. Minutes . soldier and of tin1 immeasurable patriotism of theSouthern people. These will live when hooks are changed,when, it may In1, the past may be forgotten, but these imperish-able monuments with their inscriptions will remain for a thou-sand years; and when they shall have crumbled into dust beforethe ravages of time, others will spring up, and they will be re-newed, so that the story which they tell will go down throughthe ages with undiminished light and with unfading glory. Invvii-y coi ntry in the Southland there ought to be a monumentto the Confederate soldiers, and to this s


. Minutes . soldier and of tin1 immeasurable patriotism of theSouthern people. These will live when hooks are changed,when, it may In1, the past may be forgotten, but these imperish-able monuments with their inscriptions will remain for a thou-sand years; and when they shall have crumbled into dust beforethe ravages of time, others will spring up, and they will be re-newed, so that the story which they tell will go down throughthe ages with undiminished light and with unfading glory. Invvii-y coi ntry in the Southland there ought to be a monumentto the Confederate soldiers, and to this sa *re ! ditty we call ourpeople, and urge them now, while so many of the great host, whobattled remain, to spare neither effort nor expense to placeeverywhere in the tnidsi of the Southern people indestructiblereminders of the glorious past. In the great work of giving the South its true place inhistory the men of the Confederacy ought never to forget theservice rendered by the CanfnlcraU Veteran, of Nashville, v. Bienville Monument. 108 Twentieth Reunion, Mobile, Ala., April26, 27and28, 1910. Term., confessedly the best periodical of its kind ever zeal and liberality of its editor, Col. S. A. Cunningham, hispatience and energy in the cause of the South, dearer to himthan life itself, and the absolute consecration of his means, histalents, and his time in the publication of this wonderful paper,place the people of the Southland under obligations which it isimpossible to overstate. Those who would really understandand realize the nature of the sacrifices and sufferings of themen and women of the Confederacy and their heroism and cour-age can never hope to fully do this without the knowledge ofwhat this journal contains; and we desire to urge upon all wholove the South, its tradition and its history, to subscribe forthe Confederate Veteran. BENNETT II. YOUNG, ■ Chairman; GEORGE L. CHRISTIAN,W. II. SCANLANI),JOSEPH T. DERRY,JULIAN S. CARR,W. T. SIIAAV,JOHN II. ROGERS


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, bookidminutesucv19, bookyear1890