The people. (Barnwell C.H., S.C.) 1877-1884, October 20, 1881, Image 1
*
KJX
t. la *rUla| to UW rftaa m borr
alvajt (to« yaur a>«« ao«i Pual«ffica
addr
1 Rutioaa* lattart and ommunici-
tiaaa to be pabtahrd «hould be wrUleu
ma •opMota xbeau. and theoH ct of each
clearfy tndleited by n*o-»«ary note wh*n
resmra<L T
*. Article* for publication thould b
ruten ib a c'ear, legible hand, atd ou
Wlj plje alrip of che pajp. ^ ,,
4 A\l ctianget) in acire: tl,
i^ach u> « i FrMay.
THE
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Oaa lari, aaa lasartlaa . : tl M
4 - r.rh.aWa.aallaaarllaa M Ota
nj '; l.x a-uat
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VOL. V. NO. 7.
BARNWELL C. H., S. C., THURSDAY. OCTOBER 20, 1881.
$2 a Tear.
t-H'
nanira rntsr ntr.
,** »AMCKL LOVE*.
iTrz Z ''
‘. -* 1 —d
/-
Ooj.!4-<m« d»y amici wild flower* playing —
v ' u< * *ow»qi -Nbe flltaat for hi*
Ip the bright stream, by whoee bank ha was Stray
ing,
Longing to bribe -but the boy could not ewim.
He ventured hU foot in a khallov; hard by
'Vh4n the nfnrph of (£ with .harp mooting
t , olw'.
■•M, “Cupid, d'.n’t dabble—be cautious or bold,
J nmp In, or keep out,
- r ■' v fiebaie doubt
trtj’B go t'ome with a cflugh,
And the ladle* will acoff— '
For the vary worst thing ia for leva So taka eold.”
Cupid, thus taunted, Jumped in, nothing daunl.d;
“Once o’er head and ears, 1'oy, »way with vour
- r .
the wtklar th* plwbge, ob, the brighter the Joy.;
^ ° give you thla leaeoa, sweet Ouptd, u luck.
t» llh yran-,l*» uttle wlnga, t.oi-l ta dWe-vnu*™
a dark— ‘ >•■ •* '
i j But, w.kl.lurk, d'*uA<4'b:e, ’ ,
■ the nymph aaid to him,
•* Ou«e o’er head and ean, _
td wiih ^onr fear^
rDr >»*• ®* r sc atnka when determiined to swim 1 - ‘
and eorted on the Bhehree," snggeeted
Sareilft giimly.
| • “I should be sure to break it,” fal
j torn! Haddie.
u The curtains are all ready to lie
j taeked up to the w6at-room windows,”
, ^ aid ikrclla, arou~d lor a tack-
hanymer.
“Oh, I couldn’t do that,” said Had-
die, more frightened thap ever. “I
should be sure to turn giddy on top of
p Dial step-ladder.”
Sarella looked disdainfully at her
| beautiful littlo sister-in-law.
• “I wonder what you are good for,”
udd she, hharply. ~ '
Haddie hung her head, flushed scar
let, and said nethisg.
“■For all I can see,” severely went on
Sarella,-J-‘«ay big
leave married a big wax doll,
very well so long ai he
in receipt of a big income.
"lOAf LOFE or lint.
“I,” cried Haddie Winatanley, pit-
•uusly. “I a. Luxih-n to my h^Und ?
^'b. Sarella! Barrtla I for pify’a sake
It was tba day following the family
begin—that moat dtamal, ih4v#al ami
talgtonbU id tUfd,, whan tba ftmuturr
w “ ptk«i m> 1» tb« w L. afld ■«*cV-
•4th thitr fsi a to tba walla, thayawn
lag duaunvy-piaen >Wwtitau> of mck-,
lu»# flam
she to herself. “A china doll of a wom
an, only th to be waited ou amLittude
much of. I do think Carlos was crazy
when he married her.”
At the month’s end, however, Haddie
came back, and fluttered down the lilac-
shaded garden walk to meet her hus
band, like a bird, as he returned from
his day’s work.
“Oh, Carlos ! Carlos I ” she cried; “I
am so glad to be here again! ” ,
“ Littlo one,” he asked, almost re
proachfully, “ why did you leave me? ”
“ I have been at school,” said Haddie,
radiantly. “I have been learning—my
professioo. Oh I Carlos, yon ran never
tell how awkward and helpless I felt
here, in my own bouse, knowing that I
was as ignorant as % child of alt the
brother might as wM ^8" 1 mo6t ^ oomprehesd.
I lone you—oh, ^o dearly—and I. felt so
unwortliy of yim-aso enable to help you
hi ibar sore need as a wife should help
her husband. Harell* despised my lg-
sraraaue—the vary Movants VsAa^down
•u me as s belpii sa dull; aud they were
nghl But they shall never do so Miy
m'-re, for Fra tcwme-l to be s h<sisw-
kuoparr at last—Aunt Durraa has UQg>it
uae eerrythmg. I own make buttf itka
gnM, and che.ee that even tW-4is will
m t critaciar. I shall jerpars you anm^
| atrawbarry aluxU ak« U*-umj«t«iw. and my
It was all
a mere hint
But now—
. gnuduaaa me, what sort of a (snnsr’a
wife do you suppoak jbn vrifl male ? * ”
“ I don’t know,” confoseed Ha»Mic.
feeling herself arraiirned before a sort of
I eoii-ntulatcd itqmsiUuu.
“ IX) you know anything about 1*11-
Sarella, IW-
Mto Mi t rx 1
v IB
>- fluml fli ^fl^fbflfl.
baton k*l 1 ihaiw*
eriAagtoto, ta****
flflm 1
fl Imflflflhlv flUMM Imm-w
eery l- ririk ef nj h—Mai
hwsMa ftstoy, la
ia
•i flU 9 «fl dl flflflai
keffl Mari ajtovABea Mtoeila
•amnsk aa*A *uay
IflMf ■Kflt-A mMP^
th* a Amwah lunak ea4 ri*l
AM hril mere
1 1
vdfih r*w^Vrii» BtoXhri rieato
Ihreujw-riito.
« m
MflMflMflhdf flAm • cm
1 britownmg etonb wrik whrik
"tflflhPbi'gf Mbflhfl %
hn
* kmamenmn
«l ta
I lh> tk-Wa
>AvU
- •> mw serial
• •M
ftarw
trim
rw
Is arid l»a«A4 * h
t IritW h»^a la
a rid L rialh Sla as
and rias
-w ami thee* ths *
•■•I of tl» tf ba*.
as! trim hurian , IX.
WmsSari'«« a ••
teauflm
. ** m try
* tris* t * s
.«* Ikril
dear
m A>
WgariSl
•asaririk ka
Mms'
■l f IflM
it Smu^I
■Mkl 41
aid % Itofli0f
rf flMf •
It Aasa
H
rm
t %4h* I I ■*'<»*
* Am kt+mj
ll Ml
•• Tea, But.” she added with quiver-
WgUp. “Itwill be vary lonely, won’t
it?"
“ Harclla is coming to sUy with us sml
help gat settled,” aaxl Woistai-ley.
•• Why, what wrald aurh a butterfly as
you do with all this confusion ? ’
Haddie aaid nothing. Blic could
hardly tell her husband how much she
feared and disliked Ins stem maiden
sister, who stood up so straight, and
wore her iron-gray Jiair twisted up into
s tight knot at the back of her head, in
an inexorable fashion, which made Had*
die feel ns if her gold frizzes and braids
were vanity aud vexation of spirit, in
deed ; and had a way of looking over
and'beyoud her, as if she (Haddie) were
of no account whatever.
Bnt Harclla was needed, and she come,
just as she would have come to nurse a
wounded soldier, or keep watch over a
household of measles, or scarlet fever,
or undertake any other difficult or thank
less task.
And, upon this rainy day, Sarella went
backward and forward, and looked with
n sort of contemptuous pity at the poor
little wife, wrapped in her fleecy white
ihawl, with a rose in her hair and a
Itook in her hand.
»• Dear me, Harriet!” shs had cried
out, when at last her slender thread of
patience was quite exhausted; ‘ 1 why
don’t yon do something?”
“ What shall I do?" aaid Haddie, pit-
eoualy.
“ I’m sore there’s enough to be done,'
Mid the rigid elder mater. “ Can’t you
torn and sew that piece of carpet to fit
thehaUr
i •* | (Mvrr Utd each a Hung ID my life,
■aid HkddM, aying tha heap of oan*»t-
mgaatffcbadbMa wild beam reed y
•****•• rearm •# twb
U» a aridvkriad fear mremmu tetlke g^ef
■save ad
n ta
m t
• Ukarit Ike kritidm)
Uw riwlX a«da ia I
ISmrteri.
Drydra. (lay. lb w*.
IH.-4-**, Oamp*riU. David OamrA. aD
hr wiilu^ 11 latmiartrr At hey,
«h» crnme mto help wvth the “artthag.' Walkm’a grave «a ia HiBmads a
■ughl the |aq>elar tune, and amd, near the city cd WUkrhiterr Hhrlley’a
Utfly: body waa
“PWeac. lira. WinsUnley. atend >*it would ixA
«4 the way while we’re a atretching Mwvrd in apmto of wma. Bhakspmrv
this carpet, and don’t bender us ef ye wm burwd in the chanmd cd the church
can’t help ua I" at Stratford. Dean Swift is burkd la
At the end of the Uiird day of domea- th,. ehurchyard of St Petn.-h’a, Dahlia;
tic saturnalia, when Carlos Wins tan ley Ifilhri ia St Gilaa', Cnppicgate; Chap-
came home, Haddie was nowhere to beu| man and Shirley at St lilies’, In the
found, and on her cushion wss pinned
tliu following note:
I'sab rssaoe,\ Don’t be vexsd, hot I ban
goiiv away to «Uy with Aunt Dorcas Dutton un
til Ue Beach fans ta mUled. I don’t seem to
be of much use to anybody, and perhaps Ksrells
wtU get along better without me. iff notion,
stelv yonr wife, H. W.
“ There I ” said Sarella to Betsey f ™<1 Waller in Beaoonfield diurchyard;
Baker. “ Didn’t I tell yon so ?
Fields; Fletcher and Philip Massinger
in the churchyard of St Savior’s, South
wsrk; Thomas Otway's burial place u
not known; Samuel But<er in the
churchyard of 8t Paul’s, Covent Gar
den; Marlowe in St Paul's, Deptford;
Pope in the church at Twickenham; Ed-
She’a
so lazy she can’t bear to see other folks
work! And I don’t know srhatever Car
los was thinking of when he married her
instead of Rosanna Martin, who took
the first prize for bread and cake at the
county fair, and has got a chest full of
linen and bedquilts at home.”
But she did not express herself thus
plainly to Carlos, when he asked her,
wistfully, if she knew why Haddie had
gone away."
“ I think she’s sick of farms and farm-
work,” said Sarella, puruing up her lips.
“I think, Carlos, she’s like the little
portnlaccas in the garden ontside, that
only blossom when the sun shines.”
And Carlos wss more wretched than
ever, fancying that he had darkened his
young wife’s life, and dragged her dawn
into poverty with him.
“She will corns back to me when she
ohonana." he said, sadly. M I shall not
go attar bar.”
And be grew paler, colder and mors
silent ea be went about tee dutme of the
Berella, to use her ©w* si
ft** sroamd sa bvaly aa a
dpot
me
rnn wFWspapkk nr lrAHM-norsK.
* People who live near the great thor
oughfares, where they liave access to
two or three dailies aud a half dozen
weeklies, dp not fully appreciate the
value of a newspaper. They come, in
deed, to look upon them as necessities,
and they would as cheerfully do without 1
their morning meal as their morning
mail. But one must be far off in the
country, remote from “the maddening
crowd,” to realize the full luxury of a
newspaper. The farmer who receives
but one paper a week does no} glance
over its columns hurriedly, with an air
of impatience, as does your merchant or
lawyer. He begins with the beginning
aud reads to the close, not permitting a
news item or an advertisement to sac*]*
his eye. Theft it has to be thumbed by
every member of the family, each cos
looking for things in which be or she ia
moat interested. The grown-up daugh
ter looks for tha marriage notices, and ia
delighted if the editor baa treated
them to a lova story. Tha son who ia
just about to engage in faming,-with
an enthtsrism that will carry him far
ia advanes «t ba father, raads all the
crop reports sod baa a keen ryv lor hints
about improved modes of cdtura. The
younyrmapibera of the fac.Jy oom* m
• tha 4ay
our jv VEitrrrx.
4l« “ Old Hoy t' Advirr.
My boy, you’rs noon to bo a mao ;
’ ' Get reaily for s diso'i work now,
And lesrn to do tha bast you can,
Whan surest'!* broujht to arm and br*w.
Don’t ba afraid, my boy, to work ;
You’ve got to if you mean to wtal
Hr ia s coward who will shirk ; „
“ Boll up yonr aleevea, and then * go in !*"
Don’t writ for chances; look about!
There’* always somethIng yon can do.
Ha who will manfully strike out
Finds labor, plenty of It, to* 1
Bat he who folds his hands snd waits
For “ at nautili qg to turn up'* will And
Tba totter passes Fortune's gate",
WhUa he, alaa, Is loft behind:
Be honest aa the day is long ;
Don’t grind th* poor man for htsoent.
In helping others, yon grow a Iron g,
And kind deed* dose are only lent;
And this rsmaaber: If yon r* wise,
T» four own totiiw** be oooSned.
H* ia a fool, and fails, who trisa
Hi* fellow-me#’* a IT a Ira to mind.
Don’t fas dlsaantaged snd get Un* •
If thing* don't go to ealt yon qnUe;
Wort on’ Feriups it recta with ywa
To ari the wmeg thai wnrrws right.
Dost laaa on sAhero 1 . Be a ms/
Stand ea a faeUag af fesr owa I
h- I udapsndea t. If j e« ra»..
And ealttraU aatrifad harAS ne:
S* hear, and ■
With lasts to *4 a*d I
»» t rib freni fieri • 1*1*0 ia pea,
r • s Sm« y>w aaa f
> JL)
tifo-proanrwrs, but Dkik and Fanny
(Iraggad them from tha waters.
As for Pudge, ten ohildrra-saw the
end of her tail going down stairs, with
a stream like a small Charles river
dripping offbokind.
Doll Dinks, being hollow, could
float, and he squeaked as loud as ever
when be wss pulled out.
But, after all, poor Doll Midget waa
Downed. Her nice, uienQ clothes wgrs
soaked and her lovely hair all came ent
I curl.
“ Now,” said fauay, “ wo must take
Doll Midget to the kitcliea fire aud dry
'her, or she never will lie tit to come to
thepionic.” ; >:■.
“Oh. not’ nspbad Diok. “She’s
drowned. She's dead sa a—aa a hair
pin. But I’ve baaed (tncla John tell
that they roll drowned folk* on a barrel
and then blow 'em up That maUcekee
’em." '
~ fDuele Jifliu said- ivsnarttate, but this
was too bouncing a wor i for liNla Dtek).
'* Rusticakes ’em ?" aaH Fsnay. si*
“ Tea, that's what Uaete John aallad
it Let's rtwtteake DoU Midget
way. Hold nu tOt I get« barrel I-
But all be could find waa
Than after Doll Mi<{jrv*’sdi*ai wa* «ah
,-tTahe waa ratted. Dm* votled her
hard flail hsr
Melt ha put iha unue af lha hghajm
bw*weeu hervttri, for be aaid thaft her
h waa aol tag eaougt Thaa ha
| Mew fuel as hard aa be guuldL
The Aral thmc Faaay kaew. apafaf
•dart fieweS ef Dot) M4g*rs 4de
I saha bar
flke threw bfit
1 ami bagaa la «y.
•M
r
4a*rle*lg, ■
If sets mad* 03 llhatal
. Ueatas at advsrtielag U gay able flfi
dips after Ira*. In tenlo« uaWag alAer-
Me caasriUsiaAtlea WU!
alriu soaompaalsd by Um bus* sad ad*
drees af the writer, not agwirDy hr
publicatlm, but as a guaraaty of gorid
faith.
A id raai, TJlPlOFLfl,,!
^ ; Birawell O. fl., §'<T. .
r LEAH A ITTRIRB.
Ah Albany woman woke her husband
daring a storm and said: "I do wish you
would stop snoring, for I want to hedr it
timndeff.” ' *«iq ho* - . ij-
i It is cruelty to oast yonr bread upon
the waters if th* bread k sour and
heavy. It might give the Ashes tha
dyspepsia.
Whk.n the liold Highlander tesnt
courting ha tersely introduced himself:
“Ann Baxon, I am BoderiekDhu." Ann
replied, “Dbatefi I" * ‘J * •«!
It isn’t beeadae a woman ia asafctly
afraid of a cow that ahai
screams. It Is because goeed
am not fsahioaable. q »„ ^ , ,
Wtkn a Near Orleans man wanted hi*
picture in an heroic attitude, tba artist
painted him hi tea aal ef rsfuamfc ta
drink.—Itegfaw TVaaacript ? <./
A ToteiB lady wrote aema vai for a
paper shawt bar tertedey • aaA bagded
them “ May Mte.” D almoat atedB. h*r
ban tern gray whan it appaarad in
pteot, “Mly 801b.'! , ,, ,
“ Xos don’t know bow if _
vnunte yon,” said tba Imsbgff “I
p>am tbara’s tba aMifi V —d
of tha sUek," kpliad tea boy. “Taay
rata, I'd ha wfiMa*
Baiiht rays
dents m (lod^ aw a
M eaavtaaa a man ai te» whan kBdlsps
a Stef teal ba 4Mb'I Mm was
fl
■ mala
a Aa
a
pari ef
(rashly amoag its
ia a eyrie m whtab «
tropica, aa ebararterwUe a*
the flora of th* Tomd aooe ; and youag
Afnea, under the grcea standard of the
Prophet, may yet taka her place
Thorns* Gray in the churchyard of
Stoke-Pogis, where he conceived his
“ Elegy;” William Cowper in the church
at Dereham; Oliver Goldsmith in the
churchyard of the Temple Church;
William Falconer was drowued at sea;
Lard Byron in the chancel of the church
at Huoknall, near Newstead Abbey,
Sir Walter Scott in Dryburgh Abbey;
Robert Burns in St. Michael's church-
*
yard, Dumfries; Samuel Coleridge in
tha church at Highgate; Southey in
Orosthwaite Church, near Keswick;
Ohattorton in the churchyard belonging
to the pariah of St. Andrews, Holburn;
Dr. Watte and John Banyan in the vi-
omity of tha celebrated chapel called the
Tabernacle of Good Old Whitfield;
Thomas Hood, Douglas Jerrotd and
William Thackeray are buried in Keaaal
Green Oamstory; Wordsworth in ,150
pi——"* hills of Westmoreland; Thoms*
Carlyle ia the churchyard of Zooleafeeh-
au, Scotland; George Washington at
Mount Vernon; Audubon is Calvary
New Tork; Netheemi Haw-
a group of pines on th*
brow of a hill ia Hlaapy Hollow
tary. Concord, Mean;
Bryant k. (ires* wood
T>wk. WsaleiugBsn Irving at
kite* F jv ta a
r in Anri a l pakica.
In May, 1837, the New Tork banks
euspeuded, and the crash, which had
threatened for some tune, came to tha
(tiuutry. This disastrous event wsa fol-
lowed by other failure#, many business
establishments were forced to close, and
even States became bankrupt Farm
products fell greatly in price, credit was
a by-word, and the finances of the Gov
ernment were in such shape that the
President of the United States could not
always get his salary when it was due.
This was about the time when the na
tional debt amounted to only a nominal
sum. The panic of 1867 was opened by
the failure of the Ohio Life Insurance
and Trust Company. Many banka in
all the States were obliged to suspend,
and certain kinds of paper were abroad,
which proved to be worthless. The
panic of 1878 was inaugurated in Sep
tember by the failure of Jay OookeA
Co., of Philadelphia., The effects of
this last financial hurricane are too well
known to need recital here. Various
causes have been attributed to
financial criaaa, afrnori all
ing, however, that reckJei
growing extravagance, and the
with which debts were
Mnong the landing caaa.
Tkb Den reran l Bn OranAeOoaapany
ua template bulk lag 3,000 mdas of tad-
» Utte witlua tea asal ftv
T>» * will r*»* esapioymaat teal k
Ltf.BUf arid Mall Irik* Will
livlf lfl»
Doll
was tarited to tea
Dmk got a grant milk pan and filled it
fall of water. Thu was Buafcm boy.
The dolls were first to be taken out to
sail, and then they were to have loach.
The looch wsa a large piece of spioa
cake and two jam tarts.
Pudge, th* fat kitten, waa invited ta
the picndo. too.
To begin with, they put her on a small
table, dose to Boston bay, ao that she
could look on.
There was not room in the boat for
three of them.
The lunch waa laid by in an okl wood-
box.
As soon as the boat waa ready Doll
Dinks aud Doll Midget wont on board.
The l>oat was one of Grandpa Blake’s
rid slippers.
Then they sot sail. Dick made the
wind blow with the bellows, and Fanny
puffed out her rosy cheeks with all her
might
But the trouble was that -Baby Ben
wanted to heljTwith a fire-shovel.
So the children told him he had bet -
tor be the fairy godmother. Hie fairy
godmother always hid in the wood-box,
and popjied out at just the right
moment
Baby Ben thought he liked beet to
blow the boat with the fire-shovel, but
Fanny promised to give him a bite of
her share of tha cake.
This consoled Ben, and they made a
place for him in the wood-box. There
he kept ao very still that the chfldreu
thought ha must have gone to slaep.
Ail at once a load splash waa beard.
A fearful atem arose in Bnateo bay, ami
| .tetweiUy ia
»«ry
1 th* lady
weat off to Sve ia
Ot.l Vanderbilt stock to his Jialihe ;
he left •600,000 to Madame, at bar
death to revert to the children by th*
1 first liuatriad. Bo Monsieur Lafttto waa
not pecuniarily benefited by ha» ooo-
utetioa with the millionaire's family.—
■Yetc York Utter.
ha ft a mu with BmiLLXAnrtnccKs*
William Scott was hung with mors
eclat than any on* else bad ever been.
People who witnessed tha axsrclses said
that they never knew a man to Straight
en out a rope with more unstudied grace
and earnest zeal than Wftlmm did.
He seemed to throw the whole vim
and concentrated energy of a lifetime
' into this emphatic gesture.
’ As he hung there limp and exhausted
at the end of the rope, the Chairman of
i the vigilance committee said, while he
1 took a cigar from William’s vest pocket
1 and lit it, that he had never known a
| man to jump into the bosom of the great
uncertain with more chic or more
, sprightly grace and pmcision than
William had.
This should teach ua tha importance
•4 doing everything thoroughly and
-veil. Whatever we undertake, aim to
do it better than any ana aba. U ia
I letter to be hung and know that w*
have brought out all there waa in tha
pari, and to tnow that we expiated our
ia a way calonlsted Is
of all, thaa avaatern*I
-Jbrt /to* ro
ll waa *11 that tri kitted
I Tba dabs bad
vivor of a duel, and it was agreed that
tha Agbt should baa deadly oaa with
■tona-baaded war oluba. Tha masting
was ceremonious in a high degree, and
it waa only after lengthy padbuinaries
that tea two warriors, mounted ou
ponies, armed with tha msmbsqaa claim,
and hideous in waj paint, faced earn
other for the encounter,. They circled
around far ah hour, honnW-lr whoop
ing and gesticulating { then they eanio
together, whacked sway wildly a while,
but injured nothing except the pooirn;
and, finally, Sam aeeepted Bob’* offer r f
five homes and a gun. to wduiquish hi*
claim ou Sal Molly. ^
CURB FOR TOUT HP VI OtFiDBLirF-
I had one just flogging Whan *
was about 13 I want to k ahoemakei
and begged horn to taka me as an ap
prentice. He, being an honest man,
immediately brought mo to Bowyer, who
got into a great rage, knocked ma
lawn, and even pushed Crispin rudaly
out of the room. Bowyer Baked ma
why I had made myself steh-k tool. T*
wlich I answered that I hkd k great da-
•ire to be a shoemaker, and that I hated
the thought of being k
“Why ao?" bid ha.
toll yon the tiwth, nr,” said J, ~I«t
on tofldaL” For this, without more
ado, Bowyer flogged ma, wisely, aa I
think; soundly,ml!
i*f 1
■7
im » waa, I flm