vim m TALMAGE'S SERMON. PS J"FULL CORN-CRIBS" LAST SUN * Ay DAY'S SUBJECT. Wllf - -Tram the Text : "AcU 7u < la Spoke Unto , > /jEfc IIIm Saying , the Jilau Uid SoUmnly JSIL Frotest Unto Dn Ye Shall 3iol , 8c ! , ' .My r co" Gen. , 43:3. ' < • 11 S- , 'stksfJr ? 0THING- cat ! [ / I f1 I /JslQ 11 Plenty of corn in I i B "tiTPvil ' 'SJ'P1' but " " ' ' ghastly r1SL j/w//\ ( / lftJ fam' ' ° e in Canaan , H | w * | Lftrej / / / / } | The cattle moan- Btj , H < = ! wiLJ lDg ln the sta11' RtwX ' " lfe& iw children awfully HWt /formal / white with hunger. K SB A ' * s Jfe Not tbe failIng of K / = = ' one cr0p for one H K summer , but the R .m | -filling of all the crops for seven years. I v { jf K " naton , d > 'in f ° r lack ° f tQat which I Iff * s so common on your table , and so lit I F mSf- tie appreciated tbe - ; product of har- % v wt Test fleId and grist mill and oven ; the 1 Iew Sm price of sweat and anxiety and strug- wTl T ? * s -Hie Bread ! Jacob , the father , has B'sf ' j 'i' tno Iast reP ° rt from the flour bin , and * ? % 3e flBds that everything is out ; and ho 1 Wk' TfW " -cays to his sons , "Boys ! hook up the K "j ! . ! " "wagonH and start for Egypt and get us 1 Bj JJM ' v ' .something to eat. " The fact was , there ' P Tm/ "was a great corn crib in Egypt The ' Bl [ , Y , . .people of Egypt have been largely tax- M YV ; -ed ln all ages , at tbe present time pay- Kj\V ' Jng between seventy and eighty per Ht\jh , v' cent of their products to the govern- BtXllfy' menu No wonder in that time they Kuyfjfi -had a large corn crJb , and it was full. FuSl. Tona crD * ey came from the re- JmJ J ) Jb.l . .gions around about those who were | V V fgr "famished some paying for the corn in L wTwt money ; when the money was exhaust- Eif Brf 'ed' p3yins' ' for tne corn in sheeP and [ Eft w.JC -cattle and horses and camels ; and 1 ' If'wK when they were exhausted , then sell- III ) % Jns their own bodies and their families 1 ? ? toft Into slaver - Kj ? * 1 % „ The morning for starting out on the m&h W& -crusade for bread has arrived. Jacob mtfr < \ -gets his family up very early. But be- B'Eisl l. ' fore tbe elder sons start they say K h3A' something that makes him tremble Rg AjSi with emotion from head to foot , and • IT * liPft i burst into tears. The fact wa3 that KgJljg' these elder sons had once before been Kpll in Egypt to get corn , and they had IBrr * been treated somewhat roughly , the HPfa 0ri ° * tne corn-crib supplying them * m | with corn , but saying at the close of l/x/4 tne interview , "Now , you need not S'fcrulc1come ' back here for • any more corn un- 1'IP'JE' ' ess you D1"lng something better than Rp j , \ anoney even j'our younger brother I 1 J3enjamin. " Ah ! Benjamin that very mm "h& 3iame was suggestive of all tenderness. Bri/ifj ) § The mother had died at the birth of c | | | 'l' ' -that son a spirit coming and another SjKS\ .spirit going and the very thought of IffjR > parting with Benjamin must have & \mJL Ibeen a heart-break. The keeper of this iJkJI corn-crib , nevertheless , says to these l J > -elder sons , "There is no need of your Ryf ft -coming up here any more for corn un- VSX * ? y uniig x > enjamin , your ikJyT. . . father's darling. " Now Jacob and b.is Bp lF } family very much needed bread ; but Wk Jk \ what a struggle it would be to give up Wfasmk , J "this son. The Orientals are very de- JK monstrative in their grief , and I hear [ P E the outwailing of the father a6 these mjyyf -elder sons keep reiterating in his ears jfe\ the announcement of the Egyptian Wm\ \ > lord , "Ye shall not see my face unless k tli l your brother be with you. " "Why Iwlf i id you tel1 nJm you had a Dr ° ther ? " W" ays tne old man complaining and 'Srft chiding them. "Why , father , " they imk "vKi said , "he asked us all about our fam- Ifflfe $ $ , 31y , and we had no idea that he would IPftriaft } * 3nake any such demand upon us as he [ JB [ ) nas mai9"No ( use of asking me , " iffi/fl saJd tne fatner' " * cannot , I will not , fc 'M ' . ive up Benjamin. " The fact was that fi Sjn the old man had lost children , and { mRrtAvk when there has been bereavement in jif | | ? ' a Tiousehold , and a child taken , it P'f snakes the