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SEWARD GATEWAY] PUBLISHED WEEKLY BY gateway PUBLISHING CO. Entered as Second Class matter August 2tth. IfcH at the postofflce at Seward. Alaska, un der the Act of Congress of March S. IS79. SUBSCRIPTION R4US • na Year (In Advance) ... $3.00 Six Month* ... $1.50 Eastern o®ce 213 Alworth Building. Duluth. Minnesota. Cha» II. Aske. authorized agent. SATURDAY. JUNK 15. T.X>7 THE COMING AUTOMOBILE Three years ago an eminent railroad manager predicted that before long the aut omobile would be developed to a tractile strength that would open the way for ti e abolition of railroads and the substitution of great national and state highways, perfectly paved, over which automobiles of tremendous power would draw heavy loads of, pass aigers and freight. The prediction attracted scarcely ! pass ug notice but the development of lb a etiobile has proceeded apace and ’s • >>< iit uses have run past! met ca> re carriages in which the ■ - .1 ■ • paved * • Imk: « arunning down d. gs and | |H‘(> 'and exciting the envy of; the i tariat. In the cities freight ante ‘nil's draw huge loads at less-; exp' . "• ‘ • ••• :torses. •e car can climb a cn pot h. . • . : a car. Last wiut-r in Sea" when the hill streets were so' „li;M , ry with ice that neither street cars nor horses could climb them au totti > hitched to coal wagons j bat. ">1 fuel up slopes unsurmountable j by any tractile power but the tin de steel a motors. fa • • a is spending billions in the! c>ns*ruction of railroad lines with; grata's approximating a maximum of 1 !>»■’ cent which may in a few decades 1 be as antiquated as canal boats drawn by muies. In their place tin* land may be interlaced with magnificent paved} highways like the ways of ancient Iu>' . maintained like city streets and like them free to traffic, which will be drawn by motor cars. Such highways should be cheaper than railroads even though the roadbed cost more, because j no rails would bo needed and much j steeper grades could be surmounted.* All this may come to pass before! time-serving politicians can obtain any , valuable personal results from the ad-1 voeacy of government ownership of ruii rouus. The Good Roads movement may be tin whole tiling. LOOKS LIKE CONSOLIDATION Indications multiply that the North-1 vev Steamship Company has ! arranged to swallow tiie Alaska Coast Company and accomplish a transporta tion trust :n the Alaska business. lt» only rival would then be the Pacific Coast Steamship Company, and the two cm Id easily effect an understand ing. Tiie Northwestern recently con solidated with the Alaska Steamship j Company, which operated only to Sonthe.istetn Alaska. Keren?ly the Northwestern and tiie Alaska Coast consolidated their agencies at Valdez. On the heels of that e tnes the quiet application of tiie Alaska Coast Company in the superior coUT at Seattle for disincorporating. The date of the hearing was set for July. Inasmuch as the Alaska Coast ( had a short time before disincorporated j and reincorporated oa the same day ( tiie new proceeding looks like another step toward amalgamation with the Northwestern. By the death of John T. Morgan the I senate loses one of its ablest members! and one of its honest ones. I he senate . can illy spare as much ability and in tegrity as have disappeared with Sena tor Morgan. He was one of the few senators absolutely independent of corporate dictation. Although an ultra . partisan and in his old age somewhat querdous he was to the last a useful member of the nation's highest par liamentary body. There are many queer ways of pick ing up a few dollars but Eric Lin- j blorn's “friend" who accepted $10 for his services in introducing Eric to a minister for marital purposes backed himself farther in the ditch of self abasement than the ordinary cheap grafter is willing to go. Gov. Hoggatt threatens to make a j tour of the territory this summer. If ho gets no warmer reception any where than S*> ward would give him he will find it a mighty chilly trip. When the czar and kaiser meet Nick mav mention the lapse of time between drinks but he is not likely to raise the same complaint concerning bomb ex plosions. _ Somehow Schmitz and Abe Ruef can’t make their books balance on this French restaurant account. These Central American wars are beginning to look as suspicious as a California prize fight. A writer in a Washington paper in giving extracts from the diary of Eli Smith, the Alaska musher, explains a reference to Siwashes by noting in parenthesis that they are "an Eskimo tribe.” __ The yellow journals will hardly suc ceed in stirring up a war with Japan unless they can get somebody to blow up an American ship in Japanese waters. The Gorman kaiser hales to be laughed at and yet he is always acting up so that people have to laugh at ! him. » Brigham 11. Roltertssays he will stick to those three wives. Maybe ho can t 1 get away from them. SAILED TO DEATH IN MARCH GALE (Continued from page 1.) 1 at Chenaga Point. Tho next day it ha<t disappeared and no sign of it has ever been reported at any place. There L no 'belter at the point anil it i is supposed the boat was carried out j by the storm. It was only recently that the men were mi'sed. Settlements are so far am rt in that region that when a man leu vc> one he may not he hoard of the , for many months and nothing's though: «>f it. Casual inquiries con cerning the men, who were well known around the inlet and Kodiak, , -.ranted investigation and it was then | found that they had not been seen| since they left Kagle Harbor in the ■ littie sloop. William Wharf, the coal man of Seldovia, brought the story to Seward yesterday. lit* was owner of ! the sloop, which he loaned to Latn ! bort last fall. Lambert had been living in that ' part o* the coast for several years. !I n parents live in San Francisco and are said to be wealthy. Peterson was a newer arrival. SARATOGA REACHES PORT AND SAILS WESTWARD Steamer Saratoga arrived in port from Seattle yesterday morning at 10 , and 'ailed for Seldovia and ITyak at n ;>. m. she brought twenty-two cabin j pas'Cngers and ten steerage to Seward, i am: had eight for Seldovia and three I for L'yak. Her local cargo was forty-1 live tons, besides sixty tons of coal for ! the steamer Dora. SPECIAL TRAIN RUNS OUT WITH VISITING NOTABLES A special train was run out to the end of the track ou mile oO yesterday to •show the line to John Rosene, presi dent of :he Northwestern Steamship Company. Maj. Richardson and Capt. Armstrong of the Alaska road com mi'-ion. This was Mr. Rosene’s first risi- here. Several local citizens went ou: w ith the party. Mr. Roseue went j west on Saratogo. Hobos Find Nevada Bonanza While tramping to the Masonic dis trict in Nevada two hobos picked up a piece of rook glittering with gold. They carried it to Gardnerville, sold it for enough to buy a wagon and team and went back and located nine claims. Other prospectors followed and a town called Hobo City is now on the map. Bertha Sails Southward Steamer Bertha returned from Sel dovia and Homer Sunday afternoon at 4:30 and sailed for Seattle at 10 o’clock. She took on a cargo of lum ber here for the Reynolds-Alaska De velopment Company at Tgitouche. K. L. Barnes with a party of nine besides himself went out on the train today to go to Turnagain arm. where be ha> a rock contract on mile “1. LEARN HOW TO INVEST IN MINING. It is the policy of Profit and Loss to teach investors how, and this popular investor’s magazine is growing daily, earning the confidence of mining stock buyers all over the world. Profit and Loss has scored a success unprece dented in the annals of western finan cial journalism, and this success is based upon the exceptional service rendered the public. Here Is a Great Free Offering It costs you nothing more than a postal card to get a free sample copy of Profit and Loss. Better send your name to us today, and see for yourself what a splendid value you get for your money in a Profit and Loss subscrip tion. Mind you, this magazine is ab solutely independent, or it could not have met with its great success. Ask for special clubbing offers on other publications; also premiums on sub scriptions. Do Not Be Steered or Misled Our magazine speaks for itself. To see it is to like it. Please write today for a free sample copy. Wo have no mining stocks to sell, and none to boost. Look us up. Write today be fore you forget it. We know that Profit and Loss will please you. Sam ple copy free. Address: PROFIT AND LOSS MAGAZINE 1715 California St. Denver, Colo. JOHN T. MORGAN PASSES AWAY Famous Alabama Senator Dies Suddenly in Washington at Age of 83. By Cable to Tbo Dally Gateway. Washington, 1). C., June 12—Senator John T. Morgan of Alabama died in this city late last night. Senator Morgan was 83 years of age, the oldest man iu the senate except his colleague, Senator Pettus, who was born three years earlier. He was sec* ond in length of service in the senate, which ho entered in 1887 and had served cotinuously thereafter until his death. Senator Allison of Iowa alone outranked him, entering the senate in 1873. Senator White of Maryland lirst entered the senato in 1*68 hut his to-1 tal service only aggregates eight j years. Senator Morgan was horn at Athens, j Tennessee, June 20, 1824, hut emigrat-' 1 ••(! to Alabama when 9 years old. lit* j ! was admitted to tho bar in 184.r>: was j i a presidental elector in I860, elected | on the Breckinridge ticket; was a dele 1 gate in 1861 to the state secession con front ion: joined the Confederate army j in May 1861 as a private anti rose to {the rank of brigadier-general. After tho war ho resumed the practice of law at Seliua, which he continued un til he entered the U. S. senate March , 4,1*77. He was a presidential elector on the Tiltlen ticket in 1876. lie had ju>t entered upon his sixth term in the senate and had ho lived would have j been 89 years of age when it expired. SCHOONER IDA MAY TOWS WALRUS FROM SELDOVIA The gasoline schooner Ida May ; towed the gasoilne steamer Walrus | from Seldovia to Seward, arriving Sat I urduy afternoon. The Ida May came j up from Seattle recently with a cargo i of merchandise for Knik. From Se 1 ward she sailed for Valdez with a car- \ | go of fortv-tive tons of coal from tho | Port Graham mine. Her owner, Capt. Morrison, will make a study of the Prince William sound trade with a view of entering it. The Ida May was here two years ago. Sho wa> then a sailing schooner, the gasoline motor having been in stalled since. The Walrus is the boat which C. F. Boggs recently purchased in Seldovia i for the Prince William sound trade. She has a good hull but her machinery is antiquated and a new engine will have to be installed. For that reason; she had to be towed to Seward. Tho [ new engine will be installed here.! She has a capacity of about twenty j tons. WEEKLY WEATHER RECORD Weathei record for the week ending Juno 15: Temperature. Max. Min. Sunday 54 47 Part cloudy Monday 63 44 Clear Tuesday 61 48 Clear Wednesday 59 44 Clear Thursday 55 50 Cloudy Friday 58 45 Part cloudy Saturday 58 50 Cloudy SEWARD STEAMERS Elsie: in port; sails for sound ports this evening. Saratoga; sailed for Uyak 14th. Portland; sailed from Seattle 10th. Santa Clara; sails from Soattle 16th. Bertha: sailed for Seattle 9th. Dora; sailed for Valdez loth. It is reported from Nome that a rich strike was made on Penny river last month. A big gravel deposit and one $8 pan form part of the story. The foreign immigration into the United States in 1906 is now officially stated to have been 1,100,735. The Bank of Seward We receive deposits subject tocheck. We pay interest on timo deposits. We issue money orders good any place in the world. We buy gold dust or bullion. We make collections. We guarantee a service that is prompt, accurate and safe. We grunt to our customers every favor consistent with conservative banking. We invite your business. BANK OF SEWARD. Of Interest to Alaskans Seward has two dental parlors that are equipped with the best and most modern appliances that can be found anywhere. The two operators are grad uates in the east, of years experience, and established reputation, guarantee ing the very finest in workmanship and materials. Prices are the same as for same grade of work by reputable men anywhere. PROFESSIONAl^CA R D s L. V. RAY ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Over Hank of Seward E. E. RITCHIE ATTORNEY -AT- LAW Ray Building, Seward, Alaska H. S. FARRIS LAWYER NOTARY PUBLIC Ray Building, - - Seward, Alaska d. A. BAUGHMAN PHYSICIAN and SURGEON City office: Owl Drugstore. Home office: At Railroad Hospital A Jf you desire, write or ship to MCMILLAN FUR & WOOL CO. 41 Langley St., Victoria. B. C. G. W. PALMER GENERAL MERCHANDISE Prospectors 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 — Arctic Brotherhood CAMP SEWARD NO. 21. —— " "I | Meets every second and fourth Sat ■ urday evening tn Fire Hall. J. L. REED, F. E. YOUNGS, ^Arctl^tecord^r^^^^\rctl^>hlef^ H. E. ELLSWORTH SEWARD. ALASKA. ASSAY OFFICE Reports on mlnei. Ore Analysis Gold. M-50 Gold and Silver. 2-<X) , Copper. J "® Gold. Silver and Lead. 3.50 Gold, Silver and Copper. 3.50 Gold. Silver. Copper and Lead. 4.50 Gold and Silver Umpire. 5.00 Iron. 400 Sulphur. Aluminum, Tin, Platinum, Quicksilver, Zinc, Nickel. Cobalt. Chromium, etc.. •• Mill tests.$15 to *30 ' Ore analysis.110 and up Gold refined, melted, assayed and bought Jf you want a free sample copy of the most progressive and up-to-date min ing journal published send your name te Mining Topics, 64 Fulton street, New York. Its news is authentic and unbiased and the paper is devoted to the specific and general interests of mining in every field. ..... f.pnrnp Dnll 0e"eral Mercl,ant UaGUI yt Kills!,...hope, Alaska... Headquarters for Prospectors' Outfits for all Susitna and Kuskokwim points Discount on orders of s^r» or over as follows: Dry Goods, Hardware. Ammunition, Crockery, Drugs, Graniteware, Hats, Shoes, Etc., 20 per cent. Groceries, • - - 15 per cent. No discount on Flour, Sugar, Ham, Bacon, Lard, Butter and Eggs, but all at a low price. _L...... I IKNIK TRADING COMPANY O. G. HERNING. Manager. | —PROSPECTORS' OUTFITS A SPECIALTY— a A new stock will arrive May— I i first river boat connections. I BOOTH & CO. -ms HOPE AND GIRDWOOD <05“Call on the old reliable firm of Booth & Co. for anything in the Liquor and Cigar line. Mi Kleccion Cigars, Old Line and Hunter Rye, Nelson Co. Bourbon, Olympia Beer. Everything first-class. Best of attention, run on the live and let live plan. Girdwood, Alaska. C. R. BOOTH, Manager. ^ Northern Saloon E. L. WHITTEMORE, PROPRIETOR. I * WINES, LIQUORS AND CIGARS FOURTH AVENUE, SEWARD, ALASKA. D. C. BROWNELL THE ONLY EXCLUSIVE Hardware Store THE ALASKA TRANSFER CHRISTIENSEN &. LAUBNER. Proprietors Pianos and Safes Moved spec,, attention to city Trad. Give us your orders for Goal &. Wood General Forwarders phone main se»**rd.Ai*sk« THE SEWARD LIGHT AND POWER COMPANY (Incorporated November, 1905, under the laws of Alaska) Office—on Fourth avenue, near Adams, Seward, Alaska