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9 “Unto U. i 0hU4?i*> it * * Open thy portals, life, behold ! A Kiugr^n th«> Hi* coart would Ah !; who nhnll toll His worth ! A KJm- k*fav< wborto glorious ^ And gaegcmis splendor, shrink The hleaner kings of entth. 1 sight law He, * > ? Iu royal slate, |Xyw through the gUtv Dfocends, and how 1 renlv choir before Hitn W|vr Ah rvajly ihcru He stauds, all rouui 1 The blights of heaven with song rewound, And jptUius bestrew Hi* way» But alf: how strange ! as near Ajpim»aching, all this sacred mirth ■ ; Orot a dim, and £a<Jc^ away ; Add pafm*. * * ™ ilSSSiW ' jLnd thrortes, behold, * Ail, all are gone, ^uld is found uloiu ,Xo splgtglor here adwn> His brow ligate.we hear not uow *w His^Wd supplies, i who Fimleth grace. Infant's rvsthtg-pUae, • and be wise! sec. tow He, *1 fitliin us, mild, id like a child, is work begins, And heart for heaVen thus daily wi 111 "8? - ■ ' ,mmM married *, they win, a* a? make excellent husbands ; they are all at work trying to win meatus. They ore men wl|o would he easily improved by recognition, and by bringing them into good, intelligent dams and Miscellaneous, Tare the Young Men' i in c;i$ionf$l H.UioU curious facts, no m States, to wh allusion is made in c rind the uewspape which fibirtrate the scarcity of men men there 1 a gathi jouug Six 'times Captain class. At summer resort, the >/ yotmg men mid the plentifulness of younj matters^of no tone uld* happen to be, in g as this, half a bf unexjceptionablf jx>- tbat nuwbprof omen in a coiie thirty-six women ve* pecuiiariy ladies of a traveling lude. Tb« Imtieoof a travelingjjpar- tyin Murope, are, as a rule, Stan overwhelming majority. The jfbet • that braox are scarce in *H public Is! one Hvith which the ytung women of the Hasten StoMsji are painfull*. familiar. There are n any s to be offered for jftiis ion of the sexes in ire of work «tndy J *4iion the men, at a q£ .Ijfe when their time isndt ^ f * 5»1* % ^ ^ j s 's' Htjthem^tisposml, being the.pn: one. If it ferieie only in the re ion that yotmg Wien the fact would n<ri be rticularly. They oi gbt “ g to do, aud enopgh them from spen(tiig,a dldl of time in the pursuit of It is a startling fact, the young men of tlie osc regarded as belon. summe am class, o • id the fi iaft t IP towns tels. T MSastetU am iu class, are as scarce in they are at the summer 1 marriageable girls ilies of the best ijerwhelmiugly larger mg 1* bers thawarefthe marriageableyofen£ iusu tn£jb£ same position. thfhgofShis is due to the ra made byi the late war among ranks of? he young men. So more is f ie to the emigration wifid’ of I jroat numbers of tb that, iofA >me of the Western S outnumber the woraei tiay be, mt to establish a ma; iu the number of tlu> Class to which we all social ci tern city and con cing great uumbe and well-educated y 1 which 4hefe* can found a b rilliant or even particularly desirabldynateh among the men.' trt this fe one of the most Miiutu* Hhittga conne#*! M+iol condition; and it has do with the nneasinesl of anifested in various wfcys ie* g with which to fin np life, And make It fe gwificant. But Ms have a practical reason^ for calling attention to this matter i to proseiit in a st ing^to a large nnmbel nsunlly assigned to the iu society. While! ‘ girls are bemoaning ’fche ug men, and the ivho are marriageable marriage, there is a men whom they do all, yet who will fui kt generation its met of power, of position, It ife not the sons of ioh wjm rill, as a rule, icnmin rich. the roeii Wbatevf ■ tl»o in«*<4 # ! fW i There etcry E: towu, women, m with ohr :> world women, meut re] young second t society; yet they are as little no ticed as if they were so many doge. Virtuous young men from the coun try go into the dty, am) live for years withont any society, and regarded by the fashionable women with indifference or con tempt \ but those youug men have a hold on tb^fntoro j and when their success it woo, in whatever Held or enterprise it may be, the fashionable will be glad to claim them as belong ing to their own number. If there is anything in all these facta, thus brought into association, which iioitits out a duty to “our best society,* and urges its perform ance, even by scliish motives, it will be readily perceived. The hope of the country is in this second grade of young men. They ought to have better social privileges. What better capital can a man have than youth, virtue, intelligence, health, mid en terprise t What better claim than these cau any man present for ad mission into good society f To yomtg men of this class, now almost wholly neglected, the society of educated and accomplished women would be a rare and fruitful privilege—fruitful to themselves, and quite as fruitful to those whose, courtesies they re- ceive.—tfcribner’t Monthly. . .Good Farming ia a Nutshell. The far-famed Bakewell, of I»mh ley, Leicester, England, the founder of the new I^rfeoster sheep, ami the man who lived a century before his day, used to tell au anecdote with exceeding high glee of a farmer of the olden school and ohlen times. This farmer, who owned and occu pied 1,000 acres of clay hind, bat poor in point of money, liad three daughters lookiug their father very hard in the face for money. He went to Bakewell to know what to da for them. Bakewell told him to keep his money and give each daughter some land, and make it known that he would do so, ami he would very soon lessen his family at borne. He then mode it known that he would give his eldest daugh ter 250 acres of laud. It need hardly be added that the lady had forth»ith plenty of beaux to choose from; the father's house was hannted with young men, and site soon was mar ried, and the father gave her the portion that he had promised, but no mousy, and be found, by a little more speed and better management, the produce of his form increased. Three years after he made it known that he would give his second daugh ter 250 acres of bod, which drew shoals of beaux, and she soon got married, and the father gave her her portion. He then set to wurk, and !>< emu to grub his fnrie and fora, ud plowed np some qf his poor furze laud—nay, and where the ftuxe eov- erod iu some cases nearly half the land. After giving half his land to iwo of his daughters, be found the produce of his form increas'd, tie- cause his newly brokeu up lauds brought him excessive crops. At the same time he fanned the whole of his laud better, for tie employed four times the labor on it; had no more dead fallows the third year; instead of which be grew two green crops in one year, and ate them npou the land. A garden, Bakewell told him, nev er required a dead fallow. He no more folded from a poor gross close to better the condition of a poor ^plowed oue. But the grant advan tage was, that he had' got the same money to manage 500 acres as be had to manage 1,000. Three years after the second marriage, he made, ft known that he wonld give his third and last daughter 250 acres of land. She soon bad a beau in read iness, and three or four within call, and she was married within a week. She thought it never too soon to do well, and the father portioned her off with land. He then began to ask himself a few questions, bow lie was to make as much off 250 acres of laud ss he had done off 1,000 acres. He found necessity was the mother of inven tion. He then paid off the bailiff, wht>‘ weighed twenty stone; lie fonud that he had been helping the men to manage the master, instead of help ing the master to manage tlie men. He then rose with the lark in the loug days, and went to bed with the lamb. He got much more work for his money, for, instead of saying to the men, “Go and do it f he said, ‘(Gome, my boys, let ns rfo and do H.” He found a great difference be tween “come* and “gw.* He made his servants, laborers atul horses conveyed it n|*on the land. He eat down all his high hedges, straight ened his slgzsg fcoeee, cot his ser- pentioa water courses straight, aud gained much land by so doing; made The stint ;Ut( office^ machine lisliment *vS| aoei^UjbJ Every of the poor will get ri h; move faster—he broke them from are> frnlaif, 'Iftffgjblj ih ating-rooms. store-hom ^JJ ( V P r biting es men who, m tw will control the 'if ftiddly, and flsanei iu of them means to their hduH's pace ; he found the eye ^of the master quwken&t tlie pare the servant. He grubbed up every bit of the forge on the fanru, and converted, a great deal of corn into meate Ha preserved the black wa ter, the essence of the manure, and all the land he oonld. flume of Ms hedges aiul bonleni were covered t*K|t}i bimbew from ten to foSBrtesg^fd|dS H» width, aud some than streets > and there be grabbed up the hedges and borders, and threw several little ct—es tats one. He found that twftead of growing white thorn hedges and haws, to ford foreign migratory' birds Hi winter, he ought to grow food for man.. “I sold biai long-homed bulls,* said Bakewell, “and told him the value of labor, and what ought to lie performed by a certain number of men, worked oxen or liorsee within a giveu time. I taught him to sow leas, and {dough deeper and better, and that there were limits ami measures to all things; but*, above all, the huslismlniau ought to lie stronger than the form. I taught him how to tsake hot lam! colder, and cold land hotter; light land stiff, Aud stiff land lighter. I ad vised him to breed no infrrior cattle, sheep or horse*, but the best of every kind, as the Ixrst consumed no more (bod than the worst. 8ixe has noth ing to do with profit. It is not ho much what an animal make* as what H costa making. The former liccaiiic a new man in his old age, and died rich, by adopt ing Bakewell** improved manage ment. Tbs Credit System. The credit System ia one of the most iiijuriouM that can he fastened upon a community, ami it ia also nn<* of the moat difficult disorder* for a community to get rid of. In a country like oars, where every work man gets hi* pay each Saturday night, if he chooses to have it, aud when producers and farmer* get either the cash dowu or )>ayment in thirty days for everything they part with from their families, there is no reason in the world for the long credits which it seems merchants are oblige*! to give, or loose their trade, in former timsa, when there wa* but little money iu the country, and the aarpls* of the farm was bartered away for «uch store goods as the family might need, the necea- nity of long op«-ii accounts will be admitted, bat that an evil which took its rise in an abnormal state of society should be continued, when the occasion which brought it into existence has long been removed, is simply one of those iticonaistenciea that we meet w ith in life eonaUotly. A careful examination would seem to disclose to the reason why this state of affair* continues to exist. That it is not tlie foalt of the former, we will be to admit, when we take ioto consideration the fact that the former has ceased to pari with the produce of his form on long time. II is dealings, tchen k* mnkrt soles, are routined to these who buy for cash or its equivalent. The same is true of the mechanic as to the labor of bis hands. If it Is not the former or mechanic, then it mast be the merchant himself who is responsible for the state of trade. If the desire to make, min will compel him not only to mark bis goods clooe, but also to take loug risks without interest, to his own short-sighted policy, then be must uot complain ; aud when he finds that interest hist eats np profits, sod bud debts destroy the principal, he must j not complain thst lie I* mined by trade; his in in come* from the application of Unsound principles to the solution of n perfectly plain prohiein. A onto seetus to snggeit **ho*»L itself at ouce. ' Let tlie merchant follow the fanner and mechanic; sell only for cash or short time, and the problem is solved.' It appears to Mary was feeding that swam Joyfally about in a large and handsome aquatints f presently she said, “Ms, I was nmdhtg this morning, ift the Bible, a passage that I don’t understand.” “Wall, what is U, Mary T “Why, this was it: *Oaah thy bread upon the waters, for thou shaJt find it after many days.’ Now, does that mean really to throw bread into the river aa I throw crumbs to lay Ash f If it does, how can it ever be found again T “Well, my dear, when you have finished your morning teak I will tell yew a story that wiM perhaps help you to understood what King Solomon meant by that verse.” “I am dune, now, mu; feeding my fish was the last thing I had to do” Mary seated herself by her moth er’s side, ami Mr*. Hay began : When I was quite a child, yowr grandpa was settled in a suiafl vil lage. The youug |ieople, that were old enough, nearly all belonged tq the church over which ho was pas tor, and the ebikiren of rhe town fore well trained hoys and girls. We never beard au oath, and rarely was a drunkard seen. Botnetime* travelers would pass through our town who drank, hat nor village was noted for its morality. We were oil surprised one day, wlien It be came known through towu that the Doctor of the place was going to die iNmr House to have a boy bound to him, for the purpose of attending to his horses and doing errand*. There were many conjectures as to the character of the expected hoy; aa poor rhihlrea, who are mt to the Alms Ilouae, newer hare any one to teach them, and make them good. The boy came, and one day, short Ijr after, my brother come boon greatly excited. Maid he: “Esther, Dr. Hall most hove gotten a 4*mMI boy. 1 beard him taking the name of God iu vaitt, aad hr was basting m of the borara. Dr. Hail out aad talked to him, aud he at the doctor." “Ah,* said my fother, “I that the poor boy would bring a bad art of manner* hers, lie haa prob ably never been told any better. Wg must try to tmmkr him t«ettnr." Then he turned to yonr Aunt, and said : “Isabel, he id Jaat about the age of the bays yon have in your etaa* iu{ the Habbath school, (ha you not do something for fetm f Re member, 'Bread cast upo* the wa ter*.'” Isabel looked at her father, and said : “That is snek I heard Mm. Hall say a boy before, bat what she’could see WU KNASE A CO.. GRIND SQUARE AID UPRIGHT piano Foans Mo as* TflKftK instrument* bsVt b*M teforv br mm% tuny ymn, saS upaa ot sloae stasMMS as asisHMH-. wbksli pronounce th«n **cq TO. if r «M“ > TONE got Mia ho we lost In 1856 yonr Unde Harry was In England. He hod gone to ora for bis health, and the vernal that he had taken passage In stopped in Liverpool. Yonr Uncle was anxious to return home, and went to the wharves every day to fiud some ves sel hound for an American port. One day he saw a flue ship oouac in, and soon the American flag was ruu up, and floated out to the breeze. Harry eagerly waited to see the cap tain, and to find out when the ship would sail for feis home. Uo got into a boat and went to the ship, asked for the captain aud was shown into his cobio. The captain looked up ss he entered, aud sprang up with i JjM'Jjj; an exclamation of surprise and pleas | Their are. Tour Unde was astonished to , And that the captain of the flue mer j (# - ^ mnii chant verael was Ham, the poor boy •i.r- found is m of mn •*». VTbm h. be*nl lh.t| WORKMANSHIP yonr Uncle was anxious to return home, he told him that he wonld glad ly* give him a free passage to Boston, and, with tear* In his eyes, he said ; “Harry*, your sister and your foth er*s foinily wen* the first friends I rrer hail, f am a Christian, now; thanks to yonr sister's instrtimental ity. I often think what would bare become of the jwor, friend teas orphan , uiato. | if it had not been for her ki ml ness j *£»wj ***•«• ^ s “ to me." He brought yoor Uncle , ^ *,'7!.'.?, borne, and when he was taken dek, WM KAABK A CO. No no Wwrt Hfhimvrr Si orar KuU«. MdranTmt 13 1 HOW 46—ly Um well m srrM psnlj <tf Uiroughoat th# «esle. TOUCH ■ad eiidrHy (tee Own t&« ussy ftwu. la f-ut th* very HMtwini, (to ter*« oqwul tm- •ssbiinc u* 0# teep cna- •toek nf hnnbrr. «tc^ on AU war lfc|wa» Pw»m tom • Ornnaruag Sent* aud Ot* ■r Now AgrnOt •It ■towtton to tmr to- in GrnnU Pmimm sad iquam Ornate, Aufunt 14. ISC*. nhA tiring tto pMMton tto to* ret tow K- for Carton S X««d- ■ud Ohurrti H»r- a horatero caae. iy 6m> pavf-r had iflt fllui raviiU A something in his nature that hoprfrilbat this boy sreois au thgr •Highly- had.” After a bale] she said, “HI try, fother* He daring the weak that followed, she noticed that the hoy f awed our honae to the creek quite < Am, and she watched for an QfqMN tenity to speak to him. Oad day rhen was ia the yard atteudu g to her flowers, he paawd ampped at the fanes a mtaate to Mk at the flowers. She spoke to him kindly, and asked lam what and If be had come to the village, and some other tknis of interest. II tmening theoeean. Ham took the ten derest care of him. He often visited my father's fount), and we mourned the loo* of a friend, when his ship was lout in a dreadful storm in the India* Ocean. New, do you nut understand the meanhig of that verael Acts of kind neaa, words of frirodahi|s deed* of Wn*e will seem ss lewd thrown upno the water: bat their efforts will be found after many days. B. It 8ur.fi “How fsrefty P cried little Ham, as his little fat baud grasped a bunch of white lilac dhtrh grew near (be gate of his father’* mansion. The arxt motneut, the chikfs four grew red ! with terror ; and he dashed the lilac i to the ground, shrieking, “It stings, ; it stings r What made it Sting t It was a bright, heautifol. aad sweet-smelling How could it hurt the child’s hand f I will tell A jolly little Ink, in anuqh of a dinner, had Jmt pushed bis Mae ia the Mac ; r uy him. Ho, being vexhd with the child, stung him. Thgt’s how Hammy’s hand came to be w ith hartshorn ; ami, when the ;muo let me teach you that moot them from being this truth in May ** ■ BUR:ON ft IRVING, f W Baldatore Ktoeet, BatatoNtre, Il)C7 MannXartureniaf Hlurts.ColUr*. Drawers, he., and Desfor* h* Men’s Fur earnUy. U i G. ft C. Raiiroad fiat; Hro DnlMWiffg ttni UP. Wd, f, ti '"•••»a 1 fc Ar^’rtoS^Vflfc. ,*S|1 'too. - nww ** * w rx .'8:; „ bf^-hettj JOHN II. ifflflt. 5 C. Railroad. Columbia, 8. o\ after Train* upon the H. __ ran the folbfwmg nrhedule ; For Choriortom, Arrive si CkjrUwbm... IjMtvr (’harletoot!.. Am vr at Columlds {;.•* ■ - 4PWi Ix-aye Coluiulaa... . Arnre at Angaria.. Leave AuraaSs Arrive at Columbia.... 4 Ktgit Frprnt (enxpfcdj. l^eaye rot>imt<(*,, tW»n 1 Mrtm » * V.-IsflirvWwB - •> .»« . o • • , I>eax'e A ntniKt] , •* Arrive at Edna ibis..\ * IlllZ'Z'!fl 2*1 Comutm Train, and ( olmulrta! * * *o • m • • , IM every ehUd tflsa U: l«>»n ftaturdawa; KinirdHr daily. low ve Csmdeu Arrhe at Coluaubia. Leave OlonliU Arrive at Camflsa H. T. FF.AKE. C. C. ft Augusta Railroad. (Itmrrol Freight o»*f TTrihrf OMtt, ) (tolonlaa. R. CX. Dee; StTlMii Tratn* .Yertfl.' ^5" Clfe- * {£*"**• « Man Wianaboro 1 m (’lifMtrr IS” Amve .t rSSiite * mil Making cW eonnertiato with Tim • HI - t» ■ . m . . Wi Carolina Road st aB paiate Train* Sooth. apr Ests* *• c (oluiuUb Arrive at Making rioee of Onutrsl ami SaxaoiuiK, oil 1 Fncft.—Xrm York millir mudin darts; with teat hurt 1 luumi, per j, whet* mode foi it< uu-tol rah, lit; tneted ruffk, per » dot . M We furnish Hhiri* of other gntdr* of s*#G. Jfwwr of nerh—tow round the I of rirerol tetwa the riMMiidrm or n>iimI ralsmu i« the of nThrarai, homing the arm henmaflll- 1). »a«l hrudiag the elbrnr. Hay kiwi of collar, wrWtnuxi. awl I, For «4udn or button*, font*- if s t«H or •tout kg tire. Hin often ▲ boy the their riders gay: ifeii swear there j aud »l>| tear very 8 to a ciren* s pretty aad b learned to bus that pn*tty thing, the ctrons, slung bun. pretty boy ouqr thought a me a thing. He drank it, aad to bf a « runkanL That fused and at fl at, to he *0 kindly spoken m, but raapectfally. The next day the op|»nrtuniry to pi or Answered she took r to l>r. He a nine slung him. A girl otter look Horn a basket, and fete it. •mer’ naked her a lufKtoma pear “Have >ou eaten mother. . Fearing *Ue cmihj Hall’s, and aaktel Mrs. Ufell if the K he said “Yea;* nadd gut anotlict pear, find then tch so WBODIIfO OUTFITS. Unleaaf«irt> loves, Tioa, aud l adaL in nn> quaaoty, however mnsll. pitmiptljr ■ Goad* forwarded, with HI! C. O. D.. by Kapron*, to any part of the country. May 25 1870 . 38—ly — * J P. B. 8ADTLBR A SONS, OPTICIANS AND WAU« Hi MOOUBiit*. m *212 axrm < SHilUKORE. Bxltimoae Through Tickets North. Oea’J Soperi n tmticmft ^JWrsnYfr rf* (olumhis. O X and after tM* date, et» fat Jiew York >, Wtudunjruin 1 Tick i»ro«TVt* or Mas lwqr, nlume be iqumvl on cHiuiMj w nucini Hbe then asked Han 1 to come not g *t another j. VV AlXJil HH 4 she said “No," FLM» .IKWKLUY, name ou Sunday U> attend |sYung, that die roofed not deep that she require some nerve to do this. * The *a I«*bel passed by merchant wbo dues this, while he with a clean milopf may not sell the most goods, will IP'ring about tin* stable, sell those he dorw to the best ad van tage, and in time will >etire from trade with a better bank account thau hin neighbor w1k> prefer* to sink his capital in laid debts. Our Hand*.—The linuian hand ia so lH*autifully formed, it ho* so fine a sensibility, that firnniMNty gormmits motions so ( orroctly, every effort of the will ia answered so instantly, aa if the hand itself wen* the seat of the will, its actions arc so free, no power ful, and yet so delicate, that it seems Might. to her dpsa. Me objected at Anri, K Hin* you br* 1 ih»£ sin, however sml said he was ashamed; he rate/ pretty it look*. Kin?* ft stings went to ehmrh ; aud mad 1 several eharply too. It sfiig* fotafly. The exruaes; Iwt when Snndfey came, ,Bible says, “The Ming of death is fo imssess a quality instinet in itaelf, and we nse it ss we draw our breath, unconsciously, npd have lost all re collection of Ute feeble and ill-direct ed effort* of its flrat exercise, by which it has beet) perfected. In tbs lot mb sting you, nothing ran heal the. wound bat the blood ped, and said, “Cum*, Hsife, I was of Jeans. If yoa fori the smart of goiug to call for you.” t b,- sting, go Jo J«»a* with it, and I remember how *urpn<wVl we all ^ will care it After that, never were boy cml of the bench, aad acefesed I *ri itot to Much, fasts, iu MstiMusliiueut at Mil he atwl faithfully kept right a her new 1 to fee the rough, ovw growu forg.-t that many po*Uy things have ramJ ia. !!• sat dowfe at Utie,Awry sharp stings; and be carefril scholar, and finding that ba had learned to rend, she gave hlui books k Bring —‘ What Is the hoc of briug in the qrorld uuleea you a buy to bis . . .. JP to interest him in the evenings, and are romdutdy f* Kuife would take jisins to talk to 1iim,frieud. alamt the bad habit of swearing, j? “Bure enough, and 1 mesa to be," Wheu be bail bran at the DorW* »««wewl the other. “I began this about six month*. Mrs. Hail cumc vmy day. I memi u> be somebody." over one day to our house, and dn L ^ •fifo 1 looked Gtewge in the taoe. ring the conveiwataon while she was $0* hands are twenty-nine bones, in the | ‘here, she said she never saw such a f *a ekristian boy, aad so grow up roschaoiftui of which result strength, rhsuge in a boy in har life as there to be a ehrisliaa man,* amd George. ‘ was la Sam, since be began to trad « VI briiere that ia tUa greatest some- mobility, and elasticity. On the length, strength, true lateral motion, and perfret Mobility of the thumb, depends the whole power of the hand, its strength being equal to Mm proved foot, ami fionag the three that of oil the. finder*. Without the fleshy ball of (be thumb, the jmwer of the Augers wouhi avail nothing; sud, accordingly, the large ball form ed by the mnaclea of the thumb is the distfiigtiishtTlg character of fUe human hand. the Imok* Isabel had gix^u him, and attend the Habbaih-rabool. The lmv years be was st Dr. HalFa he became a good, moral boy. When he sixteen. Dr. Hall gara up the tier of medicine to his son, sml was not needed any longer. He de ter unwed to go to sea. My father of heaven. body for us to be." | George Is right. There Is uo high er manhood than Christian manhood; aud ft is in the miwer of even boy to rcaeh that. Keen boy can not be nek; every boy can not be pceai- prar Jl«“‘i 5*3 >*»' «•» “«» be.-M.C i a.,,, but God ask* you all to a Christian . . maaboed—to be hit sons, and to with his Ban Jeans Christ, he -heirs artomvlto or • srticTte urn. spooks, rouk*. aki» uil- vek wahk OKNKRVLLT May 13 1** 4«-tf RUP1URE CURED. lUnh’t Radical Cur* Truss. [j|\ fAHNESTOfi K ni * * i f » t*« vj A*. ‘Jhfoteri, .* mt**1 Stmt, test by Um best and most i ffnrtivc Troa* for tin cans sad rriiaf of T1 E . „ _ Hernis or Rupture. Tlii* Trus* has rt- erivrd the mirilfln of the most eminent pkyririmm of this coautry, kcHitet* to recommend it to t s-ith Ilmiin *n lieing mil who do not those iifflkted M Wapcrior to *11 ottK-n*. . It »« rtm odly Tram that will retain the heWSaiW’ bowels wtHi sny osetauAy, and the wteief tea f«N«J ;Matured that he is uniiiK s n-iuedj th*t wfll be st all times nafr nod ctfoctuiu in its opr euiirc sal under oui L*d*«’ Qf otir trestmen to all w ho Buy come it. h abdominal belts for corpulency, fallinf of the Trrtinh sud sr abdominnl n mil to the Imek and ,. Aakleta, knee caps and stock- inp for varicose veins, ulcers aud weak cliildivn, for the cure of ntoopEf of shewhfor* and as a chest expander. article in uwv-lixUt, caRih^'aSJteS^an’d effectual. Instrument* for ah physical ** th * HrMar ’ bow Pessaries aud crotches of the most ap- 1 ' provwd make. ' 8. MAKSH & CO., No. 3 Holiday Street, • 1 .►*!♦ Balttiaora, Md. June 22 they exm, they can be ly removed from the moot bv the timely tun- of B. A. Vcnuifugto. It is perfectly hanule**, memiry, being a f Ritiou, and may be utmost safety fo wkh< I •- pbin. Nashville, Ixwinvilla, OnchMi. m. Ixmis, sad all point* Sooth to! I Palace Qlenoaq Cars an 1 Trains. Through Tickrta sold. 1 r»fe checked to all urforipri poi IF Paaaetun-iw by thin real North, have riioice of tve (!) C. BOUKS'IQirT, £. R. Dobskt, Geoeral Ticket A|rst BLl’K RIDGE RAILROAD. ^PRAINS on thc~Blue Ridge Rafinri X ran daily, Monday* excepted: Leave Andeinon at * 4 Slpi Arrive at WaDudla at 7 WfB Leave WaHtalbt at tttv Arrive at Anderson at .* tisn rintmdemfo Office, ) ( olvmbin R, R. (k, > », B. 0~, ScpL 4, tm) „ aad be parrluterd at the following ou thi* Road, via. 1 Greenville, 1„ AMierilb. t'okesteirjr, Xrwbcrry and AI- M.»ii JOHN H. MORE, &r»H 8*Hj M. T. Ha«ltktt, Geu’l Ticket Ageri> Miscellaneous Advertisements SSNS VV HY ia it thst so ” ▼ under the age of five years | a karire proporrion of cbiidrea die oriw | that age, dam been a wdp«-c.t of *«***». ' and without a satisfoetory ea««e s*«r tained. it is certain. Also, it is known that worm* exiri j* tlie human nvntem from its earberiiMM’ w: who are more cou»tanth with their chfl- dren, can not be too observing „ .. chndren 01 _ Worn Confections, roadc ovcnxuuing thr disease, have beeqtofT factured all over the country, bet tom short tease of life is nenrlj ssbaartm. and B. A. Fahnestock'* Vermifuge <**' than** to grow in favor daily. Gi*tto*.—Should oororira -MJdte ri* to porchaae B. A. fuge, be pj\rti<Hil the initials are k «. — . . that lut* Ik'Cu 40 favor*Wy know* 1820. and pswIiMi m««t insist on mtVU % ii they do art wish to have an rate tiou forced upon then*. _ #1 tn^yl ‘ SCHWARTZ & HASLETT, (Formerly B. A. Fahnestock’* Bon & W * J Bole Pinpidow, Pittsbergh. r» Dec 16 idea fioooBii «r uleersted pile*, that De fails to cure. U u exprestoy to cure the pfle* at. hen cored caste of ever to |V» fi — : s-' r %’EW SKR %fa ~ Ifl FCBii EVERY bude a m V> Terms Cash, Strict!] One copy. One To r annum month* Widow * <1 Stud tions, No new hook, wMhout RAxas or Ai»' For one (an * One '"• oth v"* , *“n Thm moutM - gtx • Twrive moatha On adverttsemente «rf vonnrdn a discount nf five square* and opwa of tensqaarteaadwpw* nai of na» bnW cobin rx*r eta*- will be deduct. nfltM. Otetaaries, when n^ toe coots for eight w advance. Postage—Five cent*. ] Alliwittauce* and be addressed to Rxv- A. R Beligici a: I* A v ~- Huiuan life has ■■ oafelicitonsly, to a 1. the Utter rashes wis * ■ I— 1 aloog its way. bat , at rack principal dep passenger*, takes on after having changed I er respects, and havit water and find off ou its way, raj» operation at eatt-ii o: | riot; a. at least ; so whirled along the ro every wise man, at tb pin g places along ti upon the post, throw s opnious and doctiitu] which time, experieu tended lesearch afh r moostroted to hiiu aud untenable, recti v other views and notion then again speeds ah often stopping and same ojieration. Ami > piug places we ent of each day, the Sjili ceremony, and God- ideuces: and chi* tioa the close of e; which may uot iiu;| called the “principal the road of life. With the dying Ob page in the book oi tory has been fiiiisln the thoughts, feeling! and desires, as wcllj and deeds. goo<l andj of omission, as well ni —all the bait a* we! j 4leed* oV tlie cliildreul the year—it is now taking its everiastind world, to be sealed ui| in heaven’s archives, till the great judgntj Lord, wlieh it will b«i and ofiened along jndguieut books. n« 1 records of which, hy themoefr**, they * l and shaft receive th| approbation or cond| the Judge, according written in the Book; have been judged tw or evil. How neoemoary tlu-nj one, ere the Old Teat should stop and rend he has made then j doubtless many thing that he wonld very have appear against of judgment. But a| will most snrely app unless they are erasefj fore tliat »lay am' thanks unto Ghod, oin^ ouly one way—only which they can be en| however, within the t-o accomplish it. S acter of the impre^-j the records oi men a Rook of Time, that il °*w*ery that It is pee make can have sufliH remove it. The only the acknowledging 1 'Hod, through tinnere \ of tliem. ami 11 *ng of Gml, for Chris I oot; for he thnl rin«» ia exercisexl wit j for them, ami humbi] Pardon, will be I -- V , l