ON FAIR POTOMAC'S SLOPING SHORE. M HkVtt Wll.tlffSOX. Mount Vsrnont who ran toll the ohsrm Of Ufa on that Virginian tnrm Defore our country's birth? For there waa aim pin godly fear, Anil woman' grace, anil royal cheer. High thoughts, anil tempered mirth, At twilight, when the chimney glowed, What wit nnil wisdom freely flowed, I, slighter ami quirk rninrtst Ami then the old time games what fun When George nml I.iuly Washington Joined In the youth ftil sportsl mm?- WAlllnTO AT MOfJCT ttHSM, Ami when the night grew dark without. What in lirlit r themes they talked about In tlinA historic ilnvst Or honr thnir souls with rnpturo sonrod When Nelly at her harpsichord Hang gay and gallant lays! )h, tirnre nnd hold were women then, Ami pure as women were the men Fur that wn lung ago; The old then lull the r.iwt of youth, The young were sober, and In trutli It ever should lie so. On fair Potomac- sinning shore Mount Vernon, an In daya of yore, la etlll a lovely plane; lint they nre gone that (rave that iceno Its nlr limnesilo nnd serene, Its Joyous life nnd grans. I The Day When Washington Died $ Thin Yenr la the One Hundredth An- niversnry 01 1110 r-vcni. On thnt December dnv. nearly reutury ao, when the body of General George Washington waa laid away in the vnult nt Mount Yoruon, "mock ftinernla" were hold in many towns niid cities enat of the Allogheuica. Our creat-grand parents wore in their in faucy in thoae faraway dnya, and many of them saw these "mock funerals," which were conducted, of courBe, with all solemnity. From theso sights of childhood springs tbe conviction in the minds of centenarians here and there that they were witnesses of the real funeral . Kuch is the trustfulness of old age in memories of times long ngonel Ninety-nine years of national life have passed since then, and America lias given far more attention to anni versarv celebrations of thnt hamier event the birth of its first President than to the yearly reourrence of the day of the funeral. This year, however, the centenninl f that day will take place, and the bservanoe at Mount Vernou will be n December 14, the anniversary of the dny of the death, instead of on the 18th,' which was the date of the funeral. It is intended, nevertheless, that thnrobservnnce Bhall take the form of duplication of tbe funeral services, going over the same ground as in 1799. So elaborate are the con templated ceremonies thnt already plans nre being put into shape for the great event of 1899. As General Washington was a Mason the services over his body were eon tluoted, in part, at least, by the Masons and so the anniversary services will be nnder the direction of tbe Grand Lodge of Virginia, Free and Accepted Masons. The Grand Lodge will meet tn Alexandria, and, escorted by Lodge No. 4, of Fredericksburg, in which Washington received his first degree Washington Lodge, No. 22, of Alex andrls, of which be was the first master, and Federal Lodge, of Wash ington, and representatives or every grand lodge in America, will go to Mount Vernon and there repeat the services of December 18, 1799. It is expeoted that President Mo Kinley, himself a Mason, will make an address, and after the ceremonies OLD TOMB IK WHICH WASniNUTON WAS BURIED AT FIRST, (Its appearance before the recent restora tion.; banquet will be given in Washing' ton. The march to tbe tomb will pass, of course, tbe old tomb in which Wash ington'a body was buried, and in which it rested for more than thirty years, though the objeotive point of toe procession will be the new tomb, where the coffin now is. In his will Washington stated that "tbe family vault at Mount Vernon re quiring repairs, aud being Improperly situated, I desire that a new one, of brick, and upon a larger scale, may be bnilt at the foot of what is called the Vineyard Inolosure, on the ground wbicb is marked out, in whiob my re mains ana tnose oi my deoeased rela tires (now in the old vault), and suoh others of my family as may choose to be intombed there, may be de foaU.d." NllBnf Notwithstanding hla rennest, It was not nntil 1R!U that the new tomb waa linilt and Washington's body planed therein. And then the old Tan.lt wai allowed to fall into a slate of decay. In recent years it haa been rebuilt from a drawing in the Congressional Library, and it ia now anrronnded liy iron fence, and in kept np with the anion care as the net tomb. In 1H!7, when the rrarble sarcophagi In which tho cofllns of Washington and hia wife mat were pinned in the new tomb, the key of that tomb waa thrown into the Fototnno lliver. At