The Lutheran visitor. (Columbia, S.C.) 1869-1904, December 21, 1870, Image 4
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THE LUTHtTRAN VISITOR. COLOMBIA. S. C.. DEC^H^ttl• 21,
4*
Old
that dear 1
through all ’
•weet familiar face
’shorn© appears!
old trees breida*|ie door
tlwlr branches wide: Li
The river v anfor* as of yor >,
WWi SWMftly marrutiring id©;
The distant lulls look green uid gay.
The flowers are blooming i viM,
g looks glad ti-fov,
a child.
the years have flown, |
*1 fifigfc i m
d, endearing t4m>,
endly hand;
smile tail meet,
call,
£
I flat my
I pause to
Come
through t .e hall;
■■■■[ . .. T
Bnt silence all around me reigns, * ~
A thill creep-. through my heart—
No trace of those I loVe rem line,
qn bidden start.
Whajt though tfo sunbeam fall as fair;
3 the budding flowers
Still shed their fragrance
Within lii e’s golden houi
Hie loving bhes that clostei
These wails may not rest
Voices that tilled 1a*
W^fl greet my soul no mot
And yet I q^iil the dear old
With sio\g and lingering
As when we kiss a clay*
And leave it with the
-i ■
“You staked your penny and won
six, did yon not F
“Yea, I did.”
“Yon did not earn them, and 'they
were not given yoo} yon have won
them just aa gamblers win money.
You have taken the first step in the
path; that man has gone through it,
and you can see the end. Now. I
a<1 vise you to go and gite him the
six cents bock and ask him for your
penny, and then stand squaw? with
the world, an honest boy again.”
He had hung his head down, but
raised it quickly, and his bright,
■look, as he said, “I’ll do it* will
not soon be forgottou. He ran back,
and soon emerged 1 from the ring,
looking happier
touched his cap
antly as he ran
comrades. That
boy.
the air,
here
cur
finer
The Family
PARENTS.
i
ever. He
bowed pleas-
to join his
an honest
1
CHILDREN.
For tie Lutheran Vlaitor.
Quicksands.
“Mother, Jamie
these cards to
says that they
What did he mean
Smith gave me
with, aud papa
a quicksand.—
said Willie Ed
and iauthof
children
nit ion of 1
ratal Duti<
kre
je
divine!
to “bri
nurture
.» Hei
the paren
by a divi
or paren
appointed
g up their
and admo-
the right
duty is
811 peril li
tre God's
directs theln to train
g fbr himself, for his
glory. Ajccordingly,
iy, parents
man force,
agents. *“
theiJ
kingdom
already in jj jtheir infan
dedicate their children Jto God in
the holy ordinance of Christian bap
tism. Thus they testiljy- publicly,
that,their children are, ii the high
est sense, the property cjf God, and
give, at the same time, tfceir solemn
that fey their prayers, their
instructions
and example, they will
do aQ they can, in hum
upon divine grace, to rea
dren for God and for hea
It is thei: ■ jdnty, there
echise their children. A
duty! they lit
Iren
beftofe they ! flan peruse
the catechism for themsel
a child Tirmfltby knew
Scriptures. Just as the
child unfoldfi hnd devel
its capacities for the
mst enter ejren
their children may be al
troth are ea
cious seed
scattered n
and tender hi
The spirit
veieps itself
shooli
reliance
their chil
li.
•re, to cat
npon this
before
to read,
d study
From
■the Holy
1 of the
itself, as
ption of
the pre
word be
the divine
the soil of Ijthe young
irt.
if the child
<*>
should be pte-ocoupied
meats of gospel truth,
seeds of sin lodged in its
stitution might be prevt
germinating add prodneir
fruits Of sin apt
dren
with
as it de-
8 being,
the ele-
thus the
oral coa
ted from
the moral
. Chil
should; fee made afcqnainted
God, his attributes and will,
made to n iderstand
God as heir crea-
as revealed in the Holy qcripturee.
They should
their relution
tor, preservef | and xedeei ler; and
ako their .relation to the church
of Christ, by Virtue of tiieir bap
tism.
The privileges, as wel - as the
duties, involved in this las ; relation,
should be clearly explain sd and se-
rionsly impressed upon the minds of
childftn. yftiev should be: made to
understand “that they are not their
own, but belong to thei * faithful
Saviour, JesnS Christ, who with his
precious blood has fully sa .isfied for
all their sfns.” Such a r< presenta
tion of. tiieir relation to thjB church,
together with; the other jpecessary
gosj
der the di
richly
fruits
World. |
iilST'l i • s
lay be
blessing,
vine , bl
productive of the
ot righteousness.
YOUTH.
un
become
precious
hristian
1*2 1.... .1—.
1 ■ . .. -|*v
A •»
‘*Give me a
ii »d
one of
oVdr a
That
boy
t and you
ve you six
pitch
aud if i catches
sent*.”
fair enoug , so the
ring. He stepped back to
tOk
tossed his ring,
of the nails.
;4Wili
again,
i *
“Six.
two
isfied wr
probably not
was doing
a cent ar d
and it caught one
■u
took a
a stake,
to piteh
near
. . ) >
standing
and now, fe
about and
laid his band
:“My la4, ti
in gambliqfe*
■7 - \ 1;
er, and
ut into
take six nn
six ^ntar
the ans
were
off, .!
he had d me, and
an ides that he
A gi ntleman
watch >d him,
had tlm > to look
his
yonr
lesson
wards, as he walked into his mother's
sitting room one morning.
“Well, my son,” answered his mo
ther, as she laid her sewing aside
and smiled pleasantly upon her boy
as be stood looking earnestly at her,
waiting for a reply, “Don't yon re
member your eodsin Ernest getting
into a quicksand last summer when
we were at the seashore f*
“Oh yes, I know all about that,”
said he. .
“Well what did Ernest say the
quicksand resembled 1* “Why solid,
safe ground,* said Willie.
“Just so my son, mid he rambled
aloug and thought all was safe and
firm, until ho felt his feet sinking in
the soft, yielding sand, and then he
said that he had no, power to help
himself; the more be struggled, the
deeper he sank, and the mass of
moving sand would soon have swal
lowed up the dear boy, if the good
fisherman, Peter, had 1 not saved him
by his poles, which Ernest grasped,
and by holding on fruit, be was
drawn out upon the hard beach.
Now this is what your papa meant;
these cards appear, pinnies*, and
pretty to play with, but when yon
know their names, and a few games
which people call ianoorat, there
arises a desire to play for some
thing, as boys play marbles, ‘for
keeps.' This leads to gambling, late
hoars, and dissipation, and thus
this quicksand swallows up many a
young man who thought a simple
game of cards was *aft, ootid ground.
I have known many handsome for
tunes 'and plantations lost in this
quicksand. There are moral quick
sands all along your pathway of life,
my son, which are to be avoided and
shunned, if you would escape de
struction.*
“Mother, take these cards ami
bam them.up. I don't want to get
into that qnicksand, and tell me
some more quicksands if you please,*
said Willie.
“Do you see George Jones on the
other side of the street f* said his
mother. “How he staggers I and
his clothes, see how ragged they
are ; his face bloated^ red, and sense
less. Well, he was once a fine young
man; he had a fine form, a kind
mother and sister He fell into a
terrible qnicksand; he began to take
a glass of wine once in a while—it
seemed sa/s, solid ground, to take a
little trine. When I used to tell him
of his danger, he would say, “I am
all safe/ After a while he would
take a "dram every day, he said for
dyspepsia—but it was because the
qnicksand of drunkenness had al
ready gotten hilh fast In a month
or two he went off with some young
men on what he called ‘a spree,' ftnd
after that he began to drink openly.
His mother died heart-broken; be
paid 110 attention to his farm, and
has now drank up that; his sister
has gone away, unable to bear his
disgrace ; he is almost swallowed np
in this dreadful quicksand.*
“Did nobody try to help him out,
mother F '
iff ? 5 ■ * *
“Oh yes, his friends held out to
him the pole of the .Temperance
pledge; he took 1 hold of it, but
broke it up. Then the pole of Love
and Friendship was held to him—
that he threw away. Then the pole
of Respectability, and that he laugh
ed wt. Last week he had the <fottr-
fern tremens, and now the poor fellow
will not last much longer. There is
another qnicksand here, the dancing
school of Monsieur La Fitte.*
^Why, mother, that can't be one;
that looks so safe and solid, and
makefi the boys * mid girls graceful,
improves their manners, and fits
them for society,* said Willie.
“Well, my dear, if that was the
end of the dancing school, it would
not be patronised very well. Tree,
those are the reasons usually given,
but when the young ladies learn the
dances taught, there are balk and
parries given. This leads to late
criminate society. No choice Is per-
mttted at a bait ; you mast dance
with young men and women yoo
would blush to associate with at
your own home. This quicksand
of gaiety driven away all serious
thoughts, and what appears safe,
solid ground is nothing but a quick
sand of immorality, after all*
“1 am glad that there are but few
qufekaands for girts,* said Lucy, who
sat by the window listening to her
mother.
Mrs. Edwards smiled and said,
“Do yoo remember what I was talk
ing about yesterday, Lucy t*
“Yes, mother, Annie told a story
—what she said was only a ‘white
1W aud you told her to wb*t ‘white
lying* led."
“Yea, that is the most dangeron*
and. deoeitAil quicksand of all,* said
Mrs. Edwards. “It seems nothing
wrong—all m/e, seHdgrown*—fruit to
tell a little fib that ‘don't hurt any
body.* Of course, no oae expects to
tall a downright lie, when they ves
ture npon that unstable ground, but
a fib, to evade the truth, to get out
of trouble, to equivocate, to exag
gerate, to make a story ‘Mg'-three
are all different ways of lying.*
“Oh I mother,* exclaimed Lucy,
“is that not too hard to say r •
“No, my child 5 young i*ople do
'Wot have the sin of lying property
shown to them, and that is why they
say, ‘it is no harm to tell n story.*
I have heard yaur papa say that,
when a boy, he one day threw a
stone and hit a bird that was sitting
on a fence stake; be waa slated with
his skill, aud picking up the bird,
ran to show your grandma what a
marksman he was. He told her how
he had killed it, but embellished hie
story by saying, ‘When I found the
burd on the ground, the stone was
lying on top of the bird.' Instead
of laughing at the absurd story,
his good mother's face became very
grave. She took him by the band,
fixed her clear gray eye upon him,
and said, ‘(’barite, you have told me
a lie; was that exactly so f Then,
when he confessed that be added
that part to ‘make his story tell
nice,' she talked to him about what
a terrible quicksand ’lying' was, how
hard to get out of, bow the efforts
of friends could hardly save a poor
boy or girt that got Uito it, and how,
finally, the word of a liar coaid not
be trusted, even if he toki the thing
that was true. Your papa says it
was the last untruth that be ever
knowingly told.*
Mificeflaneoua,
Tbs Msaufastar* ot Jewelry
. . | «OHO» > * ; *
The manufacture of jewelry is of
Very ancient origin, and was known
0 most of the nsrioos of antiquity,
the Egyptians wore rings aud chains
if unique workmanship, and they
were wall acquainted with the mys
teries of the crucible and the blow
Aaron, lb# Jewish High
I’nest, wore a bmast plate set with
precious atones. He was also adorn
td with a oareaaet, or collar of Jew-
fill *The people of Tyre were also
Skillful workers ia gold and silver,
Toyed
nple,
rious
usually relieved by engraved scroll
I work, or other era tollidi meat. En
amelled wort ia now < quite
known as run is
I ularty beautiful.
Li watt appointsrt jewelry
Besides, many of the larger
I employ experts who are constantly
in search of now-in** ia preerims
or now and fasdM styles
ufacture of articles belonging
to
trad*.—
udfedhn*
Letcher, Lextawtea, Ya: C
sight, ( olum
’W&t,
Lit
April • 1809
l need
byed
m of
life to
THI
“I
“Ob* said Willie,
know a girl that came near getting
into that quicksand last night.* lie
looked at Lory, who hung down her
head and blushed.
“How was that V said the mother.
“Why we were playing at Jack
straws, mother,* said Lacy. “Wil
lie had gotten ever so many aud I
had jnat begun to draw out straws,
and be said I had goggled, ami I
said I dkTnt*
“Well did yoo joggle f*
“Yea uia’m v I did ; but I thought
it was not a real, rare enough lie, to
say so. 1 won't do it again; I did
not thiuk it was a quicksand *
“Ah, my dear children, many
grown-up -people forget that there
ia a dreadful sentence passed upon
all those that love or make a lie.*
• “They shall have their part in the
lake that burnetii with fire and
brimstone,* *gi<i Willie, slowly and
solemnly. “Are these all the quick
sands, mother T
“No indeed, my boy. There U a
mean, low one, railed ‘stealing,'
which ends in robbery and murder.
It does not seem so bad to take nn
apple or a peach that ia not yours,
to pick up a wbip-lnsh or strap some
one ban lost, and keep It, or to slyly
pocket a stray emit found oa the
floor; but that ia the thin top emot.
This is a very shaky and watery
qnicksand; those who got into it
most generally do not rail fbr any
help; it swallows them up fast, and
the end is the gallows or the peni
tentiary. Then there is the quick
sand called ‘swearing.' Some boys
and girts nay, ‘(Vmfoond it? ‘Hang
it P ‘Dogs take It P and such low
expressions, who would be aston
ished if you told them that they
were standing on the edge of this
quicksand. This soon leads to the
name of God being used, and you
know the commandments, WiHle,
about taking the fiord's name jn
vain. This qnicksand holds those
that get iuto it very fast and tight
Sometimes the pole called the Church
is not strong enough to pull them
out, and the pole of Prayer is the
only effectual one.*
“Mother, how non I ever avoid
these quicksands,* said Willie.—
“How will I know, when all looks
safe and solid ground, that it la
soft and shaky f*
“My boy, the Psalmist says, ‘Thy
Ward is a light unto my path f that
will show you the quicksands. Take
that Word for your guide, and It
will lead you to Jesus, who says, *1
am the way, the truth, and the life.’
‘My son, give me thine heart.'*
' 1 B.
doru
great
led It
f the
ry is
we tn
are
is or
with
land.
r the
At
aired
•r bv
It is
have
It ia truly wonderful to witness
the nicety of manipulation that is
etnplow'd in the embellishmcat of
brooches, bracelets, ear rings, and
all articles that require ornate 4is
piny. Filagree, or fnlafd work, Is
PflilfcjteHy * difficult of execution.
Sometimes precious stones, pearls,
fee., are wrought together with each
minute patterns as to require sev-
era! hundred pieces to complete the
whale jewel. These must be fitted
with great exactness, and the moat
expert lapidaries are required to do
it*.
Htnnns set apart far thia purpose
are -first eat with a revolving dies
of trim, coated with emery, hut well
oiled- After being thus roughly
shaped, each piece fs separately at
tached to the “gum stick* with
strong cement, and, held in this
way, ia ground on a rapidly re
volving and finer disc. When made
of suitable shape, the several pieces
are set In the proper apertures with
aMfiti After the cement has hard-
coed, the lapidary smooths down
the rough onter surface of the peb
bles by grinding, in this way re-
duciag the stone to the level of the
metal which surrounds it. It ia sub
sequently polished, and is then ready
for sale.
^IPgaferYeragjNnMra
L If you raise your own horses,
which every fanner should do, re
in* tuber that colls which are com
fortably stabled, and fed on mixed
grain, ground the first winter, wQl
grow without bring checked for
nearly two years; whrrcaa, if they
are treated under the old hardening
! system, as It is called, (which means
! throwing half euotigh straw or oorti
stalks over a feaee on the mock or
] snow, for them to lire or die on,)
i their growth ia *top|ied at the be-
| ginning of winter, and is not renew
led otvtfl the feTlowing June. This
! check they never recover from, and
f the loas ia a serious one to the owner
I Of the eolta.
J 3. If yon rata* rattle, aud ran not
afford to give the calves as much
milk from the maCheta as they want,
I separate them when the calves are
; oae day old, aad feed them on sktm
: ared milk and corn meal, not cooked.
If skimmed milk la sraroe, mix it
i with hay tea. Oattlq thas raised are
; wry superior to those wh
uacmgh "rife to giva fl
bellow day aad night fer
A If yen
ia a very
nothing will drive the fat off aa
animal so rapidly aa fright. It ia,
therefor*, of mote importance to
keep your flork quiet, and to protect
them from alarm of every sort, than
feeding or anything «-Uw that caa be
done for them.
4. If yoo ratar hogs, remember
the bread ia not everything. If yoo
bay a $30 Cheater or Berkshire pig,
With it* tail tightly copied, and turn
it oat to shift far itself among the
breed at borne called “root hog or
din,* ia a short tune its tail will
beromu aa straight aa a rule; and
if k is left ia this condition, iu
bock will anna me what is called the
rrnaor back farm, and m the course
of tiare its none will become aa
pointed as those which have de
pended upon this employment for
life. The secret-of snrccas with the
bog lies in two thing*—first, a good
breed ; secondly, more than enough
of good feed.
A If you raise poultry, remember
that old twvedeni produce the
aad strongest young. If
are hatched when inserts are abun
dant, they should have vary little
feed given them; indeed, if the
ran*. » . K...I oms thry .hould Dot.
be fed at alL Chickens are not v/vret 8L; Fa
profitalde if they are hatched before
inserts are abundant? if they are,
animal food of some sort must be
provided for them. Carbonaceous
food they should not have before
they are ten day* old. It is the
chief source of diseeeee with chick
phs. We were more sncocaaful this
year than ever before, not having a
single cane of disemir of any kind,
which we believe waa the result of
not feeding ibem on carboaaceooa
food.
1 If you aow*gratu or plant seeds
of any kind, remember that deep
planting has often caused crops and
gardens to fail; but shallow (dank
ing, if the soil ia in proper order,
never canard a failure.
7. If you plant fruit tree*, remem
ber they too must be planted shal
low ; but the earth below sod
around the tree must be too**.
Baltimore AdWttoement^
vxAiroat vthffufit
*. ’
SrVTEN GOLD MEDAIB /
HAVB JUST Bfifiir AVAIDED TQ
VMA9* St* 8JTJMVVt
THB BEST PIANOS NOW MADE
n* torn ream, Vow To** u4 PtobMphls
rises* / w*q
OfUs mmd Horn Warmwsm», No. «
North Liberty, near Haiti more
... Baltimore, Maryland. ,4
pririleae «f sadremps
withia twelve months, if not entirely ast-
bfaetory to the purrhaaer.
IfeesSMi-haad riamw aad Farior Organs
always on bund, at fr»»m #30 to $•«••
Mrferom wfiefiare one Piimot iu mot: Gen
c * cr
Columbia, fi t? $ H Burweft
tots. Charisma,! C|
for a Circular |
Aeaft
Is solicited.
34—tf
WM. KNAfifi A CO..
tustractvubs or
-er
Ot
Q. ftC.BfiUroad.
fi-C-
Ci.
# a 0 * * ■ ■
Leave Columbia
Of.
!
+ **r
iiiuialiii
fwbw
as• -
•**%*«
■ S» Jkj
Arrive at Greenville..gjJJJ
Down. ”
Leave Greenville g. t
? , Bmtmi^.
. * pfs^.1 wg
/•••*
• .is wirg
I
J| Mkfem i
JOHNH.1I0HL
General
Alfe&aMroiuL
ld<1 Iffar May 1«k, <l» W
rasiSFy 5
Leave Colaul
Arrive at
Leave Cl
Arrive at
it,,
* »f|
seado'oofo mono • m
-***r**r.«w4fe|a
......... j mss
Mi
on • * * do #•,
Arrive at A
Leave A
Arrive at
m S * kt
Vi? 1 nlntiaUm “»*v**I*>»
AJss * ' ‘ to* *-• . • * • • » 000 feS fi fa
ytstbsasfi bneinma—........—7fas*
Leave CharftmXao
Irave Angusto... 6
| Arrive at ChfiuuMfiafc...-«A^^....ejfiShus
Catmint Train. ,,
GRAND SQUARE AND UPRIGHT
PIANO FORTES
_JSJ
| Ki
! lean Ci
! Arrive at
Leave C
Arrive at 1
AW fa
er. tU.
\ ud ms 1
TONE
I a* grist psrity of l
uamfrnm ms MOn
TOUCH
dssiv, aad raUwdy Set h
I is as aaaj h*u«. Is
WORKMANSHIP
4 Sis
.............tl Msu
J Wga
*!Fa
H. T. PEAKE. Om.
C. C.
General Freight*
Itunlrta, S. C^ Drf.!
Col.
Traint North.
pdsyad m
tW k« osr
Ws *o*W call qisc
fs r.OHx) f
Mime 14,
U*t bre* capital run
fOlbhflf Bl |$ k*fi*p 0Ofe«
risnas k*T# 1
ImU sa4 tbs
I k>
Saw
ls*ss *s4 ft^wnre Uiwafo
I ISA whaeti torstg fas
Agomy far Cret an 4
Pari ir Orgsm tad Obsra
ml
Seed
Obsrck Hsr-
I
Do not let any oae advise you to
cut the tap root off of your fruit
tree*. Do not trim the tree* up.
The beat iinformed nuraerymeu know
that the limbs nearest the ground
bear most alHiiidantly, but they my
that for the awke of appearance Urey
trim op trees. But this hi a matter
of taste, for which their ia no stan
dard.
8. One scrap more : We must call
the attention of our young.farmers
to the tact that wet ptswing has
bran the cause of more poor land
and poof farmers than all ofiber
causes combined. All we can say
here u|wn this subject is, we urge
aud entrant farmers and gardeners
never, under any circumstances, to
plow or coHirate the land wet.
Take up a handful of earth from
the bottom of the Iuituw, give it
* bard squeeae, and let it fall on
the ground; if if crumbles, plow on,
bit if it does not, <lo not move the
plow- another inch.;
The chopping or grinding of grain
fur stock ia a saving of at leant
twenty-five percent.
WM KXAil a VO.
K*. MS Wssi BsHissorv fid. assr Kmsv.
Bahts***-. Md.
May 13 1809 40— ly
CHARLES P. STEVENS,
(Dumarear to 8. S. Store*. * Son,)
Maaufarturer of Furniture aad Dealer
Is Lumber, *
MORE, Md.
^ . No. t fi. cel*
— .«.*»•. Factory, No. • Low fit.;
Lumber Yards, Eden. Eutaw snd Front
Sttorto [flepc tl 4-ly.
P. B. SADTLER & SONS,
OPTICIANS AND
ir A-xesB atasutax.
Baltimore 9|2 Street,
* S9XJl«T0il£o
rnmam or
WATCHES A FINK JEWELRY,
imnonruu or
SP»CTACL*8, SPOONS. FO&KA AND 8IL-
TKE WAfil G1VULALLY.
May 13 1809 46-tf
Arrive at (*harlot«e, N. C^.
Mtiduf dose ronreOim
of North ( arohna Rood at all 1
- •*»»
• 1 Vys
(•ft
‘ “>»•
Traint South.
Iajvf rWrisdte. S. C,...
( besisr....... ......
* Jfj
•* C
Arrive at
Makiag dose]
of ('eotral and
Savannah,
... * *»■
...U ii«a
...it mm
Ui
... e My*
with Tufa
Rail nod* fa
fa
U rn
It bask, and
Sooth aad Wsa
Con on afl N«k
odBfa
North, have
of five (•)
K ^
C. BOrKNIGHT, Ssg'L
R. Dourr, General Freight ml
BLCE RIDGE RAILROAD.
BAINS oa tbe~R»ue Ridge R«fared
ran daily, Hwwdsyn excepted:
Lesre Audersna at 4 Mf u
Arrive at WalhaUa si \
Leave WalhaUa at 9
Arrive at Anderwra at 4 Wt* 1
Through Tickets Berth.
Gen't Hnperintomdenft Ofiee.
GrrmriUe d Colombia JL K. < "<■ ■
Columbia, a C n Sept. 4, lgM]
O N ami after this _
eta to New York,
timore. Wwshhigton ai
be purchased at the following Satire
00 this Road, vis.s Greenville. Andrram
Abbeville, Cokesbury, Xewherty and M
JOHN H. MORE. Gen'l 8*p\
M. T. BAULrrrr. Orel Tlehet Agmt
RUPTURE CURED.
Marsh's Radical Cure Truss.
to ot
last.
IHK
T l
known for the cure
Hernia or Rupture. This
eedved thSS sanction ot the
physicians of
iMwitatr to
aad relief of
Trass has ra
the most eminent
thia country, who do not
recommend it to those afflicted
Hernia os being superior to all
It b the only Truss that will retain the
fa its
Of thfa we
entire satisfaction to all who may come
under our treatment.
silk elastic abdominal belt* for
falling of the womb, aad as
to the bach and abdominal
Anklots, knee caps aad stock
ing* for varicose veins,'ulcers and weak
JaKfa.
SbooUler hraoea for fadie*, treats and
children, for the core of stooping ot the
shoulders snd a* a chast expander.
PUe tnstmments. the most superior
article la wre—light, easily sdhwted and
effectual. Instruments for all physical
deformities, curvature of the spine, bow
logs, dab foot, Ac. I -
I * M 1
/MfiPRBi
proved
8. MAK8H A CO.,
No. 3 Holiday Street,
Baltimore, Md.
June 23 43—tf ‘
W HY b it that m
under the age of five yean! W
a large proportion of children die o»4«
toot age, has been a onlfieet of
aad without a satii *
tained. it b certain.
Also, it b known that
took
it* earibot fafto-
, fer so 1
be safely and <
ly removed fn«n the most delicate iafito
by the timely nse «rf B. A. Fahneto***
Vermifuge.
ermifuge.
1 It Is perfectly
mercury,
sition. and
For
$I000?2& R !W
H * ’ pika, that DeBmg»
to ears, «
fails
, .1 ■. - fa C-
else, and has ci
standing. Sol
• 1.
Sept
.being a purely etgeUM* tomt*
rwl may be administered with »
| afety to cbfldreti Ot all agto
Worm Confecfaarea, made more
purpose of pleasing the palate thsn o
overcoming the discose, hove been re
factored ail ore* the coon try, bat
short lease of life b neariy
and B. A. Fahnestock’* YerwStsge «to
tinuce to grow fa favor daily.
gt&FKTtat*
font ha* been *0 favorably
facy P do not wish to bare aa ire8*-
tion forced upon them. . ..
8CHWASTE fa HA8LKTT,
(Formerly B. A.Fahnratock’* »*•
' \ Sole Prepnetof*. IHtt^burgn. •*
Ifoc 16 I860
the piles
■.•araJsjgj
■ ■ " . * T
' al *
c i tHUL ^ d f - *
UDE & MU, a
CMh,
# *
JPU-I
3 «>
the*
(ot
"X,
oon»•»•!**
re* a*#• • R
mwm* - 5
when faofa than m
for Sight Word*. r
Postage—Five
SfeA tore
j eg - d* * . **** fV» »»h
mm » mm j '■■
Religious.
I
\
:- v Having bad hetoveti 1
depart from thia worbi
got avoid following: them
thoughts; and our Un>n
naturally take the form
ttoufi. Do , they exist fa J
grave! Are they hap;»y|
Shall we era them ajpain ? I
That bumreai spirit* ex. |
state. Jia- < .
aad also frequently *
by the mass of mask:
have been only a few t
Sfidduoees in amteui an-
era time*, aud these ha
mostly, if not entirely,
illuminated by Ravefatio: -
less, they have been dra r
a spirit that affects flfisgu . '
lore* ooutnulictaon : or r 4 , I
been driven by the fear
which revelation declare' t*
future portion of the wh k j
denial of thfa earnest wiaii I
V
V
— «
w*
of won science.
The ScritJturi* vev> I
teach that human *pin:> |
a disembodied state. Sov |
they but utter what run j
sriucMvely feel, ami feclu
be true ; excepting, of cot;
whose existence fa embittc ,
iaaqp|)artable weight of U f
conscious worthlu*siH>s m
They feel that it iutd 1*-,
them, that they had aw U
bw u. ^ 1 Vi hapa, how ew 1,
desire vf mankind for it
toore was never a suffiri
for obex-faking the expectat
it waa an admirable sul
mao* UM-ut.vi Qooelitqti m.
iug aa true the dnetrub
apirit’a exfatcuce hi a «ii-
stote, whenever^ if ever, t
trine should be revealed.
theivf««e, bad mental pi; \
wlu» would explain thfa
wop, almost universally feltl
tu.il mnacboily, an j
the u illusion cal ag
tuoe, hoppeutd to imagine r
<qurita of the dead still « f
he told bk iniuginatioM 1
they happened to >\
WUh ifc, aud that they in t
edit dowu to otborti As «
tkq explaiu the fact ib.*
beta ran thing* tin
of cause ami effect, 01 pt 1
and grand mid *
»utnne> % noppomng that |
to imagine am 1 |
wnd then taught <w|
btib <1^ .
How has it happened that, t* |
yeat% nearly the w ill
faao fjwuUy have been phv
thfa imagination »iu|,jh8vc } .
it, while thmwoTKfa of -i>Ml |
umtirena aa good as Gfia, ifj
fak bfai have new wNbF
*®oond time f | v
mast for an a*la
to foeet^a soaut' v
thm the hearts ot in.
wfafol not have mrva»le«t
and existed so long- Ycu
this mfapuitkm. 1
_ . ^ v _ ■ o.
W* have bo
♦‘Aisteae© 0 f our own spirit
with pw fan
fit life! to 1
pbawsn spirits until wo ur>
to the t xiatonve of th
we inter that they h.
lL
Kr
■i
\
IPCffaj?' .