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About Jefferson County Sentinel (Boulder, Mont.) 1885-1899 | View This Issue
Jefferson County Sentinel (Boulder, Mont.), 06 May 1887, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn84036046/1887-05-06/ed-1/seq-1/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
....a ss nen ItY4 1 . JEFFERSON C VOL. II. The Pioneer Newspaper of tlefibrson C'onnty.211. Journal Independent in Polities. BOULDER, MONTANA, FRIDAY, MAY 6, 1887. NO 43. The Northwestern! Owing to the fact that our store is about to be rebuilt, remodelled and enlarged, we have decided until the • above alterations are completed, to sell everything in our line at from 10 to 20 per cent. below regular prices. Now is the time to buy your Spring outfit! Our stock is complete, and are receiving new goads right along. Before buying Clothing and•Fur- nishing Goods be sure and call at T777 NORTHWESTERN. Brawl no*, Opposite Grand Central Hotel, 1 . 1:01....11M1 \ TA..7M. ri rs. J. D. GROESBECK & CO., Con a o k d , tiaematipng SWATS HARRARE I Nails, Giant POWDER, CAPS and Fuse, WOOD=TWA.=, CRCCIC=2. - Y - , Lamps, Chandeliers, Sash, Doors and Monldiugs, Plated Ware, Glassware and Bar Goods. Arats for th,e_Celelorsted Buckeye Force Pumps sad Shatler W a go —0:0 --- TIN SHOP In connection wkere all kinds of Job work end Re- pairing will be done. Ur - Opposite Court House, Lioalder • AlLostama, Jug RE -00110q, Re-F1111118110q I Boulder HOT Springs. Vironclerful Curative Properties ! ----IN ALL CA8E8 OF Chronic, Muscular and Inflammatory Rheumatism, Lead Poisoning, Constitutional Weakness. ma General Debility. A PLEASANT RESORT ! TIBIAT-CLABB HOTEL AND BATHING ACCOMMODATIONS. Reaeleemi by Stage from Helena, Butte, Wickes, Elkhevr, Comet, and all Pointe in ths. Territory. Terms moderate. Allirs-olaaa Physician DR. IRA A. LEIGI - ITON Tor full information address, TROTTER & KEENE, Boulder, Mont. 9 Is constantly in attendance. THOMAS F. MURRAY Proprietor of Boulder Meat Market! Anti Dealer in Beef, Pork, Mutton and Corned Beef Game and Fish in Season. Home for Travelers. The City litotel, JEBFFR8ON CITY, MONT., Newly Fitted Up. Newly Furnished. J. E. CRAWFORD, - Proprietor. Patronage Respectfully Solicited. Chearges Reasonable. Galloway* for Sale. I have a few very fine hail -breed Gallo- way bull calves for sale. The same may be seen at my place one mile north of Botileter. C. Oi !mote I PostoMco Store I BOULDER, MONTANA. Stationery, TOilet Articles Cigars and Tobacco, Fruits and Con- fectionery, also a fins supply of ALBUMS AND PORTMON11311 A choice variety of everything in the stationery line always in stock. Bd. 141-)8ORLBY, Proprietor. Willowburn Farm, Beaverhead Valley, Mont. IMPORTED And HOMEBRIW Percheron and Norman Stallion tknd Mares FOR SALL ! All Stock Warranted as Represented. Terms and priees to suit custom- ers. Write for I lustrated Catalogue. Visitors always welcomed. JAMES MAULDIN, • Dillon, Mont. PARADISE & 111cDONALIV: The only complete Carriage, Wagon Blacksmith and Paint Shot) In Jefferson county. Vials Street, - Montana. Horseshoeing and General Blacksmithing. J. B. PERKINS & CO. Wi h to inform the public that they are now prepared to do horse - shoeing in the latest and most im- proved styles of the art. Diseases of the Feet T sated on Scientific Principles. Lame, Inter- fering and. Forging Horses Speedily Remedied. Corns,Contraction,Quar- ter cracks, quitors, thrush, pum- miced feet permanently cured. HanMade Shoes a Specialty. Special attention given to trotting and running horses. We have in con- nection with our shoeing department preparations made to do all kinds of heavy forging and general job work, all which will be done at reasonable nrices and satisfaction guaranteed. Shoropposite Dougherty Brothers store. Mein street, Boulder, M. T. Lilr - We also keep Horse Liniments and Hoof Ointments of the best qual- ity constantly ror sale. J. B. PERKINS & CO., BOULDER, MONT. 6,000,000 pEopLEusg FERRY'S SEEDS D. P.S. FERRY a CO. ore **mated tc eh. LARGEST StISSMEI aid eior14. D. N. FERRY I CO'S inseeeht, Me - “401.4. • rrt4 SEED ANNUAL For 1887 will too mailed FREIE to to loot madia sacticama restates.' mihont or. ik te all./C—y per. .raft ardwf Ca, 5,5, 71414 ar \sae IMED11 +1.141 send for it eastives I. N. Mel a CIL Detroit, M.ch. * Grand Central Hotel 2v101•Trr. EED & RIN DA, PROPS The Leading and only First -clue hotel In Helena. Prices reasonable. Everything New and ot the La- test style. - - MMUS ST. _ Estrayed or Stolen. One dark bay horse, heavy black inane and tail, four white feet, branded NP on left hip. V on fore shoulder, and weighs about 800 lbs. lie was running with what is known as the Kelly band. A liberal . reward will be paid. .nquire at this office. Jefferson Market.' A. C. QUAINTANCE, 1)ealer in 'Fresh Beef, Mutton, Pork, Sausage, Fish, etc. In fact everything usually kept in a first- class meat market. Meat SupTlied to all Railroa 1 . and Tie Camps at Rea3onable rates. r/rOrilers solicited and goods delivered. Jefferson City, Mont. Latest THE LIME KILN CLUB, Proceedings of %hat Tamen, Colored Debating Sudety. The acerptary then announced. communi- cation from Prof. De Lisle Cabs*, dated at a comity jail in Ohio. The professor was on bis way from Kentucky to neture before the club on the subject of: \The Colored Matt a Century Hence,” and had been arrested sad jailed as • suspicious character. He wanted to be identified aitl releasol by the chin and In return he will deliver his necture for iesthing. Several members DIOTC41 that his fine of 610 be forwarded by edlegraph, but &other Gerstner replied: °Nobody axed de purfeeelor to leave Kan- tucky an' come heah an' tinnier a leckturn He did it on his own responsibility, and wid- out our knowledge. An' had he arrove benh In reed shape we 'night not her wanted his lecktur'. Do culled man of to -day consents us a great deal me' den de cull'a man of a century henee. All things' considered, de purfeanor had better remain whar he is.\ Brother Financial Smith sent, the following newspaper article to the secretary's desk Lobe read: A bill to call in the trade dollar and allow the face value to the holder has just passed thq house at Washingtou. There is a good deal of nonsense and unintentional 'minding about the legislation on the trade dollar. At one time it was all legal tender in amounts not exceeding five dollars. In this way it circulated among the people. Then congress demonetized it, and the banks refused to take it at its face crane. The working people parted with their trade dollar for about eighty cents on the dollar, and now, when it is in nie hands of bankers and speculators, congress is about to call it in and take about eight grains of silver out of it and send it forth again as a standard dollar worth 100 cents. What most ptszaled the ordinary philosopher is the feet that congress is about to add twenty rents to the purehardne, power of the trade dollar by recoiling and making It smaller. If the trade dollar question ever comes before the Detroit Limo Kiln club we hope the members of that assosiation unravel the mysteries which surround it and explain, in a lucid manner why the dollar with the least elver shoulk4 buy the mod bread and meat. Congress may be enlight- ened on this subject by hearing from Brother Gardner. Brother Smith said he would like to bane the matter discussed. He had been \docked!\ on trade dollars until the aunt amounted to enough to pay a mouth's rent. If the trade dollar wasn't worth a dollar, what business had the government to force it on the people for 100 cents! If it was worth a dollar what business had congress to say it wasn't worth but eighty carnal On. Greenback Johnson said ho would like to repeat the same inquiries. Upon a certain occasion he had been paid $20 for his labor. When he came to exchange his dollars for the necessaries of life he found he had only $16. Judge ourreney, also of the committee on finance, said the matter had puzzled him un- til his bean ached, an 1 be hoped the club wisuld take some stand on the subject. Sev- eral other members made remarks to the same point, and Brother Gardnereut abort turtber diseuesion by saying: 'De hull bizness, fire an' last, has bin a swindle on de publick. If 480 grains of silver make a silver dollar, des de trade dollar was wort 100 cents. If 413gruins of silver makes silver dollar, den dis guynnent win a fele to throw in de extra stuff. lu any event, de congress which knocked twenty cents qr.oarit dollar put out fur a dollar orter boy biirstood tie agin a boas barn au' pelted will eggs six months old. De posishun which ilis club takes on nuance am dat if a dollar bain't a dollar, de chap who stole de inside out of it au' made it alt eighty cent piece had better look out fur bis don Loam if he passes (row Detroit. Let us go home.\—Detroit Free Pieee. How Tutu Gal wort and reared tier. MISS C was Wei only two years earlier than her brother Tone When Tout was 10 years old she gloried because she was 12; whet) Toni was known to be 14 she confessed to sweet ln; whee Tom proudly boasted of 18 she timidly acknowledged herself past lin when Tow canie home from college with a Moustache and a vote and bad a party in honor of this twenty-first birthday she said to her friends: \What a boyish fellow he is. IV s would think he womanly a year younger than ir When Tom declared he was ni and oil asougli to get married she said to a gentle- man frilled: -Do you lower, I feel savagely jealous to think of Tom getting married.. But then I suppose t eine are always mom at - tat -hod to each eitberi;than other brothers and sissent.\ And two years later at Tom's wedding 'balite' with girlish vivacity to the wedding guests: *Pear old Tom, to ass Lim married to -night and then think how when he was only 5 nears old they bruught barn in to we me, his only sister. 1 wonder if he think\' of it teenightr --Clarion Democrat. A Great Capture. The Plnicertous have added another to their laurels by capturing the robber who \held up\ a coal train on the Scoop and Digout rail- way, and have 'succeeded *Lao in recovering the bushel of coal which was taken front the train. The outlaw was afraid of disposing of the valuable mineral, as an attempt to do so would have been suspicious in the extreme.— Chimer> Herald. Sweets to :be Sweet. She—Your little wife made that tele with her own dear little hands! Well, hoc, if my little wife u ill eat that cake with her own clear little muutli I will be satistled.—Life. MRS. BOWSER. — That Intelligent Female Tells About lier Husband's Complaints of His Meals. All hus:sands find fault with their meals. I know this to be true, because Mr. Bowser says so. I think it is nothing strange when Mr. Boaster wits down to dinner and begins: \Iltunph! Same old corned beef!\ \Yea my dear; it's the same cornet beef you ordered as you want down this morning.\ \Oh it is! I didn't know but it was sonic I 'seinen a year ago. What do you call Caere thingsr \Potatoes of course.\ \potatoes eh! I'll try and remember that name. And what's thisr \Cabbage my love.\ \Oa! I didn't know but it was wood pulp, my love! Was this bread made since the war!\ \Certainly. It is only two days old.\ I see! Lnok at that! That sthfloous if ft was dipped out of a mud bole!\ \But you ordered this N ery con'ee yourself the night before last.\ He growls and eats and eats and growls, and I've got used to it. Ile cost ins a good girl last week by one of his whims. I happened to wonder aloud dur- ing the evening if sae had put her bread to rise, when he promptly inquired: \Mrs. Bowser, do you know why breed risen\ \Because of the yeast.\ \But why does the yeast expand the douehr \Because it does.\ \Exactly. You also live because you do. and that's all you know about it! You ought to be ashamed of your ienorance of natural plincssephy. I'll see if the girl knows any bet- ter.\ He went out and inquired: \Jame have you put the bread to raiser \Yes sir.\ \Do you expect it to raiser - Of .\ \Why don't you expect it to fall!\ \Am you rumaine this kitchen f\ sire sharply demeaned. \Virtually yes. My object is to see how well you are posted on natural philosophy. Why does the bread raise instead onfallr \Because it's a fool, and l'm another for stayine ni a place where a man is allowed to hen huszy about the kits:heal I'll leave in the morning!\ And leave she did, and all the consolation got Mr. Bowser as he came up to dinner wa \It's a good thing she left. She might bare mixed something together which would have caused our deaths, Come, now, hurry up the dime,'.\—Dtroit Free Press. The linck Action April Foul Trick. \ 11 Young Conspirator -1'11 stick it on son it won't— \Holy nuoket I've snake l\--Judge. tight, English bls\ amen in England. Abergavcriny is pronounced A nergenny. Pneutharup hi pronounced Beecham. Bolingbroke is pronounced Bullingbrook. Brougham is pronounced Broom. Bill wer Is pronounced Buller. Cleaniontlelev U prommucel Chuinley. Cireneester is proneunced Siseister. Cockier's' is pronounced Colette CelquImun is pronounced Colexne Cowper is pronounced Cooper. Grosvenor is pronounced Grovener. Gladenotie'e resideune is pro - inmate& Hareem . Heinen, is pronounced liobun; Coekeey, 'them. Knollys is pronounced Kuowles. Majoribanks is pronounced Marclibanka Ma ryleboue is pronounced Mannbun. Nor wicb is pronounced Norrid t ee. Salisbury is pronounced Sawlabry. St. Leger is pronounced Sillinger. Tallett is pronouticelTorbuL Taliaferro is pronounced Tolliver. Thames is pronounced Toms. IVernyea is pronounced Weems. Doesn't 'teem Possible. Oneilut Man—And so you are one of the fee male Mormon missionaries in Tennessee! Mormon Woinan—Yes, there are twenty- five of us Mormon women down there, and we aro meetiag with great success. \Success! Do you mean to say that you are making couverts among the 'couleur \Yen indeed, they just jump at our pre - ovulation of the case; that is, tan married once do.\ \II unapt)! I suppose n011 promise them gold lace gowns mad diamoad crowns, and—\ 'Oh, no! We simply tell them that a hus- band can't quarrel with more than one wife at a dine, and it takes a long while to get around.\—Oinalea World. A Pitiable Tab. Omaha II ousekeepea —What I Ice at such a price after the winter we've been through! Henn& Ice Man—It s ens a very hard win- ter for folks in the ice bunuan, mum. \Why the thernmtuater n - as way below ,freesieg point the vs t - Yes, mune The iee froze so hard that it most bankrupted us neepen the saws alias - p.\ —Ouleha Wild. MR. AND MRS. BOWSER. ----e- The Wife Reflects on Their Courtship and Wonder* Why She Changed Her Name. It makes me tired wh au I sit and reflect on the courtship that made me change my renne to Mrs. Bowser. I was full of trust anii love and romance, and I looked upon Mr. Bowser as a god. One of his favorite pastimes was to pimento wberathe lamplight fell upon nay hair and to address me as his golden haired angel. Poor silly girl that I was, I thotight it would always last! One evening afteri had been married five or six weeks I took my stand under the gas and asken him if his angel was as dear to him as ever. \Humph!\ he growled as he looked me over. \But won't you praise my golden hair?\ \Golden carrots, Mrs. Bowser! If I had such a mop of carroty Lair on my head as you . nuseess, I'd go hide it away in &barren\ . \Tbati e ntenlataee ceased to love me!\ *reined nothing! I have simply got tired at all this badly nonsense, and I propose to settle down to the realities of life.\ During our courtship Mr. Bowser delighted to read to me from a book of poems. and he Insisted on holding one of my hands while be read. The second evening we were in our 3W11 house I brought out Longfellow and sat iown beside him and took his hand. nhat are you pawing around me fort\ he asked, as lie looked up. \nwant my deary to read to me.\ \Well your deary has got something else to do! Inn readine '' ue on bread and butter instead of poetry. Please keep your paw at home.\ \you used to read such lovely poetry to \That was because I was a fool!\ I went over to the other aide of the room and cried, and be let me weep away for a stra:glit hour by the clock before he ob- served: \Now Mrs. Bowser, If you have got tbrough sniveling we'll go down stairs and measure that coal bin and figure up the cubic feet!\ During our courtship we used to take long walks in the gloaming, and though I was often so tired that I could hardly drag one leg after tne onset', Mr. Dowser would in -dust on dragging me around. Ile was always quot- ing something about \glorious Luna\ and \silver stars\ and \heaven's arch,\ and one night as we rot upon the doorstep he put his arm around me and said he could sit there forever and aye. It was hruelly a month after our marriage that I put on any bat one evening and asked him if he didn't 'want to wander out for a while and watch the silent night shut down. \I'd like to see myself sloshing around with this infernal corn on my toe!\ h replieL \Mr. Bowser, there was a time when you'd have walked all night with a corn on every toe.\ \That shows what an idiot a man cen make of himself.\ \You once said we'd always walk hand in hand in life's gloaming.\ \I don't believe it! I know I was soft, but I don't believe I was as mushy as that.\ \But you certainly did.\ \Well I'll take it all back now. We've got something else to do besides squeezing paws and sighing about the gloarni»g. Dural the esteeming, Mrs. Bovi - ser! The whole ca - beadle of it wouldn't buy a peck of potatoesl It would look more suitable for you to wan- der out into the kitchen and see Low many tramps the cook is (ceding at nay eepease.\— Detroit Free Press. To a Three Cent Piece. Go, sickly semblance of a silver dime, Thou worriest me worse than a six cent fare. Fit. only for token in some fair clime, Where barter's the mode and coins are rare. A half muffled curse greets thy hybrid face Whenever men use thee to buy and sell; Among dollars and ocnts thou hat no place— Go hang as a bang or: some dusky belie. —Philadelphia CalL 'A Lyle' Old Whig.\ A story of southern polities was picked up at ThomasYlle by Mr. Van nitwit. A poli- tician who was running for onlee desired to secure the negro vote and had bought up a colored preacher who agreed for $15 to make an address to his congregation in favor of the candidate. The politician said to, the clergy- man: \I think the best way for you to ieflu- ence year people is to let them !understand that I am neither a Democrat nor Republican, but an old line Whig. it is best to break up the feeling that exists between Democrats and Republicans and start out on the new line, and this is just as good a tithe as may to do IL\ When the clergynuin got up in his pulpit and began talking to his nundeuee he followed the advice of the politician ie this manner: \My dear bredren, you ere me to pronounce upon anima Blank for 'le sins of omission or commission by edin de Demo- cratic or Republiean party. Massa Blank am neder a Democrat or Republican. He is simply a )yin' old Whi,g.\—W ben the poll- ticien heard of it he tore his hair.—New York Tribune. A Remarkable People. 4 First New Arrival—Ara - ale Mickey, an' thine Luirekeens bate the wurrukl fur Main. tions! Murther me eyes, but if thqy ain't gone an' ecnisthructed a clock in th' moon!—Life. A Kentuckian's Claim. A Kentuckian who had a claim against a ivilroad in that state for $400 for damages in a smash up eras recently visited by one of the company's lawyers, who inquired: \What sort of injury did you austainin \Nervous injury, air,\ \To what extentr 'To sin' an extent that my old shotgun now wobbles about so much that ea longer ago than paten:nay I shot at te rabbit and knocked steer the best coon dog in all Ken - tuck. Pro riZ on any claim to Igt00. and I'm genii' to push it until sornebocq bellers for merey.\— Wall Street News. A. R. ROBERTSON, . e teed. ar - Fire/ two elcs in each month at th Windsor }loose. Boulder, and the next two weeks at the Russell House, Wiese.. Driven to It. Tommy was taken very sick. His mother dnicovered he had been eating too Innen pre- served stuff, and while awaiting the doctor's visit implored him to tell her tlita cause of it. \Mother he said finally, \Mother Mame Duffy rejected me suit, and\ hoarsely, \it strove me to jam.' —Tid Lite re011. TA Pain, lone in a ei'lefaction guaran- ESTentintrIeD 1867. No. FIRST NATIONAL BANK 117. s. k:oz..-04.41tory,„ Paid up Cc.pital, $560,000 Surplus and :rofits 325,000 DIRECTORS: S. T. Hansen rent E. W. Knight, Cashier, . J. Davie, Vice Pr. .11.1ileLoschruidt, Last. Cash. A. M. Holier, Julie C. Curtis, H. M. Parchen, R. S. Hamilton, J. H. Ming. C. P. Higgins, T. C. Power. BOULDER CITY Saddle and Harness SHOP. John F. Sheehy, Prop'r. . 4 .eving purchased a stock of harness leather and mounting, I am new prepared to make anything in the above line to or- der. All work warranted hand -made and no charge if not satisfactory. BilZgY TrIniming Done to Order. 13oarag& Lodging\ Also a choice lot of CIGARS, NUTS, FEZTITS A CONFECTIONS. 0:0 MRS. E, 13111.C1111111, The lady who lost her arm on the Fourth of July, 1884. Main St, Wickes, Mont First publication April 8. MINING. APPLICATION No. If424. U. S. Land °Dice, Helena, Meat., / April 2, 1887. Notice is hereby givers, That &hoer Gil*, Nymphas B. Holway sod Levi Withee, of La Crosse, Wisconsin, and Henry Turner, of East Saginaw, Michigan, 11 Caleb V:. - Irvine, their attorney -:n -fact, whose -ad- dress is Butte City, Montana, have this day filed their application for a patent for 1500 linear feet of the Saginaw Lode min- ing claim, situated in Cataract mining district, Jefferson county, Monnuia Terri- tory, the posit ou, cnurse and extent of the said mining &Jahn, designated by an of- ficial survey thereof, as Lot No. 62, tow n- sn'te No. '7, N. of range No. 't W., being mere particularly set forth and described in the officill field notes and plat thereof on filc in this office, as follows, towit: Beginning at the IS. E. corner a granite stone 241x10 inches *et 15 inches deep, marked 1--1911 for coruer No. 1, front which the section coy. on south hound- .-iry of section 33, township 7, N. R. 5 W., bears S. 63'31' E. 1871.5 feet, and runniue thence N. 9'80' E. GOO feet; theuce N. enuk 8onc30, W. 1500 feet; thence S. 9'20' W. 600 feet; thence S. 130110' E. 1300 feet to corner No. 1. the place of beginning con- taining an area of 20.0 acres in this sur- vey claireed by the above named appli- The location of this mine is recorded in the ofr_ze of the County Recorder of Jef- ferson county, on page 308 in Book K of records. The adjoining claims are on the east survey No. 1909, the Regalia Lode. S. W. 1 , ENnuonse., Register. Jos. H. Harper, U. S. Claim Agent. Nute to ---- (..i're - ttlttkt's• Estate of `Edwin M. Batchelder, deceased. Notice is hereby given by the under- signed, administrator of the estate of Ed- win LI. Batchelder, deceasied, to the cred- itors of and all persons having clairi. against the said deceased, to exhibit them, with the necessary vouchers, within four • months after the first publication of this o t 7ffi li t o c : fat e t d i n t it Jefferson.t e t B c e o u r t said d house in the said cou u - iniatrator et his uIder this . 29th day of March 1881. A. of inst ll- a 8 te . K o j i 1;11g Xd A lia M. Batchelder, deceased. Plymouth Rock and Legliorns. A few choice Plymouth Rock and Leg - hertz cockereis for sale. Also, Wyandotte, Plymouth Rock and Leghorn eggs for hatching for sale in iseason, at my place in Wickes, second house an Boulder road. M. 0. N488. NELLIE GRANT /HMG COMPANY OF BELEN1.. Location of Works, Red Moun- tain, Jefferson County, Montana. Notice is hereby given that at a meeting of the Trustees of said company, held on the 21st day of March, 1887, an assessmer.; of seven (7) cents per share was levied upon the capital stock of said company, payable on or before April 50, 1887. to S. T. Hauser, Treasurer, at the First Na- tional Bank of Helena, In Helena, Mon- tana. Any stock upon which said agues - meta shall remain apaid on the 20th day of May, 1S87, shall be deemed delinquent, and will be duly advertised for kale at pub- lic suction, and unless payment shall be made before, will be sold on the 10th day of J nue, 1887. to pay the delinquent **ens - went, toeether with the cost of. advertising and expenses of sale. James U. SeNDER1, Sec',. °flea No. 1e 1 4 Msie /4%, lie -less. 4