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ft —CGXS<M3COC£XI>CXXX3C)OGO3GOG(X;0G)OeO©OC)O©CXDOGXI)G©®©Q g BUY RIGHT I © Go to the place where a dollar g § takes off its hat to fifty cents y i Above everything is a high elevation, That is the Attitude © | of our Values. If in need of a suit or a pair of pants call © - i on us. Not a fraction of a fib, fabrication, falsehood or © | fiction gets into our suit talk, nor any other of our good’s | | talk for that matter. TRUTH is the Best Salesman | © We carry Clothing, Shoes, Rubbers, Oil Clothing, Miners © | Shoes, Dress Shoes, Mittens, Gloves, anything you need in © © the Clothing or Shoe line. Groceries none but the very best © y Our prices on Hardware, Guns and Ammunition, beat all y © competition, Fine assortment of Glass and Crockeryware. © § Every buy is a bargain. © 1 N. F. ZIMMERMAN, The LEADER § H 3G5®©3O®GCXD©O3OG©CXD©GCXiX3©G0OO3S0©SO®0OG{iXDG)GX3©GA3©©3€D®t) | ^ IBI—«H ■ —II H I- I2JBBK9R■'« ■ ' — I ■ ■■ ■ ■ ■ Mil mm1 mgTPf nrr—■8—— CHAS. DEPPE Cigars Barber Shop and Bathrooms and Ketchikan, Alaska Tobacco y Nothing but First-class Work Satisfaction Guaranteed *§• i 1 ! Ketchikan Steam Laundry j 1 W. F. SMITH, Manager $ I Send in your work or leave your orders, t and Maude will call for them. | New Town Ketchikan X iff -'! rz-fri iff-f'l'H-?**■;*» Northern Machine Works W. F. SCHLOTHAN, Prop. Genera! Machine and Blacksmith Work Iron, Steel and Piping on Hand Special Attention to Mine and Marine Work Ketchikan - Alaska 1 SCAMMON’S 3 • • I Cafe aid Oyster Parlors | • • • The place to get Good Things to Eat J • # a Best of Cooking, Best of service • 9 J; 3 Reasonable Prices • I • | Aldon Chocolates and Bon-bons | • Boxed here in Ketchikan • « • o * 3 Stedman Hotel Entrance on Dock Street 3 e • | Ketchikan ■ ■ Alaska % 0 ® C30®®*®©6©3C&8®8C*©033023G©9®#®®«®®®09®«®®®©©©®®®®®®® If you want a square deal call on THE FUR and CURIO STAND SAM GOWAN, Prop., We Carry tlie best assortment of Confctionery, Fruits, Cigars and Tobacco, Smokers Supplies, Reading Matter, Indian Curios, etc. We Pay Cash for Furs of all kinds Opposite Tongass Trading Go. Kechik an - - Alaska / 1 .—— ————— ■■ ■ — ———- ————- ' ——— owling Alley j Open every day till 12 o’clock at night. f ^ Come and enjoy yourselves at the healthi- % % est exercise. | | HUNT & PARKHURST ■ ■ Proprietors f Pacific Coast S. S. Co THE PIONEER LINE OF ALASKA The Elegant Steamships of this Company leave as follows: Cottage City northbound, Jan. 20 and Feb. 2, southbound 27th. Ramona northbound, Jan. 15 and 29 southbound Jan. 19 and Feb. 2nd. Cottage City via Vancouver, Sitka and Killisnoo. AL-KI, will sail about twice a month, call at outside ports I and will carry combustible freight when necessary. Above sailing dates subject to change without notice H. S. REYNOLDS, Ticket Agent, Ketchikan Alaska. HOW IT AROSE. The Skagway Alaskan gives t.hh ! explanation of how the einbroglis j between the United States and Japan ! over the San Francisco school ques ! tion came about: “The answer to the question of how the trouble arose” says the Alaskan, "is the story of two American blun ders, one by the Cleveland adminis tration in 1814 and the other by President Roosevelt twelve years later. In 1894 representatives of President Cleveland and the mikado made a treaty wherein the United States pledged to Japan the same rights in American schools that were accorded other foreigners. The clause attract ed little attention, and the treaty was ratified by the senate. At tire opening of the public schools iu San Francisco last fall for the present school year, the Japanese students were separated from the white pupils and placed in schools maintained for Asiatics. The Japan ese objected to this, and their consul at San Francisco appealed to the Japanese government to prevent it. It due course the Japanese Ambass ador, arrayed in official habiliments, called upon the American state de partment and directed attention to the fact that the provisions of the treaty of 1894 were being violated at San Francisco. The matter was referred to President Roosevelt. Then was committed the second American blunder. In his impetuous way, before he had looked into the legal status of the affair, President Roosevelt personally assured the •Japanese ambassador that he treaty would be enforced. The San Francisco school board stood upon its rights. It asserted that it had a legal right under the law of California to do as it did, and it protested that it was immune from federal interference. It refused to comply with the demand of the presi dent that the Japanese students be admitted to the white schools. President Roosevelt finally came to understand his inability to make bis promise to enforce the treaty good. He opened negotiations with the San Francisco people and it was agreed that if Japanese exclusion could be secured the board would rescind its action. That was the basis of the compromise that has been adopted. The price paid by President Roose velt to make good his promise that conditions at San Francisco would be changed in accordance with Japam^e demands will be understood wnln one considers that he has been a strong opponent of Japanese exclusion for many years, and that his first thought was a regulation of the Jap anese situation by making citizens of the little brown men.” In the Harness Again.—A. P. Swineford, an early publisher of the Marquette Mining Journal, nnd later territorial governor of Alaska, is actively in the newspaper harness again, The Mining Journal having received the first number of the Ketch ikan, Alaska, Mining News, of which Mr. Swineford is editor. He has made his home at Ketchikan for the past several years and has pre viously been identified with news paper enterprises there, but has been out of the harness for the past year or two. The new Ketchikan Mining News is one of the best appearing papers that has ever come out of Alaska, being printed in a first class plant that among other things has a tpyesetting machine. Under Mr. Swineford's able guidance it will be the pre-eminent newspaper power of the territory and may always be de pended on to labor unceasingly for Alaska’s advancement and prosperity. —Marquette (Mich) Mining Journal. Congress must have been in an unusually amiable frame of mind, or else have forgotton itself entirely, when it passed the bill remitting the Slot) per mile tax on the Tanana Mines R'y and at the same time ex tending the time in which it may be completed. ORDER In the District Court for the District of Alaska, Division No. 1, at Juneau. In the matter of the fixing of the ertns of Court for the year 1907. Now on this day, this being the time required by law, for the fixing by order of the terms of this Court for and within Division No. 1 , for the District of Alaska, for the year 1907; and it further appearing that public business and the business of this Court repuires a continuance of the Term of this Court now in session known as the November, 1900, Juneau Term, and that the said term should lie con tinued in lieu of adjournmen thereof and the calling of another Term at a later date with Terms of Court at other places intervening, now there fore upon consideration, “ It is hereby Ordered that the Terms of Court within Division No. 1 of the District of Alaska for the year 1907, be held at the following places, as hereinafer set forth, towitt:— At Juneau, commencing on Mon day, Nov. 25th, 1907; At Skagway, commencing on Mon day, June 3rd, 1607; At Skagway, commencing on Mon day Nov. 11th, 1907; At Ketchikan, commencing on Mon day, October 14th, 1907. And it is Further Ordered that the Clerk of this Court have notices in accordance with this Order duly published at least once in a newspaper published in each of the said above named cities. Done in open Court this 2nd day of January, 1907. ROYAL A. GUNNISON, District Judge. District of Alaska, Division No. 1, T, C. O. Page, Clerk of the District Court for the District of Alaska, Div ision No. 1, do hereby certify that the above is a true and correct copy of an order made and entered of record in this Court on the 2nd dav of January, 1907. Dated this 15th dav of January, 1907 C. C. I*AGE, Clerk, | IT IS TO LAUGH \ HOW ONE GOT IN. St.. Peter settin’ at de gate; Nigger passin’ by— St. Peter up an’ sez ter him: “How did you ccme ter die?” “Go ax de man whut belt de gun A’pintin’ at dat roos’; Go ax de dog whut helt my foot An’ wouldn’t turn it loose!” “An’ so, St. Peter sez ter him, “You wuz kotcli in de ae’?” Dat nigger turnt and looked at him An’ spon’s: “Hit is a fac’.” “Down in de pit den you mus’ go Per stealin’ uv dat hen!” The nigger s'cratch his haid right hard— St. Peter had him den!” But ‘drectly, liftin' up his arms, He flop ’em on his side, An’ 'zactly like a rooster crow Three times out loud he cried! St. Peter hung his haid wid shame— He 'membered uv his sin— An’ grabin' up a great big key, He let dat nigger in! —New Orleans Picayune. LINCOLN’S REPARTEE. Uncle Joe Cannon tells this new and characteristic one on “Honest Abe” Lincoln: “It was at the Illinois state convention at Decutar, held to name delegates to the national convention that nominated Lincoln for the presidency. After the prayer a cry was started on the platform: “Open a passageway! Open a pass ageway I Let Dennis Hanks and Dick Oglesby through! They have some rails that Dennis Hanks and Abe Lincoln made in 1830. ’ “They came in with the rails, which had a piece of cotton cloth rolled around them bearing the legend: ‘These rails were made by Dennis Hanks and Abraham Lincoln in 1830. ’ “They were walnut rails, such as would be hard to find now, but there was plenty of that kind of fine hard wood in those days. The crowd went wild and it was some time before order was restored. There was a yell for Lincoln. “At this stage of the proceedings some fellow yelled out: ‘Abe, did you split them rails?’ Said he: ‘Dennis Hanks says I split those rails. 1 don't know whether I did not not, but I have made many a better one!’ Then the crowd yelled. ’ ’—New Y'ork World. WOULDN’T DO FOR A DOG. Several young men were standing before the desk in the Shirley Hotel yesterday afternoon talking about dogs. One of them thought he’d bother the telephone girl by drawing her into the discussion. She is pretty and good-natured, but yesterday afternoon she was very busy. “Say, Bessie,” said the young man,” “what kind of dogs do you like?” The girl found time to say, “Fox terriers. ” “Y'ou do?” “Y'es; I’d just love to have a nice little fox terrier. ” “Gee!” said the young man. “I’d like to be a little fox .terrier.” The girl smiled. “You might not fill the bill,” she said. “Why not?” he asked. “Because,” she replied, after answering a call. “I’d want one bright enough to be taught some thing.’—Denver Post. BY' ANOTHER NAME. “Senator, do you think that graft will eventually be eliminated from politics?” “YVithout doubt, ” replied Senator Badger, assuredly. “But I think there will still be many politicians susceptible to certain persusaive in fluences that will be known by another name.”—Milwaukee Sentinel. A GOOD REASON. “So your servant girl has left you again?” said Mrs. Naybor. “Y'es,” repied Mrs. Suburbs. “What was the matter?” “She didn't like the way I did the work.”—Philadelphia Press. F. O. E. Some one having questioned the probable longevity of the Fraternal order of Eagles, was given the follow ing poetical reply: When the lions eat grass like an ox, And the fishworm swallows the whale, When the robins knit wollen sox, And the hare outrun by the snail, When the sea serpent stands right up like men And doodle bugs travel like frogs; When grasshoppers feed like the hen, And feathers are found on hogs, When the Thomas cats swim thro’ the air And elephants roost on trees; When insects in summer are rare, When snuff never makes you sneeze, When fish creep over dry land. And mules on bicycles ride; When foxes lay eggs in the sand, And hearts of true Eagles of stone, When Dutchmen no longer drink beer And girls go to preaching on time; When Billy Goats butt from the rear, And treason no longer is a crime. When ideas grow in a baboon’s head, And wool on the hydraulic ram, Then will the order of Eagles be dead, And the country won't be worth a d-n The liquor tax, occupation tax, forest reserve restrictions, and with drawing the coal lands were all no doubt designed to encourage the hardy pioneer to settle in Alaska.— Douglas News. LOCAL HAPPENINGS i . Louis Levy, the hustling fur buyer, ’ has been in town again this week, as The Mining News prophesied he would be. . W. J. Sully has commenced work on his proposed new cottage, in the rear of his carpenter shop on Grant street. It is intended for the occupa tion and use of his employes. The enlargement and extension of the Heckman wharf, in length and breadth, is nearly completed, making it the largest and most easily accessi ble wharf in Southeastern Alaska. L. D. Colvin, or as he is more fam iliarly known to his many friends “Dick,” has been in town this week from Maple bay, waiting for a ship on which to embark for Seattle where he goes to see his mother, who is ill. The Metlakahtla in-ass band, under the leader ship of Prof. Gordon, will lie the attraction at the Elite roller skating rink tomorrow night. There will be no charge for admission—only 50 and 75 cents for the use of ladies’ and gentlemen's skates, respectively. But you can do better at Taylor's, the Jeweler. John R. Beegle, deputy collector of customs, had the luck to present prescription No. 10,000 to the Ryus Drug Co. to he filled, for which he had placed to his credit the five dollars advertised in this paper to be awarded to the person holding the prescription answering to that number. Dr. Zuber, Dentist, Frye-Bruhn big. Geo. A. Brown is in town from his copper-gold property at Big harbor, west coast of Prince of Wales, where he has a shaft down to a depth of 57 feet in a ledge carrying more than ordinarily high values in copper and gold. The property is located about 2000 feet from tidewater, and is a sinking proposition ; in other words, will have to be worked through shafts sunk along the course of the ledge. He has about 50 tons of high grade ore in his dumps, all of which came from the shaft in winch he has been working. Negotiations are pending for the taking over of the property on bond or purchase which, if consumated will most probably re sult in the speedy development of another profitable mine of copper and gold. New Custom House, Perhaps.— The Redmen have submitted a proposition and plans of a two story building which they propose to erect on the triangular piece of ground, adjoin ing their hall at the corner of Main and Mission streets, to be occupied for custom house purposes. The plans have been forwarded to Washington, and if approved the building will be erected without unecessary delay. Dr. Zuber, Dentist. Frye-Brnhn big. Road Wanted.—A petition, form ulated by commissoner Rush, of Kasaan, one of the owners of the Rush and Brown mine at Karta bay, has been circulated and largely sign ed. asking the U. S. road commission to provide for the construction of a wagon road from the head of Kasaan bay across Prince of Wales island to a point on Klawak inlet, opposite the settlement of that name. The Min ing News has every confidence in the belief that the commission will accord the petition its earnest consid eration. Watch your watch, and if it doesn't keep good time take it to Taylor, the Jeweler. 09999009999909009Olf999»99900999O99099»Q9Z9999JC909S09 i Got The Lucky Number I I s 5 John R. Beagle was the lucky man • • bringing in Prescription 10,000 re- • § ceiving therefore tie prescription • • free of charge and $5.00 in trade. 2 • You 11 be lucky too if you trade at 2 I RYUS DRUG COMPANY j • 2 0900 )»O99OO09999»»Ct099009000000 3900 '3QOS999OO0O ,’CO 2 i ' " m Fjl per n:f: tar H 2 cent. The above is a low esti mate of what you save, on your monthly account by buying your grocer ies from Connell & Thompson ELITE Skating Rink The only Roller Rink in Alaska Ketchikan's Popular Resort ADMISSION FREE SKATES—Mornings, 35c Afternoons and Evenings 50c. Natives allowed on Floor Tuesday and Friday only J. E. SAYLES, Mgr. Ketchikan » - Alaska FOR SALE My Business and Property On Newtown Walk. Only reason for wishing to sell, protracted ill ness in family requirim; change of climate E. K. TURNER • - Newtown Walk •••••••••••••••••••••««••• • • 1 Raber's Barber Shop % 2 JOHN RABER. Prop. 2 e o J The best place in town J 2 to get a Shave, Face Mas- 2 • sage or Haircut- • 2 OO * • c { Full line of J • • • Cigars and Tobacco | • • The Bjn Bcnnerie CHAS. COUE. ] rop. The Ntw Canty Store A Brand New Store full of the best GANDIES, FRUITS, NUTS SOFT DRINKS Etc. Opposite Hunt's Meat Market Ketchi ?an * - Alaska RELIABLE Transfer & Draying Co. HARRIS & HILLARD All Orders will be promptly and carefully executed. Orders may be left with Connell & Thompson, Union Steamship Co. Stedman Hotel, and Pacific Coast Steamship Co. Contracts Taken For Any Work. S. John’s Hospital Trained and Skillful care to all alike, rich or poor Open to any Phycisian Miss E. M. Deane, Nurse in charge NEW VIENNA BAKERY H. C. SCHMIDT, Proprietor Bread and Pastry of all Descriptions Pies Like Mother Used To Make Party Cakes Made on Short Notice Kriedler Bldg. Newtown Ketchikan THE KETCHIKAN HOSPITAL Is ready for business at all hours of the day or night. We give the best of care. Open to all Regular Physicians Mrs. Sara R. Langstrom, Matron Newtown Ketchikan Alaska 1 Ketchikan’s Popular Store H Someone has said “man wants but little here below.” That sentiment is a good one, but we think the writer failed to complete the thought in not adding “but wants that If little GOOD.” It has been our endeavor to live up to the last g I part of the thought, the “GOOD” part. We g a feel that we have succeeded. Our business is | 9 steadily increasing which means a greater num- | ber of customers for us to satisfy, and We Are 0 ! Doing It. Our stock comprises every thing 5 | that a general store in Alaska should offer for | i sale, and we know that you will be thoroughly ■ 1 satisfied if you conclude to give us a trial. We 5 ( 1 make a specialty of camp trade and guarantee j JH %• that you get the goods you order. £ S Yours for Business, £ • .V I Tongass Trading Company 1 Ketchikan - - - Alaska