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THE DAILY YELLOWSTONE JOURNAL. VOLUME V. No. »ss. MILES CITY, MONTANA. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY s, s87y. PRICE FIVE CENTS. THE DAILY JOURNAL thi OYee wperp of craUr i..n.w. Ivory Morning Except Monday. i ol ml. cwrt, - - a3000. Terms of Subcriptioo: BY MAIL-IN ADVANC--POSTAOI PAID. sb dUel. W :m...ii......:..... w0 Da i IO e.. e me ear..................... 6.0 l tties, huse sse 3......... 800 TO CITY SUOCEIUkN Dy Carier, erwv Meralg., M etas. per week. WEBILY WDITION-TELLOW PAPBE. Or Ter.. . ...- -. - --........................ .oO Omi Lemr..... .............*......... 1.00 Adv.rtlasag Rates. 1....... wt LN {. N..N .W 1LO N.N paw .» LM , 7.1 11.0 L. S& I... . . 114.U 1 . 1 e We 1.0 lera;.I .E ". . Ne 4Le m...... .l 46 " I6.S1LILU tUS.o SWel... LW0 IIS.NW 14U NIlt N .. Imea-.... L6.i4.61M.3 N.6. 36 6. b MeoNs.. s. L*l .2. lL& as M 1.11 Se L.. MIU :. M.3 S. IM SU Lesm setaee-Tei eeme per 1m Or su.-e •e* is. Wryis-u.p stIe. eMtM per Use. Adm. V*LLS sTOMS deOwutn JOURNAL IUILDINO, MILES CITY. M. T. - cONTRACTOftS. APWB A UT UAST. milmeft amod n llk PS f Mptto £33ar~ StnrLmuae. - PMTMICIANI. II G U. RIDD, a * g.i4AN AND *UMOiON. aft* at W. K. Uagens drug elie. 12 tf C. UItNEY. BL SNT.t m aa u sto, er UtSekgleeem NeUMal lask. AI. wmt pg eaed mad a renewl" rtesm. IFL . FISH. PUY CaAN, P3oDN AND OlhUT3JCAN. M Wemimeg md O helhMJr.) OeM at St'.edrug e. u ,Vil. Cit,, N. T. P 0135. N. D.. w EO~ouacrAiuw PsveaQAm ANDI ruaouom. 3. 3. MARSHALL, Prrrmr* AND Bottasol. W es W. L g.k rag sedi e. PAMOVIPTIONAL ANUMKW f 31MLZIUI*I. Attatrait at Law.N.T Gw. LLAWIUBN, ATTUNWfY-A7 -LAN. Low Bss~alAgro Interir Department l S. aLek Urore ask bueak in Nil aq. Meat. jDEOXD NBTLER. 1 AttORNE.Y·L AT LAW. at Of.mtaye., Maim .trait, Nile. City. Seti Chara-dervise Sunday, 11 a. .., 7 p O U. D. Downy, pastor. Uahbodlt Chureh-dlrvea Sunday, 11 a. a., ?i: p. m. b. K lda. putor. Pr ubyterla Chare--s rvlca BSunday, 11 a ... Gig p.i. T. C. Armtvroq, i.eor. 3L. Paul's, Ep.".apal-Dsaly osapt atrd1 , M0 a. m.; Suanday. 7:0 p.m. Wm HolaI, CA sh eor sered Heart, C'tholie-daday, 10 º a. . W. J.Lladeematb, chaplain, U. . A. A. 0. H.--Dilvala No I ienala Bt cad smess hemdears eeaf moath. L e3 I.-M-ees Ir t and third Wedneadays at 7. p. m., at Odd Valo.ws' Hall. Al . A. N.-Yaelsossma Ladge. No. IS, O yt am, id Wedledays. A. . M.--etrewer.s Chapter. No. , m-ead sUd barth Ustsudays. K. T.-D au.sea Oommandery, ecoad and SlotUh There·awt. L L. O. '.-"'uster Lodge, No. 13, every " tholr ball. L O.-0. / --snsmal Eneempest, No. 8, Iret .fp im . No. 7. Thursday ýat Odd ollows 1 . Q e A.--EMls City raash, eery kanday at I. L.-Fst an third Fri.d . O. A. L--U. I Orat rei, . . 14 Int nd i O. a. T- et of t Wet, No St, every Yuesdar evening. THE DICK SEAMLESS FOOT WVAILM. Til NILI II IUILT ATTAIIl 1 IATIHAL IEffTITI'. The lly Ihe C..biiug Warmth, ?IlahBI. hiablity mmd mral Oramt .r . them . nal eteatly deur A hbet illue. mad heart wem the praiem s of iamel, and aLIly If. o the ch. MWe if a theinesd 6"lm sla I their favor. C. B. To rs & Co. m.ILE OITY, M. T. 1I 1111ll? 1111ll1!, YOUNG LADISB' U0 .AIII )Al Irt MEWL, 17 3=4 O9Y mm WILLIAM HARMON, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL G ROCER,. CROCKERY AND GLASSWARE, iAY AI llAIN! S PECIWTY MLES CITY - - MONTANA, FIRST NATIONAL BANK. or TH OLDiT kIl GiSW BAI] II KASTK IOITIHL CAPITAL AND PROFITS, 105,000.00. ,OINI! LIKOHYON, ?rm'limt. GEORGE M. MILS.x, Vic PrMlul. 3. 3. WEIION , OuM1ED. 1.3. Wasr, A.s.i.a O ASW. INTEREST PAID ON TIME DEPOSIT8. STOCK GROWERS NATIONAL BANK, MIIE.B OIT'Y. MONT'. THE LAIGBST BANK IN EASTERN IONTAN CAPITAL AND SURPLUS, $105,000.OO -INTEREST ALLOWED ON TIME DEPOSITS. W .. T. BBIRS. President, WM. HArMON Vie, President. H. P. BATCHELOR, Cashier. ELMEI E. BATCHEIOB, Asst. Oash. IMPORTANT TO INSURERS. The afety of the asured depends as much upon the skill and khowledge of the AGENT as upe the soundnes of the eompay. The ability properly to write polles and make the endorements so fequetly calld hor, as well as to gitv the advice eeded and askd kr by almost every perso assured, Is not senaire in a few days or months, but requires the study and experieace of TEARS. It is well haknow that most of the delay sad trouble atteadlag the settlemeat of loses is the result of the lgraune of AGEOTS through whom the lasuranos is efected, sad their Inability to render aeeded asstance at the time of sandater a ire. WILLIAM COURTENAY. EcAUSLAND' CiLEEDROOI A ILORY. GUNS. REVOLVERS. AMMUNITION .t.,.,( d scriptiena Tb LsUMT '?O( of 3asq Sharps tihaln9 Ws th ml WOU.UotbIUI and ieparirau of al 111, h NshLy dry nM Wamrnad. COAL! COAL! 500,000 TONS I Must be mold in thirty days by SMI TH BROS. & CO. Best coal in the market at $3.00 PER TON. Orders left at W. A. Burleth'r, Wm Birkle's Wm. Harmon's store or with W. K. Smith will noeive prompt attention. W. K. K. SMITH, Agent. TSZZ lilts City Pump Works JORN3 DRITEAUZA, Poa',*uia. ºb S lith street Oppeite Irver lose. ear dept. I e·IN Attentiom Gaven heo PUU t PaM mmd Digging Wefa. Call and Kuamm. UV Patent tsemp 3e.. rr. oea 0.1mgsewbewe. All Work Do.e at Lowest Peae. THE STORM KINGS, February Comes in with an Al. most Unparaleled Storm of Wind and Snow. Probable Effects of the Contin ued Cold and Snow Upon the Stock Industry. IMPORTED FPOM DAKOTA. IesOerd.'s DAmO the Worest Knew for leave. $ince the weather and rsge out. look was last consldered In these col unins the situation bhas unergone a most depressing change, sad the com fort that those interested wee able to enjoy has given place to a baling of the utmost sanxiety and dread of the future. After a lengthy period of moderately bhih temperature and es. olient winter weather, the depth of snow excepted, a northeaster set In on the night of the Sbth alt., wbihob continued durlng the next two days, depositing ome six inchesb of fresh snow on the already ouvered ranges, aecompanied ',y a falilng thermome ter, ranging as low as 28 below on the allabt of the 80th ult. Tblh was fol lowed on the 3Slt by a bright clear day, during the forenoon of whibcb the mercury began to creep up and hopes of more wmoderate weather and a pra.-= bie obiuoook were feit, but these hopes were not to be realised at least for the present. Monday afternoon grew colder, and at sundown the thermoms ter read 24° below, at 9 o'clock it we 4tl below nmd before morning It reaobhed 60°. Yesterday morning it had mo.. orated sumelently to let a northwest storm Let sta.nd which raged all day, developing all thedtaagreeable chare terisoleof the Dakota blisard,with the thermometer howing about 20° be low. The effects of this storm, f.I lowing the other so closely and with sueb severely cold weather interven uing, cannot be otherwise than ex tremely disastrous to the live stock in terest of thbl locality.t s useless to speculate on the percentare of Ias that must occur, but It s certain that the mortality in sheep, where no pro. vision has been wade to feed them, will be very large and that all but the isbust and well onoditioned cattle wluut s.ucumb. With bore.. the situ ation is much better and the utmost confidence is expreemed by the owners of borse herds that they will come through without more than ordinary Heretofore the winter of '81-'81 bas been referred to by old-timers as the acme of everity,and in the aiatter of a early beginnaig sad extreme depth of snow it still has points in its avor, but it broke early In February, clearlng the bills of snow and allowing live stock a breathing spell, and although succeeded b' some cold weather dur lug February, gave way oin March to a spring which was unbroken by soany adverse weather. It is cutomary ln this latitude and longitude at this season of the year to hope and believe that we are about through with wln ter, but when a .tnrm like yesterday's overwhelms aI, and d velope a sever Ity not paralled In the memory of the oldest inhabitant one scaree knows what to thiuk, and were it not that the cheeriung hope remains that thib may be the dying struggle of grim old Bores. the future would be dark indeed. Certain it is that Ior some years to come the winter of 'N6-'87 will be held up for reference, and that the firsnt day of February, A. D., 187 wll belong re membered, but not regretfully. r1oomsm Or WOMA'IsI amiO Is. The Voee a the 1ea.te MaLes Macr Amdoew Mearu Feel Light -lagsll to b DeetN. Walingtu'n 'Telegrain: "Dove the vote in tsir Deuate mesa progres?" repeated Mi.a Autbony af.r me when I asked her that question. "Does the vote in the tuate mean progress? Well I should may it did. It wasu be longest leap the iuftnrge movement ha, ever takru. We have been wal. ing and working twenty4wo year fore this blesled day. We are prouder sad happler than we canu tell. We have not had sucl a good time In yeare u at our meeting thli morning. Just think of I ! Twenty*two yels'n work oulminated yutterday in the vote in 'be io nse," and Mitp Anthony pulled hernelt t.getlier proudly. "Tb is the first time." she continued, "that the question of woman suftfae has ever been voted ul,on directly In Congress. Progrees," iCe rzxlaimued aSin. "I lsuould tilnk It was progress; we have tewru (concllig to ('olagres for twenOty two v~ars, and In this blesses day of our Lord we have got a vote at list. "I'm ist islllh dat Jonesof Nevada," conllinued Mie Anthony. "I never thought he would do such a thlong. We have always ctunted him for us, and we had a gold rllbg to. He hab contributed itterally to carry on our work, roI we supplted of curse he would vilte lie unme way he shobt. But you never can tell. The vote was Srevelaotin in many other respects! we know now who our friends are. It iL all right for oenators and members of Congress to ay pleasant words to us anud act the gallant gentleman, but that is not wbhat we are iter. '"Wbatare weoingto do? W arel going to attend a f. w fmst tclass uner. ale, and we are not going to go as mourners. either. We are going as, undertakers. We will furnish the corpse.; we will dig the graves; we will preach the termons, anu we will at tend the wak*.. We start out this mroinog to carry the war nlto Africa. We shall organise in every state and kiki off those who voted against us. longall has got to go. He mL.rep'"e neut. the sentiment of hbl state.; the legislalure of Knome has a large ma j.rlty in favor of woman suffrage; It now bas a bill under coasdertsUon to give women a vote at munioipal eleo tions; there is a majority of seven l. favor of It in the state Senate and an overwhelming majority n the hbouse. The Republican platform of Kansas delares on favor of women esu ffn e, and Ingalls misrepresents I. He muset o. "What we need is a Moses with his magic wand to punish," oontalned Mis Ant ony, "with the seven plagues of Egypt those ieaon rulers for their tergiverations. No doubt locuset, f.g, fices, hail, thbck darkaees sad the Potomac and Thames riven turned to blood, would have more of feet In the balls of legislatioo thsa the most logienl arguments. Moses knew that tender spneals would have no ef feet on Pharosh, and bhe told Jenovab that as be was slow of tongue and had not ihe gift of eloquence, some more active measures must be devised to briug tbhe klng to terms. For nearly a quarter of a century we have tried ap p..ls. petitions, arguments, with thril Ilog quotations from our greatest jur-' ists aud statesmen. And lo, In the year ot our Lord 1887, the best an ewerh we can wring from Senatofr Brown and Cockrel, In the shape of a minority reuort, is a "bhimaey-eorner letter," written by a woman ignorant of tbh firt prineples of Republican government, wbheb, they asy, gives a bttter statement of the whole question than they are capable ofof producing." The first vote eat In the United States tSelate by Charles B Farwell was In favor of a eonstilutional amend ment granting the right of suffrage to women, and Boen B. Anthony says he Is too sweet for anything. CUT INrTO TID-a1. One of thL. Nor DiabounAt Crium. Bver lerpettee". New York Telegram: The two raorsn wblch Edward Unurr, bothe .* lage peddler, at No. 529 Ridge stret, used in carviug up hi partner, August I Blats, of Boble, after be bad kalled him In his sleep in order that he . nmigrht be packed up Ia his trunk, that turned up in Baltimore, were broubght to plice headquarters and put away' I with the rbet of the overwhelming C evidence easinst the murderer. Uun getr saw ulleuly In his cell all morning it refusing to pealk whrn spoukeo to. He is very clumelv watched to prevent his cheattug the hangman out of his Just dues. Unger does not waste breath denying hbs guilt or assrting his innocence, but says tauntingly and with a perceptible degree of anxiety behiud his apparent boldnem, that "they will have to prove it." Later Uuter wa arraigned at the Tombs police court, obharged with murder. He exhibited stolid lnditer-. eaer, and when asked if be desired to makse any statement simply turned his bead aside. At the request of in spector Byrne., Unger was remanded to pollee headquarters. The chief elemeat of mystery now elinging to the easo I the act that the bhed, with. out which identifAation will be dim-, cult, is still missing. There was a report last evenlg that the head bad been found and that the murderer bhad made a con fesion, but these storles are denied by the pollce. Two detectives were sent to iitimore to brin` the body here. After its arrival it will be necessry to bold an Inquet. The detectives yes-I terday brought to pollee headquarters the sofa upon wbfeh the victim of the supposed murderous saustge peddler is supposed to have rested when killed. Tbhe sof cover was flled with blood and bair and the blood under the mi orosonpe appeared to be human blood. A hammer was found, wbiol had been washed, but so badly that blood I Is yet upon it. Apparently, it is the weapon with wblch the murder was done. From :bhe condition of the sofr, the wall behind it and the hammer, the detectives reason that the mnrder ed man was on the lounge when a blow wase struck from behind that sunk the bhed of the hammer into the vio-; tim's bead to the headle. Pieco ofi well paper with telltale blood staolns upon them, and whhob no amount of scrubblng had suflelotly blotted out, were also secured and taken to bhed. quarters. They will be examied with a microscope. Whether or not the murdered moan was August Boble remains to be settled by examlnation of the body. Even in the absence of the hbead there are means that will makse deftlcaSlion peso ticaly eoplsteif Bobble is the victim. BLbo wes about ean. fage, five feet eight Inches b sad weighed 180 peeds. One fingers on e band, It to not know wi, was selff. Bobl wase bone i one d to eaeters provinss of Pruos. He same to this country some years ago and travelea to Califoroia sad Orego, wheren he yrgage toI buelaso at the north of the Columbia river. last Jolly he ame east. He then bad a draft fo 1,000 frem some Oregon bank whblh be ex heanged lot r German draft, as be was gooing ore the seesa to settle up some property Io Germany. He was away two months and returned in the fall. This time with a Hamburg draft for $l,2N0, which be had exchanget , and went west faain. He went to a place callted Papill n, Kasas or Neb rasks, but returned almost Immediate ly. He deposited $1,100 in as avia book here. ON Dee. 1, be called .ampany with a stout man, at a butch er bshop of Oue Guss, in Wiliams. burgh, to arrae u for the sale of o here of sheeposoanp. Thui is the last defloite informalon the detectives have of bis movememts. MANKKaE fro TEE 3AmIU. laga.' Ides ta Co.Sia ta o 3epusble. Wa.hiogtoo Tesleram: Mr. W. C. Curtia, of the Chicago News had an In terwiew with Senator luaills Friday afternoon, of wbich the followinrg a an rltract: "'.enator Ingalls declares himself with bis characteristic emphasis as in favor of the annexation of Canada, and not only Canada, but the entire Central Anaerlca states. He coined a lhrase to epress bhi doctrine,and was a 'oontinenta republic.' The uanalm. _It of the assault upon him by the English soand Canadlan papers deLs hispeech on the laberles resolets would seem to indiaete that the baows be struck were elt sad where a goes del more than a disterbaee oefthe air. That be struck a popular shead in this contry is shown by the delge of letters that aet in upon him 5l day after his speeb was deiered, ad satill ontionu with Im.ring ti ern. He has received a gped many from Qsand", as well as from dtaisze of the Uniltd ltates, sad they ar all aoonymous, vitoperative, vindtive sad nsoleet i theb last dieee. The letters received roem ibis enuntry have come from every state that could and a mail so far as W basington nce the debate, and all ar e agratulsry, ens tiuh astle. and erseteI. Sasked bln if bea hd read the at teek upon blmself in bthe glieb and Canedisa papers. He iepliti: My atteotios has been caled to them. The toe of the editlorials in the leading Loodoa journals is a further illustration of the temper of Englandnd and the Eglish people toward Ameri.a sad our InUltatiues. They attempt to avewt the Ieue feim the gravity of the ecuseatoo to the insigulllalnce of the sacusor. The real question is not whether Mr. Ingalls is obscure, but whether his allegations are true or false. No sper. eilltous alloions to me or ny I ,Late can distract attention freo the real prioolples in coatrove* y. iWe have been o submlsive, so foe Sbearnll in tbe past that the worM is eaming to believe us a nation of eow aids. There has been seba a trash ,sun of the dry rot of anglo-masia lnto r our social systeni. sueb n adoplioa of the single eye-gleJ and he "aw" the jargo sand the raiment of Eag a-nd-- muchb aspdoodle and whip. evils .ob te custard and oomeeose about kindred blood and the lead of Shakespeare and Milto. that tbhere has been a temporary aberruat of the intellect and a suspeesdo of self-nr spe.it on the part of the Americao peo. pie, who forget that England is the only enemy that we bhave on the oo of the earth. It Is time that the Amer iean people awoke to the fact that the statesmanshbp of the nineteenth 'em 'tury requilre the unifeation of this cootineut under a bomogenous goy. erminent from the frose sea to the luter-oceanic canal, wherever it may be built. That anal should be our soutbern boundary. My dream.and I believe the settled conviction of the American people, is a continental Srepublic. - Tht is a mantifst destiny; that is thbe Inevitable tedency of the politdal forces of the Amern people. It Is their only alfety, sad Ineed of wal. Ing our power Io petty lotrigue with mvqes for a naval station in the Pa elSe ea, a wise and more enmmeaudlg tolley would be to establish relatbe of ilternatiooal friendship with our Canadian neighbors on the north, sad our Spanisb neighbors on the outhb, and not permit tb* maeblawtles o Great Briraln to *oment doturbaesN that will defer uoeb ao allianee or reader it Inmpomible. Am deu of Qol m•s Iowa has long been noted athe bet test, coldest and healthiest state the L'nion, and now it b probable that be, esalth will Improve to ech a dape that undertakers, tombstone builders and druggiset will generally go Ito bankruptcy. and cemetery lola may be obtained, to eligible post does, by the most indigent. All of this iL to be brougbt about by the new law, which weat Into IGbet on the first of the year sad regulats the practice of maolel to the estas of incontinently fArin all quacks eot of the state who ooista upon playtag as physec without the proper ereetlab. Person' who caO produce d from medio scbhols of good standing oad those who have been In Oastus us practice for five years, are entitled o certiicates whbich permit them to remain. Otbes are at upon by te po-derous law unltes they "gi', sad per oonewsueoce the has bm a beirs. The losg prooemlou I hbeaded west, and Kansas and other states eat hbat way whieh lave o similar law will get the resetS, which will ahew up shortlU in the mortuary reports Magnuo healers, bowever, are x-. mpts, as they do sat admlnister drags Dr use instruments, sad are, therseb, barmless. 'hey are allowed to rub people until the sko esome n if the pattents are willing, provided they show they have been rubbinlg r the meme-ary uve years. The iw h adI.t to the regular detes-, mat gives em more to de, bt the ebees ar th, at whbe the tha e heralded abeead yong me with aea. e oa the·M.D. will aroe i to smus as te st - lowa's poiuatie I will ibe docters alone, and the neoplek the will hardly be maL-ed. The preseatbleekade N ohere PIe is th.e yea, ,and lmen t~ etres tinee , th