T nuw r 11 a in ainu DOG FOLLOW THE SPEED TJ1AT.. KILLS - (V tJV. L AlaskasGTeat Sporting Event Takes Contes tants Over Frozen Course of 412 Miles Woman Puts Winning Team Over the Line. If. ATHKRTOW DC TTT. 0' .NB of tti most unlqu. thrllllnr. Bdurmnca-tcallnc porttn vrvota that baa avar bna axrmnrad br tboaa rult of plonaera. tba mD wit ara maktnc Alaaka. baa Juat baan w1uwd bJobk tha lea-bound caaat of Bart sc 8a. That annual awaaftaka aoa: raca, wbara nan and thalr taama bo at for a taat of apaad and couraara and praoaralaMp and tralnlnc In a daat that must toTtr mora than 400 mllaa ttrawa with almost Inconcalrabla dlffleultlaa. kaa Juat baaa run. This Tear a woman, well known In aortal clrelaa In tba various Pacific Coast cltiea. baa put a taaoE across tba wlonlnc Una. So has woman won an srant that la saining such fama that man who lova apart tha world around ara comlac to Alaska for a try at thia moat thrllllns of apaad contests. Tba annual all - Alaska sweefstaka dog raca la to tha Inhabitant of Alaska what tha ajraad prtz la to tha boula vardlar of 1'aria and tha darby la to tha corkne? of 'Amstrad 'Eath and fol Icaars of tha "sport of klaffa" in Eu ropean countries. DoaT racing la sport 4hal la not wall aJapted aa a past lms fiir kld-itloreJ dudea and mol Ircotidlea. but ona requiring; much In herent courasa and power of physical endurance. While there ara many doc racea In Alaska during tha Winter aeasoa, tha ail-Alaska sweepstake raca of tha Sprlna; la tha event de luxe. This raca la over a distance of 13 miles, beajln- Bins; at Noma and (Otsc thence alone Bering Sea to Topkok Bluff, acrosa a mountain ranee to Council CUT. thence up Flab River, acrosa tha dreaded Death V alter, over another divide and down .the Keewa-lk Klver to Candle Creek. tha northernmoet mining; camp on tha oatlaent. and return br tha earns route. Tfcla raoa was won thia rear by A. A. (-Scotty") Allan, driving a loam of dogra owned br Mrs. C. E. Darling. oX ftarramento. Cal. Alexander Holaom. driving a team of Siberian wolf dogs. wnad by Lord Fos Ramsar. wko won tha raca two rears ago, was eecoud. aad Cnarlaa Johnson, driving another taasa of Siberian dogs, waa third. Al lan eovered tha distance la II hour and mlaatea. which la ( boars and tt telaotea longer than bla tlxca last year, wbea be won tha race with -tha team. Tha record for tba dia ls bald by John Johnson, who. drrving a team of Siberian wolves owned by Sir Jamea Rani say. traversed ttva Jooxaey tn Tt boar. 14 minutes and to seconds. A team of doga bred from Alaaka malamutsa and craesi i with Mlaaonrl bird hounds, tba epeciea made famotaa by a Frealdaatlal aaplraat from that a tale la a campaign song, waa left Car behind la tha event thia year. Tha pais team, driven by Oliver Blatchford. ran eocond la the raca tn 10. A rtaaaWa raraakea. rog racing enthusiasts and their arrai In Aiaska la leg-loo ara not strong oa the sport from aa amateur Standpoint. They Ilka the honor of winning, of course. Bat they think that anything worth battling ; for la worthy f aoroethlng batter for a prise thaa a bias ribbon. Therefore, the first arias la tha big raca nasally consists f a asamaaoth silver lov lart p and 11. set la gw'd cola. Tha raca also la regarded as aa event npon which tha real sen ta teal at lib erty to back their opinion. Aa dif ference of opinion makes horse racing, ao also doea It make doc racing, and. aa a uauaJ thing, about SIM. changee ends In tha Bering 8ea metropolis aa aoea aa tba yadgaa decide which team has woo. Tba prise for this event last year, owing ta a decrease tn popula tioncaused by tha tawa which compel Alas k ana to Import thalr aoal from ant down to fives' acd abowt i.t was wagered sa tba result. Oambllag Is against tha law ta Alaska, bat betting oa tba dog raca la euphemistically termed ""back ing ewe'a Judgment" Aay yrwpowltlaa which has within It aa alemant of 'haaoa, soanbtaeA with Judgment, strongly appeals to tba avarac Alask an, bat gnmbUng la taboo. This lova lor aavtluac that onmsln aa a. ems at of chance finds Its strong! manl festations In tha dog racea and In tha raffles for turkeys, which usually take place at Thanksgiving and Christmas. Quito frequently Individuals win 10 or a do sen turkeys for their Thanks giving dinners. It Isn't that they want so many of theaa birds, bat rather that they enjoy tha excitement of win ning them. Ona of tha greatest dif ficulties that some Alaskans encounter during tha Winter season la to dis cover Indigent families upon whom they might beatow thalr surplus tur key. rrraartasr For tbo Evwat. Tba Alaskan dog races ara ran under the auspices of the Noma Kennel Club. founded by Albert Pink, a Noma at torney, ostensibly for tha purposa af Improving tha brood of cantnea used as draft animals, transporting supplies during ths Winter months. Tha devel opment of the keen Interest In dog racing amounting la some cases al most to aa obsession was Incidental. Whea a man begins to "talk dog ba Is regarded as having been afflicted with a saw form of disease, known as caalaitls. Daring the period of sight months of lea and Isolation, when- tha residents of Northwestern Alaska, hemmed la by lea, ara cat off from the civilisation of ths outside world, dog racing becomes the ono question of Importance. The result of a Presidential election or of a championship prise fight ara regarded aa seoottdary matters until tha Ail- . if . Alaska Sweepstake prlxs fight has bean settled. Tha raca usually lasts three days, and during this time all business, excepting that of the saloon keeper. Is absolutely suspended. Tha laundries, ths courthouses, all Government of fices, tha mines, tha stores and every othsr place of business and Industry ara closed down until tha race la over. Nobody sleep. There la only ona mat ter worthy of discussion. At tea Start. Tet from a spectacular standpoint, tha dog raca Is not all that could bs desired. The process of th event to tha spectator Is something Ilk this: He walks from tha mala atreet to Ber ing Fes, well muffled to protect hlm elf from the bUxxard, which usually Is raging at that time, and stands In 11ns with a number of others, till ha hears a platol shot fired by tha official start er. Then ba seea a atreak of dog with a sleigh and a man hanging on behind It. vanish Into th atmosphere to the southward. Then bs returns uptown, warms bis bands at tha saloon stove, and II minutes later b returns to ths Ice-covered Bering Ees, where ha bears another shot fired and sees another team go streaking over ths froxen trail. Ha oontinues this process 1 or II times, or until all of th teams have started oa their journey. Then, for three days and nights, ha stands around the sa loon, leaving It only long enough to grab a hasty meal at a near-by lunoh counter, and, with pencil and paper, fig ures out th raiaUv positions sf tha s "i -L 1 ' ' ' T"l I I 1 t ..-'-. I - - J 4 .yy jr- 2. xj. . I various teams aa - they pass the sta tions en routs and are reported In by long-diatance telephone. If he la for tunate enough to have a family or amy acquaintances of tse gentler a ex. be sometime leave th saloon long enough to telephone them th latest bulletin.. Th women folks In th Northern town foregather In llttl group of 10 or II In th various homes. In which telephone have been Installed, and for three days they also engage themselves In mathematical problems. In which th positions of th various team are computed, and speculations aa to which team shall be th winner. At the Flaiaa. Atwut 41 houra later th team ar on their return Journey and th excite ment grow greatr " Increase un til tha team ar n earing home, when it reaches fever pitch. By th time th leading team Is reported at Fort Davis, four mile from th winning post. vry resident ef the country tor 100 mile around, excepting those who are In tha hospital or otherwise incapacitated, baa found a perch on the lc hummock of Bering Sea from which to watch the winning team cross th line; and th race Is over for another year. Th diivr of th winning team la raised shoulder high and carried to th Arctic Brotherhood Hall, where a wreathe I placed upon hi brow and ho la given a public ovation. The pre sentation of ths prlxs Is deferred until after all ths teams have returned, and all Questions of dispute. If any arias y ' J.b",? a among ths drivers, have been settled. The keen Interest In the dog race was well illustrated In the year of the in ception of the sport. Ira Orton, a Nome attorney, th day before th dog- race, aald to Albert Fink, who had been re tained In a ease Involving 11,100,000 In gold dust: "Say, Albert, we must put In an an swer today or th case will go by de fault" "Well, go and see If you can't get th Courthouse closed," answered Frank. "I haven't time to attend to th mat ter Juat now. Th dog rao starts to morrow morning." No bualnesa of any kind or character Is so Important in Alaska that it can take svreoedenae la pttMl Interest' over ths dog race. . Testa of Esdsrsaea, One of the conditions of th Kennel Club I that every dog starting In tha raoo must be Taken clear through to' Candle Creek and return to tha finish ing point, either dead or alive. This condition cause the owners and driv ers to exercise much discrimination In the selection of their team. Every animal must possess not only proved speed, but unquestioned endurance. A speedy canine, not endowed with suf ficient qualities of endurance often proves a handicap to his driver and team-mates, for wbn he becomes ex hausted he must be hauled in the sleigh. Carelessness In selecting a team once loet a prize of 110,000 and many side bets for William A. Gllmore, th nom - " : M aaaa. , 5r erz 5S3 o inee of the Republican party for dele gate to Congress from Alaska. Gil m ore's team, in 1909, was driven by Peter Berg, the young Swede of superb courage and marvelous endurance who this year again drove the - winning team but for another owner. Berg be came confused, and In a blinding bllr xard which broke loose a few hour after the "dog punchers" started on the Journey, lost the trail. H was delayed for several houra, but after some difficulty reached one of the way stations. He arrived at Candle Creek several hour behind the other competitors and determined to endeavor to make the run borne with out stopping. Running behind the sled and riding only when the team was going down hill, he covered a distance of 130 miles in 19 hours, but by that time two of his dogs were dead and two were so exhausted that he was compelled to turn them loos to run along beside the team. Berg was well up In the lead and only 19 miles from home when his team lay down on him and refused to budge another foot for two days. It 1 no uncommon occurrence to see both dogs and driver staggering like drunken men from exhaustion at the finish of one of these gruelling con test. A Titled Conteetant. Many thousands of dollar have been expended In ecurlnsT dog qualified to enter this great event of the North. For months before the event is sched uled to take place dog fanciers cour the country to find animals that have proved their endurance. At this sea son good dogs command fancy prices, as much as 11200 each being paid for some of them. Fox Ramsay, a brother of the Earl of Dalhousle. came to Alaska four years ago for the" express purpose of winning the dog race. Toung Ramsay was rather unsophisti cated In the ways of the North, and th first year his entry waa regarded as a Joke. Ramsay Is Innately polite. Soon -after.hls team left Nome a man stopped him on the trail, for Ramsay has always samely driven bis own teams. "Is them yonr dogst" accosted the stranger. Ramsay politely stopped his team and admitted that they were. -' "Well, one of them darned animal stole a ham oil of me," Informed the wayfarer. Ramsay at one became Intensely-concerned. For months h had been- feeding th dog on choice cuts of roast beef. He examined the ac cused canines very carefully and then said: "Well, It doesn't seem to have In jured their digestion very much. They 7 sy-A J loolt all right and up to now tney navo been running very nicely." ( Asiatic Wolvea Aa Winners. The stranger who had been expect ing ; payment for his ham was so as tounded at Ramsay's exhibition of "nerve" that he couldn't say another word till the Englishman was half a mil farther down the trail. Ramsay was not at all successful the first year. It soon become ap parent that he was toie left far be hind, and when a telephone message conveying the Information that he had stopped for "tiffin" at one place and for afternoon tea at another were re ceived, the odds against his team were posted at 500 to 1. He finished last. The next year, however, he took his revenge. In conjunction with his uncle. Sir James Ramsay, and Colonel L. Stuart Weatherley. a wealthy Eng lishman, young Ramsay chartered a schooner and went to Siberia, where he picked up about 200 Asiatic wolf dogs. From these he selected three teams and they finished first, second and third in the race the following year, and established the record of 71 hours 14 minutes and 20 seconds for the dis tance of 41S miles, a feat which never before nor since has been equaled. Ramsay not only trained all the teams, but drove one of them. In the race he proved that he possessed much of the courage that distinguished his com patriots on the Ill-fated ocean levia than. Titanic, a few years later. ' The Maximum of Sport. If Is doubtful whether there 1 any other sport In the United States that contains so many elements of danger and calls for so much courage, endur ance and Judgment as long-distance dog racing in Alaska. In the 70 to 80 houra during which the contest lasts, both dogs and men are keyed up to the topmost pitch of physical exertion, and often In the face of blinding- bllxxards in which particles of frozen snow sting the flesh like hot needles, the com petitors struggle from start to finish. Frequently they do not recover from the exhaustion following the race for several days. Dog racing Is no proper form of amusement for weaklings and children. Th All-Alaska Sweepstake Race Is an annual event, but during the Win ter " season several races over shorter distances, varying from ten to 100 miles, are held, and, during the past ten years, contests between dog team and reindeer teams have become popu lar. The Eskimo reindeer herders take to reindeer racing like kittens take to milk. So far. however, reindeer racing has not become very popular among the whit people of Alaska. Ablacok's racing reindeer team cov ers a distance of eight miles in S3 min ute 28 seconds. This record, how ever, was defeated by a dog team made up of Missouri bird-hounds, owned by Sol Warren and driven by an Eskimo boy named Spllt-the-Wlnd. who cov ered the distance In 19 seconds less. But deer-racing and dog-racing over short distances are but the hors d'ou vers In the satiation of the Alaskan appetite for sport. The All-Alaska Sweepstake Race, from Nome to Candle Creek and return Is the piece d'resls tance for the year. (Copyright, 1912. by W. A. Du Puy.) Fashion In Canes. The manager of a cane and umbrel la department In a large New York concern was surprised at the question: "Is there such a thing as a fashion in canes?" Of course there Is. The straight canes, with knob handles of all shapes and made oi ail materials, were, so he said, "all the rage" a few years ago. conservative men wore simple canes, but a miniature band master's baton was easily disposed of. Then came the thin, switch cane, and few years ago nothing sold better than canes with straight handles. To day everybody wants a crook handle cat e, and there is a good reason ror the style. In crowded subway and elevated trains and surface cars where man must hold to a strap and has only one hand left for cane and paper, the crook handle come very handy. It hangs at the pocket or over the arm, and Its shape is graceful and sensible. It will not be displaced a the leader In many years. New York Press. J I I