Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 37, Number 234, 6 August 1912 — Page 4

AOE FOUB.

THE RICHMOND PAJLtA131U3I AND SUN TELKGUAai.XLUiSDAY AUGUST C, 1912.

The Richmond Palladium and Sun-Telegram Published m6 vn4 by the PALLADIUM PHINTINO CX. Issued Every Evenlne" Except Sunday. Of flee Corner North th and A etre.. Palladium and Sun-Telegram Phonebusiness Office, zftis; Mows Department. litU RICHMOND. INDIANA Redolpk O. !..... .....ift SUBSCRIPTION TSUBMA In Richmond IS.OS pot year (In advance) or 10c per wee. rukai uoona , One year, in advance f2 Six months, In advance ;? aP month, ln advanoe ;, 1 Address chanced as often as dr both new and old addresses aaut o riven. ... Subscribers will bteaee remit -"J.11" frder. which should be iye pecified term: nam will not to eats d until payment Is received. MAIL. BUBSCKIPTICMSB One year. In advance ., Six months. In advanco "' One month, lo advance .....-. '

Entered at Richmond. Indiana, pen 1 office as second class mail matter. New York Representatives Payne & Younar. io3t west S3d street, ana z It Went lni etreat. New Tork Bi. T. Ctcaffo Representatives Payne & ITounr, 747-748 Marquette Bulldlns, I Chicago. J1L Tha Aaaoclatioa of Amee 'ifilillaaii Advertisers bas ew thaircHlaliaaaf ihiarabUcatfesw The fixe res of drcalatiea ontaiaod In the) Association's report only lure guaranteed. Assoaauoa of American Advertisers No. jWMtilial! Bide, IL T. City This Is My 51st Birthday MRS. ROOSEVELT. Edith Kermit Roosevelt, wife of Colionel Theodore Roosevelt, former Presi Ident of the United States, was born In Norwich, Conn., August 6, 1861, the (daughter of Charles Carow. Her ances tors on both sides of the house -were Hugenots who emigrated to America (from France after the revocation of rthe edict of Nantes. Her education "was received In private schools in New Tork City. Her marriage to Mr. Roose "velt took place in London, December 2, 1886. MrB. Roosevelt is the mother kf flee children, all of whom attracted more or less public attention during the family's occupancy of the White House. The eldest Is Theodore Roose. velt, Jr., now In his twenty-fifth year. The others, In the order of their ages tare Kermit, Ethel, Archibald and IQuentin. CONGRATULATIONS: M. Leplne, the famous head of the Paris police, 66 years old today. Darius Cobb, noted New England artist, 78 years old today. Dr. Andrew T. Still, founder of osteopathy, 84 years old today. Arthur C. Trumbo, president of the Trans-Mississippi Commercial Congress, 46 yearB old today. ' Rear Admiral Charles J. Badger, of the United States Navy, 59 years old today. Charles H. Spooner, president of Norwich University, 54 years old today. Bishop James H. McCoy, of the Methodist Episcopal church, 44 years old today. William L. Park, vice-president and general manager of the Illinois Central railroad, 53 years old today. "Were all medicines as meritorious ias Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy the world would be Ynuch better off and the percentage of Buffering greatly decreased," writes OUndsay Scott, of Temple, Ind. For eale by all dealers. A Browning Anecdote. In an English magazine a writer tells an amusing story of the poet Brownlng and how he received certain flowers from a lady, who, on being pressed to give their English names, shyly confessed they were called "bloody noses." I happened many years ago to be staying in a country house when Drowning told the story in his inimitable way, and he ended with the following lines, which I then and there committed to memory and which will. I think. Interest your readers: I'll deck my lo-e with posies. I'll cover her with roses. Should she protest I'll do my best To give ler bloody nosos. A Haitian Glass Eye. Some years ago a Haitian general wrote to a Paris optician to supply him with a glass eye. The optician, flattering himself that a successful eye would secure for him a Haitian decoration, devoted his utmost Intelligence to the production of a splendid glass Optic. Six months elapsed. A small box reached him from Haiti. A cross flittered in his imagination; but. to his horror, within folds of cotton was bin original eye, accompanied by the fol lowing" note: "Sir The eye you forwarded to me is of a tint that resembles that of the Spanish Hag, and I am too patriotic to wear any but the eolor of my country." The optician proceeded at once to the admiralty, there ascertained tho Jolors of the Haitian flag and then Manufactured a scarlet and green eye, vb.'ch he forwarded. Just a Feeler. The English visitor was getting impressions as to American education. "And do you know your alphabet?" he asked of a small boy in the house he was visiting. "Yep," said the lad A, B. C, D, E, F, G, I, J" "Hold on there, my little lad," said the visitor. "Haven't yon left out a letter r "Yep," said the boy. "I dropped my H. I wanted to see if an Englishman would notice It." " "Pertness is a characteristic Of the American child," wrote the Englishman later when he prepared his American note for publication. Harper's.

The Platform

The progressive people of the greatest nation in the world arose in their might yesterday in the historic Coliseum at Chicago and organized a political party that knows no sectional boundaries. It was the most impressive spectacle Chicago ever witnessed and it focused the attention of the liberty loving people of the world. The platform which is to be adopted la a modern declaration of principles which the American people have been crying for, for years. It is made to fit conditions of today, consequently it is a shock to the conservatives. The platform, the conservative says, is radical, still the true conservative even now resents the fact that the threshing machine has supplanted the flail. But fortunately for this nation the majority of its citizens are progressive and no longer heed the carpings of the reactionaries. They know there is not a plank in the Progressive platform which has not been thoroughly tested and found to meet modern requirements. The initiative, referendum and the recall are what the conservative finds hardest to swallow, but these modern governmental ideas have been thoroughly tested in the western states of America and Switzerland and found efficient. The rest of the platform merely provides ways and means to meet the needs of the people, political, Industrial and social, and iron clad methods to Insure real representative government.

Lock wood to the Rescue George Lockwood, editor of the Marion Chronicle and the Muncie Press, is about to render a great public service to the people of Indiana and it will only cost you, Mr. Voter, the price of a subscription to his Marlon organ. Mr. Lockwood, so he advertises in the Indianapolis Star, is "going to print the raw truth in this campaign about the 'great moral uprising' led by Stillwell, Lee, Beveridge and Landis." This great journalist, the associate of Joe Kealing and Jim Watson, renowned champions of the people, is to shed his coat once more and fly fearlessly to the rescue of Big Business and the Old Guard, who stand desperately with their backs to the wall. Having condoned the theft of the Republican nomination, which we frankly admit, was some task to perform, he will now assume the responsibility of informing and convincing the people of Indiana they have been mislead into enlisting in the great army of Progress. However, we believe, this will be mere child's play for Mr. Lockwood, especially when the political lives of corrupt corporations and members of the Old Guard are at stake. The people of Indiana should not hesitate for a minute to purchase the great benefit Mr. Lockwood stands ready to confer on them, when it can be bought for the paltry sum of a subscription to the Chronicle. If Mr. Lockwood finds the going rough in the work he has self-sacrificingly undertaken, which seems impossible, we suggest that he enlist the support of that other champion of the people. Editor Elliott of the New Castle Courier.

Wanted New Road

Winter is coming, and some people the past few d3.vs believed it had already arrived. Its advent means country road3 hub-high with mud and the usual complaints about the miserable condition of the highways. These conditions will always exist and complaints will always be heard until the legislature takes the bull by the horns and modernizes the road laws of the state. Prior to the advent of the locomotive good roads were vital to tbe welfare of the nation. American roads were never well made and cared for, but before the railroad they were better than they are today. When the railroad came it supplanted the highway as the common method of transportation. Now the automobile has come and the highways have returned to their own, but they were never made for the motor car or the motorcycle, and the road laws are as far behind the times as the roads themselves. The old system of permitting land owners to work out part of their taxes on the roads should be done away with. The farmer should not object to paying for the upkeep of the roads in a uniform and expert manner because good roads are all important to him. A county office of road supervisor should be created and the office filled by a road expert. He should have entire charge of building roads and keeping them in- repair. Road making is an art and the average farmer and district road supervisor knows nothing of this art.

JARRED THE EXPERT. The Doctor's Fame Was Great, but His Record Was Deadly. A certain great Chicago physician and A. S. Trade, a lawyer of that city, are close friends, but one time when the famous physician was called as an expert witness in a case Trude was on the opposite side and had to cross examine the physician. The physician had given his expert testimony. It upheld the contention of his side perfectly. When It can.e Trade's turn he squared away, glared nt his friend and. after the usual preliminary questions, began the examination: "Dr.- . you are frequently cnlled Into consultation when prominent men are ill Iil this community, are yon not?" "I am." "Were you in attendance on George M. Pullman?" "I was." "Where Is Mr. Pullman now?" "He Is dead." "Ah, yes! And were you called In i by Mr. Marshall Field?" "I was." "Where is Mr. Field now, may I ask?" "He is dead." "Indeed! And were yon In attendance on Philip' D. Armour?" "I was." "And where is Mr. Armour now?" "Ho is dead." Trude knew that his friend was called In consultation In almost every big case in Chicago, and there wasa malicious gleam In his eye as he named dead man after dead man and asked If the expert had attended them. After j he had named about a do7.cn- prominent j citizens who had passed away he turned to the jury with a wave of his hand, as if to say. "There's your expert!" and sat down. Saturday Evening Post. The Serious Part. Friend You appear to think that your responsibility is greater than that of the proprietor. Drug Clerk It is Friend How do you figure that out? Drug Clerk If I make a mistake I lose my job. "THIS DATE

AUGUST 6. 1775 Daniel O'Connell, the noted Irish patriot, born. Died May 15, 1847. 1809 Lord Alfred Tennyson, the English poet. born. Died in 1S92. 1817 Rt. Rev. Theodore Dehon, first Episcopal bishop of South Carolina, died of yellow fever in Charleston. Born in Boston, Dec 8, 1776. 1827 The joint occupation of Oregon by American and British subjects "was extended indefinitely by a treaty agreement. 1846 Enabling act for the State of Wisconsin passed by Congress. 1870 Germans defeated the French at hattle of Woerth. 1890 William Keraler executed at Auburn, N. Y., the first to he legally put to death by electricity in the United States. 1911 Admiral Togo of the Japanese navy visited Washington's tomb at Mt. Vernon.

Laws

How to Save Time. There are little time saver of the toilette which are worth learning. In threading ribbon or tape through lingerie, a wooden match makes nn excellent substitute for a bodkiu. It is, however, possible to do without threading the ribbon at all, and, when nbout to send the garment to the laundry, a piece of narrow tape should be tied to the end of the ribbon and the latter drawn out of the thread holes, leaving the tape in its place. The knot is then unfastened, and the set of lingerie can be sput to the wash, the ribbon being replaced on Its return in exactly tho same manner. In the case of tho.-e whose lingerie is entirely ornamented with rows of ribbon run bead'ng. this plan may save many quarters of an hour during the week. How to Make French Frostirg. This is a famous French recipe. It makes a delicious icing: resembling (he filling of chocolate creams. It is more economical than any other and keeps indefinitely, so that a quantity can be made and put ftway in covered jars ready to use. Boil without stirring one cupful of sugar, one-third cupful of water, one-eighth of a teaspoonful of cream of tartar and flavoring. It Is done when It forms a soft disk if Sroppod In cold water. Let stand without stirring until lukewarm, then bent until it is smooth and creamy. U it becomes grainy. It has cooked too long, or has been stirred too long. For caramel Icing use -one-fourth of a cupful of water to one cupful i?f brown sugar. NOTICE. Persons desiring street oiled, notify C. A. Davis, Lock Box 117, Telephone 2613, who holds contract In city, not later than the 15th. 5-2t His Retirement. Friend I haven't seen you for some time. Poet 'o. Fact Is I have become a good deal of a recluse lately. Friend I feared so. How much do you owe? He that speaks of things that do not concern him shall hear .of things that will not please him. Arabian Pro'.erb. IN HISTORY '

Heart to Heart Talks. By EDWIN A.NYE.

THE BLIND WHO SEE. General William Booth, bend of the Salvation army, is declared by his physicians to be "hopelessly blind." No! They are mistaken. General Booth baa merely lost his eyesight. He is not hopelessly blind. What do I mean? This: Few of us are able with our natural eyes to see things iu their full proportion Oculists tell us we can see not more than 50 per ceut of the objects at which we look. But W.a r co v Km. anil rmMA TTitK ' , , . w't.t ntir mlmlu thnti with nnr VfWT rl our eyes we may see one side of a thing while wlih our "mind s eye we may see many sides. With our nieutul vision or spiritual sight when we are at our best we see things as tbey are. because the spiritual vision is strong. And it is never hopeless.

Think. then, of what this old mau.sonality and hides the soul, can see iu his so called blindness. But, now and then, you will meet a During his almost uinety years be j grownup who possesses this quality, has looked upou the spectacle of a i A sort of left-over from childhood, if world iu need. He has not cared to see ; It might so be put. And while we are

material things such as houses and works of art. He has gone to the haunts of the wretched to see suffering. Where others' eyes have looked upon the homes of vice and woe and want and were turned away, shocked and' nppnlled by that which they have seen, the eyes of William Booth have been turned In keenest sympathy. And thus seeing, he has not turned away, save it may be to find some wny by which the suffering might be relieved, the wayward saved anl the hopeless redeemed. And this vision of a world of sin and suffering he still can see. And seeing, he can help. Hopelessly blind? Why. this good old seer is one of the few living men who can see things as they are and as they ought to be. What a vision must come to the grand old man a vision of men and women fallen low. a vision of mlnisterinur spirits whom he has sent to help these fallen ones to arise, a vision from the spiritual hills whence all his marvelous strength has come! Blind V Why. he can see both earth and parit d I se. ' DIXIE. ! Once more an attempt is being made to change the wordi of the song "Dixie." It Is said, the words are awkward. Possibly.' And yet The words, such as they are, are ina riled to the tune inextricably wedded. What tradition and a reverent spirit hath joined together no man should put asunder. It is proposed, for Instance, to change the old words about "cinnamon seed and sandy bottom" to the following: Olv Dixie land is the land of Klory. The land or cherished sons and story. Which words may be good enough In their place, but they never will be permanently fitted to Dixie. The native flavor of the southland is iu the homely "cinnamon seed and sandy bottom." What a lot of "go" there is in the tune! It is almost as popular In the north as in the south. You cannot wake up a listless American nudlence quicker than to start the band on those staccato notes. There is none other that will so bring men and women to their feet with beating pulses and flushed faces. Let Dixie alone. Lips that long are dust once breathed those "awkward" words. Embalmed in sacred recollection, to change them almost would amount to nn insult to the dead. This itch to change or substitute new words for our national songs breaks out periodically. Not long ago It was "The Star Spangled Banner" that was to be reformed in this particular. That failed because it deserved to fail. The words of that verse are tighting words, and they flamed up hot and patriotic from the soul of Francis Scott Key. Let the old songs he. Who would ask to change the choppv phrase of the "Mnrsellaise" dashed off In the fervor of revolution? The words forever belong to the wild music. And the slow cadences of "The Watch on the Rhine" nre no dearer to every lover of the fatherland than are the stanzas that fit it. Let Dixie alone. Because you cannot change the body of It without changing its immortal soul. The Truth of t!ie OH Fable. The Grasshopper I wouldn't work for that old grouch Ant slaves for. The Lndybug What's the racket bow? The Grasshopper .Inst look what n pretty sunshiny day it Is. Everybody's going to the picnic. When I asked Ant to come along he said he didn't think he could git off St. Louis Rc-puh!?-. Dr. Pierce's Golden This supplies pure blood by aiding

parting tone to the whole circulatory system. Its a heart tonic and a great deal more, having an alterative action on the liver and kidneys, it helps to eliminate the poisons from the blood. To enrich the blood and increase the red blood corpuscles, thereby feeding the nerves on rich red blood and doing away with nervous irritability take Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery and do not permit a dishonest dealer to insult your intelligence with the " just as good kind." The "Discovery" has 40 yemrs cum behind it and contains no alcohol or narcotics. Ingredients plainly printed on wrapper. Dr. Pierce's Common Sense Medical Adnser is seat frtt oa receipt oi stamps to pay expense of wrapping and mailing eay. Send 31 pee -cent stamps for the French cloth-bound book. Address i Dr. R.V. Pierce Buffalo N. Y.

PHOTOGRAPHIC ART c

It Often Wrests from the Deeps of Personality Traits, and Inheritances Not Seen on the Surface. Its Results Not Always Explainable.

BY ESTHER GRIFFIN WHITE. In the magazine section of the Sunday "Indianapolis Star" of a week or so since, appeared an article concerning the photographic art of Miss Bessie Meiser, of this city, who Is becoming one of the best known depicters of childhood through this medium in the country, by the writer. Illustrated with a number of pictures. On account of considerations of space the article did not appear in its entirety and was somewhat messed up typographically and on account of " f the interest taken In Miss Meiser's work in Richmond the text is reproduced herewith: What is it that one loves in chil- ! dren? We think it is their artlessness, their naturalness, their lack of that sophistication which, later, cloaks percharmed with Its manifestation, we still do not sustain that attitude toward the individual that we do toward a child. Is it not, therefore, their aesthetic apucal that is so poignant? Is not a child adorable because every pose is alluring, every attitude picturesque, every movement effective? They have escaped the shapclessness of infancy and have not taken on the angularities of immaturity. In j that fascinating period between the , ages of one and six, children are of angelic personality. And that is the period in which they should be pictured. Photography is the union of art and mechanics. It produces effects impossible of achievement in color. And in the reproduction of personality it can, through the manipulation of a skilled medium, exceed anything done with canvas, brush and oil save by the greatest masters. And often it translates curious subtleties of temperment, unfamiliar aspects of facial conformation, strange j out-croppings of character, fleeting ex pressions of eye or mouth, inherited traits. There is. Indeed, something occult and eyrie in photography. Its mechanics are simple enough and easily comprehended. But its results not invariably accurately to be predicted. "Life is not possessed it passes through us," says a certain philosopher, and herein may lie the psychological manifestations of photography. Photography may be termed a sort of magnifying glass which turns its powerful lenses on the shell of personality and vizualizes the latter's embryonic possibilities or latent characteristics, its lingering Inheritances, from the thousand and one diverse sourses out of which personality flows. "Do I contradict myself? Very well, then, I contradict myself. I am large. I contain multitudes." Thus Walt Whitman. And to this account may be credited the idiosyncrasies of photography, its surprises, its mystery and its sometimes erratic and seemingly Inexplicable tangents. In Richmond, Indiana, Uvea a young woman, Miss Bessie Meiser, of modest habit and catholic human sympathies, who has given much attention to the art and science of photography, much time and patience to experimentation and who has evolved some interesting theories as to its practice. Miss Meiser deprecated an effort to reproduce some examples of her work in print. Primarily an artist she shrinks from j misconception through an inadequate j medium. And it was only after long j continued asking that her consent j was finally won to the showing of her delightful pictures of childhood. ' This artist for such she is rei produces from the negative by platinum prints. In this manner is suggested the tender flesh tones, the eluhive contour, the fine fragrance of childhood. OLIVER VISIBLE TYPEWRITER For Sale Cheap. Fvi-Tecv condition and does splendid writing. Could ship on approval and trial. Write to Charles W. Riekart. Rnsedale. Kans. Try FLOOR SHINE MOP For Sale At COOPER'S GROCERY If the blood is poor and filled with the poisons from diseased kidneys or inactive liver, the heart is not only starved but poisoned as well. There arc many conditions due to impure blood such as dropwy, fainting spells, nervous debility or the many scrofulous conditions, ulcers fever-sores," white swellings, etc. Ail can be overcome and cured by Medical Di digestion, increasing assimilatlnn rJ

scoverv

The photograph taken for reproduc- , tion in illustration of explanatory text J is necessarily translated from the i original plate through a more com-1 mercial paper than that of the plat!-1 num. Hence much of the more subtle

effect is lost. Nonetheless remains the essence of her adorable studies of children for which she is becoming so widely known. Miss Meiser is an artist. But ahe ia more. She is a diviner of the childish heart. No painter takes more trouble to get at the psychology of her sitter than dCes this photographer. Her patience is unending, her resources Infinite. Many attempts may be made, many sittings prove fruitless, many plates . thrown into the discard before she conjures up the fugitive mood and impinges It by the route of the camera. But all the nerve wracking work is forgotten in the satisfaction over the successful climax to her artistic activities. There is no satisfaction comparable to that of the artist in his completed product. No peace so Rreat. And it is 1 ecause of the everlasting ferment of creation that seethes and rages In the human vessel. Your own creation Is the dearest ob ject In the universe. It transcends every other fact. It overwhelms every other quality. It overshadows the artificial combinations of the world. It proves to you your own divinity. NOTICE TO BIDDERS. Proposals for supplies for the use of the Eastern Indiana Hospital for the Insane for the month of September, will be received by the Board of Trustees at the hospital before 3 p. m. Monday, August 12, 1912. Specifications may be seen at the Second National Bank, or at the hospital. By order of the Board, S. E. Smith. Med. Supt. aug 6 and 7 A Broadway Mystery. There's a mystery In New York's thentrical district. At several of the big offices they're collecting thumb prints of the stars already signed up. Further than the marks are "for the purpose of identification" none of the collectors will give any information about them. "I know what those thumb marks are for," said a Broadway loiterer. "The managers are going to have the contracts so marked in order to make them more binding." "That's not it," said another. "The managers have probably adopted that method of permitting every star to make his mark in the profession. New York Telegraph. Relieving a Frost. "And If I refuse you?" faltered the Boston girL "Well?" "Will you promise me not to take to drinkr "I win." replied the Chicago youth. "The worst I shall do will be to go out and get a cup of hot chocolate." Kansas City Journal. Crisp, Snappy Checkers The greatest selling popcorn confection in America. Each box contains a nice souvenir for the children.

Sold Everyvrhe .. Cef Checker Aluxryw ' tn CAecAereoftro Box. L "

Richmond Dry Cleaning Co. CASH BEALL, Prop. MEN'S SUITS, Dry Cleaned, Pressed and Delivered S1X LADIES' LONG UNLINED COATS 1 SKIRTS, PLAIN OR PLEATED - 750 New up-to-date plant, 7th and South H. Phone Your Orders, Wagon Will Call. Phones 1072, 2411, 1906.

i asssgg5!

SclentlflcaJy Constructed JSSU 5T

Puritan "Rest Easy" Double Deck Springs have an upper deck of ftnalir t.mrwrcd steel

Double Cone Springs. " " JT which conform perfectly to the curves Bed prlfi Co, of the body, glvlna; gentle support to Indianapolis, every portion in any position, and a lower deck of firm Single Cone Springs, which prevent sagging. Your Richmond furniture dealer can supply you, If not write Hi and we win give you the names of those who can.

Old High Finance. Frenried finance Is not xclnslTply a habit of recent years. At the RIgfa National bank In Washington, says the Popular Ma serine, there Is carefully guarded a proof of the foregoing assertion. Regarding the proof there la told this tory: One winter morning; Ilenry City, finding himself In need of money, went to the Rigjrs bank and asied for the loan of $UoO on tats personal note. II was told that, hll hie credit was perfectly good, it was the Inflexible ru'e of thv bank to require an tcdorver. The great statesman hunted op Daniel Webster and asked him to Indorse the note. "With pleasure." said Webster. -But I need eocne money myself. Why not make your note for foOG, and you and J will split HI" This they did. And today the note ia I I the Riggs bank unpaid.

Which Was Slandered f Son They say I am the living picture of jou. dad. Father It waa your mother waa said It. 1 suppose. She Is mad at me because I wouldn't give her the price of a new hat. New Orleans Times-Democrat. You Can Try Free Make-Man Tablets We Will Buy You a 50-Cent Bex te Prove Their Effect. Thousands, millions of men and women are starving for more power, more nerve power, force, strength. Their blood vessels lack rich pure blood, their nerves are starring for the nerve builder .strength builder, blood builder, that Nature has provided, that science has perfected Make-Man Tablets. Nervous fagged men, and exhausted, tired out women will find in the famous Make-Man Tablets the secret of their wonderful Improvement. We are wlllirfg to prove this to you. You pay nothing. We wlU pay the druggist for a full-size 50-cent package of Make-Man Tablets and give them to you free. If your vitality is at low ebb, can't sleep, have poor digestion, etc, It is your own fault it you don't send the free coupon today and give Make-Man Tablets a trial. They are safe and entirely free from dangerous or habit-forming drugs. Sold at all Drug Stores at SOo a box on guarantee or money refunded. CUT OUT FREE 50c COUPON MAKE-MAN TABLET CO., 268 Make-Man Bldg, Dept. 21, Chicago, III. I have never need Make-Man Tablets before and wish to try. free, a full-size 50-cent box. Druggist's Name My Name Address . Write plainly one box to each family. Our sale price for a 16 size Elgin Movement in a 20year Gold Filled Case is $7.75. Can you duplicate this elsewhere? 0. E. Dickinson The Diamond and Watch House.

X