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Show THE SPANISH FORK PRESS, SPANISH FORK, UTAH t "CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP IS CHILD'S LAXATIVS : j THE MISERY OF BACKACHE Remove poisons from otomoeh, liver and Uok at tonguel I bowel. Removed by Lydia E. Pink hams Vegetable Compound. Muskegon, Mich. 'Tor six years I waa so weak in my back at times that I could hardly walk. Lydia E. Pinkhams Vegetable Com- pound was recommended to me end it made mo good and strong again so that 1 am able to do all my work. 1 highly recommend your medicine and tell everyone 1 meet what it did for me.' -- Mrs. G. Sciioon-ruxD, 210 Wood Ave, Muskegon, Mich. Womans Precious Gift The one which she should most teal-ousguard is her health, but Bhe often noglects to do so in season until soma ailment peculiar to her sex has fastened itself upon her. When so affected women may rely upon Lydia E. Pink-haVegetable Compound, a remedy that haa been wonderfully successful in restoring health to suffering women. If you have the slightest doubt that Lydia E. Pinkhama Vegetable Com- will help you, write to Lydia E. Pmnd Medicine Co. (confidential) Lynn, Mass., for advice. Your letter will bis opened, read and answered by a woman, and held in strict confidence. ly t Syrup of Figs Accept California California on only lok for the name I the package, then you are sure your I child la having the best and most harm-- 1 less laxative or physic for the Uttle ; etoroach, liver and bowels.taste.Children Full love its delicious fruity boteach on dose childs directions for , tle. it without fear. Give Mother You must say 1 California.'' A1V. li , S,; nt it- Hot Ice. Prof. Bridgman of Hurvnrd has succeeded in making Ice by squeezing water and the Ice Is so hot that It will make alcohol boll. Would Be All Right Bernice asked her mother what she was going to do today. Her mother ) said she was going to wash the win-- r down. Bernice nnawered: Oh, mother, Whereupon , dont ; It's going to rain. Mother, Dorothy, aged three, said: you wash them. You can hang them In the attic." j , Catarrh Cannot Be Cured by local, applications. they cannot reach the eeat of the disease. Catarrh Is a local disease greatly by constitutional conditions. HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE will cure catarrh. It le taken Internally and acts through the Blood on the Mucous Surfaces of the System. HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE le composed of boms of the beet tonics known, combined with some of the beet blood purlllers. The perfect combination of the ingredients In HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE le what produce such wonderful results In catarrhal conditions. Druggists 75c. Testimonials free. F. J. Cheney 4k Co., Props., Toledo, Ohio, Inrtu-enc- - al ,t- - SWITCH OFF! L Put aside the Salts, OH, Calomel, or Pills and take "Cascarets. 4 as "Tin, y. 1 1 Adv. Uttle too. Eager to Recite. One day in school my teacher asked who was the backbone of the Amer- lean revolution. I was eager to re-cite and replied: The backbone Is I the spinul cord." At this exclamation f the class laughed to my embarrass- f merit. Exchange. r DYED CHILDS COAT HER OLD AND I SKIRT Diamond Dyes" Made Faded, Shabby Apparel So Fresh and New. Dont worry about perfect results. Use Diamond Dyes," guaranteed to give a new, rich, fadeless color to any fabric, whether it be wool, silk, linen, cotton or mixed goods, dresses, blouses, stockings, skirts, children's coats, feathers, draperies, coverings everything! The Direction Book with each pack1 age tells how to diamond dye over any color. To match any materlnl, have dealer t rtMwv you Diamond Dye" Color Card 1 i Adv. Heavy Shlpment, prom Seattle. During the first half of 1919 Seattle, the American gateway to Siberia, shipped $15.i85,(90 Wort)) of goods to this once obscure land, P3 compared with only $987,381 worth 0f gootU In the same period last yent, RECIPE FOR GRAY HAIR. To half pint of water add 1 0t n Rum a small box of Barbo Compound an(j 7? s. of glycerine. Apply to the hilr twlM a week until it becomes the deauj aj,a()a Any druggist can put thia up or can mix it at home at very little coat,you it W1j gradually darken streaked, faded gray ),air and will make harsh hair soft and t0My' It will not eo'or the scalp, ia not stick or greasy, and does not rub off, Adv. The Worst The fellow who culls here has many Yes, and his worst " are Ills short-comings- short-coming- s long-goings.- Cutlcura Comforts Baby's Skin V when red, rough and Itching with hot baths of Cutlcura Soap and touches of Cutlcura Ointment Also make use uw and then of g that exquisitely powder, Cutlcura Talcum, scent-dustin- JL ,tbe collet Trio. Indispensable Half-Finishe- ,, d Sir. I am a Who Interrupted Transcript Cutlcura Adv. Job. you?" Boston . d&XXMAN Mw you keeping your bowels, liver, j andArestomach clean, pure and fresh with Casenrets, or merely whipping them i Into action every few days with Salts, Cathartic Pills, Oil, or Purgative Wa- ters? Let Stop having a bowel wash-da! Casenrets gently cleanse and regulate the stomach, remove the sour and ter-,-) meriting food and foul gases, take the excess bile from the liver and carry 1 out of the colon and bowels all the constipated waste matter and poisons 'I so you can straighten up. ' Cnscarets tonight will make you feel t great by morning. They work while yon sleep never gripe, sicken, or cause any Inconvenience, and C03t so t rZHZXAZ. I r ISAAC R. SHER--f EPRESENTATIVE WOOD of Ohio made an address In the house the other day quite out of the ordinary. Probably no other living man could have made just that speech. The house heard him with great Interest, and when his time had expired gave him additional time In which to finish. Possibly his theme may be stated as Fighting Generals of the Civil War. In general, the debate was about the question whether or not, cansince the advent of non, a general's place Is on the battle front whether or not the style Of fighting has changed war, since the Civil war and the and Sherwood waa moved to tell something about the style of fighting he saw In the Civil war. Now, Sherwood of Ohio saw a whole lot of fighting In the Civil war. He enlisted as a private In the Fourteenth Ohio Infantry April 10, 18G1, and was mustered out as a brigadier general October 8, 1805. He was In 43 battles and was 123 (lays under fire. He was six times complimented In special orders by commanding generals for gallant conduct In battle. So, few living men nave seen what he has seen. Omitting the controversial parts, and emphaslz-Inthe historical parts of real value, General Sherwood's address was In part as follows : Mr. Sherwood. Now, as to the question of our style of fighting In the Civil war. There stands today, as It stood over half a century ago, In front of the town of Franklin, Tenn., on the highest point of the ridge, a large linden tree. It was half past three In the afternoon of November 30, 1804. when General Hood, commanding 73,000 veteran soldiers, rode unattended to thut tree, threw the stump of the leg that was shot off at a over the pommel of the saddle, drew out his field glass, and sat looking across the valley to the position of the Union army. It was the silence that always precedes a great battle. Presently the silence was broken by the Roft strains of music which floated up from the town below. It was the Federal band playing Just before the battle, mother." The men in gray on the hill and the men In blue in the valley below listened. There were tears In many eyes, ns the pathetic words were well remembered: long-rang- Spanlsh-America- e n g Chlcka-mnug- Just before the bnttle, mother, I am thinking most of you." General Hood closed his field glass, wheeled his horse, and rode back to General Stewart with the command, General, we will chnrge the Federal line In front. Stewart formed his corps on the right. General Cheatham formed his corps on the left, and on the extreme right, on the Ilnrpeth river, rested General Forrests cavalry. A cannon on the ridge sounded the signal for the chnrge. With bayonets fixed the heavy columns, all veterans, marched with a steady and even tread down the slope. The fiercest and bloodiest battle of the centuries was on. I say that because It Is a fact that more men were lost In that battle in proportion to the number of troops engaged than In any bnttle that was ever fought on either continent. Hood's losses were over 40 per cent. The hottest part of the line was a black-locuthicket just at the right of the Columbia Pike. I was at that part of the line. I have a distinct recollection of that locust thicket, and I can see now, as I saw then, thut waving line of shining bayonets as It rushed to the works with that defiant rebel yell, and the mad and murderous conflict that followed. My borse, Firefly, a coni black thnt I had ridden In many conflicts from Rocky Face to Atlanta, was shot. But I was young and Try then and was at the front to witness the elimination of the chnrge. In the left of my command the Federal lines gavHwny. And this Is something historical, on wblct historians and Horace Greeley, the Count de Inrls, Governor Cox of Ohio, General Banks of i, Mlssls-'ppGen. Basil Duke, and John Trotwood Moore Tennessee have written conflicting ac- counts, going to clear thut up. On the left of my coLmund the Federal lines gave way. Gen- - eral Cleburne was abreast of that charging line. He fell Just at the left of my brigade. As the Confederates rushed on the Federal line of battle a gray figure on a chestnut horse rode diagonally across the front of the charging column. The horse went down within 00 yards of the breastworks. The rider arose, waved hist sword, and led his men on foot to the ramparts; then his brave form staggered and fell against the Federal line, pierced with mlnle balls. Ills corps was swept back under a terrific fire of musketry, neareither killed or wounded. This was ly Gen. Pat Cleburnp. Applause. A few yards on the Confederate right Gen. George W. Gordon of Tennessee, who was also abreast of the chnrglng line, fell Just under the fresh enrth of the breastworks. He was wounded and captured, ns he refused to fall back. Near this spot Gen. John Adams also fell. He stood upon the parapet and was fatally shot, his horse falling across the brenstworks. General Carter fell mortally wounded before reaching the Federal bnttle line. General Stahl reached the ditch; he stood on the bodies of the dead and gave comone-ha- lf mands and rallied his men. Just In front of my line, facing the locust thicket. General Cockrell of Missouri was wounded, but not fatally. Not a hundred yards away lay General Grnnbury dead, lie died leading the brave Texans to the works. A minute more nnd General Stahl fell, mortally wounded. General Walthnll of Mississippi, afterward United States senator, had two horses shot under Mm. Twelve Confederate generals were cither dead or wounded. Colonels were commanding divisions, captains were commanding brigades. More generals were killed In that eight hours struggle In front of that little Tennessee town than were killed In the two days' fight at Chlckanmuga or the three days fight at Gettysburg, w here three times ns many soldiers were In battle. And let me emphasize this with the statement that more brigadier and major generals were killed at Franklin In thnt eight hours fight thnn In the whole world war of four years and over where nearly 18,000,- 000 soldiers were In the hell of bnttle. Applause. I was colonel, commanding the One Hundred nnd Eleventh Ohio, Just to the right of the old cotton gin. and Just In front of a grove of bluck locusts. Early In the fight Colonel Lowrey of the One Hundred nnd Seventh Illinois, and Col. Leroy Clark of the One Hundred and Eighty-Thir- d Ohio, were killed, which left me the ranking officer of the bnttle line of the brigade, which I commanded to the end of the struggle. My regiment suffered, both In officers nnd men, the largest cusunlty list of any regiment In the Union army. Applause. 1 had only eight officers alive and not wounded In ten companies. During my four years service I was compelled to witness the agonizing nftertnnth of over 40 battlefields. I saw the brave and Intrepid General Darker go undaunted to his denth In the chnrgo General Darker wns the on Kenesaw mountain. Idol of his soldiers. I saw that splendid Ohio soldier, General McPherson, the handsomest mounted general In our army, brought on a stretcher to the left of my command at the Howard house In the Battle of Atlanta, Just as his greut soul had departed to the unknown world. General Sherman was tho commander In chief of the Union army In the memorable Atlanta campaign. I commanded the brigade skirmishers theand esUuy of the Atlanta battle of July 22, 1801, tnbllshed a front skirmish line In easy view of the Confederate breastworks General Sherman came to outpost and, standing in front of a tree, took out his field glass to survey lines. the Confederate JuRt then a sharpshooter concealed In the foliage of a tree made a line shot General Sherman, the bullet piercing the tree about two feet above his head. But he never took Apdown bis field glass. Only a few minplause. utes later the roar of arwas heard on our MfL and Infantry tillery General McPherson was killed; our left nan Gen. John was doubled up In confusion. A. Logan, mounted on his wnr horse, Black Jack, rode to the front, rallied our staggering battalions, Again, at and saved our army. Applause. of Steadman B. Gen. James Clilckamauga, MaJ. Ohio came to the front with a division of volunteers in the most critical period of the conflict General Steadman rode abreast the front of his In charging battalions. Ills horse was shot deadand horse that hell of fire. He mounted another saved his battle lines. Applause. It will be remembered thnt Gen. Albert Sidney Johnston, commander In chief of the Confederate ISO.., army In the fierce bnttle of Shiloh April C, war was shot nnd mortally wounded riding his horse nnd rallying the bnttle lines. I commanded the brigade skirmish line the day the battle of Pine mountain, at the right of Kenesaw, June 14, 1804. 1 saw the cannon shot fired thnt killed I.leut. Gen. Leonldus Polk on the Confederate front. Thnt great Virginian, MaJ. Gen. George II. Thomas, the Idol of the boys behind the guns, aplines peared. amid wild applause, along the battle In 1804, 10, December final chnrge Just before the the three days battle of Nashville. In the battle of Resaca I saw Gen. Joe Hooker in the full uniform of a major general yellow sash nnd all the plumes riding at the extreme line. He was front, almost abreast of our advance bny stallion, mounted on a powerful and furious, the most daring and Infield. Apfigure 1 ever saw on a battle ed A man's descriptive ability usually goes lame when he attempts to tell about a womans hat The fact that h couldnt get people to listen to him has made many a man a writer. Was Going Down-Hil- l Bergmui Friends Mrs. Were tut Doans Brought Remarkable Recovery From Worried, Kidney Complaint I couldnt eit down without putting a pillow behind my back, wye Mr. Ole Bergman, 820 Pennsylvania tit., When I bent over it felt Gary, lnd. as though somebody had atuck a knife right into my back and I would often fall to the floor. The kidney secretions made me get up four and five tmjei a night. There would be only e email which amount, burn that I eo would would Before almost scream. long my body bloated and my feet were ao awollen that I eouldnt wear my ehoet. My ekin looked ahmy and when I pressed It down it left e dent. I had chilla and fever. Sometime I would sweet eo that I could fairly wring the water out of my clothes. Everybody said I wae fast. In two month I going down-hil- l lost fifteen pounds and waa discouraged. By the time I had finished three boxes of Doane Kidney Pills I was entirely cured and 1 have enjoyed the best of health ever since." Cat Deaa'a at Aar Store, 60e a Box DOAN'S "RSy URN CO BUFFALO, FOSTER-MIL- N. Y. BELCHING Caused by high-heade- d d spiring plause. Ga- - I saw MaJ. In the bnttle of Burnt Illekory, who lost soldier maimed the Gen. O. O. Howard, of .Chancellors-vlll- e Bnttle In the arm right his good ride the buttle line In the hottest moment of enthusing and encouraging the men conflict, the behind the guns. In the Civil war, from 61 to 05, we lost killed InJmttle and died of wounds 121 general officers. Of this number 73 were Confederate generals and We lost 12 major gen46 were Union generals. lost 11. We lost 34 Confederates the nnd erals, 64. Confederates the anil brigadier generals, of the because ours than wns loss greater Their futt that Secretary of War Stanton, Instead of making generals commanders of brigades, took the camranking colonel. This was true in all the ; and if you will get I which In participated paigns the fntullty lists of colonels you will find that the losses on both sides were about equal. The Confederates lost four lieutenant generals Thomas J. Jackson (Stonewall Jackson), Leonidas Polk, Ambrose P. Hill, nnd Albert Sidney Johnston. We have made 11 soldiers and generals president of the United States; all generals but two, McKinley and Roosevelt. George Washington, our first president, was bur first commanding general. He had four horses shot under him, always at the front of battles. Our soldier presidents all had solid battle records. I know thnt the map of the world has been changed, and that we are lu the midst of the most momentous epoch of nil history,. But I believe the future Is safe; thut democracy under our flag is Prolonged applause, the members rising. Acid-Stoma- ch Lot EATONIC, the wonderful modern stomach remedy, stve you quick relief from dlefuettnt belching, Indirection, bloated, gaeey stomach, mdyepep. leer lea ala, haartbura and othar atomach from They are all eauaad by which about alna people out of ten suffer la on way or another. One writes as folBefore 1 used EATONIC, I could not lows: eet e bite without belching It right up, sour and blttar. I have not had a bit of trouble alnco tho first tablet." Millions are victim ef without knowlne It. They arc weak and ailing, have poer digestion, bodies Improperly nourished although they may tat heart-ll- If Orava disorders are likely to follow la neglected. Cirrhosis of an tho liver. Intestinal congestion, gastritis, catarrh of tho atomach these era only a few of the many ailments often caused by A sufferer from Catarrh ef the Stomach ef It years' standing writes: I bad catarrh ef the atomach for 11 long years and 1 never found anything to do me any good Just EATONIC. It temporary relief until X used la a wonderful remedy and X do not want te ha without It." If goa are not feeling quite right laek energy and anthuslaam and don't know juat where to locate tho trouble try KATONlO and eea how much better you will feel la every way. At all drug dorse a big box for SOo aad gour money back It you aro not satisfied. y. add-stoma- ATONIC C TOR YOUR A&p-stomacb- o ChildrensCoughs mey bo checked and more serious conditions of the throat often will be avoided by promptly giving tho child a doeo of eefo |