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•a. f PATTERSON, ir-AX-LiAVP^J; BAHVWELL O. M„ S. C. , Will Jfive pronifvt attention to all bu»- iiiAM entru^ied U* bU care. January 9th, 1890. FRANCIS F. CARROLL, Jn, Attorney-at-Law, BAMBKBG,S.C. Offlee over E. C. Folk A Co.’a store* mar.20-t . rr' ;: .. Gao W. Croft, Aiken, 8. C. J. B. BuaCKUALTF.R. Barnwell, 8. C. A.TXOWNI^.YH ATL.AW BABNWELL C. H., S. C. Will practice In all the Courts of Hits State and in the United States Courts. Mr. Croft will attend the Courts of THE GLIMPSE FAMINE OF THE FUTURE. JhM tor • day jroc Crowed tny Uri‘'ti dnh tnvk. Pot my ijO^hier irmwiu. lu *mktan ahame, W«Dt V«ur britfbt way, and loft tu» to (sli back \ l ’: )r ' On my own world of poorer dsed and «fm. TO fait hnrk ort my meawr world, and feel dimmed town, it a brief pati.-o of labor•» sullen from both of you," was the answer of Boyer, TheEnglishmaa wm MB-, ^ R aven rteln, a member of the: ^ Brttieh aeaociation for the adYaooement j vheo ehe^iMo womanhood, den,iu of • cionoe - h “ be<m «““r a « n « ^ Treatment of in* Eton KIM. It has been seriously proposed that American boys shall wear Eton suits— suits tlidt make any hUtttan boy look like an Ostrich. T’be Anglomaniacs will Cntln*«r PreMullment. ^ Charley Jenkins was as engineer cm ths Baltimore and for many ywrt, and he had many hairbreadth escapee. Hi* run was between Garrett, ind., and science, probable increase of the human race on • on wr> ■ i r\iT» u. ^ In sudnkws dnyttshf w»w the par* mm roil. Saw mountain* pillsrtn* th* perfef } *k Then Journeyed home to carry In his *oul The tomiordof the tUflPereoceUH bed*®. —WUUam Wataoo la I.»tndon Sp«< ui.tur; adopt these absurd costumes for their Chicago Junction, O., and nearly emy- children, if they have excuse enough, -j body along the routs hatte to knoflldm LT.' ^Toftaatortoof h« friend., du took, imt (OU of A»erto.oi,fta jm^perioallr. ffi.-frtoa» co-aid toll M. -- the Edwards for Africa. , rfi ii fTi r drnrUT not Anglomaniacs, nwent to school j eturine eyerv time bv the peculiar 4 ♦toot/ derote her life to .. 1 with some. One day a lad came to and whenever^ the engine was in sight at pogaladoD upon thC|l^Ml.be^ W ^ ^ hat . Murmur, thbre would b. « w.vo of the b.nd u . Monrovia when sbe-did, the U-1 I and whispers of snrprUe and ,Us»pprovnl i recognition of friendship. 1XU engine, ^ ^woridL^Z ^ 'were heard when no entered, and bmks the 750, wae the beet on thedivWon, and the population of the world of ^.pme-1 of ^ trom boy to boy. | if , fast rnn was to bemads Jenkinsand t* inr>rt»,ic W v P rv ver- u At 11 o’clock cams recess, and precise- j the "CO were sure to be uu the call board ° ' 1 'y •» *«• «* on<1 » P“» 11 »h«" wa, a ! fer it. ' , ><T f , aoouxe pe cen . -j-* nru-o —» fi, a «,rs«,or.f «Ti>«n fh« One day the. old engineer was takes lory'll frown. .Africa, missionary work among the Bassaa Air* berian anthori ties refused her permission »reo- 1 ^ ■“ barked in a frail canoe and stole away. I After four days and nights on the ocean mmmjm -t Whreabo, bipg ot nil the BitiHSH. died ^rthe ebunfry—a cioth around the loins } b 1 *'"** # "" kl “ AN AFRICAN KING. The section of the country still open to riot. That was the moment when the ladappeared with bis Httle '‘plug" hat, ill, and for Weeks he lingered on his bed, at his head town in the interior of Grand Corah, a trading station of Liberia The Bassaa are a very numerous and intelli gent people, inhabiting a large district on the west coast of Africa, and WUre- abo was one of the moat interesting oh r- actera on the coast His father was Boyer, who reieiatedly w«**d war to Barnwell County and all mattera uf lin* prevent the Amertco-Li'neiiaua from set portance wiH-receive the personal at " ~ tentlon of each member *f the tirm. may 29-tf T B. ELLIS, Jr. Surveyor and Civil Engineer. Special attention (rtreti to the eompotation •f water-powrr*. Irvt linR and drainage. A postal card addressed to me at Martina, 8. C,, will receive prompt attention. octOl KO-lvr thug ht Grand Bassa. Boyer, however. ?c!2 z victim to the vengeance of the Li- Oerian laws, and died a bloody death, bnt not before he had instilled hatrrd of the civilized blacks in the mind of his •on ami heir. ^ After Boyer’s death Whreabo attempt ed to take control of the government of his tribe, bnt he was prevented from do- ^■fjjraw.t^ssn cloth —began her journey for the chief town of the Bnnsas. Arriving at VVhreabo’s town, Jacinto found him busily preparing for his war like expeditien against his enemies, but when she in tier beauty presented her self before him and told him who she wia; hi* purple changed. Instead oi proceeding to war he gave orders for feasting and general rejoicing to cele i brate the return of his long lost bride. ! Jacinto accepted this position, and used her influence in such a way that WhreaK' ; forgot his warlike intentions. By do : green she so influenced him that he dia- | missed his other wives. She Induced l him to look upon the Liberian* without hatred, and so changed him that eventu- W tho bottom of my • dtoerto. The total »re a of *U tho habit- heurt - for n lm ■ able lands in the world is over 40,00(1,000 j ““"f- ^ . tht }* , of wjuare miles. Of this area the fertile £*« h.wa..*a*l..l» ? IM„tto wny and ( or cooperatively fertile tamls are over - . , mm ?ni.f A T. i«,.» ««, oqcnonnft— r — That arttcla went Immediately Into use lands or stewi 14 000 000 and thebare ! 08 a footb,Ll1 ’ and in leM tbnUjymnntefamily sanrouadeii the bed ftwl watched Lbumla’ loth* plswas theban , had become n shred of black t^fliS with Ureatkit^cagorncsa for any sign of liui Ui»'t teU why. deserts 4,000,18®w|ti*re miles. ^ [ iwatobuiilC^firBMTrsWM^.gover him on to life. He urns sadly missed along the route, and the peculiar “toot" of the whistle wae heard no more, for, although did 720 was kept running, there were other hands at the throttle. The crisis of his illness came. The .JW. .P™i®W'£P st outen lutsHn’ o* '■ ' klvar Cy ihe Mltletm KJchUt Be la ^ - daisies ] Ba itowU*l in* ' ' oaoetaP ; Bui I’d ewmehow bobbrn* »«* i Hui l 1 Wanderin' In the ftower t Watch in* little ^nuw *tora* groeia* yelter, Tho hr^riM a-*ilight* I n.i ,r. Catchfn up fcflecttfMia e*1 a-brewin’, | KliwU r irawkut' ai '«*ii au* Or a hirin’ henr t pr, E- L. Harley, DENTAL SURGEON BARNWELL, 8. C. Offera hi* profe**lonal nerviers to the cUUertl of Baruwell aud the amtemtHd. country Will devote Mondays. Tuesdays and Wednesday* to ofllce practice and Thursdays, Fridays and Haturtlays to calls in neighboring towns and the country. Re fere newsThe F»‘* l| U r nf the Dental Department of the University •f Msryland. " OFFICE OX M AIX STREET, East of the Dost Office. docJ-1 y DO YOU WISH TO BE BOSS —or vov*— QWH G!N HOUSE? . TUL> BUY THE Thomas Steam Press j A bno*t all ex|mrt aru< '.**». euch as ml. — AN!>— | skins earn woo 1. ivory and ric.* are g.ah _ -j ___ L-ivd in th* Ltv**a district, and Ibis fl Id Seed Cotton Elevator, i ^ »<•"-' h-m-t., uu-a ^ meant that nil citmni'Tce io thi.« aireo (It 1* the m«»st perfect system In ti«e. j Unloading cotton from wagons, clean- lag and delivering it Into gin* nr stall*, t otton doe* not pass through Kan and Treas, requires no pulley* uur belt* It j aavee time and money.) 1 ing no by bis brother Taipu, who will be i ally, from Udng that colony * enemy, he remembered by many old trader* a* Tom Will. For month* the Bxi.^a aav ago*, in factions supporting respectively WbreaUi and Taipu, engagwl in a gue rilla war Neither aide gained any de cided advantage. Taipu, however, had always been more or i« Americo-Liberia ns, no became a bulwark to protect it from its foes Finally she won him to Christi anity For many years tbia woman exerted an influence for gtx»d over the savage chief, bnt some ten years ago she died friendly to the i Since then Whreabo l.aa never left his when the mer | town hut aged, blind and feeble, (>*- chants of Monrovia dem mded that the tie:•riv wailed for the final summuua.— troubles which interrupted trade should , Now York Sun end the Liberian government exerted its j * power for his benefit, wuh the xj»iiil.t i „ l»*e m*u*t^. «■ .i * wtoi mm~c-.-zxartrzz'-^' *:rZ„ < hissirg under t‘:e tuiatletoe is a relic ! of Scandinavian my fhobigy L<>ki huted L.Jder the Apollo of the North • and ns 'everything that spring: from ten air. earth and venter,*’ had l*e*-ti To the rteppea he altbcatos a popula tion of ten to the square mile, and to the desert regions one to the squanj mile. The brlk of the population would, there fore. have to subsist on the. 23,000,000 square miles of fertile lands. Compar ing tne density of population—in India f75 to the square mile, in China 295 to MtMi ',H square mile—be arrives sF the concla si on that a world population of 207 to I the square mile in the cultivable regions would be a fair estimate. This 207 persons to tho square mile I will be reached in 153 years at the pres ent rate of increase, when the total pop- • illation of the cultivable area would be GjMO.TOO.QOO, and the total number the earth would feed 5.991,000,000. Any farther Increase of population must either be provide*! for by ft dimiau- * tion of Kubei.-Oenee to each individual or , tho fence with a yell of triumph aud the boy went home bareheaded and in tears. American honor was main tained and the injurious influence of British custom effectually defied. That is what is go ing to happen here every time a boy tries to wear Eaton clothes. Spare him, j*e — v..v ... parents Consider his Wmes, if you don't the eqaare mUe aa^in J»pa^to the bi3 ^n.^ .nrookljn SIi* WualdM’l DrlHl® Him. At a famous and charming salon a cer tain western woman, just now making a little stir in literarydom, was the hon ored recipient of marked attention on the part of the gracious hostess. Quito late in the evening there waa a -that'TTUregTio"vrnsHnr*h to an neylnm in tbebtndi. while Taipa took tats father'* town, his wive* and all the Bhumm conn UT Taipu was not long (mrmittedXo enjoy the dignity which h* had usurtM-d TronWe aross from ernehie* inflicted on LibHria’a cUUr-u* by the Vie people, a warlike trila* fntuter north, and diverted the attention of the Li Isrian government from the affair* of Ba**a This was Whrrabo’a cpilortnntty. aud he took ad vantngn of it lie endeav*4fd to oust but brother from power, and sneers* fol lowed hi* arm*. It was not many weeks before the deed body nf Taipn. swathxd la many bandage*, suiod mnromylikc in a corner in hi* chief widow * lint aw.tit ing imrial. aixl Wnmibo began to rule over the country L The fact that Whrcatm ha-1 eecursd ; fiowcr in BaasaUud gave th* Lihcrum mendiauta exuelient r*-*wetn for ai.ura '•worn not to hurt thewdcatial favorite, \ the wicketl t.jsrit made an arrow of | miathtoe. which he gaveto idind Ilovofy j to teat The (kid of Darkness ahot the j arrow and kille*l B.UJ-*r. Ikuug restored | to life at the nrgmt reqoeat of th# god* ' and goM in* mistletoe was given to tnc g<slde«* of Love to keep, and > •very one who psskmd under it received a ktaa. to s!h>w that th# branch was th* , emblem of love and nnt of death Toe > hnbbub at th# door, on<l in atrod# on# of New York’s moat prominent journalists and^liplomotiats. Tall, military, whit# haired, ruddy cheekad, distingue, in Ij/ome tmprered m,.lo cf ..redariW tif” 111 ” ~ hr (rrYfin* doVn OX fuTureSTn, rat. f" ,‘*±^1“* ‘^LA* below the ,teeth rate Mr. Baveaitoin', | ja ’ t ,to1 ™ * wa3r ,rocl * n 1,, ‘ IK rt, ‘" *"■ staUatica do not concern us of the pres ent generation very vitally. We can 1 leave the solution to our great-grand* j children. We have increased and mol- | tiplied very comfortably iu apit# of the | a change. The stillness of the room was oppress ive. Nothing could be hoard aavo the regular, heavy breathing of the sick en gineer. Suddenly he arose on bin elbow. He rftared wildly around, and his eye* looked tike a madman's. Then he sat np in bed. clutched au imaginary sheet of paper, and gasped: “Tiffin; train five; engine seven-twen ty; prepare to meet thy God.” He sank back exhausted and fell into a quiet, easy sleep. When he awoke be was on a fair way to recovery, but by that time the news had reached the place I that a terrible accident bad happened; small 1 that No. 5 had collided with a freight; that engine 790 was a wreck, and that i the engineer and fireman were dead. Charley Jenkins inu*ta that he had a ; presentiment from heaveu.—Cleveland ' WorlCT^WT • Sneak!*’ np an* down the creek, i tkeftshea. ilsor.ia In my hand i Sol bin’ t»u' h to talk < rummer, ir* every i.krw*er et I’d rUltfH 4triHU!a#*r— Then Jc^' a-ln|i 0 ’ d4«ra A^ain, In ibe riite, M~ •; Oaten iK'nrln* o’ th* to Uir glrcf O* ibo earth aa* i Contenled Kite an* happy, water »iulv*>r, but I cauX lull why. -Waller VI. Iltuvltiuo lalOmd : •trw is a parastrical plant 1 »b»s*>i» the braiubrsof uinny r* In nmtltern Fnrnpe It Ta/bott & Sons' Engines and Boiler, Stationary and Portable. Old Do- - minion Com Mills $\2^ to $$(X>. Talbott’s Saw A\flls,. Improved Friction and Hope Feed f20*» in $ooo. Lummus and Van Wiukl# cot ton - fDottonTTesses'. Weoff**r8aw Mill men and (Jinner* the most complete oiitflts in the 8tate, and at bottom prices. V.C.BADHAM, CilCNTSUAL AOTCNX, COLUMBIA, 8. C. Th« Talbott Engine is the best. apr 1C tf . SPECIAL SUMMER SALE. One Thousand Superb New Pianos nnd Organs, from best makers only, to be sold during August, September and October, 1891, at Spot Cash Prices, with payment November 15th next. No in terest. . * Linn jrmilJ be brought to di vaster Events soon made it plain that Wnreabo intended to hold no p»* > icefu) rtlations with his civilised tartwneni II# l«»i»t**.l the facton#* of Libenon merrhonts, drove the trader* from their rfUtiAusfan J uemed an edict that no prodne* o( any kind waa to t* sold to Liberians by any of his people nndcr pain of iustunt death. The “palaver’ ground in Whreabo'a town became a theater when-m w»*re perfonned m.iry bbMNly acts, fTnclmla of the follower* of the dead Taipu daily lost th-dr heads, and for week* the sav age chieftain held high carnival wan death, until, foeliug aHPUro. hr* gathered hi* hordes around bin: nr l prepared to deeoend on Grand^ljgfty.fnr f e*.)ibi|*i*e— : oT ^rTvrngtne’Liberian acttlors Into th# often «»n the on it with pe< niur reterenc*. from it.; cun nectom with the oak, the Cawnt* tie# ot ib«*ir divinity, Tntanna. nlta sevui#- tolian* twaXi iikntical with th# t’uwai cttoti f' -J Piil. or the fcnn The plant ii* %#r) rarely fm.mi in Bmtland and noviiwre *n LcLaral If a bounds in aouw part* of England.- Liuoklyn Esgle ttli.** >k »«>l;jr 1 hoNtfh Mwirljr AO Tears 014. J. Mis Euurta Bo^twick, onco known as , the Amenoin Jenny Lind, hna probably retained in r ro.c# to a greater eg# than hary other public ringer She la now ^eveuty-uwvcn year* old. but her voice ia j t»ti!l pnre *nd fn-eh. and she aiuga lu ad uurahie tune and tune. She ia the daughter of au English violiunt. caiurd (liUin^linm. and D*t*an her career on tlu* ecn«i*rt staf:# when only twelve year* of age. By toe time she waa twenty ithe was widely nod favorably known H^t roue mid a rang# of three octave* Theo-l^re Thannw then a Tfrililf T<iit*!Ti v!,,!(go^t. ii”i n ■ i I lllia»""VlW lugubrious warnings of Mr. Malthas, and perhaps they abo will inultiply aud increase in epitd of Mr. Bavenstein. If any race most go to the wall, it may 1 be confidently predicted it will not be the white race. There will be a Dor- ; wtnian eonriral of the Btteat. The weak- j j er races will disappear before the, stronger. Tue Indian will nltlmatelr 1 vanish from this oonunent, and the Afn- i can lu hie native land Uhls fair to be [ dec nn .I tod. The trudoncy of popnlati m to the cities 1 most also be taken into account in any couipsriaon of people to areas of reason able subsistence. Concentration in Urge • ; towns always tends to iccreaaod produo | ; tion wilhm a wide dreoit around them, i especially in the line of frufts and v#g»- table*. Two bun-lred j-.-at* hcncs the , j desMirt lands which Mr. Ilsvenstein re-, gar Is os incapable of cnlUvatiuo may ■ bej**ow as the r*jee. Already irrigation ! h working wonder* ia the unpromising j soil in some of oar wee tern statea Mod ern science will u^nch many ways of io- ; civ.uung the food snppiy. # Mr Ravenatoin’s speculations are ; phtnribl* and his statistic* suggestive j enough, bnt th# figures of today may b# utterly faMflod by the figure* of 200 years hence. Many things may inter- j ] reuo in the meantime to k#ep down pop- 1 nlalion or increase the food supply. Th# i extinction cf the race by starvation is s very remote contingency indeed, and t Mr. flavenstein’s Irtj year* bid fair to! stretch out ind«>fiuito!y before that con tingency occurs. —Baltimore Uua. gngement a moment to pay hi* devoir*. “But,** said Mr*. , “now that you are here, yon mnat meet Miss , of ’ whom 1 was telling you." He—My dear Mr*. , a thousand ! thanks, bnt some other time l^jdisli be • delighted. 