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PUBLIC.RE: TOICLTG. A ie A Great Outburst of Enthusiasm- fi Painting the Town a Carmine 0 it Hue-Everyone Cele- cc brating. i Word passed from house to house ss yesterday that the victory was ours. As i, telegram after telegram passed over the A wires, the excitement became intense. ft Flags were flung to the breeze and aa throughout the whole city there waved in b a few moments the glorious stars and stripes. Business was suspended and G everybody hastened into the streets. Crowds surrounded the bulletin board at f, the Park hotel, which contained the tele grams received by Mr. Gibson, and cheer- d, ed as they read tte pious ntt.erances #';f the Great Falls dlecgation at i" ."" . -. Congratulations were showered on . . Gibson who, as a man of the people, had fought the good tight and had displayed a masterly skill in organizing the campaign c and procuring that display of popular support, which like a cascade swept all is before it at Helena. a] The occasion was so inspiring that the boys-filled the saloons where in flowing ti bumpers of beer they drank success to Cascade county, and cheered heartily for Broadwater, Collins and Taylor. Coroner p Fairfield was made the hero of the hour, and wi'h Speriff Downing, Treasurer Dickerman and Public Administrator it Stanton received apopular ovation. As the evening came on the fun increased. Men h; rode in pairs on horseback through the R streets, sounding gongs; they rode into sa loons on First avenue, where enthusiasts ki poured beer down the horses' throats. Gther "boys" filled a wagon decorated with the stars and stripes, and drove B through the city cheering. At dark, the C whole town was enlivened with the boom- tii ing of cannon, the explosion of fire-works and the tooting of whistles, which tooted as F if all hell had been turned loose. The hi cannon whici once served to defend Ben- t ton now prodlaimed that the Benton ring rule was over and that Cascade coun ty was henceforth to be free and independ- . ent, with all the rank and dignity of a lo cal government in the coming state of p Montana. It The hook and ladder company joined s in the popular rejoicing. As soon as the good news came over the wires, Chief ci Frame issued a call for the members to assemble in full uniform to take part in a ti grand procession in honor of Cascade county. The fire laddies responded as p promptly as if there were a house on fire, fi and appeared in all the splendor of their ft new uniforms, at dusk. The horses and ci the cart-were decorated with the national colors, and as the procession marched through the streets flags were waved and cheers given for the new county and th,. m Cataract city. Sylvenio & Son of the te Peoples' theatre generously gave their pi fine team and harness to the fire laddies tt forthe evening. When the parade was ai over the firemen mounted the cart and ol drove in triumph through the town. b Throughout the evening there were b many merry gatherings, and celebrating s was carried on until a late hour. To-day t psople are all in a festive mood, and both sn the races and theatre will be well ,at- B1 tended. tended. ________ Detroit the Favorite. ST. PAUL, Sept. 5.-In the National w league during last week the clubs mnain- 2 tained thei: positions, Detroit, however, t increasing its lead steadily by winning u five out of six games played, while New York gained in percentage also, winning , four out of six games. Chicago appar- 2 ently went to pieces on the eastern trip and fell away from the leaders, whom she will tackle at Detroit this weekfor the last three games of the. season. Boston and Philadelphia fell off slightly in percent- d age. Faith in Detroit's winning the pen- f nant hasgrown much stronger all over the country for the past two weegs. Want Recognition. c NEW YOnK, September 10.-The com- e1 mittee of Socialists appointed at the- c Uebster hall meeting, have presented h petitions at police headquarters, asking a for the appointment of inspectors of elec tion. The petition declares the Progress ive Labor party to be a distinct organiza tion and that it contemplates holding a a state convention to nominate state ofioers. b The party claims to control the 60,000 votes cast in this county lasti year for e4 Henry George. tl Wrecked by a Land-Slide. i MlaEs Crrx, Sept. 10--[Special to the Tribune. A freight train was wrecked i a few miler east of Rosebud Thursday t night, detaining both pausenger trains twelve hous The engine' htched to the freight train was struck by a land. slide and togethler with four cars was hurled overJithe twelve-foot mbankment0 One inan was seriously in~tred. being cut about the face and arms. The silde was t1 occasioned by heavy rains. The Typographicti Ufon. 8*tLourpsSeptember 10.