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About The Age (Boulder, Mont.) 1888-1904 | View This Issue
The Age (Boulder, Mont.), 26 June 1889, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn84036049/1889-06-26/ed-1/seq-4/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
• G icortere 1' It' A It' I.' :sr 't ľ prawns IA Fruit*, Confeeblottery, Nuts. Tobaccos and Cigarit and Notions of Various Kind& Au. Vaatirnme or (»Egg Onterui», Fume m'en Ilzaaute writ. at Karr is Timis >erase:, Ir Witt. etc run Alm TO KP:1:1` Titres : Pusan AND tx >Wert( met . qt . **. 1 , might to a certain extent be accounted day last week in (bemusing this met- eor, but, crime seems generallz te tereted the 6perience of Chicago to meet its just punishmen and thleshow the advantage of the leasing sudden outbreak, of the fiercest pas : ' system. It said: \Thir city fisdishly Biers muet be accounted for in some bartered away the major portion of its t other tyay. 1 endowment in 1S3 . 7 or 1838 for 'tome- - ! thing like 83s,toort. Four blocks of • Tire TO surri.v. att. Sims MEN swearope thing befort: the ! the school liou , of the . south ., town bettm.us Scheel Hooka, labhotil Books, Mantel Hooka • 'o grand jury and m to tbc opposite oit the . • ere retained. end these tosday are Kept etat,tantly on hand. this b g ein the Boukler Agency fur the authorized TERSITORIALTSXT-SOOSSI , ORPUBLIC SCHOOLS M. lir..A.TZTIN, 3raemilatos3.88.1:nae• Sunalaser Styles of Goods Now In Stork. The gentlemen of Boulder 'are requested to give hie a trial before sending their orders ti, Other (1,W1111. Perfect Cl. are guaranteed and goods to nuit all tastes and purees eau be furniehed. ''\• I have taken the agency for the DOM 1C:4'1110 H in;VV1 N Cr. Mtachi The heel Sewin g Ittdeltine made. A tiyonis desiring to purchase a machine would li .. tio well to call and ex- amine the . .. retie to et y place of hueinerts on Men street, opposite Bach, Cory At Co.>, in , BOULDER. - - MONTANA . HELENA ADVNRTISEM Esrs. I IIRBIRT CHANDLIIR 1Cmploy rnent Agent. —ki— Purudiabeo Help of All Minds. - às No. 24, EWA ARDA STREET, IIELENA, M..reLvt.‘. ii . j . 12,11 AND CHEMICAL I...1.13011ATORY • ' . '1 11 . vl..)NTANA. Gold and Kilter 50 Zinc • la no ritIver,gold anti lead 2 On • Tin.......... ................(t 00 (dead 1 tin Antimony 500 topper I 50 Arsenic 5(5) Mille* I 50 Iron 50 O WalleSSfititild t is ne form of argunula the best improved> trove and yield presented by the Helena hublendeid ; an enor mous reeenuesthus lightening against the grand -jury system• u l time burden of taxation. If the whole such things really do occur, a convic- tion for perjury would seem to be the uatural and inevitable restilt. The change from the grand -jury to . the section lad been reserved, , the rentals to -day would cover the entire esd of maintaining the public schools; in fact, the revenue would be so.lare that, and partin another, the jurisdiction for the prosecution of such offense -Isbell be in either county bordering upon such lake, river, stream, or body of water. 7. That any person appointed Fish and Game Warden under the pro- visions of this act shall, before enteis ing upon thed' • 'hares of the duties of - his said office, give a bond to the Ter- ritory of 31ontasra; which said -bond i shall be approved by the County Com- tniasioners and filed in the office of the County Clerk in the anotty where I such Fish Warden is appointed, and in • a sum to be Sized b» the County Com - prosecuting -attorney syftem, Itowever, after ¡providing for the seheols,•tedE- I missioners and not to exceed one thou 'would not change (he datraeter of the cient money wOuld remain to -cover sand dollars for the falehful perform - men who lee a proneness for telling nearly if not all other municipal ex- ance of the duties of Os :office. This one version of an -affair on one occa s act shall take effect on and after 'M)trch sion and an entirely different version at snne - C - hther time, so the insplied evil 1st, 1889. • Approved February 20, 188. would still remain. Perhaprethe A- d/psi/rat supposes that prosecuting GETTING THE BEST pt.' ' LIFE. attornesS will be endowed with such superior wisdom as to e able to tell When a complainant is lying to them. Truly, 'tis a consummation devoutly to he wished; but, alse! highly im- probable of fulfilment. MsvoeGussi . of New York, seems penotes, thps readcring u unecesssary the taxtla'which now discourage `industry and promote fraud and inequality.