The Lutheran visitor. (Columbia, S.C.) 1869-1904, June 02, 1871, Image 4
THE LUTHERAN VISITOR. COLUMBIA. S. <
names yesterday,* said Jane. “All
her mother said was, Quito, you
ought to be ashamed, fit yosnstt*
I thought she should hare Mesa pas*
ished for the way she behaved.*
“I am sorry ior Jbs. Bay,” said
her mother. “Shg^toae se tndulgsafi
to her children, that she told am she
could not endure to correct them
when young, and now she has to
feel the effects of her mistaken kind
ness. It is not tree kindness to s
child to let it have its eira tray.
God has said, ‘Children, obey your
parents,’ and be intends that i*renta
should make their children good.
When be sees that children dool
love and prise their parents, he often
takes away their fkthers and moth
ere, and then they are left orphans
in this world. It is s dreadfUI thing
to wound a mother’s heart by bad
behavior.”
“TO never give you uneasiness,
dear mother,” said Jane. “I will try.
to be all you wish, for 1 know you
are my best friend on earth.”
“Make the Saviour your beat
said her mother,
eighty ninth year. Tbs improvement
is Me eye-sight being produced, aa
he beHsvea, from giving np the one
of tobacco. Other cases equally in
tenwMag in their character could be
given. But let these suilee for the
present. From s pretty dose obser
vation of the influence of this and
other injerfons habits, made in the
practice of medicine lor thirty nix
Fortunately, the difficulty yielded to
foils It is from a weal of {falsing
Nooe shaft boy or a»U lands with
out permisafon of dm mtoctmec.
A drunkard shall have a master
appointed by the selectmen, who are
to debar him from the liberty ef boy-
tag sod selling.
Whoever publishes * Ue, to tbs
prejudice of his neighbor, shall be
set in the stocks, or be whipped tew
stripes.
No minister shall keep a school.
Every rateable person who refoaes
to pay hie proportion to support the
minister of the town or parish, shall
be flned by the court Sfc sod 4L
every quarter, until be or she pay
the rate to the minister.
Men stealers shall suffer death.
Whosoever wears clothes trimamd
with gold, silver or bone leer above
3a. per yard, shall be presented by
the grand jurors, and the selectmen
shall tax the offender 1001. relate.
A debtor in prison, swearing he
has no estate, shall be let out and
sold to make sattoiMtiaa.
Whoever sets a Are in the woods
and it burns a boose, shall mtflbr
death ; s w, i suspected of
this crime shall be imprisoned with
out troaeit of boil.
Whosoever brings cards or dice
into this dominion, shall pay a Sue
of five.pounds.
No ooe shall rend cooueoe prayer
books, keep Christmas or set days,
eat miuoed pies, dance, play curds,
or play ou any instrument of aone,
except the drum, trumpet, sod Jews
harp.
No gospel minister join pm
m ruMLir -
Arrive st
r my long bright ringlet* out .
icy I was fair.
quaint old mirror down, snd
Id it up lest night, '<* ,
stopped to trick my hair—lor
;r 5E: Z JSE
SjTlffflrtern, Wido«- of.
aR d TheoJogn-ai 9t«d»-
old snbmsflmpa .who 1
%;
Muiie* mv eu i <
wriptETn book, without th
toZSrnncr.
*rw«rAPEB m<
1 Any penw>n wlln tsV-
u)*riv from tin |**t «&-
to hi* luunc or an*?
W lwnl«l «r not
for the payment.
*. If s person order-
he must pay ail
tR* publisher rosy teat
rati! payment to mal*
wImA* seaount. wtoeth
mken from the office or u<
‘I TV courts have d«-<
aineU) take raw spai* i ;
fmm the post office, or
Wiriiurthem uncalled f»M
crideo^ of intenti.H-jil 1:
Postage—Five cents per
All remittance ami com
he addressed to
when priated, bat not as
There was at this time (1792) a
young officer of artillery in the gar
rison at Htrasburg. His name was
ttooget de Lisle. He was born in
Lone fe Hanlntor, ia the Jars, a coon
try of reveries and energy, a* moon
Lainons regions always are. This
young man loved war as a soldier ;
the Revolution as a thinker. By hia
verses snd bis music he lightened
the tediooftocas of the garrison. Gen
erally sought on account of his
double talent aa a musician and a
poet, hr became a familiar visitor at
the house of an Alsatian patriot,
Dietrich, Mayor of fttraaborg. The
wife and daughter of Dietrich shared
his enthusiasm for patriotism snd
revolution. They loved the young
officer. They inspired his heart, bis
poetry, and his mush*; and trusting
to the earij lispings of his genius,
they were the first to execute his
scarcely expressed thoughts.
It was in the winter of1792 famine
reigned in Htrasburg; the Dietrich
hunffy were poor, and their table
was frugal, but it was always bos
pttable to Rouget. One day when
there was nothing on the board bat
some garrison bread, and a few slices
of ham, Dittrich, looking at IV Lisle
with melancholy calmness, said to
him : “Abundance is wanting at oar
banquet, but what matters that when
neither enthusiasm is wanting at our
civic feasts, nor courage in the hearts
of onr soldiers f 1 have still s bottle
of wine in my cellar ; let it he
twoaght np and let ns drink to lih
erty and to onr country. There will
soon be s jmfriotic celebration at
Htrwsbwrg ; may these last drops
inspire De lisle with one of those
hymns which convey to the soot
of the peofdr the futnvicutiou from
whence they proceed."
The young girts applauded, and
brought fit the wine, and Ailed the
glasses of their aged father and the
>onng officer until the lk|iM*r was
exhausted. It was midnight. The
night was cold. IV Lisle was ia a
dummy state; his heart was touch
ed; Ms head waa heated. The cold
overpowered him, and he tottered
into Mo lonely room slowly, seeking
inspiration now in his patriotic tool,
now to bis harpsichord; sometimes
composing the air before the words,
and sometimes the words before the
air, and ao combining them iu his
thought* that he himself did not
know whether the notes or the
vereas come first, and that it waa
tidfirebto extent.
There la a waste ia large cities for
which there Is really no ncccasity,
and that Is of the sewage. A vast
friend, my dear, 1
“and you will be all that 1 desire
you to be. He will be father and
mother to you then, if ws are taken
away, few he loves children who try
to please him, with a greater love
than that of a mother. He loved
us, poor sinners, so much that he
left the beautiful home above the
skies, and came to this world and
died a cruel death for us ou the
cross, so that we might go to heaven
when we die if we love and try to
please him.”
“I will try to do all you wish,”
said Jane.
Now, my dear children who read
this story, will not you try to be
children of the Saviour, to love Him,
and be comforts to your parents f
Never forget their love And kindness
to yoo, and their care of yon in the
years when you were a helpless babe.
Try to repay them by never causing
them to shed a tear on your account.
‘•Sharper than a serpent’s tooth it ia
to have a thankless child.” B.
ad somehow, still at eventide, my chair
is tipi ted that wayt
sit and work where once I watched—1
sat u yesterday.
My raw Mouse is a pleasant place.
But y*t it grieves me how
Its soml i ompleterass seems to say
My world is narrow now ;
'is far too small tor any one with festi-
vatotekeep,
nt for my funeral large enough—for flew
Arrive at Kinj
Christian spirit of repentance and
petoUmeof Nut cme Other mew
hare atoned and repealed, and fought
the good fight valiantly ; but nooe
have ever kept constantly their fall
North
and Central
wi^tone to weep.
ood-bjej! old house—a long good-bye!
My bapf is on your gate ;
hough tears are gathering in my eyes,
I may no longer wait.
•d-bye, oUd house ! And after all, the
Arrive at Cahuu
Arrive at Gfcarirstcm,..
4 This train runs in eoanretiuti ■
A nr* «ta train*. making elnee mn
jrtfrft-jjfcjailm,! aad Ceutn
rued Morning Trains.for all point
and Wear.
A L. TYLER, Vire-Preri
8. B. Picarxa, Ore. Ticket Agt.
ia our owa iluy t
“Aa I look hack to 1*42—twenty
•even years ago—it moms almost i
bfcVnu* dream ; I can hardly realist
my identity with the staggering
Beligions
Children's Department
r For the Lutheran Viaitcjr.
| Mother's Love.
there is the sweetest
|rn at Mr. Lane’s store,"
powers to her mother, ajs
i hastily into the room,
mother sat rocking kbe
baby to sloop. j
“Not so loud, my dear; I want
Willie to go to sleep. Now tell im*
-And in hell lie lifted uj k,--
in torment*.”— Luke xvi : ■
This parable, or nar; I.
facts, (as the case m;i: *
t many points of instr ,
attention and pray erft
tiou. The reader is *t £
tn ooe topic. u tbe dnn*p
The two more (roui11
ters in the context a? E
i rich roan” and “a «»:*
named Lazarus.” They I
Lazarus was (tarried h i
into Abraham’s boi*?TTr**- 1
man was buried, and in iL
up his eyee..being in P
Before mteruig ujk> I
]of discussion. profit a fc
may be had to souu* _g
j ’ flj-'.v.
. inculcated in the narr.it vB
after death the son! i R
heaven or miserable i: H
represented .is “Abralt 1-j
and “being in tormen: ■
this is a fixed and pi*; gl
»f the soul. 3. That i» |
a future state is ition* th 1
4. That the torroenteii |'
deejdy concerned lest : W
should come to that ■-w.M
“• That the soul is iivt I*
lively alive to its ou uffi
conscious of the happin* -f;
b. That «h-|Mrtcd spirit
their earthly conditio; I
unless uien are adm m
by the Wor.T I
will not be couvinci i fi
hatund agencies, even
rose from the dead.” » 1
As i\*sj»ects the ch j
eondition of these two I
little else is said (I
the onti wjw ricl», cloii, , J
®hd hired suinjanousl.v . |
°tlier was ven poor, at I
«nd dependent upon cl 1
sulisistiMiee. The wbol
presents in striking *ci -ft
wtuation of two imitH»rt,rl
a vrorid of amise, and" i ■i-
qoent reversed state in
Virits. It i s uot \
the wide and wild field |
“ou, and draw upon the* T
^'olting pict ure of a pi I'
f 8 ** Rrinding oppressor
1,1 one ease, m»r in flu
to fiud a world of gent!.
j***ty and resignation, i
Jr® ***>«* of the Mast.
1 tiie one whone sml l
| Nl *ii to improve was “ri
J® splendid st\lo—and i
, «Oul, the priceless pu
^“vionr^ blood.
Wealthy men are not
*J^ ,Uced tor their poss. J
nchra doapi^. Few a
blandishments oi
rT 1 ” ** presumed won .
offered to tlteir a
“P®* 1 honorable terms.
1 b* doctrine can not 1*
.,"7 m*m&a of an #v<
Presiding Deiti-, \>
J Klt ' SoTuivigw diajt. ><
^MjthU l>oth great amt sy
jrd foaketk jamr, and
ow, a,„i Bfrul
t| . the I 4001 ' (mt «f-
n,> U,e
“t> ** 1 * them amou.
stft fcri,t ’ a,ul *
from above, and eoui
^ tbt * father of light*.'
rervnm* t„ c-i.
“Mot
picture
Believing aa I do, that the !olk?w
only shall join them iu mamagv, ••
they may do it with lean aeaadal to
Christ’s church.
When parents refoae their chU
drew convenient marriages, tbs mag
ustratm shall determine the potut.
> The selectmen, oa finding children
ignorant, may take them sway from
their parents, and pot them lo hat
ter hand*y at the expeaae of their
parents.
Fornication shall bo paaiahed by
compelling marriage, or aa the court
shall think proper.
Adultery shall be punished with
death.
A man that strikes his wife shall
pay a fine of ten pounds.
A woman that strikes her bus
band shall be punished as the coart
directs.
A wife shall be deemed good avi-
deuce againt her husband!
No man shall court a asul ia
person, or by letter, without first
obtaining consent of her parents;
M, penalty for the first offence; 101,
for the second; and for the third,
imprisonment daring the pleasure
of the court.
Married persons must live together
or be imprisoned.
Every male shall have his hair eat
round according to a cap.—Busts■
Courier.
** cheater L 60 p a
Arrive at Charlotte, X. 4 fey a
Making close connecttnn* wfcb Tibs
of North Carolina K<«ul st all point► Xorfk
sad Fa«t.
TVaiua South.
Leave Charlotte, N. C„ 9 Mam
Cheater 11 15a ■
** Winndioro It SB on
Miscellaneous.
might be productive of fund, I will
he mnrh obliged if yon will give it
art 1 user Ik HI ia your whirl) circulated
Yea, always. 1 moor rim I
with the wise, the pure, the
softly what it is,” said her mother.
“It is
seratchibj
mother si
is howlifii
to cry,
I think
This need is the dradlfoal ptison
known, which human brings habit
uslly war. Its dfccta oa the human
Arrive at lujnwta 8 SOpn
Makiur doer rounertionn with Train
of Central and Georgia RaOnah fw
Savannah, and all point* ia Ftotow
the poor mother is dead,
her face is most as white
>w ’that is . heaped np
i, mother, yon most go
The dog flooks so sorry
orgaas slh tnL
which the habit
os the
around,
and see 1
for them
m uww, Sb4 an point* Snath and Was
Palme Kieeptog Cara an aD Sid
Ttautik ThroaghTicki-t* Hold, sad B*|
<tm & r riwunxi nfi
North, have cbotce'ef five (•) diffitw
C. BOCKXIGHT, 8uft
E. R. Dosm, Geat-ral Freirht aa
Ticket Aaent.
s gttdiag
to bo M
>qrer» smiled at her dangh-
t way of talking, and then
tfopose that is a St. Ber
They are trained to bout
a who get lost in the
nafly lie down and freeze
PTMurrlhby find a poor
lo has gotten buried iu
they liek his face and
! breathe their warm
Lis lace. Sometimes the
man, will revive enough
1 of the dog, and get on
BLUE RIDGE RAILROAD.
T RAINS on the Bine Ridge I
I ran daily, Sunday* excepted
Leave Amierm»n at 4
Arrive at Waltudla at 1
Leave Walkali* at .....j
Arrive at Ashnw at I
traveler,
the 8001
hands,
breath u
man, or
to take
his back
surely ai
house of
top
11. Ifolpttutouu of the heart.
IMPORTANT NOTICE
AU Retail Order* amnmmtimg to fiU
Orer tielirered in «*p Pari of
the Country
howls
OF BALTIMORE, Ml)..
I S order the better to Meet the wan#
of their Retail Customer* at a die timer,
kav« eotalitlfdied a
aaana'j msxav,
and will, upon annlication, prownttajori
by mail full Itoe* of Sample* of tue >**;
eat and moat Fashionable Gooda m
French. Englmh and Domestic M»w
factwre. gnaraatveing to all tnae*t»«al
in imr. if not at ten prim*, than aaj bow*
ia the country. .
Buying oor good* from the tergretiui
moat n h braud nuinufiactueeia in m
different part* of Europe, aiwl impsnhf
the name bv Steamer* direct to Bdliawto
onr Stock t* at all time* promptly «IP
plied with the novrltie* w the Lewd**
As we knar and aril onto for «nkjd
make no had debt*, wo are aide ami wilnsf
to aril our goods at raow Twi* vo Firi***
Pza Ctvr. Less Pboftt than if we f»i»
credit.
account of our ignorance of their
value.
If there be anything that charnn*
tenure the prearui apt it ia the re to
lotion that ban taken place fax this
reap ret. Wo lire to Iftw ora of
saving, and mnoy are the otpecta
now turned to good ocoouot which
formerly were thrown away. Hot,
notwithstanding the boasted prog
rena of this oenlury* *• onto away
for too many aubatanrea under the
from the nutate or the nentimenta
from the exprewmon. lie aaag all
and art down nothing.
(Kecpowered with the sublime to-
s|iiratfon, De IAale went lo aleeji on
the harpsichord, and did not wake
np until day. He remdiocteri the
aong of the previous evening with
a difficulty like that with which we
recall the impreaafou of a dream.
He now act down the words an^l
music, and ran with them to Diet-
rich, whom he found in the garden.
The wife and daughters of the old
patriot had not yet risen. Dietrich
awakened them, and invited some
friends who were aa passionately
fond of music oa himself, and were
capable of executing De Lisle’s com
portion His rideat daughter play
ed the accompaniment, while Rouget
•twig.
At the first stanzas all faces turned
pule; at the second, tears ran down
every cheek ; and at the last all the
madness of enthusiasm broke forth.
Dietrich, hia wife, his daughters, and
the young officer fell weeping into
each other’s arm*—the hymn of the
country was found. It waa destined,
alas! to be the hymn of terror. A
month afterwards the unfortunate
Dietrich went to the scaffold to the
sound of the very notes which had
had their origin on hia own hearth,
in the heart of his friend, and in the
voice of Ws children.
often find anybody alive, aud J«nsd*Mfoll above and orer this
f Dominion, shall suffer death aod loos
[uently. I read of a story °* propatty,
r, whd was found by the • * Whoever attempt* to change or
was dead, but the baby overture this domiuion, shall tuffn;
ad when the uieu opened death.
it was wrapped in, the The judges shall determine con
looked up aod smiled, troveray without a jury,
other had tried to keep No one ® haU 1x5 * freeman, or give
rm, bat died herself*! a vote unle »* *»« ** converted, and
it have loved it dearly,” a member hi frill communion of one
i of the churches allowed hi this do-
' 4< . .
iear, you little know the minioo.
MS strength Of a mother’s freeman shall swear by the
fra. Bowers. “A mother blessed God to bear true allegiance
r her child with a pfe to this dominion, and that Jesus is
tenderness no one else ti* e on b’ hing. ,
In the days of your child No Quaker, or diseenter from the
ire very sick, and I spent established worship of this dominion
less nights on your ac- shall be allowed to give a vote for
lays were full of anxiety, tiie election of magistrate or any
iould take yon from roe, officer.
I found that health was No food or lodging Shall be offered
my joy and gratitude to a Quaker, Adamite, or other her-
Kmnds. So it is with etic -
W. The years ot infancy, u person turns Quaker, be
If your little brother Wtt- shall be banished, and not suffered
•a of care aud anxiety ou to return but on pnin of death.
I am thinking all the No priest shall abide hi the do-
life to come, and whether minion; be shall be bauisbed ; and
i bad boy and break my suffer death on his-return.
its conduct. So I think Priests may be seized by any one
Jane/ I often wish lj without a warrant,
that yon would grow np No one to cross a river, but with
fort to me.” 4 an authorized ferryman,
ou think I am a little No one shall run on the Sabbath
F, mother,” said Jane, as day, or walk in his garden, or etoe-
farm around her mother’s where, ©wept reverently to and from
ngly. . meeting! i f . tl
r dear, you are a good No one shall travel, nook victuals,
and I don’t know What BUkke beds, sweep bouse, cat hair, or
_ without yon ; but I moot shsvs on Sabbath day.
truly desire to *ee you a child of No woman shall kiss her childreu
God, and & ying to fit yourself for on the Sabbath or fasting day.
usefulness when you are grown.”
“Mow**! Iwrd Jttlin Ray ft«
awl BSntilJI aud call her uiotb^r wm oatel'd?"UhL-. **"*
Very few of the suddeu deaths
which 4 are said to arise from “disease
of the heart” do really arise from that
canoe. To uncertain the real origin
of sodden deaths, experiments hare
been tried in Europe and reported
to n scientific congress held at Stras
bourg. Sixty six cases of suddea
death were made the subvert of a
thorough post mortem examination;
in these only two were found who
bad died from disease of the heart.
Nine out of sixty six had died from
apoplexy, while there were forty-«H
cases of congestion of the tango—
that is, the tangs were so frtil of
blood they could not work, there
not being room enough for a wdfe
cicnt quantity of air to enter to
support life.. The eaases that pro
duce congestion of the taagi ore
cold feet, tight cloth lag, cuatire
bowels, sitting till chilled after being
warmed with labor or o rapid walk,
going too suddenly from okfla,
heated rooms into the enld sir,
.‘specially after apeak tog, and sad
den depressing news operating on
the Mood. The eaases of omhftm
death being known, an avoidant*
Iff Morbef appetite for spirituous
dust, which was formerly thrown
away, is sow converted to many
3fi A fimtoa of
great debility, on
storm, an til one ha
deadneos and of
first wakiag from
lowest to lit* mot costly. .
Order* unaccompanied by the itws «
be nent C. O. I). ,
Pkospt-Patho Wboubau Bo*
are invited to inspect the Stock
Jobbing snd Package Di-nartaieni. A
drew HAMILTON EASTER A 901*8,
107, im, SOI and MS We*t Baltimore ^
Bnltoaore, U
Dec 1 . 49—!▼
unpromising material. The hard
boxwood sawdust makes an el«*fc»ot
fioltoh for jewelry, sad mahogany
sawdust to good for smoking fish.
Westphalia hams owe thetr adauru
ble flavor to the wood ased in pre
paring them. .Sawdust from the
lurch cleanses furs; that of aafidal
wood,' cedar, butternut and Mack
walnut affords volatile oils that And
fevor as fierfamrs or lo destroy in
sects. They hove a way tn fruce
of compressing sawdust into molds
suitable fire are ao artificial mood;
and II could also bo distilled for the
prod action of creosote, noetic acid,
sod wood gas. Some of It could be
need for paper, bat to general the
fibre to too short. ▲ new Industry
has arisen in converting sawdust
into ggs cotton for photographers,
Agents Wanted for
AXDWR1TING OF GOD m
Sinai, and The Holv La»
has kept two of His
oar rare; one on par
mho may bo disposed to relinquish
the habit, I could give some inter
eating oases of success, aod the
ha|*py cooaeqaeoora revolting there
from. Mr. JL T. gave np the habit
shoot twelve month* since, after
using tobacco for fifty years, with
very decided improvement ia his
health. Hon. H. G. J. relinquished
the habit twenty aix years ago, after
indulging ia the nee of the article
forty three yearn. In his cate the
improvement to his health was so
marked, that to a few months after
giving up the ore of tobacco, he
dis|*e«Aaed with spectacles, which he
had been obliged to ear for severs]
viilnnbfe Mres which wntifd Sriher
wise be lost under the verdict of
heart witl
of you t
could
We leant from the Grocer that ex
ex|*eriarenta recently carried on iu
India have proved that coffee pulp
srtn yield, upon distillation, nine per
cent, of its own weight of spirit,
equal in strength to Scotch whiskey.
Nothing is said m to the flavor of
this spirit in its raw state; but it
appear* to realtor on the spot a price
nearly equivalent to $1 per gallon.
PEED kOO
18 Lake
[Feb 14—If
▲ Inks ef blood to a pall ef wafer,
so slight as uot is the toast to affect
the color, can rmdHj be detected
by the one of acetate of siao, the
value of which for this purpose has
but recently been discovered by
Gunning.
Free to Book Agents.
A Pocket Prospectu* of the best BtojV
mind Family fnblr, pnMtobml **Jgg
EiuriuUi sod Gorman. cmit>UBin>: Wj*
Histonr, Dictionary. Analysu, Hsrw*fe[
sSSglOafykoCJM
7tb st.. Pbila^ Pa.
March 9 . Sfi
Masting powderr It wiir that be
seen that sawdust to hardly any
longer te be considered a waste pro
duct, bet it to a greet help to many
industries.
, j. *