2 CAMERON CODNTY PRESS. H. H. MULLIN, Editor. Published Every Thursday. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. rer year IS 00 If paid in advance I •>*) ADVERTISING RATES: Advertisements are published at the rate of •DP dollar per square for one insertion anil llfty •eats per square for each subsequent insertion. Rates liy the year, or for six or three months, •re low and uniform, and will be furnished on application. Legal and Official Advertising per square, three times or less. each subsequent inser tion 10 cents per square. Local notices lit cents per line for one Inser •ertlon: 5 cents per line for each subsequent •onsecutive insertion. Obituary notices over five lines. 10 cents per line. Simple announcements of births, mar riages mid deaths will be inserted free. Business cards, five lines or less. 55 peryoar; over tlve lines, at the regular rales of adver tuing. No local inserted for less than 75 cents per laaue. JOB PRINTING. The Job department of the Pmtss 1s complete and affords facilities for doing the best class of work, P A KTICC LA It ATTENTION PAIDTO LAW PRINTING No paper will be discontinued until arrear ages are paid, except at the option of the pub lisher. Papers sent out of the county must be paid lor in advance. The inventor of <*om»t.iroh as on article of commerce, Thomas Kings ford, died lately at Oswego. .V V., at the iijfi' of 7;i. He made with his own hands the little engine which was Ibe first employed to eKtract starch from maize. According to the Sioux Indian weather prophets, it's going to be a hard winter. These predictions are based on the fact that the htilfalo grass shows a heavy crop of seeds, ■which, the redskins declare, is a sure sign of a severe winter and deep snow. A sitting hen belonging to Mirf. Harry banders, of Mantua, X..1., has given up a nest full of eggs and adopt ed a motherless pig. The little porker had been brought up on a bottle for Milne weeks, and when it was missed, at search revealed it under the hen. the egjjs having been kicked out of 1 he nest. A new kind of make-up has been discovered in Paris, and is saiil to lie doing wonders to improve the, feminine face. A certain drug is in jected beneath the skin In a small syringe. This causes the face to be come round and hollows to disappear. A little rouge and powder and tbu bloom of youth appears. Koger (J. Mills, the former I'nited States senator from Texas, says that, whenever in (lalvcston he always felt a vague dread of just such a calamity as has befallen the city, and was in tensely relieved when he was hack on the mainland. He .said that he ml ways fully realized the danger to the city from some great sea storm. Paris* latest innovation in street lighting is oil-lamps. They are not the sort of lamps used a hundred • years ago when the cry was "aristo crats a la lantcrne," but enormous • structures that give out 1.000 candle power each. They have been set up on the river side of the Tnlleries gardens and light up the gardens and the opposite bank of the Seine •is far its the new (iare d-Orleans. Hooker T. Washington says that the lirst time he ever talked to the late Collis P. Huntington on the sub ject of Negro education Ihe latter gave him a contribution of Mr. Huntington afterward became one of the most generous supporters of the cause, and the last lime the two men met the railroad magnate gave tho Negro educator $50,000 toward the endowment of the school at Tuske tfee. Hooker T. Washington has accept ed the position offered him bv ihe directors of the-South Carolina inter state and West Indian exposition as chief of the -Negro department. If Jias been suggested that designs for the .Negro building be invited from colored architects throughout the United Stales, it being t lie intention of the managers and of Mr. Washing ton that the department shall be en tirely the work of the colored man. In the production of common "wateh-giasses the glass is blown into a sphere about a meter in diameter, ♦sufficient material being taken to Ifive the desired thickness, as the case may be. Discs are then cut, out from Ihis sphere with the aid of a pair of compasses, having a diamond at the extremity of one leg. There is a bna'• kin detaching the disc after it. has been cut. A good workman will, it is said, cut 0,000 glasses in a day. 1 here is a market for spiders. The insects are ,-ohl In the hundreds, the prices ranging from 50 cents to 7.1 cents, and the buyers are small firms ■of wine merchants. These merchants stock their cellars with new. freshly labeled wine, sprinkle dust upon the bins and admit the spiders, who weave their webs from corlv to cork. The cobwebs naturally lead the cus tomers to believe that the wine has been stored for years, and higher prices tire obtained. The French potache is only a boy, anywhere from six to sixteen tears of age, but he is at once high school boy, collegian and university student from Ibe beginning. In France, unless a young man has been a potache, he can all his life be nothing except a shop clerk or a day laborer. He can not, be a physician or a chemist's clerk, a notary or a full-fledged advo cate. tin army officer, or a responsible agent of commerce, unless he has passed the proper university exam ination*. "A KTfiABOO ISSUE." Senator Hanna Thus Denominates "Imperialism." C hnirmnn of the Rrpnbllcnn Nnlionnl Committee I'nya lli* ItcHpecta Crok»*r, llrynn mid the 1> em ocr Upon his return from New York, a few days ago. Senator Marcus A. Ha una nettled at once to his work at the head of the republican national committee, taking hold of the noonday nieetingsof the Illinois Commercial and Industrial league and the ('oyi niercial Men and T!e -lail Salesmen's McKinley and lioose velt club, now being' held in Chicago. In a speech on Tuesday, October 2, fcenator Ilanna said: "This campaign, my friends, is narrow ing down to but a few weeks, and yet it is growing in importance every day, be cause every day brings fr< sh to our minds these issues which underlie all our per sonal interests, as well as the bi st in terests of our country. I say it is encour aging for me to see that the business in terests and the working men of the I'nited States are awakening to the Importance of these issues. I sometimes believe that they have been waiting until the demo cratic party brought in all their issues before they decided to bring them up at all. They are narrowing down now so that with the short time left I am won dering what other issues they can pre sent. Every issue that has been presented to the American public thus fur has been lor the purpose of leading astray the minds of ilie people from the real Issue. There is but one issue, only one, and that issue affects our material interests entirely. I mean the issue of prosperity and the con tinuation of it. That prosperity is a result of a policy, the practice and professions of the republican party. That policy has not changed since the foundation of that parly. It has stood the test in the bat tles that have been fought, and with the exception of two instances have always won. The issue to-day is Just what it was in 1596, only more so. The question is, do the American people want as a founda tion for their interest sound money and protection to American interests and American workingmen. That is all there is in it. Because experience has taught us that upon that foundation we can build not an empire but the greatest commer cial country in the world. "I do not want to talk about imperialism, my friends. That is layed out. It Is a bug •IOOO. It was intended to be a bugaboo. Jt was intended to deceive the American people. And, as i said b< lore, distract their attention from the real issue, it is an impossible; it is a fraud; it is a numbug to talk about the American people resolv ing themselves into an empire, < r that a man with the reputation, with the char acter and ability of William McKinley would be emperor. And that is where our friends, the democratic party, so called, have made a grievous error. They have placed their faitli upon this fact, that the American people are unintelligent enough to understand these great ques tions. Think of appealing to a citizen of tile I'nited States that he should change ids mind, change his whole career as a public man, change the record of a life time, his life work, to build up an empire or even the theory of an empire in such a country as this, ami the letter of Presi dent McKinley has settled that question in the minds of every man who has intel ligence and patriotism enough to under stand these questions. What the people wanted, if they did not fully understand all there was in that question, was simply the facts, and they got them In that let ter. And every fact stated there is a truth. Therefore I say 1 do not care to discuss it any further and I am waiting to see what the next move will be on the check er-board. There was a conference in Chi cago recently of all of the head chiefs of the opposition, and the New York people are anxiously awaiting to know what will be the issue when Mr. Bryan comes east. Jle has been summoned there by his em peror. Dick Croker, and he will be told that he must not talk free silver in New York. I have seen in the newspapers, and i believe every word of it, strange to say, that there was a deal made, that puts Air. Croker above even Air. Bryan as far as power is concerned in this campaign, and I want to know of our western friends, whether democrat or republican, whether they propose in view of present condition of affairs in our country to follow -any man who is dictated to from Tammany hall. "Those are all personalities, but under lying that let us see what this man stands for. Everybody knows what politics is in New York. Everybody knows the power of one man in the rank of the demo cratic politicians in New York, and if there is anything approaching imperialism ! in this country, it is the power of the boss j of Tammany. It wa< under his power ; that no person was permitted to land a | pound of ice upon the docks of New York i without his permission, and that permis- i sion was given to only one company. You ! hear about trusts. The Ice trust of New I York affects every poor man who lives ! within the limit of that great city, and j is the worst trust that ever was, and it could not be made efficient unless, as was i the case, the power governing ihe city of j New York would not permit any other | company to land a pound of ice upon a j single dock of that great city. That is the power which is the motive that gov erns the men that arc now dictating the pollelt sin this campaign. Now, my iriends, from the standpoint of business rn- n, it is idle for me to discuss in this presence what would be the result of a change in these conditions—of tills admin istration. You all know that when busi ness is in a normal condition what makes j the volume of prosperity In business, oper ating for the future, not from hand to mouth. Every man who lays out his busi i ess successfully must have confidence In l be future that whatever policy he adopts he will be on the safe side. In short, he must know there will b-no radical i hanges th H will overthrow our financial condi- j tions. or sap from the foundation that con fidence upon which it rests. We had four ! years of that policy of from hand to mouth and we ail know then suit. No | manufacturer, no merchant, no laboring man knew from day today what would come the next day. And thi refore he man ufactured only that which he could sell; the merchant bought only that which he | could sell immediately, and the working man was compelled to work only hours I It took to manufacture and dispose of those ' goods, "'idir that policy the fires burned out in our forges and factories; the wheels ; of industry slowc-d down and almost j stopped, and what was the result? iji.s- j astir. almost despair. And it was under j the influences of just such conditions that j the people of this country arose in their ; might in IS9K and put their foot upon the i policy which threatened our prosperity and Industry. By their almost united voice, as far as the electoral vote was concerned In the northern statts, said: 'We do not believe in adopting a policy that will un- I dermine the confidence in this country. We don't believe in the promises made by Mr. Bryan that we need more money.' J We did not need more money. There was ; plenty of circulating medium with our I great system of commerce, to transact all and more of the business of the day. What I we wantfd was simply confidence Con fidence that those pr&iclpleit whin I say Is the foundation of our business success should not be disturbed. Party prejudices, party allegiance were forgotten, oelf-in terest, '.f-proHctlou assumed sway la CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY* OCTOBER 18, 1900. the rnlnrts of th* majority of these peo ple. And they put thetr foot down and said". 'We will have none of It.' It did not make any difference to them, and it dots not now, whether these principles are republican. Jeffersonian democratic or what. All they want to know is does it Mean success and prosperity to ourselves and families. They may bring all the demogogues they command upon the rostrum; they may attempt to create class prejudice; they may lie till they are black in the face; but they cannot fool the peo ple. It Is that upon which my confidence rests; it is that when the intelligent busi ness interests of this country are fully aroused with the Importance of the results of this election there won't be any doubt about them. "I know how easy it is under almost any condition in this country to create ex citement in tills conutry. We have be?n for three years of very exciting times In the history of our country. Perhaps one of the most important in all of our inter national Intercourse. Hut I have not seen any evidence of any want of confidence. I have not seen any symptoms in the busi ness and commercial circles in this country denoting any want of confidence; and why? Because every man knew that Wil liam McKinley was at the helm. Because every man knew that lie was sup ported by a republican congress in both branches. Everybody knew that every effort would be made to settle all of the complications and differences with one single purpose, and that the best In terest and honor of our country. It has been done. Yet there is no argument that I can make or any other speaker that compares in force with that one argu ment, to point back upon the record of the past three years and a half. The United States of America has leaped Into the very front rank of nations, and we are not only respected but feared abroad. We have gained a position second to none, and we gained it through the policy with peace and good will and justice to everybody. Therefore 1 say, my friends, there is no argument so convincing as to point back to the record of the adminis tration of President McKinley, and then ask the question, what is there in any and every promise made by Mr. Bryan or his colleagues that could better that condition. He says that he is a friend of the workingman. is he? How do we know it. Has he ever proved it? Never. The old issue that made Mr. McKinley the hero of the workingman was the tariff, which protected him. That issue was fought for years, and I do not know of a labor organization in this country or those connected with organizations when ever they wanted anything of public legis lation or anything to protect their honor or Interests that did not goto William McKinley when he was in the house. They went to him because they knew they were going to their friend. The bill which protected them and bore his name during its short life was a monument to the friendship that he bears to the working classes of the United States, it was re produced in the Dingley bill with some modifications, but during the interim we had an experience of a tariff for revenue, and Mr. Bryan was one of the chief ex ponents and principal advocates of that measure, and so elated was he, so car ried away with the success of the move ment that he was one of the two men who shouldered little Billy Wilson and carried him around the hall of the house of representatives on his back. Why don't they put out a cartoon and show him carrying Billy Wilson? 1 would like to hold up that spectacle alongside of one of Davenport's cartoons of me. I think on that proposition 1 would have the ad vantage of dignity anyway. No, my friends, no demagoguery or subterfuges are going to blind the eyes of the work ing people of the United States. 1 know them. I have been with them, and I be lieve in them. And when Mr. Bryan shows that overanxiety in their interests 1 know that he Is not true to what tie says. He simply wants your vote. That is all. Why he even intimates in his public utterances to-day that if he is whipped this time he won't be dead yet. Ho w ill come up a third time. Why, lie is a standing candidate for the presidency. And I congratulate the so-called democratic party that tliey will be spared the time and expense of se | looting a candidate every time. "This year, speaking for the interest of our business, must end all this nonsense. | This year we must put our seals of op position upon this question which affects oui interests." GOOD OLD-FASHIONED WAYS. A London Paper t'ontrnnU Ktiglisli Social I.ifc with That o 1 tlie French. These are tlie days when everyibody is cheap-—cheap and nasty. Kvery;l>ody vies with everybody. All classes have the same dress, amusements, etc. No matter how poor, they expect the best of everything'. No one is content with simple pleasures. We really ' ' n't . know where we are." What a contrast to the French, who get so much pleas j tire out of life. Look at the sensible French parents, who lay by the li'Me sum of money for their daughters from the day of their birth. This is handed over to them on their marriage; or. if they do not marry, is given to them as their portion. Whatever happens, this is always something to fall back on. We have an idea we are so provii'ent because of our cheap clothes and food. This is all a mistake. The French women keep fewer serv ants, entertain less, but are more care ful to wear the best of linens and satins; and. however simple their food, like it well and delicately prepared, says the London Chronicle. They will not eat rubbish; they will not wear rubbish. They are more refined, less snobbish than we are, more practical. Look at the simple French home of the middle class, with the one or at least two servants. The hostess receives one day a week, does a great deal of the housework herself and lives without pretension. Look at iter cupboard of beautiful linen, in which she takes an old-fashioned womanly pride that would shame her English sisters. She is not ashamed if she lias a quar rel with the cook in saying she has cooked the omelette herself, or even cleaned the family boots. I have known main such good wivesand mothers, and felt far more hearty respect for them than for ail modern ranting, scream ing platform women, who. in trying to reform the world, have not learned, or rather have forgotten, the good old fashioned ways. W lly McKinley IN I'opnlar. Among the traveling men who have renounced the democratic party dur ing tlie last few years is P. 11. Schmitz, traveling salesman for the Chase & Sanborn Coffee company of St. Louis. Although a lifelong democrat, Mr. Schmitz says lie cannot vote for Bryan this time, as business is so much bet ter under the McKinley administra tion than it ever was before that it would be suicide to bring about a change at the present time. SEE PERIL IN SILVER American Bankers Discern Danger to Securities. President Mill of tlie Asaoelatloa JHNCIIMMCN \ntlonal L.uiv* nml the l\eo€-»*lty of u Ijold Standard. The predominating sentiment, de veloped at the first, day's session of the American Bankers' association, which held its annual meeting at, Richmond, Ya., Tuesday, October 2, was that there is still a lurking dan ger of this nation being placed on a silver standard. President Hill in his annual address sounded this warning: "1 would iirmly establish gold as the only standard money of this country, as the past and present both teach that it is the best standard. lam always in favor of improvement, but I do not b' lleve that everything so called Is properly named." Mr. Mill drew a lesson from expansion and then dwelt strongly on the new cur rency law. He said in part: "We must acquaint ourselves with tho character of