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Thc Kind You Havo Always Bought, and which has boca ia uso for over ?50 yours, lins homo (ho signature of /j _^ and has boon mad? nuder lils per jZ/'Y//-',-y sonni supervision since its infancy? ***UBf*trrX /&CC/CtA-i Allow no one to deceive you hi tills? All Count?'Hoits, Imitations and ??.Tust-as-good** aro but Experiments (ital trille with mid endanger th? health of Infants and Children- Experience against p?riment. What is CASTO RSA Cast or ia is a harmless substituto for Castor Oil, Pare goric, Drops und Soothing Syrups. It; is Pleasant. It .contains neither Opium, Morphine nor otiter NnreotiC ^substance. Its agc is its guarantee. It destroys Worin? ?md allays Feverishness. It cures DiarrbuMi and Wind Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, eures Constipation 4Uid Flatulency. It assimilates tbo Food, regulates tho Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy ami natural sleep. Tbe Children's Panacea-The Mother's Friend. GENUINE C ASTORIA ALWAYS Sp Bears the Signature of The KM You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. TM* cEf?TAun eoMMnv, rt MURHAY OYRCCT. ?CW vom* om. ?>. S. VANDIVER. E. P. VANDIVER. TAKDITEB BIG! '9 PLENTY OF GUANO ANO ACID FOR LATE USE. Send on your wagons. Flour, Corn, Oats, Coffee and Tobacco! At Lowest Prices. Cotton Seed Hulls in 100 pound Sacks. Your business appreciated by VANDIVER BROS. ABB Yflll MD iSJU W?MT?WP ? unwin WAlilllib A flu In the Piedmont Belt of the South ? Anderson County is the HUB of the Piedmont Belt? and And you can select from the following and let me hear from you: In the City of Anderson : House and Lot on North Main Street. House find Lot OE South MS?Q RIrnut. Vacaot Lot on South Main Street. En Center ville Township : 155 acres, improved ; also, 67 acres. Cn Broadway Township 61 acre?. ' In Pendleton Township : 77 acres. In Fork Township : 104, 900,105 and 52 acre Tract?. ^ In Hall Township : 289 acres. ALL MORE OR LESS WELL IMPROVED. In Pickens County t have 285 acres in oae body and 75 acres in another. In Oconee County I have several Tracts, running 104, 418,75, 335, 138, 109,JL66- all in Ceuter Township. -Tbere are no better lands to produce than I offer you above, and i? you are interested in tuying or selling lauds in tha city or country, sea me and le me tell you what _ have to offer. Yours for building up the country and city, .? JOS. J. FRET WELL? Anderson, 8. O. MASTIC MIXED PAINT We Want io Sell You Your Paiut. Come in to 8?e"us, Wa let us tell you all about it. We have sold this Paint for many years, and all have been pleased who otaed it. We have a fine selection of colors, and will gladly give you a card chowing them if yo" call in and request same. Also, a full line of V arnishes, Stains, Floor Paints, Furniture Polish, Paint Brashes, Etc. v ORR, GRAY JU GO., JTestlio t?mk^iiudorio^ ?j. f | Boliable Druggists. ^^^^ g HE2STTIST. 1M^;> . .. ? , y -OMce ?vet P? rmers and Merchants Bank, ?ndera??, S. 0, , WAR ST Unforgotten Heroes of In his eloquent address to the mem bers of the South Carolina Division of Confederate Veterans at Columbia (jen. James W. Moore, the orator cf the occasi)n, said: Colnrades of the South Carolina Di vision of United Confederate Veter an: We have met again to renew the f-eenes of the past, to keep alive the memory of others who mingled with us in those t-cpnes and to recall and commetnorate the heroic deeds of those men who fought by our side'for the rights of our people, and fighting, died for the honor of our country. I seo around me now mauy who fought for our Lost Cause, who bear on their bodies, and will carry to their graves, tho scars of wounds received in that desperate s'.uggle; men who went forth at tho first tap of the drum, the firBt blast of the bugle ?nd were over faithful throughout the deadly agony I of those four years of blood; and who, when the great crash oanio, were found faithful still, with their foot in tho stirrups and their sabres buckled on. But I miss the faces of many who mingled with us in those scenes. They lie beneath the broad fields of Virginia-the green slopes of Mary land-the hills and dales of Pennsyl vania-the red clay hills of Georgia, and in the sacred soil of their own loved Corolla. They will never stand shoulder Ko shoulder in line of battle again. They have answered their last roll osll here, and are sleep ing their quiet sleep in the bosom of mother earth-they await the sound ing of that reveille wbioh shall usher in the dawn of tho great here&fter. Their work is over. But wo, who survive them, have yet our work to do. Let us see to it well that we so perform our duty that ample, oomplete and perfcot justice be done to the memory of men like these. Justice to the memory of men like these! How oan it be done? Kc ono man oan pretend to do it; and each anrl every one of us, one and ali, must respond to this labor of love this sacred duty enjoined upon us. All that ? can hope to do today-all that t shall attempt in the limited time that I shall oooupy your atten tion, will be to reoall a few teenes of that great drama and to pay a passing -.._ M._ ii_" _e "_e .v vriuuvc tu tuc uiuuiuijr vi ouutn MI IUD actors in those scenes, who, having played their parts well while with us here, have gone forth from among us forever. Asa soldier in the Hoe of hattie takes oaro alone of the emmy in front leaving the rest to tho brave beana and the strong arms of his comrades on his right hand and on his left hand, so now when the battle is over and peace reigns in the land, and we are gathered together to speak of the deeds of our heroic dead, I shall only mention the names of some of those with whom I was brought in more im mediate oontaot; those who slept Sn bivouap by my side; those with whom I fought io the skirmish line, and .rode with knee and knee in the head long charge; soldiers who knew hut to do their duty, whose spirits went up s ?. id tho smoke and roar sf hattie, and whoBC bodies lie beneath the grion fields of that common country, which guards sacredly in its bosom tho' dead, who, while living, loved that oountry so well. And going forth as it were to visit the last rest ing p?aot> of our dead, I oan only place floral o?eringa on some of these far off lonely graves, where, 'perchance, there may be no flowers growing-no ?orland hanging; leaving others to the oars of those who ehall follow me year by year, until the grave of every dead Confederate hero shall be entwined with a wreath unfading and immor tal. It is hard, indeed, to realise that more than forty , years have passed a Why since we who survived the \t\te wa/between the States, sadly ?furlr.? our tattered hattie flags, and before we took our woary way back to our desolated homes turned and took one long and lingering gase over the ik?ds, where lay om- missing comrades, who would never again answer roll call, or hear again the reveille. Since then the frosts of forty-one .wingara hive whitened the fields abovo whioh hung the dark, dark olouda and- o rook a battle; and as many summers have cast their peaceful green m so tia o ver th? scene, while th? sower? of spring have biddon &d ghastly sui cs cf r^zx and bloomed sweetly over the grave? of our fallen heroes. Alone wore they left, but not forgotten.' Xr?ttjf' hearts havo gathered again and ?gal?; around their.-last Wtlnjf ?fot,/ fair hands 'hir?s^ *ua<*$ljff atp. =rHh ?awsrs th? ?rate? of aha heroio dead/ ./ ' ' ':r'4M Thoa? who felt at Mananas ead tba fttfirV. battles ot tba wai rushed ORI BS. the Great Lost Cause. a cause that was holy aad sacred to them; that they felt would sundy -/in, and fell with the paeons of victory ringing in their cart>. Thoso to whom came a ?oldier'e death in thc noontide of battle-wheo auccesa had crowned the Confederate arms-when the Suuthern crosa floated dcQaotly on the hills of Maryland and Pennsylvania, felt that victory wa? assured, and that they died that their country might bc free. But those who fell in those last dark days of th 3 war, could only look back at their ru:ncd and desolate homes, and forward U> tho continued struggle, as long as it was bitter, ap j parently without end and without j hope. But their mauhood and their obedience to the call of duty sustained them to the last, and truly were they deserving of the inscription which was written on the spot where Leon nidas and his band died: "Tell it, O, stranger, at Laoedamon that we died in obedience to her laws." Truly, cao we say that "theso were men whom power could not eorrupt, whom d jath oould not terrify, whom defeat could not dishonor." History has already embalmed the names of thoea great Confederate gen erals who hr.ve