The people. (Barnwell C.H., S.C.) 1877-1884, June 01, 1882, Image 1
•cd •nR«ai
to b* pnblUb^d »booM ba wn
M M^arau abaau. tad tb« objpct o f«cb
•Uvlr ladlaaiad by aroMMiy uota wboo
ra^nlrad.
for publieatio i ibouk) be
writUa in « clear, Ie(ib!a hanJ, and an
o»ly oaa aide of tbe page.
4. All ehanfM in adra<U<fiiienta mua
rtMbaaoa Fiiday.
TOPICS OF THE DAT.
Rworts from Dakota indioate a large
yield of wheat ^ ' •
Mark Twain is writing a book about
the Mississippi RiTer.
Rttswa haa loot $110,000,000 by the
anti-Jewiah movement.
Ralph Waldo Emerson’s estate is
estimated to be worth $100,000.
Petitions for the pardon
names.
The army-worm is operating in por
tions of minces doing serions damage
to wheat
formal opening of Oarfleld House,
lor working girls, in London, was a
notable event
Mb. Oladstoxb condemns the rewiaed
edition of the New Testament He does
anything and everything to make the
Irish dislike him.
h the Ooanait-
afraid* The
■nan affair w
BARNWELL, C. H., S. C., THURSDAY, JUNE 1,
Oaattae* ad
days a! ar I rat la
wya tti pels ted.
No ooaaaiaaleatiM will
uuIsm aoe >«paaied by the
dress o( the writer,
G biicatlMa, bat ara
tb.
THI pxopls.
Aidreas,
Bam wall
a willingness to purchase an occasional
calico dress if it is really impossible to
do without it There are men mean
enough to refuse to do even that
Making the exeention of the Presi
dent’s assassin private will be bad for the
railroads, but it will be good for the
people and good for public decency.
The proposition of an Ohio man to take
forty car-loads of people from one section
of the State to witness the exeention is
monstrous. The simple fact is, a public
execution would draw no less than s
the result
oily or
tt»
in several
disastrous.
particulars might be most
At Aim events James Gordon Bennett,
proprietor of the New York Herald, has
done one handsome thing In ooaoeotion
with the futile and disastrous Jeannette
Arctic Expedition. He haa presented to
Mre. DeLoog, the widow of Lieutenant
De Long, who lost his life in the expedi-
tion, e check tor $80,000. In this oon-
that “ if the Lieutenant had died in the
eeeviee of the Government hie widow
wtmld have received a peoaioa of shoot
ftfty dollen a month.’’ .
The Turda complained at Kansas
unwarrantable proceeding*, bat were quickly
silenced whsn informed that they had elun and
buried Hite. The secrets of the banditti were
now no longer hidden, and so the Fords felt it
was sauce prf petit. Then the sister, who was
the suie woman of the household, hurried to
Jefferson City and did a tale unfold, and the
fate of Jesse Jamee waa sealed. The Fordn,
guaranteed immunity, went systematically to
work the captore or death of their chief. With
a plausible story of the treachery of Little,
winch had placed them in jeopardy at home,
they were received into the family of James.
Then the traitors waited and watched and
struck down the man they dare not capture.
Mrs. Mat Shannon, who accompanied
Mrs. Sergeant Mason when the went to
see the President in behalf of her hus
band, writes as follows of the incidents
attending the interview:
' Mrs. Mason seemed to wander along *» if
14 through some banquet hall deserted. 8he
found no pleasure in these attractions. Her
spirit was far away la the prisoner’s cell, and
the burden of her heart’s song, like Qrechen’s,
■eemtd to b#,
“ My peace Is gees, wy heart Is ssta,
ISed mb never, never mssa."
Having sent ia ear van
the larga ante-room by a |
alii
avoid be the
At the
rwv,
OsAbo the
-The!
eee aa.” W.
The
English and Americas Ladies' Dress.
Mrs. Soott-Siddons is qnotted as hav
ing said : “ An American servant will
tie on her veil in a natty, graceful way
that an English duchess knows hothing
about.” Mrs. Siddons will not be charged
with an over-strained regard for the
Yankee, or a wish to favor them at the
expense of her own countrywomen. In
thus placing the servant and the duchess
in contrast she was simply emphasizing
a truism which was less a fact at that
time than it is at the present hour. For
among all civilised people the English
women are the moet ill dreesed, and
seem to lack the natural gifts, the self-
reliance and ability of choice and selec
tion which are the inborn attributed of
American women. An English nursery
set off against a nursery in this country
may be taken sa a type in miniature of
the taste in dress and all that the term
involvee of the differencee which oharao-
terizee the women of the two nation*.
In this country little girls find constant
satisfaction and congenial employment
in arranging and adorning their doll’s
apparel. Left to their own intuitions,
and hampered by little rr no
from their elders, it mart be a
they die-
years of
life in her native bad. end who Wee
Uved m Uue atv half of lha» time, oo*b
aaldb- ’^We hcaaea c« Amanean girls
Betook of ert to dm
Why People Are ao Short-Lived.
The Concord School of Philosophy
having requeeted the assistance of the
Lime Kiln Club in solving the conun
drum of why the people of this age do
not live as long aa those of earliy days,
the matter was given to the Committee
on Judiciary to^investigate. They now
express a readiness to report, as follows:
“ Dis committee had no trouble to find
plenty of reasons b’arin’ on the inquiry.
In de fust place, de taxes am ao high dat
no man kin afford to lib over a hundred
T’ars. In olden days a mau could tell
his wife to git long away if ahe didn’t
S lease him. In dis age he haa to stick
y her ’an fight it out. Dis haa an indu-
enoe to make him sigh for a change to
de evergreen shores. None ob dose ole
ohape had a second shirt to his back, an*
none dreamed of puttin’ on style. Look
u!.< <! y. >u in dis Slge on’ see de coat-tails,
■leave buttons diamond pins, an’ odder
gewgaws which bow down a man’s head
m sorrow to de grave I In de time of da
prophets dar waa no maaaa of Mootin'
aroun’ de keotry an’ takin’ in da sights
In dis aiga, artar a man haa bin to New
York. Washington, Chicago, an’ a few
odder places, ha am up a stomp lor a
change of scenery, an’ be natterly wants
to he poahia' on to’rda da pearly galas
Dta anmmitlea am ob de opmyma dat da
handred y an ooght to be
dad to head ■» hta tookrt
rival at
by the sw
The
1 aa4
after the
tealng <4 haee -r- —
lode
m a i
kail Mai
Man. MR
mH IlODM
rYwee af
m
i m
Ad»
■ tJuarJtt ft
Illustrated Rlarkgnardtsm.
Caricature has always been oiia of the
sharpest weapons of political warfare.
Travesty, bnrlesqne, and all the changes
of the farcical have been need pitilessly
and mercilessly from time immemorial
both in the interest of political parties
and political blackguards. When party
lines could not be broken by the heavy
guns of argument or the fierce musketry
fire of attsok in front, the caricaturist has
been sent, likes cavalry rider to the rear,
or liks a spy in the garb of a buffoon,
into the enemy’s camp.
Sometimes the work of men like Leech
and Nsst has been more effective than ar
gument, and has been employed in as
legitimate a way. But the sense of irre
sponsibility, the license given to purely
personal spites and prejudices, and the
feeling of reckless jollity that at times in
fluence the artist, make the work of even
the best caricaturists uneven.
The temptation of the ordinary scandal
monger to go to exteeaaaa Js limitad br
the tkongblthat hewffl bebald rmponss-
bte for every word ha utters. But the
oarioatunst labors ondar no mah re
straint. Ha works in the dark or be
hind a veil, with a! the materials at
hand to besmirch and degrade. U be be
a s«"*n mao kia powers of ridicmle and
his sense of humor are given tree rstn ek
Lha dowuwwrd scale lie knows little
abool men. lass aboet eadsrtytag prln-
by supmflriel ob
ar iIsbitt. he pets
'or Bunn— into
M se—iUd if the btacri
tenaaffhmd.
ta beneeqsm^and
Je, and thiagi bstd sbbI
si mbs rsmsebs wttisani
TW k>w— meauMSa sod
* ad «i peaaaawi B tbs
fed Um f tn •*
rMklUMfei *4 lib* 4f
rj li UMfef hfefeglM
CmrrAssB has stated thaae km
tials to a baby’s well being
water tor the skin, plenty! *
stomach, plenty of fresh
longs, and plenty of sleep
Dr. Firtm, of Brooklyn, ii
experience as a bald-headed
how he restored the growth
persistent use of crude kero
he has a suspicion that the us
really the means of oaring
rheumatic tendency.
Thh Governor of Georgia
tioned a law regulating the
medicine, and vetoed a bill
the dissection of dead bodfc*.
he deeirea that the inhabitants
flute should get their medloal
and experience
Da Unna, of
pigmentary ms
blocks up the porsa of MM MO
ing black points or " fleah
, soluble in acids, and ha 1*
mends the free nee of
jaiee as a local application to I
Tmb ose of
riding ia am
coasparad ta
walk n slack
■ would ha
of a
af a aa*. an
to wl
— an a i
Dm J. T. <
• to
\wm
km
1-
hand
■ • a (
•••hatftos^mm * ^
ri *
>nM «an*m
sty —•
Mfel'
d kaf
ri •
apmto d pm
— M teyekf k
•kb—a anf —
Hfefe nmk-1
Ms BBisasy
*—
4fl
- f
Bg Boris f»-m
— e» iAiis I
toTk tottotyloBtoAi fWkM
to/to i
tW tokfei
■ fefei
}*••***• mi 9m 4
am 4m m
flfefekM bi jitmmmm,
W bAsbI to— ksma
igmhn
stf •
w*
toaB mi
me dm
vzrz a ri: r
kng tomto |
toe
sAsmo m
to— §
tBB mesa Bws *an
•Bswtwf wwries ki
•s—m Tb m*
s4wm m bm
ssagha t—
fShri sf m*
a4 tom m—i
Tam-
hBf
r«w*
h. mi*
... •nrwa*m—
m k l
trib— mm—
ri a
Km sb— b N-w«h
ahe mm*mada v«m
t Sanaa Tama
tmbsB be— m a b«
TWi
assss
L'w. .1
waa sf
fepevtnbsndmd af the
my. The eths* m toes
ef the
tree
Bee WaBbl
TW sa ■■■! {
that tbe eeffhrs
aa'atri maketm
and the ’* padl
esBvteba apam r»
iwigteahty. —Hwtrmt
%d m—
lor
city, to
will
roaad and mi l
they can’t sea.
A mws it— aaya "a Borlingtoa (Yk),
man who got a divorce from his wife, a
while ago, —ploys her aa his hired girl.
Ahe haa mors money and better clothes
than when ahe was his wife.” We do
not doabt it at all. If you aver noticed
it, a man invariably gives the hired girl
more money than he does his wife.
her of Robert Bonner, the great ad
mirer of fin# horses and proprietor of
the oldest story paper in the world, the
New York Ledger, was married a few
days ago to Mr. Francis Forbes. Emma
ia. a child of romance, and will doubtless
now give us new editions in serial form.
In a Dote to the Oincinnati Commer
cial. under date of May 11. Professor
Vennor predicted as follow*: “ I expect
a sharp period, with frosU, about the
7th or 8th of June, in Bouthem sections,
and a second one during the last week of
the month.” Well, we shall see what
we. shall see, but ws do hope the man is
oat of his head.
It la remarked that President Arthur
is the first President since Buchanan to
attend boras races. General Grant,
though vary lond of bones, did not at-
during
frnmmrnj.
and Tan
in Ts
This to probably the I
«r of this fairy ule.
Tbit have a peculiar kind of justice
in Mmaochusetta. No sooner do ws
hear of the discharge of a ruffian who
had carnally assaulted a defenseless
woman whom ha had chanced to meet
on the highway, at 1 o'clock in the
moruing—the dismissal being upon the
ground that the woman had no business
being out at that hour of the night—
than we IrngL ihak-A Justice fined f
fsther $6 and coats for slapping his
fifteen-year-old daughter. The charge
was assault and battery. Although it
does not appear that the girl sustained
any injury, or anything more than felt
the sting of the blow, it was held that
tbe father overstepped the bounds of
law and order. Thus it appears that in
Massachusetts it is a greater crime for a
• * * • . /
fhthei to correct his daughter than for a
ruffian to carnally assault the same
person. ,
A correspondent in the St Louis
Republican gives the following explana-
tion of the betrayal of Jease Jamas by
the Ford Brothers:
On* and * half mils* —t of Richmond,
Mo., it tbe houM of the Ford boys. It it dif-
leult of sec— ; deep ravines wind through and
about the farm—JtMt tbe location to bide awav
from tb* haunts of BMn. tod to plot deep and
ail
(jggjs mmm
I tv— *m, aad yet the I
— that the prloeeof
The Fatffe I
■« ess k
St his
The Tmm
Wa A. _ A t — - —Wea k. n ii . — . 1
I rv>c—t m t oti49 who amm to itciji *
suUsunhip will euafirm l—gfattow •
ef hm
ha talk
to which ha had
uarnpt, and to find
II than k aetnal typa, to ba raad by the
multitude. This feeling comes but oooe,
but the memory of it lasts a lifetime. It
can never be forgotten. What anticipa
tions it arouses—what a sense of im
portance it gives I How littls does the
young author suspect the cold indiffer
ence with which it is read, possibly not
read, by those who take the paper! As
the song says, “ It’s all the world to
him,” and why not all to the world ?
It would be and is cruel to spoil the
delightful sensations of initial author
ship. They may be false, they certainly
are fleeting, but tbe enjoyment, while it
lasts, is an intoxication of delight, as
first pleasant sensations are apt to be.
The hint comes soon enough to the
writer to discover how really' unimpor
tant the event was. If he persists in
writing he will come to be as indifferent
to his appearance in type aa the world is.
if a newspaper writer, he will we«
the eternal grind, and forget what lie
has written the day before m studying
what to write for the day after.
But no success, either as a newsps
writer or book-maker, either as poet or
essayist, however flattering, wul ever
give to the author the sensation of his
first appearance in print. It to, after it
pc sans, a lost sensation, no more to be
repeated than love’s young dream, with
freahnea* and fervor. It to an ill
exquisite to be duptooated in one’s ex
«—
c.
to rest by the
wav. A dog recently swam thirty miles
in America to rejoin his maeter. A mule
and a dog, washed overboard in the Bay
of Biscay, have been known to make
their way to shore. A dog swam ashore
at the Gape of Good Hope with a letter
in ite mouth. The crew of the ship to
which the dog belonged all perished,
which they need not have done nod they
only ventured to tread water aa the dog
did As a certain ship waa laboring
heavily in the trough of the sea, it was
found needful in order to lighten the
vessel, to throw some troop horses over
board. The poor things, my informant
a staff surgeon told me, when they found
themselves abandoned, faced round and
swam for miles after the vessel.
The New Schoolmaster,
old man approached the
with
It!
after they have i
print a—a, to |
fetoi
to In my. m
’••my
young writers,
*-4 “
in w ,
The old man approactiea me new
schoolmaster with a boll-dog glare in his
eye.
“ You got after my boy yesterday be
cause he left a live hornet glued to your
chair?”
«I did."
“ You licked him ao he thought the
world was coming to an end ? ”
“ That waa the imprcaainn I intended
to convey to him."
“ I am hto father, and Fue earn* to tot
flew to the air.
.'X&pto jfitoT
I gw teams Hi I
X
\7,
i ef the
to hm pocket. TW
hm to wrap up the
M — hm head, boned
to tW heir. TW girl followed hie ad-
left tor home, tW way taking
a (hearted heath
tgged him to aci
ny bar on account of hm money
complied, and accompanied
the greater part of the way. Hard
v , however, bed W left hm and tamed
back when he beard a piercing shriek.
H iMcLiLgbook, he found the girl lying
dead in the street without her head,
which had been carried off. Aa the girl
had told the policeman of the butcher
whom she had visited, his suspicions
were at once aroused, and he hastened
to tbe batcher’s house. After waiting
half an hoar the batcher came in with a
bog under his arm. To the question of
what was in it he replied that it was a
sheep’s head, and threw it under the
bed. The policeman left, and returned
in a few minutes with some colleague*.
The sack was demanded, and on being
opened wae found to contain the mur
dered girl’s head.
American Coin In Foreign Countries.
The American $1 to worth five francs
(95 cents) and a trifle over 30 centimes
in the coin of France. One Austrian
florin is equal to two English shillings,
or about 46 cents, and the rix dollar to
$1 American. In regard to German
coin, there are about a* many different
kinds as there ore different k
the Empire. TW crown ef
valued at $1.10, the thaler af Bexmiy at
i;_ th<* thoter w l Prussia at TO sente, tbe
thaler of Brweewiek end Hanover at 80
an; the fiO-caerk i ff'Ad)
■MM
bat
for
Una trade is in e
to proved
stock ia ta
Or Ma.
of Model
Dr. Edward
Ism bee
jet healthy
by the rapidity with which
tamed over, as well aa the fre
quent advance in price*.
In the manufacturing districts of
Michigan heavy advance* have token
almost all the grade* of lumber,
e ‘ vicinity of almuat all navigable
streams in that section of country all tbe
beet trees have been utilized; conse
quently lumbermen ace now compelled
to go farther back for a supply, aud the
coat of the pine log from the stump to
the mill haa, therefore, been materially
increased. _
To look at the immense rafts which
annually make their way down the Pe
nobscot, the Kennebec, the Merrimac,
the Oonnecticat, the Hudson, and the
other principal rivers which draw their
from the New England State*, a
tyro would say that the Eastern State*
alone can furnish all the lumber needed
for continent; bnt the fact that the
center of tbe chief supply haa gradually
moved west to the lake*, and that a
scarcity ia already j>re*hcted there, indi
cates that in the near future all these
sources will be exhausted, and that we
must draw oar supply of this great ar-
riole of commerce from still more distant
psrta—Nfric York Reporter
v*rd.
of
met him in
hung with ' ,
som«ly furnished, which was, 1 believe,
celled the “ocrporsltaa room." We ■■
round a mahogany table. '
ported to be meant for toe
trustees, and the whole i
pectof a friendly gathering to* prfMto
house, in which the study ef OWto
was the amusement of toe oooaakto. Bn
began with familiar baUadx lend tb—
to ns, and made us reed th— to Mm.
Of course we soon committed th—to
memory without meaning to, and I
think this waa probably peri of Mi
theory. At the same tone wn wen
learning the paradigms by rffta. Hta
regular duty was toe ovenighfeef five eg
more instructors who
French, German, Italian, Spanish
Portuguese to two pr three hundred
der- n radeatra Ws never knew when M
might look in on a reritatirai and vir
tually conduct II We were delighted to
have him come. We all knew be wan t
poet, and wet# (wood to have bfan tot ton
college, bnt at the
•peotod him i
aa a i
Jfefep* J°u think jua krow
with aa
how to
torn
ia—iga.
mt i
KOI
t’nt,
yowr
—4 toe Dentah
to aqaal
i »
sill
seat to tell
to the top
ywm gvesaii
ip k the a
A Georgia Mg With t
Whoever heard of »
toothache? Well,
the
for a'
nth
to- btoftl
riai
i —eriel