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10. NO. 7
LIVINGSTON. MONTANA. SATURDAY. JULY 1(5. 1892.
FRICK 10 CENTS.
jiri#(|5ton tnterjwtee.
MONTANA.
Publisher.
i1V isgston.
, s . WRIGHT.
.VTUKDAV.JULY 16. 1802.
vnths ••
u.inthfr
\KLE IN ADVANCE.
................ UÜ
................. 1 50
................ 1 00
................. 10
ajjvkhi
rh l'»*r »
» l N ( ■ KATE*:
»nih ; 10 < «*nt* per line each
lie»*. Ley ail advertising at
r; «KU'. m i'
«a inn of Bark ronnty
, Altifinarle Hotel,
UtiliM AN,
ATTol.'NKV-AT LAW
of
milk«* collet
Special atte
In H. ffcrlin Luihlittg. corner Ma
idar street*.
j;[. W. M UH INLY,
jTiiHNEY AND i "I
SSKLLGR AT LAW'.
■ convi-vauring nml all other iecxl
1 .„..„I,ptlv attended to. Loan« negotiated
•>) lender and borrower. Attorney for the
,i Fraternity Loan and Building Aeeocia
tiffii-e in tlte
IPffeklin Hum k, Livim.«ton, Montana.
Sables ta plan —
>1 KYEYOK.
tv United state« Miser
11. MTtVEVOK.
Vinci flour Emerpri
R KEI LY,
i'k, Livingston,
j
!
(
CToRNE Y AT l.A\v and NOTARY Pl'BLlc. j
Or«ohel Block, !
, ».
!
i
1
!
I
j
1V1SUST0N
TERWOKKS AND ELECTRIC LIGHT
COMPANY.
i'Sttin Hmltv building, corner Paris and Sec
,atwM. office hour«, ha. m. to :) p. m.
cieb Kent« Must
he Paid at Off
MLTE1Î i.ooDALL,
RESIDENT AGENT
qYlTXtiLE LIFE ASSURANCE SOCIETY,
MILES BLOCK,
IJI 7 WMV.V, - - MONTANA.
' ALSmil Jc FULLER,
—ARCHITECTS,
Tin Realty Company's Building, corner of
Park and Second street«.
«TON, - MONTANA.
mSGSTON
■operative Building and Loan
Association
0.Emmons. Sec. E. H. Talcott.
Vlce-Pres't S. M. Ntk.
M. II. Lashoun. Attorney A. J. Campbell
plir meetings on the fourth Monday even
öf «ach month, «t W. IL Redlleld s office
tdar street.
on
(
'
W.
SEHLBREDE,
DKNT1ST
ill Attention given to the ores«
.«»tarai teeth. Office In Milee
... Livingston.
reservation of
building,
A DAY,
irronNEVs at Law and Notaries Public.
■ Loaned on long time on real and
fhonal properly.
Office in Miles Blocs, Livingston.
D ALTON, M. D. W. H. CAMPBELL, M.D.
Physicians and Surgeons.
turner Main and Park streets, over Na
tional Park Bank, Livingston.
'■ SMITH-
-ATTORNEY AT LAW.
Office: Room 2, Realty Building,
uvua.ToN, - - - Montana.
L. SHAWK,
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON,
•■''tngston, . Mont
j
j
a
* Ht Peterson's Pharmacy.
IVINGST0N_ASSAY OFFICE.
:::::: ' 1 $
I'it. -2 in foal.............. SCO
ai.h, , '*»*>••'1» ..............$ 5 00 to |15 GO
*™tuiV" Analysis............ 10 00 to 2fi 00
'Fo t -—-(X
' t ' , uiipl«t« iirir,
li«t, address
Harvey L. GleKin.
Liviugetun, MuLtana.
Hs!!
_petual Calendar Clocks that show
a* U f l ' nute and hour of the day,
• ' tli« tvtTk, day oi the month,
uif the year, and the proper
to buy goixls from
, H. J. DIXON,
- MONTANA.
