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f iulljttati COLUMBIA, 8. C- - ' iy, December 1, 1871. R^pLl* RUDE, D.D., Editor. ‘J* unity i in non essentials ij,in all things, charity. 19 3k -~-y: i»Mr----^aa rei an ccivi nuBil lie MCI are No* that i ot tiou. Frida t, to « 1 r tifaciAL IfOTlCXS. uuikt be made in Pont Bank Check*, or Draft*, these can not be obtained, ooney in a Reomteukd Lrr- pL«.t masterir are obh#ced to when required. am sent to subscribe!* nntil s« order to dwcouthau* is re- • a »IT«UW*«. M .jv law. Merely returntnjr a (* ’tt*e paper by mail* ta *ot *uf- icatkms relating to *ub- t iboold gavel their name* venr rad carefully Indicate which which are new subscriber*, the name of the post office, that of the county ana State becriber i* necessary, in order eutries may be promptly made. obituary notice*, and intended for publication, tten separately, and not in wtrs, to receive proper atten- ti 1<*i .# tt i si| i g . i bj 1 • >»>, ! I A aid, 5th in*., Rev. Pa., on the 6t 1 THE LUTHERAN OL — raisT«*.-Ba* ±. ering, I‘n_, on the Marti«f of Sun burg, and Rev. E. Foy, of York, Pa., on the 7th. The number of laborers is fast decreasing; the call of the church is load. Jesus ssys: “Go ye and preach the gospel,* but the qiinistry has lost all at tree tious Id «be eyes of the uieu of this generation. There are young men enough, but the great minority are lovers of themselves, and not of Gbrist, the charcb, and souls. The present state of indifference trouble* u» greatly. Lnkewsimnem Is the besetting sin of our churches, and for it the Lord has bat ooe mode of treatrueut, which is given !u the third 1 chapter and the sixteenih vem* of the book of Revelation. sod, oonseqneatly H bar in fl nones for nk of Christian ch provtdaaes of Jane of last year, 1 was invited, or rather advised to preach at this then apparently waste plans la Zkfc. I responded to the cry, “Go over sad help them,* sad have preached, for them ooce a mooch, at the am ble hour of 4 P. M. Upon coming to I 1,* 1871. is llttie of India Thus la ▲Mother “I New Publications. Inst AVOLuuy.—We went although quite iudisposed, w’s,- Orangeburg, to oeuui take ftff ia the* installation of Rev. returned ou Tuesday iillTmpfoved, and uuable to the editorial chair with com / ^ivcs ami benefit to our friends wiU syui- us,^ overlook apparent lings, and patiently recover. Rev/ W. S. Charleston, preached the i, which abouuded Lae counsel, both to the new an 1 the flock over which the H hiui preacher Lii us who aWy St, John year ot that pbS PROFE pastor <£>f Lnth< been tysb nion of Genual long When i of their of the apt to Let us institRtpd, it with before would,* t ion to as adi a; <]aest only, andj the same he : “1 drink vine untfl new with dom.” 39. -We would request every when writing to as, to OVLAR to give ucti only id also his post* office, State, ao that all commit- j be attended to prompt- t tie delay Avoided of wait- second communication.— riber who wishes to paper must also send office, county and State, is done, the paper may , and We may be un- sured for neglecting to h we could not do for per information. Prom in which our lists are well as from the fact that large number of snli the same name, it is that these requests be ed. 'JidCEPTED.—The Rev. T. A. M., of Winchester, he congregation of the man unanimously elect of last month * the of {St.John’s Evan church, of this city, accepted the position and wdl enter on the the important and re hflt trust daring df January next. In the ie Rev. J<fon H. Honour, very kindly and aecept- the cwngregatw*^ of assistant pastor for a re, will coo inue to occupy >n.—Charlt tton Courier. )R Electi d.—Rev. Wolf, 3 Lombard Street English hnroh in Baltimore, has t third Tfrcjfeasor of Get- UUIV.OI kJ,UilUUI , . & fiv; LQS OP tsks: “Is te sick abased in many ngiwatious because the [tain a false view of the and ascribe Is not the It that by the dispensa- | Sacrament to those who e neglected the sadva souls, false hopes may when death threatens ! essential that the be correctly taught point* The ^im practical articles on experienced pastors, churches the Lord’s >y too rnaqy bnt lightly ind bnt few, there" rhen on the sick the majority only think temporal affairs, of , and of the burial Christians even the wants of the ber that onr last Sapper, and ate disciples immediately asion and death, connection, call a t that the ! comm by Christ to rent froni all suhse- ious in. time, and Will only be celebrated in er in heaven, unto you, I will h of the fruit of day when I drin In my Father’s on M«tt. xxvi: ?minary. Sick.—The >t the comma ■ Sacrament, edly e lift • Faithful unto Heath.—We are in debted to Mr. Hebryoob, Saperiu tendent of the Lutheran Publication House, Philadelphia, for a oopy of thia interesting volume of the “Fa therlaud Series.” We have read it, aud were interested. The story is well told, the descriptions are life like, and the men and women am like old acquaintances. Wa have heard of them before, read aboat them iu history, aud aeon them drawn ou cauvflsa by the canning hand of many a limuer. Both old aud youuft will read it with benefit aud pleasure. The book is neatly gotten up, ami deserves a place in every Sunday-school library . Wood's Household Magazine. New- burgh, N. Y. December. Wood never fails to eatertuiu us agreeably, and the present number is no ways inferior to its predeoeamv* Phrenological Journal. New York. December. We have been especially iu tores ted in “Bridge of Motiou,” “The Geo logical History of Man,” and the rest of the cooteuta. .Vs au evidence of its independence aud integrity, we give one of its literary notions: “Dene Hollow. A Novel. By Mrs. Henry Wood,* etc. This lady, like Mrs. Sonthwortb, has written mach. Some will say, no doubt, she has written well. But what of it f What does it all amount tof Living or dying, what profited! the world t" Yes, and we add, what profitetb novel-reading a man T It given false views of life, it makes earthly objects supreme, it misrepresents Christian ity, it weakens the intellect, petrifies the heart—novel-readers have no sympathy for any other sufferers than persecuted lovers—and it closes heaven’s gate forever on its victims. The novel-reader, the opium eater, aud the whiskey sucker, are in the same boat and fellow travelers, ai though the first is reflued, the seooud nervous, and tin* last vnlgar. Southern Mueical Journal. Savaunah. November. VoL I., No. 3. We have already directed atten tion to it, aud repeat our conviction, that it merits the patronage and ought to be sustained by “Dixie* Brainard* Musical Would. Decem ber. We do not see how auy singer, player, music teacher, or person in any way interested in music, can afford to be without the Musical World. Each number contains oew music, alone worth the subscription price a year/ Who taught him an< ■towa, bat his two Let thsra hi itod by Mass this place I found the church without crv^K nor any who worshiped with Hi bar sacred my walls, no church records) bat wa have generally, although there la a good deal of polemical vicinity, tolerably Uienoe*. and I am tokl that {with a few exceptions) Wa have been bli mad with better order than any at oar slater churches in thia neighborhood. Yet there remains a grant mark to do. While I miniatured here la* year there were no additions to the church militant, but wa hope soars ware directed to Christ. I hod o* the power ta perform any ministerial bond with rite; therefore, ooutd not raoalra any one into the ohuroh Then we cloned la* year, afi the while ear hearts breaking over the of Zion. Hot having under the honored tnittou of Dr. Rode, onr theological course been set apart to the holy the ministry by hands, ami having located with this lieopie, wa deSermiusd either to build or teor dowu. lleoca, imme diately after Synod, I be pointment, on Setarday previous to the fifth Babhath of Oetobar, n pro tracted meeting, intending to con tin no for n week or more, M ohto and profitable, bat the premised help of Bro. J. A. Sligh, to aj great disappointment, did not come to band, and after the meeting wan cloned, aad I returned home, 1 only learned, to my poor cooaoUttoa, that nick naan in hie family had prevented his attendance. Wa did regret his noo-ability to be with an. * On Saturday, preparatory services to communion | was full to after a discourse on the Lord’s Sap per, the consecrated ehovota ware given to a large number at God's people, of nearly rv name. Two member* on Sabbath by holy one by confirmation. The meeting lasted half week, day aud night, bat froai some mnse it wan no* as well attended as we would have wished. Yet we rejoice that the lord was with us; and now, where, ooe mouth ajgo, we hod no member* of oar cbnrch nt all, we have twenty five, all of which, save four, have been gathered as wandering sheep into the fold of Christ. W> distributed during the meet ing over a doses Hooka of Worships hitherto unknown In this chorah. nil of which indoor as to take now courage. A Paul nay plant nod an A polios wnter, bat we give aM the gion to God, from whom the But ov*t believe ia * BIB!* tl no* In el lira it *m just possible that the tonus ftitiod of J tine material—is aT5 vulcanised state—through 1 T&JIXZZS'i But if ray i ra the will t»y d be contest to tit as to the way and n ttiaffy to fheor* As am ty mppradaitea of would any that I wastrel a ship in Newberry Ooilega, which 1 would pteer * hie disposal, aad if win UtiP in- llbsraltty aohih- sf ana V. P. Bnossa. For the Lutheran Visitor. We Art Yet Alive! ' l>r. Rude—Dear Sir : Let me pub lish to the church universal a alight historical sketch of the past ami condition, confined to the last few years, of ber daughter church, St. Nichols, situated in Barnwell County, S. C., and also the result of a aeries of meetings lately held at the above named place. This cbnrch—tit. Nichols—ia lo cated in qnito»an isolated place, in regard to tbe Ev. Lutheran Church iu this State. In -fact, geographically speaking, it ia situated, \u reference to the main Lutheran Church in Sonth Carolina; as Iceland in the Old World to continental Europe. And too, to make St Nichols more retired, it is aboat nine miles dis tant from Mount Pleaeaut Lutheran church—onr most flourishing con gregation in thia county—aboat two miles beyond tbe dark rolling waters of tbe far-famed tialtkahatcbie, sur rounded on every baud by people of another faith, yet some good people. Therefore, many things to discourage us in this gopher and rattlesnake country. About thirty years ago, it will be remem herd that thia cbnrch was in a prosperous oonditioo, bidding fair to send out her light and troth to all tbe earth, but ere she had reached the zenith of ber glory, she almost instantly fell a prey to the ruthless band of the fell destroyer. It was . only by her dying shrieks that we were directed to ber atten tion ; only in ber expiring agony that we ran to ber rescue. For sixteen years, from mal administration, she has been growing cold in ber ovan- For lbs Lutheran Visitor.,' Why Wa fail. Only be who Is engaged in the Master's cause on the frontier can understand and realise the difficul ties and the sacrifices of the wort, it is, seemingly, very pleasant and gratifying to see new congregations brought into being, and new ho nan* of worship dedicated. Bat only he who is instrumental in bringing this aboat can tell what it costs. As missionary we enter some city where our church has no organization, * least not in the language of the country, consequently but little known. Yet it is our purpose to establish a church of the Reforms tiou, aud we find a few English am! a few German member* willing to engage in tbe enterprise. A hall is rented iu some oat of the way place, in s bad neighborhood, bard to find Ac. “And why go there!* because we can not aflbrd to get anything better. Well, we commence—at first, at tendance good, bat as soon as the novelty of the thing wears off, attend a nee slim, and then begins the Urinls of the missionary. How to keep up the interest in this oat of the way place—how to bring those claiming to be Lutheran* up to the work Is the groat difficulty. The small tram her eogaged in the work deter some, whilst the expenses keep others away, and many store never come because of indifference. Now tbe whole of this may be attributed to a •cant of love for the cbnrch, and this in a great measure to a defective knowledge of the doctrines of the charch. For we hold that he who Is brought up ih the Lutheran church, having a correct understanding of ber doctrines, will not be satisfied in any other. We not unfrequently beef persons my, “Yes, I was Ifrought np In And confirmed to the Lutheran charch, bat I fed Just as much at home in any other ehurch.* Why sot because sf the defective teaching, for had that individual Camilles to e< sad the F«*tte asks are to explain, able paragraph Is thto 1 “Many of them* (am he kindly almmmtj to oar .Americas Okarrfi, te edit *r -^i-l . L—t- W^rawxra % 1 not to sufficiently tiatifrt* i< Phi*. The At Oot> so (Vfegr * all. aad an wwoM Iti i sosti be, to ti Un to rob away flora Wa! our graduates of boo doe to collegians. 1 * * Hreoodlj. The tito unper repre sented auolber one of ohr Southern College* as aboat to be “sold lor debt,* wbeu it is well known that there Is no “judgment* or “execa tioo* against one inch of its Campos, or ooe brick In fto walls, Tbfrdly. The editor pa\* his ra te the Pnasilwu of ooe of oar man of God, whose praise is to aQ the churches, whose character for Integrity aad veracity has never known the slightest blem isb—and publishes him as having “lied.* 80 far as Newborn College Is con cerned, sod I would venture |p *a> ia the other instance* fa Wall, these Visitor. n VOU RAIS- The tatters of “In—lanas,* the New York correspondent of the Ia torM, hare beso exceedingly dry ot cue, to the *p there. Hot he ie ia hie t again, and accordingly given i a very refreshing eputle. Hear, anr; “Tbs ram was beginning thaJ tint* • • • * to come to spite * * the rain continued * umbrella * it was warm a chine, sultry , pljfff 4fif • * * ***** was coming down to old feahioosd • • the nun ia steadily falling * Kata, rain, rate! It to ooratog down to a steady, determined stream. U has been raining since we came to Newark. It ia a repel)non of oar Buffalo experience, two yean ago. Talk of Quaker annual meeting* bringing rain . they can’t come up to some ol oar tiynod*. It is very earm, too, without a breath of air. They mf throw are thousand* of aftoeqaltos to Newark.* What ahull we say than? Talk shoot yoar meteorological corps * W iAib .. ... 1 iku- --l.r. Jmltilil ...» Bat how shawl the wambnr of mo* f And -without a breath of bat it -well for an unhappy effect upon hie to* few boars, tinch Is the reward of a faithful Christian servant for his work, by wbioh some of tbe very moor who thus deserted him were raised to the places they bold. AU thia, however, is to consonance with tbs spirit of • ones noble, bat now I! As was predicted, this work stir the dry bones of peeodo La- It is a Mve, glittering aad goes right straight to the mark. From the feathers which were seen flying aboat Ninth street, and Gettysburg, soon after tbe Jar- aUm went forth, it may be imagined lb* somebody was hit Tbe sub jeeta treated (n the fir* three sec tions, relate to the general charec (eristics of oar fidth, sod tbe treat ment thereof has the merit of great plainness in tbe presentation of ripe, vigorous thought. The four remain ing sections relate more particularly to matter* appertaining to the pres eot cooditton of things in oar charcb. It is n noble defence of Lutheranism against that species of religious fanaticism falsely called Lutheran, which is eo tepidly running into Methodism and lalitadinariau beliefs aad practices to the North. We have need that our minds be stirred an the* satyects, lest we forget bow I malignant Americas - Lutheranism 1 has been in the past few years, and 1 incongruous record* some of its champion* have, and what ueces ! tity there was of totting oat some of | its bad blood. If the Javelin soc | card* to rooting the foes of oar - charch and of true Protestantism, it | will have accomplished a great and good work. The thrusts against the 1 too* system, called Methodism, < (what a paradox!) and the party catting itself “The Charch,* are equally tolling, and were then, and are wow demanded. Let smattering and brasra arrogance the sects be put down. It is high time. let the Evangelical Pro trstant church honor and sustain the man who takes np the Javelin and * goes oat after them. He smites | between the joints of tbe harness. LnrDKX. Far the laitheraa Visitor. 1 Wk^t a pity ! They sing, base a breath short and ret very sweet. The care to dnse aresqaitoi ia. A Pride detractions aud aspersion# acre pep-, to reproducing thts article, omits the 1. PKIDX. * mss at present to abound 1 morv .than it ever hah yet, aud, sad to cbnstiau*, I feel ooavtoeed, are upholding it nearly ak much as those w ho ser\e the god of this world. How can any one be or do good if evil rules tbe heart t If pride has |H>s*e*ioon of the mind and heart, then the inmost mind is nearly continually occupied with those thing* to which the proud delight; aad all such person* fail to look at themselves aright; they forget that they are shiners before God, and that It is not their own excellency, not their merit, not their position, not that they are in aay respect superior to other men, but tbe for bearance and long-sufleriug kindness of God, which spare their lives, ex tend their day of probation, and still, but only for n limited time, afford them a place of repautance. We have a good charch, an able minister, and a large congregation, bnt the great majority of onr charch mem ber* are too concerned in world lyr affairs; frequently wbeu they assemble to worship tbe Triune God, they engage to discussing business, polities, and such like; sot a few do not come into the boose of God till tbe hfeir of prajer is past, and some would gladly stay outside altogether, but that they have a little shame left. Farmer* now a-dajs ftud it In nousidereftoti of the eminent adr- 1 irnfaisaible to make both ends meet, vices—we quote from memory—ten j The fashion* change continually— cfeteff that iMffftntloh bjr Professor their daughters must go to the store Jacob*, the Board unanimously coo te bay the trumpery and trashy ferred W)MM him the honor of Rmer 1 finery brought from the North, and lias Profrshof with a salary <ff 11,000 i if fhrmrow have toeootfeae to gratify a year, u-M teds paid up to the time their daughters' wauls, it can Dot af hi* death. The fAtheran Gfiterrcr, be long before large slices ot their all his A BOARD OW IWOBATBM. It fa to bt regretted that the last days of the veooratde Dr. Jacobs, of Gettysburg, were disturbed by tbe action of the Board of Trustees of lVftfwyfmat* CVglef*. It to well known that Prof. Jacobs devoted bis life to the establishment and pros perity 01 that Institution, and that ho stood by U when it paid him bat tbe miners ble pittance of fifty M tors o year, aad that in Ite palmiest ume it never decently renumerntrd him for bts services. It to well known also that he labored there as long as God fare him strength for the work, and thkt be died * fl Professor Emeritus of that Cbltege. Tbe Sta? and Srntimet, In an obitn ary snide on Dr. Jacobs, says, that fectfy gratuity** Aitd entirely uiyro- voked. Now tU»- Alumni of New berry College have never dowp au They bare Dfvsr detracted from the merits of onr chard) institutional or aaparwed ths moral character of their brethren, to my know lodf®, art, I presume it la aouod philosophy to give Its s reason, tbkt their consciences would not emit Arm to do We are told is this editorial “the «diwr ><16 seek* to tare a cooacico. i of ofieucs toward God aod man.*’ Wa thought a# much before be * rote it. Though a stranger to us, wc had nrar ' ( gG'eu Jpn credit for this.— Therefore, iu the eitofqba m* the largest charity, we art about to solve the problem bow could sanaSra tioaaff bo# a* «h up—Grangers as wa am—hi sash a bad light.,1 Tha fosse Ion waa help «ate ram.* It puzzled uwtetidf. -Artat* tiii* ft rod*? woriN which fee have ‘italfctissd, and lands must go to satisfy the tost of ,IJ the eyes. I love to see young per- n*turally leaves u* tinder the impre* son* dress decently, but only look at «fonttMt ft know* cither that *m h onr young ladies new ! Mr. Editor, wna not the cate, or fliat H were w dl do yon or any ether sensible person enough slfy nothing about that ’ believe that Ged ever intended oue matter at all. 80 ft etvt that out. head to have the hair of two heads Nesr,Tffe whole thing Is plain enough on It at the same time! Do you when ft tt known that the Board of think that a lady can be a good Trustees of IVon*y!v»nln College Christian woman who does It! I informed Dr. Jacobs, a short time think not! What docs a young fe- denth, thaw*Mr salary, as Emeritus Professor, male look like with a great of hair stacked on her head ! bundle What before hi* voted him W6u!d cease. * As he wa* quite 111 at do they call ft, trying to change the time tbe nbWee was served, the family endeavored to keep him in what God has made ! It can not be anything else but sinful. If God ignorance Of tbe action of the Board, does not interfere, what is to become but a* part bf said notice had been read to him by a member of the family before its character had been discovered, it is believed he under stood or auraiiicd the nature of the contents. He aSked finally for tbe of as in the next twenty years ! I hare seen young ladies approach the Lord’s tabic with their beads and faces so fumbled up that the minister found it difficult to admin ister the sacrament to them. Some names appended to tbe notice, which do not call It pride, but what else werir'gfetifi toHtt. J Be never alter 1 isBf Remember; “God! the proud, but giveth grace to ths humble.” Read prayerfully what th» AposUe Pawl tori tea in tbe first epfe tie to Timothy, the second chapter and the ninth ver*. For ths Lutheran Viafe* A Card. Mr. Mditor: Phase let the fepfop. ing gracious recognition find pi** in onr church organ, the right Bra- ranger of charitable deads, withmt which we “become ea sounding fen* or a tinkling cymbal”—viz.: fc r Wiener, Midway, S. C n $5; C#p^ Bachman, Columbia, 8. $5. Wentworth Street Church, Chari*! ton, a O, $1.50; Pomaria, a (X,$i J two little children, Orangeburg, S.C.. 02. Many thanks for the above! Aud may they be blessed spirttrafly by the God of all grace unto eternal life. Yours, respeotfoBy, a P. Boozkr letter %pra Wart Yirgiato. ; Having finished up my work in Indiana, I was instructed to visit Wfent Virginia. Came hither by way of Cincinnati, where I spent the Sabbath with Bro. Hel wig. He is turning his attention to u, that great city, and is bound to an need. He is substantially appreciated by his people, as they, unaoHeital made a considerable addition to hi* salary. I pray for his succeat, as be is alone ia the great metropolii of Ohio, tl<ongh sarrounded with Lutherans ou even side. . * Entered this State at Wbe^g, where I aset tny friend and adbeol. mate, Bro. Bari.;tz who has do* a noble worit loft hat off?. Hlrtfififer ia neat and comfortable, and not toe large for the attendance 01 his con- gregatioos. He la well known throughout thia State, and is re garded as a successful pastor and Sunday-school mao. Met Bro. Shaeffer at Grafton. He is a most congenial mao, and his influence in that respect la great He has laid the foundation for s comfortable church, convenient to the main portion of the town. He tikes his field, and prides jn fee band of workmen in his congrega tion. At Charleston, the capital of this State, it would be well for fee Lutheran Church to consider her interests. The town is making rapid progress. Will be on tbe line of fee Chesapeake aod Ohio Railroad. Is ou tbe Big Kanawha River, one of the most beautiful streams I ever saw, aud ia navigable sometimes tbe whole year. Even now, when fee smallest of boats can scarcely go up and dowu the Ohio, much larger boats navigate the Big Kanawha. Its waters are as clear as the Swa quebauna, and its scenery is almost unsurpassed. I don't know whether there is a Lutheran in Charleston, but I do know that before many years, by ordinary effort, a oongre gatiou could be built up. In my travels I meet many substantial Lu therans in other churches. I find that they pass at par, and often at a premium. M Since my eutrauce iu this State, I have organized five Y. M. C. Asso ciations. Have a number of towns yet to viait. Waa agreeably dis appointed in tbe success that has attended my efforts. I was fee means of effecting the first organised Christian work iu the State Univer sity at Morgaiitowu. At Mouudsville, I saw au old mound, completely round, aboat fifty feet high, aud covered wife oak aud beach trees more thaa two feet ia diameter. A gentleman told m that when be was quite young, he ra saw decayed logs of fallen trees upon it larger thau those I saw standing. It is certainly remarkable for its age, and for the fact that it was the work of man. Some time ago a mao'dug a shaft in the centre of the mouud down to the bottom, aud found tbe remaius of hums* beings about half way from the top aud at the bottom. It was certainly a great curiosity. On my way to Morgantown from Fairmoont, 1 «** another curiosity—a grape vine that entirely covered a huge oak tree, and the main stem of the vine, for fifty-five feet, was one foot in <*i a meter. At Mouudsville, I met an old g* demon by the name of Edwards,» former resident of York, Pa*, is 106 yfeus of age, and who was baptised by a Lutheran minister ifi - las infancy, his parents being theraus—R. WL t* Lutheran <* server. 1 Lost for Eighteen Years.—A of laborers, while cutting a rood through “Hang Hollows,*near Goan ril Bluffs, Iowa, on Monday, dug up a sack containing $12,000 in ooi»* It was hidden 18 years ago by a to* n named Muir, who murdered a OUR l'onnan, and said that he had hidden the money under a stump in tb® Hollow, but would uot tell where* Many persons hunted vainly for the treasure. Tbe laborers who acc * deutally discovered it shared it equally. ffaw to HU* J>oW* rut i- :* fjTwbom ■ 0 "' Z* *-*•.urn*m i; not. t* te ** JOU S iL the beturr. At*>'| u* » r-JC: ^^0iu_.your reliffroM « And W him T ^ 'Jyki— hiwiseL " i -*A«ce. - f- ^eond- Don’t thn j get np a 1its aecow»*»odai tged tfiO Bl®®)* «• J tomach as you lia' k * kind af fo* . ^ ZSZc* 1 "- K 4 rawas and kindn- | V noea^fortabic when | ^ a^ke a gr*t f*rad. c f Tbe leas he tronbles - ke will enjoy the caze so » och {oT Joul V'v dishes as.foi ^ vnd beware of exjx^ ^ vanity hy letting * grand dinner yoo can ^ uk* it for granu |L a^haudsome thii»^ v_ even if S** 1 du ® ot gams it before h» vast amount of down) among tbn Lord’s peoi»4 Third. Don’t fill In lot of low scandal at minister, or about He will never great id should remain in per]-< of. * thousand dirt> whgfe are refiib pot mentioned to apybotl> lessly talk about th* sorely degrade you)', who hear you. Belt. 1 < - sileucc. Low slang i> social life. Ifyoatal<l mmieter about other- rally think that his tc; dered wail come uvx^ peddler, whether in ti oat, i* h very ufean making character. 8<* uot one of tbe natnbei Fourth. Try to imtL ter easy, craufortabi And mark T be would tidy.house and a cfe- fine furniture and ex] See that the young ch *e!L And If your mi: spend the nigbt ait 1, be does it comfbrtaLh ; Fifth. Don’t 4»k hi \ questious about the cur cult things in the Bibl.l a ekaoce to do you chiefly about those hare most to do with \ <1 experience' and your d; '| substantial good, rati gratification of au idle t J Sixth. Don't think yen | every minute ia your m, 1 euce. He don’t wi.vh N - from your aecessaiy buJ donk forget that he has things to think of^ and t I sometimes rather be a the best society. Seventh. If eouveuh pray with you before vimtis never finished wit —Presbyterian Banner. Mtaistenai Saeular We can not share the ot the Observer in tht houses, the establish ui< mills, and the running tories by men who, at ib proteas to be miuisteo pastors of Christ’s chim not seem to us to fall v head of “Church InteUig. itispu^bvtheOfcserro. of part|flOar fodlinew facu w the cwniuenUsti. sole p«OTt.’ ‘■VoA, P», ; "Tbe Sev. J. H. MeoJ enterprise raid c| to»©teri a e his moveu: < P*®* 4 ** 1 wbriton factory the borough ii ou| y a short time since h< ^ handsome and efog. I ■ ». ) w - I I % hfeh is au ornameut to of it wml uow he Mb new focati factory, wh 1110 l > ro , ation. ,^ ^ ^ « believe that this *n owns, and ban i • superin < saenUitti .r cbUgTOgatioi JBorohased sever ■ ? dccupie« I™ days clearing the °® n toact« for S in K i V v. V the ing a 4 count 1 . h ^riconsiy stigmatizes a Potato patch.”