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The Missoulian from Missoula, Montana • 15

Publication:
The Missouliani
Location:
Missoula, Montana
Issue Date:
Page:
15
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

TWO TITLED WOMEN IGHT HE HAD ENOUGH WASH LNGTON LETTER buried in a mine A NEW GRAND MASTER I bed i 1 ood for Reflect ton X' lii 'A fir went around at tin1 eighth iOgrj No Cholera in New New York Sept 27 The board of health in its 4 bulletin this after noon said there had been no cases of chol era in the city since September 19 There were 812 immigrants landed at Ellis island today frora the Rugia Wyoming and Scan dia Virgie Johnson won Out of Littie Annie third Time you get employment "No I came pretty near ha injr a place In a Bowery pre anted couldn't leant the Wash ington Star THE ARMERS ANXIOUS ABOUT THE COMING ELECTION Looks Dike Harmony New York Sept 29 The county dem ocratic committee of thirty met tonight and permanently organized for 1892 It was determined to nominate an indepen dent city and county ticket Speeches de nouncing Tammany hall intimating that Tammany was prepared to sell out the el toral ticket were made and in order to in sure election it was said the campaign must be placed in the hands of his friends Jewett is a Sprinter New Raven Conn Sept The best record ever made in the United States for a 220 yards dash was that of Jewett of the Detroit Athletic club on the Yale field this afternoon making the distance iri twenty one and three fifths seconds 2 I PRINCESS METTERNICH majesty was not older at Auster was the ready reply He married the heiress of the great house of Kaunitz and thus became one ot the wealthiest land owners of Germany Thete daughter Leontine was the mother of the present princess The oldest son of Metternich and consequently heir to the title was Richard son of a second wife At the age of twenty Pauline startled Europe by marrying th is Richard her half brother! This was in 1856 and many read ers can recall the great to do over it the trouble in getting a and all that sort of thing As she was heiress to immense estates it was at first taken for granted that it was merely a de as they say in Europe but it did not prove so Apparently they were lovers At any rate they lived as man and wife and there was not much scandal about the princess It was in Paris and soon after her mar in the most glorious era of the Third Empire that the Princess Metternich then the wife of the Austrian embassador went at a bound to the front rank of grand dames and remained there in a continuing blaze of glory Nothing could le done without the ravishing the elegant the witty princess as the phrase of the day was Balls at the Tuileries fetes at the Various country seats grand displays on the Champs Elysees private theatricals aid of at which single costumes cost thousands of dollars and the arrange ments of the banners for international af the princess gave the final word in all Scandal was active of course but it touched her rather lightly and now she threatens to tell all about the inner life of Lou is court The empire went to pieces and Eugenie no longer set the fashions but the Princess Metternich ruled at Vienna almost as royally as she bad at Paris She is now fifty six years old prob ably a little as we say in Ameri can rench possibly a little spiteful as aged beauties are apt to be but still so superb that Paul Vinto gives her the first olace in his book on the Iadiefi of and dedicates the volume to her Such is the gay and imperious princess who has just the comparatively unknown Countess Ki Imansegg This Explains It Rivers This new cornet it seems has tight tails What use has a comet for right tails? Perhaps it was fy time when tterted out Chicago Tribune He Was a Vnli mt Sobllv? and Now Live Uke a Hermit When the young reader considers that the civil war ended twenty seven years ago and then turns to the various "rem he is surprised that so many of Vikts bay stallion paced a heating his own reconi of were several other fine ex Guv It Lp "So you have tramped all ths wsy from New York Mi Lida fourth Best time A Shining Example Judge (whois bald headed) If half what jhe witnesses testify against you is true lour conscience must bo as black as yourmir Prisoner If a conscience is regn Uted by his hair then yonr honor tut any conscience at Pick Me Up A Duel Which Is Now the Sensation cf Europe All the aristocrats of Europe are in a cold sweat of horror and a'l plebeian Eu rope is indulging in a broad smile over the recent performance of two grand daxnes of Vienna A uel between two ladies eg the highest rank? Shocking! The first thought among the nobility was that it was only a sham duel but that made the matter worse as that would have been to add fraud to indecency so the truth of the matter was soon ad mitted It was a real fight and both were no hair pulling or plain scratch ing but a duel with rapiers and both ladies are of the creme of the creme The Princess Pauline Metternich is the lady who cut such a figure in Paris while her husband was an ambassador to the court of Louis Napoleon and Eugenie and whose recent promise to publish her private memoirs of that time threw so many nice rench people of the joyalist and imperial parties into cold shivers The Countess Kilmansegg wife of the stattholter of Lower Austria bears a name that has been noted for centuries and which through the performance of certain members of it who accompanied George I to England has been a standing joke in that kingdom ever since The Princess Pauline was honorary presi dent of the Vienna Musical and Theatrical exhibition and the Countess Kilmnxisegy was president of the committee They differed as to the details in prepara tion and quarreled over their respective powers in the case The lie was passed or what amounts to the same thing or worse among ladies and both wanted to fight They retired to Vaduz a village of Lich tenstein and went at it with rapiers In the third round the princess had her pretty Dose slit and the countess got it through her sword arm There were screams and tears then repentance The Baroness Lu binszka a Polish lady who has a degree dressed their wounds and then their seconds the Princess Schwarzenberg and the Countess Kinsky persuaded them to kiss and make up Historic names these No wonder Europe is astonished The princess began life as Pauline Clem entine Marie de Sandor and her father was the very famous cavalry officer Count Maurice de Sandor Slawnicza of whom it was said that in all his life he never once showed fear When lie was but three years old his aurse held him up to fondlethe ears of a horse whereupon the animal nipped him on the leg quite sharply Without ut tering a cry he promptly seized the ear with his teeth and bit it savagely ex claiming you bite me I bite When the children in their play fixed up a to frighten him he promptly seized a cane and went at it No man of his time could mount a horse more gracefully or make a finer appearance in the saddle But it is on the other side that she is truly noble for she is both the grand daughter and the daughter in law of the great Metternich the man who outwitted Bonaparte and organized the coalition which overthrew him This remarkable man entered public life at seventeen was active in it till past seventy and died at eighty six When he presented his cre dentials to Bonaparte in 1806 the latter said: are very young to represent so pow erful a handicap six furlongs wn princess Lorraig sec Time 1 :16 Miss Mosley won Cora Hannigan third Time mite Maywin won Lepanto see I lines third Time 1:44 ii ami a sixteenth Nomad won giila second Count third Time Wheeler Mascot Equals peerless Nancy Hanks At Latonia Ky Sept 29 Track fast Last won Hindoo 'ian ia third Time 1:16 Evv4r won Gin Mills sec 'iffiite Time 1:43 a' ai pstakesone mile and i' frir'Dic Byrd won Bessie adina third Time South Carolina Republicans Cotvmbja 8 Sept 29 The republi can convention which convened here today was stormy throughout Two factions headed by Webster and Brayton respec tively tight every two years This time the Websterites wore on top and named the temporary chairman Then Webster tried to get electors nominated before tem porary organization was completed Great confusion followed Very few whites were in the convention and they seemed in bad odor with the great mass of colored delegates At 1 riday after much wrangling and several narrow escapes from a serious fight a permanent organ ization was effected with Dr Crura chair man Webster whois collector of inter nal revenue at Columbia was elected state chairman all opposition to him being withdrawn SCSI jj6 JIB AND GUY ALSO John Wilson of Wisconsin Takes the Place of rank Sweeney Dallas Texas Sept 29 The conven tion of switchmen of North America ad journed this afternoon John Wilson of LaCrosse Wisconsin was elected grand master rank Sweeney Minneapolis re tiring grand master was elected editor and manager of the Journal The defeat of Sweeney was due to the Buffalo strike It is reported among the delegates here that since the successful substitution at Homestead of state militia for Pinker tons that laber organizations generally had resolved to abandon strikes and seek re dress for grievances through the ballot box which means the consolidation of all labor organizations into a great political party Wonderful Time in the Great 7ree for All Pace at Terre Haute Ind Careteas with His Money our thousand dollars in govemmeui bonds were found in a room of a Rochester (N Y) hotel wrapped in an old newspaper Tho owner who reclaimed them soon fcftid that be had been carrying them In his hip oscket ajxI that the? had dronned out The House Well Protected A West ifty second street man retired from business a few weeks ago and after summoning a maiden si rerfrom Connectl put to keep house for his bachelor son de parted with his wile on a pleasure trip neixissthe continent Affairs wentsmooth )y in West ifty second street until re turning with his aunt from a concert one Evening the young Jon of the household discovered that the maid whose duty it was to remain at home had been out also leaving the cook in sole possession of the house indignantly remarked the proprietor pro tern to his Connecticut Relative leave ti3s big house unpro tected or what is the same thing in charge of one lone woman I shall call up Mar garet in the morning and warn know suggested tho Connecticut relative mildly these are your servants and they aro not accustomed to have you rejoined the other briefly and in the morning the maid was sum moned I believe you were out last evening when you should have stayed at remarked the dignified proprietor that I was Mr William I nave went out soronly me cousin is afterai Hn for Ireland on the Germanic next Wednesday and inc brother over on the east side gave him a farewell "You left the cook alone asked the girl looking surprised "You left the cook alone I say and bur glars might have entered the house Ono woman alone on the fourth floor and in bed too was no protection at all and in fact I am surprised she vns willing to stay a bit was she in ted an swered the maid apparently scandalized she was alone nnyther sir sure and MrsMulcahy pourstay for her friends on ri day evening April and May nnl there was five called last evenin an a bon Id burglar that break int a house full of ginilemen and tree of in tlriss suits at Chicago Tribune Bookmaker Robbed New York Sept 29 Thos II Shan non of Lexington Y' a well known book maker is oui $7200 ia cash and $10000 in bills of exchange which were stolen from his room in a hotel today by Samuel Clay who was a school mate of Shannon and who for two years past has been employed in this city as a typewriter The money was in vest pocket and while he was dressing for dinner Clay grabbed it and ran Clay is a descendant of the statesman Henry Clay and nephew of Col Clay who two years ago ran for governor of Kentucky Michaelmas Day London Sept 29 All the exchanges public buildings courts and banks are closed today it being Michaelmas Day one of the few few great festal days of the English and one of the holidays of the Catholic church as well In England the day is one of the four quarterly terms or quarter days on which rents are paid and the day on which burgal magistrates and county councils are re elected In Amer ica it is observed as a holiday only by the Catholic church Michaelmas Day as all the world knows is the day of honors for Michael the archangel the chief of all an gels The observance is general in all the Catholic countries of Europe i rb Rosa won Lyceum sec ill Jim third Time 1: in He and one furlong Cynosure Tab second Tom Rogers third Greatest Heat on Record Evansville Ind Sept Budd Doble broke another record this afternoon He drove Martha Wilkes a mile in the free for all trot in 2:08 It was announced from the stand as the greatest heat ever trotted in America other great records having been against time Ten Men Imprisoned by a Cave tn in a Coal Shaft Ishpeming Mich Sept 29 Early this morning a cave in occurred at No 6 shaft in the Norris mine at Ironwood and it is feared ten lives will be lost although strong efforts are being made tn rescue the imprisoned men Those shut in are John Johnson Abraham Thompson rank Damshon Sarnhel Damshon four timber men and two teamsters whose names are unknown The skip tender is also miss ing and is supposed to be buried Large parties of rescuers are at work and pipes are being driven down through the debris to convey air to the men if they are alive i break and Guy The quarters4 fourth they MiSCnt broke fnrijed io't'd io ffiim until the lirn Guv not about tiftv feet ad Good Bye Grover all Rtver Mass Sept 29 Ex Pres ident Cleveland left Gray Gables for New York this afternoon THE AUTHOR SCOTT At Gravesend i 'xxd Sept One ti Strephon seeond King Mac 1:43 inri ngs Pappoose colt won M'l'iiinl Uncle Jim third Time or sake Raruu wbal have you been doing now I Little Boo hoc! I have been eat ing seine thistle and they hurt I Msrama Well yon did make of Jfor Wants an Emperor 'i ohk sept The spe il'( Valparaiso says: Letters from kr" Sul Brazil say a strong hnui i'n fonnel that state for the Proclaiming Dom einPeror Governor Martins is fear a aore or less favorable to thepro papers have been started to adve i' Sept A Sentinel )iiP: j' rri Haute says the hs smashed today by Mas I the ureat free for all match Jib with Starr up Guy np and Mascot with Billy participated In the first Va drew ahead at the first eighthik icu at the half lying Jib fd but in vain At three quar in a ieiimil aim nun a ler r5! ame into the home stretch i(rate earnest plied the whip a a dew under the wire a throat Tinii anl Hal record by one and a quarter sec paving record bv three sec winning in 2:04 The quar 22 1:03 1:33 The third 'in? in 29 id heat was a beautiful start in the first eighth Mascot i the quarter iring Job up and drew ahead at the minute and three quarters of a ds nine for the first half is re the tree quarters lying lengths Mascot coining an effort to redeem himself 'sdile however and lying 1 in 2:0 The quarters were: The second quarter i the world's record 1 heat Guy went whirling off ui a wonderful manner Mascot Tidrd At the five eighths they Iiiintei but Masvot lost his ad came in first were: At Myti Park Sept 29 At the Mystic Park today reduced the track I rotting to 2:13 two year old stallion Ralph as ent to neat his record of 2: 18 the distance in 2:13 double team Belle Hamlin and