The Lutheran visitor. (Columbia, S.C.) 1869-1904, April 19, 1872, Image 4
ff y •
I ^ '
If!
I
i L
Ode to
1 I
Poetry.
For the Lutheran Visitor.
the Georgia Soldier* in Laurel
Grove Cemetery.
S. E. BITTl.E.
a conjtlicts o’er, in slumbers deep,
ow, gallant warriors, take your rest!
trui ipet’s call shall break* your sleep
With; n the cold earth’s quiet breast.
No druju'iloud roll, nor bugle sound,
I*stujrts your still and loug repose.
Here in deep silence ye lu> ve found
Asafr etreat from all your foes.
The nit ua nful night winds sadly wail
jlMj I >lemn dirge o’er warriors brave,
And sil ;*t stars stand sentinel
To gi a -d each sleeping patriot’s grave.
Each Sprang, with floral loveliness,
’s hand assembles here,
st flowers th<
o^er blight
the last loud reveille
1 throughout the vaulted skies,
in the solemn day
the sleeping nations ri*e.
! in ahiniug ranks move on,
in the Saviour’s train,
the glorious army join,
iHeavens celestial plain.
'
! ■
Miscellaneous.
Robert R Lee.
nit
£'■ *
t
FROM FRRJCDICB.
never was a man who had
little of the “politician,”
countrymen understand
mi. “1 think” said Mr. Car-
tlie- well known lawyer of
[i f> a man of high charnc-
hai known Lee long and
ily, “that he was freer than
1 ever kuew from the taint
ion or party prejudice.”
apart from the intrigues,
and guiles of cities aud
izens, as though uncon-
bf their existence, but with
deep seated in his heart,
a fine judge of character}
’agnosis of u»eo and women
keeu and accurate for
his eyes to the little
self seeking, and in-
gnes which daily came across him.
Bint although he perceived, and
put them aside, he never be-
his consciousness of their
existence, or wounded amour propre
anything seeming Jo convey a
proacb. ; •
ms LOVE OP CHILDREN.
But, after all, the most winning
his traits was the affection and
fidence which, without any seemini
consciousness, and wjthjout an effort,
hie inspired in little children. Often,
! iscioos
h
him as these two great captains of
ancient history, we doubt? whether
any general of modern history ever
sustained for four years—a far longer
time now a day than Hannibat’s fif
teen years in the remote past—a
war in which, while disposing of
scanty resources himself, he bad
against him so enormous an aggre
gate of men, horses, ships aud sup
plies. It is aa under rather than over
estimate of the respective strength
of the two sections to state that,
during the first two years the odds,
all told, were ten to one, during the
last two years twenty to ntre, against
the Confederates. The prolongation
of the struggle is in no slight degree
attributed to Mr. Jefferson Davis,
whose high character and unselfish
ness are,qyen now, uudetrvalned by
Confederates, and totally denied by
his conquerors. The courage of the
rauk and file of the rebel army is
rofi-eshiug to contemplate in these
days, which have seen a European
war between two nations equal in
numbers ami resources triumphantly
and
by the three on
ness of ths shook ; aad
bs a doubt that to a
dead by lightning, the
life to death occurs without eon
scioosness being in tbe least degree
implicated. It is an abrupt stop
page of seam I ion unaccompanied by
a pang.”—firming /Wf.
•ewers of tbe hotel were full, as aleo
those connected with the privies,
with the result that on entering
those on the lower ftoor, the filthy
matter from beneath sported up be
tween the joints of the looting ei
tbe foot fell upon it
its made It ap
■ !gy
Typhoid Ttver.
HalT, Journal •/ HmUk, for March,) fever
has a valuable article on this subject.
The Doctor aims at the substance of
the matter without eireuuilotutiou.
It is, bs nays, accurate enough fur
sil practical parposea for ths
to say that typhoid is an
ted form of typhus; that both should
be celled by the same name of E*
cremeutal Fever, for then ths com
mon people would at once know the
nature of the disease, would at oocs
seek out its cause, remove it, end
thus promptly abate the malady, aot
ouly in the Individual, but In the
neighborhood where prevalent. Ty
phoid fever, typhus fever, ship fever,
jail fever, camp fever, ere one end
closed in qpveq months, an# stained 1 the same disease; for the eauee of
If a case or two of typhoid
wears la any family the eaaea
should at ooee ha eaaght for in the
air breathed, or la the water Bead
Tbe amount of lose
each year, by neglect to keep the
axles of wagons greened end bear
Inga of machinery well oiled, is
mormon*, end In tbla day various
expensive fhrtn machinery, a very
I serious tool even to those who keep
tbe bearings tolerably well oiled.
I Very few do so In tbe most perfect
manner.
According to experiasenta made in
! France, the friction of woodeu sor
BILLS
BELL FWnCDBY
l^STABUSHED Ilf 1W7.
I * beds far ■havvhA!
Superior
. A. ,
Mar lb
with
tOVBJ) KOTA BY
4 catalogues
1EN it tIFT
O.
23—ly
for driukiug aad oookiug.
Id. It la ulnu to >« watar .bkk n,W,,n * "" ’ ,ood '
ww ftw a aprtttg, or .all, *« ••»*•»' of ,h *
fountain which ts higher, in a ax
etovgled locality than say human
habitation, at feast within a mile or
two; aud safer still, if above all
barn yards, chicken roosts, pigpens,
end privies. •
‘ force employed. Tbe friction of metal
ou wood was something leas, while
tious of Sedan, Meta
euted crtpitulu
and Iferi*
Bat, after all, the one name which,
in connection with the groat Amen
can civil war, jmsteri* aermfwm atq*r
traditum super,tea frit, is the name
of Robert Edward Lee. It is not
likely that any biographer or histori
an will ever protray him as he
seemed to those who served by his
side and kuew him best. It is as
them all is one end the
breathing into the lungs, swallowing
tli a Vis, what has been thrown fount
the body, oat of the body : from the
body includes the perspiration. odors,
femes, coming from the akin and
lungs, out of the body means the
a tin, and more particularly that
which passes in e solid form from
the bowels. Tbe things which are
imposible to describe as to prove a breathed into the lungs aad awal-
negative; and the negations of Gen- lowed into tbe stomach find their
eral Lee’s character dwell more in | way into tbe Mood, poison it, make
tbe memory than the positive attri
butes of other men. He was never
haughty, never insolent, never vain,
never false, never idle, never self-io-
dnlgent, never ungenerous. In no
form did hf use or touch tobacco;
had no taste for liquor of any kind,
and seemed never to require a stim
ulant. Were it possible to give a
statistical record of the amount of
food which dnriug his four crucial
of yearstrial, General Lee cousumed,
it would be found that no great cap
tain was ever so abstemious. Of a
truth, his “superb physical health,
which remaiued unshaken by all tbe
hardships of war,” counted for much
in moulding tbe shape of his country**
history.—Blaclteood** Edinburgh Mag
aziuf.
■ ,*
mrse of the great civil war,
mdf
would approach a Vjrginian farm
house inhabited by a family of whom
be knew nothing. Adored as be
was throughout the it length and
readth of the Old Dominion, the
e of his approach jpreceded him
hereyer he went. In response to
welcome always exteud-
im
Ways
, he would desceutl from
aud sit down foi* a few
upon the porch, accepting,
a glass of wafer, and possi-
square inch orj two of corn-
but never taking anything
It might have been imagiued
gravity and seriousness of
eanor would have possessed
ittraction for young children,
re many minutes had piss
'd, it was invariably remarked that
ne or {two children would be crowd-
g round his knees, and, finger in
•nth, looking np into his kind
estjfece. He was generally snr-
by younger, more demon
, and more talkative officers,
his empire over the hearts of
young, though, like all his other
t qualities, unconsciously mani-
•ted, was irresistible. If it may
sai4 without irreverence, it was
at such moments to for
th b affection with which tbe
i, whom General Lee loved to
re, “suffered little children” to
draw q ?ar nnto His presence, and saw
in them an image of that childlike
y faith vi hich is tbe shortest and surest
! path fo the kingdom of heaveu.
5RAL LEE AS A SOLDIER,
vv nfnever the story of tbe Amer
ican Civil war i$ truly and exhanst-
. [ively fold, it will become abundantly
u|q>a£ mt, if W chronicler docs his
duty, hat seldom if eVer in modern
history has there been a struggle,
firstly upon so large a scale; second
ly, wfcich was so loDg maintained;
and thirdly, in which [the dispropor
tion of the combatanfe was so great.
One of England’s greatest soldiers,
-r Sir Charles James Napier, exclaims,
“How much more depends upon the
- chief than upon the ^umbers of an
. army! Alexander invaded Persia
• with ouly 30,000 foot 5,000 horse j
bal entered Itajy with 20,000
6,000 hors#, having lost
men iw crossing the Alps,
did he attempt feith this small
The conquest of Italy from
mans, who, witji their allies,
bring into tl*4 field 800,000
in
that
neither an ,
■ tiarT sucli
years.”
I*,
ffdr
against
it thicker, arrest its flow, cans* it w>
cfog up ia tbe smell Mood veneris,
derange the circulation, and finally
arrest the working of tbe whole ma
chinery of tbe body, and the man Is
dead.
Typhoid fever eon be reared ia ea
hour, aud death may come ia tbe
next twenty four, according to tbe
concentration of matter* ia the at
monpbere and tbe time of exposure
to them.
The civilised world bee very re
cently bed its attention absorbingly
directed to the Illness of the present
Prince of Wales, son of Prince Al
bert. Typhoid fever carried him to
the verge of the grave, from which,
however, be alow I j recovered. The
interests of arfeoce aa well aa hu
inanity demands! an investigation
of the causes of the malady In this
instance. The Prince lived about
a hundred and twenty milra from
London, In a retired (tart of the
country, sink! the btlla, not far
from the «eaooaat. In naming to
hia boose, day after day, from visits
and hnntiog ex^nrsioo*. he had to
pass some ) saris where mao a re waa
prepared from human offkl. He was
generally attended by two otb*r
imreons, one a yonng nobfeosn. a
direct ifesoeodaat of
fol. Unman a
carried away from the dwelliaga
without
delay.
4th. la etias,
be kept must acrapaloaaty
and aboakl be ao
located that a * iadow
fefofo
the
8i«U Check*
Ei
a i
c.
HI UimhmI
or PM OOm Orte, M- ‘ ?
their buaiuM* promptly
Xov 24
>«
a dif
ha ms
sidered a
5th. No «M
should hare more than oae water-
eluant ia the badfoag, aad that to he
used aolv is rasas of
sad altar bed Uma.
6U». Pnvfeaiwthe
be at leaat fifteaa yards
dwelhug, and.lar below I
or water auppiv
Itb. Every dnua of every bowse
whieh reoeirea what m depoaitad ia
burn stake,*
be self v eal listing owta*ta of
walla of the bower for erory
id of tbe twenty foar boars.
Artaaaaa Walk.
Any one who vngngm in deep bo
rings forwaterdoreeoatouasidrraMe
risk, ns no geologist or cbemist can
five him ponithe aammanee of sac
rm In ibis eonntrv we hare na
merona artesian wells, soaw of them
of great depth. The famous St.
Louis well is a boat 1,900 feet deep,
eu«l tbe force with which the water
rises is very great. It ts however
entirely anunited to domestic oars,
being charged with mineral coaati-
tui’bt* derived from rocks and min
era Is over and through which it pas
ses in its roarer. Offensive gases are
often mingled with water coming
from deep write, end the tempera-
tore ia aoifonuly high. The gases
present are usually carbureted by.
drogwa, and sometimes sulpharetrd
hydn*gm is evolved freely, giving U*
the water tbe smell of stale egg*.
Tbe temperature of the water de
petals ia a great measure upon the
depth of the boring. The well at
Lord Chesterfield, and the Priare’a ***• delivers water at a temper
body servant. The latter died, aa • turr loor F -
also the nobleman, (taring tbe illness
of the Prince.
Another nobleman having had ao-
raaion to pass these yards but twice,
waa within twenty four boom attack •
ed with a serious ftlneaa, the aymp
toms being file those which present
themselves in tbe forming stages of j
typhoid fever. Tbe party were more
liable to attacks of sickness from ao
casual an exposure from two distinct
causes, which are hare mentioned in
consequence of tbevr every day prac
tical bearing.
First, their modes of fife were not
such aa to give a strong constitution
and that vigor of drcalatioa whn h
is able to repel disease. Becood, re
to. -ring home late in tbe evening or j
night in a atate of fotigue, from the without doubt hmnd their wfiy there
bunts of the day or ocher recreations, from the mountains of Auvergne,
and very likely hungry also, their thirty miles distant. Beta and aandl
debilitated systems were unasoally fish have been fimnd in tbe water of
open to the baoetnl iufloeore of bad srtestan wells, which shows that
airs aud potaooooa emanations, la there la wwxclw*# dlreet cowimnni
addition, later ioveeUgauoiia show cations through the strata with dl*
(hat tbe Prinoe waa aabpwted to taat |*>nris or so peril rial sera mala
identically the same caonee which thxis of water. The watei which
resulted in bin noble aad lamented fells npoo inlaod moutains aad bills,
father’s death—breathing the at-! *»d passes < Iowa ward t
moatpbete of privy drama. The
tide closing the mouths of these j "ca, and thus (he edriooi spectacle
j ia afforded of fi fresh water spring
bubbling np through a mass of Bait
wfiter. Hu ml *oi<li mentions such a
spring aa occurring at tbfc mouth of
of moat other wells is fownd above
70° F. fu winter each water, if
pore, would be deJigbiftil for wash
ing purposes, bat for drinking it
would bn vapid nod nauseous. It is
also without atmospheric air, aad
would need not oaly to be cooled but
to be wrated to fit U for table one.
Altogether we ma> rood ode that
the iiee|» apringa ere not very prom
Uing eoorces from which to obtain
portable water.
It has beau remarked that tbs
water from arieeren weds is derived
from great dfetaooea. This waa
shown ia a boring at Tour*, France,
from which, when the borer waa with
drawn, quantities of sand end smell
ansi) shells were ejected, which
with metal on metal surfaces, tbe
friction was onufifth to one seventh.
With lard applied to wood on wood,
the frictfou waa only ooe tenth to
one twenty eighth of tbe power re
quired to more the surface*. Metal
on metal had tbe friction reduced to
one half of what H waa before. Of
the several substances used tor cast
iron on cast iron, lard and black
lead gave the least friction.
The beat lubricator for wrought
iron axles we have (bond to be part j
ed *. aad for the patent or cast Iron,!
ail or lard aod black lead. One of!
the greatest causes of tbe wearing out ’
of machinery la from dost and grit
worked iota the journals end beer
log*, sad this la especially true of
feet Wratng gears, ea reapers, mow .
era, thresher*, etc. Aft hearing*
should often be wiped dean before
sfltng, and every possible means
used to protert them from dirt and
grit. Good wagoners' always wipe
the axle before oiling, but very few
wipe the fore*. This to easily done
by having a spindling farce shaved
to fit. OoverH with doth and run
it through the bob and tarn It about
therein before greasing. It will keep
vowr wheels true for a long time,
and save orach vexation and labor
for the team.
The principal reason why farm
I so much longer with
than with others, to
from rare ia oiling, for a careful oil
er to pretty sore to be carefrd la
other matter* beside. Bearings, from
the contained ase of gummy tabri
rotor*, often come to mown me bi
more fHrtion than dry snrfhres.
When they become ao, they should
be rfeoned with kerosene or tarpon
tine, and thereafter oiled only with
to tty matter free from gum. There
may be a great deal of money aad
liorse flesh saved by proper attention
to cleanliness ia oiling form ranch in
dry.
rpHE Tenth v.dwme of
X.
Wood, s*4 H. V. Oshonie aad
am«mjr iU rrgwlar routnbatoi* Horace
Greeley, OaU HsmUtaW/ Thma K
Beecher. I>r. Dio Lewis^ Pt.
James Psrton, He. H»in*! 1 N“»*®,
Brick Pomeroy. John <T h**(\ Mel.
Kiinstrisk. Faiistaem V. Nasby. db
l “ i
,v>, pnhlidiMl
•sH3r«ii33 , ssiS5
Vomr Journal, l*hUadelfdda, P*-. *
has herw tanfirwrisg ever (fore we bnew
*»—a good mienos far the frtoass. —Cbo-
, New Market, (bnadn. It is a
of rbeanoeww sad flrst-ctoss quality
ed.-~ . Y. fiporioren
copy seat free to say address.
S. 8. WOOD A 00..
Mar m XBAt) Mewlawgh, W. Y
* . THE , t a
LUTHERAN B0 0K8T0RE,
.V*. 117 Karlk tone*,
PHILADELPHIA, FA.j
rpHF. u
sad ftowfoy firhssl foU
aid*
will W promptly fsrajshsd to afore.
K!fdliuiieUTs,?»*BlBS3Bd^
ers and Committees esisestly soUrited.
t TWWWAL DlfiOOtm GITD.
A complete CatafogUe of Hsodsy -School
Kooks. pwMished ia 1871. emifrru.
Term* Cask.
Rev. G. W. FREDERICK.
Apr 12 31—3m
_ I the
the
ask every va-
Itgiona, Chnreh
Anjr ‘
book or voBsmr. ^
tJLsISvl u
cents on every copy sold, aad io thy
part of the profits accrue to the chant/
Price, in Sheep si*
Dark Araaeasae * j z
Arahrsqne fist...... * m
R unted* T lu ks, gilt edge |Z
ortK-co, **xtra gilt ) S
Turkey Moroeco, plain
Tnritey Antkfue’ BUprr *' xtni *5
Wuii*rilt ci qW 1
Ministers ^ .
quested to send on tbeir
to whom s discount of ten
BUMr ‘ PCLPIT RDmOI.
B11 fciim llBi Col tua u*. s c
Fob 16 24—tf
On# of the greateot wonders con
nected with the ancient city of Bob-
yloa waa the rnostreettoa of tha
ms baagini
the kiag.
to has wife, A m etis, who,
bring a native of Media, which was
a hilly foeifer, waa aaxinas to ere
ia Baby km rearm Ming
at
Chat of the
by stain, tea
m
in
Wonders of the Lightning.
A dash of lightuing rushes through
space at such a rate that it might go
from the earth to the moon in one
second. Then what time is allowed
a man’s nerves to transmit to the
bruin the impression of a stroke of
lightning! and what time‘ho* the
brain to understand such e crash !
Absolutely none! The flash ocean*,
aud in silence and darkness a life is
cut off. Experience bears out this
deduction, for Professor Tyndall, in
bis “Fragments of Science,” given
the following circumstance :
“Qu Jane 30, 1788, * soldier in tbe
neighborhood of Manheim, being
overtaken by rain, placed himself
under a tree, beneath which a wo
man had previonaly taken shelter.
He looked upward to see whether
tbe branches were thick enough to
afford the required protection, end
in doing so was struck by lightning
and fell senseless to the earth. The
woman at hia side experienced tbe
shock in her toot, but was not struck
down. Some boars afterward tbe
tnan revived, bat remembers nothing
about what occurred, save the fact
of his looking np at tbe branches
This was his last act of conscious
ness, and he passed from the con
scions to the nneoosdons without
pain.”
Professor Tyndall relates thus his
own experience;
“Some time ago I hapiiened to
stand in the presence of a numcroaw
audience with a battery of fifteen
large Leyden jars charged beeid*
me; through tome awkwardness on
my part t touched a wire leading from
tbe battery and tbe discharge went
through my body. Life was abeo
lately blotted oat fov a very sensible
interval, without a trace of pain. In j drains first and then running np
a second or so consciousness return into them, drove the gases into the
ed; I saw myself in the presence of houses in some cases with vminors
the audience aud apparatus, and by ! snffleiret to Mow out a candle. Tbs *pri«»ff fo oreurring at tbe month
•the help of these external appearan i house of the Prince was one of them. »be Kio Sargartos, off Cap* Calocbc,
ces immediately concluded that 1 1 The National Hotel disease fa *» r huodred yards from land. Tha
^ ^ inhabitant* of Syracuse obtain «•
er. Very maiiy of the inmates were ^fent fresh wtfer by rowing o& In
taken aaddsoly ill; indeed, from iu ; boats into the salt sea, and dipping
suddenness and prevalence, men did ! *1 U P in vresels as it rises to the sor
not hesitate to say that it was the fo°* from the orifice below. It i*
result of a conspiracy to poison the , difficult to conceive of anything
incoming President of the Uuited ■*** parndoxirel than this.—Prom
States, who had taken rooms at -VJrlofo’ Pirfldr Wrecr.
that establishment. Some died In a - - ■ - — «w * —
short time; others lingered for week* *mpU Cure for Kktummt\*m -The j restore the original color.
vioo* strata, often finds vent la the
bad received the battery” diaefoargen., within the easy memory of tbe read
The intellectual consciousness of my
till the height
rails of tbs city,
to terrace
wide. Tha
by vast
RUPTURE CURED.
Hank's Ixlksl Cure Truss.
T he brat sod
known for t
April 14
most effective Trum
the rare and relief of
Hernia or Rupture. Th» Trass has re
oeivrd the MMM-ttoo of the mo*t eminent
m of this country, who do not
t* reroauoead it U> those afflicted
Hernia a* being auperior to aQ
other*.
It ia the ouly Traas that will retain tht I
bowel* with any rertainty, and tbe wearer j®
ran feel aaaored (hat he ts ustng a remedy
that will be at all (Mae* naff and effectual '
in iu operation*, ^f ( hi* *e guarantee j
entire satisfarifon to all who mar route
aster our treatment.
I^adiea* itllk elaatic aUlutninal fe lt* for
r«»rpuletter, faffing of the witnih, and aa
a tut sport h> the l tack, aud ahdtttuiaal
muieW Anklet a. knee cap* and atork- j
jag* for rarietwe letna, nlrer* and weak
Ahoitlder brace* for ladiea, gent* and
children, far the rare of atwtpiag of the
alutuldera and aa a cheat expander.
Pile InatrumenU. the most superior
article ia n*e—light, emotr adJaated and
effectual, lastiumrata for all pltjaioal
deformities curvature uf the sptm*. bow
leg*, chib feet, fee.
Agent for Clement'* Celebrated Artrfi-
ciallJniVia,
Agent for OraadalT* Patent Rubbet
tipped ('ratebe*.
Agent for I>r. Babrnrk'a Silver Cterine
foffMStter.
Agent for D*. Wadsworth's Stem Peg-
fiMk?
ladies' Apartment with a competent
lady ui attendance.
Order* per mail attended to.
ft. MARSH,
92 W. Baltimore St.,
Baltimore, Md.
June 9 tf
GEOROE 8. HACKER'S
Door, Sash and Blind Factory,
CHARLESTON, S- C.
N O imported work kept on hand t*
supply the country trade. AU
work is mime at our own factory m ths
city, and under the proprietor 3 * gt*
XUJKTYUOon. .
Send for Price List. Factory •*■
Ware Rooms : King, opt-wite CasMf
Stioet, on line of (Sty railway. P. 0.
Box, So. 170. .
July 7 tf
1 1 ■ ■”
Railroads.
>ver these was a
mixed with bitu-
v rows of bricks
together. The
with thick sheets
a which lay the ami of the
Tha earth was ao deep that
latge trees could take root and grow
oa it. The trews which the king
planted were of variotia kinds, auch
an were ant native in Babylon, bat
wklrh grew la Merlin. At a dta
taooe tht* srhoto arttfirial mound
appearn like an tmarenae bill covered
with forest trees. Tbe whole atrar
tare must bare beeo some three
hundred fact in height. From iia
aatuaut a fins view eras afforded of
ths city aud the country around for
many mi ton. Tbe different
contained fountain*, seats, aod
law. i87a
LUTHERAN
PUBLICATION SOCIETY,
NO. 42 NORTH NINTH STREET,
PHILADELPHIA.
*
J K. 8HEYOCK, SUP^T
The Fatherland 8r ' >•.
The Lutheran PuMicarina Society have
tmide Mrr-nn*n*roeiit* to tnuiHlate and pub-
liwlt a acriea of (fernuin Work*, (anifeble
for Family and 8. 8. u«e.) under the title
of ‘Tlie Fatherland Series."
The following book* hare already been
published:
The Cottage lo the l^tke fi0.75
In tlie Midst of tlie North Sea 0.75
Antra, the Fisherman. 0.85
Rene, Um* Little Savoyard 0.85
Frit*; or. Filial Obedience.. 0.65
OwyerWalty; or. Fidelity Rewarded. 1.60
These *»x hare been put tip to a neat
rase, forming Set No. 1.
1 Under the Earth fio.76
.■ ] (rtaf ThorhjLseu 1.00
qoetlng room*; and the wboW* extant. The Treasure of the Iaca 0.85
with fli.vpni Buried in the Snow Ojm
era imm wn ' INtminie; or, Bread upon the Waters. 1.10
position was restored with exceeding
rapidity; but not no the optical con
scioasness. To prevent the audience
from being alarmed, I olmerved that
it hodkOften been my desire to g?-
ceive accidentally sach a shook, and
that nay wish had at length been
fulfilled. Bat while making this re
mark, the appearance which toy
body presented to myself wan that
of a number of separate pieces. Tlie
arms, for example, were detached
from tbe trank, and seemed suspend
ed to the air. In
the power of
be complete loot bfifot* ths
•gf
. > . < .
the absolute painffeT
and slowly recovered ; scare went
abroad lor their health, and died iu
fbreigt) lands; some were attacked
who hud taken hot a single men I
there, and hnd not slept In the build-
iug at all. An extended official lo
veatigattoa took place, wtinesas*
eridHK* ft dppeffftsd that tffh ffrfims
df tfife Hty had bfofi (ft mined up by I fete
a freshet, io such a way that wl tfifi' or
To Ktotore Color,.—When color
on a fabric has been accidentally br
otherwise destroyed by acid, am
monia la applied to neutralise tbe
name, after which an application of
ehloroform will, in alixoat all cases,
Tbe ap
plication of ammonia is common,
while that of chloroform is but little
known. Chloroform will also re
move paint from a garment, or else-
Cntl farnisbe* the foilnwiag: “Boil a
small pot Ail! of potatoes, and bathe
the part affected with the water in
which tbe potatoes were boiled, as
hot as can be applied, immediately "here, when benxlne or bisulphide
before going to bed. The pains will carbon ftula 4
ha removed, at at tonal aUeftoled, by
Sedpeli, the Swiss Boy 0.65
Forming Set No. 2, put op in a neat
case.
Tlie Greek Slave; or. Filial Love,..$1.10
Is-onUanl, the Runaway...... 0.50
Little Madelou ; or. Maternal Love,.. 1.00
Gottlieb Frey,. 1.19
The School Master and his Son,......1.00
Forming Set No. 8, put up in a neat
case.
Jn«t published : Wolfgang, Prince o
Anhalt; The Iron Age of Germany.
In prens, and will shortly be published:
Gnutavn* Vans: or, King ana Peasant;
Adam Kcnaer: Tlie faithful Negro : The
Valley Mill. By.Carl Wild. Translated
iy urt
by Joel Swart*. D.D. ; Knight ai
ant ; Tbe Emerald: The Three
Faithful Until Death!
5 Mri .^Onc cup mdlAt
•tot toto Sfap^whkr creana, aae egg
and Peas-
■e Kings;
nil brill tutu Death.
We have a nnmlier of other Transla
tion* under way, which we will announce
from tinuatoOtoe.
* fi. 8. IJbrarien selected with nnusnal
S sbi net Organ n and Mdodeons fur
isd ts Asfolav -school- and churches,
and after this fotc^ tto Wfewtaf
G & C. Railroad.
Columbia, 8. C, March 1,1875.
J IN and after t
“ r kcIhhIuIc will l»e run
excepted:
UP. * m
Leave Columbia jf • **
“ Alston •SJJ
“ Newberry 1J *•*
“ CokesUury
“ Belton...... ?** f S£S
Arrive at Greenville
DOWTf.
I^eavc Gree<lville f f ?
** Cokesbury 7* * _
“ Abherille
“ Kewfacnry !SS.
- Alston....
Arrive at Columbia
THOS. DODAMEAD, Gesreal^P j'
M. T. Barti.ett. General 7faW A# *•
S. C. Railroad.
“cMumhtoft-JV J
June A l® 71 *
Change of schedule, to go into d Kl 0S
and aft?r Sunday, 2tti»in«tont:
Mail and Passenger Train-
Leave Columbia ? main
Arrivw-af rharleston
Arrive at Columbia ***
Eight Express. Freight and Arco** 1 ' 1 "
tiou Train {Sundogs eeeepted)-
a to«KI
I^eave Columbia ^ ^ B ,
Arrive at Clrarfestra 4 iods
i —rjSaw
W;,in,.^vT,°A &W&
A. L. TYLER. Vice-PTm**® 1 '
S. B. Pickixs Gen. Ticket Agt.
l^eare Cluu lcuton
Arrive at Columbia
Camden Aecommodatioe
continue to run to Columbia aajw»*“
ra, Wednesdays ana jtotnrnA t
BLUE RIDGE RAILROAD-
n tfv”
Leave Anderson at... ®
** Pendletoniana
**' PetTjville L V U
Arrive at Walhalla at * J* m
I^eave WalhhUa at - - - -J S J 9
“ Peny villa - **'*»»»
M Penutoton 9 n0«*
Arrive at Anderaea at.^
ssarfi temsrJF&£*>
K v
ni;w ski;
For th«
Almost
Thou
Christ
K
II.
i
This waa an c*p
King Agrippa- 1
guage of Gffd. W •
pose that He 'ft-g
almost n Christian
nines bat two cla**
(dnoera-tbc nghtotl
^ aWtotoocver i|
again* me-" Tt I
ground. Wbatt-veii
oocapton be ^
or essay of Christ |
Lunnhirff* ui hia m
maintain ft fair churl
of the wot Iff
very **** the ^ Ht
fyt tht want of otel
step be may
wreck of bU nalvaiik ^
See that yonng
the street to all th
fulaeaa of youth
earthly care; be I
pleasure ami pien
amiliog all arour.
thoughts of to-roofl
for tbe world to c
ly he meet* a tu|
He beholds the ba
the slow and oik*
ere- He turns a
the church yard
sighs ami sees Um
frfoods. He look
grave, aud aees tfon
aud bear* the rat
bliug upon it.
services are over «
borne with a aad j
for be reflects that
through a similar w
alone aod tries t<
oat his heart aod
of penitence; be is *
Ooe more step mij
tbe Saviour. At tl
is a rap at bis do* r
to see him. He
tears; drives awaJ
pressknre; smotiicrfl
c
/
rS, *
t V
*al B
I
hides them fri*:.
frieud.. They
and in a short tim*
rooui, or at tbe ca
dram shop! Now
man be lost! M u
when heaven is a
wbeu be had aflti,
Paradise, and was
into it! I
The case ol I>
younger, is to the
said that on nuc
so overwhelmed h
guilt, that be rreoh
in his room and in
doning mercy. il.|
sqpt to let down hi
At that moment
passed along the
tion was diverted
presstons left him.
bed he ackoowtod^
was as uear tbe ki
as on that oocasio*t.
G, to be lost un
stances, when the
ready to grasp the
Story; when the li V ‘\
to taste of the bate R*
Mnstitbe! Yes. « .
way of salvatiou.^fi_*
plainly marked *hiK
uiand is, 44 Walk '
m’":
!•/
a man be born aga.l
the kiugdom of
our
unol
Jest:
to hi