other children in the housel Ma | Jk" hold more precious. So the day for Kit w . -departure was adjourned and adjourned Bl3 | > and adjourned. Still the horrors of EiBl ? > \ ne iazaine increased , and louder moan- P-W * * tne cattle. and wider open cracked m , Ihe earth , and more pallid became the 1 % cheeks , until Jacob , in despair , cried tWitt , Wi out to his sons , "Take Benjamin and LK S&yf "be off. " The elder sons tried to cheer KB&j ffij-v tip their father. They said , "We have IfBHiltL .strong arms and a stout heart , and no | 3V harm will come to Benjamin. We'll Erel B f ec that he gets back again. " Fare- | Mk ; ' .Tvell ! " said the young men to the fath- K ? Ktst 'er n a tone ° assumed good cheer. Bv * WXi ' • "F-a-r-e-w-e-1-1 ! " said the old man ; Kt $ K or a word nas more quavers in it JKxS vX -when pronounced by the , aged than by fc ! ! * * * -the vouns. Well , tae bread party , tne oread em bassy , drives up in front of the corncrib - • crib of Egypt. Those corn-cribs are iilled with wheat and barley and corn in the husk , for modern travelers in those lands , both in Canaan and in "Egypt , tell us there is corn there cor responding with our Indian maize. • Huzza ! the journey is ended. The lord of the corn-crib , who is also the Trime Minister , comes down to these ' newly-arrived travelers , and says , -'Dine with me to-day. How is your father ? Is this Benjamin , the young er brother , whose presence I demand- 'ed ? " The travelers are introduced 'into ' the palace. They are worn and iedusted of the way ; and servants come in with a basin of water in one "hand and a towel in the other , and I Ikneel down before these newly-arrived .travelers , washing off the dust of the way. The butchers and poulterers and • caterers of the Prime Minister prepare the repast. The guests are seated in email groups , two or three at a table , the food on a tray ; all the luxuries from imperial gardens and orchards end aquariumsand aviariesare brought there , and are filling chalice and plat ter. Now is the time for the Prime Minister , if he has a grudge against • Benjamin , to show it. Will he kill him. now that he has iim in his lands ? O , no ! This lord of the corn- © ib is seated at his own table , and he 'looks over to the tables of his guests ; and . he sends a portion to each of them , but sends a larger portion to Benjamin , or , as the Bible quaintly puts ] It , "Benjamin's mess was five times f as much as any of theirs. " Bo quick and send word back with the swiftest camel to Canaan to old Jacob , that "Benjamin is well ; all is well ; he Is ' faring sumptuously ; the Egyptian lord did not mean murder and death ; but he meant deliverance and life when he announced to us on that day , 'Ye shall i not see * " my face unless your brother i be with you. ' " Well , my friends , thiB world Is fam ine-struck j of sin. It does not yield a single , crop of solid satisfaction. It Is dying. < It is hunger-bitten. The fact that it does not , cannot feed a man's heart ] was well illustrated in the life of ( the English comedian. All the world honored him did " everything for him that the world could do. He was applauded in England and applauded . plauded in the United States. He roused up nations into laughter. He had no equal. And yet , although many people supposed him entirely happy , and that this world was completely - pletely satisfying his soul , he sits down and , writes : I never in my life put on a new hai that 1 it did not rain and ruin it. I never ] went out in a shabby coat because - cause it was raining and thought all J who had the choice would keep indoors - doors J , that the aun did not come out in Its strength and bring with it all the butterflies of fashion whom I knew and who knew me. I never consented to accept a part I hated out of kind ness to another , that I did not get hissed by the public and cut by the writer. I could not take a drive for a few minutes with Terry without be- , ing overturned and having my elbow , broken , though my friend got off un- harmed. I could not make a covenant with Arnold , which I thought was to make my fortune , without making his instead , than in an incredibly short Bpace of time I think thirteen months _ i earned for him twenty thousand pounds j , and for myself one. I am per- , „ o tviot if T werp to set up as a baker , everyone in my neighborhood Would - leave off eating bread. * * I want to make three points. Every /rank / and common-sense man will ac knowledge himeeH to be a sinner. WTiat are you going to do with your I ' ins ? Have them pardoned , you say. How ? Through the mercy of God. What do you mean by the mercy of God ? Is it the letting down of a bar for the admission of all , without re spect to character ? Be not deceived. I see a soul coming up to the gate of mercy and knocking at the corn-crib Df heavenly supply ; and a voice from within says , "ATe you alone ? " The sinner replies , "All alone. " The voice from within says , "You shall not see my pardoning face unless your divine RrnthRr the Lord Jesus , be with you. " 0 , that is the point at which so many are. discomfited. There , is no mercy from f God except through Jesus Christ. Coming < with him , we are accepted. Coming f without him , we are rejected. Am I right in calling Jesus Benja min ? O , yes. Rachel lived only long enough to give a name to that child , and with a dying kiss she called him Benoni. 1 Afterward Jacob changed his name ] , and he called him Benjamin. The meaning of the name she gave was , "Sen of my Pain. " The meaning of ( the name the father gave was , "Son of i my Right Hand. " And was not Christ < the Son of pain ? All the sorrow row i of Rachel in that hour when she gave i "her child over into the hands of strangers i , was aa nothing compared with ' the struggle of God when he gave up l his only Son. And was not Christ appropriately i called "Son of the Right Hand ? " Did not Stephen look into heaven ] and see him standing at the right l hand of God ? And does not Paul speak i of him as standing at the right hand of God making intercession for us i ? 0 , Benjamin Jesus ! Son of pang ! Son ! of victory ! The deepest emotions of i our souls ought to be stirred at the sound : of that nomenclature. In your prayers plead his tears , his sufferings , hi3 sorrows , and his death. If you re fuse to do it , all the corn-cribs and the palaces of heaven will be bolted and barred against your soul , and a voice from the throne shall stun you with the announcement , "You shall not see my face except your brother be with you. " * * The world after that was a blank to me. I went into the country , but found no peace in solitude. I tried to get into society , but I found no peace ln i society. There has been a horror hang ing over me by night and by day , and I am afraid to be alone. How many unutterable troubles ( among you ! No human ear has ever heard that sorrow. 0 , troubled soul , I want to tell you that there is one salve that can cure the wounds of the heart , and that is the salve made out of the tears of a sympathetic Jesus. And yet some of you will not take this solace ; and you try chleral , and you try morphine , and you try strong drink , and you try change of scene , and you try new business associations , and anything and everything rather than take the divine companionship and sympathy suggested by the words ot my text when it says , "You shall not see my face again unless your brother be with you. " 0 , that this au dience to-day might understand some thing of the height and depth and length and breadth of immensity and infinity of God's eternal consolations. I go further and find in my subject a hint as to why so many people fail of heaven. We are told that heaven has twelve gates , and some people in fer from that-fact that all the people will go in without reference to their past life ; but what is the use of hav ing a gate that is not sometimes to be shut- ? The swinging of a gate im plies that our entrance into heaven Js/ ft ' conditional. , It Is not a monetary con dition , If we come to the door of an exquisite concert we are not surprised that we must pay a fee , for we know that fine earthly music is expensive ; but all the oratorios of heaven cost nothing. Heaven pays nothing for its music It is all free. There is noth ing to be paid at that door for en trance ; but the condition of getting Into heaven is our bringing our di vine Benjamin along with us. Do you notice how often dying people call up on Jesus ? It is the usual prayer of fered the prayer offered more than all the other prayers put together "Lord Jesus , receive my spirit. " One of our congregation , when asked in the closing momenta of his life , "Do you know us ? " said , " 0 , yea , I know you. God bless you. Good-by. Lord Jesus , , receive my spirit ; " and he v.as gone. ; 0 , yes , in the closing momenta of our life we muBt have a Christ to call upon. If Jacob's sons had gone up toward Egypt , and had gone with the very finest equipage , and had not taken Benjamin along with them , and to the question they should have been obliged ( to answer , "Sir , we didn't bring him , ae father could not let him go ; we didn't want to be bothered with him , " a voice from within would have said , "Go away from us. You shall not have any of this supply. You Bhall not see my face because your brother is not with you. " And if we come up toward the door of heaven at last , though we come from all lux uriance and brilliancy of surround ings , and knock for admittance and it is found that Christ is not with us , the police of heaven will beat us back from the bread-house , saying , "Depart , I never knew you. " If Jacob's sons , coming toward Egypt , had lost everything on the way ; if they bad expended their last shekel ; if they had come up utterly exhausted to the corn-crib3 of Egypt , and it had been found that Eenjamin was with them , all the store-houses would have swung open before them. And so , though by fatal casualty we may be ushered into the eternal world ; though we may oe weax anu ejuuuai- ed by protracted sickness if , in that last moment , we can only just stagger , and faint and fall into the gate of heaven it seems that all the corn cribs of heaven will open for our need ; and all the palaces will open for our reception ; anfl the Lord of that place , seated at his table , and all the angels 1 of God seated at their table , and the 1 martyrs seated at their table , and all our glorified kindred seated at our ta ble , the King shall pass a portion from 1 his table to ours , and then , while we | think of the fact that it was Jesus who started us on the road , and Jesus ! who kept us on the way , and Jesus ! who at last gained admittance for our soul , we shall be glad if he has seen l of the travail of his soul and been sat isfied , and not be at all jealous if it be found that our divine Benjamin's mess is five times larger than all the rest. Hail ! anointed of the Lord. Thou art worthy. My friends , you see it Is either Christ or famine. If there w : e two banquets spread , and to one of them only , you might go , you might stand and think for a good while as to which invitation you had better accept ; but here is feasting or starvation. If there were two mansions offered , and you might have only one , you might think for a long while , saying , "Perhaps I had better accept this gift , and per haps I had better accept that gift ; " but here it is a choice between palaces of light and hovels of despair. If it might say , "I prefer the 'Creation , ' " or , "I prefer the 'Messiah ; ' " but here it is a choice between eternal harmony and everlasting discord. O , will you live or die ? Will you sail into the har bor or drive on the rocks ? Will you start for the Egyptian corn-crib , or will you perish amid the empty barns of the Canaanitish famine ? RAM'S HORNS. The right place for the italics , is not in the sermon , but in the preacher's life. life.What What we lost In Adam , is more than made up by what we gain in Christ. People who carry sunshine with them , shine the brightest in the darkest I est places. , i The man who can learn from his | ' own mistakes , will always be learning something. , The right kind of martyrdom is nevei concernc 1 about what will be said on its tombstone. j The man who will break the Sab ' bath for gain , would oteal if he could do it without any more risk. i It brings Christ closer to us , to discover - cover that he chose men for his dis ciples whs were just like ourselves. - ' The Ram's Horn. WHAT CYCLISTS SAY. Racing equipment is out of place on ine road. Zigzag hill climbing is easier than the straight lift. Snapping and creaking of the chain is a sure ind nation that it wants lub ricating. Hard ridirg directly after a meal ii very bad , and hard eating directly af ter a ride is even worse. The man who tries to please every one in hi * , cycling seldom pleases any body least of all himself. All the learned uproar of physicians , about heart disease Is lost on habitual scorchers and chronic hill climberB. > If you want to steer well let youi eyes meet the surface of the ground at a point not less than 30 feet ahead of the bicycle. Not one rider in a dozen ever thinks of cleansing the outer smface of a tire , yet it Is advisable to accasionally give the outer shoe a thorough cleansing , if only for the rake of looks. | * " " * . . - -ijh gsssaa J T CHILDEBN'S COBNER.I TIMELY TOPICS FOR OUR BOYS ; AND GIRLS. Every Dollar Counts Unties of Citizen- ablp I Can't Complain Emigration ttnd Immigration A Sharp Bo joinder A. Little Samaritan. * his mother kissed him and said , "Good night ! " I whispered : fHEN ' wake some day , " But the world had nothing of love or light , Nor a rose in the rosiest May ! Yet I whispered still : " ' ' " "It's God's own will ; But the green left the valley , the blue left the hill ; And the world had no splendor , no peace and no light When his mother kissed him "Good night ! " When his mother kissed him and said if "Good night ! " I whispered : "He'll wake again ! " But in the sad darkness there streamed no light , And her tears fell down like rain ! But I whispered still : "It is God's own will , And his shafts are the kindest that crush or that kill ; " But the rose left the garden , the light left the hill When his mother kissed him "Good night ! " "I Can't Complain. " These words , often heard , says a writer in the Common People , fur nish a curious illustration of the mental attitude of certain persons. The boy who , when inquired of about his sick mother , said , "She complained of being much better , " might , perhaps , represent an extreme case ; but when inquiring after the health of a person and hearing him say , "I can't complain ' - plain , " the natural inference would be that complaining was the proper thing to do when practicable , and that every opportunity for complaint was seized upon ; but that if a person was so free from ills and aches and pains and troubles that he had nothing to grumble about , there was only one thing to be said , and that is "I can't complain. " Are there not some persons who occupy : - cupy an attitude much like this ? Who criticize everything that can be criti i- cized , and complain of everything that can be complained of , and finally , if Gverv trouble is removed , and they have nothing left about which to mur mur or find fault , they accept the sit uation with ill-concealed regret and say , "I can't complain ? " A Sharp Kejolnder. Some years ago , according to the na tional temperance advocate , Rev. E.s Klumph , now of Elm , Wayne county , Michigan , while seated in a village store , accosted a saloonkeeper with the remark : "Come over to the church tonight and hear me lecture on temperance. " The reply was : "I won't ; you said whisky sellers were robbers. " "I didn't , " replied Mr. Klumph. "What did you say ? " "I said you were worse than a rob- ber. I said you took my innocent boy and sent me home a maudlin fool. I said you took an intelligent man and sent a lunatic to the asylum. I said you took a respected citizen and sent a criminal to prison. I said you took a father and sent a fiend to throw his family into the street. I ' 'aid you took a loving husband and sej a demon to kick his wife. I said you k the immortal - mortal soul and sent it tc I said you were worse than a rol \ Duties of Citizenship. The following timely sentence by Dr. McLaurin in the Occident are worthy of attention by all Christian citizens : Citizenship involves privileges and duties. We enjoy the privileges , and are transgressors of divine law , and are moral cowards , if not worse , if we ne- gleet our responsibilities and duties. We cannot be good citizens , then , unless - less we are obedient to this divine in junction , that we should act the full ' j part of citiz ens , worthily of the gospel , of Jesus Christ. And this we should do ( because the state is a divine institution - ( tion , the state is a divine organism. This is God's country and we must rnnservA it for him : this is God's outer vesture , so to speak , and we must , who are his children , preserve it in purity from the hands of the foul and the unclean. A Little Samnrltan He was a tiny chap , says the Louis ville Commercial , and could hardly be seen when he entered a well-known res taurant the other evening. The little fellow was well dressed and caused some comment when he asked the clerk what the price of a turkey sandwich was. "Ten cents. " "Well , give me a ham ; it's only five cents. " While the clerk was preparing the sandwich the boy fished a solitary nickel out of his pants pocket and paid for the goods.t Then he walked out rapidly. Some men who were in the place at the time followed him out to see what he was going to do with the sandwich. They found him giving it to a dirty , ragged newsboy , a little boy like himself. "I only had a nickel. I got this for mumi ni iMiiiiiniiiufniiiinin I mmmm 1you. 1 ; . Next time you get hungry coma out to my house , 1426 street , and I'll see that you got a good meal. Good * bye. 1 " Then the llttlo philanthropist toe * f his departure. rroTlnc It from the Bible- While a naval officer was Inspecting ; one of the schools in the island of Bart badoes , says the Christian Herald , conj talning two hundred negro boys and L girls , a sign was made by one of the children by holding up his hand , Intlf mating that he wished to speak to the master. On going up to the child , who was somewhat more than eight years old , the master inquired what was the matter. . "Massa , " he replied , with aflook of horror and Indignation which the offl- cer said he should never forget , and 1 pointing ] to a little boy of the same nge who sat beside him ; "Massa , this boy says he does not believe in the resurj rection. " "That is very bad , " said the master ; "but do you , my little fellow , " addressj ing the young informer , "believe in the resurrection ' yourself ? " "Yes , massa , I do. " "But can you prove it from the ifbible ' ? " "Yeo , massa. Jesus says , 'I am the resurrection ' and the life ; he that be- lieveth 1 in me though he were dead , yet shall J he live , ' and in another place , 'Because I live ye shall live also. ' " The master added , "Can you prove it from I the old testament also ? " "Yes ; for Job says , 'I know that my Redeemer liveth and that he shall stand i at the latter day upon the earth , and though after my skin worms de stroy i this body , yet in my flesh shall I see i God. ' And David says in one of his psalms , 'I shall be satisfied when J awake with ' " thy likeness. Cheap Trip Abroad. George Downer , 13 years old , started away from Fayetteville on January 14 to see the world. He left home with $2 and tramped to Syracuse , then he rode to New York. He got a job as cabin boy on the steamship Massachus- ' etts and was hired as a valet. George spent a month in London. He and his employer went to Ghent and then they returned to London. George got a job on a ship going to Marseilles and , after spending two days there , paid his way to Bona , Algeria i , and went back to Marseilles. His money had given out and , after two ' weeks in the Sailors' home , he sailed ( for Malta in the steamship Arabstan. | I I Thence he went to Port Said , thence to Suez and , finally , to Aden. After ho left Aden American consuls helped ihim along from Lyons , Paris , and Havre to the steamship California , which arrived in New York on Satur * day. Philadelphia iRecord. Every Dollar Count * . The following , taken from the Pres byterian | Messenger , is worthy of care ful consideration by all church mem bers : "Sometimes a single sentence pre sents s a very definite picture. The strug gles ! of ministers of the gospel , as they try to do faithful work on the least possible i salary , have been dwelt upon ; at length by many speakers and writ' J ers. A single sentence in a letter recently - cently ( received at our office seems to tell ] the whole story , and the sentence j j is i this : 'Every dollar counts to a home missionary on a salary of only $400 , , J and not all paid. ' How many Presbyj j terians spend more than ? 