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Daily Yellowstone journal. [volume] (Miles City, Mont.) 1882-1893, June 12, 1887, Image 2

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''t"I DAILY JOURNAL
MDJll etF. MOrMTNA.
-.. er & uens us.. e paug.s.
OIMcAL P 0A. o m OOUvTT.
W. D. KMOIRT. S. GOODON.
he ?NS Tm Nu3 Jensna,,
aI mdMV tMOu -S--6 -a
Ig oa =1=lse
so--s a.. s'
£3 tem , Js m < W7 .as
mMt - s ofhe uwSi amin be giwes to lase
In aday, ans = a, *83.
tma asagn sesont1 aswsrarlm
Who wes we bepbr the eilaton
atthe mewspaper? For headsad heart
mt hae felt a need that book t euald
net ill. Though Its emlum we -eel
that we oe lablnlg a new atmos.
ph~bmaesgelIhavgeraslngr,that sim-.
Sate he pubes to new alms and bope
ad t rle.es. re potiest lbr a greter
o Sesn emeamns ogeed or evil. It s
a mlghty get of rbresm that must
ua1, or wither,. eadlt or degrade
melry. The moet ofits subtle lanu
oae li It s eoatlnual preseoae and
esess asppeebto the fireside whet
It a weleme geest that is eagerly
ree.t, sad ite teasdamp devoured to
the ealueloo of all ether .endlng
boweverelevating and Insteoetive. Ir
setter l so varied that ther I. somea
thiag salted to every taste. mood, In.
Strest sad avocatlon. It Is one of tbhe
meot Important hotors of elvilised life
and it Io only a narrow pruudle that
de.rts its value. Is sosutitutes al
mot the sole speeles of instruetlon
that mary hmlls peInes, and dull
and lasipid indeed would be soa
homes without ts cheernlag presence.
It gives oas knowledge of the outside
world wbleb we esnomt glean from
books, tar it keeps pae with every In.
navatlcs, every little businem flueotas
tia, every m eald, rehltous, eommerl
a uand poltlestl eaterprle, at home or
sabdad, la Um of war or of peae; and
N Sew resogalssd as one of the
seestem demmnds of modern soelal life
lbh it hie galied an eundlpuete
NlebLd upse peioe mesdoeo it ma
regates to itlOt a slveresl range a
psephet, teseher, wiole ad legislator
smiseass estost with all thle die
tlVmode, bet bedly drawl side the
seiaa of (ly demsude life sad ex
ppeso to velpgr ga .b eleesled, grin,
ulag shltes bhabld the downy eash
les and gilded hberdashery of can
alld lury. What the edlter I sau
what a eolal pabli would have.hla
be, are as diverse as os es eoeseeve
ad it werok be a diNeAlt undertaklaI
w ~ug UE e oe m. a al muas
set be s. pees that hT work should
hear he stamp of s ezesptlooal o.
oulemsm ad higlb, for to lndite boar
ly ad oeditably demandi more ons
rmLttiag theoght, attentlon, mad
leare than I. possible to bestow upsE
rrted matter presseted forthe public
apeoval or eoademnat#lo. The d.1
tees responuibility Isa grave oo, and
the daily and momentous pressur em
hs eurrroaudlags roders his po-ite
ay other than so enviable oe. He
muet think hastily, yet souadly; h
.mst write rapidly, yet fthblsstly;
ad sany Immasturty of thought or s.o
presmlon Is ao unorgiven trespass up.
om as invidious publio. Anothe
evil growlg out of edltorial work Is
Ihi, Wtnm esger ul aa.lngpabll i
wasnt the news whatever it may be,
moral or lestlous, In all Its detail..
Is this dedartmeo are heralded the
Iermiltle, Ik a troitod , the neorml
ties, tie sbocklag developments that
osestLtute the seasateial elomeot;and
theUsg this ao a demand of Ibts mass,
lt objtedto by the more re-aed
lse as eterlig to an unblushl_
detory of a abhbrrert nsed that
should oat be met at the pubile o.
pasis. Its efft upon tbe popular
mWid and morals cannot be too bitter
y deplond or deprected. This evil,
we w olad to my, is not a general
*e, for ther an honorable zxoptlou
that sould be empesisld by a worthy
exemptLon ftom all such startulln and
mvoltont detalls. Tbhis a g larlng
ills with uany of our lty dailies,
rad the worby editor applies the hbe
am to his ehafod ooMeleon that those
frightful deeds hould be unvelted be.
S re the world to bhow tets aummary
Mdulbutve uesle Is sure to be meted
out to the perpU It Ies a daMt p
am preedent to lamlltris the maids
of Oth mem with seeh aseM and
. Id ob Ihale the deadly dfflievi
0 $M g Imems l thoe noxlous em
. met al m roettrmsesm ad #q
e, mas ae they wae to -S
A a-Wl agw, uA h a - t
Y;rnc d i.-OtAdl( a s I
a Wto ee I e pmms aN
tIw or maniMy,
lahis owe vidtse
ot ldo p .uC ad b t rr m IC
thopneslosmmd be who ti mq-,
r mowaam e .sea maet uppy
neM peesm p.bmlums dampy for s
le of meeasy. A large penrestage of
the mo malalrl we read about ol
hamlebd, we regn to sy, by the
poplerjeeulo of the dy. Editar
ebeeld nemeber that they areas rr
epmdil for a debsuek ot Intellect as
Smolmel, and that the tltam, the*
peUtlm, and the eratme of bhe pael
ed whiek they aendorse ase osepted
by tedr psaroem u sre a sld.e of ao.
rest thought sad appreoed action up
on whlob depend our hture national
hboor, prosperity sad happlnes, for
with many the editor le aItlllble and
bhi opinlone eaoulNed laws.
A xxn editor camn nar losing hie
temper the other day. In a notice of
one of the local choiNrs he sld'that "the
well trained sod cultured voloee the
euelleot cobor showed to the best ad
vantage in the anthem, 'Whoen Moro
Ing Purples all the 8ty.' " (Tbh chlor
was horrif. d on the appearaneo of the
Spaper to find the title of their srt
piece to be "WhojlMourulng Pupples
I ill the BkL."
THE ART OF EMBALMING.
htw edles t ehe Dead Anre Prnesra
er F tere Oe.rtlimus..
Said a reporter to a prominent under
taker the other day; "I suppose thi
warm weather will eame you to get out
your "trig'ea )"
"Well it would a fewyears ago, but
now, you know, we never em boe for pre.
servlig a body except in a few o-as
where the friends or relatives object to
our embalming it."
"That is more expeanve, though, Is i
"Oh, no; the cot I. about the same
and the trouble is much lea. Now, you
e, in using ice we have a big box tc
carry around, and where we have three
or four cases at the same time we would
be obliged to have several coolers, but by
the new way of preserving here is all we
have to carry," and he laid his hand on
what looked like a sample case, such a
s ordinarily can led by a liquor salesman.
On opening the case it bore a striking
resemnblanc to a surgeon's case, excep_
that on one side there were three quari
bottles filled with milky looking fluids.
The instrwnents consisted of a small
knife, a lancet such s Is used by physi
clns in "tapping," ad a sringe with s
great variety of nolea. "Th"msid th
undertaker, picking up the syringe, ,.
the prindpd thing used, and- the no.me
are used in just a many ways as there
are mncm. Now we us this nosle when
we do not ted to do a regular job od
embalming. but imeply to peserve thu
body a day or two, and it i used f
the Said into the stomach. Thsu
a for pa injection, this for a
.rdn, this r an y and this is use
A wht we adll inah . IbTh is, if de
perso hm been sick a time and I
very Yn la the loae, we msert this I.
the ato under theo and force a certeai
Sald ao the ts to ive it a round an
then Iunde'read that it is not ne.e.
eary to ll the we and arteries in order
to peavr a body for a few days?"
"Not by any mans. Of ooure it de
peads nr much on the condition of the
body when ive Into our hands, but or
dinarily we inject bto the stomach and
Intetimn and into the hbed through the
nose and eams. In a thorough job, where
the body has to be kept a number of days
in warm weather, we fill the arteries, and
blood t. This we are obliged to d
while the body s warm. tmt we do not
lajeot the embalming fuid till the animal
warmth ba left the body."
"How long will a body retain its natural
appearance that has been thoroughly
"I can hardly my, All the way from
one year toten or even more, and I eax
pct if I em almed a body just to see
ow long Icould keep It, It would kep
till it was ed by outside agendas.
I have remod bodies that have bees
burled three or four years that were p
fet, only they were covererd withmo"
n. VutJ
-moumwr nwrms.
MeIbays m Truek Iapteeru.
Near a place called Nkklddivunda there h
a large tope which is well known to be
infested with a host of monkeys. Hvine
no other mode of occupying their dull
ho , they are bent upon tryIng to do
troy the railroad track on the T
line. It would appear that thee animal,
about fifty or sixty, form thenmelves into
two companies; they range themselvd
sytemtally, noe-half an one il and
other half an thether. Ihey begin
by rt removing the earth from the
:(de of the rails. Then they arrive a
the dificulty of nut. and bolts, which,
though they examine them very mlntely,
tbey - get over. On the -pp--h
of the upor downtrin, they will
till the eagn is within ew yards,
wheb with the uamaot o., tst.
rdmy yJump on ac de tll tihe" t ih h
pasd, ath-n asme an heir work.
A remakaM e lianas cocured an onm
of thesm oocaslc Asas eginewas ap
Sthe maabrpn made their aal
wtht e eueptlon of na, who
in as the ta e,. the
egie by t' timener. e,
thir ambr was in, mad. a rroa.
sd draed him of, oms laying hold i
m by te Ill, her. by the a ; the
acdh bim. LThey mr now the
Nddi&aUnd p bhy . guasds and
drlhw. -lbs criufnat Wolk.
Speata .1 DeeJh
An old writer, oumlng of death, aye:
"I do erlly beYl *a it in thus kTs
me. weaw lee ad piimatlowhr sw.
Withw thme Itt Ott a3ma ma@l crr
twu: Rawl YI aib u a9om,.
atb at ambow
Vw r o 0 MPOfNOK
*80W= i
-~ ~ OZadm
GUM, FIWI AND FRGRANT.
ew a Gedath4rilu Native Iere..
A lump ot( Chr, aiaM spruce gum,
th and tat a its native forr
I not to be dp ad s a chewing sab.
ance, and i everybody could get the
eal aticle, ltd of bmp. adulterated
tuff, the army o chewers would be
Ttlr augmObted. The natural gum L
aid bphyriam to be bne8cial to the
troth, aid is eastaly a great lmprove
meat on tobaxo. The woodmen bring
out coniderabl quantitis of gum, some
idme packed in ptty miniature barres,
which they whittle ad arve from blocbk
of white pine or cdar during idle horn
by the camp ire, m present for thea
triend, but then ar people who make a
busines of gathering gum, and in cer
tain ections of the spruce country it pays
well.
Most of the spruoe uam handled by thi
dealers comea from Canada and northern
Maine, while Vermont ad New Hamp.
shire contribute a moderate quantity to thi
total yield. The best um comes from nc
pticular section, but always from t
bi st pruce trees, and it begins to ru
in July or August, when, in these high last
tudes, the nm become so hot a to crac)
the bark. On the limlb, in the crotchea
and even in the trunk of the spnoe, tb
molten um forms during the heat a
ummern tall sorts of fantaic shapes
and when cold weather at in it become
hard. The first year aftr it run th
gum is white nd pitchy, then it begin
to turn amber d red, and the econm
year it is et to "pick" for the market
although it is better if allowed to remaib
on the trees until the third year. Afte
the third seson the gum remains in th
ame state for several years, and thei
begia to "turn old," as the pickers ay
and the conmuner o=mplt that i
"chews hard" and crumble up. A litt
more age makes it dark colored and bitte
n --A L- - -I..-· L. -.
a -m un vu ia 5' .
Up in Canada moc of the gum is
picked in the autua, be ias mear ly
mOctober, but thre, as hin Mim the
best time for the work s darg the deep
snows of the winter, when mowehoes are
msd, or in the early ,whaa man
can travel along at a d mrat on the
heavy crust, abovethen The
pickers are provided with long poes, on
the end of which is fastened a sharp
chisel, and underneaththat a cup to ret
oeive the gum as it is chppd off. The
cup ho from a pint to a quart, and
when full it is emptied into a long beg
which the pecker carries lung to his
back likes knapck. Thies gum har
vesters erect hutse n the woods when far
distnt from a settlement or a _lo.
camp and sta from two days toa w
on a trip. 'be they have secured as
much as they can "tote" they come out,
and then the women and children have
the tedkou jobof saping each and
every lump ree from bark and moas.
The clean, bght article ored for sale
in the shops lb very much diferent
from the brown nugget in the picker's
bag, although ooosoanaly a clear, shiny
plece is found on the Umb of a large tree.
It s the cleaning of the um that
makes a rsint clam article ep ve. An
ordinarTy ikrusually erma faitr day's
wag, although n localities that have
not baen eplored he mnemed "strhle
t rich." I have known man together
$0 worth of gm Ia one day.
Tere are twoor three (ams in Mains
which buy large quantities gum from
lumbermen and pickets for the purpose
reainingt, as they .mny. Bat, as a general
rule, the riening cons iot ato roa
with rosin. They throw the into a
big vat, bark, moss and all and bol It to
about the ane stsney of mo.les, skim
ming f the mpurities as they rise to
the srtace. Then, i the purpose be to
adulterate, some lard or and a lot
Sof rosinis thrown in, wb -aeti-s a
.The mixture is stirred until
theah poured t on a dlb,
where. while it is yet buht, it is rdolled out
in a sheet about a quarter of a Inch
Sthick, and tward at with a steesal die
into pieces hair an c wide ad thrw
quarters of an ldak g. These pieces
e wrapped in d tcoloe is paper and
kd in wooden boxes-900'pisess to a
This is the socalled "patent" guam.
Tons of it are sold omth and west oat us,
bIt here on the verge of the primeval
forest it is a darug Inthemarket.- gr
(Me.) Cor. New York am.
seek in ?re.aess OseaWsie
Ina recent addres on dental
Sir James Paet 'dwells upon the
functions of the molars, which, he mys,
stand half way between the dead and the
living-that is to my, between the food
to be comumed and the tissues formd by
it. Upon them end vry greatly the
character which will be gven to those t
es. In other words, the mode in which
we masticate has an apprecdial~e lect
upon ur future ph l condition. "Who
knows1mtw muethosr thirty-two bitu
whicbh Mr. Oladsto Is believed to take
at evry piee meatt which becoamm
ny have had to o with his bodily s
tems, ad hemc, by mmeao n indietly,
with the Irish gtiaml"'-Mdu
Record.
eser muNesse.
Iaeo lm to eeib adamm. msl
oCenda enas to color blindness ay
be rmeach too precipltly. A wrng
judment ooldr may be occesoned by
e elect t simultansosm contact, or
tl t of oe color another on the
miLes of thes es. Thus ween in ath
vicdinity of whits will appear under ardS
Ia d.M adrk ray ; bit foro t
no n it one is ot to be oa bld d
color blindnes. -Philadelphia Call.
Chartllo' Bnvemi Pryr.
Charlie, after his evening yr, w-
dding mom improvised pet= He
ray impartially, a his memory Mrred,
for all his Mfdt for the peaest
door and arond the corner, and add
with the m ne intently abtracted taen,
"I won't y for old Dr. Hart's flks,
for we don't vdt there."-Harpr's
Bum.
PtlattU with Pl.aum.
A wtirctry meh o dlectrophti
with platum his become pated &d
ot in or in Londmn. Tbeoad*
prodol is hrd durable and corramo
proo, having in them respects grat *&
ventag ovr diver, bram or copper am
faoe.-Arkanaw Tn elar.
JAKIN
POWDER
Absolutely Pure.
This powder erver varies. A ma
vel of purity, strength and whole
I somea . More eooncrma al than th4
i, ordinary kinds, ad anot be sold I
Scompetio with the multitude o
e low es, sbort wel, alum or pba
phut. powders. Iold only i _ aan
d Rtzi. BAxxxo PowDu Co.. 10
Wall etreit. New York.
For Bale,
Cattle and Horses
400 Head Choioe Amenr
can, Range Cattle.
150 Head Range Cattle.
500 Head Heifers an=
Cows.
50 Head choice Native
Cattle.
Counted out and delivered here.
600 Head of Horse.
325 Head of Horses.
24 Head of Saddle Horse
Two good Stock ranch
es, of about 1,000aare.
well fenoed, and unda
complete systemofditoh
es.
Hinkle & Mann.
Bu hlo, Wyo.
FOR SALE.
nome floe fall blood and high grade
Shor Horn Bulls
Well eoollmeted sad (strona goostltd
tlon. Apply to
THOS. H. GANFIELD,
Lake Parkb
Euin
SVE YOUR PET15
T. W. HALL & CO.,
Hawe aa arrmagme.a dto le of aU t
H11EEP PBLT
They may mal o n um sapmm
Dry Butcher's Pelts,
Are worth from 14 to leet1 . per pound.
Dry Murrain pelte8) to 1410 per pound
on the Clbago maket today.
We will ruole eamllgumeonta from
uayooe who has pelts to abip, and will
Fat FULL MARKET PRICE br
them.
T. W. HALL & 00..
Ohicwo, 1.
v
5ooo AgentbWanted! DoubleQuick, toso
-LZI'Z OF-D r i l
Im~lahly themost valuaWble usam emh
ucl~ La .'kof olav. Rm. shyL~ Iliusrusi~
il t WIall lnmeineliy. NHVa
"so want this standad Lrb .Ite(irl
Pmeherkand Orutor of the Am o1gb Ltte
wod. Torrinfo inWdemued. U ste.r
5% ~ DCET . fo od oBMS1100..
1216=11is, Minn.
Tb. Hi~Icht eHmotouas Rook of tb. A.
SAMANMI AT UASTOM
1110 In~. Ilr~t t
Usr Sm llf~ latt , e
theId~~l
Fin e Job _Pnili
THE
YELLOWSTONE JOURIAL
JOB DEPARTMENT
Is now *epared to do all branohmu
of printing,, such as
Label/, Deeds
Sermons, Drafts,
Tax lisas, Lses,
Ctatzles, Tmý
Newspapers, Bill Heads,
Flock Cards, Bnl oards,
Concert Bills, Blank Notes
Road Notoies, BillsofLading,
School Reports, Prices Ourrent,
Concert Tickets, Deposit bCheks,
Festival Tickets, Wedding Cards,
Railroad Tickets, Shipping Reoeipt,
Excursion Tickets, Insurance PolcIes,
Tags of Every Style, Oarticates of Stook, "
Apothecaresr' Labels, Gertifates of Deposit
Orders of Exeroies, Bills of Ezxhange
r ewards of Merit, Railroad Reoepts,
Dry Goods Taps, Letter Heid
Leoure Tickets. zem Ordes,
Coupon Tickes BuPieu Cardsl
School Reords, Note Headings,
Blank orders, Vitong Cards,
Bills of Pare, Bank Notion,
show Cards, CheckEooks,
Wood Outse, Stock Ls,
Pamphlets, Envelopes,
Mrgauines, Way Bils,
Tax Binls, Lotm.,
Blnlet~ Bmd
Boob BrieL
And all other kinds of
GOOD PRINTING
.T LO.W PRICGlS.
Mail orders promptly and cheaply
I
I ESTIMATES FURNIBESH)
Upon al kindS o
BLANK BOOKS AND BIlDIl,
ONLY FIRST CLASS WORK
TI UT U a A UTIM.r,
Ol aads m anld p .lts-- u
Y elowstone Jour 4

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