Na "J ' ... I - ' I . i 'i .-!! ' . j ' 1 i , ii - , - s : ! : - I ' s ' - m- .-!.;: - " aa -, . - t l. , . , , :.. : ; . f : fl - I - ' ' ' I " 1 1 m -; ;j; - :aa V-Vj i ...V'-at! V 'yl fT ""- J1 !;- -"!" ir 1 ! A V- W -" "n " ,;-4 r :::iii:ni i,7t-.T- 1 ,1 - " tt t'J i. .wit 1 roll iX. THIRD SERIES '- 5 I i. . .1, SALISBURYIT;! C, SEPTEIIBER U, 1879.' 4. i(j5 M M-T ! i tAt-- . , ' . i ' - -iJ 1 i BEST, SIX. CORD t I T "rl i i Machine of qHandrr;TTse. 411 Numbers and Colors, I iMlIOLESALE axi retail, w siottz and Rendleman, r m-".': Sahslury Iff. C. ; j i . h - '- M : : The lUrer of Life. TUOMAS CAMl'BELL. Vbenifffe we live more bvier appear . Oar iifeVMccerding stiiges ; A dav to childhood seems a year, ,:iwttearg like passing ages? , : l-rj. t -: a ' .-i'" . giadsome current of our youth i In passion y et disoi tWif , i! steals lingering liKe a river smooin '!'.f . . .: fj-'1 ' - ' Bat tlie careworn cheek ffrotrs wan . gorrow's shafts fly thicker, Ye start that measure life to mau, ' WliV46eui your course quicker ! ffbeiijbyshavo lost -their blopm and H"Aii'4 life itself is vaindJ SVlirflVtve near the Falls of Death, -I Feel its tide more rapid f It 'may ! strange, 'yet who would change Tiiue's course to slower speeding, : VTlien one by one our friends ha ve gone And left our bosoms bleeding f i Hlt'f"''''-'--- " : Hfaveo gives our years of fading strength ludciuuifying fleetuess'; ; A -And liosu of youth a seeming length Propoitioued to their sweetness. . fll' WiXTER IN. LAPLAXD. u i , ! From. Chamber's JorunaL r " 1 i ' ' :, ' : - The short but j glorious summer of Upland was drawing to a close, and I rcniPjnjbiCrpd yitli regfeUjiat the hour of mj . 'depart tire if rum XCuolitz was at tao& ; Still 1 !linffetefl;'-for I had pcntifeveal jpf.the ljappiest;weeks of my life in that fairy spot of earth, so far remote from the track of the bust Jing twirisit. I Imd grown attached to mjf imj)le-)eartetl lujsts; and their onsa(jt kimi)ess, .their gay good haporj, and the freshness and novelty of the .holiday-life, had. indescribable charms.; for me. Kublitz is a place litOcJlfnavrn 1 ies i n. S wedisli La p M,, about a hundred and fifty miles ywtbe extreme limils of Norway; and;fls iilveryl rivers and emerald liastares iare surrounded yiihe far fitrttclung moorlands, of which by far te greater part of the country con rfaway'. tfi4e soutt ;might nisieardayisinV:dim!y iUove fhe A-ast, Vpn rple moors; a line !fWuf neaksniia't' fa.ntly '"dotted the ginrseare the liohl Aloun asjlhe uiujli tv &i hd i na via nrA I u' H!aivuIe orwai irpa Sweden- I T- 1eemeu to measslhus cuzed :i:if?ifr?l9 tflref Lapland .wastes, the very outposts ofEuropean civili- j wionr But-let - me try-to describe t Jebortli vlsniireof the I ii i V - uen nature seems to onebsa ra'wonrou.inavTshness vurj(app ftftlia..:. --a if i i '"v-v"jl'rpit,Bi. xvii iiiai .i.j .j - virtMi, uru tries mai; enci r A .! Hi. anu were oouuu- m Kei?Uf f the' track leas mors; piossorucd likej garden foir land: f r...:A 1-;' . a ,r s.aiHt nowers J , every? tamhfiiiwera r i K f - - wv uuvfvc iijv; nuncio i mIiterallyf-crimsort . svith the rnes those ,woudrous straw -11 Wiaji'ttH;ihe' hnnfi Afn-iK f, lif lcte ad . matchless in- flavor, Jzar, himself scuds ,for them Chele. , r; 6trawUern.es are not , tb e.puly uat bounteous - summer .flincs Jt ' W08 the, thickets ghw 1 !. ssonj with a thousand -mau " v ' luc lucres "ami"- pcjia f At I ' j Ml V.Ai.v tt f :P W(uPA " such tlmt are white with lilies; the woods are full of strange fruits, and joyous songs of birds ; the grass springs up j luxu riantly ; g the ferns.' mosses. " lichens, have ail their varied tints of deeper or brighter green; the moors are car peted with red and purple heaths; ana even the dangerous quagmires are ruddy with the tempting fruit !of the cranberry One never knows i with . . .. , - 4 . ,; , . j -'...3 I I what exuberant iniith the i world can rejoice at bursting from the chains of winter, until one, has seen,' iiipland. And the people? Well, all I can say is, I imeii them, and they me.-rl nev er met a young face or an v-oul one amonf; these ; simple folks that had not a pleasant smile for the stranger; never went into a Lapland hut w i 1 1 lout Ji n d i n g j a I k i nbly iwelco m e, br-my worthy little liosts would bus- " j J "'A le to fill the biggest bowl with milk, and the largest -basket with ber- rieV, and to produce ereaf idles of . s . ...... 'smolke" and dried fish from the sea- coast, audj luxury unparralleled, per haps evena great black loaf, brought all the way Jrom Norway1 (for Lap- ana lias no bread)," to do honor to he foreign guest. How could I help growing fond of these queer, elfin- ooking, soft-hearted people? -The village of Kublitz Was built of green boughs aud wattles, the posts aloue which supported each cottage being of pine timber. In fact, the huts were not cottages they were: leafy booths such as the roving Tartar sometimes constructs ; and these sum mer palaces of living verdure added to the holiday air j of the ; place, aud were suggestive of a perpetual pic nic. But.the true houses were under the earth,1kt above its surface. i , The green tents I have been describing were mere temporary pavilions ; and beneath them, jwith only a low chim ney, like a magnified mole-hill, peep ing above ground, were the true homes of the Laplanders, the .caverri- ed storehouses of all their worldly weal th , a nd 1 heir ov n d wel Ii ngs for more than nine months of the vear." And now the time was coming when the, green booths were to be deserted, and the sun to vanish, and the strange underground life, like a mole's, was to. begin again for the iron-bound Arctic winter. Peter Wow. the chief rnan of the villagej in whose wigwam dwelt, warned me that the day light, would "speedily, cease, and that he had better prepare the boat to con- ,-ey me down the river southwards, so that I might reach Norway "before it got dark." A strange idea seized me what if I were to stop j behind ! I have be.en here through the daylight, the long three-months' day, that puz zled me sp terribly! at firet, and rob bed me-of my sleep, and made nje blink like an owl at the jiinw.earying sun that would shine at midnight, and which upset all the habits' of my pre vious life. I recollected what strange sensation that had been how new, fresh,' andT piquant 1 and., it is not Olien, let me teii yon, Jtnai a some whatwprltUworn 'and world-wearied rnanVwho has ' passed hi gran'4 z cli macteric, can discover a sensation that shallr.be, at onco new, ; fresVand pi ouant. "My mind is made up. X'll stay all-'niglitV'' A pretty long niht, too, reader -a uighrihatM)eglns in early October, and ends in J line. Haying tried per petuaH; day-light, I was L going to essay, how I liked antipodes. Peter Wow tried to dissuade me Ijdid not know what it was likei heAsaid ; hut Ttod him that was my exactr . reason for going through the experience. Peter shrug ged his shoulders :; Madame Wow, or more correctly speaking, Huswife Wpw (for ,; Lapland isnot a laud of titles, and t litre is but one clas, that ofthe yepmaury, WithHlleir depend ents and servants), lifted up her as- tonished r eyes and - hands ; all the daughters titteWdand all the