---The St.Lbas m Typograptical "unlon has after November fret, nine hoats .shall constltutea days work sad eight hdutrs 3 on Seatrday. The enployets held a meeuujing lat lhtad car that the a deadshould *nhirly eltd S po__________________ ~i New o Dtegaes ros sIxty abo American- schooner Mabel K'enneson, boairded the wreck of an oci+ t vessel dai ed the Ocean Pride, and was .horriifed to - And her crew lying dead -in the cabin; One dead bhdy,tied by a rope, was float ing by the side of the -wreck. -The Ameri can schoener Nellie Woodbury: lIt six men drowned in sight of the vessel. The captain cut the cable In his endeavorsa so save the men, but succeeded in recover lug only one man.- Aniother' American schooner reported the loss of .two men. 0e All incoming vessels report the gale as *e. frightful and say that when all reports ad are in, the loss of life and property will in be found to be enormous. ad Id GENERAL NEWS CONDENSED An Annti-RussianTreaty society has been at formed in Chicago. e A whole block of business houses was destroyed by fire at Cario. Ill. .r-. JI. I Vicemt., id-t v known in Sd:':i.: cicle4, died at Boston of apo d Helen Dauvray, the actress, is worse ad and i consultation of physicians has been rn called. ar Five hundred miners in the Gogebic ilI iron region are on a strike for two month's arrears of wages. le The majority of the candidates for elec tion to the new Hawaiian house of repre sentative are -Americans. or Two Swedes, near Des Moines, Iowa, probably fatally stabbed Joseph Hayes er while robbing him of $100. tr, The Nationat Cattle and Horse Growers' er association will hold its rext annual meet or ing at Kansas City, October 31. Ae Alderman Dunck of Mildaukee, has ta had the editor and foreman of the Labor ie Review arrested for criminal libel. a- Minne Waldron, daughter of a well Is known capitalist of St. Joseph, Mo., eloped with a drummer named A. T. Bogart. United States officers have arrested seven Baldknobbers charged with whipping 1e Caleb Atwood ant Hugh Ratliffe and in n- timidating them. ks John H. Stairenghi was arrested in San as Francisco, for forgeries on the Union oe bank of Melbourne, Australia, amounting n- to $75,000. )n The cotton crop report for the Memphis n district says, the continued drouth has been most disastrous to the crop and the d- yel3 will fall short of that of last year. - The report that ex-Gov. Patterson of of Pennsylvania, will succeed Secretary La mar, in case the latter is given the vacant id seat on the supreme bench, is discredited, he President Roberts, of the Pennsylvania ef company, says that B. & O. will hereafter to be operated m harmony with other trunk lines, and there will be no more rate cut a ting by that road. le A razor was found in the cell of A. R. as Parsons, the Chicago anarchist, and con e, fiscated. Parson claimed that he had it ir for the purpose of shaving himself and ad cursed and swore when it was taken sway al from him. ýd A Two-Minute Gait. I A Two-Minute Gait. 1 NEa Yona, September 7.-Maud S. made another splendid performance yes terday afternoon. Mr. Bonner took:Mur- pi r phy up to his Tarrytown farm and gave fa s the mare a fast quarter to see if she has D 8aý much speed as ever. The best quarter f of a mile to harness this time was to have been the second enetrem the start, but a e boot and one of her hind shoes came off W somehow. Finding she was going all B g right he let her come home the last quar- c< T ter as she liked. Mr. Bonner and -his B h sons looked at their watches twice to be t_ sure they read the figures right. She had made the mile in 2:17 and the last quarter in 30 seconds, a two-minute gait. Mur phy get a present the other day. Robert S a Bonner presented the faithful jockey ] with the roan gelding Keene Jim, record of L- 2:19., and added, jokingly, "I don't care t for horses that cannot go a quarter better than 33 seconds." Murphy got up behind g the horse, which is valued at $6,500, and v sent him a quarter of a mile in 32 seconds. g Keene Jim has been driven by Murphy in ! 2:16. It P A e Managed to Escape. d OTTAWA, Ont., September 10.--The i- department of customs is apprised of the - fact that when the schooner Alfred Adams 0 was seized in Behring strait, last month, g by the U. S. revenue cutter Rush, a prize oi crew was put on the vessel and were ti orderded to navigate her to Sitka. When i- she parted company with the Rush, the e captain headed for Victoria, B. C, when he reached a few day later, the prize crew consisted of only two men and could do is i nothing. Probably LDost. i- DuIarn, Minn., September 10.--The a steamer Spokane has arrived at Two Har bor and reports that'she passed the big f4 r schooner'ivid Dows of Toledo, adrift in b the gale' of Tuesday and Wednesday, anhd that the vSsel has;not been seen since. It' is' fearied she founderd with all hands, soine" fiteen -sounls. The David e1 Dows-wa the largest schooner on, the d lakes, she was owned by David .Carring y ton of Toledo, and was valued at $60,000. A Silver S-trike. - - A rich silver astrike-hs j been made on the iMissoula crossing t ulla t that created a stain de of frni is the S6utti hork. It is said. .iate led carries sand carbonates, and is frouti t to one hundred feet wide. MHalfifWed - nor, Burke, Wallace and other (eaur d'Alene towns have stru- k out for the is nawdgglngse_. II - PleasantZ ang.s. * he~n@MenAteo teeda lb. services of a hcoronelet as kmow- J. I f. ren Li oi s 1 i PBRGtE thG FINEY. SThke .ontua Centr.. . Contriactors Making (*ood Headway Be tween Butte and $e Helena. SBvZn, September 10.--The Montana Central is making the most favorable . progress. The road bed for the first six miles is now almost complete and ready for the ties. One r two cuts still remain to be finished, but the firm in charge of the work report that they will have the D first six miles finished by December 1. *West of them the Woodville tunnel is the n most formidable obstacle to be surmount ed. The contractors have excavated 200 feet on this end and 110 on the other side. They are running day and night shifts and expect to h- ve te tunnl completed n early in the spring. Their work was - somewhat retarded last week by the cave. The debris has been cleared out and the timbering, which had been allowed to run a behind, has been carried up to the face of the-tunnel. No further trouble is antici pated. The men, Jameson and Herbert, Ic who were injured by the fall of rocks,are 's both in a fair way to recover. Muller's Horse Trade. i '- There is a strange sequel in connection a with the horse thief Muller, who escaped a, from Wm. Cantrell while en route from s Helena a few weeks since,; It seems, af ter eluding Cantrell, who went in pursuit, he made a circuit and took a northerly direction and passed through the gap or at a point in the Belt range and returned r near to the locality where the horse was originally stolen. He traded the horse to 11 a man on Otter creek for another horse ., and $20 to boot. The horse he traded for r got away from him the following night and returned to his former owner. Mr. .n E. T. Tuttle recognized the horse traded to the Otter creek ranchman as Mr. Thor n son's and so informed him. The result was that Mr. Thorson recovered his horse, un the Otter creek ranchman got back the n one he traded and is out only $20 in the Ig shuffle. Now, if lightning or & blizzard would only overtake the horse thief, our Bill would be happy yet.-Fergus County as Argus. _ e Will go it Alone. TRErxTo, N. J., September 10.-Two hundred leading prohibitionists of New t Jersey met- in conference in this city, d, Thursday morning. A platform adopted embodying among its utterance, a decla is ration that prohibiton could not be hoped ar for from the leading parties. - Miles City Rejoicing. SMILE CITY, Sept. 10.-Incorporation I a- was carried to-day by a tremendous ma it jority. The vote standing 90 to 7. There id is great rejoicingat the outcome. Octo ty ber 19th is the time set for the election of municipal officers. Failed. GL' CarIAco, September 10;.-Kraft,. Glass ~ & Co. and the Illinois Iron Fence com pany of Joliet, ill., have failed. The failure Is traceable to that of Storm & Marsh, who owed the company $75.000. in1 Roe Hanged. BA<mORE, Sept. 10.-Ross the negro, ! who, December last, murdered Emma 1 'Brown and sold her body to a medical college for $15, was hanged here to-day. s He went to the gallows singing hymns. 1 The Anarchists. OTrawa, Ill., September 10.--The t Supreme court has met at Ottawa, Ill. r Nothing was done in the anarchist's cases I on the first day, but a decision adverse to 3 them is expected. i They Deposed Him. Lowoon, Sept. 10.-Advices have been received that the Germans have deposed t the king of Samoa. The English and W1 American consuls protested against the r action. F_ The Murderer was Insane. fa HELE1, Sept.' I0.-Laer news from Alaskla states that the murderer of Bishop wi Seghers, belonged to the Catholic mission s on Yukon river, and was insane at the the t time. ne tic a Buried Alive. St s NEw Yonx, Sept. 10.-Three menwere ve buried alive yesterday evening by a cave f in the new acqueduct. They lie under 2C one hundred and twenty feet of dirt.: m PC Revolt in San Salvador. th HELENA, Sept. 10.-There is a revolton B foot in San Salvador. No particulars have been received. CANARY & SIAr LIME Te r. Groat is. Hi H. CH ANDLER, 1ASSAYER, Great Fails, Mont essenb.1 o ca, . ssye P y made > ADINON tt At me at t -~ , c ateto in :1. of n , Absolutely Pure. ThisPowder never varies. A marvel of purity thanthe ordinary kinds, and cannot besold in competition with the multitudeof low tet, abort weight, alum or phosphate powders. Bold only inesas. ROYAL BA.x-G PowDus Co. 107 Wall )l at., New York. ed f-I it, i"\ or UNIOT TAE NTON4D ed , as Ir. Nht FLLAN. LEPR ed rd "The Buwlingtn" ur THE PRINCIPAL LINE BETWEEN THE jEORTHWEST AND ALL POINTS IN THE UNITED STATES AND CANADA. w @NNECTIONS MADE IN UNION DEPOTS , ATALL a BUSINESS ENTERS ad PEERLESS DINING CARS AND PULLMAN'S SLEEPERS ON ALL THROUGH TRAINS BETWEEN )"a 0ýl.&I'8t CHICAG /ST.wOUIS re * THEONLY LINE * of RUNNING DINING CARS BETWEEN of THE TWIN CITIES a*s ST. LOUIS EOR TICKETS. RATES, GENERAL INORMATION, ETC., CALL" A Y TICKET AGET IN TiE NwITED STATESO wCAADA Co ADDbAESS EGEO. B. HARRIS, W. J. C. KENYON 1- IEnSa. NAASuES, oRL Pas. ASiSe., le - rT, PAUL, MIaN. A. C. BHELDON, General Agenit, 2% Wash inton street.Portland. O n. H.T. KIEENAN, Live Stock Agent, St. Panl, Mbinnesota. o, THEI ilHtý '#zl FAS AIL H is EAST [ It is the only lihne running Pullman to Drawing-Room Sleeping Cars with Luxurious Smoking Rooms, and the Finest Dining Cars in the World, via the famous "River Bank Route," .n along the shores of Lake Pepin and 4 the beautiful Misissisippi River to Mil Ld waukee and Chicago. It has four di ie rect routes of its own between St Paul and Chicago, and it runs two fast Express Trains daily between those points, via its Short Line, oh which all classes of tickets are hon P ored. Look at the map and observe e the time tables, and then go to the nearest ticket office and ask for your ticket over the Chicago, Milwaukee.& St. Paul Railway and thus secure the re very best accommodations to be had re foryour money, as this Company runsa er none but the finest trains, over the moss perfect tracks, through the most populous towns and villages, and in the midst of pastoral and picturesque scenery, makng Quick Time and Sure Connections in Union Depots. Io k change of cars of any class between St. Paul and Chicago. Fbr through tickets, time tables and full informa tionspply to any couponticket t Sii the Northwest:.; 1. 'l Manager; J. F. Tucker, ~ S t i n'1 Maºnager; A. V. f t(arpenter, Gea'l Pas and Tk't At; Geo. Hetf fr dAss't Gen' s. and Tk't Agt., M kiiwau~ee, Wis., W. I. Wixon, A t ifg Pas. A 't Pal, F in. L BERT HUY, Y :1 IMF KYfLy 7 h First National.. OF HELENA, MONT. PaidUp ital , $500,000 Surplus a.d Prtm,0. 800-, -0 Individual poets $2,300,000 vernme posits 1000 S. T. AHUSE, President, A j. DAVI Vie-Preidt SW. KNIGST, Cashier. T. H. RKLEINSCO D Ast FIRST NATIONAl, Fort Bentor, Monta MISSOUTJA NATIONAL, Missoula, Montana. FIRST NATIONAL, Batte Montana. A General Banking Business Trai sacted. First National Bank mot Conrame. - Pis.-" OF ORT BENTON. Jos. A. Baker, Capital and Surplusa75,O.75000. We are prepared to make Loans at Cheaper Rates than any Montana nk SGrand ehnion Hote shorzt Benton, 2,cont. --Only First-Class Hotel in the City- Rates 2.00 per Day and Upwards. Special. Rates t-o Failei. Sample Rooms for Commercial Men Only Fire-Proof Hotel in. Northern Montana First-Class Bar and Billiard BEaN i, Co- m-cto A SAM KOHLBERGjPrp. BACH, CORY t CS (UMTarD.) Helena, Montana. E The Only Wholesale Grocers in Montana. Carry the Largest and most Complete Stock. Send fbr our Prioes before Purohasuag. SFine Merchant TailorinJ Special Attention to Mail Orders Samples Sent on Appli . JAS. W. BARKER, MAIN STREET, HELENA, - - - MONTANA. a 1864 ESTABLISHED 1884. 1'88 = . dANUFACTUarES AND DAIBEiR INa "Carriages, Material, and Cumberland Coal. PAINTING AND TRIMMING. H-LNA, H-ea la-.. WzaILIAM H.. McKAOr.as r McIax. MoKAY BROS&: Brick a rs,, Co nacto , i - and Wholesale and Retail Dealers in Brici, Stone, Lia i and Building Materia l Great Falls, Montana. I H. B KAnui, Manager and Secretary. 3. T. S1wS aped at I r lill 1 Gr Falls Bri h as e OFFIC (for the present): A BANK OFfP RIT FALLS. Is prepared to take contracts for all kinds of bri4k-work, ad ee th e promptly. Also claim to make the bes brick made at GreamPills. e IaStvenue oth well-Brokea WorkG Idle Diving Horse.. i ;Ad# s 8 Tiry r -WISES Ii~l~~g C~ _ I .~-~-i~·-.~ 1018~ IS 4118