Newspapers / The Albemarle Enquirer (Murfreesboro, … / May 23, 1878, edition 1 / Page 1
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? f - r -w Z. 1 "- i mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmii n mg .1 lie i ; i - . : -..v -r ; ; 1 " ; ; . ! ' 1-t ' 1 ; . '-.: - . - i " " ' " ' - - - . ! '' " bi'v1 - ..4..j-. Jj i - I ,-, - - - E. L. 0. WAED, Editor and Proprietor. Tlie Organ of tlie Roanoke and. Albemarle Sections. TEEMS:!, $1,50 Per Tear, in Advance. 4 .'' I: I Mi VOL. III. MURFREESBORO, N. C., THURSDAY; MAY 23, 1878. TstO. 30. J i I -! 1 ; I: : I ri i : r 1 i " 1 ' 1 i - i: i ifI'M;! L?5,MIIBB""-S-SSBBS SUB8C RIPTIONi ! (INDTNC.) One Year......... J $L60 bix Months.... .....L...... 1.00 Kinif le copies, fire cents Bcrtbera, accompanied by the fftsj, will receive wuo use iur ooe year. 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A sub scription Is a small amount to a subscriber, but put together, they are considerable to us. So please remit. JOB PRINTING of all kinds done In the best styles, and at fig ures to suit the times. ; I STATIONERY, ! CARDS, ENVELOPES, BILLHEADS, LETTER HEADS, AC, furnished at the shortest notice. Address all orders to the , ! ENQTJIREB Murfreesboro, N. OL Professional Cards. i 1 1 C. BOWEJf, W ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Jackson, N. C. Practices In Northampton and adjoining coun ties. Prompt attention to collection In all parts or the btate. , 1. C. WARD, ATTORNEY-A' -LAW, Murfreesboro, N c. Practices In Hertford and adjoining counties. ana in tne supreme ana ireaerai courts. Prompt attention to collections. J J. YEATES, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Murfreesboro, NJ C, Practices In the Superior, eral courts. Supreme and Fed- A. BARNES, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Mu'treesboro. C. i Practices In Hertford and adjoining counties and in the supi erne and Federal courts. Prompt attention to collection. ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Harrellsvllle, N. Collections made In any part of the State. 1 JOHN W. MOORE, j ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, ! . .. ' - i Pitch Landing, N. C Pract ces In the Superior, 8upreme, and Fed eral Courts. Prompt attention to Collections. B. WIN BORNE, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, j Wlnton, N. a Practices in Hertford and adjoining counties, collections made In any part of North Caro- llDa- - I i , I j : J-R. C F. CAMPBELL, H 05 M b i 0 R 2 H '! X :i Hi MURFREESBORO. N. a I THE SWALLOW. Of all the birds that swim the air rd rather be the swallow ; And, sumsaer days, when days were fair, Td follow, follow, follow The hurrying clouds across the sky, And with the singing winds Td fly. My eager wings would need no rest If I were but a swallow ; Td scale the highest mountain crest And sound the deepest hollow. No forest could my path-way hide ; No ocean-plain should be too wide. 1 i I'd find the sources of the Nile, I'd see the Sandwich Islands, And Cbimborazo's granite pile, And Scotland's ragged Highlands ; I'd skim the sands of Tixabuctoo ; Constantinople's mosque's I'd view. Td fly among the Isles of Greece, The pride of great Apollo, And circle round the bay of Nice, If I were but a swallow, . And view the sunny fields of France, The vineyards merry with the dance. rd see my shadow in the Rhine Dart swiftly like an arrow, And catch the breath of eglantine Along the banks of Yarrow ; I'd roam the world and never tire, If I could have my heart's desire ! Marshal DeSaxe and the Blacksmith. Maurice de Saxe was: a son of the King of Saxony, and a fine lad be was tall, etrong, handsome, and as brave as a lion. But the king, like a certain old woman of whom you may have heard, had so many children that he didnt know what to do; and so, as Maurice had such a lot of elder brothers as to have not much chance of inherit ing the crown, or anything else that would keep him in bread and butter, his father sent him out to seek his for tune, like many other princes in those davs. So he went over to France, and entered the army of King Louis XV. Now, at that time, there was always a war going on somewhere or other, and the French armies were fighting in every part of Europe ; and the king cared very little who his officers were, or where they came from, if they were only brave men and clever fighters,and ready to go wherever he liked to send them. So, as you may think, it was not long before our friend Maurice, who was quite as brave as any of them, ana a good deal cleverer than mo?t, began to make his way. First, he got to be a lieutenant, then a captain, then a ma- m . - i i . jor, tnen a colonel, ana at last, wniie he was still quite a young man, he came out as Count de Saxe and Field Marshal of the Army of Flanders, with fifty thousand men under him. That was pretty good promotion, wasn't it? Curiously enough, the one thing that this great general specially prided him self upon was neither his skill in war fare nor his favor at court, but simply his strength. There was nothing he enjoyed so much as showing off the power of his muscles, and astonishing the people about him by bending an iron bar, or felling a horse with one blow of his fist; and he was fond of saying that he would give his purse and all the money in it to any one who was stronger than himself, if he could ever fall in with him. Now it happened that, one day, while the French and German armies were lying pretty close to each other, Mar shal de Saxe sent a message to the ene my's camp, asking some of the German officers to dine with him ; and after the meal he began to boast of his strength as usual, till at last an old German gen eral, who sat at his left, said that he would like to see a specimen of what his Excellency could do. Saxe made no answer, but took up a large silver