The Sioux County journal. (Harrison, Nebraska) 1888-1899, March 17, 1892, Image 4

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    TALkAiib 6 bM
... , ..,,,,,, have been favored of fortune, or, as I
.K.010..: :Mrvat it, fftv9red of God,
r.-eo, of aCiuence ai.J hi
' . . . : I
posi. .oir aim, mat u i
If there re those
here today who
A,.. H , n,x hin nnd nil VOU fcX
Tr..a. ' sunruuei u -
Ilig text ul
the ha.f was not told me.
hotama had resolvea k jenu., - bleS8rd thj8
It-m v!iou'd be the renter of all sacred 1 e-1 w , , ... . ,.,.rij,
rirul inn fiiinmercial magnificence, i Jueen of e 8-
He set himself to wort and monopo-
lizea the surrounding uescn as a ... r 1.11
6 iariA Vmidnrnvna oueen of Kusaia
way for his c..r;.va:is. lie built me
city of 1 almyra around one of the
principal wells of the east, so that all
the long trains of merchandise from
the east were obliged to stop there, pay
toll and leave part of their wealth in
the hands of bolotnon's merchants. He
manned the fortress Thapsacus at the
chief lord i f the Euphrates, and put
under guard everything that passed
there. The three great products of
Palestine wine pressed from the rich
est c usters and celebrated all the
I am glad that Christ
,.,. i.ui i.iq fripnrtu in all aifts r-liza
i lth Christina, oueea of Prussia
i fariR Feodorovna. uueen of
Mar e, empress of Farnce; Queen lo
: tilda, leading her husband and 3,u00 of
1 his armed warriors to Cbri"tiani bap
; tism: Elizabeth of Burgundy, giving
i her jeweled glove to n beggar, and scat
tering great fortun-s among the dis
tressed; Prince Albert, singing 'Rock
1 of Ages" in Winsor Castle, and gueeu
Victoria, incognita, reading the scrip
tures to a dying pauper.
I bless Cod that the dav is coming
when rovaltT will bring ail its thrones
music all its harmonies.
m-ny us have started.
W-rt march, but we urge
came!.. What though our feet be
blisu-red with the way:-1 We are
hastening to tin-palace. We take ou.
loves and bop-s aid Christian ani:o:.
as fraiikincei.se urni myrrh ai.d
to the great king.
. - i . i . I m t l-r 111
n nie '
" " "iDJIDlf nUPARTMKN dicatiou of garget, but .ho
ou r H Hill VIA Xli nil..hivl f rising U cream
was at fault, t Xi kuuwing uw
vr;: AFFAIRS Of r
i or churn- v i'
in:
. and
and
1.1 ..n :.. ,..,. Vw.l .inn.
worm uvei on wiitiu m mai vi i . ,,.,.,,,...
tr, is the enure substitute for butter i pa.nt.ng all Us pictures '
. , , , i , , n. i all its statuary, and architecture all its
mud lard and was pressed from the f .,',,, i im Kent res: and
olive branches issitil every tree in the j i"'. " w ,
noil well, and honev 1,18 1UWUS mD ro11"
country becai
which was t' uitire substitute for
sugar these i, .. -e great products of
the c untry Solumon exported and re
ceived in return fruits and precious
woods and the animals of every clime.
He weal down to . ziou geber aud
ordered a flee tof ships to be constructed,
oversaw the workmen, and watched
the launching of the flotilla which was
to go out on more than a year's voy
age, to bring home the wealth of the
then kBown world. He heard that the
Egyptian horses were large and swift,
and king-maned aud round-limbed, and
be resolved to purchase them, giving
$85 a p ece for them putting the best of
these horses in his own stall, and sell
ing the surplus to foreign potentates at
great profit.
He heard that there was the best of
timber on Mount Lebanon, and he sent
out 180,000 men to hue down the forest
,nd drag the timber through the moun
tain gorges, to construct it into rafts to
be floated to Joppa, and from thence
to be drawn by ox teams twenty-five
miles across the land to Jurusaletn.
ile heard that there were beautiful
ilowers in other lands. He sent for
them, planted them in his own ganiens,
and to this very day there are flu. vers
fount: ,n the ruins of that city such as
' to be found in no other part of l'.iles-
' tine, the lineal decendants of the very
flowers that Solomon planted.
Stand back now and see this long
' train of camels coming up to the king's
gate, and the ox trains from Egypt,
gold and silver and precious stones,
and beasts of every wing, aud fish of
every scale! See the peacock strut uu
der the cedars, and the horsemen run,
and the chariots wheel! Hark to the
orchestra! Gaze unou the dunce! Not
stopping to look into the wonders o
the temple, step right on to the cause
way, and pass up to Solomou's palace.
Of ceurse the news of the otflueace
of that place went out everywhere by
every caravan and by wing of every
ship, until soon the streets of Jerusa
lem are crowded with curiosity seekers.
What is that long procession approach
ing Jerusalem? I think from the
pomp of it there must be royalty In the
train. I smell the breath of the spices
which ar brought as present, and I
hear the shout of tha drivers, and I see
the dust-covered caravan showing that
they come from far away. Cry the
news up to the palace. The queen of
Sheba advances. Let all the people
come out to see. Let the mighty men
of the land come out on the palace cor
ridors. Let Solomon come down the
the stairs of the palace before the queen
her alighted. Shake out the cinnamon
and the saffron, and the calamus and
the frankincense, and pass it into the
treasure house. Take up the diamonds
until they glittes in the sun.
The queen of Sheba alights. She en
ters the palace. She sits down at the
banquet. The cup-bearers bow, the
meats smokes. You hear the the dash
of waters from the molten sea. Then
she rises from the banquet, aud walks
through the conservatories aud gazes
on the architecture, and she asks Salo
mon many strange questions, and she
learns about the religion of the Heb
rews, and she then and there becomes a
ner Aanl of the Lord, Uod.
She is overwhelmed. She begins to
think that, all the spices she brought
and all the precious woods which are
intended to be turned into harps and
psalteries ami into the railways for the
causeway between the temple and the
palace- ahe liegins to thins that all
these presents amount to nothing In
such a place, and she is almost ashamed
that she has brought them, and she
says within herself: "I heard a great
deal about this wonderful religion of
the Hebrews, but I find it far beyond
my highest anticipations. 1 must add
more than 50 per cent to what has been
related. It exceeds everything that I
could have expected. The bait the
half was not told me."
Learn from this subject what a beau
tiful tbing it ia when social position
and wealth surrender tnetn selves to
Ood. When religion comes to a neigh
borljood the first to receive it are the
women. Some men say it ia because
theyre weak minded. I say it i be
cause they have quicker perception of
what if right, more ardent affection and
capacity for sublime emotion. After
the women have received the gospel
IthM all the distress and the poor of
(both aexee, thoee who have no friends,
smut Jesus. Last u all come the
ITnls the
house-i during the exhausting a.iuw,.
a ! ,ng feriods of WiDler weather and pro-
iviued with roots aud wen prep-.
.1 . 1 . ... I. ,,lyf H-
feud the work up to tl.e pala.-e n.ui footl 1B gullicieiit variety, uic
we are cuuiiuir. and that ue are weary ,, rallidlv iucreaw ua the snow lnoU
! ... .i ,.-. .wr; The km ii.. i.-.. ti. lus from exposure on
Ul fcuc uiftii " v - --- iewKim-"-- - - .
will come out and say: "Welcome to . amaire farm is very great, eq ual-
t he palace; bathe in tic- Aale.-s, re,jg
eline on these banks
friend, when heaven
it wiU be a greater su prise TLian that ilt s,,r )ltr. stuuted and unequal to the
Jesus on the thione. rind e umdo like u,1(,urlulilt.a for prolitable production
i.in.i i ..nr I hrisiiiiii menus sui- ....., in l ie owner mmu
mm. - - toaaieiioiu - - -
sounding us iu glorv! All our sorrows
and tears and sins gone by forever
The thoiiauds of thousands, the one
Miucire'i aim iony ami ioui iu, jj, pcri'x
The rrji! f....
. . i - . . . it- --vrifl
upri., aF ""7" .. f. . ToU Uve on hand, it is irupo.u parded dunnm-. "
live sioc . ,,, ;.n,(.lrt tor bulltrw" d,,i,i. ..
josajr uiv.. - --- - "I'liaa, j. .
Silage, clover tiay, cu:, com . ier millinery, '
gruud oau. ground (as, linseed meal, lavish, profusion v,'f
glutteu u eal, com meal, cottonikl U8wj iu rf, m f
me.il and wheat bran are all good in ,,d wiU be aU.u.t r
... i. ..1. n miieJ nroiH-rlr with ti. ... .. c
liien J'i.' , J .v.i,,0 in jj
-Aalers, r-!jIlg at least one-half the summers
i..i et, my riie stmk usually enter upon
bur:;: upon us w ii 0t favorable condition
other IoihI to make balanced ration. aild gujpure n M
a ;iuteii meal ha a higher feeding d A lencon, point 1
;(,e than cottonseed meal. t. Cotton. Mtli ,)l(J -
swd meal will n.'i cause ga.get. uuh-M Hreth and rjb, '
... ,-. - .. ........ ....r.k-a ill. r.. . . l.
. . . . . I ... ..1. iMi ....
! MniL iin ii oring iuc"u"
! and cold raiiih ;u-e rhaps tlie most
I disastrous to the stock giower of any
h! ol the year. A lime .11
fa e veils is
and white the 'f
net known m u (T!
Among other tr,n,.."1
in ribbon
promised a revivil ,.i .? 5
. .... . U'S
iuiiiiz a
in long lines
advance, frankincense filling tue a,r
and the camels laden with gold, shall
approach Jerusalem, and the gates
shall be hoisted and the great burden of
sjlendor shall be lifted into the palace
of this greater than Solomon.
Again, my subject teaches me what
is earmstiiess in the search of truth.
Do you know where Sheba was? It
was in A byssina, or some say In the
southern part of Arabiu Felix. In
either case it was a great way off from
Jerusalem To get t'rorn there to
Jerusalem she had to cioss a country
infested with bandits, and go across
blistering deserts. Why did not the
queen of Sheba stay at home and send
a committee to inquire about this new
religion, and have the delegates report
in regard to that religion and wealth
of King Solomon? She wanted to see
for herself, and hear for herself, she
could not do tbis by work of committee.
She felt she had a soul worth ten
thousand kingdoms like Sheba, and she
wauted a robe richer than any woven
by oriental shuttles, add she wanted a
crown set with the jewels of eternity.
Ilring out the camels. Put 011 the
spices.
Gather up the jewels of the throne
and put them on the caravan. Start now;
no time to be lost. Load on :he camels.
When I see that caravan, dust covered
weary and exhausted, trudging ou
across the desert and among the
bandits until it reaches Jerusalem
I say: "There is an earnest seeker
after truth."
Again my subject impresses me with
the fact that religion is a surprise to
anyone tha gets it. The story of the
new religion in Jerusalem, and of the
glory of King Solomon, who was a
type of Christ that story rolls 011 and
on, and is told by every traveler
coming back lroui Jerusalem. J. he
news goes on the wing of every ship
and with every caravan, and you kilo
a story enlarges as it is retold, and by j
the time that story gets dow n into the 1
southern part of Arabia, Felix, and I
the Queen of heba hears it, it must be
a tremendous story. And yet this
queen declares in regard to it, although
she had heard so much and had her '
antici patious raised so high the half
the half was not told her.
