The people. (Barnwell C.H., S.C.) 1877-1884, November 14, 1878, Image 1
mm
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’ • » : " ’^ '■■'?" . ’■* V 4 * •* -.v- **•• ' * ^ * " V *.• ... ^.'Is*' " v . /• • , ' ■ •' T •'»;»
la writing te tM* r*^e on bnsinesn nl-
t^oar i>wn« *naPwtOflVcnnddriss.
inm Uit^rs lad comuinniwuion* to
And nhoald b« written on^eparnto
■befltn, »ad tti« oljodl of «*«1» Wcarly imTi-
Cat«d by noee»sary not* lihWn retired.
8, Artiolesfor pubiiCation ehould be writ-
tenlnn cleat, legiblo hand, and ononty one
gidenf Jfce page
4. All danges M edrertisetben’s must
reach hs ei Friday.
SKr
BARNWELL C, tt.. S. C.. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 187S.
NO 63
Soutb Carolina Railroad* Chatlotte, Columbia & Augusta R P.
/
CHASOS OF SCHfiDUiE.
r 1 Vtic,
ft
CHlntBsrow, March 1, 1K78.
'••‘‘fi ‘'t i
On and after Sunday, next, the South
Carolina Railroad wih be run as follow*:
r ron amvsTA,
(Sunday morning excepted),
Iveave Cnarlesion . . 9 00 a. m. 7 80 p. m.
Arrire Augnsta . , 5 l>0 p. m. U 5o a. in.
^ ran cotuMBu, Z--
(Snndiy morning excepted),
Leave Charleston . f» 00 a. In. 8 30 p to.
Arrive at Columbia. 10 50 p. m. 7 45 a. at.
eon cBAntraroH,
(Sunday morning excepted).
Leave Augusta . . 8 30 a. m. 7 40 p ra.
Arrive at Chariest>n 4 20 p.m 7 45 a. m.
Leave CMambia . . G 00 p. tfi. 8 Oi' p. in.
. Ar. Charlestou, 12 15 night and G 45 a. m.
Swramerville Train,
(Sundays excepted)
Leave Ssmpierville
Arrive al Charleston
Leave Charleston
Arrive at Summerrille •
Breakfast, Dinner and Supper at Bronchville
Caradea Plain
7 40 a m
8 40 a m
3 15pm
~5 p m
Vs
change of schedule.
CHABiorr*, Coi.t;WB»i A AnorstA R. R.
Ukmck.u. PasaKWKn DKrAitTMENr.
CdtrnnfA; 8. C. Jan. 27,1878
The following passenger schedule will be
operated on and after this date:
Mail Exprest UuittffXorth
LeftVo Aiiffusta ,,.... 6:40 p. m
Arrive CoJumbia...,...,.,.. .11:20 p. m
Leave Columbia... .11:00 p. m.
Arrive Chat lotte 4.58 a, m.
Mail fizprttt—Going SoytH
Leave Charlotte 0:48 p. m
Arrive Columbia 2:54 a. m.
Leave CoUmit la ^:04a. m.
Arrive Auguatu 7:05a.m.
Run dally, and make elose connec-
tioo at Charlotte and Ancusta for all
poiqts North, South and West Stopat
following named stations only : Fort
Mills, Reek Hill. Chester, Blackstoek,
Wlnnsboro, Ridgoway, Doko,Columbia,
L* xl««ton, Ratefibnrcr, Rldgj Spring,
Johnston’s, Pine House and Oranite-
ville.
/My Patrrngtr—Going Souln
n no. i
LerTe Clmrlotte 12:30 p, m.
Leave Chester 2:42 p. m.
Arrive Columbia...^. 5:44 p. in.
Leave Oolurphia.5:54 p. tn.
L‘*KVe OraniteVil!e......» ... O^l p. m.
Arrive Augusta. 10:36 p. m.
Day rasutngrr—Going Marti.
No 2
Leave Augusta 5'30 a. tn.
Arrive Columbia 0:35 a. m.
Cnnnvctsnt Kingvvffle daily (l^undays creep-
ted with day passenger train to and from
Charleston. Passengers from Camden toCo-
• i^rnbia can eo through without detention on
'ays, Wednesdays and Fridays, and
Columbia tn Camden on Tuesdays, ( Leave Columbia 9:40 a.m.
Thursdays and Saturdays by cenuection L o aVe Chester.. 12:15 p. ra.
with day passenger train. Arrive Charlotte.. v ..... 2:58 p. m.
Day and night trains connect at Augusta j X t„« i o ^,.1.^
i . .7 .. , j o a 1 i> 1 ' No*. 1 ann 2 run nally, an<t mako
with Oeoma iUilroRtl and rcntral Railroad. , ■ ^ ^ 4 ~ ^
This route is the quiches, and most direct close connection at Augusta and Char-
to AtUata, Nashville. Louisville. Cincinnati, i |o, '‘‘ for ^ ,n i 8 North,HouTh and West,
Chicago, St Lours and other points in the and stop at ail rtvulsr paee statiope.
Northwest.
T. D. KLINE, Hup’t.
A. Popk, G'n’l F. and P. Agent.
■.n-rKnw.
Night trains (or Augusta connect closely
with thefastmail train via Macon anil A‘u- ... r . ) ,
gusta Knilroad for Macon, Columbus, Mont FIRE IN,SUll | {from Ihe peculiar. JAray ia wbleii she
A tTas>hing:ton Flditor of f^aree
Obeerviitlon F.xprewncM IIIm
.VIind Upon the Pont Office lie*
claton.
[Wnshlngtim Capttet] '
It hns been lately decided by the
highest Authority that the husband
has bo right to his wife’s letters.
This Is wise. It is wiping out the
last remnant of the greatest brute
once known to civilization as the hus
band-at-cohimon-law.
This creature was a relic of barbar
ism. It came down to us from a pe
riod that ante-dates the birth of Mary,
the mother of God, when women were
regarded as something inferior to man.
And this in the face of heathen my
thology and Christian records. With
the heathens—grand old fellows they
were, too—Jove shared his power with
Juno ; and, while war and rou^ti work
of all sorts had male gods to repre
sent them, wisdom and the arts had
goddesses, save and except Mercury,
the god of thiev, s, and therefore the
deity in ami about Washington. If
we turn to the Hebrew chronicles, we
find that Eve, our flist mother, was
made from a fib of Adam. Therefore |
Adam was only the raw material out
of which this finer and more perfect
article was manufactured.
From the Same history we learn that
Adam, though strong of body, was
weak of mind and the women led him.
The. women led him into a devil of a
business, to be sute. Rut that came
from the lack of training, which Eve,
edl-hfr door in w!d an ax, and I gave
Dennis a devil of a baton.’
* Did you g**t your wifs?'*
-<* She wasn’t there, but Dennis was,
an* I gave oceashua for the docther,
praste an’ undertaker all at once, I
did.’
Our first client discovered, when
looking at bars from the county jail,
In contemplation of the penitentiary^
that it was a ‘dhirty dark,* anti not
the ‘Daniel O’Connell uv Amerlky,’^
sifter all, whose advice ho bad followed.
Huy n Home.
Fr*nci« > Ohronlcle.]
Horace Greeley'said ‘‘Go West;”
but. George Barstow gave better ad
vice In a speech ut Metropolitan Tem
ple. He said that every man should
own his home, if he cun. That phil
osophy which tells a man to drift on
over the ocean of this unceitaln life
without 3 home of his own, is wrong.
The man who does not own his home
is like a ship out on the open sea at
the hazards of the storm. The Than
who owhs his home is like a ship that
bill arrived in port and Is mooted in a
safe harbor.. One man should no more
be content to live in another man’s
house > If he can build one of his own,
than one bird should annually take
i the risk of hatching in au'dher bird’s
nest; and for my own paff I would
ratEt?F~be able to own a cottnge than
to hire a puiace. I often see men eager
to effect an insurance upon their lives,
nnd this is well—it is right. But the
man who owns his home has effected
an insurance upon his happiness-and
gomery. Mobile, New Orleirtis anil points in ,
the Southwest. (Thirty-six hours to New 1
The St. Paul Fire
-A N/>-
Orleans
Day tixins for Columbia connect closely
with Charlotte Railroad for all points North,
making quick time and no delays, (Forty
hours to New York.) -- ( _ . - — - - . — - .-
Thetrainson thv Greenville and Columb.a ^arillf' IllSUrailCe COIIlTiaiiY ^ culture, choice finite, such as pip-
andSpartanbutg and Um«n Railroads con-I t J | , , „ ,
Iject closely with the train which leaves
Charleston at 5tX) ft m, and returning they
was brougblput, could not have. And,
after nil, our dear old mother only
etid'*d Where bad little boys begin—in
robbing orchards.
Thanks to tne progress in pomologl-
atfca
ter first.!
Keren**
. JMaoooc*^.
th* writer, t
hut a* ft gnaruBty <
Addme,
OAIKIEL JO. U1IAMIIEKI.AI.VI
**DICTfr:l>.
Evidence Discovered of h 1m Cora-
pllclty la the Fumunv Hell-
Hole dwindle.
A Correspondent writing from Col
umbia to .the New$ and Oourtep, under
date of November 6, sttys: The
Court of General Sessions met at 10
a, m The ca*e of the State vs. Sallie
Williams, murder, Was tried ; verdicl,
not guilty. At the conclusion of this
cause the grand pury was calHM, and
a little ripple of excitement occasioned
by the solicitor handing to the grand
Jury (Julie a bulky looking Indictment
in the caso, of the State Vo. D. H.
Chamberlain et al., charging them
with conspiracy to cheat the State.
The solicitor stated that he had two
wiiuesseti—Messrs. Deri m as tiro and
Cochran—who would now go before
them, and if their evidence was not
considered sufficient ho had anothep
whom he expected to-morrow morning.
Judge Pressley said to the grand
jury that they had all doubtless beard
that the State, some years ago, had
appropriated n large sum of money
for the purchase of homfs fur colored
men. Ho told the Jury that theyraust
disregard everything that they had
heard about this land commission
business, and must direct their Inves-
ttgarioft- exehjeiveiy to determining
whether the persons charged la the In
dictment-, C. P. Leslie, D. H. Chamber-
luin, H. U. Kimpton and Mies G. Par
ker, pad conspired to cheat the State
by purchasing a tract of land in
Charleston county, for which they ac-
and years the Christian Church be
lieved that the eternal weal nr wee of
the sotil depended upon the immersion
of the human body In a bath or basin,
when the regeneration of nations In
the Middle Ages depended on tbs
preservatlonof dead bones or a frag-
ment of wood, these were all so many
attempts to sink ths spiritual In the
material. It was the story of ths-
Refornmtjon to tell that thn slgnifl.
cance of the sacred rites consisted not
in tbs material bat Iq^fee moral ear
sense, not Is the outward tokens, but
In the soul and spirit, that, work them.
This is declared In tbe Bible from the
first to last. Wherever the mind of
the worshipper, whether In Catholic
or Protestant churches, Is fixed on the
ootwai# Instead of the essential, the
(Incidental Instead of the inward, the
temporary instead of the eternal, in
that proportion the original eplrlt of
the Gospel Is exchanged for the Judaic
custom. Wherever, whether in Cath
olic or Protestent churches, whether
In heathen orChrletian lands, the mag
ical gives place to the reasonable, the
holy and living sacrifice of human be-
isg to God, tfiere, Trom the rising df
the sun to the going down of the same,
the true incense of moral principle Is
offered by which alone roan can hope
to prevail wiih his Maker.
jSENmU
• .-'•'•hV;;
* • .-Tri
except
the heppiness of his family—which is I
ua much to hljE, UJUa jatol-ta tlgioj tmKA!®"*'- •»«?. «>* "tom-
- Ti“' T ; edit, to the State ns having been ptir-
ab his own, and conet itutes his own. II , B 1
chatted at a much larger sum. Jit other
words, laying a-lde ail prejudice, they
were to determine whether there was
connect in aanic niftniwr aitMlie train wlmU
leaves Columbia for Charleston at 5 30 p m
1 Ail runs Railroad train oonnccisnt Newberry
on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays.
Bine Ridge Railroad train runs dai y, con-
hecting with up an 1 down trains on Green
ville and Columbia Railroad.
, 8. S SOLOMONS,
Superintendent.
S- R. PtCKrNs, General Ticket Agent.
CAPITxiL $1.704,881
THE SAFEST COMPANY INEi'H
UNITED STATES
WILMINGTON, COLUMBIA AND
_ - iSHUSTA*.RAILROAD. ,
Gknerai. I’Assr.xoKn Dkfabtvkxt,
CoLUMtiiA, K.0., August fi, 1877.
The fidloving Schedule will be operated on
^and after this date:
Might Expres* Train-Daily.
[4118, bell-floweru and other savory
sort of apples, are more common and
not so precious. Therefore! when a
boy invades an orchard and is caught
at it the owner contents himself with
fanning his little hay window with a
W e suppose that at the early
day referred to, when our first, parents
t real choice article of
bell-flower was worth ten cents apiece,
trod in heavy demand at that.
However, fo Ft turn to bur mutton—
ooixg soiirn.
Leave Columbia ,
Leave Florence
Arrive at Wilmington
11 15 p., tn.
2 40 aim.
. tj 32 aJm.
GOING SOL'TH.
6 00 p, m.
10 02 p m.
1 2 5 ii m
Leave Viltn ngton ,
Leave Florence -
Arrive at Culumbia
ThigTrain is Fast Express, making through
connections, all rail. North and South, and
water line connection via Portsmouth. Stop
only at Eostover, Sumter, Timmonstillo,
.Florence, Marion. Fair Rluff, Whitevill* and
(Flemington.
Through Ticket* sold nnd baggage clieck-
cd to all principal points. Pullman Slefpcrs
on night trains.
Through Freight Train—Dally, txcept Nun-
dayz.)
GOING NOKTU.
Leave Columbia ....
Leave Florence. ... *
Arrive at Wilmington. . •
GOING SOUTH.
5 00 p. m.
4 80 a. m.
12 00b
r
Leave Wilmington, . • • • 2 30 p m,
Leave Florence . . • . . . 2 85 l m.
Arrive at Columbia . , - 10 10 a m.
Local Freight Train leaves Columbia Tues
day, Thursday and Saturday only, at 6 a. m.
Arrives at Florence at 3 30 p. m.
A. POPE, G. F. AT. A
J F. DEVINE, Superintendent.
Will underwrite on all kinds of property,
renl and personal, in Burinv !1 county, in- j slipper,
rinding gins, gin-housps, mills and inachin
ery. c>Mon ginned and ungiuntsl at the low- ,
eat current rates. , r j trntiPgressed
n. M. THOMPSON,
Locri Agent, Willistpn. S. t\ j
N. B, Policies issued in best English Fire J
Companies it prefi rred, confined to dwell-j
^ and a totiungjid, ram the hunhand at
! couttnnn-iaw was—we say that the
claim to a wife’s letter on the part of
the husband, lately disposed of, was a
remnant of that barbarism which, re-
mirding the women ns Inferior to the
men, had the y. ife entirely absorbed in
the husband. She was regarded only
as a process through which children
could be brought into the world, and
something to hav* enough individuali
ty to be beaten. Blackstone, the great
law commentator, gives us the sized
stick to be used iu such punishment.
mg houses, stoi as and cunten**.
yone‘27-tf
Barnwell Lands f r Sale
\ FEW choice Cotton PlaotHti te<
IX can be bouglit at reasonable t aO's,
sitnaLot near WllHston and Biackville,
between the South Carolina Railroad
and the E.iisto river. For termH ap
ply to U. M. THOMPSON,
o<24-tf Wiilist"!!, s. G.
MAN.”
W. J. PARK
“THE LAMP
HAS MOVED to the Hoichkia* Store, op ■
positeTbonuw’R. Kh rles' and the Fountain,
and next Store cast ot F. E. Salinas’ Grocery
Store, and ho will be glad to (>ee hiBoldpat-
ron* and' as many new one* ns may desire
Good and Cheap Lanins, Crockery, Glass
ware. Kerosene Oil, and his usual variety of
Goods needed by every house-keeper. No.
1 Kcrosiue, 18c. to UOo. a gakon ; and also
sells the
SAFETV L
COLLAR.
that makes any lamp absolutely safe.
octl0-3m i
Magnolia^Passenger Route.
PORT ROYAL RAILROAD, \
Augusta, Ga., June 1, 1878. h
Tbe following passenger schedule wilUe
operated on and after June 2nd ; i
NIGHT PAMINGBR TRAIN.
Going south—No. 1, Daily.
Leave Augusta via P R Railroad 10 U0 p i
Arrive at Yeraassee viaPRRR 2 50ai
Leave Yemassee via S ft C R R 8 20 a i
Arrive Charleston via 8 ft C R R 8 20 a
Arrive Savannah via 8 ft C R R 8
J. S. TE1Y & CO ,
BtJOCKSBORB TO
TERRY & NOLEN,
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALERS IN
Fleh, Oysters and New York Poultry,
Northern and Southern Produce.
Charleston* 8. C.
Orders solicited and promptly at
tended to. oeilT-Sm
Don’t Fail
To go 6r send your orders for French
China, White Granite, Glassware,
Lamps, Chandeliers, Ac., to the
A CASE IN FCINT.
It was in this connection that we
learned, while a law student, that the
intricate difficulties of the law were
not so much in the rule as in the ap
plication of them. We were In the of
fice of an attorney distinguished iu
-■>.
his day for his success before a Jury,
• specially when he had an Irishman
for a client and some ot that witty
people on the panel. One day a Hi
bernian, somewhat the worse or better
from whisky, came in.
•Where,’ he cried, ‘is the Daniel
O’Connell uv Ameriky?’
* He is at court,’ we answered,
i * Bad luck to that. I want him.’
‘ You want some legal advice ?’
‘ It’s the same I’m aft her.*
* Well, I’m a lawyer ; I can give you
the advice.’
‘ You a lawyer 1’ he exclaimed, with
-some contempt in hla voice; ‘be me
soul, but I thought you was a dhirty
dark H ^
* What’s the matter ? Ou what point
do you seek advice ?’|4ire asked, with
much dignity
* I want me
have seen the hemes of the people in
foreign lands ; I have heard them talk
of their condition and lot in life, and
this is the main theme of * bought with
mankind everywhere. As I listened
to them I discovered why it i’s that the
Switz r in his hut In the Alps, where
the limit of vegetation is reached and
the winter storm howls and rages
around him, is happier than the Lal
lan tenant on the beautiful plains of
Lombardy, amidst the bloom and fra
grance of perpetual summer. It is the
the consciousness of the ownetship of
a home, which, no matter how the
storm rages, nobody can take from
bint, nnd which bo fafi make happy in
spite of the storm. I would say to
every man, buy a home aW own it.
If a windfall hns come to you, buy a
home with it. If you have laid up
enough by toil, buy a home. Buy it
and sell jt not. Then the roecs that
bloom are yours. The jessamine and
the clematis that climb upon-lbe porch
belong to you. You hav# planted
them and seen them grow. When you
-ue at work upon them you are work
ing for yourselves nnd not for others.
If children be there, then there are
flowers within the house and without.
Buy a home.
Anderson Intelligencer: We notice
la the News and Courier that Hugh
Kane, one of the notorious Ladd mur
derers, was arrested in Cbhrleftton on
last Saturday for fighting in the City
Hall eupiftre, and taken to the guard
house, where he was released on ball.
It will be recollected that Kane was
wrested by the United States authori-
tles fir-tn the State and taken Into cus
tody by the United States MatsHal.
commissioners, or as the advisory
{ board of the land commission, con-
1 spired together to cheat the State out
I of the difference between the price
; they actually paid for the said land
‘and the amount they pretended to have
psid, as charged tn the indictment. If
tlie testimony then produced before
them was sufficient to convince them
| that-tho defendants should be,tried by
i a (e-ttt jury for the offence charged
against them they should find a true
: bill, and, if not, should hold the matter
1 over
witness would be sent before them.
I
Messrs. DcSaussure and John II. Coch-
| ran were*then sworn, and the grand
jury retired. The trial of Ketlah
Burke, for arson, was then begun.
The grand jury this evening return
ed a true bill against D. II. Chamber-
lain et ai., indicted to-day for perpe
trating a laud commission swindle.
The solicitor stated that he would en
ter a nol. pros, as to Neagle and Par
ker. It is expected that requisitions
will he sent on at once. The testimo
ny is said to bo conclusive ns to the
guilt of all the parties, Chamberlain
included.
% %
Kxtract from Ikran ftiunlcy'n ft*-*’ #e are glad to hear the keynote of re
enough evidence before them to war- j charged with murder, he has
rant a trial of the. defendants by a ! no UD, J >'®t h© is ut liberty
petit jury, for having, either ns land j 11,1 ^ f° lin d lighting in the streets of
Cherleston. Redmond, the alleged
trafficker in ardent spirits, Is, without
trial, declared an outlaw,'and Kano,
pue of the alleged murderers ot young
Ladd is, without trial, set at liberty,
and this by one of the best govern
ments the world ever saw. The con
trast does not speak well for the ad-
rniulstration of law and justice by the
Federal authorities.
olTour BTa
iv* Sav*
.. ria.Cent’l
P R Railroad
i p m
F> yJs Y B Rallroa ,
„ * \ja V R Railroad
Stoll,
’tick
9 56 a m
3 35 a m
4 68 ant
6.15 p w
th >No, 2, Dally
_I«-prr . 11 00 p ra
1^- yV RRR. . 123pm
Leave I* 8 , p o n R . 1 00 a ra
< «r»
Leave J*® % fl R /2 8 40 a tn
Arrive g ftn d C R * 8 30 p m
U * yt f via S and C R * I 20 a m
^ rri, *yvia P R Railroad j* 00 a m
1*» T « Fj* p r Railroad 6 40 a m
7^ *v
Itah without change. ^
““invited to connection* ot
*nd Charleston
the centre oi
ear* run flora
rtj of the dtp.
lO.fiJinffk
287 KING STREET,
(Opposite Masonic Temple),
CHARL.B8TON, S. C.
Goods packed and shipped without
extra charge. wpl2»8mO
SAM’t a. MAKSHALL EDWAHP C. MARSHALL.
juliu* J wascoAt.
SAmilL R. MARSHALL & CL,
« Importers o»
Hardware, Cutlery. Guns, Ac., and
Agricultural Implements,
314 KING ST., CORNER SOCIETY,
(Sign ef the Golden Gun).
AMO, 55 and 57 SOCIETY STREET,
Charleato*, *• C. 5
over the leaves of our Bla<
law gives a man his wife
can find her.’
‘ Is that so ?’
* Even so.’
• But Dennis O’Bryan’*
»'y, turning
^stone, ‘tb«
Merever he
erlock-
iolence
to-wit,
Agents fok Celxbratkd Watt Plows * Toa <Hd r
ed up.’
You can use all n
to recover your lost pro$
your wife.’ •
* An’ kin I smash his dko
ax?’
* If necessary, certainly.’
‘ Be gorra, hut I’ll do it.’
And our ©ileot hurried
about an hour after he retu
saw at a glance there had
eral engagement. His broken
bloody mouth and biacl
showed that his skirmish Urn
driven in ot his centre. He had
fered in his stores, for bis old hat
gone, and his clothes, ragged
irert In tattem.
‘ I done it,’ be said.
Be the holy poker I did. t
Central America Couvulftcd.
New York, November 6.—A Panama
lett-r, dated 3t. Salvador, October 20,
says: At 6 o’clock on the evening of
October 2J a severe earthquake was
experienced in the village of JrreaTmpft
and the nelghborifig towns In the de
partment of Usultan. Nearly all the
houses i^ Jacauape^ were destroyed.
Many families were burled in therpins,
particularly in the outskirt* of the
town, where, the means of escape were
confined to narrow streets. The last
advices say that ten bodies had been
recovered and many more are suppo
sed tn be under the ruins. The towns
Included in the disaster are Gauda-
loupe Ntieva, Gaudaloupe Cblnameca
an«i Usultan, Thecase, Rio Del Are
na! and Santiago de Marla, which is
entirely ruined trad some lives lost, a
condition in which are also found Te-f
capa. Triunfo and Sanbuena Ventura
in Neuv Gaudaloupe and Chiaameca.
The ruin is complete.
Ijabor and Capital.
Her® is a shoe shop. One man in
the shop is always busily at work dur
ing the day—always Industrious. In
the evening be goes courting a good,
nice girl. There are five other men in
the shop who don’t do any such thing.
They spend half of their working
hours in loafing, and their evenings in
dissipation. This first young man by
and by puts out from the others and
gets a boqt and shoe store of his own.
Then he marries this girl. Soon he is
able to take his wife out to ride of an
evening. The five laborers, his former
companions, who see him indulging in
this Httie luxury, retire to a neighbor
ing saloon and pass a resolution that
tberi is an eternal struggle between
labor And capital.
Wbeb&U9 thk Wit?—Tbe man who
will deiibft^tcly 8 it down and make
stupid puns,paying on words, ought
to have his chair covered with pins
head down,- ep that btfcould see the
point without ttyin* hard for it What
comes along without being sent for Is
w»—and a joke ov pun made to order
j* a vary poor ene * variably.
The Memphis Appeal appears in its
old four-page form, and announces at
until to-morrow, when anotfter ,t,e columns, “The
Epidemic at ab Eud.” It hopes that
by the Otb of November the business
men of Memphis will be on the tide of
prosperity again, and adds: “The
c'aims of life are so many or so press
ing that but little time can be spared
for the Indulgence of the luxury of
woe. The living claim and need our
instant attention. Happy for us that
it is so. Were it otherwise, grief would
be a calamity only surpassed by the
plague in which it had its origin. The
tread-mill of life will notston,
ter who fall*. The raulf^ Wmiied to
day are strengt^v - to-mojrdw.”—
Thiels iF-'Vfjriit spirit in which to
the great calamity, and
Dual ol’
mou ua the
MlW~
... —r^eor--
All things apto, bur flesh are ftinde t
In that,- descent and being—to our minds
In their ascent and cause.
“Do what you like with my body,”
said the ancient philosopher, “ my
body is not me. Of myself a much
higher reckoning must be made.” And
this bring* us to the second part of
the Biblical account of man which we
find in the New Testament and which
has a response in all human lan
guage. What is it that lies behind the
outward frame of man ? It is that
which the Bible calls, in the largest
sense of the word, his soul, the seat of
all those intellectual and moral facul
ties which makes him feel what he is,
which, even when we look into the
face of the living, we$lo not see, yet,
when we look into rile face of a dead
friend, we miss. This the bible calls
his soul or self. In an outward frame
we bear the image of the most degra
ded men, while iu the spiritual, inner
most being we share with God himself.
It is the spiritual man which is con
stantly going forward. While the
bodily part of man remains the same,
the intellectual part has advanced im
mensely, Our happiness hinges not ou
what our ancestors were one thousand
years ago. Tbe real destiny of map
depends not on the advance of his ma
terial and Intellectual grandeur, but on
bis moral nature, on what we are, on
what we do, on what we admire, on
what we love, on what we hate. There
is something greater than tbe resur
rection ot the body, and that is the im
mortality of the soul. There is some
thing greater than tbe immortality of
the soul, and that Is the ever-living,
quickening, vivifying power of tbe
spirit. It is this doctrine of the supe
riority of tbe spiritual nature of man
above his physical nature which, as it
is one safeguard against tbe material
ism of the scientific lecture-room, la
also our first and best safeguard
against the materialism of the altar
When for a thorn*
turning life add hope pitched in a tone
of so much strength and foitltude.
The Dresden (Teno.) Youman chron
icles ths death, at that place, on tbe
21st, of AdatO Caldwell, c?lored, aged
107. He was a slave, and thepfoperty
of the eider General Wade Hampton
until the close of the war of 1812.
Adam wentwiththeflrst8outh0a.ro.
Una Legion, in the war of 1812, as host
ler to Col. Hampton. At that period
he was forty years old. At tbo close
of the war he became the property of
James Caldwell, by exchange, and was
brought to Middle Tennessee. In 1840
Adam became the property of Gen. D.
P. Caldwell, and tn i860 he became the
property of Hon. W. P. Caldwell, pres
ent member of Congress, thus remain
ing over sixty-six years In the Cald
well family.
“♦◄I
The Pennsylvanians have to elect
over one thousand officials this year,
and they have three thousand candi
dates to select from. It is thesame
way in all the other States whenever
an election is to be held. It is safe to
say that the office-seeking profession Tert t®^k)® n k lb_%
has become a burden which can ftafely* 4 t®rm -two mllefc
be dispensed with. In a republic the
theory is that men must be called from
their “bon<st toll” to office by ths
people. Tbe fact Is, that the “ hopeet >
toll ” Is left to taks care of Itself aod
the man pushes bis way into office
ofteoest not tbe choice of tbe people.
There mo over:
Kentucky
The peanut crop
Is expected to reaobl
A bee stl«g can 1*
by rubbing It with «
leaf. •
Moody, nbe revivsftnt,
pounds. His constaol i_
sip tad sinners ftffwsn to j
him.
Charleston, fiC a/bndbri
cratio government of WadeS _
has tile fiue»i negro regiment in 1
world.
Cholera is sweeping
and Southern Morohoa
completely paralysed and h«
ore dying of starvaOoii.
Hr. Wm. Martin, oft
us that be baft tied sotfte fifteen
drefl ma|rimonis| knots
long ministerial earser.
A young lady abobt to’ I
farmer, said: “Mother,:
a gardner.” She forgot to i
owing to tas match, the gardener;
his situation.
“ Sandy, what is.the state of t
ia your town?” “Bad,Ur ;
There are no Christians
and myaelf, and I have my
about Davie.”
Up tb date the applications fob tan- *
slons on account of tbe late war
amount, la round numbers, to 500,000,
260.000 of whljh were made by men
and 240,000 by widows. *
|Tbe Spartanburg and fishetffift Rail* ’
road has been placed in tbe hands bf
Col. James Anderson, as temporary
receiver, pending litigation in the
United States Courts.
Mr. Wm. H. Vanderbilt has bougfcfc
the four years old Maud S., that trot*
ted recently In 2:17)*, making the beat
record In tbe world for her age. The
price paid was 321,000.
‘‘Heroes are scarce, but the Briut
who can make poverty respectable Is
one of them.” Measuring by tbft
standard, South Carolina can boaat 'Of
many heroes and heroines.
“ One-half of tbe world don’t ka«w
how the Other half live-U’
gossiping woman. “Ob,, wefi^
her neighbor, “ don’t worry abbfck it;
’tlsn’t your fault if thpy
iRub the point'of a
magnet, stick it through a botkj fired
It into a tumbler of water, and you will
have a cheap and reliable compass, ad
the cork will float and the needle witt
then point to the North.
The New Orleans papers i
that Mrs. Jefferson Davis L
ill, and that hsr hu^^^^ 4 taHfuUy
broetrated by and oars fof
his wife, wuh the recent i
of hLr-tfb, Jefferson Davis, Jt.
Nearly 8100,000 appropriated fori
benefit of the penal and cfc
stitutfons of the State baa bees i
in full, and Sooth CaroilPa does j
owe a dollar on tbat score. How
this compare with Radical tale! i
John Chamberlain swore’ iff
court in New York, a few dftysi
that he and his brother paid
Butler while he was In
New Orleans 81,800 per i
privilege of keeping thftlr faro
In full blast. „
The yellow fever peatfienca
forded persons Who ililaire le
ft chance to be thought;
was easy to get their names]
lently on the death roH.
tlves from justice ate known
endeavored in that way i
suit. One of these tras the fit
treasurer of Bloomington^:
Italy is the only dvUtaed,
tbe world free from debt,
balance in her treasury of i
florins and redaction in
to result. At h time
European governments Are
their taxes and their War
Italians may well <
pelves upon so cheerful a j
Farm property In New
'depreciating sadly, as
wag
from
Ths Notorious 14 Azoa.”—The boat
which carried so mray negroes to Li-
uerla last Spring, and which was the town,
ark of all the dupes of tbe Liberian ]|fifi| forthi^l
Exodus Association, turns ep missing,
It seems that she left Cbarkstoo on by
the 23th of August last for London,
aod has not been beard from since.
The question now arises, “What haw)*
become of tbe Atorf*
station, containing
of good land, wiih
cost 97,000 when they '
1873* An offar of |U,OOOi
fused for the pre
be sold for 93,C
purchase mousy
gage.
A light
&
In
nal, Jack Frost
%
3.
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SIB
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