Newspaper Page Text
Markets---Continued
GRAIN.
ST. LOUIS CASH QUOTATIONS.
Wheat—No. 2 red .............94 @94%
COB N 0 8 0o oivitean svy 13
ORU=NO. & < aivii iiniiuein 0%
CHICAGO, June 2.--Wheat opened a
shade firmer to-day, July selling at 86%
@B6%c; September, . 85% @853, @86%.
Corn was up %@%ec, with the buying
of shorts the leading help. Oats were
& shade stronger for September and as
much ag 4¢ higher for July. Provisions
were higher.
Wheat ruled firm throughout the late
session on light interior receipts, buy
ing of July for foreign account and Ar
mour, light pit oeffring and strength in
corn.
Corn developed a stronger tone on
higher cash markets, firm Southwest
markets, decreasing stocks and demand
from shorts and local professionals.
The presence of army worms in parts
of the bélt is causing apprehension.
Grain quotations:
Previous
High. Low. Close. Close.
WHEAT—
Ju1y..... l’it 86% 87 8614
Sept..... :g‘fi :6% gfi';‘.g g‘;;fi
8B . T 8 T 5
CORN-—
Ju1y...., 69% 681 6914 6814
Sept..... 673 66 % 673% 66%g
Dec...... 8% 58 585 57%
OATS -~
Ju1y..... 40% 3654 40 3984
Sept..... 383% 38 3845 38
PORK -
July.... 20.25 £O.OO 20.25 19.80
Scf)i”. 19.92% 1980 19.87% 19.65
JARD. .
July.... 10.¢0 987% 997% 9.80
Sefit;.‘. 10.17% 1002% 10.15 9.97%
IBS—-
July.... 11.27% 11.16 11.20 11.10
Bept.... 11.37% 11.2214 11.82% 11.1214
CHICAGO CAR LOTS.
Following are receipts for Tuesday
and estimated receipts for Wednesday:
Pt | Tuesday | Wed’'sday
WHORS 10 178 123
Do ooy 912 522
o, l 349 286
W o s o 12,000 30,000
BRADSTREET’'S VISIBLE SUPPLY.
Followini shows the Bradstreet's
weekly visible supply changes of grain
for the week:
Wheat, fdecreased 8,205,000 bushels.
Corn, decreased 17.000 bushels.
Oats, decreased 1,468,000 bushels.
PRIMARY MOVEMENT.
£ WHEAT— | 1914. 1 19813.
Receipts . . . . . ‘ 427.“{ 428,000
Shipments . ~ . . .| 985,000 537,000
CORN— | 1914 | 1913.
Receipts . . . . . .| 1,665,000 l 1,437,000
Shipments ... . .| 719,000 | 846,000
NEW YORK COFFER MARKET.
Ciffee quotations:
2 * | Opening. | Closing.
January. . . . .| 9.57T@ 9.62| 9.53@ 9.66
Fehtuary. . . . .| 984 9.58@ 9.60
March. . . . . .| 9.69@ 9.70| 9.64@ 9.65
i i 9.70@ 9.75| 9.67@ 9.68
WAV i e VIS 0.70@ 9.71
dJune. . . .. .|&%O | 8:92@ 8.94
Ry . .ls.o?’g 9.10 l 9.02@ 9.03
Angust. . . . . 4 210@ 9.20) 9.12@ 9.14
September. . . .| 9.25 9.22% 9.43
Octeber: . & . g 9.30@ 9.38) 9.21@ 9.33
November. . . .| 9.38@ 9.47 9,40 g 9.42
December. . ..| 9.52 | 9.48@ 9.49
Closed steady. Sales, 56,000 bags.
ATLANTA LIVE STOCK MARKET.
(By W. H. White, Jr.,, of the White
Provision Cempany-*
The following represents ruling prices
of good ‘quality beef cattle. Inferior
grades and dairy types selling lower.
Good to choice steers, 1,000 to 1,200,
$6.25 to $6.85.
GGood steers, 800 to 1,000, $6.00 to $6 50,
Medium to goed steers, 700 to £5O, $5.50
to $6.00.
God to choice beef cows, 800 to 900,
$5.75 to $6.25.
Medium to good cows, 700 to 756, $5.25
to $5.75.
Medium to choice heifers, 750 to 850,
$5.50@ $6.25.
Medium to good heifers, 650 to 750,
$5.00 to $5.525.
Medium to common steers, if fat, 800
to 900, $5.50 to $6.00.
Mixed to common cows, if fat, 700 to
800, $4.50 to $5.25.
Mixed common, $3.50 to $4.50.
Good butcher bulls, $4.00 to $5.00.
Cholce Tennessee lamba, 70 to 80, $B.OO
to §8.50.
Medium lambs, $5.00 to $6.00.
Sheep, 80 to ©O,, $4.00 to $5.00.
Prime hogs, 160 to 200, $7.90 to $8.25.
Good butcher hogs, 140 to 160, $7.80
to $B.OO.
Good butcher pigs, 100 to 140, $7.70
to $7.90.
l.ight pigs, 80 to 100, $7.50 to $7.75
Heavy and rough hogs, 200 to 300,
$7.25 to $7.75.
The above quotations gpply to cornfed
hogs. Mast and peanut fattened, I'% @
2¢ under,
NEW YORK PRODUCE MARKET.
NEW YORX. June 2-—Petroleum,
easier; crude Pennsylvania, 1.80.
Turpentine, quiet, 47@47%.
Rosin, quiet; common, 4.00@4.10.
Wool, firm; domestic fleece, 15 @2B,
Pulled, scoured basis, 38@b4; Texas,
sc¢oured basis, 44@Co.
Hides, steady: native steers, 17 bid;
branded steers, 163,@ 16%.
Coffee, steady; options opend&d 7@ 11
points higher; Rio, Neo. 7, on spot, 98.
Rice, steady; domestic, ordinary to
prime, 3% @5%. .
Molasses, steady; New Orleans open
kettie, 35@55.
Sugar, raw, quiet; centrifugal, 3.39
bid; muscovado, nomiral; melasses,
nominal; molasses, sugar, 2.74 bid.
Sugar, refined, steady; fine granulat
ed, 4..0; cut loaf, 5.76; crushed, 5.05;
mold 4, 4.70; cubes. 4.45: powdered, 4.30;
diamond A, 4.40; confectioners’' A, 4.10;
softs, No. 1, 3.95@400. (No. 2 is §
points lower than No. 1, and Nos 23 to
14 are each 5 points lower than the
preceding grade.)
Potatoes, week; white mr%. 2.00@
2.37; sweets, Fioridas, 2.00%4. i
Beans, weak: marrow. choice. ¢ 85@
6.35; pea, cheice, 3.26@2.75; red kidney,
choice, 5.85. :
Dried fYruits, quiet; apricote, choice
to fancy, 16%@17%; apples, evaporated,
prime to fancy, 94 @li%; prunes, 36s
to 60s, 10% @llde;: 60 to 100 s, 6% @:0;
peaches, choice to fancy, 64@8; seeded
raisins, choice to fancy, 6 @B%.
METAL MARKET.
NEW YORK, June 2 —The metal
market was dull m-c:ayl.’ “B:lx:d‘rd ?op
., Bpots to August, . B ter,
Posacs. lead, 585@8.9, tin, 305 G
* 30.65.
THE GEORGIAN’S NEWS BRIEFS
Atlanta Markets
EGGS—Fresh country, candled, 19c.
BUTTER-—Fox River and Meadow
Gold, in 1-Ib. blocks, 30c.
UNDRAWN POULTRY-—-Drawn, head
and feet on, per pound: Hens, lciln;
iries, 26@30c; roosters, §@lo¢c; turkeys,
owlns to fatness, 18c.
LIVE POULTRY-Hens, Mg‘}cic Ib.;
roosters, 26c; broilers, 2@ per
Found; puddie ducks, 30@36c; Pekine
Mfflc: f““' 65?750 each; turkeys,
owing to fatness, 16@16c pound.
NUTS.
Brazil nuts, 16?1&0 per pound; Eng
lish walnuts, 14@16¢ ‘%er pound; pecans,
owing to size, II?g-Hc per pound.
