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Show THE WEEKLY REFLEX, KAYSVILLE, UTAH Will Not be Ono Day Without lAi Thl Lady TELLS Her FRIENDS lira. Mary Frlcke, 507 Boraman St, Belleville, of ladles tlL, la Juzt one of the many thooaanda an of after agony who, the country throughout yean, have at last found , health, strength and vigor In Her own words tell of her suffering and recovery I suffered with my better than we can do it: stomach, had awful cramps and headaches so I often could not lay on a pillow. Saw your book, and got good results from the tried first bottle. To be sure of a cure I took twelve to my bottles. I have recommended friends and all art well pleased with results. I Have not will not be one day without which had a doctor since I started with was about fifteen years ago. I am now sixty-thre- e years old, hale, hearty and well.' Can do as much if?" work as my daughters. I feel strong and healthy " ' and weigh near two hundred pounds. Before, I mrs.marv pkickb weighed as little as one hundred. I hope lots of and get the results I did. An experieru-- pw people use that of Mrs. Frlcke Is an Inspiration, to every sick and sufienng A. PE-RU-- PE-RU-N- A PE-RU-N- A. A, PE-RU-- woman. If you have catarrh, whether It be of the nose, throat, stomach Is the remedy. It is not new bowels, or other organs, has been tried. It is not an experiment used by thousands who once were sick and are now well p0 prevent coughs, colds, grip and Influenza and to hasten recovery there Is nothing better. will improve the appetite and digestion, purify the blood ooth the Irritated mucous linings, eradicate the waste material and nerves, give yon corruption from the system. It will tone up the health, strength, vigor and the Joy of living. Do what Mrs. Mary You win be Frlcke and thousands more have done try (lad, happy, thankful. Tablet er Liquid. Sold Everywhere. PE-RU-- PE-RU-- 'a n has-bee- PE-RU-N- A PE-RU-N- A. YOU NEED NOT SUFFER FROM CATARRH Bat Yoa Mast Drive It Oat of Your Blood. Catarrh is annoying enough when it chokes up your nostrils and air passages, causing difficult breathing ana other discomforts. Real danger comes when it reaches down into your lungs. This is why you should at once 'realize the importance of the proper treatment, and lose no time experimenting with worthless reme , GZXZXAZ- - GOT HOMES a-- long-rang- e n Spnnlsh-Amerlca- Just before the battle, mother, I am thinking most of you. General Hood closed his field glass, wheeled his horse, and rode buck to General Stewart with the command, General, we will charge the Federal line in front. Stewart formed his cons on the right. General Cheatham formed his corps on the left, and on the extreme tight, on the narpeth 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 stendj 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 buttle m proportion to the number of troops engaged than In any battle that was ever fought on either continent. Hoods losses were over 40 per cent. t The hottest part of the line was a thicket 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, ns I saw then, that waving line of shining bayonets as It rushed to the works with that de- rebel yell, and" the nra (UHndHnTnrdrTOTX'roir-- flict that followed. My horse, Firefly, a coal black that I had ridden In many conflicts from Rocky Tac'e to Atlanta,' was slidtr'Bu'l young" and' spry then and was at the front to witness the culmination of the charge. On the left of my command the Federal llDes .gave uay., Aud this-- is, something historicaL-o- n which historians and Horace Greeley, the Count de Paris, Governor Cox of Ohio. General Ranks of Mississippi, Gen. Basil Puke, and John Trotwood Moore of Tennessee have written conflicting accounts. I am going to clear that up. On the left of my command the Federal lines gave way. Gen blnck-locus- -- r-f- iant 1 s' ENJOYED WELL-WO- HONORS N Fortunate Purchasers Profited by the Some Men of Genius Who Lived Many Years After Their Fame Had Dismantling of Government-Buil- t tabllshed a front skirmish Been Assured. Munition Plants. line in easy view of the EPRESENTATIVE ISAAC II. SHERWOOD-of Ohio Biade an address In tlie house the other day quite out of the ordinary. Prolmbly no other living roan could have made Just that sjwoch. The hoime heard him with, great Interest, and when hla time had expired gave him additional 'time In which to finish. possibly his theme may tie stated . Fighting Generats of the Civil War." Iu general, the debate was about the question whether or not, cansince the advent of on the buttle front non, a general's place is whether or not the style of fighting has changed war, since the Civil war and the and Sherwood was moved to tell something about the style of fighting he saw in the Clvlt war. -Now, Sherwood of Ohio saw a whole lot of fighting Id the Civil war. lie enlisted as a private In the Fourteenth Ohio Infantry April 10, 1801, and was mustered out as a brlgndler general October 8, 1805. lie was In 43 battles and was 123 days 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, nnd emphasizing the historical ports of real value, General Sherwoods 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 ugo, 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 75,000 veteran soldiers, rode unattended to that tree, threw the stump of the leg that was shot 6tt at Chlcka-maug- 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 soft strains of music which floated up from the town below. It was the Federal band playing Just before the buttle, mother. The men In gray on the hill nnd the men In blue In the valley below listened. There were tears in many eyes, us the pathetic words were well remembered : AT SMALL COST dies which touch only the surface. To be rid of Catarrh, you must drive the disease germs out of your blood. ' Splendid results have been reported from the use of S. S. S which acts on the catarrh germi in the blood. If you wish medical advice as to the treatment of your own individual case, write to Chief ledicd Adviser, 42 Swift Specific Co, Atlanta, Ga, 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 50 yards of ,the breastworks. The rider arose, waved his Bword, and led his men on foot to the ramparts; then his brave form staggered nnd fell against the Federal line, pierced with rnlnie bnlls. Ills corps was swept back under a terrific fire of musketry, nearf either killed or wounded. This wns ly Gen. Put Cleburne. Applause. A few yards on the Confederate right Gen. one-hal- George W. Gordon of Tennessee, who was also abreast of the charging line, fell Just under the fresh earth of the breastworks. He wns wounded and captured, as he refused to fall back. Near this spot Gen. John Adams also fell. He stood upon the parapet and was fatally shot, his horse General Carter falling across the breastworks. fell mortally wounded before reaching the Federal battle line. General Stahl reached the ditch; he stood on the bodies of the dead and gave commands and rallied his men. Just In front of my line, facing the locust thicket. General Cockrell of Missouri was wounded, hut not fatally. Not a hundred yards away lay General Granbury dead, lie died leading the brave Texans to the works. A minute more and General Stahl fell, mortally wounded. General Walthall of Mississippi, afterward United States senator, had two horses shot under him. Twelve Confederate generals were either dead or wounded." Colonels were 'commanding divisions, enptntns were commanding brigades. More generals were killed In that eight hours "RtrugglTirTroTiridrThirrRfGeTi'TriTeleeTtmirthuiiir were killed In the two days light at Ohlckamauga or the three days" fight at Gettysburg w here three times as many soldiers were In battle. And Jet me emphasize this with the statement that more brigadier and major generals were killed at Franklin in that eight hours fight than In the whole world war of four years and over where nearly 18.000,- 000 soldiers were in the hell of battle. Applause. I was colonel, commanding the One Hundred and Eleventh Ohio, Just to the right of the old cotton gin, and Just in front of a grove of black locusts. Early In the fight Colonel Lowrey of the One Hundred and Seventh Illinois, and Col. Leroy Clark of the One Hundred and Elghty-lhirOhio, were killed, which left me the ranking officer of the battle line of the brigade, which I commanded to the end of the struggle. My regiment suffered, both In officers and men, the largest casualty 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 aftermath of over 40 battlefields. I saw the brave and Intrepid General, Ilnrker go undaunted to his death In the charge on Kenesaw"tnounTaln. General Darker" was" the Idol of his soldiers. 1 saw that splendid Ohio soldier, General Mdigon. 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 great soul had departed to the unknown world. General Sherman wns the commander In chief of the Union army In the memorable Atlanta campaign. I commanded the brigade skirmishers the day of the Atlanta battle of July 22. 1SG4. nnd es- d -- -- Confederate breastworks. General Sherman came to my outpost and. standing In front of a tree, took out his field glass to survey lines. the Confederate Just then a sharpshooter concealed In the foliage of a tree made a line shot at General Sherman, the bullet piercing the tree about two feet above his head. But he never took down his field glass. ApOnly a few mln- plause. the roar of arlater utes on our left. heard was tillery and Infantry General McPherson was killed ; our left flank John Gen. was doubled up In confusion. A. I.ognn, mounted on his war horse, Biack Jack, rode to the front, rallied our staggering battalions, Again, at and saved our army. Applause. of B. Steadman James Chlckamauga, Maj. Gen. Ohio came to the front with a division of volunteers In the most critical period of the conflict. General Steadman rode abreust the front of his charging battalions. Ills horse was shot dead In that hell of fire. He mounted another horse and snved his battle lines. Applause. It will he remembered that Gen. Albert Sidney Johnston, commander In chief of the Confederate army In the fierce battle of Shiloh April 6. 18(12, was shot and mortally wounded riding his war horse and rallying the battle lines. I commanded the brigade skirmish line the day of the battle of Pine mountain, at the right of Kenesaw, June 14, 1804. I saw the cannon shot fired that killed Lieut. Gen. Leonidas Polk on the Confederate front. That great Virginian. Maj. Gen. George n. Thomas, the Idol of the hoys behind the pins, appeared. amid wild applause, along the battle lines Just before the final charge December 16. 18G4, In the three days battle of Nashville. In the battle of Resaea I saw Gen. Joe nooker In the full uniform of a major general yellow sash nnd all the plumes riding at the extreme front, almost abreast of our ndvance line. He was mounted-o- n a powerful stallion, and furious, the most daring and Inspiring figure I ever saw on a battle field. lgh.-headed-bay d In the battle of Burnt Hickory, Ga I saw Maj. Gen. O. (. Howard, -- tlte maimed soldier who lost his good right arm In the Battle of Chancellors-vllle- . rhle the battle line in the hottest moment of the conflict, enthusing and encouraging the men behind the guns. In the Civil war, from 01 to T3, we lost killed In bnttle nnd died of wounds 121 general officers. Of this number 75 were Confederate generals and 46 were Union generals. We lost 12 major generals. and the Confederates lost 11. We lost 34 brigadier generals, and the Confederates 64. Their loss was greater than ours because of the fait that Secretary of War Stanton, Instead of making generals commanders of brigades, took the ranking colonel. This was true In all the campaigns In which I participated; and if you will get the fatality 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. IIH1, and Albert Sidney Johnston. We have made 11 soldiers and generals president of the United States; all generals but, two, aud Roosevelt.George Washington, our first president. Was our first commanding general, lie had four horses shot under him, always at the front of battles. soldier presidents all .had . solid battle records. I know that the map of the world has been changed, and thnt we are In the midst of the most momentous epoch of all history. But I believe the future Is safe; that democracy under our flag Is safe. Prolonged applause, the members rising. Me-Kinl- - -- To select a dwelling from a large stock of samples, buy it over the counter at a bargain price, and then pack It on a motor truck to be sent home, Is a novel solution of tlie house hunting problem, says Popular Mechanics Magazine. That Is literally what has been happening recently, however, In a number of communities where munition-plan- t housing facilities are being dismantled by the government. All the purchaser needs Is a vacant lot, of course, and a foundation for his new home. Near Cincinnati more than 200 four--oo"houses were sold In two days at the remarkable price of $200 each, their original cost to the government having been over $1,500. Purchasers of these houses have been able to get concrete block foundations built for an average price of $223, and to secui truck and trailer delivery within five miles for $120, making a total cost m of $553 for a well-bui- lt home. A Snap. Everything is so high, these days! complained a prospective customer. Oh, no, Mrs. Straddup; not quite everything!" replied the proprietor of the Right Tlnce store at Petunia. These thermometers are down pretty low this morning. Kansas City ' Star. Sophocles, the famous Athenian dramatist, lived to he ninety. The aa-th- of Ajnx Is the oldest writer, and he Is unique in his degree of longevity. The next in point of nge Is Thomas Carlyle, the author of Sartor Resartus and The Fremli Revoland other works of noble ution, undoubted brilliance, and lofty aspirations. lie died at the agt of eighty-six- . Jeremy Bentham, whose dlseiplu was John Stuart Mill, and who Is th author of works on government, Th Principles of Morals and Politics," and other lucid expositions of the utilitarian system, underlfved Carlyle by one year; while Voltaire, whose Phlifr sophlcal Letters and Discourses of Man make his name to live, died at the age of eighty-four. Serbia to Build Long Canal. According to a news Item In the Athens Progress the Serbian government has decided to construct a canal from the Danube to Salonlki. The canal Is to begin at the confluence of the Danube and the Morava, follow the course of the Morava In Serbia, then join the valley of the Vardar, fo-of llowing the river to the vicinity The total length of the Salonlki. canal will be 600 kilometers (373 miles). An Old Story. Quite Justified. I know a man who delights In bringA rib is a very expensive hurarf ing a blush to peoples cheeks." . just now." A And do people allow It? Yes, my dear; it was as far w o Of course, they do. They go to him as Adam that a rib started the to buy their rouge. high cost of living. 'Why pay-- d5h Drices lor coffee when i i 1 costs less and is better for you! i Theres been no raise in price. Usualhrsold at 15 and 25 - Made Pbstum Cereal Got 1 by Battle Creek, Mich. i 4- - |