\ The advantageg to be gained from the syktent of leasing the school -lands are so great and so manifest that no man in Montana onight to be found op- posing the scheme. GAME AND FISH >WARDENS. The following is the law enacted at the lat session of the Montana Legia- tire prova tug a • „ 00 es nog have game and fish wardens if desired by the people and appointed by the County Cornmi-siotters: • , An act providing for the better pro- tection of game and fiela and for the creation of the office of game and fish warden.' Be it enadext by th, LeyWatire Aeetribly of Territory u . f Ilonhua: • SEC'TION 1. There is hereby created the t :flee of Gante and Fish Warden er each of the counties of the Territory of Montana, who may beappointed to 'hold - office subject to the previsions of this act. Sm. 2. The ditties of said office — r shall be to examine into and to in- quire as te any infractions and viola- tions of thtsgame and fish lawertf the Tersàdiga of., Montana in the county for a which he is appqinted, and to in- stitute . prosecutions, for adds infrac- tions or violations iss the courts of said county; that he shall be vested with' all of the powers of the Sfseriff of the county in making arrests and in the prosecution of all offensessigainst the game and fish laws of the Territory. Sm. 3. Upon petition being made to the Board of County Commissioners of any county, signed by not less than one hundred residents, tax -payers of said county, and requesting the ap- pointment- of such Game and Fish Narden for said county, such Board of kCommissioners, if km their judgment the hest interests of the county demand it, may appoint some suitable person to act as such officer; that such Game and Fish Warden shall hold his offiee for not more than twelve nor less than three months. The length of his term of °nice shall be fixed in his appoint- ment by the said Board of Commis - shrine. SEC. 4. rr . L C. POWER ?it BRO.. ALIle IN M ate iltirtn Nllait,tr oy and NI i 1...0 ›tttppttere. MONTtNt. eon BLAKE'S IMPROVED STEAM PUMPS. , ---STEAM---STEAMnoiars— AND COMMON 821t32 IffitOUOIIT IRON W/11118 Safety Nitro f'•:tv•lor, ratu. Pose. Et\. 14TILAWRoAT 111». : : : ItELENA. M. T. ¡IRE THOMAS tlitElin SAVINGS BANK ON' 111...:I.•NUS: • Incorporated Under the La\ of Montana. PAID t'..1 PITA L. TIP.451.1M CRUMP Presideut T. II. CARTER Vito -President. C. I.. DAIIIER Treateure•r. E. J.-C.tItTP.11 Secretary. Allows six per cent. interest on Savings Deposita, compounded January and July. Tranitact.• ti rneral banking business, draws ex . - change on therteireal cities of the l'aiited Slates and Europe. Wit! snake loan., t' y and rit y mode, and real estate mortgages. rss LUX . JttIJRINTAT.... 161)1 per year; months; 83 throe months. 10[ you want a Ilse daily newspaper. Subscribe for the lir.t.esA DAMN Jotitti If you want good Republican doetriiie, Subscribe for the IletENA DAILY J,URNAL. if you want a full Associated Pre,',' report., Subscribe for the HELENA DAILY JOURNAL. o you want all the news of Montana, Subscribe for . the HELENA DAILY JOURNAL. If you are already a sub. atilber to any other Helena paper, dincon v outwit and Subscribe for the Ilitt.xxA DAILY JOURNAL. If you want a le'lr.t-Cloa. Weekly Newt paper, subscribe for the • V r k.r EEKT.J'Y JOT.T12,1\1\ A. L. Subscription Price, $:i Per Anntun. • itANaRTA mum= AND STOOK JOURNAL, THE LlEADING PAPER IN TIIF. NORTHWEST. DEVOTED TO AGRICULTURE, LIVE . STOCK PALMING, HOUSEHOLD INTER1*G'S, AND FAMILY READING. fillbeterlpt Ion Price. $8.00 per Year. charactei- and diotermination •Of will, notwit1Htaiting . he may be said to . - have bought his way to the honorable position which he eccupies. The ruling powers in New York city de- cided .that all telegraph-, telephone. and other electric wires irt the city should be placed underground, instead of disfiguring and endangering the streets as lieretofore. A date was fixed by which time the chime Must be made, but the companies thought that the city would not dare to enforce the law and therefore neglected to obey the notice given them. Mayor Grant, when he saw the policy of the *companies. again notified agent that en the set day he would proceed to cut down all , the polea s lestring wires. Still the companitss thought they. were stronger than the people, but when the set day came around Mayor Grant proceeded to carry out the law and eut down the poles. The result is - that to -day the companies ift>ts mush more re:meet for the mayor of the City and for the public rights and interests than they had three months ago. THE SCHOOL LANDS. • • IĽ has been suggested in various parta of the Territory that • the Con- stitution of Montana shall include a clause prohibiting the sale of any of the school -lands granted to the State by the National Government and pro- viding for the leasing of the lands for a:leng period, the State to retain the right to fix at certain intervals the amount of rent. to be paid according as the land has increased or decreased in value. The principal advocate of 'the measure has been Judge Hedges in the editorial columns of thellelena Herald but the scheme is so manifestly just and practicable that but little op- Positioh has been presented. Among the objections presented was one that the grant of the lands Provided that they should not be leased for a longer period than five years, and another that the plan would involve much trouble anti expense in making leases and looking after flits:collection of rente. As Judge Hedges says, if the State .adopts the policy Cou.gress will doubtless modify the conditions of the grant. As to the other objection, the experience of other . States in similar matters imlicates that the objection has no. good grounds but rather is based on inexperience. THE AGE heartily approves' of the plan of preserviug to the people the school -lands of the new State • and trusts that the Delegate . s from Jeffer- son county to time Constitutional Con- vention will give to the measure the influence of their voices and their votes There is no good reason why the people should not retain for them - Silver Bow, and Deer Lodge counties all having had recent violent and en- selves the -value which will \ come to warrante d mur d ers. W ere cour t s o r these lands , through the increase in law derelict in their duties the plague population. AGE - - BOULDER, MONT. r WEDNESDAY, JUNE 26, 1889. An EPIDEMIC of murder seems to he 'visiting the Weag.Side, Beaverhead, 11E.I.N.NA, M. T. The Chicago -Yews That s such Game and Fish Warden may be removed or tempest- riis• suspended by the Board of County Commisaioners who appointed him, upon pron't of his incompetency or neglect of duty, br whenever in the judgment of said Board his services are not necessary. Sc. 5. The compensation of such officer shall be at the rate of not to exceed one hundred dollars per month during the time which he shall serve, which accounts shall be audited and allowed by the Board of County Com- missioners as other accounts, and shall be paid by warrants drawn on .the general fund of the county; that he shall also receite the sums allowed by law to informera in 'all prosecutions which he shall institute under the game and thrla law, and in which the line imposed and the coats of the prosecutions are eolleeted- \ SEC. 6. WItenever any offense is committed against the game or fish laws of the Territory' of Montana, upon any river, lake, stream, or body of water which is the boum tween different counties of t one ' tory, or which Hem partly in o ary be- e Terri - county The London Standard, in discussing * whether it pays to try to live to be a hundred years old, gives some useftil suggestions. It says; The man 'who really jets the Irst that cap_be got out of life, is the man who, with a fairly good constitution to begin with, is o squander it at on every occasion in a sufficient Quire. He keeps no account of profit and'hmsS with his vital energy; he sees work te s tlo and he does it, he sees pleasure to be enjoyel and he enjoys it. :He is alive all his life save when he sleeps; and he wakes from each fresh slumber looking the -world cheer- fully and courageously in the face, and ready anil even eager to be a' combat- ant when there is a good, honest fight, and a runner when there is a good, honorable -race afoot. He May. not live to' be 100, but he may live to be 70, 75, or even 80. He may have a career, if not so conspicuous, yet as active, as varied, and as restless RS that, say, of Mr. Gladstone, and yet not be really old when time registra him among the aged. \Better fifty years of Europe than a cycle of Cathay,\ and better twenty years of uncalculated activity than • the slow pulse and measured step of the cir- cumspect . snail that creeps surely on to one hundred. We are not de s flouncing eel tena Han s. They are like angels' visits, few and far- between, and they are too rare not to be wel- comed. Moreover, we doubt not that they deserve their length of years. But it would be a misfortune if it was ever thought an object of life to live very long. The object of life is to live. Wee nobly, live bravely. As Shakespeare says: \Ripeness is all.\ THE SHOP -GIRL'S VIEW OF IT. In Lee Meriwether's recent book. \Story of a Tramp,\ a conversation with a. shop -girl is recorded. She made $220 a year. It cost her for board $108.50 amid to dress $111.50. Asked why she spent so \much money on her clothes, the reply was: \The bosses make us dress nice and it costs half our wages. I hope you will help us and that the government will make the price of dress -goods come down.\ Mr. Meriwether's apt immarks are: \This sales -girl probably loca not nn- derstandten lines of political economy, but, forced by the nature of her occu- pation to spend a large portion of her meager earnings on dress, she wents the government to help her by making 'the price of dress -goods come down.' The principal way for the government to accomplish this is to abolioh the high -tariff taxes. That is the first step that is being demanded by wage- earners, both men and women, the more they reflect upon the way 'pro- tection' protects them by raising prices on ell the necessaries of life.\ VALUABLE EXCHANGES. [Burlington Free Prem.] • Editor's Young Wife—Mv dear, you must pardon me for coming down in a wrapper this mbrning,\ Editor—Don't mtoition it s my leve. Some of our most valued exchanges come to eis in wrappers. s' I A D iehard diatriet Irt Jeffereon rowdy A REMARKABLE HATCH. [F.aehangs.i 'I have learned by observation that , owls never build nests. They lay two big eggs and will deposit s them in squirrels' nears hawks' nests, or any similar receptacle. They never make Mateo( their own. I ftmundaturiottit nest once on Pisgah hill. There were ten eggs in it of different sizes, some of them very large. I s ttfok them home and set them under a lien. They all hatched out but two, but at differ. ent - timeg. The result was a screech. owl; four pheasants, two wilchturkeyms, and a wood-dulk, and I raised them all. I found afterwards that what I supposed was a nest was not a nest at all, but a place where an egg -collector had deposited some of, lua spoils one day while lie went in search for more.\ Attesziticsis. 1 31\a.rer5eirist t AND, - v M 1•1 - I have located and built a new shop on Main street, Boulder, opposite (tube Worrell\ Livery Stable. I ant prepared to do tirst-elattei work in all lines of Blaeltrunithing and Agricultural works and implementer of all kinde. I have meeured the service@ of Mr. 'Morrie elhey, Of New York, who learned hie trade under the instruction of Prof. MacDoyle, one of the beet horseshoers and horse-farriere of NeW York and Ba -ton. Ile will guar- antee first -clam alioeing and doe- torfitereeTliqC A liptffle — resinction a ill he given to liverymen's trams. Ea - pedal titre taken in repairing light buggies and wagona. I will also do wood -work of all description at reasonable price«, for my motto I' to live and let live. Intone give toe a tall. You will are the big aigu on Main street—the Gold lions. Shoe and Gobi Anvil. The best and cheapest horse -farrier and shoein g ‚hop in the State. lkoi't fail to tell before going elsewhere. I a -ill take no advantage of any one. 1 am an old experieueed hand at tire bust - ores, having had forty .vettra experience in .11 parts of the United Staten. 1 will prove these Meta by ally work. I do nut mean to brag, but come and ase for yOUrselten. R. G. l're)priattoiro. SALOONS. TI717.1 1....I 1 1\17... CASINO - H. RIEDEL.- 1 PROPRIETOR 311 , hastretet, Boulder, Mont. The cosiest plate in town to spend a anciai-leour. Pure White Rye Whisky, Seven -year -old McBrayer Whisky, Imported Old Tow Oln, Jamaica Rum, Scotch & IPTah Whiskiee, and Phillip Best's i I waukee Beer, \ always on hand. Be sure to call if you want to enjoy »good drinb and a pleanastelime. . r r /C)1:31P1'ffià EAST, Olt NIL/ TO • ÁLL 41-a , VI , ENT, 'NORTH and SOUTH, - UM - AT t t THE UNION PACIFIC t t o Orstaat But trait and Smotsuir Omer No. 50N. MAO; STREET, BUTTE, MONT. E. V. MAZE, City Ticket Agent. . J. A. LEWIS, General Agoni. LEG ADVERTISEMENTS. D ESERT LAND FINAL PROOF—NOTICE FOR Publication UNITED STAlke „AND AMUR, Ileums, Montana, June 3, late. j Notice is hereby given that David Hoopea, of Boul- der, Montana, hoe filed nonce of his intentIon to make proof on his desert land claim No. 1752, for the nvr% and w% ne% are. 28, tp 5 n. r 3 w., before the Clerk of the District Court of Jefferson county, M, T., at Boulder. Montana, on Wedneaday„ the 17tk day of July. DIM. He names the following witnesses to prove ther complete irrigation and reclamation of said land: Thomas II. Holt, Robert Ayers, Henry Nelson. and Benjamin F. Hoopes, all of Boulder. . to. W. LANGHORNE, Register. ÎV1Ă Publication June F aux -ess SOLID GOLD WATCl e klrer goes Sold for 210:1 until lately. Best Watch l u the world. Perfect timekeeper Warranted. Heavy Solid Gold Hunting Cases'. Both ladies' and gents.' mitten, with works and „ses of equal value. One person in each locality ten secure one free, together with our large and valuable line of HOUSEHOLD SA MPI.ES. These samples as as the watch, we send FREE, and after youhave kept thorn in your home for two months and ehown them to those who may have called, they become your own property. Thom who write at once can be sure of meet ving the WATCH and SAMPLES. We pay all express., freight, rk. address .„ STINSON k CO., Boe Si'. Portland, Maine. Irrine Tis Agm—It will !leech every . a.