{ title: 'Big Hole Breezes (Jackson, Mont.) 1898-1915, June 27, 1913, Page 6, Image 6', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about Chronicling America - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83025326/1913-06-27/ed-1/seq-6.png', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83025326/1913-06-27/ed-1/seq-6.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83025326/1913-06-27/ed-1/seq-6/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83025326/1913-06-27/ed-1/seq-6/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
About Big Hole Breezes (Jackson, Mont.) 1898-1915 | View This Issue
Big Hole Breezes (Jackson, Mont.), 27 June 1913, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn83025326/1913-06-27/ed-1/seq-6/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
M i l l ■ i l l P M w m m m m m W f f k M k B M k 1 1 1 T h e J a p a n e s e I n C a l i f o r n i a LQ ttEU ESKIMO SCHOOL Situated OB an American Uiand Ferty Miles From Sibari*. An island vt volcanic origin, made up .. of IJfiftt hills and frozen salt marshes: t * mm y Diamond Pickups \ *1 M a short summer, the tentiierature av- ernglug less than 40 degrees, when the tundra grass and lichen grow, and qukkiy man-ring w ild flowers, but must of the year n waste of snow and\ Ice flues that pink themselves In grout hummocks twenty or th ir ty feet high along the shore until the currents themselves are frozen; emphasizing this desolation an Eskimo settlement of yon souls, and in the midst, like a pro tecting angel iwhiek, in truth, it is), a school house floating the stars and stripes, says the Christum Herald. Less than ten degrees west Is the one hundred and eightieth parallel, where east begins again. and it has nlwuys been known as \the school- house furthest west\ until recently a si liool Inis been established at Atku, one of the Aleutian islands, three de- gres still farther west ['lie nearest lund is Indian point, Si berm, forty miles away Since nobody By “ ROOTER” The word “ fan\ has created much | was made some tim e ago when i t was dispute iu the past. Many have won- i decided that a man after crossing first dered w hat the word menus. To some i could turn either way in safety, p r o there is the hazy idea that tt refers go ; t ided he made no attempt to go to see* a fun such us ladies carry to the the- orid. ater. So a w rite r sought out the orlg- i lin batters avail themselves of this Im itor of the expression. Ted Sullivan, rule’' Karelv. And here Is where the scout of the Chicago W hite Sox and improvement come* in. for there is incidentally a lecturer of note. scarcely u runner in the big leagues \ I coined that word twenty years ! who does not turn ttrst w ith great ago In st. Louis.\ said Sullivan. \1 i speed after hitting the bail and cose was ituuiuglng tin* ,st. Louis Browns tlnue on nearly halfway to second at the tim e and had under me such celebrated placet's as Charlie Comls- key. Arlie Latham nud others. ' We were conluiuously pestered w ith ii Hum who kept hanging around and irym g to butt into the private life of the players We simply couldii t rid knows when, the natives traded ivory, ourselves of him He would trv to get T ~ nulnis skins and skin canoes to (he In dian point lu itiic s for reindeer skins and bear skins Tliev were often com (idled to Hade ugoiusl their will, and many bullies were lought. sometimes almost |o the extermination oi the Si I a i\ renee pei ipie I'lie plain vote siory seiioolhouse XV n il living rooms in tlie rear, to vv lueli the wing lias sinre been added, vvas bind mute Ilian lu e n ti years ago In ihe i.pise,ijta!iaiis tor a mission at it i ost id S,ialii i Vlioiit Hint time the m issloittiii .tl l iijir 1 ‘nni-e ol Wales was murdered In Hirer of lus sdiool h iy s and li was decided M l aw rein e was tun reunite anil dangermi.s. and Hit- idea via- a ba in |i a in | Later the I'l esby teriaiis pun lui-eil tlie bmldiug loi .y.'tHHI in 1 s: 1 -t | lie l luted States into tlie clubhouse to ehat w ith the players and gut so lie wanted to come into luv nthce to i hut about baseball, Its bistort and (he like \Hue dav an attendant came liik m iv room and sliced T h a t fellow s here again. What shall 1 do w ith him ’' 'Thai (aim tic again’ l exclaimed So utter that we beganN*aliuvg huu the lunatic 'I libs vy ns loo long so we llm illi shortened It in fan The news papers got on to it and started to using Ihe word It spread to other cities mid before long came to Include all those Interested In base ball I o- duv a Ian would consider himself in suited if von called him n lininm but tlie l s where ilie word was derived ready to go ori I f the error is made. Players realize that an extra bag lo these days of closely fought contest* sometimes is a big factor iu winning. High Value Set on Konetchy. Baseball pluvers come high, especial. Iv those who have become fatuous. II Is said on good authority that the P itts burgh dub offered ^o.fiUO and two 1*—Japanese immigrants arriving m San Framoaco. 2.—Ambaaaador Chinda (copyright by American Press Association) 3.—Japanese fru it merchant. 4,—Japanese peddler. 5,—Japanese quarters in San Francisco. Little Brown Men Have Gained Strong Hold on Business of tne Golden State—Have Their Own Newspapers and Professional Men. I T bus been n curious lliimi lo o’1 serve the changing iiHlntd\ to n urd the .Lipiinese in < a lifcniei j Before ibe ltussii-.liipswse wn j they were ivelcumed ns Hie expuiietils of a new it ml delightful onetiinlism W hen the coiuhision of Hie w»r dem oust rated that the Japanese were such j a superior military people cnllfonilMiis. j Bs inhabitants of Ihe most exposed pur : tlotl of Hie i'niled spiles experienced <1 certain sense of unrest hi ihe pos<l billties which seemed to lie implied 8ince Ihen Japanese immigration bus increased to sm-h an extent that il has become a state economic problem, and ft widespread dissatisfaction at (tie in cursions and encroachments of the lit tie brown men grew to International proportions 'I'lie Rending of Secretary of State Bryan to confer w ith tlie Cal ifornia officials came as a resiili. while Suteml Chindn. Japanese ambassador to America, hits been called upon to play an unusually active role in repre senting ids country. Opposition to the Japanese is not confined to the laboring classes, ns was dearly demonstrated a few- months a ft er the earthquake, when the Im m i grants fro/n Nippon, driven by fire from their former homes on tlie south ern border of the old Chinatown, estab lished themselves in one of the best residence sections of San Francisco— that is, along F*ine, Bush, Sutter and Post streets, between Fillmore street and Van Ness avenue. The agitation in this instance devel oped from purely business motives, lint arts long continued and intense, though i t resulted in little more than largely attended mass meetings at which there was touch fiery denunciation. The res lo being business In the • o s t,m in In hiiT'ei's. ’ ' (inlies 11 11 i lire nsii.'illi uf Hie heHer rliiss orti-au- inei'i lie els house servants primers and even pretessionul men I'ln-v lull i ■ l lieu null newspapers, their cue baul.s him I llieb eii n iu -uraiit-’ I uuipnuirs ibuiigli llit'i make tin III tempi lo repriidm e Ibe iu Inal eeiiditjeiis uf I he I Il'lehl :m I he ( hi liese iiih le llt !■( lltlepl \\(—U'l'tl met In \is i|s| i nos anil 'Ii'i - i mi nt rv . la iW ei er t here i- \ r w ina a rin v \I .1 a pa nese i\ lit * lia'e lieen ties ribeil a i/l’es’-ud Iu ofl'-cf our llesleni (ire)l) iliies :iin| vv II\ ii re el'ipi' iv eil on the e V lull\! l e (i'll i I I \ 1 11 lie-. \I ill rn i 1 roll 1 1 iin|m il emet relic Is in,alii \i Hie i <rnii(I■ ■ ns of I'III liese i he;i p In bn! The ngltaiinu of recent date is ( iilifnriibi re u r l- the antagonistic nt titnde Hint pi'ev ailed in Sail Fnilaisoo inw ard the Japanese iliirina the latter pari of BIIin and Hie early part of 1!K)7 nil :e ''onm of Japanese si lioiilboys of twenty sitting in the same classrooms as i hildrou of file and six It was a lung time before external evidences of Ibis feeling disappeared Then, as tills ^cnls who do tills kind of work during year, the federal government had to the vacation in order to earn sufficient take n hand. : \mans to carry them through tlie ensu- I.ike President Wilson. President j Big term. Jloosevelt had to dispatch a cabinet of \The workers of tills class receive as- ficer to tlie scene to investigate nml sistanoe and support and Hionurnge- niake n report, and then the president , ment from tlie various Protestant mis addressed n special message to eon- sions in San Francisco. When such a gross v ii the subject. student Jots advanced sufficiently to i eider the public schools the white wo- ! men in charge of the missions obtain A Californian thoroughly fam iliar ! for him a position ns'domestic, w ith w ith the situation in Ban FrutiiAu'o the privilege of attending school nt cer- and elsewhere w ithin that state writes i tain hours. Japanese, who raise the berries much better and more profUuMi It is esti muted that tiiose who lo u r grtulunlh uei|wired conlrol of Hie u lin k crop draw an immense uunmil income from this source line of the finest and hugest vine ,l arils in tin state Is mined bl Naga saw,a a man risen from l tie humble position of a iloioesth nod u ho is now elasseil among (lie iiitdliiiuiires His wines tl ml easy market.- In New lurk l.lierpool and London in nil of vv Ilk h ■ Mies lie i mi 1 11 1 a I li- bran Ii offices A1 most even emplmee on lainl Is an Englishman \J lie |min to inorkei in .Son Fr,'Hudson lias been roi'iieied Mi anotlier Jap named I >lii|lnia. who imw also llgures his torn,ne in million- VII Hooiigli the Sin rauieulo v alley tie Im- , isl holdings \I land- where are r u-eM ihe Inpgln;!; fuber- | 11 fiI,e b - Inend N lya-Hii.i he emploi - iiollilng loil Japanese labor MONOPOLIZE COBBLING Ibe lx l» rnmpiuit Is an nssm iation of Japanese ' oli 1*1 ei's iu San I’rain Ison \Ii\ bine handed togefiier for mutual . .......hi and u Im bv ilieir emploi ment of ' o oj mra I i i e methods have become able In sei lire complete control ol Ihe H ide of shoe mending In 1'hnl rin Most of the flowers sold In white I dealers in San Franiiseo are raised bv Japanese iu Fruit Vale and In San Vhiieu county, where the conditions -tale and \ !l!fI most fainrahle J or some reason I’lds class ' 11 not her they are able to raise (he prints and Hie flowers more cheaply than the white gardeners, from whom they lim e taken all the trade ' 1 iriidually the important Industry of fruit (on k ing lias fallen into the hands of the Japanese All through southern California and the San Joaquin valley one may see swarms of the little brown men who do the work more cheaply more quickly and more efficiently than itliire workers. Many of them are stu- The Yale Princeton Game of ’67 ii m l-si.uiurv and Speaking of college baseball makes i ui m ne li ill ihe H i e mention of an old and interesting vv lib a v ear s | trophy vv Inch lias been placed on ex coal and other htbition at Pnm etou. N J veri rime | Iv This curio u Inch has been pre sented t\ the null ci'sny I- a badge of A Newspaper Run For Chanty 'th e liev i K Ward til) who vvas It Is an Interesting fa d that a news j 1aptaln ' the baseball team which Impel I- owned and cdm inl-leie I by I represente 1 I'niicelou In their first Ha eil t I I I I o'esden the property Inn j game w i t h V a l e on May J IVI7 at ■ ut itM H e a r larult->i| Ii i> \\ )! f \| i a ii,-{ \j i *a la \I f *P* • \ Nh-liy lit*' t*ssa i’l lug been be.pieiiHu'd to the midiid|iall 1 1 The paper w a- left I\ i he city bv Hr Justus Client'/. wlm w Pled the Hresdeh Vlizeltei’ us a special touiala Hon for the e..muioii welfare nnder the condllioii that the profit- should he used for beautifA Ing I iresileu and for charitahle purposes Slime the gift by Hr Cueiilz oilier gifts have been add ed llldil the reienue for Ihe nbme pot poses now amounts to nlmut jniiuMid annually l ousel ii import The Brave Heart. VV hatever lifi- shall Unrig to oie That will 1 take mos! HciiOifuilv Some hitler i up- ini hits rcusl drain Some dais he dark ivuh mist and rain Life is nol p]:-ll hid hiltfle long And fanes rielihn weak nor strong And \nil tie of faithless heart Would stand from strife und stress apart tndv he in i nward irol.se Would have life ordered otherwise’ Arth'ir Wallace Peach in New York Sun i’nnicliin The game whs won hv l'nin dim hi Hie c ii 'V of AN to oj The M’oopd game vvludi was played at New Ifnven June ’ J~ remitted in an \I her victory for the varsity by the dose score uf 111 to lb Turning First Base The win in w hidi runnel's turn first after making a lot-e hit is another good illustration of the stride forward the playing end of the game is taking In the olden dais a hdfer idler tank lug a hiji Would lumber (low it to first and dig up the sod for a long distance in rigid field before turning back if the hull by any chance went through tiie legs of the litfielder or outfielder he hud absolutely no i banee to ad viue’e another base until he first mine bark to toiieli Hie initial sink If be turned wrong that Is, toward second Photo bv American Pres* Association Ed Konetchy, a Star Performer at Fir **1 and at tha Bat, players to the St Louis team for bi® lid Ivonetehy. the Cardinals' star first sucker Konetrliy Is considered one ofl he im media rely incurred the liability of i the best men that ever held down tha being put out , bag Besides being a great first sacker The first improvement in this regard | he is a fine hitter From a Cheerful Viewpoint THE JAP HAS AMBITION iu this wav of the struggles of tlie per sistent Japanese: \'i'lie Japanese are different from the Chinese, who always remain ns much oriental in San Francisco,as in the heart of China. The Jap has am bition and energy. He wants to learn tiie language, and he Imitates rhe ens- RUN #A N Y RESTAURANTS “ The Japanese restaurant owners o f San Francisco have done more per haps than any other members of their race to incur the displeasure of the white people. They compete w ith the Americans w ith unusual success, and toms of his ndoptM country. In order , *M‘ *art,'r flrp gradnntty liein? driven fft go to school lie w ill work for noth- ' b u s i n e s s . A Jap can serve ing as a house servant. No sooner has ® meal for 10 or 15 cents that an tie learned the white man's language American restaurant matt could not American restaurant _ _ and a few of Ids tricks than tie crowds provide nt less than tw ice that price, trtm fa o f this \section were tii-tcfientlv I his wav on to rhe ladder that leads to “ Among rite enpnnese who have btdft 1 suceess. Rp ffPeat fortunes for themselves tn “ W ith sneeess in Iutstness cam* fsHfernda m a y he J^pBtkmed RentflM yearnings fu r the social privileges th a t T K l s h e n Kalsha Steamship are denied to Min. He is even s tr ir fu g ! fcm p n n y ; Nagasa wa e*f Santa JiosM, to gain ettbseuship, although the state > B grow e r; Tusawa of the Tofc^- o t C a iiforifia refuses tn grant (dm a n y - , Jtama Specie bank: T cM^rnsa, the *pc- where such rights. He wants to g » ; king? I to, who *Jsa teiopgs I# and w m e as he likes. He %pnt& t o ffve ^ Toy» K is i u it Kaisbar Mttrmvitu o f where be pleases, and generally ttd * Is B ffaH rig « * ■ ? * !hy. tk m m t Ktm m g the w h ite pe<^de. H e 'bs al- AWiewB F f P w i w W , ' K # forced out of thefr Immes ler what they described as the greediness of tiie hind- lords, wbu very generally raised the rent after the A p ril disaster. OFFERED BIG RENTALS The Japanese offered rental* which Che Alaertnens eoeU oat afford to pay aaad were able ts de so on sccount of Ihe large member of occupants they crowd into a single which were formerly occupied fey American icmflles are now ghrew who freffsewfiy .. : or ^ * ’|>ersaas la aflsMwt #w«y neerfied tike Jaip- ways fxdite and geutlemanffy.\ It remains, then, to be seen how far he has managed to evereome the ob- fflnries f *tccd fn Ids way or t t sni he- 'yani A e IwadJcj^ natinwlly attaching every mw who etam from feaerawe aad fsrm j. The writer p m * t o t * * 4 ingsa wad t score of others. Meet of these men are m em ber* of the fa*h- Fma We Nifystm clab, ta wbieh k coa- fceaffrated almost aR the Japaiaene wealth la the state of “The rich Japanese (Mfeny & Ran fYnarineo has Ik «W * y*yrMaa». dearisrs n i pcofesskma} me» ewery Demand and Supply. It imd been ft habit w ith Aigy. who was now u senior, to approach the pater for extra money. “ My father never gnve me half as much as 1 allow you.\ said the much Imposed tyimi parent angrily one morning when bis son's demands hail been particularly excessive. \IVere you satisfiedV\ “ Certainly I was.\ “ Then why should he?” — I.ippin- cott's. Saving the Plate Money. On his way home from the kirk the parson met Sandy Macgregor. Said the parson: “ I doubt, Sandy, that ye're growing remiss. I ’ve no seen ye in the kirk these three Sabbaths,\ “ It's no that I'm growing remiss, par son.'’ replied Sandy, “ but I'm ju s t t in kerin' awa' xvi' rna soul masel,\—Bos ton Transcript. A Matter of Regret. Quite a Hint. “ Pnpn wanted to know whether you were a good business man,\ she con fided \H a v e you any idea why he asked?” inquired the young man, who had been calling fo r a long time. “ I guess it was because you never ta lk business.’’—Judge. A Touching Appeal. “Young man,” said the magistrata severely, “the assault you have com mitted on your poor wife Is a most brutal one. Do you know of any rea son why I should not send yoa to pda- on V\ “If you do, your honor,” replied th«l prisoner at the bar hopefully, “It will break up our honeymoon.\—New Torts Mail. An Open Question, “I want some sort of a present for A young lady.” “Yes, sir. Fiancee or alster?” “Er—wby—she hasn’t said which sha will be yet.’’—Boston Transcript. Amateur Fisherman—Doesn’t ft heat all! Here, after paying for a mesa of fish to be ready at the store on my way home, I actually catch one —Pittsburgh Pren. A M iner Society Leader— I f s awfSI t» hare The Seoial Seal*. “They say life should be a grandj sweet song.” “tYhat Is yotfr’s pitched in?” “A flat.”—Washington Herald. A Wonder.