Judge irotted an exhibition mile Guy won the Mascot second Jib tltc most exciting nave in the annals of the turf IIaite Sept 29 2:13 won Joe Jett second 'Riti' el Rest time 2: 09' eight class Chifurita won Oat of the Itac Mr Standardoil Is it my daughter you vant or is it her money? Tobias Howeas (amateur champion hun dred yards) Mr St oelardoi! you sui prise Ine You know vrj wtli that ea amateur athlete Mr Standardoil Wfiat tnat gut to da with it Tobias A great dal sir It debars me from inking part hi any event fur money London Tit Bits A PROTECTED TOtVN How the Tariff Increased the Population rom 600 to igooo Elwood Ind Sept29 This city is now the center of attraction in the tin plate industry on account of the formal opening or dedication of the great works established here The town has had a peculiar his t2ry S2years ago was a little village of only 600 inhabitants Now it is a thriv ing little city of 12000 people built up by manufactures and as it happens all of the protected class Besides the tin plate fac tory employing 300 hands 75 per cent of is horn are skilled workmen receiving $2 to $10 a day and turning out 2500 boxes of plates per week there is one of the largest plate glass factories in the country El wood is certainly a product of the protect ixe policy and is not a very poor example either the generals are still alive Those of the highest rank even then in mid dle life are gone but brigadiers and vnnnQ'inaior hCv generals are still numbered by scores and it is surprising that so many of them are in such com plete Obscurity Among these is Major General Alfrpd Plonsan GENERAL PLEASANTON ton who is a veri table hermit in Washington city He occupies a small room in the old Grea son House and for months together is seen only by those who attend to his daily wants He was almost a hermit when the bill came before congress t( retire him as a brigadier general He had been a major general in com mand of the cavalry corps of the Army of the Potomac he had fought the first real cavalry fight of the war at Brandy Station June 12 1863 had met and thwarted the advance of the enemy upon Gettysburg holding army in doubt and abeyance until infantry came up to fight the decisive battle of the war and had never been found wanting when duty and patriotism re quired his presence either in camp or in the field He won his spurs as far back as the battle of Resaca de la Palma in the war with Mexico when as lieuten ant and adjutant of Colonel bat talion he earned well deserved special mention in the official reports of that most remarkable engagement General Zachary Taylor afterward president "Old was especially fond of him and in recognition of his gallant services recommended him for brevets and promotion or all this and subsequent work as commissioner of internal revenue and subtreasurer he fully expected the rank of brigadier' retired and when congress merely gave him the rank of retired major of cavalry he felt it keenly Even this much it is said was due to the strenuous exertions of ex confederate congressmen who had known him old army before the He was born in Washington June 7 1824 and was graduated from West Point in 1844 in the same class with General Grant He entered the army after the usual leave of absence on Nov 3 1845 re ceived a commission as second lieutenant in the Second dragoons with which he was ever after identified His record shows several promotions for and meritorious beginning at Palo Alto and ending with the last con flict with Price in Missouri His record during the civil war was uniformly orilliant as all readers know and be was commissioned as major general for important achievements and with the applause of the whole nation Yet he was retired with his old regular army rank major of cavalry General Pleasanton is said to have vever sworn profanely in his life but in bis early service he always used the aame of his commanding general as an oath so his of Mexican war days has become a national excla mation A few years later he began to swear by historic names and his "Great has likewise taken the public fancy A few years ago his brother started the laughable "blue glass craze and the general wao terribly annoyed by its attribution to him Scott he would ex claim sir I am not the rr an No nr That is my brother a militia ma jor general who lives in Philadelphia Great ghost man what do yon fake me for? Who do you think I am? Great ghost no He was especially exasperated in Paris when scientists called to ask him about it for as he once expressed it people here and over there seemed to know more about blue glass than they do about the men the real men who commanded our armies during the war Confound Blue glass? No Great ghost confound He was never married and though uniformly courteous to ladies expressed a decided preference for the society of men His only companion for several years was Air Greason or as he called himself the Irishman who kept the hotel Since that death the general has steadily grown Niore reserved He treats old comrades with politeness but does not return their calls or answer their letters Some years ago he gave up smoking Ilf never used liquor to any great extent he cannot ride horseback now and his sole pleasure is in reading Bill Say New York Sept 29 Col Nelson edi tor and proprietor of the Kansas City Star today made a statement that when parlia ment again convened in England a bill for placing a duty on American wheat would be introduced and pamphlets urging the policy of such measure be distributed throughout England London Sept The report cabled from New York regarding the in troduction of a bill to place a duty on for eign wheat is here pronounced nonsensi cal if it implies that any responsible mem ber of the commons will introduce such a bill Some organs have urged such a thing but not a prominent member is in the remotest way connected with it pace Guy won lying Jib third Time 2:04 a iiy twH Major won Edith inl Jalesco third Moloch i 't time 2: 15 rity pu i unflushed I lowing lr took only one heat Time Slo stiti tn Everything but It Cured Hint is no um of said the white haired man ns he smoked bls cigar after dinner in an up town restaurant make any one believe fur any length of time that you are better than you really are or that you know more than you really do You may be able to de prive a few persons for a short time but you are the one who will suffer In the end every time or at least ninety nine times out of every hundred Like everything rise no one will believe this until he has had the experience and I remember quite distinctly the time that I paid for mine was when I whs a young man and I was paying my first visit to the rench capital Soon after I arrived in Paris I went to a barber shop to get shaved sat down in the chair and the barber liegnn his Work When as I supposed he had about fiuishetl the job he said something in rench Now at the time I thought as most young men of twenty do that 1 knew about all there was to be known Of rench I knew exactly one I was determined that I would not show my Ignorance to this rench' barber however so every time he said anything to me I an wered as I say after I supposed that job was finished the barlM kept saving something to me occasionally and I kept answering iot ten or fifteen minutes perhaps and every time he made a re mark he opened afresh liottle of some sort of perfume or other and applied a portion of it to some part of my head inally he finished and took away the towels am! aprons Then he wrapped up a lot of bot tles and gave them to me with my check which was for a sum equal in our money to five dollars condition of affairs flashed across me and I realized that was paying for all the fresh bottles of perfume which the barijer had opened but I say a word I took the package and went my way after paying the bill But it was a lesson tome which I shall never forget and since that time I have never trim! to make any nno believe that I knew more than I really did It may be nibarra' ing to acknowledge your ignorance sometimes but it is not half so hard to do this a dozen times as it is to be caught once in assuming to know more than you really do New York Tribune IN 2:40 LAT Candidate Record John YV Moon Republican nominee for congress in the Ninth Michigan dis trict was born in Wayne county Mich Jan 18 1836 and until eighteen years old worked on his farm In 1852 he moved to Jack son county and work 1 four years in the lurc her camps and sawmills and then went to Michigan where ho has since Jived He com menced as a saw yer in Michigan became foreman and then acquired an interest in a lumber ing outfit of his own and is now wealthy He held various minor offices previous to 1884 when he was elected state sen ator and two years later he was re elected He is president of the Muskegon Savings bank vice president of the street railroad company and is interest ed in various other business enterprises They Want the Tariff Disturbed They Want Wildcat Banking Re instated by Law rilomparisoD of Cleve land and Harrison Administrations i Special Correspondence Washington Sept 12 The interest which the farmers of the country are taking in the political struggle now at hand is exemplified by the large num ber of letters and inquiries being re ceived at the department of agriculture and treasury department and by other information received here armers Pleased with McKinley Pros perity The farmers find their condition so much improved in the past year that they are inclined to credit it to the Mc Kinley law With an increase of $150 UUUjUUU iheir sales to other countries a decrease of $30000000 in the farm products imported into this country a reduction in the price of sugars and many other articles which they are com pelled to buy they find themselves more than satisfied with the McKinley law about which thfjy were somewhat skeptical two years ago Election of Cleveland Will Reverse Con ditions They know that the election of Mr Cleveland means an entire overturning of the tariff system It is generally con ceded that if the Democrats are success ful in electing their presidential ticket they will also control house and senate So many new senators are to be elected by the legislatures to be chosen this fall and such a large proportion of those who are going out this time are Republicans that general Democratic success will mean Democratic control of the senate as well as the house This the farmers argue would mean a general overturn ing of the tariff system reciprocity anu all the features of the present law under which they have received about $200 000000 more for their products this yeai than they did under the last year of the old tariff armers Oppose the State Banking Scheme Another feature which interests the farmers very much is the proposition of the Democratic platform to return to lhe old state banking system and the treasury department is constantly plied with queries as to whether the present very satisfactory currency system is going to be maintained They Were the Greatest Sufferers The farmers dread a return to the old system under which they' were the great est sufferers years ago The people ci the cities and towns had means of keep ing themselves posted as to the value of the thousand and one kinds of bank notes that were afloat under the old state bank ing system But the farmers were the sufferers They had no means of keep ing accurately posted as to the value of these notes and they were obliged take the chances on them when the' re ceived them as pay for their grain and other farm products That they were often imposed upon and met with great losses frequently was quite natural And that they should dread a return to that system as proposed by the Demo cratic platform is not surprising Laud Record of Cleveland's Administra tion One of the most unfortunate things that has happened to Mr Cleveland of late is his agitation of the question as to the treatment of homesteaders and others desiring to obtain homes in the great northwest Leading Democrats here regret very much that this matter has been stirred up There was no feature of President Cleveland's administration excepting perhaps its relation to the soldiers and pensioners which was sc unpopular and created so much dissatis faction with the farmers and the masses generally in the northwestern states as the policy of his public land office President commissioner vf public lands Sparks it will be remembered made a very unenviable record for himself and his party in this particular General Sparks practically accused about nine tenths of the home steaders and persons desiring to enter lands of dishonesty and established new division for the purpose ofi review ing every case Thousands of armers Charged with raud Thousands of cases were thrown into the "fraud and at the end of President term of office many thousands of cases involving mil lions of acresand the homes of hundreds of thousands of people were piled up un der these general charges of fraud un acted upon Many of them had been pending for years and the homesteaders had been unable to obtain patents or titles to their homes A Startling Comparison During the Cleveland administration the number of agricultural patents is sued was only 162754 while under the Harrison administration the number is sued has been over 400000 The num ber of acres to which titles were granted by the Cleveland administration was 26 000000 while the number of acres which titles have been granted under the Harrison administration is 64 000 000 or the first time since the early history of the Cleveland administration the land office has caught up with its work and is able now to attend to cur rent business The thousands and thou sands of cases which were found piled up in the office when 1 his administration took hold have been disposed of hun dreds of thousands of homes made hap py and 400000 titles to homes completed It is probable that Mr Cleveland did not fully realize the contrast between the present administration and that of the land office under his own administration else he would not have1 stirred this mat ter up by his recent letter on the subject The farmers received $160000000 more for the products they sent abroad under the first year of the McKinley lawthan they did under the last full year of old tariff? A 51ixed up Meas 1 Sept 29 Counsel for As i 'ukl of the firm of ield Lindleyher applied to Judge Pratt in! today io vacate the order direct mdgment creditor Dietz be al oxamine the books Gould made that the liabilities were about ml that everything was in con ilc had been able to collect onlv loiioo but hoped to get as much oiinsel for Dietz argued that the ii to Gould was illegal and to de Htors and should beset aside Atmlnut Hill Et AJ i Sept 29 The World says a from Poughkeepsie states that the rm uf the supreme court has i jo isj(n in favor of the respond of Andrew Baird and mainJ the supervisors of Kings ompoi them to reassemble and i ho assembly election districts of It is understood rela no standing room in the court i cot maintain their action tion Waylaid and Murdered Antonio 3 ex Sept 29 James and Chas Mosely two prominent men of thi county were waylaid and red by two Mexican Cowboys yes i The assasins were captured and nmient is high lynching is nut im wSpl IHBSr IS 31p: ISjSI Sgl II Sgit IKl SSl 'aaffijap SarrtM llili dpSI Sv hiS iB 1 4 i.

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About The Missoulian Archive

Pages Available:
5,680
Years Available:
1870-1900