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} The Feudal Boss And The Modern When John do Warren, Jtarl of Surr f f, was asked in Court to produce his iitl«deed* to hits lands, he drew his s vvid and #aid, "Hen?, sirs, is my wa : ftctl My ancestors came oyer with William the Bastard At)d won their lan is with the sword, and with the sword -J mean to keep them against all who try to seize them,” The feudal baron, taast as he was, cruel, remorseless and tyranuous, was at least possessed of the animal virtues of courage ami enduran ce, Our modern masters have gained iheir power, by low cUmting, theft, chi canery arid niurdef»d>y the arts of the iootpad and the, sneak-thief, Compare Rockefeller witn Du Guesclip ; Sir Ch ristopher Furness with John do Warren ; Rord OvertoUn with the Black Doug las ; the greasy, unctuous, blapk-coated, silk;hatted, psalm-snivelling swindler with the mail-clad baron who grasped wliat he could by right pf the strongest without troubling himself to hire law yers, professors, parsons and lalx>f fak irs to devise sophistries to legalise his thefts. —From The Development of So cialism in Great Britain. RKGRKTS ‘‘Brudder Johnson, will you lead us in prayer?" "Ah’s sorry to disappoint de Lord to night, Parson, but Ah has a cold on mah chest. "—Puck. i I -|-1-T~T~rfni- I y IJIF I— I ' FRYING & BROILING I MRS. J, T. MORGAN, SEVENTH & HALL. • There afe many different kinds of Socialist books sound and unsound. All kinds of reformers, many of them henc-, hraen of the capitalist class, have taken it upon themselves to write books on ; Socialism. The capitalist class cannot stop the Socialist movement so they try tp„ misrepresent it. \V'e have two pamphlets that you should liave to study during the winter months which will make you class “Cons cious and put you on solid ground The Preamble Address And The Power And Weakness Of Trades Unions will be seaf to anyone «sn receipt of twenty five ceats* j 4 MINER’S HOME MILLER & SUMS, PROPS. WINES, LIQUORS AND CIGARS. ROOMS, STEAM HEAT, ELECTRIC LIGHT AND ALL MODERN CONVENIENCES. Opposite Tanana Valley R.R. Depot P. 0. BOX 797, FAIRBANKS, ALASKA ♦ FRISS’ COFFEE HOUSE Thoroughly renovated aud rebuilt ^ FIRST CUSS BATHS. FURNISHED MS. LK i READING ROOM AND WRITING MATERIALS f-fef*'*5'' v~" -3ccomode?fons. The worker’s home Socialism Do you know what Socialism is? S omc of the working class know wha it is and some do not. Some of them have been in the habit of relying on ca pitalist politicians to tell them and yon know that the politician's long suit is telling funny stories. They are gener ally too busy grafting to take time to study Socialism. The office-seeking pol itician tries to tell you that it’s this t hat and the next thing and, after he is gone you begin to think it over, then you come to the conclusion that he has b een giving you the bunk. The workin g class is the class that will profit by Socialism and and they should unders tand what it is .In these columns all s ides of the question will be discussed: the socialism of the office hunter ; the socialism of the capitalist dictionaries ; and the kind the working class is inte rested in—Socialism as set forth by Ma rx and Engels. The following poem illustrates to a nicety the foolish ideas in sonic minds regarding Socialism; THE BLIND MEN AND THE ELEPHANT It was six men of Indostan To learning much,inclined, Who went to see the Elephant (Though all of them were blind), That e$oh by observation Might satisfy his mind. The first approached the Elephant, And happening to fall Against his broad and sturdy side, At once began to bawl: “God bless me! but the Elephant Is very like a wall!” The Second feeling of the tusk, Cried, llo! what have we here So very round and smooth and sharp? To me tis mighty ..clear This wonder of an Elephant Is very like a spea:! The Third approached the auimal, And happening to take The squirming trunk within his hands Thus boldly up and spake: “I see,” quoth he, “the Elephant Is very like a sjjake!” The Fourth reached out his eager hand And felt about the knee. “What most this wondrous beast is like Is mighty plain,’’ quoth he; “’Tis clear enough the Elephant Is very like a tree!” The Fifth who chanced to touch the ear, Said: “E’en the blindest man Can tell what this resembles most; Deny that fact who can. This marvel of an Elephant • Is very like a fan!” The Sixth no sooner hart begun About the beast to grope, Than seizing the swinging tail That fell within his scope, “I see,” quoth he, the Elephant Is wry like a rope!” And so these iwen of Indostan Disputed loud and long, Each in his own opinion Exceeding stiff and strong, Though each was partly in the right, And all were in the wrong! If you arc a worker yoti need . - .-.Ar THE ALASKA SOCIALIST subscribe for it $5.00 per year CAN THE DEMOCRAT PARTY DO ANYTHING EOR THE WORKINGMAN The two planks in the Platform of the Democrat party, which they have been dangling in front of the noses of the people, as a remedy for social ills, so that they could get into office, are Tariff Reform and banking legislat ion. Tinkering until the tariff and curren cy reform haw always been favorite to pics with Democrat politieans, and es pecially with the great W, J. Bryan. Whether he is better off by receiving li is wages in gold coin,’ paper money, or by being allowed to retain part of his product as in Oklahoma, Texas and many other states of the South; or whether it is better to receive part of hsi product in time checks or not at all, which is the way many of the wor kers in the Tanaua valley are paid— all this will be told in succeed ing issues. We take from the Weekly People the following: THE CONFLICT OVFR THIC CURRENCY BILL After wcafes of wrangling, brangling, jangling—a jangling, brangling and wr angling that more than once threatened la “rough house” —the Democrats of t he House Committee on banking a nd Currency rejected all the amendme nts that the democratic “Insurgents” on the Commettee endeavored to impr : ove the bill with. What was the nature of those troubl , esome amendments that demanded the ! whole power of the Adminisnration to | squelch, and that earned for proposers ■ the title they are proudly hearing of | “Radicals”? One set of the amendments typifies ; the rest. The set is collectively known las the “Ragsdale-Henry amendments.” i These provided that the paper currency, i which the proposed Federal Reserve 15 : anks are to be empowered to issue, sh [ all be issued, not on metallic values ' only, but also on cotton, corn and wh j eat held in warehouses. Paper “currency” is the .latest link | of a long monetary evolutionary chain ; a chain in which economics ar.d sociolo ; gy are as closely interwoven as veins a | re in flesh. I These are the links:— i 1st. Values (wealth) are the product I of labor; j 2nd. Profits (gains) arise from with ! held wages—the surplus value produced i by Labor, but kept by the Employer; ! 3rd'.' Commerce produces no values; it I only exchanges values. Seller and pu | rchaser swap value for value; 4th ,The merchant’s (manufacturer’s) gains (profits) «re in his pockets before he sells He got his gains during the process of production, which includes t ransportation and distribution; 5th. Sale only liquidates the mercha nt’s wealth (which, of course, includes his gains) by transfiguring the wealth into one species of merchandise, to wit, the precious metals, gold pre-eminently; 6th. The singling out of gold as the one merchandise into which to translate and transfigure wealth flows from the commercial necessity to translate ftHc) rattsfigure wealth into a commodity, t hat is article of merchandise, that com bines the qualities, first, of intensified value; secondly, of being easily carried ; and, last, not least, of being indefini tely divisible; 7th. The commercial facilities, attain ed by the economic evolution of gold (the precious metals) into the medium of exchange, led %o a farther step, pro ductive of still greater commercial facil ities —tl\f creation of "coin," or metal lic currency; 8th. Coin, metallic currency, saves t he dealers the trouble of weighing the metal at each transaction. The coined metal carries its weight, hence, its va lue, stamped upon its face; finally, 9th. The increased commercial facilit ies, attained through the creation of metallic currency., led to still another step, in turn productive of still greater commercial facilities ,— the creation pf paper currency. The economic reasov-s which designa ted the merchandise gold (the precious metals) as the medium of exchange, a nd which, combining later with the so ciology development that made the cr eation of coin possible, dictate the nat ur of paper currency, to wit, the shad ow of metallic currency, or authorized bullion. Paper currency needs must be the e vidence of the tr-ietence, to au equal amount, of metallic currency. In other woids, paper currency needs must be plarv d upon that one merchas;dise. an V • cl only that, which economic and social evolution have combined to distinguish as the one medium of exchange. The Ragsdale-Heury proposition to b ase a paper currency upon cotton, corn and wheat amounts to a motion to rec* onsider the i^ictates of the evolution of currency. Many a reconsideration of many a principle of general modern ac ceptance would lie healthful; indeed, the revolutionary pulse of our generat ion is moving many such reconsiderati ons. What, however, the unhealthy n ature of the .Ragsdale-Heury amendme nts is transpires from the fact that, no sooner were those amendments presen ted, than the representatives of the pe anut interests demanded that peanuts be made, together with cotton, corn and wheat, a basis for currency issues. And then the trouble begrn to brew. The stomach of the Committee had eaten e conomic “green apples.” Money must go. It is a fetid super* ation that of private production for sale But “Money” can go only when the economic system which superates it lias been stamped out. Until that day, the day that Socialism is urging on, Rags dale-Henry “radicalism” is the radica lism of the mule backing a cart down a precipice. i I Ashamed Of His OWN Party ——— 1 * If Chief Postal Inspector James Cor i lelyou vwmki take a night course in ge j ography, lie would discover he is livi ! ::g in America and not in Russia. ! This -obscure official is twisted in his j boundary' hint s, because he says he ne i ver will permit copies of the Philadel i phia Vice Commission’s report to be se j nt throi g:i the mails. The report, while hardly fit for kind : ergarten work, will -open the eyes of a i lot of grown-up children, and for that r i eason Rt. Rev. fiercer of the Protesta I nt. Episcopal church of Philadelphia r i ecom mended that his diocese purchase i lO.fKkl copies of the report and circula | te same in the interest of moral reform But Office Holding Cortelyou has ha nded down his ukase to the effect that “not a copy will leave the po.stoffice, as lit is not proper reading matter.” It's a question with thinking people i whether to laugh or “cuss" at bantam roosters of the Cortelyou breed.- Toled o Union Tveadet If the report of the Philadelphia Vice Commission is so foul as to smirch the United States mails by admission, then how foul must be the conditions which breed vice and crime? If the report of the vice commission contains language that would bring the blush of shame to the cheek of our av erage citizen, then the conditions wliic h bring forth such an ill-smelling re port must be a disgrace to our boasted civilization. Capitalism shrinks in terror from the exposure of the depraviity and debauc hery bred from the profit system. The people, however, will know the facts, regardless of the ultimatum <*f offi cial lickspittle who prostitutes his pos ition to smother the infamies born of an industrial system that is so criminal that even its publicity is so monstrous that it must be denied admission through t he United States mails. MINERS MAGAZINE • _____ “FOR CHRIST’S SAKE” Ilobo to preacher: “ 'Ow’s chances t tr get somethin’ ter eat?” Preacher (Bringing him a piece of br-. ead) : “I do not give you this bread for 1 your sake but for tV Lord’s sake.” Hobo : ‘(Then fer Christ’s sake put : some butter on it.” I j ~ i i SUBSCRIBE FOR THE ALASKA SOCIALiST | • ! _ i i | The chances are that the Alaska Leg- > islature passed a law prohibiting the i sale of diseased meat. At any rate, , whether they did or not, don’t let any j of those diseased hogs get tangled tip j with the doe or their wil-l be the devil j to pay. 1 He Wit! Be Acquitted > . Joseph McDonald, who has been in jail at Juneau, Alaska, on the charge of murder has been admitted to bail in the sum of $50,000. When McDonald was brought to Alaska and brought be fore the court for arraignment, he was denied bail, but it seems that men of wealth getOmsy and were able to bring such a. pressure on our incorruptible j udiciary that the man on the bench su ccumbed to the power of corporate inf luences. The following appeared in an Alaska journal relative to the admission of M cDonald to hail: “Joseph MacDonald was given his freedom by Judge Peter I). Overfield at 3 ;36 p. m. today, subject to his g iving a bail bond in the sun of $50,000 The details of providing this are being carried out rapidly, and it is believed that the former ' superintendent of the Treadwell niirie will be given his liberty by 5 o’clock day. The sureties will be B, I/. Thane, general manager of the Alaska-Gastifl'fcau Mining Company; B. M, Behrends, pioneer txuiker and mer chant of Juneau; Pinery Valentine, pi oneer merchant of Juneau ; J. C. McBri de, manager of the C. W. Young Com pany, of Juneau ; P. H. Pox, a pioneer merchant of Douglas ; M. J. O’Connor, pioneer merchant of Douglas, and perlx ! aps others. ‘‘MacDonald said that be came l«c k of his own accord and that lie hail no intention of running awajr I - He was glad the court had decided to ! admit-him to bail. He seemed very gl ad, indeed, and as he hastened toward the telephone, he said: ‘‘i must telep hone Mrs. MacDonald.” The bondsmen ef McDonald are all I gentlemen of power and influence. They are men of wealth and as McD j onald has always shown himself to have ' been a willing tool of minging corpor ations, it is not surprising that those ! whom he was always anxious to serve, : should come to his rescue and convince | a court of the injustice of holding a murderer in a jail whose freedom was desired by our best people. McDonald made a reputation in Idaho ■ during the stormy days of the bull-pen j and the old pioneers of the Couer il’A ! lenes remember the man who was- eq j uipped at ali times to conspire against the working class. As the superintendent of the Treadw : ell Mining Company he made a record as brute and tvrant, and at no time did ; he ever hesitate to resort to any means to suppress labor in its demands for be tter conditions. He is now arraigned for murder, but it is safe to predict that he wiill never pay the penalty for the crime he is ch arged with. The same influences that 1 iberated McDonald on bonds, will be s ufficiently powerful in Alaska to expel justice from the courts anil acquit the willing tool of a master class, —Miners Magazine The Miners Magazine is correct in its prediction that justice has been exp elled from Alaska but the Socialists will bring it back and rescue Alaska from the bunch of pirates that have in fested it so long. Slayer Of Girl Is Ready To Die Rev. Hans Schmidt Is Pre pared To Meet His fate In Chair NEW YORK, Sept. 19.- Rev. Haas Schmidt, who confessed a week ago to having mtrdered his domestic when it was apparent that see was about to be come a mother, says that he is willing to die now or within a month for the murder. He claims that he alone is re sponsHl.lt: for the murder of the girl, and he is quite prepared to go to the chair to expiate the crime. The above, from the Fairbanks Timea, is another of the many cases reported recently of preachers murdering iheir sweethearts. A social system that makes it such a crime for preachers to Rgct children that they Wvu to murdtt ther: * system that should be abolished _J V.v asp. s.uMe