The Anderson intelligencer. (Anderson Court House, S.C.) 1860-1914, October 21, 1875, Image 1
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?
Kl; *W??ID NOT FORGET,
* .Time cannot wean ruy heart from thee
w.I loved tpqlofig, too well. ,
?\Ah .' better had we never met,
Or never saii farewell.
Then happy ones aro meoting
v I steal away alone,
And then I cau't help thinkiug
Of hopeful days long flown.
~~ ' I watch th? stars appearing
As twilight glimmers throw.
.'? 'xfef'^weet shades over nature
Subduing each bright glow.
And tho moon's pale light w falling
On every flower and tree,
. And the breezes softly sighing
'? -Seem whisperings from thes.
Which toll.tue I am still beloved
As' fondly as of yore,
And though all now seems clouded
? Bright days are still in store.
-^-Olaudb Db Haven.
?'?- . ... I
WAITING,
'Five years to wait!" Don't do it.
IMy. innocent blmseyed maid,
'or the years may last a life-timo,
While your youthful roses lade,
%rte yoTtreyes are red with weepiug,
Apd watching the treacherous sea;
Tyou sing the song of thelone ono,
He never came back to mo."
yo yeai? to^vait, while othere
Are dancing the dance of youth,
'-j&ndtfie one perhaps you are trusting
Jsjbreaking his vows forsooth
alnuTwa&for. my loye, my'darling,
' Who has saileOir over the sea,
Five years, of ten, or twenty,"
Said the blue-eved maid to me.
So?he jvvrojte her love letters,
?r teli^bfl her garden flowers,
'Or Watched the restless billows
On the beetling cliff for hours;
Wliile she corned her suitors pining
Away from the cottage door,
And waited,.patiently waited,
? Orie long, long year or more.
? .n?... , a rr?rr * * ? *
? >ut- r .; .:
' " Tis very weary waiting,"
; Said the blue-eyed maid to me,
And she glaneed at her last new suitor
And then.at the restless sea;
As she-glanced at the roses fading
In her garden iair and bright;
, Twice comer fwiee gone since he left her
Two years before that nigh*.
And she married her last new suitor
?? , Bofoue the winter sped;
And she wrote to her absent lover
On the day that she was wed,
"She hoped he would not suffer.
That Mie^hock' would soon be o'er;''
And thea'nswer soon informed her.
^^jjffe fiad'iumled a^ear before!'
aTtoby for mothers.
"Willie; why don't you go and play
with the b?ys, and not bo forever stuck
a?-myfeet?*>. - -
> Such/was Mrs. Gray's impatient ques?
tion, one day, when hor little son came
and seated himself in the parlor, when
his mother was conversing with a visitor.
"I would rafter be with you than with
th^bovB/'he/answered, timidly. ?
"Oh, I neversaw such a baby I"
"Is it wrong to wish to be nenxyou,
mother?" said the child._siid his nether
lip irembied as he spoke. ..
"Wrfog? oP course not - But you are
cM. enough to havp^some manliness about
yunn. See, yonde* * are Will and John
Gowdy on the ice. Eun fdong and keep
tiaem comp an v; I want to talk to Mrs.
Brown." ". ; ? xl?
' ^Iirrtr ho a 'queer child ?": asked Mrs.
Cfcay.
The other raised her sad eyes, and fixed
tlhem with such a painful expression on
the mother's face, that lor a moment Mrs.
Gray almost 'feit offended. She was a
veiy sorrowful Rooking woman, this Mrs.
Browo? ,C? r?> .Jms!
. "I had,a son.pnce, but he's gone now,"
she said at last, and there were tears in
Jierjgyj?.:
? STre. Gr^y ejazed at her wonderingly.
She had not known this before.
"It is a bitter thing to tear open par?
tially healed wounds," Mrs: Brown con?
tinued^ "but let me tell you my story."
Several years ago, I was about to give
a party; a grand affair it was to be, and
my head was almost turned while mak?
ing preparations. My Willie (his name
was Willie, .too.) was about 16 years old.
He had never been to school, I had edu?
cated him myself. At home, he was all
a mother's heart could desire; but he
40g thy, and when I forced him into
company he appeared so awkward, that
I often felt ashamed of him. This was
ojne reason of my deciding to give a
party. If he was obliged to act the part
of host he would overcome his bashful
nets, I thought. Bat Willie never ap?
proved of it.
"I shall be so glad when tho party is
ovor," he said one day; "for since you
have got it into your head, I have lost
my mother."
"Poor little baby I" I responded, slight?
ly provoked at his lack of interest. ''I
wonder how many more years I shall have
you tied to my .apron string V*
I spoke saeeringlv, and a proud flash
_instantly overspread his face.
"I will be tied there no longer," he re?
sponded ; "I will seek other company in
the future."
I was frightened at tile result of my
words. Still I made no response. My
son, putting on his coat and hat, weut
out. It was the first time in his life he
?lad ever gone out without informing me'
where ho was going.
In good time the party came off. It
was a gay affair, and. none wore gayer
than Willie. He was sort of an ex?
tremist, and took no medium stand. Af?
ter that, his books and work were neglec?
ted, and his days, as well as evenings,
were sjjfnt abroad. Fast young men
became his constant companions. I was
left alone to mourn over tue ehange I had
wrought Aj first he made it a rule to
be in ai night at ten o'clock, but after a
time he began to stay out later; and
day-break sometimes found him from
home. I tried to expostulate, tried to
win him back to his old habits, but my
efforts were unavailing. He had got a
taste of a new life, and it held him by a
charm. Well do I remember the first
night he came home in a state of intoxi?
cation. It was hTs seventeenth birthday,
just a year from the time I gave the par?
ty. I had seen him under the influence
of wine once or twice before, but on this
occasion he drank so deeply tbat some of
his companions had to help bim home.
The hours of that night were dreadful
hours of self-reproach and agony. I was
so glad when morning came to dispel the
gloom?so glad when reason returned'to
my erring child. He was very much
jishamed. He said again and again he
would do better; but his resolves were
worthless. Two nights later he was
again brought home intoxicated. After
that it was a common occurrence. He
fell lower and lower, squandered all my
ready money, and when I refused to
mortgage my property, that he might
have more, he left me with an oath.
