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WAR ST Will Fight tlier.I New V or Maj. Gen. Corbin will ?fight tbe third battle of Hull Hun. The gen eral staff of the army ii now engaged .apon improving the strategy of Gen. "Stonewall" Jaeksoo in what is re garded by military strategists as the ?..Host masterly campaign of the Civil war. From Portland, Me., which never came nearer to war titan .seeing in the offing Spanish fleets which never ex piated, the army manoeuvres will he .transferred this year to Manassas, Ya., ?which still hears the marka of the 'heavy blows dealt by blue and gray 12 ;years ago. For the first time an opportunity .will be afforded for ellectivc compari sons between the old army which tfought and the new anny which is be ling trained to fight. Can the modern armament and the methods of trans portation which have developed 40 y/cars from thc days wheu 1'ope and L/Ce raced from their respective bases iih tile battle ground change the re trait of their manoeuvres? Twenty ?fc/wo thousaud modern soldiers will be rafted to test the prowess of t he ancient -armies of the rebellion and jrove what would have happened haa the com manders whose names made history possessed Krag Jorgensen rilles, Dougherty wagons and the new anny ifield gun. It ls probable that no field of any of ?he great Southern conflicts could have 'been selected which ha? suffered BO little change af the low lying land in the valley of Northern Virginia be tween Thoroughfare Gap and thc Po ttom ac. There have been few alteration in the make-up and characteristics of '."Manassas since thc roar guard of Gen. ?'Pope's army fell baok to Washington. ??Railroad lines and road? which afford ed the old combatants their only methods of .transportation other than ??that afforded by the country roads chave not changed. The lines shown '"upon the map of 1862 aro still un changed, except that upon what was the left flank of the Northern army ?there has been constructed a road be tween Alexandria and Frederioksburg, ?\nd a line across what waB the base of ?the Southern army from Fredericks burg to Charlottesville. These latter Sines would so materially have affected <the operations of the Civil war that it 4s probable, if the general staff follows its plan of reproducing the campaign of 1802, they will be barred by the .umpire. Eighteen thousand regular army 4roops and 4,000 militiamen from va rious Eastern Stutos will participate io the operations, which will continue from September 5 to 20. This is the largest body of regulars and militia gathered for manoeuvres in the his? ?tory of the United StateB. The fields of Bull Hun, Bristol Station, Milford ?nd Manassas Junotion will again be ?trod by armed soldiers. The same etragetic points which played such a vital part in the contest of military tsoieaee waged between Gen. John Pope, the Federal loader, and Gen. 'St?bert E. ?iSSj Confederate? stand the same to-day as in 1862. .Major Gen. Henry C. Corbin, oom -niEirdisg thc Divisiez cf ib? Ai?auliu, will be in supreme command. Lieut. Gen. Adna K. Ohaffee, chief of staff, ^whoso aotuej fighting service in Cuba, the Philippines and China, in the last few years, is fresh in mind, will ob serve the manoeuvres. Military at taches of foreign Governments will 'witness the evolutions. Oonvenient as the scene of. fighting will be to Washington and Baltimore, and even to Philadelphia and New York, thou sands of onlookers are expected to their way thither. Already in ^o-ifioe that pour in upon the war de partment ?how that many an old vet eran who fought in the oampaign of '.August,.1862, intends to see how the soldiers of to-day will handlo them K?ives un the fighting ground. To this day, wherever the veterans of ?he campaign of the great rebellion gather and stories arc told, "red Vir ginia mud" \ias a prominent place. It is idj^iarod there is no "stiokter" .3B3&i~a thc world and no timo when it "fltiokier" than the last rainy har dest months. "The campaign of 1862 was fought for the most part by - veterans of at ?east a year's standing. There were four regiments from in or near the .city of New York in that oampaign, (but they had had time to learn the .difference between the pavements of ?the island of Manhattan and the shift mng slash in the wake of a Virginia cain storm. It ia considered highly ?probable by army officers that the -regiments from tho State of New York JB? fortunate as to be allowed the op \portunity to attend these manoeu vres will be apt^to encounter some in convenience before they equal the re tford of Gen. Stoneball Jackson when ORIES. 71iircl "Hull Run. k Herald. ' he fought two armies iu the same day J beyond Thoroughfare Gap at points fifteen miles of red clay apart and won thc strategy of the game of ISti'J. Co-operation of militia with regular troops, which forms the basic princi ple of the national scheme of defence, will be allorded thorough operation in these manoeuvres, (ion. Corbin re cently went to Virginia to make ar rangements for obtaining permission to operate upon the land desired as fighting ground. Property owners told him the army could begin to operate there the first week in Sep tember, when the harvest will have been completed and there will be no danger to crops from the march of in fantry, cavalry or artillery. Hut this date, although it has thc advantages of being comparatively ool aud is convenient to Virginia farmers, haB its drawbacks. Most of thc national guard organizations go into camp and have their manoeuvres in July and August. Thc militia men, with whom soldiery is an occu pation seeoudary to that by which they make their living, are better able to leave their offices and shops during the dull summer months. When thc wheels of commerce and industry be gin to limber up in September it is not HO easy for them to absent them selves from the city. Thus the militia representation will bc smaller thau if thc manoeuvres were held in July. That month, if made the period fer this mimic war fare, would undoubtedly result in not a few fatalities from sunstroke. Vir ginia is an extremely bot place in the middle of summer, almost too tropical for military operations of this charac ter. Gen. Corbin believes that, although the militia will not be able to remain throughout the fifteen days to be de voted to the manoeuvres, regiments from New York, hardened by their work in the summer encampments at Peekskill, would be able to leave New York on faut troop trains Friday night of each week and bo in Manassas be fore daybreak, thus obtaining Satur day and Sunday for work in the field, and they would be again in New York for Monday. In order to fight thc fumous battle over again, tho military authorities have consulted a woman to get his torical data. This woman, who lives at Groveton. is Mrs. Lucinda Dogan. She watched the course of the battle of Bull Run, July 21, 18?I. She heard the guns of Tyler's fli vision when tboy opened on Beaure gard's left flank at tho Stone Bridge. She saw the columns of Hunter and Heintzelman as they swept south from Sudley to turn the Confederate roar and seize the Manassas Gap Railroad. Sho saw the Confederate brigades of Bee and Barlow driven baok from along Boll Run. This old woman saw the three divisions of McDowell's army and the armies of Beauregard and Johnston como together, and she saw the crimson struggle on Henry hill. She saw the Union troops give way late in the afternoon of that sul try, bloody Sunday. Her vantage ground was a hill at Groveton, a hun? ired yards east of her dwelling and one milo west of the Henry farm, the local point of the first battle of Bull Run. Her farm-Peaoh Grove farm, Groveton-was the oentral field cf the second battle of Bull Run, August 28, 20 and 30, 1862. The old woman kept her house while the fighting went on at Gainsville, two and a half miles west, but on the seoond day, August 29, was ordered from the field during the artillery overture to the engage ment at Groveton. With three chil dren she found refuge at the Lewis house, a mile away, listened to 'he crash of the fight and dodged stray shells. She returned to her home at Groveton as soon as Pope withdrew toward Centreville in bis retreat from j the Rappahannook to thc Potomac, 1 and she saw the field of Groveton in its gory horror. Mrs. Dogan is 87 years old, deeply wrinkled, but "right spry." Her memory is faithful. She talks thus of the battle: "When the troops come down here again I hope they won't put ball cart ridges in their muskets. I don't want to hear hundreds of men lying about the fields groaning and moaning for water. Just as soon as the firing ceased, all you oonld hear waa moana fer .water. It sounds plain even now. "It don't seem so long ago. It was at breakfaat time Sunday morning that we heard cannonading down the pike toward Bull Run and my husband says 'the Yankees are coming.' We went upon that hill yonder and saw white smoke down by the Stone bridge. We saw men ooming back across the hills toward Sudley road and we knew the Johnnies was recreating. The road was . ry and wt- could sec clouds c! dust rising ab ?vc th'? tree h toward ? Su iley Springs. "\\*C r-uw .iti*t ot! uti the right in I the direction of Ball's ford, Black burn's ford and Maoassas, and ni y husband said that must be the South ern soldiers coming from that way. The men we saw corniDg from toward Stone bridge went uj> toward Sudley. The shooting over there around the Matthews house was pretty brisk. Then we saw ioug ?ines of oieu ruu across the Henry held and go ;o the support of those thi?t had come down from the bridge. Bows of cannon were being drawn up across the Henry place. The shooting was getting sharper and every few seconds a can non would go off. "All our men who weut toward Sud ley began to run back, Btopping to shoot as fast as they could load. They ran down Buck bill with the Yankees running after them. Tho Gelds arouud the Henry house were filling up with troops and more were coming up from toward Maoassas all the time. The Yankees crossed the valley and began charging up the Henry hill. By this time there was an awful din, and be tween the smoke and the dust we could catch a glimpse of the soldiers here and there. The firing was very <iuiek. We could sec the Henry house burning, and troops of men pushing along toward the main battle ground. The Yankees kept coming down from Sudley and the Johnnies kept coming up from toward Maoassas. Several Bolid shots came over our way, tearing up the ground not very far in front of us. A lot of the neighbors from all around hero were over cn the hill with us, but nobody ran away. "The noise of the battle got louder all the time and the dust and smoke got higher and thicker. About 4 o'clock we could sec men running back acrosB the Matthews place, get ting away from the fighting. More and more of them went running back toward Sudley. "It wasn't bng before it seemed as if all the men that bad come down from Sudley was running back that way. The noise got fainter and dust and smoke at the Henry plaie cleared away enough for us to see the puffs of smoke coming out of the guns stretch ed across from the Henry to the Rob inson house. We could see troops march down the pike and could catch sight of a flag once in a while. The fire slackened and the smoke cleared away. The dust was rising over to ward Sudley, and we knew that the bluecoats was going around that way to get back to Centreville. Then we went in the house and got supper. That evening we drove over toward the Henry place. They were gather ing up the wounded, and some men were digging trenches and getting ready to bury the dead. The field was torn up with shells and killed and wounded men were sprawl**1 out all about, but not thick like after the second battle. There was a good man j dead horses and some cannon with thc wheels off. You oould pick up ? wagon load of guns and haversacks ic no time. Mrs. Dogan was an important wit ness in the Congressional inquiry which corrected the record of Gen Fits-John Porter. Porter did nol move forward on August 29, beoaust as he said, Longstreet was in front ol him. Porter's opponents oontendec that Longstreet did not pass througl Thoroughfare Gap till the morning ol the 29th. and could not have oom? down upon Ject?cn's right at Grove too and io front of Porter till the af ternoon of that day. Mrs. Dogan tes titled that Longstreet and his stat took breakfast in her house, at Grove ton, early in the morning of the 29th and that his troops were ooming u] and deploying to Jackson'u right a1 I that time. Mrs. Dogan says Gen. Longstree told her at breakfast she had bette: move* from Groveton. Later in th? day, when the battle was hot baok o! Groveton, and about Sudley, an offioei of Jackson's staff rode up and ordered her to leave the place and to take th< ohildren along. She had not beet gone an hour when the Union troopi and batteries began drawing uparount Groveton and Confederate shells wer? breaking there. The next day, Au gust 30, the Dogan farm was one o the bloody battle fields of the civi war. The railroad cut which Jaok son held, and where the Union arm; sustained its most grievous losses runs through the Pnaoh Grove farm o the Dogans. Pope withdrew from Groveton dur ing the night of August 30 and Mrs Dogan -eturned in the morning of Au gust 31. "The plaee was terrible," she said "for the Union dead had not beet buried. They had shoveled dirt OTO the bodies just where the men fell and out of the soft mounds that cov ered the field I oould see heads, fee I and hands sticking oat. Some of th I dead had been overlooked and thea bodies were not even covered ur There waa a. nerd rain soon after th battle and the soft dirt was waahed o the bodies. Up there by the "out you couldn't walk without treading o a dead man. The bodies in time cam to be nothing bat bones, and after th war men came down with horses an '.'J, '? - '?'''. \ ;.'>?? ? v. :? . wacoti?i and gathered uj. the bono and buried them at Arlington. It th? troup- c ?tue down this way this fall I hop?.' they won't use ball cartridge? iu their muskets.' The Dogan hou.se was a popular resting place for Mosby's men and that enterprising cavalryman, or raid er-"tcout" aB the Southern people called him and "bushwhacker" as the Northern people called him-often dropped in for a meal. The morning af Ur the reckless capture of Qen. Stoughton at Fairfax Court House Mosby stopped for breakfast. "I remember Gen. Stoughton well," said Mrs. Dogan. "That morning when they came down the pike he was a pitiful looking object. Hu was only about half dressed and did not have a hat on. He was riding a horse with out a saddle. I think he had a shoe on ono foot. I gave him some hot coffee and corn bread and he seemed , very thankful." A Monument to Jefferson Davis. Any captious critic may write me down a crank if it pleases them so to do, but I verily believe the citizens of the State of Georgia should build a granite monument somewhere in the State to Hon. Jefferson Davis. While there may be those still living who disagreed with his policy no man ever lived who douoiea L?s loyalty to the Confederate causo. To the best of his ability he stood to the faith that was in him, and he waa tho vioarious sufferer of the whole business. It makes mo tired to hear people talk about the necessity for building monuments to any other Confederate until this one duty has been perform ed. If anybody deserves a monument for the services given to the Confed erate cause Mr. Jefferson Davis earn ed it and went through fiery trials and wade in deep waters to show his loy alty to the people of the South. If the men of Georgia decline to erect such a monument, the women will do it ere another thirty-five years have rolled over their heads. When Mr. Roosevelt denounced Mr. Davis as a "traitor," it fired the blood in my veins. So far as his acts may be accounted treason, there are thous ands just as guilty, just as much trai tors as Mr. Davis, and it is neither just nor gentlemanly to shunt off the whole burden to his shoulders. He may have made mistakes but they were honest mistakes. He was trying to roll a burden up hill that was more than any mortal man could aooomplish. He did his best in a very trying place and he should not be forgotten by those he endeavored to serve. He had hts enemies. What man in high public position fails to have them? but he was made the burden bearer of the concentrated hate of the North and whatever of odium it was possible to heap upon one man or one section, that was heaped on hip de voted hoad. Ho should be remem bered in brass and marble for his loy alty.-Mrs. W. H. Felton, in Atlanta Journal. Food Drunk. "I know men and women," said Thomas A. Edison the other day, "who ?re food drunk all the time." "Food drank" is a new term. But it expresses an idea that is old. It desoribeB a condition that is notorious, i Fow of us indeed but know' people who are constantly gorged with food, with the result that their intellects are beclouded and their bodies bo num bod just as truly as if the excess had been liquid instead of solid. The man who has his stomach full of food is moro or less stupefied. His mind and musoles work'reluctantly and sluggishly. His faculties are dulled and his feelings deadened. His condition differs only in degree from that of the man drunk with aloohol or of the snake that is gorged. It is common saying that if you are going tc ask a favor of a man first feed him well. The philosophy is good. The "well-fed" man is in oondition to grant anything rather than dispute about it. He will not question or deny or haggle. Take anything from him but his repose, and he will not object. Everyone has experienced the men tal disturbance produced by occasional overeating. It is easy to soe that the man who is continually gorged is con tinually off his mental balan se. And if the proportion of us who continually gorge were actually known we would no doubt be amazed and dis mayed. That the rich arc continually tempt ed by dishes that tickle tho palate ?oems to afford oome little exotise in that direction. But th ope who have rpco'ally observed unanimously de olan* that tho most of tho overeating is among tho poof? Thora tho stom ach io overloaded with nnassimilahla stuff in order that tao necessary nutri tion may bo gained. , j It ia quito possible that wo all might live comfortably and bettor, than we do on half what the average man;. now consumes, / t'j: '- ? 'mt tjm mUif. ? ? - Many a man turns np his toes while waiting for his fortune to turn np. . They Must Lat Arsenic. Kating of arsenic is coalition in Sty ria. The Styrianb say that arseuic J makes one plump aud comely and give.", one strength for great exertions, such as running ormouotaiD climbing. Styria, in Austria, gives the world vast quantities of arsenic. T ie manu facture of this drug is io eed the main Styrian industry. Tl ey who make arsenic eat it, as a rule, fo: they sa> that only tho arsenic ^ter can withstand the arsenic fumes. These makers and eate~" lg are comely. They have . g and clear color. They younger than they are. .'The forem m ID sf i JU ?j sc factory told me that in ht .,/uood, when he first came to that plant, he was advised to begin to eat arsenic lest his health suffer from the fumes," says a toxicologist. "He did begin, and his first two or three small doses gave him a sharp pain, like a burn, in the stomach, and this pain was fol lowed by tremendous hunger and a violent, disagreeable excitement. But as his doses increased in frequency and size their effect became pleasant. There was no loDger pain or excite ment; on the contrary, there was a ravenous appetite and a mood of joy ou9 activity wherein he could do three men's work. ''This chap, by the time he got to be 30, was taking four grains of arsen ic a day. He looked at 30, with his clear pink and white color, no more than 23. lie was as robust as a blacksmith. But he said he would die at 45 or so, that being the age at which all the Styrian arsenic eaters die." The drug is a preservative, and in Styria when graves arc opened bodies are found to be as fresh six or seven years after interment as on the day they were lowered into the earth. Chicago Tribune. - deference books contain every thing except ,he one thing you want to know. HOUSEWORK From the view point of the average man is very easy. The wife is right at home. She is- her own mistress. She can sit down and rest any time. She can eveu go to bed for a nap if she feels like it. She can order her household affairs just to suit her own convenience. If she doesn't feel equal to doing work to-day, she can ilo it to-morrow. That's the beautiful theory. She can stop and rest. She can lie down. Why not ? There are ,-' chairs and beds y^iT^k Just suppose the J ^_JJT?^ I\ \ Egj'ptian taskmas- / /^^^o^-JIl \ ters, when they | v\7Vfflfr3U \ made the required vSw^^n \ daily tale of bricks J^T?v 1 I tax the uttermost ?ft^vfvl I of human strength, ^yffil i I had said to the fl I I toiling slaves, l fl fl "Don't hurry, take I JW fl I a rest every now \fl ?P'x I and then - only, yfl Mr""l 1 don't forget that ) "'"j J your tale of bricks WrVfy ..J J must be all riglit ^^^?S#^r th e fe 1 11 be ?fc-ps. There's the fact. P** V )jS^ There are the day's hN-l?B^. duties to be got T r ^f-JK BBL through and the I / fl ^BSBfjfl women who can JI m fj/Sk W rest may not. The AJi^V^^J woman, who, when she married, said, "Now 1*11 be my own mistress," finds herself a slave to house hold cares and duties. And oh 1 how much that woman needs the rest sometimes. .She brushes and scrubs, and rolls pastry, her temples throbbing, her back aching, her nerves quivering under the 'stress of pain. What she would give if .-she could just creep upstairs and throw herself on the bed in a darkened room and rest. Rest would temporarily relieve the .train, doubtless, but it would be thc same story over again to-morrow. The real need of weak, nervous women is not rest, but strength, and that real need is fully met and satisfied by Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. It makes weak women strong and sick women well. It removes the causes of women's weak ness, regulates the periods, dries weak ening drains, heals inflammation and ulceration, and cures female weakness. It tranquilizes the nerves, encourages the appetite and induces restful sleep. "Fa vorite Prescription " contains no alcohol, neither opium, cocaine, nor any other narcotic. It is a purely vegetable pre paration and will agree with the weakest constitution. ' GREAT GRATITUDE, ?Words cannot express hot r grateful I am for your kind advice and your ' Favorite Prescrip tion,* " writes Mrs, D. B. Barriclcs. of Perivws, ?j Campbell Co.. Va. ?I MWL. feel that it has cured JWKBK me. I had been in \Jt^jP poor iieatth for four yV\\-3r years. Suffered great jr "V ftv fy with my right side, / ^\/v alao-with nearlng 1 Vs \ \ down pains, and my ?SA/VCV^- nerve? were in a ?-^VVV^ dreadful state. After k^mr\ ^NedeS^ nsing four bottles of ?f.:. . >f**v^r^ your 'Favorite Prc BO;' .:" *^r~~-' scription' I nm now flB.-.".'; \| """^^r- well. I am the mother W; H > of two children. With ??PVS VTt?^-- the iirst child I suffer SBJB. ^^311 . f** ed twenty-eight hours, wSS?nfi ! I ^ n,ul with tllL' second I aWKtt&H?l Ife^t used vour medicine, j Hi^^^^ and was sick only WgaBgffifffl f^-O^ three hours. I believe ^^mum^^ VP Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription to be the best medicine fal the wori? for suffering female*. I trish you great auccesi, and hope iimt v?od wiU bles? you in yost noble work.?? OPERATWM AVOIDED. ?October nth, tSA I wrote you far the first time.? tay* Mrs. Atfce 8, Shipley, ot West Point, Hardin Co., Ky. "Was very ill, confined to my bed toort of the time ; had so appetite, pains in left ovary, could root only OB one aide without sufTerihg most excruciating palna. Wat a per fect wreck physically. X underwent an examin ation!* one ?f the mo? prominent physicians of iX^obviHe. Ky. . He pronounced my east tumw of the stomach and advised me to return in two weeka and have an op?ration performed My husband had nach a dread of Oh* knife' that he prevailed on me to try Dr. Pierres medi cines, t took aeren bomen of ?Favorite Pre Siptlofl'wdlwo nTO ;peUea,'ilnlik cured me 6f constipation. Have not taken any medicine since the ^?^tTh^m^ I now attend to an my housework, cook, wash, iron "ndJkw for a family of six, Many,have been ivied, ty me to try your treatment, and gre.t arc the benefits derived. . Dr. Pierce'? Pleasant Pellets are of great benefit in connection with ?Fa vorite Prescription ? when the nae of a laxative medicine is indicated.' The Kind You Have Always Bought, anti which halt been, in use for over SO years, has borne the signature ?? and has been made under his per sonal supervision since its infancy. Allow no one to deceive yon in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and " Just-as-good" are hu* Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health ot* Infants and Children-Exp?rience against Experts**?. What is CASTOR!A Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worm? and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep? The Children's Panacea-The Mother's Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Bears the Signature oX The Kind You Hare Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. TM? CENTAUR COMPANY, TT MURRAY STREET* NEW TORR O ITT. LETTER TO EVANS PHARMACY. I wish to say that your LIVER AND KIDNEY PILLS are better than anything of the kind I have ever UBed. They do all that a remedy of this nature could do. I I have been using EVAITS* LIVER AND KIDNEY PILLS for seven or eight years. S. L. RUSSELL. Anderson, S. C., Feb. 24, 1904. ON HAND AND TO ARRIVE... Two Car Loads o? FARM WA-GrO JNTS, ALL SIZES. Two Oars of Carriages, Buggies, Phaetons. AU the leading makes. Everything in onr line at prices and on terms to snit our customers. FEET WELL - HANKS CO. ANDERSON, S, C. D. S. VANDIVEB. J. J. MAJOR. E. P.|VANDIVBB VAN DIVER BROS. & MAJOR, .f .-- DEALEBSIN-1 Carnages, Buggies, Wagons and Harness. WE have tried to give you as liberal treatment as it was possible for us to extend, and now we ask you, one and all, to be PROMPT in your . ? SETTLEMENT with us. Please bear this in mind, and settle the very earliest day possible, and greatly oblige If you Need a BUGGY wejkave them Cheap. Yours truly, VANMVER BROS. & MAJOR. A. C. STRICKLAND, 0E?TI8T. Office Over Farrnors and Merchants ? Bank. SPECIAL attention given to the Maher 'Glasses o? DOD tal work. Crowns, Bridges and Porcelain Inlays, snob Ss aro done in the larger cities. ; All kinds 6f Plates made. Gold Fill logs In. ar ti flo lal teeth ?by tim? after Plates' are made. Btoxygen Qa3 and Local Anaesthetics given for tho Painless Extraction of tooth. Bleeding and diseased gama treated. RS jaw* All calls to the conn try and near by Towns for the PAlnless Extracllon of Teeth promptly attended to by a oompe enfc assistant. .V % V A LONG LOOK AHEAD A man thinks it is when the matter of-Uni insurance suggests itself-but circumstan ces of late have ehown how life hang? by a thread when war, flood, humean? and lin suddenly overtakes jon, and ike only way Mielraa soLd Ccwi??fW^?^ Th? Mutaal Benefit Life his. Co, *|??>rop ha andi seo us about it BC. at.' MATTISON, STATE AGENT, Peonies' Bank Building, ?HDKBSO 6, O