{ title: 'The Montanian (Choteau, Mont.) 1890-1901, April 28, 1893, Page 1, Image 1', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about Chronicling America - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn85053033/1893-04-28/ed-1/seq-1.png', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn85053033/1893-04-28/ed-1/seq-1.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn85053033/1893-04-28/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn85053033/1893-04-28/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
About The Montanian (Choteau, Mont.) 1890-1901 | View This Issue
The Montanian (Choteau, Mont.), 28 April 1893, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn85053033/1893-04-28/ed-1/seq-1/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
YOL. 3. OHOTEAU, TETON COUNTY, MONTANA, FRIDAY, APRIL 28, 1893 NO. 51. ^ ^ o ^ E S s i o n s r ^ i L i . JAM B 'S SULGROYE, ATTORNEY AT LAW, OHOTEAU, . . . . MONT. Admitted to piatice in Land. Pension and Patent Claims before the Interior Derpartment. Land, Water, and Irrigation Bights a Speci alty. All Legal Papers and Collection« given care ful and prompt attention. Attorney N. A . i f . A . Co. Correspondents in every city in North America. COUNTY ATTORNEY, TETON CONTY, Notary Public. T . G h . ITTORNEY & COUNSELOR AT LAW. S. H. DRAKE, M.D. PHYSICIAN & SURGEON, Offioo over Valley Restaurant. CHOTEAU,- - MONTANA. ’ J. E. WAM0L/EY. CHOTEAU. MONT. J, H. DAY. IRRIGATION AND LAND SURVEY ING A FPH A L T Y . SATISFAC TION GUARANTEED. • h ® t e a u , . . . M o n t a n a . C hoteau L odge No 34 . A . I T 1 & c _A ., I M I . Molds its regular communication» on the let hi ;<1 3d Saturdays of each month. All visiting brethren cordially welcomed. D r . S. H. D rake , W. M. rOIEXUST CL ZDTXDFIF, e Authorized to practice before the De partment of the Interior, the Land Office, and the Pension and other Bureaus. PENSION OLAIM3 SPECIALLY ATTENDED TO. ®or. Main and St. John St»„ Fort Renton. A . G- W A R N E R , VOTARY PUBLIC, u. s. commissioner , AUTHORIZED TO RECEIVE FILINGS A FINAL PROOFS ON PUB LIC LANDS. CHOTEAU MONf. w m . h . x y s t c g s t , 2 5 T o ta,X 3 T 3 P -C L b lic BESS*. MORTGAGES and all kinds of legal taetrnmenta drawn up. Subscriptions received for all News papers and Periodicals at publisher’s Mites. •HOTEAU, - - - - MONT. A- C. WARNER. ft. O- OARRETT. GARRETT & WARNER, •eUVETANOEEs, h e a l E sta t e , INSURANCE r HOTEAU, MONT. 3E3L S t O X ju A J C R . & H & 'i'f d f e g g e l ', m * HOT AND COLD BATHS. Street, Qggmeite Choteau Houae Tne Oit3r Boy. [Anaconda Standard.] Now while we are talking about boys let’s look at the other side of the question. There are boys in this country who have good rea son for thinking that life is not worth living. Life in a city isn’t much for a boy anyhow. There is no chance for fun nowadays as there was years ago for most of us away baok in the misty past. If a boy runs along the street he is liable to run over a dry goods box or into a baby car- rigae; if he does not run he is trampled upon; if he sits down on the sidewalk the police kick him in the small of the back; if he starts a game of “ shinny” in a va cant lot the neighbors throw brickbats and a bull dog at him, if he starts a game of fan-tan the passing citizen kicks his marbles into the sewer; if he attempts to play ball on the streets he is ar rested, and locked up; if he climbs a tree he is knocked down wilh a club; if he cuts a switch from a tree that hangs over the fence into the street he is chased four blocks by the crank who owns the tree; if he goes in swimming at the park he is either drowned or arrested; if he tries to keep rabbits in the backyard or pigeons in the cock loft he is indicted as nuis ance^ if in search of safety and a little quiet he sneaks into a bil liard room and sits down he is re garded as depraved, as he prob ably will be if he remains there; if in the exhurbance of youth, he shouts at the top of his voice he is anathematized; if he goes to a show he tails among thieves; if he strays out into the country the farmer chases him with pitch forks and sets dogs on him. There is nothing for a city boy to do but go to Bchool and be good. In t e r e s t i n g ' Ite m s . At the end of July last there were 63,500 electric lamps— in candescent and arc—in use in Paris. At the end of March, 1892, the number was 105,000, so that during a period of 16 months the number o f lamps in use increased by 41,500. Last year’s passenger figures show that thetwi German lines— the North German Lloyd and the Hamburg-American—cariied to America more passengers thau the whole of the English great Atlantic lines sailing from Liver pool put together. Kcccnt investigation has shown that the amount of tannin, which is the noxious element in tea, is from three times to five times as great in th'* Bengal and Ceylon leaf as in the Chinese. The at tent ion of the medical profession in America is called to this fact. Mineral naptha is added to al cobol to make it undrinkable, but according to the Chemical News there are men working in chemi cal works who not only drink the nauseated spirit, but are capable of swallowing coal naptha itself. In Sweden no civil disabilities now attach to those who are not of the national faith, of whom, be sides the 810 Roman Catholics 17 are Greek Catholics, 2,993 He brews, 114 Mormonites, 17,0,00 t'rotestant dissenters, of whom*89 are Invingites. Old-fashioned hunting matches have been revived in Connecticut. Fifty men, sometimes twice that number, elect captains and hunt for a day and a night, the side bag ging the most game winning a game supper at the expense of the defeated hunters. English people eat more butter than any other nation in the world. The Table points out that the con sumption per head is 13 pounds per annum, as compared with eight pounds in Germany, six pounds in Holland, four pounds in France and one pound in Italy. Nearly all the royal personages of Europe are cousins, and not very far removed, at that, as it has been laid down by a German genealogist that every crowned head of Europe, bar Turkey, is de cended from one of two sisters who lived about 150 years ago. Gaze on Him. [Topeka Lance.] See a Kansas man in his first dress suit! Gaze on him! Feast youreyeson his tout ensemblel Observe his hands—his restless, homeless hands. So undetachable —s© obstinately therel He knows them but he cannot place them. His trousers have no pockets at the side, one leg feels longer than the othe, and his feet are in his way. This is his first appearance in a swallowtail. His mortal frame he ne’er before hath decked in a toggery like this. Upon his face he wears a smile—a wan, ap pealing smile, a smile that budded and then froze to death and stuck fast where it died. Look at that smile and then go weep. It wasn’t until woman started in to improve her mathematics that she began to count for much. —Troy Press. “ A kiss for a blow,” said the girl who loved a cornet player.— Washington Star. BLASTS FROM RAM'S HORN. Actions are ideas in motion. Backbiters‘have sharp teeth. Whoevtr opposes truth is bound, to come out a loser by it. The place for a revival to begin| is in the preacher's own heart. Sometimes little troubles onl earth open very big windows in | heaven. The devil has no fault to findl with the man who is in love with| himself. The man who talks very muchl about himself will always have a| tired audience. People sometime makes the mosl| poise in church when they are sound asleep. The hypocrite throws away hij mask whenever he feels sure tha| he isn’t washed. As soon as a preacher begins ({ be proud of his head he become| mouldy in the heart. If you want to have power t| lead others, learn to control thj man who wears your own hat. The woman who paints htl cheeks and the man who dyes h:[ whiskers never tool but one pei| son. If preachers would remembel that they are working for GoJ there wouldn’t be so much anxiefl about wages. W hew! [New York Truth: Mary Jane sat wilh her beau For six hours, with the gas turn<| down leau. When he 6aid he must geau It affected he seau That she wept, and exclaim«] “ Eau neau, neaul” In Guatemala a mother gi' her consent to her daughter’s ml riage by belaboring her with heavy stick. This not only mal| it easier for the daughter to le? home, but gives her a foretasL what may happen to her Jatej Chicago Dispatch. Some vandal has placed on front of the monument of Tl Paine, facing a public roadf Westchester county, N. Y.J stencilled advertisement of a perance drink in very clear bl| letters. Even the man who gone thtough the same re$ painting scriptural text« ul stone walls has refrained froml irony of exercising his art u| Paine’s monument. “ I don’t think lie is much partisan; I never hear him sh| ing for his party.” “ No; but;) should hear him run dowif other side.”~New YorkPress.1