the refluent of Mnrlha Washing- ton a door waa niado to the old tomb at the timn of the General's burinl, inatend of closing it with brick, aa had been thn ouatom nt previous burinla. The widow waa aure that she would soon follow her hitaband, Hhe lifod only eighteen inoutlia aftor the death of Washington, keeping entirely, it ia aaid, to her room on the third lloor of the mansion, and upon her dnnth, in 1801, hr body waa laid beanie thnt of her htiahnud in the old tomb. Washington waa buried in n mahog any ro 111 n, linoil with lead, which waa pnt in a case coveted with black cloth. Xlie moat faithful, aa, iniieeii, me moat tonnhitig, account of the illneaa, dentil and fiuiernl of Oencrnl Wash- ingtnn, ia contained in Iho account of lua private secretary, Colonel lolnna Lear, aa written in li in diary, which is in the possession of his granddaugh ter, Mrs. Wilnon Kyre, of Now lorn. WASHINGTON AT It is worth while to give Colonol Lear's entire entry for that 18th day of De cember, Wednesday, Deo. 18, 1799. "About 11 o'clock numbers of peo ple began to assemble to attend tbe funeral, which was intended to have been at 12, but as a great part of tbe troops expeoted could hot get down in time, it did not take place till 8. "Eleven . pieces of artillery were brought from Alexaudria, and a schoon er belonging to Mr. R. Hamilton came down and lay off Monnt Vernon to fire minute guns. "About 8 o olook tbe procession be gan to move. The arrangements of tbe procession were made by Colonels Little, Simms, Deneale and Dr. Diok. The pall-bearers were Colonels Little, Birams, Payne, Gilpin, Ramsay and Manteler, Colonel Blackburn preced ed the eorpse. Colonel Deneale marched with the military. Tbe pro cession moved ont of the gate at the left wing of tbe house and proceeded to sound in front of the lawn and down to the vault on the right wing of the house. The procession was as follows: The Troops, Horse and Foot. Mualo Playing a Holemn Dirge, The Clergy, viz.: The Key, Mr. Davis, Mr. Mulr, Mr. MolTiit nnd Mr. Addition. The General's horse, with his snddle. bol ster, pistols, etc., led by his two grooms, Cyrus nnd Wilson, In black. The body borua by the Free Masons and Oftleeri. Principal mourners, viz.: Mrs. Rtuart and Mrs. Lear, Mlaaes Nnuoy nnd tinlllu Htuart, M(s Fulrfnx nnd Miss Deulson, Mr. Law nnd Mr. Peter, Mr. Lear iind Dr. Cruik, Lord Fairfax and Ferdo Fulrfnx, Lodge No. 23, Corporation of Alexandria. All other persons preceded by Mr. Audersou and tbe overseers. "When the body arrived at the vault the Rev. Mr. Davia read the service' and pronounced a short ex tempore speech. "The Masons performed their cere monies, and the body was deposited in the yault." Interesting as is this acoount of the fnneral, Colonel Lear's story of the laBt illness of his chief and the medi oul treatment he reoeifed is still more absorbing to us of the present day, as it shows, by contrast with modern methods, that, had the General lived 100 yeara later, his life might have been saved, scarcely beyond doubt. The cause of his death was stated to be "oedematous affootion of the wind pipe," or, in layman's phrase, watery swelling oi tue wiudpipe. The trouble at nrst was orilluary quinsy sore throat, whioh by the seoond day had developed into membranous croup. whioh, however, is rarely fatal, except to children, Thoae were the days of capping and bleeding, and Washington not only plaoed himself in the bauds of bis doctors, but iuslsttd, rather against the judgment of his wife, that he be bled. Within twenty-four hours he was bled fonr times, losing the first time only "about half aplntof blood," COMFORTABLE I'NfiKR WHICH TOX DIED. according to the statement of Colonol Lear. In the room in which Washington diod in the second-story of the man sion at Mount Vernon ia the bed on which lie lay and nearly nil the articles which were there at the Inst scene. The bedstead is six fcot square, with fonr big mshogany posts. It was mado in Now York toil years before. VALLEY FOItOE. The only article bolouging to the bod which the Mount Vernon Association has not recovered for presnrvalinu in the mansion is the bod quilt or "com fortable" which covered bis dying body. This is in the possessiou of Mrs. Eyre, who, as told, is the owner of the diary of Tobias Lear, her grandfather. This quilt was made by Mrs. Washington. In tbe centre is representation of Ponn's treaty with the Indians, and at eaoh corner a sec tion of some eolonial print illustrating an inoident in the life of the young nation. Washington a Marshal