Newspaper Page Text
STIE DAILY YELLOWST N JOURN AL. V.L.UM V. No. s62 MILES CITY, MONTANA. SATURDAY, JULY 1S, gs$$. PRICE 3IV'CENTS. MHIWILY JOURNAL" *#vory Meomin Except M7onday. mile city, - 3000 Torme of Bubflptoc: TMAIL-IN AVANCU-PCT AGN PAID. thaw 8 3.00 r0 TT 5wnUMOZN udwdom x ale t aof. Par week. f,;M ON-TILLOW PAPU. rr zoo 1.00 Meemlag. 0551.. mwek -L.L 1-* LN 400 7.00 iiliiu* MCI W.00 4.4 606 ilool eoo SLOG WD LONG ILO IL 001s3.o1000 WeAk...10 1~i.0 IL &U1.000 21.00 00.00 Em&7. 1.0p0 .o011. 52.00 .00 Esmow... it-o L 2.m 12.00.O00.00 1mw Wenothom.. WeUIWeUAS:00.@0074.O0rlOO.00M10OI. LoWsommn1.-Tom mmw pm irneft *60 ub I Wrouepa 8*..e a" pw Use. Add,.. JOURNAL BUILDING, MILES CITY. M. T. i. a erDD, ?ETtUIiN AND URGONOW. all.W. & ewn's hug mien 1211 5.5. WOOD. PEUN. AND StTueaON. *bvqs. dzq a7... a s 3Z3N. T. D., i$ AND BUM MM.~OYIII I, . :. B Ous 1,.} 0. L r. U. Kim, f U Irns~?uekllg Lupu mliW. S C. . WIuI ". - Na. j=g , - s iu rL. rid k. ..."n k k.m p..r 'ger FoU@IO AL. Msl.~am Nol City. Nibabst A.v+Sb-bIm kais, 11 a . ., IF. 3. abs m.p _._. t. Q ImIanmIm. 11 a.. 46 ILI 811"W, 7:0 P- - Or,ýh Meth oott. CiRMIM-MI q 10 4606J.Um. dninflh, ehLaa, U. U. A. A. 0 M DtaesM No. 1 usa But sad sasse I[-sMess1ap , X. 9t., fiaste b.h msr Idai, mm. 1% eed L~ U ;~!lClis 11g. o.I .~ ( ~siaat h t, Ne At, l Na 1, Thursday CL 6 ff rll dry0ns m wlr a &U~O,5M 1, gist sad -M el te Wet, No. !t. sryO 1L l irC I w, . I~ C . RICHMOND ",. Wa Bapokde . trl "u i teý+e ý Neat letiee. AW. W. Church Futihrraet~et Lvryble h~~usumhrn egL.jUe . of oak Is h~r -rJIWI R SbU hur r~2i~fmpdb ~~is i~ iurBph~P LEIGHTON & JORDAN, WHOLESALE GROCERS, RANCHMEN'S SUPPLIES, Goods Delivered at Ranches. THI OLDEST im L ii T ISIUS IN EASTERN MONTANA. FIRST NATIONAL BAN K3 ~ZLZ OZT, ý~z rrr T OLD0B AID IAIGS BAIL IBTIUI IOFITI CAPITAL - .- oooo00 SURPLUS AND UIDIVIDED PROFITS S60,000 R. 3. JODAN3 Vhs Pmendat. .. B. W.IOZZ, Oa rlr. L 3. W1ZY, udntaut O..u . INTERU8T PAID ON TIME DEPOSITS. STOCK GROWERS NATIONAL BANK, MI~dL CITy. MO.dr. CAPITAL AND SURPLUS, $106,000.00. INTEREST ALLOWED ON TIIm DEPOS.TS. W. L RTfl3U . ?rrsUsMt, WM. L3 Yb* hllmP.sat. R. 7. . ATLTULO, @suM . ELM. 3. 3ATOLO A It.0ash. CHARLES W. SEYDE, NOTARY PUBLIC.. Real Este, Ismranc atl CoTeyancig LIVE STOCK BOUGHT and BOLD SOHEB mIaIIu WCm , I(U I2 n13 mIT! UT Fs LI ZOVwSZ ros ZrT. Agent For First Class Steamship Lines For Europe. For.i.ps.haisIBpt.r,.tlo.Slo oaaGa..lalar as... i, AW,,I t GOVNDZNUT AmD P.hsoN oLAZS A wDOILTTr. Live Stlck, aus,Real Estae aid Notary I.'lic LIVE STOCK A SPECIALTY. Aaint h She lde&s sad mt reliable FINI, LFE AND ACCIDENT INSURANCE 088, ALl he Sm ig.t Is Io. Money Loaned on First Class Security. Cattle and shoep ranches, and iarowvd farms for sale at a bargain with easy terms of p nt. Houma to Bent and Kade. Several comfortable and oommaodiols dwelling and well located business and resldeaoo'lots for sale also N, P.. . Oo.s lots and ladsa, nd grasingl in the Northwest Territory for lease or sale. Maim.a, Wear, Wre. uWyg, Tez. am pmium GA'I'TLE. FOR SALEB~ sai . trUAe baIs r ash WILLIAM COURTENAY, AIN STREET. M O W .R8 T:T H o d * CHAMPION, DEBRING and MoCOKMICI. S HAY RAKES: TIKGR and rRADL-Y. WeA ve &- tmer. A LESSON. How Stock Raising Should be Conducted in tbe Future. Grover at Clihton, N. Y., Tells what Kind of Man we Waut for President. WHAT WE ARE CONINO TU. Small Eeri ad Winter eeding to be kSbesttted rNo Ceure ad Ig ,eems. The future of the eattle binesls in Montana and theo orthwest sange geIr ally is at preent a question that is reclving profound tboeght sad liberal discussion among those later sared. The fearful mortality of last winter among range attle, whereby owners suffered a loss of from one third to three-quarter of their herds, has about settled the question that ragling cattle without preparation to feed them during a part of the winter lt not practicable In this latitude. True, there are years when it can be done with comparative small loss, but no one knows when the repitition of '81 and '87 is coming, and the immu iaty from serious loss enjoyed during the intervals bears no profitable rela tion to the wholesmle slaughter of the bard winters. A chsa with Colonel Bryan yesterday on this subject would seem to point to a very radical change In themanner of handlinlg cattle in eastern Montana at least. Col. Bryan was for two or three terms, and until last spring, the president of the Mon teas Stock Growers Aa.ociation, mad barring last winter's handiwork, the owner of as handsome a herd of cattle as ranged in eastern Montana. His experience in the cattle busines, both here and in Iows, invests his opinions with weight and makes them worthy -f oonsideratloo. His flrm conviction Is that the days of big herd are gone ever to rtuorn to thbl country anod that the stock grower who Is not pre pared every wlntr to feed and qre for his cows and young stock will grow poorer every year. This abse. lute requirement will of course meos sitate the reduction of lage herd. to such lae as can be convenienly and fely handled and ld to to the grow log up of small benches of cattle that are cared for, and in this way, into uall but proetable elrds. Had it not been for the envis obsesee of for. age las year, thae would have been no o to speak of among mall own em-men who were rLunning from 80 to .00 had of stock. A herd a. chice Her.lbe owned by ol. Bryae, on Hsrl f of about 860 bead, and which S herded eparately, wem arried through a portion of the worst weather of last winter on hay five years old, but the supply unortunately gave out before thebad weather did, and a lres of 180 bead was sustained, when fifty tone of hay would have caved them. In Col. Bryan's opinion the making of hay and the raising of forage plants ouh as alIhfal,te., must hereafter be the yearly occupation of the stock growers. Year may come when the range will supply all the winter feed necessary, but there should be no let up the next summer nla putting up what forage the country will af.ord. It will always come bandy sad does not spoil if well put up, sad there l no telling when it may to the etire d pendence of stock growtr to weather a winer like last. "God helps those who belo themselves," sad no strong er application of this truism can be found than its relation to the subject hen treated. It Is Col. Bryan's oplan lea that with abundant thed to easr for the cows and young stelk the winter loss in thl country can be r. diced to seh a minimum as o be not worthy of mention. The labor that Is required to sooomplish thib re suit is trivial compared with the base 8l aeuruslg, and the truth of the statement is already so fly resogalsn ed that all over the unge to-day the mewers at work and will be help Iy uti t eu last spepr of ges that be out is gathered into stasks. Fortunately, by will be modealay piety kILs yar, ad the ladb l .eU s re that tbe m will eu to ahce eugly tha meat years .ep will be vM- ah biter. Th et M.ath hen, a smv.sts U..e we a tha mms nameaaser Assam sewb tk w~~Yn dogI o ESIingoossad is Sb. uosMom of bomr mtau of a .tdotlody lta dom W ~ o OWl urs,01S.moma .5.01b MAW.h ~Mm f sad sea* a .roS Is All tbhi tende to he wealth and th prosperlty of the oenatry in eoatradb tisotios to the peast whre nothing caemtom for the oeupaties of the range but the taus and whbt spppliq there was necesary to be pesbseMd drting the round-upe. With er ranges illed with cattle belonging o actual redents, prepared to eare for their stook daring the winter, and marketing their beef by pool arrange. mente, a new era of prsperity will dawn upon us. The peeeade of our beef will come back to ms, our lads will nrease in value as they become mor produetive, our revenues will IL. enase correpondingly, sad every branch of buslnas will feel the m petus of the new ordw of things. Om..r akme a5pesed. At tb. Cliat., N. Y., eotemnnal eelebratlon, Presidet Cleveland re speeding to the tout, "The President of the United States," spoke u el. lows: "I am ncinelld to coonteat my self on this oceslio with s acknow. ledgement oa behalf of the people ef the United Stat of the eomplmemt whleh you have paid to the offee whlch represents their sovereignty, but such an aoknowledgement sug gests an Idea whieh I cannot refrain ftom dwelling upon for a moment. That the ocee of President of the United States does represent the sov erelgaty of sixty million people Is to my mind a statement full of sol emnalty. This sovereignty I conelve to be the working of the actorenforce meat of the divin gift of macb to gov era blaself, and the manlfestatlen of God's plans cernlag the bh.ms race, though the stauggle of politial partles to secure Ineoumbeney of this ofce, and the questionable methods sometimes resorted to for its powes sado, may not bo ta koeplag with His ides; and through the deeelt praetlied to mislead the people oin their eheles, and its too frequent suacogdl ue may sarprise us, these things shoeld ever lead o stmray in our o.estmtim of this ealted positie. and of Its value and digtnity. And though some who may e obesoe to perform for a time the duties of this hlg~st place should be badly selected, though the bst at. alab n.eulta may not be nwehed by this admlnistratle, yet the esaetieos of the watbhfulnes of the people, treed from the disturbag trmoall of politiaeel excitement tend to prevent miebanoe to the oies which repe. sent their sovereignty, sad ebould r duos to the minimum the danar to the state. I by no means underestl. mate the tmpourtaOe of the utmeat care snd oreumspeetloa In the seole. dlon of the incumbent; on the enmary I believe thre is no obligation of eitlsNashlp that demands more thought and eowmaleetio deliberatiol thLu this, Bet I em speaking of the altise's duty to the ofme sad it selected incumbent. This duty is on ly performed when in the Intereot of the entire people the IfUll exerses of the powers of the oblef magietrate is insisted om, and when ,or the people's safety due regard fr the limitatioa plaeod upon the ofnice e exasetd. These thingsp bould be enforced by a manUestatioo of csalm and enlightena ed pmblio opinion; but this should nt be simulated by the mad clamor of dsappointed Interests wrch, without neard for the general good or allow. soee for the exercise of omal judg. meat, would degrade the omee by fordeng complisao with selih doe mahds. If your prelsdent should be not of the people and one of your fellow citisens, be would be utterly unfi for the position and Insapable of understanding tbhe people's wat anad careless of their desires. ThaI he is one of the people Implies that he is subject to human frallty ad error; but he should be permitted to elaim but Ue exemption for mleaesm; the generIoait of his ollow eldsoushbould alone oeesr how fbr hb good Iatean oome should esces hie sbortoomlags. Watch well, the, tbei high oice the meet preeous pessees of Amerl. ean etueesp; de Id d f t the meet eampte deveotik of the beak of bl to wbhse eeeodV it may be e trusted, ad pea noet lea frob a. . w...rhy o s h. witme,,. Thm *Ulyee pesks e su e4 t y M unwelsm ead to tbhem wkho I. w esrmt emnt of the ,fus k.I t-oies which heaves bse weam. atIor. Wool oymo. In Um-ma The mammal emyn of &h wool s., lvnt @&or .uau we an Stomw Iber bulI" pmmft, LaU ailts teth Uf eing mum 16aq in aoummi toas wed grow"rs fmlewr tae ek'hi we in OiMem Sho the gib fLhs mw moviuhu ww MOT ~-- 11 I) V.' 'p. twsety onto, while to hMI bold r twity.Ota The .061m-g e[ d semimltiom wan held Is Ie"Gumsd 0.ion botel*[ the papeo.lewibb of w lb wo filled. The oi , eloled fer the earuing jum wore 1. S. hE tws of Steaford, Preldens; P. W. Wlat, of Holes, vioe pnsldemt; L. W. wee, asrotary, and T. &. COllUUU;,5IemU P. S. Gibeso, the retilug pr- id, ama apeeeh, Mdul ofln Iamt toup mem, md the aesreay aed a ven. iloom gpg. The mmml umabe of ftsinUtlne Vee -aw aid the mate lng rademed. Levenlng ab 91 woa given by the Bantet humid of W eat which all ie v ds= acd a inqrutty of the tows People wow pr at, the eeoeron bolng e ofmm. erl mirth and hilty. Jmr Jan The Woody Toedo Bld.i n weat Ilquries to ilb rsbreeema4rl Pubeof tbs. U ..kI ik them tR sIgnfy thrl, IM sad usewd eelem e the lepubil.an Bekst at 1US. Au.. vein bave bees resded bees SAW pemssaor about me In refhU e siddrued. The blkewlng is the iasbi FIMs obolee kbermn ............... 61 L seola .................................. AUlso..................a.................. Edmnde.........................»..... U?7 Inein ...... ...... ... Br#.,... ........,............ Eva r b ·..............................«...... 7 Haw rl ess...................... . D ep p w................................... fleesd choie.- ..................... (t Lise.................. ................. SAi Li~ ·dsobrmr.......~ Edm u d............................. Ha mrpho............. .............. . Depew. ....................... 11 awle ...............3............... li Some of the financial results of r cent oongresiloual legslation too the subject of pensions are discloed in the treasury acounta for the fie1a year just closed. The sum disbursed by the government on this account amosated to over $76,000,000, the heaviest rn reached In the history of goveramea bis b over $10,000,000 mor tea the amount thus expended in 1886. about $D0,000,000 mere than M 185 or 18S nearl three times maodt s An 1877, a decade ago, and not far fr hear times much m la 1887, twd dees ago. In bsort, s we reed ftoe th war period the bnrden of our penele list rows heavier. These ar faeet which should arrest the attention of those who. while not lnclined to be niggardly or ungenerous to the sol diers of the war, yet recognise the im. portanooe of economy in the admini tration of governmnt. CamsdiMas bheM omemmber TMis. Fint Kansas Woman-"Were you at the polls yesterday, Minnie? Second Kansas Woman-"Ob, yes, I was out at the dear little polls. Isn't It jut too nloe to vote." "How do you vote? " "Really dear, I don't remember." "Well, you remember that they had two kinds of tickets-white and red ?" ' Oh, I remember now. It was the lovely little red ticket that I put Ln' the polls." "Why, I am surprised. That was the Republican ticket." "Well, I didn't ask. I saw tht te color of the ticket was a delicate' red, and that It exactly matched my drea."-Nashville Amerlian. "Here lii Matthew Mudd, Death did him so hurt; When aliv e e wa mud, Now he't nothing but dif." Epitaphs ae sometimes the vldd' of rejolcitg, as given In the fllt i on a graveyard sexton: "Hurrahl my brave boys, Mt's r4Jl in bis (ll. Ft If b he ad lived, rbe d brtod i all. The sam vein of ezalMaUdi rm through the epitaph of the eutn' allent partner, one Dr. Chdu: "Hae e Ul* te r L of Dr. OLrC Who flied this haltf tofa yearc." Tim uoxps"u b whMA boppg. v. ad Boo dl ~a No W.4to, .mmdD4M in osew ja "Moog yW a *w of I slum ms~biei Ia wor 0 0r~