The Lutheran visitor. (Columbia, S.C.) 1869-1904, February 16, 1870, Image 4
V
M Kw tM Little Ohm.
God him the little cMildran,
W. inert thru every whore;
Wr hour their Toler* round our hrarth,
Their footstep* on the Hair;
Their kindly hearta in nreiliof o'er
With mfnhfuluera and giro;
God Wear the little children,
Wherever they may ba.
We meet diem iu Um lordly hall—
Their Mutely fiiitier'a pride;
Wo meet them ia tb* poor mao', cot—
lie hna no wrahh beside;
i the oity'i crowded atrait
Tlwy bowl the hoop or boll;
W* And them ’oraih the pauprr i root;
The mddeat sight of nil.
Foe there they hare no Cither'a lore,
No toother a tender rare—
Their Only friend the God aboro,
W ho bean tin orphaa'a prayer.
Bot dreared in aiBta, or wrapped in rags,
la chifolah ariel or glee.
God bices the little children,
Wbererer they any be.
The Family.
PARENTS.
Put at Home.
Don't be afraid of a little ftin at
home, good jieople. Don’t shut up
j onr house lest the sun should fade
yoor earjiets; and your hearts, lest a
hearty laugh should shake down
some of the musty old cobwebs there.
If .row want to ruin yottr sons, let
them think that all mirth and soeia
enjoyment must be left on the thresh
old without, when they come home
at night
When once a home is regarded as
only a place to eat, drink, and sleep
in, the work is begun that ends in
gambling houses and reckless degra
dation. Young peojde most have
fun and relaxation somewhere; if
they do not find it at their own
hearthstones, it wilf be' sought in
other and less profitable places.
Therefore, let the fire bum brightly
at night, and make the home-nest
delightful with all those little arts
that parents so perfectly understand.
Don’t repress the buoyant spirits of
your children; half an hour of merri
ment around the lamp and firelight
of home blots out the remembrance
of many a care and anoyance (luring
the day, and the best safe-guard they
can take with them into the world is
the unseen influence of a bright
little domestic sanctum Tie Little-
torn Prm.
YOUTH.
The Boyhood of Jama
The following, from Dr. Scltaff, is
so full of tender sympathy with the
narrative, and of loving i> sight into
the character of the holy child, that
we commend its careful perusal to
every teacher as a help toward pre
paration for teaching the lesson of
the present week.
Of the boyhood of Jesus we know
only one fact, recorded by Luke; but
it is in perfect keeping with the pe
culiar charm of his childhood, and
foreshadows, at the same time, the
glory of his public life ; as one unin
terrupted service of his heavenly
Father. When twelve years old, we
find him iu the temple, in the midst
of the Jewish doctors, not teaihing
and offending them, as iu the apoc
ryphal Gospels, by any immodesty or
forwardness, but hearing and asking
questions, thns actually learning from
them, and yet filling them wfflPhs-
tonishment at bis understanding and
answers. There is nothing prema
ture, forced or unbecoming his age,
and yet a degree of wisdom and an
intensity of interest in religion, which
rises lur above a purely human youth.
>‘He increased,” we are told, in wis
dom and statnre, and in favor with
God and man. He was subject to
his parents, and practiced all the
virtues of an obedient son ; and yet
be filled them with a sacred awe as
they saw him absorbed in the tilings
of bis Father, and heard him utter
words which they were unable to un
derstand at the time, but which Mary
treasured up in her heart as a holy
secret, convinced that they must
have some deep meaning, answering
to the mystery of his supernatural
concept ion and birth.. 8ucb an idea
of a harmless and faultless childhood,
of a growing, learning, and yet sur
prisingly wise boyhood, as it meets
us as a living reality at the portal of
the gospel history, never entered the
imagination of a biographer, poet, or
philosopher before.
CHILDREN.
riie began to talk to heraelf in a low
tone: “When 1 say my prayers,
God says, ‘Hark, angels! while I
hear a little noise.’” Her mother
asked her what noise was that.
“A little gin's noise. Then the
angels wiU do just to (shutting her
mouth very tight and keeping very
still for u moment,) till I say, Amen.”
Is not that a sweet thought I
wonder if the children who read this
story of little Kellie have ever
thought how wonderful it is that God
always hears their prayers. He ia
surrounded by thousands and tlioij
amis of angels, all singing and
ing 1mui with their golden
and yet, through all the m
all the praises, He hears the 'softest
prayer of a little child kneeling by
the bedside. He must be very lov
ing and very kind to children. We
should think he would sometimes
forget, and be listening to the beauti-
fill sounds in heaven, instead of to
the prayer of a little child. But He
never does. There is never too much
singing or too many praises there for
Him to hear a little girl’s voice.
