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About The Hartford Pioneer (Hartford, Mont.) 1895-1895 | View This Issue
The Hartford Pioneer (Hartford, Mont.), 13 July 1895, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn85053184/1895-07-13/ed-1/seq-2/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
, a eg iA : ‘ m . ~~ d e & Ae & ; 4 i: ae ta PH ¢ Ng Be fi ‘ h r i , e . . ' The Weekly Pioneer. PUBPISHED WEEKLY BY THE HARTFORD PUBLISHING COMPANY. ee Rosert G. BaILry, vei Mer. oe ar ‘BSC RIPTION. Per Yetr, - . - ob =\ ta 00 Six Months, - sith we 1 25 Three Montiis, * 75 IXVARIABLY IN ADV ANCE. Kinvveciisashests, to insure prompt insertion, Should be handed in not liter than ‘Thursday preceding’ publication, rf 4 Rates made known at the public ation office. Address all communications to THER HABTFORD PUBLISHING CO. Chaney, Bontana: i a Entered at the spsathbtica et Clancy, Montana, ~ as second class mat ter. i — pabeeege ey “SATURDAY, JULY 3. Se a Ir the free silverites of the gouth want to be heard they will “fave to shout more lustily than .they did in the convention in old Kentucky. . et eee Since the introduction of ma- chines into.the Helena Herald office that paper has experienced a much-needed Change, and ‘now ~ takes its place in the front rank of state journs lism. SHOULD ‘attempt to wrest from plucky, Japan her well-earned war laurels the czar will find himself paddling in. the same boat with his celestial maj- esty. The same condition of affairs exist in Russia that caused the downfall of China—-lack of patriotism and love for the ruling power. : Tur people of Montana, asa unit, are in favor of the free and unlimited coinage of silver ata ratio of 16 to 1, and yet:the dem- ocratic and republican press of the state are making frantic ef- forts io ‘queer each other on that most important issue. For once it would be good policy to drop all party lines, unite and work in harmony for the accom- plishment of that greatest of all boons to the people of the west. In Northwest Mag: zine for July appears a write-up of the mines in and around Marysville of which any camp might feel proud. Eigh pages of this popu- lar magazine is devoted to their description, intermingled with which are beautiful illustrations of the town and most noted prop- erties. Another special feature in the July issue is ‘*Recollections of the.Nez Perce War,” J. Parker. Tuk Montana Mining and Market Reporter comes, to hand this week aaker the title of the Western Mining World. ‘The Reporter was ushered into the field of journalism nearly four years ago a8 a representative of Montana mining industries, but having outgrown its territory made the change so as to cover the entire great northwest. It is now one of the leading mining journals of the west and should receive the hearty support of all. AN exchange says the printing press has made presidents, killed poets, furnished bustles for beau- ‘ties and punished genius with criticism. It has curtailed the power of kings, converted bankers into paupers and graced pantry shelves. It has made paupers out of college presidents; it heb c _ educated the homeless and robbe ‘tthe philosopher of his reason; it smiles and cries and dies, but it can’t be run to suit everybody, and the man will go ctracy who tries. 4 > It is not ‘often that such an unusual départure is taken from the time-honored custom 6f gush- ing notices about the angel of death as the orre found below, but as it was clipped from a: Missouri exchange due allowance should be made: ‘While it is almost a _crime to speak ill of the dead, we feel it our duty to tell the truth about Miss Mary Boyer, who dieti . last night... She never spoke a -decent word about any person, living or dead, and slander sprung by Frank |; from her mouth like toads frem a girl ina fairytale. If she goes to heaven we don’t want to go there, and we believe we voice the sentiment of every man, woman and young lady in this burg. We gladly contribute a quarter for ice for Mary. She will need it.” ’ Every column in. a newspaper contains, from. twelve to twenty thousand pieces, of metal,. dis- plicemeng of which would cause a blunder or typographical error, says an exchange. And yet some} people lay claim to remarkable smartness if they discover an error in a newspaper. | When they find a word with a wrong letter in it, or a letter misplaced, they are sure they could spell that word right and are happy for the whole day, and go around to the neighbors and tell them that the editor has spelled a word wrong. Witn very few exceptions, there are no townsites more favor- ably located’than Hartford. The town is beautifully situated, com- manding an extensive view of the district: It is well watered and tle mountain breezes are pure and exhilarating. It is of necessity the distributimg point for the entire canip, there being no other town on the raiiroad which is so easy of access to the different mines. The price of real estate, considering the many advantages the town possesses, is extremely low. The Halford lane, over whith all ores from the mines are hauled to this place for shipment, has been repaired and put in excellent condition, and when ‘work is commenced on the concentrator things around our burgh will boom and prices advance accordingly. Better in- vest now and be ahead of. the stampede which is sure to come. EE GEREN Farner, dear father, come home with'me now, for ma has some carpets to beat; she’s got all the furniture out in the yard, from the front porch clear to the street. ‘The stove must come down and be put in the shed, and the yard must be cleaned of Uead grass, for it’s time to clean house and the devil’s to pay, and the front window needs some new glass. Father, dear father, come home with me now, and bring some bologna,and cheese. It’s most 12 o'clock and there’snothing to eat- I'm so hungry-I’m weak in the All the dinner we'll have will be cold scraps and such; and you'll have knees. to eat standing up, too, for the tables and chairs are all ott in the yard—Oh, I wish that house cleaning was through. Father, dear father, come home with me now for ma is as mad as a Turk; she says you're a lazy old thing and she preposes to put you to work. There is painting to do and paper to: hang, and window casing to scrub, for it’s house cleaning time and you've got to come home and revel in suds and cold grub. A COUNTY ‘superintendent ina neighboring county recently asked every teacher at the institute who took their local papers to hold up their hand, and out of about a hundred present only six re- sponded, at which. he expressed great surprise and said: ‘You don't spend one dollar a year with these papers, yet you expect them to print free of charge natices of institutes, insert long programs of same and full reports of what you say and do on these occasions, and thus expect them to adver- tise you and your abilities in your chosen professions, thus assisting you to climb the ladder to higher positions and-better salaries with- out a cent’s postage in return.” ‘Your position in this matter would lead me, were I an. editor of these papers, to promptly throw into the waste basket any Communica- tion seit in by any societies the metribers of which were too proud or too stingy to take a papet, or, if I inserted it, to demand full advettising rates for every, line published.—Fx. ss as —— — es iy Jonx Donco is a Hungarian, citizen of «New York, Bertha He closed by saying: « * ‘apartments quietly pulled off his whole is fitted With a lid, one set Donco is his wife and James Big, also a Hungarian, is ‘a resideht of the same tenement where the Doncos livé.. A few evenings since Mr. Donco returned home to find his neighbor sleeping peace- fully by the side of Mrs, Donco. Naturally he made arow.. ‘To his protests both man and woman declared with deep fervor that neither knew of the presence of the other in that room. . Big had! come home with the accompani-|: {ment of a large-sixed’ jag and wandering into the Doncos’ clothes and crawled into bed in such a.way gs not to awaken the ‘old lady.” . When he told this to the husband the latter showed distinct signs of incredulity. Fi- nally He listened: to his wife’s declarations and asked her, ‘‘Will you swear it?” Both declared they would, and so he marched them off to Harlem court, where each made a solemn oath that their peculiar proximity was due entire- ly to-accident. That satisfied Donco, and the, three went home together the best of friends. CHLORIDE OF “BROMINE AS A SOLVENT FOR GOLD. According to the Australasian Ironmonger, Dr. Gaze, of New Zealand, has obtained a patent in which. he particularly claims} the use of chloride of bromine as a solvent for gold, the use of caustic soda to recover: the chlo- rine arid bromine for use, and the recovery of the gold from the solution by electrolysis instead of by chemical precipitants. Buta very important, if not the most important, part of his claim is the method adopted for making the solvent used in gold exttfact- ing. He proposes using a con- taining vessel about three feet in diameter and two feet deep. A number of porous cells, filled with: plain water, are placed in this vessel, each porous cell having a number of carbon rods placed in it. The contairlidg vessel itself is filled with a strong solution of chloride and bromide of sodium, and mere, catbon rods vare im- mersed in: othe solution. The of carbons‘ being connected with on§*pole of a powerful dynamo mathine, and the other set with thé other pole. One passing a strong current. of eleetricify through the .clectrodes fhe two salts are split up, the cholrine and bromine uniting, and the chloride of bromine thus formed is forced into a vessel overhead. This solution of chloride of bro- mine is in turn run into a vat containing the crushed ore in sufficient quantity to thoroughly saturatg atid cover it. ‘The lid of this vat is then screwed down and air pumped ‘in, so as to make a pressure of 50 pounds to the inch and left for one or two hours, by which time the whole of the gold is dissolved, out of the ore. After this treatment the contents of the vat are placed on a filter and the solution. pumped out of it bya vacuum pump. The solu- tion is again used on other charges of ore until it either becomes rich in. gold or weak in solvent pow- ers, and when it has reached this point it is run into an electrolytic cell similar to the, one used for producing the solvent, and by passing a strong current of elec- tricity through it the chloro- bromic acid is. liberated from the gold and the metal falls down as a purple powder, which only