Mrs. A. L. Nissley lived in Landisville, am unincorporated community of Lancaster County, in southeast Pennsylvania.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Landisville,_Pennsylvania
In May of 1913, Mrs. Nissley received a postcard from Nora,
Nora mailed the postcard from Evansville, a city in south-central Wisconsin.
The area around Evansville was first farmed by settlers from New England – they were attracted to “the pristine wooded landscape and the placid Allen Creek”.
After the Chicago and Northwestern Railway reached Evansville in 1863, the area developed industry related to the manufacturing of windmills, carriages, wagons, pumps, and iron castings.
Agriculture remained the bedrock of the economy, however.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evansville,_Wisconsin
The face of the postcard is a bucolic scene of the Wisconsin countryside.
Fields of clover are covered in pink and purple blossoms, pleasing the eye and delighting all hungry animals who graze.
The hand-colored picture is sub-titled, “Scenes along the country roads.”
Published by E. A. Bishop of Racine, Wisconsin, the postcard was printed in the USA.
On the reverse, Nora voices a complaint about some matter related to the contents of “Good Stories” magazine.
I am unable to interpret the problem fully, but Nora references something that she “wrote a long time ago” and that should not have been noted or included recently.
Because many magazines of the era included offers of pen pal exchanges or invitations to develop friendships by mail, it is possible that Nora was dismayed to see her invitation for communication at a time when she no longer wanted to be contacted.
Nora’s comment, “If I hear from any one, I will write and send them on to you” would fit in this context.
Nora remains poised in her clear remonstrance, and signs the message, “Your Friend”.
One hopes that the matter was resolved appropriately, that Nora was not discomfited by any correspondence, and that the magazine continued to provide good stories to its readers.