{ title: 'Kendall Chronicle (Kendall, Mont.) 1902-190?, August 25, 1903, Page 3, Image 3', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about Chronicling America - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn85053338/1903-08-25/ed-1/seq-3.png', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn85053338/1903-08-25/ed-1/seq-3.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn85053338/1903-08-25/ed-1/seq-3/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn85053338/1903-08-25/ed-1/seq-3/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
About Kendall Chronicle (Kendall, Mont.) 1902-190? | View This Issue
Kendall Chronicle (Kendall, Mont.), 25 Aug. 1903, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn85053338/1903-08-25/ed-1/seq-3/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
Kendall, Montana, August 25, 1903. 4. Editorial Minds at Work. Oppression In New Norm. The Chicago and Easterly railroad inn - puny is credited with posting the follow- ing notice in conspicuons places in its stations: \'Complaint has lval made that some of our trainmen, especially some of thoae employed on the Terre Haute locals, are in the habit of flirting with ladies residing along the track be- tween Mon to,satratWial, Hillside. 'I heft employes are liable to get themselves in- to serious troubie if the practice is con- tinued. A word to the wise is sufficient.\ On account of its form and the place of posting, we accept this notice as an official order. If the several organiza- tions'yyf - railway traintuen alia not stand t's their couiradea miming between Moubzuma and Hillidale against this new form of corporate oppression of wage earners, they will miss, a fine op- portunity to enlist puislie. sympathy. America is not Japan, and the question of flirt or no flirt is one to be determined always and finally by local option rules. Moreover the salutation which the po- lite trainmen of the country return to the women who wage dishrags at the train as it flies through the rural dis- tricts of Indiana are more properly to be characterized as due social recognition rather than IlinitIg.—Bute Inter -Moun- tain. —0- 0. the Good ma In every neighbarbood Whore is always an old woman who creates a lot of mis- chief. Nearly every man has experienced theIalighting effect of 113Vinipt geissip or scold in the conimunity. In thihg days of ultra -refinement there is no punish- ment for the scold, or if there is it is never enforced. In the grand old days the scold was taken to some convenient pond and, ducked, and after such an ex- periment she generally reformed, at least for a while. Every man can think of at least a dozen old beldanis, whom he has known somewhere, who ought to be ducked. It was a pity that this cheerful custom was allowed to lapse; it is also a pity that the stooks and pillory have been done away with. -When a loafer or a wife beater goes to jail now there is nothing for him to do; he rests in idleness, thinking what *soft snap he has, with his hoard furnished by the town or comity. In the teed old days the loafer, the wife -beater and the gen- eral malefactor were put in the stocks for. the amusement and edification of honest'men ; with their heads and hands locked in a wooden yoke it would'nt take long to come to the conclusion that the way of the transgressor is anything but hot stuff. --Forsyth Times. —o— Ig) r f Illillfner Jeffries' Victory. he victory of §Ittinter Jeffries was largely slue to brute force and the ability to stand punishment. The champion heavyweight fighter of today is in many respects a mu horn gladiator. He Is said to have improved in the scieoce of the manly art, but it is chiefly to him phys- ical prowess that his soecess has been due. Jeffries was a boilermaker, and it is doubtful if a better primary school could be selected for the early education of one ambitious to achieve fame as a knocker - out. The foundations of a fine physique were evidently laid with care, for the fighter hes been able, to present a balk that the heaviest of blows could never shake, and a right swing that would drop an ox of average weight seems no more than a love tap to this champion,. of bruisers. There might be something to admire in this magnificent specimen of physi- cal manhood if there were associated with it any considerable mental capac- ity or any ambition to rise in HI world and become a nseful citizen. There are few . prizefighters who have been any- thing better than loafers and loungers, save when in training, and in all they do they usually serve no more worthy pur- pose than the bull dog or game cock. Ten thousand people from all classes of society will turn out to see these ath- letes maul each other, hut so will the same flambee of Spaniards turn out to see a bull fight, and the bloodier it is the better they like it. --Spokane Spokes- man -Review. A Matter of Railr•ool Passes. Almost simultaneously with the an- nouncement that Senator Tillman had been so unfi•rtunate as to lose Isis rail- road passes, catne the story of a new representative in congress from Mary- land named Baker, who, in a manner not altogether free from ostentation and vul- garity. took occasion to return an annual pass offeredihim by the B. & O. railroad. List winter, it will be recalled, many members of the Montana legisheure in- dignantly returnedlthe passes sent them by the Nonthern Pracifke because instead of being annuals, they were limited to sixty days; or, according to Representa- tive Baker's theory, because the recipi ent of the sixty-day passes were_'nt being bribed -hard enough. All of which re- calls the story of a Kansas legislator who started an agitation for purity in poli- tics.' \Fellow legislators,\ said he, on the opening day of the legislature, standing up for a speech and putting otra look of righteous determination, \let us make this session long to be remembered by having it wholly free from any taint of dishonesty.\ He made a long speech in this strain and ended by stepping up to the stenographer's table and laying down a railroad pass. \In oelei to back my wards with deeds,\ lie concluded, \I will lay &we my- pass on this table; and I urge every other member of this legislature who stands for clean govern- ment to step up and do likewise.\ Not a sold stirred. The speaker watched them a moment with a triumphant gleam in his eye. Presently, when everybody Inel a chance to'lay down Isis pass and in - body had improved it, he burst out: \Not an honest maui ill the chamber! Very well. ' You thonght yon had me, didn't you? Well, you haven't. That's last yaa.'e pass.\ Consumption Threatened C. Unger, 211 Maple St.. Champaign, writes : \I was troubled with it hacking cough for a year and I thought I had consumpti in. I tried a great many remedies end was under the care of phys- ician& for several months. I used one bottle of Foley's Honey and Tar. It cured me, and I have not been troubled mince.\ For sale by L. C. Wilson. USES OF TURPENTINE. A Valuable Household Article When It. Ise la Properly Under- stowd. Turpentine, either in resinous form or in spirits, has a household value. A child suffering with the croup or any throat or lung difficulty will be quickly relieved by inhaling the vapor .and having the cheat rubbed until' the skin is red, and thsit being wrapped about with flannel moistened with fiery spirits. After- ward sweet -oil will save the skin from irritation. In the eaire:of burns and scalds turpentine has no equal, says Woman's Home Companion. It is the' best dressing fpr patentTleath- er, it will remove paint from artists' clothes and workmen's garments; I: will drive away moths If a few drops are put into closets and chests; it will persuade mice to find other quarters if a little is poured into the mouse -holes; one tablespoonful ad- ded to the water in which linens ace boiled will make the goods wonder fully white; a few drops will pre- vent starch from sticking; mixed with beeswax it makes the best floor polish, and mixed with sweet oil it Is unrivaled as a polish for furni- ture -- the latter mixture should be two parts of sweet oil to one part *at-*.tilite-**st**Sg.*-**-fh*-ftft**.*1!kfkft*tkthtt-*k******th&t!K*t!hffHktii**, Club Saloon : CLINOAN & HAMILTON, Proprietors .41'Kl.VLEr .4VENU E, A'EXD.1 High Grade oe Cigars TRY OUR Cedar Brook Hunter's Bourbon Rye L Whiskies +4 Sitsir.4 0 44044iThleit +11 - 14* - 0 - 4t 40444********Sititifit $4 1 . 1 NTANA Rustlers HARDWARE f Lde COMPANY Lewistown Montana We have on hand and can fill your orders for MINING SUPPLIES, ASSAYERS' SUPPLIES, PROSPECTING OUTFITS In fact everything needed for mining and pros- pecting EXCEPT THE rUNE Now is the time to beautify your home. Nature is putting a new dress on lother earth and you should put a new coat of Paint on Your House Inside and out. The Montana Hardware Company has a complete liae of Devoe's Ready=Mixed Paints that are guaranteed. DON'T buy cheap paints, but send your mail orders to the MONTANA HARDWARE COMPANY and get the best. We also have a Complete Line of Wagons, Buggies, Harness, Shelf and Heavy Hardware, Steel Ranges, Cooking Stoves, Woven Wire Fencing, Poultry Netting and all other spring goods Screen Doors, Garden Seeds, Lawn Crass Seeds Call in or send your orders by the Kendall Stage Company Montana Hardware Company _ Telephone 52 M***3=1-X=‘,11:11:13Ck When in Lewistown Call on 330 Montana Lumber Company Mail Orders Promptly Attended to Everything in the 441. 4.• Lumber, Sash, Door and Moulding Line Largest Retail Stock in Montana. Prices Reasonable. (live 1g 34 1 ( us a call. Telephone 77 0 3* fl turpentine. Some physicians rec- ommend spirite of turpentine, ap- plied externally, for lumbago and rheumatism It is also prescribed for neuralgia of the face. Dialoaue• of the Day. Relieved Taxpayer—Well, that war with Cermeny didn't last very long. Naval Contractor—No; just long Bread, Pies and enough to get me some more con- tracts for battleships. Taxpayer begins to think he is \re- lieved\ in the sense in which a pick- pocket \relieves\ a man of his watch. -s-N. Y. Post. Kendall Bakery and Confections ry Store M..IIITIX CL.4USEX Proprietor Frtsh Every Day Cakes Candies, Tobaccoes and Hunter's Rye whisky at Clingan & Hamilton's. Cigars, Very Choice Local Agent for Kendall Stages