The Keim and allied families in America and Europe . keep the type ofNumber 1 of The Keim and AlliedFamilies standing for a reasonabletime in order not to disappoint any per-son within or without the family, linealor allied, Societies, Libraries and other-wise in securing the first number so asto have the series complete. If you have any names and addressesof relatives or friends, please send themto the Editor. They will be communi-cated with. It will not be practicableto secure back numbers after the listshall have been made up. Family Contributions to Histouy. My venerable friend, lion Ains-
The Keim and allied families in America and Europe . keep the type ofNumber 1 of The Keim and AlliedFamilies standing for a reasonabletime in order not to disappoint any per-son within or without the family, linealor allied, Societies, Libraries and other-wise in securing the first number so asto have the series complete. If you have any names and addressesof relatives or friends, please send themto the Editor. They will be communi-cated with. It will not be practicableto secure back numbers after the listshall have been made up. Family Contributions to Histouy. My venerable friend, lion Ains-worth 17. Spofford, Librarian of Con-gress, informed me that not less than800 publications on American families,their genealogy, history, &c, are pub-lished each year. The list will be completed for 1898,when The Keim and Allied Familiesjoin the procession. Then the compre-hensive work can go on in the full as-surance that ancestral glories and lateractivities are not to be permitted to fol-low the heroic men and women of oldinto their JOHN K El (VI. Son of Nicholas, Sou of John thr in Oley, Pa., 174^. Died at Reading , Pa., The Kdm and Allied Families IN AMERICA AND EUROPE A Monthly Serial of History, Biography, Genealogy and Folklore,illustrating; the causes, circumstances and consequences of theGerman, French and Swiss Emigration to America jfromthe \ 7th Century to the present time. Vol. h READING, PA. JANUARY, 1899. HARRISBURG, PA. No 2. WILLIAM PENN PROPRIETARY Sown in Faith: Reaped in Dominion THE ECONOMIC ASPECT OF HIS PROSELYTING TOUR THROUGHHOLLAND AND GERMANY* HE history of American coloniza-tion does not afford a parallelto the journey of William Pcnninto Holland and Germany in the sum-mer and autumn of 1G77 in boldness ofconception, fearlessness of executionand magnitude of results. The contrast of the visits of 1671and 1677 marks the exclusively sect in-terest of the one and the sect and secu-lar initiative of the other. The former was actuat
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