. . . , ' • . . 1 . - . . r • -- - - " 1 . - ‘.:<-•,=,,-,... ..-'-:-PIW-e:. ,_ --..- • - --.-, - • , . .••• ...... ~..., %. • . P , „.. ' - . N. -A ....- 1 i • • ' • • - T ? ... ...... ~. -•• ,1 I • 1• tI :.!'",,- ,- , : % - ,.. .< V - T,-',4 -, :• . ' t. l';',. ,••., ,A„ , ', 5 •, - ..t . r ...` -- ri• - ?..".." ,,.. " 'r, ' . '',,-'„ .- • .' t '.. " '''''''f' 1 -')" .- - • ": , 1 - ' s' -. .. - .44-'l'..-i xi. , ' ~ -, ?r, t , -4-..,-.. .-- -.4‘, .. ~.- ~ . ~, . .., v. .. '-' - I. ' ' . .. ''' . 1 -'' ' ' '''' , "- r, ' •••-• •-',.'.,!.-..;'.;`,,-:.: ~- 4 - ;.'..•.2.?1,::: - .L.k. -,, , , , - ... --- .., . ._ ... ',,-: , r ...* W..i, _..,.• :' . . . ..,::' . , ' oi ~... , _ ~ , _ . - v, ' ..,;'.' to 4. ,.. _ i , ''-,,,..,......-. .., - .1;;:,..., f 124 - • • ' rH" • .-' - t." - : - , , . - '''''' '" ''..- ' : • --:' -_, ' -.------ . • . ,-, <. •.•. - ••-:'•- . . ... . . , .. . , - , - 4 • ~ .. ,::-- ....;- .. - r '•1" '''`:•",,,-..-,•.---. 5... -• .g. - = . - 1 . -.:: t,,',-. t..P.; , . ,;.;," , .. - : •<••••••••••A -. -".•,-, -•-: -,- • • = .. ' l ' •:.• ' -. :-;.., .• •_ , . ---- - -, • ':•:-.,:.-. ' _ .--, ,-,l' -, - A • ' • • r- ,- . .. :- ',E,: . ..k $-,' `fa ~:,,, ...,-- . _ '` . .e.- ... , , i . ~k . : Ti'' 0 1 , ..,, . • • • ' ••• ,' - - i -. .1 . `'. • . . _ ~.• .. . . ~ :, - ,: - ~.1....L-.;-..: .- t ~, ~....:, •• ...i'l r',.. :F .te . . ....... • '._ ~ T ," . 1... :1. .',.. ' . l-: - !.1 -- ::, , '",,....:, , i,li:' . , . • ':-, '-- _.., ' . -'-... , . , ----------,-,---.,--.,,,,.,- ~ , . , . , . . • ..- \ . - ME RN ' - pHATUJES F. READ, &I! H. H. FRAZI, . . • . congregation •th n . united in •singing to, the tune of St Ma iris, the .following Versdi , E • • - • • ' ' • I. -.-- • 4 ‘ Let all th '-heathen writers rem,' i • I r .' For the' ~ ,eptiblicars; ; 7 ~ -' : ;_- - - ' •Tf '' 7 f bk. ••• . , _L-.. : . ... .. . ~ i, • •-•- IstiottoLsoN, Pa:, August 16, i S'.ift',., ' ,• - Great Goitif-Oneicompared with thine, i Messis. Editors :-----A long tune has elapsed • • • 11°w - 4'nm:their writings look." • . - t "lee.. which •tivas sun at the . hay Stack I have taken up my pen to address you.fifty'. year s :44this seeming negleciEitas•been 00+0'intich ,' ago. ' • Aftet the reading.of the xevit P. by iiigh forgetfOlness.er lack of noiewbrthy Ile- the Jleir.-Dr.• 'Ferris, of Netiv York, .prayer, ~ eideats, as from pressure Of business arid woo, was offered by the Bev. Timothy Wood , :. of health..• . A valetodinatitin js uufit, for any bridge D.. D. II have no language that can extivti eiertion, physical or mental;.' ' . =i, • adequately express the impression :this - effort . IL - - ; g It:wos my pleastire to spend the! wholeof seemed to prOdnee,-on the entire.o.t.mbly.— . ,E•t : . - •t. last week at : illiarustoxinon the triost beau- 1 heard numbers speak of it as'aiirPasi n g In - .. _t,'lfella . all the-(valleys of 13crishir • Counts; • fervOr And elOquence any ,piritiier T te: which •' istitss achusettS. In this ititletvale Sturm -End.. they had •ev•erl listened. Dr.' WOOdbridrre id by the grandest rnouotain seeneriy, is Wa. has been blind tfbr•fifty years. • . Pants College. The.sixty-second Commence - The hymn .Conimencing "Save ye not 'the . ~ , . - inet of this institution Occurred last weele— cleud arise," was then sung, after which Prof.. • - fßeginning With" Sabbath morning,l- we bad - a). Albert Hopkins ilelivered,,the Jubilee Ad • - sermon' by . Rev.. Mr. Thompson, ofßOxbtiry, A ress. . In speaking of the Mission Park he • ••••akkas, (one of 'the Missionary denotation to. .saidi " While the woodlands have receded to -ndi,a) from Matt. xxviirr' 20, an earnest el-; the mountain lopi.,•the grove has eseoped.thito .. . ;pin:enc . discourse. In the afternoon President, feller's axe, anti remains, - standing like a sen ......Honkins preached .the Baccitiatireake sermon, ,tinel at its p st. The Altimni have decreed to the graduating - dug, frOm Heti _ii:: lft in i•thotit shall s andy .and ifi at; the millenial '. - ponirectiort with -Matt, tart `24.- -- hese. Bac; down it shall 11 With, the forests of Leba .t i ... ;• calaureate-s 'have justly been • I onsidered tiori,,its mem n•y shall never die. • Therm i,•:ktitoni hie 'ablest efforts of Dr. -I,ll4kiits,and were two hay. tacks, but it-was of the:North , E • • - . lhavd.always been remembered with the lire- sta . & lie . sheol speali---the: Most celebrated ;Ilea interest, by those to whini they have.l haystack in t ..world,' and . this lie made the ;' ibeefi 'especially 'addressed ,-and the diseMirse i•stibjeet of his tddress, - treating it under four .E ;upon this oceasion was probably) not a Whit iliads, :viz. , 1,. The days of the haYstaek.-4- , . inferior to any that hail preceded it. • Aboinid:E . 12• 1111 4 7 -' Merl f the - haystaek: -3. The - rela-. . . . ing in rich, ocautiful metopors, liti was cull, <•- 1 ton the, times .ait_ men to the cause of . . nently practical, :mil predueed - a deep iini...lrifligton. 4, :Our ,position in reference to , . • . .. • ; - , 1 I pression not- ,„i , Vy on the forty•fliree yoeng i tli,...se.evencs." -. Ile-eidled on a yisung man . ; men., who lisAelied to the parting' eounsers.of 1 torn Andove who`read original letters writ-, ...'; I , tWit-rl:•_beldved. - venerable instro4or ~but.a ISo 1 ten h' Saint' . J. Mills 'raid ('ordon Hall; • 1 onithettoits•of Abortni and distinguished me-ti, CO. and:ex-White - the original papers of this first • who had catitereafroirt v•t-' fof tail;, .111i. -, s lonarv; a. sociation, Written in' cipher.: - . .. s. countries .ions . ,arts o .t ie., --- ... .. • , , f and many other to:attend. the forth- . leLspealun 41611. ,,, e Jubilee Prof., It. said t ,ecifning. Missionary •-..Juttilee. , I The ; viand :! this is abol'lxicle--the oldest—it is .time • "i 0 t t•-• 1 theme of the 'MIS to show '‘• What to . Took- 'ove • the,. Machinery '.once- in 'fifty -, ,cohstittites the true lrao," ' -This airs t t l p:It: .1 y i::: - .1- E s-46 •wi dup the c l oc k . " ln closing i ed. - under: seVO: beids, 'and ibilowed by an• Ihe propbsed planer: a Seritinarli- to be Jo-- i ' • •-•'•--_, - - ~.- .. 1 • • •-• .1 . f elbquent pero . thin - to thei graduating .elasß. • .eatited in the Park, for rate preparation oS , 1:A ser'non so replete with' learnest, profiWild,4issionaries and recommended the sobjee .. I : ttiott.' , Er ' should it l ass :the Press, . "wilf.: - ,4,';'o'the friend of the.cause. This ".kildress 00,k ' ' real , t t .1 . I read ‘t, it it crest pleasure -and .salisfiletion4 ~-',',.,-kk",•;e•Opied an ho ir and-. WaslisSened to with pro- 1 - 1 - 1, '; -., • 1 Th., , -, , \ \ 1 • 1 ~'- •liliii(l 'lt te11f . 1.311 ' I ' ; 11 - 114,::: eVen : A)g toe ....v./Ir. i.wc!.N.l.i.c.atl rc , ; ; liieu -1 -. ~ ' '. J - • ---, tt , -- .... - ..tile Owl. i - the ltais liiiiol.ogical'Socio - .. in 'that ,teitei., i • • - . -, - . . _t_••.. the teem •; i tons 'manner fpeetilist to, art eliaraeierist;ie in i-, ,i il.. t b'imself. - .At ithe otttset liii made.: hion),•;'irtil- 1 'l 's ~,(4 in • • • • ~ Ei11, , ,,, s ;'• lusion to theLeopidos shower - 61 - tran whi. - ..b .7 „,. •1 lod 7 u-t fal l en upon the ar •!1 '1 .. •t' afterl ' '.• '' • • 1 . _,) h . • , - tt I • t nen lotii 'week; of drouth. . Though so : mewl - 14 diseurt-4 ___.: . .____- I • • ..• -- 1 s , ...rtEttive tau •F • sive; " the qualifications • requisite to make al •• E . of the Colle , good minister of ilte gospel" tivos• the' (-rand 1 7 ; ~ L •- • bi • .. Se:or° on bci -. f, topic of the ucidress, which to .a late hourlwo. ' '" • • . ___:l Hon. G-.. N. k listiined to without wea•riness ! • , I - ' 1 ) :I . •,t' - t•Bott ~,• .- 1 .'0,n Monday 'evening the Germania B:md Lr : '. i ''', •,. i '' I . *Of 'Boston gave A concert to a. full tibuSe.-- , w Y eltd " ' ''' ilvformed c '1 Till. Band performed at the pilbitc exerf'-ises i of the succeeding dilYs' in -a very acceitcable I Y ' . ... 1 , , .• , i The coil • -1,- ~ in sinner. - • ' ''' ' ' '' 1 ' . 1- h —t tl • I iota ym. i - : On Tuesday-- - morning the annual meeting 1 which E t after ‘ ti bf the Society of Alumni was.lielil in theiCol--1 early „ rod t ; • • li.. lege Chapel—Jedge Buell of :Albany in' the 7' ,1 - ameng, - wht l . (lair, This association Was'forined. thirty Revl ~ .fi.ver" -- ,y cars ago rind is th.p Oldes t tef,the kqtcl ' in 1 " Mtiss " -: • •• • ;Mr. ; this country. One of the regular exercises, t• Rea. ; . ) .. I slow, from . •1. Is reading obituary,notices'of all Alortni`whii-, -••- , 1 Gorden : .hove deceased since the hist -annuOl . Mee i tin..• ~. f I 1 - • - .7 , • - • - ', '-.: 3lessrs. ; , . —members of the Society Make correction i . -: -.i tarns of 1 1 olihese notices it'neededi * and bestow Isuch f •-•- • 'E' I ' •• 1 , • 'lt \t ~ Of Ceylon..l i ,eulegiura as they deem prope.r. The 'honey , f 1 • There v.' 1 E ten 'arrived' when the Meeting' broke -up mina' time Rile. , . 'then such greethig4 of long, seParated frii,:adtirl' .. . . • T - \nieneing" I ; .11y father was the - re flrthe first:time irr.for,l tb the tun, 7 ; ; • V five years—he met inky One elosginate,'--•-•.-1 .`:apron . 1 . ‘'i -H0n..C..A.: Dewey, Judge of th'e Supreme hag be OdUrt of Massachusetts. 'Of the' thirty'four pered\ 1 who graduated when he'did, tort arn'nurn"i - outline . • ,f, ~ , tiered with the dead i : outlaw. , -Whom is'thit late,; I n ; - due ti Hen.E.A. H.-Read; • : t,i " ' ~ . •••":: , , . , • I (treble . ocE I : • The Society 'adjourned tti attend' the Itele- f orm , but : bratiOn`ofL e Missionary;U i ee,. ~ - th j' b'l 7' .. ' I' types•Wil ..-• - 1 • Fifty years age last :week a littleband or will be :it ! i' , students who had consecrated tlierrisels to Tuesdal ; ....i the• cause of Foreign Missions,, retired to a Prize Rh, secluded grove near the bank of Alm IrOosae almost,m it . for prayer. , ASdden blander shower 'bolia: 1 phis Unto 1 1. . pelted them•to take refoge: under tr'hOy4Ock Harvard - .;,. •••„• ' clOse -- ,-by, and there for a lOng.t.line after;they t' N Vekl '• ; depth:wed their meetings..; Three yeati , i ago, graduati ( ' -tie precise locality Of-thig Spot Was identified great cr I . '- by the Him. Byrom Green of the el&SS.t.,of .The ..V:i f • i '...1808. 'The :Alumni have I purchased raid en- ;western '; . closed ten acres otwiie this 'spotfand the grove, Darin , 1 . Et. • , • • • , -i . 1 to be forever-•set apart . .a; a 14. is-siert . Park, edifices l' L Which they design to adorn with 'everi :tree grounds t• • , and plant from Missionary & ids, :thia t, . 3..1 .- ffl t-1 to the ' ha, . e a11 ., 1 the nu . '• t • grow in that climate: The grounds; • ; • - „2:(4dy been tasteftillv arrall„,e•ed r the'haistackland the , , . E. - spot is Marked by' a marble slab, f' . . 1 L.l stable biyststek, whieli,eabh -year' Will -be:re. ---a P art l and h, yer l condits I tion—u 1 • j'. • Dewed from the grass cut -within the enelo-.., • sure. • • This birth-place of Missions, this.haltowed ePot,in all coining time the friends of the deerner will love to. visit: in -the beautiful gins.* the liissionary . Wearied and. worn out I 'in the....Caster'S service, May-seek refreshment ! and repose-. to the haystack, the student em- Won,: of undying fame, will .retire tci! pilule with nature, and, with God,. and by prayer gain the strength th a t +.hairrnake him , , a chrip,tian hero. - In this Park it was designed to Ifirird the Ju bilee exercises ; and ample preparatious, had _`been made fur that . A;nipose but a copious shower.of rain fr4tiated - this design .and we were obliged to repair to' the. brae Contvre .. I gutionai Church which I,Tati -oar haystadk pro tem. • ' i••• • • • The Ham David Dudley Field 1, 1 4 1,L iof. New York, ehaiiiian of thevcommiitee of ,arrangements, delivered the IntmlUctory Mhdress—a well timed thing. The choir and 1 I lIM • it =GI R • EDITORS: 'i State .' Along down this', riari p r would be. "eitik" 1 'Lawrence are . the large' :bath well located on the iier, To'peka SeVenty-five, 'miles from It's mouth: - '.. L ecompte, the ‘:i . Capital," ten miles - above Lawrence, on .the 'same side of the river, is a small, mean place; -It yas the reudezvi)us.of the U. S. Marshal,'Donalson,' and renegade passe ; while preparing lo Sa -!1 - awrenee, and .. is •ed for the vagaboi d 7 . araeter of its in (.oet t congel:.;,tion:then sang ‘; iff ow 1.: 141b1tants, dilapidated a ,d!r,,gs and 'lamer let." to the time of Lenox—a r e.. i :...: Ocis grog cries. ,These last l'oentioned nui- however, are s id tee"' be tin the de )) minutes; 'f elh;wed=then all . ' ,sxleesi linging Coral ;' , :!on • after' whielt;', Crease, owing to t.he in f liilify!:,lf the proprie- L. Dewey - 15. P. 1,2. in araver. ...t.1.:r4 to replenish their bars,#blel - 1 governor wed brief a - ddis, , ,,:s -es by 1 -,,,p re .... - _Bll4nnon has drank 1 ~ 1 on eteili!,-7-the ' only 41: . •1. PreS.. llapkins Cin'behalt" : . .l .\- 4•fibe I ms es er klul: a ill . l\ 4- is- - .1 Rev. Dr.: Andersen) Sen., ... 4 1t isa fact),vorthy o . a :'plat this food-' (half of t h e A. 13. C. F. ..M. .3-' ; eta Sodom, LecOmpte, is ,aa4e tape of what Briggs L. L. D. ?rest. of the 4 ;#ther Pro Slav&ry t ' wns.,...tllere : are in the ,rd of . AliSsions: • 4. Rev.: ;#1 ~1 { Territory, while the Fr l e St :.ecaes, (RAI; urn- Albanv On behalf of the Dtilel - i ,bering them ten to onel, .are:all lb a flourish ..nirch. .5. Rev. Dr. 'Fyn. - af-': • . J 47, colviiti,,,,- ~ . . .• • • - ... ~, . . - piseopal ellureh. - ~ . N. T Were. it not for its p i olitical . difTieulties, this . , . regation then sang part of' an 0r...1 wOuld soon- bee4ne : a -cry populous country, to the tunc,-3fissionary llymn ; - : 1 as its central, ieogra Ihical position, fertile Lrief addresses W:Pre delivered liyl soirand congenii di ' ate, refider it the most' .. . • , ates and returned Missionaries . ' valuable portiali::t.ifou (I 'national territory, :md: • - - in were Ex- Gov. W. ashburn : - ' would ere long; i4rati dan unparalleled tide of L` - 'Dr. Riggs from Canstantinoplf emigrants to settle (4 its broad prairies.— oor• from India, Rev. Mr. - win- Back from the..l.ler bottotnsthe land is high Madras, Prof, Morgan of Oherliu;: and rolling, affi)rding every facility for drain all, son of the Missionary, Rev;. age, so there is; not- a swamp or marsh in the lark and 'Bingham - of S. I. NyillW. - Territory ; hence it wlll doubtless remain OsPI, and • ltev. H. R. MisingtO.ti`,! free from many diseases prevalent in most '.!. ' western . countries." It ls: well atered with stream' Sand springs; 1 and these streams arc Skirted with timber. Isuffieiel I sfur fuel and building - purposes: he soil i \deep rind rich, ( 1 producing, with 14t1 labor, al\ the cereal crops raised in the: tates, as vr - 1. as every variety of vegetable S t , - •Before the od is bro ken ken there is ItHiuxuriant groWth of russ, so that stock, can; be ra4ed'at a trifling expense; , =--an - admirable country too for woe - I -grow - . in 0. --- 1 : !" 1' . e Near the frontier s e • ttlernents wild game of every kind is 'abund:int ; indeed, it is aston .ishing to. see :the .vast numbers - of wild ani mals that keep just! beyond the borders of 'civilization. • 'The ~ flesh pf ..the bufiltlo, elk, deer and antelope ari moil} used for food, and turkey„- duck, plover i :and prairie*Tenicken are daily dishes";', excellent'flsh too arc taken in 811 - the streams. : Ptletty well north and west . the Indians,accionally , catch a black- bear, whose flesh they esoern --highly fur foal— Sorne white folks.to'ire fond . of this kind-of i o diet. . C.lreis reporte of-::....e man, that:while on a tour througkt at region he ate'so mach hear meat that on r turning home lie actually hugged bis ., wife ! - : ._ .. re many others to speak but the . After singing the 112.-mn' com esus shall reign ,Where'er thesun,'.' of Old rfundred, the 'benediction nced, when' the great assembly, n in session six hours, quietly dis hus havet, I sketched an imperfect he e s iceicises of this great Jubilee. e the full pmeeeding,s Of that mem sionWili be published in pamphlet iu\ the e are some things to which the fail do justice, and anion them 'L a i d e: r oil: es ,. w b a y s t. o h oc es u e P rn ied en. with the torical r. \ reins, and an address of latchlesselob,ence before the Adel * SocietY, by Prof. Huntingdon of . . eestlay was com a Is, C e.. \ . .. g class acquitted dit; and their exeret dictory Charles N. Y. the: pa.st few• years, se have 1)66i - erected on -the, i . 4 valuable additions have lx , el ibraries, liuseues and Cabins I ber of Professors has. been ilium linstitutiorils in a highly IL:lurk:hi Situat'ed'in a quiet. lovely'valley , from the bauuts of vice and tempts der the control- of great and good' a desirable place to educate a young lliamsCollege has; few superiofr. . Dr . id at Meeting of the - Alumni •on day. morning, that he had fOoked over ntry with the view of selecting the 1 liege at- whiCh to educate 'his own lid he' had _ChOsen Williams. lle 'e . its sincerity by presenting his sons fur . on to the coming Freshman Class: soabruptlyy for my letter is • long e- !Lien, is inan,W Ty ng Wedne the co best. sons, a admiss' 1 ea sough As ver . Yoti rat Truly. Ft 'lo‘Our S.A2i7SER..