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About The Montanian (Choteau, Mont.) 1890-1901 | View This Issue
The Montanian (Choteau, Mont.), 21 July 1893, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn85053033/1893-07-21/ed-1/seq-1/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
VOL. 4. OÍÍOTEATJ, TETON COUNTY, MONTANA, FRIDAY, JULY 21, L893 NO, 11. D P i e O E JE S S I O I s r j L . X j - J A M E IS SULÛRÛYB, ATTORNEY AT LAW, CROTEAU. - - - - MONT. Admitted to pi atice in^Land, Pension and Patent Claims before the interior Derpartment. Lend, Water , and Irrigation Rights a Speci- atty. All Legal Papers and Collections given care ful and prompt attention. Attorney N. A. M. A. Co. Correspondents in every city in North America. Notary Public. COUNTY ATTORNEY , TETON COUNTY, T . < 3 - . ATTORNEY & COUNSELOR AT LAW. ; ; § T ì £ d r a k e , M . p : : PHYSICIAN 4. SURGEON, GfKc* over Valley Restaurant. CHOTEAU,- - MONTANA. ; J E}. W A M S U C Y .. C H ö tEA U . MONT. ' J. H . D A Y . COTTlNrT'^r S U B V E Y O B . Irrigation & Land Surveying a Specialty. C h o t x a u , . . . M o n t a n a . .A.. J P & c J L . I s / L . Holds its tegular communications on the 1st and 3d Saturdays of each month. All visiting bret hren cordially welcomed. D r . S. H. D rak e , W. M. J O ZECHST O . ZDTTZPZE1. Authorized to practice- before the De partment of the Interior, the Land Office, and the Pension and other Bureaus. PENSION CLAIMS SPECIALLY ATTENDED T O . Cor. Main and St, John St*., Fort Benton. A . G- W A R N E R , HOTARY PUBLIC, U. S. COMMISSIONER, AUTHORIZED TO RECEIVE F ilings a F inal P rooes on P ublic L ands . CHOTEAU, MONT. ZE3L ZLTSTOliT, , 2ÑT pta,x3T ^ P u ilo lic DEEDS. MORTGAGES and all hinds of legal instruments drawn up. CHOTEAU, - - ; • - MONT. S. Oi QARRETT. S A- C. WARNER. GARRETT & WIRUER, CONVEYANCERS, - r e a l estate , INSURANCE - OHOTEAU, MONT. n . s t c x j — r - H ot and C old B aths ; « t — MAln Street, OppoBite Choteau House í f i ^ i , f SulfecritVtor T b s M u n i a s x a n . LOST. Lost! I have lost’him. ■ When did he-go? Ligh tly I clasp him. How could I know Out of my dwelling .. He would depart, Even as I belli. him (lose to my heart? « Lost! I have lost him, Somewheie between School house and college L a s t be,was seen; ,y Lips full of whistling, Curl-tangled hair; L o s t! I have loRt him, Would I know where, - Lost! I haveJost him, , Chester ¡m y b o y !,. ; r • Picture book, story book Marble and toy, Stored in the attic Useless they lie, Whv should I care so much? Mothers, tell why. Yes, he has gone from me, Leaving no sign, But there’s another ('alls himself mine; Handsome and strong of limb, Brilliant is he, KnowB things that I know not Who can it be? Face like the in ther’s face, ^L.v.Eyss.black as mine X O j i U l j A L & a o L Il l U U i . Ste^fulrofima^y^grace,^ Voice masculine; . Yes, but the gold of life Has one alloy; Why does the mother-heart Long for her boy? , Long for the mischievous, Queer little chap. Ignorant, questioning, . Held in my lap. Freshman,.so tall and wise, Answer me this: Where is the little boy I used to kiss? —Good Housekeeping. Mystery of t li - Veiled M del. For a number of years the most highly prized model in the Na tional acadamy classes in New York was a young woman kown as “ The Veiled Model,” says the Washington Post. No one ever saw her face. She was heavily veiled when she applied for and secufed employment to pose for the class. The artists engaged as instructor for the class requested her to unchver her face. She re fused. “ 1 am r^ady to pose nude,” she said,“ but I must remain unknown. If you are willing to employ me for the figure only I shall be glad of the position, but the pupils must paint and draw some other head than mine.” The artist demurred to this ex traordinary proposition. But when the mysterious stranger re quested the privilege, o f standing before them in a state of nature they, were so delighted with the symmetry of her figure and the purity of her flesh that an engage ment was at once affected. The veiled model posed at the acadamy for several winters without dis closing her identity. The heavy drapery wound around her head was neither removed on the stree! or on the studio platform. Those w.ho painted from her could get an occasional gleam of jet black eyes .shining through t.h'fe veil. The more curious, of the p.upils at first tried to follow her home at night to ascertain her name a’nd where she lived. ;But one ’ night when they tracked ' her * nearly to her home she suddenly stopped and. said quietly: “ Gentlemen, it is mv secret. To make it known «/ * would cause me great grief and mortification. Let it be as it is. 1- appeal to your honor.” After that the mystery o f the veiled mod el was respected and she went to the studio and left it unmolested. Nobody knew her name, where she lived or anything about her. At the end of the week she re ceived her money and departed silently to turn up on time the fcwo-yearsPago slm,faded, into trie darkness as usual at 11 o’clock. She was never seen, never heard of again. She had utterly, disap peared, and from that day to this the mystery of the veiled mcdel has never been solved. Making Postage Stamps. Every part of postage stamp made is done by hand. The de signs are engraved on steel, 200 stamps on a single plate. These plates are inked by two men, and then are printed by a girl and a man on a large hand press. They are dried as fast as printed, and then gummed with starch paste made from potatoes. This paste is dried by placing the sheets in a steam fanning machine, and then the stamps are subjected to a pressure of 2,000 tons in a by’ drauiie press. Next the sheets are cut so that each one contains 100 stamps, after which tlie paper be tween the stamps is performed, and after being pressed, the sheets are filed away. If a single stamp is injured the whole sheet is burned. Barn's Horn Wrinkles. There are loo many people who like to tell bad news. There are people who can swear without saying a word. ;«s The only people'who live rights? are those who love, right. The devil’s sugar-coated pills a L | | | ways have poison in them. * Everything in the Christian’s life that is not good dishonors God. No honor can be conferred upon the memory of a good man by a monument. . \ • Cutting off a rooster’s spurs will generally , take a go ,d deal of wind out of his crow. There is no use in looking for a revival in the church where the members prefer to sit ten- feet apart. If it were not for the bread and butter question it, wouldn’t be so hard for some folks to be relig ious; It is hard to get people to be lieve that anything can be wrong upon which they^ have set . their, *“ Love is • n o tpidfed which sense it. differs from.pepple who occupy front seats in church. Nearly every church has two or three members who think they have put the Lord under obliga tions to them. There ought to be more people getting religion so that those who live in the same house with them would know it. A Ntw Commandment. Fi ve-A ere Lots In Texas. The population of the earth which is estimated at 1.400.000,000 divided into families of five per sons ¿each could be located in Texas, each family with a house on a five-acre lot and there would still .remain 50,000,000 vacant lots. The fourth commandment as re vised and improved by the world’s fair directors reads something like thi.: -Remember the Sabbath day ' to keep the gates shut; six days shalt. thou exhibit and show all thy goods and curiosities, but the seventh is the Sabbath of the Christian Endeavor and other re ligious societies, and the atten dance drops to 40,000, one third of whom are deadheads, wherefore it givelh us a pain; in it thou , ^alfc not* do any exhibit'ng,or make any holy show of thyself, thou, nor thy partner, nor thy wife, nor thy typewriter, nor thy divorce law yer, nor thy kicker, nor thy crank, nor thy cat, nor thy dog, nor thy trotting horse, nor thy stranger that knew the back East and would like to know thee $10 worth more.—Anaconda Standard. The Merrimack liver moves move machinery Ilian , any other dream in the world.