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Furl that Banner, t BTair. 'tla weary; jund 1U staff 'tis diooplng dreary; Furl It, fold It, It It beat; Far there’s not a man to wave It. And there's not a sword to save t, And there’s not one left to lava it In the blood which heroes gave It; And Its foes now scorn and brave lt| Furl It bide It—let It rest! take that Banner down! 'tls tatterwl; Broken Is Its staff and shattered ' And the valiant hosts are scattered Over whom It floated high. Id It; Oh; ’tls bard for us to fol . , Hard to think there’s none to hold it : Hard that those who once unrolled It Now must furl it with a sigh. Furl that Banner! furl It sadly ! Once ten thousands balled U gladly And ten thousands wlldlyvmadly,. _ Swore it should forever wave; Swore that foeman’s sword should never . , ' “T'r Hearts like theirs entwlncd^llssever, TUI that flag should float forever O’er their freedom or their grave! Furl It! for the hands that grasped It, And the hearts that fondly clasped It, Cold and dead are lying low; And that Banner—it Is trailing: all While around It sounds the wailing Of Its people in their woe. For; though conquered, they adore It! Weep for those who fell before It! l*ardon those who t railed and tore lt!~ But who furl and fold it so. Furl that Banner! Trfie! ’tls gory, Yet ’tls wreathed around with glory; And ’twill live in song and story, Though its folds are in the dust; For its fame on brightest pages, Penned by poets and by sages. Shall go sounding down the ages— Furl Its folds now we must. Furl Uiat Banner, softly, slowly! Treatfft It gently it is holy— For it droops above the dead. Touch it not -unfold it never, l^t It droop there, furled forever, For its people’s hopes a re dead! THE OLD, VETS. [continued from page one.] It has been aptly called an “ir repressible conflct.” And so It was. In the evolution of this great country and in its rapid rise to greatness it •" ooold not beotherwlse than that great issues would emerge. Issues that must be settled and settled quick, so that progress should not be retarded. Such Issues did in truth arise and could not bestopped short of the great Issue which culminated In that war iu whlcfi~ybu took so prominent a wrt. You, my friends, have a lively remem- — brance of It and of the result. Nor have we cause to regret because for- snoth the result was against us. The cause was Inevitable and you performed well your part of the great drama. You have been privileged to be the participants in the great struggle lor Qod pity the man who has never-seen the smile of the woman he loves.” A blind man said: “Justly see you, and then go blind agalmT lant old Confederate soldier, who had -starved to death in prison.» He had not seen his beloved for two years He was dylmr In that prison, and they V »r; H told hlmaiiiecoul44Lv^tj_get home go. in sight of the old home she came out to rafeet him, none other than proud of It. iiT Its traditions, proud of Its rles, proud of Its men, proud heroes. 1’roud of the great leaders It devel- Proud memo ir Its opened and proud of the men win* fol- luwcd them-unto death, Lee, proud of our Jackson, proudof el ? ed hal , of death< Aye, even 01 our Hampton. \ ea, and more, proud ^ n/ , llornr . a nu ,, v nr,-; Hampton onm those who wore the gray and who will go down through the annals of history unto generations yet unborn aslierocH worthy .of the great eaqi for which they offered their lives a willing sacraflee. ^ TONKCOUNT AND RECALL. It Is to give expression to such sentl- inents as these that we are now assem bled. It Is to do honor to the memory of those brave spirits who have gone before and to comfort and cheer those who still linger here. It is Mr recount and recall the memories of the past and once again take hope and move forward let us come together in the spirit of the soldier, who while brave In battle in none the less generous In peace; let us whfie cherishing the proud recollec tions of the past look with hope un abated to the future; let us, though now in the noon-tide of life when the shadows grow long and age with Its oft toftrmitle* grows upon us, still looking forward to the day when hope shall be swallowed up in victory and those of us who tarry shall yet witness the fruits of tills great travail. The truth of a “life through death” announced to a captious but inqillr-* log multitude of Him “who spake as never man spake” to one of his match less parables: “ r.xcept a corn of wheat toll Into the ground and die it abtdeth alone, but if it die It bringeth forth much fruit,” has. other significance titan the great spiritual truth with which the Master was then dealing. Yes this principle Is true In the whole realm of nature and fruit is the result of all true and noble sacrifice. When our flag was for.the last time furled and you returned to your homes and dear ones to witness naught but desolation and ruin It did indeed seem as thongh all Was lost and that the sacrlflce of blood and treasure which you had so freely made was indeed vain and waste. Looking, however, back through the vista of the one-third of a century we see that our great sacritice comes too within the realm of this great principle. .* a No, all has not inndeed, been lost, but. the great achievements- of the past have been eclipsed and will con tinue to be eclipsed by the greater achievements -o| the future. The rapid progress 1 and the material developement of our country bear ample testimony of this truth, and the fruit of this sacrifice will yet ba seen to one reunited country going for- ward step by step qntll it shall stand . foremost among the nations of the world. Survivors of this cause, you have been assembled to perpetuate Its mem ory and unto this reunion Columbia gladly welcomes you. At the request -of her good people and as there repre sentative I extend to you a most cor dial Wftidome. While with us may God’s protecting care be round about each of you, and when you shall bid us farewell may God be with you all till we meet Again. fe—- THE CITY’S WELCOME. Mr. Clark was followed by the Hon. Pott Sumter Earle, mayor of the div,. L who in a graceful speech gave the veterans a welcome to the city which . belongs to them. Bat the enthusiasm of tbe vet erans seemed to btvf been kept in check until Kim Elisabeth Lumpkin, wbo addressed tbs veterans last year, was presented by OapL Starling, Sbe had stirred the hearts of tbs old soldiers when first she came to them with a greeting and with a message of love from the sons and daughters of Confederate soldiers. Wednesday she deepened her hold upon the affections of the thinning ranks of gray. Fre quently she was made to pause be cause of the cheering of the enthusel and admiring auditors. Tiily.daughter of an •-•loquent father, reared In a home where the Confed eracy is reversed as a cause, holy and Imperishable, addressed the veterans as foil >ws: They have asked me to talk to you again. I am totalk to you as one ,of you, as belonging to you,. 1 thank God that I do belong to you—that I am one of you.- • There Is nothing stronger or more splendid on this wide earth than to have borne the sorrow you have borne, than to have endured tbe pain that yuu have endured for love’s sake; and for you we can say: “Greater love hath no man than this, that a man lay down his life for bis friend.” Avc, you fought and bled and died and lived for that cause, and though “We furled our flag In sorrow Nor could hope or comfort borrow, From the promise of the morrow. For that flag had ceased to wave, And we knew, no more defying Foes, we'd see It o’er us flying, tjs to cheer, and sooth the dying, For ’twas furled o’er Dlxie^s grave,’ we knew Uiat “Those who bore that banner loved it, And though conquered, they have proved It Upon many a field of strife. They have Uune It when ’twas riven, When by fiery tempests driven, h fought KoF Its tri 11 mph fought and st ri vCn, triumph i Add to shield its honor, given Heart and arm and blood and life.’ And tliough tiiey' pirr'TftTtrmp and death on you then, we who hold your names above all other names oh earth, not only remember those who “never came back,’’ but we give our hands In deepest reveremje to those Who did come back, to you among us now; and for every blow they struck you we give you glory; for every wound they made we gi ve you love; and upon your tired heads we place the crowns of victory. .■--I WOW'AM’S LQ£E. _ A woman's love Is the tenderest thing on earth and the most wonder ful. It crowns you like a diadem; It shines on you like a star Lam tM.ys were at her side, and “Oh. tluir I am at home and well again, well again, be loved!” he cried. Then he held out his arms, smiled and died. And that smile never left him—like inr angel of whit- on the conqueror's own tbronerand proclaim ing that there be earthly loves which “build their temple on the stormy brow of dissolution Itself.” of T raw a toiling s6JeRefl>end'lftg "down Footsore and cold* A soft hand covered him, his wounds > and scara ~fnr Daughters of South Carolina, our fathers' sakes we should love and honor these old men. My father fought beneath the Confederate fiag. And though without that glory, to crown his dear head. I would love aitd honor him above all men: still, with that heritage he gives me he must needs be a thousand fold greater to me. And there is one regret concerning the men we may love and marry—they cannot be Confederate soldiers! I had a ^“ftather be a woman than a matr. What To this end, as opportunity affo ds woman would not, if si she could be a AoutheftT'-woman and be loved by southenTmeu'/l But,there is a time I would h&ve heen a man. I would have Charged with Ptrtretrat-Gettysburg vuiva • a avsn.v'vv mu u v j o is w i ^ , when every hope was IdStTor watched with Hood on Winston’s Hill, “when he gave bis fateful orders for the brave brigade to go down to their death,!’ or stood by Forrest, when the “great cavalry leader of the Confederacy laid down his sword long enough to melt bis iron soul in gorrow.” I would have been at the front near Nashville, “when fromti e -second day of that freezing December until the sixteenth, Hood’s remnant of an army stood and fired and froze and when that stub born freezing, dying retreat that end ed the war and buried the flags of the L ist Cause In the soil of their birth!” THIS SOIL IS IIALLOW'BI). You young m£i In whose' 1 veins beat the blood of those heroes, uncover your heads for tbe land In which you live Is holy, hallowed by tbe -blood of your fathers, purified by the tearjLof your mothers, for every drop of blood a southern soldier sp lied mingled with a tear a southern woman shed and sprang up Into the lilies of Memory that shall blossom through the ages. I would know each one of you, when I meet you. We, your sons and daughters, should know you that we may do you reverence, for the mao who does not lift his hat, or the woman -who do®? not bow her head when she meets one of you is not worth of the name of southerner! , If I could write, 1 would write for you the finest poem ever penned. I would tell how men starved and died with a sob In their breast for their dear ones and the light of battle shin ing on their pinched faces. 1 would tell how Jonhs->n and For- rest and Cobb and Gordon and Hamp ton fought and prayed; I would tell how the women went through agonies that no man knew and “opened not their llns” 1 would tell all this—and I would tell something more. I would tell how the private fought; how he lay all night InTthe muddy fields: he fell where no man saw. He never came back and no man remembered— he came back and fought poverty, ruin, sometimes degradation for his dear ones at the hands of brutal men; he did all this, I tell you, and no man gave a helping hand, sometimes be cause no man could, but now we can and the men who loved and lived for Us we will stand by even unto death. Someone said that the souttodid not hate the north, and I pray God that time may come when some great poet will rise up and tell to blazing words that when tbe country had her qpar rel with England, through it did not oooosrn ths south, shs gave tbs lift* blood of her chivalry aod ttood by bsr northern brethren till the bitter end! But when the time came for hyr to stand up for herself, brave and bright and beautiful as tbe warrior-maiden OTtoenturles ago -thank God, she did It! , " HE TOUCHED TP* KEYNOTE. From among yob one has been call ed by his Captain over the river—a grand old hero has left you—Ute light of heaven shining on his silvery hair and smiling back from bis tired lips, He touched-tbe keynote of South Car olina and all the land vibrated with replied Mr the mighty music. Hut the music has ceased, the great chords is lost and Only In Heaven shall we hear that grand amen.’ v ^ "Go Glory, and forever guard "Go Glory, and forever guard OurchieftIan’s hallowed dust, And Honor! keep eternal ward, And Fame be this thy trust!” I have seen great cathedrals whose spires reached up and seemed almost to be pillars for the clouds—and they were wonderful. 1 have seen pictures by great masters that made the heart beat faster and the blood throb in the: veins; I have seen bronze statues and marble shafts that told of the deeds of the human life or the story of a splendid nation, but the long earnest prayer of my heart to that my eyes may soon see resting on the same sod wherein rest his ashes, a bronze statue or a marble shaft; bailded jto the kolghtliest man that ever trod the soil of South Carqllna, Gen. Wade Hampton! Let every manT^very woman, every child of South Carolina give some thing to help build this monument. ' Legions of Hajnpton! he ted you in tUq-tigttle and charge.- Voti atc pass ing swiftly. Soldiers of the gray, let there be one more charge. Lead ns, your sorts and daughters, to climb to thc topT.f the hill, aod toq^aoe there a monument to Hampton that shall last with the centuries. To ybtt men among us now, to you, ye splendid soldiers of a splendid race, on whom .the ..mantle of his glory- rests, I give welcome, a thousand wel comes. I give'you welcome and I give you love—a love that would draw you ttack from death, a love that would bold you a little longer with us; a love that would send you before the throne of God with a smile on your face and the echo of a great Joy ringing thremgh your soul. - r - c mx. t. xtex nan, txxyatx. Gtn. Oxrwll* pre*atad to the vete rans one who was not a general, not a major, not a captain, not a lieuten ant, merely a private, and when he was made a corporal Just before Appo- matbnx Gen Lee was forced to surren der to save the army—Mr, J. Rice 'Smith, a native of the Shenandoah and for 10 yeare a resident of South Carolina, and now State senator from Augusta, Ga. When Mr, Smith advanced to the front of the stage there was some con fusion in the hall.. “Speak louder,” several veterans called. “All right,” Smith, *‘as soon as I sorter get myself together.” He then told the story of the Confederate soldier on picket duty w1k> in the act of clean ing his gun was surprised by the officer Of the day. When chided for his lack of Interest In the regulation of war the private replied: “Well, you sorter wait until I sorter get my gun togeth er aijd I will sorter give you a sorter salute.” The joke was told in a way which gained the attention of the veterans, who listened attentively to the splendid presentation of tbe glory of the south and the causes leading to secession. He denied the charge that he had never held an office. Some time after the w2r Tre was coming, from Virginia on a trip: When he got to Wilmington he was called “Cap’n Smith": at Charleston It was STRONG ADDRESS Mads by Dr. Parkhunt, of Esw York, lx Atlanta. TOUCH OX RACE QUESTION. ^ j Saya In Plain liAnguage That tbe >1 intake North Made a Great *• Making Negmea iu The crowd large Fark- mag- “Majah Smith”; at Atlanta * Colonel Smltb.” He wrote home, “Promo- general tlon rapid. Will be a major by the time 1 get to New Orleans.” . - A SPLENDID ORATION, Mr. Rice’s speech took the form of an oration, a superb summing up of the causes provoking secession, a fine description of the part the south to >k in the struggle, and a recital of the aftermath of that war. When he sp >ke of the part which Hampton had taken, the ho ise shook with the tremendous applause his word^eyoked. at Cltxena. ' V . ’ , r: -/ Atlanta Journal say a heard Dr. Charles H. hurst, of New - York, deliver a nitioent sermon Sunday afternoon at r 3:30 o’clock at tbe Baptist Tabernacle. It was the conference sermon preach ed to the delegates to the National, Conference of Charities and Correction but there were many Atlantians there in addition to tbe conference delegates and the Tabexnacle was crowded to overflowing. —— ~ Dr. Parkhiiret tooITaS his text the fifteenth verse of the fifth chapter of St. Mark, read as follows: . “And they qaflae to Jesus and saw him that was possessed with the Mr. Smith spoke at considemble’ length, buLwith such fine effect tliat the veterans before him did not tire. Ak40 minutes past 11 o’clock Gen. Carwile dismissed the convention. "I saw a smile, to a Confederate ‘twas given, And he was old, The sun broke forth, l saw that smile |r > heaven wrgnftiii miu gum* Gold of such lustre never was vouch safed to us, It made the very luminous. light of day more town, when, a car- riage swiftly dove up tohimVand two masked men Jumped put, threw a bag over his head, bundled him Into a car away. The mason to alight, the sack was taken frorobls head, and he found himself in an old fashiohed court yard. He was pushed through a door into a-corrMorr aod toan CTrptr -nom hg| Wrought in gold, Grew straight Imperishablepnd will be shown To smiling angels standing- round the Judgment throne. We who pass down life’s hours so care- lajjssly CoaUTmake this dusty way a path of flowers if we would try. , And_all the deeds we do for them and kind words given "Wrought Into gold will make -Hs- drous rich in Heayen." tieir revolvers at his breast, arid ordered him to wall up the opening with the woman behind It,' threaten fngJBLShi.pl him dead if lie refused. Stones, mortar and trowels were in the room. He was told that the woman was a Mahometan who had Injured her husband. ^ *, -The ipason built up the'opening, the sack was again drawn over his w w>'Uiead, ami Diree-quarters of an hour ( AMI* HAMPTON DEttmtTBD. The welcome on_Jbehalf of Camp Hampton was delivered by Capt. An gus _P. Browne, one of tbe gallant members of that camp, who attends. Its meetings regularly and helps to keep up the spirit of the Lost Cause by reviving around the camp fire the deeds of vulornagreat battlefields. IN BEHALF OF THE VISITORS. In responding to all of these mes sages of good will from the city of Columbia, from the business man and -from-the-women. Gen—Carwile said: “It becomes my pleasing duty, as the official head of these brave men who battled for their rights from 1801 to J806 and who are ever ready to take up the flag, to protect the honor of South Carolina—not only of South Carolina. Mr. Chairman, but our whole country. 1 ' When you touch this country the South Carolina veteran is willing" and ready to stand by her colors as they did from 1801 to 1805. Apd to you good people of Columbia, and you, Mr. Chairman, who detoted entertaining these people I have the honor to represent, wc as a man re turn to'yeoour most heartfelt thanks, and I say to you and^ to the good peo ple of Columbia, and to the ladies, God bless eaoh and every one. We will go home to our people and tell them how the good people of Columbia opened their home and hearts to the men who protected this-land, and in their behalf, Mr. Chairman, I return to you our heartfelt thanks for this reception.” - IN MEMORY OF THE DEAD. The convention, after being, form ally opened by Gen. Cajrwile, gave a tribute to the Confederate dead. At, the conclusion of the Reading of the tribute the vast audieft&> arose and voiced tbe grand response. “They died for their country.” The tribute itself was the glorious Inscription of Trescott which makes doubly graud the Confederate monument - which stands In front of the State house. -A-beautiful tribute to the women who sacrificed comfort,home and even the bread of life for the cause of southern rights, after which the ex- soldiers oT that great army responded: “God bless the women of the Con federacy.” It was more than the benediction of men now about to close the .chapel of life. It seemed that there was in that grand response an of the women of the Confederacy. YOUKO MEN HONOR THEM. Gen. Carwll« t!.en presented “the young man who has worked harder than any other; to make this reunion a success”—Mr, E. J. Watson, secre tary of the Qhamber of Commerce. Mr. Watson waa given a cheering re ception by. the veterans wbo knew of his efforts to make them have a good time. Mr. Watson paid a splendid tribute to tbe private soldier of the Confederacy. A HORRIBLE STORY. A Give Women Seeleilup in w 8(009 Well. A cable dispatch to The New York Herald from Baku says: “A stone mason was at work in an old wall in the center of the niticed an opening in a stone wall in which was wedged a woman, tremb- ( with regard to any 11 >g with terror. -The men pointed his devil, and had the legion, sitting and clothed and in his right mind.” Dr.-Parkhurst spoke in part as fol lows: “We are met here In "c inference, not In the Interest of tenement reform primarily, but In the interest ant reform. “There is STfoag Incentive in the fact that to whiten and .sweeten the condition of man fs an enterprise so of ten- 1 full ofterge appeal that even Almighty T5oirnmoved upon-hls throne in-re sponse to tbe appeal, opened personal communication with the race, and made a man of Himself that lie might make small Gods ot jis. “The vermicular' theory that we give expression to when we sing such hymns as ‘O What a Worthless Worm Ami’ does not square with the his toric Jfact of Calvary, die for grubs or echionderms “No man can do great work who is not Impressed with the magnificence of the material he is working in “Of course there ate specimens of humanity—sick specimens, crazy specimens, horribly depraved sped-, mens, aborded specimens, specimens that are a prophecy only, with no prospect of fulfillment, that are an awful discouragement. In bur dis-' cussions Ug^theryou will have a good 1 of discouragement to deal of th: encounter. - _ But Ahere Ja always a-great deal left that includes thoughtfulness, and questionable resi due, 1 want to adduce this principle Judgment and later he tfas.put ouLof the carriage at a lonely part of the city. As sour as he could free himself of the sack lie did so, huLAhe carriage had disap peared. He went immediately.to the police •aud told the story, but, although the police arc ransacking the houses An the Mahometan quarter, they can find no trace of the locality , of the horrible crime, Poisoned Wblakey. As the result of drinking what they thought was whiskey, five men em ployed at the Adams Express 1 ware house in Cincinnati, wete poisoned Thursday ~nIgHl7 'one~lWffi?r‘ B ! rott Jy after arriving at the hospital. The ward saving the world if he had been supposed to be working in his capacity air-* Savior, and would have done nothing as God if He had not been able to forget that He was God. ^ “(in March 6th, I say, j read the following paragraph, which had been apparently telegraphed to a paper from Wisconsin: “The fnlatiatory steps for the convention to settle the race questlbrr weie taken in the sen ate this morning when Senator Pat- tan presented a joint resolution au thorizing and requesting the governor to Call upon governors of other states to appoint ten delegates to a conven- tiqn to be held In Atlanta, commenc ing July other four men are in a serious condi tion. A bottle was received from Memphis addressed to Kftte Nobbe, in this city. In handling the bottle, J, B. Kicker discovered a leak and remarked, “This is a nice bottle of booze, and foo^-geod to let go to waste.’ One of the men procured a tin cup and each took a drink. They' became violently ill in a few moments and were rushed to the city hospital.. so much time to the prepaiation dT Picker died on arriving there, while from one another^ And yet rouTti-' ’riiat wtj-1 Tineit into clear sky when William Stevens. George Ehrie, Louis Burbank and William Daly are re ported In a serious condition. A Church Dynamited. At Chicagp recently dynamite, sup posedly .hurled by some fanatical policy player, partially wrecked the Institutional. Church just as the con gregation, to whom the Rev. Dr. Ran som, pastor of the church, had made a burning speech against policy gambling, had left the building. The explosion was terrific and shook every structure for blocks around, shatter ing windows and frightening women Into hysterics. Dr. Ransom; who lives in the parsonage which forms a part of the Institutional Church, was siM.moncd to the telephone knd warned not to preach against the policy Sunday night or there would be trouble or calamity. The party said: “I warn you as a friend to stop your crusade.”* Negio Not Wanted. Wm. II. Jackson, Republican mem ber of congress from the FI ret Maryland district, announced Wednesday that be will ask for the discontinuance of the postolflceatQuiudocquia, in Some- rest county, Md., to which Andrew J. Day, a negro, was recently appointed, This Is said to be*4he first colored postmaster appointtd in Maryland. Congressman Jackson says he will ask for the discontinuance because ft is unspoken prayer that the women of the south would always be of the.tjpe juuJ because Day is not a proper person to hold such an office. Killed by a Falling Tree. Near Kirkland, Ga., Eldred and Lyman Newbern, father and son, were returning to their farm Thursday dur ing the storm In a wagon. A mile the wind tore down a big wagon, which was embed. Lyman Newbern was killed instantly, bis father seriously and perhaps fatally injured, and the V crippled that Lhey shot. of-Judgment and measurement - that we shall estimate men by the stand ard of the best,,not the p<x>rest,- “Wlmt we do professionally never enters into the personal life of, the In dividual or the community that we do it to. A reformer who reforms in his capacity as a reformer defeats his own . purposes: so of a teacher, preacher, humanitarian in any line. Christ, would have dune nothing to- fate mM*. ate fafan tba Eftettv* argM* - ' _ , /_ TWO FLoanroa, S. c„ A*«. U, IMS. SfaattemMiI be fan to auCar from rkoumattem about throo yaara ago. and bad It vbrj bad Iu m/ Umba. At time! I oould hardly walk. Waa treated by a ybyaloian without benefit. More than a yaa* ago, Mr. George Wlieon, aa engi neer on the Ooaat Line. UAng io Flor ence, told mo that M BaaoiiAOiBa” cured him. I got a bottle and it be un fitted me. I took fire bottle* and am bow aa wall aa I ever waa In my life. I regard “Bbcumaoidi" aa a great medicine. I know of othera it haa j—ft.' , v ., Truly. X T. BURCH. CUXCX. ' „ • OabUWMOE, s. Cm Aug. Mth, frantlaman -.—About two yeera ago I t in flam ma il ad a vary aavare attack o * |i torr 1 he uina tiera. fmiffared great pain ana waa conflu* <1 to my bed for five week*. During tke time 1 was traated by two Pbyalolaoa without permanent relief. Capt. Barker, a conductor ea laatlo tbe Atlantic Coast Una board of my ooodittoo and Sent ms two bottles of “RaauMAOipv.” I began to taka It and in a week I got up and walked on crutches. After taking three bottles of the remedy I got entirely well and went back to my business. „ I personally know ot a number M other bad eaaea that were cured by tbe uae of your medicloa. In thla town and Sold by Druggists. Will be tent express paid on receipt of $1.00. Bobbitt Chemical Co., - Baltimore, fid., U. 5. A. It The Guignard Brick Works, COLUMBIA, S. 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Niacfeat, ortlcial Court .Stenographer, President. mark, by the way—that tLr more conKlderato, and sensible members r of the emancipated race are coining to recognize that fact, and are bung en couraged to recognize it,by their God does out j more intelligent loaders, In the best sense of the term a right does not be come a right by any pure act of legis lation, whether state or federal. -A genuine pefrogatlve has its grounds in the individual, in his personal quali-* ttcatlons~ Tor the exetclsiLof that pfe- In the long run ^ njan will rogatlve. get all that he earns, not a farthing more nor a farthing Jess, and when he has earned it—if there Is that In him TtTat~make«-him-(tble to earn It - noth. lug can permanently keep him Tils earnings. This is a principle that applies -equally, to aT—"ATHA'flY'flrT" Caucasian, nuvv and 1 “D&wttiism-toatthfes tbe doctrine of the survival of the, fittest, which is the scientific formula for ‘Devil take ■Lhe. hlndermnst.’. Christ steps for- ward with Ills gospel, relieves the devil and says, T will take the hlndiy:* most.’ T^iat is always with UjV under dog. -That-is the genius of Chris tianity so far JR the inattpr of humani tarian effort is concerned. To stop with enjoying people that are at our level and that are congenial is pa?fah. Paganism is veryplcasantand.oom- fortable, anrj is just as pagan as ever It was and more elegant: Just is mean Inexpensive to lay. Easy to keep in repair. . ;Llght apcPvery durable. 'v-Watarproi f and ordorless. Not affectotf by cbacge of tem- perature. .Elastic. Acid and Alkali-proof. : - Fire-resisting and oil-pro >f. — Vermin wtil-not attack H. -AirreRarToTanr — Needs no painting or coaling. Will not deteriorate with age. -WRITE FOR PRICES— AMIHHAflMN 1.1 Mil & t-BIKNT COMPANY.' -All classes building material, CHARLESTON. S. (’. A Sc w % ■ J w am 47 "Now, a small thing that is stupid does not count for much, but a thing so colossajly stupid as that is refreshr ing, and not only refreshing but illu minating. » “The solons from Wisconsin or from t^he entire, north, with the south combines, cannot double quick. We can hoe and har row and water, but the growing is otherwise provided for. -‘There are two lines somewhat dia- which ef- be prpse- ally supplementary, upon forts at amedoration can cured. One line alms directly todm- prove people themselves, the otherto improve their conditions -although, of course, with a reference more or less definite to their personal better ment. A UloL Four negroes were killed in a race riot in New Orleans Saturday night. Thtf negroes armed, and threatened If a man has been in jafrM 0 * ence because one of their number rimci Kwot rx M’H/k urhiToc rrwvfr t nom ‘Providentially, or as a result of the war--according as each one may interpret the case—the staves vyere emancipated. Now this was a great event in the history of the colored people. even five years it is a momentous in stant for him when the warden slips the bolt and he steps out a free man. But if he was a criminal five minutes before he was set free he i^as just as much a criminal five minutes aftfti; be had been let out into the fresh aft.' Moving the bolt reshaped his circum stances^ but without doing anything to him, and the proof of thatdr according to prison statistics, insjde of six months he is quite probably back in jail again. ^’’Thls supposed instance of the con vict Is in principle exactly whit oc curred in ' the case of the blacks. Emancipation pushed the bolt for them; it let them out Into the sun shine. There was a great deal of heroism in the course’ of the war, north and south, but there was not much statesmanship in the construc- tfon of a peace, and one of the radical mistakes made wae i« supposing that altering th«r colored man’s condition altered the colored man, that letting a wolf out of a cage domesticates the wolf, that substituting coat and trous ers for swaddling clothes makes of an Infant a man, and that emancipation not ODljr. relieved the slave of his fet- out of | pine tree and threw4t aoroM Lhelterej batqualillfid film to be a citizen. Change of circumstances is no In dex of change of character. Con structive work has first of all to be 0 mules so badly put Into personality, not Into condi tion, and It Is interesting—I may re- \ and more aesthetic. Christ reached down and pulled t p tUC'lhan that was at the bottom. In His scheme of re- •garri and helpfulness there were no ex-' eeptions.* He was about the only Christian Uut ever lived that was not fastidious. We arc ready to do almost anything for people that are nice. He was equally ready to do for people that hardly seemed to be nice. He leved to work on vertical lines; we pre- for horizontals. Thetrtggcr and grand er the man the lawerThe can stoop. The stronger he Is the more weakness appeals to him; the purer Is he the less afraid he is of being tainted by im- iwrt.(u-tbc. ^jaore>..aimplete he is the more he is touched by the cry of hu man Incompleteness., The rejil mother revbisAn the helplessness of her child, and-mnnerees lie reel f in the inarticu- la.te pain of her infanlr^wliich is as near like God as she knows bow to be, who reaches all the way from His Jays His ungloved finger on the decayed flesh of the Aeper. f^ittie How many cldTuds of dltllculty and per plexity there are hovering over the-- civilization of the noTth and the south once the air has become warmed with the genial light of Gin M ami hls~ thoroughly and IF Dr: C.4d Dowman opened the ser vices with prayer Rev. G. W. Bull read a chapter fruri the Bible, after which Dr. P irkhur.-A delivered ids elo quent sermon. - Music was fumi.>hct by the choir of the Tah-*rfviele. _ mecHclnc, tender oertlfleate on merits of any but I take pleasure in breaking my rule on this subject in behalf of your was beaten.- The whites met them and a pitched buttle ensued with the result of the death of four of the negroes. Peace was then restored and the trouble is over. If you are not w< .-’d Want to ki.' 1 rrth gbou, trouble, Mna t kLo» th« your ■ tor my free booklet? »nd tell rxamfnation blank*. So. 1, Nerrou* Debili ty (Sexual Veekneu), No. St-VmmwmU, No. £, Stricture, No. 4, Kid- •iey and Biadder Com plaint*, No. A XKi of Women, No. A Tbe King (Blood Poison King (I iroUonL No. 7, Oa- tarrh. Th**e book* aboyolbeln the band* ftf ;yery person afflict ed. ra Dr. Hathaway,' tbe author, 1* raoojt- ‘ d as the beet mr- HR. TTATHXWJY or send ."or tbe Whik Will be sent you free. «e-ilo,t ton .latbaway. M l) 2 thorlty and expert in tbe United Btatee on the«ed1sea*ee. Write y want to-day, and it Address I v»sr- 8$ Inman Building 224 S. Broad St. Atlanta, Ga Carolina Portland foment fn charleston L/CIllClll \A/*i South Carolina^ bite Lime, Omenta, Fire Gager’s Wt Bricks, Terra -21—If. Cotta Pipes. Hi rack at a Funemi. At Toledo, Ohio, during the funeral - services over the remains of Mrs. Marry Kernm the drivers of hacks struck and refused to work because tbe hearse was. driven by a nonunion man. The ofliciating undertakers filled the strikers’ places juit in time to prevent a scene, as the casket con taining tbe remains was being taken from the hearse Just as the ^ffalr.vyas., straightened. DR RIGGRR8 HUCKLEBERRY eOKOIJVIw. FOK THE ~ . Bowels and Children Teething. It is THE GREAT SOUTHERN REMEDY for the bowels. It is one of the most pleasant and efficacious remedies fof ill summer At a season when violent attacks of the iwwels are so frequent, soifie speedy relief should be at hand. ^The wearlod mother, losing sleep by nursing the one teething, should use this medicine. . - 'S— FROM HENRY W. GRADY. The Constitution Editoral Rooms. Atlanta, Ga., May 23,1881. Dr. Walter A. Taylor, Atlanta, Ga.; Dear Sir:—I have never gtveb_a - €> Riggers IIuckItbcriyjJordla 1. It is the best medicine I have ever seen for use in the family. Fifty cents invested in a Ixittle of this medicine, and put on a' shelf convenient for- use in the begin ning of any bowel trouble, will often save life, and will save in almost any family ten time its cost In doctors’ bills. I have a friend whose life, in my opinion, was saved by the prompt use of th is cord ial. 11 ought to be in every family in the land, especially at this season of the yeaj. I take pleasure In thus testifying to it merits. Veiy truly yours, •- HENRY W. GRADY. For sale by all druggists. 25c to. 50c. per bottle. *— Haltiwanger-Taylor Drug Co , Proprietor*, Atlantan *•» Whxt They Bay About the Metal you Roof Paint WRAPHITE ELASTIC, or UKJCMC 8AM. Write us for Circular that tells what such people, as American Window Glass Co. W. Maynard, Capt. D S. Navy, Rex Acetylene Generator Co., ' • Standard Plata Glass Co., have to say about this piece of goods, .; DISTRIBUTING AGENTS. : Shipwrecked. Over four hundred shipwrecked Portuguse Immigrants, 3#0 men and 34 women, driven ashore on the North Carolina coast th a terrible storm on last Saturday night, were still being cared for on the coast this week. One perished from starvation before rescue. The immigrants will be taken to Massachusetts, where tlmi* was bound.