tate1908.:rueSep-aaed e of bis the affl-l de-tian sbe and tian e be ega-» un-f-sbe and bris-n A. Kin-eirs. Kin-bose id of i un-s un-.‘y. if tian in, if isees bris-:oun, bris-y A. eirs, bose fe^ofl3kf-leirs,ty. ifbris-Laf-leirs, bose e of Hips, wife e un-; un-le be e un-H o mDr. Barton B. Bigler Host to Jolly bunch at His Country Home.The ministers of the city had a big time Monday at the country home of Dr. Barton B. Bigler. It was as jolly a bunch aryou would find in a day’s travel, and Dr. Bigler declares they are the biggest feeders he ever saw.The following comprised the par tv: J. II. Craig, E. C. Dunn, E. A. Arthur, J. C. White. G. D. Estes, C. H. Brown, A. A. Mainwaring. Walter Johnston, B. F. WattsandJohn Gray. A few of them went out in George Bliss’ automobile and the remainder went on the interurban.The forenoon was spent looking at Mr. Bigler’s nice yellow corn, big pumpkins, fat porkers, etc., and when the dinner horn was tooted that bunch of preachers came near running over each other. After everything in sight had been eaten, which required considerable time, for there were many good things, the now well filled crowd reluctantly left the table to spend a few hours sight seeing, whittling, swapping jokes, trading jack knives, etc. They returned to the city in the evening, feeling it had been a day well speut.Every minister wishes every other preacher had a country home, so they could have a day out about once a week.It does even a preacher good to get out into the rural districts, to wander through the woods, to stroil auross fields, to saunter by babbling brooks, to commune with nature.Self-Confessed Thief.