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1 yý M wit 1 ,v ~. -g l u m lo w . ýOUM2 _ 'ý:r5~ > NU!Y~Ww.ilI, i v 1~~k'YfRCý raiillsbed Every Iris Myw ?T BOZUNAN, . G ALLATIN (OUNTT. JO EP ?~ JOS)EPH WRICH rc7ULTSMER AND) r21OPRI R Nau year, io ,Lesnxxa qW I ý' 43m dear, va' d 4alWtP? $*i$!1F tb1N'I ,'.,"..e rre d:iring ttrxs.of a*suacJI ·... 400 Tares mouthy. ixxvsriA~lv io x4VSauce...... A I)V t 11l tL'Ii I K A T iAE : - I= 2 $3 $ $7 $0 $ 10Z f i 5 r. 0 i 54 Sfiao.4' 4 1 I6 17 30 47 1 eaath. F 6 1 8 14 13 25 5" 2 Months. 6' 1 1 16 30 45 15 3 Months1 7 12j Id 'A 40 45 H $ Monithxa.!' 1O 30~ 40 6s $6 140 1 Tear . : 6 R~ 21 .40: 55 -,.5 120 3224 A Card is Five 1.i~ss A;SqutiMrsT0t Liries,.r¶,tki tpe . l.usal N4otices 2.5 centS tier tinre fri Ithe Grst inser Y.r t ratsioa-t adver~isrteznefxj _ t. le paid Cl.x In a~Iv taco, ab4 All Job1.. riati.g wanea tk. work is ~deiivertd. DIRECTORY Or FFDi.l'LAL OFFSI 7EE .HOIIP.I501 NO' U fAW A OF lii o: ha 32h. UF~t'! AME. £ILIUKCE:8 Vev'ernur..ii ..fr fl . r. I'o'rrxe Virginia City F ,%l'1e ir f..t ..... '- 11' CAL AWAY. (hir'f Jl tIce .... . t a jti. nr. Helena. Il (irginia . f'srt rtY . IS ' Virginia City Associate Ju usttces{ 1,l KPcOrLWLK (Deer Lodge. U. S. Dist. Al'; 'M . 1'AI1B Rsxeraljrg. ýlnrveTor P-ueri aJo' E., it LAtlSL Oli lEcna. Keg ister ur Iaoda O-ZL- 5Tkstt.. ..IleuIOg Rleceiver x.. it. t: . F... . ?l x'nlena, tit t Ilxdtfl .1 l-4 f~~r~ A ,Vil u- .!Ilekena. `. 3. M tis WM. P1': 5AKLZCLS l esla '.s, t Itt . B 1 ltttx.5ii l V ..Helen . 1' I'll er cnt 1 WA . T6Or..... I kienrai. g 1otlletior "" '%.r.rtls. I.oL: W.rs I. .S. Cntottflt , t' r P 1'4. c'IAl i'B\TLttirtalr11 . a Times and iaee- - m r l------- -- iIi the Territory of oeamtra. At Yirgin» Ctrty, bIrstNItlay iii Ja nary and see ond Mosd.ty iln An'i ust. L.. 1TD ,rATL8 DISTRICT LOLRTS. i,'et District--At Virginia City flrt i ,idany in Al ril, ~ccao 14 Moudelii JJtily, and second M'.ia day in Noveinlter. erend District-At Deer LodIge, third Monday in April, first Molnday in September,and flrst MoJn day in hlecember. ihir 1Di istric?--! L Iieenra Irt Mnndav in March, Alsr lona..y in J:uy, a.d iouirtlh Moda) in Oc tober. - : ,iitnltTORiAL, €3l4I fIT. . - ibrst District-In MaldisoCnltlll il, at Virgii Cit y, Airt lMoiIndy in April, s"rl.'itd itondlay in inly, and secoud M3onday in Nrven:her. In tlalltin lont+i tt. at Bitzeix ,n, 'irst Mjon ay in Malrh and 1i1th M.tndiay in OIctoeitr. Is Jttifetoll County, it la:tldcrrbs.:ig, s,,Pol, lMorn lay in Mlay, adl ilr--. Mondaty ist t~nch.. i', Maenud bistricl--leer ILdge Couliy. at ilere I/,'ve (City,-third Mlondayi ill Apil, firt Milunta ii Septonlter, and it'et lo;diay in Ileceiuber. ,1 Missoula County, at Misisoula, fourth Monday in June and second Monday in Noveinber. In Beaverl ead Lotlity,. Btannsek, first Monday in .Juie, and third Monday in October. 'Jhird a.ilric'--lti Lewsla.id (;larlk County, at liel ena, 'lrlt ltondav..lzi Mancih, first M.leday ir July, and fourth londay ia October. In Meagher County, fonrth Itonday in May nad rourih Monday in NoVeliber A.. F it A. %1. fRStalted comm Inictiona of atllatin Lodge o. A F & A M. nel at their hail on the frstSatur day eveniing on or before the full moon of each Viliting brethren are coidially inited to atlend. 'I'lI)S. It, hCDWALIW)S, W. hi. RI. P. MENxIrisi Sec. :. O. O. *'. WIT STERN l'ARK LODGE No. 4, I. 0. O. F., mV meets every Monday night, iat o'clock p. mi., in Odd Fellows' Hall. A. M. cPHKIISON. N. J. Jol. O'1xLLaLr. It. S. HENRY MILLLER. Manufaltturer • and Dealer Ir Boots and Shoes, MACL STREET, NOZIfIAN, M. T. K EEPS constantly on hand and manflacturss to order Gustom-Made Boots, Warranted to At sad made of the best material J013 woRK Qfevery description "done. If you want your souls soastructed. bring them alonu buns! Guns! Guns! W. COOPER, kGUIT FOR SHARP'S IPORTIJO 111136 duns, Pistols an+Amnmuflt1on second door beloW L7M. Btid'*i sor., NOZEMANII x14NTA.