Newspapers / Statesville American and Tobacco … / Aug. 13, 1881, edition 1 / Page 1
Part of Statesville American and Tobacco Journal (Statesville, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
Mil nHr in CYTY a familt PAi-rn. devoted to ihutks. auuicrLTVtu, nwrint'ou iuMHtia.-c. : :Muxt.tU tr-:-..i VOL. XXIV. STATES V I U.K. N. C. SATUIUAY. .U t.l'ST 13. IsM. N. . i tiik rtiM.ri ir. la moi7 atiii t- J:. ti v' r. w btw ta-r e-, I; ' !; J '' " ! MHrtrrri ffJta BH't n, t.r. rr iw ". Ttwir rj-a IMettt i lent; a.-.a-,. w mi our V.l vi ' ,r- With atnllea BM-fO 'I rl r,f irtifi!t, - ' 7 hlf '' -" nrtrr. Tbrir l.r rteit.ra f'rr. Tito liaH hat'K thr oar a ": '. MJtJ . bia! IVt- Vl lb iValurr. tiitu.-. Tarf lik Wi'l Ijitrtr tirret, I aam-lij fMt tfrt. W a- a.t c ur b -U ' -(-"1'-r. brli frirtela ha bn-.l, haor iei-ti ami l; . U blif-l "if I ' "" imr -( i-Tt ua -r, Atr Ith ua w ti l r M-r. I'n -tty littlf Mr. N"..rtn Mttiuj.' Jh ).ii.1 tin- urn ft fair nn.l l.A. ly !o y-tr ntrn r r hin)i.-l . r ti.1.1.. ut h-r lonl anl in-'int r. t- wiw a fiu- lH.kinK f ,0". ,nstt lnisl.an.l of lit-rn, ami it was v.-ry .-i.l-nt Ih tviirii tin-in, f"r all tin- huI.j. t "f " ve rnation wan in f -ry l.-a-i 1. l "pm- ii.n. at l-at uim.h Mrn. N..rt.u'n j. irt ; .liiht now slu'MJar.il anl h;iiii1 Mr. Norton m turoml cuj of -o!V.-, an. I I.,., It t..ul.r.l4 him with a Uttl- ill- II11IK i 1 ... ..... ... iliinaiit r. nmrk : 'J'.nt it'- too 1 : 1, l'ru:ikT unl I l - Ili'M' Noll tliiuk HO tM Ami hli' lfk l Hii!ii-ioiiHly us if th n- wi n- t-ar in li' T r tty y n. "Imll, I think it'n jnt as lnul it ...... 1.11.1 .-iioiii'ii for us. hut a tlnusaml tinu-M woix for lrnrl- Tom." "It i.H riiliiMilous ! Tin Ma of liiin f illing in lov at this time of life,- lut moiv Hum ritlit-uloiiH in falling in lovt with MU-h a m'aturn as Aura Van." Frank laughcl at Lottif-'s finihati remarks. . "Vi mustn't forg t that of roiirso the g. ntlfinaii hiw a jK-rft'it right to ilo as h jih'iwi'H with his own, liar. His 1k--ing hity yrars ol.l 1ims not lUtH-liitle liiui from vw.u marrying Miss Yam if hr ch x wh to. " Ijottm looknl very -ariH-st imltHl as sin answrr'l : "I know- all that, hut why can't Unt U Tom H ln-r a.s hh is, as -vrylMMly els socshor? S) is ftrt.v if sln' naiil Lottie. He interrui'teJ her with a little tor menting laugh. 'A verv suitable age you must admit for him, Lotta." "Frank Norton ! How can you, when you know just as well as I do that its "only Uncle Tom's money she is after? And to tliiuk he promised to leave it all to hahy if we'd name him after him, and I wanted the little darling called Roland Ho'hadly, insteiul of Tommy. () Frank ! you never w ill know what a sacrifice I made. And I'll change bahy s name ves. I will if Uncle Tom marries that horrid old thing, who never had a beau, nor an offer before in her life. How ever she contrived to entrap him I'd like to know." Two bright little red spots were flam ing in her cheeks, and despite the passionate bitterness' of her protest Mr. Norton realized there was a great deal ot righteous truth in it, and he was looking grave and thoughtful just as the front door w as opened, and in a minute or two Uncle Tom himself came in. "I am sorry to have been so late for dinner, my dear," he said briskly, with a Rinile toward Lottie, "but I have been driving in the park w ith Miss Vane, and really it was dusk before I knew it." "Are you personally acquainted with Miss Vane, my dear?" he continued presently, after dilating upon the lteauty of the park in its late autumn dress. And then Lottie purposely avoided her lord's eyes, where she knew, full w ell would be a cautionary signal. "Not at all intimately, uncle Toni. When I was a little girl she was a grown up woman, and, of -course, I never had occasion to associate with lier. As a child I never fancied her, however." . He laid Lis knife down in the act of slicing off a delicious piece of brown meat. "You mean to insinuate that Aura is as old as all that?" Then Frank took up the euwgel in his qniet, uuhnpassioned way. "I don't think my wife would 'insinu ate