The Sioux County journal. (Harrison, Nebraska) 1888-1899, April 18, 1895, Image 1

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The Sioux County Journal,
VOLUJiE VIL
HARKISOX, NEBRASKA, THURSDAY, APKIL 1, 1895.
NU3IBEK 32.
Of-
'favore Wide Tlrea oa Wion Wheels.
Th Agricultural Department baa 1
tued a bulletin compiled by Roy Stone,
ipeclal agent In charge of road Inquiry,
containing Information concerning the
oae of wide tlrea on wagon wheels. Mr.
' Rtone regard It of special Importance
in the maintenance of public highways
that Uie veli Idea uaed on them shall
bare tlrea of greater width than are
aow In general use. Extract from the
Bute law respecting the width of tire
to be used on vehicles are given, some
of which offer a rebate of a portion of
toe highway tax on wagons with rims
or tire not leas than three and three
and a half Inches In width. The result
of ex perl menu with wide tires In vari
ous States are also given. The bulletin
til concluding print extracts from the
Consular reports concerning the width
Of tlrea prescribed In various foreign
countries. In France every freighting
cart la said to be a roadmaker. Their
tlrea are from three to ten Inches In
width, usually from four to lx. The
German law prescribes that wagons for
heavy loads, such as coal, brick, earth,
and stone, must have a width of tire
of at least four Inchea.
Oood Koada and Prosperity.
Roads are the connecting links that
bind communities together In bonds of
love and In unity of spirit Roads be
long to all time. They are the ways by
which nien have advanced and will ever
advance, and we who wish to leave
some worthy memorial to posterity,
something which shall endure when our
lives are but a memory, can bequeath
nothing that will be more beneficial
than good roads. Colonel A. A. Tope.
An Innovation la Road-Making.
The Massachusetts Highway Com
missioners are trying an Interesting ex
periment The board has found In
building macadamized roads, that upon
loose, sandy soils much stone Is being
driven Into the sand. In such cases
gravel, when acce-islble.has been placed
upon the sand to a depth of three or
Tour Inchea, and on tbla Is laid the stone.
By so doing the cost Is greatly reduced
There being no gravel at Martha s Vine
yard, cheap cotton cloth has but a short
Hm ago been spread upon the sand,
and over that the stone. It has been
found that the sand does not work up
through the stone so much less stone Is
required. layers of tarred paper were
tried, but without success, as the stone
pressed through them. This In prob
ably the first experiment over made
with cloth, and while the stretch on
which It Is lined Is not long, the showing
Will be none the less valuable.
Ml on-Ooul Hoods.
It Is the opinion of well-Informed
Frenchmen who huve made a study of
cououilc problems that the superb
roods of France have been one of the
most steady and potent contributions
to the material development and mar
velous financial elasticity of the coun
try. The farreachlng and splendidly
maintained road system bas distinctly
favored the success of the small landed
proprietors, and In their prosperity and
the ensuing distribution of wealth lies
the key to the secret of the wonderful
Itallty and solid prosperity of the
Trench nation. Selected.
THE WIFE OF THE FUTURE.
Or Jnat What Man Fanclee the New
Woman Will Come To.
lie stood In the dark at the bottom
of the stairs. Ills coat was over hi
arm, his shoes were In his hand, bis
collar was unbuttoned, bis hair dis
heveled, and his breath would have
put the strength of Hercules to blush,
lie was musing. What was he to say
to her Oil time? That he bad been
with a sick friend? Bah! Uiat chest
nut dates with Noah when be got back
from his first night out of the ark.
Lodge? Political caucus? Pooh! a
soon might tell her that there are
June bugs In January. Why not tell
her that be had been dallying the chip
at tlio club and then pass over a hun
dred of his winnings for herself by
way of reparation? All right In the
ory, but where was the hundred? He
had lost Just a cool hundred and fifty
to Col. Keenwun, and the Lord know
It would ' take a month of severest
economies to maks that up. "Well, I
might a well go and face the music,"
fa said, despairingly, at last a fa
eoftly mounted ths stair Ilka a wraith
t bygone. . . V " '
One In bl room b disrobed with
lafltUte caution, drank a pitcher of
(hajidjfo 0f cot, and
wm vtwmp m pwr, pitch.
MM M BM
l iilXf TIT i
SBMB Ha,
mother? Had she eloped with that
that scoundrel of a French marquis
who was so excessively polite to her
of late? Oh. no! that thought was
madness. He approached the bed.
No, she had not even been there. The
sweat was ooalog from every pore.
He made his way to the bureau and
drew forth a revolver. "Blood r be
muttered. "Blood mine, his, any
body's, but blood!"
There is no telling what ha might
have done had not at that instant a
rattle at the keyhole below startled
him. He struggled to the banister
and looked over. There was the wife
of his heart taking her shoe off at
the bottom of the stairs and trying to
haug her hat on several Imaginary
pegs. Slyly h crept back and leaped
Into bed, feigning aleep.
She entered. Her faca was a Httl
flushed, her eyas somewhat bleary,
but she had the vary air of bar own
husband when be had got his story
down pat Instantly the outraged
sleeper awoke with a start "Madam,
what doe tbla mean?" he demanded,
rubbing his eye. "Here It Is nearly
daylight and you you, the wlfa of
my heart, th mother of my cbl hll
dran Jut come In at this disgraceful
hour from God only knows where.
Give an account of yourself. Where
have you be-hen oh, wh-here?" i
But the calm wife only faced him
cynically. "I will not work off any of
your own stale old canned goods about
'lodges,' 'sick friends,' and 'caucus
es,' " she begsn a trifle thickly, "but
I'll come right to the point and the
truth. I spent the evening at the Dor
cas Advanced Woman' League,
where we had a little quiet game.
Here, my dear," she followed, tossing
a roll of bills upon the bed, "take thl
and buy yourself a sealskin overcoat
or a diamond ring. Suit yourself. I
won $250 from Mrs. Keenwun, the
Colonel's wife!"
Then the foxy old duffer drew a
long sigh, grabed the roll as a ship
wrecked sailor clutches a spar, and
buried his nose In his pillow. "For
given!" he murmured a moment later
when he caught his breath from the
sweet shock, and lay awake a whole
hour winking at the clean hundred the
two of them were ahead of the Keen
wuns. New York World.
ANCIENT HINDOO DnAMA.
Modern Performance of a Play Written
Thonsnnds of Years Ago,
At the Irving Place Theater, New
Tork. was recently given a performance,
of "Vasantasena," a drama written
thousands of years ago by Sudraka, the
king of a small Hindoo sovereignty
It was the first performance ever given
In this country, although It has been
performed several times In Europe
with great grandeur.
The dm ma Is very Interesting and
noteworthy, principally because first
it enlightens us about Hindoo life, cul
ture, and customs of the time, boUl
In court circles and In the homes of tho
people. There Is a great similarity to
Shakspeare, which Is surprisingly evi
dent In the gradual working up of
dramatic situations and the stupendous
climaxes of this drama of human pas
sions. Sudraka renders the dramatic action
In noble rhymes, which are Interspers
ed by characteristic scenes in prose,
Introducing the people as they are true
to nature. lie offers us an excellent
example of the humorous originality
and innate wit of our Aryan forefath
ers, which through all these centuries
have paused from generation to genera'
tlon and found their best exponent In
the masterly work of Shakspeare.
Originally the drama wus of seventy
three acts! To adapt it for the modem
stage It was shortened, but, of course,
at tho expense of tho tmpresalveness
of the original. Sudraka, the author,
reigned successfully for many years
and then retired Into solitude and died
a hermit over 100 years old.
New York Types.
Dudes we have, but not In such
amusing numbers as London, nor near
ly so large a proportion of those elder
Mies of the pavement whose scientific
name Is "men-about-town," all bloom
lug precisely alike from the curve of
their boot-tips to the minutest shaping
of their collars and the tenor of their
speech; and the beautifully attired,
beautifully self-satisfied, beautifully
vacuous-looking old gentlemen who
decorate the club window and the
parkway of London are present with
us, only In raro examples. Again, cler
ical types make default almost as whol
ly as do military types; and with all
oar variety In feminine type, the dow
ager hardly lives among us. To be a
true dowager, not only age and social
experience are needed, but social de
voutnens and an Ingrained One assump
tion of great social power; ao for thl
type we shall have to wait nntll th
generation now entering middle life
sees It grandchildren growing Into
manhood. Century.
' Oood Deal of Deviltry In It.
Ibsen ha finished bl new work a
three-act drama which he ha mention
ed aa having few persona but mnch
"deviltry" In a It to ba brought ont
la Norwegian and German J oat before
Oartetjnaa.
The eureet way to ba mm
la te be a bachelor. ., 1IM ,(..,, llt)
WHAT WOMEN WEAR.
STYLES FOR THOSE WHO WANT
TO LOOK PRETTY.
Dreaaes to Be Low-Necked and Sleeve
to Ba Short with a Tendency Toward
Puffs That Reach the Elbow-Bloaaa
Btfect in the New Bodice'.
The Beaton's Stjlea.
Vew Tors correspondence:
UTTING a sugges
tion of blouse ef
fect Into the nw
or made-over bod
Ice la the surest
way to make It
seam .freshly, styl
ish, for nearly all
new bodice uodeia
have this a a con
spicuous feature.
It Is seen even In
tailor-made dreaa
es. where It Is ac
complished by tha
presence of fi-oop-lng
straps that are
draped over the shoulders and down
the front of the bodice. If the drees la
to be called new, the simplest way to
effect It Is to have something droop
ing In the bodice's front A banging
bit of drapery set In and flanked on tha
sides by dangling straps of passement
erie is, perhaps, as easy a way as any.
Another favored trick Is to have a box
pleat down the front the bodice being
bloused at each side of the front and
tight fitting In the back. This effect
la so much worn that It Is seen In many
varieties. One of them Is shown In
the first small picture, the pleat being
smaller than those usually . made.
Cream-white corded silk Is used for
this garment and It la trimmed with a
flchn of the same, forming a round
collar In back, with sashes on the
boulders and then coming to the waist
In front to fasten with rhlnestone but-
II.KKVES DKSERVISQ OF SHAPELY ARMS.
tons. This fichu Is edged with cream
guipure.
It Is still as desirable to have some
thing approaching newness In the
sleeves of the new bodice, as It was In
mld-wlnter. It Is noticeable that the
universal tendency Is toward puffs that
reach the elbow. The shoulder strap
unelaborated Is never seen, but ela
I to rated shoulder straps serve as a
foundation for softly falling clouds of
draped material that except on close
examination, look like puff sleeves.
It' a new and very pretty sleeve In
the next Illustration, and one that will
make an excellent setting for a hand
some arm. For the rest the blouse
1 alike buck and front being made of
pale rose pink bengallne and banded
with black lace Insertion. The draped
sleeves are edged with lace and looped
up with pink satin bows, and the same
ribbon gives collar and belt which are
ornamented by sprays and bunches of
flower. A fitted lining of piuk silk
book at the side.
There I no accessory devised as yet
to make acceptable for any but hand
some shoulders tho style of sleeves
shown In the next Illustration. It is,
perhaps their being so exacting that
make the stylo so slow In It progress
toward favor, for slow It Is, though ths
cut ha thorough novelty to recommend
mm tbut aa axAcriao.
4L Baatdea that It la Men a rat only
on nnqneetloaably correct gowns. Tha
tactT vaat ec wfaKe crepe da thine la
raker proof of tbla ganaeofs new-
neaa, aad tha conMaatnw of jacket aad
blouse effects Is very unusual. The
Jacket forms a circular basque In back
that is considerably shorter than the
fronts, and the edges all around are
finished with Jet galloon, the fronts hav
ing pendant fringes. Silver gray satin
duchesse was the material as sketched,
and the gown was planned for the cele
bration of Oliver wedding.
Round bodice are now seen cut Just
below the hips, and the edges are wired
to stand out free from the skirt A lit
tle while ago unlesa the edge of the
bodice fitted snugly to the hip the un
fortunate maker was a hopeless mis
fitter. The bodice of the fourth sketch
la not of thl aort, because It haa that
other stamp of newneaa, a slightly full
front the remainder fitting tightly.
Coming over the skirt It la ornamented
front and back by a large rosette of
bluet aatln ribbon, th dress stuff being
bluet cheviot A deep yoked collar of
rCFFED STTLISHI.V.
ecru lace fall prettily over shoulders,
back and front and the sleeves have
drooping untrlmmed puffs Thlsls really
the most popular sleeve at present, a
great soft puff that reaches well below
the elbow on the outer side of the arm
and that Is not nearly so long on the In
side being the desired shape. Some are
the slxe of great pumpkins, and some
times they look a little like them, too.
