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About Big Hole Breezes (Jackson, Mont.) 1898-1915 | View This Issue
Big Hole Breezes (Jackson, Mont.), 13 Oct. 1899, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn83025326/1899-10-13/ed-1/seq-4/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
J i ilS A*iS|9sifU «Jj|PfeS-£ timm BIG HOLE BREEZES, irsuaxso * T .JOHN M. ARMSTRONG EVS1T nUCAT. Entered at the PmtoIBce At Jackson, Mont,, u eecuad-olas* matter. Subscription Price, 12.50., Publication of filial proof, 13 Karnes and address should accompany til letters, which if re otherwise in dan- ■ get of getting lost. ___ THE OLD STORY. A e Alaska Uaa' Loser' Prove* Feta*. With her Huffy blonde locks combed neatly back Horn features whicb tvideuced at once intelligence And harsh treatment Kellie Howard stood in the office at police head quarters yesterday and related the romance of her life, says the Butte Kiser of the 6th. The blue eyes of the tall, hand some woman lore a eatl expression SS the chapters of her unfortunate history fell from her lips. The better nature oi the woman whs had sipped wine wfth kings, so to speak, shone out is she appeared before the officers of the law to prosecute S msa whom she bad trusted and by whom she had been deceived. She •omplaiued to the poli * in a case where aa indiridual was charged With the larceny of a diamond ring, but the complaint brought out the Story of her lile. - Wheu the Alaska fever swept c m ths country, Nellie Howard Vka a California school teacher, file became interested iu the eloriet abeut ibe wetlih of the Northern sound) and the outcome of it all was that amoti; the grst women to Wrivc hi ibe ice-bound region of the midnight mu was Nellie. She axprrisncid little trouble lu finding tdtmrei> among the rugged miners The coffers of the bonanaa kings were at her coin maud- The best tbit the Klondike afforded was within her grasp. Her beauts aud anil intilliuence were a passport to ''the resoiiirees of ibe Yukou. Her sparkling vrtt amt pleaBaut smiles won their way to the heart* oi the gold princes and Nellie lived on the fit of the land ami drank the' best wines ibe ships ever carried to the aaetie world ut miners. But in lime the daughter of Cali fornui grew tired o f height life Ahmug tier Croesus like associates Bin longed rm the sunny clime from which she came and one day she dropped her queenly position to sail hack in the land of flowers. Wheu she arrived iu Porllaad she Biel 1 m ed liarktr, a young mar who Was not possessed of much wealth. Nellie grew lo like her new friend aid plot id lue afleciion !>y sharing wi.h idin ilie gold she had brought from the irigid count'). Freddie war attentive, to tlm youog woman and ilie pair was happy for a lime. Tien reVM'Ni'N wine and Nellie learned to her sonow that the man who had said sweet ihiugs to bel aud uioveel at her lieck aud call wh* n her puiee was foil was grow Ji.g ebillj toward her The girl was finally reduced to the necessity •f asking the man lo leave her. llei ht-a M ban clisnged Under hia jmlitli miii hi sued her and she wamid in 1><; lid of him and to for get I im as far as possible. But F im mu- was lot inclined lo go, and bis reiusaia wound up by his ill treating the confiding girl and abe bad to call a physician. The doctor gave the young woman an anaes thetic, and while aba was uader the inffaeaes of the drag it is alleged Barker harshly pulled a 1200 dia Bond ring from her finger and went •nd pawned it . / f t waa this alleged act which'Csused Nellie to t( II her story to the police. She had Barker •nested aud charged with grand larceny. The case ie act to come up Oct. 12, before Jnatiee Herring toe, aud in tie meirffns* tb« former favorite of the Yakow will nurse Mr wounded feelings and reflect on tbs romance' which ends with bar as eomplaiaaet againit the man at* Hasted. Walt^fe Tiff FUR CA «p Third Perty Waa the Oae W Is Es, Joyed It Most. The email boy wno pins s paper to the schoolmaster's coat tail im agines that he baa achieved a mas terpiece ef humor. But he is not iu .a position to reap the fruits of bis perilous adventure. It's s fearful and precarious joy which be feels. What if the sohoelroaster should turn around? That would be tragedy. Now, neither the amall boy nor the schoolmaster gets the fall flavor of humor. But suppose at that moment an old Iriond of the school master happens to look in at the door. His delight iu the situation has a mellowness far removed from the anxious ambiguous glee of the nrehin. 11a knows that the itnall boy is not so wicked as he thiuka be is, and the schoolmaster is uot so terrible as be seems; in fact, that oaly a only a little while ago he was up to the same pranks he now finds so rcpi'eipeufiidtf. Bo, from the assured position of m’ddle age, he looks upon tjhu small boy that was and the small b-iy that it is. aud Audi tln iu Coin viry'gooo— much,better, iu deed, than at 'Ibi moment they find oue another— Atlantic Monthly. Now Use for Copper. Scarcity a day passes that a new use for copper n uot fouud. The latest of any considerable import ance was discovered by the manage ment of a Massachusetta railroad The discovery cousins iu the fact that thin sheets of copper is not oi.ly better tbau paint as a covering for freight cam, hut also that it is cheaper in thl long run. The Fitchburg railroad iu that stale is using the sliteti and, probably, many others may eventually use them instead of paint. The present high price Of the metal may limit in application in that direction un til its production exceeds the de mand, but that it will thus be used admits of little doubt. Ordiuanly, of course, it. is con sidered good business for one lo get all ho oau foi bis goods. That is quits natural. Just now copper producers could advance the price of the metal to 20 cents or over and then find ready sales ior their out put. But the advice of ceiiain level-headed mine owneri who be- lieve that a grasping, avaricious pol icy would not only iujure their bus iness, but that of trade in general, seema to have prevailed and oopper standi at about 18J without any noticeable rising tern ency. it is said tuat copper can now be mined, smelted ami inaiketed for I rom 5 to 9 cents per pound, acoord mg to the location ef the tnine'and the lacilitiea for handling its ore. Bay the average cost is 7J cents a pound it will be seen that the mar gin tor profit is large enough to sat isfy all but the most-avaricious. There was a tints, however, in Butte --about 1861-2, wheu the cost of producing oopper eq talieu its mar ket priue, and mins owners simply exchanged lb old dodar for a new one. The Heauerville works was shut do*** shout that time lor that reason. Conditioue are different Wow and the copper mine owners are having their roiling. Mr, John Stanton, the president of several large oopper corporations, is credit ed with say ing that it would be bet ter for ail concerned if the price of copper oquid be maintained about 16 ceats a pored. But as every commodity is considered worth what it will bring in lb* market it'doss not appear that any fixed price of copper can be maintained. —Western Mining World. A Fie# Beatiac fircwtxd. E. M. Doagiaa, who has charge «f the geographical surveys of the forest m o m s, ia speaking of bis arork to * Salt Lake reporter, mikes nesttes of the Jackscm Hole coun try; He said: “ By the way, ths lstter is the Best heating gross* that I have a m la aB a y yarn of roaming in the wost. Thera are close to *0,000 oBcf&aro, tad we freqaesatly raw .-la * . a t J M » . ifltilfait J® Ibe jJaras. ... Sdtos, hies, maaum .fam m im tipa *» aikewamer « A sro m s e r m two feofaios-de last roamnauM n a »■* m - n flpjHg&pm— ■ ^a him That «£ of wins ftqm Missouri hang ing «p then in the corner of yoiir establishment. Hehadto he shown I don't, Aud with a light “ ta t- I will see you lator,” the Kansas fi wsnded, hia way toward the head o a fat nan who waa slumbering tn oi a neighboring couch. A family of bugs was preparing to make a raid on some froil ln< when one of the younger bags hap pened to notico a parcel of English sparrows chatting around is ths immediate viciulty of the tre Then one of the young hugs turn- iu alarm to its mother aud sat “Mother, *e had better hike out from hero or tbifiNt bird* willg every mother’s sou of us.” But tn. old bug kept on heading for th true, aa she calmly answered *Ar sop, those sparrows can fees »..« dghi aud raise inure ------ for thei size than aui birds 1 ever saw, bu i never keen ,-ue to eaten a bn j a worm.’ MORAL. There are’ luauy people who . < up a good tWi of irouOie aud iua* a lot of racket, Inn when it corner l* Ion g auyiniug useful they arc. there. Captured a Corpse- bolt by which it not lequue any A traveler in snub Air ion till ghastly i-tiii) oi an adventure aiuon the outlaws and desperauoea then One ui^ht a farmer was aroused from his sleep lij iic iriugan unusu. noire about the place, lie go quickly out of bed, and, after list euiug alientively, disci vered the1 some people ou tide weie cuitiug hole through the door close to thi was bald. It din great amount oi detective taleut to guess the ebjeoi of the operatiou, and the bast way to foil it was suggested by a thong of rawhide with a loop in it, which hung frouji a hook ou the inside of the door. Noiselessly lemoving (he thong, he slipped the end of it ^reugb the loop, and there he ptood, arpted with an impromptu jaiso, rqady for action. It was an •nxious time while the farmer stood watohing the hols in ths door grow ii g larger and larger, until at last it was of sufficient sine to effect the r f . , purpose lor which it was made. The supreme moment arrived, aud a hand was inserted stealthily, not only through the bole, bnt also through the loop of the little lasso which hung skilfully around it. With a sudden jerk the loop was tightened around tha wrist, the band was dragged in si tar as lha aperture would allow and tha thong was se- eurely fasted to the hook on tbe baok of tbe door. Tbe robber was rerfepily helpless. Bis companions cams to bis aid, aad having ineffect dally dragged at the imprisoned arm till they ware tired, gave up the struggle and prepared to depat t. ^ut they were prudent men, and it ooourred to them that, to sere him self, their comrade might betray them. Dead men, they said, tell no tales, so they killed him on the spot and ran awav. The Isopportns# Man. Fables sip to Date. A 6pider carefully wove his net in tbe corner of tbe room and wait ed for a victim. By and by seeing a fly meandering along that way ha invited him to chat awhile, disaslly offering to set ’em op as an extra ia docemect. \May I ask,” said tbe ffv, aa be brnshed a bread era mb off hia left eyebrow with his frost foot -■why yon are so Wamcff anxious to strike tip an acquaintance with an entire stranger? So far as I know yoa never saw me in year life be fore,” ‘-True,\ replied the spider as be fastened another strand, --but aa soon aa I saw yon I was struck on your appearance and determined that yon were jbe iadindnai I bad few to go iato a great oeitere. I eaa see tea aawntethat yoa have aa eye for busiaew.” Bat the fly simply said| smoking Before a mirror, rebesrsteg Tbe following from tbe New Or leans Times-Demoortt illustrates the characteristic* of persons oue i- conlinntlly meeting. “There geos a man,” said a Cana strret philosopher, “ who baa math a failnia of life ia apito of excep tionsl equipment for snooess. He has no bid habits, and I eonldu't name a man in New Orleans who possesses a kindlier disposition, yet bo is continually out of job and i- Htudiously avoided by everybody wbo knows bint. The mysterio i part of it is that nobody can nil yon just why, and the poor fellow doesn’t tisdeMsad ft braself. ... t t t is beginning to think that somebody bas worked a rabbit’s foot ou him, bet the secret is really this; Us has a genius for the inopportune, By some malign freak of fata ha alwsjasaye and does tbe wrong thing sntbe vrronz tune. It is lack off1 taet; it is destiny. For example. I like bid, but he never Galled oc me in hij life tbit bis Tint wasn’t highly nnweleomo. He is morally certain to drop iajnat i i time to catch one doing somethiag foolish or discreditable, and yot know bow we hate tbo isooooot chance witness of onr lollies. He made • mortal enemy of Col. — bemuse Be happened to walk ia:« bnedlea while tbe old man ws* dystaghis mnstacbe.' He duraed ob * errtsxn prominent lawyer “My fancy beaded friesd, l a n t f f as imprerapta xfter-dinner apeeoB. strayed torn AsIftoMMy 1* ewgM tie gl«*ee]apithe profiteer ' j»^vBg.teoif it wss\ f o r t^ jl^ fMttiet, T t a e ere two o r k out of dyteiis. Us sever goamps or tatllei, bat the mart fact that be fas seta things be oughtn't to see and hoard things be oughtn't to hear makes hia .very presence etu- bairusing to the otber fellows. It’s moat unfortunate, aid all fate. If bs ware introduced to a man whose grandfstbar. had been hanged he’d be abadsitelj certain to begin talking abadtyr rope inside of two minotfs. As I said before, ba has A genius for the inopportune. My wifi loathes hint because her false .frixxts blew off on tbt street one day and landed on top of his uut brells. He bad nothing whatever to da wjih the itixrot or the ali ments, bnt now I can’t aak hits to my house. Terrible to be onler xuoh a curse, isn’t it?” ■ - s u r e at chemistry . • U»»4 U«* \korJ4 i« tn« MysU » am pi Uh« l^b«rA<Ory. ilsto la Oennaar\ is now the rr og- nod trade-mark to r okeo^aic roughout tha, world, Ths dxeu ihhi - -producta derived.from coal tar tuuc . w a elasaleal tnatauce, oi, aa cun would have laid, a glaring rx pie. At wa have rtated, the Father- riders hsve captured these trades Iroai i. Uo to Blherteld, and what do we i«t At the Farbentabrikeu, besides rst-class works, we are ahown a I h- storr uaauroassed, perhspe not ailed, la Liopdon, and employed tn searoh or la the bueinee* there an ay hlgh-clais ohasalata. In the Ba soks Anllln und Bodsfabrik aeventy- sht chemiata are engaged. An expert nsu told the Oreeham commission t six skilled chemiata waa the maxl- um number employed In any gngllsh or works, If, indoed, there were *o \y. These toen are unceutngly ac a in reaeareh. The price ta pay for -greet Ie eternal vigilance. Every tint from England, France, America or n»ly !e tried; every new material •ted; every hopeful process patented, i he great works at Hocbst made In ISSO from 1,700 to 1,800 colors; they em ploys! 1,000 hands, seventy chemiata. and twelve engineers. A firm In Offen bach with 300 workers hnd forty-five In vestigators. Ths lesson that has been driven heme In the Fatherland ie that Induetrla! processes carried on upon n large scale give great chancee for discovery. Just as gss miking gave anllina so the eoap- boilers’ lye yielded Iodine, the watte of •alt garden* bromine, the mother-llq- uora from thg spring! caesium aad rub idium, ths acid chambers selenium and thallium, the mines and metallurgical werks gallium, and germanium.' There fore th* ‘‘chemtker,\ on the other side of tfis Rhine, Ie always looking out for something new. He found H In the beptldlno arpt a*o dyes, the former giv ing Congo fed and chrysamln, \the moil Important discovery of modern llmee eo far as cotton dyeing It con- aerned.” In short, ns Dr. Oetwatd has said, It Is now a Ann article of bo/lef that \the secret of German Indued III chsuletry is the recognition that sci ence Is the bast practice.\ In England It Is greitly to be feared there ntlll Un gers faith In \the rnle of thumb.\ NO HASTY MARR1AOES. Ilf N,-r pduQitlsn S mu J i Wtfttes ORIGIN OF THI HUM IN RACK Suns SelswMsM Hold She Paler Rafteas War* Oaea lakabltad- Bslfsveri In the Daplace theory of tha origin of ths ann and ths planets srs of ths oplnioh that the original stock of ths human rice Drat came Into exis tence at the poles of the earth and grad ually moyed out toward tbe equator. All believers In tho nebular hypothesis nr* fast conforming their Ideas to the belief that this earth was once a red- hot ball of fit a, and that ths human race com* Into etlsteaee ae booh as a tion of tho globe had cooled sufilcItntJr to admit of tkelr living upon It. The- portion moat likely to cool first was tho . Deputkilenti | \So long as the attraction of set, rr uvmus you cannot abolish marriage! excitedly eacciulmed tho consemtivi riitn. according to Vogue. \1 have no desire to do away with uairiage, but simply to mitigate it.’ i plied the woman propagandist. Ana mat ihoughtlul people w-ipl agree wito he woman speaker that the reckless iess which characterises marrlag- iiouM he moderated. It Is cncotrcagln; o those wncec pearte arc- touched b) he manltold sorrows.ot humanity tc obaerve that, ta thin matter of mar rktge (a most prolific source of mla- -ry to human beings), different ngenelep >re at work, educating people to an ap .u-eriatlon of. the gravity of the estate rad its tremendous consoqiences to tn dlviduale aad to nations. The htghei education of women baa, from the start, shown a tendency ta disincline those who took tho college courses toward early marriages and toward impruden< ones—quit# a largo percentage of them moreover, taking np careers and re maining single, A recent canvass of college graduates la said to have shown that, while to per cent of non-college women become wives, only 55 per cent of college graduates resign their llvee Into the keeping of husbnnde. From other sources It la learned that those who marry do not awall the Hats of Invalid wives; neither do SO per cent of tbe children born to them figure In mortality tables, aa Is the ghastly fact with tbe everyday woman's children. College women are not apt tc marry a man to save him, end thus Insure tor children morally weak or vicious fath ers; neither does love (?) tn a cottage— translated in these flayt Into a cheap flat In an unwholesome locality—ap pear to her finer or more winsome than the wlf-respeetlng independence of the breed-win ring positions that are now within her reach. Years ago some con servative men hnd the perspicacity to realize and the courage to state that fuller life for women meant tbe lessen ing of her Interest In marriage (the only profession her toremothera hnd been permitted to consider) and that she would bs harder to please and mors deliberate In her choice. That the phophecles have come to pass is matter for congratulation or for condemnation, according to lbs observer's point of vlsw. G ods , Sfm s, flinuiilion, Powder. / t/' | P ish Bros. Farm and Spring Wagons* For prices call o r w r ite JOHN W. MORTON, Dillon, Montana. MacCallum & Cloutier, O B I & B S 3 P a r k A v e n u e A n a c o n d a , - M o n t . C A WIFE'S TYRANNY. l o i n of th* Awfol Tilings She l)»t« 1# Aimo? Her Htuimnd. She contradicts him at the head of his awn table, Interrupts his anecdote to set him right on an utterly unimpor tant llttledetall—say the date ofatrana- actlon, which he makes the 7th of Sep tember trod abe assert* wa* the 8tb; she Interfere* ta all his arrangements, and question* hie authority tn the sta bles, the field, the church, the consult ing-room; she apportions his food snd regulates the amount of wine he may take; should she dislike the smell of to bacco she wilt not allow him the most transient whiff of the most reflnsd clg- sretle, and, like hdr brother with his victim, she teaches the children to de spise their father by the frank eon- tempi with viltlch she treat* him and the way in which she flouts his opinion snd denies his kurirorlty. If she Is mors affectionate thanT aggressive ah* rea ders Mm ridiculous by her effusiveness. Like the “Bammy, love,” which roused Dean Alfordls reprobation, she loads him with silly epithets of endearment before folk/oppreeses him with person al sttenUon snd treats him generally as a sick child next door to an Idiot All oat of love and its unreasoning tyranny she takes him Into custody— In publlo M In private life—and allows him no kind of freedom. Robust and vigorous *a he li, she worries over hit health m though he were a confirmed Invalid; In the hey-day of hia maturity eoddltng him as If he were an octo genarian bordering on the second child hood. She continually uses the ex pression, \I shall not allow my hus band to do no and eo;\ or, “I will mako my husband|do this or that.” Never by any chance floes ehe confess his right •to free action, hound aa be Is In th* chains of her tyrannous affection. In the end she makes him what she has poles, snd th# evtdsnco deduced from _____ Util ipeculstion Is that upon which Is j long fancied him to b», a |iftckboiitlesB founded the Idea of the polar origin of j valetudinarian, whom t b e u scorch«« th#human family. On the tbove theory : to fever and the east wifi4,akiK^te In explained th* mysterious finding of i pneumonia—one who has lost th\ ft th# remains ef tropical birds, beasts and plant* far np fa tbe polar regions, ft It Is really true that the poles were the first haWtabl* spots on tbs earth’s •urf.ee, and that they were rendered ao by the gleho first cooling at tbe spots least affected by ehnshine, It must bo true also, that tho polar regions are gradually encroaching upon the tem perate and .torrid none?. Who knows hot that tho centuries yet to come will flu the Indian ocean and the Uuif of Mexleo with ioeberge and keep tbo Nil* and ibe Atfikion froxcu solidly through out the year?—Ex. Tb« Btgff«it America!) bUk?itot><<. Diamonds have been found occa sionally different places iu the United States, but never in sufficient quan tities to render systematic mining profitable. The largest authenticated diamond i m found in ttis couttry by \faddlng\ about the flower.—Chica go Chronicle. P*. Clark’s Novel The Rev. F. E. Clark, press.ical of ttr Christian Endeavorn mi ., estid i unique plan a week or two ago. It I- tc Start a “chain of prayer, to reach clear around tbe world, and In wnich e\try Ujtmber of the society, if ar- v l-bes. might form a link. I a ( b 7 n 1 orer Is to offer one short petition every day for ottftr tfiembers and for .ibe cause at lsrae. Special dtgec's 'may from tfnfe to time be Included. To become a link, in the chain requires but one con dition, viz., belief in p-ayer. Wholesale anil retail dealers in groceries, men’s furnishing goods, boots and shoes, hardware, wines, liquors find cigars. Our motto, best o f goods at lowest prices. One order will convince you that we consider your interests. BIO HOLE MEAT MARKET, t; ' BLANTON & HOMAIN, I’ kocbietohs , DK.u.Kiis ix Beef, Pork and M u tton. R. V. BURTON •J. C. ROMAIR. J O H N H A R B I T , GENERAL BLACKSMITH, WISDOM, MONTJ HORSESHOEING A SPECIALTY. Repairing on machines or any old thing that needs fixing don* with neatness and dispatch. THE BREEZES blows once a week for the good of the valley. Take it. Send it to your friends. ■/ • was picked np by a laborer engaged In grading the streets of Manchester, Va. Ita original weight waa about twenty- four carats, and, after cutting, a twelve xarat stone resulted. On this stone, •ailed by Csptaln Dewey, Its- owner, the Olnoor, there was’ obco loaned Elj!>Vhu*- Mr. Kunx, the diamond ex pert appraised its vsiue at leas than a thousand dollars, as it is podriy colored and imperfect In the matter of dia- mold* Yankeeland at all events does act 'licit creation.\ Tfc* Katvet OwrteoB. The Prison MirroY, * bright papa edited by the inmates of (he peniten tiary at Stillwstor, Minn., made the statement recently that \a!) Miswsoi; -fiiWS out of jalf left last ?a-ard*y fo' he Atlanta exposition.\_Ip this tb- irove City TliessTCfijec - \Wo take tsssfeda t* tK* H»t* c*ot. but aaewto « r -'her- {hrethe .hat we have n« tBSfftr'-o: 4>ibaw«r ipro. 18a* m ArJ fi'B •• Uswike yy-'K'n «*-t(her qofcxisj twfcjic-rite, ttW.-il!. ck,a - i : It W bb Kuift'tj. A tory speaker in Berwickshire held | J. P. Mackenzie, PAINTER AN HOUSE FINISHER, V, i-vfH.V, MONT, a nut in his hand and said. \Thi^ rvpre- jKufts_thiJvhqle church^qiies-Jon. Th,. shell is the Jree church,'good in it»1 way, but not the best cf things. Now ! * ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ GET TOUR Mi 1 ------------------- crack Ihla nut, and you get the celeb Uahed church.” He cracked j.- and h was rotten and be had to retire amid derisive cheers.—Fun. \ ( i I o Bt«rn«y. | Hlo Reverenee- I can - take you’ cab, P at ! see your horse hr? been on his knees.* i Pat—-Arrah, yer riverence; be cisy j shout that. The last place he had wa» with a praste and laith, he hsa to keep up a Elmblance of rriicion --gyapei Bullet in. k t i Hr Wtl DejrMWtl. \Somehow he said, diseeesdstaiy. T don’t aeem tor moke farmin’ psy.\ “Maybe yoa haven’t tried the riffhl • ay.” Tels; I've done everything. Pro .-•sded mee-Jn's ss’ Jtaed data aa’ oted fur every cssIMst* thm sold h a , uowed tha way ter he*p ta aiosg. Bat t don’t aeaM t n fls A# Etod am'I feast ay Fm sects’ Vaabdsgtcs Star. BIGGEST. BRIGHTBST KBEST 11 daily —tie • am •smna,' *r ( > : 85c. rrr month. _ _ _ ■ . . 6 s e m i - w e e k u f -W M I I I * 11 A vc?r, or 7V lor I MOMttL , ( ) * Scbs'-ribo tbronth leeal diest ss ., •tad direct to— , .)■ ALL THE NEWS! . . . ALL TUB TIME! Tin: A \t Publisher more State, Telegraphic and General News than any: other uewspa per in Montana or tbe North west. DAILY ' SUNDAY 10 P ages ic T’ ages fo C o u ’JWs 112 Connorg * 0 i ? ‘e*J •V t ra V - Ft i»s. V - . STJBSCRIPTION PRICE Daily and Sunday, on? y?a i ....... tl9.CC « “ *>■ ' 5 wom K . . . 5.6C « *• \ S mort'M.,., 3.01 ................... i month ...... 1.0C Dwly, f>uJy, one year .......... . 8 Off Sflp*T. uBiy.Mv year ...... . ...... 2.<E '\ ■J • ” -.r** - , '. .. •* AH postxaostm sod to r t agesto are ssthddxed to reeore ntewr^J - £ - - \ ' • - X ' ^ - _ _ r - — - - ‘•Z. . ****■ r v -- ^ ~ T i I , s i ’• 1 .Wf - V.s