anything, Uncle Tom. She simply knows it to be a fact, as I do, and any one else who cares to think at all about it, that Miss Vane is past forty years old. But then, of course, no one ever troubles one's self about it. Complexion and hair can both he bought nowa days." . "I am perfectly aware of that fact. But I assure you I have satisfied myself that Aura is one of those rarely pre served women who at thirty for I have it from her own hps that her last birth day was her thirtieth are more charm ing and mature, and every way suitable to a discerning man's taste than w hen young and girlish." And he looked straightly, defiantly, in Lottie's eyes. " Oh ! well," she retorted stubbornly, 'you'll find out some day. "Yes," he answered, "I expect to find out that;the woman who will honor me by being my wife is just what I have said she is in all respects. Frank, don't you want tickets for the opera to-night ? ' Itio ht Villi. Mi Vu I fta-r lnia-r, I't!i :it h th. ji!ir ry mm. i.uu n-r inw ntuwi hlf iu.nr of .-i1iy.orliip, ! iriTtxl )ie tu;t r oiil I rail htm br Li hoti H nhull ! maliiU' d-ulmg litth IVUnd num." h- naid. holdup him iu li(f ni. and ho-rii:g ki- on hi t, Uuhi!ig fe-. Frnk Jmighed. You hd l ttrr 'nit litth I'i.. r. Iottie. I' rhaa tilt old lUiUl dtt U- t liantment will r n vt -t." . " It'n diguUng," le iL Ailif then "id f;o.Ml-,!,g''l to h-r vir-oll lioywith 'loj-m f kifn- and h'lfc', and gave hirn biu-k to hin nunw. "I want 30U to .'o on an errainl, plea, ' Frank," he aid niiddenly hj tin y w nt ii-to th. ir own room, ".up to l'.hnilford' for an invisible n t aiid hair piiiH. Will yon, Wiiik ?" " An invi-ibl.- in t ? What on earth is that ?" Can't voll s- it? How hall 1 kno-u when I'e got it? I'll nquire." She gave him a little push toward tin do.,r. "Nevermind, Mr. Impudence! You simply ak for what I b ll yon, pay what tliev charge, and bring it home to me S goM.l natnred Frank put on his hat and htart.-d off to lilamlford's, tin famous hairdresser's, where he was to buv the ; invisible net, to meet '-Uncle Tom on the dxirst , impatiently wait ing for tin' carriage that was to take him to his liclovcd. "There is plenty of time," Frank said as he stopjM d a minute, "(let your cane, Unci.- Tom, and walk up to lilaml ford's w ill me. " Uncle Tom looked at his w atch. "Well, I will. I shouldn't like to keep Aura waiting, though." "There is no need to," Frank answer ed. And thev starbnl oil' , evcrv bit of ' a. Frank's determination and tact kept con tinuously on the alert to prevent the old gentleman from discussing Miss Vane. How ever, by violent effort he succeed ed till they reached lilandford's, where an obliging shopman gave them seats, mil begged them to wait only one mo ment, as they were so very busy just then. And Frank and Uncle Tom sat down and waited, close by them lteing a tall V enctiarr screen, which neither particu larly noticed until, in a low, yet clearly distinct voice, they heard a sentence or so that startled them. "How will that do, Miss Vane? have applied nearly an entire bottle of the enamel; but, pardon me, the hollows and wrinkles are so deep that it is almost imiMtssible to obliterate them. "It will have to do, I supitose. Fortu nately all my new: costumes have longer sleeves than the old ones. Now, if you will make haste w ith niv hair, I will wear the 'perfection' to-night, I think. And, oh ! please rememlter the touch of M'iicii on my eyel trows. They are get ting so horribly thin and pale !" Beyond doubt of mortal comprehen sion it was Aura Vane's voice, and Frank actually pitied the look that was on the old gentleman's face. .Ynil then no one in all the world ever knew how much an unheard of, awkward catastrophe --happened except Uncle Tom, whose foot reached out and touched the door the door in the screen tlew open, and revealed to both gentle men the startling sight of a woman with a head almost as bare of hair as a pump kin only the merest wisp of gray hair, twirled iu a little pig-tail on the crown and on the dressing-table beside her a heap of soft, rippling tresses, and a bottle of belladonna, and of enamel, and various sponges and brushes, and other paraphernalia. There was a shriek of horror from the bald-foreheaded lady, a series of "Oh-o-o-o-h's !" and then it all seenied in less than a 'minute the attendant threw a shawl over Miss Vane's pate. Uncle Tom gave a groan of utter horror as he got up and took Frank's arm. "I am going home," he said tersely. ' ' I've seen enough. What an escape ! To think to think I was so near marry ing that" I think the story is told. Miss Aura Vane did not secure her rich husband. And the baby's name was not exactly changed, but Lottie inserted "Roland" for his middle name, and as once in a while they call him, in jest, of course, "T. Roland," I shouldn't wonder if, after all, the little fellow has his pretty name and the fortune too. More Cliff llwellers. Colonel Stephenson, of the United States geographical survey, has turned another page- in the long-sealed volume of American antiquities. A large village of cliff dwellers has been discovered be tween the Jem ez mountains and the Rio Grande river, in New Mexico. The cliffs rise to a height of from fifty to five hundred feet Some of them contain two, some three and others as many as five lines of dwellings, rising line above line, and, back toward the mountain. A. 1 . a ' tier a oove tier. The houses on the top of the cliff in the abandoned city are circular, being ten or fifteen feet in diameter, with arched roofs. Within the excavations are numerous small rooms. Before each line of dwelling. XT . . Of mere appears to have been pavements sometimes four or five feet in w idth. on the broadest of which Colonel Stephen son found imprints of feet Many pic- of tleTock- g m 1 1 at .a .! :j.a.rM . , .. , - - . --k of lit plentiful Lrtt iti Atu-n- CA. ' I UUrd: - "I for Aroi-ru-a tomorrow. "Ah, ifadca-l, ir ! You mill L a U lioW-JaJkAaM-nKi-r JoLfl U. (Jimgh. " "Itn lit) wni! tomfTow T "Y; juid I hme ticket to heat him to-kight." "lUre ymi .-rd hitnittxtTbT' "No, nir; hkVe Vou?" -"Yew.-. - "How do you like him ?" "I d not think much of him f" , "Then you are Hot a teetotaler ?' "Yen, I am." "I womUr you do not like Air. ( lough. " "I said I di 1 not think much of him, not that I did not like him." "Ah, that's very much the same thing f Wliat sirt of an apjx-aring i-rnon in he?" "A very ordinary -looking iwrKm." "It is plain to M-e you do not like him. Hiat might le hin hie, hir?" "Aliut my size, I jinltre." "Have you heard hiiu more than once '!" I " es, many times. "I leg your pardon, sir, but do -you know him ?" "Tolerably well." "Shall vou hear him sjH-ak this even ink'?; "Yes, I exjtect to do SO." "Did you heiur him last evening ?" "Yes." "I have been quite desirous of hear ing him, and I have secured my ticket. Does you'r air suit you, sir? Shall I put some hoil on it ?" "No, thank you, it w ill do very well; and you will have an opjtortunity to study your work on the platform, for you have been cutting Mr. Gough's hair." "Bless my soul, sir! I lwg your par don, I 'ope I 'ave not said anything wrong, or been in hannv way disrespect ful" 'Oh, no ; on the contrary," you have been quite complimentary. " "So vou are Mr. Grouirh. I shall ear you to-night. Enery, sweep up. all this air and tke care of it. Good-byt sir. I am glal I 'ave 'ad the opjortiinity and the honor of cutting your 'air." A Wonderfal Window. The stained glass windows so much used in churches, and representing flow ers, or f oliage, or pictures from the , , '. , , i . i glass put together m lead sashes and jtainted. The glass gives the color, and the painting gives the drawing and shad ing. Some of our native artists have recently tried to make improvements in this beautiful art, and now the most del icate and complicated pictures are made in this country entirely out of glass and without the use of paint. To under stand this some account of a wonderful window made in New York may be given. It is for a church, and is in three parts, and represents a view of the sea at sunset as if seen through the window. Three curtains ' are represented as if hanging up before the window. The center curtain has fallen down, but those on the side shut out the view save at the top, where the rosy sky and the clouds mav be seen. The colors of the curtains are made by the bits of colored glass, and the figured pattern is marked bv the leads or sash. At the bottom is a heavy friezestudded ... . . I In the centre, where the curtain is - . ... I lown, is the picture. In the foreground sure flowers in bloom. Then comes the iUC HUnClO AXi IIIWUL. XUU WAiH-o I .Al . . . -, i I sea with a dostant lull and over it the sky with a white dove flying upward and I the silver bowed moon. Ail this is done in colored glass and without any paint, j The water is a sheet of glass marked with wavy lines or ripples; the flowers are pieces of white glass stamped when hot in the shape of flowers, the clouds ire made of white or colored glass that is of very uneven thickness. The light comes through the thin places, and is kept out or shaded, by the thick parts, and it is these differences in the thickness of the glass that make the waves, the leaves, the fringes on the curtains, the clouds, and, in fact, the lishts and shades of the lucrure. The precious stones are bits of thick colored glass chipped and cut into diamonds of many faces. : Stand near the window and it looks like a confused mass of glass of every degree of thickness. Stand at a distance when the sun is shining on the window, and it is a wonderful and beautiful pic- ture made without paint. lhis is the beginning of a new art, and it is thought that it wfll lead to still more remarkable windows in the future. The Sale of Women. It still appears to be believed in the wilder regions of Eastern Europe, that a man's wife is a marketable commodity, different hamlets in the neighborhood had sat drinking together fo some hours, when the wife of one of them a remarkably pretty young woman came to the wineshop to look for her lord and ui muii uc u. at iiuen; w uuiiuk ij they have a chance to get siarcea again permission to give the word of com-' Am ",c - ---a (au tmr .o ... o.-., sale whenever it may please hiui so to and" ready for a new assessment, so to nand. ' die.1 of hyU na or pin. witli a jct-ia- . - htth U for. haial. H'u h halt yurr-. do. The other dayr at the annual fair gpeat." 4 -Mav le something in it, but "Mav all journalists do as I have deranc- of evidencaj ui-u Uth .Uwi. J J-"'" u aa rwetitaaJ U I-n4 of Paixez, a large village in the Eisen- s8-h." For the guest in the chair done," said he; " it is their duty.". , f4 lU . burg Comitat, two peasants from apieald to groan and shiver in his oinZ hw armM' he cntxl : Tliev ho forgive iu.-t ali-11 I- timt .... u if.L-ia-.alei.i ,1 ri.a., tuA Tib fMi-r r6li, irtsc1i: 'Inr W i tarii arr- . m,' Maj... .. lias I a , I - ... .... tad U"-viitrrt rlufel l7..a..t)aataub, th pur. Lf ra fr' lil ml W XsX m mvjLi 1 &m.tm i u-v " m. m - a n . i wnujj Uit taaaa iwi uu.w hicb rrjr.rl-l a a revival ttrrmtcCarl to laiin? j.riJa -jxTi't, t4 t &'tit, f-Ho-'rd by llf rlaumjb-vt Uhttr.rhxtmimK' To ttoUrtar, h"eer, tnmriC i t).a mm.f Ik... II ttenAl1 saCEI it T tartte tn-tiiu, aul n.at, tu - rkLd ' -FAiiifc; : to obtain delivery f him t! itj- apj 11 t-l p aijt dtm!:ll hi AfiS bo4 k. w ith another for iiiW-rt, m l.i:h requisition he a tiut'y UpJt1el by a imrnS" r f hi fellow sbj.'i-r, hi,. the litis. tld' abaioluU- fvfual to pay np, heied him and l nt iutu anni ly. JI a-i clitnvel, howert, U rltricaU hirn If friu their clntc...-i, and mjule otf at the top of ht but Wu Caught by the Jxa-saJit ).' UJotieV he tijul jxei.etel. l urnmg lu imrxiu r, In- drew a hatchet .from h, lelt, ainl with oli sauge bloW pht tile unfortunate man ' head ai "twain, killing him UH-'n the . it.. Situ drat -a. 1 he smartest li iuii. an.i m ia-i. ine mHrtewt fanner, I eter ne t: sayn VAi IVrkim. in old Sim (Iravet wLo lie on a I.ik M acre f;trm c-t nf WaxahaU hie, in Central Tela. AfU-r Mr. iruew ha'l shown me his cattle and rott n, he tok me over t i is w cm "Well, what of it '" I Mud. as h. jHtinttvl t a U-n-iu-re forest. "What of it ?" Why, them's black walnuts, sir. Ten acres of 'em. Plant ed 'em myself ten years ago. S-e, they're nine inches through, (tood trees, eh And sure enough there were ten acre. of hand-lanted bluck-wah.ut tn-es. They sUhh! about twelve f t uart, 2(Hl to the acre in all 2,tMX trees. "Well, how do vou aret vour money back?" I aaked. "IJlack-wa r.uts are worth a bushel, ain't thev? I'll tret 1H) bushels this year. That's gl.OH). A hundred dollars an acre is a crood rent for land wo'-th $15 an acre, 'aint it ?" "Well, what else?" I inquired, grow ing interested "The trees." eontunuid Mr. (iraves. "are growing an inch a year. Y hen they are twenty years old they will Ik nineteen inches through. A blaek-wal- uut tree nineU-en inclies through i.a worth $25. My 2,(XH) trees ten years from mtw will be worth $.5n,(KX. If I dn't want to cut them all, I can cut half of them, and then raise a bu.hcl of . , . walnuts to the tree that is, get $2,.rH) a year for the crop, -Two hundred and fifty dollars an acre is a fair rent for $15 land, ain't it ?" The more l examine into the possibil ities and probabilities of ten acres of black-walnut trees, the more astounded I become. There is no crop on earth that. will come within fifty miles of it. Calculate it any way you may, ten acre of black-walnut trees w ill pay $2."i0 an nually an acre for the forty years. Ten acres of black-walnut trees fifty years old. lie worth SKMhtHM). There is no fruit that will pay $2."0 a bushel, the market 'price of black-walnuts. Ten acres of black- w alnut trees, at any age, would always find a market, like a mar ble quarry or cool wine. It could al- wavs be sold. Mr. Graves savs he has never seen a time since his black-walnut t i. . . . i .'.: ..n .it... ,-..,ii,.'i - I have sold it tor more than as many crojs of wheat. .lUn, il .Now, any farmer who has ten acres of .-..11 . !.,,, I . .t 11. I hfn .tu lti,nim I'lili u,c'""" oo... .... just w nax uns aniaua aexan oUC He can make it worth more than ten I . . . . - 1 1 acres in the suburbs of Chicago inside I j . Chicago man can buy acrt.s cf low, black prairie within fifty miles of Chicago at 25 ' an acre plant it to a black-walnut, and make it pay him jflo.UOU a year. Softening of Ih Itrain. I There wiis a man sitting in ou of the Saratoga hotel office chairs one night last summer apparently asleep, which was doubtless the reason a couple of clerks liehind the counter 1 vegan to eon- verse confidentially "I 'pose you've heard the 'loss new rule?" inquired the cashier of the room-clerk. "You mean that we are not to charge guts all they've trot hereafter?" ' Exactly. The J.le.i of ftllowincr lw-iarders to leave with .x i . .. i .11 ;.. ti.i.ir ew...V..t. 1 1 ai. ieti leu uuuaiu l " ,r-i xi .li .a 1 ta; tl... ..tl;- ..- i.bin,,,,!, soiieiiiiiii oi nic iiiiuu. ei " and Newiort they und . i .1 . i- . 1 1 t-rsuiiut nit? uou'i i business I tetter. If a guest gets aw ay with his life and baggage, he considers himself in big luck I can tell you." Well the Governor explained his idea , . , i .riii.- .. T to me. he said thoughtfully , and I must say it sounds reasonable, tie says that when vou clean out a man com- , , eeuenlly u to drinking anJ xgs up in the poorhouse, and in that way a customer is lost. By leaving ;SJ a little corn for seed, as it were. sleep, and for fear he should wake up the clerks dexterously turned the conver- sation to the subject of a ltoarder who had that day choked to death on a hair- pin in the hash, . .-m. w a Xtmft SiM Timim H-tm 4 ti-mr c tf r trim Ita hmi Wi li ar i.t-S, t 4 liar - fifH .-t . .Jb KLwl(f M nlT. ib Ua.t kCf twte i.t i . 1: Jf-TtB4 " " -! rt-ta-ftakJJ. t)r Sir- i a.xi.1x-ac4. te-wt ivvl lia r er 44i4.wt t misrtt: ar'i? 'i'', ' -xHt-f iwtM.. 'i':-a-.t EfaJ t itg m' -ji,,.t !r 5 a' t- t 1 r t aStU 1 ! U' f it trt-t t i la L,' thai irri W I fMrtferr r' . fcrr !tl.a j.t m, r ij.ar Ui ! IU 1 i -I Bia.". a. .a a : Thi ! lil.n lA i 'linl 1'( fcii correj d.-s.ta attj K -I v. th 1 J tjon. Win n Vmx r ' turn eluc. hi- t. k the h n. but l! wa ith -udt,t ft '!u tance that he .!., Whrn ht' h.l dole- a,. .t he tnr!.l to F"f l.4 1 an i p,ttjd neral, I h'.u tia. "-l ntnui'i.t ot.l It'caiiiw 1 hiu firc-d t do mi ; l-H-ati"" without .h-ing a I could iot fultil Hi's duty a a firn-jiiiident ; l-'u- wii! otit doiiig m I could not iju-eeiiupajiy the eiji.-.htien. I Jut I warn you, ir. tlt I fcludl ajH'rtk the truth, the whole truth. Ui.d nothing' but the truth, tolJ -hu.g ftllch Iliattern -as may O'lin' under ln ol wr atiott. " And with u detiaiit asl-nce at the ieia-ral, 'alnille withdrew. The old general afnawe.1 hi gri.l.-.l mutiu he to dic'al hi w rth. He did what jx-rhajw niot men would hae done --he set a tqy to do th fiftt jm of Farcy. The cXc.lient was hUC-eHafuh Two evenings after, the pv detech-d thr jourmdist, under disgui'iM, .quitting the camp.-'- He IoUoWtsl, lUUl KU lillll e- Jxiwit a large e!leloe in n of the minor j m t -oilices ujoii the Algerian frontier. He wa at oiice arrest. -d, and conduct-d to Forgetiiol' head- 4lr,j rs. Alia!" said tin- enrral, "at it id- reiulv. mv tine fellow. Well, what hae we here?" ainl he wi.el and broke o-n the envelojw. "Hum addrcHel to I.a J-Vanrr, Kvideiitly Home "orre-nd- eiice which vou cru sending without mv know ledge. " "Yes, general," said Farcy,- calmly. "Let Us sec what it. is," said Forgeiuol, as he l'j;an to jw ruse the letter ;..t-l..riil- Mioil Prev c.il.llv "ikT. ' . ' . - mit me b remind vou that vou are!' violating jriviiU' corrcsjKiii.leiH-'. " "I'rivati correisMilence ! Hah !" retorted Forgeinol. "Very private, indeed : all I'aris would know it iu an- ither day," and he lesuinetl his reinl- mg. There wen some severe strictures 111 the letter ujm the conduct of tin- cam paign. Forgeniol'n reading .wan inter rupted by oaths, ainl when he finished he was purple with wrath. "So," said he grimly, "you consider yourself Comietcllt to judge of the ojHTations of a general , in the field, do vou? Well. sir. vou shall have a ta--tc of. martial law t mid to your knowledge of militarv afTiurs." Farcy disdained to defend .him If. A c-onrt-martial wtas imniediatclv cfinvetiisl. Its priKTeedings w re summary its sen tence short: "( iiiuille I arey is con demned to Ih- shot at six in the morn- tug. It wits then midnight The doomed man w as placed in charge of a lieutenant and a squad of soldiers, put upon a stH-cial train, and lie was Js.rne swiftly tothe cq-itai dty, Algiers, w Here in.-. execution was to take place. . i Ililil -1 liS I 11 I ot i rv 1111: on... '-.-,' . i dashed into the city. It passed umb r At half-Past five o'cl. sk tl ie train the w alls of the palace where .VlU-rt Orevy, the goven,,-general, lives in statt. jhe windows were bright ly hVhted ami the strains of a waltz were borne to the ears Ol the prisoner The governor was giving a bail. ion have halt au hour in wnieu 10 prepare for death," said the lieutenant, compassionately ; "would you like U, have me send for a prietd ?" "I snpise, a-! Farev, "yon w.I f grant my last request ?" 1 "men lei me go i ine nan. j wou... "lhen let me go to the I Kai I T ..111 ke to have a waltz Is-Iore I die. Monsieur Grevy's tndaoe. .... . i ni . .'" request shalll gTiUibsl, Presidents krr.ther. "Wli.t could - . , t t 11 . reiuse a uvmif uiaxi . ... . - . him here ; he shall dalice Willi uiV daughter." .And it w as done. The last mouietita ! of his life were spent upon a ball-room d.or. At six oVlH-k the oflicer poke: "Tlie file Ls waiting," said he. "Iet us go," said Farcy. He saluted the dancers, and withdrew. When he reached the ground where the file was awaiting him, he refused to allow hi eves to le lrandaged, aiid demaiideil .ri ,.at, t ih t,,t,Vt. ru ..,,t the morning air. Caraille Farcy fell 1 dead, pierced with ball. j The vengeance of General Forgemol was accomplished. ,i ? ... ... . a aat , -, .. 1. T ia- . mi W an ax1 -.4 w 1 f 1 i (... Wsl tiaa .AXiw t a .: ,a.!fi ,k Wa .4 Mla, I . i f-S-'1rfa tJ, JU4 ,.b. '' au(. ! W a g.a.l. a , ii. Y -al-a: ..taj.i-.-j J.. 4 ti. Uat. r .4 T (i..lM.i. ' -i.a. -..l iXt . l,tt ej i 5. M '4ra. at ti l.s- ia a a-varsau iul, atli. ta.1T, aul ti . U ttai -a-n f T-1 at; .;.-.. fca --' I .l !at r a a.:..f o. J'? , CM. j w U a.! IK. i, a i tfc let. B J. ,j , I .uf l. i!,tM,j- f "U a a t . I I . t t. j -4 -. ) a. I the t.'.t a.: . I it t .'.r . it I aa 1 '.'' l.--tif-. I..- in.t t, jamaa,. ,4 l;r .! I I ,, 4J1. th, t!i t!., fat al ,t, ...;. A l.... tie t.t ;,t. t ! . m r .. ; , tt.. f ,. f,,4 . the . -t f ,i. if H'tiq!t r'- -t o. a! ar-. . J t!.. .ii.i T. tmf 1 he c t !i. t..-r., i't.f.,t..l i;, )r e.,liijy( Mat, !.,! the j ia., a tw, !o. and f.-ui.d that ..t.i the out 1VH ti.e ,.Mt h. f the rt quite d.e.t, alH .r1,' . t, 1 he I h.i.1 natif'i, J.,, tf, j, that tie- fj,t coiihi el.tf. hcit ., -l"!l Wedded Hi the ,rr,, r t f . of the h. le, ciod U att. ,.! at di. Kil t yi and eiiu-ll klie 1 haiia. IMlllb like a i the fjM of the ! T", tender lll ..ft ,r- hia e . he Is h fio UieniiH mi a''-nlU- aa he l.a ka Like the heathe!. ("hllioe, J.a eitil,tr- nance l li. a him. and tin n rt- f. eacitilig Ittid Withal d-iieroua aa.rti than ktWiJ.''1 hina' I" the htiiih r kll.g for aotne liew a. tte ! a iat to i the wtldaof Australia Hi March of kal 'urH. cull 1 e rei-oi,Uiet,.lel. t I -.Ji.lft His t t.rM- to run an ' old nun" .1 if he 1f-ts it fair I hit nee luil.nf) ld . and ftr-.iij.-. . 11 trin. mI doa to It kl- him uf it i Ton lit in ,itt. It.l.le Ma a..Jt, lb m r ba aa 4-mwmm.m-mJ av., which rail bit. s. rlv. a oreHiWB, weak us they set in, can lift a doK hia'h in the hit and crush him to .b th. hile ln li lllliK ilnali, his faonte f.a,'htlla' nttitu le, he can kick with his irf7il ! i.....l ... I ... II.. ..I k- o. .. ... ..... ...... - - ii .il. il- i"iiiii lion, .mi w i m m-ii.' in iiiiiinir il'V that coin.- within r. ai h . those huge cl.tWa. which call III ale t th-sll Wound ilii p elioll'h to li.liu th. one mi. kill the other Of,,urs. we lure u-ik of tin- a; re lit i.ln;r the IsM.Iuer or old tliitli of the i ! i ! t m .. .. i i i - i .. i .i it tlliktter of f.Mt, there are Mifite thirt dur. r. iit kinds of kangar.-- inhabiting various- parts of Autrt!ia. and one Cl.-s peculiar to New (ii.llictv 'Iln ary in si.c, from the tiua ban- kna' r.-i of South Australia, the t aile of its kind, win. I, is but little Ura-.r than a rabbit, to the a...rl e)rt,t p.-ai whetlier bhu'k, r si. hrowti or arrn.s-nnn-of which stand nearly an fe. t hiah. Ir. all,,,. "YolJ see. oliserv.sl I r. Sllfll. a, he bange.1 the pMtl.nt twr si the batk of tln m-i-k with a club, "you ae- plainly, genthmeii, that thi-'e in iio orsiiic dif ti ulty. The functiona are nulural i. I this la a plain cae of hat. ria. " "I don't know about that " . ! I r iSt4lll!f kl, kil,K ti,. Wt,mmU . f. rf .al kn k ,f U "She mar m-t n.aj.if.at it, bllt there la certainly a. li.atj.'Ti there." 1 "If you notice," chirjsilin Ir. Gre-n, t 1 ri .1 11 il T, ir a h.al full of ) .rick a . .fi I h- afi 1. .. tlMh she were concioui, thoiaih that may re-- tilt aa much from hysteria as from spin al derangement. Thin W." r. mark.sl In. h-j p, a- h- , . . .1 ' ted a charcoal fire on thf wotiiAiia tart head, "haa ! n found infallible. If under thi treatment tthekicka, it is hy- ateria. If aha- dotj't -kick, we firiI that evt.ii n.ore iM.t. i.t L.-aia tiiUat la- ai.t.!i. . .. ... I "In that ra- mv avst iu i tlir one V nj,loy," aaid If. F-l, running a 'iht ninr.l through the mtieiit. ,. f ' ' ! thi- treatment we invariably arnar at rW1llta." j "I am nt atir but what we will he to reaort ti the LeTolC rernedle., Uaf- j L'.t.-.l Ir. tiruel. eu.ttviriir a araJioti .f vitriol dwii the womaii tiirtaat."lli.a- ; rniiti li -a la ju u I'latu vi iiiunum vi , Cllclusiona." I :I1 . 1 ... .. ... . . 1 . . , "Hae you loti.".sl any p.-cu!aa m- ! ti-rna ? ' akel th-ftvculty in cLoru tf thtt weertinar hualaaXal i ovr l, . ivi.ll..w " a.l.l..l th- ajsue. ..UL.I a a. It, at uat a. . : "She-Ue.1 aUmt-twei.ty.f.ur hour ) ago f'rgivetu Ia rll Low long or abort. .-nuit to heaven. . Sin may be cla-p.-d o clee w c cantiot it fa. i 4.1 .1. , . .M . .. a. 1 .11 m. . .. . 1 - . . . . 1 a.. I ......... I 1 I a aw a a f ..1 J., . ! tt ti , ,t a t. -(o ,1. ,.v, ' " iii-.l . 1 '-'a - IV wai t .4 i.a.i th. aiar , i .1 t wa t a t!.. , w . , II.. f. f. ,..i. ah w frkfr.! to I- ptt., thai. tJ- . t .a i. Ma ,. a..i .4 , ., .,, II, I hoe t ha a a. I a- 4.1 . f I. M li A ti.at. baa to a .i f iv fafi .i . . . . i a.ia a' . mtl I -.,.1 r..4a, I .lit H la i, Ha Ja al aj.,. ' t h. f , ai. I the I , o. . 4 ,. , , t n , n' ht, I '.t t J.r. m .,r i, . . . : 'b f All rt Jl.fi- - ih.aff.S a , th. ' "'air fan., ,ie i 1vd A i-k I ' . a I, -ail! a l.e- thai. ( . !,., h. . h. f , .!, atrot.r' l,J .1-. li Ul It .ta i.. to i.i.y', a 1 . 1 1 f a. -f !, l,f t if lu are tl bfafii.l I t t-' ll..,tal 1Iiim li a.i.l (1.. I a In t the "I 11 at tl ot -I. r. ? t.k. . tli. a that t tt I i . a it a Of a at. .1.. a If !..,. haw . , ,: .1. ,. a.k. t, of i. d.H, m,il, -t 4 , I .. i nit.' It oft. I. h j. I.a that th,. a. ap. jtk 1 al . ol. taltl. afi tat k . ap. jk ! at . J . faith " '. n J Life a t a.. !,. ft I t tlalth.fl ,a lata 1 1 to. if.oiih f f i.m rl. Vi( is -ti.li.al.. I la t h. I,,. ;, . J, m .i .. 1." li i ... JUi ,(, I L.J., .. ., i. ,4 U t.. ... -,ft )l.ttil.riaits mi, a. t. f . I'iW thud's ar. hitt. r. t J. at. to h.Jt .tl. . A n.I. a i.i fi. ("t-ta J,..,fc.:f .. th.ii he ii ton Tin- hi rf il are i,-,a., t tl hm Whill tri k 1 a a .1 . .. f .,, m t ,4 fil.f" thi Is II, he il a'' '"''! .1 o. a. I.. I hilu of I "t aft o (a,-i.i W in !,. Il I l filel a aa ( a'. m . is trwj I a''at. f ii J f. tlrf- Js t (a.- 1 t f 1 . lofn, lot tiia I ante thai hi I hatiisi If 1 s lii til. a f he .J t.en to gle. 'Ihi-fi is oii! imf ail tl ti at. .-j ja t'l : of ihapl.tii. a'f..t f.if.- f " i--t -l 'n b'lt a-f l I ,, th- im of?. a a 1 In' J'r t. . al oif aa. I.tlife A!!thra'a thll.a's "f th ifl-l afa In. further Lliaal to lla thai, aa tl. ... . it. . ' we can tar aid 11 iirf-ff, A niiiii r l-va-oii.- ttrot at !o . .! tJ teli- ol.ll by f rr.'.-1itJ l.f.saaf n.ar ' h Isrf " J'"1, l"-.? ' wti r. rtir !M-rt av-aur..ll faJ in ,, . t , ,t tlie liour lit l.la'h ra. hia'h T" think we are a' U ta a.'nxa to I an to d.ta-rill Ilia IJti a 1 1 al I... f t I fr.iplet.tJl attait.n t.t If a. !f "Ih'ia rl ln-s t ri-aa iiuta"tt haa ott.ti a.tirs to hat e alal.it it al:aat a aatof of ol.l.ia. ta-lK'e. Wl- I Ul lit n.atiaa' if Will ft, it t . t. l- il I 1 .. . I I.i. aa w-m it 11a. titw itii'kti ('J.iiiiiii l ' .. I,, (U La.'l Sl'l I I... h.ll I.a. M, ff r u Ui U .rlflt r,U. .4 ti-iOTT lafof. Wr la.'wl tol.af It. S it'ia" rta ka . lo t4. ?rik- Yi ti.Ual -k t tlwm if .-i w.aii. ki tin-- a riia-k la-a.J la 4 la- iaarrisrt la- Cal.a.- il iiniia , a l.ia.'l lia-a.l I-'I 1m- lit- ... ... . t I 1 n 0tjlat - it laesuar he aaia a .. a aj-ta , UiJt ,ti ,1, alu--t anithuv e.jua.1 . II aa ua- r r-rtaio I- tJ-r it fortuiiti or mn uhfortuft nrt-tiri ataora - iu hia hfe. Vrraatihty, r- ! fiietXil ra, tual frrtit nni ltrlaMia ainl thlia a. all-r tle f.rirW t a l.fr. mm f . olJlu;u ll ry at,.,.,'! Ut. II T'l faeairr rxtflj hfe. ai-t.l lat-tatl awl I ana. if I l4-taaar. Maka.lt J.t that It U la awall.U t arhaefa frTf-wtlj. aa with a tatl fmj, ti-rm U t.uvethit.4( m tlat aoul whi.-!l rvlaU aial f ua.-a lU homage to getiitta, laovri r l'liht, wLU tt i dela-a Val ile. 7 V 'U.,-ll(ii i an a. .m tmt.tg afc.M W 1 I V ,o -a- a.. , w-f . ... . ,--a . if lr It .. . a,t,., f ' a taM. I -H a. 4 f.a.,.1 ,. . a t. 4, imm t l.oa-antiiMiy a,a--M,ra . I 4 a JM a. 4 t , , ' - 1 , I - il : K I v ,, , J t V j,. ft . . ..... t ; , !..t ... . I V.. ...... '-a' - a . t , 1- a ' --... ... s w, . 1 U , . , I.. (...,.,.. , I', . t j . . , ;,. i, . . . a !,,.. If a a .Sl. a , . . , ... ie, ,, fr " ' a ' ' . a la lb t . a.-1 . ,1 t ii t ' -' al- - , ... I t .1 t ..a . , . f,,. k, , t , I a ! ? - i -, .. H ! i-. ' , i ... , i f , . la. , , t. .1 .. s I . . a : 4 . : I . , f I , ,4; t. ., a.r. f -. 4 a, . . - j,.. ,.,, I - i " i . . a . I I - , t. r. . i t i i ,( ' -- ' lb -. t . i , ;. U of I), .l t ,1 a I 1 I ,i f.. .. .,!,,, k:. I' lOtlfcl t ,a .1 . ... 1
Statesville American and Tobacco Journal (Statesville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 13, 1881, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75