bakins ♦hew business* wi powder ft o frank! stone · the white house just about now. in his day,...
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![Page 1: Bakins ♦HEW BUSINESS* Wi Powder ft o Frank! Stone · the white house just about now. In his day, when engaged in a war with banks and money sharks, he said : “By the eternal,](https://reader035.vdocuments.site/reader035/viewer/2022071215/604416ea11253b0dc96989e1/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
■ä ?MISCELLANEOUS»MISCELLANEOUS.Qnml leva.Çhnllia I■/ctyThUM KEYSTONE
hü Women are to be employed a* drammera for a Chicago dealer in gnm. .
Secretary Morton baa declined to send a special agent to North Dakota to investigate tbe damage done by tbe Canada thistle.
An experimental shipment of California fruit to England was made on the Paris which sailed from New York last week.
The Japanese Government has contracted with a firm in New York for one hundred thousand stands of guns and ammunition.
A dispatch from Pittsburg Penh., says the passage of the tariff bill has already made itself felt there by a marked revival of business.
Lightning struck a barn on a stock farm near Louisville, Ky., August 15th killing Earl Belmont, a trotting stallion. He was worth $50,000.
Stanford University will open September 8 with 1000 students. The University has ample funds to maintain 1000 more students and 80 professors.
Sheriff D. Grant Armstrong of Covington, Ky., when dying, sent for his brother and confessed to having signed the brother's name to $15,000 of notes.
The damage to tbe corn crop in parts of Kansas and Nebraska is so great that the St. Joseph and Grand Island Railroad has issued orders for the abandonment of over a dosen stations on its lines.- As a north-bound train on the Paducah, Tennesse & Alabama was nearing Hazel, Ky., Wednesday afternoon it struck a wagon loaded with people killing five of the occupants and injuring one.
By a decision of the Secretary of the Interior, about 900,000 acres of land in California will be immediately open to entry under the homestead laws. The land is within the conflicting limits of the grants to the Southern Pacific and Atlantic A Pacific railroads.
The Czar of Russia sent a wreath of flowers to be placed on the coffin of President Carnot which cost, according to French papers, $1,600; that from the King of Italy, $600, and from the Queen of England, $800. The flowers presented by Baron Rothschild cost $1,100.
A. J. Meyer, 21 years of age, a son of a St. Paul saloon keeper, eloped to Hudson Wis., with Miss Rachel Berkey, 15 years of age, one of St. Paul's Four Hundred, the daughter of Peter Berkey, a millionaire banker and until recently president of the St. Paul National Bank. The young couple were married by a justice of the peace.
The biggest strike in the history of New England is on. Every mill in the city of Bedford, Mass., is closed down, and the 11,000 idle operatives walk the streets. The mill owners held a conference Monday and decided to close down the mills for an indefinite period. The union men say the strike will be of six months duration.
A dispatch from Washington, D. C., August 19th, says : The legation has received a telegram announcing that Japan has decided to issue a domestic loan of $50,000,000. The dispatch states that a strong outburst of patriotic feeling has been evoked by this proposition, and the people in all parts of the country are eagerly subscribing to the loan.
A special mouthpiece for public telephones has been introduced in Germany with the object of avoiding the spread of diseases carried by the condensed moisture of the breath. A pad or a large number of disks of paper, with a hole in the middle, is inserted in the mouthpiece, and the upper disk of paper is torn off after every coversation.
CHAX.ua, August 23,1894. Two republican! came into Challis early in tbe morning”—one, CoL
N. J. Sharp, yesterday morning, the other, Hon. F. B. Willis, this morning—via H. C, Lewis’ fast freight line. Having ridden all night, it is presumed they should have taken a short nap, but otherwise our citizens were surprised at their encomiums on the possibilities of tbe populist party. Both said and say the people's party have not a ghost of a show to win. Their pérora-
where
BakinsPowder
AUGUST 25. ISM
♦HEW BUSINESS*•INew York quota- **20%,. me., Le»d. >3.15.
ïs^^eoogh U prevailing
#g,tcbu»^_.re was a pleasant party at
Thr Hot Springs Tuesday even-
Wi%■
3o> Frank! StoneGall fer People’s Party Coaity
Caanatioa.Political Votes. ftiof. ,„d Mr*. P«tw Snyder of
visitors to Ketchum We need an Andrew Jackson in the white house just about now. In his day, when engaged in a war with banks and money sharks, he said : “By the eternal, we will see which is to rule, the money power or the people.” If Jackson lived to-day be would be a “crank” and an “anarchist” in the eyes of the plutocrats.—Independent.
