Newspapers / The Chapel Hill Ledger … / Aug. 28, 1880, edition 1 / Page 1
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r i 5 ' r r , - j ft hi n w $1.50 PER ANNUM, IN ADVANC. JOS. A. HARRIS, Editor. FOR THET PUBLIC GOOD. NO. 19. VOL. Y CHAPEL HILL, N. C, SATURDAY, AUGUST 28, 1880. .. i t ! ' i - iff m I IT MIGHT HAYE feEEN. It might have been ! When life is yDnng i,nJ hopes are bright. and hearts are strong Xo rattle "'h be beartleea throng, ' Wfcea youth and age are far betwoen, tflo Lean the words so sadly song ? It might have been ! . It might bare been ! When life is fair. Youth stand beside the boundless eea Tbt ebbs and flows unceasingly. And dreams of uame and golden fame ; , In J bo shall limit the To Be . That's dawning there ? it might have been. When life is bright, vootb recks not of the coming night. or dreams that there may be a time Yten love will fail, or change, -or die Eternally ! It m ght have been ! When time prows gray, lud erring-tide's hopes have passed away, OU ago looks back on by-gone years The- many wants and d:mbt8-nd fears ; nJ through the mist a way is seen. The might-have feetn ! It might have been ! Wbep age so pad, Weary of waiting for the fame Ttott, "after all. is but a name, Yben life has lost the charm it had, True knowledge makes regret more keen It might have been ! i It might have been ! When yomth is dead. And love tbat wa so false is fled, ' ffben all the mockeries of the past iIT lost their tinsel rags at last, Tue oue true love is clearly seen k -That might have been ! It might'have been ! Ah me ! Ah me ! And who shall tell the misery Of knowing all that life has lost ? , Bv thinking of the countlesn cost Poor comfort can the sad heart glean ! It might have Ween ! H might have been ! Nay, rather rest Believing what has been is best ! Ihe life whose sun has not yet set Can and no oom' for Tm re&Tet' AuJ only felly crowns as queen It might-have-been. . The color the ex- to The Lottery Ticket. Painsted was in a state of excitement. There was gossiping by the roadside and over early tea-tables. i,,mrable voices had uttered iTV tPll" and want know but all that had happened was the 2SSS-'Iy clothes, ac compared by two friends also arrayed in S best, ha walked over to the church, and there the minister had pronounced them man' and wife. Even at Painsted people sometimes mar- and Simon Wheeier; out sted was excited. somehow Pain hair been Aunt I4 U as caw"'"- r .vbSn.inh1 was a'VOunff woman ot ;thmit beaut v. but wonderfully neal UUl I J , "SSTiicr flfieenlh birthday she had gone about from house to house mak Sidrtsses and children's clothes, known eveiy where as a good, pious young woman, but never considered attractive. Her work was good and slow. In the course of these fifteen years she had laid by "ShJXtvs had a black alpaca." a clean linen coUaf, and a checked apron-, but whether they were the same or were occa Bionally renewed, no one could tell. Simon Wheeler was a very pretty young man of. four-and-tweuty, Willi ngni and big blue eyes. Sjintheleft school he had never i . onvthin? but on his Wheeler's door step and look at the news r,rftrtn)dlv "lookM at it he nevr t"t- "iViooa as it arrived he would seize upon it, turn to a special corner and look &t What . he stared at, though this was known only to himself was a small adver tisement which occupied the same POf on in that particular paper from one year s ena to the other, and which was beaded L . i.r.f n.imiv Txrtterr! Capital rnze, Fifty Thousand Pounds. Tickets, one pound each." " . . j When the day of the drawing came, and . i;mi f niimhera was to be seen be- low this advertisement Simon looked long er and was often observed to sign. Not however, because he had mves ted his money in tickets and lost, but because he had none to invest. Aunt heeler was not too generous. , ;iT. Vl'll keep you till you can keep your self," she ofun said, -but I shan't hav6 my money wasted on cigars and wine, l ou re Utter off without none,0 . Simon neither desired wine or cigars, n..r nv .thPr luxury of dissipated youth, bought a ticket, drawn the prize, and be stowed upon his aunt a little carriage, two cream-colored horses "and a' black silk dress. Her delight over the unexpected present ai'.d wonderful news had kept him from opening the canned fruit as he had. promis ed to do. . Mrs. Wheeler, who knew nothing - of this fine waking dream, desired to scold him. I However, Sally's presence prevented her from doing so. She contented herself with a talk at him over the dress -maker's shoul der, i She praised the girrs industry, her pru denbxyiOTnw'ayto get on," sue saia "that's the spirit I like. Independent noui the time you lost your parents, and male-inn- little savings all the while. Don't say, "only fifty pounds." Every little makes a nickel, I've heard my grandmother say. Many a one that has earned double your money hasn't saved a penny." Simon listened. i " 'Fifty poinds!" said he to himself. "Why don't she buy a lottery ticket, draw o nri7n nmi sion senium x " He looked earnestly ai oaii rflnip into her thin cheeks. She was not often the object of such-in- font rptrftrd. ' Could it be that this young man admired lior ? ! Kllv Corkindahl felt sure that this was so when Simon offered to see her home that evening. That was the beginning of it. The end was that wedding which had awakened such astonishment at Painsted. The wonder that industrious Sally (rk indalil had married such an idle fellow, who certainly could not take care ot her, was only matched by the wonder that hand tAiti; Simon Wheeler had married that cvujv i nil r l plain, utterly unattractive Sally Corkin dahl. i . . Mrs. Wheeler resented it highly. "Since you've chosen a common seam tress, and married her without a hint to ine, ypu can take care of her," she said : "I won't." ' So Simon had sauntered over to uie one room which Sahy hired, with his portman teau in one hand and an umbrella in the other; and Sally still went out to work, while Simon sat at the window and looted at his paper. ; Hehad told her he expected to come into a fortune, and she received his state ipnt with the credulity of love, and was . vwir.i nl toil in the meantime. ci,'f,a.i r1,ifp.l her savinsrs book in ins a'uv "wv w hands. . . tAll'shf "hnd tas Ills T me am belore ineir euuiu6-uj over Simon had bought his first ticket. It was that that made his heart beat so TTildly;not the touch of her nonesi uauu upon his own as she met him but he said4, to himself. There, shan't -be any more drudgery for bally when I draw the capital prize. There are twelve months in the year ; each month the great Gumbo Lottery had a drawing each month Simon Wheeler a tirkfit and drew a blank. kn(w nothing of it. again. She looked at her husband with the gleam of anger in her tyes, and cried out, sharply : . "Is this it? Is this the secret the for tune you've talked of? . Are you crazy en ough for this? Have you been buying tickets in that cheating lottery all these years, and is my last pound, that I see you have drawn from the bank to-day, spent for that thing?" Poor Simon 1 " He stared at his wife for a long time without answering; then he said, slowly : . .' - "Think of it forty-nine blanks, and every time I expected a prize the capital prize. Think of my disappointmeutl,'1 iVearffeti a fool,"7" said Salty.-' "I could kill myself when I think or, it. l ueiieve you married me to get that fifty pounds to era uble with. Then she becran to cry. "Yes. I've been a fool," he said; "but though the money made me think of asking vrm to have me. I meant to make you ricu. J . . r i i nr..' , T did. Sallv: 1 VOW 1 CUU. - neve oirmrr vprv wp.li. haven't we? I think great deal of you. I meant to do every thing for vou; but it's all over now. I lookat that ticket, and 1 know it's a blank. I should never buy another never, never I You see, that dream 1 told you once of my dream appeared as if it must coni6 true; but my luck is bad, I see that "Luck!" cried Sally, stung by resent ment. "Luck 1 f Oh, get out of my sight! i;-i,r. tht. ticket that vou've spent my last hard-earned pound on. and go where I can't see you for a little while, do!" Sallv!" said Simon. He stepped towards her as 'he spoke. He would have kissed her it sne naa permit icr liim to tlo SO. ' Ti,on i,p nirked ud the yellow ticket, rpd the number aloud W889 crammed it into his Docket, and sauntered away a Q;v rvlrtflr that evening mere was ill DIA V i;tti rvmwd heaide the mill dam. It was fast increasing, for a body had been taken out of the water with a pocket homii-pmhief full of stonesbout tne nee, AVhppler's bodv tt i..wi Hmnwl himself in less than X1C iicvi v.. w half an hour after he had walked sqJeis urely away from hii injured Sally's pres Ti,pr found in his Docket an empty Durse. a little list of numbers, and a yellow. ticket soaked through,' but still bearing on noon its surface the figures. yoo. ! v . .. ; : ' T ! atlns Clay, u . A Strange Story. . I . , . . . 1 ; Thirty-three vears ago a ; family named Benton, consisting of father, mother, son? and daughter, resided in one of the west ern states near a small town called Blank. . In "their chemical action, soda and potash are very much alike, though they are dis tinct substances. IJnited with oil, potash makes soft soar) and soda hard. The best The father was wealthy and lived in style, Castile soap is made of soda and the oil of OllVeS , It 18 IUC pUICSt ttUU Utoi ouop xiiv.v. United with carbonic acid we have the car bonate of potash and the carbonate of soda. They resemble each other in appearance, and as a medicine, both of which are so used,- their action is much the same. The carbonate of ammonia, on the other hand, tliough it is white like the others, is readily lv different. There is another common sub stance which has alkaline properties in a certain degree and which is as important m agriculture as either of the others. We refer to lime. It unites with oil and forms a soap, though different than that formed by either of the others, and unitea readily with acids. It enters st largely miu we xyxiix and his daughter Mabel, a child between two and three years of age, was always elegantly dressed, and George, the son, a boy of seven, was preparing to enter an eastern school. One day little Mabel dis appeared, and her parents never heard of her again, although they spent thousands ado.Ui.rs in searching. for her. The heart bfokeVmother died soon after the losspif oier EuTwpev-aua unaiiy settled m JSew York where he died. George grew to manhood, and the memory of his lost sis ter was almost effaced from his mind, in his twenty-seventh year, while visiting a married friend, he fell in love with the governess of his friend's children, a-beauti- ful erirl ot aooui iwemj-wc 1U1 Elll ouwu , MnA some months they were marrieu, rf " Mfth thftt , fis called an alkaline haDDilvforfive.orsix years, a bnlnhnrin acid lanites with Dorn to iiieui uu'u6 - - San Fran- girl being time. T?.r rtpath of an uncle in cisco. George was iei i. . tune, and the lawyer who convey eu vu telligenceno him also stated that his sister had bee-i traced. A iramp uii . bed in a St. Louis police stauon couit that he and two companions naa bwjicu tie Mabel Benton for her clotheo and locket and she naa wuuuucu ovii When sii nhuric acia winva potash the compound is called sulphate of potash, a substance used but little save as a medicine ; a union ot the same acid with soda, forms the sulphate of soda, or salts, a substance formerly much used in domes tic medicine ; with ammonia this acid forms a sulphate entirely different froin the other two and of but little value, and with lime it forms the sulphate of lime or gypsum, one of the most valuable .fertilizers, gen .niixr Koftor tnown as Blaster of Paris. In ClOUJ uvvm. " i . In Western Africa, the negroes of Guinea have been long known. to eat a yellowish earth, there called, Caouac, the flavor or taste of which is very agreeable ' to them, and which is said to cause them no incon venience. Some addict themselves so ex ccseively to the use of it, that it becomes to them a kind of necessity totheir lives as arsenic does to the Syrian peasants, or opium to the Theriaki--and no punishment is sufficient to restrain them from the prac tice of consuming it. . When the Guinea negroes used in former times. Id be carried Aafija vjea. ti JltaJWest .India islands, they ! rtan Tolnndfl or the substance which, the poor negroes attempted in their new homes to substitute -for the African earth,; was found to injure the health of the slaves who ate it. . The practice was therefore long ago forbidden, and has now probably died out in the West, Indies. In Martinique a species of red earth or yellowish tufawas still secretly sold in the markets of 1751 ; but the u of it has probably ceased in the French colonies also. In Eastern Asia, a similar practice of eating earth prevails in various places. In the Island of Java, be- tween Sourabaya and Samarang, Labillar--diere saw small, square, reddish cakes or earth sold in the village for the purpose of being eaten. These were found by Ehren berg to consist f ojr the most part of the re mains of microscopic animals and Plants, which had lived arid had been deposited In fresh water., In liunjeei vauey, wmcu iue wmcn sue wwie, , . v.PftPr known as piaster oi x ana. m . t- . , ft1 lAv omirs. with them lor several yea, - - righrnent ;fcud growth of plants, t.TZ aa a r.,rr for the eoiter. The bright, pretty facurapa - & 8ubstances perform a very im- cal nit of the substance has not of a kind-hearted Ohio lady, who aoopie r Ammonia composed of hy- pnemlc ; Tn Northern EurODe. es- and ent her to school, wnere sne ru - sen furnisheg to plant3 -"rr 6t Sweden, a that nitrogen which is an important ,con- g d Qjf earth 0WVL by the name f bread stituent of those tissues and fluids ' which consumed in hundreds of cartloads, contain albumen, commonly known as azo- .g In Finiand, a simi- tized or nitrogenous tissues. The chiet commonly mixed with the bread, source of supply pf ammonia for agncultur thege caseg tbe earth employed con- ral pjirposesrs the mine ana aung oi a-m- . mQst of the empty neUs until her patroness died. .Mabel then De came a teacher in a large school in Cmcin- r health Degan lu as governess, ana nati, but as he applied. for a position was now in the family of Mr. M- at. least that was the last piace or he had heard of her being m. ..; . 'mt HtL the form of phosphate, en-. Vr.,.TL7 animalcules, in which oiweiamiiy ffintn the comoosition of the ""VXr " inar nounsh- "What was the name was with?" asked George. ; . ; f' was the ans wer. 'What name did my sister have ? "Mabel Ferris." .. x "My God!" cried George, in agony, 'She has been my wife for five years. Upon further investigation this proved to be the truth, arid the girl nearly went crazy, as she was a devout Episcopalian. A separation ensued, all property being devided. me is ses. rione meai ui uum the field, will be laws tlfl HQ S'allyyuld have known what it was but placed with friends, she never saw u, mc uci . ivo,i mtn it marble whiteness like some AV-fWIXtV w w hpatit if ul. statue, for she lay upon ner pu low as white as he, with uer. utile DaDy on v . . twt rii, lml LIJ orifVrtrTri i;.tio Mmmhvard -at Pain was BtlV2r T - T - jIait rip fiiriprai mere w " in i lit; tuy i. vv drawing of, Ihe Gumbo Lottery. ti.p nmnaer of the enterprise ranital Drize : 9889 was LUC UUUluv-i v 1 i not among them. lilts holder was titled to fifty thousand pounas. children as neither shouted not en- Butr it made no difference. Simon llv knew nothing The armiversary of their wedding came. On that day Simon bought two tickets, and in due course of time drew two blanks. He was always kind to his wife, fcrever oIL-pm of his expectations, and praised her i"""" - , Wheelej lay. beside his wire unconscious f ,p orawincr. and the yellow ticket had lnntf atro resolved itself into a yellow sop the seagy grases oy ujc uu"- were parent could bear the sight, of what was to mem t : f o o n ncrainst ViOU axi" "'Ui rivp or ffirl is still living in a quiet L'TnpndUt Ws -fortune save a ,r.nHrpd dollars, in dissipation, v,;DOif ff from all communication Uimowi hi fripnoa. and lS to-aay aw. and where few know his sadly story. ;; . . city ve a shut with farmer, 1 V.1 remawauic Besieged Twenty-Three Times, mor world tard oforp V lnLO lilt;. WUiyUBlUUU sta5 ?ed of all the cereals, and Is in dc ife to their full development. It jwstrf obtained for agricultural purpo- fr.,ry wa whim must nrsc ue un solved in some acid. hrnnjlcast UTDOn slowly dissolved by the acids ot tne son, and thus be made available to plants. Pot ash; and soda also enter largely miu iuc composition of plants, forming a large jer cent, of the ashes' left after their combus tion. Both exist naturally in the soil and are supplied by the application of wood excess "of" acids 'which sometimes exist in the soil rendering it sour- and cold and un productive. The. application of upslacked of the carbonate, or ot un- 11U1C lU V"" ' ' n ilacked, ashes to swamp muck has a won derful effect, sweetening it and causing it to pulverize, and preparing to giye a growth and support to vegetation. The sulphate of lime or common plaster aids agriculture in various ways ; it . neu tralizes acids, unites with other substances in forming plant food and perform &y . m. among lliff -Girls in a Frontier School. - . , ll;wJ V.Jo trVHltmn t - TJ,-rrontinP rfthelS SCVen A school teacner wuo pacu uw. . oy iuc ": ' u Turks. . 7 m B A J M Anvrfl t I,. ft 1 rl T I.I I I r. U V t - A ifwi takmbut six; by A iclbiade, Constantinople has undergone than any other ciiy vi thrice by lnnts. those nutritive principles which had twice Dvme auueu., v.-, - . , . . the Roman emperors ; thft Persians, the Avares, V.r Vno of irk dethroned sovereigns, "J v . . i U TJiiltrariflnS ! OnCe sieges man auy-u r - r?. - f , mior.kimr for the use ot - 1 1 ; nrrni rWPIlIV.LUICO LUIIVju I ir IH.L1 i UOi V - 14. hno npfn I ii'rs n i . f " . . . t., 4V.a onpipnr, wreei.a . Uy " . j ... . Jl rU-riYHWlt.. once uy tne uaii""! i niijuervw om u""- ;mnnt. At st anv oruinary .uvmiou ment. In H6rth Germany, also, on various occasions, where famine or necessity urged it, a similar substance, under the name of mountain meal,- has been used as a means Of stayuig hunger. In South America, like wise, the eating of clay prevaiU among the native Indians on the banks of the Orinoco, and on the mountains of Bolivia and Peru. Wnmholdt states that the earth eaten by the Otomac Indians, on the Orinoco, is anTinc tious; almost tasteless clay true potttr s earth having a yellow-gray color, i voon-wr.-ence of the presence of oxid of Iron. one kind of earth from that of another. A I i swellinff ov the river, wmcu . UstsfrtTo totliree months, and when all fishing is stopped, they devpimniense quantities of earth; An Indian -will eat ?rom onequarter of a pound to one, pound anda quarter of this food daily A simi fJT m,pp nrevaUs in the hlU country of Kand Peru. Dr. Weddell saw a spe- ries Oi gray-wu-'iw . l-vta of T,a Paz. on the Eai m wa called by the the Sclaves and Michael Paleologus; times by the and ndustry : forever looked at the paper, ana npjjj r . . YOUCOulda't man emperors Septinius ; Severn .anu i:4i ,.a in lpa.l Dencil on Sally s big Jt'ntown giri w fUnan Hftva 4;o thp Do?e Dandolo and Count mauu uiuc . ' riiRPinline a DUT jimiowgu Jr uuBiauuuu, . r,o1o1ritr1is v.. x " . , , U inn now. I n.u 4-V.o H ninWOT MlUlOCl a. ciwv, uc uu"w i rjaiuwiii, i'"'-' -""'t' , . - " TT.Wprl 1 r In fiY. unuer U 111 1 " ... ' A Quaran tina Fleet for trie alssisslppl. oi cray-vwivif v.- x the markeU of X, Paz, on . the Eastern .dilleras. and.which was called by th? Native name of Pahsa. The aa aaj wu . are the only consumers of it, eat it in large !fri with the bitter potato of the yVlTheyallownforacer. nrotar Mi 1 MS LU 1U1U1 - ... : 4 v. nnU At lain nine, iu " ' . S4V. ooif i nr) oAAcmnit. With Bail. soup or gtuc " Ht.t gmall ex' Pl At the end of two years Sally began to feel a little anxious, at the end of three a. little weary, at the end of four alarmed Forty-eight months had passed by, fort -ei'ht drawings had been made, by the Gumbo LiOttery, anu iwi)-". been drawn by Simon. One day he made his purchase witn trep idation,5 and returned home trembling ; ne had Sent the last pound of his poor wife s hHre Lid bought his fiftieth ticket in the Gumbo, and for the first time heart he had always wuvu - he only looked ior a Girls were very scarce then; single, young oki menery plentiful; girls very much sought after; . they came out at an early age the tropic . sun of J imtown boomed them into, a precocious maturity ; b? Wirfppn or fifteen they, were ac knowledged powers in society they went t ballsed parties they rpdeWonora Ck)lutobii, Springfield, onaw s x -, 5mSifl Chinese Camp-along those , r7 a nicrht. with dusty miners in S o Tiih one had half a dozen w " . t a 1 nnAOO ami perfect system quarantine regulation, inspec tion and dsin a iQo thP want of swift, properl . AT- ri I C1 I I H V II lflilAV - I 1 t flTMl .III I I III V T . V OVA v llv L11C JUU"" - . ,oHo4,nn Pnerienced in 1 nv.innisaca. the capital of the me lernuiq 7-5 :- . m. n- "" T ' npA Chaco are ift7ft bv vellow fever, Dy me eiue aiw& pota maue ui 5u , hnro 1878, . py ye"". . . '.niinatftd cieariy to n for sale. These are eaten like cboco- the lower JjiiBaiooiyfi,, ;. . -m r J" lited Stai rroat npea OI a more 1116 1 ---., , n.ant the i f .. rru noting of certain vaneue u TTnitoH Stnt.es JieQlCai ueuaiimvu. laie. """"o . nprfpct svstem of I OT the A . n l n .1011 III II I II V ins? couniry -t , leveling villages anu "" . verting the nounsmne euu-i waste Then came the Crusaders in 1204 devastation committed by the French and Venetian champions of the cross ex Leded even that offhe Arabs. They " the richest and largest quarter of .the city, and inflicted such a blow on it that ; it never recovered its former weaitn ana a?f.lr nprsons and- to convej aloner the nver. neSciuirements of .the. case V fleet cf four steamers has been designed by Dr. J. F. Turner, Secretary of the Ra tional Board of Health, and these have just been completed at Pittsburg, leaving that nitv June Zd, ior uuiy between Cairo and New Orleans. of earth or ciay maTtherefore be regarded as eann orcioj j momr native ln- pection anu umua- very eXxenueu i 7 - 1rtKf Pof swift, properly Lu of tropic repoof the globe. Tt oprvps in some una.no wu 7- comparative strengin w ; ; the To PPssarv and it can be eaten in moderate 1 cessary , 1 . 1 , xu 4 imp with- cessary uu - . . . with. quantities, Zl fond- out any sensiuic V:Tu0 -t lost it jL :o ftpn piuired.80 that at last u and rsew iicauo, - ness even 10 - - ..'., n Haintv. .. . , i ctaampr I . i nMn bH Ana e&tenas a ujwuvj comprises tne nospuai J o couic w - The fleet failed him; prize before, now blank, j He went into his small room at her j table sewms. Simon as he entered. with tears. - uti.,BuanA " she said. "I've got . . , , , A i Sally sat ShP looked up ai and her eyes' filled of the. "boys .ai , r5r" .cuvclr" T;r"nQthpd al of St. Sophia, wa were all on the snooi, auu.n -liiey proiaucu - - . . 4if' tVid apnoolmas- 1 1 u ttn thp. tomDS OI lUt-ujTr their skeletons They - UUVB nvr - ulmas I , 4 Via tr rulv girl chose to say tnai. n - oroKe 7 tr ,r Rkeletons, and "v ' . - t .nnfira ' wiLii 1 1 r . 1 . xxx i nmnarnra ihhkcu uuv . t n hori nppnwuuc; ui ow. r ' . . "'F" r"" . .. 1 1 V. -.ct Kan. H H Benner, and tne sieei 7 Lookout and i-iCKei. A"c " hull steamer, ox 112 feet long, to ask you about add to it. said Simon,' leave the money uo You ve got it saie, x supp. I'V-a the book' is safe, M.y - .J . nrvnrdoainn. .iu 4- i,nn if von don t mina, said poor Sally. "It seems as if it would be a sort of comfort." Simon took the book "from 'his pocket and handed it to hey. She opened it ana gianceu at it,. w Then her face flushed and she began were vuu suiUt " " , , , ixii ci' "ot. t'wplve and four town va 'opA-thfi erins iei. 1 1 1-. 1 . .vj - a m.fiPW&S7 -a- j?.Trrfifi;;riiLr - were.it not Wlr half the Cmyariy ui r - 1 wnu Jb"--T . . . t. -i 1 rt 4 4V.a; hnnAs m me Birecio. tod S.TCl5k T libraries, ridiculed the y,Jkn w Hpnkinff their horses with tinel, q stprn wheel iron rfl4Qn niorh-nressure type, HWtwu -B x--- - - , main or 18 ieei ueaui, - cw - ---,t..t -.ipen mm of ,uv.:k nold of Her rm that LXlC lt.VVUV.v- . . . . I xiUli U""1 " " , L,eft Over. the night of the 6th, a 1 .4 wvlrln! rrVit' Ml i W-rf 'avenue, Detroit, .. - oia BPAtedln a dara naii- Ciscovereu r, ; tanlufor beddin etc., ThvfOTlvW m thai was shut up o it8 Situation, Constantinople feASeSliours a have ri8en again from its as ivf 1- j , : -n , Bch00lmas. d 8nch terrible calamities. the most, ditBcult, f - character. delicate --ir-flr3if were of and perplexing . r the-mcoiparable beauty and advan agea uonstanuuujjie . ashes and vived snch 5 crerms)f fever. sur- 7 Prln3e Biaiur4llc. to cry ' 4 don't cry. Vll4 if l.A VM1 i.avp had the price ot a lot "Ul 11 lie vWU'V ' " -. . . tcry ticket without working for it, ne ould have rejoiced. I 1 :. ..n.ln Vwivlirwl he , 1 1 .4 u iii-V v number, ne tuu uu uaii Uionu v j b lieved in dreams that dream in particu lur it had the effect upon him that having his name in a will has upon many a young man. - - - '.'. , 1 ' Uorninar a trade. 01 lie saw no neeu ui p - - goiug into a shop or setting himself to earn Lis bread anywhere or iu any manner With his first pound he .ouy tery ticket, draw the D J 7 - Don't 1" said Simon.- "Uont, auyi 1 mean; 11 ior mc uco. .Tf vmi needed iu y . , 4. trnn Q tniich aS tO H1C sX"7-but yoht have mentioned- it. welcome. " said - Sanrthe great war between France onrfany Prince Bismarck, "the man cLnt,pf a inftrt! Bstive and genU neiure LiTeed. Heis The Silky Marmoset. 0t 0 Sonth American mon- 'ine maimvovu x ---- . , mup key about the size of a squirr.el. The K.?v ' Z-Lt ,Q a of Golden ytllow color, feTar tS aXnaie 8harp claws; Kis long and bu.hy.ot prehen sile, and .tne doo, -"T" and makes 11 IS UttO"J v , It is supposed to contain: we This tank is 6 x 8 feet, of vna WnAir 1 a 111! -1 1 IM. U boiler iron. The upper u - with bath room, physician -"". ."T medicine chests. The mam cabin is a dear, well ventilated space, 14 x 50 feet, SdeOdtandSetl feet beam, and 8. noiu, driving propeUer of colutiousi attd 6 feet pitch makmg v hS a small c ing passing Sfinable Learest quarantine sUUon , Pne clan wiU be on W. foot It was she acrainst hia suddenly pui xier - - te and 'Young mau, 1 - lerr I v :..4 adfliirinr her He was sever" ..;in ann inn uvt V1"" ""V "hpn her mind was any service to ner, -eair on that she expla, on "1 come uv-ttxx - the don't vouome spookiDg h Wp Unless youVant to lose a leg I Xed the officer, as he cautiously advanced agaln. , 'You go 'long, sir!" she repeO. , his omciai i- . ar nee to ner, iwu that she explained : on araeuuij -3 "Thp. value of a wuuiy r - - ti-te oet, teporteaton: u .g the an mteres mg anu monkeys,and Benner-will r;he crew will be C1?0ncr that it easily Reilly,oxuhvemntnedread will be in charge sure. "So sure of what T asaeu pUUIlUC, said - X getunga- their bonT and llJK.es 10 nav ,7. , tm'Is will De auuuv witn son iuiu tt - iA i,t. KismarcK . u through a battle, m ib vlK,"1 . 0 - Mt . I..viiinr store Kimon "I expected it longag.. -b -You've never told me what you expect ed it from," said Sally. ''Do you ever think it will be left you vva. j - ." o the smoke-giving ce r it j'ou u tcii v- t , T rH "I painted in fe"1" th Y Oil WOU1UU li I 111 Ilia vi. " ' . . l.niir Wflftn I vtv ' of it. , r It 10." " rr? ' f tKfi luxury , m glad .,.anuw - md- eladiy de fer him, wnea u V .vi ace. and under wWch it delights They are very ionu w ."' , i a., -m thpi hand ot up in a corner to hide itself it . 4a - f nlra Q and win oueu - - for hair. Btiaixv o father s money rfcimburse his aunt for all thai wie u- thousand pounds. be very Joiiy - - sim0nl" , fink it over. viiaiwasitt j ja- nnri tu are not crazy; uwii "v, j - pptine- think what you mean uj " - Anu, ou, x "i w In his own but I colors, in my ntnd, YhThappy. hour when flvfrom the hand J .... X? T.O ... T. 1 otrariiTR Ill&LUK the Visitor, ii i which was the Uiue ww. - , - Sfll o auorneu " " Government $36,000. The Q"""; ' .1-1 toPAted at ' .lrpflrtv oroviaeu iw y 'v - giauuuo -.rvsia and isew .vyi leans, and liiver. v. h T trot left over. .HoongVaTe you been here Sta..Ibout an hour, I "And will y6u go to a hotel .rm 6W-?.",?SJ5ri- croa. on an7atehepay.oSou, no money at a as - . a flirure anoui Cairo, Vicksburg, leek - r ,, sbUrg, JJxeinF"- p d ice t the mouth of tne ieu unds. ttiov , - ; . . I t,nr mis iv in and .iTi. IrinH il UAa and there , 6" id. but Clilorwe of 1-latinuin. can't TtVOr a Kuv : tr. it.H r nould enioy it after the victory hushy beard, was , " n the - . 1 a . AhanppH. vw- i ann 111 uctwv I, T-1-llCPalfUia.LCtl' fcHV v - . iive luxuriously . 1. rt mouse m bonded urxn him, uus to everybody, and. v-rT iv ' lite the town J . , . "one afternoon as -mifcJ tyed and tlreamy, he fpund Sally Corkin. uahl at the tea-table. the s. isoH ln sewinc for his aunt all tne Sally," said kftprnnnn " .., . iiSom1 leen: very Jieanwnue ue . - nn( He had found an imaginary pound " v . , 4Perhaps it may come jet, SXtook: his handkerchief gom bis pocket i as he spoke and wiped his wife s Adid so a bit of 'yellow paper.1 As he am bu anmbo Lottery ticket, into her lap iuc-r Vinri miscalculated drftffoon lay helpless, crushed murmuring with both arrns mux v w and Its. food is ill cnaracier both the would be of no use to mm But stay 1 ,o otUl mv treasured agarl.. thisfor him, and tPPth: You shot low's grateful smne, placed between sTould have seen the poor smile. I never enjoyed r lusy. bougMbut an hour before. J much afl that one did not smoke. She I caught master's jace, thick masses of b?ard. . TTPCrp.taDie -T"-s ' Kpinor chiefly com; ammai porvi . mav be yarious insects, - - V vegetable casional youngjbird; and .m ? 8rfMe diet rangi article fruits. -UcKroiico .r are peculiarly rwf fOOd- 6-" t relished. . " i Kronhlonc acid, lo hP meiaiiuuj" a -JlSBUi , .HrPft Dans. five Darts, and nitric YlJT; thia our- ht down , ai0ne." Florence lias rfjd 4s dissolved, --w I wiU I lean wmi - and I'm uauu 4- --- purty many if vou near j. Atkii in. Lu - 4 rats running. 7t noW and dayhreait .oam for help twixtnow" ' oviv. - - ,at. lome iwi w ing aisu, -1:5 - DvnPP wholeof the aoa of platiauIn SSf steel-like appearance. ting up all night! il- I 1 H. 1 v , m i 1 i i t
The Chapel Hill Ledger (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 28, 1880, edition 1
1
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