Newspaper Page Text
THEANACONDA STANDARD: FRIDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 37, 1889.
5
THEBUTTE FIRE BRIGADE.
riu
HoeclalOorreat
ndnicrof the- SUmdmrfl.^Burnt, Sep*. 38.^Tbe Butte Fire Bri^^gade to-dajr completed the purehaae of a^lot for the erection of a Are building for^tliemaelvee. Tbe lot ia situated on Weat^Court street, baek of Maul's store, and was^purchased of Clark * Bielenhers for^fa.ffHf Chief Thome* has for some time^been at work inapectiiiR various Hite^ for^the brigade's location, and the entire de^^partment will be pleased at the selection^made. The lot is so situated that from it^the voluutccra can run down hill in al^^most any direction. The lot 20k1U0^feet. The plans, so far as perfected,^are that the Brigade bouse shall lie^oite story of brick and a 12-inch wall.^There will be sleeping apartment* pro^^vided and the intention is that 10 of the^40 member* of the brigade shall deep at^tbe house all the time so that they* may^be ready for a Hrc at any hour. It i* also^their intention to make the member* of^the paid department rustle to heat them^to the Are. It* three hose cart*. 1.5UI feet^of bose and other paraphernalia will be^trausfered to the new house, as well n*^the Are Itell. which is the property of the^brigade. The brigade was orguliiztH I in^187B and has ex|^eiide^l aliout^fCVMXJO in fire apimratu* since that^time. It* efficient service during the past^18 year* has earned the gratitude of^Butte's citizens, who ure airre-e-el that al^^though there is now a paid department,^there i* still room for the volunteers. The^IKiid firemen are kept pretty busy at pres^^ent inspecting chimney tines and con^^demning houses that are unsafe. The^mutual rivalry between the volunteers^and the paid firemen will he to tie* benefit^of the city, since both will work harder^and accomplish more than if cither were^working alone.
Plan*will at once he drawn for the^new building, its erection will begin very^soon, and it is thought the brigade will^occupy it* new home in :tn days. The^building will Is- 'M feet by 50 feet.
LOSSOF LIGHT THRO' WINDOWS.
Howdo people manage
!mK* mil ^%# nMUr1**
Ifthe artificial^limb gets but of order5.^' repeated Mr.
veryoften that a limb with all
Fanner.
Theyusually hat
GIRLS WITH RED HAIR.
Resultsof Memtt Iiite-re-eet In* experiments^Recently Mailv In (irrniniiy.
Someinteresting experiment* huvelieeti^undertaken hy Hcrr Herabersr, with the^co-o|m'ration of Hcrr G. Schulse, chief^engineer of the Berlin work* of Messrs.^Frederick Siemens * Co., for the puri^o^c^of ascertaining the loss of light in passing^through window-glass of various kind* in^general use. The experiment* were con^^ducted with a Bun-eon photometer in^which two Argniid gas-burner* of equal^illuminating power were plueed at the two^ends of the graduated har. After equali^^ty of illumination of the screen had lieen^established, a plate of the glass to be^teste* I was interposed between one of^the light* and the screen, and the extent^of the displacement of the latter thus^necessitated for the rc-cstublisliiiu-iit of^equality of illumination on both sides^gave the measure of the opacity off^the glass. A simple translu^^cent but not transparent glass^showed a loss of 27 per cent, of light.^Cathedral glass, such a* is used in stained^glass work a* a hasis, ls iiigclcar, but with^a slight ground tint, showed a loss of^|^or cent. Plain cathedral glass with a^white tint also showed a loss of li'VJ |^cr^cent. Plain white Khenish ^double glass*^^gave a loss of lu per cent. Plain, thin^ininror glass obstructed 111 |wr cent of^light. The two last together, with an in^^terval of six centimeters Is-twecu them,^showed a loss of ^_'l |s r cent. Cathedral^and Khenish ^double glass^ together,^with the same interval, showed a loss off^Si per cent. A ground glass with cut^stars, together with a white iNickground,^such a* i* found in house fanlight*, ol^-^Ktnictcd tit) per cent, of light. A new,^clean piece of ground glass without stars,^together with the dusty white glass back^^ground, u* in the preceding cx|^crhiiont,^showed a loss of 4^^ per cent.
THEREVIStO LIST
talliesto be Held in Montana In the Next^Two Vteek*.^Owing to the fact that Col. Pemberton^will be unable to keep the appointments^made for him by the democratic state^central committee, that committee has^l^cen coni|iellfd to make a new list of po^^litical appointments fur the meeting* dur^^ing SeptcinlxT. Below is the revised list^of the places at which the various *|M^akcr*^will address meeting* during the cam^^paign :
MAUINNIM A N il tooi.K.
Anaeonihi-^eiileinl^e r -^.^Butte^Se|4einbcr :^.
MAIilNM*.
KeMIxslge, Mrptcmber -^i^.
TOOI.K.Deer I^*lgc -Sejitcnilsr 'J7.
i'KMHKRTONAND smith.^Tiiwiuie-nil- Mriitciiibfr 27.
IMHMNMami uu'KriiKii.^Helena- -Se-|itciiilier 30.
^KMItr.KTON, iii! KKOKO ami SMITH.
HozeniiUi Septf iiihcr
UNMA NII WOKI^.
Wickes,Septi-mlMT ST.^Ib'U'ua, Ne-|iti-mbe-r '^.
MinlU.KTOM.
Itillliig*.Heitteinlier 27.^Miles f it^, Se-|iti-inhi-r
STYLESIN WOODEN LEGS.
How 30.000 People are l'ren iile-el with^l.tgncou* l^ut Mervteealile l.lenii*.
I'mmthe t*hli-a|((^ Times.
Oh,there wui^ all olil man ami he hail I^witetelcii leg:
Quotedthe artist yesterday as he worked^away at the llnishiiig touches of one of^those useful, but ut the same time, little^to-bc-dcsircd ap|x-iidngc*, u Hugeous limit.^. ^Yes, and more than one old man,^ he^continued. ^About MMKl) |s-ople in this^country urc^wcririiig artificial liuilw, either^arms or leg*. Lots ^^f ladies, too, are iin-^turbinate enough to lose a limb, and tli^^one I am now at work on i* for a member^of the fair *cx.
Anexamination of the apparatus in^question showed that it was an ingenious^piece of mechanism, which came as close^to counterfeiting the genuine article u*^anything mechanical could.
Thekno-joiut was made in *uch a way^that it perfectly perfortBMMl its otlicc, no^matter how it was used, while the ankle^and auother joint at the center of the foot
MHtNai*6 t^i work iM-rfi-ctly.
Thel^'g iv-elf is llrst carvetl out of wikkI,^which is thy 11 hollowed out, leaving a light^hut substantial shell. t ^f courwe it i^^made in .^aps, tin- joints at the knee .sad^ankle being of sc|turatc pitH-ea.
Theffoot is ^if ruhls-r and made to mate^the *iirviving member of the poi-Hoii for^whom the ^artlflciul^ i* intended, as in^^deed is the whole construction.
Insidetin* wooden tills' a mimlier of^*pring* are arranged which work noise^^lessly, and them-, together with careful^balancing of the ilillen nt parts, repro^^duce the natural motion* of a living leg^and ffoot. MHM pii-e-e- off work costs from^$^^i to*12o. according to tbe style and lin-^i*h, though it i* rather a quaint idea to^think of a wcsslen leg a* Is-iug ^*tylish.
Artitlcialanil* and hands are made 011^much the same principle, only for an^arm the mechanism is of a much^more intricate description, and for the^most elaborate kind the cost i* pro|*^r-^^iunately higher.
Butit ia not^tbe latest
Improvementsgoes wrong. Of course,^an accident may happen to any machine;^so, as I said, they usually have a dupli^^cate made to provide for such an occur^^rence.
Itwas further learned that with good^usage such a limb will last twenty years,^while many people do their walking with^this assistance without tin- fact ever neing^suspected hy their most intimate friend*.
Withan artitlcial hand it is different.^Tbe motions of hand and fingers are too^numerous to tie successfully produced by^machinery, while to make an exact copy^of tbe color of living flesh is uu impossi^^bility, Im-cuiisc that is something which is^ever varying, and, no mutter how skillful^tin- imitation might lie, comparison with^the living hand would show the difference.
WICKEDSAN ANGELES.
The smry of a Texas Village Fiiuudnl by^Criminal* Nole-ly fur Viclou* Purpose*.
FromMM riileajto Time*.
FortConcho, Tex., one of the bc*t ami^niiwt famous of tin- military out|sists^erected 011 the frontier, ha* recently been^abandoned by the government. The fort^was built on a high plateau lietwecn two^branches of the stream after which it was^named. Three miles to the southward^was, ut that time, the village off lieu^Fickleu, the county sent of Tom lircen^county and one of the central supply^|m^iut* for the overland stage company.
BenFickleu was chosen a* the county^seat for the very simple anil entirely ade^^quate reason that it was the only collec^^tion of houses in u county a* large a* the^entire stale of Illinois. Situated l^_i^ miles^west of Austin, the same distance north^^west of Sun Antonio, anil just north of the^most remote settlements. Fort Concho^commanded the very core off what i* to^^day tin- richest regions of Texas.
Nobodyk now* tlie coat of Fort Concho.^The great barracks for the troops was^built of stone, the immense store-houses^for Mipplies, the dwellings for the otlieers,^and even the high wall* around the cor^^ral* were all made of tin* same material.^Everything hail to Im^ hauled from Austin^or Fort Worth hy team*. The laborer*^received $lt a day and skilled mechanic*^scorned anything smaller than a sin gold-^piece for a day's lulsir. The large 1111111-^Ikt of men employed in building the fort^were followed by a motley c rowd of out^^laws, gamblers and desperadoes, and the^place became, to all intents and purpose-,^a frontier mining-town, the only difference^Is-ing that the men drew their money from^the government paymaster instead of dig^^ging it from the ground.
Beforethe fort wu* completed everyone-^not in the employ of the government was^excluded from the reservation. The gam^^blers and venders of frontier whisky went^just across the creek, which in the prodi^^gal nomenclature of the west was called a^river, and built a little* hamlet of barrel^staves, cellar poles and udohc. This ram^^bling alld wretched collection of shanties^wu* ironically called San Angeles, and^soon contained the most abandoned anil^dcHpcrutc of men 011 the Texas frontier.^It became the supply point for the hulfalo^hunters, the rendezvous of outlaws, and^the temporary home of the most abaml-^oiied hit of men and women ever gathered^tocjethcr in the far wi^st.
From1*7.1 to lKTil Sun Angeles wa* in the^glory of it* almost uu|iurullclcd wicked^^ness. It wa* a parasite which drew it* life^from Fort Concho, but the military po-.t^and the town were so mutually identified^with ull of the great tragedies which^mai ked their early history that the career^of one becomes that of both.
(ieii.(.con-son,the brave old farmer cav^^alryman,was in command ut the fort. The^troops consisted off the Tenth Cuitcd^State* cavalry alld a portion off the Twen^^ty-fourth or Twenty-fifth infantry. Both^tiff these regiments consisted of iiegr^ics.^At that time t he ( omaiiehi ^ and the Lipan^Indians bad di*np|icarcd from tin' region,^the former having liei-n *ent to a reserva^^tion ie Indian territory and the latter dis-^l*-r*cd a* a tribe. Tin^do except routine garrison^rare illtcrvut* by a small scouting ex|*sli-^tion. Night time found the soldiers in^San Angeles.
Thetown contained moiiic :U*^ resident*^and a Moating population of nearly a*^many more. '1 la-re wa* a store ami saloon^at one cud of the village, a similar one^nearer the center, and a little jail built of^upright log* set ill the ground like a lot of^fence |s^^t*. The crack* between the^posts were fully tlin-c inches wide and^were the *ource of no little comfort to the^people. Ranaatad ex|^crimenta dourly^demonstrated that it was much easier to^put a shot-gun through one of the^(^racks and till u horse-thief full of^buck-shot than to drag him out^and spoil a rope by hanging him to a tree.^There were several dance-halls built of^poles covered with mud or of iwlolic.^These were also gambling hell*, saloon*,^the homes of the women, white, negro,^and Mexican, and the centers of the busi^^ness ami *ociety off the place. Then' wa*^not a school house or a church. A gap of^over 2UCI mile* *e|^uratcd the place from^the civilisation ea*t of it. With the ex^^ception of the military x*^*t* and the stage^stations there wa* not a human habita^^tion tn the westward nearer than the !{io^(^ruiiilc, .Mill miles away.
Duringthe day the town wa* asleep; at^night it wa* in the glory of a wild de^^bauch. Crowds of soldiers, cowlwivs.^biiffaio-hiiuters, outlaws, and gambler*^filled the dance hulls. Mingled with tbe^strains of fiddles and guitars were the^shouts of the dancer* who occupied the^center of the halls; ranged all round the^side- wen* I he tables of tin* molite dculcrs ;^noisy crowds patronized the liar*, ami the^crack of pistols was so common that they^a'l'rc not noticed utiles* a free and gen^^eral fight wa* on. Mexican moiito wa*^the Hole game, hut it wa* played witli un^^tiring jiersistelice and ran* recklessness.
Itwas at one of these tlancc'hall* one^night in 1^77 that forty-live soldiers armed^with carbine* and six-shooter* |m^urei| a^steady lire through the doors and win^^dows. A gambler hail shot at a soldier.^The ball uii**cd the man but shattered to^splinter* the Imiw with which a Mexican^was scraping a liase-viol. A light grew^^int of this incident and the soldiers Is-gati^what was intended to Is- a massacre of^tin' white*. The riot liecuinc a buttle,^and the discharge of lln-nrius was inces^^sant for no lour. T*:; the ^ ItisstM or^^ganized and the soldier* retreateil to tin-^fort. K:v.- men wen- killed.
In1S7M the little cemetery near the town^contain)*! 7*. graves, t ^f these nearly 7u^were marked with a board and the one^word ^Unknown.^ Ptsir fellow*. Fate^ill the form of a desperado's bullet I aid^them low a few hours after their arrival.^A rude pine box, a careless burial, and^forgotten in an hour.
Afew years ago either laliorcr* came.^They laid a road of iron acrtiss the wtlder-^nc** and soon the avant courier of i-ivili-^zatioii startled the long-eared rabbits on^the staked plain*.
To-daySan Angeles is a thriving little^city with scIkmiIs, churches. news|iapers,^and the house* of a re*|si'table ami pro^^gressive |s-ople. Tin- fort has outlived its^usefulness. First and last it cost tin- gov^^ernment several million dollars, but it*^place ha* lieeti taken by a |*iinilatioti that^will pay the money back. Tin- last buf^^falo disappeared from the surrounding^plain* in 1*7*. To-day the Tcxu* frontier^i* gone and thousand* now live where only^. the coyote then howled in the sage brush.
Vaster Which Aaharn-^Halred Beauties are Cempelleal to I.I ve.^From the Chicago Tunes.
Everainee some meddlesome brute of a^man discovered the affinity existing be^^tween tbe red-headed girl and a white^horse that interesting female and her nart-^ner, the hose, have been constantly before^the public. Songs and poems without^number have been written abesit tbe^couple and no variety show or well regu^^lated female minstrel troupe is now com^^plete without a girl suffering from an ag^^gravate*! attack of re si hair sitting on a^stufTe-d white- horse in the- intnsluctory^overaturc or classic first part. This tends^to increase the popularity of the ceHuhiua-^tiou of hair anil horse-, which is more^pleasing, if less artistic, than a mixture of^hair anil ls-cf e.r other victual*.
