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TE _L _ YELLoWSTONEJRN . VOLUME VII. No. 255. MILES CITY, MONTANA, SUNDAY. JULY 7. i889. PRICE FIVE CENTS. THE DAILY JOURNAL The Ojerit J1 g.r of Co.utr Couwltg. Every Morning Except Mcnday. Ppulation of Mile. City . . 3,000 Terms of Subscription; Y NAIL, IN ADY ?C6, F94TAUE PAID. Daill Editlon, one year................... . 0.011 Daill Edition. .4. aoonthi....... ......... 1,40 Daily EltIeu,one month.......................... 1,10 TO CITY SUB3CRIKSU, (ardier, I very Morning, at 25 rents per werE, WanKLY EDITION. YELIIW I'AP.a, O e Year.....................................................5100 3Iz Mouths.............................................. 2.10 Three Month ........................................... 1,00 Advertising Rates. h/. i i "'. i. ri i. )ay....... 4.00 3.00' 4.00 4.00 10.00 14.00 30.00 Days-...' 1.ii 400 7.00 11.00 13.00 15.00! 26.00 Days...... 1.0 5.00 s.00 14.00 15.00 21.00: 30.00 We*k.. 1.00 6.00 10.00 16.00 15.00 24.00 35.00 Eeeka.... 7.00 10.00 12.00 )0.00 24.00 12.00 45.00 Meeks... 4.00 12.00 14.00 21.00 2.00 38.00' 50.00 Mouth ... 10.1 14.00 16.00 21.00 12.00 42.00 60.00 Months.. '2.00 18.00 21.00 34.00 42.00! 12.00' 56.00 'loath... 16.00 21.00 1x.00 42.00 80.00 66.00 100.00 Xnnths.. _2.00 .1200 40.10 60.00 74.00 100 00 110.08 Lees? 5.tlces-TesI cents per Itne for each in..er Wrte-ups 5fteen rents per line. Address ATTIORNJIE%5. JOHRN I. IIENNETT,--- ATYOI .Y AT LAW. Practles in ab the Courts. *'ellowutone Journal Xili. Ci1, M. T. P1 hiºC1Ahh. L L .j REDLi, Dl PF 1'MICIAN AND 8URGEON. Ooes at W E. iavage's drug store. 12 ti DL L. d. FleHts. - PHYS.CIAN, $URBON AND) OP.TUTRICIAN. (re., Wuadarat und tGeburtshel(er.) Un1t* at ap' drug strc, IIi..(le ty, M. T. C 5. W MITNEY, (1P DasTIUT, Mala twaeet, over Stockgrowes National Bank. All work guaranteed and at reasonable raise. R 8.C lu('(RAN, . Psnlor Veterlary $urgeo.th caralry. Realdenee Miles City. Calls attended day or aight. Lsavsrders at Savage's drug store Cor sepoedesee prmnptly answers C. S. LESCBLE II. D.. Physielan andsugeao. Oiesad sildeseeover White kiphant. Maln. 8 DEL C. A. MAJOS. /J Ckeale Rheumatlsa a specialty. Per g«ea fot N. P. LX. UOae at W right's drug store CHURCHL1. Smasminl Church (Epiripal) Palmer lL-Se.r eshadaps t S:J a... and 7:10 p. w. Wa. -hl" rector. PUai Churek-W.. H. Weeks, astaug psear. ? aing serviuss onaday at it a... aid a p . P a. Prayer Meeting, Wednesday as 7:i4 p. a. A *edial lavitaUen to all. Methedist Cbureh-Perviess eaday, li a. "., :U"L p.. Prayer meetaing Weiedeay evening, :41. P. Lewry. paiter. rIsab~yerlan Chureb-Isrvicss Suaday, 11 a. a., l:IIp. a. T. C. Armatroeg, pastr. Chink of sacred Heart, ('sthoetic-ervires s,ay Set aid third Panda, of the meet. High s at lS:f "a. .. Seuna7 school as 2 p. a. aspeas and enodiction at ,,30 p. m. FATnnaC. PAUWILYN. socirrnis. A. O. H.-Divisolo Ns. I mees list and secemd essdaystf seeh meath. K. of L.-Mees lrst sad third Weadsday. at :$O p. a, at Odd Follows' Hall A. F. *A. M.-Y.llowstose Ldp, No. 21, Ent sad third Wedmedays. t. A. M.-Yellowstom Cbapter, No. b, second hearads5,i. eacb month K. T.-Damascus Uommansdery,fourth Thurs. 1. 0. O. r.-Custer 1.p, No. 1, eer17 Wgady at their hall. L O.0. V.-lemutlal Encampment, Ne. 6, lrst sad thbd Friday. L.t P.-Crusader Loda, No. 7, Thursday sealsap at Odd Fellows Hall. C. K. e A.-Mile. City Branch, every hunday at I. of L.-First and third Naturdays. 0. A. 3.-U. S. Grant Post, No. 1, Arnt and third Toesdays. I.O. G. T.--$tar of the West, N.. 24. every uldaq oven 1ig. E. of V.-Gilbson Camp No. 4. Meets lrst and hird Meaedar of each monob at Good Templars I. N. PARKER B. W. TOPPING NORTHERN PACIFIC FOUNDRY PAKEE & OPPllI >IafaieimurI. of all £ae4 "I IRON and BRASS GASTINGS. BRAINBRD, gINNL3OT0 (EDIOOR AM ORY McAUSLAND'S GUNS. BR VOLVERS. AMMUNi2104N ..rqr 1eserle fb LAasaar seUa epMea hae4. UiniMsi west. am Les .hi, ad hpklara .a. Ws TRUTH STRANGER THAN FICTION. Mcintire's Bazaar Actually Giving Away Goods. With eaclh $.itor'Nh M4le we pr.re' ntt vo, ir . gr dti. for uothlr, A Challis Dress Pattern of 12 Yards. GREAT REDUCTION IN ALL BUMMER (OODS. 5o DISCOUNT ON OU LAWNS, So SU _- Goods at Sc- JUo A Special Sale on Ladies' Gauze Underwear, 5oc garments for 25e-50 per cent disc unt. WA Don't Need Mtne, but Must Have Room for Fall Goods. MoINTIRE'S BAZAAR. STOCK GROWERS NATIONAL BANK, MI .ES OITY. MONT. THE LARGEST BANK IN EASTEBPIONTANA NTEREST ALLOWED ON TIME DEPOSITS W. B. STEBBWD. Presidnt, WM. H&ION. Vie. Prusident. H. F. BATOHELOR. Cashiur. C.L. MERUILL, Asst. Cash FIRST NATIONAL BANK 01 1AT-r vyaCIT"T,. I~IO2T'"fAI7A THE OLDEST 1DD LARGST BAN.' ID LASTIRN IQOTARA W. B. JORDAN, resideat. 0.K. MILE', Vics Preeldet. 3. 3. WEIRICL Cashier. . 3. W ILT, aslatwn Cashier ,INTERE8T PAWD ON TIME DEPOSITS. W JOHN ADAIS & SON. COMMISSION -:-DEALERS. M LIVE7 BTCO2K. UNION STOCK YARDS1. CICAGO. ? W Correipundenee okided, Larket leperM Ferrnishd.I WILLIAM HARMON Wholesale and Retail, zFaucy and Stp1aE GROCERIES Ranch and Stock Men's Supplies a Specialty. Main and Sixth tre'e t - . - * KilOs City Life Stock, Loans, Peal Estate and Notary Peblic Ageot for the oldest and a .t reliable' FIRE, LIFE AND ACCIDENT INSURANCE CO'S And the oldat a smt to town. LIVE STOCK A SPECIALTY Money Loaned on First Claym Security. Cattle and sheep ranches, and improved farms for sale at a bargain with easy terms of payment. 9 Houses to Rent and Collections ]fade Several comfortable and commodious dwelling housea and well located business and residence lots for sale cheap; also N. P. R. R. Co~s lots and lands, and grauing lands in the Northwest Territory for Inote or sale. Montana. Westorn, Wyomin,. Aeisa and Eastern GATTLE FOR SALE lots to muit purchasers. Also several choice bands of shee. aad I'e 387 + "slack Top re ga tgm sas d Sheet Horn thorou abvsd WILLIAM COURTENAY, MAIN STREET. 110W TO MAKE FRIENDS. DR. TALMAGE SAY8 IT IS A SACRED AND DIVINE ART. lrlendlsilp an Altogether DIlerent Thing from Geniallty-Throwing the Mtle d Charltr Over the Defects lo Others-The Vulue of Noble Friends. tSROOKLYN, June iU.-At the Taber nacle this morning, after the pastor, the Rev. T. De Witt Talnmage, U. U., had made an exposition of a passage of Scripture, the congregation, led by cornet and organ, sang the hymn beginning: \owI have found a friend. Jesus i wuine Dr. Talmage's subject was "How to Make Friends," and his text. Proverbs xviii, 24: "A man that lath friends must show himself frindly." He said: About the sacred and divine art of making and keeping friends I speak a subject on which I never heard of any one preaching-and yet God thought it of enough importance to put it in the middle of the Bible, these writings of Solomon, bounded on one side by the popular Psalms of David. and on the other by the writings of Isaiah, the greatest of the prophets. It seems all a matter of haphazard how many friends we have, or whether we have any friends at* all, but there is nothing accidental about it. There is a law which governs the accretion and dispexrsion of friendships. They did not ",just happen so" any more than the tides just happen to rime or fall, or the sun lust happens to rise or set. It is a science, an art, a God given regulation. Tell me how friendly you are to others and I will tell you how friendly others are to you. I do riot say you will not have enenies. indeed tbe best way to get ardent friiids is to have ardent ene mnies, if you got their enmity in doing the ligh ttr ing. Good inuen and wom en will always have enemies, because their goodlness is a perr4tual rebuke to evil ;but this antagonism of foes will make more intense the love of your aulnerelits. Iour iritnus will finer clon.r around you because of the at tacks of your assailants. The more your enemies abuse you the better your coadjutors will think of you. The best friends we ever had appeared at some juncture when we were espe cially bombarded. There have been times in my li() when unjust assault multiplied myjuiends, as near as I could calculate, about fifty a mi ute. You are bound to some peo ple by many cords that neither time nor eternity can break, and I will warrant that many of those cords were twisted by hands malevo lent Human nature was shipwrecked about fifty-nine centuries ago, the cap tain of that craft, one Adam, and his first mate, running the famous cargo aground on a snag in the River Hid dekel; but there was at least one good trait of human nature that waded safely ashore from that shipwreck, and that is the disposition to take the part of those unfairly dealt with. When it is thoroughly demonstrated that some one is being persecuted, al though at the start slanderous tongues were busy enough, defenders finally gather around as thick as honey bees on a trellis of bruised honeysuckle. If, when set upon by the furies, you can have grae enough to keep your mouth shut, and preserve your equipoise, and let others fight your battles, you will find yourself after awhile with a whole cordon of allies. Had not the world given to Christ on his arrival at Palestine a very cold shoulder there would not have been one-half as many angels chanting glory out of the hymn books of the sky bound in black lads of mid night. Had it not been for tho heavy and jagged and torturous cross, Christ would not have boen the admired and loved of more people than any being who cver touched foot on either the eastern or western hemisphere. In stead, therefore, of giving up in des pair because you have enemies, re Joice in the fact that they rally for you the most helpful and enthusiastic admirers. In other words, there is no virulence, human or diabolic, that can hinder my text from coming true: "A man that )aath friends must show himself friendly." YOLU FRIENDSHIP MtST NOT BE A PRE TENSE It is my ambition to project espe cially upon the young a thought which may benignly shape their des tiny for the here and the bhreatter. Before you show yourself friendly, you must be friendly. I do not re comnuned a dramatized geniality. There is such a thing as pretending to be en rapport with others when we are their dire (lestructauts, and talk againht thvm and wish them calamity. Juda. covered up his treachery by a resounding kiss, and caresses may be demnauaaI. Iktter the mythological l erbemr. the three headed dog of bell, barking at us, than the wolf in sheep's clotlhins. ittI brindled hide covered up by dect'ti vie woad, and its deathIUl howl cuda nci-d into an innocent bleat nug. l)eruali writes of Lord M)sn fred, who. after committing misy outrages upon the people, seemed suddenlv to become friendly, and in vited th. wn i a banquet. After most of the eourxsw of food had been served he blew a horn, which was in those times aasignaa for thoservantatobring on the de- seat, but in this case it was the signail for amasasus to enter and the sente pHeteded friend watee g.*etehuseas and thus grace will Leconme easy. lou may by your own resolution get your nature into a semblance of this virtue, but the grace of God can sublimely lift you into it. Sailing on the River Thames two vessels ran aground. The owners of one got one hun dred horses and pulled on the grounded ship and pulhd it to pieces. The owners of the other grounded t'essel waited till the tides came in and easily tloated the ship out of all trouble. So, we niay pull and haul at our grounded hunmai nature. and try to get it into better cuudition; but there im nothing like the oceanic tides of God's uplifting grace to hoist us into this kindliness I am eulogizing. If when under the flash of the Holy Ghost we see our own foibles and de fects and depravities, we will be very lenient and very easy with others. We will look into their characters for things cowmendatorv and nagIam natory. If you would rub your own eye a little more vi?.rouslv you would find a mote iu it, the ex traction of which would keep you so busy you would not have much time to shoulder your broadax and go forth to split up the beam in your neigh bor's eye. In a Christian spirit keep on exploring the characters of those you meet, and I am sure you will find some ting in them delightful and lit for a Toundation of friendliness. You invite me to come to your country seat and spend a few days. Thank you. I arrive about n on of a beautiful summer day. What do you do? As soon as I arrive you take uneout under the shadow of the wraet elms You take me down to the artificial lake. the spotted trout floating in and out among the white pillars of the pond lilies. You take me to the stalls and kennels where you keep your tine stock, and here are the Durham cat tle and the Gordon setters, and the high stepping steeds by paw ing and neighiung, the only language they can speak, asking for harness *r saddle, and a alort turn down the road. Then we go back to the house, and you get me in the right light and show me the Kensetts and the Bierstadts on the wall, and take me into the music room, and show me the bird cages, the cana ries in the bay window answering the robins in the tree tops. Thank you I never enjoyed myself more in the same length of time. Now, why do we not do that way in regard to the charactbrs of others, and show the bloom and the music and the bright fountainst No. We say come along and let me show you that man's char acter. Ire is a green scummed frog pond, and there's a filthy cellar, and I gues under that hedge there must be a black snake. Come and let us for an hour or two regale ourselves with the nuisances. Oh, my friends. better cover up the faults and extol the virtues, and this habit once estab lished of universal friendliness will become as easy as it is this morning for a syringe to flood the air with sweetness, as easy as it will be further on in the season for a quail to whistle up from the grass. When we hear something bad about somebody whom we always supposed to be good, takeout your lead pencil and ary: "Let me see! Before I ac cept that baleful story against that man's character, I will take off from it 25 pir' ent. for the habit of exag geration which belongs to the man who first told the story; then I will take off 25 per cent. for the additions which the spirit of gossip in every community has put upon the original story; then I will take off 25 per cent. from the fact that the man may have been put into circumstances of over powering temptation. So I havc taken off 75 per cent. But I have iot heard his side of the story at all, and for that reason I take oft the mnminI 2' per cent." Excuse nwe. sir, I don't believe a word of it. A DEFECTIVE MAXIM. But here comes in a defective maxim, so often quoted: "Where th re is uo much smoke there muust ta'h'e tire." Look at all the smoke for rares arimid Jenner, the introducer of vnariiation; and the smoke aroundl CoI,1mbhus. tht discoverer; and the smikc around Martin Luther, and Savownaola. jinid Galileo, and Paul. and John. 111id Christ. and tell me where was the tiret That is one of the satanic arts to make smoke without fire. Slander, like the world, may be made out of nothing. If the Chrbstian. fair minded, comnion sensical spirit in regard to otnera pro dominated in the world we should have the millennium in about six weeks, for would not that be lamb and lion, cow and leopard lying down together? Nothing but the grace of God can ever put us into such a habit of mind and heart as that The whole tendency is in the opposite direction. This is the way the world talks: I put my name on the back of a man a note, and I had to pay it, and I will never again put my name on the baek of any man's note. I gave a beggar ten cents, and five minutes after I aw him entering a liquor store to spend it. I will never again give a cent to a egar. I helped that young man In business, and lo, after a while, he came and opened a store almost nest door to me, and stile my cus tomers. I will never again help a young man start in business. I trusted in what my neighbor promised to do, and he broke his word, and the Psalm 1st was right before he corrected him self, for "all men are liars." So men beonsne suspicious and eaturnine an( tlevee wall dof the sad amoth.r bolt to te eat fuem wudr a tnousanc conars, or nmisnterpseted, or disappointed, or (strayed, and higher goes the wall.and faster goesan other bolt, not realizing that while they lock others out, they lock themselves in; and someday they wake up to fnd themselves imprisoned in a dastardly habit. No friends to others, others are no friends to them. There's an island half way between England. Scotland and Ireland, called the isle of han, and the seas dash against all sides of it, and 1 am told that there is no more lovely place than that Isle of Man; but when a man becomes insular in his disposition, and cuts himself off from the main land of the world's sympathies, he is despicable, and all around him is an Atlantic ocean of selflshness. Behold that sle of Man! Now, supposing that you have, be adivine regeneratuou gi t right toward God and humanity, and you start ou( to practice my text. "A man that bath friends must show hi.nself friendly." Fulfill this by all foa. i of appr - ateoalutatiun. Have ) ,u noticed the head is so poised t iat the easiest thing in earth us to gio a nod of ree ognition? To swing tl e head from side to side, as when it is wagged in derision, is unnatural at unpleasant; to throw it backs invite: vertigo; but to drop the chin mn greet i g is accom. ned with so little exert on that all y long and every day :ou might practice it without the east sem blance of fatigue. So. also. the structure of the haul indieas handshaking; the knuckles not ins so that the fingers can turn out, butm. made that the fingers can turn in, as in clasping hands, and the thumb divided from and set aloof from the fingers, so that while the fingers takb your neighbor's hand on one side, the thumb takes it on the other, and, pressed together, all the faculties of the hand give emphasis to the saluat tion. Five sermons in every healthy hand urge us to handshaking. BE KIND TO EVERYBODY. Besides this, every day when you start out, load yourself up with kind thoughts, kind words, kind expres sions and kind greetings. When a man or woman does well, tell him so, tell her so. If you meet some one who is improved mo health, and it Is . monstr-twd in girth and color, say: "How well you look !" But it on the other hand, under the wear and tesar of life he appears pale and exhausted, do not introduce sanitarysaubjeta or say anything at all about physsal conditions. In the case of Imaproved health. you have by your words given another impulse towards the robust and the jocund; while in the ema of the fatling health you have ar rested the decline by your silhems, by which he concludes: "If I wers really so badly off, he would have said something about it. We are all, especially those of a nervous tempse. ment, susceptible to kind words sad discouraging words. Form a eoan spiracy against us, and let ten men meet us at certain points on our way over to business, and let each one ay: "How sick you look," though we should start out well, after mestag the first and hearing his deprellar salute, we would begin toexamineour symptoms. After meeting the seaond gloomy accosting, we would conclude we did not feel quite as well as uual. After meeting the third, our sensatisas would be dreadful, and after meetilag the fourth, unless we expected a eon spiracv, we would go home and go to bed, and the other six pessimists would be a uceless surplus of discourage ment. My dear sir, my dear madam, what do you mean by going aboutthis world with disheartenmentsl Is not the supply of gloom and trouble and misfortune enough to meet the de mand without your running a factory of pins and spikes; Why should you plant black and l!ue in the world when Gol so seldom plntas them? Plenty of scarlet colors, plenty of yel low, plenty of green. plenty of pink, but viry s' Idom a plant black or blue. I never saw a black flower. and there's only here and there, a blu' tx'l or a violet; but the blue is fur the most part reservel for the sky. and we have to look up to see that. and when we look up no color can do us harm. Why not plant along the paths of otherithe brightessa'e, instead of the gloemst Do not prophesy misfortune. If ion must be a prophet at all be an 6sste, and not a Jeremiah. In andeat times prophets who foretold evil t#ee doing right, for they were diwiae ly directed; but the prophets of evil in our time are false prophets. Some of our wise people are prophesying we havea summer of unparalleled It will not Ise that at all. I thi q are going to have a snummer of harvest and universal health; rate I know as much about as Last fall mill the weather agreed in saying we shoal a winter of extraordinary severity said on the heels of blizzard. a the mildest winter lever reiem have p:,4d Indeed, the autuman i the spa in; Linost shoved win of the pncassion. Real troubles no heralds running ahead of somber chariots, and no one h authority in our time t9 a their coming. Load yourself u helpful words and deeds. The once sung in our churches is be sung, forit says: We rhcmld .inpr t enur4aaet JA Whewe we ryarem deI ht In other WOrde, mnann mirsrble nil the time. . i~ t tihe pianos a 1w,' ýdi.. Ulr ~sir nesta in tbmav. aI