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The hontana Post. FRIDAY MORNINsG. NOV. 6t1. 'ItE.II)EiNT OF THIE 'NITED STATE.S. GEN. U. S. GRANT \ 1 E PI'RE'IE.NT (F TilE INITEID TATE , SCH'II l'LER COLFAX. Graant and ('olfax 1VictorIou% E% r) where. C(onneticul, 1,500. %eiw llaumpmhire, 6,000. Sicehigasn, 2t,000. Mailn, :30,000. Olio, 35,OO0. A.ld Still The) Comsme. T'le "Rioter" and tie "'Revo lulioni't" Repuadlitted by liae Nation. Ring Bell.. T huander Deep Mouthed Gtp s. aind Shout Glor), All. in. tlse (lad Hlill Echo It. M 1I.NIit; r -'1'The diis.patcihes r-ect.ved to this hour indic'ate an overwhelming victory for th.-. tRepublican ticket. the States of Michigan. (hio. ('onnecticut Maine and New Ilanpshire. aggregating a Republican majority of two thousand m:;ore than they gave for Lincoln in '64. We carrie; the Union then by a popular imajority of four hundred thousand, and it the Republicans were permitted to vote in the Soutlhern States, it undoubtedly reached half a million yesterday. Re. bIsllioa and modern l)em.ocrary. t;litical %sy.nonyms, 'ire dead, the sun doeh shine on their rotting corm- to-day. Grant and ('olftax: Liberty and Loyalty are tri umphant and we will have peace. The Nation is redeemed; we have entered upon the new life, and the great Repub ieC is peerless among the Nations. FROM WAdhIENGTON. The October Session-Maryland Prospects- U. S. Naval Academy Extension -The State House-Montana in the East. To-day, at non, Congress met puiru ant to adjournment. Only a few mem be. of the House were present, and in the Senate only W\ade. ('ol,. ('ameron and Patterson filled their places. A number of spectators were in the galle. ries, doomed aowever to witness only the reading of the journal and another adjnturnment. after a five minute's s's sion, to meet November 5th. T'he result of the elections thus far made known has a had eftect upon the I)emocratic party. The defeat oft Tom Florence, who went carpet bag in hand r., am this city to Pennsylvania in or ier to get into 'Congress. shows that the 1Democratic party may Ie cacº!ed of hionu i-sty in their dislike ,t certain purtions ,,t the floating population. W\e were at .Annapolis a day or twoi ago, and found that the (iovernament was extending the gazrounds ,t the U. S Naval Academy and putting up new buildings, which, when comhlceteld, will :add greatly to the beauty of the town. The only place of interest save the Na val School is the Assemblyv ('Chamber. in the State house, where \Va..hington re .igned his commission. The interior has never been changed except the turniture. The walls are adorned with paintings of the signers of the Declaration of In- I dependence, from Maryland: copies of Washington's address and the address1 otf the Speaker of the House who ac cepted V.Vashington's resignation, and a large painting of the scene, somewhat different in details from the one in the dome of the Capitol at this place, and we think a trifle better in execution. lion. J. M. Cavanaugh is again in the city, after an abslence of several days East. Mr. Kingsley is also here. and Frank Kenyon. ,ot )eetr Lodge. The attention of busin-,s J ucn and capitalists seems to be dir-ctt-d now to Montana more than to any otlher por tion of the W\est. and we should not be surprised if the coming year would wit ness a great influx of capital in that dl rection. So mote it be. Q. D. W'ashington, D. C.. Oct. 16. 1868. Another four years of oppression to t he poor. and disgrace to the nation, would serve to combine honesty, and c.alse it to be wielded with a double force in an E..trt to stay the profligate hands that have squandered the na tion's treasure, and are threatening the life of the Republic, and bring back an era of prosperity such as once was ours. Ideklnndent. Oct. 31. Please clinch the above. Mr. Rogers. by stating how long it is since you was mustered out of the rebel army. The Washington &St- says: "'We have received from official sources a statement showing the total cost of the government buildings and grounds and improvements in this city. including the lighting and cleaning of the same, and all expeses coanected therewith, and find thaLt p to Joue 30, 1868. Congrems had appropriated in all- for such perpo. eas 4,4651,910 18 ' From New York to Ma Fraciteco, overland, the price of psagem is $M0 In gold. Meels extra, 1 50 each--tim nine days. or about $3 per day. A Salt Lake paper comesldes a marni age moake thus: "TIh o.onvivialaess o the evala, we are IUformed. w.re chase sad ex.hiaraia." The Vi.lusm are after am Dos - a, at cTyv. . mlatted tat a .ok bhim to the Fort for pee sectioa. JOVlnEW JOIT. V s.lii. NL"MBFIR TWaLVi. Philadelphia--a Milinery Military and mall. skus peep-Riding on te Rail--Alleghany Morning glories -An Ir le, Escapade --* Wetwrd he!--breaklMst on the ears! SCn t!emeaa---A Fair Suggesties-Pelhiesa"d Apol egatie. From the city of "magnificent distan con," with its Treasury, Patent and Poet. office buildings, the finest in the world, with its magnificent C'apitol, where the "Reverend Seignors ' bombard with leg islative missilee "the man at the other end of the Avenue," with Its Washbing ton monument, grand in projected pro portions, but unsightly in its halt com pleted, paralysed condition, with its thousands of attractions of art. archi te-ture and historic surroundings. we turned back to the city of Brotherly Love. It is either a misnomer, the season of political campaigns is excepted when appropriateness is considered, or broth erly love is a species of sanguinary af tection. Philadelphia has the advant age ot beautiful naitral surroundings. attractive suburban villages, and streets geometrically laid out "on the square." I-t has fine buildings, good stores, the best hotel in the country, and the fresh est, heaithist looking women. It has fine park ., go<od colleges, and the "old lndelwndence Hall." It has the Spring Uarden miarket. the Schuylkill water works, and one of Forney's "two papers. both daily." It has more houses than New York, more time for dinner than ('hicago, more schools than Boston. and nwar' blue-eyed babies than - Brig, Laint Young. These thingshouhl us sk . atn attractite city, and d. provi i:ng )you take a view of it from the puve uent-. But climb to the top of lude p."nde.nce HIall t,y h.harynthian stairs, of naval architecture, and the scene is no: enchinting. Every host:s is Lrick, every brick a fiery red, and ro ,fs painted to match. Packed in together for t wen ty two miles up and down the river, red roofed. re-i walled, red paved, without a relief to the eye but the ubiquitous, un: versal glaring little white shutters, the houses ot Philadelphia are the most dtn handsome we have seen. We should think attic lodgings in that town per fectly unendurable, and therefore, as a Bohemian, will give it wide berth when looking for a "sit." Montana registered her delegation, small but select, at the Soldiers' and Sailor's Convention, October 1. It made the committee of arrangements open its eyes when Montana reported ten men "present" for duty, but Montana will yet make many a committee open its eyes w.th its representatives-if they are "bricks" of another character. The demonstration was an immense one, as you will have learned by the dispatches. Philadelphia was gaudy with banners, ablaze with torches and enthusiasm, and all went merrily. How many miles long the procession was is not material, and as it takes sone processions twice as long to pias a corner grocery as a church, there is nothing definite in that. It was great enough to demonstrate the "boys in blue" will vote as they fought, to maintain the government and secure blhssed )ea(ce. Out to the west, through Lancaster's fertile fields along tie usquehannua's town dotted valley, up the "Blue Jani etta" with its iron ribbed mountains, and picturesque scenery; up into the Alleghanies once majestic looking and superbly beautiful, now dwarfed and co)umonplane by comparison with the great RH ky's, and such beauties as the Ruby. But one beauty incomparable they retain--the brilliant mosaic of autumn. There is no other time or sea s,,n when the forest is so surpassingly beautiful as in the blush of the morning sun kiss in the first October days, when the autumnal tairies weave with deft lingers the coat of many colors-a robe of rainbow glories to grace the forest kings-and no other place they show to so good advantage as in the billowy hills and precipitous mountains. [Unfortun ately for us, there is not variety enough in the trees of the Rocky Mountains to furnish this lovely annual to admiring eyes. Rapidly whirling down the western slope of the Alleghanies; along the head waters of the Lovalhanna; past "the dark and bloody ground ' of Brad dock's Field, with a clatter and clash the train plunged through a deep defile and dived into the murky breath of Pitts burgh's ever glowing fire--the city B. F. Taylor aptly described as like the children of Israel, covered with a pillar of cloud by day and of fire by night. Sumoky it is. this Manchester of Amer ica, grim and soot stained, but substan tial. The clank and clang of machinery. the eternal thunder roll of freighted ve hicles, the glare in the smoke cloud above. and the fires flashing out in the rivers. tellof prosperots industry; while its inevitable Republican majority is assurance that intelligence predomi nates in what the great "war Governor" designated "the loyal Gibraltar of Penn sylvania." Thine, old town, is almost creative power, for while the hills lie sleeping, the miner plucks the rib from their sides, and thy Vulcan fires trans mutes it into man's helper where forrest is felied, field fur rowed or earth trav ersed. Sit proudly in your soot, your sombre shadows and eternal twilight. Your forges and furnaces are the glow ing womb of industry. You are forging the scepj'e that gives man mastery of a continent, and your iron crown is more honorable and enduring than that of Charlemagne. Crossing the old bridge, by the an cient engine house. along old familiar streets. 'Fond memory brought the ight Of other days arosd Is," rad we thought a.Uectlosltely of those dear oN plaes whre wes uapos a time a "lltth acore" played truant, ad mever was iaght. Hew old memories thiek msed s we met grup of boys with tol aaebly deem fes, ad the tevittable dirty desks; how yesthful amplmastms wore revived we w oe tme year old to drew anhaer it the river for a .hmp off bhie oulder," srd how esups am bean beat qulekesad s we s dd, mmd --d%&" s d Mft It MO W lid k Itow a stue.. We othmr sr lth LU. jthe in mm #i, a s esash Masoek. esespt fevnwe ta tho alt r f the mra omas. :nside, I grant the proposition; no place where the hand presare is so nervoosly cordial, where eyes look so joyfully, lips speak so lovingly, or one can visit the cupboard so unceremoniously. It is there the heart says "here is pesos,' and ther that one ean tell the most maniti gated yarns and Sfid unhesitating ece drnce. WVe are not telleitously senti mental, but home is a world in itself-a sacred sanctuary, trom which no jour nalist can send to the outer, "graphical accoants."' and so the threshold was crossed, the "good byes" uttered, and another of the thousands who ovel the mountains better than the States, was again westward bound. Chicago had changed but little; built a few hundred houses, added a few thou sand to her population; got wet in a fu rious storm, and came near suffering from a severe cola. A first-class ticket 1.r mny "carpet bag' and myself, on the Illinois C(etral night express, secured to us the sleep of the virtuous, until a gentlemen of poor but African parents announced, just as we left Springfield, "Breakfast in the din ner car 'Delmonico,' two cars forward." The dining car is the institution of the day-a veritable, unequivocal succes. Tear down your "twenty-minutes." thronging. whistle startling. glutton gobbling institutions, raslrosd men, and yield gracefully to events. "Twenty minutes for breakfast" is a dead issue. The day has gone by. The Illinois Central nss demonstrated it. Suns!line had succetdel storml whlen we re nched St. Louis. It was Fair week c:nd Thanksgiving day. Hotels wer,. thronged-but stores were closed. the str,.ets '-!serted, and St. Louis had :,,nt ", the Fair. What a rush and thro:ig' Ninety thousand people ou the grounds. swaying. swearing and staring; shaking the ampitheatre, crowding the tents of the Paschall house agents, drifting through the art gallery in a serpentine twist, stumbling over reapers. running against fat cattle, drinking beeer at "Mike Mc('oole's," and the more sensible, taking a peep at the -Luge, pyramidal stack of silver bricks piled up for admiration by the St. Louis and Montana Mining Company. The exhibition of stock and machinery was excellent. In some other respects it was a tpoor affair-but paid well. The build ings are miserable, as a general thing. Next year the Association proposes to have erected fine buildings, and as the Fair has become a great Mississippi Valley exhibition, I think it would be well for the officers of the Montana So ciety to ship, during the boating season, a worthy collection of Montana ores for the Fair of 1869. There are a number of persons here, old residents of. or in terested in, Montana, who would gladly secure it proper exhibition. I find the political feeling very warm here. Each party indulge in torch-light demonstrations, and each, that I have seen, were creditable in point of num bers, behavior and appearance. Not the slightest disturbance occurred; but there Is anticipation by many that serious trouble will occur during the campaign. in this or other portions of the State. The feeling is intense, but the leaders and the press are using all their powers to prevent any collision. Should it oc cur, it would be deadly. In these "jottings." up and down the land, written hastily here, there, and wherever time and half opportunity permitted, I have omitted much, per haps, that would have been more inter esting, and written much that were as well unsaid. But they were thoughts and impressions as they occurred. it not always happily expressed. sincere, though in judgment. 1 erhaps, at fault. It has been to me at pleasure to thus hold converse with the readers of the PoST; and, I trust, to them interesting. Ere this shall greet you, I hope to be again within the confines of Montana, and shall, therefore, affix, for the last time. D. Q. St. Louis, Oct. 13, 1868. TRIP TO DIAMOND. The Stage Is-Repairs Ieeded-A Cood Road--Canon Fry--The Mines of Confed erte-Thr Great Riches-A Few Figures Iusiness-Thanks. A stage line, second in its appoint inents, and accommodations to none in the Territory, is that of Beveredge & Staetler. which connects Helena with Diamond City. Although the distance between the places named is less than forty miles, four changes of horses are made, and all the stock used is of the very best description. The coaches and their drivers are rated by all who have had occasion to patronize them as " A 1," and the system and order which characterize everything connected with the line strongly contrasts with the hap-hasara style of doing business adopted by those engaged in staging a few years since, and which often com pelled passengers to wait at a station an hour or two, in order that grass.fed stock, of anything but the beet descrip tion, might be hunted up. The line of Messrs. B, & S. is being extensively pat ronized, as the fame of Confederate gulch is attracting much travel to that locality. For the greater portion of the dis. tance, the road to Diamond is the best in the Territory. Near the Prickly Pear several bridges are sadly in neel of repairs, and we hope the County Commissioners will so far consult the interest of our citimens and the treasury as to remedy the defect named before they shall be compelled, by the occurrence of an ac cident to pay for broken legs and frac tured skulls. In favorable contrast with that portion of the road, under the charge of the County Commislioners. is that over which Capl. SktaSld, of Caa yon ferry exerclses supervision. We passed over the section of road named, some three years ago, when it was hard ly a decent trail,d when the roeky de ales, which gave it passage, wetr. ed table vallies of the shadow of death to all wheeled vehicles which should ven trae within them. By the .apeidltar of a vest amount of mosey mnd labor, Caps. ta,4 has eteed ash Eek s have sec d to thn publie a wagn rseed throeg theessesia Brteat to - a~t r of iut, _ the aý R.bi fee his tlebr heisg the regular lawrfl eharges,wheh he receives for esrrying freight and passegeP r across the river at Canyon terry. This terry is a strategic point to borrow from the vocabulary of the once great "Mc," • and is the best situation from which to )"light out" for .Magpie Cave. Avalanche. White's or C'ontederate Gulches, and hence it is that Capt. Stafford is waking money. Of Confederate Gulch itself we need I say but little, for the fame of its im -mense riches is already known far be yond the limits of this Territory. We found that great changes had taken place since last spring. The entire gulch, as ita down as the mouth of the canyon, and some five miles below l)ia monmt City. is now being worked with flattering prospects. El Dorado bar. only a short time since a beautiful gras sy slope, is being turned wrong side out, and by the indomitable pereeverence of the miners, the King& Gillette bed-rock flume is now within a stone's throw of the lower end of the town, and is hav ing a way blasted for it through a point of rocks wzt;ch obstructs the chinnel of the gulch. Just above Diamond City the celebrated claims in which Messrs. Metcalf. Head, McGregor. Brumley, \Vil liams, Thomas and the "Ingram boys" are interested are yielding larger re turns than any other placer mines in America. The dividend. clear of all expenses, in Messrs. Metcalf, Head & Co.'s claim was, week before last, over $O,000 in gold. During our visit to these mines, prospects of ttom seventy five cents to one dollar to the pan were obtained ten feet above the bed rock. in the claim of the Ingruhaam boys, and $15.,000 in gold was refutsed for tifty feet of ground. liusiness in laniOmntd t Itv. H% ille It makes no great 5show. is. Ievertheles. gosxd, and not sulject to sudden cliangeis. Prices tor staplle articles are about the same as in Helena, and commercial transactions are conducted upon the slow, but sure policy. We cannot close this letter without expressing to the people ot Diamond t'ty our appreciation of the kind re ception and extensive patronage which, during our recent visit, they gave to the PosT and its agent. EVEIYW. IIHERK. Helena, Nov. 2, 1868. DI.TRICT COCLRT. third Judicial District, Territory of Monta na, in and for the County of Lewis and Clark. Hon. Hiram Knowles presiding. October Term, 1868. November 2nd.-Geo. M. Pinney, Man ager, &c.. vs. Fisk & Stuart. demurrer to complaint overruled, and ruling except by defendants; motion for appointment of receiver denied. Territory vs. Mathew McManus: in dicted for the murder of Thomas Welch, defendant was arraigned and the plea of not guilty entered. Chadwick & Parrot appeared for defendant; cause set for trial Nov. tith at 1 p. :n. T. C. Powers vs. N. W. Fur Co.: des fendants answer filed. Peter Lee vs. Henry Hudson: appeal bond filed. N. Sweeny vs. Wnm. Rutan: dismissed at plaintiffi costs. H. Hi. Lyon vs. A. M. Hlolter: cause on trial to jury. November :I.-tieorge M. Pinney. Manager of the Po.T, vs. Fisk & Stuart. Three days granted to defendants to file amended answer. L. Vaudeventer vs. M. 11. Burd. An swer of garnishees filed. H. H. Lyons vs. A. M. Holter. Ver dict for plaintiff for $J34) and costs. Joseph Wilson vs. A. J. Davis et. al. Plaintiffs notice to produce contracts filed. E. E. Barker et. al. vs. W. F. Stein. Plaintiffs motion to strike out the an swer denied : plaintiffs rephlication filed. Win. ('humasero vs. W\ells, Fargo & Co. l)eposition from Elkhart, Indiana. received. opened and filed. W. H. Blarecroft vs. Hi. Ii. Lyons. Lien upon the judgment in the case of Lyon N j. Holter filed. Kamak, Levy & Co. vs. J. C. Levy. Judgment by default for $310 and costs. Marie Germain vs. 0i. Jules U(ermain. Cause on trial: jury empaneled. Nov. 4.-Joseph V ilson vs. A. J. Da via et al.; amended and supplemental complaint filed by leave of Court, upon payment of costs of filing by plffs. W. H. Weimar vs. Taylor & Thomlp son; deft's affidavit of disbursements filed. H. H. Lyons vs. A. M. Holter; assign ment of judgmentt filed. Jacob Loeb et al. vs. John Emanuel et al.: dismissed at plffs costs. Marie Germain vs. iU. Jules tiermain; cause still on trial; evidence for plft. closed. ('HAS. W. FOWLER. Clerk. THE WEST. The wheat crop in California this year amounts to twenty millions of bushels an enormous yield. It cost $500 to cut down one of the big trees of California. It ought to cost a million. Only about tour hundred miles yet re main to be graded of the Union Pacific Railroad. Charley Watson, of Gold Hill, Ne vada, a prominent Democrat, declared for Grant and Colfax early in October. C. E. Barton and William Willie were shot and killed in a fight with deepera does at Laramie on the 21st of October. There was a rumor on the streets yesterday that the Indians had again broken out, up in the neighborhood of Plum creek, and that the settlers were stampeding for Denver.-Colurado Tri &uar, Oe. 1. The Bitka 1ume is the name of a new paper published at Sirks. It is 1eased in meauscript, the first number of which appeared on the 19th of September. It is pubislis.d weekly by Baruey O'.agan, at tweary-five cnts t c)py, and is spo hes *.as a genuine ,.:.. ikvt newspaper. A lew dave ge Mgr. J. A. L.tcket rt brmn Ulver Cl6y, and broaght Jabh Wilanums, whom Judge at Ow)ybee snMensemd to. pe ipeooesmiet In the Peitestiary, Joil"s t n he bulfio tobeý, lastI iý 6 f the' ý* *Meta D al i he vr$art -0qi . 5d ot . All Hands on )eck. Ry RlE. WASHIIE1ITN uo.AltltlE. Steady. there ! Strip the bemliag topmast bare! Wear the sbit ! the breakrlq state Thbrhuhb the lrimlmlnhjl w r ,ft fam ' Pi pe them down-tbe crazy crew, Cli e me sober men and true : let the abil, be manned anew ! Quick ! we felt the shock ot daswa. Pipe them down ! a shall the ship of old rPnsowu 4ink because we fear their frown Shall her precious treight be 1.lt ' They have trnedl her from the track : They are sailing swiftly a-k Through the drear and blinditng rack Toward the danger we bhad crased. Now she rights I Hoist the anvuas, ters the igbts : She has lived through darker night.: She was bui;t for any seas ; %None buat shipmea brave could laainelh i er. Itnt "he rode the waves in grandelr. And the tomwns have made her arstniuchr ' Ha ! she laughs it gales like these. Ready about ! Bring the bruakes compass out ! T'ake the helm. () PIilt st.ut ; Itighteousness thy chart shall be ! I:rightly. Freaomtn s monaing star I:~rtkons tbrouah the eltd,' afar : tl'hat's the hea.land -seet. tha sc..r I here'i thie pomrt if Liberty Olive Logan believes in John Allen. England is 424i miles long. Lame conclusion- a sore foot. Chicago, is assnssed for 22`t.444,.1S'. Florida i6 making wine from tomllatos. Tnere are 2.,165 policemen in New York. No groonmsuen at the weddings in New York now. Milwaukee calls 1.arness makers horse milliners. There are Atlantic i,-bergs 1.000 years old. A New York city election costs $l. O(J). A new daily the (;bl," has appeared in Philadelphia. The silver currency of F'rance is no longer legal tender. The wite of Kossuth is visiting her friends in New York. New York city spent $3,,20,8;2 for school purposes last year. New York has 600 lottery shops. Whitelaw Reid ("Agate") has joined the staff of the New York T'ribunr. The British museum contains twenty. five miles of book shelves. The Illinois Central railroad has 1.53 locmotives. If you would look "spruce" in your age don't "pine" in your youth. The Queen of Spain has become a car pet-bagger. The average number of deaths in Lon don per week is 1.252; births. 2.064. The assessed value of taxable proper ty in Illinois is $478,000.000. Philadelphia proposes to briage the Dtelaware with an arch 4.490 feet long. Seven thousand acres in Tennessee have been bought for Swiss immigrat te. There are over one hundred thousand more women than men in Sweeden. The St. Louis bridge is to cst four and a half millions. An ingenious \Vesterner allules to Uieorge Alfred Townsend as "'t. C'." Oliver Cromwell originated our use of the word "plat torm." Jean Paul says, "Remembrance is the only paradise out of which we cannot be driven away. lotta's father has opened a liquor saloon on Broadway. New York. The sugar refineries of Philadelphia annually refine 190,000,001) pounds of raw sugar per annum. Someliodv has estimated that in 1870 there will :50,000 miles of completed railway in the United States. The statue of Alexander lHamilton, intended to be set up in the new Capi. tol, has been shipped from Rome. Over 1.300 steam voyages are made yearly between Europe and America. Misse Braddon. the celebrated English novelist, is coming to New York in De cen bte r. There are 1.400.000 members ot, the (rand Army ,.f the Republic in the United States. Photographs are to supercede mono grams on note paper used by the ladies. The aristocracty market if glutted in Russia. There are only 10,000 princes. The apple which Adam and Eve sinned by eating. turned out to lie a fallen pair. Edward Ketchum, the forger. has al. most served out his time at Sing Sing. lie is still keeping books. (Gen. Lee and about forty other rebels are all that remain unpardoned in Vir ginia. The School population of the U nited States is 5,000,000, requiring 20.000,000 books at a cost of $18,000,000. One manufacturer of false teeth in Phil adelphia turns out about two millions of false teeth every year. "I'm sitting on the style, Mary," said the envious young girl, as she plunged down on her sister's hat and teathers. Pompous aged being to small girls : "What is the pestilence that walketh abroad in the darkness': ' "Bedbugs, sir !" A man has just served out a sentence of one hundred years in the galleys. in France. The marine losses for, the nine months ending September 30. 1868, amounted in value to $11,698.500, and include 237 vessels. The lady whom Secretary Seward is not going tc marry is Miss Olivia Ris. ley, daughter of the Assistant Secretary of the Treaaury, and 28 years of age. Ranche For Sale. Baldwim dk Ulllla's Rau-he. SITUATED two are aboe tme Hlot 8 perinp. to Sale REAP. meAye L to pýea ood lamete wll Wr4o .. **.S Lmalrm Ie E.e.N. 0.. 8 . C. FsVAT. -G. H mN, Wfie Zew. M. T M. A. Lindsley & Co. WV hole sale WIN E, ANI) Liquor Merchants. Have openled thetir pla'ce of bu-i iless at the ol.1 stand of VXivion',. on iIBIDGE and V)OOJ) STRiE ETs Helena, M3. T. They oftier to dealers the only complete stock of this class of goods ever brought t,. this market. Our stock of 2OREIGN WINES AND LIQURS Is as extensive as that of any .TJol bin,_ l4ouse in the States. 'Thec goods have all been purchase.1 from First Hlands upon1, the lmi t favorable terms, and will be otfir etl to dealers by the l'ackage ,,r otherwise. Purchaser, are iniformel th at this stock of gooids is s, extensiv-e, that their wants can he suill,'it.ol for ani indetinite period, without inaking any change in the IIualit\ of the articles that ithey tll:v av l,': tfor uise ()ur stock of Bourbon Whisky, LIEmblraces a variet v ,f brands well-known to the trade. Our Stock of lIl AN 1)E1. (znsii't of lthe cec*lbratel birarn. 1 --inct, Castellon .L Co., and T'h" Hlinei & C('o.,-of . arious :s, fronm I s50; to 1 1868. 4 )ur CIIAMIPA(GNE VINE, Is fresh. and of lIeceniit Importati,, and is the ohl original brand ,t IIEIDSICK & Co. Our stock of (erman an.l French Wines, includc. IIOCKK EIMEl{, MAlI'( )1.1[" N IEl:. IREI . NIº \.HITE il :. 1N'I I'!ES, And Clarets of various gra.de.-. We also have in store, and for salt. 2O bbls. Pittihurg Stock Alte, O)t Superior Qu:ality. All -alehs ,,f Merc'handi-e. For Currency. 31. A. LINDSLEY & (cU. 1I w-jv22 A. IRI ('HMAN 1. tl H('H H NIA4 HIRSCHMAN BRO.'S SlIoin;hy ,. Sh- " t::..." Wholesale and Retail De,.ier iN GCentI' and EBo)4 C'ulalslin mi:itde Clothing, Boots and Shoes. Hats and Ca:N Traveling and Sole Leather Tru:uU. Valises, Carpet Sacks. Buck Gloves, Gauntlets, Etc., Etc. Au exten..irve ani « lI: a-+.rt,.i .t. * Notions Fancy Goods, Silk and Velvet RiLb;oas Hoiserv, Furnishin. Goods. The m,.st extensive variety uoz Ltdi,'." Shoe.. G;,,it'er, ' l,,,, Rlid"-* Which we will sell at reasonabie rat,. .:h Whuletrle or Retail. at our new b~,re at Dunphy & Iten.tly' Illlck. All are invited to examine our gou.ls, and ' shall take pleasure in showing the samr.e. whe'b. tbhe customer wishes to iurchase or not. C. C. HUNTLEY, D)AILY & TII-WEEIKLY Stage and Express Line' And carrier of the L. M- Mail irow Ilel'nu to, tllrgte' v'ia Blackfoot, Deer Lodge and Beartonw Leaves Helena alternate dayve at 6 a. m. for BLACKFOOT AND ALL WESTERN CAMP' OFFICE-No. 40 Main Street. Helena septl4dtf S. S. UNTLEt1' Ag . P. S, BRADIYTRY'S* FAST .RMEIBHT, REPRES AND PA8SENGER LINE, Betweme HELENA and LINCOLN t~ULC'Lr Leaves Helena. Tuesday', Thveday's and ·a Lisela Gale, Wiaesmayu, Friday and a ed Sat Hall & MIlr'i. ti Heleos *MCehtfasks Hotel. toaItmla. __ Uldt Statutes of Montana, Par ale at thi oaee.