sons stared, at this remarkable deciiori'on my partly Bursas I nbt: onl V paid Petejr for my ' board and lodging at thesinecedentedly liberal Arate of four f'sjlver; Itix-dbtlarsweekbat. couULspeak and iing on occasion, in Swedish and Norse, knew a little of the Jappoinc lougue, auu piaycu mc fiddle aiul flute, besides tielng te own er of 4 usicat-toxI I was iqaite a popular character; among" worthy entlrtairiers, 'arid 'ray detdrmination,tpas Mye Jurjied taquit the hilJ, after toUeti'itVuVtlrotlili'thcVdong Winter uitii tuciut u iu uikei tta acuuipuiueui gipw liau uieu away too ai ready an by the entire community. According- c, breezq had sprung jap from the ly, we. moved intb 'bur- winter quarr J dim i northwest, and 1 1, shivered and tersV ? 1J A Lapland winter hut has generals ly tw . drawbacks," of a nature, ;;'at- t most unbearable to Europeans it is tu .... ........ : i: . two crowded, and. it is smoky, i But Peter Wpw, chief of the -village,' was a rich man in his way, and had a ! j 1 must confess that felt uncommon roomy and cpranj odious set of caverns ly like a frightened child left alone in for his dwelling,' with' furs and eider the dark, and egretted 'my whim for uuwii 4111ns in piemy, as uccauet in& staying ampng nej laps. iNay, but owner bf five hundreel reindeer. ' The . for the very shame j believe I should familyr slept in a quaint tier of little have proposed! to, hire Peter aWow's box-bed about the usual length of boat, before the' ice f should seal up inigndnette troughs, which were.suok! mere t, 'and, jrive.anoj'istartjylikc'a into tjie clay-walls like a rowofsleep-s bird of. passage, ia.-pnrsuit of the sun. iiig berths on board a packet-shipi The country deemed1 to "me to 'chance' But Ias a distinguished foreigner i the unwonted twilight; the familiar had a'jden to myself, such as a hermiji rocks of the glen, the? far-way moot of especially austere alul self-mortify- lads, the pjnethicket', assumed a werid ing tendencies might have" construe- ! aspect: even1 the faces of my entertain- ted. for lt VOil without fl window of Pl InnL-Prl gfrnmA nrid frritocnnn nnl - f : T - - - t ' i " - - F 1 any k ind;and air Xvas dmitted by; means of the hollo wn friink of an aU der-treei ; which -had (been thrust . througirftlie roof of the caye, and ' made a 4ort of wooden shaft overhead. 'nie'fltfdrWtffft i frTTvTtTf soft, dried moss, softer and more luxu- rious than the most costlynhree-plicd velvet that ever -looinlwovethe iied : was a pile of dressed deer-skinV, as supple aiid. pliant as silk ; a copper lamp hung by a chain-' from thc roof; I had pillows and bolsters stulled with t he laraa Of H t M mH&JlWk and th wild wan, two bear-skin coverlets, and at least a 'dozen- quilts of yielding eider-down ;' and, 'prown-' ins magnificence 1 there . was aii old fashioned qhest "of oaken 11 drawers, . 1 1 ' ii 11 1. .1 wiin urass nanaies aua jKeypiates, 10 which Peter Wow pointed proudly, as to proof of intercourse KiWith the civilized, world of morden'v .Europe. ii was eviacnuy some reuc ora wrecK off the North Cape, and r had been dragged i many a weary mile ; by the patient deer that drew the sledges. fancied the .scent of the sea hung about ityet. - A'1 1 Scarcely were we snugly establish- -e.l in ouj: underground quarters, when one fine evening, I wa summoned to join a solemn procession which annual ly according to immemorial custom, as cended a neighboring" hill to see the last of the sun for that year, and bid the orb of day "good by !" It was a strangely picturesque sight, and not without ;its touching pathos, that, as semblage of villagers, of every age, from the wrinkled crrandsire who toi- lei cil uii 111a diuu, auu - huh shaken hand shaded his aged eyes as he watched that fast 1 declining sun which w-as setting,? not , for a night, but for a drear winter, Und . which he might scarcely .hope .markrjajain. down tQ-the.jCjiild whose w'onderipg eyps noted the scent for the. first time since itsf reason began to dawn.' "AH were there--the maidens-and. young men, the' reverend LieJdersjKe .feeb(e crones,' who shivered ? already in the strauge bmiqipns.Vin the air, ihp hardy hunters, the no! less hardy suepherus, or rather, ueeriierits ; old aud youri were gazing witli,a con? mon purpose ana a common luiensiiy of feel iiig tt pori the sinkiniuminary. All kinds of wildTimagiuiugs, all man ner, of poet icmemor ies, rushed iu upon my mind, as the sun approached the , v ..... i V.vj-ho" ' ' , 'vijV horizon 4and prepared , for the : final plunge.! The. wild aiidvhiystf.e yrsps of JTegn,e4r,rpejriiipsggfe try ilAt very spe:tacle of the death1 'of1 the northerni sunis recurred to i me with bod insr clearness. I begbii 'to Wonder a Dsunyr n , w su 1 ug , jwk swj, a wimf r t 1 ' I " . A. A Z A in Lapland, Ijke a mole ja its burrow. I begani to sigh aftpr tny home-where tue suniwouiu smpe.oim many a usy, on the crisp 6how' n,d frost il vejed boughs,), whei X spi? m bVn mnier-? tan Pi unge I the, red so n . had : flashed ....4 fJ 1144 4i.ti.aV fk ?'-1 do wif' below' thd ' horizon.1 J 1 A heay V twilight settled, .as If by magip, ovpr the fairjlaud scape, still gilded by tlii smiles fisnmmer.' Hark ! the long wail i ng l-cadence B of tle, i?eety fajp! chantan old,, old heatheVchantbf the days when Frey a was worshipped FreyaK at once Veuus and bumra r of this "far Iremot1 race-ih whiMf the Lapladers bewailthe?parting' day I No w for tu1onyonjj.ij ' straining lour eyesntil the las lki.pt ' Wrapped my! cloak, -around me at the sudden sensation of cold. "It is the snow ;wind,fr said , aiilold Laplander, as; we paced down to the village : "no i . i. i iij, . , more flowers for the lasses to braid in their hair this year,1 , f C V V V I f B V j their pigmy; fingures j impish, in the dep, shadow,; jhen,1top, the singu-j lar feeling that jall j this wa3 not a! dream that if wiis rieal, wakinjr life 4-that.I had actually seen the sun go' down' into' an "obscurity i; that whs to 1 . . ' . .1. . last for the better part of a year and that 'I was ouigjtVtry to while away a winter-night that ght that would have given Itera zad e h ersel f to exhaust time to Sclierazade herself to exhaust a quarter o quarter of her budget of stories allj this bewildered inej! But that- night there were .high revels held amoug the dwelleis in caves. Peter Wow, as ch cf of he village, entertained all the beauty and wealth (all the ugliness and poverty as jwell) of Kublitz in his hosptiuble halls under ground. Torches blazed and sputtered; lamps feil by sealoil aiiid dear's fat, were light edyand hung til every bracket aud pro jection thnmglf the subterranean d wel ling; and $t'a' ycry early hour, the monotonous but; impatient beating of the Lapland drum : summoned the guests. Ap Kublitz was there, young and old, id holiday garb. There were games and sweetmeats tor the child ren, danciilg for; the lads and lasses, and abundance of tobacco, gossip, and strong liquors tor the seniors 01 the village, h pet reindeer a lovely milk-white creature, almost hidden by the flowers with which he was gar landedwas led through the room by a rope of I roses: held by six joung maidens, j Six,; young; hunters follow ed, each with a drawn sword, with which the were presently to figure in the ancient sw'bid -dance "of Scandinla- Thebrcljestra', composed of the r .i.,.t.. . . 