of Frano. Somewhere in the South there is said to be an ancient porcelain mug upon whioh is engraved "George Washington, Esq., General-in-Chief of tbe United States Ar'my and Marshal of Franoe." The mug recalls the fact, so little known, that Washington really was an officer in tbe armies of the King of France. How the illustrious champion of Yorktown received that title arose in the following way: When old Count Rochatnbeau came to this country it was speedily made known that be eonld not serve under Wash ington, as the old Lieutenant-General could only be commanded by the King in person or a Marshal of France. A way out of the difficulty was found by Colonel Laurens, who suggested that King Louis make Washington a "Marechal de Franco. " So it was done, and some of tbe au x iliaries so addressed Washington at Yorktown, Washington's Farewell. It was on December 4, 17S3, that Washington's officers assembled in Fraunce'a Tavern, New York, to bid, him farewell. As ho looked about on hia faithful friends his usual self-corn' mand deserted him and he could not control his voice. Taking a glass, he lifted it np and said simply: "With a heart full of love and gratitude I now take my leave of you, most devoutly wishing that your latter days may be as prosperous and happy aa your for rner ones have been glorious and hon orable. Washington, What figure more Immovably august Thau that gave strength so piitleut and so pure. Calm In good fortune, when It wavered. sure; That mind serene, Impenetrably Just, Modeled on ulujulo lines, to slmpla they endure? Soldier nnd statesman, rarest unison; Hlgli-poUed example of great duties dona, Modeat, yet linn aa Nature's sell; uublumed Baveby the men bis nobler temper shamed; Uroad-mlnded, bigb-souled, there is but one Wbo wa all this, and ours, nod all men's Washington. Jamn Russell Lowell. WASHINGTON AT VALLEY FORCE. A FJple of Klow Raftering and Patient Iferolain. Valley Forge ia a name which In spires nnspeakable emotions in every reader of tbe Revolutionary story, ap pealing to tbe (Inptli of the pathetic in ns by thoir snnorings, and to our sublimeat sense by their heroic forti tnde. Thnt winter nt Valley Forge surpasses thn retreat from A'oscnw; for the American heroes nnd 'their great commander endured through the lung winter instead of fleeing. Valley Forge Is a rough pleen of ground on the banks of the Schuylkill, twenty-one miles from l'hilndnlphia nnd six from the nearest large town. As mere Iniid, it is not worth much. Hut if thn Pass of Thermopylm is nlaaaio ground, Valley Forge is olnaain. If there is one spot on this continent more fit than any other for a flnnl and sufficient monument to the ninn and to the men of thn American Revolution, it is Valley Forge, WiiMliington rhoan Volley Forgo, a deep cleft in a loft bill, with a stream at the bottom of it emptying into the Hchnylkill. There was nothing in this valley for human use except the prim- oval forest that densely covered it mid thn streams or water Mint flowed by and through it. lint Washington, himself wnll skilled in woodcraft, com manded soldiers most of whom bad built or inhabited log cabins. When ho told them thnt log huts could be quickly made warm and dry, he said lint they all knew to be true. He also knew tironisoly what was neces sary for the construction of the huts, what tools were needed and what ma terials. His order of Deoembor 18, 1777, transformed the whole army in to a cabin building host. Every man had his place and duty, from the ma-jiir-genernls to the drummers. AH the tools wore fairly dividod; each regi ment had its ground fnssigiind it; the street nnd intervals were marked out; nnd when the work was begun, the valley was nlirewitli busy builders. Luch colonel divided his regiment into parties of twelve, gave thorn their share of ares and shovels, and lot them know thnt they were building a home for themsnlvco. A cabin was to be omupiod by twelve men. General Washington ailil,n(l the stimulant of a reward to the parly that should build thn best but. Two weeks of bard work, nnd lints were built and arranged in streots. The work was done on a diet of flour mixed with water nnd linked in cakes, with soarcely any meat or bread. At night the men huddled around the fires to keep from freezing. Few blankets, few coverings, many soldiers without shoes, "wading naked in De cember's snows" snob were the at tributes of Valley Forge. Ry the now year tho lints were done, the streets laid out, and the army boused, witli some three thousand raeu nulit for duty, frost-bitton, sick and hungry. Tliuy had shelter, but that was about all. The country bad been swept so bare by tho passage of contending armies that even straw to lie upon was hard to get, and the cold, nncovered ground often had to serve for a sleep ing place. Provisions were scarce, and hunger was added to the pain of cold. Sometimes the soldiers wont for dnys without inent sometimes without any food, Lnfavotte tolls ns, marvelling at the endurance audcour ase of the men. Waaliltlgton's Inlltlenre. As a tree is known by its fruits, so may a politioal policy be known from the character of its supporters. Shortly after the Federal Constitu tion had been adopted at Philadel pbia, Francis Lightfoot T i signer of the Declaration of "rdep ulence, was at the courthouse o Westin eland County, Virginia, and sii, eone tsked bis opinion of it. I do not,' replied Mr. i. P e- tend to be a jndge of an or t cm 1 iw of such importance, but one iur clines me to support it. General Washington is in favor of it, and John Warden is against it." Warden was a Scotoli lawyer of the county, who had been speaking iu pnblio against the ratification of the new constitntion. Mr. Lee's willing submission to Washington's judgment was imitated all through the country. Trust in Washington brought about the adop tion of the new Constitution by Vir ginia; and without the ratification by that State, then the largest in the Union, the Constitution would never have gone into effect. "Be assured Washington's inSuence carried this Government," wrote Mon roe to Jeffoi'sou, after the Virginia conventiou had voted for the Consti tntion. "Tbe country was an instrn ment with thirteen strings, and the only master who could briug out all their harmonious thought wai Wash ington." Washington Was tho Ideal Commander. Washington, a great commander, had the genius for getting all that was best out of the men under him, but the work of organizing aud dis oipling tbe army at Cambridge waa the least of the troubles which con fronted him when he faoed the situa tion at Boston. Moreover, h knew all the difficulties, for he not only saw them, but he was never nnder delu sions as to either pleasant or disagree able facts. One of his greatest quali ties was his absolute veracity of mind; he always looked a faot of any sort squarely iu the faoe. and this is what he saw when he turned to the task before him. From "The Story of the devolution," by Senator H. C. Lodge. Proclous Washington Urn. One of the valuable relics iutruated to the care of the Graud Master of Massachusetts Masons is "the Wash ington urn)" a small golden uru con taiuing a lork of General Washiugtou'a hair, ' Mrs, Washington presented the lock to the Grand Lodge in 1800, and Graud Master Paul Jin vera made the uru. FOR FARM AMD GARDEN IRDEN Harlequin ('fttitinge Itttge. This is one of tho worst garden posts, Thn full grown insect is nboiit half nil inch long, with a hard shell, brilliantly spotted. It is n snp sucker, puncturing tho stnlks and leaves, then sucking out the flip. Thn insect is inrticulnrl,v fond of rnlilmgn and tur pi I is, working upon them both In tlfb spring end niitiiinii and is especially destructive to these plnnts when they nre shooting for seed. About thn only ell'iii'timl ml hod of getting rid of the pests is to pick tlieiu oil' by hnnd. They nre not affected by poisons, and turkeys and cliiclions refuse tit cat, them. It pays to destroy tho liis4 brood nt any cost, eveu to the itmt of the tmrly cr p of ve;;etiil!oH. Fertiliser for lnii . PrirhnpN grape vine n-e 1 only plnnts wIik-Ii ilo not need Mini. In imm ure, owint; to the fai t, that iniiiiuro contain niliiiiniiioiils in excess, which inukcH gnijicH rot nnd vines decay. A poor, gravelly soil suits vines lieflor t hull a rich o in. Therefore vineyard nre pliintml on thn hill aides. Mure Hum nitrogen and mil phosphate, vine nod n fertilizer containing- l." per cent, of potash. Ofte l wn hear farmers bousling of having put tons of coiiiiuerciul fertilizers in the soil of their farms, which mny be very good, but we never hear nny bonst ah mt a well .preserved stuble manure, which in this sandy soil particularly is nil impellent necessity, for it furniahes vegntulilii mntter (humus) of which the soil in deficient, improving its condi tion so as to eiiubln it to hold its hu midity, and thnt addition of commer cial fertilizers, if tho soil is too loosa ns is the case witli ours makes it compact, and if it. is still' it loosens it. It i a fact that thn efforts of stable manure in the sod have been traced twenty yours after. Alex M. Vulerio in Now England Mo noitrml. White Movrr Seed. It is so difficult to rut and cure white clover nfter it bus ripened the its be seed that this send must always high priced. It is thnreforn worth while for farmers who complain, that everything they grow is toi cheap to give them any profit to scad plenti fully with white clover on some land that is reasonably fre i from we ds, and grow this crop ns a specialty. What is now marketed is secured from hand-picked heads of clover, out of which the seed is ponudad and the chaff blown a way. White clover hoods ore pretty aure to be filled with seed, ns the honey boos pass from flower to flower and fertilize it. The fanner who grows white clover should always keep bees, as the clover makes the very boat honey known. The modern habit of seeding with red clover thick ly suppresses the whitn clovor, as the larger growth smothers tho smaller Yet wherevor white clover bus been plontifiil it will come in when tho red clover dins out, ns it dons after tho second year, thus showing tho per sistency of the whitn clover seed in tho soil. Were it not so valuable a plant it would prove a troublesome weed, nml indued does, where straw berry beds aro neglectod. American Cultivator. Ifow tr I'nilnril rain the Orrhird. Locate drains midway between the rows of trees. The depth of tiie drains should bd from four to five foot, not less than four and as much deeper ns the outlet nnd convenience will allow. The tile should be two or threo size larger than would be necessary to use in ordinary laud drniuing, to give aeration to the soil, and not be liable to obstructions from small roots. If the drains are midway between the rows and as much as four feet deep nnd laid with five or six inch tile, the roots of the trees will not likely reach the drains iu sufficient numbers t serioualv nffact tlm druinu'n. Tim deeper the drains the deeper the roots will nuuetrate the subsoil. If tho drains were eight faet d.iep tho earth midway between the dr.iins aud di rectly under the rows of trees would be affected as deep as seven f. et, iu a few years' time, u:id tiie rooti oi tha trees will penetrate ns deep as tho subsoil is limine I with in a letsouab'e limit, say ton foot, p.j.ssibly mure. Trees so deeply ru.ited nre thu better secured ugaiiist injury fro n the ex tremes of the wenthe. With tiiu suf ficient nnderdruinugu'. of a fertile, re tentive cl:iy soil, the intelligent or chardit with persistent energy U ma.i tar of the business. FnuTtrynn the Fnrm. Professor Gilbirtof Ottawa, Canada, in answer to the question: Why is poultry valuable to thu farmer? give the following r.isoiis: 1. ISucaiue ho ought by their means to ro.ivert u great deal of the waste of his farm into money iu the shape of eggs aud chickens for mar ket. 2. Uecause with intelligent man agement they ought tu be ull-year rev enue producers with tho etccptiou of perhaps two mouths during the moult ing periu 1. y. lieca'lse poultry will yield him a quicker return fur his capital invested than nuy of the other departments of agriculture. i. Because the munura from the poultry house will make a valuable compost for use iu either a vogdtuhte garden or orchard. The birds them selves, if allowed to run iu plum or uppla orchards, will destroy all injuri ous insect life. 0, Because while cereals and fruits can only be successfully grown iu cer tain sections, poultry can be raised for table use or layers of eggs iu all parts of the couutry. for farm fl. Reran poultry raising la an employment in which the fnrmnra wife and daughter can engage and leave him fise to attend to other de partments, 7. Dncatisn It will bring th best returns in the shape of new laid eggs during thn winter nenmni when the farmer tins most tlnte on his hands, P. iliicaiisn to start poultry raising on the farm rnquirns little or no cap ital. Under nny circumstances, with proper liiaiiiiffoionnt, poultry rail bn made with I it t In cost a valuable ad junct to the farm. Honey lleea aa I'ollen I Hstrlhiitera. The hoTiny b"o as n pollen distribu ter is perhaps of greater value to this country Hum the nop of honey pro duced. It has of lute years ocrnrred to scientists that the honey bee is of morn benefit to distributing pollen thnn all other anurrei combined. That vA lire largely indebted to the honey bee fur both quantity and qunlily of our line fruits there is hut littledonbt. Not only fruits but Vegetables, nnd cereals coin uonly grown on thn farm, ilees are not the only insects that nre vnliiulilo in pollnni.ing Mowers, but if we noto very closely we will find that only on n rnry small scale com pare 1 with the honey bees do other inoct4 lU'compliKh much of this work. The honey bee is a pen oral pollen gatherer wherever pollen is to b found, and thus works au extensive territory. Jlees thoroughly canvass soveral uiiles in dinninter iu search of both pollen and honey, and are al ways pollen distributers whether they are engaged iu gathering honey or pollen. Who lias not seen the corn fields with their hevy laden tassels of pol len swarming with honey boes? Also the clover fields, the buckwheat fields, the orchards, the vegetable Holds, the ntrawberry fields, and almost every wild flower thnt produces either fruit or send is daily visited by the busy beo, perhaps every hour in the dny, thus distributing pollen from flower to flower, industriously performing the work thnt nature intended theiu to do. Fruit growers r.f the present have avvnkonnd up to the fact that the honey bee ia their best friend, anil thnt beea and fruit, growing must be closely combined, nnd the strawberry mau has found that his berry patch is almost a blank without honey bees principally for successful returns. Who would not be a friend to the honey bee, one of nature's good gifts toman? That there are not enough of bees to thor oughly snpply this want there is lit tle doubt; many neighborhoods Lave but few colonies of bees. In support of this I would refer yon to the state of California, which is the most exten sive beekeeping state in the Union, and also the same in the production of fruit. II. II. Duff in Farm, Field aud) Fireside. l'tantlng Itlnrk llasplierrlea. My method of planting the black raspberry i somewhat peculiar. Owing to my ability to get stukns very cheaply, I proier to stake. ins ar rangements for planting all kinds of berry plants are made at least one, yenr in advance, tho ground being de voted to some hoed crop which is kept thoroughly free of weed. The ground is plowed in the fall, then disked in spring. Tho field is marked ont both ways, the rov.-s being four and one liii 1 f feet opart. They are opened U one way by means of a single shoveled plow ainf the plants urj s -t in this furrow where the. cross mark inter sects. In sett ng, care must be tnkeu not to get th crowns too deep. One inch or loss below the surface is sufficient. Th3 roots, however, should be set as oeepns possible and the ground packed . firmly about them. I usually plant a nurse crop with the raspberries, pre ferring potatoes, cabbages or tomatoes to corn, as the latter crop shades the plants and is detrimental to the rasp berries iu consuming large quantities of water. Cultivate the young rnsp- birrie both ways, keeping the gro iud I tho onglily clean iiuiil ubout Ang, 1. thou sow tho Hel l to turnips, nsing u garden drill for the purpcto aud put ting iu two or three rows of turnips ! betweon each two rows of raspberries. ; It sometimes happens thnt the rap ' borries make such ra; id growth dur ing the first ee-ison that it is difficult , to how the turnips. If a full Maud of ' pluuts is not securel it is best to set I the entire field ane'.v the uext spring, j I ha-o seldom had any sncce.s iu re ; planting misled plure. If oue fourth of the plantH fail to grow, replant tha ) entire Held. j During th i first summe" the erne are itllowrt.l t grow hi they please, 't he lo!lo .vin;r spring they are trimmed back to about IS or Ul iuches and staked a ad tied up. The second snin-ma:- an I each sja.n thereafter tho vines nre pin 'lied oil' at ubout throo frtet in height, and iu the spring the side branchss are cut to within ouo foot of the m sin stem. All the old wood is than cut ont and rakdd off with a horse ruke and burned. By my method of tying I am enabled to work close np to ti e bills and thus save a great deal of hooiug. By cross work ing I get rid of the ridges which are the result of working one way. I now have berry fields six and aevea years oM and they are nearly level. The 1 nst sea on they made a splendid growth. W. S. Fultz iu Aiuorii-an Agriculturist llonn'l to Keep Warm, In a school house iu Lucirue. Switz erland, that .M icea of summer tour ists, u new hC't-nir fiiruaci has recently been installed. Now on the black boards of the various recitation rooms one may read the admonition: Hino i a hot-air heater has been installed in fiis bud ling the opening of any win dow is expressly forbidden, since the hot air would go out. Chicago KecorU.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers