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THE I)A1lY .JOU'lINAL. M.IL" (IT'. rMONTaN It. • _ Every ttaarninslg Eacept t.le n. t. itey l ert al s . .. . a., i •t . . W ly l"it. a . t i - 11u th. - : .a a I Toll 1 It '1 +s'ta :In t WEsKI.Y b.thino . 1Ik:.L++ u l . (\l'l;. tear ....t .. . .at Mmt h .. . .. 1.1. 4 Thursday. February 9, 18.13. TINE i'tI.It.IETE IF.tILI tE OI F NERIt. K at V'R.%tE. There has elaplsesd more than a quar ter of a century during which efforts have been mad.e to solve the Negro problem by legilatlion along the line of emforced't politicat equality between the' raees, and all these et.ffrts. without ex ception. stand forth clnfe'ad failures. The prbtbleln yet remains unsolved. Tat the question. "Wh* ?" I lwoultl anawser that in atte'mlting its stlutitll the hlgis lators s'ena to have lost sight of the great fact. shlining forth tfrom ''very tngat' tof nmotlern history. that "*whe'rt' the Anglt-Sax,,na sets his ftat therea hae rules." Into the reason for this there i:t no net''ttesity to inquire''. It is enough that the fact exists. Nor alas the' rela tive nunmerieal strength of the rav'ces iin any ha.altity steemn to hate' tght to do with it. (Cast away ulatn an island in habited by sattvages ai rudlte. unlhettaered American or Britisi. sailor. and. if the natives do not t'alt hinm in twe.nty-foulllr houri. in five year- he ' ill tIa king of the country. W\l ether it tat uponl the icy surface of Pl" moaeuth lRak o)r on thet hIrning sands at India. fromt the Io went the taxon~ ftot pressed the sotil. his dominion I -'ains. It is only with due regardl t t.lis tfact that the Negro -problem is capable ot solution. While the federal po..r has t.en engaged for more than twenty-tive yetars in an effort to overturn t his innutablet truth with the "tbe it enacted" of the national legis lature, the pleople mtst dirnctly affected.t have been steadily aengatged in nullifying that effort and in trying to solve the problemn along the line of white supremt acy. John C(. Wictklittf'. in the Flebrna ara F')orum. CYNI.sl who ,elieve that h.itlsty his gone out of existenie are invitedl to gazi nm the speetartle of ich-lena. where thirty thre.e' r,.ituhlie,.ns are, dlaiy ttil', against two viilli,,nairas anl in favesr of a IIanti who hasn't gt.ot a ll;ar. 'h re rolingr an_.el will taki Iaro' of those thirty-three me.n. Th.-e I,.Iple or Mol tana will tentrate them. Thile ,hihlIre. now g'rown!ig up will Ihe taught to r.e~ar.' them as thirty three hultwiarks aiint crime. thir?-tlhree' dl'fetnlers of the' state's honor. thin' three citizens whew ' jiecor l and elmhrlliter will hriihtt.en the. pages of Mount.ni's .potlitinat history for all tin,. to mIni. A.i long as piersoual honor is worth mii. tIan nlhney so loo; will the thirty thr M,,nitana reptutlli cans h thetir I,,rin. nla't."r Mulnain. (lo, l..l i,:l, tL.a:s sign l the bill, 10 creating Vallh y a,:+l l' th , .,,nti.. and by thei at .it.e th,.', ,politit'! =lh divisins: p I',e ult, the, I ni: ,if Mn tnani. iei. "Se-is to have 1bee'- it question as to tithe ni. .,sty of tlh" ,'Ii.. tihn of thts'.i' rnties so lf.. n veninc'' of t1"" inhahbithnts arl' r"l corneti. hIut it is unfortlnatl that in lthi ca. of \tli'a.? i."un.ty the- tom'wis .O',pt about 6tl.O ' iill .. paild l tilnth ' in terests: Th,.( a'ti. t N.ort hern Itllway.tlhe Home Lamnl and ( 'attlti ('o. alnd Kunrail Kohrs. The two, lhtter. having only Iper animl pmrop.rt% io thin tthe' t."i.o 'itun mow ,ut if tht.y tind th.e hburlen of tax atiol to, ,;rt. t,11ut the rt;'lroatl will have to, stat. Tu;: senatrial tight at lhelhn is fast kingl interest with the pl. I Ih. ,no they daily c, t0" i now ,only aI pIterfcn,'tor.y dutt wthi.! t.le. legislators ,lsp.se ."f ua. rapidl!. as lrpissiile. with ini.' -I',I'tatioiim of a change inl they situation. Ii faNt it seems t, Ie' now tanitly amui l itte by both win. ,,f tihe ,.imnt'.ralici pirtl that it ia ui tight to a ilnish.aual luht hlI I tinal result will I.t tIl$. aplq.intmelnt f i r pulitian senator by the gtern r. ,% l.llltlllill Ipeirl-i .l.... The aw' ,wtith ,ih tle '-l:.Ll I., loolks umn ita r'etir''.d iii :"-'" it., pr, ablydue to it' lmairoelmuit., ' lri'i",' the mariner irintheslt(.tl' to e li I, a Au example of this eixti * 1 ati i ai Liaes came lip reei.untly in It . re of a con vetration l'-tweem a hi of six and an ex-sea capttilt. "*pi Skaggs, did you ever get in bit off by a shark?" asked the bor. D "MDd L uonnyi" he replied. tid It- Well. ratheri Doses of times!" Why the Apple UI MemlthufL Mie acids of the apple are of sigma g for men of sedentary habits whose live-i are sluggish in actmu'. Saos acids ,s .:v-no to eliminate frost Ie body i':.. 's mutters, which, it s wined. w'otld make the ,hear: heavy and i'ui. or i,rii '. ,it jut,: dice or ..t t .iu., . i ,tter a lied t-erouL o. h -.. .. . s , ling applikesaduce W. .. 1cl:, &* gooae and like dishes. - mie AsiL PHE COULD SAiL ON DRY LAND. S-- Ti I L.oked for a Time as Thou. ;h tII Stramer Wag (;otiag over tllhe 1.1 ,I. That'as ig+"l,):+ story that a L: .i ' on ula.'hiiia't and t..h.l't 'r t ' he time they sta't sl A.vilrf,. ' in. that witiirouis flat l,ttto,:'tu.l. wog wheehal arrangmlntut of a st!'amn tioat on Lake Auburn. Hie had just t cot her into running order and the h uwner. a smonewhat tredulons gen. - tleman, was on bounrd when U.a Irish of jocose memory camne along. "Here." said the engineer to the i owner. "is a pilot. Here is the man who knows this lake to a nicety. t He a just the man to steer." Theyl set sail with Dan Irish in the dilotot house, and has knowledge of steam boating waseslmeially limited. What fun they had. The engineer is a noted dare devil and he had the old boat jumping. Mr. Irish cut up all sorts of antics with the hells, to which the engineer paid little atten ti3t. Mr. Irish shouted stenturian orders. set every gong and gingler into action. stormed and yelled or ders and then lay down to laugh. "How many pounds of steam lhave you here. Mr. Engineeri" he shouted. "Forty aunds." was thle reply. •"Crowd her up to sixty." he shout ed. "'1 want to .ross that island. Think we can do It:" "Just as well as not." said the en gineer. "Up she go.'s. "What-- what :" said the trembling' owner amid the hiss of steanm. "'You don't think you can go over dry land t" •"Certainly." was Captain Irish's re ply; "we have had the tIoit up there forty feet in the bushes. Here she goes." and tie turned her nose full' tilt for the island "How unany pounds now" he asked the tegineer. "Sixty." .'Crowd her up to seventy and let her go." The owner fell on his knees and, supplicated. The Itiat ripped and tore for the shore. The 'ogwvheetls ground like a stone crusher. Captain Irish whistled a tune as he headed for the island. It was a narrow squeak at hest, for heca me very near, carrying the joke too far, just scrap I ing theshore and bounding away. All the day they had a gsld time with this wondrous old craft, and it would do you good to hear the tale in its en tirety. One man never forgot it. and that was the owner, and it is said that a happier man never set foot on shore than he. - Lewiston Journal Anienul Iuurt.d Tr.esnure. Doiuhtless in a weniltlhy ommlnercial t ity ,overwhelmted with sudden dl .truction.al was the a.:se with the t ncdent Lriconimn. muchllllll treasurle was actually buried or thrown itnto wells or drains. But then the tr.es are seekers of the Middle Ages have generally exploitedl such sites Iretty thoroughly, and imloern excavations º made in the interest of archteologicul researches have brought little to light in the way of treasure. Great hoarlds of copper coins of the empire e have often ls'en broiught to light. but not mnuch in the way of the i,preious metals. We ntig.ht exprIet th:.t more treas are was cnllealdl here and thelre during the lbug contin.ilut strife Ihe twe-ein Briton and111 Sa~xc,ll. and the oran llll I.qlllest Ilay have causedtl omie d l$,.ults of btrital hu:n ds. But the Norman kings thetselves, with their habits of aer'.ullating hourds of specie against a rainy day, offer the most tempting stlldies to the treasure seeker. All the Year Round A Ioving Tre.e. SM. ThAluar. during his explorations in South America. had (ocasion to apprehelnd an attack from hostile In dians. He kept his men on the watch for six days. though they were worn out with fatigue. "1( o1nce a te')tillel slept leaning on his gun." he writs. "I woke him and warned him that one of the least dangers of such a sleep was that a Toba spy would fall on himo and kill him with his own gun. "While we talked I noticed that a: little tree which I had noticed earlier now occupied a different losition. I fixed my attention on it and saw that it moved amost iml*ereptibly. I, had seen such a llhenolmenom i efore. The sentinel aiiil I pretenIlded. toslrep:; the tree continuell to approach. Sud denly I raised my gun and firel. "We rushed forward. There lay a Toba wouiillll iin the lug and grasp ing the branch with which he had disguised himself as a tree." A Wr.st That rate tee. One of the wonders of the wormn. world is Nentato, xis eocena, a creature that eats ice with as much avidity as the silkworm does mulberry or osage orange leaves. Profeesor Pintori, a Smithsonian institution authority of . few years ago. believes lhat theme -he eating wonders will finally, on 'account of their rapid increase it the arctic regions, gnaw through the ice bergs and make a trilp to the pole an as.ay task. -St. Louis Republic. Not IImI Si.. Every year a great many hero wor shiping pili imns go to the house in which Carlyle was born aal try oni the sa' .' .i li.:t. \chichi is ,prow,-rv, as a rl i:, . r Of tie,- thou. .and. o f v :-:s dr i 1-._; the p;.t few large enoulh t fit the hat. -New York Press. THAT AWFUL TOBOGGAN. Thrillii.. ti i riptihto +f a lir-t Ilde ll It Au.il t i ll (i;lllcl"u ks. A qut' lomking c.tl::rivanie' with n s-i;r ti: we- i- itli :.loti't a,; Cat as yon are is plct t !Il i,- :i ton It is a t+ lhouulniti titd inl!i:th il dti'vil. In llx.lixt`iie Il tl'ultrue n ll. u lttat down onit) ltlng. tlnt ,'- i-i, ainti ttltck in your feet ()th!er. get on Iht hhinll, a volte etxthci!ites. "I-1'd cill tight'" and y ,u atre a dliuil mIlt' You give oine mnighty. tc-o vulsive gasp and contrnetion of tihe it mtuewlti'. like a mtin shIoketd bIy e"lctricity. some evil minded brute hit you over the head with a chlub audtl made yout me myriads iof stars. and you fell off the fool toogg.nii anl ti u wllliimng down frem that dizzy height. Half way you struck a stake which plenrce your chest and drove its point up into the roof of your mouth. somebhxdy tried to save you ind tore away half your whiskers, an entire ear and your silk tile- -and you're falling still. falling to a shattering doom. That's all right. the Inagmnary stake is onlyv your heart trying to get out of your ntouth. you have lost your tile anld tie ear muf tempilior rily. and the ellhy'rs sulugh a bit freely thrcough yout hirsute aplpe dages. but those ('inllk savalges don't want to kill yoill ant are only laughing cheertfully You have flllen ii.0t Itlfeet iinow S.and the finll u rtirib ulist lie at halind VWhiz-- izz whiz' \o'nu gradually become collrinclt. of ln aultnzitllg. lrdlike forwail flight. the sl'e"rk pale from your frnghtitnti eyes: youl' halted blohut surges wiilly thrlnuli your veins, and you feel it sciuclttiotl Sof glorious exultation You have es e out hat is recoveret ftor' you. with your hast tarinutfl. yl ,nlllage to close your mlouth ilgin. s.-in ,t body asks you what you thlllnk of it. Snd you answer vaguely. -Fuff-fuff fine." Outing He Wasn 5.spI rloun. *'Even a stutesmluin is pil.ked up momnetimes." remarked the vongress man to a icrotwd of listeners "Ont one o~lcsioln I was gisillg over my distrint to get ,Instntd. and in my ram I bale I ran aer.ow an old fellow away up on the head waters of a creek. He was boeing ,iru in ma tield near the road and I stoP~l'i to talk with him "* "(osal Itiiruin.g. I ,nadl pleasantly " .llltl. itl heires5nudtil. but never stopped his Iteing "'*Right uw(e hluikin tield I rn marked. " lighli Ie, u,"u-.' he rellhtd. still bUDi hoeing .. Ex.c. e IIIe.' I venttlrel. bIut Li i eat the Inlelnler l of ,'ngress fron. till, fin district. an S'Air yonu 'i he asked. still hoeing -I voted fer you.' a "'I'm much obliged. I'mI sure.' I bu said. I'm up here now taking a look ti over the country fi " 'Well. I lhaii't no objeeti :. lie 00 said. still hi,sng. if you donlt take ns nothin elwe.' and he lIoked at iu. so) thi suspiciously that I tade him gsd~l WI day and rode on." -Detroit Frae th Press. an -- dic seerviluga 1oth ;nd ad Mian. to' The late lishop Selwyn. of New de Zealand and Mtelatnesia. wa.- well as known during hMs university days sr ' a devotee of the noble art of self di., k fence. He inturrtr I a great deal ,f' animosity frotn a c ertlitn '.ac,,,u i:l i New Zealand. owing to has symlviathy at with the Maoris during the war th One day be was asked by a rough. I, i one of the back streets f.l' Auckland, tb if he was 'the bishop who hbcked at up the Maoris" Receiving a reply a in the affirmative. the rough, with a m 'Take that, then I" struck his lord r ship in the face. t "My friend." sad tihe bishop. "toy Io Bible teaches me that if a man smite 'g thee on one cheek, turn to him the' t" other." and he turned his head slight- g ly the other way. a His assailant, slightly bewildered, t. struck him again. "Now." said his lordship. "having tl done my duty to God, I will do my d duty to man." and taking off his , coat and hat he gave the anti Maon champion a most scientiiic k thrashing. - London Tit-Bits. i . A (reat ch.eme. A North Carolina genius prmposes a novel scheme for providing an en dowment for a college in his vicinity. Ie suggests that the trustees insure the lives of fifty men, between the' ages of forty and fifty. for $10,000 ~ 1 each, and as the insured die off and a the amountsof the policies are turned t in convert the money into a fund for the college. This would mean an en- I. dowment of $O.000UO at onme time or other.---New York Sun. d I Tr.t.er.in .r. w.r. In China there is a kind of worm , that regularly falls a prey to a spe cies of parasitic fungus. In the course of time this fungis pervades the poor worm's entire anatomical e structure. converting him into a woody fiber. in which state he is eb teemed as being a valuablemedicine. -St. Louis Republic. The Trueble with Juah. S *M"'y boy studies very hard, Ml. Ii Ca'rtt:r. rawl yt lis reprt ar4n m· ost 4 ...l: . ': .. r. Jan .s. tia t -,is Gre.k in the " ' h,",','e :!I,,1 ,,h, t! ,. (.G r.,,k hI : . h1 is ready with his , i;.: :i :hat:iCs." - Harper's Bazar. A BURGLAR'S TRIBUTE TO WOMAN. Slow a ('n..t Hraded (rl ('ptu.red a iRt.ril Idlling UTlder the IPel. "h Te ,l .t way lfoira wominl to ido if she ty 'k ip1 and found a elan at work in her room," says a buIrglar. -w',ld be to k'eep very still and lirtvndl shte was still .!,-ping. or. if h, lkna"w that she had s nit him, to olbey his olrh"s and keep. still. If he tholughlt sh,, had sntlllnittal. lie woul:lent watctil her to hard. ullld it would give her time to think what todo. Thelre'.. one thing, though, that wo:lhl iha' ieal for a wmatau. If a lrgzir left her room by the de:,r saId. ought to listen to lais footstep or watclh the light o' his lanternl. al slet don't want to g.'t out ot lesd or move until he is well lut of hlastititg. "A man who goes out that w:: will always stop when he hats gnet. at few feet frotn the door where a wionl an is, and. if he lteatrs her jump .,.t of Iied at onct. he ssnltwetts what sheI's up to. and would then esetape by the nearest window and be out of Ie. reach. or else he would go bhck aus make it dlangerous for her. Shewants ter be cunnia. Then she amn cater him. It wast a smart girl and a coo girl that gt aiway with a fellow I know. He had got into tiahe seosid story window :and-l hud just asbout landed when lie heard two womean comin. le crawled udller the bed and got at o sight. The women calse in aald undrsnsse.ld iand gtot illt. ltl "ghen he thlouht lt riu y Iatot 'e in btd long enough to g,,t aleh"ep he began to work out. A dih light had been left in the room. lie, had just got his head to the edge ot the ibed and his hand and arlm were sticking out beyond the hlie. when le' found one of the women wa.- getting lot o bed. She stelld square' on his arm. and looking down iaw him. so it -otned. draw it ac'k. She went across t.h, resm anti turned up tlhe gas and began looking around the dressing table. •"In a minute she alletl to the other woman. *lMary. wake up.' The wo-oman got awake, an the other says. *What did I do with that letter that came this afternlmnl ' The one ill bed didn't seem to recall the letter, Ibut finally she seemed to and the girl on the floor stud: "It worries me: I can't sleep. I mlust go down stairs and see if I left it in the parlor. The i other one said. "All right.' an the first girl calmly took a lot of matches, just as if she nceant to light the gas and went out of the room, but she didn't go any farther than the room whe'r a man was shl''l :ngi. She told him she had found at man nUlllr hler bed. He thought at first it was that same old man women alt aIlwaysi findin_. Site convii'd hhn finally. an he went out an got hell. "She came e back iuto the r'octo alone, and in a1 few minutes the ,'on burst in and snaked the fellow fromn under the hIed. He was a ', mplletely fooled man. an said that woman wa'e so cool an nutmu:l about it that hei never should have suspected her in the world. But the best lpart of it was that after the first waonlan left the room the other was just as quiet and happy there as a baby. S'i' didn't suspect anything. an when she found that there had hbeen ; 1man im. Sder the bed all the' time she just up and fainted away. That's low a woman can foul a burglar it sh:; "keeps her wits about her. "One foolish thiin that women do, is in getting their hiusbanids to get upl Y at any noise and go cha.'ing around the house to hlcate it. Hl;alf the men i who hear a noise in the hose would i, think it had some good explanation I an turn over an go to sleep again. Y But their wives won't l,' eem. They a make 'em get out of Ib'd and go Sroaming around hunting for possible thieves. That's where the mischief y comes in. The man don't stand as e good a show as the woman does. If & the woman would only turn over an - go to sleep thers.lf she'd save a good many of the lives that are lost . through burglars. 'All thieves know that women are : theirgreatest dangers, an nine-tenths of the burglars who are captured ar. is aught through women: but it de i- aa t as said, on the woman's c eeing cool an usin her wits."-N-ew Yorlk Recorder. let.ay.d b m pa n.pi·s. ".Queer fix old Dredger got himself into, wasn'r it'" "What was that?" "'Formed a comlpany to raise a Spanish galleon that sunk in the Pa ific in 1698. Hoe boomcl the stock on the strength of a bag of guineas that the diver brought up and then some prying idiot looked at the dates a. them and found they were coined in Madrid in 1876. Dredger said the date must be a misprint, but the stock Sopped all the same, and now he' going to sue the Spanish govern menat for damages "-ew York A Tospbhes is Ier Cabin. Perhaps but one vessmd afloat-the police tug Stckley-can boast of tel phone connnetiobn with the world at large. A r gular telephone has a lace on the wall of the main cabin, and when at anchor off Vine strnet the instrnu.nut is connected with a jwithhlard on the wharf by a he.av ly insulated wlle. When thus con nected tho-t- ablo.nd can talk to any part of th.*- .ity. or to any point ,esehed by Il:.tr distance teleTphone without l.a: :. tLe ve 'el.- Yisil& delphia R.:, i. INVENTORY SALE! 4I1 fSCHELdJ&BROS2 I, ORSCHEL & BROS. Wholesale Dealers in Wines, iquors an D Cigars.I Wines, Liquors and Cigars. ONE DOLLAR EVERY HOUR I e.ilyr lar".l by a,'y ,.,' of rlther trx Ia any part of tthe etuutry, who it wllli, tio w-ork ldes. trioaly at tih empoplollnt whicr we furtilutl The labor i. lilga itli a rnpletrut, lud vot run no r.rk whaltever. We tit you out CnI..eto, eitso that you canp r I lt.e boIt--o - . t rial wi:laut e .xpnue to vuurself. Vdr thu.-" willlllgtu aldo a little work. tlis. I. tle gru ilil."t idr luta.. Y,.n can work t11 tol'. ur ill riteo g " ti l If , oo or." rtn. pl.trd. atld IIsIt a fey t .alr h.elr. at your dl. poull, utilize thleta..lO, ;odd io your laborer, our I..t-tt. wlll fait inlt. rfr at all. You will hr tlu.d l.u I I Ilt .tart 11t th. rniidtiut and raw ho whiclh tin ift.t-". dl..llr ulna dllnr;dayilIlnuand dlan out ".v. It l »..inr. ar ineu rtuitul frvom Iwr first lIa.ur. lt..r rll e rl ta nsthr t.r.ite-. n.or fail. You ilt,.i l try iltolhilltg rl-. Iitll noo sr for vour-elf whtat sn can it. 11 at ti bll )u.reI which wre olrr. No" capital ri.ked. Woutan are *granl worker.; iowalday. they niakr a. ,iuell u. iewa. Thrv lulOt:l:' C, r, thlt buion., a" it i i"" .rI lllaptld t., tllm Wrlltr at Ol.trre ad rr e ( your.rlf. Addrwaa U. IHALIEIT * CO.., usa $lS, pior.laui. Xe. $161 -- T $21 TYLERI DESK CO., ST. LOUI$.Mc· tOur Mltammoath C(tn loI:. of Bw' . Ci lrr T LxtSl, lad ctt+.. • t -.-.,t" tcnauerv t :S 2 T" au\. ..t . i',io*Ya. New ti ,n Dekal ;.t.i:, i,,-<, -. i Lno ok Casce. C tran. &c.. A h r kncows al al)l .1l'. t' in cvery coIatry .psa-a+- ma.h C(: ..O...r. -nt r. P".ta. MILES CITY Iron and Pump Works. B. Ullman Proprietor. ,:. is F s wr'C H s-; gudsm srr en d ellr MyeI I 7 Squ,.ly ~l a n r" ):' . 1 ""I .w yUL r Ahr . vrtnVI J TMe hndee of _ 2xn:z3 Cz.s'"! ,r .!. w; eATiiZ h c t-_. "