X February 11, lonq. THE OMAHA ILLUSTRATED BEE. i t Great Preparations ( "CV" v. r ? (7 0; NICHOLAS IO WEDDINO lnc th Foliom Cleveland nuptials In the White i House nearly twenty years ago has drawn the searchlig-hU of wr nf publicity to such a degree aa the preparations for the marriage of Miss Alice Lee Roosevelt, daughter of the presi dent, and Congressman Nicholas Long worth of Cincinnati. Interest in the wed ding la nation wide, to some extent inter national Consequently the press, enter prising vehicles of publicity, strive to sat isfy public curiosity by publishing advanoe details of the ceremony, the bridal trous seau, the bridal gifts and the honeymoon tour. Hew much of this is true, how much Imaginative, Is hard to say. Washington correspondents admit that great secrecy la observed at the White House regarding these matters, and at the same time fur nlah details about the very matters re garding which "great secrecy" Is ob served. The difficulty of maintaining se crecy about the details of a wedding in unofficial life is well understood and Is overcome In some manner. The task is tenfold greater when the White House and the president's daughter are the centers of attraction toward which countless scribes direct their energies and news-getting talent Coat the Bridal TreaMraa. To show what enterprising news getters can do when stimulated' by secrecy, the Washington correspondent of the Chicago Inter Ocean gives the detailed cost of Miss Roosevelt's trousseau In these figures: One wedding gown 1,000 8ix dinner gowns, average tJM llliuo Two Imported lace gowns LOW One lace coat sun Dl. . I . " ...... MVV iepuon ana anernoon gowna. average $10 Four evening wraps at 150 Three street dresses at fljo One driving coat One automobile coat Lingerie, twenty-four three-piece sets, average $60 Twenty-four embroidered muslin skirts Six embroidered muslin and linen too 1,000 50 loo 1.200 600 bouse gowns goo Six matinee and lounging gowna 600 Four corsets at tao o Bhoea loo Gloves luo Hosiery 200 Farasols feu Handkerchiefs , ? K) r Ton atrt hata 250 JV bix reception and afternoon dress hats Three driving hats 9)Two evening dress hats lx rough and ready hats for out- 0 100 3U0 160 " " . ... a .,......,.... . . . Total $11,400 Bridal Gws aad Thlaas. Supplementing these figures, the New York Times correspondent gives what i claimed to be first-hand information about the style and material of the bridal trous M.U. The writer savs: "First, as to the wedding dress, concern ing which many romantic stories have been woven. Not a particle of Oriental ma terial enters into lis composition. ill Roosevelt has bctn greatly auiused at Uie guessing to which it has given riae and laughed when a friend begged lier to clear UD the mystery. "Concerning the famous court train of brocade, the fauts are understood to be: It was desired to preserve some of the ma- .terlal of the wedding gown of MifcS Roose velt, as daughter of the piesldtui of the United Stales, for an heinoum. Thereioie Miss Roosevelt puithubed a (juaniity of plain white ducheeu satin, and ims was turned over to a Sua mhi i.i IVlerson, N. J., with instructions tu embroider upon, It the main features of tlu lanu.y coal-ol-aruui. "The dress is of ll.e -u.:f uaciiess uuu, and the style la lae fuSLloiiaoie pi ilices. The bodice is siiniiy ui j.. i-d uud uiaclo.'S a pretty yoke of puint ue Venise luce, V-shaied back and lrotil. The lace was furnished by Miss Kousevelt. Tun sleeves are of satin, very i.ui t also tur.micd with lace. The court train, wmch Is of tne legulalion length four aids is attached to the shoulders. "The going -a way dress is of almond col ored clotti. with a jvkt of laoe criiaiuculcd with motifs of pasaementei ie of the st-.ae hue as the dress. The hubll, close nttir.g. with luge pleats, rests upon a front of Irish point lace, tutn tpeoa on a vest trimmed with emoroideied - saloon and pompadour. The satrt la beil-sl.aped, with a high corselet. The bottom is encrusted with Irish laoe. "A dinner dress of white linon elaborately covered with embnidery of white silk is a novel and beautiful feature of the trous seau. It la short, disclosing the ankles, and decollete, with a suple pel vance trans parency, the bodice simulating a bolero. There are three flounces of Valenciennes on the skirt and tiny fluuuies of the same laoe form the sleeves. A ot in ture of wide horiensia ribbon completes the costume. "There is a vtsiticg costume ao telcning that the very few fenJnine friends of the bride-to-be who have been favored with a peep at it describe It ecstatically as a 'dream' or an 'event.' This Is a Dlrectoire dress of fuchsia colored clotti of a vague princess affect, the chief beauty of which lies la !U line. There la an arranarement of lit tie cajwa ana rvvara at pruna velvet LONG WORTH. embroidered in silver. The effect of the entire dress Is heightened by the Indis pensable cravatte, which is of cream col ored chiffon trimmed with point de Venise. "Miss Roosevelt has a deshabille of lemon-tinted mervellleux and chiffon en tirely covered with entredeux of Valen ciennes, and decollete, V-shaped, - front and back. Over it reposes a cloak of superb Alencon, held on each shoulder by a but terfly of real pearls a wedding gift. The sleeves are short and very full and are trimmed with the same entredeux of vel enclcnnes Interlaced with bows of pom padour ribbon, which Impart the prettiest effect. "Another tea gown Is of pink mervellleux and pompadour liberty gause, flecked with silver ribbons on the skirt. A high cein ture, corselet style, rises to meet a gulmpe of malines so fine as to be almost lmper- ceptlble, and descends to a point at the waist. The sleeves are of gause, very short, and trimmed with wee silver roses. An ample Wateau cloak of lace embroid ered with larger silver flowers is held at the waist by an oriental belt of gold studded with emeralds and rubies. Ball Dresses. There are three ball dresses. One, a toilette of pink chiffon and mousseline de oie, is lncrusted with medallions of pink ilk and point applique hand-painted with pompadour motifs and encircled with an entredeux of valencjennea. With" it goes a celnture of sky-blue silk. "In direct contrast Is a princess gown of black tulle entirely spangled with gold paillettes and inset with garlands t roses of malines lace, also spangled with gold. The skirt is trimmed with a flounce of malines lace on a transparency of sunburst pleated golden gauze. The sleeves and loops at the breast are of black chiffon velvet embroidered In gold. "The third dress, also princess style. Is of blue tulle embroidered with paillettes and large motifs of silver. It rests upon a foureau of silver cloth that has a large llsh point embellished with silver motifs, ruche at the hem. The sleeves are of Eng- "Mlss Roosevelt's predilection . for the blouse is well known, some of her most popular portraits showing her attired in Hybridizing Fruit Methods and Results FEEL honored to be Invited to speak before such an eminent body of men from all parts of this and other countries. With so many noted men to speak In a limited time I can only give a few facts from my experience and not attempt to elu cidate them. Upon your program I am as signed to speak on methods and results of hybridizing fruits. It is not of my choice. We do not regard hybridizing as necessarily the best method of getting good frutts from breeding. We made a great many hybrids with stone fruits, apples and a few ears. From the little prairie sand-cherry polli nated with wild goose and the product pol linated with Quackenboss we have the Vic tor sand cherry plum, one and three-quarter Inches in diameter, considerably larger than a sliver dollar, a valuable fruit. A dozen years ego we pollinated the Miner with the Canada Blue Grass (Quackenboos). We got a plum we named Red Glass and have grown it largely for years. A few )eais ago we inbred Blue Glass to Quacken boss and we have Red Glass Junior. The tree looks like an Americana. It is un usually thrifty, with extremely large green leaves. This is surely one of the b-st hardy plums for the northwest In existence. To produce a free stone plum from the Wild Goose we usd the combined pollen of Trag'dy prune and Wolf plum on Wild Cooee. The seedling and fruit shows all Its parents. The fruit Is a free stone, with the pulp sunt and fine, as the little French prune to eat. With the combined poller of Jonathan and Next her crab on Ben Davis we have a hanly crab-like tree, fruit size and quality of Jonathan, and so beautiful that the fruit has always ren taken by the birds or people before maturity. Only FpFflnrs of Besslkss Asl. lAft August we took some scions with fruit buds and bark-grafted them near the house. H was no use. Soon there was but one specimen of Benathan apple In exist ence, and that is photographed here with the danger sign over! ead and the string running from apple to shotgun. Our native and the Japanese plums cross as easily as corn, and probably, along with the Indian and Chinaman, have had a com mn origin. We have fruited more than 1.000 aexllsiurs of apple and Pyrus Baccara crab. Much of this work was for the pur pose of testing the value of stocks upoa which to grow applea We have crossed the little Baccata apple, which is not as large as a cherry, with most of the well known apples and obtained some la the second cross as large as the Wealthy. Bom of these crossed with high-flavored apples give P Bein Made for Coming Wedding at White House V- in v f ps..-. I 5." . r ? I & -'J .f ! lt '. MISS ALICE LEE ROOSEVELT, t this easy and becoming gu-ment, which came into world-wide favor under the name of the Garibaldi at the time when the Italian patriot was leading his red-slflrled regiments against the Austrians. For many years the garibaldis were worn in every country, and in one form or another have been more or less in fashion among young girls, especially those who engage in out door exercise. Miss Roosevelt wears them with an air that is ail her own, and a number of them have been Included in her wedding outfit. "One is of marvellleux of a peculiar hydrangea hue, neither blue nor mauve nor pink, but of an exceedingly pale soft tone. In its folds are cascades of tiny ruffled Valenciennes lace, a bridal gift, it is understood, from a member of the family. "Another blouse is of white Liberty s4tin, trimmed with wide, perpendicular bunds of Alencon lace, that extend over the shoul der, and with a prairie, green point d'esprit tulle. The very full sleeves, daintily caught up at the elbows, are trimmed with little pleats of the tulle. "One other is of green gage taffeta sln xolln, forming a bolero that arches 6n a belt of the same color. A wealth of tiny tucks and a foam of lace constitute the ornamentation." Wedding; Presents. Miss Roosevelt probably will receive a greater number and more varied selection of wedding presents, before, on and alter the day of her marriage than any other bride' in the history of the country, if nut of the world. Presents have becun to come In from all parts of the country. The more expensive gilts, of course, will be timed so that they reach the White House on the day of the weudlng. Estimates have been made by friends of the young people In clined to be statistical as to the aggregate value of Miss Roosevelt's presents. Some persons predict that they will amount to xi.000.bu0 in round numbers, while others are more conservative and place the figure at half that sum. All are agreed, however, that Miss Roosevelt will receive enough material to set her up In housekeeping and last her for the remainder of her life. What to do with these presents after the small crabs of great beauty and quality. One of these Is a sweet one a little larger than a silver dollar. We call this Economy crab because It Is always, fair and free from worms, is cooked whole for sweet pickle, canning or preserving. It is as firm as the Golden Russet pear and as good as a pear. Every family would need ten or fifteen bushels put up for winter and the trees can be planted by the fence-side In entire neglect and grow them by wagon loads for even pigs or cattle. Greatest Power la Breeding. The greatest power in breeding is mind over mind the mind of the older and stronger over the weaker and undeveloped. With all flowers, fruits, animals or human beings, mind rules the existence from before birth tl!! after death. To create we must be educated in our mind to know what we want before we can expect success In call ing upon nature's laws In breeding. The human being should be bred so as to attain the haplst, most useful and high est spiritual existence possible, under the reliable, divine environment and man's er roneous Judgments. The individual has many wants to be sup plied as he Journeys through , life, more varied than he can attend to himself. He needs the assistance of others, therefore he should be educated In the proficient produc tion of something that will supply the wants of others In return for what he re ceives. Animals, fruits and flowers need tbe same education. To successfully edu cate in breeding new beings we must under stand their mnln mental characteristics. These are the same In all living; things, but in the plants and less emotional orders our human mind is not often intelligent enough to penetrate and perceive the beautiful in dividuality of some of our apparently Inert friends. Justice prevails In human beintrs and the divine power approves of it by allowing the most Just people to rule. Now, if our horses did net have a sense of Justice the same as man we could not ride behind them In safety. They know well enough the power rf their heels and that we are behind them. In the trees and flowers we educate a sense of Justice and they give us beauty and nourishment In place of poison. Eve Plants Cemaslt Crtma. So closely virtue and vice blend that It is hard to know where-one leaves off and the other begins. All life has a tug-of-war across the line. Even plants commit crimes and are Immoral. We have the prototype of the depraved woman In the Wild Goose plum, which cohabits freely with every fruit that has a pit and brings forth lis sr ' - "V r' 7 BLUE ROOM wedding will be the serious problem for the bride to face. Their number and their value are so great and many of them are of such unsual size and shape that It is doubtful if the bride will have a room in any modern house for them, unless she wishes to turn it Into a sort of museum of wedding gifts. For as the presents con tinue to come In it seems that, like the superb pitcher presented by Mr. Stillman, the givers have .not been content with ob jects which they found in stock, even when they were making purchases from firms of national reputu , but have had their presents made from special designs, so that these gifts form what the connois seurs call a "collection." Peaches from Soatb Afriea- Nestllng in the finest of tissue excelsior, peeping forth like the first violets In spring, with the blush of the purple South African . sunshine in their ruddy cheeks, some of thhe most delicate peaches in the world lay in a New York wholesale fruit house, receiving the homage of the com mission dealers. . This particular box of peaches came all the way from the Meerlust Fruit farm, In Groot Drakensteln, Cape Colony, to grace the wedding breakfast table of Mrs. Alice Roosevelt-Longworth. These peaches might be called grand children of California. Some years ago efforts were made to transplant California peaches to South Africa, and Cecil Rhodes, building an empire in South Africa, found time to take an interest in the venture. The shoots were set out on his farm and have done wonderfully well. Because of the tact that winter as we know it is un known there, a new and wonderful flavor attaches to this fruit. In California peaches ripen from June to September, but In South Africa they ripen ull the year round, and at no time so deliciously as when the snow is piled on northern New York and New England hills. Bridegroom's Brat Man. Mr. Longworth's best man will be Thomas Nelson Perkins of Boston, Mass. Mr. Perkins was a claxsmate of Mr. Long worth at Harvard. He is a son of Mr. Ed board of paupers, that, being nearly all mule trees, give no return for their exist ence, and thore are some plants that even commit murder and then devour their vic tims. One is the Sundew, a Welsh plant, and the other is the Venus Fly-trap, found on the east coast of North America. Except for the purpose of proving an ex periment we never emasculate and hand pollinate the blossom. It Is an outrage upon nature's sensitiveness and will not provide fruits of as fine quality as by other and better methods. We bring congenial sorts in close communion by bark grafting them together under stimulating conditions that will cause Improved size, productiveness. jre. V ' " V .r AN ILLUSTRATION OF THE BENATHAN APPLE ON A BUD GRAFT ANI THi. ONLY SPECIMEN IX TUB WORLD. AU C UUT. 1. uiNi .iUliiiin t .V"J".iK- j...., IN THE WHITE HOUSE WHERE THE ward C. Perkins of Boston, formerly of Cincinnati. The father of the best man was a clnssmate at Harvard of the late Judge Nicholas Longworth, father of the groom-to-be. The ushers are to be: Quincy A. Shaw of Boston, Frederick Winthrop of New York, Francis R. Bangs of Boston, Guy Norman of Boston, B. A. Walllngford .of Cincinnati. Larz Anderson of Washing ton, D. C; Vlcomte Charles de Chambrun and Theodose Roosevelt, Jr. The Ohloan, It is understood, will give scnrfplns to his friends, in which hearts. Joined or pierced, will figure. In double sig nificance of the wedding and the nearness of St. Valentine's day. Pearl and tur quoise rings and wee brooches of the same stones are thought tu have been chosen by Miss Roosevelt for her chums. It Is likely the bridal pageant will de scend the private stairway between the state dining room and the breakfast room and will march 120 feet along the fine cor ridor to the East room. In the lobby the Marine band will play the "Lohengrin" march. - The processional is to he sung by a full choir, as well as other sacred selec tions. In the course of the ceremony. "Be Thou Faithful Unto Leath," from the "Elijah," and "My Beloved Cometh," from the Song of Solomon, are on the program. It Is intended that President Roosevelt will escort his daughter the floral altar under festoons of white ribbon held up by the ushers at the entrance to the East room. Bishop Satterlee and the Rev. Cot ton Smith, with Representative Longworth and Mr. Wallinjford,' will await the bride at the altar. About 1.200 persons probably will witness the cerpmony. Thousands more will crowd into the East room when the luckier throng gives place. Noon Is the hour for the wedding and from 1 to J -a buffet breakfast will be served. Honeymoon Trip. After the wedding breakfast the going away. Where to? How many rumors there have been floating about the Washington air In regard to the place where Mr. and Mrs. Longworth are to spend their honeymoon! Every quarter of the globe seems to have been selected by one person or another for beauty and quality. , We cannot mention many of the fruits ws have produced. We were raised where the Talman grew In perfection and we have re produced the Talman that will bear in east ern Nebraska. We wished for the Seckle pear and we have it on a healthy, hardy tree, free from blight and productive. We have wished for the hardiest types of peaches that would reproduce themselves from seed so that we could grow them with a kind of Intelligent neglect by the fence rowa. We have them, the small white and the large type of red and yellow. We have had them in such abundance that people . , -ssw irJ V ' -eV .. f J . ' art t t 1 1 i Mt ,f,-..;.. .-. LONQWORTH -ROOSEVELT WEDDINO the first happy weeks of the newly mar ried couple. Some have said they would go west to the president's happy hunting grounds, thus giving a true Rooseveltlan touch to the affair. Others have had It they would travel north and cross the bor der Into Canada. Some have mentioned this, that or the other camp lodge In the Adlrondacks. Tes, there have even been some who, thinking this country not large enough for the honeymoon of a Roosevelt, have thrown out mysterious hints that the couple would not return to Washington until they bad been in India! But Mr. Longworth has been ordering straw hats Instead of helmets. Straw hats point to the south, and southward the cou ple will take their flight after 860 persons, and who knows how many thousands more gathered about the White House gates, will have thrown rice and old shoes after them. Gotasr Array Car. The Pullman car Republic has been placed at the disposal of the couple by the Pennsylvania Railroad company. It contains all the comforts of home, from the dainty bedroom with Its bed, as dis tinguished from berth, to the kitchen and pantry;' everything except a bath. The car abounds In snug nooks and cor ners, the color scheme being Miss Alice's favorite red and green. The wood is Dutch oak and highly polished mahogany. First, there is the observation room at the rear, looking upon a platform as large as the average porch and guarded by brass ralllnirs. A wide armed sofa faces the platform. When the material needs of the hour send the bridal couple to the dining table the bride will sit at the head of a table which will accommodate six. Another sofa Is Just behind, where her husband's chair will be; at her right hand a dainty little china closet of Dutch oak, containing the silver which will do service during the honeymoon. In the left hand corner is a Dutch oak writing desk. Adjoining the parlor and observation apartment are two bedrooms, each con taining a large brass bedstead. Both are heavily carpeted in green and hung In green, the wood being highly polished ma Obtained have come for them with baskets, buggies, carriages, wagons and automobiles. Some New Fruit Productions. By desiring It and breeding for It out of more than 1,000 seedlings we have a hardy apricot, which Is large and very beautiful. It is of better quality than the California apricots are when they reach this market. It has survived where other hardy sorts but the woody Russian have gone down. In 1S01 it bore such a marvelously beautiful crop; in 1906 It met with 21 degrees below sero in the winter and 11 degrees below freezing after blooming, yet last season it bore apricots. In the growing of apples we must have all the vigor we can get, which means a hardy root and healthy top and plenty of pollen to keep the fruit from dropping be fore maturity. The nursery should grow the sorts more suitable for a given locality In large quantities cheaper. The plantar can, without trouble, insert the sorts he preiers. " Hew Met hod of Graf Una. For ages topworklng has been done by tying In a bud or by a spilt limb and wedge graft. That kind of grafting will blight and kill the tree. It Is too tedious and expen sive to be practiced. Now we have a new and simple manner of grafting that is worth millions to horticulture. More than fifty years ago I did topgraftlng and have been familiar with the most advanced methods of propagatingever since, and yet, with all these years of thought. It is only recently that we have evolved the principle In such simple perfection that It seems in capable of further Improvement. In this method we like scions three or four inches long, of the sort we wish to In crease, getting them from the new growth as soon as the terminal buds have formed. In June we slope these scions with a sip ping cut and run tbem beneath the bark of the tree we wish to improve. By the aid of two cuts lees than an Inch long, the first cut Is made on a line with the growth of the tree, the second parallel with the first, one-fourth of sn inch, away and three fourths of an Inch lower down. Across the top of the upper cut .the knife Is drawn, raising the bark, behind which the scion Is pushed between the two cuts, a piece of bark tying it In. It Is necessary that the tree that la grafted should be In an active state of growth, with plenty of descending sap, which spreads over the cut surface of the scion. Healing and growth begin In stantly. No tjlng or waxing is used. If one chooses to be careful 100 growing scions can be bad from 100 scions set. THEODORE WUXJAM3. : l . -V. r-iihf itii, ij WILL) OCCUR. hogany. A dwarf bureau with a mirror Is in one corner. The pressure of a button In the wall produces a wash stand nlckle. at which hot and cold water may be had. Between these two rooms are the tete-a-tete sections, doneln green and mahogany. They are convertible Into state rooms with an upper and lower berth each. In one of the sections two seats face one another, with a window between. The whole ot the other section Is occupied by a semi-circular divan. The "observation room and tne parlor are equipped with tiny reading lamps, electric bulbs, which fit into the wall when not In use. , Should the newly made wife desire to boss the cook, she has but .to walk Into the forward corner beyond the parlor. Crowded into this space are a pantry and a cook's galley, each about three by ten feet. The white capped chef has Just about room enough to turn around In amidst his pots and cans. Former Walte Hoase Weddings. Although there have been only four Whits House weddings. In' the last 'fifty years, there is no topic more Interesting to the dally visitors to this historic mansion. Tourists, especially women, are delighted when they can hear "Pop" Pendle, the venerable usher, who Is 82 years old and who has been on duty at the White House for more than forty years, relate the de tails of Nellie Grant's wedding. They are shown the exact position of the bridal party, and most of the women regard it as a special privilege to be permitted to sit on the divan which marks the spot in the east room where Miss Grant' stood during the ceremony. Much Interest still is manifest In Mr. Pendle's narration of the Incidents attend ing the marriage of President Cleveland to Miss Frances Folsom. This took place In the blue parlor and was a comparatively private function. Miss Folsom was the 'daughter of an old friend of President Cleveland and many years younger than he, but the marriage has proved In every respect to be a happy one. The officiating clergyman was Rev. Byron Sunderland, whom President Cleveland had known dur ing his early manhood and at whose church the Cleveland family worshiped while In Washington. Miss Folsom came to Wash' lngton and with her mother took apart ments at one of ths prominent hotels a day or two prior to the wedding, after which the couple spent their honeymoon at Deer Park. The latest wadding In the White House was that of a niece of Mrs. McKinley, who was a daughter of General Hastings and who married an officer of the United States army. This ceremony was also performed In the blue room, in the presence of im mediate relatives of the young people. How President Rutherford B. Hayes and Mrs. Hayes celebrated their silver wedding In the White House is related by the lata Benjamin Perley Poore In his Washington reminiscences In Interesting detail. This was the first celebration of the k!nd4fiat had occurred there. The members of the cabinej: and their families were the official-personages In vited to the celebrayaru and with them were a few old friends from Ohio. A dele gation of the regiment which Mr. Hayes commanded, the Twenty-third Ohio Volun teer, ltjsraffy, brought a beautiful silver pflVerlng. The Marine band, precisely at 9 o'clock, struck up Mendelssohn's "Wedding March," and President Hayes, with his wife on his arm. came down the stairs, followed by members of the family and the special guests, two by two. The procession passed through the inner vestibule Into th east room, where the president ar.d Mrs. Hiyts stationed themselves, with their backs to the flag-draped window. There they re mained until the invited guests had paid their congratulations. Mrs. Mitchell, ths daughter of the president s sister, Mrs. Piatt, stood beside Mrs Hayes and clasped her hand, as she did when a child, during the marriage ceremony twenty-five years before. The president and Mrs. Hayes led the way Into the state dining room, which had been elaborately decked for the occasion with cut flowers and plants. The table was. adorned with pyramids of confection ery, fancy French dishes and Ices In molds. The bill of fare Included every detioaey In the way of edibles, but no beveruce rxeept coffee. Several guns boomed out a salute to ths new years at midnight and then ths company dispersed. Besides Mr. Cleveland, the only presi dent to be married during his term of office was President Tyler, who took as his sec ond wife Miss Julia Gardner of New York. but they were not married In the White House. Ths first wedding In the White House was that of Miss Maria Monroe, the young est daughter of President Monroe, who was married In March, 139, to Samuel L. Oouverneur of New Tork. The ceremony was bald 'la ths famous east room. There was another early marriage In the east room, that of Miss Elizabeth Tyler t William WaUar ot Virginia. : M