The people. (Barnwell C.H., S.C.) 1877-1884, January 12, 1882, Image 1
1 la «YU>a< to UU •So* na battaMi
alva^a |1t« jroar mao aa4 foot
_ . Uttoro ••I mm Haalo*
Uoao la bo fwbJUbf 4 aUaU ba wrltua
•a MaaraU aboau. aad tb# abjool a aaab
alaarlT ia4iaato4 bj a mooary aata whoa
raqwlradL " ^
t. Arliolc* far pabliaaliaa ahawM b
rUtaa ia a e'oar, lagibla baa4, aa4 aa
•ly aaa ai4a af lha paga.
4. Afl obaagaa ia Urartloamala aaaai
noFnda
i a* aa
-f.
•N
' r
-L
LOVE'S ECSTASY.
Lonolj and iwaat a rlolet i
The maadow waadi amonf.
On* Bara a roar akapbard maid,
WUh oaralaaa baart and tdla tread.
Oamabr,
Caao* by
The maadow land* and annf.
M Akr’ aald tba rlolet, « woaid I ware
Boma atately (ardan flower,
That I might gathered be, and pipaaefl
One Uttia hour to bar awaat breast
Ah, mat
Ah, mot
Only om Uttia hour."
C* came Ifc* tway ahaphard laaa,
’ With heart that idly baat,
And crushed the rlolet In the grass.
It only aald, “ How sweat ”
u How swaet," It laid, with (amtlM moan,
** If I must die, to die alen* '
For bar,
w Ihohao-
Te die at her deer feat"
fotr rE TOOK A HOARDER.
y#w oar hoaM is quit* A large one,
pa, beeide Ujoee apartmeaU which wo
feupy o and too and thooe which wo
dedicate to our gaeoU, there is s rsrj
■lee little room on the oooood floor,
which wo newer tue and Tory
mtst.
Owe morning, when I happened to
feel tea eeryeoanooaieel mood, I bm
thooght myeolf that, were this rum*
fornlohed prettily, we might joet es weU
00 not toko o bear Jar—there were each
oamber* at edeertieeiBente ia the paper*
for tool each nlame. Bo many ample
Udue wiohed " board ia o pnrate fama
lj when aooth*
and so msmj am
i A o bum. ,- that I bed
Id aait uamelTM as*
ortly.
Acourtliaffly I braerhod the aab^eet to
Pealtar *1 the Ut4o that eery
TOL. V." NO. 19.
BARNWELL C. H.. S. C, THURSDAY, JANUARY 12, 1882.
mnsioal tintintabulatioa, which betok
ened an anaoeuming and well-bred ap
plicant for admiaaion.
A young gentleman *o Biddy in
formed me; and, after peeping in the
glam to eee if my hair waa amooth, I
ran op stairs.
There wa* a yoong gentleman In the
parlor—a tall, fair yoong man, with
straight, ■traw-colored hair, combed
back from h * forehead with a nuh, and a
white oaeat of ministerial proportions.
He had dear little hand* incased in the
moat delicate of gtoreo, and waa ao
. Polite and gentlemanly that, really, 1
thoaght to myself, I ooald hot poaaibly
find any one who would suit me better
for a boarder.
He wae on a visit to the city—eo he
said—and his principal object in the se
lection of a boarding placa waa privacy
and good society. He waa a church-
member and kept vary early hours. Ho
was very fond of children, and would
be happy, if I had any of thoes dear
creatures, to instruct them in any little
accomplishment, each se drawing or
music, aa an agreeabto manner of pen
ing his leisnre hours. Altogether he
Fanny happening to ran in jaet thee
heyumg gentleman took bar npcm his
knee, nnd thrw became friendly at mos.
Bo, somehow or ether, it wee all settled
i e lew momenta, and Mr. Orlande Al
berts bad agreed to bscuma the OOra-
pdntof mf sgsrtnsaiA After tb* t«
nees hsd been anftraly settled, hnbe-
gse to ehat with me and Fanay, and tb*
they wereta
idteenr aew l
that I
to tb*
M we 1
"No, sir,” I replied.
“ Nor any one named Phillipe ?” in<
quired the man.
"No, air." : - ' - , ~j
" Perhaps his name is Alberta," said
the other, stepping forward.
" There is a gentleman named Alberts
at present in the hout>e,” I replied.
" Ah ] then wift you be kind enough
to ask him to step down a minute ?’’ said
the first speaker.
" Certainly—if yon will walk into the
parlor I will oall him," I said.
to the floor, abdve, while I sent Biddy to
summon Mr. Alberta. After a great
deal of knocking, she returned with the
information that ah* could not make him
hear.
“ And what is more, mum,” she con
tinued, “ the window out onto Hie roof
of the abed ia open, and the curtains
Mowin' out of it, and it seems as though
there wae no one in it at all"
"Take my word for it that the room
is empty—the bird has flown," said the
first man.]
“ W* must unlock the door and make
sure, however," said the second.
I stood there in perfect satoniahment
as they pronounced thee* words, sod
placed, at the seme tune, two stars upon
the hnso— of their ooata M Vhtt
mid it all Maori thought.
“Too look surprised, ma’am," said
» first pelinamsn. "I suppose that
Mr. Alberts came the gad, interUcVswl
kind of body over you, didn't be f—eeid
hie prayers, Like a good boy, sad al
that, ebT
"Ha eertaisTy ssimrf * very f<d
■bob," I ■eghsA. la test, 1 see as
mm Id beiisee bim otberwme"
"Nor replied the mea. "Jed look
mod and see if yoa miss eaytluag. It
Is eartnm if ye* A«mX“
" Mms aaythia* f*
•* Tea, me'em. fine jm mmsAsi
ms ttlvsr. m ssm yoar Iswehy tftsi
• The art oi, printing, which is the
greatest source of enlightenment and
knowledge in the world, has been prao-
tioed, in its rudest forma, from remote
antiquity. Among the ruins in Egypt,
bricks have been found with mystic,
characters impressed in the clay. By the
Israelite*, seala and mgneta were used,
tpd.’in later periods, the Rontons used
stamps or brands for marking merchan
dise' or cattle with the owner’s name.
The Homan inscriptions still in existence
posed that a passage in Oioero, De
Natura Zteorum, giving dijeetions
gar ding types in metal, called by him
formoe lUerantm, suggested the idea to
the inventora. It is nuarkable that
the ancients should have approached so
near the invention of types, without
their being brought into ue until the
fifteenth century. Among ftie Chinese,
Japanese and Tartan, tfc* yrinting of
bd&ks from blocks of wood bad been
priK tioed fr')ia- jivmote jicnods Their
method was to paste paper upon the
face of the Modi, draw upon it the
eharaotsc desired, and then entoa
wood eat ooTered by the drawing. The
(see of tb* drawing was then eo
with ink, and an imprt arise taken.
kgr
f, tboegb tb* time and place of
i is not knows with esrtainty.
It b claimed that LnursB* Jenssoon Oee-
ter invented the art of pnnUug ia
in tb* year 14S,
m st wand.
No work af
•ition cs type founders, and its true
merit wae n*t mode known. In 1795,
M. Fennin Dit^t improved upon the
prooera of Van b* Iffy Impreseinns
of the' types were ttt#n upon amooth
sheets of lead, and matrioes war* ob
tained in this way from which reverse
impressions ooald be made in type
metal. Not long after this a better
method was invented by Earl Stanhope,
and it has been used to some extent
He made a plaster east from a page set
up in ordinary type, except that (he
spaces and quadrate were the same
the tody type. The east
upon being removed waa exposed in
an oven heated 400 F. It waa then
placed taoe downward in an iron
box, the cover of which waa secured
and the whole immersed in the
melted metal. The metal flowing
in, worked under the heated mold, and
raised it and the floating plate upon
which it rested against the cover. When
tokeo out the bottom was aei Ib water
to cool before the upper surfeoe, while
umm a—wee pooled into the tap fa
keep ep e pro—ure against the plaster.
When cool the plaster east wee heato*
up and th* plat* dries sd by planing tb*
book adgea. This Hsfy wm about
one-sixth of an inch in thioknsae, and
was beaked with weed fa make it th*
ef type. By this method
WOMEN.
WhSi Ores* Writer* sap Akewt 1
How errors * thins
A warns* Bar b*
—WdswortA.
Tasss woium era
to**uo».
Earth’s noblest thing—a woman per
fected.—LOWt.U. ; '
A woman’s whim—they are full of
whims.—Aldrich.
routes lor ooftneoa m,
A*4 awaat attncUTa
On* must tell a woman only what on*
wants to be known.—Caron.
i *rq tecte yssasfl W farawe*a
. I — i - * _
Wokbn always gfv* more then they
Wo
more than
and th*
Woman it a
PLEASANTRIES.
A oood housewife’s affairs are like a
motion to adjourn—" always fa order.”
Why are seeds, whan sown, liks Mate
^ _|j *
i planted in thei
posts? Theyi
P*®p*g*lA^g
A WOMAN who has four sons, all sailor*, ~ ;
oomperoa herself with A year, because ;=rte
she has four i
What constitute* a revolution of
earth? First comes th* spring,
the summer set end the fall. Needless
f the
then
In red is adopted as the j
color fa cities like Mew
cattle are allowed to roam the streets,
gored drosses will oenm into general use.
—/Noeyimc. r
Ticks is only a slight dUfcranna be
tween a hand-organ and an
Ob* is worked with e crank
other generally by a "eranl
tor the as* of 1
e very neat mstnoa. <
vhiek wee favaated I
ymetieed an eL th*
pan fa
principal
is Bow
It was
fa e leafa <
It ton
lass fa th* i
i of e
t
W I
•■J
mat b*««. ami K
very pnrtlmriaf
myealf • pmtty
, and I
irteel, mmel and i
, m t* g»*w ip Mm
i bfarngta* te e flrecemyany,
I that tb* momhm* sf tee
ete *>lil to eltowwd um pnv%
msttog in my pnrter enes e
iheM *~4> ksmm wm enl ef
I hbewMs meetmasri Jto* be
uk amity meimd at mbs m
Oh.
gmtlamee's
I
[ the petal, te 1*1 e ■
of i he engiee
tend te ambe me
Although 1 I bought aa, 1
•mv Te
^ Itowfate
parVw. fce
Thetees
11 M
fa the
A WOW AN
ICflCsri
who am
with
tm to
tv* i
if •r
fatenet
Mtf‘fa
ami Mr
Verv <
b wee bts
rr I
iteboa'
worthy and well
I, M h better to b
bo hnlbOMt, Is It aetf* II
a* the
- Aeyly *. »—*
W> lake Fksm'h
te know
be ta fa* eye, • rap-
John.
ami fhs
the Aset at
wp** 1
the sattsfa It
The
is t*
au wessh Be
am and anyteg tod to'
M*a., a *h«e. wa*
mn* Ml faeVrei Ittft
ef th*
i a* fast B
IVA, the types l
-Ctoerpe
fa 1479 tele t Ml<
be* M h as tms ae B h u . t
it*
A Um
its Mto |
I on
> that I bad
* say aaytbiag Bgia Na 140,”
might to "topping glad to
have 'em mo«t ia my parlor, for—for all 1
thought myealf soot* yeakiaa, I waa
only small portal arm,” and that Na 940
boys wen fine folk**, end I’d totter not
roatredirl fatal—so—av?"snd departed,
leaving an odor of bad cigars and stale
whisky behind him.
My next applicant was a maiden lady,
who desired accommodation* for herself,
a parrot, a kitten, two poodles, a moo-
key, and a cabinet of mineralogical spec
imens. Of course she did not suit me,
especially as she was very particular ta
her inquiries as to my servant girl's ca
pability of washing and attending uj-ol
poodks and parrots.
Closely following upon her heels came
a gentleman of respectable appearance
and plausible addraim, with whom, in
spite of a pair of very wild, singular
eye*, which protruded beyond the lids
until they appeared to drop out into his
cheeks, I was mightily taken. In fnct,
the arrangements were nearly concluded,
when, to my horror, I made the dis
covery that he was a professor of spirit
ualism, ami a speaking and singly
Btodhun ; likewise, my eyes were opeued
at once to the singularity of the gentle-
man’s eyes by this confession, and 1
became aware that th* neareet insane
asylum would, in aO probability, suit
him far better than my humble dwelling.
Bo, with an inward thanksgiving for ray
rseciK, I got out of th* scrape aa pohte-
ly aspoettbia, and the " raadintn " de-
pufaC
arrived throe very untidy young
who wanted to share th*
It wee
" Thai remark of kia about the dig
nity of truth waa really tee,” ***4
Psalter. “7 m may to right, after all,
John."
"And he ia ao kind to Um children,
and ao very amiable,'' aaid L ’’ I am
sure we atoll to delighted with fasa.”
And we walked on together in the most
amiable mood.
Th* concert over, we returned home,
when, to our great surprise, we found
th* children still up, and in the parlor.
V It is not my fault, mum," said Bid
dy, when I spoke to her about it. “ Th*
;roung gintleman got up after you wap
gone, and has been playin’ with ’em all
the evenin'; and he sent me out for
candy for ’em ; and then, when the fun
was over, he read ’em a chapter, and
bade ’em say their prayers, lor all th#
world as if he were a minister."
« Oh 1" said Fanny, " h* is so swest f
They talked about Mr. Alberts ail tie,
time they were undressing, and their
admiration confirmed me in my opinion.
Children alwayf have such penetration 1
The nexl nsoming we all arose as u*®-
ol, but Mr. Alberts did not make hi* ap
pearance, and Biddy informed me that
he had requested her not to arouse him
if he should sleep late, a* ho never took
breakfast, and was very much fatigued
by his journey. Bo I cautioned the chil
dren to keep quiet, and we sat down to
tba table without him. After breakfast
the gentlemen started for their place# of
«—j and everything proceeded as
until noon; but etfll Mr. Alberts
did »al teaks Waappssranca, aud I be-
SM the
te leeeive th* aew* that Mr. Altotte
• a rotofoat ef Wag Bug. which we
did ia Um than a fortnight
P. B.-I have ecu* to the unalterable*
•gain to edverto* for a
to board.
A sraoiio effort, it ia eeid, will be
made, at the preaent aeaaion of Ooo-
greas, to scour* the passage of a bill au
thorising the erection, on an appro
priate site, of a new executive mansion,
to be used exclusively aa a reaidenoe for
Um Pnwideut. A number of friends of
President Arthur have told him that he
ought not to live in the old executive
yaurinn, which, if it be healthy, ia not
equal in point at convenience to many
private residences. They have urged
upon him th* necessity of kia living
apart from the building in which he per
forins his official duties. He ia disposed
to assent to the pro]>osition that the
President should have at his disjiosal,
as the Governors of some of tlie Htales
have, an office building ami a residence,
and he approves the plan which devote*
the White House to office purposes, and
contemplate* the erection of a new ex
ecutive mansion In th* northern part of
the city.
V.
HI*
iflsa. the BJ
girea to the world, la Mila*, fa the
yed 1474* e Qswek |
and the Aral work fa 1
plate, wa* Oteare’s ’
rsa,” printed al Bos
At Cam bridge, ia
ftnt printing prate S
the United Btates.
John Barkerville, living in Burning-
t, England, invented punches for
cutting type, and produced those of ele
gant proportions. After his death fa
the year 1776, hie inventions and types
were purchased for the splendid edition
of Voltaire’s pork* published by Beau
marchais. Th* art wae sustained by
Bulwer, whose edition* of
A th*
Tb*
a OeB
A* to waa
this the tops
Boston daily pegro ba* been afate to
snake a plate ted prepare ft for
press in eight minutes and fifty-eight
eeooods from the time the form wae re-
oeived In the stereotyping deps
These plates may be used for editions
of 100,000 or 900,000 ooptea, and the
rapidity with which papers are printed
by this process upon
preaaly far this process ia marvoloai.
subject,
and Milton are among th* first spaei- Into fa eahetaatially, Um* history of Um
art which has done so much to improve
the condition of mankind, and which
has led the human no* from a state of
mental darkness into the light. May tte
future prognes be as rapid and aa fruit
ful ae topast^
Th* following ULhT shows the cotton
production of the United Stole*, with
average yield per aero, by States, as re
turned bjrthe census of 1880:
When Gladstone rises to speak he
clasp* his hands behind his back. ' y Thi*
attitude prevails, however, only daring
the opening sentences. Once wanned
up, hie gestures ere rapid, ttmoet tun-
on*. When addressing Um Bouse of
Commons, to will take th* I taa- '* :
box on the fable « represents tm of
ford opposite," end beet It
Or;
mens of typography ever executed.
Cases for the types have been invented
at different times, until they are noy ae
nearly perfect.aa possible, the objwcl of
the mvantors having t*een to lessen the
From these
ch 1 htv^ Wbe learned, tho
letters not being placed alphabetic*
ally) the typtehke art fate thw compos
ing stick, a Uttia iron tray, until it ie
filled. From the stick they are placed
in a galley until the article is set up,
from which they are plaeed in the form.
A number of raachhm* have been in
vented for th* setting of type, and oth
ers for distributing. A few machine*
have been put in successful operation,
but they are not In general nee.
A rode form of stereotyping, an srt
newspaper printing, was invented early
in the eighteenth eateory by Vaa D*r
Mat. m Leyden, who formed the types
into solid pistes by soldering the lower
end My fade means print- <
ed several ofattoae-al the Bible ia the
Lriitch language. LMs method pw*e<|
a VJaro. for the roeecn that tba
te
'fa
WATB. f
. •* . V */ .. V'.’*
Tssa
Atm I Stitt. • pnr
\Strt.
•*e*s****s^ **
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M,W7 MJ
liirilM S1M41 au
tn<UM Ywtllery. — ......
ttCSotkfiwsy- •«•••••»«*■*•••
. JIgfMHftADfa. ••• »•>••»•••*••>
} milSHiPpie**#* •••«s«*****
* MMn./sls7..V.s»
Kovtk Cftroan# *...*
Hotitii •
••••#••*••••
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•SR
stt.fr
'ran*
mmm
: HISM
V«.tm
M.tt«
llm e.w
l^ST UM
MMtt «.*
tst^a <u«
tai.wt; n.«
MM>* Ml
uomi s et
MMOi AT
ISJttj Att
VinrtBi*
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14,tSXtfl
AteSAul AM
A noncrwD hotel m Toledo will have
bo bar-room, bat. fa tte stead, a
chapel, fa which the
The
bsmsms*
bitterly renla.K
Inetaetiy, a bolt of lightning
irons the cloud overhead and the
young man fall dead fa his trsefci.
Nearly every boo* fa hie body was
mashed to a jelly, while hie boote were
torn frees hie feet and the clothing from
fas lower extremities. Tto .lxxly pte-
seatod a horrible appearance, being a
blackened and mangled mass of human
ity. His companions war* stunned and
thrown on the ground, but not serious
ly injured. Th* funeral of the unfortu
nate yoong man occurred the next day,
and attracted a large crowd, the larger
portion of whom were drawn thither by
the rumor of the strong* events prooedr
fag the death of fas deceased. When
the body wss deposited fa fa* grove and
the loos* earth tod been thrown fa until
the aperture was filled, and while th«
friends of the dead man yet lingered fa
the cemetery, a bolt of lightning de-
t—from a cloud directly over
the borial ptoee end struck th* grave,
dirt as if a plow bad
through it. Nooee
woe injured, bat thoes present scattered,
almost paralysed with terror. The inoi-
deat Is ex siting a great deal of attention
—ministers sad roUgious people gener
,!W holding the! the
th* victim of the wrath ef aa
OoA while etiMts smart that the
the money on Me
from it, I
hove drew
aceouet; also, that if
person fa e I
not m * 1
I* He nmanilMr ,
ran from whom be holds the money ran
follow it, end toe a charge on the fai
ence in th* banker's hands, sven tboogh
it is mised op with th* depoftoNri* ewn
money. Th* aaaae ooart held that a
penalty for failure to pay promimn ex*
) tressed fa an fasomno* policy caa to
enforced fa all cease, fagardtem of all
excuses or reasons that I
—-
Bn weeks after the death si Ma
Gilbert Thompson^ wile, fa'New York
oitr, fa 1884, he locked hi* wife’s sister,
Mise Barker, in a room, knd called God
to witness that he farad her, weald
cherish her till death did them part, sad
i more of tiro same kind. He soid ltt
couldn't marry her on account cf his
mother's opposition, but from that
he proceeded to bra with tor ■
Twile, i
All the tuts he held hirneeB oat to i
*$ ji