\ s Christian Sun. .religion Without bigotry, zeal without fanaticism, liberty Without licentiousness. Vol. 'A SUFUOLK, VA., FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1871. jSTo. 39. I The Christian- Sun. Devoted to the Intercut of kf.lioion mul Mo JlAl.ITY, GENERAL and I.OCAL NkWS, Allil to ine advocacy of the i»riiieiple8 of the Chris tian Church. PUBLISHED EVERY PHI©AY. For one yenr..**M. Fot six iiouths. II. WELLONS A CO. ItEV. NV. B. WELLONS. 98 Oft 1 50 . Publishers. .Editor. Office on Kilby Street. Money sent. In unregistered letters, must. bent, thermk of the sender, i The safest way to send looney Is by a Post Office money order, ureels w.fJr ii ,,tftB or deceive others. 1 Lkt your promises ho sincere, aud within the compass of your ability. l1 How to Deal With Children. Children cannot he deceived. They can rend you through and through. Therefore, to be successful with them, the first essential in you as a Sabbath School teacher, is he in earnest—to fed that the souls of those chil dren are in yotir keeping ; to feel, that if you are unfaithful to your heaven imposed charge, you will be held accountable iu the last great diy. With a heart thus burdened, your man ner and your words will be earnest. This will give your class faith iu you, which will be one 'point gained. Having then respect, nexfc seek to secure their love. This can be easily done. Treat them not as your inferiors, hut bring your self down to their level. Try to feel like a child,—to understand their child natures. Above ajj^-^o not be dignified or pompous ! Do not enter the class with a frigid air and stiff bow, but smile a bright, cherry smile as you got within sight of it. Call each child by name. Give each a cordial shake of the hand. Ask after their parents.— Ask linir they liked their library book.— Then when school opens, each little heart will be warmed toward you. Each face will be bright, and each car keen to listen to your words. Then is your time, delir teacher. You are the potter, and tbe*e!ay is before you; God help you to mould it aright! Do not, however, banish them from your mind and heart till next Sabbath ! Pray for, and think of them all through the’ week. If you see them upon tlfe street, dVr not “pas> by on the other side.” Go,speak to them. ' Walk with them, if you have time; and let them feel that your.interest in them is not put on like Sunday clothes, once a week * but is an abiding, constant interest. If it be possible, meet them pri vately, and pray with and for them. Occasionally write, each one a tender, toeing note, beseeching them to come to Jesus. Then when G"d graciously answers your prayers.and the first one emm a tremb lingly and says. “Teacher, l want, to love Jesus.” oh ! receive him tenderly, and try to lead him to the •‘Children’s Friend.” And when he feels that “peace which comes from believing,” make him your co-worker. His heart will be overflowing with love,and he wilPbe eager to do something for his dear Saviour. He will gladly j »in his prayers and appeals with yours, for the sal vation of the others, and y*u will have, if you are only'earnest and faithful, the great joy of seeing one after another gathered within the fold. uriiu pia<3uu m mo ncau or mac class : Chance had nothing to do with it ! If you live near the Cross, socking strength and guidance from your' diwitic Master, your labors will assuredly he crowned with a rich reward. Therefore, faint not. Work, struggle, and pray, remembering the precious words. ‘ They that turn many to righteousness shall shine a« the stars forever and ever.”-— »S\ S. Times. Systematic Giving. One of the best evidences of the decided progress in tHe Church of Christ, is seen in the rapid growth of systematic giving. But a few years have passed since the weekly offertory was unknown in most of »ur churches. Now it would probably be i difficult matter to hod any one of our sity Churches'without it. And when it has been properly tried, its beuefits are very ippareot. Does it not seem strange that the Church. n modern times, should have been so slow 0 follow the example of the primitive Jhurch in this particular, since it was a solemn injunction of St. Paul, and com uend* itself so fully to the judgment of all neu of intelligence? Every sensible man mows that we are all creatures of habit; 1 md that our interest in every object is. as 1 rule, proportioned to the attention we give oit. In nothing is this more clearly seen hau in the habits of noardiug and giving. A by is it that it is generally so hard for a rery rich man to giwtiberally for the pro notion of the gospel, or the relief of the >oor? Is it because he is a meaner man hail his less prosperous neighbor. IIis mbits of calculation may indeed iu the eud mm inrun . dui, uitcu ,wucu( jic^ia-ii o give of liis money, h(i is very f6,ady to , 10 tin act of kimlne-s to his suffering fellow le will even put himself to much trouble 0 do.a kind deed, hut to give he is not able. Tis like drawing his very life-blood ; and imply because his thoughts, through life, lave been centered upon the ore business of, loarding. lie may indeed have haeomc a 011 of calculating machine, Before he rives a dollar, he may have to go through he painful duty of calculating how much ntciest is lost to him through the remaining rears of his life. On the other hand, we see the man who ias been trained to the habit, of systematic , riving, relishing it as his greatest luxury. 1 Ie is never so happy as when he is giving ' >f-his means to build up the kingdom of his jord, or relieving his suffering brethren Vn abundance of illustrations could be fur- j lished «*f the growing disposition to give ibundautly, among those who have for a ong period persevered in setting by a port, if their means for the Mister’s work, as he prospered them. To'deprive them of the leavenly privilege of giving freely of their reasure, would be to deprive them of the iliief joys cf life —Our Own Church Work, i Many people drop a tear at the sight of 1 is tress, who would do better to drop a. dol- j ar. Dr. John Hall well a»ks, “Who ever leard of a man boing disciplined for covet ■usness? For other sins,” he says, “men ,ro cast out of the church ; hut in this sin, ehich the Bible calls idolatry .they live and lie without ouo honest rebuke/’ C >vetous- j :ess will keep more people out of the king- ! loin of (iod than any other sin ; the love of mmey, says the Apostle, is the toot of all , vil. 4 Industry, honesty, and tempcranco, arc isscniial to happiness. Where is Your Place? A place for i vory man, ami ever) in his place ! Thin motto is as go< during the war. But what is every Ohrid- j tian’s right place ? Wo answer that it is one for.wRich God made him. and for which the Holy Spirit | converted him. To mistake it is a fad ( blunder ; to desert it is a disgrace. Some men—like Spurgeon and Newmau Hull arid Bishop Sympson—-Were created for the pulpit. God gave them clear heads, warm hearts, strong lungs and eloquent tongues, and'a hunger for saving souls.— i To?possess such gifts is a clear call to the ministry. And thousands of humbler ! preachers who cannot attract Spni grinds ' crowds, are yet as clearly called to' ih min ; istsy of the word as the Loudon Briuot'.ires was himself. But tin- vain-glorious creature who cannot attract an audience except' bv , scu\s time, thus act., and we doubt not , tliat now. a* well as then, Jesus is much “displease! ” with them. .\ uat is to t»'*i;oiyc ot an orchard where there arc no young trees, or of a Church, all of whose members are adults ? Shall the place of the dead tree be" filled by one j transplanted when full-grown V That would i he a perilous Undertaking, and ofaly under ; tht» most favorably circumstances, and even j then in the fewest calces a success. It is j equally perilous— and only the help of j God’s grace makes it possible for h'im to succeed—when a man who has spjnt his life in disobedience to the will of God be- : gins in middle life to prune his wicked I habits and to adjust hin.self to the require mi nts of a Indy life. Not only woutd^the Church that depended for recruit** upon the few adults thus transplanted into the car den of the Lord, s »on have h r candlestick removed out of its place, hut she would subject herself to the curse of Jesus when he said. “Whoso shall offend one of these little ones that believe in me, it wore better f»r him that a mill-tone were hanged about his neck, and that lie were drowned in the ; depth of the sea ” In place of training up a child in tlie way he should go, that win n he is old he may not depart from it, we let him go in way he should not go, and when he is old, we find that he will not depart front it For just at that time when the Church is inactive, Satan is most active. ! After most careful inquiry Lord Shaftesbury stated at a public meeting in London, that i nearly all the adult male criminals of that, i city have fallen into a course of crime when between eight anu sixteen years of age. Ir is with persons at this age that Home is most active, and finds among them her most zealous converts. ‘ Give me a child for seven years.” was a favorite saving of Archbishop Hughes, “and he is good for Home.” The child should never know any other atmosphere than that of the Church, j If should always be “our Church,” with him. Then would the Church suffer less j from scandal and reproach, because old sin ful habits would n*>t be constantly pulling her converts back to ways of evil. Says Spurgeon; “I have, during the past year, received forty or fifty children into Church membership Among tho>e I have had at any time, to exclude Church fellowship out of Church of a twenty-seven hundred mem bers, I have never had to exclude a single one who was received while yet a