CtS UnVKK than ANYWHERE
1S AMERICA.
ANOTHER HI.OODY RIOT.
The Seetie of Hie l.ahor Trouble« Tran«,
ferre«! Iront Hoineateatl to the
Coeur d'Alene«.
The disagreement between the minera
and mine owners of the Coeur d'Alene,
over the adjustment of wages, culmi
nated Monday in an attack upon the
non-union workmen in which several
were killed on both sides and consider
able property destroyed. A dispatch
from Wallace gives the following details
of the encounter. The Gem and Frisco,
non-union mines, were guarded by men
behind barricades armed with Winches
ters. Monday morning a miner from
Gem started for Burke, and when oppo
site the 1* rtsco mine he was tired upon,
Soon the miners in the town gathered
with arms and marched in a body to
ward the Frisco mills. When scarcely
within ritle range a volley from the mine
greeted them. They scattered and a
regular battle ensued. One miner and
one non-union man were killed, and per
haps six wounded during the engage
ment.
The miners in the meantime loaded a
Union Pacitic car with 250 pounds of
giant powder and sent it down the track
toward the Frisco mine. This uttempt
to destroy the mine failed and the min
ers got upon the Hume and shut off the
water and sent powder in packages
down the water pipe into the mill. A
fuse was put in the last package and
sent down. In an instant a terrible ex
plosion occnrred which shook the can
yon for miles. The non-union men then
surrendered, anti were marched to Min
j ers' Union hall and guarded. No indig
! nities were offered after the surrender,
( and while the Hght was going on at the
j Frisco the Gem guards suddenly began
! Gring volley after volley into the town
of Gem, riddling the buildings with bul-1
! lets. John Ward was wounded in the
i arm and Gus Carlson, a union man, was
killed. Attempts to recover Carlson's
1 body were met with a volley, and when
! the body was recovered, an hour nfter
I wards, he was dead.
At 8
j At 8 o'clock a truce occurred and the
J
I
sheriff, district attorney and United i
States marshals appearing on the scene '
peace negotiations were immediately set
on foot and a truce declared and at 12
o'clock the mine force surrendered to
the union men.
( In the afternoon about 300 miners
' from Gem, fifty of whom were armed
j with rifles, marched down to Wallace,
j They took with them their prisoners
consisting of about 110 non-union men
and five dead bodies, another man, James
Hennessy, lately of Butte, Montana,
being in a house at Gem shot through
the breast, Upon arrival at Wallace the
"scabs" were turned loose and the union
men began to search for A. M. Esler,
manager of the Frisco mine, against
whom the union men have a special
grudge. The terms on which the Gem
miners and guards surrendered were
that the twenty-seven Winchesters and
a number of revolvers and 20,000 rounds
of the ammunition should be placed in
the hands of disinterested parties—two
citizens and two conservative union men
—and that the "scabs" should be shipped
out of the country.
The complete list of the dead and
wounded, the result of the conflict at
Gem, is : Dead—James Hennessy, Gus
Carlson, John Starlich, Harry Cum
mings, Ivery Bean. Wounded —F. C.
Wilcox, L. L. Abbott, Samuel Carver, R.
K. Adams, Charles Smith, N. T. Hal
cron, Samuel Corkupp, Hugh Campbell,
E. W. Putnam. John Vhiitney, Charles
Peterson, S. C. Collins, Jno. Gaukepager,
Geo. Pettibone. The loss by the explo
sion in the Frisco mill wiil be 8125,000.
The governor of Idaho decided to call
on the president for assistance and sent
a dispatch to that effect. He started
the militia from Boise on a special train,
but as the companies are very small it is
not expected they will prove effective in
preventing further trouble. In response
to the governor's request the president
ordered federal troops to be sent to the
scene of the miners trouble in Idaho,
In
$
GO
00
it
and General Schofield has ordered Gen-l
erals Ruger and Merritt to send troops I
there.
Later dispatches state that Tuesday
night passed without incident, the min
ers resting upon their arms. The col
ored troops ordered from Missoula, three
companies of colored infantry, were in
tercepted at Mullen be the blowing up
of a railroad bridge at that place. The
announcement was made that the Bun
ker Hill and Sullivan mines were to sur
render to the strikers at 3 o'clock Wed
nesday afternoon and that if they did
not surrender at that time a battle would
begin. If these mines surrender the
troops will be permitted to take posses
sion of the Ooeur d'Alene country with
out resistance from strikers.
Five companies of the Fourteenth in
fantry left Vancouver Wednesday morn
ing by special train for the scene of the
trouble. Two additional companies left
Fort Sherman, making in all 700 United
States troops due to arrive in the Coeur
d'Alene country Wednesday evening
All the Coeur d'Alene mines are re
ported to be tilled with dynamite ready
to create general destruction at a mo
ment's notice.
Wednesday's record from the Coeur
d'Alene district is even more horrible
than the preceding day and will mark
the conduct of the strikers as brutal in
the extreme. The report, which seems
to be corroborated, is to the effect that
upon the surrender of non-union miners
they were escorted out of the country,
and that when they reached Mission, in
Fourth of July gulch, they were tired
upon by the strikers, twelve or fifteen of
their number killed, and many of them
robbed of money and valuables. Among
the number was Monohun. superintend
ent of the Gem mine, whose body was
terribly mangled. At Wnrdnernll news- j
paper men are virtually prisoners and!
are unable to semi dispatches. Report -
ers at different points in the region con-j
trolled by the strikers are intimidated
to that extent that tlie highhanded and
murderous occurrences there cannot be !
half told if told at all. Numbers of the i
business men of Warilner suspected of i
anti-union sentiments have been driven *
out of town by the strikers anti are now
in the hills where scores of non-union
men are in hiding. Mine owners ami
their representatives are in constant
danger of their lives at Wallace and
elsewhere.
Shoshone county is now under mar
tial law, troops are being massed at
Wardner. and it is hoped they will he
enabled to restore
further hostilities.
1
KATA I. EX
Tlir«« Minor
* nt St. L.nui
Srtf«ty Fbwi
peace and prevent
in
ii |> Willi
Srtf«ty Fbwi
Independent : Miners and prospectors H*
living in the Indian Creek district, four
miles above St. Louis, were awakened
late Sunday night by a terrific explosion.
On investigating as to the cause the cab
in occupied by three prospectors on the
right hand fork of Indian creek, was
found to have been blown to atoms.
The men who had it were David Bar
nett( Peter McI)onald and Daniel Wal
]ace Enough of them was found t<
es
tablish their identity and to show con
clusively that all three had been killed.
The men owned a prospect near their
eabin, which was of the usual style occu
occupied by McDonald. Burnett and
Wallace used the other bunk. Between j
pied by miners working their claims. It
was built of heavy logs against the hill, j
In it was two bunks. One of these was i
j
the heads of the two bunks was a space
where the men kept their powder, and
some distance up the wall was a shelf on
which it was customary to place the
light. It is not known whether the men
used a coal oil lamp or a candle. If a
lamp, the supposition is that it either
exploded or was overturned. If a candle,
it is thought it burned down und the
hot tallow dripped over on the powder.
In this space between the bunks and
under the shelf for the light was a box
of safety natural powder, twenty-five
pounds.
The force of the explosion was terrific.
The roof of the cabin was lifted off and
thrown forty feet. With it went the
body of Wallace, who was found in the
wreckage of the roof. The bodies of the
two men were found in the derbis of the
cabin, and so badly mutilated that it
was difficult to believe the two masses
of flesh had ever been humun beings.
The sides of the house were knocked
out and even the logs at the back ad
joining the hillside were broken and
splintered.
It is believed the box of powder was
unopened at the time of the explosion,
as the men had just bought it. Some
of the neighbors were inclined to think
that lightning struck the cabin and ig
nited the powder, though the men near
est the scene say they do not remember
of there having been any storm at the
time of the explosion.
McDonald had been prospecting in
I
Montana for eight years and was very |
.well known. Little is known of the
ther men All, so far as can be learned,
I wpre unmarried . They had been occu
pying the cabin since last fall.
The Mineral Land Kill.
A Washington special to the Miner
gives an interview with Congressman
Dixon in which he says : "There would
have been no opposition at all to our
mineral bill if we could have brought it
up yesterday. I had obtained a promise
from Mr. Sweet that he would make no |
effort to press his minority report. Ev-j
erytliing was favorable to the passage of ;
our measure, but instead of considering (
this bill, which would have taken about i
ten minutes to read and pass, other bills
which provoked much discussion and
contest were taken up and considered
till the time was lost, which would have
been better employed in passing bills to
which there was but little opposition.
It is rather annoying that we could not
get consideration at this time, when the
house is disposed to look with favor up
on our measure, but we have not given
j
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up the fight yet. We have another sus
pension day two weeks from next Mon
day, and we will not relax our efforts in
behalf of this important piece of legisla
tion.''
Hold Hun»« Tlit«v«*.
A Red Lodge dispatch of the 7th says:
News reached here this afternoon that
•P head of horses, belonging to the New
ton Brothers and John Smith, stock
men on the Crow reserve, 35 miles north,
were driven off yesterday afternoon hy
men. The loss was discovered in the
evening, when Mr. Newton rode out to
drive the animals into the corrul. The
trail was easily followed. It led across
Rock creek and headed towards the
Heart mountains in Wyoming. The pur
suers got within sight of the thieves
yesterday evening, hut not within gun
shot. Today 10 Crow Indians, under
command of John Smith, took the trail
and are in hot pursuit. Mr. Newton is
guarding the ferry over Clark's Fork, to
intercept the party if they attempt to
cross at that point. Smith and his party
are well mounted and armed, and if the
thieves are overtaken their bodies will
probably be left on the trail. Further j
developments are awaited with intense I
interest. It is thought the chances are !
good for recovering the stock, as there
j
j
j
!
are a number of mares in the lot with
cults, which will prevent rapid traveling.
KKI) LODGE NEWS.
I From I lie Fickct.]
Charles A. Dewar of Billings came up
Monday and was engaged a day or two
in egineerinsr work on the big ditch of
the Rockv Fork Town ,fc Electric eom
pany.
A va Burns had his face severely burn
H* 1 *! a quantity of
ed on the morning of the Fourth, lie
powiier in a paste
board box, uncovered, which was acci
dentally ignited. His eyes fortunately
escaped injury.
Thus. North y departed for Cokedale
last Tuesday to look after his business
interests in that camp. Last week his
wife presented him with a son and heir,
in eonsequence of which event Mr.
Northy is one of the proudest men in
Montana.
VV. F. Wittich, of the firm of VVit
tich & Boughton and Tom Kent, of the
Grow reserve, came into town Thursday
with u pack outfit of seventeen horses
,
in the Sunlight basin country, j
w q )ere they will remain severid weeks
j doing representation work on their
minerul locations.
ant j mx lnen . They stopped over night j
j am ] started yesterday for the Telluride !
i
j camp,
Strik« in the *!imilm.
Castle Reporter : The new strike on
the Jumbo is proving to be the greatest
one of the season. The finding of big
boulders of high grade carbonate ore in
the water ditch which is being dug
across the Jumbo property led to across
cut being made along the line of the
contact, and it has discovered a fine body
of rich gray carbonate ore nine feet long
and three feet wide which appears to be
in place and solid. A shaft has been
sunk to a depth of twelve feet and every
indication goes to show that it is an ore
shoot from the bowels of Mother Earth.
Mr. Stewart, the foreman, and one of the
best miners in the camp, is sure that it
is permanent and that it goes down deep.
In another place on the same contact,
250 feet away, they are running a tun
nel and have found the same ore there
indicating that the ore is an immense
body. Work is being pushed with en
ergy and it will not be long until they
know pretty well what they have. The
Cumberland Development company have
an option on a controlling interest in
this property which expires on Novem
ber 1. and it looks now as though by
that time they would prove it one of the
big mines of Castle.
Over the Dam at Grent Fall».
a\b the steam launch Minnie, which
I belongs to Jack Cornelius, was startiug
up the river on her last trip to Riverside
| pHrk from Great Fb11b Sunday night ghe
_____ „
. . . _ .
h f P sen, * er8 ' A
rope was thrown out, but fell short and
became tangled in the wheel. The an
chor was cast but would not catch. The
launch became unmanageable and went
over the coffer dam of the Cataract Mill
company. Jack Delaney, foreman of
Contaactor Cornelius, jumped overboard
with a line, probably intending to fasten
it to some piling near, and as he cannot
| be found it is supposed he was drowned.
The launch lost its smokestack and was (
; otherwise damaged going under the rail
( road and First Avenue North bridges,
i As she went under the latter a roi>e was j
thrown to men waiting to catch it, but
they could not hold it. The launch
j went on down and was stopped in the 1
boom of the Butte and Montana Com
mercial company, where the six persons !
on board, including one woman, were !
placed safely on shore. If it had not
tieen for this boom all would have gone
over Black Eagle falls' dam and been
lost.
j
I
! di(Jt of insanity waB ret urned. She was
taken to Warm Springs Wednesday in
charge of Sheriff Templeton.
Adjti<l|f««l lii*rtii«
Dinah Hunter, a colored woman who
was formerly a resident of Livingston
but who for the past ttve years has been
residing at Great Falls and Helena, ar
rived from the latter place Saturday
evening and went to the home of Gus
Lucas. She soon exhibited symptoms
of insanity, laboring under the halluci
nation that she was pursued by two men
and a woman named Eva Clark, whom
she insisted were attempting to kill her.
She claimed that she left Helena with
the intention of going to Townsend and
taking the stage to White Sulphur
Springs, but that upon arriving at Town
send she discovered the parties who had
designs upon her life riding on the top
of the coaches, and overheard them say
that when she stopped at that place
they would beat ner to death. She then
concluded to come to Livingston, to
which place she insisted the men and
j woman followed her, still threatening
j her life. A warrant was accordingly j
j sworn out for her arrest and an exami
! nation had in the district court before
(Judge Henry and a jury composed of [
Dr. D. S. Green, Worthy McKee and J.
S. Stuff. The evidence clearly indicated
a deranged mental condition, and a ver
I'ark Comity'* AfeH«*Miii«iit.
The valuation of the property of Park
county for the year 1892, as shown by
the assessment roll completed and for
warded to the Btate board of equaliza
tion makes a flattering increase over the
assessment of last. year. The total valu
ation, exclusive of the rolling stock and
other personal property of the Northern
Pacific to he assessed by the state board
• minis, ditch«
Minim: ami irrigHtiii
and flume*.....................
Mort gages........................
Watch«**, jewelry, luriiiture, «fcr
Mtisicul itiHtrnnient lilira ri«**. ,Vi
(woods, war«**, ItlPTflWffmS«*, »fcc..
Fixture* of business places, la
utensil*, machinery, «fcc ........
Vehicle*, harness, lobes, «fcc ____
Horses und mules ...............
, Caille ............................
j shetq) ami goutu...............
lloLH
of equalization, is 84,690,265. To this
may be safely added8452,240 as returned
by the state board of equalization for
valuation of railroad property last year,
and a supplemental list which last year
amounted to 864,192. This would make
the total valuation over 85,100.000, an in
crease of about a quarter of a million
over last year. The following items
compose the list as returned to the state j
board of equalization : \
.$ 21,11»! IN)
.. ni«, 2 r >2 in
WI.W5 (»I
ml
.. 2 .1.U2H (»I
j
!
Hav, grain, lumber, «fcc .................
V' »lue of all improvements on land the
title to which is vested in another
than the person so listing it.......... 1,875 (H)
Money................................. 40,l*i7 00
Otter personal property not described. £#o,titt7 00
■ Lt' 1 ; IJl
28!u».! <«'
•lil'sis !Ii
LjjfiJi (Jj
Miulnir CoutoNt Lit last Ion.
Suit was begun in the district court
Monday by Savage & Day, ns attorneys
for John Brown and John H. Elder, ■
against the Vinnedge Mining compuny, j
a corporation organized under the laws |
of this state and owner of mining prop
erty at Cooke. The complaint sets forth
that plaintiffs are owners of the Chip
munk quartz lotie mining.claim, located
in the New World mining district in
July, 1882, by Thomas M. Ackles, Henry
VV. Snibley, John Walch. John C. Mc
Carthy and John C. Rogers, title to
which has since that date been regularly
transferred to plaintiffs ; that in April,
1892, defendants made application in the
land office at Bozeman for mineral pat
ent of the Silver King quartz lode claim,
which conflicted with a portion of the
Chipmunk lode ; that on the 6th day of
June, 1892, plaintiffs filed an adverse
claim in the land office at Bozeman to
protect their title to the ground claimed
aa the Chipmunk lode. The action is
now brought in the district court to ob
tain a decree that defendants have no
estate, interest or lawful claim to any of
the ground claimed as the Chipmunk
lode, and owned by suid plaintiffs.
rimr||«<l With Forgery.
Jacob Fleshman, 17 years of age, is
confined in the county jail to await ac
tion of the district court upon a charge
of forgery. Judging from the record of
the pust two weeks Young Fleshman
had entered upon a career of eripie that
would have marked him as a shrewd and
bold crook had it not been nipped by
his arrest last week. Fleshman had
been residing with .losiah Gosnell, a
ranchman of the upper Yellowstone.
His first offense dates from July 2, when
( nagerie. Having been a spectator of the
gorgeous street parade and becoming
possessed of a desire to view the interior
j of the large tent with its two-ring circus
performance, but not ixissessing the
money to purchase the necessary ticket
1 of admission he resorted to his first for
gery to make a raise. Knowing that Mr.
! Gosnell was a regular customer of Mayne
! & Burdick he drew an order «or 83, to
with other youths of that locality he ,
came to Livingston to witness the spec
tacular exhibition of King Solomon's'
_ , , . , * , , i
Temple and Robinsons matchless me
which he attached the name of Mr. Gos
nell and secured the coveted funds. His
success in this first step in crime led to
a bolder attempt. Learning that George
lowing ,,av u charge of forgery was pre
ferml against him, preliminary exami
Husted of this city was owing Mr. Gos
nell about 850 lie came to Livingston on
Friday of lust week and presented an
order for the money. He was informed
by Mr. Husted that the money would he
left at the store of Mayne & Burdick,
where Mr. Gosnell could call und get it.
Mr. Husted later left the money as prom
ised, but said nothing about Young
Flesbman having called upon him for
the money. During the afternoon
Flesbman uppeured at the store of
Mayne & Burdick with an order for 830,
purporting to come from Mr. Husted,and
instructing them to hold out the 83 pre
viously paid Fleshman. The order was.
simply signed George H„ but the firm
having no suspicion of Young Fleshman
disregarded this irregularity, and the
827 was paid upon the order. The money
was afterward spent by Flesbman in
purchasing clothing and a watch, after
which he went to the home of Mr. Gos
n el), cached the clothing and retired for
j the night. Mr. Husted learning of the
f or ged order, informed Messrs. Mayne &
Burdick, and they at once dispatched a
[ messenger to the Gosnell ranch. Flesh
man was awakened and confronted by
th e messenger when he made a full con
f e8 sion of the whole matter. The loi
nation was held before Magistrate Lep
ley and Flesbman was held in the sum
of 81000 to the district court. County
Attorney Joy has filed an information in
the district court charging the crime of
forgery. W'. H. Poormnn has been ap
pointed to defend, and Fleshman will
today t*nter his plea.
I>i hI riel Court.
The following cases were disposed of
(] ur ; n g the past week :
>« the estate of Neil
Decree of settlement
distribution of estate
j n matter
(jjilis, deceased,
0 f a( . c i oun t and
H j gn ed and tiled.
Babcock «V Miles vs. Lee Morris et al.
Trial by court and judgment for plain
tiff f or gi63.r>3, with interest, 86 expenses
f or iiij ng |j e n, &->0 attorneys' fees and
ousts of suit.
j J. S. O'Brien et al. vs. Fellows D.
\ Poase et al. Judgment for plaintiff for
(H)
00
00
$2,355, with interest. Decree of fore
closure.
Henry Beckler vs. E. A. Vickery et ux.
Default of defendants entered for want
of answer.
W. A. Hall vs. VV. F. Kirby et al. De
murrer to ■ complaint overruled and de
(Jj fendant given twenty days in which to
file answer.
Benjamin Urner Jr. vs. Lewis W. Sim
mons. Sheriff ordered to sell attached
property and deposit proceeds in court
to abide the judgment in this action.
In the matter of ihe estate of George
Reeder, deceased. Decree of settlement
■ of final account and distribution of es
j täte signed and filed,
| In the matter of the estate of Annie
in
Kennie, deceased. Decree of settlement
of final account and distribution of es
tate signed and filed.
E. Goughnour vs. W. F. Kirby et al.
The motion of defendant Henry A. M.
Joy to quash summons sustained by the
court.
Rocky Fork Town and Electric com
pany vs. James Dick et al. Plaintiff dis
misses suit without prejudice.
Ellen L. Kennfelly vs. C. W. Savage et
al. Defendants' motion for judgment
on pleadings overruled.
In the matter of the estate of John W.
Grannie, deceased. Further considera
tion is extended until July 18th.
In the matter of the estate of William
Williams, deceased. Decree of settle
ment of account and proceedings of ad
ministration signed and filed.
Jes6e H. Grogan vs. Darius F. Grogan
et al. Dismissed as per stipulation on
file.
The State of Montana vs. Jacob Flesh
man. Information filed for the eriin^ of
forgery. Time given defendant until
July 13th to plead.
The State of Montana vs. Julius Alex
ander. Information filed for the crime
of burglary in the second degree. M. D.
Kelly appointed to defend and defend
ant given until July 13th in which to
plead.
Ellen L. Kennedy vs. C. VV. Savage et
al. Case set for trial for third day of
next regular term and continued.
John Brown et al. vs. Vinnedge Min
ing company. Time to file answer ex
, tended Bjxty day8 from date and pluin
tiffg giyen Uurty dayB thereafter to file
.. .■
i replication.
In the matter of the alleged insanity
of Dina Hunter. Verdict of insanity
and ordered that she be conveyed to
Warm Springs and confined there as
provided by law.
Estate of Duncan J. McDonald. Sat
urday July 23rd set for bearing.
The State of Montana vs. Julius Alex
ander. Defendant enters plea of not
guilty. Set for trial for first day of next
regular term.
The State of Montana vs. Jacob Flesh
man. W. H. Poorman appointed us
counsel for defendant and time to plead
extended until July 16th.
Gean Walls vs. James Walls. Decree
of divorce granted und plaintiff awarded
custody of minor children.