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THE LUTHERAN VISITOR, OOfcUIHIA, 8 (Jr, DKCBMBBR 1, 1871 wh»t to do with the baby. It tree » very pretty child, with light, oorly bftir and blue eyes, and when be t took it in his arms to go ou shore and take it to an Orphan Asylum, it dong to his neck, and laid its head on Me broad shoulder, so that the oapfljtin eeuld not bear to turn it adrift 0U the world. He spoke aloud and said, ‘I.hate to take this poor baby to the asylum. Does no one, of att this crowd, want a friend leas orphan child, whose lather and mother have both died on the way f Now there happened to be a gen tlemau from Lancaster standing ou the wharf. Ha had gone to the city on business, and had walked down to see the foreign vessel arrive. He heard the captain’s words and saw the pretty child. He thought of his hice home up in Pennsylvania, aud his good wife, and how lonely she (had been since his own little baby was laid iu the grave, and he said, *1 will take the child, captain ; wbat is its namef “ ‘Mary Miller,’ said the captaiu. “‘MillerP replied the gentleman; ‘why, that’s my own name, and Mary was the name of my lost baby.’ •; “He foeu took the little girl, who smiled whetf he held oat his arms to her, and he carried her home to his wile iu Lancaster. They both were very kind and good to Mary, and dearly loved her. She grew np to be a very pretty, good woman, aud became your [own grandma. Now, she was an ‘orphan,’ a ‘charity child,’ and would have* gone to the asylnm, but for the kindness of the gentleman from Pennsylvania. Would yon like to have her called a ‘beggar,’ because God took away her parents F “No, indeed, mother; was that really my own grand mother, whose picture hangs np in the parlor 1* “Yes, my son; yon see bow wrong it is to worry and torment Jacob for what is not his (halt. He cau not get suTnice clothes as we provide* tor yon. That is his misfortune, and ■rtlfitill mountain from the deep ravines below, walla, oat«H% tout, pinnacle, culminating in the temple within and above all, and probably measuring between 500 and COO feet. The palaoc of Solomon, too, odded to the impressiveness of the sight. It is settled by recent discoveries that this pile of buildings was on toe south-east corner of the area, joining on toe boons of the Lord above, and extending below to the king's gar dens, where the two valleys met, and “the waters of Sttoam go softly." AH these buildings, porticos, ool omn«, pinnacles, altar and temple have perished. “Not ooe ttooe re mains npoa another which has not been thrown down." The area alone remains, snd the massive substruc tures that for three thousand years have been sleeping la their courses. The preservation has been dae to the rain. Buildings so vast have been toppled down the slopes of Moriah that the original defiles and valleys have been almost obliterated. What had been regarded as to# original surface, has bean found to be debris from 70 to 90 feet deep. leaden cans, holding an ounce each, which are carefhHy covered all ever with paper, on which are stamped various hlerogirphteal signs, which jM-rhap* assort, a* *tnmg1y as do the types os American labels, used to cover toe outside of similar prodoe- tfoufi of “home Industry," tbit tot contents ere genuine, and warranted the beat In quality that can be ob tained even In the Ho wariest region of all thrtr Celestial country. TV popular Idea that musk, or something near akin toft, to obtained from other son roes than the one Columbia, 8. C. March J. nd after this date, March l w hen ail is doubt upon, the eartl And all i« dad ness on the sea, "Whose bould I some but note OG od! whokeepeatme? Thfa him ing soul, as long rejne Wtotjlntifa to poor itself and v English same from a which w« am familiar iutitis country. Its usual Mas Is about two feet to height, and three to length. Tbs eats long and narrow, the tall vary short. The untrue of Its coat ap proaches that of for | the rotor to u dark gray., . » , The musk to secreted b) the male animal only, and to found iu a sac, or closed pouch, under its belly. As soon us the doer to killed, this sac to cut off and dried with Ms content*} in this state it to sent to market. The capture of the doer to by no means an easy took. Timid to a* tore, and possessed of great activity DrilvV *•••• Arrive tot Green Till* Of this wo guarantee to all who may come if abdominal belts for of the woosh, end as back and abdominal knee cops and stock* Ijould 1 bring, but uuti d t; who pitta* me 7 4 i ** POP Wr- | that mourns its death Arrive at Cohuibia wmm** i with hungry ciuptinew, oor husks of earthly love d to satisfy or bless— old I bring, bnt unto Thee, ! who lovsot me t Miyoud all other friends! joyond all other love! ibto my heart descends ; t.beats calmly as a dove's, 1 my .woes I bring to Thee, *d! who healest me. nitric arid sod oil of amber, but, from He want of Introduction into use as S substitute for the genuine (the east of tts production bring comparatively trifling), it to soft to infer that a sucosasfhl imitation has never been produced; that to this aud retreats iu the mountains, almost inaccessible to man, aud prefers the regions of snow to the lower grounds, which renders the labor of hunting Tltepe* My he; When Leave Columbia*... Arrive at Charieste I>ave Charkaton Arrive at C<fluuiKu Sight Rsprtm, Frrni turn Train (Bm Leave Colombia... A i !■ i ■, jil at f "Ti a s~l unfa Am%t 4 *m 1 imriraU Arrive si Columbia it for Dr. Babcock’s Silver Uterine nir Dr. Wadsworth’s blew Psr- tinartog to largely practiced, sod to probably the moat aanrassful method of Ukiag thorn. Early tiav- explorere have been down to the original foundations. Fallen columns hare been mot wish and avoided, or a way bloated through them. The cinders of burnt Jerusalem have been cat through and turned ep. to the light—rich moulds deposited by the treasures of Jewish pride. The seal of Haggai, in ancient Hebrew characters, was picked up out of the siftings of this deposit. TV first courses of stones, deposited by Pbre niefen building*, have beee reached, lying on the living rock. At the south west corner of the area debris has accumulated to the depth of 155 feet—the accumulations of ages, made op of the rains of successive Jerusalem*; and here some of the most interesting discoveries have been made. Hers to the Ihmous arch of Robinson, shown now to be an arch, as he conjectured, by the din eovery of the pier upou which the first spaa rested. It to the remains of a bridge which crossed the valley ■ promptly attended to. 8. MARSH. 92 W. Baltimore Ht.. Baltimore, Md. Visits*. oouttane to run to Cetambtam ft 8. B. Plain, Gen. Ticket Aft 186.1. 1879 LUTHERAN PUBLICATION 80CIETY MO. 42 NORTH NINTH STREET, PHILADELPHIA. J. K. 8HRYOCK, SUPT BLUE RIDGE RAILROAD. IAIN* nr the~Bk» Hid** Re run Sally. ' imd*y» exeeptoi; would Bfove though'! that thfjy were enjoying;!, toe time very nraeh in having 4 bguod play." So thought < barlie’a mother, as she noticed that her son was Standing with the other boys^tond laughing quite loudly at Arrive at WalhmiL I^hvv WalhsDs* Arrive at Anderw The F&therUnd 8e: 3». The Lathrrss PuUietlkNi Society have made ananmomats to translate and nob* link i mgMimtnM Work*, (writable for Family snd 8. 8. see,) under the title of “Tb* fatherland Seri**." The following book* have already been published: The Cottas* to the Lake till Is the Mhlat of the North Sea 0.79 Anton, the Fiahenoan 0.**> Rcse, the IJttls fimrsvaifi OR Frits, or. Filial ((bedirnce 0A6 t Walty; or,Fidelity Rewarded 1JOO Three aix have hern pat np in a neat known to every out-, to oor of the most duraMt' and |*rsiateot of any found in nature or producible by art. It i* so strong ami diffativs, that ooe port of mask will impart its sreut to three thousand ports of inodorous matter. Exposed to the air, it will, after reaching a certain state of dryness, continue to give off odor indefinitely, and with acareriy any appreciable loss in weight* Leather scented with it retains the odor for years, sad, to foci, iu seeot once diffused to any substance or place, which saflbrs little exposure, will remain for an almost Incredibly k>ug time. Mask to largely used as a perfume. Although not osually liked la its pure state by persons of cultivated taste, there Is scarcely an tafor more popafsr hi compound*. or which is of greater use to the maker of per- that had beeu said, she saw a boy, rather Msed, trying to escape st of the boys. He hong IMPORTANT NOTH!* hfo head down, and Mrs. Fay thought be Was cry ing. She tapped on the wiudow, land Charlie, looking np, saw bis toother beckon to him. He came runuing into the house and said, “Win* fed you want, motherP “I wanted to know what was the matter wfkh that boy. He appeared Uos. Frugality yon should & very kind and gentle to him. Mrs. N says that be to a good boy, and tries to be a Chris tian.” “I am going to be to friend, mother," said Charlie, “and show him that I am sorry tor mv con duct." “Do so, my sou, aud never allow yourself to join other boys in making a fellow creature unhappy by‘thought less words and deeds.” B» XAMH/ra* RASTER ft 8011, OF BALTIMORE, MD„ r i order the bettor to me* the w*jw of their Retail Customers* a tiatmee. alts him in the community ; pro Moriah with the mountains opposite —the modern Zion. It is the skew bock or abuuneot that slopes Iu receive the end of the arch. Thaws courses remain. The staoes are five or six feet thick, snd 30 to 23 feet long. The valley here is 390 feet wide, and thus must have been the length of the bridge connecting the temple with the royal palace on the other side. At a depth of 89 feet a worn pavement was found, worn by feet that passed over it in oar Lord’s time. Lying on this pavement were e boys were only teasing i; nothing bat a ‘beggar we were having a little e&BTPiti miiii Greek Slave; or. Filial Love, Mm* Runaway tu cull it /ns, my son, to bet's feelings T 7 mother, beggars have no > hurt." io yon know that he is a Id be ask yon for anything, unto a. „ GoCtMeb Frey 1.10 Tbs Mefesol Master f*d his Nw, 1.00 Forming bet Ns. t, pot up in a neat Jast puhlisbed : Wolfptnr. Prince of Anhalt; The Iroa Age of Germany. la pirn snii r ill >li irrlj hr polilishi il Gnstava* Vasa : or. King and Peasant; Adam Nearer; The Faithful Negro : The Valley Mill. By Cari Wild. Trend*u-^t by jod Swart*. D.P. ; Knisrfit and Peas ant : The F.merald ; The Three Kiss* : Ftithtel LatM Death. We hare a number of other Transla- tkms wader way, w hirh we will an noware from time to Lime. 8. 8. Libraries retorted with nnusnal ram. t'abiuet Organ* and Melodeon* fur nuked to 8a.iday-reboots and ehrdefies, Miscellaneous. and great durability, and the pecn I tar property it has (to common, how ever, with other substance*), of gtv* tog fixity or permaneoee to perfomes more volatile than itself, make It ooe of the mo* valuable of his materials. It to also employed, to a 1 twitted Mount Moriah has been found to be a sharp crag or ridge, with so little space upon the top as scarcely to afford room for a temple of small dimensions. On all sides it fell off rapidly and very steeply, except from north west to sonth-ea*, the direction in which the ridge ran. The area ou the summit was en larged by walls built along the declivities, the outside walls deep down the valleys, from 100 to 160 feet below the area on which the temple buildings stood y son," said Mrs, Fay, r 1 am you worried that > made you to be so differ W JDo yon know who fi^p iJterC'N—-has taken f an orphan house to run s, and help in the store, is Jacob Williams, and said that his father and re; dead.” , I heard Mrs. N talk- tiis very boy," said his B is parents were j very In a dreadful lire that p urt of the city of B , perished. This boy was \ fireman, who rushed into belonging to the arch Breaking through this pavement, and through 24 feet of debris beneath, they (band a still more ancient roadway, and resting upon this, the key atones of a still more ancient bridge. The explanation to probably reached: Bobiueon’s arch to the remains of the bridge that was standing st the siege * Jerusalem, upon which, at the cod of it, stood the Roman General Tttus, bolding a parley with thejJews, occupying the other end of the bridge. The older bridge, the remains of which were found beneath the pavements, belonged to the palmy days of hemeniC.aD. PsourT-Patino WholAau Bonn sre invited to inspect the Stock to ear Jobbing sod Package DemrtmaL Ai dwasHAMILTON EASTKR A SONS, IfT, fit, MM snd tiff We* Baltimore8t.J “ kiw^ Out ehteifleU, It* fir*-I fom btfeu* way of clwics gene NSfttWfe kfttgfen* The average yield of “grain i. e., the musk itarlf—from when it is watkrku by prayer, and foaiared »\ the uknial rats OF THE si N OF RIOHTEOl 8NR8S. One hun dred feet again below this toy the original bed of the brook Kidroo. The foundations of the temple, there fore, were 250 feet above the deep defiles around. This area, originally bailt by Solomon, and enlarged by Herod, still exists, running on the south along the valley of H in non 1,060 feet, add along the Kidron 1,500 feet. This enclosure was originally oov ered with splendid edifices. Fir* were the porticos or covered walks, built along the outer walls, and overlooking the Kidron and Hinnorn. They were magnificent structures, resembling the nave and aisles of Gothic cathedrals. The middle walk, or nave, 46 feet broad, and the two aisles 40 feet The aisles were 60 feet high, and the nave, rising like a clere-story between the two, was more than 100 feet high. Add now terrace walls to the height of the porticos, and we have a solid and continuous wall of masonry 350 feet high. Bnt these were only outer buildings of the temple area. The porticos opened inwardly upon a court paved with marble, and open to the sky. Steps led op to a second conrt. Beyond this again, through beautiful gateways, was a third, and rising above them all was a fourth, in which stood the temple proper, ascending story above rtory, and said to have been 100 or even 160 feet high. Of coarse, we can not vouch for the correctness of the reputed height of these immense structures. We have the less reason, however, to doubt the last, as we have established the first If ode looked upon Mount Moriah from the Mount of Olives opposite, coming round the brow of Olivet, ou Abe way from Bethany, as oor Lord did when beholding the city, it most have been a sight which, for arclii- J. will open oo Wednesday, thettft * September next The aim of this school to to format a Seminary of hiirh arrmlo for the educato* of the danohters of the Lnthrraa fluid, as well as others who may desire to wfa fa ad vantage*.^ ainon* it* number aa able instrartam s» are to be found in say similar 1 refill - tkm. The entire espenres of a putol I* Hoard. Tuition in the Enjdtoh, hcaenofe and Latin course. including funumw reholaAric 1, yem^win be fit*.’ t*h* wUnim ; uAi that ciriw Dkl yoo ever study the cheapness of soon pleasures? auks some writer. I>o yon know how little It fakes to make a multitude lmppx ? fech tri fle** as a penny, a word or a smile, do the work. There are two or three boys panting along—give them each a rheotunt, and now mniliug they look; they will a* be ernes for some time. A pour widow lives iu the neighborhood who is the mother of a hair doxeti children. Bend thebi a half p**k of ilirert applra. and they rfftilfiM 1 - ' A shiftl 1mm lo* his arrow—the world to hoa—and be mourn* sadly; help him to find it, or make him unother. and bow (]uirkl> will the sen Rhine play over hfe sober ftu-e. A hoy haa as ranch m be ou do to pile op a load of wood i SNstot him a taw momenta, or speak #kind word tp him, snd in forget* bis toil and works away Without minding it. Your apprentice lias broken a mag, or out the va* a tottic too large, or slightly Ifoured s piece of work. Hkf, “You soouadred,*' and he feels miserable: but remark “I am sorry," and he will tty and do better. You employ a man; pe> him cheer fully, nod apeak a pleasant weed to him, sod be will leave your house with a contented heart, to light up bis own hearth with ttnllca and glad newt “ n * As ytm pass aftmg the street, yon province * diatriri of Tooqoin, bnt the name "Toaqulu musk’ 1* proba bly now appHotf Imfiscrfmlostrly to all the Chfeent gfifffiBMs Our chief supply of (Jhiaeoe muak come* to us dire* from (tooLon; H is lapsrtol in caddie* cxmutoiug fifty to oao nd picked the child ap idle, jast before the roof , mother had fallen on ercome by the smoke, xned up in the house, property was the house ved in, the poor child titnte. He was sent to Home, and kept there — got him. God might o terrible ealamity upon : little brother, and then yon feel to be called a and all together not lees than ten millions. The remains of towers and bouses have been lighted upon be longing to the age of the kings of Jafiab. The pool of Biffteefia has been, in all probability, identified— an intermitting fountain, which ex plaiae the popular legend of the troubling of the water by aa aagel. Underground passages, probably of the uge of Hesektah ; channels, too, have been opened, down which the refuse of the altar, water, ami the tare aa oaaec in first hands, sod the pure article, separated Rom its en velope, iu like proportion, warned, twenty to tweofo five dollar*. Not withstanding this high price, its preparations can be produced at a moderate coat, because, a little of it “goes such a great way* iu the matter of giving off odor. As amk is Is octree demoad la almost alt coontrira, and, as might be Inferred, i specially in the Rost, ami as the diftk-alty of procuring it BUCKET* BILL J0USBH f^STABLISHED IN 1W7. Sspdg: of PmtE f °BFXL^SfAL^^yi*i ^~PA l fEKT^UPk 1 OvSD^OTA^ HANGINGS. fynimlislilMffjiig rent free. Addraa VAKDUlEKfjn* 1 108 A 104 East 3d stivet. Cincmnsta. a Feb 8 SMr [ should feel very sorry bout it lam sorry now st his clothes, and helped boys to tease him," said blood of the victim seem to hsve passed.- The tracing of these chan nels will probably lead np to the identification of the exact spot where the altar of sacrifice stood. oil you something that do not know," Kidd his [any years ago, a man left Europe for Ameri nd jput all 'lheir money ceasary article* for their ng the long voyage that make, aud iu paying for t across the oceans The ’-Oar Rtomane . lot •“euud truu*lation •Pfi* tbe forts ami Eud by u |ha <l gr(Hii WWitlMW in id 8 mv***** , A Mtcrrt Easily Misunderstood.— The inundation of 1771, which swept away a great port of the old Tyne Bridge, Newcastle, was long remem he red, and alluded to with emphasis as “the flood." On one occasion Mr. Adam Thompson was pat into tbe witness-box at the assises. The conn sel asking his name, received for answer: “Adam, sir—Adam Thump he will coustuntly keep on .ft rejected amortment of Ml nrtid ing to hi* line of business, sacs rire, Provisions, Tobaccos, (kt. January 26 over three months on the n^ daring that time the riry sick aud died. He i'in the deep sea, aud a after, bis wife also died me disease. Then there indulged m though you felt natural sat, of it will work sdin Of vour n.-igl eta all about as, 1st on sot grasp them with a misers fist, and lock them up in oor Waits. No, rather I* ns take them and scatter them a boat ns, 1w the cot of the widow, among tbe groans of children in the “Where do yoa live f" “At Paradise, sir.* (Paradise is a village about a ndl* AftFFICE and Warerooms. JACOB S. SCHIRMEK mother placed her vessel was bound and when tlic port hero wa* quite a e gathered ou tbe io had Come in the >C. The passengers went tt leir different iaiu did nbfc kflow Ju. “And bow long have yoa dwelt in Paradise r continued the hamster. “Ever since the flood,’ was the reply, mads in afi simplicity, and with no intention to raise a laugh. It is nsedlssB to any. that the judge askfifefei an explanation. >*' • DIFLES, Shot-Gun*. Kevolver*. Gun ii Material. Write for Price List, to Great Western Gna Works, Pittsburgh, Pa. Army Guns, Revolvers Ac-, bought or traded for. Agaata wanted. Ang 4 _ ™ Sfoe- rn a* .« m. -Ml everywhere. h 103 EAST Bff charleston, s. c Oot 12 . hppe has ndvar hswi <*l>JflBed, taialy nbt surpassed. It was mini IO£ it fti _W ** w Kt •