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FOB I TALLEY, GA.
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1VEATLV EXECUTED
AT THIS OFFICE.
PERRY; GEORGIA,' THURSDAY, MAY 10, 1888
Soiilifoi'ihi>evelopnieilt ;
Farmers’ Alliauce and Merchants' T lib Leader of a
Men and Women of
Revolution.
room was loyal to the chief and the men, including officers, but did tion to dinner" because, she snp-
cause.” not succeed; owing to high posed it Was given only to gratify
Major Burnet’s father was a winds.” the curiosity of the other guests.
Al’.iirce idVocala.
Hours
a the
The Last of Washington's Life Guard.
Copyrighted, 1888, by Funk i Wagnalls.
“The third time always con-
iguers,” declares “a wise saying.”
^ - g * '! The miiterifiljprogr6ssjof tile oM
Scotchman, and his mother was a “You say General and Mrs. She soon found out her mistake,; I did head this article,” Farmers’ Two years ago a man named Southern Stateiunjillgtliat goes to
native of Ireland. He was a lieu- Washington gave entertainments for Lady Washington called at Alliance versus the Merchants”—; Hall, who had never been of any make a lasting prosperity,'is be;
tenant of artillery, and was in occasionally. Were you ever at her mother’s bouse, and little that would have been wrong—the : special use to himself or anyone ginning to HttrkBt the attention of
„ _ charge of a battery at West Point headquarters at such times?” I in- Anna was afterwerd very oftenj Alliance.men don’t want to 'hurt’;® 1 *©, wag discharged from the’all classes. Withniagilificentnatj
I found it verified in iny attempts at the time of the discovery of quirpd. * at headquarters. When she grew the merchants, or anybody • else; •! place he held on the Texas &[ ural resources and fine’climate the
to obtain an interview with the Ja- Arnold’s treachery. He was af- “Always, as a special guard at to full womanhood she was only j they are simply trying to' better; Pacific Railroad. The Knights of, wonder .is that northern and east;
test known survivor of tlI6 famous terwards promoted to Major,” and the door of the house, or on other a yard high.. She lived a maiden; their own condition. 0 Men e n-j Labor, with whom he was affiliated, j ern business menj’did hbt* long
porpS^ knowns as “Washington’s was one of the officers delegated duty there. I shall never forget until she was seventy-five years ■ gaged in all other pursuits and demanded his restoration to thh ’ ago try their fortunSi in this faf
Life Guard,” which was formed to attend the meeting at “The the Christmas dinner at head- old, and then died. Perfect in professions, have their protectivej P laee be bad occupied, and on the vored land. But the passions an^
in the spring of- 1776, of trust- Temple;” just allaged to. He con- quarters, a few days after Lady form, sweet in temper, she was be-
worthy men of the Continental tinued in the army under the im- Washington came.'* j loved by everybody. AnnaBrews-
-Army for the protection of the mediate command of Washington,! “Why do you ball her Lady ter was the smallest woman in
person, papers, and baggage of ail< l v;as oue °f the founder's Washington?” I inquired. i America.”
the Commander-in-Cliief. Of this fbe Society of the Cin-J “We soldiers always called herj It was dark when I left the old
the unfortunate martyr, cinnati. When the Amer cans so. She was a real lady, if there guardsman’s door, and I rode
marched into the city of New : ever was one,” he answered. j back to Newburgh in the light of
York, accompanied by Washing- j '“‘Well, as I was saying, It was : a full moon. I met Sergeant
toD, on the day of the British Lady Washinglon’s first entertain- Knapp once afterward. It was at
J J_. evacuation, he commanded the rear m ent there. There was trouble at a celebration at Newburgh of an
mander was Caleb Gibbs,.of Rhode j £ uard ' He was also present at the j that time in getting poultry for historical event. There was a civic
Island. . j parting of Washington with headquarters, particularly turkeys, j and military procession. 1 was
A new organization of the Guard ’ °® c ® rs , at Fraunce s Tav8rn > 1U : for the camp had been lately es-! invited to ride in a barouche with
'occurred at Morristown New Jer- q a.,. itablished, and the farmers iu all Sergeant Knapp and the orator of
sev at the close of the soring of iJ - a J or iJurEet was then eighty- direotions had been robbed of the day. The Sergeant and I were
T?/**" H ? bad ,“ r « fowls by the bad soldier, j invited guests. .He had a con-
‘creased and a part of the Guard ln “ od< *' n times j As I knew all the farmers in the | spiduous seat on the platform, and
were mounted as ckvalrv. Wash- . h d b ^ .,.’’ a “ ely ’ the llvm § neighborhood, 1 was sent to se- j when the orator had finished hi ?
ington required these men to be, ! rejireBenfejiv© of seven genera- cure poultry for that occasion. I ■ address I'was invited to intrdduce
• ■ ■ • * ,* t^ons or kind reel. had travelled far without success, I the venerable guardsman to the
when I called at the house of Gen-| people. The audience testified
eral James CliDtcta, who was then j their reverence and respect for the
in the Northern Department. His j hero by hurrahs- which almost
wife, Molly, one of the best of j brought the echoes from Beacon
women, had locked up several tur- j Hill and the Storm King, looming
corps
Nathan .Hale, was an original
An ember. It consisted of one hun
dred and eighty picked men from
different regiments. Its first com-
associations of some description, !refusal of the management of the sectional’ feelings ebgendenered
and why not the farmers. \. The i line COI PP 1 / witb their requests ] during Jhp war, together ^itjf.the
wonder is that
ed their Alliance HIHHPBI
sity had to drive them to such a ter n syriteni. The Knights ap-, the growth of a National sentiment,
step. Ruinous rates of interests;
low places for their principal crop,
cotton, inefficiency of labor, high
credit prices—all combined—are I , n
about to bankrupt the farmers, j orcIer P eff or settle it just its they | dollars'of northern capital have
they have not form- i a stl ’ike was inaugurated all along: wonderful and undeveloped Weak
ice sooner. Neces- * be roada .of the Gould Southwes- \ accounts foritlie delay; Time, ana
tern system. The Knights ap-, the growthbf a National sentiment,
pointed three iheh as a committee; | however, wrought a change, ana
witii absolute power over every j now the southern states liaVe eri-
movement of the strike. They j tered on an era'of real prosperity
i could continue it, compromise it, i and development. jU\lil)idrii of
an stature, not more than five feet
ten inches, nor less than five feet
mine inches—“sober, young, active
and well made.” Gibbs
their commander. He
a short
Burnet.
Sergeant Knapp lived
distance from Major
was yet j we ^ere iu conversation,
was sue-1 * be venerab l e Sergeant, Burnet’s
needed at near the close of 17 7 9j : senior in age, rode by at a brisk
by William Colfax, of New Jersey,! pa , c . e ’ h °“ eward „ rh | e Ma ^ OT said ’
with a trace of jealousy in his
•the grandfather of the late Vice-
President Schuyler Colfax.
The uniform of the corps con
sisted of a blue coat with white
facings, white waistcoat
•breeches, black stock and black
in
tone, “See how carelessly that
man rides; he will have a fall yet
that will kill pirn. I ride as well
and * ie ’ more carefully.”
b I bade Major Burnet rare .veil,
, v, j , , , I I and arrived at the liouse of Ser-
half-gaiters, and a cocked hat with | ,
•a blue and white plume. Their f aa t K aa PP J a stas he alighted
•flag was of white silk, on which ! from bls borae - He left the steed
• , £ ,, v-, v m care or a laborer aiid invited
was painted one or the liuard . , . . ^ ,
, i • ,1 . j. me into his dwelling. I ielt sure
holding a horse, and in the act or , , T , „ ,
... „ ,v that he could tell ms more' about
receiving a banner from the ge-1 , ,
» T , -n i ‘events at Washingtons hBad-
mus of Liberty, persomned as a , . - T , ,,
, . .. XT • quarters at jSew Windsor, than
woman leaning uoou ■ the Union ,, ’ ...
, . , . T- ft . - i any other living person, and with
•shield, near which was the Amen-I J ..... D ’ .
very little preface, alter we
can eagle. Upon a ribbon was j
were seated, asked:
the time he was at New Wind
sor?”
“Certainly,” he said; “I was
I
the motto of the corps—“Conquer
or Die.” This flag (Which I have
seen and sketched,) was made af
ter the national banner of the
United States—the Stars and
Stripes was adopted ill June, 1777. ) one of the Guard, and I believe
Informed that Shi'geant Ural: am the only one livingi”
Knapp, the probable last survivor “When did you join the Guard?”
of Washington’s Life pua^d, and I asked.
-Major Robert Burnet, one of the i “Not long after the battle of
General’s escort into the fcity of Monmouth court-house,” he re-
New York on the morning when plied. “I joined the army when I.
■the British evacuated in Novem- -^5 eighteen, and my first battle
ber, 1783, were living not far from was a t White Plains.. I was af-
Newburgh, on the Hudson j I made terwards with General Wooster in
’three attempts to visit them. The tbe affair at Ridgefield, in Connec-
first effort was a failure; at the ticut, where he was killed. Then
‘second I had a brief interview with { joined the light infantry Under
Major Burnet, and the last, result- j L a f a j|tte,j fought at the battle of
•ed in an interesting conversation j Monmouth Court-house, iu New
with both of the-veterans on .it Jersey, on that terribly hot Sun-
pleasant September afternoon. I j clay in June, and was chosen a
•rode first to the residence of Majdr j member of the Commander-in-
Burnet, whom I had visited on | Chiefs guard a month afterward.
keys for her own family’s use, but
gladly let me have three of them
for the General, with which I re
turned to headquarters.”
“Who were at that Christmas
dinner?’ I luquired.
“I cannot remember all,” lie
said. Sitting in silence for a while
in summoning memory to the
front; he said:
“There were two young French
officers from Rocbambeau’s army
at Newport; Governor George
Clinton and his wife or daughter;
soihe gentlemen and their wives
from the neighborhood; Molly
Clinton (who, you know, was the
mother of DeWitt Cliuton), and
bot evening in August. Appfoach-
-ing bis house by a green lane,
shaded by aneieut willows planted
Where did Washington reside
at New Windsor?”.I inquired.
In a plain, old-fashioned Dutch
by his own hand, I greeted the old farmhouse,' built by the father of
.patriot as he sat in his arm-chair Simon DeWitt,” he answered. “It
just inside the wide-open front -^as no t large, but comfortable iu
‘door of the spacious entrance hall
of his dwelling. Seated there, I
■Was entertained for an hour by his
reminiscences of the old War for
Independence. He gave me a
graphic account of the great meet
ing of officers at “The Temple,”
•on the camp-grounds of the Conti
nental Army, not far from New
burgh, where, in a dignified ad- j taiced there, and there were lively
dress; Washington gave irscatlnng! t i mes t ii ere on the Christmas ar-
rebuke of the unpatriotic and se- r ter Lady Washington came.”
tfitious spirit manifested by the j “How were the Guard housed
famous “Newburgh Letters,” ia | that winter?” I asked. -
the spring of 1783, which were the
the occasion of the assemblage,
“Washington, entered the Tem
ple unattended, after the officers
tvere seated,” said Major Barnet;
“took a seat at one end of the long
room, and in a few minutes he
arose with a paper in his hand.
Taking from his waistcoat pocket
a pair of silver-framed spectacles,
fie said, in his usual deliberate
iuannBi'_6f speaking; ah he placed
.them before his eyes, ‘You see;
gentlemen, that I have ndt only,
grown gray but blind in your ser
vice. These words powerfully
touched every heart, and from
that moment every soul in the
“Were you with Washington all the staff officers, two of them with
their wives. Co'ioilei Hamilton,
Washington’s secretary, was at
Albany, where he had married
General Schuyler’s daughter only
ten days before, and did not re
turn until after the holidays.
There were about twenty at the
table, which was set in the big
gest room in the house. Besides
poultry, there was beef and mut
ton. After dinner spiced wine
was passed around, followed by
pies, puddings, apples, nuts and
cider. I was detailed as a Ser
geant to take charge of the Life
Guard Band, which played liyely
tunes during the feast; and so I
saw all that was going on in the
room, for we were stationed in the
passage, through which each guest
went into the dining-room.
“On such occasions Colonel
Hamilton generally sat at the head
of the table, but now being absent,
the General presided' at one end
of the table himself; and Lady
Washington at the other end. She
was a short, stout-built and good
little woman. We all loved her.
Before the guests sat down, tlie
General, standing; asked a bles
sing with solemn tones and closed
eyes. Old Billy, Washington’s
body-servant, whose head appear
ed like a bunch of white sheep’s
wool, was the chief waiter on that
occasion,and moved with great dig
nity; In,the evening some of the
young people of the village were
invited in, and all indulged in in
nocent amusement particularly in
dancing, until nine o’clock, when
the company broke up. Captain
Colfax, who commanded the
Guard; was a guest at the- dinner.
We all had a good time.”
Sergeant Knapp gave me many
other interesting reminiscences of
his life as a guardsman, and X liii-
gerbd'until the sun bed set arid the
twilight was fast deepening. I
bade the venerable patriot fare
well; when he said:
Oh, I forgot to tell you the best
part of the story of the Christmas
dinner at headquartersf There
cold weather,” he continued; “and
there Geueral and Lady Washings
ington lived and entertained com
pany from sonle days . before
Christmas in 1780 until the spring
of 1781. That house stood in the
village and was pulled down many
years ago. Great -officers of the
army with their wives were enter-
hp from the Hudson not far off, on
the crests of which Sergeant
Knapp had ’seen signal fires blaz
ing daring the old War for Inde
pendence. And when, an hour
latei’, the last survivor of Wash
ington’s Life Guard arose at tlie
public banquet to depart, with a
solemn but firm voice be invited
the whole company to his funeral.
Just four months to a day from
that time, when he was a little past
ninety-six years of age, his spirit
took its flight, and many who were
<lt the feast were mourners at. the
burial. His remains were interred
near the tall flagstaff at Washing
ton’s headquarters at Newburgh.
Over them stands a chaste mauso
leum of brown sandstone, fashion
ed by that eminent; sculptor, the
late Henry K. Brown. It was
erected by Company F. 19th Reg
iment Newburgh Guards, in the
early summer of 18t>0.
Benson J. Lossing, LL. D.
“First in tents and then in huts,”
he replied. The weather was very
iniid. The river did not freeze up
at Newburgh until after New Year.
The Bay was as clear of ice as in
May- The water-guard boats
could come and go as they pleased.
Why; ouly a few days before
Christmas Washington ordered
Colonel Humphreys to take as
many of the water-guard as he
might think necessary and attempt
to bfiDg off the Hessian General ^
Knyphausen front Morris’s house, j was a pretty and proud little girl
on the upper part of York Island, lin tfie village; named Anna Brews-'
or General Clinton from the city.; ter, then in her teens, but less
He went with two whale-boats and:than three feet high. She re-
a barge, and twenty-five or thirty' fused Lady Washington's invita-
Gen. Joseph E. Johnson ex
plains how he came to make appli
cation for contributing member
ship in the Grand Army of the Re
public. Some one sent him a cir
cular setting forth the purpose of
Baker Post to incease its list of
contributing members in order that
it might extend its benevolent
work, and accompanying the cir
cular was a blank form of applica
tion for membership. Gen. John
ston filled out the ' blank, enclosed
810, the first year’s contribution,
and registered the letter id Baker
Post. He was moved to this ac
tion by the aid rendered by the
Union veterans in establishing the
Confederate Home in Richmond;
Va;
A rilonster toad; weighing 66
pounds and measuring - nearly 3
feet round the fiody, is said to have
been found at Juilac, France, and
sold for $350 to a mauufacturer at
St. Etienne. Its croakjng bears a
close resemblance to the barking
of a dog. The inhabitants of all
the country around have been
pouring into Juilac to see the phe
nomenal animal.
One never grumbles if he finds
a hare among the viands while eat
ing a game supper.
Tlie Verdict Unanimous.
W. D. Suit, Druggist, Bippus,
Ind., testifies: “l ean recommend
Electric Bitters as the very best
remedy. Every bottle sold has
given relief in every case.. One
man took six bottles, and was
cured of rheumatism of ten years’
standing;” Abraham Hare, drug
gist; Bellville, Ohio, affirms: “The
best selling medicine I have ever
handled in my twenty years expe
rience, is Electric Bitters,” Thou
sands of others have added their
testimony, so that the verdict is
nnanimous that Electric Bitters do
cure’all diseases of the liver, kid
neys or blood. Only a half dollar
a bottle at all drug stores.
Renew your-sal
They must do something. Real
izing the truth of the old adage:
“In union there is strength,” they
are very sensibly uniting together.
Not befog a member, as yet; of
tbe organization, I don’t know
what special oath they take, or
promise they make; but I know
many of the men belonging to the
Alliauce, and I know them to be
sensible Christian gentlemen.
These men are taking a deep in
terest in the Alliance, hence 1
know that the Alliance is a good
hing.
It is not designee! to hart the
merchant, or to hurt any- other
legitimate busines. The Alliance
men have no doubt, determined to
drop these one-hundred-per-cent.
Shylocks, whose conscience have
beeii sleeping the sleep of death
for lo! these many years—they
ought to do it. The man whose
god is a golden calf is a very lit
tle man, and all there is of him
mean, selfishness. The farmers
have no unkind feelings towards
the honorable merchants all over
the land; They have been trading
together for many years, and their
transactions have beeen mutually
satisfactory.
Merchants Shylocks and lion-
paying customers are the carise bf
the troubles in the mercantile
‘vorld. There is an army of idlers
in country and town, whom the
working people have to feed and
clothe, and they are a grevious
burden to the working class.
These idlers ptisli iri for credit
everywhere without any expecta
tion or desire of even_ paying for
what they get. We ought to
quit respecting men' who wont
work and pay their honest debts.
But the merchants are not op
posed to the Alliaube. This or
ganization is for benefiting the
farmers.
Every financial interest in this
section of country is dependent on
the farmer and will advance or
-retrograde, with the agricultural
interests. Everybody knows this,
and every sensible man wishes
the Alliance well —more, is will
ing to put his own shoulders to
tbe wheel and help push, if there
by the farming interests can be
benefited.* Every merchant, law
yer, doctor, teacher—everybody—
should give it the right hand of
fellowship—to help the farmer is
to help every body. Let the mer
chant-sell farmers goods just as
cheap as they possibly can. There
have been'two hard years on far
mers in succession; They ought
to have all tile favors that can be
Conferred on them. The truth is
mauy people fail to realize just
what the farmer^ are worth to the
world. They not onlyjeed find
clothe humanity, but from their
ranks come almost entirely the
merchants, teachers, preachers,
etc., that run the world. Tire
farm is the great physical, mental
and mdral sanitarium of the world.
“Alliance” means tied or bound
together. May its principles
bind together all men, every
where and of every pursiiit, in the
delightful bonds of peace, love
and prosperity;
Prow Boy.
judged best.
• Martin Irons^was the chairman
of the committee, arid he signed
the order for the strike. . He was
called the “Little Napolebn'of the
Southwest.” At his 1 command,
fully 15,000 men abandoned tiieir
work and inaugurated a Conflict
between organized labor and' ser
ried compact capital. With a
stroke of.his pen he had stopped
the trains on'5,000 miles of rail-
been invested in the cheap Iancffi
of all tiieie states, beffidls fh8 oth :
er millions which are being placed
in’the railroads and manufactures:
Arkansas,'with her receHtly discov
ered and iniriiensle bodies of tow
grade gold andsilver ores;Alabama;
Mississippi, Louisiana, the baro-
iinaS.Georgia and Florida; witli
wonderful foreltS 8f yello# 5 pine
and other hard woods; toffi and
iron; and in fact, hll of the IBnth-
road arid paralyzed Commerce west i era s ^ a | :es ’ re sources tmri-
of the Mississippi. He had! valIed ’ cliea P M in abnndaffiffij
pluDged into the fight with all the aud a scattered population
energy of his restless nature, arid
had forgotton himself and' his fu
ture in the struggle for what he
deemed the rights of his brethren
in the ranks of labor. The other
members of the committee were
overlooked and forgotton during
all the days of rtliat sharp conflict,
and only Martin Irons was named
as the chief opponent of the
power of the capitalists. His
brothers in the ordei- were enthu
siastic in his , praises. He was
talked of as Mr. Powderly’s succes
sor.
Well, the strike foiled. The
men went back to work—such of
them as the railroad company
would receive again, but thousands
of homes were broken up and
want stared mariy of the strikers
in the face. Then Martin Irons
begat} to receive the reward of his
efforts in the men.'s behalf. He
was made to bear the'blame of the
strike, when in fact he had voted
against the inauguration. He was
charged with, its failure although
he had sacrificed all his possessions
and labored unceasingly to make
it a success. • He was no. longer
spoken of by his co-workers as
“the man of itod.” Occasionally
he was denounced as a traitor to
the cause for which he had done so
much. His expenses had compell
ed him to go into debt during tbe
strike, aud when his creditors
swept down upon him and- put
him in the street, the treasury of
the Knights was not opened to aid
him. Though an expert mechanic,
he was turned, away Horn every
Workshop. Wherever he Went he
found his name on the bla§k list,
His former friends among the
Working people had deserted him.
The capilalists and employers
would have nothing to do with
h'm.
A little pudgy, round-shotildsred
man with shaggy gray hair; and
with, steel gray eyeg that liave a
hunted expression in them, runs a
peanut stand bn a wind-swept cor
ner near Hunt’s Hotel in St.
Louis. It is a small Wofider that
the little man looks ptemature'y
aged and that his eyes have a
half frightened,' half hunted look.
He is gatherning a scanty living
as best he can from the almost
charity of the passers by. His
came is Martin -Irons;
In order to pass a certain cor
poration bill through tbe New
York legislature, • it is announced
that $2OO;O0D Qmust be raised.
This is a glowfog tribute tb the'
New York Isgislsture.
Tiibre is Said to be a man iii Lee
county who
euiv w\>men, and has hem reject^
ed by tiem all; but he says that
he is enlisted for tbe war and will
persevere until “sdteiity tiffieS
seven.”
Penile Who Ti iivei.
disposed to ^strangers, have entered
the high road to prosperity, a-,
northern man, unfomilior with tlffi
fobts, is hstoriisbed on learning '
that good, farming iabdijf in d
good bliihate, and heat railroad^ '
can be’bought at from one to fivd
dollars p'er abre; and : yet such id
thb base: The south b£ tb-flky
eupiSs the. position of the West aiid
the north-west of twenty-five yearh
ago, with odds in favor Bf tliB
south; for .there, is civilized peo
ple, schools, railroad^, good Mar
kets, and a genial climate; ill
which foriiiiiig is followed ltd
year round.
The ijnefy Will naturally arise]
Why are farming lands in thd
south so much cheaper now thari
before the war?-The ’explariatioil
is simple. In ante belldm dayri
the people of the south were
strictly ari ^agricultural peopld
and had their farms Slid planta
tions ou the navigable
streams where access to market .Wad
easy and these lands ar§ Still as
valuable in many cases as before]
bdt the advent of railfoiicis had
opened up tlie’ immense iilterioT
country, where lands -which werd
considered absolutely worthless
have assumed a value arid Srd
sought after by many farmers
from the river banks,' as of 'the
north, east hnd west.
It is,a matier of pridd and coii-
gratulation jior all pattidtic Amer
icans that the time has at last
come where there is no section of
oar common bouutfy in which any
citizen; whatever his Crbed or
opinions, iriay udt peahSably and
profitably erigdge iri llid pursuit
of wealth and happiness:—Es.
The advertising and obittiary
columns bf the Philadelphia pa
pers contain some Very odd names;
some of which would have hebd
treasures; for Dickens. Tlie fol
lowing are speciriieris: Ague;
Goenog, Cu‘dilb:irk; Cupid; Dider-
ricks, Emanereiorose, Epph; Ewe;
Light Cap, Manypehhy; Teenth;
Wiskotter;
A Physician from Iowa.
Dr. H. Monk, Nevada, Iowa;
Mates: Have been practicing medi
cine fifteen years; ' and of all the
medicines I have ever seen for the
Dr. Biggers’
far t
Job
a man in
A Wholesale Clropei'.ynian -
Mr. T. D; Mdador ot the firm of
Oglesby & Meador, thinks it is just
as important to fortify against the
sudden attacts of the boWajs, as| ^ a ^ d, , w
the robber that invades
hold. He si
Hacklet
Change of climate or water Ver/
oftiiri affect the bowels Seriously;
If da tile fr s syiriptoilS of any
disturbance you would take Dr|
Biggers’ Huckleberry Cdrrli
much suffering might bh saved.
ran says?
3t combed 1