v - . idyertisiiiE is to Ensinsss what Steam is To M.rniM:in-'nn: (iKKAT PRO- Loot at ttie Date on Yoer Address. r, HI. I. IN' ! I'oWKi:. Ii hantHi'si- paTTrlE KU;t KKS IMUCATK THK TIMK T v 1-1 'l l l: A . WHICH VOf HAVK l-Alli II'. Ik in A IJIEKAKs YOr AKE KKSPKITKI l.l.Y. HI T I ;;ETI liEyi estki) to PAY I I' AT ONTK. jTHAD R. MANNING, Publisher. cc O-AJEtoi-nsrA, O-AjRoi-nsrA., Heaven's BiiEssnsros Attend IHDehr." ! SUBSCRIPTIOR $1.60 Cash. VOL. XIII. HENDERSON, N. C, THURSDAY, MAY 31, 1894. NO. 23. A ESI I WlML o The Old Friend Ari'l th; hurt Irii-nd, that never fills you, i.-j Simmons Livr tegu lar or, (t)i(i lf Zj that's what you hear at the mention of this excellent Liver ni-li-ine, and eojle j-houM not he j.en-u.ided that anything el.-:o will do. It J3 the Kin of Liver Medi cine; in li' tu r th:m j-iHs, and taki-.s the :t-r; of Quinine and (Violin-!. It ai-t-i !:i'fc! i- on the Liv'-r, Lidii'-v-: and I in v. d.s and jrhv.s 1 1 i ; : to th" v;li.).- -v.s- tf.'.'i. 'I':.: ' i.-i th" iM'-di'-in.: vxl v.. m! . hv all 1 JLiijIlid, or in i r.vl-r lo ! ; t .-1 k -1 1 , dry or lis.ido into a i -.. I Ib-i:vhI!Y iA-fi '..:. . 3 llaa 111- '. lftfitp I,t ztil .i rnnir. 5 J. II. zi:i l.l. ..V ., V. ... . . V. j STANDARD " ,1 ( ' 1 ' ) ! '. ' ' i r ! f ' T T T A ' ' I - . . . ' i i'i I J I i 1 1 N ij ligiilsist Rnuiiiiii Loss Noise. Fastest Sowing. Simpicst Attaclnneuts. Tin s tin- 1'iHT.itor !-.-" 1li;in any other .Murium- nil tin- ma I V. K. M"s will In- li.i )!'" to cvil;in its iiiriits I" l.i liii-nt :mt tlx- iibliu. i :il:i rr u. S. & C. W ATKINS, II i-".si)!".i:m, Au"1'1" V:oifi-. Ki iii:I; I in . . i an vil If .1 1 1 t '. Ul l I'M C'llllll :.. w. w. vMimi, DRUGGIST III.Xni kSON. -X. CAROLINA. I) i.i:;k vaiiikty f New Field anl Barien Seefls. MOW l'RICMS. Oiiiiiii Sits. Yeli&w or White. Also the Great Mnltiplyer. Hair, Tooth and Nail Brushes, Perfamery.Soaps Cigars, Sc. A lull ami complete line "1 Mia cs am ii:rjiisTs sr.i)i;ii:s, I oa: i a tu-aiitilul a-ui i nu-iii of Ton.irr a n i r.NcvAi;Tici.i:s, imii:s A N I s3KKi:i:s' ;ois. Prescription Wort a Specialty. l'uici-s i Si i r i in-: Timks. wii.i. i ri:i. - hi: ai ciii: and nki ralc.ia. F HE SEWING MACHINE is in:-: i;i:st. llniii.iii'l "tv-r Kvt Iale. New Stylo SkeU-toil as.e. : 1 oulv Machine th.it will Sew 1IACK i. :v'i, l) ai well as KW"AKl w ithout i-ijiing. liiet. Light Jlunuiny, ailjust i:e iii all its parts. w c si;Mroi)EAy:usoxhy t'orrt'spoiideiife Solicited. INIOX MAXULACTURING CO.. u ii. 1. 1 ah i'i:ri:it, iiihut, Toledo, - - - Ohio. !.i.ti cu pi.t-iiry f iisin.', trejtjunt at i thf.r disease, etc., w. itn Ovuarsw j S i'-e in -rivd in I oultry. . ALDERT ASKEY. Ridott.JI. 0J)MBM m a, ISM POULTRY Yards, j 'PV.JtfVtJ i p:w.io.t lii.iura rW: Vtrmt-M Kab- J , iVVSPSiefo-V J l!..r..r.lf,l lM.n.l t Lia Swlmr. J ODE TO THE CONFEDERATE DEAD. 11Y CSC Alt W. KLACKXA.LL. Stionj; Kianit seek the skies ! Ktenial stone arise! To honor our Southern dead, To honor the men who shed Their life-blood for the right. With retrospective eye 1 see them throng to die On fields their valor made " Names that can not fade From history's greatest page. Our precious heritage. Not Olory holds the hav Hut duty points the way When at Carolina's call. Their Spartan mother's call From cabin hearth ai:d hall. From station great and small They gather to the fight. They have resistless might. Carolina, from thy breast, Thy sturdy, rock-iibbed breast, A lit memorial wrest For these, thy sturdiest sons. Thy dutious, gallant sons. Who faced the hostile guns : Who, at thy stern behest, Forward to battle pressed, Nor counted gain or loss 15eneath the starry cross, Who fought and starved and bled With all but honor dead When Hope itself had Hed Who more than won success. Who won the deathless fame That belongs to the spotless name. Theirs tin! happy lot From our name to wash the blot, Hy envy cast of old. Oispi aise was put to shame, Detraction hid its head Hefoie men of such mold, Whom Lee with pride hath led, Who under Jackson sped loom Held to lid. I of fame And on the bloodiest field Won their country's sword and shield. Ah ! not till they were low ( 'aim: victory to the foe ! From where against our ranks The Noithern hordes were hurled, Till on Appomattox's banks The starry cross was furled. 'Twas only o'er our dead, Our ow n Confederate Dead. That hostile foot could tread, 'ould tread without recoil The sacred Southern soil ; 'Twas only over the graves. The earth encunih'ring graves, Of our uiicottined braves That the invader came, That we were put to shame. Kise, granite shaft, and stand A beacon in our way '. Kise gianite shaft and hand The example of that hand. That more than Spartan hand, Down to remot days. Let not their fall be vain From even this loss give gain ; Far more than victory, Than laurels ev.tr won. Is the example of duty done, if men who would not shun F.ven death when liberty railed from her inmost shrine, Called forth with voice divine, Hade them her ransom give, Hade them their heart's-blood give, Hade die that she might live. And to the example high Ah. never let it die '.) O! I lie intrepid iiie in Orey We owe that to this day She Mill with us abides, S!"(ll in our midst resides. 'Twa that that made us hold Her garment's hem to hold i hiomh Hit: dark and hopeless Wftys of reconstruction days. I 'poii thy face, proud stone. Nor name nor deeil be shown ; Simplv be it said " To M It COXKKDEKATK DEAD." Not all the shafts that rest Fniiuai rieil in thy breast, , .Mother state, could hold In smallest characters told F.very worthy deed, f those who in thy need. Who in thy sorest need. Stood a living wall Uetween thee and the foe.. Width thi:y might overthrew, Which might perish, fall. Hut w hich could not retreat, Could not survive defeat. Honor all as one ! Honor one' as all ! Know neither great nor small, Oreater than patriot none, Yea, patriot to the core The humblest man who bore A musket in the strife And for conviction gave his life, The highest could be no move, ' Whether w ith breasts unsuarrfeil, With hope as yet unmarred, He.neath the banner barred They fell most gloriously When a battle meant a victory ; r purged of every dross Heneath the star strewn cross, In deadly trenches pent Their shattered frames were spent Till wounds or fell disease (lave their gallant souls release, It recks not how or where That highest pledge was given, F.nough to know that there A hero's life was riven. And those other Southern Dead, For whom no tear was shed, No other stone lias riseu The Southern w omen true, (iive them their tardv due, At heart ! At heart ! they bled ; At Home as in a prison They could only hear afar The harrowing sounds of war, In strife could take no part, While every ball that sped, I'.very ounce of Federal lead Smote them full within the heart, The man could die but once. The woman a thousand times ; The body dies but once. The heart a thousand times. Those issues noy are past : ;;avo sunk within the vast And should no longer cast Their shadow over our lives. Let prejudice abate, Away with sectional hate ; Honor the brave and true. Whether in Grey or Blue, Hut one point never yield. One truth forever shiel'i : As sure as rolls the sun. Or on the centuries rr n That these men, that they Who w ith hoiloj- wore the Grey, Were patriots evey or.3. That motives purer, higher. More patriotic lire Did never breasts inspire. Nor men more true and bold A juster cause uphold. A man with a brcken leg is liable 1 1 do a good deal of darning while the lei; is knitting. A Wet Blanket. The Father vou, does he ? ' le wants, to What do you marry know about him ?" The Daughter He is a sincere Christian." The F- " Has he any money?" The D. " He has a treasure laid up in Heaven." The F. He has, has he ? Then he can have you after he comes into possession of it." New York fress. Although it is not claimed that Ayet's Sarsaparilla cures every ill to which flesh ! is heir, vet, as a matter 01 jact, it bohi nearer doing this than anv other medioine ever compound. la purifying the blood, it removes the source of nearly all dis orders of the human svtem. HANDSOME TRIBUTE TO NORTH CAROLINA'S LANT DEAD. GAL- Capt. Mason's Eloquent Oration Delivered at the Laying of the Gorner-Stone of the Confeder ate Monument in Raligh A Graceful and Scholarly Pro duction, and a Fine Contribu tion to History. The following is the address, in full, of Capt. Thomas W. Mason, delivered at the laying of the corner-stone of the Confederate Soldiers' Monument on May 22nd : Ladies and Gentlemen : North Carolina bids us pause to-day and consider the memory of her soldiers those whom she gave to the Confederacy. I know that you are busy with your affairs, that the demands of duty press upon you. I (ear that disappointed hopes and failing fortunes may distress some of you ; I am sure that the weight of years is now laid upon those who have survived their comrades. Repeating the message of our beloved State, I entreat you to come away from your cares and sorrows to-day ; and let us stand with hearts aglow, and with uplifted heads, presence of our heroic past The day invites us. It independence day. It is our in the is our day of glorious memories. Now, and through all the years to come, it is our Con federate Monument day. For this day, our mountains have given their lairest treasure into the hands of woman, and she has brought this treasure reverently into our midst. Our brothers have taken it gratefully from her hands, and laid the stone in its place. We watch and wait with swelling hearts. Voices fall upon the ear again that have been still since our camp fires went out. We feel the touch of elbows again ; our lines are forming ; our ensigns stream above us; our bugles are calling. The stone, which you have laid in place to-day, my brothers, shall be lifted up ! And, by its side and from its summit, he shall look into our faces again our comrade, our brother ; " bone of our bones, and flesh of our flesh ;" brave as he who followed the Eagle of Rome, or the Lilies of . France ; our Confed erate brother; he who was first at Uethel ; he who was nearest the foe at Gettysburg ; he whose rifle gave the last salute to the flag which was folded with immortal honor, We have waited loag enough to consecrate this stone. History approves and demands it. They who were our foes, but who are now our friends, -tsk that it be done. The passing years have laid their hands, in blessing, upon the head of our comrade, and deepened the halo about his name. If the courage of the soldier, untainted by evil pqrpose, is the noblest gift of time j if the memory of Grant is sacred; if the name of Lee is our priceless heritage ; then, have we waited long enough to dedicate this stone to the memory of the North Carolina Con federate soldier. What moved him to leave his plow in the furrow that he might struggle, unto death, with his brother of te Torth ? Was he not happy at home ? Pid he not love his wife and children? Had he not hewn from the forests his fruitful fields? Were not his barns filled with rich harvests ? Had he not altars at which to worship ? Had he no name or history to love and cherish? Was he not taught to reverence the Constitution next to his Bible? Was he a disturber of the peace ; a hater of his fellowman? Did not all the graces of a generous host adorn his fireside? Did the sun, in his course, shine upon a fairer land than his ? What moved him to leave his hearth-stone and go forth., with dareqed brow and compressed lip, tq struggle and die ? We know that no lust of power ; no worldly gain ; no pride of life moved him. He was never an aggressor. His keen sense of what was due to himself, made him careful of the rights of others, careful was he ; so regardful of So hi$ acts : so caatiows in moving forward ; go contented with the portion which ! God and his own right arm had given him, that his neighbors bantered him ; for his homely virtues, and likened hiin to the good-natured dutchman who was said to have fallen into a peaceful repose that he slept until the stock of his fowling-piece crumbled with decay at his side. A,nd yet our good-natured sleeping comrade sud denly awoke to such deeds of valour that "the world wondered," and declared that he must take his place with heroes, while his neighbors were happy to share the glory of his deeds. What moved this peace-loving, God-fearing, contented man, happy within the shadow of the vine that climbed about his cottage door, to go forth against his brother of the North ? Let it pot be said that in a moment of unreasoning haste, he tore asunder the ties of home and kindred, and rushed, like a madman, upon the sword of his adversary. His lour years of hard endurance gives higher meaning to his courage. Rather, let it be said ot him that he loved the union of these States. The blood which flowed in his. veins, unmixed with alloy, had warmed the hearts of the men who struck the first ! blow for Independence. In the county j of Alamance, hard by the old stage I road that leads from Hillsboro to ; Salisbury, a stone has been planted and on it are engraved these words : I "First battle of the Revolution. Here was fought the battle of Alamance the 15th of May, 1 771, between the British and the Regulators." Here by this stone was poured out the first libation to American Independence. Four years thereafter, on the 20th of May, 17 5, the listening ear of North Caroli 1a heard the cry that the men of Massachusetts had been slain at Lexington. And no more, save from hostile camps, did the ensign of Britain wave over her soil. Then, it was enough for her to know that the nivaucts 1001 was upon me sou 01 a sister State. Can the sons of Massa chusetts ever forget how the battle cry of Lexington was answered? Can they ever forget how they and the sons of North Carolina locked their shields until King George, on the 20th day of January, 1783, calling each one by name, treating with each one of thern, declared these States "to be free, sovereign and independent." Let it be said of our comrade that he loved the Union, but, let it also be said of him, his proud lineage taught him that his own beloved State and her sister States were sovereigns. He remembered how those, whose name he bore, had refused to enter the Union, under the Constitution until the sovereignty of North Carolina and the liberties of her citizens had been assured. In all the years of peace, while. he tilled his fields and reared his children, he had been taught to guard this treasure committed to him with that supreme devotion with which the sons of Israel guarded the walls about their sacred city. In all these years ot peace, he rejoiced in the strength and glory of the Union as it broadened toward the setting sun. By the fireside he had heard his sire tell of 181 2, and- of Lundays Lane, and how he marched against the Indians with the warrior Jackson, whom North Carolina gave, with many other noble gifts to her fair daughter beyond the mountains. He, himself, had marched with the star- spangled banner and cheered it as it waved m triumph, over the halls of the Montezumas. Let it be said of him that he loved the Union ; that he loved the arts of peace; that he loved repose ; but, let it also be said of him, his repose was never so prolound that the tramp ot the advancing host failed to arouse him. In 1861, as in 1775, his sensitive ear caught the first foot-fall of the foe upon the soil of .the State that holds the ashes of Washington, it was enough. The plow stood still in the furrow ; the unuttered good-bye was caid with quivering lips and straining eyes; the door of his home closed behind him, and he went forth to battle. By his side, through all the firey struggle, be it said, was one whose love for him was as the love of Jon athan for David ; given him strength and comfort ; caring for the stricken ones whom he had left behind j guard ing the honor of the cause for which he bled j and when all seemd lost, save honor, leading him by wise counsels, away from the sorrows of war to the victories of peace. We would that this one were with us to-day. How our hearts would burn within us to hear his voice and look into his face again ! But he sleeps well where we have laid Kirn, with out loye for him as lasting 45 the mountains that guard his resting place our great war governor and leader; but, as we tenderly think of him now, our comrade ! and brother, Vance ! It was strange and terrible to see these men of the South and of the North, shed each others' blood. They spoke the same language ; they worshiped at the same altars; they had been school-boys together; they had shouted together in the shock of battle; and, together they had filled the world with their victories of peace. No ray of light touched the glory of their country, that did not fall, with its benediction, upon them both. And yet, above the contentions of thj White and Red Rose ; of Cavalier and Round-Head ; of Bourbon and Jacobin, there was a solemn grandeur in their struggle. Can the Union live by force? The North answered, yes ; the j South answered,, qo. And this momen- ; tous question of government was to be settled in the stormy comitia of arms, Each thought he had " his quarrel just," and thus thrice-armed rhey strove. Two millions of men of the North stood to arms ; six hundred thousand of the men of the South stood to arms. How grandly they strove, shaking the ocean with the tramp of monitor and ram, and teaching new warfare to the nations of the earthi How they strove, while the storm of battle howled up the valleys, and over the mountains, and across the plains, shrieking and hissing into the ear of the pale wife as she knelt by the bed side of her children, and prayed for the husband upon whose breast the pitiless storm was. breaking! How they strove, while their flocks and harvests perished, and their homes were consumed, and want and hunger came, and, through thedreary watches of the night," and widowed wife sat looking, with wan and weary face, upon the dying child in her arms, while the currents of its life ran dry in her aching breast ! Brave women of our land, what tongue can tell your devotion ! There was no soldier's arm you did not nrrve ; there was no soldier's couch of suffering you did not pillow with your gentle hands ; there is no soldier's grave your love has left unblest ; If. history shall say of that man of Uc ouuui auu v uie ruim uiai nicy j irmed-iq. goiogtQ battle against each the 30th of July ; and when his flag other it will re- snre to say also that 'bearer was shot down, "the Captain their rich offering of blood has opened wide the everlasting mansions of glory for the cause each fought for. How did our comrade bear himself in this supreme test of virtue ? Let us follow his shining lance, and see the grim face of war radiant with the sublime, courage of the soldier. History startles us with its record. A military population of one hundred and fifteen thousand "men ; an army of one hundred and twenty-five thousand men ! In all the annals of the earth is there a nobler record of heroic endeavor ? Let us follow our brothers, as they pour over the James, thirty thousand of them, in the June days of 1862 encircling Richmond with their dark gray lines, near one third of those who had gathered for its defense; standing with their faces to the North ; waiting "for the struggle of the Seven Days to begin ; waiting for Jackson, the Eagle of the army to swoop down from the mountains ; waiting for Lee to speak, whose voice in battle was, to them from that day forward, as the voice of God ; and when he told them to go forward, see how they and their comrades twist McClellan'sarmy, with their strong grapple, back and forth across the Chickahominy, striking him blows of iron, day in and day out, until sore and weary, as the day closed upon the field of Gaines' Mill, he sat down and wrote to his Government that he was beaten, and that his only hope was to escape from his fierce pursuers ; and five days thereafter, Lee rode back from Malvern Hill, praising his soldiers and regretting that he had not captured the Union Army. See how they go, on the morning on the 17th of September, 1862, double quicking from the right to the bloody Heft, at Sharpsburg ; sweeping proudly into line, and staying, like a wall of granite, the torrent of the battle as it comes rushing in over the dead bodies of Hood's brave Texans. See how the foe recoils from the deadly blast of their rifles ; see how they drive him back with yells of defiance, restoring our lines, and standing in their ranks, through the day and through another day, as firmly as the solid earth beneath them. Read the record of their daring at Chancellorsville, the death-bed of Jackson, in the early days ot 1863 : One hundred and thirty-one Confederate regiments under fire ; twenty-five of them from North Carolina ; ten thousand two hundred ana eigniy-one Confederates killed and wounded; two thousand nine hundred and forty-eight of them from North Carolina. See how they move their torn battle flags above the crest of the struggle, at Gettysburg, as it moves along its track to death, up the slopes of Cemetery Hill, urging forward with the throbbing of their hearts ; and when the fateful storm is over, when the crest of the battle rose highest, there lies our comrade by the side of him, of the North, whom the peace ot death has made again his brother. As we look into their faces, side by side, the one clad in gray, the other in blue ; each aglow with the spirit that has brought them thus together, to the open portals of immortality, can we say of either that he has sinned? Shall we follow our brothers, as they hold in check the unbending will and mighty forces of Grant, through the fire and smoke of the wilderness, in the trenches at Petersburg, along the sullen retreat, until the end came, and Lee bade them adieu, with his blessing that has followed them, and made them, patient and heroic in peace as they were great in war? Shall we measure the glory of ' our comrade by the treasure of his blood? Then read this record : Fifty-two thousand nine hqndred and fifty.-four Confederates killed in battle; fourteen thousand five hundred and twenty-two of them from North Carolina ; twenty one thousand five hundred and seventy Confederates died of wounds ; five thousand one hundred and fifty-one of them from North Carolina ; fifty-nine thousand tw;o hundred and ninety seven Confederates died of disease ; twenty thousand six hundred and two of them from North Carolina. Forty thousand two hundred and seventy-five sons of North Carolina gave lives to the Confederacy, more than one-third of her military population; nineteen thousand six hundred and seventy three of the sons were killed in battle or died of wounds, more than seven teen per cent of the military popula tion, while the average loss of the Confederate armies was ten per cent., and of the Union armies five per cent. Read this record of the 26th North Carolina regiment of Pettigrew's Brigade, at Gettysburg, the conflict of the century. It carried into action over eight hundred men , eighty of them were left, and history has declared: "This loss of the 26th North Carolina, at Gettysburg, was the severest regimental loss during the war," in which seven hundred and sixty four Confederate regiments and two thousand and forty-seven Union regiments were engaged. Read the thrilling story of Capt. Tattlis com pany, on this same field of death, that the last of all its officers and eighty three out ot eighty-four of its men killed and wounded ; and of Capt. Bird's Company C. of the Eleventh North Carolina, of this same noble Brigade, that lost two of its officers and thirty-four out of thirty-eight of its men killed and wounded, in the engagements of the first two days; and these four who remained took their places in the historic charge ot brought out the flag himself." Near the town of Winchester, in Virginia, they set apart a Soldiers' Resting-place, after peace had come ; and when those of our sister State, who loved the memory of the brave, had brought thither the soldiers of the Confederacy who had fallen near their homes, lo, the dead of North Carolina held so large a space, among their comrades of other States, that this silent witness' moved their hearts to renown ; and they sent here for our beloved comrade, Vance, to come and speak to them of these men whose noble dust gave honor to the soil of Virginia. ShalV we say of- the Confederate soldier that he died in vain? Shall we say of his mighty struggle that it has no higher meaning than defeat? Shall we stand above his grave and declare that all was lost but honor? From the smoking altar of his sacrifice, is there no incense to virtue ? Does the world bless him only who wears a crown of laurel ? Is there no beauty oh the brow that wears a crown of thorns? Were the oracles of God lost to men when his chosen people passed under the yoke of Rome? Were the laws and language of Rome lost to the world when the Goth struck down her Eagles? Was Cromwell lost to Britain when the Stuart came back to ! her throne ? j The Confederate soldier has not i died in vain. History will tell the j story of his death and passion, that 1 men may be lifted up by the example j of his devotion to the memory of his fathers. If they, did not die in vain who fell at Moore's Creek Bridge, at j King's Mountain, at Guildford, at Germanton, at Brandywine, at Prince- j ton ; then their sons did not die. in vain who fell at Bethel, at Manassas, j at Richmond, at Sharpsburg, at Fredericksburg, at Chancellorsville, at Gettysburg, and on every field, where they sealed with their blood, the covenant made with their fathers, that this should be a Union of Sovereign States, with a Government of expressed powers limited by the letter of the written compact. For this covenant they died. That no sinful hand might be laid upon it, they took up arms. That no jot or tittle of it might fail, they drew the sword. The cause, for which they died is not the lost cause of a dead Confederacy ; but it is the vital cause of a living Union, its soul and strength ; its only hope of future life , and without which, it will dissolve and pass away like the smile of a 'dream upon the wrinkled face of time. The Confederate soldier has not died in vain. The lesson he has lelt us is the only counsel that can save the life of our Union, When history shall call the names of those who have been truest to their trust, in the ranks of war, the men of the Gray-Union will uncover to their names and take their places in the world's Legion of Honor. My brothers, the memory of your comrade will not lade. In the twilight of the years to come, it will be as the luminous star which led the Eastern worshipers, where a new life had come to abide among men, long enough to teach them how to live like heroes and die like martyrs. The daughters of North Carolina will point our children and our children's children to that star. They will never turn their faces from the Confederate soldier. They gave you your battle flags wet with the dew ot their tears, and in that sign and with their prayers, you made the name of North Carolina noble. With each returning spring time, the grave of your comrade blooms out afresh as they lay their hands upon it. To-day, they have embalmed his memory in stone. They have given you this token of their love that shall not fail. Let us lift up this token of their love, my brothers ! The light of the morning will bless it ; the glory of the evening will hallow it ; the patient ctars will watch over it ; and the calm face of our comrade will teach us courage for the day and hope for the morrow. Ye men, who wore the Gray, you have been brave in peace as you were strong in war. You have lifted North Carolina up in your arms, and made her as true to our Union'as the bride is true to her marriage vows. By your patience, peace and order and hope are ours. Elsewhere, in our Union, there is trouble, Social disorder vexes the son of the patriot, and the cry of distress pains the heart of him who loves his fellowman. Teach others the lesson of your patience. Teach them to right the wrong, as you. have done, by the wisdom of the law and the purity of its administration. Teach them to be true, each to his sovereign State, as you are to North Carolina. And, by this shrine which her daughters have consecrated with their love, let us to-day renew our vows to our Sovereign 1 Queen, the brightest jewel in whose crown is the memory of her soldiers whom she gave to the Confederacy. An old citizen in a country village being asked for a subscription toward repairing the fence of the graveyard declined, saving : "I subscribed to ward improvin that buryin' ground nigh unto forty years ago, and my familv hain't had no benefit from it yet." Work Well lone. Cedar Kapim, Iowa. I suffered with dvssepsia and disordered liver and would f reouentlv throw ns bile. I procured a l bottle or Simmons Layer neguiatoi, and, j after using half of it was completely cured. 1 On3 of my lady customers told me the other day that .Simmons Liver Regulator : - completely eared ber of sick-beadaebe. VITAL RELIGION. What it is and How We are to1 Practice It. TXew York Herald. J l'ure religion and un defiled liefon1 (.'(Ml and the fat her. .lumen, l:l!i. Xo more succinct statement of what 1 is essential 111 me lormatiou ot a re j liious character was ever made. I We are told in simple lauguage, j which the humblest can understand, j that God's requirements are few ; that j this life can be made worth living, aud ! the other life anticipated with pleasure, j by obeying two injunctions uamely, i being helpful to those who are strug ! gliui? with adversity and keeping our souls clean aud wholesome. I If "pure religion and uiideriled,'" embodied in our daily actious, will in sure the approval of God, aud if it con sists iu doing all the good that lies in our power and iu makiug for ourselves a record of impregnable houesty, then we must agree that religion is indis pensable and we can no more afford to live without it thau we can live with out a roof over our headn or food for our table. If the Church will pardon us for the criticism, we should like to say that it has taught men to look at life from the wroug standpoint. It tells us that we must believe certain doctriues before he can lead a certain kind of life. These doctriues are of a complex char acter and sharp controversy arises. If we must believe before we can live, then unless we believe we cannot live, aud many a noble soul has lost its grip on the higher life because it could not make the doctrine intelligible or even reasonable. That is a misfortune of the gravest kind and one to be grqatly deplored. When the Church says to a man, you must accept this and that dogma, and accept it with the shade of meaniug which 1 ascribe to it, it makes religion too much of an intellectual process, while the spiritual process is lost. If a man rejects the dogma he is apt to think that dogma is an essential element of religion, whereas iu very truth it is nothing of the kind. That mistake may prove to be fatal, and his whole life may be blighted. On the other hand, when a man is told that since this is God's world, and he is God's child, be must therefore seek the approval of God by being of service to his fellows encouraging the weak, lifting up the downtrodden, de fending the oppressed, setting an ex ample of honorable dealing which will be attractive to others there is no room for controversy, and the whole debate possible is as to the best way of accomplishing these results. He may begin this work without any don mas whatever, may not kuow that there is such a document as a creed in existeuce, but you cannot deny that he is a loyal follower of the Christ. He need not hesitate to carry his pure motives, his uprightness, his self-sacrifice to the foot of the Throne and need have uo fear that he will not be wel comed by angelic hosts. Moreover, he cannot long pursue such a course without becoming, in its best sense, a firm believer. He may not accept all the Thirty-nine Articles, but that is of no consequence. He will accept the general principles ou which the earthly career of Jesus was based, and the moral law which He proclaimed iu such startling phrases that we cau hardly resist calling it a revelation. He will not only believe in a God who rules the world wisely aud justly, and in a Providence which overleoks the experiences which come to each one of us, but will perforce reach the conclusion That this God has arranged things iu a fatherly way. When he is seeking tor an ideal life, the best conceivable life, the life after which it would be. perfectly safe to model his own, he will find it iu the Christ, and the record of it in the New Testament. The great example will impress itself on his mind, and his re spect for the Nazarene will grow to admiration, and his admiration will increase uutil it becomes worship. r urther than this, he will see at a glance that there is aright and a wrong in the universe. He does not know how evil originated, neither does he care. It is suthcient that it exists and that ho min t avoid it if possible. It is plain to linn that the right enlarges the soul and makes it strong, healthy and happy, while wroug hampers his action and makes him cowardly. It does not take long then to discover that it is always better, even though it be at great cost, to maintain the right than to surrender to the wrong. Once more he sees that no man com pletes his work iu this life, and as in completeness is an anomaly in a wisely governed world, he reaches the con clusion that beyond the confines of the present there must be a future ; that death it only another name for change, aud that he has nothing to dread when that change comes. He began by liviug a good life but while living it be has gradually ac quired a series of beliefs which consti tute his greed. It is not the creed of the Church, but it is quite sufficient for all his purposes. Xo Church an afford to reject him for he stauds where St. James stood when he wrote the words of our text, and where Christ stood wheu He preached the Sermon on the Mount. He has in his soul all the essentials of a vital relLriou, is equipped to live and prepare for immortality. Sobbing Wife Three yean ago you swore eternal love, and Brutal Husband How long do you expect eternal love to last, anyway ? Hello Ueaerviuf Praia. We deire to sar to our citizen, that for years we have been celling lr, King's New Discovery for Consumption, Ir. King' New Life Pill. Cucklen's Arnica Salve and Electric Kilter, and have never han died remedies that eel! as veil, or thai have given uch nniveral gathdactiort. We do not hesitate lo guarantee them every time, and we stand ready to refund the purchase price, if satiKfactory results do not folio their ue. These remedies have won their great popularity purely ou their merit. Melville Itoner. druggist. ir. T. Baker North Pembroke. Mass. After the Grip Relief from Hood's Sarsaparilla Wonderful and Permanent. C. L Hood & Co.. Lowe li. Mmi: " I had kidney trouble au.l wore pain lu my back, which was brought about by a -old contracted while iii camp at I.iimtWld in xt:. I have been troubled more or lt-sn sinew tlmt time aud have been iinalilti t l anv heavy work, much U-ss anv MUiir. I rooi-lvVd only temporary relief from im-dicini-. Last spi iiiu 1 had au attack of the Rrtp, which left mo with A Bad Cough, Very Weak physically, In fact my system was completely rundown. I tried a imttlo of Hood's Sarsapa rilla and It made me tfol no much better that I continued takliiK It. and have taken six bottle It has done wonders for me, hs 1 have not been c free from my old pains and troubles since Urn Hood'ssi. Cures war. I consider Hood's Sarsapat ilU a (iod-ieut Messing to the suffering." William J. ISakkk. KortU I'ombroke, Mass. UAArl'a Dllla nrrt f 'uiittftiult.kn l.w i-Mf..r IngUie peristaltic action of the alliuculary canal. SPECULATION. The Mien Commissiou Company, BROKERS, '-IS Chestnut Street. I'hiladelphiA. Pa., offers Special Facilities to traders in Slock, lion lt hikI .rnlu, iu laro or small quantities, for ca.h or n maruiiis of one per cent, or more. Send for pam phlet ' Ho to to Speculate." make the home circle complete. This great Teinperancu Drink Klvea pleiut ure and health to every niemlxT of tuo family. A 'c package inuUex 6 :tl 1 as. " Be tuiro aud get the genuine. Sold every where. .Made only by The Chas. E. Hires Co.; fhilada. PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM C1rannt' mul lHantiti- tin- hir. )'rultitt-a ft luxuriant pruwth. Nrvcr Fall to Heatore Oray Hair to III Youthful Color. Cures -mlf iliwaiM-. & liair falling. n,.ii'l l "HI llrtiyyMi !' Parker' Ginitcr I onic. It ir. . Hi.- ("uyu. Weak Lungs, Drhiiity, Inuigrsliori, J'ain,Tak' in timr. S"n la. HINpERCORNS. Th only sur.nir.l-r C.inn. Slop ailiu. Ijc at tiruuita, or IJlaCOJt CO., . V- JIC. S. IIAKKIS, DENTIST, HENDERSON, - - N. 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J ai..u'. tuft-A I t'! r:fi-K Uir rc- .'r. V '.- I' n 1 . .!. ptm-ih..!.. io 11.. y Zlir, N. Nlntli M 1'hUxK.lpliU. I Hard Times vili nil to frmvajre(-t, fur Fertilizers. xzx-"tvzMiB for Corn. Votian and Peamita. it SI 3.00 Track-ins; Crupa and Puttuea I ..V f Oats. Tu!.accv and Prtuta Akn Vnn&Jj, 'A P..f .h Kainit Rnltihaiai Pntaah 1 Black. Nitrate Huda. in larjra aod aabaU qaantlUea. head moJ atampal sr rirc'a IV.S.PtlH :M. & -. r'rili-r Mfctiufs-t'irra. Kn It ttnsirf" ll. Rnotheer JK. C. S. li O Y 1) 0Mk Vi VsswrfT$ 'mm rsssjsr W&7 mm J'