The Lutheran visitor. (Columbia, S.C.) 1869-1904, September 11, 1874, Image 4
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THE LUTHERAN VISITOR, CHARLESTON, 8. C., SEPTEMBER II, 1874.
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Poetry.
If ;
f
The Lift-Clock.
FROM THE OKNMAN.
There is s little mystic clock,
No human eye hath seen.
That boateth on—and beatoth on,
From morning until e’en.
And when the soul is wrapped la sleep.
And heareth not a sound,
It ticks, and ticks the livelong night,
And never rnnneth down.
Ob, wondrous is that work of art,
Which knolls the psseing hour:
But art ne’er formed, nor mind conceived,
Tht life-dock’s magic power.
Nor set in gold, nor decked with gems.
By wealth and pride possessed;
Bnt rich or poor, or high or low.
Each bean in his breast.
Huy Hewitt in tht TjrroL
In the Leisure //oar, Mary Howitt
gives a sketch of tbs ignorance of
tlie peasantry and the lying wicked
ness of their spiritual go ides that is
almost incredible. She writes that
the simple-hearted, plena pea—ntry
I of the entire OathoMe world are made
to believe that “Holy Father,” as
the Pope is termed, ie at the pro—at
time enduring all Urn miseries of
a bard and cruel cajHivitj. In the
Austrian Tyrol, whwo oar tarn
re spent, thin is the general belief
amongst a people not deficient in
good sense end intelligence, bet
credo Ions of every fact related to
them by their price la, or rood by
them in the,! < v
Where Bon' Kirbtot Oeme From. i the
When life’s deep stream, mid beds and We, naturally, going direct to them
from Rome, are eagerly beset with
questions regarding the health
condition of the cruelly suffering
head of the ehurvb, who has become
to their Imaginations as a
crucified Saviour; and, but for the
credit which we have established ia
that one little village, our statements
would not be accepted, for how
should we, who are Protestants,
know better then the priests 1 They
believe us, however, and their simple
hearts are comforted ; but they are
only a few out of the many thou*
ands who are imposed upon by these
outrageous fabricstions. At Ant
werp, one Sunday, a preacher having
painted in roost vivtd colors the mal
treatment, the sufferings, the ion
prison men t of the head of the church,
cried out, “How is it possible to
deny all this when here is
on which li— in chains the Ho'y
Father V At these words the whole
A few days ago “Ireneus,” of the I congregation burst into sobbing and
New York Observer, visited a town weeping, and, rushing forward to
np the Hudson, to assist st the ob the pri—t, secured for themselves
Heqaios of the pastor of the church, little bundles of the straw, which he
where 30 years before Irene— had [ sold at half a franc a bundle. AI
flowers,
All still and softly glides.
Liks the wsvelet’s step, with agentle beat.
It warns of passing tides.
When threat’ning darkness gathers o’er,
And hope’s bright visions flee,
Like the sullen strokes of the muffled
oar.
It beateth heavily.
When psssioi} nerve# the warrior’s arm
For deeds of hate and wrong,
Though heeded not the fearful Bound.
The knell hi deep and strong.
When eyes to eyes sre gating soft,
And tender words are spoken.
Then fast and wild it rattles on.
As if with love ’twere broken.
Such is the dock that measures life,
Of flesh and spirit Mended;
And thus ’twill run within the breast.
Till that strange life is ended.
ml-!--— - " -'Ll »■ '.T B "
Miscellaneous.
“The Whole Hog or None."
himself been the pastor. Among
the numerous incidents which hap
pened daring his pastorate, and
brought to mind by this visit, was
the following hog (not dog) story :
“One of my elders sent me as
gift a whole hog; weight two or
three hundred pounds. It wi
dressed—that is to say, undressed,
for when I went down into the cel
lar to see my present, be lay there
most all tbs perish priests sell the—,
and it is said that half the
go— to the Vail—n. But this Is not
all. At Ghent they sell photographs,
in which ie repr—sated the Fops la
chains, looking out from betwi
strong iron bars from a little dismal
cell, a bersayliere standing guard
over him with his mosksL This
photograph, the priests my,
taken from the lift, therefore it —a
not be false, and there is
Not Aur from Helsburg, la Austria,
is a great mountain which consists
of nothing but beautiful nubble. Tbs
atooe maeoas out out blocks and col
umns of it, take them to the great
city and build palaces and flue houses
of them. But what become of the
Utile pieces which sre broken off,
and which are — small that the
great people caa not use them f
| These sre for the children I Out of
' them are mads the little marble
bells—piayiag marbles. How this
is done 1st me tall yoa.
From this asms marble mountain
several brooks flow down Into the
valley below. Their waters rush
•wifUy down from one shelf of rock
to another, nod form countless little
waterfalls. By the aide of the— fit
Us folia numerous small mills have
bran dUamI. Ia sash of iImm the
w. et—sew www umw^^m^uv
water drives a little flying wheel.
1 l*-i iji'V U tiii* barrel <>f the wheel
in a round grinding steer, Thin
millstone tar— lu a sto— trough,
into which fresh water to constantly
•plashing. The larger bits of mar
ble are broken with a hammer into
rough, angular pise— about — large
— walnuts No child would care to
play with the— stou—; they a
•harp cor—red, fogged, and gray and
dusty besides. They are thrown
talc the stone-mill trough with watc
and the mill sto— begins to tare.
Now the angular stou— have a long,
merry dance ; they hop, and skip
and stumble over one another, sc
whirl round and round la a circle;
they crash, aad beat and grate upon
each other ell day aad all night
long. At last they become — small
that tbe mill stone ia tin* irutig
takes ao mo— hold of them, aad the
tittle mill stands still. Then the lit
tle stou— are ready. The millstone
Is lifted—the— they its, a hundred
or more, all together, aad o— just
— pretty — another. They a— per
foctly round ; all corner# and rough
— are gone. The marbles non
only need polishing. Thee the chib!
gets them, sad plays all kinds of
»uh them. —Lsdiw’ Reposi
ks; it to considered a —-
to have the dunning sticks
thrown into the wigwam, and tbe
creditor never —— them except with
IiamI rust outer#.*’
WEST
lawn and flow— beds. The trap was
contrived by George Reek—, Lie
welly n Park, Orange, N. J M and to
not patented.—Scientific American.
on his back, with bis numerous legs
extended in all directions, especially I Holy Father suffering tn one of the
upwards, with a mighty rent extend-1 most horrid dang—an ini
tog from head to heels. What to da The— photographs are sold to the
—ffilh him x_ dld not know. Had be members of ttoOUtoh^t^sUm
been a live elepnsitltrtiitf into 1 hi Iffitf t frfllft
would have been of more service to
mo than this huge carcass, which
seemed to fill tbe vault, and, in tbe
light of a solitary candle, presented
a ghastly spectacle. There w— no |
person in the village on whom I
nrh. amt to
people at one franc aad * half,
half of this money goes to Si. IV
teFs. They sell thouaamU of copt—
The one 1 procured bear# the num
ber 45,343 of tbe ninth sene* It is
a singular fact that the Pope at the
could call for help, yet it was evi-1 present tin— has never lor y—r« been
dent that tbe beast mast be dissect — well in health — now,
ed and packed in a barrel with brine, merry or free. II sad reds of
I was in a pickle to get him in. Tbe both Catholics ami Protestants, mw
more I contemplated the task the him every week—almost daily—in
more tbe wonder grew. I returned his luxurious palace, fell of [oka and
to my study and mused on tbe vanity lively repartee, as to his wont. This
of possessions that one does not | can not last long, at his age ; but at
Tht Oorculk
The plum carcoho winter# as
beetle above ground; he—» all the
tbs—toe bused upon its wintering in
the ground arv false It shelters
e the bark of trees, brash, —
—yetW rtttSftl tMHTltli mm
injurious in Umbered than in prairie
the burning of
know how to use or enjoy. At this
moment a stranger, the Rev. Mr.
Bronson, an agent of the American
Bible Society, called at the door,
the time I write, ho walks about bin
spacious garden* at a pa— which
tries the breath of the well fed cur
dinals in attendance j visit his avia-
and sought tbe opportunity of pro rice, to attended by bis favorite biack
seating ‘the can—’ to my people on cat, and knows no imprisonment
the next Sabbath. This being set which himself or his priests, tbe Je
tied, he yielded to an invitation to vnits, have not imposed upon him.
pass the night. After tea, I said to And all the while, through the dm
him: taut place# of Europe, tbe pnrwte
‘Mr. Bronson, we country mioto «« filing the pretendiNj damp straw
ters are obliged to do onr own work, of his dungeon, end the poor, igw>
I have a Job down cellar; will yoa nuit, but devout [mmant* arv break
excuse me for an hoar, or will yon iog their hearts over the lying pic
go below and hold the candle f
He preferred to walk down and
continue onr conversation. I took
the knife with much trembling, and
not knowing where to begin, struck
in valiantly bat blindly. Mr. Bron
son exclaimed : ‘Brother, it seems to
me you don’t know how to do that
thing.*
tar— which repr—snt bim behind
his prison bars!
Jftad of Cmffahms is OM .lyr —
An old man is like an old wagon .
with light loading sod careful usage
it will last for year* ; but one heavy
loud or sudden strain will break it,
and ruin it forever/ Many people
I paused in my work, and aerioos I reach the age of fifty, sixty,*or eveu
ly fixing my sy— upon him — he seventy, measurably ;fr— from the
stood with tbs candle tn bis hand, I most of the pains and infirmities of
said: laffo cheery in heart and sound In
‘Do yen suppose you could do it health, ripe in wisdom and etpe
any betterV rieo—, with sympathies mellowed by
‘I do,’ said the blessed man. | age, and with reasonable prospects
‘And I will hold the candle,’ said j and opportunities for continued
I, banding bim tbe knife. fnlne— in tbe world for a
He took it, and with the ease and | able time. Let such per— 1*>
skill of a surgeon who has a beaati thankful, bat let them also be
fol pie— of human misery in his ] fill. An old constitution is like
hands, this goo<j[ brother, in twenty old bona—broken with
* minntes, carved that animal into the j with difficulty. A young tree bends
most elegant pie—a; such shoulders, ■ to tbs gale, an old one sn sod
soch hams, and the spare ribs, too! I falls Mm# the Mast. A single hard
And those leaves of lard, aad a ni— lift; an hoar of heating work ; an . m harp stick* referred
lot of chops that he slit wp; aad evening of expoaar* to rain or daap;
when he bad laid aside the meat for j a —vere chill; an rices* of food ;
head cheese and —age, «r« pal tbe j the unusual indulgence of any spi*
rubbtsb
orchard* destroys largo number#. It
fly | hence all attempts to stop
it from crawling np n Use wilt
ptevent its injary. It to
hr<» »)««,} end the beetle le taxis lived
cm ale sometimes living more
a year, sad ovipositing during
a period of several verts. It to nor
turnsi rath— than diurnal, and
though, daring the —son of egg
depositing, the female may be found
during the day, especially
in rtoady weather, it g——ally keeps
quiet and secluded until tv—fog,
the most successful forriag
may be do— very early to the morn
u»g or late in the evening. It f\
ways becomes a papa — the ground ;
vary hot, droathy weather
may destroy it ia un-Un turner by
bakiag It to death. The grub fre-
Uj remains to sack fruit —
after the falling;
dally picking up and do
st ruction of soch fruit to to be tee
mended. Cherries aad the small
•r fruits do oat foil «bs* infested
with it, — do pt-a, peaches, etc.
During its beetle Ufa, both sexes
feed — hag — the wroth— admits
of activity, while fruit lasts they
gouge holes to it, attacking pip fruit
■ sto— fruit to —t to
At the prop— soasoo, aad
favorable conditio— these puncture*
gouging* — instrumental to
spreading rot; hfltoor the toeset may
do mo— indirect than
direct harm. Jarring should bo re
every morning — tv—tog
from the time the fruit to tbe ai— of
poo till It to rips.—/W. HiUf to
jr.
Hpaiu ts the greatest prodoc— of
raising. Those Styled Valencia ral
•ins find great fovor with all Masses
of English people. A few year* ego
a crop of 12,0ifl tons, for the supply
of the world, w— considered largo |
now Ixmdoo r—Ives 13,000 to— out
of a total of 90,000 tons that art
grown. The— ratal— also tad a
largo market to the Ueltod Slat
aad Canada. The improvement to
the article moat ob—nr able of Into
year*, to that of —moving the stalk*
before shipment A* ao usefol par
pose baa been found — yet for the
•talks, they a— ge—rally
Muscatel, — table rutoius
Malaga, vary, widely la quality.
They a— known — “layers," “bunch,"
aad “loose* nfitoins, the beat beiag
picked from the atalk This sort to
largely need to America. 1
growth of ||U—tel• come to thto
country in •^''•rated box— with
paper aad la— edging*, to
the —pease of pocking to
the exteat of 0139 per too.
The Bella— raisins, produced to
Turkey, sre cured to the sen,» Might
sprinkling of of) being employed to
prevent the too greet evaporation of
the* metstnro, and also to assist to
the preeervaltoa of the fruit
and shipped. The Genoa—
> large o—men of
and they constitute an arti
cle of consider*bis traffic between
Trieste and Smyrna. The greater
proportion of the raisins from Smyrna
a— knows — “Chceme,” the name of
— island near the mainland. Them
a— the Turkey grapes, purr sad aim
pfe, without select loo, (ticking of
lUlki. or snv mauinutation what-
•v—. They find a ready market ie
Rasteru countries, but are tbe special
feature of fruit trading between Tur
key and Germ— porta There are
vast districts to Persia where ratalna
are cultivated, hut the difficulty of
guttiag them to market to so great
that it does not pay to export; cue
•eq—nliy they are ased for dtoulltag
and local purposes. At the Cepe of
Good Hope, raimus are iwodnocd
which And a market chiefly ta Aus
tralia. Ihatillalloa from fruit to —
anally in—Mag, and the supply for
this w t!;■ htock num— of
Turkey. Tbs— arv small grapes,
cultivated without much care, but
full of saerhartae. They are
valued by wi— tuskers, and
tbe stock — which much of
able be«etugu is founded.-
Much also to used to the manufac
tore of spirit—drinks at the place
of growth. This rafeia has of late
ur* boas used ta the etoe district*
of France, and in Porto.
A Be* Story.
Tbs following illustrations of the
power possessed by insects to com
muil—I* their experiences to o
sooth— to given by a tody oorreapou
dent of the Loodon /^psrtsfer; “1
w— staying in the boose of a |—ie
man who w— food of trying e^tn
men La, and who w— a bee keeper.
Having read in some book on bees
that the best and most humane way
ef taking booty without destroy mg
the bees w— to immerse the hive for
a few minutes to a tab of oold water,
wbeo the bees, beiag half drowned,
could not Ming, while the hooey was
uninjured, since tbe water could sot
penetrate the clo—ly waxed oells, he
reeMved on trying tbe piau. I saw
the experiment tried. The bees, ac
cording to the recipe, were fished
out of the water alter the hive had
beea immersed a few minutes, and
with the— remaining ia the hive,
lakl on a eeive in the sun to dry
but as, by bed management, the ex
periment bad been triad too late in
the day, — the sun w— going down,
they were removed into tbe kitchen,
to the great indignation of the cook,
on whom they revenged their suffer
iag* — noon — the warm rays of
the fire before which they were pieced
had revived them. As she insisted
on their being taken away, they were
pot back into the old hire, which
beeq dried, together with e por
of their honey, nod placed on
one of the shelves of tbe apiary, in
which were five or six other strong
hives full of bees, sod left for tbe
night. Ear ly the next morning my
friend went to look at the hive ou
which be had experimented the night
before, but to bis amazement, not
only the bees from that hive were
gone, but the other hives were all
deserted—not a bee remaining in
any of them. Tbe half drowned
bee must therefore, in tome way or
other, have made tbe be— under
stand the Cate which awaited them *
R» Ri R
RADWAY’S READY REurt
OTMlWIWOkllfUl.
In from One to Twenty
NOT OHS hour ^
EADoars
“‘tun*?* to-
Th© Only Pain
nn
** VBOM OXX TO TWEBTt BtBVfm
NADWAY’fl READY
nn%juoZSosT w '“'“““
IXrUSEEATlOX
BOX* THEOAT, DI
HTBTXEICB, CXOUr
RXADSCtX, TOOTH*rH»
CQUb emus. AOtTECHILti^
TS* of Um 1
it» h»!f » tr mhi.
CSAMP*. ffak
ir^
Ofl«14 aln.r. ftrry a fcaMS \
•Sy inn -
^tr«[ DrluiNi .«■ MU
ItSbetur tb*B
ribVJtB AKD AOUg,
AOtT^ewyi f, tttr,
STAUNTON FEMME SEMINAR!
“disjecta membra’'—the disjointed
mfepberx—into a cask prepared with
salt; we rubbed the hams with salt
petre, and having cleared up tbe
place, returned to the parlor.
I had not been neglectful to enter
tain thto stranger, and he proved to
be the angoi whom I needed to my
hour of embarrassment when I had
toojnnch of a good thing.
Ftoften meet my old friend af the
cMiar, for he has not gone up yet,
and I know he will enjoy this re min
tooence of a night scene thirty yearn
UM*
11 or ; a vndd+n fit ef an
ger; an improper do— of
—nny of thane, or oihei
thing*, may net off a valuable lifo
in an hour, and tonvs the fair hones
of — sfSl— and enjoyment bat a
nhapele— wreck
A A'ice Wap ia Bake Apple#.Take
>or apples, dig out tbs c—, place
tbe apple* in a deep .Itsh nr tin, fill
tbs ru r i |.i—
out with —gar, poor a cop of hot
WOt— to the tin, bake ta a quick
ov—, and you will have a healthful
urt.l
U*W (I* /udtoaw /few.—Tbe Hart
brd fours*/ evolv— the CM towing
: “There has been some philo
logical doabt — to tbs phrase’After
with a sharp stick.’ It may
bav«> nccurrvd to many that the
is the much
bared ’January bOL’ Aad It would
there w— mm— ground for
thto Tbu N>—b—ao Indian* of
■to have not the brutal sod
disagreeable habH pf#valent among
— of eoodiog dunning bills. Wheo
io<h—, it is
m it k, to
creditor to doa the debt—. He
with ms—i folk—r< He pro
cor— a acetate number at sticks, —
to tbe aotooot of tbs debt,
ami patata a nag around the #—I iff
bo
oto
away
pay*
Utw to K >e
W« pr—umv there are few of our
agricultural reader* wbe at some
period have cot heartily xuathem*
Uaal the urafes. Although the— lit
tle animals do a considerable amount
of good to killing insects and worms
which would destroy graiu, they
tore than Counter balance the bene
fits they confer upon the farmer by
tbe Injun— they inflict a poo the
work of the gardener. They appear
to have a taste for the rboiorat bnlli*
and for the root* of the rarest flow-
era, while their truck* very speedily
ruin tbe afipearnnep of smooth ami
neatly kepi towns
Tbs Patent Office records show
that plenty of lav— live genius has
been expended to attempts to lie vi
sa effective mole trap. Of tbe— in
veaikma ws have tried quite s num
ber to oar effort* to rid oor garden
of the itamaser, bat we bar* found
mmi as —ttofoeforj — the following
very simple | Ian. As«om — a ft—h
mole run to found, indicated of soar—
by a ridge on the surface of the
ground, a brie should he dog and a
large si sad ordinary flower pot set
therein. Over the tup of thto reoep
tacle. a nlc— of board ia niece*!,
leaving a apaee of about thr— inch—
between it and tbe edge of tbe j*ot
— that dirt from above will oof fall
into the latter. The opening* of the
run toad into thto spore. The earth
to replaced aad the surfs— of the
ground restored. The mole ia fo)
towing his usual road blindly comem
to tbs orifi— leading to the pot, into
which he i—ootioeutly tumbles At
be to unable to crawl up the did— —
burrow through the bard earthen
ware, be deeld— to remain and wait
for assistance, which generally com—
ia the shape of a ^..rdeacr aad a rat
with the I—t mentioned of thto pair
are each — to destroy bis taste for
bulbs — for future mining iov—Uga
i*iug thto device, we caught
mofes tew first day and three
Um Mfivud iky After setting.
i placed one ce
ls a marked
ft the aspect iff our
Plant Treat.
“lie aye after planting a tree, when
ye ha n* other work, it will be a
growing while ye are al-pto." So
—ys a Scotchman. We might add,
you may boss® day ait in its shade, —
Mi of its fruit If this will not be
your privilege, it will be that of tome
mi else, which will make the good
deed all the more benevolent —your
part.
Have you, reader, planted a tree
this spring f If not, shame on you !
You could not find any place for itf
So. No fence corner 1 No space
along the highway f In Germany
the roads are lined with fruit tree*.
How refreshing to the traveler! And
> a— sustains any lo— by the ar
rangement. It spoil* no one’s ground,
and the country looks all the tnore
beautiful, by being thus turned into
* fruitful garden.
Then what a pleasure it to to plant
a tree! To a— bow it grows! To
know that we haw had some hand
in making the earth more beautiful,
and fitter to be tbe abode of man!
In thto respect it “pays well 1 * to plaut
a tree.
Are there no church glebes and
grave yards, that are still bare, un
shaded aud dry Y It si way* makes
u# shudder to see the grave* of the
dear departed lie ox|>oacd to tbe
burning suu of summer. No matter
how unreasonable this shuddering of
our* may be, it to ueverthtoe— the
truth. Somehow either God has
made us so, or we have learned to be
ao. Why not have beautiful groves
around our bhurche# f Why not
haw oor grave yards shaded T There
are a hundred masons for having it
done, which will suggest themselves
to any reflecting mind. Suppose
that instead of tending that Christ
w— buried in “a garden,” we should
read that He w— buried on a grass-
leas, treeless common!—Dr. II. liar
baspk, ia The Guardian.
Rvv. J. L KILLER. A. K-, Principal.
W ILL «vn iu Firm Kkasiox on tbe
I flat W <«ducMday of September next.
The great aim of this Seminary is to cul
tivate, in cooiM'etioa with Bound, practi
cal learning, correct rkwt of the sphere
and misftiou of woman. We enjoin upon
our pupils, in connection with neatness
ia dir**, Mmplicity and economy. The
education of tt»e moral nature of the
pupil to • paramount end ever kept in
view by all the teacher* of the Seminary.
In healthfulneuM of location Staunton
has no rival. Froot the malarious dis
trict* of the South pupil* come to Statin-
too and become strong and healthy, at
the same tiaae that they are cultivating
the mind.
Term* more moderate than any other
first-claa* Seminary offering equal advan
tage* in the South.
Bend for Catalogue with all necessary
information to
Rev J. I. KILLER, Principal.
Staunton. Ys.
Jntic 26 300—2m
HEALTH! BEAUTY!!
DR. RADWATfi
- Sarcaparilliai Resslven
THl CR-TAT BLOOD ifalPIgfc
Ui* NAPE THR »0«T *1
one*, aojLM-ip ai
fooTCVoabOU,!,
teclt woi
Every Day □ iaqpie ii M
aid Weifkt is Si ail M
Jwry 4ror of — SAXSAIUUUj** m
vest iwwiiitmw tkiMtN ta bm.
ni <«lMrrw£u1 }ikM of tho trmn.
Uf. roc tt U« .uu< of t*. b-tj wtu JJTJ
m*t»ruti. SrrofiiU. Bjj™
Kidney <R Bladder Cfeiisptatef#,
I'rlMry ud Womb OrmLI
maoTCr
The Fatherland Series.
42 ,Wf* .Vi«tt Arm, VhilaMpkia.
J. K. SUUYOC'K, Sup’t. |
Tlie Lutheran Publiratiou Society hav#
amuli- smingrmetit* to translate and pub
lish a aeries of German Work#, (suitable
for Family and 8. 8. use,) under the title
of “The Fatherland Series.”
The following book* have already been
published:
The Cottage by the Lake fiO.75 i
In the Midst of the North Sea.0.75
Anton, the Fisherman 0J5
Rene, the Little Savoyard 0.85
Friu; or, Filial Obedience 0.85
Geyei Walty; or, F idelity Rewarded. 1.00 i
Set No. 1, in a neat case, mjkm
Under tbe Earth ....$0.70
Otof Thortockaen 1.00
The Treasure of the Inca 0.85
Buried in the Snow 0J0
Dominic: or. Bread upon the Waters. 1.10
Sepp» li, the Swiss Boy O.to
Set No. X, put up in * neat cmae.
Tbe Greek Slave; or. Filial Love,..$1.10
Leonhard, the Runaway fiJiO
Little Madelon ; or. Maternal Love,..1.00
Gottlieb Frey 1.10
The School Master and hi* Son, 1.00
Set No. S, put up m a neat case.
Ju*t Published :—Twelve excellent
storie#, translated from the French, hr
Mr*. Emma B. Stork. 1st and 2d Scries,
in s neat box, $1.50.
We have a number of other Transla
tion* under way, which we will announce
from time to time.
KITH)AY-SCHOOL LIBRARIES.
Our arrangement* sre *uch that ...
sre prepared to fill order# for any books
imiud by the vsriou* publishing houses
in till* country and in Europe (English
and German) at thr mbm rates as tbe
publisher*.
W e keen constantly on hand s large
and varied aasortment. to whidi we are
daily making addition#.
, "earn supply all the want* of a Sun
day School, including Bible#, Testament*
Tract*. Reward*. Record#, Bible Diction
aries, Question Hook#, Catechism#, Curds,
Ticket*, Hymn Books, etc., etc.
Any of onr book* (except those marked
*et) sent by mail at the printed J ’
Reasonable dincomits made to
and to Sunday-schools.
We earnestly request onr customer#
>< to send cash by mail; but to remit
cheque*, drafts or Cost Office order*.
Tumor of 12 Years* Growth
Cared by Kaelway’s IicnhnA
..
DS. RADWAY’8
PerfBGtP&rfatiTe&Eeiii/iBKfiDi
The Short Line Schedule.
C. C. A A. Railroad Ooupafv,
Columbia, February «, 1RT4,
HE following Passenger SchriW*
will be operated on and after t#»
T 1
date
GOIKG NORTH.
Train No. 2. TraiaSat
I>euvc AngustA, 630am 41l?e
Graniteville, *7 88 a m -511f*
Ratesville, 0 43am
Columbia, 1158am
Cheater. 14 24 pm >*»*
Arrive Charlotte, f6 46 p m *514b a
No. 2 Train make* close connect*— **•
Richmond, to all point# North, Bmywf
at Now York at 6.65 A. M. No. 4 T»»
make# done connection, via RkJiuiosA»
all points North, arriving at New Y«*
at 5.15 P. M.
GOING SOUTH..
Train No.!. Trai*!fo*.
Leave Charlotte. *7 00 a tw • t® X*
Chester, 954 sin
Columbia. 1216 pm
Ratesville, 4 57pm • J * *
Graniteville, f7 15 p m *«•*
Arrive Apgusta, 805pm 8«5#a
* Breakfast, t Dinner. fSspp^*.
I iwicea.
—nfeni
South bound trains connect
»r all point* So
ticket* sold and ba ;
for all point* South and Weri- ^Tte—fr
checked to -
ng car* sa *"
GEORGE S. HACKER S
Door, Sash and Blind Factory
Rye as Green and Dry Fodder.—
An exchange gives its experience to
using rye a* a green summer feed,
nod proaounc— It ss excellent feed
If cut when coining into ear. This
has been used both for bora— and
cow*. The journal adds: “To feed
rye that bus been cut ripe, we would
thresh it, grind the grain along with
oont or onto, cot the straw* a fod
der—liter, moisten it with water,
sprinkle n handful of salt and three
quarter* of the ground feed upon a
large pailful of the moist cut straw.
This make* n very good feed for so
ordinary aiacd horse when working
moderately.*
CHARLESTON. S. C.
N
0 imported work kept on hand to
supply the country trade. All
work is romltv at our own factory in the
city, aud under the proprietor’s special
ipervinion.
Send for Price List. Factory and
Wore Rooms : King, opposite Cannon
on-line of City railway. P. O.
tf
Street,
)ox, Nc
July 7
TV Prtoerre Quince*.—Peel, quar
ter, sod core; boil tender( skim
out, and do not a— the Honor they
ora boiled in, but use it for JMIy;
also the peeto and oor—. Make n
syrup of — gar, using pound for
pound; odd the quinces, a few at a
time, boil until done; nour the syrup
over the quioaos Make i
Jelly is the usual wny.
Atlanta A Richmond Air-Line.
urt
bm r*•■*#"»—i
the quince
ticket* sold and baggage
principal poiut*. Sleepii
Njjht'Ttol**.
Jas. Anderson, Gt*'l &? ( -
A. Pope, Gen. Pa*. A Ticket Aft-
Change of Schedule
South Carolina R. R-Comcaxl
Columbia, S. l\, Oct
Change of schedule, to go into *****
and after Sunday. l»th instant:
Mail and Passenger Drain.
Leave Columbia ® S_-
Arrive at Charleston ]
L*-ave Charleston * a!
Arrive at Columbia * 9
Night Express, Freight and
torn Tra* (Sundays esr***).
Ijeave Columbia J
Arrive at Columbia • 5,,-
Aixive at Charleston I
Leave Charleston f ^
Camden Train will run Monday,
nesday and Friday as follow#
Leave Columbia
Arrive Camden wv.#
T«ave Camden if »•*
Arrive at Columbia • • • ■ “ vL*
8. B. PiCKiNS. Gen TickeCAg..
North-Eastern Bailroad ComP>
RcrXBtirtBirDiXT'B OfWCB, \ g,
Train* l«*v« Charleston 4*Uy, M»<tasr •—•
1 80S»
«»P*
6.S0 A
and •* T r
vlnjf C _ .
only ,1a Richmond. Train
whmmUo* rla Richmond ; *1
JP.* Bay .Um.
this train galmg ,1a Bay Uns **7
Baltimore ; than* leaving Sundays lay ,w * ..
Train loarln* 7 P M. M Sunday*.^
Friday*, oonaoet at PortamonUi
namn of the Old Domtalnn Stonwdtl.
Bnw Tort, Arrirlng Utnm *ho«* * r .*l
om night at and entirely aT
Fare by this rente* twenty doll*™. !■»"
ARti on 8tftni<—
The ship* of the Old
t on the
test oa the AUancir Coast.
F. X. HOG**, «
P. L. Cinartn. #wi Ticket Areal