Show ABSTRACT OF awe ly elder ikler C kin iball at the Tale macle sunday Foren forenoon con Q 1 1639 I 1 do not wish to add to the able remarks of the speaker who has just preceded me ine he handled liand led lug his subject with coi consummate summate co ability abilia abi lit arid and I 1 can make inake tile the subject noue none the llie more lucid there are things though to which I 1 wish to direct 4 our particular attention matters of tha deepest importance to you all I 1 refer to conr clr tempo at al welfare wel fire now we are in in a period of the greatest plenty a period of abundance yet right at the thresh hold of f famine aurille Au lille take warning and provide yourselves for the future I 1 know by inspiration what is is in in store for us do not allow the men ill its of this place to further impose M do upon you as they have heretofore done ne what have hav I 1 done with my wheat have ila e I 1 disposed of a single grain of it no with the exception of what I 1 gave a new york friend to carry him to california it la is all lying in my grainery and my lay mill and there it will lie until that day of awful desolation arrives now right at our doors when I 1 will ill have it to feed myself my wives and my children on and some of you who will then come to me lank jawed and famishing it is is within the power of you all bow however ever 1 to ha have e enough and to spare but w will i 11 you do doit it no you wont thousands in in this church will hear bear the warning and allow it to pass by uh unheeded heeded soon very soon the inhabitants of north and south bouth america will be writhing in in all the horrid agonies of starvation one universal wait of sorrow will ascend from famine stricken millions million and the hand of delis deliverance arance erance will not be extended in that terrible time where will the saints be will their lamps be filled and trimmed for the occasion the wise will ill have an all abundance and to spare a and I 1 d as I 1 before said thousands of others will beg be from their more prudent friends am I 1 dependent upon these shylock mer chants any longer I 1 sty say to you all t that ta t I 1 will never again allow them to have a penny from me 1 have plenty coming to me and instead of my sugar costing me sixty five cents per pound it shall no lorger cost me to exceed ten or eleven cents my coffee not over twelve or fifteen my tea the best ot of tea not more than seven shillings my factory riot not above twelve or thirteen ce cents nta per yard and everything else in in the same low I 1 ican ical I 1 buy sugar in in st louis for six anil and seven cents per pound and all 11 other articles in the same ratio now low much will it cost me to bring nay my artiles cles here I 1 will do like the merchants here lo do buy my teams on the missouri Miss ourt river r 1 verl use them hem to haul my freight over I 1 tha he plains and when they arrive here sell them for the original cost which aich money I 1 can send right back and again buy teams for the next trip and the next and as often as I 1 desire so be to do remember as aa true as the lord god liv eab the evil hour is close at hand when for successive yeats s the farmer labors but nought is 13 brought forth when mother eat tit refuses to supply from her bosom of her dependent tenants will your grain eries enea and flour bins bills be empty even now the dark period begins to dawn the new york friend of mine before referred to told tile me that in in the genessee Genes eee wheat country new york the wheat raised of late years bad been continually growing interior in in quality atom ear to 3 year ear and that the prospect for this season is is that there N will ill be none at all owing to the ravages of insects the genesee section of country has always been classed as the richest wheat district in the union frere here the elder related the trials and privations he had passed through gli and again recited the terrible retribution awaiting those who ho had bad opposed the church of god in in language similar to that published in the abstract of his sermon week before last ast and continued J I 1 am looked upon by some as rather hard bard upon this generation instead of the adverb rather and adjective hard the elder used a noun expressive of his bis character which was so completely orl original ginal with himself foreign to our vocabulary and singular in its ita sound that it escaped our memory almost simultaneously with its utterance I 1 dont deny tle tie charge iam I 1 am rough roligh with the people of this age of the world and expect to be as long as I 1 live and nd when I 1 die I 1 will rise up and be rougher than ever I 1 am not dot partial either in my denunciations I 1 acknowledge openly anil and above aboveboard board that all the persecutions which this chinch has underwent have been brought upon it through the iniquities of its aldeis and its members hut but the dibi will astion I 1 soon be paid then will conic a settlement emen t N will 11 the parsec persecutors u tors As they measure to us it will be me measured 1 back to them anil and the measures which ch they will receive will be oer overflowing flowing to too 0 tit aliey ey 9 got ot brother young yet have they no anil and they wont get liim him either till they take my life ferna rna when they take my life they will seek to ta take 1 the lives of all the members of this church but never mind god has got a bit tit in the mout mouths 11 s our enemies they are am bridled ld lie he holds the reins challed about the devil being chained in that bottomless pit which brother pratt was talking about Is that pit without a bottom it it asp Is the devil w will ill cor core coce e out at the other end laughter many wo would uld call this language vulgar but I 1 dont dor t believe in doing like most moat of the rr preachers eachers in the east who put on faces as long as a wheel barrow when h t in at the sarrie same time they are arc as full of 0 hypocrisy aro crisy as they can be the elder concluded by again vividly reminding Il the congregation of 0 the season of scarcity approaching and the importance of prodding iding and upon requesting all the bishops present to con congregate regate at the north door of the tabernacle to hear what he be termed secrets took his seat fee receiving iving the usual encore of 11 amens 11 |