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Mch. 16 2 mo. la. w. pd. ts Ix)s Angeles, Cal., May 27.—In tills tcrmon for Memorial day the preacher marks the line between true and false heroism, utters a warning against mil itary impostors and gives some timely advice to the old soldiers. The text is Leviticus xix, 22, "Thou shalt rise up before the hoary head and honor the face of the okl man.” started a* au lustltutlou of mercy for which happened down there that I am widows aud orphans. * convinced I was not there at all.” So Let me read to you the following with the impostors of the civil war. words once spoken by Commander In | We sometimes turu our hacks ui>on the Chief Ceosge S. Merrill: “Into the earliest hours of well won peace there came the psesence of disabled veterans, suffering families, distressed homes. The aid to these came cheerfully, but without organisation, and the fre quency of the call speedily awakened the sense that something in the line of systematized effort was not only desir able hut Imperative. All over the north true heroes because of the Impostors who wear the old uniform. Let us be ware of neglecting the honest soldiers or refusing just reward aud care for the faithful and noble veterans merely because there are some deceivers 1c the Grand Army of the Republic. Bet ter. far better, give a pension to ten false jjgtitioners rather than neglect to do patriotic Justice to one true hero sprang up veteran associations, with i who is now among us and deserving of varying pl$ns, although generally unit- 1 our governmental aid. ed in a common purpose of rendering But the Grand Army of the Ilepub- assistance to those in need, who had lie teaches us still another lesson, and it is a terrible one. A man may be a hero in his youth—aye, a hero upon the field of battle, yet anything but a hero lu his private life. He may be brave ns a '‘Chinese Gordon” before a hu man foe and yet a coward before the temptations of the ttesh, and, though i-i MURRAY IRON MIXTURE Now is the time to take a spring tonic. By far the best thing to take is Mnrray’H Jron Mixture. It makes pure blood and gets rid of thatj tired feeling. At all drug stores A ■SOes or direct fromt The Murray Drug Co., Columbia, S. C. dan>d the danger and shared the con flict.” Ah, my friends, the Grand Army of the Republic laid a nobler sig nificance to me when I first realized the purpose for which it was started. It was not conceived for tlie purpose .. 1 of praising the deeds of its members. , - Some time ago it was my privilege I wajj gtart0( j to t jj e sin is repellant when it is witnessed in aud honor to address the old soldiers ! ma i me j au j the blind. It was started any man, it is most pathetic aud to be in the Veterans’ home at Sawtelle, in to rare for tp,. widows and the orphans deprecated when it is seen In au old southern California. Just before I as- | of llle f a n en comrades. And as 1 take soklier who is drunk and immoral or off my hat to honor the empty sleeve w ^o Is vile of tongue. A soldier does of the okl veteran I also take off my not necessarily have to t>e a physical hat to honor the little button of the veteran, lu tlwit little button 1 see the symbol of charity, of sympathy and of big hearted brotherhood. Haring seeu how the Grand Army of the Republic was started, we natu rally take a step forward and see how . it became the greatest political factor dt < v temptation when it came to them of this country for over a quarter of *n time of peace, a century after the war was ended. If I you go to one of the old soldiers *ad j ask him what are the politics of .be ! 1 Grand Army of the Republic he \ ti; vehemently deny that the Grand Arinj i of the Republic has any political af- ! Unities. But again and again it 1 i elected its representatives to the White j i House. Grant, Hayes, Garfield, Me- ] „ ^ . . I Klnley, all tvore a soldier’s uniform, i tolligently read the story of the g or - j Tfae 8eQatorial balls vvere crowde d uus deeds that these men wrought. ceudcd the platform the leader of the meeting made a strange request. He said: ‘Tlease don’t throw any bouquets to the oljl soldiers. They don’t like it.” "What do you mean?” 1 asked. ‘‘Why,” said the chairman, "I mean do not call them ‘heroes’ and tell them what a no ble set of men they are. Almost ev ery speaker who comes here tries to get their good will by hinging compli ments at them, and too much sugar is always nauseating to the stomach.” “All right,” I said; “no compliments will I give. But,* though I may not praise them, I feel like doing it just the same, for any man who can stand ' 10Core a great audience Hke this, made i:p of Grand Army veterans, and not feel like taking off‘his hat and bowing before them has not the first elements of 1 .ilriotlc pride. He lias never in coward to be a moral castaway. A man may l>e a moral coward and yet be physically as brave as a Hon. So many old soldiers have lost the battle of life not because they were coward ly upon tlie field of carnage, but be cause they were not brave enough to * Host Anything And a little of everything is now being shown in my line: All the new conceptions’and fads . : : ..In The Jewelry Line.. From the cheapest worth having to the very finest specimens and grades. Re pairing done by an Ex -eft. Thos. H. Westrope, Next to Shuford & LeM aster. TO SUFFERERS WITH CANCER or chronic old soree, write D. B. Glad den, Grover, N. C., aad learn how to be cured without knife or plaster. In vestigate before vou take other treat ment. Write today; you won’t re gret it. Apr. 6-3mo. WILLIAM 8. HALL, JR., Attorney at Law, Office over The Battery. Gaffnay, 8. C. Prompt attention given to all business DR. W. K. GUNTER, DENT 1ST Office in Star Theatre Building Phone No. 20. Crown and bridge work % specialty DR. J. F. GARRETT, DENTIST. Moved 10 new office over Frederic ttreet Front, of the Battery. 