OF be Sass to Be Suffrage Con nce in Washington. “Her grand * and her husband were Ameri helped the Chilians to win depondance. Bhe shows her the country by bulldinz cis. churches, asylums hospitals cilngs for the poor. A splen: 813 maternity hospital was built and | ined by her in Velparise When reservoir above the city burst, | # many persons out fo Ren, k those who wers eft penniless | and homeless into her palsce and af forwards set them up in business. 1ace vell draped over her head and e wears cheap clock BAYEe Monty to give to ie pont. Now York Press. _ Ornaments for the Paty. Be white tulle bow as found 8 new perch om top of | the head, with a loop of hair * forming | one large Sower wade of Chantilly Jace daintly spangled is ; J. hair oruament. wo of velvet arrange) bair fern are another o arming hair ornament. If the = fhe tucks orang poluts, ie runsing up into the this parasol at the head of the se Nore aad there a white row. ered an ports of gorgeous things ars to chiffon and applications of | id flowers to be teen this year. r pretty white silk parasol has y of plain silk and the jower part Bh deep ruffles of chiffon edged iny rachings. At the top of 8 fluffy rifles are set at intervals + a fhe e's ard the ek fs tied . the bow. I a tendency in these pars- y be wall trimmed upon the Some, trimmed with applica h white chiffon ruffies has pndstion of white silk with black ruchings, and lines » parescl to the ruffies. y stick at the top is a | of chifion, with Yelvet rib- | a Gspoolal committes iture, have now been iy the Great and General Be vow a n fssué, $5000 and half the | ge has gro hiztoric it affects provision in i i el i 3 in- | stead of & bonnet or hat she wears a | ing in order to | in Alsatian 4 ing them into hat-pins. { a bright hue. shop gown, § keeping to quiet tones of gray and tan black and white For Warm weather white Hale thread or toni and pretty, infefinitely. and may be washed bay a cheap glove the fingers and over the points, These detalis soem simost trivial : be nacfal niirely ypon the way if Is first put if the seams of the finger, are, | themselves will be longer; if the wrist | iia Jdrawe well up before nn attempt bs | made to button the glove the shape of | the wrist will be vastly improved, It in said that a French woman pute on her gloves fn her bedroom sn English | woman on the stops and an Amarfcan {om the street, this particular assortion may be, ft is gud it is for this reason sion that she i world grive, hut {tw aocrssnries willbe parfect, this is because she has learned that Linen Turnovers. A welcome change from the stiff 1 ang severe article of neckwoar, known as linen “turnovers.” comes in some beautiful linen collars brought out re cently. They are made of gomowhat familiar lines hut are distinctly deep er in front beneath the chin, and all | pear to be open st the throat Pure Irish nen, pink. blue light | green and white are our new tars overs. They are embroidered in fast embroidersd in light bluas on a white ground, and the sa¥e pattern is waved in either solid black or solid white up on pink, blue, white or green linen Another collar 18 curved in six broad scallops, which preserve the wavy effect Here the podlework is | executed in Persian colors, embirolder ed In medallions, one in the center of each scallop. The Persian embroid | {ery Is given on white, bine, pink and groan own collars, Another coliar kas the center of front cut out in two small backward turning revers. The design incindes tiny bunches of grapes inckead in an ornamental border. The embroidery is either in sold black or solid white upon coltired linen grounds, Three little separate collars overiap each other with Jalnty scalloped bor : ders lawn, embroidered in black and white, | is divided in front and embroidered in red or navy bite with trefoils. The same collar can ¢ bad In scariet, em: broidered with navy blue, Very handsome effects are given in pink, blue or seagreen collars, with ornamental embroidery in white, with outlining in black. Still another col lar shows white embroidery on strips ' ta: ; of pink and blue linen, whizh combine One parasol of the style in a pattern. ‘The black outilne used with solid white embroidery is Very handsome, Reseda green and gendarme blue {fashionable street gowns, In colored underskirta the colors most worn are dark in tone, black and white being a favorite combination Parisian novaities in chateline bags { | of suede, satin and gol] show decors tions in the way of jeweled watches or minature spaces for small portraits, Becoming flower toques for youthful faces are made of forget monots. One | designed for & pretty blonde had a full crown of white ciota and a brim of the forgetanepots. On the left side was a white sigrette, Owners of old-fashioned earrings ars finding new use for them by convert Canieos, onyx of variows tints corneliang and other stones mounted in gold make hand “some hat anchors. i Ome ol the prettiest of the fancy stocks 1s of back chiffon with black pearls There 1s a row of black pearls upon the toy of the collar an] Jesigns | in the pearls below. The stock is fn ished at the back with a row of the tulle, Pocketbooks, card cases, hand bags and feminine belongings in leather of the latest design are Jdupli finished and green tinted, with mountings in gold of : A jewel or two adorns the more expensive and elaborate speciraens, Loosely knotted ties of soft silk are costumes. This is artistically shown | in a gown of willow green panne + whose short bolero is trimmed with i peroll work of cloth appligne. There is a large collar of tambour musiin on the shoulders. with a pate blue sii silk gloves etitéhed with hiack are Except in white, It never pays to: Whether it be a | heavy kid for shopping or a thin suede | for calling the quality asd the shape i must be good. the top of the glove toming well ap under the slesver and | tha fingers fitting weil down between | but so | many 111 gloved women are seen (hat | | soma information on the sebject may | Much or the fit of a glove Aeperds | held straight, for instance tae fingers However true or false ja fact that a French woman dewotes | more thme and attention to the smali | details of her toilet than to her gown, | d i Hive meek cine Pan ralss, is the lest dressed worsan in the The dress itself, the giirt and the bodice, may be plain 16 the last de : {snd gnd will be perfectly worn, and all | aot ta mention the minor detalis are of major lmpor | fasten In the back aithough some 8p | colors. A dombiyundulating pattern is | These are made of fine white A plain straight collar of white linen | have somewhat supplanted brown for | used to give a touch of color to street | : > A FORMIAR STENCCRAPHER HAPPY IN A NEW CaLLING i i 3 § 5 i Near Cary N.Y. | five stock fErm that ever made a pro i fir for a farmer, The 3 i who was a surge v York stenographer until compelled by I typewriters’ paralveis to seek anpther | WEmAn, CGeongation, Her mtock farm is less tann four : BOeTeN extant Bha pwn no CORR, Perse Or pigs, aed chickens are tieaable chiefly by thelr absence, yt in despite thy nck of the annimals fom monly found on farme it ig safe oe say that her property pays her a bet tor return than many of 142 one gad two hundred Acre farnss her, Her specialties are Pekin Jueks and | beow. The former she sell to a hotal, while the Joney is shipped through the east In spanking of the bees to & cererenpondest of of the New York San, { Aho suid: pretty. small fry. at J] have sm just about the most p Not § Tan half of honey in hgur dave low figure more than 3200 eniy part of my crop I have since gathered of the finest jlght tong. more bane, wheat eron “Ten bh 86 Are the ripest hoon £11, back of the yar] the frames we had emptied al the front were O50] again it was exciting work while the honey bora jasted, “How many bess have I In all? Oh, something like a coupls of millions, | gapposa. IL Is said hat the average hive contains froaw twanty to forty Cthearsand ant 1 have summer I shail increass to A Eives, that namber, 1 think of overstockine my range sro ox man In Yermont had M0 hives, piv & large restaarant in Boston, He EOL a bad season And pot aaly winter months, tare. aod neither does it pay to ry tar the boos “Some peopls have tried taking ail | their hooey to sel] when the market WAS good and then fesding giocoss at in a very short while ail their heen i were dead. Even the belt refined zine cose COBIAIDS a trace of sulphuric acid, which is rank pofson. “The Lees of course travel! a good | tle farm to got their sweats piace lself. The three chief crops | “1 get a leat crop. say half a fon, from the herbs which %ipen in the spring before the basswood Blooms, and another in the fail 18 honey having the properties of several cara tive herbs. “Through the summer the bees draw largely for thelr honey upon the vari cus fruit blooms strawbarries, rasp berries, currants, grapes, apples, eto, anid the wild flowers are also a never | falling source, last summer I o on on which the work, The ciaver fat and Crops, honey, Eood, “1 gapply the market with extracted honey andy. The hues ean maks sev. eral pounds of Dopey io the time it In a threomile dri boss were honey {8 the hright momt healthful ager particularily the The wore remunerative labor "To extract the honey the vom are pet in a machine which rapidly and expels tha honey trifugal force Liv The comba are Cone not Ir the Lives to be refilled comb we supdly an artificial with the pattern of the ool] bass, berg quired for ecompletin om ghartensd & the comb wills often produce an drones, whica, as they and make none are by Hinr with bes tomers, portion, perhaps 23 percent of the oe cupanis of the hive, must be drones for the queen is capricions Tn choice of a mate, and must have BX ey of a the bees do pot work wall without {ncapntive ers, given to support their board- with their breeding places at | drones lose their heads at the wlge sharp. kaife which decapitate | { Rews, Ele Thinks, Are About the Most | i Profitable Live Stock (oe Caw’ False Frofy in the Honey « The Management | of ihe Farm « She Bases Ducks Also, | bloom I will come ¢mt in the yard : find the grounl - strewn with dead drones The work. dromes and | thrown them out. Patience has ceased The unlucky drones are caught! wing and jeg and ejected, cand the entrance to the aive is close | ang they are left tb freeze or slarve fa the gomailost 21 New | surrounding | "The average farmer thinks hess | fosind | ton” rofitatile | ONE 889 | ives, 1 guthersd a ton and a | worth at a | This was | for tie season, several the vied from the byek- ¢ : bad weather of last Ju vy wags | i bonanza for bee farmers. i weather for flowers and the bees working nag hours but also | gave an exquisite favor to {he honey, | tr was ideal | okt Bent : he ripest fruits are (he swostest and | morning til sight doing potiiag bat | reraovy the Roney from the hives, and carrying new frames for the bees to | Hy the time wa had reached the | 70 hivew, Next 160 | I have plenty of pasture for “I 40 nor want 10 make the mistake | which he ran for comb honey to sap a had mo honey to sell but be had to buy a ton It doesn’t pay to overstock YOUT PAS | bl ver waiters Japanese. Often the | A i chaniw in the iast two years Is in the | Ceesbhetitution of Japuness butlers for : the English or American article Sew. | | tral fashionable hostesses have a Jap | substitutes for honey on which to win two cents a8 pound during the winter | deal further thas the limits of my lit. fa fact, | count on are tha Basswool clover and | buckwheat blooms In the order named ve : wanted 2% varieties of 8t buckwihiear a is dark an) the Saver pot so ° takes to constrict g pound of honey carmnb, so | prefer to keep thew at the ha | rotates i berg on our other damaged in the least ang ars put back | “When we are short of the natoral ; amb { 5 basis, which fs a sheet of wax stamped | The | start from thiZ Tod the time ro | is “The bees IT 0 their own sweet | only oat honey | DO means pad A certain Bro. : har J wide field for selaction, and moreover | tha “It isn’t rafe to interfere too mued : : the | {start but later in the seascn many | “Phe drones Rave 1 10 stings and foe Taey take a | short alterooon fight cach day, | influence in the hive and {for the rest of the titse remain in in Lmotivity, "The worker tolerate then an but after frost shuts down on fee sane morsing to Lers bave tired of ithe to be a virtos - a5 the case may be | treated right - vous and excliable (if the hives are opened ihe Foung bees in i Bnd ¥ ones they Coommaonest familiarit es for the entire | sega, My bees are good tempered because I Barve crossed them but tittle, Beever stingy withond good provors sERvANT Ts. A Feature of Housekerping on he Pus eifle Count, Honseheaping in Calif ged, on the wh such an ewmpiatic Otien Che pxciusion act has ee god. Ine const, Has tinge ihe proper wash hing of than one would ] § Cpe wed tic help problem of the west fill them than there are competent boys & man In the kiteben. To begin with sweeping and wipdow washing days, PH HR mA HAS RTE AA Ab the Japstese of Chinese is most handy. if there i» a little gardening 10 da Pdoex to alter he is through In the addition to bis other duties 34. CCEGRE are Gow paid $4 8 weet, and fre: CueRtly Bn scbhooiboy earns $50 Good v he iw well bo CEirl is employed and the family keeps L & week, The best cooks are Chinese; | “second girl” is a Chinese boy. . aness in a tuxedo at the door on thelr . prominent society men in San BP Gisco Bave Japanese valets. i Young Chinese girls from the mis. L Mons sometimes serve as maids at! : teas and as waiting maids on ordinary | the slave gir! prohiom is settiod thease | valuable hits of femininity are too muck of & temptation for the high hinder to make the mistresy wha ame ploys hem few! absolstely safe. It nc Lrepleasant to feel that you must waleh | i" | & maid every moment lest abe he kid. | really valuable for medicinal purposes, | rapped. Every sen ing maid or man Cin the went nowadays and evening out, and on these days the mistress aipmost never attempts tt get Alnner at home Either the | - family arranges the night on one wien | Cthey are invited out or elie the entire | family goes to a restaurant for that | LEER Lemond 3 Husidlierpiug. Motu Fleet of feebherga A terrible fleet of icelwrgy seen on A voyage from New Zealand tn Cape Horn 3 thas deseribed by 8 corre. Hendon a Kaowledge: “We awoke ty find tees dorrounded hy 17 foobar. number increasing! | throoghout the day. until at one woe | cmens 1 myself! counted 33 together, | “and there were flows of joe gli about | On one during that firs night as we ware slowly coasting round | Due the LR, rl 08S sain, re captain suddegily discovered that A wag fodued under the water nv a &ida A preat block had probably fallen away, It was! [dust toward dawn, and the igh: waa so extremely bad that it was just a mere chance that the rippling of wa. ter over the covers oe showmed tar danger. To have contipaed would] Lave meant cerrain Husster. The star bears EnEIDe was af once reverse: Lay the abip might turn more quickly than sha could have answered to the redder, and we rognded our adversary on the soul Sy for fu was not belors Friday ad mbiday Cthat we were nally clear of Not enly were they quite unexpected. hut neither the captain {in 5 voy- CaRes round the world) nor any of the officers in all thelr experience EreEr Coe roe them, Spa LV feabergs either in Cslze of number fo equal those which | i wads curs a record voyage, The gold mines ot Mysore. tudia, gre worked by American electrical £2 { ¥ices, the power being from Re meit- | og Hisahyan BROW, ong 38 there {8 an abandanes of fond, “Bees are sony citizeng if they are but they do not like to : be intereferc! with and they are sen They become nely | for honer | | when the weather iz cold or at night, | for they know that ordd air is bad for thee brood chamber, | : £01 angry they are (APL tO Stay so and fo resent even the re fable thug » to do with | Wester ri fishes I give, Many a housewife In the woot hopes ardently thar the exclusion act may pot be pa for the unresaricted immigre | tion of Chinese would solve the domes There | | are A great many mors kitchens wait | “My man Peto and | worked from | ing for Chinese and Japanese boyy to | and the maid servant 8 growing scar: | er and more scarce ad women fod out | how much more usefiil than a maid is | there Are si many more (hines that a man can do. Very often the housewife TOHOW nd whity canales. He went to | and her daughters do not object st all | ty doing the chamber work, save on : | “School's out” he had jearned his five | table. He didn't eat jo till after school | but they do object to watering the par. | den, which is a six rionths’ duty dur | ing the dry season in he wast Hera Bie | Kitrhen, & man alwxes looks Letber than a woman as a walter, and oftea | Tw GRrS - } re coy 2 I Phe looks after the family horses, in | Of ontivee | The cheapest Japasesa | Gf sugar to feed bis bees during the : tOoRS in the families wheres § second | i Lup some style gee sald from $8 fo $10) “They don’t thrive on sugar. nither, P ¥ia are paid from 3 $9 reception days, and at least three | ocvasions, and some travelers Hring | | heck dainty Japanese ayshs, but until they make very little honey from the | ¥ Japs yahs, but ung AE aS aftarsoon A mopsier of about three miles long | | od had A Tarvin Heipes, “My father snyn ma rrest halines ” Hamid Sinvie Mis Pordsy Gey. “There's just only us and sor Bridget, 85 | have to wrk ov’ ry div. De En sdany 1 sabe do tive wishing yw sag the imi dry ned bright, o 1 oedny 1 Belp ra fame os on fing the towels Haast rhe: Fadaesdtay | herp 4 th mending a threading (he saedine op, Inet, Ant Thursday | help viess ‘thn diver aad Fic on with 13% sweeping NY 1 wi ® Sasung = ms a 1 own, add bay J met do the baking By batvering avery pan: And Sonday-—wali, Sunday, my futher SAYS be dosen't acte’iy kapw But bed brane right down n bis sermon At menting it I dint po 17 ~~ Yoath's Companion, Easting Wis Way. Freddie despised the multiplication it was sky enough to learn to Tem and speil--—and writing wasu't anything. Bot it made row Sche all made you sche! | member, Mamma got up and went out of the ‘room. When she came back she had the glass jar of tiny colored candies | (tat you put on birthday cnaes in her | " the bv as he [INad the tray from the poverier hand She was dpening it and pour Ling oul a splendid weap un the labile Cioth, TMF breathed the boy who could Rot remember, and who multipiioation. “Wow,” ssid she brightle “hete are five Are t at “Porty ” “Yon, and four Umes Sve and the rest. When C you have made the whole table. learn (iL When you hive Isarnoed i, eat it" “ih wk It was the most splendid way to | Imarn your tables’ Freddie forgot they | were tables. They were tiny red sod promi | work with a will, | teacher «that andl when the in mamma ~~ aid The next day they went hack and re | viewed the too table. and the next day | alter tha three and the paxt Jay after {that the four | nies out in the Baek vard, and sharad | day the pext-danr twins teacher was Pmaking Ladle molber 8 call Freddie | | WAS making one on the Dextdoor | | is 4 | twins I "Don’t you go to school, little boy®™ | the teacher askad him. LOR yes’; politely, Oh, you 407 Well 1 suppose you think the multipiivation fable is per Ingiy “Oh nom!” eagerly: of mine” I "T've only saben as far as seven times | seven yer" sald Praddie And he went | homa wondering why the nextdoor { wing’ teacher had opensd her eyes so wide ~~Youths' Compania. Tha First Peseh, It was certainly a pst beautiful | peach tree, and the hest Using about it | EL was that Mildred Grey bad planted Iz : herself, when she was a tiay girl | had tucked awny a peach stone in the | the Alden's, next door | and when the hidden stope put forth | Mildeed. By and by Lo creep into the Aldens yard but slender supling’ sprang Greys glde of the wall, | grew more interssting. sand when it | became a real tres its brant | &% much on one side i | the orher The girle were wild with excitement i 7 i i ¢ of the will ag on i i ra sudden cool spell scattered them. and | frightened away the baby fruit. so Sat | leaves came out later om, Lucy and Mildred conid only see one | i When the { little hard green ball apo an upper ranch that gute any promise of be | : wag Deg” coming a peach. ous watching: surely. When it was ripe pick Then bogss sn aay x Brew the it, but they afterward oh ied to i ahip. Every marniag before breakfast. two gir And at laxt thelr satience was rewngrd. The peach, plump and rosy. the wall between them. And fallen exactly in the 1 wall “its yours’ lLaar™ it had sald Mildred in Hern gids, We were among | & burst of generosity, {he jeabeves altogether Shans 50 Boars, | “No, It's yunre said lawy, not Ww he outdone, planted the tree” “But you let it spread over in your yard. You must take it. Luey: ‘be plenty more next year, and | want you to have the firs” : “Hat it fan’ fale I wan't take iL" And so, oft and on, during the day. they held spirited discvssions bu could come to BO Agrevment night came thoy covered if Hse anvhady'a ™ objected Lucy: i he stopped suddenly. GFE 0 say your tables, my, how it ae i with a tender smile as he stood beside her bed | ft, Pele | mother answerad. didn't lke 4 sects candy dots in 4 row, Hers | ight rows, How maoy candy | Now makes seven times five | Freddie had little ple. the muitipteation tables] mean the | candy dots--with the pextdoor twins. | The next-door twins were six, like | Freddie, Sut they went to a school | | with biackbosrds and desks in It. One | he ¥ three months pot oa word had been fectly dreadful too?” she asked, smil | that morning. Te very fond | “Indeed! How far along are you? ghe ; V | ie he Bott earth, close beside the high bank | VOR than facing his mother. wall which separated her home from | : : | the disappointing news later on. Lacy Alden was hor dearest friend | Dick came of soldier stock, you will ie Art shoots ah vu as delighted as ree Her. ¢ roots be a : 5 ¥ {Aad turning. made his way home up en he 1 : very year it | “hGered the Kitchen and called him to | ber side. hes spread | | when the first blimsoms appeared, bat | I Bo feller, slowly but | FEAR Ito Dr Hall to bring 10 mamma. nted to | There's mopey in it and daddy is come | ing home and mamma says we'll have let it fall of bs own will, any whise | {it landed would determine its owner i his mms the | is hurried down & the wall to | see what had happened over night saw father and ob! fay on | middie of the | a i Bow, st work keeping a brave front “You | quite ready ty fry pancakes on, Dick's i fare thera'il | rim psi and an The U0 fed the glass a Ralf fell out on either Bow Dick Stood by Wis Mother, “We pever have pancakes Bow i sighed wea Daisy, hooking mourafolly across the table at ber brother. “But we have oatmeal and its 80 { nice and Bol.” soeswersd Dick presse ing bs fingers to the outside of his bowl by way of warming thems. morning with lots and ots of maple ayrup. We used wo Have good things when Daddy was home | wish be {would come beck” and Daisy drew 8 mite of 2 handkerchief from Der apron pocket and held it to Ber bloe eves TIE that's ail you want Lather home fore Dilek Iwgnn indignantly. Then “We've got mother” he added lowering his voles “But she's so sick” “Plrk, come hers please™ The boy pushed his chair back from the table and entered an adjoining “it was such a good breakfast you “1 don't ses how you mazage "You neadn't think I am going © Flee you my recipe mass” laughed “You're such A comfort Dick” his Then ahs added as ha turned sway. “Maybe | wan't think it foily, too" Dilek declared. bis face fairly beaming “T am poling to 3k the doctor i 1 | may sit up a while today. Amt, Dick, you won't forget to go 1 the post oflcs this morniag?™ Dirk 41d not answer Immediately. I But the threshold reached, he paneed and said slowly: “Vom won't connt too much on get ting a letter. mother? “No, | won't, dear. But | feel we shail hear from Your fsther today” and Mra Foster's thin white fade CHehted hopefully as her hoy left her It was something to have 3 soldier father’ How proudly Dick straight ened whenever be thought of it But it was more to have a slek mother doe periding apon him for certain things it was this that made Dick stand loyal. His father Sad heen sent by Bis country away of to the Philippines over & Year ago. Several letters. some containing money. had come from the father to thie cottage on Lincoln street. But for herr” from Mr. Foster. Bot as old DD» Hall sal, “Where Dick {s sunshine And the boy's cheery brave spirit helped his mother to bear ap during this anxious time far more thas be | ever dreamed of “No letters for you today, Diek™ i Mrz. Thompson at the village posts offive sald when the doy asked for mail A lamp cae suddsnly into Dick's thromt and his eyes acquired an une wonted dimness How “ould he go back to Bis mother and watch the light dhe out of her fac: at the news he bore? She had been so sure there Capald be a jetter lone on, DUK, we're going nub { Ming” sala a vil st bis elbow, Mek teroed Yo find a sehooimaate | standing beside him. “There's loads of ‘em ou Hickory Lame pp fur & menor Tok was tempted 11 woubi be caster going nL it wonid be time spough to tell her But onfy for a moment did Dick Nesitatee- “I can't go txday, Ned™ he mid His mother heard his footstep an he “Coming.” he answered asd stood as if fastened fo the Boor. He had not decided yet, though He had besn try ing all the way from the postofios bow bast fo tell his mother there was “THek, dear. come Piickly” How Cenger the voice scunded. Dick felt his legs trembled. Then Dany danved ont of he bed. PR to mest Big “You've been so "abe cried. "There is & letter from daddy, Mr Thompson PR Hut Dick had fosn past Daisy to “Mrs. Thompeon said there was po fetter and [| was afbald to tell you, amb—and Ws een 80 ong soos we im so glad ™ Here Dick stopped suddenly and hid ix fave in the coveriet. But mothers Mt tell, and Dick was aaly 19, you and sometimes it had been pretty FRY. Bat Ly the time Daisy tpiosd back from the pantry, whither she had been 0 WKS sure 1hat the graldle was was sunshiny again. nmmed a bar of And he h “When Johany { Comes Marching Home Again” as he © made the big armchair ready for his Comether | and ! to haves his father home sain Ohi cage Record Herald When | the peach | with a goblet and went to bed to think i ik ove: but in the morning they found with pillows and comforter, thonght How good it would seem RAE SA lr (Rin) dp sl, Podge The mast popalous ward in Chicago, the Thirtisth, Baa twice as many ue | tive-born as forsign-born inhabitants “1 shall be thankfal t when | am able to make things comfy | again for you and Daley”
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers