The Lutheran visitor. (Columbia, S.C.) 1869-1904, April 21, 1871, Image 4

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THE UITHKHAN VISITOR COLUMBIA, S.<\. , rich man, bat Christian man good life and with its ldghest the gains of e&ii l Ailed the thoa< good boy, too; f am baa 111 try for it’ When Arrive at Greenville... OOWII, for OOP “I think I than Mke f*nr Hhrca brothere' my (Hondo also; ibr 1 want to bo good and uaefol and happy whon I grow sp. m B. tin is derived indirectly Miscellaneous, Comparative Period of Melting of Xatmrol and Artificial lee.—The idea has been more or low prevalent that artificial ice Is more readily ached Auto* st the coat of the material and labor used. If they are uegteoted and allowed to rot away, the farmer will QOt bo long in becoming n bankrupt. There are few articles in which there Company of the Mmemftrim /ape Wafer, wishing to tost this question, in i reference tX the ice to bo.used on its vessels in the Indian Own, have made experiments, taking 100 kilogrammes of each kind, and ex* posing to the same temperature un der similar conditions. The result is as follows: ] Ileum. Natural Swim ice required for eon*- i melting Iff Norway k« required IU I iee of the Carr* machine bed 1 m ioe from Barton required IV BUSTOS * IRVING Religion than in the varieties of paint sold to fanner*. While wn do not know anything about dm mane lactam st merits of the |mint mentioned in the following letter to the fro trie Form er, yet we can at least commend to oar render* no article which Is rec ommended in such unqualified terms. The writer says: Home two yean ago I got a bar rel to a barrel and a half of Avanir* Chemical Paint, of a light dan color, Natural ioe from Boston required IV Artificial iee of the Tfellier machine rt'tj tu ml .•« .. .....a .a.* • • Hi If these experiments were conducted with such preeantkxis as to be relia ble, it would seem that, after all, one form of artificial ice lasted longer than any oC natural origin.—Harper's enough for all work ; boners, doors, blinds, fences, bee-hire*, wagon*, tools and all I pat two goml cants upon my residence, and run over some three or four of my smsltsr form houses. With what was left I painted my Whirm, wagon*, wheel Artificial Ice in Packing Fisk. - As might have been expected, the artificial ioe machines have been ex tensively called into play for the manufacture of iee to be used in packing fish. Ia corroboration of previous statements, it ia said to be for more durable thau natural ioe, the crystals being much more sdlid and exhibiting less tendency to split into flakes. The estimate has been made that thirty per cent, lew of artificial than of natural ice will secure the same preservative effect. One objection to some forms of arti ficial ioe is said to be the opacity of its color; bat an inventor announces his discovery of a method by which perfectly trhnap* cent ioe can be ob tained, and for ltd publication to the world he asks the modest sum of Ave hundred pouuds sterling.— Monthly Report IK Washington. . “wlffijthis hateful sufii." “Haw did. you do it V* *‘Evpy way; first I a ikied* and H wonld‘npt come right, subtracted, and then I and atjWt I .divided.” His uncle laughed. Arthur looked up and are yoi laughing at, urru-* ; a ^ as it was a month after It was put aw, and bids feir at least to bold Its own for fire year* to come. If not tea of them, better than ordinary white lead and oil does for even two k*a^«-licrkc(Ibnfi| ararhMl pot North, haw choice of fire?? boys work m had ask- hey would isi is the way lax snoas, Arthur. If j O three brothers,* helped yon.” he three brothers uncle ? I don't see Anybody.” r|5(ry, Mr. WiU and Mr. Can. :dl work together, a ad by their <fir^ difficult things! are done: lit me see yoor book.” ; ^ dutle took the slaje, aud in a at or two the soar lias done. J* m Arthur, jHJ %y did 1 know nothing bow this paint it made, or who the bm Is that makes It, nor do I ease. 1 know ha has got something that wilt, in (let, stand our climate, 11 well pul oa, and at a moderate owt, and that la all 1 cure E BAILSOAfk T K \ IN Uu’ 0i "Med, "A* the Lord li tkj son! liveth. I will not l< w the two went on* FI him aa for as he Conld r. determined to catch the i thff feW (Hun hi* tips, a; h * ascending glory . niyeould either Efts*. „ pie of Israel afforxl to W tbt man who had and. p tivastorfiwt and open 1 l»i» prayers, “that It misr o»’lhe earth for the iqi;, - ve *re aud six month*.' * ami the heaven* n *°d the earth hrin u fruit—th«f man who ha.'t HfrStfoirh in God as fifr heaven to eoi -ffwiag and fifty men wk, * v the king, or to cornu, ; of raven* by a b- "tunas for the suppl \ Ueteeaitie*—t he m» ***" sweet and inrimat* «■ 5r i«d talked will pure Hatred oil aod Me, chrmiedBf rombiaed by some flax, which gives this paint its uneqaafcd polish, finish aud durability. I bare watched It now for about two years, with interest sad sure, and f have never found a single spot on it where it either peeled, cracked or chalked off as our other paints do. F. B. SADTLER I 8018, OPTICIANS AND BCUmor. 212 8tr..t, fiiU2treB£. There is no “notion” more firmly .” said his an he mm blindfold, and did o look and- see what should Always examine your and see if it ia under the Ither of the ways you men hot stop t be dose, nuestio*, of the influence of the moon on the foil of rain, the violence of the wind, etc. Scientific men, acting on the theory that “where there is so much smoke, there must be oomo Are,” have given mnch attention to the subject, aod hate hinted at certain theories as being possibly correct SEVEN GOLD IfEDATS in October sad November, 180, *si Ten First PREMIUMS and Meta to wheel wood ha, except where the throwing ia of the weed has jammed point, wood and all off, by extreme violence. Other* who have used this paint like It equally well. Hot the point Ist l eon take owe and (la tion. fchen Mr. Will helps you, and! gives you the determination to accomjfiith your task. Mr. Can is just the opposite of Mr. Can’t, aud I heard§ yoa talking to him, instead of bis ofeosin. Mr. Can’t always tries to disown rage boy8, and tells them ▲WAJtPKD to 4 ,«|gSi «ilaS, st. SVXUVSt FOK THK BKsT PUKO*, over Haltimurr. New Yurie. WM** and Boston HI an nf actum*. Ojfice end Kerr W«reroomt, Jf«- * K. Jjihcrty flt, Bnltimoct, MI STIEFF8 PIANOS contain all the latest unprovemuda fe]| WATCHK8 & FJXE JEWELKY ferent series of experfmeots have foiled to agree, sad we are as fot a# ever from any reliable confirmation of the popular belief, except in the single point of the dissipation of clouds by tbe full moon. Sir John Herecbel believes that “cloods have a tendency to disappear under the fall moon,” and that “a slight pre ponderance in respect to quantity of rain sear tbe new moon over that which foils near the foil, Would he a UAUmil consequence ef a peepomfer Alice of a clondteM sky about the fall.” Arago, who concurs in this opia ion, refers to a common axprnarton among French country people, that “the moon eats op the etouda.” It has been observed by the writer that a large moon has,a tendency to dissipate clouds In dry weather, bat has little or no such effect when rain is falling. Beyond this trifling foci, my buildings, wi f*MBTTArtJ», SPOONS, PORKS. AND yxr a*ark liKXKrally. May 13 1800 4&-tf ing. tlo you kuon who iacovered America t” ler Columbus ” said Ar- wftl worms, aud threatened aCml dcuUacthm fie went to with Me unruuturned energy, □renting, trying everything inly,” said his uncle, * and I .isegica woaW nAa ir have sovfiredt if it had] not been ‘three brothers.’ j When 1 r, my father used tp foil me, ian has done, man can de.’ it my motto. Don e you tripped ip ami *Hd down no, on Hs smooth (hoe, that I bad to roagheu H with a file. There may he many better points than thin, but I am not acquainted with them. 'Any color of this paint desired, from a pure white to a brown, don, red, blue or black, con be hud, as I andef stand, to salt tbe taste of the pur chaser, and I premime It can be got in any of oor target town* and Mr r ^ *r J* 431 * by tbe closest examination of the relation between the state of the weather aod the condition of the moon daring a period of six years, not the least ground toe the popular belief. ,? • ; Not only is this belief mi worthy of intelligent beings, bot It 1s safoeet to the oddest contradictions. For instance, ut New England, a “wet moon” is one which is so much in dined that it “won’t bold wafer,” or on which “you can’t hang a powder- horn.* -At the South, a ‘'wet moou” is dffe which “lire on its back.* It JACOB S. SCHIB i good ouef” if,” said Arthur, “and If I I could ever paint m beaati- ires as you do, I’d make it A- ' "\ I Artlmr, it wag by tin- help krec brothers’ I came to be scares covered with irregular of a bluish or almost black appear to he Ittsefiidbfe to was poor when li**.' hot the money to go and ntiug, so i need to go to nt Art GaUertee and study es. Then I would golfoffie MAii^U A ■ iVs HoWtaj atnot,