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mmw l. rvent. ''Emmanuel, God with 5 Us'" Z Sermons by the Late Rev. Robert A, Lee. w iev shall call his name Emmanuel, which, being interpreted, is, God with us.?St. Matthew i : 28. o Many centuries before the coming of Christ, Solomon, ai at the dedication of the temple asked this, "Will God in u] I very deed dwell with men on the earth ?" Impossible, he al ? thought, that God should dwell with men; although Solo- m I. mon had built a temple to be the house of God, he yet felt H I that God could not make his home among men. And so, ni in the prayer in which he consecrated this temple to God, d( and his worship, he exclaimed, "will God in very deed B ? dwell with men on the earth ?" And yet we today do com- m memorate God's life on this earth among men, and as a H man. We today do recall as actual fact that which seem- ai ed to Solomon too grand and glorious to be true. And so e\ Solomon said, "The heaven of heavens cannot contain thee; ai /how much less this house which I have builded." That th house was a veritable creation of strength and grandeur w | and beauty. Seven years of unremitting labor and effort th had passed away since it was begun. Unnumbered treasure, gold and precious stones and costly wood had gone H into that temple ; upon it had been expended the loving n< and patient and devout thought and skill of the foremost th artisans of the time. But when all had been done, Solo- w mon felt that this house which he had builded could not be \A ;' * the abode of Him whom "heaven and the heaven of hea- ei vens could not contain." And yet we, to-day, do call to y< mind the time when for our Lord a home and resting place fo were found on this earth ; and were found in a manger, th That gorgeous temple at Jerusalem, that lordly pile, which A the sacred writer declared to have been "exceeding magnifi- uj cal," did not have the honor which weak and mortal hu- n< manity had of furnishing for more than thirty years a home ai *'v and shrine for the dwelling of our God and Saviour. "Will d; God in very deed dwell with men on the earth ?" Oh ! will u? He not come to us, and dwell among us ? That has been hi the lonpinf crv of men in all the past ; and in striving to io O O -V * _ find an answer they have builded Ancient Delphi, and the m Parthenon at Athens, and Diana's shrine at Ephesus, and a ai thousand other temples of antiquity, all "exceeding magnifi- w cal;" some of them remaining to this day, the highest crea- ar tions of man's artistic genius. Will God indeed dwell ec among men ? Our ancestors in England tried to find an ci answer to that in the strong and sturdy oak, hoary and se crowned with the mistletoe. At Stonehenge in England th we see another effort to find an answer to this same prob- he [ lem; its few stones, uncarved and crude, set upright at w 1 intervals, was an effort to form a vast unroofed temple that 0 might contain our Lord and Creator. Efforts, these that sa were vain and futile ; and yet powerfully witnessing to a th ^ -? ? A 4.1*^4. omnnnr T4ie r?roo 4" 11 roe o1a_ CO id t Wiillt, LllclL VJUU 311UUIU UW&li aiuung jl xxo 01 vavuiwj vivquently pointing forward to a time when such a universal fo . want of our humanity should be satisfied. .Will not God ra dwell with His creatures on the earth ? That has been the io heart-cry of our race in all the past. Christ's birth at be Bethlehem is God's response to this universal cry and prayer of His creatures ; for it gave us ''Emmanuel, which is th being interpreted, God with us," God in very truth coming us and dwelling among men on this our earth. And so we w on this Christmas day, this feast of the Nativity, commem- m orate Christ's incarnation, His taking to Himself a body cc and temple that He might live among us. de T~> - - - _r _n ? a n out again, in me imusi ui an uui juy emu cAuiiduun is kj there not in the minds of some, perhaps, as they revert to th that day long ago in Bethlehem, a secret misgiving and un- he Certainty ? We know there was such a thing as the offense cc of the cross. Christ's cruel and shameful death on the cross offended many, made it difficult for them to accept Him. May there not be likewise the offense of His nativity ? We love and adore Christ for the strength and purity that belonged to His matured character and life; we worship Him as we contemplate Him risen and ascended into heaven. And yet can we so readily and fully wor- y< ship and adore Him as the sacred writers present Him to us at Bethlehem, an Infant ; an Infant of a day ; weak and insensible with no voice but a crv ? Is this our God th and Saviour ? We usually form our conception of God as th one who is infinitely and immeasurably great. How, then, H shall we worship the helpless Babe of Bethlehem ? And he yet, if we will but diligently consider, at no time perhaps 01 ? " has God so manifested His greatness and power as on the be day of our Lord's Nativity. For what do we know of wi greatness and power ? We know a certain kind of great- wi ness, the power and majesty that God showed in creation, w< and in upholding and preserving creation. We call that sh greatness. And we also know a greatness among men pe . somewhat similar to this, greatness of intellect, and of ar accomplishment. But on Christmas day we are brought le face to face with a greatness of another kind. In God's th work of creation, and in man's works, there is greatness, y that of growth, action, increase. But in Christ's being cc born into the world there is greatness different in kind, and re uiuic wunueiiui ciuu nidivciuus, iiic gicdiucas ui ucucd.sc, n the majesty and power that does belong to one who could H thus humble Himself. We know in this world the great- sp ness that belongs to vast knowledge, great acquirements, m and increasing possessions; and our ideas of greatness and se strength are largely limited to these. But in Christ's na- ar * tivity we see the majesty and glory there is in having pow- te er to resign all these, and to become a helpless Infant, su Great and marvelous, then, are God's works in creation ; but to greater and more wonderful and adorable still in the Incar- cl nation of Jesus Christ. No more matchless exhibition did H Deity ever give of omnipotence than in the event which we vi celebrate to-day. We do not wonder that Deity should be sc great; we expect and demand that He should be that, m But we have reason for wonder and adoration that Deity hj should become lowly and humble. And so to-day, with devout joy and gratitude we praise God that His Son Jesus at Christ came to visit us in great numinty. te "And they shall call his name Emmanuel, which, being dc interpreted is, God with us." Emmanuel, God with us, God G taking our nature upon Himself, and dwelling among us; th that is the great event that we call to mind to-day ; and gc that is the great event that has forever illumined and trans- in figured our common humanity. This event declares that w: man is not an animal that lives for a few years and perish- as es ; for man can incarnate, and furnish an abode for the in- in dwelling of the Eternal. Man is related to the beasts, thai he perish ; but he is also akin to God who is immortal and w; eternal. So Christ's Incarnation, His taking unto Himself of - our nature, declares ; and Christmas, our commemoration w of this great event, recalls to our .minds, and emphasizes di this transcendent truth and fact in the life and history of nc our race. And so it was that, when Christ came to this ar earth, there was little regard or reverence felt for man as gc man. Murder stalked abroad in its most horrible and bru- lii tal forms, not the worst of which was infanticide. In a thousand amphitheatres throughout the Roman Empire, of resounding with the plaudits and acclamations of thou- ch canHc crlnHiatnrs men created in the imaere of God. were ch stabbing to the heart their fellows, and strewing their bod-jgc W \ I . I s on the sands of the arena. But, to-day, all of that isjWl J . C I 1 ^ _ 1 rtiif I oc langeu ; ior one nas come ana lanen upuu innocu uui imanity, and redeemed it by joining it to His Divine Na- yoi tre. And because He thus came, to-day human life is yoi icred and inviolable; sacred in the common humane feel- th; gs of mankind, sacred in the eyes of the laws of ourland th; hich give expression to that sentiment. One came in bui eat humility to find a resting place in the Manger at it i ofh 1p>1i pi? =>nH tn.Hav fhat pvpnt ptiH the life and reli-ldui V.V...V..V... , .-..v. vv- v..v on that have sprung from that event, stand around the no adle of the poorest and lowliest born in all this land, to ize lard from all harm and wrong?hover over it to bless of id dignify. And, too, how has Christ's taking our nature ing Don Himself lighted up and transformed in our thought fre 1 weakness and feebleness. We are prone to think wh eanly of these ; sometimes, perhaps, to despise them. Lil ow gladly we worship strength and might. We recog- life ze our duty towards weakness perhaps ; we are willing to ing ) our duty towards it, towards helping to bear its burdens, am ut at the same time do we not often despise it ; or at best W< erely pity it, or bestow our compassion on it ? But in we im who was the Babe of Bethlehem we see feebleness tui id weakness ; and having beheld them in Him, somehow am -er afterward they are not the same ; they are lighted up sel id beautified because He was weak and feeble. We feel sel tat not strength only and prowess have a place in this I a orld ; but immaturity and weakness also. We feel that sta * ' r .1 J _ : J lese too are true, ana wortny 01 our loving care anu aiu. spt "They shall call his name Emmanuel, God with us." his e is Emmanuel, God with us ; a Divine Saviour ; and we wa jed such a Saviour, a divine Saviour. We have needs I a lat no other Saviour could supply. We have wants for th; hose satisfaction we would look in vain to any other, asl Je have sins from which a human deliverer would be pow- no less to deliver us ; sins in the years that are gone that yo it rise unbidden to mock and terrify. We feel the neetj m; ir some satisfaction being rendered for these ; we want tia lem blotted out. Only a divine Saviour could do this. m< nd, too, we have sins in the present that have fastened th< pon us, and that hold us in their relentless grasp. We an sed to be saved not in them, but out of, and from them ; bri id only a divine Saviour could do this. And so we, to- rm ly, are thanking God for the gift of "Emmanuel, God with of He is also God with us, in us ; God having taken our it iimanity into Himself; a human as well as a divine Sav- an ur. And humanity needs such a Saviour, one who is hu- up an as well as divine. Men of flesh and blood, faltering du id daily falling, need a Saviour who also Himself likewise thi as a partaker of the same flesh and blood. Men tossed here du id there by divers temptations and trials, torn and distract- sin 1 by the fierce onset of appetite and passion, need a mer- acl ful and sympathizing High Priest. ''Who in that He Him:lf hath suffered, being tempted, is able to succor them ch iat arp tpmn^rl " That kthp Saviniir wp need, Himself WC iving suffered, Himself having been tempted; an^ so one wt ho can be "touched with the feeling of our infirmity." til ne of the gems of ancient classic literature is the pas- en .ge in Virgil in which the African queen Dido declares to be: ie worn ^Eneas and his tempest-tossed followers : "I my- 'n If not ignorant of evil, have learned to succor the un- W rtunate." And so we come to a Saviour who is not igno- be .nt of the stress and conflict of life ; we come to a Sav- ity lir whn wac mar\p lilr#? nntn 11c T-Tic V?r#?tVirp>n tW we might vei i our merciful and faithful High Priest. lar Finally, what a defence there ought to be this an! [ought, "Emmanuel, God with us." A defence to protect no i against all that would deface and degrade this human/ty ex1 hich God has thought worthy to be joined to His divine asl iture. What motive-power in it to oppose that sin which br; >nfronts us everywhere to-day, sin strong and crue^ an^ ;stroying. What inspiration in this thought, God with us> be od taking to Himself our nature, to live and labour f?r ha is humanity, all sin-stained and impaired as it is. What an )pe in this thought that we shall yet see humanity be_ ?P me a temple fit for the indwelling of Deity. he * th; Action. Pa ha . an th* 5 men of Galilee, why stand ye gazing np into heaven? Actsi-11. ' wc So spake the two men in white apparel who appeared to 1S | ie eleven apostles as they stood upon Mount Olivet on SP' ,e dky of our Lord's ascension and looked upon Him as an e was taken from them. "Why stand ye gazing- up into fus ;aven ?" A pertinent question as it came to the apostles on dif ir Lord's ascension day. Why should they to whom had ;en entrusted the preaching of the gospel in the whole lac orld, be standing upon the mount and gazing with idle the onder into that heaven whither Christ had gone, while the gu rid lay about them lost in ignorance and sin ? Why int iould they be gazing into heaven whither Christ had gone, ge" ;rhaps with vain regrets for Him who was taken from them, ye1 id not be obeying Christ's command to return to Jerusa- Pa m, there to collect His dispersed followers, and to wait utt e outpouring of the Spirit on the day of Pentecost? to Why stand ye gazing up into heaven ?" This must have thi ime as a trumpet-peal to arouse the apostles from the idle aV( verie, and sadness perhaps, that was stealing over them. lt ? as this question lost its pertinency to our time and day ? sin ow many of us, without the Church and inside of it, are ? ending our lives in idly gazing upon Christianity. We ad- cu^ ire the church; many of its features attract us; we like to " : e it making progress; we feel kindly towards those who 1?' e trying to advance its interests, but with that the matr ends. We never lay hold of it, or if we- do, it is with l?v ich a feeble and half-hearted gi^.sp that little good comes an< ' the church, or to us from our adherence. Christ de- 001 ared that after the preaching of John the Baptist on until teg is time, "the kingdom of heaven suffered violence, and the me olent took it by force." Would that it might always be do: i ; would that we all might with eager and enthusiastic inds press into the kingdom, lay hold on it, place violent an< mds upon it. ah' "Why stand ye gazing up into heaven ?" The fundamental titude of Christianity, then, is not that of standing, of con- mc mplation, but of going forward, of action. The funimental attitude of all Christianity, of the church of wo od, is not to stand, and to receive, and to enjoy/ ^ i ie precious gifts that God has bestowed, but it is to ate ) forward, to impart these gifts to others. As the church blc all her history has realized this, has acted in accordance Us ith this truth, she had advanced and made conquest; and NV'i( : the church has failed to understand this truth of her be- a t g, as she has been content to enjoy that which she had, she f?r is been unable to hold what she had, and has gone back- mu ard. What is thus true of the whole church, is true no< any single congregation of the church. If this parish ,a^( ere not willing to aid the work of the church in thejtur ocese and in the church at large, it would show we had |an( ) true appreciation and love of the church with its devout y?l id reverential service, its divine sacraments, and its pure 1 >spel of Jesus Christ. It would show that within our own,we; nits we were going backward, and not forward. | w*s out again, wnat is tnus true 01 tne wnole cnurcn, anuiW(J each congregation, is also true of every member of the suc lurch. My friend, what attitude do you maintain in the sta lurch to-day ? That of standing, of receiving, or that of ^ea >ing forward, of action? This is a crucial question. ^ his ? '' *' I -.? 4 ? t - . "r ;Wy.>< '- ' / hat is Christianity to you ? Do you look upon Christianity a system to give >ou instruction, something to furnish n the sacraments, something to save your soul ? Is that nr whole view of Christianity ? If so, your attitude is it of one standing and receiving ; you have forgotton it the true attitude is not to have and enjoy for oneself, t it is to carry out in action, in life, what one receives ; s to go forward ar d impart it to others. The essential ty of the christian is not standing, but is moving ; it is t receiving, but giving. Would that we all might realthis. How many of us have been attending the services the church all our lives, receiving instruction and partakl of the Holy Communion in the hope that we may be ed from sin, and saved. Our whole thought is about iat we received, our own salvation that we hope to attain, ttle wonder that we remain but babes in the christain : ; we need to forsake the attitude of standing, ot receivand to take tha.: knowledge and truth we have received i put it into praclice in our lives, and give it to others, e have been concerned too much about our own salvation ; have made our religion absolutely selfish. We need to n our thoughts away from self, and think of the welfare d salvation of o'hers. Then indeed we will be ourves saved, because we will be freed from selfishness, and fishness is sin?that from which all men need salvation, .sk therefore every person present that he do not simply .nd and listen ; but that he also go forward and act and ^ak. I ask it for the sake of the church which needs i aid ; I ask it fcr his own sake, because in no other y can he become a sharer in, a partaker of Christianity. .sk, then, that you do not simply stand and hear, out it you do put into practice that which you receive. I < that you do this very positively, very definitely. It is t enough that you be as good as other men ; that as u mete out justice to every man, you in return deind justice at the hand of every man. This is not chrisn conduct. The trouble with-the world, to-day, is that m insist on their rights. Men, to-day, insist on the right jy have to force to the wall some one who is unfortunate, d unable to meet his obligations, although to do so is to ing ruin upon him. Christianity says : "Look not every in on his own things, but every man also on the things others." If justice has any place in christian conduct, is a justice tempered with mercy, and love and forbearce. Allow me to commend to you this as being a summing of Christ's teachfhg on conduct : Think only of your ties, and not at all of your rights. Let men but act on is principle, and rights would cease to exist, and only ties be left. Let not, then, your attitude be that of one nply who stands to hear, but, one who goes forward to t. Engage, then, in some active, definite, christian, and urch work. For the lack of some definite church >rk men lose nheir interest in religion, and their lole christian life is weak and halting. My friends, unyou do engage iri christian work, you can never be hearty, thusiastic churchmen. What would you think of a memr of a society who never opened his mouth to say a word its behalf, who did nothing to advance its interest ? hat do you think of a christian of whom the same may said ? Do you ask what work there is in this communto be done ? This is a church-going community, and t there are persons here who do not go to church regu Kr \\7Vnr nnt tl- on if vrm think thpcp sprvir.es are worth ything, if they bring to you any spiritual grace?why t, quietly and unobtrusively, as opportuniny may offer, tend an invitation to others to attend service ? Do you < for opportunties for engaging in church work ? Our inch of the Woman's Auxiliary does not embrace in its smbership all the ladies of the parish. Our choir would glad to-welcome recruits. Our Sunday School ought to ve more pupils. Men to-day are being tempted to sin, d are giving away to temptation. There is no lack of portunity for work. "Why stand ye then gazing up into aven ?". But again, the apostles might have answered, perhaps, it they preferred to be with Christ where He was, to see s glory and majesty, to associate with Him and thus to rtake of His truth, and goodness and love. They might ve said that men about them were sunken in ignorance, H nnrlpan livinp-: He^araded therefore and reDulsive. and it with such men they had nothing in common ; they >uld therefore remain with Christ. Such a feeling as this very natural, and yet I tell you it is utterly false to the irit and genius of Christianity. To take such a position d attitude is to stand, and receive, and enjoy and to re;e to impart to olhers. To do so is to lead a life wholly ferent from thai of Christ, who, being endowed with Lrvelous gifts, went about freely dispensing to those who :ked them, to those who had need of them. Natural ^n as is this disposition, it is false and one that we need to ard against. Christianity is always in danger of resolv j itself into a coterie, a club of those who have connial tastes; to become exculsive therefore, if not in name t in fact and feeling, and so to lose all touch and symthy with a weary and sin-laden humanity; so to forget :erly that it has any duty to perform for humanity, a duty raise it, to save it. In order that the church may avoid 5 error, it is necessary that you its members should aid it. Let me ask, then, that truth which you have, is i barrier between you and sinners?not between you and , observe ; it ought to be a barrier between you and sin but is it a barrier that stands between you and sinners, ;ting you off wholly from, love and sympathy for them ? so, that whir \ you have is not the religion of Jesus Christ, initely pure ind holy, He was the friend, the associate publicans and sinners, while you, yourself a sinner, alv what truth and religion you have to come between you i lost humanity. The most unchristian lives in any Timunity are perhaps those of men of unquestioned infrity, of unimpeachable character, who are hard and irciless in their condemnations, not merely of wronging, but of wrong-doers. Their lives are most unchrisn because they do most completely fail in understanding d exercising that love and compassion which our Lord vays manifested towards evil-doers?evil-doers someles of the lowest and most degraded type. Let . ocl- furfVior Hnvo vrm anv trnnH fift nnrl hlpss . Mft J l-> o ; that some others perhaps do not have? If so, God uld have you use it for the advantage of those who have lot. Do not allow it, then, to cut you off and, to separ: you from those who do not have it. Have you the ssing of good birth and of that position which it gives ? e it, then, to help him who perhaps has inherited from the ikedness of his father an evil name, and who is making >rave fight to live down that reputation, and to establish himself and his children an honorable place in the com J A - - ? -1 frt Koln Kim ' /1 o I X11Ly- rv\ till y*JUlf>ClVC3 Ul yvjui j/usinun ivy nwfy mwi, , : stand idly by when you could lend a helping hand ; >ve all, do not frown upon his efforts. Have you cule and refinement ? Do not then despise the ignorant i degraded. Give of that sweetness and light which is irs, to them that need it. Finally, "why stand ye gazing up into heaven?" Many ak and fearful souls will answer that they cannot do other;e; that they can hardly stand; that to go forward and do rk is something of which they are incapable. To all h I repeat, The essential attitude of Christianity is not nding, but is that of action. To every man who is rful and uncertain about his own salvation I say that concern, primarily, should be, not about his own salva niH| ' vnG tion, but about that of his neighbor ; that if he will but labor for the welfare of others, he will be himself a saved HH man, because he will be freed from selfishness; because his ?gE^B| life will be a reproduction of the life of Christ?a life spent for others, a saved life. I know that this may not be an easy 1 thing to do. After months of sickness the convalescent I finds it strange and hard to undertake life's duties; yet it is essential that he should do so, that he may be completely restored to health and strength. Would you be saved ? Turn your gaze from self, and look upon the welfare of others. "And the Lord said unto Moses speak unto the children of Israel, that they go forward." / ' ' 'y, .LI MITED -DEALERS INAll Ms of Groceries, | SERYICE [fresh meats, sausage, hog head ; cheese and fish. / To Atlanta, Charlotte, Augusta. Athens, Wllmineton, _ _ __ _L . J'M New Orleans Chattanooga, Nashville and New York, ^ A WT li 1 Boston, Philadelphia. Washington. Norfolk, tvlch- I f\ 111 111 P I I I vl II I I 1^^ raond.?Schedule In effect Feb. 7, 1897. W llJLl UU UVUl/lJ gODTHBOUNP, No. 403. No.41. ?i? pyPl'V fl PSPTMT)tiOn i Lv. New York, via Penn.K.K.?ll 00 sm *9 00 pm C1C1J UUlltV, " Philadelphia, " " 1 12 p tn 12 05 am -? \ , "Baltimore, " " 3 15 p m 2 50 am 1l/? 1 1 ?? ^ -J \ ? Washington, ? 4 40 pm 4 80 em h VAC II JjVft3,CL \ " Elchmoud, A. C. L.. 8 50pm 9 05 am ?* VkJXJ, U?0X. vUlVA i Lv. Norfolk via 8. A. L.? *8 85 p m *9 05 am t_ ji H 14 Portsmouth, " 8 45 am 9 20 am RlWRYS OH V CvTVadon. via 8. A. L. .?ll 28 pu *11 55 am J * Ar. Henderson, via *12 56 am *1 89 pm Give as a call' when In need of anything In Ar~Dnrhaxn~vift 8. A. L. t7~327ra~1-4_09 pm our 11/ie. We guarantee satisfaction. Lv Durham 41 t5 20 pm-tll 10 am ' ^SlStvlaa? u:~ 1 aS1'-m ISp" Particular attention " Southern Pines, " 4 22 " 6 55 " . . " Hamlet, ' 5 10 " 6 58 - ?1 yg]l tO OUr " <Vadesboro, " 5 54 " 8 11" luvul " Monroe, " 6 43 " 9 12 " . ' ^ &.T. Charlotte via 8. A. L *8 30 am *10 25 pm "1 if i T\ ~T7" I 1 f M Ar. Chester, via8. A. L. *8 10 a m *10 47 pm ;|/| \ 14 U I Lv. Columbia, C. N. a L., fSOOpm ill /-I l|l\ | I I Ar, Clinton, 8. A. L *9 45 am *12 10 am "*"* J-*'-*-* J- ? j " Greenwood, * 10 35 " 1 07 am * u ABBEVILLE," 1105 140" flpnnT?tmPllt ? Elberton, " 12 07 p m 2 41 " tlilt?lit. ^ ? Athena, " 1 15 u 3 45 u ' " Winder, " 1 69 " 4 30 " Remember the place, No. 2 Washington " Atlanta, (Central Time) 2 50 " 5 20 " street. NORTHBOUND. No. 402. No. 88. ^ InUflOTD ATTAM AJATTPU :&J.= ir:^aMlWlftflllUII MM, :f " Greenwood, " ^5 41 ^ ^2 09 ^ f7oo>m Old Certificates of Eegistration Lv. Cheater. " ..... *S 13 p m *4 83 am qjq Yoid?Everybody Mll8t Ar. Charlotte, via p. A. L *10 25 p m 8 80 ani Pam'ofor " Lv. Monroe, via 8. A. L. *9 40 p m *6 05 am U)0glBli8ri '? H?tot ? *11 23 " 8 15 ? Lv. wio ji 30 am ?I2 30 pm xhe Books of Registration will be Opened Lv. Boatbem Pines, " 12 14 am *9 20 am on the First Monday In December next " Raleigh, ** *2 16 a m 11 35 am Ar. Henderson " 3 28am *l 00 pm and kept Open for Tbree Successive ATDurham via b. a. l ^pm d&yfl for the Registration of Voters Lv Durham " to 20 pm fll 10 am Ar. Weldon, " *4 55 am *8 00 pm enuueu to ftegiairauon unier wie won" w^'l^vSpKlS 12 81 pin 11 pm =U'?lon-For the Information of ti. " Baltimore, u 143 pm 12 48am People Attention Is Called to the Fol* Philadelphia, " 3 60pm845 am , .. ? _ ? New York, " *6 23 " ?6 58 u foling Provisions of the New Law, ApAr. Portsmouth, s. a. L., 7 30 am 5 50 pm proved the Fifth Day of March, 1896> Norfolk, " *7 00 6 05 rriHE BOOKS OF REGISTRATION SHALL Daily, fDaily, ex. Sunday. {Daily ex. Monday. JL be opened by tbe Boards on tbe tint Monday lu April, 1896, at tbe Court House la Nos. 408 and 402, "The Atlanta Special," Solid Ves- each County, and kept open for at least six tlbuled Train of Pullman Sleepers and Coaches be- consecutive weeks. They shall be opened tween Washington and Atlanta, also Pullman again at the Court House on tbe first Mondays Sleepers between Portsmouth and Chester, S. O. In June, July, August and September, A. D., Noa. 41 and 38, "The 8. Ai L. Express," Solid 1896, and kept open continually for at least Train, Coaches artf Pullman Sleepers between Ports- one week in each of said months. They shall mouth and Atlanta. Company Sleepers between be cloned thirty days before the general eleo* Columbia and Atlanta. tion in 1S96. After general election In 1896, tbe Both trains make immediate connections at Atlan- Books of Registration shall be opeued on tb^ta for Montgomery. Mobile, New Orleans, Texas, Cal- first Monday of each month at the Cou*t ifornia, Mexico, Chattanooga, Nashville, Memphis. House and kept open for three successive da^g Macon, Florida. in each month until thirty days before tide Vnr TifkM* Sleenprs annlv to eleclionln 1896, when they shall be closed For Tickets Sleepers apply to til tbe said general election shall have takefr V&S B. A. NEW LAND, Oen. Agt, Pass. Dept. place. Tbe offices and books mast be kepl^^n . 6?KiS.^1L,Hou'?i Atl?nta, 6a. 0pen from 9 6'clock In the forenoon untlI^|H^ GEO. Mc. l\ BATTE,Trav. Pass. Agt. o'clock Id the afternoon. Charlotte, N. C. The Board ol Registration Is the judge of G. St. JOHN. Ylce-Pres. and Gen'L, Mgr. tbe qualification or all applicants ior regisV. E. McBEE, Oen'l. Superintendent. tratlon up to January 1st, 1898. Up to JanuH. W. B. 6LOVEB, Traffic Manager. ary 1st, 1S9S. every male citizen of tbls State ? T. J. ANDERSON, Qen'l. Pas*. Agent and of tbe United States, twenty-one years of General Offices: Portsmouth, Va. age, who Is not an Idiot, Is not Insane, Is not * a pauper supported at tbe public expense, ,vi and Is not confined in any public prison, and who has not been convicted of burglary, ar, . ? tit a. n u tit. 8on? obtalnlne goods or money under false tliarleston And W83tern Uarolllia K. A pretenses, perjury, forgery, robbery, bribery, adultery, wife beatlDg, housebreaking, reeeiv- '?f Augusta and Asheville Short Line. lng stolen goods, breach of trust with fraudtiin KVh 7 icQ7 'ent, Intent, sornicatlon, sodomy, incest, as1 sault win intent to ravish, miscegenation, r ,, .???r Q . jn - larceny, or crimes against the election laws, Ar Greenwood "" 12 17 *m and wbo 8bal1 bave beeD a reB,dent in this Ar Anderson 7 3(> rS 6 U)"um StHte two ywMexcept ministers in charge aI , ,r i'm 7 nit yf organized churches and teachers of public Ar Greenville 8 00 Dm 10 15 am 8cho?l8' and lhey afler months residence Ar fltmn ^nrinn \ . m ln ,he State,) a resident in the County tor six aSSSuSES* ~ ? qoS"" months, and in tbe polling precinct four 9 25 am months, and who can read any Section in the a I ? ri Constitution of 18U5, or can understand and explain any section of said Constitution Ar Ashevule 6 45 pm 7 00 pm when read to blm by the registration officer LvAshevlllo 8 20 am or officers shall be entitled to registration and t_c?ii at, am 4 no nm h^cnme n elector uoon annllcation lor such ^ Lv G^enn timings 10 00 ?m registration. If any"perso'n'has been convict- i Lv Greenville 11 65 am 4 00 pm ed of any pf the crimes above-mentioned, a " ? Lv Laurens 1 30 pm 7 10 pm pardon of the Governor removes the dlsqnal* > Lv Anderson 7 00 am iflcatlon. Lv Greenwood 23 28 pm lu case any minor who will become twentyArAugusta .. 3 00 pm 11 10 am one^ears of age after the closing of the Books Lv Calhoun Falls 4 44 pm 0{ Reglstratration and before the election, ArRaleieh .. 2 16 am . and is otherwise qualified to register, ma Res , Ar Norfolk . 7 80 am . " application under oath showing he is qualiAr Petersburg 6 00 am Bed to register, the Boards shall register such Ar Richmond..'.. ' 8 20 am applicant before the closing of the books. r ? Any person whose qualillcatlons as an elec4^ iiffl'I * t\n tor wl" be completed after the closing of the 4! "" k ?c pm Registration Books but before the next eleca! v!ll. Ail o'6n"" ? pm tlon, shall have the right to ap^ly for and sea? t in ^ am 7 on nm cure a reu'sfation certificate at any time 4' n'(n ''I in cn - on p within sixty days immediately preceding the f a ?L I" 10 50 am 7 80 pm closing of the Registration Books, upon an a 1 fiSi' o J!b pm application under oath to the facts entftllng Ar Charleston .. 8 08 pui him tosuch registration. Lv Charleston 6 50 am The registration of voters must be by pollLv Savannah 6 SO am ing precincts. There must be a Book of Reg- , * Lv Port Royal 155 pm 8 15 am Istratlon for each polling precinct, that is for Lv Beaufort 'i 10 pm 8 25 am each township, or parish, or city, or twon of Lv Yemassee 8 15 pm 9 25 am less than five thousand ihhabltants, or ward Lv Fairfax 10 32 am of cities of more than five thousand inbabiLv Allendale 10 47 am tants. Each elector must vote in the polling . io ?>i niwinct in which he resides. If there is more ar angusui p?. .. ~ 7 77; 77?,T?77 than one voting place In the polling precinct, Close connections at Greenwood for ail points on tbe elector may vote at any voting place dee- fl i.uo .J*n n" , "aHway?! a1"*at Spartanburg i^nated on the registration certificate. The with Southern Railway. Boards must designate In the registration 9) tor any Information relative to tickets, rates,ached- certificate the voting place Id the polling pre- B ule, etc., address ... clnct at which the elector Is to vote. If there ifl r u wSdIo u 1" *M,,.A*ellti Is more than one voting place In the polling M. NOKTH, Sol. Agent. precincts, the Boards shall designate on the certificate tue voting place selected by the elector. Old certificates of registration are void. Erery man who may desire 10 exercise the right V TV/f~TTnPTT A X ' to vole must apply for Registration. 3 J. D. CARWILE, I flfil 1111! __ I ?4nn nnn. ? I WRITE TO OR CALL on the'underslgned ^ ^ _ * ?? or to the Director of your Township Jz Jr , for any Information you may desire about J2 *4 our plan of Insurance. J? We Insure your property against destruo- H gS TT w ?^ tlon by W ?3 UJ FIRE, WINDSIORU OS LIMING, fjf* f ? ? pq and do so cheaper than any Insurance Com 2*^ H fj a pany In existence. H lis Remember we are prepared to prove to you 2 pH that ours Is the safest and cheapest plan of r-\ . * -a Insurance known. w H w ||J """ . ? ^ ^ J. E. BLAKE, Jr., Agent, j Ml 3 S ivi ill- CI n 2 auuevniB, o. b HH 4- QJ J. FULLER LYON, Pres. g - 9 rH Abbeville, S. C. _j s T , 8 ?0? 3 s 2CU 1 BOARD DIRECTORS. (/} * 5 ? I T.C.Turner -Ninety-Six Township. ?___JI "3 ^3 ^ ?| J.M.Major Greenwood r* r ~) fl| P. W. Sullivan .. Cokenbory ^ w . W. B. Acker Donnald* " w) . L HH M. B. Cllnkncales Due Weft H ^ \? Hi T, L. Haddon Long Cane w J. W. Scott .Smllhvllle ** ?H < * ,trL.,._ , ? Jg? XL,. W. W HIHUU VYIIIIO ami W -N. MM J. W. Lyon ....Indian Hill V" C/ ^ EM Capt. John Lyon Cedar Spring *4 W UK W.E. Leslie Abbeville Hi ^ 5 fl H I)r. J. A. Anderson.DIamoud Hill BHRB ** ** Q| H. A. Tennent Lowndesvllle ,Z SJ A. O. Grant Magnolia W J. T. Horton Calhoun ^ MR 0. N. McKlnney Bordeaux gg Abbeville, S. (J,, March 1, 1S97, 36