'Phone in Office and Residence. PA'RkTg'g HAIR BALSAM CImom. and tewitlflM th« hah. Promote a luxuriant growth. Never Pail* to Bettor* Oraj Hair to ila Youthful Color. Cun* acalp divax* it hair tailing. iOc.aptHU* at DruggiM. and WHISKEY HABITS cured at home with* j out pain. Book of par ticular* aent FBEE. _J B. M. WOOLLEY, M. D, , Office 104 N. Pryor Street. THK ORIGINAL LAXATIVE COUGH SYRUP .KENNEDY’S LAXATIVE HONEY-TAR Bad CWvar Blaaaom tod Hooey Bee ea Every Bottl*. fOimnONETHCAR •borne ila* oougH eaad laoeleltaxaga SB5B- DeWHt'e JGHf Salve Perl BANNER 8A LYE the meet heeling salve In the world. But a truly bruve man always dislikes j to be eulogized, ’file only time you i can compliment such men face to face | and not have them protest is when they are I ing in their caskets, and i even then 1 ‘'link some of their bodies, j although co’. are still protesting against the p Mises uttered over their I unconscious forms. When the American people on Me- j mortal day see the long lines of blue- | coats filing past ike reviewing stands, ! although many of these old soldiers are | now crippled and [diysically enfeebled, ! they feel a great deal as Daniel Web ster felt toward the old veterans of the Revolutionary war when be was de- j livering his great address at the lay-1 ing of the cornerstone of the Bunker Hill monument in 1825. “Veterans,” said he, “you are tlie remnants of many a well fought field. TOu bring with you the marks of honor from Trenton and Monmouth, from York- town and Camden and Bennington and Saratoga. Veterans’of half a century, when in your youth you put everything at hazard lu your country's cans*?, good as that cause was and sanguine as youth is, still your fondest hopes did not stretch on to an hour like th'is. At a period to which you could not rea sonably have expected to arrive, at a moment of iTatlonal prosi>erlty such as you could never have foreseen, you are now met here to enjoy the fellow ship of old soldiers and to receive the outfiowingg of a univecsal gratitude.” On a similar occasion Edward Everett, the great Massachusetts orator, deliv ering an encomium upon the American flag, so stirred his audience that two old veterans of (he Revolutionary war arose and bowed to the speaker. Mr. Everett, deeply moved, said: “Sit down, aged friends; sit down. No American senatorial halls were with its leaders. The gubernatorial chairs were filled with them. It was said that all John B. Gordon had to do when he was running for office was to throw back his long hair and show the saber cut which he received In that awful civil strife and the “boys in gray” would rally to his support. Now, my friends, is there uo mighty lesson Nor you and me to learn from this organization of the Grand Army of the RepublicY Does it not teach a lesson to be helpful to your old friends when they are lu distress? Is there not a lesson also Ifo be true to the friends of your youth aud to stick to them through your middle life and also through old age? It is a noble char acteristic, that of fidelity to our friends. Woukl Unit In the shurch and social life it was more common. A true hero is a man who is brave before the attacks of an enemy. He Is also the man who is steadfast and faithful In his allegiance to au old frieud. “Fraternity. <•' -ity, loyalty,” are the watchwords o Bie Grand Army of .the | Republic. May they be the watch words of the church, the home and the state. May we be true to our friends, i always true, and never willing topturn ! our backs upon our friends nor upon I our foes. But as 1 see the long line of the "bluecoats” called the Grand Army of the Republic file past I am struck with another fact. There ds not a grander set of men on earth living than these men, take them as a whole. I was talking with one of the chief officers of one of our large soldiers’ homes some time ago. He said, “florae of the finest, noblest men I have ever met are here.” But though that be true, yet on account of the prominence of the organization A Hera Conmiered. To illustrate my thought let me draw for you the picture of one of my dear est friends. He was one of the leading combers of the first cleirch of which x vas pastor. I can see him now, s’might as an Indian war chief. He .rrled himself as only that man does .110 has kept step to the beating of the drums. No music was to him so sweet as the booming of the cannon on a na tional! holiday. I can hear him now say: “Do you hear it? We old tiellows have often had for a reveille the sound of those guns.” He was in that awful charge of the Sunken road at Fred ericksburg. He U*d bis company there in defiance of Longstreet’s cannon sweeping over that field. He followed Grant on through the Wilderness. He never feared the face of man. Yet how relentlessly the temptations of sin entrapped him! Lower and lower he sank. The stout hand which always had such a cordial grasp of miue be gan to weaken and tremble as it mere and more frequently reached out for the poisonous cup. After I left that church and went to a western field let ters fr^m my old home came saying, “Captain So-and-so is not doing well.” No, he was not doing well. He drank up his business. He drauk up the for tune his father left him. He drank a big mortgage on his home. He sent his girls forth to wouk for their daily bread. And the last time I saw him sin had almost completed Its work. I did’ not at first recognise the physical and mental and spiritual wreck. When I saw him sitting in my old church I said, "What a mighty power sin must be to have conquered so valiant a hero!” Oh. it was pitiful to see that stalwart frame, that indomitable spirit, over- come»and laid low by a degrading hab it! If one so strong, so fearless, so brave has fallen, God keep us weaker mortals close to himself, lest we, too, succumb to temptation. But there is another great lesson that I learn from the old soldiers. It Is the preserving power of industry. No man is so happy us when be is a working man in the struggle for his daily bread. 1 once read a dramatic story of the Sioux war of 1S72. The Third United States cavalry was encamped^r the aud also on account of the grand men audience wants to see you stand In its ; who compose this organization impos on tbe southern borders of South presence. We are the ones to stand 1 tor!4 have crept in aud have been the p a j [ota p y tbe violence of a mighty and uncover our heads to you. We' means of discrediting the organization 6torm ' the caV alrv horses stampeded, know that It was your blood and sac- j to some extent in the eyes of many AU gwmed lost for without those which made that flag possible, j who want to be Just. False heroes have 1 horge8 ^ goldler8 were helpless before rificc Sit down, aged friends; sit down.” Daniel Webster and Edward Everett voiced the popular opinion. The Rev olutionary veterans of 1825 did receive the gratitude of the American people, as the aged warriors of the awful civil war of ISdl do receive the gratitude of the American people of this twentieth century. Truly on this Memorial day of 1900 we rise up and honor the he roes of the American battlefields. Dlacrftnlnattaff Ealovr. Eulogy in a Christian pulpit, how ever, must always be a discriminating utterance. Here the speaker is under a sacred obligation to speak nothing but the truth. The heroes whom we honor are too noble to desire praise that Ignores the facts. A great army such as that which won the great bat tles of the war necessarily comprised some men who were not patriots, men who shirked their duty and who In the long Interval that has succeeded the war have received honor they did not deserve. Some men, too, who were brave on the battlefield were not rulers of themselves, and since the army dis banded have by their sine and their vices disgraced their uniform. Few In feed, compared with the whole num ber, are these Ignoble soldiers, and their misdeeds we speak of with sor row and regret, deploring them all the more because of the heroism that we honor. First, let us go and stand by the cra dle of the Grand Army of the Republic. When you do this you will be Juat as much surprised at the genesis of this organization as I was. I always felt that Major B. F. Stephenson founded this society as a social organization, if I might use that word. I thought that as these old veterans had fought and bled together, therefore they wanted to build their annual campfires of fel lowship and communion. They wanted to meet together and talk over the old campaigns, sing the old war songs and recall the memories of the battlefield. But that was not the primal purpose of this organization. It was started to help the helpless, the aged and the sick veterans and their families. It was multiplied almost as rapidly since the war closed as have thf numbers of people who trace their/ ancestry to some man who crossed the Atlantic in the enemy. Suddenly the colonel or dered the bugler to blow the "stable call.” At once the horses, flying In .. _ _ _ , m . every direction, lifted their ears and the Mayflower in 1620. The American ba | ted Then they turned aud every who cannot find one of his ancestors in , lorgo came back to lbe camp and the the cabins of the pilgrims’ boat has uo ^{went was saved. Beautiful call, ancestral ingenuity. Why, If we count the number of descendants of the pil grims now living we must conclude that those pious refugees were the most prolific race that ever descended from Adam. What is true in reference to the Mayflower pilgrims is true to a less extent of many who have paraded under the noble uniform of the Grand that. Oh, yes, It was a beautiful call! But I want to tell you that the call of work has the same magic effect upon the human race as that bugle call bad upon the cavalry horses of 1872. The call of work seems to be a harsh call, but it Is the call of contentment, the call of happiness and the call of peace. „ , I am never so Impressed with this Army. Sometimes I feel that the war thought as when visiting some of the heroes can be manufactured to order In oId g0 | d i erg - homes of America. Wltb- our day almost as readily as the guides out any exce pti 0 ns I believe the vet- can pick up the bullets and the rusty flintlocks upon the battlefield of Wa- erans’ retreat of Washington or Mil waukee or Danville or Sawtelle can be terloo, which those same guides buried amoDg Uie garden spots of the only a few days before they led the gullible tourists to the places where they could find them. laaeestora on the Roll*. Shame, shame, we say when so many noble men have fought and bled and sacrificed for their country that impos tors and deceivers should parade about as heroes. And because these Impos tors have crept In upon the pension rolls, the country has become suspi cious. At the same time there are hun dreds and thousands of noble veterans deserving of better treatment who are being allowed to suffer and who have no adequate provision made for them aud the support of their dear ones. We find ourselves in a similar posi tion to that of General Taylor after his elevation to the White House. No sooner was he Installed than a great number of men came to him and said: “Give us a position. We fought with you at Buena Vista. G|ve us a posi tion!” One day, after* listening pa tiently to a candidate who wanted to be postmaster in a Missouri town on the ground that he had fought under the president in the Mexican war, Gen eral Taylor said, “I used to think that I was at the battle of Buena Vista myself, but sines I have come to Wash ington I have heard of so many things world. The one of southern California Is especially beautiful. Go there any time of the year, and you can pick flowers In the gardens. There you are within a few minutes’ ride of the great Pacific ocean. There the libraries are filled with books and the Memorial hall has Its regular entertainments and the aviary Is filled with birds and the set tees are In just the right positions Un der the trees. All that most of us feel is needed to make life happy Is there. The old soldiers do not have to worry about their meals or their money or the beds In which they are to sleep or the doctors and the nurses who will care for them when they are sick. All Is provided for them. But as a class are the old soldiers In Sawtelle happy? No. Go to the old soldiers’ home and begin to talk with these veterans and you find them discontented. What do they say? Praise their surroundings? No. Invariably they will find fault with the overseers and with their food and with their associates and with this and that and with the other thing. They have noithlng to do, and so a large part of them spend most of their time In com plaining. O man, I want you to thank God that you are compelled to work day In and day out, month In and month out, year In and year oat When a friend came to Caylus, the celebrated | French antiquarian, aud asked bln 1 why he always was at woik he an swered, 'T engrave lest I hang my self.” Thus all men can most easily find contentment, not in idleness, but in aevere and unrelenting toil. Infidel* 11 n Old Men. But there Is still another fact I want you to notice about the old Um’.diers: The approach of old age and df dcc.t'u does not change a man's views toward God. If he Is a blasphemer when he is young, be is apt to lie a blasphemer when lie Is old. If he ridicules and sneers at tlfc Bible when he is young, he is apt to be a scoffer and an a-jAos- t!c when lie Is old. The most solemn sentence I ever heard uttered was by the chairman of tlie meeting when 1 spoke befor! the Old Soldiers’ home, at Sawtelle. “Mr. Talmage,” he said, “you will have sitting before you all kinds of men. Agnostics, infidels and atheists, as well as Christians, are all here.” “What,” I said to myself, “can it be possible that any of these gray hair(*d men, who are so soon to meet their God, are men who dare to go to sleep at night without the prayer upon their lips that Christ will be their Saviour?” Then, a short time after, in order to corroborate this statement, I said to one of the chief chaplains of the Grand Army homes, “Chaplain, have you any atheists and agnostics here?” “Yes,” he answered, “but I want to tell you a very wonderful fact about this: Al most without e^vption the good men are believers in Jesus Christ. And the old soldiers who are atheists and ag uostics cun' I** classed among the can teen men.” "Ah.” then I said, "that accounts for the infidelity among the old soldiers.” It is the same reason which accounts for infidelity every where found among the men and the women of today. Atheism and agnos ticism and* 1 in fidelity are in most cases not a matter of the head, but of the life. When a man wants to drink and to go to places of evil resort, then that man wants to argue away Christ. Among the canteen men you find most of the scoffers and tlie deriders #f Je sus Christ. Among the frequenters of the saloons and of the low variety shows and of the places of evil resort you can find the most of those who are enemies of the cross. If you are ready to give up your sins, then you are able to appreciate Christ. It is sin which is blinding our eyes to the cross, ami not doubt. And I would have you, fur thermore, remember that wheu you ap proach tlie grave, like the'old soldiers, the more those sins will get a tighter grip ujioii you aud the less you will be able to see Jesus Christ as he is. As I now call to the old soldiers trembling upon the verge of the grave I would call to you: "Except ye give up your sins ye shall never see the glory aud the beauty of Jesus Christ. Bepeut! Repent! Repent of your sins or ye shall all likewise |>erieh.” A Great Picture. Oh, that we all might be what every Christian veteran of the Grand Army of the Republic ought to be. Some time ago I saw one of the most dra matic pictures ever painted by the brush of man. A young society wom an was seated on a sofa in a fashion able home. A young man In regula tion evening dress suit was iu a chair opposite her. He had evidently Just made an offer of marriage to this beau tiful young girl and was waiting for the answer. Her eyes were looking Into the far distance, aud there before her, on his knees, with a bloody band age about his forehead, was the ghost of her soldier hero, with a pleading face and with arms outstretched to ward her, begging his loved one to be true to his memory. That was a pow erful picture, but no more powerful than I see before me iu many and many an old veteran’s life. I see tlie old soldier sitting iu the twilight of life. He, too, sees two visions before him. On the one side sits the man of the world In evening dress, the symbol of tlie sin and the selfishness and the evil of life. He Is saying to the old veteran: “Friend, come with me. We have often together made merry. Come with me.” On the other side of the old veteran I see the ghost of a youug sol dier arising aud pleading with the vet eran to be as he once was, when he went forth to war. The old face of the vet eran and the youug face of the ghost are one. The young face seems to say: “Be like me. Be like me when you went forth to battle for your na tive land, when the kiss of a Christian mother was upon your forehead. Be like me when you used to kneel down in simple faith and say your prayers. Be like me when you used to read your Bible. Ob, aged veteran, be like me!” And there sits the veteran on the verge of the grave, with two spirits—the good spirit and the bad spirit—plead ing with him. The picture changes. Now instead of the veteran sitting In the chair 1 see your face, O man. The two spir its—the good spirit and the bad spirit— are pleading with you. When the good spirit in a soldier’s uniform turns aud says, “Be like me, be like me, be as you once were When you knelt by your mother’s knee,” I hear the strong powerful voices of thousands of Chris tian soldiers like Generals Clinton B. Fisk and Samuel C. Armstrong and Generals Fallows and U. 8. Grant and Rutherford B. Hayes and James A. Garfield and Major William McKinley and General I). O. Howard say: “Yes. be as you once were when you knelt at your mother’s knee. Be like Christ. Be Hke Christ.” Was the picture of the great artist purely Imaginative? Is It only a foolish vision of miue wheu I assert that on this memorial Sabbath day I see all the noble Christian mem bers of the Grand Army of the Re public, heroes In war aed heroes in peace, talking to us and pleading with us to be like Christ? [Copyright, 1906, by Ixiula Klopach.] Jver-Work Weakens Your Kidneys. Unhealthy Kidneys Make Impure Blood. All the bVoa In your body passes through your kidneys once every three minutes. The kidneys are your blood purifiers, they fil ter out the waste or impurities in the blood. If they are sick or out of order, they fail to do their work. Pains, aches and rheu matism come from ex cess of uric acid in the blood, due to neglected kidney tr .i'ble. 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When In need anything in the building line, col ind see us; we'll treat you cour teously and make yoar estimates for aothlag. Baker, MANAGER. Overworked KIDNEYS Mnmy’s Mochu, Gin and Janlp«r is prescribed and endorsed by emi nent physicians. It cures when all else fails. Prevents Kidney Disease, Dropsy, Bright’s Disease, etc. At all drug stores. $1.00 a Bottle, or direct from The Murra- DrugCo. t ColeRhiiJS. C r [ If anybody has a message for * the people of this community he cannot deliver it to them so effectually, so cheaply, so quick ly in any other way as through die column! of this paper. It is the business of this pa per to carry messages of one kind and another into homes. {> The message will be delivered, ^ too, under favorable conditions, ( ^ for few persons take up their * local paper except in a pleasant * * and receptive frame of mind. The sign upon the fence board * * may be good, but it can be seen * * only by travelers who go that particular road. The message o in the local paper carries itself to thousands, no matter by which road they travel. Select your space and put , > your message where it will do the most good. We, perhaps, can help ym it you will bnt ask as- I HmSKTONEYCURE Make* Ktdeeye end Btedder flight