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About The Montanian (Choteau, Mont.) 1890-1901 | View This Issue
The Montanian (Choteau, Mont.), 03 June 1892, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn85053033/1892-06-03/ed-1/seq-1/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
r V W y VOL. 3. P E O P E S S I O N A L . T. G-* 3 5.^uX!IE39 ÄTTÖRNEY & COUNSELOR ST LS¥. - JAMES SUEGRÔYE, ATTORNEY AT LAW, CHOIE AU, - • - - MONT. J. E? WAMSEEY. P ^ y ^ i d ^ â ^ i & { E k ii'g e é ii. CHOTEAU. - - - - - MONT. A. G. WARNER, NOTARY PUBLIC, U. S. COMMISSIONER, AU T H O R IZED TO RECEIVE PILINGS & FINAL PROOFS ON PUB LIC LANDS. CHOTEAU, MONT. J . H . D A Y . IRRIGATION AND LAND SURVEY ING A SPECIALTY. SATISFAC TION GUARANTEED. C h o t e a u , • s- M o n t a n a . *^vT IH. 0 I O L Ä I R , B a f f e e V & H ä L f e i f , 9 S * HOT AND COLD BATHS. Main Street, Opposite Choteau House i j ' s r c a s r , ' UST © tstry SP-ij/blic DEED*. MORTGAGES and ftll kinds of legal instruments drawn up. Subscriptions received for all News papers and Periodicals a t publisher’s rates. CHOTEAU. - - - - MONT. E . C . GARRETT. A - C . WARNER. GÄRRETT & WÄRNER, CONVEYANCERS, REAL ESTATE, INSURANCE AND COMMISSION AGENTS. CHOTEAU, MONT. r > - £ ^ ' ß Z ' ^ T T J E z & t t r z - H. A. DAY A THOM A S W . MURPHY, L a w y e r s , GREAT FALLS, - - - - - - MONTANA OFFICE OVER FIRST NATfONAl, RAN 1C. REPAIRS AND CLEANS WATCHES & J E W E L E Y . f C hoteatj , - - - M ont . ROOM 14 COLLINS-LEPLY BLOCK, OREAT FALLS, - - - - MONT. TEETH Extracted without PAIN b.y the use ol Vitalized Air. JOSIsT CL nDXJP1^ , Authorized to practice before the De partment of the Interior, the Land Office, and the Pension and other . Bureaus. PENSION CLAIMS SPECIALLY ATTENDED TO . Cor. Main and St. John Sts., ,_Fort Benton. RANCHMEN VS. RUSTLERS. Stock Ranges Against Stock Farms— Mo nopolist Trying to Crush Farmers. The Irrigation Age takes abroad and clear-sighted view of the re cent war of the cattlemen in Wyo ming, and says it is the old ques tion between cattle and men as rival factors in promoting the prosperity of the far western states. This is in accordiance with the position taken by the Times at the oui break- of hostilities. Admit ting that there has been thievery and depredation in nort hern Wyo ming, that large cattle oweners ha ve suffered from exasperating raids and dishonest roundups; that not all of those who rallied to re pel the unlawful invasion of the hired Texas Cowboys are guiltless of crimes which excited the overt demonstration; there is yet a deeper and broader significance to these troubles than the mere ques tion of rival interests of calf steal ing. While there are lawless cat tle thieves among the “rustlers,” there are also lawless cattle barons. .Neither hesitates t.o rob, to destroy and to kill when it suits his ends. But neither faction is upheld by the real sentiment of Wyoming, and both should be -suppressed--by. the iron hand of thè law’ The Age says: “The state has learned that peo ple are better than, cattle, and that a million farms are better than 10,000 ranges. Happily for Wyo ming the development of the farms by no means involves the restric tion of the stock business. It only demands that the public range shall give place to the 160-acre farm so far as the water supply and the demands of settlement will warrant. It only means that the stock ranges of the few shall fall back to make room for the stock farms of the many. And even when this has been accom plished—so generous are Wyo ming’s diménsions—there will still remain millions of acres of unoccupied land for summer ranges.” As a specimen of the motives which actuate the cattle kings and their hired fighters the Age gives the following: “One year ago the writer can vassed the city of Cheyenne for for subscribers for the Age. He met in the capitol building a pub lic official who told him: 1 want nothing to do with anything which will have a tendency to bring more people into Wyoming. There are loo many people now—too many people and too few cattle.’ The man who made this strange remark was a leader of the mob that went forth to kill the 'rustlers.’ He is one of (he men whom t.he United States cavalry assisted to to ‘let go of the bear,’ and escorted under a while flag of truce to the safe precincts of Port McKinney. This man (a public official) illus trates in his own experience the entire issue. He deprecates the coming of men, women and chil dren because they occupy soil where cattle ranged before; he was willing to go forth to battle for his convictions, but he came home in shame and defeat, and realized sharpley that the day'\ of frontier barbarism, bolh mental and phys ical, had iione. Civilization is driving barbarism before it, just as the ‘rustlers’ put this insolent champion of cattle on the “run.” BENEFITS OF TH E M lvIN - LEY T A R IFF. 1-Yliat an Englishm an Thinks o f If—-How I t is Bringing' F o r c ing I m lnstries and Capital to This Country. [London Times.] To t h e E d i t o r o f t h e T im e s : Sir—As doubtless yon aware, a census is being taken in the United Stales of the-.industviaL results, of the McKinley tariff and its success in establishing new industries and bringing increased opportunities ■ for employment to th t working classes. The first returns have just been, collated. They show that, in the last IS months no fewer than 127 new factories have, been es tablished and 53 old ones expand ed. Four well-known English textile firms have moved the whole or a portion of their plant across the Atlantic, and many of the most skilled hands from the tinplate mills in South Wales have emigrated. With such results, attended by the notable increase in the Ameri can export trade, contrasting with the continuous decline in British exports and the daily record of di minishing employment for Eng lish, Welsh, and Scotch artisans, the hope is small, if not nil, of the early reduction of the tariff, which has further in many markets, an advantage for American over British goods under the reciprocity clause. The Labor Correspondent will soon have a more rueful tale to tell than the idleness at the present time of 14,000 skilled workers in only 19 trade unions comprising 252,000 workers. The first chapters are now being pain fully learnt in many a .home in Yorkshire. Lancashire, Sjouth Wale, Glosgow, and Dundee. A remedy is ready when the people awake, 4I am, sir, yours faithfully, C . E. H o w a r d V in c e n t . Carlton Club, April 22. NO. 4. BA D L Y M IXED. The Most Corion* Cases o f M ix ed R e lationship on Record. The two following cases would be difficult to beat. Some time age a marriage took place in Birm ingham which brought about a very complicated state of family relations. The woman had been married three times before, and each time had taken for her hus band a widower with children. Her fourth husband was also a widower, and as he had children by his first wife, who was herself a widow with children when lie married her, the newly-married couple started their matrimonial companionship with a family com posed of no less than eight prev ious marriages. Another cbrious case was in Australia. Dr. King, of Adelaide, a widower,J niallied a Miss Norris! Shortly after, the doctor’s honeymoon, the doctor’s son married a sister of the doctor’s wife. Nolv a brother of the doc tor’s wife is about to marry the. doctor’s daughter. In other words, the doctor’s son became his step mother’s brother in law, and when the doctor’s daughter has married the doctor’s wife’s brother she will have-become her stepmother’s-sis ter-in-law. The doctor, by the marriage of his son to the sister of the doctor’s wife, becomes lather- in-law to his sister-in-law, and Mie doctor’s wife, by the marriage of he sister to her stepson, becomes stepmother-in-law to her own sisj ter. In the event of the marriage of the brother of the doctor’s v in* to the doctor’s daughter, the doc tor will become father-in-law to to his brother-in-law, and the doc tor’s wife will become slepinother- in-law to her own brother. It is an unsolved problem as to what relationship the children of the contracting parties when horn will be to each other.—T t-Bit’s. — --------- » ♦ ♦ --------- — SHE CAN’ I’ H E L P IT. There’s a tierce determined glitter shining from her aznre eye. She's a-ripplng all the carpets up and palling things awry, She has wrapped a towel around her head and donned her oldeat gown, For house-cleaning must be finished, though the heavens tumble down. And her husband gazes sadly at her soot-be sprinkled face. . At her weird and awful costume as he file« about tlie pluce, And he wonders and he ponders, as she rushes to and fro, “Can this really be the angel that 1 wed a year •go?” —Indianapolis Journal. W ithout E xception . —The less a man amounts to the prouder he is of his ancestors being big peo ple.— Bairn’s Morn.