passed from the scenes of this earth, and left alone tho mem ory of their u?iaes and their deeds be hind them. Lee, Jackson and Stuart are types of these. The first, the Commander-in-Chief of the Confed erate army, the others his trusted lieutenants. The immortal chieftain, who led the armies of our great Lost Cause, was direoted and governed in all his actions by the single word-duty. As long aa his native State, to whom he owed his first obedience, and whose sovereignty he acknowledged above all others, remained in the Union, his sword rested in its sheath. But when Virginia seceded from the Uoion and oast her lot with her sister States of the Confederacy, he took his place in the line of battle, a Confederate sol dier in for the war. During the long years of the momentous strife, when directing the oampaigns which made him the central figure of that grand straggle, towering high above C all other actors in it, and which has written his name in the history of those times, as the great general of toe war, no dream or fame led him on-no thirst for glory lured him from the straight path of duty before hjm. His duty to his State and the Confederacy was the Polar star, which guided his oourse. And when,-after ye aro of heroic endeavor ~ nd glorious deeds, that army, guided hy his mas terly genius, .had writi^a in their blood and the blood of their enemies, the most glowing page ' in the annals I of war; and when the fateful moon of Appomattox had dawned on them, and ihobe weary, worn and starving men were begging to fc* ordered for ward onoe more to the battle, duty was still his guiding star. See him, s9 he received, through Col. Venable", the message of the gallant Gord?n. "Tell Gen. Lee I have fought my corps to a frassle," and realising that there was nothing else to do but treat with Gen. Grant, and feeling,, SB he expressed it, that he would rather die a thousand deaths. Watch him, as in. the agony of the moment he glances at the ranks of his battlo soarred veterans, and says. "How easily I could get rid of all this, and be at rest; I have, only to ride along the lines and all will bo over; but it is our duty to live; for what will become of the women and ohildren of the South if we are not there to protect them." . I Lee, great in viotory, greater still i in defeat; who-e name will descend to future generations, side by sido with that of Washington ic tho storied page of history. . Io the history of thos generals of tho Confederacy the name of Jackson will always be associated with that of Lee. Whether at the first Manaseas, where, by his indomitable courage, he gained for himself the nama of "Stonewall"-his soriea of uapMalell ed victories in tho valley ol' Virginia, Hie great flank movement ia the .pries of 1862, when he appeared ; so suddenly on the 'rfgtii;jfi^of^''^ OleUan; end . joining wl|a X^e, ihe united Confederate forces fanget a a^y-^ttiei: kno^ as; ^ Seven D*yV Fight before Richmond^ OTU' 0W? UWW . v?S Ktcnmono, ut tmm \m their ?Qtrcnchments at ha^i^'on^tB?^Ja?e?' . still greater hank movernos?t, kt?r ia the same : 5 year, ||iti^'?in?7>f the,MsM^|i tami sheUntare df HMMT"* " ?Shell ;? -"/apeak of h jle?ni fight al Frederiekabu greatest nank movement, culminating I io the great victory uf Cbanoeilors ville. A victory glorious, indeed, but bought with a great price. It cost tho life of Stonewall Jaokson. No! I need not repeat it to you, you who know so well the wondrous story of this gr?a?. Confederate hero. It is not necessary for ms to stop here to delineate the character and talents of Gen. Jackson. As long as unselfish patriotism, Christian devotion and purity of character and deeds of he roism shaii command the admiration of men, Stonewall Jaekeou's name sad fame will be reverenced. Of all who mourned his death none felt more acutely the loss tho country and thc army had sustained than Gen. Lee Gen. Jackson had always appreciate*: and sympathized with thc bold con ceptions of tho commanding general and entered upon their exeoi'.?'on will the most cheerful alacrity and zeal Geo. Lee never found it necessary t accompany him to see that his plan were carried out, but could alway trust him alone; and well might h say when Jackson fell that he hin self, had "lost his right arm." Stuart has boon spoken of aB a ga cavalier, riding into battle at tho hes of his squadrons, whistling a live! air, or singing a gay song. So he said to have led Jaokson'3 corps in the battle of Chancellorsville, singh "Old Joe Hooker, come out cf tl Wilderness," and you will rememb that Hooker, with alacrity, obeyed tl order and put the Rappahanno* once more between the 30,000 Confe erates under Lee, and the one hundr thousand men of the Army of the I tomeo. That army, which had i vanoed with ouch a grand flourish trumpets, returned, beaten by. h than one-third of its number, a though cowering beyond the river its intronohments, their boastful lc er still declared it was the oustod of its own honor; that it "fouj when it pleased, advanced when pleased, and retired wben it pie ed." You of the oavalry and horse ai lery; . who followed the fortunes Stuart through his brilliant campai which ended ai Yellow Tavern; i heard his merry laugh and saw dancing plume as he rode at th? h of his Southern horsemen to tuiokest of the fight, know well 1 there was nothing frivolous al him; that he was a brave and dsBl leader, a brilliant strategist, a h stubborn fighter of indomitable en* and above all devoted to duty, can all recall that campaign in valley of Virginia in the au tum 1862, when Stuart's oavalry and horse artillery were engaged in tie for fourteen days successively, J after day, held iu . check the who Fi??S??tO?'? Cavalry supported, was, heavily by infantry. Th> was that Stuart received a tety that his daughter, Flora, was d: and with a heart full of anguisl swered, "I muBt;leave my ohih the hands of" God-my country | me here, I cannot come.". Dutj his wathoword from- first to When mortally wounded.and abo pas B away, he was asked by .Pres Davis1 how he felt? , He answ i;Easy and willing to die, if Got my country think:. I have fulfille* destiny and done my duty/' with his duty to God, and; kif di bis Country kept steadily ? him, one of the most prominen ares of the war, one of the most" iag cavaliers of ancient or m history, one of the bravest pa who ever drew' sword id defen his.country's cause, panse d paso .?over the river to rest ,unde: shade of the trees." Leo, the Commaaderm-I J a o k s o ?, the. right arm, which eyer tko deadly blow, and le Starry ?ross of ; the South alw viotory, Stuart the left arm', warded off Banger, the great o leader j tireless, indefatigable, ey ?a and esra of tho arm y, k ceaseless ward end watch/* wh .wearied army slept. : They ce eulogy from me. No higher t can be paid th an to say thoy we loaders of the Army of Northen ginia. That army, whiob went 'in the springtime of I tis, life, . great battle of Be ven Pines ai Reven days' fight around Kio) with m oro than eighty' thouean kots glittering like burnished beneath the rayB of the Southe) . and '. which, af tor four y cara tc vation, slaughter", cara^'^B??? laid down but as ven tbSu??nd u at the foot of the conqueror, thousand muskets . jae tonger, aud glittering, but begrimed w; powdar smoko of hundreds of fields en* ^ bravo mea ' who bore' them. t** Wmm?*Mi* bed life: weak' r a*d;^waj^^^ft their nerveless a^a?p nb longq* ?fc>i*;?ei$&^ Stuart, because they wer?' tj the Confederate soldier* ;#Ch*i. his groat ^tenant; the tb <rUS^'.'b^a*W ^ga*^ . . 77, rr ? vriiiieiiora'i: soldier. Wo hired mer cenary wa? he, fighting for pay alone, but a patriot, battling for bid rights and governed alone by his duty to bis country'? cause. Let us wander, in imagination, to the plains of Virginia and look upon j the battle field of the second Mauae j eas. There, under a grassy mound, lies all that is mortal of one of the braveBt and best soldiers who fell upon that gory field; ooo who bore the index of true nobility plainly stamped upon a faoe as beautiful as a I woman's, but carried within hie I bosom a henri aa braveas alton's. 1 I refer to Capt. Stuart, of Vicksburg j Mies. I knew him well and I nevci I met a braver soldier, a more acoom J pliehsd oiRcsr, er a Diore nolibhe( J gentleman. v.? Ile wore the insignia of a Goofed crate captain. But he led into tb I battle no company of. infantry wit! j their bristling bayonets; ho command led no battery of artillery to awake j the thunder of war; no squadron fo I lowed him in the headlong rush of I cavalry charge. Ho was a captain o I Stuart's staff, commanding the signi j corps of the cavalry of the Army < I Northern Virginia, but where bis dui I led bim he did his work faithfully at I well. It wan in the summer of'6 I Jackson had made his great flat I movement. He had destroyed ali tl I military stores at Maoassas. Ho b: I hold Pope in oheok, but the Fedei I lines were closing in on him, and t I great lieutenant was looking for he j from the great captain. He was ac j iously asking "Where *ris Loi J street?" and Lee snd Longstreet w< I asking 11 Where in Jackson?" Ht j above them - all, on the top of 1 j mountains, the signal flags W6re i ling, Lee and Longstreet read fr I them: "Jackson is before yon, ht I pressed." To Jackson ?bey ss I "Hold your own, help is nearl Loi I street is pressing through Thoroui I fare Gap. The long linea of j enemy were closing in oh the sig ?station. To every intimation of a I ger of oap turo thc signal officer I plied: "My duty is to give infer; j tion, and I shall hold my post to ?last.'' And still the flags kept flyi I There was a wild rush of trampl I hoofs, the. rattle of carbines and ; I tols, and the enemy hsd captured I signal station; but, somehow, ici j confusion, without his horse and I his shirt sleeves, the captain of, I signal corps esoaped .through the j oiroliog lines of the enemy, to ci I fuller information to the Confede I leaders. The great battle bej j Capt. Stuart was asked what he I going to do without a horse, and I simple answer was "Any mau j find a musket, and today every I should use one.'V And when bia I nnmnany. from Vicksburg, went action, the staff .officer marched ! his musket' on his shoulder, with privates Of the line.a Tho thundo the. seoond MsnaBsas ceased, I when-; th*y ?-?ntforth to bury dead ..' . > t und the Cv.u-ims.ndi t^eV ?'??rpi of the cavalry ?I amo?* tittilb.ckly strev/n dead of in-?ahi f> M Bi* white,:;' njfcujued; ! still ?s'?;ic?v rd as s--woman's, tho noble, uv -ve^hes^ ^? qesB'e beat forever, io bia , quiet ..rpo will leave him, and laying our gal tenderly and reverently cn the ot crated monad,, ?w* $Jl turnar? ? template another gravo which ot in the- ?ame Virginia joij;^ two years a? tor, to re?oive ad* ?;ker?;\/>'-<;rr .>'fl'.??'.'\ v * fe'-: ^ Th?rfl !?iy,' bo ^ssme "ps'sseni have chan a?, d to meet Col; Pate, mander ioif..ihe'5.tii;.i;V'irg^W?iiiW He was ; a ge q tie m au ul wealth ar ?Qomcnt,-'living;in WestVirgini the early part of, tl o wir ho rai cavalry command known as 1 battalion, in the arming and equi of Whian he spent bis eptire foi In 1362 thia command, by the ai ment of other oom pan io s waa raia a full regiment under the ?amo c 5th Virginia cavalry.>:i He; nat' ex pooled to bo oolonol of this mont, but found that ho waa aat to the position of seoond io corni while the dashing Bosser waa pr ed colonel, and placed over the ment. The' almost inevitable followed, 'andy^SMtt-J^'tt?si^ml household was, to: a Oertaia r/e divided - against itself^ ; The.7! naturally wideoed and entende til it caused a feeling of ili-wt tween Pate : and Stuart. . And 1 winier of I8SSN sod 1864, Pa Court-marfcialed by his comm< Officer. It will hot avail* now ?,? quire ??Vo.Vthe;f;merits of this ?Suffice i ? io say that:fPate was { OR ted on every ehargo and every Bastion. <:-h , , ; . t The terrible campaign of 1864 ed. Kosser; bsd .he^n 'Promo! brigadier geberal and V Pate nae to ba pblonol In commano of hi ;men t.> The; federal cavalry % toi ; of the . Coafederaoy? Stm ! danperatioa for tho sslvftSon o lion. TW sab mSm traverse? [greater pert, ol the ?reh of? between them should le buried, offer ed bia band. And there, upon the raging held of nattle, recompilation . wad effected; and thero, "or a brief moment, stood the cavalry leaders, with hand grasped in hand, like blaok-wioged demon of war drew back ^ for aa instant, and the white robed v angel of Peace hovered over the scene. They parted. But soatoa j had the waving plume of Stuart dis appeared ia the distance, hardly the ringing hoofs of his horse ceased to sound, when the commander ot the 5th Virginia fell dead, with a carbine ball through bis brain. The slanting . rays of the setting eun were falling on tho scene The Federal commander, despairing of reaching Richmond, had determined to mass his troops together, and, cut ting his way through a portion of the thin lines opposiog hin to rejoin his army. On onme the Federal oavalry in ono ioug, unbroken line-their trumpets sounding the advance from 000 end of the line to the other. Tho gaps made in their ranks by the Confederate horse artillery closed again as soon as made. The weak squadronb of Southern oavalry, which charged them, were thrown .back from their solid masses as the foam of the o?r.a?i wave is dashed back from the /oak bound shore. Aod with the power of overwhelming numbers and 1 the determination that grows from I desperation, the blue' torrent burst through everything that opposed them, and sought safety in the dark ness of the night. They escaped but they fired a Parthian shaft as i ?bey went, and Lee's great command er of horse fell, his life-blood Bowing '.forlb on his last battle field. He had saved Bichmond, and his dying mo ments were doubtless gladdened by the thought* of a duty well'performed. But this thought could scarcely have afforded moro pleasure than the re memberanoe of the reconciliation with the noble comrade in arms, who had just gone before him. And Pate! He, too, had sunk to rest justas the only thorn, to disturb his repose, had been mercifully taken from his pillow Drawing bis sword at tbs first call of hts country, he had pledged to the cause of that country "his life, his fortune and hie sacred honor.'- His fortune had long ainoe been consumed in or ming and equipping the brave mon who fought under bim. H? life he had freely offered up on the field of battle, but his : honor was safe add oaored forever io ibo hearts of bis countrymen, .- Comrades, I will only ask yod id Hogar for a fei? moments longer beside one more .grave bf a departed, hero. Not one of those lowly i and grass grown mounds which mark tho ltv.i reBting place of a .Confederate soldier Who leif in the war. but one whero tho earth on it is'still mellow, and t where the fragrant flowers of the 1 sunny South are freshly blooming. A grave not on tue far off plains bf Vir ginia, but here, in tho Capital City ol our own Carolina, where the sof Southern breezes, as they BI eh amie the branches of the spreading'oaks and rustle the broad . leave* of chi 'magnolias ?above it, sound a soldier' requiem., Here rests one weii knowi to us all. One whom many of us fol lowed with unswerving confidence am unceasing devotion through the fon years of war/ One whom we rejoice i to have with us, again and again, i i these Reunions, as long as he wa 'ft to ua.l One whom ali true. Care i jians delighted 13 honor while Iii 4og, 'and'^ho^'!,rioir'''i^ea^?t tho who! people r?\)V-TU*- hat grand and gio fjyuav ?son %t^So.ttth'A'?/arol!na~Wat Hampton. Comrades, ne?.dlesB it for me to attempt to remind you . ; -who Wade Hampton was and what 1 did for South Carolina. His^nac jalone bringrit all before us :ihv*v.?Jivi 'picture. " ; Wc ?ecTiim, in o?f?ind eye, leading his legioo\?a t'odvbatt 'field Cfithe first Manas'saB, i\nd gui iog them. to where the ? .thc. hctteati * We fell?w: hi oh his e^ery battle , field of the fo ong years of the war, untU ?ith t stars of m lieutenant general gtttteri on his collar,?and his body torn chot and steel attd shell,; he sheath i?a sword whioh had beett drawn i -tis country's cause alone; aod be wielded: on<y for his country's hon Great "was-:-':tfamptott-''-!a'/war, I greater etili;in peiae; No higher e dance of the trust and confidence c ?people in one roan - can -be : addu that that shown in 1876 to HampV Aft?reigbt; yeera cf oarp?t-bag rt the peVpl? i of. SoUth Carolina i gathered once more with arras in tl bands, ready to fight again? if ne< aar^7 for" /ih?lrimperiled Ulbert but wheo their tried and trusted 1? *rV staoding oh the steps of ?bc Ci tali told thora tb go homel and ti itali tb hini^th?t^e>wb?|d itb^r r?ghts^^that be, would hold of?c? to which they had eieoted b ?nd be tho Gbvef?or^ Ci inti they took ht?^i his word quietly returned0 their homes, < fident that he would .perform fa fully ?ll hejfctad promised them. :the lette^id he make good his pr iso. K T% . .Federal troop? wer?: * dre?ru Mfnv the Mafrito J-^ihe^car bagftc^ bayonets, fell to th^Md-f 'the i of South Carolin*, mc* more oam tbelr^heri^ wa? -Crovbrnor^ ^ In - aigbtVof tts. tho quiet .^Veptft^^Wnlly,^ men of Carolina bow in?^MSl^c euee at ?his fast resting.plaec woman ot flercHofttireur paiera hia grave. Ho hrta<3ise, but ho left behind him^i| hi? oharaater ^ef^wkaoo, Stuart; Haimpt No; historian has be**., able to oh a^l5?^ ^jr^ ?? *s