The people. (Barnwell C.H., S.C.) 1877-1884, June 08, 1882, Image 1
wrhtag '* Ali
fo*r mm
rw o#o.
Bo» n««i Wi**ra aad
i io h« puh >»k«>4 (koald b« wr
WMnU tfcMU. Aid Ik* ohjAct o? ooch
*t\j lodieotod by M
rtqairod.
k i j mtia WbM
*• AtKoIm far poblfootioa should bo
writtoa io o door, logiblo hood, and on
oalj ooo sido of Uto pof*.
4. All •h*0|M io odroitiMioenU must
1 okMMO io
>oa Friday.
NEWS GLEANINGS.
EHE PEOPLE
VOL V. NO. 38.
BARNWELL , C. H-. 6. C., TH0R8DAY, JUNE 8. 1882.
Aidroai,
TOPICS OF THE DAT.
The Texas Legislature has created a
railroad commission.
The Buckingham gold mine in Vir
ginia is valued at two million dollars.
WellsburjJ W. Va., claims to have
the biggest gas well in the United States.
The Dunn’s mountain^ gold mine, in
North Carolina, is paying handsomely.
Five Kentucky boys graduated at
West Point this year.
. Sessions ol Police Court are held on
Sunday at Lynchburg. Va.
One hundred and twenty-five papers
are published in North Oarolina.
The wheat crop in East Tennessee
promises to be as good as that of last
year.
The Texas Legtsature has levied a
1600 tax on all dea'ers in such literature
as the Police New*, Qawtte, etc.
An effort is being made in Alabama to
establish a number of societies tor the
prevention of cruelty to animate.
Five thousand sheep are said to be the
number in one Hillsboro, Fla.,
Burns Hatch is predicting a disas
trous panic.
Pro?. Huxlut is to act as one of the
biographers of Mr. Darwin.
Fits of the nominees on the Pennsyl
vania State ticket are lawyers.
Tax Garfield Memorial Church edi
fice at Washington will cost $38,500.
! I .mmmmrn&m, i . » ■ — * ■
Queen Victoria, the dear old soul,
has just turned her sixty-fourth year.
Wn confidently expect at least
a light frost about the Fourth of July.
Tin egg product of France last year
amounted to $300,000,000, so says a re
port;
Twn saloons of New York City plaeea
side by side would reach a distance for
forty-five mile*.
A SAD young man, after taking a meal Pre«bTU»n»n Cbarsb in Lawrenoebm/g, Indians,
at a New York coffee house, after much | "bers I began my ministry."
searching in his pockets, produced a $2
greenback from hia watch fob, and with
aaigh, said: “Here she goes.” After
hia departure the note was examined,
and on the back appeared, written in a
fine hand: “Save your salary; don’t
gamble; newer play at a faro-bank.
Hie last ot a fortune of $10,000.
Tot poet Longfellow once wrote to a
youthful poet as follows: “ No man. I
think, should devote himself to poetry
as a means of making a living. True
poetry is the offspring of our beat hours.
If you make a trade o< it you may be
sure that it will degenerate into mere
verse making. Therefore, follow some
railing or profeeeion for a breli
hood, and keep the gift of song sacred
and for itself alone.”
PaamzMDrr Aumua's mail average* GOO
letter* a day, and of these no* cue is
twenty <
The new cotton mill nt ^
(tenth Casolina, will knee a capacity
, Horatio Thom pm*, lor
■rty rears a IrwMee of
Rav. Robot Goman spoke in New
York Sunday night upon “E
When he rose to begin hi* lecture be
•aid: “ I see P. T. Barnum sitting in a
back row of this church, and 1 invite
him to come forward aod take a seat in
my family pew. Mr. Barnum always
* eond M*t m to* area* and I
During the marriage ceremony (that
of the Duke of Albany) say* the London
2Vu/A, the Queen happened to look up
•t the knight's banners, and, to her
amazement and indignation, she discov
ered half a dozen opera glasses peering
from behind them, all pointed straight at
her own face. An inquiry was speedily
made, when it turned out that a promi
nent official at Windsor, at tbalaat mo
ment, had secretly constructed a small
private gallery up behind the carving at
the top of the knight’a stalls, from
which, after reaching it by the aid of »
perpendicular ladder, his friends had an
excellent view, perched up like owls in
an ivy bush. The Lord ChABkberlain
and the Lord Steward, supported by a
posse of their subordinates, summoned
the erring official before them, and not
content with administering the question,
ordinary and extraordinary, ordered him
to come up for aentooee at the Loudon
at the Board at Work*. But be
fore being again recked, be is
stood to here goo* down oo bin knees to
John Brown to
Ik* thing properly." Bo he gut
It's the Way Yen Hny It.
There is •. man in this city who wants
d
killing. He has got a way cl paralysing
K'ople that will bring bun into trouble.
The mau we speak of it sharper than
tacks, and well posted on all topics of
interest, and can converse and entertain
those he may be thrown in contact with
as well as anybody. He can put mi a va
cant expression and seem to be the most
ignorant person in the world. He wna
at a party recently, and was introduced
to a young lady from an interior city
who was a guest, and the first thing be
said to her after the compliment* of the
season, wa*:
“Bad about Greeley, isn’t it?
I The young lady did not exactly com
prehend what he waa driving at, and
■aid beg pardon, etc., when he remarked
to her that Greeley waa dead, aud he
put on % sorrowful expression and added
that Greeley w*a a great man. The
girl, who hiui known ol tho decease of
the wohishop.
Fob tempering small
dad. The method
petroleum i» recommend—
is the same as by other prooeeaen. The
pieces retain their polish and are not
tarnished. Care must be token not to
approach the petroleum to the fire. Af
ter the pieces We been treated they «n
be covered with soap, being first slightly
heated.
drs« of
C biles tl in
th.
USEFUL
Cat fresh water. Water which bM
stood in an open dish over night should
not be used ter cooking or drinking,
as it will have absorbed many foul ganes.
Mr* a little carbonate of soda with th*
*B*er in which flowers are } *
and it will prrferve them tor
Common saltpeter is also a rorj good
It i* no easy matter to |lug up a dia
mond drill hide from which there te a
strong flow of water, frequently under
great pressure. When * Tud* ■ to be
plugged there are farced into’ A small
bags of beans and
the great editor for manj jyesri^
at the man, and looked at him
as though aha thought he was far behind
■ -
flaxseed fhe plug,
made of dry pine, from **■*>
Set in length, is drive- mafte* these
bags and forces them forward in the drill
hole: also, a hoi* to sometimes bored
lute the end of the plug, which hole to
filled with flaxseed. Ti e flaxseed and
ti«*ns are caused to swell to such an ex
tent by the hot water that the bol# to s*
compactly filled a* though closed with
oj.Uteu lead.
polish within
for a long time, it
-Take ol
that she thought he must be oraay. and
■be excused heneif aod went into the
i should place their bofl
■ of ‘ —‘
are a good eubetii —
Tax* a new flower pot, wnahitdea*,
wrap in a wet doth, and act over butter,
will keep it ** hard a* if on toe. Huh*
if put into an earthen can, or even a
one, will keep sweet tor i
well wrapped in a wet doth.
Btboko Lavhxdhs Wat**
English oil of lavender, two u™,
of bergamot, one dmna and a hMfj
of ambergris and
dram; fiain
ram. ; rectified i|nrito of wme, ana n
pint Mu.
To Dnensor Arm—Take earbotie
•md diluted with water—take one part
parte water—end with n
ihm
cracAs and bote* wbesi they
,2
> AIM to 4400 each two Teamen of
_ three
n •tore-keeper, two
'Green Office " men, and two etemn n»-
peratua men. And in the oonfeotiooerv
department there are n first and second
yeomen, with salaries of £300 aud £250,
roapeotiveb, an apprentice, three fe-
p-.U raatotanto, and an errand man;
and, in addition to these, there are also
a poetry cook and two female assistants,
a baker and hia assistant, and three
coffee-room women, ’fhe ewer depart
ment, which baa charge of all the linen,
consists of a yeoman and two female as
sistant* only. The gentleman of the
wme and beer cellars—or, properly
speaking, her Majesty’s chief butler-
has a salary of £500 a year. He has to
select and purchase wines for the royal
establishment, to superintend the de
canting and send them up to table.
Next to him are the principal table-
deckera, with £200 a year each; the sec
ond table-decker, with £160; the third,
with £90, and an aastotant, with £52—
their duties being to superintend the
laying out of the Queen’s table before
dinner to served. The plate pantry ia
under the care of throe yeomen—with
anlariee of £100. £150, end $120, re-
speotively, beeidee lodging-money and
board — * groom, and su aeatotanta.
These office* are of greet trust and an
overpaid, seeing that at a- rough
the gold and silver piste at
Ca*t> *l»oe it wobably w^m,
Supreme Court ban given
e uecpMua i* the long pmiting eait of
the Ongaby brim, to recover about three
of land in and near Dnl-
toak The denial nti is in favor of the heir*,
and gives them property veined at nearly
*3,000,000.
Captain Eads la going to Europe.
Meantime if the Government refuses to
shell out some $50,000,000 for him to try
bis hand constructing a ship railway, he
will bring some "bloated Englishmen’
here to do it for us, and then we shall
feel awful bad.
A man at Rochester, N. Y., who went
about the news stand* tearing up the
flash newspapers oflered for sale, has at
last got into jail from tearing down the
picture of a nude woman in an art gal
lery. Some people are ashamed of the
works of Nature.
JenuM Cramer, after a
Um MalWv boa**, oo her rstarn
virtually thru* ooi by bar mother;
that aha parsed the
after her experience
evening of Friday, two da;
| ^T^tTm^daithedfam. of the
having, with her party, » boUteronxly as to v ho rightfully deserve fecognl-
attract general attention, and so annoy one i ^ . have the privilege of the home
land; if that be the
the eoldiem* claims remain unim
paired. the government ia to be defraud
ed. Or else it mean* that theee copies
are to be used in some
the
SM. V mi — ^ »
i .articular Hartford matron that *he requested
, . . * . a l t I — ~ _ Al. :_^a A 4 Ymr»_
husband to take her home; third, that Jen
nie Cramer was found in the aballow water,
dead, at an early hour, on Saturday morning;
and, fourth, that she died of the effects of
arsenic in solution.
The theory of the defense is that Jen
nie Cramer killed herself on account of
the treatment she received from her
mother.
A oontbmpobabt says Jennie Cramer
should have minded her mother and she
would not have met with a violent death.
Yes, and the Malley’s sfarald have been
gentlemen instead of murderous pimps
surrounded by riches and the* influence
of good society.
Tn list of wadding presents to th*
Duke of Albany sad bis bride fills two
comma of th* Latototi 7‘od.
Rav. Hrnbt Ward Beecher the other
day, in Plymouth Church, said:
“ I havs never asked a collection h«
when it has been ordered by the Official
Bat to-day I want you to give a collection for
me ; not for my personal use, but for my sake.
When I was about twenty-ttasa years of »ge-,
yes, my wife says to (looking down si Mr*,
beecher, who nodded her bead in her pswj,
knowing little of Ufa, and having much
n. r
1 «rn, I went forth aa a preacher. I went across
the Ohio to Covington, to a little Presbyterian
Churob, for I was a Presbyterian “
Lhetr aonfseaioa of
faith.
tion and have the privilege of th,* home- ,
stead act. Soldiers should remember
and dishonest men need not be told—
that “ in making final proof on a home
stead entry under the Boldiere’ and Bail
ors’ Homestead Act the party will be
required to present to the proper district
laud officers a certified copy of his dis
charge from the United State* Army
during the war of the rebellion, or in
the absence thereof, ‘satibfactory evi
dence’ of service, which may consist
of the party’s affidavit of the facts, cor
roborated by th* teatimony of two dis
interested witnesses, will b* accepted.
The intelligent soldiers of the State ot
Iowa and the Northwest will at ouoe
see the reasons wh/parties want soldiers
to give up their papers for a considera-
tiou. Let such persons understand that
such practices will be investigated, and
that thev may hear farther oo the sub
ject, and their achemsa will b* dropped.
Nothin* they ritoeiv* through their fa-
terooura* with th* B*ttl«ra.
expert with the spear, end n*a dab
waddy, and tba boomerani
resell tiling a
wooden sword, bent to an dips*; oo
fr+ing thrown into the air, it strike* the
and n*a dab or ^
rwras St
ran rallTtffiffi* am . .. .
groond aad rebounds toward the ^ ro •
The dil
Mali U ai Iilffijlin’i far name sow, »
no ooa will know—anm* for me to goto £*^
Don Putt ia not
l,f« wa all tivn.
satisfied with this
I A
different tribe* have often been
Eatred in feuds with each other. The
re of ardent spirits has made great rav
ages among them. They are polyga
mists, aud their marriages consist chiefly
in the groom carrying away the bnde,
with or without her consent The dead
are buried in the exact placet where they
died, and those spots are never inhabited
awain by the members of the tribe of the
deceased The name* of the dead are
never pronounced, and those bearing th*
same name* are obliged to change them
They believe in a good and a bad apmt
In regard to white*, they beheve that
white men are the reanimated souls cl
the ; but whether or not this u
he taken a* advancement or retro-
greeaion ia not clear; at the same time
U brings to mind th* vfaw* cl some of
the Afru-ana, who believe the evil spirifa
are all white, wtiffa the good «**/*?.
their own ebony shade. Jfa
to be ramdly i-
rwault a fimra
retted
» wee
^rrat vigue, ihe cady
the finThour two C
and the
imipitioaSb The reoiwd,
bowvtw.. not keep np, o«dy ooe
timuaand being added fa the seoood
From this time on the baainea#
and at the end of tbo third hoar
broke down. Th# young woman
the midst ol too much of a
good thing, and the young man’* lipa
were cramped out of their refulnea*
and paralysed.
It isn’t wo
it is alday*
nt to
Held without
extent, th*
•tapir* net*. *
In 1812 Napoleon
e fore* at 400,000
invaded
but the
worth while expressing
gate ol the Russian
what leas than 200,000.
strength
The
the difficulties ol
,; n in.i about an extrsordiuary couple
like*that They have their own poniih-
pumsh-
ment in the fact that the matrimonial
engagement between them waa broken
off in consequence ot the stranoe per
formance. Probably there isn t any
warning! in this fat American girls. They
don’t make a public exhibition erf their
kissing, and they are never known to
faint at the end of the third hour. They
are the kind of girls also who do not
paralyze the young men’s Ups, and the
young Tna.ii whose Up* don’t paralyze
must be a pretty poor young man if he
. • w • 1 U Krafvarraan klftfM*ffi_
meat ooped with — —
situation with unaccustomed —,
the late war with Turkey. The •▼owed
intention was to make the confasa afart,
sharp and deciaive. I® November, 1876,
the Russian army
composed of 180,(
army of 59,000
L the Danube
give* a girl* time to faint between kisses,
lon’t d
But don‘t do it in public—it fan’t worth
much that way.—Philadelphia Timm
men
Kan, fa Asiatic Turkey.
- • • Asmara ■
i principal
marched
In tba
against
i follow-
had
% What He Died eC.
An old lady from this city
*ho
ing April the.
swelled in numbers
eluding 40,000 Servian i
auxiliaries, and 8,000 at
militia. The army in Am
increased to 79,OMl R*
tinual effort* were made
- number of the troop*; L—-
, ■
T&a seems to be rather ms fanpotoa*
result when we ooomder that fa Febru
ary, 1871,
nutu., ta Bito. kr 4
d^nptu,°< .
»nd She asked ehsl (irrme* te» a**! d*e*i
T,' IT
•—rra