I EASY RSE aT, Bellefonte, Pa., February 15, 1918. THE SCOTCH-IRISH. (Address read by Dr. W. E. McKinney, pastor of the Bellefonte Presbyterian church, before the Bellefonte Chapter of the D. A. R). (Concluded from last week). The testimony of another strong American is worth quoting—that of another ex-President of our Repub- lic, Theodore Roosevelt. ' In his “Winning of the West” he says “Along the western frontier of the colonies that were so soon to be the United States, among the foothills of the Alleghenies, on the slopes of the wooded mountains, and in the long trough-like valleys that lay between the ranges, dwelt in 1774 a peculiar and characteristically American peo- ple. They were of a mixed race, but the dominant strain in their blood was that of the Ulster Irish—the Scotch- Irish, as they are often called. Full credit has been awarded the Round- head and the Cavalier for their lead- ership in our history; nor have we been altogether blind to the deeds of the Hollander and the Huguenot; but it is doubtful if we have wholly real- ized the importance of the part play- ed by that stern and virile people, the Irish whose preachers taught the creed of Knox and Calvin. These Irish representatives of the Cove- nanters were in the West almost what the Puritans were in the Northeast and more than the Cavaliers were in the South. Mingled with the descend- ants of many other races, they never- theless formed the kernel of the dis- tinctly and intensely American stock who were the pioneers of our people in their march westward. They were a truculent and obstinate people, and gloried in the warlike renown of their forefathers, the men who had follow- ed Cromwell, and who had shared in the defence of Derry, and in the vic- tories of the Boyne and Aughrim. “The West was won by those who had been rightly called the Roundheads of the South, the same men who be- fore any other declared for American independence.” ir Let us come down from generali- ties, and see if facts of historical knowledge substantiate these claims of Froude, and Lecky, and McKinley, and Roosevelt. There has been a good deal of con- troversy as to the birthplace of Amer- ican independence—was it in New England, the home of the Puritan, or was it in Virginia, the home of the Cavalier? Bostonians contend that the first gun of complete independence was fir- ed in the old Town House in Boston in the month of February, 1761. James Otis shouldered the gun, and with deadly aim shattered the “acts of trade” recently formulated by the British Parliament controlled by King George, the Third. But what of Virginia’s claim? Ac- cording to the testimony of Thomas Jefferson, as quoted by William Wirt, “Mr. Patrick Henry gave the first im- pulse to the ball of the revolution.” “He was our leader in the measures of the Revolution in Virginia, and in that respect more is due to him than to any other man.” Thus Virginia claims to have given birth to the child Independence, which in fifteen years—in 1776—grew up to manhood, and declared itself free. What of these claims? John Ad- ams, who supports the claim of Bos- ton, was born in Massachusetts and was a New Englander through and through. Thomas Jefferson, the sup- porter of Virginia’s claim, was born in the State of Virginia and was a typical son of the Old Dominion col- In the Colonial Assemblies of 1775 the relation of the colonies to Great them. While all deplored the arro- gant and iniquitous conduct of Brit- ain, not one of them voted for a com- plete break with the mother country. The tenor of all the colonies might be summed up in the words of the New York provincial convention for that year. It reads “The turbulent state of this colony does not arise from a want of attachment to the King, from a desire to become independent of the British crown, or a spirit of opposi- tion to the ancient and established form of government to which we have been subjected; but solely for the op- pressive acts of the British parlia- ment.” In contrast with this statement of relationship considered what is known in history as the Mechlenburg Decla- ration. The North Carolina Conven- tion had formulated a judgment much the same as that of New York. The citizens from the county of Mechlen- burg demurred from that judgment, and determined to give to the world their conception of the situation. In May of 1771 the Scotch-Irish of this county and contiguous territory had resisted the oppression of the