The people. (Barnwell C.H., S.C.) 1877-1884, August 24, 1882, Image 1
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l> ArtieU* for pvWlflatioa akovU b«
writtoB la a elaar, Ufibia kaad, and oa
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4, All ohaagaa la adyartiaaaMata
reach oa oa Frlady.
lait
TOPICS OP THE DAY.
Bn and his adherents hare
been proclaimed rebels bj the Saltan of
Turkey.
It will be remembered that Yennot
said we would haye “a year without a
summer.* ^
Texas will have 50,000,000 bushels of
com to sell this year. Last year the
State had to import
Potatoes are btAng offered in Illinois
for twenty-fire cents a bushel for fal
delivery, with no takers.'
Mb. ?Iladston* looks upon De I^e*
eepa as a private indiffilaal, but De Lea
aeps doesn’t, not by any means.
t„, ..t ■ ?-= v
T«» Detroit Frrr firm figures up that
tlitre have been 167 deaths from tetanus
this year, caused by the toy pistol, and
suggests that next Fourth at July
■ie be used as k>a* fatal substitute.
A ootukfoslabt thoughtfully
that “ each place thinks its
and harbor appropnaUbh all right, but
that ia other piaeae ills a ■UaL” Soft
W la all matu rs uhvte
THE PEOPLE.
mmZSrnmSZmr^
tsS HjHI
j&sspMigg
■uhflaattau, hut as a guiia!ity?fsad
VOL V. NO. 49.
BARNWELL, C. H., S. C., THURSDAY, AUGUST ‘24, 188‘2.
82 a Year.
Taanoru,
taA.aa
. A qlancs st the naval register shows
thst with s total force of 12,000 men,
including marines, we have twelve Rear
Admirals, twenty-two Commodores,
sixty Captains, 110 Commanders, <116
Lieutenants, 180 Masters, 400 Ensigns,
while the Naval Academy is prepared
to add from year to year largely to the
number of the latter. This is certainly
a large enough staff of officers to com
mand as great a navy as we shall pos
sibly ever need, and it ia quite natural
that a movenqpnt, such as. that recently
iaangurated by Senator Miller, of Cali
fornia, should be made to reduce
the number of officers to make it in
some measure proportionate to the
*ra«J marines,
MY LOVE.
*
number at
Or all the Engliah-eerreapondenta at
Alexandria, it ia to be said that they
have shared the perils they have de
scribed. Afloat they hare shown them-
aalvea ready to face shot and ahall, and
ashore the knives of Arabi’s snasnllns.
not to speak of mobs and explosions.
They bare done their work under a cli-
of great beat, and bare done a
leal at 4 Altogether, they have
been a eredit to tbelr prolaaeteu, end
the )wnfeaatno seems ia no porUmlar
harry to take credit to itself or award
to the brave end bnlkaai
• be kH journalism s step higher by
as parity and etmrags
pnhrie- Uske an in wander at thr
V—U»y ti rvedshts mstsrr turned awl
- \
Mv love'B worth all the world to ms;
tier walk to others’ dance Is light.
When she come* by, the sun rides high.
And when she's past, 'tu night.
Her gentle voice, that bids “good-day,"
Is music that my soul loves best;
Her deep-set eyes, her low replies,
The dreams that haunt my rest.
Her presence, like fresh morning showers,
Gives to all things refreshing grace;
If she but stoop, sweet buds that droop
Gaze up into her face.
That May-day face—where nothing lives
That Is not bright, for long together;
Thoughts come and go, like winds that blow
The clouds in golden weather.
Life’s passing shades have scarcely chill'd
The gladness ol her spirit's light-—
O when she's by, the sun seems high.
And when she's past, 'tis night!
___________ —H. Aid*.
iluf a ‘|. | "C the Corn Crop.
Till within the past few years littlo
anxiety has been felt in any part of the
country about the supply of corn. There
Wls a general impression that it ooald
be raised with considerable profit in
in nearly every State and territory. In
most of tbe States enough was raised to
supply the local demand. In some
nates it was a le tding crop, and it was
that It < profitable production could be
greatly evenied th i.(hers, where tbe
attention of farmers was mainly devoted
to tbe gr srfntnf e HtoU, Vibuern,
tbe mbsM grams. There waa sa-areely
any demand tor it foe. -~|r-r*n*nin. and
iu employmeal fur making giwnana sad
riarrti was not known. It wm used to
a • mstdnrabin eainut ns land tor bum>U
^ -gs. aod was very generally employ
ed lor laUeamg kngs in sorOnwa wbene
It sees sifuwiily given. Itwus rarefy
^•■4 %|r%9 * ||h
imrm, m4 wm mm
1*4 fen TWv« w%* wn fnii4
Frew Deatk te Life.
A reporter for the M<tU and Rrprtu
was walking in the vicinity of the Fulton
Ferry a few davs ago, in the company
of one of the officers attached to the life
saving tcrvice. There waa a rush of
people to the Fulton Market slip, and
the officer and tbe reporter joined the
crowd to see the excitement. "It waa
spectator! aaid,
"only a boy
nothing, ,T one of the
turning to go away, «•••/ -
drowned! ’’ The lifo-aaving officer, how'
ever, seemed to take a different view of
the drowning of. a boy, and he hurriedly
elbowed his way througlfthe crowd till
he was at the water’s rage, with the re
porter at his elbow. Three of the fish
ing schooners were tied up at this part
of the pier side by qjde, and on the deck
dU5 e -—
fishermen stood by, saying that the boy
That' 7
was dead and
of it. The life-saving
that waaall there waa
offledf sprang
~I&dard tbe nearest achooner, and waa
Immediately stopped by a policeman
who waa on guard—for the boy had
been out of tbe inter for some time.
" Stand back," saty tbe mb-eurer. "I
am a physician," ana, followed by tbe
reporter, be
hk-h ibe dro
Tbe
■kin, feh
elhti end looked
emng the "kinks" out of Me beck.
"Wrap him up well In these blankets
and put him In a berth. Be sure you
make his hands and feet warm. If von
have a couple of empty bottles fill them
with warm water, oork them up well,
and put them against bis feet. In tea
or fifteen minutes give him another glass
of brandy. He will be able to talk to
J ou inside of aa hour and tell you where
e lives. But he will probably be too
weak to walk home; some of you will
have to carry him. Come, did fellow
(to the reporter!, let us go. There is
nothing more for ns to do."—AT. T.
Mail and Exprat.
Shortl
French
A 0er(»es Snuff-Bex.
ly after the breaking out of
Revolution, its advocates de-
the
uman race;” that man. "so easy
to live with," who aang the song about
himself, called •• Billy Tilt, theTory."
His Secretary one day told him that a
foreigner, wbo *i>oke English tolerably
well, had twice or thrice asked to sea
kiin; but. not looking like
P 6 | which (be drowned boy lay.
l *® Tbe offloer-phyatcien Ml Ike boy's
skin, feh for hu pales, drew so oae of
^^^■psaeMu lyr him
to admit every at ranger who, oa TMro-
losu pretests, mwht arek to gratify an
idle curioeiti Taie peraoa. however,
bad aaM be akookt return hi an
the Secretary, therefore. 1
duti to lofonajiKnH of eat |
farther onjrn la
>xkt H Us
h bitea-
had beaa owl of tbe wet
" Yo« aw**lgat aojeb bare WHemvoa I “ Hero the gondassa." m*d the Mlw-
ara an aadertnber,'* said ows of the | hriar. "to epM tbs tag tsfl bend draster
sd hstag m
Ysaag Fig Fsedtag.
Few persons really know bow to feed
fount; pigs aright They generally
jverdo the matter and give them too
much at a time. They mum and wal
low ia the feed left m the trough, so
ffiat it is unfit for them, and when hun-
rer forces them to eat it it makes them
nek. The owner, seeing feed in the
trough, either adds more to it, or waits
till it is eaten. In either case he does
wrong. Before feeding the second time
the trough should alwayi be washed or
■wept out clean. Pig* should never be
maae to eat food in which they have
tramped with their dirty feet. This
leads to the remark that their feet should
sot be dirty. The pen should be so
instructed that the feeding place—the
trough—should be sufficiently elevated
enemy to so that tbe tofeee hi the pea will not
“ nasty up’ r this part, and there should
be bewftag enough In tbe pen to enable
tbe pigs to keep their feet and their sa
tire bodlee dean, when this Is
troqgh will aut-bs so dirty and the pigs
wUldo better. We bare often i
not looting ■■ Apropar ap. e^aintt giving young pigs too hearty
plicaat. had been seat away, the gniT food, salt ritajavAs to them; so (a
man • time Mag t<«. precieiu for him • >l ilpiii A Tbt fmnar prwtaeet de>
of the
of tbe bowtbk
ef .
la
pigs de net thrive.
toh» sshieb meet he _
feeding swfll er milk - toe tear.
When wheat er rye braa k
bowels.
la
Ike let-
bto or rmtMATfM.
To largi
Lynchburg, Yes
To name of God in the
language ia Rain, In tbe Permian, Bba.
Gmao began to write hk M DeoUae
anC Fall oftbs Roman Emptie n fat baa-
don in 1772. v
la Moscow the plague introdaeed by
the Turkish army carried off 20,000 vie*
time in a month.
Dumao the fourteenth
centuries in France guilty i
farad death on the gailowa.
Pbaoocks were carefnllj reeved ia tbs
island at Samoa, and sold at soak Ugh
prices that Yaro says tbsy fetched yearly
£3,000;
TO ] __
from Greenhithe,
1845.
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few* am
ef kw /*"■!<. eed toe eaJ
Ter mrmtwm ef tbe (rinkwhb flamsly
be«v sevetod veer (be tomb ef tbe (hew
ers! s large granite m«meirik. aesghieg
lewr towe Tbe tomb ■ walrks i dey
aad night Tbe dermnei at to tbe Aaal
place is left to Farimmrnl.'wturk
i to tbe JaatesUam. Danag tbe
first few days after tbe death at Gari
baldi. 12,000 telegrams reached the
family. ^
A niLraa to obey tbe ecriptnral in
Junction, “ Obey your hasbeiMls," bed e
owl ending in Ohicego. Paul Toll net
took him young srife to one side, in their
home, and calmly inquired : " Will you
obey me after this ?‘* The wife replied
evasively, a hereupon he shot her dead,
and then stepping into an adjoining
room, shot himself through the heart.
They had been married two years and
had one child.
to ♦ • p,,‘ -- .
Advices from Sagua, Cuba, report
the destruction of the corn crop, owing
to the extreme drouth. The Preeident
of the Central Board of Agriculture of
the Republic of Columbia, writes the
Captain General, warning him to take
effective measures to prevent the larvw
and locusts devastating that Republic
from being introduced into Cuba by
vessels carrying ca'ttle to the Island. It
is recommended that cattle on vessels be
fed with hay only. It is thought that
the locmto will soon invade the United
Btatee after reaching Cuba.
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l ere *■% toe toe a*
>W f
‘I’
to! W«*rw
pteivrs aad •oiplwje«l la <dbev om-i
boas, bet tke elects are more *<r.Ai* u
sad mare auttumMe oa tbr tana tkan m
tbe work sbap er tome wbere tbs roe-
Uar nf duty to aanre eerily merkrd aad
the labor to mure merkaairal la its as
’ tare Farm work can never be reduced
I to suck exaetasm ia detail that tbe
workmen can perform it satisfactorily
unless he to thoroughly interested in it,
and ia hearty sy m|uUhy with his em
ployer. So much for the hired hand,
aad on the other band, to keep ibis in
terest alive, there must bo on the part'
of the employer the approval and appre
ciation of work faithfully done.
But there is something more in thft
than the bare fa ts of work well done
and well remunerated. There is a gen
uine satisfaction on the part oTboth em
ployer and employe, and the resultant
happiness which accrues to the men
themselves and to their respective fami
lies is a thing to be sought for and prized.
But when the men are continually at
Tn jury who acquitted tbe M alley
boys sod Blanche Douglass of the mar
dm at Jennie Cramer, held e grand r*
dap, vtoitiug flavin
tbe girl s deed body wm
“loggerheads,” their families feel the »ud organic matter, and its only defect
reactive influence, and even society is,
in a degree, affected adversely by it.
Whatever, then, will br'ng about mutu
al contentment and good will among
fanners and their help should be fos
tered, and while "hired men” are falli
ble, the farmer should remember that it
is largely in his power to make their
mutual relations agreeable.—Aural New
Yorker.
Deadly Weapons.
A detective frightened a young man
nearly to death yesterday. The young
man was standing on the corner when
the detective tapped him on tbe shoul
der aad said: "T shall have to arrest
you for carry inf deadly weapons." The
‘ and his lips
oat that he
Ye*." mid the detective,
be al right, but took at
“ Tbe
■■IBM BMMHB
dsdekmt la wermab er
rib. Ctoru wm never
e pc* tomato crop le raise In tbe bawtbsrn
bums, and as tbe eotl bwwmm
etkeatoed ef Me tortilMv tos prodortioa
bee imsa Will more dltoeoh People
bavo finally become coartaead tbal tke
extret <4 country adapted to tbe
profitable prodncieie of core to quite
limited. It tr embraced ia n strip of
country about two hundred miles wide,
and terminating about a hundred miles
west of tke Missouri River.
If the amount of corn in tke country
i« to be largely increased it must be^loae
by improved methods of cultivation ia
the places where it -ucceeds best. Mach
of the land In the Western States that to
capable of producing the largest crops
of corn is in no condition to do so dur
ing reasons as wet as tke present one.
It is covered with water in the early
spring, and can not be plowed till it to
too late to plant without incurring the
danger of an early frost in the fall. By
draining it with dies it can be made to
produce more corn than anv land in the
country. It is naturally rich in mineral
is its inability to part with the moisture
that accumulates during the win terWd
early spring. The drains will not only
carry off this water, but will extend the
growing season:several weeks. Experi
ments madeTn the counties of this State
show that the average yield of corn is
increased one-fourtn by putting down
grain-tile. The cultivation of the crop
is also rendered more easy and the or
dinary risks are avoided In a great
measure. Improved methods of pre
paring the soil, of putting in the seed,
and of cultivating the growing crop
will do much towara increasing
r iroduction. Generally the farmer! of
’ennsylvania, and others of the Eastern
States produce more corn to the acre
than the farmer* do in the most fertile
of tke Western Stqtes They hare a
much poorer soil, but they prepare it
better, pay more ritenlioe to manuring.
Ik
, Tbe b*y
Hal be s
•keaaa lur toe Me, way
a lotto, aB ef yea, sad
■Mtoito mW
ftetal hemltoag per am. tbe
oae of Ibe boyv
and begae to slap H rigorously
mme Um* Betting Urea of (he
•vs al work on like other kaad aad
took. Tbe reporter
at the slappiac bori
reiumed the no-eqa
E resting the ooy’t frame till
arc cried for mercy if he
conscious. With four men slapping his
hands and feet, and an expert tiring to
start his breathing, tbe boy must have
been unreaeonabie, indeed, bad he beau
dissatisfied. But he still lay as dead as
a stick, and, happily unconscious.
. After about five minutes of this treat
ment, very much to tbe surprise of the
market men and the reporter, aad
greatly to the delight of the life-saving
officer, tjhe boy gave a slight gasp for
breath.
Just at this moment of triumph the
policemanron guard called across the
decks: "Say,you’d better let that boy
alone. He’s dead enough."
" Never mind what they have to say,
they don’t know what they’re talking
about," said tbe officer. "Get me a
glass of brandy."
He redoubled his artificial breathing
treatment, and one of the fishing Bailors
went down into the cabin and soon re
turned with a tumbler nearly fuU of not
very inviting-looking brandy. The boy
meanwhile gasped Main; had twitched
a little in tbe legs; bad rolled bis bead
to one side, aad at length had drawn a
good-sized breath. Tbe miaate be
breathed tbe
of
tbebor't
he refused to
find no
■ ak
wm no help for it, shoulder ii
obliged to oo. Offered employment in
Rouen, he made it his home. The trunk
lay hidden and forgottoo in a dark eloset,
until one day while rummaging he came
upon it. He determined to send it beck
to hi* aunt Aa he emptied it he found
it bad a double bottom; ha opened this
doable bottom ; he found in it $16,000.
fie carried them to the bank aad found
tbe money good. He capered for joy, not
only with his legs but with his tongue :
so new* of the discovery reach < d
his aunt’s ears, and she said the money
belonged to her, and the found the junk
dealer who had sold her the trunk : 1 a
willingly became her witness to this met,
bnt added: “ Zat drunk eea my righds
and zat monish ees mine.” So they have
all gone to law.—Paris Correspondence
Mew Orleans Picayune.
—A curious freak of lightning occur
red at the house at Alexander Avery,
Centreville, Ala. None of the inmates
were killed, but the shoes of each
destroyed. The stroke fell on Mise Joeie
Avery's neck, aod passing dowa tbe
body threw tbe shoe from the foot with
terrific force, a great distance. Tbe
•bom on tbe feet at her mother were eat
to pieces, while Mr. Logan, a
aoie of oae tooe wreoe had off, aad a
la tbe
ia
tell
frequently,-—
a t oa both rides; place oa a platter,
t and pepper to teste. Beef baring a
tendency to be toagh ran be made very
Iielatabie by stewing very gently for
two hours, pepper and mlt, taking oat
•bout a put of liqaid when done, aad
letting the rest noil into the meat
Brown the meat in the pot After taking
np make a gravy of the put of liquid
saved. A small piece at charcoal in the
pot with boiling cabbage removes the
smell Glean oilcloth with milk and
water ; a brush and soap will ruin them.
Tumblers that have had milk in them
should never be put ia hot water. A
spoonful of stewed tomatoes in tbe gravy
of either roasted or fried meats w an
improvement' The skin ef • boiled egg
is the moat efficacious remedy that can
be applied to a boil. Peel it carefully,
we*, and applet to the part affected.
It will drew off the matter and relieve
the aorenem in a few hours.
—An Illinoia fanner gives an Eastern
writer for the New England Home-tead
the following directions for curing
galled sbeulders in horses, aad says
that it to infallible. Take old leather
and bum H to a crisp; rub tbe ashes oa
the galled part; a few applications will
effect a perfect cure. A new work
berm pot to the plow this
eeived several sot
sbeulders. A few applbattoas of tbs
it leather made them aa soaad a* M
la Loadsm.
iariyas "Walter," .
him evidences of bin esteem: when be
succeeded to tbe throne, oae of tbe flirt
acts of the kingly prerogative was to
create him a BarooeC—8Y Jffskefas.
A Saa ■■
writes: They toll a story of a would-be
funny broker, who last sea
a most fiendish method of
with one of the chronic
said to make tbe piaasas beta]
in the season. He obtained half ^ i
energetic crabs from the f “
and, watching for aa op
no one was In a particnl:
the inconstant fair object
geance, he dropped in 1‘
(way up term for crab]
lady continued her n .
Cam up tor paddltog) fefew
longer, when she suMMy i
blood-curdling shriek, tM m
ap the ladder with a f
her pink little to*.
ooaseootive epileptic fittt
riae
Tbal
Mrty the mecotog
days after that tha