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About The Wickes Pioneer (Wickes, Mont.) 1895-1896 | View This Issue
The Wickes Pioneer (Wickes, Mont.), 07 Dec. 1895, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn85053310/1895-12-07/ed-1/seq-2/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
Zht *litho ginuttr. ROBEfaT C. BAILEY. MONTANA. Chicago gamblers carry faro -layouts around in their hats. Chicago's motto Is: \I will.\ The bicycle craze has added the past year $5,000,000 to the bank accounts of rubber dealers. About the time Japan grabs Hawaii she will tumble in the soup tureen. It Is not a Chinese fort. Now it is claimed that bloomers are better for winter than for summer wear. llow about bathing suits? , If there is anything to the London marlecfr present besides Barney Bar- net° it must be too unimportant to be noticed. It Is itteltesting and somewhat dis- quietipg to . note how much more identi- fication it takes to cash a check than il does to get lynched. By the time congress meets public opinion in the United States will force it to make some expression in favor of the oppressed Cubans. Miss Dressler, who has left Manager Rice to he married, evidently prefers to be Queen Marie -in 1895 rather than Queen Isabella in \1492.\ Gen. Campos has resolved to here- after \treat Cuban prisoners with kind- ness.\ lie would do the greatest \kind- reS6\ by vacating the green island. The women of Moline are said to be remarkably successful as streetcar con- ductors. It seems natural to a man to have a woman demand his small change. Besamse some American politician made a monkey of Lord Sackville seven years ago he is not particu:arly excusa- ble for making a monkey of himself at this :ate date. Campos is beginning to complain that there are too many insurgents and not enough Spaniards. It looks as if any- one who wished to assist in freeing Cuba _would have to be quick about it. Chicago is to have a tower 1,100 feet sigh. By ascending to the top of this ,strusture it may be possible for. .the Chicago citizen to get a glimpse of the sun and oalch a breath of smokeless air. The work on the grand canal mad tunnel, the most important pares of the project for draining the 'city and val- ley of Mexico, is practically coulpieted and attention is being turned to plans for rceonstructing an entire sewerage system for the city. The total cost will be about $10,000,000. Of lete we have heard and e read great deal about , the importance of teseehing the school children to be good .Arflarican citizens. The truth is that the schools have alwaya taught patriot- ism ant have given a skeleton of his- tory. There is no rreed of any new de- parture. We do not wale the schoois disturbed with conflicting interpreta- tions of the constitution. Their pur- pose is to impart instruction In a few important subjects, and furnish a framework to which the Items of an education may be attached as they may he gathered after leaving school. In only a very fees things is there time for broad or thorough work. Mr. Samuel Gompers, American dele- gate to the British Workingmen's Con- giess. just returned. is quoted as say- ing: \There's no question but that the labor movement in Europe is further advanced than the movement in Ameri- ca. In Europe, especially in England, there exists a better appreciation on the part of the public as to the purposes and achievements of labor organiza- tions. The fact. Is that England was an industrial country when the United States was wholly undeveloped Indus- trially. There they line men in the labor movement whose grandfathers were agitators and walking delegates. The labor organizations of England have overcome a great deal of the pre- judice against them which formerly ex- isted.\ In the country around Rich- land, Mich.. accordin i g to a veraoloas correspondent, the break- ing of the long drought has caused some strange phenomena. \Wild flowers.\ he says, \that should have blessomed in May and June are now in full bloom, and apple and plum trees are bearing ripe fruit and blos- soms on the same branch. Fields of beans that wire planted late have the r ipely d pride. green beans, and beans in blossom in the same hill. Garden seeds which were planted last spring and did not Sprout are growing now. and farmer! are haying their second growth of early vegetables.\ This man Is wasting his talents In Richland. Chicago's chief of police is yearning for just such geniuses to revive interest in the Holmes case. Pelican lake., in South Dakota, is re- ported dry, and Lake Kampeeka. near Watertown. lower than ever before. As it is the source of water alletely to this flomishing town, some anxiety is felt for the (Mime. Heavy winter snows wi'l most likely correct the cult Y. A Missouri farmer figured It out one rainy day that he had walked 300 miles In celiivating one acre of corn. He thereupon sold his farm and matfett to town. where he walked 600 miles to find Jele CHRISII'll FIR S1,40GAN AIMS OF THE NATIONAL CHRIS- TIAN CITIZENSHIP LEAGUE. So Itcforna t he ry Al,ing t he I Ines Laid Down by the I \tinder of the k pith Atainat Choi, It and Sidle t Ili011. (Chicago Correspondence.) --\ HE marvelous of the National Christian Citizen - growth in member- ship and influence Citizen- ship League chal- lenges universal wonder aud admi- ration. The organi- zation was incor- porated under the laws of Illinois last March Previous to that date a local organization existed throughout the state. Since the move- ment has run from city to city and state to state with a rapidity and spon- taneity that is amazing even to those who have given it motion. Leagues have been•formed in nearly every state in the union. Their inabnce is felt from New Hampshire to California, and from Minnesota to the Gulf of Mexico. The wonderful increase in strength and po- tency of the National Christian Citizen- ship League has not been on account of effort on the part of its projectors to E. F. XHEELOCK. force its growth. Deeply concerned in the important work which it is de- signed to promote, they, nevertheless, adopted the most conservative methods in introducing it to public notice. Be - President Christian Citizenship League. Ileving that the best results would fol- low cautious movement, they addressed their energies more to the perfectiOn of the parent organization than to the geographical extension of its Opera- tions. It may, therefore, be said -justly that the multiplication of its member- ship has been achieved without effort, and almost without solicitation. Now, however, the gentlemen who have borne the burden of labor in this sacred field of usefulness, enlist in the work, so far 83 possible, all the moral and physical energies of good citizenship in every section of the country. With this purpose in mind, they issue the following \call\: To the People of God Everywhere:— The world belongs to Jesus Christ. \Whether they be throne or dominions • • • all things were made by Him and for Him.\ Satan is a usurper. What be- longs to Jesus Christ should he yielded to Him. In a. marked sense, this coentry is His, since it was taken possession of in Ills name by its first discoverers and settlers. Government is an ordinance of God Our history shows that God has chosen this government in an especial manner to fulfill His great purposes. But since He works through human means, these divine Intentions must be wrought out by Christian men and women. If the prayer, \Thy kingdom come, Thy will own worst estate. Votes are bought, sold and intimidate I Offices are treated as political - spoils\ rather than as pub- lic trusts. Legislation is transfornsed into brokerage. Social wrongs fester unniedicated le full public view. Shall these things continue? Sehall Chsistian apathy be the chief Lily -Of the Philistines of sin? The force, of et II are organized, aggressive, insolent. triumphant. Is it not time to marshal the hosts of righteousness in battle ar- ras . ? We live under a government of the majority. But the majority is com- posed of Christians—if not of (setael church members, at least of those who are adherents of the church. Therefore we are responsible for the evils men- tioned above. However we may differ as to creed, ritual and polity, we can all agree as to the need of united action to correct those evils. We can co-oper- ate without surrendering our denquil- national names or our political prefer- enees. Tae only question is one of meth- ods. A practical and adequate organiza- tion has been recently called into ex- istence In Chicago called the National Christian Citizenship League, which has already abundantly vindicated its reason for being. Its avowed three -fold object is: 1. To reveal Jesus Christ as the Savior orthe nation as well as of the individual. 2. To make Christian principles operative in public affairs. 3. To unite the followers of Christ in con- sistent, harmonious and aggressive ac- tion, not as church members, but as Christian citizens, for the following purposes, viz: 1. Tie prevent, by per- sonal effort, the nomination and elec- tion of corrupt candidates and the en- actment of corrupt laws in city, state and nation. 2. To secure edelity on the part of officers intrusted with the exe- eution of the laws. 3. To exterminate the saloon as the greatest enemy of Christ and humanity. 4. To preserve the Sabbath. 5. To purify and elevate the elective franchise. 6. To promote the study of social wrongs and the ap- plication of effective remedies. 7. In general, to seek the reign of whatso- ever things are true, honest, just, pure, lovely and of good report. We do not wish for a union of church and state. Nor do we seek to govern the state through the church. But we do propose to identify Christian citizens with public affairs and thus infuse into industries, politics and administrations the spirit of Jesus Christ. With the conviction that the time has come for a great forward movement. and that God will utilize the league to prepare the way 'of His kingdom, we urge all Christians to take instant steps JOSEPH le BERRY, D. D. Vice President Christian Citizenship Leaglie. je done in earth, as it is in heaven,\ is ever answered, the people of God must do a two -fold work; as In Nehemiah, iv. 16-18, where trowel In one hand and sword In the other. they simultaneous- ly rebuilt the walls of the eoly city, and fought the enemy. Today wickedness Is in power, who- ever is in place: and encouraged by the apathy of Christian sentiment, heaps obstacle upon obstrica! in the way of the coming kingdom The saloon, the gam - bling den and the brothel (satanic trinity) ruin our youth of both sexes in body and In soul. The Lords day Is made a time of reediest hut enforced toil to thousands, while its sacredness is oftan practically denied by He friends. The missionaries of the cross sped on their way by the prayers and gifts of the church are followed by the agencies of hell, athlete under the sanc- tion of Christian civilization, degrade the lict.ahen to depths unknown in their A. M. HASWELL. Secretary Christian Citizenship League. toward the organization of local leagues and their affiliation with the central body. The details of organization and plans for work may be :earned by ad- dressing the National Christian Citi- zenship League, 153 122. Salle street, Chicago. This is not a mere call for civic re- form—it is vastly more. A double work needs to he done, formative and re - . ,formative. The young must be educated in civics. We must stop raising boost., iers and drunkards. The present gener- ation of voters must he -united for Christian government. Nor is it enough merely to sweep and grrnish the house —It must be filled' with good tenants. We must not only correct the evils of the day, but prevent other evils by making Christian principles the ruling motive in public affairs. To this necessary and named work we summon all, of whatever creed, par- ty, nationality or sex, who acknowl- edge God as supreme over al' and de- sire to see Him will done upon earth. We commend to Christian people everywhere the Christian voter's vow, as printed below. Heartily adopted, honestly advocated and persistently practiced. it will redeem America and relegate the evils that afflict the body politic to oblivion. if It meets with your approval sign it, and get your friends and neighbors to do the same; \Believing that my ballot is my tes- timony. and that as a Christie!) citizen I should make it witness for political righteousness. I record my NOW: That I will. whenever possible, attend the caucus and primary, and demand the nomination of honotable rnd capable men. That I will seek the divorcement of national illIftlles from municipal and state elections. That I will work for the extermination of the saloon, and will support for office Ruch men only as are In favor of righteous legislation and the Impartial enforcement of law \ Always!. A thy complained to a shopkeeper that In sending parcels to her he would address her :is \the honorable.\ \Don't mention it. ma'am. It doesn't signify at ail.\ \But it does signify. My parcels may go to the wrong person. I am not 'hon- orable.' \ \We. madam, have always found you so.\—The Spectator A .Motonnan's Life. FULL OF HARDSHIPS, EXPOSURE AND CONS l'ANT DANGER. Th• Greet Strain on a MAW% 1.1111r, ea buffIclets1 In Itself to Wreck 111m lo a Short Time, The Experience of • Well -Known Motorman. From the Cincinnati, ohm, Enquire:. '[hi' life of a motorman is not a bed of roses, lie is subjected to many hardships especially in the winter when he is exposed to the cold and snow. Even in the summer he must leer the incense heat which beats down upon him. Considerable nerve and self-possession is necessary in a good motor- man, for the lives and limbs of his lumen - gees are at stake. One of the best koown, electric motormen in this city. is William Frazer, who is at present running a ear on tne CumminsvIlle electric line. He is not only well known to his fellow employes but to the people Who travel on his car. Mi.. Frazer is a young man about twenty-six years of age find resides with his wlee and child at 144 Betts Street, Cincinnati, 0. About a year ago Mr. Frazer was taken with serious stomach troubles, lie bought several kinds of medicine which were rec- ommentlitd to ii mu, but none of them seemed Lii give him even temporary benefit. An enthusiastic admirer of that famons remedy known ps Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People told hint to try them. Frazer was almost diseonraged, but took the advice. a reporter for the Enquirer he said: -I can most heartily recommend Dr. Wil- liams' Pink Pills. They are all that is claimed for them, in fact they advertise themselves better than any medicine I ever saw. I was seized some timeago with a bad attack of indigestion. My stomach hurt me nearly all the time and I could not digest my food. The pain was almost unbearable and I found nothing thaS would give me relief. I confess that when I bought the first box of Pink Pills 1 hadn't much confl- deuce in their efficacy because! had tried so many things without success that I was al - moat discouraged Before I had taken one box 1 was decidedly better. Two boxes cured me entirely. While I have been under the weather from other causes my indiges- tion has never returned. If it ever should I know jest what to do. I have So much confidence in the efficacy of Pink Pills that if I ever get real sick again with any disor- der I shall use some of them. It is It pleas- ure for me, I assure you, to testify to the excellent qualities of those Pink Pills. They not only tone the stomach but regulate the bowels and act sat as a mild cathartic.\ Mr. Frazer's testimonial means some- thing. He speaks from personal experi- ence and any one who doubts that he re- ceived the benefits stated can easily verify the assertion by calling on Mr. Frazer or seeing him some time while he is on his ear. Dr. Williams Pink Pills contain all the elements necessary to give new life and richness to the blood and restore shattered nerves. They are sold in boxes at 60 cents a box, or Six boxes for t2.50, and Nay be had of all druggists or directly by mail from Dr. Williams Medicine Eompany, Schenectady, N. Y. SAT IN THE OFFeE DEAD. A Hotel Guest Who Had for Hours Heim Thought a bleeper. The corpse of Thbtnas J. De Puy, an attorney of Seattle, sat bowed in the attitude of sleep nearly all day in the busiest part of the office of the Golden West hotel, in Sin Francisco the other day, and none who jostled the dead or sat down close beside the rigid form knew that it Was a dead man until 3 o'clock in the afternoon.' The man sat down in a stupor about 7 o'clock in the morning, before the bustle of the day beran. His brain was benutnbed with drink, and probably also with poison taken to escape froth a troubled life. When he sat down he crossed his hands in his lap, pulled his hat dawn over his eyes which were closed and shadowed by heavy eyebrows, and dropping his head on his breast, went to sleep. Ile mils.. have died during the morn- ing, and without meving. Night Cleric iiiidebrant saw him there and let him sleep on when he ;vent off duty at 3 o'clock. By e o'clock and during all the rest of the day the place was crowded with guests and others, The chairs on either side of him were seldom vacant. Men stumbled against his feet in sitting down to read the morning papers, but it was none ef their business if some guest had been up drinking all night and was fast asleep in the chair. So the corpse sat there anti grew rigid hour after hour near the big front windows. As time afternoon teas wearing away some man who had loafed there Some time thought he would do a neighborly act by rous- ing the man asleep. - Partner, hadn't you better wake up?\ he said as lie gave a shoulder a slight shake, but the form responded strangely to the touch. Ile gave the head a push, but the' neck was stiff and the head did not move. When the morgue wagon came rigor tnortis we , . far advanced, and it was plain that the men had been dead for sev- eral hours. -- There is moire Catarrh In this seotton of the country than all other diseases put together, and until the . last few years was supposed to be Incurable. For a great many years doctors pro- nounced It a 'o•al direase, and pre- scribed local remedies, and by constant- ly falling to cure with local treatment, pronounced it Incurable. Science has proven Catarrh to be a ronstitutional disease, and therefore requires consti- tutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio, Is the only constitu- tional cure on the market. It Is taken Internally, In douses from ton drops to it teaspoonful. It acts olit.ctly on the blood and mueoes surface. oi the sys- tem. They offer (Inc Hundred Dollars for any case It falls to cure. Send for circulars and testimonlala Address F. J. CHEN'SY & CO., Toledo, 0. Sold by druggists; The. Hall's Family llllp 25e. THEY BOUGHT OUT SALOON. The Methodist or Union Coarse Are to Have a New Church. New Yoyk Times: After many yells of effort the Methodists of Uniott Course, L. I., have succeeded in rais- ing funds safficleht to build a Suitable house of worship and a cozy little struc- ture is now nearly completed. Perhape there is no place in this neighborhood where there has been more wickedness, at least from the Methodist point of view, than in this village. The famous linoin race commie from which the v Liege .derives its name, was in its day the greatest gam- bling center in the neighborhood of New York car et was there that many of the present day kings of the turf made their first suecessful bets, and where many old time famous horees won their first races. Of course, that was all long ago. The race track has disappeared under pretty villas and busy stores, but this change took time EMI it Was years before there were enough Methodists to organize a church society. When such an organization filially did get into existence it started in to fight wickedness in a decidedly novel manner. There was in thevillage particularlL e objectionable - liquor sa- loon, which Ked survived from the old race track days and which was the re- sort of bad characters. One enthusiastic member 7f the new church society sug- gested that its first work should be to get rid of the objectionable saloon- keeper. \How can we do it?\ he was asked \Buy him out,\ was the answer. \We ueed a building and I will give $500 to- ward securing the saloon.\ This struck everybody as a good plan and so the anoon keeper was bought out and hie den of iiiiquity converted into a house of worship. In that build- ing the enures, society grew stronger aed stronger and recently the plan for the new building was perfected and the money raised. The society still warships in the old saloon. By what seemed an intervention of Providence, the building reeently narrowly escaped destruction. It was right in the path of the terrible cyclone which swept through the village on the afternoon of 'Saturday, July 13. All the buildings in the immediate vicifiity Were wrecked or injured. A shed at ono end of the church was carried a quar- ter of a mile, arid a tree at the other end was pulled out by .the roots. The church building Itself war uninjured. but next morning, when the members of the congregatiorr gathered at the church, they found that the wind, sweeping under the doors, had torn up the carpet and some of the pews and piled them 'in a promiscuous heap in the center of the room. This seemed like a Providential hint that it was time for the congregation, to move. They held service, but on Sunday, July 28, they laid the corner stone of the new churth buildieg. Then new structure will seat, when finished, about 400 persons. It is, un- pretentious, being built in the Queen Anne style s of architecture. The interior will be finished in natural woad. The windows are to be of cathedral glass. The church will be dedicated next month. A 110 -CT. 4 51.1.Nit.tit The l'ohlIsheta of Tnr perm'. Come...1ov off, lo send free to el ely new anborriber a handsomt fonr•poge calendar. 1 it 10 In , iltkoirrsphed In rile, • 01 la. The retail price of Mt. calendar Is SI C ono. Tipple who sphseill at once. send :fit 101 ▪ treelte tte paper free et cry ureic fiom tip time thr subscription I. r•celyeri to ton I. lebi Also the Thankafirinu. ehrlatnito awl No , S en'', Ti MIA • NIllither• free, aid TIIP V\ , TM . .. • • a full year. fl weeks. to .110 I. pos. Nddro.. o I t ries collIPANto T)s, I Coe' lli''. • • Rorie First Horse -If I were I'd lie ashamed to ehow myself at the 11 ,1 1 , 1 1 a) another season. Second fleece Why not? First Horse —Volts mitt triers wore an Antericanenade dress, and your eroorn did not drop Ii is Ws. All time respectable horses Were Weighing at you. The Roddy Engliairman. It has long been recognized, at least by the caricaturist, that John Bull has a stolid mind glooming behind an ex- ceedingly rubicon visage. The ;amo high authority on race type depicts Brother Jonathan with a shrewd spirit peering forth from drawn and parch- ment colored features. The humorist of the quill gives a rough and ready ex- nanation of this difference by calling John Bull a beef -eater. Now the first thing an American traveler notices in England is that the beef is not so gooe as that to which he has been accus- tomed; and is scarcely to be called the national dish. He soon learns to make the excellent English mutton his staple viand. Meanwhile, however, his belief in the ruddiness of the English com- plexion is strengthened by observation. and if he has ever had the pleasure of becoming familiar with the features of the colonial fathers as they shine on the canvas of Copley and Gilbert Stuart, he recognizes that onr ancestors were far more nearly related in temper- ament than we to the typical Briton The Englishmah's explanation of this —bitter beer on the one side and We for breakfast on the other --Is scarcely more satisfactory than beef -eating hy- pothesie. One is ferced to the opinion that the difference—auperficialty at- tributable to social conditions—Is fun - damentaily based upon climate. LABOR NOTES. A co-operative cotton mill will be started in Columbia. S. C. The Cigarmakerme International Union issued two new charters last month. The Order of Railway Telegraphers favors the federatior of all railroad or- ganization.) The union manufacturers of the green glass lreitietry have agreed to advance the wages of employes 5 per cent. Window glees manufarturers of Pittsburgh, Pa . and vicinity. have or- ganized a \selling agency\ with a rap ital of $25,000,000. The national strike of tailors to equeeze temiltions in other clotbires markets with those whirh exist in Nett York IS now under way. Tete Chicago & Alton shops, in Bloomington. III.. began operation this month for ft nine -hour erhedule for the first time in two '40111 -Mt The garment workers' strike in less ion is pre/els:illy over t wo thirds of the employers have grunted the terms of the strikera. Ferry --What luck did you have MO mg' ilargreaveit Gnu a bigger lnad than I smile carry home, \Of fish?\ Cinrinnall Emperor. Scrofula from InfanY Troubled my daughter. At times her head would be covered wa s h scuba and running sores. We were afraid she would empl become blind. We had to keel! her in a dark room. We began to give' her Hood's Sane - parole and soon we saw that she WWI better in every re. spect. The sores lave now all healed.. I had a severe atillEclalsof the grip, was left in bad condition with muscular rheumatism aud lumbago. Since taking Hood's Sarsaparilla I ant all right and can walk around out doors without the aid of crutches.\ W, H. AREHART, Albion, Indiana. Hood's Pills care all liver ills. 25e. SisalsawalaSalli•-••••••••••• Go to California in a Tourist Sleeper. It is the RIGHT way. Pay more and you are ex- travagant. Pay less and you are uncomfortable . . The newest, brightest, cleanest and easiest rid- ing Tourist Sleepers are used for our Personally Conducted Excursions to California, which leave Omaha every Thursday morning reach- ing San Francisco Sunday 'evening, and Los Angeles Monday noon. You can join them at any intermediate point. Ask nearest ticket agent for full information, or write ha Buno,tol Lue I L l'nexcis, 1'. A., Omaha, Neb, waliwawasara..aaaaaarawasawa•sahseis f r i obb's I para us eyPills i HOBE'S Ch.c.igo. Is cure all Kidney Troubles, caused by overwork, worry, excesses, etc., and all Blood Troubles ( Rheumatism, Gout, Anaemia, Skin D i s - eases, etc.), caused by sick Kidneys. A few doses will re- lieve. A few boxes will cure. Sold by 211 drug- gists, or by mail pre- paid tor 50e. a bee. Write for pa Inplaet. MEDICINE CO., Sin Francisco. (AM ter Itrio Se ems; 5,1'' Mc et I.,. 1, id Abs r immu N 100 - (olumbia po c pE ie Fcice ,s m pa,•,1r„Rlity,(1\ Save Money by Buying Di- rect from the Factory. $20 t,,r this 7 Drawer Ilia% 1r, latent lolpri,erl ri•• 'o'er !teeing Ma.' hi.., cnonplet with at attaehments •ni1 en , ranted for ten Ynn\. (toe die I IptIre estalo,o• to day 4:1.111GAINO5 it RICH 5FF. 275 Wabaah-all.Clairazo S v VaitiMISSOURI. bert fr,,im nortion In the Wiwi tin ilywitha. A Collor , . of ernes ne... ill I • Ilinatio. rrieketi•• Alitin.lsne. of C....I y glriog f.d rienerIPLI\^ oi the til , 11 M 1116.'1,1 •1141 4 gi 1,11tril el Land. In 11•.. J4111115, rung. If, Pinnate , of ti P *LIMO, I lAnd nn•I Ii.. SteeP Ilimp. Neosho. Newt n '0 IiI Omaha STOVE REPAIR Works Steve Repair . . for 40,000 different *love. land ranges. 15021/0li5lla• t..11)th., n • eh W A — 1ov Indy to mdc oorn• Money ifuleklr needing , o.A.`• meet • hnold work fiir 1I1^ neWng MP , 1 IOW prerP. '114i wra A. M. DA.M. S. 0„ 219 I olurnhuin 1••••• I.N.U. No, 46. 1896. CM - Kindly Mention This Paper When You Write to an Advertiser. Ii e‘. 01 C- 1 0' 4 • •