TIS T HE GIRL. It isn’t the gown, theugh you fhink it is el It’s the girl. It isn’t the plume of the Parisian kat, It's the girl. It isn’t the rmusic that maketh the trance Of delight In the ance. It’s the girl. It isn’t the style—you may think it is that— It's th It isn’t home longing It isn’t the bottle, it isn’t the bird, That something anew in vour being stirred It’s the girl. It isn’t that you of old ladies are fond, t's the girl. It isn’t that Mamma is brunette or blonde, e glorious whirl of the e girl. juai renteth the flat, irl. It isn’t philanthropy draweth the ckeck, It’s the girl. It isn’t the fear of the soon dawning sun That leaveth the cards ere t quite done, It’s the girl. It isn’t the innermost love of the play, It's the girl. It isn’t that you have two fivers, I say, It’s the girl. It isn’t the plush of the opera box That bringeth divorce of your purse from your rocks, It's the girl. So would you the all-potent mainspring of man, Seek the girl. . And if aught goes wrong with some well he game is place, and standing behind her he very gently laid the pearls round her neck. She was conscious that his warm hand trembled as it momentarily touched her neck. Perhaps the clasp was a little stiff, and he lingered a second in fastening it; she could never tell; she only knew in one lighting flash that the crisis of her life had come. Before she realized what she was doing, ‘for- getting all the preparatory speeches that she had rehearsed. forgetting everything excepting that he was close beside her and that she loved him more than anything in earth or heaven, she turned and threw her arms round his (INQ \ NS TS [te endure handling than when first FIXING up MAN USCRIP IS written, Some of the papers that have { come to the library have seemed ab INTERESTING CORNER OF THE solutely hopeless when received. They LIBRARY OF CONGRESS. were frayed at the edges, extremely : 3 brittle, and full of holes, where they Nice Work Done in Patching Up, { had been felded. Some of the old Vir- Mounting and Binding Old Records | ginia records were exceptionally frag —Material for Study in Old Docu- | ile and only by using the utmost care were they saved. A Aside from the historic value and Unless properly introduced, you will | human interest of many of these old miss the most interesting feature of manuscripts there is rich material for the Library of Congress, writes the | a carefu] study of the development of Washington correspondent of the New | the written forms of the letters of our York Post. Behind a screen in the | alphabet. Some of the Virginia rec. ments— vandals in the Library. ordered plan, ek the girl t's the girl. d ne . For man ruleth earth with a grip that is It isn't that you care to strike =p with Pa A brief conversation on father-in-law-— It's the girl. neck with one low sob, and laid her cheek, wet with tears, against his, “Arthur—Arthur, can you aver for- give me? Can you ever believe me? Have [ strained your love too’ far, my dear—my dear?” “Mabel!” only her name, but in it was the pent-up love of a lifetime. “Mab, is this really true; has it come at last?” grim, 3 But if you would ¥now who is ruler of him, Seek the girl. It isn’t an idle > : —J. W. Foley in the New York Times. heth the neck, It's the girl. reading room of the division of manu- scripts, where sit all day studious men poring over records of the past, is a door which opens on a narrow, spiral staircase. If Mr. Lincoln, the assist- ant in charge, gives permission an en- tertaining hour awaits the visitor who climbs the stairs, At the very top of the building is a large shallow room ords written as late as 1622 look more like Pali text than English, Few of the letters as formed by the keepers of the records of courts and the jour- nals-of the provincial councils, bear the faintest resemblance to modern writing, and are wholly meaningless to any except an expert. The care, and the search for treas- THE STRaIM OF WORK. Best of Backs Give Out Under the Burden of Daily Toil. Lieutenant George G. Warren, of No. 8 Chemical, Washington, D. C., says: “It's an honest fact that Doan’s Kidney Pills did me a great lot of good, and if it were not true I would not recommend them. It was the strain of lifting that brought on kidney trouble and weak- ened my back, but since using Doan’s Kidney Pills I.have lifted 600 pounds and felt no bad effects. I have not felt flooded with the north light sought by | ure through tke bundles of manuscript artists. It is furnished with tables | that come to the library is an entranc- *y EDITH REDE BUCKLEY. ¢ A Pearl NecKlace. | | Sue was seated by her bedroom fire deep in thought. The firelight glim- merzd upon the rich folds of har white satin dress. Her elbow was on her knee and her chin rested on her hand; she was lost in thought, gazing absent- ly upon the red glowing coals as though she wanted to look through them and beyond them to some bright- er, happier life on the other side. And the bitterest part of the whole thing was that it was her own fault from beginning to end. She hal been given a far larger share of! happiness than falls to ti had thrown it away with her own hand. She raised her eyes and gazed around the luxurious rcom in which she sat; no thought and no money had been spared to make it as beautiful as possible, all the thought and care of the husband who had idolized her and whose love she had thrown away on her wedding day. It had been one of those misunder- stndings and mistakes which have no real cause. She had been proud and wilful, had told him that all her love had been given to her cousin before she ever met him, and that her marriage, like hundreds of fashionable marriages every year, had been a ‘marriage of convenience.” It was hardly fair news to a husband on his wedding day, but Arthur Davenant was a man who wanted love for love, and would ac- cept her on no other terms. And so he had given her back her freedom, only begging her to stay under his roof and bear his name that the world should know nothing of their story. They had passed a month in Paris for the honeymoon, and then he had brought her to his home. the home prepared by an eager bridegroom for the reception of a dearly loved wife. For nearly a year they had lived to- gether, outwardly as friends, but see- ing nothing of each other except at meals or in the presence of guests. The house was usually full and she made an ideal hostess. He always treated her with the utmost courtesy and consideration? and he bided his time. He was in parliament and man- aged his own estate—was, indeed, en- grossed in his own life, she thought, and left no room for her! For so per- verse is woman's heart that when he let her go she would have given all she had in the wide world to have him back. In her early girlhood she had been devoted to a cousin who was ab- golutely penniless and who went out to try his luck in Virginia. No actual engagement had ever ex- isted between them, and after he had been gone some years and any hope of a marriage was as distant as ever Ar- thur Davenant had wooed her, and her parents urged her to accept him. He was a man few girls could have re sisted, but her heart was so wrapped up in her cousin that she fancied she would never have any love to give, Arthur Davenant had found her cold to his wooing, but he had the confi- dence of an ardent lover that he would win her when she was his wife. She was naturally very self-con- tained, and as the months went hy he never guessed her secret that she was learning to love him with all the pas- sion of her woman’s life—a love be- side which the feeling for her cousin had been a mere girlish fancy. Kind, courteous, and considerate as he was he was unapproachable. Doubtless he had ceased to love her: other things had filled his mind. “Love is of man’s life,a thing apart,” and it was over for him probably, and too late she had learned to value the pearl she nad | spurned. The very sight of him as he sat opposite to her at the table made | her heart throb. According to her own | request he never kissed her or even | touched her save sometimes to shake | her hand on bidding good night. Hew | could he guess that the mere touch of | his fingers made her thrill? She would | | | | | i | | | | have giyén all that she po the cagless care he gave dog. Fe envied his little nephews nie when they came to stay an 1ed him showering} n E faces” AND! if had only nt, children of Ris climbed on kis own ave iren. Two ye: for the front. "Ss before he | She oft she lived wrote to 1 but no w brother w she who had And now she thinking, e home from | , brown and lean and care- with two years’ sufferings and | 9 0 a worn, hardships marked on his > lot of most people, and she | land she wondered jealously if some- thing else had marked his face, too. Sae bad looked at him when she could | without observation. The house was fu. of guests; many of them were his relatives who had come to welcome him home. She had not had five minutes | alone with him since his return. She buried her face in both hands. “Yes, i at any risk,” she cried to herself, “I | must ask his forgiveness, beg him for pity, if love be dead.” She repeated | “If love be dead.” God help her then, | the words cut loud again and if love be dead and she rad killed it. She had denied him love, denied him everything. Might he not have taken { her at her word and put her out of his (life altogether? She had plaved with | edged tools, and her fingers were bleed- js She had juggled with her own again— fate, and the car had passed over her- i self. “God help me if his love is dead.” She got up and paced round the room. | Tomorrow, this very morrow, she {would beg for an interview and tell him everything, and ask him if she had come too late; beg him on her knees for a crumb of love, she to whom a rich feast had been offered. “And now,” she cried, “I would rather he struck me than ignore me; I would rather he were cruel than any one else in the wide earth were kind. Oh, love is a terrible thing when it comes like this.” She wore no rings but her wedding ring, and as she glanced down at her cienched white hand she thougt a mockery it was to wear sank back again in the swayed herself to and fro: heart felt breaking. She had l¢ ) love her husband before he went away, but those two years of sickening anx- iety had magnified her love till it had grown beyond all bounds. It was like the seed in the Bible parable that had brought forth fruit a hundred-fold. There was a knock at her door. She thought it was the maid whom she had dismissed returning for something, and without raising her head she said, “Come in.” closed again, and a step that was not Natalie's crossed the room to her side. The color flamed up into her cheeks when she looked up and saw her hus- band. He was looking unusually hand- some tonight, and there was a tender light in his eyes as he glanced down at her quickly lowered head. He car- ried a blue velvet case in his hand. He took up his position with his back to the fireplace quite close to her, and [Joohed down in silence for some min- utes—looked down on her bowed head, thinking that it was bent in cold in- difference, little guessing the passion- ate longing that was surging within her heart. She wondered if he could hear her heart beat; it seemed almost that he must in the absolute stillness. The little carriage clock ticked; a coal fell upon the hearth. She clenched her hands together, but she dared not look up. At last he spoke. “Mabel, I thought you would forgive me for coming to your room so late, but I remembered it was your birth- day tomorrow and I wanted you to ac- cept my present when we were alone— and we never are alone, are we? Not for five minutes since I came back.” There as a ring of almost entreaty in his voice. ‘Do you mind?” “Mind? Oh, no.” Her voice sounded cold even to her- self, but she could scarcely control it from trembling. “It is so good of you to remember,” she added lamely. “Good?” He opened the case and displayed a row of the most exquisite pearls with a diamond clasp lying on a pale blue velvet lining. She got up and stood close beside him to examine the necklace: her eyes were clouded and a lump was rising in her throat that almost choked her. She put out her hand and touched the rls with a little caressing touch for joy of knowing that he was g the case. she controlled h The tears were d not look up. nantelpiece ire ed, and she watche( him tale the necklace brown hands and then p lips, never realizing that she him. Then he to the fire- z reflect in his strong ress it to could sec stepped b he door opened and was . evening party. | is also the proper obedience to society There was a world of tenderness in his voice as he put her gently from him that he might have the joy of look- ing in her face; then he framed her face in his two hands and looked down into her eyes. “Mab, is this a dream?’ His voice was very low and hoarse from the in- tensity of his emotion. “No,” she whispered, “it is life. Oh, Arthur, Arthur, can I ever make you believe how I have learned to love you, Yow I have been hungering for your love all these years, how I love you a myriad times more than I can ever express? Arthur, can you? Tell me, have I come too late?” He only folded his arms tightly round her, drew her slender figure { close to his breast, and whispered two words, only two, but they changed the whele world for her forever. “My | wife,” and then he laid his lips on hers. | —London Tatler. ° such as draughtsmen use and occupied by five persons, two ‘men and three women. They are repairers of manu- scripts. Their skill has made it pos- sible to use for purposes of research some of the priceless old manuscripts that have come into possession of the government. The curious thing is that none of them have served the long ap- prenticeship that one would think necessary before undertaking such del- icate work. Mr. Berwick, the chief re- pairer, was detailed from the govern- ment printing office. He and his as- sistants now do such work as is done only at the Vatican. Some manuscript repairing is done in New York, but only here and in Rome, so far as is known, is such work being done con- stantly. ' The repairers handled nearly 4000 pieces last year ranging from the per- fect document (requiring little atten- tion beyond flattening, to the most del- icate and exacting task of inlaying and re-enforeix The old Virginia records obtained in the Jefferson Library and dating back to the Seventeenth cen- tury have been inlaid as rapidly as suitable ¢ ntemporary paper could be obtained for them. One volume is completed and another is well in hand. The royal and vice-royal decrees ob- tained from New Mexico, which have been deseribed in this correspondence, have been repaired, mounted, and bound in two volumes, and some vol- umes of the Jackson, Thornton and Tazewell paper have been finished. The ancient records from Guam, se- cured at the time of our peaceful con- test in that island, are fragmentary and have suffered much from neglect; but there is much of value, especially the volumes of the orders of the gov- ernor, Don Manuel Muro, 1794-1800, and some court records. There is hardly a paper of a date earlier than 1860 that will not require repair. These Guam papers will be taken in hand by Mr. Berwick’s force as soon as the Virginia records are completed. They will not be available for the stu- dent until the repairs are made. In repairing, cach paper or collec- tion of papers requires special treat- ment, but the general process is the same. The manuscript is first damp- ened gently with a Sponge so that gmootihed. The nicest care must Le smoothed, Tthe nicest care must be taken to smooth no crease which was unnoticed by the-writer, lest legibility be sacrificed. The manuscript is then dried between hoards and submitted to heavy pressure. This prevents the re- appearance of the original roughness. The period of pressure necessary to secure a permanently smooth surface is about 24 hours. Where the quality of ink will not allow the manuscript to be dampened it takes a longer time. The manuscript is now ready to be repaired. For this purpose paper of similar color and texture to that of the original must be obtained, In mary cases, owing to the age of the manuscript, this is no easy task. In- deed, it is the hardest problem for the repairers to solve. They are con- stantly in search of old paper, and the government is always ready and anx- ious to buy when any is found. Hand- made paper is necessary, and no bit of such paper is wasted. Sometimes in collections of ruanuscript that come to the library several blank pages are found. These are eagerly seized upon and preserved. Pieces no larger than a twenty-five cent piece are saved as scrupulously as whole pages. In re- pairing an effort is made to find a patch that will match the watermarks of the original manuscript, so that af- ter the work is completed the naked QUAINT AND CURIOUS, The longest article in the new sece- ticn of the Oxford dictionary is on the verb “pass.” It takes up 16 columns. At a recent conference of the trade in Leicester the president of the In- stitute of Carriage Builders said that practically the whole of the wheel making industry of England had been captured by America. The Naticnal Union of Telephone Operators, formed by English hello- girls, has won a great victory. The National Telephone company threaten- ed with a strike, has consented to al- low the members to wear colored combs and beads and shirt waists oth- er than black. Few people know that other days of the week than the first are being observed as Sunday by some nation or other, The Greek observe Monday; the Persians, Tuesday; the Assyrians, Wednesday; the Egyptians, Thursday; { the Turks, Friday: the Jews, Satur- day, and the Christians Sunday. Thus a perpetual Sabbath is being celebrat- ed on earth. More double stars have been discov- ered and measured at the Lick obser- vatory in California. The latest bul- letin issued by the university con- tains an account of another hundred new double stars discovered and meas- ured there. They are of the same character as those previously discov- red at the Lick observatory. Nearly all would : be difficult objects to observe under conditions less favora- ble than obtained at Mt. Hamilton. The National Society for the Pre- vention of Cruelty to Children has a remarkable museum, where within a glass case, is a collection of impie- ments of torture. Straps of every de- scription are there, sticks, elubs and ropes with the knots still in them. that once held childish wrists fast. There are also twisted hooks, bamboco canes and a chain with a padlock by which an imbecile child was for vears fastened to a post. Hanging by itself is a straw. basket two feet long and a foot deep in which twins were found on a bahy farm. a A curious custom has just been celebrated at Klim, near Moscow. All the marriageable girls in the town lined up in the principal street, deck- ed out in their simple finery, many of them also having with them the stock of linen, household and per- sonal, which forms part of their dow- eerste meen Ing and absorbing occupation. Usual- ly they are received still folded as in the days before envelopes, and without either alphabetical or chronological ar- rangement. Rach paper ig opened and care taken to note any enclosures. Undated papers require special study to determine, if possible, their proper location. Unsigned documents, drafts and copies must be identified, often requiring a minute comparison of quaint old hand-writing, and names are sought and the relationship of manuscripts established. It is like reading a well-constructed and excit- ing story; one never knows what is going to happen on the next page. The old diarists ‘and keepers of rec- ords had of Pepys’ delightful frankness and love of detail, There are at times amazing personal flashes even in the documents. It seems hardly probable that in years | to come the searcher of the records of | the past will find much to entertain | and in the records of our present-day | councils. When the land was new there was an absence of the dry for- mality that marks the records of the present day. The journal clerks of the old days did not hesitate in mak- ing their records to illuminate them with side-lights on the characters of the persons whose affairs they chron- icled. ‘ seme MYTHICAL ORIGIN OF JAPS. A Legent that They Are Descended From the Pick of Ali China. One of the traditional accounts of the origin of the Japanese empire mentioned by the famous Jesuit trav- eler, Pere de Charlevoix, refers to the emigration of a Chinese colony —under rather peculiar circumstances. Sinosikwo ascended the throne of China in the year 246 B. C., and at once entered on a career of cruelty and tyranny. He was most anxious to enjoy the privileges of his position for as long a period as possible. For the purpose of endeavoring to obtain some specific agent by which the dura- tion of human life could be prolonged he despatched trusted mesaengers and explorers into all countries with which he held any communication or of the whereabouts of which he could obtain any knowledge. Taking advantage of the circum- stances, one of his medical attendants —Wwho was living in hourly dread of a sudden sentence of death—told the emperor that he had learned that such an agent existed in the juices of a plant which grew cnly in the islands which now form the Japanese empire. 1ae plant in question was also reported to be one of so delicate structure and sensitive nature that if not plucked with pure hands and special precau- tion it would lose all its mysterious virtues before arriving within the lim- its of the Chinese empire. It was sug- gested that 300 young men and the same number of girls—all of spotless physical health and moral purity— should be selected to proceed to Japan for the purpese of procuring a suffici- ent supply of the precious plant. The suggestion was promptly acted on. The medical adviser patriotical- ly volunteered to conduct the expedi- tion himself. and the offer was accept: ed. The expedition embarked as speedily as possible for the Japanese islands, but not one of its members was ever seen within the bounds of the Chinese empire again, The previously unoccupied parts of Japan were rapidly populated with a race more fresh and vigorous in body and mind than the average inhabitants ry. The young men contemplating matrimony then walked down the ser- ried ranks of beauty as they moved toward the church and selected the girls of their choice. A formal visit to the parents to arrange details was then made in each case and a date fixed for the ceremony. Proper Apparel. No man should wear anything but! a swallow-tail suit to a dance or It is not only economy wear a dress suit, but it eye cannot discern where the new ang old join. Some marvellous specimens of the skill of the repairers are shown. After the manuscript is prepared a patch conforming in size to the hole in the original is cut, the edges of both hole and patch carefully bevelled and scraped, and the patch held in place with a thick flour paste. The manuscript is against submitted to heavy pressure. When dry the line of union between patch and paper is again delicately scraped, and the first stage of the work of repair is com- pleted, but the manuscript is not ready for use. Although no attempt is made to sup- 7 words which have been torn from to own and final and man looks And reason, then, as a every custom. complete better in a dres ply kind. J (ress suis oah bho olbnal mbna: ript it is protected s : t further loss. A covering of fine silk veiling. (crepeline) is u Tor y thin cing paper ave fir to the uscript, but impaired legibility. C line was first used by the 1 ht at the Vati and was Soo >vident 3a : rin eVigon adopted in t library. This cove o Wor (Kan.) “Father of All The Fiji Islanders } in the fir awatha i is pasted o script, that { to curl may be nanuscrip ¥ jo i nounted for | C 5 n both sides of the manu- the tendencies of the paper neutral When dry Deviis.” ered After the repairs are com scrip manuscript is stronger ang of the land of the Celestials itself! The medical chief of the expedition, of course, created himself king of the country and soon had a magnificent palace erected for his residence, which he called Kanjoku. We are further told that the Japan- ese mention the historic fact in their annals; that they point out to visitors the spot on which the medical founder of their empire landed, and also show the ruins of a temple which was erect- ed in his honor.—American Medicine. of his colored servants about ding.; Yes, she said, “it weddin’ ih sua, the trouble come back since, although I had suffered for five or six years. and other remedies had not helped me at all.” For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N.Y. Delayed. “Ladies,” said the chairwoman of the club, “I must ask you to ke pa- tient. “Mrs. Rumdum, who is to ad- dress us this afternoon on ‘The Fool- ishness of Modern Fashion,” has just telephoned that her modiste has only this moment delivered her new dress, and, of course, she must wait long enough to don it, as she could not ap- pear before such a representative au- dience with a last season’s gown.” With a chorus of murmured sympa- thy and approval, the members of the club settled back in their chairs to wait the arrival of the helpful speak- er.—Life. : Who Owns the Railroads ? « H. T. Newcomb, of the District of Columbia Bar, bas compiled statistics showing that 5,174,718 depositors in savings banks of six Eastern States are directly interested in the joint owner ship” of $442 354,086 of steem railroad securities, that insurance companies. doing business in Massachusetts hold P540,880,038 of steam railroad stocks. and bonds, and 74 educational institu~ tions depend on $47,468,327 invested in similar securities for a portion of their income. Other fiduciary institutions owl enough railroad securities to bring such holdings up to more than a billion and a halt dollars, about one-sixth of the entire capital invested in railroad property. These investments represent the savings of the masses, there being twenty million holders of life insur- ance policies in the country, as many wore of fire insurance policies, and an even greater number of depositors in banking and trust institutions, where investments are largely in railroad se- curities, Tr ——— ® Grim Tartary’s Awakenig. The ferment in Russia has had a curious sequel in a racial ferment among the Tartars of the Crimea for the restoration of their aneient king- dom. A pretender has even appear- ed, styling himself Sabal-Girez Khan, and elaiming to be a descendent of Scachin Garez Khan, the last of the independent Khans, who submitted to Russia in 1783. The pretender, who appears among the Tartar vil- lagers, with an armed body guarg, bas even issued a manifesto, claim- ing the restoration of the Khanate. Troops have been sent from Sevasto- pol to Buchaschisaraj, the _ ancient capital, and the mosque where the Khans of old were inaugurated is under military guard.—London Globe. The Last English Pope. The land area of Canada is 2,316,- 684,071 fancies of fcticn of 1904, but it is more than doubtful whether it will ever be a fact again. The first and last English pontiff was elected as long ago as December 4,1 1154, Nicholas Breakspeare was born the son of a laborer at Langley, near St. Albans, and lived as Adrain VI. to be one of the most powerful and as- sertive of the popes. It was he who compelled the emperor, Frederick Barbarossa, to hold his stirrup, ana when he died in 1159 he was about to excommunicate the emperor. It was Adrain IV. also who blessed and au- thorized, by virtue of the suposed papal jurisdiction over all islands, his old sovereign, Henry ILs, resolve to conquer Ireland. — CHILDREN AFFECTED By Mother's Food and Drink, Many babies have been launched inte life * with constitutions weakened by disease taken in with their mother's miik. Mothers cannot be too careful as to the food they use while nursing their babes. The experience of a IKan- sas City mother is a case in point: “I was a great coffee drinker from a child, and thought I could not eat a meal without it. But I found at last it was doing me harm. For years I had been troubled with dizziness, spots before my eyes and pain in my heart, to which was added, two years ago, a chronic sour stomael. The baby was born seven months ago, and almost from the beginning it, too, suf- fered from sour stomach. She was taking it from me! “In my distress I consulted a friend of more experience than mine, and she told me to quit coffee, that coffee did not make good milk; I have since as- certained that it! really dries up the milk. “So I quit coffee, and tried tea and at last cocoa. But they did not agree with me. Then I turned to Postum Coffee with the happiest results. It proved to be the very thing I needed. t not only agreed perfectly with baby and myself, but it increased the flow of my milk. My husband then quit coffee and used Postum, quickiy got well of the dyspepsia with which lie had been troubled. I no ionger suffer from the dizziness, blind spells, pain in my heart or sour stomach. Postum has cured them, “Now we all drink Postum husband to my seven months’ It has proved to be the best hot drink we have ever used. We would not give up Postum for the best coffee we from my 1d baby, ever drank.” Name given Ly Postum Co., Battle Creek, ? 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She | yes and joy, disda tures - of laces her : as thoug! iy But her b I space is cramping laces tigl the lung line, in o figure mq which to graceful. “I don’ people Ww! diren’s stc ed a wor over the “Now, .he group of play—*“di ? ugly chil #8 like that 3 of a mo ought to B ; every pel “0 ly for wc 3 same tyr and over wonder v engaging it seems them lool I Dry bal bells last outer cas vl by the c thus Yorn cape, anf keeps the means tt battery. is only r porcelain the batte about ha ¥ tablespoo been diss then be ammonia been usec If the hol or few in nail. 1 house for batteries as useles workable cents or 1 least a d 5 To = Spots : cloth by ” had of tl : boiling bark, let through for use. you have fluid, for stained ¢ stained, s ently hop anew by - f diluted roportio bout tw uart of the skitt and cut, wash flar ly out, ri water, sl wring, h before it ing on th carefully with a 3 attention Ss “What woman's some On *The own hon would n sleeping you Ame
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers