The people. (Barnwell C.H., S.C.) 1877-1884, December 01, 1881, Image 1
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1 bi<«r S and onmBanin
»« UpiiU^'t tiioald hr writian
2iffl5£!22f%: th * °^‘ ct 0 ' MCh
*"*"* n^leatad by nronwry doU when
«qw r #d.
1. ArtlrlM for publication rhould b
ritt*a ia a cVar, legible hand, and on
nly one aide of the page.
4. All ehangea in adTnrtiaenienta aanat
reach u< an Fildar.
*^POBLIQ,Aj(lait (TURKS a EX BAA-
TIOXH.)
. . n»»T. " .
Sqalra Cecil at hli hlgb-arohed gate,
Staod with kla non aud heir; v , -
Arbnnd him apread hi* rich eatata,
Naar row the manaion fair, ’ ■
And «hea a neighbor, ragged, lad,
Cnlean.ed, paaaed that way,
father turned, and to the lad
Theae kindly word* did eay:
“There goee poor Moggine! Ah, my eon,
How thankful weebould be
That our republic giraa a chance
„^_To fellow* auoh aa he 1 ”. ^
THUD. i
All* Mugglna blazed In Jeweled light, • ~
And swept In el.ken aheen;
Hs, conrhera thought a maid ao bright
iao naantaoem ■a’ar aas aean.
Aloft abe bald her haughty head,
Suneyed her Pari* clothe*:
“An<t I mmat patronize,” ahesald,
l \'^ m Cedi, I euppoee.
“Shr’i poor, the teachee, ha* no etyl# 1
„ In Europe, new—bat oh I
In thle republic, we're ounipetled
Tb neat ail kinds, you know!*
'-'Swtfcwr'# MafXn*.
TUB Lit TLB BOOTS.
ia the morning, on Uweing my room,
I Wtd to see bta ahoge cnrefnliy pUerwd
liVHle my own before the door. They
were UttU, Uend bgoU, rathr / worn nxi
Urtu»h*ai by tb« rough nMge to which
he aalijrrWtd thrm. The aulew wort
aowmrwlmt tiun ia pleeea, end a litth
hole ommowI the toe of the i%ht loot.
The atringta, Ioom end hap, hung ewe
haefy to the right end left By the
•welling of the lenAher, I cnald maw I t
bule u«w, ead nil the nrrea
lei a^tn id hka |oa4 heal h M
thw trwwe aether la
ewrwri tilda m
Why kee mwey it rag he all thh t J
•w^*y ba»w ant, bal I eaa *<iU ear ay
fear hnyV t»»M aaheti wedy jdnnad l >
ay wwa ■ twm grwema <A eased benmle Iw*
paeiag eh man, a gaMiaah
w- Lb aa a i»4aat I TWy «
“rary 4ay laMai ha play
he trwewread h
«ry t ww4 the fepfei «4
pwfe el wew TW)
end paehan*
■hel haawa that aMhag a»
1 aaHnad he ’
ha ae lh
-r- J*.
YOL. V., 1^0713.
BARNWELL C. H., 8. C., THURSDAY, DEUEMBER 1, 1881.
$2 a Year.
"Come, baby ; come, my angel; yon
will catch cold I Hold him I Will you
be quiet, little wretch 1 ”
Then she would wish to scold him,
but could not suppress the unmistakable
smile upon her lips. And who could
have looked serious in the presence of
ihat flaxen head of hair, of those -roey
oheeks, flushed and happy, and of those
baby lips that opened but to vent his
little heart in peals of merry laughter,
as he bounded upon my knee ?
My wife turned toward me, saying:
"He is intolerable! Gold heavens 1
what S child 1 " But I, uudaratond vary
well that she meant: " Look how
pretty, how healthy and how happy he
is, our little man, oiir darling baby I”
And in truth he was adorable; at least,
I thought so I
'1 was wise enough—I may say it now
that my hair is white—not to let pass a
single one of those joyful moments
without enjoying it amply; and, truly,
I did well. Let us pity those fathers
who know not how to be papas as often
as possible, who never roll upon the
esjq>et, never play at hide-eod seek,
never imitate the barking of dogs or the
roaring of liana, never bits with all their
might without doing harm, or hide be
hind the arm-chair, taking care the while
to let tbemaalvaa he seen I
Lrt ua auioerrly pity those poor an-
toctaaaSs ooeal These are not only
childish and agrees hi a paetiwas that
>•7*.
taken together,
which anmaay p
r4 r-t -ating only fa
they a l pert M la
haawa to the fcwm of aa lagot wfcea M
ia 1 raralk oar awry lert, is pmmme eh«4
asset saiy to ha iih«eait a* L«* aa
tWa aalhai
lama tw dmp uar ihassl ary of
y an it, essay fev
• -etesa baatoMM I
day bmSe very _
wake Iks oU ana who still slept aomal
I ttoas m tH aides, and j fait s
wile Mat fata *y heart to
■ykpa The old glove, parfasssd with
vtolat, wtoek I here ao km* kept hidden
la the moat secret depths of my drawer,
Ailed my aool with ao sweet as
Parental love is not a passing af-o-
upon the wiada ; it has its fol-
liaa and its weakness -it is either paer-
Qe or aoblima. It never analyaca itself
and never seeks to explain its emotioua;
it makes itself Aelt; and I allowed my
self to dnft with its delicious earrent
J^t the papa who ia without weak
naas oast the first stone at me—thi
mammas will avenge mo.
Remember that this little laced bool
recalled to my mind a tiny, dimpled foot,
to which was attached s thousand cher
ished souvenirs. f '‘ ", v
‘ 1 can still see my dear boy sitong
upon my khee as tent his flngw nails ;
how he straggled and. pulled my beard,
■aughing in spite of himself, for he wai
ticklish, V,.t/K>)
I can still see him when, in the even
ing. beetle the bright, warm fire, I re
moved his little stockings. How de
lightful it was ! f,
I used to say : ,"One—two—” Anc
he, enveloped in his vast night-gown, hu
bands lost in the sleeves, which -were by
far too long, with sparkling eyes and
ready to burst ont laughing, awaited tin
glorious " Three.”
At length, after a Ihbnssnd delay*,
after a thousand attempts at teasing
which excited bis impatience and gave
me an opportunity to steal five or sis
kisses, I cried "Three.’’
The stocking flew to the further end
of the room. Than it waa a veritable
pleasure. He (brew himself back in my
arms, and bia bare legs cleft the au.
Prom his wide npmi mouth, is which 1
could BM two row# of brilliant bltlr
a naacade of heart y ami
Aa aye* f*
iiw»m* LmS tha |«Maml hmrea ikaar t •
•od (f ecu my te Ihaui. m Btop an M
e*an^ W4 y«us bat .. aa4 ap* • **m
• erfe, sad * «4a a pteas ef turn gemt rtd
• Ujt , |rt as surd seLfe, smila a eav
n | ami rvatyaaa —w ehlldnmt* thaw
•auhy; **tm,emai*4v, we am seert* I
fewujheam tteww Asm wa shall steal
tonaa lUate mimdlW lappy ’* A-l
ekau Ik y bnae afftied down tta»»,
• pealhteee and tmdian, • Wee An* *»*
♦>» ria*m iag tlm ** am»> af tfea
•ai gens, Aa pneemd Is eg to msfea has
lavSeel a, seytef : ** (irelJ *sssa. Pea
arts b Wtoat ep t~
>4 Aa ■
Why
Iteyw
leal eulUvetr tie* i
Asm mbs bolds Aa keys
Art wa are Aa dnpaauf
that Am f<oal Ptowv
!*•-
•aw .af ua wiA
hdoualy auukad, ahvady cut and
•rad apen a pftsu of rH ^
over, te tirkla OUT ears wiA seaat
y pmooa do expect A how-
sver.
Aa mart ha laaacanhla, roO up our
sbwvsa, cook our own food and not ex
pect Heaven to make cur pot boil
I thought of all this, in Ac evening,
when my boy lay in my arms and bis
regular, moist breath came against rey
hand. I thought of all Ae happy mo
menta which I already owed to Ae little
man, and I was thankful to him for
Aem.
" How simple it is,” said I to myself,
"to be happy—and what a strange idea
it is to seek Aat happiness in China! ”
My wife entertained Ae same opinion
and we remained hours at s time before
the bright fire, speaking of that of which,
our hearts were full
" Do you not perceive, my dear,” she
often said, " Aat. your love is of an en
tirely different nature from mine ? Pa
pas calculate. Their affection is like s
trade. They sever love Aeir children
well until their egotism is flattered.
There is something of Ae proprietor A
Ae papa. You can analyse your par
ental affection, discover its causes, sod
•ay: * I love my child because it is Aus
and Ana.’ For Ae mamma this analy
sis is an impossibility. She does not
love her child because it is pretty or ug
ly, intelligent or absurd, because it re
sembles her or does not reaambla her,
or because it has her gestures and tastes
or because it does not have them. She
loves it because aha cannot do other
wise: with har it k a neeeaaity.
nal lorn >a an innato tceong m
In bm
soul, we men; we are bloodthirsty can
nibals. Terrible sentiments, those I”
And I plunged Ae poker into the fire
with a violence that caused Ae sparks
to fly in every direction.
And yet I could not but acknowledge
Ast my wife was right When a child
makes its entrance into Ae world, the
mother's affection cannot be compared
to Aat of Ae fathpr With her, it is
already love. It seems Aat Ae has
known her darling a long time. She
seems to say: "It is he.” She takes
him to her without embarrassment, her
gestures are easy and MCOMtraiilfii-
and, folded in her arms, Ae baby finds
a place exactly to his measure—a soft,
warm nest made expressly for him, in
which he sleeps in happiness. It really
seems as if women had served a mys
terious apprenticeship to maternity.
Men, on the contrary, are plunged into
deep trouble on Ae birth of an infant.
The first cry of Ae baby touches Aem ;
but Aere is more sntonisnmant than
love in Ais emotion The faAer’s affec
tion is not yet born. Hia heart haaneod
of reflecting upomaid habituating itself
to this tenderness which ia entirely new
to him.
An apprentices)op mast be ■erred te
the art of being a papa; there ia none
to Art of being a mamma.
If the father la awkward ia loving his
ase teas baby, wa mast arknowledra
Art be la nans As leas awkward in
A
TrwsHif i
lortows, a 1
te rairtng A
»afraid uf 1
fappatskip la aware af As tot sad
kM t* fB-*ag Aw Afl
tomato* If to kto rt/hte
a Mi to*. flbstowAAtea
BTMOXIV JOB KB.
Notwithstanding Byron's assumed con
tempt of death, nothing could exceed
bis abject terror when laboring under
even Ae slightest illntoss. He was dining
at Piss, with Hunt, Trelawney and
Shelley, one day, when he was suddenly
seized wiA a violent attack of colic. He
hastily arose from Ae table, threw him*
■elf upon Ae sbfa, and began to say,
J ‘ Oh, my God I I am dying, I am dy
ing !” Trelawney, who was a very pe
culiar man, went up to Ae terrified''
bard„and said, "Come, come, Byron, if
you are dying, yon needn't maka such a -
OUR VUVBX1LE9.
Th» Song of Iho Eat Hot.
When ell the Ilf ht hat); left th* Weat,
Xudth* wearied world hath gone to net; ,
When the moon ride* high In th* purple iky,
From our fonat home we falrle* hit—
Ont of the warm, green heart of th* earth.
To waken th* wood* with eong and mirth. N 't
/» _
Flow, watara, Sow I Blow, reft wind*, blow 1
The falrle* an kings of th* wood* to-night I
W* are the children of Ught and air;
We know n(k Borrow, wa feel no ear*:
Through th* i<mg, eweet hour* of th* eommar’i
night,
To rorel and dance te onr delight;
Sad wherever onr flying footatep* paae,
Thera ase heigh** *
,lH
d wat^f
confounded fuss about it” The tone in
which he said Ais was so irresistible
that Ae sick man could not help joining '
in Ae laughter which Trelawuey’s non-
chalance caused. Byron, who really at
heart was s very kind man, and whose
nature rose at every oppression *“
very fond of himself out
bad one, and when he hsd ind
Himself wiA • little mors gin and
than usual ha would frequently grow
almost maud Hu over hia imaginary
wickedness. One night h* waa partic
ularly dismal over bia own miquibea,
and expressed great repentance. He
wse very much put out by Mre. Hunt
eayii^, in a tone at affected euaeulatkm,
"Coma, my Lord, you are art half so
is you flattec y mi real f you are.”
i his publishar, John Murray, gg
rea*t, a Bible very mealy
bound. On Ao outsh
ffnldrt tettme. wee t
** From Lord Byron, to kfc friend. Joto
Munpy. laq’ Tbfc won
► af l
Flow, watan, flow I Blow, toft wind*, blow I
Th* falriaa are king* of th* wood* to-ulght I
In every bloeaom and bud w* hid*.
On wing* of th* wind we mount and rid*;
W* haunt tb* brook* and th* raahlng atreanu
And wae^mb totha etan wplh* blight mocnhi—... ,
And the woodman aaaa by th* dawir 1 * pal* tight
The circling track of onr footatep* bright
Flaw, watan. Bow 1 Blew, aoft wind*, Mow !
Th* falrtm an klag* of th* wood* to-night!
jrwfcto. —t- '
toe | “Whff,
Ae rtr of a 1
And yefl.
A glacier ia a field or immense mam ot
ice formed in Ae deep valleys of high
mountain ranges upon whisk enow erem*
to be eternal Tbs now, however, it
not ao lee ting. Indeed, it te cunetanUi
evoporating, rrterning to the cloud*
from whrth II descended; or, rerooimog
exposed to Aa rays of Ae sun, or to A
influrone of a hot southerly wtod, it
toelte and tnektee down until it is retted
by Ae onld and armgaalad into to. Ttomr
by means of Ae mtlltooe of drupe aback
■alt only to tones end melt again, are)
totofamld. and, HttU by tttto. tto
enow ao lately fallen spaa Aa summit
of Ae mnuetem ia -bread to have to
amuded Ae etepaa Kvea ■ eemm»«
A*ue msrm us qwemim ef me end
enow prertnee e loaal wtotrt, eB tto m»ev
eefltoue hum Ae esnMeet, tor safe by
mfe wrtk Ae gtoamy •toner, wrtk Mt
af
Without deecendiiflg into the depths
of n glacier to study its sir-bubbles and
crystals, praiseworthy m Ae courageous
effort may be, we call find much to In
terest us on the surface.
In this apparent confusion everything
is regulated by law. Why should a
fissure always be produced in Ae frozen,
asms opposite one point of Aa steep
hank? Why at a certain depth below
Bhould Ae crevasse, whichhsagradually
liecome enlarged, again bring its edges
nearer each other, and Ae glacier be re
cemented? Why should Ae surface
to be*
come fissured elsewhere ? On seeing
Cratrset advsrtWac Is psyable M
day rtter first Inwrtioa, uo'sei other-
itlpulated.
Ne communication will to pubiiAjd
unless sccompaaied by Ae name and ad
dress of the writer, not ns ream r 11 y for
jiublicatlju. bat aa a guaranty of good
AJdrem, TJE PEOPLE,
• h—. Barnwell 0. U., 8, O.
PLEASANTRIES.
Wa wonder if gram widows <
hay fever.
Evxbt man o! honor has a loaAlng lot
a low thing, *
1 It is hard to pergnade a man that a
rich widow isn’t handsome.
Two waif in Newburyport played 8,263
games of dominoes last year. They
must reckon that year aa Anno Domino.
Con. Mr oils is Ae President of the
United States Hay Fever Association
this year. He feels as muckle a man aa
Jnttox Sneegsr. : ;
all theae phenomens, which roughly re
produce the ripples, wavelets and ed
dies on the smooth sheets of the water
of a river, we better -u|demtand the
unity which preside# over everything in
nature. ~
When, by long exploration, wa have
become familiar wiA the glacier, and
wa know bow te account to ouemItm
tor all tbs little changes which taka
pfaoe upon it, it la a delight to roam
about it on a fine summer's day. The
heat of the sun has given it voice and
motion. Tiny reins of water, alaacat
tmperoepUMe at first, are formed hare
and there: these unite in sparkling
wind at Aa bottom <4
out by
It isn’t because a woman is exactly
afraid of a cow Aat Ae runs away and
screams. It is because gored dresses arr
not fashionable.
Annex that ia given away la not ap
preciated, and it is given away becauM
Ae giver has no nse for jt himself.—
Bottom TranteripL
Tax proprietor at a LauisriDa bone
tot p—ous leaving
1 that peo-
of a
fall
lartlmy |
■ to tha '
tot of
wto*. at
■toy
to a Iteooto
'■toff I afcto 3
-No.
i Into of
rt Ito I la *^ •fl'totoily to kffl
m aU j amo tolto affiy.'-rtJtoton
mtora I -(tort asm. rtmMmstmywu to ga
to to | m tod.'maf an AaaSm Mr to brt Bate
to Aa I ArtflMrt "panmamkrta to toff. Deret
yrtl
41km
Aa ptomt tomtoo totebtt to 1 (Mtobnfif" ** Yea, toa An afifi
to tore rear re rear*--- 0 -to i «*. m-re rt m k^i*! ^te^ t-L _|rtmiff^l
■mstort arttott . rttert AMS to toto mrt am^* vto fkMfev • _ ^ M ^ ^ ^ ^
wrtA m to aaflty ! Ms tofl Mto kAmmam —Jtosprt'k | |
Art . Hrtya
V-v
r i
_-I kM A*
tomRj
f you mean to Maun tofftofl M art to a* r
t vrer. I ~ frv Ae tort I ams to t ortt bread
mre* a j teto* *« A* '
- feemAAre i
Ito abre
tom TV* i
JAy ymnff
Mw
la ■ art
! to MS I
**| am
>• mg uni maMfftoff As to*
Tto taflflm makre teMa*n»4 1
I v-tgreg tor tor umArttoAtog. amf play
J vary forty m Aa yaana, •Ask Ire
| fort'7 fo reyAmg but naff TWa I
mrtfoar gtre wtAcrt a saw lammrt ami
aa Aa eafom gwfo af bs* art Wham !
tto ssffff
to bm. rtf
It tea
'•A*
-t. ,
ffaere
A I
to*
by
Ah! Aahalored darling!
ya pa. I can atiU bare bm
Uttla voice and atoll are hia tiny rad
rise and fall. Wa
a rtrela around
above hka gtanla. Wa aaid
Hay Art again, little man,
1 Whara is your pays r
And be, cheered by tha bright
around him, tnrnad his ayes toward
and held oat hia little arms.
Oh I bow I embraced Ae darling,
voice waa ebosed wiA tears.
From Aat moment I was s papa,
riously a papa.
I had been baptized '.—From
French. — _____
to
■•7
me
My
Um
A LITTLE M IBB MIX T.
He walked into Ae office Ais morning
looking much like s man pretty well
satisfied with general results, and said:
" Can I see Ae editor ? ”
He waa shown that eminently useful
adjunct to a newspaper at oooe.
" Good morning, sir,” he cheerily be
gan.
" Morain’,” said Ae editor.
"I came in,” he proceeded, "to tell
you of a misprint in Ae paper.”
"Yes? What is it?”
"Well, you see I sent a notice around
yesterday Aat Mr. SmiA had just been
married, and your compositor, 1 see,
has got it 1 Mr. SmiA has just been
martyred,’ but I guess it don’t hardly
make enough difference A change it’’
The editor scratched his hand a min
ute, and Aought of house-cleaning and
oAer female eccentricities, and told the
visitor to omrea it didn’t, and ha went
away whistling, " Why should Ae spsrit
of mortal be proud?”—AtertxnveZZe
UermUL
aud tor mrth
rtfpmartwffh tor work!
ia ito kttetoi
a ffto wrnte au Ihu table, |
aud. 4 aurtte
tag to wealed dunag tto '
■mal. feuuy
sure* rtrea to grt M, but
pamrettosm
fdy dmk to tor mrtkwr tew 1
t, and adjuata to* pretty
a nai Me ia
happy igmamuee rt Ae
though la to
Acre looking on. Now
this fo all 1
rvcsif. TTua girt ■ art
af Aa
ay into
falling ova*
Art part i
to Aa
to Aa
naturally bad ; bar mother fo aoUly to
blame. I lor ore do not baligva ia Aa
plan of wearing out tha oldest first
Let Ae younger ones Lava a good time ;
don’t be ao strict as our
wiA Aeir families, but
■pact lor yourselves and for your own
nghta, or your children will doubtless
tore nowe for ywu.—Rural JVam Yorker.
Tto
M*- Mills, Ae apostle of ensilage,
or Ae preservation of crops A a green
state for fodder, the poesibilities of
which he is illustrating at Arrabeck
farm, Pompton, N. J., l^ys down the
following conditions as essential to suc
cess: Air must be perfectly excluded
from Ae pit or silo by a uniform and
continuous pressure of about 360 pounds
to Ae square foot; the crop should hare
flowered before being cut, and Ae
knives should be sharp enough not A
tear Ae saccharine sacks. Last year
Mr. Mills fed for seven months 140 sni-
mals, cows and horses, from ten acres of
corn-fodder. The past summer he fed
for six weeks 100 cattle, mostly milch
cows, from five acres of oats sown in the
spring, and he believes Aat during the
coming winter and until his corn crop
(or 1882 is readyjhe can, in fptte of an
inferior yield occasioned by Ae drought
keep 160 cattle on Ae oorn-fodder out
from twenty-five acres. Mr. Mills states
Ast one An of gram preserved green A
a silo pbwflmm aa great feedAg capacity
as twenty Ana to Ae hart hay. Theae
ate startling figures, but if any cue feels
disposed A dispute them Mr. Mills will
gladly furnish tha proof, sod triumph
antly point A hia sleek aud happy cows,
where rich milk Mum 1 rent a quart
suttees at
fnrtaou of As ire against ito edges dues
net npple it wrth (Ay waves Mmilar to
ttoore to Aa shore, but fracture* and re-
fraHurm it wiA crwvieaa intersecting
one another A a multitude to fimurea or
cracks, which, widening cat A A chasms,
tierome shat are known aa errratoet,
and which make travel upon a glacier ao
dangerona.
Lx king down from Ae edges to there
"harLS ws am layer upu. Ayer to blu
ish ice separated by blackish bands, Ae
remains of rubbish carried down from
the surface, or at other time# tha ice may
be as clear and perfect aa one single
crystal. What is Ae depA ? We do not
know. ▲ jutting crag of ice, combined
wiA the darkness, prevents onr glance
descending A the lowest rocks; yet we
aometimpi hear a mysterious noise as
cending froir Ae abyss; it A Ae water
rippling, s sAne becoming loosened, a
At of ieft splitting off and falling down.
Explorers have descended Aeee chasms
A measure Aeir density and A study
Ae temperature and composition to the
deep ice. Sometimes Aey have been
able A do it, without any great risk, by
penetrating laterally A A Ae clefts from
the rooks which serve ss banks A the
rivere to ice. Frequently, too, Aey are
let down by ropes. But for one scien
tific explorer, who carefully and wiA
proper precaution Aus explores Ae
holes to Ae glaciers, how many unhap
py shepherds hare toau ingulfed by
theae chasms I Yet it is
mountainaam, having fallen boi-
to a
by tto
Tto
to
to •
i a
Bal hardly knew what to da At
firet to ttongkt ha would run busk
terte, th*u be felt as If be should cry.
So to keep back the tears ha thought to
must be brave, and, doubling up his little
^ data, to shouted : " Coma out
I’ll give you a licking I ”
How Mr. Dean did laugh I
1 Mr*. Dean came ont and took Hal A
’ and he soon became acquainted with
Mr. Dean and liked Am as well m ha
did her.
Before Hal went boms, Mr. Dean
gave him a book fall of pictures, which
he kept till he was grown up, and al
ways called it his Dean book.— Youth’t
Companion. -7 "V r
- "J A
Thb capacity of the Germans for eat
ing and drinking is something wonder
ful. A festival known aa the " Oanstet-
ter” was lately held at Philadelphia.
Of eating and drinkAg Ae Prett says:
" The consumption of beer, sausages,
aud sauer-kraut was enormous. One. of
Ae committee gave Ae Prett reporter
Ae followAg figures of the amount
drank at Ae different bars yesterday :
There were seven places A all where
beer could be purchased, and at Aere
663 kegs were sold. Each keg contains
160 glasses, so the total number of
achoppens was 88,480. In addition A
this, it must not be forgotten that sev
eral hundred bottles of Rhine wine were
consumed, and s large quantity of soft
drinks. The society received 16,232 rent
for the beer and sauar-kraut At
the last-named place since tto festival
began 76,000 plates of saner-kraut,
12,000 pounds of sausages of %jl descrip,
taons, 14,000 pounds to ham
to
*7
thirty-twu
fey
great hospitals at Madras, India, for tto
to tlm air. tto mnviMft to
by toad, are
stitntkm being both effective mid afloffom-
ioal The machinery by which this is
•eoomplished is quite simple, all of tto
tew A the great establishment being
pulled by. a steal wire Une som* 1,700
feet long ; that is, tha whole number-«f
fans—100, prerenting a total area of
2,050 feetr—are all pulled as dh6 pendu
lum, giving s swing of seven or right
feet, smoothly, steadily and without
noise of any kind. The long swing and
uniform continuous motion produced by
Ais arrangemout insure Ae desired
change of air, wiAout occasioning a
draught
• *»«■
Thom who have suffered from the
lodging of a locomotive-cAder A the
eye have scarcely ever recognized it as
a blessing A disguise. Indeed, parses
undisguised, together with weeping,
wailing and gnashing of teeth, rubbing
of Ae inflamed organ wiA only Ae ef
fort of making it Worse are tto usual ac
companiments of Ae affair. A boy,
blind A one eye, suffered for several
days from the Atrurion rt oua to Aere
pests, but when the b* adage waa re
moved he diaoovered to hia intwae de
light that he could are for the first time
in several months. Tto
to w to
trauhlad him a<
could art eut ax