British crown as unjust. The Governor of the colony had treated them as out- laws, and sent an army against them and shot them down, and took captive and hung thirty of their number. This was the first blood of the Revo- lution—shed by the sons of Ulster- men. It is known in history as the war of the Regulators. Bancroft says of it “The blood of the first rebels against British oppression was first shed on the branches of the Cape Fear River.” We can easily understand what would be the feeling of these cit- izens of Mechlenburg when they heard of the doings of the minutemen of New England in the battle of Lexing- ton. It did not take them long to act. A summons was issued to send their representatives to Charlotte, North Carolina, in conference for May 21st, 1775. There were twenty-seven del- egates, and every man a son of Scotch-Irish parents. They formulated a Declaration of five propositions. To understand their decision on the relationship that ought to exist between Britain and these colonies we have only to read number two. It says “Resolved, 2nd, That we the citizens of Mechlenburg county, do hereby dissolve the polit- ical bonds which have connected us with the mother country, and hereby absolve ourselves from all allegiance to the British crown and abjure all political connection, contract, or as- sociation with that nation, which has wantonly trampled on our rights and liberties, and inhumanly shed the blood of American patriots at Lex- ington.” This was the first recogniz- ed public convention which called for a complete severance from the Brit- ish crown. It antedated the Philadel- phia Declaration of Independence one whole year. It was in toto an as- sembly of Ulstermen, and historians of today are giving it its rightful place in the evolution of our national independence. “Wallace Bruce, a man with a double Scotch name and a double Scotch nature, honors the event of Mechlenburg in verse: Manhattan and Plymouth and Jamestown (an boast of their heritage true, But Mechlenburg's fame is immortal When we number the stars in the blue; The Scotch-Irish Puritan Fathers First drafted the words of the free, And the speech of Virginia's Henry Is the crown of our liberty’s plea.” Ulstermen were the first who dared to resist British oppression in these States of ours, with the sword; Ul- stermen were the first to shed their blood for the liberties we now enjoy; and they were the first to announce openly to the world that we ought to be an independent people—a republi- ony. Suppose we turn to history of the United States—not a history of Vir- ginia or even of New England. Ban- croft is a recognized authority, and both by training and make-up was well fitted to give us an unbiased ac- count of the whole matter. His his- tory has received the highest com- mendation from men entitled to re- spect. Here is his view of this mat- ter, “The first voice publicly raised in America to dissolve all connection with Great Britain, came not from the Puritans of New England, nor from the planters of Virginia, nor from the Dutch of New York, but from the Scotch-Irish.” Col. A. K. McClure, the famous Philadelphia editor, has left on wec- ord “It was the Scotch-Irish people of the colonies that made the declara- tion of 1776. Without them it would not have been thought of except as a passing fancy. The action of the Continental Congress voiced the teachings of the Scotch-Irish people of the land. They did not falter, they did not dissemble, they did not tem- porize. It was not the Quaker, nor the Puritan, not the Cavalier, not even the Hugeunot or the German; it was the Scotch-Irish of the land whose voice was first heard in Virginia. In the valley of Virginia, in North Caro- lina, in Cumberland and Westmore- land counties in Pennsylvania, the Scotch-Irish had declared that these colonies are and of right ought to be free and independent. They had taught this not only in their public speeches, but at their altars, in their pulpits, at their fivesides, and it was from these there came that outburst of rugged and determined people that made the declaration of 1776 possi- ble. They were its authors, and they were ready to maintain it by all the moral and physical power they pos- sessed. They meant that Scotch-Irish blood was ready to flow on the battle field, and come weal or woe they would maintain it with their lives.” lcan government, of the people, for the people, and by the people. History has richly justified their wisdom. Had we time, what names we could bring forward to show the spirit and calibre of the men of Scotch-Irish blood. One prefers to quote the ver- dict of others rather than give his own conception of things. Says Dins- more, “During the war the Scotch- Irish were incomparably the most ef- fective element in Washington’s ar- my.” It was from this race that George Washington got Henry Knox, a mem- ber of his cabinet, and the first See- retary of War in the American Re- public. It was from this race that Washington got Rev. James Caldwell, the chaplain of the First Brigade. Caldwell was more than chaplain; he was at one time the assistant commis- ary-general. Washington esteemed his services as invaluable. Thomas Jefferson is the recognized writer of the American constitution; he was a son of this race. Professor McClos- kie, Princeton University, says the Declaration of Independence, as we have it now, is in the hand writing of a son of this race; it was printed by another son -of this race, and a third — Captain Nixon—first read it pub- licly to the people. This race also claims Patrick Hen- ry, among the first to sound the toc- sin of war in that great sentence of his “give me liberty or give me death.” Madison is claimed by more than one member of the Scotch-Irish Society. He is known asthe father of the American Constitution. Seven Governors out of the thirteen origi- nal States were either Scotch or Scotch-Irish. In the words of Doug- las Campbell, a lover as well asa writer on the Puritan “The Scotch- Irish gave to New York her first Gov- ernor, George Clinton.” To Pennsyl- vania they gave her first Governor, Thomas McKean, one of the signers of the Declaration of Independence. Britain was discussed in each one of |, RAL WAYS TO | eee ee ee eR To Delaware they gave her first Gov- ernor, John McKinley To Virginia they gave Patrick Henry—part Scotch and part Scotch-Irish—the great war Governor, and also civil leader, who, supported by his Scotch-Irish breth- ren from the western counties, first carried and then held Virginia for the cause of Independence. To North Carolina the Scotch-Irish gave her first Governor, Richard Caswell, and to South Carolina they gave another ence, Edward Rutledge, and another great war Governor in the person of John Jay, of French extraction; the second chief justice was John Rut- ledge, of Scotch-Irish descent. Two lof the original associate Justices | were of this race—Wilson and Iredell. | Scotch-Irish blood predominated in lat least seven of our Presidents— | Jackson, Polk, Buchanan, Johnson, Grant, Arthur, and McKinley. There was also a goodly stream of Secotch- Irish blood in the veins of Jefferson, Monroe, Madison, Taylor, Lincoln, Hayes, Harrison, Cleveland and Wil- son. Alexander Hamilton was Scotch and Scotch-Irish. In the naval wars of 1776 and later the Scotch-Irish gave such command- ers as Samuel Nicholson, Richard Dale, Alexander Murray, Matthew Galbraith Perry, Oliver Perry and others equally famous in their day. Among American generals a few may be mentioned: Andrew Jackson, U.S. Grant, James B. McPherson, George B. McClellan, Stonewall Jack- son, James Longstreet, John F. Rey- nolds, Winfield S. Hancock, Frederick Funston, etc. In politics we have such men as John C. Calhoun, Alexander H. Stephens, Marcus A. Hanna, White- law Reid, Wane McVeagh, Stephen A. Douglas, Stephen B. Elkins, ete. In American literature we find of this strain such men as Lew Wallace, Marion Crawford, Thomas Nelson Page, and Maurice Thompson. Hanna tells us that, “in law and theology they outclass all other na- tionalities.” Of the Sixty Judges of the United States Supreme court, it is said taht one-half have been of Scotch or Scotch-Irish blood. Amer- ica’s prominent business men have been of the same grain. Witness A. T. Stewart, Robert Stuart, John I Blair, James Lenox, Andrew Carne- gie. During the first hundred years of our existence as a nation historians seemed to see mo further than New England or Virginia. Everything AVE SUGAR-WHICH 1S YOUR WAY? signer of the Declaration of Independ- was credited to the Puritan and the Cavalier. The Hollanders in New Amsterdam, the Huguenots in New Rochelle; the Quaker in Pennsylva- nia; and the Scotch-Irish everywhere —these were forgotten, neglected, passed by. But there has been a won- derful change in this respect in the past forty years. These other factors in American Republicanism are com- ing into their rightful heritage. As one has said “The eyes of the public are being opened, and the result is, there is an honest and a popular de- mand that American history be re- written from alpha to omega, and that the uncredited heroes be en- throned in the midst of their lawful rewards, and that every omitted chap- tor be inserted in full.” When this becomes a reality we believe those historians will only expand on a state- ment made by William McKinley in the address referred to, “The Scotch- 'Yrishman comes of mighty stock— that we know—descending from those | who would fight, who would die, but ' never surrender. He is the perfection "of a type which is the development of ithe commingling and assimilating | process of centuries. In the Ameri- | can Seotch-Irishman we behold the personification of liberty and law. | His thoughts have been widened with "the process of suns, and the civiliza- tion which he has helped to secure has added: light and sweetness to the stern faith of his fathers. To the dis- tinctive qualities of this type has been added the humanizing and fra- ternal influence of the American spir- it of toleration and equality. He will stand forth as a fair prototype of the coming American.” —A company at Moss Landing, Cal., has established a packing house for whale meat and will soon supply consumers on the Pacific Coast. The whales are caught with trollers and harpoon guns. The flesh is sold in steaks and roasts, free from bone and gristle, at 8 to 10 cents a pound, and resembles good beef in flavor, texture and appearance. ee —— V Took a Preparatory Course. That auctioneer seems to know his business. Yes, knocking down is his special- ty. He used to be a pugilist.—Bos- ton Transcript. Boastful. «] know that he is bragging.” “Why?” “He says he knows all about the in- come tax law.”—Detroit Free Press. CASTORIA. CASTORIA. \ \ 3 ES age is its guarantee. GENUINE Bears the 59-28-e.00w Tn Use For Over 30 Years The Kind You Have Always Bought EE EEE The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been in use for over over 30 years, has borne the signature of and has been made under his per- sonal supervision since its infancy. Allow no one to deceive you in this. All Countc:izits, Imitations and “ Just-as-good ” are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment. - 5 » * What is CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. neither Opium, Morphine nor other narcotic substance. Its For more than thirty years it has been in constant use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic and Diarrhoea; allaying Feverishness arising therefrom, and by regulating the Stomach and Bowels, aids the assimilation of Food; giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children’s Panacea—The ¥other’s Friend. CASTORIA ALWAYS It is pleasant. It contains Signature of @ Shoes. Shoes. FEBRUARY SHOE SALE tie) AT YEAGERS SHOE STORE ET Dh the month of February I will reduce the prices on all shoes. This is not a sale of another store’s stock, but a sale of my own good quality of shoes at Reduced Prices. NOW IS YOUR TIME to purchase your needs in the shoe line, even though you may not need them for | months to come. Girls $7.00 Tan, High Top, Low Heel Shoes Reduced to $3.00. YEAGER'S SHOE STORE THE SHOE STORE FOR THE POOR MAN Bush Arcade Building 58-27 BELLEFONTE, PA. asin nnn. . Come to the “Watchman” office for High Class Job work. LYON @ COMPANY. We have just received 1400 yds. Dress Ginghams in stripes and plaids, dark and medium light, all colors, that are worth to-day 30 cents per yard ; while they last our price 20 cents. A large assortment of new Voiles in stripes, plaids and dotted, also embroid- ered from 10 cents to 50 cents per yard. Costumes Crepes in the floral designs, all colors that do not need ironing, special 35 cents. A full assortment of Ramie Linens, all colors, 44 inches wide at 75 cents. Special Cloth, a beautiful line of colors, old rose Copenhagen and tan, looks like Tinen, 36 inches wide, only 35 cents. SILKS. Our new Silks for Spring are ready for inspection. Satins in the new Spring shades, plaids and stripes in all colors, taffetas and Georgette Crepes to match. COATS AND SUITS. All our winter Coats and Suits at cost, which means manufacturers prices, a big saving and plenty of cold weather to get good wear this season. At Special Request we are continuing our White Sale until February 16th. Lyon & Co. «-» Bellefonte. -» *