Newspapers / The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, … / Feb. 23, 1893, edition 1 / Page 1
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r , J CHILD BIRTH ; .MADE EASY! " Mothsrs' Fkieho is sclenific- ally prepared Liniment, every tiigre- . : - dient of recognised value and in . constant use by the medical pro- :'. . , fession. ThcscsiUjretlients are com-'., j binedlnamannerliutiertounknovra ' MOTHERS' ;.,FRIEND."r- . WILL DO all that ii claimed for; ' .it ANDMOKE. lt Shortens tabor,- ''.-; J-essons PaiivDimmiihes Dinger to -V ' Life of Mother and Child.' Book . , i to ' MoTHrits "mai'ed FREE, con- " " taming valuable . information and voluntary" tcstirnoniaK v 'J ." Bentby exprcts on. receipt of price ff. SO per bottle MMOFIELt RESULKTOa CO., Atlanta. Qa. v . -gold bv ai-f. riHnooisTa- ii i i ,'L . I "" " '. - PROFESSIONAL CARPS. ; . - ATTOr.,AT LAW, G&ASAM, " - . .May 17,1. V . j. x: re ri nodle: J TTORNJSY TLAJF Practlcenta lie Htnt3 ao Federal ,Onrt . trill faiibfullyand promptly attend ta neas oiitrasted to him. - jfTr. btockaed, jb. W. S. LONO, Jll. v; Stockard& Lonar. r.vjfaatix Dentists,- ' Will be at Haw River first Mouday In each nioiitb. Culla attendod every .s" where in the cou-ntv. Ilavo yon gaVe?the Isarwillo 3 Eoller oveii.ijs WAikaanitilon your ItoU oemi Ii not, do eo a: tone -and save -i yoiir tuonoy. Jiead M'hat the .,.: pro- -tprletor of the Mancheater Milla save. , ' 'SlANCUESTKB, N. C, : . - - March ,12ih. 1893 ' JLr. WvJL- Scott,''- I'roprietor Danvildi Holler Coim&Jliop9 , , -' 1bab je liavj used rollers cbv- ' ered at your shop & ;tli' Just ,'twolve 4 tnontn, and uh pitasure lu paying Ihnt ytur work Ju kivjum .pficfi'Ct.eHt isfacuon. aud I would adviso all - fac- ' tory ti)eriiiteifdnt8 tq patronize "-ftitti lou can u tins K'Htiuiouiui n you wish, ' KeRptC'f1'iHy, " . , , ,f , - t a John. F.,Clabb:.' 5 Hopins to 4ave a trial tn' your roll 1 - .Yours T'"'y. ' ' . " w Wn If. BC0T1 Jan. J-tf,. - 'If ar.ngpr HANVILLE, yA. C. C. i j.eid. " - ' N. S.. Cardvr-c!! c.c. towhseuo a co; Mann fuel urws Aio(S' for " -.' ft , riedmi)nt.Jfi'ft:)ti, i? i1 ptaodard Waaoti Co. Bupeel and Cart PiVrry flt'f'K Co.t'UtiaRiea arid Carta, . Cook Carr'M.j? Co.:Bnt?(;ie, . ' , " Jiiuinnnpohs Wuieon Uu. iiuglea, fttchlet&Co. tlufzairA, Collins tlTg Co. Cart, . - ; Michigan fuKy Co. Carta, " Walter A. Wood's Mo arsf BiDders and Eakes, , .' Buckeye Mowers and Binder. r v ... We curry ia alock Feed t'uutra, - Com Shellera, full ctock of HarorAn. Collars, BaLllcs, Blaokets, Lap Kobe. Vbipa, Haltera, &c, aluoa full line of V tJndertakera' Good, such, as Camas, Caskets, Burial Eooee, &. ; Hearge lurnisbed on short noiioe, ? - . C. C. Townsend C6 S.13IPLE COPIES FREE ! bwlfW " Ti ne fcii. iitnn'.i I cri i kn a er':it Snnthrrn Fanily Weok'y, hon!d ti id (rvrrv ' hfncluid; .Tjitf piice Is J a Vi'. ii - and f prwent, worth that I i.r more it) ei:tt I. r evt ty j jarly Bub- .- A B inile enpy r't i.t'nl tre to ..i rest, vt uieatono to ' -J lr. SEALS A CO.. -'- Atlanta, (J a. .ui I v ' r- s Fall term opens rpt. 19, 1802. WV . .J- Inv'tta cnrre(ondcnce. - For full par - tloularg'adjsa. . : t . J. T. FAERELL, rrln, -AnC'-tf. - f Oratism, N. C. jxECUTurx'a kotich. . "; - Letter of ftdtnliiUtoidoo bSTlrn,beo J-fn-fd to the noa-rf.it;nt, span ttie mhh ct 1 1 o.oW fi. LunV. ii. bvney DKilfmi Sil oenMru indt'tn-l t rr.-i opiate In rrrk Irnmectue pa f u nl a' f -.fi clatiDS fc'fiuito4 m.J etaie to rr-vo iifiii, oa or brl-Te Ibe lfl da? pf leceiuU:r, ii-vi or ihia octice will be pleaded in Lar ol their recover. Xbia iMb, day of Kot.. ml. . ANN Lo5G, Ex'r'z. dee. l-6t. - : - ' . I::T,aiwT.!.i;:. . , aus 'la: i,' J, japs r i .) I . i..s T ,1 -; ) : . -T , a p'-tr-'; - c?re 1U-tt.Kl. . .ves re :c -' ) ') . ; a. : I - t i. r t !. if". 1 1 mm mm iaw hi ii iiiiw iiiwllii 'I niiiaiiwiw. iim'i iiii ii i ! " -'- '- - - - " . t tll n , , , , , i -, ... -. . r, ' i rT73I ' A; - 1 -UL f A. 'Q- , dhZ j. - - ,''1 JIJilUSFUSfiDiCIlOWN ; -i .J ;.,.,....i-'- AN EXAMPLE' OF WASHINGTON'S NO BLE AND UNSELFISH NATURE. , How This Aotlon Impreued Gladstone and Carlylo -It Boomed Inomprehenl - blo; to Uonaparto Wsalilntton's . Rela " ttons With Trnmbnll nf Arnold, t - - ICopyright, IS33, by American Press AjmocIb- i tlon.J , . , ' Mr. Gladstone. In one of his chats with Channcey M. Depew, said that ha was inclined to the belief that all in oil per haps : the greatest man since. Martin Luther was George Washington, .and the great English statesman went on to explain what he meant by this charac terisation. He did not regard Washing' -ton OS- intellectnally possessed of snch genius as any one of half a dozen- men whom he,couM name. . His military con ins is nndisputed, althongh of course it is hardly fair to- compare it with that displayed by John Churchill or Napoleon or. Wellington..-Judged simply by re sults, it was as great as the victories of any of tbeso men, since it lod ti the es tablishment of a nation, destined to be pre-eminent in the nations of 'the world. Every ono who. has studied the mili tary movements of the Revolution on both sides.- is awara ' that r Washington was very greatly helped ; by the distrac tions which existed in Great Britain and whisk-toade it impossiWe to concentrate its efforts in the American colonics. What the result would have' been had Great Britain "Sent 0 Wellington cou uiandiug a groat British army in wsa ho and Wasliington joined in baftlo no man can say. , i-v-., . - Yet Mr. Gladstone tbonghtr that in some respects Washington stood the: greatest tests. His. so. called- Fabian policy, which' consisted' in ' Citraordi T ... OKKERAL WASHIHOTOX. V narily skillful avoidance of battle when defeat would have been almost certain and" when it, required strategy df the highest order to avoid it, was carried out with the patience and the conviction of genius. His retreat after the battle of Long Island was of itself, in Glad stone's opinion, sufficient evidence of great military ability to justify his ap pointment as commander in chief of the American armies. - -'- - .,- . -' . , But it was not In respect of military quality that Mr. Gladstone regarded Washington as so pre-eminently great. It was In the perfect balance of all his greater moral and intellectual qualities that this pre-eminence lay. His patience, according to Mr. Gladstone, was some thing exceeding that of any other man who achieved greatness, for it was par tionce ' on $Jt extraordinary Irritations, snd. patience exercised for no personal fil ition, but simply for tho cause. ti:Vconcptioif of what the govera i.t v i.xh he was seeking to establish - '. 1 1.3 was qui teas distinct and con -.'i. ;.i.ive as that of Hamilton, Jay, ' a or J Person, although he prob- s'Jy could not have set forth in legal ar ' cuuient as they did the. reasons for that -tonception. They were admirably set forth in his'nif ssages, and especially in Lis farewell address, although there are Indications tb.it errnie of the messages were written by Hamilton, while the farewell address was unquestionably written by Livirsston, although somo writers bttlieve tlist iladiiton wrote it r t if ,!! KtrajcoV3gy,..M.Vt if tM arxrt-tary tho i!eas were thowe of VaKli t''m, rr. 1 he ciidoubtfVJy set th?m t jrth to his sncretaric-s, asVing tbem, who were more frwrjliar with tha liUrary use of the pen than be, to put tbem In Ltting lancoap. Mr. Gladstone rosrls the finest trirtmpb cf xtiub!a, nffel.lfdi. - patriotic sn.l mai'stic lmnnls to tx" ill u.-stratod ty crae I H f in i.lt Lt ia Vi'as'.iin.rton'i career. Wht V.'ahirrt -i-n rc.'r.l tLo crown. t.ii t. e world La l tr.e Ln' t ex trpr'. ,'..:v'-'n cf s r.ol,!a. tr-.j--st;; natnrj. le M.-:.t U xt t t f-mUi-W es it mm should be. American yoirth know that vealed his moral greatness. bnl,,MCcorJ Washington captured Cornwallis, made 'ing to the opinion of Mr. Gladiitono. and a brilliant retreat after the'battlo of Long other great EngHsh thinkers who have Island and worried and fretted tho Brit-studied his U3, rtade it Inipossible' that lab. armies into exhaustion dining a seVen a monarchy conld ever be eutabhshed in years' war. They-also know that he wiur the United CteteJs-...iJr,-.: - kj. . ; president twice and declined to becomo Carlylo, wL.o had no groat opinion of president third time. There are not the American Revolution,, believing, if many who know that the only time tears his private, talks with Americans -whom were seen in. his eyes and the manifest!- ho met have been correctly reportodk that tion of great personal sorrow was mad,, it was little more than a gnemlla war to those about him was upon that oo- casion at the close of the war when his army, encamped upon the bunks of the Hudson, waeatxmttobedisbanded, There- WASHlNaTOS- BRFVStXQ THE CROWN. ' wore men who were fearful that the am bitions acd Jeaionsies of soma pf those who bad . been of infinenre during the ' r. , . , - , - t .1 . . .MV. were others who believed that as result Cf the victtwytbere would be stabliahel in Ameripitr a constitutionalmCnarchyj modeled after that "of 'Great , Bntnin.' The nation as . we jiow .knowit vfas a government yet to bo created, - , - Eo a cpmpany of officers mn having Infiuence having talkod ' this . matter Ove"f. agreed to go to Wwhingto'n..ak bind to accept the crown of empire and to promise hiin the support of the army in establishing- thus a personal throne, When they approached him Washington believed that these ofScors and friends of his had come upon some such errand as lod them often to seek him for counsel. He was in a happy frame of mind, that morning. ' The war was ended victori ously, and he had already been in con sultation with Hamilton and some others respecting the form of civil government which the now free colonics should un dertako. ' They oJTcred him the crown In but a single sentence. - A few years before, across the river, Washington, being seat ed at breakfast, had liecn approached by an Officer, who said to him that Benedict Arnold had fled after an attempt to be tray West Point into the hands of the British. : The news was appalling and to Washington must have been extraordi narily painful, since for Arnold he had a personal affection which he bestowed npon only two or three of his other offi cers. Tet so reat was his self command so snperb bis capacity for suppreasim? emotion; so thoroughly nad De scuooieu himoclfto face adversity with calmness, that those about him only saw a look of sad sternness coma to his countenance a- he tottered tbo now lustorto word, . nojd'g energy to getting his company to "Whom can we now trustT 1 gotlier within an boor after the messen- . But when these officers proposed to . brought the'news of Lexingtcm, and him the empire and tried to - put the ,t the bayoncfi pcint demanding pow soepter In his hatid Washington broke jor fr0rn the hesitating New Haven an down.? Theri was sorrow aud there was ; thoritiea. snd then, enninncdf leading anger in his countenance and in his man- . S;,i.'' JOSATHjCh TCtrMBUUa ner. Tears came to Lis eyes, and when he durminaed them with a sad gesture and only a brief word these men realized that Waohicgtoa had been shocked and j grieved tiiat it coald hare erit.Tc.1 into t;-ir liearts tlmt he for one monwrnt could : have ri'gr led en empire as pfiljle or ' COuM lmre for -;;t tLn-c - h the term) rea.it.utLs L-iu-'-t Uilf a'.Li..a tiie Ia that sctrca W l.ir.-rtoa cot or.Jyr i. -fj j V. faro, nevertheless has Baid that this half sorrowful, half angry and contemptuous rejiulss to those who weru bringing to hint a crown was something greater than tho command of tho American armies through seven years to ultimate victory; It was an at t that Europeans coal 1 bot unJtxstand. ' Bonaparte was ' always inclined to be lieve the story trarolv anocrvnhal. al- thongli he was a- great .admirer of i Washih'rton and paid a higher tribute to his military genius than ' somo other ' groat cutrtains- have done, t But it Was incoinprehenftible to Bonaparte that a man shoukl have conducted a prolonged warfare to'traccesB without any idea- of personal aggrandizement, and, moreover, Bonaparte ' bims:lf had no conception wliatorer ol any other form of republio . fin government than that hideons night mare which followed tuo ITrCncu revolution- Washington's grrntneeswiis impreoccd npon snnie of the great muwrfi f the times in which he lived even before the world I understood" his victories', and tbers are some anecdotes traditionary rerpoctiflg j i UiB rtfiuiiuun w mi nt v vt iug nump mcu I his relations with Hfo of the ablest men not become threadbare by constant repe tition, tmri which illaritruto f his iuinres- f tjion of greatness which, he gave to bis cim temporaries. Two of tho ablest mon produced by the Revolutionary era wcro Jonathan Trumbull and Eonedict Arnold. " They, were both nativR of eastornConnecti cnt ' Arnold was bortf only a few milea from TrncbuH's home,.Tnunlmll was a man of grent piety, splendid exocdtlve capacity and possessed in the highest de gree the quo'itiesibf statemanshlp. . Ai nold was f utfcjlectually ' brilliant, 1 but even in childhood had revealed deficient nioral iuality ?Uo would have made a great business man, and v?aa in fact em- ':-' BCREDICT AETOLD. ' ..-' V barkrd on such a career when the gunsnt Lexington brought him into the field. Trumbull, who was governor of the C'on-tcctlcut colony, greatly admired Ar- thein lit- the march across country to Boston. It was Tmmbull who advised Washington of-this exploit, so that Washington become early' Impressed with Arnold's military ardor and ability. Arnold s achievement in taking aa army across the wilds of Maine to Que bec, which has been likened by some writers to the marches of Xenopbon or Hannibal, gained for him the warmest frieudshipof Washington.""- , i Arnolds letters show that the" only man In Revolutionary times for whom be felt either fear or rwpoct wae Wash ington. In Washington's presence Ar nold was subdued, gracious and rerpect fuL ' Some of his letters indicate that h had for Washington a feeling be had for no othor man. something of affection, and it was apparent to those who studied the life of Arnold that the only jmon bef oi o-wbotn" be Etood' taated and "-bfe authority he cheerfnlly acknowledged we Wafshington- That IridU-atfts jmo t!.iug of tlmt grwit moral qnaliry which le.1 Wr. Gla btonetosrwak of WasJJng-4 tin as perhnpe the greatest man ince Liither. ' When hrf was ccnttmpLitinj his awful trwhrr the thought Uiat pave Arnold paia was that Wasldng ton would rcCtr. For the rest he cared not or jnfe' , Tnuu'r;!K r.Ii tiori ;h oot so cawplctioua la" the BUilior Wi . h lel to tte ivvcjt f t tl.- c.:,-j;' as S.J.l Adam or John LUacocU r lir-gT tbenuaa or Thomas : ai , . . -.a. O-i. . JVi. - : ' I A.- Jefferson, was nevertheless regarded by i AN, OLD WASHINGTON STATUE. Washington as the strongest friond that r; o ' " " ho had to lean upon. It is probablO that , cf"t,on froM he rovealed. moro.of hW confidonoss to r.r r a-u. Trembull than to any other man. ,Tbey Tn" wcresomefhmgjilikelnthoirinordinaI- p There is now on one of the mont p!c iLics, although Trr.mbull was of Puri- 9 8pot3 0 Manhattan island a tanic piety, whilo Washington was not. gtatuo of Georga Washington which has Uiongh each of ; them was a Wligious , ftn jEtei!tIng history. The statne standi man. ,-: k . ' : ' , In Riverside crescent, and is to the lower Some fU.ty years ago tho Eon. Learned eiuV of Rjvorsid drive what the Grant He-bard was appointed esectitor of s feiausolenta is on a grander scale to thtf rsuue ot vyuimui wuaw, vi grandson of , Jonathan Trumbull, and Thoso father was ono of tha signers of. tho Doclaraaon of Independence. In tho settlement of the estate JudgoHebard came across a vast amount of corra- . spondenco, iucludiag letters whioh passed between Washington . and Governor TrumbnlL Some' of these letters were formal business documents; others were J of a uioro tjonfidential cntare.. They re vealed on the part of Washington a free dom frotn rpecrvO which nomi of hia other correajKindenoo shows. One or two of them . cohtalned that tena which Washingtort publicly applied to ; GgV ernor Trumbnll and which for many years was regarded as a nickname for the -American nation. "Brother Jonathan." Somo , of Trumbull's corrospoiidenco was also fonad," which shows that this, man of genius and clear intellect, a man born to be of nothority , bimaelf , had recognizod In Washington that c;unlity ' of greatness early la the time of the Revolution end before be had demon strated it to "the world.'- Trumbull's let ters; while pot extravagant, for ko.was not tho maa to uss extravBgant tenns, indicate that Trnmbnll.. regarded Wash' ingtoni as having been specially fnrniohod by Providence with those greater quali fies, &ot only'irailiStary, but moral, which woro necoswy to establish tha Ameri can nation, uo nart aimosi mo jeeung for ..Washington which .Arnold bad, i al-, Eoia9 ,,,3 Won tho rebomon the though ia lits cse there was psraopcl to- 0! assembly of Trginio authorized tlmacymrd almost an, eqtialitr of rela- ft QsmxS gculptor-Guntherman by tlori which prooatly no other man of tho , t,, maaf iXLVUaata of the Hon Revolution enjoyed, vvy , v - j aon utatno, and from this four caste were Thus fuo impression and .influence tottdd. vono of these Is tho statue in which Washington created and erortod ; Rjver.iae m i jnat after the war the upon thosotwo -mm-e of .briUiant I jptor'S widow brought it to New abihty, but morally bad; the other of in-! york placod lt on exhibition in One telloctnal sad moral integrity and cf of the tmblic halls. Bhe wanted to sell mhwiwuiu """, was that to men of all quality tha Im pression' that ho gave was . that of great r.c ss, eractly as to the greatest intellects of this day, lilto Gladstone's, the same fan prepion has been given by a study of his lifA ' . - -;. - E. Jay , Edwards.";: THE WACHINGTOff ' FAMlLVi' ''il. " " -'-m:'-' In the presidential campaign of 1870 it. was often remarked as a Curious coinci--. denco that of tho tara elected president every third ono was childless. The Ust ran : Washington, 7 Madiaon. Jackson Polk, Buchanan and but there seems to have been a break in the line, bo that the Omen failed on Tilden. It is also worthy of remark that these childless men had singularly happy home lives, and none more so than George Waahington. Martha Daiidridgo was a beauty and a Virginia belle when at seventeen she married Daniel Parke jCustis. Of their four children two preceded their father to the tomb, aud when the Widow Custis" married George Washington in 1759 she bad but aeori-and a daughter. History gives ns a few exquWte glimpses of tho home life of Vashington for the next fowyeara He and hia, wife wore very nearly of the same age; both born in 1733; both were wealthy, refined and of tbo highest standing aniong their Vir ginia ctra temporaries. Wanhi.igtou loved tho two children as, bis own. There was nothing to tear their domestic life. But in 1773 Martha Porko Custis died, and Washington wo long affected with a strungo rffltlesances. ladocd his do mestic lifo never again sceinod so calm till aftar the Revolution. Martha was sometimes cHed toe ''dark lady', or "dark beauty" becansa of her brunette complexion, but she was both beautiful j president of tho park department thia and amiable. . - The son, John Parke statue came under my notice as I was Custis. at the ago of nineteen married faurpecting the city's property of which I one of the famous Calvert family at Bal- was to have Charge. It was covered timore. but no, too, died young died of with dust and was hardly recognlzablo. camp fever af York town soon after the : Its history bad been forgotten. No one sorrendcr. ' leaving four "children. Of ' knew what it was or bow it came there, these General and Mrs. Washington ; The Tweed regime was past, and new adopted two, and these constituted the ' people were In. Finally I found an old Washington family seen in the familiar j clerk who knew, and be told me of ife pictu'reo. v '.i v V T 1 "We- were then laying out Riversid'fJ Eleanor Parke Curtis, the daughter, ; park and decided that the statue should was so young at ber father's death that be placed in the little crescent where it she knew no home but Mount Vernon. Ia 109 she became tho wife of Major Lewis. , Washington's sietrir's son. The son was the well known 'OooTge Wash ington Parke Custinan author of some note, who acquired the famous Arlingto estate, where he died in 1807. His only child, a daughter, married Robert E. Lee, 1 who thus becarno the owner Ot Arlington.' ' J. H. B. TeachfT WUiio, when I called at your hnnuit T-mttor.biv and fnw tha "Life of "'".; - .A E onolile Ttotr. mmm SiiaiouZl yyVPXJ1 $F- Wf..BrftlBtiOTiary. much grieved to notice that toe leaves had not been cntC - Willie (mocilyV-Ko"m. If Td cut those leaves I wouldn't bare half the chance to swop it ol. T71loro' Palitesooa. George Washington was polite shnost to the point ,ot. pnnct:uonsiK. -Ihe story i of iro toil of hifn that, bsnr.g boweJ to a colored nun-who had saluted him. a trWn 1 hjtc-.1"! surprirA Va-b-rngt-m"a quick r'.-vt v, "Wbit. y oa yf.ii .1 to r.3T9 n.0 cuu.tte ia po-jle- Bcra ty k iir . -.'..' upper. ; The Cgnre stands with Its back t tho jjuCgort Bbout eighty feet abovo the tido. General Egbert L. Vicle, who saved the statno from oblivion, told me abont it cs follows: f .7 : : ::, '.y ' "This piece of statuary is a.lif e size rep rosentation -c?. WashLigton. The "first thing yon notice about it is its apparent stualluess. " It shows the pater patri td have been a much smaller man than 'everybody supposes. . - That is : because all his statues are either heroio or colos saL - In exalting bis character tho people have magnified liia person. It is so the world Over with' military and political heroes. Li pers m Washington was not a mair of gigantio proportiona by any means. This is a truthful counterfeit, If I may use the paradox.- It la one of five which show him as ho was.' All ' others make kirn put a man ot hercio build. Supposo you look up biabiog raphics and see if you can find in a single one of thorn a.spoclflo description of; his poraoni with roferonco especially" to hitf i weight and stature. ' "The original of this efUgy Is In tha Capitol at Richmond. It is by Houdon, tliecelobratcd French sculptor. Houdoa was given the " commission througli Thomas Jefferson.' ",' 1 "Eo' stripped hia subject to the buff and made a planter cast. It is the only perfect model over made of Washington. The result was tho statuo at Richmond. ! it to the city for one or the parks, iter price was $10,000, It was very cheap for such a piece of art, but the offer was declined by the city authorities, and it wao- finally decided that a subscriptioni should be opened among the children or the public schools to mako up the pur chase, money in sums ot a dime or loss. After considerable, exertion $3,000 was raised, and there the matter stood until tho widow agreed to accept that sum and to give a bill of sale to the city, THE WAECE'QTO!t 8TATUK. ' The authorities now accepted ti statue, and ordered. It to be placed in a Btoragoroom In the park with alot of rubbish, and there it remained something like twenty tears. When I . became now stands. A number' of residents . along the new park joined toe In a sub scription, and we brought a block of granite from New Hampshire and had a pedestal made. ' When the pedestal was ready the ste'ue was dedicated.;; It was . on a Fourth of July. Children to the number of COO, detailed in military form front the vai ms publio schools, carried out unaided on that day the programme that had been begun before any pf them were bom. The school commissioners and 6,000 other citizens, with Cappa's Seventh regiment band, assembled at the crescent, and the children united to anthem and song and oration- to com plete in their own way the programme of Inauguration. - The little girls were dressed to white, and the boys we-e all bright and decently clad. Every girl .. and boy carried a little flag of the cotuv t try, and they 11 marched to procession two and two, singing and scattering ' Cowers about the statue as they passed. The scene was the most interesting and ; touching of any I ever beheld. And j thus the statue was dedicated." Boil is now being hauled from Fort Washington, more than three miles up the river, to complete a bastion front for the statue, and congress will be asked carmon 10 piace at me nngic xiub ' fort was the Errt geographical point to be named for Washinon, snd there is not a square foot of lu'soiJ but was con- accreted by the blood of CJwallaleT's 1 noblo Marylanders and rennsylvanima when they made their finsl and borx-ls "stand, a fijartan band of 3.000, nsriiant the kings srmy, seven times as sroty. G-mrrai Viols ork:inal tho Lb a rf Takinr the ba.rtion front with t'.is a .L It wiJl bo wteTi conjp'i.toil an f;.i t duplicate of 01.0 cf AlXMnuer Ua:!..'.:.-a'a - -. r m WTFSITltlf t -. . "5 Luiiuus at Ca old fort. Ex3:s r :'.:-, r c r Is po.uille only v, ' i t'. 1 pure ami vigorous. '1j v : ula and other poisons f.'- i I e i culation, the eupfnor r a j ; AYL'Il'o Mr-.-;. u i. Ii . permanent streii'.'t!i andc;..:".---i y t every oran o tlio body. tioa to pcriuot he ' 'i a'l t i f r - hvwwiy lis.. , v ..... AYEIl'S Sarsparl." i. I' ' -bort, Kansas City, lis., wnus: "I r.m convinced that after bsvn; ' been sick a whole year from liver :.--plaint, Ayee Sursaparilla Bitvnd " life. The bout physicians beiw uu " . to help ioe,anu having tried t neu -proprietary medicines without licuei" , i at tnt took Ayer's Snrxaparilia. 1 i" result Was rttinplete crirn. bmee tiiiMi I have recomuiruded thia riican-iiio t j others, end always with success " mf? Vr XJ &4 IJ ill v I PrepareJ by Dr.J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Is uu. Cures others, will cure y c u V 1 v-r;.... -.;-,.;.Perftctlf- Wril. . ' : tlLXjroBE, Dubuque Co., Ia., Sept., 138. -..'triM 1C. Flnii'gan rlfi: My mother afl (li. tar lilted I'm, tor Kcwxfs's NorTs 'Jtonio ! nnm!si. Iter ax botU perioctly wul un KUil tytc tired ut pramny Uiu 1'ouM. liiaVsoia, KewMox'ica, JoiyS, Js4 ' Whb X yt3 young my motbmr bad a b4 frigut tir.d lua-.To ma bar boaora brai 1 iu crm, and two boar aftar I bad ir.m fuv. nttti:i ot iinari dlot;. Vaator Kuunit Mnt-o Ton! o drue UiO wui.h f?o.-d auS fea bf daurcd aHuuk , if.Iuljt.ij A Ia0t.. , Mormnm, Ark., Oct. IS, VS9. Forfowr ytr icy lepilanBhtor wa auujr.-t to opileuclo fibs, bqu tho uao ot Pastor Kouuif Narv foiilo v lmuwdialo arlgfaoiion aj fiuo8 tbo oomujencad takjpg it ihe bas not 4 etrou Uiu lijliuit aymptooi ot too aiMsaa. iif baafa tiiauka to this BwUlrlna. 1 . 1 ioati SCBVID7. A ValnaMo' Bonk n Kcrvow i . lflHBaa sc'ttt iroo to any admons. i and poor patterns eta a.o oiuaia m tiiia iuticliu iio ol unutoo. ti.i r-mfn1vhj boon firorowil br 0o Rornrcni Puitct Kotin, nt Virt Vnyiic latU inc la.ti ai'J UuowptvparuauiuittraiiifiiretiUub bxtua KOEM1C KED. CO Chlcr, t!. Bold b7ro5sfc:fcj tttt per Dottle. OfJtS j, 1,.-:9SK',6L7. fliioMlCMlorSO. s!e:il.no Axartcsa , Ji r r'S...4 ptttal. C.-'truOrt!4. otoJ ForrrifrmafliiniTfJ fro HnnrtiiooV wnrtn WtiNN Sr. h.l I'noAii A i, Nt ... Oldest bnrau for aomrinsr paifc us in A.i Frorr patent taken out ! ns U hrov t t... . , tbapatfuo feruoufMgiVunlreuXoiMMuiu0 fjarmt elrenliiftfin of rrf rt'm'.tlw p' trartL ".uini'ilnur tuitiuw. f- 1 m.n chnifiil baalfTiout II.. Wfl. v. vtf-irf tlifinix nK.fifi'o. An.trift.ft a,;. 4 iA. yuniihiiaa, Uu A i-ioauf a, turn Vws Ui, 3 Over roogli roads fs obtained by riding a Spring Frame Pneumatic or Cuseion .' ' . RAMBLER , If Jrou have neter ridden a RAf5t.r with lbt comhfnalion ofG. A J. fc-;oir Pruma nnH 1nlimftttp. tir .In tint rfi.:- ItkaklfcAn XI m n.i'n nl 0mm ornafrfll rtr plrs, bat try lltjol around a Mock, b'Ji on a sool long ride; Its "life" n . .... luxunovvne'a will smafe vnn. JOHiS B. HARDER. Ag't, Feb. 11- ' Uigt alla, .C. Of Interest to ladies. mimcitr. fxtr f !" rrf.p!iini to AT.y l?n; wiij w.b- to UH-t ft-:'ref - pfrc-ii04T. tr.- ! t- Notice cf Incorpcraticn Kotlre la hereby zItCo of tho Incorpor.i;. of C. V. Albrk'bt Cf. 1 C. r. Al'jrUiht. V.. C. Ulrd 4 T. tV. Y f. terwi. and tnclt .Mhcra tly may a us ' with then. That the prlntl-al '! 1 !.. ine ta ait Haw Blrer, lo Afnmnnre :',. Vlateof inb Caj-ollna. 1ht t' '-n-. -and seneral imrprmo l tha. ol whoir' .'f- a mail dnri 1. mercliaota, dealm. in r. S'td (terftonrcl ropeny. emiiwiij.!::. acriiuoi, btiytna" ft lJ aeiurc atia c-' -Inc nil kli of dnir" enl r.!' ';r. e p.t.il tvH b mix lhonori Holi?.r, n Inti IWfi fonilred and f.-.My i.1e i f ' (yflve 4'illarf eah Tli.t it r- n tliirty yeara tni t')"t ttif" t rk h - . not linb'e iff ilwr f'lw of t! e cr; ur . jcood thi Value of 'h-ir ek. - J. 1. HliifiT. C. S. ('.. JanlSSte .. . . r( - xroTic;: i mt!"e U h- rr r r -i 1' f Tl be. a-'c I 1! Vr-.r;j l: r'. 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The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 23, 1893, edition 1
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