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* 1 The “One' THE LUTHERAN VISITOR. COLUMBIA. 8. C., AUGUST 11. 1871. Poetry. of a Tired Servant | work for for me! tven in. nearer, i is dearer lay* to me. >ve anil light iy wail to-night. t : i 3 i daj'g work for Jesus [ glorio^p is my King! fjN f, not duty, Ills beauty; soil mounts to the wing “mere thought st its Iff© hath bought. One mbijt day’s ^ ork for Jesus, , sweet the work has been His stify, I tf f enter in. , • mine! i day's |rork for Jesus: in fkitli, in prayer, I’ve spoken, I’ve broken faint with despair; jjMtde them flee To Hinjj jrl io hath saved me. One mure day’s Work for Jesus ; j,||; ; Yei ind a \rfary day. • But Lfe&veu slices clearer. And %8t cornel nearer At each? step of t|ie way ; And Christ if all; Before Ills face | fall. <) blesstii work 0 rfsi at Jes Thera toil seen My wants are And pajn for Hi Urfipif I HI serve Thee >r Jesus! feet! is plnasure, pasure, looks sweet. re another day. n’s Department, f [ For toe Lutheran Visitor. Mary Grey. ?y’s toother bad gotten a golden banded |ily.” Ja ’ere mre in the village lole family watched the ids If at grew larger and finally- assumed a white Mrb. Grey said, oue Mary \ UoiUltiful pan lilies* and the first tiny! larger, ad appearant evetiing:! “My litj will Ibe open on to-tuor row, I an* bure.” i»|the morning Mary was op, and wen trout iutb the Hower garden to see if tito lily 't lKS open* She bent quite eagerly over it, and was look ing at it} Aery intently, when her dress caugit in the thorns of a rose bush close by. Sjfie gave it a sudden twitch, if’liat threw her off of her balance, ;**1 in tfying to save her self from filing, jbhe brushed rudely against taut lily. \ In a moment ^the delicate stem snapped, and it lay ou the grOutiit broken off. Mary was frightened. ! Shu looked all round to see if any body jsaw her, aud then she ran ifgp the Louse very quickly. ear some little girl say : o ami tell her mother V d not She went into, ud sat by the window, I think “Did No, she the li feeling whispered- ever con Then. M; another v< Mary ; d Mary h mama to knew that i to deny she was blamed, what to d bell rang* table, m could not “Mary “No, breakf; Her fatff keenly for ly. Something r heart : “Don’t fc you did it.” t that she heard : “Tell the truth, lie.” ght by her good truth, and she be very muiglity e tho lily, but at she would |bc e did not kuow ntly the breakfast ind flary went to the was troubled that she and, her father said : you kick f” but i! don’t want any children to <lo wrong deeds, sometimes he gets them into terrible scrapes by their listening to him, instead of to the little monitor God has given them.* “Papa,* said Mary, “was it old Satan that told tne in the library not to tell r “Yes, indeed. Was there such thought came into your raiud Mary r “Yes, sir. I was afraid you wouk scold me, and I did not know any one saw me, and at first I thought would not tell you.* “Now you see,* said their lather, “if Mary had denied it, I should have bad to punish her. I am sorry that the accident happened, but I know she did it by^peing careless, and not on puqtoso. Always listen to con science, and you will not do wrong." Some little boys and girls, when they break anything, will deny it. Always be honest and tell the truth about everything. Children that do this are always beloved by every body. It. Miscellaneous. ed at her very ent, but did not WE when they knees, he “Cbildre few just now, er’s lily the grou that if ai to break it Mary sw made a dee some tears eyes “Tell little voice “I did but I fell she burst Her fath and kissed “Mary, I truth. I v pretty lily my littlo it. You d were out under an* Then did not had told “Now, father, a friend tells you and w It tplls you iog the times the say anythmj; to bet. After brea k fast her father bad prayers, and then, l 41 risen from their [d: I w£nt yon to stop a I teas in the garden I saw that your moth- broken off and lying ou Wbq did it T I hope yoii were so careless as at ycjn will tell roe.” *1 a great sob, and ,te Effort to keep down at w+uld come into her e truth,” whispered the lowed I didn’t mean tb, ” said Mary, and her on his knee said: yon told mb the d sooner never see the na than* to have had tel] me a lie about t dee me when you this morning. I w;us tree, and saw it as Very glad that she to the first voice, but ► • [f t I *■ l Idren,* said their ive in your hearts which should do right ive done wrong, to avoid repeat- future, Some- old Satan tells Orthography and Orthoepy. • msummmdrur A correspondent wishes to know how the word saith should be pro nounced : “Is the a long, or is it not rather pronounced seth r Most cer tainly. Saith is contracted from saycth, as said is contracted from sayed ; and the diphthong in liotii is sounded like short e—so in my*, But spying and sayer are pronounced as spelt. Walker pronouuces »%id ■and says as sed ami *rr. But he says, “Said, paid ami laid are » scau dal to onr orthography. It upiieared so to Cooke, the translator of Hesiod, who si>elled them regularly snyed, payed aud layed. ‘Perseus is sayed to have been sent by Pallas to day Medens.’” He remarks that lt Says, for *«, seems to be an incorrigible deviation.” Paitl and laid, despite the deviation in orthography, are regular iu orthoepy. We may grnm ble at all this; but we are railed to ttse the language, not to wimd it. There shonld be no accent on the third syllable in words like rireum stance, circumstances. Concent, con centrate, and their derivatives, are accented ou the second syllable—ex cept, of course, concentration, con centricity. Ituftiau is two syllables, as ruj'yan. Contumely lias four syl lables, accented on the first. We have a good friend who set* down to see the sun sit! We have another —an Bsculapian—who lets his pa tient lay iu the bed 011 which he laid before. Do not aug “the bond of perfectness—we do not accent the verb ]>erfect, nor the (mrticiple per fecting, on the second syllable, tho’ some allow- it, but 011 the first, as in the verse, “And perfect us in love" -and “Perfecting the saints below." Integer, integral, integrally, inte grate, integrating, are all accented on the first syllable. We know of no authority for accenting industry on the second syllable, though its derivatives are so accented. Idea has three syllables, accented on the second—it is vulgar to say idee, ulcer or idea. Area is accented on the first syllable. We recently heard an orator at a Commencement s|ieak of argosy as a cargo—does it ever mean anything but a merchant-ship T Patriarch aud its derivatives have the long sound of the first a, even in these derivatives, patriarchal, patri archate, patriarchic, which are ac cented oil the third syllable. Ac cessary, or accessory, and its den Vtttivet, are accented on the first syllable. Demonstrate and its de rivatives may be accented ou the first or on the second—except demon strable, demonstrableness, demou- strably, demonstrative, demonstra tively, demonstrativeness, which are accented ou the secoud, and demon stration, which is accented on the third. Demoniac is accented on the second, but demoniacal, demoniacal ly, demoniaci8m, are accented on tho third. Annihilate and its derivatives are accented on the second syllable —except annihilation, which is ac cented on the fourth. Fanatic and its derivatives are accented 011 the second syllable. Steadfast and. stead fastness must have no accent on the second syllable. Farrago is accented on the second. Do not lay Jigger for figure. Febrile may have the short or the long sound of the accented 0, bat the i must be short, as in favor ite, fertile and the like. Phial mast not be pronounced r*aA—indeed, wo do not know of but two words in which ph have the sound of r, to wit: Stephen and nephew, and Webster pronounces nephew nefu. The o in govern is sonnded like short «— some persons erroneously omit the n in pronouncing the derivatives of govern. Expiatory and expiable are accented on the first syllable. We have some scholars—we will not say in what State they were born—who say fumichoo for furniture, Jiggu for figure—Kyast me not oat of the kyar nor lcyart—let me go into the gyarden to weave a yyarkuid.—XushvUle Ad vocate, Haalt* Hints. Boxing tbe ears is an tuexettaabto brutality. Many a child has hern made deaf for life by it, because the drum of the ear is a membrane, at thin as (taper, stretching like a car tain just inside the external entrance of the ear. There is nothing bat air just behind It, and any violent coo cussion la liable to rend It in two, and the “bearing* is destroyed for ever, because the ot Hal of hearing is caused by the vibrations of this drum or “tympanum.* We are indebted to the Hearth and Home tor the following valuable recipe; “The antidote for Faria green i>oisoo is hydrated M>M|aioxkle of iron. Nearly every druggist keeps it always on band. If It cannot he bought, it may be prepared thus: Dissolve copperas in hot water, keep warm, atnl add nitric add until the solution becomes y ellow; then |>our in ammonia water—common harta horn—or a solution of earUfeate of ammouia, until n brown precipitate falls. Keep this precipitate moist and in a tightly corked liottlc. A few spoonfuls taken after even a t*od case of poisoning with Paris green or arsenic is a perf*«ct remedy. Kvery farmer who uses Paris green lor the bugs shonld keep this medicine in his house." Students alio apply thcmarKea closely, need to lie well nourished. It requires good food, ami a great amount of it, to make the Iwain work well, and sot impair the body . Sedentary habits often induce iadi geet ion ; therefore, many have sup I Mined the less they ate the more they conld study. About twenty five years ago, earnest person*, with lint ited moans, worked and studied very hard, aud ate ami sle|»t very little. Many a good constitution was thus ruinAl. Nervous dy s|ie|isia was often induced by overwork ami lack of suitable nutrition. The more abate mious they were as to food, the less aide they lieeame to dts|mne of what was taken. .Many of our lad to* not pinched by poverty or pressed by hanl work, lose thefr ap|ietite by too little exereise, too little sleep, ami too much study. This course, if long contiuued, will induce indigestion. The nervous sy stem being exhausted through braiu work, has not power to carry on the bodily fiinrtions, ami the victim wonders that she should have any stomach trouble alien site had eaten ar> very s|mringty. The truth is, limited nutrition has induced indigestion.— Herald of Health. There is no fact more clearly cstab iahed iu the physiology of uiau than this, that the braiu ex (tends its enrr gies and itself during the Honrs of wakefulness, and that 1 hear are men Iterated during sleep. If the reru Iteration does not equal the expendi tore, the brain withers—this is insanity. Thus it is that, in early English history , (teraons who were condemned to death by being pre vented from sleeping, always died raving maniacs; thus it is, also, that those who are starved to deoth lie come insane—the brain is not nonr totted, and they can not nleep. The practical inference* are three: 1st. Those who think most, who <lo the most brain work, require (In* most sleep. 2d. The time “«nve«P rom neccHMarry sleep is infallibly destructive to mind, body, and e« tate, .hi. Give ymirself, your rhi! dreu, your servant*, give all that are under you, the fullest amouut of sleep they will take, by compelling them to go to lied at some regular, early hour, and to rise in the morn ng the moment they wake; and within a fortnight, Nature, with almost the regularity of the rising by this exhibition of royal favor, ho started boose they aencfitcd the pledge of union, ward, aad, as la sappoaed, walked aad from' that time regarded the all the way. When he returned, his yoong prince as especially their awn. shoes sad storking* wore worn oat He was, thenceforth, called the and his clothes soiled. In addition “Prince of Wales.* to his great fatigue, he was threat His elder brother, the beautiful ened with fever. The effort of bath aad beloved Alpbouao, soon after lug when the body is heated is oftea dying, the yoong Kdward, for bis to prodace the If can not ter. Its, and too 1 be exercised In tba mst “Do yon know of anything that will prevent the hair foiling oat V Mine has been coming oat for nearly a year. 1 have tried a great many thing*, bat they have not done much good. 1 am using bay ram and borax now. Are they good P Keep the hair cat short, and the scalp srrapaloaaly clean. Leave bay rum, borax, ami “hair iu vigor* tore" with the druggist. Wet the with cold water two or three times a day, and give it a thorough nibbing with the fingers afterward. The mon the bead is uncovered, whether la door* or oat, the better. Air aad sunshine are as nervosity to the health of the hair as the health of sy stem generally Air tight hats are an abominatvoo. They keep the scalp heated, and keep the air aad light (Won mating in contact with It Many cases of falling hair nmkl lie eared by simply not nearing any covering u(mmi the bead at all, aad being out of door* a large share of the time. Feather pillows should not he used to sleep u|ion. They are too beating. I * nd in* menial activity tends to pro duce falling of the hair. Where this condition exists, the mental effort must he reotraioed, snd more physi eat exerrisr taken. The better the digest Sou, the more |ierfeet the gen era! health, than less liability to the loss of the hair; consequently. rare ful attention shook! tie paid to the observance of the laws of hygiene.— Herald mf Health. 1 >1 nami The Trines of < tor hoys have always llwii fami liar with the title width the eldest mat of the English sovereign bear* always, lint perha|m not all of them are acquainted with iu origin. It was first given to that pnmw daring the reign of Edward L one of Eng land'* noblest and bravest kings. Kdward, while yet a yoong had already by his martial pro* iwesrrvrd during a great rebell for England bad her great re hell loos as well as we—the fortune* of his weak fother. ami thus sn ared the throne from disaster j and had then de|>artcd for the East, in order to share the prospective glories of the lari “t riisader*," where he performed feats of wonderful valor in the wars against the infidel*. Recalled to England by the death of his father, the incapable llesiry III., he was crowned with great splendor in Westminster Abbey, A. D. 1274, ami was com|iel!cd to la-gin at once a warlike reiga, bat which proved one of the most successful throng!* which nny monarch of Eng land ever |m*ard. While nearly all the chief* of the kiugdoat. including* the Kiag of Hruttaml, appraml at the corona tion to exhilot their hnalty to the sovereign. IJcwelly », the promt hod of the North Wales, refused to be present, ami mmni raising the stan- father's name was given him, became the eldest living son, sod therefore heir to the throne. And no it bap peoed that the dignity of the Grown Prince, aod the title Prince of Wales, centred In the eldest son of the English monarch, and he now bolds that appellation, till, in the coarse of events, he Is called to take the royal sceptre — 7Atm'$ Herald. if Life Gel (Hit of them, if you ais’j to live long, If you wish to avoid the lunatic asylum, if you wish to escape suicide or a miser's death. Men aud women most have recreation, most have amusement, must have diver skm. It is wholesome lor the mind to break sway from its daily voca Lion or employment every uigbL The man who goes from his counting bouse or his work shop at the dose of the day am! due* not leave it behind him, bat sits at the femily talde in moodiness, brooding over l»ri occurrences, weighing prolm bitiUcs, casting conjectures, laying plans, ami when the meal is over, sits thinking, thinking, thinking by the boar, sod goes to bed to toss ami tnmlde and worry, can not live long; the twain or the heart mast give way, and he will drop dead in the street, as many a ttasimw* New Yorker has done within n few years fr»*m Gel oat of tin* rut, reader, two or three hours a week, and there w ill dartl of rehellHm. lie gathered his | |«eoplc, and declared war against King Kdward. After a time, however, he was reduced to submission, and Edward now tlwmght that the province of Wales would remain in |ieaceablc subjectiou to the EngRali crown, when suddenly David, another chief imu, und brother to Llewellyn, aroused nearly the whole of that department into a tlaim* of revolt, ravaging tin* lionlers of the English territory, and rolling ftuth all the euergie* of Edward for its wulqnga- tion. In this lie at length succeeded. Llewellyn was killed 10 battle. David was hung as a traitor, and Wales was thus—after centuries of war fare, in which she hail stubbornly resisted all the efforts of Saxons, Data** ami Normans—brought into final and peaceful submission to the English sovereigns. Edward, at this time, had two sous, the first a fine, manly boy, named Alphohso, the second an in fant, lawn at the Welsh castle of serious apprehensions for his fate, ('aeniarvon, during the stay which The most diligent search and in bis father mnde In the provtore for qairy were made, but no trace of him the settlement of iu affair*. A could be found until at a late hour, happy thought occurred to the kiug. ;wo days afterword, he returned The Welsh, regarding themselves as tome in a state of incutal and pbys- foreign to the English nation, and as ical exhaustion. The following facU merely a subjugated (leopic, were which is the usual ranne of ear- were learned : On Wednesday, he perpetually rising in rebellion against «cbe. • to Kov '' n ," nont - tb«T*forr SuflTrvrTfrmii neural determined to unite them to the gia may be pleased to learn that a English throne by a closer tie, which medieul corres(K»ndei»t of the Ixrndou sun, will unloose the bonds of sleep he moment enough repose has lieen secured for the wants of the system. This is the only safe ami efficient rule; and as to the question how much sleep any one requires, each must lie a rule for himself—great Nature will never fail to write it out to the observer under the regnlatiou nst given. One warm day, early this summer, Charles Dickenson, a boy fourteen or fifteen years old, son of George H. )ickenson, of Somerville Gent re. disappeared uuder circumstances so mysterious as to cause the most la the Island of t'uha, (be wagon roads lead over bills made of lime- ; the wheels have ran in the track for generation*, and have into the solid stone that the halts srrspe the surfoce. and there is 00 getting oat of the rat antil the bottom of the hill is reach eil. Ho in the tires of many, the mind, under the influence of worldly rare, get* to ran in a partirular trark 5 in other taaes. the ocenpn turn* are of saeh an insufferable year’s end to an r or king* Iwcome of these lines they can not work at all; hence the stupidity of such a large |>ortion of The farming (icqiaiation of all conn of England and Ireland and France, and Germany and Russia as well. , More farmer*’ wives and daoghters gn erase, oat of one tboasand. than of any other class, simply because of the aae same roatioe of drudgery— of cooking, washing, cleautug, from moruiug to night, from oue year’s end to another; even the Sabbath day maktag but little chaage, and that chaage only the result of the extra drudge of Saturday. Ami our wives, in large towns aod cities, sweep ami dust aod arrange, and wash ami sew and provide, ia one incessant round, summer aud winter. No wonder they grow thin ami care worn, aud weak and ner vous. Get out of the rata, all of yon; pay a neighborly visjt three night* ia the week ; or for two after noon* let there lie a “tot up" iu the way of a drive to Ihe Gentral Park, a visit to the “village,* an exeur sioii mi the river or iu (lie cars, a (Me air, a cclcbrolimi. but I tost of all, is city or country, a knrseltuck ride of «n hour or two, “there and lark ;* what an appetite it gives; and the weariness, wbat a delirious sleep follows! H is astonishing how little liced is paid iu our present system of education to inculcating correct knowledge of practical questions of everyday Ufe. We listeood only a few days ago to a dUctuwian con ccrolng the nature of soap, which; for the first time, made os aware bow mauy intelligent persons there are who have not the most remote idea of whst soap really ia. All dirt consists in the first place of dust; a fine dry powder oontaiuiug almost i all known solMtonces in greater of leas quantities, and produced by the endless friction incessantly going ou in all parts of the world. This dust, falling on a dry* surface, remains a fine |M>wdcr, aud can be sweid off with a broom or cloth, leaving the object precisely as clean ss before, j If ft falls upon a surface wet with { moisture, it forms a paste, which be comes a solid cake when dry, and which, when dry, can be rubbed off, leaving the object, almost, if not entirely as clean as before. If our | clothing or skin were wet with moist ore, we should clean it by rubbing or brushing as soon as the moisture had eva{»orated, or the clothing or akin had lieoome dry . In the one ease we should eteeep off the dust; in the other we h boo Id rub or brush it off. But <Mir clothing and our skin are neither perfectly dry not wet with moisture. The perspi ration from the (tores of our skin contain a fatty substauoc, which never dries, aud which, wore or less, (leueUates nil our clothing. When dirt foils ou our skin and clothing, it is held there by this fatty sutatanoe, which prevent* us fnan getting rid of the dust by either sweeping or rubbing. We can only trash it off But the fotty substauoe which holds the (lust will not allow the water to get at the (lust, and all the water iu the world can not w ash tin* dust off a human skin or human clothing. The tatty substance must first be removed. A little lye, or alkali, a mineral sub stance, possesses the (M*cultarity that G. & C. Railroad. Columbia, fi. C., Msrrh 1, toft con road, going South. Leave Col bis his.. UP. lotarnot* 7(k). Alston 10 *r Newbeny «<■ — *• Cokeebury «** PU * is** • 8 05 * » - 8 13 a a *(n*Z ■ \ l B 18a* viracwirai/ •••«..«. .... .... 8 ttfejb “ Belton......... 5 (Jit! Arrive st Greenville - — DOWN. Leave Greenville M Belton..., •* Abbeville “ Cokesbary Newberry., Alston............... Arrive st Columbia m. t. babtlett/ General Ttohe# Agmt, S. C. Railroad. WtoMil.0- 1 Juifi* Change of srheduto, to go into Hto — find after Sunday, lltli mutant ; * Hail and Passenger Train. Leave Columbia 7 40*u Arrive at tliartestou Leave Charleston s ao * » Arrive st Colnmhia 8 40 p * Sight Express, Freight anil Aenmnuda tion Train (Snndoys errepted). Leave Colombia.... 7 Arrive st Charieota* 8 45a* Is-ave Chat lesion 7 10 n» Arrive at Columbis ...« Camden Accommodation Tram wfi| cootiutie to 1 uu to Columbia as foiva-jU —Mondays, Wednesdays aud Saturdays A. L. TYLER. Vlre-President. H. B. Picuiks, Gea. Ticket Agt. BLUE RIDGE RAILROAD/* T RAINS Of. the Bine Ridge Rmlreto ruu daily, Suixlaja < M.cepted: Leave Auderaou at 1 4 90 p* Arrive st Walhalln st............7 (Dnir Leave WaJiialla at toa v Arrive at Anderaou at 0 15 a* Miscellaneous Advertisement*. IMPORTANT NOTIGE TO CONSUMERS OF DRY GOODS! .41/ lietail Orders amounting to $90 and Over Ibfrrered in any Part of the Country Free of Express Charges. - when it coroes iu contact with grdase HAMILTON EASTER A SOII^ or fat it renders it soluble iu water. BALTIMORE, MI)., Apply lye and water to the skin, and I N u ’ UH Tl .. . . , . , . * ■ of their Retail Customer* »t s dtotaiwr. Hie grease, becoming soluble iu water, have established s is imn*(*(1iitU‘ly dissolved, the dust is no longer held by the grease, and can now la* washed off with water. Hoap is iHdhtng but lye, in fonu convenient tor use. It is lye mixed with groasc. Tbc cleaning part of i» is lye; the grease which is will, niton application, promptly send by mail full lines of Sauiph-« of the New est and moat Fashionable Goods, of French. English and Itomestic Mans- fuelun-. KuamuteeiBg at all time* to aefi as loir, if not at less yriers. than any hoc* in the country. . . Buying our good* from the largest aad .KM with it Acil.t,t<« IU.- nibbing 22LtSS51 * ** parts of Esrope, aad mi|s*rtanjr by Snonit is direct to Baltimore, the aame __ «»nr St<»ek 1* at all tfme* pronmtlv ns- phed with tin* novdues of the aad I’ari* markets. by which the lye is everywhere brought into contact with tho article to be Hcaned. This additional grease J , _ . • . . . . ... . As we buy snd **11 only foreash, and being aln-suly mixei! mill lye—IS male HO bad debts, w* ar»- and uiiiiag of warm 1 soluble iu water, and is to well oar good* at kiomTkx toFiiteei< . 1 . 1 1 • * » .. . Per Cext. Lrw Prsfit thsn if we gar* immediately washed off after it has credit. •ert ed its purisme of carry ing Uu- lye Jtl wherever it m wanted. The fatty iaa^T^ every cls««C |M*rspinUion holds the dust, the lye u ’ tlie n,ort c °dD-. . Orders unaertmoaned I the rnatp dissolves the fat, and > be sent C. (J. Ih of bn thr t**h wilt 11 ______ _apBppfi|ipipH, , euables the water to wash away the Prompt-Pariiio ^ ik^xsale Bi nu • . ... ... ... J *re invih-d to inspect the Stock tn nnr dust. — ( l>i ixtuin I nton. Jobbing ami Parksg* Deiiaitment. Afi- . J drew. HAMILTON ElSTER & SONS, ’ A Sensible Rssolve. 15<9,301 * m1 ^ R*lumore St-. “Did was IXh> l Bidtimons, Md. 4-S—ly you ever hear, sir, how it that Edwards, the mason, gave ! A GENTS WANTED for the P.-opto’* 111) drinkitlirr said a wnrkinw man ^ Illustrated Fditton of IFAuliunich ■p unuaingi sam a workingman gn^at work. HTgTUR\ OF THE to my father, one day, when he was G reat talking to him almut the evils of .. ., Relornatiou. u , New f-duiou, c«»mntoteiuu one voiusM.al •now «as jM*pular priros. Buy it, read and ltora to him intemperance. “No,” said my father; itr “Well, «Mie day drinking in what rxr At.t.tmi.rrr tiran*. Tt should to ..... I >n run Protestant family throagtosl I®*'" an ' K v a8 (he huid. Send for Mtijdc rirenlar, writA ptildie lions*-, when Htnstisstfcm*. IF UtUHnsI roramiwkw tb, bmdlonlV wffr o, m< „ rad ho' “ said the ImsKind to his dinner.* “ 4 What’s for dinner | ntan. “‘Roast goose,* replied his wife. ‘“Is there Apple Ranee to he ask- lie no time lost by it in the l«Mig run ; ed. indulged in vigorous play with other boys, and then, when his body was greatly heated, he went Into the for it give* activity to tlie moral nature; It cultivates the affections; it wakes up ol»servati(Mt; it exercises c«Hn|M(rimMi; it gives breadth of view- mi all subjects; it makes a man moiv manly; it makes a woman more womanly; and in countless cases it would save from the mad house !—//<*//“« Journal. —* <♦ ^to to- Curt for Earache.—A correspond ent ot the Western Enrol says; As sumi aa any soreness ia felt iu the ear, let three or four dro|M of tinc ture of aruica be (mured in. aud the orifice filled with a 'little oottou to exclude the air, and in a short time the uneaaiue** is forgotten. If the arnica be not resorted to uutil there is actual pain, the cure may not be so speedy, bnt it ia just or certaiu, although it may be necessary to repeat the apidicatimi. It is a sure preventive for gathering in the ear, “*No,* slit* answered. Wm. fUNT & Go., N*. 26 S. 7th St. Philadelphia, Pa- May I ,>m - — -m V - Atteniion, Agent-! Think of This!! Wonderful Success!!! 30,000 copiesof BraekefiV Ilatory of the Fraaco- Gcniinn War *ol<l (int *0 «lavs. ft I .■•w, but aiiBwt-mi. (.(-nunn War nol,| Ont «0 Omvk. It no* “‘Well, go and make some; 1 f«‘U hutoiyof tin-lied Rebel . . . , 1 lion m I ans, mnkini nearly fiOO laro wont eat roast goose without apple ro»4 ISO elegant flia*tath>nw, mt vffl ^ am illuKtntions nnd will *4 fire turn s (aster Urns heretofore. IViee. <*nly F2..*j0. Inemiiph-4- works, writteB w the intorest t»f tho Iritli snd apple sauce.' “When the woman bad left flic room to prepare this delicacy, Ed - ol »‘ l . 1 . . . * ’ for want of uu-nt, chiming to l>e ofBriw, w anls w as so impressed by the scene etr. Beware of aafii. Brack ' both Engliali and impartial, popular, to think f»st selling work extait. rtFd. the BM»t I lxsA to r l G«-num, is — r, idinble, cbi-*p and he bad witnessed that, for the first time in Ids life, be began * n .o„,.v. AddmwGi “ ‘Here’s his tnan,’ said he to him- «7 Park Row. New self, ‘can’t eat his dinner of roast 8t jfajv < lf 1B BUj goose without a(»ple sauce, while my i IK>or wife and children at home are I Reduction iff Prioes. glad to get a herring for their din-' I ADIES’ popular pwiv plwetons, ww nc«, ,n,l rtty ofl,n h.vr oven i that, fi hose money, I should like tnru-aeai buggies, in raricty. Ftu>y •» ^ «u, f.Hov 1 jssss ■pisss.'i'SriS with good things f Mine, and that Open and tnm-s«st rackaway*- TW rttiw,* ,/ui. „ . vari<-d stock ia now lieing oneml of other poor fools like me. f Well, low. Also for sale i di-sirabh- p*»r of fenfebLD- interests, strike qnickk and y<>n can c«*. -fpsPETT) & CO- 148 lab* —if what’s done can’t lie undone. It’s Bsy Mare*, •lane 23 W. Ki greenfi 3m no use erying over apilt milk, bat j tlmt follow .han’t ‘line off roa.t j CHARLES P. STEVENS, BOOM again at my oxiionw.’ j (Snnanr lo S. Si * »»•> “80 ho I«i.i his rorkooiog, and fcarttatTO of mjaltuni «4 walked out of that public honoo, never to enter it again.” water to swim. On Thnraday, he felt while merely a nominal onr, was Lancet writes: “A few years ago, Miss Muloc-k nays to |iarentR that in Lumber, BALTIMORE, Md. S H unwell, but went to school tut usual, sufficiently strong to bind Wales to W * M ‘ U '*** ^biua, I ascertained that nml devotod htmaeir to hard .tudy. I Ha comiueror. iu mdiwolublr boada. £L.“l-2i , | p*-L Aft« aebool, in tho att.ruoon, he PrearutiDg the iutaM ta public, lie mint, which 'they lightly applicll to says, he weut out to take a walk, but told them that they akouM have ‘*« the seat of (min with a camel’s hair remembers nothiug more until be native lioni prince of tbair own, who l*' 1 * 0 * 1 - Since then, in my own pra«*» found himself in or near. Manchester,! could not speak a word of Enalish ” 1 have ^“cnUy employed this »:“• “TTi-T fo ."‘’ n, ‘* ,hc ^ ■«“ — the tS&rtnSV'ZFl& WsUidered nil tuih <liitUiic6 iu lUU 1 Kiui|ilr iiiindt^l \\<*lnh, au<l tintUTcd rt‘uiarkiii)Iy good rt^ulu. n ylltlK, NO. 8 b. Cd* tlie lime mu«t come iu every family nSTid when it iR the children’s right to Streets. j (Sej»t»2l 4-iy- O FFICE and Wi li is the children's right toj la-gui to think and act. for them selves, and the parents’duty to allow them to do it; wlteit it is the wisest gradually to slacken authority, to sink “I com maud” into “I wish,” JACOB S. S5HIBMER. and to grant large freedom o* ion, and the cxpmMiuK of it. i OplQ- 103 EAl CHARLl Oe4> U 9 HAY, IN, 8. C. • Svr-D- ■ VkWSK ^ PCBLIWIKI EVEBV FUJI I nv . r BUI)E & MIL3 ■, M. Cuh. »ri«lT >" * iM*r BBIHITH • • • • • j <Hir «* a—rhw.---- Widows of Mu Te Slfifirnt* «tfS5CSa. •£ will be charged p. r * S .IV A i- !PL —Uitocr rosy coutin A ’ newmmpers an- PontatO"—Five <vuu per <ju r - *U iruiittsnc*^ and <n*ni i * t* addressed to * Rkv. A R Kt f t ■■ Religious. Justice or “Men*y I Mr. Matthew 1 do not ask for mesrev. lag from God but jnstic plejostiee,” “B*!,” wpli«l Mr. Mu you really mean to tell it- that you dare to st#iri and ask for simple justice.# fed no need of merc y V “Certainly 1 do,” be re: a scornful laugh. “I tell it ia, Mr. Matthews, A you jdetely awed by yonr olo peredtions. that you daa facto in tho face. What what has any honest uwl VV’ho can (mint (o a flaw -rrff actor ? I appeal to y«»uj - know I am not boasting.*' “As to that,” rwyotsV thews. “I have not' a won wish in that respect then like you. Bnt you kno- of conduct before- men i\ thing. I cannot imagifn- so ignorant of yonrselt a that you are perfectly rigbte^is.” / “Ah! there- * you are » \<mr old world notion*- o evil hearts, ami a hear. God, and so on. I know things by heart . I w as ta* as a child, and have had a of difficulty in emattcip.it from their bondage. M ;> <t voarGod. Mr. Matthew A Being I worship is too m^i _ to regard such trifles; ami is just and upright, and doty as a man shonld. be fear. At any rate I am; I tdl you again, I want n<^ God lnit justice—(wire, si tice to . ' ! . Mr. Matthews folt it v no use (Mirsuiug the argtu pansed for a mom cut, thoughts were full of p proud, self righteous man 1 “I hope, Bartlett," be said. will come -when you wil you need mercy, not just it “And I am certain it n« rejoined tbc other;—yet •Rent his face grew (tale. j»g his desk, and taking h ’•ehind the door, hi- gai ^ Matthews giawl evening. “Strange!" said that to himself as the outer «1 “that he seems to have ; or wrongdoing; and • » *nost upright, hoooraH a conduct.” Just t *4 the door, ati e " ter cd. He looked 80111’ i ’ ai1 ^ a keen observer n detected traces of ogitj t T ms ' lt 1 to well . . South American a< f r save ^ ni ‘ “ I bring them down_n juniors to enter.” , °^»od his desk, and t« ^nd 1 © of pajH-rs which **? full > together, and a ledger: “V fr> well rZ' , attlu ‘"S not lifting [r° u ;^k; “if you , th ‘ [tonldei‘Ok, tl< , ar S***- night ag "*ord or tw4* |jio«K . * Matthed^thc ,iZ' l man ° f JL.', lna «ager of tlie 1,18 <30 *PWMoti B ..h-rk. a«rt h, ‘"' •** W>.