THE CENTRE PA. WH Grant. Memorial Home By ELMO SCOTT WATSON HE date is April 27, 1822. The place is the little backwoods town of Point Pleasant on the Ohlo river, 25 miles east of Cincinnatl, In the home of Jesse Root Grant, foreman of a small tannery, his wife, Hannah Simpson Grant, has presented him with his first child, a son, For the first six weeks of his life the baby is nameless. Father and mother, It seems, cannot agree upon | name, Then, In the words of W. E. Woodward In his biography “Meet General Grant,” “It was agreed finally to let chance decide the question, The assembled relatives—so the story runs—wrote the names of their choice on slips of paper, folded up the slips, and drew one. It was Ulysses, the hame that had been proposed by Grandmother Bimpson. Evidently the outcome was not wholly satisfactory to the masculine part of the family, Somebody who was there succeeded In tacking Hiram on In front of Ulysses, so the child was called Hiram Ulysses Grant.” Thus, the first chapter in the story of a man and a town, The scene shifts now to the north and west some 450 miles. On a high point of land rising abruptly from a little river which empties into the mighty Mississippi six miles away, & settler from Kentucky, named Thomas January, has es tablished a trading post. French-Canadian voy. ageur and American traders call the place Jan- uarys Point. There Is a good reason for establishing a trad- ing post there. Away back in 1700 a French. man named Le Suer, ascending the Mississippi, bad discovered Indians working rude lead mines near this river and in his official report he called it the River of Mines. Later In the cen- tury a French trader named La Fevre estab- lished himself here and the name of Fevre river was tacked on to the stream. American frontiersmen later Anglicized that name to the Fever river and that name, with its unpleasant suggestion of ill health, persisted until 1828 when Januarys Point became known as Galena and the Fever river as the Galena river, because galena is the name of the valuable sulphite of lead which was mined there. Bo while Ulysses Grant Is growing up into a lusty young manhood back in Ohlo, the trading post on the Fever river is growing into the lusty little settlement of Galena In the new state of Illinois. More trading posts are established. bee cause this is still the heart of the Indian coun try, and the red man has many things the white man wants and vice-versa. But the thing, which Is bringing a rush of migration there and which would have justified a proud chamber of com- merce boast of “Watch Galena grow!” (if there had been chambers of commerce in those days), is the lead mining industry. Next to St. Louis, Galena was the most Im- portant town In the West and Galenians began suffering from delusions of grandeur. They boastfully predicted that it would soon overs shadow the old French and Spanish metropolis to the South, Had some one told them that it would soon be displaced in Importance by a little town named Chicago, which squatted down among the marshes on the shores of Lake Mich- Igan, they would have laughed long and loud. For everybody who went West In those days visited Galena. And “everybody” Included na- tional and world notables—the Marquis de La- fayette, the Prince de Joineville of the royal House of Bourbon, Dolly Madison, wife of the fourth President of the United States, Martin Yan Buren and Zachary Taylor, future Presidents, Mrs. Alexander Hamilton, Joseph Smith, Mormon prophet, Charles Sumner, and Jefferson Davis, then a young leutenant in the United States army but later destined to lead the Lost Cause of the Confederacy. By 1800 Galena had reached the apex of its fame and its claim to distinction. At that time it had no way of knowing that in less than half a century it would become a town that had died on its feet, a quiet little village resembling nothing so much as an old man bask. Ing In the sunshine and dreaming of the days of his youth. It could not have known that it would come to be famous principally through the Mnking of its name with the name of a man who had not yet walked through its narrow, winding streets. It probably had never heard of the town of Point Pleasant, Ohlo, and cer tainly the birth of a son to Jesse and Hannah Grant there on April 27, 1822, meant nothing to Galena, Except for the adding of another business en- terprise to its list, it meant nothing more to Galena when tile elder Grant, then owner of & tannery in Covington, Ky., sent his two sons, Jesse Root and Samuel Simpson, to open a leather store in the Illinois town. So Galena could not realize the importance to it of an event which took place In April, 1860. Hamlin Garland in his “Life of Grant” describes it as follows: “Men stood on the levee watching the steamer ‘Itasca’ while she nosed her way up the tore tuous current of the Galena river; as she swung up to the wharf, attention was attracted to a passenger on the deck wearing a blue cape over. cont. As the boat struck the landing this man rose and gathered a number of chairs together, evidently part of his household furniture, “*Who Is that? asked one man of a friend on the river bank. ‘That Is Captain Grant, Jesse Grant's oldest son; he was in the Mexican war Statue in Grant Park + : {or mize on A FS pe hl AE —he is moving here from St. Louis’ was the reply. Captain Grant took a couple of chairs In each hand and walked ashore with them: his wife, a small alert woman, followed him with her little flock (four children, Frederick, Ulysses, Jesse and daughter, Nellie), The carrying of the chairs ashore signified that Ulysses Grant had become a resident of Galena” So Ulysses Simpson Grant (the change from Hiram Ulysses to Ulysses Simpson had taken place during his West Point days) this Army cap- tain who at forty was a failure at everything he had attempted, became a clerk in his broth. ers’ leather store at the munificent salary of $000 a year. Apparently he made but little im. pression In his new surroundings. There was nothing about him to mark him as a man of destiny. But he did make some strong friends among them Elihu B. Washburne, state senator, John A. Rawling, a farmer and self-eduented lawyer; W. R. Rowley, clerk of the Circait court, and Dr. Edward Kittoe, an Englishman by birth but a naturalized American. Even when the event came which was to pot his feet firmly on the ladder of fame. Grant was still pretty much of a nonentity in Galena, At the news of the firing on Fort Sumter a mass meeting was celled in the courthouse and at that meeting Grant offered his West Point training and his Mexican war experience for the service of his country in the new crisis. When some one criticized the offer because of the likelihood of Grant's sympathy for the South since he came from St. Louls and It was reported that his wife owned two slaves, Immediately Washburne and Rawling came to the defense with the em phatic statement that “Any man wio will try to stir up party prejudices at such a time as this is a traitor!™ 80 at a later meeting to ralse volunteers Grant was made chairman and within a few days he was busy drilling troops on the broad lawn which surrounded the Southern colonial home of Washburne. He was offered the captaincy of the Volunteer company that Galena raised but refused it, although he announced his in. tention of going to Springfield with the com. pany. His departure from Galena was almost as unmarked as his arrival had been. He simply walked from his home to the Illinois Central depot over a miserable pathway through the muddy streets of the town, carrying a little satchel In his hand. His leave-taking was “un. noticed and unhonored.” When the war was over and the victorious general returned to his home in Galena, the man who had slipped away so quietly in eivillan clothes In 1861 was welcomed back with wild acclaim. From all over the West thousands came to join with Galena In honoring her first citizen. Across Main street in front of the De Soto house was an Immense arch bearing the in. scription “Hail to the chief who In triumph ad. vances I” Galena further honored its returned hero by buying a fine brick house, located on a hig hill east of the river, and presenting it to him for his home. There the Grants established them. selves and took a leading part In Galena society until his election to the Presidency in 1808 Again In 1870 he was given a great reception after his trip around the world at the conclu sion of his two terms in the White House, Once more he settled down In Galena, only to find the quiet life which he had anticipated disrupted by the insistence of his friends that he be a can didate for a third term, Simpson was sitting In the office of his whet news was brought to an convention had denied nd given it to Garfield, had fust 1 * of his famous cigars. Walking out to the sidewalk he stood for a moment in thought, then tossed the cigar in ths street, turned and went back into the office. "1 can't say that I regret m3 “By it 1 shall escape four years of hard work and four years of abuse. And, gentlemen, we can all support the candidate.’ Across the street was a Jewelry store own defeat,” he sald quietly. * When the son of the proprietor saw Grant throw aw ay his cigar he sent a clerk to retrieve it. That igar, the symbol of the end of Grant's public career, is one of the Grant relics which Is pre served in Galena to this day But KK I= only one of the many which you find on every hand, A modern paved highway Galena, but the moment you enter the town, you leads you into realize the apiness of someone's description of Galena as “a town where time stands still.” The crooked narrow streets which wind in and out among the old stone and brick houses are the game streets along which walked the notables of 8 century ago. But the booming river town of those days is no more, The river itself, that was 850 feet wide In 1844, 1s but a thin trickle now, barely kneedeep. The levee where once scores of packet boats tied up is gone. For once yon realize that the much overworked words of sleepy” and “quaint” as applied to a “little town” are true because Galena is both. There are innumerable landmarks which stand unchanged by the years to take you back to another century. They suggest innumerable in- Indian wars, of the old steamboat river days But dominating them all is the memory of one man—a late comer In the history of Galena to whom Galena clings as giving It now its only claim to fame, It is the memory of Grant. Galena will show you the store in which Grant clerked and the First Methodist Episcopal church in which Grant and his family worshiped, Grant's staff during the war, and that of his friend Doctor Kittoe, who became medical di rank of lieutenant colonel, | ‘They will take you out to the cemetery and show you where rests “the only Grant who stayed In Gaiena”—Samuel Simpson Grant, Ulysses’ brother, who dled in September, 1501, and is buried there. Through the principal park in the town, named for the general and dom- inated by a bronge statue of him, they will lead you up the hill the brick house which Galena once gave to her distinguished citizen and which his son, Gen. Frederick Dent Grant, gave back to Galena to be preserved as a (Grant memorial There you may look upon innumerable relics of the citizen, the soldier and the President and his family, fof It Is furnished and kept as It was when the Grants occupied it, Im fact, there is scarcely a place In the town but that has Ite memento of him or can con- tribute some Incident to the story of his careosr, Grant and Galena, Galena and Grante-the words have become inseparable. His ashes may rest in the magnificent tomb on Riverside Drive in New York eity, but the living memory of him ean be found only in a little Illinois town “where time stands still” » (0 by Waptarn Newspaper Union.) % cross. Doctors have said so; men and women everywhere Chinese Leaders Split on Educational Plans most nations dis klore, but » government and Literature » government for food . . . but for work and play ~don't about it! One of the most famous tonics for ness, “nerves,” s Fellows’ Syrup. It sti i weake will prove that “Fellows” for "building up.” That is why #8 femuine Duly Attested When Judge Fletcher Riley, Okla. homa went fishing at Galveston and land y Supreme court magistrate, a box to Mrs Riley in Oklahoma City. attached an affidavit with fourteen signatures attested by that accompanied the jurist on his trip. “Justice Riley cansht this, we saw him,” the affidavit read. On the outside of the box was An Umbrella Borrower Wife (as visitor departs) —Just see him past the umbrella stand.—Hu- morist, When you read a blurb that the novel Is “a story fhrilllsg with the exultant joy of physical life,” you ean bet it is pretty odious, Grewsome Death Watch Paralyzed by feaf, an old woman of Bayeux, France, lay in bed and { watched her husband hang himself. Even after he was dead, when she found sufficient strength to get up, ghe did not cut the cord, but lit two candies, one on each side of the body. Finally, neighbors, anxious at not seeing the old couple, entered the house and found the old woman on her knees before the body sus pended above her in the candle light. Bills Ignored Herduppe—1 have nothing but praise for the work of my tailor. Cashdowne-—Yes, so the tallor tol@ me. Farm Journal, It iz easy to begin loafing, but it's hard to stop. Mothers! Curticura Sear Used Daily Protects the Skin and Keeps It Healthy Every member of the family should use Cuticura Soap regularly. Bb IT Sr: the columns this . It buys space and