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About The Montanian (Choteau, Mont.) 1890-1901 | View This Issue
The Montanian (Choteau, Mont.), 09 June 1893, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn85053033/1893-06-09/ed-1/seq-1/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
VOL. 4. CHOTEAD, TETÓN COUNTY, MONTANA, FRIDAY, JUNE 9, 1893. NO. 5. SIO U S T .Ä .IA . J A M E S . SU LORO Y E , ATTORNEY AT LAW, CHOTEAU, - - - MONT. Admitted to pi a-tice in Land , Pension and Patent Claims before the Interior Derpartment. Land, Water, and Irrigation Rights a Speci alty. . All Legal Papers and Collections given care ful and prompt attention. Attorney N. A. M. A. Co. Correspondents in emery city in North America. Notary Public. COUNTY ATTORNEY, TETON COUNTY, T . G-- 1TT0RNEY & COUNSELOR . RT LEW.. ' S. H - , D R A K E , M .D - . PHYSICIAN &. SURGEON, ; • Office over Valley Restaurant, •CHOTE.AU,: - MONTANA. P i ^ y ^ í d i 'a ^ i áE:S'CLí<g e é # i l ' 1 * \ i - * ■'•**>' e t • ' * r « ? • HOTEAU. • MONT. r-*' J , H . ‘D AY.< GJOTTZCTTiZ:. Irrigation & Land.' Surveying a '■ specialty; C h o t e a u , - - M o n t a n a . C hoteau L odge N o 34 •xy 'Ht; ..'-yj A . -A_. IP Sc IMI. Molds its legular communications on the 1st. and 3d Saturdays of each month. AH visiting brethren cordially welcomed. D b . S.-LR D rake , W. M. r O H N CL X D T T ^ r 1, Authorized to practice before the De partment of the Interior, the Land Offico, and the Pension and other Bureaus. PENSION CLAIMS SPECIALLY ATTENDED TO. Cor. Main and St. J.ohn Sts., Fort Benton. A. G- W A R N E R , NOTARY PUBLIC, U. S. COMMISSIONER, AUTHORIZED TO RECEIVE F ilings ..* F inal P roofs on P ublic L ands . CHOTEAU, - - - - MOJNT. ''^ r s v n - DE3Z- JL T Z T O ls T, 1ST © t a x j r ^ -u -T o lic DEEDS. MORTGAGES and.all kinds of legal instruments drawn lip. ;‘ Subscriptions received lor all News papers and Periodicals a t publisher’s rateB. ©HOTEAU, - , ’MONT!.' *. G. GARRETT. \ A - C . WARNER. GÄRRFJT.& WjlRlfSRy- •OHVBTAKOBEs, ■ • - l e a l e s t a t e , . INSURANCE CHOTEAU, MONT. \VLT ZE 3 I- S t O L A I B v BiaLfeeT & H è J f c l L e ^ e L ' — — H ot and C old B aths . ------ M k h r fttoeet, . Ü 24 «B it e CFotsaa H o usi TIM E ’S U P . Time’s np for love and langhter; We drained.the banquet onp, Bat now the dark comea after And lights are ont: Timo’supl 1* O, lovers in .sweet places, With lips of songs and sigh,’ Come forth with pallid faces And lcisa your last good-bye! O, sweet bride at the marriage, I ih patient at your gates, Beside a. sable carriage The ghostly footman waits. O, statesman. Crowned and splendid, The laurel leaves yonr brow— The long debate is ended, The halle are voiceless now. / Time’s up for wooing, winning, For doubt and dream and strife; For sighing and for sinning— For loveAot hate, for life I Time’s np. The dial’s mark is On (he last hour—complete. Lie down there, where the dark is, ; And dream^that time was sweet. - , . • ..., , —JTyank L. Stanton. IN THIS N;\\V C O U N T I E S .' Official J istrojl''‘tIi^,yfficès Now!. D e taclied From liieJL d Ones , L j -U The official post aLjujtde .forMay Contains a list of the offices in the new .counties in Montana, It. is of interest and will prove valuable, to those having., business’.with , these^ places. The list is as foL lows: 1 ■'**' - Granite county (formerly in Deer Lodge)—Bears Mouth, Com bination, Drummond, Granite, Hasmark, New Chicago, Philips- burg, Princeton, Rumsey, Top 0?Deep. Flathead county (formerly in Missoula)—Columbia Falls, De mers ville, Holt, ICalispell, Lake Ciiy, Libby, Richland, Sheldon. Ravalli county (formerly in Missoula)—Carlton, Como, Cor vallis, Darby, Florence, Gianls- dale,'Hamilton, Pyrelees, River side, Stevensville, Sula, Victor,' Woodside. Teton county (formerly inOho- teau)—Belle view, Brighton, By-, nuin, Choteau, Cut Bank, Dupuy- er, Kipp, Piegan, Pondera, Ray mond, Robare, Shelby. Valley county (formerly iD Dawson) — Culbertson. Glasgow,. Nashua, Poplar, Wolf Point. Cclonel Sanders’'Uniform * ♦ •• * - * * - * •• * - When11 was in Alder.- gulch in 186&, (he Bannack Indians had a very hard. time o f . it,.... and were .dancing the ghost dance every day . praying- for .-the coming. !of Ihe‘ ¡Messiah,..etc;' Y. ‘ *\ - * The Indians never go-to tlie ghost dance unless they are suffering. I’ve noticed that for. the - past 27 years. Those were hard times for white people as well as Indians,' and grub yvas.!none too plenty. . One day Bannack Jim, now chief of the tribe; \vh.o. was then but a boy, went up to Virginia City, and Colonel Sanders called him into his office. Sanders took off Jim’s blanket and dressed the lad in his army unifom, with mag nificent epaulets, and Sanders never looked better than Bànnack Jim in this -military suit. San ders had a fine hat that went with the suit, and Bannack Jim was given that,,too. After being dres?ed, Bannack Jim started for camp, and San ders and some others of us follow ed after to see the fun. When the Indians saw Jim coming they thought he was the devil instead of the.Missiah. There was such a Stampede of Indians, dogs and horses as was never seen before, and it was several days before some, o f the Indians came back to ..Campi-- 1 : : ‘Bannack-Jim wore that uniform after tliat uiit.il it was worn out. _ • * : a . ; ’• , He was' called Major Jim\ after -that;* and-the wearing ; of the suit undoubtedly-had something to do with making him prominent, re suiting in his being . made chief when Bannack George died.-Wm. Reain Bozeman Courier. * 'if Pounding thè Prophet. - [Inter-Mountain.] What a malignant man Charles A. Dana must be! He fully real izes that the stuffed prophet is in a hole, that he was elected on pledges_x?hich he never intended in good faith to cerry out, that’ he is a freetrader without the courage of free trade convictions, that he must maintain the tariff which he has been damning for ten years that he is under solemn obliga tions to call an extra session oi congress and hesitates to do it, tffat the time has come for him to do somethihg and that God did not give him the brains or the moral courage or the conscience to be true either to himself or the nation. Dana lHiows all these things about the prophet and re joice that his fat enemy is in a hole. And every few days the savage old editor, prints the follow ing extract, form the last national platform’ and asks the prophet whathe proposes to do about it: We denounce republican protection as a fraud, a robbery of the great ma jority/of the Americ an people .for the benfit of the few.. We declare it to be a fundamental principle of tlfe democratic party that the federal government has no constitutional power to enforce and collect, tariff duties, except for the pur pose of revenue only, and demand that -the collection of such taxes shall bt limited Jo tbe necessities of Ihe govern ment; honestly” and economically ad- ministred. Good A d v ice to Y o u n g W om en. [Philadelphia Times.] There is nothing^ so certain to make you disliked as to tell jTour troubles to a friend. Prosperity means friendship, but once you take it into your head to retail your woes you will soon discover that your company is not wanted, and the people who once bowed to you in pleasant recognition now walk on the other side on the way with a cold and stony glare that looks over your head or through your body,.but never meets your eyes as of yore. The people are not hard-hearted that turn the could shoulder to you. They are only averse to knowing of any more misery than (hey already have to bear. VVe every one of us have our little troubles. In some cases'they grow to be very large ones, and it isn’t pleasant to have the . dark'side continually thrust before us just when we begin to feel a' bit com fortable in our minds over some unpleasant' occurrence that has upset us for a time. Take a bit of valuable aid vice, and when you feel.. like. telling some of your spat wit h your in tended or how low your finances are, just remember our warning and don’t do it. Your mother, your father and your husband are the truest sympathizers, and, out side of them, you are certain to be soon called a bore if you persist in your harrowing confidence. Napoleon as a Sliatclien. Mme. Vincent, a prolific writer on historical themes, has recently completed a sketch of Napoleon Bonaparte’s match-making pro clivities. According to her re searches, it would seem that the general was the greatest match maker that ever lived. After re peated refusals the doughty -little soldier himself finally won the hand of Josephine, and devoted his matrimonial instincts to the affairs of others. No excuse was admitted from a bachelor. To of ficers who pleaded that they might be killed in battle he answered, “The more reason for haste.” To those who urged that they could not find a wife, “Be that my care,” he said, and Ihe same evening the affair would be arranged. The poor received dowries and .trous seaux. One day by decree the emperor married off 6,000 soldiers at once. Another day his great court dignitaries were ‘obliged en masse to marry. While the gen- erel was still in his apprenticeship one might have a day in which to fall in love and court his bride of Napoleon’s selection, but later (here was no question of a night for reflection or an hour for woo ing. No sooner thought than aid; no sooner said than done. .