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2 : THE SUNDAY STAR. WASHINGTON, D. C. JANUARY 1, 1928 -PART 5. e s ——— a————— 1 BUNDAY BLAN, WADBRISGIIN, 1. Ue JANUAKRE 3, 19c0-F AL < Winfield Scott, Gentleman of Mad Valor, a Figure of Success Alr. Creel is widely known as an twith a wild shout the height was author and editor. During the carried, or! - s chai sabis 1 1 — ~F1 Racing along the cavseways that Dot i s | | Astonishing Feats of His Younger Years Marked Him as an American of Destiny—Major General at Twenty-Eight. | | futiis s e corevars vm: lic lnrorxv\nyi‘vn. o 5 1 G 1 F V C l] M . H 11 ;!“:lr:‘;:l.:l!;":ftfl‘:vynu ,"m:l This article is he sixth in a Trammg Ground of Civil War Generals—From Vera Cruz to the Montezumas alls. wall” Jackson, Lee, Pickerr, Long- series on heroie r}}:arm‘lers \\'hnsv G street, Beanregard, Mt iellan—ail to adventures have helped \p shape face one another as foes at a later American destiny. Other ' articles RS s N day— oined in that plunging at- have portrased Bam HOUMOD, AD. | uuonia diterior iniaveryiréatiocts | : — SCOTTS BUGLES _SOUNDED exhausting siruggle through swing | $A¥—Were Soined in that nlinging at- drew Jackson, Stephen Decatur, | 15" (ha one consolation permitted | 4 AND A GREAT CHEER SHOOK and rain, up a boulderatrewn ravine, | neke, WOCLHK difehen throuch deadly Daniel Boone and Hernando De | pi was 1o Mve and die & gentleman. THE_RANK THE. MEN SET firm ground was sained. A moment | o, STURER T e ousetops RO R R R [HE battles of Chippewa ; -'wln-!j HALLS OF THE MONTEZUMAS. In I7 minutex by the watch the [0 Scott s 15 ore of gloo | Lundys Lane were two of the /| battle of Contreras was over and the LI glory to Hernando Cortes, | three land engagements that od 4 . Mexicans were in flight, leaving 700 the great captain, vet his con- | America from utter humiliation in | 18 Saiits Ana, comHIE D with quest of Mexico was not more [the War of 1812, Young Scott was z ed reinforcements, met only a' 7090 and Santa Ana still had 12000 daring. more shot through with | the hero of both. And he wore the | = ‘ream of fugitives. men and the people of the cit courage and sheer genius than |stars of A major general at 28, »\ = 3 B \ Seott, grasping the situation with @ dictator, ho ver. wae W eld Scott’s ¢limb from Vera Crllt‘ The Rlack Hawk War [flfl many = = ! his usual genius, followed the stroke “omach for arther fig 10 the valley t glittered like a |festering bitternesses, but Scott’s jm- » 2 by racing his men to Churubusce, but 4 calling upon the zods Jewel amid the voleanic peaks 8,000 | perial presence awed Sacs Foxes and 2 here he met Mexican valor at its Dess his own courdge i feet above. }\\ innebagoes into submission, even as | f 3 hest. Charge after charge was driven | *lipped ¥ to Guada the auiporetly Simpreg: | in JRUIGe LHin, ihele, (aelenRshin. i . 7 back, time after time i: seemed that | ballered tru g . guarded by the frowning { When he awarded a medal ennite 3 the' Amiériealis MUSE confews Cetais: dawn e ns of Nan Juan Ulua. Scott led an |chief it was “’“‘\‘“'I'H ¥ “‘_K‘“ f”"“ [} ) i but at last a flanking movement won | With 2 white pped 1v of 12000 effectives | exch NAES o imaiinfOLn(Li 2 | | the bi zeheaw. and only the convent| onlv to array | b <t & population of seven millions, |and amazing honor. i h kept up the battie. rode to the palice and took ot the naked savages of Montezuma, | The Seminale r‘ Var of 1836 seemed 4 § Even when the last gun was out of | Possession of the ~Halis of the Mon ignorant of fircarms and weakened by | AN opportunity for new g R Ty K commission, and not a cart zuma i B awe of the Fair | was Seott’s misfortune to have quar- LN, 28 . 5 mained, the heroic gar |, A treaty of peace. sizned Fehruary ¢ people that had {reled with Andrew .'m!«.‘*"\ 1 _\«-.n‘v \ \ o . | to ask quarter. and it was an Amer-| 2. 1945, gave the United Sigtes clea= with loud boasts of ‘Y‘“"‘(f;s":“fl,:!,"vli.':( o Bt aama =¥ ican who waved his handkerchiel to | title to Texas, upper « o © . @ o) Sec could | Z 7 £top the useless siay e Of' [anta 3 Mexico : {launch his campaign the President = A 2/ e O e V:‘“x‘?‘-!-'tha,x: 10,000 | cahle acceptance of Amarican awn. £Tim Mountain gOrEes |ramaved him for no better reason | 2 followed the crazed dictator ints the | ership. the Mexicans wers gziven a er marched, every pa han the peevish whine of a subordi ’ - : . 5 7 that fighe i total of §20. n cash ss. worming h pate. A court of inquiry cleared | = 9 Z . Al A Scott completely, but the great chance | z LA T rm ishing superior e foiot [anioat | > JFACING a demoralized enemy, the {XRCCITCE Bl do by fierce fron By every rule of fitnoss he should d : ; “Halls of the Montezumas” were pagb®i0o0cS D the enemy from |nave heen the Whig eandidate 2 P Seott's for the taking, bt when anj (2205, K008 her soveréizn : after Sirenshold, and en- | president in 1840, but the poli 3 armistice was asked. he put glory ifernta and New Me ng Duebla. the City of the Angels. | foareq his independence high | ) 3 aside in the interests of peace. For e RAD BE it & sbadow 3 high pride that took no account | morality, and, more Nan this. a| 5 2 d 11 days it seemed as if ‘he war would | sicner province. both surrendering to and bare feet. | ihinking compalgn was not wanteq. be brought to an end. but on Sep-| Sorerican arme in 1346 with scarce A Ralt. an offer e olive branch | William Henry Hareison was nomi- | tember & Santa Ana brought discus-| 3 wirugele. o d then that last fearless dash into | nated. hard cider put on tap in the | 1 # S8H% 1y bl aBt Gt b 112 valley where towering Chapultepec | open streets, and the whole Nation R | 2 e - (st L SR lonked down on an army of 30.000, | dragged into an org : Z elimination: he knew also that Scott crouched behind strong fortifications. | So we come to the Sprinz of 1848 Pt sy b gLk cried the Duke of | When the eountry raared its enthusi- as as glory. The das's fighting had reduced his effectives to a strugel i During the negot 1% Seott re- stored order to th coun- try by wise, benevol adminisira- tion, but all the hi knives were ning low: working secretly under cover of the armistice, the dictator had strengthened fortifications and welded a new army, and. these advan- tages exciting him, he determined vned ot A8 &5 the Democrats feared, however, fo e T b gewet 'n": “tum LD h»““i.;‘ 1 :s‘m: ,n‘a(\mv‘rhmh\:i( 3 ?\_‘_m 3 / people were calied upon to extermi-| ,¢ his spirit. Pilk ariheic bughear. o r o ' [ ate the vie invaders. and on evers funcan, ‘the arres . r 1 ’ y e 2 | hand nationai . vanity regaine restored to commands JaLreally ithe Whls feNders i W0e. - x normal inflammation without a trial. wh clded upon him a ¢ eandidate ‘ | Serene. stat spensing his morn- | g, T h a humil he ° Serene, i dragged through a humilia E ';!.‘,3cfifn?'¥’\$§'fi 1‘\‘\"1‘\":';;1\ ?1‘”:‘3‘.-: 5 | in salutations with all the effect of | QUiEE" i orainates. mines beneath their feet: | o¢ olorv Scott's request for assign- ~ 3 N N u—"r‘:;m:‘; 'h; xr-:r.”.:monr:: "‘:r!n“ A wave of generous emotion sgwept ro SR e mand ught e iy a n “nited States row, swept cause 3 e to Vel the Unit ment to leM an expedition to Vera ; 4 struck bold ceiving Sant p - 1t down the gates of the | (ry; was contemptuously refused. ' bility, and the hope that he might dim { wall, and on April 12 set out to fol-!cled, waking the echoss with their hawk eve, and then plunged his men | T ';r_}n.’ ‘.’:“,?m??h:";f& et ax{:::‘ the perseeution, but. d treading the ancient Aztec || illed wits set ahout the busi- 1o glory of Old Rough and Ready, a | low the footsteps of Cortez wells 4 I e Tal otaltg ot Ve st e e o At as conquoerors ness of reducing him in public esti- : % e : he very madness of the thing was miles to San Augustin, a suburb south he _mornir § n he | Whigs ralli r the land iy ; candidate for the Whig nomination. | As the hot coastal plain fell behind. (' Weid TEfnes of the think was [miles to Raunche ck upon Casa Mata | spair standard bearer . i el R: wo strong < pains that praise of Scot Slowly, subtly. his grand air was| Free at last from the cords of the the Americans walked through scencs must he following. cowardly Yankees" T {ook pains that praiee o made to seem mere sirutting. his dig- Lilliputians, Scott moved with speed ‘changing beauty, gay ]“ “’- !"l“!, ‘\; lhfv, -<"m|x L o conform to Santa > faliting: ;‘.‘e»fl;;"‘ PR S mity attacked as pompousn: TS o Ragl S i rro Gordo | there in arsed. The. pinie spread .o the |AnA's Plane. apd the frntic dictator | “Fur’ gporaaches tothe city pre- courtesy and elegances derided s con- |y, .yperghle obstacles in the matter o slience. ' On jone alde the 1 leaderless men, and by 10 v'elock Gen. | 1iee compelted to 8 S &N sented themsclves, one from the | ¢ha ceit and_affectation. and fn a fittle | EERTR S B0 il i, | toad were frowning precipices, on the e e K Gen- tire scheme of o FroohBan | Lo shei othai: friae thet: waat: while a giggling public joined in call | ;o0 "came hefore Vera Cruz on March | Other yawning chasgs, and from the ke LN GO it | Augustin the on " way 1o the city | (p,nuitenec guarded the latter, and ing him “Old Fuss and Feathers.” | 50 = 0l 06 2 summits of two towering bhills ' ';““"" Dlianal “I"-‘ """"‘”} :-j was the Acapuico road. and out of fiding in the strensth of th When he prepared careful plans of There was no time for a slege, as | Atalava and EI Telrgrafo—Santa Ana ',M"‘““’l" \ \\'m 1‘]"'“' : }""., »‘;‘5_(\1'" the conviction that Scott must choose anta Ana occupied himse campaign. he was a “hook soldier.” | e season of the dread vomito was @nd an army of 16,000 commanded M juncd s e L B Santa Ana fortified San | 7 actiig thie wanthers” gale resentment at these constant attacks, oo (0 Hohpledi it S At| . Scott gave them back their conf ; g R S e BRLYEE, R Again Scott refused to conform Thro it was disloyalty and insubordination. | g: HiCCHas from. an attack by sea At| ooty Crter arkee cour | the conveit of SAn Peblp/over tntoa ., S0 SOOI ISR 10 confotm to | Th ok 1 P ol e City of Angels, | fort. and e i ictator o Sreat tleman The Democ a thorough b hegan the work of landing his men ' (e mountains about him. he studied e Nlk: soreEhmentiion cait Pridicheaql "t e and guns At the | g0y’ he conducted. and after feint abuse. treachery and betra e e i dnct. that the lat a point three miles from the city, |hif blan of battle as though it wers 0 (OKEEC D0 ETVEEAIMENT 1o fUsh |bridgehead. ¢ ing at the southern portals, threw his Whigs abandoned him ns a candidate |30 gt POITt Eates mie on shore N0 more than a chess problem, finatly | U RSSO D A0G SUBRUES. | Ax at Cerro Gordo, Scott sent in- | little army. againse (hapulterec o and even his friends hegan to edge (G oo TVERRAT e 4 deeiding that the one chance was 10 | o garttinGs: slownens, hot by Arreat| VAluable young Capt. Lee -on an er-| the morning o the tweltin. RD dor away | " Working “under cover of darkness, [LUFN Santa Ana's left and gain the | pe"piiH SlORReRs, hut By AURUS | run of reconnaissance. and he re- | hie mwnn ined s ol pelpaa In November. however, the elections s : Mexican rear. % S o ported that a way could be made but that w = heavy hatteries were swung into posi. % wait Jonger. Again the Mexicans mit, but that night. when decision went against the Democrats: Taylor, | oo ¥ HCTES Were Swung i9fo pos The dictator had not troubled to| uare 'SyStey Afwn the Mexicany s the pedregal, a bleak. terrible | was made to storm at dawn, the ven- t when the Ctvil W by turns sulky and domineering. | [, ST, IR B, CORIN 00 S lguard this approach. ingistini that | S5 STETEL Pedte, But when they { lava vomited from Mount | ture was so desperate that Scott o aet mimeelt to the defonss dawdled fn Monterey. doing mothing, | (000 WPe Peftited on th R | Dot even a goat could reach him from | phil Mo, ey ey at cheer | AJUSCO some 7.000 vears before. Under | geked for volunteers, Undos “with anch of hig ol nd Polk and hix advisers came to the | 1,1, "o ve nnd nights a rain of leaq | At direction, but Capt. Robert E ok the ranks as the menf set forth | (over Of darkness the movement was ™ Twe hours of heavy cannonading | pe was new 3. The hards =ad realization that the war must be |, 0 aoon onCotEgE o Ulua and the | 2°¢ and "“‘-, ngineers, scrambling | (o a barty in the halls of. the Mon. | CATried (-vk on the h—a .'“}"" # | preceded the assault and them | ;ampaigne and ds wore be- ! pushed and brought to an end if through the night, found a way. On | qen (f storm making every step a stumble— | \orth's and Dillows divisione span baigs ‘his fron frame, 1te his day, taking unto himself any | [Tned and, brousk To be averted. | City. and at the end the white flag tezumas orth's an W SPrang | ginning to teli on even his iron f E at ‘met his fancy. y Aas to be averted. | gow from the battiements the seventeenth a whirlwind attack nd by midnicht 4 Americans were . It was, however, as though the' st Now Scott was indeed between the not capture the city | Palma, where blundering Zachary ali back on his base.” | Tavlor had been fortunate enough | te ‘meet superior incompetency. It was not Old Rough and Ready that marpiot, kept huss 108 and when Scott took steps to On plunzed the Americans, adoring lieved of command their trusting him blindly. » marshes that menacing fort resses crawling across 1 nights of : to hand in the | breastworks; | D the steep slope ot pouring down | 2 tives, and that his suppliee were run-: ., 5 haale. . G a prize ng away from his | 2sm over Palo Alto and Resaca de 1< [ ! 4 3 2 t his - | | A tremendous achivement, rich in and glory, vet shamed in his- by a series of those @nister < that seemed to pursue Win- nghout his life. has been made of the Admira- ause he could speak zes, compose brilliant irgue down red men and le a sword with the best. These were only a few of Scott's ments. There was nothing that he could t o from treading a measure to n a war: from basting a fow! 0 writing a hook. Six feet five inches 1, and strikingly handsome after | e Olvmpian manner. more courtly n Lord Chesterfield, a Hannibal n strategy, as profound a diplomat 2= Tallexrand. as much the chevalier | ns peur sans reproche as Bayard, infield Scott seemed born to domi- dawn on the ninth, therefore, Scott |dence. As huge and granitelike as cypress grove that had shaded | gt adms Srmities. the morning of the eighteenth Scott | A TGUST 12 saw them looking down | imo. well in the rear of Gen. Valencia. | yjo . . o tery hour of bestowal and doomed suggestion of an attack upon | Vera Cruz was to have his men die | ) Telegrus S ) e hill op ol | Caenar. & stopping only at the wall Abcab i I it . » hill o ha and s ppin, only at h . ratirement rakam ¥ d it first gurer some vist sentinel, across e pe carried the - ot on h 1 Vel tes . ailing a nt career that stretched from 1812 to|Seott himself had to be put in com- |scemed no less certain death. The e cxhimid dean e \ K A, nied Tor & frontut| of stk suboehes. for cvers Thoh of | bedside of the failing = zmbitions: three times he was turned | forting conviction that he had been | with one of his imperial gestures he Tl . | of sarvice wept the scene w.th a | down the line. and afier 4 hours of | ever, the ladders arrived at last, and Wt Montezuma, careless of the shot that | One sracs sweetoned these bim to defeat in every dear wish of |Vera Cruz had to be adonted, and after | like fies from yellow fever, but 0| There were only a handtul of Ameri PO at ar e e A panied by the cabinet and fac Now was thelr wa rred. for | to Scott and arranged fo v of sick suspense. for every inch of g t 2 1506, enmity and intrigue mocked his | mand. However, there was the com-|bold way was ever Scott’s way, and o i B ttons e for | to Scott and arranged for a frontal of sick suspense. for every inch Of | hehalf of the Nation the » but with eckless fury they wproack it seeme nani O | o'l spered onder we - iley 10 nde, ow - from the presidency by men ! “killed off” as the presidential possi-|flung his defiance at the mountain | ieaped PREAN AL o S 1 h that scemed humaniy i At 3 o'clock a whispered onder went The mines failed to explode, how forward, chargink through the great in October of 1351 he was ferved arried La Atalaya, and at dawn on bl zathered at the hamlet of San and in Oc r of e fites repented their favors in the SARILY, Scott’s intelligent jdevil and the deep sea. To stay In | ordered chyrge aganist the height of £ un the Valley of Mexico, joweled | A1 incompetent who fancied himself a tore their ranks. carrving redoubts |yiveor aq his In the course of a ‘heroic |a feverish survey of the entire field |penetrate the heart of the country leans, scare %00, in that Jlanding in dts center like| = Cant. Lee. feeling his wav back ' The promised scaling ladders were ing them were batterics and 2,000 cav- | strong fortifications guarded every | attack at dawn. the ground was known to be mined.| Jnicad a people's gratit to the combat, havonets lev. hle, bt Scott BY PAUL MOORE. A8 some one has said, this fellow Haleaiot oy day coming when we will zet gran the first atriking clock. In thel o e e of the greatest horologics hands, but by some ingenious’ method appren Np as Aok Sk ey ol of a striking gong—and we still have | - maker and $30 in cash ¢ the Horological Institute our gongs B ather. _kn s e I.,N.‘«("n But how ahout skating time? W, £ ! i waste v ie-getting would take the clocks net work b Abis tral stations, brozdeasting 3 weather. So man's ingenuity hit upor 3 ble_watche romagnetic waves, similar to the sand gliss, which has survived i ; Undes a dolier o or the application of xome kind T omorning minute “egg-timer . tlon comt. Several o of radioactive material incloxed within he Chinese, for a long thine, kept 3 i day are deeply Interested i Yhe timeplcces, or whether xome other up the Jdea of the cavem ) R = e mechanim of watches and clocks force, not yet discovered, would be ap Knot ot equul distances in The chairman of one ‘of cur 3 < 4 it they applied the gong i . ¥ X > 3 v nizations is right no - 20 there wax almost ndicate’ the slow burning between § \ « clock pendulum. while 5 White Houke knots. King the Great had . \ > Know of zrea who nearly ’ e ddea of 1 ! used candles N 3 18 One t) nest \v\ At H’\ :-:’Z'!\‘H\ watch 2. inches high, with notches 1 inch apart (fhe world. And clock fxipg is ard him : ch thus rexistered the paxsing of . WY f the present f news ; One of his candles would burn : nited States. tional y i ut a bt of wind would A SKRULL WATCH MADE ABOUT 1660, T o / change the rate of hurning, so a g YREAT scientists of ail led 10 give an 4 tection wak devised of thin, | welht of U we Ia Worth $5,000. [ swer now. In these days we need |watches Inspected twice 8 year and White. ouse ; = horn Ned, ir Yngliah, | And, apeaking of vatues added by man- | faith in oar watches ke that of the | commared with standand sine st e A L Y v by VECORATED WATC i > “ . wred with standard time 24 hours S P . CH CASE ¥ in which ; from which we gel our fufucture to raw matetal, You may be [ man who stood with witch i nand on | sach. yeur. What foes ean to( And have ‘hewped grewtly o bl A S tiins A ol Navitgin intereated In_ knowing tht while un | tin senshore Just before suntise wnd | the traveting mtiesr, o0 Mean 10 B0 e MNUDS 1N IR EE RETHR R had obtal v b . But the “tick-tlek™ which he the ounee of golld i wor S an eunce Lsald, CIUs one minute to sunrise, g And what w and clock mechan- 11 some of the greatest mechan ENTEENTH CENTURY. ; g ittention of 4 baby With w wateh ut|of steel-not nearly so viduble as | the xun docs not begin to K6 nimselt | i e oing in aeronautieal AN PNKINCering geniuses of the wor Stw ear In only the begluning of the |kold—made into watch halrspeings bn | out of that ocenn in 57 secunds Le'll | probloms 18 onts heginnme o e ove a watch because of its wond porian universai desivre 1o ¢ wWheels fworth $2,400, A nomatter of delicacy, | he late, that's all B TP G TR e Rt ¢ mechanism is it not ! be a strong T hress: ®o ‘round And the time came When ' an inel of the ordinary ma wiatch rement of ting time luter & fvery one of us to a lit st portarce he wheels wers applied 1o timekeeping | buiespring welghs about one-(wenti < LR m, The first clock ix accredited o Faciti I o i of the President’s cun, archdencon of Verona, who died O o smanh A D KK but the records are in wayed clocks between 1288 and 1306 Bt maisture, down where the temperasur s slass to eyve and we t inest o Do tme: SHELL . SHAPED WATCH MADE | “hat i said 1o hive been the fivst 1enl does not vary, and they aee i a ools. In Enrope he is ap ated d T IN FRANCE ABOUT 1690, IT IS ;v";\',[..'”’ v in ”}‘I",:;'I’}""T' ; ':‘: I an ke kB case, Wi (e ats patly . a i an arts 3 ked ws o the fully of wox ON CEXHIBITION IN THE MET. )0 10 W IO b BRI Drovai o e : O et & ROPOLITAN MUSEUM, NEW | South Kannimcion Munetm, Tohdun 10t AfTost tham. | Thiews. alotka hues ; . D, degree. He \ hour mean YORK. . e s st i ranning condition |l observed scjentifically and “\l\(' L »d with his h B x A synchr In more olden days. o whole town Theen Tound not to vary more than twa v 3 ha Rnow ledge ! < I oevery man ol mdE o Vear When you «onsider allurgy phvsics, there are about 31000000 seconds in 4 \ Instead e v supported iready required not only more about our watches 00 ™ N0, ACCUrALe LMe means ope oo, of the watchma and what r<hali Fle thing to one person and another A u. He does not work o of impor thing to another. There arve clocks a cold Ford has ex flap ftr Wings and go | w gulated by one clock, with pub Aing ground. and at sunret | e tmekeepers o nnnomnee e hotrs he turtle dove will Ay quickly o | two seconds % not muen varia Arinking pool and then 1o 15 roost e Thore have tecently heen: e ' hange talk about Bt If the bivds and anials have ans | {OW many peopie, ar e W Veloned apparatus (or measueing e niricate and w method of Gmeleeping during the i much more rapidly than nnything mechanism feeding and resting we have mot din- 1 5 E 0 T Bitherta known. Phe United States While the United covered it though there ix good ey 0 st i s sl e Hurenn of Standnvds has dovised 4 HUst o DUt ont watches on dence‘that ‘woma:aniowin-do: hive i o0 Huy Gallise it hin Hinges on 1 tuning Gk pendulum ishe methed 2 p wchine tush soale with i nenine wn 10 when certain thingw are | Duike, which B ity o 2 W an accaracy te one ndved thow \ able parts, that very fact e bl acty |‘n-» n’xnv*rv Sobit &l ) reoare 000000 valltoad men in R : Our hurry ap spiit has given us PrOSTIVE man @i bive some |t lnterats regardiees of the short Ro: Galtad Ritrek s MRS o Loale bRl bl knowledgs of tima perk In his | ening of the are A Tthough the ATe BRULY §U0 WOrReRC St weve ] (hey curly duys he sbly caught on 1o | ponciple of the pendulium wan thus NUREMBERGER FGC TYPE 3 wrkme ut " i il y " " o GETYPE OF jncompetents atse Mare than any w the ddes whi b, years ’1 ter. w - e .‘uml..,’. 1in ;I i ;” wan 14 iy “,‘ A SECTOR WATCH 0'|"||hn;v]‘ lII‘II WAT I‘I| \I{\ln IN THE SEVEN. other ‘“\.‘ hanical device in large o, ! et vioped by the Groek o st | Indrag. veurs Tatar the Ve LR GURE POINTS TO O R~ Pabidd ) ot 0 " ady o e b S 88 g Bl A { H L 4 TEENTH CENT A ® wateh demands fine adiustment 1 BC into th ] Mi | plied 1o o ON ONE SIDE AND MINUTES ON TH CENTURY AN the late war brought out the fact | e bombing, w Gls and AIRRE S e lack of ood watehmakers. for W e chandelier swinging, woull S Just uned w rock, o1 high Invention does not stop. In U . s object nourhy . swhiboh | come the portable ook o wateh, | THE OTHER, bk nite Trge shadows | The test was mnde by Feter Heindein . testing, but also for laboratory testing our Government found grvat need fae 9 ool ek | German wel v than Lopetn e 5t v 1 i [l e tren vouen ple of (e W wervie dstriiments and i 1A curions thing that this ma o cortatn place on (10 wios made entirely of drom, was | e : i WRerever @ in destrable to make ¢ he SPRISNE Gupresston on 4 e § b Bt s ex [l s foot Dl and shaped ke a L 0r raiy or sabphives weisho when T 0 WG i iy T Sha @IOIEr Tl O sIRE-OF tibss LONGAT OURco JE CHONL: I8 Vi $10, 000, ol Meastiiement horn Germany Gearge Npie than ten wilion clocks were | IRried watehmaking in his ow PANCt U I the Unitod States ) Y AR R Voung nman saw a g 1925 Al more than two mittion wateh | 86 e Capital at Washington and OVEMENtE, I the same vear alimost | AR VR Rix mind he wanted to live PING Al A halt mition watches wna | WRUER GG Builline was S ition war deabrable, | carlier witehes Gy vern calfed * Na i midne iy oo 1o tea ey e Bebiw oo boge for | And fust ax your VU e prent Faniten distinces by ned ot f om e grd) wowateh s i heart - the hilones with TOVEIEntS worn mported (rom ather | TR0 A0 vears age, he same 0 Was v ¢ tow N £ poape watch dial Dmeuntain side, Thos e veen some L ance nection With the tension of PImped 1o nearty tone millions. of | AUEAHGR of the Nationnl Research | Clok—=is Rell camtive ava and Phee slowly fveeping spark enabled | 2620k advancees from Dot climey, | e hadesprling prosides o means « WAthem and wateh mevensnts Conneil and the Natimal - cademy ot WS of afiiis moves te the TRyt winn 2o mark the Mght of i wateh 1o the modern waleh [ the notion of Wi R 4 i ¢ Sviences (he watehoavnaiving sitnation. | of e ek ek ek o e pace CLOCK o dere Bt mundinks did not work | ter of o dolline 0 few Live neen e AN ordinary Wit Yonls ap “‘_W'“”:M‘“'I* \';‘N\““- them bubial in ] Gaversment s nesd tn the war, ater ! of four venturies of adva (oD wight e or i weather [ the #ize of o 1ot plece) and give |proximately I8 miles eieh 28 houes | Abtwy [ mumber of conterences of represent. At art Fatks in thowe days han “pyrifes” and | you yothe P of dav bt i e st hoset smakes oo an aver | % Rome of pur gre ©ndusirial Al atives of every phase of the weley Attt ot o e 0 G kept date hours. Fhat | sonie insta WL vecond soronom Lage alaut 4320 Leats e houe bt VANCOR hAve been made byomen | buasiness the . Horohwioal Instituie of comes Gom the Latin i) and other dita [rhe “0emin of i wateh dn so arrans sl | tratned W watehiaehers The sep | America was established, This Fumous Spanisd Patace, st vo e whther device g been T pequices sy menthoc o vear Bl e regadie 1000 vilations of e 1AL CONdERNEE fur the SEAIN CIEE | TRED Ras sstablished tasts i the the | Baoril ar Bwurid is the name W BT oF WALCHINAR . 4B the patace of the K < Loy stmgdest forin 10 wis w Wi | dbiaey wateh bie from 160 1 %00 s | diy the losn 0F 0 KINede VibERiion R towatchiaker Who tater devehoped [alinady more (haw @ thousand men, | | & % B o Lol qaetad o o sabean e Uk [rate parte, which g rom 5000 eanly b would e w s of @i AN ESEIOHE AR GEOrEe [ overy state, have submitied fo fos; 14 MOMEE among e Bl 38 miles A Moat of st otk of 000 operations. Thero are ased W faver 5 soentids per week | Nrephemson, Who developed the fist | examinations [T Arid, the Npanish euv owmietive. Wik ] WHAE thin Wil mean in the develop ' ae Phrough o sery sl B [ jewels o minall ik mare ] Cape Catthe b aowate desedie | Pl st ) N taation we witer wecped i riosdy, e bow) 96,600 wiil 01 an ondinaey oo [ by Dickens ko (s o1 it k| il Watehmaker | BALIWIDG WHS e 8E Sompeivt - orattamen for | eyl v winking b Ll mevesws wo sl it wliont “'”lr“lluil L T R T Y [T PRRTYTeY S PO vianteed the Bakiwin Locomative § » et which v called o waten [oomplens o Wieopiade watelc Ve o | batande wheo an houf W LA T eRted By daies Watl He wis |y | America van be readity seen. Lae the . " PWorks, wan alehia s | o » W W N by ROSR. SHAPED WATCH WITH A WAtk Blia ' HIUte hax many other anms o & | ke ot p srted Lol e are contained inoan sinee Laother quniter o e after oo Ul Whe sewt oud koo - lcating that & certain | botile Vinless yon - Jooke at e Land 108 a witoh i do vonvedic | {Hewe the inveantor of (e sewing ma fwaest. 1t s mtondad (o b the oo { \ \ S 1 [l Hoech Owekeeping st e CRVYTAL FRONT, MADE AN Filine. was o watchmaker. The man | fer the e wmeood all tane ke e e W B “~ Qe ponnd seryve Capl Cuttle, but 0 woula wot an - FRANCE .\le‘ 1610, Who dnvented the Hnoiype whivh seir prehleng® And what s fust as o \ newn | perion of e Wl elaimed, aftey Wi theough o msgnifying Yon ant ot Lt the vides of the cuckon cluck [0 S T T