SAE Bellefonte, Pa., ember 8, 1911. LEAVING THE NEST. Two thrushes came to my garden, In the bloom of the early spring, And built their nest in the holly, With many a flutter of wing; And four little heads looked over The rim of the well lined nest, And 1 thought of the songs of the future From my birds of the spotted breast. 1 went again to the garden, And my little birds had flown; The nest was there in the holly, But all forsaken and lone: For it needs the ampler spaces, The higher and larger things, And the nest is all too narrow For the bird which has found its wings. ‘We made our nest in a garden, Where the flowers of God are grown— In a street of the crowded city, But the nest was all our own; And the children's voices filled it With a music passing sweet, And the home was a bit of Eden, Though it locked on the narrow street. For love had set them soaring. And given them golden rings, And the home-nest was too narrow For the bird that had found its wings. And as we sit in the gloaming, And think of the long-ago, ‘Thou gh the house is strangely silent, It is best it should be so; For still we can hear the music, As our little birdie sings By its own sweet nest in the garden, Now it has found its wings. —By Dr. Henry Burton. THE WITCH'S DAUGHTER. It was well for old Elma Franklin that Cotton Mather had passed to either the heaven or hell in which he believed; it was well that the Salem witchcraft days were over, although not so long ago, or it would have fared ill with her. As it was, she was shunned, and at the same time cringed to. People feared to fear her. Witches were no longer feared in court, and put to torture and death, but human titions die hard. The heads there- of may be cut off, but their obnoxious bodies of fear and suspicions writhe long. | People in that little New England village, which was as stiff and unyielding as its own trees which sentinelled so many of its houses, knew nothing of that making of horns which averts the evil oe. y shuddered upon their ortho- heights at the idea of the sign of the cross, but many would have fain taken refuge therein for the easing of their un- quiet imaginations when they dwelt upon old Elma Franklin. Many a woman whispered to another under promise of strict secrecy that she was sure that El- ma bore upon her lean, withered body the witch-sign; many a .nan, whea he told his neighbor of the death of his cow or horse, nodded furtively toward old El- ma's dwelling. In truth, old Elma’s ap- pearance alone, had it been only a few rs ago, would have condemned her. n was she, and withered in a hard, brown fashion like old leather. Her eyes were of a blue so bright that people said they felt like swooning before their glance; and what right had a woman, so old and wrinkled, with a head of golden hair, like a young girl's? Her own hair, too, and she would wear no wig like oth- er decent women of less than her age. And what right had she with that flower- like daughter Daphne. Young creatures like Daphne are not born of women like Elma Franklin, who must have been old sixteen years agone. Daphne was sixteen. Daphne had a Greek | name and a Greek beauty. She was very small, but very perfect, and finished like an ivory statue whose sculptor had toiled for his own immortality. Daphne had golden hair like her mother’s, but it wav- ed in a fashion past finding out over her little ears, whose tips showed below like the pointed petals of pink roses, and her chin and cheeks curved as clearly as a rose, and her nose made a rapture of her profile, and her neck was long and slowly turning, and her eyes were not blue like her mother’s, but sweet and dark, and gently regardant, and her hands were as 8 = i: J : FH 78§ hit fritid EEE g § 45 Es 3 J : 1 i i9sE Hl 23 laid to bear upon and he was sent away to Boston town, and Daphne wateh- ed and he came not, and old Elma watch- | ed the girl watch in vain, and her evil passions grew} for evil surely dwelt in heart, as in most human rts, and she had been sorely dealt with and badg- ered, and the girl was her one delight o life, and the girl's sorrow was her own : And whether she were a witch or not, much brooding upon the with wtich people regarded her made her stars. And old Elma led her daugh- ter the El Sd which made her pass- her passing like that of a moonbeam; and the mother took her daughter by the em, and she so loved her that she hurt “Mother, you hurt me, you hurt me!” moaned Daphne,and directly the mother’s gash of the listle fais qm was as if she a new-born babe. “What aileth thee, sweetheart?” she 1 whispered, but the girl only sobbed gent- < “It is for thy lover, and not a maid in the precinct so fair and good,” said the mother, in her fierce old voice. And Daphne sobbed again, and the mother gathered her in her arms. “Sweetheart, thy mother will compel love for thee,” she