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c A N V AS _^tar£aulLTS -_il°®5 .ARRIVED, HATS Laiesl Styles John 3, Stetson and J, F. Hardeman OVEH THE LAKE Also large assortment of Suits, Shirts, Shoes, Underwear, etc. New stock Gold Seal Gum Boots, "La Ciosse" Rubber Pacs.The new rubber pac will arrive soon. Pick while the picking's good.__ H. Bobs, Leading Clothier HART SCHAFFNLR & MARX and CHESTERFIELD CLOTHES THIS STORE CLOSES AT 8 P. IYI.; SUNDAYS AT NOON OTTER_TWO STORES-1DITAR0D TCBACC;s I OlOi^RET"! / i A Full Line of Smoking and Chewing Tobaccos and Cigarettes al Right Prises KARL THEILE THE HOUSE OF (VIAX-I-MUM DISCOVERY IDITAROD Flags Flags Get your Fourth of July Dec orations now. We have small flags, large flags, cotton flags, silk, flags, from 10 cent: dozen to $10 each. Crepe paper streamers, Stars, Stripes and Eagles. Come quick. Get first pick. A full line of Inks, Blank Books, Diaries, etc., just re ceived. Snslefo Book Store ID1TAROD, ALASKA PAUL GETS A DUCKING Paul Budweiser- that isn’t his name, but y.m wouldn't recognize his real name, and we don't know it had a thrilling experience in a canoe yesterday afternoon which fortu natcly had no tragic result. He made the statement that he was going out m a canoe belonging to Tom Willett, and "take some paddles mit mine-oil." In stepping into the frail craft he upset it and was precipitated into the water. He clung to the overturned canoe until rescued by onlookers. In de scribing the accident afterward he said he "shtepped a lgedle too much all at once' into the canoe. Other than a chilly ducking and the lo.-s of a cute little ha: Paul said "everydings vas all rgiht. THE NEWNESS IS STILL THERE Why hitvo y ’.r fine cloth. - sp. :.!t by i washing, when you can have kid glove-, kid ‘dippers, line -ilk and wool dresses aim ; \i ■ parel dr ‘leaned by the Casca.ie Laundry with their new proce. s and new dry-cleaning material, just re c.'ived over Lebarge. Wc guaran^v 11 dry cleaned articles to be satisfactory re ceived at our plant. p didph 0BftSm Washington Selected Fresh Ranch Eggs Swift's Premium Ham and Bacon, Foil Cream Cheese Sam5! Applebaum RAMPS PETERSON FLAGS, BUNTING Everything for Fourth of July Decorations SMITH’S GUN STORE, ID IT A ROD, ALASKA PRAIRIE BELLE ARRIVES WITH PASSENGERS AND MAIL The Prairie Belle arrived shortly after noon today with passengers and a small consignment of mail. She made the trip from Dikeman in seventeen hours. Among the passengers were Mrs. Marston. Mrs. Shonbeek, B. T James and Bridie Anrier son Others of tin4 Delta’s passengers are on the Beaver, which is due some time this afternoon. BAoEBALL CHALLENGE The Iditarod baseball nine issues a chal lenge to any team in the district for a game on the Fourth of July at Iditarod, Mat City team preferred. The celebration committee will no doubt put up a prize for such a game. Communicate with James !■ anvil. A. A. Shonbeck came in from Discovery to meet Mrs. Shonbeck, who is one of the belated passengers from the Outside who came down the Yukon on the Sarah. JUST RECEIVED OVER LAKE LEBARGE A Well-Se’ected Stock of And also a full assortment of Cravenette Raincoats This Store Is the Home of Hart, Schaftner & Marx Clothes AND EXTRAS Have Just Received a New Supply of AH Kinds of Straps, Collar Pads, Hanes, etc. C. R, Peck, Flat City Riley & Marston are building a big silo on Boulder creek to -i'-re native hay in. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Smith, Jim Morton, Ed Kearney, Paul Minnich and Mr. Me Isaacs left for Candle creek Thursday. They are traveling across country. Charles Stranberg, on No. 1 above bench, j Otter creek, is working two cuts, ground- ; sluicing one and scraping the other, and j will be hoisting pay dirt m about a week. I Ronald McDonald and Borchu are sluic ing Jay Johnston's old tailing pile on No. 1 below. Otter creek. Smith & Olsen of Black creek are ground j sluicing and will be shoveling into the box in a few days. Jim Ryan left with his two horses for j Takotna Thursday across country. NO WAR WITHOUT TEDDY I We don’t think, in spite of the alarmist ! j dispatches coming from various points, that ; war will be begun against Mexico. Our j reasons are simplicity itself, and the main j one, and the most important and the only j one. is that Colonel Theodore Roosevelt is absent from the country, and it cannot but ( be believed that disaster would follow fast j and follow faster any effort to begin a war . in which the gallant colonel did not figure j to a very appreciable extent. Nome Indus j trial Worker. The read wa< sent out Monday evening J on the Alaska. Jonas Brewi came in from Flat City last night. ! Iditarod Lodge No. 1429, Loyal Order of Moose of the World, was organized three months ago, and now has a membership in Flat, Discovery and Iditarod numbering 27 5. and is rapidly increasing. The initiation tee is SI0.00, which, with the Examiner's fee of $1.50. covers the total expense of joining, and the due:, are $18.90 per year, payable quarterly in advance. Every member of the Lodge and the members o' his immediate family are, in the event of sickness, entitled to the attendance and care of the Lodge Physician FROM TH E DA I E OF HIS INITIATION, by complying with the laws of the order in that respect. After one has been a member in good standing for six months he is further entitled to a cash benefit during illness of $10.00 per week. In the event of death, iu neral expenses are paid by the Lt.gr. Ah of ’i-.ese benefit; are covered by the yearly dues of the members, and there can be no assessments for any purpose whatever. The matter of hospital service to our members will be taken up by the Lodge at a n early meeting. Twenty-six years old the 12th of last month, tho M oose ranks second among the beneficial fraternities of the world, having a membership of a million in over 1,600 Lodges throughout the United States. Canada. Hawaii. Philippines, Australia, Canal Zone, Germany, France and England, etc. Alaska now has 16 Moose Lodges, with memberships ranging from 65 to 80C strong. Charters for 14 others are pending, and will eventually be organized. The Loyal Order of Moose had a greater increase of membership in the year 1913 than all other fraternities in America combined, having established a Vocational School at Mooseheart, Illinois, for the benefit of Moose and their families, which will be the best equipped and the largest of As kind in the world, and will insure a free college education to the dh ildren of all Moose in good standing. Also the care of widows, or phans, the aged and the sick. Mooseheart is not a ' poorhou se." but a HOME and a SCHOOL, in every sense that these grand words imply. Judge John J. Lentz of Columbus, Ohio, defi nes Mooseheart as "the manifestation of the spiritual substance of the world’s best manhood and womanhood." Elbert Hubbard says: “Every member is actually a stockholder, and pays $1 a year toward making Mooseheart possible. As an economi c investment it appealed to me as an essentially good one Moose heart will also be a home for the aged and worthy members, although it looks to me as if a good Moose who lives up to the ritual will never grow old nor be incapacitated for work—he carries with him the young heart.” The education of the boys and girls at Mooseheart S chool will be along vocational as well as academic lines. The heart and hand will be educated as well as the brain. Each will b e advanced along the vocational lines to which they are best adapted, and when the students complete the prescribed course they will step into the world a finished product ready to meet the battles of life. They will not be compelled to take a post-graduate course in some machine shop, business college -or mer cantile establishment before they are capable of making a li ving for themselves. A correspondence school will be started shortly at Mooseheart for the benefit of members, and the lodge rooms will be converted into instruction rooms, where traveling teach ers will give special instruction, to promote by education an d organized effort a higher public spirit and better social and fra ternal order. This should especially appeal to the young men and women of our Order who have a desire in their hearts to do greater things. All men of the Caucasian race, of lawful occupation, sound body and good moral character, between the ages of 21 and 55, may make application for membership. Men who are over 55 are accepted as non-beneficial members. The personnel of the membership of the Loyal Order of M oose is second to no organization in the world No order contains! a more diversified membership. Upon the rolls of our Lodges will be found Presidents, Vice Presidents, Congressmen, states men and millionaires, together with the honorable mechanic, merchant and laboring man. All are banded together for the promulgation of one great common cause, viz.: THE UPLIFT OF HUMANITY; and each is doing his duty within the scope of his opportunity. The qualifications for membership are n ot wealth, social standing or exalted position, but we demand honor, morality and manhood. Are you qualified? Can you afford to refuse to affiliate with a million good men who will assist you in your hour of need, and when death overtakes you in sure the welfare of your family and the education of your children? Think it over! Iditarod Lodge No. 1429 meets at Discovery, Otter, tomorrow (Sunday) at 8:30 p. m. sharp. At Iditarod on Sunday, June 28, at S:30 sharp. GET IN YOUR APPLICATION NOW. Who are, who are, who are M/e ? V/e are M-double-O-S-E™ Get the password, get the rap; Howdy, Howdy, Howdy, PM PI FOR THE BIG Banee T'© m§ht Silk Skirts, Silk Sox, Silk Underwear Bayles Clothing Co. IDITAROD DISCOVERY, OTTER STORE CLOSES AT 8 P. M.; SUNDAY AT NOON Monday, June 8.—Alameda at Xulato. Alaska up Chena. 8:30 a. in. Carrier at Eagle, 7th. Casta up Yukon Crossing, 5 a. m. 7th. Gen. Davis up Circle, 7th. Daw son at Dawson. Gen. Jacobs up Delta, 4 a. m. Julia 13. down Kaltag. 0th. Kerr down Kaltag, 7th. Relief down Birches, 9 p. in. 7th. Reliance up Koyukuk river. Sari'll, no report. Schwatka up Rampart, :>ih. Tanana down Whitehorse. 0th. \\ ash bum up Mintu. 7 :20 a. in. White Seal up Ruby. 7:30 a. m. No report from Circle and Egbert. Delta to coimeet with Sarah at Holy Cross. Louise, Klondyke and Her mann at St. Michael. Tuesday, June 9.— Via 1 a, Fairbanks for Dawson. 2 p. in. today. Cam- r at Eagle. Case a up Carmacks. 7th. Gen. Davis at Eagle. Dawson up Dawson, 10 a. m. Sth. Gen. Jacobs down Richardson, S :30 a m. Julia B. at St. Michael. Kerr down Kaltag, 7th. Relief at Kaltag. Sarah down Melozi, 8 a. n. Schwatka up Cin l * 1 p. ni. 8th. Selkirk down Stewart. 10 a. rn. Sth. Shu sh anna, Fairbanks for Betties, 11 a. m. today. Tanana down Dawson tonight. Washburn at Fairbanks. White Seal at Gibbon. Whitehorse up Goffer Creek, ■"> a. in. Sth. Wednesday, June 10—Alaska down Hot Springs, 6 a. ni. Carrier at Eagle. Gen. Davis at Rampart., boun bound. Gen. Ja cobs at Fairbanks. Kerr down Kaltag, 7th. Relief up Louden, 9 a. in. Sarah down Kal tag, 10 p. m. 9th. Schwatka up Cir< F. sth. Shushanna. Fairbanks for Betties, S :30 a. m. Tanana scheduled down Dawson 9th. Washburn, Fairbanks for Dikeman. 7 p. m. today. White Seal up Hot Springs, 3:40 a. ni. Delta at Holy Cross, connect with Sarah. Reliance up Koyukuk river. Julia B. Herman. I- ui>e and Klondyke at Si. Michael. Thursday, June II.—Alaska up Rampart, 10:45 p. n . 10th. Carrier ar Eagle. Gen. Davis at Gibbon for St. Michael rln.- after noon. Gen. Jacobs down Tolovan.n. 0.55 a, m. Robert Kerr down K Jtlik, 5 .50 p. m. 10th; on bar. Relief up Mein:'., 7 p. m. 10th. Sc.rah down Kaltag. 9th Si. ..s’unna down Tf 1 ov ’. . 0:30 a. in. Sehv.itka up FlagF. s -:.u a. in. Fuh. Ten m i flown Cir cle. 11:30 a. m. 10th. »Va hburn down Minto. 7 a. in. Whitehorse up Big >alinon, 5 a. m. 10th. White Seal up Minto, .*:10 a. m. Yukon down Can :'. 9T5 ... in. 10th. Selkirk up Daw-son. 3 p. : l. 9th. Reliance up K yukuk ri\ The Little Delta has been out of the water during tlie past •week, undergoing ex tensive repairs. Friday, June 12.—Alaska up Rampart, 10th. Casea down Big Salmon, 9 a. m. 11th. Carrier at EagF. Ge:i. Davis down Kokrines. S a. m. Dawson up Selkirk, noon Rich. Gen. Jacobs at Gibbon. Robert Kerr at St. Michael. Julia B. at St. Michael. Reliance up Koyukuk. 7 a. in. Relief at Gibbon. Sarch d< u :i Iv-dik. 7 a, m. Sel kirk lip White river, 1 p. in, 10th. Shu shanna down Birches, 3:30 a. in. Tanana down Circle, 11 30 p. in.'10th. Washburn at Gibbon awaiting Yukon. White Seal up Xenana, 1 p. in. 11th. Yukon down Eagle, 5 a. in. Saturday, June 13.—Alaska up Ramj 10th. C&scu down Stewart, 8:10 a. m 12th. Gen. Davi- down Kaltag. 2 i in. Delta at Dikeman. Dawson up Carmack, a p. in. 11. Sarah at St. Michael. Selkirk up Yukon Crossing, 7 :30 a. in. 12th Shu shanna up Koyukuk river, 3 a. ni. Tanana at Gibbon for Fairbanks, 11:30 p. rn. 12th. Whitehorse scheduled up Whitehorse 11 a m. 12th. White Seal on ways at Chena for repairs. Washburn at Gibbon. ' ukon down Circle, 1 :4o p. in. 12th. Alfred Boas v. .- a passrng-r last Sunday on the launch Beaver f<>r Dikeman. whither he went to ne-t his father, who C returning to this city from the Outside. John Holmes received a dispatch Monday from Charles Ross at Dawson, stating that he was leaving for Iditarod that day on the Tanana. The Prairie Bell left Sunday evening with passengers for the Delta, connecting at Holy Cro- with the Sarah, bound for St. Michael Harry Watson came up from Dikeman Saturday with Bob Griffis and Jim Hairy, the mail carriers. On Thursday afternoon a boy baby was born in this city to Mr. and Mr.-. A E Malt by. Location Notices at Pioneer offi? • FINE NEW STOCK OF Just unpacked and placed on display at my now Willow-street store room. HOUSELINING. BURLAP. ETC. Ail Shades of Mixed Paints Best of Everything ALL THE TIME AT THE Arcade Cafe flat errv Open Duv and Night PATRONIZE HOME INDUSTRY Fairbanks beer DRAFT AND BOTTIE Bottled Beer $25 Barrel, $5 Dozen, 50c Bottle, 3 Bottles $1.25 ^saloon] DISTRIBUTING AGENTS The House of Quality For Best Goods and Right Prices CROWLEY & PORTER IDiTAROD The House of Quality FLAT CITY RING US UPANY SERVICE WE CAN DO YOURING US UP WESTERN UNION AND BEDFORD-McNEIL CODES NO TROUBLE TO FORWARD YOUR MAIL THE AMERICANO—16 VOLUMES FIRST EDITIONS OF THE NEW ALASKA MINING CODE A Drinking Place for Men NEW BUDWEISER witarod BAIRD ANDERSON flat city THE BRANCH