THE .*AMAN('E GLEANER.
VOL. 1.
THE GLEANER.
J PUBLISHED WEEKLY BY
PAEEER ft- JOHNSON,
-- -* Graham, N. C»
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POETRY.
Gallant Gray-beard, can't you see
You unconscionable bai, you—
Wlrle you play the t'evotce,
That the girl is laughing at you ?
You were handsome in your day,
You are well preserved and thrifty, —,-~~
And your manners, one may say,
Are superb, but—you are fif.y !
Don't be foolish, now you're old,
Flirting in this feeble fashion—
Trying on a hearth grown cold
To le-liglit a boyish passion.
You have had your day of youth,
With its tender freaks and fancies ;
You liav-e known a woman's ti uth,
And liave lived Love's sweet i'omanecs.
Ay, I know her lips are i ed ;
True, her curls ave black and glossy ;
Yes she hears a dainty head,
And her eyes are sweet and saucy.
But she knows you act a part,
While you try to tease .and please her—
Knows, Old Makc-Beliovo. your heart
Is as dead as Julius Cxsar; —
Knows it, though a simple girl,
And is laughing while you linger;—
Knows, it well, and; like a curl,
'Winds you round her jeweled finger !
- ■ But if you must act a part;
If you caunot drop your feigning,
Feign you have not in your heart
Such a thing as love remaining.
Come and stand with me, my friend—
She'll permit you—never donbt her !
Do as I do, and pretend
Not to car j a flg about her!
—Scribner'B Monthly.
An Act in Rclnliou to Ckau|(ius Ca«-
(gen or Railroads.
The following is an act of the Legis
lature under which Gov. llrogden has
instructed the Solicitor to commence
prosecutions against parties altering I he
gauge of North Carolina Railroad Iromj
Greensboro to Charlotte.
Whereas, by acts of the Geucral As-'
scmbly of North Carolina bolh the At-'
lantic and North Carolina Railroad and
Western North Carolina Railroad were
compelled to atlopt the guage of the
North Carolina Railroad would serious
ly injure the two railroads before men
tioned, as well as a'l other railroads of
the same guage connecting with them;
and whereas, 4 feet 84 inches has been
adopted generally as the Nori.h Caroli
na guage; therefore.
Section 1. The General Assembly of
North Carolina do enact. That no
railroad uow in this state with the
guage of 8 feet 44 iuches shall change
the same, and all railroads hereafter
constructed in this State shall have the
same guage.. 4 feet 84 inches.
Sec. 2. The penalty for construct
ing or changing the gauge of any rail
road contrary to the provisions of the
preceding section shall be SSO per day
per mile for every day such railroad is
in use, aud in addition thereto the Pres
ident and Director*, Secretary and
Treasurer, or any officer, servant or
employee shall be guilty of a misde
meanor, and shall be find not less than
9500 or more than SIOOO, and imprison
ed not less than three months; and it
shall be the duty ot the Governor of
this State to canse to be instituted im
mediate proceedings tor the recovery of
sneh penalty and infliction of such pun
ishment In case of any violation of this
act: Provided , This act shall not apply
to any narrow gauge railroad hereafter
chartered, or to the Spartanburg aud
Aslteville Ralroad, the Raburn Gap
Short Line Railroad, the Tennessee
River Railroad, or the Georgia and
North Carolina Railroad.
Sec. This act shall take effect from
and after its ratification.
In General Assembly read three times
and ratified this 15th day of March, 18?5-
now the aor.s to
CHURCH.
Fredrick T. Martin writes to (he
I roy Times from Constantinople, giv
ing an account of the spectacle present
ed during the Saltan's passage from liis
palace to the Mosque. He says:
From nnr standing point we could
commi.iid the tr.arlle sic ps if the Sul'an's
palace, and'we had not been standing
many minutes before the sound of a
great trumpet was to be heard, and we
knew it was announcing the opening ot
the doors of the Sulian's pa'ace, and
| that lie Was about to descend to his
bargp. The procession had 110 sooner
commenced to move from the palace
than the firing ot guns commenced from
a tort situated above the palace, which
was immediately taken up and answe.-
ed by the men-of-war in ilie bay,
aufl'amid ihe shouts of the populace,
s : rains of music and the boom of many
gHi the most imposing spectacle that
I ever espact (o see commenced its
progress. Aj it passed on the d'fierent
bands struck up, and I felt 1 had never
H>eeu present at such a wondevfal sijjht
beio.-o. I will describe as well as I can
the orderpf the procession. The barges
weicall oPburuislied gold andglil.ered
in ihe suu, the bows and sterns sloping
g -aceiu'ly up. The.e weie five in all.