Thatthere i* some-thing l--twi^en the^girl and die horse- i* a fact that can not he^elispute el. Hut just what that Memie-thillg^i* no one mcciiih to know, and yet tln-y u|^-^isireiitly make elate s. At times a vague-,^haunting suspicion that the something lies^tween the two might Is- u saddle- |iervades^the thinking mind, but this ide-a i* te*i^tangible to he cutcrtuiiicd. It is some^^thing dceiM-r, ilurke-r ami more mysterious.^S'oil sec tlie^ rcd-huircd girl, the-n yem se*'^the white* horse-, ami that is all there i* to^it. She e-un't explain it; neither call t he-^horse, anil yet one of thi-m must have de^^signs on the either e-lsc why should the y^meet
Isit any re-asem why a nice, cle-nii girl^shouhi In- insulted on the- street ill the^hrtMid glare of the noonday sun just ls-^cause ln^r hair happe ns to Is- the coleir eiff^u new harve-st pumpkin V What ilillVr-
ictroops hail little- to I^rison eltity, varieel at
enccdoes the col eir make ho long a* the^girl'* hair i* he-r own and *hc has plenty^eiff it'.' A robust head of hair i* a woman's^chief charm or one of them ut lenat Imt^senile- men e-uu't appre'e-iate- a good thing^whe n they se-o it, 1 hey guy tin- |M*ir girl^with the rusty hair ami rnve over a lluily^shoe k eif bleiuilc, brown, eir black l^*-ks e-ut^from the- he-nil eif a imupe'r ceirpnc ami^weirII on a scalp so sterile- that tin- eiwuer^can't e-ve-u raise- duiulrutf on it. And^it's such a mean, e-onte-liiplible- say-^tin- ine-ll have of Hinging tin-^girl'* misfortune^ illhe-r fae-e-
amicalling attention to it ut the- same^time-. A man will meet the rcd-he-ad^*l^girl mi the- street, *t^ip anil stare- at he-r^hair feir a mome-nt, then step to I be edge^of the- side walk anil pe-e-r carefully up anil^down the thoroughfare-. Tin- girl ami^evcrylssly else witnessing the- ae-t know*^a/hat the- man i* I'sikiiig for and the y all^grin exe-^^pt the girl. She- ge t* mail, but^e-un't say any thing. If she- diel ve nture- tei^*|m-ak her Illiliil the fellow would probably^say thut he wa* lesiking for a stre-ct-cur eir^a mail. No, the- unfortunate rcd-he-uelcd^girl i* doome d tei everlasting tiirini'iit on^the hair question Isith in tin* and the- life^to come. Shouhi *he commit suicide or^elie- from natural e-ause-s the- pe-rse-e-ution^would bi-giu again the moment the- breath^eif life left her Issly. Feir do we- not road^that the angel of death always appeared^on a pah^ horse^.' Wretched girl.
Ane-aste-ni write r haselise-ove-re-el among^other interesting thing* coiice-ruiiig the-^re-el-he-ade-el girl that l^iie-e-ii Klisal*-th and^llele-ii of Troy se-t tin- fashion in re-el hair.^If this Is-true- those- e-eh-brate-d fctuule*^might have^ Im-cii in ls-tte-r bu*iiie-*h than^inti-eslui-iiig a eoatume which reepiiii-* a^horse- to comph^te it. Acconliiig to the^same writer the- majority eif woiiii-u with^auburn hair write |ss-try of gre-ate-r eir le-s*^e xe e-lh-ni-e-. It isn't to Is- supposed that^the quality of the verses would make^much ilitTcrciie-c, hut to Is- aildicteil to tin-^reel hair ami |s*-try habit ill one life^^time- is uu!. i'd u hard fate-. Still those-^kind of girl* are- |Mipidar in the-^^*u*t, where- biisim ** me-ii advertise fe'r fe^^male- help with r^ d hair. It i* cluhmsl^that the-y make- Is-tti-r e-le-rks and wuiters;^that they are smarter, quicker, brighte r,^and more- intelligent than girl* with oil-^colored hair. lu fae-t, the- red-headed^girl'* ae-e-eimpli*lime'iits are- eif such a su^^perior tMxIcr that atte is se-hlolll Ollt off u^job. Thi* may Is- true-, and e-ve-u admit^^ting that it is the girl with the reel top^^knot invariably ge-t* olT a stre-e-t-e ar the^wrong way just the- same^ a* he-r le ss sul^^try-haired siste-r. But however smart Kin-^may Is- he-r tcuqM-r is as lle-ry a* he-r hair.^A* se-rvant girl* the-y are- a siie-e-e-ss. Hay*^the- same write-r, and any boiise-kee pe-r^who has olie-e- employed reel luiire-el he-lp^will hire* no othe r. i'he-y are- so tiely and^neat, attractive in every wuy, inte-lligi-iit^and hulldsoilU*.
4If e-our*e-the-y are*. Any one- who ha*^ever seen the- average hired girl with n-el^hair will agre e to tin*. If she- ha* control^of heith eye's atiel he-r nose-, if she- hasn't a^eoiiipli-xieiii like- a new-luid turkey egg,^anil granulated e-y-e-liels, she' might |mis-^sibly Is- ge^e*l looking enough to attract^the- white- horse-. But on the- other hand^the- horse, unless he- Is- blind, would fail^to fulfill hi* elate- if he- saw the- girl llrst.
The-re el-hi-adisl girl, it i* said, inake-s a^good wife-, if she- t-an Is- imliice-il to we ar^le-e- em he-r te-lll|s-r. The-y make' the' Ileum-^bright and happy, are- a* wanii-he-arleel,^e-olil-f.Kit.sl, allis'tionati-, anil elemoiistru-^tlvc as any class of girl* in tin- world. But^for all the ir geiesl points the-y- are- a rarity.^Senile one has elisi*eive-re.el that but one^woman with re-el hair in twe-nty e-xist* in^dvlllaed e-eilllltl-ie-s. The-tl, according to^this, the- white-heirse- supply must Im- in the-^same- ratio. This is consoling, cs|*-e-ially^lo hostle-rs, a* the- pure-w hite-animal is tie-
llarele-stkiliel of a lieirse- tei ke-ep g|-o.,iue^L
i(ally carried an appeal to Peking, whence^hia ease waa sent back to Honan for^trial. Tbe above facta as elicited^at the further examination show that^bia action was influenced hy affec^^tion for his mother, and he tins there^^fore only Is-en sentenced to the slight |Min-^iahmeut off eighty blows for bringing an^unfounded action. Though tlie |m^Ucc-^men are- not res|ionsihle for the death off^the- woman, yet, as it was indirectly^causad by their entrance into the house-,^the-y are each to receive eighty blows and^two month* eif the canguc.
TOLDIN ^ LINt OR TWO
Babycurrioges at cost at the Bee Hive.^Picture frames made- to es-der at the Bee^Hive.
Locksre pa ire-d anil keys fitted at the
BeeHive.
Comple'te-linee^f cartridges nt Anacon^^da 11 are I ware' Co's.
Gotei Hawcs feir line- work in photo^^graph-.
Excellentis the (lnish of lluwcs'ie photo^^graphic art.
(inn*for rent at Anaconda Hardware-^Co's.
Haveyou s^-n those- line hanging lamps^at the- It.,- Hive
F.ste-sA Council have- re-ce-ive-el the ir lle-w
fall~t.s k eif e-leitllillg.
(tunsand ammunition at the Anaconda^Hani war- Co's.
Photographsin all the- latest novelties^ut llawe-s's I'alae-e Studio.
Forstyle*, giMiel g^m*l* ami a |s'rffi-ct fit,^go to K.st - ,v CoiiiicII'm fur your clothing.
Loaite-e!shells at Allae-ollela llarelw are^^ 'ei's.
Newill.ele-rwear, over-shirts, neck we ar,^hats anil e-aps, boots anil shoe-*, at F.*te-*^Sc CONMM I'm.
tiiiiisand rilles ut Anueoiula llanlwure^Co's.
Afte-rthe- l.Mh inst. Mr. B. F. Malum^will reee ve the milling stock ipiotatietn*^of thi' St. l.ouis market daily.
Ifyou x-ant a g.-.-d Domestic, lni|M^rtesl^e^r Ke-y iVe-st e-igar. go lei l^. Tie-tje-u's^cigar store, i-nrm-r 1st ami t lak Htreets,^Anacomln.
Kste-sA ^'onne-ll are- marking the ir ne-s-^stes-k eif lothing ami furnishing goods at^prie-e-s th it w ill please- all whei want llrst^e-lass go. ils.
Ifyou want a suit of clothe* made to^order e-ul at F.ste-* A Council. The-y have-^eive-r :^^^ ^amph-s to seh-ct from, ami guar^^antee a iM-rfe-e-t lit.
