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Show Your Wcddg: good, pur IS karat goTO hv been famous u. wedding rings for eeniury. FIFTEEN THOUSAND OLD SOL. DIERS CELEBRATE SEMICENTENNIAL OF BATTLE. by uitlliiN Inns la- - and elimltmlM dad mprM. sanity, exhsl: lav nit ! Uugh. and 'j1 mtl " I mu lamb latr. rvst Secretary Garrison end Governor Toner the Oratore at Opening A STUDY IN CHEESE. lie See-elo- n. Confederate Veterene Greeting Speaker With Rebel Yell. Fa-mo- th Pa. In pltllcai Gcltybir glare of a aun that cnl th nierriiry bubbling over th hundred ninrk. the acmlre of thn horih anj th south on T'loedry began the for mi of art to nnk the Vetrrane to tho number Gettysburg. of IS.OfiO. the army officer estimated, filed Into the big tent net apirt for tho extrrlaee, eat la the bate of heat I! ex.-rlr-e aoml-centennl- to for houre and ehook the ramp with their rhenra when the speakers mad rrVrenr to a reunited nation. ' Kerry eeat under the rnnvan was taken long before Secretary of War GairDon and (Sovernnr Tener, the oratore of the day, arrived. Although the nun In gray acre far outnumbered by l hone In blue, there were possibly I, (mid aoul hernere through i I the i I I i i i i . f and emiihithraler wh.it they larked In number they mad up In Inna power. When Governor Tener finished hla epeeh. (kneral Dennett II. Young, rhlef of the United Confederate Veteran a roee alowly and can jtt lowed to him. you thing that no one elae ran give you,1 he Mid. "We will now give you the rebel veil.' Nine fa mow confederate general and l.OoO veterans of the south gave It no loudly that It waa heard far hack In the camp toward Gettysburg. When General Young atepped for ward to deliver his address he was greeted with wild enthimfnam. the union vetrrane led by Commander-In-Chie- f Deere, giving him three lusty cheers and a "Mger." lie took as bin keynote the conviction of each side In the greut struggle that It fought for a principle, which It believed was the truth. One of his i opening sttnements was that the northern soldiers deserved more rredlt than the southerners for the promulgation and successful realisation of the present great reunion which he characterized as the great-ea- t movement of Its kind In the world. Among the 200 .guests on the platform were Governors Mann, Virginia; 'McCreary, Kentucky, and Eberhart, enator Penrose of Minnesota; and the following confeder-atgenerals; Itoblnson. Texas; West, Georgia; Thonma J. Shaffer, lain A. I). Williams, Florida; K. M. I .aw, Florida, and Carr, North Carolina The Invocation was delivered by Jthe Rev. George Edwarda Lovejoy, f chaplaln-lu-rhleof the Grand Army of the Republic, , Penn--sylvanl- i -- ' i. $ - - jf - v - o-- ' v . ' ' i, ; , . tffoi. t ' - r . v '..w i i ( . P - 'i J ? - r ; - V .. sg -- iVf- vjSs.5! & Charge of ths Nineteenth Infantry at Gettysburg. and Little Round Top was saved to the Federala by the arrival of a brigade under General Weed. Tho third day opened with a wonderful artillery duel, tbo greatest of Story of the Famous Battle of the entire war, and then came Picketts charge, which has gone Into hisGettysburg, Fought Fifty tory as one of tho moat heroic of all time. Tbo men of Years Ago. Pickett's division formed In brigade columns, move dsteadlly across open field which were swept by such a LOSS CF LIFE WAS FEARFUL storm of shrapnel and rlfilo fir as had CRISIS OF THE WAR never before been seen, and though they fell like grain before tbo reapers, some of them reaching tbe Union tinea, only to be speedily overcome. That ended the mighty battle, and there was nothing left for Lee to do but get back into Virginia. Gettysburg cost the Union army tho lives or a number of geoerala, and th loss of nearly 24,000 men. On the Confederate aide five generals wer killed and nearly 30,000 men killed or wounded. e WILL BLAZE Caravan From A HIGHWAY. Indianapolis Begins .Journey to the Coast. Indianapolis. Twenty-tw- o automo-"bile- s carrying a hundred or more persona started from here Tuesday after noon on a tour to the Paeltlc coast In support of the proosed IJncoln transcontinental rock highway to stretch from New York 'to Ixa Angeles, Cal. The tour Is said to be one of the greatest ever taken, both in length and magnitude of purpose. The caravan expects to reach I,oa Angeles on August 2 and will remain there until August 6, when the return trip by speclnl trnln will be started. The route selected will take the motorists over 3.573.1 miles of highway The highway the plan for which originated with Carl fl .Fisher, mil 1onilre Bimrteman of this city, is to Of be built by popul ir subscription. the 1to.00U.Oilu needed $4,000,000 al ready has been subscribed. Assault Women and Girls. of variFI Paso, Texas.- - Excesses ous kinds, Including assaults on young girls and married women, are charged against soldiers in the command of General Paneho Villa rebel commander. who two weeks ago captured Casas Grandes. according to accounts given by Mexi"an refugees arriving here. Scores of women are said to have fled to the hills to escape the insults of the victors. The refugees relate that many of the men were bound and compelled to witness the excesses of the soldiers. - Chicago Women Celebrate. Chicago. Chicago women on Tues-dacelebrated their political independence when 2.000 women representing a score or more societies active in obtaining the passage or a womans suffrage bill paraded Michigan Engineer Saves Miners. Duquoln. 111. Four hundred coal miners Tuesday were rescued from the Paradise mine near here, Charles Matthis, had caught fire. chief eng neer stood at his post and worked the hoist. Denver Gets Convention. Denver was selected Washington as the meeting place of the next trlen-al convention in 1916 of the Brothand erhood of Iaxcomotlve Firemen 1 nginemen, F. Carter of and W. Ieorla, ill . was persidentr Both Armies Btrugglsd Bravely, and tha Confederates Were Conquered Only After Three Days of Bloody Conflict Fifty years ago nearly 165,000 Amer leans met on the field of Cettyaburg, and for three days fought one of the greatest battles of history. Gen. Robert E. Lee's army of some 84,000 southerners which had Invaded the north was met there and overcome by about 80.000 Federal troops under the command of Gen. George G. Meade, and the tide of fortune In the Civil war, which up to then had often favored the south, was turned. Thereafter the Confederacy waa on the defensive. Though the eouth lost the battle, there waa nothing to choose between their bravery in the conflict and that Doth armies of the northerners. fought with valor and stubbornness, and the losses In dead and wounded were tremendous. Commanding the corps of the Union army were Generals John F. Reynolds, W. S. Hancock, Daniel F. Sicklea, George Sykes, John Sedgwick, O. O. Howard and H. V. Slocum. Lee's were Generals corps commanders Jumes Lougstreet, Richard S. Ewell and A. P. Hill. Reynolds, sent ahead to feel out arrived at Gettysburg the evening of June 31, and in the fighting which began early the next day, was killed. Gen. Abner Doubleday, who succeeded him, was forced back to Seminary Ridge, after hard fighting, and then had to abandon that position, ao that the first day of the battle was in reality a Confederate victory. That night Meade ordered the entire Union army to Gettysburg, and by next morning the two armies were e confronting each other along a line of battle. Lee ordered Lougstreet to turn the left flank of the Federal army by taking Little Round Top, but Sickles defended that position so stubbornly was that Longstreet's movement checked. Peach Orchard, Cemetery This monument was erected by the state of New York for the soldlera Hill, Culp's Hill and The Devils Den New York Infantry, who fell at Gettysburg. were the scenes of desperate fighting. of the Forty-fourt, ten-mil- h when named McIntosh, clearing a space In which to make a discovered home in the wilderness, Fsrmera of Dundas County, Ont., Extrees number wild a of among apple pect Monument In Honor of the one which bore fruit so superior to the McIntosh Apple. rest that he cultivated It and named mon- It the McIntosh red most novel of one the Perhaps The apple became famous; seeds uments in existence has recently been Tbe and cuttings were distributed to all built in Ontario by Canadians. farmers of Dundas county, Ontario, parts of Canada, so that now the Mchave just erected a marble pillar to Intosh red flourishes wherever apples mark the site on whch grew a famous grow In tbe great Dominion. In 1896 the original tree from whclh this enApple tree. More than a century ago a settler ormous family sprang was Injured by SHAFT MARKS SITE OF TREE In Canada fire; but it continued to bear fruit until four years ago. Then, after 115 years, It died, and the grateful farmers have raised a marble pillar in horn or of the tree which has done so much for the fruit growing industry of their land. The story of this apple tree lllus-tratthe African proverb that though you can count the apples on one tree you can never count the trees in oaa apple. Iti never too early to mend. Cheese I on of our most v1ubl th United foods, and In chees production, It clllxcw high ! on U Informed should b menially as well a dietetlcally. have quit successfully Imitated many nd esub of th foreign varieties, to Amcr a own our reputation llehed Iran chees. V get Stilton, a rich, chole cheese, and Chedder, pale and nutty, eomex from England. From Franc holes of la full larg which Gruyere, In cookery. snd is especially good Neufcbatel, tamembert and Drle, as Roquefort well a th fascinating such a favorite among chees lower the famous From Holland come Edam; from Germany th odoriferous Llmbirrger, which I aald to be mosl delirious to those who are hravs nose, and enough to let It pas th from th unny south beyond ths Alps comes Parmesan and Gorgonxola. Titos who hav not cultivated or acquired by Inheritance a last for cheese are deprived of on of th choice flavors In our list of foods. Al finish for dinner, thre I nothin! more to the popular taste than chees crackers and a cup of black code Roquefort la the most commonly liked, served In this manner. Cream cheese and cheese crackers are very appropriate served with tbs are Cheese cracker salad course. prepared by sprinkling a mild grated cheese over salted wafers, dashing a bit of cayenne and then putting them Into a hot oven to melt the cheese. Many have never tried the good combination of boiled rice and cheese, which makes a good, nutritious and cheap dish- Put a layer of cooked cbeeae In the bottom of a buttered baking dish, sprinkle with grated cheese and bits of butter and salt; repeat, and add sufficient milk to mola ten, and bake thoroughly hot Cbeeae canapes may be served as a first course for a luncheon or dinner, and are prepared by spreading soft cheese on shaped pieces of buttered bread, and finish with a fourth Inch border of chopped olivet and a piece of red plmlento cut In fancy shape In the center. Canapes are always eaten from the fingeri. Cream of cheese eoup Is a moat delicious aoup to serve for a luncheon. - who borrows trouble ger of borrowing again, th habit jJ$ - The Way to Begin is to Begin! Nail SI or more to th oavlngo department to dav. and your account will bo storied. Then odd to It a you can. I! i Walker Brothers 114 Bankers Fminded IMS. Tomtt el Ut Malt lif (H Hiri-tuta- The lure of the heights times the strongest when seen In the distance. it they AfOMTlUiur HAMA! till II d i liquor Cm: tiki UUka MiN, TM tuun Tlrnk m MUdtf, m Mm m trilUU M.iMkliwl,bM.Ul4 napwpaffa K Klf Ba la K U Commercial A Ol! h mtr I.ATtST u ('AIAUM.U. k l,v ,ii MULCH BARSCX hin-e-t ALt - Ltu Extreme Meet. hungry young cyclist had yr for tho night at a wayside hi found tbe supper rather the most substantial part elk I a single sausage roll. "I that the best yon ctiltl way of sausage roller he tsbi "Why, said the host, ta' r good?" "Ob, It's good enough perh the ends of it dont suit mt What's th note "The end A st them?" Too near together." said tbrh youth, and the Innkeeper toot bint. :ti Lost, A man bad occasion tashiyn by rail to another county. Hr the animal to the station la Ik a darkey. When the trekk of 8UMMER DISHES. put on the car the dartey K the bare and saw tic The salad la the chosen dlBh, espe- through waa mule eating the tag i(oi cially during the warm weather, and bla destination waa marked, one likes to have sufficient variety to darkey at once ran borne W vary the daily menu. Massa! Massa! Dat mole, Berkshire Salad. Mix two cupfuls and et up do place th gone of cold riced potatoes with a cup of MagaxiM pecan meats broken In pieces, mari- gwlne to!" Harper nate with French dressing, arrange on On the Lefthand Side a mound of water cress and serve, Pat, who waa lefthanded, garnished with halves of pecan meats. In ths e91 8almon Salad Flake the salmon, sworn In as a witness Colo. of court Denver, mix with a little grated cocoanut, a "Hold up your right hand, chopped sour pickle, moisten with boiled safad dressing and serve on Judge. Up went Pata left hand. lettuce leaves. Garnish with hard "Hold up your right hand. cooked egg, put through a sieve, or rlcer, and strips of the white of egg manded the Judge sternly. cut in strips. When shrimp salad Is "Sure and I am. yer honor, served, remove them from the can, clared Pat "Me right hand'i cover with cold water and let stand lefthand aide." Woman How half an hour, remove, drain in cloth panlon. and remove the Intestinal veins, break s She Couldn't the shrlmpa In pieces, reserving three to hard or four for a garnish; mix with salad husband your n dressing and serve on lettuce leaves. "Oh, I dont know. I've Potato Salad Mix together six po- to please him yet." tatoes cut In cubes, a half cup of blanched and shredded almonds, one Woman' Way and Mm chopped cucumber, salt and pepper to "The trouble with you woo taste and sufficient salad dressing said, "is that you are I"of seasoned with onion Juice to make it ready to he suspicious sufficiently moist. u otner." Boiled Dressing for Those Who Will "I suppose we have that If011 Not Have the Best For those who she replied, "and the will not eat oil dressing, the a,waT are you men is that following you Is a substitute: even f Mix tea to lie for one another, 8D spoonful of salt, one half teaspoonful ought to know your lyinf of mustard, three-fourtChicago of a table- to do any good. spoonful of sugar, one egg slightly Herald. beaten, two and a half tablespoonfuts of melted butter and Auto Got There of a cup of thin cream. claim) When well Judge The prisoner ho r ' blended, add very slowly a fourth Of before horn his he tooted a cup of vinegar a little at a time. you. Cook In a double boiler until smooth (much Complainant and thick. Strain and thin with honor; your he did, Maybe cream when using, or add car whipped a when good la that cream for richness. souud? Bo than faster Cabbage Salad. Old but ever popu-lais the following: Shred tender script. cabbage and serve with cream, salt No Ear for sugar, vinegar to taste. If the cabwatched WJ aged 5, bage is bruised after shredding with to tne stew serve oyster a potato masher some like it better. hers of the family. u8'ejCii! about to receive his - U Ut J th r it sti U' rpol .rln a i mi loan ft I of P 'OB Pa it Sxy-"I- art lc it kin nr ised - msf sign ppm 4 Of one-hal- nn eel h three-fourth- Say, mom, I mine ! " Only Perfect Baby. 0f plcklng out h JvVdea me&ns of a tape all f the Perfect measure Is tommyrot. Might as well try to locate virtue by using a divining rod wilMeli ,b,1' so. D. 'A a s Tluu. Philadelphia In- - dont wan Serious Matt Boai What are yon your resignation for? b08, Messenger Well, me down twice dls week, J I'd better git out before tl Agi see ornli leva Uk( !ainf 17 Pi A wh h p Pc it letne A 3,70 11 firm. I fond CQ- fcow j X d to make things unples el Method of Jilted by her fiance, Revenge. a Ci eel on Ol Judge. i - Unnecessaryyoung Paris P avenged herw-d- f on the "You ought to brace ouog man recently by palntln hi your wife who Is nnnln while he was asleep, your house." She "It Isnt necessary. Houston Post. ini mill (d q "e pot t |