The people. (Barnwell C.H., S.C.) 1877-1884, November 02, 1882, Image 1
V
i
p
?• Baiineai letter* ind oonmanict-
Uone to be pablfahed thgald be written
? " hMta * “ d tbe object of each
dearly indicated by neoeenry note when
«*q aired.
II. Arttcle* for pnblication ihonld be
^ritten In a dear, legible band, and on
only one aide of the page.
4, All changes in advertisement* tnuit
rMch n> op Frlady.
OR. J. H. r. MILHOUS,
DENTAL SURGEON,
, BLACKVILLE, s. o.
Ofice near lii residence on R.R. Arenne.
lk “"o owafortable to
“ 5*5 wor ^ do,, « »* the offica, as h« has
D * D ^J KOod J, »bt and the
te^Lf/ r0Ted ,V ,p l “ c ®*- H « should be
tel tTnit “J-' preTiolu to their com-
toR to prevent sny disa p. lntmsat—though
wdj^enerally be found at his office on Hat.
< ^ 11 ® 0 ”, Unn * to attend sails
throughout Barnwell and adjoining conn-
[anglS ly
OR. L j. QUATTIESAUM,
SURGEON DENTIST,
Willis roN, a. o.
t
OfBoo over Oapt. W. H. Kennedy’s store.
Calls attended throughout Barnw.II
“d adjajnmt- couattoo. \ nMtta wi'l
find it to their advantage to aate wwk
«1«« dt ►Js office.
DK. J. RYER80N SMITH,
Hmth« u4 IrrhiAKAJ leitiit.
WIU IBTOH, 8. a
win
J. A. PATTEHSON.
Hurjffon I>entist.
oi the hMm wtll Chart
There wss a maiden ncbtv bOrn,
Her name was Ltiy, beauteoui she,
An<l vhtox of OonsMraine her to woo.
And asttv land irithl
t bended knee.
ftot'l WOUam was her choice, and Wfteft
He sued, she »al<kea bCr eyes grew dim,
“I oap’t re/awi*W, WlUlam. dear,”
And With a smg&zcepted him.
But true love's course ne'er did run smooth.
And her o'd man forbid the bans.
“ Breonto rascal," said the sire.
And William went to fern lands.
And after many rtauv wrote:
’* ni love thee, darling, till I rot,
O! keep my memory trerornn.
My darling I Surest! firryet-me-netr’
■ O. L*uuUrr thus the father orlea.
dwwet William's gone, and you're my
choice."
Then Leander me* to seek the maid.
And thus he lifted up his vogm:
“My LOy-of-the-valUy, sweet, -
l ve gold and land, and wealth untold;”
Ge-ia-ut-um what a look she gave,
And said: “ 1 will not martj«*l.' J
Bwt. sweet maid yo.r maple^sa/ my srord.
In hta uhi pa
the room with s dense cloud of dust
that renders breathing fcomewhat dif*
ticult to those not used to suOh atmos
phere This beatih*, it is said. not
only rids the. feathers of the starrii but
it brings ouV the “due,” and in the
hands of skillful beaters none oi tae
feathers are ever injured. The strings
of feathers are taken from (he beating-
room to the dyeing-room, where they
&re colored to suit. White And black
have become staple colors, and the
former of these, like other hues, is pro
duced by dyes! The fashionable
fancy shades this year are terra cotta,
bronze, cardinal and garnet.
'• We dye feathers now a days'’ to
match the newest shades of Imported
silks," said a busy manufacturer in
West Houston street. g
After being dved the feathers sro
taken into a large work-room where
young girls scrape the ouills with glass
to make them pliable. Next the stems
are papered and wound, and the
feathers are held over steam pots to
Hoff them out After that they are
combed and curled by hand. The
curling prcx-esl i« done with a small,
fat kaue and to the unurtisted it ap-
* earsto 1 e \ erv delicate and laborious
work. ( uders am paid so much per
<lo*en. and ther earn from tU to *40
per week The utmost skill and rare
are also required on the part of the
girts who aew together the viw out
pieces of which the long and bran’ifnl
plumes are met to Tha ecarrit y in the
markrt of the gratriae long eetrioh
feat hen, swell a* are ebiatoed a| the
proper time of the year from the falW
grown wild ostneh. laipnene nj»n
mianlanerwn the teak of mak ag teeir
phim < by pieriag Nearttmos a plema
will eoaapo^m^ef dm or at*
sad «emH *‘v« It will onaslst of
fair atond hethor* arwed
si eon
toe
thev ar
oil iial •»
maned over
rt tod i
ynai— % a#
mn!
I# i
*9*
t rely
a dfe *
at fr m
fvtxa *3
tnmrhed
' A merchant of Alieghety has in his
possession the following note:
It will not be possible for me to keep % i
appointment for this afternoon, I regret It
much, but buslnses Interferes. J. W.'B.
The note was Written by John Wilkes
Booth in 1865, two days before Lincoln
was assassinated. In April, 1865, the
Allegheny merchant want to Baltimore
to endeavor to find some traces of his
brother, who had gone from Pittsburgh
as a soldier in the aarly part of the war.
“The second day after my arrival in
Baltimore,” said the merehant, “I called
at the house of Hr*. —. The family
oonsL Es
telle, live
years een
eight was
rathe ier,
and t was
■ s:V
what
axpn
•on s
“1
had i
for
of th.
When vary young they should be kept
S uiet. not too much exposed to the
ght. It is usual to engage some old
and experienced expert to attend to
this, and the direction in which the
“twig is inclined” at this stage is gen
erally the ruin of the parents^ peace of
mind for two years.
Milk is said to be good for babes, but
there are so many “ patent foods” now
sold at the drag store that milk may as
well be done away with. Give the
child something that you don’t know
anything about and it will thrive—poe-
Don’t cross the child when it is small
It will take so kindly to having its own
way that it is really cruel to Insist on
parental rights in the matter.
Learn the little coots to “crow” as
early as possible. Take them in your
hands and toes them np as high as you
can and jounce their digestive organ* all
eat of place. This is a genuine “raise”
of children.
As soon as possible pot the
by into a baby carriage and posh It
the sidewalk, running tot
with it and gathering
at the crossings to
will give the Uttte one
not li
Or-
What a Policeman Saw.
Just a wee bit of a sweet-faced child,
with wonderfully dear brown eyes ship-
ng through a man# of tangled hair that
drifted over them. A pair of red lipe
quivering with the sobs that shook her
*hght frame. Soft checks, down which
he tears were falling like April rains.
That was what a policeman saw.
“I want my mamma,” ahe sobbed, in
reply to a question from him. “pbe
in a big boose way off, Daisy said.
I’m Vying to find her. They put her
in an ugly box and abut her np Jighh
and papa just cried and said
with the angels. Do yon know where
they are? I want to go to her. Can’t
yon take me ?”
Something ip the officer’s erst made
indistinct the object* around him ae he
took the little one in hie
her name.
Ob, it'e only Mamie,
a Mamie, and I know
wan to me. Won't you take me loo her I 3
He atartod with the Iteht burden to
Won't you take eset
with the he
ward the •tatioo, bet before he
it ahe had UiUn aatorp, talking of masa
la At thaaeaboo, her
RELIGIOUS IKDEDUCATIOSAir
—Greek and French haws
es optional studies to the
Indianapolis high school
_AThe English Cbarahhas estobBthod
a Christian mission at Sara, a t>—
which reaches further back than
call of Abraham.—y. T. Examiner
—The Philadelphia Board of
Uon estimates its expenses lor the
year at •1.715.999.6&. Of this
|1,186,028 will go far toaohers’
—The net numerical growth of
United Presbyterian Cbnroh tost rear
was, to the very unit, double that of the
year before, via.: 1,68® to 814.—Ihe In*
lerior.
-The ceasas of the worid. according
to its religions, has been figured eut by
some Scotch stetitrtctoaa Its
are: Protestants, 180,000,000;
Christians, 8a000,000; Room
lies. 100,000,000; Jaws, 10.000,000; Me
hsmmedans. 175,000,000; Pagans. 90,
000,000.—CMoepe /afsr '
-Mr. Flod. a Geraai
EL-crarrsw - -i
Egypt to rvgato kb test prev-
tocet, and heaas rabouad aed hapffiaed
that toe stove trade
to do ee m lona> ae toe eeeeirr b
the heads of
—TV* ItotraM/h*
Ltotrotl with a rove* li ■rsbtp of
total
of ea ami
g*we
ROBT. O. WHITt,
marble
— AVIV—
GRANITE WORKS
■BSniiO *TBCSr.
tQMseas Ifeetoea* s Atom.)
WAffiLfiMlOM * i g.c
iwuMf 1
ono mu i sou
Cnctn ml fimu Dula
Miami Ml lael ley tosato,
aegtlly OVAlUDtTOJV. A. <
toapm ^ ffiaffitoeg MeMsato Na. M lam hr
fist, tojeua hooas. Ocssa her.
Devereux & Co^
mm l im m.
UtK rUlsar th
toMtol totosi lito#' I
At
»ito
mt
V- H -A
i
lie k
rash.
toftoei
isva
v- .
te «v
tag**
letd
gvwwlag
ra T i
memo*
i TVm
toil
ftses
avto
Iftrfti
liaJMRefhMS todh4
to^smtoto
4
9AP H
• mm
m%m
■pgiyl charleston, to c
HfMME’S RTSriURIKP
tS9 King
Oppoalte Acmdeesy of Meal.
CHARLESTON, to a
to#\8
rtcfc
bm 999 i mm
\*m
to let at M seats s
at all beers—Oy*ters to svary Nvlf.
Ales, Wins*, Llqeers,
CHARLES O. LESLE
Wholesale and Be tail Dealer to
Fisk, fitae, Ukten, ThUm, Ttmpw,
Oysters, Etc. Etc.
SUlb, Nos. 18 and 80 Fish Math
CHARLESTON, to a
All orders promptly Attended to.
Taras Cash or City Acceptance.
aogtOly] ^ [
TH0S. McG. GARB"
growing
Iob^ vnoi
aTY Ti
K 1 A.SHION’ A. BIjE
Shaving aid lair Drewiig Siini
114 Market Street,
(One Door East of King Street,)
marSOly] CHARLESTON, 8 C
TRY-®*
THE GREAT REMEDY FOR
PULMONARY DISEASES, .
COUGHS, COLDS,
BRONCHITIS, A<
AND GENERAL DEBILITY.
SURE CURE FOR
Malaria and DyspepsL ^
all ns stages.
•Ms *"<8
b leather* that cume U>
York market era purchased la
The lanner* in NTtito Africa
who asake a bosineea of raieiag oetrich-
e* for their faatben carry or send their
to Port Elite both, where they
toned to commiesion merchant*
who *«11 them at auctioo at elated pe
riods. The buyers, as a rule, subja-
ooeetly dispoee of them in the princi
pal European markets. Under the
stimulus of a brisk demand the ostrich
raisers have mostly gotten into the hab
it of breeding by artificial incubators.
With rare exceptions all of the feather*
sold in this country are the feather* of
domesticated ostriches. There are but
few wild ostriches left in what is known
as the oetrich raising country. A few
yean ago an idea prevailed that the
“bird of the desert’’ could be raised in
this country, and some elaborate exper
iments were tried in the State of Texas.
Those experiments, however, were not
C ractioally successful, and their failure
as been attributed to various causes.
By some it has been claimed that the
climate was unfavorable, while others
have asserted that the ostrichers were
not supplied with str h food as was
needful However that may be. the
New York dealem in ostrich feathers
say that they will continue to look to
the African products for their purposes.
After the raw feathers arrive at the
factory thev are taken out of the pack
age-) in which they are sent from Lon
don, and •‘strung." That means that
the feathers are firmly attached
to strings a yard or two long, in
order that they may be handled more
readily and quickly. Of plumes about
fifty are usually strung together, and of
Ups there are seventy-tiro and eighty,
and sometimes one hundred and fifty,
according to site. These feather*
represent verted values. The lowest
pn««*i ar* worth from 980 to $40 per
fxmr,: white toe cboioest oex-a.*ion*Jlv
ad from 8350 to 9400 per powsd. f
Whea property “•tnutg’’ toe -
ad • li'f wa-h ug. m>-' »r
tele toe heads of owe or »toet j
bay * w to> rub them vqftwvx.. * oe orvl p •
eery owto-hoards pteeed a laths o wa-
tor la wh«A ito— Is eseee eofwLtm J .
•ode A has faa a < of ■ ties mef* W I s b
twaa ■* srWM «S
■e Aw a gVM »i ■
is stowas of
mmm ha —i 4 to ha<e
■ar sraea TWl tvm
wav we* to* t awed a
•ad ag *ery rafddty L
ttoah lha* iq order to
ay mm* hate ihaW ha •
vvrwd wwh ll*a eaB ph
aw arv a*4 rsah
•ran v'vwiMaa > ism
-n hrr furor ttow a «to> «
>t IrV etear to -hi rvtevW'l
I isrt ia-gv h rd» TVr
a II asr* ar* p litex tori*
I«fu> -a • ntt sums of Ihatl
w alar hot •. *
* »r la l^.rj 1 k'orl the prw-
Wire of •*' rtrh tvathsrsP'
aut a^weeahke e* sat
Daere wa« a vlight ad^aatw to pricas
aienlb ng In l>ondoa. aad some of
New York >mporter* of leatbor*
ba>l to pay from Im to tsaoty par caaL
■tore lor tboir goo.U ih s year than
l*'t. Th* tronM- ip Egypt, howavar.
total
here
s *’
hut*
■fto
VOS*
te M
•as
I
Mid to
ws*
Wn.
frigl
•Oh,
did aot extend down
country
enough lo
into the ostrich
It did not U«
affect the hii*ineur~ *
•ear
nv
The Pleasures of Biula<
No human mind is ountented without
occupation. No human soul is without
an aim or purpose in life. The neatest
success in life consists not in the mere
accumulation of riches, bat in being able
to acquire wealth with a disposition to
apply it in snch a manner that it ahall
ijp a comfort and blessing to oilier*—not
in the mere giving away of money, bat
in patting people in a wny to labor and
help themselves. w
There is no pleasure in oppression.
There is no picture in grinding and ex
acting gold from tbe poor; bnt there is
s great deal of gen nine sat Maction in
Ixnng able to offer steady and honorable
employment to the many willing hands
that have nothing to do.
One of the greatest enjoyments of
the prosperous business man consists
in being able to comfortably provide for
the many employes in his house or man
ufactory. In doing this he is fnlfllling
his obligation tc society ; ho becomes a
useful and honored citizen; business to
him is s rc*l pleasure ; he enjoys his
successes, wheu they arc fairly won, be
cause he feels that he deserves them.
When a business man has tbe right
kind of purpose in life he always enjoys
his occupation. He feels a just and
worthy pride in his prosperity, he is
pleased with the respect and gratitude
of those whom he directs and controls in
the management of bis affairs, and he
feels that to beuefltting himself be is
ooufmiof a favor upoo others. — Ov
torfnm
N.
t, hut
i doe-
£3
aim 1
ter,
lifte
will
aim
• «
41
** Dou*i
r mug^l - men
u>L-_ j I _ i br»
with?’ * ^
“ Then I remembered the note, and
the fact that it was signed ‘J. W. B.’
Estelle had not mentioned the name,
and that was why I did not understand
it. Mrs. was wild with terror, and
feared that her daughter might be i
pected of having some connection 1
the plot of Booth and Ms compani
Eitcllo wns ill, and did not leaye her
room, and I never saw her after that
awful morning, poor girt!
“ Oil my way home I found Booth’s
note in ray pocket, where I must have
put it without knowing it after I had
rolled it np in a ball. I kept it then as a
memento. The business Booth refers to
w as evidently that of the plot.
“I don't know whether Estelle Is
living or not. She was when I was in
Baltimore two years ago. Her mother
Was dead, and Estelle was living with
some relatives near Bowling Green, Va.,
and not far from Garrett farm, where
the man she loved was shot in a barn
twelve days after he had murdered the
President of the United Stotee.”—/*«#-
tmrgJt Telegraph.
^Yary true,” responded the Premdent,
“and I trust that aU an willing to admit
their indebtedness.”
They may be,” replied she; “but I
eared it was something like Mrs. Hite’s
_ my egg* and saying she would
always indebted to me for them: as
WML for she never paid ’em baqk. •
President kick a little annoyed,
there came another about.
“Don’tyon think,” ahe said,’
/these few roan should have been
trated when the war was over,
left the women to do what
bered on the men ?” J
“Perhape,” replied her in
“ but better late than
“It came nigh being too late,”
Among the brute*,
only requires no
superior physical abilitr, l
ly prvjua.cial to healtn,
rebned.
When food is thus eaten, especially
the more solid and tough, it is utterly
impossible to chew it suttk-iently, while
it can not be properly combined with
the saliva, a solvent prepared to an ex
tent to indicate its use and importanoa
from three and a half pounds to six in
itor, twenty-four hours. The primary ob
ject of chewing is to so divide the food
■aid that this juice may be mixed with every
she, “ with tUb poor legless heroes ran- part, the fineness presenting an in
ning to their long home through a poor- creased s. rfaee, the act of chewing act-
house gate; but, thank heaven, some will ing <>n the nalivary glands, in a kind of
have a comfortable home to go to, after mi king process, which, in addition to
this where they smoke tbe calumny ! the excitement of the food, causes it
of peace, without even a tax-oolleotor to to ooze oat, thus affording all the
make’em afraid.’* I liquids needed, without any artificial
She
—B, P. Shillaber
wearying, bnt aha meant wall
ullaber in Sword and Pen. K
F" T A 1 As*w
I?
■ * »r, k» Ago rea.1 an
tie in P*m by * man who
*U dagger te the depth of naartv
vetoes tlmatofc th*- top of the shall
mu the beats Powerfoi matoiarry had
to t* faroaght into aas to wmeii A
tana wsftad
towstoal vtovr he
that l>r
i-to (M«.) •A/'-
ism R Go h
think*
Jr., oi
awrww* a little
thirty ra n sf
^ Ha
Hikx are two illnstrationa of matri
monial felicity; la Leicester, England, a
man went with another woman to a place
of amusement the evening of the day
hm wife died, and joat before the fnneral
the woman having eoase to taka charge
of the boose, the dead wife * mother
turned bar oat of loots, a large crowd
black lead
tor with fioar and black
MM
the
way te the
with hie wils’a
i of tee
New York.
to tee
drinks. By this mouth-digestion, sojto
! spvak. i educing all to a moist and*'
[pulp, and only by s: ch pro -essMc can
food be properly fitted for the sti
j If not well prepare i for the stomach, in
the m oth, tbe labor of that organ most
j\e increased rising i a owa, with a part
pcrtain'ng to the mouth. It is proper
| to add that even tbe hqa d foods cannot
I be eo prepared un eas they ere retained
In the mouth long esoon to allow the
aaln e to be Incorporated with them. H
is *i*o tree that sack maa-v* of
by rapid
by tto!
< lark. Clark of I
Collector of Taxeo,
at-Aaeemblyiasa ami
one, aad yet bee
— Cfneaffo Berm
—Mr. Freeman psbliabee to the
b Fortmgktly Review Ml
of tbe United States He i
cordially the
kindness received. He i
ica throoghoat i
thusiaam. H<
the character
on the essential identity of]
America.
—John Quincy
known to be late during all his
service to Congress. One
the dock struck, e i
Speaker if tt wss not tin* In
House to order. “No,** M’*
“Mr. Adams is no* yt* Ji Ms
Just then Mr. Adsu
proved that the clock
tut.—Chicago Tribune.
-All accounts of Si*
died a few days ago, agree thaf she
phenomenal voice. Her Ml
Gilbert, and the
her death are those el (
whea she wae a
Philadelphia was <
of “I Know that My
with Jenny Lind’s,
me, ana i
mmm/mm/mm