Newspaper Page Text
Markets---Continued
: GRAIN.
ST. LOUIS CASH QUOTATIONS.
Wheat—No. 2 red ............. 6% @%
Corn—No, 2 flle@
ORIE--Na:'S .l vl o
CHICAGO, May 26.—While May wheat
was %c higher for the day and showed
a reaction and decline of %c from the
best prices, the more deferred months
were ¥ to lc lower.
Corn was Ic¢ higher for the May, while
the other months were uo ihe lower.
May oats closed % c higher, while July
was ¢ lower and September un
changed.
Provisions were lower.
CHICAGO GRAIN MARKET.
Grain quotations:
Previous
High. low. (lose. Close.
WHEAT-—
May..... 981 98 9,8 975
Ju1y..... 87% 8614 863 BTB
Sept..... 86 85% 85% 86%
CORN--
May,.... 1% 0% % 0%
Ju1y..... - 88% 67 67% 67%
Sept..... 66% 655§ 65% 661¢
Mo ) % e ey
BY. L% 41% ’
Ju1y..... 40'% 80% 30%, 392
Sept..... 89 38% 3815 38%
PORK--
May.... 10.82% 1082% 19.821¢ 19.95
July.... 20.15 199815 1992% 20.10
Sept.... 19.80 19.65 19.671¢ 19.82%
LARD-.
May.... 9.% 9.70 970 0 821
July.... 9.8 9.75 9.75 987%
be‘;{)}B ..o 1002%. 1090 10.90 10.05
May.... 1118 11.07% 1107% 1115
July.... 11.20 11.10 11.10 11.20
Sept.... 1.27 T% 11.17% 11.17 T% 11.30
CHICAGO CASH QUOTATIONS.
CHICAGO, May 26.—Wheat—No. 2
red, 99@9%81%; No. 3 red, 98@9%9; No. 2
hard winter, 99@9%%%; No. 3 hard win
ter, 98@9%8%; No. 3 Northern sgrlns
99@%0%; No. 2 Northern spring, 97%
98%,; No. 3 spring, 95% @97.
Corn—No, 2, T%@72; No. 2 white, 72;
No. 3 yellow, 72@72%; No. 3, 71; No. $
white, 7114; No. 3 yellow, 71 l{,fi’«’l%: No.
4, 69% @70%; No. 4 yellow ,T0%@71.
Oats—No, 2 white, 40; No. 3, 43%; No.
3 white, 39; No. 4, 41@41%; No. 4 white,
41%; standard, 43Y%.
S§T. LOUIS CASH.
ST. LOUIS, May 26.—Wheat: No. 2
red, 9% @%%; No. 3 red, 931 g; No. 2
hard, 93@9%7%; No. 3 hard, 92% @97.
Corn: No, 2, T11¢; No. 3, 70%; No. ¢,
69; No. 2 yellow, 72@72%; No. 3 yeliow,
71%; No. 4 yellow, 69%; No. 2 white,
@4 No. 3 white, 72@72%; No. ¢
white, ts%’:o.
Oats! 0. 2. 40; No. 8, wfi; No. 2
white, 41; No. 3 white, 40%.@41; No. 4
white, 38@40; standard, 40%@41%.
CHICAGO CAR LOTS.
Following are re;.c;!;ts for Tuesday
end estimated receipls for Wednesddy:
o | Tues Gay \Wedn'sday
Wbkt 5, . 239 Tt
ol v . 218 153
Oats = ¢ 169 208
Hogs . . . . .| 15000 | 31,000
LIVERPOOL GRAIN.
LIVERPOOL, May 26.—Wheat opened
I.d higher. At 1:30 p. m. the market
was %4 to %d higher; closed unchanged
to 14d higher.
Corn opened %d lower. At 1:30 p. m.
the market was %d lower; closed % to
5%d lower.
PRIMARY MOVEMENT,
WHEAT— | DMZ | 818
Receipts . . . . . .| 454,000 I 621,000
Shipments . . . . .| 412,000 | 487.000
. CORNes® = 1 4916 43NS o
Receipts . . . . . .| 815,000 i 559 000
Shipments ~. . .| 379,000 216,000
NEW YORK COFFER MARKET.
Qfiee quotations: E L SaTal
R T Opening. | Closinr.
JaNRIY. RG] s en e |’.l4 9.15
February. . . .l ......... | 9218 9.28
Mareh: .. .. .l 9088 | 9.29@ 9.30
April. .o, 001 B 8 j’.“ 9.36
May. . . . . .| 8500 9.70; s.so@ 8.52
June. ..y ; 8.53@ 8.54
IRy g s.ssg 8.70| 8. 8.64
August. . . . .| 8.75@ 8.80 8.73@ 8.74
September. . . .| 8.85 | 8:83@ 5.34
October. . . . .| 8.94 8.91@ 8.93
November. . . .| 9.00@ 905‘ 8.95@ 9.00
December. . . .[9.10 | 9.07@ 9.09
“Closed steady. Sales, 38,250 bags.
COTTON SEED Olw.
Cotton seed oil quotatfons:
T ] Opentng. | Clowing,
Bpot . . o oo e | seeiiens 17.13@7.19
May . . . o | 6.99@7.15 | 7.13
N L.l Tet@Ta? | TI3@T.IM |
July . « « « of 1.28@7.25 | 7.21%7.22
August . . « o .| 7.36@7.39 | 7.36@7.38
September . . . .| 7.40@7.42 | 7.41@7.42 |
October . . . 1 7.21@7.24 | T.19@7.22
November . . .| 6.85@6.93 | 6.80@6.90 |
December . . . .| 6.70@6.80 | 6.73@6.80
Crude Southeast| ......... | 6.07@6.20 |
~ (losed steady; sales 13,600 barrels. 1‘
LIVE STOCK MARKET.
CHICAGO, May 26.—Hogs—Receipts
15.000. Market 5c to 10c lower. Mixed
and butchers, $8.00@8.25; good heavy,
$8.15@8.25; rough heavy, $7.90@8.10;
light. $8.00@8.25; pigs, $6.75@8.10; bulk,
$8.10@8.20. :
('attlemnecexgm 2,000." Market steady.
Beeves, $7.50@9.20; cows and heifers,
$2.75@8.50; stockers and feeders, $6.85
l‘.go Texans, $8.25@8.40; calves, $8.50
10.00. 5
sheep—Receipts 12,000. Market steady.
Native and Western, $4.50@5.60; lambs,
$6.50@9.25.
ATLANTA LIVE STOCK.
(By W. H. White, Jr., of the White
Provision Co.)
The following represents rulinfi prices
of good quality beef cattle, nferior
grades and dairy types ullinog lower.
Good to choice steers, 1,000 to 1,200,
6.50@7.25; good steers, 800 to 1,000, 6.25
@17.00; medium to good steers, 700 to
850, 5.50@86.50.
(iood to choice beef cows, 800 to 900,
6.0066.50; medium to good cows, 700 to
750, 5.50@6.00.
Mediursn toeg}loieot holter!,b?ei‘o’ to s:‘o.,
6.00@6.75; medium to good ers,
to 750, b.00@5.75.
Medium to common steers, if fat, $OO
to 900, 51152:.025; mixed to common
cows, if fat, to 800, 5.00@5.50; mixed
common, 4.0094.75; good butcher bum.t
4.60@5.50.
THE GEORGIAN'S NEWS BRIEFS
[l Atlanta Markets I‘
EGGS—Fresh country, candled, 1%.
BUTTER—Fox River and Meadow
Gold, in 1-Ib. blocks, So¢.
UNDRAWN POULTRY—Drawn, head
and feet on, per pound: Hens, 10211«:;
ries, 25@30c; roosters, §@loc; turkeys.
owinq to fatness, 18c.
LIVE PO%!CLTRY-HQM. Mglcsc ib.,
roosters, 25¢; broilers, 25@ per
gnld: puddie ducks, 30@35¢; Peking
‘swe: ,eose. “?7&: each; turkeys,
owing to ntnm.'}uq_l:c pound.
i grul: n}ns,“u?slcte per pound; Eng
sh walnuts, er pound; pecans,
owing to size, l?g,g!gc per pound.
M.
FlSH—Bream and perch, 7¢ pound;
unaprr, 10¢ pound; trout, llc pound:
bluefish. Tc {ound: pompano, 25¢ pound;
mackerel, 12c pound; mixed fish, 87&:
pound; blackfish 10c pound; mullef, §l§
per barrel
FRUITS AND PRODUCE.
FRUITS AND \'EGETABLES—-A&
ples, $6.75 per barrel; boxed apzla. $3.
8‘3,35; Florida pineapples, $3.00@3.50;
üban pines, $3.00, owing to quality;
cherries; in 84-?1. crates, 10@12c per
quart; strawberries, 8@ 10c (lu|rt; Flor
ida celery, $2.00@250; Florida and
California oranges, . $3.000#3.25; ba
nanas, 2%@3c E:r pound; Florida eab
bage, moving better, per crate, sl.oo@
$1.25; peanuts, pound, fancy Virginia,
6%@7c; choice, 5% @6c: uulwowrfi.
$3@3.50 per crate; snap beans, plentiful,
$2.00 per hamper: South Georgia EnT
lish peas, chn(lful, 76¢c per bushel;
lettuce, well headed, 5c small drum;
grapeiruit, $3.00@38.25 per crate; tln’e
rine oranges. $3.00@3.50; kl.ll'm]\la'.lil %
@Bc per pound; beets, $2.00 in half
barr(;.l cn;eso'bficu_?rumbers. l81.,52“01.60:
egegplants, $3. ,2.76 per crate; ! p
pers, large crate, solid packed, Sg.eN:
six-basket crates, $2.00; tomatoes
fancy, six-basket crateg, receipts light,
$250@23.75; cholce, $2.00@2.20; squash
in small crates. §1.00@1.50; onions, red
and yellow, $2.00 per bushel, sweet po
tatoes, pumpkin yams, $1.10@1.26 per
bushel; Irish -gotatoes, $3.00 per bag,
eontaining &% bushel; new crop; $1.235@
1.50 per drum, containing 31 bushel; No.
% gou-rel potatoes, new, $3.00; No. 1,
4.00.
FLOUR, GRAIN. ETGC. :
FLOUR — Postell's imegant, $7.00;
Omega, $6.25; Carter’'s best, E.so; Qual
ity in 43-lb. towel bags, $6.25; Qual
ity (flnest“mem), $6.10; Gloria (self
rising), $5.99; Swan's Down, $56.60; Vic.
tory (in tow -sacks), $6.35; Victory
(best patent), $6.16; Puritan (highest
patent), $550; Home Queen (highest
tent, $5.50; Paragon (highest patent),
!)?.80: White Cloud m;ghut rnent).
5.'25; Wtiltat Dn.lasyh ;5.8 : 'Xflx te Lily
(h en 8 ; Southern Star,
(gnflnt?..u.okz Spray (patent),
$56.05; mg Cotton (half patent), $4.75;
Tulip T (ltrdfm). $4.46; low grade,
98-pound sacks, $4.
Beet pulp, per cwt., $1.70.
GROCERIES, .
SUGAR—Per pound: standard gran
pianted, I%c; New York refined, 4%c;
pléntation, 44c.
COFFEE — Roasted (Arbuckle), $2O;
AAAA, $1450, in bulk; In bags and bar
rels, $2l; #nen, 20c.
RICE —~Head, 4%@5%c: fancy head,
§%4 @7c, acrording {o grade.
LARD-Silver Leaf, 12'%%¢ 1b: Scoco,
9%0 pound; Flakewhite, %¢; Cotlene,
$7.75 per cade; Snowdrift, $8.25 ger case,
SALT-—One hunared pounds, H4c; salt
brick (plain}), per case, $2.54; salt brick
(medicated), per case, $5.10; salt red,
per hundredweight, $1.10; salt white
rock, per hundredweight, 50¢; Grano
erystal, per case, 25-Ib. sacks, 75c; salt,
Ozowe, per case, 30 pwck-%es. 95¢; 50-Ib.
sacks, 30c; 25-Ib. sacks, Ibc.
CORN—-Choice red cob, 9%%¢: No. 2
mixed, 9%6c; yellow, 97c; cracked, -85¢c.
MEAL—Plain, 96-Ih. sacks, 95c; 48-Ib,
mixed, 97¢; 24-Ib, sacks, Bc.
OATS-—Fancy Canadian clipged, 6%¢c;
No. 2, bsc; fancy white, H6c; white, bbc;
mixed, 53c.
Coton seed mea! (Harper), §529.50;
Cremo feed, $27.00; Buckeye, $28.00,
Cotton seed hulls, sacked, $12.00.
HAY +Timolhy choice, large bales,
$1.49; large light clover mixed, $1.25;
Timoihy, No. i, small bales, $1.35; straw
70c.
GROUND FEED-—Purina feed, 100-Ib.
sacks, $1.70; Purina molasees fend, $1.85;
King Corn horse feed, $1.70: Larro dairy
feed, $2.08; Arab horse feed, $1 85; All
needa feed, $1.65; Suerene dairy feed,
$1.55; wifelfa meal, 100-Ih. =acks, gl.ii;
Victory horse feed, 100-Ib, sacks, $1.79;
Fat Maker, horse and mule feed, $1.20;
A 6% C feed, $1.60; Milko dairy feed,
$1.60.
SEED--Tennessee blue stem, $1.50;
Appler oats, 76c; Texas red rustproof
oats, soc; Oklahoma red rustproof oats,
83c; Georgia seed rye, 2';2-bushel sacks,
$1.20; Tenuessee seed rye, 2-bushel
sacks, $1.00; Tennessee barley, :uo;
Burt oats, 60c; Orange cane seed, $2.15;
Amber cane seed, $4.15. 3
CHICKEN FEED - Beef acrn&s. 100-
Ib. sacks, $3.25; 50-1 b sacks, $3.60; Aunt
Patsy Mash, lfl-l!. sacks, $2.30; Pu
rina pigeon feed, $2.25; Purina chowder,
12-pkg. bales, §256; Purina chowder,
100-pound sacks, $2.35; Purina scratch
feed, bales, $2.40; Purina hb{ chick
feed, $2.20; Purina scratch, 100-Ib, sks.,
tzu.- Purina scrateh, 13-293. bales,
2.35; Victory baby c¢hick, $2.30; Victory
scratch, 50-Ib. sacks, $2.15; 100-Ib. sacks,
$2.10; No. 1 chicken wheat, per bu., §1.85;
No. 2, ;;;rlsbustl:‘el. tl.]zs;sgyllbter ah:ll,nc;
ggo, .15; charcoal, -Ib. sacks, r
108 pounds,-$1.95. ”
SHORTS—Red Dog, 98-Ib. sacks, $1.85;
‘vhite. 100-Ib. sacks, $1.95; dandy mix
dling, 100-Ib. secks, $1.75; fancy. 75-1 b
sacks, $1.85; P. W., 75-Ib. sacks, $1.80;
brown, 100-Ib. sacks, $1.70;, Germ meal,
75-1 b sacks, $1.65; Georgia feed, 75-Ib.
sacks, $1.756; Germ meal, 175-Ib. sacks,
$1.75; bran, 100-Ib. sacks, $1.70; 75-Ib.
sacks, $1.70; bran and shorts, mixed,
$1.60; Germ meal, Homeo, §1.65.
PROVISION MARKET.
(Corrected by wmu) Provision Com
pany.
Cornfield hams, 10 to 12 pounds aver
age, 18%ec.
Cornfield hams, 12 to 14 pounds aver
age, 18¢c.
Cornfield skinped hams, 16 to 18
pounds average, 18%c.
Cornfield picnic hams, 6 to 8 pounds
average, l4c.
Cornfield breakfast bacon, 26c.
Cornfield sliced breakfast bacon,
1-pound boxes, 12 to case, $2.50 per case,
Grocers’ bacon, wide and narrow,
18%c. 2
Cornfield fresh pork sausage, link or
bulk, 26-pound buckets, 13%e.
Cornfield frankforts, MW-pound cartons,
14c.
Cornfield bologna, 25-pound boxes, 12c.
Cornfield luncheon ham, 25-pound
boxes, 14%c.
Cornfield smoked Mnk sausage, 25-
pound boxes, lic.
Cornfield frankforts, in pickle, kits, $2,
Cornfield pure lard, tierce basis, 11%c.
; Country style lard, #-pound tins,
I%e.
émpound lard, tierce basis, Sc. 1
D & veliles ki 2%e.
. B. , medium average, o
D. 8. rib bellies, light average, 12%c.
A Sermon by Rev. W. H. Faust, Winder, Ga.
Text—"l am ready to preach tho“
gospel to you also."—Romans i:l5.
The biggest question that is be
fore the church to-day is that of ml--i;
signs—sending the gospel to all those
who have not heard it, carrying the
tidings of salvation to the lost ones
of earty, whether it be men of Geor
gia or men of China. Wherever there
is human need, there the gospel
should be found, Various methods
and plans have been inaugurated to
have the good news spread., All of
them have been exceedingly helpful,
and among the most helpful has been
the annval missionary day to be ob
served by all the schoolsof certain
churches,
Missionary Day in the Sunday School.
If our children are ever reached,
so far as their own souls are con
cerned, they muat be reached during
the time that they are children. The
children of to-day will be the church
members of to-morrow. The givers
of to-morrow, as well as the workers
of to-morrow, are being trained now,
Mayhap a generation or two ago we
had better preachers of the Word
than we have now, and to that fact
may be attributed this fact that we
have 20 many who are not great doers
of the Word in this present time.
The preaching of generations ago
luid more emphasis upon doctrinal
preaching than upon missionary
preaching, Churches during that pe
riod sprang up like magic until tQ
day we have hdsts of churches, but
come was emphasized more than go.
Now go Is equally emphasized, and
the next thing after come is go. If
one can't go personally, then the ob
ligation is upon such to send a sub
stitute, Either one of (wo—go or give.
One of the great ways in which it
helps to observe a common day is
that all the people who study the
lesson feel a common intevest, and
the helpfu'ness that comes from num
bers who at the same time are en
gaged in a worthy enterprise,
A ~ Our Obligation, e
“T am debtor both to Greeks and to
Barbarians, both to the wise and to
the foolish. So as much as in me is
1 am ready to preach the gospel to
you also that are in Rome.” Now, if
this heroic minister recogni hisin
dividual responsibility to ch to
all classes, why shouldn’'t we? If he
was obligated, with his le«nchlniand
training and culture, 0 go to Rome
also and preach, bow can any man in
this dgy of enlightenment figure him
self out of the way of service in this
particular field? Our debt to Agia is
a big one, daily assuming vaster pro
portions. All the religion that we
have came to us directly from Asia.
Then not until Asia is as thoroughly
evangelized as we are can we be said
to be out of debt. Then it will be
necessary to pay up the interest that
has been accumulating for 1,900 years.
The principal and interest, too, will
have to be paid back before we can
really be said to give anything to
China and Asia. Weare great on pay
ing our debis. Every man who is a
man wants to meet fully agd quickly
bis rightful obligations, To ¢do so in a
religious way is going for the next
few years to cost us a vast deal of
real service and sacrifice. We are
( going to have to give until it really
|hurfs, and then some more.
Still, there is a sense in which we
are not really debtors to the heathen
€0 much as we are debtors to Christ,
and He says that if we give to one
of these, the least, even, of earth’s
litle ones, we have given unto Him.
So in helping the needy and helpless
we are helping Jesus, and in he'ping
Him we are helping ourselves, As
we save souls under the power of the
Spirit accompanying the Word which
we read and speak, stars are added to
our crowns, ‘
The servants of the Lord are richly
and quickly rewarded. The lahorer is
worthy of his hire. Balvation is the
free gift of God. Good, faithful work
is the free gift of man. Jesus laid
down His life for us. We ought to
ley down our l'ves, if need be, for the
brethren. Christ’'s merit, and not our
own, puts under obligation to all men
everywhere,
Carry the Message. |
Preaching could be improved upon,
especially a vast deal of that which
is done in the present day, but it is
tby the foolishness of preaching that
the Father has ordained to save the
world. It is splendid for the churches
to erect inagnificent and beautiful ase
well as costly bulldings in which to
‘meet and worghip. Nothing wrong
‘about erecting schools and colleges,
provided they have as their chief end
the preaching of the Gospel. Splen
did to equip and maintain orphan
ages if it iz done with a desire to
spread the Gospel. Alas! that so .
many schools seem to have lost sight |
of this and allow their students to
stress baseball and become mm-o‘
conversant with athletic language
than they are with kingdom terms, It
possibly wouldn't be entirely out »*
place just here to say that any de
nominational gchool or coliege cught
to consider very seriously the pro
priety of its representatives asking
the masses of the common people,
who are already taxed by the State (o
keep up the State institutions, to con
tribute to the support of denomina
tional institutions run on the saine
general plane with said State schools
and having very little, if any, more
religious instruction therein, and
stressing athletics and other things
as much or more than they do the
Gospel,
Without fear of successful contra
dietion, | take the, position that we
MISSIONS
can't hope to compete with the State
in the general field of education;
therefore we must spécialize in our
denominational educational work, and
the Gospel should be our specialty.
In common day parlance it should be
our long suit. Stress not less the
things that are already Dbeing
stressed, but put more emphasis upon
the pawer of the Gospel to draw men
to Christ.
Not Ashamed of Gospel.
Some of us have grown to feei thal
the Christianity of the present day is
the product of the colleges instead of
‘the colleges heing the product of
Christianity. Now and then it would
zprove helpful to us to pause and con
sider that there were ‘men of God in
the world before there were educa
'tlonal institutions, The Gospel is the
‘power of Qod unto salvation. . Just
give the Book a fair showing and see
the results. Rducate all you can, bul
ieducatlon of the head and not of the
‘heart will produce a poor type of cit
‘lsenshlp. :
~ What the people of this decade need
‘as much or more than any other one
thing is a correct perspective—ihs
power to see things as they realy
'are. Missions don't mean the Gospel
for Asia alone, or Europe alone, o 1
America alone., It means all tphe
world, It is exceedingly unforiunaie
that we have gotten into the habit of
talking about home, State and for
elgn missions. In the mind of the
‘Master there were no such divisiona.
To Him it was all the world. The
Gospel for all the world,
Men are sinners, All men are sin
ners who have not been regenerated.
Jesus said to Nicodemus, a ruler of
the Jews, “Ye must be born again.”
No getting to Heaven without ac
cepting Christ; without a changed
heart. People may scoff all they want
to and say that the person who be
lieves in the doctrine of depravity is
archaic and an old fogy, hut the Book
teaches it. Men without Christ are
fost, just a 9 sure as the world moves,
Jesus Himgelf said. “1 am the way,
the truth and the life; no man com
eth unto theé Father but by Me.” In
herent goodness can not save, Only
the Christ can. What a tremc¢ndous
responsibility, then, rests upon us to
carry the word of salvation! How
can they hear without a preacher?
How can they preach except they be
sert? How can they be sent unless
someone contributes? These arve
profound gquestions for our thinking
men. Alas! that we have left off
their consideration, when it was so
vital. Paul was not ashamed of the
Gospel. It did so much for him. It
has done so much for us and for our
country that we should not {:
ashamed of it. We are if we do n¥
spread it.
The World’'s Need Calls.
The Man of Macedonia stood and
called to Paul, and he respondel
readily, quickly, and in that respon-e
of the great-hearted apostie can te
found our true greatners to-day.
Suffice for a single moment that Paul
had gone east instead of west. The
call of the world’s need was to him
an Imperative call, and he answered
with the glorious grace, Macedonia
was little, if any, more needy than
many of the nations of earth to-dav,
Our citieg hold up their feeble hands
and cry to us, “Come over and heip.”
Our streets say they are filled with
dying men and women who need to
know Jesus in order that their lives
of impurity be cleansed to purity,
that their indifference and sin may be
changed to activity and holiness, Our
rural districts are calling to us for
ald and assistance. The desert places
could be made by a little careful wnu
tering and cuitivation to blossom a¢
the rose. Then we who belleve In
prayer and the Holy Ghost need (o
pray nightly that the neede of enrth
may be met by those who love the
Gospel so well that they will carry it
to all men everywhere, The galva
tion that God really works into a
man is going to be worked out of hitn,
If a man is grpd, he can not but «)
good; if he has tasted ol the Lod
and found from his own personal ex
nerience that he s good, then it fol
lows as day the night that the Gos=pel
must be spread.
Salvation Only Through Christ.
Neither is theee saivation in anv
other, for there ls none other nam:
under heaven given among wmgh
' whereby we must be saved.
\ This is Gospel truth, No oth:r
name is comparable to that of th»
wonderful Counse'or. Mighty God,
Everlasting Father, Prince of leace,
Prophet, Priest, King., Saviour, R:-
‘deemjer, Master, Brother—all thess
names are blessed to us because He
is our Shepherd and we are H.=
sheep, but’'it seems that Saviour !
the sweetest of all He came to vee's
and to save the lost, The outcast, the
wretched, undone sinnér was 100
recipient of Hig love and mercy, e
loved us while we wers yet in our
sins, and died for the ungodly, Gi:«d
are we all that we ever looked 1o
Him and were gloriously saved. Gla<-
der still are we that we have thn
pleasure of holding Him up to others
a 3 their RBaviour, too. We are H's
witnesses; engaged in urging His
warfare. He is onr Captain: when he
commands, it is ours to obey, "G,
ve therefore and teach all nations,
baptizing them In the name of Ihe
Father, SBon and Holy Ghost, and i
I am with you always, even unto (as
end of the age.”” The trust of Christ
should impel each Christian to do
hig best that he go not Into the ban
quet house of the King empty handed.
Lord, may perfect obedience compe!
us to carry the word and may the
Holy Ghost real it to the entire salvi
tion of the lost,
11