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MIs it the Porto'e 1 rMWend-o iaý i1 matter. S(I.n Advance.) one tilith ....................0...,768 1op0the-....................... 2.35 ' ntathmn1. »........... ... 4.00 a .....-...................... I.0 I. o oreigt countries. LIPIO R NUMasIte. 1 Ind ndebt......51O W ingten Offles Sunsamy building, { If rneat Hasen Pull man, correspondent. SHamliten Office Main Street, near . mond. pUS~ CRs Iqp' PAPERP. it M.oulan , anslope to Rive the . t teridr service: theretore, sub. Are requeted to report faulty 2 at onee, In orerlng paper toanew addrsg, pleasegive also. Moy orders and eabib "houl4 be made payable to SMiuoISIlan Publising a ompany. MA MDAY, AUGUST 16. 1910. PERIIANTO. " gtial story, n The Sunday MIs ',; )esatsaday dealt with the in qo s.esslon of the Esperantists "l ' to be held )n the natlonli . thbl week. This convention *tobe one of the most nut . agrinu over hold in Washinl P.?9t only will the new univereal i agbe employed during 'the 0se6 ': qa t ofi he convention, but'Jt will be ' mredllum of speech with the dole eat In. their unoffillal commu lica D.na. atr well. Theatrical porform ;.. 1 I'. be given. In whith .the 1Sies will be in IEspergnto land ;. 1.t.evtsi ianounced that the base baIl umpires during the week will i c o their' declonsi in this qiew Ian Alsoh the megaphone 'll\m on S ightaselng cars have boon in '~ 4lh . and, all in all, the visitor in , sibulgon, who is not versed In "peri ito. will have a buwllderlity 'e tblh week. But it will not be i~ bad, after all; there'le a good deal 'o the tiUmo when nobody knows what 'the folks 'in Wasbiegton are talking rebout. .. 'THE WEEK AHEAD. With the federal -troops in the field .i lrelighte.r and with rain fore- I eft0ad b4Y the. weather service, thils wel promises to bring a new turn in I i..O battle against the flames in the i fornia bids fair to furnish the Ititat will be most interesting int h Iical news of the week. Thebo hs will be ihld throughout the on Tuesday, when the voters t caboohs candidatos for state offl- i csil,, United States senators, reprq- t lenttative in cotagress and memabers a "ft ,! legtslature. Interest in the re- v -ults has been increased by the belief a ,that the Insurgent movement has v ;~.de aeonsiderable h eadway among y the 'republicans in California. The a nlaip Interest centers in the field for tl g.-veinor, and sine 'Theodore A. Bull, d ,the democratic aspirlant, hue no op position In his party the real struggle isn' between the five republicans., n Hiram Johnson, indorsed by the Lgpqevelt leagueo and supported in the 0I field by 4.i.ord PincJot, is the inllur II gelnt candidate. Tle others are '111 lip Stailtto, s~uaker of tile asseubly: Charles F. Curry, seretary of state; Aldesn Anderson, state suprlintendelnt of banks. and Natlan C. l.liery. Republicanes of TenLllusee will 0me0et SIn hi-livlllo Tucbday to adopt a plat lnty., and name candidates for gov Sefhbt*R eid Inlur state officialsa. The 0 factional warfare in the democratic u, ranks has given tihe rupublicans ullme ahope of success at the polls ill No ve.mber. I .ilursday is the day seact for the ilun- iN Yelltng .at Volsilaes..of tile statuelo of 0l Ueorge .Waallilngtun, presenteld to :~t.Le by the state of Virginia "as Is 'am explre.etIl of, Virgnllla' cordial tl ad-mlration and lovilng regard" for tihe p country whose friendship proved of 1r valaky to tthe American colonies It a , strulggle for indaluendonce, Tlhe ~ tation of, the statue will be mlade V e : dlstingUa shed delegation of Vir- t. 'A' e'et conventiln of tihe United a tf A.r.ertic, to ansemble In It, 0n1ays. an attempt is to be :q aR vg the high- mneqt problem y'plans to, orga o iz plemndent cooper- le houses, rndeirlng st s 6 'will eon ul ta e (l t of the Naitonal Praternal eon a pses in Dett'blt and thie entertain. mont of thle officeri and men of tlie North AtloIptte batielhip fleet at Newport,, n . ., - Tip political developmintse ih Spain Will' contin~e to attract attention. Other events in the foreign field will a Include the eloebration or the 101th t. birthday tlnnlveirsary of , Emperor SPrlnatelI, Josepht Of Austria,. 4h meet Ing of the International Co'aress of Geologists In hiUto.hilnh. and tile 6 launching of the mainmoth brltlsh B battleship Orion at Portsmouth, HIS'TORY IN TOUR, A novelty int automobile road con tests will be furnished this week Ill the Munsnoy tour, the itinerary of which has Well so arranged tliat It Semberaces many plaeos closely connect ed with the most exciting Incidents In *the history of the country. The start will be made tolnorrow mornling froml r Philadelphia and the Journey will In clude West Point, Ndow London, Bos ton, Concord, Lexington, Bennington, Saratoga, Central Pennsylvania and a 4nal run through Maryland to Wash Ington. This "historic tour," as'it Is called, presents great possiblitles. It I will be relieving to turn froa the contemplation of a punctured tire to the considt.rktion of 'the difficulties lhilch encountered the colonists at Loang lsland; there will be consolation for the men whose gasoline runs out, If hlie will look about hint and recall the privatlons of the continental army at Valley Forge. All along the tour there will be something to suggeit that, no matter how bad it is, It might be a good deal worse. Tile plan Is excellent. ONE MAN'S WORK. Students of statistics are finding much in tile year's record of tile New York customs office that Is encourag Ing. Tile figures show that the ad-1 ministration of Collector WilliamnI Loeb is entitled to credit of an In crease 'In revenue to the government of more than $13,000,000, The fact that this .lnniense sum of .1 amoney has been saved to tile treasury t departnment by tile application of sound and honest business methods In the New York custom house carrieso with It, of course, the loss satisfying conslderation that the treasury lass a suffered ulader different mnethods the ! loss of milllons In that establishment. But no eonalderatiuo of this kind should be permlittpd to detrnm.t from tile value of Mr. t;eb's ach.let'elelrt. t Ratluer should It add to the great I predit that already attaches to him. For nothing could be much plainer than that lie mllght have easily made iIls term of office anore comfortable c atd more profitable for himself, In i tie sense in which some mnatters have been too long regarded, by permitting t to go on as lie found them., , Some of those who shall succeed n William Loeb anay not be as exacting na as lie, but It soenms probable that ti never again can the New York cue tomn house become tihe nest of negll gence and corruptlonl that it was wheal t he entered upon ,llus 'duties. He lihas not a pace and made a record that a call hardly be departed frotm lhero after. And maore than thlls, the work to whicl lie lhas accomplished iln New u York lhas raised tile moral standard tl of tile public service evorywhiere, and e the molral standard of tholW who have It dealinags with It. h1 Colllalontllng ulpon the.l announcea - I ment tfiat Coloncl jryan will move rc from Nelraska to Texas, tle St. Louis t1i globe-I)emaocrat predicts that the col-. r onel and Ioenator Balley will get alonag I like two brothers--aian and Abel. hl A phliluuophlic vlicw that willie the aamile of optiimlisaa maay not always hi Iglit thal way to victory, it at least In will helpl, to dispel tIle looull of,' defeat. Tl'e alaoral is: Keelp smulllag., of Tiac (Oklamiahoma Inquiry has coma- Wi laiced tile Ilivostigators tleat Indiallns i spond their anoiey fast. The looker- U on In Miuoula ons clircus day would gi ollcalr in that opinion. i ''The iallemlllecrs of tiae Ulllited Miie u WVork'ers lre finding out that soaec- fi tling llumore substantial thaut Ilot ail' u i I.ccrutllr' y for thle. support of their of oagaanizatian , I Before a mall studios 'tie maecihan- Ti lsaIll of the automlobile, lae should learn ta i1a rules of thIe road, the Inost Ila- sa portalnt of which Ia to keep to the to right. ta Publlilled photographs of the Widow M~aea lead lo the concluslon that Wuandllng doeserves to go to jall for ailing In love wltll a face like that. a What with the new tariff and tile al activity of Collector Loeb, the cu.- On tounas roeolpts at New York show a tl ;ailn of $l3,000,OU faor tlhe year. U Tlae best Interoest of Monatana call be for the adoption, this fall, of the tax- N. levy amendment. Ivery voter in the : styts shouWd bear this In nmind, It It sceans cprtIln that tile census Iftpresr will show that Missoulu has LI Ita4e the lreatest percentage Igaln r In population of all the. Montana do tiues. lIi :At biil allne, we lesire to renew the o)( Iggstiomn that the Wtlbther man WI S.t.h hl4 r4 yau rdaty in (len-w o, pounty wee aiways E)$ C, : *., The German Advance SXI.---The (Jertul Talriff l'olity. ($y .Prederio J. Haskin.) SWhlen Colbert, the great minister of i Louis XIV, in 1I64 revisod the PFrench sr ystem of taxationt on tile bhals of the theory that the labor of Its people is the greatest asset of a state, lie laid f thq foundation for modern commerctul P ystt;ms, and, as a bl-product, he prod duQad tihe doctrilne of the proteetive tariff. Until that time the tariff had been used only us a means of raising revenue, and have been levied solely with respect to how much the king happened to need. In the two and a half centuries since Colbert's day tile I tariff ques*tion has beanl the chief con Scorn-of fiscal legislation in every cornm Smerclaf country, it that 230 years the prdtective lariff has built, new nations and has wrecked old ones: It has en couraged Irmanufactures and discour aged ugrilelture; it has fattened the, n farmers and starved the manufac turer; It Ias fostered commerce and it has killed tradet it has eaused na lonts to go to war and It hams prevented Suwars-one thing or another according 'to how, when and by whom It has 'been used, I tatesmen of every nlltion now enll orally adnrit that thei Germnan tariff Collcy, lIr tile selfish Interest of Ger many, Is' the m'ost scientlflcally wrought and most skillfully upplied 'tariff system yet evolved. The Import ance of the German empire amung tile nations of the world is great, not int the ratio of tile strength of its mill tary establishilent, but according to its industrial an8,teconomle condition. That the German empire now Is thile most highly oriraniaed Industrial na tlon of the world, and that it has attained this supremacy In only 80 years, cannot be explained except by an examltation of the German tariff policy. Thile Zollvereln-the German customs union-was formed In 1888 -to put an end to the restraints upon trade b. tie excesslve tariff levied by each one of the two score German states and which practically prohibited general Internal colnmmeree. As It was tlhe first purpose of the Zollvereln to re move restrictlons fromn comnmorer, it s)V inhevitable that German fiscal tlhought should have Inclined toward free trade rather than protection. ly the time tile German native industries .had.begun. thoroughly to recover from tihe exhaustion of tile Napoleonlic wars. Cobden was leading the free trade movement In England and was affecting tile fiscal pollcy of all Eu rope, as well ai of America. Tltus InI 1888, when Prussia had gained tile supremacy of Gerlnmanll and had excluded Austria fromt tile nation, tihe Zollparlament in Berlin was controlled by the anti-prutection sats, and the tariff revision acconmp4 Ilsimed at that time., making the forma thion of the empire economically cer tain, was a tariff for revenue onmly. Rtsinarek at that time, was anl earnest advocate of a strict revenue tariff. At that time Germany was concerned oltly with tie problem of freeing its commerce fromm every possible restric tiomn, in order that trade Ilight exist, whether its profits were small or large. Nevertheless, tile Illnlusion of thle German states within a tariff wall, providing absolute free trade for do mmest!c commerce, and levyling tile nmecessary revenue tariffs on foreign trade, had tlhe result of furnishing some degree of Incldbntal protection o,. the nascent German imanufacturer. After the new empire had been es tablished for five years, and It had become apparent that German union was peormanent and tllat internal dis sension need no longer he feared, Blslmarek's economlic policy changed from subjective to objective. Imperial unity assured the prosperity of domes tie commnerce. It now became necos cary for Germany to develop its ini dustries and to foster aind encourage Its foreign trade. With this changel liI thle tutur of thile problem before him, Bisnmarek, wholly without warn ing, went back- to Ilis free trade record alnd bdeamne,an ardent protoe tipist. At that thue the will of the irh t chancellor was law Ill the Ger mnan ilarllalennf, anld as sooul as hit hlad worked out the details of his pro tactlve scihemne the rehlclstag passed -te first German protective tariff brill "i May, 1879. It Is a curiously interesting coincidence that most writers of histories say that tile rise of industrial OGermany ,beganrl i 1880. Olltsmarck said: "Free trade In timhe wdaipon of tile strollg." Therofore' !lritaln could afford free trade, biiut Germnanly could not. He resolved to give Oermamly a tariff systelli wlhicim would provide It with weapons of de. fense, and with whilch trade adver saries must reckoi. Im framing tile first protective ,hiii, Blimnarek and hisi uslltalltl violated all .he precodents of thp legislative advocates of Ipro tctloll, inl that they did Inot consider tie intoroests of their owm cdunltry. Th'y exainhled the wtue k w lkots iii tihe tariff systemas of their trade rivals, iand framied their own schiedule so as to gain the greatest posslhe avaun tage for industrial Germany as a whlole. T'h protective system was duestroyed II Groat Brlitall, because it was used only for thle benefit of thie landlords, who with pighlleaded selfilshnemo Ii sisted upon mailntaihing a highl duty On breadstaffs in thie face of thie facts that the country could not produce sufficient corn to feed its workmen, i aid that .the workmeull were starving I because of .tie Imigl price of bread. Now that l~lere Is a recrutdeonce in Wngl(nd of thie protective propaganda it is intrtereting to observe that the Ingllsh luhave learned nothlng from lermany or from olther countries, and hat., the prevalent Itlmglisu idea of a protective tgriff is represented Ini the lma#nd of tite agrarian elumlent fom igh t4)ubieq on wheat. In the United itietns, wlhere tariff Imaatir~a , alwals hmlmve: beeas 'frlelmed iltbiath le 1.of i ofa single coslgreas,' htheln ephi bapi nelther time mloryopor iunltyi for tme 'slentific ' preparation. . itv 4tbi dUlua a.ordlinjg to thei B-Ihllii 'lsylstem. ThMere has been a iF~i.!7. i!!.#o~itkre !' is H'npr~l.;1PII tariff commission now, and there any be a full flegged tariff iOmnlnmlslyn again; but there 'is no reason to ,be Ileve that a congress, contruiled by eitlher party, would respect the recom. mendation of any kind of a commis tsnmaurek. had before him the Brit Irh and American examples, and when he resolved to to throw a protective tariff wall around the empire he was careful to avoid the errors of the two Anglo-saxon natjons. the chief trade rivals of Germany. lllt the posslblll ties of protct'ion tempted the cupidity of the agrarian element in Germany, whose Interests were one with Bis marck's but whose stupidity liesdid not share. The'landlordst succeeded In raising tlhe tariffs on agricultural products to the point of Inviting po litical revolution. The cllmax? of thills protective Papidelty was reached In 1887, when an Increase of the tariff was followed by the elcetionl of a low tariff reichstag. TThen Hlnsmatrk was dismissed and tkti'flstal policy of the country was liberalized. I'ood pro ducts and raw materials needed for domestic consumption were admitted tariff free, not by sa generist act, but by mleans of reciprocity treaties in which Germany got a new trade ad vantage for every concessaion made. ,Bismarck had (nstltuted the German protective pollicy, but It rematined for 1his su'cessors to bring It to organised perfection. The 'system of reciprocity treaties negotiated with most of the l.uropean nations fixed the tariff Untll 1904. A conmmnission of government ex perts and representatives the Indus trial Interests was organized In 1808 to make a detailed study of every In dustry In any way affected by the. tariff, and '[o' recommend necessary or advisable revisions. More than 2,000 experts participated In the work of the commnission, which was extended over five years of Incessant labor. The new tariff law based up on the report of this commission was enacted In 1902, It made considerable advances in duties, anll was designed to form the basis of a system of diplo matic bargaining. Reciprocity treaties, giving great advantage to German in dustries, made tyith several other na tions were concluded by the end of In making these treaties the German dipionaWits were prepared; their ad versaries were ntot. The Germans got' the best of It. It was Hadowa and sedan hll over again. In 1905 these treaties, making considerable reduc tions in the dultles, were enacted Into law, and their benefits extended to all nations enjoying "most favored na tion" treatment. Using this system as a basis Germany has been able to make aldvanetageous. rommercial ar rangements ,with practically every country in the world. No far as the, encouragement of lln dustry is collencerned, the German tariff policy appears to have meen emlinently' euccessful. But nothing human is perfect, and the system of monopolies bIuit up- behind the pro tecting tariff walls has so affected do enestlr relations between producers and consumner that the German peo ple now are in revolt..agailist the op prression of the ftceal system. 'Al though (lermans credit prqtection with having developed their industries and trade, they also accuse It of having In creased the cost of living to a degree that is becoming unbearable. (Tomorrow--The German Advanee. Xll-'Industrial Development.) A BRIEF VISIT. Professor Peirce of Htanford unliver city spent yesterday with President Dunlway of Montana. university, whose old-tline friend lie is. Professor Peirce is the government's expert chelnist In the Anaconda smnoke investigation. WOMEN OF MIDDLE AGE Need Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Brookfleld, Mo.--"Two years ago I was unable to do any kind o~f work and - hed 118 unds. My trouble dates back to the time that women ma epet nature to rt n on them the Change of Life. S Iot a bottle of i l E. Plnkham'S Y. tmb *getable Oom pound smd it made me feel much better, and I have contin ned its use. I am verygateful to you for the good health am now eno 0 n."-Mre. nAnAI Eouso.orNT. 414 8.L vinpton Street, Irookield, Mo. Tbhe Change of Life is the most orit al period of a woman's ezistenee, and Iglegt of health at this time ipvltes ueaee and lp.. Women everywhere shonuld reniem rer that there' i no oth rwedy ,own to medleine that l II0 e.sfully carry women r0u s .0. 80n e It hi been e.ao lg w'o "t ·· i'' wo I u +. ~ EL. ORANEHAS HrIIIORY: ' do FIRSt KNOWN OF S*KDLESI FRUIT IS JINGLE 'TRA f ' lCENTURIES AGO. It is a trite saying that yoeU have n to go a Jong ways L'rin home to leotrtn e the ftiws: and this *111 apply: very 5 well to the latest eiohtrlbitlon regard " Ing the history of the navel orange. le You would hardly Iook In a yting peo VoPie's magazine for Information on Iipr Y ticultural subjects, but the last issue w" of lt. Nicholas, In the "Nature of "' Sciefice" department, appears ithe fol d lowing article rdgardllg the Washlng d ton navel: 1 'Thie first we know of the navel or t atl*e, which ik very valuable not oply. Is on account of its fine quality and taste, n but also because of its being seedless, tf Is of a slpgle tree that was found Sgrowing on the northern shore of the a Mediterranean sea. !.lhis wai about e the year 1666, or nearly 350 yeal' igo. . A monk In a monastery in that.flr ir away country"painted a picture of the d fruit and wrote a deacrlptiop ,of it, both t of which may be seen in `the library n of the Roman Catholic university' at Washington, D. C. 'Grafts.of thia tree were taken to Spald by the Moors sev n oral hundred years dgo, and feoom r Spain tile trees were carried to Sotth d America by tile Spaniards, who con y quered and settled that country after its discovery by Columbus. A little, less thAn 40 years 'agi a woman missionary from the Unilted States found this fruit growing iI Brazil in South America, and through 0 her efforts 12 trees were sent to tile department of agriculture at Washing ton, D. C. These trees were 144Qi in the hothouses there, because they came e from a very warm country, and there 0 fore could thrive only ,when they had t plenty of warmth and sunshine. Tile department of agriculture sent two of tllese trees to California, and a there they grew and multiplied until n now the navel orange industry is one I of the greatest of our' land. So far as we know, this s .the first I, attempt to trace tile hlstorg' of the navel back 9f Its introduction intq tills country from Brazil. It is certainly Interesting to know that the orange was growing oil the shords of tile I Mediterranean as long as 1565. If this Is the ease, the variety must have.dis appeared there many years before it w as found in Brazil, for it was un-. e known at that time anywhere else in the world. In more recent years p navels from California have been , planted at Jopia, In Palestine, and they are said to be doing well there. It would be Interesting to know why the growing of this delicious orange was discontinued In Spain. "We have regarded It as a comparatively. new variety of orange, but it seems that it was well known almost as long ago as the days of Columbus. f [ HEiLO VE OF' MIEz H By Byron Williams:-in tihe village tile mut who paints Ills barn is, for tile fleeting nonce, In the public eye. In the city men are as peas in a mammoth hogehead. To the great in. satiate craw of tile monster of steel and brick, the individual is a mere nonenity. Men pass each other upon the. street all day; rolling' peas, stranger peas, occupied peas. Each is on Ills own mission of success, going to tile ball or returning from tile heaped-up mound of a dear one. And yet, In all this conglomerate mass of hulnlity, eacl Individual ,entlty has In ills tlle alme longing for fellowship and friedshlllip that makes tile westerner hospitable and easy of approacll. Man is by nature a soetul being. -He craves tile good will, thim( plaudits, the admiration of his follow man. And he gets It too, If lie is worthy. . Co into the cafes and the restau. runts lit non1 time. The very air is chlanged: MaOl in pairs and In parties plass through the portals Into the realm of laughter and of conforence. "lowdy, fill?" "Heo who comes now!" "All. Joln,, gladl to 5ee you !" I,'aces beam, ihunds cll up and tiie sllver rattles. Camaraderle alnlolng Ilel distinct. 4 woelalli to love anlotlher wuman must find in h1er no flaw. Silo ilust be as pure as Mary, as considerate as Diana, as lovely as Juliet. Tile fellow. ship of mIan Is builded upon a broad 'r acquaintance with tile weakness of hlimailty. Moll realise that behilnd tile fault of thile real man there pulsates a heart wholesoiie and true. Jones takes a glass too much now and tlieCin, We wishl hlie would not. but we kilow that Jones is companlonablel honest, good-hearted. Alunother Jones Is some. times garrulous-but only sometimes, Smith's manners are often 'blunt and uncouth, but no nan over had a truer friend. Thus uien might go the gamut and count every nman his felllow. Melt never love eachl other, says the Ilatter-of-fact critic. What Is it, then, that promlpts him to watchll over his fellow In sickness and i need, that pro9lpts him to fight away the'blue devil of deslpair and in still new hope in him who sees the flickering light of hoipe burp low? Men not love each other? Yes, with a deep and abiding Ibve that knows, no transitory passilon nor whilom hour beneath thle cypress trees along thp primrose path of dalliance. Men love each other with a love that Lsa.erllipep uplifts, ennobles,. Men-love eachli 'othbr with a love that operu the door of death ajid find# not ts Uaater un afraid to die for .g e 't Worahlpp, And 4l) about us' in the.lity, Wit its cruel olamor for the ,luiDe of 'uei with Its lnsatiate ro!1ers sqtteellip out the ,blood and ipjrlit in thi grqt gain we call jpogresia are ,nrep wise si gle pn and wl' bepa.se pf pq q l i4 tnpplrltlon and advipo liven; sl t fint o"l1w lvand fehpllqii~pl.:ii .aoi little nook of the" gr s1!o. I where a 'raw kindrelil. i, ! F 0 .. pi,,t.. a rJ.e erS, r .. n. .. ................... ...... .19 7r ' shliry - d dlr wens, now, each.... ...................... 40 05e work shh'ta, now, , oneh ................. ... ............. . 4 , ,, $5 me's work and dress shs, a pairn.. ..............th .50 Stnawaly n ts at ................................ .Al NI-mAL PgIoICI S Women's Departmen , s i.5i0 A ,1.4u Lad.. ..orsets, H oW_ ...................... 1.009 1.50 wrapperts or house dresse, , cnow. ................... 540 Odd work shirtsnon now, eacht ......... .......AL 5 PRICE Smhilden's woash dress es, vaiues to 'l4, now. .......$0.48 S5r silk gloves, t il co. oN. , no , a. "p. ir.................. 1L 9I 15e meolo rond lawns n ow. a ard.................................0 1.50 wrappers or house dresses, now Odd lots of kimonos, now at .. . ALF PRICE iRound TrlpRate From Butte Thi railte cglovers all l colors, hotel*, a stage exir... ses for complete tour of the park, takeing t all points of interest. 45 emember the date: Leave Butowte 4 p.m., ar.............iing at en-. tranYello wstone Parkf thepark :45 next orning. colmplete tour of thIe plark, taking In all points of interest. This is the cheapest rate and the quickest route from Butte. Make Your Through Pullman Berth Reservation at Once City Ticket Office, No. 2 North Main Street, Butte, Moat. F. D. W.'LSON, D. F. & PI'. A. TO DENVER ' VIA Oregon Short Line From Butte and Anaconda August 27 $37.50-Round Trip 437.50 (oing limit five days; final retr 1l bit ,eptinubvr 25 Usual diverse routes permissIble. Oregon Short Line 'LTcket Office, -2 'oJ'tr alu St., ifidtt0. t . D. WILSON. D. F. & PA. THE USUiALTHING. EJ Paso, Tex., Auf 14.-At Dpouglas, Ari2.,.200 miss wests of lD. B i ,d Der. nett was 'shot snd rinfantn.- killed 41 . agn early hour thin morni WkF-while sit. unit in thetb room1 of Mrs. Georg~e Karrr jryto4.l,so m.rried .wampnio wth whon :hs . l r td Qteuiedýý a . d . The shot was fired from * point outside by .isii It your,, Iivor,1 si * j un l a~tdo of !' i, i i· rmd ,Wop.,,tpk ulil _ lrrýR!how ': An Ideal place pn spet4 Mour v cetloo and Imprav8 yd'our h ahh STA' ,'It M ~OLO. (cqnnaqta w~tll ~# ) :n~ ' WIQ4 nwab, doii fir!Id' loci'pp, Ao.ý 4mmjdi -G"o diL o vºýOpt `icb LM' yt t, t ia., :Bteos ?