FISH--Bream and perch, 7c pound,
snaprr, 10¢ pound; trout, lle pound:
bluefish, Te¢ found: pompano, 25¢ pound;
mackerel, 12¢ pound; mixed fish, SQGC
pound; blackfish. 10c pound; mullet, $l5
per barrel. *
FRUITS AND PRODUCE,
FRUITS AND ‘.’EGETABLES—As
pIes, $6.75 per barrel; boxed upglu, $3.00
@3.25; Florida pineapples, $3.00@3.50;
Cuban pines, $3.00, owing to quality;
cherries, in 24—(1t. crates, 10@12c_per
quart; strawberries, B@loc}gua.rt; Flor
ida celery, $2.00@2.50; orida and
California oranges, $3.00@3.25; ba
nanas, 2% @3c per pound: Florida cab
bage, moving better, per crate, sl.oo@
$1.25; peanuts, pound, fancy Virginia,
6,@7c; choice, 5% @B6c: caulifiower,
$3@3.50 per crate; snap beans, plentiful,
$2.00 per hamper; South Georgia EnT
lish peas, plentiful, 75¢ per bushel;
lettuce, well headed, bc small drum;
grapefruit, $3.00@3.25 per crate; tange
rine oranges, $3.00@3.50; kumquatz, %
@Bc per pound; beets, $2.00 in finl!-
barrel crates; cucumbers, $1.25@1.50;
eggplants, $2.00@2.75 per crate; bell‘gep
pers, large crate, solid packed, .00;
six-basket crates, $2.00; tomatoes
fancy, s‘x-basket crates hece’?m light,
$2.50@2.75; choice, $2.00@2.35; nquash
in small crates, $1.00@1.50; onions, red
and yellow, $2.00 per bushel; sweet po
tatoes, pumpkin yams, 21‘1061.25 per
bushel; Irish gotatoes. 3.00 per bag,
containing 2% bushel; new crop; 81.35%
1.60 per drum, containing &i bushel; Ne.,
% obéarrel potatoes, new, $3.00; No. 1,
4.00. -
FLOUR, GRAIN. ETC.
FLOUR — Posteli's fmegant, $7.00;
Omega, $6.25; Carter's best, $5.60; Qual
ity in 48-lb. towel ba%s. $6.25; Qual
ity (finest patent) $6.10; Gloria (self
rising), $5.90; Swan's Down, $5.60; Vic
tory (in tow sacks), $6.25; Victory
(best patent), $6.10; Puritan (highest
patent), $5.50; Home Queen (highest
atent, $56.50; Paragon (anut patent),
;’5.;’10; White Cloud (highest patent),
$5.25; White Daisy, $5.25; White Lily
(high patent), $5.60; Soothern Star,
(galenl). $5.05; Ocean Spray (patent),
$6.05; King Cotton (half patent), $4.75;
Tulip Flour (straight), $4.40; low grade,
98-pound =acks, $4.
Beet pulp, per cwt., $1.70.
GROCERIES.
SUGAR-—Per pound: standard gran
ulated, 4%c; New York refined, 4'gc;
plantation, 4%c. -
COFFEE — Roasted (Arbuckle), $2O;
AAAA, $14.50, in bulk; in bags and bar
rels s2l;Ԥreon. 20c.
RlCE—Head, 4% @s%c: fancy head,
6% @Te, :vvordinuo grade.
LARD—SHVIg]r af, 12%ec Ib: Scoco,
9%c pound; Ilakewhite, s¢; Cotwolene,
$7.75 I;’,w,r case; Snowdrift, $6.256 ger case.
SALT-—One hunared pounds, H4c; salt
brick (plain), per case, $2.54; salt brick
(medicated), per case, $6.10; salt red,
per hundredweight, sl.lv; salt white
rock, per hundredweight, %0c; Grano
crystal, cEoer case, 25-Ib. sacks, 75c; salt,
sacks, 30c; 25-Ib. sacks, 18c. e
| CORN—Choice red cob, 99¢; No. 2
| Ozone, per case, 30 packages, 95c; 50-lb.
mixed, %6¢; yellow, 972; cracked, 95c.
. MEAL-—Plain, 96-Ib. sacks, 95c; 48-Ib.
mixed, 97¢; 24-Ib. sachs, 99c.
OA'l‘S—J‘u.ncy Canadian clipped, 59;
| No. 2, bbe; fancy white, 56c; white, bbc;
| mixed, 53c.
Coton seed meal (Harper), $§29.50;
| Cremo feed, $27.00; Buckeye, $28.00.
l Cotton seed hullg, sacked, $12.00.
HAY-—Timothy choice, large bales,
$1.40; large lght clrver mixed, $1.25;
'lgmothy, No. 1, small bales, §1.35; straw
Toc.
| GROUND FEED—Purina feed, 100-Ib.
sacks, $1.70; Purina n.olasses feed, §1.85;
King Corn horse feed, $1.70; Larro dairy
feed, $2.00;. Arab hoise feed, $1.85; All
needa feed, $1.65; Suerene dairy feed,
$1.55; alfalfa meal, 100-Ib. sacks, $1.56;
Victory horse feed, 100-Ib. wacks, $1.70;
Fat Maker, horse and mule feed, $1.30;
:lfi% C feed, $1.60; Milko dairy fced,
SEED - —Tennessee blue stem, $1.50;
Appler oats, 76¢; Texas red rustproof
oats, 60c; Oklahoma red rustproof oats,
63c; Georgia seed rye, 2%-bushel sacks.
$1.20; Tennessce wneed rye, 2-bushcl
sacks, $1.00; 7Tennessee barley, $1.00;
Burt oats, 66«; Orange cane seéed, $2.15;
Amber cane seed, $2.15.
CHICKEN FEED-—Beef scrag!, 100
ib. sacks, $3.25; 60-Ib. sacks, $3.60; Aunt
Patsy Mash, 100-Ib. sacks, $2.30; Pu
rina pigeon feed. $2.25; Purina chowder,
12-pkg. bales, $2.55; Purina chowder,
100-pound sacks, $2.35: Purina scratch
feed, bales, $2.40; Purina baby chick
feed, $2.20; Purina ecratch, 100-Ib. sks.,
$2.05; Purina scratch, lfl-zpk;. bales,
$2.35; Victory baby chick, $2.30; Victory
scratch, 50-Ib. sacks, $2.15; 100-Ib. sacks,
£2.10: No. 1 chicken wheat, per bu., $1.35;
No. 2, per bushel, $1.25; oyster shell, 75¢c;
Eggo, $2.156; charcoal, 50-Ib. sacks, per
100 pounds, $1.95.
[QHORTS-~Red Nag. 98-Ib. sacke, $1.85;
white, 100-Ib. sacks, $1.95; dandy mix
dling, 100-Ib. sacks, §1.75; fancy. 756-1 h
sacke, $1.85; P. W., 75-Ib. sacks, $1.%0;
brown, 100-Ib. sacks, $1.70; Germ meal,
75-1 b sacks, $1.86; Georgia feed, 75-1 b
sacks, $1.75; 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.
i LIVE STOCK.
CHICAGO, June 2.--Hogs: Receipts,
‘12.000; market strong and 5c higher:
‘mixed and butchers, 785@8.15; good
heavy. K.00@8.10: rough heavy. 7.80@
7.96; lght, 7.85@8.15: pigs., 6.50@7.9%;
bulk. 8.00¢78.10,
Cattle: Receipts, 2.000: market steaqay.
heeves, 7.50@9.30; cows and heifers, 3.75
@8.50; stockers and feeders, 6.75@8 25;
Texans, 7.05@8.40: calves 8 50€10.00.
Sheep: Receipts. 10.000; market
strong; native and Western, 4 50@6.190;
lambs. 6.50@9.50.
BT. LOUIS, June 2 —Cattie: Receipts, |
4,800, including 2,300 Southerns; market
steady; native, 7.50@9.00: cows and
helfers. 4.25@9.00; stockers and feeders,
5.0068.00: calves, €00@9.25; T?“‘
r:geeu“. 5.75@8.40; cows and heifers, 4501
Hogs: Receipts, 8,500: market strong;
mixed. 8.05@8.20; food £.10@8.20; rough,
7.05@7.85; light, 8.06@8.20; pigs, 7.004
8.00; bulk. 8.05@8.16 - ;
Sheep: Receipts, 5.000; opening strong:
prospects higher; sheared muttons. 4.75
@5.00; mheared wtnn. 5.75(;6.50:
:h:rod lambs, 7. 8.60; mpring, 9.00€@
“Children of the Devil”
A Sermon by Rov. W. H. Faust, Winder, Ga.
Text: “In this the children of God
are manifest, and the children of the
devil; whosoever doeth not righteous
ness is not of God. Neither he that
loveth net his brother.” John ili: 10,
To the man who stops for a moment
to think, it is a self-evident fact that
there are two forces operative in the
world to-day—one for the good of hu
manity and its general uplift, the other
for the purpose of crushing and destroy
ing all that is good and pure and up
lifting. One of these forces is God, the
other the devil. One has subjects at
work busily engaged trying to build up
His cause, the other has followers
equally busy tryving to further the in
terests of his kingdom. The inhabitants
of these two kingdoms are as really
forees in this world as are the citizens
of Germany or Great Britain or Amer
ica.
There are certain things in this world
that men may know-—things that ar¢
easgily observed. Among them is the
subject of salvation. One may know
whether he is a citizen of the kingdom
of God or a subject of the kingdom of
evil. The.children of the devil are
manifest in their work, It is impos
sible for a good tree to bring forth evil
fruit. It is also equally impossible for
a tree that is evil to bring forth goed
fruit, “Out of the heart proceed the
issues of life.”” The evil outworkings
are only evidences of the evil forces
operative within.
Love of the brethren is one of the
evidences of a Christian. Indifference
to and hatred of {he brethren, on the
other hand, must be evidences of the
one who is a subject of Satan's king
dom. In this age the line needs to be
clearly drawn. There is a line of de
marcation clearly drawn between the
kingdom of God and that of the devil
Worldliness has almost obscured it
though, and it is one of the duties of
this present day Christianity to make
clear the line that is now £0 dim and
obscure, that has so nearly been cov
ered up and wiped out by the forces of
unrighteousness. One of two things is
true—you are a child of God or of the
evil one. You know deep down in your
heart which. You serve him whom you
love. You know whether vou love Gyl
or the devil. To which kingdom do you
helong? Answer as you will wish you
had answered when you stand face to
face with Ged in the day of judgment.
Servants of Lae Devil.
John iii, 8: ‘“He that committeth sin
is of the devil.” John viii, 44: “Ye are
of your father the devil and the lusts of
your father yve wili do. He was a mur
derer from the beginning, and abode not
in the truth, because ther: is no truth
in him.” And in the thirty eighth verse
Jesus uses two very important-pronouns,
“my’ and “vour.” ‘I speak that which
I have seen with My Father and ye do
that which ye have seen with your fa
ther.”” One of God, the other of the dev
fl. One came to do the will of His
father, the others the will of the devil.
Prior to 1864 the negro in the South
was a servant. He was owned by his
master. He was subject to his owner.
His master's word was law. His service
was given to his owner without any
question. Just such a condition of servi
tude are the servants of the devil in
to-day. They belong absolutely to their
master. ‘‘The lusts of your father ye
will do.” See how the servants obey
their master. Go into the dance halls
and see the hosts of supposedly pure
and innocent girls swaying to the seft
strains of music and watch the faces
of men as the thrill of the soft and
rhythmic tread and swish of femininity.
The hot breath of lust and passion is
there and will wither and blast and
scorch. Up-to-date dancing is of the
devil. Hesitation dances are simply un
hesitating hugging. The man who dare
not in the streets publicly hug vour wife
and dau%hter will do so unhesitatingly
in the ballroom under the strains of
the devi’'s music. You belong to your
master, what he says you will do. Stop,
ch, man and woman, created in the
Imafe of God and try to see how you
would feel should Jesus come in the
midst of a baliroom revel and find you
in a compromising attitude. He says:
““Behold, I come quietly and my reward
is with Me and render to every man
2zcording to his work.”” Oh! the serv
ams cf the devil, how they slave and
toil and all the wage==: ‘hey ever get is
death. ‘“‘The waßes of sin is death, but
the gift of God is eternal life through
Jesus Christ our Lord.”
But says some one: ‘1 can play
cards and still be a Christian.” Can you
curse and still be a gentleman? Can
you follow the rractices of the devil's
servants and still be a servant of God?
Christ is coming. That is one of the
fundamental teachings of Scripture. Can
we really feel that we are ready to wel
come Him into a card or gaming room?
The sufferisg and sin that is in the
world to-day is simply appalling. Too
much poverty. for a true servant of God
to be found at the card table. Too many
weary souls seeking light to frolic at
games when {ou are light bearers for
the King. The Son of Man came to
seek and to save the lost, why then
should you not be about your Master's
business?” You are. The devil is the
boss of the same hall and the card ta
ble and the brothel and sin. You are
GRAIN NOTES.
CHICAGO, June 2.—The Record-Her
ald says: ‘'Conservative traders in
wheat said the aggressiveness of short
sellers on weak spots causes the mar
ket to be oversold, and until there I 8 a
material increase in the hedging sales
they do not look for any material de
cline in values.
} “Bulls in corn consider the market in
‘good, healthy condition, with the short
‘inurut large. ‘l'raders in oats regard
ed Bnow’'s crop report as bearish.”
‘ - . *
Bartlett-Frazier Co. say: ‘“Wheat
The weather map shows part cloudy in
Neorth Dakota; generally clear else
where. We gee nothing but a trading
market at the moment,
“Corn—We look for prices to gradu
ally work higher.
“QOats—Speculative trade is light, but
there seems to be rather more disposi
tion on the part of shorts in July to
cover.
“Provisions—There seems to be less
pressure on the market with a generally
better undertone.”
. » .
“The wheat crop outlook continues for
a bumper crop,”’ says E. E. Clark.
. - -
Rycroft says: “All facts surrounding
the corn market are increasingly bull
ish. The 700,000,000 shortage in the crop
will assert itself with greater effect
during the balance of the year, because'
serving your master. You are serving
your master.
Dead in Sin,
~ Paul says in writing to the I'plesians:
“and you hath He quickened wio were
dead In trespasses and sing; wheiein
times past ye walked according ta ihe
course of this world, according to the
Prince of the power of the oir tle
lal’)lflt that now worketh in the childicn
his obedience: Among whom al:c ve
all bad our conversation in times past
In the lusts of our flesh, fulnitirg e
desires of the flesh and of the 1
and were by nature the chilaren of
wrath, even as others.”
Men are abroad in the world to-day
teaching salvation by works. licw can
a dead man do anything toward making
his way into salvation? Whoewor
heard of a dead man doing. A lifiiess
man can not work., Who then =uyv.o:?
God. Who makes a life, self or ¢ a 7
tI is all of God and all throvgh faiih in
the Lord Jesus Christ. All of g ace. “ie
who lveth in pleasure is dead while
she lives. Then the great need of tie
dead man i= 10 be made alive., Christ
alone can give life. lis own te-inunon)
is *T.came that ye might have i'fe ard
that ye might have it abundaniy,’
Abounding life—life that thriks &and
throbs and pulsates and proedoces and
expands and develops. Lite rich, pow
erful, abundant. The new birtn is wiat
the old man needs. Ye must Lo born
again. Unless one is born so. he can
not see the Kingdom of God. Cue getls
to be a citizen c¢f this world by birih,
One gets to be a citiven of the singdon
of Heaven by being born of God. ‘Trneie
fore, the doctrine uf repentance can not
‘be stressed too much. The man who is
dead needs to bte made alive. 'l'he work
of the Holy Spirit is here manifest
Lord, raise the dead and restore-them
to life,
Already Condemned.
John #ii:18: ‘'He that belleveth on
Him is not condemned, but he that be
lieveth not is condemned airesdy, be
cause he hath not believed in the name
of the only begcotten Son of God.”
Men are lost now. It doesn't take a
judgment day to reveal that fact. ‘l'rue
a lot of pecple think that death will
reveal whether one is leet or suved. but
such a view is a mistaken cne. lLife
itself is the revealer of this great and
all important truth. Aiready condemned
if you have not believed in the Yon of
Ged. None will be condemned in the
future, but are already condemned now.
Lost now, here in this world. 1 ost, lost,
lost, now and here.
Under God's Wrath.
John 3:36: ‘“‘He that believeth not
the Son shall not see life, bhut the
wrath of God abideth in him.”’
Have you ever at any time falien un
der the displeasure of a hiend-— was
‘the relation pleasant at all? Did the
‘unfriendly aititude appcal to ali that
‘was best in you? Did it make vou a
better man? Imagine, then, a man
‘under the condemnaticn and wrath of
‘a pure and just God. Under God's plea
)-ure. Oh! what joy and bliss. 1 nder
the blood of God's Son. Oh! what se
curity and happiness. Under the favor
and love of a kind and indulgent Fath
er. Oh! what satisfaction, but under
the wrath of God. Oh! what an awtul
thought. Ceondemned here and now,
God displeased with my life. He who
'is all powerful and can cast the soul
into eternal punishment. "o be under
his wrath is awful to contemplate, lear
ful to pursue the thought, buat not
nearly so awful as to be under His
wrath, ‘“But the wrath of God abid
eth on him.” Just contemplate this
thought until its profound significance
sinks in upon vou and takes popssession
of your seul of souls and drives you by
‘the very horror of its contemplation to
seek favor and mercy at the hands of
God before it is everlastingly too late,
Anything rather than the wrath of God.
Avoid it in eorder that at last you may
not be numbered among those who cry
out for rocks and mountzins o full
on them and hide them from the face
of an angry God.
| Sure of Hell,
. Let us comeé reverently io the Word
of God, with tears in our hearts as
well as in our eyes, as we licten to
His revelation concerning tie final
docom of the child of the devil. Rev.
21:8: “But the fearful and unbeliev
ing, and the abominable, and murder
ers, and whoremongers, and idolaters,
and all liars shall have their part in
the lake which burneth with fire and
brimstoné, which is the second dGeath.”
It is» awful to stand at the grave and
see a loved one planted away to await
the resurrection. But ten thousand
times more terrible to think «f souls
impenitent, despisimg God's love and Hisg
Son, cast inte eternal punishnsnt, But
according to the techings of this Book,
Russell, etc., to the contrary notwith
standing, the children of the devili have
an awful future. Oh! soul without Gaod,
without Christ, without hope in the
world to-day, following the lunste of the
flesh and the suggestions of ilhe evil
one, break away from the bhondage
of sin, come to Christ. Become a
child of God with faith in Jtesus now
while yon can. To-day give Cod vour
heart and become a child of Ihe King,
an heir of God and a joint heir wiih
our Lord Jesus Christ. ‘To-day is the
day of grace. of opportuniiy, Chrier
calls. Respond, Oh, soul and give to
Him eternal allegiance Be able (o
say with the redeemed, “I'm the i-hild
of a King.”” “I'm the child ¢f a King,
with Jesus my Baviour, I'm the c¢h'id
of a king!”
both commercial and foreign demand
were so insistent during the first six
months of the crop year that they were
met at the expense of coun'ry Siocss.
It certainly looks as if the hign price
on this corn crop is still to come.”’
PROVISION MARKET.
(Corrected by White Provision Com
pany.)
Cornfield hame, 10 10 12 pounds aver
age, 18c.
Cornfield bams, 12 to 14 poards aver
age, 17%e.
Cornfieid skinmed hams, If# ¢ 1%
pounds average. 18Y%c¢.
Cornfield picnic hams, € 10 & pounds
average, 13%c.
Cornfield breakfast bacon, Zic
Cornfield sliced breakfasi bacon,
l-g)und boxes, 1Z to caze, $3.30 per case,
rocers’ bacon, wide and rnarrow,
N
fleld fresh pork sausage )ivk or
bulk, %isound buckets, 121 ¢.
% Comnfield frankforts, 10-pound cartons,
4c.
Cornfield bologna, 26-pounnt hixes 12c,
Cornfield luncheon ham, 25-pound
boxes, 14%c.
Cornfield frankforts in pickle, kits, $2,
Cornfield pure lard, tierce baris, 11%c.
Country style lard, b-pound Ilns,
11%e.
Compound lard, tierce basis, S¢
D. 8. extra ribs, 12c.
D. 8. bellies, medium average, 12%c
D). S bellies, light average 12%e.
11