je od og . Je WE C ) wW of be He ¢ Seofofecgeefechrsfreecfecfosfocfecgeode ck ade oe ® 9 & w ° ¥ Straw-Ride at FrisKer’s. : . : Sedefesderdenfentecfeofertesfoudeofooferd -— segeeoafoefeslonfonfeofeofecforfesdiofur,s | By Fletcher Cowan. > ea = : : : : $i cgorfesesecfastosfesfoctecircfecgocfecosfoc]sofocfecferfosfocfaafaoforte es he village of Racketville was at y a town ‘clock; in fact, made himself fever ‘heat. -quite a bore. : At fever heat in the middle of Feb- 30 the ‘old bachelor, discarded. by, ruary. everybody, ‘went it alone,” nestled.:in ‘What an absurd expression that is, | one corner of the sleigh under a clus- by the way. At fever heat in the | ter of fir branches, with no one but his middle of February, when the general | little brown pocket flask to keep him climate is so sternly suggestive of ul- sters, arctics, chest protecters’and Bal- timore heaters. But we use it only in a figurative sense. Racketville was at a perfect fever heat, not according the thermometrical pressure, but the presse of excitement and expectation. ‘Whac was the cause of this ferment? Why, the following notice, clipped from the “Local Items” column of the village paper: “It is a well known fact that the an- nual ‘straw-rides of our esteemed fel- low townsman, Farmer Frisker, are the most prominent features of Racket- ville’s winter enjoyments. Tomorrow evening, at half-past seven, the best straw-ride of the season will start from Frisker’s house, to travel all the way to Dan Kelly's hotel at Fairview, where quite a surprising sensation is promised to- take place. The party will return home in plenty of time for the next day's dinner. vitations have been issued.” Is it not _likely that such an an- nouncement should cause quite a furore, that everyone in the village who had the least claim to acguain- tanceship with the Frisker family should be looking forward to receiv- ing an invitation; and that everyone who had not, should determine on go- ing down to the Frisker cottage to see the party off? for, in the opinion of everyone, the starting off of the an- nual Frisker straw-ride was a sight not to be missed, or eclipsed either, even by the great displays of Christ- mas and the Fourth of July. ‘Well, the eventful evening arrived in safety, and a more glorious one for a straw-ride could - not have been wished for. The moon and stars were out and shining beautifully, the sur- rounding country presented the most lovely snow landscape the eye could feast upon, and the road over which the party were to travel was in splen- did condition. Half-past seven came, and the great straw-ride started from the Frisker cottage amid the cheers of half the willage populace, who had assembled to see them off, and the crash of a brass band that Farmer Frisker had secured to accompany the party. “Music allers seemed to patch up such a sort o° enchantment around the scene,” he said. There were four sleighs full of in- vited guests. They were all ranged in line, and, festooned with flags, branches of fir trees, bright Chinese lanterns and numerous other decora- tions, looked quite a prttty sight. The horses were trimmed up fantastically, too, like a lot of animals in the holi- fiay assortment of a New York depart- ment store. As the party moved away from the cottage the scene was lit up magnifi- cently by the glare of brilliant fire- works, which had also been provided for the occasion. . Then away the sleighs sped in fine style over the fleecy road like arrows, and the crisp snow crackled beneath them with sharp, snapping sounds, the bells jingled with a merry unison, and the voices rang out upon the frosty air with a far merrier discord- ance. ¥ The night was superb. The glisten- ing jewels of the sky shed a soft, ce- lestial glow over the snow-clad hills and meadows, and gave the country the appearance of an ermine paradise. On, on flew the sleighs, past houses, fences, trees and mile posts, like 10c0- motives, until the village was left many miles behind. On they dashed through the hills and valleys, -and across the low, white-carpeted mead- ows, past scattered villages and silent, lonely homesteads, the party enjoying this pleasant diversification of scenery all along the route. Enjoying the scenery and enjoying plenty else. Ah, how nice it was! How really nice it was! Young Simon Lee, for instance, sitting with his arm around the waist of Laura Dale, pointing out to her the places of interest upon the road, the old dead sycamore tree, with the spring in its trunk famed for such good water, the broken-down bridge where he used to fish, the haunted mill beside Brewster's, where he got her that pretty pair of pigeons some time ago, etc. All this while her father and mother, sitting quite near, were in danger of looking; when they were not looking, the conversation was carried on in the silent language of the eyes, and made doubly interest- ing by affectionate bouts in hugging and kissing. . All the other young people derived an immense amount of enjoyment in pre- gisely the same manner. There was one person there who en- joyed himself as thoroughly as all the others combined, and, however strange it may seem, all alone. That person was Bachelor Spriggs, guite an eccentric individual, but the most intellectual man in Racketville. No ong, however, seemed to make much of him during or to care for listen to queer but humorous conversation. The ladies of the party though im ‘‘perfectly hor- rid, for he drinks, and the whisky on him is terrible!” they w pered to e other. The men pi his weakn pronounced smart and fiinny man, but d 10 deavor to draw him for, when once started, be ran the ride, his = Of smell cn € ofesgonfecfecfoofuegrofecfocfonfocfec TEplldpibbied to.|. Over fifty jn- with a sly smile, into comversation;: company, but he had real enjoyment with it, and seemed to prefer its pleas |’ ing comfort to all the fun®and frolic faking ‘plate around him. : His fréguent..potations soon. began to tell upon him, as everyone. feared would be the case, for he was known to mever be without his flask, and ‘oftentimes the people saw it flash in the” moonlight as he raised it to his lips and took what he humorously termed his “astronomical obsetva- stions.” wiles : Farmer Frisker began to get nerv- ous. He had brought Spriggs out upon the ride for a particular purpose—to make a big speech at Dan Kelly's hotel as the opening feature of the ‘‘surpris- ing sensation” he had promised in the notice of the village paper. 4 He began to fear that Spriggs would be unfit for the delivery of the speech. These fears were considerably height- |: ened by the bachelor suddenly burst- ing out into a boisterous song, and as tipsy men’s songs are always as long as your arm, he never finished until | the sleighs entered Fairview and | -dashed up before Dan Kelly's do6r, where fully half the town were gath- ered to receive them. “Spriggs!” cried Frisker, seizing the bachelor by the hair so viciously that he yelled like a wild beast. “I didn’t think you'd sarve me in this way, Tarnation take your distillery stom- ach! You're not fit to grace a mud- gutter, let alone a grand affair like this here. You're not fit to’ spout now.” . “Oh, ves, 1 ‘am, Prisker,” said Spriggs, in a quavering voice. “Trust me—trust Spriggs. He's not gone back on you. He'll make a grand sp-speech.” Frisker said nothing, but turning to one of his sons who was assisting some of the girls from the sleighs, whis- pered: “Zach, for mercy’s sake, keep Spriggs down in the bar-room, or he'll turn the whole affair into a circus. Don’t let him upstairs, or I'll go mad!” “But, father, I can‘t hang onto his coattails all the time. I must be pres- ent upstairs.” “Then tell Dan Kelly to get some one to do the job. If Spriggs gets up- stairs a cock fight will be nothing to the row he’ll raise.” Frisker, Jr., promised he would, but the gir] of his heart was waiting to be handed from the sleigh, and as he sprang to do his duty Spriggs fled from his memory. As the party left the sleighs and filed upstairs into the snug parlor of the hotel, everyone, excepting the members of the Frisker family, and the Darrell family, and a few others, was burning with anticipation as to what the “surprising sensation” was going to Be. When all were assembled in the lighted parlor, quite some surprise was manifested at a few certain things. Farmer Frisker's daughter had thrown off her cloak, and was dis- covered in a handsome silk dress—a rather too beautiful and costly cos- tumeé for a straw-ride. Stephen Darrell was dressed in handsome black, which is not general- ly worn upon a straw-ride, either. Two or three other ladies and gen- tlemen were dressed in a style not to be expected for a straw-ride, and the families of Frisker and Darrell were dressed in their very best. All this caused curiosity and re meark. | Suddenly the presence of Parson | Brooder, sitting at an adjoining table with a Bible before him, was noted, and this and that put together gen- erated a great deal of suspicion. In the midst of the mysterious whis- perings Farmer Frisker arose, and, that showed how he enjoyed the deception he had prac- ticed upon his friends, disclosed the | nature of the “surprising sensation.” “My friends,” he said, “I wanted to provide you with real enjoyment upon this ride. We have had great fun on the road but I have reserved the cream of the amusement to the last. This cream we would have churned at my house, but there wasn't enough room there, so we'll churn it here under the roof of good Dan Kelly. The great sensation anounced to take place here is the marriage of my daughter to young Stephen Darrell, on which. I pray you to shower your blessings.” What Frisker had dome in his few words he had intended Spriggs to make the subject of a splendid speech. But, alas! Spriggs had failed him in his hour of need, and he was forced thus to be his own speechmaker, but it is our belief that the great Spriggs, had he been in fit condition, with all his polish and ready command of lan- guage, couid not have delivered a speech with better effect than had the farmer in his few blunt words. Then all became silent, and the parson, rising, entered upon his happy duty of joining together two loving hearts. when the couple are testioned as to whether they accept denly -out went the gas, and the.room. was left in tetal darkness. .r.