ROT: pom — ERA aE EE —_,, RN COME HOME! Come home, come home; You are my home? Fields once I walked in, faces once I knew Familiar things so old my heart believed them true; These. far, far back, behind The dark clouds mutter, and the deep seas roar, And speak to them that 'neath and o'er them roam, No word of home. Beyond the clouds, beyond the waves that roar, There may inde-d, or may be not, Where fields as green and hands and hearts as true The old forgotten semblance may renew, And offer exiles driven far o'er the salt sea foam Another home. But toil and pain must wear out many a day, And days bear weeks, and weeks bear months away, the weary traveler hear, Ere, if at all, With accents, whispered in A voice he dares to listen to, say “Come to thy true home! Come home, come hcme! That Is, L indeed cur home? and where is home for me, Whose ship is driving o’er the trackless sea? To the frail bark here plunging on its way, To the wild waters shall 1 turn and say, And where a home hath he Whose ship is driving o'er the driving sea? Through clouds that mutter and o'er waves that roar, Say, shall we find, or shall we notsa shore as is not ship or ocean foam, me lie; before a shore his way-worn ear, —Arthur Hugh Clough. ! It was 9 o'clock in the morning, and fhe doctor had paid an early visit to his patient, Mrs. Appleton, leaving in- structions with her faithwul attend- ant, Bridget. “She is past the danger line now, Biddy, so feed her up; we must make der take nourishment whether she cares for it or not.” “What will I be giving her, doctor, she jist ates like a bird at the best of times?” “Try a good, strong, lamb broth, and given her two raw eggs per day; now feed her up, and we will soon have her out again.” “Indade, and I will, doctor; it do seem as if the whole house was gone with her so still.” ’ “Well, Biddy, it all depends on you now, if you do not feed her well, I shall ‘have to send. in one of my trained nurses; and you know how much you like them, eh, Biddy?” The doctor closed the front door softly, and went out laughing. Biddy was a good friend of his, but he loved to tease her a bit. As he got into his carriage; he 're- called with much amusement Biddy’s indignation some two years since, when Mrs. Appleton was stricken sud- denly with an acute attack, and he | had installed a trained - nurse. Now; there are trained nurses and |. trained nurses, 4s every one Knows. fThe dear, gentle, faithful ‘souls, who get into our hearts as ell as our homes. Biddy could gore foatt that ex- perience. The first act of the nurse was -to forbid Bridget’ to “enter ' the zoom. The patient, although: speech- less and suffering, longed for her ever devoted helper, and Biddy ‘wag heart broken. This time, with young Harold away at school and«Bridget “the'salé: coni- forter of his widowed mother, Bridget was to reign supreme. * Why not, pray? Had- she not lived with the dear lady in her father’s home from the time Miss Bessie first entered a kindergarten, and then did she mot prepare the new home for the bride? ‘Who but Biddy knew ' the agony of those dreary days of early avidowhood, and who could read the face so dear ‘to her as the one who knew ‘her best? It was a sweet, old story of mistress and maid, “and the doctor well knew how dependewrt his frail patient was wpon the greathearted Irish ’ woman, who had no other home and cared for none. i When the doctor’s carriage was out of sight, Biddy crept softly up stairs to find her charge resting with closed eyes. “Dear heart of her,” said Biddy softly,” she do be making the sign of the cross with her white hands, and it’s the best broth in the town I'll be makilig' for her.” Down, stairs went Biddy, and soon she was telephoning for supplies. That duty over, she went into her well-ordered kitchen, and, while mak- ing necessary preparations for the broth, talked as was her custom, to herself. “The doctor was laughing, he was, but praise be the saints, there will be no more sticking of that nas- ty little theomometer in her mouth, and no more messes for her to eat, and she that dainty. I do be coaxing her all the while. Oh, but the airs of her made me so angrl that I was doing penance for it. ‘Bridget,’ sez she: —J want some steak for my breakfast, at 8 o'clock,’ sez she, ‘and do you be cutting it an inch thick, and don’t put it on the broiler until I give the word, for I must have it smoking hot.’ «Another time she came down, and sez she:—‘Bridget, I don’t like your omlettes, or the way you cook eggs,’ sez she; ‘I will have to show you how I was taught in the diet kitchen of the hospital.’ “‘All right, mum,’ sez I; ‘my cook- ing pleases the one who pays me for it, and that is the chief concern of Bridget O'Connor.’ “Oh, the way she would come down ordering me around, was enough to put me in a fever. I do pride me- self that my range and my kitchen is at neat as any in the city, and it’s the dear doctor, himself, who has said so many’s the time; but the high and mighty nurse, down she came, and sez: — Bridget, you do need some les- sons in sanitary science, indeed you do.” “ ‘In what, Miss? sez I. “Which was wicked of me, for the blessed missus had told me all about it, and was very particular herself; why not, when she is a director of a cooking school, but I was stupid on purpose, heaven for- Bridget’'s Broth. By MRS. KATE TANNATT WOODS. : broth’ was being made, not according ‘[ satisfaction. she, in her proud way, wid the head of her up in the air. “‘And what is it like, miss? sez I, ‘do you boil it, or cook it in the oven? We never eat fried meats here.’ ‘“‘Bless me,” sez she, ‘what dense ignorance one finds even in good fam- ilies. You see, Bridget,” she went on, ‘Mrs. Appleton is never very strong, and you should know what to do for her.’ “‘Yes, miss,’ sez I, ‘seeing that I have done for her ‘since she put on short frocks, mebbe I might ‘learn, if she asks it.’ upside down, and she kept me that worried that 1 lost ten pounds of flesh, which I might well spare, but I lost my sleep, which was worse. © “At last she went. The doctor need- ed her somewhere else; and I clapped the two hands of mie till they ached, when she went out. of, the door, and the dear missus, she said SAmen’ as next door. “That's why there is mo , . trained nursé this time. A good, ‘strong broth is it; well, the dear lady shall have it as.quick as I can make if, for’ thi morning, when she said to the: doctor: ‘Leto one take care of me “but ‘Bid- dy, doctor, for she knows just what to do,” I. was happy. “ ‘All right,’ sez the doctor, and. I was’ ‘that proud I.wanted to hug my. poor ‘dear, and the doctor, too, indis- criminate like.” ¥ Alifay Biddy trotted Back end forth wea ng her felt slippers, and the in- yalig? ‘was happy, knowing how pleased her: kind servitor was. © Down in the kitchen the “strong to aty formula of the hospital diet. kitchen, but as Biddy pleased, and her mistress liked to have it done. At last it was ready, and Biddy pre- pared a tray on which she placed two: well-browned crackers, a pretty china bowl, a few flowers in a tiny vase, and some glossy damask napkins. Love had taught Biddy some things which were beyond the ken of many blessed with a more liberal education. She knew that the best dish in the ‘world would never tempt Mrs. Bessie unless it was served in a dainty man- ner. She had learned, also, never to cook the rice in the broth, but to add it after it was thoronghly cooked. The broth “was skimmed and seasoned, and :Bridget surveyed her work with great But fate, the rascal, was on the alert to disturb Biddy’s confid- ence.’ Just as Biddy mounted the stairs, the front door bell rang sharply, and a sudden movement caused one of the felt slippers to slip on the smooth, waxed floor, and away went Biddy, tray, broth, flowers, dishes and all, clattering down to the room below. Even one lamp chimney or one small plate can make not only a terrible noise, but with fiendish glee they are capable of producing endless bits and pieces, to aggravate the unfortunate victim of thé break. The patient nearly sprang from her bed, as the crash was heard. The sil- ence at last became unbearable, and she called in anxious tones: “Oh, Bid- dy, are you hurt?” No answer. “Bridget, do tell me, are you in- jured, have you broken a leg or any- thing but dishes?” Still silence down below. It was too much for poor Mrs. Ap- pleton, whose mind pictured a dozen evils; and in spite of bandages, anti- phlogistine and hot water bags, she sprang from her bed and crept into the hall. The sight which met her eyes as she gazed over the banisters into the living room, was ludicrous beyond words. The newel post was decorated with a napkin, from which dripped a slow stream of broth, the floor was spat- tered with rice, far too moist for a bridal party; and bits of china were to be seen here and there. In the middle of an oriental rug, sat Biddy bolt upright, rubbing. her eyes with a fat, broth-bathed hand. She had not heard her mistress; and was simuly dazed.by the accident. ‘Oh, the likes of it,” she murmured, half fo herself: “and the poor dear need- ing nourishment.” A voice from above Interrupted her; “Bridget, tell me at once, have you broken any bones; if you do not tell me 1 shall come down.” Looking up, Biddy saw the white face of her patient, and in an instant, she forgot herself and her keen dis- appointment, and before there was give me! + ‘ganitary or domestic science,” sez time to remonstrate, Mrs. Appleton “Well, that woman tired our house |" hearty as the Methody” main, who lye be - was hurried into bed and nearly smothered with blankets. “Oh, my dear, my por dear,” said Biddy, “it’s getting a death cold you'll be, and all for that old bell ringing.” “I’m all right now, Biddy; and you must excuse me for laughing, but you did look so droll sitting there, and—" “Shure I was that mad,” said Bid- dy, “I lost me voice, and me breaking that pretty bowl you brought from France; and the strong broth ®wasted and me a sight to behold.” Then both mistress and maid began to laugh, and the merry laughter in- creased the circulation, which was the very thing the doctor wanted to do, and Bridget was happy when she re- membered that more strong broth could be had in her kitchen, and no one was hurt. Many times during the day Mrs. Ap- pleton found herself laughing over the mishap as she thought of Biddy’s picture on the oriental rug. “What a snap shot Harold would have made of it,” she said to herself, and then she laughed again. The next morning, the doctor found his patient much better, and the tem- perature nearly normal. “Biddy,” he said, “did you make the strong broth?” “Indeed and I did, doctor.” “And did Mrs. Appleton relish it.” “Very much,” said that lady, and then began to laugh again. The doc- tor insisted on hearing the story, and he, too, laughed merrily with them. "As he said good morning, he could not refrain from teasing “his friend Bridget, and remarked with a twinkle in, his handsome eyes: “Biddy, the next time I order strong broth just make it strong enough to get over the stairs.” "Murs. Appleton recovered rapidly, and insists upon it that a “merry heart doeth: good like medicine.”—From the Boston ‘Cooking School Magazine. ar QUAINT AND CURIOUS. Birds, when perched on trees or bushes, ‘are natural weathercocks, as they invariably turn their heads to the “wind. By the “midnight sun” is rhefins the northern regions, when for: mouths it does not fall below the horizon. . The vine attains a great age, con- tinuing fruitful for at least four hun- dred years. It is. supposed to be sqgnal to, the oak as regards longevity. The Singer building in New York is the highest in the world, but there'is not enough wood in it to make a lead pencil. It can never catch fire from: within. hie a Statistics of the Chicago municipal baths for 1907 show that only 577,684 baths were given in them this year, as against 671,104 in 1906, a decrease of. over 90,000. The Bible has been translated into four hundred languages. Two men spent twenty years learning the Tahi- tan language and twenty more trans- lang the Bible into it. There are now being carried out in New York city new engineering works whose total cost is about $600,000,000. This is more than -three times as much as the Panama canal will cost. The following advertisement is clip- ped from a Baltimore newspaper of recent date: “W. H. Logue, Jr.,, 981 North Broadway, having been as- signed to jury duty in the criminal court, earnestly requests the patron- age of his friends and acquaintances.” Moving van records in New York show that new arrivals in the city who come without advisers seek first the lower stories of apartment houses, then keep going upward with each successive move and very frequently go from the top floors into the sub- urbs. In the Philadelphia directory for 1785 is the following entry: “Dorleans Messrs., Merchants, near 100 South Fourth street.” These were Louis Phillippe, afterwards King of France, and two ef his brothers, who lived at the northwest corner of Fourth and Princes streets. A Wareham (England) man named Wellstead found four blind baby rab- bits on his holding and took them home to his cat for food. Pussy was nursing her one kitten, and instead of eating the rabbits she proceeded to nurse them, and under her fostering care they are doing well. Caring for Two Blind Men. The facility with which blind men find their way about the city is il- lustrated in one of the largest restau- rants of the city. Every noonday two blind men come to the place and stand near the door until the head waitress guides them to a table. The blind men, of course, cannot read the menu, and instead of having it read to them they state the amount. they wish to spend for lunch and allow the wait- ress to make the selection for them. At first her choice of luncheons was often unsatisfactory, but from their frequent visits the young woman has gradually learned their likes and dis- likes until she now rarely orders a luncheon which is not to their tastes. Another detail which is carefully looked after by the waitress is that the pepper, salt, and other table ac- cessories are always in the same rela- tive positions on the table, so that the ‘sun during the long day of the high | So vedobee this capacity. Rip Van Winkle sleep? The call for want wealth, do you want position, do you want. brains. ers of the earth. serby their disadvantages. son by saying to him: have accomplished as a young man!” can hear the call. capacity. and use ycur own brains. mission. o£ tion? of - time. ‘ideal before, as a people, we can minds and to express it in clear speech. hold ourselves. ZZ Z ed with dirt. should be ready to pay for such milk plane of care and cleanliness. cans or other appliances. brains, enriched brains, educated brains, has through the world, in this, the beginning of the greatest century. Do you In every human vocation . the call rings out for men whose brains and hands are trained for service. Wake up, fathers and mothers; wake up, young men and young women, Quit working on shares, and work for yourself. You are never too old to do something, and be something. Klondike, count one in this century of brains. age is man, master of his own mental resources; man, master of the world’s resources; man, realizing all of his possibilities; man, fulfilling his divine ® The Acquiring of Clear Specch |B trained Ww D. Barry, ; oii ? ; — OW how are people to break themselves of faulty enuncia- Simply by taking time. couraged to do things in a hurry, To be busy, that is, te be - rushed, has been so long an ideal with us that even if we : really aren’t busy we have acquired the habit of doing things, in a busy way—that is, a hurried way. We attend to trifles hurriedly. We even speak hiirriedly when we have plenty Moreover, it is so ¢redible in the general estima- tion to seem busy that many people with Jblenty of leisure pretend to be busy and dishonestly say they are'busy, and act as if'they were busy, and talk with the breathless hurry of people rushed to death. It is very curious, this ideal of seeming to be rushed as if it were a good in itself and not a misfortune, a state to be guarded against, both for one’s own comfort and for the ake of not annoying people about us. easy balance of one’s mental and physical.qualities, must be recognized as an learn to arrange what is going on in our ried or an harassed being, but a nature calm and rational. our faults of diction will straighten themselves out, and we shall find our task of clear-speaking astonishingly lightened. —Harper’s Bazar. Crrvvashtneye By Dr. W. T. Sedgwick. UCH ‘is said and written nowadays concerning dirty ;milk, and any one who is familiar with the primitive methods of keeping and milking cows, especially in some stables, does not need to be told that milk is likely to be seriously pollut- More than one pamphlet has been issued by the United States department of agriculture and by the state experimental stations drawing attention to this fact, and to the need:of greater cleanliness in the milk industry. The writer is constantly urging upon city consumers of milk that they should not only demand purer and cleaner milk, but also;that they The Call for Brains Enriched Brains—Educated Brains. . By Woodbridge N. Ferris. 906090600000 OR ages, men and women have been trying to get food, clothing and shelter without the aid of brains. not been even. moderately successful. man has awakened to the realization that knowing how to do things and get things is an element of tremendous power. If it is worth while to live at-all, it is worth while to live well, to live nobly, to live happily. Man is something more than a bundle of instincts and impulses. gence; he has the capacity to think: Most men do not use They trust to luck, they pin their faith to the magic of a rab- bit’s foot, a horse chestnut or some other charm and turn their “think tank” into cold storage room. Reader, what are you doing? inventory of your own brain resources, the resources of this great round world? They have Here and there a He has intelli- Have you ever taken an have you ever taken an inventory of Or, have you been taking a long gone out you want power? If you have brains, two seeing eyes, two hearing ears, and two willing hands you can have what Behold, the world’s natural resources! sources, your raw materials lying about lcose in the earth. They are so much junk,—worthless until transformed by the creative hand of intelligence, Not one man in a thousand ever discovers the riches buried in his own Confidentially; most people have brains, but they are not using them. They have left their own brain farms and gone out into the highways and by- ways, slaves to the intelligence of those whom they call bosses, the few own- These are your natural re- On every cross road, on every street, throngs of youth cry out that oppor- tunity is for the sons and daughters of the rich. They recount to every pas: How frequently the rich man tries to awaken his “If I had only had your advantages what wouldn't I This is an error. With his son’s un- earned spending money, with his son’s fine clothes, with his son’s spendthrift associates, he, too, would have been a cipher, a nothing. Young man, young woman, this is the hour when the great, busy, hustling world calls for brains, educated brains, self-directing brains. house calls to you and offers you the key to the world’s great treasure house. Every robust boy and girl who hungers and thirsts for knowledge and power All the great institutions of learning are taxed beyond their The school- and women Work your own The flower; and fruit of every < wll Jn this country we-‘are en- Repose, quiet, poise, the So.if we decide to try to speak well, we must accept this ideal and relax from the tension with which most of us When we express ourselves we shall then express, not a hur- Instantly many of a. ye Clean Rn i Handling of Milk and } Degetables : 3 Epidemics of Typhoid Fever and Other Dis» eases Often Due to Lack of Cleanliness. a higher price ,since great pains and expense are required to put the milk industry where it belongs, ona higher Many epidemics of typhoid fever and other infectious or contagious dis- eases have in recent years been traced to milk, polluted by dirty milkmen, suffering with one of these diseases, or by dirty water used in Washing pails, All fruits and vegetables, even upon the farm, should be catered washed when practicable before they are put upon the table; or if, like strawberries, they are subject to damage by washing, they should be carefully mulched with clean straw, or otherwise protected from dirt above or below them as they grow, and then handled only with clean hands.—Youth’s Companion, Ld Bank of the Boardwalk. Through its latest financial enter- prise Atlantic City has not only paid the compliment of imitation to our Night and Day Bank, but also has per- petuated the famous Boardwalk as’ a national institution. This is the es- tablishment of the National Board- walk Bank, which is situated on that renowned promenade and which not only is open during the regular bank- ing hours, but also in the evenings from 8 o'clock until 11. This enables persons who have squandered over- much money in the mild diversions of Atlantic City at night to have a check cashed and continue their mad pursuit of chairriding. The advan- tage of the scheme is in favor of At- blind men have no trouble in select- ing them.—Philadelphia Record, : lantic City as usual.—New oYrk Sun. Their Appearance. Little Wattie Wombat—Dem white gen-lemen dat runs de autymobiles looks sawtah funny, Soest dey, Pop- py? Mr. Wombat—Dey sho’ Loos, muh son! Minds me, in de face, de most of ’em does, of a pusson dat has been sent for and couldn’t come, and is den shot in de proximity with a box ¢’ tacks for not comin’.—Puck. Works Like a Charm. Skinner—Trying horseback to reduce your weight, eh? how does it work? Hevvywate—I've only tried it for a ccuple of days, and I've fallen off quite a good deal already!—Philade} riding Well, WORK WEAKENS THE KIDNEYS, Tho Experience of Mr. Woods is the Experience of Thousands of Others. gf Bernard P. Woods, of Jackson Street, Lonaconing, Md., says: “Hard work and heavy lift- ing weakened my kidneys. I was tired every morning and my limbs stiff andi sore. Dizzy spells and headaches were frequent, and the kidney secretions much disordered. ® This continued fon fifteen years and until I began using Doan’s Kidney Pills. Then I ime proved steadily until cured, and nats urally I.recommend them strongly.” | Sold by all dealers, 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co.,-Buffalo, N. Y. HARD COPPER AX IS FOUND. Lake Superior Relic May Prove An- cients Knew Tempering Process. Examination of a small copper axe found on the shore of Lake Superior at Presque Isle, shows that the axe is harder than highly tempered steel. This fact, coupled with indications that the axe is of aboriginal make, is taken by metallurgists to show that a race of people, possibly antedating the American Indian, knew the art of tempering metal. A Texas Shooting Wonder. The World's Records for wing shooting with a rifle were ‘‘smashed to flinders” in Sam Antonio, Texas, recently by Adolph Topperwein, a native of the Lone Star State. He shot for ten consecutive days at 2% inch wooden blocks thrown in the air at a distance of 20 feet from him, missi only 4 ot out of the first, 50,000 and but 9 ou of 72,500. During his shooting he my runs of 14,540, 18,509, 13,292 and 13,219 hits without missing. In doing this wonderfal ‘Winchester repeaters. His ammunition was of the smokeless powder variety made by the Winchester 4 and famed for its prouracy and clea iness be elected Mayor of Rome. £ born in Elhgland and is Past Grand- . master. Mason. 4 Pazo Ointnient. is caseof Itching, Blind, Bleeding or rE os Liles in 6 to 14 Qoys or money refunded, 50e. Liye, Too Fast. Physicians Have long peen preach-" ing the doctrine that American busi- ness men live too tast. with the telegraph, the ‘ocean cable, the tele-', phone and other modern facilities, the - man of affairs can ‘'do in one hour... ov work that formerly would have oc- cupied six. pondingly shortened. Nothing of the sort has occurred.’ which trade ‘can be effected has sim- only works faster but. more hours than ever, with ties. To keep up this energy he eats”: too much-—sometimes drinks his working hours at his desk and takes no open-air. exercise. Physical-: deterioration is inevitable and when succumb.—New York Herald. Forestry the Great Issue. external political indications may not | show it, is to be the conservation of % This is true be- rescurces have natural resources. cause our natural been shamefully wasted and we are the future may have in store for us if waste is not checked. Upon these- the prosperity of a people absolutely great and strong, we must husband and perpetuate the sources of our, prosperity, and among the chief of these are the forests.—Woodland and Roadside. BANISHED Coffee Finally Had to Go. The way some persons cling to cof- fee even after they know it is doing them harm is a puzzler. But it is an easy matter to give it up for good, when Postum Food Coffee is proper= ly made and used instead. A girl writes: ‘Mother had been suffering with nervous headaches for seven weary Years, but kept drinking coffee. “One day I asked her why she did not give up coffee, as a cousin of mine had done who had taken to Postum. But mother was such a slave to coffee she thought it would be terrible to give it up. “Finally, one day, she made the change to Postum, and quickly her headaches disappeared. One morn- ing while she was drinking Postum 50 freely and with such relish I asked for a taste. “That started me on Postum, and [ now drink it more freely than I did coffee, which mever comes into,;our house now, “A girl friend of mine, one day, saw me drinking Postum and asked If it was coffee. I told her it was Postum, and gave her some to take home, but forgot to tell her how to make it. ‘““The next day she said she did not see how I could drink Postum. I found she had made it like ordinary toffee. So I told her how to make it right, and gave her a cupful I made; after boiling it fifteen minutes. She 3ald she never drank any coffee that tasted as good, and now coffee is ban- ished from both our homes.” Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Michigan. Read the lttle book, “The Road to Wellville” in pkgs. “There's a Rea phia Inquirer. i son,” shooting he used only two .22 caliber rifies— - : Ernesto Nathan is the first Jew to . He was .’ Piles Cured in 6 to 14 Days. ! 2 aranteed ‘to’ cure any: ° 5) It might be thought uw his working day would be corres- #% "The speed witha i ply accelerated his pace, -and he not ; corresponding in-. "crease of business and responsibili-, too}: much—for a man who spends most of a period of more than usual stress, and anxiety arrives he is liable to The great issue before this country ; for the next quarter century, although - now feeling this and beginning to realize the unhappy possibilities which resources and their wise management -- depends. No amount of economic = science can finance a desert. There- fore, if our country is to remain -) TH A SCHOL PRO 2 } 5 Subj Brook] Black, of ary, pres ette Aver large au ‘“Esau’s textr fro Esau sal to die; birthrigh Black sai We cal pathy wi - tween th ’ as much and in cc -* crafty ch “the bette: lean to v look ‘at. figure. 1 calculatiz trickery, his poun brother | ‘With out face jud think it set aside for one + malice a own inter dealing v Or we wo ment, tru thing les and that sinned ar his life fo yet he we erly malj might suj ities of h it inevita - should be purpose. weakness his overn Esau’s dent, bei mized and the typie sportsma and gené character magnanir the prud “of affairs ++ hot-blood "tues are ‘1y near-tc .a creatur crisis, th passion, . ‘without . \Without itual ins; to know judging and mal mot in h ““ which a : be cut. "control & ' our text, ~ right. Ci and fain .*pottage o sting of +. him feel : not get it his broth barter hi -birthrigh There in the mi “value of them val carrying but it m here was strong’to hungry, for the fc a thing a; ‘seemed a value. If privilege posed to miss the ~ sidering. thigh plac He could terial ad the birt He must something eldest soi heritance ity after things we though hi deeper: m the prom appetite tages wer In the pre tion the and unre; present e is’ going t is always not get passion i he does solation intangible his birthr point te this birth The Bi always w with all c natural frankness not help The man who is sv of the mo by sense, the highe call for after all, mal, and at that. ' the Hebr person, w sold his means noe secular, a fine issue earthly si aspiration sting of sting of s manly an splendid c be; but t ceptibility life. He of impuls fense to a ble of des ing of su even thou thing, be present n person as the New 1
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers