The Lutheran visitor. (Columbia, S.C.) 1869-1904, June 22, 1870, Image 4
Mr. \V. W. Contll, Um* founder of
the Cornell University at Ithaca,
X. T., haa passed away from earth,
Ira vine aa hia luounment, Um Inati
tutiou bearing bis name, to which
be itevotod the princely sum of half
a million of dnihira. The University,
already highly proaporou*, promise a
to eaert a widening indue nee ojKin
the Utah where it h located and the
whole land. A eomsapondent of a
Xew York paper mention* the fol
lowing interesting partienlara, show
lag the small beginnings from which
hi* large beurtternce sprang, ami
bow Mr. Cornell cultivated the grace
of giving on a great scale:
When a poor black smith, earning
bis living dvrr hi* anvil and forge,
be made a donation whirh, aa be
aaya, laid the foundation for hia ra
loDxal fortune, and caused hia Uber
nlity to keep pore with Ida wealth.
A eolleetlon was being taken up in
; (irvctie street to remove the debt mi
the ebnreh. A party soliciting fond*
Worth*m Society by a Varthara Pan. In the congregation cam* to bin pew
““ ; amt an id: “.Brother Cornell, t think
The Hev. W. T. Clark, a Pettnayl y M ought to give aa something.'' “1
vanian, paiota a dismal pirtate of the t]l i„k ^ ^ » vM the ■ ration w.
“Moral Situation" of Northern 2rh Ural. 1 pa, yra£w. T"
ety. To enable our reader* to Mgr upm, dollArt.” “You onght not to
for tliemadveo, we qnoto, without |-ty tUat .y Hlltl ,mor laboring
comment, the following passage : mAn .< think I can,’* Mid Mr.
“The re action of the war on the C4WW u { .to.il nave fifty dollars
ta*te, habit*, ambitions ami moral* JuM before he died, Mr. Oor
of onr petite hna |woved damaging. M .|| mU: *.3,,^. ] ua ,| r that don*
The obi order of thing* ha* bean liot , i mw the time that I
broken up. The leaders of other ^cked a bandied dollar*.’ He hfr
lUya bnve been left behind, if not for Jamra atnwt, he
wear. Long after we are dead, opr
children will bo clothed in the liabiU
we helped to fashion.
My fellow-parent*, we are weaving
oor children’s habit* every honr. We
do it a* clothes are made, stitch by
atieh. We do it by little thing* and
through unconscious influence*. We
are making the “little coots" which
shall he worn not only in this world,
but in the world to cou»«! 0, bow
much it depends on us whether they
shall “walk in white" among the
glorifled in heaven t The property
we can leave onr childrvn may be
small iudeed. We may not afford
them an expensive education. Bnt
day by’ day we can be prayerfully,
patiently weaving for them that gar
ment of goodness which shall grow
brighter and stiU brighter nntil they
lb castle bulls, or cottage home*, »
Wherever guilds#* childhood roams,
Oh, there is nothin*: half so sweet
A* busy tread of little feet.
The sighing hreejtr, the ocean’s roar,
The purling rill, the organ’s power,
All stb the soul, bnt none so deep .
An tiny trend of little fact.
When forth we go at early dawu,
To meet the world and brave its scorn,
Adowu the garden walk so neat,
We see the prints of little feet.
At ev«s when homeward we repair.
With aching limbs and brow of care.
The voice# ring out clear and sweet—
Then cornea the rush of little feet.
The knives are lost, the dishes stray,
The tools are spirited away.
And when we go the loot to seek.
We take the trail of little feet. ,
Bat when the angel death hath come
And called the flow'ret* from our Inane,
Oppressive silence reigns complete—
We miss the sound of little feet.
Then tools are safe, no dishes stray,
No doors go slamming all the day;
Lanye Oa
Arrive at
One of the nicest of breakfast
cake* Is Japanese cake. One plat
•f milk, one aad a half pints of
floor, one egg, and beat all thor-
ongbly for a few minute*. Bake in
twelve earthen tea cop*, or in a
French roll pan.
Vegetable oik. Store especially
Unaeed, simply rnlihed ou to the
cgjg, binders any alteration for a
■nflkteallr extensive period, and pre
sent* a very simple amt eflradosi
method of preservation, eclipsing
any method* hitherto recommended
or practiced.
SEVEN GOLD MEDAL*
HAVB JUST BKKS AWARDED TO
OilASs 2U WTM99%
le Oewbw sod Noretabro IMS, far
THE BEST PIANOS. NOW MADE,
L*ate Await*..
Arrive atCdmnbU—
Xigkt Krprea (Saadapt
Leave Cohradda ...„
Arrive at Charhwtoa
Arrive at Angnata.
I .rave Charleston
Leave Augusta...
Arrive at t'riimibi*
Camden Train.
Camden and (olumbta I*»
will ran on Monday*, We,
Batmans; and between
Kingriue daily.
Leave Camden....—,^..,.
Arrive at Colombia. "
Leave Coiambia—
Arrive at Camdrn
OMcr sad .Vhf AV 9
Sorth liberty, ntmr Baltimore
Baltimore, Maryland.
Mrifi llanos have all the latent
improvements,including the Agraffe Tre-
M», Ivory Fronts, and the improved
Ftrarfa A,-*ion. Fully warranted for flve
years, with the privilege of exchange
at this twelve shuiIIh, If mat entirely aat-
isfartory to the pnirboaer.
flee sad-hand I’ivno* and Parlor Organ*
nlaara on hand, at from #30 to •**.
Krftren who kart oar 1‘iaaat in asr: Gen
R K law. la-siaatna. Va: Gc* R Hanantn,
N C: lira l> It Mill, CbarloMe, X Cj r.ov
latoar, Lexiaaton, Va: C W Melton.
IVwtCT. * cJTJ ll Hmith, Cheater, it V;
JR ItougU*. Wlntndatm, H C; C Bonk-
night, Coined**. B C; U Harwell ft Son,
Female Institute, Charlotte. XC
tV rieinl furs < irroLr containing TOO
names of person* who have bought HteUT*
I’iaaos siller the cluw at the war.
Term*— I Jbrral. A call is solicited.
April 9 1H0D • M-4f
put on tb« abiniug raiment like unto
Miscellaneous.
those that are before the Tbrone.
[Rre. T. L. (fryfrv.
HT-l’KAKK, <;«./wy7.
C. 0. ft Augusta Railroad.
To make a ire abort cake, take two
heaping tuble*(«sHifuk of lard, fried
wwt fat or trotter; two I-. aping tea
*l«toufak of anteratua, and owe of
salt; rub all into uwe sad a half'
({Marts of ftnsw. mix quickly with
oor and a half pints of sour milk
(a little soar rrcam greatly improve*
it.) Moll oat rather thick.
YOUTH.
GRim ftDABB tin UPRIGHT
PIANO COATES
THE LUTHERAN VISITOR. 'COIiUMBlA. S. C., WEDNESDAY, JUNE 22. 1870.
To hear again those noisy fret.
Soft night hath come—«U are asleep;
Yes, all bnt me. I vigil keep.
Hush, hush, my heart, and cease to beat 1
Waa that the step of little feet t
Yes, mother, ’tis the softened tread
Of him yon miss and monrn as decal,
And often in yonr sweetest sleep,
YouTl dream of hearing little fret.
And when this pilgrimage is o’er,
And you approach that blissful shore,
The first to run your soul to greet,
Will be your darling's little feet.
The Family.
PARENTS.
i ■
r i
A Talk with Parents.
1 know thousands of parents who
have received from God a child, and
then they turn the young immortal
into a dress maker’s doll! As if
God hml not ramie the little creature
beautiful enough, they must overload
it with upholsterings of silk and
laces, and then torture it* graeefol
freedom into the tongues and screws
of arbitrary fashion. On a certain
Sabbath these parents bronght their
children to church, and formally de
voted them to the Lord in baptism.
Bat all the rest of the time they are
consecrating their offspring to that
other trinity—fashion, finery, nnd
folly! I tell yon that this overdress
ing of tho body strikes through into
the heart It poisons the mind with
a most iinchildlike greed of admira
tion and vain glory. How can a
stop ever be put to the crop of fops
and fashions if children arc to be
trained into foppery and coxcombery
from their cradles? How can our
children be taught self-denial, fru
gality, humility, spiritnal-minded-
ness, white their graceful forms are
smothered under the trappings of
pride and extravagance f I am qnite
sure that when the sensible Hebrew
mother “made a little coaC for her
lovely boy, she remembered that be
was “lent unto the Lord,” and not to
the “lusts or the pride of life.”
But there is another meaning
which I wish to give to this “little
coat.” In the Bible, dress is an
emblem of character. Christianity
is spoken of as a raiment; we are
exhorted to “put on Christ,” to be
“clothed with humility,” aud to keep
onr garment* unspotted from the
world. Nor is it a mere pun—a
playing with sacred words—to remind
you that habit both signifies dress
and signifies disposition of the mind
and its tendency to good or evil.
The habit of doing right is the
essence of godliness.
Now, we parents not only clothe
our tittle ones; we also provide, in
no small degree, the habits of their,
-sold*. We help to clothe them in
garments of light and loveliness, or
else in garments of sin, and sorrow,
aud shame. Wc make for them
coats which no moth can consume—
coats which they shall be wearing
after we have moldered into dust!
Oar children put on the example we
set, and wear it Not only what we
say, but what we do, will be repeated
in their opinions and their conduct
Our characters stream into onr chil
dren. It miters into their eyes and
through their ears every moment.
How quick they are to copy us!
No photographic plate is more ex-
qnisitively sensitive to tho images
which lodge there. Onr dissimula
tions make them trieky aud deceitfai.
If a boy is handled harshly, and
jerked into obedience, he will likely
tnm out a sulky, obstinate nature;
he will be jnst what our impatient
rudeness makes him. If malicious
tattle sour ear conversation at the
table, our children’s “teeth will be set
on edge.” If we talk only “money,
money, money,” they will be greedy
for sharp bargains. If wc talk
“horses,” and “base-ball,” and “race
course*,” etc., they will be on fire
with a rage for sporting. If we give
enr boys a dollar for the toy-sbop
or places of amusement, and only a
dime for the contribution box, we
sha.IT teach them that self indulgence
is often times of more importance
than charity. If we live for the
Rum'a Doing*.
A woman went to a wood-yard on
a very cold day and asked to see the
head man. He came forward. “Sir,”
said she, “can you let me hqve a
quarter of a cord of wood for tkat f
banding him a piece of money ; “my
cbildreu are freexing.”
Tim mau looked closely at tier.
“Why, are you not Seth Blake’s
wife f” he asked.
“Yes, sir, I am,” said the woman.
“now does it happen you are iu
such low circumstances f naked the
man.
“Sir, answered Mrs. Blake,
did it”
“That’* bad,” said the autn.
“Yes, sir, it it bath My children
are starving, nnd ram did that. My
children are ragged, and raai did
that. My children are growing up
outside of the church, outside of the
Sabbath-school, outside of the day
school; and rum doc* that. My
husband, once kind and indostrion*,
is now a vagabond, and rum did it.
My heart is broke, and ram did that.”
And the poor woman sank down ou
a log of wood, the picture of want
and woe.
Nor did the rongh woodman keep
hi* eyes dry, f«»r he rememlierctl the
time when Seth Blake was a proiui*-
ing young printer. n« married a
nice woman, and the young couple
started in life witli as fair a prospect
of comfort and happiness a* a young
couple could well have; They had
seats in the Methodist church too,
aud used to be seen listening to the
word of God,
But Seth had a weak point, ne
irnalil sometimes “drink." He did
not qnite believe in total abstinence. |
“Taste not, touch not, handle not,” j
was not his motto.
The habit gained on him. It
mastered him; it ruined him; and
what is worse, a drunkard’s family
has to share a drunkard’s shame
and degradation ; and worst of all,
drunkenness rains the soul.
Touch mot, latte not, handle ao(, boys.
That i» the only safe ground. Any
other may sink yon.
The Hev. W. T. Hark, a Penuayl
vanian, paints a dismal pirtare of the
“Moral Situation" of Northern Hori
ety. To enable our reader* to jadge
for tliemaolvra, we quote, without
comment, the following paarage :
“The re-action of the war on the
taste, habits, ambition* ami moral*
of onr people baa proved damaging.
The old order of things ha* been
broken up. The header* of other
tlaya have been left behind, if not
forgotten, ('lames are dissolved.
Ideas and usages whirh bad lwrarac
familiar are throws smile. New
men, new custom*, new notion* are
in the ascendant. The low hare
lieei lifted np. Follower* have be
come lender*. Beggar* of yesterday
are ntilHonaire* trvday, and act the
fu*iiion far whoever i* fooludi enough
to follow their lead. To get mnoev
and to spend it is laxary, display and
di*ai|mtion, are the ruling imarina*
of the day. Harh an intense ami
insane rash and struggle for wraith,
such ruinous extravagance of ex-
jienditarr, sorb a delirium fair the
flattering fripperies of fash km, this
country has never witnessed before.
And, ala*, not oplv taste, refinement,
parity and piety have suffered im-
*]teaknble detriment ami diminution,
toft even honesty—the only firm bs-
sis of commercial prniqierit.v, the only
sure support of norial order, the es
sential roudithui of individual and
national well being—ba* given way
before the steady napping and mi
ning of immoral rnidoui* and the
fatal strain of a false ambition. Spec
ulation, the pnpnlar name fair gam
bling on the street and at the board*,
is trenching in on the line of legiti
mate business and rating out the
heart of honoraliie enterprise. Frauds
and villanies deserving the aeremat
punishment are perpetrated almost
openly ami eonfrassd without shame,
rit-arcely an article of fund, I wit is
nnnseous with adulteration*, t’nffoe
ia made of Rtale ship bre-ml ami oil
Htrccteuiaf Stoat Jan.—A
teeper writes: “Having some stone
jars ia which lard hud been parked
until they became unfit for asr, 1
made them perfectly neri by pack
mg them fall of freah earth, and
lie left that when out of debt, and ! letting it n-utala two or three week*,
went to the Fourth street Marble I amqirct this course would hr equal
church, to lift the ttn.000 with ly effective la any ra-e of foal earthen
which it was encumbered. When a * door ware*
auharriptiou waa to be token up Mr. • *"
Cornell usually look tho floor tot Tm Ctn,m /tM Olffr
one ounce of bicarbonare of ammonia
la one quart of warm walrr. With
this liquid rub the cloth, using a
piece of floancl or Mat chub for
the parjsiae. After the application
of Ibis solution, dealt the doth well
with drar water. I>ry and Iron It,
Iniidiing the doth from time to time
make iN-rmmal auUcitatiou*. Ilia
own donation* were usually small
comparatively. Hut be Mould aab
arritie himaelf in the iuunr of other
profile, imrtly to hale his gifts, aud
partly lo shame the penurious. Go
fog to a pew, w here a reluctant bat
well to do MK-mfo-r sal, and abode-
dined to aalmrribc, he would pus* an > *“ ** diredtou of the filar,
to a pour widow or sowing girt, aay
a word to the parta-a, aad then about
nut, “Widow Jones, fidOfi ; * “Hi*
ter Kennedy, fit30." A mechanic
thought he cool,I spare *10. and the
snlss-riptiun was sitoatcl oat for
♦ 100. The general *u|K-rintrtidcut
id the city waa 1 insight to hia fret
one night, lib had * greed to
A Simple Rrreipt for Ulnar
.Voopr.—Two nonces isutgtam ami
two t|uart* milk soaked
and then ad it on the bock of the
stove where it will fowl slowly, f
When nearly folding strain into a !
bowl, sweden aud flavor. Stir of
tea, and when nearly read, turn info
acrilic fifal for some and he BKmW * *•* bare hreu difq-si ia raid !
fo-atd hi* us mm* announced hw fil/SW •*». ««■
—half a j raris salary. The sub- * M<
acupthMi* were wit bogus. In every •
case Mr. t’oruell make llieta good.
Hi* mle was, that in whatever he . ... .
undertook, to give one half of the ' ,Mrt H ta, ° * ***** *** • fl««t
uiinnooK, io gre, mi am. or rue ^ ^ ^ , y, |h> ^
nisi Id simmer till quits soft aad
TtIRfaF isnirssma, W*vr bm Met ll«
pvUr far Sr a, hr Itet, yrsf*. as* ask Ihrir
osfasM skur tosisHt n uurefissl pee
rsShesrr. sIScii fnuoamm thres oisqaakfi.
Twr
TONE
ssiMsm gw si power, mum «S Xne Sq-
lq mfo. m *«B m smu |suj «f isou-
Iss sad ONMM IWwisgiuMt far raise mx.tr.
TOUCH
(mad is ■ tommy fam. Is
WORKMANSHIP
far? me ssrxrstkst bmo* fwsr M lie T,ry
far Isqrr mpiul am
Orarral Firiaktaul 7Viet OMir t
Culutuliu, P. lire, aamiq \
Traiat XoiH.
“J” i®ak™“:.r it!!
Areivc at ('hsrinttr, X.(', « J
Makina rfo*,- riHim-rtiuns with
uf Norf^h Csrulina Ituad a( all imiutr Aarfa
llreskfast aud dinner at Chester.
Train* Snath.
Lrave Charlotte, S. C, l* » ta
< foster !»«.
“ W inasfoiro
“ l.bon hia t«pi
Arrive at Aagatta 9 9Bp a
Mnkimr rlosr remnertimo with Train*
uf Central and UeM-gia Railttwfa. Ur
Ssvsiliudi. aud all |wim. fa KWuk.
Marsu, ('uhmifoi*. MmitgoMery. Mntflr
Kew Orlratw. kelma. Chattanwin. Itrae
phis Nasloitlr, IouoviTlr, Ciariatuii.
Ht. lost is and all [siiut- South aud view
Psfore Sir. pin* Car. on all “ *
Trains) Thronsl. Tk-iu-t. raid, t
mute rlirekrd In all priuri|ial J ’
tV PosM-tnc-n, hy tin* r
Xorth, have rhuiec of three
rotttm.
C. Hoi KMOilT* ^. *
E. K- General Fteiaht sad
Tlrket A Kent.
G & C. Railroad.
Orarral Smjecrimtradrmf # Ogu*. I
' ( <dntahia, January W, UOX j ‘
O X sssi after Wednestfoy, Jansaty «,
tile folios in* Sritedttle w ill he ra*
daRv. SundsTK except,-,), xmurriitnr whi,
Night Tmiu on the Hourii (Waltra T *
Mira Balia.—Wash a quarter of.
! a pound uf rfoe well in cold water, I
whole *iiliarri|itioii.
CHILDREN.
Great Mau.
Dear Little Headert: Many of yon
know little yet about the lives of
thoae who made great men.
After awhile yon wilt read books
that will tell yon all about the great
men of this anil other land*. You
will then sometime* atop, as yoa
road about them, and wonder what
matte them become so noted iu his
tory ; why they, more than other
boys who grew up with them, should
become *o loved, and useful, and
honored.
Well, this you may not id way* be
able to determine to your own satis
faction ; but of one thing yan may be
sure, and which you will not fitfl to
observe, if you read with thought
and care, that they all were dutiful
and obedient children to their pa
rents.
We have to leant of the first
yet of a man, who, in the trne
of the word, was a great man, whose
childhood was not marked by love
and obedience to parent*. What a
dutiful child was the great Wash
ington 1 how obedient to hia parents!
how truth-loving and noble in all hia
actions! Lather’s childhood, too, was
noted for this. He was subject to hi*
parents, aud tried to please them as
far a* he «ould do so, in keeping with
his sense of duty to his God. And
what a great mau he became 1 As
yon grow older you will learn more
about this noble Reformer.
But it is not my purpose to write
you a long letter tWs time. I will
finish it by giving you the language
of a great Statesman, Tho*. H. Ben
ton, who died not many years since,
which will show you what an obe
dient son he was. A year or two
before he* died, we saw him'takiog a
horse back ride one evening, ia the
city of Washington. He rode a fine,
of time needed fair their ran
summation, hml IlnwighaiB aays
that in dirtatiag a man tuav fre
utiu mi dictating a man may ire-.
out*, milk i* thick with disease, ami quentiy fall uiderp after uttering a
wine ia a coinismnd of drug*. fo w Monte, and he awakened by the
“Onr streets and |iabifo |4aera are uniannritiu* repeating the laat word
foil of inteai|MWnaee, mid not only , to show that he baa written tfo
do young meu ami old fall liefore it whole; iwt though Ire or six are
by the hundred, fort even boys amt raids have elai-rd between the de-
wnrnen wear Bm Are blnsh on their )i rrr > of the senteiiee amt Ha tram,
rheeka, and reel ami totter under itn fr r ,s,| M . r , the sl,-epre may hav* I
influence on the Mhleoralk. Gam- pus*e«l
Uing i* a business carried on 1
imbliely, bnt ucareely leaa extensive.
Shortmrnm of Tern* ia Ihramt.-Otre ’ , ** r “ draJ " il *“ 11 ^ •«* 1
of the most remarkable pbeuraneaa ■*** »■"» * itJ * «flhhmt batter to '
eowierted with dream* I* tire abort * '‘■ lr “ Xro
»|sssi fol of pow dered mare or carry j
isiwiter, if preferred. Flour yonr;
hands and make it into lulls the *
sue of s walnut; drop them into
stewed chicken nr veal ten miuntes
before it is aerxed ; take them out;
carefully , ami arrange them over ami.
around the stewed meat, (Minting the
gravy over all. Tfo-*- fotlls will be J
(band very nice. They mat also be 1
lux toiled over with brutett ytdk of
egg*, then dragged with gratetl
natter, and tried in plenty of ten!
iug tent, to be served aa a aejmrate
tUslt w it h fricaaeea, etc.
through a dream extending
through half a lifetime. I*ml llol
land ami Mr. Bahhagr fotth confirm
ly titan many honorable avocation*. t |,i* tlreory. Tire one wa* listening
ami the gambler* include every eta**, * friend reading aloud, and slept
from the boy of fifteen to the ram- of from the beginning of the sentence
sixty. Indeed, every vice on the , he wu . r , mH of tUr w ^ten,x- itn
black catalogue of transgression has p nndiately soeevedinx; yel dnring
more than doubled In volume and in this time Ire had bad a dream, tire
victim* within a doxen yearn, aad i particular* of which would hare
To Prevent Horae* briny Teamed by ,
BUrm.—Take two handfuls of walnut |
I rare*, upon which |<our two j
Ktmrr Pteito fully v anaotrd fcr fltre ytmrm!
IM* Vkokwmkm miifi’urj far (WUl $ $r*d-
Ur> Psrkf Organa mad Ctuucli JUr-
V II. KXAliK A OCX f
Ku 31# Wrxrf BuhtiMfY 8fl. m-mr Kmair,
Dull irnri’,
May IS 1K«0 Hi—ly
P. B. 8ATTLEE & 80N8,
OPTICIANS AND
Haiti morn 212 Streat,
miiwu,
ixroxrsm or
WATCHER ft FINK JEWELRY,
unrimttu or
fimCTAI'hKS, srooxs, FORKS. AND 8IL-
VKR IV A UK fiKXKBAU-V.
May 13 I8CD fo-tf
7 »*■
“ XewhtTrv. IHtia
Areivcst Ahheville » Up a
“ AmterMHt 4 30p«
“ CrrenviHr r> Otpn.
tswve (IrrenvBle 5 fits i
“ Andenuai...... (Sib
“ Alils-viUe * fax a
“ Newberry ...SSfl
“ Alston 8 tfipa
Arrive at I'nltunhia 3 Up is
Thr Train will rentru from Rrltea ts
Anderson ,st SIinAtv »ml Friday tnera-
ittrs. JAMES O. MEUKDim-
General Sti]M-rintradeal.
> i—-—— ■ t'"%f
BLUE RIDGE RAIMIOAD.
rpRAINft on tbeliine Khljrr .
JL ran daily, Sunday* excepted:
Lntvt- Anderson at ......8 !*?»
Arrive sit Wsihsth, at s. 7 0B p *t
lrave WalluiUa at
Arrive at Anderson sit ( Ifiaa
SPARTANiinw; AND l'MQN RAIL
ROAD. ,t <_
P ASSENGER Trains mil leaveSpr-
tauUntyr C. H. on M,unlays,AVtdre*.
ilay*. Th«r»d*y* nnd Sstonhp, her,
Alsttui *t 8*. in.. snd trrlTf tteftStt-
Irerp at 1.(0 p. m.
THO^. B. JirfER fro-
Miscellaneous
three quart* of cold water; let U
iufuar one night and ponr the whole
young men, the pride nnd taken more thau a quarter of tut hour urxt “ *<**'<• «>“' b-t tt ,
hope of tho nation, fall before the to write. Mr. Uabhuge dreamt a * ,rr a flfififtW of an hoar. When
snlitle destroyer* faster than they nneceaaioa of event*, and woke up ** **' ^ ,wr -. more
fell during the Southern campaigns. ' , n tiwe ^ ^-ar the eoweliulhig word* • rt ”l u,p ed ‘»m»“ to moiaten a a|tooge
Marriage* are dlminlahing. Homes . „r * a na*er to a n nest ton he ' ’ mhI ***** the horae goes out of the j
are breaking np. Amasement* are ^ j llia pnt tw Wm stable let those part* which
THE DEPOSITORY
O F the Mary land Sunday -school Union
is fomisfo-d witli sn mmarpswvd a*
sortmeog of rrerythin* owsarr-ht thr
onnutuarion of hunday -st-hools and Itihle
I'laasrs. nunprisini; l.ihrtui, *, nuifonulv
fortiod. lrtti-red and numfo red, Lihntfv
and IVemfom l-uuk* of kiwix-Kt t-xvcll,•«<■<■
and tienntr, (jnrwrinn fosik*. (Ttuw books,
SMtnUj-srhool Hymn books. Roll honks,
Music tssiks. Picture Card# and Rewsid
Tickets. CWtoiaiaUrha, Bible iMetinu-
srieo, Srnplnre Mara and other ltookt
desiirned to aid teachers in cxt-lamiu»r
threrkaattaa,
Muperintemients aad Librarians
« h« call not rail to make a selection, nut v
onler by writinc, and may exehang,- for
other books sneli ns after inss-etion do
not nn-et their wislios, provided they are
('atjtkqrm-s will he farwwtflafl»^feHHi
ixtitl, to any aildres* w henere
Adtin-s* Rev ft. GttitesU, See'
Fay ette Street, Baltimore, Md
Aug 18
Sunday
vitiated with vnlgnrity. Echoes of j (table to fbelingH of aaflumtlnn, *o-
profanity All the *ir. The street. by » dream „f a skeleton
- grasjMug hi* throat, whenever he
alepi in a tying itoatare, ami had an
are mined with pitfall* of vice, nnd
crimes are so frequent that they
have ceased to shock or even to
startle na; indeed, we expect an
ncoonnt of a wholesale, robbery, di
)
the liquor—via; between and upon
tire ear*, the neck, the flanks &«■ j
Not only the lady or getitk-auut who
ride* out for pieoanre will derive i
benefit from the walnut leave* thus
attendant to wake him the moment
be sank down. But, though waken- ,
. . ed the moureut he began to sink,; i“ r P»i*di *»* the coachman, tire
vorce case and murder a* «pte* for ^ t { mc anfliraj for a |, m g strugglr ’' ■C MVrr . and all other* who n*e
our breakfast. Many of oor judge* ^ wjth tlM . ,k e u>ton. Another man i' 01 ** during the hot months,
to imagine that it is their Jraamt that he creased the Atlantic, I ’ • —
1—tf
business to protent criminals from I
justice and prosecute persecutor* and
punish witoeaaea until they are afraid
to testify in court. .
“Many of <mr eities are at tire mercy
of banditti who plunder by ordinance
antf pick pockets by tax. The lobby
spent n fortnight in America, and! # » Jforara—The opening
foil overboard when embarking to "houtd be made large and deeji
return; yet hit aterp had not lasted i wwu « b v*» the matter cm be j
mere than ton minute*. swabbed out by a piece of sponge
tied to tt small stick. A portion
Columbia Advertisement*.
of the folktwiog mixtnn- should be
Introduced daily j—Owe ounce of
formp B’ieU.—I think that few of
yonr reader* know that a lamp wick w
is the moat powerful branch of the which ia equally good with those we ! erooaote, one ounce of turpeutiue,
legislature, aud almost any mean ; buy, may be made out of Canton j and two ounce* of oHvo oil. Before
ureennbe moneyed into law. Half IflmaajL Take a strip three timea a* afadyiug the medicine, the envity
at the weoue offieera an susirected wide aa you wish the wick to bet ohil anrnmudtug* should be cleaned
of ulusisi 1 rs llan a,wl it i- ani!n...*nA - - ... *5k ' I n .. .
of npeculatiuo, and it ia rotimatad and M long aa you like. Fold it
that a single interest defrauded the j with the fleecy side in. so that it will
Government out of a million doltera ^ threnLicknr^ ZS baato
laat year. The Governor of the trad
ing State in the Union mw unques
tionably elected by fraudulent vote*,
and the “repeater*" drop through
the mu* iu oar rotten courts like
canary need through a cool arewa.”
.Bigots ever think others moat per
versely and wUfally wrong heeded.
or overcast it up the aide. Almost
every housekeeper has bit* of Canton
flannel which would be aaafjKff
nothing else, and it aavea quite a
little item of expense, to aay nothing
of the conveaienea of being able to
moke a new temp wiek whenever it
ia needed. ! have made all the wick
used hi our family for the teat six or
seven yeora. ,« t s
with soap nnd water, with aa little
friction to the porta aa possible. Iu
more severe coses of poll, even where
deep fistula* or curios of the bone
cxiat, it is proper to sail the aid
of a skillful veterinarian aa *oon
fia possible. Poll can generally be
cured without tearing a stiff neck.
A bushel of plaster per scan, sown
broadcast over clover, will add one
hundred per cent to tta produce.
REMOVAL.
G IHERCKK, Wkofrsiilr and Retail
• Grocer, Columbia, S. t, rpspectful-
ly informi, hi* friend* nail rnntranen, that
he ha* removed to liis new ewtaldlHiunent.
formerly Kinder'* building. »n lt»e ennu-r
of Rirh*nl*on and T*ykir *treets, where
he will rouatsntly keep on hand a well
selected assortment of all artiele* belotqt-
^ 1© hi* line of iHinine**, uneh as Groce-
, Provision*, Tobaccos, lie.
January 20 . 21-ly
1ST A Bill SUIT lass
BOOT. SHOE, AND HAT HOUSE.
WBOlSSAJJt JXD MSTAJl
i>X4taa is • mf •; t
B^TS, 8HW AHH HATS,
>* »» nun, OOI.VSBA norn. xtocX,
COLUMBIA, S, C. *’
Jfljiia,.” ' io—tf
Adv
W nv i* U tlint «» osuqr rhadrra**
under the ape of fi'Ccreirel ire
a force projswtimt of children "th*
that ace, ha* been a stddect of n»wj*
and withont a #*ti*f*rtoty raw* ttttt-
tMilled, it i* eerfain. -Ji-.
Also, tt is knmvu that worm* cn* »
the hnnutii si stem from it* Tniowl™*'
ey; therefore, iiatent*. esperidlyiBjaraf
w ho are more constantly withttwir tm
dten. ran not be too observragatt**
first myo>ptm*s of warm* ;.f«r as ssret),**
tls-j exist, thCy can be safely and criw -
ly removed from tin- moot drltentr tm***-
tif- the tiateiy use of B. A. f xhnt.***’
V enaifutte- '
It is jvtfoetlv harnde#*,
sasEisvass.
ntmosi safety to children of »B«
Worm Couti-ctions, made mot
pnrpiwi- of pU-sfiuK.tlie pafofoj
oveteonting tlie dtwtse, have bee#
factored all over the cotmtry. MttJ
short lease of life is nearly e.
and II. A. Fahm-stoek’s V«
tiunes to grow in favor daily
(Mmhoii.—Should ooearion .
to purchase If. A. Palmeetre*'
that has been so himait
1888, ami purrhatwra mast iusnatoqgg
it, if they do not wisl, to Itftvc,** «■**
tiiai forced troon them. . '
is the
foteed upon
SCHWARTZ A HASI.ETT,
(Foramrty B. A FshMriockfr **
- Sole lW-ietors. VitfobwSfa n
Itec lfi 1S6D .■
A Good Chano®
ffVFKERED to intredi
" Knitter. Ha* one ne.
^"rvThit kn ^
t van be kml
with far las*
* standard, do"
lo
' 4
Jaa
pIpHgy
s* - ‘ iM*-
3
BVEB
Kpr one sq>
First ii-
One ■ It"! |
three iu
Six moot
» Tarrtre ti
On adv,
upwards a
five sqfiaii
of ton squa
and of oi
per eenf. «
rates.
OWtttan,
ton cent*
advance.
PospiV
TV Mem
ter* sltonid
1 '
L
Genu
“Faitir
creases fai
“We ai
faith, win
all the
ehthlrei! t
ns lienetiv,
“If you
it will be
not to lain
grow bold
l-’or how
roM-fHl aT^
tains no ti,
it J"
“Christ
two tlivei
place, he i
is neeessar
ly. be lias
siu, deat a
respect ii
auy out- to
he has giv
baptism,^
Christ—tii
this—asst;
twinkling
his sins.
removed,
more in
*<i red J, Gits
“Gear ft
en, ami 1
before you
“We ur,
wi iu fai tii
its uianit,-.-
ever, ajutl i
bajitud.’ t
borly, and
grace iu tii
the world
this fiuallv
the beot-iit
bring the i
preaehin"
“‘In Ch
eisiim avsi
etpetebu
law,l but
should sa\
of being
and there
be an eiu
nature mu:
w ill follow
“Coina-r
says, Jolm
born again
dom of c
■works wii
himself n»N
«ut natun
ttstn, win ,
litis renew
“The gre
Powerful a
Be, as visi
in tho sou;
•nib itself
boon! bear
it bears, it
it change,,
fete itself
It is eon,
manifest;
where it
le*vos of
M Au cut J
ture is nee,
“The re!;
a pernteion
«T Graf iv 1
fiMSfough ti
lap.”
“Guard
again: