Newspaper Page Text
DailyYellowstone Journal
VOLUMEi. NO. 63.
MILESCITY, MONTANA, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1882.
PRICETEN CENTS
THEDAILY JOURNAL
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W.O. KNIGHT, Publisher,
HHIMJllHU1ldi Ml.
1 -
TELEGRAMS.
Kl^ort* *t tfTftrrnnty for thr Ihtity Y* M*^tr*toH*^Journal hff th+ 1%'vmtrrn Anmorhttrd^t*re*n and thr \% rntvro 9 nion^T*-I*y rnph font}** np.
ADEAD MAN SPEAKS,
AndHis Words are Many, Con^^cerning the 111 Fated^Jeannette.
anunusual marriage.
Yankton,D. T. Deo. 29^There is^great excitement here over the secret^marriage yesterday of Dr. Sebiaken^Ross, a young physician, and Sister
congressional.
Washington,Dec. 29.^Senate.^^The president's disability bill was de^^bated for some time, when the bill for^the relief of Gen. Porter was taken up
MaryPaul, of the Cut hollo Convent of and Logan made a long speech against
BUSINESSCARDS.
ARTIIl'KH O'CONNOR,^Attorney at I.^^ ami Notary l'ukllc.
aNDKEW K. uurlkk.ll.^H.ATTOK M KY-AT- LAW.
Mll.taCiTY,
MoNTAMA.
CB.1.1.II' II i.h m. 1^.^a Prismas ^^o^ sceheo^!.
OIBceal City Dm* Store.
JJAYWOOD,^.PHYSICIAN ANI.SURt.KON.
Oftcebelow the Journal UiuMing, Main Street.
yM WILDK, Attorney at Law. Billing*. M. T.^IJ Practice in all ruiirta'iit the Territory.
KENNETHMICE,^TEACHER OF MUSK,^Mn f City, .... Mostaha.
Instruction*on the Piano an^l Vocal H
pecialy. Pianea Tuned.
FIRSTNATIONAL
BANK
MILESCITY, to. T.
JOS.LEIGHTON, - PRESIDENT.^RICH'D E. STOW E It, CASHIER.
AuthorizedCapital, - - $250,000.^Paid up Capital, - - t 60,000.
directors:
Jos.Leiohton, Hich. E. Stowkr.^Alfred Myers, Wm. H. Guthrie.^^Uko. M. Miles, John J. Gkah'am.^Ja8. 8. BaUUIV, U. S. A.
colIMnM:^Chatham National Bank. New Y^ rk^^ity.^Merchant* Loan ami 1'riiet Co.. CHeaeo.
MerchauUNational Bank, St. Paul. Minn.
ThePresident Moves Into the^White House, and Will Re^^ceive New Year's.
CREEDMOOR
ARMORY
A.D. McAUSLAND,
GunsAmmunition
OFEVERY DESCKIITION
HEAVYAND RKtil'LAK SHARPS RIFLES
W#can put them up *rotu 1- to 18 ponnda with^EatnlUKton iiarrela it MTajilad, 'M
WeGuarantee our Work
^laStrMt, i ^ites City. ,
UNIONHALL SALOON
ParkStrMt, Mltoa Orly.
OPENDAY AND NIGHT
RafVaahmcnUof all klnda. Warm and Cold^l unch** % centa. The hall I* furniihvd with pool^and gaming tablaa. Fresh Lager Beer on Tap by^t4i^ Quart. The public art all iiiTileu. 26
JohnStriegel. Pro.
Billfor the Relief of Fitz^John Porter Still Before^Congress.
YanktonDoctor Selects His^Better Half From a Catho^^lic Convent.
SacredHeart. The affair leaked out^to-day. The Doctor is a determined^man and proposes to stand by his mat^^rimonial right-*.
nihilism.
NewYork, Dec. 12).^At the Tam^^many primary of the Sixth Assem^^bly district, held in the liquor^store of William Oeogher, shortly^before the polls closed, some person^dropped a bomb which exploded, blow^^ing the entire front of the store away.^For some time the greatest confusion^prevailed.' No one was injured.
canadiannews.
Montreal,Quebec, Dec. 20.^Six^clerks in the Carlisle dry goods estab^^lishment were arrested on the charge^of systematic robber}-, and other ar^^rests are expected.
\V.C. Anderson, a young telegraph^opcrutor at Lochutc, who recently fell
itbut didn't fluish. Senate adjourned^until Tuesday.^House^Not in seanlon.
goingfor buffalo huntkrs
Washington,Dec. 29.^Indian^agent Porter at Fort Peck, Montana,^telegraphs the 1 ndiun bureau that the^Milk river country is .overrun with^wh ite hu nters who are slaughtering the^buffalo by the thousands. The Indians^are becoming restless and the agent^fears trouble. The presence of military^is requested. The secretary informed^the agent that white hunters had no^business on the reservation, and that^the secretary of war had been asked^to-day to have them removed.
L.NADO,
-DEALERIN-
GROCERIES
PROVISIONS,
Alaoa full line ofFurninhinf Oond*
Notion*
HuntersSupplies
KeptConrtantly on hand.
delong's journal.
Washington,Dec. 29.^De Long's^report found beside his dead body has^| been made public. It makes thirty
heirtothreequartersofamillion dollars tnousand words, and details incidentals
A^Friendly Bout*' Between the^Prize Fighters Sullivan^and Coburn.
Twoof Cincinnati's Leading^Journals Join Hands Across^the Bloody Chasm.
GENERALTELEGRAPHS.
appointed.
London,Dec. 29.^Lord Napier, of^Magdala, has been appointed field^marshal.
railroadstocks
NewYork, Dec. 29.^Northern Pa^^cific 4^i, preferred 85 ; St. Paul, Min^^neapolis ^ Manitoba T42{.
burned.
NewYork, Dec. 29.^The sugar^refinery at (Ireenock is burned, caus^^ing a loss of 3,500 i^ounds of sugar.
released.
Chicago,Dec. 29. -Dr. Buddington,^a medical student charged with ab^^ducting the girl Annie Jackson, was^discharged to-day.
thepresident at home
Washington,Dec. 29.^The presi^^dent move* into the White House from^the Soldiets BaMM to-morrow and will^receive New Year's.
bythe death of an uncle in Scotland,^had just been notified of a bequest of^one hundred thousand dollars by the^decease of another uncle.
consolidation.
Cincinnati,O., Deo. 29.^Arrange^^ments have been completed for the^consolidation of the Commercial and^Gazette new-papers, and the publica^^tion of a new daily under the name of^Commercial-Oazctte. The new paper^will be issued as soon as the mechani^^cal preparations can be made. Both^Mr. Suiith, of the Gazette, and Mr.^Halstead, of the Commercial, will be in^management of this newspaper, and^they will be assisted by such talent^from the two papers, as is needed to^make the new pa per successful. The^paper will be republican in politics.
perishedin the flames.
Beverly,West Virginia, Deo. 29.^A. Currence, a promiuent farmer of^Randolph county was burned to death^on Wednesday night, with four of his^children, and his wife was also fatally^injured. Currence had lost^sleep through watching with^neighbor, and Wednesday night Mas^sleeping at home, and while his wife
ofthe cruise from the departure at^San Francisco in 1879 to January, 1881.^Its principal feature is an clalyorute^account of De Long's views regarding^the expedition. He considered it good^judgment to bear for Wrangell land.^He embodies the story of how land^was sighted, and how he expected to^reach it, and geographically describes^how, on the next day, the Jcanctte^became beset in ice, never again to be^relieved, and says the party was com^^pelled to make virtue of necessity, and^stay where we were.' Some times all^night and sometimes day and night,^from January lf'th to February 4th,^Sweetmanand Ninderman stood down^in the fore peak, with icy water flow^^ing around them nearly to their knees,^working faithfully until tht-ir work^was accomplished, and the good results^of that woik were evident in the grad^^ually reduced amount of watercomiug^into the ship and our ability to control^the leak without such ruinous expen^^diture of fuel as had been necessary^before. It is for these reasons that I^much I have had the honor to recommend^a sick ] these two men for medals of honor as^a recognition of heroic couduct under^the most thrilling circumstances. Capt.
Higherteaah price paid for Hide*^Park Street, Mile* City.
tor.
CityDrug Store,
Dr.LEBCHER,
Dealerin
Onusand. Mies.
i
PRESCmPTICWS
CarvfullyCmmfwmtui.
SMOKINGCASES,^VASES, BUSTS,^LIQUORS
ACtOABS.
Everythingon hand generally it/it^in a well regulated dnig hotue. I
andtwo children watched a', neigh- j DeLong's record the remainder of^bor's bedside, they saw the flames of the winter and summer of 1880 is for^their homestead. Before they could I the most part a monotonous record ^f^get there, the wall had fallen In, en- ! storm, ice movement, constant anxiety^veloping the five inmates. Mrs. Cur- I and almost unbrokeu disapi^oliitinent.^rence made fruutie, but unsuccessful j As theshort Arctic summer drew to a^attempts to rescue them, and received | close without setting the Jeauctte free,
firein england.
London,Dec. 29.^The large flour^mills nt Belfast were burned to-day.^One flreman was killed and three^injured. Loss, ^40,000.
royaltyamong ITS.
Chicago,Dec. 27.^The Japanese^princes and suite passed through this^city en route to San Francisco to-day.^They are delighted with their trip.
fellthrough the ice,
Boston,Muss., Dec. 29.^Five chil^^dren broke through the ice in a brook^near Hyde park and three drowned.^John Burns Charles Hums, and John^(barney.
moneymarket.
NewYork, Dec. 29.^Money, 8(5.7^closed, offered, 3(a 4. Prime merchants^paper, 6(o 8; sterling exchange, bunk^^ers' bills, steady, 480; sterling ex^^change, demand, 484).
burnedbt a lamp.
Dubuque,la., Dec. 20.^Last night,^at the residence of Edward Doyle, near^Farley, a hanging lamp fell upon a^boy two years old and burned him so^badly that he died this morning. Two^other members of the family were^alao severely burned.
badchildren.
Meriden,Conn., Dec. 29.^^Two^children, eight and eleven years old,^acknowledge that they placed obstruc^^tions ou the track Tuesday to wreck^the New York passenger train, and snjjlf^they did so because an employe of the
roaddrove them off the track.
,^^ a
HVRl'riskdSURVEYORS.
Eureka,Nevada, Dec. 29.^A few^days ago h band of Indians surprised a^party of surveyors on the Eureka A^Colorado River railroad, and robbed^them of every thing In the camp, In^^cluding about HMO in greenbacks- The^surveyors being unprepared, made no^resistance, and wen not Injured In^person.
bumsthat will prove fatal. The char^^red bones were recovered yesterday by^the neighbors
boldrobbery.
GrandForks, D. T., Dec. 29.^A^bold and successful robbery was per|^e-^trated at East Grand Forks, about two^o'clock this morning. The resilience^ofW. C. Nash was entered, and the^desk robbed of Hourly $250. No one^was awakened but the servant g'r'i^who supposed it to be one of the^family. A part of the money was a^school fund, as Mr. Nash i^ a echuol^teacher. There is no clue to the rob-^l^er, but it must have been done by^someoneacquainted with the premises,^and knew where Mr. Nash kept his^funds.
Ata meeting of the chamber of^commerce to-night, resolutions of^condolence were ]^assed on the death^of one of It's most prominent members.
suitwithdrawn*.
St.Louis, Deo. 29.^The damage^suit for f.50,000, instituted by Alice A.^Slayback against John A. Cockerill,^managing e;Utor of the Itrt-Ditpatch,'^for the loss of her htrslmnd, watt dis^^missed to-day, at the plaintiff's In^^stance, and the cost of the suit was^filed after the grand Jury had ignored^the bill against Cockerill, for the kill^^ing of Col. Slayback. Depositions^have been taken by plaintiff's attor^^neys for the past three weeks, but
andanother dreary winter approach^^ing, Capt. DeLong evidently began to^resolve in his own mind the question^if it would not be bettor to abandon the^ship and make for the northern coast^of Siberia over the ice than to mn^the great risk of a second winter^in the pack. Under date of Sept.^, 20th, 18M0. he says: ^I dislike natur-^1 ally to dwell on the idea of abandon^^ment of the ship. We have come^' through so much that it gives me^hopes of surviving more. As long as^enough of tin ^hip remains to shelter,^us, sticking by that fragment is prefer*^able to cumping out, and I can con*^oeive of no greater, or ^forlorn hope,^^than an attempt to reach Silieria, say^240 miles distant, over the Ice that sur^^rounds us. And with winter's cold^sapping ones life at every step. In^case we should l^^e our ship, we would^make efforts to got there, but our^eha.iees of success would In^ extremely^prohlimatical. The last entry In the^record is dated December .'list, 1880,^and is as follows: ''Minstrels and^singing in Now Year, in latitude 73
StageLine,
Connectingat Spearfith with Rodgcrt*^Daily Stage for
DEADWOOD,
lejrThestage leaves Miles t'Ky^Monday, Wednesday and Friday^mornings at ^* o'clock. For pa-sage ^^r^any information apply to
A.J. MAXWELL, PROF.
1 Main Street, Miles City, M. T.
COAL!
1It ia to the Interval of all who ar* on ,^r ^ '^ ^^with the quality of Coal ot I hi* eowmiy. SajfaM^,ii.i making arruiureuieiit* lor ^ion r ^ fuel locum if*
degrees,48 minutes north, longitude ,h,. ^,J ^, lhtr^177 degrees and 22 minutes east. Dur-^i ing the past sixteen months we lave^! drifted 1/00 miles, fur enough If It had^, been In a straight line, to carry us be-^{ yor.d the pole, but we are yet only 220^miles northwest of where we were first^j beset. We have suffered injury, and^: danger has often confronted us. We
nothingnew concerning the tragedy | have been squeesed and Jammed, tos-^whlch resulted in Slay back's death i sed and tumbled, and we have pumped^was elicited, except some theoretical1 a leaking ship for a year, but we are^experts testimony. The attorneys for j not daunted, anil are as ready to dure^Cockerill notified plaintiff's lawyers everything, as ever we were, and we^that they would begin taking tcsti- face a new year, firmly hoping to do^mony for the defense at one o'clock to-! something worthy ourselves, of the
Brand
BETTERKSO WN A6
HAINES'COAL!
wwtea
andalway* fear* unher-.l ^ati*taet^I* jwat aa rmwwiiaialua. All Oi^^ lied ateaauaabla dlaewwM aar
l*enIn aae here for the ihi
we*^Til* real
Ursa
Pro**-*^ Otwere
day,but when the hour arrived, and^the witnesses for the defense were In^readiness, th^ attorney tor (he plain-^tiff rushed In and said thai the suit^was dismissed. Comment on this sod-1^den action la peculiar.
Bennettenterprise, and of the flag^above us.^ In lea than ten months^after these words were written, the^Jeannette was al the bottom of the^Arctic Ocean, and LeLong Lay dead^in
0.W. UW| 4 ^wTtV tTORC
Or
ILHAMEf
!^^!