400 on a sin- j gle ' , fashionable party ? How little it' , seems to support a minister and his . family for a whole year ! " Emigration and Immigration. The London Spectator is becoming alarmed ' at the growing sentiment against immigration in this country , and | wonders what is to become of the surplus ' population of Europe if we erect \ an effective dam against it. "It' 1 is ] more than probable , " the Spectator j says , "that within twenty years im , migration as we now know it will be j prohibited all over the world , and that i Great | Britain , Germany and Italy will be compelled to meet the problem of , growing populations , without any relief from departures to other climates , a , change which will almost compel some { grand alteration in the social sys tems i of Europe. " A Hopeless Caie. A striking story is told by Darwin in the life of his grandfather , Dr. Darwin - win , of Shrewsbury. One day a patient entered the consulting room of a Lon don physician and detailed the symp toms of his illness. It was an obscure and difficult case , of a kind that was only imperfectly understood , and the London doctor confessed himself iairly puzzled. He could only state that the" patient was in a most perilous state. "There is but one man in England who understands your disease , " said the London doctor , "and you should go and consult him. It is Dr. Darwin of Shrewsbury"Alas ! " was the an swer , "I am that Dr. Darwin. " Jerusalem to Day. A native girl in Jerusalem , whether Christian , Jew or Moslem , has no hap py childhood , does not in any case en ter into a business life and has no aim in. existence beyond marriage. Even among the first two classes the bride groom rarely sees his wife before mar riage , and brides of 12 and 14 are fre quent in all stations and kinds of so ciety. Even the Christian and He brew girls generally go veiled when , on the streets , which is as rarely as j possible. j I There are several ways to ; pay bills , but the majority are paid with reluc- tance. _ M GRAND ARMY REUNION. M IH rhoniand * of Veteran ! In tbe Great F- > H rade at St. X'aaL | 5T. Paul , Minn. , Sept 3. In recent H years it has been thoughtneceatary to H shorten the length of the grand pa- H rada of the old soldlers.and this year's H line j of march exceeded two miles by H but a trifle and as it was over smooth H streets and easy walking no 111 effects H were anticipated. H General Walker and staff beaded H the < parade. The first division , led by M the f veteran signal corns and lncluu- H injr the departments of Illinois , Wisconsin - H consin . and Pennsylvania , followed. H The second division consisted of the de- H partments of Ohio and New York ; H In tha third were the departments H of Connecticut , Massachusots , New H Jersey , Mhino , California , Rhode M .Island , New Hampshire , Ver- 1 raont Potomac , Virginia and H North ; Carolina. The fourth was made M up of the departments of Maryland , M Nebraska , Michigan , Iowa and Indi- M ana. j The departments of Colorado , H Wyoming , Kansas , Delaware , Missouri H and Oregon were in the fifth. The H sixth included Kentucky , West Virgin- M iaSouth j Dakota , Washington , Alaska , H Arkansas , New Mexico , Utah and Ten- j H ncssec. \ In the seventh were the departments - H partments of Louisiana , Mississippi , H Florida : , Montana , Texas , Idaho , Arl- H zona , Georgia , Alabama , North Da * M kota j , Oklahoma and Indian Territory. M The ' department of Minnesota closed H the parade , comprising the eighth M division. ' H As the head of the parade turned M down Summit avenue the veterans M straightened their shoulders and tried H to renew their youth. The avenue H was crowded on both sides with the M spectators : who applauded . ' .iTorita H posts or favorite leaders and now and H again a cheer went up for the fine ap- M pearance of some of the less known j H posts. Opposite the residence of Colo- M nel IL M. Newport , the white hiircd H veterans uncovered and salited : as H they recognized the widow of their M loved "Black Jack , " and Mrs. John A. H Lotran carefully returned every salute. H As the head of each division ar H rived at this part of the avenue , H twenty daughters of old soldiers H stepped out into the street and scat * H tercd flowers before the oncoming H vetcians , who picked up the blossoms H and plased them in their buttonholes. H The little children of Thaddcus Malt' M by chapter , of the Children of the H American Revolution , also saluted the H veterans with their waving flags and H sang a song especially written for the H occasion by Mrs. J. Q. Adams of St. H Paul. . H Relay JJIden at Kearney , Neb. H San Fkaxcisco , Sept. 3. The ExH aminer-Journal relay riders have been M on i the road seven days , six hours and H seventeen i minutes. The courier ar- H d'rived at Kearney , Neb. , at 6:17 last H night , making the distance traveled thus far 1,675 miles. The packet is over seven hours behind schedule time H at , this showing. M Iowa Patent Office Keport. M G Diddy and D. N. Kratzer of Des H Afoines have been trranted a copyright 1 for an artistic engraving adapted for H nse as a campaign badge. The title is H "Silver Write. " W. A. Michels of Beaver , has been H allowed a patent for a wagon rack H adapted for carrying hogs and other H animals advantageously. H H. L. Fisher and J. McKercher of ! Des Moines have been granted a patent for a portable fire extinguisher in H tvhich an acid and alkali are held in H solution separately so that they can be H instantly mixed to produce a gas that \M \ | I can be readily directed therefrom in a > j ! steady flow and with force as required ' to extinguish a fire. A patent was issued this week to John Miller of Stuart , for a composition - I tion and process for hardening copper. It seems to be the recovery of a lost I art He has edged tools made of copper - I per that warrant the prediction that I copper will supercede the use of steel I for many purposes. One of the directors - I ors of the largest company in England I manufacturing alloys is testing the I invention with view of controling it in I England and other foreign countries J : hat grant patents. _ m Valuable information about obtaining - H ing , valuing and selling patents sent I free to any address. I Printed copies of the drawings and specifications of any U. S. Patent sent npon receipt of 23 cents , Our practice is not confined to Iowa. Inventors in other states can have our services upon the same terms as Hawk- eyes Thomas G. & J. Ralph Okwig. Solicitors of Patents. Des Moines. Iowa. Aug 28. 189a LIVK STOCK AND PRODUCE MARKETS Quotations From Xeff York , Chicago , St. .Louis Omaha and fcls > ewhere. OMAHA. Butter Creamery separator . U @ IS Butter Fair to good country. 12 Or 16 Esgs Fresh- : 954 © 10 Poultry Live hensper a 5'/i < & 6 spring Chickens 8 ' * 9 Lemons Choice Messlnas C 00 @ 6 no Honey ; Fancy White 12 i < r 14 I'otatoes-New 20 < ? r. 2. . Orances Per box 5 00 06W Hay Upland , per ton 4 00 © 5 0 > Potatoes New 0 < ir Zi Apples-Perbbl 1 50 @ 2 00 SOUTH OMAHA STOCK MAKKET. Hops Lipht Mixed 2 SI < & 2 S3 Hops Heavy Weights 3 70 ® 3 75 Beef-Steers 2 G3 & 4 z ; Bulls ; 1W C2 70 Milkers and springers 22 00 © 39 00 Slap ; . 2 GO fe31. Calros. 3 CO © 3 2i Cows 1 25 © 2 90 Heifers 2 CO ® 3T. Stockers and Feeders 2 2T ft 3 25 ' Cattle Westerns 2 10 < S 3 30 Sheep Native Feeders 2 65 < & 2 70 Sheep Lambs. 5 00 < & 5 10 CHICAGO. Wheat No. 2Spring 55 © z "i Corn Per bu 20 & .0' . ' Oats Per bu * . & W Pork 5 70 © 5 75 Lard. . . . . . . . . 3 72 ft 3 u Cattle Western Rangers 3 00 ( as 3 ? 0 Choice Calves 5 50 ir • > CO Hops Medium mixed 2 85 © 2 9" Sheep Lambs 3 25 © 5 00 Sheep Western range. 3 00 © 2 SO NEW YORK. Wheat No. 2 , Bed Winter 67 © 6711 Corn No. 2. 25 © 2li Oats No.2 , - 12.X& 20 Pork 7 i © 8 50 Lard - - * 10 © 5 00 ST. LOUIS. Wheat No. 2 red. cash 53 @ 5 H Corn Per bu 13 © 1"H Oats Per bu 1754 © 15 Hoes Mixed packing 2 60 © 3 Ci Cattle Nati > e ship'ng Sheers. 3 GO © 4 CO KANSAS CUT. Wheat No. 2 hard r04 ! © 51 Corn Sal - 13 © 1SH Oats No.2 17 & 17S Cattl Stockers and feeders. . 2 t > 5 © 3 75 Hops-Mixed. . . _ 2 a © 3 00 Bheep Lambs - 2 G' m i 4 > I bheep Muttons 163 © 3 23