$$• $■ j'-l s; h‘. if;' THE DROVES AT THE WELL Dr. Talmage Discourses on the Thirst of Mankind. Thin In* Intlfcil, k World of Thlrat and I n re*t--.M»ny (Main I .<* a.nna Drawn from 111* Trit. Well Worth a Care ful, Thoughtful l'eruaal. Ei.miiia, N. Y., Sept. 0.—Dr. Tnlmagc preached hero today to the immense multit ado who have come to attend the New York and 1’cunsylvania exposi tion, which is being held here Septem ber 1 to Septcmher ll. It is a combina tion exposition of cattle, sheep, horses and valuable stock of all kinds from the two states. The sermon was preached on the fair grounds to agreat I v audience of farmers, horsemen, drov ers and stock raisers from near and far aa well as citizens from the adjacent cities Secretary Stanley, of tho Y. M. C. A. of Elmira, presided. I)r. Tal mage's text was llenesis xxix : 8: "And they said, we ruunot, until all the flocks lie gathered together, and till they roll tin. stone from the well's There tire sumo reasons why it is ap propriate that I should accept the in vitation to preach ut this great inter state fair, and to these throngs of countrymen and citizens, horsemen just come from their flnu almrgrrs, the king of hensts, for l take the crown from the lion and put it on the brow of the horse, which is in every way nobler, and speak to these shepherds just come from their llocks, the I,ord himself in one place-called a shepherd, and in another place called a lamb, and all the good are sheep, and preach to you cattlemen cotno up from the herds, your occupation honored by the fact that (joil himself thinks it worthy of immortal record that lie owns "the cattle on a thousand hills.” It is ap propriate that 1 come because 1 was a farmer's boy and never saw a city until I was nearly grown, and having been born iu the country I never got over it, | : and would not dwell in cities a day if my work was not appointed there. My love to you now, and when 1 get through 1 will give yon my hand, for though 1 have this summer shaken hands with perhaps about-10,000 people in twenty-ouu states of the union all the way through to Colorado ami north and south, 1 will not conclude my summer vacation till 1 have shaken hands with you. You old farmer out tliurel llow you make me think of my fattier! You elderly woman out there with cap and spectacles! llow you make me think of my mother! And now while the air of these fair grounds is filled with the bleating of sheep and the neighing of horses and the lowing of cattle, 1 can not find a more appropriate text than the one 1 read. It is a scene in Meso potamia, beautifully pastoral. A well of water ef great value in that region. The fields around about it white with three flocks of sheep lying down wait ing for the watering. 1 hear their bleatiug coming on tlio bright air and the laughter of young men and maid ens indulging iu rustic repartee. I look off and I see other flocks of sheep coming. Meanwhile, Jacob, a stranger on the Interesting errand of looking j‘v ^ for a wife, comes to the well. A beau tiful shepherdess cornea to the sumo well. 1 see her approaching-, followed by her father’s flock of sheep. It was a memorable meeting. Jacob married that shepherdess. The Bible account of it is: "Jacob kissed Uachel and lifted up his voice and wept.” It has always been a mystery to me what he found to cry about! But before that scene occurred Jacob accosts the shep herds and asks them why they postpone the slaking of the thirst of these sheep, and why they did not im mediately proceed to water them. The shepherds reply to the efFoct: "We are all good neighbors, and as a mat ter of courtesy we wait until all the sheep of the neighborhood como up. Besides that, this stone on the well's mouth is somswhat heavy, and soveral of us take hold of it and push it aside, and then the buckets and troughs arc filled; and the sheep are satisfied. We cannot, until all the flocks be gathered together, and till they roll the stone from the well’s mouth; then we water the sheep." un, imi 1* a tmrsty world! Hot for the brad, and blistering for the feet, and parching for the tongue. Tho world’s great want is a cool, refresh ing, satisfying draught Wo wander around and find the cistorn empty, liong and tedious drouth has dried up the world's fountains, but nonrly nine teen centuries ago, a shepherd, with crook in the shape of a cross, and feet cut to the bleeding, explorecLlhe desert passages of this world, and one day came across a well a thousand feet deep, bubbling and bright, and apales ?-r cent, and looked to the north, and the ;, south, and the east, and the west, and cried out with a voice strong and musi gf f cal that rang through the ages: “Ho every one that thirsteth, come ve to the waters!” J If a herd of swine come to a well they angrily jostle each other for the precedence; if a drove of cattle come to a well, they hook each other back from the water, but when a flock of sheep come, though a hundred of them shall be disappointed, they only ex press it by sad bleating, thoy eome to gether peacefully. We want a great multitude to come around the Gospel well. I know there are those who do not like a crowd—they think a crowd is vulgar. If they are oppressed for room in church it makes them posi tively impatient and belligerent. Not so did these Oriental shepherds. They ■ - . waited until all the flocks were gath f ered. and the more flocks that came the better they likod it And so we ought to be anxious that all the peo ple should come. Go out into the high ways and the hedges and compel them to come in. Go to the rich and tell them they are indigent without the Gospel of Jesus. Go to the poor and tell them the affluence there is in Christ Go to the blind and toll them of the touch that gives eternal illumin ination. Go to the lame and tell them of the joy that will make the lame man leap like a hart Gather all the sheep off of all the mountains. None Bp torn of the dogs, none so sick, none so worried, none so dying, as to be omitted. When the fall eleetions come the whole land is scourea for voters, and if a man is too weak or sick to walk to the polls, a carriage is sent for him; bat when the question is whether Christ or the devil shall rule this world, how few there are to come out and see the sick, and the lost, and the suffer ing, and the bereft, and the lame, and induce their suffrages for the Lord Jesus. Why not feather a great flock? All America in a flock; all the world in a flock. You notice that this well of Mesopo tamia had a stone on It, which must be removed before the sheep could bo wa tered; and 1 find on the well of salva tion today impediments and obstacles which must bo removed in order that you may obtain the refreshment and life of this liospcl. In your case the impediment is pride of heart. You cannot bear to come to so democratic a fountain; you do not want to come with so many others. It is to you like when you are dry, coming to a town pump, as compared to sitting in a parlor sip ping out of a chased chalice which has just been lifted from a silver salver. Not so many publicans and sinners. You want to get to heaven, but it must be on a special car, with your feet on a Turkish ottoman and a band of music on board the train. You do not want to be in company with rustic Jacob and ltuehul, and to be drinking out of the fountnin where ten t housand sheep have been drinking before you. Y'ou will have to remove the obstacle of pride, or never find your way to the well. You will liavo to come aa we came, willing to taka the water of eternal life in any way, and at any hand, and in any kind of pitcher, ory ing out; “O, Lord Jesus, I am dying of thirst, (live me the water of eternal life, whether in trough or goblet; give me the water of life; 1 care not in wliat it comes to me.” Away with all your hindrances of pride from the well's month. Jlere is nnother mnn who Is kopt liaek from this water of life by tho «tono of au obdurate heart, which lies iver the mouth of the well. You have no more feeling- upon this subject than if llod had yet to do you the ilrst kind ness, or you had to do (iod the first wrong. Seated on his lap all theso years, his everlasting arms sheltering you, where is your gratitude? Where is your morning and evening prayer? IVhere are your consecrated lives? I 'iiy to you, as Daniel said to Ifelshaz ’.ar: “The (lod in whose hund thy breath is, and all thy way, thou hast not glorified." If you treated anybody as badly asyou havetreated (iod,you would nave made five hundred apologies—yea, your whole life would have been an ipology. Three times a day you have been seated at Cod's table. Spring, mmmer, autumn, and winter be has appropriately apparelled you. Your icalth from him, your companion from :iim. yourchildren from him, your home from him. All the bright surroundings )t your life from him. O man, what lost thou with that hard heart? Canst diou not feel one trob of grati tude toward the Cod who made you. md the Christ who cam* to redeem you, and tho Holy Chost who has all licse years been importuning you? If you could sit down five minutes under die tree of a Saviour's martyrdom, anti fool his warm life trickling on your forehead and cheek and hands, me diinksyou would get some apprecia iou of what you owe to crucified iesus. Heart of stone relent, relent, Touched by Jesus’ cross subdued; See his body, mangled, rent, Covered with a gore of blood. Sinful soul, what hast thou done? Crucitiud the eternal Son. Jacob with a good deal of tug anrtpush took the stone from the well’s mouth, io that tho flocks might be watered. And I would that today my word, blessed of Cod, might remove the hin drances to your getting up to the Gos >ol wall. Yea, I take it for grantod that tho work is done, and now lilt* Oriental shepherds, I proceed te water Come, all ye thirsty! Tea here am indeilued longing in your aeuL Yon rind money-making; that did not sat isfy you. You tried ofiise under gev srnment; that did not satisfy yeu. You tried pictures and sculptures, but works of art did not satisfy you. Y’ou are as much discontented with this life as the :elebrated French author who felt that ho could not any longer endure the misfortunes of the world, and who said: “At 4 o'clock this afternoon I shall put in end to my own existence. Mean while I must toil on up to that time for the sustenance of my family.” And he wrote on his book until the clock struck 1, when he folded up his manuscript ind, by his own hand, concluded Ills earthly life. There are men here who ire perfectly discontented. Unhappy in the past, unhappy today, to be un happy forever unless you come to this .1 os pel well. This satisfi-s the soul with i high, deep, all-absorbing'and eternal satisfaction. It comes and it offers the most unfortunate man so much of this world as is best for him, and throws all heaven into the bargain. The wealth if Croesus, and of all the Rothschilds s only a poor, miserable shilling com pared with the eternal fortunes that Jhrist offers you today. Come, also, to this tlospel well, all ye troubled. I do not suppose you have escaped. Compare your view of this ife at 15 years of age with what your rievv of it is at 40, or BO, or 70. What a jreat contrast of opinion! Were you right then, or are you right now? Two iups placed in your hands, the one a sweet cup, the other a sour cup. A :up of joy and a cup of grief. Which has been the nearest to being full, and lut of which have you the more fre quently partaken? What a different place the cemetery Is to what it used to be. Once it was to you a grand ;ity Improvement, and you went out on the pleasure excursion, and you ran laughingly up the mound, and" you iritioisod in a light way the epitaph. Rut since the day when you heard the bell toll at the gate as you went in with the procession, it is a sad placo, tud there is a flood of rushing memor ies that suffuse the eye and over master the heart Oh, you have had trouble, trouble, trouble. God only knows bow much you have had. It is a wonder rou have been able to live through It. It is a wonder your nervous system lias not been shattered, and your brain has not reeled. Trouble, trouble. If I -ould gather all the griefs, of all sorts, from this great audience, and could put them in one scroll, neither man nor angel could endure the recitation. Well, what do you want? Would you like to have your prop erty back again? “No,” you say, as a Christian maa: “I was becom ing arrogant, and I think that is why the Lord took it away. I don't want to have my property back.” Well, would you have your departed friends back again? “No,” you say, “I couldn't 'take the responsibility of bringing them from a tearless realm to a realm of tears. 1 couldn’t do it.” Well, then, what do you want? A thousand voices in the audience cry out: “Com fort, give us comfort!” l<’or that rea son 1 have rolled away the stone from the well's mouth. Come, all ye wounded of the flock, pursued of tiie wolves, come to the fountain where the Cord’s sick and bereft ones have come. “Ah,” says some one. “you are not old enough to understand ray sorrows. You have not been in the world as long as 1 have, ami you can’t talk to me about my misfortunes in the time old age.” Well, I have been a great deal among old people, and I know how they feel about their failing health, and about their departed friends, and about the loneliness that sometimes strikes through their souls. After two persons have lived together for forty or fifty years, and one of them is taken away, what desolation! I shall not forget the cry of the the lato Kov. lJr. Ue Witt, of .New York, when he stood by the open grave of bis beloved wife, and, after the obsequies had ended, lie looked down into tUo open place and said: “Farewell, my honored, faithful uud beloved wife. The bond that bound us is severed. Thou art iu glory, aud I am here on earth. We shall meet again. Farewell 1 Fare I well!” To lean on a prop for fifty year* and then have it break under I you! Thera were only two years’diltor i once between the deaths of my father j and mother. After iny mother's decease, \ my father used to go around as | though looking for something; [and he wouLd often get ud I iroiu um room, witnout any seem | ■ “g mason, and go to another room; ! and then ho would take his cane and I start out and some one would say: i “father, where are you going?" and j ho would answer: “1 don't know ex actly where 1 am going.” Always i looking for something. Though he was j a tender-hearted man. I never saw him 1 cry but once, and that was at the burial ! of my mother. After sixty years' liv I jug together, it was hard to part. And there are,aged people today who are feol I ing just sueh a pang as that. I want j to tell them there is perfect enchant ment in the promises of this gospel; and I come to them and I offer them I my arm, or I take their arm and 1 bring I them to this (lospel well. Sit down, ! father or mother, sit down. See if | there is anything at the well for you. Home, David, tlie Psalmist, have you | anything encouraging to offer them? , “Yes," says the Psalmist. “They shall | still bring forth fruit in old ago, they ! shall be fat and flourishing, to show | that the Lord is upright, he is my rook, and there is no unrigntcousness in mu." Come, Isaiah, have you anything to »ay out of your prophecies for these aged people? “Ves," says Isaiah. “Down to ul»l age I am with thee, and to hoary hairs will I carry thee. ’’ Well, if the Lord is going to carry you you ought not to worry much about your failing eyesight and failing limbs. You get a little worried for fear sometime you will come to want, do you? Your children and grandchildren sometimes speak a little sharp at you because of your ailments. The Lord will not speak sharp. Do you think you will cornu to want? Who do you think the Lord is? Are ills granaries empty? Will ho feed thu raven and the rabbit, and tlie lion in the desert, and forget j you? Why, naturalists tell us that tne porpoise will not forsake its Wounded and sick mato. A ad do you suppose thu | Lord of heaven and earth lias not as : much sympathy as tho fish of the sea? Liut you say: "I am so near worn out, and I am of no use to God any morn.” I think tho Lord knows whuthur you are of any more us* or not; if you were of no more us* l:o would havo takeu you bo for* this. Do you think God has forgettaa you booaus* li* lias taken oar* of you sovonty or eighty yours? H* thiaks nor* ef you today than ha *»#» slid, baoawM you think mora of kin. Hay th« Cad ef Abraham, and Ism*, and Jacob, and Paul the aged k* you* God for ova*! Rut I gather all the promises today in a group, aud 1 ask the shepherds to drive their flocks of lambs aud sheep up to the sparkling supply, “behold, happy is the man whom God corroct otk." “Though he cause grief, yet will he have oompassion. ” "Many aro the afflictions of the righteous, but tho Lord delivereth him out of thorn all.” “Weeping may endure for a night, but joy cometh in the morning." 1 am de termined today that no one shall co away uncomforted. Yonder is a timid and shrinking soul who seems to hide away from tho consolations 1 am uiter iag, as a child with a sore hand liidos away from tho physician lest he touch tho wound too roughly, and the mother has to go and compel the little patient to come out and see the ph\-sician. So I come to your timid and shrinking soul today, and compel you to come out in the presence of the' Divine physician. Ho will not hurt you. He has boon healing wounds for many years, and he will give you gentle and omnipotent medicament. Hut people, when they have trouble, go anywhere rather than to God. De Quincy took opium to get rid of his troubles. Charles Lamb took to punch. Theodore Hook took to something stronger. Edwin For rest took to theatrical dissipation. And men have run all around the earth, hoping in tho quick transit to get away from their misfortunes, [t has been a dead failure. There is only one well that can slack the thirst of an afflicted spirit, aud that is the deep and inexhaustible well of tho Gospel. Oh, what a great flock of sheep God will gather around the celestial well, j No stone on the well’s mouth while the j Shepherd waters the sheep. There Ja I cob will recognize Rachel the shep i herdess. Aud standing on one side of the well of eternal rapture your chil dren; and standing on the other side of the well of eternal rapture, your Chris tian ancestry, you will be bounded on all sides by a joy so keen And grand that no other world has ever been per mitted to experience it. Out of that one deep well of heaven the Shepherd will dip reunion for the bereaved, wealth for tho poor, health for the sick, rest for the weary. And then all the flock of the X.ord's sheep will lie down in the green pastures, and world without end wo will praise the Lord that on this first autumnal Sab bath of 1891 we were permitted to study among the bleating flocks and lowing herds of this fair ground the story of Jacob and Rachel the shep erdess at the well in Mesopotamia. Oh plunge your buckets into this great Gospel well and let them come up drip ptng w j h that water of which if a man drink lA never again shall thirst. LATE HEWS OF THE MARKETS! Items of Interest to Dealers and Agriculturalists. News From the (Jreat Cattle and Sheep flanges and the Markets Where These Products Are Sold— Marketable Notes. The world’s stock of lard decreased dur- j ing' August 750,000 tierces. • Hogs in the vicinity of Nebraska City, j Neb., are dying from cholera. Native cows at Chicago Saturday were i £0c lower than the opening of the week. During August the decrease in receipts j of hogs at Omaha was 177,99d and 1,154 ; head of cattle. A Winnipeg dispatch states that the re- j cent cold wave did no injury to the crops, j which are looking tine. j The top on hogs at Kansas City during ; August was #5.50, which was #1.40 higher j than during the same month last year. j During the month August South j Omaha received 45,330 cattle, 71,589 hogs, 21,906 sheep and 1,541 horses and mule*. j A bunch of choice 1.500 pound beeves | sold in Chicago Monday at #6.3# and a bunch of fancy at #6.25. Inferior to fair j grassers sold as low as #0.30(^3.73. # j The average weight of hogs at Chicago ! during August was 213 pounds, being 35 j pounds lighter than the same month last I year, and 34 pounds lighter than they ! averaged two years ago. | I ixu rtuuikiun iueing uuut ro tne packing : house at Fort Worth, Tex., which will in crease the killing capacity to 1,500 hogs . per day. A canning department is also ; being put in and will be in operation \ within a few days. During August Chicago received 200,765 cattle, 23,357 calves, 8**4,499 hogs, 100,349 sheep and 5,005 head of horses and mules. Of this number 88,162 cattle. 4,820 calves, 170,360 hogs, 43,798 sheep and 4,805 horses were shipped out. '1 lie decrease from the same month last -year was 33,008 cattle, 17'9,70S hogs and 24,825 sheep. The production of oleomargarine con tinues to increase in spite of repres?;ivc legislation. The average production per month during the last fiscal year whs ! 8.031,201 pounds, as compared with 2,566, 494 pounds in the previous year. Internal f revenue receipts from this source increased from $7S6,v9l in 1890 to $1,077,934 in the last fiscal year. Stockmen at Pierre, S. D., are perfect ing arrangements for the establishment of a system of sun Gash or beliegraphie sig nals, to be run in oonneotiom with the sig nal station, to prelect stock on the ceded lands. The signals can be seal 1^5 miles and will send out reports of all approach ing storms, so that cattlo can be driven to shelter. There uro over 91,000,0U0 worth of cattle within roach of the signal*. The Chicago Drovers Journal says of Monday’s hog market: The range of prices continued very wide with rough , and mixed at $hf>0p, threshed the entire crop and carted it #6 market before daylight. The robber boarded an out-bound train, and as a re sult of his boldness carried away $1,000 In cold cash. The *hog market at Chicago is still in a bod condition and prices are shading downward. Receipts last week were 20,000 less than the week before and 82,000 less than the same week last year. In re ferring to Saturday's market the Drovers' Journal says: It took good mixed hogs to bring $5.00 and common stock sold at $4.45(^4.70, though good to choice assorted mixed bogs sold at $5.30@5.45. The ex treme range of price* is very misleading to farmers and shippers, but sensible men know well enough there are few hogs fetching the fancy prices and that if they get what the bulk of the hogs arc selling for they have hogs that are as good or bet ter than the average. Five hundred cattle created a panic in a rainstorm on one of the line steamers bound for Europe the other day in the lower Delaware bay, and the cattlemen and crew gave the animals a wide berth in tbeir hurry to reach the hurricane deck. 'Hie loading clay there was a very warm one, and the cattle were tied around the fleshy pari ef the head, with stout ropes which were drawn light and knotted. When the rain began to fail the ropes grew shorter, cutting into the skin. In a few seconds all the besets were rearing with pain; some had torn loose from the stalls and were trying te jump overboard. It required all hands to loosen the rope halters and release the beasts from further pain. The market for beef cattle at Chicago Wednesday was not very good owing to the scarcity of ripe cattle and a liberal supply of the “bent cuttle in our neighbor hood,” as the Drovers Journal facetiously refers to fair to good cattle which owners considered a-s prime. The supply of beef cattle from nil quarters, especially the rangers, was very liberal. For that rea son buyers could be deliberate and fas tidious. They were both and the result was that sellers had to take olT fully 10c on cattle that were salable, making 15@ft5c from the close of last week and the worst feature was that many poor to pretty good cattle remained without a hid. The fancy cat tle at 00<$5.C5 were hardly numerous enough to mention. Some l,4S5-pound cattle sold to an exporter at 55.25. Such cattle would have been called pretty good on Monday and would have brought about $•*>.50, so the seller .claimed. Kcugh grass cattle at $1.35(704.00 were hard to sell. The Northwestern Live Stock Journal in referring te the possible demand for wost ern feeder* this fall *av* that with corn in abundance there must cornu a large de mand for feeding steer*, and the west is the main, aad iu fact, only source of sup ply outside of the corn growing ot-ates. Shipper* and farmer* throughout those state* freely adatit that the horn* supply will fall far short and hundred* of thous ands of *t«*r* will be required to fill the demand. The demand for feeders will not be couliaed to the territory west of Chl c*uge. Indiana, Ohio and Pennsylvania will want feeder* from the west and they will pay f*r good enw. The southwost will supply a few feeder*, but the states north and e?>»t of Missouri will depend on the want and northweat. It also counsels its patrons not to begin shipping their feeder* \intil October. The following are Chicago wool quota tion*: Michigan and Wi cousin—Fl-ncco washed, medium, ‘Jf^rUe; line, J4'2rf.c; coaraa. ; iia* wa»h*d delaine, *xtra and double oxtra, CXkgSS*: medium washed combing and do laine, ST^jCi'kJc; coarse washed coxibiug and delaine, 33<2;>4«; Canadian v*.iko<4 eombirvg, Jl^S-lc; tub washed, choice. 37e ; fair, 33(j)36*; coars*. ; medium unwashed, eombiag and detain*. coars* anwaebed. eonabing and del aim* 24 (ft-fle; Meetaaa fiae, territorial, 1S&91* gt. r»ul Steak J*wna2 : A buyer wha has watehad tla eattla market of tfc. norkhwas* shout aa • oselv an anyone in it fare it as his opinion yesterday that cat tle now aalling from J>4 to JC 50 per huud red would be sailing at 50* less before De cember 1. His statement issue baaed upon sound logic, be ari umg that the ex cellent grazing of the summer and the bountiful corn crop would be the means of ripening mere than the usual number of beeves, and as there le known to bo an abundance of cows and common steers in the country those grades would bo the most likely to feel the first effects of '•* decline that is sure to some. This is nearer truth than fiction, and shippers who send la half-fat grassy cows and spindling acrub steers will' realize the truth of lb Thin cows arc now soiling at such low prices that there ia no profit in them, and an additional drop of 50 ceute a hundred woul-l. after paying yardage and freight, leave such a small ’margin that the shipper conld not aiford to stand the risk of loss by sending tbvm to market. The advance in values sb ppers were led to believe were sure to com.- hare failed to materialize, and the opposite seems more probable to be meted out to them. Denver Live Stock IJecord: Southwest Xcw Mexico is experiencing a drouth that if continued much longer means ruin to the cattlemen. In the vicinity of Lake valley the plains are covered with the car cases of dead cattle, and in the neighbor hood of Gregg's ranch the water holes are a veritable Golgotha, and teams aro kept busy dragging the dead cattle away from the water. The Sierra Land aud'Cuttle company are busy driving thousands of head to the mountains, but they are noth ing but skin and bone, and are i’n poor coiv. ditiou to climb, for both grass and water. The regular rainy season generally begin* there about the middle of Julv. but this year it failed to come. The usually strong mountain springs have shown a rapid de cline ami many of them have entirely dis appeared, and digging after them has no signs of water The cattle situation is becoming alarming and several of t.he most prominent companies are now selling off their cattle as rapidly as possible, while others are shipping them out of the country as fast as they ean gather them up and secure transportation. The cattle kings at present are very sick kings, and for once are praying for rain and not prey ing upon the innocent maverick. Cut Out. Mr. De Cutter—IVhy this sudden coolness, Cla-1 mean Miss Beauty? A few days ago you allowed me to infer that 1 had at last won your favor andperhaps—r-. , Newport Belle—'i^at vt ill do Mr. De Cutter. A new yacht has arrived in the harbor, and it is tea feet longer than yours. A mountain of coal ie Wild Dorse Valley. Wyo., has been burning for more than thirty years. Two gum tries which tower over 100 feet above a little churcli in Guatemala are sixty f£et in circumference and their strong roots have pushed th foundation of the church ont of place. Naphtha 8( _8est there are. Sand fer catvalogue. A* ^ JKN^INGS, Pres., Y. SC. C. A. BnHdin* Dea Moines. __ CRAGIN. VALE & BIGKFOfiD I _is Attorneys. W14 rSTiltET,' TV A* H I\UTO-V SPECIAL ATTENTION "IIVBN TO LAN >■ J'L' INtt AMD INDIAN DEPliEHATION LLAl-ls PILES A NAIvKStS ?I. #»lurf. »r>U nn BW'Vh-. MJC t UliE t<>r rihr^ Pr.fi.Hi »* drurcjfWV' by mail. ■* Addm-e "A SAKE'** GoxiJtlfi. Nkw io«K trrr ,_rJOWS- Due all » >4 dteabled. $2 fee for fncrcu.se. ■ patience. Write for Laws. A.W. .. Jmati 0 A Boms, \Vasuington, I>. U. A Cinlin. ‘_ The Soap that Cleans Most is Lenox. HI