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About Kendall Chronicle (Kendall, Mont.) 1902-190? | View This Issue
Kendall Chronicle (Kendall, Mont.), 08 Sept. 1903, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn85053338/1903-09-08/ed-1/seq-5/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
- Kendall, Montana, September 8, 1903. 5. • • es MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS. Men of/ blue or gra y jet are almost. invariabl3 the be: -1 The total immigration into Canada. for the fiscal 3 ear ended Ante 30 foots up over 70,000 persons, Americana be- ing in the majority. The Gulf stream is 200 fathoms deep off Cape Florida. Near Cape Hatteras the depthis . only half as great, the stream appearing to have run uphill, with an ascent of ten inches—to the. mile. Road taxation on Long Island is an , item of importance.Included in SoUth- ampton'e tax budget this year is 216, , 000 for the maintenance af highwN•s..- For the support of the poor of the town $3,300 was provided. During the nineteenth century Lon- don- grew from a city of 800,000 peuvle to etre Of csoo.coo4-that k. eight eight fold. New York increased from 60,000 to 3,500.000—nearly 60 fcia. Lon- don I. now increasing 17 per cent. in a decade, and -New York 35 rer cent., or toice as fast. If this rate should hold good for 50 years , more, New York would hare over 15,000,000 population and ben million ahead of London. The three balls, the sign of the pawn- brokers in thiA country End Great Brit air., are derived indirect 13 front the coat-of-irms of the Medici family Florence, Italy. The family sprang from a physlcian, a medicos; it became wealthy through transacting a bank- ing business for many years. and when it became noble It adopted five golden pills on a blue ground ac its irthorial device. Bankers in other countries adopted the same device, either in whole or in part, as a sign of theif bmintst; and when bankers gave ,up the pawnbroking business the pawn- brokers retained the old Florentine device. When New York was Yount tower cinch was built in - the -- titsre PI+ -of a little church that then eiotid at the corner of Beekman and Clift'streets. That was nearly too centuriea ago, but the clock L. , still ticking away and keep- ing just as good time es ever, Its hands are not is artistic and gi thseeuX as those that point the time in many of the tower clocks to -day. They sere. made by Simeon Willard, Sho ham- mered them out of rough iren . .at a lit- tle blacksmith forge In the woos.* near Boston. Nct only the hands, but the whole clock was made out of the same rough material, and to th.is day it shows evidence of the crudest Ling of workmanship. Its scape wheel N much worn now, yet from all appearances it is still good for another century. and the regularity of its movement is almost perfect, putting modern clocks to shame. HE SHOULD HAVE KNOWN. • tltr•et Car Conductor Who Was Net Fully 14 to the Requirements at Mt Passenger. The conductor on the street car is theoreticall3 responsible for the lives and comfort of all his passengers. No matter how crowded the car, he is sup- poSed to see *eery signal for the car to stop. and the company expects him to collect every fare and say \Please\ when he asks for it. Worse than that, he is supposed by some passengers, tike the one who }ION it in this story from the Chicago Tribune, to know et erything She pas an elderly worn - nn e in a 3 outhful bat, and as he paid her fare, she said: \Conductor. I pant to get off at the street Mrs. Rebecca 'isinglass lives on I've fingotten the name of it, but there, • drug store on the corner kept by a trail named Johnson.\ \I don't know any such woman, ma'am.\ replied the conductor, \and we pass 10 corners where there are drug stores.\ \Butt It's in this part of town, and she liver is a two-story brick about six doors front the corner. She's a o omen oith a double chin, and /he alo a3 s travels cn t! is line.\ \I don't doubt that, ma'am, but I don't know where the lives or any- thing filio;ut her.\ \I think that's mighty strange. She's got a isier that teaches in the Kershaw school, and rye told you the kind of a house she--\ sorry,,but I don't know a thing about her, ma'am. You'll have to tell me the easne of the street or—\ \Seems to we the street car company ought to employ conductors -that know something. If yori can't tell me where to get off, give me my money back and I'll take some other car.\ \I can't do that. I've rung up your fare.\ \Going to cheat me out. of my nickel, are you?\ \Certainly not, ma'am If you had told me where you wantcd to \I did tell you, sir. If you didn't know where to let me off, you ought to have said so. I 1 old 3 oti the name of the woman I'm hunting, I told you about the drug store, I described the house she lives in so plain that nobody can miss it, and I told roll it was in this part of town. What more do you want?\ \Nothing ma'am.\ said the con- ductor, weakening. \Here's your nickel.. I'll pay it out of my own pocket. You're too many for me.\ He gave her a coin, rang the signal to stop, and his passenger got off at the next crossing. where she stationed herself to wait for a car with a more intelligent conductor. Ms's lolinssosarte to Man. First Detective—How did you man- age to get a confession from that des- perado? Second Detective—Well, you see, we traveled together by rail for 200 miles. \But what had that to do with his confession? 1.baught a cigar of the train boy and gave it to him: After smoking it he thought be was going to die. so he told we everything.\--Chiettgo Daily News. SCIENCE AND INDUSTRY. - Mirrors of-- platin ura r —palladium, Iron, nickel, cobalt, copper. and bis- muth have been prepared *-project. lug the metallic particles by kathode rays. The rarest shell in existence is one called the \Cone of the Holy Mary.\ There is a specimen in the British museum, which a few years ago was valuea at $6,000. More than nine-tenths of the hemp Produced in the United States is grown in Kentucky, and at present prices it is regarded as second only to tobacco in profit as a farm crop. A pair of women's shoes made in Lynn, Mass., to establish a record for rapid shoemaking required 57 different °iterations and the use of 42 machines and 100 pieces. All these parts were assembled and made into a graceful pair of shoes, ready to wear, in 13 minutes. The limit of span wooden truss bridges was, practically, 200 feet. The wonderful development of the cantilever bridge, having a truss on the beam principle, has resulted . in Its being oftenest used in spans up to 2,000 feet. When the distance be- tween piers must be 2,000 or 3,!)00 feet the suspension bridge is used, To prevent pitting from smallpose It is only necessary to protect the liatient from the blue and violet rays of light, which can be done by al- lowing no light to enter the room save through red glass. In the ab- sence of these irritating rays of light—to which sunshine is due—the deep disfiguring pustules do not form. • A very striking instance of the deterioration of leather, produced under conditions demanding quicker tanning by the use of various chem- icals. thus decreasing the durability of the material,, is afforded by the fact that the British museum ex- pends $20.000 a year in rebinding books in leather. Modern leather is widely different from the material produced by what I. now regarded as an effete process, its life being limited to 15 year.. In the search for cheaper and quicker processes of making leather, large quantities of sulphuric acid are used, and this chemical, in combination with others, causes the material to decompose rapidly in the course of few years. W.S.SMITH TELEPHONE 115 LEWISTOWN, MONTANA EXCLUSIVE IN HOUSE FURNISHINGS TERMS CASH r‘soi. Aitaitlialgalfaligat4J0aitsJOisilraNailfalgs.elstait 1424 AGM DRUGGIST F D. B. MORRIS -11.)•).-)s))1 ) II. WILLIAMS, Lewistown, Mont. PRESCRIPTIONS A SPECIALTY Drugs, Druggists' Sundries, Toilet Articles, Perfumes, Stationery and Cigars lane'VenelrelE\Wlsr\.Or'allane'W'srisrdaVar5r7irfar • sr\St - vr k st _ Kendall Livery I BANK OF and Feed Stables FERGUS COUNTY MERICKLE & M'CORMICK Proprietors Opposite Stephens' hote 1 S. Headquarters for Lewistown - Kendall Stale Patrons Given Every 4ttention, Stock will be eared for at reasonable prices. ALIAS SUMMONS IN THIli DISTRICT COURT of the Tenth Judicial District of the State of Montana in sold for the County of Fergus Edit Mae Watson, Plaintiff, vs. Bailey Wat- son, Defeininnt. The State of Montana sends greeting to the shove named defendant: You are hereby required to appear I.. •ti action brought against you by the above - named plaintiff in the District Court of the Tenth Judicial District of the State of Mon- tana, in and for the Connly of Fergus, and to answer the complaint filed therein, with- in ten ,lass (exclusive of the day of service) after the service on you of this summons. if served 'A ;thin this county ; or, if served out of this county, but in this (District, within twenty days: others Ise within forty days. or judgement by default will be taken against you. according to the i.rayer of said com- plaint The said action is brought to obtain a decree of divorce of this court in tivor of said plaint iff and against said defendant dis- solving the bonds of matrimony between Plaintiff AIM Defendant and for the custody of Twilit Mae Watson, a minor child of the Plaintiff awl Defendant on the grounds that Defendant has failed for more than ono (I) year last past, to provide for I'laintiff and their *Rid minor child the eomn ,,,,, necessar iss of life, because of defendant's idleness. profligacy arid dissipation, all of which is more folly set forth in the romidaint filed herein to which reference is hereby made for a more pnrtictilar description of the nature and ramie of this action, Stud ) .ott are hereby notified that if you fall to appent - nrod iitt•aer the said complaint is ftbove re,illired, that the Plaintiff will spot , ',the court for the relief demanded in the o ,,plaint My.., under my hand and the weal of the District Court of the Tenth Judicial District of the State of H tans, in wad for the Coni.t y of Fergus, this list day of August. he the year of our Lord one th,iiisand nine hun- dred and three, oiporated under the law... • Lewistown, Montana S. S. HOBSON, President. L. W. ELDRIDGE, Vice -President. F S WRIGHT, Cashier. AUSTIN W. WARS, asst. Cashier. :Board of Directors: T. C. Power, Peers WAdow. W. D. Sytatnas, S. S. Hobson. I. W. Eldridge, J. Holsenser, I.. H. Hamilton. Amelia W. Warr Frank B. Wright. Capital Stock $200.000. Surplus and Reserve $135,000. Correspondents: American National. Helena. Montana )(mint's, Bros., New York. Continental National. Chicago. Illinois Interest Allowed on Deposits Left for a Specified Time. W. G. Norman & Co. Manufacturing Jewelers Lewistown, Montana File Watches and Clocks Repairing Given Careful 4, 4 EMICP/11 WRIOHT. Clerk. Room., Voir Tonsi,, Ails for Plaintiff. W. G, NORMAN VISITS KENDALL ABOUT THE TENTH OF EACH MONTH. HE ALSO CALLS AT OTHER TOWNS MONTI1LY