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About The Sioux County journal. (Harrison, Nebraska) 1888-1899 | View Entire Issue (April 7, 1892)
I 1 - TALMAGE'S SERMON. Dr. Talmage text was taken from Deut vL, 1L "Only Og, king of Ba shan, remained of the remnant of Kiants; behold the beadstead wa3 a bed stead of iron; is it not in llablath of the children of Animon? Nine cubits was the leufct'i thereof and four cubits the breadth of it." Tho Btnrv nf trinnts is mixed With myth. William the ewiquerer was aid to have been of overtoweriug alti tude, but, when in after time his tomb was opened, his bones indicated that he had been physically of only ordinary size Roland the hero wa3 said to have been of astounding stature, but when his sepulchre was examined his armor was found only large enough to fit an ordinary man. Alexander the great had helmets and shields of enormous size made and left among the people whom he had conquered, so as to give the impression that he was a giant al though he was rather under than over the usual height of a man. But that in other days and lands there were real giants is authentic. One of the guards of the Duke of Brunswick was eight and a half feet high. I'iiny tells of a giant nine feet high and two other giants nine and a half feet. So I am not incredulous when I come to my text and find King Og a giant, and the size of his bedstead, turning the cubits of the text into feet the bedstead of Og the king must have been about thirteen and a half feet long, J udging from that the giant who occupied it was probably about eleven feet in stat ure, or nearly twice the average hu man size. Cyrus and Solomon slept on beds of gold, and Sardianapolis had ISO bed steads of gold burned up with him, but this bedstead of my text was of iron everythine sacrificed for strength to hold this excessive avoirdupois, this Alpa of bone and flesh. You say what a fighter this giant, King Og, must have been. Xo doubt of it. I suppose the size of his sword and breastplate corresponded to the size of his bed stead, and his stride across the battle field and the full stroke of his arm must have been appalling. "With an armed host he comes down to drive back the Israelites, wuo marching on from Egypt to Cannan. AVe have no particulars of the battle, but 1 think the Israelites trembled when they saw this monster of a man moving dowii to crush them. Alas for the Israelites! "Will their trouble never cease? What can men five five and a half feet high do against this worrior of eleven feet, and what can short swords do against a sword whose gleam must have been like a flash of lightning? The battle of Edrei opened Moses and his army met the giant and his army. The Lord of Hosts descended into the fight and the gigantic strides that Og had made when advancing into the battle were more than equalled by the gigantic strides with which he retreated. Huzza for trumphant Israel! Sixty fortified cities surrender to them. A '.and of in describable opulence comes into their possession, and all that is left of the gigantic king is the iron bedstead Xine cubits was the length thereof and four cubits the breath of it. Why did not the Bible give us the size of the giant instead of the size of the bedstead ? Why did it not indicate that tho man was eleven feet higli instead of telling us that his couch was thirteen and a half feet long? Xo doubt among other things it was to teach us that you can judge of a man by his surroundings. Show me a man's associates, show me a man's books, show me a man's home, and I will tell you what he is without your telling me one word about him. You can not only tell a man according to the old adage, "By the company he keeps," but by the books he reads, by the pictures he admires, by the church he attends by the places he visits. Moral giants and moral pigmies, intellectual pigmies, like physical pigmies may be judged by their surroundings. That man has been thirty years faithful in attendance upon churches and prayer meetings and Sunday schools and putting himself among intense religious associations. lie may have his im perfections, but he is a very good man. When a man departs this life you can tell what has been his influence in a community for good by those who mourn him and by how sincere and long continued are the regrets of his taking oft There may be no pomp or obsequies and no pretense at epitaph eology, but you can tell how high he was in consecration and bow high in usefulness by how long is his shadow when lie comes to lie down. What is true of individuals is true of cities and nations. Show me the free libraries and schools of a city, and I will tell you the intelligence of its people. Show mc its gallery of painting and sculpture, and I will tell you the artistic acivancoiueDt of its citizen). Show me its churches and I will tell you the moral and religious status of the place. From tha fact that Og's bedstead was thirteen mi J a half feet long, I con cluded tin giant himself was about eleven feet high. But let no one by this thought be induced to surrender unfavorable environments. A man can wako his own bedstead. ( hantrey and Hash Miller were born stoi.e jnar-nf, but the one became an frnmoiwl sculptor and the other a I'cnstian scientist whose name will never die. Turner, the painter in whose praise John Buskin expended the greatest genius of his hfe. and was the son of a barber who advertised "a penny a shave." Dr 1'rideaux, one of the greatest scholars of all tune, earned his way through college bv scouring pots an5 pans. The bite Judge Bradley worked bis own way up from a charcoal burner to the briich of the supreme court of the I nited Sta'ea. Yes, a man can decide the size of his own bedstead. Notice, furthermore, that Cod's peo ple on the way to Canaan need not be BJrprised if they confront some sort of a giant. Had liot the Israelitish host had trouble ei.ough already? Xo! Bed Sea not enough. Water famine not enough. Long marches not enough. Opposition by enemies of ordinary stature not enough. They must meet Og, the giant of the iron bedstead. "Xine cubits was the length thereof and four cubits the breadth of it." Whv not let these Israelites go smoothly into Canaan without this gigantic opposi tion? Oh, they needed to have their courage and faith further tested and developed! And blessed the man, who in our time, in his march toward the promised land does not meet more than ' one giant. Do not conclude that you are not on the way to Canaan because of this obstacle. As well might the Isue!ite3 conclude that they were not on the way to the promised land be cause they met Og, the giant. Stand ing in your way is some evil propensity some social persecution, some business misfortune, some physical distress. Not one of you but meet a giant who would like to hew you in twain. High er than eleven feet this Og darkens the sky and the rattle of his buckler stuns the ear. But, you are going to get the victory, as did the Israelites. In the name of the God of Mose3 and David and Joshua and 1'aul, charge oa him, and you will leave his carcass in the wilderness. You want a battle shout! Take that with which David, the live footer, assailed Goliath, the nine-footer, when that giant cried, with stinging contempt both in manner and intona tion: "Coma to me, and I will give thy flesh unto the fowls of the air and to the beasts of the field," and David looked up at the monster of braggadocio and defiantly replied: ''Thou comest to me with a aword and wit'.i a spear and with a shield; but I corns to tlieo in the name of the Lord of Hosts, the God of the armies of Israel, whom thou hast. This day will the Lord deliver thee unto mine hand; and I will smite thee and take thine head from thee, and I will give the carcas3?s of the host of the Philistiues th 8 day unto the fowls of the air and to the wild beas'.s of the earth that all the earth may know that there is a Gol in Israel.' Another impression from my subject: The march of the church cannot be irr peded by gigantic opposition. That Israelitish host led on by Moses was the church, and when Og, the giant, him of the iron bedstead, came out agaiust him with another host a fresh host against one that seemed worn out things must have looked bad for Israel. Xo account is given of the bedstead of Moses, except that one in which he first slept the cradle of aquatic vegetation on the Xile where the wife of Chenephres, the king, found the float ing babe and, having no child of her own, adopted him. Moses of ordinary size against Og of extraordinary dimen sions. Besides that Og was backed up by sixty fortified cities. Moses was backed up seemingly by nothing, but the desert ttiat had worn him and his army into a group of undisciplined and exhausted stragglers. But the Israelites triumphed. If you spell the name of Og backward you turn it into word "Go," and Og was turned backward and made to go. With Og's downfall all the sixty cities surendered. Xothing was left of the giant except his iron bedstead, which was kept in a museum at Iiabbath to show how tall and stout he once was. So shall the last giant of opposition in the church's march suc cumb. Xot sixty cities captured, but all the cities. Not only on one side of Jordan, but on both sides of all the rivers. The day is coming. Hear it all ye who are doing something for the relic hunters to examine. 'The Lord of Hosts!" "The Lord of Hosts!" and I cry exultantly, with Oliver Cromwell at the battle of Dunbar: "Let God arise; let his enemies b9 scattered." Make all the prepara tions for the world's evangelization. Have the faith of Robert and Mary Moffatt, the missionaries, who after preaching in Bechuanaland for ten years without one convert, were asked what they would like to have sent them by way of gift from England, said: "Send a communion service, for it will be surely needed," and sure enough the expected ingathering of many souls was realized and the communion ser vice arrived i i time to celebrate it. Appropriately did the missionary write in an album when his autograph was requested: My album la the aavifre brennt, Where 1rknc relj?n and tcniinala wreat Without one my of lUht. To write th-j name of Joiiik there, And point to wonla both bright nixl fair And wm tho lavage bowed in nruyer, ' In my nuprciue delight. Whatever you work and wherever you work for God-forward! You in your way and I in my way. With holy pluck fight on with something of the strength of Thomas Troubridge, who at Iokermann bad one leg shot off and ..,If.tirifl oilier leZ, aim uru they proposed to carry his off the fbld replied; "Xo. 1 do not move until the battle i's won." Whatever the rocking of the church of slat, have earth quake that frightened everybody else, and who, when asked if she was not afraid said.- ' Xo, I am glad that I have a God who can shake the world." Whether your work be to teach a Sabbath class, or nurse an invalid, or reform a wanderer, or print a tract or train-a household, or bear the quer-uluusne.-s of senility, or cheer, the disheartened or lead & soul to Christ 'iuow that by fidelity y.-u may help hasten the time when the world sh;dl be snowed under with while lily and incarnadined with red row;. And now I bargain with you that we will come back someday from our superstellar abode to see how the world looks when it shall be fully emparadisel its hist tear wept, its last wound healed its last shackle broken its last desert gar deiiizod, its last giant of iniquity de capitated, Ami when we land, tiny it be somewhere near this spot of earth where we have together toiled and struggled for the kingdom of God and may it be about this hour in the high noon of B:m glorious Sabbath, looking into the upturned faces of some great audience radiant with holiness aud triumph. llarrr Than l.nlil. Tho39 with only an elementary knowledge ot chemistry aru aware there are more than forty recognized metals. A large number of these can only be regards 1 as curiosities of the l.tbratory, for llr;re is no spicilie use in tiiem; indeed tluy are found in nature in such minute quantities that s,o:na of them are far more precious than gold. Among these rare m 'tals is wolfram or tungsten, a use for which hai been found since guas of enormous calbre came into vogue, say the Chicago Times. It is, unfortunately, a matter of com mon knowledge that thsso gus aro lial.de to fracture; but it has been found that by a iding a small per centage of tungdeu to the fine steel of which the inner lining is made, an elasticity ia conferred upon the metal which it did not possess before, so that it will bear expansion and contraction under heavy charges without giving way. Tungsten is a white metal of every brittle quality, and its pacific gravity is only a trille less than that of gold FARM DEPARTMENT. hill us- the tar. , few I-ai-and mll . ' ti,o rmmlrfT of stalks in the t lie biO of Ordinarily there are 3,21 lulu ;"' acre of checked con.. Allowing for about seven percent of lo-s, 3,uJ hihs. with two stalks tach, (counting MO ears to a bushel) produce M bushels to hie acre. This is the beat way to plant if one expects to shell the corn tor fad ing or lor market, provided o:iu is sure L-d and triat me grouim In regard to the q-iality of cows, any farmer can sati.fyl.imM lf that while his ordinary i.ativecows will iot make ,nure than about live pounds butter prt week, there are Jers-ys rrmu make unity 1"" " the same tune nd again, while at the present writ Li it is di.r.cult to get more than twenty cents ,rr.iinJ for butter as usually in 1 1 yet there an "gdt edge dar.es that are sure of from fifty o K-venty-livecei.H per pound for the product of their dairies. The farmer that has a dairy that will average from ten to ii:te.n pounds of butter and pets it roi" W ,0 .... ... ....!.,! irn.Kt rer- sevelity-live cei.ui ) y -, - Cluardlng England's Doom. I lie bank of Lnglan l s doors are now so finely balanced that lha clerk by pressing a knob under his desk can close the outer doors instantlv and they cannot be opened again except by special process This is done to prevent the daring and ingenious unemployed of the great metropolis from robbing the famous institution. The bullion departments of this and other great English banking establish ment are nightly submerged in several feet of water by the action of the machinery. In some of the London banks the bullion departments are connected with the manager's sleeping room, and an entrance cannot be e ected without setting out off the alarm near the Manchester Guardian. If dishonest official, during day or night should take even as much as one from a pile of a thousand sovereigns, the w hole pile would instantly sink and a pool of water take its place, besides letting every person in the place know of the theft. iif pftfKi see nut so foul as to require harrowing dur ing the first two we.sk after the young j ( ,,,.3 a greater profit than his ,r ul.nM- dairy oi.ly averages weeds, lithe corn is i shocked into fodd-T and fed to cam without huskmg, three stalks 111 me till are more satisfactory. 1 nree u.uu sand hills would produce M bushe s of lOuears each, to tho acre. I he staiss would lie liner, too, and would f uriush a greater quantity and better quality of fodder for feeding purposes. 1 ue.c are cases, where the. unsoundness 01 seed and foulness of the ground, with insufficient time to harrow it thorough ly before planting, necessitates persist ent harrowing to suppress the weeds while the young stalks are shtouug Irom the ground and this makes it advisable to plant three prams to me hill for growing corn for shelling, and four grains for production of fodder corn. M. New Disinfectant. The manufacture of a new disin fectant and deordorant called Satiri don has been commenced at Maryhill, England. It is a residual product of an uncommon kind of black stone shale, which is composed of animal and vegetable remains, is remarkaMv light and yields a large proportion or neavy volatile on. The oil is ex tracted by distillation, and tha residual product is reduced to grains of ailterent sizes, varying from a fine powder to the size of a pea. The powder is claimed to have an instantaneous effect upon obnoxious matter, white also being tastlesj and colorless and harmless to animal life. A Hired Servant. "Do you employ your man Ilastus by the month or day?" Well, with Kastus it's sort of both. I employ him to do a day's work and then, but it always takes him a month to do iU" -Washington Hatchet. (;laiiti cf the 1 orent. In big trees tho new state of Wash Ington Is quite rich. A S'eatt le naner mentions a fir in Mimas which is eight ana one-half feel, in diameter. Xear Stan wood there is a cedar seventeen feet in diameter tliirty-three feet from the roots, and twelve feet fn diameter 112 feet from the roofs. Xooksack reports a fir twelve feet in diameter. v Itljn on OIam. So called diamond Ink for writing on glass is a compound of fluoric, acid and barium; the latter has no effect, It being simply a white powder to give the body to the acid. Tho ink can l. used with a rubber hand-stanip, and it should be allowed to remain fifteen minutes, when the barium will brush off, leaving the design on the Mati. Shallow CultU at lull . If the farmer will select the best ears in the early Kail, thoroughly dry before a hard freeze and then store in the ear, in a dry place, during the Winter, he is almost absolutely safe in having teed which will grow. In hciecting seed varieties, each must determine what is best adapted to his particular soil and season. We find advocates of deep plowing and of shallow plowing, of deep cultivation and of bhallow cultiva tion, of root pruning and of surface cultivation. Soils, climates, and sea sons differ, hence the diversity of methods required. In preparing the soil, whatever its nature, the following facts should be borne in mind. The corn roots require a good depth 01 loose soil which they can easily pene trate, and permeate, that they may draw their substance from it. On the other hand, the soil should be suilicient- ly compact to induce, to the fullest capillary attraction by wlncn means the moisture is brought from a depth to supply the growing crop during the J hot dry periods. This action is also greatly retarded and in a measure pre vented if the soil is cloddy. The sur face ot the ground should be loose and fine admitting of thorough cultivation, and to serve as a check to evaporation of moisture from the soil below. The moisture being brought to the surface must be held in check there. A layer of loose soil also serves as a non-conductor of the sun's rays and the heat in the air. In our black prairie soil, we plow moderately deep, compact the undersoil and crush all clods by the use of the roller, if necessary; then pulverize the surface and keep it In a line loose condition. As to cultivation, all that is needed is to keep the sur face loose and free from weeds. We believe in surface cultivation almost exclusively, using the small shovel cul tivator the first time over, and I he gopher or scraper the remaining part of the season. The roots are the feed ers of the growing plant, and why should they be disturbed by deep cul tivation if the soil can bo kept loose withoitt.--G. W. Biding, Grundy Co , Hi- AVorklnc Corn llarly. I select good seed, examine kernels of each ear to see that it is sound, keep seed dry in winter and where it can get plenty of air. I plow my corn land as early in spring as it will work well, generally from April 10, to May 1. 1 believe in deep plowing on old land say from 0 to 7 inches. I run a smooth ing harror over the eround ns soon as plowed, and ii it is dry and cloddy, I run a drag after a harrow. The drag levels the ground and mashes the clods. The corn conies up more eavenly when the land is level and loose. I plant as soon as the land is prepared or as soon after plowing as possible. This I think very essential, as corn comes up quick er and grows faster than when land has laid for some time after plowing before planting. I commence cultiva ting as soon as corn is 3 or 4 inches high. I use a cultivator with good fen. aers to keep from covering the corn un cultivate It once every week or oftner If possible, until it is waist high. The first time 1 plow It I get as close to It as I .Aii.iiiiriimiuii neep iariner away and the last plowing I run plows In center of rows and throw all the soil to to the corn 1 can. nriel. live pounds of butter per Lean, auu ou oulv gets twenty cents per j ound Mr h.s'butter. Commence ly discarding all your dung-hills;" they arc unprolit able. V011 have only kept them at a loss, an 1 in their place grt the ' best dairy animal within your reach ot any dairy breed you may prefer . 1 lav ing done so. then i:i the name ,f r,'a sou and common M-nse do not Ue.U them as you did your old diuu lull. ire fur tl.ein in a manner clcuueu to promote the.r well twing auu ductiveiiess Improve your Mc J judicious breeding, the use of well-bred mid -s, and make up yourimU, whether 111 butter or cheese 111 the b-ot possible maimer. Make an article that will cumiiiai.u a premium m ""- The butter market is most fa-S-tuious; it is a tvra'it ; do not attempt to rule it. Mib.serve ) our own inteiests by gratifying all its demands, ep.ciailj the demand for quality. ( orn ou I'all J'loiiln;. 1 prefer deep plowing in ti.e spring, but for fall plowing it makes less differ ence. When the ground gets diy m .May I cultivate tho fall iowin,: ou-r and truss hat row it, then plant it across the plowing. Then cultnito eury row before the com comes up, then 1 harrow it again. Wlcti you plow young corn, use small shovels lor the lira plowing tnd plow close so as to break the crust Irom the coin, and then it will grow. Don't plow close 111 cross plowing as you did the lirst time but a little deeper. The third and las', tim. plow deep aud throw thu dirt up to the com. i f you put your ground 111 good order before you plant, three plow mgs are enough. It is much easier to put it ill order before than alter planting. Soil l'r-ivat 011. Ill plowing for corn, keep the sod right side up, that is do not plow dt eper than the black motiid is deep, and 11 d.si,o!.eJ to be lumpy, harruw boon after plowing. If the ground is some what hard Irom any cause, put com plows on without bhiekls, and ixsi soon as plowed put on the harrow, and cross If ti.e mound is mellow so that a har row will take hold well, use the harrow instead of cunt plows. On sandy soils use roller lirst. All the above cannot be done too quickly alter planting. Just befi.re the coin comes up give It one inure harrowing with a light harrow. Do not wait too long then U-foieyou start cultivating as tho seeds grow nights. N-e to it that 111 the lirst j.low- ing the soil is thrown in euough to coverall the ground even it you do cover some corn once in a w hile; the same is crossing the work. Thiee to five kerm is is about the right number. The men plow nearer the com If there is a good stand. Always test the seed by planting early out of doors, and some also 111 ti.e house between two pieces of sod. AFFAIRS OF i Ta,, A round wast (1. ..... r a f 1 a. L-jbt m,4 II Simple toilets. VT A gray gowt, lis h K bodic-i stud !ed u.u, r and has a yoke and ft white chiffon ruf!iW'" I i .11 .3 Hie li almost to tl e V o...,ui ay vi l.lillKK.a, are made of Chant;:' w ' Tabs gr.-en ;!iJ m-.-i.soii in coiiihiia-j , , c.oth", an 1 .1 ukr gr sa?, i etc.. aU.j ,.a e J aim lawn govts. A pretty tprinj l!..r. green ;E u-.-iin green ground, h,is , 'f velvet ;.s a (iiiih at !i corUi-t w,U waist hue. H i.s pi.- . v 117 t(, L,:, 1 .. - , .i mil- a .i.oer ii.j (j HkmK lao" :ti!i..r.c,iliyc,' It is hop"d her a.iiu.ti enough to take the t enemy. New ami pr-tty la,;;. in lb ! shaii - of (,- b ales an I h. rrai si Tliew lwi.it ai una I yi S vie 11I tl,.- n,'',y ( I and serpeiit Ij.iii-.i-s. A simple rn.d . pink s.lk pan,.'. 1 ; of the same coli.r, the figure by ilir.-i lelvet. A l-.ig- l-.j j', IhultlillS .".t tin- r!i'i:t:.Jif, A pretty wa.-'. inn little trouble Ir i.i r, that you wore w ta-m but that i.ow you l,st wondering why yn extravagant eiiougli Ij:- The S.lk si;'-: b'.riii; j. shelf; its rcig'i is u gilt cords are ;. fi-i At the end ol 11 ii rr. live rosetti;. 1 wi! iml silver or popular. tiolii ami si a blaik tit' An lie Hull I.lvcl, Jlaron Geinuiiiigen Lieutenant Field Marshal and Inspector-General of the Austrian cavalary who died at his home in Guilei berg, Austria, recently had been an active soldier for almost half a centiry. When, on the after noon of his death, his physician told him he had but an hour or two more to live, the old man sat up in bed mid called to his military attendant in the next room. Ths Boldier cams. "Hring my parade uniform," commanded the General. The uniform was brontrht. 'Now put it 011 tne." The order was filled and the tray was laid 011 the (Jon eral'sbed. lie ate a bttln nml ilmni much. He lighted his cigar. He smoked it half down without taking It from his moutlu As he removed It to knock off the ashes, tho cud came. He sank back with the cigar still between bis lingers, and died before it went out. ver i-'.' A decorat.vo effects m '.- J inill.iiery. Ileal geld J ttoduced into (lu.j dtS Clied for tleg.ii.t handsome evening x-wi? gray cloth, velvet aii: S-.pring jackets '-'Zj millitary air. '1 'Unit and trimmed wil.V.-rt-f3 bllttoi.u. Docket 44" in size since last ;-r.'4''J finished with 1 lift rTx, up and down the Iftf (he collar. jjf Many of the new!; Russian, liolero, ami t. loose blouse vests off or those of silk delira". in a tiny patu-rn. Tl jackets fit the form In most cases this colli' In velvet. The girls aro biuy Ist neckties for their us Tlu.v firvt can-fulJ f pU'Xioil Itlld then H' .- ...10 i. 1 ii I't Wl.l ue oeco.iunB ' of beauty. The til" a - u, 1 1 I .' latflttt U IOUI-III-iiuii' "v and patience, but t,ie tb ? are happy. A few jackes will k at coarser woven clotlu 4 (iood t'owa. Can any one estimate the the loss an nually entailed upon the dairymen of tne country by keeping poor cows on scant pasture, stinted in water, or com pelled to drink from stagnant pools, hounded to and from the milking yard milked by brutal and rough hired men the milk manipulated In a room un suted for the purpose by women or girls without the slightest idea of the art of butter making, and packed and Bent to market in an almost unmarket able style? This Is something that the most competent expert cannot detail in dollars and cents. Tub Tall Urau of Yucatan. The sisal grass of Yucatan Is one of the most remarkable vegetublo pro ducts known, it grows in long bladei Hoinellnu-a to tl.o I. ...n.- ' " " ""5 "niBui 01 lour or live leet, aim when dry the Wade euri ,,n from side to side, making a cord which .oUUIiKt.-i umn any cottcn string of equal size mat has ever been manufac tured. His In great demand among ! ( ir i u! a 0r.1t KM . 'ong manufactures ol various muds or grass good, but ns soon as lbi valuable properites become known it will havo a thousand uses which are now undreamedof Hopes cords, sines of any size may bo maim' factured of It, and a ship's cable of tisal grass Is one of the possibilities of the future. Itisalmostlmpreiousto the action of salt water, and is not readily decayed or disintegrated h. , I1,"'1 ht and will In time prow on. of ril .r'. ubto.. Production, of traveling wear, anu - skirted coats llarin? the waist lino in t;'-J style, or plaited or 555 according to ths ''"aiinn. tho majority of ' round waist Dress skirts w.ll 111.4. model, flaring even V knee than mo swwt.lng out grareM i " . . ... r r.itlilKTS Should W C ""ii of the cloth andexactlj in every way, am' 11 ut the top which a darts of the outer s'-'t Anrettvand sty!: ing dresses for the is to havo the un -pelisse, and toque r,,,.ti.riul. This I-"1 neat and effective .1. ..., I anrilh ill brO i .,, .MM 5 coior, in -'- cashmere, or 1.1 ft or soft summer f.U. ens'' .l(Tt !, .iravui:ance da,, and yet at IV -0 in a dress of vtl fold, which U 1 gold, which less than U, rZii noown sown XOHO diamonds, . . I.,...,.,l l.V I'"" - ,1- ...r.Plldra V cheeriuiiy 11 Incomes for 10 M cic half0" precious stones w ,lnru 1 .. h hoi'' ' acarci-iy " - w,ct n deMontcspantieW at the court 0 one great ff"VMKS gold 011 gold ami, WI stitched ni"' " difuxria makes the i"0".1 " - panegyrics writwn w ff " 1