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About The Sioux County journal. (Harrison, Nebraska) 1888-1899 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 13, 1891)
71 r M ..J V J f TALMAGL'S SERM. ! laden with opium and rum; wbfn the ! iiiiiht air of oar cities is polluted with Pr. Taltnage text was I s" her St , 14: 1 the laughter that breaks up from the 10,iXW saloons of dissipation and 1 bau donment; when the fires of ti;e second "AVJlA uI,kI.- !.. ! to the kingdom for such a time as this?" Esther the Beautiful n.-s the wife of Abasuerus the abouiin.-b e. Toe time had come for jer to present a 1 etitioa to her infamous husband in Uh.-ilf oi" the laraelitish nation, to w U x h hhe Iiad unco ueiongea. Mie was airaid tu uu-j chinch to sleep: The great audiences dertake the work lest she should lose are m-t gathered iu the Christiau Ler own life: but her uncle iiordecai, j churches, the great audiences are gath who had brought her tip, encouraged j ered in ihe temple of sin-tears of un- whulc! audience might feel that the Lord Almightv is putting upon ihem the hands of ordination Everyone, go forth and preach this gospeL You have as much rilit to preach as 1 have death already are kindled in tlie cheeks or as any man has. Cidyfiiid out the of tome who, only a little wliiie ago, j pulpit where God will have you preach, were corrupt. ever since me curse ! and taere preacli. Iledley icars was fell 111 011 the earth has there been a , a wicked man in th Kcglish army t me til.cn it was such an unwise, such , The grace of Cod came to him. lie a cruel, sin h an awful tiling for the , became an earnest and eminent clim ber with the suggestion that probably she baa been laised up of God for that peculiar mission. "Who knoweth whether thou art come to the kingdom Tor such a time as this f J sther had her God-appointed work you and I have ours. It is my business to tell you w hat style at people we ought to te in order that w e may meet the de- mand of the age in which God has cast our lot. If you have come expecting to hear abstractions discussed, or dry technicalities of religion glorified, you have come to the wrong place; but if you would really like to know what this age has a right to expect of you as C..:t: 1 w iiiiu men auu women, tneu 1 am ready in the Lord's name to look you in the face. When two armies have rushed into battle the officers of either army do not w;:nt a philosophical riis cuision about the chemical prop ei ties Of human blood or tho nature of gun powder; they want someone to man the batteries and swap out the guns. And now, when all (he forces of light tad darkness, of heaven and hell, have plunged into the fight, it is no time to jive ourselves to the definitions and formulas and technicalities and con ventionalities of religion. What we want is practical, earnest, concentrated, enthusiastic and triumphant help, In the first place, in order to meet the special demand of this age, you need to be an unmistakably aggressive Christian. Of half-and-half Christians e do not want any more. The church tf Jesus Christ will be better without I J.OOO of them. They are the chief obstacle to the church's advancement. 1 am speakinir of another t-ini nr! C hristian. All the appliances for you uLuiiuiig iin earnest christian are at four hand and there is a straight path for you into the broad daylight of uoq s lorgivness. i 011 may have come tiere today the bondsmen of the world and yet before you go out of these ioors you may become the princes of the Lord God Almighty. Vou kno.v what excitement there is in this coun try when a foreign prince comes to our ihores. Why? Because it is some lay expected he will sit upon a throne. But what is all that to the honor to which God calls you to be the sons! ana aauvhters of the Lord Almihtr; rea, to be queens and Lings unto God? -iney snail reign with Hint forever rod forever." But my friends, you need to be ag gressive Christians, and not like those persons who spend their lives in - hug ging their Christian graces and wonder ing why they do not make any pro. peas. I low much robustness of health would a man have if ho hid himself in t dark closet? A great deal of piety of the day is too exclusive. It hides it i i .. .i imeii. juieeus more iresn air, more outdoor exeicise. There are mauy Christians who are giving their entire life to self-examination. They are feeding their pulses to see what is the condition of their spiritual health. How long would a man have robust health if lie keptall the days and weeks and months and years of his life feel lug his pulse instead of going out into active, earnest, everyday work ? O, ray friends! if you want to have a stalwart Christian character, plant it right out of doors in the great field of Christian usefulness, and though storms may come upon it, and thouirh the hot sun of trial may try to consume It, it will thrive until it becomes great tree, in which the fowls of heaven may have their habitation. I have no patience with these flower-pot Chris tians. They keep themselves under shelter, and all their Christian experi ence in a small exclusive circle, when i 1.. . .. 1 - . ... . , urej uugui w piam 11 in the great garaen 01 me j.ora, so that the whole atmosphere could be aromatic with their Christian usef uln ss. lVhat wa want in the church of God is more brawn of piety. f. "But, says some man, "1 liberally support the gospel, and the church is open aud the gospel is preached; all the spiritual advantages are spread be fore men, and If they want to be saved kt them come to be saved; I hare dis charged all my responsibility." Ah! is If . 9 t i a n - huh. uk) wwiicr spirit r is there not an OM book somewhere that commands s to go out into the highways and badges and compel the people to come rar wnat wouw nave become of you tad me If Christ bad not come down off the bills of heaven, and if Ho had not come through the door of the uetmebrm caravansary, and If he bad ot with the crushed hand of the eroeinxlon knocked at the iron gate of ue tepuicnre or oar spiritual death, orj'uw, -iMimmw, come forth r Oh nrj Christian friends, this la no time for Inertia, wtoen all toe forces of dark- T'i ' " " " ; . when ; printing pratjei are pob 4&w'C2r taM teMtr. when express !? -r2mi faataa an carrying measen- iSV.cacf (; vkM fait a tie: able woe their baptism, the blood of crushed hearts the awful w ine of their sacrament, blasphemies their lit any, and the groans of the lost world the organ dirge of their worship. Again, if you want to be qualified to meet the duties which this age de mauds of you, you must on the one hand avoid reckless iconoelasm, and on dippers are the other hand not slick too much to things because they are old. The air is full of new plans, new projects new theories of government, new theologies and i am amazed to see how so mmy Chr'stisns want only novelty iu order to lecmmeiid a thine "to urine;. ui j .so iney vicitiate ana swing to and fro, and they are u.seiess and they are unhappy. Few plans secular, ethical, philosophical, religious, cisat lantic, transatlantic. Ah, my brother. do not adopt a thing merely becausa it is new. Try it by the realities of a judgment day. But on the other hand, do no: adhere to anything mealy because it is old There is not a single enterprise of the church or the world but has sometimes 1 ueeu sconeu at. 1 here was a time when men derided even Bible societies; and where ;a few young men met near a nay stack in Massachusetts and or ganized the first missionary society ever organized in tins country, there went laughter and ridicule all around the Christian church, Thev said the un dertaking was preposterous. And so also the work of Jesus Christ was as sailed. People cried out: "Whoever heard of such theories or ethics and govern neut! Whoever noticed such a style of preaching as Jesus has?. Ez- iiou luincu vl mysterious w ings and wheels. Here came a man from Capernaum and Geunesaret, and he drew his illustrations from the lakes from the sand, from the ravine from me lines ironi the cornstalks. How the l hansees scoffed! How Herod de 1 11 tt ... lueu; now caiaphas hissed! And this Jesus they plucked by the beard aru they spat in His face and thev ca.:eciiiim 'this fellow!" Ail the ereat enterprises 111 and out of the church have at times been scoffed at. and there have been a great multitude who have thought that the chariot of full n-uuU tall t yietca if U once got out of the old rut And so there are those who have no patience with anything like improve merit in architecture, or with anything like good, hearty, earnest singing, and they deride any form of religious dis cussion which goes down walking among every-day men rather than that which makes excursion on rhetori"ai sill"-. u, mal, Ule Ciurch of would wake up to adaptability of work t We must admit the simple fact that the churches of Christ in this day do not reach the great masses. There are bO.OuO people in Edinburgh who never hear the gospel. There are 1,000,000 people in London who never hear the gospeL There are at least 30 ',010 in Brooklyn who come not under the immediate ministrations of Christ's truth: and the CKurch of God in this day, instead of being a place full of living epistles, read and known of all uien, 13 more 11 lie a "aeaa letter" nost- office. But," say the people, "the world is going to be converted; you must be patient; the kingdoms of this world are to become the kingdoms of Christ" Never, unless the church of Jesus Christ puts on more speed and energy. Instead of the church converting the world, the world is converting the church. Here is a trreat fortress. Ifnu, shall it be taken ? An army comes and sits around it, cuts off the supplies and says: ".ow we will just wait until from exhaustion nd starvation they will have to give up" Weeks ami months and perhaps a year, pass alone. and finally the fortre s surrenders through that starvation and exhaus tion. But my friend, "the fortresses of sin are never to be taken in that way, xi iney are taken for God it will be by storm; you will hare to brimr uo the great siege gans of the gospel to the very wall and wheel the flying ar tillery into line, and when the armed infantry ot heaven shall confront the battlements j. u will have to give the quick comra ,nd, "Forward I Charge I Ah, my friends, there la work for you to ao ana ror me to do in order to achievo this grand accomplishment! Here if a pulnit and a clergyman prea lies in it 1 our pulpit la the bank. 1 our pulpit is the store. Yoar pulpit is the editorial chair. Your pul pit is the anviL Your pulpit la the bouXaffoiding. Your pulpit is the mechanic's shop. I may stand in this place, and through cowardice or self. seeking, max keep back the word I ought to utter; while 700 with sleeve rolled up and brow bet wonted with toll may utter the Word that will jar the foundation of heaven with the about of a great victory. Qk, that today this tian. Thty sciffed at him and said "You are a hyocrite; you are as bad as ever you were." Mill he kept his faith in Christ, and after awhile, finding tlwt thev could not turn him aside by call ing him a hypocrite, they said to him: Oh, you are notliing but a fanatic.' That did not disturb him. He w ent on Informing his christian duty until he had formed all his troop into a Bible class, and the whole encampm. nt was shaken with the present of God. .o Havelock went into the heathen tem pie iu India w hile the English army wag there, and put a candle into the hands ot each of the heathen gods that stood around iu the heathen temple, and by the light of those candles, held up by the idols, General Havelock ureached their conti- j righteousness temperance and judg- meiit to come. And who will say, on aarth or iu heaven that Havelock had not the right to preach ? 1 think that before the sun of this century shall set the last tyranny may fall, and with a splendor of demonstra tion that shall be the astonishment of the universe God will set forth the brightness and pomp and glory and perpetuity of His eternal government Out of the starry flags and the em blazoned insignia of His world. God ! will make a path for His own triumph and returning from universal conquest He will sit down, the grandest, strong- uiguest throne or earth His footstooL When hl (he Bilious' onis aeoend To Dxee, our Ituler, EadW, Krieud, Till heaven ' high arch rwtonnd gain Wit 1 "Peace on earth, rood will i mn " 1 preach a sermon because I want to encourage all Christian workers in every possible department Hosts of the living God, march on! march on jus spirit wm uiess you. His shield will defend you. His sword will strike for you. .March on! march on! -The 'Jut dr.Al.,.. -i i moyu.jsm win lan, ana paganism ww ourn its Idols, and Mohammedan .am iu give up its lalse prophet, and LUO 8'eai, wans 01 superstition will come down in thunder and wreck at me long, loud blast of the gospel trum y-u jiarcu on: march on! The be siegement will soon be ended. Only a few more steps on the long way; only a few more sturdy blows; only a few more battle cries, then God will put ".c wurei uppn your brow, a.,d from the living fountains of heaven will oauie oir the sweat and the heat. a,i .ouuolui me connicr. Mnroh ni marcn onj ! or you the time and work m soon De passed, and amid ti. flashings of the judgement throne n,i (Iin (r, 1:.... w "muuu, oi resurrection anzels upheaving of a world r graves, ana me liosanna of the a..,) and the groaning of the lost, we shall oerewaruea lor our faithfulness , punisneaior our stupidity. Blessed be the Lord God of Israel from ever. asting to everlasting, and let fi, whole earth be Oiled with His h,, R FARM DEPARTMENT. I'uullry Mote. Laying hens must have exercise. Scatter haves, cut stra, or dry dirt wtr a part of th door and scatter al1 grams fed Iheui iu it so as to comjl them t jwork. '1 he good scratcher Is also a good layer. When your fowls have swelled heads or ees, or hoare breathing, if you examine closely you will lind a crack or crevice in your house or a draught from vour top ventilator strikes theiu- That tp ventilator has caused thou sands of deaths. A fat hen is a poor layer, and if she ays any eggs at all they will either fail v hatch or produce deformed and weak hicks. Soft shelled epgs, double yolk i ggs and other irregularities, are a sure indication that your hens are too fat. Did you ever try boiling the water or vour fols? Sometimes water that has not been boiled seems to cause diarrhea in chickens in the winter sea son. The water should bo given fresh and in clean vessels daily. Amen and amen. Wluilmlll orCrnfk, Vihlch The winter water supply for the farm animals should be carefully investigat ed now, when arrangements for needed changes may be placed upon the list for fall improvements. The creek sup ply oi water for open weather in spring, summer and fall is too great a convenience to be argued against sue cegf fully. But when we review our exjierience iu handling stock at the creek cutting ice to keep ojteu th drinking places, paying doctor's bills for animals injured 011 the ice, and the dozen other inconveniences and diffi culties arisiug from a dependence upon creek watering for the winter seasou we feel like endorsing any suggestion that has for its aim an encouragement of a more general use of well water for stock in the cold season. The fol lowing we take from the National stockman by a correspondent, ,-Betse: iiieie is cousiueraoie loss m turning stock out of Harm btables in winter to go to the creek for w ater. If Hie dis tance be ten rods, no one would esti mate the exposure to cold and the drinking of ice-cold water which the heat of the animals would have to warm up at a figure less than one cent an animal, for it lus to consume extra todder tu uiak up for this Joss, the tendency of which is also to check growth, and 111 the case of cows milk iecretioiL At this rate twenty animal i waste lu cents a day. And then the farmer leading his horses to that creek twice a day for water travels uimec s jftrily forty-five miles a )e, This consumes two days, worth t'i. M ure loss at the creek is worth ft more. A windmill could be erected to supply witter to the btables at a cost the daily interest 011 which would Ui over ten times less than the amount of this daily waste. All the stock would tret ui.tr.r at ine rign; temperature and clean wider at that Creek or other surface water may contain any or alt kinds of tilth, and the practice of permittinir tnilfll relive in r!,.I. It 1.. ..... .1 11. 13 iiul always a inarK of cleanliness. Water fr. i, iieat h the surface, in right localities, is clime CwHc It tikes about two acres of goad pasture to keep a cow through I lie sra f,n. Iu other rrds a M acre h will furnish pasture for 10 cows. Where Uud is cheap and abundant it is not a very expensive method to keep cattle as it involves little labor. Most far mers think it is best to have twe- ten acre lot instead of 2), so as to afford a change- Eienence teaches that every time the cattle are changed from one lot to the other they will not feed quietly until they have spnt a day in exploration and in the investigation of. the fence question. Cattle do best! has ever when in quiet; they hll themselves and then lie down to ruminate. It will take a full week and good fer-ces to settle down to this method after a change of pasture is made. Certainly double the stock or mre can t kept cu the same number of acres w hen the feed Is out and fed to the stock iu a small lot or at the end of a tether. ocr nurs depariiqt; Italian Hui, The women of lieathen li.n much better care of the system jT; the Christian women of this t,m. era lake of theirs, says the , v Ledger. They wore loose gWlwJ that gave their lungs full play, fu! muscle were systematically dert-u and educated. Thry ere prohibit, law from all usages and practices Li ly to impair their health or their coq. stiUitions. JI-nce their sous ( rt; hardiest race of men that the ,,, seen; hence for Tin Home triumphal over all her Hie,Uk. We talk of the Koman fathers, but it was to the habits of the l.oman moth ers and the vigor engendered by tho habits that the republic and theeinw,, largely owed their greatness. in yet the figures of the Italian show the inherited effect of the training. v Here else in the wurl,l . If ro, tl.lu l, v. ilvca lalM.r ' ,,,.!. .. ... , . ....o ... . . v.. . ... , .,, max inner ui leuiaie bust la and judgment. But it pays where land is worth 81uu or more er acre. GraM cannot be cut and left iu hoaps while the dew is on or utter rain has fallen. It should, under such conditions, be spread out and dried off. it is not meant to be made into hay, but sim ply to get rid of surface w ater and r haps of a part by evaporation, as new ly or fresh cut grass is full of sap or water a siiirabundance of which is of no value or use to the stock. Every farmer has no: iced that catte will not eat close to their droppings even for months afterwards: hence we see many tufts of high, good grass all over the pasture; when cut and parti ally cure I, thy stock will eat it readi.y. This leads me to remark that these deposits ought to be spread and dis tributed in pasture or meadow Ire quenuy, so ma; an the lann, more or less, can have the benefit of the fcr tilizer. found as in Italy ? form for so:ne Walking llutlri. A subscriber w rites: "I would like (o hear something about working and salting hutter. I know some jK-ople who are considered the best butter makers in the mghborhood and they think that butter cannot be made riiht wiuiout making it with the hands." Well, each one has a right to his own opinion about butter making as well as anything else, but he ought to be aljleiOiVe 8lKxl r(-'afi0"8 w ''" his meth od isV right one. There is not much to be said in its favor. In the first place ii. is a uiriy practice because, even though the hands bo cleanly washed the p rsplration will leave them aud re main in the butter; the heat of lhe hands has a tendency to melt the but ter and ihe working Is not so evenly ilitlm cm it u.,i,LI I ... I... .i . . ulu J Uy llm um 0 worker or the puddles; the grain is more easily injured and the butter is liable to have a greasy look. Russian Servility. Nothing imnres9l Mr.it i- .i in Itussia, more strongly than the do- uiu suumissiveness of the the only stamp of freedom in.m i'i, germs cf diseate. Hog. in Siubble Field. Stockman and Cultivator; The cus- om of turniinr stubble fields to glean the heads Unit ire dropped is almost universal. This practice is well enough where the field whether soldiers or civilians ti.! Kussian,', he writes "must tKtfi.i have a master; if he has non i, .. himself to find one. Each comn,,,, to be plowed and reseeded to irrain: lllfUlU Ito elA.n.. 1. - J illllt. fillMl Clul.lu .. a,u,olalu,s or Claer from 1 - aic ine exception ana uiie uuirea men, else it would be iik ut lue ru,e 111 almost every ulaee Bwarin oi uees without a queen. 'Our 1 18 f?r iu a crop rota' lanu is gooa, nut we have nobody over uow lhe larr Pr of the us. Come and rule us.' Thus ran the CUU!ilrr- u tlj hogs would confine message of the Bussian common t ' tir llt,e,1'-' t looking for the strav lturik, the Varangian. And so it a '"'at heitds lel"iining in the stubble with the Russian soldier. Witi.,. his capUin he would be in deadly per- A.,,,. uo wouia inins: for him lead him or punish him? "His captain may possibly defraud ...ui vi uis aue, or m treat him in anger, but nevertheless he loves him better than he would a German officer wuuwpuniniimeniaarejtat and well considered. It an Jfciropean soldier 7 8 "-commissioned officer drunlc, discipline would become impossible, but the Rmelan puta Lim to pen, wipes him clean and obeys him as falthfuuy a. ever on the morrow when his fit is over."-MacmilW. Magazine. Buttermilk for Freckles There la nothing that equals fresh buttermilk for removing tan, freckles sunburn or moth spots. It i,u ,i ' srreat advantam thut . . - , " -uuni hoi injure 'Uv " "ft "ke a litUe child'a. Take a soft cloth or . ! ami llh. .h. 4 . - necK and arms thoroughly with buttermilk before re tiring for the night; then wl. r .v.- uiiiiiu7. xu tne morning wash it vuwrvuguiyana wipeary with a crash toweL Two or three such baths win takeoff all the taa and freckle, t III I At.. I M " X it ue nanus son and smooth, The Bast mt fMtaia Etbal-Whr doo't you go and talk Ln the otter glrkr You kW t TJ. wwuias ruu an or nov, . Jack Yes. I know. Bntr m .... interesting you know. In fact I'm . perfect bora, and I'd rather both. " than thasK.-iw York Epoch. would be kept busy in these days - uiuurn picaiug up enough to ive on. Hut his hogship is too indolent w conline himself to one kind of em pioyiueut iu hot weather, and too in Jilleient to wheat in the chaff to hunt tor it wueu sweet and Under clover is within his reach. The result is the "hog ... mo Biuuoie becomes the pig iu clover, aud the wheat is eteu only as a side issue. This turns out fairlv well ir as ine pig is concerned, but is aw i ully expensive in clover. Whnd4v.i will t.ibi.. wc me care to exam. me a young clover plant iu his field win find that the crown of the clover nlant ... jut t, lue suriace or the crr,......i and that tle clover plant, although a vigorous grower, is also the uo.t "faH grasses. The one Up root which characterizes the clover plant has Il0 habit of sprouting below tl. and when this part of the plant is de,' Kprur Itar, This is also an excellent summer drink. 1 1 should be made and bottled in the spring. To make it, allow one ounce of hops and a spoonful of ground ginger to each gallon of water; when not l.ill ...j . . pint of molasses and ha!f a pint, orlessi of the essence of spruce: when cool add a teacupful of yeast, and put into a clean cask and cork tightly. Let it ferment for a few days, then bottle it for use. If more convenient, boil sprigs or spruce fir, instead 0f using the essence.-Good Housekeeping. The trotting horse interests in Iowa have received an infusion of new life this fttlHlIP I'l.r,. . r.... . --v.v me mure norses in training on the tracks in Iowa today than ever before. . Johnston has been defeated in his first race after his long retirement At Grand ltapids, last week, Yolo Maid won a frte-for-all pace ain.i t ston and Grant's Abdallah, the best iiujo ueiug c;iz. I'ractlcai Millantliroiiy. A sound scheme of philanthropy h vvm v.,,iut-u y IL W III rou, a gentleman of for tune in I arts, who some years ago, be reft of wife and children a, . '. , otiiiriisti uiv ,7 ,: . 'i-stalled ... ... ..uo om uesoiate house suitable staff of ffoverne. them educated carefully under his under a and had own K'fl ce and two have tS"'? 'y . ? WK tri is presented with j nm L . '-'" " of tuir rty they are brought up wJtt i PrP ious tastes nr -"J . "?. Tth "oluxur while clover fa ur,.. . . ' ' , unu teuder the lin ( annlotl. . .. J - . ' l"e root of the plant, and with h l f like teeth quickly and effectually the crown oil the plant or goui K entire root out of ue ground K not require close observation to see th? work golag on in any clover field whir! hog. are grazing, aa tb d daman where ti, ..i--. m08t the irrnwlli iii.i " "MB and B wsiajnij,, v ItispooreconovnvtA - . . newlyedloclover "' e,d of stock. The am.. SI" "7 K,m f..T.7 , l,",l"llonthe VOUBr clover fnr.,1.1... i tag wd tramping irreparabT (Lf " lck of song BiPl4 fo llZl"""1' -nlzed . "reign song birds in ll In Clilnniui,.! ...in at is being secured br co,., 'a07 isheinVt.i.M - -"""', ana " ' sraauaiiy. The ah .houtd bs'au v. id mirrr wUh ,r k 1 hey would be an atUacflon ttJ ttL beautiful as Uhi man hliirf iiL" u rrairni j 7 "uta nowars. th. graceful trees and Kotr of Kubion. tirenadine is a new groundwork galloons. Gold threads ami rubies exquisite garnitures. Black kid worked with flowers, tln-ik beetles, etc., are new. Louis XV basket designs iu i. t on frellis work of silver and pearls xr new. Mrs. Oscar Wilde's latest gown l said to be a "furniture like white crej covered with small flowers and fasten ed at the waist by a curious chain. .Silk muslin, brocaded with brizht posies, ii used for the summer tu gown. It is fashioned in medieval style with full, big sleeves and slightly draped skirts. .Mrs. OVhea Parnell is said to lie a woman of high literary and mciitai tastes and of considerable acquire menu she is strong-minded, original and brilliant, besides possessing a win ning personality. At.-andown Lady Brooke, not at all discomforted by recent events, was in the royal box in green and brown shut silk, trimmed with blaik lace. Her hat was a small round one triuiti.ed with blue flowers. Dotted dimity night robes are a new feature. They tnaka pretty chamher gowns with their clear white eroui.J and tiny blue or pink polka dots. They are tucked in shape of a yoke, the back being laid in front in tiny box plans. Miss Braddon, the novelist, had a daughter married to a Cambridgn dun me owicr uay. .Mrs. Maxwell, fur m called when she isn't writinif novU gave her a wedding reception and bloomed in black and gold as hand some as the bride. John Stranhe Winter, the aull,r who, in private life, Is Mrs. Arthur Stannard, is a very handsome young woman. .She Is lull and slender, with fine dark eyes, a pretty mouth 'and a well shaped head. Altogether she is pretty enough to be a summer girl in stead of a Winter. Voting matrons wear dinner nwi.i of chamelou silks-yellow, lilac or Niio .rv--nUU gu-ipes of deeper tints, and china blossoms or great boquels in spam between. The trimming are real laces, forming coat frills and a plastou on the low pointed corsuire with panels on the skirt Miss Urne Tstida, a student in liryn Mawr college, is taking a special course m Lnglish literature and American I . i a . . wrj, ui oraer to continue her work in the peeresses school in Tokio. Miss Tusda was one of the five little gith --tit by the Japanese government In IS. I to be educated ln America for a term of ten years. M,6 is, in conntc- uon witii her studies, soliciting con tributions to a Japanese fund for the establishment of a scholarship in the United staU-s to fit three or four Yum Yuma for teachers every year. There is nothing like self possession in all irnmergericies. Not U.mr mm n clever womaii was dining at a hand some board in an interior ritv ki, had never, as it happened, seen lim.. Juice offered h t'. course of a meal. When the buu.e ..a4 handed around some salad had just been served her, nd without giving the matter any thought she assumed the liquid to 1-e a wuce piquant for the salad and dash ed a few drops on her lettuce he.vu. In an instant she became aware, by that sort of intuition which is in the air at such times, that she had done something wrong, and when rhe saw egoor adding on.e of the bottle to Ids glass of water, she divined at once what her blunder had been. "i he meal progressed and she finished her salad with apparent relish. Her hostess pressed more upon her and she pted B second serving Then with fNN&fJ'of not baring everything to ter liking, she looked up and down i5I?uU.bte nd Hgnaied the waitress: l he lime IuIcml hImu .i,. .u..i mm, clialanUy, and as If salad without lime liilce were an uneatable xlish. ihis hit of adroitness mt m,M .i i,, in niclte amonc the comMn un ni. cure of occult and edge. Gold rone Is tnnrh nmmA tar nlMur frames. It should not, ho em tLan an Inch In diameter, urmnt for Utm as osps-sw FranaiKofit I fiaa imIIi. pictures. Hemp and man ilia are also M:hut bemp Is batter, for It ai A J,.' iS.-' " . ... . j - i . "