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About Big Hole Breezes (Jackson, Mont.) 1898-1915 | View This Issue
Big Hole Breezes (Jackson, Mont.), 22 Dec. 1899, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn83025326/1899-12-22/ed-1/seq-2/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
-ML . . j ' ' i „ ' * ‘ ‘ <* 1 . \ '. . V /. * h a ., ' ' * ps-, &* ' it i 'r<- u - E. h f . tag! £ ay»*B«olthbTra**T*al; toOfOaUO- in tho bo uhlUty to opriat f t * ta tow* a oortona atajact too (WtadbMtea tom taatost boat that know fit a t tela tent are tea Briton tad ■•linn,\ aaya Dr. Parktarat. \I* Both- bb aton ttaa a gorilla with a coa- i* And mm* a n lack tvan the Heart Rochefort, tk* a*tof • f Faria S/latxaaalgoant, baa (ought 210 duel*. t o aovoral occasion* ha ha* been (lightly by accident ______ i reason (or England not of throwing op the aponge In M lifffi* of thla kind la Ita needing It to wipe Tranevaal off the map. A Ftttabnrg paper aaya that Ameri- cana «*• op 260,000,000 poker chlpe an nually. Mow, who can toll how many Americana a n need op by poker chip* I Jlmenea baa been elected President of Ban Domingo, but he will make a —— i m if ha apenda much money (or furniture that cannot be easily packed Itad moved. We are Indebted, after careful and patient enumeration, to 167,000 con temporaries for the pleasant Informs tion that Columbia la still gem of the ocean. _ _ _ _ _ —a Win or lose, It seems to be the fash lea the world over to giro natal officers Pi t h i n g that will indicate the esti mation la which they are held by their •ountry. la the United States they get swords, la Spain they glee them the ax There Is a one-legged man at Wheel ing, w . Va., who bat bad another one- Itgged man arrested on the charge of stealing the former's wooden leg. This ahowa that while people may be willing to respect one another's misfortunes they are seldom Inclined while to doing to Ignore a chance to help themselres. Sir Thomas Llptou says he will cbal lenge (or the America's cup again un last some other Englishman does so, la view of the treatment that Sir Thomas received there should be little trouble la finding somebody else who would like to come over and get beaten. The lege says yf.s a k _ president of Amherst Col 'down the gage boldly. He nglteh language contains the Ire In the world, the classics fie the contrary notwithstanding. There fore a correct understanding of the Bn gtiek tongue and Its capabilities It the Prims essential of a liberal education. All of which makes It appear that Am herst’s MW president It right up In the fan of progress. The latest report of the Pension Office has lately been glean to the public. The rolls mow contain 081,000 names, of which one-fourth represent widows and ether dependents The amount paid on this account during the last fiscal year waa * 188 ^ 00000 , . The total outlay for pensions up to date has been 62,400, 000,600), a sum which, as the Outlook Intimate#, would have paid for all tha real oateto ta the acceding States. Econ omically considered, the afterclap of war strikes quite ns bard as the orlg Inal Mow. POw people will find fault with Ad rnlrnl Dewey'a aversion to promiscuous handshaking, and hi* frankness in ob jecting te It and refusing to submit to It la the la teat of tho many Uttle In- fileee o f his candid nature which the AsMrieaa people have come to admire ateag with his profeaalonal ability and his splendid, manly character. Moat pebtte man, wa believe, really object te thla aert of thing, bat rarely does om stead up and apeak bis mind on tha subject as tha Admiral has. Most of thorn Buffer in alienee. The man who taslata on shaking hands with tha “man a( tho bow” la about on n par with tha fearetatent souvenir collector and the camera \fiend.