the people and the coun tries to which our trade reaches. AVe must know what these people produce and what they consume, and the routes by which they -can be reached most quickly and cheaply, and we must Inform ourselves of the chief features of their commercial laws. Must Have Stable Currency. "But we need more than this knowl edge of these people, their countries, com merce and laws, If we are to dominate their trade and be their bankers. To do these things we need a currency of stable value. No one will buy drafts on us or deposit their money with us if these drafts and their credits represent doubtful and changing values while a competitor na tion offers a currency which does not shrink and is measured at ull times by an unchanging standard. "It is no answer to say that payment in gold, if that is the standard desired, may be secured by private contract. Tho very fact that it requires a special contract to secure it is a declaration that the gen eral law does not afford the protection desired. But, furthermore, it is not, s a practical proposition, possible to entire ly safeguard onesself against the unci r tainties of variable currency through pri vate contracts. The evils at home of such currency are bad enough, but in foreign commerce they are worse. "1 think that all members of this asso ciation will agree with me that a vari able standard of value is to be deplored and avoided if possible. Furthermore, 1 w dispute the proposition that gold is the most unvarying money standard, though some contend it Is not the only or best standard to be had. "Mr. Bryan says he first desires to pre serve 'greenbacks' from legislative <|e structlon, and that he will then consider whether they should ever be paid, and if so, how. Step in ItlKlit Direction. "Since our last meeting a. step—though not as long a one as 1 had hoped for— has been taken toward fixing gold in the monetary scheme of this country. I re fer. of course, to the act of congress ap proved March 14, 1800. It authorized n increase in the national bank circulation and leaves undisturbed our ten different kinds of money, and it should therefore not offend, though it may not satisly, the monetary expansionists. "This action leaves the standard silver dollar a legal tender to any amount in payment of all debts, public and private, except where otherwise expressly stipu lated by contract. It provides that noth ing in it shall be construed to affect the legal-tender qualities, 'as now provided by law,' of the silver dollar, or of any other money coined or issued by the United States. "Therefore all private contracts merely providing for the payment of 'dollars' can still lie discharged by the payment of silver dollars, Sherman certificates and green backs; that Is, it has not affected the standard of private contracts. It has. however, provided that something over $839,000,000 out of about $1,026,000,000 of gov ernment bonds, bearing three, four and five per cent, interest, and payable iu 'coin,' may be refunded into two per cen». gold bonds. That is, to be assured of gold in payment of the interest on the bonds they must be readjusted, as it were, into two per cent, obligations on a 16 to 1, or 5 per cent, basis, so far as interest is con cerned. Dlust Pay for Security. "In other words, the act declares that 'coin' in the bonds referred to shall mean 'gold' If the holder will accept in exchange for his present three, four or tlve percent, bonds others bearing on the average less than half the interest he Is now receiving. "There still remains unfunded into these two percent, bonds about $550,000,000 of the $S39,(100,000 that may be exchanged for two per cent, 'gold' bonds. Having provided for the possible issue of $839,000,000 of gold bonds, common prudence demanded that our gold reserve should be strengthened, and this the act has done. But it falls far short of establishing the gold standard in this country, and does not secure against the policy of a president or a secretary of the treasury hostile to gold. "The passage of this act means, in my judgment, one thing we should realize if we would understand the sentiment of this country on the question of currency legisla tion, and that Is that there is no hope in the near future, if at all, in the lifetime of this generation, of any elaborate currency enactment along the linns of the 'Balti more' plan or any other which contemplat ed the issue of money by the banks. "Before we can hope for any legislation of that kind the people at large, the masses, must be made to understand the necessity of it and the justice and wisdom of its specific provisions, and 1 care not how the value of this bank money may be secured, or how fair may be the compensation paid by the banks for the privilege, it will be diflieult work and take a long time to persuade the people that the bank'rrs are not getting an undue advantage and profit through their right to issue money." ICTOf 30 public men to whose active aid Mr. Bryan testified by inserting their portraits in his book reviewing the campaign of 1896 only 17 tire now ac tively supporting the some candidate. Some of the others are dead, some are simply silent, while three or four are openly advocates the reelection of Mc- Kinley. The Bryanlte picture gallery calls loudly for revision.—Ouiuha Bee. Sen a tor Ilanna says: "New York is all right now and there is no doubt that the state will give a good majority for McKinley and Koosevelt. The business men finally have awakened to the fact that they have an interest in this elec tion and are showing a willingness to spend time in attending tv politics." ry.Mr. Olney's declaration for Bryan gravely impairs, it' it does not entirely destroy, the moral right and power of Mr. Olney and of democrats like lam to resist future recognition of 16 to 1 as a cardinal democratic principle. Boston Journal, Gratitude. Young Lady—(Jive me one yard of- why, haven't I see you before? Dry Goods Clerk —Oh, Maud, can you have forgotten me? 1 saved your life al the seaside last summer. Young Lady (warmly)— Why, of course you diu! You may give me two yards of this ribbon, please.—Boston Journal. It Hectored Her Kyebrown Some time ago, Mr. Alfred H. Wenrich, of 16 North 13th .Street, Philadelphia, l'a., wrote: "I sell lots of your Lotion. Four bottles of it have cured a young lady of Sore Eyelids, with which she has been af flicted since childhood. It restored her eyebrows also, which had fallen off. It is a remarkable case." Many more cures equal lv remarkable have been reported of Palmer's Lotion, which is one of the most wonderful healers and beautifiers known. Palmer's Lotion Soap possesses all the medicinal properties of the Lotion, and in all cases should be used in connection with it, in preference to any other soap. If your druggist don't keep it, send his name to Solon Palmer, 374 Pearl Street, New York, and receive free pamphlet of testi monials and sample of Lotion or Soap. Appreciation. Fhe —The Browns called on us last week, you know. He Yes. "Don't you think it is about time we should retaliate?"—lndianapolis Press. What Sluill We Have for Dosiirt? This question arises every day. Let us an swer it to-day. Try .Jell-O, delicious and healthful. Prepared in two minutes. No boiling! no baking! add boiling water and set to cool. Flavors: —Lemon, Orange, Rasp berry, Strawberry. At your grocers. 10c. Dlfflenltlen in the "Way. "I will make your name a hissing and a byword," savagely spoke the rejected lover. "You may make it a byword," the proud beauty answered, with majestic contempt, "but your own good judgment will tell you that you can't do much hissing with such a name as Delia Miller." ('hieago Tribune. Lane's Family Medicine. Moves the bowels each day. In order to be healthy this is necessary. Acts gently on the liver and kidneys. Cures sick head ache. Price 25 and 50c. The Philadelphian—"lsn't the mud on this street a triliedeep?" Chieagoan (proud y)—"Deep? It is the deepest mud on any iaved street in the world!"—lndianapolis Press. The butcher is a joint proprietor.- (.'hi eago Daily News. To substitute the good is the best way to eradicate the bad. Ham's Horn. The man with ,i "strong-minded" wife is in a hen-peck of trouble. 1.. A. \\ . Bul letin. Blessed is the man who truly rejoices in the prosperity of his enemies. Chicago Daily News. "But when the nuvs came, dear, it is a wonder that you did not faint." "How silly! You know that I could not faint with out mussing up my new dress." Philadel phia He co id. Two Slight Changes. Reporter "Do you think any changes should lie made in the rules this season ?" Football ('apt a in- " Yes; I'm in favor of barring the sti angle-hold and the eolar plexus blow."- Town Topics. Hardener- "I keep this gun loaded, but it is very seldom I discharge it. I call it my magazine ritle." Farmer "Your mugu eine rifle?" Gardener "Yes: you see, when anything goes into it there is no tell ing how long it will be before it comes out." —Boston Transcript. The ghastly rider on the white horse stopped at the gate. "1 am Death," he said to the sick man who was watching from the window. "You are welcome," replied the latter, and added, in a whisper: "If you value your life don't let my wife see you ty ing your horse to that tree. She'd never let anybody do that."-- Philadelphia Press. A smart young lady recently entered a railway carriage already occupied by three or four members of the opposite sex. One of them, in the familiar style we know so well, produced a cigar and his matchbox, and said: "I trust, madam, that smoking is not disagreeable to you?" "Really, sir" (with the s-ueetest of smiles), "1 can't tell, for as yet no gentleman has smoked in my presence."—Pick-Me-Up. For Infants Thirty Years ° f The Kind You Have Always Bought THE CENTAUR COMPANY, TT MURRAY RTRKT.NtW YORK CITY. A, Dr. Bull's Cough nfi| Cures a Cough or Cold at onco. Wfe Sal Conquers Croup, Whooping-Coupli. My J"ll II Jg/L Hoarseness, Bronchitis, Grippe anu v Consumpt ion. Mothers praise it. Doctors prescribe it. Quick, sure results. Get only Dr. Bull's! Price, 25 cents. WALTHAM WATCHES The best pocket machines for keeping time that it is possible to make. " The Perfected American Watch ", an illustrated book of interesting information about ivatches,