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Daily Yellowstone journal. [volume] (Miles City, Mont.) 1882-1893, April 06, 1888, Image 2

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THiElAItY JOURNAL
arnLISH·n 1881.
MIL R CITY. MONTANA.
UWEUOFIV CIAL PAPII OF CUSTgE COUNTY
webills ariat Tien TEaLLOToNr JOUrNAL
ItNAKssteo..contrated by any of ih, employee
doeil paper or othibr, will be recgtuisod unless
lgetupaaled by a wriette orier sigued Ly the pub
Mr er or usuees manasger.
Theediteref les YELLOWSTONI JOt MNAL
h not responsible for aty ft the optu
ieas or utterance of its correspodonts.
MtoeM is hereby given to all conoerned that
SYridOW/TONr JOIt.N.L P'3LUIIINO (10
I the cotract to do all printing and ad
e~u whatver natute chargeable to ('us
eeatyanu d i ale thedeelgnated and only pap r
s etI county iu w. irh services by publicauun
a be legally wade. Legal notices pubitihtd in
er papeps of Custer counlt, are v id and
Sas has been decided by the courts of
Pr!Say, April 6, z68.
CITIZENS' TICKET.
For Mayor,
COL. GEO. SCHEIETZ.
Dpr Police Magistrate,
EDMOND BUTLER.
For City Treasurer,
H. F. BATCHELOR.
For City Attorney,
C. R. MIDDLE CON.
For Aldermen- First Ward,
A. E. FLA(ER.
B. K. HOLT.
For Aldermen-Beeond Ward,
WM. H. BULLXRD,
CHARLES BROWN.
THE Qulonnpimo, the Shetucket, the
Mattawamkeag, the Megalloway, the
Pemlgewmaet, the Ammonoosuo. the
WLnooski, the Oclawaba, the Chocta
whatbchie, the Conboctun, the Pepac
ote, the Kiskimi nitle, theTallabatehle.
ebo Mequaeumecum, the Pekatouic&,
Sbe Wapeepin. 1co1, the Little Ruoe
bad and the Big Rosebud, the K'.
Wood and t'e No Water rivers, and
several thot'4aasde of other obscure
streams wbi !h nobody ever heard of
but the geoe rapher, all get a large ap
Dropriatiou from the committee on
wiveur and narbora for improvements.
THU Io A5 legislature hbas oesed the
most lma,artant railway law ever en
aeted in that state. The bill parsed
both houses unanimously, and there I..
the greatest matlfaotion over the re.
OelL The principal provisions of the
bill are that it shall be unlawful for
any oommon carrier, subject to the
provisions of tbls act, to charge or re.
soive any greater compensation In the
aggregate for the transportation of
pssengers or a like kind of property
efr a shorter than for a longer distance
ever its line, or any portion of the
shorter haul being included in the
beg, and said common carrier shall
eharge no more for transporting
feiLght to or from any point on ile
llroad than a fair and just rate as
seapared with the pries it oharges for
the same kind of freight transporta
thoe to or from any other point.
THE old spirits of flood and field
seem disposed to reassert their ancient
deminion over the minds of men, and
balling in that, to Iunish the bodies of
humanity. Forsurely no year within
memory has, in the short period of it
fret quarter, been so productive of ter
dble and destructive storms, tempestl,
reshets In rivers, flooding by sea, out,
merging of coasts and shores, earth
quakes, cyclones and other such dis
turbances as this. Ten millions of
people in China are destroyed by a
mighty river bursting its banks and
flooding fifty thousand square miles of
territory. Germany from the WVt'er
to the Nieman has been subjected to
disastrous floods that overwhelmed
towns, submerged hundreds of square
miles and even threatened to carry the
North and Baltic seas to the border o
Bavaria and Bohemia. The whole
world has been the spirt of floods and
tempests these paut three montbhs.
Ezohange.
Pr.eeryatlon of Negattre
The best way to hold a person or keep
track of him is in the posicsion of a
good negative. Or her would do IhNtter,
as there are more Illustrations of the
truth of this remark in the case of'
women. I have had a great deal ot ex
ice in this line and have never
ow it to fail, and for tha:t reamn t
am always very particular to presrve
asatives. They are better than bail
bonds. I have negatives of * nuImbeor of
people now who have left the city and
who want their friends to forget them,
a to that end have very carefully
a"wlded allowing thone friendl4 to know
where they are or which way they had
m. Yet I hear from them frequently
means of orders for pictur·es printed
of such and such a neg:t .re. I have
bkow of people missing for in nth', and
eamn for years, and who.o friends had
Smup the search for them, to write to
photograrphlrs for pictures off of aan
r negative.-P'hotographer in Globt.
Agnocrat.
e------bb--g
Thue are bath fanatics who noraatly
dlk that life without n epidertis is the
"ly desirable form of exiaWnce, The
Mues of apor~lfation and of scrub
l are all very well as a luxury, though
uatsm. of the Bmosn therm. were
,beause the il ueed after the bath
ar e sums peoion to the abraded
ut t f f tuhUiag is only for
o , d e the rrong, if they
their rites n a nalrmlious Mou
have been observed to icken seona
thse who have oontented them.
with cleasning, and have ant goo
(p s oe Wiataon.-Dr. Tltus Muas=
La la In rpr'
,rlE SENSES OF ANIMALS.
gS Jobs Lubbek's Blask Poodle "Tm."
Boees' easlbhlty to aesod.
Sir John Lubbock recently delivered a
lecture to the members of the Edinburgh
Philosophical institute on "The Sense and
Senses of Animals," in the course of
which he said that there had been so
many important recent works published
relating to his subject that he thought it
would be more interesting were he to
deal, for the most part, with his own
observations. Different ideas prevailed
regarding the question of the intelligence
of animals. Some people regarded a dog
as an animal almost as wise and clever as
themselves: but, on asking them if they
thought a dog could realize that two and
two made four, he generally found a good
deal of doubt on that point.
Sir John Lubbock then described the
system which he had adopted in the
training of his own black poodle dog,
"Van." He had placed two pieces of
cardboard, on one of which was printed
in large letters the word "food," the
othbr being blank, on *wo saucers. In
one of the saucers was food, and the card
with the word upon it. In the other,
"he blank card and no food. In about
ten days the dog began to distinguish the
card with the letters from the plain card,
and would go at once to the printed one.
The lecturer then related in some detail
his successful efforts in inducing the dog
to bring him the proper card when he
wanted food, in teaching him to know
other cards containing the words "out,"
"tea," "bone," "water." On bringing
the card marked "out" he would rush
to the door. The cards were not put in
the same places, but in different posi
tions: and in order that the dog might
not be guided by scent, other cards with
the same nmarkings were used.
Ou uOne WHO saw amun oon Gown Ws
row of cards, and pick out the one
wanted. could doubt that he sought a
particular card for a particular object.
He had found, at the end of three
months' experiments, that ho could not
get the dog to realize the difference oi
colors, and it was just possible that the
dog might be color blind. He had also
failed to get the dog to distinguish
among one, two, three, or four broad
bands upon the cards. In order to
ascertain if bees were sensible to sounds
he had placed some honey on a musical
box on his lawn. The box played fao
ten dare without stopping, and then he
removed it to a window sill on the first
door of hi house. Not g bee came to it.
H- again placed it on the lawn, and they
again returned to the honey. He next
brought it into the drawing room on the
ground floor, about ten yards from ith
former position, but they did not follow;
but on his bringing two or three bees
into the house and putting them on the
honey, they began to feed. and, flying
of, returned with their companions. It
seemed as if they did not hear the tune.
Regarding the old ides that bees would
not swarm unless they were "tanged"
by the creation of sounds, he was under
the impression that it was the ",over
tones" which the insects heard, and
which were inaudible to our ears. The
sounds were so low as to be beyond our
range of hearing. Man, be said, had
fire senses, and fancied that no others
were pthsible; but it was obvious that
we could not measure the infinite by our
own narrow limitations. Even within
the penetration of our own senses there
mjght be endless sounds which we cguld
not hear, and colors of which we have
no conception. There was also the other
question still remaining for solution. that
the familiar world which surrounded .s
might be a different place altogether for
other animal;, in which there was musto
we could not hear, colors we could not
see, and sensations which we could not
conceive. The pursuit of such studies
gave a clew to senses and perceptions of
which we had no conception -Mec~an
sanl tW ArAt
Love by Candle Uigt.
The expense in light, fuel, etc., which
courtship brings paterfamilias is a never
wrorn out joke with our newspapers.
Probably these long enduring fathers
would welcome the iutro4luction of a
system of courtship ururlued by the Boer-,
a thrifty race of Holland de.celnt in South
!frica. Here it is the practice for the
young man to make known his intention
to the lady of his choice by calling.
armed with a long candle. If his suit is
agreeable to the lady and her family, the
mother lights the candle brought, sticks
a pin in it to indicate how long a time
the young people are allowed to devote to
wooing this time, and leaves them alone.
When the candle has burned down to
the pin she returns and the young man
must withdraw. The same candle is
brought out at subaequent viaiat and
burned by installments, and when it is
entirely consumed, the girl is e pected to
have her tr,,useau in readiness for the
wedding. -Alta California.
enry Hergh's Charleterlstlee.
Mr. Irgh is selnder, of medium
height, anl carries himself erect and
with great digniuy. lii face would com
manl attontion in any aw. Mblage. His
most dieti;:liAhing Iharacteristic is his
forc'heald, which is ruayive in btreadth
and height and lprotrules alruost to the
line of his rcsolute chin. In spite of his
busy years and bury life, his eyes retain
their brightness and his voice its pleasant
and cheery softness. It is a voice that is
always under its owner's perfect coftrol.
Its tones are the same is their quality
when he addrewwss a court to secure the
conviction of some ignoble brute who
has raised his hand against his more
noble but less fortunate fellow, as when
he comments upon the play to his com
panion between the acts at some notable
theatrcal rst night.--llnjamin North.
ro.
Am KvI 0m .
"Are you eupsnmtioourt'
"Not ver. Why?'
"Lo you believe that It iausign of
debthwn a dughowlaund your win
dow a night?"
"Yee; If I ran flr1 my gun befor, the
dog gen away. "-Nebrauka state Jour.
sal. _ _ _
Aulmca's Seer. Aumelut Ce...
Sientitst saiml thait tim newly (llanO.
Bred chitie of Arisoma arei the sme u
wouglt by Curt" and the . tatyiy panlsb
adventunreu in Uhitr exlwpeiona after
gold. Tm cltite are f-%' an in auulahu
gand show evidwmicu cf iuie'r yril.
Hato sad wealth` 4 u eraid.
ANNUAL STATEMENT
OF CUSTER COUNTY, MONTANA TERRITORY, FROM ..AISO LiP, J.'7,
Dac. 18T, 1887.
OrFICE OF TIlE HBOARD OF COUNTY CoxMMISJioNER,
O'r Till COUNTY oF CtUS'r'H ,
MILES. ' CITY, March let, 1,i8.
To the Honorable, The Board of ('ounty (;omnri.iiour of oCuutr ('untf, Mon
Ueutleweu: In compliaLce with the Cumplied StaMtutre' Mf loiliaua, Sie
1650, page lo0'J, Filth Dlvlsion of General Law., and Sc-. 49, page lI5H of th
Extraordiuary Sle. oUn of the 151h Lt-gisatLure of the r'erritory of Moutana,
herewith submit the annual statewment howing ther tinantcal condition of Custe
County for the flcal year ending Dtecutbel 1-I, 1887:
T1ATEMENI' OF CASH RECEIVED ANI) DISBURSED BY TREAS
URER FROM MARCH lb'r, 187, to DEC. i]r, 1887.
March let, '87.
i'o balauce caWh on hand..............................................$58,490 76
" totl- amount received irom collectiu ol tates ........... 6,6i63 86
To total amount received from collecatou of fees, liute,
penalties and forfeiture ................. ........... 7,171 30
To total amount received from collectiou of licaats.a....... 8 60 73
'o total *amouL received from Yellowetone county and
all other sources ................................................. ..... 44,738 14
DI*BUURILEMEN i'.
By general fund warrants and court orders pad .............. $ 24,454 70
" ontingent " " ................ 18,363 39
" poor " " ............... 2,4413 76
" road " " ........4,
gen. school " " " ................ 25 00
" bonds redeemed................................. 8,215K I(N
" bond interest, paid ..................................................... 11,701 1
" " " " school district No. I paid....................... 5263 31
" school orders .. ....9,3tk 62
" remittance to territorial auditor act. territory............ 2,601 15
" " " " act. stock inspection 21119 1
a" " c i " act. " lodemnity 43 02
" treasurer's fees........................... ......................... 2.833 52
" Balanoe..................................................................... $102,922 68
$187,924 79 $1N7 924 79
Dec. Ist, 1887. To balance cash on hand........................lu1,-a..' tin
Of the above cash on hand, only the amounts in the following funds on
the let day of Dec., 1887, is applicable to the payment of the iodeutednoe..:
G eneral fund .................................................................................. 9.795 09
Co .tilngent " . .... ............................................................... . . 5,171
Poor " .................... 4689 42
Road " .................................. 4,221 0o
Bond int. " ...................................................................... ........ 11.897 IN)
R eserve " .................................................................................. :8.217 44
Sinking ' ........................................................... ................... . 5,459 04
Warrant debt funding account................................. ............. M) :35
$70.252 31
FINAL EXHIBIT SHOWING INDEBTEDNESS OF CUSTER COUNTY
DEC. 1, 187.
Bond Indebtedem........................................................... $32, (
Accrued interest bonds from July let, 1887 to Dec. let, 1887... 9,3.9 60
Warrants and court orders Issued from Mch. slt, 1887, to
Dec. let, 1887............................................................. $4 42 22
Watrants and accrued interests outstanding Mch. let, 1887 4,109 42
$5i2,531 64
CONTRA.
Warrants and court order, paid by treasurer from
Mob. let '87, to Dec. let, '87.........................$49,516 ,90
Warrant, cancelled by limitatlo...................... 1811 40
--$49,697 30
Warrants outstanding Dec. 1st, 1887................................. 2,834 34
Gross inuebtednees Dec. let, 1887, bonds and warrants....... =333,093 94
Les cash on band toin hands of treasurer, Dec. let, 1887, ap
plicable to payment of Indebtdness.......................... 70,2'52 31
Net Indebtedness Dec. 1st, 1887........................................ $2-62,F41 63
ASSESSED VALUATION FOR YEAR 1887, AS SHOWN BY AeSESS.
MENT ROLL.
Real estate................................................................................... $1,039,155 00
Personal property........................................................................... 2,892,916 010
Total valuation real and personal property .............................3,132,071 00
TAX LEVY FOR YEAR 187.
Territorial.................................................... .................................. 2 m ills
County.................................................................. ....4
chool................................ ................................................................... 3 "
Poor ................................................... ............ ....................................1 '"
Road ... . ....................................................................................1 "
Rond interest..................... . ............................ 3 "
Sinking fund, for redemption of bonds....................... ............... "
Stock inspection................................................................................... "
Stock indem nity ...........................................................................
Total tax levy for year 1887............................................................ 8 mills
STATEMENT OF DELINQUENT TAXES.
188.3 MM'T AMT.TAxm
Personal........................................ ................................ 1 3
Real ... .............................................................................. 54,967, 2,717 83
1884
Personal ...................................... ....................... ............... ,1 2.142 20
R eal ............................................ ...... ......... ...................... 10 2,955 91
1884 .
Personal ................................................................................. 55,48 1,.223 37
Real ................................................................................... ... 2 ,3: 7, 1:2' 28
Personal .......................... ................. 93,5. 1,67 93
R eal ............................. ................................... 39,125 1,148 tNI
1887
Perouial, Delinquent Dec. 1st ................................................ 367,06 R8.568 12
eal, " let............................... .... ... ......... 113,611 2.516 46
Total " Mob. let.................. ............ 349,988 6,863 49
Respectfully submitted,
L. C. DEAR,
County Clerk.
Approved by Board March 12, 1888.
L. A. HUFFMAN,
Chairman Board Coounty Commissioners.
CLEEDIROO ARIORY.
EcAUSLAND'S
GUNS.
REVOLVERS,
AMMUNITION
fevery descriptin. The IAalear 8Tror
of Heavy harpe' RIee In the west.
W'Ouuanmithlng and Repairing of aI kird.
N4atlp deone sad Warranted
lies City & Speafish
Stage Une,
Connecting at Ipearabs with Rodgers
Daily Stage for
DEADWOOD
Th.etlog leteos Mie Citty Meadra, Wedaluds
nod ndr meimlae., as el| oVesk. FPr pn.aqe
N y IeM ea MroIoIIt stage Gs m MA.J
Maawesl a.
ITO
CAPIRCAN:
PtAGAZlNE
ustifill, llustrated. 25 8st,1s.3aru.
mED wts~mrebem meueeelS atwgw geseesm
w I~twee. mi oily mbtet l.i M...IM.1 1
m ·brlh-t ý I t llllti
IBM stud.1.M .b rt Muutu
mur .m.. ooum .t cusmn ,I r .mq
M. fuemwtpoelºN Wi puled,. mib S.1
DIstInctively repre entatlve of
Amerioan Thought sad PvegvuS
h wb ar.wedg.d b 1tbep.uaadbl pbebe
m.~~p la e..ea.r~leS...Aa bI. Se bp.
-u meetUle.
IMPORTANT.x ....'"''
3U1.Mwged Pmtreum it. 1.,Mad .e.t1. Ba.
dee.mwla I. CrN or Vml1.eb tewlw
Mob 3Mam.., will be ..O10. rw N .
.r Ueapoelble ad me......
=Mo~mlH· ue wr.11.ý..
fU ANZZZOAI KLOID
140 edWap, Hew VeeW
Jno. B~arter's,
fl1~n hfl x ornO ff iee
FINE JOB WORK.
THE
JOB DEPARTMENT
YELLOWSTONE JOURNAL
Is now prepared to do all branches
of printing, such as
Labels, Deeds,
Sermons, Drafts,
Tax Lists, Leases,
Shop Bills, Oiroulars,
Catalogues, Transfers,
Newspapers, Bill Heads,
Flock Cards, Ball Cards,
Concert Bills, Blank Notes,
Road Notices, Bills of Lading,
School Reports, Prices Current,
Concert Tickets, Deposit Checks,
Festival Tickets, Wedding Cards,
Railroad Tickets, Shipping Receipts,
Excursion Tickets, Insurance Policies,
Tags of Every Style, Certificates of Stook,
Apothecarles' Labels, Certificates of Deposit,
Orders of Exercises, Bills of Exchange,
Rewards of Merit, Railroad Receipts,
Dry Goods Tags, Letter Headings,
Lecture Tickets. Express Orders,
Coupon Tickets, Business Cards,
School Records, Note Headings,
Blank Orders, Visiting Cards,
Bills of Fare, Bank Notices,
Show Cards, Check Books,
Wood Cuts, Stock Lists,
Pamphlets, Envelopes,
Magazines, Way Bills,
Tax Bills, Lectures,
Billets, Bonds,
Books, Brieft.
And all other kinds ot
GOOD PRINTING
AT LOW PRICES.
Mail orders promptly and cheaply
filled.
ESTIMATES FURNISHED
Upon all kinds of
BLANK BOOKS AND BINDINGI
ONLY FIRST CLASS WORE
TURNED OUT OF THIS ESTABLISHMENT.
Oall and uee namples and got estlmats fom
The Yellowstone Journal
Main Street.
41

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