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About The Sioux County journal. (Harrison, Nebraska) 1888-1899 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 19, 1891)
TALMACE'S SERMON. Dr. Talmage preached mi bailing Vp the Nile," the second seruiou of the aeries entitled "From tlie Pyramids to the Acropolis; or, What I Sa iu Egypt aud Greece Confirmatory of the .Script ures." llis text was Ezekiel nix., 9: "The river is miue aud 1 have made it" Aha! This is the river Nile. A brown, or yellow, or silvar cord on which are hung u.ore jewels of thrilling inter est than on any river that was ever twisted in the sunshine. It ripples through the book of Ezekiel and Hashes in the books of Deuteronomy and Isaiah and Zachariah ai:d Nahum, aud on its banks stood tbemighties of many ages. It was the crystal cradle of Moses, and on its banks Mary, ll.e le fugee, carried the infant Jesus. To find the birthplace of this river was tie fascination and defeat of expeditions without number. Not many years ago Bayard Taylor, our great American traveler, wrote: "Since Columbus first looked upou .San Salvador, the earth has but one emotion, of triumph eft. for her bestowal, and that she reserves for him who shall first drink from the fountains of the AVhite Nile under the Hiow fields of Kilinibiijaro." Hut the discovery of the sources of theNieby most people was considered an impos sibility. The malarias, the wild beasts, the savages, the unclimbable steeps, the vast distances, stopped all expeditions for ages. A u intelligent tative said to bh SaiLi.ti n'. Baker and wife as they were on t r way to accomplish that in which o ..eis had failed: ' Give up the mad Etiitiiic of the Nile source. How would i i Lie possible for a lady young and delicate to endure what would kill the strongest man? Give it up." Hut the work went on until Speke and Grant and Baker found the two lakes which are t lie soarceofwhat was called the White Nile, aud baptized these two lakes with the names of Victoria and Albert. These two lakes, filled by great rainfalls and by accumulated snows from the mountains, pour their waters, laden witn agricultural wealth such as llesfces no othir river, on down over the cataracts, on between frowning moun tains, on Letwieu cities living aud cities dead, on for 4,000 miles and through a continent. But the While Nile would do little for Egypt if this were alL It would keep its banks and Egypt would remain a desert, llut from Abyssinia there comes what is called the i.lue Nile, which, though dry or nearly dry half the year, under tremendous raius about the middle of June rises to great inomeiitum, and this Blue Nile dashes with sudden iutlux into the White Nile, which in consequence rises thirty feet, v.ud their combined waters inundate Egypt with a rich soil which drops on all the fields and gardens as it is con ducted by ditches, and sluices, and canals every whither. The greatest dani- iijre that ever came to Egypt came by the drying up of the river Nile, aud the greatest blessing by its healthful aud abundant flow, 'ihe famine iu Joseph's time came from the lack of tufneient inundation from the Nile. Not enough .Nile is drouth, too much Nile freshet aud plague. The rivers of the earth are the mothers of its" prosperity. If by some convulsion of nature the Miss issippi should be takeu from North America, ortheAmason from South America, or the Danube from Europe, or the Yenesei from Asia - what ueni ispiieric calamity 1 Still there are other . i 1 .1 .' . at, A BO VU HiM. Then I understood how the laud could brow of ll.e hills, Ull you of what I was nvera that could fertilize and save these Our own continent is irulched, is ribboned, is glorified by in iiumberable water courses, llut Egypt has only oue great river, and that is harnessed to draw all the prosperities of realms iu acreage semi-iunni.e What happens to the Nile, happens to KtfTDt The nilometer was to me very suggestive as we went up and down iti damp atoue steps and saw the pillar marked with notches telling just now bleb or low are the waters of the Nile. TVh.ii the Kile larisinir. four criers every morning run through the city announcing how many feet the river has riaen ten feet, fifteen feet, twenty feet, twenty-four feet and when the right height of water ia reached the gates of the canals are flung open and the liquid and refreshing benediction ia pronounced on all the land. As we atart where the Nile empties into the Mediteirannean sea we behold a wonderful fulfillment of prophecy, The Nile in very ancient timea uaed to liave seven mouths. Aa the great river ..rnuhMi the aea it entered the aea uneven different place. Isaiah pro Dlteaied: "The Lord ahali utterly de stroy the tongue of the Egyptian aea and ihall smite it in the seven streams." Tbe fact ia they are all destroyed but two and Herodotus said theae two re maining an artificial. Up the Nile we .hall mo: next of the way by