The people. (Barnwell C.H., S.C.) 1877-1884, October 14, 1880, Image 1
—
Rates Advertising.
■ —
0nt9 inch, one insertion ] ^ $1 00
“ eech siil>4cqufnt ineertion. M) cenu
Qnerierly. eeml-enuuul or ywrly cuntraeta
ma«i«;m Hbvnl terms.
tout met *<Wnrtijtug le |*<i/nb1c .10 n/*
stef tirsjjn—rt^oh nnUyy Aii.i^y.u. .i8|i T i
I No cornmuoicKtion will b<f ptiblishfil uh J .
css Hccompouieil by tho name aft J a ldrose of
lh^ }y r iiar,-*Hit <icceH!iarily for publication,
but as a »uaranjy fff good f a i r h,
AJireesj TUK ■
• * * DwnweU C. k., St ft
VOL. IV. NO. 6.
South Carolina Railroad.
" p
CHANGE OE jCHKpCLl.
,* Op Day PaesengeV—Mail.
(This Train connects with Tra*n from Co
lumbia at tirauchnllc.)
Leave Charleston , 0,00 a m
Lease Columbia. 6. W a m
' ** Dranch rille 12 6-\ p m
** Midway 12.31 p m
” Daaibcrg 12.42 pm
*i!» ti rah am s - 12.04 p m
" Ws 1.10 pm
“ Rlaokvitle MO p
Klho 1.3A p m
WilHston ' 1 4tf p m
“ Windsor ^ l.Od p m
“ Moutmorenci 2.*2f p m
“ Aiken 2.4(1 pm
Arrise Augusta 8.40 p m
Down Day Passenger—Mail.
(This Train connects with Train for Colum-
. biaat Hranchrille.J
Leave Augusta
“ Montmori'iioi
“ Windeor
‘ Wfllfston
“ Klko
Dlaokville
“ Lee's
" GrahaniU
Uautberg
** Midway
** Uranchrilie
Arrive Charleston
Arrive Columbia
Sioht tsntcss -Ur.
Leave Charltsion
Leave it rati dif ilia
Leave Ulackville
Arrive Augusta
Dow.v.
I^av* At;/nsla T 1(1 pm
Leave tllackvilTe ( 11.20 pm
Leave Itrancliville 1.30 am
A rri ve Charleston f..fid a m
Couoecta with night Trains at IJmnch-
villv t«an4 from Onl.imbia.
/tUiudv asu accoMnuOATiex—Ur.
Leave * liar lest on T.Jii a
Leave Klaekville
Artive Augusta
8,(K) a m
ft 04 a m
0.18 a ra
TLft Ala
M.(>2a4i
10.11 am
10.28 a in
lO.^g aw
10.58 u in
_ 11.07 a m
1J 17 a in
11,50 a m
2.]-> p m
.5.17 j* m
10. lo p in
*2 2i 1 a at
a m
^8 80 a in
tie riTm 1110.
H AS BEEN RECENTLY.THOROUGHLY
.novated, [ircpai'aiory to the convening of 1 '
Th0 September Court
New. Inkge and comfortable dini’ng room
and oIRce on the basement floor.
Rooms large mid airy. Attctive se'rvifnts
and the tulilu furnisbed with tin; best the
mrU'ket aflin dM ^ .
Ample StaTilcvootW rtnd attentive grooms
on liiuid, -
dtsiiit ©. m'mim,
Jan*)- PROPRIETOR.
A. CUDWORTU&CO
Manni’acttlrers
-apn—1
WHOLESAf/R DEALERS
— IN —
IlHitlwart^
Iltirncss,
Oollhra,
- \Vhips, ttC7
15'i Meeting St., oppositeCliaiTcstou llote!,
an lit- , CHARLESTON, S. C.
HORSES! MULES.
BARNWELL
Jsset aw ol'Old.
sheet*', aod the ehfeet •< each elierty
*. Articles for pnbVicalloA shoald he irrii*
ten la a dear, legible haad, Md «a only oaA
aide of the page. ^
l AH changes It adf
reach a* oa Friday.'
Juat as of old I The world r^Ils on and on;
Tho diy tiles Into nljrht-'night intmlMWu
—Dawn Into tlu*t—Wirough oouturlcb un-
told.
Just AA of old. .
Tho turbid streams still
or with
winter
Time loiters not.
flrvws, , •.
Its In ink or whit ) With blouuoms
snown; *
Itstidaor warm with spring or
oo!d. .. , r a—.,
Jusc as of old....
Lo, whard Is tho b“glnnlng, whoro tho end
Ofth’S p**rp|oilM(f skoin of Hfo, my friend?
Ood answers with a sllenoo of puro gold.
^ust os of old.
TABERNACLE SERMON.
A i>im o(Juki: uv «r.A. t. i>k
* W ITT I’AI.HAbJi:.
Ill
2.»h p n.
U. 15 |> in
Puwa.
l eave Augusla 4 .2-tam
Leave Llackvllle 8.48 .1 m
Arrive OerleMon fi.2t)p m
t'onntcis al RranchvUle with Trains to
and from C.dvimbia.
Th-day Mail and aighi Etprvsv trains
run daily. The aceuianimlAlien trains run
daily, eseept 8uniUys. Sleeping car* eu
ail ike night trains. On Saturday* and Sun
day* round trip tickets are sold tu and ftom
nil station* »n the road at one #r*» cIas* fare
Inr^he round trip, gomi till Monday noon to
return.
D C. ALLEN. 0. I\ A T Ag
• JOHN B. PECK. Gee I SupT,
Md^OdUa PjLNAffisvr Rpsie.
PORT ROYAL RAILROAD, >
AtarsTa, Ga., April 4, 1M0 1
The fdUwing piMenger acheduie will be
operated ou and after mis date :
Belloc 11
He! Joe
Allendale
Alleadals / a 4J Up
i»a 1 tv raancvnim rastj.
^joing South
Down
4 12 Up
10 on Down
Tirst Marriage on Itwfifrd—The
B edding fii I lie 4>arden of Edcu—The
Enemies of Mutrimonj. .
This is no v bono of my bone and flesh of
my Mo&li.—jUouqbUsJL.U.—
Mortiiuig without a elotid. Atraos-
phwre without a chill. lAdia^o Withoiit
a eruinbtrn? leaf. Meadows withont
a thoru^ ?lt morning for the world’s
Qrst wedding. Itahali bo .iil church,
the great tecitd* °f a world, sky dom
ed, mountain pityfred, sapphire lonfed.
The sparkling watyrs of the Gihon ami
the HidiMref will tuake tho font of
the temple L;uks. fotrlns, and gold-
ffnehes will chant the ve Iding march.
Violet, lilV 4 and rose burning ,Incense
tu the morning sun. Luxuriant vines
sweeping their long trails through the
fore, t aisle. t’pholfITcry of a spring
morning.' Wild blasts standing out
side the circle looking on, like family
' servants from the back door gi.ziug
upon the nupUiU. The eagle, kiug of
birds ; the locust, king of insects ; the
lion, king of Leasts, wuitit^. Carpets
of grass like emerald for the human
pp.tr to walk on. Hum of excitement
ns thVrte always la before a ceremony.
Grass-blades and leaves whispering,
and the birds a-chalter, each to his
mate. Hush nil the winds, hush all
the birds, hush the noises of the wa*
ters, for the King of the human race
advance- with nis bride, a perfect man
lead* to the alter a perfect woman,
and tears of morning dow stand in the
eye* of the vi »ieta, and Adam takes
the iound band that had never been
worn with wotu or utung with |>aiu
luto his own stout grasp ns he says ;
This Is now bones of my bone ahd
flesh of my IL-eh. Tumults of Joy
bteak forth, and all the ires of the
wood clap their bauds, and all the
' galleries of the foroat sound with cat of
and chirp and chant, aad the circle of
Edeulc happiness is complete, for,
which every quail hath uiwwerlbg
ijuatl.ivud every tlsh answering Hah,
and every low 1 answering fowl, and
evriy beast uf the forest appropriate
cotupanion, stlaat iuan, the Immortal,
1:4s for mats woman, the IrottorutV.
Maine-1 oil the second Tuesday morn
ing In May of the year one, Adam,
| Hist man, to Eve, tho Qrst woman,
! high Heaven ctnualiog. Away with
the course notion that maitUge Is a
I mere civil contract. It la a Pnradfs-
six-tliotisaod-years-ohi divine
and all the laws
1 e*»* Asguvia
0 OH r m
Arrive M ) raiu.-v*
1
50 4 III
l.r.»»* ) em t*-o«
2
SO 4 IU !
Arrive Svr.no.h
ti
85 * iu
l.etve 8*v iaaall
4
lu • m
Arrive J*«keo*rille
3
15 • lu |
Arrive I'bmrle.luu
8
(Ml • m
).e*v« 1 vi**»* «
2
20 • iu j
Arrive Hewifon
•a
•e
45 * in
Arrive 1‘vrt K->v»l
Goiog North.
4
UV • ui
Leave Port Loyal
11
00 »* m i
Latv* Beaufort
11
2-1 p iu
Arrive \em***ee
1
(N) • in
Leave J*ck*oDvillt
8
<iO • ni
Arrive S*v*nn*k
8
45 ■ m
]4*v(8*v*aa*h
P
t*‘ 11 T*
Arrive YVhuvavec
1
20 * u
Lmv* Cbarlartoa
8
201. in
oft * m
1 .e**r Y<m*-Mre
n
Arrive A Of net*
b
UO * Oi
I have just returned from Lexington,
Kj„ wiifa the best lot nf Maddlc mnl
Draught Iluraea ami pLntnliiHt^Mules
that 1 have ever btought to this mark
et. Prices will advanec mateinilly later
in the rea.-ou. and :ill tiocrliug good
slotk, sill do well lo buy now.
I’RiAii hi nx.
Wanted
—BY—
G. E. Steadman,
Heal estate agent,
Dlockville* So. Cn.
rise Farm v««iaif,ing Nvc or *ix bun'lre-1
*<T*m fm*i alt# 1-.SIUM Ulel.
llir** •m^ll farui* siiliin too miles of
(bis place, wiib some iiuproveiseuis.
For Sale !
One Farm, one a*4 a half wiles fr>m Wib
lietotl. 288 acrea.
Teu sere* fj.lcr cultitatisa, two-thirds,
«f tbs tract pari rnftnn laud. () U r »uiaii 0 ' 0- b
baildiag, eislwl asd ban oa the place, rx-d i 1 ‘ u ' , uU l, ‘*' Uw-
well of water. Well tiu.bervd. «u.J nUcksmue, of before Hlackstone, can-
low leads adapted to rice saliure. pi ice ' 00t H rr r '1"Utely many two hnarta
low. Addreae G. E. aTEAPMAN.
Dlack viils..
J, W. HOLMES, Ihsrnweil.
W. II. PHILLirR.
W Uliettm.
Sewing Machine Depot,
dominant, you all know there they
deeplse polygamy. Whe^e nolygaray
t xletu thero may be a houaef a larppt
house, and a epleadi 1 horn
home. Huppoee feur, or flv^ or ten,
or twenty, other queens trtod to sit
upon the tame throne with Victoria—
how much prosperity in England
would thee be? Just as much aa
there will bo happiness in any domes
tic establishment where more than
one wife tries to be queen,, God In
tended woman to be man’s equal, but
in t he polygamous state that is impos
sible. The whole implicatlop is that
it takes ten or twenty, or thirty wo
men to be equal to one mau. It Is
very complimentary to the toon, but
not to the Women 1 All that poetry
about man’s being the oak and wo
man the ivy is Hat, and stals, and un
true. In tens of thousands ease#
men in commercial dletwter-Rqvo been
flung flat, and they have gone to their
homes utterly discouraged, readv to
give up the struggle of life, wishing
they were dend—although when a
man says he wishes be were dead
he lies ; try to kill him, and see how
much he wishes he were dead—still
going home utterly discouraged, and
The wtfa. bf her prayer and faPjf to
God, has civeu him encouargement,
and told him never to mind bis mis
fortune; that there was some other
way of escape, and planned this way
and the other, after awhile, by her
courage, lifting °him up a^aln into
commercial prosperity,
When a man likes any place better
than his own home, look ouHpr break
ers. How can you toll whether a man
loves bis home better than other pla
ces? lly this infallible rule—a in to
always stays the mrst where he liKes
U the best. Oue man out of a hundred
may have so firm a will and be so Con
firmed in his morals that he may spend
every evening for forty yaars away
from home und yet be pure and good
and honest ; hut the nlnety-uioo out
of a hundred will go down under the
process, and the years will ba merelya
pair of Htalrn to let theta down iutolm-
mofallty and Into death. A Woman Is
surprised that she has not aa much at
tention paid to ber now as before mar-1
rlagc, as when the man wasasMppUaut,
candidate for her preference. Perhaps i
there might be a retort, and she might'
be asked If she took as much pains to
take away out of your prefcence tbe
beet friend you have on earth, and tbe
richest boon which God la Ht« omntp-
but ho oteftce and Infinity has capacity to be
stow—a good wife. If a child gc, that
desolates the nursery. If the wile go,
that desolates all the house, and all
fb& heart, and all the world. Tbe ed-
eucea ate eo appalling when ber vole*
running around tbe room with a hurt
Unger, calling for mother who will not
come, and at night asking for a drink
and saying, “No, no, I want mamma
tq bring lb* Reminisced that rush on
tbs heart like a mountain current over
which a cloud has burst, Her.Jewels,
her books, her pictures, her dresses,
some of them suggestive of banquet
and some of burial, put Into the trunk
whose lid (mines down, with a heavy
th.ud. as much os to say, “Dead !” The
morning dead. Tbe night dead. The
air dead. The world dead. Ob l mao,
if in that hour you think of any unkind
words uttered; you would be willing to
pay in red win of. blood every drop
from your heart if you oould buy bock
the tinktod words ; but they wfll not
come back. Words gone from the Upe
do not fly In circles like doves coming
back to their cote, but in straight line,
a million miles a minute, across tbe
extremetlse. They never oome back.
Flattering epitaphology, though a
Dryden comp need I:—polished Aber
deen granite, though au Angelo chis
eled it, cannot atone for uukladoeee to
the living.
While I speak my mind In full of the
memory of a couple who were united
In holy marriage Dsn. 19,1808. Their
Christian names wvre old fashioned,
like themselves—David the one, Cath
arine the other. Legal contract, of
course, but chiefly the Lord married
them. They live I to see their crystal
wadding, their silver we iding. their
golden wedding, and nine year beside.