child.” In tact, the Saviour’s statement is true of the Church to-day. the "visible “kingdom of God.” Her choicest members are not simply those who have become as little children in their Christian life, hut those * who devoted themselves while yet children to the service of God. Let any pastor find j out how many of the members of his Church j became disciples of Christ when they# were, J •av, less than sixteen years of age, and he j will find among them the ripest and most j useful Christians of his flock. ^Especially : is it true ot the miuistry that it is composed, j for the most port, of persons who became i Christians at an early age. perhaps, in the j majority of cases, when less than sixteen j years. i A Wonderful Preacher. A correspondent of the St. Louis Ath'Q rafc gives the paragraph following,concern- ! ing a new star which has just been discov ered iu the galaxy of Sou-hern MethodiSt" luminaries : “On Saturday, there came to the meet j ing from a mountain circuit, ou which he is a ‘supply,’ a man of most wonderful powers. Horn in the mountains of North Carolina, tlie son of a Methodist preacher, surrounded by no other refinements than ' the true refinements of religion, he grew to manhood without education. At twenty- , me he purchased his first English grammar. He studied it and mastered it. Rhetoric, I logic, natural sciences, followed. (»od j jailed him to preach. lie refused. Afiiio ion came—long, severe, intense. It passed, ind ho yielded to the call he began his ministry. Providence threw him iatlie mountains of Georgia, on missionary grqufyd, ind there he has a circuit. lie came to mr camp meeting. Plain, unassuming, deeply devout, ’ he came to work, for his Master. He preached for us three times, and of the three, two such sermons T never heard. Has heard the preachers of great note in our Church; has heard Bishops Elliott and Beckwith and Johns. Has heard Stephens, Toombs and Douglass in j their palmisst days, but never did he hear j from mortal lips eloquence that thrilled like the eloquence from the lips of that tuoun- | tain missionary. Without a single grace of elocution, without any pretence to polish orelegauce, bis grand thoughts were like huge nuggets of pure gold thrown out by the rude miner from a California vein. The very remembrance of some passages of the sermon on the spirituality of man’s nature, and God’s response to it, cause my nerves to tingle oven now.” Nkvkk get another to do for you what you can just as well do for yourself. Money thus paid out is thrown away. Do your business honestly, aud then you will have a good character among men. Masonry and Christianity. We live in an enlightened ago of the world, one in which every institution, and Lbc doctrines and principles upon which it is founded, is tested and scrutinized by all the lights of science and reason, and whore faults and flaws can be found they are ex posed to the scorn and derision of this pro gressive and enlightened ago. Both Masonry and Christianity have been a thousand times- assailed by infidels and bigots,and they have hitherto withstood the shocks that have been leveled against them. Neither of these institutions have suffered from the investigations that have been brdogbt to bear against their principles or policy, so tar, and they shun no tests or scrutiny which the new lights of the pre sent generation are able to bring to bear upon them. Notwithstanding these two ereat institu tions have come down to us through many centuries, and have labored together, hand in hand, for the amelioration of the moral condition of the world, yet some Christians and Christian ministers ?©ek to cast odium and contempt upon Masonry; and some Masons seem to discard Christianity. If these two institutions are both able to defy the world, in regard to the purity, truth, and soundness of their principles and doctrines, is there any good reason why they should not harmonize with each other, and continue to labor together for the im provement of the condition of our disorder ed world? But it is said by Christians that there is no such thing as the recognition of the per son and sacred offices of the Lord Jesus Christ ; and that, therefore, MasoDry has left Out the very life, soul aud essence of j Christianity—that there is no such thing as \ redemption and the new birth, taught by '••ur Ancient Craft. This charge is partly true of Ancient Craft Masonry, hut wholly untrue of Ma sonry as a whole. Ancient Craft Masonry took its rise, from doctrines and principles, a thousand yt?ars before the Christian era, ; and therefore it could not engraft these fea tures upon its body, or constitution, for the ; reason that they did not then exist. It gathered i*s light from God and Nature as ; they were theu revealed aud understood ; j and as its very existence depends upon uni- * ty’ip perpetuity, it c«uld not change with | the changes of the time, and remaiu a unit over the whole world. But it accepts the Old aud New Testaments, and in them we have all that is claimed by the Christian. But Masonry does keep pace with increa sing light, and the improvements of the ages as they pass. This is not done, how ever, by a change ot its organic structure, but by instituting superseded organizations which arise in the progress of passing ages. For example : at. the building of the second Temple, under the supervision of Z *rul>ba bel, the prince of the house of David, Joshua the High Priest, and Ilaggai the Prophet, a new cord of the spirit.’' Thus, when Masonry is spoken of rn this late age of the world, we use such terms as “Ancient Craftf “Royal Arch” “Knight Templar,” or the Christiau Order of Ma sunt-y. Taken, then, as a whole, no such objections can be urged, as those referred lo, which are supposed to ignore Christ md his gospel institution We have most suggestive symbols in Ancient Craft Masonry, which have a di rect reference to Christ, and the resarrec rection, which can only be fully explained to ooe legally authorized to receive them. We conclude, then, that as Masonry is a system of truth, based on science and the word of God, and Christianity is a system of tru'b, based upon the word anj spirit of God, both having universal charity iu view they cannot be antagonistic, aud the .votary of the one should never be the opponent of the other! Rut ir. is natural to say, “we saw one casting out devils in thy uame,\vho followed not us, aud we forbade him.”— Family Visitor. John Newton, with no more pungency than truth, said : “Many sermons, ingenious in their kind, i nay he compared to a letter put iuto the ; Post office without a directionit is ad- , iressed to nobody, it is owued by nobody, md if a hundred people were to read it, not one of them would thiuk himself con cerned in the contents/* A Serious Thought.—Suppose there was a book, in which the whole of your life was recorded, each page of which contained the events of'a day : and at the beginning was written—“This is the life of a ration al, immortal, accountable creature, placed in this world to prepare for eternity.** Oh, what an amount of guilt would the record of Sack day present!—Dr. Dayson. One of the hours each day wasted on trifles or indolence, saved, and daily devo ted to-improvement, is enough to make an ignorant woman wise in ten years—to pro vide the luxury of intelligence to a mind torpid from lack of thought—to brighten . up and strengthen faculties perishing with j rust—to make life a fruitful field,and death a harvester of glorious deeds. As daylight can be seen through very small holes, so little thiugs will illustrate a person's character. FARM AND GARDEN. Plant Flowers. Headers in country or town, no matter how bumble or unpretentious your dwell ings, let me entreat you to plant flowers there around. They will brighteen your homes, aud lend an air of pleasantness and | cheer that will interest the most indifferent beholder of the most obtuse intellect.— j Flowera^gladdeu our homes. Yes, plant flowers. They will make J your lives happier^and your children more i amiable and lovely. Know you not that j our temperament aod disposition are cast,in the mold of circumstances—that they take color aud form from the material things which we are surrounded '? Have you nev er learned that pleasant objects and scenes ; exert over us an influence for good ? Then plant flowers, those fragile plants ■ that look up with their bright faces aud smile upon us fur our watch-care over them. Yes, plaut the beautiful flowers. They are bright gems, God-given to sinful mao ; angel tears dropped from heaven to ! brighten the devious pathway of our lives, lie that has no taste for flowers is void of every tender feeling His heart is a barren rock, a parched aud arid desert with a sin gle oasis to cheer the horrors of its isola tion Yes, plant flowers ; those mute though impressive teachers that point our thoughts upward to the skies. You will be all the better, and happier, and healthier for hav ing a few flowers to cultivate and train. They cost but a trifle. A single dollar will pay f'*r quite a variety ; the labor of work ing them, which is light, will give health to your cheeks ; and their fragrance aud beauty will repay you a hundred fold for all your toil and care. Yes, you who live in the pent-up city, plant flowers for your health aud amuse ment ; and you who may be farmpr’s wives or daughters, plant the brilliant gems to break the dull monotony of “the work and worry*’ of rural life. Plant a viue to climb about your cottago gate; a rose in memory of some sort though it be but one ; have one at least over which to while away an idle hour Yes, plant flowers, the beauti ful flowers. If you have uo ground make a garden of the veranda or of y«>ur parlor window. Plaut flowers, though it be only by the grave of some lost friend. The tomb is no inappropriate place for flowers. For myself I ask no prouder mouument than to have flowers bloom over my grave. —B. IF. J. in Rural Messenger. Clover as a Shade. There is probably do other plant in the world of sueb value to the farm era for this purpose. It furnishes the most perfect pro tection to the soil during the fierce dry heats of the summer. Being a constantly decidu ous plant, its leaves are perpetually falling, and soon form a delicate covering for shade, and easily penetrded at ali points by the air, which is the great carrier to the worn out soil of those atmospheric elements that aro to enrich it In this way the clover plant noi, only contributes directly to the fertilizing of the soil, by giving its own substance to it, but it furnishes a protective covering to the entire ground, which enoourages and stim ulates those chemical processes by which -the hungry aud exhausted soil is recuperated from the vast supplies of nutriment that are held in the atmosphere. It becomes to *he farmer the most valuable fertilizer in the world, as it imparts fertility to the entire soil.—Journal of the Farm. Mulch as a Manure. An experienced farmer, once found, by experiment, that where be mulched his wheat land with veitcb, he had an increase of crop of twelve bushels per acre , and be iuvariably fouud that land which hud been sheltered during the previous winter, from the action of atmosphere, frost, cold, etc., was always more fertile Tlian any portion of his adjoining laud, even under a high state of cultivation. Our use of mulch upon small fruits, also confirms the above theory, fora good mulch invariably increases*the production from fiftoen to twenty-five per cent., as well as contributing very materially to the size, color and cleanliness of the fruit. We be lieve that mulching will always pay — Horticulturist. Though most farmers keep their fowls, and raise their own eggs, there are many who have not learned the difference there is in the richness and flavor of eggs produced by well-fed bens, and those from birds that have been half starved through our winters. There will be. some difference in the size, but far more in quality. The yolk of one would be large, fine colored, and of good subsistence, and the albumen or white,clear and pure ; while the contents of the other will be watery and meagre, as in the parent fowls, to properly carry out and complete the work nature had sketched. Grafting Potatoes —A novel experi ment was tried by a neighbor of mine this season. Ho took an Early Goodrich potato, out out every eye. and inserted in their place the eyes of the old-fashioned red po tatoes. He made only one hill of the graft ed potato, and he dug from that one hid 161 pounds of potatoes that were neither like one or the other, but, like Jaoih's cattle, ring streaked and speckled.—Country Gentle man. Care »f Teeth —Put a piece of quick lime thesize of a walnut in a pint of distill ed water. Clean the teeth frequently with’ this fluid, washing the mouth well with clean water afterward. The application will preserve the teeth and keep off the toothache, and will harden the gums.— CorresjxHuhnt of English Mechanic. Know your route before you commence your journey. ••• . __._i.ji-..:_r The Christian Suit, AD V ERTISEM ENTS. A D VJE.R TIs J53f e X T3 not Inconsistent irlth the' y character of the pnper, will be Inserted at tli# following rates > One sqn*»r« of ten Ifihes first Insertion .. #1 00 ror eaeb su»**eqner.t insertion.. 50 One square thiee months— . 0 «») One square six months..12 00 One square twelve motithS .T..IS ut) Aijvkktisers changing weekly, must mnkd* i special agreement. Yearly advertiser* will pay imnthly, or Quarterly in advance. Tmnsieut acR' .’ertl.se.iie fit a to be mid for on insertion. JOB WORK. Book ahd Job 1’kistino of every kind done Hour Job Office in the best styje arid on nioder-' ite terms. Farmer's Wiye0. Did you ctor think of the amount of bought requisite to plan three meals a day "r three hundred and sixty-five days in succession'? To prepare enough and not oo much, aud for those living a distance Tom tows to remember that the stock of lour, tea, sujar, etc., aro replenished in lue time ? Do you ever think of the roul ■itude of her cares aud duties? She rnusf rise early to prepare breakfast or Oversee it. Perhaps, there aro children to wash, dress aud feed, or get ready for school with their dinners. There is baking, sweeping, dust • ing, making beds, lunch for the men, may be, dinner and supper to he made ready at the proper -time, the washing, starching folding and ironing of clothes, the Cafe of the milk, including the making of butter aud cheese, and the inevitable washing of dishes. In the Autumn there is an addi tional task of pielsliug, preserving and can ning of fruit, drying apples, boiling eider, niakiug apple-sauce, with the still more un pleasant task which falls to her lot at butch eriag time. Then there is haying, harvest-' iug, sheep shearing, etc., when more help' is needed, bringing an increase of her la bors. Twice a year comes house cleaning. By the way, of all the foes a house-keeper has to contend with. dirt, is the greatest.— She may gam a complete victory, and think to repose upon her laurels after her semi annual engagements, but it is only tempo rary. The enemy soon returns, and even skirmishers do not keep it at bay. There is the mending, too. Sewing machines are-' great blessings, but they can’t set in a patch or darn stockings. I do not mention1 these things by way of complaining of wo-' luab’s lot in general, or asking for bef Oaf rights she does not posses;!. I don’t know' that there 1. any remedy in the present"; date of the world. It seems to me one of •he evils of life which must be borne as we hear no other ills—but what I do ask is a due appreciation of the important part that woman acts,and a concession that her labors, mental and physical, are as great, all things' considered, as those of the other sex. Wo men are not so childish that a little sympa thy now and theu. or acknowledgement of their efforts and sacrifices, make them thiuk their case worse than it is. I tell you, men aud husbands,it doeth good like a medicine, aud many a poor, crushed, broken-down* wife and mother is dying for want of it.!’ Transplanting Trees. A tree will transplant very much bettei'p and grow with more certainty, if dug when1 the ground is very wet, and if it is a valua ble tree it pays well to wet the ground the' day before digging. Almost any evergreen will bear trans planting, and will do well if shaded the first summer. No one would believe the differ-’ ence till they try it. Tbera is no trouble about transplanting' large trees, if you take two or three years1 for it. We have tried it ou pears, which ia' the hardest to move. Dig three-fourths up, an i.fill up the place till another year ; or if a very big tree, lake still another year.—" This saves labor for then not so much dig ging is necessary. Plant started too early in the spring gets a check or kind of chill from which they will not recover the whole season. Trees should hardly fco watered at atf unless they are mulched, not simply be cause of the waste in evaporation, but the' told produced by the evaporation, doer about as much harm as the water does good. We often hear persons say they wonder why watering trees does so little good. The1 reason is that the evaporation produces so' much cold that tho trees stop growing.—’ And then it tabes very much more water to reach the roots of a tree than the inexpe rienced are aware of, so that a single bucket jnly makes a cold place around the collar' of the tree. If the tree was in a strong' [•rowing state it could bear it, but it is in’as1 much need of warmth as water. Mulch prevents evaporation and bolds thtf water till it has time to reach the roots.—• But when we consider that a barrel of dry earth will nearly hold a barrel of water, we' must not think that a single bucket of water' will be of much use.—Gardner’s Monthly Keeping Sweet Potatoes. I notice K., in your journal of February 23, wished to know hew to keep •west', potatoes. We hare them perfectly sound! and good all the year round,and though our' way may not succeed in a colder climate, J give it: . Dig just before heavy frost, and having plenty of perfectly dry uirt, and making at layer of it on top of the ground, in a pen/ house, or out of doors, lay the potatoes on* it, (to be very certain of not rotting, let DW two touch, and another layer of dirt, and then one of potatoes, &o. An obtuse eoDfet sharp is best. Layers of dirt to be one or' or two inches thick. After disposing of alt your potatoes in this way, cover them with the same dry straw, fodder, or something of the kind, and protect it from theraio by boards, etc. In getting them out for nae, use care, and take out enough for several days at once, and I think you will snceeed. I suppose the straw covering will need to j be thicker in your oouotry. Of course you can regulate that to suit. The principal point is in'having the dire dry, and keeping it sc. A trench around the pile with outlet is first-rate.—Country Gentleman. Don't Rest. Thera is no such thing a* rest for th# farmer who would attain to full success.—' Admissible lulls in his physical labors may occur, Wt there are required mental labors enough to fill these up Plans must be laid, and these “rests,” as they are called, are the seasons in which to lay them.—r Thoroughly matured and well digested plans are over half the battle. No man should strike a blow until he knows exactly what be expects to AgT The industriou# farmer who has au p full view at Ihp beginning of the - Bt,'will be sure 19 have an object to vrtfl. Bjn the jear ok*«A*