1 - -: strangest JooUiug .instruments, still raanaged-f forjj the rLaps are a very musical . peopledto discourse swet sounds, now of a yld pathos, now al- idieuingly, gay and exciting. most ma Such Ii hearty vigorous, agile dancing I er beheld.1: ';it wa3 a marvellous never sight that jasseinblr of small folks uu- der the level of the earth, and it put t it h - : ii me in , mind ot I what! had; heard jot thrPaidne'Slieah of the, Scottish le gendsy an4 iiiclr revelry within some haunted MlU fi P 1 j Pcter iWowl the tallest man in the cbmmumtV; hd atjalned the gigantic stature of ik v'e! eet four and with his high red eap set jauntily on his gray locks, his cu6rnous white beard ; aud moustaches flowing down like a frozen n y eft and! his liniibriji costume of reddish-brown cloth, looked uncommon l;ijk.te,.;;iing; ! of this Drows or Gnomes, as ; Norse's supeistitiona de scribe h i ra. 1 Tlie' sti 11 ' more d war fish assemblage presented every variety, from the grotesque and witchlike ug liness of tbe'old wonien, to the infan- ittnVdimiiitfye beauty of some of tlie young gjrfsl The children were al&bstl ionutiigey.itjseems, comes on with terri by wi ft strides! among these dwell-; ers jof tifrozei)t wprld, -as wel I s, with ihVsun-ScorcUed Asiatic; and I look faces that! peifer -fail to meet the ye Jj ,TheektoQrnlpg I had a surprise Ashoui from the upper earth aroused me and scrambling to the outer, air, I beheld:the VocUsthe black pine copse. iheliimUabietm one daz zling, all-!pervading sheet of blinding snow. Ail gone I tHe fair flowers, the sbW-ofrds.'the PncuItuTed fruits that offered their proffusion everywhere, blooming Mieatuer, anu green grass, an goneL; buried J until: next - summer i day ligh V beneath a brought buck 't! I - - I I - . ' ! i ' . -i - - i epotless, unvarying shroud ofvircin as I inT&W?lJ"2i'-X Wj.i-f-Tri". inoWl To W relief it l i "A T?'f''.V,dge,'!5 .Ps.P?5tWp revoked. Wfl. . " my reiier, it as not as cursion.aneida'matioa from ray ga 3e laboring Ami S-.i -Mt dark M l had expected, A rt.,f ,,1 .'m bfv. ,h.mmer.0g l.ght prevailed, like th. .eene,iThe;heaven,W on vast ,. Ruh"rforS W re ca'rt northren .wind blew keen; and even orange,:nery ired .-deer.1 viole! no r i' f?"M'iaM, , a.Igaze.1, ,h, blinding .nowBake, MiSiSSsS , ,!f1.?-ESennS,Ken(acky,t? came whirling down, again ed to bury the dead summer every instant' 1 "ThW nro the wild, coose's feathera . there north," said Peter owiviia mai nis provero was an iiiu- elish ns well iAnUA g er it was day or ntgrht. or-f ' both, or never suf- neither. The laraDs were ered to go out; the fiddles and drums, !,f b?ne fleanthe P8.?:?! A m ;ri.' v. werejuever.silent for three consecu ... w - v uiivj hue ui uaa-UA a uui 11 . i tive hours; and there seemed no reg- uiar limes tor meals, or sleep, or work v --:u. wu uie contrary, music, and such simple labors as could be promiscuous fashion through the twen ty-four hours of what would, down south, been a legal day. I fauy one felt tired or sleepy, he or she went to sleep; the hungry ate, the thirsty drank; the perpetual fires constantly cooked the most outlandish messes; the "fiddles and drums went ru as if by self-act ing; the reindeer were fed, tended aud milked; birchen bowles were carved, horn-trinkets chiseled, and stories re lated to gaping listeners, all at once, and all forever. . I left Off looking at my watch, except mechanically. I went about as a sleep-walker mieht: T . . , . " , " I dreamed stand intr. I passed a trreat put i ui iuuk wunuenui wiuier uui uu- .i ti i . a a ii i 1 1 1 ill iv -iiiil, in :t Kiirr ill nniianiHi r "jj - - niglittnare. Of course, I saw no news i t.' i A. i. -r . pieasea. it. was in ine uayiignc i in the dark. Of course, I received no - - : eliint" wnrM UAftT HWIIUi A .ir 1 1 - " i vio, mo TTuiiurous uguui ui loeorur; i Natron'1 a nvt rm u i-m WMiijj.'Mi lvnton onr manifold wrn nf f.fiA I Sts' IT JL Ml J m.'' .T 1 a - - t .1 m i . "7 .,ww,!wlffw?.--w laps Note red-handed murderers, and woolen, and , betook us to .wjrW were always ind, fltle,andgay,-id nooTUay assassW T acaiiiii i if 1 1 1 1. w'i vi xi pfi t r cw inn r9 -. - - - ii - i ' - - - - i , r . " uiei.tsbjL snouiu reaiiys do iii, oe- 1 performetl underground, and dancine hailed tlie r t 1 . . . . , . , . w s - i ' . 1 i. i ... ii n m r-rj J-ue air oi f numaiL .puicners ,anq and cooking, to say nothing of eating, sura mer-came pouting in at once; and! "IT v'-T. ' : 7 & i""fa "-" v.. .w . ywi H05 .MVIHUFU., BUU.lk UUUC . T,0 f Ii. lot tore Ko'irwetrWiiifif. nraa ctinf nut I 1 ' ..V ft ! ' i, T la wealthy add: prominent", citizen pf sh9HId:ney arg W,u, uie fA,a .A:wa. the 8-brot, of the wiUly Thirty mill lenam 01 a strange lamp-m, moon- . 4 r : it n ' Mn vah T ' . :-v . , i years old.-and lrred about five miles In the fine weather, the reindeer werelrv v . f . . driven out to browse on the lichens; and ' mosses, from which they scratch- ' , A. L a 1 t 1 here were hunting parties, too, when i ill aV u-a i ! wv vntiotvt uuu oiciv iiic nunc nuivr ...: l :.. r u: rni i wiuiet iiveiy ui vtiiiic. xuere nasi. ; I t Al ...ni 1 nhnrn aiiH Hi aIaoa tuc ciuiiuc viiao uuu iug v.uaac Ui IfllV white fox, and a grand battle with art . ' , b , a .-4- old giant of a bear, who presumed on , & .. ' ... T , i r .am y, j. a? -nr. j i for "Old Grandfather Wizzard,. as they callihim, and robbed the store- . - i- houses, until the thefts became tin- . i UCiiiUUic, uuva a iut;av ijvw juiu ajiiu low. the white hares, the martens, the deer. If , . i. rs - (n -!t 'I ? A eiant Willi Junes -of leather , the birds, all and every one in their rT?r aa 'iii.'": j lL. L thews of brass. S irtJ,-i dt il3'A And then there" were b..glOOTSiy2. . rives! Oh, the wild excitement of ' ' - i I weeping over the snovy in a deer- sweep drawn sledge, swift as a havk on , the wing, every bell jangling, aud the wild driver singing as he cheers on his ant ic red team, that fly like the wind over the dazzling white moorlands! The worst of it is. it takes away your . 9 W breath uncommonly; anu wnen x wr .1 1 . 1 Jl T ' ea connaenr, anu icocwa.u rive ijcitjuu - ha t.- 'a ' r upset with an awful hurl into a drift . ' - l '' ' i. . . away winij.ui. vuuio, five fathoms deep, and dug out igno-j miniouslv, amid much laughter of the little folks, who greatly crowed over clumsy ; Gulliver. Still the drives were famous fun. I was frost-bitteh twice, aud revived by a snow-rubbing; but worse, I was struck with snow blindness for I had to pass a for- nltrht in mv cabiu iu absolute . dark n. and was not happy in the reflec- tionthatmy own obstinacy in refosiug ... -;.( to wear snow-spectacles had brought this agreeable seclusion upon me. But the kind little folks bustled about tne and told me the most wonderful sti ries of gnomes, witches, genii, and so forth, all with perfect childish belief and gravity, and sang and played to me, aud lightened my loneliuess con siderably. When I recovered, I was thankful for the spectatles, and nev r suffered from the glare any more. . J ' The northern lights, the customary aurora and meateors, were unusually splendid about midwinter; but once, , and seem- with lustrenaurpnw. .lUhlml . - 1oif, Mf I . ' t . . , , :TT'- 7i , 77 . T " -sfom eiianng uaroiiaai across cow ueeper at lone jrlowin'mas-' rpTi?fp Konpnfh I , 'uj.,irj i i " i F.1 A'.j!4-v. , rojyHJUisssippriobrutaraexas, plucking iouch,ngthe,saowy.iplainr, wheeled Utid hoWtifiVrwr tr.iii "i 1 1""-' ' -tjiii,! r.u :..rs .ti.Ts f I eoeiiion aiuL ..f. .i i r r WOW. UDCOn- hnndrpd nn iimn. rr nr;m;A I-HW 3 JtH -4 4 -r . i hiiu ouuiaicu. ii3 hi ixiiuiMir! iiiinf-n. a i jin .i -iii ----- that seemed-the creatidn'bf some wild 1 " i! Jni- "- , WiS- m,r-The,were,hemerryrfaaae M:MkW and abandoned to the wizards a sort of niedicihje 'marf'ampntheib-Wi beats hla ;agwt' &ixm iM&mutteH iwnrD ma irinnriA. rfi 11 nr ,Ann vt iAm i M "T 6 - ' snel Is over the sick, as flmoriths U NoHlfSMai fSduns.; Tllin rl . I k. . . , , Maui h lt waa pieasant winter; ano 1 protest that 1 vas, halt .sorry .when L4.was uait sprry.wiien isin?'sun. and' dav ' & weall? went! J&ma U. GatllngMurdered . !., -V.il . ! J f 41 HS ffll 4 i . . - Special pispRtcU. q ttA twr Jfl.,4 rUtt- M d fresboro; 1 N.' C.; September1 3. -James 'H.. Gatlinsr, 4 a farmer resi- I . ll-TT .0 ir uiuX now; iui jnow:riniu uiuvuu ui vue inveoior wwe uauiog gun, was found dead near, his hog pen, pierced by three bullets.' 'He was iu pros- perous circumstances and was hiehly roTWvto1 j ' Vh' 1 n vf fn fho mnpl I, - . - f ..-ui-.. T I aerer. . . if. ; i Jj. .," AA.AA ?, " .. i , .5 , i ji ' T.Anpif-- : i 'Vi' . vr ' ' . w A" I L -. .Xlie. vUZwI19OS XlOriuaul UlOU . CUUU I ... . - - pots, on the Roanoke -Railroad, were .. a y-. -v.-;-! jv. ' I iiiiiimi rfli::ll fll w mmw Hriiii v. UVPr l.l IK iihinm i 5r rJJTaVJ xl" I.T: 1 r '. 1 1 ue was-auacneionana aooutntty-nve . my .hosts jadieu, andfyenUolT to s the .n Bllt:,.iahS daylight pen ' aiAEnglish' world mi j. tm r hL again. : , i ? ... . . ,,tf- . r it ... ,.,1,,, -..t- ;n, J!o.V;.r4tV . ' ." . -I. WW" i iiH-'i' I from NewsQm s, Virginia; and about " Tv v -1 i 1 1 i u -iU-u-,L. :.-.'ir .fc-Li.uB0 This, is a-Ration. ljt a di' hunA'-i b- 1 i' 'I -lit K M1 ' ' iorui Carolina, iuriuamptou couuiy. V-L1- XTaI J.A' His dead' body was lonha 'yesterday, . a! r ; ,.v t' '7 j -a A v-' morning lying .along side of a pig- . i i j -J '-jtt;.ii Ti "-i r ' nora wl1 t nrl cf irr Ir. ia nnl OF ' 1 1 . . . i t i 1 . .11 .. . ! ll i. lL 1, J 1 J . j .r i . ; . -,,!! . f, . 1 V " Monday .niglrt of very early yesterday A'l -a . vL1' ' . morning; As Jiijvas. very highly es- teemed and had.'nd enemies,; and w 1 . .mii-. - , i.", , ....jtAA,,! -. shot7 by parti6Sl,.fot,tne purpose Of . v i 'HV'A w,!,r,4 'V.',1 wjaAllAT - l-i ic AlAfhAfi itTova i rirwl lllt . nothing'WasTnjured at hi8 house. " .MHio ?w3o''t:jj .fji aw . -. ;- v"- Itaiifc ''-" Our informant Iidnt liar thatanyt ' sV v:?. jl.L'lJl 1 one uau oeen siispecieu wine uiuruer, 1 I t H-wifi''.t vf !.ii?j'l ,. ;,.u . .-ft .i :.'.' were going to - work-ertergetically 5'es- . '1 a: r ida -t t ' f'!j v terday to take '.mealuted to ferret Out rday the assassins. Socli ai. cold-blooded. land mysterious "murtler4 before taken; place, in JSroi has 4 ne'ver place, in .Northampton ; , , , ... .,(,,f(im!ll. 1 ,a r'ii rcI-, VkvJ; edto aidlhe officers: of the:! Iawja eiuil.inif mil n nn a' VA " j ' -t . oc u L"" ? ""TAr; nais. ,, .' ... .shitin 2. .n ta i hW i.7 The Leading Republican Editor r&gain ;iS;l, FA-- - '' '-i-ii 41 -- ' : ; f: "Rutherford, Ikir YaufY ! . Now,' Rutherford Burchard Hayes, ; i President of-the United States in I I . 1 in. - - - . defiance; ,of. theT ooustitatipflt ,pf;.tlie United Stat , t ;,Coonfeq pxach qbaadlerftna placed in the xkAitty Grant, l : Taken from tuacUttcf. and, seated ntK; iln;ti VfcTo i ' ;.Mi3 ? !Are ?yim!inari. 6rmpulsef Sttcbjan opportonity as U now witH- : Comes but pace in an era, anq when utilizled serves d niark the bWinning f io-UofW h tUit -"a'V - " - ' . t , a t ,A t Tn tAre vou a came cock dr dunghill A bubble floating along on the ttir- Lulent waves of Destiny,' nan nn hb nrnmicoe . nlilh.'tttrA . lntlAf : 'I VUP. f . l.f'i ". t'l'i.i . r v m wawrtwrn i b w nan ifinnfi n 11 mm mil f- i ... . .... , . , " - W-J- - 1 AT Vli .V a:5vwg in.tha tjts ot the i baffled titorsihoVeoXishtWestrbr thfs bonorabt.plTc. int.aol. I.nd); - V AAAeJtli uJin.Ufl''uif teJn .viil&HM i;t tT hvim ihm i h i ;j i' ju 'i w.-- f ' -v see there, down inVXazoo, tin old oee there, mown in fYazoo. .in old it t JfazoQ, r th&j pride ,.andtglory-of ojjj, ,t 11, , 4d 7" jfhe homefcOwarl't'HBrpafs -yiti hatlmm. tl jfrh WnifU . A - The port cull is of treason and im placable enemy of the Natioo t We say, I Rutherford, look down tuc c, : . . .,,,. ,t .,r. tf aite your cue, -:t fm .It ,. ,lt.wpjr ere sure jqn were a rtality. and not at a sham, 'we would say'ln spiration Instead of oue,r f " Prrvt!m f.Kft Kfafpfl nf! nfi.siTnhT , j ; - -i -.u 'si ft ; ana louisanainopen reoeiiion against ,1. viv jJa :-At-;-- tno nation, i .. . .v? ...j. ..t . . - Anrl avopv Ptlf iK-4.-M rr . rvf"7'v,v' -tff fr 'drifrtrtnrl t-V m- fn Jnf ovln wiTiTa -w m -" -w- - . have, emsrged J .ts ion loyal hearts are be- Rotherford," i-- - I T) .,V,rt Vxy1 laM ITAII flAtf . . . . . I IkUlU W iVUMi ,MM M J VU, 41 i W si"' i - - - . - ... . , , word from the lofty WU1U ,rr,) eminence you oc- and i i.t : Rutherford j are you the. Man? Issue the proclamation.71?'1 ; Appoint Ben Butler millitaryGbv ernor of the ihsuTfecfT6nary!ptrovinces, with headquarters inoazoo iCityj ia . old Jklississlppiiatu, m tH,iirJJtlr: ! , Call a u eitra j cession if Congress; Excl ude therefromVeyer' so-called . ujiio ui i. .k , j . rebellious territory. fUhaieij thenork OfV motildiog a plaiticr 'Na- tiondntoform:, .:lnPn'M ' : r , l ilhis rs'tl; KeruiC'tne ; and re 1 nnirea a hero inTlne van. a-a,.. j .iuwh ? ,?a - . ;i ! - . Rutherford, we eaTypa are .pot the 1 , ' . tf f J , J . Man on;horsel;ack4fiir jThe whUeMtjoged copiplhe deepvill bring HIMfronl the Orient, j Where he is now-arbiiratingtheaf fairs of Empires whose history takes measured by:tbousands of yeara-vii . - UG rant, the simple tixenf 'Imoking his cigar, the statesmariwithout' an MAaapplcitreaaUiidlnsiB Mr'pdoa. Hotcbkisa's door yard. in -tbo northwest- I - - - . . 1 :-. !.ir-.r"-""- t. l..i.ll 4m lur ImaI t Mt fc States Its aee tt betraeed W' fkmi- traditioil' to' 140 yrs'a. Ieaat;!jand -i m'ay be 20 br 25 years older;- The trnnk i nearly roand, witnaat a sear or oiemisu on it. adhere are ti&C lafgenches j th(( .jg. thre. ifc.. belt;- bat tl.C.nlnaiae old tree,Vhich most hare attained the 'prime, of ofatuarf appIe-tliUforailia-i twai'boru, expanded iUMPia ia- to a complete crown of glory, lanoA lore jii AAnimn.!- f ihiT tree'afe : Oirth J4 feet 6 ndies helshtiofe'ti nd theV spread ,f tlie ! branches rod. Are ready to echbf the first note . That Tells Of a grand tron'g, pur-. eoual, the soldlWitmta peer, ( Watches and "HA : l' Waits. j fc' 'mr L 1 I 5 fi 1 j A l Hf 1 f f 01 ! " ;A ::fj "' i "if ;R . At a; "i.i Uli A fiA U ;t'J;;i if. i- v;f r f !"A '! s ! i' i!i 4i Ai :f-:,J-;:.h' y-M: i.- '''r::C..-.:..;:--..- - - 1 A - ..j. ... .A.M -.i.;Av'--A-:::kA:V. k r.hliAAry- j:,.to:A.?-:' 'i--.j

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