-: s.r This. created some consternation. : “Blame the luck!” cried Frisker, ad he ‘bellowed for a match. oi “Tl go downstairs for one,” cried the man on guard ‘at the‘door, and he cpened the door to go; but af the same moment the bridegroom, Stephen Dar- rell, called out that :his pocket. tap There was no use then of the guard _again;” but before ‘he did so a "dark figure passed into the room unnoticed in" the gloom. : Stephen Darrell: was: intensely "flurried by the interruption, and .rushed to light the gas himself., But when he got to the jet he found that he had no match as he had supposed, and that it was ‘only a toothpick he hgd: felt ind his : pocket. Then, desperate: with rage, and — simple - fellow!.— quite frightened, it must be admitted, at the sudden. extinguishment. of the. Jight, which he superstitiously tgok to.be a bad omen for his wedding, he rushed out of the room and downstairs to get a light himself. me : No one knew who it was that went .out, but thought it some ohe of the young men gone on-tpe errand. : “Confound the. thing!” -¢ried. Fris- ker. “There aint much more jobhing to de, is there, parson? Well, then, let the wedding go. on in.the dark. Darn it! I’ to stop in the middle ‘of a marriage; and if that’s the case, the dafk-ain’t going to stop my daughter's.” in .the dark!” “I’ve heard that ’ “Yes, - let cried Farmer it’s bad luck it: go on Darrell. to: stop, too.’ . The parson attempted to expostulate; but both the farmers ordered the mar- riage to go on in the dark. Sco the bride tock her place beside a figure which she supposed to be that of her husband, and the service went on. “Do you accept this woman as your wedded wife?” . No answer was heard. Everyone supposed that the bridegroom had spoken it, but that, owing to nervous- ness which ' sometimes does. affect bridegrooms to a great degree; he had spoken inaudibly. “Do you accept this man for your wedded husband?” : ; “I do,” replied the bride, in a firm voice. “Gracious, Stephen, how you are trembling[’’ she was then heard to whisper. “Then I declare you man and wife!” said the parson, “and the blessing of God, and of everyone, be upon this union.” As he said these words the figure of the husband bent toward the bride. She thought he wished to kiss her, and presented her lips for the purpose of being so treated. Her lips met something, but it was not the lips of her husband. It was something very cold, and a strange, shivering sensation passed over her as she felt its touch. “His—wanrt some—hic?’ asked a quavering voice, and the next instant the young bride felt a cold stream of some liquid poured over her face. Some of it went down her throat and nearly choked her, and by its taste and smell she knew it to be whisky. She uttered a piercing shriek and fell back into the arms of her father, who was standing beside her, just as Stephen Darrell entered the room in er i © eI Ar oY We ihe greatest haste, bearing a lamp. Light being thrown upon the scene, a strange tableau was revealed. Stephen’s bride lay in a half-faint in her father’s arms, and Spriggs, the dark figure who had stood beside her during the latter part of the cere- mony, stood.in the glare of the light, with one hand grasping his brown flask, and the other.clutching the table for support—spriggs, : the .. bachelor, stcod half married to Miss Sarah Frisker. : # The excitement that prevailed after this thrilling tableau it would be hard to portray. “Blame that Spriggs!” roared Farm- er Frisker. “Throw him out cf the window!” : “Let me at him till I break his neck cried Stephen, and indeed the | angry pair would have broken the | poor bachelor's neck had friends not interfered and calmed them down, and bore Spriggs out of sight. Then, when the full ridiculousness of the scene was realized, there was great amusement. The cause of the light going out so suddenly was that somebody downstairs had turned off the gas, but whether designedly or ac- cidentally could not be ascertained. The mirth and excitement over the affair did not subside for fully fifteen minutes. By that time the bride had recovered | from her faint, and the fathtr and bridegroom from their desperation. Then the ceremony was re-enacted; and the right man was married. after the ceremony there was a splendid supper, and after that, spirit- ed dancing, which was kept up until an early hour of the morning. : Then the straw-ride party left Dan Kelly's and reached Racketviile not only in time for dinnér, but in plenty of time for breakfast. “We have had a first-rate time. Haven't we, Frisker?” said one of the farmer’s friends. Yes, a, nkin’ time,’ said Fris- | ker. “Str are very well in a3 straw-ride I their wa noth- a 1} t wed- ct b York ‘{-each other :as husband and wise, »suds he had.amatchin], going for one, so he shut the door| H I've heard that it's bad luck j Independence for Ireland It Would Lead to an Irish Alliance With England and Strengthen the Empire . . : By Thomas J. Regan. F Ireland were given her freedom, the first thing she would “do. would be to form an alliance with England. Her first formation of a foreign policy would be an official declara- tion of the obvious fact that the prosperity of Ireland, when a nation, must depend upon the prosperity of England, her. - safety upon England's safety, her welfare upon the main- tenance of the British Empire. If Ireland were a nation she would need England’s navy to defend her and protect any shipping she could create. | She would be too poor to’ waste ‘any money or energy on the maintenance of wilitary and naval armaments to be used against England or any other na- ‘tion. An alliance with England would leave her free to give all her attention to demestic concerns. It would mean that Ireland could never be attacked ‘by amy Continental nation.” Such an alliance would be Ireland’s only for- . eign policy, and it would be maintained as stoutly as we maintain the Mon- rce doctrine. 3 Ireland's welfare and prosperity would be at stake whenever England ‘was attaéked. England's prosperity would be the source of Ireland’s riches, ‘becatise England would be the consumer of the surplus products of Irisk farms. Ireland when developed would seek an English market for her surplus foodstuffs, for her fowls, eggs, and dairy products. . She would supply Eng- land: with high priced grades of meat, which ‘cannot be obtained from the! .museulay cattle. of our western ranches and whiclr England cannot provide for herself. This English market for Irish products would be a community of interests between the two. Ireland would be the warmest friend that England could “have, because her friendship would have the warmth of self-interest, which is the warmest thing on this side of the grave. ; ngland’s alliance with Ireland would do more than anything else could to strengthen lier union with her colonial passessions. She has seen the neces- sity of a closer union with her colonies. During the South African war she .called for their help. The gratitude of the Irish race would bring her more help from her colonies than she can see any other way of gaining. If the green fiag were waving beside the flag of England there would not be a true Celt in. Canada or Australia whose heart would not leap with enthusiasm for an Anglo-Celtic cause. If there was an alliance between England and Ireland the British Empire would renew its youth. : + CO AN, 3 Yerba ste Fer te ste ste Peo este Ve ote ae ote oe oe tes % spefeesestestsdesfedorfesterte desfestesdofrededotototeooon iiritnty T=THOE= §empornerpon Incomparable Dalue of =————DBusiness Tact: By E. E. Perkins. 09060000000 NY man who has to meet the public and whose success de : 3 pends on the public's attitude toward him needs to study : A $ $ : himself constantly that he may become tactful. How easy bes adaaalsd to say the wrong word, to make an unfortunate impression, to canvass a prospect at an inappropriate time, or not to realize when to stop talking. There are two eminent examples of what tact will do. James G. Blaine was a most adroit man. He was a friend maker, a moulder of men. A wonderful memory for names and faces aide him. He used to know and call by name people whom he had seen but once many vears before. That was one of the secrets of his great pcpularity. He approached people right. So did Mr. McKinley, who was remarkably considerate of the opinions of others. He was so tactful that political enemies often were transformed by him into friends at a sitting. Qualities like these are necessary to the successful, high-grade insurance solicitor. They should be cultivated at every turn. You are in “public life” and daily have to meet people. It is absolutely necessary that you employ diplomacy as did these two eminent tacticians. You know how you warm up to the man who treats you as you like to be treated—in a business-like way —because he has properly sized you up. You know how susceptible to such influences you are. If he went at you properly he could get your signature, or your last dollar, as the saying goes. Turn it around; get yourself into the same relative attitude toward the other fellow, from whom you want first an interview, then an application. ’Twill enhance your success. In other words, constantly study the art of being tactful in order that you may excel in it. S etesgodetel There is $eosssssed Nothing : : ~: That Will Endure By President Eliot, of Harvard. ; HAVE often wondered if our civilization will leave anything sedefaafotefoefeiote ! 5 - & to the archaeologist of 2000 years hence to study. You have 5 5 studied materials that have endured under the earth for we +. % 3000 years. I have found it difficult to find any such dur- : % able things in our buildings, arts and great manufactures. * x Do we make any vases that record, as the Greek vases, td our costumes, arts, religion, ete.? None. It may be that Eerie sete ferteoterte 3 ours are not worth recording. Instead we attempt to put i the records of 2000 years ago on our vases, much to the con- fusion of the archaeologists 2000 years hence. Across the river there is a structure of concrete durable in spite of the frost of winter and the heat of summer. Will it stand?: What will be the ruins of the Stadium 2000 years hence, or will the structure of steel and con- crete stand? All the products of our {rade and commerce are the temporary. Our stone walls are mere veneers of three or four inches thick backed up by bricks. If you examine the producers of our great industries, they are perish- able in a high degree and all are becoming more SO. The old books of Germany will last, but ours will not, for the paper will rot or dry in a short period hence. Where, then, shall we find material for the archaeologist 2000 vears hence? There is only one thing that will last—our subways. There are our chances. The Brooklyn Bridge, which is the foremost of our engineering structures, needs constant care. I trust that out of your labors as they penetrate the minds of our people will come worthier arts and buildings to record our civilization to the future. CAR AR) WW HE HN eV Veo Pe o¥e s¥e *4 serferiestesfertesfeslesferiererioresie eve sfefeterfeloiesfesietae Paying Too Much for Success By Orison Swett Marden. | F a vigorous young business man, anxious to push his busi: ness and make money, were offered a million dollars to shorten his life ten years, would he accept the money on such terms? For what stocks and bonds would he exchange the peace and tranquility of his mind for the rest of his life? What price would tempt a man to trade his steady nerves for shaky ones scarcely enabling him to sign his name, or substitute for buoyant spirits and a vivacious manner jaded ennui and dull apathy? What would he ask for his bright, vouthful countenance, if it was to be immediately replaced by a wrinkled, careworn visage, stamped with anxiety? How much would he take for his athletic figure, his quick, elastic step, if offered in exchange a bent form and a shufiing gait? How much real estate would he consider a fair compensa- tion for the companionship of his wife, the joy ard comfort of his home, and the sweet love of litttle children? Suppose that a bright, hopeful college graduate were asked to sell, off- hand. the result of his four years’ work, to give up his grasp of human nature, .r all the docrs of intellectual progress that his studies have close the bargain? > would take in exchange for the friendships that and } petual inspiration, and to close fore wh Ask some man at he life 1 i with hallowed expnerie ure and profit in future year fluential for good in his community, whose 3 to growing youth, to sell his v’s respect, what sum would he name? ie his and which pro { Son sought, who is h ¢, his infiuence, his com 1 ca. agg Co-cperative Socialism: in, Belgium. Soclalism- in Eelgitim has’ developed largely in the direction cof co-operative enterprises. In that particular it has taken a firmer hoid in that coun- try than elsewhere. Cg-operative evolution is ‘already too far advanced or any opposition by the State to be effective. There are many huge co- operative organizations, and their energies are directed toward almost every phase of economic life. In the main they may be said to be success- ful; certainly they are far more suc- cessful than any attempts at co-oper- ation which we have seen in Ameri- Without! doubt ‘their influence © is beneficent.. Most of the great co- operative associations have their own libraries, devoted particularly to eco- nomic and social science. In the Vooruit, at Ghent, I have seen a col- lection of many thousands volumes devoted to these two subjects. . New Erie T.ocomotive-, The Erie Raiiroad las ordered 137 very heavy freight locomotives and 5609 freight cars. The company is alsp having built three of the new and fast type of passen- ‘ger epgines known as “balanced com- pounds.” These locomotives will pull more passenger cars at a higher rate of speed than anv other kind. The comnany is also’ having built threc aeavy Pacific type of passenger engines. . Honduras Lottery Raided. Collector of Customs William Tibbitts, of the Iichile, (Ala.,) dis- trict, seized 1,000,00 tickets of the Honduras National Lottery company, and at the same time notified W. C. Cable, W. Baltumet and James Ray," alleged officials of the company, to. appear at his office. The seizure is: result of correspondence that has: been going on for some time with Washington. The tickets were on. . board the steamer Hiram just arrive: ed from Honduras and the same ves-* sel brought the alleged ‘officers of : the company. : BE FACE . LIKE RAW BEEF Burning Up With a Terrible Itching Ec-. zema-—Speedily Cured by Caticura. Se “Cuticura cured me of a terrible eczema = from which I had suffered agony and pain for eight years, being unable to obtain any help from the best doctors. My scalp was covered with scabs and my face was like a piece of raw beef, my eyebrows and lashes were falling out, and 1 felt as if burning up from the terrible itching and pain. Cu- ticura gave me relief the very first day, and made a complete cure in a short time. My head and face are now clear and well. (Signed) Miss Mary M. Fay, 75 West Main St., Westboro, Mass.” ] Always Says State of Maine. A really curious question has been raised by the Boston Herald. Why, it asks, does a Maine man always speak of his part of the country as “the State of Maine,” instead of call- ing it simply “Maine,” as a New Yorker would say “New York” or a Nebraskan ‘Nebraska?’ As an ade- quate answer to the inquiry it says: Maine was not one of the original States, but up to 1820 was a part of Massachusetts. It was then known as the District of Maine. In 1820 Maine achieved her independence and became a separate State of ence and became a separate State of the Union. Finnish Bride's Dress. In rural Finland a bride wears to church a curious combination of wed- ding veil and wedding bonnet. It is a great cap with ribbon streamers behind and in front a fall of lace which shadows the face. Over her dark cashmere dress she ties a handsomely embroidered white apron. —— To Cure a Cold in One Day Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets, All druggists refund money if it fails to cure, E. W. Grove’s signature is on box. 25c, . A bee that works only at night is found in India. Assassination in Russia. _Takings-off are so managed in Rus- sia that the very chief of the third section has again and again proved unable to protect himself. Col. Su- deikin, who held office in the late Czar’s time, transacted a good deal of his husiness on aa upper floor in an out- of-the-way street, under a name as common as the English “Smith,” and always with the door locked. A visi- tor had to Knock in a certain manner, and give a password that was changed every day. Yet one day some one knocked, gave the pass- word, got inside and opened fire. The colonel was badly hurt, but he killeq his man &ad reached the landing— only to be finished off with an iron bar there by somebody else. No- where does the unexpected happen oftener than in St. Petersburg.—N. Y. World. . Knew What He Wae Talking About, A reader asks where the characteri- zation of Washington as “first in war, first in peace and first in the hearts of his countrymen” comes from. It ap- pears in the oration delivered by Major Henry Lee at the request of Congress in 1799.—Springfield Republican. $100 Reward. #100. The readers of this paper will be pleasedto learn that there is at least one dreaded dis- ease that science has beea able to eure inall itsstagzes, and that is Catarrid. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a con- stitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall’s CatarrhCureis takeninter- nally,actingdirectly upon the blood and mu- coussarfaces of the system, thereby destroy- ingthe foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the con- stitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors haveso much faithin itscurative powers that they offer One Hun- dred Dollars forany case that it fails to cura Send for ist of testimonials. Address P ?. J. CHENEY & Co., Toleg : Sold by Druggists. 75¢. r Zoledo. Os Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation, China’s Coal Fields. China’s resources of coal and iron are among the largest and most favor- ably situated in the world. The extent of the great coal fields has been put at 400,000 square miles—more than enty times the aggregate extent of a3 the coal fields of Britain, SeV- + t ar — a —— —— i en im The we left hand, on the f« finger wa “private ¥v cate nerve too, was and the | the little gerous p the liquid that wed on that qualities wedding stinate sf Too m1 necessity gloves fr more tha length © wear. A should b as far as be pushe fingers ¢ this is ing are begin to the hand straighte into shaj them fr ‘sible, as 4t that rc glove is ¥ t (The f Jdargely ‘ness re ‘that’ ope possible ‘cleansin ‘quently , thoroug] a good s ‘soap an shawl ir ‘do not wool fre looks si ‘rinsing ture. 1 second of mois shawl i ' warmin over an fectly ¢ Many ,by the convers ‘ture of en day: “the tin _breakfa ly all and rej history mealtir their w look u during thing mealtir been s be trai fully d trained will cl sought on the of bolt your n gestior Obsery The this si 1905 is all of cade 1 she is ‘come mothe ¢.. The “ mificar will b + thank{ “are ni i Just 1 * extren and a one. course their | pointe the bc sashes fashio indeec with 1 and 1 murel Lac many terial and n SO g0o they plain gown! or he hold ark A ‘Wh met can ¢ or as from custo office need
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers