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About The Lump City Miner (Lump City, Mont.) 1895-1895 | View This Issue
The Lump City Miner (Lump City, Mont.), 08 June 1895, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/2014252004/1895-06-08/ed-1/seq-3/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
6.e THE LUMP CITY MINEft: LUMP CITY, MONTANA. s , ob Dat 'less had you erved edoo? com- 1,ent •t ts for n In o• me- otoree t t r - lace ire al inns te KNOWLEDGE Brings comfort and improvement MO tends to personal enjoyment when rightly used. The many, who live bet- ter than others and enjoy life more, with less expenditure, by more promptly adapting the world's best products to the needs of physical being, will attest the value to health cf the pure liquid laxative principles embraced in the remedy, Syrup of Figs. Its excellence is due to its presenting In the form most acceptable and pleas- ant to the taste, the refreshing and truly beneficial properties of a perfect lax- ative; effectually cleansing the system, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers and permanently curing constipation. It has given satisfaction to millions and met with the approval of the medical profession, because it acts on the Kid- neys, Liver and Bowels without weak- ening them and it is perfectly free from every objectionable substance. Syrup of Figs is for sale by all drug- gists in 50e and $1 bottles, but it is man- ufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, whose name is printed on every package, also the name, Syrup of Figs, and being well informed, you will not accept any substitute if offered. Many men of many minds CLIMAX 13..; all other kinds Climax Mug is much the best chewing tobacco made. It's LocrInard's. W$3. L. rrr POR A K11 , 40. O' CORDOVAN, rerscma MANDL= CALF. 4.$37te FIN( CAu &Kamm,. $ 3,'9 POLICE,3.... 32 57. WORKlM'p • eXTes eiNr- . J - *2 4 1 7 1 1 BOYS SalielSMEI - L.A.DMM11- 3 . dei9:2. ‚ 1. 7 - 0 i kEST P t t r . ) Initl e tt e . °veep»Million Peopts wear the onoc °NJ -Leas. j W. L. Douglas $3 & $4 Shoes All our shoes are equally satisfactory FOND OF THE MELODRAMATIC Inc k Cain . Works Plentifully Sprinkled With Dramatic Situations. It is curious what a penchant Dickens had for certain melodramatic @Rua - (Ions, which seemed to his fancy so telling that he repeated and reproduced them many times over. Ile had a lively dramatic turn, says a writer In the Giaitleman's Magazine, and I always thought would have had extraordinary success as a dramatist. I once asked him why he had not taken up this \line\ seriously, and I think he made the ex- cuse—it was long ago, many years be- fore his death—that he had not time, taste or patience. The real reason, no (ioubt, was that he could not work without expanding, and could - not \carve heads upon a cherry -stone.\ A literary friend, who has his \Boz\ at his fingers' ends, has with great acute- ness pointed out to me that Nicholas Nickleby was a genuine \Adelpiii walk- ing gentleman;\ his manner, heroic bursts, protection of his sister, beard- ing of Ralph, etc., were all elements in the Adelphi melodrama. Ralph was a regular stage villain. That his works were all dramatic and conceived in the true spirit of the stage is plain from the vast list of adaptations. Each story has been adapted again anti again, and will bear the process admirably. The method of winding up his plot, to which he was excessively partial, was the un- masking of the villain owing to the be- trayal of some confederate. The parties are generally brought together In a room by the more virtuous members; the confederate then emerges from his concealment and tells a long story of illainy. We have this denouement first in \Oliver Twist,\ where Monk makes his revelations. In \Nickleby\ Ralph is confronted with the man Snawley and Squeers. In \The Old Curiosity Shop,\ Quilt) is similarly exposed. In \Barna - by Budge,\ Haredale forces his heredi- tary enemy to make revelations. In \Chuzzlewit Jonas is confronted with another betrayer. In \David Copper - field\ Uriah Heap is denounced and ex- posed by Mr. Micawber. In \Bleak Rouse,\ Lady Dedloek is similarly tracked. In nearly all the cases the guilty person goes off and commits suicide. They give the bent value tor the »ovary. They squat cu.teá shoes to style and fit. Their waseetnit Otaulttlas are uneumossed. The prices are manors\ --stamped on sot& Prom te 5.1 saved •ver ötkor Snakes . If year dealer cannot supply you we can. WELL MACHINERY all gure..-,oftiod Stow' Ltity Engine & Unit Works «tort Pam. Dave been tested and AND JETTINt 1 MACHINFItY, etc. tt • .•••liar• i.• V « 4 , u• City. Iowa \137/1 e. H 810 i Illostrated ratalogne showing arnout, itoClt DIIILLn, STD 121; Dino. Kane.. nt. — Ns IN.rflflN sw.stintat Itt la, itahIngton, D.'. wIt i e l o 4 - ef w std., Ponerlon Flare*, uily Prosecutes Clulms. 37re Iv lout wag , I .4d44U I. all lig c/.110/11/, ally elan\ L M. U. h. U. /895. girl ( indly Mention This Palm When You Wrip to An Advertiser. INTERESTING SHOE NOTES. Some Perplexing Variations in Color. and Uses. There is no question that the retail àhoe dealer finds It a little more diffi- cult to toe the mark just now than formerly, because of the swift kaleido- scopic changes in colors and forms of footwear, says Boots and Shoes Week- ly. When black reigned with undisput- ed sway and the general form of the shoe at the front end assumed but few modifications, the present bewildering maze of variegated stock had no place in the shoe store. The shoe man's reper- toire was simple then, and the clerk could pass an examination without fear and trembling' lint now he must be well up in geornetrie.t1 figures, for some of which it would have taxed Euclid's ingenuity to furnish a distinctive name. He must know all the fancy names for these centi -toed shoes; and if he is modest and given to blushing he must also be perfect in célor lore as \she is speke\ by feminine moderns; because from the dry -goods store to the shoe store, In the mystic rounds ot hopping, It is only a difference to local apparel now. The !tame esthetic shade samples will very soon prevail, and the shoe clerk cannot, if he expects to be in favor with the grntle sex, afford to con- found \azure\ lvith \moonlight\ blue, nor to mix up \lettace\ with \sage\ green. A dealer says about the con- stantly changing toe ot the modern shoe that this feature has its disadvant- ages for the retailer. If he could sell out closely one style of toe before an- other toe (and woe) came treading on the heels of that shoe, he could get along nicely. But this, of course, is Im- possible, and the consequence is that there are likely to be a good many \nest eggs\ in his boxes. For the sale of these slightly \hack numbers\ as he fashionable@ would term them, the dealer depends upon ronmervatfve buy- ers. Many of . these new toes are dis- tinctions without differences, and yet each requires a last of its own, and no two of them will match to make a per. feet pair. Underatood Mheolertutery Methed. Yesterday was observed as mission- ary Sunday by one of the largest Prea- byterlan churches in the city, anil the pastor preached forcibly and 'en on the dire distress af the Ignorant heathen. and the beneficent Influence of Christianity. A practical businese man, who is not a regular attendant, WAS moved to place a dollar in the collection. After the service he waited around to speak to the pastor When he had secured his attention he said: \Pastor I gave a dollar to the foreign mission this morning. but I was so 1m - pressed by your description of the condition or the heathen raeea that I would really like to have them get the benefit, of that dollar.\ The pastor looked up inquiringly and the man addesi \Here is $10 to pay the ex- pons..i; of getting the one over there.\ Philadelphia Record, Truthful. It takes a girl to outvelt tile law every time. A lane of 16, whn ran away to get married \way out west,\ pasted the number 21 in her \(hoe no hint she rould truthfully @newer the clerk In the af- fIrmetive should he inquire If she was \over 21.\ --Boston Home Journal. California Gold. Cunt\! nin I. being literally 'squeezed for gold lust now. Not only .sse thé old diggings in Calaveras and ri of other countries worked over r,r I he precious dust. hut the very shore along the ocean in sight of San Franchises , la being iiesirehed for It GOVERNMENT 1 AKEN IN. Alladlson :11InnanicrIpt for Which 830,011111 Was Paid. In 1837 congress appropriated $50,- 000 to purchase from Mrs. Madison the • 'manuscripts of the late Mr. Madison.\ After the lapse of half a century the general public is permit- ted to know what was comprised in that purchase, and No. 4 of the bulle- tin of the bureau of rolls and library of the department of state contains a calendar of the manuscripts. A cursory examination of its con- tents gives us an exalted idea of the simplicity of the government officials who performed the transaction. The \gold brick\ and • •green goods\ ex- changes are nearly similar, considered from the standpoint of the purchaser. We do not mean to assert that the sale was a job, but the government was certainly taken in. The attorney general decided many years after that Mrs. Madison was entitled to what she retained, but we marvel at the blindness of the official who dealt with her. The real Madison letters were .scat- tered at auction two years ago. There Is only one series of letters to Madison in the department calendar worthy of note ----the noble series of Jefferson letters. Turning to Washington, says the Nation, we find copies of liVe or six letters. The originals of many (nearly 400) usually long and interesting let- ters from Washington. Pendleton. Ed- mund, Randolph, .Joseph Junes, John Armstrong and others were scattered at the sale just mentioned, and could have been purehased for one-half the sum paid for the collection obtained in 1837. In historical value there could be no comparison between the two lots, and yet the government made no ef- fort to secure the more valuable let- ters sold in 1891. Like a Machine. Which kept In order l'Unb ollioutnly and regu- larly, so tue towers keep up their ètcl.10it it measures are taken tu keep them rit goon worearg taller. 'rats infers, of course, that they arc out of order. The surest recourbe then e tu Hostetter's stomach Bitters, a taxa - ‚Ive mile but ellecilVe, stilun le, also is remedy tor uyspepsiu, malaria, rneumatistm bertuure near unu isidney trouble. Revived el the Curfew Bel. There is to be a revival of the Cur- few in Canada. and if it proves suc- cessful in the cities and towns of that dominion it ia not unlikely that it may be used in some parts of the I nited States. The law has been enacted by the legislatures of Quebec and Ontario was drafted by the Society for the Protection of Women and Chil- dren, and - provides that,. tbe municipal councils rn cities townie :aid Incorpor- ated villages shall have power to pass by-laws for the reg.' iat ion of the tisne after which children shall not be in the streets at nightfall with mil proper guard lucid» p. The law also provides that. these cootie il shall cause a bell to »e rung at or near the truie appointed as a warning, to be called the curfew bell, after which the children so re- quired to be at their homes or off the streets shall be liable to be warned by any constable or police officer to go home.--1.adiei Mime Journal. Deafneee Can Not Be Cured by loeal applicat tilf , f1Il 1101 reach the iliSeMiseil port ion of the ear Thare is only one way to cure Deafneks and that is by constitutional remedies. Deafnesti cities(' by an inflame' condition of the mileour fining of the Eustachian Tube When this tube get. itillitme:1 you have • rumbling sound or imperfect hearing, and when it IS entirely dosed Deafness is the result, •nd unless' the inflerinunt ion ran be taken 01/t and t hi. tube restored to Its nor- mal eondit ion. hearing will be destroyed forever , nine \pan. .tit or tftl are \guise(' by catarrh. which Is nothing hut an iti- flamosrl rond it ion of the , mucous surface, We will give One Hundred Dollars for any ,ame id Isente..- ranaed , futal that •-aim not be • ‚r \4 by Hall 1 atar rb ('mire. Send for , ilars, free F J (11KNI.11 . , Toledo. O Kold by Druggeds. 75e. Fantil) '!Nr. Itelle•Ing the Itandleard. An interesting outgrowth of the difficulty found by many tenement - house owners in volleeting their rents Is a concern that takes such buildings off the hands of owners with a guar- antee of a certain annual eental, less, cl i f course, than the landlord would re- ceive were all hi + flats ostssapied by paying tenants. It. is in effect as if the landlord sold his property and left the purehase money at interest OD mortgage; 1IP DU 'baby I. Cotti•g Teot h. De sure and a» that old and well tried ltaa Wiailmara8001181Na R'i,'r for Childten Teething. Mush and Milk rrrrr •••• IM Milt and milk surprise parties are pe'irin'r in some eastern Those a ho malice the party swoop dos n triton the subject of the surprise with a box of corn meal and a jug of niiiimeo.os line mush is met taiil,th• moin.ou, fo turtles(' into taffy and absielantiv pulled. rakes are baked, apples pared, and the mush is eaten a/ong „il tu fresh milk and rich rrearn The mush and nil* eurprtse furnishes a max imum - hf fun for a minimum of expenditure. Ilegewiari'•trantipbx.te leallaith (31 yrarlia•. Tt,..,././q11/1.1 ender/Its r`milPr. 4 . 61.6\.1 'huppg.41 Ilsa/dt ant Fr/ ••,/ / /4 / ter.. tit .5.H11 , /51,11. W ben a married man fuels sick his mother \Own X, MP/MP* hi wife. After «Ix year* . atiffering. I sae cured by eiso a cure.- Mier Ohio Ave . Al ferny l'a Me lit It tel•e• ,•t flid mail II' •' • t ' ' OVAL BAKING POWDER is the purest and strongest baking powder made. It has received the highest award at the U. S. Gov't official investigation, and at all the Great International Expositions and \\Todd's Fairs wherever exhibited in competition with others. It makes the finest, lightest, sweetest, most wholesome bread, cake and pastry. More economical than any other leaven- ing agent. g e rree le i l e -; We 00 : 4-43,4- e e e # We r eilUee› S ifflZ ‚.0., 106 1 At ' ALL ST.. NZW-Yutt • The 1'. S. Senate. The senate chamber is in the north- ern wing of the capitol at 'Washington. Like the house, it is a square with galleries slanting back to the floor abo%e. It has a large glass roof and a marked lack of ornament in its construction, but it is much smaller than the house, and therefore its pro- portions are better. If you have just Fome over from the house and go directly into the senate galleries the difference you will notice most is the ou et of the senate as compared with the other branch of congress. This is due to the much smaller membership, and also to the smaller size of the hall. If you reach there at 12 o'clock, as you ought in order to get an idea of what a day in the senate is, you will see, when the htiur of noon is leached, the vice-president of the United States, who presides over the senate, enter with the chaplain. Then comes the prayer, and then the vice- president calls the senate to order, and the journal of the proceedings of the previous day is read. Then conies cer- tain routine business. The communications which are sent through the vice-president are laid be- fore the senate. Then the different senators offer petit ons and memorials, and introduce bills and resolutions. W hen these formal matters are dis- posed of. the senate under ordinary eiteumstanees proessedm to its calendar. Here arises a marked difference frein Ore house. The lionse has three calen- dars. and hardly ea cr goes to any one of toem. 'lue senate lias hut one calendar, which is a Ikt. of measures reported from cotninittees. but it goes to that calendar constantly, and dis- po -es of matters upon it either in their order or by senators eallingbnp any particular bill in which they arc in- terested by general cousent. in this way- the senate is enr bles! to transact rapidly a great deal of small business. anti to dispose of bill-, which ut, is not ea›.3 . to get through the (crowded chan- nels of house legislation.- Harper's Young People. Notlea. Dre. If II. Green & Soros of Atlanta, Ga., are the greatest dropsy specIallets in the world. Cure more, patients than the entire army of phyalcians scattered over this beautiful land of ours. A val- uable rile.'overy outside any medical book t.r published opinion. A purely vegrta prepare/ t lr,yr, Remove\' all dropaic al rt,y mittornst rapidly. Ten days' treatment maths! to every sufferer. See ad‘erthiernent in other column. M Bev. a ber «mn la the In , eitor ef a new sort of or namentel g-n».. which ici.ele resemble% how frost on glass n the featii- ery forma 'u taut ut Unrecognizable. -How do you know that Billy Brown is afraid of the Smith boy?\ \'Caruso he went into the hone and fixed himself 80 the Smith boy wouldn't know him.\ -What did he do?\ • s 'our bed his hair.\ Chicago Inter - 'pecan. Short Journeys on a long Road IS the characteristic title of a profusely illustratei book containing over one hun- dred pages of charmingly \ritten deecrip- tionsi of summer resorts in the country north and west of Chicago. The reading minter is new, the illustrations are new, and the information therein wig he new to almost everyone. A copy of \Short Journeys: on a Long Road' sill be sent free tu anyone who will enidose ten cents Ito pay postage) to Geo. H. Heafforik General Passenger Agent Chicsizo. Milwaukee 4- St Paul Railway, t'hicago, Ill. The largest hell la Japan, that in the temple at Kioto, mily -Intim feet high and sixteen feet in diameter across the rim. Illrourte Corn Salve.\ Warranted to .tittz or money iorundoit. AWL yent drugglot tor re Price IA °eats. It rests 27 shillings a week to maintain an knglish lifeboat. One thousand novels are published every year in London—that is over three a 'day. What an ordinary man eats and the way be eats it would be enough to give dyspepsia to aft ostrich-- unless the oe- tricit were wise enough to as- sist his digestion front time to time with an efficient combination of vegetable ex- tracts. Such a prepsiation ii lit'. Pierce's Plea.sant Pellets. They are the pills _ par excellence for those who sometimes rat the wrong things and too much. They stimulate action in all of the digestive organ's. They stop sour stomach, windy lie chine, heartburn, flatulence and cure constipation, biliousness, dyspepsia, in- digestion, sick headache and kindred detangements. Once used they are always in favor. Ely's Cream Balm WILE ( ATARRII Price 80 Cents. I Apply Balm lab:beach weed' itaoa., Warring N.T. FOR ALL THE ILL THAT PAIN 611M BRING T. eitIGOM OIL fts CURE IS KING; Alike witb ACHIM lo Invtrythlos. A GREAT COUGH REMEDY. Perhaps you may think that Scott's Emulsion ia only useful to fatten babies, to round up the angles and make comely and at tractivo, lean and angular women, and fill out the hollow cheeks and stop the wasting of the consumptive, and enrich and vitalize the blood of the scrofulous and anicmic persons. It will do all this —but it will do more. It will cure a Hard, Stubborn Cough -when the ordinary cough syrups and specifics entirely fall. The cough that lingers at ter the Grip and Pneu- monia will be softened and cured by the balsamic heal- ing and strengthening influences of this beneficent food -medicine, namely, Scott's Emulsion of Cod-liver Oil and I I ypopliosphites ot Lime and Soda. Refuse .subslilute. They are never as gœd. Scott a Bownc. Ncw York. AU Druggists. 50e.. and 6