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r A SERMON FOR SUNDAY AN INTERESTING DISCCURSE BY THE REV. R03ERT MACKENZIE. Subject: "The Trials anil Triumph of Life" ?The Outside and the Inside Sourcesof Mreiisth?The Weakness of This l'resent Day?Life a *ceuc of Compensation* Brooklyn, N" Y.?Dr. Robert "Mackenzie. pastor of the Rutgers Presbyterian Church. Manhattan, preached Sunday on "Tiie Trials and Triumph 01 Life."_ His text v?js found in Acts xx:22-24: ".\nu note, behold I go bound iu the spirit into Jerusalem, not knowing the things that ha!! befall me there, .^ave that the Holy Ghost witnesseth in every city, saving that bonds and afflictions abide me. But J none of these things move me, neither [ count my life dear unto myself, so that 1 J might finish my course with joy. and the ministry which I have received of the Lord Jesus, to testify the gospel ot the grace of God." Dr. Mackenzie s.nd: Paul feels himself set to a definite purpose in life, something appointed of God and worthy of himself. He is determined to finish his course successfully. Each of us is called of God to live some definite purpose , to add by our live? to the sum of the good :n this world, to do something and to he something for God. To accomplish this purpose Paul saw that he had to pass through many trial>. temptations, difficulties. He is looking back upon those through which he has already come and forward to those he saw he must yet meet. Ho knew that bonds and afflictions awaited him if he pursued his present purpose further. He 6uw his life as a very stormy ? ir;D f-ion/ic a.-kinrhf t<? nt'r?iii.idp him to change his course, to compromise a little with his purpose, to adapt himself more prudently to the ways of the world in which he found himself, to be less straightforward, and so escape those bonds and afflictions that threatened. He was not indifferent either to the dangers of the way or to the kindly interest of his friends; but-he answers: "What mean yc to weep and to break mine heart* For 1 am ready not to be bound only, but also to d'e for the name of the Lord Jesus." Then the calm conclusion of our text: "None of these tinngs move re." It is difficult to get. up to the level of Paul, he is the most determined, uncompromising struight-on man in this book 01 great characters. Yet there are ordinary numau steps leading to this level; all who will can rise. ''These things" of out text have not Kssed away with Paul. Trials are behind, nds and afflictions are before every man that will make a worthy course across this life. When you build a ..lip for the North Atlantic you must take storui9 and icebergs into account and build accordingly. When you would build a boy for business, for honor, for goodness, for Christian service in thi6 community, you must take "these things" into account. Last year's icebergs have melted in summer seas, but new oues have formed and will meet the sailor of this year. The North Atlantic is ever the same?a scene of storm and ice. The particular trials that overlook Paul may not fall on any of us, but others will come, bearing other names, equally Jislurb. ing to our souls. This world is ever the same?a scene of many trials. Only a few are exempt, oniy a few are permitted to stand with their hands at their back and their backs to the tire looking out upon the storm. There are such people. We are glad when old people can do this, but the i young people who can do it, or do do it, are not to be envied, but pitied. Must men must go out and meet the storm of "these | things '?opposition, competitions:, disappointments, tcrflotations?meet tliem and ? make their way through them, as best they can, and become men, and all the better men for meeting them. ' "These things" move some men mightily; they seek to edge their way out of the atorin, they change their course, compromise with their original purpose, choose some less strenuous way through life. Some young men form a purpose to go to college, when the bonds of mathematics and afflictions of Cicero's orations come between them and their purpose "these things" move them out of their course. They compromise with their purpose and look for an easier way. Some men go :urther, they finish their preparation, face their protession, meet the difficulties incident to any such beginning, complain, flinch, fall out discouraged, despairing, scarcely living, driftwood on the streets. Some men, like Paui, are unduly moved h> these things. These are not spared the storm nor docs the storm beat less hard upon them; yet they keep their faces to it, keep to their purj>ose firmly, often bent like trees, but like trees well rooted. recover themselves; oiten like William lell going through a pass of his native Alps on a narrow path cut in the face of the precipice. the mountain wind blowing a gale against him; unable to make progress against it, unable to stand against it, he fay down in the path, but he lay with his face to his goal and crawled to it. Men knowing their full share of the trials of life are yet able to say, each in his own measure. "None of these things moved me." Most of you here belong to that number. Your life in youth was not cast iu easy places; your present life is not spent in sheltered places. Most of you were cast as young men into thw. or some ? feina'lar stormy community to make your own way. You have been met repeatedly by the storm of "these things" in business, in borne and in your Christian life; yet you are here to-day with your faces to your purpose, your purpose well in hand, able to say after a? well as before the storm, "S'one of these things move me." How is this explained? Take the life of such men as Job. and Joseph and Daniel and Paul?men who have set before us examples of how much the human heart can bear and not break, what bonds and afflictions it can endure and not be unduly moved. Take the men and women of your own acquaintance and observation 011 whom these things have broken with full force and yet they are cheerful, sunny, sympathetic people, reaching a middle life "of high honor and an old age of charity and faith and hope?people whom it is good to know, people who show into what rich coinace the rough ore of human nature caii be minted. How is their triumph accounted for? By the fact that if life lias its scenes of trial, life has also it sources of strength in which to endure and triumph over the trials. After all, if you will think about it. this life is a scene of compensations. On the whole, "these things'' are balanced by other things. On the whole, life is not ?o bad as we were taught to expect it; the fears of pe?-imism are not realized by healthy men; our young fears were larger than the experienced facts. "Oh' Yes."' said a colored woman, "I have had a great many troubles in my life. mo?t of which never happened." When they do happen we fir,d that there have been compensating preparations in which to meet them. Tf natuie smites the Norway and the Oregon pine trees with its north winds it lays the protecting mo?s on that side of the tree. If nature allures the animal to the Arctic it wraps and haps it (ri furs. Man is nor neglected in this distribution of compensation, no trial has overtaken you wore than is common to man. no trial is {>ut upon you more than you are able to tear, with the trial there is some way of escape, of compensation. Both God and nature lay burdens on us. for life i< a dis, clpline for character in ourselves, for service for others; but neither (.'od nor nature has any pleasure in seeing oar shoulders stoop too soon, or our hearts break untimely. It is possible for uc to hear these thing" and not be moved, for God and nature have ordained sufficient sources of strength to enable us to bea. them. Xhere are outside sources. The young w { * i: -V i spear of wheat beginning to grow in the bleak winds of November or March finds itself supported by a little barrel of flour in the grain out of which it springs. The young caterpillar waking up to begin its life finds itself providentially deposited by its winged mother on some green leaf on which it can food while yet too weak to forage for itself. Take your own children, you can count up "these things" of trial that beset the child to an extent that would make you sigh with pitv. They have come into a world fraught with pain, privation, dangers to body and to mind. They are wrapt in no furs, furnished with no weapons, provided with no stored up food in themselves. How can they bear "these things" and not be moved? How can they bear them and be hanpy? Yet they are haunv. Scarcely is the tear dry on the little face when the wreathed smile of an angel conies there. For the chihl also draws its first strength from outside sources, "God hath set the solitary in families." God lets down on the child in normal society the protection and provision of home. This is th? necessity and sanctity of the home: not only that it is Christian, law. not only that it is moral law. hut simple that it is natural law. There are inside sources of strength. Neither God nor nature moils the child, j By 9 o'clock nature withdraw; her morning 1 dews leaving he growing things to find new sources of strength in which to stand ' unmoved in the sultry or th - stormy noon. , Not now the outside dew. but the inside J sap. Nature giving the sprouting grain an ' outside supply for its first few days row ! leaves it to send its own roots into the ! earth, its green leaves into the air. and by j its own inward activities transmute them into life and growth. The first green leaf exhausted the caterpillar must now move off to find a new leaf for itself. From the children of men. too, God withdraws (lie early baptism. The youth must one day leave home and its protection and provision and bv the exercise of his own powers wring a living for himself. If now he is to meet these tilings and not be unduly moved, if lie is to meet them like a tine man with courage and strength and triumph he must develop the sources of strength within himself. Here exactly is the weakness of this ?<recent day. Every age has its own strength and pre-eminence. The strength of our day has been the discovery and application of the forces of nature, bv art and science, to our daily living in all its brandies. We have turned the bullock cart into the automobile. the tardy sickle into the steam harvester, tiie postman going three miles an hour with letters into the telegraph and the telephone. Yet it is always true that from the greatest strength falls a shadowing weakness. Our fathers had but few outside forces on which to rely. Not long were they allowed to lie in the cradle, not long to plav in the nurserv. Nature was rugged and rough with them. The old farm house stood far from its neighbor, drifts of snow or swollen streams often lay | between. When the wintry night closed ! ll ? ? 1 f ^ A? atvmaomonf ! in mere was no puo.tv |wvx ?i aumn..i^.., , no stirring procession of multitudes under the electric lights of the streets, but moonlight and shadows on the lonely country road. If the family would pass a genial evening they must develdfc) the inside sources of the home, of the hearthstone in the log cabin, and find the comedies and tragedies of life on the stage of their own minds and hearts. No newspaper or magazine allured them out of themselves. There, in tlicir own little world, at their own fireside, they thought out their politics. their literature and their theology. In J education the schools were poorly fur- I nished. the teacher but poorly trained, the text books but few and serving the sue- I ccssive members of the family in turn. | If they were to he educated they must find i their education bv the painful development j of their own powers of memory and rofiec- I tion. You have seeh pictures of the poor j school house in which Daniel Wester or j Henry Clay was trained, or. going a gen- | elation further back, we may think o? the j simple school in which George Washington j or Patrick Henry was educated: yet out . of such school houses came leaders who j founded States, wrote constitutions, built | a republic, grappled with the diplomacy of Kurope; out of them came orators whose eloquence, though dead on the printed page, still thrill the reading soul. Gather them out of this primitive school house, closet them in the Colonial Congress in Philadelphia to fashion out of their own minds, their own destinies anil that of their own nation and what was the re- i suit? In religion the churches of yesterday were bare and cold, no fresco on the wall, no inward vision of spiritual things; no organ rolled its music to lead their praise; no gifted voices in a selected choir lifted them out of themselves on the waxen wings of Icarus; no grace of rhetoric made theology easv. Thcv were left to the rte- I velopment of their own inward sources of j praise, of prayer and of thought. And what Homeric characters they were! Jonathan Edwards in barren Stockbridge made himself the first philosopher of nis age. It may well be feared that the church of to-day is doing for the young people just what the schools are doing for them, surrounding them with ever Increasing outside religious props and stays?societies, clubs, brotherhoods, guilds, aud now. to add to this, comes the threatening addition of a "scientific pedagogy" for the simplicity of the Sunday-school. Some of you were brought up in a Sunday-school where there were just two outside sources to help, the Kible and a question book without answers. Von learned to know vour llib!e, you tame out of that school into the oiiurch and into a Christian service that has rilled the world with Christian philanthropy. The Sunday-schools of our children are furnished with a Vallombrosa ot lesson leaves?primary, intermediate, quarterly, and the teachers with a variety of helps, ready made expositions, to be familiarized in the hour between breakfast and Sunday-school. Ask the average scholar to turn to the second chapter ot Zephaniah or of Titus, and see the vain turning over of unfamiliar pages. What can you expect? How should they cultivate the inward sources of memory and reflection when you have excused them by supplying | them with all conceivable outside supports | that make memory and reflection superfluous. Do you remember that solemn parable of the seed tailing on stony ground, quickly growing on the shallow soil and as Suickly withering before the heat and the rougnt of the growing day? because having exhausted the supply of the outside source. *'it had no root in itself." As Christian men. let us lean less and less on these temporary and childish outside supports and develop these inward sources of thought, of reflection, of conscience, of high duty with which God has endowed us, that amid all "these things" of task and of trial we may rise as the sea gull rises again-t drowning wave, blinding spray, ] baffling wind, rises into the calm of the I unpei air by means of its own well disciI plined wings. \l hen We Return to God. You have seen the heavens gray with duM and leaden colored clouds, you have -ecu the earth chilly and comfortles: under its drifts of unmelting snow; but let the sun shine, and then how rapidly does i tlic sky resume its radiant blue, and the I fields laugh with green grass and vernal I flower. So will it he even with a withered and ! a wasted life when we return to God and suffer Him 10 send His bright beams of j light upon our heart. 1 do not mean that j the pain or misery under .hich we are | suffering will necessarily be removedeven for e lirist it was not so: but peace i will come and strength will come, ana resI ignntion will come, and hope will conic? : and we shall f el able to bear anything I which God shall send, and though He slay I us we still shall seek Iiim. and even if the blackest cloud of anguish s.-ems to shroud His face from us, even on that cloud shall the rainbow shiue.?F? W. Farrar. I Minced Meat Browned. Mince cold roast beef very line, add to it one tablespoonful of chopped parsley, half a teaspoonful of salt, a little pepper, one teaspoonful of minced onion, one cupful of grated stale bread, a little leinon juice and one cupful of stock or gravy; put this over the tire, then put it in a buttered baking dish; spread over buttered crumbs and put in the oven and when brown remove and serve with tomato puree. Cocoanut PnfTg. a ; The whites of three eggs beaten very light, a small teaspoonful of line white sugar, one teaspoouful of corn flour. j When these ingredients are mixed, put : the mixture into a custard saucepan, or a jug set in a pan of boiling water, and stir constantly for twenty minutes, then take It off the stove and add a quarter of a pound of desiccated or grated cocoanut. When well mixed, drop in teaspoonfuls on buttered paper. Bake in a very slow oven, as they must not brown at all. 4 Graham Griddle Cake*. Scald three eupfuls of milk, let it stand until cool; sift in two and twothirds eupfuls of graham flour; beat the mixture until smooth; add two tablespoonfuls of butter melted, one tablespoonful of salt and half a compressed yeast cake dissolved in a little water; heat again and let stand over night in a warm place or until the mixture is very light; beat yolks of two eggs; add them and then the wellbeaten whites; let stand ten minutes; bake on a hot griddle. These are a little more elaborate than some griddle cakes and also very good. Brown or White Sandwiches. Any kind of finely chopped nuts, | beaten to a paste with a small quanti- | ty of mayonnaise, will make a delic- j fill! fni? nitlmr lirnwn nr whit A broad sandwiches. Waldorf sandwiches are made of white bread and butter spread with a mixture of equal parts of sliced apple and celery, a sprinkling of sliced walnuts, all moistened well with mayonnaise. Chicken sandwiches are made in the same way, omitting the nuts and apple. The ripe olive sandwich was very popular last season for afternoon teas. For one loaf of gluten bread use a pint of ripe olives, one breakfast cheese, one tablespoonful of mayonnaise dressing and one tablesnoonfirl of cream; stone and mince the olives; cream the cheese, adding first the cream and then the dressing, and, lastly, the minced olives. Stir to a smooth paste and spread on thin slices of buttered bread. For making sandwiches, bread baked in large-size nauing powuer cans win j be just the right size and free from crusts. A simple dessert is whipped cream, sweetened slightly and llavored with pistaehe. Serve the cream in shallow bowls, and in the centre of each drop a very fresh meringue kiss, one of the large round ones preferably. It is the present theory that one should eat a great variety of food. This does not mean that many different kinds of food must be taken at one meal, but rather that one's diet should be made up of many different wholesome things. Moreover, a wholesome diet shotild not he permanently rejected simply because it is not liked at first. It is frequently the case that by eating such an article a few times one acquires a relish for it. In table setting there is always something new. At a recent dinner the hostess surprised her guests by decorating the centre of her table with a cloth of pure gold thread solidly worked, the border a lace design of while silk and fine gold mesh in diamord-shape irfAnn fr\v tlm tnhlA U'Ofl OUll X ill ^iCVit * U? IUV luutv Ii?v small ferns, set in an oval dish of dark blue china, with figures in relief representing peasants in holiday costume. I At each corner of this gold centre was a candlestick in dull silver of Colonial design, furnished with a shade of iridescent kIhss. which graduated from tones of light yellow to dark orange, and then to red. In the lighting of houses plenty of light judiciously shaded is what best suits the majority. The idea in artificial lighting is to suggest the brightness and warmth of sunlight within the house walls. The only real sunlight color being pale yellow, this should he used largely. It is far more comfortable and more economical to have the light down low, surrounding" and warming the occupants of the room, and to have it standing out cold and chill from the distance. The wax candle is untidy, and its light is not practicable for reading purposes, but for general purposes there is no purer or softer light. Many women prefer to have their drawing-rooms un1 derlighted. iij.?1 .v RA 'S HORN BLASTS. , rr HE best time to at[ ten(1 to >'our neighhnr'a nffairu is in Character deter? VW?T^ min<>s condition 1 I Home is the har' b0r l^e heart /RSlvV V?>g Life *s ever mor? f?9i ^ than literature ?\?fl ?V A Jk Greatness appears IftX. . ir^gl in Httle things. Strength comes through struggle. When a man falls in love with Heaven he learns how to love this earth. A man is not doing his.level be3t who is content to stay on the same level. Prayer is sometimes a device by which we shirk our own duty in telling God His. A reputation for eating chicken is not the only thing essential In a good pastor. The man who has only flowers in the garden of his lifed oes not need to build a wall about it. When God hangs His promises on the walls of the heart the devil's pictures have no attraction for the eye. Separations come from setting up your fad as another man's faith. Skepticism may take the place of salvation when it can heal our sorrows. Many a man thinks be is on the lookout for evil when he is only looking at evli. The really busy man always has more time than the man who only thinks he is busy. Boucks an Historical Family. The late Col. Gabe Bouck of Wisconsin, who died a few days ago, was descended from early .settlers in New York state. The Bouck estate, which | has been In the family since was j deeded to them in 1750 by King I George, consists of about 500 acres in Schoharie county. The soli Is very rich and has been under such careful cultivation that now it is regarded as amonc the most valuable.estates in all New York state. Col. Bouck's brothei Charles lives upon the property, hav ing passed most of his life there, living in a house that was built by his grandfather 115 years ago. 1 I IIB?MB? THE ITU | Great IMew Off< (United States to May Contest Opened Ja i di Ir Wl II IV V/r II IU 11W C4 I V?OI IV of Cotton received at all Uni' 1st, 1904, both inclusive For the next nearest estimate--For the next nearest estimate... For the 5 next nearest estimate, For the 10 noxt nearest estimat For the 20 next nearest estimat For the 50 next nearest estimat For the 100 next nearest estimat Additional Offers for Bes Made During Differen of the Contest For convenience the time of the ct test is divided into estimates receiv by The Constitution during four ] riods?the first period covering frc the beginning of contest to Fobrua 10, 1 fio4: second period, from Febi Iary 1 o to March 1, 1304; third perl< March 1 to 20: fourth period. Mar 20' to April 20. 1904. We will gi the best estimate received duri each period tin addition to whatev other prize it may take, or if it ta no prize at ail), the sum of $125.00. Tho four prizes thus offered $125.OO each amountto Conditions of Sendim Subject to the usual cond is now on. Attention is called t 1. Send $1.00 for The Weel 2. Send 50 cents for The 2. Scr.d $1.25 for The W< TIMATES in the contest?that is 4. Send 50 cents l'or ONE SCR1PTIO.*. Such a remittance make a number of estimates on warded at the same time estiina without subscriptions, the sonde fered for only ten estimates in on CEIVED WITHOUT SUBSCRIP' PER ITSELF IS AX ACKNOW1 CAREFULLY RECORDED. 5. The money and the sub APfiMiufn th n mr?> idv ami ?he I Secretary Hester's I COTTON SEASON. 1897-9 8 1898-C 9 I309-OO I9C0-0J 1901-0 2 1902-0 3 The lisares above are certified by furnish the ofiieiul figures to decide . Orders to M hi 11 I * THE I AMERI#S I RBfiH I THE NECESSAE I IN THE PRESID! 9 The Preview of R.e necessity, in recognition of I readers "up with the times In Presidential electii OF REVIEWS is more tl magazine." Everybody wai ? informed about this or that fg forged to the front; to kno dates and personal factors ii H plete picture at hand of th 9 history. H In Or. Shaw's editorials, it jffl tributed articles, in its brilliant cha M aations and reviews of all the import HJ and in its hundred a month of valu and interesting views, the REVIE ->3 much desired news of the world's j World under a Field-glass " isthe v J Men In public life, like Prtj M members of Congress, and the grc 1 mvist keep " up with the times." i 3 over America, have decided it is " ii 9 25c. a copy, 3 I THE REVIEW OF 1 9 13 Astor Place. Current Events. Ninety-seven listed incorporated mining companies in the United a States paid dividends during the first fl three months of the present year aggregating $d<),282,083. The San Fran- tl cisco Chronicle says: "If information S were only accessible regarding the a] earnings of the close companies, ' whose shares are not listed in the 01 stock market, the profits of the min- fc ing industry for the quarter would hi probably foot up $50,000,000, possibly h more. tr stacoot ?r Upon Receipts o Ports From Septerr 1st, 1904, Both Incl in. 18th, 1904; Closes IVISION OF PRIZES tho exact, estimate of the total nutr ted States ports from September I st, i , $25.00 each es, 12.60 each es, 10.00 each es, 5.00 each es, 3.00 each t Estimates J TWO CRANO C t Periods First?For distri those estimates inoi >n- . the above 1S8 prizes ed I ;"00 bales either \v?i ^ ! figures >m i ry . Second?For disti ru- . . )d those estimates (noi ch the above 18S prize: ve ! ing the first connola ne ing within 1,000 bi er ue of the exact figures Crand Tota at In case of a ti< ...$ 500.00 j money will beequ: g Estimates in This For iitions, as stated regularly in The Constii o the following summary of conditions: kly Constitution one year and with it ON Sunny South one year and with it ON eekly Constitution and Sunny South both ?, one estimate for The Constitution and ESTIMATE alone in the contest IF YO merely pays for the privilege of sending this basis, you may send THREE EST13 .tes are sent. If as many as ten estimate.' r may forward them with only $3.00?this * -A/i/iinf ? ill hn Cf?r p order. a posiai i-mu n.n;i|n ? . *. HONS. Where subscriptions are ordered. LEDGMENT THAT YOUR ESTIMATE H. scription and the estimate must come in i subscription go together. THIS RULE IS Figures Covering: the Peri TOTAL PORT RECEIPTS. 'r<>m Nt Sf<t !ii5>f>r to 1st Mar (incineivr) T . >f .'o!!'>u ;itv* ycar. The ;>eri?<! cover:*', by this . outer.!. K,v ?rci 8.333,962 7.993.45' 6,843,134 6,346,312 7.218,179 7 378 627 Secretary Henry G. Hester, of the New Or this contest. _ TftE ATLANTA CONSTBT .. . - . .. 1 ? . Vrt'Vr LY MAGAZINE ^ CNTIAL YEAR. SI views is often called a H its usefulness in keeping on years the REVIEW ian ever "the necessaiy its to be truly and quickly u public question that has m v/ about the new candi- ? \ politics, to have a com- 9 c current movement of $ i it* authentic and timely con- ,.p ractcr sketches. in its condec- Kf ant articles of other magazines, SU able portraits, witty cartoora, WW ;W OF REVIEWS gives the and our own progress. "tThc ffi,l vay cne subscriber describes it. r\| lidtnt Theodore Roosevelt, the :at captains of industry, who *>' ntelligcnt men and women all gB ndispensable." Bp 12.50 a year 1 REVIEWS CO. I , New York f I News of the Day. Word comes from Pierre, S. D? that rticles of incorporation have been led with the Secretary of State for le National Farmers' Exchange, with outh Dakota headquarters in Pierre Qd offices in Chicago, and a capital t 150,000,000. This corporation has >r its purpose co-operation in the andling of all the products of the irmo n?? in nf Vi or> tnnr/lo o t* mo, wj f iu \jiuvi nuiuo, a xaiiuuo ust." I e l' rUTION'S f Cotton at All iber 1st, 1903, IIIQI VP April 20th, 1904. ibor of Bales 1903, to May $ 2.600.00 - 1,000.00 500.00 125.OO g 125.OO I f 200.00 | 250.00 [] aoo.w $ 5,000.00 . CONSOLATION OFFERS. button among t taking any of ) coming within ij" of the exact $ 1,000.00 i but ion among t taking any of s and not skarti'.in ofter) com lies eiiacr way 1,000 00 I $7,600.00 e on any prize estimate the ally divided. t Receipts Contest. utiou each week, the contest E ESTIMATE in the contest. E ESTIMATE in the contest, one year, and send TWO ESauothcr for The Sunny South. U DO NOT WANT A SUBthe estimate. If you wish to IATES FOR EVERY $1.00 for > are received at the same tlme^., . splendid discount being of- N it for ALL ESTIMATES RE THE ARRIVAL OF THE PA\S BEEN RECEIVED AND IS the same envelope every time. POSITIVE. od of the Contest. ^ BALES !N COTTON CROP. } <i4 merely for your information and it w ihcKutiiortofthispresent contest. It is pri only :i? mi additional aid to an lntolli- H it coiimute*. 9 11,199,994 | 11,274,840 J 10,383,422 S 9,436,416 B 10,680,680 1 10,727,569 H Ictm Cotton Exchange, who will 0 UT2?ft, Atlanta, Ca. J gap iii ii I'IIII??w