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About The Montanian (Choteau, Mont.) 1890-1901 | View This Issue
The Montanian (Choteau, Mont.), 02 June 1893, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn85053033/1893-06-02/ed-1/seq-1/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
■ V :‘ - .... N. ... -, YOL. 4 . C H O T E A U , TETO N C O U N T Y , M O N T A N A ,:F R I D A Y , JUNE 2, 1893. NO. 4. ■ P B O P E S S Í O Í T A I j . J A M E S S U I T O R O Y E , ; < ; ATTORNEY AT LAW, CMOTEAÜ, - * -r • MONT. Admitted <* fiatiee in Land. 1 Pension .and ¿PatentClaim» htfere the Interior.Derpartment. Land .W a ter, and Irripafion Bight» aspect- , All Legal Paper» and.'Collection» given care - Nil and prompt attention. Attorney N. A. if. >1. Co. Corre*pcm<ie«f« _»n weery city in Nerth'America. Notary Public. COUNTY ATTORNEY. TETON COUNTY, - 3 \ G h . B A S J 3 8 * A T T O R N E Y & C O U N S E L O R J t T L K W . -S'. H . D R A K E , M . D . N P K Y 6 Ì C . I À N & S U R G E O N , Offisa ovar Vallay Rsitaurant. C H O T E A U ,- - M O N T A N A . ; , J W A M S L E Y , P t \ y { S ¿ o ^ a í i & S i a . t ' g Q é ' P i , CHOTEAU. • * * MONT. J. H - D A Y . . vo o :tTi?ra?'5r -BTrjB&'V’is'srozRr Xnlffatioa. Ai Land, Sumylng » Spcolalty. • NO T IM E F O B W R A N G L I N G . Thon*h the wind« nra cool, in Georgia an* tha blessad ekioa are blue, It'« too hot to fight with Turkey or to quarrel with Pern; An* it'« not a time far flgktin' or fer writln* •alky notes; When the eweet bird« are delightin' with the music o’ their throat«. Oh, it ain’t a time ter wranglin' on the land Or on the sea. , When the sunshine 1« a tanglin' round the aoula o’ you and met When the world is Jest the brightest that a feller ever saw, ' An* the lilies are the.whitest an* Jest laughin' at the law) It's a time fer fellin' oserry on' fer danoln' in the light, With a bright sun in the day ime eu' a lot o' stars at night; An* with all its leve an’ laughter an* with all ita perfect biles, ■ It'll be e bright hereafter if it's half aa bright aa this. • - . - ’Atlanta Comtitutton. It. P a t r ic k and the D ilyeeii fcarpent. ,. C n o t i a u , M o n t a n a . C f o t E A U L o d g e M 3 4 A . . I F & A . Jiolde its regular communications on the let end 8d Saturdays of each month. AU Tieiting brethren cordially welcomed. Dm. 8. H. D eakb , W. M. St. Patrick’s task of freeing Ire land from serpents and other nox iouB creatures proceeded with little hindrance until he encountered the one which was finally chained in Lough Dilveen, and the mon- ster which he persuaded into the iron box and then cast cage and contents into the“ sea. The Lough Dilveen terror was“ chained to a T O K C ^ S T O . D T J P P , Aathoriwd to practice befora the De partment of the interior, the Land QMca, and the Peneion and other “Bureaue. PENSION CLAIMS SPECIALLY ATTENDED TO. Car. If aim and Hi. John Sts., Fort Banton. A ; O - W A R N E R , NOT ART PUBLIO, . U. S. COMMISSION»», AUTHORIZED TO RECEIVE F ilings * F inal P kc oes , on P ublic L ands . CHOTEAU, - - - - MONT. ■ “W 2 L Æ . ZE3Z- X j\2 T O I S r , I s T o t a - x ^ r X = - u . T o l l o »KBPS. MORTGAGES andall kinds of lagal teatraoiaata drawn up7 -. ■ubeoriptione received for all News papers and Periodicals at publisher’s tales. •HOTEAU, .- MONT. |L #. SARRETT. A- O. WARNER. / G J R -R R E T T .& W f i R N E R . «•N y iT A N O E B i, - . \ l e a l E s t a t e , . ■- INsUSANCB C H O T E A U , M ONT. • W H . S T C L i L I R , B f c f f c è f & H á ' f r c í f e g g e í y H ot . ànd G old B aths . Capeadle J. j G m A sb rock in one of the seven lakes which lay in the Qaultie moun tains, the understanding between the saintly Patrick .and the ser pent being that his snakeship should only remain in durance vile until “ Monday.” The people of Cork and Tipperary, the two counties in which the Gaultie mountains are situated, believe that early every Monday morn ing the serpent may be heard crying from the depths of Lough Dilveen, “ Patrick! Oh, Patrick! It is a very long Monday; Pat rick ” , . The old he-serpent of the coast was overcome by a similar trick. Patrick prepared\ a trap or nox and invited the snake to coil him selHjp in it and see how it would fit. WDien the creature was once inside the wilv Pat closed the lid V and then consigned box and ser pent to ihe mercy of old Neptune. The mediaeval Irish believed that the rollin g of the waves was caus ed.by the wriggling of this' ser pent.— Republic. Opinion on Money. A N e w T a r iff B ill. .Washington special says: “ R e p resentative Wilson, of West V ir ginia, assisted by an able corps of. experts and amateurs, is said to be at woi k on a tariff -bill which is ex peefed to be ready for presen tat ion when congress meets. I t is reported that this bill will hew hearer to' the line of the. Chicago rplatform than any other bill now. in prepa ration and will come in with much organised backing, The cause of every depression is money famine and nothing else. — John A. Logan. Whoever controls the volume oi money in any country is abso lute master of. all industry and commmerce.— James A. Garfield. Liberty cannot long enduie in any country where the tendency of legislation -is the concentrate wealth in the hands of a lew.— Daniel Webster. That prices will fall or rise as the volume of money is increased or.diminished is a law that is as unalterable as' any law of nature.— Professor Walker. I f the whole volume of money in circulation was doubled, prices would rise one-half. I f it was in creased one fourth, prices would rise one-fourth.—John Stuart Mill. A decreasing volume of money and falling prices have, been and are now more fruitful of human misery than was, pestilence and famine. They have wrought more injustice 'than all the bad laws ever inacted.-United States Money mission: ~ ; -'f- - I believe that banking institu tions are more dangerous to our libertis than are standing, armies. Already they have raises up a moneyed aristocracy that has set the government at defiance. The issuing power should be taken from the banks and restored to the. government and the people to whom it properly belongs. Let. the banks exist, but let them bank on coin or treasury notes.—Thomas Jefferson. The government ought not to delegate the- power of raising money, if it could. It is too great a power to be trusted to any bank ing business whatever. The peo ple are not safe when such a com- * **• pany has such a power. The temp tation is too great, the opportunity too easy, to put up and put down prices, to hring the whole com munity on its knees to those Nep- tunee, who preside over the flux and reflux of paper money. Slocks are their playthings with which they gamble with as little secrecy and less morality than common gamblers.—Thomas. H. Benton. W a il o f i l l « People’s P a r t y Lost, strayed or stolen, on ' the 4th day of March, 1893. one grand tariff reform movement, with democratic ear marks; any inform mafion regarding the present whereabouts of said tariff, reform will be thankfully received' by several' hundred thousand deluded voters, who. last fall yelled them selves hoarse in,behalf of a prom ised milleninum, and cast their ballots . for Fat-man-afraidof his- promises, Grover The Good. : IS A L A N D O F C O N T R A R IE S . Some o f the Many 1 hm gs W h ich the Chinese D o the ‘ ‘ O ther “ W a y .” Nearly all the old writers; especially H e y lin, Goering, ,Men- lin, Mandeville and the two Her- riots, frequently refer to China as “ the land of contraries,” and.“ the land of opposites.” .These „names seem to have been well applied, for, according tiie.; Philadelphia Press, it is a well kno wn fact that the people of the celestial empii;e do nearly everything contrary to to the way. in which it is, done in other parts of • the world* . Here' are a lew striking illustrations. W e shake hands with each other, the Chinaman shakes hands with himself. We uncover the head as a mark of respe.ct, the China man not only remains with Jiead covering in.place, but removes his shoes if he wishes to appear very, very polite. W e shave t.he face,- they the h< a V; we cut the nails of the fingers, they .consider it: ultra- aristocratic to.let them grow sev eral inches in length.- TherOhina- man not only wearadiis>shjrt' out side his trousers but whitens his shoes instead„of blackening them. W e bury in-the earth, they'on the surface; and white is their badge of mourning. In “ the land of op posites” it is the old men who lly kites, walk on stilts, play marbles and shoot fire crackers.- With us the right baud is the place, of honor; with then it is the left. We live, cook and eat on the ground floor- and sleep upstair.«-; with this contrary naiion the. re verse is the general rule. In dainty letters we write the year last; they place it fiist. W e pay our doctors when we are sick; they pay as long as they remain well, but as soon as they f i l l sick the pay stops. Here men kill their enemies; a Chinaman gets revenge by killing himself. A full hundred things could be mention ed which .t hey do opposite to the manner in which it is done in other parts of the world; however I will close this “ curiosium*’ by adding that they launch ships side-, ways, ring bells from the outside of the building and actually turn screws in a contrary direction. Mrs. Blaine is visiting at B ir Harbor and intends to soon sail for Europe with her youngest daughter. It is her present iuten- tion to remain abroad /or a - year, at least, and she proposes to take a house somewhere in England. Her. health is good, but the troubles she has encountered, dur ing the last few years - have,made absolute rest impérative. I.