Is Cleveland crazy or what is the matter with him? Here is a sentence from his letter to Professor Wilson :
“You know how much I deprecate the incorporation in the proposed bill of the income tax feature.”
Mr.ogrfFork««
c w. Stickney came m from the Phi Kappa mine
d»y. with Mr.. P.
* H0tions reach many camps,
people read.and learn. Nix.Tbe new service for mail facilities
direct from here to 8almon City goes into effect shortly. Messrs. A1 Jinnegar and Joe Ebberte having received authority from the Government to resume the same on September 17 th.
We note a scarcity of dances since our new minister came. Whether it is owing to tbe hot weather, or bis liking (like ours) to hunt and fish, we do not know. While our society is much inclined to pleasure, more than praying at this season, we will excuse our parson.
oAt a meeting of the People's Party County Central Committee held in the courthouse at Hailey, Wednesday, August 15, 1954, it was ordered that a County Convention be held in Metropolitan Hall, Ketchum, at 2 r. m. on
m tsinWAU BSflfl.)(Im>•tot
p, B»*terj_____________. .urn Geo. M. Snow, accompanied
whar'little boy, arrived from Boise rltr yerterday to spend a few days jl Ketchum. _
fits received » New tmd VnA1 rTkusiif, SaplMlir 27, 1894, mfor the purpose of nominstiag s county ticket.
Primaries will be held In the precincts between the hours of S sad 8
$ Stock ofmCDIndes and Mrs. I. I. Lewis and
Jtnd Mrs. F. K. Gillette returned
î-'tsrday from a week’s outing on ioant Baldy.__________
P3 ©0r. h. on ©fegUakw lg, 1IH
No proxies will be allowed in the con- held by actual residents
of tbe precincts wherein they urn given, end no person will be allowed to vote more than one proxy.
The apportionment of the several precinct! is as follows:
Dftues,a CO a iftwAssessor Atkinson was in town .rtterday diitribating po and Lpiul tax «caipti to »11 who
qualified to receive thorn.
A party of railroad dignitaires.urtsrsd in a special car were
Jrnong the arrivals at the depot this *eek The gentlemen came up I fishing and hunting excorsion.
Gsorge Philbrick will leave for Yellow Jacket to-day, where he pro- dosss to work off some of the surplus flesh accumulated from eating jrrouse, sage hen, etc., out of season.
Tbs weather has been sultry during the past week, with a slight ,bower occasionally to cool the sir. Tbe nights and small hours of the morning were, as usual, delightfully
vention nnl
CD %a ©Here if* sentence from his message to Congress, December 4,1893 :
“The committee has wisely included in their plan a small tax upon incomes derived from certain corporate investments. These new aasessmonts are absolutely just and easily borne.—Worchester Telegram.
Tom Watson's paper is authority for the statement that twenty-five members of the Mississippi legislature, who were elected as democrats, have joined the people’s party. Tom thinks if tbe populist funeral continues at this rats the cemetery will soon be too small to hold us all.—Times-Democrat.
Next to Artemus Ward's eagerness to save the country even if duty called for the sacrifice of every one of his second consins on the field of battle, there has been no more striking exhibition of unselfish generosity in the United States than the spectacle of tbe Democratic party heroically discharging its pecuniary obligations to the Sugar Trust by levying tribute upon the workingman's breakfast table. The scene vividly illustrates the quaint but handy old Democratic principle. When duty calls find a substitute.—New York Tribune.
George Hinckley, Depnty Auditor of Latah county who was arrested while attending the Republican State Convention, is a Republican. The Statesman doesn’t mention this fact. That paper is so ready to hunt down Populists, and every time it finds one against whom the breath of suspicion is breathed it is used as a text for a long-drawn dissertation on the crookedness of Populism, and in nine cases out of ten the charges are baseless. But when a Republican covers himself all over with disgrace the Statesman does not use the fact aa a text for the discussion of tbe rottenness of Republicanism, and does not so much aa mention the fact that the wayward indivual is a Republican. We never have, and do not now, contend that a party can be justly held responsible for the acts of individuals of the party who may do wrong, but do say that if this rule is to be applied to one party it ought to be applied to the others as well. But the Statesman doesn't do this. The methods it employs to down the Populist party are not the methods of a faisable and dignified journal. A party is responsible for its acts aa a party—for the legislation it enacts or fails to enact, as well as for the principles it advocates or opposes. Hinckley was arrested on a charge of forgery to the amount of $15,000. It is said he forged $9,000 on individual paper and $6,- 000 on the county by filling out warranta for any sum that struck his fancy. If tbe Statesman would treat the Republican party èxactly as it doe« the Populist, it would come out and aay emphatically, and in big head lines, that the Republican party ia an organized band of thieves.—Idaho World.
The Denocratio Stats Tiokei.
The convention last week nominated the following ticket :
Governor, A. E. Stevenson, Ada county.
Congress, J. M, Ballantine, Ads.Lieutenant Governor, J. B.
Thatcher, Bannock.Secretary of State, J. R. Hall,
Idaho.Attorney General, W. T. Reeves,
Bingham.Supreme Justice, J. C. Elder,
Latah.Treasurer, J. H. Bush, Ada.Superintendent of Publio In
struction, J. W. Parris, Bingham.JUDICIAL NOMINATIONS.
First District, Judge J. Holleman, of Kootenai ; attorney, to be filled.
8econd District, judge, 8.8. Dem- g, Latah; attorney, to be filled. Third District, judge, Edward E.
Nagent ; attorney, T. D. Cahlahan, Ada.
Fourth District, judge, C. O. Stock-lager ; attorney, Guy C. Bar- num, Logan.
Fifth District, judge, R. P. Queries, Bannock; attorney, J. C. Rich, Bear Lake.
Ü« *
u I H»il
H[Communication.]Challis, Aug. 17,1894.
The Kxystons hat an article in relation to the divorce of Dr. W. A. Dodge in the isaue of the 11th inst., that is quite misleading in its nature, and places the writter in a false light. The Doctor, after having need up all the means I had in obtaining an education, to fit him for his profession, at Bellevue Hospital, N. Y. City, deserted me, leaving me penniless.
After having deserted me for years he begged me to allow him to get s divorce on the grounds of desertion, and nothing else. This was a false charge, aa he well knew-—he being the deserting party. But as he had left me shorn of all my means, and would not help me any, I consented to a divorce on that ground ; now he claims that I interfered or was too inquisitive about his professional duties, which is equally false with the charge I consented to. I have submitted the complaint served on me in this case to an able lawyer and am told this last charge was entirely outside and unnecessary and could only have been used to smirk the good name of an innocent party whom he had basely wronged. Had he made any such charge in his complaint he never could have had his divorce. Tbe claim of abandonment was known by all to be untrue ; and the adding of interference was illegally interpolated, evidenty, for no other purpose but to soothe a depraved but guilty conscience.
Mbs. Jennie Dodge.
»
ag 31Arco...
Antelope...........Baltics................Clyde.................Deer Creek-----Era.....................Boyle MooataiaHalley...............Island.................Ketcham...........Eut Fork.........Moldoon...........Sawtooth...........Smoky...............
Total...........
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CD« SCHOOL BOOKS, h1 p boet- O _
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WALL PAPER,.......soGEO. J. LEWIS,
Ch’tnaa P. P. Go. Cea. Com. C. D. Saxdebs, Sec’y. O»
V fcool.LAMP GOODS,Professor Robinett of Montpelier
hu been engaged by the school trustees as principal of the Ketch- am public school. The fall and winter term will oommence September 24th.
T. J. Reid of Sawtooth and J. V. Easley left for Houston last Monday. If the camp will justify it these gentlemen will probably invest in real estate and become permanent residents of Houston.
Mrs. W. J. Treloar and children of Challis, who have been on a four-months' visit to relatives in North Carolina, returned on the train Thursday. Mr. Treloar met them at the depot and they left for their home shortly afterward.
Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Lewis invited s few of their friends to join them M Sunday on a picnic to North Turk. Among the party were Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Williams, Mrs. Louis fiweitzer of Salt Lake, Mr. and Mrs. Frank J. Stone, and the Misses Leona and Nora Griffin.
Wood river and Warm Springs creek presented a phenemenal appearance Thursday. The waters were the color of milk and there was no perceptible rise. Some advance the opinion that the strange color of the water was due to a cloudburst aomewhere in the Sawtooth range.
Mrs. Richard French, of Broad- ford, accompanied by her daughter, MisaParmeal, and the Misses Mary and Maggie McGuinness, with >j retinue of bear-hunters, fishermen, etc., passed through Ketchum last Wednesday en route for the Redfish lakes. Ensign J. P. McGuinness, of the United States Navy, who is visiting his relatives in Bellevue, was among the party.
Mr. and Mrs. George McCoy with a party of guests had a pleasant picnic last Sunday. They spent the day in one of the lovely grovea along Warm Spring Creek. Among those present were : Mr. and Mra. W. M. Price and family, Mr. and Mra. Milt Mourning, Mrs. John Miley, Miss Hannah McCoy, Sadie McCoy, James and Charlie McCoy, Miss Clara Richardson, Miss Carrie Roberts and a number of children.
A1 Griffith returned Wednesday from a trip to Boise Basin. Mr. Griffith has many good things to "*y about the mining industry in that country. The Popham Bros., who left here for tbe Basin to locate some ground they had walked over in early days, found that it had •»ready been located by other parties and partly worked out. They *ill remain there until snow flies.
* 0)olUid, Wtf. or Widow, need never fear to make thatcontemplated trip east if ebe will trust to the Chicago, Union Pacific A Northwestern Line. Qnicket time. Fewest changes. Union Depots.
For full Information call on or address O. F. Brsdt, A gant U. P. System.
o Ho> SMOKING TOBACCO,0*
©CIGABS, Ete, Etc,Professor Campbell of Lick Ob
servatory has demonstrated with the spectroscope that the planet Mara presents no evidence of having an atmosphere. Professor Holden aays if any atmospheric pressure exists it ia not aa great as on our highest mountains, and thus popular fancies concerning the planet are overthrown.
Q0
Also, s «ompUU Une ot
©<• 3 STATIONERY GOODSBOHN.
Physicians’ Prescript!OTTENHEIMER — In Mountain Homs, August 18th, the wife of Jacob Otten- heimer. of a daughter.
ICarefully Compounded.
[The article referred to was taken from and duly credited to the Pocatello Tribune. We hurl it back from whence it came, and request the fighting editor of the Tribune to “put a head” on tbe ungrateful M. D. for causing such falsehoods to be published.—Ed.]
Palace HotelHAILEYGUYER
Ketchdm, Idaho.
HOT SULPHUR SPRINGS ENSOR INSTITUTEMy boy was taken with a disease resembling bloody flux. Tbe first thing I thought of was Chamberlain's 'Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. Two doses of it settled the matter and cured him sound end well. I heartily recommend this remedy to all persons suffering from a like complaint. I will answer any inquiries regarding it when stamp is iuclo»ed. I refer to any county official
my reliability. Wx. Roach, J. P., Priraroy, Campbell Co., Tenn. For sale by Frank J. Stone, Druggist.
Returned From an Extended Tour.
A dispatch from Knoxville, Tenn., August 14, says Mrs. Frank Emert, wife of a Seville county farmer, after suffering from'a fever for some days, died on Monday to all appearances and was laid out for burial.
Just before storting to the grave yesterday she gave faint evidences of life, and prompt medical attention brought her to consciousness. Within a few hours she rose and insisted on walking about.
She declared she had been perfectly cured in the “great beyond,” and told the moat wonderful stories of both heaven and hades. She said she met in one or the other of those places nearly every dead per son she had ever known.
She told where the departed ones located, and, as most of them,
according to her story, are now in the lese desirable place, much grief abounds in many families.
Her detailed descriptions of the joys of the upper and the agonies of the lower world have caused great religious excitement, and her sister haa gone violently insane.
JAMES JUDGE, - - Proprietor.
© 3DThis Pouplar Resort, lately leased by H. M. STEWART, has been re-fitted and re-opened for the season of 1094 ander the most favorable aupioee.
O Pi'Jez ô I» now Open fer the receptionFIRST CLASS
ucc t
IPi0. of ffROfltS
zas to PLUNGE and PRIVATEBATHS
IN EVERY RESPECT. (0 wPI 1occ For the Permanent CunWill be furnished gueets at the
usual prices, and the
Best Hotel AccommodationsAt Reasonable Rates,
To those desiring to avail themselves of this
KUMTFVL SOMMER RESORT
©Good Beds A Airy Rooms X 71
O0.
Throughout the house.©When moving into our present homo I
found a bottle of Chamberlain’» Paio Balm left by a former tenant. On the label I found good for cute and burnt. I can testify to the truth of this. Nothing in all my es- perience baa found its equal for treating blisters or burns. F. É. Bakbktt, manager Le Sueur Sentinel, Le Sueur, Minn. Pain Balm is also a tare care for rheumatism. For sale by F. J. Stone, Druggist.
Swiss Flan to Help the Unemployed.
The city of Berne, Switzerland, has in practical operation a plan for helping idle working men who are deserving of aid, and from the description of the arrangement given by the United States Consul at that city it appears to be working suc- cesafully. It ia a sort of combination of mutual aid society and employment bureao, under the direction of a committee of seven men representing the labor unions, the employers and tba city government. All subscribers to the bureau pay monthly dues of 5c each, and the fund |thus obtained is increased by gifts from employers and by an annual appropriation of $1000 from the City Council. Subscribers who
ont of work for two weeks are thereafter entitled to benefits ranging from 20c to 30c a day. Those who leave work without just cause forfeit all right to any benefit whatever. The association, through its officers, meanwhile acts aa an employment bureau, bringing together wonld-be employers and those seeking work. The results thus far have been satisfactory, the members reporting twice a day at tbe large and comfortable headquarters, and accepting work quickly when offered.
In order to introduce <%amberiain> Gough Remedy hem we sold several dos- ee bottles oe strict guarantee aad ham
every bottle did joed servie#. We ____ end It ourselves and thick It superior to any other. W.I. Mowusv, Junta- villa. W. Va. Far sale by Freak J.etaea,
(0 H Ltauoc,Xthe statement that it was
h Several Daily Hacke will ran Pi Tobacco,O from Ketcham to the Springs (2)4 miles) and customers will find congenial treatment and first-class accommodations at the Baths, the Bar aad the Hotel.
Nice Sample Rooms X ©
m Morphine9CC >illFor Commercial Travelers. ©Picnic parties, private parties,
families, etc., desiring luncheon, prepared, are requested to give one day's notice.
> Q© Cocaine,Zo
were and Opium1 Good Restaurant H. «. STEWiRT, Lessee
Free! Free ! IJoe and Ben Rich are brothers, ibe former is a democrat while the •Uer is a republican. Ben was the
temporary chairman of the late republican state convention and Joe *•« temporary and permanent chair- *“»oof the democratic state conven-
•on- They belong to a good old orraon family than which in or intellect and respectibility ou® m the state stands higher.
two ^rot^er« both bright, of course Joe is head and shoul- a°ove R«n in weight of brain
r Dat“r.ri and acquired abilities.h*8 distinguished
Ja- in Boise tbe other day^: * ®en *8 a tolerably good
,l , ^Ut the d----- dest political liardemocrat unhun8-”“Jdabo
»The Examiner says that tbe big
cutlery and sporting goods and notion firm of Will a Finck of Sen Francisco has discovered a conspiracy among its employes to rob tbe firm and as a result of this discovery all the clerks in tbe big store, some of them ladies, with tbe exception of half a dosen wilt be discharged. The firm placet its losses at $5,000. Nine cierka have been accused of dishonest practices and have made a confession. In addition to these clferks four more will be discharged, not because they were dishonest, but because of carelessness in not noticing and reporting stealings going on. All of the other thirty clerks will be dismissed as soon as their places -can be filled aa the firm baa loat-ooufidence in them. The fraction of the diaboueat clerks
to knock down on sales and to purloin goods. They give aa their excuse Abat their waget did not allow them to drees aa well aa their eaplqyers demanded.
Any person sending Gkeir address either ofthe undersigned agents of theFIOAEBK
Hailey Hal Hpriage Bathe ia
eeaaeetioa.©DAGO, HLWAIBMEAT MARKET 'I
are
in itGOODING BROS-, Prop's,
ST. FAVL RAILWAY For Rate«, Bto*» a^dio— uo.
Mata Street, opposite First National Bank. $. H. PARSONS, Soe’jL
amn -
will be sent TREE OF CHARGE. A MAP of tbe United States, two feet by three inDealers In—
lüflBéllfiM M<
UM Change Cara,**Jfajl Nay 1 Not if pan risks the trip m the Chicago, Union Fncifie B North- weetecnXino. Fewestebenfee to
ahim. Throat
•9 t9^rom London, August
£7jïJÏÎX; There is no doobt 4hal Chi^°,009 wil1 t* raised here for bond! °nI0Ur P®r twenty-year will hi Two-third« ef the Joan Ann«« 10 China in silver.will wfxfaoj" pwdict •Dlwmr
444 fo to 32d per ennoe.
andJcOrithe
B McCann, teof
and other IM;er., Utah. Melnpeeed of Btainff Oeie, dam Bleepers aad Free
I atwaaef mi:flnt aad
Rectintaf Chair Cara.For tall Information eall an or
a F. Stadt, Agent U.F. flyUm. - 1
MA* «AA, —— A. tads»t■ig
SB;>• ** ■w1H mmf (Hk:j?»
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