5 I i Leading Paper IN THE VELLOW TOBAIillO DISTRICT. 1 $2.00 a Year; 6 Moi. $x.oo. LargesMJirciifct, BEST - ADVERTISING MEDIUM. ; tRatcsoa Applkatioa. ' - - -, - , ' - ' ' - Si ' ri s it-. l'r-ni in the mol elegant iorm T.U LAXATIVE and NUTRITIOUS JUICE or THE riGS OF CALIFORNIA, Conibiued with the medicinal 5i tiK-s of plants known to be i .ost V-'ficial to the human : 1.1 .hi, iOiniHiK ayrccsiuiv: : hi tnccuve laxative to penim-i-.'iitly cure Habitual Consti-j.-utiou, r;ud the many ills de pi:a:.i;g on a weak or inactive condition of the KIGKHYS. LIVER AND BOWELS. Ii i- :!.e iot excellent remedy lcnown to '.IZZUSE TUZSYSTZM EFFECTUALLY When oi.i xi. liiliom or Coutip-ted SO THAT FuREr'.OCO, REFRESHING SLEEP, ic; if and STRENGTH hATUrtALLY FOLLOW. ICvery'cne is using it and all are tl-lighted with it. AS VOUFt onucaiST FOR .. a. II ?CTUEO ONLY OY r.'.Lli'dRNTA FIG SYRUP C( . S.tri F5AHCISC0, CAL. iWV'it. r- ' NEW YORK. U. DEFEVV'S ORATION. A GRAND TRIBUTE TO THE MEM ORY OF GEORGE WASHINGTON. Thoughts Suggested by the Centennial of the Inauguration of par FirsVPres ident Reflections of an Historical and Economic Nature, IIEADQUARTEllS FOK Fine Shoes, Hats AND Gents' Furnishings. This is wh:it tli public say ilie cstab lishniei t of A. R. AIMCLEA elv lilt: plib'.if. (iUIiL t P.IHHV, The following is a synopsis of the oration delivered by Hon. Chauncey M. Denew. LL. D.. at the Centennial" of the Inauguration of George Wash ington, first president of the United States, from the steps" of th- Treasury Building, New York, April 30, 1889: We celebrate to-day the Centenary of our Nationality. One hundred years ago the United States began their existence. The powers ot gov eminent were assumed by the people of the Republic, and they became the sole source of authority. The solemn ceremonial of the first inauguration, the reverend oath ot Washington, the acclaim of the multitude greeting their President, marked the most unique event of modern times in the develop ment of free institutions. The occa sion was not an accident, but a result. It was the culmination of the working out by mighty forces 'through many centuries of the problem of self-government. It was not the triumph of a system, the application of a theory, or the reduction to practice of the ab stractions of philosophy. The time, the country, the heredity and envi ronment of the people, the folly of Us friends, gave to liberty after ages of de feat, of trial, of experiment, of partial success and substantial gains, this im- 1 mortal vir.torv. Hencetorth it had a 1 j . refuge and recruiting station. I he op pressed found free homes in this fa vored land, and invisible armies march ed from it by mail and telegraph, by speech and song, by precept and ex ample, to regenerate the world. Puritans in New England, Dutch men in New York, Catholics in Ma ryland, Hugenots in South Carolina had felt the fires ot persecution and were wedded to religious liberty. They ! had been purified in the furnace, and in high debate and on bloody battle- . - . . . 11 der Elbndge Gerry uttered the grim pleasantry,-We most hang together or surely we will hang separately, the portly Harrison responded with the more daring humor, "It will be ail over with me in a moment, but you will be. kicking in the air half an hour after I am gone." Thus flashed athwart the ereat charter which was to be for its signers a death-warrant or a diplo ma of immortality, as with firm hand, fajgh purpose and undaunted resolution they subscribed their names, this mock ery of fear and the penalties of trea son." More clearly than any statesman of the' period did Thomas Jefferson grasp I and divine the possibilities 01 popular government. He caught and crys talized the spirit of free institutions. Hi? philosophical mind was singularly free from the power of precedents or the chains of prejudice. He had an unquestioning md abibing faith in the people, which was accepted by but few of his compatriots. Upon n is lamous axiom, of the equality of all men be fore the law, he constructed his system. It was the trip-hammer essential for the emereencv to break the links binding the colonies to imperial au thority, and to pulverize the privi leges of caste. It inspired htm to write the Declaration of Independence, and persuaded him to doubt the wisdom of the powers concentrated in the con stitution. In his passionate love of liberty he became intensely jealous of authority. He destroyed the substance ot royal" prerogative, but never emerg ed from its shadow. He would have the States as the guardians of popular rights and the barriers against cen tralization, and he saw in the growing power ol tne jNation ever-incrcasuii; encroachments upon" the rights of the people. For the success of the pure Democracy which must precede rrei dents and Cabinets and Congresses, it was perhaps providential that its apostle never believed a great people could grant and still retain, could delegate and yet firmly hold the au thority which untimely created the power of their Republic and enlarged the scope of their own liberty. Where this master-mind halted, all stood still. The necessity for a per- fieldshad learned to sacrifice all ma- manent Union was apparent, uui cdu. terial interests and to peril their lives '.State must have hold upon tne dow- '1 liiii.k if in V many fiiemls l cum toni;i inr l li ir i liliHrji! i.ttrnai. ill l.llf IliNt. I i!HifH tliV tllil I l4VM III! !! I hii- s :ii; 1 tlit- largest i'.! Hdj rights. The principles ol o government had been if SHOES, HATS impressed upon them by hundreds of chinery required to successiully fight ' vears of struecle and for each princi-1 the common enemy, but yet there was fpar that it roisfht become a iranken- ANU- -r liroiig'il to Ueitderami, to which I inv le thir inspection. Ail ih" !Hlina mV.i s nf f hfiffc represented stj 1". qiial itv anil prir- fuaranie 1. A Weani'iTu; lino of fit's in both stiff ami soli. ooimIs tie :i- bb't'St Mtylf" ftho shsoi. A lastv oi tniHvi ol lid'kwMr ud ; t-nts' riirtiih"nn i-'oods r wry dewr'pt Kvr thinsr bought low d i I l .oid heap. iJiVi- in' a m:I. V-rv u-s.eHfn'lv. "A H. ANUI.KA. vj;. a HPiiiiPrw", vears of struggle and for each princi i pie they could point to the grave of an ancestor whose death attested the j ferocity of the fight and the value of the concession wrung from arbitrary i Vntc' Piirnichinrr fnnrk Pwer- Thev knew lhe limitations of beniS rUrniblllllg jUUUb j iuthority) they could pledge their lives and fortunes to resist encroachments upon their rights, but it required the lessons of Indian massacres, the inva sion of the armies of France from Can ada, the tyranv of the British Crown, the seven years' war of the Revolution, and the five years of chaos jf the Con federation to evolve the idea, upon i which rest the power and permanency of the Republic, that liberty and union are one and inseparable. These men were not revolutionists, they were tne heirs and the guardians of the priceless treasures of mankind. The British Kinr and his Ministers (TOW Sl MarstOn. PfOl.'rS.. jwere the revolutionists. They were 1 helpless wreck upon the ocean, tossed apout by the tides and ready to be en gulfed in the stonn. . Washington gave the warning and called for action. It was a voice aefcustomed to command, but now entreaing. The veterans of the war and thetatesmen of the Revo: Iotion"stepped to lhe front. X The pa triotism which Jud been misled, but had never falteied, iose above the in terests of States and the jealosies of j-"Tirjy iiBP" una ine uasis for union, "it is clear to me as A, a, C," said Washington, "that an exten sion of Federal powers would make us one of the most happy, wealthy, re spectable and powerful nations that ever inhabited the terrestrial globe. Without them we shall soon be every thing which is the direct reverse. 1 predict the worst consequences from a half starved, limping Government, al ways moving upon crutches, and tot tering at every step." The response of the country was the convention of 1787. at Philadelphia. The Declara- tion of Independence was but the ves tibule of the temple which this illus trious assembly erected. .With no successful precedents to guide, it aus piciously worked out the problem of Constitutional Government, and of imperial power and home rule, supple menting each other in promoting the grandeur of the Nation, and preserving the liberty of the individual. j The deliberations of great councils have vitally affected, at different peri ods, the history of the world and the fate of Empires : but this' Congress builded, upon popular sovereignty, in stitutions broad enough to embrace the -continent, and elastic enough to fit all conditionsof race and tradition. The experience ot a hundred years has demonstrated Tor us the ierfection of the work, tor defence against foreign foes, and for self preservation against domestic insurrection, for limitless ex pansion in population and material developement, and for steady growth in intellectual freedom and force. Its continuing influence upon the welfare and destiny of the human race can only be measured by the capacity ot man to cultivate and enjty the bound less sopportunities of liberty and law. The eloquent characterization of Mr. Gladstone condenses its merits : " Th American Constitution is the most wonderful work ever struck off at a given time by the brain and purpose of man." The statesmen who composed this great Senate were equal to their trust. stein and destroy its creators. Thus ineir conclusions were mc iu. riifhcultiesot com- calm aeuate anu wibc uiutoaiua. encircles its throat. It was admitted that union gave the ma string wnicn patriotism and fear munication between distant communi ties, and the intense growth of pro vincial pride and interest, led this Congress to frame the Articles of Con federation, happily termed the League ant HENDERSON Carriage Wagon Works, V lake Ih's inflhod nf informing our friends and lhe pnMii; rmiiall v iht we ire lit t'fr prepared to siipp'.v CHrriasr-. Ibiugiew, W4"'i , ''arts, .1 . cheaper lh:n Hi-r lie'". W 111 ike a xp'ci:illy in in mulactii'i- a the !. b.alt-d Alliance Wagon, on i'f th liHNt wa ns soid. It cannot be excelle-i. We have with us the finest workmen in t hst..e. -nd are prepurfd to ilo all kin lw r wink with 111 ai i.est and. lefpatt:h. Carriage Painting and Horseshoeing a ai eri.iliy. Thankful for pat patrome, wo h 'pe b pxal w rk and strict Muni tion to liu-iineKS to merit a coniitiii; nee t f the s.i:tie. Ve-y i:epeetrnl.y. mi. 24 3 1 CROW & MARS TO to of Their character and abilities were so imrp nnri preat as to command the t o confidence of the country for the re versal of the policy of the indepen dence of the State of the power of the had hith ' - y 1 U TT'Hch;., Th- resnlr. was not a Eenerai uovcrnmcui, wmui Jl 1 IIV.HUJUIM. - 1 w . , -ii J .rrnnient hilt a t?llOSt. BV ttllS ertO Ueen UlC IllVdliauic a uu scheme the American people were lg JJUSA-D Tills ! AGENTS WANTED Kver wh-e to sell my Kev,Tas and Stencil Plates! Kr..m 2 t $ p'r rtaV 'a" ,,H '"'v niHd I v artive waents H.v-I2 ears I aients. O it tit hIh y 11 --i d -tamp lor pam-ulai. Addr-"t o'l licit. ! 7 j reiil-. I.. -V i: X N :l IkI 28. I) o Y l Dental Surgeon, i reactionaries, seeKing armuaiuy turn back the hands upon the dial time. A year of doubt and debate, the baptism of blood upon the battle fields, where soldiers from every colony fought, under a common standard, and consolidated the Continental Army, gradually lifted the soul and understanding of this immortal Con gress to the sublime declaration : "We, therefore, 'the representatives of the United States of America, in general Congress assembled, appealing to the Supreme Judge of the world for the rectitude of our intentions, do, in the name and by the authority of the good people of these colonies solemnly pub 1 sh and declare that tnese unitea coi onies are. and of right ought to be, free and independent States" To this declaration John Hancock. proscribed and threatened with death, affixed a signiture which has stood for a century like the pointers to the North Star in the firmament of freedom, and Charles Carroll taunted that among many Carrolls, he, the richest man in America might escape, added descrip tion and identification with "of Car rollton." Benjamin Harrison , a dele- emfe from Virginia, the . ancestor ot the distinguished statesman and sol dier who to-day so worthily tills the chair of Washington, voiced the un alterable determination and defiance of the Congress. He seized John Hancock, upon whose head a price was set. in his arms, and placing him in the Presidential chair,, said : "We will show Mother Britain how. little we rare for her bv making our Presi- BKNHKKHiK.Jf.l Satisfaction guaranteed as to work and prlc s. Offic -wer Parker A K :ns.T atora Mn stre fd 4 a nored and the Declaration ot inde pendence reversed. But, while the perils ot war naa given temporary strength to the Con federation, peace developed its iaiai weakness, States passed exclusive and hostile laws against each other, and riot and disorder threatened the dis integration of society. "Our stock is stolen, our houses are plundered, our forme nre rn iderl " cried a delegate in JUA. 114 J r j the Massachusetts convention; "des potism is better than anarchy!"- To raise four millions of dollars a year was beyond the resources of the Gov ernment, and three hundred thousand was the limit of the loan it could se cure from the money-lenders of Europe. Even Washington exclaimed in de spair: "1 see one head gradually changing into thirteen ; I see one army gradually branching into thirteen, - . . f ! which, instead ot loomng up 10 con gress as the supreme controlling power, are considering themselves as depend - in" on their respective States. And later, when independence had been won, the impotency of the Govern ment wrung from him the exclama tion: "After gloriously and success conteuding against the usurpation of Great Britain we may fall a prey to our own folly and disputes." But even through this Cimmerian darkness shot a flame which illumined the coming century, and kept bright the beacon fires of liberty. The archi tects of constitutional freedom formed their institutions with wisdom which fArerasted the future. They may not; have understood at first the whole truth. but, for that which they knew, they had the martyrs spirit and the crusa ders' enthusiasm. . The government ot the republic by a Congress of States, a diplomatic con -vention of the embassadors of petty commonwealths, after seven years trial was falling asunder. Threatened with civil war among its members, insurrec tion and lawlessness rife within the States, foreign commerce ruined and almost universal opinion, and for the adoption of the idea of the Nation and its supremacy Towering in majesty and influence above them all stood; Washington, their President. Beside him was the venerable Franklin, who.though eighty- one years of age, brought to the delib era Hons of the convention the unim paired vigor and resources of the wisest brain, the most hopeful philosophy, and the largest experience of the times. Oliver Ellsworth, afterwards Chief Jus tice of the United States, and the pro foundest jurist in the country ; Robert Morris, the wonderful financier of the Revolution, and Gouverneur Morris, the most versatile genius of bis period ; Roger Sherman, one of-the, most emi nent of the signers of the Declaration of Independence, and John Rutledge, Rutus King, Elbridge Gerry, Edmund Randolph and the Pinckneys were leaders of unequaled patriotism .'cour age," ability and learning ; while Alex ander Hamilton and James Madison, as original thinkers and constructive statesmen, rank, among tne immonai few whose opinions have for ages guid ed Ministers of State and determined the destinies of nations. There were no examples to follow, and the experience of its members lead part of them to lean toward absolute centralization as the only refuge from said: -It is too probable that no plan we propose will be adopted. Per haps another dreadful conflict is to be sustained. If to please the people we offer what we ourselves disapprove, how can we afterward detend our work ? Let us raise a standard to which the wise and honest can repair : the event is in the hands of God." . : Freed from the limitations of its en vironment, and the question:: of. the adoption of i ts work , the convention . erected its government upon the eter nal foundations of the 1 power of the people. It discussed the delusive theo ry of a compact between indepepdent State's, and' derived national jxwer from the people of the United States. It broke up the machinery of the Con federation and put in practical opera tion the glittering generalities of the Declaration of Independence. From chaos came order,from insecurity came safety, from disintegration and civil war came law and liberty, with the principle proclaimed in the preamble of the gfeat charter: "We, the people of the United States, in order to form a more perfect union, establish justice, insure domestic tranquillity, provide for the "common defense, promote the genearl welfare, and secure the bless ings of liberty to ourselves and , our posterity, do ordain and establish this constitution ior tne unucu owics. With a wisdom inspired of God, to work out upon-this continent the lib erty of man, they solved the problem of the ages by blending and yet pre serving local self-government with Na tional authority, and the rights of the States, under the articles of confedera tion, became bankrupt because it could nt raise four millions of dollars ; the j Government of the Union, under the constitution of the United States,raised six thousand millions of dollars its 1 cred t growing firmer as its power and resources were demonstrated. I he Congress of the confederation fled be fore a regiment, which it could not pay ; the Congress of the Union review ed the comrades ot a million of its victorious soldiers, saluting as they marched the flag of the Nation, whose supremacy they had sustained.. The pride of the State and the am bition of their leaders, sectional jealo- ... 1 . J . c sies, and tne overwhelming aisirusi 01 centralized power, were all arrayed against the adoption of the constitu tion. Success was due to confidence in Washington and the genius of Alexan der Hamilton. Jefferson was the in spiration of independence, but Hamil ton was the incarnation ot the consti- tion. In no age or country has there appeared a more precocious or amaz ing intelligence than Hamilton, tie .... ., r XT-.: 1 gave Hie to tne corpse 01 anoiwi credit, and the strength tor sell preser vation and aggressive power to the Tederal Union. Both as an expound er of the principles and an administra tor of the affairs of Government he stands - supreme and unrivalled in American history. He captured the people or the whole country for the constitution by his papers in the Fed eralist, and conquered the hostile ma jority in the New York convention by the splendor of his oratory. But the multitudes whom no argu ment could convince, who saw in the Executive power and centralized force of the constitution .under another name, the dreaded usurpation of King and Ministry, were satisfied only with the assurance, "Washington will be Presi dent." It quieted the alarm and gave confidence to the timid and courage to the weak. He alone could stay assault and in spire confidence while the great and complicated machinery of organized government was put in order and set in motion. Doubt existed nowhere except in his modest and unambitious heart. His whole life had been spent in repeated sacrifices for his country's welfare, and he did not hesitate now, though there is an undertone of inex pressible sadness in this entry in his diary on the night of his departure: "About ten o'clock I bade adieu to Mount Vernon, to private life, and to domestic felicity,' and with a mind oppressed with more anxious and pain military companies, which escorted him, marched from Franklin square to Pearl street, through Pearl to Broad, and up Broad to this spot, but the peo ple saw only Washington. As he stood upon the steps of the old Government building here, the thought must, have occurred to Jnm that it. was a cradle of libErty, arid as. such giving a bright omen for the future.- In these halls in 1735,1 the trial of John Zenger, had ben established for -the first time in its history - the liberty' of ! the press: Here the New York Assembly, in 1764, made the protest sgamst the Sump act, and proposed the general con ference, which was the beginning of the United Colonial action. In this old State House in 1765 the Stamp act concrress. the first and the father of American Congresses, assembled and presented to the English Govern ment that vigorous protest which caused the repeal ot the act, and checked the first step towards the usurpation which lost the American colonies to the British empire. . Within these wall the Congress of the Confederation had commissioned its Ambassadors abroad , and in ineffectual efforts at govern- ment had created the necessity ior the concentration of Federal authority, now to be consummated. The first Congress of the United States gathered in this ancient temple of liberty, greeted Washington and ac companied him to the balcony. The famous men visible about him were Chancellor Livingston, Vice-President John Adams, Alexander Hamilton, Governor Clinton, .Roger Sherman, Richard Henrv Lee. General Knox and Baron Steuben. But we believe that among the invisible host above him, at this supreme moment of the culmination in permanent triumph of the thousands of years of struggle for self-government, were the spirits of the soldiers of the revolution who had died that their countrymen might en joy this blessed day, and with them were the Barons .of Runnymede and William the Silent, and Sidney and Russell, and Cromwell and Hampden, and the heroes and martyrs of liberty of every race and age. As he came forward, the multitude its? 4d;-: 'l'''--"i ags.ctc. J CIHTS. uETBT CcbrOns to Too? Pound Xf : Dress Gobds. Garments, Yarns, Rags, A Child can use them f The PURR3T. STRONGEST ! FASTEST of all fc. Wrrt ii- 'l ly tlr r ! . five lhe bnl color. t!uvxr-.H.-ci : tlri hit. Sons, aixl all Fiwy ltynnr.': 33 I -d: ( teloim. They ako ik Btil autd Cheapest VRiriNl IN'K I ONKQUAW -LAUNDRY PUJE , IO Cents. DireciiouVfi CX-; c l"oifTa4siMl a Ui4l Cabinet I i. '1. a ; uilca nt (or K.trw Ask Jrtr.: : U.i iUir.H it - 'I Saordc C-Kt. of writ WELLS. hii. i. s. SfiSi V A CO.. BvrlwytM.rt. For C-iliJinj or Ummit.-; Kaacy Arcl t'fci DIAMOND PAINTS. Gold. Silver, Bronac, Cttt Only IO Cu. PROFESSIONAL CAKDS . AYCOCK & DAN1ELN. C. C DANIELS, GOLDS BO BO. WTWOK. AYCOCK & DANIELS & ATTOBNBY8 -A.T LAW, WILSON, N. C Any huaiuewMtrurted to.ua will a f-romptlj attended to. R. HENRY. ATTORN KY AT HENDERSON", Nr C, OFFICE tS BCBWELL BCILDtSa. UIVKiV auu)( r lauanui - vllle. United States Court at Roleigb, and Supreme Court ofNorth Carolina. Uct-KRKKCKs:-Chief Justice W. V. B. Smith, Hon. Augustus H. Hernmoe. uerr. Daniel O. Fowle, Hon. T. CVKuller, Hob. T. M. Argo, Dr. W. T. Chestham, Dr. J. H. Tucker, Mr. M. Dorsey, H. H. liurwell. Km., Hon. James tawin Moore, Mwreiiw uiu PtalUlDs. Francis Yhar- Amerlcan Jurist. orU. H.Samuel ton. Li. La. D Office hours 9 a in. to 6 p. m mob. 7 3 1. T. W ATKINS, Attorney and Counsellor at Law 11 ENDEKSON, N. C. Courts: Vance, Granville and Warren, and the Federal Court at Kaleig n. Special attention given to negotiating 1, ana uugmieu jan. a. T. M. PITT AI AN, in the streets, in the windows, and on the roofs set up such a raptUOUS shout 1 loans, settlement of estates, mat vvasniugiuu sat uuhh uvutumv with emotion. As he slowly rose and his tall and majestic form again ap peared, the people, deeply affected, in awed silence viewed the scene. - The Chancellor solemnly read to him the oath of office, and Washington, repeat ine, said Fwill faithfully execute the office of. President of the United States, and will, to the best of my ability, pre serve, protect and defend the Consti tution of the United States." Then he reverently bent low and kissed the Bible, uttering with profound emotion: "So help me, God." The Chancel lor waved his robes and shouted : " It ATTORNEY AT LAW. HENDERSON, N. C. Prompt attention to all professional I j1 ness. Practices in the State and Federal courts. Rpfora hv normlaalon to Commercial If a- " I do solemnly swear that tional Bank and E. D. Latta Bro- Charr J loUe Nl. . Afred Williams Cov HalelB, IN. v.i u. x. trooper ana jm. ix. aawsiter, Henderson, N.C. Office : Over Jas H. Lass Iter A Bon 'a store. nov 51 c. " A N mtiSW J. HARRIS, ATTOKNEY AT XAW HENDERSON, N. C. Practices in the courts of Vance, Granville. Warren and Franklin counties, and In the is done ; long live George Washington, Supreme fiu uourt nouse. President of the United States! Long live George Washington, our first President!" was the answering cheer of the people, and from the bel fries rang the bells, and from forts and ships thundered the cannon, echo ing and repeating, the cry with re sponding acclaim all over the land : Long live George Washington, Pres ident of the United States 1" No man ever stood for so much to his country and to mankind as George Washington. Hamilton , Jefferson and Adams, Madison and Jay, each rep resented some of the elements which formed the Union. Washington em bodied them all. Do his countrymen exaggerate his virtues? Listen to Guizot, the histo rian of civilization : " Washington did the two greatest things which in pol itics it is permitted 1o man to attempt. He maintained by peace the inde pendence ot his country which he con quered by war. He founded a free Government in the name of the prin ciples of order and re-establishing their sway." Hear Lord Erskine, the most famous of English advocates: Ynn are the onlv being for whom I W. H. DAT. ' A. C. ZOIXIOOFFSk.-' JT AY & ZOLLICOFFElt, ATTOHNKYS AT LAW. HENDERSON, N. C. Practice In the courts of Vance, Oranvllls, Warren, Halifax and Northampton, and la the Supreme and Federal courts of the State. Office: In Zolllcoflers law building. Oar nett street. feb. f-I. It. C. EOWABD8, A. R. WOBTOAM, Oxford. N.C. Henderson, X. C. JlWAItl8 & TVOiiTHAM. ATTORNBYSATLiw, HENDERSON, N. C. - Offer their services to the people of Vane county. Col. Edwards will attend all the Courts of Vance county, and will eosee to Henderson at any and all times when his assistance may be needed by bis partner, march lit a P ti. HARRIS, ' : DENTIST mm HENDERSON, vlaT s Strei over E. O. N.C. 'DmH Stars, or at. 25.1c. - The Bank of Henderson. the archery of the confederation, while j fu sensations than I have words to ex the rest clung to the sovereignty of the j press, set out for New York with the States, tor fear that concentration of best disposition to render service to power-would end at the absorptiou of mv country in obedience to its call,, liberty. The large States did not want with less hope of answering its ex to surrender the advantage of their j jactations." position, and the smaller States saw jo conquerer was ever accorded tVi ilonorVr tr thfir vi;t!nre. ! cur-Vi i"rinmr1i- no ruler ever such a I i IV. UUllg.l v - I 3UU k -" 7 " - - . 1 1 - 1 1 3 I rvan r dent a Massachusetts man, who she internal iraoe paraiywru, u-uu., uovrinlfrnm irdon bv uublic worthless, its merchants bankrupt, its nrnrhmarinn:" and when thev were farms mortgaged, its markets signing the Declaration, and the sle- its lalxw unemployed, closed, was like a At this crisis the courage and confi- j dence" needed to originate a system weakened. The temporizing spirit of compromise seized the convention with the alluring proposition ol not proceed ing faster than the people could be educated to follow. The cry : "Let us not waste our labor upon conclu sions that will. not be adopted,. but amend and adjourn," was assuming startling unanimity. But the supreme force and majestic sense of Washington i brought the assemblage to the lotty plane of its duty and opportunity He WelCOmT. 1H m lliciuuiauic iiioit.il of six diys to the Capitol, it was the pride of States to accompany him with the masses of their people to their borders, that the citizens of the next commonwealth might escort him through its territory. Washington was never dramatic, but on great Occasion ne not only rose to thp full ideal of the event, he be came himself the event. One hun dred years ago to-day the procession ot foreign Ambassadors, of statesmen and GeneraU, of civic rsocieties and have an awful reverence. Remember nfrVurU IjmN Fni. the UtiSUKKXOS. VANCK COUftTY. K.. .irpaipvt narliamentarv orator who ever 1 i;eHral BaakiHsr. BzcbSMaaTa swayel the British" House of Com mons :" Illustrious man", before whom all borrowed greatness sinks into in significance." Contemplate the char acter of Lord Brougham, pre-eminent for two generations in every depart ment of human activity and thought,! mrM. H.S. BURG ATN, .1 B W tVipn inmress utmn the memories! w Calieeslast aSewlaveea, ' Kikht MoBToaoa Loam Serotlataa ; u'xmI farms for a frrsa.of Tearar la -Htiitf$5tO sul upward, at 8 pef ea IntiTHii kihI moderate ebarga. apply Vfy. H.H. BURuniH, At the Hank of Bebderaoa. 1TOKNKY AT X-AW. ; HX5DEB802T, V. C. r . . 1 1h. a aAMnlt tna tesmjsasaat teat of the progress which blonaly ,whi find ma dally at nay oOe la TneJiana oi jaraaeraoD sbiaoibb; ot your children his deliberate judg ment : " Until time shall be no- more will a race has made in wisdom and .virtue lie derived from the veneration paid to the immortal name of Washington." We tand to-day upon the dividing line between the first and second , cen tury of constitutional government. There are no clouds overhead and no convulsions under our feet. We rev i erently return thanks to Almighty Jod (WTm'UD OX KOrKTH IE- KW. COGHILL, . -" - ' CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER. HENDERSON, N. C.?: Estimates for tha ereettoo ot bcMUsr. and orders for lumber solieltad. Iwlll ell all kinds of lumber at Pint WMds prices, wttb freight added, v Ifeb.-1 e. : It ' j j i i I . 1 1 Ui n a p. ti V 1st 11 ,1 i! f n .'ti I i ! ? Y ..w. ' - i