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About The Montanian (Choteau, Mont.) 1890-1901 | View This Issue
The Montanian (Choteau, Mont.), 21 April 1893, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn85053033/1893-04-21/ed-1/seq-1/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
w SCÜ8 YOL. 3. CHOTEAU. TETON COUNTY, MONTANA, FRIDAY, APRIL 21, 1893 NO 50. y ^ O ^ E 3 S I 0 1 s r ^ . L - J A M E S SULGROYE, ATTORNEY AT LAW, emOTEAU, . - - - MONT. T . Q - - ITTORNEY & COUNSELOR a t i m . S . H . D R A K E , M . D . PHYSICIAN & SURGEON, Offiee *v«r Valley Re*<ourant. CHOTKAD, ■ MONTANA. « ~ J . $ . W A M S L /E Y . \ • HOTEAU. ................... MONT. J . H : D A Y . IM IQATION AND LAND PURVEY ING A SPH ALTY. SATISFAC TION GUARANTEED. • b ® t « au , . . . M ontana . C hoteau L odge No 34 .A. IF & a .A., IMI. V o id* it» tegular conmiunH'Htioni on th* 1st and Sii,S»1urrinvpofpiich month. All visitirg bietrirpnconinitiv welcomed. D r . S. li. D rake , W. M. •XL “W , M T J K P H T ' , L A W Y E R 3BEA.S REMOVED TO yORT BENTON, - ■ MONT. rozExn^r o . xdtt : f : e \ A*tk*med\ to practice before the De partment of the Interior, the Land Office,and the Pension and other Bureaus. SIH9WN CLAIMS SPECIALLY ATTENDED TO. Gee. Me in end St. John Sts., Fort. Benton. A . G W A R N E R , H9TARY PUBLIC, \ U. S. COMMISSIONER, AUTHORIZED TO RECEIVE »t&DIQS & FINAL PROOFS ON PUB LIC LANDS. CHOTEAU MONf. \W^AC. 3EL T S y r C X t T , 2 S T o t a , r 3 r ^ - u - T o l i c ! ■ » < MOBTGAQES end all kinds of local SMtramMxte drawn up. ftsbtsriptions received for all News papers and Periodicals at publisher’s sates. •HOTEAU, MONT. fe * SAB RETT. A- C. WARNER. GÄRRETT & WÄRNER, •MTYEYANCERs, r e a l estate , INSURANCE CHOTEAU, MONT. r \ 7 2 ~ S 'T C I j.i^X X e , M T 'HOT AND COLD BATIIS, •aSs ßexcet, CXntcau Bouse □ T l b - e \'sTsT’I l n . i s t l l n . g ' E c s r . O’er the pavement comes the school boy, lips a pucker, cheeks outblown, Scraps of ancient tunes he whistles, little c itch**s of his owu. For is it not vacation time, the greatest of all boons, When he wanders like an Arab in the golden afternoons? Whistle, whiftle, how his treble through the varied bustle cleaves, Drowning out the noisy chatter of the sparrows in the eaves; Whistle, whistle, what a j »yance as it echoes np'the street, I hu ve hew id in nil my join uejings no music half bo sweet; For he whistles down tne shadows that the jealous years have cast, And in whistling i if the present he has whistled up the past. I have beard the blackbirds whistling on a swaying map’e bough, And have heard the plowmen whistle as they walk behind the plow; I have heard tl e nu ninTnl meadow lark, whose whistle is a wail, And well I know the whistle of the brown and bonny quail; Yet none of these may enter in the city’s grimy walls, Where the crash of wheels is constant, and the veiling smoke appils, But the trilling of the schoolboy seems to bring them back to me. And I see the old school-house by a gnarled wild-cherry tree; For bis whistling tells of happiness unmixed with care’s alloy, And I mark amid his shrilling, lilts I whistled when a boy. “ Bonny Doon” and “ Annie Laurie,” “ Yankee Doodle Come to Town,” “ Sailor’s Harupip»-,” “ 01d Dan Tucker,’’“ Money Musk” and “ Camperdown.” Why, I seem to smell the cloyer and the basswoo 1 buddings bright, There's a we l-sweep in the distance aad an orchard to the right, And the pink-white apple blossoms nod this message from each bough; “ School is over for the summer; school is over, over now.” Whistle, whistle, they ure coming, all my happy bovhoo 1 d iya, With die sound of running waters, and the winding woo led ways; Whistle, whistle, now he ceases— and you Hiinshaft’s a in her gleam '1 urns as gray and cold as winter—(iod have mercy, ’ tis a dream. —The Independent. angel appeared and, hovering over the couch, imparted to her the spot where golden treasure lies hidden. A woman in Georgia, it is relat ed in a southern exchange, quenched a longing for eggs and buttermilk by eating,atone meal, two dozen bard boiled eggs and a gallon of buttermilk. “She died in great agony three days later.” Quaint ami Curious. . hiladelphia bus rai.-ed more camellias than any city in the United Stale*. ■ The water is h < low in S.illon lake that <lu* Salt Lake company has begun taking out salt. By an act ju t passed in Sou'll Australia, all hotels ate U) be «¿1 ton* th*r.closed on Sunday*. The pi rcen’ago of women win- successfully pas* i lie exauunat ¡on for government posil ions is greater than ihat of men. How Chinese women were ex peeled to behave themselves 2,000 years ago is set forth in an an- eient Chinese work in 313 chap ter*. The «feel used by the United States'navy is recommended by the Austrian Society of engineer* as the best known in practical science. A Florida fhh story tells of a fluid, some 20 inches long which leaped irom one stream to another, over a considerable space o t ground, in search of food. An experiment in weaving silk bv electric Looms lias been made in Geimany, and the result* en courage a leluru to manufacturing in the houses of tlie weaver*. Spain w?, stares ai d plover- are on friendly terms with the fairies TLe laik and the swallow are birds of good omen, but the-latter should not rest on the liqji'e lop. Australia will send to the world’s fair probably flie biggest >»strnnomieal eb»ek ever made. It will ba 40 feet high and 25 feet tquare and is to bo built, of eolo niaI cedar. Old peach frees are now being r poneil from various parts of the rountry. but southern paper* claim that the oldest free bearing tree is living in Geoigia and is 52 yeais old. The Chinese have many kinds of ceremonial dishes and cakes. Thus, oranges form an introduc tory cour-e at ceremonial dinners, and preserves of betel nuts are of fered to the guests at the new year. Twenty-five cent* was paid for a horse at a sale in Bucks county the other day, and the auctioneer threw in a halter to make a re spectable bargain. The horse dropped dead before the purchaser got him home. Crows, like crickets, come for good or evil luck, but. ihe “ curse of the crows” is a malediction to 1 e avoided. If good luck abides in i lie horn« stead where they build their rockery they should £ = f.l.© S ^ molested. -‘. o r i m . g ’ , S i d . i n . o - Hard Cider Jags. .[Washington Nows.] Tho man who sells hard cider doesuH have to get a government license v or purchase revenue stamps; all he needs is a keg of the fluid ami a dipper and he is ready to scatter desolation and pave the avenues to drunkard’« graves at the rale of 5 cents a drink. The cider that is sold is sometimes sweet and innocent, but generally it is * hard as a doorknob, and a small quantity of it will cause a man to imagine himself a lion tamer m a striped uniform and lead him to elope with his grand mother. There is no liquor in the entire category that will compare w i t h ha id cider; it occupies a sphere peculiarly its own; its last ing qualities are wonderful. If you get intoxicated on it in early manhood you may-sober up in old age, bui t he chances are that you won’t. The headache that follows its use is enough to make tho heathen rage ami the wicked imagine strange ihiug*«. Some thing should be done to contract the powers of the dealer in hard cider. In his cheerful, offhand way lie is setting traps forth® ie®t of the young and pitfalls for the unwary. It. might be possible to urge him to soften his cider with out hurting his feelings. A R m arkable Clock. Japan possesses a remarkable timepiece. It is contained in a frame three feet wide and five feet long, representing a noonday landscape of great beauty. In the foreground plum and cherry trees and rich plants appear in full bloom; in the rear is seen a hill, gradual in ascent, from which ap parently flows a cascade, admir ably imitated in crystal. From this point a thread like stream meander«, encircling rocks and islands in its windings, and finally losing itself in a far off stretch of woodland. In a miniature sky a go] leti sun turns on a silver wire, striking tiie hours on silver gongs a< it pas-se*. Each Hour is marked on the frame by a creeping tor toise, which serves the place of a oJlum- t•• * V ? r.o Geor^j' ; n „ C L ° ^ e a „ U T 'li i,l„do'vn anywhere on .the line of Falls & Canada K. R. ■E & M ® | J A ^ C O M M E l C I A L ■ '- A C r E a n : . C H O T E A I T .