®hp g’ruiarti (Sateroag and THE ALASKA EVENING POST. Published Daily Except Sunday by The Gateway Publishing Company. R. G. CHAMBERS, Business Manager. E. 0. SAWYER, Jr., Editor. Published Daily Except on Sundays and Holidays. Entered as second-class matter September 2, 191 •* at the postof/ice at Seward, Alaska, under the act of March 3, 1879. SUBSCRIPTION RATES One year, in advance...-.-.—-.-.-.-...$10.00 Pif month, delivered-....-.—... 1.00 Ihe Alaska Weekly Post, by mail....-..-.-.-.*. 3.00 AWAKE AT LAST America is arousing from her lethargy of contentedness to the real ization that nations are never wafted on to glory in flowery beds of ease. Our “place in the sun” is not so secure that we can go about the pur suits of pleasure alone, nor can \\» devote all our energies to betterments within. Those who climb must prove their fitness to retain their gains or their sj is the career of a skyrocket. THEY LOOK AFTER THEIR OWN; Other departments in Uncle Sam’s government might learn a lesson in humanity by watching his railroad builders. Outside the army and navy and life guard service, employees of the government often have cause to complain of the treatment accorded when they are ill. Hut not on his railroad. The Alaskan Engineering commis sion has gathered about it for the most part a crew of trained engi neers, experienced in railroad build ing. They know its trails, hardships and dangers. The strong man of to day is the invalid of tomorrow be cause of exposure in the line of his duty, and the active trainman is al ways in danger. So there is no red tape to unwind or quibbling so far as the chiefs are concerned when it comes to the care of faithful employees, ill or injured while in the service. ---- A WARNING Oi l OK THE WEST Those three Jap battleships slipping; in past Cape Flattery yesterday morning spoke volumes to those who cared to listen. Our boasted bulwark ot the seas has vanished. The oft repeated claim that no country in Asia or Europe could risk sending a force over seas to battle at our gates has gone glimmering with the fleet submarine, capable of '>,000 miles cruising radius, and the vast fleets of battle craft and their tenders. The three came silently, unherald ed until they were sighted off the cape. There might have been thirty-three %uth a fleet of transports carrying 100,000 men, for no one knows how many thousands the Japanese fleets have convoyed from hast to W est in this war. And we on the western continent knew not a word until long after ^he embattled hosts had landed at the Dardanelles. Salonica or in France. RUMOR AND THE “LEAK” The testimony in the “leak” investi gaiton in Washington recalls a verse of recent vintage. It runs something like this: Absolute knowledge have I none; Hut my sister's charwoman said her son Had seen a nursemaid on the street Who heard a policeman on his beat Say that his nephew had a friend Who knew when the war is going to end. Lawson heard a woman (now miss ing) say that some one had told her Tumulty “got his bit.” That is about as direct as any of the testimony thus far rung into the jamboree. Of course, the main thing is to get at the leak. It is a heinous thing for any public official to profit by the secrets of his official knowledge while the rest of us can’t because we don’t, know. The antiquity of the practice shouldn’t be allowed to blind us to