FRHLMD TRIBUNE. ESTABLISHED 18H8. PUBLISHED EVERY MONDAY, WEDNESDAY AND FRIDAY, BY THE TRIBUNE PRINTING COMPANY, Limited OFTICF; MAIN STREET ABOVE CENTRE. LONG DISTANCE TELEPHONE. SUBSCRIPTION RATES FREELAND.— TUo TRIBUNE is delivered by carriers to subscribers in Freolnnd at the rate of 12V6 cents per month, payable every two month*, or $l 50 a year, payable in advance- The TRIBUNE may he ordered direct form the carriers or from the office. Complaints of Irregular or tardy delivery service will re. eeive prompt attention. BY MAIL —The TRIBUNE is sent to out-of town subscribers for $1.5:) a year, payable in advance; pro rata terms for shorter periods. The date when the subscription expires is on the address label of each paper. Prompt re newals must be made at the expiration, other wise the subscription will be discontinued. Entered at the Postofflce at Froeland. Pa., as Second-Class Matter, Make all money orders, checks, etc. ,7toy able to the Tribune Printing Company, Limited. Pome one has discovered that the fcrip is no respector of persons—like gout and appendicitis. To furnish the people of the world with bread, more than 2.300,000.000 bushels of wheat are consumed each fear. Perhaps the next step of the big trans-continental railway syndicate will be to arrange a transfer system that will enable a traveler to ride any where on the map for one fare. The oldest European sovereign now is Franz Joseph, Emperor of Austria- Hungary. and when ho dies much more trouble Is likely to ensue than has been caused by the passing of Victoria. A new feature has been developed In the game of golf. A player on a West ern link drove a ball square against the back of a caddy's head, and out of the unfortunate boy's mouth came a bawl. An old fellow In Missouri had lots of fun recently. He nailed a stuffed squirrel to the limb of a tree, and he says something over a hundred sports men each took from one to half a doz en shots at it. The legal rate of interest In Canada has been reduced by act of the Domin ion Parliament from to five per cent. Gilt-edged paper in the United States has 110 difficulty in commanding money at from three and a half to four per cent. Down in the beginning of the nine teenth century smallpox carried off perhaps a greater percentage of the people than consumption does to-day. Jenner succeeded in robbing that d.:eadful scourge of its terrors, but to the layman it does not seem too much to hope that a second Jenner will final ly conquer consumption, reflects the Baltimore Sun. The footpad business lias been re duced to a science in Chicago. Two members of the fraternity in that city, having despoiled a helpless woman ok' her purse, fled, pursued by a dozen citizens. When the highwaymen had lured the pursuers to a comparatively deserted street tliey turned at bay and held up the entire dozen, not leaving a nickel in any of their pockets. •Minnesota is one of .he State which are constructing new eapitol buildings of elaborate design and large cost. The Minnesota eapitol is to be built of white marble, to be ornamented with sculpture and to cost $2,000,000. When completed it will bear some resem blance to the Treasury Department building at Washington, but will have a very much finer approach and be sides a picturesque dome with six sup porting figures of marble, each nine feet high. The State capital of Minne sota is St. Faul. It is not objectionable, but grateful, to hear that toe American fighting man is not of the machine brand. Ordinary obedience to orders is of course indis pensable, and good marksmanship is highly desirable. But let him keep up his individuality and his politics, with in bounds. From civil life as an in dividual and a free man he will re turn. With us the good citizen makes the good soldier, and the good soldier ought to hold hi. <elf so as to become again the good citizen, observes the Washington Star. Eight teeth suffice the elephant for munching purposes. The giant ani mal has two below and two above on each side. M. King of Ifopkinsvile, Ky.. has in his possession n twist of well-preserved tobacco raised in Vir ginia in JSCS. A LOWLY LIFE. Pf9 uncomplainingly she bore the moi! Of housewife care and unremitting toil, And, be it said, throughout her length of days Her womanly; reward was stinted praise. She lived a life as lowly as the loam. Yet just her smile suggested home And mother-love that watched o'er trun dle-bed. Till e'en th- praise less husband often said She made his home-life happy. So, when the friends had crossed upon her breast Her tired hands, that she might betterrest, And noted th? angelic smile of peace She wore at labor's end and toil's sur cease. An epitaph to mark her grave they framed, And, while no deed of martyrdom was named. The lines told all of wife and mother strife— They yvrit beneath her name: "A Farm er's Wife- She made his home-life •-Roy Farrell Greene, in Good Housekeep ing. I W(jy Mrs, Parker | Was Worried. | TT WOMAN wlio lives ou the /\ south side relates a horrible experience