History of the American Clock Business for the Past Sixty Years, and Life of Chauncey Jerome eBook

Chauncey Jerome
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 117 pages of information about History of the American Clock Business for the Past Sixty Years, and Life of Chauncey Jerome.

History of the American Clock Business for the Past Sixty Years, and Life of Chauncey Jerome eBook

Chauncey Jerome
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 117 pages of information about History of the American Clock Business for the Past Sixty Years, and Life of Chauncey Jerome.
of them.  We could make forty cents more on each clock than we could on an O-G. clock.  As I was favorably known throughout the world as a clockmaker, this Company wanted to use my label as the clocks would sell better in some parts of the country than with his label.  They were put upon many thousands.  Soon after we commenced, I told him I would make out a writing of our bargain because life was uncertain.  He said that was all right, and that he would attend to it soon.  As he always seemed to be in a hurry when he came, I wrote one and sent it to him, so that he might look it over at his leisure and be ready to sign it when he came down again.  The next time I saw him, I asked him if the writing was not as we agreed; he said he supposed it was, but that he had no time to look it over and sign it then, but would do so when he had time.  I paid into the business about one thousand nine hundred dollars in small sums, as it was wanted from time to time, and worked at this man for eight months to get a writing from him, but he always had an excuse.  He had agreed to give the case-maker a share of the profits if he would make the cases at a certain price, but put him off in the same way.  We both became satisfied that he did not mean to do as he had agreed, and I therefore left him.  The money which I had paid in was what I had received for the use of my name in England.  I had the privilege of paying it in as it was wanted, working eight months, keeping the accounts which I did evenings, and giving this man a home at my house whenever he was in town.  All of this which I had done, he refused to give me one dollar for, and it was with great difficulty that I got my money back.  I had to put it into another man’s hands, as his property, to recover it.  This man, probably, had two objects in view when he went to Waterbury to flatter me away.  He did not want me to be there with my name on the movements and cases, and therefore he made me a first-rate offer.  I had been broken up in all my business, and felt very anxious to be doing something again.  I was a little afraid when he made the offer, but knew that he had made a great deal of money out of my improvements and was very wealthy, and I did think he would be true to me, knowing as he did my circumstances.  Look at this miser, with not a child in the world, and no one on earth that he cares one straw about, and yet so grasping!  Oh! what will the poor creature do in eternity!

CHAPTER XII.

MORE MISPLACED CONFIDENCE—­ANOTHER UNFORTUNATE PARTNERSHIP.

Before closing the history of the many trials and troubles which I have experienced during my life, I will here say that I have never found, in all my dealings with men for more than forty years, such an untruthful and dishonest a man as ——­ of a certain town in Connecticut.  In 1858, he induced me to come into his factory to carry on a little business.  My situation was such, in consequence

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History of the American Clock Business for the Past Sixty Years, and Life of Chauncey Jerome from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.