The Lutheran visitor. (Columbia, S.C.) 1869-1904, October 11, 1872, Image 4
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THE LUTHERAN VISITOR. 'COLUMBIAN Bt^C/, 00TOBRH ll
V
Children’s Department
The Fewer of Lore.
i la one of
found a poor,
i. *nrV. god
The
AMmci ehmtiah I
her visits of charity,
destitute little orphan girl,
brought her to her own house,
little straugar at first would take uo
comfort, bnt sat down weeping iu
the hall. The children of the house
eateaweted to make friends with her
and draw her into the parlor, bulj
they could not; and so they said to
their mother: “She will not come
aud play with us. She will not leave
the hall."
“There is a secret,” said the lady,
“by which you can briug her where
* you like. It is a secret, in four
letters. Try if you can find it out,”
The eldest sister taking the lead,
searching eagerly among all her
prettiest playthings, “I know what
it is,” cried she, “it is ‘D-o-11.’ * So
she brought her best doll, and of
fered to give it to the child if she
would Come into the parlor. No; it
was a failure.
The next in age said to herself,
-luuff is spatted with four letters f
an«b ^sought her a fine muff—a
Christinas present, but she would
not touch the muff, uocaveu look at
it. . - | *
Grace, the youugest, could think
of woWiibg worth offering after this,
but stood looking on in sorrow, until
at length, following an instinct of
her ow*,“she sat down beside the
little kHunger, and cried too. Then
presently she^took her by the hand,
ami encircling her nook with her
owu tiny arm, she drew the weeping
head softly nearer and nearer, and
imprinted a gentle kiss npon her
cheek.. This decided the battle.
There whs nothing said; bnt Grace
soon led the way into the
holding her captive by the hand.
“Well, girls,” said the mother,
“Grace has found out the secret, and
the four letters are L o v e. Love is
the strongest rope in the world—
even God will follow when you draw
with tbai*»;.:\‘ V , p j
Ah ! yes, love ts a great power. It
draws all things to itself. It drew
the Son of God down to earth to die
for at, and led him back to heaven
to intercede for ns; and is able to
draw him down again, any day hnd
every dajr, to dwell with us in our
hearts. It wilt draw down blessings
on our labors. It will draw down
i to all our prayers.
'»«■»*
Arthur looked up surprised and
pleased as his brother and sister
willingly accorded the credit due
hb» \V j I ‘ J
How many times they had seen
him, small boy as he was, cipher for
an hour rubbing out and writing
figures over and over again, until at
last he would bring his small fist
whack 1 on the table shouting, “It is
done!”
How patiently and persistently he
would plaue and hammer and saw,
and saw and hammer and plane,
with all his miud on his work, until
a boat or a box, or a wind mill, or
something done, and well done, too,
would reward his labors.
Yes, Arthur was ‘Done.’ “He is
a finish or,” said Jasper, “and I wish
I was one too.”
“Think, Jasper, 0 said his mother,
‘how it Would be to carry ‘half-done’
into everything—the bread half done
your dinner half done, the table half
j»t> your new pants and coat from
the tailor’s half done, the sweeping,
washing and sewing half done.”
“Please don’t mother,” said Jas
per, “let me think of it”
l*gLII!I"aagHB!.WgJML‘'l''ii ■ ■ ■ .
' Miscellaneous. .
Curious Things About Dreami-
Is it not a curious fact that dreams
are all the creations of our own
minds—that we ourselves originate
the forms and faces that look on us,
and perhaps terrify us—that we
think the thoughts that others seem
to speak with their lips—that we
and no others are the authors of the
comedy that is acted before us, or of
the terrible tragedy in which we our
selves are the only sufferers !
There is another, very curious
thing about dreams, aud that is, the
parlor, 8bort period of time iu which they
- Gci&r. This has be
===:
ured—by noting,
hour or minute when
answers
Naming Over.
“I have three children to
over,” said Mrs. Dfe* otfeday) “and
I shall |'name them Half-Done,
Almost-Done, and DMfe.
Jaspea'Shrunk behind hfo toother’s
chair with a goilty look. He, I am
sore wad forth qutek as
lightning? ha thdughfrof the nfcrtih-
boose began fts he had Ids nouf/box
of tools anil aSrar roofed; of his
aunt’s fl<vtffeiyfad4er, which only had
the sticks and that ton all t ©f the
latdi hfe ^egtrh to mend, and left;
of his geoinetry which he missed be
cause it.,-fraar bfify half learned; of
the ntettaM which he tost because
they Were only half in bis pocket;
and wore© than all, of Zebra, the
horsey who ran away and broke the
buggy because he was only half har
nessed. Jasper, I say, thought of
all tbit and stifunk back, more than
certain that Half Dono was his. If
all he thought was true, did he not
deserve itt V
“You mean we,” said Lucy.
“Mean you for what T” asked her
mother. .U .....
“For Almost-Done,” said Lucy
blushing. “I was almost dressed
when ,breakfast was ready. I was
almost to school when it began. I
had almost done my letter to papa
when it Was tims to send it I had
almost finished Golden Threads’
when James came for it Oh I dear,
Almost-Done is almost as bad as
Hatf-Doae, and a great deal more
provoking, because yon see, josfc a
little more trying would have done
it” h *
almost pufounded to be achmtuui
after hearing 96 Paul preach; but
there tbep<for king stopped; alrooAt,
but nob altogether; poor Agrippa!
I atn bo vcry kbrry for him.” , v i
“And are you.sorry for ore tool”
asked Lucy softly. .f
fiYwL J—
boo* often uieas-
for exanqjt* the
one has-fallen
asleep, dreamed a long dream, and
awoke. Many remarkable irUtames
of this has been given. I shall mid
to those one from my own expo
rience. Very late one night, when
wearied iu body and mind, 1 was
dictating to a friend what required
to be sent to press early uext morn
ing. I spoke a sentence, and sud
denly fell asleep. I dreamed a very
long and complicated dream, and
then I awoke, feeling quite refreshed,
but for a moment utterly confused
as to where I was, or what 1 had
been doing. Recovering myself, I
began to apologise to my friend for
Laving so long detained him at that
hoar of night) expressing the hope
sarawwars
college exercises, when at lafi^, tarn
log round—for lie had been writing
with his back to me—be asked me
with an expression of wopdfr, and
f if I felt utoweAFAr what
did I mean ! I woudered mnch more
when I heard that ho had never lift
ed his pea, aw had ceased writing,
and that I was aroused by his re-
positing the teat TWWfi Of life sen
tence, so that I could not possibly
have slept over three or four sec
onds ! And thus a long dream which
seems to occupy a night, has often
been foaad to have occupied, per
haps, only a few seconds before
waking. This may acoount for a
fact often noticed by mm.recovering
from drowning, that just before be
coming nnconscioos, their whole life
seefoed sddden^tp pasi before th^m
like a panorama, and time was noth
ing in the rapidity of thought. *
There is one experience whioh we
have acquired, I believe, from our
dreams as from no other source, and
that is our awful suffering through
fear. Who ever was smitten when
awake with such abject terror, such
may
feet are turned toward tboLord, but
they will nottoke you to him. Your
eyes are looking up toward heaven
bnt ‘almost’ will leave you this side
of the besratifltf and
is outside, where you would not be
left, my ehsKLP a
“No mother, I do not want to be
left out,” she said. “I will put away
‘almost’ and take up ‘altogether,’ for
‘altogether* means Done, I suppose.
Who of os is Pone.”
“Who is V* asked mother.
“Arthur!” dried Lucy aud Jasper
at once. “Arthur does! Arthur
always fiqiHbtff
mere, to be peroaohted by every
savage or demoniacal power—the
wild beasts of toe desert, the hid
eous forms of serpent life and of
ocean life, while we are all the time
utterly powerless and deserted.—
Even the dearest friends turn away,
and we are alone a midst all that can
fill this tout with siich fear that the
hero of * hundred fights starts up
with q cry of tfeppr, and the great
B* import* fcrttuxs Hhe a child!
What a wonderful description is
that of such a dream given by
Eliphaz the Temanite, in the Book
y brought
ed a little
.the vis
ions of the night, when deep sleep
ialleth on men, four came upon me,
some trifle—some indiscretion. I
have no doubt this is generally the
case. Some of you may have seen
an excellent caricature of George
Gruikshank’o representing a man
asleep on his back, with an expres
sion of agony on Jiis faoe, while a
black pig sits on his chest, and look-
iug at him asks, “Why did yon eat
pork for supper T” A most pertinent
question, which might be varied by
asking suffereis from nightmare why
did you eat “cheese,” or “pie orust,”
or this or that dainty, which causes
you now to suffer f And it surely is
worth learning, as tanght so vividly
by such night agonies, what an ef
fect the body has on the miud, how
what we call a trifle, affecting the
nicely adjusted and finely tempered
organisation of the one win affect
the other, aud a small morsel per
haps of toasted cheese make the im
mortal spirit of the greatest states
man as well as the greatest boy ex-
perjynce a horror of great darkness t
So look sharp after the body by
obedieuce to God’s will regarding it,
anti yon will save much suffering in
the sonl.
Another curious feet about dreams
is that we very seldom, if ever,
dream about what chiefly occupies
our minds during the day. This
side of the brain, so to speak, is
wearied, and sleeps soundly; while
that portion which was idle dnring
the day remains awake, and works
at night. Accordingly, if we want
to know what has given rise to our
dreams, we must search the most
trivial of our day thoughts; but,
alas! tbe trivial are so numerous
that we seldom have patience to
search long enough to discover tbe
tiny enp of water which at night
onr fancy magnifies into an ocean
tossed by a storm. Hence dreams
from different son roes may assume
uearly the same form. For example,
when one of my boys was ill with
scarlatina, I had a shocking attack
of nightmare, in which 1 was at
tempting in vaiu to drag him from a
house on fire, aud from which I
awoke with a sense of horror at
seeing him perish tn the flames while
appealing to me for help. I went
up to his room, and was told by his
siek nurse that he was in a refresh
ing sleep, but that he bad spruug
up in the night with a scream, say
ing that his room was on fire. 1
was determined, if possible, to trace
out tbe origiu of so strange a coin
cidence, aud searched among the
trifles of the past day. BseaHing
my thoughts, I remembered that at
a crowded meeting the previous eve
ning I had conjectured what mould
be done In the ill eonstracted build-
fog ff it took lire, and bow 1 could
possibly rescue my family, who were
seated in the inmost part of it. So
much for my part. But what of my
boy’s share ! On making minute in
quiries, I ascertained that the physi
cian attending him had casually re
marked ifi his hearing the day
before, “Although this room is very
comfortable, I bare a dislike to all
garret rooms reached by wooded
stairs ou account of fire.” This re
mark be had heard and noticed.
Thus our dreams, so much alike,
occurring the same night, originated
in different yet similar
cidents of the previous day !
The Svei Temper I
‘ffeiflrtireM trefes, tlii » dreary
fcamonessln all that VOtt Aw. 1 It was
was waiting onf to it© A fctratfce night, y*t we looked
wito rdmlbAi 1 something
skid to awe as the gfok evfching^o
gnn'ito off’tbh gfwfow and the
stones, snfi‘* ttte * !*t*ri* * sighed’ ™
mournfully atnofffcM the eiiureb yard' *
trees that Stood like sceptres round.
MM
J
Tbe other day I
tbe wbalf, when, at tbe last moment? areirfW
after tbecabtos were loosened, % and
the wheels were beating the water,
aud tbe ship was on tbe very point
of sliding away, I saw a gentleman,
whom, for some time 1 bad remark
ed as auxiously awaiting sometbiiig
which did not arrive, hand his wife
aud children over the side, and de
scend tbe plank from the ship to the
wharf. The moment they wero off
the plank it was raised, sud the uext
instant the ship glided into the
stream, a gun boomed over the water
aud she was on her way over tbe
ooeas.
Tbe gcutleuiau and his family
watched the ship disappear iu which,
for mauy weeks, their passages bad
been taken, aud wbioli they had left
•o reluctantly at the last moment.
I, in turn, watched them, not intru
sively nor impertisently, I hope, but
because I saw iu tbe gentleman’*
face uo sigu of a*feer, uor, indeed, of
very serious disappointment. While
! was admiring his self-command—
for I have seen people surly because
dinner was delayed—a truckman
with a heavy load of baggaga drove
rapidly alonj* the wharf. He saw
tbe situation in a inommt, and was
confounded ana frightened. The
gentleman pointed to tbe receding
ship, and said, quietly, to the truck
man, “You have prevented our go
ing.” There was no anger, no harsh
or scolding tone. The gentleman
evidently did not choose to lose bis
temper as well as his passage, and
his mildness and generosity bronght
tears to the delinquent’s eyes. The
truth was, uot that he had idly lin
gered, but that, thinking he had
time enough, he had turned aside to
send a physician to his wife, and had
then been impeded npon his way to
the ship.
It was, after all, a little tbiug—
the gentleman and bis family had
only missed their passage. It was
merely au immense inconvenience,
a derangement of plans carefully
laid, with the general absurdity of
all balked endeavors of the kind; but
it was, for all that, a sudden aud
sharp test of tetniwr. That of some
of us would haved snapped ; and I
pity that truckman if he shoald ever
briug the baggage of most of us too
late to the ship.—Geo. fr'iu. Curtis.
SIMM O N
frill’ii!
Ioe and lee Machine*.
REGULATOR
From what wu cau’Jaam of
operations of tfr© various newly
A Vitit to Naaarttk.
vented ioe machines, it is not improb
able tliat this welcome commodity
wilt soon t>e supplied to each family,
on demand, from portable machines,
that will be one of tbe regutar fea
tures of the “coming d welting.”
At present the two most successful
of these ioe machines arc those known
as the Carre and Tellier. It ft stated
that a Tellier machine, capable of
turning out ten tons of ioe per day,
eau be operated at a oust, including
labor and interest, Of from two to
four dollars per ton. It is a marked
aud peculiar feature of too ioe that
it is more solid, brace possessed of a
greater cooling-power that III© na
tural product. This result is due to
tbe fact that the water was submit
ted to a mnch lower temperature
than tbe freeziug point—degrees
Fahr. Tbe ice in the Tellier ma
chine is formed rapidly at five d©
grees below zero. | .
Messageries Ituperiales, uf France,
the largest steam, paaseuger, aud
express company in the world, used
on their steamers, in 1868, over one
miinou and a half of ice. With such
an immense consumption, it became
an uuportaut question as to what ice
was tbe most lasting. In order to
determine this, the Directors caused
a series of practical tests to be maths
which were conducted as follows:
In the same sootu and precisely
under similar conditions, there were
placed five cakes of ice obtaiued from
different sources, aud weighiug two
hundred pouuds each. These sam
ples were carefully watched, and tbe
moment that each had entirely melt
ed was taken as the unit of its
lasting value. Tbe following is a
tabulated statement of the results'
obtained: Natural ice from Mwitzer-
lan lasted 107 hours; natural ice
from Nowary lasted 115 hours;
natural ice from Boston lasted 130
hours; artificial ice made by Tellier
machine lasted 144 hours.—Apple-
ton's Journal.
the utoM-efl i«Apr«rr
10 . This uurividlcd Medicine. »* warranted
hot to contain s single particle of Mku-
ocay, or any iqjuriou* mineral «ub*t«iee,
bUt ‘* FTTM5LY VEGETABLE
For fort* rear* it has proved ft* great
value iu aU diseases of the Liver, Bowels
and Kidney*, Thousand* pf the good
and rrewt in si! parts of the country
i-v.
;
*1. f*W*M 0*.r
on or outer toeaxa
r ssor^.'
-
n«y*,M4a
mmoos’ Liver Regulator is ac
iug new Ufe aud -vigor U»
foA. Simmon* Liver B
knowliAgod to have no equal s* a
LIVER MEDICINE.
: i It conUiuH four medical elements, never
united in the same" happy proportion in
any other
thebe
d t -v \
vu: ■ fpentle
Cathartic, a wouderfol Touic, an unex
ceptionable Alterative and a certain Cor-
l-ectesB of all imparities of the body.
Such Miirual success liaa attemied iu u#e,
that it & now regarded a* the
GREAT UNFAILING SPECIFIC
for Liver Cowntaint aud the painful off-
S ring thereof, to wit: Dyspepsia, Con-
pation. Jaundice. Billon* attack*, Sick
Headache, Colic, Depression of Mpirit*,
Soar Stowm-ii, lit art Burn, 6lc., A
Regulate the Liver and prevent
CHILLS ABB PETER
Simmon*' Liver Regulator is manuter-
IhWoI
of
Nm
VaMud yiirt
U lb* - ^
wit <, iIm q.Wr. f. a Am
flnteM
TtM the mow
r. n. xdwxuhsoa,
Aired only h
l*riee 111 i*v ]
postage imid, |1-
Urn in h
«>y ? iJu ZEILIN At
Macon, ria., and Phlli
ilndelphia.
o ut by aiail,
. ... Ji-to/ I *rcpawl ready for
PtoH IIJW. fhdd hj all Prng-
gmts. GF* Beware of all Conntt rfeiui and
Imitations.
J. WALKER, Prop r.
""IW ‘
SOLD IT ALL DRUGGISTS AWD DEALCKS.
Ang 0 : 48—3m
July 19
• t s ■»
rrlj
J.
RUKCKERT.
• U v
WEBEE'S, ,
Elegant Pianos
AXD *’
Wood & Co.’s Charming Organs.
They
anti un*
Tone,
G ut Design*.
cue*.
XZLLE& k CO.'S STAKDASS PIANOS.
IT Every tnxtrnment warranted for
live year*.
CP By all meaus try the almve bt-fotv
pnrefia*ing el*ewhere.
WARE-ROOMS, MASONIC HALL,
‘ No*. ST and 99 Market street,
May to JW-tfl WilnihiKton. N.C.
ucMionahly the test
or Purity and Posner of
f Musical Effect* and Ele-
Send for Illustrated Cata-
Ood <j. ‘ tit ti*at tki* precious bool mem
find its trwf »•* erery /family in t%e land?
says q promtueut reformer, of T. 8. Ar
thur* l.tsf great work,
Three Y?ar» in a Man-Trap.
Notwitlistaudiii/ it* immense sale, we
re to extend ii« indwenee still farther,
■ call for more aid to introduce it to
every corner of our land- It I* burhly
emlonwd by Judge Black, J- H„ One,
Neal Daw and other*. Will do more
go<>d than any profobitoni law over
framed. It sells beyond parallel. Agent*
ha-i-e done and are doing splendidly with
it. One has *old over 500 copies. Owing
to its great success we are enabled to
offer (-specially large discount*. Send
for ilhnUrated <4—ilar and term*, and
enter into flu* great work at once.
J. M. STODDART & GO.,
• Philadelphia.
Oct. 4 4——im
REMOVAL.
C 1 DiKRCKjS. Wholesale and Retail
T • Grocer, Columbia, S. C M respectful
ly iaf.'j me hi* friend* and customer* that
How to Start au Aquarium.
One ot the moot attractive of sit-
tiug room ornameuts is an aqnarium.
They need uot necessarily be expen
sive, as common window glass set in
a wooden frame will sufltoo, though
one with an iron frame will be better.
Of course it must be made water
tight. When this is done pnt in
rain or river water—probably any
soft water win answer; then get a
piece of rock large enough to come
nearly to the top, aud the more boles
and cavities and projections it has,
the better it wfil suit tbe fish. Put
this iu tbe middle, aud then cover
the bottom with clean sahd or gravel
two Inches deep or more. Yon are
ready then for aquatic plants, which
may consist of American Starworti,
Mermaid-weed, Calla, Eel gross, etc.
When these have been planted three
or four days It will be ready for the
fish. Minnows, water newts, perch
mussels, tadpole^ snails, and a few
gold fish are coimnouly used. Snails
are said to keep both the water aud
the glass clean. Some other kinds
will do equally as well, but pike aud
trout are objectionable ou account of
a weakness for eating up the other
members of the family. Care must
be taken so as not to overstock the
vessel, or all will die. With a proper
proportion Of plants aud Ash tbe
water will remain pure for a number
of weeks. When It has stood some
time it can be improved by dipping
out, aod pouring back from a little
and trembling, which made all iny; height. Ihe fish may be fed bread
boues to shake. Thou a spirit passed
before my face; the hair of my flesh
stood up; it stood still, but 1 could
not ditoern the form klmreof; an im
age wa%$Nifore mine eyes? there was
crumbs and minute bits of meat, but
what is not eaten by them must lie
removed, or it will taiut the water.—
li lt very likely that you pill sage
ly remark that all those terrible
dreams of ours have been caused by mubt a mao good.
A correspondent of the New York
Tablet writes:
Amongst the pfrosant excursions
we have made with our Eastern
friends during the past week was
one that much impressed us by the
novelty aud sotomu quaiutnesa of
what we saw. It was to Nazareth,
one of the old Moravian settlements
of Pennsylvania, which are undoubt
edly to be classed among its “lions.”
The drive from Nazareth to Easton
is through a broifrn, hilly country,
abounding in the constituent ele
ments of the picturesque landscape.
But it is the queer old Moravian
town that is more than all interest
ing. There tbe vefy spirit of silence
—if it have a spirit—seems to brood,
trifling iu | nestltng amid the thick, over arching
trees, the grass-grown streets, aud
quaint, tiukdorned houses that tell of
days long gone by, and of a genera
tion of singular sectaries whose
spirit survive* toe partial di*ap{>ear-
ance of their semi-monastic institu
tlaes.
In Nazareth all is dead, dull, stag
nant; no voice of song or laughter,
or cheerful converse reaches the ear;
the very children yon meet, and
passing few they are, do not seem
to play, but stand talking together
ill low, monotonous tones. The ob
jects of special interest are a rather
handsome, though antiquated school
house—the seat qf the celebrated
Nazareth Institute; astutely obelisk
in a green meadow square in front,
commemorative of certain pupils of
the Institute, who fell in the late
war in defence of the Union ; a sort
of public garden, the dreariest,
louelieat, most deserted spot onr eye
ever beheld, reminding ns of poor
Tom Hood’s “Haunted House,” tlio
refrain of which was continually in
our mind while rambling with our
own cheerful companions through its
chilly shades and moss grown al
leys:
“A seusc of iuy»tery th« spirit daunted,
Ami said a* plain as buy word* could do,
The place is ha an ted.”
And haunted the dear old gardens
may be by the dead juid gone Mora
virtu n Sister*” and “Brothers” whose
graves lie jnst oatspTe, in the prim,
formal, yet not unimpressive ceme
tery which forms ttofc lost, and per
haps greatest atljnetion of tbe
quaint and silent town. The graves
lie in long unbroken rows, each one
marked simply by q pat stone, of
granite or of marble, some eighteen
inches square, bearing the name of
the sleepsr below, together with his
or her place and date of birth and
“departure” as theaa -gtooes all have
it, in set phrase. AXtltpuglr tire cem
etery is well kepi otek planted with
The Country Gentleman says : “A
carpet ©an be ©leaned on the floor
with warm soap suds and a good
scouring brash, a piece of flannel
and a coarse sjionge. Dip the brash
into the snds and soonr a yard at
a time, using ns little water as possi-
ble; then rub it over with the
sponge, and dry off with the flannel.
Have also a pail of cold water, with
enough sulphuric arid in it to taate
sour; dip a clean sponge into this,
and rub over the spot jast cleaned ;
this will restore the brightness of
greeus aud reds. Finish yard after
yard in this manner, rubbing each
as dry as fMisaible; keep a good fire
in the room, so that it will dry- rap
idly. Ot oourso the carpet aud floor
must be free from dust anti dirt be
fore this cleaning process is attempt
ed. Hearth rugs can be washed in
the same manner.
“Worsted furniture of auy kind
can be freshened by sin-inkling dump
sued Indian ineal on aud rubbing it
off iuto a dtiHt-pan with a stiff brush,
or a sheet can be spread under each
piece to catch the litter. Worsted
and printed cloth table-covers can
be washed iu soapwuds made of
mpttled bar-soap, adding one qnnr
ter ot a pound ot salaratus to every
gallon of sads; wash in two waters,
and rinse in a Shaker pail of ookl
water, to which half a teaspoonful of
oil of vitriol has beeu added. If tbe
table-cloth is silk aud worsteds, leave
out the vitriol and add four table-
spoonfuls of fine salt.”
GEORGE 6. HACKER S
Door, Sash and Blind Factory,
he has removed to hi* new establish men t.
formerly Kinder’s building, on the corner
of Richardson and Taylor street*, where
he-will constantly keep on hand a well
selected assortment of all articles belong
ing to his line of business, sorb as Gracv-
2U.v
nes Provisions, Tobaccos, Ac.
January 26
Railroads.
CHARLE8TON, S- C.
to
AU
N O uupor{©d work kept on baud
supply the country trade.
work i* made at onr own factory in the
city, and under the proprietorV special
»u
pervi*ion.
Send for
Price List. Factory and
Ware Room* ; King, opposite Cannon
Stieet, on line of Citt railway. P. O.
Box, No. 170.
July 7 tf
Leave Greenville..,.. „
“ Belton
SAMPLES.
HAMILTON EASTER A SONS,
BALTIMORE, M D..
D ESIRING to continue serving their
friend* at tbe South, will send SAM
PLES (marked w ith width and price of
each,) of any kind ^f
DRY GOODS,
of English.-French and American Manu
facture. We will pay ETpreiw freight ou
all purchase* from us amounting to
$20 and Over,
hut parties whose orders are unaccompa
nied by the cash, (either Bank Check or
Post Office Order,) must pay the Express
Company for the return of money in
MU*.
se SE&risml
Dec 1
-tv
RUPTURE CURED.
Marsh’s Radical Cure Truss.
Mote to Fix the Clock.—Wheu the
clock stops don’t take it to the repair
shop till you have tried as follows:
Takeoff the pointers aud the face;
take off tho pendulum aud its wires.
Remove th«r ratchet from the tick
wheel, and the clock will ran down
with great velocity. Let it go. The
increased 8|Hhh1 wears away the gnm
and dust from the pinion*—the clock
cleans itself. If you have any pnre
sperm oil, put the least bit on the
axles. Put the machfile Itogetber,
and nine times in ten it will run Just
as well ns if it had been taken to the
shop. Iu fact, this is tbe way that
most shopmen clean clocks. If, in
stead of a pendulum, tbe clock Iras a
watch caoaiiemeiit, this latter can be
taken out in ah instant without
takiug the works apart, and the
result is tho same. It takes about
twenty minutes so to clean a brass
clock, and saves a dollar.
—U? mt>'4 j
Merit is never so ootrapicnoos as
when it springs from obscurity, just
as the moou never looks so lustrous
os When it eteeigee from a cloud.
Spring* wM not Rnil Path iteporwO*
T HE boat HJ»d most effective Truss
known for the cure and relief of
Hernia or Rupture. This Tram has re
ceived the sanction of the most eminent
physicians of this country, who do not
hesitate to recommend It to those afflicted
with Hernia as being superior to nil
other*.
It i* the only Truss that will retain the
Iwwela with any certainty, ami toe wearer
can feel assured that heiSVftdng'a remedy
Una. will bo at all times safe and effectual
in it* operations. Of this we guarantee
entire satisfaction to nil who inSv come
under our treatment.
Ladles’ *ilk elastic abdominal belts for
corpulency, falling of the womb, and as
a support to the lawk and abdominal
muscles. Anklet*, knee caps and stock
ing* for varicose vein*, ulcer* nnd weak
joints.
Shoulder braces for ladies, gents and
children, for tho cure of stooping of tho
oliouhfor* aud os a chest expander.
Pile Instruments, the most superior
article in nse—-light, easily adjusted and
effectual. lustrumenta for all physical
deformities, curvature of the spine, bow
logs, dab foot, Ac.
_ A^ent. Tor Clenpent’s Celebrated Artifi-
Agent for Grandad's Patent Rnbbei
^GcidSJ^Babedt-k’s SilverTterine
Tgent for Dr. Wadsworth’* Stem Petr
N
Ladies’ Apartment with a competent
lady in attendance.
’Order* per mail promptly attended to
S. MARSH, it
92 W. Baltimore St.
Baltimore, Md.
June 9 —tf
G. A C. Railroad.
D AILY, Huudsys excepted, connecting
with Night Train* on Sooth Caro
linn Railroad, up aud down ; also with
trains going North and South ou Char
lotte, Columbia and Augusta Railroad,
and Wilmington, Columbia and Augusts
Railroad.
UP.
Leave Columbia at 7 13 a ni
Leave Alston 9 05am
Leave Newberiy -. 10 40 p m
Leave Coke*bury 2 00pm
Leave Belton 8 50 p m
Arrive at Greenville 5 80 p m
DOWN.
. 7 30 a ill
tv..... 9 30 a lu.
Cokesbury.... 15 a m
Abbeville 8 15 am
“ Newberry 2 80pm
“ Alston 4 20 p m
Arrive at Columbia......;...^ 6 00pm
Anderson Branch and Bine Ridge Ih-
rision.
DOWN. ur.
Leave Walhalla 5 45 a m Arrive 715 p m
Leave Pcrrrville 6 85 a m Leave 6 85 p in
Leave l’cuuleton 710 a m Leave 5 50 p ni
Leave Anderson 810 a ni Leave 4 50 p in
Arrive at Belton 9 00 a m Leave 8 50 p m
Connecting with down train from
Greenville.
Accommodation train* run on Abbe
ville Branch on Monday*,'Wednesday*and
Fridays. On Anderson Branch, be! ween
Belton and Anderson, on Tuesdays
Thursday* and iSattmlays.! "if
THOS. DODAMEAD, General Snp t.
Jarez Nokton, General Ticket Ag't.
i
Charlotte, Columbia A Augusta
Railroad.
Gc,hfral Snpcrin tenden C* Office
Ooh ubia, September 22,1872.
O N aud offer this date the following
schedule will be run on this rood ;
GOING SOrTH.
Train No. 1. Train No. 2.
Leave Charlotte, 8 00 a m 8 20 p ni
Columbia, 2 40 p ni 8 80 a m
Arrive at Augusta, 742pm Steam
GOING NORTH.
Train No. 1. Train No. 2.
LeitVe Augusta, 685»m ‘ 5 50 pm
“ Columbia, 11 58 a m 11 05 p m
Arrive.at Ch'lotte, 7 42 p m 6 00 a m
Standard time 10 minntes slower than
Washington; six minutes ahead Colum
bia"
Traiu No. 1 daily; train No. 2 daily,
SundfrTs cxcoi)tod.
Both train* make close connection to
all points North, South and West-
Through tick*its sold aad baggage checked
to all principal points.
E. P. ALEXANDER.
! . Gea’l. Superintendent
E. R. Dorset,
Gen. F. and T. Agent.
I" " 1 i i*MWii|fl^>^iy^j|jjipiii f T **■*“’
Change of Schedule.
South Carolina R. R. Compart,
Columbia, S, (J., Sept. 20,1872
Change of schedule, to go into effect ««
and after Sunday, 29th instant:
Mail and Passenger Grain.
Leave Columbia. .» 00a iu
Arrive at Charleston ......4 80 pm
Leave Charleston 980am
Arrive at Columbia .5 te p m
Night Jbjrprts*, Freight and Awwtm aHa
tton TYatn (Sunday* excepted).
Leave Columbia 7 50 p ni
Arrive at Charleston 8 80 a m
Leave Charleston.............. -«--7 10 pm
Arrive at Cohuhoia. i' .*6 45 a m
Camden Accommodation Train will
continue to run to Columbia as formerly
—Monday*, Wednesdays and Saturday*.
Leave Camden.. 7 90s m
Arrive at Columbia............. U Mam
Leave Colombia..:; 2 10 p m
Annvc Camden ... 8 65 p m
A. L. TYLER, Vke-Preridint.
S. B. PiCKJK*, Gen. Ticket Agt.
S;#ti*:w ■
*
m i
j*ail 11 i.'jn
4582*™
, ,1 -. tmsm. fc.U'
TIC
geluaj'.
Ho.evpT 4»
the,
inborn
the »Q[
i
never 4
klw *nWW
t. be brought to
Of this f f h *
after. I -fff
ou thi» f
submittf4Jift-^ e i
more, except the
U P° D , f.. Wi..I
few statetu^afo
marks fo preaai
true!#*.
The
Uanchq, fW>»i
report fdrtePF*,
“I hare |>erfor|
’ during toe jpK
ing some,aflMal*
Rev. Dr. A. J.
Committee
gelical
October l$3h
is tbe attyv >
with the
olina Synod*
with tbs
most cordial lj ed
ositiou, and ead
“>• trmmxd
this
uessee
go forwj
the Gei
pitsh meat of irl
mead the sfithdra
Synod front the
NortU-AJ^uitote*-
I feel that we atj
reserved rights as
Qolston Synod ui|
eral Synod/
The majority t,t]
the Presideut’s li
ing attention to
meudation of tjj.t*
tneilded the adop
ing resolotiou :
“Resolved, 1. Tl
withdraw* from tl
iu North Anieric;
forming a joint ui
nessee and Xortl
aud with these i»d
becoming au iut^
General Council."
MINOR!
We, the subs*
the Committee
Report, being u
the majority in
raport peitaiuiu
our connection v
od in North Au
of our Syuod * i
the Tennessee
Synods, looking
the General C*
both our priviie
a minority repo;
^ © are deep
souse of the ir
tiou upon this
‘“outs placed iu
reliable source*
are fully aw’ari
and deep inter
t*on, and that i
loach anxiety,
immediately ini
therefore to be
*o owe to our
ooncerued to d
ent views aui
shadow, as cle.
a U the lights
future jioliey au
^ e 8till regai
^“o, the divi«
Ghureh in this <
an d, in some i
Accessary parti
“» v e deeply l a
“ffuirs. W C hav
^ruestly and
***** a more
8tat e of thing,
. *• bar thorougl
conviction that
ihi ' welfare of
Poratively dem t
*thernuM in tk
*£** el * *****
Confessions of'
and ot-L,
-W VZ 9 .
I