The people. (Barnwell C.H., S.C.) 1877-1884, June 08, 1882, Image 4
1*?^ M# rimt
► Ih.r.,; .r.rf,
U AfTVrTTTVi
hjdrogfln dMtrojt the
ury k) th* fbm»
> dell deni diol reeulU In m
hu recently
rich, nitro-
development of
1 female*.
in South
i ^»men*e enpply of
Jity, ao that the
be dependent on
It ib anried by n recent writer that
lie art of mitaio jb prehistoric times
1 through tbie distinct stages of
pment, ea^s sharacterized by the
ation of a nelr form of instrament.
DxrFutmnr opium alkaloids do not
act alike on men.and auimnls. As nn
bxample, man is^ipecially sensitve to
morpliine, while animals are only affect-
edVby it whast administered In large
A Fuxoa naturalist has shown that
>bfaaoria l ona*ixth millimetres in length,
a complete anatomical organiza-
a moath, stomach, alimentary
I, skin, and'irreii a well-defimxl
Oou> is
U
> widsly distributed
W^S- 1 — _ 1A - M
UAiTmnj of
vr&rcrs
0*1 of I
Twnw atriklaa
"Pm ee eoed e i
Dhweln thbeM
eahl the
the tabU with Ul let
tan aemeUs tneu'ir *
t«m
A tjr* ei
la iap*»-
|lwPL.’
!’r - t
wtm the few
It wee
of th*
“My r«.N.rd will compare favorably
with roura,” said the temw with a sneer;
“perhaps then an a few little back*
racket* in your life. sir. that wouldn't
bear a microscopic investigation.^
“Oh, sir,” said the editor, visibly agi
tated, “I don’t recall the post; don't
bring up the memories of the tomb; I
know I’ve led a hard life—I don’t deny
it I killed Shorty Barnes, the Bowery
boy of New York—backed him all to
pieces with a knife. 1 hare atoned for
that a thoosand times. I blew a man’s
hesd off at a log-roll in Kentucky, and
bitterly have I repented of my folly.-
I slew a lot of inoffensive citizens of
Omaha over a psltrv $4 pot, simply be
cause I gut excited. On, could i but
cheat the tomb of the men I have placed
in its maw 1 would be happy. But it
was all owing to my high temper and
lack of early training. I know that I
have been wayward, wicked, oml /bn
have a right to coma here and recall those
unhappy memories; but it’s mean for all
that. Nobody with • heart would treat
a mad hkevon have me. Don’t leave,
stranger; ill tell ; von all I sawed a
a man's hesd off with an old army saber
just for—”
The Texst Terror waa down stairs and
half way around the comer, while the
; taking a t
editor.
> fresh chew of rattlesnake
twist, continued Lie peaceful evocations
quietly as a law-abiding citizen.—
lake Tribune,
HI MORS Of THK DAT.
but
I* a lottery you pay yoor money,
70a have no abater. ■ ■
Wax* k a botes like s bfcaioeee men in
trouble ? When be bevska.
Da it ever oerux Is yen that a eaaa'e
aphids Skis » arret dovat
of
Ckomwall
territory are
Loos XU. waa the most famous
of France nine* the days ofjiaint Louia,
and acquired tbs title of “Father of his
people. 1 ’ , . ..
Thk oldest brick bnilding in England,
except those built Ire the Romans, 1i said
to be a castle in Sussex, built by Db
Fiennes, treasurer of Henry VL
Art iNTEBcsrnro Arobwologioal Con
gress haa recently been held at Tiflis,
which was attended by abont eight
hundred -persons, nearly all from Russia
and Caucasus.
Is TJIB time of Alexander the Great
interest in natural curiosities was so far
developed that he used to send back from
bis exiieditiona such objects to his
teacher A ristotle. •
Jcbtcniah raised Theodoria, a the
atrical performer, to tire throne of the
Roman Empire. If Gibbon’s account
of her be true, she was in many respects
her husband's superior. . ..
An important classical discovery is re
ported from Athens. It is a manuscript
of Homer, dating from the 117th Olym
piad, 808 B. €. It was found by Prof,
nokoe, in an Athenian monastry.
John Atlwxr says of Queen Eliza
beth that “ when all the ladiee went with
Iheir hair frounced, curled and doubly
wirled, she altered nothing, but kept her
M manieuly slumrefaosducsa ”
■ Scon was ths publio fevling against
Roman Catholics during the reign of
Chaste* II. that memlwrs of Par ham rut
■srs raquirsd to make a ilecioraUos
agaiost traMsbeta'itiatam, which e\-
eluded Roman Catbohcs fnvn thaar eeeta.
1 new tale by
in the world of
» reader knows
H was
sritrcf
A mm*
whan he res
ofhwty - Me then bad M
> he it
77”"Iti
fieri
Hue
ef the
<4 a
I ehti« the vm
i a | see re * he
Ike reesiMw N
Mr
*Mr.
a fcAJ the eSrwv •*
rsH ~~* olteaU « So <
ewrgael ee t*Aees
eA*. «a A [VreS m oa
gad f« the proper gemot,
and at there was no sign at the storm
abating detemined to order a earring*
The demand for carriagsa was greater
than nsual, at indeed it is in every town
daring etormv weather. A few minntes
lieforc 11 o’clock, however, one answered
bit summons, and arriving at the place
of worship, the clergyman hastily or
dered the driver to wait until the service
was over, to find himself, however, in
the edifice alone. Apparently sea-faring
peofttfe hesitate to attend divine service
in rainy weather with the same trepida
tion as tbe'munera of the land, for not
one place waa occupied. The clergyman
being a zealous man determined-to defer
the services for a short while, and per
haps then some God-fearing person
might attend. His patience was re
warded, for in a few moments a man,
dripping wet from the rain, entered, and
modestly took a seat on the back bench.
One might think he came only seeking
shelter from the pouring rain, as all the
taverns were closed, it being the custom
throughout England to close them all on
Sunday. Now this spiritual adviser was
not only a zealous but a conscientious
man as well, and he determined, there
fore, even before one worshipper, to ren
der the service from beginning to end.
He read with care ana deliberation a
portion of the Scriptures and the Liturgy
throughout, and influenced probably by
the piety and devotion of the worshipper
before him, took occasion to suggest that
the unfavorable weather had certain!r
deterred the usual vuutore ffuai attend
lag the •ervioe and that he would not
preach a aermon. but close the morning's
exercise with e few remarks The war-
shipper begged hue to ootiUntM the
entire serviee, etpreremg at the aeme
time a dosue to h* or thv errmoa. This
Are ire f<e tnetructhm <« the pert of the
attentive listener rrat.ft*d the man f
Gag. and. fttltreel e<4 e tmie. be dr
to fulfill the reqeeel H» ee-
■’<%>*t wit end ek sweetly m
■> tu firetiv. ereenAn. thirdlv,
mL The prawn by which the
was areds has besti kwl to the
_ of
r«*d bad a mstalHo flnnueas rsesaiblmg
Frequent coats of this, if the
hard, stone-like shell. After death the
veins and the cavities of the stomach
were filled with quicksilver far the pare
pose of preserving the body. A piece
of isde was then placed in each nostril
and ear and id one hand, while a piece of
bar-silver was placed in the other. The
body thus prepared was pnt on s layer
of mercury within the coffin ; the latter
was sealed and the whole committed to
its last resting-place. When some of
these sarcophagi were opened after the
lapse of centimes the bodies were found
in a wonderful state of preservation, but
they crumbled to dust on exposure to
the air.
as he is 1
Am ambitious young clerk in a whole-
tie groeAkv establishment resolves to
rater the civil service, and so presents
himself before the examiners. One of
the questions is; “ What ia coffee, and
where does it come from ?” “ Oh, come
now, yon know,” says the candidate, “I
can’t give away the boss. Allow me to
plead privilege. That’s a professional
secret, 5 ’
ATLANTA Com* ilXBITM,
Steam Engine and Sa« Mill
.
MoaafMtsrvn •/ •
w M ilia, (lass ■«f*i
> KMwsr 1
I liver Cere.
lee eu
Sugar and Teeth.
In a previous number it was stated
that pore sugar and candies, having no
residue, conld not, by lodgment about
the teeth, injure them ; and that if used
in moderation, neither sugar nor candies
were prejudicial to the teeth or health of
young cliildren or grown person*; that
there waa more or less sugar in all vege
table food, but os concentrations were
liable to abuse, we advised that they
should be taken at regular meals.
The Medical Journal, of Charleston,
South Carol me, stoles the eandusioni of
M Lares:
•‘1st, Refined sugar injure* teeth, either
by immediate contact, or by gas devel-
opad in Lha stocaaoh.
“id. That a tooth soaked is
wabe becomes jelly-like, from the
emnbining with the hm* of
— JfaU« Jeumai 0/ HraUK
\ m> ymn m (
T«« White Imm »r> jm*
I ••'Vvr f. It Vft# rvL«:lt Ml
! «t it Lfksi IfH uAmmLf' iii \rj try
( the LUUrah tr -v- m (La areas are
I Ureor • • -. are a WaaVregVre to the
R OWDEROOMK hMdi tha IM of All otbor
. Lomon SquMwn. BqoeeAe A bo* of I.moii. In 10
btogntAAlAiid moro Juica. «U6 Qrond St., Now Torb, <■
It is not vary difficult to train chil
dren. Thev are adapted to training. No
willow to farm s basket was ever woven
more easily than children may be in
fluenced in ’ ’ '
They
con
mmmm
Time Testers and Burden Bearers.
Prom time Immemorial UuS hone hss bertj
nan's best friend. But a fewjsar* lack ws can
all remember tbs comporntHwIy little attention
paid to this moat IndtiitentaUe of autmul*. We
aay comparatively little attention, for the bone
wu as well froomed, and certainly a* well fed,as
now; andot tho-earealKatlu:rings—agricultural
•bows-you would sec the pride of the county
and Stale sublet and (arms assembled. Bat
there waa a roreuicuoas want of noble draught
bones, and as for s[«-eder»—well. 2:10 was ths
(rear ultimate limit that owners In tboae days
deAirni to strive f >r, Bat now a 2 «0 animal Is
estermed a btlr roarVter, and line animals only
deaervw iN» uaree w ben tbeyren sheds the flnt
auarter of the third mlnate. There have tx-rnlre-
n.rneest rM--» tirwacl In 1 be ngi.l derW.'poirDt (IT
hor-eSreh in tbeci > Ulred count rice of Ike rs£k
Speelel attest!ee si
ehiaery. lUtutrmted (
,ven to PleetatloB Mre
C’lrcsslwee MVoe.
LANE A BODLEY CO.,
John Jt Water BU., dneinnati, A
PIUM
HAMST
CURE.
By B. If. WOOtUT, si
i.uts, (Jo. asUable »’t-
<Uaos gvea, A refer.ns-.
u oursIpstlssUAAf pbys
ctsaSKiri"
MAKE HENS LAY.
Aa SaSllsb Vrteria'ory nurotcu snd Ui.w.t, mom
u.ralia* in tbls eoeatry, »sj» ib.t tno-i of tb# Bono sad
CaMIe rawdars sold bars are wartbleoa tnwb. ti* says
that SbeHdae'A Caedhlse PswSsri ATS absetetely prre
.ud iuimvfltely taIaaMa. SaSbln* <o eortb will ■•Vs
bwts lay Ilka eib.iidan'i CondiSMe Pewdere. I'os-, on#
t-mpofAbal Is .a. pial of feed. Sold osrvywboto. oo
•onl k- Aiul lor S lottor otoapo- I. S. JOHXdOlf « Ca,
•,-toe, Mam., fermorly Bonsai, Mo. .
Strong’s Sanative Pills
LIVER.
as ahuwa kj ths i
i of that
is sugar
tooth. '
Bwtre eayv
k Mre
.4 /. anwfe.
redwM
hm hi
Uto
re ■ | ■■ ■ y area v uree eow^ m
VoWAto,yrdyiA* Iho M—d ci.
A fm'mm onto tw 0Mb bo
am, bow Vote ca>.
r. o.
JEWELS 35551525
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HISTORT**®!
titi —■** % >
ami .4
is re
•w^u
Thee ib Mre efeti
■reilsM P<
srer
Nb •*
toss, thaws ■ a ftar bigtiow ^
; ami as toe refi* reiis re, : ^
Ftw» s >o re!
how*
nTv ^ , Imto Mremmahmeetto bewa. «si the Ur
Pm——ora —relhtnw, f eamto!!^ Att fieotorod that hm k7m>Z
ei ss
which
bmd Meet isulurm only i /
only I
«4 —tol Men
ihtoliv the
srs
k But this far
M have been at-
s»d it hdre B»-
indastrioua, and
Bwedca,
ti wise ox-
i Federal Government offers to give
everv man who is the hesd of a family
one handled end sixty sores of land, if
he Till plant twenty sens of it in forest
?ijM—r Gan a young man afford to ac
cept this offer and wait for his trees to
growl There is no doubt of it—but
will he? Ths Bulletin recently alluded
.to the remarkable scarcity of black wal
nut This tree flourishes in many of
the Western States, especially in Iowa,
Minnesota, and Wisconsin. On fifty
acres of such land aa could be obtained
here, lfl,000 trees could be planted;
when twenty years old they would be
worth $5 a tree, or $80,000; when thirty
Id be
years old they would b« worth $20 a tree,
or $320,000. It ia said that every yeer,
after the trees ere ten years old. the nuts
would be worth ea much as a wheat crop
from the same number of ncres.
frees an growing any in
ner oould obtain a hand-
: . . w*^52
I, and a veal
tha evil altogrthrr sta
subsequent
abworbrd by the in as react mo rareieut of
fa tors agea. Bui the dp—rice of
great men never leave us; they are im
mortal; they ooiitotu those eternal truths
which survive the shook of eapiiwa, out
live the efruggks of rival eweds, and
witness the decay of sernisariyafistglooa.
All these have their different moasnru*
and their different standards; one set of
o]>inions for one age, another set for an
other. tO—ff pea away like adroam;
they are as the fabric of a vision, which
leaves not a rack behind. The discoveries
of genius alone remains: it is to them
we owe all that we now nave; they are
for all ages and for all times; never
young, and never old, they bear the
seed of their own life; they flow on in a
perennial and undying stream; they tire
essentially cumulative, and giving birth
to the additions which they subsequently
reoeive, they thus influence the most
distant posterity, end after the lapse of
centuries produce more effect than they
were able to do even at the moment of
their promulgation.”
The Boy — the natural Bridge, Yu.
Tha name of the boy who climbed the
qf Pe Natural Bridg<
his name above ill h^prel
and came so near losing his
life, was teres Piper.
On tbs abutments of the bridgs then-
la the roek by
J-mgre h4jrMuld i
kA-daga
aavar-iy
start
out with his fluit
s ssampls os
twa Hs wrote merely in fan. In (set.
hs waa a member of that eery hand, and
spent half hu income in krerping it go
ing. But hie contemporaries did n<<t
know this. Tltey seised upon his item,
and made it apply to the brass bends of
their own towns Binoe then it has an
nually made the round of the press of
the United States. It is now a staple.
The reporter who has not made fun of
the brass band is not np to the standard.
At Leaat four-fifths of the reporters who
denounce amateur bands as a bore do so
simply because it is expected of them.
We haven't hauled our organization over
the coals to any extent yet, bat shall ii
they dop’t get to work and practice more
regular^/, even though We admit that it
is wrong to do ih Fact is, an amateur
band is not a nuisance. After three or
four weeks it plays so well that half the
citizens torn out to its rehearsals and un
qualifiedly declare that it has made won
derful progress. The pride and boast of
moat towns is the brass band. Yet the
local paper is expected to refer to it in
sneering terms.—Larmie Oily Boom-
a-ana
— . jM' r
Who to Hurry.
If you can not find a gentleman to
marry, girls, do not many at all
that term ws do not moan a man who 1
above the need at work; ho may bo i
thing bat a gentleman, but s
1 to wotk, who I
to keep him from low
Tss o4ife* «< Ure (koornm M. W F
rbaoti. *04 » orei a to* re wsiM aa<- tiy a
Went to pare m too WA a* red*- are!
reok Having tore tov-otoav i■ pvrere I
W* ■ m- tore vttht V Arts* / re antrto
■vs.4 a re to I fee a-, —-'ire mum, scad
sail i -i*M~ Hrewmoetore. wa ratilrei Uo*
i4ailing part, red to lore Urn# lhaa w*
wnta It, rvtfef cars- TVu art* .* »
hi. Jacobs Oil. — ( Wre*;-itisnv (.Y Y.
Cbvrrer.
Ths ftoy at the Sataral Brtogv, Ya.
The name of the bey who rhmtod the
aide at the Natural Bndge. Virguua,
and carved his Bams above ail his pre-
decere m, and cams so ficar losing hu
life, was James IhfMir.
On the sbutrasnts of the bridge there
are many names carved in the rook by
persons who have climbed aa high as
they dared on the face at the precipice.
Highest of all, tir nearly three-quarters
of a century, was that of George Wash
ington, who, when a youth, ascepded to
a point never before reached. But this
feat was surpassed in 1818 by James
Piper, a student in Washington College,
who climbed from the foot to the top of
the rock. _
No hah with money about his clothes
should ever retire without having a
woman with him, a wife, of course, to
frighten off the burglars. A reformed
thief yesterday told us that a burglar
would sooner enter a room containing
foot men and twice re many revolver* as
one having only one woman in it—for
neither the men nor the revolvers can
squeal like a woman.—Kentucky State
Journal.
“ I BMurvzSt Jacobs Oil to be the.
very best remedy known to mankind,
to —««— a4 (4 4
' ■ rex 111 A. * • «0»A» A. re-re#
A. S A- l-rere ot o—i'*%. rresaov ■ I
oS
waot ■ Arwo* 4 .a i io p—torewr'f a rrefeUaq
tore r*mooary ore *aqw ia ( sosoS Boooro
VC. ,r yimor% %oo 1 -rX Ire* to Sowg^re*
a w a i
sf lwi<
fsalius4 4g vslas m o«(*
. % u« n of o>t <ortldaf .ill
l-ranilo-l o r>u I too
A tnvfix so s»«ol of • —'**00. 1 . o oaZ syre
4 1-00*00 koAilA*
’.■I toareaiij, *o
yowvvsi ■!• Soisf
k.if. Abcs( to*
prupr • arr mtd.ciaoo ■lo—lred is I Ao ;■
IM-rsIb'r* aro non* tool loM • kijbrr rank
tosa tbAo# of Tm Dx Harrv.t NrMctas
CoMrANT, 8t. Ixu.A. Dr lUrtor’A less
fomc io winais^ opocul favor, oach toulo
o-kI pruviss it* wunurrfil Iiosofir.nt vlvrt*.
an oilrt Aimncal which to'i may odditissal
l>otU<«. The t*«ii oouia’A which ths l>r.
Hirtcr Conipsuy aro a hi* to pmdnco ia
proof cf the mcriiA of their tnrdicinc will
"onvgrt the nioit Atspieioaa to iU use. Rood
heir Advertisement, and if aofit-ring from
•ay of thedis. sscs mentioned write to them,
or ask your druggiet for iheir medicinta.
A man who give* weight to what he
says by an oath, pledges his simple word
to be light, unworthy of belief. He
lacks the character to swear by himself,
and so goes about to find something
more stable than he himself is to which
he can nail his assertion so that it will
stay. An oath is a trellis, without which
the BMfirtioa would (nil to the ground.
HEALTH IS WEALTH!
Sitters
oof Iona, ar. otooo4, to I A. mo. ot
0*0 Iren; oa-4 ■»o>ol 00—0*1, u fa, Irerltor*. •
atA touro Lotoo .4 IOa amo( Ooiwreo •
■ry M NO Aof—l—o— —4 to t—i
rAyoreoao ... rywhoro. ,togtMAo4 wwS (So o4oll—oi«4
toore of eo—floor—, pro—nto B — Iho »ofe.» —4 —re
roiiohio of oil .Ip—h«S-
rot —lo to on Drosglou —4 C—lor.
isUf.
to ■ re A—— s—sureo, — 0, — mom* —
•rewo 4 pmo, •pggreawl S—Mto atoTtat
re—. re wflMAa rerenMs aa Arentis ■snSA WMs
Ooooo re •«— —reIi I M«
A 00*0000. to— re re— o —
Ay SI 4 AS MB. At
siio iLrasvnirs.srwLrt-r
ihiDiamonD
X>YES.
lljMiC .ti it »do. CnolOosnt
iiAckoge will color dots
IS or B8 ot. dyo o**r »oM. *d poymlAr
~ saffelnln rrfr~'T
booonvim-od. Vo-i'-y eardo,
‘ AUmodoAifor lOcto.
Jt CO., Barniistaa,\t.
Front MisslsNippl
OoSiNTHy Mine., April 2, 1877.
Oapt. W. P. EIUa Bailiey Springs, Al*.:
Denr Sir—It give* me pleasure to
state the result of the use of Bailey
waters in my case. I had for several
years been the victim of Chaonle Di-
EVERYONE^
Will (Ot valuable Information FKEH
by Aendlug for circular to X. TOLJUKE, Iloilo*, Mm.
aura innoru cibitlab saw mills.
4 k With anivorsal
US Bend for l»'>utiie
K1 UN‘£Y - WORT
IFOR THE PCRMAHEHT CURE OH
CONSTIPATION. w
No oUiAvStAMAA Uss Tnva^nt la this oore
PitrraaCr—rlsaaos, b..1 no r- nodr k— o*Ar
|oc.i*ncd ths soi-iwwcd JOdArr-wcrt aa a
{Slears. V/kAtATarp ’.OAajp.UowATwr oboSj—O*
2! :' d ei—, proper ua« of thl* roaodx wilt
(ovetcimett.
091 Tm3 dirtro—in* com-
* StboL-O* pV.ui la vory apt to bo
lo-loonrpUostedwlthooicTl.pcitljoa. Hidney-Wart
rubllihon’ Union, AtlantA, Qa..
..Tw—ly-Vwo-—’M-
ICCCC n-tV* 4
J to wwb “i'l> J<» illufllrulioA^ ami to—feeto
.M.1...I .. , * rto .. .. 4 . 1 Ita.vonl . Q
iii ibii.t-kil iJrtftifri ihc UoiacS
14 cnU»«oi tu a‘.4»0 rmerti
’ * jknditicn
UooAooJtoo