\ It Is a source of never-ending woq- fief te the careful observer that nearly trary evil earrias with It Ita own rem edy. Some people, for went of some thing better, have been worrying a goad deal over tha possibility that tha aarth to te bsoome overpopulated la the count of a certs!a number of centuries IL Vanthter, the French sociologist, la n recent analysis of statistics, finds O at the birth-rate la dacraasing In every country qf Europe but four. Italy, Spain, Sente and Norway are th« neeptiona, and even hers tha mar gin of differenoa to very amall it ■hated never be lost sight of that the ,tonafft,mce la primarily a product of what ws a n to do when > are changed, for this la all i of. If anything wa should anwglia te amkteg tbs eon- i no healthy t t may be, mnvtag i t e take eara of themselves. Itoam msktag too circuit of tha a b b * ftote.tiptu aceatury ago tbs Eagltoh bwgusgo was apokeu by hardly a w n than 20,000,000 peoples, while today It tothaoMoommnaly need by man than 200,000,000k Mot has there ever bean u time when tha spread of our native tongue was mote rapid or when tt had become mora necessary to tha com mercial transact tens of tho world than at present For centuries tha French language has been tha exclusive lan guage of the court*. To-day there to uo court to Europe where an Americas minister cannot transact business English.. The English language la be ing almost entirely used In tha Vene- soelan arbitration court at Parte. The American proposals at the peace con ference required no translation* ex cept ferdelegtteo from other than Bw- ropoaa countries. English will replace Spanish in Cuba, Porto Rico and tha Philippine* and It la gradually sap- planting nil other* In South America. Speech also fellows tha flag. Ptoaaoat lacteaU Owartlaa tk* World Over-Sajrteaa that Are Cheer- Cal tp <»« er Tamm—Fanny M a o tlaaa that Tea WUI knior, j Ceefirae-t piaster. \Marry your tha young woman adnrafnUy exclaimed. “! wouldn't marry yon If yon were— \ \Jupiter Olympus, tha Osar of Rua- tla, or the Count of Moat* Cite to T tarcaatically Interrupted the young Many attempt* have bean mad*, with tome success, to draw Into tha coun try, for employment upon farms soma of tho labor which goes to waste cities These enterprise# have dealt usually with pen; but may not agri cultural settlements for women b* a so lution for the perplexities of some of tho women who have to earn their liv ing, but find the usual employment* of women overcrowded! In England an association baa been formed to pro mote inch a movement It publishes a newspaper, has established couraes of Instruction, and 1* doing what It can to Induce women who cannot get work In cities to \go back to the laud’' for support At Reading College two house* have been fitted up, which are occupied by women- students who at tend claaaes in horticulture, chemistry, botany, entomology and dairy work. This Instruction alms to fit women for three different kinds of work. The first la the direction of the home, gar den or farm. The second la tho work of general gardeners or grower* of grapes mushrooms tomatoes and cu cumbers the care of dairies and the raising of poultry. The third 1* the establishing of agricultural settle ments where groups of women In ad Joining cottages, with land attached cau apply their knowledge to market- gardening. This experiment la very In teresting. There la nothing unsuitable In tt. In fact, market gardening, bee keeping, poultry-raising and the grow lug of flower* and small fruits seem to be Industrie* for which women are naturally adapted. Rightly directed, they arb among tha most profitable connected with life cultivation ef the soli. Surely, If women should enter them, far healthier and happier lives would result than follow the struggles for self-support In our cities WBDDBD ON A WARSHIP. Miss Buts want to New Tork from Dayton, Obis to tell Dr. R. W. Plum mer, of Chicago, good-by wbon bio vea •el aalled for Manila, Wbon obo went aboard the veanol WM coaling, prepare, tory to a start Dr. Plummer suggest ed an Immediate marriage, she agreed and tbe ceremony was performed la the preaeuce of tbs ship’s officers Divorce Possible, A s f orth of American ahonld keep la aaktevto te Dewey baton their eye* ate totem s tha gfetere woS oa their tenia. They cna loan (ram K that woaytblag ta f i T M i te a eouatry Bb* fete fftfiaa tea tafiMfifal ■ifato anra te ta a a They eaa taan i fit Atari bo who to tetthtd over a wffi to gtvan Ther esa l t u a E m E that too ter mas of feho-I am w a d M tem ^ a it He—Tea; bat yos Bvo to Chicago. Veatflstisg TiBantS Various devices have been rate la Europe for too veatfeatioa of tunnel*. Is m m cases cfl-taratef or electric locomotives hove boos oubutftuted for tho trip through the tread aafi toother cues artificial ve&tibtiea baa \Nor she rejoined, with Increasing acorn. \Not even If you wore tho man who aent Dewey to the PhlllpplneoH— Chicago Tribune. On tho Prior Doom \There te one good thing about an ocean voyage,” remarked the globe trot ter. “What la that?