The Syracuse Journal, Volume 1, Number 12, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 16 July 1908 — Page 7

A MOTHER r 1 /Hb How many American women in lonely homes to-day long for this blessing to come into their lives, and to be able to utter these words, but because of some organic derangement this happiness is denied them. Every woman interested in this subject should know that preparation for healthy maternity is accomplished by the use of LYDIA E. PINKHAM’S VEGETABLE COMPOUND Mrs. Maggie Gilmer, of West Union, S. C.,writes to Mrs. Pinkham: “ I was greatly run-down in health from a weakness peculiar to my sex, when Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound was recommended to me. It not only restored me to perfect health, but to my delight I am a mother.” Mrs. Josephine Hall,of Bardstown,. Ky., writes: 41 was a very great Sufferer from female troubles, and my physician failed to help me. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound not only restored me to perfect health, but I am no w a proud mother.” 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, andhas positively cured thousands of women who have been troubled with displacements, inflammation, ulceration, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, that bear-ing-dowm 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 has guided thousands to health. Address, Lynn, Mass.

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I Civil War Stories j Sounding Their Only Retreat. Tie following article, showing the rapid decrease of the members of the Grand Army of the Republic, we take froir the Minneapolis Journal Sunday Mag xztpe: The Grand Army of the Republic is passing in final review. The total number of survivors is now 620,000. This figure is obtained as follows:, The last offlc al enrollment, made by the pension authorities at Washington, June 80, 1901, was 644,358. Deducting 2,500 a month, for nine intervening months, there were 22,000 deaths. The Old Guard is dying off at-the rate of 90 a day; but the death losses for each are often higher. In 1906, Grand Army survivors died to the number, of 29,208; and in 1907 the loss was 81,201; for the year that closes June 1, 1908, the death rate will be unquestionably between 35,000 and 37,000, if dot higher. For the old soldiers of the Republic now have reached the average age of 63. At that rate, the deaths will con e faster and faster still; and within ten years the noble army will be all but a memory. Had the soldiers of the Civil war not beer mere lads in their teens, the Grand Array would long ere this perished from the earth. But the Union was saved literally by ant. many had not even reached their tee is. Startling as this statement seems, it Is ndisputably born out by ■ the official records: There were 2,778,309 enlistments, as follows: At the age of 10 and under 25 At the age of 12 and.under 225 At the age of 14 and under 1,523 At the age of 16 and under...... 844,891 At the age of 18 and under..... .1,151,438 At the age of 21 and under. 2,159,798 Twenty-two years of age and over 618,*511 Adding the number under 21 and over 22—that is, 2,159,798 and 618,511—the total enrollment was 2,778;309. But there are some very old men in th( Grand Army of the Republic: afld thf.t is all the mole reason why tne death losses will be exceedingly high in the years near at hand. There will eoiue a time when the last call will be responded to each month by no less than 5,000 of the brave heroes of ’6l for already figure has been touched by one-half and over,* and is growing with alarming rapidity. It requires little argument to support the statement just made; and if the reader is of a mathematical turn of mind, let him go to the standard mortuary tables of the life insurance companies and determine for himself what is the expectancy of Life for menof the ages set forth. Here are startling official figures pointing to the rapid vanishing of the Grand- Army: Number and age of survivors passed on by Commissioner of Pensions Wara?r. to June 30, 1907. Age. Survivors. Age. Survivors. 62 .13,381 81 1,287 63 11,665 82 . i 1,129 64 11,282 83 753 65 9,485 84 636 66 -9,248 85 436 67 .... 6,819 86 378 68 5,209 87 230. 69 3,100 88 127 70 8,302 89 60 ■ 71 .i 5,881 00 36 72 5,112 91 25 73 4,409 92 24 74 2,901 93 .. . i 11 75 4,253 94 $ 76 3,528 95 \ 2 77 .. ~ 2,496 =96 j .5 -78 2,009 97 * 1 79 1.786 98 5 80 2,031 108 i Never in the world’s history, before :ur day, was a nation saved by youths in their teens. In the stirring years of Father Abraham, these boys eame forward by the tens of thousands, in response to the call to arms. . War expenditures reached $6,000,000,--KIO. During the war 67,000 were killed In jattle. The records also show that 43,012 lied of wounds. Disease claimed 224,586. And 24,772' perished from other muses. There were-280,000 wounded in battle. Between all these dread disasters, it Is a wonder th + even a remnant of the Grand Army of the Republic survives; and it should ever be the pride and pleasure of this American’Republic to remember the debt owed to'the boy of '6l. > Happily, all soldiers who have survived “forty years . after the close of the war” (to quote the language of the law) are now entitled to a service pension. Veterans In Dhngrr. "The old soldier, when he is a bachelor or widower, .is running into grave danger these days of financial distress among the feminine portion of. humanity,” remarked Treasurer Bigler at the subtreasury to-day. He was speaking of the recent reforms adopted in paying pensions to the surviving defenders of the nation during the somewhat late unpleasantness, whereby checks are sent to the veterans, instead of them c/owding into the pension office once ewry three months, thereby creating no end of trouble and annoyance for the ageht and his assistants. “It is not generally known among the gentler sex that the United SJates government is bound to pay. a pension to the widow of a soldier. Now, a man need not to have been married before he donned the blue and shouldered a mudlcet for his country’s cause and the protection of his home. He has the right to marry any tlmp, whether he be twenty-five or seventy-give, provided al-

and every blemish on beauty, and defies detection. It has stood the test of SO years, and is so harmless we taste it to be sure it U properly made. Accept no count er* feit -of similar name. Dr. L. A. Sayre said to a lady of the hautton (a patient): M As you ladiei will use them. I recommend

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ways that he has no such responsibility as a wife living. “One can see, therefore, where the danger to the old soldier lies. He ought to have some protection from the wiles of those who will seek to marry Him against his stubborn will. No retreat will be sacred from the adventurous maid who seeks a husband, or the widow who desires to have her marital relations renewed, with the prospects of a pension for life in the somewhat dim and distant future. Let him secure for himself such, seclusion as he may desire, he will be found out by the persistency women apply when looking for what they want. “'I know of certain cases where women have courted aged and infirm men whose only source of getting money for a livelihood comes through the pension agency solely for the purpose of securing for herself his pension when death, which appears near, takes him to the grave. This has been so fully demonstrated by the figures obtained at the War Department that it needs little comment, for, if I am not mistaken, there are .still about half a dozen widows of pensioners whose husbands fought in the war of the revolution. “Under the present laws this thing is likely to go on indefinitely. No one knows how many widows the government will have to support through this arrangement. Some, of course, will be worthy cases; the most of them will be of this class, perhaps, but it is a notorious fact that some men of ninety have married girls of eighteen and nineteen years. The girls, perhaps, are not to blame for this, but those who have an eye for the future have seen it, and very frequently have urged such unions. Now, if this were generally known among the women of the unscrupulous kind they would not hesitate become legally bound to some man, very old, who is a pensioner, and who draws anywhere from $24 to $72 each quarter from Uncle Sam’s treasure box. I do not see how the system could be improved, but I think that there is some way of modifying it.”—Philadelphia Telegraph. Her First Speech. It was the first appearance In public of Ada’ 6. Swt-et of Chicago, United States commissioner of pensions undfel-, President Grant and one of the first women in the movement for equal political rights for the sexes. When the civil war broke out she was living with .her parents in the village of Lombard, now a suburb of Chicago, and was chosen to present to the boys of the Lombard company a silk flag which the women of the place had made with their own fair hands. The literary Woman of the village had written for the occasion a beautiful presentation speech, in which the soldiers were adjured to “take the fair flag into which your wives, daughters and sweethearts have sewed fond hopes and tearful prayers for your safe return; carry it through the smoke and shell of battle free' from the stain of dishonor and the rents of defeat and bear it home victorious at the end of the war.” “I thought,” says Miss Sweet, “that I had learned that piece up and down, backward and forward, inside and out, but on the great day itself, when the band ceased playing and an awful hush fell upon the crowd and every face was turned expectantly up to mine, it was different. I opened my mouth—and paused. The literary lady creaked forward in her chair and pered loudly, ‘Soldiers of Lombard’— “That whisper went through me like a knife, but left me still speechless. T set my teeth, stepped ; decisively forward. and pushed the flag into the 'hands of the nearest soldier. Then I spoke. Every word of that speech had left me, but I knew what it meant. “ ‘Soldiers of Lombard,’ I said In a desperate voice that must have been heard to the utmost confines of the. crowd, ‘here’s your flag. Don’t get it dirty I Don’t tear it! And be sure to bring It back I’ ' . “A shout rose from that crowd such as no orator before or since has ever evoked from a crowd in those parts. The first thing I knew I was riding on the shoulders of two soldiers,. while the whole company pressed about me, with waving hats, and my father was leaning over toward me from the back of his big horse and calling me his ‘own original girl,’ while the tears rolled down his cheeks with laughter. “As long as I lived in the village of Lombard I never dared to meet squarely the vengeful eyes of the literary lady ' who had ‘written that presentation ; speech.”—St. Louis Republic. o An Anecdote of Ellsworth. There was a characteristic incident in the early life of Colonel Ellsworth, the brilliant young lawyer who was one i of the first notable victims of the civil i war. His struggles to. gain a foothold ; in his profession were attended by ! many hardships and humiliating privations. Once, finding the man he was looking for bn a matter of business in a restaurant he was invited to partake of the luncheon to which his acquaintance was just sitting down. Ellsworth was ravenously hungry, almost starving, in fact, but he declined courteously, but firmly, asking permission to talk over the business that had brought him thither while the other went on with the meal. The brave young fellow in telling the story in after years confessed that he suffered positive agony at the sight and smell of the tempting food. “I could not in honor accept hospitality I could not reciprocate,” was his simple explanation of his refusal. “I might starve, but I could not sponge.” —Marlon Harland's “Complete Etiquette.”

He Meant Well. Lady Bountiful —Well, all I can say is, Jenkins, that if these people insist mi building those horrid ' little villas near my gates I shall leave the place. Jenkins—Exactly what I told them it the meeting, your ladyship. I said, “Do you want to drive away the goose that lays the golden eggs?”—Punch. Willing to Oblige. “Look here,” reared the angry man who had bought a lot of suburban real estate, “that ground you sold me is under water and there are actually little fish'swimming about.” “Oh. I’ll fix that all right,” assured the oily-tongued agent. “Then you’ll give me another lot or return my money?” < “Not exactly that, but I II send you >ut some fishing tackle to catch the fish.” A Long-Felt Want. Tired Tatters—-I wisht I had money enuff t’ patent a Idee uv mine. Weary Walker—What’s de idee? Tired Tatters—-A noomatic tire for perl ice clubs. In Luck, Sure Enongh. ’YTTTXr' ■ tea, •* Toc>ax • “Gee, mister, you’re a lucky guy! Take dat ball to de gate an’ dey’ll let you in fer nuthln’l” Looked So. The Guide—-This is tfie leaning tower if Pisa. TL. - Tourist—l knew there was somei thing .choked about this place. The important Part. I Employer—ShmneigL. writes me that, ■ rou insulted, him when you calk,!, at his [ office yesterday. I Collector—Well. I'll tell you how iC happened. I —— ; Employer (interrupting) —Did he pay i ip? j Collector —No, sir. i Employer—Well, never mind-the rest >f the explanation. There Now. i Mrs. Bull—Now, Tommy, I want you |.:o be good while I’m out. Tommy—l’ll be good for a penny. Mrs. Bull—l want you to remember that you cannot be a son of mine unless you are good for nothing. Very Slow. Higson—A messenger boy has a walk in life. i Digson—Yes; but it’s a mightj‘ slow one. Not ClasKifled. I De Quiz—l thought you told merthat 1 horse could beat anything in his class. De Whiz—l did; but he was out of his class. Another Literary Note. “He failed in literature, didn’t he?” “Sure did.” “What’s he doing for a living now?” “Running a literary bureau.”—-At-lantic Constitution. That Let Him Out. “Gimme a bundle of assorted vietvs' of America,” said the man. who was about to sail for Europe. “A man ought to send postcards of his own , country first.”—Kansas City Journal, The Endurance Race for Anglers. Farmer —No fishing on these grounds. Didn’t ye see that sign? Fisherman —Well, who is fishing on the grounds? The water is good enough for me.—Field and Farm. Another Monopoly. Miss DeYoung—Stella tells me she has an engagement for every night npxt week. Miss DePlayne —I don’t think that is right when there are so many girls that can’t get engaged at all. Pleasant for Him. Him—l took Miss Willing for a drive last evening. Her-—Did- you enjoy It?. Him —I certainly did. She knows how to drive, all right. The Usual Case; Meeker—My wife and I never quarrel. She does as she pleases and I do, too. Bleeker—l see—aS she pleases. Meeker —Os course. I’m not looking for trouble. ’ ;

All He Could Afford. The young and lanky wayfarer stood before the cheese counter. “Do you sell Swiss cheese?” he inquired. i “Yes, sir,” replied the police clerk. “And do you charge for the holes in the cheese?” “Os course not.” The long and lanky warfarer fumbled in his pockets and found them empty. “What can I do for you?" asked the clerk. “I’m broke, boss,” replied the way farer, “I guess you better give me the holes in the cheese. They’ll do to-day.” And He VZon Her. Mrs. Prim —I don’t think I would care for you to call on my daughter again. Suitor—Why not? Mrs. Prim—Well, to begin with, you are too disrespectful. I heard you say that I used powder. Suitor —YeS, baking powder, and you are the finest cook iu the neighborhood. A Winning Speech. She was white with indignation. "You shall never go down to that horrid club again. James Henry.” “But, Martha I r-” “Never mind. You heard what 1 said. You must remember when I bring my foot down op anything it bears weight.” < “Nonsense!” “What? You mean to ridicule my assertion, James Hetfry Butler?” “Oh, no, my dear. I merely wished to remark that a foot as small as the one you possess could not-possibly bear weight.” ', There was a long pause. “You really think so. James? Well, now, aren’t you both clever and truthful! I believe I will let you go down to the club to-night if you’ll promise to come home real early.” Parisi Prices. Gunner —Allow .me to congratulate you. old man. Guyer—What oil? Gunner—Why, I hear that when yout wife asks you for a hat and gown allowance she makejs it go a long way. Guyer (gloomily)—Oh, she makes it go a long way, All right. She sends it to Paris and gjets about a third of the value she gqfj7when she shopped in town. ’ Prosaic Call-Down. Sandy Pikes—Sever more will I claim to be a poe t. I told dat lady in de wayside cottage I was going to reme masterpiece “De Call of de Gritty UfMirge--She gave me an ax and said she’d gather hear me recite “De Call of de Woodpile.” Didn’t Get the Chance, OB . ' l b . , [Summer boarder —Well. I said while I Was out here t intended to go to bed with the chickens, but ! CouldnQ Understand. Farmer Hardapple—Ma, Molly is back from college. Ma Hardapple—Well, tell her to go Oall the sows , home. .Farmer. Hardjapple —What would be the use? Cows don’t understand college slang. 'i. *j It Would Seem So. Gyer—l understand young Seers was married last wAek. Myer—Yea; 6e married a clairvoyant. Gyer—-Indeem! Case of love at second sight, I suppose? Nothing Else. “Did you ever see a real Hindoo idol?” queried the interviewer. “Did I ever see a Hidoo idle!” exclaimed the globe trotter. “Say, I never saw one at ytork.” What He Wanted. “'This dog,” said the fancier, “is a perfect type of a setter.” “Well, perhaps’ he is,” rejoined the prospective customer, ‘‘but what I want is a hunting dog, not a typesetter.” "How highis the thermometer?’ • asked the Philadelphia girlQ After a busy moment with a “tape measure her Boston cousin replied: “Five feet and three Inches from the floor, dear.” Amended. “Mr. Hunter is married now,” saic the bride-to-be, preparing to send out her cards, “so we’ll have to address his invitation to ‘Mr. and Mrs. Hunter.’ ” “Better notr her brother advised “She’s the boss, so you’d better address ■ IF to ‘Mrs. and Mr. Huntress.’” —Phil-’ adelphja Press. A Slight Jolt. Yopng Boastem—lt will cost me al i of ten thousand a year to live. Miss Cntstique—Don’t you think such I a waste of money sinful? ! | Not the Same. “It’s a pity” remarked the thoughtfu.! thinker, “that a man isn’t like pie crust.” “Because why?" asked the dense per son. “Then,” explained the t. t, “the shorter he is the richer he Would be.’

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“Bouncer” Twenty Years After. The perfect skeleton of a cat was fonnd between the walls of the old Corby building in Bloomfield Centre this morning by men iu the employ of William R. Raab, a contractor, who is remodeling the structure for the grocery firm. li: was recognized by one of the older residents as the reinains of “Bouncer,” a cit that disappeared suddenly about twenty years ago. “Bouncer’’ was a famous fighter of dogs, as well as rats, and had whipped nearly every canine in town, until one day he ran across “G’ p Sleggers,” a dog with a record for cats, known by almost everybody. “Gyp” and “Bouncer” had it hot and heavy for a time, but the dog was too much for the cat, and the latter was chased up a dark stairway leading from Abel Baker’s old store, and In gome manner fell between the walls and was unable to get itself out. For a ilime it was believed that the building was haunted, .but, the cries came from poor “Bouncer.” —Newark .Advertiser. ■ - PROOF FOR TWO CENTS. If You Suffer with Your Kldueya I and Back Write to This Man. G. W. Winney, Medina, }J. Y.. invites kidney sufferersrto write to him.

To all who enclose postage he will reply, telling how Doan's Kidney Pills -cured him after he had doc- , tored and had been in two different hospitals for eighteen months, suffering intense pain in the üback, lameness, twinges when stooping or lifting, languor, dizzy spells and rheumatism. “Before I used Pills,” says .Mr. Win-

■ (¥> 4 . Doan’s Kidney

ney, “J weighed 143. After taking 10 or 42 boxes I weighed 162 and was” completely cured.” Sold. by all dealers. 50. cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. ¥. Two Kinds} Both Tired. | An agent of the Interior Department tells many stories illustrating odd phases of the Indian’s character. “There was a farmer in the West,” j this agent, “who was in a-difficulty ‘ tfa secure help on his farm. Indians I were numerous in the neighborhood, bat! tjfiey were poor workmen. Always tir-1 ed, they would put down the hoe or the rake as soon as the master’s back was tyirned, and, selecting a cool spot, they tvould lie down in the shade and sleep f!he day away. “But one morning a very tall, robust Jlndian came, asking the farmer for Work. -- ? “ ‘No,’ said the white man; ‘you will i;et tired. You Indians are always tiriid.’ - “ This Injun sot like other Injuns. Never get tired.’ “The upshot was that the Indian was engaged and put to work in a cornfield. The farmer went away. When he returned. an hour or two later, the Indian was asleep under a tree. “ ‘Here, wake up!’ exclaimed the indignant farmer. ‘You told me thdt you never got tired!’ jj “‘Uhl’ grunted the red man. yawning. ‘This Injun never get tired. Bu: if he not lie down often, he would get Jired just like other Injuns.’”—Harper’s Weekly. Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup tor Children teething: softens the gumsi, reduces Inflammation, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25 cents a bottle. A shopkeeper in Thnbridge Wells, Enf,‘land, is a believer in reform spelling. H« 'displayed the other day a placard reading : “3 Whewl Trysiceul for Sal.” • Goo* Housekeepers Use the Best. . That’s why they use Red Cross Ball Blue, ▲t leading grocers, 5 cent a

CftSTORIA For Infants ami Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the ZL L Signature /yO °f (\ Jp* to Hy SB v Fur Over ThirtipYears lIfiSTORIA TH« CKNTAUR CO»I» ANY.. I»£W YORK OITV.

TWO CURES OF ECZEMA. Raby Had Severe Attack—Grand* father Suffered! Torments with' It —Owe to Cntieura. i « “In 1884 my grandson, a babe, had an attaqk of eczema, and after trying the doctors to the extent of heavy bills , and an increase of the disease and suffering, I recommended Cutieura''and in a few weeks the child was well. He is to-day a strong man and absolutely tree from the disease. A few years ago I contracted eczema and became t.n intense sufferer. A whole winter passed without ionce having on shoes, nearly from the knees to the foes being covered with virulent sores. I tried many doctors to no purpose. Then I procured the Cluticura Remedies and found immediate improvement and final culre. M. \V. La Rue, 845 Seventh St., Louisville, Kyi, Apr. 23 and May 14, ’07.” • Presumption. Phisty—l suppose you think that if you had { the regulating of the you could make some improvements on thi present'job, don’t you? Kuphs—l don’t know about that, but I think I could suggest one change. I should like to have things so arranged that when ? a' man is having a good time the days would seen/ to pass slowly instead of quickly. I’m about to take a vacation.” , , . .Niagara Fall# and Return. 25th Annual Excursion Aug. 3 Via Nickel Plate Road Cheap side tribs to Toronto, Thousand Islands, Montreal and other points. Write for iilusltrated booklet. J. C. Melpnbacker, T. P. A.. . . Fort Wayne, Ind. “Grass Widow” Not Slang. “She Is a grass widow,” said the professor, nodding in the direction M a lady with yellow hair. “A ‘grass’ wjidow? Oh, professor, I didn’t, think you would use slang.” “ ‘Grass’ widow is not slang,” said the professor .stoutly, ft is, on the contrary, a very' ancient and correct expression. It comes from the French ‘grace.’ It was originally written. Igrace’ widow. Its moaning is- ‘widow by co’urtesy.’ “There is nothing slangy or disrespectfui in the term ‘grace’ widow.’ A ? widow may call herself that with propriety and with propriety any ope may call her that.’’*—Chicago Chronicle.

i.™"" DODDS w rtt w

Opportunity of a Lifetime. A Home and a Permanent Income. This association has an option on. 500,000 acres of land. Two rivers. 100,000 acres of valuable timber. Fertile soil, delightful climate. Railroad now building. Under our plan you will have a home and a farm of your own and an ecjual interest in the entire enterprise. Easy payments. Write for literature today. La Prosperidad Colony Association, Dept. H. 536 Chamber of Commerce Building, Los Angeles. Cal. Wanted—Stocks of Merchandise, Invoicing from 10 to 50,'XX) dollars in exchange for income property and some cash. Address Box 56. Marion, Ind. F. W. N. U. - - - - No. 29—1908 When writing to Advertisers please say you saw the Adv. in this papery WlDOWS’ unser N EW LAW obtained TWKI ky JOHN W. MORRIS* Washington. D. a.