Egyptli rail train and then by boat, and we ball understand why the bible gives such prominence to this river which is the largest river of all tie earth with mm exception. As ws slowly move up fee majestts rim I see on each t ank the wheels, the mbm the backets for irrigation, and fWniMu with bis footoo the treadle aft wheel that fetches up the water aathenfortftrUtM i m ' that passage in Deuter- be watered with l lie foot How do you j suppoie I felt when on the deck of that I steamer on the Nile I looked off upon the canals and ditches and sluices! through which the fields are irrigated by the river, and then read in Isaiah, j "The burden of Egypt; the river shall be wasted and dried up and they shall turn the rivers far away and the brooks j of defense shall be emptied and dried up; and they shall be broken in the pur- j poses thereof, all that make sluices and ponds for fish." That Thanksgiving morning on the Nile I found my text or today. Pharaoh in this chapter is compared to the dragon or hippopota 1 mui suggested by the crocodile that used to line the banks of this river. "Thus saith the Lord God: Behold, 1 am against thee Pharaoh, king of Egypt, the great dragjn that lieth in 'he midst of his rivers, which hath said my river is mine own, and I have made it for myself. But I will put hooks in thy jaws and I will cause the fish of thy rivers to stick unto thv scales, and 1 will bring tlice up out of the midst of thy rivers, and all the fish of rivers will will stick unto thy scales, and the Und of Egypt shall be desolate and waste; and they shall know that I am the Lord becaue he hath said the river is mine, and I have made it." On and up 1 11 you reaci Thebes, in scripture called the City of No. Hundred gated Thebes. A quadran gular city, four miles from limit to limit. Four great temples, two of them Karnac aud Luxor, once mountains of exquisite sculpture and gorgeous dreams solidified in stone Statue of Fameses II., 887 tons in weight and 75 feet high, but now fallen and scattered. AV'alls abloom with battlefields of centures. The surrounding hills of rock hollowed into sepulchres on the wall of which are chiseled in picture and hiero glyphics the confirmation of bible story in regard to the treatment of the Israelites in Egypt so that, as explor ations go on with the work the walls of these sepulchres become commen taries of the bible, the scriptures originally written upon parchment hei e cut into everlasting stone, i hebes mighty and dominant 500 years.; Then she went down in fulfillment of Ezekiel's prophecy concerning the City of No, which was another name for Thebes: "I will cut off the mul titudes of No." Jeremiah also proph esied: "Thus saith the Lord, I will punish the multitudes of No. I his city of Thebes and all the other dead cities of Egypt iterate and reiterate the veracity of the scriptures, telling the same story which Moses and the prophets told. Have you noticed how God kept back these urehological conformations of the bible until our time when the air Is full of unbelief j about the truthfulness of the dear old book? Ho waited until the printing prsss had been set up iu its perfected shape, and the submarine cable was laid and the world was intelligent enough to appreciate the testimony and then he resurrected the dead cities of the eartli, and commands them say ing: "Open Jyour long sealed lips and speak! Memphis and Ttebes! is the bible true?" "True!" seaponded Mem phis and Thebes. 'Babylon! is the book of Daniel truer responds Bablyon. lining of Palestine and Syria! Is the new testament true V "True!" respond the ruins aU the way from Joppa to tbe Dead sea, and from Jerusalem Damascus. What a Mercy that .this testimony of the dead cities should come at a time when tbe bible is es pecially assailei Two great nations, Egypt and Greece, diplomatized and almost came to battle for one book, a copy or scnyiua. Ptolemy great library at Alexandria there was no copy .Aacblus. Ihe Egyptian king sent up to Athens, to borrow tbe book and make a copy of it. Athena demanded a deposit of 17.70O as security. The Egyptian king received the book but refused to return that which he had borrowed, and so forfeited tlie tl7,70J. The two nations rose in contention concerning that one book. Beautiful and mighty book indeed! But it is a book of horrors, the dominant idea tliat we are the victims of hereditary influences from which there ia no escape, and that fate rules tbe world and although the author does tell of Prometheus, who was crucified on tbe rocks for srmosthy for mankind a powerful suggestion of the sacrifice of Christ in later years, it is a very poor beok compared with tbe book which we hue- to our hearts because n coniaius our only guide in life our only comfort in death and our only bope ior a oiiss- immortality. If two nations could afford to struggle for one copy of iBschylos, how much more can an nations afford to struggle for the possessions and triumph or. tue uoiy scriptures? t notice the voice of those ancient dties is hoarse from tbe exposure oi forty centuries, and they accentuate .lowly with lips that were palsied for ana. but aU together those cities aloof the Nils intone yaws wore, fMiitwf old. and it is hard for aa to speak. Wa were wise long bsfors Athens teemed bar tot hatoo, Ws sseiew ships whlls yst navigation was nbora, Tae in grandeur and of what 1 am coming down to be. We sinned and we ieu. Cur learning could not save us See those balf-oblileraed hieroglyphics ou yonder wall. Our architecture could not save us. To the printed columns of Phiue, and the shattered temple of Esneh Our heroes could not save us. Witness Menes. Diodorus, Barneses and Itolemy. Our gods Amnion and Osiris could not save us. See their fallen temples all along the 4,0.0 miles of Nile. Oh, ye modern cities get some other God; a God who can help, a God who can pardon, a God who can sae Called up as we are for a little while to give testimony, again the sands of the desert will bury us. Aahes to ashes, dust to dust!" And as these voices of prophyry and granite ceased, all the sarcophagi under the hills re sponded, "Ashes to ashes!" and the capital of a lofty column fell, grinding itself to powder among the rocks and responding, "Dust to dust." . MR FARM DEPARTMEM. The speaker knew of Tansy water (Mark ! t'm is recommended as t i ... m- i-r Til destroyer oi i if. Where tansy grow in large quantities it will not cost much to try the remedy. . UM to be better than hogs for the purpose of picking uP the ,wind .... r,.i,ard. that is if the trunks bv wire The National Cloth of Ireland, As far back as the history of Ireland can be traced in writings mention is made if a coarse woolen cloth woven by the people of the country and known to them as frieze. The name is said to be drawn from the ancient Frisa in the Netherlands whence possibly the art of making the fabric was derived. So remote however is the period when frieze was first made in Erin that no one can tell when or where or by w hom it as originally spun. Century after century so long aj that the mind of nian runneth not to the contrary ic has been the national cloth of Ireland the distinctive dress of patriot peasant and peer, and since the seventeenth century and outward badge oi me people's aspirations for nationality. Donohoe's Magazine. breeders and now had only FohmH Footprints in Connecticut. . Several footprints ol reptiles of various dimensions have lately been discovered about three miles from Holyoke, upon the rock In G. L. Bosworth,s quarry, near the shore of the Cinnecticut river, which have caused considerable excitement and elicited many inquiries. The e discoveries occur not unfre quently. more than 12,000 such foot- marks having already been brought to light and, iu fact, it is well known throughout the scientific world that the uew red sandstone of the Connecticut valley, which extends about 110 miles fiom north to south and averages about twenty miles in width from east to west, is one of the most prolific of fossil prints. Slabs of this stone, having up on them the wonderful indentations, can be found in almost all the muse ums of this country and Europe. Springfield Republican. The Spouse In a Fish with a Stomach. The. sponge is perhaps one of the most curious of fish although several eminent naturalists ef the past have maintained that it is not. One naturalist says that the animalcule of the sponge is a stomach, without arms very simple very elementory in short an animal all stomach. The innumer able canals in the sponge are at once its digestive organs and breathing pores, li a sponge is uruuu wu " will be seen that the pores of two different sizes. In the living atate the water containing the particles of food in Mintttantiv beiiiB absorbed by the small holes aud is discharged by the larger the food being retained. The number of species of sponges at present known is very Urge. In 1S86 Dr. Bowerbank described nearly 200, and several others have since been dis covered. Sponge fishing at the present time takes place in the Grecian Archi pelago. London Tit-Bita. The Nutmeg Tree The nutmeg ia the kernel of the fruit of several species of trees grow ing wild in Asia, Africa and America, The cultivated .nutmeg tree is from fifty to seventy-five feet high and pro duces fruit for sixty years. Tbe fruit is of the size , and appearance of a roundish pear, yellow in color. Tbe fleshy part of the fruit is rather hard and resembles candied citron. Within is the n'it, enveloped in tbe curious yellowish red aril known to us as mace. Up to 1796 the Dutch being in possession of the islands producing tlie only valuable verity of the nutmeg jealously tried to prevent the carrying of the tree or a living seed of it into any tetrritory Independent of Dutch rule. Foods aud Beverages. Au Old Maids' Society. Thirty years ago and more fifty. ladWw of the First Church of Milford formed a society of old maids, every one of whom vowed that she would never marry. Each member paid five dollars on admission, the interest on the nrincipal thus raised to be expendea in annual dinners while the principal Uself was to go to tbe member wno re mained unmarried tbe longest In tbe three decades which have succeeded all but fiftesn of the original fifty have married, and as the storms of sixty winters bar whitened the bair of the faithful It looks as if they wooM stick. It it ia a question who will oumvs au ihe others ana receive we i wblcb new aasoants to nearly 11,000.- Xew Harm raSadJua. ... foll.ir. the orchard, that r.t n,A te are protected screens. Hon H. B. Curler of Kalb county Illinois who was butter making Instruc tor for some time in the dairy school of Wisconsin has been engaged to occupy nositionin the Vermont dairy school this winter. The dairymen that have brought .1 1 . , n.mA 111 pnui rnund aoumi iv. lllibtl vvr m m .:n fti.r thft niUIlsE V I rum nuw mi a-- -o - orratulatiug themselves: ,........,.ti make butter a little above summer cut and " at winter prices. It is always easier to go down a hill than to climb it. It isalways easier to run a cow down in milk than to bring her up again. It is always easier to make a scrub out of a thoroughbred than to make the equal of a thorough bred out of a scrub. It is custom in tlie east along the sea coast to haul up barrels of brine for the purpose of showering with it the cabbage plants and thus destroying the green cabbage worm. This is god but salt water should be applied while the worms are young and tender. Teach the cow as you want her to continue. We have found it a gr-at nuisance to accustom a cow to expect lipr fl at the time when one sits down to milk. If you do uot give it she is very likely to show her dissatisfaction in a most emphatic manner aud if you grve the feed she is constantly reaching for it much to tne discomfiture of the milker. The dairy commissioner of New Jer sey says that upon investigation he has found 1 hat oleomargarine is almost universally used at the seaside resorts such as Ocean Grove, Atlantic City and Long Branclu It was served up on the tables of the hotels and in the cottages as pure butter and was brought in trunks hat-boxes, wash hammers ni n like to eHcaue the eye ot me law. V'tirm Tmirnul OilOteS SOIIIB OII6 88 savine tliat he has found molasses very ffei tntl in destrovinir caterpillars, lie smears it over the nests and adjoin ing linius and says that the insects cannot travel through it and he likes it better than "lighted torches, kerosene, soapsuds whale-oil soap or even tne thumb and finger. J:ut what we would like .o know is does not the remedy cost more than the disease ? At this time of the year many fields are being manured preparatory to being turned up by the plow. One of the most common mistakes is careless ness in spreading the manure. To get the best results possible from the fertilizer it must be spread out very finely and not left in great or small lumps; for in that case part of the surface receives not enough manure and other parts to much. This is a detriment in either case. Thining the manure will require some extra labor but It will more than repay the offort put forth. j different places. instances wnere :ii ries twenty-five. It i aff to estimate the l)8s at from to 40 per cent. The breeders who have pigs for market this fall will be lucky. Ijwd T Web rr Mrwkrtl.. 1 was recently talking with a Ment who lives only two miles from Mr. C. and who marketed last year 500 worth of strawberries from an acre and one half and he told me that his crop would have been more satisfactory and yielded more money if the laud had been poorer. It was a piece which had been heavily manured for cabbage and onions for several years and the growtb ,,f f.iliare wa; excessive and the fruit dirticult to ffet to u avi t ' - market six miles away, in perfect shape. The varities are Bubach and Haveland polleiiized with Jessie and Glendale. the softness to an over- supply of nitrogenous manure In the soil or the same cause which makes wheat lodge. Had his field been pianieu to early potatoes then sowed to wheat or stocked with clover, plowing under ti,u in,T plover next sorine. and then ..i.,tU,i m .tra wherries Drobably 2W busbies ot potatoes and thirty of wheat jer acre could have bfen taken o!T without at all impairing the soil for strawberries. Mr. Terry who by three years rotation of potatoes, wheat and clover gives no opportunity to the white grub plants strawberries or a rich clover sod and manures but slightly so as not to lodge the wheat which follows the strawberries the latter being planted in a corner of the potato field. .Mr. T. gets very success ful yields of strawberries in this way on land that produces one year with another twenty-eight or thirty bushles of wheat per acre, so this is a very good gague for the requisite fertility of strawberry ground.-Vick's Magazine for June. WOIEN'S DEPARTMENT. A Milking Kith i The milking machine receutlv inven ted and patented says the 1 arming World was shown in operation twice daily at the royal show at Doncajtler last week. Three cows were provided by the society to afford the public an opportunity of witnessing the much talked of machine at work and also to all the society to form au opinion as to its real worth. Not withstanding the fact that the invention has many preju dices and skepticisms to overcome it created a very favorable impression amongst the large crowds that continu ally thronged the stand. Amongst the many noted personages who in spected the machine at work where the I rince and i'rincess of wales who wit nessed the operation with apparent Interest. We have little doubt but this machine has a succtssful future before it. It performed I'a work so satisfactory as to earn an award of a silver medal from the royal society. The Incubator. The incubator must not be delayed If you expect to use one. Hatching ihould begin in November and may xtend until April but the earlier now fho better if high priced broilers are to goon the market as tuey oiten bring 75 cents each during March, April and May while In June and July the larger sizes also bring good prices. The main point here is to urge the importance of beginning early. Even if only to experiment it will not be lost hours with the operation of an in cubator for tbe "old hen'' will not sit at a time when you wish her to do so. UM laa batt Salt. It is ono of tbe queerest things in the world how often you see In the dairy room of the man who pays thousands of dollars for his blooded cows end per haps has hlj cow stable and dairy bouses buiit after classic architectural designs small five or ten pound bags of salt brsudoc Sm Jones Light of the World, or oven more laminar name f the nearest cross roads grocer. Does he not kuow that wholesale deal era in salt buy up large quantities of job lota of all kinds of salt except the best and then pack It in little blue lettered bags in any brand or name tbe purchaser may desire? Does he not kuow that this Is the beat way in the world to get into his butter all tbe ob jectionable articles that salt is ever known to contain ? If he does not it ia time be was learning and buy his salt from those old established manufact urers who hare a reputation to protect New Dairy. A Steart M( Cm. ilr. W. 1L Lamblnc of Des M olnes (who has travelled extensively over the Mate spoke of "lbs Pig Crop of ItJBl." Tbs crop Is abort for saveral causes inrsissrs were anonoi issd in some .pUostand redneed the stock of females. Tbodaaip early spring caused heavy jleasB sreeB each eausss as thumps or ttacaana et Tae lossless. Advances in Science. Antimony is found extensivly iu I'or- Uigal, the largest beds being situated near Itraganza. An electr.c flying machine was re cently made to rise to a height of .0 feet and fly about 400 yards. Sawdust and shavings, when reduced to powdered charcoal, are now used in wine to absorb unpleasant odors. A French electrician lias gotten up a device by which he can send 150 type written words per minute over a single wire. A great microscope that is being built at Munich will under ordinary condi tions magnify 11,000 aud in special cases 16,000 diameters. Recent improvement in telegraphy enable certain companies to transmit 100 words for cents and realize a handsome profit An alloy of gold and aluminum tins recently been made. Its color la a most beautiful purple, and it will be valuable in making up jewelry. Besides the large planets which re volved about the aun, over 250 others have been discovered and catalogued, and science is daily adding to this list Telescopic steel masts or rods are to be used in lighting the public squares in Brussels. The object ot this system f is to preserve the beauty of the paij j in the daytime. A new aluminum alloy, with titanl-' um, is being manufactured in I'ltUburg. it sells at from 25 cents to 91 per pound more than pure aluminum. it is very hard and is in excellent ma terial for making tools. About 10 per cent of titanium is used. Further tests of fiberlia, the product of common fiax straw, show that to a certain extent it has not only valuable textile properties of itself, but also as a substitute for cotton or wool; it is claimed in fact, that 25 ner cent of the Oberlia, with 7 i per cent of wool, made Into broad-cloth, lives a oroduct abso lutely more valuable than if made of wool alone-that it is the real strength of the cloth that is enhanced, It Is more impervious w water, is wanner and on account of iu tenacity and flexibility, A pretty ulster is oi cnenille cloth in black and white, with the hood and cape Mned iu black velvet lowels, especially the plain lm.B hemstitched ones, hsve taken to them selves added inches this autumn. J'earl gray gloves with rough edpes and wide bla. k or white stitching are considered more elegant for street eai than the pure white. Of all the shapes, tlie very long and perfectly round, loosely flowing cape it perhaps the most graceful The hm will circulate rather freely beneath it, but who will care for that? It is pretty. Tbe watch paper weight is something of a novelty. It Is more suited to a man's desk than the boudoir kavenport as it is very massive and solid. Th timepiece is sunk In brass, usually a plain heavy piece with polished fiimti. Fine lingerie is plainer In that it is not lace trimmed, but its cost ii kept up with exquisite needlework. Fiuc wide frills worked at the edge by bana In French knots In red, blue, mauve, and heliotrope Is a new garniture. TU frills are put on very deep and fulL Yellow cloth skirts appear ou French costumes roadb with dr brown or green princesse overdresses, slashed to the waist and edged with brown fur. The yellow skiitsars neatly covered with brown or green silk !s)utatiie, braiding with a roll of fur at the ex treme edge. How la Col US' Art I.I Ic Coram. No room ought to hnve more than . . two corners li you expecno n.veu pretty. Get rid of oue by a four leaved screen, in front of which your lounge will be very much in place, i na seen a lovely con er treated in this way. The screen is coveied with sntrmi silkaliue In soft cream and wood color, the lounge is a bamboo affair with cool, thin pillows, covered with grass cloth. At the head of the lounge stands an oiu rosewood chest with brass bandies, in which the family silver used to be kept fifty years ago. It has a few favorite books on it now and a reading lamp. The flat where you must go to admitc this comer was designed by a man with a soul above closets. So tbe Innocent loekiug screen coticeals a lot of trunk; aud a length of stove-pipe. Fill up another corner with a lot of drapery and set there a small table, covered with pictures of everyone of your family, from grandpa to the baby. Dout let a single outsider show his face there, uot even If he is engaged to one oi me girls. It is a pretty Idea and rapidly growing In favor. Beisdes its dainty senUmeut it is a great Bourse of con versation and will draw pleasant re marks from the most Impossible visitor There is pretty sure to be a door In the third corner, so don't pay any attention to it, but put your easie.-t chair in num ber four. and. if by a window, u win u instead of an eyesore, tne piuj others tbe most desirable. of Indeed the man who can resist a girl in this season in her 0era cloak of mauve plush, lined with sHk to match, will be euner souue&M ui wv-r- with the hideous coutrast made by his own stupid, prosaic black coat and white shirt front that be wauls to go away on a vacation until some kind brave soul inaugurates for men a stylo of dress that will be more artistic and suited to the sumptuousnesa of tbe girl . tl.U he elects to escort ur course, nutans velvet coats, satin waistcoat, delicious lace frills that seem to breathe fourth the courtly grace that has become adead letter in the days of modern at tire. He will also have to don knee breeches and wear jeweled shoe buckles.' 1 leave the suggistion to work. What man has the courage or artistic sense to take up the gauntlet t Balzac, the keenert anatomist ot woman, says that iu a woman's selec lion of color Is to be found the keynote of her character. If you have courage you may change your favorite hue if it contains too much self betrayal, after, you read that be thinks the woman ; i r x "i nnre or green Is quarrelsome. :. .AlUa Lata nr who CO imu pvK j"'" " clad In black without cause are not to be trusted. Whits should indicate co-. quetry. Gentle and thoughtful women prefer pink. Tearl gray la the color of women whoConawer meowi , fortunate. Lilac is the shado particu-( larly affected by over ripe beauties; therefore, according to Balzac, lilac hats are mostly worn oy mower. their daughters marriage day and by women more than forty years oio they go visiting. cementing property and electrical aeV Dasiveness noreiiadoes notlmuart ore. servaUvs qualities to the woof andin ersased durability. to tbe cloth, but lav pane u ine wnoie a sums anj nnistv not otnerwiss attainable. By tbe use of the camera, with power ful Ulescopes, a new and very large I crater has been shown open the saoon's It may startle you a little when you come to be fitted for the gown to be told that you must get rid of your hips hlhlsseesoo. Of courssyou canm-v- tbem plaued off or the bones crusneu with some slight Incooveuieuoes result ing, but you can couseutto bare your waist that you hsve been squesting In padded out a Utile, which will produce the straight outline now absolutely necessary to a front rank in tl proces sion. If you are a very ali fW, w much tbe betUr-you can "Wm the straight up and down proportioned girt, nmtpod eut U t i i - i i ii i'i f e ri ttt " 1 !.C txt2Llut5 .hi ,