that she had the £ other day with one of her husband's debtors. The debt had been of long standing, and the man who owed the money had been paying it off in regular install ments by mail, sometimes Inclosing a postotHce order and sometimes a bill. The last time it bad been a bill and the letter never came, so he wrote to say that he would make a trip to Chicago and bring the money himself. The day appointed the woman's husband had to he out of town, and he asked her if she wouldn't for once forego the Joys of shopping and stay at home and net ns cashier, and she agreed to do so In consideration of a reasonable com mission on the payment. "You can give him a receipt for it," said the man, whose name is Parker. "I'll till it out before I go, and it won't be any trouble to you at all. Treat him nicely, although 1 needn't tell you to do that—only he's an < dd sort of genius and has peculiar little ways. Some of the people out at Waukegan have got the idea that he is a little out of his head, but he Isn't, and I will say that there isn't one man in a mil lion that would act as square as he has done. Ask after his son In New York nnd how he is getting along with his corn-shucking machine. That will please him. Well, good bye; I've got to hustle." The Waukegan man arrived 011 time. He was large, loose-jointed and eld erly. with a wild eye and a timid, hes itating manner. ' The fashion of his clothes was decidedly rural and he wore heavy cowhide boots. As be ex plained the object of his visit he fingered his long, wispy beard nerv ously and seemed unwilling to look the lady in the face. She invited him in, and after carefully rubbing his boots 011 the door mat he followed her into the sitting room, where he seated himself 011 the extreme edge of a chair and gazed earnestly at a crayon portrait that hung over the bookcase. "Mr. Parker told me to tell you how sorry he was that he couldn't be here to see you." said the woman, with an engaging smile, as she seated herself opposite her visitor. "Yes'm," coughing behind his hand and transferring his gaze to the clock. "But he thought as far as the busi ness was concerned that I could attend to it just as well as he could." There was au embarrassed silence. Mrs. Parker felt the contagion of the man's nervousness. She thought that ne certainly was odd—almost alarm ingly so. She caught his eye in the course of its wanderings around the room aud noticed that he colored slightly. She coughed and he coughed a rasping echo. "He left me the receipt," she said, at last. "Yes'm." Another silence. The man shuffled his feet uneasily and the woman began to feel desperate. "It was too bad that your last remit tance was lost, but Mr. Parker told me to say that he would give you credit for half the amount, or all of it if you thought that he ought to." "That wouldn't be right," said the man. "I don't want him to lose any thing by accommodating me. But you've got a pack of darned thieves here In Chicago—a lot of rascals that ought to be hung. I would help hang them if I had the chance." He spoke with great vehemence and looked at her so angrily that she quailed and wondered if lier seiVant was within call. "A man's money isn't safe," ne added. Then in a gentler tone: "Have you got a bootjack?" "A bootjack?" "Oh, well; may be I can manage without, but they come off a trifle stiff." He pressed the toe of one of his boots against the heel of the other and pushed with it; it slipped and his right heel grazed his left Instep, and he uttered a cry of pain. The woman started up from her seat with an ex clamation of alarm, but her eccentric visitor wa between her and the door and she feared that he would jump at her and strangle her before she could reach it. She was, moreover, con scious of sudden weakness In her limbs. Perhaps, she thought, he wasn't really dangerous nnd she could humor him. It would most likely ex cite and anger him if she should cry out. He looked up and said: "Excuse me," then took his boot iu his hand ud pulled at It vloleutly, Mrs. Parker had heaud of the power that a calm, steady look has over the insane. She looked nt him calmly and steadily, though her face, she felt, was growing white with terror. The trouble was that he would not look at her, but con tinued to wrestle with his boot. At last an energetic wrench brought the boot off and the madman thrust his arm in it up to the elbow. Then he said: "By jinks!" and smiled in an imbecile, salf-reproachful sort of way. "How s your married snn in New York?" Inquired Mrs. Parker, in a flash of aspiration, moistening her parched lips with her tongue. "Him?" replied the maniac. "Oh. he's all right—leastways he was when I last heard from him." He bent down and tackled the other boot, and Mrs. Parker once more rose and tried ro edge her way round the table to pass him. lie stopped and looked up and she retreated to the window and seated herself, with an assumption of carelessness, on the sill. If the worst came to the worst she might throw herself out and risk the injury that she might sustain from the broken glass and the fall. It was not more than eight or ten feet to the ground, and anything would be pref erable to the horror of being In the clutches of a madman. Then nnothpr thought came to her. Perhaps she could attract the atten tion of some passer-by and dumbly summon assistance. She looked quick ly out. A man was passing—a young man with a quite noticeable dark mus tache. fashionably attired and holding his arms gracefully bowed out from his body. Mrs. Parker, who is a good looking young woman, throw her whole anguished soul into an implor ing look and beckoned stealthily but imperatively to him. He smirked en gagingly at hpr in return and raised his hat, hesitated, then smirked again, enressed ills little mustache aud passed on. "There!" exclaimed the lunatic. Mrs. Parker started. He had got the other boot off, and, standing in his stocking feet, was groping inside of it as he had In the other. "Good joke on me," he said. "I clean forgot which one I put It in, aud I couldn't tell nothing by the feel." Withdrawing bis hand he drew out a thin, flat package, and then, moisten ing his finger, separated from it a slu bill, which he extended to Mrs. Par ker, who looked at it wonderingly for an instant and then dropped into a chair and began to sob hysterically. It appears that this is not the end. The man from Waukegan who had made a safety-deposit vault of his boot tried for some minutes to soothe and calm the agitated woman, but his gen tle ministrations only seemed to make her worse. He Blood aud tugged helplessly at his beard aud then rushed from the room in search of help. Going down stairs he suddenly came upon (lie servant, who, in conse quence of his bootless condition, had not heard his approach. Before he could explain his mission she-screamed and fell over against the gas stove in a dead faint, and. as Parker says, there was a dickens of a time gener ally. Another tiling, there Is a young man with a slight, dark mustache who passes the house quite frequently and annoys Mrs. Parker by iaising his hat to her and sometimes kissing his hand. Parker has not caught him its yet, but he is biding his time, and lias ex pressed his intention of breaking that young man's darned neck. As for the Waukegan man. he called at Parker's office for his receipt, and hesitatingly inquired after Mrs. Par ker. "You'll excuse me, Henry," lie said, "but ain't she a—well, just a lit tle, you know " "Hey!" said Parker. The Waukegan man tapped his fore head significantly with his forefinger, —Chicago Record. Miilure lti-iileM of the ltlcli Young Men. Three eases of marriage between the elite of New York where the brides were several years the senior of their youthful mates may not betoken more than accident, but it looks as if a pre cedent had been inaugurated which in time might be made a fashion. Women age so much faster than men that these five years or less should be on the other side of the family. If the moneyed aristocracy of this country adopts a social custom it goes. "When we were twenty-one" will read some day when he was twenty-one aud she was twenty-seven, and the inequality, in spite of beauty doctors, in a decade will lie too apparent for the lady's hap piness. Lady Randolph Churchill and her young husband are not yet dis contented with their match, but Mrs. Langtry, who wedded a comparative juvenile, lias already found her doll is filled with sawdust. However, mar riage Is a lottery anyhow, and it is a question if rich young men are not safer with women older than them selves.—Boston Herald, English Song Bit Us For India, Darjeeling, the mountain sanitorium of Bengal, is getting tired of talking of the tornado that wrecked the station a couple of years ago. So the improve ment committee have thought of some thing else. They declare themselves dissatisfied with the CUCKOO, hitherto Darjeeling's almost sole feathered warbler, and are trying to import Eng lish song birds, at a pound apiece, to plant in the woods, says a Calcutta correspondent. It Is a bad lookout for tile songsters, as the woous are full of Himalayan ravens, and Himalayan ravens feed on young birds. But the improvement committee are sanguine, and the lieutenant-governor of Bengal is alleged to have made the suggestion, so nobody protests. The ravens, by the way, are said themselves to have been imported some years ago by the mab urajali of Darbhanga. BM rfoftLD ENGLAND'S NEW QUEEN. The Personal Characteristics or the Con sort of Kdwurd VII. Millinery is one of the many accom plishments of the new Queen of Ens land. In early life she and her Dan ish sisters were brought up upon de cidedly narrow incomes, and had to make the most of a scanty provision for the wardrobe. The consequence was that Alexandra learned to trim her own liats and bonnets, as well as to make her frocks. This talent was not neglected when she came to Eng land as the bride of the young Prince of Wales. If the court milliners sent home hats or bonnets which were not to her taste—if they were clumsy or unbecoming the Princess' scissors were at hand to take off the trimming and remodel the offending piece of mil linery. Very few women of her age con tinue to look well in the so-called straw sailor hat. Numerons pictures of the "Princess of Wales" show her fondness for this headdress. But it Is not to be supposed that as Her Majes ty she will be photographed in the sailor hat. Many of the recent photo graphs taken in England lately Alexandra show the little straw hut in all informality. But, no doubt, as a Queen she will forego wearing it. The story is told by a lady of the household of the late Queen Victoria that on State occasions the dressing of Her Majesty was an affair of mo ment. As It sometimes happened, the Queen's bonnet did not prove be coming or look sufficiently regal for the forthcoming function. Then it Is said the Princess of Wales was sent for in haste to operate with her scis sors, needle and thread or long pins upon the "impossible" bonnet. Queen Victoria, it seems, had Im plicit faith in the good taste of her daughter-in-law, and in her capability for transforming an unbecoming bon net into a suitable and becoming head dress. The new Queen of England has always displayed conspicuous good taste in her own dress and in that of lie - family. "Mas. Doe." is an affix not many women have to their names. Her Ma jesty Queen Alexandra has been from early girlhood an accomplished musi cian. Some years ago she went to Ire land to receive her degree of Doctor of Music from Trinity College, Dub lin. A London photograph shows the Princess in the crimson robes and "Oxford" cap of a Doctor of Music, as she appeared on the occasion, which was rendered something of a pageant. In spite of her deafness and of the fact of being lame, the new Queen of England lias always been considered a graceful ornament to society. It used to be said in the early days when her lameness showed itself that the court ladies adopted a slight limp, called the "Alexandra limp," to show the imitation of their royal model, which is the slncerest form of flattery. The Queen's beautiful figure and erect carriage she still preserves in her grandmotherhood. As daughter, sister, wife and mother, Alexandra has tilled all the duties of her position conscientiously, hut in no other relation of life does she shine with more radiance than as a grand mother. There are numerous pictures showing her with Prince Edward of York or one of the other children of her son George in her lap. A photo graph somewhat rare in this country shows Alexandra with her little grand daughter, Lady Alexander Duff, daughter of the Duchess of Fife. This picture gives the four generations in the maternal line. The Queen of Den mark is seated in an armchair, lioldiug upon her knee little Lady Alexandra, her fair head partly covered by a large white cambric snubonuet. Behind the chair stands the then rrineess of Wales, with one hand on her mother's shoulder. The Duchess of Fife, now Princess Royal, stands beside her mother, supporting her hands on the chair in which the Queen of Denmark is seated- This is a good picture of a clannish family group.—Philadelphia Record. The Chutelaine Ornament. It is a revival of an eighteenth cen tury fashion that is seen in the use of a small jeweled hand mirror worn as a chatelaine ornament. In the old days of powder and patches and wigs and rouge, a mirror at hand was a ne cessity. The troublesome war paint often needed a touch of repairs which, in the frank days of Queen Anne, was always uublushingly supplied. Now the tiny mirrors are worn only for ornament, so their owners say, and very pretty ornaments they are. There is no limit to the price one can pay for one of these little mirrors, for they are most exquisitely enam eled, set with semi-precious stones and made of gold, silver, ivory, gun metal and gold, or have tortoise-shell backs, on which, in gold, a floral pat tern or the proprietor's Initials are wrought. The finest art of the French goldsmith is lavished on the frame work of many mirrors, and a small chain and hook at the end of the han dle makes tne trifle fast at the belt of Its wearer.—New York Sun. A Modish Fastening. The pretty new under waists, com monly called corset covers, are made of white cambric in the plain old-fash ioned shape, with a little insertion of needlework or embroidery around the throat and down the front. The new shape has no buttons, but is provided on both edges with three worked stud holes, and is meant to fasten with gold studs. Have these studs properly con nected with a chain if you do not wish to lose one or uto.'f, and sj break the set. Three studs are the correct number. They are small, but fortunately have flat heads. Studs with small round heads are of very little use, because they will not remain fusteued, but are apt to come undone when one takes a long breath. The studs commonly used are chained like the gold studs used to fasten the little waist of a "long-clothes baby's" frock. Dainty and Simpltt. Though it looks very plain this little dress represents in reality a goodly amount of labor. It is made of finest Swiss embroidery deep enough to give the entire length, but actually em broidered ODly to a depth of a few inches. The dress, or rather the cloth part of tile embroidery, is tucked very finely down to within seven inches of the edge. Then it is made up just as if it wore plain cloth, and in sacque shape. I-est the fine, closely-set tucks should not give sufficient fulness an inverted box pleat finishes each under arm seam, being let in about seven inches from the lower edge. The sleeves are of finest tucking, and are edged with narrow embroidery, as is the neck. For a child of two or three years nothing could be daintier than the little French dress, which fits down well, and has the fulness all sticking out so prettily at the lower edge. The Art of Conversing Agreenhly. There are comparatively few people who talk well and agreeably, though there are many who talk constantly. If you would speak well, speak dis tinctly, neither too rapidly nor too slowly, and with a properly modulated voice: enunciate clearly; dispense with superfluous words; avoid affectation, conceit and laughter which is not nat ural and spontaneous; never interrupt a conversation nnd never introduce a subject that is not of general interest. It is a common idea that the art of writing and the art of conversation are one. This is a mistake. A good wri ter may be a poor conversationalist, and vice versa.—American Qoeen. Scwlncr Hints. Always use double thread for a gath ering. Always use as fine a thread aud needle as the garment will allow. When threading your needle make the knot on the end broken from the reel. The rule for frilling is one and a quarter the length of the edge to he trimmed. In lacing a sleeve turn it and place the fitcing inside the sleeves before sewing it on. Gathers should always be set on the right side, but never with a needle. Use a large pin. In sewing a seam put the stitches closely together, but lightly, into tile cloth, being careful not to pull the thread tight, as this causes the seam to draw. Women no Station Mnftlerfi. The head of the Rlazan-Ural nail way, in Russia, recently asked the Minister of Communication to allow the women who have passed their ex aminations at the Railway School at Saratof to hold places as station mas ters, baggage inspectors and telegraph superintendents. The reason assigned for the request was the scarcity of ed ucated and trustworthy men. The permission was granted by the Minis ter. There are many handsome gowns of various thin, black stuffs. The prettiest cotton shirt waists have bishop sleeves with narrow baud cuffs. A black grenadine sprinkled with crystal dots is very effective, made up with touches of color. White dresses are much in evidence and white costumes triinjned with black are deemed even more stylish. French knobs In either black or white silk beautify some of the nar row gold braids. They are done by hand, nnd one row through the centre is sufficient for the narrow widths. Very fashionable stock collars are made of white satin ribbon, with tiny lines of gold braid put on at intervals, or those of black hebc velvet rihhoti standing vertically, aud ending on a little loop, held with a small gold or jewel button. The Raglan shirt waist seems to be one of the new varieties. The sleeve sets in from the collnr hnnd like a man's Raglan coat, nnd there nre small stitched pockets at each side of the bust. Both flannel and wnslinbln shirt waists are made on these lines. Pale old-rose chiffon and a very beautiful shade of dark pansy velvet nre combined on a shirred round waist, with very drooping front, and an ex tremely short bolero jacket, trimmed with a tiny edge of outer fur aud very fine gold passementerie designs en ap plique. The so-called "lingerie sleeve" con tinues to increase in favor, so that now even tailored gowns show the dainty undersleeve of silk or velvet. A new idea is to make the sleeve full length, but slash it half way to the elbow in narrow sections, through which the undersleeve forms puffs. Pretty belts, suitable for wear with either a flannel or silk waist, have a foundation of black velvet; through the centre is sewn a bias band of col ored satin about an inch wide, aud over this are three bands of very nar row gold braid. The whole belt is scarcely two inches wide. It is pointed front and back, fastening by hook and eye at the side. ■■■- " , HABITS OF THE POLAR BIAh. Not as Daneeroiiß as the Walrus o* Hooded Seal. The following description of the life nnd habits of the polar bear from the pen of the eminent naturalist. Kerr Muller, Is from the London Field: The character of the polar bear is a curious mixture of cowardice and dar ing, for it will fly at the sight of man, but will often come close up to the huts and sometimes even try to enter them. When met with in the water bears are killed with harpoons. On receiving the first wound the animal utters loud roars, seizes the weapon with its teeth, pulls It out of the injured part and hurls it far away: sometimes, but by no means invariably, it will turn upon its assailant. Quickly it receives an other spear or bird-arrow from a sec ond kayakman, against whom it turns after treating his weapon in tin 4 same manner and sometimes breaking it; nnd in this way the struggle is contin ued until the bear is overcome. The most important precautionary rule which the hunters have to observe is. when during the fight the animal had . dived, to keep a sharp lookout down into the water, in order that it may not come up unawares right under a kayak; its white gleam can always be seen when it approaches the surface, and there is time to get away if it lie coining too near. When a boar is en countered In the water, or amid some what scattered ice, its capture is con sidered a certainty, for, although an excellent swimmer, it cannot get away from a kayak. In the northern col onies, where tlioy are seldom seen, the Green landers appear to be afraid of them; but such is far from beiug tlie case in the Jullanshaab district, where, in the water, at any rate, they are considered as much loss dangerous than the walrus or hooded seal. The food of tlie bear consists mainly nf seals, which, however, they can not seize in the water, but only when lying on shore on ice; but as the seal, when in such positions, is extremely watchful and wary, the stalk is often fruitless, nnd the bear is obliged more frequently than suits him to depart with an empty stomach. Carrion they lake at any time; in summer they rob birds' nests of their eggs and young ones, and appear to be partial also to berries. Probably, too, they live upon sea fowl, seizing them from below while resting on the water. According lo Brelim, their ordinary food is fish and they even capture salmon in the sea; this, however, I have never had confirmed by the Greenlanders, who all consider that tlie bear's powers of swimming would not be equal to it. According to the same authority, neither reindeer, foxes, nor birds are safe from the polar bear, but this, I think, is a mistake. Nature has intend ed that it should seek its prey in tlie water and 011 the ice, rather than on the land. When really hungry there are few things which a bear will reject—down to old skin garments and tarred ropes' ends—which may sometimes be found in ills stomach. It is under such cir cumstances that it ventures close to the huts and devours whatever it can find, sometimes even attempting to cu ter. In the winter of 180G-7 a bear was shot at Godhaven with the whole of the forepart of the body in an oil cask which it was licking. In the Jullanshaab district it is not unusual for these animals to visit the Green landers' provision stores, where they keep their dried seals' flesh, etc.. tear I lie stones away from the entrance find clear the place completely out. At Kangarsak, a few miles to the north of Holstenborg, in the winter of ISO 1-5, a hear pulled to pieces all the Green landers' fox traps and ate all the foxes found. In March, 1807, a Green lander at Ilolstenborg fell in with fresh bear spoor, which he proceeded to follow. The animal had gone a cer tain distance by land and afterward to the seashore, where it had eaten seaweed and mussels and then entered the water. A New Kind of Torpedo. Tile newest war engine Is an air tor pedo which, after a slight initial vel ocity is given to it. propels itself for n distance of nearly four miles. It is of secret construction and has been patented by the Swedish Major lingo, whose Government has granted money (o him for the undertaking of experi ments. The forward movement of tile pro jectile is effected by means of a gas which, oscapiag ,aiul flowing out through the channels of a turbine fixed at tlic bottom, drives the torpedo with Increasing speed. Any kind of percussion explosive may be used. Tills projectile is tired from a specially constructed camion and is noiseless. The initial velocity being low, there is no recoil, and not the slightest danger to the firing party. Wouldn't Assume the lllsk. The son of an officer in a life insur ance company was about to enter well-known university as a freshman. "Father," he said, a few days before ills departure, "I think I ought to have my life insured. Suppose you take my application." "Harold, my boy," replied ills fath er, with a smile half whimsical and half sad, "as your paternal ancestor I strongly indorse that idea, hut as it conscientious agent of the company I represent I shall have to refuse to take any risk on a college student iu these days of football and cane-rushes." There is food for thought here— Youth's Companion. Tlic Way Things Co, "I have noticed," remarked the Ob server of Events and Things, "that the more a girl thinks of a young man the longer she takes to fix iter hair when ho calls; and the more the young man thinks of (lie girl the more the girl's hair needs fixing."—Yonkera States man.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers