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Valdez Daily Prospector PUBLISHED BY THE Prospector Publishing Co. TEEMS. ' V ’ Dally Protpeotor. By carrier, per month....$ 1.00 By mail, per annum. 10.00 The Weekly Miner. By carrier, per month.*0° 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 Business Office and Editorial Rooms, Phone 152. Advertising Rates on Application. ■■■■ ' TUESDAY, AUGUST 5, 1913. UnIBANDAGE EYE OF JUSTICE. A recent editorial of the Sat urday Evening Post refers to the cause of Andrew Toth, proved innocent of murder 20 years af ter life sentence to tlie peniten tiary. The writer suggests the crying need of legislation which will provide redress and at least 11 . nancial restitution to such un fortunates as Toth. B|Ut while we are at it, why not go a step farther and crusade for a broader justice? A few weeks ago a New York attorney, disbarred from practice for alleged misdemeanors, was shown guiltless of the charges upon which he had been deprived of livelihood, honor, friends and name. It was not only the blindness of justice which wrecked his life, but the open-eyed conspiracy of a powerful corporation reveng ing itself upon an honest lawyer successfully prosecuting the damage suit of an injured child. Time, the great solvent of lies, at last exposed the details of the vile plot. Documents, as well as confessions, established the fact that a great railway company was responsible for this outrage and that its officials endorsed the acts of (he directly responsible subor dinates. Now, a broken, haggard, emp ty-hearted old-young man is “generously” permitted by the community to take up his work where “Justice,” some 12 years ago, checked bis activities. Aside iron) I he restoration ul specfability, restitution comes empty-handed. Hi's parents dead, poisoned with humililion at the disgrace of their son—his fortune dissa pated in the light to cleanse away the slain—his sweetheart mar ried to another man within a few months after jilting him, wiLhout the benefit of doulit—yet law, as it. stands, denies this man com pensation of any sort, 'simply be cause the acts of oppression and conspiracy committed against him occurred 12 years ago, aiid under the statute of limitations, even the perpetrators of such a crime are absolved from punish ment. What a parody upon the liber ty of republics in this electric lighted Year of Our Lord 1913.— Woman’s World. For certain kinds of lassitude a foiling trip i« uni so bad. Two women fouglit a duel with shears in Oakland, Gal. 'Is there a law against hatpins out there? Report says the Honduras ba nana crop is in danger of fail ure, which again shows that ev en scientific cultivators slip up occasionally. Skirts will disappear in 2013 ■says a Washington society wo man. Doesn’t look as if there are enough left of them now to last that long. The Norwegian whale har pooiier’s $1,000 a month in like ly to give even some,of our fairly successful paragraphers a feel ing, of discontent. No, Elizabeth, just because the baby has learned to snap his fingers doesn’t necessarily indi cate that some day he will be come a great ragtime singer. The Prospector always prints paid advertisements except when they are libelous, indecent, or are intended to promote crooked schemes. This is only busi ness and we are sorry when any body cannot recognize the fact. BEST PLAGE TO EAT MRS. ST. MARIE’S Crawford Building, opposite Tele * phono Exchange. , > 7 a m.to 9 a m MEALS > 12 m.to 2pm 'x J 6 to 7 p m * ' A Special Dimer Snh;« at 5 o'clock HUGO FELS Gonliactor and Builder Day Work if Desired Estimates Furnished WORK GUARANTEED BASEBALL. BULLETINS. (By George Fitch). The baseball bulletin is the modern substitute for a dog light on the street. Owing to the in creasing scarcity of dogs, which can be proven by a reference to any tax list and also to the growing demand for originality in entertainment, an ordinary one-round dog fight on a city stregt is not only a rare occur rence, but draws poorly when it is pulled oft'. There was a time when any well conducted city could boast of a dozen dog lights in an af ternoon and each one paralyzed business for 10 minutes. Nowa days, one light a week is the av erage, and usually one or both combatants are run over by an automobile before they have got ten a good hold on each other. It is into this dearth of en tertainment and excitement, which was rapidly making our city streets a dreary monotony, that the baseball bulletin has come with its extra-inning sus pense and its variegated heart throb. The baseball bulletin now draws better than the lire de partment or a new and audacious skirt. From 3:30 to 5:30 p. m. the bulletin,* in a thousand cit ies arc paralyzing traffic and making engagements as uncer tain as the stock market. For these two hours all summer long, clerks and capitalists, ministers an/1 bartenders, retired farmers and soubrettes stand shoulder to shoulder efore the newspaper of fices of the land wondering in ag onized suspense if the red-head ed boy on the Hying gallery is going to hang another goose egg up for the home team or if the opposing pitcher will kindly con sent to blow up in the forthcom ing inning. Writers of the human soul no longer haunt the hospitals and cemeteries for their inspiration. They mingle in the throngs be fore the bulletin board and study the dark anguish, the cold dis gust, the paralyzed amazement and the whoopful joy which can be found there in unlimited quantities each day. The bulletin board is a boon to business. It shows it up for two hours each afternoon. It is also a boon to the patient husband who no longer waits at his place of appointment with watch in hand, from 3 p. m. until dark while his wife examines every shop window for 19 blocks on her way to meet him. He waits be fore the bulletin board instead and arrives two hours late, and jus) in time to receive his wife in a kind and forgiving spirit just as '-she hurries in. Mankind in America has I, (300,000,000 waking hours at its disposal every day. Of this amount it spends aout 10,000,000 a day before baseball bulletin boards. Advertisers of new and durable automobiles and break fast foods would do well to note this fact. Schedule of Donaldson. Office of the Quartermaster Fort Liscum, Alaska, June 9th, 1913. Daily, Saturdays and Sundays excepted. Leave Fort Liscum, 1:15 P m. and 5:00 p. rn, Leave Valdez 2:00 p. m. and 5:30 p. m. Sundays Leave Fort Liscum, 9:30 a. m. Leave Valdez, 12:30 p. m. Saturdays: Leave Fort Liscum, 1:15 p. in., and 7:00 p. m. Leave Valdez 4:00 p. in. and 10:30 p. m. There will be no trips on the 2nd and 4th Fridays of each month, these days Being used to clean boilers. Spevial trips or cancelling of the above will be made without notice only to meet the exigen cies of the service. By order of Lietut. Col. O’Neil. *■ •' L. A. KUNZIG. 1st. Lieutenant, 30th Infantry. Quartermaster. Go to the ARCADE . < for quick, clean tervice. bakERY iN-.coNNEcnorT everything good JACK CAJLLJN A Co! CITY EXPRESS MEETS ALL BOATS When in • hurry cal! on me. “QUICK ACTION” i* my motto. Phone S2. J. A. SPENARD, Prop. LAUNCH BRIGHTON CAPT. STAMEY Leave* once a week from VALDEZ DOCK for PORT WELLS and Way Porte.. FOR SPECIAL TRIPS SEE CAPT. STAMEY BARGAINS ADLER will sell A Bailey piano in first class shape at a bargain. A Five-room house with ten foot shed for less than lumber cost. When In Seward Stop at the COLEMAN HOUSE GEORGE SEXTON, PROP. STRICTLY first class Fourth Aye Seward, Alaska FOR SALE—“Quick Meal” oil stove. Suitable for camp use. Perfect order. Inquire Mia Shepard. They are all good live pictures at the Orpheum loliight. Bring your job work to the Prospector office. Cable Office Hours. Week days 9 a. m. to 9 p. m. Sundays and holidays 9 to 10 .. m. and 5 to 6 p. m. The Order of Alaskan Moose For Sale Cheap. Twenty-eight foot Racine ino* Lor boat hull. Inquire of E. P. Cashrna.i NOTICE OF SEIZURE. In the District Court for the Territory of Alaska, Third Di vision. United States of America, Lib elant, vs. one ship’s boat, her tackle, apparel, furniture and equipment. Whereas a libel of information hrs been filed in the above couri on the 14 th day of July 1913. on behalf of the United States again st the above mentioned ship's boat, her tackle, apparel, furni ture and equipment; and where as the substance of said libel of information, is that the said ship’s boat, her tackle, apparel, furniture and equipment were seized on the 25th day of July, 1910, and turned over to the Unit ed States Marshal who now holds the same at tin Port of Unalas ka, Alaska, as forfeited to the United States for the reason that the same was then and there found engaged in unlawfully kil ling fur seals within the waters of Alaska, and praying that the said ship’s boat, her tackle, ap parel, furniture and equipment Be condemned and sold for use of the United States. , Now therefore, in pursuance of the monition under the seal of said Court to me. directed and delivered, I do hereby give public notice to all persons claiming the said ship’s boat, the tackle, apparel, furniture and equipment or in any manner interested therein, that they be and appear before the United States Distriot Court for the Territory'of Alas ka, Third Division, to be held at IJnalaska, in and for the said Territory and Division, on the 18th day August 1913, at 10 o’clcok in the forenoon of that day, provided the same shall Be a tlay of jurisdiction; otherwise on the next day of jurisdiction there after, then and there to inter pose their claims and to make their allegations in that behalf, and that ip event of their fail ure so to do default and condem nation will be ordered. H. P. SULLIVAN. United States Marshal for the Territory of Alaska, Third Divi sion . GEORGE R. WALKER. 1 ... Shushana Shoes The shoe to land you at the new diggin’s is the HUNKIDORI » A new line just received that will stand the wear Copper River Draying Co Freighting anti inissengers to all pail* of the interior. ficneral Trucking Wd. Wood, • Proprietor McKimey St. Valdez Chas. R. Crawford Wall Street Phone 159 PUte glass, window glass, roofing and building papers, roofing pitch, lime, ce ment, plaster lath, shingles, builders* hardware. Shop and job work of all kinds Windows, Door*, Moulding, Finish ing Lumber Agents tor Fairbanks, Morse & Co. Valdez Sheet Metal Works Manufacturers of YAKSHAW STOVES ‘ Plumbing, Steam and Hot Water Heating, Pump* and Well Points.? Sheet Metal Work of Every Description, Hose Valves, Iroi °ipe. Fittings. ffcup Hotel niii iui vi CTJXiiuiflu mmnwonstcm^ 135ltooMslTiilkifrMSM>irtoMy ..... _I “1 IRONING WORRIES^ ALASKA WATER, LIGHT & TE_ EPHONE COMPANY. THE COPPER BLOCK1 Finely Furnished Rooms All Modern Conveniences Good -riir DIICCCT G ° °d Goods I nt DUiTlI Goods Copper River Lumber Co., Inc. ALL KINDS OP Native and I I TH/IQFD and Building Puget Sound LUiVlDLIx Material CONSTANTLY ON HAND Prices Right W. M. FINICAL, Mgr. Phone 1 Patronize a Home Industry VALDEZ DRUG CO. Drugs and Druggist Sundries PRESCRIPTION SPECIALISTS ! Telephone Orders Solicited Free Delivery We do a general Banking Business Bank in rear of mercantile department *. We Pay 4'Per Cent Intern* on lime Certificate at Deposit,