The Sioux County journal. (Harrison, Nebraska) 1888-1899, September 26, 1895, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    ioux County Journal,
The
VOLUME VIIL
HARKISON, NEBRASKA, THURSDAY, SEPT. 2G, 1895.
NUMBER 3.
S
v
r
Jests In Jingle.
The bright ambitious mercury
I heated to a cherry red,
And the butter aud the summer girl
Are beginning; now to make a spread.
Indianapolis Journal.
IT took her little hand in big, Jt
Hhe did not draw it back; s
Blie simply elevated it
, And, Moses! what a whack!
Detroit Tribune.
The violet lingers in her eye, the rose Is
on her cheeks;
Her dainty lips of poppy-leaf with pearls
play hide-and-seek;
But the dearest of the blossoms which
her many charms disclose,
I the funny little dandelion-freckle on
her nose.
.Washington Star.
The boy stood on the burning deck,
because he was afraid
He couldn't swim to save his neck,
And that was why be stayed.
Philadelphia Record.
J A ballet firl who tried a bike,
Though versed In antic steps galore,
Performed a pirouette whose like
Was never, uever seen before.
New York Herald.
The torrid sunbeams now descend;
Forbearance is the rule.
But verily that rule must end
Toward him who says, "Keep cool."
Cleveland Plain Dealer.
The peach may be knocked galley west,
And other fruits out of sight;
Bat in this assurance we may rest
The primes are there all right.
Cincinnati Tribune.
The Dead Doll.
Ton need not be trying to comfort me, I
tell you my dolly is dead;
There's no use saying she Isn't, with a
crack like that In her head.
It'a Just like you said it wouldn't hurt
much to have my tooth ont that .lay,
And then when the man 'most pulled my
head off you hadn't a word to say I
When my mamma gave me that ribbon
I was playing out In the yard
8he said to me most expressly, "Here's a
ribbon for Hildegardr,"
And I went and put it on Tabby and Hil-
degarde saw me do it.
And I said to myself, "O, never mind, I
don't believe she knew it!"
But I know that she knew it now, and I
Just believe, I do,
That her poor little heart was broken and
so her head broke, too,
O, my dolly! my little baby! I wish my
head had been hit,
For I've hit it over and over and It hasn't
cracked a bit!
But, since the darling Is dead, she'll want
to be buried, of course;
We will take my little wagon, nurse, and
yon shall be the horse.
And I'll walk behind and cry, and we'll
put ber In this, yon see.
This dear little box, and we'll bury ber
then under the maple tree.
And papa will make her a tombstone like
the one he made for my bird,
And he'll put what I tell him on it yea,
very single word!
I ahall say, "Here lies Hildegarde, beau
tiful doll, who is dead!
8he died of a broken heart and a dreadful
" crack Id her head!"
Home Queen.
Boane Rweet To-day.
I will not light the lamps until I've
thought
What waa the sweetest thing
In all my day;
I will not seek to speed
. 1 The lingering ray
Until my anxious eye somewhere
has
caught
A word, a smile, or something that hath
passed
In my small sphere. 0, Memory, thou
hast
'-" Boms tweet to-day 1
Now fancy travels oat and conjures up
A long and brilliant train;
It all floats by,
Joy ni tadnees go
' With laugh and algh,
And dregs of pain lie deep in pleasure's
i i cup. i
Bat now I see two tender hasel ayea
Turn on ma lipa that smile Ah, berela
lis
My tweet to-dayt
A peffome breatbet from pictures of the
aalnd,
Aad la our fancy Memory carves ber
,. lore,
0r dsAreat treasures la the air we And ;
I know mr bapplneaa to-night wat for
i ji : (mm tweet to-day!
-Boston TftarljJt.
I ara sa, cheap tow that tba
bur tad own tfctm.
HUkttAlt art! ,t .fcci-m 'H ) vm
t Li. od Ion ;(, n il in t-;iiiwi h Uii
H a.. ;-. ? r.'. : " : f;'?t
TALMAGE'S SERMON.
A6ERMON OF CHRISTIAN CHEER
FULNESS. Ber. Dr. Talmaae on Daniel's Devo
tions Before the Window that Faced
Ilia Native Jeruaalem-The Battle
with Bin and Death-The Victory.
The Open Windows.
In his sermon Sunday Itev. Dr. Tal
mage chose a theme overflowing with
Christian cheerfulness aud encourage
ment. The subject is "Open Windows,"
and the text selected was Daniel vi., 10,
"His windows being open iu his chamber
toward Jerusalem."
The scoundrelly princes of Persia, urged
on by political jealousy against Daniel,
have succeeded in getting a law passed
that whosoever prays to (Jod shall be put
under the paws and teeth of the lions, who
are lashing themselves ill rage and hunger
up and down the stone cage, or putting
their lower jaws on the ground, bellowing
till the earth trembles, liut the leonine
threat did not hinder the devotions of
Daniel, the Coeur (le Lion of the ages.
His enemies might as well have a law that
the sun should not draw water, or that
the south wind should not sweep across a
garden of magnolias, or that Cod should
be abolished. They could not scare him
with the redhot furnaces, and they can
not now scare him with the lions. As
soon as Daniel hears of this enactment
he leaves his office of secretary of state,
with its upholstery of crimson and gold,
and comes down the white marble steps
and goes to his own house, lie opens his
window and puts the shutters back and
pulls the curtain aside so that he can look
toward the sacred city of Jerusalem, and
then prays.
Daniel on His Knees.
I suppose the people in the street gath
ered under anil liefore his window aud
said: "Just nee that man defying the law.
He ought to be arrested." And the con
stabulary of the city rush to the police
headquarters and rcort that Daniel is on
his knees at the wide open window. "Yon
are my prisoner," says the oflicer of the
law, dropping a heavy hand on the shoul
der of the kneeling Daniel. As the con
stables open the door of the cavern to
thrust in their prisoner they see the glar
ing eyes of the monsters. Hut Daniel be
comes the first lion tamer, and they lick
bis hands and fawn at his feet, and that
night he sleeps with the shaggy mane of a
wild beast for hia pillow, while the king
that night, sleepless in the palace, has on
him the paw and teeth of a lion be cannot
tame the lion of a remorseful conscience.
What a picture it would be for some art
ist! Darius, in the early dusk of morning,
not waiting for footmen or chariot, has
tening to the den, all flushed and nervous
and in dishabille and looking through the
crevices of the cage to see what had be
come of his prime minister! "What, no
sound?" he says. "Daniel is surely de
voured, and the lions are sleeping after
their horrid meal, the bones of the poor
man scattered across the floor of the cav
ern." With trembling voice Darius calls
out, "Daniel!" No answer, for the
pbophet Is yet in profound slumber. But
a lion, more easily awakened, advances,
and with hot breath blown through the
crevice seems angrily to demand the
cause of this Interruption, and then an
other wild beast lifts bis mane from under
Daniel's head, and the prophet, waking
up, comes forth to report himself all on
hurt and well.
But our text stands us at Daniel's win
dow, open toward Jerusalem. Why in
that direction open? Jerusalem was bis
native land and all the pomp of his Baby
lonish successes could not make him for
get It. He came there from Jerusalem at
18 years of age and he never visited it,
though he lived to be 85 years. Yet, when
he wanted to arouse the deepest emotions
and grandest aspirations of bis heart, he
bad bis window open toward his native
Jerusalem. There are many of you to-day
who understand that without any exposi
tion. This Is getting to be a nation of for
eigners. They have come Into alHoccnpa
tiont and professions. They sit in all
churches. It may be twenty years since
you got your naturalization papers and
you may be thorough Americanized, but
you can't forget the land of your birth
and yonr warmest sympathies go out to
ward H. Your windows are open toward
Jerusalem. Your father and mother are
buried there. It may have been a very
bumble home In which you were born,
but your memory often plays around it
and you hope some day to go and see It
the hill, the tree, the brook, the house, the
place so sacred, the door from which you
started off with parental blessing to make
you own way In the world, and God only
knowa bow sometimes you bare longed to
see the familiar placet of your childhood
and bow in awful crises of life you would
like to have caught a glimpse of the old,
wrinkled face that bent over you at you
lay on tba gentle lap twenty or forty or
fifty years ago. You may hare on this
aide of the sea risen in fortune, and, like
Daniel, bare become great and may have
come into prosperities which you never
could have reached If you bad ttald there,
and you may hare many windows to your
house bay windows and skylight win
dows and windowa of conservatory and
windows on all sides but yon have at
least one window open toward Jerusalem.
