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THE DAILYJOURNAL WrMA3LIUBD 186-. miLES CITY. mONTANA. EUSSN & WU.U Silts Oad pobllbeeeI TUB OFIIIAL lAPZl Of CUSTER COMM W. D. KNIGHT. &. GORDON. go b~s againat Turn lrt4uwwOWr oU3 .U&L. ae & %my of a h ampber" O sM Papr . I'm.. m am aee*Mpmlai by a weli =d bw th publieelr or Orbosma no aib of TuUS TOLuaWayeinCJouWL b M -Ithe egatm er a~~~ uaraern at TmIawOVEM JeWAuaJ be"i ta$ *aso~ tram asrm9-- -- ow e a 64 Sl plaliw a8 MSiraihig. of whaleta anow* ehaquable ta Own I aatrr , Ia .Ia the esigua ad sad eLsh ba - he ur vmads. Leal aaUae" Pub Ihl er paean af osar emsty . &IVpaid X weULrmm bo bo 4@i g v 1 esom O hr pabiloulam to wIbMy ~'SIIUUS4 he Turr· cn Yuw~vom·I 5mL sd SAMo the WO w ogMr be EItRo to itsurv Thursday, January 6, t*S7. Oomxmsboxwz COLEMAN bas writ ten a letter to Governor Oglesby, of Illinois, sharply protesting against what be terms the violation by the Illinois state live stock commislioner of the rules prepared by the commi. idoer of agriculture to regulate coop eration between the general govern meet and the states for the suppres slon of pleuro-pneumolni. He cites rule 10, providing that all animals af locted with contagious pneumonia are to be slaughtered as *soon ater their discovery as necessary arrangements can be made, and says: "It is notori one that such animals were not promptly slaughtered." He declares that d,.4pite the explrem stipulation that iruoculation shall not be prac tised lu Illinois, innoculation has been permitted. He calls attentionto the proyisions that quarantine .hall not be remc ved without due notice to the de partinent, and that all necessary dis lafection shall be conducted by the department and declares there have been violations of these rules of so im portant a character that they threaten to Impair, if not destroy, the value of wi at is being done in Chicago and New York and lead to results so dis astrous to the whole country that he cannot allow them without entering a most emphatic protest. The commis sioner refers to the action of the com mission in resolving itself into a sclen tifc committee for the purpose of as certainilg whether pleuro-pne amonia ean be spread by immediate contact. In pursuance of that obligations of the state were violated, the con fdence of the country destroyed, and sys: "It is generally considered esfe-t to lav'e s.ientifle q(ei.iltoni to be ,ettled b. -eientlifl.* Sie.. Iul aI de parture frimio thb. rile is e,.srsy alwaysi follhwed by *,n lio- ll woirse c.n founded.' " Tie comillmisniouler, in pointiing out the uiange*r b, reflliing stables. av-: "Willh tile fl,,r under laid by a great ,a-. of o,rgasic filth, with whilh these sta&,le, are p.maibly saturated with crnturiintl Ithe rem.oval of a few board. lallrnvy mitltl 1ine r might set up an outlrieak t hiuhi' wouil repeat all the loessC of restrict.ljons anl the burdens of the various kinds that have been ,ufftred frot the ires ent calamity. In euelusion the cohll missiouer says: "It appears now doubly implortutl that you -hould take such action a. will leave no reason for doubt in the mind rf any one as to the future lpdicy of ylur sta'e live stock eomrnisljrners. To, this end I would respectfully suggest that you cause the order of thle t,,ir(d in regard to re filling tihitfeldt stables to be revoked. That the cattle in these sheds be Immediately -laughtered and this de partment be give. an opportunity to practice such disnfectants is are de airable and posshible under the clrcum stances. I make this suggestion on behalf of the great cattle industry; for the important part of the nation's food supply and on behalf of an unre stricted commerce which are together threatened through this lack of co-op. eration with the department of agri. culture on the part of the board which represents your state." IF the House of Re resertautives pas the Washington Territory sdmnslon bill with the Montana amendmnen:, whlch t undoubtedly will, anº, If the Senate pays the bill as It will thus have the House. and If the President ignsu the bill, as he most auuredly would, and if this | i e done witlin th next twenty days, the legislative amaembly may as well adjourn or oc. aWpy its time In Isltening to congrat Ulatory speeches upon Montana's ad. aNlhoo ma a state, as Its on''upatison will be virtually gone, for the gover. lar will be compelle under the ern stitution to order a new general elec. tion of all oMeers. Including membera of a legislature to perfect laws for the pvernment of the state, anrd to trans. at sueb other businres a will leilti. Iately come before It.-Butte Miner. Numbers of range catile were ob. erved grmslnl along the blufb on the lortb side, hldb up on the peaks of h. bills wbiob the wind bad bared d the mow. It was also noticed that gmnelJ bead of range stock were banr. g~ aeand the barn yards of the aity. MIlgRIES OF A TIMOROUS MAN. Le iae a murder bh Wetr .e AeemUm -A guasr Sea ed issaS . Ther amne om people for whom the recent reductio n the elevated railroad fas has no interest. They would not ride on an eleva d road if a ticket cost nothing, with a prise package thrown in. They ar the people in whom fear is abnormally developed, and who live In constant terror of bein injud by accident. The feelng seems to be constitutional and no amount of xper eaec will lesson its acuteness. It - jects misery Into every pleasure. The. is no place whr a person with this feeling can go in safety. On the treet there is constant danger of being -" over or struck on the head with a faling brick, or of tumbling into holes. No matter what te height of a building, an elevator can not be taken. Eievatre are unsaf, Food is eaten with the idea that it as poisonous. A gas jet awakes thoughts of asphyxia and a lighted lamp sends a thrill of agony into the soul. A steam boiler is a torpedo with the fsm burning brightly, and a ride on the eam is a journey to the grave: Everything that is looked at is viewed with the po sibility of accident and personal injury. Such people are not numerous, but they exist. Every one has seen the man who would not ride in as elevator if t wasguaranteed to carry 1,000.000 pounds. and who would cross the street to pam a building in course of erection. Dr. Ball, the French physician, tells of a man who recently came to him to see if something could not be done to conquer this fear of being hurt by accident. The patient was a young man, and was en gaged to be married to a girl in a dis tant village. When the marriage-day arrived he went to the depot to take the train for his sweetheart's home, but could not overcome his dread of riding on the cars, and the marriage hadl to be postponed. Dr. Ball considers this peculiar mani festation a form of insanity, in which an imaginary danger becomes real and can no more be overcome than any other kind of delusion. This condition is thought to be due to nervous shocks given to children when young by sudden frights, not from the presence of any real danger, but from attempts by older people to frighten them.-New York Tribune. Soee Foulble Curlous ResIlts. There is no reason in the nature of things. why the chemistry of the future may not supply us with artificial food. which may replace some of the various forms of protoplasm upon which human beings now subsist. Were such a thing pos.ible as the substitution of a chemical for animal and vegetable food, some very curious results would follow. An article in a scientifie journal samy that the man of the future will be tooth less and hairless. As there will be no need for teeth in assimilating a nutriment that would probably be liquid in form, the human teeth might, from want of use, disappear or become rudimentary. Then fat people would disappear, for cfiemistry would control the conditions which lead to the formation of adilwse tissue. As there would be less wPrc for the human stomaech, the abdomen would diminish in size, while, Ij...ibly, the lungs nmight be still further enlarged. But the general digestive apparatus would ew in better shape, as the chemis try of food could be adapted to every variety of system. This all may seem very wild, but in view of what science has done in the world about us, what may it not accomplish, when its im proved and improving proce.sas are ap plied dire.ctly to the human race?