The Lutheran visitor. (Columbia, S.C.) 1869-1904, August 09, 1872, Image 4
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THE LUTHERAN VISITOR. COLUMBIA, S. C., AUGUST 9. 1872
Ou Pi
wav
And dash
shore,
The pi
The heft
trand, where sea
blimlihg spray upou its
aspiration’* aid,
and fntnre years
Celestial
Arose and
Uutil at lafttl before
The Kiug
throne;
Angelic
hi ii
of kings
in glorious light,
iis raptured sight,
glowed and shone
n beauty on his
Till heave*If groves
raug,
He saw tha iiortyred
Who gladly
sake,
And
band,
. Before the
stand,
Upou the
palms,
And songaj
i nd
music sang,
vales responsive
th< ir
rnuls to life awake,
lives for Jesus’
gla
There cam j ; a glorio t
countless, shining
throne he saw them
, with conquering
glad, triumphant
s, mighty, shining
From evtjr;
•1
nation
The
light,
The ch
white,
The new
Shone lik
Klysian fi
Stretched
every tribe aud
With murlnnring crystal rills and sliady
grove,;
so£ quiet redt and peaceful love.
fair arose in glittering
in brida robes of spotless
seceding fair,
aldiamond in the radiant air;
of livin : verdure lay
the dreai ty axure far away,
sotils, li e’s tribulations o’er,
to grieve aud sigh no
with
; cutlest voice, bids
love
he wipes all tears
And vale
Where
Reposed ill
more
Where GM
wee;
With
awuyl
rbe pr#plle<| saW, au l wonderingly said :
“Whence »re these* t >uls in beauty thus
arrays 1?"
A voice replied “ Twas tribulation's
breath. j
Aud iiery i rials, eveij uuto death,
That broul ?ht them li ere! In Jesus' blood
They wosl «jd their fobes, and now are
sons o God.
He has a ith Jby to euter in,
Who overt)Ome^ the rorld, the flesh and
sin;
A glittering crown o life he sliall receive,
And on th^ Book of Life his name shall
live,
His name |n lienveu frith joy sliall be con
£
And he
blest.
He that
With
Drink
Eternal
His fain
sight,
Upou lym
Within
A name
know
As in the
Shines g
afar,
So he anu
Ilis brow
Upon my
• down,
And I will
Savan
dwellkvith me among the
ovJiron e temptation's art,
i food sh ill satisfy his heart,
tlje' ctistal streams that
««"• i ,
and rapt ire always know,
faitjli be -hanged to glorious
a nfbe of spotless white,
a glittering stone
to all^but him nn-
s ;y the morning star
ffoin distant realms
f
of God shall Shine,
h coronet divine,
he with me sit
aud he my son.’’
On the
Crawford,'
The Fimily.
17tth of
of the l
Meeting.
June Mr. K. K.
. P. congregation
g Hill, lod., ac
of New Zfon, Sprit
cording t > a cust >in observed for
some yeaiis past, © lebratcd the an
niversary lt)f his bir h day by a fain
ily union for socia and festive eip
joymenfc, »s well as by religious
exercises auitdd to the occasion.,
* The prayer meeting for that dis
trict of the congregation was, on his
request, held at his house on that
afternoon ; so that neighbors as well
as near relatives had the opportunity
of uniting in the religious exercises.
The following address by Father
Crawford was read:
My Dear Children : Once more
in the gobd providence of God, we
are assembled together on this my
seventy-second bir hday to renew
our obligations tc each other as
parents and cbildn n, which are as
lasting as life itecl • And may we
come with our . h iarts filled with
gratitude to God, the giver of al)
good, for his mercif il kindness to ns
his unworthy creatures, who have
come so fair short oif the end of our
creation. Remember now thy Crea-
days of hy youth, while
s come i ot nor the years
when t iou shalt say, I
leasure n them^’ >*ot-
g our unworthiness of
ness to ns, he is still
be gra ious to us, and
is giving & line uj on line, precept
upon precept, here i little an<\ there
a little fo our inst ruction. God in
his goodness has sps red our lives as
parents to an old Age. • I feel that
God has b sen very ^ood and kind to
me, and h& bestowed upon me the
unspeakab e privilege of his word
and ordin inees from infancy till the
present mefcnent, and has permitted
inc to 8cq the thii I generation.—
These ma ay privi eges bestowed
upou me »aye bee; i so poorly im
proved thi t I feel inworthy of the
least of G >d’8 mere es to me. My
dear child en, I pri y that you may
always be outid wal :iugin wisdom’s
paths, whfeh are piths of safety.
tor in
the evil
draw ni
have no
withs
God’s gi
waiting
“With all thy gettiugs, get wisdom.*
“Buy the truth and sell it not 1 ’
Seek to have oil in your vessels sad
your la/nps trimmed, so that when
the bridegroom oometb you may be
prepared to euter into the joys of
our Ix>rd. Such is the earnest prayer
of your aged parents.
A fow words uow to the yonth
of the congregation, and more e»
pecially to those of you that have
made a profession of youc faith in
the Lord Jesns Christ and promised
to be his followers, but art back-
sliddeu aud are walking in forbidden
paths. My dear young friends, con
sider where you are goiug, and ask
yourselves the question: Are we
doing these things for the glory of
God and for the advancemeut of the
Redeemer’s kingdom, or are yon
laboring for the advaucomeut of
Satan's kingdom. Young friends, 1
entreat you to consider these thiuga
while it is the accepted time, aud
the day of salvation, for you have
uo promise iu divine revelatiou of
to-morrow. May the Lord send the
arrows of conviction into your young
hearts and oonviuce you of siu and
of a judgment to come, that yon
may be enabled to see the exceeding
siufuluess of your ways, and turn
unto the Lord who will have mercy
upou you aud to our God who will
abundantly pardon. My heart’s de
sire aud prayer to God is, that your
aius may be freely pardoued aud
washed away in the blood of the
Lamb that was slain from the foun
dation of world. As the tret' falls,
so it lies; as death leaves us, so will
the judgment find us. There is no
repentance iu the grave, whither we
are all fast hasteuiug. Young friends,
do think of the value of your im
mortal souls, once lost, lost forever.
The time may soon come, yea, will
soon come, if you continue to diso
bey God’s com maud meuts, that the
Saviour will say to us, as he did
in his lamcutatioo over the city of
Jerusalem, “These things aie hid
from your eyes.” If the righteous
scarcely be saved, where shall the
ungodly and the sinner appear T
Turn ye, turn ye; for why will ye
die, saith the Lord Almighty.
And now, Christian parents, let us
cousider well the great responsibili
ties God has enjoined upon us, that
we take these children he has gra
ciously given us and uurse them for
him. As the twig is bent, so the
tree is inclined. For our failure in
duty here God will require an ac
count. “Ami you fathers provoke
not your children to wrath, but train
them up iu tbe nurture aud admoni
tion of the Lord.” “Train up a
child iu the way he should go, and
when he is old he will not depart
from it.” Mark the expression, “be
will not depart from it.”
Sometimes I fear there is too much
attention paid to tbe teuqiorul wel
fare of our childreu and too little
atteution paid to their spiritual con
dition, or, in other words, to the
salvation of their immortal sotils.
Christian parents, let us couie this
day with broken and coutrite hearts
in prayer to God that we may be
enabled to labor more earnestly for
tbe salvation of immortal souls.
In connection with this address,
remarks were made by tbe pastor
of the congregation, found in Gene
sis 18: 19.—“For 1 know him that
he will command bis children and
his household after him,” Ac. The
psalms that were sung, the portions
of scripture that were read, ami the
prayers that were offered, were all
suited to the occasion, seemed to be
eujoyed by all prescut, and it is
hoped that their influence may be
felt for good for many days to come.
W. J.
Miscellaneous.
Dikes.
Dike, in some parts of England
and in Scotland, is the common name
for a wall, but the word in its usual
significance, as applied to a sea
wall or embankment, comes proba
bly from the Dutch term dyk, which
has the same meaning. Hollaud is
the land of dikes.. They are built
elsewhere, but not to the same ex*
tent, and have not such vast inter
ests depending on them as along
the coast of this and adjacent coun
tries. *
It was claimed by Najioleou, that
all the laud of Holland and Belgium
was made by tbe washings of the
Rhine brought down from the Alps,
and therefore whoever owned the
highlands ought to owu the low
lands. Whatever may be thought
of his conclusion, his premise looks
not a little like the truth. The wash
ings of all those rapid streams run
ning from the high mountains in the
centre of Europe are immense; aud
much; of tbe material carried out
into the North Sea, is again brought
back by the tide and currents which
generally set so strongly toward the
coast. The prevalent high winds
blowing in this direction greatly aid
in securing the result. The process
is continually going on, aud new
lands are reclaimed, ifcoogtr
currents are also washing away the
coast ia many other places Hi srtrioh
no protection exists. When a de
posit has begun at any given point,
the secessions are very rapid, rape
dally after the bank has raised itself
above low water mark and tags sad
reeds have begun to grow opon it,
as they soon will. Those plants
check the retreat of high water, and
thus favor the deposit of the earthly
matter which it contains. When the
laud is raised to high water level,
the accumulations are thenceforth
slow, ss the additions can bo made
only by the overflow of the highest
tide*. The operation of diking then
is not much longer delayed, la
many places these are
rows of dikes, which have
made at successive periods; the asd-
imeut from the sea still extending
the const farther out, and new em
bankments beiug raised as often as
laud enough has been made to pay
for annexing it. Iu this way tbe
configuration of the coast Hi many
regions has been materially changed.
One point ia mentioned where in the
middle of the fifteenth century were
two small islands, containing to
gether about ten thousand acres,
but now, by moans of some sixty
successive advances of the dikes,
they have beeu brought to oouqioae
a single island, whose area is not
less than sixty thousand acres. At
another place, at the close of the
last century, were several small ia-
lauds containing together less than
five thousand acres; but in 1S37
they had beeu connected with the
mainland, aud the area contained
about ten thousand acres. The
whole land gained to agriculture in
the Netherlands by diking sod by
draiuing shallow bays and lakes Hi
estimated by tbe best authorities st
but little short of eight liuudrrd aud
eighty thousand acres, or about ooe-
tenth of the whole srra of the coon
try.
Before the system of diking was
introduced, the boildings ol the
region were erected on artificial
mounds, and many are still built in
the same way U|*m the unprotected
islands aud beyond the chain of
coast dikes. Tbe jierils of such a
dwelling are readily- seen, and the
history of the coast as wp become
more acquainted with it, does not
diminish our sense of the insecurity
of those who live in these true
meuts. Ancient chroniclers tell us
of forty four villages .U*etmye*i by
a single foundation fo 1277; ami of
eighty thousand |ier*ous who perish
ed in another ten y ears later; aud
of one hundred thousand who lost
their lives through the ituperfscUoo
of the dikes in the fifteenth century.
Many, however, regard these ac
counts as not altogether trust
worthy; with every allowance for
•*x|ggenitHMi, then* was, no doubt,
immense destruction both of life and
pro|»erty. Nor is there any wonder,
fo the presence of such dangers, at
the extreme vigilance and immeusr
expense constantly bestowed on the
dike*. In some (daces they ^ave
acquired the uame of the “golden
bonier;” by no means inappropriate
ly given, whether we consider their
cost or tbe pur;wee which they sane.
The process of erecting n dike
is usually to build s low cheap em
baukmeut from an older one, or front
some higher ground, so as to enclose
the new tract it is proposed to pro
tech This Is called a “Summer
dike.” These are sufficient to secure
the ground from ordinary overtlow,
and they also help to retain the
slime brought iu by higher tides,
which, otherwise, would be wasted
back into tbe am. At a sabeequeut
period a permanent embankment is
built, either of earth, compact aud
bound together and protected by
every device, or else of stone. Some
times they are built upon piles, aud
they always have sluices, built upon
piles and most carefully protected,
for the drainage of tbe land at low
tide. These prominent dikes are of
varons height aud strength, accord
iug to the exposure of the (dace.
Ordinarily they rise front fifteen to
twenty feet above high water mark.
The sides of the upper part are
abrupt, as they are washed only by
the spray, but tbe lower portions of
the seaward faee are rnneb sloped—
recent ones more than the older—-
as this is found to add greatly to
the security. This face is also pro
tec ted by stones, (dies, fascines and
bther devices. Rows of pilss are
sometimes driven down outside.
We are told that “triple rows of
piles of Scandinavian pine are
driven down along the coast of
Friesland, whom then an no da
for a distance of ooe hundred
fifty miles. Tbe piles are bound
tfifathsr by stroog erase-timbers sad
iron clamiis and the interstices filled
with nlnoes. The ground adjacent
to the piling is secured with fascines,
and at exposed points heavy blocks
of stone are heaped up as an ad*
iHtinasI pretexting. The earth dike
is boilt behind the mighty bulwark
of this break water, and (Is foot also
s fortified with stones.* Tbe great
Zuider Zee is mUfefily of Norwegian
granite. It Is mess than five miles
long, sod forty fast wide at the top,
•loping down two hundred fret late
the sen at an angle of forty
At intervals im
even more strongly built than the
dike, run several hundred feet into
the arm Along the tap uf this gi
gantic structai
road, which, at
aifiosat views la every directum.
The cost of budding
is immsnas, am
is also a heavy tax.
•sous for this is
is a continual setting, which
attribute partly to the gradual setting
of the oonst, but which in every ease
would result from the great weight
of tbe works themselves, resting
often on a soft foundation. There is
ia moat cases a constant necessity of
adding to their height, as well as
making other repairs. Tbe annual
expenditure upon the dikes and
hydraulic works in Holland is not
much short of three million dollars,
and Holland, U must be remembered,
has but 13,610 square miles of terri
which b Jest about ouathtrd
than the assail stale of Vsr-
Emjr. r. Mi
U is well known that the yonth of
the country have rushed toXfec cities
till venous kinds of trades and pro
fessions seems likely to be over-crowd
ed, and hence come want, “poverty,
hanger and dirt,” suicide and other
crimes too horrible to mention. Tbs
reader may now na'urally ask. What
is the remedy f Tbe answer is sim
pie cstongh. Let borne be made at
tractive by culture of mind and
heart, ss wall as soil. Daily and
sternly toil without say relaxation,
breaks down body and mind. But
it will be said we hare to work like
slaves to live. No doubt msuy, start
fog with little if nay capital ia a
new country, bare bard work, and
great privations to undergo, which
unfit their minds for eflbrt; bat
there are tbs whiter eveuiags, sben
the farmer aad his family surma ad
their own fireside to cultivate the
aflreltoos and improve the auod.
Health, temperance, and well -direct
ed mdaetry emm secure, to even the
pooteet iu our favored land, a
fartabir com penary Then by
greet borne caa be made
by tbe proper proper management of
a fruit fa I soil. It wilt yield act ealy
a bat ia user saury tv soataia life com
fortabiy, bat also (densore to gratify
tbe amet gifted minds. Tbrjr, of all
others, who till tbe soil, come into
closest relation* with Nature. . AU
the spitsi ere asrr er Ism imtimmtMf
me served r«tA fir mil. There is no
lack of food for the mind ss writ as
the body. Thus, wbde we bare not
aa enligbtend cultivation of soil end
mind, so long will (be young men of
the country flee from the music of
nature to the cities' die, to drag ant
perhaps a miserable existence in the
exacting toil of traders, who are but
the agents of the tillers of the mL
Let ns have enlightened agriculture,
aud a more equal distribution of
wealth must necessarily follow,
producer and the consumer will
•bake hands ( the farmer wifl
as smooth a cunt ns the merchant,
and be at least as well educated |
ami, above all, bis relations will be
divert!.! with tbe Giver of all good,
who never cheats bis children ; (hue
bis borne will be enriched, sad uncle
happy ami lwwntiful.
mid out of it springs the tempest or
the hurricane, which desolates s
whole region Hi Ha lunatic wrath.
Tbs marvel is that a power which
is capable of assuming such a diver
Mty of forms, and of producing such
stupendous results, should come to
us Hi so gentle, so peaceful, and so
unpretentious a guise.
■ .' -
Farm and Household.
Tbe great aim of tbe farmer must
be to make the labor be employs, as
well as bis own aad that of his
teams, more effective. To do this
requires much study. A man may
work hard and accompliah little. Ur
does not plan well, or be lacks sy a
tern aud order. Another lays good
plaua, bat larks energy sufficient to
carry them out fo all their details.
It is a great thing to know when to
work and when to let others work.
In bayiug aud harveutfog, a
farmer yrbo employs ii good many
men should rarely undertake any
steady work. He can accomplish
far more by attending to tbe little
details than by using np all his
strength ia pitching or binding.
He should always be present, ready
at any moment to lend a baud where
bis work caa be most effective. He
should be aide to see at a glance
that every important bolt fo a ma
chine hi tight. He should know tbe
weak spot in nil bis operations, aud
be prepared for all emergencies. He
should realise that tbe weakest link
determines the strength of the whole
chain. In the innumerable details
sf the farm work this weak link ia
sometimes in ooe thing and some
time* in another, hut it ia always
somewhere. In one field it may be
in the reaper and fo another fo the
binder* ; sometimes it ia tbe pitcher,
sometimes tbe anlonler, or on tbe
rtock or mow. It hi always some
where, and the farmer should look
out for it, and be prepared to strength
en that point.
VINECAR BITTERS
HHgy-S
iSr&SESSS. -t—. °* **£.*—*
tlat •
of Do- WAuns'c Vnr»CA«
Im-
VrncAB Bn
j wAuiK.Se> au- ■ipstiLBSca,
User of 7/srww a# S tfkt.—Few
who handle homes -give proper at
tentioa to the Art and leg*. Rape
«aMy is this the case qn forma Much
time is sprat of a morning in rub
bing, brushing and smoothing the
hair on the skies aad kips, but at no
time are the let examined and |>rop^
eriy cared for. Now, be it known,
that tbe fort of a borer require more
care than the body . They need ten
times as mush, fiat in aw tqspool they
are almost tbe entire horse. All the
grooming thpt can be done won’t
avail anything if the horse ia forced
to stand where bis fort will be filthy.
In this case the fori will t**ootne
disordered, and thru the leg* will
gut badly out of fix ; ami with bad
fort aad bad leg*, there is not much
rise of the horse fit for anything.
Htabic- prisons are generally severs
on the fort nod leg* of horses j and
unless these buildings can afford a
dry room, where a horse can walk
around, lie down, or roll over, they
are not half so bead thy and com
foriabtr to the home aa the pasture,
•nd should he avoided by all find
hostler* in the country \nrtk ftrit
u
. I
|*old by all DXVGCtsrs and dialers.
Aug. f». 48—.tm
l AH
MTHKHAN
PUBLICATION SOCIETY,
BO. 42 WORTH NINTH KTUKET,
PHILADELPHIA.
J. K. 8HKYOCK, 8UFT
The Fatherland Serea.
The Lutheran Publication Society have
mmW smutgrmrsta to tranulntc and pub-
hah a aerie* of German Work a, (suitable
for Family aud 8. 8. tur,) under the title
of “The Fatherland Seth**."
The fallowing hoaki hsv«- aln-ndy lera
putriiabod :
The CotUuri by the Lake...’.) fiO.75
Is the Mki»t of tbe North Seal, 0.75
Anton, the Fwbt nuau....... ojs5
Rent*, the Littb- Savoy ard 0.85
Frit* ; or. Filial < tbdimrr 0.S5
Gever Waltyior,Fidelity Krwaidrd. 1.00
Th«-wr nix have Iwm put up in a neat
ease, forming Set No. 1.
Under the Earth.... fiO.70
Mtaf Thorlakarn 1.00
Tie Treasure of the laea <* hi
Hull**! ui the Snow >^ r 0.80
Dominie; or, Bread upon tin Waterlk 1.10
JM-p!« Is, th< It«.\ .1 ***
Fornuns Set No. t, put wp is a
REMOVAL.
M DIKUCKS, WlmWt*
UTa Orseer, Columbia, S. C
ly informa hia friends and
hr ha* removed fo his new , nwnM
| formerly Km*lct ‘>* building, ou the cam,
I of Rirhatflam and Taylor Htrreti, nhr, 1
I.he will constantly keen on hand
selected aawrrtmei.t of all aitidEnJw
j ins to hia line of Uuainca*, aoak a* Tinul
I rifw, Provision*, Tolwceos, Ac.
January 28
! BOOK OF WORSHIP.
j PfcMtoW hy auAorttt of Or ijnlj.jj ,
ff>i/ /i/ k^./i 1 ... -
(-•w* SSVa A^gt^sSriA vjf A*to *• \
rpim Book, of «74 pap*, 94*h, k
JL ready, we give the chunk JZ
cent• on every eopy sold, nnd Hi thi» **.
part of the profits accrue fo the < Wh.
Price, in Sheep a. fc
Dark Aral*eaque |
Arabesque -Gut « 2-
Morocco Tack*, gilt edge j Z
Morocco extra gilt j Z
Turkey Morocco, plain ; w
Turkey M<>i <«•<-«», super extra sfii
Turkey Antique * s 2
With gilt clasps, 90 cents extra. m
Ministers and congregation* are it
qmated to send on th«rir order* at na~.
fo whom s discount of ten per rent fci
Ill.wir.
FULPIT KDITIOX.
Prk-e, in ShCep, f2 ; Arahe*n*>
edge, fiS; F.ngitah Turkey, fi4. T«t>,
cent diwottat made to tluaw- who ha»i lt
quantities. IlUFFIF. A CHArtfW
BookM-Uer*, < , olttmlria> (;
Feb lfi 24—tf
THE
LUTHER1N BOOKITIU
Xu. 117 Xortk Sixth street, t
PHIL A DELPHI A, Pa.
11E undersigned, haying
Tlo Gttvk Slave; x*r. Filial I*»ve,. .fil.lfo
lama hard, the Buna way, OSS
Little Mwdrlott ; *w. Maternal Love,.„l.'0
OottHrh Fmr 1.10
Hr bool Master and hia Hon ...1.00
Formula Set No. X, put up m a
Jn*» pnt»li*ltef|: Wolfpinf. Prince of
Anhalt; The Ins Age of Germany.
In per**, and w til <4*<hv1> hr published:
in pm*. a»<( will tUoutiy Ur nuMiatasa:
Gnstavn* Y/&**: or. King and Pesrnnt:
Adam Nium-i ; Tim Faithful N«**rr«» ; The
Valley Mill. By t ail Wild. Ttaiudatid
by J*al Swartx, I>.D. ; Knight and Peas
ant : Tbe Emerald : The Three King*;
Faithful Until Dmtk.
We have a nunitw*t «>f «»ther Tnuiala-
tkma under way, whk-h we will announce
fnnu time to time.
8. S. LReark-i *r]M«d with unumal
t ahhi* t Orjuuia and Mt-huieon* fur
niahed to Sunday — boola and rhurrhra,
«m spmol forms. 8. 8. Banner* supplied.
August It! 4<i—ti
1\ 1UECKKRT.
WEBERS
The grrotcut ot physics) (taradoxes
Is the sunbeam. It is the most po
teat and versatile force we have,
aud yrt it behaves itself like tbe
gentlest and most accommodating.
Nothing can fall more softly or mon*
silently upon the earth than the
rays of oar great luminary—nnr
even the feathery flakes of soow,
which tread their way through tbe
atmosphere aa if they were t«w filmy
to yield tq tbe demands of gravity,
like grosser things. Tbe most deli
cate slip of gold-loaf, exposed as a
target of tbe son’s shafts, ia not
Atlrml to tbe extent of a hair,
though an iofaot’s faintest breath
would net it into tremulous motion.
Tbe tcndereM of human organa—the
apple of the eye—though pierced
and buffeted each day by thousands
of sunbeams, suffers no pain during
tbe process, hut rejoice* in their
sweetness, and blesses the useful
light. Yet a, few of these rays, in
sinuating themselves into a in ana of
iron, like the Britannia Tabular
Bridge, will compel the dooely-kwlt
particles to separate, sod will move
the whole enormous fabric with ss
mach ease as a giant would stir a
Straw. Tbe play of tfctae beams
upon oar sheets of water lifts np
layer after layer into the at mo*
phew, and hoists whole rivers ftwm
their beds, only to drop them again
ia snows upon the kills, or in fitlyn
tug showers apoo the pis His. Let
bat tbs sir drink in a little more
#nu*hiix* at ooe place than another.
t'omlrd fWnwhri.—We find the
folfowiag in, tbe Rmrrnl Sowthlmmd .
“It docs not seem to be very genet
ally known,” says su exchange, “that
the oau-umber is ooe of the most use
fui vegetable* we Wax e, and can lie
' dreamed in a greater variety of pals
. table way* than any other, except
! tbe tomato. It i* better than m|wm*Ii
and mote delicate than egg plant,
prepare*I in the name maimer ; can
be stewed, fried or stuffed, and.
above oil, they con he parboiled,
mashed up in hatter and fried a*
fritters, more (deosant and easily
prepared than any vegetable or frnit
When a cocumbw just becomes too
old to he ward raw or for pickling, it
is then at its bent for cooking, and
may be used for that purpose even
until the seed* become hard. A raw
encumber in, for most persona, sn
indigestible abomination, however
much they may admire its flavor and
odor.”
Elegant Pianos
ANP
Wood fit To.'a Charming Organs.
They are uuaiM-Mtouahh the brat,"
•nd nn«tintaMv*d for Pmrihi omd JWcr «/
Jhac, liriUioHt iintnyrl KficrU mod Rif-
C ml /IrwjrM. S»-jmI for IllUMtnitod Cata-
jru***.
1CLLSS k 00.'S S7AK&AST PIaKOS.
IF Every inatmawnt * arrantm1 f«»r
fiwsMat*.
IF By all mean* try the almve lirforr
pmwhasms elae* hen-.
WAKF.-UOOMH, M VSdNK HALL,
N<». 57 and 5ft Market Mreet.
| * May 41 as-tf] Wlladagtoa. X. C.
GEORGE S HACKER S
Door, Sash and Blind Factory,
Leoum Boiler.—We find the fol
fowiag highly recommended; One
|*ound of white sugar, one quarter
imund fresh batter, six eggs, mice and
grate*! riml of tlmw letmais, taking
oat all the seed*. I foil all together
.a few minutes, till thick ss honey,
stirring cnoMsntly ; pat in small jars,
or tumbler*, covered with |mpt*rs
dipped in white of an egg.. One tew
*1*00*1 ful is enough for a tort or
rherae-cake. This will keef* a long
time in a cool, dry plsor.
Asst—This is the month to examiue
fur foal brood in bees. About three
weeks from swarming. 8o much baa
been dooe towards getting rid of it,
that we hope it will yet be complete
ly eradicated. Those troubled with
j it, or thane iu sections where it is,
I should lie energetic, au*! stegfov* no
ease at the right time. Catch tl*e
, moth io dishes of sweetened water
M*i smoog the hives at nigbt.
CHARLESTON. S- C.
^ mom *■ —
fejo imjNtrtvd work kept on hand fo
IN (uqqdy tlir <ountry tmde. All
work is made at «*ur *>wu fartoiy iu tin-
city , nnd umler the proprietor'* *]M-cial
snperviaiou.
ifoad fox Price List, Fact my and
M arc Room* : King, op]*osite Cannon
Btreet, on IHm* of City railwnv. P. O.
Box, No. 170.
July 7 tf
BAMPUM.
HAMILTON EASTER A SONS,
BALTIMORE, MD. t
D ESIRING fo continue serving their
friend* at the South, will send SAM
PLES (marked witii widtii and pric*- of
each.) of any kind of
DRY GOODS,
«f English. Preuih and American Manu
facture. \\ u w ill |>a\ Expivaa freight on
all purchase* fr»*in it* amminting t<»
fl20 and Over,
httl pariie* whose orders tm- ttnn**ct»titi*n-
nfod by the cash. («*ther Bank Check m
Post Oflicc 0ivk-r,) must ]uq- tin- l-lxpiv**
CowfOuv for -the return of nionev fn
settlement of t*| -tr Mil*.
■■ in * nsge B*4-nt of the __
erisMiskment. offer* for sale every tx-
riety -r TliooUigicsl, Religions, Chatri.
and Humtjy >< bool Books. Aay bank.
puhlislMMl in 'hi* country or slnwaiLesw
risllv Luthetun ttook*, both old sod am
will 1*«* promptly farmsked to order.
Special attention given fo fomiskbr
SoiKlay-h*- **» supuBo*; also, aid* far
Kuperil*fouth t' and Tfarlten. Tht or
der> of Mintitet», iTTeriiifoadent^Tearl.
er* snd Committ*-*-* rtrncsHy r ^ •
LIBERAL DISCOUNTS GIVER
A eompleu- Catalogue of Sunday-8rks*l
Books, published in 187L, mrmtfrrt.
Term* Cash.
Rkv. G. W FREDERICK.
AfN- Vi 31—Ja
RUPTURE CURED
Marsh's Radical Care Trass.
Sfrtnf* tr%U i
T HE best sad mist effective Tn*
known f«*r the mrr and rriirf of
Hernia or Rapture. This Tram ha* n-
orived the aaiictjon of the mast eauaest
phyddMH of this country, who da aa
ueNitst*- to reeomiaeud it to those i
with Hernia a* being anperioc
others.
• It i* the only Truss that will
bowel* with any certainty, snd the
ran feel assured that hr 1* *
that will lie at all times aah
in its operations. Of this we gnsruftre
entire aatisfaetioa to all who may earn
under oar treatment.
Indies’ silk elastic abdominal belt* far
corpulency, falling of tbe wood*, sad a*
s Miiqtort to the Imek and abdomiaal
muscles. Anklets, knee cap* snd stork
tug* for varieoar veins, ulcer* mod weak
joints.
Shoulder brace* for ladies, grot*
children, for the cure of stooping of the
shoulder* and as a cheat expander.
l*ile Instrument*, the moat ftamenor
article iu use—tight, easily adjusted mi
effectual. Iu*trum*-nt* for ml }*hy*ksl
deformitu-s. curvature of tbe spine, how
legs, dub feet, Ac.
Agent for Clement's Celebrated Artiff
rial Lind**.
Agent for Granda!!'* Pateut RnMiei
to ail
tipped Crutches.
Agei
Su
•nt f«*r l>r. IWcwk'o Silver Uterme
fgnt for I>r. Wmlsworth’* Stem Put
•or)-.
ladies' A|*artmeut with a competent
lady ia attendance-.
Order* per until promptly attended to
s. Marsh,
02 W. Baltimore St^
Baltimore, Md.
J ttlie 9 —tf
Railroads.
G. A C. Railroad.
* Vowcngrr Truim Sckedmk.
D AILY. Sundays excepted, conseruor
with Night Yrain> on South Care
lina Kjiilroad. up and down; afo*
train* going North ami ISostk on Char
loM«s Colombia and Augusta R*ilma«1
snd Wilmington, Columl»u snd August*-’
Railroad.
UP.
L**sveColumbia at ?
la-avc Alston *
Leave Newberry tl 15p®
I>-avc Cokeabuiy 2 45p««
Ix-avc Ikdtoii I JJP®
Arrive at Greenville • 10p»
DOWN. •
Leave Greenville • “
“ Belton.....
“ Cokcsburr }***
“ AbbefUle
“ Newberry
“ Alston
Arrive at Columbia 7 -4?
AH<1rr*o* I:much and * h
WWTHI.
DOWN. Uik
Lt-ave WalhaUa 4 43 a in Arrive ^
licave rcrryvillc 525 a m LroV*
l^rai-e Pendleton 610 a m Leswft fw
I*eave Andursou 710 a ui Iaave 530i
Arrive at Belton 900 s m I^cstv 4
Aec**nmwHlation train* run on
Koiids ou Monday*, WftritdpJ* ***
Friday*. .
Abbeville Vromch. *****
lycavr Cokesbury for Abberilfeft*-l®J®* "J
Leave Abbeville forCokesbiuy
TI10S. DODAMEAP, General &V '■
M. T. Bartlktt. General Ticket Aft
„ Change of Schedule-
Sot vn Carolina R. R. Convanv.
Columbus8. tU Jane », 1 ex
change of schedule, to go info effect *>n
snd after Sunday. 24th instant:
Mail and Panenger Train.
Leave Columbia
Arrive at Chat fast on “ m
Leave Charleston - -£ Ii *
Arrive at Colombia * 40 1,
Night Expire*, Freight and Aertmmfnw
tiun Train (Snnday* e:eeptea).
T^-ave Columbia * C m
Arrive st Chsrtest«»n i •"*
Uave Charteston ] JJf J
Arrive st Columbia .....** a ...
Camden Aceommmlation Twin
continue to inn to Columbia as foruie x
—Hoods vs, WeilnesdayR aud Satun' ;i . ‘
A. i tyler. VTw TmMmm
8. B. Fkkws, Gen. Ticket Agf-
*
NKW SK
I
-%■
Rule* for Hear q
(foine jaTtoHis r>«U
land, »»* 1 wiU ^ 6
ia g ruk^ as th *
tXbets often, or
,«(», atxl m *> ' 4
how tlteir neigh! *
,„i resoHs- Tb<
these rulcw aro-pa*^
Crospel itself, and
p, he modifteil b
reman* as ngi* 1
iqioti their first
H re stated as folio
(*. J Do not go I
ing daring the
devotional exere. |
Iwrhood.
(h.J Do not eii
ioas work that m
If there is a nn-
aociety to eneoural
church work to
dear of it. Word
an<l devotuj \-
fe.) I^ve in
worldly • way a
milting serious tli
(dace or favor.
fd. ) If you rt‘
the week, let it is
.Subscribe for the
novels, or get tlvi
ting library. Do
history, travel, or
might pat youi
thinking, which i*
fe. ) .Sjiend 8utui
greater part of t
style of social dis
is a dance within,
better: but if tha
a gay party, at wt
light and tbe foo<l
do as a substitute,
(f.) Rise late iw
you are dull and
better. Eat a In
you have j*ork. e<j
of sausage, eat l
try buckwheat c
kind of food, if
quantities, will an
An overloaded *
worker in- the t;i
■oon.
(g.) Feel as so'
conventent till eh;
read any in the U
book, thinking al
incidents of the *•
is important to ^
ex|icriences of t
fully in miud,
way of accompli
end.
(h.) Feel sure \\
the services, lb.
that you might 1«
aud read some ent
take a good sle<*|
Sabbath a day oj
last you do start;
thought that you
house of God or u
merely that you ai
form that is the c
liorhood.
(i*) Rub your f
whether you l»a
ache, and cougl.
if you are takm<
l**rsuade yours* If
the thought that y
remained at hom|
you dislike the sei
(y) Conclude ii*
lection, and in war
the consUnt call
ter your indignat ;<
aud missionary
there is to be a>
b»r home use or
.vourself that you
tributor. lie a*.
h*r the minister
duty of giving. t*i
will not be etlifyii
(le.) When you
rtand about the
hour, talking ou
1®*^! or making I
duties and pie.
This will
oecupictl during
^rvkx*.
(kj When you
••ot sit straight aiij
down iu the cor
w hat is even belt
down ou the back
.'ou, or cover it
or handkerchief.
tlull aud aniutc
^ mnch of a
|H»ssible.
Do not n>
lu '8ht excite S*»ll
,n g inoousisteut
view.
''w.j Lfo not sii
l h* 1‘shUu migb ■
l »w of Go«l .
r
I"
i-
r k