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About The Age (Boulder, Mont.) 1888-1904 | View This Issue
The Age (Boulder, Mont.), 23 May 1888, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn84036049/1888-05-23/ed-1/seq-1/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
• ialX• 'Pal. 1. — _ 1311fcnalc1ceir, iiiiima.tatassa orearritcsa-v. 10117ectztensclab7, 2101Csair 2E4 MMES. NTcs. W. Ęa ,COCSERL7 Wholemale Hind Retail =smuts !Fr Glartt.CSCIIE111.IMISS. Hats and Capt., 1100te. and Shoe», 61•El leURNItMINer3 - cescrI5s,' AND FANCY NOTIONS OP ALL KINDS. arc C:r D 1E1 ÁSD C .1. O 'I.* , H I N Have recently been added to our large and varied _unit* and a Pull end Pine Asiinensent Ot these hues id goods will hereafter be found en our shelves. —gi(— AGEtcrit Foz all. form -slab 121'c:omit:relator WORKS. IlePettles, CAPS, • BLASTING, ÁSD sporting. 1P'CILIC = , Ranch Butter and —AND— . ALL ARTICLES OP COUNTRY PRODUCE Are made a specialty by this house. Highest nerket price paid .for Russia. Moos. AID Au. Howe or Couirriy PRODUCE pAT11101111211$ THE liOULDEtt ratuG Erromil Anything you used in tbe line et DRUGS, PATENT MEDICINES, PILIIITS. Winker Man \ Luna Gunmen • aces - N.,. Curie. A hill line of Gkeatmé AND GRAMSsimuros In stock. Sixty different Patterns of • IA IF „A. M 1n stock, which will be sold ut Helena prices. Call and see the Weal designs. PARCHES dt MORRIS. Paonurroita LEGAL ADVERTISEMENTS. ALIAS SUMMONS= • Jefferson County, Territory of Montana. In Justice's Court of Basin Township, before I.. Suitor, Justice of the Peace. J. F. Rudy, plaintiff. rem.% F.. Pksin. defendant. The people «if the Territory of Montana to the abovenameel E. Beau. defendant, greeting. You are hereby aommioned to la -and appear before me, L. Motor, a Justice of the Peace of Jefferson ëounty aforesaid, at my office in Baein, on the 110th day of June, A. D. l.$, at four o'dock p. m. of said day; then and there to answer the complaint of J. F. Rudy, plaintiff aforesaid. in a civil action to re- cover the sum of Thirty-four 71 -lit)' dollars for bal- ance due on money Inmost, and on default thereof judgment will be rendered against you. E. 1k -au. de- fendant as aforesaid, for the sum of 1:party-four 74- 100 dollars and tIm eosts of suit in tins behalf ex- pended. Given under my hand thin 14th day of May. A. D. 1888. L SUTOR, . L. Justice of the Pamice. Pled publication May 16. 12ti5t, Nonce TO CREDITOJIS. Estate of Thomas Veal Gay, deceased. •• Notice is hereby gieen by the undersigned, Admin. ' Getrator of the relate of Thomas Veal Gay, detrained, to the creditors of and 'all persons having claims against the said deceased, to exhibit them, with the noobasary vouchers, within four months after the first publication of this notice, to the said Admitils- trator at Boulder, nettle said county of Jeffèrson. Dated at Boulder, this 5th of May, leffl. A. S. Kra.i.cam, Adminildrator Of Thomas Veal Gay, deceased. Find publication. May Sk Dee. OTICE TO CO -OWNERS. To Morgan Williams, Alonzo floodkunts. Thomas Dexter, John Wallace, and Warren Stowe, their hein; or nodule: You are hereby nõtified that theunden ti gned, your eoinornere in the shoctSY quartz lode n nis daim. situated meat of and adjoining the Chtielreny quarts lode mining claim. Little Pipe:erne mining distikt, Jeffertion ehutity, Montana Territory, have expended on said elaim in labor in the years leg and 1,667, the Inim of one hundred dollars each year, said s twin g ' the required ttttt of labee neeemeary to hold paid quarts lode mining Maim under Sectimi 2324 of the Revised Standee of the United States, to December 31, 111117„ Audi( within ninety days after this service of notice by publication you fail or refuse to contra% „le your proportion of such expenditure as «xiiiwnena, your interest in said claim will become the property of the undersigned under said Section 2324. Dated Butte, Montana, May 11 tent A. H. Barmier, CHNINTIAN JACK T. First publication May 16, laffl. NOTICE Tt) CO-QWNER$, • • To Morgan Willianin, J. H. Baker. 'Manna Itexter, and Altair, (;.itslicuotit, their heirs and assigns: Von are liereb)- notified that the under/named, your coliWilers in in -tie - quartz toile miningehtim nated about one and one-half miles from Dan. J. Ittannard's ni-l' on the 1,1111e Pipeelone. Little Mile- stone mining district, Jefferson county, Mcmliaria Territory, have expended «in said claim in labor In the year ending December 31, lieff, one hun- dred dollars ($1olh. said mum heing the tenoned amount ‘#f labor neeeasary to hold said - quarts lode ing claim under Section 5124 of the Reviled Stat- utes of the United States. to Decentber 31, 1887. And If within ninety dapa after this riervidb of notice by publicetión you fall or refuse to «atribule your . Pro- portion of such CIpelIditlere easeransena, your anter- eat in said \sim lues -orne the property or the un- dereigeneel under maid ‚Welton 2331. • ._ Dated Butte. Montana, May II, M. • A. R. Wanart. , Cueuerime Lin ay. Fired publication May O. LITERARY GEMS. [Gathered for ' Tua Aer.] Friend and kinsman—saute their sunning than the idle -hearted mind; Many friend min prove unfriendly, many sideman • lem than kind: He who shame his comrade's portion, be he beggar, • be he lord, • Cornewita truly, Conies as duly, to the battle as the Stands before the,king to rumor, Adhere to the pile to sigh-:-• Ile la frienaLiand he is kinsman; lem would make the name a lie. —Indian MMus. Few persons have sufficient wisdom to prefer censure, which is useful - to them, to praise, which deceives them. Rochefoucauld. To clothe the eery thouglat--.— In simple words succeeds, For still the craft of genius is To mask, the king in weeds. —Ralph Waldo Emencia. Every path where mortal feet now tread secure has been beaten out of the hard flint by prophets and holy men, who went before us, with bore and bleeding feet, to smooth the way for our reluctant tread. It is the blood of prophets that softens the Al- pine rocks. Their bones are scattered in all the high places of mankind. But God lays his burdens on no vulgar men., He never leaves their sotcht a prey. He paints Elysium on their dungeon wall. In the populous cham- ber of their heart the light of faith shines bright,end never dies.—Theo- dore Parker. 1 am one Who Suds within inca nobility That spurns the idle prating* of the great, • And their mean Dowd of what their fathers were, While they theniselars are fools effeminate, The aeon, of all who know the worth of mind And virtue. —Pereira!: Fame is an undertaker that pays but little attention to the living, bet bedizens the dead, furnishes out their funerals, and follows them to the\ grave.—Coitois. Seith the Bo - nk: Count not as dead Such Mfor the Vieth have bled; Stark and red their bodies lie, But their souls are in the sky, Resident with God, who grants All for W which the spirit punts. Joyful are they, resting there Free from sorrow, pain, or fear; Watching us who, left in life, Are not quit, as yet, of strife; But shall soon intain, to share Allah's mercies, and declare— Side by side with those—tlutt lie Showell, grace eternally, And withholdeth not the pay At the ending of the day. • —Pearls of the Faith. WHY CONKLING 11' AS NOT A MASON. [Fachange.] Aid. Conkling was asked if Mr. Conkling was not a member of - a Ma- sonic lodge, and, if 80, if his lodge would not like to be present and take part in the funeral services. \No said\ Mr. C,onkling„\the Senator was not a Mason nor sfid he belong to any -other secret organization. When his Alfred Conkling, was ,publie prosecutor in -Montgomery county, aboneista3- years ago, he was at one time prosecuting a murderer who in the midst of his summing up against him made the Masonic sign of distress. My grandfather was so disgusted that he resigned from his lodge, and since that day no Conkling has ever joined the order.\ • TERRITORIAL NEWS. \Slim Jim\ MeIntyre, who ran off a band of horses from near Fort Shaw, has been caught in the Northwest Territory. Charles Dickens and Bob Burdette are to 'be in Montana soon, the fernier to give readings from his father's writings and the latter tő lecture. The - Crow Indiana sent -to St. Paul after the trouble on the reservation last fall, will be sent back to the reser- vation shortly by order of the 'President. * Harvey W.' English, for twe or three years Wilke magistrate of Helena, died last week at Seattle, where he had been taken sick -en rortte to visit a brother al Vi -teria, P. (.. HELENA & BALD ' MOUNTAIN MINING COMPANY. [Montana Midas Review, Helena.] The annual meeting of this company for the deletion of officers was held in this city Saturday evening, May 5th, when the following trustees were elect- ed to serve the ensuing year: David Merritt, Ben Benson, W. W. de Lacy, Charles Anderson, Jos: W. Crewe - 11,J. E. Steers; arid A. M. Williams. - Col. de Lacy Was made president and treasurer, J. E. Steers vice 7 president, and A. M. Williams secretary. The mining property of this com- pany is located on Bald Mountain, at the head of Grub gulch, Jefferson eounty, and consists of three quartz lodes, known as the Grand Central, Queen City, and Clipper, as well as a twenty -acre placer claim in Grub gulch. The property is being developed by a .tunnel on the Grand Central, now in on the vein a distance of 227. feet, from which tunnel cross -cuts will be driven to tap the Queen City on the left and the Clipper on the right. The tunnel is being driven into the very heart of Bald Mountain, and a perpendicular depth of 800 or 900 feet can be ob- tained. Sothing, aside from pros- pecting,. has ever been done on the placer claim, but it is thought to be very rich and it will probably be de- veloped this year. - Nothing was done oh the qttartz claims during the, past winter, but the company has decided ‘ to resume oper- ations. The property lies in the im- mediate vicinity of the Peerless Jennie; the Garfield, Lucky Jim,' the Crescent, and others-, and . the country is a no- toriously rich one in high-grade lodea. Some of the richest gold -bearing ore ever discovered in Montana was found\ of the company. about 150 feet above . the present tun - The Iron Age mill at I'lacer is still nef of the company On Bald Mountain, running full blast and is a surprise to and it is expected- to -reach the ore - every one. The stamps are small, body from which this \float\ conks only i weighing about - four hundred during the present summer.* pounds, but still (he ten %tamps crush CELERY FOR FARMERS. - twelve tons of hard rock daily. The mill was made in - Atlanta, Georgia, and leas never built to crush :Montana A correspondent to -the Germantown quartz.—Moidena Mining Revienz,. Telegraph asks: Why do so many far - C. II. Yeomans hire at extension on Deer Lodge, Anaconda and Butte, and cost over 118,000. 'Mr. Bielenberg 'has pirrehtesed outsidel;f Montana with- in the past year over $50,000 worth of hogs and shipped them into /ion- tana for use in the several meat mark- ets in which ho has interests. The ¡.a -fed hogs of Montana make just as palatable meat and are healthier food . -than the - s‘ -- Vllrand - garbage-fed pork brought from the East, while there is certainly 'big money in raising it. This $i0,000 is paid out, by -one pur- chriser only, for imported hogs. Are not our farmers' overlooking a good sotirce of income iv net givingsanore attention to this product. Peas, which make the beat feed, can he rais- ed and hogs led and fattened on them cheaper than they can be fed in the States and brought here. The impor- tation shows there is good, ('ash market for all that can be raised. Would it not be well to devote more attention to, thhepaying product? • MIN INC>. mers dep of cele is l themselves of the luxury . - les? To many it the Island l'onri lode ; called the Little a k F nown RR-lt 1 raud, Situated on Jaekscre creek, Jef- ,... . Irish woman who, for the. first time fers county. The vein us twenty- . one f g eet wide eragen from 818 saw a man eating it at a hotel table ,and exclaimed, indignantly: \gee! erect 8 i 4 1\ i i w n lien liand o: n t dav him . v I:r rpert o ' il y e and the blackguard is eating the bouquet!\ developnient work will be - ptrished as Whatever is good and highly -prized rapidly iel -- $'\i l \ h ' .--Min . in g - Iferinr. by the ePicore alwold be On his tables RELIGIOUS NEWS. and not as *some foreigners do—sell all _ , . . . . ..,. he eiSel that Ai; marketable and keep'. .- Ia.. the .Methodist General Confer - the - ha - lance for himself. Celery can enee hi New York last week, .Rev. be raiséifif careful attention is paid' . Charlet C. gbLeahi of gt: \ Johns - t - o instructions given by those - having River, created quite à sennàibni by experimental knowledge. There are offering a remolution to the effect that now excellent kinds which are self_ no one should be elected or conseerat- blanching, and. for that reason are de- ede bishop until he had taken a cast- sirahle. The chief trouble, i n m y, iron oath to abstàin from the use of opinion, in the failure to success.; is tobacco. it was voted down. A re - ‚getting it started. It is very slow to solution from the Kansas cOnference germinate; * and likewise it is very slow was offered that mass meetings. be to grow at first, therefore it is neees- held by the members of the conference It -was prostesti m i o ig v aga to in l s a t . flic e l r iqu lo r t t i( r ) a o ll , oo h .. sary to plant the, seed very early in the spring, *so as to have ‚plants suit- the - table - and -les 3 ‘.--:-.1 7 he resolution able to transplant by the middle of was referred' to the • committee ,on June.' The surest way. for the novice temperance' ' . is to buy the plants from the . n- There is a stor3. told as a fact in the house. Then select the richest corner circle wherein Col. Robert G. Ingersoll' in the garden and set the plants in moves: Ile .entercd a chureb, saunter - rows about six - inches apart. Culti- cd right up the middle aisle and coolly. vate every few days. - If you do not look his seat in one of the finest pews. raise self -blanching, when you culti- A few. ntomentrilatèr theowner of the vate draw the earth about the plants pew, o pompous, purse -proud, but. to one-third 'their height. For winter orthodox man, 'marched with telling sand - in - Your cellar. striders to the door. He seemed slight- ly disconcerted at seeing a elm - tiger - 1n occupation, He seated himself, and taking a memorandqm book from his [New North -Wad. Deer Lodge.] pocket wrote: \I _pay 83 1 000 a year Mr. X. J. Bielenberg returned from for this pew, sir!\ Coolly taking his A Colorado man has sold his silver mine and reinvested in two Niagara Falls hacks. He hopes now to make something.—Detroit Free Prem... County Attorney Joyes Kent some oro from a lead in the Cataract dis- trict in which he is interested to 'lei-. ena a few days ago to be assayed. The return showed that the ore nulstwO- fifths of an ouni of gold and 348.49 (anuses of silver to the ton. - Dr. Pancoaist, of Philadelphia, pres- ident of the Penn Placer Company, visited the mining grounds of the et:WIWI:1y at Basin last Thursday and was well pleased itt the_oulloult. t. wieeecompanteelby John T. «'hite, of Philadelphia, and other memben4 IMPORTING HOGS. Livingston 'édaesday, whence he had gone to expedite the transit of 800 head of - ogapurcha 1 .11 sed in ite- ei aa, f ir. Plii1;1).1rurg, pencil from hispocket without chang- ing his position. the man of the silver tongue wrote underneath: \I 'don't doubt r word. sir. It's a d—d goo(l reW \- - RAILItt 11) RACKET. Progress, ott the Wickes tunnel for the week ending Saturday, May 12th, was as follows: North end, 61 feet; south end, 49 feet; total, 110 feet; total amount of tunnel completed, to date, 4,140 fet. • .When President Harris, of the Northern Pacific, was in the Territory on his tour of inspection a couple weeks since; he estimated the damage to the Mullen tunnel by the recent firo at $5,000 or $10,000. Aldred as to,, the truth of the reported agreement between the Northern Paeille,aaid the Manitoba to build no road in Monti' this year, he said: \Not a word or it is true. I, never heard of such an agreement. This road will cetitinue to build .and 'prosecute all %necessary improvements in Montana and else- where whenever they are needed for the efficiency of the road in its trans- portation of passengers and convey- ance ( of freight or otherwise. We make no agreements whereby we re- strain ourselves trine making neces- sary improvenients anywhere or at any time, We will probably build a good deal in Motitana this year.\ • POLITICAL POINTERS. A - Cross-eyed refermer is one who has become so by.. watching for two parties to pick him tip.—New Oriecins Piciyune. Butte has three 'city tickets ia the el d—I remoca t ic, Rein thl i can , told In- dependent. A mixell- ticket will prob- ably be elected. Tho Reform Club of New York, or- ganizeia _few - Jawlike age With the immediate 'purpose of terr,metitig tai -- ill' retierni on the lides of the Presi- dent's Message, anneunces a prize of 8250 for the best practical paper on \Our Local Interest ill Tariff Reform,\ printed in any newspaper in the United States before September 1st, and an additional award of $100.to the nevri- - . paper 'printing the article. ATCII ND TRAMS. ItYAraI I. now breaking to muddle and harneee some very liandatatir colts, all of the • • EEeeblzracsn.t aitools. • They will he redoiy for use i. uhtiut two week\ emedi evelrybody who wind« goOd riding or dilving rid- • male should improve the opportunity to buy. Spe- cial attention given to match teams. Nt EAT MAR K ETS. W OLTILit, MAX V1ICIL.0 dk, CO., Itol'I.DElt, MONTANA.. holeinie ami Retail 31:111CT C; XX 2111 111. Of Bowl, N1 Val. KINI)S tiA1'.-4A4iP: sPitiMiLTY. • San Meats «if lir•t Unialtay Always on Ilea& Ettl..41I FISH .1.1I) (LINK IV TIILIR HEASON. Market at the old MURRAY sTA ND. dlualuirrsiii(te, a. LIZItillTOM, ‘te an RIITAt.. DMA LINO ts 311Plressis Soot; 7iletztto22, a ' 111011/11 B1C05, 81111 III) LIU 11.1111/1111011111. 0Yeateet•is, Foot, Butter, 1 I andled only fresh and good. RAILROAD AND WOOD CAMPS SUPPLIND, BRAME Houton kr ELIC/IORN AND Beam . CHARI.le.ie POND, DEALER IN liandlkerehlers, Sear*, Fatter Notions, ete. CHINESE arro JAPANESE SILK GOODS —Same 2Pstara.io3r GFcacict eastesuraxi.tt GOOD MEALS, CLEAN skavIcz, BFAT TABLE the market affords. Boarders by the week get the beat of attention. 60011 BA k KRT in connection with the iteeteurent. y rakes and pies made to order. s rliSCRIBE for THE 114F -Only i2 a yea.\ In id- , all Jetr•rmro enmity new., • •••