That night a large firm was robbed,
and it was discovered Ciat Willie was one
of the perpetrators of the deed. The
next morning the town was alive with
excitement, and I almost crazed with
anxiety, for my boy had fled. The news
passed from mouth to mouth ; my house
was ?e?rchcd, and my son called a vil
]im; but I had no 'power to prevent
rHESON, S. a,'THURSDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1875.
VOL. XI-NO. 14.
dither,
paths.
"You .
said a blunt*!,1 sto
ring the daytfA&
home, huty$?Q ?
pany." ^i^.qu'
That uight
sat alone, a* wj
and Willie sfr**
a glad cry I N?PI
pushed me rt?0^'
?'The bloodh
you given me
would not ha! &
"Yes, mo
have made rue'Cta
you I have seduce
ings. God knW*
her." ,.ni
Kate was a ptt^nrv
16 years old, iioces i*
grew around ir . {?'
heart gave a <j&; T!
continued: fj L.
"The ^orltjilF
married. She/dlfc
Hark ! they a cow
I too young, tocick\:
die.. Farewelf B
I saw his /rpo$
j clutched a reifer^
I feet I threw nanny
; him from himlf. \
; The next rnomt &/
I P?stol echoedliroui !
glance show mer
stretched ome
was blank toe.
When I a'ke
morning sunias s
was filled wrpeo
was satisficdind
the dead, jf?ay, i
less, I sat Side ?ar^led cor
Some peoplo-indera the rest, car
in to make rparalfor the fuuen
and 'passed Jentltf but I dull
, heed them.
I Kate Hasjigs ccj?st aftcr
I She was dreed iu.) mourning, a
i her face waso irhslthat it start'
I mo. * I
"You, too, *vo coio reproach m?
; I said.
"No, mothf, youier enough wi'
1 out my rep?aehesl have come1^!
viatch 'with tb dead ,JL
"I wish toratch ac," I said
typing informed of its loss, Mir
/without any hesitation, oaniod the pa;
firwh'o had it, and it was recovered. J
How can these things be? Tha
are so is uncmcstionable, as Dra. P:
Baird and Blake will testify, bu
they are so, puzzles the scientific
Mr- ?? ?couts the idea of spirits aiding
him, and will not, under anjy circum?
stances, receive money for information,
nor will he give the information if asked
at any other time except while
under the influence of his epileptic or
cataleptic exacerbation
cerebal disturbance, a ,
rather a hyperathesia of the sensorium
that pushes his mind or soul free and un>
trammelled into space,, and tft
fluenced by surrounding
clearly all things ha'
We see often the same
extent iu the case of
they, with closed eyes,
ejar
Wjty?
tancesj
uncom"
far dis,*
tells t(?
and thd. "??i/i -.
in which ^ftousei, ueKi^ precipices, an
ate actual mty. W|iy? Because fro
nervous /exaltation tho op
ceases to be the only mode c?f comyance
to the brain of objects, and! evennerv
ous filirnent becomes pro fehp0re 'aetim.
This is a temporary caUfleusy^jd an
unusual or overpowering hrnbuaSf by
""^mesia would produce Hkewiseircatcr
mer
fid.
&e metp
reliable wit
seem to be
lowers or to
)r he deems
leaven?one,i
He scorns
hay for any-1
\s an humble 1
Presbyterian
mmble'd and
trances. He
all respects
ied man, and
ad though we
toriety of tn
1m, we neve
v to tell the
"who could,
iber one se
vet is conte
as a Christian
fortune on (the
Grumblers.
:he grumblers are^ i
unot
)C(oiiiug
tint instiii
thl
B1""
TlAere^tilftSjMyho are si
ituted that they c"
erous and happy
.ions. These, actuated b
which shapes things, into the form
?people would like tfiem tobe,'trv to *
rsuade themselves and otierj /hat *
7 prosperity and happiness^ t0~;s'0
as they app
certain arac
feelings,
this stamp
the community
Light In Egypt.
No country in the world presents so in
tercsting a spectacle as Egypt, at this
time. The ancient "dry-nurse of lions'?
has been for a thousand years almost as
dead, withered, and dry, as the mummies
of her ancient philosophers tod herbei?.
Her civilization runs back so far in 'tho
dim past, that scarce any two chronolo
gists have agreed upon the measurements
of time?some of them differing by thou,
srnds of years. It is remarkable fact
that the light of her civilization does riot
grow dim, out ou the contrary h found to
a niggnjfcgog-Wjj brighten as the explorer of the^past goes
further and further into the renjote ages.
Egjpt is a very long arch in ?e bridge^
wbch reaches back over the kWssesW
igprance and savagery, from tfiepresem
t-Oihe enlightenment of the prnnitire
nun.. She; gave civilization io Assyrjk,
letters to Phoenicia, taught Greece her
aMabct, and trained'her in science and
plilosophy. Even the chosen people were
fair hundred years jo her school; find
looses, tho lawgiver, was providentially
prepared for his mission by her profound
instructors. In arms she was scarcely less
renowned tban in arts. Th< natfons of
all theEast, from Ethiopia, ar s?uth at
the sources of the Nile, to tie iiomadic
tribes of Central Asia, a^kncwleofged her
sway, and brought gifts to lier temples.
Her libraries and lier leaning /vere the
glory ot the ancient world. lifer moiiu
the world-wondersjof to-day.
.'?.?illey was death An asetting
^slftd bewitchii^beauty?
jjj Mnm?P'turlng Pay ?
TJie 4umbusl '^l^)lTinmV\ib
lished a cityi Inch in the So.hern
States** elainft wne protninencias a
manucturing ft, advances the low?
ing ^uments 1 ravor of the. estalish
ing r cotton Jrfi in the'South. The
fact presenteftl^e forcible, and veil
wo/ny of coifir'dX-rtion as prjintinj?n
micakably to~jriC course our pc^ie
sJjuld pursue * order to acquire ;0s
prity and thfability to dep;nd u0n
oir own resou^s:
? Five hundre hands?able-balied e?n
i-are require?
to make two thousad'
t sees
ound.
ited
ists;
wal over
ithmpu
a piuliar
ex|nsion
asses.
jforbatbrillij
&of?r "
^^tvChat
,t liccntioi
Hence of
for near
erUin amount cf balm tofc^ound.
fceUngs. TheLity^^f?als
this stamp forma vcrj ia]r ^lon
S?immunity. ?^W?iH
queen and
There vj a
the close of
pageant the
>t departed to
Jtwo thousand
ildren and? pupils have
great nation s Jinj rjied th,e
us. tier children of the
rth gener.it^on 0f nations
bales of cotto in one year. Fmr bals
to the'hand** morc than tlieaverag
amount prodt'-d- One hundisd worne.
and chifdrf (can spin this anount ov
Charleston and tlie ?p-Conntry.
A>eeent visit to Charleston has given
us much lio^ieof iU increasing business
and prosperity. There has always been
too wide a gap. in the business, and too
distant a social relation between Charles
tori and the up-country of the State.
The recent war with its horrors and its
necessities drove a great many families
from Charleston to the up-country, and
forced a great many soldiers from the up
couutry into campaigning on the coast.
These facts brought about a better ac?
quaintance between the two sections, and
a common heritage of war and sorrow
growing out of the results of war and the
bad government since the war has ce
spin co/t
yarns,
able-boilied^d hands who nroluce the
raw cotfton;11* manufactured.
Nodi if ese conclusions are-orrcct,
and tfffl-e.^hnioii made for theeiuire
cottz An "f the South, it is cidmt
thi'/jfflbl'ng numerous small natu
adopt the speediest wayto
ity and an increase of po
Q^ f^re
da!
"I wish to ^ 0 -
"It is I *%^r I am ^ *L3?
\\0 w
co^
-u.V.. 'It iaaiy rig ^
How calm B?e m There was
even a tremc of t" voice to tell
she suffered. .
"Yes, it in jour rifr
I said, "It jives j another pan^
give him up, fren toou, mv dmgl?
still I do it." I
4"She looked up qvM?.
'He has tcMyon '^
plied.
{ht, Dr. Thjach
put his hsx??! to
fpe of it, ano.?Vj)
at some $vr?s
rou doingjiDoc?"
see a*' ring."
the hotel/in tlie
fas two hundred,
it up and .let's go
>r. Mr. ' , at
at the door into
Thach following
jtre of the very
it unhesitatingly
1*1, Btoopcd
biers is coustUu'ted ly tKe pe0pi
who arc evet <W kttenhfl
?rf> cleverer tn.m ^^dy
tl
the world,
lev look wit
|?and it is not
h great surprise
tha
they are cleverer than _^dy ei3P
Such people, perhaps, ocri^ pur
l^eut, hoary, wj-inkled mother,
,-ptcast hot bread on all
so many \0ng ages she
m! Strange spectacle it is
down
r and" banded
?& - -- lu the
selves the next bat thing, ^ g00l
done by othwr petple. A clit53 0,
gXbfers h.ma^e upiMfayomen
|.hosedispSitio^
or havcbfcome S
smaU, the S^esent Khedive, is the
ester- the _ . ^w^jiightjsay.
? so long agQ? ^ strike down
?**?g t4de;Sto abolish
government since the war
men ted it into friendship.
! Charleston is now acquiring that com
c^tton"iutciP^i in the san$ time it mercial strength which a want of capital
takes five W>dred hands to jroduce it. laiid bad polities has heretofore deprived
It is a princle ?f political ecotomv that 'her of. There are no natural barriers to
all values aj?d to the raw matTial addyiu being the first commercial depot along
as much wt^h to a locality wfere they the Atlantic coast, and there is no reasou
tori"to yarns, as fiveijuudrcd why the entire confidence and patronage
jof the up-country should not be centred
here. The Charleston merchanU have
nergy, business capacity and great integ
tty ; they have, in their natural advan?
ces of easy communication with the
coin try and extcuded commercial cou
netion with the Old'World, superior ad
vartages; they have now, what they
ha\e not had since the war, money to
more our crops, to fill our stores and to
assist our planting. Then, above and
beyind every other consideration, they
are mr brother* and have experienced,
only as South Carolinians could have,
ihe tirefu! results of the war; they have
been true .to their honor and their prin
out from pov
ihe same fair
econithey were wont to have in the old
ime, yhen Charleston was a synonym of
tfinenent, elegance and hospitality.
Brosd street looks as btisy and as active
a it iid when we knew it years ago.?
Te wiarves and shipping seem as well
?Vd y-ith business ami as lively with en
teirisi as before the war. There are
mcv of liberal views and gehtlernen of
finibusness capacity there who possess
boti the capital and the will to build up
its rolen wall* and to raise its com*
merq byond a point heretofore known
to us,
Fohnmg'all of this in the train of tho
prospent and commercial importance of
\xAx% ca
[?Tutors,
!d herevitt
-Mites, wet
nicjev eowes vita the order:
Q?tionfl, tffo Innertiona,
Esrtatr Kotitz, three insertions,
Final Settlements,' five insertions
TO QOldl&PONJ)ENTS.?ln order to*
attention, co'l,raunlc'?tion? must be accouij.
by the t^"? P9100 ant^ ?ddresi" of tho writer. _
jected mahiscr'Ptfl K,ri not he returned, unless i
necessary !t?niPs ?re rurnbibed to repay the postage
thereon. , .
W? are not reoponslblo for the views and
oplnlousof ?UT corr??ipondents.
All coii>niu"'ca,'ons should bo addressed to "Ed?
itors Inteii(?cn(,?ri" and all checks, drafts, money
orden* At-, s?ould be made payable to the order
of ' hoyt A CO.,
Anderson, S. C. ?
?^on 0
nr have bfcome i^area
illy ^Wfc'^tl
their
ill
\>e^v.
not condemn to/' , {or a m?j*tf\^
A sad beantifuU^ 0# ^
"Yes.
"Yet you
ond"(
A sad
was down
with the same
money, and
doctor still
Khe^her 0?
yns
'^sel
.?ard
of bis vi
ago, a
gotd on|W
xY. ^^ccrt
men any run
8cbe;a th?
^%rasb.edj
^n'rojnovfS
e .aamtf I
men only
tiuried the
door, hopingbat ?*" McaCfl." Day- 0-0
eater; butnmchBumraOTs^u^ / gold at a well marked spa Herc thev
nsht ?M?-;ZmS^ Beparated^n^bein^g afraito come for
yR^Bmi#^fS^Si^. it, soon it transpired that cy were aU
chamber of eath-. ^T rrenerj tiie door three killed or died, and e g0id was
became so giat that I ooeneo ^ m^hcd\n i? hidu Dfac6j and
and looked L The g?rii"g there it stiU rests mite bed. ^hvdon't
Sue of &,r^^??iSpS you go and get it? WojldL & thu
Softly I M? ^0?rtIrt, S oves m<t my spot?" "Yes. I can go tfi ^d put
d?ooping:iead; But no ?ad g? ? > v hand ^ ^ box but ^ fea
SNonin^ut .the ^^dU gok It is blood-money, d |f will ffion," and" are f
ftarigooaofawt^.^0whiai8he Sarry a curse with it." . Anj^ rgu ; ? ? and that; intelligence "com*
bv her oVn Wad, asabottiew ^ ^ ^ his detenO;^ 0d foin experience, that it is individual
"~oi Ha hiding ol-^CiVtH _?i:t? a??ondi>nt for its volume
iu5- But
nohing'but. tlie white iuw.- k
staring ops of a.corpse .^atie *f^fd gild It is blood-mone^
cfutehed >rovelad: " * ^ ^ 8h? 1 ^' a ? ^
The neit daftJiey buried the'piir,
erring soi anl bis child wife, Uj
grave; aid as lie clods foil on th; coffin
??^nf mv life wentoii for
with th/- ?
ies go
>f ?00Ii.
nbor
ar
discontit. A^^-e, trtcy^x e,-. ^
those uarc-them; abroatj Q&fiBn S
liked ??p^d and laughed at on accqnt
of the aar'infirmities of temper w^h
they dsp- 11 is simply impossible to
pleai? K ^nc most accompliacd
Pafislnr^^ that lives wuld fai to
satisfy f* changeable and partiiilar
palates^e keenest students of ncir
charac/aQd those most desirous d re
their favor find that I is
m ana ?rji or-dt woman ; sib^?^ . S'"-"'.
-teSttWi of aWeitherto tb
S- eatoblwU 4e YanKCe Jg*^ klA a (ill commanc
iHtoler-^
vnov topntinteUigenccana
8C>0d^.;?;An Lhincthis new
the heart and
oldier;to put reli?pna
mZ
common ' tiSn
ird?"a-v tbo fcro
1 of CVCSdcr
proficiency
g mathematics, bmguages,
large element in tl
lT }of the question to hope tW, oy
&jfk and being, by
?^ingthatis
and philosoph;, a Even
ttsUfor proimtion in J1^^ drudges
tVe field labors and domcsUc ? g ^
ot his own rate are reached by of
f;
attain
the^StatrJimited to the mauufacture if
varns?niXA not Pu*d handsome,'
since t& panic of 1873. Some hav
netted Ity Per ct-'nt- 1? all parts of th
Stidc ^r'e small farms prevail, it.is he
comin^tomnry to send the cotton toi
eentrav located gin which gins for thl
nciglitttfood, taking toll as grist-mill^cipie;arid they now come (
do. Sw> suppose a factory is estab- erty, hut not disgrace, with
lished < these centrally located planta?
tions tspin the cotton into yarns, and
the e'e-^n be pressed into bales of yarns
and jpP shipped, is it not self-evident
thatlr enterprise would pay? Of
co'u'^thcse factories will be few in
nu'w unt'' t^lc Pr0I>lt becomes gener
y Mown, but m believe in the end, as
Irop out" of the unprofitable pur
f cultivating large plantations on
,vtd capital, they will see that this
practical and-pregnant with great
Instead of one man being the
the "custom" gin house, a
co-operative society will build
Llike tuatof Mr. Rhodes Browne,
n^ flurabus, with the addition of the
library gins. The yarns will be
e North or to Europe,
tH fill command a more ready sale
n\n\aw cotton u?w does, lhe profit
djv aid to the manufacturer and mid*
tQici will be kept at home, and enrich
it?. ydncer, who is now so poorly paid
ifjajoil. This is the mission of the
.-p/n tho near future, and it should
placed boforo every agricultural or
r-jgtsocicty in the States. It will be
') oofitable than Grange warehouses.
r-~
s'tupid, iafeel
'Thiswthird class is th*
the purpose oi i~omercial Morality.?A good deal
gctic monarch, wiin ^r^ jgUOrant -"be said and written about the de
giving them education. ^ c011ipietcly f c the standard of morality of late
Eohammedan pnestj ?2ypt) as the h lT3,;ributed quite generally to the
bat control oi ;education ^ ^ in. ^ inflllcnce 0f the civil* war.
fgoten !^*22S^wnalllcd Bismarck /ni\\can not be doubted that dishon
class
in,^' ?t* nothing but misery frcrn the
iHPiKSU Their!,Tumb
up
couplts members adopt,
lingdays no wounded feelings, ?ut ex
po^thcra to the stings of a reproving
co4ience.
t &TiscT and Intelligence?Pro
ft rLeConte, of the California Univer
d /lately lectured upon the distinction
iHreen instiuct and intelligence
c'tlusions arc that iustinctis a quality
g*eral to a species, not. volitional or sub
jjt to improvement, "*Ua fin?l result o
at repetition of v
scale of
?am
iilitary power.
All this is the r
of one absolute
rcclv a trace
result of
the final result of
oluntary acts, fixin
ibite that pass from generation to cene
K??"?n/are "inherent, in the brain
ngi
my
one
ake him reveal Its hiding pi,
xUa?1
J
I ojality, dependent for its vc
'the amount of experience.
. i J-...1.1...?. I'ln^linP
upon
He there
the b'rigitnessof my
ever. i
Mrs. Blown.puld say no morafot sobs
choked br utiirance. Her listcer, too,
was decpty affected, as her pale'ace and
tearful e^es shwed,
Le:
merit, Mii
and called:
"Williil"
The cbJldhejrd her and oaro quickly
to her side.
"Wha&jt, Jjamraa?"
*'It is so luictome withoutyou, darl
ul e^s ghpvea. tuerbr a mo
javinrtbekreavedin ne ^
r Mrs. Grv stole soroj ^
m
one.
He had a daughter attending a"ilc rt"lv'""1,- V -r*:f
Dr. Ward's in tnlsdty. On the Usto^oa wncludes'that instinct therefore,
the commencement, he was in.a tH^? accumulated experience or knowledge
we know not what else to call <Sof maa* ?ficnf ru.tluns' .fixec Permanently
his far away home in AJabama. til JM bwi^8tr,uctufc- A 1
once he sprang forward and extw5Uch Petrifaction arrests development,
ov,.;*?Hc "ThAw> ???^tr, fL , i pecausc unadaptable to new conditions,
excitedh, There, we are in the ?KnrtoiritoW for the correspond
excneuij, ??>???) ...
Hi8 hi^^ffi ^^^nTenoi7n the higher sphere of
v.-as burnine Oh! I mean at gb. KJJ evomtion> j belie* we fi^d it in;
I was attending theexamiuation Cow 1 - -c_atnA ?;^i;,nf;nns
it's all dark." When his daarf7, re?
turned she told them of the ga3,'oo oat
while the commencement exer^ were
in progress, leavinglhem all illness.
He has other and'divers p<r>tm"i)De
ing
she sail, drawing
him ft
ior.
Asmdeliuftlusface
"Loveya? "Hh-WiUi^
aw she
He has other and divers po
day he carried Miss ^Valtoif's n^rom
the office. Handingher a Jettejn^vs,
"This is fr0n Brothe, McD. ,<<this
is from his rife. Hconly baclar Jet
for he." "No, this is fr
m.
SUUl.H VTV1V.V.V.
the phenomenon of arrested civilizations,
of wnich nearly all barbarous and semi
civilized nations are examples, but the
Chinese and Japanese are tne most con?
spicuous. Nations isolated and breeding We
without, mixture with other nations,
gradually assume fixed customs and hab?
its which become euforced and finally
petrified io national character. The re?
sult is often marvellous development, but
extreraelylimited." The practical appli?
cation of {rnich is that, unless nationali?
ties mix occasionally, their intelligence
would bocome instinct, and all advance?
ment intellectually would cease.
oed will
"here was s
iterprise iu
.11 The ii .
hether the mainspring
rogress, wraryjd up in th
res of human life, will
lat life fails, and the peop
gain into their long leth
re several reasons for !
aings. The son and heir
.ulighteiied, energetic, ax'^,
iis father. He is^entK'/
poney in thfintcnan
he villages sh belon
?he schools iblished
nd which lrrsonally
rogress of nsion beyo
ig to practagriculture an
lanic arts..
But a mo?rmanent grou
r the futuf Egypt lies ii
-tcr of th^ple. TheAra
tys. been-ar as they had opportun
t persist students. The anciei
i^rit of t^tolcmies has long bee
ldden?t'spark smouldering und
ty calso sharp practices, between
xicU honesty but a thin partition
;istye become much more frequent
, [anjrlier times, we are inclined to
tho cnligbt- j ..\*ieat it is due, not so much to
monarch. ^eniing wilfully dishonest, as to
of the new ;<ie -r fields for money getting, and
The Cotton Outlook.
Thcfipeculation in cotton ha* taken a
turn tt;ward3 higher prices, aud the de?
cline which has beeu going on almost
uninterruptedly since March last seems
at length to hare received a decided
check. Prices have been forced down in
the meantime more than four conts ?
pound, and this affords an assurance of
safe values which it is impossible to ig
noreKortified as it is by other circum
staucss ?f more or less insignificance.
Tlie ?Liverpool market has become quite
active, with a partial advance in prices.
That market requires more liberal ship
me^'fpim the Americau ports, and bid
higf I Price3 to stimulate them. Be
sidepit begins to be suspected that the
cro^for the current year h*? been over?
estimated in placing it at 4,250,000 to
4,5(0,000 bales. The planting season
war late, the acreage without \mportant
incease, the growing crops wereassailed
by droutlm in some sections, fluod? in
otlur*, and latterly by storm?, high
wird?, excessive rains arid unseasonable
cob in various partn. Much itjury
mint have been done. The large re?
ceipts at the ports for the past monthmre
of Ittlc significance. They are account?
ed or by the fact that the planters need?
ed honey and carried forth a portion of
their crops. This the navigable condi
tiotfof the Southern rivers favored their
doing, whereas one year ago they were
neirly dry. The large receipt? come
fron a portion of the South where the
citps matured early by drouth. Cotton
gods are selling more freely, though at
lor prices. Thus there is no leading in
flence operating to depress prices, and
tl; advance that has taken place is quite
neural.?A>w York World.
The Best Food.?As a rule, not only
i the simplest food the bot food,but the
nist reasonable is, iu the long run, the
tost appetising. There is no difficulty
i determining what we should eat, since
te products of our climate show us
[ainly month by month. Fish, fU>h
nd fruit, by their plumpness, tenderness
nd ripeness, themselves denote when
ley are ready to be eaten. A sound
tomach will profit by whatever an un
poiled palate enjoys.
The wholesomeness of food depends
icarly as much on the time it is taken as
on the quantity. We have grown so lux
Charlesto will be the certain reaction cf urious in our physical as well as mental
prosperit;,and enterprise in the up-coun- tastes that we are constantly tempted to
try, and < a still further consequence, eat things out of season. Yielding to the
much to b djsired, a closer connection temptation, as we often do, we pay the
"Thalctod! Yon tee ^
ing," she (ied, hjsterijaul
She. die' him closer Vher,*shflclung
to him, ah showered .'Lies on hi won?
dering fa?. But nevr uiitH he was a
man, wiOa son of hujwn, did ?e tell
him tha&ry of that ?Jer Willie,whose
ohildhod and his la been so much
alike, an how, by thi nowledgejf that
other Wile's unfortu te career,ie had
been sa^d by her ppaps fVoma like
fate.?Person'* ilagcfie.
The #t ov Listbino ? Caversa
tion isnore frequetly spoild and
ruined I bad Llstonifthan bybd-talk
ing. N Tb persons, C several, my cn
???|???io^of a subjet with
quainted, adoach
ii of langure and
of hem is
g^e ime
which eh is Ml ?lY?,f laDfi
may peo^ ^mm.alf:f oQC oinem ?
fluencyf dlcjlon, bij? ??t U?t.
an inatntive- uncas, > fafuscd
toner tJ conTcrsatlo. m flitUer
and iiyilar, often ntoU^ ? ia
of it4 breaks pfl orfiieral
theoccurrei^fany
contents of tb letter, as was scon
return from he other diirctii r
said among is neighbors hei
any letter trough its ervold
whole neighlrhood applyio '| v
anything is fet, and he an ny
asked in atrance, anster;
Even the roges have beconoi
his po-er.
But the m-t singular of ''
formanccs, at equal.to the j
of the best Writualists, is t
cumstattce i will relate. \
thousands or there, but we d
necessary to p^e a reprcsentafee^io
each branch obis powers. Tc'Molj
dist Coaferen< year had closed and
new ninistcnf MooresYille M c(
On Satarday,u:r. ?-fceqiieut,' sj
of his ?iriositjABLkear thejiew poa?
He wa< sick aHtturday*night, .o
it'becouldtotsleep. After
Smdav ma-niug, Vo told hh
Id taie a nap itid then
?^hes^ never quenched.
??tiona it is bright and vig?
flie new <?tI0ns
us once e. The Edjptians' are
gile on issus as .thete are on tWr
looded fbiaiw. Having a tiste of
^arningy will not renounce iti p)i?
res, ifey can help themsdvfJ
faving,i?3piration of the knowlUe
hat thfre fairly in the race Ith
ther nPs, for the goal of c'mlirsim
ot readily abandon ?**
'des tSe"idea"is quietly.
it. 3e
but fee
J e&in Empire properl} beloBon
t NMher than on the ?Bpaphis ;
il cnclosjjjAe?asis of our* modern social sys
,ri^' jtixury, ostentation aud extrav
giring which has been mainly
ja<h of the last ten or P&sA
'^parental inj^inctiou^'
|nrr4?L^onesUv if you can
%ouZ??3*Z*y^w have
0KM3 form, P,ujtWgi?fi}e>
rneccpt, such courrsef*~has
fi"d has too often been hoeded.
TheJv,nrtunc, or fault, is that when
questtble or dishonest practices have
prov^ccessful, people nave hesitated
aboupropcrly stigmatizing them.
Kna;. trickery and deceit are too of?
ten ?n under the colossal sums they
sonues bring. A rogue who obtains
rJa fei'llars upon( false pretences is pret?
ty ceo to be overtaken and punished ;
but U an individual, a firm or a cor
Eoraj in previous good standing,
avtpropriatcd large sums to their
own, without an equivalent, it has
not 'equently happened that honest,
wellaning men have pronounced it a
fairiiness transaction. At intervals,
fortucly, public virtue asserts itself,
provd thereto by some startling de
velo?nt of fraud or crime, and the
tideevil is checked for a time; but,
as d)nesty has been practiced in the
ranfef business men from time im
meiial, it is not probable that they
wilier cease, at least until the Millen?
niums reached.?Xrw York Shipping
List
of busines-'rehtions and of sympathy be
tween lhe\w? sections of the State.?I
Rock Hill irau/e.
Origin .u-i^ecrecy of Inventions:
?A century ag) what a man discoveree1
in the art- htcoicealed. Workmen wen
put upon oaJi.ever to reveal the pro
cess used by teir employers. Door
were kept closec visitors rigorously ex
eluded from adnssion, and false open
tions blinded wokmen themselves. Tb
mysteries ofevei' craft were hedged i
by thick set. fcocs of empirical prete*
tions and judicirl'iffiruiation. The royl
manufactories oijprceiain, for exampi,
were carried on n Europe with a spilt
of jealous exclusvtness. His Majestvif
Saxony was espe^nlly circumspect. Sjit
coutent with the ?ath of secrecy imposd
upou his people, it would not abate rs
kingly suspicion \ \ favor of a brothr
monarch. Neitherking nor king's d?
gate .might enter he tabooed wallsof
Meissen.
What is erroneousy called the Drescn
porcelain?that eqahite pottery of wh;h
the world have neverseen the iike?CkJ
manufactured for tyoiiu'idred years!;
a process so secret hAAeither the b|)
?ll ff princes nori/jfl^arrulity off e
onvletiUf'' ?*a?,'-<^';t " ^ther
1 if mr^aiVB been iess'ACcessfu
?JB?Vcgately < for te world.^pe
manufacture of tinware i Europeps a
stolen secret. Few readts neea tto be
informed that tinware i simply! thin
iron plated with tin by beig dipped in?
to the molten metal. Iu teory itj is an
easy matter to clean the siface ofj iron ;
dip it into a bath of the bding tm and
remove it enveloped witluhe |\\very
metal to a place for coolin. I
tice, however, the precess i one
most difficult in the arts. I was
ered in Holland, and guarde fro
licity with the utmost vigilace f<
ly half a century. Englani t
vain to discover the secret, mtil
Sherman, a Cornish miner, rro
channel, insinuated himsel m.'Jter of
the secret, and brought it form. The
secret of manufacturing castsfeel was
also stealthily obtained; and isnw with?
in the reach of all artisans.
The Philosophy op. Hoeing.?It
may ht overdone or underdone. There
is.reask.ia everything, "even in roastingL
eggs/ as the saying is. ,So in hoeing jind jading "minds have disccred
cropi. It we hoe up the soil m large -J? -
luin^, as we arc apt to do with the very
serviceable modern prong hoes, wo let
the^eeu, dry air'into contact with the
starting but enfeebled roots, and by their
osrchimr an irrepairable injury is done.
crushed down
at
ptnrching an irrepai
hat troad to modern empirlics
hrou.aescool-room. I a
ffl everything in thchistonnd
raditl of Egypt to inspire hcrDple
Hth Uon. Those mightypnu
J ruins are p&rpetual reflers
they oncq were thepm
- ed?
hen
et serve to protect
iweep. But as in
bay run to wreck on
11 1 . r-_?..,,,,f w.r in a #>ril<:
ai?iding'&jnu "w?" yliee Yonrth-olJulv oratThc
make it toe
i''^2SS3f^r?*5w ?w-?M0sa?a?r--?O ?etive roo,sivil^ti
S crowtn will be checked until thlj Tfpromise
Torte equivalent i. used again U
abanded with a
eens^Uef on thewe?
so that^e coulJV
fast,
?Visit her?
church. Be sleeping so
the rc?hr church time th*
would Plawakeahlm. Just as
he religion, of Ration already
ireak' up aud open
inter|"tt]on from w offenderaexarnr
variouaasses oi ?? notse^m bo
pl?of*hof wWcl^ part. Tbe
i ietwiina wn?l. emarrass
leaathkable, antt j* ^0 to igtract
ing buften euffi^n ^ |
the bfefalkcrs, an ^ nerv|8 and
gress dliscovirsc, perbap^teiroua
fid5^f?* to ffve attentio|?itbe
swci/r
the surface crust,
riiis have such a texture as to pre^
'Ttbt Pacing effect of rains, in fcficj
?hev are apt to produce more thai
ar richer soils which "run." A surfac)
oFrJsinff or mulch ot vegeUible matter,
rent
use
mlf planted alod the
Teiftbc driven bd nor will
the work of cojicst.
Nililt will
pause
antl imding ?
aubjeonder treatment, are uroie io
controhysical restlessness whilothers
are Uing. Th?s manifests self ju
varioivays?by w-auderiiigs of ic eyes
moTOitB Ihnhs, arranggeate of
the di, taking up aud jiuttir down
bookad other oh}ecta, and ftea by
iin asishingly large number f sensi
-1 aud othenve irell
ble, U-educateO
_nAADlC.
sinaU>erson ot
speafe,
I The presecc of a
condi'd peop> ? . tp_ncramit In an
utnoTevenennn4 .public
und often
not disteb you to go to the B4
churcb, tid so you missed hi
newpr^er."
"No, I oard hhu."
Hov uuld you hoar
know'juuiave been sound
time.''
?Ifo/erlcloHs, I hoard
provr it, Xvill snow you."i
And hc -rotc down at
dei intt various heads
synofffe o the lermon,
ing feuronts. This
eyeing t?Uic Method
0thC '-'utxhey all reci
the literal sermon."
?umor hoeing
arser soils can.
HOW NtTBO-QpERIKE MADE.?
litro-elycerine fade byfe action
Kneacid upglyccrimt a low
l""lZ?t?re. Tlroccss costs essen
an?'?v in the slomxture glycerine
lf e thing bg packed
rhouc opcrafi and then
lallv in i? ?j
*ith the acid, tithing hjg packed
The Possibilities of an Acre oe1 ice throughoifc opcrafi and then
\SD.?Xo man knows what these are 1 washing flic i-glycerii. from the
/e know that two hundred bushels of xcess of acid f water. Hiring the
bra Was once grown on one acre, and Process irritatiijiies arerivui oi\'in
.iat five bales of cotton have been made^g0 quantiticflie worhi?i rcscm
?X the same area of soil, but we do nut Me skeletons, fare so BMlthy.)?
now that the limits of production were Alien it is at Unshed afd bady foi
. ?itro-riycfis an ojfl^iid, hav
VW
tp0w win iuc um!? ui "p??"rn ?itro-gly
eached in cither case. fL; ?ncciWty
\Ve should try to find out. not merely Pg a
noyjdiscomo^^^
ltisUtobcwonderea^iat!
.Jnni?fltion pf icial in
i i ? ? jhrih thinWngabojttr
sity invention.?
w once heard Dr
rPaJ;ts differed with
-SI home, he went]
gjjd. lhc I)oct,or'
Siiicnt-for be w
Z$o have been ^
abging in figure
^rftic m tone
Is unneccssaryj
dcJl things be
ft3v where an)' rJ
ef& while in '*
jt i is able t>>
^ sUde hrsj^
ipcci
made it is en
of 1.61 FresblY
white and opaque,
much of a given crop can be,P?d^ety? \\rolouiiontac?itV the at
aud, but how cheaply il^pbere. it 4nd bed)u?s a trans
acre of
ihjc^grown. A big crop -nay no>
cases, be a profitable one
raueh to make it. The
ith Mie smallest possible
,and labor is what we mult ami at.
said before?and we wilh to im^
truth on the reader's mnd?out'
~* often poor, not so nuch bef
iir crops are small?aid nrnalj
compared with what th3y migj
^ause it costs too mucfe.:o mr
p\.must learn to make
i-? less labor. -To do vhf/?
over less ground, ani;,
skilKsupp^
It ^ parent amber It ha
priemen and
using it soon
to 40 degrees.
i-ivho
gCt'ri
Fahr?.
white'cn-staline. mnj jt
can not be firedjandjt
aavv'cet aro
Mnt head
to or even
lugh the
Constantly
fit 39
, J <?zcs to a
,,U!*fro7.ciwit
e during
OY Good Farming is Profi
taU?The best way is to look the facts
squfly in the face. This is one of them.
Pot?rmiug does not "pay." We can
notiolate ourselves if we would. We
wr in competitiou with the world.
Itu'nntiquated methods, mere plodding,
uncled labor, worn out, unfertilized
soi will not serve us against science,
ski labor-saving implements, and heavy
nnUring. On the fertile virgin soils,
th^d, rude, wasteful system may for a
wile, give the farmer a living by rob
bU posterity; but in all the older parts
ofhi; country we have got beyond that.
Ifve cannot manure our lands, adopt
tbbiist and most economic methods of
wtjting them, train and skillfully direct
ou labor, and ucie wherever, practicable,
imrcfcd labor-saving implements, we
ahil ?0 under in the "struggle for life."
five bushels of com to the acre, or
onj-foirth or one-third of a bale of cot
tof is rot a remunerative crop at any
prte, f>r crops we are likely to get. If
wt'enmot do better, we may as well "lay
devn toe shovel and the hoc" at once.
Itts trie elsewhere. In New England,
Nm York, Pennsylvania, and even in
th grea^ fertile West, there is the same
conpbint?"farming don't pay."
Eutgood farming docs "pay" there,
and itjiays still bettor here. Make a
bile o.cotton to the acre?a great deal
bitter'ban can be done? aud from
tacntyaye to fortv bushels of corn?
which s setting tlie figures very low
again?uid other crops in proportion,
and faring will no longer he unrcmu
ncrative
transportation whenfroz
- Every ^f^^S
nalncd Jones', BroJ^on ot ?g??j
while the balance^ the^na^e ?1
hello, there
"A
? Ddng a dense fog a Mississippi
ieambol took a landing. A traveler,
xiousMro ahead, came to the unper
?bed ^Sger of the wheel and asked
thebC^opped! "Too much fog,
s^er." "But you can see
th^ars. ovetVj ? ?y^ ft repiied the
urb>lC pilot ?,)X;ujUil th'c bifcr busts
we au't goin tiv- ? T,passc/gcr
went o bed satisKJ- /
? lhc fortune T^n^rvit fs now
no less than a ^fef^*^
growing. In I860-f^&&tv<%
Yng.andhe was t
our of his aUoWfl^A0^*
Hi\ present wca*
j use? by moralists^
-1 thaJ?"?nelvt 0f ^httjJ
The Story of a Thousan .Dollar
Bill?The Baltimore Gazette?ys: The
death of Josiah Cobb recalls ! singular
incident pf bis life. About 5:9 a col?
ored woman named Sarah Kic ly called
at Mr. Cobb's grocery and r/fchased a
small amount of groceries, g'iig him a
thousand dollar bank note ifcayment,
thinking that it was a one <?lar note.
Supposing that it was stolen,e detained
the bill and advertised for owner re?
peatedly; but, no one claiing it, he
invested it in city stock, fveral false
claimants appeared for theote, and it
was the subject of several lauits, which
terminated in Mr. Cobb retning custo?
dy. The history of one ofiese claim?
ants is as follows: Mr. Ob one day
was conversing about the ijney with a
man who made so many pA'cular in?
quiries that Mr, Cobb raistrujd his mo?
tive, and told him the wornJwaa dark
and had a large wen on tiJde of her
neck, when in fact she jyafi mulatto,
and had no such wen. S'?fterward a
very dark woman with wen on
her neck appeared from tBBaltimore
alms-house and professed tel the Sarah
Ridgely, but the fraud wiasily ex?
posed, and up to this timjfte vtfumn
who left the bank note W n0tJ)eeu
heard from. Mr. Cobb alle? tb'Wm
ey to remain with accumtjfd interest
until 186G, when it ai^ftjlt<\^J.
and he then presente<Af ,~tlie Union
Orphan Asylum.
Floating?Men arf}ulfl-Jied by rais?
ing their arms above wa ithe unbuoyed
weight of which deprel the head.
Other animals have ncil motion or
ability to act in a similafcnner, and
therefore swim naturally. |hen a man
falls into deep water, he vjrisc to the
surface, and will contirjthcre if he
docs not elevate his hand
his hands under water, i
pleases, his head will ris
f he moves
ny way he
give him free liberty to
he will use his legs, as ii
iug (or rather walking
shoulders will rise abovt
that he may use the les^
his hands, or apply thenj
sek These plain dired
mjended to the recollecti
lifeve not learned to swii
they may be found J
ous in many cases.
high as to
the; and if
act of calk
stairs), his
penalty, soon or late, in temporary or
chronic derangement of our health. The
meat, which is excellent in cold, may not
be desirable in warm weather; fish is
best during spring and early summer;
vegetables ana fruit are nutritious when
they are fully ripened by sun and season,
and not artificially stimulated. Nature
knows what she is doing. She furnishes
for every latitude the production fittest
for such latitude.
We need variety?not at one time, but
from time to time. The delicacies of the
season will not hurt us; but delicacies
out of season certainly will if long con?
tinued. The appetite so jaded as to crave
oysters in July, or strawberries in De?
cember, needs correction by the adoption
of the simplest habits. The palate natur?
ally relishes what nature has near at
hand. A simple, nure life gives appetite
for pure and simple food.
Perfect Independence.?All the
South needs to make it the most inde?
pendent and prosperous country on the
fhee of the earth, is to put every body to
Work at some useful employment?raise
oqr own supplies, and instead of sending
cotton money off for what can better be
made at home, invest it in cotton facto?
ries -thus .supplying, the.^majketsjof the
fwurl?" with themanufactured article In?
stead of the raw material.'
This is the wlole matter in a nutshell,
and whenever tie South carries out this
programme, it will become the most pros?
perous country on earth. This cannot
all be done in a lay, but we can at once
commence prepaiiog for it, and the soon?
er the work is begin the earlier it will
be consummated.
Georgia is an empire within herself,
and can grow and manufacture every?
thing she has use for, except coffee?so
great is the extent md variety of her
soil and climate. Sie could take the
lead in the great reforia. Whatever may
have been the best policy in slavery
times, it is very clearly tbe interest of
the Southern people to look now to di?
versified labor as the rend to wealth and
independence.?Athens Watchman.
Warming Without Fire.?If peo?
ple had no common sense about what
they should wear to keep them warm du?
ring cold weather, we might stop to tell
them; so the trouble is, tliey never think
for a moment, but, like a wild beast, use the
same, hide summer and wiater. People
go about the streets and aboot their busi?
ness half doubled over, looking like any?
thing but a man; go for hours together,
huddling up and shivering, quarreling at
the weather; quarreling at the fires,
which are not sufficient to warm them,
when the fact is, the fault ay in them?
selves. There is fire enouvh in every
one to keep him comfortableA if he puts
clothing on. Lay it on until! ^ ouHiFe"
enough to feel warm. Never* go abut
half irozen, or remain chilled fwr halnn
hour at a time. But if one feela rid
erven for a short while, he may get aW
fortable heat, not reached of a fin by
immersing his hands in hot water.Let
kvery reader try this, and very poopeo
Ue may find it a great economy, til/,
dress warm; it is better than firc.-?wt
nai of Health .
? During the war a Georgian sta'dto
Marietta with some chickens fo^le.
He met a squad of soldiers, an?iey
bought all his chickens but one 0*ter.
He insisted thev should take \> but .
they were out bf money, and uJdn't^
buy. The old man said he ha to go
.9? vto town with onlv one chip* and
was greatly puzzled" about iAt las' >
one of the soldiers said: "Olffn, I" f/
play you a game of seven ur* him '
"Agreed," says the old Th
Played a long and spirite^e.
last the soldier won. Toid n- '
wrung the rooster's neck aJ8Sed / ^/'\
at the soldier's feet, anf"/1^
swab-tailed pony and 1<*J h'
After getting some two 1^' 11 '
suddenly stopped, tur"*011"^.
rede back and said: 0u P,a-r
far fame and won the^r ,
h~J
?24
game and won the.T fa?}^
I'd Bke to know whatthc
put up agin that roost v
"No," he saida'^?1*1
c water, so^??*
' rtion withfe t^, n. v
sre recoup Qt/F
Seven men in
fraw lotteries
st one; bi
Te: