The people. (Barnwell C.H., S.C.) 1877-1884, October 26, 1882, Image 1
i r
■ Special Ilcpuecta.
■ — •
1- la wviltag to tkk offlo* oo baa
*£*7* llTa TOW MUM and Port.
r
1. BuiIomi latton
lU>na t# be publiahed ahouhi be written
^rn ae per ate nheeU, and the object of each
1 clearly indicated by neoeMary note when
required.
8. Article* for publication ahould be
written in a clear, legible hand, and on
only ope aide of the page.
4, All ehanrsa in ad vert in me nti must
reach ua o*j Fri^dr.
\
a.*
inf the
but
VOL VI. NO. 8. BARNWELL, C. H., 8. C., THtJRSOAV, OCTOBER 26, 1882.
r > - ,<i "
k
DR. J. H. I. MILHOUS,
DENTAL SURGEON,
BLACKVILLE, S. 6. #
, Office near his residence on R.B. Arenue.
Patients will find it morp oomfortable to
haTS their work done at the oCoe, as hs has
m food Cental Chair, food iirht and the
anost improTed appliances. He should be
informed severaldavs previous V> their com-
ins to preveat any disappointment—though
will generally be found at hia office on Sat
urdays.
He will still continue to attend calls
throughout Barnwell and adjoining conn-
ties. r [aaglS ly
-DR. B. J. QUATTIEIAUM,
8URGEC3 DENTIST,
'VllXlSTON, 8. C. ^
Office over, <pt. W. H. Kennedy’s atom.
Galls attended throughout Barnwell
End adjacent counties. Patients will |
* find ffi to their Advantage to have work
daM affifcia office. [MflU
$2 a Tear.
a
a KtNQ is disguise.
Mv brain is dull, my hands are tired,
I have no heart for wortorplay;
Just let the hours go as the
1 can do naus
Life's battle does not need myaidt
I'll lay aside my sword and shield;
To-mopewMierhaps, with hotter heart
^ify be glad to take the field: ’
^at Is To^lwf Aifew short hbtMa
In which men toil, or th.nk, or weep.
I'll let them idly drift away.
And sleep and dream, and dream and sleep
“What folly r cried my better seif.
“ Lift up thy drowsy hi
What Is tv
mlence is
ie age ns
“ Lift up’thy drowsy heart and eyes.
It Is To-day? He is a king.
▲ mighty monarch in disguise.
DR. j; RYERSON SMITH,
tontm Iwbuktl iHtot.
WILLIHTON, ffi (X
“ His bands are full of splendid gifts—
' Honor and wisdom, wealth and fame.
Haste thee!" perchance this very hour—
This only hour—he calls thy name.''
Then anxiously, with eager haste,
I went and sto >d In Duty's place;
And fust at noontide’s weary hour
fortune aod I met face to face.
“ rT * "•'**> *•*» fov then,
And heir 1 frar-d thou would delay.
Now what the Past has still denied
is thine with tenfold gnee Today."
*75?* ** * p kour? Oft fortune, fame,
Of wewry rears the goal and prM;
Wist te To4ay? flo serve It writ
t'emhnnce s wooareh la dtngulen.
—LPh. K. Burr, tn Harper'.
KlVKM HKirf MIS.
la a paper reed helot
AsnoofoUowLw Use Advaa
Bn
I’r.f
Os>reilams sne he
wd el hts
all the las
J. A. I'ATTEKHON.
Hurgron Dentiet.
Office s'. Ito ffinrwwwt: ('mmn Hewes
ho British
icement of M-
eoce si iu rsospl in-"* 1 mssting in
fv ulhamptno. FKil Bf. H. llnwfcins
wd “*TIm gapgvunMnpl rkaawe w
Nurthnm Europe at the cJsss of the for-
•st-hod sge was very gvsat The loraet
«f.lbs North Baa Sunk heweaih tho
waves, aad Holnia was daptwsawd to a
depth of m Lws than 1 SD) feel la the
U eUh UrsnlMWi. and was rad need to
aa archipelago <*/ Mamdm eoMpoaed of
whsl are aww the higher law da The
aww of-«h* lAgimh I ■awwet afee tea*
MM Ihs
>ev slrwah
of river pravet forming a terrace over-
lookiBg' Uiernver. and .dbmuoseil of ma-
teijlals washed down from the old termi-
tvsl moraine which strikes across the
estate of New Jersey to the westward.
The large block of stone and the gener
al character point out that during the
...time of its accumulation there were ice-
rii'ts floating down the Delaware in tho
spring, as the Thames, the Seine, and
the Somme. The physical
clear that it belongs to the sa
deposits with similar romains\n Brit
ain. The animal remains also Viiht to
tho same conclusion. A tusk olmnas-
todon is in Dr. Cooke's collcctio!
Brunswick. N. J., obtained from the
gravel, and Dr. Abbott records the
tooth of a reindeer and the bones of a
bison from Trentou. Here, too, living
and extinct species are iound side by
side. Thus in our survey of the group
of animals surrounding man when ha
first appeared in Europe, India and
North America, we see that in ail three
ons so widely removed from each
er. the animal life was in the same
stage of evolu’ion. and "the old order”
wM yielding ^place unto the new.”
Tin- river-drift* man is proved bv his
surrounding* to belong to the pleisto
cene age in all three.
It remain, now for os to sum up the
results of this inquiry, in which we
have been lead very'far afield The
idea itv of the implements id the river-
drift Ttunb-r proves that he was in
lb* same rude slate of civil gallon. If M
caa bn nailed civilisation, in lha eld
and new worlds when the bead* of
log.cat clock pointed lo lb
r It te ao| a lin e strange that his
Mode of Hie should have bean Ifcn
In the Mr Ha In lb»
lb* MedMrvawsaa. hs r*l*«l>se. In lha
trnpwnl forests of la-La. and ew the
WffiCBfB ffifceifffiffi ui IW Attmr' The
hunter of th* reu*d**r m the enffiep of
in* Itetsware wns t* nil tnisws* and
hr mm* sort of m< as the
4 as
Advice to • Teaag Man.
And, while you aveid effetuire blunt
ness, my boy, it Is wall to cultivate a
habit of frankness. Be straightforward.
When you see anythingjpou want, ask
for it like a man. If yffiT want to bor
row five dollars of a man, dr If you only
want to marry his daughter—it amounts
[Ho the same thing in the end—don’t
sidle up to him and hang on to your hat
and talk politics and religion and weath
er ; don’t tell old, sUk stories whereof
you hare forgotten the point, and lint,
unprofitable Jokes that never had any,
until yon worry the poor old man into a
of nervous irritation. Oo at him with
full head of steam on and your bow
ports open, like n gunboat pulling for* a
shore battery. Snort and paw, if you
feel like it, no matter if ffidees astonish
him. Better to astonish spaa nay time
than I si his af-
fectioi oth, like
a brio his fore
head, il np and
the dt
Or, p
teb him.
totoffi
have
afraid
fight.
7-Etfafir
■•jkonk whotoMuZvd.
font
About Plnms.
A plum tree Is usually a delusion and
a snare to the unfortunate owner. It
gives promise of fruitfulness in bud and
blossom and may set abundance of fruit.
But while the owner sleeps the enemy
descends upon his cherished tree aqd
marks it for its own. Its mark and sign
manual is n little half-moon, a cresoent,
which it stamps upon every little plain.
Then the plums fade and drop from the
tree, and although a few may hang oo,
yet before they reach maturity the sap
ootes from their wounds and they per
ish. And not a plum remains to fulfill
nil the promises of its blossom. This is
why a plum tree Is a delusion. The
enemy is a most Insignificant creature;
asmiM, pany,sasaRing beetle that.when
disturbed, falls to the ground and lies
curled up and motigafoM, so that It **•
capes detection It has a disngrssnkli
name, too, which seems to mona mis
chief as soon as we try to rend it—• Om-
ttrmcKduM arenplM may mean every
thing mean, sly, treeebetoas, aad ds
street!vs, and this is precisely what this
wsevUte. And his a we*svil. teo, for
plnms. It is so smalL^nor upon th*
gren*d. where it fells and "plays pot-
sum.” Ifsnr a hundred of them Maid
i are laoh, and a haa-
Isesrrry the freH of e
It is a bstia, brown.
ton bed
Art ef
USEFUL ASffi
' —.
SUGtiESTIT*.
vH-
An Ohio dairyman, who claims to
I have weighed tbeTmmed milk fed to
|,wiM. ud U» pta. ta fca
Tbs training of deaf matos has long I
been an Intsrastlag study, sad in tbs
past half century it nas besn systsmlasd
*nd brought to a high degree of psrfso- atys 100 pounds of skimmed milk
tion. Institutions exist here aad abroad produce three pounds of pork,
where those wkom nature kM deprived _Mola*ee« Cuslaid* One cue of
of speech or bearing can acquire a . „ llt , ot --a
employed among thsm,aadiUoapacitr to —Tbs aoaa who takas sdraataga of
oonvey all the utterances ot the tongue ah*, soil aad fertilisers, aad studies how
has frequently been a souroa of wonder to manufa' lure grain and roots, meat
to tbo*a in rail posaasstoa of their fee- and fruit* out of lhasa raw materials,
ulties. It has always beau a souros of is tbs om to
that deaf aurtas In ooa- OknmteU.
versing are oomp*Uad to resort to pan- —Probably the;
tomlme, which la pubMe Is oertal
draw attantioo to their Infirmity,
it h aim deplored that ‘ ‘
unabl* toreosivaidsM r
the world nalsm eommoaioalad ia errih- sist«r, egad respaotBaly ihirtesa
lag or la the sign laaguaga with whlah I leu yearn, aa t have doM amst of
eomparetlvely few of tae eommoeity [own work.—(h*«*«* TWa*.
familiar. A 1
by us eg od
ot tar one
ips laiSSxrSSSS
®®**baau in cethm aad tea in coni, aad lad good
• Aurewto empe Tba child re. hJCrVad
miMMT •»*•! re*ijwti\*ir ihhtaee aad
are
af deaf motas la
ET
MW. >t«IM »
wsrvvi. the abfiMnui
whM
MU
res wsdar ihaa II la now. a*
e*w a at ho
I PM p s
d I seat*
t ii•
M*ag* <
i ih* has
mrj l
fhaAsuss
ffiesd UT*i
af Bam**
an*ll
u au at
m4 asN* ta any psaffin
HampSaa rnastm*
Terms ms*
ROBT
M .
. D. WHITE,
\ H H I. K
—Affilh-
GRANITE WORKS
VECIlhQ VTffifSt.
e AUsp )
OffiABL
tear*i•
f etOU
onn mm & m
Snctn ml Pnram Dealta
IBS MBS B*p *u
CTtAffiLJBtTlJl
■raeklaahaM
•• % hfl
#1 Ite mHAAmIme
m m Mf kffi i
•fcmffitffii v to w It ffi
■ Ml
4a4 Mar
to# ai !
■Mf%
4^
A -tore
l. ffift 1
tl» * ilffif
1 Mtt mi fife#
< ■■ism 1
i Awe oat.
toffinw th
■I |^r
ii4« af tm*
Imm I
t]
nft Ik*
Warsaw W
V I
mmm wmmm
m&mmm/i m*
Iffir VM f%
a (ran Is
IfeM rffi I
tit rffil
mmf %m ffi |
ffii
1 oNSWo af
1
•ffi r •
Bare w
feah wanktod fees
TW
kNssand
Id tiRffi
- eg’
sffi
I
Bejpffifffilffi
Iffi sFkJff
■ mmm
■d \mmmm
MBffi I
iMtar
mm iffitffi#
ffffiffiffi
1
him ffir«4
fmmkfm
Uni
ILffi* I
4r4
mmm
(ffiMffifoffiffii
mf i4a0
C
■t j
\ •
sA «S
Ms*
hn**
fear I
- warn
SfSi
dsUt tmatamss
•*' e us a* Us tfe*
less fesSn**. m
sr eft
“ Mg
iaf Ua
■UaffisMMUh to
, Nunuh Bn
Dcrercux t Co^
MfeAUUi
(mm, UiK . Ptotow. Imt
t HABLtKTUU K
HFMMPS (Mull
Oppaalt* Acmduusy of I
C HAKLIXTON, 8- C
“ ‘ st at rveSs
— Mssis
St sil fe**r»-OysSsrs ta *vsry stvts.
Alas, Wis*, Liqasss, Wsa*»», Sn^warWIy
CHARGES O. LESLIE
Wfe*lrnl* s*d Brtoil Dsalsr in
h»k. bat. bktm, Tiriks. Terripm,
Oysiers. Etc*. Etc.
Stall*, No* 18 end 20 Fish Market
CHkBLESTON, 8. 0.
AU orderapsomptly attended to.
Terms Oafi or City Acceptance.
•■E*»yJ
o
THOS. HcG. CARR,
F’ySBHION'A.BLH:
SbTiig aid lair Iressing S&Ihb,
Ill Market Street,
(One Do»r East of King Street,)
marSOly] CHARLESTON, 8. Or
tsD mfY"" 1 ®*
CAROLNA mil TONIC!
THE (BEAT REMEDY FOR
PULMONARY DISEASES, .
COUGHS, COLDS,
BRONCHITIS, Ac.,
AND OINERAL DEBILITY.
ST RE CURE FOR.
Mal&rii and Dyspepsia
Df ALL HS STAGES.
to Meaa pares mt
Btonpn
wswirg t
a son a
M arso- wfewre
Me son
•tonrto dsawofi
At Bs*fe
wsara Ma nss>-4
nM a«o4
hrwfi rssfess festoss
i dnsM*
aasshare soanoae
•asww*
tou*
mm ffito m % i
r rr* * | pa«
■
••
WkiSb hm hMAto4 ito i
torn! U to* tBtototo ftotototovwL Ik#
Mtok ito ito tofito, I# ito toto^g
toto mi torgMuAdR to Iton4ffi»i 4** to
to toMi enpease af seurm the a|
U**h*4 with aumN tseb**)
tham whhh drepped thaw
Brerht—feam Bay. At Ifebs ~ll>s. tm
tasuMeth. reindeer a*
*tfe ef the Nmum* e
gtaciel eee TVs ei
clear that the n
in tont-
ala after U had smargsd frv-m beeae-h
the waters of the glacial sax Tha riv
er-drift mao is orovad. by tha imple
menu ha left behind lo hare wandered
over Ih* whole of France, aad lo have
hunted the same animals in the valley
of the Loire aad the Uaronne as la the
▼alley of the T-iamee. In the Iberian
peninsula he waa a contemporarv of toe
African elephant, the mammoth, and
the straight-nuked eleph rat, and be oc
cupied the neighborhoods both of Madrid
and Lisbon. He alto ranged over Italy,
leaving traces of his presence in the
Abruzso. and in Greece he was
temporary of the extinct
Mat
mgfed
* *f
4 aunar hm
4bawl Bed-team I srwsfea.
*
I aa»t
tha uid
tart af
bar (
ha feaatad th*
harre la Ihs
th* shore ef tha
tdeaea Is aquaily
drift banter folk
bad
la t
i p fen a* tea
hgaia*>
n ha-
potamus
South of
a oon-
y hippo-
(Hippop<Mmui 'PitUlanai.)
the MoUiterraneau his imple
ments have been met with in Oran and
near Kolca, in Algeria, and in Kgypt
in several localities. At Luxor they
have been discovered by General 1’itt-
Rivers in the broccia. out of which are
hewp the tombs of the Kings. In Pal
estine they have been obtained by the
Abbe Richard between Mount Tabor
and the Sea of Tiber as, and by Mr.
Slope* between Jerusalem and Bethle
hem Throughout this wide area the
dmplcmenK lor the most part of Hint
or of qu rtzite, are of the same rude
types, and there is no difference lo I e
noted between the hao' es found in tliq
cares of Creswell, in Derbyshire, and
those af Thebes, or between those ot
the valley of the Sommc*and those of
Palestine. Nor is our.survey yet ended.
The re>eaiThei of Foote, King, Medli-
etr't Ha ket and Ball establish the fact
that the river drill hunter ranged over
the lnd : an peninsula from Madras as
far north a< the vallev of the Nerbudda.
Here w* find him forming part of a
fauna in which there are species now
liv iig in India, such as the Indian rhi-
onperus and tha arm** and extinct types
of‘oxen and elephants. There were two
extinct hippopotami in the river, and liv
ing raviala. turtles aad teMoise*. It
la ptaja. therefore, that at thia time
Hip 'sane of lud'0 stood iu th*
hi ou lo the i»raaeui fauna aa the
doe* to the* mss Kaiag ta
W# are led trem tha 4f Uafh
aal Ipdia ta th* *
• Kaw Jarre . by the
re* af Dt. C C
taw taura. re th*
bed room*. I* u
soot* laiiaacr*. I
ehaoga. which
wamatad ha*
•i-ai-f
uti* n-nu
BOiicffi I kui
iu aa* hrr
i era a-uu
waaird nor
H*d I feat is
to my. iD'tead of th* «-ar)»et tbal at a*M
time out*red ail Ilia i-urfato of the
floor with the gn-.ue*t niivlr of ad i| ta
tion. Lherv i* no carpi- at all This ex
trema change is not at all desirable.
It ia good to have carpets in every
part of the room wl ere the feet
must regularly be placed. It ia
bad to have carpets in any part of the
room where the feet are not legrfiarly
placed. These two rules govern tho
whole position, and the most inexperi
enced nousewife can easily remember
them. By these rules there should be
carpets all around the bail, carpet op-
pos ta the wardrobe or < bests of draw
ers, carpet oppos le the washing stand,
and carpet opposite the dress ng-table,
but noire under the bed-*, and none for
a space of two or three feet around the
room—that's to sav, two or three feet
from the walls of tlic room. The rar-
pets that are laid down should be loose
from each -other, ea* h one ahould be
complete in itself, so that it can lie
taken up to 1 o shaken with the least
trouble, and eadi one should be ar
ranged to lie close to the floor, so that
dust may not easily ge: underneath.
t’nrjiet stulV for b. d-roo ns should be
made of tine lUkter.al closely woven,
and not fltiTy on the surface. 'I here
was a form of Brussels carpet called
"tapestry.” which sonic years ago was
very largely used. It was as warm as
the ihiti.iest blanket, and it was almost
like wire in fiber; in fact, it waa tough
enough to last half A life-time, and it
was the best carpeting for bed-rooms I
ever remember.
The advantage* of small carpets in
th* bed-room are many, they cause
the footsteps to be noise Urn. or con-
paratively Boireieaa. they prevent tha
feat from becoming cwkd while dresting
i tha room
Iu th* Hare
above au rnnMfefi
a . n a * * •
a* Mas it rerena,
■I sres m had. ured aa a
•atofi
*« mi
rree **st naausag re aa
as hapa aad swoshre* aad
fore, wNhreu a htoah afi l
radwsrea. Tau*E a
fo 4*foA, my hay.
work, tha leas ■firehfof aofi traoMsyao
-towfeogUa* ffiMshsya.
or mark ya*
Tha hardre
A renarkahU rarear was that af tl
Hon. John Tod. who fired reoaody
Vwfona. K t'., agad a aety-ooa y
i a I MB’ ha aorerad tha srnrira at
Indsoo’s Kav Company, and within a
1 few >aars had ri-ttad aisoet every por
tion of tha vast territory from Hudson's
Hay to the Columbia River. He visit
ed Montreal in IK 12. aufi Astoria, Ore.,
in IMIA Afterward in the Peace Hiver
country he spent nine years without
hearing his mother tongue or seeing tha
j face ot a wh.le person. Forty years
' ago he was in charge of old Fort Kara
r loop*, and one day. when almost alone,
! was surprised by a large party of In-
j diam>, who invaded the fort for the pur-
• pose of plunder, and, perhaps, murder.
; tjuickly knocking out the head of one J
| of several barrels of powder, he delib
erately lighted a match and threatened
to blow up the fort and every one in it
* if the Indians did not instantly leave the
| neighborhood, which it is needless to
sa> they did. He was a member of the
first Executive Council of Vancouver’s
; Island, and held that position several
: years, but retired to private life about
| fifteen yore ago. He retained full
possession of all his faculties to the day
of ftis death.—Chiraao Tribune.
A Home Thrust.
from beeumiag
undressing.
Complaint was brougl
Fizsletop that hi* boy Johnny had at
tacked and beaten, on Austin avenue, a
much smaller boy than himWf.
The Colonel took Johnny toide, and
had a private conversation with him, in
which joint discussion a strap played aa
important part.
“ I’ll teach yoq to strike a * mailer
boy than yourself.”
** That 4 * so,” sobbed Johaey. "that’s
ja-t what you are fining!”
“ What drt you
scampP* ‘
" 1 safes a. pa, yoa tonght ms to
Rule boys. Yoa are
li saaal
tha greaa gsg* tor preasrvtag. I da
now at a plum hare Is this last will
asst tha earnalto, aad tfeis K daae, i
will not sttog K bat
rem—probably iu aa-
aad lb* laxtare <4 tha
Wkat Are tlaafisl
Though the clouds are eucn familiar
objects, vary little is known about them,
and tha processes by which they are
formed and give back their moisture to
the earth are unsolved mysteries.
They can not be classified as belong
ing to lha solid, fluid, or gaseous form
of matter. Yet they are defined a* be
ing "a collection of watery particles in
the state ot vapor, suspended in the air.”
If they are ordinary vapor, they must
be governed by the laws which affect
vapors. Brande define* vapor thus:
"When liquids and ceruun solids are
heated, they become converted into
elastic fluids or vapors, which differ
from gases in this respect, that they are
not under common circumstances per
manently elastic, but resume the liquid
or solid form when cooled down to or
dinary temperature.” According to this
definition, clouds can not be composed
of ordinary vapor, for under all condi
tions their temperature must be below
the condensing point ot water-vapor.
At the elevation at which clouds are
often «een, they are in the regions of
perpetual congelation; and as they float
above the highest mountains they most
be exposed, even in the sunshine, and
certainly in the night, when the solar
heat is not poured upon them, to tem
perature* colder than those of the frigid
sooe*.—C. Morjlt, ta Popular
Monthly.
ceofully eon
vorad fallow
the
t with tfestr
i, bat for w
batter adapted
It b wall know*
on# sen-s U wealing tha other*
more acute. Being deprived of
sense of bearing, the sight of deaf
u-ually attains a remarkable dagree of
acutenaat. They generally have a great
talent for drawing and sketching; oulte
a number of the former graduates of the
institution are successful lithographers,
engravers, wood-carvers, etc. One of
} the former pupils of the New York in
stitution is now a student of the School
of Minos of Columbia College. He oom-
rehends the lectures by following th*
ovements of the lips of th* Professor,
and recites his lessons aa other students
do. Mr. D. Greenberger, who is the
Superintendent at tha Institution, says
that a prominent feature.of the method
amployed by them is that articulation,
reading ana writing are combined and
taught simultaneously. The teacher baa
agv
i chart before him "on which the ele
mentary sounds are represented by the
oomfnon letters of the alphabet, in such
order, however, as they are most readily
acquired by a deaf mute. While teach
ing a pupil how to. imitate a certain
sound ne points to tits corresponding
letter on tha chart, which th* child at
onoe trie* to copy, later on, when
words and prases are introduced, fevery
one of theaa is fin* presented ia writing
on the blackboard, from which they are
read off br the pupil.-N. T. Herald
Wall
gaa, KUn Wife
the only pnats
tl traveler’s [»-ck<M. the oth
er tote IS* l.sA-bev’s pnlro. Ha sailed,
w d ‘'HsaV yon. 4 ’ and was sfipp ng It
into his ~ <ct. when "Gat it ebangi-d!”
again rung ii to his aars. Two quartern
cams bo. k with him thia lima, which he
han-led to the guest, who putting one
ia bis puma, turned over tha other to
th* hall-boa. This time he wssallowed
to walk off nearly across the ball. when,
as if by an electro shock,
brought to a stand still, with those
ribi* words “Get t changed!”
time two dimes and n nickel wore de
posited in the hand of the guest, who
put the two dimes in his pocket, banded
»
the brush boy a nickel and
dinner.—/fefroif Free Press.
in to
Fashionable Wrlaklea.
Two new wrinkles are ohargod upon
the fashiouable women of New York
City by a correspondent of the Cincin
nati Enquirer. The lirat is fiddling.
"It is not rare now to meet n finely-
dressed girl with n boy carrying one ot
those black, coffin-shaped boxes which
formerly wore lugged by professional
musician-t only. She is on her way to
or from her violin lesson. Pretty i
she will stand up bofore th*
her papa’s parlor, tuck on* end of n
fiddle under her chin, aad