They lived to weep over tbe grave oSf
three of their children. They lived to
pass through many hardships and
trials, but they kept the Cbrtstlaa faith;
they lived for God, for each other, for
theiseMMrcB, and for everybody but
UivoNritree. Their hair grow white
with age, and their stops bovame
shorter and shorter, ami their voice
trembled in the church pselin, though
make herself attractive office mar-1 ut>c * ibej bad led in the village oboir.
rings as before marriage. Those wo- 1 Tbu one leaned heavily on a staff
men make awful and eternal mistake j *blch I have In my house to-day, but
who, as soon as the hour of marriage > heavier on the arm uf God, who bad
D past, surrender all lastefulnesa of [ always b>-Jpsd them. They wers well
attire and all those little arts wLlcb, | unaled, ^ hat was the joy of tbe oue
thoutrh Indescribable, go to make up' *** the J iy of the other; what was tbe
womanly attractiveness. How do you * orrow vf tbe one was tbs sorrow
greet him at the door when be comes I of l(j * other. At lest they parted,
from the store nr office, o# banking 1 God gave to ber three years preowd-
house ? Are you as anxious to tu»et t 1,004 departure. My father, though
his admiration now aa yop were the I * VM 7 tender-bsartwd
is etill; »tic vacancies are so ghastly ; blessed for the husband to bring back
the gloom is as though the midnlgbto
of fltty years hurtled. The little child
G <i«* Soiilh, roanection* mule with S
F. A W. R. U. si Sevaimtdi for all Florid*
point*.
Going North, connection m»«le with 0h*r-
lotts, roliliilMm stui Augu.*ta Railroad fur wit
point* North and East with UeorgiaGtail.
road for Atlanta and the Wert. Aim, with
8011th Carolina Railroad for Aiken und
point* 01. line of said road.
Baggage checked through.
, Irry* Through ticket* for aaie al Union
Depot Ticket Office, Augusta, (la., and at
all principal Jicket officer ;
Roll KMT G, PtKNI.NO,
General Superintendent.
J. 8. Dtvtjrr, '
General l , a»i'enj;er Agent.
riurloUe, lutambia & Augusta it- P.
CHANGE OF SCHEDULE.
Cll (SLOTTV, CSLFMSH A AltOt'HTA R. R. 1
G KM KRAI. I’AMKXUKR DkI'AKTMMXT. I
Colunuia, S. C., April 4,1880. j
■ r
The following pOsrengcr schedule will be
operated on and after this date:
l»ay Tarrenjjor No. 15.
Nokth,..
Lr Aitgu da 7:46 a m
Ar Columbia 12.05am
Lv,Columbia 12.12am
Ar CuarLue 5.00 pm
l>»y PusTf-nerr No. C.
Bofrtit. ,
Lv Charloitel T.'27tyn
Ar Cotumbia 4.20pm
Lv Co umbia 4.25pm
Ar Auguau 8 80pm
Arrive ai Washingtua, via Danville ami
/.ynchburg, al 7,59 a m. next day, and n(
New York, by limited express from Wash
ington, at 3.45 p m, or by mail tiaiu, at
4.45 p m.
Niichl Kxbivk* No. 4S.
tWH P.
Night Ex|>re*r N«.47.
Nohth.
Lv .Kitgurt 17.00 p»
A r Columbia l(t.4S“
Lv Colmiihia)0.-55 “
Ar(!hai-1otle 3.40 am
Danville to
dorirn P. M
Lv rhartotte 12 85 am
Ar "Columbia 5.80 am
Lv Columbia 5.37 am
Ar Augusta 0.15 am
Reclining Chair Cars from
TV add a gl on vi* Lynchburg.
PuUmau PaUce Fleepers through from
Augusta lo all Northern and Eastern cities
via Richmond on both trains.
Trains leave by Washington City «itne,
being 20 minn e« faster than Augusta time.
For iaforai;Uion, time cards, Reservation
of Slooping IV Bertha, apply to W. A.
GIBBS, Tit-aet Agent. Union Depot, or to
COAfl. L DIRRKLL, go. Trav Agent,
J Box 2tHi, Anguata, G*.
D. CARDWELL, Awt. 0. P. A., Columbia.
Job* B Madtnwp >, Own. Pas. Agent
THM PAPER rjjtfrttjasg
At Blackville, S C,
FIRST CLASS SEWING MACHINE AT
tachmetits. Needles, Oil. Ac , for any style
Sewing Machine. Goods sent by mail when
orders arc accompanied with the cash. Sew -
ibg machines repaired on short notice and
satisfaction guaranteed. I have on hand the
“New Improved Weed’’and tho New Ameri
can Machines, one Singer Machine. Also
Wheeler and Hllson No. 8. A tine stock
of Picture - Primes and ( hrotllba. Vhave
the Agency tor Barnwell and. Orangeburg
counties for the sale of the “Stewart Manu
facturing Co’s Singer Machine,” which
claims superiority over any other Singer
Sewing Machine, lean furnish, on short
not ion, sny. *4yW-*w - Hittk t* f
sired. 1 am also Agent for the RLicklock
Fan Attachmeut, .which dan be used on any
Sewing Machine.
B J Hammet. Agent-
mayCi-4in
Central Hotel,
JIJS4>AL> WXIlICliT.
.AUGUSTA. GA
MRS. W. M. THOMAS,
Centrally located, convenient to btisi-
»uv20 tf
ness.
N. A. Hunt & CO
WnotESaLK UKALKUS IN
A
ks
<
161 AND ICi! MEETING ST BEET-
Opposite Charleston Hotel,
CHARIA&TOH, 43. C.
suglV-
unh-oa thu L -iJ Alti.i^hty has fliat
a:utried theta.
1 ptop<«e ibis morning to sp*«k to
| you on the bitter •-uetiii •« of tbaiuar-
tl ws it 1 don. The tl at oa« that
crutvls out l efore our obaervatlou Is
j (ndyKStuy. M >ru people tu thin coun-
| tty than ever bofore believe In thU
duett iue, aud thate are those la all
parts of tbe Isa 1, some under another
name, and some none at all, practicu-
1 ig it. The B.ble rdeoculz-.s polygamy
just as i: recoguli-.-s all other styles of
sin, but in no case eauctious it. On the
couttary, God expressly thunders In
the book of Leviticus : M- itber sbsll
a mau take oue wife to another ;
while St. Paul puts squarely before
the usliou this passage 1 Let every
man have Lis own wife, and every wo
man her own hu<band. How was It
when the children of Israel were pas
sing through the wjl L-ruess 1 For
forty years theie were 2.5oO,000 Israel
ites on the mutch. God especially
looked after them ; led them by jdilar
of cloud by day and pillar of tire by
night, slaked their thirst from Heaven
—especial y looked after tliem—and
in all the forty years, among tbe 2,-
500,000 IsradKos, there was only oue
case of poiyuamy. Does that look us
though God sanctioned it? No such
crime attaches to Adam, or Noah, or
Moses, ir Abraham, or Joshua, or
Simuel, or a hundred others I might
ment ion. Who was the flrst polygam
ist mentioned in the Htble ? Lamek,
he, by hie own confession, was u mur
derer. And wherever in the Bible"
you And a man with more than one
wife, you tiad him up to his neck in
trouble ! The whole drift of the Bi
ble is against polygamy. G id paid at
the beginning. If. is no.t good for mau
to-be alone • I will tnakd a helpmeet
for him. Mirk yon, the singular
.number—a helpmeet. If any one ever
Mncliine (^••Tijgedva Hi ore ftran —orrer - companion ■
certainly tiiat Was Aiiam, for there
was mv society outride. God was
Mere in LJcu btai iiug the iiiet-lfuuou
of ma: riage, and if plurality of wives
had been right that fact would 'have
been demostrated, ami instead of one
rib taken from Adam’s side. Adam
would to hive a rib Mt! The race
was to be bridged over the deluge.
How was it done ? How many wives
am' the wives of his sons. If poly
gamy had been riebt, there would
have been twenty wives for each, and
so save a multitude more from drown-
tug. The census of thl world presents
tbe fact that in all ages and in ail
lands tho men and the women .havei
been about equal in number, and
where there has been any except! m
to that in any land, or in any age, the
men have been lu the maj >r4y. Does
that look as though there were a sur
plus womanhood ? Does that look us
though the Creator of the human
race sanctioned polygamy? The Bi
ble 4s not mere thoroughly agaiost
theft, and blasphemy, Sou murd<r
than It is against polygamy Moreover,
whenever civiiizitioo i*la hhrh ad
vonce, and whenever good aioi<U* are
first month of your acquaintance?—
1 be fact is that many wumes make
their ehat tn« a net for onsnaul, and
ufter tbsy have wade that Lsdl they
throw ttrw net away. Ht-fure marriage
you could play on the piano like a
Thalberg or a 0»>ttrehalk ; now you
cannot (day at all. Though you have
b<*en together slxiv year* you ought
still 10 be the bride adorned forher
husband. Or do you spend tbe even
ings fretting about the servants, or de
cry tug the fact that you 1 neighbors
have it better than you Lave, or pick-
lag at your husband's faults, put
ting him in a sort of Infant class over
which you are the supetvlsur, when
you ought to make home aamaO Leav
en to his pertuthed spirit. Let the
women of this country trad the news
papers and the books ton minutes a
day, tf they cau aff >rd no mors Uiue—
and there U not one but cun ttffnd as
much time as that-let women read
books and newspapera ten minutes a
day, and be familiar with the stirring
questions of the hour, and be ah|» u>
hold stout political argument a- be
tween Hancock and Garth-Id, and that
borne will be a club-house to wbkh
many outsiders will (1 >ck. Oue intelli
gent woman has mote attractiveness
than twenty intelligent men.
Again, 1 remark, corrupt literature
Is a powerful fo; to the domestic rela
tion. I refer to those slushy pam
phlets and bookawhich tell how im
possible men married Impossible wo
men and got Into imposuiblu difficul
ties, and with impossiols results, and
viliany went unwhipped, und virtue
fell dead. I mean those hooks. The
fact is that many of the young mar
ried people of this day get their heads
so lilied with the false and sentimental
notions la regard to the plain, serious,
old-fashioned institution of marriage,
they are unflt for the common duties
of life. There she goes, louog ug
about the house with a flfty-cent novel
over her arm, her slippers run down
at the heel, the furniture uudusteri,
und the socks undurned, and every-
a very U-ndar-busnad mao, 1 never
caw him cry but “ace, and that at my
mother’* burial. You see they bad liv
ed together titty nlns ysars. My
mother said in her dying moments tu
miUUififA JF*riLri. would n’t It be
pleaaantlf wdcJutrt foth gn topsiksit
But tbe three year* soon passed and
tney wer* leoiarriod. Their children
ate gradually Jolulug Mein, and will
soon all be Mure 7 but the vision of
that mat tied life will huger la my
memory forever. Together lu the
vlitage church where they stood up to
take the vows of the Ghiisriau just
before rbelr marriage day. Together
throughout the vtctaehudee of a long
life. Together this tuorolog tu tbe
quiet of the graveyard. ^2tofretfcar in
Heaven. And in the cSYs that win
er. But if ono baa grown worse nod
aunt lower than at tbe beginnlog, per
haps e-tea then, patience and toll
s iuehioe maj
and
*
erring
I y bring back the
one m do?*, Uft up the fallen, rescue amount of Uw aMi
the pcrMifng, and save tbe lost. How • eoupls of bottle*
glorious for a wife to pluck ber bus- Whatever food t
band fraw tbe Jews of min and
T - ML J I bring
hlu safely to tbe heavenly borne! how
to the gates nf paradise tbe
who, th(
astray!
-JR 1 woman
who, through we'ikueos, bad been lod
~n
THE
L^-w
EloOWNl.
chaos. Go home and gather up all that
French}', infernal stuff and pitch It in
to the kitchen Are, lest it blast you and.
damn your children after you.
I want to make you, my friends, the
sworn enemies of everything that an
tagonize tbe domestic relation. As I
suppose the raoet of you had booora-
-bto-aoeeutryH l woaiAo sweae -yotr to
day by the cradle in which you were
rocked, and by the family altar where
you knelt, ami by the family Bible out
of which you were instructed, and by
the gluves of your parents—if they
have gone to their long sleep—to war
against evetything that would bring
thu marriage relation Into disrepute.—
The best eulogy you can pronounce
upon it. is by making your own home
relation right and beautiful. Do not
lake 1 ffeuse too easily from each oth
er. Buinember that hasty words and
hasty action sometimes are not a mat
ter of the heart, hut merely a matter
of tbe nerves. Husbands at the store,
worn out with anxieties—wives at
home worn out with household cares —
sometimes have their tqyipolse of
spit it unbalanced. There are but few
Amuican men or women who have any
nerves worth speaking of. These deli
cate telegraphic wires of tbe human
body get damaged in the storm, and
the lightnings of temper run over them
very irregularly. A^d> remember that
this relation wilt sodn end. Bpare all
Me hold words, omit ail ths slights,
(or before long there will be a hearse
stauding at youx front door that yriil
And
Me Held o’ Mochpeluh, which is before
Mamre, there they buried Abraham
a id 8arali bis wife. There also they
burled Isaac and Hebekab Lis wife,
and there I buried Lsah. Oh ! Mere
ire many in the bouse this luoralag
who can say with Wiliam Oowper :
“My t oast I* not that I d*'u-* ojy b rth
From loiua euliuOusd aud rulers ot Me |
earth;
But higher far my proud pretensions
rise.
The son of parents passed luto the
skies.''
How John Lowlow Drifted Into the
Ctreas—Hsrter Rough but H salts Me.
(Oharritl* OWerrcr.)
Tbs man who rodo at the bead of
the circus procession yesterday morn
ing on the white horse, was John Low-
low,one of the most noted downs lo the
country. He is Houthem born ahd
bred, aud hag a great many, personal
friends South of Mason and Dixon’s
line. Tbs fast that he was once a
student at*’the University of North
Carolina, Is. we brttess, generally
known, In tho absencu of the B“bin-
son brothers, be Is boss of the show,
and In this capacity a reporter met
him yesterday Just before ths per-
formsnee began. He Is exceedingly
quiet and gentlemanly lo hi* manners,
but brtm full of humor which oCoftsiou-
ally lights op bte face like a sunbeam.
ilow did you get lots this business,
any bow ? Mr. Lowlow was asked.
Well, you see Mere was flvs of os
boys In Savannah—that’s where X was
boro—and they eooldfl'i do any thing
with os. At last ths old folks son-
eluded to send us up to Obapsi JUH -do
tbs woods, but the woods oouldnT
hold us. We rsa away from tbs Uni
versity sad walked all toe way to
High Paths where «s took the train.
We weren't going any Where In par
ticular, and when we got down in
Houth Carolina we struck tbe otreos. I
concluded to travel with them, bat
the rest oouldnT stand lu EeUII, tbs
present editor of tbs Mavanash Mot u-
iog News, was 00s ot the gang. He
left us at Charleston and went nome.
He Is still editor and l‘m still in Ms
show business. That wss in 1856.
R »ugb sort of life, isn’t It ?
May be It is. but I'm used to tu We
get plenty ot sleep and work about
four hours a day. I got married up
lo New York a good may rears ego
and my wife’s people got after ms lo
quit Me show business and go lain
something more respectable. Well. I
did. I bad saved «p between |14.000
and $16,000 dollars, and 1 put
It Into the merchants bssioeea It teoh
me Just a year to get away with It all
I thought I hod better go bank to
something I was used to. and I have
been with tbe show ever since.
Yes. eontlnued tbs Slows, I like H,
uf course. Then, I oouldnT do bettor
at anything X haven otos boms
In CMwUnd, O Ho, one of ths prst-
Ueu lowasln iMXutesd iUtss. and
try to live Ilk# a geotlsaus whan I’m
them. We are generally on the rood
about eight months In ths year, and
they pay ms 8160 a week and ail ea-
pessss. 1 hat e enough to live on.
Don't poor local lilts sometimes get
you luto trouble ?
Very rarely. Once, oot West, a fel
low ran luto the ring at me with a long
knife. 1 dropped on my kneso Mis
way (oiasptng his hands like a man In
prayer) aad ssld you wouldn't hill a
fool, would you ? Tbs people here
would think you were Ms biggest fool
of Me two. He looked down at me a
minute and then said, I brilevs you
ere a damn fool, aud walked away.
But I don’t have much of Mat sort sf
thing.
But the band's playing and I most
get out of these doMea. (Dome again.
the young
thing from parrel to cellar lu dotnHSLioiTbiuk of Ibis, and let them walk care-
llrrora In Nlarrlage.
Many of Me errors of life admit of
rcmjdy. A lues in oue business may
be repaired by a gain in another ; a
miscalculation tl is year may be re-
tiicvtd by special care Me next; a bad
uartnersblp may be dissolved, an lu-
ju~y repaired, a wrong step retraced.
But an error in man tags goes to tbe
vety root aud foundation of life. It
bos bseu said no man is utterly ruined
uulll be bas mairied a worMlees wife ;
aud so every woman bas a future be
fore ber until sbe is chained, la a wed
lock wbicb ieu padlock, to a wretched
aud unworthy man. The deed ooce
done caunot be recalled. Tbe wine of
life is wasted and the goblet is broken,
aud no tears or toils can btlt g back
in« precious draught. Let
fully la a World of snares, aud take
beed to tbeir steps lest^lu tbe most
critical event of life they go fatally
astray.
But here we must guard against an
other error. Many people think they
have made a mis uke iu marriage,
when tbe mistake is only In their own
behavior-“they-were Tnarrtud.—
Good husbands make good wives, and
good wives make good husbands ; and
the scolding or intemperate, or slat
ternly partner often has but himself
or bersclf to blame for ths misery that
clouds the life and desolates the home.
Multitudes who feel that their mar
riage was a mistake, and who make
their existent*! a life-long misery,
ought, by a little self-denial, and for
bearance, and gentleness, and old-time
courteey, make their Lome brighten
Uke the gates of Eden, and bring back
again the 0I1J love that blessed the
happy golden days gone by.
Suppose the wi.’e does not know
quits so much as you do ; well, yon
• bowed your great judgment when you
thought her the chief among ten thou
sand. Or. if your husband Is not ths
most wonderful man in tbe world, It
simply Illustrates the wit ahd wisdom
of the y oung woman who ooce thought
be wsl, and could not be convinced of
tbe cootray. So perhaps you arc not
-0 unevenly mated after all; and If
one bas bad better opportunities sites
married, then of course Met oue should
teach aud cultivate, and encourage the
other, aad *o both j jurney on togeto
Ncheal Trwstsea.
Tbs average Bcbool Trustee under
cloak of oaring for ths schools, uses
them as step-ladders to see bow high
be can climb Into notoriety. It lelo
trust cases bis flrst step upward, and
he sees Ms Legislative ball#- put hap*
Congress, far in Ms horizon. Tbs
re-elecUon of teachers U mads to sub
serve his vaulting ambition. He pals
lo Mrs. &. because ber father or
uncle will help in return ; be puts lo
Mr. Q. for similar reasons, t e t known
to himself. But, Just wall a moment,
sod let an applicant present herself
without “influence,” without favorites,
and her case is hopeleis. Most trus
tees agree, that M Mey all teach alike,*
so it is a question of dollars aud cents
with him. They will pay ten, twenty
and t hlrty dollars per mooM because
Mere are plenty who will take It at
that rate. And so teaching Is classed
with house or farm work. And ths
U men table part of It Is, that* Mass
prices bring Into the school-room not
teachers, but Moss who want to earn
a few dollars, by sitting quietly la Ms
school-room and doiog uoMIng for
bearing a child recite is not teaching.
Tbe school trustee is uerfsctly satis-
fled with raw material for Me school
room, but If be bas a sick child, he
calls for skill, experience, knowledge
and is willing to pay for k..
"Tkach nu’
gas Is poisonous; but Ms
carbonic add gas fdvsn off
dozen booobsa of ~
dozen nights would
ties of mineral water.
for Ms
u Whatever food la prspsrsd
slot should tritons be of Ms ftt
Ity and cooked with tbs gruatstt datfto
Remember Met sick-cookery shooM
do at least half Ma work ot Maps-
be Ms room of tbs ho ass which bas
the most saafthtee eoastag Into it, aad *
if Me bed can bs so planed that ths/ i
person lying oa M saa sea a food piece
of tbe blue sky, aa much ths better.
-< Ifevsr leave your patient's food ad* - ,
tasted by his sMs from meal to Mi
lo tbs hops Mat he will set tl He
newer dons sat it, aad yoe only add
diagoat to bis aisttiis kg laavliif It Is
» Let tbs food cssm st Ms right
»* Mtja * stmts
take it away in a little WM*
A little food at a time, aad oftsa rf-
Posted, to tbs general l ‘ “
people- Frequently, ad
dan orders bsaf fiaa, at. sf
tb© kind,
full!
than
e lt. whereas, bad S tSMes| mful
RirM &T+ry 1
would have base
and have doaa
sd good.
Ueaeonssaxy noise,
disturb a sick psraoa
as ureas ry noises, svt
loader.
Remember always Mat
fao© “Joeth good, fake a
every three or four boor*
1 likely tbe paiisat'a stoma
1 It, whereas, hods taMso|
es “duetto good, Uke a medietas*
lever use aaytfclag bat light Ma
ets ss bed covering 1st Ms wish. *■
cotton impf rvioas counterpane to bad,
for ths reason that KI
oatloos from the
blanket permits I
lever, under
sek, wlthlfl hearing,
stdan doss aot think Ms
or ask Ms pbystoUa hto opinion as to
Ms result of ths dtosasa
A Father
Tbs
troit
follow tom Ip
they had arrived there he
“Isw, young mss, yes
Ighuag aflpfiTi
bam fluid yo«
igbtr^
Oh, taker, Mb
eitissa sf Dw
year tdd seam
yes Mm diz
thu boy
“I cast help it.
it is ay daty is I
lbs Lord.
wtwwS
VMllkhl
">Ybstl what'* MalT
“Audbs aatd you
hsatorf*
** Whatl whet loafer
asseruonl”
"It made ms aafbl amd,
any ■aytHiag. Tbsa hi
Smlhm* I
"Called IDS a hireliag! Why Td
like to gs* my hands oa kfcnL" puf-d Ma
old ccmlemaa.*
‘‘Yes, and be said yon wu t poli'ieal
Uckspittisr*
"Land o'grxc&Mu! but wonUn't 1 bks
to bats the (ratotag oflhatbi^rAir sboat
five milieus!'' w‘
| -(rntSare of the Nick-
From a little book entitled "Plain
direction* for Me care of Me sick,* dis
tributed to tbe policy holders of Me
Mutual Life lueurance Company of
New York, we take a few bints to nur
ses:
All appearance of haste is painful to
tbe sick. Tbe rule to, to do things
quickly, and do things quietly. When
you visit a sick | e son, always sit
where he can see you without turning
ths head, and never speak to him from
behind. ^
Never lean against, sit upon, or even
shake Me bed lu which Ms sick per
son lies. *
A good nurse will see Mat no door
opens with a creak. Mat no window
rattles; and a very good one win see
that not even a curtain (Ups. A drop
of oil aad a teaMsr will do away wuh
Me creaking.
It U a popular prejudice Mat plants
and flowers shoald nos be trier seed lo
a sick chamber, "bsrauss they givs off
oarboolo sold gas, whtobto pvU.uous."
bo they do give off Mb pC*- t and Mo
Ms sM sme as
be bopped arownd.
"I pat op with
boy; 'aud Men he raid you bid yoar
pipes fo. otee tod got left hj a taps
majority. I eouldsT stood Mat, taker,
sad so 1 sailed over ths
him baMheeded in Ism Uss’a two I
utes! Thrash ms if you mum, kU..,
but I oouldu't sum U to bear yea
abased by cos of tbs malignant oppo»'
sitioo!"
My son," mid bis father w be IsB
for s half s dollar
wiped bis eyas with Ms
may so eat sad bayyoatwe pawndeaf
candy. The Bible moat mstaalbw-
anoe for political rsmpulgas and the
vile slaadosz of the other party. I saly
brought you oat ham to talk to you, aad
now you can put oo you com aad run
along.”—Free Press.
A Bkkeatid Hue baud's. Lot.—
Tour corresDoodeot ba[.pcoed to hi
walking out in our besoti/oJ city ceme
tery tbe other day, sad saw what few
people know to extol
people oat of OriHs. A
a lot them, is wbtoh
wive and five ohiUraa. A
marksthe tastily
sod * smaller ose w placed over i
child. Tbe mosoments are
alike, of the mme pattera, and look like a
row of capital and small "IV—
II II If It If. On Me last heed stone
is tbe seggasuve asms of Me shad,
"Little Hope," though 1 nsdsmtaadMe
gentleman has married the sixth Mae.
I do not mention Mis out of dumped
to tbe gentleman t he was an old resi
dent of Grifflo, bat has recently moved-
awey. Only the mnarksblenefs of the
sight leads me to allude to it SoMe-'^ 1
body mid, Me oMer dag, H wu
■ffM ' i JTL
Me girls srooad here
be moved airsy
certainly a caisnuty,
tor has wondered al
CouMaMm.
hsow hop that
lot is
, aud many * vtoi-
St »t.—Ctr- Atlanta
Tbe company
meeting la Ptorttol 1
mektag paper hap m<
friag success Mat
obuttt twenty
pane of that
in