1 really have not a moment j to spore. I—— She (fairly dragging him arrma the room, if so rode a verb may express so dainty an action)—CoIoikI , this is I Mho ——% of ——the coming woman. Mias — twbone keen ears and ready wit had graqied the situation, gracious- | ly bnt deprooatlvel) >—Pray, do not let her detain the going man, Mr*. S ,j and preaenting hie much in demand YV>*r« an Kagll*!***** I* Speaking of Englishmen in New Yprk suggests the recent plaint of a very w#U to do Uri Usher of the female sex now in this city. “Yon know there are now no j distinctive resorts for English people abroad." sard she. “W# oned to go to Scotland, bnt the rich Americans over ran the country and gobbled op every ( available estate. Then we tried Brigh ton; but, blees yon. the hotel people there now won’t look at ms Englishman where be conflieta with an American They next drove ns oat of every fashion able resort pu th* ponthM&t, bully the Riviera, our apodal stronghold. We have no longer the exrhuhrs social sway anywhere ontabie nf England, r “It na*d to he Uml the Bwtaa and Ger- liighncev the sitlewise curve of a whsL.. alionMer, she rontiau 1 the labtlriona 1 kMM - watering (Jece hotel* wore mn snetainment of an Emdlahman lu con- vereation.—New York Warki See These Bargains. sea. The Vi#** in th# north at this time, en couraged by the intriguing English of S4erm Leoue, were offering such stub born reriatance to the Liberian force* that the Liberian government found it impose,b.'e ty do anything for the relief of its citizens in Bassaland. and it was decided to issue au order that (Jraud Bassa be abandoned anti all Liberian cit izens leave the oonutry. Ou ^the day when it had l>een determined to make this order public there arrived in the port of Monrovia, the Liberian capital, the bark Edwards This vessel came from England and brought a beautiful negress, who called hereelf Jacinto Boyer From Jacinto's earliest day stirnhg. Incident* marked hei life. While little more than nn i-nfant she hud Imhui stolt-u from her parent*, who wore Mandingoe* and sold to Portuguese slave traders. The vessel which was bearing her tc Brazil was captured by an English gun Jill, mi part in l:»r concert*. • bb# was married iu 1836, bnt did not retire from the concert atego. For a nnml»er of yHers she was the soloist of the New York I^Uharmonic society. She hoa never sung in o|>era. and the wonderful preservation of her voice ia t« be attrihutod partly to that, aud part ly to the care she has observed iu her diet and mode of life. —Exchange, Onr Two Orno-e Stnt«s. OU from tli* rorpolM. The porpciws hilled In winter are the fattest and produce most oil. The largest size mordure about seven feet in length, tire, feet In girth and weigh about 500 pounds, liuch A (wrijoiso yields from six to seven gallons of oil. The blubber of a big porpoise weighs about 100 pounds ai:3 is ouo and a half inches thick in summer and two in winter. The jaws of the porpoise yield a su perior qttulifcy of oil. When hung np ia X* Trlr* m Xfnmnn'n flMdg«Kty Two m#n stood tu front of th# sbow window of a Wabash avenae milliner} concern looking at the styles and guess ing at the price*. Of oouree neither had any sort of idea a^xuit tlie articles on ex hibition. Then they went In ami naked the floor wakaT bow near they bed come || to gneerisig at the prices. After she had tol l them ou# of the men asked: “ Why don’t yon pat tho price* on year food* the sitae a* c’.otbkrs do on what they exhibit ia their windows?” “You betray an ignorance that 1* par donable under the circumstances. Here ia a hat that we sell for $1.53. Do not j faint—there are hats for women that can f l>e bought fur that figure. Suppose we put that (Tice on the hat and dtepinyed it. No woman would ever purchase M because sb# would be afraid if she did ] that her neighbor might have Aeon it and mr ii.'Tr?^ of the pririlcges of a woman is to de ceive her sex about the cost of her hats and bocnets.’’—Chicago Tribune. ohiefly is the jut#rests of the English traveler. Now the American has it all his own way. There are now more American* living In rillae about Flor ence, Ootno, ftJtns, Breeden. Lucerne and the German spaa than Eogliahmun. Even Paris is gt-tUng to be dominated by your conntryuieb. Now, 1 put it to yon, what are we going to doT* “Come to America," said L “Her#, at leaU, tho American Is 'small potatoes and fear tn a hill.’ Here An glomania rage* worse than the pi cur o- pueumonia. Come to America, an hap pj, outlawed, dethroned people of an effete civilization, and come with c-mfl dene# and cash -especially cash. Here Ton’ll find a newer growth in New York to fall down and worship you",—New York Herald. the sua it readily drips away into cana In the United Statea oranges and lom- provided for the purpose, the quantity of is r.re produced only in California and oil thus procured, however, boins not The ons r.re produced only ■ Florida. The orange crop of the latter ! is practically out of the way before that of the former is ready for the market The California orange is of slower growth than the Florida product and docs not decay so soon. The orange sea- ' son in California lusts five months, be ginning Jan. 1, and it will be prolonged ] in future, as the people are planting 1 Valencia oranges, which do not ripen i till July. The lemon is more sensitive oil thus procured, however, being more than half a pint to the jaw. oil from the blubber gives an exaeTent light and is in demand along tho co'vu for lighihoiuo tuio. it has no offensive odor. Porpoise shooting is followed at all . , _ , „ seasons and in all kinds of weather. Ot,. ^ " n J 1>™ women a calm summer’s day the porpoise may ■ ’X^er 06 ’! in tliein. Mr. Yonn^ had lost MarrleU th« Fwinilf. A etory cf a Florida man who married three wivea from on# family is going the rounds ns something remarkable, but there was a family in Maine consisting of six girls/and of the six three married men named Bjckwell, three married to the name of Young, one married a Liver more and one never was Yh/uried. An other paradoxical feature ia that there were only five husbands in all. Tho explanation is that two of the Bickwells died, leaving widows, und Mr. Young, who had two of the sir,t* rs before, took one of the widows. Then Mr. Livermore took the-other. 8o that there were seven weddings in tho fam- Bcautiful Upright Piano only $223. Superb Cabinet Grand Piano only $250. Fine Parlor Organ only $50. Rich Parlor Organ only $«5. '' ' Superb Mirror Top Organ only $75. N. W. TRUMP, ! COLUMBIA, S. C. ROBT. C. MIXSON, SURVEYOR AND ENGINEER. BLJCE 1LLE, 8. C. ! nttfntfnfl drpn to l and »mr tattentiou to oil bnei* mjr care, v fore she reached her destination, and of all on board tho only ones saved were the officer in charge of the vessel and Jacinto. Shortly after the Englishman and Ja cinto were cast on the beach they we.r# discovered by the savages, and by them were taken to Boyer, at his chief town in the interior. Boyer was then tn the midst of his struggle with the Liberians, and the civilized man who fell into his power was fortunate if he waa killed without torture. _ . - Whenr the Englishman was brought into Boyer'H presence he raised his plion to strike him, but Jacinto sprang for ward and threw her little arms around the intended victim. “No! No! King," she said, “give me the white man." The sudden action of the little captive arrested Boyer's arin Ail the Ba*sa women are extremely ugly, and the beauty of the Vie girl so pleased the chi*-f that he hesitated. Whreabo then a lad of ten years, was an inter ested spectator, and when th# young girl made her plea his precociona eye* discovered that she was fair, and struck by a sudden fancy to earn favor fq her sight lit joined her in petitioning his ■lailief to spare lL« tTMTlTiSTuallfe. “T'W strtmgw maiden Hiall be thy > wifs, and the white man he • olave io be heard blowing a mile or two away. If you wound a porpoise, and there a re any sharks around, the shark is very apt . . Man’s Two Reputation*. I am always interested in what may be called the two reputations which each man has; one is his public name, the other his iiersonal or private Eminence; the one is the distinction which be has among people, the other the regard pkht r^' The region in the vicinity of the north- P nt down as carrying a cheap, unreliable ; to him by his own immediate sot or fol-r5 combination of works.and case some uu- lowing. Archdeacon Farrar has a great boat, and the prow was turned toward ! to froiil than tlie oran ^ e - and il is l >ro * : to sharo your booty with yon even if he Sierra Leone, where the human cargn (luced with more diiru ’u]ty in Florida , doetn’t devour it in toto.—New York was to be turned over to the English ai than in California, for the rea- | Recorder. — j lb critics. This slaver was wrecked be- 9011 lhat U i e f ? ra * er 8tHte is moro ™bject to frost.—L. A. Sheldon lu Forum. Tli* “ItluneMter of Hie Gulf. ,, A Sweeping Charge. Niue men out of every ten one meets, if the possessor of a watch, can safely be ern extremity of the Gulf of California is inhabited by a rare and terrible crea ture—a member of the lizard tribd— called the “Maneater of the Gnlf.” He is hardly large enough to warrant bis awe inspiring name, being only about fifteen inches long, but is one of the moot poisonous creatures known to natural-. ists. He is a member of the lizard fam ily, some akin to the famed Gila ^ou ster, .and his body is almost os brittle oa j glass.—Bt. Louis Republic. principled tradesman has palmed off on' reputation among the ordinary people of him as a good watch and timekeeper. , America and Great Britain, but scholars Tho tenth man, if he has purchased a i look upon him with much of stfkpicion really good watch and timekeeper from as an accurate and profound exegete. some reliable jeweler, has paid about 500 1 Bishop Westcott, however, has. a small Ito«r Dog* Arm fttals* I* Paris. Dog stealer# In Paris have two prin cipal means ot getting bold of the nni- i# liberty Lo U al lowed, the hours that he takes an airing either alone or with a servant, and make their arrangementa accordingly. They sometimes prowl around a honso for a week before obtaining nil the informa tion they need. When they learn where they can meet the animal, they attract him by some sort of bait, or make him follow a bitch, which they lead with a string. In a narrow street it iaeaay to approach th# dog aud pat him. if he i* not very savage, the offer of eometUi.ag to eat ren ders him confiding; tho thief, who ho* a slipooose ready, passes it around the dog’s neck, and the game ia bagged. On th# boulevards and in the public parks, where dogs usually follow their mastep or mistresses without being held by, a cord, the thieves always use a second animal, and as soon as the dog comes near enough to the decoy brute the lasso is thrown and the gallant captured.— Cor. New York Epoch. TW# R*rlte*l ClitM’s As might be supposed, I Hint is aligned to the I Kra inmar. * Boy*' *>c*Vi*rul centurie* a coun^lcil fn<*n the larger’ tus and Priscian, and they in'Hily known by th# na or Doaet*. a' term which -Plowman." The* word the contrary, was as tion with I^stin stndie# H*i«ne#. »• wi ll «* #veu wuh sometime# spokyn of ee j A very commonly need schoo monaster 4 .#* seems to hare “Consolatiob of Philoenphy"^ inal, of conrerk bf B*#*thins, of leajd; a frsguwnt “woahl b# for’.d even ia the ma vent library.*’ Tht i sihcst besdr in exprewlr for hoys b I Aidlwlm’s “D* Ahii;r-uailb«», which i*f th# of it consist* of i cr and pupil, in the i popular in th* ci-otnry, and n work* as Mr*. Venerable Bed# ts wrlUr for the yeoaf, Review. “We< mother sides the other a patient, “but fid* thrieas, and prog7V**ed w# are much het than were our _ great many of the notice that yon are draff, and 111 many dollars on aiid you are worse. . yon couimenoed. Let me •grnndmotbtV faiU. Go to a < one wife before he began on this family —Manchester Union. HH| . Ull'.' Not Afraid to Umpire. “They tell me, parson, that you’ve consented to mnpiro the ball game this afternoon between th# Squash Hollow Baptiste and the Zion Brotherhood. U that so?” “Dat’a de Gospel trufe. sahl” “It strikes me that's rather a inrecari ous position for one bf your calling. lip ‘Now, looker yer, Mister Man l I hain’t no prize fighter, ter be sho’, nceder I hain’t nnvver v.uikked in no quarry an got mix’ up wid a bins’; but a genter- man er my periession dat’srumpired fo’- per cent, more for it than he should have reputation among the people. Probably t . een ’lections, wliar de a r was not one in twenty of those who read this ' ( * Ht paragraph ever heard his name, but the fiih ■! HitF half <>f it in warm a h#a 1 thot onfhly. B vnla of three months fie" *’j won't be annoyed with more."—New York done, and this is the very reason why the other nine men carry such remarkably bod timepieces. They cannot afford to respect in which he is held by scholars is pay the extra 500 per cent, heretofore nee- 0 f the highest.—Chicago Advance, essary to secure good works and a war- l There is a curious Instance of an echo at Tatenhill, Staffordshire. The tower ^ of the church there has nn echo that re peats five times the syllables uttered at the centrum phoniemn, which is about ; seventy yards distance. Whispering galleries can scarcely be considered any thing bnt odd items in onr sacred edi fices. Of these there are examples in Gloucester cathedral and St. Paul's.— , -Gentleman's Magazine. _ . . ■ - ...I. —- - .. - The republic of Houduru is very rich £m ' ^ A survey of thee# fur*-«te estitnates the '▼alaeof the treoof thla variety which *• 11 for Market at $800,000, .OOF- ranted cane, aud are therefore swind’ed. —New York Truth. If Tour Shoes Arm Wmk. . When you come home with wet feet, don’t throw aside your boots to get hard and moldy. Stand them up, put tlteui in shape, and then fill them with oats, such as they feed to horses. This will, io a few hours, draw all the moistur# out of the leather, keeping the boot ia : shape meanwhile, and leaving it soft i and pliable. The oats can be used again and again. This is a relic of the tone aader AflBcul tie* lad la wm0> er the ITeesnt generation has no coacep- turn uf. —Ladies' Hotue Jounul Queen Victoria’s Spider Dress. In February, 1877, tho queen received from the empress of Brazil a dress woven lers’ u u’liu^wid razors dat do ve’y dat yo’ dofre ep *9sorfy got chop np ini silly bubs fo* dey git half out de motif, leimno tell yo’ dat akin# o’ chap liain't gwint* tremble ’bout rumpirin’ ober dose yer ebbyday baseball erfa’rs, ’deed he hain’t, sah!"—Boston Courier. entirely of spiders’ webs, which for fine ness aud beauty is said to surpass the most splendid tilk.—Notes and (Queries. Taking Lemtons frwm Papa. A ^few York father, who in common with moat of the men of today .settles a J great many of the trifling affairs of life it Can't nm Helped. j by tocsing up a cent, received n rather Twyrn—What makes the wealthy sharp rebuke w ' people ia the boxes chatter so noisily? I woe inc Triplett—Money talks, yon know.— daughter of the New York Epoch. undecided on •Oh," said Mim Edith, after U»e < Ilr.minify Ran# In Peculiar humanity ransl certain daj* you will notice a i number of tall people. . cr.ios eyed people. On other the noticeably *hort p< itml n*rs. Then one day i observant will say, “What a i tiirsy of the crippled, the maimed, the dwarfed, tho formed there are out tedayr you are coinmentiug on it a* along and then another and the idea makes you thirsty.- Herald.. • - - ’ Dislikes Vk-vatops. It is a peculiarity of Mr. Clarence 4 Seward, president of the Unkte that lie will never rido oa tho < road. He prefers the conservative 1 car, and whon th# street < rmuiiug he waiks. Mr. Sews an avv^r4ou to passenger elevat buildings. It is said by ckw t friend*that theonly 1 he will trust himself iii ia th# ooei U nion club. His office In is on the third floor, aud thensh up aud down stairs.—New W*" 1 * ; 1 “ r A new method of am t , pieces of steel is to heat them a* 1 as pcsoihle^ and when at a red them between two pieces and screw them up in a vise, burns info the boards, wl gether, form an air light m cool the steel ia fc oughlj annealed. Some have so charming a 1 to l«ad you toTihink tl^^ them, tno only Observation may moke you ion the mahttsr which charming. tender age of eigi the matter of eh archgoing. s, • Ikwfoinl burglar! “tel break tat Vwnnit*. I *aat ii *r*''