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Valdez Daily Prospector PUBLISHED BY THE Prospector Publishing Co. TERMS. Dally Prospector. By carrier, per month....$ 1.00 By mail, per annum. 10.00 The Weekly Miner. By carrier, per month. 40o By mail, per annum.$3.00 The Daily Prospector and Weekly Miner, by carrier, to one address per month.$1.25 The Daily Prospector and Weekly Miner by mail to one address only per year.$12.50 J Business Office and Editorial Rooms, Phone 152. Advertising Rates on Application. THURSDAY. APRIL IT. 1013. j | I DISCORD AT JUNEAU. The reports from Juneau that the members of tin* lirst terri- i torial legislature are spending; j their time fighting; each other in- j stead of working for the best in- j terests of the territory is what i has been expected and feared, but. ! which everyone with the interests ! of the territory at heart, hoped would not happen. All the mem bers were prolific in promises that they would work for t he best interests of fhe north, but as soon ! as they are at the eapitol they j forget the promises made both before and after election and light I for petty advantages. But two more1' weeks remain of the present, session and the laws enacted and those failing of pass age will be hul little to the credit of t.ho legislature which started off with such rosy promise of harmony only to end in jangle and discord. The nexl session will be held I wo years hence, when an entire lower house will be elected and a new senator from j each division. If is In he hoped i that the next session will result \ in more'real good for Alaska Ilian j has the present. A REMARKABLE INDUSTRY. More capital is engaged in (lie moving picture business today than in the operations of thej Standard Oil Trust, according loj recent, statistics. Moving pictures as a coinnier- j rial proposition in America are j but fifteen years old. They have j made such rapid progress that to- j day they threaten to overturn the | establihsed .order of theatrical! productions. They herald t he era j of cheap amusements. But with their promise comes: their menace as well. The older! theater was more responsive to , public opinion, because a pro- | duct ion had to win favor before j it could be pul on tour. When i one of great popularity was de-j vised a limited number of com panies could be put out to pre sent it. Xo great popular success i in this country has ever exceed ed six concurrent productions. The cost of putting these out.-and the varying currents of popular opinion made theatrical produc ers extremely sensitive to public opinion. But the moving picture man is not so circumscribed. He can make any number of productions very cheaply. He can flood the country with a success. This fact, 1 nkcn in conjunction with the facts that moving pictures make strong appeal to the very young, and that they are often exhibited in out-of-the-way places, 'not subjected as in the theater to the recurrent criticism <)f the press, has made the authorities see that moving pictures must have a dif ferent censorship. The police power must be invoked.--Ex. EXPERT TESTIMONY DENOUN CED. II Is refreshing In (i in I I he courts refusing In give unquali fied endorsement to the testimony of experts. The supreme enurt of Missouri, in an interesting decision, holds that “expert evidence at best, is only advisory” and says that with doctors on opposite sides giving expert evidence with equal decis ion, common sense must find the way out. The court holds that a jury lias the right to discard and disregard all the expert tes timony, and decide for itself what caused an injury.' Any decision tending to make expert testimony more humble, and therefore less common, will be welcomed by laymen who are exceedingly weary of the assur ance and authority displayed by physicians on the stand. As soon as courts begin to em phasize the fact that, a doctor who is testifying for one side in a controversy must be considered as liable to err through his pre judice for that side, the fewer doctors will be" found lending themselves to the devious ways of expelT witnessing as it is con dueled in our criminal courts. SECESSION IN MEXICO. Six of Ihe slates of the Mexican republic are planning a conven tion al which il shall be determ ined whether they will secede from Ihe Mexican union or unite in a revolution which will over throw llucrla and place them in coni rnl. The autonomy of Mexico is a quest ion that Ihe Mexicans musl sellle for themselves, but Ihe pro tection of I he lives and properly of foreigners in Mexico is a duly that Ihe failed Stales is forced to assume, under Ihe require ments of Ihe Monroe doctrine. The administration at Washing ton is pledged against a repeti tion of the reign of lawlessness which marked Ihe passing of Ihe Madera regime in Mexico. THE COST OF PEACE. Tin* (ionium government is about to authorize the increase of the standing' army to a total of 870,000 men. The population of Germany is about, 70,000,000. Kmperor William believes that the best, way lo preserve peace is to be prepared for war. Known as “The War Lord,” he has ruled for twenty-five years in peace, hut Germany has paid well. The big problem before the nation to day is lo devise new methods of taxation for the maintenance of the military establishments. Peace bath her victories, but al so tier expense. The crack of the baseball bat is* a sign that the backbone of winter is broken. According to the gossip of the sporting editors there will be no second divisions teams this year. Talking movies are now pro posed. Don’t the militant suf fragettes answer that specifica tion? The government has assigned a man to record Indian music. The first step in recording Indian music is to find it. I)i-. Stull' of the University id' Nebraska says that the young women of the country are drink ing themselves to death. O Stuff. Reports show that there is a great revival in religious affairs in the Panama Canal zone. Still, the Culebra cut is a great back slider. President Wilson insists that be will pay bis way when he goes to the ball games. Probably he wants lo feel free to say what he. thinks when the senators are out of form. Harbingers. 'Hie sap has risen in the trees, Ihe buds fti" breaking forth; no longer do we shake and freeze in i"i\v winds from I lie norlli; ami ! everywhere we pilgrims go, the harbingers appear, lo say I here is an end of snow, lo hint Ihal ! spring is near. The housewife talks of thrilling bats she' saw in some one's store, all Irimmeil with ostrich plumes and tints and lloi'iil things galore. And dad con fesses In a wish In void1 a vernal song, and laltts about a place where lisli are Ibirly cubits long, (lid granddad makes bis aneienl thews convey him down Ihe street, and Ihe children long In shake Ihcir shoes and try I heir naked feel. The ggenl leaves his wtn-< ter haunt, with easy marks to plead, and sells (hem traps they do not want, and hooks they’ll never read. The hobo leaves the city slums for pastures fresh and new, and in Ihe village jail the hum kicks up a Imwdydo. The candidate begins, lo pass around his fatal smokes; composed are they of garden sass. including artichokes. We gather up the old tin cans around our Inis be strewn. and formulaic our divers plans for raising pea and prune. Oh. spring is coming once again, to comfort us and help, so let; the joyous sons of men stand mi , Ili'eir heads and yelp. WAT/r MASON. | I Ingram’s Eight-hour Bill The following account of ltn*| passage of the Ingram eight-! hour law in the lower House at Juneau April 5th, is taken from the Juneau Empire of that date: The House this morning pass ed the Ingram eight-hour law, ap plying to hte mining industry, amended so as to exclude all sorts of placer mining and non-mineral quarries. The bill as passed, is less broad in its scope than the Roden-tiafT- j nev bill, recently passed by the Senate, being restricted entirely to the quartz mining industry. The bill as passed provides for an eight-hour day excluding the time for lunch or meals and the time required for descending and as cending or otherwise going to or coming from the place of work. So far as the quartz industry is concerned the bill lias the favor of all l.lie big operators in South eastern Alaska. The House also passed this morning House Hill No. 8. the (iaffnt^v hill, amending the act prohibiting liquor traffic with Indians. If this hill heroines a law the crime will be reduced to a misdemeanor and the Indian who solicits will be made co-re sponsihle with the white man who sells the liquor. The second of fense on the part of either carries an increased penalty. Independent Laundry Co. Satisfaction Guaranteed I Telephone 66 I Foot Keystone Ave Rough Dry lCc lb. Valdez Dock Co. PHONE NO. 1 JOBBER IN COAL, HAY and GRAIN AGENTS FOR Alaska Steamship Company Alaska Coast Company ........ . . .... FOR SALE 2 1-2 H. P. Stationary Gasoline \ Engine A BARGAIN I Keystone Dock Valdez Iron Works New Arrivals For THE HOME 9x12 ft Amber Velvet Art Squares 9x12 ft Seneca Velvet Art Squares 9x12 ft Palisade Velvet Art Squares 9x12 ft Fulton Tapstry Art Sbuares 36x72 ill Hart Axminster Rugs 27x60 in Smiths Axminster Rugs 16x30 in Smyrna Rugs A Few Bargains Left In Green and Red WOOL FILLER SUPER INGRAIN CARPETS. MILK—MILK—MILK Fresh Milk and Cream VALDEZ DAIRY Telephone orders to Phone 187 Geo. f. white The Assayer Assaying and Ore Testing CORRECT RESULTS No More, No Less VALDEZ, ALASKA New York Life Insurance Co. W. H. CRARY, R*pre»enUti»« Valdez, Alaska. Phone 41 THE SALESMAN makes more sales and makes them with greater facility if his work is re enforced by Electric Light. It shows his goods to the best advantage,and colors may be readily matched under its rays. / A brilliant electrically lighted store stamps a merchant as a hustler. And trade follows light. A. W. L. & T. Co. THE CUFF ROOMS Steam Heat Always Clean and Comfortable Central Location P. S. HUNT, Prop. Copper River Draying Co Preighting and passengers to all parte ol the interior. General Trucking bid. Wood, - Proprietor McKimey St, Valdez Steam Heat Electric LigbU THE COPPER BLOCK Finely FurnUhed Room* All Modern Convenience* lva THE BUFFET ‘ Copper River Lumber Co.,, Inc. ALL KINDS OF Native and I f TR/jDCD and Building Puget Sound IjUIVIOLoX Material CONSTANTLY ON HAND Prices Right W. M. FINICAL, Mgr. Phone 18 Patronize a Home Industry VALDEZ DRUG CO. Drugs and Druggist Sundries PRESCRIPTION SPECIALISTS Telephone Orders Solicited Free Delivery ✓ _ Wedoal generalI Bankingl Businessl Bank in rear of mercantile department I We Pay 4 Per Cent Interest on lime Certificates of Deposit. :&*'<** *v