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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-4/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
dIr Trire AkinavoA WEEKLY e - wsearia hshed every Westareday ai liouider, Jelled« county, - Muntenia T . ekery, at a eaddriptimerice lit • year. payable- • tly in advtuanr. It will be the ort the pelyisher to herniate Maim subseibers a &maple -le and tiniele• ressort of ali local Impseentugs of •interesu iii the essenty. and too make sure d this he endeavor to have every aseltion of the county n•presented by au enencatie and reliable eorrespoisient Due us -idiom well lie Made of anyching likely to tide ems- Me deeds e the county ...onet it., van... tamps wed vidiees within ita bonier.. Editorial comment will he made on all neleations of local interest and questmeet of general entered will be din -test-a as may be deemed /dens - hie. Sueli ‚elected matter 4d' of genend • Se May be nes-rted „ill le thuroterid1 edited- esik that master of no import-kit., *Ur ,i( lot llie Clalorill. id Tut At.i. The paper will be oardl aim, but the- esigew will endeavor to make retry Id M it readable While 'Inuit) he the Min to wean thoroughly res • liable med respesetible eorissepondente air editar di> claim, any per,matI reapme.ileltly for auhromeals oar 011111.1) , eaprreard t,v ei,rreowalohrtata. Tut. Akio: emitters among it,. Ose friend, sad e upporters geittleensu teelmeging _tit: ‘ bah em mess politest perinea of the day. die as prow -wit wishes, the paper well nos assure thiredm- pionstop of either party. With, taus reaadaiiial n eutral far am ;mid aid parlor* are•nontorrateek the editor reserve* the right to dieses whets deemed ad- sushi,-sut•It qtlos4i.Pla.. poditiood to-x.8mm'. glebe gray &minder of importatsse or dense to the readent the paper. A to: r arisen Leis_ As lhe subscription lists of howl papers are tehécooM if eVer SUfficient t» PASIPI-Prt tilt' Mitte' of Menemselveat, TILE Ana will. in art...rebus, a ith the mod ensure receive advertisements for torermun ou us enigmas The advertesingitpare, however. ueS he &Boned to eistroaeh top nitwit upon the devoted to reading matter, or to interfere- with lke permendes enunciated in the pareurnoples rebuke. Advertiarments will do be sulkiest to neeptimor by the editor, will endeavor to rzelude from the eldt111•201 , Taa -tee emything „I a fraudulent or dierepoide clam - setter. Tin- term,. of advert isiseg will he is follower Five Lents per line of Seesawed ithis type. for the fin» insertioit. three emits per line kW mete subeeequent insertion. Fifty eentsper rolteula ‚sore toi' the Oral imertion, thirty ‚emu pee Mae for drio eats sequent insertion. NU WIVertielibrai CHM - ilea tut Ines thaLLI iVr0 lines, t'hang'-' en nite•ertmeamereent ale equivalent to fir.st inteertnew. Twelve ham of Nuit - pardi make an ineh. the follow no: table will roadie advertisers to rationale the out of ode erteoraurata 1 Lime. t times. 3 mouths ‚a.,\ I Sr. Two lines Sr IO t,54 • et su Three line* 1.1 • 42. I :St 2 zs Four hues 56 1 Wit $ Ha ate Sex line.. 5 §, 2 Ott 3 e ; 5' One Welk 30 60 4 HU 7 SO LS toti Witt. Kelltelenv •orr. Perewirra PRO elS I N L t '.A RIOS. T EINNIRLIS JOTIKS, le.Y ° AT UAW, Boon.asi. Jr:maws Clown Mosormoà. COW All 11 PARKER., 0111=1 tad IT UV. I -ion ide -r. - - - M con t moon - Will prattler in all the Comes «orltooltsioa Toirtitoors_ Geo. F. c.orke. IL IL Psalm's -‘‘ e * „Y L. HAW' ATMINET - IT - LAW. - Aare in Herb. con - Y it Co. * *. BOULDER, : : A. LIZIGHTOIL le D., Jlo PHYSICIAN ono SURGEON, BOULDER, s litiNTAN.A. ° 011iee in the Binh. Cary & (1s. bedding. Peyzeus iv ocousie Her Elmo» iiEgrrN•ig. n at P.-BOULDElt DIRSIGEs NO. 111. 'BERTA every Tuesday night at t.0G. Y. MIL ster lodges are cordially in teeter& s. W. N TEN EYCK,' P. W. Coll.% K. of R. k a. t A. It. M. .PHF.P.....« iN Pot - , T No. IS held• y. it.. regular esomp-firem on the lad Friday evening of eaeh month at the I 0 go. halt oil Braider. Conaradee visiting Melee memity ate in- vited to camp with ow A. S. E1.14N it:, Past Commardere J. H. maze:. aase , .. , § • TOIIII01ÜAI. 1 , 11..16011a al the imNoR Horn_ BOULDER, MONTANA. J' W.lidt4:»11...1:1e, Ferozoia. IWO& 1134111TI/G, 11.11-110MIK Dear in the Bela ittyles and on eery lilemirmakie Tenn. Sir -Ladies and Children promptly warted at and Sett i --fat ituaranteed RON. J. K. Tooes defeated - in the ;. National House of Representatives tho other (ley en effort to bring up for consideration the Senate bill granting right-of-way over the crow reserva- tion to the Billings and Cooke City road. The Delegate's excuse is that he wants the other road to have a chance to nelLita bonda and build it ..1 • oad. As the Rocky Fork road has had the right to build for more than a year and hasso far expended little else than wind, the excuse seems pretty thin. Delegate Toole should recollect that he represents the whole people of Montana, and not Sam•Word and a few other sift:mid-be capitalists alone. ('tu.. p. C. Ruseeee. a gentleman who has had a very varied experience in editorial work, eispecially in the mining States and Territisriee. botwho i n . not at present connected with any newspaper. is desirone of :wearing em- ployinezit in newspaper work, being willing to accept any position and to let his work be the measure of 'his ability. Ile is now in Jefferson county and any letters addressed to him in care of THE AGE will reach him at the earliest practicable moment. 311213 WILLARD. the celebrated female apostle of prohibition, sighing for more worlds to convert. , has now, un- dertaken the annihilation of the aw- fully vicious practice of doll -playing on the part of little girls and which she denounces as heathenish. silly. etc. A plank condemnatory oj the piac-a good investment: As an advertising tice and demanding a hiw prohibitory e project, however, the scheme ie ephem- of the use oi• manufacture of dolls end. Granted that the gentlemen do will d ou btl ess b e i nserte d i n the next all they promise, distributing- from Iteanserneer ' s thinks a half -holiday at dome of the week is a godd thing but that it should be voluntary and not enforced by law as in New York. When the half -holiday idea gets to be general through the voluntary action of employers, then will be the millen- ium close at hand. As things go now it is probable there would be no resit on Sunday in the large manufacturing diseiet» were there not laws providing for it. Innocent childhood has to be ' protected against the rapacity of man- ufacturers and mine -owners by strin- gent laws, or else mere babes would would become day -laborers. Certainly grown people Might expect less mere\ thiuz the little ones. BOOMING THE COUNTRY. • It is natural and proper that the people living in a country should ad - vertise the advantages of their partic- ular section to the world in order to bring more people into the country as also more capital. The more people there are the more pleasant is life apt to be. The greater the amount of cap- ital to be had, the sooner will come the rewards to those who have done the work and endured the privations of pioneer life. Besides, inevery are men desirous of change, and it is only when the countr)\\ is fairly popu- lous that they can dispose of their property to advantage and thus avoid the waste of more or less years of their life. There are numerous other reasons for the booming of a country and all combine - go to make adver- tising schemes more or less popular. As a result of this desire to adver- tise the country, many men who prefer to; get a living by their wits rather than by haft] work concoct advertising schemes which will aeeording to their statements boom the country beyond precedent. Every. few: months the country is invaded by a gang of these men, and through their brilliant prom- ises the people generally extend a very liberal patronage. Only a month or two ago such.a party was in Boulder, and it is probable that when their scheme keiliiished they will take at least $.500 out of Jefferson county. Possibly they may take a much larger ean. The money will go to San Fran- cisco to pay for labor . there and to support the projectors of tbe scheme. None of it will be spent in. Jefferson county. So all the counties in the Territory will be levied upon. Perhaps the money thus invested will bring a fair return and thus prove 'interested in the nrineraLdeVélopment \ of Jefferson county were to chip in to the amount of $200 and subeeribé for a hundred copies of Tax Ace to be sent every week for a year to the min- ing exchanges -in the eight principal cities of -the United States. There is no question but that the papers would he eagerly read..? - The rendent would see that every mohth in the year there are from fifty to one hundred and fifty mineral locations made in Jefferson county, and they would naturally conclude that it must be a pretty good mineral country. Each month they would read the list of transfers of mining property, and these would in- dicate that most of the miners and prospectors are inclined to give lib- eral terms for the purpose of develop- ment and consequently that Jefferson county would be a good country in which - to invest money. They would read every week from one to three col- umns of news about the mines of Jef- ferson county Showing that many of the mines developed are paying well and that consequently the chances of loss on new mines would be greatly - reduced. It is not too much to believe that for every $100 invested in sub- scriptions to Tas Aim, to be sent as indicated, $100,000 would come into the county for investmént within the year. Suppose the people more interested in the development of the agricultral and stock -raising resources of Jeffer- son county were to raise $200 and subscribe for one hundred copies of Tue - ,Aex to be sent each week for a year to one hundred of the country taverns or hotels in small - towns in the richer portions of the older -settled States. It is probableahat each sub- scription so sent would bring to Jef- ferson county within the year at least one substantial fariner or stock -man who had money . to invest either for himself or for some of his sons. If mug citizens not III - Wrested in the, special development of any particular interest but desirous of see- ing general dévelopmect and general prosperity would raise $100 and sub- scribe for fifty copies of Tax AGE, to be sent to public libraries, to free rehding rooms, to club rooms and houses in the large cities, t§›.the hotels at health and pleasure resorts, to the leading hotels in the cities, to other places where men ofwealth and energy do congre- te would find that the invest- ment paid a thousand per cent. profit for the general good. THE AGE has used the lowest esti- mate of what the San Francisco men will receive from Jefferson county. It has presented another plan for spend- ing a like amount of money in adver - tising the country. It believes that THE ,Atte ' s plan will pay ten or even a hundred times as well as the other, and that the prospectors, the miners, the farmers, the stock -raisers, the real estate men, the merchants, the lum- bermen, the builders, the mechanics, the laborers, all persons interested in the development of , the country in the slightest degree, have no right to say they can not induce capital to come to Jefferson county itntil they have tried this plan. LITERARY NEWS. National Prohibition platform. 1,,ece 50.000 to 150,000 copies of their pam- hibition, like charity, can be made to cover a multitude of sins. Tun ecists of 1860 showed that no children were employed in factories in the United States. The OPIUM of 1880 showedthere were 182,00080 employed. When the hard times existing since ell% the rednction,pf wages. ia.--tha same period, and the great number o boys employed in coal mines, are con- sidered, it may be safely estimated that there are half a million children em- ployed at day -labor in the United States. This means that the fathers of so many children eaa not earn enough - to support their families. This is one of the beatifies of the high pro- tective tariff which is claimed to in ... hie wag's -to workingmen. phlet on various lines of railroad. In a month the distribution will be over and in another month the pamphlet and. consequently the advertisement will have pritctically reisied out of ex- istence. The same reasoning applies to nearly all of these spasmodic efforts at booming the country. -But-while theee peramabulating ad - f Vertiez - ng schemeriare well patronized, one legitimate, steady, constant r eheap means of advertising the country is almost entirely neglected. That means is the local newspaper. A good many men interested in the develop- ment of their town and county think they do liberally when they take one copy of the local paper for their own - nudinged pay for it in advance. • But inippoee the many men who S e re In regard to her biography, Mrs. Harriet Beecher Stowe says: \f have placed all the letters and documents for this purpose in the hands of my son, and neither he nor I have author- ized i any one to circulate such reports as have appeared of late in various PaPers. \ The manuscript of \Mr. Barnes, of New ‚York \ was rejected by publisher afterpublisher of New York and Bos- ton, and after shelving it fist . a time, the author, Mr. Gunter, concluded to have it printed himself. This he did, getting , out an edition of 1,000 copies, but was able to get the booksellers to put the books on sale only on the condition that the unsold copies might be, re- turned. In a month after the first publication a second edition was dey mended, and the ifliillE btu; now run up to over 1E30,000 copies. JEFFERSON COUNTY MINES. [Montana Miateg Renew. Habra.] The Bamboo Clae, is looking better than heretofore. Three shifts are now being worked. The last shipment of ore made by G. S. Kennedy from the Little Emma »thee averaged 4240 pee -ten per cur load. The Eint kbeee is undoubtedly the best mine in Placer, `and no doubt will, in the near future. be very valuable. An offer of $30,000 cash wag made the owners the other day but Was refused. Jake. Murphy ia in Lump Gulch, Jefferson county, opening placer groondsf which shows good indica- tions and pays from $2.50 to $3.50 per day per man. Be has - a seven foot streak of gravel which is prospecting very satisfactorily. Chas. Anderson will leave the city to -morrow to see about getting in sup- plies one mile southeast of the Peerlem Jennie property. If the snow does not hinder him he will commence work on a contract for the Helena and Bald Mountain Mining Company. A car load of ore arrived to -day at the Montana Sampling Works from the Peerlem Jennie mine. The roads have been in such a bad condition - that it has been impossible to do any hauling for some time back, but regu- lar shipments will now be made if the roads continue to improve. Humphrey & Price are working on an extension of the Mountain King mine at Placer and have a vein of fine looking ore eight feet in width. The ore at present is rather low grade. only assaying about $30 per ton, but from present indications the lead promises to develop into a splendid mine. W. W. Walton's mine, the Edna No2, Is being finely developed by iferena paies. They have „ st vein of about two feet, mostly carbonates of lead. They are down about forty feet and have several cars on the dump, which they - expect to ship shortly.' They expect to sink to water level. C. H. Yeamans has leased his mine, the Ground Out, situated on Clarke creek, near Jackson creek, Jefferson County, ' in the vicinity of the little Little Emma, to a party of enterprising -The- vein -is-eight „ide and the ore assays from $12 to $18 in silver and gold. Assays have been made that. have gone as high as $48. MRS. JAIILEY ' S WAX -WORKS: [The Lounger, in New Turk Critiej The Imperial Court of Vienna has lately enj23, - ed a genuine Jerky Wax - Work Saw; only it was not directed by the \true and only Mrs. Jarley,\ nor even called a wax -work show. • A letter from a correspondent of the news tells all about it. It was called \The Doll -Shop: \ and when the cur- tain was rung up, the stage was found to be arranged after the manner of an actual shop. On the shelve' were gentlemen and ladies of the Austrian aristocracy, dressed in every variety of costume, and made to look as much like dells as possible. The Princess Paulitt Metternich wee the head sales -woman, while Prince . 1§zhn Schwarzenberg and the Margrave of Pallaxicini were her. assistant's. As customers entered, the clerks lifted the dolls down from the shelves, dust- ed,them, and wound them up to show off their accomplishments- The Countess Pelocka represented a Jap- panese doll, and when wound up deeced to the , Yum-Ytun ' song from \The Sido \ -- while. the (ietiiiiîie Hunyadi 'played the castenets and danced a Spanish dance. As the works of each doll ran down, the fig- ure relapsed into silence until the end of the \show \ When the inagic wand of a fairy (the Ca:mitten Clothilde Inensdorf) touched them into life, and a grand dance, in which they all took part, brought the entertainment to s close. TI:1 WINDSOR UOVESE. HOULDES 4 INECTAN.a. U. M. Mateo/Me, nicrizercit THE weenzem HOUSE is the Leadiag Hotel to Boulder. Its ream are large, warm, and well ed. The betla are aonikartable and Mean. The labia includes the beet everything the market aim*, The best of attention is given to gavots ao' every- thing posoible done to make their stay solenoww. de - Charges laesisionable. - 11* arJ' m 'Boo • To sa. emu Au. Tandlide B OULDRBI MOT 11,1113168 AND IIOTIEL.. WM. TROTTER, PlOarillE1011. These Biarings.have most Wonderful Curative Properties, all farms of R.Iza ataxia' estice Troartaltolleas AID ti Lead Poisoning and Ornei -ai —to(— The Spring.. is • PI.P:A.S3A.N It F..,3012 • 1\ For those who are overworked and weary mod who desire a few days' relief from told mail bd. nem and west a few days' medium Run is always tie BM of Ulna] laded d lade an Pen In Poem ol the ire Yams RAGE To AND 'Papa ALL TRAMS HELENA ADVERTISEMENTS. T HE THOMAS CRUSE SAVIDIIIMI MARK liaroorparated Cutler tie Leers ef Manasaia.. PAID IN CAPITAL. CP CO , CI0 C1 CO THOMAS • T. H. carraa. vireerioureest. c. L DAHLEIL. E. .1. CARTER, Allows six per cent, interest on Savingo Desomilla. eompounded January and July. Transacts a general banking business, dried ex- change on the principal cities d the United States and Europe. Will make loans on County sad (My bombe and real estate mortgagee. JOURNAL. PUBILISIELNGr . Hale». THE LEADING lEtococa . lit. tile ecolts eeirizatepiria AND 334Z:fidZiŒrse.rnierniTrUNT In Montana, Solicits through this paper all Made of J013 WORIK, Which will be exeented in the lateeditelleatedemIngele and e reasonable pries& Is Cconrarrioa. Their have a large r store of STATIONERY, ELAN' HOOKS. ' ARTISTS' HATERIALS, AST GOOle, ETC - FINE ETCHINGS, „:,an orders entrunted to them will remiss prenent attention. JOURNAL PUBLISHING Co, M oires/1m STAGE CORIPAIII. _ . Carrying - Crialtococt »tattoo« Ildlrattliat AND Northern Pacific el.:prem. COACHES. LEAVE Durum& AULT RUMORS WRITISRA.LL • rani \mm_ SILVER STAR, SHERIDAN. Vim:me gm •32 , From Colvin for Butte City On the arrive/ of the Northern Peelle train. ham Helena. W. J. TOWNIMIILND,, . a GAFFNEY, Agent at Boulder. C ARRIAGE Oar Him. J. R. WARREN io now reaming a laimboome elan nag, to the trains for the Grad Central Inad aid When not in use for that purpose it is et ihe earebee . e the publie fur trip, to the HAI «Ittheeterehleisheos. A OVF.RTISIE in Tite. Ana -I' will mach every school Tie itt ieirfflootioximoty.