whispered, and the girl shrank away in fear, for there was e something strange in her mother’s voice. “I want no witchery, to call true love to truelove.” “If love cannot be called else, I want not love at all.” “But, white witchery.” “I want none, and besides—" “Besides?” The girl said no more, but the mother knew tnat it was because of her that the Jover had fled, and not because of lack of ove. “See, sweetheart,” said old Elma, "I know a charm.” “Sweetheart, watch thy mother cross the field from east to west and from north to south, and criss-cross like the spiders’ webs, and see if thou thinkest it harm- ful witchcraft.” “I will not, mother,” said the girl, but she watched. | And old Elma crossed the field from east to west and from north to south, and crisscrossed like the spiders’ webs, and ever after her trailed lines of brighter sil- ver than the dew which lay upon the field, until the whole was like a wonderful web, and in the midst shone a t silver light as if the moon had fallen there, although still in the sky. Then came old Elma to her daughter, and her face in the strange light was fair and young. "Daughter,daughter,” said her mother, "but follow the lines of light thy mother’s feet have made and come to the central light, and thy lover shall be rt, this is not black but white and smooth as lilies, whereas hands | there. had never been seen so knotted and wickedly veined as if with unholy clawing | as her mothers. | Daphne led however, as lonely a life as | her mother. People were afraid. Dark stories, vile stories, were whispered among that pitiless, bigoted people. Old | Elma and Daphne lived alone in their poor little cottage, although in the midst | of fertile fields, and they fed on the milk of their two cows, and the eggs of their | chickens, and the vegetables of their gar- den, and the honey of their bees. Old. Elma hived tilem when they swarmed | with never any protection for that strange | face and those hands of hers, and the! le said the bees were of an evil | and familiars of old Elma's, and ! durst not sting her. Young men some- | times cast eyes askance at Daphne, but | turned away, and old Elma knew the rea- | son why, and she hated them; for hatred prospered in her heart, coming as she did | the girl go to. meeting where she could be | and admired; but Daphne went £gt because of the black looks cast u her, which seemed to scar her gentle or the girl was so tle that she to have no voice of insistence for i When 1; and her mitts and her scarf, and y her own hearth and be seen of no one, the girl only kissed her mother on her leathery brown cheek, and smiled like an angel. Daphne was a maiden of few words, and that would have enticed lov- ers had it not been for her mother. How- | ever, at last came Harry Edgelake, and evra a EE ht ol ment eyes upon : green with a rose in her hair and a rose ; at her breast, spinning in a cool shadow’ and was ever after afraid to ven- i But the daughter stood in her plas, like a white lily whose roots none coul stir save to her death. “I follow not, mother,” she said. “It would be to his soul's undoing, and better I love his soul and its fair salvation than his body and his heart in this world.” And the mother was silent, for she tru- ly knew not as to the spell whether it concerned the soul's salvation. But she had still another spell, which she had learned from her strange book: “Then stay, daughter,” said old straightway she crossed the paths of light which she made, and they vanished, and the meadow became as before, but in the midst old Elma stood, and said 8 e words under her breath, and waved her arms, while her daughter watched her fearfully. And as she watch- ed, Daphne saw spring 2p. in the mead- ow in the space over which her mother’s I arms waved, a patch of white lilies, wh gave out lights like no lilies of ir scent came in : f 8 g : i thou shalt have thy lover, and his soul shall not miss heaven, neither his soul nor thine.” “And thine?” “l am mother.” And Daphne stood firm. “Better I love ions A so A . T3a Much Page : FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN. Thix bit of tumor und pathos is from DAIL a. i the Howsilae Siar: “Au amusing in. ¥. THOUGHT. ry cent is reiated of a young service | Patience in cowards is tame and hopeless fear; matron who dud relinquished her hus- | but in brave minds, a scorn of what they bear. baud for two years und who. having | —Sir R. Howard. before his departure insisted on a good | thee, mother,” she said, “than heaven on Exchanging Forest Trees. earth with my lover; better I love thee — than his weal or mine in this world, bet- ' Not satisfied with exchanging profes- ter than all save his dear soul.” sors, Germany and America are exchang- “] tell thee, sweet, cross my body, and ing forest trees. It is reported that a de- his soul and thy soul shall be safe. mand has dev for Montana larch “But thy life on earth, and thy soul?” seeds to be used by German n . “l am thy mother.” while white-pine seedlings are to be im- “1 will not go.” ported from Germany by the town of Then came a wail of despair from old Guelph, Ontario, for planting a 168-acre Elma at her daughter's feet upon the tract of land belonging to the municipal Sve oF he faery Sageake he Germans ize that the int was up ng recognize that the intro- and she stood 2 ide leathern face duction into their forests of valuable like an angel's for pure joy and forget. trees nativeto other countries may be de- fulness of self. For her daughter stood cidedly to their advantage. Although as in her lover's arms and his voice sound- a rule the forest trees best adapted to ed like a song. each region are those which naturally 1 i g 2 2 8 33 3 B gz 3 § § : 3 of mo BF § % ; 8 $8. ga Ea 5 °f i i g 7s Es seg EX gid i ‘ fore the sun and the wind which have given it life, and she lay still at the feet . of her daughter and the youth, and . stooped over her and they knew that she . had been no witch, but a great lover.—By Mary E. Wilkins Freeman, in Harper's Weekly. ANOTHER BIG LAND SHOW. The Success of Last Year in Pittsburg to Be Duplicated There This Year. i | The arrangements that have been car- ' ried out, and the contracts thus far | signed for 1911's Big Pittsburg Land 12 to 28, assure a ter success than was last year’s. is sa the 1910 display in the gigantic Garden—one of the largest hallsin America—was the first successful | event of the kind east of the Mississippi. { When the people of the Pittsburg ter- | ritory came to realize the scope, variety and magnitude of this Show, which they |did within a couple of days after the | opening of the doors, the walls of Du- quesne Garden were not enough to hold them comfortably on any | one of the remaining nights of the two | weeks. At this wating enough of the i space irr Duquesne Garden has been sold to exhibitors to guarantee in 1911 more than a duplicate of the achievement of 910. No exhibit in this coming Show will attract more attention than the one which will display the marvels achieved by Luther Burbank, the ant ie wizard of California, disclosing that has been opened up, through the dis- they men will quote. ying a great deal, indeed, for a: capacious | great future | in it, there are many exceptions. dd spruce and Austrian and Scotch pine have been carried from their native home to other parts of Europe and to America, and have been found well worth the attention of the grower of timber. Several of our own species, such as the Douglas fir, black walnut, znd others, have met with favor in Europe and flourished there. The Australian eucalyptus is proving a great find for America and South Africa. Our own white pine long ago crossed the Atlantic in response to the needs of Europeans, whose forests are compara- tively poor in tree species, and is now grown commercially on such a scale that when it is wanted tor planting in its own native habitat the German nurseryman is often ready to deliver young plants here for a lower price than our Own nursery- Now the Germans are going to try the Western larch also. The request from the German nurseryman in- structs the collectors to gather the choicest seeds when ripe this fall. One nurseryman cn Flath Lake has offer- ed to exchange larch seeds for seeds of desirable German shrubs, which he in- tends to cultivate and sell in America. In the same region, four or five months ago, foresters of our own ent of Agriculture gathered seed for use in the neighboring Lolo Forest, where a new forest-planting nursery was begun last year. The objects of the Guelph planting are, according to local accounts, to protect the town's water source by a forest cover over its springs in the hills, to make beautiful woods fora public park, and to provide for a future timber supply as a ' municipal asset. In foreign countries, forest tracts are often owned and man- aged by towns and cities as a paying in- vestment and to insure a permanent sup- ply of wood for local consumption, but in America planting by municipalities other than for parks and for watershed protec- | tion has scarcely been thought of. The kinds of treesto be grown in the Guelph ! park have already been decided upon | the Ontario Agricultural College. The proposed reforestation promises to be of | so great economic and sanitary value | that the estimated cost of $8 per acre for | importing and planting the seedlings and | caring for the growing trees is regarded ; as well worth while. | Mammnth Ivory. Siberia furnishes a large quantity of te. | ivory to the markets of the wor!d,but the In view of the large show attendance production of it belongs to another age last year from the terri contiguous to | and to a species of animal that does not Pittsburgh, much of which represented | now exist. The ivory is cut from the tusks the farming element, the management | of mastodons whose skeletons are found will offer this year from 50 to 75 silver | frozen in masses of ice or buried in the cups, to be contested for by the fafmers mud of Siberian rivers and swamps. The of Pennsylvania, Ohio and West Virginia. | northern portion of the country abounds These cups will be awarded as prizes for | in extensive bogs which are called urmans. the best exhibitions of fruit, grains and In these are found the tusks of the mas- othor garden products. | todon, from which it is inferred that these | animals lost their lives by venturing upon a surface that would not bear their | weight. | ‘ Even to wild Snipes these Juris are ' forbidden ground. e nimble reindeer J. H. Weber vs. Jacob S. Herman. ‘can sometimes cross them safely in the SECOND WEEK—OCT. 2. summer-time, but most other large ani- Mina R. Goheen vs. Alice Gensimore mals gtempting to do so would be en- et al. William Witmer vs. Edward Sellers. oa Te Muswn mat Joblsk are numer, Isaiah Davis et al vs. M. D. Kelley | through out this region they are by no et al. Means rare. Nien an repack Deals : own a river or the summer thaw VY Reman vs. Celia and Henry | penetrates more deeply than usual into the rbach. | ground, some of these antediluvian mon- George Fravel vs. Greek Catholic | sters are very likely to be exposed. church at Clarence. In many cases their remains are so George Stott vs. Henry Kline. fresh and well preserved, with their dark, Morris John vs. College township. coveries of Burbank, of how to grow pit- | less and seedless fruits, stringless beans, | Trial List % FIRST WEEK~—SEPT. 25. the belief that they are specimees of ani- mals which still live, burrowing under- ground like moles, and die the instan they are admitted to the light. : The farther the traveller north- ward, it is Said, the more abundant 20 . ese remains become. ey are wash- Washington National B. & L. Assn. vs. | ed up with the tides upon the arctic Mary Jane Egan et al. shores, and some extensive islands off the Washington National B. & L. Assn, | coast contain great quantities of fossil vs. Mary Jane Egan et al. ivory and bones. Washington National B. & L. Assn. vs. os Silce h ave Ben long SY Jopeat) Susan E. Snyder. edly exposed { unserviceable, but those which have re- Moshannon Mill & Lumber Co. vs. Hained Puried in the ie retain the quali : Grace Holling and husband. . es of recen wory an are a . valuable article of merchandise. There is a t W. H. Bradford vs. Quaker City Co. market for these mammoth tusks at Yak- | Alfred Cherry vs. Catharine Harper's | utsk, on the Lena, whence they find their executor. way to the workshops of European Russia and to the ivory-carvers of Canton. A. J. Tate. Washington National B. & L. Assn. vs. H. M. Davidson and wife. Washington National B. & L. Assn. vs. A. C. Bowes and wife. Marriage Licenses. A woman needs d to give double careto the Grant Ellenberger, of Juniata, and Sue preservation Or her r=Once 107 het ppiness and once for the health! E. Houck, of Dungarvin. and happiness of the children she may | Clyde W. Stover and Nona M. Hous: | have. ] ow often oss She} he thie para : man, both of Millheim. care 0 rely, un e > has entered upon a course of suffering, George Wingard and Flora V. Davis, | and ha learned from experience the ne. | both of Penn township. cessity of care. It ought to be a part of | Robert M. Smith, of Centre Hall, and jhe Totfler's duty fo retruct her daugh i May OstErIn: Cobun: n n o ng her rR. Mader, of Lock Haven, and | ¥omanly health chung it ought. . ’ ven, to be taught that the high office of moth- | Emme M. Bitner, of Blanchard. erhood has its weighty obligations and William W. Westbrook and Alfretta E. | resonsibilities, and that if there is peril | Sensor, both of Tyrone. in motherhood it is chiefly due to the; neglect of the necessary laws of health. | John C. Martin, of State College, and 2 | C. McKi of The best way for young women to pro jectand preserve thelr womtan| health | Orlanda Conaway and Adaline Smoyer: | is to use Dr. Pierce's Favorite both of Snow Shoe. fon on the fist symptom of § ty. Howard Moore and Margaret L. Mer- Rs hg, Often, of rell, both of Sandy Ridge. orders. “Favorite ption" regulates the periods, cures inflammation, ulcera- ——“Yes, father, when I finish my edu- | tion and female weakness, soothes and gation | am to follow my literary ong the nerves and enriches the en bent body with and vitality. It “Humph! John, you ought to be re. | contains neither alcohol, nor narcotic. | successful. 1 markably you the four years you spent in college. ——Returned Traveler.—I have often i fhought of that young Mr. Tease and —*“How are you?" how used to torment Miss Auburn “Oh, I'm about even with the world.” | about her hair. Did she ever get even | “How's that?” with him? “I figure that I owe as many people as | Old Friend—Long ago. She married 1 don’t owe.” him. Subscribe for the WATCHMAN. ——Subscribe for the WATCHMAN, shaggy hair and under-wool of reddish’ brown, their tufted ears and long, curved Samuel S. Osman vs. Spring township. | tusks, that all the aboirgines, and even | Mrs. Angeline Tate vs. Wm. Dale and | Some of the Russian settlers, persist in ‘ stallment plan she thought you were ' Boston Transcript. | you? p- | the other fellow of a tale which is photograph. applied herself assiduous. ! iy to the upbringing of her two-year- old baby with a view to the child's fa- miiinrity with ber distant father. Each day she would call the baby girl to ber nud, hold up the photograph. pointing out ench feature to the child . “Ome day the officer enme home. and | the hahy girl, then four years ged, was | sumiusued. ‘Come dear’ said her mother in rlee, ‘papa bas come home at lest” The child surveyed the offi. enor in perplexity and (naliy shook her head woatehat is the matter, dear? asked wer mother. ‘Well replied the child, be obs something like my papa, but my pags hasn't any legs?” Humor of the Barometer. It was a beautiful barometer. It glistened from its splendid wooden ease with a spick and spauness that bogsted of its newness. [ts rich frame- work clearly advertised the large price thut had been paid for it. Its owner was justly proud. But it possessed one drawhack-Iit wouldn't work. Ever «ince it had been purchased it had re- | mained at “set fair" whatever the wenther had happened to be. And the wenther had happened to be particular Iy wet. At last its owner grew weary | of its external beau:y und exasperated over its internal stupidity. One day when the rain was port 12 extra hard’ he tore the weather ndicntor from the wall and took it out into the road. For n moment the needle hesitated. Then as the ralodrops began to dim the glass it made up its mind and moved slowly round to “very dry."-— London Answers. An Innocent Victim, General F. D. Grant, at a dinner at West Point, once analyzed the mili tary menius of Washington. “Washington,” be said, “gave us our independence by campaigning fauit- lessly. He never made mistakes. There have been more brilliant sol- diers than Washington, but there has never been so sure a one. In warfare, you must know, the smallest mistake may lose a whole battle, a whole cam- paign, a whole cause. Ard that re- minds me of poor Tom White. “Tom White failed in business ow- | ing to the mistake of one single letter made by his stenographer. Tom's pa- tron in business was a deaf million- aire who was very touchy about his deafness. This millionaire turned from a good friend to a bitter enemy— he foreclosed on Tom—because the un- happy fellow's stenographer acciden- tallv began a letter to him ‘Deaf Sir.’ n A Gilded Gown. : During the reign of King George E Lord Hervey. a cultured man, gave this description of the fine dress of a dis tinguished woman: “The Duchess of Queensberrs's clothes pleased me most. They were white satin embroidered. the bottom of the petticoat brown hills. covered with all sorts of weeds. and every breadth had an old stump of a tree than ran up almost to the top of the petticoat. broken and ragged and worked with brown chenille, round which twined nasturtiums, ivy; boney- suckles. periwinkles. convolvuluses and | all sorts of twining vines. which spread | and covered the petticoat. Many of | the leaves were finished in gold. and| part of the stumps of the trees looked | like the gilding of the sun." ' wor Grown Cautious. Chatty Lodger (to landlord) — You seem to have seen a good deal. What | are you? Landlord—Well, sir, 1 were a lion tamer, and I'd be there now it 1 'adn't a-married: but, you see, my wife were a knife thrower in the same show. and she got to practicing her turn on me. Well, thinks 1, life ain't too long to run no risks, so I took on a safe job and become a steeplejack.— | London Punch. i A Word to Be Avoided, Wife—Well. did you find out what it | was I sald that offended Mrs. Young-| bride? Hub—Yes. her husband told | me. It seems that you remarked. “I see you're installed in your new home," and as they've furnished on the in- trying to be funny at their expense.— -—- , Quite a Help. “Is your boy Josh much of a help to “Yes,” replied Farmer Corntossel. “He is making a collection of insects. Of course he don’t catch as many as he could if he wouldn't stop to label ‘em, but, then, you know, every little helps.”—Washington Star. Anecdotes. “What is an anecdote, pa?’ “An anecdote. my son, is a short and funny tale which at once reminds neither short nor funny.”"—Puck. A Choice of Words. “You sold me that horse as free from faults. Why, it's blind." “Blind? Well, that's not a fault; that's a cruel misfortune.” He Heard Her. “My daughter's plano lessons have been a great expense to me.” “That so? Did some neiglihor sue yon?" If you live by nature you will never be poor; if by opinion, never rich.— Epicurus. ! with aigrets are a " tneeling beside ber. would novaly ' fringed with black or smoke gray. ny ' later on as a | very wholesome. One wonders how and how wide ostrich feathers are | to grow. The fashionable shops of Paris are showing a : most wonderful selection. Gigantic feath- er butterflies of tropical colors fringed In ostrich plumes some are of vivid pink of them show three shades The firm way in which the bolero has made its way to the front of fashion again this season is worth remark. It began to appear at the very end of last summer in the models of an exclusive dressmaker in the Rue de la Paix, a man, who himself on his knowledge of the uy arts, as well as on his flair as to what is, the right thing for a woman to wear. He first sent it out in the form of a short silk coat with a full basque, the waist line being indicated by a cord. color. Then others of his kind took up the tale, and now the bolero, in some oh or another, is worn by every woman who follows fashion closely. There is one kind which imitates the Russian blouse in lace and has a black velvet band fas- tened with a quaint buckle round the waist. Such a little garment as this locks very well on any dress, and could be used bridge coat. Another lace coat fastens like a fichu in front and be- hind forms butterfly which are caught into the waist by a e basten- ed on to a pad of black velvet. The latest idea for the favorite taffeta . bolero is to have a lawn collar in cream, embroidered in vivid tones likes those of the Russian embroideries; but for the wear of the moment nothing equals the daintiness of the lace bolero, only—and the “only” is such a big one—the lace must be good, or the effect is common. I saw a friend impatiently cleaning a bean pot. I said to her: “Fill that with cold water; put in a teaspoonful of bak- ing soda; cover and set in the oven. When it has boiled half an hour it will be 2 as) to wash as a coffee cup.” Clean sh and meat roastin, ns int way.—Good y Fs Ly he. Fame Looking at the back of your house from a neighbor's window or yard will be bene- ficial to you. To see yourself as others see you is often asurprise. Window cur- tains may need straightening, back win- Sows to be ached, brooms and mops put in place and the ya erally cleared up.—Ladies' Home gon y Ginger acts as a tonic and is considered The white i i even better than the black. vaney » Bay leaves impart a nutty flavor to food "in which they are cooked. If left in too long, however, they are apt to make i bitter. P * ’ Mace is the outer shell of the nutmeg, resembling it greatly in flavor. It may’ he used whole or in powdered form. Curry powder is of East Indian origin and is used constantly by the natives. It combines condiments znd spices and is medicinal as well as delightful to the taste. Nerves are fatal to health and good looks. We constantly see wrecks of young women who are victims of numerous ills | brought on from one cause or another, sometimes physical, again mental. Various disturbances of the nervous system follow in the wake of infectious diseases, such as la grippe, which has been the Grim Reaper for so many of its vic- tims this winter. Typhoid fever, disorders of the stomach and intestines, overwork, lack of sufficient exercise and necessary diversion and a naturally high strung temperament are other common causes of disease of the nervous system. Those who are naturally high send tem- pers and cultivate patience. They should seek friends and a home environment soothing and resting in their influences, and those who are naturally cheerful and opLmistie. 16 and : oung girls and older women engaged in the business world are frequen - tims of neurasthenia. Soqeeny vie Overwork in many cases is the cause: This state of exhaustion, however, is not always attributed to their business tasks, but their indifferent manner of living. _ Theydo not take sufficient nourishment inad igusiible form. During office hours when th y feel faintand weak they lunch on candy. In seeking diversion they are not con- sistent with this means of rejuvenating themselves mentally. Toco many nights a week at play, with continual reductions of sleeping hours, is an excellent way of cultivating nerves, wrinkles and a sallow n On the other hand, women of maturer years do not put sufficient stress upon ER 0 and send them back to their next Hock work refreshed and eager. fps prea Cockeal], Shred the flesh of n thorough! ving Tost with OR Dy i , Serve in cocktail Seve in Sock ies ae ping i i 3 E 2 g | 1 i id i H : i i} : | i § 7 i i f i 8 i i Ez : i
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers