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About Big Hole Breezes (Jackson, Mont.) 1898-1915 | View This Issue
Big Hole Breezes (Jackson, Mont.), 19 Jan. 1900, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn83025326/1900-01-19/ed-1/seq-4/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
j 3 ‘ '• ' 4- \.--■ ..T--/;rw •.. • ■ ••r. -■ •-• • \•?•«■# - ~ *' IG KOLB BREEZES, rou tin e i » y JOHN N. ARMSTRONG, EVERY FRIDAY, Subscription Price, $ 250 . .. Publication of final proof, $ 5 . Advertising rates given on apphea- OD. Names and addresses should accom pany all letters for publication. The Old, Old .Story. On the 28 th day of this mouth the school children of New Orleaus Will lay flowers ou a statue orcolca to a wiser. It is probably the ouly slatut- yiLioli may be called by these terms in the world. John MeDonoah was not a mis •i, as history proves. He was a gicat and noble-hearted gentleman, relates llie Philadelphia Press, but, like many others, he bitterly allow - * ed the woiid tu mistake his great k ness toi giccUimsit aud pass him by Vf • • with coiiU'<n|-t. J. r. lot.ay iu New Orleaus they re t’i Vert- mid l.omii his memory with tin ir Gamin- ami Aliuonastcr aud 1 Lld-'uilc. ?■ 1 ins ini’i min lit lu a ini-t-i' in the !'•- Fr< ill, cm ui Amt-rii'si is rlisliiu-l Iy iiniijiic. No city in (hi.-, country but New Orleans puts its emotions it tn marble. Ollier nil, s ;-ay it is tickle, but i k III uni- denies llial w lull it loves fr it gins ureal lu-aiied sweeplili' pas Sion id the pi tmiii ol its hive. It haled McDonnell once with all llie Blicnglli ol Us Volatile Fienrli nature Today It loves tiin, its aih i itt ion mingled w iill con trition. ’ll. sun i>a long i ne. heaped up hi n n millin'oter with all the Ji ii hi i i^aiiu ttdveiiline and tragedt thin h t ms in i i loin; fitly to the his-my ol New <)■ leans and its nil tiles. 1 n llie lii s| y i ar of I his century thtleeume to New Orleans a sing ularlt ham smile yontu man. lie Was horn id 'ciilcli-Irish slock anil Combined wiln liis business abilities a l omuuee willi which seemed after Wind llie ketsiiine id Ins life. At that dsi New Orleans coti- ■ Bint ml itsell llie leading city of Ami tea. It linil binngbl from ihn old World the perfumed etiquette ami Bcmlillaiing culture that had mado Louis’ court the most talked-of in Europe. The people of New Or leans urrived m this ciuintry from France, and whin they bestowed Upon a siianger the latchkey ol their Hours the lest of America ae kliowkdged this person as one socially made. New Orleans gave to John Me Don ogh the latchkey ot its doors. lie was ol the race culled •‘Amer icans,’' hut he had come from Lord Ualtimor’s land, an I lor the com l- ly cavaliers of Maryland the cava liers of Ja uisiana had inspect, In all that gay confusion of mask ed hubs and races and dm Is and Frciic.li plays, he was a high figuic. The little green gates that barred llie tnliance to the inner courtyard of aiistoeracy wereopei eu to him, lie feil in love, and doing all things mightily and wf-li, he eliose the most high placed girl in all ol that anie-beiium aristocracy. She was cuurted by the best eeions of old France and Spain, ller father dreamed for her a royal match. She w as beautiful, she w as witty, Bhe had money. Who not, then, take her place across the sea in the splendor of royalty and not waste her life on this nde of the sea among the bar batons Americans from the north and the savages to the west? In those days, however, young Americana dia not woo and wed as They a© to-day. The New Or leans woman of those days was as foil of romance as she is to-day, but the word of her father was the law of the bouse. And the beautiful young creole’s father thundered a decided {‘No” to young MeDouogh's suit. “Marry an American,” he said, a man with out money? My daughter, who must marry lute court life in the highest eirelee of Europe! Never!” She waa an Almonaster. You *b« know New Orleans knew what it a to be thftt. One is not allow ed to forget it cvea today, for at the great cathedral the Angelas bell aiwiys times the masses for his 9 Mi. fie srts as atterex royal; he prao- ticaily rebwHt New Orteaaa after the great few; his ward waa madia- feted aad over the bess&M eb3d K M t m y a a k e l f f t n y d p f f i Hemado her marry De Pontalbt, page to- the Emperor Napoleon. It is she who, with her Louisiana nullioua, bought and demolished the great palace built by Louis XIV for the Due de Maine, So that it might not be occupied by the enemy. •She reserved its treasures, erect ed a new palace which is now own ed b ya Rothschild at a price of $3,000,000 francs. She had all the glory her ambit ious old father craved for hc-r—aud the handsome y oung cavalier from Maryland? Why, he fell readily in lovo with auolher woman. Better had he thought himself alway tu love with Moeuela Almoo aster! The womau of his heart had come from his own laud of Alaiy- la id. She has lived iu the tradi tions of the town as oue of rare hypuolic power. She had all the lasciuations that make men never forget— nor want to lorgol. it was saw that every week brought its proposal from some young blond ol Louisiana. Sue returned the love of hand some, clever, masterful young Mc- Doriogb. Both had mount; both lived in the vt-iy innermost circle oiihe gay life. Society was de lighted at the love affair of the- two. It thought H ouly right ihal the most desirable paiti la Louisiana should marry iht belle of belles, lor by this lime MePoiiogh had made a lortiiiu-i w illi that .‘scoltdi- iri-h i h i i f t behind his Maryland t IDu| lulih, 11 1- lii ed —-as well placed baehe i us i-l his day lived in a splendid house with dozens of slaves and his i ru-rtal.iim iits were the talk, of the i o an. lie went to the father of the belli-, c.'iindcni that as lie had the girl's h-vc llicic was naught in his life to d serve him a “ no” from the par ent. But, “ no” it was -conditionally. An aflirnialivo it lie would become a Catholic. To this proposal McDoiingh an- sutied -‘ iih ’’ forever Ilia Scutch lii'li l’icshy tcriaiiism was iht- stroiiaist faith lie hud and his de- lei iiunat imi not to change that faith was.is inexorable as that id his love’- lather. The girl and the young man eomlorled themselves with the theory that the old man would relent; that when lie saw how devoted they were and that it wus not a passing fancy he would yield to tlnir entreaties. The ye.-tis passed on, McPonogli and tlie belle continued to live at llie apex ot the gay plantation life. lie had distinguished himself m the war of 1812 and was leading society wilh a reckless, money eil lianad. They met constantly in the crowded routine of a small city, j 'They had all around them ihe at-' uiosphere of romance, a background j of moonlit evenings and balcony'! whisperings. | Finally the last demand fur his j daughter’s hand was made on the j fervent Catholic. ’ The same answer | was gi/i n. I -•If you renounce your creed, said one. “ I should not he worthy of your! (laughter if 1 did,” said the olhi r. In those days girls did not marry without the consent of their fathers. The belle of New Orleaus took the veil. In the famed old Ursuline chapel she became a nun. ! No gossip ol old New Orleans is j complete unless the gossipers tell i the story of, this day, She eouiess j ed that if she was not allow ed to j marry the man she loved she would j w ed no other. j All New Orleans sighed over the unhappy'terminaiion of as pretty a romance as novelist wanted to create. And be«~what did he do? Dropped the world away from btm, too Gave up bis sumptuous establish ment, his horses, his dinners, his brilliant, sunshiny life, took alt his slaves and went across the treach erous river to Algiers. Then began Lie downfall, in the eyes of that city that had fawned oo and loved bios. At first society took hit decision with meloneholy and much curios ity. They still remembered bis cavalier hospitality n d bis lovable nature and folks said bis retirement was a wbim— so romantic— bet bowed to paaamrer. Bat f eara ireat M and the wbim rmaioed, XeDeMgh. m ne w n to tho'eity «W fj itaj la baa m a gloomy |M«. the river in tbe afterpooa. After aw hilt bis fnsnda looked snail Utarrhat tha little chikUaa Tbetgbicieakft wihah the. marsekt<AS at him askance. Rumors were on float thatthis man was -‘a screw”— that he was coining money for money’s sake. In short, he was a miser, they said. Tales went the rounds that to the poor, to tbe Widoyv aud the or phan he showed no mercy; in a commercial bargain he was tncrei- less. *- His garb was threadbare, mean; he grew grey and bent in his prime. It was whispered that he did Lis own marketing aud screwed down the venders to a “ picayune’s worth of this” aud a “ two-hits’ worth of that.” They said he used his own rowboat to avoid fetriage. Ills fiiouds stopped speaking to him. Of all the things that par ticularly gay society despiscit it was greed. To make uioucy to spcuil was like a gentleman, hut to make money to hoard was- -hah! too con temptible to talk of. “ McDouogb, the miser,” became a by-.void. Old mammies frightened the Creole children wilh the prase in the gloaming. His name was the bugaboo of the nursery. As it is known to day, this last condition cut him mole nearly to the heart than any other. For thirty years this life was led. At the end of it men tlespised him utterly. It was evcii said that lie star veil his slaves and coulii ed them over in Algiers, and that was why so many had escaped and gone to sea. JSo easily does the .wrong side of' things armv! Auolher geneiation grew up around him, ami all that was known of liiin was that lie was --the ni-.ser” a personality of the commercial Bluets; one to he dreaded and slum- ned■ -and the old balcony gossips knew his old romance, now a pail of their folk lore. Only one eli tuge in those thirty yeais. The l'rsnline sister became mother superior, alter thirty teals of work, and every Sunday, rain (ii- shine, -'MeDonogh, tlm miser,’ rang the hell ol the UiMiline eon vent and paid a visit to lii.s mother. Think of llie pathos of this! What a story for a novelist! Ilow New Orleans dies ovir this part of the whole sad story to day. rl hink ol the man with the spleu did face, arrayed in his one tine suit ami spotless linen, lowed by his slave to the gates of the conn ill by the river, then the long holiday afternoon togdher in the dying sun; their two lives going out to gctlu-r! Ilow lie must have told her all his grealheai led plans; how slit- inust have pleaded with him to lit the world see him us lie was, and how his conservative proud, hurt iSrotcIi spirit must have said, as he did in ol e of liis letters since found: “ 1 will not It 11 them vvlial 1 do, but .1 promised you the story shall )>e know n some day.” At the end of thirty live years of this life the mis er was dead. New Oilcans eared liitle. His Haves buried him and the slaves re mained to hear the will read. New Orleans became keyed up when it whs known that the miser’s w ill w as to he read iu llie presence of distinguished persotiH. Their only curiosity was as to how much money he had lift, lie left 8100,101,10, an enormous sum to hurt! outside of slaves in those days, and,when the wilt was finished the state of Louisiana, and especially the. my of New Orleans, sat aghast, te a r-sr i ken, fepen ta n t. This will was the talk of balcon ies, chibs, commercial houses for weeks, for this miser had left his great mint of money to tbe children of the city. It was to build for them puhlie aehool houses, tbe first is the eoua- try. Attached to his will was the outline of the far reaching scheme of education for these beloved children that be had mapped and planned for the last thirty years. It bad been said by all strangers that New Orleans danced belter than 6be spelled, and McDonogh’e millions and method were to go toward equalizing the two. Part of the money be left to Bal timore children for tbe same par- pose. His will was the most pstbetie document of its kind ever recorded. It told of his great schemes, his loaeii&ess, how he bad shrunk more rate himself sod bitterly left this world to go on with its gossip. At the end of it all came the <me tragic Mt» of the enure will. It was the Krteaee that it the ream of the to-day: ♦‘Isjrt^rii fortbt* I ask as a will soiotfimes come and plant a few flowers above my grave.” Grace King, the brilliant New Orleans Writer, said of this will that in reading it oue quivers in voluntarily - at the harsh, 1 rude speeches that dogged tbs man's old age, and pne shrinks away from the presentment by imagination of tbe long, lonely cveniugs ,tbat filled the Jhj,rty-five years of the solitary phutatiou home, and one -wishes tnat— ab, how one wisheB—that the little children, bad not mocked aud pointed at him, aud that at least one in his life had proffered lum the flowers he craved lor his grave! Another part ol this will read thus: “ They saii 1 |of ate, ‘He is rich, ho is old, without wife or child. Let us take lrom him what he has.’ Infatuated men! They knew not that that was au attempt to take from themselves, for I have liee.ii laburiug all my llie, not lor myself, but for them and for their children ” Front that May to this New Or leaus has been teaching its young to love llie man whom they were taught to fear, 1 he old mammy's in the Cretle i|uaru-rs have had to secure a new bugaboo for the trtirsery. Troops of little chilJieu were led liom the schools to lay flowers on inis man’s grave and m each one ol me school houses which had been (.reeled lrom his money there is placed u liruuze bust ol him Once a year it has been the pusloui ol ail llie children in New Orleans to lay Ilow ns around this image. Out ol the money they raised was creeled this new statue, which h. fl its urn anniversary the 2 'Jlli ot this mi hi 111. I'll e (lay it was unveiled Inoiisands ot school children gaihoi* ed around ni multiple circles and sang to Ins memory. 1’hoii, m small legtiiiciils at a mile, tliey man lied lorwaid and presented then w iu illis. 1 lie day was .me of New Orleans ciuot ioi.nl iiionii sits. It has linen dninoilstiuted repeat edly in every state in the Union an-l in many foreign countries that Cliamliei I hiii N Cough Remedy i- a cci'am preventive and eure lor croup. It lias become the universal reiiieilv fu|- ihaL disease, M. V. Fisher -if Libei ly, \V. Va., only re pi ;it -, Winn has been said around the -dube when lie vviltos; “ 1 have us, - ii (,'liiuiiherlain’s Foueh llena-dv in hi v faintly lor several years and always with perfect success. We believe that it is not only the best cough mm-ily, hut that it is a sure cure for croup. It lias saved the lives of our children a number of times.” 1'his mnedy is for (ale by J. F. Lossl, Wisdom and Jackson The Nineteenth Century. eeHtujt, we^saa look Li lot) years ihe win Id has mai e more imperial progress than in all the thirty eentnriis before since Homer. Wi can travel at seventy miles an hour now instead of six. In 1800 , a man in Boston who wanted a i interview w ith one in Philadelphia would have had to go himself, aud the journey would have, taken a month. Now he dis patches the business ovir the tele phone in five minutes. The nineteenth century has given us the railroad, the steamship, the telegraph, the telephone, tbe phono graph, the perfecting press, the photograph, the sewing machine, the reaper and mower, the perfect fa'-tory system, tbe armored war ship, the high-powered gnu, the tor; edo, tbe electric transmission of power, the trolley car, the eh c- tric light, the compulsory military systems of Europe and the trust. Imagine the society of to-day de prived of these things and try to pictcre what wtrald be feft- Tbe nineteenth century has been a new Renaissance. The human mind has been stirred in n to an j.i tensity of activity that the race nev er attained before exoept in the age of Pericles and tbe age of Michael Angelo. It has been a time of storm and stress. The new iuvei.- tioss that have enabled a mao -t# do fifty times as mnch work as formerly have given .-bun more wages, hot not fifty limes as much. The worker IS discontented because be does not get bis full abate of tbe increased production; the employer curses bis greed because be is vet misfed wrtb getting more than bis grandfather got, end *o» matnaJ- ly cuffing-tad bsafcng, they make their way iSeHrly toward better tWags. ; And B#w,iii*iipg*iHm,*kc **»■ tage p m B r i f l l i l i W year e t f f e work of tbe past 100 years has been only a preface. We cau - see that tbe wonderful scientific achieve ments of the nineteenth^ century, which so dwraf everything that was ever known in the world before, have been merely setliog' tbe door ol Nature’s treasure vault ajar, and that .many of us now living will witness applications of natural forces that will produce all the cf fects the old story teller ascribed to magic. There is a Paris exposi tion every eleven years, and by the time the next one after this is held we may be able to sail to it in an airship. The twentieth century will prob ably -witness tho cud of the war. It will see all tbe barbarous taces of the world civilized. It will know all about the poles, aud such other cornets of the earth as still remaiu uuexplorcd. It may t,ee all oitrreut languages reduced to two—English aud Russian - and possibly to one, tbe Euglish. Eveiy village on the globe will be instantaneous tele phonic communication with every other. The powers of thewiiui, the sea, the rivers and the .suu will he chained, so that the air will no louger he luulcd with smoke, for which meu have worn out their lives iu coal mines. The desirts w ill be seats of vast manufacturing enterprises, carried on by electric power delivered directly liom solar heal. With the world lor au audi ence amt every grown up human neipg a leader, popular authois will bo plutocrats of the tune. And with their mastery of nature the ini’ii of tho twentieth century will learn liovv to master themselves. Tuny will solve the social problem. They will bring the organization of Hociidy, inherited from an age of hand abor and individual produc tion, into harmony with a system of -concentrated production based ou natur il foiccs. They will se- euio that lair relation between ser vices and e linings for which l lie transitional nineteenth century has been blindl; striving. It. is something to have lived in the strenuous ago that is passing away, Imt, we turn from it gladly in w i Iconic the golden time that is coinin— I>e Lamar Nugget- HAVING A GREAT RUN ON ( IIAMBEllLAIN’S GOUGH REMEDY. Mauagei Marlin, of the Pierson drug store, intonus us that lie is having a great run on Fltamber- I,-tin's (.lough Remedy, lie sells five hollies ol that medicine to one of any other kind, and it. gives great satisl,action. In thesedays of la uiippe there is nothing like ('Inon- berlain’s (lotigli Remedy to slop the cough, heal up llie son; throat and lungs and give relief within a very short tune. The sales are growing, aud all who try it are pleased with its prompt action. —-Sou It Chicago Daily Calumet. For sale by J. P. Lossl, Wisdom and Jackson. turn ptc JioiiL tbe waler leYd is There is copper, all through the Big Mole couuti-y,anci VY\ D. Clark,, chairmau of the board of coa&ty commissioners, has a very promis ing prospect’near Divide, that he expects to develop ou an exteusive scale the coming year. Mrs. Elizabeth French, of Ar geuta, died last Friday evening at the home of her son, County Treas urer Geo. W. French. The receas ed came to Montana In an early day aud was one of tbe first tcttlers iu Beaverhead county. Many ex prefsions of regret were heard iu D.tllou when the news of her death became kuovvn. \A youug man came into our store yesterday suffering lrom a severe attack ol cramp colic,” writes B. F. Hess, miller and general uiei chant, Dickey's Mountain, Pa. “ He had tried various home rente dies witbout relief. As I had used Chamberlain’s Gelic-, Cholera and Diarrlioya Remedy I gave him a dose aud it soon brought him oui alright. I never saw a fellow so rejoiced.” Bold by J. P. Lossl, Wisdom and Jackson. Fred Brown, the young wale I repairer t f Gibbot sville, and well known iu the Big Hide Basin leli lor Peoria, Ili., last week where In will take a thoriumli eoui'-e ot schooling in horology, which is the science of measuring lime, or ihe principles and art of coiisu-uoiing ini-li'iiiaeiits for measuimy and in dicating portions of time, as clocks, watches, dials, etc. Fred proposes t'J rind the top round in his profes sion. Tbe l)uy on Deliverance. Mr. John S, M. Neill, ihe pub. Usher ol the Helens Imh-penileiil. say s: --Thu cud of i t is goi ii g to lie that Daly rule in Montana will et-ase anil that a democrat, with a conscience and a mind of liu own will be able to live and thrive wiihout consult ing the headquarters of the Anacoii da Standard. Il’s u d u be long ed for and il is com i n r. Tin- !anl light of the gang is In n g made now in Washingum, and advices lrom those in apo.-iiion io know what for them and victory, a I tvi so many years, to b«t>«tor Clark ” It is to be hoped *ba| prophesy ' thus made may be Tolled. The people of Montana have waited long yeais for the chance to c-.p duet their owu business aud political affairs without interterouce iroci those who have »et cm to rule, or rum The day of deliveruuce is-#t baud.— Miuer. 1 want to let the peojde who suf» fer from i In utuaiiMu and sciatica know that (. t'.,tmbet liiu'.v Fain Balm relieved me niter a number of other meAic-iuos ur.-J a ihn-for iuui tailed-' It is ! he bi .-t I in i ine, 11 | ha v c c vet* known ol. ...t. A. t' -t. k - , A!.,bar- etta, Ga. i'htuisam.iv cured ol i ii uicat:- ii , HI. Dm ; pain. l-V, tVLoom an. have beeu y tins ruiue* pi hcHti'U! relieves the sale by J Ik Lossl, J.IV li nn. I 1. ■ M'i y its at- if di-iu iu W J-lli,l:;tOU -eve I, > file Mi.-.-., made art Cl a - i . i .1 i i - : lo r ,ui in ju n c t io n lain ol I uiuois n11< 1 the ->o in re.-i rain them from - i t en ntly opened diaill- 60 YEARS' - EXPERIENCE P atents I RADE MARKS D e s i g n s C o p y r i g h t s A c . Anyone sanding a akofeb and dvschnlion tuny quickly ascertain our ophiloti liu e witclliur au lurontlnti is probably putouluJMu. rtumminlca- ILmnatriotly coiiflticnUul. HuiuJbonk on I'uUutl# sent, f-roo. OhloRt uucuojf for saoilriiiK puteala. I'utonUi taken through Munir A. tu receive fpfrttil notice, wifboui. cfmr«o, 0i the Scientific American. jr lllturtrnfed weekly. Eurwcnt olr- ny icIentlUu journal. T< mtir «, (3 a ontUffiilk bold by all noWBilenlor#, Co^e,Br°-dw^ Nework Y ice, 635 IT bt., WnsbiUtfton, I), C. B niucq Office. ? i:. I ICGI.o D A I I .Y hfn:. Hr!’ .SI yciir, to .Sob: ; t semi tut l-V -I- I V H WOftTHI | | If ..l l j U i LU, , i Id; till 1 LST& BEST 1: 11 ? di no per fennum, or < | i i. ( h. > K K M .T —O n l j 11.80 per < <• for h noun hs. ( i j 1 iiin o itli lot Til Mfteal Of i t , . - O fi ! i io movt atd , co,. i i fcult IdtKe (.’Hy, UtOA. , . An $8.00 Dictionary for $2.00 the New Werner Edition of Webster’s Dictionary. Newly a.id muKnJflrrntly llluatraled, oiler you the beat dictionary ever put on the imirket e t a low price. Tbisiaim A ihoiican Dictionary o f uio E iik U h I i 1 a » u - Copper Minlog in the Big Hole. The finite Miner of the 17 th con tains tlie lollowing; DukeGi-u of Jackson, in the Big Hole biidti, arrived in tbe city Monday night aud went over to Anaconda yesterday morning. Mr. (list is quite largely interested tn mining in the Big Hole basin, and pi edicts for that country that it is going to develop into a great cop per producing district. With cop per at the- present high price, pros pectors all over Montana have turn ed their attention to the red metal lar more than they have ever done before. Until the last two or three years the average prospector would hardly bother to wors: a prospect that only promised to yield copper. There -is a sayirrg among them to tbe effect that \copper mining is a ! rich man’s proposition ” and the | majority of them let it go at that. Nowadays it is different. If a maa | has a good looking copper property j he can bond it or sell it outright without any trouble to men who have plenty of capital to develop iu The consequence is that many pros, pectors tarn their entire attention to looking fot^copper leads, jast as when silver took stteh a sharp after the repeal of the Sherman law, the prospector quit look tag for silver ore nod paid his attention to h ant ing for goW-beariog rook. Mr. Gistasj* that the present win ter there are 11 different outfits devefopieg copper efcasas in tbe Big Hole bash, iad some of tbe. prospect* a » « b « r i** ap in a most gratifying M SUter. -A fatten of mao' tMK gufli'o, RoHialning tlm whole voeubulfiry of thft firnt the enure eoprertluuB ttrul liupi’ovenmnls of tho Fi-cmid edHicn, lo which is prefixed aa lnuoiluotoiy (lis- s-*rb»ti-)n on (he h(story, origin, and t'on- loctiniH of the lftn«uagcs»>f WeHtern Asia pud Europe with an explanation of the ;-rincipicH on which langniiKeHffiro foniiwl. Ti:!i bnnii contains ev^ry -word tAat noiih Webster ever defined, and the ^Mi.mitiK SPECIAL FTATI/FES: An A| h , -'itiiix of Ju,fii)o wortJri, EronoiiuHiig Vo- “jsl/U«iiiry of ffcriptuio nameo, (ircck and 1iilo j Ur tjd'r Ne.rneH, .Mixiern Cleogruplilcul -tin h , I' t'Uoiiary of AitliMiyms and Hyn* ••rtviin, i.uc.iiotinry ot Fiiuiiliitr AII ubdiip I , of 1'orubVn I’I iulscf . 1‘ictlormry of 1 k-u- *vhu i -MH, (*'(•, Ho, together wilh DP- f.UTIFCt CO 10 KED PLATER, «how- , r !c (U'-ii’ ectuai voosb I (lie Hugn of the ‘ .-iH-.iilu Nutloity, Jf.B. N hvm I I1figfi, I i'ilnt Rlg- •.•'ip.'T Yarloug Nations^ achf ( lohSlgiinl?L ul S'muitlcr fr>r Officers. THIS NOT TBE CHEA? BOOK but a beau'i- mly pruu.cd oHii'i.n on tine paper wilh ' ■ m ; i :u nils of VHliuihN.! of aid to n Uftiidfintw f of mGdem zc.Wvj'*. Tt is ft grtun^ e<im'ahirfpf the ■ fnT\”\h io our onmotr I Inftnmiipt’Rnisgtylii in ku-ouiu r. oh its cr tr. v.-'i-.- to m» p»npie. ■ (on/i'l inT.u» Jih’-fp «• 'i «■ hHuirifnl c. -- vit - rjcdk'n ntxi fit»M b.f. tn» Moyli pmt-j o* m*k»Mi i the 1t't i l---!'! v i. !•)•*. u-.-rj pH'Mnrmry ever publi:. bed. for rvery day v* >n i; c cPce,,' ~.-‘)no! end u ntrv, fh.is i>it AuDitrs’ HiUjCjiialed. Forwfirdc 1 bv expro* iir“*y; r-Mvij-t of our mh . • i >i o'li.r price, , ■ ft). ir,{ j.t not r.-pn^cmetj you may return it l« - uflatom rxjV-n.ve tiic] we Wt;' i-d• ’ . mu ,’mou«|, ‘ *Vrite ns f*r nur ftp**™1 iilnstrat^d ho->i: uoaloviM minting tho I. »%••*■■-( priffs oil boou> A'l-lrewnH nriler-i t(» T H E W E RNER COM P AN Y. . Fublishers ood M anufacturers. - AKRON, OHiO. !'i he V/'erner Cum pan j b thoroughly rolbibte. ^Editor. *. t- - Ml 'Iji hu %;■ L / '..&**■* HORSE HOTEL. Meals at All Hours. BAILARD & NEWCOMER, F koirietors . Com for ta Die Stalls far Horses. May and Cram. THE BIG HOLE MEAT CO., WISDOM AND JACKSON. E/LALKIta Beef, Pork, Mu 1 ton, Sausage, and Fresh Oys ters and Game in Season. Mail Orders Promptly Attended to. R. V . 8 L 4 OT 0 3 , J. a 20VAI3T, W. B. HATS. J O H N H A R B I T , GENERAL BLACKSMITH, W ISE © *, M ONTf 1