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SEWARD GAEEWAY PUBLISHED WEEKLY BY GATEWAY PUBLISHING CO. | KntomI as Second Class matter August 24th, , 15E l. at the postofltce at Seward. Alaska, un-j dor the Act of Congress of March S. |s7U. SUBSCRIPTION RVTtS One Year tin Advance) ... $3.00 Six Months ... $1.50 1" ...... ,.> •», . \ 1 ... r OM . .r |» ’••»»!. Minnesota. Chas. It. Yske. authorized agent. SATURDAY. MAY J, lDt»s WIRELESS MESSAGES The lit'st wireless message trans i: Fa :iks to \ a hie. was received by the steamer Bertha "lien at Yaltle/. early hi the month. She, was a so iii cotniiiuuieati > " tb the 1*0 tiaiill which was at Uordova at tite i Fine-. Apparent ly the hie i m imitains ; ai> :ai Valdez. d<> ’;■<! impede fie trans it) s>:t»u of messages by wiieless from th interior. vYiivless stationes; pi o d at suitable points alon*T the; eo.is' and at Hiuch.nbrook inland' would make it |K)ssibie to keep in touch with steamers e pupp' d with wire,ess, ami also with Seattle. This would be of at assist nice in e se of wrecks Oceania^ outside of 11 inehinbrook i>. • . whet''e the Oregon met disaster. 'Pi . • .1 on tins trip was in com m . e it ion with the liertha whose w ■ .,> unfit is auam in working j t)i>., she also pick> d up a iraipiioiit ot a m* ssa^e from some unknown s,. .v, b it it was too incomplete to oi\e any connected story. i i; is taken i^loiio- time for definite ki vb dire of this far otT territory to Ujt into ihc minds of people in the >t, ii scn-;;ee is i.'iuuiif to our , p wi i ,a t be many years be .v.isk. n . 11 ■:i n. icu O' net* know ;e eft ?iioV'“ c.osely connected itb F ,lu in n .i s in stations tor A NOVEL PROFESSION l li)t> g.ai •( ;tU\ lx ?n consult?tv 1 ll, N a:i ,i - a:’-- a- iilgen io - ■ - a,i (■ ■ , its d i-'.ng mea: - 'o jji . , ;•.*i*•»v. It Iai> been ictt, 11ot\ — ev* , t • > i' tail*1 * ha lie- Dove, the piopr t ior of Dm* “lk v Drop Inn . in London, to formulate a Howl -cheme fo. ran-ien it a e i lr«un oth* r pock et- into hi.- own. A ay new industry >p. .i a tig up .- Ilk* I,* to give rise to what »i::i\ l*» t . a* -id* i—ties, some seh me- uhetvh\ u ha i- called the by-product r > be commercially v;i uhio. - a--ait ot any 111), ,J -t’soy i- a v i\ . o lead to side j |ju>. ' :•«•'. <uv a- acted. In Lon don there hate h* *ai organized by set-a he 'm * v '- e : .>■- for the purr -.* 4'i geti .■ g in touch with t] - - tie ne parted. It a-, i >.. . ■ - •’.••• of t hese sp. s| the Ultd' - parteo. if give:i an inch of advantage thi \ . ,;v a \ a- t. tv. -e spirit.-. Of gho-t-s, ,at.leg they aero receiving cn. • ir.igvn.v:; ! " •* t la* psychic sociotv.-, ! _r i t • ' .r with undue It*. ■ i:v !*-• t-otiabh.* hour-. Ton. ■*..•: tin- i. ' condition the pro-; pi .• .rot ;h*-“D-u Dtop Inn" orga-; njz d a -ovicty ior t. extermination of •• - -. Kor a given lee the mem ber- . * lie ofg.r.t -at :ou -land ready, no matt'-r now vrrifNiug the midnight visitor ma\ be. "to iay in patient wait for han, or I,. ;-, or ;t, and Knock his, or her, or its head utf with a -tout oak- ‘ en -tick." Aoplieation- for Dove'-expert serv ice- are said to have {toured in by the basket ful as soon a- Ids advertisment appeared. ' THE UNEMPLOYED During the past winter at intervals) have come reports from various cities in the states of men out of work, of! men parading the stieets and march ing to the city hall to demand employ- j ment, of men going in a body to! churches and asking that the morning j offering he given to them. Even up into the present month men by the thousands are said to have gathered! in bands in Chicago and appealed | to the city government to shield them . from starvation There is no denying the fact that these conditions have ex isted in the stato> during the past win ter, and that they still prevail to some j extent. Evidently there is something wrong somewhere that should he i righted. There are probably many things wrong. One thing that aggra vates the situation is the tendency of men to crowd into the cities. This is especially true of our foreign popula tion. They have been brought up in cities and know no other life, and when they come here it is the eity which in some way must give them support. When a country is new and nearly all the people are getting their living directly from the soil, there is little complaint, even though they are as much lacking in the comforts ol life as many of the loudest cotnplainers dur ing the past winter, it js to the soil that we must all look for the means to support lite, and when men are willing t<< turn to the country and load the simple life there will he less suffering in the city. FAULT FINDING HABIT Human nature, like gravitation, seems to have a force in it that keeps it pretty much along the same line. So far hack “that the memory of man runs not to the cmtrirx'’ there was the same tendency to dwell so largely upon the evil that men no, that their praiseworthy aet> escaped recognition. \mong the ancients one good man has gone on record as sax mg tlr.it all men are liars, hut afterwards