So religion is always a surprise, to any
one that get it The story of grace
an old story. Apostles preached It with
rattle of chain; martyrs declared it
with arm of lire; death-beds have
affirmed it with visions of glory, and
ministers of religion have sounded it !
through the lanes, and the highways, I
and the chapels, aud the cathedrals, j
It has been cut into stone with chisels I
and spread on the canvas with pencil;
and it has been recited in the doxology
of great congregations. And yet when '
a man first comes to look on the palace '
of God's murcy, and to see the royalty j
of Christ, and the wealth of this
banquet and the luxuriance of his 1
attendants, and the loveliness of his i
face, and the joy of his service, he ex-'
claims with prayers, with tears, with j
sighs, with triumphs: "The half the 1
half was not told me."
I appeal to those in ihis house who
are Christians. Compare the idea you I
had of the Christian life before you I
became a Christian with the appre- I
ciation of that joy you have now since
you have b.-cuni.. it f!i:-i?' ;::i . I -, I
are willing to attest before au?e and i
men that yon never in the davs of your !
spiritual bondage had any appreciation j
of what was to come. You are ready
today to answer, and if 1 gave you. an j
opportunity in the midst of this!
assemblage you would speak out and
say in regard to the discoveries you
have made of the mercy and the grace
and the godliness of God: ' The half
has not been told me."
Well, there is coming a greater
surnrim In
r - j .bvw gicaLeij
surprise than anvthf nor I hav
W 9 s- "VllvilVUi
Heaven is an old story. Everybody
talks about it Children read about it
in their Sabbath school book. A ged
men put on their spectacles to study it
esay it is a harbor from the storm
We call it our home. We say it is the
house of many mansions. We weave
together ail the sweet, beautiful deli
cate eqhilrant words; we weave them
Into letters, and then we spell it out
in rose and lily and amaranth. And
yet that place Is going to be a surprise
to the most intelligent Christian. Like
the queen of Sheba. The report has
com to us from the far countr and
the great multitudes that no man cau ( w renstest care should be ex-
number, will cry. world without end: : emM.j i maintain the Mgor and nor
"The half-the hall was nol told us"- t.0dji,i, 0i the domestic annuals,
i.. ..,..r 1,1,1) mid oroiectioii iroiii the
!" . . 7 ' ,
storms. .Mui'ii iiiiiungc i" -
foreii.u the stock to a sudden change
Muitnrr f Tod).
manners ol this world, like the 1
Tli
fashions of it, are constancy passing
away" (Hie hundred years ago men
had not to compete with steam and
electricity. They had time to bow,
they could afford to frame laborate
compliments, they could easi inter
rupt the ever tenor of their oct1. patious
to discuss the health and oomestic
movements of a friend s family. Now
we are all iu a hurry, and we must be
in a hurry or fall behinu the marching
order of the day. A very courteous
inan is a bore. Men rushing to the
tock exchange or the office cannot
stop to bandy bows anu polite family
inquiries.
Women decjierately in earnest with
their lives cannot be troubled with civil
platitudes which are common property,
though each would stop to ' 1 to a
few words meant for th. alone.
Words which mean nothin but polite
ness are now inexpressibly tiresome,
aud only maiden ladies with settled ih
coines have time for them, the buisy
world is content with a lev sentences
of good natured chaff, and passes on
without rellecting that chaff, eai'.y falls
into familiarity aud impertieitce.
Amelia E. Harr in I.ippin.; r'.l's
A IMIIKTIIU VOW.
ix Ultimate friends, three young
men aud three young women, 111 Louis
ville, two years ago. agreed that one
should not marry unless ihe others did.
A year later, one of the young men and
one of the young women became en
gaged to each other, but an the others
were yet apparently heart tre they
could not marry. Six mouths later an
other couple agreed to join their lots
for life, but then came trouble The
third young man was willing to marry,
hut the third young women was not.
This drove the other tw o couples nearly
wild, and they frantically reproached
the reluctant maiden for keeping them
out of happy matrimony. Finally she
yielded, and the three couples were
married, the justice of the peace who
performed the ceremony arranging
them before him in the form of a horse
shoe. A Doubtful (.'otill!uidt.
The following story, if it possesses
no other merit, has that of being true.
One evening a short while ago an old
domestic came to see her former mis
tress after an interval of over twenty
years. The latter, a very religious
person, presently interrupted the
interview, saying: "Now, Mrs
,we are going to have prayers. VTH1
you come too?"
"Dear me, my lady." said the old
servant, "do you still keep up the old
custom V"
Mistress (severely) -Certainly. 1
have had prayers every morning and
evening of my life ever since 1 saw you
last.
Uld servant (admiringly) WelL to
be sure, you are a persevering lady.
London Truth.
i...:ivi!v a iter a cow com -s 111
5, The Cyclone churn is concurred a
d good one, we beh.ve. t "earn
,nds butter should not h;ve any ' tang, if It
is made proi-eriy; 111 l.vt, 11 is hiiiiohi
imnossiblt to tell lirst class sweet cream
, .. .IK- ro.t oll:ililT ol ...:
uuiier 11 "in " e'jtio - h 1 ' moire rranrais y( ..
sour cre.im butter. The fault is either ripples and the liio,.,
in the way 01 111 110.
-,. Abortion may be caused by blos,
falls or injuries received lrom other
cattle, ihere is, also, a form w Inch is
called sporadic, and is belived to I
,111.1,1:1 irerin. When this kind gets mil I r.-.r!...! ... .,
" I - " " "II llif if,
into a herd, it is very hard to er.id.c.tle for bonnet tr.iigs 11 L,
which is full of sap and with but lilUe " - rru satin riW,, t
wurii is iuii o 1 . from the herd for at least ,,,1,, ,,..
nutrition at At it ' " ' " .".-or, to
Animal industry 111 this country has
not and cannot advance to the highest
... 11 ti.u st. . vi Kiitiiiii in ijiii it'u. tiuu me 1
point ol perlectiou until the root cellar;"' ' .1 .auze ribbon with
ninuio m'.i vnn-i.j -
from the dry lodUer ol ihe unci r
out upon the grass of ear.y spring
I, freer u u 1 ... .
" a- A tlOl.
moire called va, r tji t
of pearl efle-t, in Mpi
abletinls. Jnd,edv,n'
ribbon will preva.1
Noinf simp), tnt
One often has bmdis,
. ....... 1. 1 ut.il 1, ..1 Ik. lirtvl for four ii... ...1
i .uuiimn, '. - on iiis, iu ie lied jn
mouths. All litter and matter from clin a, U. I
COW
becomes as important a iact.-r 111 larui" "... , . , pnined flowers of mj
.,.!.. I I ul ! i k 1 1 1 IliH.il Will
economv a.s the product of the uit-oUow , , suminer like trimming,
.. ... ,j. 1.1 i.o r.w.tt flu , not cause it ; i,i..i 11, ,, 1. .,,
Or Ihe corii-ueiu. .iiiiouk in. iv 1 .... v uiiuugii an
sugar beet stands perhaps at the head. ' K- , colors, as cream
.111 .. . 1.. I..,llr n tli ! 1 ol.bun cm m t'BII Im tliud f TO III all ...
1 he yieiu IB iioi o , ; ..v. n,.,,. nupm 01
wertel but the nutritive value ia jr- apple barrel ith the one end covered are edged witli tiif i-.
haps as great per acre, with much less with lath and a door to admit of clean- black. J! ack dots
weight to handle. In the tliy a:fiio-1 ing and placing leeu tor uie oroou nu 01 point d enpnt ar .
sphere of our Winter climate, animab aud the old hen. At night and on wet t,e slightest colors.
fed wholly upon dry and often not very days apiece ol oil clotii can ue ar
nutritious provender, the system often ranged to shelter the front and be
becomes clogged for lack of sutlicieiit thrown back when not in use. It cau
moist'ire to carry ou the work of secre- easily removed from one place to or silk put away; tlmt sv
tion and excretion of the solids in j another, admitting of fresh surround- this spring to ad vnt,
sutlicieiit quantities to supply the ; mgs as often as deemed necessary. It into a skirt to be wurt
growth and waste of a proiitab.e grow j ig raised slightly from the ground by colored coat or j,im 1 K
ing animal, lieets puljied and mixed means of blocks 011 either id to avoid into a jacket to oe ors
with cut or choiqted hay, straw or corn j the least dampness. The inside of the skirt. The jacket t
stalks, nature 111 this direction. 1 hey ; barrel should be covered with Iresh is still most prevail
ii r,irt,ii.l,Mil riiitriiv.. onaiitv not utriL- in n moiierati mi uri t if T Wire Htreel hii t f c l..,.
aiav , vt 1. ...... - 1 J ' fc.. - - - - j - ' S . 1
. . ... . .-. ' t .i.i .. 1 1
found ill SUIIieieni qiianuues 111 some nelling in place Ol lain can aiao i usrii sinoKing j.iceis
jlher fols, for healthful vigor. Ihe and Isjust as good for th front, pos. doms in Ln.us .Wail.
prot ten elements are ready the medr Hibly I ter. The entrance boanl can more and more 0
;-inal qualities ol louds, In cause unlike be made about as shown by cutting away entir. ly wi
the starchy or carbonaceous elements the front bioct under the barrel, slant- skirt, ma y of i ,
which heal and dry 111 the system caus-' ing aud placing cieats 011 it, to allow having le eu lined th:
ing const. patioii, they seui rather to the chicks to get in and out easily. j When light fabric
gather muistiire and tims prevent dis- j foundation they t- M
-a.se and at thesaine tune add to the 1 " 1 - - to it. so the outside
, ...... 1 ... 1 : i. be milked clean, sava r leld V harm. . ., . .
uone anu n uscu ar ueveio iiiieiu wincii ? - leavtliir l ie loimd.-v
represents the vital forces of the animal , m ur"I- '""icing .sine
and hn.sM
-H."lioiuy j ricnesi one in me 101, auu leaving iiiiih
Farmers and stock growers study too ln ule uuu,,r 18 "ou,'e 10 ,114lur" 11181
little these subjects which mean so i""e is an ovemuppiy, wnereai sue w 111
much for profit and for ihe health and mju """- a sucn
comfort of domestic animals. Similar tu"K bh stripping too far, and cans
arguments might be advanced in favor inf the cow u iVe ,l0" iLS fa"1 M
n.na is secreieu, inus making a coi.
tinuous strip, er.
'1
id
,3K
of the silo.
In 1 hr ilKrd Larxe ICDfjUfb.
Are you keeping all the cows you Why ii wiui.
ought to keep ? If every cow owner in Reginald Jlarstoii h id deeri talking
this country could read that question j with Miss A exander for at leas,, two
and answer it correctly, the reply would - hours on the piazza, where Fred
Kiiiie plaiting or cru,
' The jKiloriaisc gni1
day suits, w hde tl
mod
wor
the youu;' girl, wn Uf
low necked viiu'jri
I popular full skirt h;i
tlie foot sIotH-d to li.- A
lirooklyu i a-lt
f BUItl, w hiJe thmrf
dihcation of li," ;w
ru for evening b;
A pretty spniif! W:
made of i arm it
What l Perfrc Xerk.
What is a perfect neck . This qnes
tion was put to many of the well
known authorities on tne art here by
the writer. In various respects as to
coloring they differed, but as to for
mation they thoroughly agreed. A
perieci iiecu musi ue twice as long as
lis circumference; that is a law of na
ture. If lacking plumpness of par
alell equalities it has awkward lines
and inharmonious expressions. The
poise of the neck Is not a matter of
cultivation. It is always a heritage,
like the shape of a finger or the forma'
tion of an ancle. You can improve ou
existing curves, but you can never uU
terly change them. New York Cor.
Pittsburg Leader.
S'i Ladylike.
Mr. Richard Redgrave, the artist,
records in his diary this amusing rec
ommendation from an Irishman up.
pointed to examine studenU compet
ing for medals: "I should also reccom-
mend Margaret for a reward.
JSeing very young, she naturally
missed the point of all questions in the
papers, but her answers were so lady
like that I think the medal should be
given to her," Argonaut
Am Hit,; aa Two Buss;.
Diamond importr-"Thia parcel Is
two carets short There must be a
leak somewhere. "
Stock clerk-"Very likely, sir. Every
tone in the lot has over fifty facets
Jewelers' Weekly.
oe iiiuie vast majority oi cases: 1 es (Mieelmgloii had presented him to the xMirhtly draped npS
we are Keeping as many us we ought to heiress. All his best powers had been princess May vox i
Keep, oui are nui Keeping as goixi as we exerieu 10 please ner, aim it was quite 8i;(j a wa!lo-!iJ W
might have. Well, just there is the evident that he wa mo-e than success- particular case a
trouble. We have cows enough ln this fill. As Wheelmgloii came out a t 1 1 takes the place of tos-S,
country. We arc not sure that it would o'clock into the fragrant sumuier air Great atl-iitum is iiflL'
1101 be c irrecl 10 say that we nave too of the night, Marston aros t to go.
many, but thousatiis of them are not' "Not yet, 1 hope." said Miss Alexan
the right Kind of cows. If we suppose der uetainingly.
that we Pre feeding our dairy cows as! "Ves. 1 have stayed too long already,
every dairyman should feed; feeding Ma, stou almost whispered, as he took
the best and feeding plenty, it is reason- j her hand.
.0, o suppose mat we uesire u.e best With R ghort gooJ nght ,0 ,)e - CHI18i(emJ wiui
Fo.u. v. tuv .oou. ihBj left Miss Alexander and Wheehngton part of the wardroi '
r, . ,.B yM 11 18 ; 0,1 ' Kown is exceed.t.jljf
any ulu .... w. consume as a gooa Wheelimzton took the nh.ir Xtfn 1 ,l fi-L'
t0"-, are,h?rdS lnth.i8.COU,,t7 Jtaoated and with the fa.i.Uiarif v above It h won. .
n cuusoiu anu me proceeds invested, 0fail0j fnend drew it 1 ,i,:i, i t In. tr.velii.ff cloak i
VJ
I :!3 Z
decoration of trswi-Jt JUL
these latter daji. Tl
that any ha f-wmpw-
enough to jaunt iW
routed, and no U
worn on car or iwf
an fir mm thev wnull irf in ...tv. tl.,. r.i I ..
.. . .. ... w,uv U(e woman
for the dairy, the owner Would double! nui,.,,,,,,
! ,
and treble bis prohts though l.emigtl0 Mr. Mamour.h, u'
not have a quarter as many cows as he Ki vt K
1 1 .. ii .... , , r , . Diyeijr.
in"
iuipnl-
appeariiig
garments, is
' like a circular,
velvet cove
"Not a great deal of a comr.!'.mi.n. The collar i in
...... . . . .. . f.. . i...i
the standard of the herd. That is the 1 " anM;u?r. '"ed banterring. j 'e wrP
road and only road to a good profit 1 y' ere ls" 1 m uch 10 say. l't
' 'you know."
Cloy., and ,..,,...,.., Com.,0.,.B. j ..(jt, f ,.,..,.,,.
Again we are asked if spontaneoui, ' "but you must have said
- .
for 1 never saw a man so
among V
bad before. He would feed away less
grain and yet get more money. Raise .
is of liuurf'J1
Uar, Kith if
ered "d' '
witb'1
stripe, and 11 aw
wear to cover a" tUbof-y
...1 RC
jr native wt
Vur tf our
iferous wjd li"1 .
combustion is possible in clover. We she Insisted
nnf.,,,, .... I,.l,ll.. . . t 1
Z 7 S W "re ear"e8t" ,10"-,,t P"t in find- th. islands in il 'f
zrtLzr: i,?-.ha?;, !,t v:tt .,,,4
" - lyuoniuil I m ttllW Klltfi I I U If an .. 1 I . ..ififtlT
' ' itBU KIHCeiUilY Ml Hi Kf .l,,.. iutA ittH M'"!
V
mure ueai in a mow nt . ivr h n .1 :- . . ,
i...,u. f n,.i ,i,ici, 11,. ci.rt 1 . 2? ... .... ...... """ .2
"' orieny. nf i arPHl arnm I
Tell me," she urged, "now that's a
tion seems directly traceable to spun.
tullilllllB IlAllll.llIllL.r. L- . ..
time since a real nice big brothor" and she took
we published a commui.icai in , i.. . anu " look
u i . , .
ntcnuujei;i iu whicii there was strong
evidence of the possibility. At mi'
events there are sections of the country
that will never be induced again to
mow clover hay until it is throughly
dried, and to thoroughly dry it is to in
jure iu value. If it becomes settled that
clover hay can getou a rampage and
et itself on lire, we fear that clover
growing will be abandoned tc a greater
or less extent, and that would be some
thing to be lamented. It is stated that
one farmer In Iowa put eggs m ,he
mow of clover hay and cooked it them
The clover had been pt in rather
green. But It is possible to cook an
egg in heat that would never develop
into combustion. (Still clover may be
sufficiently dried to save all its value
and yet not be to thoroughly dri. das
to Injure IU We do not apf rove of
putting clover Into the mow too green
even if It should never etUrttoanj
thing,'
must have been a great
u li v 1. . . . ...
uui i uiun 1 leu him any tblng.Tie
Insisted, without making any violent
efifort to take his hand away from hers.
"That is," he said after a moment,
"not much."
"Oh, but it
deal"
"No, It was only a word or two."
"1'shaw, she exclaimea snatching
her hand from his. 'you couldn't tell
him anything about me in a word or
two which could pos-ibly have had
any influence upon Lira."
It seems, however, my dear-Miss
Alexander that 1 bid," heaaid'exas
perHlingly. .
Nie Jumped up from her chair and
walked across th ,,!, wll.r. ,
Mood against, the rail pulling a honey
sue, l i o pieces. '
"ilow per er.l, Idiotic."
i.ii,.i..,i ....
iniowiiig me now
lloi.r. "W hut wu itv
"J told him you was very rich."
she crushed the flowers tinder her
foot and went into the boue.-Ltrolt
I ree rress.
he
re to
the
great
of which it is built
Llbocedrus iiecu
south, is known
from its fraaraui
ft'iinressus nutk
Monterey cypress i
if
rid
A 1
111 '
n
pa) have ais"
Atlantic tat-
viia- have 8',ll,lfl
Monthly.
)lflrrrt,J"'trEa
sidered a small foo y
girl In a bagelb'' aveiMfc
before a cusioii... ,t '--"7.1
igtuimr! I". T(
u , i ii ,.
The average U .B
ii,..oii i nave v-
"- -
feet that were
i.ulr nf iddia rubu".
i
I huvn one
tut another wl0
-mm a.
contrast, ln't f , - ti-l
a grown ,ron l ,
one or our ,,oy , ,
chiid'aalw '' .rV
Im.ks to WtlefJ
Tribune.
j
ml.
aa