| OCR Text |
Show Pierthp Vl haV,e a bank- "cor. A. thisyS' TlLYn1'1'!11,111 Sorth 1)akot" lo anv n.m lc tttu toiled to pro-' pro-' , any appropriation for a fair. weekTntl?pat s,trikes ere .nude last Wvom ,t l-y,St01le mi"iS Strict in forKeysf;ne!,lCllpr0m'1SC Dardntfrrfn" bein,? nm,le to "cure the in!Inpm n eaUlcr llrove a wan Wrt;,,"e Wared on the streets u a? 1U '"'ffalo overcoat, fur cap and arctic shoes. v n n?n i? Dakot8 Prohibition law is W n Ullf0ree' Ukiu? effe'-' JuW 1. 2 Tt fTk!,ge,!,. coataitiing condi- Hand e"S,i!edjaSS1U'ening,'eal In tlie glove contest between John McGuire . ot Livinijstoue and Billy bcaies of Helena, Mont., the latter was knocked out in tho second round on the night ot July 5. The local editor of the Kurcka, Utah, thief says: Bishop Hatfield bet Milt I nee Sunday that lie could not ride a horse to Silver City in twenty niimitos. Trice won the bet. Susan B. Anthony has inserted her hue Italian hand" into the political pie of North Dakota. Susio is just a till e advanced in years, but age has not milled the razor-like edge of her tongue pr the wonderful vitality of her intellect. intel-lect. Mrs. Amelia Johnson was sent to the Dakota msano nsvlum last week. She labored under the impression that she was starving to death and had to continually con-tinually be in a state of perspiration or death would ensue. She subjected her children to tho samo treatment as her self, und when discovered they were nearly suffocated. Chief Rain-iu-tho-Face quarreled with his lawful squaw about another woman one day last week at Standing Rock ageucy in Dakota. In the night Mrs Raiu-etc. stole into tho tent of her husband hus-band and inserted a large, cold piece ol steel between several of his ribs numerous numer-ous times. Chief Rain-iu-the-Face's chances for becoming a good Indian never were brighter. He boasts that it was by his hand Custer met his death. 4 jtnlS of Interest rrom the Different States and Territories Comprising the Great Northwest. r 11 JHE CENTENNIAL STATE IN BRIEF. it Z T ,' Montana, Idaho, Wyoming, Utah and the Itro Dakotas Searched lor Nbwb of I Interest to the Hurried Header. I. r(j IDAHO NOTES. b The Hailey hot springs will soon ' ebauge hands, as Mr. E. R. Strahorn 1 bus retired and his successor Jis looked fcr from Chicago. ... Jlr. Lee of Cornwall has for exhibi-1 exhibi-1 tion a stool of wheat from one. kernel tnt contains 210 stalks, each bearing a . r'od head of wheat. ? J. E. Stearns of Nam pa, who has bpeti appointed commissioner to the World's Fair, is collecting an assortment assort-ment of ores from Idaho to exhibit at the fair. Thomas Kirby of Kendrick recently brought to Moscow to have stuffed a a monster white pelican, measuring near-J near-J lv five feet from tip to tip of tho wiugs. It was killed on Snake river. These k birds come np the river only as a far as the .sturgeon, as their food is principally young sturgeon. Sever in tho history of northern Idaho has the outlook for a prosperous season been so bright. There is no specula-l specula-l tioa In regard to the agricultural inter-I inter-I psts;the frequent rains have rendered an abundant harvest a certainty. Mining Min-ing properties are yielding rich returns; tlie stock raisers report cattle and : horses to be in a" line condition, and the stamp of prosperity rests on every branch of industry. The Chinamen employed in mining on Loon creek, Custer county, have been getting up an almost fatal row. The last number of the Messengor gives an account of a free fight they had among themselves, using guns, knives, etc., resulting in several of them being bailly used up and three of them being incarcerated in jail. How soon American customs grow upon tho almond-eyed rice eaters. MONTANA NOTES, ? Thomas F. Casey, a well known law-I law-I of Helena, died Friday. Butte is trying for a through train from the east on the Northern Pacific. The Alice is producing more bullion " than any mine or mill in tho Butte ;( camp. r Excavation for the foundation of the now Uoiton and Butte concentrator at Butte is progressing rapidly. The opening of tho Butte stock ex's ex-'s change causett a ripple in mining circles. cir-cles. Twenty stocks were on call the first day. Albeit Sheppeid, a Butte Creek uiiuer, celebrated the Fourth with giant powder. It cost him one hand aud a large section of an arm, besides several minor wounds. . Butte City offers less inducements to funerals than any city in the northwest. Tho burial grounds are in a deplorablo condition aud the undertakers go upon the principle of robbing the living for caring for the dead. Much trouble has been experienced at the Anaconda aud more especially at the St. Lawronoo mine sinco the naler has been taken out on account nf foul gasses. It has become so bad that work had to be suspended in the lower drifts. Arrangements are being made to placo a hoist on the Hiawatha mine capable of sinking 000 feet. It is estimated esti-mated that if the mine, after more development, de-velopment, holds up to its present promise, it will be as great as the Granite Gran-ite Mountain. After filling up on red, red liquor on the Fourth a crowd of Finlandersin Butte began fighting among themselves with knives. So terriflic was the lighting light-ing for a few minutes that the police refused to interfere. No one was killed, but the number of injured would rerk a printing oflico if the names were published and correctly spelled. The sensation of the week has been the find in the New State. A body of ore was struck on the 200 which is reported re-ported as being the richest ever uncovered uncov-ered in Oro Fino district. Some idea of the value placed upon it may be fathered from the fact that the stock rose ot once from (50 cents to $3, and none to be had at that price. ' COLORADO NOTES. Denver will build a $250,000 miuing stock exchange. Nathan Brown, a laborer, fell from a viaduct in Pueblo on Friday and broke his back. Bert Young was fatally hurt at Colorado Colo-rado Springs Friday by the bursting of a musket. The crop outlook in tho Arkansas valley is the most favorable it has been for years. The labor strike in Denver has ended. Arbitration accomplished favorable re-'iilts re-'iilts to all parties. A new mining district has been opened thirty miles southeast of Grand Junction.' 'Ihe ore is of very line quality. qual-ity. When a Denver rogue becomes tired of jail life he digs a hole through the rotten walls of the jail and makes his escape. Marion S. Cook, unde.rindictmentfor forgery whiie city clerk at Aspen, made Ms escape from jail, and has eluded all efforts at capture. The Grand Junction News with its Usual spirit of enterprise includes at least two verses of original poetry with every obituary notice. The Salida Mail publishes the dead "eats on its subscription list. It is venom pasted. A newspaper dead beat is impervious to shame or remorse. . The Denver Field and Farmisauthor-'ty Farmisauthor-'ty for the statement that Colorado will pow three-quarters of a million more bushels of wheat than it ever grew before be-fore in a single season. TheTelluride Journal has adopted new style head letter, which gives it Jh appearance, typographically, of wing teen thrown together with a 'air of tongs in the hands of a small, hut vigorous, youth. The arrest of Gun Wa, the alleged Physician, and raiding of his dispensary t Milwaukee, elicited the fact that the celestial's real name is Jim Lee, and 'hat his learning extended further into 'he laundry business than in the medi-cal- Gun Wa was the tool of shrewd Americans. WTOM1NG, DAKOTA AND ITAH. Butt is overrun with burglars. Brittou has organized a tariff reform ; Riband a W.C. T.U. j A series of races will be held at Spear-"'h. Spear-"'h. commencing July W- ! . The king and queen have gone from , "t'den. . Onh- the jacks remain- Ihe new dress of the Butte Miner I |