-" I see," says a 1 oudent of the kleston Atlas,. "that in . h •ivitnia the_Ltuthanan men are forming band dubs,'-{Wheatland is the name , ' ansn's scltt,) with baurfers bmting as aBbc;al of Wheat - . I beg to suggest e banner inscribe:l witb_the name of ales Fremoneshould have=for itsde, Threshing Maeldne. :That sheaf of is deatined, to 'be timbal And the to be gathered int° diniither garner than border ruffians." . Tux core Pipits of } ;Bu a nevi that. Jolla - vice wheat wheat that • "rieTßYmpou The following letter frm a resident of Lawrence, Kansas, to a ehlizen of this coun ty, Will , be read . with inteirsi; Liire es, Kansas, - Jul 29, 1830. J. Coomvst.t., : ear Sir :—I write you, thinking you will be interested in a line frotn,this country, so 'famed for its troubles. I came hero last spring , and have been over all the settled parts-of the Territory. The last cabin on the weste frontier is some seventy :: miles bai:k of ly there are few settlement. l leaving the Tort. This ' the eabt. bank of 'tepid;li .mouth, eighty miles isont soot one hundred and'seventy sour.• All supplies for p from th . e,States, tit'au en it. is. important .ibbat' it sl~ course it . will to done Government keeps. in rca here to use in exteitnina •freedom"that may siring ing colonies. , 1 Near here, Onlndd h - publican and Sin.oliy lii es the Kaw, or .Kai ts considerable size, [line of Itiall_.ixater,j, edit i to, Which oauses 4 cont , thannei.. It runs ; east, coarse of over two h teat:l3llw the 'Nfl .,, soitri ; rt. • - • ittitries, awl is the h tncement, The kieraselves with • ' ;8' closed with Halsey' of oral tie* College made X 3.3. 8 I TROSE, THURSDAY, '..AUGUST : 28, -.8516-_, MO mass of geldi. making g.ol • ditions. W hat is the ,praise or: blame when 'it is unf.diled All we are - barn to be or del ' , • •Onnthing is 11C0 flip ever settled, that the subject is-.tit be definitely - "- dealt with: . It : is' up now, And . cannot .be . - put do*n by . any 'power, nor postponed:, .Henceferth no' free-. man is ever WOilig:tl4 lid‘quiet.i . It.ii,idl'e to think of it. G 0.7 -toliary where she - WS - be, nentli the Cross whereon her only Son hangs, with five ghastly .NvoiiMis,. aini;biti lier 'Calm her grief. Never, till she sees - bile.. arise x l ik from the-tomb, shall she be calmet , -SO we, • sitting under the very. shado* of ts- Cross where Freederiflangs crucified, . - -ith ,those five bleeding i'OuridS iiiiiiiiiiiie.las ten years 'have given, in each of which is - • li .tongue of .fire.—how shall we -be quieted?--..it . cannot be I Not - until the resuriectirei • .thor n - of Freedom rises on our lanpsimil we CeaSe,.to weep and pray and work and Watch-by tie sepulcher. . Already,: Oli,.nli,r brothers !I' hear the flutter-of the atigel'S - - *ieg.f irg-he • comes to roll away the-id-one:And' break the • seal of: the Slave, Power. ...:; ,:: '• - - • 'l Le;us all be ready, staittleg, attifitirigthe vieto -- of God. The .in.t.qii is indeed' high and strong ;' inie strength is, small ;' our Might Weakness. - •• - But if each One surrenders himself this .day and •.heneePth "to - be • the passik3 instrument of the beCttinstiricil in„,i, in him, his acts will ce,dib•to:b.e the wark of a mere man and rise' tO*ltegrandeur and influence of direct acts for.eiod: ,giieh• one can- be'now•A'NfOrkirian for god, his visible finger"entering and - Molding- : the affairs of men. I. beseeeeh -you.. O. Christians,' yield yourselves„thus. Lend ii hand AO:the : great cause of God and man ; , and kno*.that, aim eess is certain. The:tongee of God bath spo ken it... "" Not by might, nor by poWer, but 'by niy spirit, saith the Lord of hosts. - .: Wh . ' :art thou, 4) great mountain, befOre Zeriibba bet thou shalt bane a .plain." . ' - 1 6 . __ - -----,i ---,--,,,r'.F1ii5..';'t7,,,.'...' r•- - -