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THE DALY YELLOWSTONE JOURNAL. VOLUME VI. No. 134 MILKS CITY, MONTANA. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 188 PRICE FIVE CENTS. THE DAILY JOURNAI. r7. ,Jlri.a P.P., .f wbar E..a.4g Ivery Morning Except Monday. Populatsa of Nils City, "3000. Terms of Subscraptma@ St MAIL-IN ADYANUI-PWTABEI PAID. UitIU". Ow Yea......«........-....s if Will". six ~..a....-......... 6.00 r1tally Idtl.a. thie et..b...hs............. ... 8.M or Carier. 3.s', ment~a, r " -. ps week. WEELYL 3DITIWN-TELLUW PAPER..0 w . . · ..........-.... ... LOO Advertia.Ifl Rates. ILL n Ip ig y. j I.qS .0 1.60, 6.0 10.00 14.06 90.00 Days ...... I0 tW 70I1.SJi1S.S 11.01 11.0* A Nays.... C 0i 001 4.00 16.00;15.00 01.0I 10.0. I '(uek..... ..10 400,10.65 15110. 11.08 86.00 £ W~k.... 700 10.00 .1.64.A0012.0 0.00 41.0. 'V . 1L0. 411140.257S 11.10 0.01 VeLh O A' I10 01' 15 £d00 00.00 11.00:001 1~Qtu. 2 II dl.W)4.oU)54:0044:I 5,.U0 4.00 8 L.mihs. ,$0D(lt400 bO.Z0S I 4.00;100.00 S * h· _ r #I1U.M1005 0.00,74.00i00.0. 160O Lees morts.,.-TOS ser per n.. for sach am. U.O. Wilt.-ups AlSe eNt. Par lme.. Addnr tHE YELLOWSTONE JOURNAL PUBLISHING COMPANY. JOURNAL DUILDINO, MI1 ES1 CITrY. M. T. I. NtMACTOf JjuNTMACTOB AND SI,!LDISa himmo~tm lurnished om all klumd of CS!rpEL@? YYkaYL'AON AL. DYOZ4D BI'TLEI. ATTOINIBT AT LAW. ~~Csuoit..a, Maim .lmtH Mumr Ci·.. PM!MlICIA~S. Rl 5. (5. <IDD, aM teuitAN AIID SCUODilO. at W. o.. savage's drug mwore. 121i SLJ.5. WOD. PHYsCACAN ANID 119112411. D 3. . FlaW. D ITauCIAN, iUNEION AD OrTRICIAM. M w Uudam mmd 4 tjurtaelimtr.) UO/ce at b. drug Mestem. YMaai ciLt. M. T. C.' WM1TNEl , DUUIS e raim INSI. ever arowm Nationl aso. YL werk giasrantaml d at I le rati.. (,t ICHE La. /uaaae Churcb (Episcopal) Palmcr St.-'Ir 6mdas a S:*J) S. m. an T:78 p. a. Win. beL cacOr. 3erIst Churfth-&fYniC luudq, U a. U.. 7 p. a, i) 1). WwnIMy, passer WIgkdIutburcb-dsrries s Sunday. 11 a. M., % pU. S. Lk. hmnldr, ,sswr. ?, qb etaa Cburcb-SerrlLk Sunda, 11 . a., 40p . T. C. Arwuirong, .autor. As eh ef acred Heart, stabulie-Sunday. 1", am. E. W. J.Lidasmtuh, cbrai.Aau, I' ~. A. OF-_ _~ - ---- A. O. H.-Divisloe N.. I meea int a 4 coma ladays of seh month. M. . H.-Meeto s.st and third Wednesdays ai pN. .., at Odd Frllowm' Nall. A.1. A. M.--oYutwuome Lodse, N. ito. , A- and third WedNasdays. L A. Y.-Y.*Iloew.ee Chapter. No. 5, second ad fourth Saturdays. K. T.-Damascu Oommaadory,searth Thun 1. O. O. F.-Custer Lodge, No. 18, every I. )day s their bill. L 0.. O. F -sentiJal aeoampmeLt No. 6, in 4ad third Friday. . P..-Crusder Lode, . N. Thursday Wealags at Odd Vollowe 1slI. QC. . of A.-Miles City Branch, every bunday at . et L.--Firt and third Fridays. Q. A. L--U. O. Graut Veos, No. 14, rat and *.tl Tuetda. 1.0. O. T.-M o the West, No. S4, eviry tebeday evening. L N. PAIKEl 5. W. TO??IXi WON1HERN PACIFIC FOUNDRY Pi3K.1 & TOPPIIIU, rWmhisns of Btll tied of IRPON ain& 3RASS GASTINGS, BIjINERD, MINNESOTA TEE FEIII 03 EILL. If It hs been In constalt us or 16 year, with B r.car equald by nort. WARRANTED .ot to blow duow, units" tb towene with it: ofaflnhlt s,'1 wind that din, Sot 4iat.ll +ulahitataIn arml hll laaii .n he Ig.fIE't n outla.I andl ii IIC? Wir wre thai a other witli 1e. W. ,,auafactun both I'uwplhtr an, (l eard I and carrly a 111l1 Ilun of ' id MIIl Yuppll. `Recto WPlntq& nd tar 7ataloeue, Cirulan uad Prim. MIS... PIUKIN$ WIND MILL K AX OS.. hIamB.Bh mumw LEIGHTON & JORDAN, WHOLESALE GROCERS, AND RANCHMEN'S SUPPIgES, Goods Delivered at Ranches. THi OLDEST An LAIGEST HOUSE IN EASTERN MONTANA. FI RST NATIONAL BANK. o0 14=' 30 CZTY, ýcOOTTr THR OLDEST ND LaG ?T BANK IN EASTERN mONTWA CAPITAL - 860.000 SURPLUS AND UNDIVIDED PROFITS 870,000 JOSEPH LEIUHTON, President. W. B. JORDAN, Vice Presidet. E. WEBIIO, Cashier. H. B. WILEY, Assitant OasMer. INTEREST PAID ON TIME DEPOSITS. STOCK GROWERS NATIONAL BANK, MIT L OITY. MONT. THE LARGEST BANK IN EASTERN IONTANA CAPITAL AND SURPLUS, $105,000.OO INTEREST ALLOWED ON TIME DEPOSITS. W. I. STEBBINS. President, W . HARMON, VIce Preident. H. F. BATCHELOR, Oashier. ELMEB E. BATCHELOR, Aent. Cash. CHARLES W. SEYDE, NOTARY PUBLIC Real Estate, suraIo ad Coveyanci LIVE STOCK BOUGHT and SOLD SOME DESItISLE i l.C'EE. AI'E Al1D lIT' POFEITY FOR SALE. NOVns 3 iron R T. Agent For First Ulass Steamship Lines For Europe. Foreign Exchange, International Collections and Consular Business Attended to GOVERNMENT AND PENSION CLAIMS A SPECIALTY. Live Stock, Loans, Real Estate and Notary !ublic LIVE STOCK A SPECIALTY. Anhnt for the eldest sad meot relisbie FID, LIFE AND ACCIDENT INSURANCE COS, And the oldest aget la tew. Money Loaned on First Class Security. Cattle and sheep ranches, and improved farms for sale at a bargair with easy terms of payment. Houses to Rent and Collections Made. Several comfortable and commodious dwelling houses and well located business and residence lots for sale cheap; also N. P. R. R. Co.s lots and lands, and grazing lands in the Northwest Territory for lease or sale. Montana, Western, Wyoming, Texas and Eastern GATTLE FOR SALE In lots to suit purchasers. Also several choice bands of sheep and Pennsylvanla "Black Top," registered rams and Short Horn thoroughbred and grade bulls for sale. WILLIAM COURTENAY, MAIN STREET. NORTHWESTERN GROWN GARDEN, FLOWER, FIELD AND GRASS SEEDS. All kinds at Eastern Prices, freight added. Send fbr catalogue and prices. Orders by mail promptly filled. Miles, Strevell & Ulmer. A SOLUTION OF SALT. The Saline Springs cf the Yel lowstone Valley Brought In to Requisition Would Prove a Bonanza for the Northern Pacific as Well as Butte Smelters. THE SALT QUEtTION. The Salt Wells uf Michigan, the Black Hills and the Yellowstone. It Is the opinlion of buqineo mell whe have taken the mlatter undercon siderallon that when the Ma'ort cut through Fipe-tone 'anm is ompi,leted. the N 'rth-rn P&eifl,· miy coune to thel rescue o* Butte in the way of furnish Ina silt at lower prices thin now rule The Michigan salt producers claim to, have great advantages over all others ID very rich briune and large lumber mills clome by, thun Heering Ulabs. pine sawdust and waste steam at no, coet, as obhe slt wells and saw mills are worked by the same companies During 1886 there were a number of new malt ble.ks erected, and a new process of manufacture reduced. In this process coal was used for fuel, and experliment proved that the eomt of the coal, which wag the chief eiensen In manufacture, was ,only 13¢ crints per barrel. The averale selling price of regulargrained salt in 186I, was 668 per barrel of 480 pound..; or $4.61 per ;on. This looluded the salt made by the old, expenoive prooeeses. By the sew prooess the quality of salt re quired by the reduction works could be tuaned out at such a low cost that it could be sold profitably at $3 per too, or even less. The Northern Pa. ciu bee h arried wheat from Wells Walls to Mloneapolis, a distance ol 1,722 alles, for $8 per too. On the same bests it could haul malt from Duo luth to Butte through the Plestoue Pa. for $5 per tou, and a rate of $2 per ton could undoubtedly be made to cover the short distance, by rail or water, from Maloetee to Duluth. This would land walt at Butte at $1i per too,and the Northern Pacific could well afford to cut the tariffn osalt vety line, In view of the enormous Increa-e of freights going eas that w6uld rt suit from the reduced coes of salt at tbis point. But before long it will be possible to obtain salt much nearer at hand. At Jenny's dtockade, Dakota, there is an abuudance of brine from watch salt has been made to furnish the towns In the Bla:k Hills. Before lung that place will becouuected with Butte by about 7u0 males of rail, and lte salt qutstiou will be somewhat sempltlsed. The United States Gelog. toal Survey reports numerous salt springs in the .Yellowstone valley, which no effort has been made to uti l1ae. There is a good opening for some enterprising capitalists to locate the Yellow.toon ualt springs, which aill range from 175 to 300 miles to Butte by rall, and which will alwaey have a sute thing ou the markets of the Montana mluing camps.-Butte Miner. Mrs. Iara J. o.bam.o. eitd Oul11t. Buston Telegram: The jury in the (-ee of Mrs. Sarab J. Robinbon, the al l.ged wbolesale poisoner; rendered a verdict of guilty of murder In the first degree. lu blis trial bshe was earged with the murdr of Prince Arthur Freeman, betr nephew. Mrs. Robin son had previously been tried on the bchare of killing her son and daughter but the jury disagreed. The seven supposed victims of Mrs. Robinson'. poisoning, were Muse, her husband; Laszle, her daughter; Willie J., her son; Prince Arthur Freeman, her nephew; Mrs. P. A. Freeman, her sister, and Oliver Sleeder, who board ed to her house, and is supposed to have been a distant relative. 8he killed them to get the money on their Life Insurance. Honorable Mention. The JOURNAL takes pleasure In pub Ilailug fur thI nInfrmatlun of Colonel Snyder's niavy friends In Mliiae City and vicINity, tbe oufihul order by Col. i iton, relleviuag 11iIi 11Crow furl ar duty with the Fifth iinfiitry. T'be high eeteeti in which C'A.* Rtiyei. r to held by hie eoIta i, I One in atirin II evidenced by. th t'ele of the order. and whirlc in emilisd ical ly enadorawd by hi. citizez friernde. i I:AIa4UtA It I vie F t 11Il IN' FA NT~tY, ' 1uioaaK K i~uuia Mont., Fe~b..), IBM } No.6. 6 In eotlpllalce with paragraph 3. N. 0., No. 24. Headquiartei of the Army, A. (U. 0., eurr.ut serie.; Major Sinion lnyder, FiLth Infantry, recent Ij psmrd d to Lisuieneat -Usemel, haimtt iii aiL rj, Is bereby relirved lruiudu-y wit iii. His1tegtuieit Lu Cl sile. btiu '(o J.-it' Isii flew satalonin LU sIuIIineiCII of Ar Zeiss. Aim *v .err a Cu~uise I dnyd-r'm cou nrci*L i of 97 yearu sting WdIII wi h hi. ~id awuuradevmm cthue FreIth iii aurniy the. Culmudrl o1 "'loe gins..u *uken pride ini rreterrlul to the wteaernablg record r. Itali.ettd by biruo duriug at/ pe-riec. mlii which bha ic frequecntly It - l·, big nIaig .-I.e*It by mupeil"ir authocrily ,o cuiiduct rexpsdlttiona tmquitmeg Brea fir.t-., Taw amid delecac"y, jaatll mep vo.te'md be brun to an etuc'anrl do cIree, and u bb creewtaed hi. operr tone with.urec... His brotherefit C li aniud itihe enlisted muen of aLes id eeginwrnt, In whii4ch be hu a*eird -cc its anti fanhflafciiv part with hits with heart-felt regre~t; whilma h.s Vriot eIlwrienice In the. fielt uill he m'taee ' y Them on aN'.unt (of the Confld"iI4 w hicht hi. trcren'.e alwarm inmseired Him late Heiitrutal (oranianule avrts with himt with a feeling skin t0 mor row, having wver funaid him m-.-' f'ithftil in the tierfcrnaanpe of hiii du fue.: an fr l.er "witheut fear and cmhcve rgrergec."h.' By order of C.'.lendl (lhann. OSCAR F. lONG. Iot Lieut. ani aceje., Fifeh infantry. WON BY ALERTm. The Oe.As.You.lP"ase Filashed sad the Record ieu.en Ten Mian. New YORK, Feb. Ii-At 6:50 Albert made. his. 607h mile appering as frihb almost am ee did when be began the rare lust Monday nightbL At 7:01 he fl'tish-d the 608th mile. At 7:10 Moore had covered 625 miles and at 7:12 -lb.,r hadi laid 6419 miles behind him and was going in good shape, oc csinenally breaking intm a run and making his 610th mile a a 7.milI gait, and tied the recrd a' 7:23, 1 hour and 441 minues ahead of Fittgerald's time. He no the 610th mile like a deer. stepping high and without apparent effort. The last mile was made Ito II minu..., N) ee..,nde. A surging ,rowd followed him around the rail bheering him on. Albert eomplet.d hi. 620th mile ten miles ahead of the record. At 10 o'cluck, the conculonu of the race, the score stoud: Albert. 6211; Herty, 582; Guerrero. 564, Hart, 546; (Jolden, 538; Mar*,. 531; Stockel 528; Noremae, 25; Dillot, 504; Mulll vom, 883; Taylor, 3.58; Tilly, 832; Mtout, 207. An estimate of the gate money to he received by the m no who covered 525 miles and over, is as follows: Altbert, $1,800; Herty', $3,000; Guerrero, 1,(000; Hart, $960; Golden, $721 Moore. $190; 4trokel, $3010; and Neremae $244; total, $11,560; The ofumeial report shows that Albert covered 621 miles and 1.320 yards In 140 hours sod that be rested nineteen hours and twenty seven mnloutes. Illegal Timber Cattin u Slt. Wabhington Telegram: Acting Secretary Muldrow has requested tbe attirney-seneral to institute crilna nal suilt a.aiost H. i. Hesoock, of Missoula, Mont., for unlawfully cut ting and removing from public Ands plue timber, estimated to have pro duced 1,210,000 feet of lumber. Her cock is represented as the servant or instrument o. the Miners' Lumber Co. of Butte City, with whom the attor ney.eoneral Is requested to lnstitute thbe suit for the :value of the lumber cut, ascertslned to be $7,,000. The acting seoretary has also requested that criminal suit be brought againoat tbe members or uoeers of the Blaok. ftot Mill eompaoy of Missoula, Most. for unlawfully outting and removiung from the publio lands timber estimat ed to have produced 9,500.000 feet of lumber; and jiont civil suit agqiust this company and the Miners' Lum ber company, and the otbere,to wbhom the lumber was sold, for the value of the same, which is estimated to be about $10,000 Aamlversary of Lleola's Birthdayl. Boeron,Feb. 12.-tbe Massachuentte e club celebrated the anniversary of ,t Lincolu's birthday this evening , Hannibal Hamlinu ut a letter inl which be said; "Let his birthday. tu like that of Washington's.' hi made national,and lik tiat of Wasbhlutnn' a let It be forever commemorated." The a senotiment wa recoelved with g4ap. plaus. b egqulilUo Iourned. CHARt..ErOow , W. Va., Telegram: (Governor Wilson has Iued a reluisi. tln on (1nwvernor Ituckner, of Ken tucky,for twentty-eilght lnn who are harIgeed wilh hnving participted In thlle killling ol WIll:.tI I)enmley In Lo. La11r(o11 tty, til *sate. ln the Itth of il.t M.lrlch. Ii a fkiht b 'wenU the Ilattflid" and M1e'- os. To every bird Its own neat it charm. ina. How haypp our otnes if only I health abide with us. Keep that dread visitor, Consumption, .kl. by using Warner's Log Cabin ,oglh and 'oasumption Remedy. It drives the ods of the dseuett of the s yet . "'ITS KNOBBY. Y'153W t Bill Nye'. CyS.ee. On *t th most popula. things ever written L.i BIll Nye I his brief doe riptionn of a Iwrwonal expi-ienoe wlt seyeleis. the actual ucourrenee a blob eoae near cooing blhm ble lif., and tboml. raculoje msues of hib cure are gives below: Cyelones are of two kinl., vii: The dark maroon cyclone and the Iroe gray cyclone with pale green aune* and tail. It wva the latter kald WIsal I frolicked with at the time alluded to. My brother and I were riding along in the grand old foret. and I had just been eiung a few bars frm the opera of "W~oop 'erm Up Ltlasr Jane," when I notioed tbat the wind wa begiuntol to sough through the tree. toon after that I noticed that I was soghbing through the trees iae and I am no slouch of a enogher either when I get started. The horse wa bhanging by the breoehilog from the bough of a large butternut tree, waitinl for someone Ie come and pick him. Idid not see my brother at first, but after a while he disengaged blE emlf from a rail fence and came where I wa" banging, wrong end up. with my personal .iT-s spilling ,out of my pockets. I told him that mo ses a the wind kind of softened down I wished be would go sad pick the horse. He did so, and at midnight a party of friens carried me into Lvwa on a stretche. It was quite an ova tion to think of toroulrght proos ioon coming way out there into the woods at widnignt and carryinl me loto town un their sboulders La eli. umph I And yet I was once ouly a poor boy. .Mr. Nye received the warmest seym pathis of the press, sud to a peraonel friend counected with the Chicage Times, wuo wrote to bln isinedlate lyafter, he replied as follow.: Hudson. Wi uonsio. My Dear-: I've written a good many letters relative to that blasted cyclone of mine and I get madder and madder as the incident ges furtbhe and further away. My Ikg is getting along very well, but I sh.ll not feel like going on the stage with it. The knee Is swillen considerably and it will be some time before I 'an get my poink tights over it. It's knobby, but it's nice. I oould play "Riobard IIl" this winter, but I can't appear mas "H rnes." It wouldn't do to delay the blc oy scene for thbe purpon of rub bing St. Jaoubs Oil on my knee. The public would feel Justly incensed and the galleries would aske jeering re marks. Sincerely ynours. Bill 1ye. Upon another occasion Mr. Nye bh written as follows. "My little dautgh ter recently burnt the painu of he hand very severely, and after I bha wetit with a remeedy and put my handkercbief on it she did not eves cry. S~ I tried it again the other day on the frosen cheek f a little girl two yvearold. It worked likeluagiu. Tee remedy is St Jacobs 0 1, and At Le mighty good thlou:to bave in the bose. I now b leve if we keep the ten eIO" and Ltills rena edy we will beprosperuus and happy." The Old asuhlond ('ark. It i it (llrioul fact that for nearly hI centurles ivl, ntors have in ni trd I improll' iip n the tiught flt ing e'v indlriui cork. ,Nothoig has yet been lpt1luhOedW imuwrs Il th cork that iin i'eriguas devisel. lad which Is uied today, as I was 173 years ago, in tottling .hlm pages. It is cheaip, it is efmctivU Seither o thee qualities none P modern eoUatrlciti in botles mei e torIs I. -Nw Tb .rd 4,