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About Montana Sunlight (Whitehall, Mont.) 1902-1911 | View This Issue
Montana Sunlight (Whitehall, Mont.), 14 Feb. 1902, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn85053178/1902-02-14/ed-1/seq-1/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
é Se + FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1902. ~ NUMBER 1 — Senco —_ : 90D IN FRUIT SKINS. ive Qualitios In Them Believed te Be a Brain Feed, ¢ are more uutritive qualities | iy the skins of fruits, ccreals pgetables than the average per. aware of. In fact, the great f the-brain bulldlag foods are in| = of the fruits and vegetables s Savarin says, “the destiny of GERMAN ARMY OFFICERS. | HE FILLED THE BUCKET. ARMY | | Lt HUNG CHANG'S WIVES, A @tery ef Grant When tie Was | The Abject Deferenes Shown Them | Phe Firet Onc, Thowgh Alive, Was “Pleb.” at Weet Point. by Civillans ia Amazing. ot Lovked Upen as Deed. 4 There is a story told of General Grant | The regect and deference shown to | ‘The one romantic complication tn the when a pled. He had just entered on | the German arihy officer on duty and | lite of the late Machiavelli of China, his first day in “pled.” camp. -A first | od duty by bie countrymen are won | Li Mung Chang, la. amusing or tragte claseman who bad noticed the boy's | devful to see, according to a London | according as one may cto to look strong build intimated to bim it would | writer: “Civittins, even compatriots at it Luea_plensure to have him cal! imme- | of distinction, on entering (he dining | Karl Lt early fi bis distingutsbed diately at the seniors tent,“ Graat} room bow to bli With format humtiity,-+*career took a Wife, Nurlig” the-tat—— bh s depends on their food,” then atiny, Whether a heathy long insanity or‘suleide of every unit | United Statesdepends on how be ts fed. 1¢ breed so much depeutls upon why should ijotevery. ca: of nofmal thought seck ach food as best sustaiue his or went, There ts @ rule at West Point, | which was a rule then as Well, that any ecdet who asks another to perform | menial labor for bim shal! be dismissed from the service, The first classmon kuew too much to ask-his pleb, visitor outright to do anything of the kind, but here fa the way he went at it: ~L_presume, Mr. Grant, that yeu have lived on a@ farm, and, thie the He acknowledges the ebciaauces only with a rigid glare of haughty indiffer- | ence, though he is politely conscious of the coming and going of ladles. Tho Germun civilian does not appear to be surprised at or to resent being con- temptuousty ignored by him, but rec oxniazes him and looks up t bim asa superior member of a superior race and continses to make hin obvisances, + Plug rebellion his wife had to fly to the fufertor for safety, where Fhe lived for many months without communicating with her husband, ‘The Chinese stytes- man, meanwhile, thinking bis wife bad perished with other victims tn the mas: sacre, enlisted the symiphthies of the emperor, who ordered a nrtgnificent fnneral, The empty coftin was follows, ed to the grave with all pomp and page rl ae he gee case, you have had uncoubtedly @ however loftlly they are ignored, eerenony of state by Li Hung Chang . ‘a w! oa ly tod opportunity to mote the effect of the) “But, while the eflicer vw table to) aud representatives of the cmperor, ae of Sage : ‘9 rays on certain objects, “Naw, !€) see the ciyilan atwhou le Is Wukhig | After a pertod of mourning Li Lung - , DAG We @ water bucket that Was) polot blank, he never misses observ: |- BDL, ie ‘ nathire rovided ote eo in the | f the grape, which €otitalne the | art of the wine; fn the skins of | aits and vegetables und if not in ‘ins of the cereals, Low cowes it timulating properties are extract- om them, as the faner kernel, areb, is devoid of auything other b heat giver? as been proved by chemical anal-; ud demonstrated by uleroscopic | tments that the most valuable, sustaining properties are real.) ia all skfua of cereals, frulte and nbies, and as.an insiance of the) difference to the bealth rosullaut | partaking or rejecting the skins | is an ivetgent that oceurred tp , aa told by a Indian officer: egiment was atationed fn a part) » country where grapes were the) Innocent of hoiding.a.eingle Arop of the fiuld outin the sup from its rising to its setting, whet do you think, sir, would be the particular effect upon that particular water bucket?” - “I think,” sald Grant, “that it would get warped and icaky.” “Very geod, Mr. Grant. You show erudition beyond your years, Now, if) you will notice my Warer-bucket, you; will gece that it Is as dry as a chip. | Now, by the further exercise of yout kuowledge, Mr, Grant, can you tell me by what means | may prevent the} warping and lenking of my bucket?’ } “Llnve it Aled,” sald Graut. “Very good agate, Mr.- Grant, but, hote that you sald ‘have it Med,” not! ‘dl it. That necessartiy means that] suine ove must Ot for me. You have) shown so much acumen that | fear! to violate your preseription eliher la) “bis heels together wilh a sharp parads the salute of ano’ of bia own race. Flo riacs from bis sett and é6tanda stiff and crect while the newcomer ad- rances and exchanges formal bows | and greetings, anf as he recovers: the | erect position from the bow he brings ing the entrance and rake ona rane | elick and wails until bis superior mas tnken a-esent before he resumes his | - own,” t There were tremendous ccremonics | in eating and drinking, too, capecially | in drinking. “Rach table group lifted | thelr ginenca invariably together, as If at the word of command, takiag thelr | time epparently from the sculor pres | ent. Haytog seized-their-ginssea to- gether and rolded them together and | sinvultaneously~ drunk, they would) su:nultancously finish and then, ‘bold: | tug thelr plasses before them, would | Chang teak uuto bimseif avother wits and settied down agaln to felicity. A sgt Then the first wife appeared, Bhe had natrowly. escaped the massacre and bad, been living with her family; Mrs. Chang No.1 took exception te Mrs, Chang No, 2 and wislied to be relustated as principal wife, for the law of China does not allow polygamy, L! Hung Chang was tn-a great stew. In despair he applied to the emperor. The emperor said Mra, Chang No. 1 had been accorded a state funeral, ‘Therefore, to all lntents and ‘purposes, she was dead, and he advised bis min- ister to ignore her, which he did. Ag women are treated as mere chattels tn China, the Orst wife did not demur, but went back to ber family, among whou she died.New York World, “Stulng a Cold.” ‘ tte le . rie Pere . ow ¢ | article of food, The oflecrs, nd : een ante shes O5 sbel saauaer tees eae ion Y haem ‘Fhe man whe originat the off other, becam °| apa - - voted maxim, * avcther. fe 20 sick a8 to be! water tank niyeelf.” the table. It did not matter whether | a haxim, “Mturt « cold and starve ded as’ unfit for service, but It). considered remarkable that the CGranr diled thé bucket. they were drinking beer or claret or | the Gorman champagne, which reems a fever,” either did not understand what he was writing about or be hag a were all well a conunission of es, aa tae tse tate ing to| D682. Widely misuuerstood, to the ry wns instituted, when it was) PROTECTION OF WORDS. | °° be the especially amart (hing to) great injury of multitudes who bave i that while every trooper fw eat- — take, there was the same ceremony. | geted upon the abaurd maxim. rapes swallowed the skins the of!- A Plea For a Mest For Our Familiar | When a senlor-officer went out of the Presuming that the author of {t was | Quotations. room, all the Juniors present rose to followed the fashionuble habit of ting them, It was then ordered | the officers should swallow the! , which was done, with the result they immediately recovered, w it will be seen that the skin of | rope, besides being a braln feeder, | secs other healthful and nutritive | ties ncceasary te tbe sustenance of | aman body, The reason why aot sus, cabbage, string beans, lettuce,| ch and other green vegetables are Lolesome fs that the skins are not) 1 the fyiklore of the water front “,. for lastance, Sciplo Flanagan, biggest nigger In the business,” | orted the entire weight of an Im- packing case, Weigiing upward 800, ou his prostrate body. The o held the hand truck to receive “ase, which in the bands.of half a on men was being balanced at Just. ight angie to slip into place. But, t the edge of the truck ahd knock- | t away, and the negro unluckily | his footing and fel) fat with the t box on top of him. Le ehrieked| rror and groaned, it was sald, ike) rou Whistte, but when a gang of) : found wing persistently { il ; Ne t vored féw withdraw to some select se) over: at (birty one desires; at forty one aro persistently In a w in men lifted the thing bodily and) cision and the countless thousands to reflects.—“Tler Grace's Seerct.” . | Stete, aithongh It bar often been as 1 him out all he did-was io screw ists into his eyes like a biz child, | ch histong-Hmbs grotesyuely- and | rn to work, Of course he talked | it tiis feat for many a duy.—lrank le’s Mouthiy. O14 Deusions. is inexplicable how the old delu- | that a man cannot eat one quail 1y for thirty days bolds its own. man can cat one quall a day for ty days. At Lawrence some Will Upton ate two quails a day | grandest passages tu the language to” | some dry eyed privacy. In these days when everybody Is writhug and everybody seems to sue: eced would it not be well to start a society Cor the protection of words and phrases?) Mauy of these are so bru- tally overworked by the amateur, The winged words, the words that burn, the thoughts that breath, the telling phrases, do they not clumor loudly for a rest? That very sentence affords an! fuminating example of what | wean, Tow apt, Wow vivid, bow expressive it would be If all its epitbets had not low their vitality through overwork! ‘to the sated reader the whole sentence ts but the echo of an ec It not merely meas nothing, bat It ls robbed even of its cound aud fury. The greenlorn that eomplalned of “Iiamlet” that It was tqo full of quota- tions uuconsciously expressed a great fuct through the medium of 2 bull. tn} a wrongheaded way he pointed out that | constant reiteration has reduced the! incre conuponplaces, Give our fawilhr quotations a rest, Lay to elerp our Lousebold words, Let fortune for awhile cease to favor the brave. Let | us feign that the poct Is miade, Let a| man who would steal another's thun- der be arrested for felony. Let us win no niore golden opinions. Let the fa- Thus may nouns, adjectives and- phrases, aficr a long rest, reawaken | with the freshuess of the morning upon | them, thelr original incanlogs recreat- ed, energetic, effective, brilliant, as on the day when they were rst conceived aud brought forth.—Era. Thought She Was a Calf, Wlien Mme,.Schumann-Heink was | thirteen, her father was transferred to Gratz, where a singing teacher, Ma- more than thirty days, For fie) retta you Leclair, recognizing the young girl's talent, offered to give her week or two he starved bimselt | ) the iden that he must keep up an, *nging dessons without compensation. tite, After that he someti:nes ate| For two years she atadied nothing but © or four of the birds In a day. solfeggios. Then she began learning nother old fraud on the public Is; #ongs She had a very deep contralto belief. that a horse cannot pull a! Without,eny high notes at. that time. : of sand-at the end of n two bun-| One day a caller, hearing her sing t foot rope. Any cow pouy in Kan-! Schubert's “Der Tod,uml das Mad- will go off on a lope with such n| Chen” In.an adjoining Fodi, said to .—Kansas City Journal. her teacher, .“1 did not know that you taught young calyes.” The “Big Dipper.” “She is not a young*calf.” replied astronomy the “Big Dipper,” sc! Marictta von Leclair. “Some day she od, is in the cobstellation of Ursa| will be a great singer.”—(iustay Kobbe or, or the Great ‘Beasy* The stars; {un Woman's Home Companion. ving the tail of the bear also foru| handle of the dipper: The first star | The Antiquity of Whest. he handie is Renetnnsch; the second! The Chinese cultivated wheat 2,700 ar, the third Alioth. The othet; yeara before the beginuing of the Chris- , which go to form the bowl of the, tian era, always conaldering it as a yer, are Megres, Phad, Merak and gift direct from heaven. Scientific ag- lhe.. The two last named are called, riculturists are of tire opinion that it e Pointers,” because they point, ot | je the eye to the pole star, which *) ant 20 degrees. The top bow! stara) 10. degrees and the bottom ones J rees apart. supplanting the use of maize, or Indian : ‘ oy \ oak tu \tee ‘American states. The| totle and Corfolanus refer 10 cats and pegpri oe a ved Poy ogee = A Bad Lot. * Egyptians attributed its origin to Isis| Alexander; he lutroduced“a billiard: ta- atin oe Bika aa as a ewitt— Yes, old Goodman's three} and the Greeks to Ceres. - ple Into Peopatra's ‘pulece; he Howert| 7 ; - sare a bad lot. Two of them at Bohem}é with a sew const ofid maker) Y : st ought to be in jail. rown — Some redeeming quality jut the third one, eh? if ewitt—Yes; he’s already there. tholic Standard And Times, Roosting Comfortably. It wa'n’t. warm, but it was peace .\ says the man who lived in the cken barn because his wife's rela- es lived in the house. Thus the sat- nction of the mind transcends fn im- ‘tance the mere comforts of the was widely known and cultivated. by prebistoric mat. At the present time it Is the principal bread corn of<the leading European nations .and fs fast The Dinner Ordeal, id on the to dinner, more absentminded comes until his meet his wife | Atchison Globe, itude when they positive apology.— Ostentatiops Display of Wealth. Tim--Dat Muggsy kid makes me stiff attention and bowed nas he passed, j When.a junior rose, he made the round | of the table on his way to the door and } bowed separately, with a spur Jlngilag, heel click every time-to every other} ofecr.” “PICKINGS FROM FICTION, Tt fen't hard to judge huwan nature—| if you let the other mau do the taking. | ~The Great White Way.’ ' x When we undertake to comproinise with thoYtiotil, Lis majesty always aw serts bis ability to grab the .wholt thing.—Shacklett, If a man In the mist of the contume ly and detractlon of the world can get one wowan to bellevre in bim, It fe enougli.—\Love's Itinerary,” Mrs. Wiggs was a philosopher, and the\cum and substance of her philone- | phy lay in keeping the dust off her rose, colored glasses.-\Mre. Wiggs of the | Cabbage Patch.” There ts nothing In the- world ar harmless and as utterly joyous a8) man's conceit. The woman who will not pander to it Te*ungracious indeed,— “rhe Spinster Book.” The past gives ua regrets, the pres ent sorrow, the future fear; at eighteen one adores at once; at twenty one A tan I knew once—'c's dead now poor chap, and three widows mourn ing for Jim-~sald that with all ‘ls ex perience winmih was as much n ridlle to ‘im as whemlhe fast married. —\Light Freights.” Senrching For Knowledre. “I say, pa,” began little Clarence Callipers, with the Pising Inflection of one who earvestly desires to acquire fmportant Information, “what\-- “Ou, P don’t know! replied lis tong euffering site wearily. “Yos. But the question | wanted to ask ian’t foolish, pa.” oo “JI'm! If it isn't foolish, you may ask it. But, remember, Just one ques- tion, and no more.” “Well, pa, there are two of ‘em that I want to ask. One is, Which ts the| smartest, the man who knows enough to know that he don't knew much or the i who knows enough to look as | if he knew eversthing? ‘fhe other tu, | lf the-end of the world was to come and the earth be destroyed while a man was up fn a balloon, where would he land when he caine down? Aud, pn, I don't know which one of-’eu) to ask.” Shakespeare’s Anackronixws, The véry head and front of ai! ofend | ers In the perpetration of anachroninit: was Shakespeare himself: Te @peiks of cannon. in the reign of John, where: cannon were unknown until a century and a half Inter; of printing In the time of Henry.-L.;~0f..clocks,.ond_strtking clocks at that, in the time of Julius Cwsar; he makes Hector quote Aris Detpbos an island. Qe tty Severed, “There has been very little discus- sion of your separation from your_bus- band,” guid the New York woman. “No.” answered the Chicago friend;! “we thought-It over and concluded that o quiet divorce would be |n 80 much) better taste.\—Washington Star. Quite the Contrhry. Towne—He's the most disagreeable a physician who knew something of the nature of colds and: the action of remedies, he must have spoken. sul- junctively aud uot Imperativety, and then It would read thus: “If you stuf a cold, the consequence will be that you will be thrown Into a fever as a result of the stuffing treatment of the cold, and then you will-have to starve the fever,”. This is a true and senalble luterpreta: tion of this commonly received maxim, which bas dove, ts much horm os any ef the thousand and ope popular er- rors which prevall ov medical subjecta. ell! on the nature of causes Of e on what physicians nil. the gy of these disorders, we willsay that & low or even starva: tlon diet for a few days, with the free: drinking of warm, mildly stimulating teas, Is better for a cold than any drag or combination of drugs.—Loudon lau: ily Doctor. Wheat Does Not Grow Wha. The extetence of vames for wheat Ip | the mont ancient languages confirms the evidence of its great antiquity and of Its cultivation in the more temperate parts of Burope, Avin and Africa, From the evidence adduced by botan- inta of high standing, It scems highly improbable that wheat’ bas ever bee sorted by ports, travelera and histo- rians. a In the “Odyssey,” for example, we are tokl that whent formerly grew in Sicily without the ald cf man. Dilodo; rus repeats the tradition that Osiris found wheat and barley growing pro- twisevously In Palestine, but nelther this nor other reputed discoveries-of wheat growing wild seem at all credible, seeing that It does not ap- pear to be endowed with the power of -persisteney, except under continucd culture. Hew Man and Nature Use Gases. Man uses the same elementary gnae9 as nature does, with otbers that she does not employ with the same tuten- thon, Roth use oxygen for sustaining combnastion, but nature uses It system, atically for construction, which mai does not, Man uses hydrogen for come bustion, ag nature does, byt not for coustrugéon, Man takes advantage of nitrogen for concéhtration of energy. Nature takes the same advantege, by which nitrogen, thowgh negative, bey cowes the most important of vita) structures. But she ders more, Sble makes nitrogel constructive as well as concentrative, an art mao has not ; attained.—Longinan’s Magazine. ~Massachasotts Stperstitiors: In parts of Massachusetts it 18 thougbt that If a girl puts a ploce of southern wood down her back the first boy she niceté Will be her husband. 11) Boston ff a marriageable woman puts a bit of southern wood under her pil; > _ A Minute or So Late. ‘ Sweet Wife-—Oh, Herald, the hal}, clock just fell and narrow! _ tt mother. Had it striick her she weil: have beer Billed. (cet eos _ Herald (aloud)—You von't say xo (Aside) I always did say that cloe was sléw.—Iodianapolis News. —_————— Merely an Opinion. : _ “There's only one thing more rash than marrying.for.money,” . “What is it-marrying to win a bet?\ : ly.—New York World. Tim—Aw, he-got a nickel. sumhow,| fellow I evey played poker.with, .“No—miarrying without gioney.”= and ever’ feller be: meets he asts him| Browne—A hard loser, ch? New York Commercial Advertiser. * Me. Wasn't Disturbed. éf he kin change it.—Boston Post. * Towne—No; an ensy winner Phila. Janviiswet—Don't let me disturb you, Jelpbia Press, Eveh So, F eget \When a lamb bas been through Lit stu Himer—Papa, what ta It t busy Mercbant—I won't. William, | are experience In Wall street, he gen-| .The largest cast bronze statue In the eo oe gr Ne . . thal a ee ow the geritletnan out. ~ Chicagd | 6 lly. feels mote sbeepish—-Wisuthg: world is that of Peter thd Great, at Bt. Professor Rroadhead-! Death ny bor iburie, i fou Tiines. a PetersUtirg. It weighs 1,100 tohé. Lpatber's Bazké. ace’ : wy ft: - Ped ca Me a“ ‘ ¥ ° t \ t : ; . ; _ s “. XN mapa