repented and admitted that he spoke in haste. When times are dull and prosperity] is onh a memory or a visionary hope, it is easy to find a fault. Anyone can1 pick up a fault as easily as hi* could pick up a pehhle front the glacier stream. If a steamer should come into this haPbor some line morning and the captain should lind all the people ol the town gathering and hoarding gla cier pehides he would have reason! to think the town had gon "nutty." i Vet th<' hahit of seeking out faults and ; dwelling upon the evils, supposed or real, that exist in the world is just as senseless, and far more detrimental to the fault collector. The man who smiles when every- ; thing is favorable deserves no special credit, hut the man who keeps right on ; in the midst of ail verse circumstances ■ looking for and praising the good m* sees about bi n is the world's ben efactor. THE HASEY TRIAL The verdict of acquittal in the Ha- j s*»y murder trial at . I tinea u was not aj great surprise to anyone familiar with the conduct of the case. The decision, j ho we veu, comes as a shock lo ones faith in the ability of the court to mete out justice through the medium ->f the ordinary jury. In the Hasey ease there was no p test ion but that the accused was of\.iIr \ of the crime charged. He ad mitted that he committed the deed. I':, circumstances were such that he e id not claim that he shot in self de f.r.se. or that his life was endangered by the unarmed men who wereat i e: <; if : • pass t n rough the Key stone ear. Keen though he had been mu:. hold the pass, and had warned toe advancing men lo halt, there were, no conditions that would justify his j * , i, g into a company of men pass ing througii ihe valley. Tlmre art some circumstances that made it easier for tlie defense to sc c re a acquittal ot the accused: Dis trict Attorney Harlan, who was the man 1 -t -piaidi d to take charge of' til-- pt o>m cut ion. was sent to Fairbanks j on tie- pie-a that tin* labor difficulties tlv- re made Ids presence imperative. TTi ->ot;c man valuable to the prosecu tion anil a staunch supporter of .Itts tice was removed. Then in the midst of the trial Assistant District Attorney Scott was taken ill and died. With the prosecution thus weakened no great surprise was felt when the an nouncement of the result of the trial was made. Millennium Announced Seriously believing that in October, 1914, or in the year following, the mil lennium will come, the existing order of earthly things will change and that two-thirds of the people of the earth— the wicked two-thirds—will go down to eternal death, Mr. Charles H. An uerson. senior partner of C. II. Andes son vV Co., a commission firm on South Calvert street, has canceled two poli cies of life insurance which would ma ture at that time. Mr. Anderson is well known in the | commission trade, and being a business man he sees no use in continuing to pay premiums on policies that will do him no good, because the mixup that’s coming will turn the insurance compa nies upside down. The policies can I celed were issued by New York com panies and are of the twenty-year I kind, one expiring in 1914 and the other after the time the millennium is due.—Baltimore Sun. Sweaters—Clayson carries the best. ARRIVES FROM GAINES CREEK 0. Odgar King From the Innoko Country Reports on Mining Prospects and New Trail. Mr. O. Kdgar King of Moore City in the Innoko mining precinct, arrived in Seward about t!o'clock last evening. Mr. King left, No. <> on Gaines creek twenty-seven days ago. He reached Susitna Station in fourteen days. After spending two days at the Station In' came on to Ktiik and stopped there live days, and from there came through to Seward in six days. Mr. King came over the trail marked out by the government party under Mr. Goodwin from Seward it) Nome. The party said the route would be recom mended to the government. A wagon road is planned from Mc Grath’s, about ."*0h miles from the mouth of the Kuskokwim, to Gaines creek. This will enable the miners to get their supplies from tin* river to their claims on the creek. Gaines j creek is spotted with rich placer mines and is a iso a good quartz pros-, pect of free milling gold. Pay was i also struck on Ophir creek the latter j part of February. About .’lad men j wintered on Gaines creek. Mr. King has been in the territory! since 1!H)0. He is on bis way to Cor dova to meet his partner, and may go to Seattle and then from there to I Nome. State Republican Platform The following is from the republi can platform as adopted hv the repub lican party of the state of New York , at the beginning of the present nation al campaign: “We indorse the great administra- j tion of President Roosevelt and an* j proud that he is a republican from j New York. His noble work lias ex-; emplilied the principles of equality i upon which this Government was' founded and has presented a record of achievements which give to him for all ; time preeminence among the benefac-j tors of the nation. His fearless and j patriotic treatment of all questions in volving our foreign relations has main tained and increased the respect for the American Hag throughout the world. •‘We indorse the administration of j Gov. (has. B. Hughes. As chief exec-, utive he has set an example of official : courage and fidelity. “Relying upon ids devotion to thei interests of American citizens and j trusting in his wisdom, his courage J and Ids statesmanship, we direct the1 delegates this day chosen to present his num * to the national republican convention to he held in Chicago as New York’s candidate and to use all honorable means to bring about his nomination for president of the l nitetl States.’