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About The Montanian (Choteau, Mont.) 1890-1901 | View This Issue
The Montanian (Choteau, Mont.), 26 Feb. 1892, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn85053033/1892-02-26/ed-1/seq-1/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
VOL. 2. OHOTEAU, ('HOTE.1 U COUNTY, MONTANA, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1892. NO. 42. O E ’E S S I O ì T j IL.X j . T. GK B - A - X I S , ATTORNEY & COUNSELOR m i m . ___ J. WAMSl^EY. P t i y g i c S i a i i & S t i f g e i s n . C H O T E A U . ........................ MONT. ,V. IP«, B O U T S C A K E I CIVIL AND' HYDRAULIC ENGINEER. Addrou: P. O. Box 34, CHOTEAU, Mont. “W h . s x c x j ^ x i e , B&rfeef & Hfepilrifeggef, •ST HOT AND COLD BATHS. Main Streot, Opposite Choteau House J O H N O - I D T J H ’H ’, Authorized to practice before the De partm ent of the Interior, the Land Office, and the Pension and other Bureaus. PENSION CLAIMS SPECIALLY ATTENOEOTO. Cor. Main and St. John Sts., Fort Benton. G rand U nion H otel , CHAS.ROWE, P r o p r i e t o r . FORT BENTON, - - MONT. , x z j L r s r «se M. A. OAV A THOMAS W. MURPHY, , X j GREAT FALLS, - - - - - - MONTANA OFFICE OVER FIRST NATIONAL BANK. E» m© iD E i s r a r i s a ? , ROOM 14 COL LINS.LEPLV BLOCK, aiUBAT FALLS; - - - - MONT. TEETH Extracted without PAIN by the use of Vitalized Air. E.C.G-arrHtt. JLC.Warner. GfiRRETT M D V/ÄRNER R E A L E S T A T E A G E N T S N O T A R IE S PUBLIC A N D C O N V E Y A N C E R S Daeds, Mortgages «nd other Legal Documenta executed. Pnblio Land Plate and Abstracts. Ä, C.'WARNER, U. S . C O M M IS S IO N E R . L A N D P R O O F ti A V I ) FILING S . Corner Main <fc Hamilton Street, CHOTEAU . . . . MONT. -w ~ 2 ,x . L \ 2 \ o a s r , U s T o t a x y I 3’u . ' t o l i c DEED*. MORTGAGES find a 'l kinds of legal instruments drawn up. Subscriptions received for all News- papere and Periodicals a t publisher’s .. rates. C H O T E A U , - - - - M O N T . J. H. DAY. IRRIGATION AND LAND SURVEY ING A SPECIALTY. SATISFAC TION GUARANTEED. C hovcau , M o n t a n a . 4194 . S tockmans N ational B ank , .<* O f F ort B enton , M ontana . (Succeeds the Bank of Northern Montana.) Cap tnl paid up $ 1 0 0 ,0 0 0 . JNO. W. POWER, - - - President. L. W. PECK, - - - - Vice-President. CHAS.E. DUER, - - - - - Cashier. Board of Directors; J no . W. P ower ,' L. H. II krrhfield , .I no . L e p l e y . C ham . K L ibby , .1 • IS. H IRSHRERG, .INO H. GREEK, L ouis W. P eck , D avid G. B rowne , C has . E. D uer . Transact a G eneral B a n k ing Business. LOCAL SECURITIES A SPECIALTY. Interest allowed on time deposits. No; 3525. F i f g N ä t i d t f i ä l B a & k . OF GREAT FALLS. OFFICERS: T. E. C ollins - - President, J. T. A rmington - - Vice-Pres. A. E. D ickerman - - Cashie’ H, II M atteson - - Ass’fc Cashie DIRECTORS: C A BROADWATER .. JO B S LEPLEY PARIS GIBSON IRA MYERS. ROBERT VAUGHN 1J. O. CHOWEN J STEWART TOD J H McKNIGHT. JBOOKWALTER L G PHELPS. A general banking business transacted. Ex change drawn on the principal pointain t he east and Europe- Prompt at ten- tion given to collec’iens. Interest allowed on time deposits. Great F a lls - - - M o n tana THE MONTANA ■ w ^ - o - o n s r AND O A .S,»X -A .a-E S H O P - All kinds of wood work neatly, safely and promptly done. T WHCCL REPAIRING A SPCCIAkTY- J. E. WEBB. CHOTEAU, - - MONT LAUGHLIN BRUCE HAVING O P E N E D A SHOE SHOP At Would announce tliat he is pre pared to make BOOTS an d SHOES to order on short notice. REPAIRING NEATLY DONE. j HE HAD NOTICED WOMAN’S WORK. I ____ And That is The Reason He is a Bach elor. River Tress. We have just received a copy of ‘•Woman’s Work,” from Athens, and a request that we notice the same. We have noticed ‘’Woman’s Work.” We noticed “woman’s work” when but a child, and we can’t say we were tavorably im pressed by it. We noticed its ag gressiveness, and the memories of the way we tried to squirm from under a certain piece of leather belting she was working will ever hmj; to us and cluster around our thoughts as firmly as the in terest. around a promissory note So it has ever been through life. We noticed it in the school room, where woman read us many a tedi ous essay on “ he sanctity of the Sunday School,” and “the good boy’s reward,” when our mind was hungering for ‘‘Deadwood Dick’s Double,”or‘*Burglary Made Easy ” We noticed her work when she used to give us a subject seven sizes too big for our little mind, and then made us stand on one foot for an hour with a clothes pin On our nose,-if welailed to analyze i it with all the eloquence atid ratiocination of a Webster or an Ingersoll. And then we noticed woman’s work as we were blooming into lovely manhood. We noticed how she worked us for the dance, the skating rink and the picnic. We noticed how she workiedus in to loving madness and bankrupt cy at the same stroke. And the scenes shifted, and we saw her drop her financial wreck and go to work some previously unworked fellow who had more money than ourselves. Yes, dear publishers, we have noticed woman’s work and that is the ieasou we are a bachelor. K lu g Solom on’s M ines. On the identical spot where King Solomon procured “gold dust, peacocks and monkeys,” a syndicate with $5,000,000 capital stock issued and a ten-stamp mill erected, has just pounded out $55. 000. Mount Ophir, of scriptural renown; is close by. The old rocks, which were too low grade for King Solomon’s reduction pro cesses, are being ground up and fhey average half an ounce to the ton. This gold field of Solomon’s, which has been idle all these cen turies till now, is on the Malay peninsula. The. people who; have gone in to develop it have had to cut seven miles of a road through the jungle and to clear sixty miles of river. They are just beginning to realize on their investment. The company with the big capital has a concession on twenty square miles of a gold field. The forma tion ’•*8 of black slate. A shaft sunk 100 feet on the lode has uncovered enough ore to keep the mill going a year. The ore will yield two oun ces to thè ton. In one place on the concession there is a hill 250 feet high and' half a mile long. The company has tunneled into this hill about half way from the bottom and found ore ranging from seven pennyweights to seven ounces of gold. The reef varies in with from two t»;%nine feet. Even the loose rocks scattered about on the hillside yield half an ounce of gold to the ton. The su perintendent said to the American consul recently; “I did not think I here was anything of this kind so extensive in the world. Wherever you try you find gold.” Kaub is the modern name of tire ancient El Dorado. . X* « t - ........... . .................. . . . . ............... b .... _ REPAIES AHSÓìMlrS%AT0BX8 & J'X B 'W JS j X j X^*3T- C hgteau , - - - M o s t . K O T E M E A IM ¿jTfiLiXj JbUED A.]iOM§>5> E K V E J L t t P S ? A I D AJILE Ì T O I T M ID O IETIE — . a o ? — é T H E M o n t a n i a n ------ J o b O p f i o f ' — 1Ô Q Î3 THE HELEN! JOURNAL T H E R E P R E S E N A T T IV E R E P U B L ICAN PAPER OF T H E S T A T E L Ó C Á t R D A T T IIK CA P I T A t - * * í » ,