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About The Montanian (Choteau, Mont.) 1890-1901 | View This Issue
The Montanian (Choteau, Mont.), 15 Sept. 1893, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn85053033/1893-09-15/ed-1/seq-1/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
tou : 4 . OHOTEAÜ, TETON COUNTY, MONTANA, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1893 NO. 19. P E O F E S S I 0 3 S T Ì L L . S. H. DRAKE, M.D- . P H Y S IC IA N & S U R G E O N , O f f i c a o v e r B a n k o f C h o t e a u . CHOTEAU,- - MONTANA. J A M E S SU E C R O Y E , A T T O R N E Y A T LAW , CHOTEAU, - - - - MONT. Admitted to p\atice in Land. Pension and Patent Claims before the Interior Derpartment. Land , Water, and Irrigation Sights a Speci alty. 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, J\ G K ATTORNEY & COUNSELOR AT LAW. J EL W A M S L /E Y , <& S 'U P g e é i i . C H O T E A U . M ONT. J. H. DAY. . C O T T l ^ T Y STT /R 'V IE 'yO IR X r r i e a t i o a Ss L a n d S u r v e y i n g a S p e c i a l t y . C h o t e a u , . . . M o n t a n a . X h o t e a u .L odge ..No . 3 4 -A.. IF 1 <C 3 -A.. IMI. Hold« its regular com m u n ica t ion s on tb s 1 st and 3d Sat u r d a y s o lea c h m o n th. All Tisiting brethren c o r d ia lly w elcom e d . L a . S. B . D k a k e , W . M. UOZESZLST CL TDTJP’P 1, Aathorized to practice before the De partm e n t of the Interior, the L a n d OJRee, a n d the Pension and other Bureaus. ISENSION CLAIMS SPECIALLY ATTENDED TO. Cer. Mafe and St. John Sts., Tort Benton. A . G- W A R N E R , r O T A L Y P U B L I C , U. S. COMMISSIONER, . AUTHORIZED TO RECEIVE IF ilibss & F inal P rooes on P ublic L ands . 'HOTEAU, - - - - MONT. iec . x r ^ c a s r , tT o ta-x^r ZEP-u.'tolic | BINDS. MORTGAGE* ah * ail kinds ef legal astrumsnta drawn up. IH O T E A U , - - - • - M O N T . I. « . OAR RETT. A . C . WARNER GARRETT & WARNER, |t»VEYANCERs, p e a l estate , . INSURANCE CHOTEAU, MONT. W 'ZEE. S T C L i L I K , — H ot and C old B aths . lafa Street, Opposite Cholean House ^ ^ ^ ^ $ Pnbsorit e for T hb M d HJA ñiaji , .«£?( The Cry Goes Up. ____ L * ‘ [Now York/Tribune.] From forces where no fires burn, * From mills where wheels no longer turn, From looms o’er which no shuttles leap, From merchants’ shops—which sheriffs keep, From hanks gone up, from stocks gona down, From God-made country, man-made town, From Wall street men, from sons of toll, From the bronzed tillers of the soil, From North, from South, from East, from W Go b, , > Bualnoss is crying with a zest— “ Don’t monkey with the Tariff.\ T E L E G R A P H I C . Hamilton Fihli Dead. N ew Y ory , Sept. 8.—Ex Secre tary of Stale Hamilton Fish died d uriner the worn-?nix at hi* country home, Garrison, N. Y. Police Guard the Lords. L ondon , Sept. 8.—A significant i’ealure of the home rule discus sion in (he house ol lords to nigh I was (lie fact (hat a special police force was ordered to report for duly in Hie palace yards in iron! of llie house of parliament m order to he ready for immediate action in case of a hostile demon stration against the lords when the latter left the building after divis ion on the home ruie bill. The Earl of Kimberly spoke for the bill on behalf of the government and a division, was , tljonjaken, resulting in 419 against the bill and 41 lor it. Baby Ruth’s Nose Out of Joint. W ashington , Sept. 9.—Mrs. Cleveland gave birth to-day to a baby girl at noon. Mother and child doing well. Big’ S juo w>heds. S pokane , Sept. 9 —The contract for building the Great Northern snowsheds in the Cascades, which will give employment to between 350 and 400 men within two weeks, has been let to Mathew <fc Krech, general contractors, who have headquarters at Spokane. Cleveland Refuses to Budge an Inch. W ashington , Sept. 9.—Presi dent Cleveland absolutely refuses to consent to grant any conces sions ip the silver fight, says' the Post. More than this, he will not promise to agree to any recogni lion of silver, even should the re peal bill be passed. This is the >ura and substande of his position as reported by the senators who had conference with him yester day. Custom Receipts Low. W ashington , Sept. 9. —At no time since the war have custom receipts been as low as now. The market is causing Carlisle a good deal of worry. In the treasury the cash balance has been grow ing smaller. What, is left of the depleting gold reserve continues to be the only cash balance in the treasury with which to pay .cur rent. expenses. The receipts are now running about $170,000 . be hind the expenditures. Gresham Talks. W ashington , Sept. 9.—Friends of silver are quietly rejoicing over what they consider a gain in their favor. The report is current among free coinage men that Sec retary Gresham expressed his views on the financial question very forcibly at the last session of the cabinet. It, is claimed he favored a bimetallic standard, ir respective of an international agreement, and, in the course of his remarks at the meeting men tioned, predicted a commercial division between the eastern and western states dnless silver was maintained on an equal footing with gold. .No Cloture. W ashington , Sept. 9.—The last extremity, cloture, is not to be in voked by the American senate. A heavy majority of members are in favor of unconditional repeal, but this majority has been carefully polled and it is declared that the conditions are not such as warrant the radical departure from the time-honored traditions of the s mate that would be necessary to secure cloture of debate and force the repeal bill to a final vote. A conference daily held between the president and leading sena tors, participated iu almost invar iably by Secretary of the Treasury uot of the passage of the' bill un conditionally repealing the pur chafing clause of the Sherman act, but of this bill amended by such conditions as to give to it the undeniable garb of compro mise. . Orders to Deport Chiuamen. Lo* A ngeles , Sept. 9 —The United Slates marshal has re ceived orders from United State> Attorney-General Olney to carry out the Geary act, sixth clause and all. Olney says: “ See to it that Ohinamen are deported who have been convicted of not having registered.” Over 300 applications for war rants have been made. None will be issued until after the jail is cleared of Ohinamen. Death on Wool. C hicago , Sept. 11.—A Washing ton,specia) says: It has become evident, as the expressions of the ways and means committee are developed, that the, tariff bill will be much more moderate than if framed six months ago, but there is a practical unanimity in the committee in favor of putting wool on the free list and making a heavy cut in wool manufac tures. Some members of the com mittee will work hard for free lumber. jfy T jij Forcing a Repeal. W ashington , Sept. 11.— While outwaid appearances indicate that the situation in the senate as unchanged and that the debate on the repeal bill may continue in definitely, there are facts appar ent to the initiated which go to show that the end is in sight. There is a strong probability that the senate will be either ready to adjourn or take up other legisla tion by October 1. Wool Men Before the Ways and Mean» Committee. W ashington , Sept. 12—A large delegation of wool men appeared before the ways and means com mittee to-day. diaries H. Clark of Philadelphia, representing the Manufacturers’ club, said he be lieved the depression affecting manufacturing to be due in part to the apprehension entertained by manufacturers that there would be a fulfilment of the threat of radi cal ehauges iu duties on imported materials. Manufacturers, he said, are afraid to operate their mills and merchants afraid to buy. Many mills had ceased operations completely. A much greater num ber were running upo,n short time and many had already been com pelled to reduce wages. He ex pressed the opinion that relief may be afforded, instantly by the assurance that the committee would not assail the tariff law .in such a manner as to expose the manufacturers to unequal com petition from Europeans working with a lower wage scale. 8. N. D. North, Bosl.cn, read resolutions adopted by the Na tional W ool Manufacturers’ asso-* ciation, which lauded the McKin ley bill and deprecated the pas sage of any. v* i * tariff schedule on wool. Theodore Justice, of Philadel phia, ' assumed that it was the intention of the committee to put wool on the free lht, and he an- ticipated that such action would destroy the second largest agri cultural industry in the country, ile declared that the cost of trans portation from one portion of this country to another was 12 per cent, greater than the cost of transportion from foreign coun tries to America. He said the woolen mills throughout the country were being closed daily and attributed it to the fact that. President Cleveland said that; 'Adtliin a few months wool will be placed on the free list. Sun Struck Boomers. A rkansas C ity , Kan., Sept. 13— One hundred degrees of heat in the shade, the air filled with suf focating dust and hot winds blow ing across, the parched prairie; these were the severe conditions that the boomers along the Cher okee line were forced to endure to-day. At this place more than 50 were overcome by the heat, most of them being in line before the registration booths. Six have died and others are in a critical condition. At Caldwell 32 were sunstruck. Two of them are dying. At Orlando there were 22 sunstruck and 2 deaths, and at Hennessy there were 18 strokes and one death. Helping 1 the Chinese. W ashington , Sept. 13.—The ad ministration has deterni'iied not to enforce the Geary law in regard to deportation of the Chinese. Cleveland wants time and insists that silver be disposed of before any action in regard to the Chin ese is taken.