University of South Carolina Libraries
NOTICE Is hereby given that Application be made at the next Session of tin: Ceneral Awcmbly of Bo. Cn. !"i ^ l?'enewal of Chariot of thd Executive Committee of the Orangobnr-* (Baptist) Missionary Union. K. \V. K EMM EKIJN, sept 14 Secretary. W tea ^fl Sua U tl B A l-'a y BayaaDoMcui tibys!< inn. " I :?? 11 > riptid a? n l?lo?i?l jmriAet, nenriufrofitU'iiiniiv woiul' .i nfter nil otiUir reu* dicf btiri lulled. I i'wliul Labora tory; nuri roiivhii-ed my.elf .iwrlt. It \? propnreil f tmi i' i . . ? ? ? ?' "' winch i- highly ??lter|iv.\ -.?.?: ? ? ?? rt?i - ?iQOiided i;i micIi rmuim r?'w to j ?? cu id 'i IIP' ICdUll.." Im the greal l'.loo l V VE6ETINE Mood fiMilVr. \) Lull 3 2r*i? Will Cliru lilt: v.... ? ?-..- e of Si ??>?? --v ? ' s y? vegetine il gottiu ituu'.ut.oiiU e.ir Ih ri oonniH ?: linn effected some i..a!..:... imp-is !n canca ol Cdttcer< Citri?? ti(l. \vi.r-t ????? ??? Cimlct A i .1a <?'-? \o'-i p ?.?"??-*.1 a i v ftofcfiNs: wonderful ?? ct'os iii * McpIswUIi wonderful i.i Mercurial dlt? Will urOlliCMlO S:;;t 111 ? It in r??l ti ?? \; r. ? - ? . d ills. .v Cured Const!pation1 n ? lbs Dowels. vesetine In a raluabto reinciiv for I yfciknrk Will ent? D)T;>op-:n. Itrftori-.t lliacnliru'h; ?< u to a l.?:?Jt j condition. /EUbi NE liviUtlf ? V?HT!NE ' v Lj?L h i i ... ?:.n-? Ji i l-.i; Ciin:]\ VtGfcTiNc ?I? nTwtt'i !u rare of Fvajsli! Wnsknsra. VEGETiNE la tin* i;:;>n' r?ui?tly for ??eui'tal Debility. fx\ I'fiMi ?':-(?.' I>V .?'| rj.i?if i>?io?le to h? Die in ' i Mid tuest rfiinblu bii>od puritii r In ihu world. ru' V.-.i:;.:) :'\ Dt X5 wrrini. c/ .< . ?. r*fjtr.ij VEGLTlNii IS SOLD BY klh BK05U1ST& ?pr? Hi tf._ FSo.12 W.ElRhth St, St- Louis, KSo. Vlio b?s find jrrfntrr e-rprr'<~rc In t!ip trratmcnt of Iho ti-xiial iroirt'lc? ft both umtu I reiimle lliaii imv i>!ivilri*n In tlio XtrA. Kivw tlio rntiill-i nriiii I m- ami Mi.Vnwiiil liracticc lu twoiu-w ?Tur!.v,jill1 |lublialietla m ::i.i-J Tho PHYSIOLOGY OP MARRIAGE The PRIVATr- Mgp'GAL ADVSRER Iiii?kH that uro really Patdrt nsil PrlMmtrurtora !'i nil tn?t lcr> hrrtnlnlng In Manliviiil ami Wniumiliavl. uml ouw>ly wniiiloiiR Ii It. Tin v r? b. i.II? lllii.tmlnl, ami i:i p:ala HU|2UUa, ui.ily uufterstoJil. The twn ! ... ciulirurgM.1 r.lri>4,tin<!r<."f.!iMi.!iiaM?l.i.'Srir?it..n foi In.tli marrliitnnit ?HMflfiHvUplluiercei nl InipruvuiiiciittliiiiipdicaUrcalinciit . I^^hatourli<iiiici>r.m'rfi 'ay C'ThcKn v. Ii ?!??.? iiiii.mtwl In Dr. BnlU' now ?? ;. w. in ??<? u:u'nl .o.- ? !:?,'.-. ih I.t, but it pomrtlihifi tliai n?j ?r0 iLnutd Sa,,?. Tba VoBlblthc victim of rarly i:?U. ntioai llir ?an.utnrrwiM pcrfi ?fijrlifiil?iy.ni?>ln*,b i'.w -!i?.-i :p^\;. - | ,i> of life, and thti Wniuan, In inli>.*r\Yf"%'l\*if' fmin tho mnny in- ln-r q , P ft, to."?St. Louis Journal. P?.7% h k If rori f.Aii rntcRS?no rt?. Mih J^L/J %.fsZ both in QjioaotuuM, (1; In < : 'tli uniilfirbK f Kilt, -ui?; ?^?.r?. Eon un<Tr m.;I,oiiH I*J M " rxvcijirof jtIco :ci'i.i:>7 (.?.? stninpj. WT-L?? JB. npr'l *J7 C? AGENTS WANTED FOR THE l.HISTORYo??WORLD mar 2'.i i? tf. iiU fsT jik k i;rv iVok?ku. f-9 Wfttotii-n^.'lt-itv. Krvolver?, VVS f'J.r.ll. (lo r |o:i||iU >l .Nnvi llii -v , ttT fw au ii Kiuil?d, tk|.Sut>|ilj Cu Kubvllle.Tu apl'r27 ' ly "P?ESCEIfTIOH FREE? t or i in - KVet'ily run- Qf-Ni'iiiinnl Weuknos*. l.nst Miiiibiinit Ami nil dlsnriteni liroUKbl 0? liy imlin ; crntiou at oxro/B, Any .Iirtti&IM. lias llto inurn Jlent?. Dr. IV. .S,l<tM:.V .V <??., .No. 13U ?i't xt ?Ixtli Str4M'U C'lnrliiiuatl. O. V?pr'l '27 ly JL nint fast, ngentfl Ahoiild address KIN LEY HAKVEY A Co., Atlanta, I in lllllQ 1 ly lit? on hand a IT NE STOCK ol Srocories, Ehmps and Goods, Watt and other Piow?. Flour a S|i'ciallT, j Jn-t from the Mill. Unat Proof Oats, warranted. Wheat Seed. Also a LA UGK STO-K of looks, Stationery, Picture Frames and Pictuies, Curtains, and Cold W-nt and Pencils. \nd last but :;:it !oa-l a lot of Beautiful and Kl -gant CI1ROMOS Ready Framed, at VERY LOW PRICES, t all and sco them. TO A K RLVE :' fine assortment o! Brackels, Wall Pock ! Marble Tup Tables, and oilier Fancy G > > L. CHEAP for CASH, a lot ol Vases and Toilet Hells soiling at COST, .1 make room :.">r other libods. Will nay the HIGHEST MARKET LMUCK for Hides and Skins, nov '1 1v 70 1 y LEALERS IN DRY GOODS, LEAHY MADE CLOTHING. SHOES, HOOTS, 11 ATS, I i \KD lyYARE, WOOD WARE GROU Kill ICS, &c. Are oll'ering their Entire Stock at Greatly Rcdu :ed Prices. They asjv.ithe Public generally to cxamin ? their >TOClv before mak ing their purchases, and iruaranteo to save them money. We will be glad how vou-ovor<o;r ST? >? T\. C ill and s ? s us. ' UTSISY & MURRAY, McMaster's Old Stand. NVc wilj pflfer BirjiUiiiL l?IJu uliiMlijJMTS lurouirh lite month of NOV KMC SR. W. S. ?b 8/ ?t 1 I87S W. J. Murray. It O.FFIC E OF y: f. DORIC I 0 s V r 1 would respectfully bring To the notice of the Public that I am now receiving on? of the Largest Slock of Goods Ever exhibited in this Town, and would therefore invite everyb >Jy to com* ill and convince themselves of the fact. CT Comprises all the different lities in Dry Qfiods, Groceries, Hardwaro, Hats and Caps, t^ood and W ill6w'Ware, Kaddlcsand [Jaruoss, Crocktry and Glass Ware, Provision*, o*c, Clothing, Root.-- nad Shoes, a bj ocitlty. I have also added a FURN 1T18RK ESTABL1S1?\1 ENT "Where is kept Walnut. Parlor ami Bed Room Furnituro, Cottage Set?, Sofas, Lounges, Bilreans, Washsiaiuls, Tn-bhvs, Cradles, Cribs, und all varieties ol Chaiis. Also Carpots. Conic one and nil ami examine for yourselves. Respectfully 62EO. ?Ho CORXKIiSOX. I D DJ RR 8 R --ON EACH TEA IN! Is a.LAPiGE and VARIED Assortment of Dry Goods, Groceries, Hardware, Tin war?, Cr?ckefy, Cottoii Baggingf, Tics, &c. All of which will be s mil Our C?STO.MERS are requested to call in and examine our STO K. Attentive ami polite CLERKS will wait upon them. No trouble to show C io )< Is. SAYE MONEY By BUYING I mm us. J. C. PIKE & CO, Tho following curious article is taken from nu English newspaper of ? a year 177 I, mid i> there called the "Perpetual Alumnae, or Soldier's Prayer Book," hy Itichar i Lane : .1 I'rivttte {Soldier, bcfonyiity'to the p'oi'tjf'tccoiul lit,'/"'""', who wits Id/ten before the Mayor of Glasgow Jut pttti/ing nt curds during divine service. The sorgeunt conamauded the soldiers to Church,and when the par son read the prayers he took hi.s test Those who had a Bible t ?ok iL out; btiti this soldier had neither a Bible nor a common prayer 1> ook; but pul - ling out a pack ol card s, he spread them out before him. il s first lo de ed nl one card and then at the ollu r. The sergeant of the company saw hii i.ami said : ?Richard, put up the cards; thi.-i- | no place lor them.' f?ovei mind that,' said Riehaid. When tho service was over, illu constable took Richard prisoner, and brought him hcforclhc Mayor. *\\cll/Sllid the Mayor, 'wh.it II iVC you brought that soldier here fur?' 'For phiying cards in Church.' 'Well, soldier, what have you lo say for yours*.It'?' '.M lich, Sir, 1 hope.' 'Very good; if not, I will punish you more than man ever was punish .1 > eil. j 'I have been.' said the soldier, 'about .six weeks on the march; 1 have neither Bible nor Oomuiou Prayer Look; 1 have nothing but a pack of cards, aud i hope to satisfy your worship ol the purity of nr. in tention. 'Very good,'.-aid the Mayor Then, spreading the cards baforc the Mayor, he began with the Ace : 'W hen 1 see the Ace,iL reminds me thai there is but one I lod.' 'When 1 see the Deuce, it reminds j me ol Father and Son.' ?When 1 see the Tray, it reminds, ' j n.e of Fallier, Son und Ifbly Ghost.' j 'When 1 sec the Four, i: reminds Line "i ilie Jour Evangelists that proa paired, \i/ ? Matthew, .Murk, Luke and John.' 'When 1 see the Five, it reminda me of the live wise virgins that trim med liuir lamps. There were ten, but live were fouls and weru shut out.' 'Whiiu I sec the Six, it reminds uie that in nix days the Lord made lieaven nod earth.' 'When 1 sec the Seven, it reminds me that on the seventh day God rested from the works he made and hallowed it.' 'W hen 1 see the Eight, it rcmin Is me of tho eight righteous persons that were saved when G.>d drowned the world, vit: Noah and his wife, bis ihre? sons and their wives.' 'When 1 t-o.c the Nine, it reminds me of the nine lepers thai wore cleansed by our Saviour. There were ten, but nine never returned thanks.' 'When 1 stet lie fen, it reminds me of the Ten Commandments which God handed down to MosCS on it tai>!e of stone/ 'When I see the King, it reminds I me of tho (treat King ?l Heaven, which is God Almighty.' 'W ben I see the Queen, it reminds me of the Queen ot'Sheba, who went to hear the wisdom of Solomon; for she was as \\ iei: a woman as he was a man. She brought with her fifty boys and fifty girls, all dressed in boy's apparel, tor King Solomon to tell which were boys and which were girls. King Solomon sent for water for them to wash themselves; the girls washed to the elbows, and the boys only to tho wrist, so King Solomon told by this.' 'Well,' said tho Mayor, 'you have given a description of nil the cards in tho pack except one.' 'Which is that?' said tho soldier. 'The Knave,' said the Mayor. 'I will give your honor a descrip tion of that, too, if you will not be angry.' 'I will not,' said the Mayor, 'if you .will not term mo to bo a knave.' 'Well,' said the soldier, 'th* *r,caL_ '"^ ivuavo t know is the constable that brought me here.' 'J do not know,' said the Mayor, whether lie is the greatest knave; but 1 know he is the greatest fool.' 'When I count how ninny spots in a pack, I find three hundred and sixty-five -- as. many days as there are iu a year.' 'When I count tho number of cards in a pack, I Had there arc lifty-two? ns many weeks ay there are in a year. And 1 find four suits?the number of weeks in a mouth.' ?J lind liiere uro twelve picture cards iu the pack, representing the number of mouths iu the year, an,I on counting the tricks, 1 iiiid thirteen ? the number of weeks in a ?parier. So yon seCj Sir, tho pack Of cards serves for n I'ible, almanac and common prayer hook to me.' Work aud Pray >v sa and I hi were two brothers, whose J';i rms lay side by side in a for i iie vale. When the young corn, the oais and the barley were springing up, the Weeds took advantage of the rieh soil, and came up with them. ' Po you see,'said Asa,' what a hold i tlie weeds arc taking! Then; i-- dan ger ol their choking out the crops entirely.' 'Well, well, wc muni he resigned,' said int. 'Weeds as well as grain wert: a part of the Creator's plau.' And he lay down lor a pai l of his afternoon doze. '1 can < nly be resigned to what I cannot help,' said Asa. Ho ho went to work, and plowed and hoed until the fields were clear of weeds. 'The army worin is in the neighb <r hood,' said Asa to Ira one day. 'It has eaten its way through thcheigh !) -ring meadows, and is f*a:st moving toward us ' 'A h,' exclaimed Ira, 'it will surely destroy what the weeds have not choked out. I will immediately re tire to pray that its course may ho ! stopped or turned aside.' Hut Asa replied : T pray betimes every morning for strength to do the work of the day.' And he hastened to dig a trench around his Ian 1 wiTicfT" tho army w >rm c m! 1 not p tss; while Ira returned from his prayers only in season to save a portion of hid crops from its ravages. 'Do you aee, Ira,' said Asa another morning, 'the river is rising, and there is hut a small chance of pre venting our farms from being over flowed.' 'Alas! it is a judgment upon us for our sins; and what can we do V said Ira, throwing himself down upon the ground in de-pair. 'There are no judgtucntS30 severo as those which our owu sloth brings upon us,' said Asa. And he went quickly, and hired wookmen with whose help he raised an embankment that withstood the flood; while Ira witnessed with blank looks tho de struction of all his. wealth. 'There is one consolation,'said he, 'my children are left me.' lint whi lo Asa's sons gr.-w up strong an 1 vigor ous mtn, among Ira's there was a drunkard, a gambler and a Suicide. 'The ways of the Lord are not equal,' said Ira to his brother. 'Why have you always prospered while I am afllictcd, and my old age is dis graced ?' 'I only know thi<,' replied Asa 'that Heaven always helps me ;o meet my children's faults as I met' the Weeds, the caterpillars and the flood; and that I novcr presumed to send a petition upward without mak ing toil my righthand scr vaut, the messenger of my prayer.' 'Now gentlemen,' said .Sheridan to his guests, as tlio ladies loft the room jlct us understand each other. Arc wc to drink like mon or beasts-?' Somewhat indignant the guests ex claimed, 'like men, of rourso.' 'Then,' he replied, 'we arc going to get jolly drunk, for beasts never drink more than they want.' -1^ I t|Hl|l l I _u Young ladies. *-.0 ^-?i to administer warm consolation to invalid beaux when they call, by preparing hot pepper tea. Unspeakable Trouble. Laie ou tho night after election1; when the furious storm was at its height, and the rain was pouring down like an Ohio freshet, a voter out on South Hill suddenly sat bolt upright in his bed, with an incoherent' exclamation that expressed so many and such a varied assortment of emo tions it was difficult to tell which one was tho title page. 'What i? it?' asked his startled wife. The votor said nothing, b.ti ' inked the unutierahlcst kind of tilings. '!)id you forget (.?? vote ?' ask :.! Iiis wife. . , He silently shook his head. 'I)id you make a mistake an 1 v )ta tho Hadical ticket V Again he shook his head, abstract edly. 'Did you lo-o a bet ?' Ho . hook his head despondently, as though that would have been a very small matter. 'Well, then.' she asked,'what is the matter with you? Something, has gone wrong, I know.' With a hollow groan he fell heavily back upon the bed, and buried his face in the pillow. 'Don'tspeak to mo,' he raid, in husky tones; 'let m"Q get to sleep and forget it.' He had just remembered that after he cuttho kindling wood, he piled it up on the cistern box, and forgot all about it, and there it was at this present mom ent of writing, taking a shower bath and breeding smoke and trouble for the morn ing. If a young lady wishes a gentle man to kiss her, w hat paper would she mention ? No .Spectator, no Ob server, but as many Times as you please. Wc wish to add that she would like it done with Dispatch, no Register or Journal kept of it, and for him not to Herald it or tneutfou it tc a Recorder or Chrouicle it abroad. Her lips should bo. tho only Repository, and the Sun .should be excluded if possible. If a M^isenger got it, the World will kijjsjin'wnP^*a* News is now carried by Telegraph where it was formerly done by the Courier, w ho was always ready to Gazette it. In the act the Pros3 up on the lipa should bo light aud the Union perfect, assuring ourselves thaw uo Argus eye was upon wi, and the only Reflector present tho Mirror. No riain Dealer, in fact, could be more Independent in this last age. Review thj case as you will. Josh Billings says : 'An editor is I male whose bizness it is to uavigate a nuzpaper. He writes out editorials, griuds out peotry, inperts deaths &a& I wedin, sorts out manuscrip, keeps a 1 waste basket, blows up the priutttt, ; uteals matter, litcs uthor people's has* lies, tells his paper for a dollar and fifty cents a year, takes Wime beans and apple sass fur pay when he can get it, raizes a large family, works nineteen hours out o'.' twenty-four, knows no Sunday, git.s abused bi everybody and oust in awhile whip! bi somebody, lives poor, dies middle aged, and often broken hearted, leav es no money, and iz rewarded for a life of toil with free obituary uotiud in the nnzepapors. I''.- and l?\s.?The origin of the phrase 'mind your R's anil l^V is not generally known. In such cases where chalk scores were formerly marked upon the wall, it was custom ary to put thoso initial lottors at the head ofovery man's account, to show the number of ]rinus aud quart* for which ho was in arrears; aud we may imagine many a friendly rustic to have tapped his neighbor on tho shoulder when he was indulging too freely iu his potations, and to havo exclaimed as he pointed to his score, 'Giles, Giles, mind yoor P's and Q's.' -? - i mm I A driver of a coach in Texas, stop ping to get some watet for tho young ladies in the carriage, being asked w hat he stopped for replied, "I an\ watering my flowers." A delicate compliment,