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. the way.. g iSt. John's in March, 1775, was thé ‘a Holde Tombs, of: Pntrlnlo ) {Americans, and lts' Walla Echoed”' l thry’a mmjnql Wordl. A : {Visitors nuq leave, mehmond be- 'tore Journeying agromsithe viaduct to | © a look at old mgohns church, lt 1s not only a ple AQ‘E!"*}"( o m| shave llem n;figflh o ¢ Old Domialop, ; and 4 % wmgn the historic’ ediftce * wflre, enmemcy had its birth. William -Byrd . gaye . the ; acre of ground for the chyrch.: Records: show' that .Richard Ran- dolph, gentleman, bujlt the church, which ‘I8 tllough‘t to haye heen: com- pleted June 10, 1741, 181 years ago. The' structure*then was 60 feet long and 20 feet wide, but in 1772 was'en- larged. 4 The original cost was £817 (0‘1.550). which sum ‘'was paid to-Richard Ran- dolph “by the: amount of ‘the sales of 20,000 pounds of ‘tobacco: annually ta be Ievled ol It wag about tha titiie, that llgll mg " rods came into végu wh idg was enfarged; to have called on ‘the vestry with'the fdea of selling rods’for the safety ©of the remodeled:edifice.““With the ex- cepnon of John Enders, on e was I)lttefly opposed Having supplied most of the money: for the | improvements, his fon carried, and emnrged the chuzel of God'and it had‘béen’ duly’ conse- crated to Him. Therefore, if the Lord wanted ‘to destroy “His."church Wwith | Church, Richmond, Va., Years Old, Where Patrick fire; man. should ‘place no scene of a historic convention, called to consider arming the colony. Then and there it was thnt Patrick Henry spoke the words whlch are so insep- arably linked With' his'name:' “Is life 80 dear or peace 80 sweet as to he purchased at the price.of ‘chal t) ‘and -~ glavery? " Forbid it, Almfightv'(}o(l' 1 know " not ‘wh,at _cpurs but as for me, give me:liberty or give me death!” Thereypon the conven- tion took steps to arm: ‘the ‘coloniés.— Vera Palmet, In Richmond Times-Dis- patch. S DEAR TO AMERICAN HEARTS Washington's’ Headq Ttors at Valley ' Farge .Will Forever. Remaih 8 In - this -building -General ; George: Wnshington made hls headqub:rteu half-clad American Continental : army shivered on‘ seant: muons and hoped * for spring. . 1 T AR I L i Relic_of Bunker Hill. A shotgun used in' the battle of’| Bunker Hill in 1775 and the battle of New QOrleans in 1815 has' been “pre- sented to-the State Historical society at,Columbia by P. J. Hainey of Barn- ard, Mo. It is an old model muzzle- - loader, 59, inches long with a_43-inch batrel, It has the wsme 1ock, stock- and barrel used ar Blmker Hi though much worn till shoot. On.} the stock is attn 2, tallow and | patch box which! N‘PQ“M to grease the balls when they were londed in the i Flcurefl Pi .mmently in Revolu- : tlonary ‘Wa Days. " Ponn.ylvanla Bc ‘8quarely Between the British < .and American. Armies. - Thé advent:of national prohibition *sourided’ the - deathi-'knell ‘for ‘many ‘rondhonses - scattered’ throughout the {country districts.. The stopping pl wp :of tourlsts, the! Mecca “of ‘motol :and_the ‘scenes of ‘many.’impromptu , - these phce! for many years held ‘a_corner in the hearts of ‘the American ‘public 'that gave them & place of almost equal fmportance wlth the:clrcus and" the .chau uqua. - Few, ved long aftér January 16, 1920, because :the main source of ‘their income was gone. One of the.most- popular. mdhoqses within_ several hundred ‘miles- of the city, for many years a Mecca. ‘for prom- fnent " Philadelphlans “on . their hikes and rambles, has to some extent su viyed and.still opens its doors to thoy-' sands of tourists each month.’ It 18 the old. Jeffersonvyille inn, located on: the corner of Egypt road and Ridge pike, about seven.miles: from historic {Valley Forge and about two miles northwest of Norristown. It is’better: § to its friends as Tom Brown which name 1t went £0r many yei Surronndedqyy Spots’ i famous | becauge of 'theft ‘connection wub “events ‘of the Revolution, itself meated wlxh histprical nssucluti he fnn held the interest gnd patrons, ny.educated men becauge of the torles' and. data of historical events closely - connected with. ‘the old bulldiog. ..., The House was bullt in 1765 and was §le] by, the British and pnrlla!}y yed, ten years later. This site was In the neutral ground “between the established lines of both the Brit- ish an( merican armies, and was constantly scouted by horsemen of both armies. The Americans, when at [“Valley" orge, had their most easterly ‘pickets at the. juncture of the two of their. relationship to ouss. That 6toad |- * """ oid Jeftsraonvilie tnn. floor, said t5 be the resuit mish between a- British’ ghe soldier. The floors themselves slope gun—Kansas City Times, Qudscribs Ttor The Danly Pioneer. toward the outer walls of the rooms at a terrifying angle, but because they are adjudged to be entirely safe, the e S By T. C. HARBAUGH ‘When Liberty nned to a7 peonlaap- i ' press'd They sprang. as nna man. to the fray; They carried ‘a banner. by Providence | bless'd, And it waves {n its glory\today; Long ag0 on tho fields that’ thelr valor ‘won Our fathers triumphantly ‘stood - And muaa the emblem 'that glows In the Andv smmeql ita bright folds vith. thelr How. they stood long ago on flae flelds f ‘thejr’ fame Let il'remon and Brandywine tell, B Let Yorktown. and Valley Forge echo each name L To the tocsin of Liberty's bell; They sleep where the rivers flow: down to the sea, Revéfed by all patriots. true: They rest 'neath the rose and they camp 'neath the tree— The men of the old Buff and Biue. Who sees not our bgnner in pride ax it waves 3 By the winds of America toss'd? ‘Who ‘drops not a tear on our ml‘eruthau' graves When he thinks what our Liberty cost? We'are proud of our land in its lovelight diyine, Aye, proud’ of the men of our wars; The, nmra in"the heavens will mever out- The anuty of Old ‘Glory’s stara. We hail this_ bright day on the sea and the shore That tells us of Liberty's dawn, ‘And the old Continentals seem mnrchlns once: more As they did in the days that are gone Thelr fame is eternal, ‘for.the fame never dles Wh’e'l (ha cause* that is tought tor Ia just; Look up! see our standard that's set in the skies, ‘And’ honor the brave who are dust, 4 We are ONE in the land lhA! they left us today, Wejare strong on the creat’ or the sea, ‘Anid ‘Liberty rules in her own gentls way; ‘“‘We-are truly the home of-the free; Forever and aye'may the lmppy “bells ring, Ti)_trémbles the arch of the sky Foréver Of the ‘orld’s. only’ Fourth:of 1922, Wastern Newi ads at Jeffersonville. At that time'| " & 'inn was owned by- the Thompsons, |* [ stopping »u‘bfimmel' that ‘stie. would “spend them, The camp was near a crowded re- sort. She went through the resort on her way to the camp, passing by fat women eating “hot dogs” and walking, under the blazing summer sun. d ‘aye may we kluolu]ly ]:ln: % LAt this camp were mothers and £ CHNE g Never Hul He ‘Seen’ Anyone " Like Cartina. vacations hud been before claimed by Sickness which had come to them and had fdemanded its own pecullm- lmm age! Cnrtlnn played with the chlldr@n, she lhowed ‘some of the new arrlyals over the hmlse, where were rows and Tows of nmeat little' cots where at night small boys ang girls would find rest and over whom the great sea breezes would blow so that' color would be put into -otherwise wan, drawti faces. In the dining rooms were tables and tables, all fixed with flowers. for the special Yourth of July dinnen., Over six huyndred. quarts of milk had ar- rived for ‘the children to drink that day. . No wonder, thought Cartina, that cows could chew so placidly and excite themselves so little when they *1 were able to do so much good wlthout any. excessive exertion. Cartina told the children stories. She listened to them as they told her how good the food was and the teachers, tno—mentlonlng the food first in a veéry human way. And they told of the lights’ they could see at night, which “made the’ nearby resort look like a fairyland, So.Cartina ‘spent her -day with the children, reveling with them 'in the glorfes of the Seashore. There old Mother Ocean and Mr. Wind were (do- ing thelr ‘part for the: little boys and girls of . the tenements and of the curbs just as t]ley would for others with more advabtages. But though Cartina knew of the hap- piniess 8he was, nlvnfl and flmugh it Lontemed ‘her, &JI imm time to time she thought 'of ~the :holidny party to, which she had invited: ! That ‘ntte 1i, one of the’ dactors i children cqme there. ap x;n:; up bemn ‘Gartina anid Balph Miner g }gundlng and synipas n. one’ anothes. ' Nevi who vad; kept her thtes: Httle: walfs and /hd( of’ conrse -|/This’ pirticular three ‘years Fourth that ¢ sayih, £ Vnn lmnw the ending! ‘Fourth of Julywas goi - But every ;?hgle es alopg finds Carting -“Blessed old Fourth! ‘The best dny 4 dll the yi Though you did give up your Indepgndence, husband mine.” And Ralph jalways answers, “Inde Happiness 18’ the nce, and 1 have that!? ey Taugh and remark y8 say the same every Fourth, and Fiag! en—they hang out the A RTINS T TR A ORI LTS R I T ety in mrn hnvlng rlsen out of ghe uhel of the origipal Schuyler mansio Revfllnummry home of G Sq\\ule; stands today. at Schuy , Just about the same; lhe fnlshing touches’ upon it by the Contlnental g 177, \The old mansion is mnh\wme\d as it wu when Washington was a guest there, when Lafayette toasted the la- dies, leanmg _one elbaw on the on- whogany. sidehoard, when the mdouq lady . of . General - - Schuyler ed to dispense hqaq\tnlm to nJl the. west ha i ‘name, when there, was no/railrond and the old road'up the Hudson was. still the ‘natural ‘highway -of trade, when| heat . was still taken ‘to ‘Albany ant batteaus. There is no region in New York! state where -the ‘spirit° of the past is maintained as arvound . old : Saratoga, where every turn in-the roafl has its story, where every old'trée’ls a langd- | mark, where almpost every, mound of ground was once an earthwnrk where: the magnificent = battle. . monunient plerces the sky, where the verlest school boy can show ‘you the battle- ground where one of the fifteen de-|, clsive battles of history was fought, o United States. The" Fegion’ about this lovely Revo- m-shaded mansion is n;lnh You may browse around live ‘over' the days ut two nturies, and; recréute the wars Indlan- und rsdcoqt days, You| ‘may. sey retthe siullof the Britist) sny, Lab eusur with & pat hole still in it; where it' wns' dug 'wine cellar- whenua Burgoyne drew his cheer; you mpy drink from the same spring where the:soldiers of the Revo- lution élaked thelr thirst while the ‘battle raged ‘about them; you' may .wilk the streets beneath the whisper- ‘ing streety that are- still General Schuyler’s Tomb, peopled. with the shades of the fleelng army in red, the streets that still echo, with the.drumhbeat of war, the street through which for more thap two ¢en- turies. the tide of Amerlcan life has passed to and fro. If you. will take time you may get all this at Schuy- lerville, for.the mansfon of the Schuy- lers has been g little off the beaten high-way of traffic all these years, and legend uhd story linger under these elms, Niagsra’s. tofal: practical, - energy. equllnlcut 18 in -excess of 6,000,000 torse:power. This stream of energy Is kept constantly renewed by the:ne- tion of the laws of nature, and it finds expression through . the medium m/ ndfse, The falling water at Niag presents a - grand snncmr'le which 18 viewed ench year by less._thun 1 per cent. of the population of the coun- try. But this spectacle, Ilmugh grand, 15 a traveling show, for the falls haye receded 955 feet since the finst survey wus made In 1764 —Wor m'- Work, : lt's- toasted. Tlllp' one exlr- process gives a rare and battle which practically settled the |- delightiul | 1 uality / —-lmms L duplicate, Guaranteed by . Z(/M JM of 8 El‘?vfll hank; you may see the i . .l.n“nflueqceon ll:e.flngéshvo B 5 organs, it ilanifled‘leenlh 8’1 4 WHETHER you use hard or soft water, you can now enjoy rich, smooth, full- flavored fcc. The discoyery of Nash’s Deli- cious Coffee_blend—hfter exhaustive stpdies 04 and pfachc;l testssmakes this possible. L ‘Carefully mnlud, tostod, tcel cut, apd air-clgahed s - ~=free from chalf dnnt-—-vm bitter flavors. “Your col{ep taste will u:ll you, " It's the favorite ‘coffec of the . dismmmuung house-wife and populan-hostess. 2 > Packed in one and three-pound containers. Sold by Your Grocer uhy i | il ulmun])‘ i " A summer faste thrill! Kelloj 5"“ orn Flakes with Compare such a breakfast or lunch with a heavy, greasy diet on a hot day! Realize the health and - cooling refreshment of Kellogg’s Corn Flakes and raspberries—or other fresh fruit! Kellogg’s, Corn Flakes appeal wonderfully to finicky folks—just the.food for uncomfortable weather! ~Yet Kellogg’s are as nourishing as they are delightful. "Keep the little tots on a Kellogg’s dict and sce how tbey benefit] 8 ngist upon Corn Flakes in é D. xa Kfii i icka ring thn liznatum,‘ W, Ifslvll;‘: ? tor of Corn Flakes Iiuuc are xenuho with- out it] , Also makers of liupcn_’s KRUMBLES snd KELLOGG'S BRAN, cosked and krambled The Pioneer Want Ads Bring Resulls -