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About Kendall Chronicle (Kendall, Mont.) 1902-190? | View This Issue
Kendall Chronicle (Kendall, Mont.), 28 July 1903, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn85053338/1903-07-28/ed-1/seq-6/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
6. Kendall, Montana. July 28, 1903 THE NAVY RATION. Immo... Amount of Provision. Oen- summed in a Year by Air - tea. Signore. The enlisted force of the navy dur- ing the coming year is expected to consume 220,000 poundsof frankfu. _er sausages and 144,600 pounds of sauer- kraut. This is a part of the new navy ration, for the component parts of which contracts are shortly to be awarded covering one year's supplies, deliverable at the various navy yards and stations. The schedules for these provisions have been prepared in the bureau of supplies and accounts, and It has been one of the interesting estimates of that bureau to figure out the amount of subsistence of this class which will probably be con- sumed on shipboard, says the Army and Navy Register. The aggregate supplies, in addition to the 220,000 pounds of frankfurters and the 144.- 600 pounds of sauerkraut are as fol- lows: 1,150,000 pounds of fresh beef, 287,000 pounds of fresh pork chops. 172,000 pounds of fresh veal, 21 , 5.000 pounds of fresh mutton, 220,000 pounds of pork sausages, 88,300 pounds of bologna sausages, 723 000 pounds of smoked beef tonTues. 141,- 000 pounds of sugar cured hams, 141,- 000 pounds of sugar cured shoulders, 141.000 pounds of fresh beef liver, 285,000 pounds of dressed chickens and 71,800 pounds of dressed turkeys. A NATION OF SMOKERS. The People of Spain Puff Tobacoo In- tly and la All Sorts of Places. Although one often hears that the tobacco habit prevails universally in Spain tt — ls - impossible to know bow general that habit is until one visits there, says.a London paper. People smoke in...e:..santly, under all condi- tions, at all hours and in all places— exeeotine the eloirch. Men smoVe iii the railway carriages; they smoke in (be tram cars: they smoke .in all the minor theaters: they 'smokein n11 .the restaurants, in the hotel dining rooms, and, of course, in the cales. In tbe business office the merehnnt an.1 his clerks smoke. In shops the shopuitin. while trying to sell goods to a lady, will stop to roll a cigar- ette, which. when lighted. he will poll' in her face. You see conductors and drivers of tram cars smoking. All the hackney cabmen smoke all the titre, while even coachmen aryl footmen of private carriages some- (imes smoke on the box. Beggars ap- pre.wh you cigarettes in month to whine for alms. If you ask for tick- ets at a railaay office the eke: lays down his cigarette as he hands you the dingy bits of pastelica rd. The innionernbl\ readier% all snioke ciga- rettes all the time. The lower-class women, including the gypsy women, smoke freely on the streets. AUTOMATIC DOCTOR IN PARIS. Draw. for Twelve Different Ailments Furnished by Penny -in -Slot Machines. It is probable that the climax of the automatic supply craze has been reached by the compan. which Is about o install enny-in-the-slot ma- chines, called \everybody's dexter,\ on the botilevards and principal thor- oughfares, says the Brookl)n Eagle. Each machine is to have 19 slits, which means that not only the reme- dies, but also the prescriptions for 12 different ailments, such as toothai he, indigestion, cold in the head and \nerves.\ will be forthcoming for the ubiquitous penny. The faculty of medicine has grant- ed the system a certificate, and there is consternation among Parisian doc- tors. One.cloct6r said: • \It will lead to all sorts of com- plications. People who ale suffering pain have not always their wit at command, and it is quite c ince:vahle that many people will tak the op- posite drugs to those they require. I can see a man who is half blind with biliousness putting his . penny in the rung slot and swallowing a cure for influenza. That is certainly n hat ni:1 happen, and then those ma- chines will be railed at just as many a doctor is when he happens to make a mistake.\ ODD JAPANESE Til*EP Mad* to Represent s Noonday Land- scape with Every Detail ha Poetic:than. \When in Japan not very long since, I saw as remarkable a time- piece as I suppose the world con- tains,\ said Mr. William T. Cr.ws, of Newark, N. J., reports the Washing- ton Post. \It was inclosed in a frame about three feet wide and five feet long, re- presenting a noonday land.,ca . e of rare beauty. In the foreground ap- pear plum and cherry trees and gor- gerousplants in full bloom; in the rear there is a slop:ng hill, from which a I t'ascatie seems to flow, the crystal im- itation being of wonderful Ji eness. A thread-l.ke sbreok me nde,rs from this point. encircling r.ins and islands, and finally dila p! r ng in • pieetof woodland. - In a ntinia ure sky , a g /him sun, mining in a slyer wire. strre the hour on ad er gongs as it passes. \Rada hour is marked rri the frame by . as c cep eg tortoise which tr the place cf a hand. A b.rd • f exqui- site plumage warbles at the close of each hour. and as the nonce t..1 . 1111 a mouse sallies forth fr in a neig bor- ing grotto, and scampering ova: the hill to the garden is soon lost to view.\ A Pickled Traveler. A traveler in Tartary tells the fol- lowing stery of a corpulent Greek servant who accompanied . hips: \At the end - of The third day the well. seasoned kavass in attendance, whoa( whole life had been passed in tht saddle, came with a smile/to report that Gurgis was unable tO proceed from abrison, as the doctors called it, of the epidermis. 'He can't be left behind, sir, in the desert,' added the . old beirakdar, 'so. with yonr leave. •.ve will give him the Tartar bath.' A tub of the strongest brine. was ac- cordingly preparelt in which the un- fortunate Gurgis was forthwith im- mersed. uttering the most appalling howls at the first plunge, but subsid- ing shortly afterward and eventually. after half an hour's tanning corning out so effectively case-hardened that he rode a further thousand miles to the Black sea In the course of the next week without showing a symp- tom of distress.\ SHAH'S PRECIOUS GLOBE. C. It. KELLY H. A. MOULTON KELLY & MOULTON ABSTRAOTERS Conveyancing Real Estate Insurance Collections Abstracts of City, Ranch, or Mining Property Electric Building LEWISTOWN, Telephone No. 3 MONTANA Made 11•11id Gold with All Marko and Meandaries of Precious Stoaem It appears that persons have not been altogether mistaken in 11/' pos- ing that the shah of Per.ii, pot; e , ..St's 6(1111e treasures t hat canto t be ma ich- ed on earth. A brief states' e.it as to , the extent of his riches is frond in , the \Courier des Mates Un . is,\ says a translation made for the Literary Digest. The English jeweler who offered the shah the mrdest sum of \Low ; KO for tt e jewel which he wears on ceremonial o:casions probably knew what he was about, and %%mild at least have stood a good chant e to get his money back if the offer had been accepted. But what would he or any- one else do with the famous terres- trial globe which his majesty pos- sesses at Teheran? This globe is made of solid gold and weighs about seventy pounds. The boundaries of cotietrtes, and oth- er marks, are male.,Al t 5 precious stones, the total number of which is said to be more than 10 003. The oceans are reprevented by t' ousands of emeralds, Per,ia is blue with many turquoises, Africa is abla/e with rubies, France and Englai.d rparkle with hurdre.'s of diamond , . How de- lightful it would he to study geog- raphy from a globe like that. Judith Inland Transportation Co. ( J. S. KELLY e 1 NOTARY PUBLIC' 1 REAL ESTATE 1 c All Kinds of Legal and Mining Blanks 1 KENDALL, riONTANA t 1 Montana Railroad i Company Nearest rail line and quickest route to the new gold camps of the Judith , Basin'. Direct corn- . munication railway stages to Harlowton. Lve. II:00 Arr. 2:45 Daily, F. T. ROBERTSON, ROST. with Northern Pacific at Lombard, and with and from Lewistown at a.m. Lombard Art. 9:05 p.m. pan. Hartowton Lire. 3:30 pan. Except Sunday ' Supt. Lombard, Montana. RANTOUL, Gael M'gr. Heleistatia. ' Wilson's Stage Line Fast Time Between Lewistown andHarlowton Carrying making on Coaches cept Sunday. Leave Harlowton ternoon , the U. S. Mall and C.01111Yrii..11 with trains Montana railroad Leave Lewistown 5 a. m. ex- upon arrival of af- train KIDNEY DISEASES are uses. FoLErs or money remedies nent Kidney tfle physicians most fatal of all dis- L I I NE Tli c h iE s is. ; refunded. Contains recognized by emi- as the bat for and Bladder troubles. PRICE 50c. sod $1.00. . L. C. Wilson, Agent. , - - • , Foley's Kidney Cure makes kidneys and Mader right. Foley's Honey tied 7ar cures colds, \rave:ifs pneumonia BANNE . IFt. SALVE the most holding salve In the w , e1d. Foley's Honey and Tat for children,safe,aure. lis r!,Iates I.. C Wilson, agent. Subscribe for the Kendall Chronicle Operating Between. Kendall and Lewistown TWO COACHES ne leaves Kendall at 8 a. m. daily, ex- ept Sunday, arriving in Lewistown at 1 a. in.; returning, leaves Lewistown t 3 p. in., arriving in Kendall at 6 p. m. be other leaves Lewistown at 9 a. m. aily, except Sunday, arriving in Ken - all at 12 m., noon; returning, leaves endall at 3 p. m., arriving in Lewis - own at 6 p.m. OUR HORSE COACHES Ample Accommodations xtra accommodations for baggage of commercial travelers. MARTIN CLAUSEN Agent at Kendall Northern Pacific Railway ESTIBULED TRAINS DINING CARS TIME CARD—LOMBARD AST ROUND DEPART o. 4, Atlantic Exp 4:19 p. in. No. 12, Local Passenger 2 • 33 B. tn. 'EST ROUND No. 3, Pacific Express No. II, Local Passenger DEPART 8'34 a. m. 4 • 19 p. m. 'Connects at Logan and Garrison w ith North Coast Ltd. NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION - Depart- ment of the Interior, United States Land (Mice at Lewi.tpwai, Montana, June 4, 193 Notice I. hereby g ti that the following - named settler has ed notice of his inten• Don to make final roof in support of his laim, and that proof sill made be- fore Register and Receiver at Lewistown, Montana, on Thursday, August 5,1993, viz: GEORGE J. WAREHAM a ho made homestead entry No. 1501, for the ▪ sw1, sec 2, tiw a / 4 \ nia 4 / 4 see. 11, tie 1 / 4 1,01, sec• ie. (p.19 N., R. LI EM. 31, He 'lames the folio% iota witnessirs to prove his continuous residence upon aud cultiva- tion of said land, via: Andrew J. Rodgers. James Awbery, Jethro Wnreham and Wilbur A. Moore, all of Kendall, klotatatia. EDWARD 'MASSEY, Register. First Publication, June 50, my. 191 s jOTICE FOR PUBLICATION (ISOLATE!) • \ TRACT l-PublIe Land dale. - United States Land Office, Lewistown, Montana. Notice is hereby given, that in pursuance of instructions from the Commissioner of the General Land Otto.. tinder anthority vested in him by Section '2155, U.S. Revenue Statutes, as amended by the sot of Congress approved February 28, 1895, we will proceed to offer at public sale on the 21st day August 131.3. at this office, the following tract of land, to -wit: awl?, tiw% of sec. 21, T. 17, N. R 188. Montana P. M. ny and all persons claiming adversely the above described lands are advised to tile their clahns III this office 011 or before the day above designated for the commencement of said sale, otherwise their rights will be forfeited. Iiroirsari BRAEISZY. Register. Dated this the 9th day of July, 10u3. First publication July 14, 1903. Geo. R. Creel Main Streit, Levr4town Licensed Embalmer and Undertaker Local and Long Distance Telephone Calls Answered Day or Night