The first was lowed by I welvc men nud
occupied by only a single aide-de-camp,
wiio stood motionless with li's arms
crossed upon his breast and his head
bowc.l toward the boat of the Snltan.
The seco-id was rowed by eixieen men
and contained two of the Sultan's staff
standing in the same manner as the first
niot'onless as a staiue. The io'lowing
and third barge contained his Majesiy
the Sultan, and I shall ever regain a
vi.v?d remembrance of the splendor oi
this Tlr.s barge was lowed by
twenty-lour men, and ttieu- mo ious
were a penect wroddcr to me. At eve
ry siiokcthey rose and siepptd forward,
juid leceded to their seas with wonder
ful pteclson and regularity. The Sul
pLti satin the cujru undera magn : flcie 111
wnopy of c" imson velvet, the deep
®nges of gold reflecting the lays of the
hi. Two of fcis stall stood motionless
Hl>te him wiihttheir arms folded across
■Kir breasts and the'r bowed
law, and they did not alter their posi
tions in the slightest all the time they
were in sight. The only contiast to all
this cpjendor was the Sultan himself.
republican Pres'dent could not have
less preteasion to state and show
So did this " shadow of God upon
X." On 3 order only glittered upon
and he wore the usual Taik
i-lfcz. The Sultan's, barge was follow-
otheis suiiMar to those that
it, but Instead of bowing
t'orw|MPh ; s lace the office.s were obli
gedj|K>ow toward liis back. We stood
wJßhsg the processionuntilitwas quite
Mm sight, and we could but feel that
PFc had seen something that we should
never see again in our lives. The sur
roundings, the brilliant sky above onr
jftuids, the crowds of slipping of every
M||ii, and the people in their pictnr
esMb eosiumcs, the music and the roar
oflraguns, all conduced to deepen the
imjAjslon upon our minds.
LOCK OF HAlß
jHTcven' one has at least one lock
cut from the bead of oue now
doling in that silent land whence
come ifo messages, uo letters, no tok
ens of any kind to tell of love or of re
membrance. Every one knows that
strange emotion, h«lf joy, half woe,
with which fl>e tiny relic of so much
that wasojfßfear can thrill the soul.
Ouy now do we dare to take
it from its hfcEg place, bold it iu tlm
press if Jo the cheek, and use il
as a all tl&t we mus!
perforce in the wcrk-a-day
world for of strength to do iti
We do not ■Bk 'whose hair thai
which you treasflßfoay be; wbethei
the flossy curl froflHtt>y'B bead, the
dark lock from the fcPWT that once mad
your breast its piUo«Ta parent's graj
tress, or a young lover's sunny curl.
Nor does it mMtXfor all love in iti
essence, in that part of it that outlive 1
know that tbere is nothing like it to yos
anywhere. There are no words for th
the thought it brings. They mock lan
gunge. As you touch it, and gaze at it
yon have nothing to say. You feel th
thorns of yonr dead rose, that is all, au
the wounds they make bleed.
- A loint resolution is passing througl
the Virginia legislature accepting wit!
thanks tlie bronze staue of Stonewal
Jackson offered to the State by Be res
ford Hope, member ot the British Par
liament, and a bill appropriating $lO,
000 for receiving and placing the st&tui
in position accompanies the resolutions
GRAHAM, N. C„ TUESDAY, APRIL 20, 1875.
A I.lt'lv-Sili : liliT DOCTOII.;
" Well, what about liim? Yes, w?
gave him a drink, but let me go back
and tell how it came about."
About twenty years ago John Weath
erly, John Bailev, John Power ami I,
all went to Shrcvepoti, Louisiana, to
| sell our cotton. It was about 100 miles,
and we had to take camp kettles, tents
and whiskey alongto keep lrom being
subservient to the inclemency of the
weather. We four lised six gallons on
that trip.
"We moved along two days very
but well, found the draft on our lfpg
was very heavy, by reason of friends
I who passed or met us, all of whom tes
ted the qualify of our whiskey."
"Jolyi Weatherly poured three pints
of-whiskey into a very heavy, black,
quart bottle. Into this he put about
one-fourth plug of mean tobacco. He
then got about two ounces of bark from
a "tooth-ache" tree, the barkof which
will burn at least one hundred times as
bad as cavcne pepper. Why, sir, In
dian turnip is not a circumstance to the
bark of a •'tooth-ache" tree. lie mixed
the medicine expressly for any of our
friends wno might not be consider d of
the lirst families—dead-beats and the
like. The old bottle rolled about in a
feed box, lashed to the end of a cotton
frame, till it was as thoroughly mixed
as a bottle ot Simmons' Liver Kegula- ,
tor.
"Wo found no one who we thought ,
ought to be complimented with its con
tents ti'l we got to Lick-Skillet, on the
Texas and Louisiana State line.
We there saw a doctor playing poker,
or euchre, just at dusk. We drove our
tired oxen through, camped beyond the
viliiage half atnilc, near Boggy Church,
"A 1 oaring log heap and a good sup
per ot broiled ham, stiong coffee and
cold biscuits soon made all hands joy
ous. About nine o'clock thatnight our
1 ick-Skillet doctor came along on his
way home from town. Our rousing
tire and the prospect of a dram were
more than he could stand; so he came
by, and asked the privilege of warm
ing, winch was readily granted. He
was not drunk, nor was he sober, but
about "haif-seas-over."
"After some preliminary remarks, he
skirmished around -to the subject of
whiskey. Old Uncle John Weatherly
—the doctor who had put the four
horse-powcr prescription—gave me the
wink, and asked me why I had not of
fered the stranger a drink. I got the
bottle out and ho hesitated a momeut.
lest he might, when he had tasted its
content", knock some one down with it.
In order to make appearances regular,
I took a horn of it —so called—flrst. " I
closed my mouth as tight as a corset
string ct an actress, and turned it up;
and my God! that fluid burned the out
side of my lips, it was so strong. I
handed it to the doctor, who deliber
ately tho old bottle at arm's
length, and said.
"Gentlemen, 'ere's, to the man that
own'd the hand that raised the cprn that
fed the goose that bro't forth the quill
that made the pen that wrote the Del
ation ov 'mericin 'Dependar.ee."
"With the close of this very patriotic
"health" lie brought that ponderous
black bottle in contact with his hash
trap, and drank two or three swallow#
before his blunted 6ense of taste detec
ted the strength ot the "red-e^e."
lie instantly began to expectorate
worse than a Thomas cat with a feat bet
in his mouth. In fact, he became as
energetic as a sewing machine agent.'
Said he:
"Gentlemen, (spits,) have yon a pipe?
(spits) My God! (spits) where did
(spits) you get that whiskey?" (spits.)
"The saliva thrown from his mouth,
by spasmodic efforts, was as tough.and
white as the lint ffom a Pratt cotton
gin. No pipe Was used by any of us.
As soon as that fact was made known,
be mounted his horse, anu as he did
so, said:
"My God! liilian turnip; I'm ruin
ed at last," (spit.(
We heard his horse's feet clattering
over the frozen ground, aid the further
be went the faster he traveled, until the
sound died away iu the distance. ' i \
" We presumed that be never would
pay a nocturnal visit to a crew of Texas
Bjagoners auy more.,' — Calvert ( Ttxai)
I- dispatch to the New. York
Pott say*: " Prominent lawyers feel
sanguine that the Supreme Court will
decide in favor of (he constitutionality
of the enforcement act." Of course,
they will either so decide or make no
decision at all. A contrary decision, a
decision in accordance with the letter
and spirit of the Constitution would be
treason against the radical party. It
would be worse; it wsuld be " flat
burglary."
Wasbington Special to the Chicago Times.
HI'LI.KN AND UK IHBN.
A Heavy final of CMilrrfd|e■ la
Virgiiia, the T»u«m lilmp
Plant Maeceaa af ■■ Kigkl l'earn
■laal.
"Within the last few days one of the
most important hauls of counterfeiters
in the history of the secret service has
been made. For years, in the moun
tains of the Blue Itige, in the locality
where the three States of Virginia,
North Carolina and Tennessee come to
gether, there have been one of the most
lawless gangs that have ever invested
any locality in the country. The pecu
liar topography of the country is 100
well adopted to the growth and immu
nity ol lawless gangs. The country is
ftbinlv settled, is covered with tangled
forests and a mountain recesses, which
have a Honied, in times past, the best of
hiding places for breakers of the law.
The secret service has long been at
work trying to run down the counter
feiters, who have for so long done a
most thriving business, undisturbed.
The counterfeiters have been engaged
enly in the manufacturer of counterfeit
gold and silver coins. These counter
feiters bave been so long undisturbed
that they liavo all of them acquired
wealth. Nearly cvely man arrested is a
landed proprietor, and well-to-do in the
world. A special agent of the secret
service has been down this country for
the la-it three months, acting with the
counterfeiters, buying money from
them and living among them as one of
them. During this time that he has
been there he has gathered the informa
tion npon which all the arrests have
been made. He lias forwarded, from
time to time, information to the secret
service bureau here, which indicated
Hint he was making most llittering pro
gress iu inaugurating himselt into the
confidence of the counterfeiters.
Last week be completed liis work.
He had all of the operators spotted, to
the number of some twenty odd men.
The secret-service department bere then
6ent seven picked men down to Abing
don, Va., the placo from which the raid
was started. Hero some sixty deputy
marshals were sworn in, mounted, and
were divided iuto seven squads, with a
secret-service man at the bead ot each
squad. They left Abington last Friday
night, the 26th of March, and set out
for a seventy mile tour through the hea
vily-wooded. mountainous region where
the counterfeiters were located. They
arrested iu all some twenty men witbiu
a r&dius of about 100 miles. They ex
perienced some resistance in making
arrests, but the descent was so suddeu
and the plans so well laid d>at the coun
terfeiters were "taken completely off
their guard, and therefore fell compar
atively easy victims.
The grand prize of tlte bunt was
tared Sunday night. The chief of the
gaug, Jack Mullen, a noted desperado,
has long defied all power to trace him
down to arrest him. He was.found iu
a solitary cabin iu Wise county. Va.
He was surrounded late Sunday eve
ning and he was taken in bed. Mullen
is a powerful, athletic devil, fand before
a band could be laid npon him he bad
crawled ont of bed, seized a chair, and
attempted to club bis way through the
crowd of deputies to a where big
arms were concealed, lie inflicted
nearly fatil injuries upon one of his
captors before be was finally taken.
Mullen was then ironed and taken in
with the rest of the prisoner*. He is a
jrery wealthy man, owns 7,000 acres of
land iu tbat vicinity, and bas been for a
long time a terror to all law-abiding citi
zens in that locality. He was a bush
whacker during the war. in the rebel ser.
I vice and was one of the most blood-thirs-
I ty and reckless of the mountain guerilla
I forces. He has been very sullen and
ugly since his arrest, and requires close
watching to prevent bis attempting bis
escape. His capture is one ot the mostdi
-1 rect blows at coin-counterfeiting that has
been made fcr years. He bas had one
j of tne strongest gangs of counterfeiters,
whose membership embraced men sup
posed to be respectable, and all men of
I property.
I In the Ust of counterfeiter* of his
gang arretted is one Methodist preacher
bv the name of Corn. He was a thrifty
parson, Who eked oat his ministerial
salary by keeping a eoantry store,
where he also dealt in counterfeit coin.
His congregation decline to stand by
him in his present troubles, and al
though he is npon the ragged edge of
despair since his an est, be docs not
i contemplate tbe publication of any
statements explaining the cruel combi
nation of circumstances that hare con-
Lord for the salvation of souls in the at
, titnde of a manufacturer of the queer
A Hotelkeepcr by the name of Burt An
derson is also among tbc prominent
ones on the list. There arc three ot
four men who have not yet becin arres
ted, but they are so surrounded that
their capture is only a question of time.
Fears are entertained for the safety
of special agent Conant, who has been
atqong thc counterfeiters for the past
three monthr, working up the case. He
was sent ont alone, to bring iu tbe
most prominent counterfeiter next to
Jack Mullen. Couant was to persuade
this counterfeiter to come into some ren
dezvous, where the deputies conld
ponnce upon him. No word has since
l»een beard from Conant, and fears are
entertained tbat he has been foully
dealt with. He is not so fsr from means
of communication that he couldn't find
some way of scndingln a message." He
left Abington on Friday last, and bas
not been heard from since.
The people in that section of the
country are greatly rejoiced over these
arrests. The Uuifed States District
Attorney for the western district of West
Virginia, W. S. Curly, says tluit tikis
raid upon tho counterfeiters of that
locality is worth $50,000 to that section
of country, at species of ter
rorism lias been for a long time exercised
over the law-abiding citizens, and these
arrests afford them immeasurable relief
' HOW WIRT FOUND A WIFE.
A well-written sketch of the loves of
the great lawyers contains this touch
ing incident in the life of William Wirt,
at one time Attorney Generul of the
United fctates.Xln.his younger days he
was a victim to the passion, of intoxi
cating drinks, which has been tbe bane
of so many distinguished in the legal
profession. Affianced to a beautiful
and accomplished young woman, he had
made and broken repeated pledges of
amendment, and she, a'tcr patiently
and kindly enduring his disgraceful
habit, had at length dismissed him,
deeming him im-orrigiblc. Their next
meeting after his dismissal was in a
public street m the city of liknmond.
William Wirt lay. drunk and asleep on
tbe sidewalk, on a hot summer day, tbe
ravs ot the sun poflring down on his
uncovered bead, ami the files crawling
over his swollen tacc. As the youog
lady approached in her walk, her at
tention was attracted by the spectale,
strange to her eyes, bat alas! so com
mon to others who knew the vic
tim, as to attract little reniark. She
did not at first recognize the sleeper,
and was about to hasten on, wbeu she
was led ou by one ol those impulses
which form the turniug point in human
lives to scrutinize his features. What
was her emotiou when she recognized
her discarded lover! She drew forth
her handkerchief and carefully spread
it over bis face and hurried away.
When Wirt came to binftelf be found
the handkerchief, and in one comer tbe
beloved name. With a heart almost
breaking with grief and remorse, he
made a new vow of retormation. He
kept tbe TOW, and he married the own
er of the handkerchief.
«*«r HAS BAKI.
Josh Billings thus speaks of a new
ageicultural implement, to which tbe
attention ot farmers is invited: John
Rogers' revolving, expanding, uncere
monious, sell-adjusting, self-sharpening,
self greasing and self-righteous boss
rake iz now and forever offered tew a
generous publick. These rakes are az
easy to keep in rapair as a whipping
post, and will rake up a paper of pins
sowed broadcast in a tea akre field of
wheat-stubble. These rakes kan be used
in winter tor a ben roost, or be sawed
up in store wood for the kitchen fire.
No farmer of good moral karakter
should be without this rake, even if he
has to steal one.
a ■■oAJiadhr'H raivißiiiici.
1 John Bingham was tried in tbe New
YorkCoart of Quarter sessions ou Mon
day, 6th Inst., on a charge of bigamy.
„ Both his wires were in tlte court-room.
He pleaded guilty and refused to change
the plea. The recorder asked bim which
1 he would prefer, to be discharged to
' live with bis two wives, or sentenced
' to State prison for three years. Tbe
prisoner promptly expressed a prefer
• ence to be locked op, and t.ie Judge
■ sentenced him to State prisou for three
years et hard labor.
I " ' " 1 ■». '
r An eventful day in tho lift of a lady:
k Dnrmg on the streetcars she saw
S Shr^
. never was so iumilted in her life as she
was by a young man who spoke to her
on the car, and finally got home tired
> than she ever felt in her life.
:NO. II, ;
fcjJjiuCAM.3.
The wort'i of woman—Double yon, O
man.
Why did Freedom shriek?—Koa-ciasko
felL
An Indiana town wants to hare Shanks
ina jo*.
Ahjnt Lhe worst go imaginable te the
lumbago.
We should like to know bow that man In
Minneapolis broke bis kg patting oa his
overcoat.
A yonng man has aued has barber for cat
ting off his moustache. The barber myw be
didn't see it.
What she said at the frontdoor, as be at- -
tempted an osculation, was briery this:
"No Jack, tastes differ!"
A child being asked what the three great
foasts of the Jews were, promptly replied:
"Breakfast, dinner*and supper!"
The hair of » young lady in Yermcnt
turned white in a single night. Bhe fell
into a Sour barrel.
After all," says an old doctor, "there are
only two kinds of disease, the ens of which
you die, and the other of which you don't."
A man in Illinois broke into the house of
a widow. She pitohed him out of doors.
A striking evidence of the power of the
widow's might.
A Michigan man hai raised five lemons
on a tree which he keeps in a hot-house. It
took four tons of coal, and he sold the lem
ons for twenty oents. . t j
A reason for calling.—Visitor, (naively) t
"Well, I certainly never dreamt I should
find you at home on such a lovely aftesaoon
as this!"
A postal can! picked np In the street at
Norwich, Conn., the other day, bene this
solemn appeal: "Deer mary for hnr of God
send me a pare of pants."
"Why did you pass yesterday without
looking at me ?" said a beautiful woman to
Talleyrand. "Because, madam, if I had
looked I could not have passed."
Daniel Fender concluded a letter, asking
Mary to bo his, thus s "And should you say
'yes,' dear Marv. I will ever and faithfully
bo your D. Fonder." Daniel thought that
was neat, and so did Mary.
A Wisconsin lady opened a matrimonial
intelligence office recently, but she married
the ilrst man who applied, and the concern
came to a speedy ou i-
A >New Bedford company is "making
butter at a cost of four oents a pound."
Wo judge the "butter" to be very
healthy and strong, as it has driven all
the beggars of cold victuals into other pro
fessions.
Oro wants to know why Mr. Woodman did
not spare that tree he used to rsadso much
ibout. The agricultural editor of this pa
lter answers that it was becaass ha hadn't
. tree to spore.
"Poor things," murmured Sotosaon Burch
of the State Journal. "Who?" inquired the
Deacon. 4'Why, them bally girls. They're
so fearful dissipated. They can't hold out
. very long. They say they g*t on tights ev
ery blessed night o' ths week 1"
• A Kansas farmer purchased a revolver for
his wife and insisted on target practice, so
that ahe could defend her bouse in oaas of
his absence. After the bullet was dog cot
of his log, and the cow buried, tie MM H#
guessed she'd better shoot with en ana. .»
McLean county Progmt : One day last
week a young girl, whose pusto rssiiis |»
this county, swallowed forty pmwinic
caps. She really deserved spanking, bdt
her mother refrained for fear of *n explo
sion. Cautious mother, that.
"My God, man, he will not live to esrvn
the half of it!" was the exclamation of ft I
Boston Irishman the other day, when he
hoard that Friel, who killed a fellow
is the •tiition bouw, Imma icntenotti (o
imprisonment for life.
cirov© • mirvw im- looiuig
horse into town test Saturday, and. stopping
in front of Bank Mock, be requested asmafl
boy to bold him a moment. "Hold "tor
exclaimed, the buyj "jeet lean him up
igainst the hold
A Western editcnr, noticing the preeeat of
* silver cup to a brother editor, saya: "He
needs no cup; he can dnnk from any vee
kl that coot alas liquor, whether the
uock of a bottle, the mouth of a piekla
; spile of a keg, or the bug of a
| " Waehington/* exclaimed a member of ft
• Nashville debating club, in stentorian
tones, "Washington was a gnat man; hm
i was a goud man; he was a noble asani Ma
| Blind had a powerful grasp of ths future;
if ever a man was aoa compos wmUis, Wssh
[ uigton was that man."
A farmer told his man to run into the
' pasture and catch sin ex. "I ausp the off
*,e, I will manage the other myeelf/'he
laid. Ths nun ran on to doM he was bid
den, but suddenly puissd on the wuf with
H, r fpfX.
r anyhow. How an Ito know which is the
. t prcsgat: TW« f liW
-5 The little fsHow, up at
, uatiila. " . . ■■ '
r ipL„ entire aln'iabetisfoundin these four
r Bismsrek is expected to rustic St* at Ban
healili. S benefit