—aoi THE AIKEN BY DRAYTON & MTRACKEN. AIKEN, S. C., TUESDAY, JANl ARY 23, 1883. Hotels, &c. - Eailroad Schedules, &c. HENRY BUSCH PROl’KIETOR OK THE IUSCH HOUSE! Cor. Richland Ave. and York 8t., —AJ»D DEALER IK— General merchandise. X^urmftBtrcfct, Aiken, S. C. lUSi CHARLE^iTON, 8. r HIS favorite family Hotel is situ- . ated on King street, the principal ?tail business street, and nearly oppo- The Waverlv, under the n- w manage ment, has recently been renovated and refurnished, and" is recommended for its well-kept table and home comforts. |Kates $2 and }2.o0 per day, according |to location of room. The Charleston [Hotel transfer omnibuses will carry guests to and from the house. G. T. ALFORD, Manager. SUMMERVILLE HOUSE. If. A. Smyser, (Formerly of Aiken, S. C. p ) H AS a line large house and cottage for the accommodation of board ers in the beautifulVillageof Hummer- Te. near AingMsta, Ga., finely situ ated, with spleiVnddrivesand pleasant w T alks. Churches very Convenient to the house. The house is ueatly and comfortably furnished with everything necessary. Rooms and 1 lails well ven tilated and heated. Minis delivered daily.- Terms moderate. A. SMYSER, Sand H Georgia. Apply to H. 11s, Augusta, South Carolina Railway. Commencing January 7th, 1882, trains will run as follows by Charles ton time, which is about ten minutes fu-‘< r than Augusta time: MAIN LINE—WESTWARD DAILY. Leave' Charleston— 2.00 a. ni. *8.35 a. m. Leave Aiken— 6.21 a. m. 1.08 p. m. Arrive Augusta— 7.05 a. m. 2.00 p. m. MAIN LINE—EASTWARD DAILY. Leave Augusta— 7.05 a. m. 4.20 p. m. 9.00 p. m. Leave Aiken— 8.20 a. m. 5.11 p. m. 9.43 p. m. Arrive Charleston— 12.55 p. m. 11.30 p. m. 1.45 a. m. COLUMBIA DIVISION—EAST. (Daily, except Sunday.) Leave Aiken— 8.20 a. m. 5.11 p. m. 9.43 p. m. 4 WEST) Leave Columbia 8.00 a. rA. 6.58 p. m. Arrive Aiken 1.08 p. in. 6.21 a. in. ACCOMMODATION TRAIN—WEST. (Daily, except Sunday.) Leave Branchville 5.55 a. m. Leave Aiken 8.20 “ Arrive Augusta 9.10 “ *On Sundays this train will leave Charleston at 9.05 a. m.; Aiken at 1.30 p. m., arrive Augusta 2.25 p. m. connections: Connections by trains leaving Aiken at 8.20 a. m. made daily with Atlantic Coast Line at Union Junction, near Charleston, to all points North, with only one change between Aiken and >Y ashington. Connections made at Augusta Union Depot with Georgia Railroad to and from all points West and South. Trains leaving Aiken at 6.21 a. m. West and 9.43 p. m. East, has through sleeper between Atlanta and Charles- toM, making close connection at Atlanta to and from all points South and West. Connections made at Blackville with Barnwell Railroad. Throligh tickets can be purchased and bagnage checked to all points Noath, South and west by applying to agent at depot. D. C. ALLEN, Gen. Pas. and Ticket Agent. John B. Peck, General Manager. Professional Advertisements. 1). S. Henderson. E. P. Henderson. Henderson Brothers, Attorneys at Law, Aiken, S. C. Will practice in the State and United States Courts for South Caro lina. Prompt attention given to col lections. Geo. W. Croft. J. Zed Dunlap. Croft & Dunlap, Attorneys at Law, Aiken, S. Janies Aldrich, Attorney at Law, Airen, 8. C. Practices in the State and United States Courts for South Carolina. P. A. Emanuel, . ~ Attorney ) ! 1 Will practice in fill the State and United States Courts. Special atten tion paid to collections and invest ments of money. W. Quitman Davis, Attorney at Law, Aiken, S. C. Will practice in the Courts of this Circuit. Special attention given to collections. 0. C. Jordan, DOWN’S GLOB E HOTEL Augusta, - - o eorgia. |cated in the Centre of the Business Portion of the JC'4y. :0: BROWN, 3 I a Hager, ‘ y of the Plante rs Hotel, Au- ., Ga., and the Highland irk Hotel, Aike: i, S. C. Charlotte, Columbia & Augusta Railroad. GOING NORTH. Leave Augusta 7 35 a. M. Graniteville 8 15 Trenton 9 08 Batesburg 10 08 Leesville 10 14 Columbia *.... 11 46 4 13 P. M. Attorney at Law, Aiken, S. C. E. W. Norris, Attorney at Law, Aiken, S. C. Will practice in all the Courts of this State. Emil Ludekens, Attorney at Law, Aiken, S. C. Will practice in all the Courts of this State. All business transacted with promptness. James E. Davis, —Attorney at Law,— p. M. CAFE AND RESTAURANT! »17 Broad Street, Augusta, Ga. (Former site of National Exchange Bank.) T HE handsomest Cafe in the South, to which is added a Restaurant of superior excellence for Ladies and Gentlemen. Kew York Oysters (“Blue Points” aiKl/ fc, Sh re wsbu ry s ’ ’) in the shell ab^ays on hand, and Game of all J^mds in season. Table d’Hote Dinner 1.30 to 4 p. m. Ladies entrance adjoining Bank of Augusta. JAS. T. MULHALL, Proprietor. WANTED! $50,000, TO LEND ON l, GILT EDGE” SECURITY. P ARTIES HAVING MONEY TO invest will do well to correspond with the undersigned. CLAUDE E. SAWY ER, Aiken. S. C. H. F. Warneke, Baker and Confectioner AND DEALER GROCEI iIES at* ♦--J— FIRE-WORKS, Arrive Charlotte going south. Leave Charlotte Columbia Leesville Batesburg Trenton....., T4htt>*ii[n , irftr > Arrive Augusta 11 45 * going north. Leave Augusta 6 10 p. M. Graniteville 6 50 Trenton 7 48 Batesburg 8 49 Leesville 8 55 Arrive Columbia 10 25 GOING SOUTH. Leave Columbia Leesville Batesburg Trenton Graniteville Arrive Augusta 10 22 G. B. TALCOTT, Supt. M. Slaughter, Gen. Pass. Agt. D. Cardwell, Asst. Gen. P. A. Port Royal and Augusta Ry. DOWN DAY PASSENGER. Leave Augusta 1 30 pm Arrive Beech Island 2 00 Brown’s Hill 2 11 Jackson 2 25 Ellenton 2 45 Robbins 3 04 Hattieville 3 15 Yemassee 6 10 Beaufort 8 10 Port Royal 8 25 UP DAY PASSENGER. Leave Port Royal 6 25 afm Arrive Beaufort 6 40 Yemassee 8 00 Hattieville 11 30 Robbins 11 42 Ellenton 12 02 Jackson 12 22 Brown’s Hill 12 37 Beech Island .... 12 Augusta 1 21) p m Sale of Tickets. ' Regularly — Between al i /stations, good for ten days, and 3 'cunts per mile each wav, first and second class. * J. S. DAVjANT, General Passenger Agent. J. N. BASS, Superintendent. Augusta ami Knoxville/Railroad Barnwell Court House, S. C. Hawkins K. Jenkins, Attorney at Law, Kock Hill, S. 0. Will practice in all the Courts of this State. Special attention given to collections. ’ Ciaudti E. Sawyer. t Law, Aiken, 8. C. { “VcrETTA* t)FKie«,7 -T!" ,1SS2. > 'Commencing Monday, fith instant, the following schedule will be oper ated. Trains run by Augusta time. No. 1—Nortii. Leave Augusta { 7 45 a m Arrive at Greenwood.. / 1 10 p m • House fresh and uea; Table best in Pavilion Tr Wagons at all t Rates ughout. Coaches and s. Rate* your 2 15 p m . 7 15 p m No. 2—SoutCh. Leave Greenwood Arrive at Augusta Connect at Greenwidod with Colum bia and Greenville iftailroad for points West. (o. P. HILL, General Pa/ssenger Agent AND The State. Governor, Hugh S. Thompson. Lieutenant-Governor, John C. Sheppard. Secretary of State, James N. Lipscomb. A ttorncy-General, Charles Richardson Miles. State Treasurer, John Peter Richardson. Comptroller-General, William E. Stoney. Superintendent of Education, Asbcry Coward. Adjutant and Inspector-General, A. M. Manigault. United States Senators, Wade Hampton, M. C. Butler. Conyressmen, . Dibble. (Second District—Geo. D. Tillman! Third District—D. Wyatt Aiken. Fourth District—John H. F.vins. Fifth District—John J. Hemphill. Sixth District—George W. Dargan. Seventh District—E. W. M. Mackey Ay ricultural Department, A. P. Butler, superintendent. L. A. Ransom, secretary. Eailroad Commissioner, M. L. Bonham. Penitentiary, T. J. Lipscomb, superintendent. Supreme Court, W. D. Simpson, Chief Justice. Henry McIver, Associate Justice. S. McGowan, Associate Justice. Circuit Courts, First Circuit—B. C. Pressley. Second Circuit—A. P. Aldrich. Third Circuit—T. B. Fraser. Fourth Circuit—J. H. Hudson. Fifth Circuit—J. B. Kershaw. Sixth Circuit—J. D. Witherspoon. Seventh Circuit—Win. H. Wallace. Eighth Circuit—James S. Cothran. Solicitor Second Circuit, F. Hay Gantt. ZST Congress meets op the first Monday in December of each year. C3£"The Legislature meets on the fourth Tuesday in November of each year. C3F* The Circuit Court for Aiken Connty meets three times a year, as follows: first Monday in February, 'last Monday in May, and second Monday in September. Congressional Districts. First—Charleston and Berkley— (St. Phillips and St. Michaels, Mount Pleasant, Moultrieville, St. James Goosccreek, Summerville), ten town ships of Colleton, fourteen townships of Orangeburg, and the entire County of Lexington. Second—Hampton, Barnwell, Ai ken, Edgefield, and Colleton—(Brox- son and Warren). Th ird—A bbeville. New lx derson, Pickens ami Oconee. Fourth—Greenville, Spartanburg —(except White Plains and Lime stone Townships), Laurens, Union— (except Goudeysville and Drayton- ville Townships), Fairfield, Richland —(Upper Township, Columbia and Centre). Fifth—York, Chester, Lancaster, Union—(Goudeysville and Drayton- ville), Spartanburg—(White Plains and Limestone), Chesterfield and Kershaw. Sixth—Clarendon, Williamsburg— (Kingstree, Sumter, Lees, Johnsons and Lake), Darlington, Marlboro’, Marion and Horry. Shventh—Georgetown, Williams- burg—(except Kingstree, Sumter, Lees, Lake and Johnsons), Sumter, Richland—(Lower Township), seven townships of Orangeburg, Charleston and Berkley not in First Distriet, six townships of Colleton, and the entire County of Beaufort. Judicial Circuits. First—Charleston, Berkeley and Orangeburg. Second—Aiken, Barnwell, Beau fort, Colleton and Hampton. Third—Sumter, Clarendon, Wil liamsburg and Georgetown. Fourth—Chesterfield , Marlboro’ , Darlington, Marion and Horry. Fifth—Kershaw, Richland, Edge- field and Lexington. Sixth—Chester, Lancaster, York and Fairfield. Seventh—Newberry, Laurens, Spar tanburg and Union. Eighth—Abbeville, Oconee, Ander son, Pickens and Greenville. RECORD THE Ml iWAUKLE HORROR GEN. TC> i THUMB'S LIFE. clothes, much trTT immedf'j express! loss of .'f ewelry he la' J lied rel ost evf people gled fori men ar The litt relievid around/ water sympal v Tom mates story oi “I \va FLIGHT FOB Further A< C nints < f the Catastrophe— HoiTii>I it*; 8«M?nes—HairOreatith Escapes. [From Tel 'grains to Northern Papers.] Tom Th imb and wife were rescued from the hotel by Police Officer O’Brien. ' They were in their night aj id Mrs. Thumb suffered the cold air. The General, y upon being placed in the ice, began mourning the [table diamonds and other jewelry BBonging to himself and wife. The la'i^ftheard him through and rt“- f died re^Bvingiy, “What if we have ost ev^Hbhing; just look at those re,” pointing to the man- of twenty dead and dying romeu lying upon the floor, oman then bravely began ~ e sufferings of those by supplying them with th^ display of other acts of ig kindness. the general says. mb, one of the ■ ?T ^- - ^ j e house, tells the following experience: partially aroused from a heavy sllep by a violent beating and poundinl 4t my door. I was hardly awake iliTen I arose and wondered what tlw matter could be. The pound- nued, and before I could door it was bursted open by aid: ing co reach tl| a powe “For of here, have or “My r the offic and I t time to fore lea not. H still in 1: ana sta lowed, v we tried but bv t il policeman, who sait toil’s sake, General, get out The house is on fire ami you y a minute to save yourself.” was one of the parlors on , near the dining-room, there would be ample —:o:- 2 00 @ $2 50. CAROLINA Si^NGS BANK. OF CHAR*^ ‘ON, . #500,000 .1520,072 50 J. A. Wright, -BOOT AND SHOE MAKER,- E. F. VERDERYJGen’l Manager Incorporated. Authorized Cap*i Undivided Profits Deposits received and interest al- all i lowed in the abov? Rank at the rate [ of Five (5) Per Ceid. per annum. Ex change on New Y(»rk, Liverpool and Loudon bought aid sold. Noithside Park Avenue, Aiken, S. C. The best of material used, and any Russ & Stotliart, j GR A J* ITE VII.LE, - - DEALERS IN Geo. W. Williams, President. J. Lamk Johnston, Cashier. C. -*IRE- style of boot or shoe made'to order. Bansley 3c Renz, AT THE ! DRUGS, MEDICI} TEES, IIEbllCALS, I VARXIS cm SUES, Insurance oi a Solid Basis. T HE undersigned would call atten- tio t j ring property adjust fire in compa- PAIXTS ! s ot unsuwpavd reputation and at ‘ ’ | fair rates. In ijses of losses occur-) Oils, Glass, Putty, Fine Soaps, Per-! ring, their frlenfc. placing business in funiery, Dye Woods and Dye Stuffs ) their hands e- ig, hut the policeman said •aught up my wife, who was d, wrapped "her in blankets ad out of the room. I fol- uh my trousers half on, and go to the front staircase; is time the fire was spread ing terrilly fast, and we were driven back by fie smoke and the awful heat. The politjman was still carrying iny wife in l&arms. We passed into the dining-rjmi, stumbling over chairs and against tables in the dark. The policemar’s idea was to take us around bl the rear of the office so that we nilghlreach the staircase from the other emjof the house, but there we found oilrselves cut oft’ again, and again hif| to retrtat. “It seJned as if retreat was imi>os- sible. TlA blinding, suffocating smoke and terrific heat were about us. We finally Aade our way through the smoke tolhe front balcony, and the officer cafed people to put up a ladder. The freeing water from a stream thrown into the building above us poured oourn good many of the been saved.” girls might have LOUISIANA'S SUGAR CROP. and calied that she m drew ned dowm The offi S ut my wife back into the j window and then agged life woman inside. This was hardly do ic when a man le*ting him self down by a rope made of sheets and blan lets landed beside us. He immediat ?ly asked if we had seen Ills wife, sayi ug she had jumped or fallen from the window of their room. It turned ou ; that the woman inside wa> his wife a id that the man himself was Mr. Bleck er, the manager of our com pany. i SAVED AT LAST. time the fire was coming e hotel lobby through the the room where my wife lecker were. Finally a, rope i up to the balcony and the d to let me down to the , but it threatened to part, and the jofficer lifted me back. At last the /adder was put up and we were saved. Al R. DIXON’S STORY. S. A. D xon, of*Chicago, who occu pied a ror in in Michigan street front, rilling account of the fire, wakened by the crashing of and opened the door to as- gives a tl He was s somegla;- certain tljd cause. The hall was tilled yvith an imrnediul mpeiietrable smoke, which *iy filled his room, forcing him to clrtse the door. He then gath ered up h s clothes and went into the hall, gro[ mg about uutil he found the way Tear ng to the bank building. Continui g, he said: “I look d back upon the Newhall, a dark hiking mass of smoke envel oping it,i with now and then lurid gleams lighting up the opaque cloud. The seem' was a frightful one. After The Burnside Estates Produce 7,500 Hogsheads. The sugar crop of Louisiana has ex ceeded very largely any crop since the war. Two and a half to tiiree hogs heads per acre has been an average on many large estates of six or eight hundreds acres cane each. "Some of the best cane has yielded as much as 4 to 4h, hogsheads. (By hogsheads is meant the “commercial hogshead” of 1,000 pounds, though most planters put in 1,200 to 1,400 pounds to save hogsheads, cooperage and freight, &c) On the ten “Burnside Estates,” now the property of Mr. Oliver Beirne, of Virginia, the total crop will be nearly seven million five iiundred thousand pounds, say 7,500 hogsheads, and the crop on one place was lost by the over flow. But for this the crop would probably have reached 8,500,000 lbs.; molasses 12..000 to 14,000 barrels. The sugar, if put in barrels and placed in a straight line, from end to end, would reach over eleven miles, and the mor tSs-Ws /Tt'Ufs is enough to man and child iii Charleston with 150 pounds apiece, and every inhabitant of Columbia with 750 pounds each. How will nearly eighteen miles of sugar and molasses in barrels, all in a row, do as an illustration of “linked sweetness long drawn out?” till.jjV. The u(T supply every man, \vo- a momen enter the ving son) te f< y pi ’s hesitation 1 decided to re building in the hope of sa- ; poor creature. Hiving two girls. w clothes I had recovered I hastily plit on and crawled back. I met a girl, one of the help, with a bundle of clothes in her arms. The moment i saw her she fell exhausted, and I ca'ried her out into the bank building. The rear portion of the ho tel where I was was not then in flames, but from the other side great sheets of [fire lea}ie< 1 up \vhirlinand j ri‘,Tt “l‘ The South’s Supremacy. [Lexington Dispatch.] The North may just as well recon cile itself to the fact that the South is destined to supremacy in this Repub lic. Her resources are the greatest, her traditions the proudest, her daugh ters the purest, her sous the pluckiest, and her political convictions the soun dest to be found within our borders.— Her recuperation since the war af fords the grandest spectacle in human history. Her growth is steady and sure. She is not in need of the expe dients that other sections have re sorted to to promote their growth.— Her resources are becoming more and more apparent to the world from year to year, and she can all but gaze into the splendid future that awaits her.— There was a time when her people were on the verge of despair,'but the spirit of the true Southerner asserted itself, and proved that there w as life and will in the old land yet. The! world will yet pour its myriads into 1 her fertile fields and sunny vales, but 1 the people that will result from this | admixture will he Southern in char- ! acter. Southern in sentiment, and nos- j sessed of the spirit that has raised us j from the depths of desolation to the ! plane of prosperity, wherever we stand j to-day. Womierfwl Cow Story. The editor of the Shelbyville, Ken-' tueky Sentinel, is responsible for the i following: “Hon. Harrison ow ns a cow which, | in the last fair years, has dropped nine ; calves, three of them the present year, j and of course is highly valued. A few nights ago she got into a cornfield | and filled herself so ..ull of provender of four squares in the neighborhood 6f the Northeastern Railroad depot were burnt down. The value of the property destroyed was several million dollars. There was trouble enough, and difficulty enough, in what the flames and the bombardment had done; but this-was not the worst of the situation. The Bank capital' of Charleston in I860 was #14,000,000, and the whole of this vast sum was blot ted out by the downfall of the South ern Confederacy. In course of time, the notes of some of the hanks regain ed a certain measure of value, but when the Confederate soldiers who had gone forth to Virginia and to the West to light for the State, and for the South, returned to their homes, in those sad days in 1865, they found their beloved city in ashes, and the w hole of the commercial capital of the city changed like fairy gold into worthless paper. There was little or no money in the city, and there was no way to increase it. The railroads leading in to Charleston were worn out and unfit for active use, even where they had not been torn op as the South Caroli na Railroad was. There was no gleam of hope anywhere. The wdiarves were decaying fast. Grass was growing in the principal -streets. There was no rift in the cloud. No hand was stretch ed out to help the “Cradle of the Re bellion.” When Richmond was de vastated by fire in 1865 Northern capi tal was lavished upon the picturesque city, and the burnt district was speedi ly covered with buildings far superior in style and size to those which had crumbled before fiery breaths in the great conflagration. Northern capi tal was sent freely to Savannah, and it was bestowed ungrudgingly upon Atlanta. The people whom the North, )l thcfc djiys. could not fond vz were the people orCimrlestor. The one Southern city which the North was unwilling to aid was the city where the Ordinance of Secession was passeil and where the first gun of the war was fired. Charleston was left to her own resources, as no other city of the South was left. Where could the people of Charles ton turn for comfort, for hope, for daily bread? The low country, which had been the principal source of revenue to the merchants and dealers of Char leston, was utterly desolate. The wild birds built their nests where grace and culture and hospitality had reigned. The rank weeds hid from view the flower-bordered paths where the feet of Carolina women and children, now refugees in distant districts, had light ly pressed the ground. All along the coast the freedmen were supreme.— Nothing remained but the ruins of the empire of intelligent industry and well used wealth. The low country had nothing to give Charleston, yet out of the riches of her poverty Char leston gave to the Sea Islands and the low country, in general, nearly every- { thing that remained to her. It was I rightly judged that it was all impor-j taht to revive, if practicable, tbe pros- j perity of the low county. In the en- j deavor to compass this, Charleston j lost, in the course of a few years, a t very considerable part of what com- ! mereial capital had been saved from ) the war. We exaggerate nothing. It is not I in our heart, or mind, to make the sit-) nation seem a shade blacker than it was. It is hardly possible, however, for any city to have been in a more desolate condition than Charleston was in 1865. The estimated value of the real and personal property in Char leston Distriet in I860 was $65,648,736. It is not an extreme estimate to say that one-half of this amount was ut terly lost as a direct consequence the war. no superiors In the r-outn. T’aTffiTW machine shops are hi active operation. The Bagging Factory sends out its goods to every part of the South. A system of water works has been built, and the greater part of the city is sup plied with artesian water. Charles ton has a paid Fire Department in the highest state of efficiency, and the wa ter works furnish the means of extin guishing fires rapidly before they have made any serious headway. The streets have been paved for miles with stone blocks. No city south of Balti more has streets as well paved as King street and East Bay street in Charles ton. The telephone is more generally used in Charleston than in any other Southern city, and the stores on the principal streets are brilliantly illu minated with the electric light. The schools of the city have been increased in number and inefficiency. During the past ten years Charleston has paid for public schools about three-quarters of a million dollars, of which amount $.14f ,602 was derived from the special tax levied on city property. There were in the city public schools last year, 4,014 pupils, and the expenses amounted to #59,320. The city finances have been managed admirably of late years, and a reduction of a million dol lars in the principal of the debt is of ficially reported. In every direction there has been a solid and permanent advance, and without going further into details, we feel that we have made good the assertion which the Columbia Reyister ignorantly derides. Charleston can afford to compare re cords with any town or county in South Carolina, and, taking into con sideration the losses and peculiar dif ficulties of Charleston, no other Southern city has done more or ac complished more in a given time! Our Columbia cotemporary is satis fied, we hope, that we did not speak hastily or thoughtlessly, and it will admit, we trust, the justice of what we have said. The Reyister claims to be the friend of Charleston; but it acts 'as only an unrelenting enemy should it act. It is, however, never too late to mend, and the iPegr/sfer may ultimate- ly see the error of its ways, and aban don the idea that it can do good toTfie State, or even lessen its own unpopu larity, by defaming and misrepresent ing Charleston. The State is for all the p-^e^^'f South Carolina, and all the people of South Carolina should work, and talk, and think for the ben efit of the State. There is no help for us, when one part of South Caro lina assails another part, and newspa pers, whether representative or not, take pleasure in railing at a South Carolina city. No good can possibly come of it; and much harm must and will ensue, if a jjolicy of sectional de famation be persevered in by news papers in the State, and these news papers go unrebuked by their readers. —The feat of George Hutchins, a Boston fireman, will bring him a medal. It was performed at the burn ing of a gun store, described the other day by telegraph. It was impossible to "keep the people far from the build ing, although they were told it con tained explosives." The fireman learn ed just where the stock of powder was kept, and Hutchins volunteered to go in after it. He dimed through a win dow, got down on his kne#s, and crept toward the spot to which he had been directed. The smoke was stifling and blinding. His hands touched the huge copper box, and he carried it out. Again he vent back for the remaining box. The copper burned bis fingers, and, as he sprang out, the flames fol lowed him, but the powder was safe under a powerful stream of water. —The question, “How long is it nec essary to keep children away from school after an infectious disease?” was answered some time since by the Academy of Medicine, Paris. With scarlet fever, diphtheria, measles and smallpox, isolation is to he maintain- days. flashing, and met girl, and 1 sat. Si I went back not her girl. a second time 1 do not know her uanu , but she was a dining-room was unable Jo rixe -.vYien she lay down; and nothing short of nev death was expected, until a neighbor came along and undertook to relieve f ed for forty days. Chicken-pox and 01 1 mumps lose their contagious power ... , , i . i * | after twenty-five days. \\ e have seen what Charleston was, j J and we know that the people of Char-I —M r . DeSaussure Bull, of Sumter leston had nothing but their own brain County, took the premium of #110 and their own industry to depeud on. | offered by the Stateburg Farmers’ (Milb. for the best aere of cotton. The i yield wuh pounds. XV. W. >\n- ilersmt, Ji . t came in second, with 2,011 pounds. .vaited at the table at whiei nized me, but I did not knowt her. >She was burned very badly. Her hands were hanging by her side, cut opeu by ti e, and the flesh hanging loose upon them. Her arms and her face, too, were scarred and black witii soot. Her scanty clothing had just caught fire, and rushing into j experiment was tried and one of th*! rooms I seized a sheet i» | bushels of undigested corn, c which I enveloped her and carried ! her through the bank to a sleigh upon which she was placed and taken to j her sister at the Axtell House. By j that time the hotel was a mass of fiame and entrance to it would have been death. THE WHIFE FACE AT THE WINDOW.' “I stool by them and watched the | horrible incineration. I saw the five ; girls leap to their death down in the ' alley, but the most awful view was one displayed soon after. Miss C'hellis stood by a, window of the fourth floor in her ni^ht clothes, her face pale as death. AH round her were tongues of fire, darting like circles from great sheets wl]ich waved skyward and her by plunging a butcher knife into her flank just in front th** hip-bone.— This failed to have the desved ell'ect, and another neighbor proposed to en large the hole made by the knife and remove the food. To this the owner would not consent until convinced that she would die any way, and the fully six feV .. ornstulks and grass, in a state of fermentation was removed from her paunch. The opening was then closed and in a very short time the animal was on her feet, and as contentedly chewing her cud as if nothing unusual had happened, and is to-day as well as any oilier cow on the place. What has been accomplished since JNfVi*? I io\V