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About Jefferson County Sentinel (Boulder, Mont.) 1885-1899 | View This Issue
Jefferson County Sentinel (Boulder, Mont.), 29 July 1887, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn84036046/1887-07-29/ed-1/seq-1/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
OUNTY SENTINEL The Pioneer Newesisstiser of .J1roii astiot as--- Vanilla• .11 41. is rmil--1 fist,' 1st , no VOL. II. The BOULDER, MONT:, FM ) , )\ 2 9, IST. NO. 51 A or.twes. Owing to the feet that our store is about to be rebuilt, remodelled and enlarged, we have dedided 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! Ottr stock is complete, and are receiving new goods right along. Before buying Clothing and Fur- nishing Goods be sure and call at THE NORTHWESTERN. Bolter's Block, Opposite Grand Central Hotel, * rr. J. D. GROESBECK, Hutt on Co a o n k : Ej a elt p ing Sto \ I ) a ye3. IIR,CD1NT, Nails, Giant POWDER, CAPS and Fuse, 7.A7 - 0013MLN - W - A_Pd, CIRJOCK=I - L - Y\ Lamps, Chandeliers, Sash, Doors and noulditigs , Plated Ware, Glassware and Bar Goods. Agents for the Celebrated Buckeye Force Pumps ° and. Shatler Wagons, TIN SHO T, iu connection where all kinds of Job work and Re- pairing will be done.!, EV - Opposite Court House, I3o alder Just RE-Opoutt 3Iontatitat., Boulder HOT Springs. Wonderful Curative Properties ! IN ALL CASES OF Chronic, Muscular and Inflammatory Rheumatism, Lead Poisoning, Constitutional Weakness, and General Debility. A PLEASANT RESORT! FIRST-CLASS HOTEL AND BATHING ACCOMMODATIONS. Raached by Stage from Helena, Butte, Wickes, Elkhcrr, Comet, and all Points in the Territory. Terms moderate. 47liret-claraa Physician DR. IRA A. LEIGIITON, Is constantly in attendance. For full information address, TROTTER & KEENE, Boulder, Mont. The Windsor House. KEENE & TROTTER, Prop's. BOULDER, Mont. Everything First -Class. BOARD PER WEEK, $700 41 \ DAY, 2.00 GRAND CENTRAL HOTEL FRANK FARNHAM, Proprietor, Newly Built, Newly Furnished Throughout and Centrally Located. THE LEADING- HOTEL IN BOULDER. The Tables are Supplied with the Best in the Market. BOARD AND LODGING *7.00 ,BOARD PER DAY 1.50 Stamen; From All Point Stop at. 'Fhb.; 'Hotel. The 'Merchants Hotel. HELENA, _tiont. Three doors above P, 0. The Neatest and Most Pleasantly Located Hotel in tile City. Newly Fitted and Newly Furnished throughout. Ladies and & Gents' Baths, Barber shop, Bar and Billiard hail, with all modern improvements. SAMPLE EOOMS with special ac- commodations for COMMOTCial Tra7alers, 'Bus to all trains. - THOS. O'BRIEN & SON. Proprietors. IS117. No. 16 - IS). FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF HELENA. '. S. Ile1os4t Dry, NeFARLAND-I; The Story of a Man II itieh Culmina- ted in His Committal to the Ainishot , t eek. From one of ‘.1tr, :olb r i m ' s \ inter_ estitier letters to the 7‘1 ,,s eu li ang we Paid up Capital, $500,000 take the following extra which re- calls to mind an old , ork trad- egy which most oi our people who have passed the noon of life aro fa- miliar with the circumstances. It runs thus; Among the startling romances of this feverish and changing city life nothing more ronia.ntic or painful can be found than the story of a man which culminated in his committal to the almshouse on Blackwell's Is - and last week as a homeless vaga- hond and pauper. Twenty years ago Daniel McFarland was,known to ev- ery man upon the press of New York city. Horace Greeley was then alive and in the zenith of his fame, which reached its nadir five Years after and set in darkness and sorrow. Henry .1. Raymond was a power in the New York Times; AIanton Marble guided the destinies of the World; the fa- mous Brookes brothers ruled the Ex- press, and James Gordon Benuett,the founder of the New York Herald had not yet passed away, but made his influence felt in every postion of the Union; they were mighty men all. The war had developed a new and enterprising race of journalists who had served as war correspondents— men who with dash, enterprise, rare ability and dare -devil courage had contracted in the service all the evils of the . camp. Young journalists striving for position who lacked their ability, copied their vices and ima. gined as they listened to their sfories and drank beer in Pfaff's and gnawed deviled bones at the House of Lords on Houston street, that they were on the high road to fame. It was an evil time for New York's journal- ism. To get drunk was acarcely re- garded as an offense, and the man who was unduly sober lacked good fellowship and was regarded with dislike or suspicion. A prominent figure in New York journalism was Albert D. Richardson, the famous war correspondent of the New York Tribune. He had come back from the war covered with glory, and when the war was over, in the inter- est of the Tribune, he visited Cali- fornia and laid the foundation of a respectable fortune by publishing a breezy, bulky volume entitled \Across the Continent.\ Daniel McFarlan(l was a friend of his, also on the staff of the Tribune, and not- withstanding his drinking habits, which eventually led' him to ruin, enjoyed in common with Mr. Rich- ardson the friendship of Horace Greely. At the close of the war Daniel Mc- Farland met Abbey Sage, a girl young, handsome and ambitious of literary fame--- a consuming fire which has followed her to old ago and led her into the front - rank of American literature. She was anx- ious to get on anti she was charmed with the writings of McFarland, and when he flaked her to marry him, though twice her age, she accepted him at once, for she saw with her marriage her admission to that charmed circle which was the dream of her life. The honeymoon was brief, and the minister had scarcely pronounced the blessing when the scales fell from the poor girl's eyes; her high hopes of advancement lay dead and withered at her feet; the man to w min she had plighted her young faith was a hopeless, irredeem- able sot. In the hour of her supreme agony she met her husband's friend, Albert I). Richardson. He was her ideal; young, famous, prospectively rich and the very. antipode of the man she had married. She sought for a divorce and obtained it, and the next day it was announced that she was going to marry Richardson. Mc- Farland, soaked in rum and maZi- dened at the loss of his wife, declared he would muider the man who took her from him. He lay in wait for Richardson and shot him, and after lingeeiniz in great agony a few days Le died, in the arms of the woman for whom he had sacrificed his life. Just before the spirit left him and while scarcely able to articulate Henry Ward Beecher was sent for as a friend of the dying man. His life was swiftly ebbing when the living and the dying clasped hands; the Surplus and Profits. 325,000 DIRECTORS: S. T. Hauser. Prest. E. W. Knight, Cashier, A..1. Davis, Vice Pr. Asst. Cash. A. .M. Halter, John C. Curtis, M. Parchen. R. S. Hamilton, J. H. Ming, C. P. Higirius, T. C7. Power. LEES TA) OR. C a\\enn t ee 7:2,1 1 1 /41 (or. as rad ta.aaal.s.ol. All kinds of Doors and Window Frames, Stairs, Counters, Etc. made to Order. Plans, Specifications and Estimates prepared. BOULDER, Mont. F. McGO WAN, PRACTICAL Brick and Stone MASON. He has secured the best brick -make. in Butte, and ail have BRICK FOR SALE at $10 per thousand. BO1JIDJP1,_T. Notice of Dissolution. Notice is hereby given that the partner- ship heretofore existing between J. D. Groesbeck and Frank S. Lang, doing busi- ness in Boulder, in the hardware and stove business, the firm name being). D. Groes- beck & Co., is hereby dissolved by mutual consent, Frank S. Lang retiring. 13. GROESBECK. FRANKS. Lee°. Eggs for Hatching! Plymouth Rocks, $2 per 'dozen; White and Brown Leghorns, $1.50 peridozen. In- quire of Soulas BROS., Jefferson City Montana. G- 0 Bri ts\: e : t 7 07 ° *seasispr igal : w e rn suss w*il s i ti b %dams who dus airsai over Sin la idsy. Indierougsrodd. net minim'. Too srs OEMS trek Taft w•ii shut 01 I,, absolutely me of ism Sitio fertams. All is me. Strayed. One black home, eight years old, end- dle marked on back; weight 1400 pottnitts; brandeu X on left shoulder. FELIX SANDERS, Gregory, Mont . - Ask Your Druggist for Morgan's kidney Cure! For Kidney and bladder affections, female complaints and digestive disorders. FOR SALE. One Hundred and Fifty Head of Stock Cattle; also Twenty Milch Cows and,Yev- eral Beef Steers, well traded up. Must be sold soon. Don EIITY BROS , Cotd Springs. The - Inclepenclent, Daily and Weekly—Helena. Mont. Independent Publishing Co., Publishers. Has the largest circulation of any paper in the Territory. Located at the Capital, it is the organ of the dominant party, and contains the Latest Local, Territorial end Telegraphic News. DAILY, Per Year, $12 Cash in Advance WEEKLY, \ $ 64 25 [(Net Paid in Advance Boarding & Lodging Also a choice lot of CIGARS ; NUTS, FRUITS & CONFECTIONS. 0:0 Nums. v.. MUCH lEIEL, The lady who lost her arinfon the Fourth of July, 11384 Main St. Wiekea, Mont Taw lievie.n.e . OVID R Is 0 issued Sept. • ocl M.. h, each year. es 'its p.444 es, 1144.11. ,44,44 tch yew 3,1500 -- whole Pictux GIVES Wholesale Prices direct to consumers on all goods for personal or family use. Tells howl. order, and gives exact cost of every- thing you use, eat, drink, wear, or h. e fun with. These /1CVALUABLII 1545)11.5 contain information gleane4 n - om the markets of the world. W. s• ill mail a ropy FREE to any ad- dress u . ,-ipt of 10 eta, to defray ex pens,- . , 1 it us hear from you. tftally, MONTGOMERY WARD & CO. ars ,ss see Walnut& Alumnae, Ckiestoo. $200,000 IN Mt ESENTS GIVEN any. Send us 5 cents postage, arid by mail you will get YREE a package of goods of large value, that will start you in work that will at once bring you in money faster than anything else in America. about the $200,000 in preeents with each box. Agents wanted everywhere, of either sex, of all ages, for all time, or spare time only, to work for UR at their own homes. Fortunes for all workers absolutely as- sured. Don't delay. u. Nei.t.trre • co., Portland, Maine, Livery Barn for Sale. I will offer :it private sale my barn with two lots, together with all the horses, bug gi;.s, wagons, ete. Terms of sale Oue half cash and the balance in one year. J. R. WARREN. nuptial blessing was hardly pro- nounced when the spirit of Albert D. ri took 'its dlight, but from r.,i.th Mrs. McFarland Itss signed her name Abbey Sage Rich- ardson. No act of Mr. Beecher's life brought on him severer condemna- tion than this hasty deathbed mar- riage. A storm of obloquy followed the wretched wife, and unqualified sympathy was expressed for the mur- derer. The trial came on and Mc- Farland was defended by the ablest counsel, and acquitted on the plea of insanity. But the mark of Cain was on him and he wandered forth a mur- derer among his fellow men. Mrs. Abbey Sage Iticharison enjoyed no enviable position. She was looked upon as a woman who had led one man to his death and another to the foot of the gallows. Such crnshing adversity and Misfortune would have killed an ordinary woman, but Mrs. Richardson, as we will now call her, was no ordinary woman. At the time of which I write she was utterly friendless and alone. The first storm 'of her sorrow past she set herself to work to repair her fortune. Step by map she advanced, slowly at first, but never losing an advantage gained, till to -day she finds herself in com- pany with some of the best writers in the world in one of the foremost mag- azines of the United States. For a number of years she devoted herself to the study of Shakespeare, and by dint of her ability and perseverance has been able to maintain herself honorably sans reproche. McFar- land, his hands red with his brother's blood, sought consolation in drink, only to sink to lower depths of deg- radation. In his cups the ghost of the dead man followed him and he drank deeper to drown the horrid vision. At first old friends aided him on account of his broken health, till finally the proud spirited journal- ist was content to eat the bread of chartiv. in the end that frail support deserted him and he became an out- cast and a wanderer. One night last week Mrs. McFarland. was en- tertaining a brilliant company in one of her palatial mansions with her in- . teresting lecture on Shakespeare; at that slime hour a poor old vagabond tramp found his way into the Twelfth Precinct Station to beg for a night's lodging and a mouthful to eat to keep down the cry of the wolf that was gnawing at his vitals. His clothes were tattered, his shoes in ribbons, his feet were stoekingless, his hair was matted and tangled and his person foul with dirt and grime. God of light and mercy what a ruin' It was all that remained of Daniel MleFarland, the murderer of Albert D7t Richardson. Tears streamed down his aged cheeks when the mag- istrate informed him that he should commit him to the Home of the Thieves and Tramps on Blackwells Island. Only a few days and Pot- ter's Field way claim him, mile is the charitable hued of a fellow craftsman shall rescue him from this closing in- famy, and so ends the chapter of twenty yeirs. Rum led him to his ruin. Looking back over these twenty years I see the shoro lined with the wrecks of literary geniuses whose lives have ended in sorrow and shame. Kind, generous souls, brim full of talent, but their own most bitter and unrelenting enemies. New York journalism of to -day is a very differ- ent thing frein what it was twenty years ago. - Now sobriety is the rule and drunkenness the exception as man's talent is no longer gauged by the amount of whisky he can guzzle, and to . the young man who conies to this Metropolis 'expecting to, make journalism his profession, my best ad- vice on this one hundred and tenth anniversary week of our national in- dependence is \Touch not—taste not --handle not --rum. er or wine.\ Something That Boulderltes Should Read. An exchange has the following blank verse that contains so much truth that the SENTINEL man. thinks it worthy of being handed dowr to posterity and hopes that its teachings %ill not fall upon an unappreciative ear: 'Tell us not in mournful numbers that the tett a is full of gloom, for the man's a k that slumbers in these burst in t , e - of boom. Life is real, life is s- , and the grave is not its goal; every dollar that thou turn- est helps to mel.:0 the old town roll; but enktyment and not•sorrow is our destined end or way, if you have tio money borrow—buy a corner lot each day. Lives of greet men all remind us we can win immortal fame; let vs leave our chumps behind us and we'll get there just the seine- In this world's broad field of battle, in the bivouac of life, let us make the dry bones rattle—buy a corner lot for wife. Leeus, then, be up and do- ing, with a heart for any fate; still achieving, still pursuing, booming early, booming late.\ A GHOST STORY, Captain Horne, Custer's Chief Scout, Gets off a Barb Wire Narrative on the Bostonians. Capt. Henry W. Horne, chief of Gen. Custer's scouts during the cam- paign against Sitting Bull, has been interviewed in Boston as to what he knows of the terrible massacre. He tells a remarkable story, which throws considerable light upon the celebral tett battle. He says he waa with the general three hours before the battle in which he met his fate. He strong- ly intimated that others besides In- dians were back of the affair. At' the battle while examining the trail to discover the number of Indians in the fight, a network of wire was found stretched in the grass in the valley, near the plateau where the battle °e s curred, the puipose of which was to throw the horses of the soldiers should they attempt to escape, making it an easy matter for the Indians to shoot them down. The wires had been ta- ken from telegraph poles. ays Capt. Horne, \Since that fight no less than twenty-five Indians, who participated in the battr have distinctly told me that the wire - was procured and laid down under the direction of a num- ber of renegade white men who were with the Indians disguised as war- riors. About ten days after the fight accompanied by certain government o$eistisi \- ssid - Capt. iterNte,i\I visit- ed the scene of the battle, and found that the wire had been removed and the field had been fixed.\ STRUNG UP BY THE NECK. A Mob of Infuriated Miners at Phil- ipsburg Try On the Lynch- ing Business. Deen LODGE, July 22. —News has reached here of a highly sensttional occurrence at Philipsburg. Last night a mob of twenty men from a mining camp two miles above Philipsburg, came down to the town and went to the hotel where C. L. Currie, superintendent of the San Francisco mine, was in bed. The mob forcibly entered the room, dragged from his bed the astonished superintendent and carried 'him off with them. Besides Currie the mob had with them two other prisoners named Louis Demers and Sam Tal- mon. After securing Currie the gang marched the three prisoners down the road and. halted neer a tel- egraph pole a mile below town. ,Here without further ceretminy they adjusted ropes around the necks of Demers and Talmon and strung them up to the crosspiece of the tel- graph pole, leaving Currie under guard to watch the performance. After hoisting them into the air the ropes were'immediatelv cut arid the victims taken down before strangu- lation oe i gu'rratl, although they suf- fered considerably from shortness of breath and Were horribly frightened. One of the mob then harangued the terrified men and ordered them to leave town at, once. The men, how- ever, waited' until their courteous guardians retired, when they re- turned to Philipsburg and' placed themselves under the protection of Deputy Sheriff Hammond. The cause of the affair was some trouble over mining property, the exact nature of which cannot at pres- ent. be learned. The occurrence has created great excitement in Philips- burg and vicinity. Sheriff Coleman left to-day for Philipsburg, and until he reaches there the threatened parties are safe under the protection of Deputy Ham- mond. an authority as Mr. Ruskin. The London Queen says: \In connection with the employ- ment of women as compositors one fact deserves to he recorded, inas- much as it tetlects very great honor torn the 'body representing the inter- ests of the men who pursue that oc- cupation. In place of displaying any amount of class jealousy against the women who sought to gain their liv- ing as printers, the • London Society of Coinpositnrs passed a resolution stating that they were most willing - to welcome women as their col- leagues, provided only that they did not attempt to lower the scale of re- muneration by accepting work below the prices paid to men. It is not often that new competitors in a field of labor, whether men or women, are i ii n i a et nl i i n er s . o honorable and chivalric a. \ The London compositors show themselves 'rise ill their generation' 1- in the practical character of the pro- viso upon which they insist, and which embodies the principle adopted, at the recent convention of the Inter- national Typographical ITtlion ita Buffalo. Women ought to be paid the same as men for the same amount of work. Wosten as Printers. The employment of women s- printers is increasing in Enc I nnd. women ' s printing societ . : - been organized, with prominent ;nes iril the , f directors, while the excel -1 the work done . by wons - fir:. • is testifie41 to by co f Private Sale I will sell at private sale, on ,the rancle of the late Cornelius Griswold; about 20 Good Brood Mares, with their colts, ya+41 bred, and weigh- ing from 900 to 1,100; about 30 Head of Flue 'Raw Horses,. some of which hare been broken; all welt bred Three or four good sa,ddle horses, Eillit Good Wort Horses, Also one thoroughbred CLYDESDALE STALLION three years old, weighing about 1500. Also one thoroughbred GALLOWAY BULL', Wagons, Harness, Road Wagons, Buggy and Saddles. For prices and terms apply to the un- dersigned on the ranch, or cccrespond by letter. HELEN B. GRISWOLD, Administratrix of the estate of Cornelius Griswold. BASIN HOTEL Basin, Montana. Henry Joyner, Proprietcr. Having just bought and refitted the hotel at Basin we are now prepared to furnish the best accommodations to the traveling public. Feed and lodging also for horses and excellent care given them. WILLIAM L. HAY, Attorney au d Counselor at Lay, Boulder, Montana, Will practice in all the courts of Mon- tana Territory. Reuben Warren, Livery alid Feed STABLE Carriages, Buggies, Saddle Ilors, Doulxie Teams and Everything in 'The 'Ayes -3- Line. BOULDER CITY, MONTANA —r - A. BRA 1)LEY, 13 1-2 Main St., - Helena. - Jeweler, Watehnuther INT C+ Pi A- 7. 7. Pd. Repa:ring and Manufacturing Tew-elex. Watches cleaned for *1.50, and other work in proportion. ell - Agent for T rn Door Plate& 7 1 1 LiqUalia and Cigars nu i.et. ities aiil Rni!iiiit's a Siw .,‘ T :2 ; - •