Plymouth Tribune, Volume 7, Number 49, Plymouth, Marshall County, 10 September 1908 — Page 7

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Thousands of American "women in our homes are daily sacrificing their lives to duty. In ordtr to keep the home neat and pretty, the children well dressed and tidy, -women overdo. A female weakness or displacement is often bror.ght on and they suffer in silence, drifting along from had to -worse, knowing well that they ought to have heln to overcome the iains and aches which daily make life a (mrden. It is to these faithful women that LYDIA E, PINKHAKVS VEGETABLE COMPOUND comes as a hoon and a blessing, as it did to 3Irs. F. Ellsworth, Mayville, X. Y and to 3Irs. W. 1. Boyd, of Beaver Falls, I'a.,who say: I was not able to do my own work, owing" to the female trouble from which I suffered. Lydia E. IMnkhara's Vegetable Compound helped me wonderfully, and I am so well that I can do as big'a day's work as I ever did. I wish every sick woman would try it. FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN. For thirty years Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, has been the standard remedy for female ills, and has positively cured thousands of women who have been troubled with displacements, inflammation, ulceration, fibroid tumors, -irregularities, periodic pains, backache, that bearing-down feeling, flatulency, indigestion,dizziness,or nervous prostration. Why don't you try it ? Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick women to write her for advice. She lias raided thousands to health. Address, Lynn, Mass, VT. Im Doajlaa mikfl and sella moro nra'l S3.O0 end SkJ-SO bor than any ot hrr msnnfattarfr Jn the world.becauta they hold their ahap, fit better, and wear longer than any other make. Sfcc if All Price, fo Eery Member of the Family, Men, Boys, Hamm, Mitseti Children VlJtnilu $4 00 ad .CO OUt Zdf thm em&aak Tm t amy vrlea. W. L. Doici M.M ea4 t C itca an ta Wrt ta th mil Ful JTyrlmta Urnt erTak Hm Kkx(tute. W. L. LtouylM am and atr t stamped on bottom, gold errywbre. hhoee mailrd from taclory to any pari i Om wo'ld. Catalcwne fre. W. L. DOC C LAS. 157 Saara Si.. Brocktoa. Mast. TOILET ANTISEPTIC Keeps the breath, teeth, mouth and body antiseptically clean and free from unhealthy germ-life and disagreeable odors, which water, soap and tooth preparations alone cannot do. A .germicidal, disin - a lecting oeouor- r - ixiog iuiici requisite lijjrv- iViVir. . ' - :. w-fK. a .... . j of exceptional excellence end economy. Invaluable for inflamed eyes, throat and nasal and uterine catarrh. At drag and toilet stores, 50 cents, or by mail postpaid. Urge Trial Sample wt-rx "mcaltm no acauTf book iint rate THE PAXTON TOILET CO., Boston, Mas?. 1 Let us do your Printing using for your office stationery. You can' get the paper and envelopes to match. It lm thm rmml thing. Takm nm othmr. A 8Mn cf Beauty Is a Joy Forever. lR. T. Ftflix Gouraud's Oriental Cream or Magical Baautlflar. Remnret Tan. Pimples, Freckles, ltb 1'atciiee, KaaJi, and tk a Liisraxea, ani rrery biemla oa bauty. anl !afiea dKiection. It baa tood tt) tt cf eo year, and I ao bannlp w taslelt tobePur:t la i rprrly nia.e. Accept noconnu a frit (J a!m:4.ame. Dr. L. A. ha vre eaid to a laily of tbi buuttoq (a patient ! "A jt i ladica wlU w-e tf.rm. I rceummerid C1,.A' r-rn rr tha 1t bkrTTll ft all tie eVtii t.rfjarvk)n!." t' r scie hy all drmtc-'t FancyOowds r alrre in the United Stales, CaoaOa aud Europe. FEE1T.K3PBU Prcp 37 Great Jssa Zitfa Tcii mr nur hnest lands in the FOR SALE nsv-.4o.oflo acr-s of chiiic 1 nrt in the cehbratcd CLOVER BELT OF WISCONSIN, a!) within a lew nirs of ihn- ra!Iroid.s: kA nadü a'd s.:hiK's; terms and price o;i tracts of 4C acres and tip n-aonal!-. Write for information SZT7LERS ESPECIALLY DESIRF.DJohn S. tir.ea Lumber Co., Owen, Vi3 I .r.w Rates 1 fornl Oregon, Wasninglon, Idaho. Utah. Cc'orado. Montana. Wyoming and other Wes'er 1 Sutes. on SHIPMENTS CF HOUSEHOLU GOODS AND F.MIGRANT MOVABLES. AdJ,e THE AMERICA! f Of CO.. 185 Maiise SU Caicaae. IIU r 353 E'üca'l Sjmre. Baiul. N. J0S.0U0HAG&G0. FJMF WISCONSIN FARM 1 111-' ""AND tjo to $25 TIMBER LANDS an acre 92 U SA'-LE STREET, CH CACO

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Are the Hoe and your eggs for you? mites harvesting One of the great secrets of hog raising is to give the pigs a good start. It Is better to pay $"0 fr lWO firstclass sows than ?100 for six scrubs. Reduce the corn ration for the horses about one-third or a tripe more during the winter months. A little fetrillzer "well placed will bring better returns than an unllmit'd j quantity carelessly applied. Buying oo.vs and selling them si fast ns tliey stop giving milk never j built up n herd of high-producing unity cows. When a farmer sells all the grain and J hay from his farm instead of fi-eding it, he is cutting the underpinning from under hlmsei. Weil-grown fruit or vegetables, wellmarketed, bring a profit which Unit rare less producer never ays to do things right. Onco a week, from January to January, saturate tho rousts and liest boxes, niil once a month spray tho entire In-1 tenor or tno Dulidlng witn kerosene The draft horse Is the one for the farmer to raise, because It can be done In harmony' with