Show p t y- y Y II 1 Timepieces Were Kent lent nt f Expensive Affairs J the street lives Jives an nn ancient ross rocs ieee ece fell and nd dark with narrow Kot checkered Inlay It was d elf r Win elin tot of for one General Mower of ot sterling worth as they the Ito o say ay The general bought f t ht and pendulum In Boston them Mr Cheney of ot for tor Kg i g 65 made wade the brass works 25 9 and d John Dana of ot Woodstock I e. ibe case adding 35 to the cost I hundred hundred and twenty five dollars I see a large sum In- In ether you and on onI one bygone days 8 r for tor those I couldn't at all account for tor until covered CaTered that brass weights and 1 t came chiefly from England and Nicholson resolution of 1806 1800 the n. n lively ively prohibited their importation clocks must always have ill fill such 4 f as far tar back as the less 21 Inh in year ear of ot 1790 pounds h was paid for a grun grand grand- leVs rs rB clock a financial fact tact that thatIs Is es you yon wonder why colle collectors tors to- to to expending only a little object such antique treasures p cr for tor really are bargains 1 Last month leallY country auction one was sold and some people thought the And nd yet It probably cost much when it first was as riy lj eo a jn ii know It was said that It was tho oi of these brass works price Thigh Connecticut ch originally Inspired kH kl makers to whittle their works of of t hardwood Ell Eli Terry erry deserves l credit r for tor this ingenious econ econ- but r but ut the method was soon u adopt adopt- by by I many maDY craftsmen so many ln- ln that If the old label has been the various vicissitudes of ot reng w- w ting ng an nn attic residence and bandy- bandy about from owner ovner to owner It ita a little difficult to say Just who Toned a t particular clock Alice Allce Alice Carrick In |