[Ciild «t Home.
this. Christianity without doubt dilation of the world. As (hr as he
does coo tain a philosophy, but it is can make it, It will be, he soya, the
souiething non than the fruit of hit- history of the action of God on the
science. It is the human rare
revealed history of God’s dealings
with man.” He accepts all tributes
to the moral power and jjrauticai
utility of Christianity, but place* its
defence on the higher ground of rea
son. “No one,” be says, “estimates
more highly its moral and social util
ity, and the inference of ita truth be
cause of ita uarfttlneas, hut it ia be
cause it ia true iu itaelf that it ia ao
use fill. It ia not from speculative
reasons that one in aiekneaw seeks
the aid of medical science. Religion
every jwraon in your neighborhood
knows more about it than you do.
|H Did yon ever think what n volume
He has also ready for ’yoor talk would make if it were print
publication a history of France, writ
ten for his grandchildren. It ia de
signed to give the interest of u ro
mance to recta that it ia important to
know, but which are too often made
repulsive to children by unnecessary
details. His recent history of the
lives of Calvin and Hi. lamia has
been published in England, and ia
cirrnlated in a aeries of books for
•* Sunday Reading.* The moral de
signed ia that an examluatiou of the
lives of those two men, one a Cat bo
has no remedies, that like quinine lie aud the other a Protestant, show a
and emetics, act without tbs iqiera- there ia much good in both Protest
tiou of the mind. The soul draws no autism and Catholicism, and neither
relief except from that which it ae- baa an exrhtrivr right to the virtues
cepta in faith. Mnpprraa belief iu the of true Christianity.
ed t If every thing that
aay in a single day were printed,
what a volume it would make! And
if all they aay in a year were printed,
what a library it would make 1 I pity
the man who shoo id hare to read the
oue or the other. And yet all their
sayings from day to day, and from
year to year, are fiying in every «M- j
rectfcm, producing their effects on!
those on whom they foil. The esag- j j*
gerst foils, the over colorings, the | m>
misrepresentations, the lies (for we
all lie continually) which escape us
w Ilf-11
Baltimore Advertisement*.
MPTUHE G0BSD.
Karst’* Radical Care Trass.
IMT.
by th t
Of*—**. «, HWrdfay art* WhOT, Ut
we
WHS
Miscellaneous.
A Child’s Idaa at Prayer
Little Nellie, who was only four
years old, no sooner saw work laid
aside than she ran to her mother’s
knee and claimed a seat there. Mrs.
Lee lifted her on her lap, and went
on busily thinking of ber duties and
pare*, while she rocked herself and
Nellie to and fro.
F<w a time Nellie amused herself
i>y winding a string in and out
,-Cbrough her Augers; but presently*
Cofreepondeifoe of the guruonah Republicua.
Oaisot on the Faith of tha Christian
Religion.
Iu the midst of the general ex
citement which )>crvnded the nation
iid been extended by telegraph
hrough Europe, causing puplic se
curities to fluctuate almost with the
Emperor's purse, oue voice has Iweu
heard by the Paris public which iu
former days was always listened to
with respect—speaking to it tbrongh
the pages of the great French re
view of Um Drnx Mtmtle* on a sub
ject so remote from the imlitiesof tb«
day, and yet so importuut that it bus
almost seemed like the couacicnee of
the nation proclaiming that there are
higher duties even than the framing
of a Constitution or the saving of a
dynasty. Some time siuce M. Jauet,
a member of the French Institute,
and Chief of the French School of
Rationalists, charged M. Guizot
with having displayed more scuti-
nient than philosophy in his lute
work iu defence of Christianity, pub
lished under the title of “ Religious
Meditations." The venerable author
and statesman wlio is now upwards
of eighty years old, bus replied in the
lost number of the /Vu Aloatirt in
terms of great dignity, and fon»kl.-r
ing the udvanced age ami the subject,
with touching pathos. He refers to
the pious instructions of a Christian
mother as having liecn his protection
when as a youth he was thrown into
the great maelstrom of Paris life, and
says that non- in old age, and after
years of stmly he finds indefinitely
greater consolation and knowledge in
divine revelation than in pbihmthrn-
pical ideas. Hut that his serious
convictions of the truths of the Bible
may bo seem not to be fonuded on
the “ fragile be sis of mere sentiment,”
he says that when at one period of
his life, the Rationalistic doctrines of
Germany, preached by the pastors of
Geneva, bad contributed to give him
an extreme toiemtiou, or rather a
philosophical indifference to si) kinds
of religious dogma, he was brought
to believe in and feel tlie necessity of
sincere and simple faith in the Chris
tian creed by the study of the early
Fathers and the records of the growth
and development of Christianity.
A Paris publisher propnsml to is
sue a French edition of “ Gibbon’s
Decline and Fall of the Roman Em
pire,” and engaged Mad. de Median,
who snbeequtyitly became his wife,
to make the translation, and himself
to levise and add notes. It was on
this examination of Gibbon's anti-
Christian authorities that he became
satisfied of the Divine character of
Christ, and that while Gibbon had
been himself deceived in some in
stances, in others be had wilfolly de
ceivcd. It ut im]H>ssible to give in
the compass of a letter an idea of the
completeness and beauty of this ar
ticle of Guizot. It should be trans
lated and circulated wherever the
Unitarian and Rationalistic schools
have eueroacbed upon sound views.
It takes common ground, and sum
mons all Christians to the defence of
the fundamental doctrines of their
religion. Its peculiar importance at
this time, ia in that a great Protest
ant author and statesman like Guizot,
should proclaim that the greatest
danger to society, at this time, is not
in the meeting of the (Ecumenical
Council, or tlie extent of this or that
sect of Christians—but in the war
that is waged against Christianity
itaelf, and necessarily tbrongh it nlti
mately against society, by a claws of
persons who gain influence by pro
fessing respect for and exalting the
morality of that religion whose found
atiou they are seeking to destroy.
On this point Gnizot says: “They
take away from the dogmas of Chris
tianity their living reality and give
them s merely symbolical or intellec
tual virtue. They recognize it as a
philosophy, aud think they do it
honor. J cannot >be content with
historic truth of Christianity, or its ;
suflk'iency for the wants of the aonl, 1
and yon may keep lip its external
forms aud observances, but its pa sc
tiesl efficacy will cease as the flaaieu,
and even the smoke when the fire ia
out. Rationalism, he ttys, conducts 1
its followers to a Iwrreii land, an un
explored ocean ujkm) which are nei
ther busts nor aails. Christianity
provides a l«Mt that ia guided safety
through the darkueas ami storms of
this ocean to a region hryoml, iquiii
which it throws a light brighter than
that of the sun ou earth. “By sci
ence «Hie may rorognise God, but it
ia only by the Bible that be can have
knowledge of llim.”
ltationaliam U sn|M>riur to Material
ism, aud more |4iiloao|ihh-al than
Pantheism, in that it recoguiicw men
to be the *ul»)rrt of a moral dnehqi
OB8KUVRK.
Tha Past 1- 0- Psrmvwl. Sts
are speaking about our- . ■
selves, about oar children, about our j , u
property, about our neighbors, about
every thing that we have to do with
—what must be their influriiee upon
the world t Mill, how few there are
who know anything about the owe of
TIIK best ss* ■* adt-rtive
TRt'HS known Inr (to ewr*
sad rahrf of limits or Rop-
tun-. TUU Truss has racrirad
of (las bu emlorot Phyeictora
at this ouuntrv, win do But best-
■ K to those aSbctod vtfh Her
sts as Wing supoors to all otlwn.
It is (bo uaijr Tows that wi
Bowels or Hit soy consist j, odd tbs w
' (bat bo Is now s moody
thnra soft sad fdbrlual is
mots Um
will
ko
Ot thh so guarantee rutin, sot Sturt KM
SUk gloat* Abdominal Boka to Cor-
puioco-y, Felling at lbs Worab. sad as s support
to tbo Barb aoJ Abdoaninsl MWtrs Anklet*
Ksoo Cogs oad Stock lops far Vsrtoooe Vriua,
1* loots sad Weak Joists.
SboMtdrr Brans lor IwJkro, (Jests ssd C1.il
- . . ... . - ,, . dross, hr tbo essra af stooping ot tbo Shoulders
their tongue, which is forever ou the am* MO a Cbm F.ryraofor
morel A man might aa wall under PUo louraaorato. tbo mom superior oniric h.
take to keep an account at what
Another literary man, some time
within the same indicated periods,
honored Charieaton with his prrurnoe;
and |iropoard, indeed, to make it kia ^ ^ __ ^ __
rerideuce for life. ThU was James ’
goes (Hit of liia chimney, of awoke,
and cinders, aa to keep an
U. Penival, then ia the zenith of kia
reputation, aud po(mlar in this conn
(try bey nod all eontem|Mwwry poets.
Hr, too, became an objert «f much
regard, attention and sympathy, and
soon attaehtd bimseif to Crafta and
the Corner, writing for that paper,
almoat daily, ataoe flowing song, son
net or hullatL
Hi* fluency in verse was wouderfnL
No |loci that ever lived has ao cuta
; plctely mastered every variety of
measures, ancient or modern, and
with anch liquid flow aa to eommead *
of s nudnxu Influences fur life or for
death. Ami therefore how vastly
important it ia that we should exam
ins ourselves in the matter of aprerh!
f Uttsiiar
| iH"w or* .
tm all n.ysicol MsmIks Curvature
ot lbs Apia*. guar lops. Chib Furr, Ae.
I 'wo.hi «sd Crirtidtra ot tbo MOM
SMko. S MAKSII A CO
No. 1 Holiday Strrs-t. Britroora. Md
May 13 40—I y
Columbia Advertisements.
THE BOOK OF WORSHIP.
hi
* Vr i A
J. B. WATKIN’i & CO-
CARRIAGE MANUFACTURERS
szs sncocas or
EXPRC88 WAGONS,
ment, but it is the fruit of special tUrm thr
ear, even when they to-
f p -
T HIS BOOK. ot «1« :< » la arts
wady. Wo giro thr Cbulsb rlpbt oral a
way off ok. aud M It'S war port * Iba
tally foiled to reach the rniud. He
wrote on all subjects; the changes
nf tlie aramma from day to (lay, tha
rain sturm, etr^ the laudarapr and
. watrrnrapc; n ith freqncnt rgtast ieal
■ml mtuungs refltvlinghisovn moods,
which were naturally aad, If not
habitually ginuniy. Ilia livelier
S wing Machines. Guns, Pistols,
Etc . Etc.
|«uss out from the
• hn h his mnar waa tuo prune to ran.
For his wonderful t arirty of meas I
ores aud their free flow, the render
has only to examine the thick dmidec
i mo, entitled “ A I beam of the I la v, I p , t T‘~t“ - .a
and other I’oems," paldiohetl by Sni “m muo.<j so m o lorpo ood wbrr «o-
ncy IDheori, is New Haven, not J* A ^~ ,t *" l) *^
hmg Ik-fore IVrrivnTa death ; or the was** • w *vi a tiattr - . ssd Vdu.. Mbsnir
war matter wttl probably U- (onad 1 ** bM
pwMisbeil. in two miniature volumes, *»■> Mutt isos (bar ho K Iraa Mo.
study and observ ation, ami lias never
reiqoinded to the sa)iirutiiMiR of man
in kin pnat feeble ami auflbnng con- 1
dititHi. “Why, then," in- asks* “seek
to make it more thou it really is, tlie
preface to Christianity ; naggeating
ipu-xtions and indicating wants that
it caunot sHtu.'i, but that D.vine
Rcvelathw either udve. or derforenj DMu|lv tkr trwmh ^, n Hfek-t
insoluble except by that faith for
which infidelity offer* no aalmtitnte.
but which Christianity , in making it
an essential, clothes with the filial
fruition of ita promiara f”
M. Guizot then clieent up the
friends of true religion by a inokt
clot|Ucnt sketcli of bis Inqs-s from
their united action in behalf of those.
fundamental doctrine*, iu wliicli they i
an- ngn-cd, say ing “ Christ utility is
not coauted by ages—its source ia
more ancient than it* name. Tlie
foes it cocoon ter* are not greater
than those it ha* heretofore over
come. Its new adversaries will not
have more learning than llayle or
more mind than Voltaire, or more
I Mission than the revoint moists of
IBM. Religion will hare also the
advantage of a new arm—liberty ou
ita part and on that of ita fora. It
being freed from the abuses of au
thurify amt kept on guard against
attack, it will he enabled to rnani
feat the sublimity of ita nature ami
origin.”
An appeal like this, coming from
M. Guizot, who is called in Frshrr
the Protestant statesman, would at
any time command great attention.
But at this particular moment It bas
a special significance, and bas been
read and commented on hr all the
various organa of opiuktn. I ts tribate
to what U valuable in Catboln-uun is
aa generous, ita arguments against
Rationalism are clothed with such
courtesy, and ita deprecation of the
evils to society from the relax*
tion of religious belief are so sin.-ere
ahd forcible, that with the thinkiag
class of the Paris pnpalathMi, It has
excited quite sa much attention as
the late speech of Prince Napoleon,
and merits to be classed with the
great events of the day. M. Guizot
concludes with a quotation from
Plato, that: It ia more easy to build I , . _ ,
a city in tha air than to be fimml a “ lm “ t wboU > M
society without religion, ami with
another from Machavelli, in the four s . ,
teenth century, raying, “That what thrn °* “T ^'J***
w. t«.b t. . . t to a profeaaorahip in n est Point, he
W V, \ A x alamdonetl it os -no. ra be wra raihd
He adds: “ My religions imprra |
t tm Ik kwii mi Um < U«rc*t
Hal
* r«c .tt, |>K «4fp......
JA--e svo aitn gth . .
Tflfirt UffifWMNk fkla........
Twky *up«c »Rin> r%U
Twtff .........
With K»It r*tt*ytt, M errata «ium.
Cankfcfi find wiqronk at
iMiih to mmd vrartoulrd
QT Htrjforimjfc *■ all «• yraadim.
May 13 46-tf
SKNT FREE!
M O'Keefe, Son ft Co ’i
SEED CATALOGUE
■ III AU Gatdt to Um rtmrm sml V v lMr Cmr*m.
* » ; hr 1ST*.
. BUMiKO is J.
S ** |> 1 '
4 a. a
» **
cturK. a
. run i
mod am Cbrw urArr. at .
i of Ms pw rest a aaatr
t° t>t’rrtK a chai zan.
gfoomy groove ia »■*»*". * C
Ang » 1—«f
• •Nil. WVr of
y UkKKKK
1 ktdwtflrr, N
Oct fi
J. T.tary torrr at
,Wm aaat m4 r.bMt.|r
•trraa isavtlSflT
OU. Kll «»■*.-. A ban-} '
8—8m
THE DEPOSITORY
or YHK
MAKYAAIft ft. ■- OMIOKt
1 8 tUMfiMfopd Wfllt W
. mt
T IIK
I
rtmyxiuuf mcommmrv M Um ucgmnitMUom
Md liftfttMMt-wi uf 8*m4m\ 8Hr»4a and ImU*
Clftaft ft 4r* t-«*fi»|w -uMit UfltMirik fimkajiy
Ikfod, LrUantl ak Knffikttd. Ijhrmrr afod
I‘rrmiwai BnuU uf foffWt rttvllfikv and
kfiflt; ^Nrianoa Burak* Oaai lUmk* 8.8 Hima
8wU M tkaak*. littftC tb«4ft fVtUlt iaftifi.
mmt KrwfiH Taftrttt, ('.^urarratanra, |J.We Die-
4 fiKbftr Un4tt tie-
i rX|ilutitn| iktr
(Mur and gobl,) Since bis death, from
j the prera of IVknur A Fn-kUs Ikattoa.
While in t ltarlestuu he puhliahrd
hew at the tkrrr nambrrs at bis “Ohs”
a collect km at |wura aad verm mi*
crllaay, from the press of It's. U.
itabrork, farethrr of Hfclary, and •
Uharleatou buoktwih-r for maay year*.
I mite that some of bis hmgraphrra
report h m to have foiled as a pear
titioucr of phyaarin t'harlcstuo, be-
i auar uf the prejudices of the people,
who nwM aot remgwiar ia oar pernua
the Mended cajmrttirw at (art aad
|ihysaan. This, to tbuar who knew
I Vrrival, i* purely slowed. He never
prartierd phyttr anywhere. He
ur<er attempted it here; Merer bang
.sit bis sign; Imt subsided, at ooce,
ialo the embraces at the littmtaan.
He was too shy, sensitive aod^U(aid
j a mau, ronatitathmally, for aay cm
ploy ateut which brooght him iato
(-outset with Ike people, with the
crowd, or even with select society. j
Though writing lore songs perpetu
ally, he hardly possessed the eoarage
to look a beaatifral a .saan ia
eyes; would scarcely have dared
touch her hand, and would no more
have ventured to feel ber pulse than
he would have attempted aay other,
to him, impossible thing! Love was,
with him, s sweet sseUm-buty ab
straction, never to find its atteraacr
except in the ear* uf an Meal.
This feebleness of will kept kirn
which demanded free or familiar
contort with others. When a|qmint
Ia4», Mr,
k-tlhm »i
hum Um mmtUrj pffiflif raam4 LtiUlmttj
F. A. Hi llNEIDKK,
Mtta Surat, star Ctp firm
.Tm* *"J
K. B
rastus raS t» ntr . s J-rtiMS. mu .ertrr by
sruisg. Mi May no*.sa. tut .sl.r I..A.
at .Sr wpru. u» out ns tbrir sidss. |M
'nAro Us-t M« mat ta^u^aA.
Oi.*OSn rOt I* brssnbd put *g»- pul. t
Jaulifi
;i—ly
UTABUkUKlI ISSS
BKV. S lil'ITKtd. Km 't.
Xu. 11 W. Fortttr HtnaL
Am—,, ml
Aag 18 1—tf
BOOT. SHOE, AHD HAT HOUSE.
A. SMYTH E.
WHOLSKAU AXD KIT AIL
Dt.LM IS
BWTS. SHGM, ASH BAT*,
•SI mam no naan, nuiuu aunt, bus's.
Jam 13
COLUMBIA. fi.C.
10—tf
THE
LUTHERAN BOOK STORE,
th Ml. r» Jbrat. oa.ra»>... /w.
Is sow pp.it M m at Mart, btsi at mm
1 ChswS hokicsUMS. Mi dl uOst Tbralrat
omI a rift KiMwIhmoiM vark«L
will %md ft Ift lk» fiftrafi aff*
, now ra wab tbMf Mdes Sfrrral sbMra
the firm ra Mm .betb. M t ibrartra.
I tn fiirorra rigM mm* ■ revrtmj isin.nl af
risitmij alaraja as I «m4 AStm >t>n t.
T. L fit'll llAt'K fispX
P it. Box ISOS
May 27 43—tf
■ifocllaneoafi Advertise menta
S A FAHNESTOCK S
VEHM1FUGR
W ill a I tbst s> sms; ctsMron dir sadw
tlw ama at Sr. raarw ? Thu . Ur
Mifslkc* at itiiMn. 4m mSt tbst or*, ti
mg bras ■ wl, et tf resort, ood witiomt
MUdarvrT cosra Mrertsmed. It h ter,jib
AU S a koorro Out wmm rjot io t!
I *—ii .j Mi'M Suot w rarti.s intone} . tb-rek-re
fare.!* tar ta.Hr Mutlirrs .bo ■>« mc
MaotlT otdi tbrir eraldrwv raa sot
rionw. at Um tret .yiiiptoiu tf marram; ts
•o rarely at tboy rxMt, tlo-j too b*
Ssf.ly aad C«'taiot; Ismoi.d
Sera lb. SMOt drlMaU intuit, by lb* tuoriy
am at
ill. r.liLvtsrocrs raatttTGi:
It W prtwlf bMiolras ooouio* no Htrcsy.
Ms; to
with
CbOdreo at Ml Agra
Worn Ooofcciuo* sad. mor, l» lU par
fra at gbra,o( tbr pint thaa of meroraiog
III. dra ra. bar. bran Moooloctiarrd i
Ih. tiMUT. bat tbrir Short Irate d lift ii
orarijr ozbooMod, ood B A. Fol.oratocb'.
Virsufug* ouotiaow to grow is hr or daily.
CArrroK
[.Urtii**-
REMOVAL.
-
drops of life! Do you make life
sweet with your tongue wherever you
go, or is your tongue like the tongue
of s serpent, carrying terror whenever
yonr mouth opens and it oomea forth 1
How often do you think of your
speech t Do you know anything
Christ, and its ppt ancp into thf efr■' a boot ill 1 ventnre to aay that
COLUMBIA, 8. C.,
R RSPBCTTCLLT Mi cm 14* forods rod
rr.noin that b* bra raraorid to hh ore
Mt. ftwavftw Kiraii r't baildiHg sa
at Rri.ro. rod Tirhr atravr,
rifi oBMbuitly krop t a Usd s writ
owl rant of all anWra hotosster Is
ho Has af bad mss aab s<
OffifiPriH, PmUfififi, TftaeeoR, Etc.
January 28 21-ly
SURGICAL DENTISTRtT~
* OB. B. L. BOOZER,
S UKVIT1I0 fuw, at Dr. D. P. GfiJCOG
briagranmaMdly I “ _
. . , . . , .. , . npon to lecture, sad led to the soli T * * t
■toon, reoetveil aa I have described, tll(tp hu liulp nH , „ N>w , Uvra ., I »• I*
have been deepened by rtndy and TUpn . , ... him , B llax ||p Iu ^ n
tbe observation of the diffl.nlf, of tbeu enK>J(txl w Webster
men without religion fioveraing in tHp pwp .mtiou « bu ^ <iic
toemseives or being gtiverae,!. THry ^ „ WM thpn
fluctuate between servility and re- ^ rTrTnf| ^ H , vpn Ua MiAtd
volt, and are by tura. feyerisbly in. th , t bl Iwlr ., Welratra- was inrtebt' WhoUn^tt nod Retail Grocer,
iwtient and bltndl, subotUsiia Ita ^ for etywobigiea, and for mtrat
ligtoa alone can serveas a substitute )>f , hf (hmi |wn «lettW.
for despotic power ia restraining fieri work _ H Mpa< M XI j Cfnt
dom from excesses.” /#p JcaMry
In condemning French society, and -,
attributing to the English more so- tviw
lidity of principle and a higher mural
standard, oue ts restrained by tbe Do you know wlmt your habits are
spectacle of M. Gnizot using this shoot talking I Do yon talk fi great
language. He ia in hi tn self on Ulus deal too much I Do yon ray a great
(ration that the almost parity of pri- many thing* heedlessly T Do yon
vste life ia compatible with public indulge a great deal io oulswelling
consideration. Three volumes of his word* of pride t Are yoar words
“Rq|igiou* Meditations’ hare been like sjmrka of fire, or are they like
published, and tbe fourth and last
volume will aooo be issued. Besides
diernasing the Historical Evidence*
of tbe Bible, it will contain a sketch
of tbe progress and unity of Ghri*-
tianity in ita marvelous march taros*
the world from the time of Noah to
S A. F.bnraKx*. VrrwihstT- ft* pMUrulratj
i bat tlw isms* sto B. A. Tha *
mk !»• ba-cffi so
I TA VOKABLT tXOWX SIS’CK IMS.
rod poMnwr aral raw am horn,, it, if liter
do sot roh is Harr .. iradobuo ftjnwd upon
tbrra. BCtlWAKTZ A ItASLKTT,
(Ponrarty B A. F.I.nratork'i Son A Co..)
SUr fitpndn, Piu.ln.rfh, Pi.
Dec lfi lfi—ly
Charlotta, Celtuabis aad Afiguta ft ft
I'.unti FsntiHT am. Ticckt Orricz i
Couua& C, Dowrabor IS. ISC*. (
TRAINS NORTH.
Lrarr AsfssM. si 4 00 *. m.
- OutSMbis. & C. St »40«.m
* WhuMhom. st 1140s m.
a Ohrawr.at 1.4* ft or..
Arrlr* st Chsriotto, N. C 4.10 p m.
Uobinf rloor ooonrctlom with Trots* ut North
Corabos Rood far oil putolo North ood Kori.
Hrrakhtt sod dhmor ot Chratw.
TRAINS BGCTII.
Lraro CtMThdi.. N. C. at Iu SO a. tn
“ Chrator. at l .lftp a.
* Wiuuafaorn, ot til p. m.
** Oulurabu. R. C, at 5 01 p a.
Amro st Auk-uaU... 1 SO p. m.
HakiOf ctora ronorriion. with Train* ol C< n-
tral aud Osotww Railruod* far Raronuali, sod
all point* in Ploridn, Macon. Cnlnmbu* Moni-
, Mobile, Now Orleans Srlma, Chotu-
MarapbM, XnahriMr, InnwriUo, Cincin.
non. fit. Loom, sad all point* South and WraL
Prior* Slcrvii.f ('on on nil Kifht Trains.
Throufh Ticket* sold, ran) Bogfofc chrekcd to
MU DriuCUtai pointq
IF Pa*senfe* by tlria rout* OOfirtl Nosffi,
hore stwior ot reus MrrescxT Bocros.
C BOUKXIOHT. StomriahaAtmL
F.. R. Dosszt, GriMfsl Krri.ht and Ticket
i *001.
Jan 12 10—tf
mtt p ,iTi„,„,^T*rf A Good Chnnoe
•or. Tooth .strawod with- rpo IntrodtM. Ih* CMmsx Knitter, lira arm
Hlridra of o loon! *s.lh«4ii 1 needle, no woiyht*. is waiple, otrrmf, raejr;
I oeery l.ip.md MyU dose holu ohjihin* Cbrapkfa that con bo knit be
. Poruoolor auentioa I* la- , hood or by osy kuiner with hr lea* trouble Of
•*. ra parlor rod rare loss tt*( uara at fit* Alan, a lundanj. double-thread.
mo*, uf sttsehiaf Moth to sruOcral piatn. Co* lorf», hoadaosie. hiyhiy improved Sewitur Ma-
Md too atiisra 1 Urine at fiU. Jfackinw tool mt InoL Ubrral
Ottra over firm Sriionri Bank, Main Straw, dfaouaut. O. I’ATBONI, Oracral .4*4.
ClI.Mkln, & C. Ill Merkel St., Wihatnflon. Del.
April lfi 3«—ly 1 Jan * 18—ly
zav
newly rod d.
TtMd bull
Baltimore AdTertifiemeotg-
WM. KNABE d CO ’
^^M^ ; ’atimr*cmnm or
CKUD SQUARE AHD WR168T
PIANO P03T2S
Wortnomo, St. US WtM haKimart "- -
nmi tji.oo* lialtim&f e Mj ** f *"i'
TIIKSK
thirty
lafoa Uw
CIOCilMICO | w it lfi* OUfiiftriJ dji UfiBfoftsroj —
Miinrnoe. whlcii prunoanoe* il-—F*’
TONE
nrabinw fr -et fwwer. ewretaera rod Cro dro
inf quality, a* well m fraw pariy at t-„T
Hon, rod rrranera thruuyhoul Um —Ik.
TOUCH
I* pliant nod eiratie, rod entirely ftra tnm lira
Silti,era found U ao rony Pia.ro U
WORKMANSHIP
they sra musM. oSbf non. bat ih* ran
irat sweated ■rotrriri, Uw Im*. wprolraL
yloytd io our busaera erablin* ot la keen tom-
nuu.Hr o. iraioraw Suck of ■—* - !C~"w-
Of* A0 oar Square Piano* ksro oar J_
Iratuurod (Keratruoy Seal* and tbo AmtoL
Treble.
We would cull opeciri atieMiro to mt fa
peovetnenr? io Grand I'sots «., i Sonora Grrafa
p*uwwd Aufuot 14, |M4 wjarh hrtro .h.
Piaiur nearer ^ertcetiuo thou ha* y« bra. . u
Freer Pisao Silly wanosled hr too rraral
Buis .buhrale Aferwy for Cort«l iHra*.
haul » ertebrstud Parhe Orfan. and Cbraeh )Ur.
n*i wi! tnjis
JTM. KNABC A 00
No. MS Wes Eaiuiuore Si.
May 13
44 --ly
PATS5T SLAATIC Si’05€l!
A Subhiiire for Hair tud Fntkm.
The Elastic Sponge Mattress
is lhr hrahhirri rhwoert. oust rlnSir, donU
rod brat bad la the m urid.
The Elutic Sponge Pillowa
on l.fU, rod. owrac ssd irra Iran to uui«riihy
sad uirafrarobie odor, ra must foul hen bon.
The Elastic Sponge Coahieae
fs Cl.urrir, Carriof. or Choir, .ra far siywiw is
rrro the brra curled lour, (which io oarer 4
In rod. art Hie*.) alnay* rtaiuay lb* I
very eundunobir, aud much cheaper thro pad
hrir
Tt * kl.oiic Spoags to Purn.tarw
•> much bett.r thao hair, a* it io always ftra
from onuho sad oil iuorri lift-: wad on fro
arwtlr .her as Io kra-p llw oatn eoaabedty
lull- thu* Mhl.i.f fnwiir to the beauty af tbo
fanra ore.
Tn Elastic Mprag O odo
are aril in. rapidlr. «...l rrrrthudy like* ibraa
Srol hw pamphlet-, iprin. hill panaabs waM
pin In. ut p^.
L e*l agent. Wanted.
Au Af«s wanta-d iu every tews is the hide,
to wimm ..it booirru threxrimuve ».leut lira.
|wdi K SiiViX (Arii‘1 Apent,
Zb W . Fey a lit Mu»i, liu.tisaue. fad.
May 13 40—ly
POOLS & MM?,
diAiTdlUOJlA.
■ixervenatus or
PORTABLE AXI) STATIONERY
STEAM ENGINES & BOILERS,
LF.FFKL'S PATKXT AMKIUCAN DOUBLE
TUUUK
WATER WHEEL.
The best Who 1 now before tbe pubhe. «
MORRKLLS FIBK KNGIXP, DKKP WELL
anp femes ran** f
THIS rump ia fecknoii l.dffift
by fell nKtHttutiffi arfao bare wm
it, tube io its coMtnkiion, the
no* muipk . rwtaWv and duniUa
SAW MIIaLS
Portable Grist Mills,
1 tear Mill Mtebiapr;,
SHAFTING,
Pl'LLKYS AND HANGERS
tf Send lor Ciirahr by moil.
May fi
46—tt
E STEVS
ottace orcan
A RK oiimirrd by tbe thousands who bw
Uiew in uee.
They here mere reel itoprorcincuts ibm Mf
Her inftirutuoitl '
They are the boding inrtrunicnts of til)
OVER FIFTT DIFFERENT STVLe*
We hare hundred* of toriiiuouiala from th#
lead.*, muriciaua >f the mmotrv.
Liberal iodu.'riocuu to Churehra, Chi fa)—,
School. Ac.
ALSO,
BmON'Jj’fi Ceiefifpifi
AND
IalGHT ft OO. S
BEAUTIFUL PIAH0S*
Which we will aril from ten to twenty for not,
fora > ban the) cdfc be otruiued eicrwlieie.
II. SANDERS 4 Ctfo
IS W. FayriM Stlrri
Baltimore, M4
K. B.—We lehr lo Rev. t. L Mills*, who fa
our Ageot st Staunton, Va.
A pi 8 40—tf
P. D. SADTLER & SONS,
OPTICIANS AND
BaJtiznore 212 Strwfit,
iHPosTxas or
WATCHE8 ft FINE JEWELBY-
*
MAVUrftCTTRSM OT
SPECTACLES, spoons, forks, AND SIlAi
VER WABE GENERALLY.
Mav 13 46—tf
JUJI
‘ Iffifi term I
oalbura at ft-
Cfane-mr
Thralufiy. «re
or Tbo*-
rasa(>•• df C -
omrj t
L_
. fifaronesqu* f
Firat isfaert f
On* moou.
Thro. to...'
Hizaoonti -
IVele* nut
t>n mle«nj« I
Ward* u dfacr .- ■
•nd upward*
Upward* 4U
4M upward
fed rix.ro ra:
Obdurrio ' fe
I far et.M
I
* Old Tt
A
THE
It is ■ sn i
that the Bit
Whoever *
HUtl COlUfW!
dweaver thu
luczita have
autl also a >
agreement
truths taMif
rime as to
ftMta Th*
itorit “lit
unto the t;i,
times, imt *
When speak
it zucluUcs
i—tnn t* me
’ Imftsttsssit l
But laagtia,
TBcli
rW
*
K
rv
", "i '
con; I
-1
Th. I-
■tap*"** 11 ^
image of u
the luugtiH
laagwoge ot
tH> llilixtru! I
Btawwlad hi
head or w.i
third ajqx
ittgfa. The i
ing to men
for theu u
aanh Hied th
whatever
odapttxl tu n
by wurtix,
by any 450U
may be
•ifafitk to t hr
Wonls, nor u
lie i ii_,
of “tbe title j.
ful Pepresjeu
which intiti
those age>.
all who kii.>
know, the i>
the histori ro.
words betxm [ T
bola of diver
obotind. TI
taem is not
have been
fency of otir
tbe huniau n
furnisheil a I;
wbou He, 44 :
l»y His Sou
of fitct, * br
(lid so speak.
He dbl sjh
•^Wffi^kfiyui
eont action
tions of thw
A symbol,
plex, may lw
^Vben natui
sfiggeat tn
*t Beads a et
ever useful it
in has no ns.
Sj'iulwl.
Couspicu.ii
orestaokrai
Hm OU amt*
btm. They
de* Of Ueu
the ts
by the
I>iami upon
“•tin thetaHK
eawrettgbt 4ii
Thfiy were ro
°n tbe liuoi r
»«*»aeenby I
^ appeal.
Prophet Isai-
*?«hy John
Rftd by him .
Then what n|
I fifitue i