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THE IDITAROD PIONEER Published Every Saturday Morning at Iditarod, Alaska Vol. 7 CHARLES A. DERRY, Editor and Publisher No. 1S Subscript Ono Year . $10.00 Oix Months 5.00 on Rates One Month . $1.00 j Slnglo Copy .25 j Advertising Rates on Application FOR MEMBER OF THE LEGISLATURE The time is approaching when the citizens of this sec tic n should determine whether they desire to be repr: ented in the territorial legislature, the Third session of which will convene in Juneau in the spring of 1917, and the members of which are to be chosen at ne ct November’s election. The work of the two sessions of that body already held emphasize the need of the Interior to be represented by men who understand its needs and are in touch with condi tions as they exist here. In the last session this sec tion was deprived of a representatve because of the fact that no interest was taken in the matter, and finallv. when no candidate was put forth by the resi-1 dents of the Iditarod district, the Non-partisan con- ’ vention at Fairbanks nominated a local resident at a venture. This year the voters ol the Iditarod and sur round ng districts are to be given the choice of at leas? two candidates, and although it is too muc h to hope hat both may be chosen, the interests of the distrie: could be intrusted to the hands of either with full assurance that they would be cared for. Two years ago the many friends of W. H. Kil gore endeavored to persuade him to make the race for the territorial legislature. He was compelled to declii! ■ because of personal business ties. This year he feels at liberty to make the race, and has con sented to the use of his name for the nomination on a non partisan ticket. Mr. Kilgore s known ability, his knowledge of local conditions and his intense Amerconism, coupled with his scholarly attainments, j make him an ideal candidate for the position, and no doi bt he would receive exceptionally strong sup port throughout the district. Another name that has been mentioned in con nection with the legislative nomination is that of W. A. Vinal of Ophir, United States commissioner at that thriving cented of the Innoko mining district. Mr. Vi lal is not personally known to many of the residents of the Iditarod district, but those who do know him speak in the highest terms of his ability and hi devotion to the interests of Alaska, and espe cially of the Interior, where he has made his home for many years. The citizens of the Innoko coun try, as well as those of the neighboring Kuskokwim region, appear to be a unit in favor of the nomina tion of Mr. Vinal. It may be considered too early for definite action by the citizens of this community, but it is likely that arangements will be made for holding a mass meeting for the purpose of determining the wishes of the voters hereabouts in the matter. One thing is certain, however. This section will not be un represented at Juneau because of lack of interest in the question. PRINTING THE NEWS jus- before the taking of testimony began in a receni trial at Fairbanks Judge Bunnell called the representatives of the three newspapers before him and spoke of the difficulty of securing juries for future i rials in the series of criminal cases on the court c. endar if any of the testimony were printed. Judge imnell did not make a request for the sup pression of the news, and left the matter entirely up to the newspapers themselves to handle as little or as mud as they could agree upon. In that particu lar case the wishes of the judge were respected, but later ore of the newspapers announced that there after it would print the testimony adduced in suc ceeding cases. Apparently the request of Judge Bunnell was not made b cause of the expected salaciousness of the evidem that was to be brought out, but because of the fact that the readers of the newspapers would be enabed to form an opinion of the guilt or mno ence the defendants on trial, which might have , cfrc: upon their judgment m case they were diawn as jurors m succeeding cases. fhe p oncer has no sympathy with those publica tions v ich print testimony brought out in court merely : ecause it is of a sensational character. It always has appeared to us that it was a pernicious practic- to publish by means of the printed page what v culd be considered indelicate to publish by word of mouth. Because a newspaper usually is read by ill members of the family circle. It will be found that the only thing which recommends the pubi ration of such “news” as that brought out at the T rbanks trials was that it was sensational and help d to create a demand for the publications. The new paper which panders to depraved tastes may have a temporary success, as far as circulation goes, bu? in the long run it will gam the disapproval of right-tl linking people, even as its publisher must despise his own methods. Had J dge Bunnell’s plea been made upon the ground that the publication of such stuff must have an evil effect we could understand his position and commend compliance with his wishes. But it was made upon what we believe to be mistaken prem k , ises. The old practice of excluding a man from jury duty merely because he may have read in the newspapers about the case upon which he was to sit never had anything to recommend it; if followed to its logical conclusion it would result in the selection of a jury of ignoramuses or numskulls in many in stances. Everybody reads the newspapers. And when a sensational trial is taking place everybody —generally speaking, and especially in small com munities—talks about it. If the testimony be printed, from carefully-prepared notes taken by a trained reporter at the trial, what harm can result? The matter is bound to be discussed, and it is far better that discussion should be based upon reliable news than upon the garbled statements of spectators who relied merely upon memory. The man who would form an opinion that was unalterable by the evidence to be submitted to him In court, and by the judge’s instructions, is not fit for jury duty. To exclude a man from a jury merely because he may be acquainted with the de tails of a case is to argue the utter failure of the jury system. It is to be presumed that the average American citizen is able to go into a jury room and give an in telligent verdict upon the law and facts placed before him even if he were acquainted with the whole de tails of the case prior to the trial. ♦— In disavowing responsibility for the many bomb outrages and acts of incendiarism committed in this country against American shipping and American industries, the German government am German press have laid stress on the traditional friendship of Germany for the United States. Vet it is noted that the notoriou Von Papen. whose name was so closely linked with many of these outrages, was decorated by the kaiser upon Ills return to the fatherland after his dismissal by the American government. The same also was true in the case of Dr. Dumba, the Austrian am hassador, who was recalled at the request of President Wilson be cause of his connection with the efforts to incite strikes in Amen can manufacturing plants. Emperor Francis Joseph conferred special honors upon him. also. Rather a strange method of show ing that friendship, was it not? It is another instance where actions speak louder than words. - C The following story, clipped from an exchange, probably ex plains why some spinsters, even with the opportunities of leap year, prefer a life of single blessedness: "A widower had long laid siege to the heart of an elderly spinster, but finding that his protestation of love met with a cold, response, he solicited the aid of the vicar, who, after some demur, promised to do what he could in the matter. Visiting the lady shortly afterwards, the reverend gentleman broached the subject. 'Have you never thought of taking a husband. Miss — ? He would be a protec tion here.” he remarked, glancing at the valuable furniture and ornaments adorning the room. 'Husband!' ejaculated the spinster icily. ‘I have three pets which jointly possess all the qualifica tions. I’ve a dog that growls all the morning, a parrot that uses strong language all the afternoon, and a cat that stays out a; night!’ ” ^ -ii At least the sons of the kaiser cannot be designated as merely ornamental soldiers. They appear to have been in the thick of the fighting from the start of the war. A recent news dispatch says that the wounding of Prince Oscar on the Russian front makes four of the kaiser’s sons who have suffered bodily injury in the war. ac cording to accurate records. Only the crown prince and Prince Adelbert have escaped thus far. August Wilhelm, the kai-er's fourth son, was wounded during the battle of the Marne by a bullet in his left arm. The second son, Eitel Frederick, was thrown from his horse in October, 1914, and suffered a damaged knee. Joachim, the sixth son, was wounded by shrapnel in the right thigh in Sep tember, 1914. Joachim also was nearly captured by the Russians in the following December. He was rescued by a German aero plane. Oscar, recently wounded, suffers from palpitation of the heart, and collapsed from that complaint after a battle in 1914. -O - -- The Fairbanks Citizen, which has filled its columns with details of the trials of men accused of crimes against young girls in Judge Bunnell’s court, calls attention to what it intimates is an unex plained discrimination in the fixing of penalties in two instances of conviction. An Indian boy was sentenced to ten years’ imprison ment at McNeil’s island for a crime committed at Ruby against a young Indian girl. A man named Badger, convicted upon three different counts of offenses against young Fairbanks girls, was sen tenced to six months in the federal jail and to pay a fine of S750. In the latter case influential friends interceded with the judge and the defendant’s attorney made an "impassioned plea" for leniency. It is not recorded that much influence was invoked in behalf of the Indian boy. ❖ An item of news is going the rounds of the press which re lates that Theodore Shonts, who resigned the position of engineer in charge of the construction of the Panama canal, and who was held up to the scorn of his fellow-countrymen by President Taft for abandoning a task of patriotism, has been getting along fairly well since he quit his post at Panama. As president of the Inter borough Rapid Transit Company last year he drew a salary of $100,000, was given bonuses amounting to $150,000, and a Christ mas present of $200,000. His successor at Panama, Colonel Goethals, is still struggling with the problem of keeping the canal open since its announced completion. Juneau papers are making much of a Taku wind which blew a brick clean through a candy store. We can go them one better and show them a Valdez glacier wind that would have blown that candy store through the brick. Valdez Miner. A local man who was once a resident of Valdez is authority for a story that would seem to bear out the truth of the fore going. He tells of a wind that blew so hard and so steadily there that a pet dog of his was blown against the trunk of a tree and held there by the force of the zephyr so long that he starved to death. -^ The newspapers of the ^territory are making much of a news item which recites the fact^hat a Fairbanks girl has stepped from a menial position in a hotel to that of wife of a mining operator worth $500,000. Even though it should appear that the extent of the bridegroom’s riches is not exaggerated, there is nothing re markable about the story. It is characteristic of the country that the laborer of today may be the capitalist of tomorrow, and that is the main reason why the land has an attraction for men of en terprise, industry and intelligence. The employe of the postoffice department who has the say as to what mail shall be forwarded to the residents of Interior Alaska by the limited service over the winter mail trail evidently does not favor the Daily Empire, published at Juneau. While cur people receive certain Eastern publications with regularity, seldom more than five weeks after date of publication, the issues of the Juneai newspaper of dates from December 14 to 22 have just reached here. Four months for the delivery of a newspaper published in the ter ritory is quite long enough. -^ One cannot help but wonder why, at the time of year when the trails are at their worst and when the task of dragging mail over hundreds of miles of country that has been denuded of snow by the spring zephyrs is most onerous, the authorities should decide that we are in such urgent need of forgotten newspapers which were published last December. A few weeks more and rivers will be open to navigation, and they would be just as serviceable at that time. The time to be solicitous as to our needs with reference | to mail service is before the stuff has had a chance to accumulate. -♦ THE LOCAL NEWSPAPER (All-Alaska Review) It should always be remembered that the newspapers of the ( territory deserve all the support the people can afford to give them. Without those newspapers Alaska would never have reached the position which it now enjoys. When a business man refuses to aid the paper of his community he is really refusing to do his duty to that community. The Review in speaking this way does not include itself. It speaks of the daily and weekly local newspapers which are struggling along in the effort to keep their several towns and districts before the public eye. An Alaska camp without a new-sparer is dumb and partially blind. AN ALASKA CHARACTER WAS “BILLY THE HORSE” (Anchorage Alaskan) Another Alaska character has run his race in this world of troubled mortals and passed over to the Big Strike on the “other side,” and the northland loses one more of its early seekers of fame and fortune. His name was William Elliott, but he was known throughout Alaska as ‘ Billy the Horse.” Elliott was taken to the govern ment hospital a few weeks ago, suffering from tuberculosis, and died last Sunday morning. He was buried on fVednesday in the local cemetery by his many old sour dough friends. Many stories are told of Elliott's esca pudes up here m Alaska and down in the States. It is said that when in Spokane one time he had met tinancial reverses and was “jumping sideways” as to where the npxt lunch was to be found, and that any chance looked good to Bill. There was a mounted official there who rode a very fine horse that looked good to him, so he schemed and wondered how best he could “borrow” the animal for a short period. After watching and waiting, the opportu nity finally presented itself one day, when the horseman drove up before a store and dismounted, going inside to transact some business. But imagine that gentleman’s surprise when he came out to drive away. He looked foolish, wise, up and down the street and around the corner, but no horse was in sight. The search was kept up for many weeks, hut without success. A deep mvstery surrounded the disappearance, from the fact that there apparently was no av enue of escape from the town except by way of a trestle which had to be crossed. And how wag the horse to cross? That was the question before the interested peo pie. However, it subsequently became known that the horse actually did cross the trestle, for it was led’over after an ingeni ous "pillow" had been made for its feel hi the shape of half-fi led coal sacks, which "Billy” tied around each foot, enabling him to get the animal safelv over and away. Time wore on and "Billy” and the horse incident were forgotten. He drifted about and finally reached Alaska, where he re mined to the end, to sleep his last sleep beneath the moss-covered earth and sigh ing spruce. “Bidy” struck it rich in the Nome dis trict and commenced a meteoric career. Among his many ventures was the pur chase of a saloon, which he conducted until crushed by its heavy weight, if lule at the bar once a man stepped in whose face seemed familiar to “Billy,” and he recog nized him as the officer who rode the fine horse he had “borrowed.” He asked him if he had ever found his horse. “No, nor the one who got away with him. It is still the mystery of Spokane,” said the man. “Well, I’m the gent that ‘borrowed’ the horse, and as he wasn't workin’ and I needed help, I just ‘coaxed’ him dong on my journey to some other place. Nice ani in si, that, chief, ami he done nobly, so i thank you for his use. Have a drink.” He was a surprised visitor, but the horse was on the chief. Another one of Billy’s resourceful moves was when he went imo a saloon and was refused a drink. He .withdrew gracefully, but came back sputtering like the fuse he held in his hand. He had secured a “stick” of pea soup, put up like a stick of dynamite, and procuring a fuse, proceeded to the saloon to “blow ’em all up.” As he entered he lighted the fuse, which was sputtering uncomfortably close to the stick of pea soup when the proprietor and the “reserved” seat holders observed his entrance. There were more movements than one, and in the mad scramble for “safety first” one fellow broke his leg. Then “Billy” was the pro prietor, bartender and porter all in one. He helped himself to several “souses,” a couple of ft 11 bottles, and vanished, having enough “dynamite” left to give a first-class banquet to the whole engineering commis sion ♦ - DISTRICT ATTORNEY ROTH ANSWERS INTERESTING QUIZ Recently District Attorney Roth, at Fair banks, received the following telegram from a resident of Tanana: “Can native or part native woman, mar ried to qualified white man, vote at school or city election? If they have residence qualifications, can native or part native men or women vote? Can native woman of China, married to Chinese man, born in the United States, vote?” In reply the United States attorney wired the following message: “Native or part native women of any i age, married to qualified white men, may vote; native or part native with residence j qualifications, who has severed tribal rein- ! tions, may vote; native Chinese woman of | age. married lo Chinese man horn in the j United States, may vote at school or muni cipal elections.” GUGGS SECURING OPTIONS IN TOLOVANA DISTRICT? (Fairbanks Citizen, April 3) That Ft! Austin, the Iditarod manager of the Guggenheims, who recently arrived in Fairbanks from the Outside, came in this way and went to the Tolovana country for no other purpose than to investigate cer tain Livengood creek property for his people, I is the word received in Fairbanks during the past week from Brooks. The ground ! already has been optioned, Tom McKinnon , and Sam Godfrey having been busy during j the past winter securing the contracts to ! purchase from the owners of the properties , It is understood that if the options are i taken up the ground will be dredged. I The property under option includes all I of the creek claims on Livengood creek | from 2 below discovery to the head of the (-tream. It is practcially all shallow ground, i bedrock being found everywhere not deeper | man tmrty tret. Ann that it contains vai l ues which will pay to dredge has been dem I oust rated by the prospecting which has been j done and which showed that all of the j ground contained “near pay/' which means j that most of it will go about 75 cents to i the square foot of bedrock. And the gold is found from the grass | roots si' the way to bedrock everywhere j on the claims. However, it was not found j anywhere in sufficient quantities to pay for j working the ground by the methods gener ; ally used in Interior Alaska. It is understood that no cash payment j was made on any of the Fivengood claims. O First class dog kennels at the Regina. ❖ | Fresh Olympia and Eastern Oysters. SI 50 per can. Iditarod Meat Co. —— ♦ FOR SAFE French Joe’s Roadhouse, 1 Seward trail; cheap. Apply Henry Roden, I Iditarod. ALL THE TIME AT THE Arcade Cafe FLAT Cl TV Open Dev a n ri N i p h t I Professional Michigan, 1881 Alaska, 1910 Kentucky, 1391 George Woodruff Albrec+it COUNSELOR AND LAWYER IDITAROD, ALASKA The Pioneer Attorney or Iditarod E. M. STANTON Attorney at Law Office: Corner Willow and Second Sts. Iditarod Pioneer Building C-HAS, E. TAYLOR Attorney at Law BANK BLOCK First Avenue Iditarod Fred Harrison ATTORNEY AT LAW Room 1 Over Merchants Cafe DR. f^tOORE PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON DRUG STORE DR. H. E. AtJRiNSER Plusician and Surgeon Office: Flat City Hospital, Fiat City : Consultation Ilnurs in Forenoons ar.'l I y Appointment DR. H. BEHLA DENTIST FLAT CITY , Will Arrive in Iditarod by the first boat in the spring Se:ondSt. [OITAROD MEAl CO. Phono 15 Gold St., Flat City Mrs. Geo. Mutchler, Prop. Nicely Furnished Rooms Barn for Horses and Dogs Baths in Connection HARRY DOs’i^ELLEV IEEE GENERAL MERCHANDISE DISCOVERY, OTTER THE BEST OF EVERYTHING ALL THE TIME MERCHANTS’ CAFE j BBggaaMg GOOD MEALS bmms SHORT ORDERS iWBmiwrrBrnrii| FIRST AVE. OPEN DAY AND NIGHT Prop. We Have a Complete Line of A-l Groceries In Hardware we carry Axes, Saws, Mauls, Wedges, Picks, Shovels, Sluice Forks, Stoves and Stove pipe, Door Locks, Hinges, Files and other small hardware. We have a Clothing Department where you can be supplied with Bib and Waist Overalls, Khaki Suits, Woollen Pants, Overshirts, Underwear, Rubber Boots and Pacs, Socks, Mitts and Gloves. If you are making the usual spring repairs on your house we can supply you with Building Paper, Burlap, Oilcloth, Paints, Oil and Varnish. Mg MAHON GENERAL MERCHANDISE FLAT CITY