Callaid see those phislie-s at :\X et^uta at^Kste* ^ t'eiuilcll Me-re antile- Cei.'s
The-Montana l.iimlM-r A Prisluee com^^pany will name- you l*itteim prie-e-s on hay,^grain and fe-cd in large- and small lot*.^They carry the' large-si ste^ek in tow n.
Luilie-s,e-all ami see those :^*. cent^plushes now on sale- at tin- K*te-* it Cou^^ncil Me r ailtih-Cei.'s.
lulire-ill I.lick.
Fromtin- America.
Ilardii'g:^llavi- you he-are 1 eif the lue-k^that tleSngkiii* ha* ste ppe el into'.^' Hen 11:^^No: wl-at i^ it'.^' ^Hi* fortune'* made', '^n-ckcli b-'ll re-tire- from business entire ly. ^^He-all: ^What ha* lie tkine^^ Harding^^Why, li- ha* Is-e-li made- aehiiiiii*trator^of the e-t-tatc of hi* ls-st frit-ml.
Asies-einslile .\|^plli*ne*e.
Freimthe i 'In.-a^^i \c^-h.
The-ulTCMt eif Wise-olisin's ne-e-omplished^train ml l^ i- shouhi not ik-tcr the- railroad^coiiipans-s of that state- from supplying^e-ae-h se-at ill the ir parlor e ars with a *leit^whe re a frighte ned pa**e-iige-r call drop in^u nickel ami get a re volver.
XlieHiel Fighter Willi Ink.
Fromthe Akron Te'legnuti.
Csi-neral Leird Weilse-ley- again i-nmis^forward with a long article in the- \ttrfh^. I iiie-ii.-ei it Hrviftr, telling how the- civil war^shemlel have been fought. His |m-ii ha*^ever Is-en busier ami mightie-r than hi*^swore I.
tiry sliiKiilur.
Kreimthe- Te-X^s SlftlllK*.
A.^You change your mind very tn^^que-tltly.^ B: ^Ye-s. I ls-lieve I llei.^ ^Anil^what ^ ve ry singular about it is that no^lllatte-r how fre-epie-iitly yem e-halige- your^mind you never manage- tei got a gone I^eilll-.
Tile-siahiic Italee.
Kresnthe t'hicagu Times.
Nature-has the- ls-st lire- ele-partun-iit of^all. When all of the art* eif man proved^unavailing snow and rain ipieni h. d the^Montana fore-st tire*.
OurIte-Jllve-nste-el Nal).
Freimthe Haltimeire Amcne-aii.
Ihirnewnavy i* rapidly achii-ving tlie^|Misition that is demanded by the- great^^ness eif the- country it repre'selit*.
Lookat bargains in hosie-ry at laMM et^Maxwe-H**.
ONEWEEK LONGER.
MontanaHotel. IChuii -i.
UNTILSUNDAY. SEPT. 29.
JUSTICEIN CHINA.
no-i .
It.oli.i .. k.mo^Ii Tlilnu: le^ th- em
Ic-mIImI l'eille-e l*e^rc-e.
Ch'i-ugCiriuig-lisin, native- of the- Che ^^i li'uaii department in Honan, benight tell^years ago twe-nty-thrce- pie-ills eif scHullltini^from a iii'ighl*ir name-el Sung Shili-luiig,^*iythe- Xorttt OMh //^^^^^/^/, auil having^no reuily money asked his brother-in-law,^Hu llcug-jiilig, to Is come- se-e-urity for him^for 2BOtiun, the price, eiff the - art ie-le-. lute-rest^wa* to Is - pa III at tin* rate off |S'r e-e-nt, am 1^the whole* elebt was tei be* repaid ill nine'^months. Ch'en lust on the- trhlisai'tion,^anil w he n the* time for paynu-nt arriveel^he- was unable- tei mee t bis liabilitie s,^whie-h llow amoetlte-el to :U7tia'-. He- ue-^cordingly made over his farm ^^f 7 mil tei^hi- creditor for LT7 tiaei. le av lig a bal nee^of tn ti.-i'i still elui'. Te*ti ti.io oi this Sung^remitleel on the- e-e unlit ion that the* re m.iiii-^el.-r should b.- paiel in two mouths.
Cli'i-tigdid not inform bis family eif the^sale of th.. I.inel. and when harve st-time
came his Jf.ithe-r prenIe*el tei reap tin*
e-riii. To th:* Sung naturally objee-te-el^and a lawsuit ensued, the' re**ult eif whie-h^was tll.lt 3* ti.'lei of the- lle-llt Was struck eillt^nnel a decree' i-^inil fen* the- ehse harge- of^the* remaining In tiao. The Ch'en family^re fu-esl tei accept thi* arratigi-me'iit ami^i-nle-re-d upon a fr. -h e*ours^' off^litigation. Hu Ibiig-jiing who hail^gone' to Shansi in the' meantime-,^was w anteel as a witness, ami tin- |*ilie-e^^nu ll who were se-tit to seun-h for him sus^^pected that he* wa* still at hMM and i n*^t.-resl the- house ill hols- of llneliiig him.^liis mother, a frail anil sickly old woman,^was -ii startle d by the-ir uppcaruncc that^sin* slipi^od and fell, receiving injuries^which resulted in he-r death a few elay*^later.
Nothingwould |s^r**iiaele* Hu lb ng-juiig^that his mot Imt had met be r ele-ath by fair^111. .ins. and he loelged a ee^inplaitit e-oii-^taiiung a purely iiiuiginative account of^th' uieiile-iit in the- Iih-uI i-.iurt and eve-nt-
DR. D. H. G RHY,
eethExtracted and Filled
^JUSTRECEIiZEl^0-
BYEXPRESS!
THEHANDSOMEST LINE OF
DRESSPATTERNS!
Shownthis season hy any firm in the city.
LadiesIntending to Buy a Nice Dress
willilo well to call on ns and inspect them,^before purchasing elsewhere.
RESPBQTFULLYt
M.S. ASCIIHEIM.^Marriage is Not a Failure!
Thatis If you an- inarri.il .m.l h\inK m Ana. on.la an.I Imyiiig your HTOVKMof the-
ANACONDAHARDWARE COMPANY.
Whoan* alw;.^^ to th*' front ^ it la a lull I.in*' .m.l t'lioii*** H**lt*^-tkfta avt prin-s ImhioU^to ^uit. W *^ hIm^w Hum wi't-k it floor full *^f
Hardand Soft Coal Burners and Wood Heaters
,\l*o ;t iaoiii|^l**t4* hli^* of ll.iii-. ^. ;iiit1 \V^mmI nut I'tial 4'^^^k H|ov*-^.
^ M7v^7v^vyr^ii^riois ^
Weare hca^li|uarte*ra far fartrlilge*, t 'enter ami Idui Kin-, Shot t;iui slu-iu. buth to and ta^gieare-. tern e-heaii lei talk aleeeiit. Shut I i nine. Itirle-K liii'l lte*v i ilve'iii, I f tin fane'*, i .irtrnUi- lie-its aaa^tin-t'e-le-lirate-d AhiUt/.e'I'eiwelcr, fall ami see ua. ttHKN TUX TKN AT NlliHT.
THEANACONDA HARDWARE COMPANY.
FINEPHOTOGRAPHS.
MyWork is all First-Class and of the Latest^Styles. Enlarging a Specialty.
PALACESTUDIO
OverPeters' Store, Anaconda.
W1TMOWT
4bm
|i|(lilCW el.m'^ not .-Willi amthhii; eiiil^l.le^tar aataf ^^( aetaaee. He operates with :t |nt^rutnl e-lei-trie- lnhale-r. ami e-xtrae-tfl tee-tli by^airana of VITALIZKI) Ml:, walrh is ratlreto^palnleaa an.I Ianmle na. Ttsrtli till.-.l w ithout^pafi.
I'llllsllltatloUfre-ev
ASSIGNEESALE.
TwoHorses, Harness,
Atielthe- re-lii.eill.h r of the- Parr ateM-k
Willbe Sold on Saturday.
('.ASI'I.INt.. A-esiu-nes,-.
AT
MacCallum^ Coutier s.
NeiwI* your time to titi). fall :iuel msiHi-t our st.n-k. Full line of
STAPLEAND FANCY GROCERIES,
GENTS'FURNISHING GOODS