The Lancaster news. (Lancaster, S.C.) 1905-current, June 27, 1913, Page 7, Image 7
PEACE INSTE4U OF WAR JET
hold
rant
TO HOVER OVER BATTLEFIELD. tha(
! sect)
.Heroes of Four Years' Strife Will Iden
Again Bivouac on Historic may
> ... . mer
Battle Ground. es w
, Gettysburg, Pa., June 26.?The vete
a hills of Gettysburg, where the ar^"
armies of Meade and Lee pitched .mea
their tents 50 years ago, are fleok- i . ,
w< ed today with canvas, harbingres of y
the tented city which will soon arise f*ce
ijfcjt on the battlefield. The army of ^
Civil War veterans from the North ?F
Sg and the South?40,000 of them?are ,?|
wRjj coming, some few in thread worn ,p ."j
unarms and all without their mus- I ...
iSpr kd ft hold a jubilee reunion on the ' ,
i anniversary of the battle. I ...
.vTof the scouts are already here; I . .
the advance guard will bivouac on I' T
w the field within a week; the rank I
? and file will follow them not more | rlnR(
h iimu in uours laier. mJ
jm j. Every star of the 40 in the Amer- . .
51 ican fla8 expected to have here its . .
H -own quota of veterans. They will .
come as the guests of the national t .
government, and of their respective ,
states and territories, which jointly .
will spend more than a million dol- .
lars for their entertainment and
comfort. To receive them the government
and the state of Pennsyl- .
ania have made elaborate plans. .
One detail alone provides for fur- th
nishlng the veterans more than 800,000
meals. ^
PLANS FOR CELEBRATION. brea
T
Pennsylvania has been planning .
for the celebration of the battle for ...s
more than four years. She has appropriated
8415,000 as her share of
the expense. Congress has appro- ,.
priated $150,000 to defray the expense
of the government's participa- a? .
tion, and named a commission to Jv
help carry out the plans. Every Vle
state and territory also accepted the }
general invitation to participate and
nearly all of them appropraited ; ^
money to trausport veterans and arra
commissions.
The big camp is pitched on that
part of the battlefield which lies q
southwest of Gettysburg. On nearly ..
300 acres of contiguous ground
7,000 tents and more are going up co
under the supervision of the war department.
The camp lies partly on B
the scene of the first day's fighting
And is not far from High Water butt
Mark, where Pickett's famous charge D
shattered against the Union lines. mas
w Five thousand tents have been ding
erected for the exclusive up^ of the Si
veterans. The camp has been laid CUCI
out like a city. Each street and each brea
tent has a number, so it will be easy
for nnv votoran 1?1, '
......... .V luua uy Cfc mi nil-1 g
comrade or foe. In the center of rjce
the camp will be the headquarters of
the chief quartermaster. The vet- ,.0fT<
erans will he encamped according to p
states. toes
Although each tent is designed to frea
accommodate 12 men, it has been fee
planned to assign only eight veterans g,
to each, so as to make them as com- swei
fortable as possible. Each veteran fres
will have a separate cot, blankets fee
and a mess kit, which will contain a
plate, cup, knife, fork and spoon and R
will become his personal property *r
when he breaks camp. Each tent an(1.
also will have two hand basins, a |iaat
wd^P^bucket, candles and two lan- "a"
t< With the preparation of D
m<^h. the veterans will have nothing , ?
to do. These will be wholesome and
substantial and will be served at the ter*
ends of the company streets. , s'
toes
OUTSIDERS BARRED. butt
"Only veterans of the Civil War
may be provided food, shelter and r
entertainment within the great camp and
around the battlefield," reads the an- fresl
nouncement of the commission, coffe
"Therefore, no woman or child or g,
any man not a veteran will be given cucu
food, shelter or entertainment. No brea
veteran should bring to Gettysburg fee.
any member of his family or other
person for whom he will have to obtain
food and quarters outside the
camp unless all arrangements there- fr'ec
for have first been madp for thom ho. brea
fore he or they come to Gettysburg." D:
No veteran will be permitted to corn
bring a trunk into camp, his bag- brea
gage being restricted to that which tea<
w1" he can easily carry himself. The
care of it will rest with him. an(1
The principal events of the cele- coffe
bratlon will be held on July 1, 2, 3
and 4, but in order to avoid conges- bj
tion of traffic on the railroads and nieal
confusion at Gettysburg, the camp brea
will be opened on Sunday evening, f>l
June 29, the first meal to be served rtppi
at supper time. Twenty meals will pudr
be served to each veteran during the j(.e t
week if he is in camp that long and s(
the camp will come to an end after Hnce
breakfast on Sunday, July 6. toes,
Veterans have planned to visit historic
places in and about the great
area where the battle was fought Bi
and where skirmishes occurred that bollf
led up to it, and to hold reunions, ter a
The great celebration will be in full
swing on the morning of July 1, exactly
60 years to the day from the T1
time the battle opened to the west h
of the town. than
OFFICIAL PROGRAM. for
The program for the four big days t
Ib briefly as follows: =
July 1.?Veterans' Day. Appro- ?irfti
priate exercises under the Joint di- bu'r_
rection of the Pennsylvania commis- . *
Blon and the commanders-in-chief of . '
the Grand Army of the Republic and hHn.
the United Confederate Veterans.
July 2.?Military Day. Under the H..nc
direction of the chief of staff of the q
Un*led States army. . .J
n* 3.?Civic Day. Under the dire^
of the governor of Pennsyl- *
- " presiding and participated In . ?
governors of the states, If .
, '?o deslro. Addresses and
a music.
July 4.?National Day. Patriotic
exercises, orations, with fireworks In Surc<
the evening. von
The exercises will be held in a "
great tent, one of the largest In the
United States, capable of accommodating
about 1R.000 persons. This Tt
tent is at the southern end of the ' lain'
9 camp, beside the Emmlttahurg road, I tnort
down which Leo's army went after rem?
the close of the three days' battle. | bles
Except for the time the main ex-J sale
THE LANG
ses are being held the big tent
be given over to the veterans to WIT AND 1
i such reunions as they may ar;e.
The tent is so constructed
it can be sub-divided into many Willie Paw, wha
Ions for these reunions. For the Paw Gas and el
tlflcatlon of old soldiers who my son.??Cincinnati
not be easily recognized by for
comrades because of the chang- Clare Do you tl
rought by the hand of time, each bring yourself to mi
ran is expected to wear his intellectual inferior'
y, corps, division, brigade, regi- Lydia?I suppose
tal and society badges. ?London Opinion.
fter the principal exercises on
4, there is no schedule of events Maud What in
pt such as may be arranged by you buy more postal
veterans themselves in the way Ethel Why I we
reunions and short excursions store to t s(;me f
it the field and to neighboring who 8hould be the
e?; . . . Boston Transcript,
nited States troops, whose camp
adjoin that of the veterans, will NeI1_Hus MaU(i
ojnstant police duty. Boy scouts cro8s eyed?
act as guides. Pennsylvania's Belle?No; some
b po ice also will be on duty^ her she had beautj
he United States government has ?.. ^ ^
d, hard bread, butter and cof- Mr. Scrapper?I i
Mr. Henpeck?Sb
JULY 4. hero!?Buffalo Inqu
reakfast Puffed rice fried eggs ?whafa the latea
1 bacon, cream potatoes, fresh qnffraeettes'"
,1, hard bread, butter and coffee. U^' ^no b
Inner?Fricassee chicken, peas belllgerents."?Kam
, ice cream, cake, cigars, fresh 6
d, hard bread, butter, coffee, ice "My dear "
? . . . . "Yes, John."
ipper?Salmon salad, macaroni t<1 thlnk we.u h{
cheese, fresh bread, butter and cook back to
rrTr ,, - Louisville Courier-J<
JUui 5.
reakfast?Stewed prunes, oat "It is only a q
I and milk, beef hash fresh when the suffragists
d, butter and coffee. country."
Inner?Boiled pork and beans, "Nonsense! No!
e sauce, fried potatoes, tapioca know how to hand
ling, fresh broad, butter, coffee. Town Topics.
ea.
ipper?Cold meats and bologna, CiOOD MAI
(\ tnnmtnoo ? *
- iranru SWBet pOtA- I
fresh bread, butter, coffee.
If I had known in tl
JUL.Y 8. How wearily all t
reakfast?Puffed rice and milk. The words unkind v?
d eggs, bacon, fresh bread, but- mind,
ind coffee. I said when yo u
INFLUX OF VISITORS. 1 Nor^v" "e
ie town of Gettysburg:, which But we vex our ow
a population of a little more tone
4,000, will be unable to care We m'ght never
the Influx of visitors and thous
of them will be cared for In For though in the <
bboring towns and cities as far You should give
r as Harrisburg and York. Prac- peace,
ly every private house in Gettys- Yet it well might b<
will he turned into a boarding
e. Many veterans who desire The pain of tho he
ttend the reunion and want to How many go forth
< members of their families have Who never come 1
unable to obtain accommoda- And hearts have b
i and must leave them behind. words spokei
leclally invited guests of the That sorrow can r
i and national government will
iven quarters in the Seminary We have careful
of Gettysburg and in the build- stranger,
>f Pennsylvania College north of And arm es for
town. gue&?,
But oft for our own
Though we love o
takes almost as much nerve to Ah. lip with the cu
"*ed as it does to explain why Ah, brow with th
didn't. 'Twere a cruel fate
too late
Can't Keep It .Secret. To undo the work
MR4
ie splendid work of Chambers
Tablets is dally becoming
* widely known. No such grand We are living, we ar
>dy for stomach and liver trou- In a grand and a
has ever been known. For In an age on ages t
by all dealers. To be living is sul
. - ., ? .. . .. . But inai way irom
ted a mammoth field hospital h at lt._PhiiadP,i1
b to the camp, fully equipped.
state also will have its hospital jIe ..jf t^ere is i
state commissioner of it>8 a mn woman..
th will keep deputies in camp she "h m' W1
constant inspection work. The man??>
e fire marshal, in addition, has ..Qh well a
gned men to the camp and steps excuse. Women'ar
5 been taken to prevent fires and vnn knnw "
>xtinguish them promptly should
occur. Griggs?Let's see
he commissary department will , wh? en t
inder the direct charge of regu- maklng wa8 Colora
army officers and will be one of nHees No- thei
most complete ever oraginzed for chancf at law:makit
WU ?bf Ue,arJy, 8?2 Matrimony.?Boston
C8; 125 bakers will furnish fresh
id every day for the big army. Driver "Can't
he greatest care has been taken mum That thar m
irranging for the 20 meals that , j t hln]
be served during the week. The nl , r nHv .,T nn
u was written with due regard aort o' disgusted.''
the age of the men. It will be
e diferent from the hard tack "Haven't you leai
coffee and the occasional portion blcvcie vet
?ean soup or "sow belly" given "qorr:, h'it snr- s
'MS .MM "><? "ix" 'standln
rears ago. This part of the camp _? i i?, * p t p
ngements is in the care of ' '
or William R. Grove. The menu
mged for the week is as follows: VOU8^Jfng fhe ce,
MENU FOR WEEK Bride?Well, I 1c
JUNE 29. session when papa i
upper?Beefsteak, fried onions, (^liarley! Judge.
>d tomatoes, bread, butter and .<Mlag Anteck wa
tttntc on cause I kissed her i
JUNE 30. ?Dld yQu apologi3
reakfast?Oatmeal and milk, ??of course I did.
1 ham, boiled potatoes, bread, mistaken her for h
er and coffee. and still she was n
inner?Roast beef with gravy, American.
hed potatoes, peas, tapioca pud
I, bread, coffee, ice tea. Mother (at the si
upper?Baked pork and beans,
must vorv H lanro.
lruuer pickles, fried potatoes, men you meet here,
id, coffee. Elderly daughter
JULY 1. I know, mamma, tfc
reakfast?Stewed prunes, boiled fully easy. Puck.,
and milk, fried liver and bacon, ~
b bread, hard bread, butter and "Am I the only g
je. loved?"
inner?Roast beef, roast pota- "Not exactly. Bi
, mashed turnips, rice pudding, you're the only glr
h bread, hard bread, butter, cof- willing to pay taxi
ice eta. Detroit Free Press,
tipper?Boiled corn beef, baked ~
at potatoes, sliced tomatoes, "Did Gwendolyn
h bread, hard bread, butter, cof- the young fellow
road serenading he
JULY 2. "No. She was ou
reakfast?Apple sauce, oat meal j111111
milk, tfrled eggs, fried bacon, tomobile. ?Chicagc
led brown potatoes, fresh bread, .4Pipftae mum th
1 bread, butter, cofTee. . J ;?8?/ " ;.,,
Inner?Roast mutton, boiled po- * , tn,hvV
es, stringless beans, bread pud;,
fresh bread, hard bread, but- ' ?,?, gokk
cofTee, ice tea. ower th? vS*b.J
tipper?Ribs of beef, fried pota,
peas, fresh bread, hard bread, latler
er, cofTee. ... ~ , ,
_ "Are you affected
July 3. fever?"
reakfast?Stewed apricots, beef "No. My troublf
vegetable stew, fried mush, ness."?Chicago Re
ti bread, hard bread, butter and
se. Mr. Henpeck?Ar
lpper?Baked pork and beans, i who gave my wife
tmber pickles, rice fritters, fresh I rtflncn'
ASTER NEWS, JUNE 27, 1913.
A Famous Shibboleth. The
lVISD0?4. Boston Herald. But3
Nearly a century and a quarter ...j
t in lteht fiction* haa elapsed since the French struck rer8
ectrlc liKht bills their hiatorlc blow for freedom, and llt,gl<
V, , f ' Gustave le Bon now tells us that for the ,
ji.nqui . j that ujjghty upheaval this country Wate
link von could has nothln? better to show to-day witll)
irrv a man vour than a soundlnB motto and' a democ- of tll
arry a ma yo racy Qn paper ? m8 owll explan- hunt
i uh 11 have to' ation Is that the revolution was the hole?
snail nave to. worj{> not 0f ^e "sovereign people," have
I as the historians assume,, and not ot
.. , . . 'an aroused reason, as in the conventthe
world made ?ona| vlew, but of susceptible crowds 1
;e stamps . stirred by leaaders and under the do- carel
>nt .nto the llruK mination of a phrase. He admits that v,y s<
ace powder and .Liberty Equality> Frttternity" made ___
;re but jack. great noise in the world but he de- q
nles that the revolutionists either ^
. . knew or cared very much what those ,
e always been ideas rea?y meant
. ? . , . Note the change which the years |
fellow once told h brought in ali three concep- I
Iful nose and she Uons For the ?8aU8 culottes.. u?_ I
constantly look- erty glgnifled not only the overthrow I
^ of tyranny, but also delivery from I
i.t.. r a * individual restraint, a sort of irre- I
anything I detest | 8DOUsihln Bnnnta?oI?? , .? !
_m I iieeuuiu
fl, . "to do what you like." If there is
hy not a nirty anything we have in our time about
. social forces it is that constraint inman
has some creases> hoWever subtly, with the
e so attraotne. degree of social unification, and
maybe the very measure of it. Even
7~ t?, a f ^e nations cannot now go altoThe
first state getter as they please. International
a chance at law- obligations have come into existence
do, yaaa t it. unknown in the days of the French
f , nrst revolutlon. More and more what
state or eaCb can do depends on what all
i Transcript. mu8t do
?~ , , Equality has alsr had its vicissihelp
swearin tudes. The first of the famous
LUle knows every prencb declarations, that of 1789,
' , announced that "men are born free
tlced he looked and having equal rights." This was
changed in 1793 to "All men are
equal by nature," but in 1795
-ned to ride your pranre contended herself with as,
serting that "equality consists in the
ure Oi can t bal- jaw being the same for all." It is
ig still, let alone now conceded that men everywhere
are born unequal, and that even their
? equality before the law, however
?Were you ner- 8toutiy insisted on, is no more than
emony a working approximation. Hence
>st my self pos- appropriateness of adding "fragave
me away to ternity" to "liberty, equality," and i
putting it last. We might have the *
? freedom of ordered constraint at its {
s very angry be- Completest, and equality at its 2
n darlc* fullest, but if there were no brother- j
5e?" hood among men the earth might j
I told her I had wen be a howling wilderness. There
er pretty cousin, can be liberty and equality without |
lad-"?Baltimore fraternity, but no real fraternity |
without liberty and equality. |
hore)?Now, you j
it with the young Sunday in the Country.
^wltlTa sleh) Th3 13 a wel1 earned Sunday j.
Ley scare dread- My chores were all done
long ago, ana i am sitting down here
after a late and leisurely breakfast
irl vou have ever wlth that luxurloua feeling of lr- \
you n responsible restfulness and comfort *
, f win ??? that which comes only upon a clean, still
i I've ever been Sunday morning like this?after a
k ki ? week of hard work?a clean Sunday
caD nire tor. morning, with clean clothes, and a ?.
clean chin, and clean thoughts, and
. , . . the June airs stirring the clean
take any interest curtains at my windows. From
who stood in the acro8a t^e bills j can hear very faint*
T?? n ly the drowsy sounds of early church
it riding with tne bells, never Indeed to be heard here
him with an au- except on a morning of surpassing
> News. tranquility. And in the barnyard
, . . . back of the house Harriet's hens are
e neighbors wan cackling triumphantly; they are imlend
them tne piOU8iy unobservant of the Sabbath
day.
T^fii Inlm" Yesterday morning I got out earlath!
Tell them, ler than ugual n wag a perfect
one. L.onaon june morning, one of the brighetst
and clearest I think I ever saw. The
. mists had not yet risen from the hoiat
ail by spring low8 of my lower fields, and all the
. earth was fresh with dew and sweet
5 . lazl" with the mingled odors of growing
cord-Herald. things.
j I walked out along the edge of the
e you the man orcbard and climbed the fence of
a lot or impu- the flejd beyond. As I stooped over
I could smell the heavy sweet odor
ir"- . of the clover blossoms. I could see
iake? You're a .. - ---
- iqc Billowy green sweep of the
"er- glistening leaves. I lifted up a mass
?* T7" ?' tangled stems and laid the 1*1
it from the Eng- paim Qf my hand on the earth under- '
neath. It was neither too wet nor I
ie recognized as too ,jry.
ias City Journal. "We shall have good cutting to- '
? day," I said to myself.?David CJrayson,
in "Adventures in Friendship."
, , (Doubleday, Page & Co.)
ive to send this
the minors."? mo
tturnal. Tho Sc,,sitivo Man"
? Spartanburg Herald.
uestion of time George Fitch says: "Sensitive
will sweep the mPn are greatly to be pitied, but +
what most of them need is a good,
t half of them earnest kick. They are generally senle
a broom "? sitlve because they are too passion- *-l
atelv devoted to themselves. When *-*
you hurt a sensitive man you hurt
VXERS. the dearest thing on earth to him o
and the thing for *hlch he has the
greatest consideration." 1 ,
he day And tl,at is VPr* nearly correct. **
rould trouble my " " o 1
A FAIR WARNING. al
iwent away,
eful, S(
edless pain; One That Should be Heeded by
n with look and Iauicaster Residents.
take back again. Frequently the first sign of kidney
trouble is a slight ache or pain
iuiet evening in the loins. Neglect of this warn- i
me me Kisa or tng makes the way easy for more I 1C
serious troubles?dropsy, gravel, |
3, that never for Bright's disease. 'Tin well to pay | J"
attention to the first sign. Weak
iart should cease, kidneys generally grow weaker and
at morning delay is often dangerous. Reslhomo
at night, dents of this locality place reliance
roken for harsh in Doan's Kidney Pills. This test- 1C
i, ed, Quaker remedy has been used
le'er set right. in kidney trouble over 60 years? 3.(
is recommended all over the ctviltzthought
for r.ho ed world. Read the follpwing:
Mrs. W. H. Ayers, 4 54 8. Wilson
the sometime St., Rock Mill, 3. C.. says: "Doan's t.
Kidney Pills did me a great deal of
i the bitter tone. Rood when I used them, and I can
ur own the best, recommend them to anyone having ?
rve Impatient, kidney complaint. They relieved
e look of scorn, roe of backache, pains through my W
were the night loins and other ailments which had |
showed that my kidneys were '
; of morn. weak "
?. SANfJSTER. For sale by all dealers Price 50 !
? cents. Koster-MUburn Co., RufTalo, 1
e dwelling York. sole agents for the Uni- ZZ
wful time, |1,1,1 ^;,tos ?
elllng, I Remember the name?Doan's? i
blime. and take no other. [I
7
man who is always looking out * | -v * i t |?
i slight, tinds the most of them. I fk |i n 9 1 \\ V I 1 A
listen, Mr. Fitch continues: '*"' '1*1 mr* TT jr llv/
'he sensitive nian not ouly suffrightfully
'rom words. jut
ict is fatal to him. The lily of y vi a ivT^T^
garden does not fade without I ^ I I K/\ 1\ I) |C
r as quickly as the sensitive man '
aut attention. The world is full
mid, grief-stricken men who are
iug obscure and close-fitting . ii ... C??,M
i in which to die because they Court nouse Square
been left off the reception comjes
or have been passed over in
lewspapers or have been given a V C
ess nod instead of a handshake
ime friend."
Subscribe for The News. Phone 261
Insurance
The Farmers' Mutual Insurance Company
and the Mutual Live Stock Insurance Association,
of York and Lancaster Counties, now has
an office in the rear room of the Farmers' Bank
and Trust Co., Lancaster.
We are prepared to insure your buildings and
live stock in the country, also in town provided ,
your property is sufficiently isolated.
D. E. BONEY, Manager,
Yorkville, S. C.
las since 1894 given "Thorough instruction under positively Christian
nfluences at the lowest possible cost.**
RESULT: It Is to-day with Its faculty of 33, a boarding patronage of 363,
ts student body of 413, and Its plant worth 9160,000
THE LEADING TRAINING SCHOOL FOR GIRLS IN VIRGINIA
$150 pays all charges for the year, including table board, room, lights, steam
teat, laundry, medical attention, physical culture, and tuition in all subjects
ixoept music and elocution. For catalogue and application blank address,
REV. THOS. ROSSER REEVES, B. A., Principal.
BLACKSTONE. VA.
Covrrlaht IW br ^ R Zimmerman Co --Ncv. 1$
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jT
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