor- ! ings and was carried by the waves over | to the island, according to Sandy Mc (Jregor. purser of the'Jeanie. About !MX) cases ot giant powder were placed upon the lighter from the Jeanie. which stood oft shore about j two miles, and had been waiting there j four hours for the tide to make it agreeable to tow the lighter into the “harbor." Before tin* tide was right a high wind came up and tilted the lighter, tipping otV part of the powder. Then the waves grew more ambitious and drove the lighter to ward the island, spilling cases of pow der along its course. (Jiant powder floats for a short time, aided perhaps by the wooden cases, and boxes of the gentle explosive sail ed at random in the trail of the lighter before sinking. The bottom of the sea in that vicinity is now well-mined, and the rocks of the islands are smeared with dynamite where the boxes were broken when tossed there bv the waves, yet none of it exploded. The crew of the Jeanie spent a ner vous night, expecting all the time that their ship might be lifted out of the water or buried by a tidal wave, resulting from an explosion. PORT BLAKELEY MILLS BURNED Biggest Lumber Plant in World Totally Destroyed by Flames In a Few Hours By Cable to The Dally Gateway. Port Blakeley, Wash., April 2.'! -The lumber mills of the Port Blakeley Mill Company, the largest in the world,! were destroyed by tire early this morn-! ing, blaze starting at midnight. The j residence district of the town was un-1 harmed and ail of the 300 employes j who were in the mill when the fire j started escaped safely. The blaze was generated by friction in the bearings of machinery. Assistance was sent from Seattle by the city tire department, which aided materially in checking the flames, which were harder to light because of a high wind blowing from the sound. None of the lumber fleet was injured, the boats all moving out to deep water quickly. The loss is estimated at $600,000, of which 75 per oent is cover ed by insurance. To Rebuild Port Blakeley Mills Seattle, April 24—The Port Blake ley mills will be rebuilt without delay. BOUND FOR COOK INLET TO OPEN COAL MINES Seattle, April 25—A party of twenty two Michigan men, headed by George VV. Ross, will sail tonight on the steamer Bertha for Homer, on Cook inlet, to develop and operate coal mines there. They expect to employ miners at Seldovia. EMMA EAMES DIVORCED FROM JULIAN STORY By Cable to Tbe Dally Gateway. New York, April 27—Emma Eames, the prima donna, was granted an ab solute divorce today from Julian Story, the noted painter. The Bunker Hill & Sullivan silver lead mine in the Coeurd'Alenes, Idaho, has paid dividends aggregating $8,406, 000 since it was discovered by a mule twenty years ago- The capitalization is $3,000,000 and the February dividend was 6 per cent. The “Citizens” carried Fairbanks over the “Business Men” In the city election. ELLAMAR GOES FOR $1,000,000 Famous Copper Mine of Prince William Sound Sold to II. C. lilliott. OTHFR PROPERTY CONTRACTKI) Member of Biq Syndicate Negotiates for Acquisition of I xtenslve Mineral (iround. Cy Cable to The Dally Gateway. Seat ilk. April’J4 II. <Klliottof the IIithhard-l'.lli )tt Company. today pur chased the Kllamar copper mine for i.ooo. and also made contracts to take over other copper proper ty in the vicinity of that mine on the eastern mainland of I Vince Wiliam sound. Negotiations have been progressing quietly. INLET COAL TO GO TO NOME W. G. Wharf Contracts Output of Port Graham Mine to Paci fic Cold Storage. Nome will take most of the output of the Port Graham coal mine this sum mer. The Pacific Coal Storage Com pany has contracted to take the out put for its operations at Nome and will send steamers from there to get it. W. CP Wharf, owner of the n.ir. . came up from Seattle on the Pennsyl vania to go to Seldovia. He states that he expects the mine to v i»*i<l from 7000 to 10,000 tons this summer and that nearly all of this will he taken to Nome. He says he could have mad* contracts for several hundred thousand tons this year as the fuel famine in the states is getting worst? and tin? big con sumers are much perplexed to g< ■? their needed supplies. The first run from the mine will be taken by tlu? Sari Juan Pish Company for the plant which it will install at Kenai. the material for which is now coming on the bark Amelia. ERUPTIONS KILL 10OO VICTIMS Volcanos Near Santiago de Chili Bury Valladia District Under Lava. By Cable to The DeUy Gateway. Santiago de C’hili, April 26—Several volcanos are in eruption near this city; the district of Villadia is destroy ed. 1000 people were killed and many thousands more are homeless as the result of the overflow of lava covering a wide area. The inhabitants are fleeing and leaving everything. This city is covered two feet deep with ashes. _ _ TREMORS IN NORTH ITALY SCARE THE INHABITANTS Rome, April 25—Repeated shocks of earthquake were felt in various parts of Northern Italy this morning and the inhabitants are in a panic. SHOT FOR CALLING MAN “FRIEND FROM MISSOURI” Wallace, Idaho, April 25-Because William Quinn called Deputy Sheriff Hicks “My friend from Missouri” the officer shot him early this morning and he will die. Quinn Dies From Wound Wallace, Idaho, April 2(5-William Quinn, who was shot by Deputy Sheriff Hicks, died last night. Hicks claims he tired in self-defense. The Orr stage has again broken the record between Fairbanks and Valde/., cutting the time down to six days and fifteen hours.