\ queried hla compan ion. “Why, a man can get ns tight as he please* every day and everybody will think he la only seasick,\ answered the traveler.—Chicago News Power of tbo Free Pate, \Did old Skinflint object to hi* daugh ter marrying an actor!” “No. It whs shown to him that he could get free seats every time his son- in-law comes to town.”—Philadelphia North American. kkto wot Uka* tar go tar school to do only omo wotgtts ter stay aw*y.-8aa W Francisco Examiner. A ns tsar Thsstrlcst*.' Mabel (the heroine)—Oh, dear! Tho curtain win rise ta five minutes Are yon anro yon trill know your lines! Jack (the hero)—All except the part where I kit* yon. I think we'd better nheane that ones more.-New Yqrk Journal. Tha Way* of Wo warn. Absent-minded professor (mistaking balr brush for a mirror)— ltealiy, I do need a shave. Wonlat-rut Development.* Watts—The development of the sense of touch in the blind Is something at ways a wonder -to me. Qotroi—1 have It pretty well devel oped myself. I have got It so I can tell a borrower two blocks away.-Indian spoils Journal. carter ai- to* prisons! anpervtoton o f ■ to* Philadelphia Record. Instead of a Journalist, became editor of \ lo a n Gyro* McCormick. Inventor of to* first pouring oat shot and shell like,the lab at HomsF In 1802, shortly after a* machine anccaasfoBly operated in 1881. ter, too machine a, question, however, earned tha associate editorship at hot which was for years an object of poors ont a great volume of water on \Scribner’s MagasIne,\ and upon tbs ridicule, both in tola country and Eng-, a fire with tolling effect This piece death of Dr. J, G. Holland, 1881, sue- land. I of apparatus la known a* the Monitor ceeded him as editor-in-chief, tbe Forty yean ago when the people bo- battery and wa* invented by H. H. of the magazine having been, la the Gortar, constructor for the San Fran- meantime, changed to Tbe Century. In Cisco Are department It Is designed tote position hla tnfiuence upon Amerl- t» take the place of a water tower In can literature and art baa been second to no man of hla times Mr. Glider’s first volume of versa, \Tbe New Day.\ appeared hi 1875. and was followed by ‘The Celestial Pas sion,” 1887; “Lyrics,\ 1885 and 1887; “Two Worlds and Other Poems.\ 1881; \The Great Remembrance, and Other Poems,” 1888. The contents of thesa five volumes were gathered into ono volume, under the title “Five Books ot In amall confines where tha latter cannot be taken and can be used la a base ment blaze and np to a fourth story In clusive. Several lines of hose are con nected. thus concentrating a great force of water that la easily handled by one man. i The noszle la provided with tip*. When not In action the table upon which rests the huge uossle is suspend ed M M in throw: the .weight on th* Bong.\ and published hy the Centure gan to see the practicability of inch an Invention the combination reaper and mower wo* thought to be very fine and tha farmer who could own on* was envied by farmer* who Could not afford __ to pay tho price these machine* Alfred, dear, I’ve one favor to beg o t ! brou«llt Tho price of a reaper In those you—If we meet the Strebel* be as attentive and affectionate toward me as you can! Tou see, Frau Strebel Is always hateful to me, and her husband I* as selfish and Inconsiderate In his treatment of her as you are ordinarily with me.—Heltere Welt Two Qosslpv. Mrs. Podd—I'd tell you something If I thought It wouldu't go any further. Mrs. Pepper—You needn't be afraid.' I guess I’ll never see tbe day 1 can make a piece of news go farther than you can.—Philadelphia Bulletin. Needs More Prectlce. Mrs. Nexdore—Our minister evident ly doesn't believe In practicing what he preaches. Mrs, Nabor—Mow do you mean! Mrs. Nexdore—Well, he seems to have so much difficulty delivering bis sermons. When to Be to Dead Esrneet “We want a clergyman who can see a Joke.\ ‘T can see a Joke all right, but 1 don't want any humorous arrangements about my salary.”—Chicago Record. A D sncerone Man. Halfback—We ought to get that young freshman from Oklahoma on the football team. Center Rush—Why! Halfback—The boys tried to haze him last night, and six of them are In the hospital to-day.—New York Journal. Objected tn the 'T o o n * o n * .\ \Whut'S da( you wah ilugluT' asked the old man. “list's de lates’ coon song,” answer- ed Mr. Brastus Plnkley, “Well, you ougbter go on 'bout yob work, 'stld o’ makln’ yohself laughable tryin’ to Imitate white folks' ways.”— Washington Star. Unavoidable^ Reporter—Was that accident un avoidable! Railroad President—Certainly, sir, certainly. No one to blame. You see the watchman had two crossing* to look after, half a nn.c apart. You can’t expect a man to be In two place* at once, can you!—New York Weekly. Knew What to Kspact. Te you on duty, policeman r “Yea, miss. Why!” \'Cause I’m lost!”—Punch. Coffee f o r Breakfaat. Doctor—Dyspepola, ch. Yon want to Arink t enp of hot water first thing •very morning. Patient—I always do. My boarding mistress Invariably serves coffee for breakfast—Philadelphia Record. A1 wave “ O nt\ Dp to 1 A. M. Wife (pathetically)—Are yon going to ta ont until niter midnight again te- night! Hoaband—Oh, I suppose ao! i sever aeem to hare any lock on til about 1 'clock—Detroit Journal. Kiehast Mtlk. The richest asflk to that which cones too doae at ton mttrtng. A tart fftodnnafi f to t toa ferat tortf y M s f nfi at a ndtotog cantataefi tefiy 1*7 p f poakiat a t the Mne*. Tommy—Pop, are there nine Mnaeo! Tommy's Pop—Too. my son; accord- tog to mythology. Tommy—I* tost why n cat has nine Hves!—PhUadelphi* Record. H n c U b llttr. IVluiper-Spungcr Is a very sociable sort of fellow, Isn’t he! Sharpe—Yes, he's always trying to borrow money. Poa -Morttm Improvements. “O, things will go better In tbls world when tho fools are all dead, but w* sha'n’t be her* to see It!”—Pollchlnelle. Crnabed Him, The Shoe Clerk—Beg your pardon, madam, but It Is a number five shoe you want, Instead pf a number three. She—Number five! You must be thinking of the slae of your hat.—In dianapolis Journal. The Daet. “Did Madge Simpson enjoy her trip to the Dewey celebration !” “I don’t know; she talked about tt all the time 1 was there, but I was busy talking to her about my trip to the mountains.”—Detroit Free Press. At the Amateur Performance. First Gentleman In the Lobby-Hat the cnrtaln fallen on the first act! Second Gentleman In the Lobby- Better than that! It has fallen on tbe head of the leading man and knocked him senseless.—Somerville Journal. day* wa* more than three times the cost of a reaper to-day. In 1860 It took two men to reap a field —one to drive* the other to sit astride the machine teeing the cutter and rake in with his arm* and throw down the bundle* as fast a* reaped. The Illustra tion give* a fair Idea of the crude affair the farmer waa compelled to use tu the '60s. Recently n farmer was examin ing this old reaper. He had owned one like It during tbe civil war. He said It took him In those day* more than twice a* long to reap hla wheat as It does now. wheels and relievo the horse of the strain. When required for action the table ta retagged by a lever .which threw* It forward to a level at the same time moving the center of grav ity forward. The weight Is thus thrown between the toes at the end of the shaft and the axle, giving the machine sta bility to withstand a back pressure of 1,500 pounds to the square Inch. Tbe toee referred to are spike* under tbe end of the shaft for. the purpose of ob taining n purchase In the ground to prevent moving. The vertical movement of the nozzle 1* on an Improved ball and socket Joint, allowing a free flow of water at any Company In 1884. He has slue* pub lished “For the Country,\ 1887, and “la ConsampMoa. Nearly one-fourth of tbe deaths among the animal* a t tbe British Zoo logical Gardens last winter were due to tuberculosis. This Is nearly double the human average, and confirms the rapidly growing belief that tbe disease Is emphatically one of confinement and overcrowding, far this society's superb menagerie ,1s very much cramped for room. The difference In the distribu tion of tbe disease between the various classes of animals at tha Zoo la marked. Reptiles of all sorts are al most exempt, probably because the tubercle bacillus cannot live at the low temperature of tbelr bodies, although two or three suspicious cases were found tn tortoises and python*. Ani mals suffer nearly 60 per cent, more severely than birds. But the most itrlklng difference Is that between the meat-eaters and vegetable feeders. Among vegetarians (monkeys, ante lopes, deer and kangaroos) It causes 26 per cent of all deaths; among meat eaten (lions, wolves, small cats, civ ets) barely 8 per cent. Among grain- eating birds (pheasants, pea-fowl, grouse, ostrich*) tubercle Is responsible for 80 per cent of all deaths. Among flesh eaters (eagles, vultures, owls, crows) l l per cent Comment Is super fluous. An open-air life and a meal diet are clearly tbe best protection against consumption. kiss A S trong Dafonae. Mother—Why did yon let him yon! Daughter—How could I help It! He was holding both my hands, and I couldn’t kick him, could I!—New York JonrnoL W inning A rgnm -nt. The Invalid—Bat I am already gain, log great benefit from Bogger's Onion Ointment. The Agent—Yes, and If It should cure yon, *H yon would get would be a sin gle column wood cut; whereas, if you use onr remedies yon will oorely find relief, and the two-colomn art etching we will print in all the principal papers of the country win be something to gaze on with pride.—Indiana poll* Jour nal * Costly Fruit lo England. At a farmers’ club In Devonshire, England, not long since, aq experienced [srdener In tbe employ of one of the nobility made the statement that the Income from ten acres covered with (lass beneath which early vegetables and fruits were grown would exceed that from 10,000 acres of the best farm land as ordinarily tilled. No doubt that assertion was extravagant, but It can be said within the lines of conservatism that the Britisher wasn't off In his flg- nres more than 50 per cent. One man, to our knowledge, a German gardener, •old early cucumbers, melons, and relery, from one acre under glaso- cold frames—to Leadvllle and Aspen (Colo.) miner* to tbe amount of from 13,000 to |4,000 a season. In England, where, on account of the damp, chilly climate, even peach trees must be trained flat against a brick or stone wall like vines In order to Insure fruit, and where corn cannot be grown, extremely fancy prices are paid for sitra early fresh fruits and vegetables. A dollar a pound for strawberries and 75 cents apiece for cucumbers are only ordinary prices for tbeso products, when put upon the markets early. Early fruits and vegetables bring handsome returns tn large cities In any country.—California Vlneyardlat angle. A roller bearing Is provided for traveling the nozzle through a horizon tal arc which reduces the friction caused by back pressure to a mini mum. The total weight of the battery complete 1* 1,060 pounds and owing to Its construction and free waterway, a solid stream Is thrown ranging from a. w. OIU>KK. Palestine” last year, both by the Cen tury Company. Mr. Gilder bolds a dlNlliict and hon orable position among American poets. Ills fleet volume, wrllteU uuder the In fluence of Italian studies, coutalucd lyrics of muck Imaginative beauty, It* fine quality and verse sluee has I hhu warmly received, lu Inter years his work has shown a wide range of themes—a broadening rlalou and a deepening purpose. As lm» beeu well said, however, “He remains nevertlie less essentially a lyrist, a maker of songs; a thorough artist, wlm has se riousness. dignity slid charm. His is an earnest nature, sensitive alike to 200 to 800 feet, according to the pres- , vital contemporaneous problems nod ta sure. The noaale with Its tremendous l*1® honey-sweet voice of the Ideal,'' pressure can, as Itefore slated, be easi ly handled by one man, who guides It with a small lever. C e d i R h o d e * - A n ib Stoa. Sixteen year* ago Cedi J. Rhodes, then a man of small means and no po fitical record, stood in a small Kim berley shop and looked for a long time at a map of Africa which hung on tbe waB. An acquaintance who had watched him for several minute* stepped np to Rhode* and asked him whether ho was attempting ta find tbe toenttoa of Kimberley. Mr. Rhodes made no reply for several seconds, then placed hi* right band over tbe, map and covered a largo p v t of south ' and central Africa, from ton Atlantic ta the Indies Ocean. Bleep Mistake*. To get up at 7 o’clock, or 8 o'clock, or any other fixed hoar every morning, no matter at what time yon went to bed the night before la tha most effectual way of making a bad workman of yonr- self. And as for saying that right hour*’ sleep ta what suit* everybody la aa nonsensical as to say that ono ounce of tobacco—no more, no leas—Is the quantity every one ought to smoke In n day. No donbt It la difficult for moat people to sleep aa long tn the morning as tha body requfres to repair Itself. Bust- aeas haring fixed hour*, toe people wbo do tt moot accommodate themselves to them. Still, aa long ah people use alarm* nr bars themselves called they win continue to feel more or leas out of sort* on moot day* of tbelr life. For moot of u* there to only one way nf solving tbe question—that to by go ing to bed nine or ten hours boforo the time when our business require* us to get up, and sleeping until we naturally awake. This would mean getting np at various hows, instead at tbo non*! fixed hour*. But any one who carried out too plaa would feel so vigorous on •rtatag that he could turn tbo Interval before breakfast to good account Nashville has few Idle men. India has Immense coal deposits. Steamer Oceanic employs 500 men. England has 84,083 union engineer*. New York State ha* 188,455 union ists. New York has a Hebrew Bakers’ union. Ixmdon bricklayers get 18 cents per hour. Wheeling made 66,250,000 stogies last year. Berlin sewage farm laborer* get $2.61 a week; 17-hour day. Unionists managed an Industrial ex position a t Minneapolis. Southampton has municipal dwelling- house* (edifices erected and rented by to* city). There la no mill and smeltermen’i union in Anaconda. The largest smelter city 1* in the State of Wash ington. At Pittsburg the carpenter* and painters bare withdrawn their dele gatee from the Central Union because the dues were Increased from 81-3 to 25 rents. > Canada's trades and labor congress wants the alien labor law amended so that tt will cover all aliens Imported under contract, “no matter from what country they come.\ A labor political party to projected. Ho Had Told Her a Few. CONSUMPTION IN OLD BOOKS. Twenty Clerks Killed by Germ* In Mlchlssn ' tnta Record* - Specialist* In pulmonary diseases, physicians Jii general and particularly clerks and office managers, whose (lu ties compel them to constantly examine and handle documents and record Jone*—My peftSaber* want me to write some fairy tales for the Chil dren'* Department Mrs. JoaeO—How did they find ont test you were talented to that way 7 New P n g s t to Defter*. A singular and unexpected source of danger was lately discovered on a French boCer. Tho top of this wa* ^covered with sand and t tiny steam Jet Mtaptng around a rivet set some at (OStSVMPTirz’s lilt!MB MARK. books, are Intensely Interested In tit* report eeut from the Michigan Hosrd of Health at Lansing, telling of the death from tuberculosis of twenty clerks, wbo contracted the disease through handling old records. It seems that the clerks were em ployed la a labor bureau, snd tbelr work compelled them to turn over iml over old volumes of records. Within a short time the men were seized wl!h consumption, one after another, anil all died. It was finally discovered that tue volumes of records were full of tlm bacilli of tuberculosis, or consump tion, and It was decided that the men bad become diseased through constant and close, use of the Infected volumes. It was learned on careful Inquiry rlint a consumptive clerk had tieen employ ed III tbe place, and that he bad a habit of moistening his fingers In his moutn when be turned the pages of tbe books. Heaps of Cold to New Yor'r. Bigger heaps of gold than ever were burled by Captain Kidd or carried by pirates on the Spanish mala are hauled around New York City every week, •ays the Scientific American, to and from banks and wharves, In common place trucks. D e llotoos E a k lm o a a Dish. A favorite dish with tbe Eskimo Is an Ice-cream made of seal oil Into which mow Is stirred until the desired consistency baa been obtained; then trottot tmrrtw v f different kinds are added, with a Uttle of toe fish egg for flavoring. Tall M m Beasvo ta BsghoA __ Tho directors of toe Great Northern the purtidM !i motion, creating s novel A t O at Brte *affwa? «f Bngtoafi hare tawed a dr- ,*and Blast teat wa* nqfiffiy retting a 1 Marveloa* Lack. Sir Robert Rtwlinson. K. C. B., is toe only man wbo was ever knocked ont of the saddle by a cannon ball without being killed. Final care: “Jimmy, when I spank you it hurts me worse than tt (baa you.* “Wefi, mo. why don't yon put oa pa’o hoxto'-gtoveor—Chicago Ros ord.