% All kind. .r repatrka, Sealy, sa o up dmo". Will e k cpekttY VO_., ?*ºO fie' ~L~~g~3 L~j~~&~~~~~ dte : - Will prmtie? 4 ~ jamj LI Will practice in al l bt aborts o! Mpnt*.a Tarritury. (.EOE1Ga l F. COWlI AT"TO i NTEY AT LAW; *se., lower $t wy of lb. Boumi 5$ M4 , , HAIEERtSUUC ~tG , M: : r. UR. rDWAwns. P. TiVWN. EDWARDS k roioN, Attermeys aind Couiintloris t Law, BOZEMAN, Mi T. Will practico in all the Courts of the Territory'.' 3$ collections promnpttly aticluded' tI. H. V. WILLIAMI,,. ýlt4.rney and C'cunselorat el'"'w BOZEMAN, MONTANA, Will practice jn all Courts or the TerritdrY. A. G. P. GEORGE, a 'rTORNEY AT LAW, RADERSBUIIr) M. 'T. * ~AIIJEL WORD, A±TOIINIE 'a" A 't LAW, TIM'di'(IA ClTi , M. T.i· Wtl! i)ractice in all courts (f Montana Territorr. J" J. DATV I, Attor'noy and Counselor at Laws BOZEMAN, MONTANA. Will uractice in all courts A'} Montana Terriltry. PAGE & t.OLEMA: ,. ATTORLNE YY AT' LA,. ()Zi:M'N AND) KADtl t>DCRG, 1. ? ljýWd IIractice it sJI Cucrts or Montaria, C. MUS!CBROD,, fila Physician and Surge= n, Olc. at t e Mrtruboliiln IIotel, T oZEM A V, . MONTHANVA. DR. H. CREPIN, PHYSIC. aV AHED SURGEON, li~em1, cM aens t, 13ctn uat 'T'eidlers hºit protif~s~iona services to the people of Bozenia it and tLte Othltatin vulley. Office at residentiPos, Birk etr.'t. Dr; G. W. MONROE, HTSICIAN AND ýUIjF EOM, Ofee at Osborne's Drug ,o re, Masonic building, Main Street. TOZEMAN, f. T., ' r Offers his pr,,fesiolal services to the people of Boazman uad the Gallatin valley. ........................................................................................ 7" DeN L. BYAM, 1C CECTIC HP H Y.C.IAN, At his residlesne on Middle (Oeek. --- - - - - - - ---- ----- - ytU. R. UUlLARD). 1. D., Physician and Surgeon, AAIUEAH ISBUf{G, i. T. Dr. THOS. REECE, Physician and Snrgteon, Ofice, No. 42. Rs. tuins Hotel, HELENA .................. ......MONl AN. MINJERA-L iURVE YV, PETER IocH'• tT. 8. 'Deputy Mineral'Surveyor, Will survey and pto trh patents for~lcer Mines and Gold and Sriver l.odes at rear alite rates. 317 Surveys of Miming and Irr lp eh aise made on skort nos :. . H . . A1 it,$ At the upper end of Main Street, BOZEMAN, 3. `r., Is fully prepared to . of BLACKS UNG W A GOr ' W Q HORSES, MULES AND -- SHOD. And everything pettat f4 bas' JAM +C ' EPX? WflhCH beat li I ip~~ 81~ ,fJr~ tf.lia±.atvroon at tfhete S# a Itilte ,k Jurnp"Iuzjft 11.nietw' cnteckoe; At~ilt zn,,. ' .Xtt i~t hadn't I.o# tfo' d~ 10* if WhV lte OS..t "ro *y heir `bc~s t. to tamrp,: Aaml yogife er jrtfeltfu:tkyi tEor Ithe frog, Wif ` t~nit tuti,' Leaped hic tt; j into a nonikbj$ Tiwu Ia iapened wtj dpiuey~s, Hfis Iesturea.;Ivr to acap.,,. And ob~ecred. with great aiurpr~s3,' 'I hat-the ulonikeyi a* man,. But he vansthet l et, aty sigli'p *And I souk up ti the Uojr Jst as miasnat, with alight, Conte inside the kitchen do, r: Th'~aibcginning t® abuis t m, Shea stays, *S'.ruh, you've been dlrinkin?" I says, 'N "ýi otir, yota'il extuse nip, lint I've znt'rely becti a-thlnkiu.' 'Jlut as sure us& l'ini a cinder, 'hiat party whet pou cee A gittiu' ont o' W~nde'r, have deveha pe~ttfrom a flea.", lie 4woul7 d Have His Garden. We suppose there is a timne.that comes to everv man whe it i! "'e he's -b" E'0ahoulb d li to have. a gard.n. . If lhe I ukeis iu i notioni lie will tell his wnlit of it. Thi Is sthe first mis take he mkes,. and t£11e groni[d thus lost is never iully ricovvered. Shle draws her eiair tip to his. and lays one Iland on his knee. and purses up her lips ii to r whistle ofexpeetatf.on (the vixen), and tells about her mother's gar den, sad bow i;ice it Is to have vegetables Iresh Ironm the vines evrry morninig, and sthe will go r;lht out and plan th;e wbl, i irv tlng, herself. Ife takes the spade, and works .himsehl iirto a i.erspkiralion. and shie tramps around n.iler a Iriirlgtrfl s.itn-boirict, and gets ti:der his feet, and shrieks at'the wormr; itnd loses. her .shoe, a:'.l mlakes him first vexed, tbhen h,, i:tl thein ft.rociotu. Afte. the garden is spaided, Ihe gets the seed, and finds that she has been thonurhtfull enouMgh to opl tite pflhaier, :,.t ( i d 't. ipy thirteent varietie, of ulifferent vesieftaes i tt one dish. This leads hiul to step out tloor: where he caul eomuidti witllh ature alone for a moment. ihen lie takes tip the se1d, ind at ihte, a.d litne.:tntld starts for the gar..fu. Atni then she pults or with a l.n'g hauitld rake. and :t -oek'tfnlu ofi betitins and p tut.ia x.Ced :ind dahtila blF,',.. 'While hle is plau ing tlIe corri ,ihe standi onlt t:e ettcutnhlt'r hIill-. untl Takes over the seed pan. 't'heti sIh ptJ:s fh1i rake imalidkc over her shoulter and the rakel teeth in:to l.i hair. and walks over tthe other beets. lie dotn't find the sfqlil settl uitil she Imoves. and tiheni lihe. igs thretin ut of the grouInd with his thu:ub. She liplants tihe best sled herseil. uutting just atloit two feet of earth and sod iporg thfein. Thlen she takes adva:n tage of his absorption ill other matters, and puts down the pettn.i:i Fe.,d in one spot. and afterwards digs otlinti ip, and puts tlhtm down in another place. The beans she con ceals ili the earth wherever she canl find a place, and puts 'he bulbs ilnto the cucumber hills. Then she tips over the seed-pan again, nin apologizes, and steps on two of t'ie hbest touiatoe piante, and says, "O, my!" which hi no way resembles what he says. A`bou't this time she liscovers a better place for the pe tunia seed, but, having ftr.otlen where she last puutthem. 'he proceeds to fin I hem, and within an i.eredible short space of lime. succ'eds in unearthing pretty tuch every tliini t hat has Ibeen int down. Afitr con fusing thii;gs sio. there is no eartl ly possi bility of ever iunraveling tlheiI again, she says the sui is kiuliiig her, and goes over to the fence whre site stands for hours;, tlling the woiula next door about an aunt of hers who wa~t Cont)lied to her bed for 'leven years, and hid eight d.eters from the eft, but nolthing wiould give her any relief unt:'l an old lady--but you have heard it before. The nIext day a i.al comes to hl's ofilee to.get the 'pay for.a patent seed-sower which his wile had ordered, and he no more than gets away -before the patentee of a new lawn. mower comes in with an order of ten dollirs, and he in turn is followed by the ccrn-sheller ma,. aud the miserable gardtner starts'for home to head off the robbers, and findis his wife at the gate with his own hat on, and just about to close a bargaIn witlh a s;iboath aIeId iadividual for 4 two hundred dollar mo.ing-machlne, and a pearl-hanidled, ifory mdoroted, hay-eutter. He firit knocks the agulteurnl implement agent ~hii the bend, andthen drags the mniseraible woman futo t6&. bose, and, lockin the doir, pgives hImsailf up to his ;+eeins,-Da. Nidew.. . 1 w '` ire " brapkr l is All the pa )sri t e any lriau by the Govervnment is mSardn(tVA u o`o a r Ineb Foufdriuieit " eit mb*Gen MlUs,'pw Wresat (twesti , li *agtayi&t Sbort prtees otf fed'i , tlk x t ittl tfr te- et~gtse.~u@~i~i ftdhLVd Stilrt It It til *ti' wbi+$ p**u tblul an? uyb 4iwe tbeEehkka ý" 4y.ý .. H. i "!3'6$ ý4 a. Skl.H *O ."aarr t*a· 4~ ~ ~ !~l~~ge~e~I Solem"tart lig I'me" itti n .. ef. / i t ; tYt tense ailtetrestlt heel w ee. he a rret to l lh i r4ywbter.b the otb.eC of eithuliti!icpvatietis aO . a victim ,of lomattisai.n A lthoug h Germantll, lewhispa-n per,,fur i.bviotll reatonol have not veuntured to publish a, line on the sneit at. it is ,np loanger.a secret at the Imperial capital that tliee j[esits lad nothing whatever to do with the poisoning, and tini the ieal crtliiial, who, however. was riot prosecuted ataj fTior the offence;' was a woimahn. The flRstuss. pielolqs in h gard.to this mysterious affair were aroused by the alpeaniiee hi tlie middUl of January last. Inf i Berlin no~(spnper. of the announeement that ht lery Peltzer had ,been marriaed to Pauline Wtyrgel. Peltzer was a middlke-hged. tteddint of. the house holdif t.e (row~ Prince, and Pauline Wei gi1, who ostensibly carried, on the. business of am nilliner, had for years been the umistres of the Crown prance. The relaltons of the latter with the inilliner had long furnished lsPatfrt for_ the oessips, of, Berlin. J'l'e Crown Prince, it appears, (Qritled. the ac -quaintar cc of ulijhqe teigci shortly after his marriage to the oldest duughter of Queen Victoria. Pauline, at that time, was a dash ing. spirited beanty,- a dark blonde, of sinder, graceful form. an expressive, viva eiotis ,eountenance, cnmil hands and feet, hitl- engagi ng m inerd. (''he Crown Prince, lik6 ni.st of the Princes of Iiis house. had a decided we:akness for the.isIr sex, and, meet iing the lair Iauillne, who was then but twenty ye:ia old, at a populir ball, he fell id love with her. A' week after she was his jfiztress. lie visited her #eery day, and from ithe first she gained an asdendaacy over him, wiichd she liian.ed to r t-itn until ai very recent p riod. L: tlhe tounrse (o t lie she LIre several childeni rc the Prnlcee, who awnple plovlded lbor their wants, while he i furnished the mofti'r with ineans enabling her to liveiin a style far above h r station in lifte, his hanlts ofl t aisro -n Piince'~ did 'nott lontg-remint asaer'etr to the Crown Prin eems' Victoria, and it led to many angry altercations betwh es r. and her wayward t rupture tletwrweetlltFcm Wiia ytd .only by the iloi tls of the Ctlojhis PI'rint'sa' father. l'rihze Albert, who hurried hrunl Windlor Castle to Irliin, artd lho t : cceedted in eflect ing a recongiliation betweeil his daiughter and her hisiibitf. The latter pronmised to behtave iiitim..l in the future; but althouighl otr a timne lie acel with m.ore circutmspectton, he did not by any melalns break off his lial )oii witli Pauline Wigel, who, knowing full well her great power over tht. CI owh Prince, ilntgenuously stimulated his jealou' of her, and thereby strengthened the meshes in which site held lfir captive. Years rolled on, and stillthe IIaisou con tlnued. Pauline Weigel's beatity was not "eusibly impaired in the course of time, and it was not until 1866 that the Crown Prince iladcl fi tffort to shake off her y oke. The death of his' .legitrmate) son, Sigismiuhd, which occurred Ju4t at the breakiing out of the war with Austria, madg a profound im pression uponI him. which was, peihIaps i'. tesitied by fthe terrible events of the' Sa dowa campaign. When he returned to Ber lin. atter the conclusie l ol'peace, he told his mittress'thastthey must part. Pauline Wei geT, who, on her parrt had become passion ately at'actied to -)hi. and wht.se disposition was extremd!y: jealous, sueceetded by dint of teari., reproaliCes, and threats of suicide, it keeping him attached to her chariot. The Crown Prft.lce suecumbed, again, but thence forth visited her more rarely.. Filally, in November last. he resoivtd upona dellitte rupture with Pa~line.Weigel. He visited tier one nught'itt"the early paltof that month. and told her, with true Hiohenzollern brusque iness, that their liaison must come to atr endI. that she amst marry; that Henry Peitzer, who had; frequently acted at go-between for theni, b.diclnsented to become her husband; tifat he would liberally provide for them, and that they must leave Berlin and Germnaany af ier the weddiig. Vainly did she try to sheke hfs determninatione 'tear and supplicationa proved unavaling.-, Ti.ea only thing whiti ishe e'torted from hint was the promise that he would visit her again o' the following evening, but he told'her tibstetemBptirally (liat it Wrould'be iem.the last time. The wtietdied w+man (1u 1(1 leafs Im r, rqoom dujqUi4i- Iiole of the oIowbii da º nor receive " nybody. At bfimst 8 is thne evening #tht 1>ttae ,rr'ed in a public hack. le ase tittaffled in Isa eloakrmud wrore the uti*udil uitIf aO ,t of W e F :ol, lo grae.Wbt~errn.e '60W hh* ,tnd, PatultrIae Welget dfgji this theisr- l"nter vievý is a' see~.i szePl *IiM t' T.w Pet uf 'ltern Slut 6'efo*. ` =W ~r id~i~ 4ftr1SVOIO*~l Wt~ela u o e at, d W ~ah; fbnts ti # +rie4.e _'~S1 thehtdib tb$. a xsh&tr (1w? 4euwj~rt~k~U mbY'Be Mcawrhe1~ am 'r xi 1' fl 4ei* r9 w r, the pl,% skic fatqtitý .ato Foot .,.. nt ces .,td th e Ron then "~$ FGIR 44 i atm 11W 4ott whir #ts'o W4SflU )~ek6it it t;very weak, Tw8o q wa afterward L'elrpsed y was' rt~tored to ` et Aal ptf+ W.taibut f S ltJ winA trit 1# with Pauline Weigel under the clrcusihtanee&.i rh liate ls ernan wted would have gFNei rise to a ti rrible scandal, and ie coubldiwt ev n order lherto Iere]3erlhs im tindiately without arovsInk wcvry bnpleasaat, stipicinhut. And thus it is protbabe that, se WiIas.ni tiolested at all, but glven to ma -et stand t hat #tie woulV ihitai'r tk i tciiii'y Pelt~rz *and leave 'Germrantyy with =hire, or stand the consequences. Alter the wedding. Pauline'"s nonss and furniture were quickly sold.uzad she departed with her husband, for a foreign country. WVhere they 'ha}e gone to .is nro knofWol. Eastern Ph.lanthropy. Wbhile Eistern churches are ;ietitionirng hleaven in behalf of the peyrseeuted'Modoes, and Eastern journals aire characterizing the people of Oregon as barbarous outlaws be cause they desire the Indianis #linrsjied- ior tile innocent amusement of scalping our friends ard ivighb'ors, strange scenei are bein enacted iii their owfi miidst. A cor respondent writing troin -P"rbvidenc , RIhode Islaud, and speakkig" of the recent strike of the starved alnd over-worked mill operatives in that city says: "Whlile the leaders of the strike, rnost of the men in it. in fact, are not much hurt by working 'clever. hours a day, it is killing. thewocmen and children. Out on the Dyerville'road'was a: meeting of tP 01 neyville strikers. Perhaps there were fifteen hundred people 'thee,' and at le.sst three •fourths of them were women and children. The women ltooked worn and haggard and wild-eyed, and :ot one in twenty of them seemed to possesWphyslcat.lit.i mental health. There were boys di all ages there; but thiey appeared to stand their toil pretty well and -tobe as lively with ~frtmal spliiti as most boys in their social scale. But the saddest sight of all was the little Iris. Some of them, apparently,, were not more than ten years old, and their eyes were sunken,.their cheeks colorless aiW 4helloW, their shoulders and arms shrlunrketic and had they beea maore neatly dressed ont. IItt aye thought itu nl-.liitL ir . strly` ne dt'tlhem looked as though shel lrd fire years ol life left in Itcr. it the strike should result in nothing lmore tlhl-i to give these pale, wan children a lew days iu the open air, it will have done good." Where are the hyJlpoi itieai literty-shreikers of New Englard who are ever ready to weep over the wrongs of the poor negro and In dian, and whose hands are always thrust deep into their pockets to i ftihe undpeserv ing ? Under the shadow of the very tem ples in which they pretend to worship a just and merciful God are little girls of their own race ai d blood, 'their eyes siinken, their cheeks col.rless and hollow, their shoulders and arms shrunken,", while their . gta.e=rs "worn hag gad and wild-eyed," hover In de spair over their famishing brood. Are not these mothers and chfldren.worthy objects of christiamI sympathy arid aid? Are. they not at least entitled to simple justice ? Alas ! not in the cold blooded worshipers of mam mon among whom their lots are cast. New E!ilani!tilpports Grant, however, and like anrlent Rome,, sits upon its seven hills ard from its throne .1 ,; geed ut,1 ,earice rules the nation. We wish the starved and wasted forms of those Provjdenlee starvelings codild be marched in mourniul procession thirough it the length and breadth of the land that the laboring masses of the people ,pight see to what they must all come at fast unless there is a swift, radical and thorough reform, in 'every departurehrt of the government.4 State Rights Democrat. AN UNPLEASANT PROPHEIT.-A decidedly sensational story comes from Vlnna. Fran cis Joseph is said to hade' been warned sue eessivelyby i eednd i ttd id peasant of Trransylva\ ta thatMa 2ikflfat would be shot, any, that the caiiipargitof 1806 would prove very disastre us to Austria. Thie'ged seer appeared a third time- quite recently to tell his sovereign that ,in another vision he hld witnessed a :Prined of, the Imperial house opening the Austrian Parnliment as Regent for tlhenEmpire. T his otleifal hLa as ingra tiatet himself With the peple by promislMu to rule them in a truly liberal. spirit. The Prinee, the draleeradded. was married be low, his rank, and. had been . I Vieitia f.j sonimthie pastwtItb; t the Emperor's know ledge. Thits scared Fratets Joseph, for. he recolleetet4ahat thie peaaasut formeripredie tions had been fut~Wed. , Itapprear on,tur there avestgafea t·r.lwethe A.tdduke ,Per, Scousin erf tahe EaroSi aadn the hutsB"iof an *ettrsier aes U tm Jiia t6eotopolis. frl lmp it relativeat omea-bumtes ,iseB3ap kaud had a Ight with his pr ivated shpii. giv tong htN i l8e dy :me .n tmothW1 marks o+a: M aigyrws. ¶a'n d hEn i e "the rlt;-e gt tha is noti 'oalyr ·ti.ý t * sl.a p sue; . os i a. tessp ne--sj t ais `fa d thi.as i lagee i.p t d toh i ales in a . M "Ig g . rat e ftis fet lhigh,t several mifts.i.ixuqt. .t-c4lacing the village, oau west, is tevalige ,v of Apple Creek, about eight feet nrve the level of tha river The oi oin tiese lj4bota.pairics is, nout eigh teen ianies t k,a' iud"rated clay from twenty-onrinchme. . tothree feet thic nnher lying it.. a re, nderlying fnit about seven feet of grvel.,. h'ley say there Is hut little rain in thi . souqtryew bpt}wu'o .gaiss on the tiegh.st tiau l mroits, host luuria.ntiy.3a pinof thruat drowult d heo ot prevail. Wvater is found readily near t-e s.ararce; wells, n i Bismarck alfguron! t rom 30 tor60 feet, At present .there are about six hundred inBal.itats in the . aew town, among theam twore, e tamilies. T'he gambol'rs tand salooi tniq ha, to u;S paosesl on ofe the town, ind fora few weeks. will have every thing their own m ayy ; but they ire all very quiet, and seem ,O.fiutns to buidi it up. Whisky and beer are 5i cts,a drink, and at those figaues "bums" . .unot afford toe in duilge very often. There are now tweity eight bar roomsb ; seven houses occupled by Brackeeit'4 Ief1igees,. olie generalt vIrjty store, carrying a $45.000 stock represented byT.V. LB. ~ha, of St. Paul; one drug store, law ofilees, lumber yards, carpenter Mhid blacksmithi shops, lireiy haubles, etc. Track-laying is pr preoeing at the rate of from ne to two wiles5 per day, ahd witl ' completed by the Ob10th t, Jne. 'there-are no lots in imarlket at Bismalrek except at fearfully high tfigures. The agent in charge of the town salt property could not sell, but perpitted Irsons to apply for lots, reseiiiig to ilienm the first right to p irehahe. All the roite re applied for, and newi sjecu lation, oa tihe "chances" runi fi4h. This wd e stopped, howeer, on the arrival of ir. Candgld, soid tlrae next week. Several lots 14a a changtd lands ht $!O each, size 25 bya 140feet.: Trhe Ai itW mtr. . 1The Plf Itt ,bu ede i0*May l5th far M. Hippe, aldS.s ra , .rom Oregon. We have not room for the details in full. Accordtng to the Leader, in the year 1856 HIppel seduced a girl, tames Bara Hoom, who n as theowmpanion of his yonth. The relgtives of the girl,: who were highly respectable, instituted: a suit: ieo ,ieduction, and In order to avoid exposure in Court, Hippel marlerd the girl. He remained with his wile down to 18di, and the resultol, their union was three children-4-he.laq.t d bor-on in lawful wedlock, In April, ~180', ippel disappeared, from home, takingt with him. $4,000 In partners~ip funds, atd sa'lg be hbind- .0ersttea fronm riv l $2,f00 was realized. The next that is known ot;hui. Is his appeaance at the town of TSan .Luis Obispo. in Southern Caliqrnia. where he laudedlrim Pna Panama stefner. ThIs.wu.in May, 1860, and at that time heo, was, a~eopn panied b ia yuulg and, sjrightlg *ogna, wiwm he introduaced as his wife. Is stlay at San Lt f Obispo was bjfle and irotp there he went to San .Francis,etand neot to P~rt land., Oregon, at whie. place !he reporteu, hat !its wife had died in Uslilornia, The i.ference is that this Califotnla wife was a TO. na he fled with from Pennsylvania, and. that his ehao of ina4ie,appropaistiorn ot funds, and other disgraceful acts, wereowvin to his connection with this woman. Subse quently lippel married the daugtber of Jdo. B. Price, of Portland, atvieg at the same time a wife .living i lr anylva from whom he had never been legakly separated. 'th wihhly Iskabandoaed, long after pro cured a diuress tlit.bt hOat1eo falls to rem lease the agsa Benator 00e the charge of bigamy. In 1867, ae we read the article In the Pittatbag paperiippel mUpde 500d the amounet ait , i lbgh b asgdefalt to his fore mer partner, and to that extatnt.*toned for his criminal appropriatlon of the funds of another. What repasatlon, if any, he has made to his abbdned.. and wro ds wife, weare not informed. This Is substantially the record of the Oregonlaenator, and it is a retal frrnom: h1 all o nI+ae and true ria will tuar sIthlotir aNd dsUst. `C tsT =!h rcooturg between es bua; I1 aL 'ar15 bps ; otered v, ` is eEapI~t:; WoDq it Lb. iibk . rP4s. ,ss any part oi L piC4t$ptbe b> p 't . r dbohr iii j19n j o( tebr b re ºIMPX t atr .,, $a 's. tbyhs ,.p3dCS5 0vcr low 4 iaef y. p ,Pt {`t .lýt l~n~: IWO e aIlfry of Chbarles M.Webb. hiteffus I. Webb, who wrote"Thin'gs" i'r i1e Goeldii ira a.d aiterwrrduipbtql hed .r.s. ditiei the (aliforplan, ltha !b~s Jlterary, papei SriiJ.. e.- Atter he left for New. York; a hsiDandQaygtayshf I HT pedl, laridter by speculating in Wa4t1 streAt. $c, lte: .!w llo tIi adverti~en-.ltt- apj edtsi jt~aw· ork paper: ;T EUS. 6IVE UP WY IIrSBANlIsD." ':;i W. T nbl &raily d au nal Atr t,.lr bew are 4it(id !ba l UbaCimrley, come boiai, ; .i i-t voi~tw 'lnigo."' 1tle explanationl of tilis advertai meoLtis as follows: Four yearua s hWtip wuet Jenny-- , a fine, daithiiln girl, at a picnic in J.~neslt -wood. ?Jewy was a city bred girl, not.'long 4from schooli, ad po.; partieuic)Wsiatrntive.while there.; l;.~ , jo. met o!tun at picnics and elsow here, uliti . iS ipol weather set in. Then Chrldy- 4d~er: mined to pall on. Jenny at her house, e .Le was htipduced to pa ani ulta. I he p.lp.p with!l a low Jet of gas, as it thlega.s aien. were:: -ven then on a .trike, was aCcortded him, and , for tw* ighlts in a week ire. held forthlb WiYith the holidlays came engagement and mar riage. Honey bliss,tof course sulat dedl-4- s always does. T woS~lislws lhve blessed the~ union. Before their arrival Ubarley had, got rich, very rich. This fact causeld him to. -hangstoward lids wile. ,.s.-,,auner wa., less affietionate he w#s out mere; hispVep, ings liengtheined into nights; tlheier he. wa, a seunt for weeks. Jenny, to: wlom/dides ,Was not every thing, called compainy, p.1 , last summer "the little cotttage among tl trees"' aas purohlasei, in order tit . -nelth of the children ntitit be.leaQ r li5pt.t is locter),, WcatchLd gjg. y1 aA lis soon as the. 1amiliyr, w .l elltt there, the husband took city .qiprters .iti woQ ladiest 5 ccspible mapulners In '"Amlt /C- Cankl street." heee iasdeinating 'n;' sell are the fiends mentiuued above. ' i one Atenms contet with half aloyer, pro.ided he has plenty of mloney, wLich elharlj h". All winter Chazrley has Ilred with'c . eqtr and supported these two frail siste.r~s i te, mother slperintending the .iouse olirder i keep a shlade of respe.tability in t.'iio4il. yorh~od. All thle t the if, ' Ls"ii patiegtt and atloe. bWuZife f d however, she went to New .ork AnirIo th near her hbs iadl's boa.ring, house. (i& ';lb 01h of ,&ay she saw i~ m go. out wrt. dil ; this oan a pleasurc trip to enitrail afaik. One eali iulge her feeli ngs. f i.4tteries lia she thpyagpw herself neglected, a. nure or, laier chlienr onlyiyi' MJe t lhe gay b.,' d ttirned from their rite, t e nsoi~lu~ was found seated in the parltr. h sttuattlst was such a one, asal soaioetlf izj ced d' on the stage when the orchettj-a iumtH ghostly, thrilling flddl.ajg.; . The Pcens cqn never be described; but 4t they pd the hhus* batid gave his, wife to gpaderstaaud thlt" lh'~ i must return to the home,~te hadt provl4rtedlbo her--"the little cottage amopg t~e ti'ees' if site ever expected to see hbl a' i.ia Thi. burst her strong self-control, and lla in tears and shrieking, the once dutifilt Cha.l ',thol father ol her two childrier, escootedl h'titd. the door aid shut it in bher fade. With fl it4 ilght of her 1ie gone, the unhaimppy wothmatl' mbined I~.a to the little cottage 'andf wifte, her thusi d of the fct.El te madp nuttis4t -te came net.. 'hen she ifletted t rfte asd of flames prqbably o. 'fco~ I 'l3haBd far t be a little subdýued, lio aver s,.He' 'i," s~nce this last public. wail, hdA o atsfietl vriiteds g ýc til very ,so on bi'a, sfif 'ud htise aseethn4a lpe canpre ' di'id y: 'Thi will e unfortunate'Tor ChlMle 'ibid'k`fe mriuey account.. ih real pfi+#eil 1 aubd& well-connicetetl, ani' her ·law ii #*iI make it lively for the faitht~ie htutisa IU, it any wonder that the a vet~ .sici% ' bb iut with the uord "i'Fieh 7'i: ioii o. 'i 'Wo Yatk oorroapoudri;dl;B.aof 1t dOneiete Ceu.. Imagtue' a- beordim poue hellow, an a Arls~ ~act~ian e~aob1 Wt~ltra pair of puvrp~t. -r: F r ma p orvl v a e . b r e e e b . , a p a i r o f - .s no w b ijt . tatokIngi comiing -to his knees at :whicbl they tare ttlmwed with lace; a pair of '1ow shoes with silver kpckles, a Whit. liaaui. Jacket, a four oorrered'hai of white Muim,. asd Carr ngspbryR aeh 1111.4 - With, those deiloouas dlIs'ii'are ma for tbIa,. Sunday bresMakt , i t:'i eo the b towut of France. I g;Ci circ us Jeer Of or ft $r tiade bhmbvu . .mm lag the setlrg 16 boys to g h' at. -I saw, himp, S attire than 00 of his kind; iL.;,._ khte5arWl hfndrs of last : unday f motimu, £ol.a round ioiat oiose to homes i Athe up.t. per part o e fob town, suplylog his wetonu era h='b t1 bread-arlls fa qpea&Iout soltblwte s onartiveld6 ne hre, hs ba beeahIM+S by AlstmUn ez1 ; The. 1 .Ii, ° *r! u testu looks eisnply . I p. oiw , *Iltaeef nltuss 'ann Pyet~y; `ie aseau lei io sn em im ce tse tIthat gte f t . I It i FU it la-2ot~" L y itbeer dnajllOkL. taw=:~b: ,w f WS? iy tt aim, who: tsi 115*34 #sf uim s1ie.&Dmtheir labo* ur 1r .:asi Stheki prilvige to iI. see l4 . '3 the only 1fi.&,J4Si*~~l ~av#n i.· ' 0 7' RAW, ati' IT- ~ P FS S