ders will be is one of pleased in existence. —Editors, to speak” t Booked sxiremely rocky for the Mudville to six, with just CASEY AT THE BAT. to see “Casey at the Bat,” s of our literature, sparkling with the spirit full of human nature, eat even if it is an It is one of the nine that day; an inning left to play; score stood fo! Ro, when Rood Aika at first, and Burrows did the same, wreathed the features of the Sith ar few got up to go, leavin ope which springs eterna d put up even money, with Case But Flynn preceded Casey, and likew And the former was a pudding, and t 86 oY that stricken multitude a death For there seemed but little chance of But Flynn let drive a single, to the w And the much-despised Blakey tore th And when the dust had lifted, and t re was Blakey safe on second, and Then from the gladdened multitude w! It bounded from the mountain-top, a It struck upon the hillside, and rebou For Casey, mighty Casey, was advanc There was ease in Casey’s manner as There was pride in Casey's bearing a And when, responding to the cheers, No stranger in the crowd could do Ten thousand eves were on him as h Five thousand tongues applauded him en, while the writhing pitcher gro Defiance glanced in Casey’s eye, a sne And now the leather-covered sphere ¢ And Casey stood a-watching it in hau Close by the sturdy batsman the bal “That ain't my style,” said Casey. From the benches, black with people, Like the beating of the storm-.wave “Kill him! kill the umpire!” shoute And it’s likely they'd have killed him With a smile of Christian charity great He stifled the rising multitude; he b He signaled to the pitcher, and once But Casey still ignored it; and the u “Fraud!” cried the maddened thous But one scornful look from Casey an $ They saw his face grow stern and col And they kenw that Casey wouldn't 1 The sneer is gone from Casey’s lip, his He pounds with cruel vengeance his And now the pitcher holds the ball, an patrons of the game. there the rest within the human breast; For they thought if only Casey could get one whack, at that y at the bat, ise so did Blake, he latter was a fake; like silence sat, Casey's getting to the bat. onderment of all, e cover off the ball; hey saw what had occurred, Flynn a-hugging third! ent up a joyous vell, nd rattled in the dell, nded on the flat; ing to the bat. he stepped into his place, nd a smile on Casey's face; he lightly doffed his hat, ubt ‘twas Casey at the bat. e rubbed his hands with dirt. when he wiped them on his shirt; und the ball into his hip, er curled Casey’s lip. ame hurtling through the air, ghty grandeur there; unheeded sped; “Strike one,” the umpire said. there went up a muffled roar, s on a stern end distant shore; d some one on the stand, had not Casey raised his hand. Casey's visage shone; ade the game go on; . more the spheroid flew, mpire said, ‘Strike two.” ands, and the echo answered, “Fraud!” d the audience was awed; d, they saw his muscles strain, et the ball go by again. teeth are clenched with hate; bat upon the plate; d now he lets it go, And now the air is shattered by the force of Casey’s blow. Oh, somewhere in this favored land th The band is playing somewhere, and s And somewhere men are laughing, and But there is no joy in Mudville—mig qd g——==>D = THE LAWYER'S =D0@d= e sun is shining bright, omewhere hearts are light, somewhere children shout; hty Casey has struck out. STORY. = A Spezculation in Real Estate and What Game of It. De gq= By CHARLES BONNET, ESQ, OF THE PHILADELPHIA BAR. MN OME years ago an old resi- dent of Philadelphia died childless, leaving a small estate which he directed by his will to be equally di- vided between his widow and his only sister. The estate con- sisted of a substantial home in the eity and an acre of ground in the coun- tay, besides some money in bank and a well-invested securities. The sis- ter resided in a distant State, and in order that her interests might be prop- erly eared for, she engaged the services of an attorney at Philadelphia; the widow in like manner, being ignorant of such matters, employed me as coun- sel to see that she also was protected in her rights under her husband's will. The personal estate of the testator psily divided, but it became nec- essary to sell the real estate and divide the proceeds. For the home place we soon found a purchaser who paid for it in cash. The lot of ground in the coun- try was not so easily disposed of. It was situated in a pleasant part of West Philadelphia, out on the Darby goad, not far from the Schuylkill, and was at that time laid out on the city maps as a building site between two streets, but the streets were not much graveled and the country round about was thinly and poorly settled. Long after the money and stocks which the old gentleman left had been shared be- ~ gween his widow and sister, and long after his old home had been sold and the proceeds of its sale distributed as te directed, the country lot remained on our hands. The sister's attorney and myself advertised it in all the city papers, as “for sale, cheap, to close an estnte;” we mentioned it to real estate agents, who also advertised it as “a ee bargain in suburban property,” all to no purpose; it would not sell. For more than two years this little mcre ef land remained to perplex and prevent us from effecting a final settle- ment of the estate, when one day it ®ccurred to me to buy the ground my- pelf. I did not want it and had never seen it, but if I could purchase it at a price which all the parties interested might agree up-n as falr, the estate gould be settled, and some day the poor acre which had so long begged a purchaser might prove a boranza to my ghildren. “Who knows?’ said I. “Stranger #hings have happened and happen every day.” I made the proposition of purchase first to the attorney of ghe sister, mentioning the amount which I would pay and all the details of setflement. He wrote to his client, and in due season my offer was accept- ed by her. Then I made the same proposition to -the widow, my own elient, advising her before accepting to make thorough inquiry among her friends as to the propriety of so doing. It 1s a position of extreme delicacy shen an agent or attorney undertakes 40 purchase for himself the property svhich he is employed to sell to others, and no one can safely occupy that po- sition without inviting the fullest scru- tiny and letting in the broadest day- Jight upon the whole transaction. She ponsidered my proposition fully, con- sulted many persons acquainted with she value of country real estate (who afterward mentioned to me that they tad been consulted), and finally accept- she and her sister-in-law executed to. me a deed of the ground, the money was divided between them, and their testator’'s estate was thus entirely dis- posed of to the satisfaction of all con- cerned. I did not undertake to inspect my newly acquired investment until the following spring, when one beautiful Sunday afternoon in early May, I started with my eldest son to see if I could find it. We rode together to the termination of the line of horse cars and then with rapid strides we paced the long street on which one end of my acre presented a frontage, according to the plat, of about one hundred and twenty feet. The “street” on which we walked was sufficiently discernible, and to the left of us, high up on a ridge, was the other “street” on which the other end of my acre presented a like frontage. Landmarks there were none, and al- though we perceived signs of civiliza- tion and modest prosperity all about, here a house, yonder a country church, up on the ridge a cluster of cottages and over there a schoolhouse, I could not locate my own particular property anywhere. We returned home, and a few days afterward I wrote to a sur- veyor, giving him an exact description of the property and requesting him to survey it for me. “Plant at each of its four corners,” lot and build a fence around it if I shall so desire.” to instructions. gion,” “Is it indeed! You surprise me. not find it. I requested? outlines.” “No. “Why not?” barn, and a stable and cowshed and—" “What!” I exclaimed, him in amazement. in the house, and it is all brand new of dollars. any posts.” deed. “Is your team at tae door?” “It 18.” once?” “I will.” During the long drive into the coun mistake for his own. self was at fault. 3 my offer. Ia ibe autumn of 188- I wrote him, “a tall cedar post, so that when I go out there I can locate the Within a week the surveyor called at my office to say that he had surveyed the ground according “And let me tell you that it is a fine lot, too; one of the best in all that re- I had supposed it was an inferior prop- erty, and on a recent occasion I could Did you erect the posts as The mere survey is of no use to me unless you put something on the ground by which I can find its I had no occasion to do that.” “For the simple reason that your lot already has a good fence around it, and a fine house within the fence, and a big interrupting “Oh, yes; and there are people living and must have cost several thousands You don’t need to put up This was startling information, in- “Will you drive me out there at try with the surveyor it became ap- parent to me that somebody had either taken possession of my property with the deliberate intention to deprive me of it, or else had committed the egre- gious blunder of building on my lot by The latter was more probable unless the surveyor him- Again, in a carriage, I passed over the same avenue which I and my son bad traveled on foot less than a fort night before. Here was the church, yonder the schoolhouse, and up there on our left were the cottages on thé ridge. “There is your house,” sald the sure veloy, pointing to the rear of the larg. est and finest of the cottages on the ridge, “and that is your barn on this side of it. Your ground extends from one street to the other, and this street is the rear because the house fronts on the other, up on the ridge, which is higher and better ground.” Yes, it was perfectly plain, I had seen this identical place a short time before, but I had not recognized it as my own, because I did not then know that I was the owner of a new house with a tenant in it, and a barn, a sta- ble and shed, on my despised country acre; and all these improvements, bes ing permanent in their nature and af- fixed to my soil without my consent, were in law my property. Arrived at the house, I observed a pretty front fence newly painted, and a well-laid brick pavement leading from the front gate to the front piazza; in the piazza were hung at intervals baskets of ferns and flowers, and on the lawn were numerous flower beds, in the arrangement of which my tenant had displayed much taste, and in the choice of flowers a nice discrimination, The house itself was a three-story structure, quite ornamental in style, and the whole premises were very new, In answer to the bell appeared a moth erly lady who ushered us into the pur. lor, which was well, even luxuriously, furnished. A soft carpet covered the floor, handsome pictures adorned the walls, a piano occupied a cheery cor- ner, and everything in and about the place indicated that I had secured a tenant who would undoubtedly take good care of the premises and was abundantly able to pay tie rent. The conversation which ensued was positively painful. It appeared that the lawy before us was a widow; that her husband had died in thé previous summer, leaving her a few thousand dollars, which were all she had; that she desired to purchase a small place in the country where she might end her days, and she had been recom- mended to this neighborhood: that some friend had inquired about the price of the surrounding property, and at his suggestion, during the winter, she had invested a few hundreds of dollars in a lot on which, as she sup- posed, she had built all these improve- ments this spring; that at about the time of their completion she had learned in some way that she had biilt, not on the property which she had bought, but on the land adjoining: and that ever since the discovery of her mistake she had been in the greatest distress of mind imaginable, because she feared that the owner of the ground on which she had built would take measures to deprive her of the improvements she had made, and thus sweep away nearly all that she pos- sessed in the world. She was mot in the least surprised when I announced myself as the person she had so much dreaded to see. “While the law would undoubtedly give me all the improvements which you have affixed to my soil without any consent on my part,’ I began, with considerable embarrassment, “you shall continue to own them. My dear madam, do not think that I would do you the wrong of appropriating them.” “Qh, it is terrible, sir,” murmured the much agitated little widow, with an evident lump in her pretty throat. “You are very generous, sir—but—ob, how will it aH end? I can not let you do it. Either you must let me buy your ground or you must buy my house and improvements.” 1 hastened to assure her that I would do anything in reason. As the improvements were of much more value than the ground, and as she had selected the place for a home while I had bought merely on specula- tion, I suggested that she should pur- chase the ground. During the course of the conversation she gradually lost all sense of uneasiness, as it became evident to her that I did not intend to take undue advantage of her error, and when I finally offered her the ground she put a purchase price upon it which I accepted at once. In less than a week she received a deed from me conveying the her the entire premises “with all the improvements thercon” (so ran the deed) in fee simple; I had in exchange more than double the amount of money which I had paid for the property ’ess than six months before; the poor little acre which for more than two years I could not sell to anybody at any price suddenly found a most eager buyer, at a fancy price of her own naming; and I was put to the necessity of planting posts at the corners of some other real es- tate. That is the story. It is true that no , | sooner had the conveyance been effect ed than I began to wish I had not done it; that the widow insisted on my staying to dinner; and that after dinner she drove me into town behind her » | spanking bays. But I can hardly sup- pose that you will be interested in these things.—The Pathfinder. The Hatless Fashion an Old One, The fashion in London of going out bareheaded, which is becoming so com- mon, is not a new one, but a return of a very old custom. Time was when only kings wore hats, other people be- ing content with having hoods attached -| to their outer garments, which they avore or discarded at pleasure. Stow, the historian, mentions that no one wore anything except the Lord Mayor of London, who sometimes donned a hat on state occasions. In the reign of Henry VIIL, he says: “The citizens began to wear flat caps of woolen yarn, so light that they were obliged to tie them under their chin, else the wind would be master over them.”— About seventy specimens of the ex- Moet great auk are now preserved in museums. A specimen recently sold in London brought $2000. Samples of the papaya, or Mexican pawpaw, have been sent to American paper makers to be tested for its adapts ability for the manufacture of high grades of paper. Since a Monaco engineer's discovery that an electric current will free the foil from insects, the idea has been held that electricity should aid in abat- ing the insect plagues of Southern Europe. Artificial zine ortho-silicate does not fluoresce like the natural substance— willemite—from Franklin Furnace, N. J. The addition of traces of manga- nese makes it react to ultra-violet light, however. If we consider the species of butter. flies found in England to be seventy. those of Europe will number 300, while the wealth of British India in species will number the enormous number of 1500 species of winged heauties Some soldiers in battle are so serious. vice, has invented a whistle which, with a very slight exertion, gives a loud sound. In treating red moses a Paris physi- cian uses an instrument resembling a very large toothbrush, but having forty platinum wires instead of bristles. This instrument is as heavy as an or- dinary household hammer. It is con- nected with an electrical machine, and is then used in hammering the trouble. gome nose rather sharply for several minutes, or until bleed’'ng is produced. KEEP WELL! Health the Only Heal Physical Worth Having. What shall it profit a man if he gain the whole world and lose his grip on health? It is probable that the bril- fiant generalizers who accuse the [American of this or that trait after having observed a half dozen cases of its existence are as far astray in say- ing that it is particularly the American who lives at such a headlong gait that he is the most short lived weakling on earth, as they are in the majority of their attempts to become famous by smart epigrams at what they are pleased to call the new American peo- ple. Now the fact is, we are not any newer than any other people on earth das far as our physical traits are con- cerned. There ought to be an end of this twaddle about America being a new country and its people a new peo- ple. We are grown up and that is all anybody can be. But while we will stand no lecturing from outsiders on the score of health and will be very apt to say to them, “You are another” if they persist in their impertinence, and tell the truth when we do, it will do us no harm to remember that pretty much the only pebble on the beach in this world is good health, and that the way to lost it, for ourselves and our children, is to be in such a furious haste to get rich that we dock our hours for rest at both ends and then make up by stimulants of various kinds for the lack of energy which na- ture refuses to give us on such terms. What is worth doing at all is worth doing well, and that reverend observa- tion applies to living as patly as any- thing else we know of.—New England Grocer. ——————— Traveling in France. Compelled to choose between the two, the devoted French husband and father would sooner separate himself from his family in traveling than from his baggage, though, as a matter of fact—a marvel of his devotion to both —he seldom fails to keep them all to- gether. In registering one’s trunks, in making one’s way to the train, one trips over bath tubs and lawn mowers, bumps into cage beds, runs into dogs and cats snarling in crates, and strug- gles horribly with the ubiquitous father, bravely clutching a string of children by one hand, while with the other he embraces the innumerable bags and bundles containing all the household goods he has not checked, and—a further degree of martyrdom to the French ideal of family unity—at every shift of his baggage, at every step of the family’s progress through the gare, he halts to consult his wife, attached to the string of children at the other end, to debate with her, to resist her opinions, and (generally) in the end to agree with her.—Harper’'s Bazar. Asset ———— Gooseberries and a Cat. Not long ago, says Collier's Weekly, pfiicials of the Department of Agricul. ture were much amused by a letter sent the department by an occasional Iy wounded that they lack the strength | : wl Io eal) Joudiy oe ASsigane. 30 aid | is said by the natives to exist over a d ese Ss yom Pr. . ER > nee considerable area. Lead and zinc have octor in the Japanese Red CTOSS S€I*| g)56 pean discovered in the eastern dis- LIBERIA'S RESOURCES. Wealth of the African Republic of the Colored People. Liberia is considering the expediency of a now foreign loan in order to make needed public improvements and to re organize the public debt. It is mow elghty-three years since the negro re- public in Africa was founded by Amer. lean philanthropists and more than half a century since it was recognized as an independent State, Sir Harry Johuston, the African ex- plover, recently spoke very favorably of Liberia's natural resources. Its great wealth, he said, lies in its for- ests, which contain most of the West African timber trees. In india rubber producing trees, bushes and vines it is richer than any other part of Africa except one or two small areas of the Congo basin. The interior of the country is in- elined to be hilly, and from forty to 100 miles inland the ranges of hills reach altitudes which justify callihg them mountains. The marshy character of the country, Sir Harry Johnston says, has been .exaggerated. Beyond the forest region there is a park-like coun- try. Elephants are abundant in all parts of Liberian territory. Through the forest many of the paths are little more than elephant tracks. Very little is known about the min- eral wealth of the country. Hematite iron appears to exist everywhere, and traces of gold ave found in nearly all the rivers. In the Mandingo uplands beyond the forest region alluvial gold tricts. On the whole Liberia is said to be less unhealthful for white men than Sierra Leone, the Ivory Coast, the Gold Coast and Lagos. But the high plateau regions are naturally thought to be most free from fevers to which white men are especially subject. OF WISDOM. WORDS A man of pleasure is a man of pains. ~Young. Like our shadows, our wishes Jengthen as our sun decling .—Young. It can not be too often repcoated that it is not helps, but obstacles, not facil- ities, but difficulties, that make men.— W. Mathews. There is no life so humble that if it be true and genuincly human and obedient to God, it may not hope to shed some of His light. Happiness depends much less upon external things than upon the disposi- tion of the mind and the affections of the heart.—Madame Roland. Obedience, we may remember, is a part of religion, and therefore an ele- ment of peace; but love, which includes obedience, is the whole.—Elizabeth M. Sewell. There is dew in one flower and not in another, because one opens its cup to take it in, while the other closes jtself and the drop runs off. So God rains goodness and mercy as wide as the dew, and if we lack them, it is be- cause we will not open our hearts to receive them. Child Rescues Baby Brother. The eighteen-months-old son of Mr. and Mrs. G. F. Kyser, of Fall River township, while playing in the yard fell into the well which was twenty- two feet deep. His sister, eleven years of age, hearing his cries, ran to the well, and by ¢linging to the well rope, started to descend and rescue her brother. * The rope burned her hands and she realized that she must let loose. Throwing her body to the opposite side of the well, for she was right over the baby, she let go, and dropped safe ly to the bottom. The water was be- tween two and three feet deep, and the infant was submerged and strug- gling feebly. The little heroine grabbed up the drowning baby, and, holding him in her arms above the surface of the water, called for help. The mother heard her cries and came to her assistance.— Kansas City Journal. A Meerschaum Mine. “Meerschaum is mined like coal,” said a pipe dealer. “itis a soft, soap- like stone, and in Asia Minor its min- ing is an important industry. «The crude meerschaum is called hamtash. It is yellowish white in color, and a red clay coat or skin en- velops it. The blocks cost from $2 to $200 a cartload. They are soft enough to cut with a knife. «These blocks in summer are dried by exposure to the sun. In winter a heated room is necessary. “Finally, the meerschaum blocks are sorted into twelve grades, wrapped in cotton, and packed in cases with the greatest care. “rhe bulk of all this meerschaum goes to Vienna. There the best pipe makers in the world live.”—Philadel- phia Bulletin, ———————— It Made a Difference. A story is being told of a Sibley young lady who found a package of correspondent in Virginia. Among other things the writer hastened to advise the Secretary of the department to this effect: My wife had a Tame cat that dyd. Being a Torture shell and a Grate faverit, we had the same berred in the Gardin, and for the enrichment of the soil I had the Carkis deposited under the roots of a Goosberry Bush. (The Frute being up to then of the smooth variety.) But the next Seson’s Frute, after the Cat was berred, the Gooseberrys was all Hairy—and more Remarkable, the Catapilers of the Same Bush was al! of said Hairy de- London Tatler. scription. / love letters that had been written to her mother by her father before they were married. The daughter saw that she could have a little sport and read one of them to her mother, substitut- ing her own name for that of her mother and that of a Six Mile young man for that of her father. The mother seemed utterly disgusted and forbade her daughter to have anything to do with the young man who would write such nonsensical stuff to a girl, When the young lady handed the letter to her mgther to read the house became so still that one could almost hear the grass growing in the yard.—Oak Grove * nd Few more curious places for a church could be found than one at Southam Delabere, which stands in the middle of a farmyard. The only means of entrance is by passing through the yard. i A custom house officer at Yarmouth, England, the other day saved the life of a boy who had got off the quay into the sea, and found he was a boy whose life he had saved in a similar manner twice before, Antoine Stenod, a German, come mitted suicide near Prescott, Ariz., by standing upon the stump of a tree and exploding a heavy charge of dynamite that he had placed in it. Pieces of his body were blown in all directions. The proprietor of a traveling merry- go-round, whose route had been in Wales and who had gone into banke ruptey, informed the court that lack of patronage, due to the religious re- vival, had caused his failure. An explanation of the reason why paint and varnish look white after a heavy rainstorm has just been fur nished. The moisture has inserted it- self into the minute divisions of the paint, and thus gives it the -whitish appearance. ne AN INTERESTING TREE. — The Shellbark Hickory is a Rugged Native American. The shellbark hickory is perhaps the most interesting tree we have, because it is a strictly American tree, and so wedded to its native soil that it refuses to become a citizen of any other coun- try. In the sturdiness of its roots and trunk, in the boldness in which it flings out its tough branches, in its strong individuality of character, and in its general fruitfulness, not forgets ting its uncouth roughness of bark, it further manifests its strong Americans ism. Its winter buds are large and ins teresting. Early in spring the dark=- brown outer scales fall away. The in= ner scales then le hen to protect the growing leaf, sometimes attaining a length of five inches. These inner scales are marvels of beauty both im texture and in color. The body of the scale is thick and leathery, while its surfaces, especially the inner, are soft with a silken nap gorgeously dyed in yellow, orange and red, suggesting the chimney corner, and the heat which glows from a hickory log. — Frank French, in Scribner's. —————— ee A Philadelphia Fakir. One of the curb fakirs on Market street had a new ware yesterday. Knowing that this was to be the day when the sun would be in eclipse, he showed himself up to date and pro- vided himself with bits of smoked glass, which he sold to passers-by, who were attracted by his cry of, “Git your smolked glass through which to see the great eclipse of the sun to-morrow.” The pieces of darkened glass were g0= ing like hot cakes, too. At a moment looker asked, “How is it that you can sell so much of your smoked glass?’ “Because the Philadelphia folks are so much interested in astronomy,’ he re- plied. “But few people will want to rise at 5 o'clock to see an eclipse, and it is all over by 7.30," said the by- stander. “Well, they don’t think of that,” answered the merchant of the curb, with a wink, “and I don’t re- mind them.”—Philadelphia Record. ~ Mule to the Rescue. Adolph Wilson, of Nicholasville, whe was in a railroad wreck in Indiana last Friday, attributes the saving of his life to the action of a mule. He says: “When I came to my senses a huge timber was lying across my back, which I could not move. In glancing around, looking for help, I discovered a mule standing within a few feet. of where I was pinioned, looking at me as if wishing to render assistance. Soon the mule turned his heels to ward me and began to kick. The first kic struck the timber a glancing lick, second hit it full ani just grazed ear, which now shows the mark, you can see, and somewhat moved the timber. The third kick raised it sufe ficiently for me to slif from under, and as I arose from ground the mule followed, evideskly satisfied with the good work a plished.”— Harrodsburg (Ky.) Hera: ? Resignation. Didn't Pay. “Resignation,” said the man N liked to preach, “that’s the great thing in this world. If we would all just practice resignation our troubles—" “Yes,” broke in the sad-looking one, with the last year's straw hat. “I've practiced it. I sent in my resignation, thinking they'd give me a raise to get me to stay, but they accepted it, and the best I could do after hunting Record-Herald. ee ——r— ‘What She Died Of. A German, whose wife was sick a, a hospital, called the first evening sige was there and inquired how she WRs zetting along, He was told that ghe was improving. Next day he ca ed again, and was told she was still fim- proving. This went on for some time, each day the report being that his wife was improving. Finally, one /night when he called he was told that his wife was dead} Seeing the doctor, he went up to hinj and said, with a worlg of sarcasm in fis voice: “Vell, docto (Me.) Banner. vat did she of mbrovements?” when trade got a little slack an on-" | around three months was to take a job at $6 a week less pay.”’—Chicago When 1 clothes sl! of labor i —make dresses a then dra When mq tittle long Zontal tu Brows Ve lengthen the tape | way the without | Observer. The firs the furni utility. see, and tz the sc The delic: from a h one whic without of any ki and at th just as w sun with nature he and softl tained th possible, and as a; Much s lights ar satisfactc scious of is slightl; the sun i slanting der are | are the s the ceilin sufficient they are to entert: condition: _/ to focus t] it to the ¢ er beaut Cutler, in P The wa season, to decide coming, ¢ jewels sl with the use of ow becoming of emera one’s col _ored ston or white, one’s jow wardrobe ing a few petticoat, be made far as th to be ma that one in her aj wife conf and yello those huge is called being mo always p mony of | ers and a One ne quite as might che and white bright gre of her he substitute or violet : calors ye would so distinetiv The stu worth w The mos seen in be or in hyd the femir more bea erpillar ¢ “sorts of by keepin Having comparati number © son. It | buying ul ‘A deep tume is si buttons ir Small t eatch in blouse, w serve at The lace taffeta ir cuffs. Th on the u The yoke with the serve for the nar \catches t trapping ‘Taffeta ture of tl ones are | the smal They fair] tucked sl also appe lero and Val. lace. Though might ap] voile in cl these tha taffeta a:
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers