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About The Age (Boulder, Mont.) 1888-1904 | View This Issue
The Age (Boulder, Mont.), 16 May 1888, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn84036049/1888-05-16/ed-1/seq-4/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
.7 • •rpart WEFJKLY.bLEWSP,Aret PľB- Ibihed every Wegmeday at Boulder, Jeffersers e nintY, Montana Territory, Ms subicript loti prior of - Itt a year, payable strictly its advance. \ • • It will bathe aim of tlie publisher to feirphila to the auhaeriberati temtplete.and - timely- report of all the local lumpenitype of littered hi' the wanly, and to make sure of this . he *ill endeavor to have every auction „lhe county represented by an energetic and reliable correspondent. Due mention will he made of anything likely to advents the internal* of the county and the various camps and f alley\ within its borders. 'Editorial comment will be mate on all queationa of local .interest, and questions of general Interest will be discuss...4as may Is deemed adviste hie. Such selected matter or items of general news as may he inserted will lw thoroughly edited, no that matter of iso importance will not find a Mute in the column... of Tits A.A.:. The paper will be II In size, hut the editor will endeavor to snake every line mit readable • • While it will be the aim to - ..itre-thoroughly re liable and terponsible correspondents, the editor di*- , claims any personal responsibility for data -ments or opinion., expressed bYterreasponcleasts. Tug Ana numbers, among its relive friends and WIPPortent. gentlemen belonging to. both the greet political parties of the day. In deferente to their ez - premed wissites,the paper will not weseune the eham- pionship of either party. While thus remit' g neutral as far se political parties are cemented, tlie editor reserves the right to discirs. when Licensed ad - reek ouch questions ofpoiit Wad eessnomy au. lie may consider of importance or interetit to the renders of the paper. AOTPURTINEEKNTe. As the suMerietien lists of local papers are seeldoul if ever suttleient to tampon the paper of thenowlvets, Tits Ana will, in stecordasiee with the Mold receive advertisements for iswertion in in. col - tinow. The aulvertising spice, however, will not be •allowed to eisciench Lou much Upon the spate devoted to reading !natter, or to interfere. With the principles enunciated in the paragraphs above. Advertisements will ohs; be subject to neeeptanee by the editor, who will endeavor to exclude fr the columns. of Tula Acut anything of a fraudulent or disreputable char- acter. 5 5 . . The terms of advertising will he as hdlow8: • Five (eoIs per line of Nonpareil this type) for the nod imertion, three mills per littellortuch autonomist insertion. • Fifty cents per inch of . ..column spate for . • the flog imertion, thirty ends Per inch for each mule . sequesu inacrtion. Nu toteedsentesityeecirtai forks.« titan two lines. Changes in advertimentruta are • -- equivalent to ilrest•iiiken ¡WIS. Twelve lines of Non- pareil make an inch. The following table will enable advertisers to nth ttttt te the test of advertisements.: I time. 4 times. 3 months. 6 nais. I yr. Two lions 80 10 till t 50 se 81 50 Slim • Three lines IS . 42 1 20 - 2 1:5 4 SO •Yourinies 20 36 1 OU 3 10 6 (.10• Six lines. e 70 2 00 3 One inch- . 30 I 40 4 le 750 15'00 KENNEDY Einto4 „ss rscasoz,„ • i t g ) L (*ARDS_ T HOMAS{ JOCKS, • In( 4T LAW, BOULDER Jilreasort. Cutlery. MONTANA if IOWAN de PARKER, ILI „DOM fS „ad COURILLORS /1 LAW, Boulder, - - ' - NIontittist. Will practice in till the emarti of Montana Territory. Oko. Cowos. M. II. PARSES. ;, ATTORNEY:AT - 1.1W. Office ill Hach, (ery lc Co:s., .BOULDER, : : MONTANA. ir A. Licrowtorg, N. D., I. • PHYSICIAN Ass STRG EON, • HOC LOEII, MONTA NA. Office in the Ruch, Cory Ai Co. building, PHYSICIAN To BOULDER HOT SPRiNGS St teiETY MEETINGS. . K of E, NO. 19, . 1 %ii.e.Fres • every Tuesday night at 1.0. tt.\Y. Mem- bros Of sister lodges are cordially invited t.. annul. W. N. TEN EYCK, C. C. F. W. coins.. K. of It. Je - • if' 1 A. IL—J. B. 111.1•11EllSON POST NO. 13 holds ILK. it., regular cutup -lire* on thc- last Friday évenittg of eau -h 'nona'' at the I. O. O. T. hall, in Welder. \'„rades vitalism is. this vicinity sue in- vited t.. camp with tan. A. S. KELIA ; . Peolt Cotnnsander. J. It. !tIts.s.ra..t.ljtateint nor one body of men relieve another bodyof men. It wodld follow then that á government can not derive its just powers from the consent -of the governed, notwithstanding the Amer- ican Declaration of Independence. None but a divine power can relieve a . elan of moral, responsibility, and if - the leading principle of the Prohibi- tion party is true, the only correct form of government is a theocracy where the - rulers are beyond question divinely inspired. The tendency' of the Prohibitionists is toward a theocratic government. This is shown in -Pennsylvania -and other States, where the platforms add a plank requiring the enfincement of strict. Sunday laws. The tendency is natural. If the goyernment must protect a man against himself morally, it soon must do so spiritually, and the old days of religious persecution are set up as the golden age of, the world. It makes no difference if the bestand purest men in the country. are at the head of the movement. They would gladly see another man suffer untold torments if thereby his soul could be saved. It was the priests and the lawyers and the drretoni, 'the Scribes. :inethe Pharimires, the business men of spotless reputation (aonieetwhore4le . .. turned out of the Temple), the leaders of the nation, who crucified Jeans Christ. It was the \rabble\, who wanted to crown Him king. It was,,, the Christian ministry who led in the religious persecutions which for sev- eral centuries drenched the world in the blood of the purest and best, men living. Because these men askforthe passage of a law is no sign that the law is good or necesinry. It is more likely to be - a law to in some - way re- press the \rabble to interfere with the rights of the conimon people. Mr. Wickes found faille with 'Tile AGE for asserting without proof that the -Prohibition partyaeted with either party to frighten the other into giving more and that. the . last. Prohibition PreSidential campaign was _conducted on that plan. If Tue j Aces is not very much mistaken, Mr. St. John is to -day a Democratic officeholder in Kansas, sappy; Prersidelit Clefeiallti. In political' circles such an appointment is regarded as pay for services ren- dered. The campaign work of Mr. St. John, WES largely done in the States which were very close as between the two great . parties. Worldly -minded politicians can imagine motives in such caste, though the \college presidents and professors;the Christian ministry, \and many • business men of spotless reputation who \are the controlling spirits in the Prohibition party\ may not see anything wrong. Lack of space prevents the citing of otherfacts which are proof enough for politicians if not for., theProhibitionists. Mr. Wickes says the prohibitionists Were willing to support candidates of either party..wito --would promise to pass red put irate effeet-temperance measures until it was found nothing was accomplished by this, when the national party was organized .and de - Oared against tiny compromises. The assumption that there were no tem- perance people outside of the Prohibi- tion ranks was in keeping with the basis of the party.- As far as Montana is concerned, 'the temperance , people have received nearly every Iaw , which they 'asked. , There is noW on tlié statute books a local -option by which the sale of intoxicating- liquors can beetopped in any county in the - Territory if the majority of the voters oppose the traffic, and certainly a pro- hibitory law would be ineffectual- un- less supported by a majority . of the voters. If Mr. Wickes thinks that the people of Jefferson county can be Mught to believe in prohibition, there is no more effective way .of educating them than:thin - Ugh the local -option law of Montana, which provides for a separate and independent election On that sole issue. There is hardly so good a general educating force in the country as a red-hot campaign. Mr. Wickes also coMplains of Tait Ames treatment of Mamena Bullard, E.sq., but he misquotes the paper when rroN son t AL PARLORS at ihe WINDSOR 50TH liorlAsElt. MONTANA. Z. W. MCI'. iner cal>. and HÁIR-DRUSIIG Done f in the heal Style. and on s ery Remontible Tense, -Ladiem and Children promptly wait...1 upon and Sat t :as Armond. THE ACE - - - BOULDER. MONT. WEDNE.s:DAY, MAY 16, 1888. PROHIBITION. The article by Rev. Mr. Wiekes last week's issue of Tus Amu was a plea that the paperàeing non-partisan and largely devoted to local interests, should not take is/pie against the Pro- hibition 'party; or having taken issue, should judge the members of that party by a different standard' from that used to gauge other parties. THE AGE Might not feel called upon to deprecatelhe Mrtnation , of the Pro- hibition party were that party 'baked „ on some political idea not affecting the personal rights of man or not attempt- ing to relieve man of personal moral responsibility.. The basis of the l'rc- hibition party is that it is the right. and riot only the -right but the duty, of the government to protect a man against himself, tó relieve him of the necessity of making any choice in moral actions by prevénting the wrong coming to his knowledge. If it is the duty of the government 'to do this, then, when the government fails to do this, the man is relieved of much of the moral responsibility for his ac- tions. Most all Prohibitionists not saturated with the very bigotry of prohibition will admit that amid not be desirable, however much t may wieh'to de for th.e good of - man- kind: But who makes it t e duty of the government to protect a man against himself? One man can not relieve himself of moral responsibility, nor can a body of men relieve themselves, • he says it charged - Mr. Bullard with running on a temperance issue to draw iroteri'from the Republican nominee. THE AGE said that Mr. Bullard ran on no platform and no principles for the purpose aforementioned, and that this man was the chairman of the 'Prohi- bition Executive Committee. After the 'election the Democratic organ in Helena calcUlated that Mr. Bullard, who is a good Democrat and probably did not vote for himself, received 188 Republican and 3 Democratic votes. To the non -gullible mind those figures throw considerable light on Mr. Bul- lard's purpose in running as an inde- pendent candidate for Mayor of the city of Helena. . Perhaps Mr. Bullard did have a platform to run upon but only an- nounced it to the Good Templar lodge of which he is amember. e This might be done in the general apirit of Pro- hibition of doing evil that good might come. The 4pierican people, how,. ever, never like secret society politics. They do not like to see men led into a society for one purpose and the in- fluence of the body then used for an- other purpose. The fact that the Prohibition party is fostered, nurtured, and maintained by secret societies weed bring it tó ruin even if it had just principles at its base. And in its fall it will bring down the Goe Templar order. That body has done Much good in the land. It has done much good in Montana. It merits the eueouragement of good citizens generally. put when any secret so- ciety in thialand, be it what it may, turns from its distinct purpose and begins to dabble in politics;it has out- lived its usefulness and can commence winding up its affairs RELIGIOUS NEWS. The corner -stone of a new Christian church in Missoula was laid ou Sun- day, April 6th. Bishop Ireland, of St. Paul, Minne- sota, has been made an'Archbishop and will have spiritual jurisdiction over the Catholics of Minnesota and ,Dakota. Henry George, in a recent issue of the Standard, uses these rather strong words in regard to the churches of the age: \No matter how mnch the vari- ous sects into which Christianity has been split may differ as to things of no moment, or what fierce strife they may wage as to vestments, or rituals, or dogrnas,-the influence of the great- er part of the clergy of all creeds is to-day—as,with a few noble exceptions, i as been since Constantine married Roman imperialism with the religion of the Carpenter's Son—exerted on the side of oppression and against the oppressed.\ Hon. J. E. Rickard, of Butte, who was elected by the Montana Confer- ence as a lay delegate to the General Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church, now in session in New York, has been . refused admission to that body on account of infermalities in his election. The contest between Rev. W. A. Shannon and Rev. F. A. Rigel' over the clerical delegateship, has been decided in favor of the former. The General Conference has refused to admit any women as delegates, but the question of their admission to future Conferences will probably be sent to , the Annual Conferences - decision. THE NINETY AND NINE. There are ninety and nine that live and die,' In want and hunger and cold, That one may revel in luxury, And be lapped in il\ silken fold; The ninety and nine in hovels bare— The one in a palace with riches rare. They toil in the fields.. those ninety and nine, For the fruitage of Mother Earth; They dig and the / Y delve in the dusky mine, Bringing rich treasures forth. And - the wealth released by their sturdy blows, To the coffers of one forever flows. The -sweat of their brow Mikes the wildernem bloom The forest before them falls, Their industry fashioned our thousand homes, And cities with lordly halls; But the ninety and Mile have empty hands— The one owns cities and homeland land*? But the night so dreary and dark end long, The glorious day shall bring, When over the land ,thevietor's soult Of the ninety and nine shall Fine And the chorus shall echo from »be to zone— \Rejoice! for labor -shalt have it. own!\ —Iron Nowetnimt, Mirk.. 'grad ime. LITERARY NEW& 7 A new story by Bret Harts is pp - J- ibbed soon to, appear in Harper's, Weekly. ° Julian II / a » wthorne has charge of the literary departMent of Chicago's new weekly, America. The last 'census placed the r number of literary men, authors, and lecturers in the United States, at 1,300. Geo. Ilennan's articles on Russian prisons and prison methods are cut out of every copy of the 'Century which goes into Russia. In a recent lecture in Becton on literary men Themas'Wentworth Hig- ginson said that this country is the one of all others in which a man may engage in literature with the greatest faith and hope. Mrs. Martha J. Lamb, editor of the Magazine of American History, New York, was knocked down and ran over by a carriage in front of her office recently, but happily she is recovering from the injuries received. Bedford, Clarke & Co, will in a week or two begin the publication of Belford\ Magazine, with Donn Platt as editor - in -chief and .an able corps of contri- butors. The magazine will openly es- pouse the cause of Democracy. It will also have a complete novel in each issue, after the style of Lippiacati's. Dr. Hutchison Stirling . has publish- ed a \booklet\ which ought to be good reading for those inclined to do liter- ary work. It is a letter .written to him by the late Thomrs 'Carlyle in 1842, giving kindly and wise counsel concerning the literary life. it is sold in America by Ctipples & Hurd, Boston.' 4 SOCIETY ITEMS. James Horton, of lkix,was married in Helena last we40 Miss Lucy 13essette, of the latter city. Carnelina_Peterson and Miss Dora Olsen, both of Wix, were married in Helena last Thursday by Justice B. F. Woodman. Quite a pleasant little dancing party came - off - at the Boulder Hot Springs last Wednesday evening. a number of ladies and gentlemen from Boulder being in attendance. Neither of then was over ten years old. One leaned 'against the and th other rubbed his back against a post, and they eyed each other foŕ a ong time. Then one of them said: \My mother has got a new seal - akin sack, and your's 'haint.\ \I 'don't care, - replied the other; \she frizzes her hair and uses paint, and that's just as tony.'•'—Ereliange. The marriage of Otis R. Allen and Miss Anne Kennett in Helena last Wednesday evening was a very swell affair. The wedding was at the man- sion of ex -Gov. Hauser, stepfather of the bride. It was attended by the larger portion of the aristocrac?of the city, and the display of fine toilets is said to have been magnificent. The bride was the recipient of very many rich and handshme wedding gifts. The Helena Independent containing the ac- count of the affair has been in great demand among the ladies ever since. , TERRITORIAL NEWS. Missoula is going to have electric lights. Gov. Leslie has accepted an invita- tion to attend the Fourth of July - cel- ebration in Bozeman. The Philipsburg Mails is to be issued semi-weekly hereafter. Mark &Bryan will be editdr and Charles T. McCoy wilt have , charge of the city . depart- ment. t \Slim Jim\ McIntyre ran off about fifty head of horses from the vicinity of Fort Shaw last- week, making for the British possessions. Officers are in pursuit. Andre Racine was killed on the 30th ult in the Boston aud Montana Company's mill at Butte by being 'caught by a belt and drawn into the machinery, which crushed him.. . THE WINDSOR HOUSE, BOULDER, MONTANA. ,• , MK. M. MCOONNeo, Purist:nos- THE WINDSOR HOUSE its the Leading Hotel in Boulder: its rooms are large, warm, and well light- ed. The beds are comfortable and clean. The table , - includes the best of everything the market affords. The best of attention is given to guests and every- thing possible done to make their 'stay pleasant. 4M -Charges Reasonable:1Di ind - Pres 'en To AIM Foci« Au. • HELENA ‚ADVERTISEMENTS. T HE THOMAS MUSE SAVINGS BANK 1-11GLE...NA. Incorporated Under the Laws of Montana. PAID IN CAPITAL, 31. 0 0 1 , 0 0 . THOMAS CRUSE, President, T. H. CARTER Vice -President, C. L. DAHLER Treasurer, E. J. CARTER Secretary. Allows six per cent. interest on Savings Depoeita, compounded January and July. Transacts a general banking business, draws ex- change on the principal cities of the ['lilted States and Europe. Will make Mans on County sad City hands, and real estate mortgagee. PUBLISHING CO., - - - - Merman*. THE LEADING 23C:solA. eces:» i=.x-izttiox••• AND MIC,C,33]Elil\TT/Mrlei I'' :%lontaist„, Solicits through this Paper all dames id JiD131 WORK, Which will be executed in the latest styles, promptly and at reasonable prices. • In Comscron. They have a large store of STATIONERY, BLANK BOOKS. FINE ETCHINGS, ARTISTS' IATERIALS, ART GOODS, ETC. All orders entrusted to them will receive prompt attention. JOURNAL PUBLISHING CO., Hiizsa, MoNTANA_ IIELELIIEST VIA THE N'ORTMERN PACIFIC Railroad. rImlis:n =Pi/six:Ls Czar et.cytite AND Great Short Line to Easte,rn Cities. Mir Inks, Quick tam, Through Can, Pallaus Paine Slums, NORTHERN PACIFIC TIME TABLE. The following is the time of the arrivals and de- partures of trains on the Northern Pacifié at Helena by the latest schedule which took effect February 5: ARRIVALS At RILSRA No. I—Through West -bound Liuiited 8:30 a m No. b—St. Paul and Helena Load 7:30 ara .\ 2—Through East -bound Limited 10:00 p m \ 8—Butte and Helena Express. ,I2:23 p m \ 10—blarysvillePassceie.W.„.. 30 p tu \ 20—Rimini Aecommo.Ution 300 pm \ 17—BotsIder and Calvin Passenger :5:55 p \ 6—Wiekes Passenger 5:55 p m DIPARTITRUS PROM MARA. No. 1—Through West -bound Limited 8:45 a m \ 2—Through East -bound Limited 10:15 p m \ 6—Helena and St. Paul bond 1:00pm \ 7—Helena and Butte Expose 4:20 p m \ 9-11.1a Passenger..9:00 a m \ 19—Rimini 'Accomm ation 500* m \ 18—Calvin and Boulder Passenger. ....... 7:50 • m \ 30—Wickes Passenger.. • 750 a m A. L. STOKEE, General Agent, C. S. FEE, Helena, Montana. Gen. Pass. and Ticket Agent, St. Paul. _ MONTANA STAGE COMPANY, Carryine 1730t.itect fat/attune Mails AND Northern Pacific) Express'. COACHES LEAVE BOULDER DAILY POR ELKHORN WHITEHALL. FISH CHUM SILYSS STAR, Slt2RIDAN. VinceINIA CITY Ana DILLON ALSO leroln Colvin for Butte City On the arrival of the Northern Pacific trains trem Helena. W. J. TOWNSHEND, Sept. W. B. GAFF'NEY, Agent at Boulder. A, DilERTISE in Tan' Ann -It will reach every ..tj. school district in Jefferson nuttily. 1 4