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About The Age (Boulder, Mont.) 1888-1904 | View This Issue
The Age (Boulder, Mont.), 06 June 1888, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn84036049/1888-06-06/ed-1/seq-4/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
1 • ITRE BOULDER, 1011f,llil TERRITORY. An Independent weekly newspaper published ev- ' ery Wednesday mid devoted to the record- ing a the ses.wm and 1 Ile deVelOpIllellt tite I' „Uive. of Jefferson county. SCBSCRIPTIIIN, se2 at Year, In AilVaneè, A DVERTIRI KATI>. eive cents per line Of Nonpareil 4 this types for the insertion. three amts per line for each subarquent insertion. Fifty ...rids per inch „f column space for the End Insertion, Iliirty cynic per inch for etch sule- aequent insertion. No acKertimment receited for leas than two lines. Changes in advertiseinentic ewe suivialeut t» lind insertions. Tvvelve linos of Non - pas ci make ail inch. The following table will enable advertisers to estimate the eicst of ad vertbmanelite 'time. .1 tithes.' 3 inceeths. 6 anon 'Pwo lines $0 Pt 40 2s $O Ill Three liten t 15 ' 12 1 e 2 ws Four hu.'. Z 56 1 00 3 00 14ixdistese 25 70 2 sae 3 25 7 50. On! back 50 141) 400 150 15 No rending -matter advertisements inserted. '- No column -rules broken for the inesertiosi of lel- vertilietr•enin. 1WILL kENNEDY E;nr.st MUD Pai7t\a iN.AL CAltirS. THOMAS JOI(ES, /11LN NV, BOULDER. JEFFERSON COMITY. Montana COWAN do PARKER, 1110101118 and COUREELLIME I•W, it. isalcIce ' - Montana: 'Will practice nis — arilte courts of Montana Territory. Dam. F. CowA.N. M. it. PARKER. ItT L. HAY, . ‚V . ATTORNEY - AT - LAW. ram iti Bach, Cue k Co.'s, 110CLDER, : : MONTANA. T• A. LEIGHTON, M., D., L. '• PHYSICIAN AND SUMO,PA/N, Wit, MONTANA. Office ill the Beek, Cory k Co. budding. PHYSICIAN TO BOULDER Ho? SPRINGS 1 - ',1s M. (HALLE,' ' _1.11. • Civil and Mining Entatteer. ľ. s. DEPCTY MINERAL. SURVEYOR PrOcures C. S. Land Patents of all kinds. - The matt thorough atteinbins will Ise gn'en to all • Diastase entrusted to'him nee. oFFICE. In tile liAt II, t ele VIA. building. BOULDER. - - - - - MONTANA it 1 ETV M NGS. Le or p.---storcesat Leone, NO. 19, MF.F.TS . ‚ every TtleN1ilt,\ night ail. C . ,: T. hell. Stein - ben' ef mister lodges. arc eneliilly invited to attend. W. N. TEN Eyre, v. v. F. W. Ciimes, K. of R. k S: If 1 A. 11...a• - .1. It DIcellEltSitN PI ‚ST NO. 13 hotels 14 its regular eampsines tor the hat Friday evenneg of coal niontli at UR. I. O. IL T. ball, in Meade -a% (*emirates visiting is. Ibis vkiísity are in- . vited to eanip with us: ..i. S. KELL( d I. Post I llllll ender. .1. Il i MiLutac, Adjutinit • T L ONSORIA PAR Lt/Rff rit the Vt >Olt HOTEL 110CLDER, !Vitt>. 1 %N. Z. W. itifiC•eLi.l.M . , F o rajp. WHEW\ ItIR-001711iil, sad 1111R-DANSFE 'bow in the' }km& Myles etemi « on very itertainable Terms. .301 ladies undithildren promptly waited upon -mid ‚Satisfaction Guaranteed. THE AGE - - 'BOULDER, MONT. Weesesn•st, Jerre. 6, 1888. InseATest says that the salaries of the city officers and police of Butt.' as fixed by ne› new enuteil. Will be, 830,000 a year. ' As the fire, and water, and lights, and street., and ether nee- esairy improvements and repairs are Id seem as though the people of Butte will have to pay pretty high for their city _ . government. e I . ec • MR. BLAINE has reiterated in a let- ter to Whitelaw Reid, editor of the — New York Tribune, his determination not to be a candidate for President. It is evident that he is in earnest in his staments and that lié has been unfairly treated in the misconstruction which has to st considerable , extent been placed upon his first letter of declination. As it is an open field, now for the other Republican candi- dates, there will be lively times in the Republican . camps from now, until -after the National Convention which meets in Chicago on the 19th inst. Arrest Judge McConnell had rerk red his ' opinion that thé election of nty Commissioner Lambert was invalid, County .‚Verney Joyes felt . it bis duty as the public law officer to have the- judgment. 't was 'a judg- ment, Properly entered n the court records and the proper unty,officere duly notified. He accordingly applied for a writ . ef judgment, but this. was • refused, Judge McConnell holding that he had simply rendered an opinión on an agreed case where the old County — 7 Tinerieaisiiiiii — parfy 7 : 7 held that the proper proceeding in the matter -as -it stands would be for Mr. • 'Wood to bring a suit in the District Court for the ousting of Mr. Lambert; • As the next term or the District Court will nötbe held until September • and the term of the Commissione . rship in' question will . expik In December, it is hardly - probable that Mr. Wood will ebnieet the mat.— BUILDINt; ASSOCIATION. 'The ' first annual meeting of the Boulder Building and Lean Associa - tion will be held at the court -house this evening, at which_lime there will be elected nine trustees, three to serve one year, three to serve two years, and three to Serve three ; n ears. Each subscriber to the ste,...ief the .Agso- eistiorkwho witi have paid the admis - WWI fee of fifteen mute a 'share and . , Itercente for a passbook, will be en- -, itled to one vote for each of the trus- tees. The by-laws for the governmen ' t ortitie Association will also be adopted at t deefin Practically, t,he first queetioteto set- tle titis evening will be as to whether 'or not the Association shall be organ- ize': Several of the gentlemen who were appointed to organize the Asso- ciation and who hutte taken the pre - uni nary' steps, doubt the advisability ` oriterfeetieg the organization unless at least six hundred shares are taken, and it is probable that unless that number of shares is subscribed for this evening the project Will beabandoned,. Some four hundred ' shares have at the present writing been subscribed for. Surely the people of Boulder will not pe - imit such an important and 'redid project to go by default. There esearvely a man in town who would not be benefited by the institutioh of such an Association here, and there should be a determined ' effort made on the part of every citizen to ' perfect the organization and to further its success. No one who -becomes a member, either for personal purposes or for public good, will regret the move after wit - 'leasing the operations of the society, for a few months. Even were regret to follow, the dissatisfied person ' cue easily withdraw and the money in - - Vested will be returnedby the society and with a fair rate of interest.'_ _ There are two or three secret socie- ties - in town - which might profitably take from twenty to forty shares in the Association. The monthly dues on these shares would be from ten to twenty defiers, a payment which the Good Templar's, the United Workmen, and the Knights of Pythias could prob- ably easily make. Such an investment would be mrquestionably a strong bond of fusion among the members of a so- ciety and would tend to perpetuate the respective societies more than al- . most anything else which they could do. If any of the societies wanted to build a hall of its own or to invest in property in other ways, it would have equal- right with any other stockholder to borrow . moneyfrem the Association for the purpose. Members can easily see what advantage this would be to their respective societies. - The question of the organization of a Build* andLoan Association is be- fore the people of Boulder. It should not require iteration and reiteration of argument to convince them of the profit and general advantage to be de- rived from an Association. The thott- sands of such societies scattered all over the United States are proof suf- ficient. It is to be hoped that Boulder will organize one this evening with a thousand-ehares taken instead of six hundred. • • Ax 'Teti going the'. rounds of the papers . - says that the Philadelphia clothing firm of • Winamaker & Brown ia furnishing the Union Pacific with an $100,000, Worth of uniforms for its em- ploYés. This uniform business shows to a certain extent the degradation io which these great corporations are gradually reducing the American peo- ple. , The company Uniform is but an- other manifestation of the private liv- ery. When an American citizen can wear a livery without murmuring, he has lost - a co - deiderable - portitnt ut - his manhood. There is no more necessity for the ordinary Union Pacific em- ployé wearing a uniform than there ' is for th'e president of the road doing so; anil -anyone at ell acquainted with the history of the Adams family can eas- ily imagine what would be Mr. Charles Francis ' Adams's reply to Messrs. Wanamalter-& Brown if they came to - measure bbia9 - 0 . Iffiffihretr. personal righb , 7' • ari) no greater than those of the humblest workman on the road. Thé fact that the right. of the humble may 1ö ignored with impunity is one sign that the American nation is on the down grade. —TINE•SUPREME Coeur - of the t - ízited States recently rendered two important decisions concerning the power of States and municipal corporations to tax and license telegraph companies. In one cam the Court held that tele- graphing is a branch of commerce and that the enforcement of a license by a State or municipal corporation against a telegraph Company doing business between two or more States is an in- terference with interstate commerce and therefore unconstitutional; Con- gress only having power to regulate such commerce. lit a second cam the Court held that where a tax ' is levied by a State on the business done_ by a telegraph company, it could only apply to the business completed within the boundaries; of the ' State, as business between different States is interstate commerce which can only be regulated by Congress. The question is of con- siderable local interest, as the West- ern Union company has for a year or two been fighting the payment ' of the license fees provided for -by Territorial statute is and, if TILE AGE is not miss - taken, Jude McConnell ‚within the past two weeks decided against 'the company an appeal case from the .Helena city court - where the company had been compelled to pay city liéense. The decisions are of still greater gen- eral interest in showing that.CongréSs has the power to regulate the telegraph to the same extent ail - the, railroad business, the good influenceis of which regulation has been manifest ever since the 'Interstate Commerce Com- mission came into existence: NEW APPARATUS FOR EXAM- INING ,ORES. -\11 improved method for - the pur- pose of ascertaining whether rocks contain metallic ores has recently been patented by gentlemen of Washing- ton Territory and • ('alifornia, regard- ing which the Scieuqr Anterirau thus speaks: One ,pole of a battery is connected with one terminal of a telephone re- ceiver by means of a wire in the usu- al way, the remaining pole of the bat- tery being conneeted by a conductor with a, brush provided with a suitable handle, while the remaining terminal -of the telephone receiver is connected by a conductor with a similar brush having a like handle. • In examining rocks in place, the two brushes form- ing the terminals of the conductors connected 'with the telephone and bat- tery, are drawn . along the face of the rock, while _the telephone is held to the ear orihe operator. If ' the rocks contain meta> they conduct the cur- rent, and the movement of the brush- es along the rough face ef The -- eitar - causes variations therein, which are audible through' the -telephone, there being no sounds produced - when the rock contains no minerals. In exam- ining detatched portions of rock, the latter are placed upon a conducting plate connected With thé telephone through the battery; and the brush at the other tetminal is touehed — tó the rock, which, if it contains metal or metallic ores ? will cause sounds to be heard in the telephone. Instead of using the , conducting plate, the frag- ments of rock may be examined by being placed upon insulating material, and bringing both brushes in contact With each specimen. • DISTRICT OF MONTANA. .• • IESchttnNe-1 1>Tfergl - mending the Department of Dakota. has announced in orders die abolition of the Military District of Montana. This District was •established in 1877, , by General Alfred II. Terry, and has of late comprised the posts of Forts I Assinaboite, Maginnite yitteoula, and Shaw, and was, until his recent pro- motion. under the command of Vol. :John - R. Brooke. ' LITERARY GEMS. Iflothered for THE AGE.) He who aits Suppresses« ail the restrumento of desh, Yet in. h» idle \earl thinking ois them, Mee the melt and guilty hypocrite; Boa be. who, with strong body nerving mind, tniess ep Ins mortal powers to worthy work, N4.4 +yelling gam, Asjuna! +teal an one b000latbdr. • —The Sang Celestial. The king its but a man. as I aut; the violet smells to him as, it doth to me; the element shows to him as it doth to me; all his senses have but human conditions his ceremonies laid by, in his nakedness he appears but a man; and though his affections are higher mounted than ours, yet, When they stoop. they stoop with the like wing. --.Sitatopeare. l'i'e haed. of the king me soft and fair. They asever knew labor's stain. The hand* csef the robber redly wear The bloody hennit uf Cain. But the Muse methe man are hard and scarred With theories of tell and pain. —.Anonymous. 'It is better to desire than to enjoy, to love than to be loved.—Hazlitt\ .— A meta may shun Homo, yet rilbeareum tumor all be can, lie demo hot Death, which duds out every man. —Owen Meredith. It is conferring a kindness to deny at once e favor which your intend to re- fuse.—,Publism I owe Uwe mothiag lake good etiesr sus ' seeds— A maxis a god whom hoscshend freely bleeds: (lhainperne ten esessecrwle the damnedest evil; A Imusery parmate adorst the devil. —Peter Pilgrim.. Thé way ' to gain a good reputation. is to endeavor to be what you - desire to appear.--Seenee.. eareems. its opliewdid settings., something of the mdill Essay 'aim Atici - im «mime of wee uoes fuels to wissilum may atilaha. —India» Wisdom. mispio NEWS. It is amerted, that ex-Gov. Hauser intends to put into the Helena smelter project the Coltedale mines as part of his - stock_ Perhaps this is what the Great Falls Teiberse means when it Ray/37.—Heiena rapitalist- - 1 want - to see ' our smelter a success anti would be willing , tribute to the 'addi- tional I I I nt needed' fund if Sans Hauser not rung . :« the com- pany all e played -out 'nines and worn-out machinery he has in the territory. - -Boreaffle Otresicle. The Major Budd Gold and Silver Mining company has filed articles of incorporation with the territorial sqe-_ retary. The objects of the company are the sale and purchase of mines and utininAg_daime,,werating_ ing mines, extracting and reducing ores', erecting mills, purchasing mill sites and doing all kiwis of mining and milling business. The capital stock ieeloon.ono divided into500,000 shares at $10 each. Thé company is to exist for twenty years, and the trustees for the first three 'months are to be Daniel J. Welsh, B. W. S. Folk, George N. While\ - . D. D. Budd, and Henry Nickels_ The principal place of business is to be Helet, but part of the business's may be t nsacted out- ' si ' de of the - territory. Mining will be ' carried on in the Major Budd mine, the east and west extensions of the same and the Major Budd mill site fn Silver Bow and Jefferson counties.—fielena Indeprodeue JEFFERSON COUNTY MINES. [Ilmtan Minmg iteriew, Helena.1 A carload of ore arrived Teeetlay at the Montana Sampling Works from C. H. DaYie's mine, located near Placer. Chas. Anderson. the contractor of the — tunnel work to be driven on the property of the Helena and Bald Mountain Mining Company. left yes- terday for Bald Mountain to commence operations , - Mr. Anderson confident- ly expects to unearth an ore depos- it before he finishes his contract, sec- ond to no mine in Montana. The property of tbite:company is situated in Jefferson county, in the midst of a very prolific mineral field, and the stockholders, one and all, have great faith in their property. They have three parallel veins in Bald Mountain, and are concedtrating their development Work upon one of thew, having at this; date a taiin> el 7. ket ono the heart of thé nanmitarn_ GC) 3111.41.11111r • IVA THE • NORTHICRN\ ' P \rho Jairitimais Coax' Ft.crwAtce• AND , t3h-eat Short nine to le.antérn CItlabe. .• In' Lae Kick Wag, Through Cars, Tenn Mao Shapara —10 NORTIIERN PAcIF :— Ic T13IE TABLE. The fo11owit4t tithe lime r;f the arrival» 'Mid de- partures of train» ou the Northern Powitic at Helena by the latest schedule which took effect Muy : ARRIVAL. AT /13Lall• No. 1—Through West -bound Limited -9:00 an' No. 3—Through West -bound Local :45a in No. 2—Through East -bound Limited 9:I5 p No. 4—Through Kast -bound Local 3:e s In \ 8 --Butte and Helena Express. 2251' in \l0—Marysville Passenger ni \ 20—Rimini Am station •fflop n 17—Wickes, Bouder, and Calvin Pam p DIPARTUR13 ISOM No, 1—Through Wed -hound Limited ' 9715 a in No. 3 --Through West -bound Local 2:00 • ni \ 2—Through Eiod-bound Limited 9.5) p \ East -bound Loral 3411p In \ 7—Helena and Butte Express. 41:15 p ru \ 9—Marysville Passes er - :520 a in 19—Rinitill Accommi ation _ikon a ni \ 18—Wickes, Boulder, and Calvin PAM 9:10 a in A. L. STOKES, General Agent, C. S. FEE, helena. llontatia. Gen. Pam. and Ticket Agent, St,. Paul. ‘ArOZITAILL STAGE COMPANY, (*ferrying 117xxitoci JEISte•teoli AND Muslim Northern Pacific ljxprees. '7 COACHES LEAVE BOULDER DAILY FOR . ELKHORN WRITIRALL. PISA GRIME, SILVER STAR. \ SHERIDAN. VIRGINIA CITY AND DILLON ALSO From Calv : in for Butte City On the arrival of the Northern Pacific trains from Helena. W. J. TOWNSHEND, Supt. W. B. GAFFNEY, Agent at Madder. • LEGAL ADVERTISEMENTS. N OTICE TO CREDITORS. Estate of George R. NuYee; deceased. Notice a hereby given brthe undersigned, admit's- bitratrix of the estate of George R. Noyes., deceased, to the creditors of all persons having chinless against the said deceased. to exhibit them, with the neceseare vouchers, within four months after the tine publicist' if Ones notice, le the mid Adminia tratnx, at the °Mee of McBride dc Ilaidorti, in the county of tillveritow. Dated at Butte this 19th dirty of May, Dow, MARTHA A. NOYES, Administeitrix of the Estate of George 11. Noyes'. deceased. Find Publication, May Itt, Metet.' — ' • - ( toekhoIdere , »fantail. 'Flue fird regular annual Minting of the Stockhold- er' c>f the Iheulder IRAtildiuseititid Loon Astroriation will be held at the edtirt-1 se in liosilder, M. T., on Wesineesslay. Jtine 6, Peet. at g o'clock p. in.. for the purpose of electing interim to serve during the coin- ing yemr, adopting by-laws for the goVernmeist cif the Asseei, eel for the transac- tion of •eieh oilier business sim may tome be•fore it. Only those whoa. initiaticat teas him. been paid et that dine will be entitled to vote, l'reixiee meat he in writing. . W11.1.I'AM MORRIS, R. J. ihrcutirserv, •• ('hamu'.,,, 14eteettee; Owou Toil:Bow CAPiE. In the Probate Court of the county of Jefferson. Ter- rilewy of MOintatin. In the matter of the e•date of John Fout li, dtxweined. Order to Allow Citlele why order of sale ef personal r.122.tral estatrshould n m ot be ade., 7r. MeKay and N1 sis. V. Illeyers, the exerts- - tone of the eitate John frattli, diseased, having tiled their petit' herein praying for nit order of sale of all the real estate and personal property of said deced- ent, for the porpoises thereitt set forth, it is therefore o.- cicendli,v thedadreof--the fetid 4 torn:That all Per - sons interested in the estate of said deceased appear before the said Probate Court on Thursday, the 11th day of June. Peei, at ten deltaic in the forenoon of artiffany, at the court -room of mid Probate Court, at the coati - house in maid en of Jeffenion to show rouse why. an order should noi he granted to the said executors to sell all of the peremal property and real enrage of the odd deceased John Fouth. And that a copy of thim „nier he published at least four soseeeseive Weeks in THE Ana, • newspaper printed and published in said Jefferson county, Montana Territory. , J. C. KERLEY, Dated May 21, DM. Probate Judge, ALIAS SUMMONS. — • Jeffengoo Comity: Territory of Montana. In Justice's Court of' Basin Township. before L. Stator, Just ive, of the Peace. J. F. Rudy, plaintiff', odrsus E. Ike's', defendant. The people of the Territory of Montana to the abovenamed E. Beau, defendant, greeting. You are hereby summoned to be and appear before me, L. Subi, a Justice of the Peace of Jeffermon county aforesaid, at sny.ottlee in Brain, on the 20t1. day of June, A. D. 1/488, at four o'clock p. In, of maid day, then and there to answer the complaint of J. F. .Rudy, plaintiff as aforesaid, in a civil action to re - Lover the gum of Thirty-four 70.100 dollars for bal- ance due on money loaned, and on default thereof judgmeut will be rendered against you. E. Beau, de- fendant am aforepaid, for the sum Of Thirty-four 70- 100 dollars and the f.usts of suit in this behalf ex- pended. (liven cinder my hand fleis lith day of May, A. D. tiCTOR. Justice of the Peace. First publieatten MaY 14 DISS, NOTICE TO CO -OWNERS. To Morgan Williana, Alonzo Daxikantx, Thomas.; Dexter, John Wallace, and Warren Stowe, their heirs or ensigns: • You Yo pre hereby notiti'ed that the undersigned, your exisTrienc in the Shoofly muirtz lode mi g cl , situated west of and adjoining the Chile / seem quarts lode mint= claim, Idttle Pipestone n g district, Jefferson county, Montana Territory. bave expeeded on maid claim in labor In the yesne little and 1857. the sum of one hundred dollars each year, said aim being the required amount of laborticeesseiry to hold said quarts lode mining claim under Mellon Z124 id the Revised Statutes at the United States, to December 31, 1,1197. Anil if within ninety days after thie service of notice by publication you. fall en refuse kb contrib- ute your proportioss of much expenditure as caiwnens, your interest in maid -.Maim will become the property of the undersigned underlrOid Section 2321, Dated Butte, Mealtime, May 11. Pea, A. II. BARRET, I, it un.TIAN zrAtIKY. Finn publication May 16, Peet. N OTICE TO e0-0'ASERS. To Morgan Williams, J. B. Backer, Thom,.'. lk-tter, end Alonzo tiootlkunts, their heire and euestunew - - - • . You are hereby Mallleclit tiii , dridersigned, your roiiwiters in the Arctic quarts lode mining claim, sit- uated about one sued one-half miles from Ian. .1. Slammed's ranch on the 1,ittle Piantone, Little >stone mining district. Jefferson eountv,. Montana Territory, have expended on maid elailt1 in helper in the year ending December 31. Doe, how h - tired dollar's ($145', said sum beillg the required sunount of labor neceedary to hoist said quarts lode mining Mahn under Section 2.'124 of the Revised Mat- inees; of the United Staten, to 'December It, „(7. And if within ninety days after this service of testier l'y publiestleit you fail or renew to contribute your pro- portion „f such expenditure ne eaiwnerm, your inter- s. est t,. Mid claim will lessmee the prnperty of the un- demighee under said election 2124. Dated Butte, Montana, May 11, Dee. A. 11.-Ilietturr. . , Cutter' IAN .fe Ky. First pithliedien 7,lay,jjk,„1916.