, By the Opea Window, ;
When the foreign steamer comes to the
wharf, yon see the long line of sailors,
with shouldered mallbaya, coming down
tba planks, carrying as many letters at
you might suppose to be enough for a
year'e correspondence, and this repeated
again and again during the week. Multi
tude of tbein are letters from home and
t all the postoMcet of the land people
wll go to the wiadow and anxiously atk
for them, hundred! of thousands of per
son Bndjng that window of foreign nalla
tba ope window toward Jerusalem. Mte
age tkat teyi - "Wkn are yon control
hotae ta see asT Broth eTtas ton la
IM sw.m Plata fc dead fa tsar assd
rtlsartA atlM eof feeWa, ,Wa are
cm avail hi twit h'tntUh i t u: i
'th"nil Mm m'f i ft " I ,-r.vt.
will you come to us? All join in love and
hope to meet you, if not in this world,
then in a better. Good-by."
Yes, yes. Id all these cities and amid
the flowering western prairies and on the
slopes of the Pacific and amid the Sierras
and on the banks of the lagoon and on the
ranches of Texas there ia an uncounted
multitude who, this hour, stand and ait
and kneel with their windows open toward
Jerusalem. Home of these people played
on the heather of the Scottish hills.
Some of them were driven out by Irish
famine. Some of them, in early life,
drilled in the German army. Some of
them were aecustomed at Lyons or Mar
seilles or Paris to see on tlie street Victor
Hugo and Gainbetta. Some chased the
chamois among the Alpine precipices
Some plucked the ripe clusters from
Italian vineyard. Some lifted their faces
under the midnight sun of Norway. It Is
no dishonor to our land that they remem
ber the. place of their nativity. Miscre
ants would they be if, while they have
some of their windows open to take in the
free air of America and the sunlight of
an atmosphere which no kingly despot
has ever breathed, they forgot sometimes
to open the window toward Jerusalem. "
No wonder that the sou of the Swiss,
when far away from home, hearing the
national air of hia country sung, the mal
ady of homesickness comes on him so pow
erfully as to cause his death. You have
the example of heroic Daniel of my text
for keeping early memories fresh. Forget
not the old folks at home. Write often,
and, if you have surplus of means and
they are poor, make practical contribu
tion and rejoice that America is bound to
all the world by ties of sanguinity as in
no other nation. Who can doubt but It is
appointed for the evangelization of other
lands? What a stirring, melting, gospel
izing theory that all the doors of other na
tions are open toward us, while our win
dows are open toward them!
Idolaters.
But Daniel, in the text, kept this port
hole of his domestic fortress unclosed be
cause Jerusalem was the capital of sacred
Influences. There had smoked the sacri
fice. There was the holy of holies. There
was the ark of the covenant. There stood
the temple. We are all tempted to keep
our windows open on the opposite side,
toward the world, that we may see and
hear and appropriate Its advantages.
What does the world say 7 What does the
world think? What does the world do?
Worshipers of the world instead of wor
shipers of God. Windows open toward
Babylon. Windows open toward Corinth.
Windows open toward Athens. Windows
open toward Sodom. Windows open to
ward the flats, instead of windows open
toward the hills. Snd mistake, for this
world as a god Is like something I saw in
the museum of Strasburg, Germany the
figure of a virgin in wood and iron. The
victim in olden time was brought there,
and this figure would open its arms to re
ceive him, and, once enfolded, the figure
closed with a hundred knives and lances
upon him, and then let him drop 180 feet
sheer down. So the world first embraces
its idolaters, then closes upon them with
many tortures, and then lets them drop
forever down. The highest honor the
world could confer was to make a man
Roman emperor, but out ot sixty-three
emperors, it allowed only six to die peace
fully iu their beds.
The dominion of thla world over mul
titudes is illustrated by the names of
coins of mnny countries. They have their
pieces of money which they call sovereigns
and half sovereigns, crowns and half
crowns, Napoleons and half Napoleons,
Fredericks and double Fredericks and
ducats and Isahelllnos, all of which names
mean not so much usefulness as domin
ion. The most of our windows open to
ward the exchange, toward the salon of
fashion, toward the god of this world. In
olden times the length of the English yard
was fixed by the length of the arm of
King Henry I., and we are apt to measure
things by a variable standard and by the
human arm that In the great crises of life
can give us no help. We need, like Daniel,
to open our windows toward God and re
ligion. Necessity for Prayer.
But, mark you, that good lion tamer is
not standing at the window, but kneeling,
while he looks out. Most photographs are
taken of those in standing or sitting pos
ture. I now remember but one picture of
a man kneeling, and that was David Liv
ingstone, who In the cause of God and
civilization sacrificed himself, and in the
heart of Africa his servant, Majwara,
found him in the tent by the light of a
candle, stuck on the top of a box, his head
In his hands upon the pillows and dead on
hia knees. But here is a great lion tamer,
living under the daab of the light, and hia
hair disheveled of the breeze, praying.
The fact ia that a man can see farther
on hit knees than standing on tiptoe. Jer
usalem was about 550 statute miles from
Babylon, and the vast Arabian desert
thifted its sands between them. Yet
through that open window Daniel saw
Jerusalem, saw all between it, saw be
yond, taw time, taw eternity, taw earth
and taw heaven, Would you like to see
the wty through your tint to pardon,
through you troubles to comfort, through
temptation to rescue, through dire sick
ness to immortal health, through night to
day, through thinga terrestrial to things
celestial, you will not see them till yon
take Daniel's posture. No cap of bone to
the joints of the fingers, no cap of bone
to the knees, made so because the (Jod of
the body was the God of the sou), and
especial provision for those who want to
pray, and physiological structure joins
with spiritual necessity in bidding ut
pray and pray and pray.
The Bridal Jernealesa.
But It It another Jerusalem toward
which we now need to open our windows.
The exiled evangelist of Kphesns saw it
ont day aa the turf of the Icarian Hea
foamed and splashed over the bowlders at
hit feet, and bla vision reminded me of a
wedding day When the brld by sitter and
matd was bavlag garlands twisted for her
balr axtd Jaw ale etraat for bar nock just
beiot pots her betrothed toad tat
th hand pfha amoed., "L, Job. saw
a ftrMo saforiM 'Mr W hutsW'fiF' 'f
1 iff ion fc.'ica , J ni'i
' ,.' i
ward that bridal Jerusalem are our win
dows opened?
We would do well to think more of
heaven. It is not a mere annex of earth.
It is not a desolate outpost. As Jerusalem
was the capital of Judea, and Babylon
the capital of the Babylonian monarchy,
and London is the capital of Great
Britain, and Washington is the capital of
our own republic, the New Jerusalem is
the capital of the universe. The King
lives there, aud the royal family of the
redeemed have their palaces there, and
there is a congress of many nations and
the parliament of all the world. Yea, as
Daniel had kindred in Jerusalem of whom
he often thought, though he left home
when a very young man, perhaps father
and mother and brothers and sisters still
living, and was homesick to see them, and
they belonged to the high circles of royal
ty. Daniel himself having royal blood in
his veins, so we have In the New Jer
usalem a great many kindred, and we are
sometimes homesick to see them, and they
are all princes and princesses, In them the
blood imperial, aud we do well to keep our
windowa open toward their eternal resi
dence. It ia a joy for us to believe that while
we are Interested in them they are inter
ested in us. Much thought of heaven
makes one heavenly. The airs that blow
through that open window are charged
with life and sweep up to us aromas from
gardens that never wither, under skies
that never cloud, in a springtide that
never terminates. Compared with it all
other heavens are dead failures.
Homer's heaven was an elysium which
he describes as a plnin at fliB end of the
earth or beneath, with no snow nor rain
fall, and the sun never goes down, and
lUiadnmanthus, the juatest of men. rules.
Hesiod't heaven is what he calls the
islands of the blessed, in the midst of the
ocean, three times a year blooming with
most exquisite flowers, and the air is tint
ed with purple, while gameB and music
and horse races occupy the time. Tht
Scandinavian's heaven was the hall of
Walhalla, where the god Odin gave un
ending wine suppers to earthly heroes and
heroines. The Mohammedan's heaven
passes its disciples in over the bridge Al
Sirat, which is finer than r hair and
sharper than a sword, and they are let
loose inio a riot of everlasting sensu
ality. Keep the Window Open,
The American aborigines look forward
to a heaven of illimitable hunting ground,
partridge and deer and wild duck more
than plentiful, and the hounds never ofl
the scent, and the guns never missing fire.
But the geographer has followed the earth
round and round no Homer's elysium.
Voyagers have traversed the deep in all
directions and found no Hesiod's islands
of the blessed. The Mohammedan's celes
tial debauchery and the Indian's eternal
hunting ground for vast multitudes have
no charm. But here rolls in the Bible
heaven. No more sea that is, do wide
separation. No more night that is, no in
Romnia. No more tears that is, no heart
break. No more pain that is, dis
missal of lancet and bitter draft and
miasma and banishment of neuralgias and
catalepsies and consumptions. All colors
In the wall except gloomy black; all the
music in the major key, because eelebra
tive and jubilant. River crystalline, gate
crystalline and skies crystalline, because
everything is clear and without doubt.
White robes, and that means sinlessness.
Vials full of odors, and that means pure
regalement of the senses. Rainbow, and
that means the storm is over. Marriage
supper, and that means gladdest festivity.
Twelve manner of fruits, and that means
luscious and unending variety. Harp,
trumpet, grand march, anthem, amen and
halleluiah in the same orchestra. Choral
meeting solo and overture meeting an
tiphon, and strophe Joining dithyramb, as
they roll Into the ocean of doxologies.
And you and I may have all that and
have it forever through Christ if we will
let him, with the blood of one wounded
hand, rub out our sin and with the other
wounded hand swing open the shining
portals.
Day and night keep your window open
toward that Jerusalem. Sing about it.
Pray about it. Think about it. Talk
about it. Dream about it. Do not be in
consolable about your friends who have
gone into it. Do not worry if something
in your heart indicates that you are not
far off from Itt ecstasies. Do not think
that when a Chrittion dies he stops, for be
goes on.
An ingenious man hat taken the heaven
ly furloughs at mentioned In Revelation
and has calculated that there will be In
heaven 100 rooms 16 feet tquare for each
ascending sonl, though this world should
lose 100,000,000 yearly. But all the rooms
of heaven will be ourt, for they are family
rooms, and at no room in your house is
too good for your children to all the rooms
of all the palaces of the heavenly Jerusa
lem will be free to God's children, and
even the throneroom will not be denied,
and you may run up the steps of the
throne and put yonr hand on th side of
the throne and sit down beside the King
according to the promise, "To him that
overcome! h will I grant to sit with me in
my throne."
But you cannot go in except aa con
querors. Many years ago the Turks and
Christians were In battle, and the Chris
tians were defeated, and with their com
mander Stephen fled toward a fortress
where the mother of this commander wat
staying. When she saw ber son and hia
army In disgraceful retreat, she had the
gates of the fortress rolled shut, and then
from the top of the battlement cried out
to her son, "You cannot enter here except
as conqueror!" Then Stephen rallied bit
forces and resumed the battle and gained
the day, 20,000 driving back 200,000. For
those who are defetted In battle with tin
and death and hell, nothing but ahame
and contempt, but for those who gain the
victory through our Lord Jeaua Christ
the gatet of tba Now Jerusalem will hoist,
and there ahall bo an abundant entrance
Into tbe everlasting kingdom of our Lord,
toward wbttb you do. well to keep yovr
windowa open...,, jr ,;,,, ,-.
Jeremy, Taylor memorised hia Mr
BMM so aMtlf tfaatt It WU MM of kixa
ho neon to commit hia mvmw to matp-
) l.;7VM 3 til
btdoiiof Jon hi
H'fi
GOWNS AND GOWNING
WOMEN GIVE MUCH ATTENTION
TO WHAT THEY WEAR.
Brief Glances at Fancies Feminine,
Frivolous, Mayhap, and Tet Offered
in the Hope that the Beading Prove
Beetful to Wearied Womankind.
Gossip from Gay Gotham.
ASH ION makers
have turned a very
chilly shoulder to
ward the fancy
waist, which U
surely going entire
ly out, despite all
tfi many admirers
can do to preserve
stylishness to It
This Is a severe dis
appointment to
hosts of women
who welcomed this
fashion as a means
to eke out a scanty
wardrobe and who
treasured their one
or two fancy waists In the fond hope
that they would be serviceable for
"best" for months to come. But a
fashion that prevailed as long as these
pretty garments did Is sure not to last
much longer, even If its death cannot
be foretold with the accuracy that
comes from the Insurance man's mor
tality tables, so, after all, the women
who find themselves supplied with
these erstwhile fashionable gar
ments have only themselves to blame
for their predicament
Sweeping and comprehensive as this
shift Is, It accords to the newer bodices
quite as much and equally as fanciful
trimmings as Its predecessors had. So
X PROMENADKR OF UNUSUAL APPEAR
ANCE. there Is no need of regret on the part of
those women who delight In highly
wrought effects. Dresses for middle
aged and elderly women, Indeed, seem
to approach even more nearly to the
fanciful, though, of course, good taste
keeps tight rein on the selection of
colors so that the result may not be
unduly gay. In this first picture there
Is shown a rich costume for an elderly
matron, sketched In prune colored ve
lours, with a moderately wide skirt ex
tending Into a short train and lined
with black moire. The fitted bodice is
alike la back and front and fastens at
the side. Though on a middle aged
wearer its rich fabric might seem to re
quire little adornment, It is, neverthe
less, provided with a Jacket of heavy
lace whose design is outlined with gold.
A medlcl collar with a slightly rolling
edge and full balloon sleeves finished
with lace epaulettes, complete the gown.
The conspicuous successors to the
fancy waist are the coat and Jacket
bodices. The former will be seised upon
by extravagant ones and be carried out
In the most costly fabrics that can be
made, and then be embellished In ways
that, if possible, will go ahead of the
richness of the chief material. Coats of
sensible materials and of reasonable
cost can be had, but the long purse gets
A SAIHTVslTOr M1D-SSASOH MILLIHSBT
u , r j
tboro Int. aa usual, so they will sot
ppoar abundantly until tbe expensive
gnrmonu of which. tk7 art tn the mall
I i Y.!lAmiij ti asrtn iit nemm unld' a rfutm
iff
It l
7
promptly democratic, and bids for tao
favor of the million without first bo
stowing iu graces upon the fortunate
few. This being, then, tbe situation. It
will be found on examination of cur
rent fashions, that Ingenuity expresses
itself in coats by richness and elaborato
ness, while in the less ambitious gar
ments, the air of novelty is more often
attained by effects that at first seem
odd. To better understand this, turn
to the second picture, wherein Is shown
how striking effects can be attained by
unusual cut. This garment is of navy
M
FKESH FROM THE PLEATING FRAME.
blue cheviot aud opens over a vest of
white chiffon over figured white silk.
Surprises in millinery are already
abundant enough in autumn's head
wear, but they promise to become even
more plentiful with winter's showing.
If. the latter's novelties have as large a
proportion of desirable hats as fall has,
susceptible women will surely be driven
to extravagance, and milliners will
have a midwinter haymaking time.
Take the neat fall hat presented in the
next picture; there is Invitation in every
item of It from its novel combination
of twisted dark blue velvet and felt,
to Its trimming, which consists of a
handsome buckle in front, In Its fall of
white lace at either side, and In Its two
quills perched so saucily atop it With
such tasteful millinery plentiful, wom
en's pocketbooks will be bard hit
The rust that had been accumulating
on pleating frames has been removed
by this time, for accordion pleating Is
to be freely used In trimmings and
accessories and in whole gowns as well.
When contrived tastefully these
dresses make an excellent appearance.
There are, however, many dangers of
going wrong in planning them, which
only makes success the greater when It
Is achieved. The next illustration
shows how swagger such a rig can be
come when of artistic construction.
Here the fabric is black silk and Its
skirt Is not trimmed, the rows of rib
bon that were once added being no
A SMALL, BTTT ELABORATE CAP.
longer permissible. The bodice la fit
ted, fastens Invisibly at the side and
is trimmed with a number of narrow
pleated frills of the silk, both In front
and back, and with two bows of wide
black satin sash ribbon on the shoul
ders. The only dash of color seen In the
whole Is on the bat, which Is of black
woven hair In toque shape with garni
ture of vivid scarlet geraniums and
foliage, In addition to black ribbon and
wings.
Furriers declare that full-length coats
of costly pelts will be the fashionable
thing for winter, but there Is a host of
pretty capes that seem bound to make
that prophecy ont a mistaken one. So
many of these little capes are embel
lished elaborately that It seems aa If
the trlmmlugs of tbe discarded fancy
waist had worked through to tbe out
side. Here Is a sample one. In tbe final
picture, made of almond green silk shot
with rose and figured with darker green
In stripes and flowers. Tbe garment Is
bordered with an Inter tl on and points
of yellowish lacs and Is edged with a
frill of cream silk. Points of the tans
lace ornament tbe top, and the collar
consists of a raff of whit moosstUne
with full groen rosettes. Another styV
tab fall hat appears above It, mad of
almond
with' frees fsatkMH apt rlbbeas la two
of M mmm otov-.ut JwWiih o
i'jj r.i!t i.
(I '! I 11 'I '
3CtMct trail.
t,,Mf!Y..f( "ill! i.) J,y. '.
'i'.t HH.Mtt, Hi.i 4t0 ilWl'L
green woven fort and
! OtjprttgMt tmtminti.k & ni a.:
I- HI I' '