Unless one can elaborate a gown a
great deal, It Is better to keep to entire
simplicity. In the midst of all the cur
rent gorgeousne, a gown made of
soft fine cloth with a bodice fitting
closely, save for the little baggy place
in front Its skirt cut Just right and a
pair of huge sleeves, will give an ef
fect that Is likely to make the richer
neighbor miserable, In spite of her
elaborations. But highly wrought ef
fects have their place and are tasteful
ly managed on the final pictured gown,
which Is composed of rich ivory-white
satin brocaded with old gold for the
wide godet skirt, and of old gold ve
lours for puff sleeves and bodice. The
latter has a pleated vest of Ivory-white
mousseline de sole ornamented with
a big bow of white satin and two
rhlnestone buckles. The points of the
bodice are embroidered with gold and
a bertha of filmy tulle lace completes
the garniture. In such elaborate gowns
as this a dressy effect Is sometimes at
tained by having skirt and sleeves to
AOAlIf, TIIK ARMS
match, and the remainder of the bo
dice need not be of a material that even
harmonizes. Velvet skirts are so com
pletely out of vogue, however, that It
ha not been selected for such com
binations for some time pust
With summer reached, the bodice
will shift In large measure to shirt
waists. These are now made to order
for women at swell men's furnishing
places, and such garments have a fault
less set about the collar and cuffs thut
explains the price, even though the
matcrlnl be the simplest cheviot Ex
cept In very dressy shirt waists, but
ton are set down the front covered
by a boxpleat because women have
discovered that with their bangs to
keep parted, nails to manicure and
aide comb to keep In place, life Is too
short to try and attend to studs. In
deed, a collar button la bad enough,
Copyright 180B.
Alexander Pope waa tnerclleaaly nick
named by hi contetnporarlea because.
In hi writing, be lampooned all hla
anemtea with no little rigor. ' He waa
called tha Waap of Twickenham, tha
Bard of Twickenham, aa tapt? Flaak,
a Little Nightingale, root Pug, Paper
Bpaiteg Peea, PorteatDoa Ouh, , aad
maw other Itsntfiisw.naWMfri t .. i .
SHOULD BE PKETTT.
TALMAGE'S SERMON.
THE PREACHER DRAWS A LESSON
FROM THE ARK.
Gift of Salvation Through Christ-A
Bare Defense in Time of Trouble
Loadstone of a God-Fearing Life
The Door Swings Both Wave. '
On the Gospel Ship.
Although his oratory is at all times
magnetic and eloquent there is one
theme with which, whenever he makes
it the groundwork of his sermon. Dr.
Tslmage never fails to communicate to
bis auditor the enthusiasm he himself
feels. That theme is the gospel invita
tion, aad when, Sunday afternoon, he
took for his subject "The Gospel Ship"
the great aadience that crowded the New
York Academy was in full sympathy. The
text selected was Genesis vl., 18, "Thou
halt come into the ark, thou and thy
sons and thy wife and thy sons' wive
with thee."
In this day of the steamships Lucania
nod Majestic and the Paris I will show
you a ship that in some respects eclipsed
tht-m all and which sailed out, an ocean
underneath and another ocean falling up
on it. Infidel scientists ask us to believe
that in the formation of the earth there
have been a half dosen deluges, and yet
they are not willing to believe the Bible
story of one deluge.
In what way the catastrophe came we
kuow not whether by the stroke of a
comet, or by flashes of lightning, chang
ing the air Into water, or by a stroke of
the hand of God, like the stroke of the ax
between the horns of the ox, the earth
staggered. To meet the catastrophe God
ordered a great ship built. It was to be
without prow, for it was to sail to no
shore. It was to be without helm, for no
human hand should guide it. It was a
vast structure, probably as large as two
or three modern stesmers. It was the
Great Eastern of olden time.
The ship is done. The door is open.
The lizards crawl in. The cattle walk In.
The grasshoppers hop In. The birds fly in.
The invitation goes forth to Noah, "Come
thou and all thy house into the ark."
Just one human family embark on the
strange voyage, and I hear the door slam
shut. A great storm sweeps along the
hills and bends the cedars until all the
branches snap in the gale. There is
moan in the wind like unto the moan of
a dying world. The blackness of the
heavens is shattered by the flare of the
lightnings that look down into the waters
and throw a ghastllness on the face of
the mountains. How strange it looks!
How suffocating the air seems! The big
drops of rain begin to plash upon the up
turned faces of those who are watching
the tempest. Crash go the rocks in con
vulsion! Boom go the bursting heavens!
1 he inhabitants of the earth, instead of
flying to housetop and mountain top, as
men have fancied, sit down in dumb,
white horror to die, for when God grinds
mountains to pieces and lets the ocean
slip its cable there is no place for men
to fly to. See the ark pitch and tumble
In the surf, while from its windows the
passengers look out upon the shipwreck
of a race and the carcasses of a dead
world. Woe to the mountains! Woe to
the sea.
A Storm Coming.
I am no alarmist. When, on the 20th
of September, after the wind has for
three days been blowing from the north
east, you prophesy that the equinoctial
storm is coming, you simply state a fact
not to he disputed. Neither am I an
alarmist when I say that a storm is com
ing compared with which Noah's deluge
wag but an April shower, and that it is
wisest and safest for you and me to get
safely housed for eternity. The invita
tion that went forth to Noah sounds in
our ears, "Come thou and all thy house
into the ark."
Well, how did Noah and his family
come Into the ark? Did they climb in nt
, the window, or come down the roof? No.
J liey went through the door. And Just
so, if we get Into the ark of God's mercy,
It will he through Christ, the door. The
entrance to the ark of old must have been
a very large entrance. We know that it
was from the fact that there were mon
ster animals in the earlier ages, and in
order to get them Into the ark two and
two, according to the Bible statement,
the door must have been very wide and
very high. So the door into the mercy of
God is a large door. We go in, not two
nnd two, but by hundreds, and by thou
sands and by millions. Yea, all the na
tions of the earth may go in 10,000,000
abreast.
Christ the Door.
The door of the ancient ark was in the
side. So now It is through the side of
Christ the pierced side, the wide open
side, the heart side that we enter. Aha,
the Itoinan soldier, thrusting his spear
into the Savior's side, expected only to
let the blood out, but he opened the way
to let all the world in. Oh, what a broad
Gospel to preach! If a man is about to
give an entertainment, he issues 200 or
800 invitations carefully put up and di
rected to the particular persons whom he
wishes to entertain. But God, our Father,
milks a banquet, and goes out to the
front door of heaven, aud stretches out
Vliis hands over land and sea, and with a
voice that penetrates the Hindoo Jungle,
and the (irecnlnml ice castle, and Brazil
Ian grove, and Kngllsh factory, and Amer
ican home cries out, "Come, for all things
ore now ready!" It is a wide door. The
old cross has been taken apart, and its
two pieces are stood up for the dooriosts
so fur apart that all the world can come
in. Kings scatter treasures on days of
great rejoicing. So Christ, our King,
conies snd scatters the jewels of heaven,
liowland Hill said that he hoped to get
into heaven through ths crevices of the
door. But he was not obliged thus to
go In.
After having preached the gospel In
Surrey chapel, going up toward heaven,
the gatekeeper cried, "Lift up your heads,
ye everlasting gates, and let thl man
come In!" Th dying thief went In. Rich
ard Baxter and Robert Newton went in.
Europe, Asia, Africa, North aad South
America may yet ao through thl wide
door without cvewdlag. Ho, every one-
all conditions, all ranks, all people! Lu
ther said that this truth was worth carry
ing on one's knees from Home to Jerusa
lem, but I think it worth carrying all
arouud the globe and all around the heav
ens that "God so loved the world that
he gave his only begotten Son; that who
soever believeth in him should not perish,
but have everlasting life." Whosoever
will, let him come through the large door.
Archimedes wanted a fulcrum on which
to place his lever, and then he said thst
he could move the world. Calvary is the
fulcrum, and the cross of Christ Is the
lever, und by that power all nations shall
yet be lifted.
Swings Both Ways.
Further, it is a door that swing both
ways. I do not know whether the door
of the ancient ark wss lifted or rolled on
hinges, but this door of Christ open both
ways. It swings out toward all our woe.
It swings in toward the rapture f heav
en It swings in to let us in. It swings
out to let bur ministering enea eeme out.
All are one in Christ Christiana on earth
and saints in heaven.
"One army of the living God,
At his command we bow.
Part of the host have crossed the flood.
And part are crossing now."
Swing in, O blessed door, until all the
earth shall go in and live. Swing out un
til all the heavens come forth to celebrate
the victory.
But further, it is a door with fasten
ings. The Bible says of Noah, "The Lord
shut him in." A vessel without bulwark
or doors would not be a safe vessel to go
in. When Noah and his family heard the
fastening of the door of the ark, they were
very glad. Unless those doors were fas
tened, the first heavy surge of the sea
would have whelmed them, and they
might as well have perished outside the
ark as inside the ark. "The Lord shut
him In." Oh. the perfect safety of the
ark! 't he surf of the sea and the light
nings of the sky may be twisted Into a
garland of snow and fire deep to deep,
storm to storm, darkness to darkness
but once in the ark all is well. "God shut
him in." ,
There comes upon the good man a del
uge of financial trouble. He had bis thou
sands to lend. Now he cannot borrow a
dollar. He once owned a store in New
York and had branch houses in Boston,
Philadelphia and New Orleans. He owned
four horses and employed a man to keep
the dust off his coach phaeton, carriage
and curricle. Now he has hard work to
get shoes in which to walk. The great
deep of commercial disaster was broken
up, and fore and aft and across the hur
ricane deck the waves struck him.
"The Lord Shut Him In."
But he was safely sheltered from the
storm. "The Lord shut him in." A flood
of domestic troubles fell on him. Sick
ness and bereavement came. The rain
pelted. The winds blew. The heavens
are aflame. All the gardens of earthly de
light are washed away. The mountains
of joy are buried 15 cubits deep. But
standing by the empty crib, and in the
desolated nursery, and in the doleful hall,
once a-ring with merry voices, now silent
forever, he cried: "The Lord gave; the
Ijrd hath taken away. Blessed be the
name of the Lord." "The Lord shut
him in."
All the sins of a lifetime clamored for
his overthrow. The broken vows, the dis
honored Sabbaths, the outrageous pro
fanities, the misdemeanors of twenty
years, reached up their hands to the door
of the ark to pull him out. The boundless
ocean of his sin surrounded his soul,
howling like a simoon, raving like an
euroclydon. But, looking out of the win
dow, he saw his Bins sink like lead into
the depths of the sea. The dove of heav
en brought an olive branch to the ark.
The wrath of the billow only pushed him
toward heaven. "The Lord shut him in."
The same door fastenings that kept
Noah in keep the troubles out I am glad
to know that when a man reaches heaven
nil earthly troubles are done with him.
Here he may have had it hard to get
bread for his family. There he will never
hunger any more. Here he may have
wept bitterly. There "the lamb that is
in the midst of the throne will lead him
to living fountains of water, and God will
wipe away all tears from his eyes." Here
he may have hard work to get a house,
but in my Father's house are many man
sions, and rent day never comes. Here
there are deathbeds and coffins and
graves. There no sickness, no weary
watching, no choking cough, no consum
ing fever, no chattering chill, no tolling
bell, no grave. The sorrows of life shall
come and knock at the door, but no ad
mittance. The perplexities of life shall
come and knock on the door, but no ad
mittance. Safe forever! All the agony
of earth in one wave dashing against the
bulwarks of the ship of celestial light
shall not break them down. Howl on, ye
winds, and rage, ye seas! The Lord
"the Lord shut him in."
Fastenings Secure.
Oh, what a grand old door! So' wide,
so easily swung both ways aud with such
sure fastenings. No burglar's key can
pick that lock. No swarthy arm of hell
can shove hack that bolt. I rejoice that I
do not ask yon to come aboard a crazy
craft, with leaking hulk and broken helm
nnd unfastened door, but an ark 50 cubits
wide, and 300 cubits long, and a door so
lurge that the round earth without graz
ing the post might be bowled in.
Now, If the ark of Christ is so grand a
place In which to live and die and tri
umph, come into the ark. Know well
that the door that shut Noah In shut oth
ers out, and though, when the pitiless
storm came pelting on their heads, they
beat upon the door, saying, "Let me inl
Let me In!" the door did not open. For
120 years they were invited. They ex
pected to come in, but the antediluvian
said; "We must cultivate these fields.
We must be worth more flocks of sheep
and herds of cattle. We will wait until
we get a little older. , We will enjoy our
old farm a little longer." But meanwhile
the storm was brewing. The fountain
of heaven were filling up. ' The pry wn
being placed the foundation of the great
deep. The last year bad cotoe, the last
month, the last week, the laat day, the
last hour, th laat moment In an awfut
dash aa ocean dropped from the any, and
another rolled np from hmistk, aad Ood
rolled the earth aad sky hto aa waa of
ualTeraal aeatnctioa, , . ( , ' , " ,
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