-Dem orest's Munthly. MNamerlling by Telephone. A professor of iacetnlerisrn who vi ited Portsmouth recently was inter viewed by a local reporter, who, after questioning him on a variety of matters, asked whethelr lie had ever succeeded in casting a mystic spell over a subject who was at a distance. "Yes," was the pro fessor's response. "At Glasgow I was successful in mesmerizing by telephone. I had previously experimented on some young men, and I instructed them to place themselves at a telephone in the offices of Messrs. Lipton, who are large butter and egg merchants. I was in Messrs. Currie, Thompson & Co's office, and gave them directions by wire and what to do. I think expectation had a good deal to do with it, but, at all events, they all went off into a trance, and eminent physicians in Glasgow satisfied themselves of the genuineness of the phenomena by running pins and needles into them."-Court Journal. The Palm Tree la Cuba The palm tree--Palma Real"-though so much written on and so familiar to many, your readers may not object to have once more treated, even though it be by my humble pen. This tree is of great value to the ion habitant4 of Cuba, every part of it beng ' made use of by them. The hard white portion of the trunk-cut into long trough-shapeIl planks-the "yagua" and the "guano"-the leaves of the palm out off and drid-are used by the "(fos Jiros" (the white country polpulation as peasantry of Cubs) to build their bo. bls" or huts. Of the fibrous wood, just under the bark, rope is made. The fowers bursting forth from their gream covering by which they are enveloped like an immense ear of corn, into a golden feathery bloom form berries ealled "pslniche,e on which pigs feed and grow very fat.--Cuba Cor. New Orleans Times. Democrat InfcUtl es se Dast. The hial,its of individuals in every eAese of socity, including the muasses, we not calculated to diminish, but rather to augment, the amount of ea Ipnic matter in our atmosphere. Muo.e saliva and humor, popularly known as smatter," must be discharged from the mouth and nostrils to the extent o1 many gallons daily, and not a little of this oomlne from infective sources, while Swe ventulre to think that the bulk of it m lagles with the dust of our street ad Igrta.-Lundon Ltoat. IN THE L UYIIR REGION. WesI sem DasplltIs m hent -Cautles l-p-Aetme-lse--e.sg weather. The lmberman's days work is from daylight until drtk. 1 matter how far his working ground iL from the camp he must be on the spot by day light and not leave t till e can see to work no longer, though he may be ten or fifteen mille from the sheaty. The sinof the camps varies from ten to seventy-fve and one hundred men, aad as a rule they are all hardworking, ber mres "They live in low, log shantes," con tlanned my friend. "The rst thing a camp does is to construct their abiding place and then cut a main roeed through the woods to the river ia which it is in tended to dump the logs. As soon as the frost comes on and the ground is hard the chopping beginr. There is one man known as a 'chopper,' who is flo lowed by two men who saw the tre into logs; next come a 'swamper' and 'chainer'-the 'skidaway' men, with a yoke of oxen. The 'swamper' stripe the logs and the 'chaine' fastens a chain to them so that they can be hauled to the skidaway, which is two trees cut down and placed four feet apart and laid at right angles to the road and on which the logs are piled. From this they are taken on broad sheds to the river and dumped over the bank on to the ice. The logs are cut from twelve to thirty feet long and, where we are, are all white or Norway pine. Their thickness varies from eight inches to five feet. "The river we use is thi east fork of the Black river, which takes them to Lacrosse. The pay of the lumberman is from $10 to $26 a month and board. They don't draw their pay till the spring;t and then there are high timLs in the towns along the river. Many spend all their earnings in drink, in a spree which lasts two or three days. Acci dents among the lumbermen? Oh, yes, lots of them. Many are injured and killed by limbs of treoy falling on them. drowning or cutting themselves with an axe. "Very cold sometimes? Well, people here would think so, but we don't mind it much, as a rule. Last winter the weather average 27 degrees below zero for six weeks, and the men think noth ing of working in weather when the rec ord is 20 to 30 below zero. But I have seen it so cold there that men's ears, noses, hands and feet would freeze and they couldn't work--o cold that when a man would catch hold of an axe lie couldn't hold it. These times are only rare, however.-Cor. New York Mail and Express." The Cold Air Crar. The evidence that pulmonary com plaints are inevitably and exclusively caused by foul indoor air, and cured by pure, especially by cold-pure, out-door air, can grow convincing to a degree al most afflictive to a philanthropist, who must often feel like a traveler seeing his companions groping in the gloom of a subterranean labyrinth, and refusing to follow the clew that has led him back to the sunshine of the upper world. The remedial influence of fresh air is so touch increased by a low tenpielrature Ihat "colds" are. in fact, far more cur able in midwinter than in mudsumnunr. 1 was shot through the lungs in 3lexlco, and have ever sincet been bUct'ptlble to the contagio of a "catarrh factory," as a friend of mine calls the unventlatedl school rooms and meeting houses of o.r country towns. In warm weatlher I avoid such man-traps as I would the pit of a gas well, but in winter I risk their infection in tile assurance that its inllu ence can be counteracted by an extra dose of ice air. On returning froml a crowded lecture h41ll, a stilling sick rooUl, a stuffy uoanibus, etc., I remove my bed to the draft side of the house and open a window to the full capacity of its Iechlanism, taking care to go to sleep facing the draft. I have often awakene.d in the morning with mly hair grizzled with hoar frost, but without the slightest vestige of the calarlh which had announced its approach the night before. Cold is an antiseptic and a powerful digestive stimulant; and I here record the prediction that the hoplitals of thu future will beiceh-bouses. Dyspepsia, a tarrh, and fevers of all kinds can be frozen out of the system. Not by let ting a patient shiver in a snow-bank, but by giving him an extra allow'ante of bed clothing, with the additional luxury of breathing ice-cold air, which, under such circumstances becomes as prefera ble to hot nmiasma as cold spring water to warm ditch water. I have also found that the best brain work can ib dlone in a cold room, and that stove heat has a tendency to stultify like a narcotic bev erage. Warm wraps make ires tolera bly dispensa:ble.--Dr. Felix L Oswald in Herald of Hlealth. The (limbers of Mont Islane. Altlollugh Mont Blanc has for a quar ter of a (.eltury been French sod, its climbers have not usually shown an annual ll.aj, nity of Frenchmen; yet this has been the case thlis year. The ascent was made by thirty-one French, three of thenm I.elis; : IH enty-five Engilish, one lady; ten Americans; seven swils, two ladies; ix Germans; two Russians; two Swedes, one Italian, and one Belgian. Total, eiglt-five.-London Times. The Oc)ullt to the Temor. Amateur tenor (who has I ev.i abroad) -Ah, lmv man, you are an eye doctor, I under talld. Omaha occruht-I aºn an occuh,.t. sir. "Yes; well, what I want to know is whether there is any way to p're v'nt the eves from filling with water wl hil singmin." "Nonel. tlat I know ol ,x"C',.pt to steel your heart against thI* "tiffrings of the audience." -Omaha W,,rld. Smoking and H.art tIiPmm. Dr. Fraitz-i. of B.'rlina. Iin N i.',Art onf Immodletit. sImiokiiag ant INIf4g.lt,"º upou tle J,..:wi notes that thiº. sui'keru chbokice If ay ma cigars ar.e generally III wornt 'mfftrers; in fa.t tIey who Inok. tig rM of ordlnary iitaIIty, hbough very Iargely, an rarely aqtakedj .-Now York Uraphk. PREPARATION OPF ONDENSED MILK. Operamuer n has WThree V We.eih Im awM.ss.eed-Ana snatewe.M. Pee*s. N. Loof Grandesn hJs just published a smclaSt and Instruotive account of dairy farming in Switauriand. Thee are, he tol u, about 10000,000 bead of m.stle n Switarland, rather mon than bhalf of which areows. The total quan ty of milk which they yield ln the corse of a year isb ,000,00 gallon the daily average per cow being me and eaquartergallo, and the value of this milk, eaimated in Eglish moeray a about 6 pence per gallo, ie about 5,575, 000 pounds sterling. M. Grandean then proceeds to show how this large quan tity of milk is disposed ,. In the trit place, one-half is used for making 4,000. tons of cheese, and of this quantity 86 per cent. iL thin cheee-that Is to say, made with skim milk. The cream taken from the milk ued in making thin cheese goes to make 15,000 tons of but ter, which is not quite enough for home consumption. But of cheese something like 800,000 pounds sterling worth is ex ported every year. The native consump. tion of milk itself, and the preparation of condensed milk, accounts for another 90,000,000 gallons; this amounting, with what is converted into butterand cheese to 86 per cent. of the whole. The re maining 14 per cent. goes toward rearing the 300,000 calves which am, taking one year with another, to be found in Swiss erland. M. Orandees then goes on to describe the operations of the Condensed Milk company, which, with its capital of 400.000 pounds sterling, has seven fac tories, of which three (Chami, Guin, and Reichenbacht) are in Switaerland. This industry had its origin, so far as Switzerland was concerned, at Chaim, when, in :160. Mr. Page, the United States consul at Zurich, determined to try an experime.nt which had been con ducted successfully upon a large scale in his own country. lie had great drill cull) in getting any onie tobelieve in the l-.·hillity of success. and for the first year or two his factory did not condense the milk of more than 300 cows, or make more than 1i0,000 pound-tans of condensed milk. At the present time the Chami factory receives the malk of 8,000 cows, and turns out more than 13, UU0,000 tins of milk a year. Thre milk is brought to tihe factory on large trolle.y, each ioldin.g e.ighty ca:ln.; thie COmiinkly itself fetching the asulk from the various filrl sl. anld giving a uniform lprice of 5 12 ienle s*er gallon for it. Upon arriving. at tile factory the milk is passed into a large reservoir through a net which acts as a strainer. This reservoiralso serves as ornl of the scales of a macilne which weighll thle milk. After tile milk 1has been weighed, a plug is witildrawn from the bottom of the reservoir, and tile milk runs out into large boilers of copper, where it is mixed with sugar of the same weight as itself. When the sugar is dil solved the liquid mixture rung into vacuum boilers, where it undergoes, at a very Iligh temlllm.rature, the process of condrlensatiton. In tile course of tllree' lmm,uisb it is reluced to about a third of its original volume by thie elimination of wttr, hilr i tihe e. -its.ii liU umnts of the milnk. such ais i. t anid ca.wine, are in no w.I" allected. FmlOmr t thle ('eullmnti. ing lib.r, tihe lilllul mixture, which(: has alwmalt tile samle colsitency as a fluid sirup, is passed into large c) lin dern which are const:utlll beming in m.erse. In cold waLter, wih.re it raplully coows. Tile condenllsedl mllik, when) colMd, is raised Imy milachminery ii to the' work ihlp-, wmhere it is put in to imietal tiis, wlhih are il nrledtiately seailed iher lrlllt l cually, and are thenI re.ady m lr saile. All the cans u.ld for bringilng iin the lulk are first washelld out itlh wa;ter, tIllhen sclhlumidad ilsaide, and finally steammed, biore goin, g hiack to the dauiry. lThe tre'atmenmt of this large i:antity of milk ,and tihe fabrication anid ill,,ng of omle ,(J00 tins pIr dielna woul I' lm1n possible nlllt, ltste greater plart ,of tile w-n-k . a- ,l iH by naitehiI'nery; aild. fr om tihe cuttimnm out of thie sui'ts of mImtll Will, II a;re ui..tl for mnaki, tihe tins to the fL.stening diowin of tihe .enisI m c.m1e in wim'ch thlu mllllk is sent all over tile world, all in idonle by ltmahinelliry. a single worki;am1 iN'i b g able tosulder 11nI tmins an hour. thllllik to tlhe excelllhne of, the maD.Iellll lie Illallaage.-.hicaL;o Tilmes. ftanle)'s Welsh Ielatives. I und.rhl:and that Mr. II l[ry M. Stan. ley regr'et Ilulllc that he Is lilable to go to Dublin, tacause, although he has die. covered miany out-of-the-way places, hlie has not discovred Ire!and yet. It is a curious thing that he has latterly devel. opil a gre.at repugnance to le.,turing in Wahles. hIod as his native country. The reason of thi, is interesting. Your I eadl. ers are awar;e that Mr. Stanley spent hIl early Iays in a Welsh workhlouse, and that he has no precise kno,wledge a to his parentag:'e. Well whenever he gees to .W.les h ais sure to encoulnter twenty Dr thirty 4,,l women who pers;ist in claim ing lhm as a so.l or a nephew or some other aultonate relation. It Iu.ini highly ensharl.-ne.: and ilconvenlilt to have as Ian.u 1as ahirty imothers, the expi.lrer has I,. ui ulllll to keep out of lthel way of thel,.. II Ialies in future. ile tells Ithe tiry hn iellIf with great relish. Cur. FI aseina'1. Journal. A Cure for Y.arg-Iuqumeh. Whle offi kindslg of theori., h1ave been Ii t Ioni,.n I. ac1ount for the inlirimi cimdi. tion of oiur cruest, and intrlaamlelnL u mIae rmuIrItIu' rgistetrerd its aelrratioen from the inm:el. only one observer ha hIwpn bIrve e',eiughi to prepoee a reinn.v. Thir is an EJml·hmnan resident II I cahia. (laving I tidloi the disastrous dlistuirb. alce in II l and 1883. Ihe ('11,nn1 to the conclIusiona that a vent for tiw im. prione.dl foroeu Was '% ht WU nleded*. Ho hIe suggested at stop. cork to Iii onf the earlih's uieam. At the epii4Intf'r of inatenimity sink an ar tesian well f130 yards deep. Tie wNll reliev'e. Ohw strain and resmmit In at quieifte condition. If Ischia flumd. thls* e,1wratiuif sue e*fu tIm. t re'e.Iy, may IM, a 1,ot.dl by Sijatli Cauoline. The Ides of cun. struclinK an artilicial volcano Is to he eredited to Mr. Johnson I;Lavi.-New I 'ok Graphic. a The Ia Ies ams aleeate'ss Iar*. A group of gsetlmen wen discussing the necssty . r brans labor in som life vocationse ead after allusions had been aude to mramd well- known citi mae who were oeeemful and prominent in their profesmlio. ons the speakers, himself a retired merhant and indue tal politician, declared that Blank, mna lag a draftsman and investor employed in a large machie tool manufactory, did more brain labor than any other man In the city. loume eamples werm ited dt well-known mehanc, and th coe cludon was reached that intelligent me chanical labor required as much solid thinking as any other work. The intelligent, valuable mechanic is not a mere walking machine; materials are not always plastic; they are some. times perverse, and judgment and calm consideration are required in their man agement. The parts of a machine, how ever closely planned, do not come to gether unaided and naturally, as eye stones converge in a saucer of vinegar; it requires head work to "assemble" the partsof a machineof any kind, and now adays, when mechanical work requires an accuracy of proportions and a nicety of dimensions such as wre not dreamed of a generation ago, the mechanic who is not brainy in his line will surely get left.-Detroit Free Press. Qu een Victoria is maid to possess a se of the autographs of the signers of thI DetHlar;atin of lndependence, whioh b Lthe ti..t iin existence. There are 104 men in San Francisco, Cal., who are worth over $1,000,000 each. About three tons of yarn are used every yvear in the manufacture of bass balls. Thin piatea of metal in the backs of books are a now London notion. MOST PERFCCT MADE I'!··lar-l, \ tli1 trl(tr ~t i f-P . FStrngth, ud l1~~CLr41 o r°-. rPL.t,- hiI . r , untaiU POs" G A !w ^ <" C. ^-e wS; In the liitr ,t ('ut .of tihe I ourth Jud . falt Di trio l Il e 'lrrlst.rv of M.lIItAa,a, aith n and for Ite 4 auuu v ao I ultEr. cl Ion brought in tbe litaltrtt ('ourt of the Founh FI st Natinatl I aslk If Miles Judicial I Jltrlct ('I.'. Stostalia. o* the Territory PIlaintil, of lollntanan and for Ih. o('uuntyfv. A*I,.AIT illat.r. and the ( orhplaint , el In Jamesm lIrixhtl, .ai I oulty , 1)elendant. I us er in th of flet of tIhe' lerk of emiti District l.,urt. They ,pie of the T. rllory of Montan mind g ra vit t,. Janie. I. ltrimtlti,. U i ndanit. You art hl rlby required Ia a pt.. r Ia, at, Itm'1, hrulight agaitnt you by the albove italt d pilan Ii'. llthe Itle rcl (Coart of the Fourth Jtudti Fial Ilstlrict of the Terrli Sr O \IuIInitai in aItl for the slaid I oulcty of I ater. nld t,. antiSwr thea in ill int filil thar-in. wit hiI, I. ni dsa (ea. lola'." of the lay iof siervl, ) after the ~srvltce oan you of this -utllllll,-nse-if urv, d with luitit. ctI.iIl, or. If erta.td ou' of thi c unty, tat i |. I le i-tricat hlieu ati oln two lit itays; aitlrwi* wlithin lfortl da)s l", jltgmhll a n)t i I rtefault.r ill (,taIken KanI Iu, aratording tot a g ra er of tall eaoui Iii t ii. 'The a d actioiin I II oughll It r*..trar the msum of "2. ItI;,' I with Iint reaCt ,Il the sum of 1 ,1.31'1. r at ithe r.ulae of ifI wler arlit I r mlitum t roa t Ola t.ler tr . I. P., and m n a- t.fa faiii April 1l. ItMl, at tlhe rate ll Ia, per celll. ,er atulllllm, and, f.r 'iats, i- 'ou lite furtr tsir tidtldeal ahI te ftllainig e st rilwd pruIpro y th ls l i-en attahed it said acto in lh,'N .it ..',. tlie ..W4 . lnd llai numlheretd 4 and Itof ect ta tI Iu rlllllllr 1 l, am lamliwhtf I arth, lrlllage 4laewat. atnd tut, iitsa.brd| It and I1. hI (t.tck I., -lI'. t'y, utatala., iatd la il numisre I mail 2. In hltk 'cl ti~ geti ler with the buil nls an I otlher inqlt|ri rnaeit'at thter aon. In t tie town ai. Nlest ('l y. u t I) atI C'url r at d ter',lltr of Mlotana a ccrd intg 'u ihi surcir an i tle ilaat 'hereof flead fr ralor bty hliIh \, rthern I'a 10ia rllrad coe.l any with ItII, raecotr at dli'd t--r ~said county 1his action is bro glta ataihat yaou to reu over the ahmollnt of unpaid staIb k o lied byr .)o n the Is sie tive r irriclling aidl It(ch I'mnlpla.' to eate t, Ithe ,ihamtid of p atntifl as above saltel,. e will llre full i Ipl.e r by referenc t, *the cum III tiat sn file herein Awl you are herlty tlollf at that if you fell to aIp ear mald lnhwer Ithe maid conplaina, asu lhoe requitrred. the m: p ,latiI will iake judlg entll for Ilie tls of $2 1I'. i.:a dnaslllllded In lthe omplalnl, intlarettl an ' toali ,Ira . undel.r tlay hand and the seal of the IIattI't o'uurt of lth FIourth .lulliLal Ilstrict of the T. rri tory of ontsl a I , a d tor the said it t mly of 'Culter, his 13.h d7ay of Ic [sAIt.] tiobhr, n the year of our lord tane tllou.alld eight bu dred anld eighty JAfIEI McrARLAN ,lerk. RTrIIFYLI. t.1 ;iRI lcK. AttUrneI s for lllltullr . Null'. to Creditora . Terriltor of Mtotana, Comilty of Cornier n P'robtate ('Court In the (l tt l p te F..la of Wli. It. ttuol. d .pa med. N tier I. h teby gien! by thliii tIgI r'I. o.d ad. ii,Iolatratr a of the ceatlh of tt fitla. II. 0. d .4 d. (Call. to to . Ow -re.IIra. mud alI fel.ot having m it,.,, 'ataliat lb. .CIAl d.c.maer~t. to iu h1141 Ib let Wilk the nrcUamrr vouehera, wgild,, f...r ni'ii'he aft. r the firs. , tlltC'ttl of III. ,ot e." 1., the rald ad. ini-Irt-ilatm atbe.h.. ,It,,I A ,ire. F. Ihvttitlh a't,,i'tiP at law,.i I lb . ,r, TIW* ti' Itank b~uild ug, Ml ea ('Ity, Moni ala UOed at Ni t-a 'lhr. Nov 27. iMit Anreid F Itor I. M,. Alt', tur AdmtomllatllIL wheriVlrl hale. William ItroJtt, 1'1a1 ,,ot 1 tih.. 'it 1ýIf, olb. ii .. tIf mlinaItf 'I h.- N --rl nI I '.,mnml.·(on.n t oat. r "11111y, 'i T.. I1, fr.iln anta. I 7n. h".old at ah'rhl'a .meP. an the 12th 'tay of 'IJm .e., I' , tIN.7. t two (1) ,lct. p. mi. it hi I die. at ithe from ot tor o, the Ceilr' hiouc. In 'i." 'itI, 't.,ilinti Trriloiy, al of the I leht. "it, lit. te.. ot ite alaow. defetidoahin to i, tiulo tiim Ig ,tmerrled real opaiB14, 1O *it 'l ,e. -ii liputl 'naoare" ('il ,J) of arectluil 01t (11). in tn* ah,,. niotaCr Ive O(i)north range torlr-, ltwt (it) N.Iat, alluat In r gr (.telly, M.tI-i1tami 'Jr wilt,~. . 711014. H. 1 V NM, IR ierl I isted Mlles City, H. T.. We. 99. IaN. hammoas. In the DUirlie oCn r f the e"s Jh1Ua Dltrin of the Toritery of Mosten withlaU or the May ef Cu stor. Aetsou breghtM lia e t hse KMriS Woed, Distrle Onrt of th Fourth judleial Dim.ta ntabUf, f the Territu Y f MeW tans n Msdlor theso.. AeAur ly of (uster, and the ol m. Ilot gird In feM w Mo* Charle A. Wood, t et (Nutr, in * a*oe oftheetorkof md DVi. Defrl dant trict Court. Thepol.of the Territory f anMeteas ad or sln. toCharls A Wood. dorender Yo kireby wqrlrd to appear In Mn Le =W4es giln-t you by the above amed bplatilllf. ti Dist ltctt turt of e Fouith Jadefl Distrit tlh Trritory of Mem sas In iad for theeL eems t o Custer, and to an-wr the eomplalt dA hlkrein, within ten days (ecluslTi of the dey ervice) all.r tIh service on yur o this sae l -rrvd withis shle ch ty, or, it sor eat ro this county, but in tiis district tM wIhUU twenty daysl uotlerwis withln Ioy dayl judgmenl by defult will be taken a·Nl t yes, s cordi g to thl praver of aid complaint. The sid action ls brought to diuol= the mU rlanso lation eiating lIetwee you uad the sMl plaintif. and to procue a di * re In sad set Th*g ound ,f ial aetlon beln .ontrem orws.it rpetrated by y-u, tbe said d ledant. upe the aIl plaintllfla the time and date In the osld som plalt now on Ie In Msdl cause allg 4, d. wil mon Srlly appear by reoeronc o the complaint l fie hotels. And you ae he by aooltped tlit If yo rul to ippr au d mawer Itb s.id complaint, a aee required, the sal plaintil ill apply to the eao0t forth nsl.lofude nd n plb ro p alnt. Given uuder my hband sad the seal of the D1151i Court of the Voearh lo.leial DiMtr of the Territory of Montena. in ai 1Ow the sud county of Caste , this 2It [sIAL] day Otoethr. In be year ofour lra one thouusnd eight hundred Ml eighty-eiz. JAME4 McPARLANE, Clerk. brTREvLL A GIALOCK. Atternye for Plantilf. Amm-ems. In the the Distit Court of the Fenth Jalky D.tricte of the Territory of Metas vwithin sa for tbe cosaty of Castor. AC los broobt im the Andrew J. Maxwell, District C'un of th IFourth Jdcisel Dim PFIaItif, trict of the Territory of M( ema. lasu for beL LOAIWII county of a aster. ad the complaint led lIa Maroellsl Msazell. said county of imt•o, D·d·lt.· in tiLe a 5 n et t Dofodaut. clerk of said Ditrict The people of the erritory of Moentas sed greting to Mareolls Maxwell, defendant. You aee hereby lequired to appear ia -o se iLo brought ag linst yu by the iro nametd p1.dlirlf Ia the Itistrict court of the Fourth Judletal Iroirlet at the Territ, ry of Montana. In aid for bte aid county or (usterl. an a to a swer thb omplalal Ifled therim, wihlbln ten days (excluslve of the dq of service) after the service us you of this a..m, mons-lfserved within b e na c ay. or, if served out of this cOlty. but il this district, thei with in twenty days; otherwis wl hin forty days-er Judgment by d* fault wit b tlaken asasint yoes. - cordi tothe praverou said complaint. The said sclion i brought to d muo wv lb bonds of matrimony eistinlg between the plaintif sad defendant upun the ground that the said dell* dent dasrear linK the so'emnlty of her marriage vow. wilfu ly and without eause deserted and shet doea ed the plaintifl in ta- year 1.71. at ever Blims thbl time has ani still continues soto wilfull and without cause desert and shandon said plalstif and to lire separalt and spat from him witLhou his consesl. And for co*es. a will nr- te llf ap pear by re(mres to thIbe enam Is n o lle beral. And you re by nuldlied thas it you fall o appear and a swer the said c mplaint. as above re qulred. the said pt l*intwill apply to the eartl flr the relief demanded I tike comlaint. Gives under m, hs, d sad tbm seal of lthe DistrieI Court of te Frourth Judicial Dimstri o the Territory of Motlals, in sad for the said eunty of Custer blis 1lth [sIaL.] day of Ibe*rmber. in the year of ur Ird one thouad eight hundred sad eighty-ais J 01ES MCPARLANE, Clerk. 3TRYvI L A (llOa5L . Attorneysfor lalntif. Tbe annual tweet S of tLh sbagyoid.ueta the inut National Hank, for for olE1«l n of direstm will be held Tuesday, January II, 1M7. E. H. WEIKIfCK. Ceshle,. Notl.e. The annualmrrtingof the .hare holder, tfthe Situock tGroueta N.atttal Hank ol Milan (it Moo .orf the lcr..ln .d -'etlrrt." will lwh.14 at the banking hott o". Taeada,. January 11. 107. II F. AT4'HKI.K. Cashier. NOBRTHERN ACIFIC RAILROAD. THE DIRBET LINE BETW1~EN SAINT PAUL, MINNEAPOLIS. Or DULUTH Idab. Wa.kihYasw Tirritfi. And all Poinut in Minnesota, D ktota, Montane, OREGON, Britids Coluia, Pct Soul al ALASKA. NO CHIANGE OF CARS BET3WENE ST. PAUL and PORTLAND. O. Amy .ss of Tieke. EMIGRANT SLEEEERS FREE The Only All Rtll Line to the YELLOWSTONE PARB spem htrlse ftaiI1, to wh.elh sm BtkeiW PULLMAN PALACE SLEEPEIR AND rLEI. IT 9O00 OAlS. ONAS. S. PEW.. .'I IW.. L. MIs .e Fees.. HmI