re- quires collecting and fusing with a Suitable flux to produce , a bir. The solvent itself seems to’ “Aptit up as the solution bec omescharged with hydrochlorie and hydrobro- mic acids after it has been‘ysed for several times. © This they in- ventor neutralizes. with catigtic soda, producing gain the origi* nal salts, chlori sodium, which will again be used for the production of the soivent. Any gold,that is in this solution is recovered by depositing it on a metallic plate by meanc of. elec: tricity. The process is a con- tinual splitting up and reforming of the salts used ‘to aco 7e solvent. t und bromide off SHINGLE GULCH. Part of the District Seldom Heard From, But Is Gotng to Be a Hummer. This district has been more thor- oughly prospected than is generally, known, and abounds in “good leads, many of them showing galena on the surface. . Franklin R. Wallace has been stopping at Hartford the past month and has mage frequent visits to Shingle. located claims. _ The Queen of the Hills has a. shaft about about 70 feet deep, and a large body of fine galena ore has been en- countered. Mr. Vinson is quite elated over the strike. Mr. Jameson has found good ore in the Top Hand, and Marshall & Shook. are well satisfied with the present showing of the Blue Bird, ‘The Mina, belonging to Mr. Matheson and other Helena gentlemen, has been thoroughly* prospected by 12 different openings and the surface in- dications are great. We are informed that a half interest in this property is offered to any” one who will sink 100 feet. fthis claim were in Lump gulch it. would create great, excites ment, - Shingle gulch is bound to come \|to the front.. Now is the time for bargains in that district. Weare _|informed that 15 claims have changed hands in Shingle during the past two weeks. Some Helena capitalists have made frequent visits to the gulch lately and before long we expect to nent of some large deals. ‘ ctviressniciemscnlinlailpiliasieanepsiinn semen Lucas County FRANK J. CHENEY makes oath that Sr afte oF OHIO, City oF ToLEDO) ver F. J. Cheney & Co., doing business in the city of Toledo, county and state 4foresaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED, DOL- LARS for each and every case of catarrh that cannot be cured Dy Her use of Hall’s Catarrh Cure. e FRANK J. CHENEY. , sa ’ A. W. GLEASON, ee 3 a Public. and mucous surfaces. of .the system. Send for testimonials, free. FRANK J. CHENEY & Co, Toledo, oO. Sold by all druggists. . YESave *. If you are in need of Counter Slips, Envelopes, Bill Heads, Letter Heads, Note -Heads, Dodgers, . Posters, Invita- tions, tickets or any kind of ‘ JOB WORK-~— a” . & Call on or write to the Pio- Work of all. kirids exevuted neatly ‘neer for estimates. and promptly at very low rates. A ae ee es ESTRAY NOTICE, Taken ae June 1, otte bay horse, branded G? (combined) on left thigh; one icant no brands. Own- er can haye same by priswiing property and pay ing charges. Wo. BAiey. Dated Hartford, June 15, 1895. He has also made a good]: map of the district, showing about 90 | he is the senior partner of the firm of. Sworn to before me and subscribed |, .’ sex presence this 6th day of Decem- berA. D. 1886. 1 Hall’ Ss Catarrh Cure 4, ‘taken inter- 6 nally and acts directly on the blood} '* Prices Quartz Location Placer Location Water Greatly. Reduced | Portland ‘ en A aor eee Payne, Henry , Recelvers, Through m Cars : -+-BETWEEN— Helena hie 8020SCOCOS™S Pullman <A Sleeping Cars Spokane Tacoma Seattle £ Pourist Mlegant Dining Cars Sleeping Cars AMAMADADAAAAALAA AMAA TR: AdAA TIME SCHEDULE. * In Effect Sunday, June 2, 1895. LEVE HELENA No. 10, Daily, except Sunday....... . 15am, ARRIVE HARTFORD No. 10, Dail), exeept Sunday......... \8:07 a.m, LEAVE HARTFORD No. a, Daily, except Suntlay.......... 4:00 p.m ARRIVE HELENA No. 9, Daily, except Sunday......:04. 5:20 pam, For further particulars, i »8, folders, rates, etc., call or write to C. RNET, Station Agent, Hartférd, Mont. A. D. EDGAR, GFNERAL AGENT, HELENA, MONTANA, ‘|Chas. S. Fee, G. P. & T. A. St. Paul, Minn. ON’T CROWD _JUST PUS! It is just push and enterpries that *| has given to the Northwest the newest . and best’ of Trangcontinental routes, the-— Great HOT Northern = - “Relay Line The Newand Breinid Way EAD] «« WEST The Great Transcontinental Ril” -assengers Ticketed to-— St. Paul Chicage Boston New York Phitedeiphia Winnipeg Spokane Seattie Portiand Tacoma San Francisco And All Other Points. Close Connection at Minneapolis and St. Paul for all points Kast and South, Comfortable first-class cpaches and Palace Sleeping Cars, Tourjsts, Biffet, Smoking, Li- brary and Dining Cars. We are agents for all first-class Steamship Lines, and can ticket you to all Oriental and Occidental points. - Prepaid passage arranged, TIME TABLE LEAVE HELENA No. 4, Atlantic Express, eastbound 10: 1s pm No. 2, Pacific Express, westbound 11:35 am No. 1, Butte Local, daily e 7145 pm ARRIVE HARTFORD No. 1, Butte Local, daily.. So) pm LEAVE HARTFORD {iodo ABO No: 2, Butte Local, daily é / ARRIVE HELENA No. 4, A Istic Express, ¢astbound 10:05 pre No. 23, Pafific Express, evestbound 11:2 am No. 2 Bette Local, daily. M08 ate For information, time cards, maps ana tickets call bn or write vee c.W. PITTS, City Ticket Agent. C. £. DUTTON, _ General Agent. HELENA, MOND. | ea