the other Interests ff the farm "and with the greatest Jrofit. Tuberculosis In cattle and scab in sheep Is spread from the stock yards of the large cities by the feeders who purchase animals from the pens without proper Investigation. iCye sowed in a cornfield will afford good winter pasture for the Iambs during the fall and early winter months and again when other grasses are backward about starting in the spring. Every sheep grower should have a hospital flock upon which he will bestow more time and to which he will add from time to time all of those that are drooping or are pushed aside from their feed by the more hardy ones. The calf from the moment of Its birth should be kept in a thrifty, growing condition. Letting nn animal dovrn Is a great aud permanent loss. It Is something lost forever, that no amount of after care or fettling can regain. Some Idea of the scarcity of timber may be had from the fact that when an Illinois farmer cut nineteen-inch boards out of cottonwood trees on b's farm the fact was heralded throughout the state as something iuite remarkable. If you intend to "hog off' the corn this fall you will have an ideal feed if you have planted cow peas with the corn. It Is pretty late to sow them In H e corn after it Is laid by, but la the south they will make growth enough to help out to a great extent. "Too much hay will make a horae's coat rough and staring aud spoil hi appetite," writes a very good fritrnd and a good farmer as well, but we differ with him. The trouble Is evidently In something else, as we do not believe a horse will eat more clean hay than is good for him. There is no middle course or standstill period to calf raising. Kach day the calf Is not gaining It is losing. At the end of two years' proper care and feeding we will be rewarded with en animal with a healthy appearance, with a well-developed frame and an abundance of flesh and fat. Prevent the soil washing ou your farm. Many fine fields In some of the westerx states have been ruined byi toil washing Some are washed o oadly that they can - no longer be aorked with modern farm machinery. Soils that-have a good supply of hu.uus are not subject to washing, as they have a greater water-holding capacity. It pays to use a good sire. If a man Is in the dairy business, a sire from a milking strain should increase the productof his progeny by 1,000 pounds a year, yet a good many dairymen give little thought to the sire. If he raises cattle for beef, a good beef sire will Increase the price for his progeny. And it costs less in the long run to feed a thoroughbred than a scrub. An enterprising merchant In a western town has fitted up a rest room for the wives of fanners who drive 1o town and who sometimes have tedious waits for the husband to finish hia business and his street-corner gossip. Furnished as it is with rockers and tables on which are magazines, fashion books, etc., it Is growing in popularity, and is good advertising for the merchant. Here Is a hiut for merchants in other towns. In 1,000 pounds of cotton-seed cake there are b'J pounds of dry matter, which contains ounds of nitrogen. l." iounds of potash ami ol pounds of phosphoric neid. Corn (l.OoO pounds) contains 8S0 pounds of dry matter, lueluding IG pounds of nitrogen, 3VL pounds of potash and G pounds of phosphoric acid. A ton of manure from cuws fed on linseed or cotton-se'l meal Is not only more valuable than a ton produced from corn, but there is also a saving of labor in hauling and spreading. Illnl Aliont I'rullt. . The eulti v::t !r;ti hi tin? orh.iri showM lie disconl iii'.K'd about the first of t.V JiK;nth. At Vi? last cultivation scV a cover crop of vetch or something s,;v ihir. This will take water from it'soil, thus helping the trees to riirr r.: the wood and will also serve to c.-fc-'i snow for protecting the ground o'iu ii ;? the winter. Iiant. iot-grown strawberries f.r fruit next summer. I'rum; tin; rs;IriTiies; take out all the old wood, Living all the new growth, whi-h v?as made this year. The old canes shczM be burned. You can Increase the number of currant bushes by making cuttings of thv ripened wood during the latter part of the month. Tie them up In bunches

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ami pack them away In damp sand an1 store in a cool cellar. Next spring tin? cuttings will have c il!oised, when th'v can be planted out in the rows. Have the cuttings six Inches apart in the row and the rows far enough apart bo that they can lo cultivated. I inlluoit Ion in Cnlve. This may be due to costheness, a too liberal supply of milk, too rich milk, the? furnishing of the milk of a cow long after calving to a very young calf, allowing the calf to sui k tho first milk of a cow that has been hunletl, driven ty road, shipped by rail or otherwise violently excited, allowing tLe calf too long times between meals; so that, impelled by hunger, it q::iekly overloads and clogs the stonnoh; feeding from a pall of milk that hts been held over in unwashed (unsealded) buckets, so that if is fermented and spoiled feeding the milk of cows that have been kept o.i uwholesome fuyd; keeping calves In cold, damp, dark, filthy or bad-smelling pens. 0 Hint on Care ot Home. A stallion ought to be driven eight ol ten miles at least and worked every day for three or four hours duriivg the breeding serson. Too many good horse? are ruined by being pampered. Ringbone can be prevented by keep Ing the horse's feet properly trimmed not overworking colts w hile young, careful driving on hard and uneven roads and avoiding all strains on the tendons. The man who feeds his horse corr one day, oats the next and something I eli?e the next will produce a beautiful cne of indigestion in about a month. Heavy draft mares will grow a grade draft colt every year that will sell readily at from $75 to S-vO when S years old. These same mares when bred to a light horse will breed colts that will bring from $75 to $ 100. . Sow rirnty of Alfalfa Ser-d. In some farm papers exceptions have been taken in regard to heavy seeding of alfalfa. Ixt mo say that this sea!n I was oi.ly able to sow at the rate of thirty pounds of seed to the acre, and the stand does not begin to be as good, and there are more weeds to contend with. I believe that forty or fifty pounds is better than thirty, for the reason that there will be fewer woods, a finer stalk, and Juno grass will be held in check. From one piece of four acres I have drawn into my barns in three cuttings twenty-eight large loads of fine greeu hay. In this piece the June grass came in strong, but In the spring I shall disk and sow in wherever needed a thick settling, and hope to make the field hold out Rt least two years more before plowing under. It has been In alfalfa four years and yielded a large amount of niiv alfalfa hay. I). C. Dean, Michigan. I'lnntliifB Sornhum. The followiug information Is taken from an Oklahoma Station Press Bulletin: Tlie sorghum plait Is well adapted to nur warm elimafe, and It is known to exhibit a certain degree of drought resistance, hence the crop can be grown successfully even In the semi-arid jwrtlons of the state. The seed should be sown upon a well prepared seed bod, preferably In rows twenty-four or thirty-six Inches apart. This method of planting gives th grower an opportunity to cultivate the tTop, especially during the three or four weeks subsequent to seeding. Tin casual obsener may contend that as good or better results can be secured where broadcast seeding Is practiced; however, experience at this station appears to warrant us in making tho statement that forage crops should b planted In s-jch a manner as to permit cultivation. This fact holds good even in the move favorable seasons, mid muck bette results can bo obtained in the drier years by giving thorough tillage. It Is a well-known fact that moisture oi-aies quite readily from the surfaco of an uncultivated field, but If the soil Is stirred to a depth of two or three inchrs, a surface which Is formed and tbe upward movement of soil moisture 1 cho ked. Tillage aids, not only In the conservation of soil moisture, but this rjrocrss is also a potent factor in the eradication o! weeds. Fields that ire given careful cultivation, while the crop Is tili small, are coiiiparatlve'y tre frota weeds at the close of the season. The dense shade produced by a grx;d crip of sorghum Is instrumental as well as In shutting out the suu's raye, ajid Incidentally aids In holding objectionable plants in check. The Ilrau Crop. The raising of white beans Is a great Industry in many sections, and it Is profitable Ixvause the output Is a much a staple as wheat or corn. Like these crops, It is a foodstuff which has keeping quality. The bean growing industry has gravi tatot to the peMjrer lands, so that but IittLi of It is found In the corn belt. And yet there are places in the corn belt, and many of them, wheie beans inltht be grown to advantage. Sandy knolls or wornout fields which will oniy make twenty bushels of corn per a eve will return a greater cash product if planted to lieans. I Jean culture was once' onsiderod very hilarious, but it Is not necessarily sc. now. Uy the use of modern machinery It-is made easy. They may lu planted with a two-horse corn planter, cultivated with riding plows and veeders, pulled when ripe, thrashed bnd even sorted by machinery. To make the most of the space Iii' hills may bo only six Inches apart, but the rows should be wide cuouglrto j Hermit horse culture. When planted in this way and carefully cuitivafei. if tli. ground is free from weeds, tit" crop may be earried thr(;iit,h by horsejxiwer. P.ut if tlw soil is fou!, im1 hand hoeing will In- need-!. Th er'ip is loaded fnnii the p'.ii'or inte btyraeks and hauled to the bini. -: upon the barn J!o.r or loi'l. it will h ready for thrashing aller two wee!;s of dry weather. liefere marketing sort, ing is absolutely necessary . TJ old p?:m was to get the f.miily totdie' In t!i evening about f!u kltehcn table and each by handful pi ked out the had speeiineiis. l'.jit the cnodern bean softer Is a s;n;ll niachii.e nd (heap, whieh you may take Into any room. The motion is controlled by a treadle, and a slowly moving canvas carrier brings the bcas to your hand as fast as you can look them over, one spry man doing the work of five by the old system.

Civil War Stories Battle of Cedar Creek. During the civil war the Shenandoah valley was the scene of many a bloody battle. Men of the North and men of tho South chased each other up and flown the dusty pike that extends from Harper's Ferry to Staunton. Here Federal generals won fame. Here Stonewall Jackson marched aud fought and Sheridan sent Early whirling out of it. Then it was the home of the guerrilla, whose chief occupation was stealing through the mountain passes by night and by day, capturing our pickets or shotting down the guard placed at the houses of farmers to insure them protection. The Fifth Michigan Cavalry boys will remember the fate of their comrades at Berryville. The valley has been largelv settled since the war by Northern people, and time has obliterated many traces of the conflict. But fortifications at and near Ccelar Creek still remain partially intact, grim reminders of the struggle that nearly resulted in driving the Union army into the Potomac at Harper's Ferry. The impending disaster, however, was averted by the timely arrival of Sheridan after the Federals bad been driven eight or nine miles and what seemed sure defeat was turned Into a brilliant victory. On the morning of Oct. 19, 1864, just before daylight, Early began his celebrated movement which resulted in a complete surprise to the Union army and afterward a crushing defeat for himself. A dense fog had settled down and this favored his designs. Three divisions had been massed at Fisher's Hill, and these were disencumbered of every accoutrement except their arms and ammunition. They were not even permitted to retain their canteens, lest their clanking might advise the Federals of their apprcaeh. Just as the break of day approached the rattle of musketry on the extreme rght gave notice of what proved to be a feint attack. Then' along the whole Confederate line signal shots were fired from left to right. Immediately following three divisions under Pegram, Ramseur and Gordon came down the turnpike from Strasburg in solid columns, without skirmishers, and assaulted Crook's position in front and rear. The surprise was complete. The Confederates, advancing by columns of regiments and firing rapid and terrific volleys of musketry, swept over the works almost without opposition. Crook's whole line gradually gave wayv and of seven guns in the breastworks six were captured. The enemy continued to press on, keeping up a deadly fire of musketry, which prevented Crook's men from rallying in the thick fog which bewildered both men and officers. The smoke of battle, the thick fog, ihe yells of the Confederates and the deadly fire from an unseen foe who poured into the camps, capturing camp equipage and halfawake soldiers, helped in promoting the general confusion. The enemy then pushed up and beyond our left and entered the camp of Col. Kitchin's division, routing it also and driving those and Crook's troops toward the pike. Kershaw's division in the meanwhile had crossed the north fork of the Shenandoah before dawn, and was closing in on the Eighth Corps, capturing prinsoners in large numbers aud seizing the batteries. At the same time Early. with one division, had moved up the pike toward our center and opened a hot fire with artillery on the lines of the Nineteenth Corps. The cannonading was followed up by the advance of the infantry across the creek. The third brigade of Grover's division was ordered to swing out of position and neet the flank fire of the Confederates. This was done, but scarcely had the men left the breastworks when the enmy was upon them, forcing Grover's whole division back, with the loss of eleven guns. By this time it was broad daylight, and the enemy had rolled up our left, captured eighteen guns, which were turned on our retreating columns, and was driving in our center. Nearly all of Early's force was over the creek and closing in on Emory's left, who was flanked and driven away to the rear. Then a general retreat was ordered, covered by the Sixth Corps and the cavalry, which had been sent for from the right, together repelling a tremendous charge of the Confederates and holding them in check. They were steadily gaining ground on the pike toward Middletown. In the retreat and in the effort to cover our wagon trains the troops suffered severely from the enemy who pursued closely and with great vigor. The Sixth Corps continued to steadily cover our retreat, and by resisting the enemy's advance gave opportunity for the formation of a new line. Early had increased both his musketry and artillery fire to its utmost capacity, and tbe roar of the big guns, the sharp rattle of the small arms, the shouts of the advancing Confederates as they furiously pushed us back, and tbe dreadful carnage everywhere appalled the stoutest heart. The scene was awful. Men were falling dead and wounded on every side, but on came the Confederates again in a furious charge, threatening our left flank and seemingly determined to drive us away from the pike, seize our trains and get between us and Winchester. The enemy pressed us so much more heavily on the left than on the right that the cavalry under Custer and Merritt was sent for from the extreme right. When this order came the Michigan cavalry brigade was massed in a piece of woods with an open field beyond. Just then a shell came sceaming over them and exploded dozen yards or so in front. Another and another followed, and then they came by half dozens, hurtling and crashing through the woods. The order was given to change position, and they gained the rear of a small hill, where they were somewhat protected from the deadly missiles that were showered around them. They remained there but a short time, however, when an order came to move, and they rapidly went to the left to support the infantry. The change of position was executed with cool precision, although as they broke cover the very air seemed filled with hissing lead, and the gravel flew in showers where the balls strick and hounded over tbe ground. The men moved obliquely from their position, and as they rossed the pe;i tioM the tin? of the enemy !M-reascd in Intensity. They swerved to the left a littl ami hending over th-ir saddle bows they rushed forward with bloody spur and loose rein. Another crash of musketry from the enemy came, but the bullets passed to high, and in another moment they were under cover, and In comparative safety. Here the men were

dismounted and prepared to go In as In fantry, armel with the Spencer carbiuf. As thv went forward on fxt the enemy opened fire with a battery planted near the spot they had hut a few moments before vacated. Our artillery respomlitl, ami for a quarter of an hour the ground shook with the rapid discharges. Then our brave fellows had to return, forced back by superior numbers, and with their ranks thinner by many men than when they went forward. Fresh Confederate troops were now pushe! forward, and after another short ami bloody struggle we were forced to give way, yielding the ground prudgingly, and finally falling back to a new position in the woods near Mlddletown.

This dismal morning wore excitingly on, and at 0 o'clock we were again making desperate efforts to check the enemy's advance. Tho brunt of a fresh and fierce onset was borne by the Eighth corps on the left, and the Sixth in the center, with Custer, and Merritt in the thick of the battle, cheering on the men, fighting like tigers and accomplishing wonders. Artillery and musketry were used oil Nub sides, but the big guns of the enemy were brought to bear with greater effect, their batteries being re-enforced by those captured from us earlier in thr? day. Early's flanking column prcssel us severely, and once more we were forced to retreat. The Sixth corps in the center Iiil the ground stubbornly, but unassisted. It could not resist the determined advance of the enemy. The whole line gave way and the Confederates gained possession of Mhhlietown. Again and again they charged our retreating columns. The federal forces seemeil as playthings in their hands. Heroic attempts were made to rally our men and make a stand to check tho furious advance, but the tide of battle wrs against us; the ground is grudgingly yielded foot by find, aud away we go to Newtown, on the pike and about fiv? miles north of Mhldlctown. The enemy took possession of the heights north of Mlddletown, whhh Ave had just vacated, planted his artillery, which was served with great accuracy, and sent a storm of sht ami shell into our retreating columns. We had then been driven ultout eight miles since sunrise. It was an anxious ami terrible influent. The gravest fear pervaded every breast. Where would It all end? Was It possible that we were to be driven back to Winchester, and so down to Harper's Ferry and out of the valley? We had been fighting against fate and a lesiorate enemy since early sunrise, and disaster had overtaken us at every point. The bravery aud dauntless courage of officers and men count eel for naught liefere the furious onsets of the victorious Confederates. Our men were hungry and weary, and almost disheartened at the continued rovorss. Wounded and dead were to be seen everywhere, and the stragglers were Uvouiing more numerous. Something must Ik done to check the enemy's advance or our worst fears will be realized ur army will be crlpphtl and scattered through the valley and our previous successes count as gol work thrown away. Hut where is Sheridan in tills time of peril? lie had arrived at Winchester from Washington the day previous (litl) and slept there that night. Ou the morning f the I'.Uh, without thought or kuoweld;e of the danger menacing his army tit the fuont, be started with his escort for Cedar Creek at a leisurely pact. Hut he had not proceeded far before he heard the distant roar f heavy artillery In the direction of Middletown, and then he urged his horse into a faster gait. lie began to feel very uneasy as the sound Of the guns came nearer. Had Early ventured to attack the federal ixisition at Cedar Creek? Gradually as he rode along the soumls of battle roll like thumler toward him, and then Ue began to realize that heavy fighting was raging to the front and that the Union army had met defeat and was rapidly iK'Ing pushed northward. Then he drove the spurs deep Into his horse's shle ami dashed forward at a mad gal lop, uuwililng to believe that disaster had overtaken the gallant army he had twice led to victory. Yet the bands of stragglers and camp followers he met on tbe road told him but too truly that his brave men had leen beaten and were In full flight. Galloping along far in advance of his escort he dashed up to the retrcatlug army, hrse reeking with foam, and by his colce ami presence infused new courage into the dishcirteend men. .VII retreat was ordered stoppetl at once, ami in a short time he had got his men established In line of battle. The army f western Virginia, which had been so completely broken up and scattered, was reformed in a measure and put into position. In the meantime the Confederates had moved up their guns in range of the new iosition, and having gt the troops again In hand, charged the federals again, but were driven hack by the Nineteenth corps. Gen. Hhlwell was killed in this attack. Sheridan, having made all preparations for assuming the offensive, ordered an attack with a view of regaining his old position at Cedar Creek. Getty's second division was lu advance, the Sixjth corps in the center, the other divisions supporting. As (Jetty dashed forward in the charge he was met with a tremendous fire of musketry and artillery. It seemtl impossible for the troops to withstand it. The lines fell back once, broken, but were again reformed and the men puslntl on. Despite the bloody and determined resistance Newtown was carried and the discomfited enemy driven out. The crisis of the day had arrivel, ami from that moment victory hovered over tho federal army. On through Middletown and beyond the e'onf'dTates hurriel and the Union soldiers pursued. Charging right and b ft Custer ami Merritt douolcd up the flanks of the fm taking many prisoners, slashing, killing and driving as they went. The retreat f thii-neniy was continued back to Fisher's I Iii). At Cedar Creek Early attempted to hold the Union troops in check and plantetl his batteries on the opposite side to hold the 'bridge and forks; but our troops pushed on. swept away all obstruct ions, and drove him from the crcc-k through Strasburg to Filler's Hill. Tho cavalry dashed through Strasburg to Fisher's Hill and the victorious march terndnatel. The main army bivouacked that nlj;ht In the old camp along Cedar Creek. Detroit Free Press. Larch and juniper wood are unin Jurel after seven years of exposure but birch ami aspen commence to decay at three years.

I Pattern Department jr 'r

Pointed Yoke Blouse. The blouse that is slightly open at the throat Is always an ideally comfortable one for warm weather, and it is so pretty and charming whenever becoming that it is quite easy to understand its extended popularity. This me is absolutely simple, yet chic and graceful, while it can be made either with the V-shaped neck or a high one, ris may be found most Itecoming. It this instance the material is one of the pretty eottou veilings with trimming of filet banding, and the Avaist is un lined, but it can lie utilized for silk and chiffon, for almost every seasonable material and can be lined whenever found desirable The above pattern will lie mailed to your address on receipt of 10 cents. Send alhonlers to the Pattern Department of this paper. He sure to give both the number ami size of pattern wanted, and write very plainly. For convenience, wite your order on-the following coui ion : Order Coupon. No. 59: 2. SIZE NAME . ADDRESS Haatilrtii Iilrtte Urea. The dn-ss that is made in Kussiat style, or with blouse and skirt In one is always a satisfa-try ne for th younger girls, and t Iii season it has taken on a iinmbr of new and attract ive forms. In the illustration Is showi one of the best and most desirable. I; PATTEBX NO. 0022. is buttoned down the front, so that I: can iV opened out when laundering bo conies netssary, and It Is finished Witt the big sailor collar that always Is be coming, and which in this Instance h o1lly shaped. The alxne pattern will be mailed tc your address on receipt of lo cents. Send all orders to the Pattern Department of this paper. He sure to givf both the number and size of pattern wanted, and write very plainly. For convenience, write your order on the following coupon : Order Coupon. No. W2Z SIZE NAME ADDRESS FACTS WORTH KNOWING. Seventy thousand Americans cmlrated to Canada ln 1900. A man's hair turns gray about five rears earlier than a woman's. Living expenses in New Yprk have infieaseil 11 per cent ln one year. irirs'shoes are sometimes made In ustralia of cowhide insteail of iron. Every man believes he is an ideal nan. That's the reason he "talks' sc mich about other men. A man never gets tired running for oflleo. Every one makes mistakes, but the iveather bureau enjoys a monopoly on bavfiig all mistakes published. j A girl might as well be retired in a j Miivent as to have a younger sister i rrow up who is better looking. We are all prone to wrap a sheet iround a pin scratch to give it the ap- , .learance f a serious wound. More than -10 per cent of the deaths in Moscow are of infants under h vear I -.1.1 t.. T l.. ,...4.. v s.. Ol ' v'iu. in j-ainmou luv iien'iiuijiu is -l.-.. Eerlin now has over ll.COO cabs with taximeters dials indicating the distance traveled, and cost to the passengtr. Costing JCsOeKVO, the new Thames tunnel for horse-drawn traflio and peil'stria:is between Stepney and Ilotherbithe will in all probability be ready for use shortly. The building of the Chicago drainage canal has been the means of so improving the sanitary condition in that city that the death rate from typhoid and similar diseases hat been reduced G7.5 per cent.

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Eli ft rf?Ck r ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT tx-f .t I" Acge(abkPrcparalbn&rAsstailaiing toMandRcijiJatinlitc Stomachs aiidßowclsof a Cr i. SI Mi Wl aaa i a Promotes DigestionlTicfifiil ness and Restcntains ncitter Opiuni-Morphinc norMiacraL Not Narcotic. aaawaaaaajastMBBBaBBM Rupia Seed.JLcSeamt JmcMeSdtsWim Serif' Ctmfird Suqtr KUiajrttn tMmr. &T Of feto Aperfeet Remedy for Consflpa1 1 Oil , OOUT DIU UkSJl. u iai i MUJ WorujCoToTilsiouSjev-cnsir rtcss andLOSSOrSEEEP. racSinute Signature of Fä?r NEW YORK. KISS Exact Copy of Wrapp THREE CUBES OF ECZEMA. Woman Tri la of Her Drothrr'a Terrible Suffering- Two Dable Alme Cared Cull cor Invaluable. "My brother bad eczema three different summers. Each summer it came out between his shoulders and down his back, and be said his suffering was terrible. When It came on the third summer, he bought a box of Cutlcura Oirment and gave It a faithful trial. Soon be began to feel betver and he cured himself entirely of eczema with Cuticura.A lady ln Indiana heard of how my daughter, Mrs. Miller, had cured her little son of terrible eczema by the Cutlcura Remedies. This lady's little one had the eczema so badly that they thought they would lose It She used Cutlcura Remedies and they cured her child entirely, and the disease never came back. Mrs. Sarah E. Lusk, Coldwater, Mich, Aug. 15 and Sept. 2. 1907." lie Wanted to Ilatae Some. What will the Congressman with a rural constituency do now? is the question that Mr. Iiurbank and his school of disturlers of nature will shortly be called upon, to s Ire. At present, ao cording to a correspondent of the Bos ton Herald, the matter is a perplexing pne. Two Representatives one from Iowa, the other from Massachusetts met in the corridor, and the following conversation txk phi et. "I received this morning one of the funniest letters that ever appeared In my mail since I left tho beuch," said the Iowan. Tell me alout it," said the man from the Ray State. "Well," continued the other, "a con stltuent wrote me that he understood the Department of Agriculture had developed .a seedless tomato, which, to his mind, ought to be a mighty gorxl thing. He wanted to raise some of them right away." "WellV" "Well," rejoined the Iowan, "he said he wishetl I would send him some of the scents by return mall." luaker Meditation. Faint heart ner won fair lady, and it's much the same with a faint bank account. When a woman's dlamomls arc paste It isn't alwrys an indication tihat she has the dough. No, Maude, dear, a girl shouldn't be considered a cannibal just because she eats lady ringers. Sins of omission are more popular than sins of commission, because they involve less effort. 'Truth crushed to earth will rise apain" Is one of those sayings that are to good to be true. Sillicus Do j-ou lelieve that money Is the root of all eril? Cyulcus Not unless you marry for it. When a woman believes everything her husband tells her It's a pretty gool sign that they haven't been married very long. "Will you take it with your or have It scented?" remarked the facetious drug clerk as the customer asked for a cake of soap. Every clergyman is anxious to bring his people together, when he might be more successful If he could only keep them apart. Philadelphia Record. -Vlcw the tVInd niorra II Iaht. Stranger How far is it to the stockyards? Native Right here. Can't you tell bj jour nose? Stranger No; been s;n-Ilin(t Just like this ever since I came in sight of the. town. Chicago Tribune. The Canadian shipbuilding on the great lakes is growing. During the lake season of 1007 there were'nVarly ISO liritish built vessels of one class and another in Ihe transport business between Canadian lake porta. Von Can Get Allen'a Fool-Haae FltCR Write to-dnr to Allen S. linstvl. Le ot, X. Y., for a FKKK saniple of Allen's FootKase. a powder to Rhake into your shoes. It cures tired, sweating, hot. swollen, achSnjf feet. It niaLcs new or tllit shoes eay. A certain cure for Corns and itunions. All Driislats and Shoe Stores sell It. 23c. The quartz lamp is the laU.t electric li'sliiins apparatus. It is a mercury-vapor lamp with a cpiartz tube in a gl.iss globe, and resembles an arc lamp in general ftppcarnnee. It is to bo used as a sin;;! lamp at 2-0 volts, and has a rating of '..n.u) andh's, o;inming 0.'2 watt jief ciUiillo power, its life is given at 1 MIT '..iit-c mi l on .,:,.,.. I ... .... .'ni., til. i ii u tun i. utiiv l il ( !:! II j for it is that it is uniu'ce.-s.u-y to replace I any electrodes. fled Crom Rnll Ifluo Should he in every bom-. Ask your trocer for it. 1 -oz. pa.'ka;e, 5 cents. liven C!inie. "Von spent a month at the seaside. DiJ it nay 7" "I can't say it paid, but I cam. out exactly even." "How 7" "Paid out ?'', but gained twelr pouuds. Same thin?, you know." Mrs. TVInslowa SooiMng srrnp ror Children teething: softens the Kama, reduces Inflammation, allays pain, cures wind colic. 21 rents a bsttu.

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mm For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Thirty Years J vü TMS ccNTAua cowpanT, arw ton errr. ITew Darb Shop "Wrinkle. There is at least one barber sho In New York where they brush your clothes with a vacuum cleaner. Here when the customer steps out of the barber's chair, and with his check in one hand and reaching in his pocket for the money with the other, advanced toward the cashier's desk, the brush boy a man it is here advances on him, not with the usual old-time rhlsk broom, but with this very latest newfangled dusting apparatus, a vacuum cleaner. This is in appearance not unlike a gomewhat wide, thin, flat paint or Tarnish brush with the usual handle, but from which the bristles had all b?cn pulled out. Where the bristles might have been is the opening Into which the dust is drawn, and trailing away from the other, what you might call the top of the handle, is a long, small flexible rubber tube leading to a fixed connection through which the dust is drawn away. The brusher uses this bristleless brush much as he might use a paint brush, only instead of laying on paint he draws out dust with it He runs It gently around the collar of your coat and across your shoulders and then down your back ami so on all around. There is enough novelty in the eieratin to make even men of mature years smile. Worth Ita Welht lu Gold. It's rirrTIT'S EYE SALVE, strengthens eyes of the old, tonic for eye strain, weak and watery eves. All druggists or Howard Dros., IJuffalo, N. Y. Thoughtful Urlde. . "The most considerate girl I ever knew got married yesterday," said tbe man. "She showed her thoughtful na in a most unusual way. Tbe day before the wedding she called the attention of the rest of the family to a row of oll shoes standing in a downstairs closet. "I want you to throw these after the carrlage, she said. They are all mates. I collected them to throw away. I learned some time ago that certain poor souls who have hard work to get cioths of any description kfep a lookout for big weddings. They ban? around the house at golng-away Unit and pick up the gootl-luck shes. May. Ik they find a fit and maybe they don't Anyway, I've done all I ctnild to ao conimolate them. Here are six pairs o decent shoes to be fired after roe. ii FonielxHly doesn't get fitted in that collection it isn't my fault'" A leading Swiss sdentift declared that tbe Itoentgen rays can be so applied that white horses become Hack. He is now experimenting on old gentlemen's beanis. v a v v- fry y IF YOUVE NEVER WORN 'S SLICKER youVeyet to learn W bodilv comfort it Gives in me witest waiter MADE FOP Hard ÄtRVJce AHO GUARANTEEDVrXTERPPOOF 322 ATAUC0Q9 S TOPIS ATAUX mi lami cwnawi c omri j. nmemn cm - - No. 371908 lira wrltlnir to Advertlaera slrau ay )ou nnve tbe Adr. In this paper

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