28 ' Annals of the Carnegie Museum. 



83. Silver watch with various dials showing the hours and minutes, 

 the day of the month, a compass and a curious painting of 

 Adam and Eve, about which a serpent revolves to mark the 

 seconds. French manufacture of the early nineteenth cen- 

 tury.^* (Diameter 60, thickness 19 mm.) 



(Plate XXIX, fig. 3.) 



Chatelaine of gold and enamel with a circular enamel picture of 

 two children and a bird upon its nest. French manufacture 

 of the period of the First Empire. (62 X 40 X 3 mm.) 



(PlateXXVIII, fig. 3.) 



85. Gold watch with a silver dial upon which a miniature gold clock 

 with a pendulum is shown. Made by Perrin Freres at Paris. 

 Period of First Empire. (Diameter 56, thickness 17 mm.) 



(Plate XXVIII, fig. I.) 



I 86. Gold mechanical repeating watch. The dial is cut out in the 4 



I center disclosing two seated figures of gold, which seem to I 



I strike the quarters, while a movable figure at the top ad- | 



I vances to strike the hours. In reality the striking is accom- I 



I plished by a concealed mechanism. French or Swiss manu- i 



I facture of the early nineteenth century. (Diameter 47, thick- i 



i ness 20 mm.) i . 



{ (PlateXXX, fig. I.) ? 



i — i 



i ISA similar watch, number 291, is in the collection of Mrs. George A. Hearn at » 



• the Metropolitan Museum, New York City. t 



• • 