* Coal Land Interests A big delegation of Alaskans inter ested in the coal properties of the; North is now in Washington. The j Alaska Central is best represented, but the coal properties in the Bering! Lake district, which will be reached by the Guggenheim’s new road, have several interested capitalists present in tlie national capital. Donald A. McKenzie, of Orca, is leading the tight of the coal interests. Unfamiliarity with Alaska condi tions is believed to he responsible for congressional hesitation in the passage of the bill. Those officials of the gen eral land office who know conditions in the North favor the Gale bill and President Roosevelt’s message an nounced that he would accept a revis ion of the coal land laws such as is proposed. The republican convention at Juneau asked for similar treatment for Alaska—Seattle Times. WEEKLY WtATHtR RECORD Weather record for the week ending May 2. Temperature. Max. Min. Sunday 54 36 Clear Monday 47 36 Clear Tuesday 49 32 Cloudy Wednesday 46 40 Cloudy Thursday 50 32 Clear Friday 47 36 Cloudy Saturday 42 34 Rain Meet me at the Branch 1 ENGINES ' Guaranteed to Be High 6rade Simple and Reliable NEW IMPORTANT FEATURES MODEL 1908 For Particulars Addres GRAY MOTOR 00. P. O. Box 43. Seward, Alaska. R iJ JHESSaIRBK! _ f... - - ■ - _ - — — | The Store of Quality. 1 j 1 ’a! Merchandise ] | Of All Descriptions j I Whc'csale and Retail S iBest Goods—Best Prices—Best Service 1 We Make a Specialty of Outfitting Wholesale Retail 3 _ 1 ' 4 wnM ^ ir» m_- rfyp '.MKrmJcav vmtmmaxt .-£mmmx~Lm THE ALASKA TRANSFER CHRISTIENSEN & L.AUBNER. Proprietors Pianos and Safes Moved »>««■■■«»"«'"»»««>V«a Give us your orders for Coal 3c Wood Forwarders PHONE MAIN Seward. Alaska ] THE SEWARD LIGHT ANO POWER COMPANY (Incorporated November, under tbe laws of Alaska) Office—on Fourth avenue, near Adams, Seward, Aiaska knik Arm Coal Washington- In the opinion of the geological survey, as expressed in the last official report, on the subject, the coal deposits found in the region stretching northward from Knik arm and including the Matanuska hasin are “among the most valuable coal beds vet discovered in Alaska.” In a bulle tin issued the survey siys: ^ “Other sources of mineral wealth are also present in the same general region, for the gravel beds of many of the streams contain gold, although it has been discovered only in small quantities up to the present time, and the high mountains between the Knik and Matanuska rivers are re ported to contain copper: but the value of the coals of the area overshadows that of all the other metals. Excellent bituminous and semi-bituminous steam ing and coaking coals, comparing fa vorably with similar coals from Penn sylvania, occurring in beds ranging in thickness from 2 to 1L feet, underlie at least 70 square miles of the 400 throughout which coal-bearing forma tions exist. Anthracite coal has also been found in this region, but the quantity is uncertain. Lignitic coals occur in adjacent areas. The depos its need only accessibility to transpor tation lines to make them of the high est industrial importance, and such ac cessibility will be provided by rail roads now under construction.—Wal ter E. Clark in P.-I. You can get it at the Owl Land and Mineral Decisions Published by Woodford D. Harlan, land attorney, Washington, 1). C. Mineral Land- In many cases where the character of land embraced within a mineral application is placed in issue it must appear as a present fact that mineral can be secured from the land in paying quantities. Mining Claims—Citizenship of Cor poration-Under the terms of Section 2321 H. S., the citizenship of a corpo ration that applies for a mineral patent may be shown by a certificate of incor poration. Practice—Regulations of local office in the matter of procedure on opening public lands to entry, conclusive upon parties taking action thereunder with without protest. Reservation—Alaska—Mere occu pancy of land in Alaska for the pur pose of trade and manufacture, will not confer any right upon the occupant, as against the government, that will pre vent a reservation of the land for na val purposes. Residence once established can only be changed when the act and intent of the settler unite to effect such a change. Settlement Rights and Reservations —Rights of settlement extinguished by Executive Order creating reserva tions. Coal Lands—Entry of coal lands not allowed for non contiguous tracts.