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leaf From tho Dovil'n Jost Book. Destelo tho Bowlngdoblo ohalnod and bout, They etUoh for tho lady, tyrannous and. For her a wedding gown, for thom a shroud; Tho stioth and etlolh, but never mond tho rent Torn In life's golden ourtains Glad Youth went, And loft thom alono with Timo, and now if bowed With bdrdons they should sob and ory aloud, Wondsilng, tho rloh would look from tholr content. And so this gllramorrlng lifo at last rooodes In unknown, ondlcss doplhs boyond ro cal); And what's tho worth of all our anolont oroodfl, If boro, al tho end of ages, this ls nil A whito faoo lloatlDK in tho whirling ball, A doad faoo splashing lo tho rivor roods? Edward Markham. DR. TALMAGE'S DI8COUR9E On tho Importanoo of Prompt Aotion in Anything We Have to Do From a passago of Soripturo unob served by most roadors Dr. Tolmago in this diooouvso shows tho importanoo of prompt aotion in anything wo havo to do for ourselvos or others;'text, Eoolcsi astos xi, 4, "Ho that obsorvoth tho wind shall not sow." What do you find in this paokod son tonoo of Solomon's monologue ? 1 fiad in it a farmor at his front door examin ing tho woather. It is soodtimo. His fiolds havo boon plowed and harrowed. Tho wheat is in tho barn in oaoks, roady to bo taken afield and soattorod. Now is tho timo to sow. But tho wind is not favorable.- It may blow tip a storm boforotttight, and ho may got wot if ho starts out for tho sowing; or it may bo a long storm, that will wash out tho seed from tho soil; or thoro may havo boon a long drought, and tho wind may oontinuo to blow dry woathor. Tho parched fiolds may nottako in tho grain, and tho birds may piok it up, and tho labor as woll as tho soodmay ho was tod. So ho gi von up the work for that day and ftfxtkti infft 111 o l./\M"i v. ri .rr o ? ? a fr>. c n I .-Vll\tA it will bo on tho morrow. On tho morrow tho wind is still in tho wiong dirootion, and for a wholo wook and for a month. Did you ovor soe such a loner spell of bad woathor? Tho lothargio and ovor oautious and dilatory agriculturist^ al lows tho (lennon to puss without sawing, and no sowing, of oourso, no harvest. That is what Solomon means when ho says in his toxi,, "Ho that observoth tho wind shall not sow." As muoh in our timo as in Solomonio timos thcro is abroad a fatal hositanoy, a disposition to let litt lo things stop us, a ruinous adjournment. Wo all want to do somo good in tho world, but how oasily wo aro halted in our ondoavors. Porhaps wo aro solioitors for somo groat oharity. Thoro is a good man who has largo mean", and ho is aooustomed to give liberally to asylums, to hospitals, to roform organizations, to sch )ols, to ohurohes, to oommumtios desolated with flood or devastated with fires. But that good man, liko many a good man, is mercurial in his tomporamont. Ho is doproBsed by atmoBhpcrio ohangos. Ho ie always viotimizod by tho oast wind. For this or that reason you postpono tho oharitablo oolicita tion. Rloanwhilo tho suffering that you wish to alloviato doo? its awful work, and tho opportunity for roliof is past. If tho wind had boon from tho wost or noithw?Bt, you would havo cntorod tho philanthropist's counting room and sought tho gift, but tho wind was blow ing from tho oast or northeast, and you did not make tho attempt, and you thoroughly illustrated'-my text, "Ho that obsorvoth tho wind shall not sow." Thoro oomos a dark Sabbath morning Tho pastor looks out of tho window and BOOB tho olouds gathor and thon dis ohargo thoir burdons of rain. Instead of a full ohuroh it will bo a handful of pooplo with wet foot and tho dripping umbrella at the doorway or in tho end of pow. . The pastor has proparod ono of his boat' sormons. It has oost him groat rosoaroh, and ho has boon muoh in prayer whilo preparing it. Ho puts tho sermon asido for a olear day and talks platitudes and goes homo quito deproSBod, but yt tho samo timofcoling that he has a > his duty. Ho did not realize that .. that small audionoo thoro wore at ioast two persons who ought to havo had bolter trcatmont. Ono of thoso hoarers was a man in a crisis of Btrugglo with ovil appetite. A carefully propared disoourso undor tho divino blessing would havo boon to him complote viotory. Tho liras of oin would havo boon extinguished, and his koon and brilliant mind would havo boon consecrated to tho gospel ministry and ho would have boon a mighty ovan gol, and tons of thousands of souls would havo, undor tho spoil of his Onristian oloquonoo, given up sin and started a now lifo, and throughout all tho hoavona thoro would havo boon congratulation and hosanna, and aftor many ages of otornity had passed thoro would bo oolobration among tho ran somed of what waa nooomplishod ono stormy Sunday in a ohuroh on earth undor a mighty gospol sermon dolivorod to 15 or 20 pooplo. But tho crisis I speak of was not proporly mot. Tho man in stiugglo with evil habit hoard that stormy day no word that moved him. Ho wont out in tho rain unin vited and unhelpod baok to his ovil way and down to his overthrow. Had it boon a sunshiny Sabbath ho would havo heard something worth boating. But tho wind blow from a stormy diroo tion that Sabbath day. That gospol husbandman noticed it and noted upon its suggestion and may disoovor some day his groat mistako Ho had a sack full cf tho finest of tho who it, but ho withhold it, and somo da) ho will find, when tho wholo story is told, that ho was a vivd illustration of tho troth of my text, "Ho that obsorvoth tho wind shall not sow." In all departments of lifo thom aro thoso hindorod by tho wind of public opinion. It has broome an aphorism in politios and in all groat movemonto, "Ho is waiting to nco whioh way tho wind blows.'' And it is no easy thing to defy public opinion, to bo run upon . by newspapers, to bo overhauled in so ofal oirolos, to bo anathematized by thoso who horotoforo wero your frionds and admirent, lt requires a heroism whioh fow po&soss. Yot no great reformatory or elevating movement has cvor bcon aooomplishcd until Bomo ono was willing to deny what tho world should think or say or do. But there have been mon and women of that kind. Thoy stand all up and down tho oorridors of history, cxamplos for us to follow. Charleo Sumnor in tho Unitod State? sonate, Alexander H. Stophons in Ooorgio oonvontion, Savon arola staking his lifo in timo of perse cution Martin Luther fighting tho battlo for roligious froodom againnt tho mightost him them mi that wore over hurled, William Oaroy loading the missionary movement to eavo a ko?then world whilo ohurohos donounood him as a fanatic and with nttoir piing an impossibility; .fenner, tho hore of itnodioino, earioutured for his ftUomptby vaoolnation to boatbaok tho worst disoaso that smoto tho na tions. Thoy who watoh tho wind of publio opinion will not flow. It is, an uncertain indtoation and is apt io blow tho wrong way. . . , Oorarauoitios and ohurohos and na tions somotimos aro thrown into hys toria, and it requires a man of groat rquipoiso to maintain n right position, Thirty-threo yoars ago thoro oamo a timo of bitterness in American politics, and tho impoaohmont of a president of tho Unitod Statos was domandod. Two or titree patriotic mon, at tho risk of losing their senatorial position, stood outr gainst tho domand of thoir politi cal asaooiatos and saved tho country from that whioh all pooplo of all parties now BOO would havo boon a oalamity and would havo put i vory eubiequont president at tho mercy of his opponents. It only rcquirod tho wai dog of a fow months, v. hen timo itself romoved all oontrovorsy. "Lot UH havo war with England if nocds bo," said tho most of the pooplo of our northern eUtos in 1861, when Mason and 81 idell, tho distinguished southerners, had boon taken by our navy from tho British stearne r Trent and tho English government rosontod tho aotoi our govornmont in stopping ouo of thoir ships. "Give up thoso prisoners," said Groat Britain. "No," said thc almost unanimous opinion of tho no) .a. "Do not givo them up. Lit us havo war with England rather than surrondor thom." Thon William II. Siward, scorotory of state, faced ono of tho fioroost storms of publio opinion over seen in this or any other oountry. Sooing that tho retention of 'thoso two mou was of no importance to our ooun 'try that their rotontion would put Great Britain and tho Uoitod Statos into iin mediato oon?liot, ho said,' "Wo givo them up." Thoy woro givon up, and through tho roflislauooof popular olaraor by that ono man a worldwido oalamity was adverted. Some ot" us romombor as boys huzzi ing when Kossuth, tho groat Hunga rian, rodo up Broadway, Now York. Mont Amorioaus wore, iu favor of taking somo dooidod stops l'or Hungary. Tho only result ci' fcuih intorforonoo would hav? boori ihn f?oriflafl of all good prc oodont and war with 10-ir o pc an nations. Thon Djnicl Wcbstoi, in his immortal "Huhcmnnn letter," bravod a whirl wind of popular opinion and enved this nation frtrn usoloss foreign cntanglo mcrtl. Wobstcr did not observo tho wind when ho wroto that lotter. So in state and church thoro have always boon mon at tho right limo ready to faco a nation full-yea, a woild full-of op position. How m,\ny thero aro who givo too mnoh timo to watohir.g tho wcalhcr vane and studying tho baromotor! Mako up you mind what you aro going to do aud thon go ahoad and do st Thero always will ho hindrances. It is a moral dis aster if you allow prudeuco to over master all tho other giaoos. Tho Biblo makos moro of courage and faith and poraovoranoa thau it docs of cautiou. lt in not ouoo a yoar that, tho great ooean steamcra fail to to sail at tho ap pointed ti m 9 bocftuso of tho storm sig nals. li yt tho weather buroau prophesy what hurrioano or oyolono it may, next Wednesday, noxt Thursday, noHt Sat urday, tho stearneT will put out from New York and Philadelphia and BoBlon harbors and will reaoh Livorpool and Southampton and Glasgow and Bromon, thoir arrivals as certain as their om barkation. They oannot afford to oon sult tho wind, nor oan you in your lifo I voyago. Tho grandest and best things over ao- I oomplishcd havo been in tho tooth of hostility. Oonsidor tho grandest ontor priso of tho otornition-tho salvation of | a world. Did tho Kornau empire send up invitation to tho hoavona inviting tho Lord to dosooud amii vooiforations of woloome to como and tako possession of tho moat capacious and ornato of tho palaces and sail Galileo with ricbost im portai flotilla and .walk ovor flowors of Solomon's gardens, whioh woro still io tho outskirts of Jorusalom? No. It tit ruck him with insult OB soon as it oouli roach him. Lot tho camol drivers in fho Bethlohom caravansary toatify. Seo tho vilost hato pursuo him to thc borders of tho Niiol Watch his ar raignment ns a criminal in tho oourts! Soo how thoy bolio his ovory ootion, misinterpret his boat words, howl at him with worst mobs, woar him out with sleoploss nights on oold moun tains! Soo him hoisted into a martyr dom at whioh tho noonday orowlod it solf with midnight shadows, and tho rocks shook iutooataolysm, and tho dead j started out of thoir sopulohor, fading it waa no timo to sloop whon suoh hor rors woro being onaotod. Thc winds of stormiost opposition blow on his oradlo, blow on hi8 moun tain pulpit, blow upon tho homesteads that darod to givo him sholtor, blow upon his gravo, but ho wont right on and sowed tho oarth with sympathotio tears and rodooming blood and consola tion and helpfulness and rodomption and viotory. It was an awful timo to BOW. But behold tho harvest of ohurohos, asylums, worldwido oh uri t ios, civilizations, millonniumsl Just oall over tho namos of tho mon and women who havo dono most for our poor old world, and you will oall tho mines of thoso who had mobs af ter thom. Thoy wcro Bhunnod by tho olito, they wcro oartoonod by tho satirsts, they livod on food whioh you and 1 would not throw to a konnol. Somo of them il inti in prison, somo of thom woro burned at tho stako, somo of them woro buriod at publio expenso became of tho laws of sanitation. They woro houndod through tho world and hounded out of it. Now wo oross tho ocean to soo tho room in whioh they were born or died and look up at tho monuments whioh tho ohuroh of tho world hat) roared to thoir matohlosn fid lity and oourago. After 100 or 200 or 300 yoara tho world has mado up its mind that instead of being ll;gt Huted they ought to havo boon garland od i antead of cavo of tho mountain for rcsidonoo thoy ought to have had bestowod upon thom an Al hautbra. Young man, you havo planned what you arc going to bo and do in tho world, but you aro waiting for circumstances to become moro favorable You aro, liko iho farmer in tho text, observing tho wind, B ;tior start now. Obstacle s will help you if you oonqmr them Gut your way through. Peter, Coop er, tho millionaire philanthropist, who will bless all succeeding bonturioa with tho institution ho fouudod, worked five yours for $25 n ye aro and his board. Houry Wilson, tho Ohiiatiau statesman who oomrhandod tho Unitod States sonato with tho gavol of tho vico pro> sidonoy, wroto of his oarly days: "Want sat by my oradlo. I know what it is to ask a mother for bread when sho has nono to givo. I loft my homo at 10 years of ago and ?orvod an approntiocship of ll yoars, roooiviog a month's sohooling oaoh year, and at tho end of ll yoars of hard work a yoko of oxon and six oho op, whioh brought mo $81. In tho first month aftor 1 was 21 years of ago I wont into tho woods, drovo a team and out mill logs. I aroso in thc morning boforo daylight and I workod haid till aftor dark and reooiv* SZtCDHHwHtHS -. cd tho magu.ifi0o.at ?um of $6 for tho mouth's work. E&oh of thooo dollars looked AB Iar?o to mo aa tho moon looks tonight." Wondorful Honry Wilson I i?ub mm, wan uuu um urgiutu immu, nu ohangod hiB namo booauso ho did not want on him tho blight of a drunkon father. Aa tho vioo prosidont stood in my pulpit in Brooklyn, making tho last addrcBB ho ovor nudo, and oommondod tho roligion of Christ to tho young moo of that oily I thought to mysolf, "'You joursolfaro tho sublimest upootaolo I ovor ?aw of viotory ovor obstados." For 30 years tho wind blow tho wrong way, yet ho did not obsorvo tho wind, hut kept right on Bowing. Many of us who aro now proaohors of tho cospol or medio ?I praotitionore or mombora of tho bar or morohants or oiti zjuu in various kinds of businoaa had vory poor opportunity at tho start bo oauso wo had it too oasy-far too oasy. I Wo ncvor approoiatod what it ia to got an oduoation bcoauao our fnthora or oidor brothers paid tho sohooling, and we did not got tho muBolo which nothing but hard work oan dovolop. 1 oongrat?lato you, young mau, if to you lifo is a strug gio. It is out of suoh oiroumstanoos (J od makoB horoos, if thov aro willing to bo mado. Out your way through. If it woio propor to do BO aad you should stand in any board of bank dirootoro, in any board of trade, in any logislaturo, otato or nations I, and ask all who woro brought up in luxury and oaso to lift thoir hand, hero and ?hore a hand might Lo liftod. Hut ask thoso who had an awful hard timo at tho start to lift thoir hands, and most of tho hands would bo li fud. Tho horoes of ohuroh and stile woro not brought up on onfootioncry and ofiko. Whcthor in your lifo it is a south wind or a north wind, a weet wind oran cast wind, that, is now blowing, do you not fool liko aayiug: 'This wholo Bub joot I now dectdo. Lord God, through thy Son JOBUO Christ, my Siviour, 1 ara thino forovor. I throw myuolf, rookloas of everything into tho oooan of thy nioroy." "But," says somo ono in a frivolous aud rollicking way, "I am not liko tho farmer you find in your toxt. I do not j watoh t ho wind. What do I caro about ! tho weather vano? I am sowing nov,*." i What aro you sowing, my brothel? Aro you sowing ovil habits? Aro you sowing infidel and athcistio boliof?? Aro you Bowing hatroda, rovongoB, disoontontB, unclean thoughts or unoloan aobions? It' BO, you will raiso a big orop- a vory big orop. Tho farntor BOmo times plants tilinga that do not oomo up, and ho has to plant thom ovor agaia. J3ut those evil things that you havo planted will tako pot aud oomo up in harvost of dis appointment, in harvoBt of pain, in har vost of doopair, in harvest of fire. Go riglit through sotno of tho unhappy homos of Washington and Now York and ail tho oitics and through tho hos pit?is mid penitentiaries, and you will' liad stacked up, piled togcthor, tho shcavoa of suoh an a.vf ul liArvoBt. Ho soa, ono of the firHt of.all tho writing prophets, although four of tho othor prophots aro put beforo him in tho canon of Scripture, wroto on astounding mota phor that may bo quoted aa descriptive 0 thoso wh'o d) evil: ''.they IIAVO sown tho wind, and thoy Bhallroap tho whirl wind." Somo on has said, "Ohildron 111 ty bo strangled, but doods novor." Thoro aro othor porsous who truthful ly say: "1 am doing tho host I OAU. Tho clouds ave thiok and tho wind blows tho wrong way, but I am sowing prayer? and Bowing kind COBS and oowing help fulness and sowing hopes of a bottor world." Good for you, my brothor, my Histor t What, you plant will oomo up. What you BOW you will riso into a har vost tho wealth of whioh you will not know until you go up higher. I hoar tho rustling of your harvoat in tho blight fields of hoavon. Tho soft galos of tbat .land, ns thoy pass, bond tho full hcadod grain in ourvos of boauty. lt ia goldon in tho light of a Bun that novor sots. As you pass in you will not havo to gird on tho sioklo for tho voaping, and thoro will bo nothing to rominds you of weary hus bandmou toiling under hot tm m in er Bun on oarth and lying down undor tho sha dow ol' tho trco at noontide, so tired woro thoy, so vory tirod. No, no; your harvoat will bo roapod without any toil of your hands, without any boBWoatiug of your brow. Ohiist in ono of his sor moas told how your harvoat will bo gathorod whon bo said, "Tho rcapora aro tho angels." That Honey Was Ont. Tho Kans AB City Journal tolls this story: ''Frank Andorsou was for yoara a woll known oommoroial travolor who mado Galona. Ho waa paanionatoly fond of honoy, and tho propriotor cf tho Galona hotel, at whioh ho always Btoppod, always had somo on haud for hi ai. On ono trip Andornon took his wife along, and AB ho approaohod Ga lona ho montionod to hor that ho was gotting to a plaoo whoro ho oould havo honoy. Whon tho pair was sitting at tho suppor tablo that night no honoy appoarod, and Anderson said sharply to tho hoad waiter: Whoro is my hon oy?' Tho waitor Binilod and said: You mean tho little blaok hairod ono? Oh, sho don't work boro noSv.' " Ono of the President's Cars. Tho Southern railway having inaugu rated "Gontlcmon's Club Cara ' ou tho Washington and SouthwoBtorn Limited botweon Atlanta and New York, making this ono of tho finest pasaongor trains in tho United Statos, has suooooded in obtaining as ono of tho oars for uso on thoao trains Gontlomon's Club Car "At lantio," whioh was rcoontly usod by President MoKinloy/on his tour to tho Paoifio Coast. No hotter guarautoo of tho e l?gano J of tnofcQ ol tr; oars oould bo givon than that thoy aro of thc olasa of Pullman equipment soloctod by tho Provident for lu? tour whioh, ai a mat ter of oourso, is of tho finest workman snip and latoBb dotdgn. $100 Reward. $100 Tho readers ot' thia papor 'will bo pleased to le um that thoro is at loast ono dreadod disoaao that soionoo lins boon able to otiro in ali its BUgo.i and that is Catarrh. Hill's Catarrh Curo iu tho only positivo euro now known to tho medie;?l fraternity. Catarrh hoing a constitutional d hf ea sp, requires a oon biiiutional tro?tmont. Hall's O Ata rr h Curo is takou internally, aoiing diroot ly upon tho blood and mneon > surfAoes of tuc systom, thornby destroying tho foundations of tito diaoaso, and giving tho p - tient, stron'gth hy building up tho oouat tion and assisting naturo iu do ing ita work, Tho proprietors have HO muoh faith in its curativo poword, that thoy offor ono Hundred Dollars for any caso that it fails to ouro. Sond for list of testimonials. Address. F. J. CH KN EY & CO., Tolodo, O. . Sold by druggies, 7&o. Hali's Family Pills aro tho best. Ants may bo oasily kiliod by pour ing a tablespoonful of bisulphido of oar bon into a small bolo opoirod in tho oontov of tho ant-hill and thon quiokly and tightly closing all oponiugs into tho noat. Tho deadly vapor of this volatilo liquid will spread through all tho galldrics and tunnols and kill tho ants by tho wholosalo. THE FORECASTS FOB JtjfLY. Tho Kev. Irl Hlok? Predict Many iiBti'OMuiio S???uru?u?vo A ooDibination of astronomic ovonts out of tho ordinary falls on and about tho oponing of July. Tho opposition of tho plaoot Jupiter-Tho world groator than all o thor planots' and moons oombinod-falls on Juno 30th, and tho opposition of Saturn, tho noxt frcatost planot, falls ou July 5th. Tho ull moon, or moon in opposition to oaith and sun, and ho no o in conjunction with both Jupitor and 8aturn, falls on July lut. Tho planots Vonua and Morouy aro, also, in conjunction with oaoh other and tho earth ou Juno 30th, with oarth and Moroury in apholion, and Vonua in poriholion. Suoh a bal ancing and lining up of tho worlds is not an ordinary ooourronoo, and to say just what tho rosult should bo; in inotoorologioal way, ie not au entirely easy thing in our proBont stato of knowlodgo. Addod to all tho abovo, it must bo kopt in mind that wo aro still uoar tho conter of tho Jupiter equinox, aud that a rogular Vuloan storm period oxtonds from tho lat to tho 6;h of July, wind ing up with moon on tho oolostioal equator on tho G.h. Wo fool warrantod in saying tbat a maximum tondonoy to soismio, olootrioal and voloanio pertur bations ia moro than probablo undor this ooudition of things.' Wo havo also many timos eallod attontion to tho faot BUOL romarkablo oonjunottona and op posions of other planctB with earth and sun, has a inarkod tondonoy to soattor and sogrogato tho solar onorgy in that part of tho oolostial longiludo oooupiod by an unu>ual nsuomblago of planots. These things hoing roasonably prob ablo, wo predict that tho world's oor rcot rcoord will Bhow a atato of ooaraio and motoorologioal unrest during tho closing daya ot' Juno and well into July. Lot it bo positively undoratood that wo do not predict anything out of nature's rogular ordor, and that. wo oounsol quiotuoss and poaoo of mind, ovon in tao oxoroioo of that oaution, forethought aud watchfulness whioh should always bo oxoroisod in tho faoo of naturo's vioiositudoa and phonoinona. Tho storm period oontral on July 3rd, shown in tho storm diagram will bring a sorios of very aotivo storms, during whioh tho frequent and marked fluctuations of tho bavomotor will both bo an admonition and oonsti tuto a study. Tho oncoming of storm arena may bo attended with vory high tomporMurcs in soaUerod seotiona of this and other oontinonts; but wo pre dict that tho phenomenally low tem peratures will bo realized gouoraUy. Ordinarily, wo would namo tho 3rd, 4th and 5th as days- of groatoat Btorm dtsugor, but undor tho unusual condi tions prevailing, they aro probablo any timo from tho 1st to tho 6th. ltoaotionary storm conditions will exist on tho 8th to 10th, continuing I .1. -Ul- _ il_, '?J_," ... jpiuuainy uv vi mu wvyu g pcr.gCC 0:: tho 11th. Falling baromoler, rising tcniporaluro and winds from tho oaat and south will preoood tho aotual storms and precipitation ol' thia and ull other July poricds. Tho oontral storm period f<)r July ? Alls from tho 13 oh to tho l$tn. Tao orisis of tins poriod will fall from Suu day, tho 14th, to Wodnosday, tito 18,h. Barometric and atmospheric conditions will plainly indioato whoa storms aro gathering wost pf your Jooaliiy, and just as positively will thdiamo' things indioato whop tho Btdim.oiw.VJil J: ^.vo gono oaat of your looality, although tho path of tho aotual storms may opt havo parsed over your int mediato .iootion. This oontral Vulo%n poriod for July is ombraeod in tho Vonus period} shown by tim storm diagram to bo central on July 31st. Tho ono thing that'-gives posaiblo hopo for raina ovor interior parts of our oountry during tho last half of July and tho first half of Au gust, ia tho prosonoo of this Venus poriod. If BuiHoiont humidity should not bo proaont during tho rogular storm days in thia Vonus poriod, there ia great probability ot extremo hoat and hot-, withering winds, oapaoially in tho opon grain rogions of tho weat and northwest. Thundor gusts aro always probablo when tho moon pasaos tho colostial equator in summor, tho 19 di of July boil,g suoh a dato. Tho atara printed in connection with Sunday and Monday, thc 21st and 22 id, Show that roaotionary disturbances aro duo on and touching thoso datos. Tho probability of rain and storms at this timo ia inoroasod by tho proaonoo of a Moroury poriod, blondod with that of Vonus, oontral of tho 261 h and extend ing from tho 21st to 31st. Moro or losa rain with probablo cloudbursts, hail and dangerous winda nood not surprise any ono during tho storm poriod whioh is oontral on tho 26th. Ooo of tho war most tones of tho summor may bo cxpeotcd in oonneotion willi this poriod, and many storm olouds with sovoro thundor gusts will bo natural about Thursday, tho 25th. to Sunday, tho 28th. Doatruotivo hail storms aro moro than probablo at this poriod, as well as at othor poricds with in tho Vonus braco. Tho great boat probablo at this timo will break up at tho conclusion of tho storms, and very oool nights for tho season will follow in most parts of tho oountry, ospooially in tho northwest. If rains do not appear I during tho last ton days of July, tho outlook for rain in tho groat wostorn and northwestern grain regions is not encouraging for tho rest of tho bummer and early autumn. Tho last two da} s of tho month, with full moon and Vonni at tho oontor of h or disturbing period, arc rotvoti jnary storm datos. On and tourohing thoso days tho baro meter, thormoinotor and wind ourronts will snow a return of storm conditions. Our road ora must romombor that oven in a season of great drouth the regulas ?nd reactionary storm periods wal bo plainly apparent-tho barometer will fall, and biaok, blustering Btorm olouds Will anne on and about Mo sloan days. But what prouuisou io bo an abundant ram will too oiten ond in violent gusts of wiud, thunder and dust. Such clouds may oontor about ? narrow aroa, and let fall a destro>iug oloud burst oxtroraoly iojal in oxtuut; but tho vory intensity of suoh storms pi ovonts a nor mal ditlusioii of what moisture thoro may bo in tho atmosphere and olouds. tl o coo, wo of ton hear pf dca J and de struction in looa! floods wnon tho ooun try as a whole is suffering from extreme dry nuns. This is pooutiarly the tcn tonoy during tho J upiior period of por b A( ioji. This S'i"M.m \s nt n J upi tor oiiod, Work of Lightning. A dispatoh from Fiorouoo to Tho Stato rays a singlo bolt of lightning Wodnosday af tor noon temporarily stopped tho working of a dozen Boll, and twonty-fivo South Carolina tofo phonos by burning out tho fueo wiros, lt also struok the oourt houso and*split sovoral troon. Anothor bolt damaged tho electric light plant considerably, burning out Bovoral lights and ono trans* former. Ibero wan very litt lo rain. A high wind blow for an hour. OUR BATTLE FLAGS Ths Colors ot ths Lost OQU?* ?nd ' Their Origin. AN INI ERE8TINQ STORY Which May O - ur Revision of an Anto-?ecnssion Flag Which B?cnmo the Flag of South Carolina. Tho first, Baye tho Nowport Newa Herald, flog indioalivo of aobeiaiott was ralsod at Charleston, S. C., Dooombor 1?, 1800, ouot day prior to tho paaoago of tho ord!nanoo whorcby South Carlina withdrew from tho F?deral Union aud doolarod ita indopondonoo. Tho Hag is a Hag of solid reit? with a oroooont and a star, in whilo, quartorod In tho uppor loft hand oornor, Who dosignod tho tl ig is not kuown to this writer; a numbor of Charleston ladles purchased tho matorial, mado it on tho pattoru dosndbod, aud ran it up on tho tall stall' of tho Custom House. Ito dimonslone woro olght foot in length and ti x foot broad. Lalor it bcoamo tho naval flag of South Carolina aud oontimtod suoh to tho oloso ot' tho war. Thoso uiado for tho navy woro forked ot tho oad. Tho South Catoliua privu toor Dixie, dying tho star aud croaoont Hag, engaged tho United Plates battlo ship Keystouc Statu, and aftor a torrifio fight, ia vrhioh tho-Koyslono Stato sullorod terribly, tho Dixio was captured in a siukiug couditiou ita omird crow boiug dead or disabled from wounds. Tho critics obj cot ol to tho red Mtg with Ps silYor (piarterings, on tho grouud that ailvor or whllo on red was non-horaldio. lt was orhioisod ?also on tho ground that it was almost identical wi li tao Turkish Hag. Thoao and othor points of objootlou, whilo falling to attraol tho atteutiou of tho natal oommnudors, oausod alterations to bo mado in tho original, after whioh tho Logis laturo adopted Ibo rcmodollod pattern as tho flag of tho sovereignty of tho Stato of Sou h Carolina, CROSS or HT. o KOROR. Tho revised South Carolina dag bad the orosd of til, Uoorgo in blue un its ohio? qu?r toring, tho oroSB emblazoned both on its up. right and tronsvorio, with whito Biara cor responding in numbor tu thu numbor of States iu tho Southern Confctoraoy. Auothor aileration was that tho small star in whito appealing on ibo original flag near tho orcB oent was substituted in thc (lag of Hover cignty by a whito palmollo troo Tho first national Hag ol'tko Sou thora Con foduraoy was adoptod at Moutgomory, Ala,, Marah 4, 18151, and w?s hoibtcd to tho sum mit ol' tho HI alt' of (ho Capital building in t hat oliy, Miss L. C. Tylor, daughter of ?x-PrcBl dont Tylor, pulling the oord whioh sent tho Stats aud Lars gliding gloriously up tho polo tn tho presence of a multitudo who greeted tho new flag with dcafoniug ohcers. Tho Act of tho Confederate Congress in session at Montgomery.. Ala declares that ibo Hag o/ theConfoderato Slates of Amorioa shall consist of a red field, with a whito spaoo ox tending h?m?ntally through tho the contre, mid equal iu width lo ono-thitd of tho wnii h of tho Hag, tho red spaoo above and below to bo tho samo width as tho white; a cautou of blue extending downward through tho whilo spaoo and stopping at tho upper border of lower red spaoo, In tho centro of (ho bluo oanton stars oorrospond ing in numbor to tho nu ?ber of States in tho Southorn Confederacy must bo placed in a oirolo, tho oirclo indicative of perpetuity. TUE Finar FIMO. Tho Amt flag boro sovon stars, that being tho numbor of Statos iu tho Confederacy ai tho limo tho Stars and liars bcoamo tho Southorn ll ig by enactment at Monig jmory, Ala , on tho dato mentioned above Lator bcoamo customary to make llaga with tulr tcen uluru, ono for each of tho cloven scooding ?S tatos, ono for Maryland and ono for Ken tucky, aud in some rnotances tho Stars and Bars boro fourteen stars, tho Stato of Mis souri being inoludod ia the Southorn constel lation? Tho Sttu.i and Bars ooasod to bo tho legal national Hag on May 1, 1803, an Aot of Con gress passed on that dato subetitutod another Hag horoaftor to bo described, but whilo tho Stars and Bars by tho subsequout enact ment ccaucd to bo tho flag of tao Confoderato (slates of .'?morion, to tho end of tho war it floated oa many forts aud was oarrlod by many rogimout. Ii is probable that when . Father Kjau wrote his immortal requiem of tho Lost Causo ho had ia mind tho Hag of tho Stars and Bara. Tho Beauregard Battlo flag is tho beet known emblem of tho Lost Cause, and tho history of its origin is oxocedingly interest ing It was designed jointly by (Jon. Pierro Toutanl Beauregard and Col. William P. Milo?, of (len. Beauregard's stall. In heraldic terms tho battle H ig consists of a field of rod and quartorod therein a broad, bluo saltier bordered and whito, both bars of tho bluo whito bordorod saltier to be tm blazoned with fivo-pointcd stars correspond ing in number to the numbor of Statos lu tho Southorn Confodoraoy. DAi/riMORR tmiii's wornt. Aftor agi ooing upon tho patiorn and do sign a Qormau artist, serving on Con Beau rogard's ?tall', made a pict uro of tho battlo flag, whioh Con. Joseph E. Johnston ap preyed, and immediately Misses Constanio and Jonnie Caroy, Iwo Baltimoro bollos, so journing in Fairfax County, Va., organizad n sowing club and mado a numbor of thoao llaga, whioh were used iu subsequent battlos In Soptomborj 1301, the Conledorato Con gross enacted a bill authorizing tho dosign uosoribod. abovo tia a battlo Hag of tho South orn Confodoraoy, and suoh it continued un til tho end of hostilities. In au add rom boforo tho Louisiana Division of tho Army of Northern Virginia, dolivorod in Boooniber, 1877, Con. ioaurogord do soribed tho incidents tending to tao ndop lion of tho I) utie flag, iu Hubstauoo, nu lol lows: At 4 o'olook in ibo afternoon) July 21 1801, tho bullio was raging ou tho plains of MauasBns oud roinforooments woro urgently needed on both ?ide?. Con, McDowell was ousting anxious ey m towards tho Bluo ilidg Mountains, hoping to seo Pat torson's oolum emerge from tito uiiut cloud whioh hung lite n pall on his Hank. Cou. IkauregarU was also wiuohiug ni tko samo direction, cxpoot ing jubal Karly, willi tho 24th Virginia, th Vin um ts ia na and tho 16th Mississippi, column strong enough to route tho ouomy already iiainmored to tho vergo of dofoat. Confed?ralo signal ollioer informed hi n?xious oomumiulor that a ktrong column was approaching by tho Warren turnpike, prob aoiy l'ai lemon, tho signal oifieor state i. Tho air was motionlcHsa, not a broeaa stirring aud tho color.-i of tho advancing host drooped around thostatl', so (nat at tho distance i tomming they rcaoiublod tho United Stat Hag. Just thou a gust of wind c night tho U.ig of tko trout lino and soul lt nt roamin out train its stall', enab.ing ibo Confed?ralo leader io see at a giuuoo knut it was Bar and not Patterson Lo dtooornod. lt was tho dilliculty ooscrved at ino lira?, battle ?uauassas in distinguishing bel ween I Stars aud Bars mut stripes that brought about Hie adoption of Ibo Beauregard balli Hug, a Hag willoh ondurcd to tho und of tho fatal ut nit gio, and has tuneo been adopted tho seal ol thu nial Cause. NBW FfcAa ADOI'TIW, As has boen sttvtod, tho Stars and Bara adoptod Marou, 1801, at Montgomery, Ala ooiuinuod to bo tho national Hag uutll May 1, 180?, on whioh day tho Congross of th Confoderato Statos of Amorioa, in session Itiohmond, Va,, whioh had booomo tho Cap! tal of tho Southern Confodoraoy, onaotod bill adopting auow Hag tho model of whioh is said to have bonn Hie oroailon of two Mia oissippians Tho now national Hig enacted on May 1.1803, was a solid floUl of whito will tho Boaurojard battlo Hag quartorod in uppor left-hand oornor as a canton, width of tho Hag to bo two-thlrda of length. Tho proportion tho oanton boro tho Hag was ai foijowa! Tho oanteu to in wlutti throe .fifths of tho width of om ire Hag. tho width of whito beneath oanton to bo one-third of tho longth of whito from the outor border of tho oanton THE B Grove's ' Thc formula know just what ye do not advertise th their medicine if y Iron and Quinine p form. Thc Iron malaria out of thc Grove's is thc Os* Chill Tonics are ir chat Grove's is s are not experimen and excellence h only Chill Cure s _thc United States. tho ond of tho ll lg. Aolual lost of tho Hag indicated fu i ul objootion?. Wlion wrappod ou ita Blurt* a row furl? of tho canton diBap penrod from viow, loiving in sight oui; tho while Hold- Tho soldiers ridioulodit ns tho ' flag of truco," applying othor epithets, and tho now (lag fell into dltuso. It in not likely that many of thom woro ovor mado. luoro aro Confcdorato Veterans now living who never aa ir or heard of (ho Hag of 18U3, known jocularly aa tho llig of truoo, so-o*llod by tho gallant boys who boliovcd with all tho /cal of their hearts and tho . oourago born of doop conviction impressed upon thoir Bouts that the white Hug would bo raised by Ibo Othor aldo to tho contention. IIKAUKKOAIU) IIATH.K PL AO. Tho ? i\? Lu mil ?l?? last ftUtuO???sd by Cor? . gross iu a bill onaolod March 4, 1806, OOH sisled ot tho (big with tho 8DOW-whito ti ol I doBoribcd in thoforogoing paragraph, being tho Bamo iu all particulars as tho Hag adopted by tho Oonfederate Congross, May 1, 18133, wilban additional quartering, consisting of a verti? ?I, bar of rod al tho end of tho Hag, tho red bar to boin width ono hilf of that portion of tho ll lg between tho right-hand border of tho canton and of tho lUg. Ia addition to tho boiuregard battlo Hag lhere woro other battle lings, which, while not Rcimioned by (ho Conieueralo Congress, woro used on bloody battlellolds with tho authority of generala of corps and divisions. Ono of these bullio (lags was that borne by tho rogimoiits and brigades of Uon. Pat Clo* Immen divisions, lt consisted of a Hold of blue, bordered with whilo and a sil vor moon nuartorod in tho very centre of the blue field. Tno veterans who fought under tho oom mund of Uon. Pat Cleburne vunember tho beautiful moon Hag, which in oatnp, on the IllVi?ii, Ol' ?it tho liiitiUlt ?f bi":Ul?, ?liOi-?od their henrie and aroused thom to doods of v i'm- which aro still going down tho ages, and will always have a p aoo on tho pages of history. Woro no mention made of tho "Bonnie Blue Flag (hal. Bear? a Bingle 8(ar," tho oreation of that beloved mini tirol of tho .South, narry McCarthy, tho ti*lo of tho li ig dosuribes it exactly, It ia a field of solid blue with n uiuglo largo flvo-pointed Btar quartered in ila centre, lt is said that Harry McCarthy saw Texas soldiers at Now Orloans carrying tho hag and conceived tho idea that it was tho il ig of tho Confederacy, hence tho inspiration which oanie to tho li earl of that sweet singer breaking forth in song, whioh will bo beard when (ho great-grand ohildron of tho veterans of the war will in thoir turu bu the ancestors of tho coming daughters and sous of thc Moa thc vu Confed eracy. A New Horso Disease Recently a disenso Jias appoarod among hornett io Now York whioh munno to ho vor.y fatal, and none of the veterinary surgeons sooms to know muoh about it othor thau that it is very contagious. For Boroo time horso mon hereabouts havo boon apprehensive that it-would sproad a j far as this State, and havo boon looking out for it with much oonoorn. A tologram roooivod by tho governor Friday may moan that it has already roaohed South Carolina and tho votorinary Burgoon has boon asked by tho govornor by wiro to look after tho mattor vory oarefully. Horo is tho tologram vooiivod, whioh is signor! by Mr. LoRjy Springs of L\noastor: uPJoaoo havo veterinary aurgoona oomo to Lano&atcr at onoo. iCpidcmio among mules; ono doad; four oiok. local horsemen don't known anything about it. Ploaso sond him at onoo. Answor." Pr?sident Hartzog of OlomBon was noti fied at onoo. Ia this oonnootion tho govornor suggosta that honooforward partios nooding tho votorinary ? Burgoon tolograph donison Collogo dirootj as this would bo quito a saving of timo. Wo olip tho abovo from tho Columbia S tn to and would advino our far morn to watoh thoir stock oloooly and if tho y iiotioo any symptons of tho disoaso to isolate the sick animal at onoo aad tele graph for tho veterinary Burgoon. AB Tlioy I'iKnt Now. Spartan-Did I undcrslnnd you to admit that your rival is tho champion pugilist? Flta-Corbett-No, slr, I said "plagia rist." Ho's been using1 a lot of my old newspapor interviews aa his own. Philadelphia Press. won noMoriboti. Mrs. Pierpont (ecstatically)-Isn't lt just, a poem of ti spring bonnot! Mr. Pierpont (dubiously)-Yet?, a magazine! spring poem-I can't make head or tnil to it ;. or tsll^whioh is the front or bach.-Brooklyn Eagle. A nicely Ynm. La rt y-T suppose you got that red nose from drinking rum? Sandy Pikes-No, mum. I stuck mo head out of do car door nu' me JIOKO rubbed ngin de bricks on dc sido ob de tunnel.-Cition go Daily News. AVlint Wan Ho(inlrv", Mr. IToles'ayle-I want nu offtco boy that don't chew, smoko or curse, and ia alway? neat,' clean, bravo, manly and courteous. Applicant-Hally Cool Wot you want is ft ma tinco idol I-Puck. A 'Bui's Kl KI?, "I am certain that Minnie intends to marry Frank." "What makes you so certain?*' "I heard her scolding bim for send ing her such valuable presents."-Har lem Lifo. To Birmingham and Return* On aooount of tho National Grand Tomplo, Mooaio Tomplars of Amorioa, to moot at Birmingham, Ala.. July 80 to Auguot 4, tho Southorn railway an n nun o? ti rato of ono first-class fare for tho round trip from all points on its lino:; to Birmingham, Ala , and return. Tiokots to bo sold July 28th, 29th and 30th, final limit August 6th, 1001. For dotailod information call on or addrosa any agent of tho Hon thom railway or oonneotions, W. H.Tayloo. A. Q, l\ A,, Atlanta, Qa, ?astelessChi is plainly printed on every )U are taking when you take eir formula knowing that y< ou ? knew what it contained, ut up in correct proportions a acts as a tonic while the system. Any reliable druggis igln&i and that all other nitations. An analysis of othc uperior to all others in ev ting when you take Grov aving long been establishe old throughout the entire No Cure, No Pay. Prtct , SIXTY LIVES LOST. Exaggerated Reporto Oausfid by Do&d Bodlos Being Wuohod UP ANO FLOATING! IN FLOOD. Patl* Van Dyk? 8? wine'Croat Co'umn of Water Rtu hing Down muum?i?i G Or ?6 Upon Ula Homo. A dispatoh from Roanoke, V? , says a telegram from Blue Ibid Wodnosday afternoon says thoro aro no important dovolopraonts thoro. Bopair work is going ahead 'with a rush and vigor. Blutfiold ia tho groat shipping point for tho Pooah?ntas Coal oompany oom* ing eajt. It is said thoro that coal fud du will not bo ablo to ship out any ooal for tho next'10 days. It is thought at Bin? li ld that tho loss of lifo will roaoh in tho neighborhood of 60. Tho ooal fields will nullor almost inoaloul ab'o IOSB as a roBult of tho washed-out trnoks and damage to their maohinory. A gcntloman arriving from tho strioken seotion givos an explanation for tho report first oiroulalod that great masson ot human bodies wore to bo scon floating around in tho wator. It seems that iii TO is a gravoyard hotwoon Nor folk Junotion and Koystono, which towns are about a milo apare, and at whioh point tho storm was very severe. This gravoyard ia near tho bank of tho rivor whioh oauscd tho great dosttuo tion. When tbo flood carno tho gravos gavo up thoir doad and addod greatly to tho bodies soon. Mr. J. B. Fran ooo, a Boanoko man who id in Koystono installing a wator plant, and who was first roportod doad, has vr litton, his vif o telling bor bo ls. safe and sound. Ho has tho following to say about tho disaster: "A big flood visited the town last Friday night Eve y body had to go up on tho moun tains. Mon, women, andobildron wore drowned in tho stroots and housos wont floating down with people in thom, All our orowd aro safo. Wo aro ontiroly out off from tho outside world and provisions aro getting very short. Thoro is now no water in tho town." Aoothor lotti r Wednesday from Keystone sayB hotwoon 10 and l?pooploworo drowned and 40 houses washed away at that plaoo. Taz?woll, Va., also suffered from tho oloud -burst. Tho house of Paris Van Dy ko, four miles wost of Tazowoll, in a gorge of tho mountains, was washed away. Van Dyke hoard tho roar of wator and started homo from tito fiold. Whon a short distanoo from tho hcuso ho saw tho wator lushing down tho mountains and loaring up and twisting off giant troes as if shrubs, the wator loaping 40 foot high and travoHing with frightful tipood. Van Dyko rushod for tho house toward his family, but tho wator ovortook bim aud ?wept tho houso and all iti inmates away. Two ohildron, 5 and 7 years old, woro in stantly killed, their brains being dashed out against the rooks and timbers. Tho bodios wero washed to low lands. A littlo girl, ll years old, holding a young sistor in bor arms, was oarrlod 200 yards. Tho sisters tossed on tho waters and when rosouod woro unoonsoious. Anotbor member of tho family diod Wodnesday afternoon and Mrs. Yan Dyko io still unoonsoious and oannot livo. At Oodar Bluff, 16 milos wont of Tazo woll, 17 dwellings were swopt away, but no livor aro loot. At Pounding Mil), four livos were lost. Koobe, a small town seven milos wost, was al most oomplotoly dootroyod. lt ?von s, two milos west, was badly damaged, and many business housos wero de stroyed. Tho damage to oounty roads will not bo less than 150,000. inn it'orveiit ii opr. Mrs. Sleepylzo-Henry, the alarm clock Just went ?ff. Mr. ?loopyizo-Thank goodness; 1 hope th' thlng-'ll nover como back. Columbus (O.) fit ato Journal. A bl ant Al Fallnro. Hewitt-Are you a good judge of women's ag?ft? Jewctt-NV I can't guess n worn? an'? age any nearer tuan she can her self.-Town Topics. Itmnnn ?.tmltnitonii, Pirnt Trarnp-vlt'fl hard foi a man to live up to his ideals. Second Tramp--.Dat'a nil right! A feller , can't git out of sawln? ?orne wood.-Paok. No ?linne* for Dl-jpnio. "You know Will was Just crazy to marry mol" ?aid tb? young bride. "YOB; tluttte what everybody tbtak/B," repUo-i her Jenloua rival. Yon Kera Statesman. A Sad Acoidont. Hon Wm. IS. Olarko, bis two daugh ter^. Mary B . agod 12, and Fa-an oin J),, ?god 8, and Goorgo B. Bryan, tho 10 year old son of Groot) Bryan, were drowned at Nowboro, N. O., Friday, Tho party was out rowing opposito tho wator works, whon tho boa? was swamped by waves. Mr. Clark's littlo son, Wm. E., Jr., was tho only ono of party saved, ho clinging to tho boat un? till rosouod, Tho oodios of tho two ?oung w?mon havo boon roooyorod. $lr. Ibrko was a lt?pub)lQ4i? and had at difforont times boon State sonator, ro prosentativo, doputy oolleotov o? ous ?oms and postmaster of NjwboT, ION/S ?4 4 *v\ bottle-hence you Grove's. Imitators :>u would not buy Grove's contains ? nd is in a Tasteless Quinine drives thc t will tell .you that so-called Tasteless :r chill tonics shows 'ery respect.. You e's-its superiority :d. Grove's is thc malarial sections of 50c. f Ho Died for Her. Samuel Logan, Bon of Jadgo S. 'J?, Logan, wes drowned in tho Tonnoeaoo liver at Knoxvillo. Tono,, Thursday evening after rosoulng Miss Guiou of Now Orleans from tho Bame. fate. A crowd of young sooicty people had goao on tho river for a boating. In attompting to ride tho wav? behind a storn whoel of A stoamboat tho boat dippod and Miss Guion, thinking the? boat was overturned, loapod into tho ri vor. Logan followed and kept her ' from sinking. After a bard Btrugglo in tho tu'hulont waves ho got Miss Guion io tho boat. A? was being pulled into tho boat and boforo holp oould bo oxlondod, young Logan tank from exhaustion and drowned. To prevent tho doony of posts, tho end of tho post to bo put in tho ground should bo obnrrod on A ino. A ?mat 'of tar is tbon applied with a brush. Tho tar soaks into tho pores of tho Wood and af tor h AUK in tho ground awhilo turns into a kind of rosin, koeping out tho water. Corn Mills, Cane Mills, moo TTIIIIAV?: Pea Hullers, Engines, Swing Saw? and all other kinds of wood working maolilnery. My . Sar geant Log Beam Sav/ mill ie the heaviest, strongest, and' most efficient mill for tho money on the market, quick, aoourate. State Agent for H. B. Smith Machine Company, wood working maohlnery* For high grade engines, plain slide valve-Antomatio, and I Corliss, write me: Atlas, Watertown, and Strainers and Wells. V. 0. BADHAM, 1826 Main St., Columbia* S. 0. ?l iii. wmm m Plenty of Places Are Open to graduates of tho Columbia. Business , Collego,and evgry graduate is thorough* ' >? ly qualified to fill a responsibleposition : in tais busino'js.world. We fit young mon and women for business : oarooi n, and assist thom to s co uro good positions. ' For special auumor ra?o:), andoftlalogij 09. giving full information, sond at ??oef\o " Columbia Business Colloq 0, COLUMBIA, 6. O. i W. H. NEWBERRY, President. LUMBER PPMPANV AUGUSTA, OA. OFFICK ANO WOKKS, NORTJt AUGUSTA, S. 0. DOOKS, SASH, BLINDS AND DUIDDEWS HAUDWAKE. FL001UNG, SIDING, CEILING ANO IN SIDE FINISHING: LUMBER- IN -GEORGIA PINE, All Correspondouoo glvon prompt atten tion. July 2-ly I Address, Bo? 105, H HS Spartanhu?g, 8. Q<