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T! ALASKA SOCIALIST AN INDEPENDENT SOCIALIST PAPER, NOT SUBSIDIZED BY ANY POLITICIANS. Issued by Socialist Publishing Co. at Fifth & Lacy Streets, Fairbanks, Alaska. A. KNOWLES Manager. Subscription Price : $5.00 per year; $2.5 for six months ; $1.25 for three months 50 cents for one month ; single copy 25 oents, payable in advance. Published on the Fifteenth and Thirtieth of each month* . PUBLISHEP in THE INTEREST OF THE WORKERS OF ALASKA AND ADVOCA TING POLITICAL AND INDUSTRIAL ACTION THE PARTY BOSS The people of Alaska generally, and of the Tanana in particular, have done well. On the 3rd of November they laid the party bosses on their backs. They are again active, and are said to be neg otiating to put over one of the crooked est of the many crooked deals that they ever put over in the Tanana. The party boss never lies down. If you put him out of business to day you will find him on the job to morrow. If he is annihilated in oue place to-mcrrow he is sure to be found working in a dif ferent place the following day. His is a risky business sometimes. When his op erations become too apparent then does he lay low. He always tries to work in the dark As "agent” or "attorney” working for his "principal" or "cljent" he reaches for the filthy lucre wherever he fiuds it and only when his personal safety is endangered does he desist. All is grist that comes to his mill. Watch the party bosses. Sometime ago several of the local at torneys were heard complaining of the dull times and a lack of business. Since the resignation of Judge h’uller, liow ! ever, it is said, nearly all of them have been busy, working for their "clients" in the matter of selecting the "right" man for judge. TIMES’ OPPOSITION It is significant that the Fairbanks Times which .boosted McGowan fox Ter ritorial senator is opposed to District Attorney Spense of Valdez who is a can didate for the Judgeship of the Fourth Division. We do not know Spence but the fact that the Times is opposed to him would indicate that he has some merit. PURE JOURNALISM Silas Madder trieb to bribe vour ver simiHtndinous correspondent to get his name in print. He offered all sorts of inducement, including a basted dollar watch which an automobeelist threw at his dog and missed, but we stood firm for the fust pnncibbles of journalism, which is that a reporter ain’t to be bought, not with no busted tin watch, so we won’t mention his name. We can’t think of nothing as would make Silas madder. Sidelights On The Late Election * —----— A Politician's Dream John M. Brooks, the candidate for delegate to Congress on the Socialist ticket, recently toured the creeks in the Circle district and reports the Forty Mile, Eagle and Circle districts almost solid for the Socialist ticket. In a letter from Mr. Brooks to the Juneau Socialist Local, written from Fairbanks, he saj’s, that many of the Wickersham supporters are deserting him in the Tannna district; and the people know what the Democrats have done in the past for.the common people Somebody seentsto have started a rumor in the interior that Brooks has sold out to Bunnell. To this story; Mr. Brooks gives his most emphatic denial and savs “pay no attention to anything the old parties may spring on your can didate and you will find that I am still on the job alter tJte smoke has cleared away.” He takes issue with Mr. Wickersham when he claims that he lost some sup porters in the Interior because he did not secure a Federal building for Fair banks. Mr. Wickersham is losing vptes in the Tanana Valley because every law and decision he has had anything- to do with hbs enadied the Corporations and Banks to robe and plunder the people. He did not tell the people of Juneau i that there is over a million dollars of unpaid labor in the Fairbanks district. The workers are getting their eyes open, and are deserting the supporters and de fenders of the parasitic cluss. Everything look6 good for a big in crease in the Socialist vote in the inter ior and Mr. Brooks challenges the vot ers on the coast to roll cp as good a vofe for the Socialist ticket a* they will cast • • * ** . " .. in the Interior. . ■ -ALASKA SUNDAY MORNING POST Oct. 25th, 1914. Lena Morrow Lewis Editor. It was a sad affair. The maehJoe bad exerted its utmost power, but all to no purpose, its defeat was complete.. Ev ery unit bad been accounted for. Every old, worn-out trick, known so well to Tammany, was called into play by the local bosses, vet without avail. Tom Me Gowau, who knows the political game from A to Z and: then some, was there directing things in perscD. With bis fierce military mustache, be might eas ily have been mistaken fora Prnss an colonel of cavalry directing his forces i against the attacking Russians, all that i was necessary was a suitable background I _ THE WHOLE DAN FAMILY [ f 1 ■ ■■ ’ The two Protestants, Dan Sutherland I and Dan Driscoll, will probably feel j lonely without the two Irish Dans who ran for election -Callahan and McCabe to keep them company. Next time the people should elect the whole Dan fam ily. I ■— | An old Scotchman who -was in the ! habit of calling each evening at the village inn lor a *‘drap o the beet,” found the landlord one night putting a shine on the taps. After a tew remarks j about the weather, he received his j nightly dram. When he had gone the ! landlord discovered, to his horror, that ! ] he had supplied Donald with a half gill | out of the bottle of sulphuric acid which I | he had been using for cleaning the taps. | Every moment he expected to hear of I Donald’s .death, and hi* relief was great j when the old worthy arrived next even i - .... i , • I j ( !_ Dirty Work in Juneau '* Valdez may think that she was intim idated by federal officials on electios day but her citizens got off well in cam* parison with the voters in the First Div ision. There the candidates on the pro gressive Democratic ticket were coaxed and coerced off the ticket two and three times and then after it was finally filled and the ballots printed, the distributer of the same was .met on the dock and f , . ■ X the ballots taken; away from him and thrown in the bay. What a good thing it would have been tf the distributer of the Progressive Democratic ballot* bad been armed with a good Colts revolver and sl ot about sixteen ounces oI lead into the highwaymen. That gang at Jnnean is getting desperate as they ap broach their latter end. YAI,Q£Z COMMONS®. Election Reforms The first bill that should be introduc ed into the Legislature should be one putting into effect the Australian ballot system in Alaska.—Ketchikan Mail. Sure. And right along with it shooid go bills providing lot the registration of electors, regulation of earope-ign con tributions and their expenditure, anti providing for sworn publicity tcnccrn ing both.—Strong’s JBmpire. The Australian' bhllot and all the ap purtenances thereunto .belonging it a roaring farce without the nomination of candidates by a primary-’election;- yet yon never hear these ‘'refoimers" sav ing-anything about t h at reform. ^X'bat difference does, if make to the corpor ation who is. elected If a few. machine men can get together and put Vhrir tool* on ALL ballots and.tben have it so you can get cut no otberjUK . - t’- 1 Many were called but few were choeen • a? • »., , Candidate Burns was unable to drag the rest of the ticket with him. • • • l • - One of the ex-Soapy Smith xnen is eaid to have expressed his regrets that the Tammany ticket was defeated. • • • • • • •* . . One of the Democrat politicians, who is represented as having promised one of his recruits a political Job in concid for his support, on being requested, aft er electron, to \'come through, "and be ing unable to deliver the goods bought the sadder but wiser Democrat an axe so that he could go in the wood business lor himself. Moral.---Trust not ye a Democrat pol itician, for his tongue Is a loose thing and runneth wild at eleetion time when he seeketh- votes. Mrs. A. Lincoln All kinds of repair work done oo Ladies and Gents suits, Under wear and so forth Ladie4* fur coats for sole. Next to Peoples’ Store i .1 i i ■ i .■ i ■ . i w——■ ■' ■ . i » * ing ’‘Donald, what did ye tbiak o’ the whiskey ye got last night?” ”tf was a fine dram, a good warshlng dram, but it had one fault—every time I coughed it set fire to ma whiskers.” i r ' • Subscribe For S THE ALASKA SOCIALIST ' THE FIRST ANNUAL * Grand Ball or \ Fairbanks Lodge No. 1392 Loyal Order of Moose Of the World WILL BE GIVEN AT THE Auditorium CHRISTMAS NIGHT H FAIR HEW H01FL First Class Accommodations. ROOMS 50 cents AND $1 Year Patronage Solicited FRONT STREET PHONE 245 A JOSS HAST HART ; i Patronizettie : i Miners Home \ Restaurant ! ♦ t Dome Cigar Store OtNCSS CARRIES FIRST CLASS Clothing, Cigars, Tobaccos STATIONERY, CANDIES AND FRUITS. Large Circulating Library: WM. VOSS, Prop. I 1 Best Equipped Roadhouse In tte Interior of Alaska. IKE IGLOO INN In the Heart of the Quartz District. COHfWT FOR MAX WO BEAST M ROCKWELL ClfM CITY The Square Deal T. H. DEAL, MANAGER. WHOLESALE AJO) RETAR MERCHANDISE. GROCERIES; AND PROVISIONS. ISi iVe Cater To AH KH-6-B Second Arenne, near Lacy. Phone 32 P. O. Pox 6M FAIRBANKS ALASKA The »iaancipatl<m of the working cieaa rrraet he the clees'CcoeckMie wrirk of the working claee.---KARL MARX. * DON'T LET YOUR CLOTHES SPOIL YOUR GOOD LOOKS. KEEP THEM IN GOOD ORDBR. BRING THEM TO HARKS THE TAILOR Next to Fairbanks Meat Market SMYSER’S HOTEL CHATANIKA NEWLY FURNISHED ROOMS WARS BARKS AND DOG BOUSES | WINES, LIQUORS AND CIGARS >' '< ' - . . .... --- » m, . — ■ ■■ » ■■■ ■ ■ ■—