dish, which was standing before him, in his strong white fingers, (for, big and powerful as his hands were, they were white and smooth as any lady's, and he was very pioud of them), and, without more ado, rolled it up like a sheet of paper. I Can your Honor unroll that dish again?" asked he, handing it t the German; and, although the General was a strong man, and tried his best,he found the tak too hard for him, and was forced to own himself beaten. "Your Excellency's strength is very great," said he, "but, nevertheless, I venture to think that there is one man in Flanders who can match it." "And who may he be?" asked Saxe, frowning, j "A blacksmith-in the village of Sche- veningen, Dirk Hogan by name. All the country around knows of his ex ploits: and when I met with him my self, 1 saw such things as I should have thought impossible, had my own eyes not witnessed them." When the Marshal heard this, he looked blacker than ever ; and the first thing he did next morning was to send off messengers in every direction to in quire for a Tillage called Scheveningen, and a man! named .Dirk Hogan. And sure enough, some of them came "back with news that there was such a vil lage, and that Dirk Hogan, the smith, had been living there till quite lately, but that now he had sold his forge and gone away, and nobody knew what had become of him. This was a decided disappointment to our friend Saxe, but he had something else to think of just then. The enemy's army had lately . received strong rein forcements, and seemed inclined to at tack him ; and he was rfding out one morning to reconnoiter their position, when suddenly his horse stumbled and cast a shoe. ;inere sa village justaneauot us m -s s your Excellency," said one of his offi cers. "Shall I ride on and see if I can flnrl a hlanlramUli - mm r-iva-miiHA "Do so," answered Saxe, and the officer came back presently to say that he had found what he wanted. So the horse was led up to the door of the smitny, ana the smltn nimsell came out to have a look at it. The moment he appeared, the Mar shal fastened his eyes upon him as if he would look him through. And well he might, for this smith was such a man as one aoes not see every day very nearly as tall as Saxe himself, and even broader across the shoulders,while upon his bare arms the huge muscles stood out under the tanned skin like coils of rope. The marshal felt at once that he could never be comfortable till he had had a trial of strength with this sturdy looking fellow, so he bade him bring out one of his best horse-shoes. The smith did so, and Saxe, looking: at it, said quietly : "This ware of yours is but poor stuff, my friend ; it will not stand work. Look here !" He took it in his strong hands, and with one twist broke the iron like a biscuit. The smith looked at him for a mo ment, and then, without seeming at all taken aback, brought out a second horse-shoe, and a third, but Saxe broke them as easily as he had broken the first. "Come," said he, "I see it's no use picking and choosing: among such a trashy lot; give me the first shoe that comes to hand, and we'll cry quits." The smith produced a fourth shoe, and fitted it on, and Saxe tossed him a French crown a coin about the size of a silver dollar. The Dutchman held it up to the light, and shook his head. "This coin of yours is but poor metal Mynheer," said he, saying the words just as the marshal had spoken his. "It won't stand work. Look here." He took the coin between his finger and thumb, and with one pinch cracked it in two, like a wafer. It was now the Marshal's turn to stare, and the officers exchanged winks behind his back, as much as to say that their champion had met his match at last. Saxe brought out another crown and then a third, but the smith served them in like manner. "Come," said he, imitating the Mar shal's voice to perfection, "I see it's no use picking and choosing among such a trashy lot. Give me the first crown that comes to hand, and we'll cry quits." The Frenchman looked at the Dutch man the Dutchman looked at the Frenchman and then both burst into a roar of laughter, so loud and hearty, that the officers who stood by could not help joining in. "Fairly caught 1" cried the Marshal suddenly, and added, j "What's your name, my fine fellow ?? "Dirk Hogran, from Schevininsren." "Dirk Hogan !" cried Saxe. "The very man I've been looking for. But I've found him in a way I didn't ex pect!" "So it seems," said the smith, grin ning. "I needn't ask who you are you're the Count de Saxe, who was al ways wanting to meet with a stronger than himself. Does it seem to you as if you had met with him now ?" "Well, I rather think it does," quoth Saxe, shrugging his shoulders ; "and I promised to give him my purse when ever I did meet with him ; here it is. And now, if you'll come along with me, and serve as farrier to my. head quarters' staff, I promise you that you shall have no cause to repent of having met with Maurice de Saxe." And the marshal was as good as his word. I George Grant, founder of the En glish colony at Victoria, Kansas, died in Victoria. Friday morning. Nothing Is so odious in an acquaint ance as the discovery of a new defect in him. ; Of the six millions of Roman Catho lics In the United States, 1,237,000 are said to be Germans. During 1877 there were 8,159 horses brought to Chicago and disposed of at the public yards; also 1,096,745 beef cattle, 4,190,006 hogs, and 364,085 sheep. The best government is that which teaches self-government. School Room Exercises. " John, bound the state of matri- mony." j j j " The state of matrimony is bounded on the North bysolitude, on the East by double-trouble, on theWest by vexa tion." - ;v " What are its chief products?" " Peevish babies, scolding wives, hen pecked husbands, sinoked coffee, burnt ham, and sour-pipes." " What is said of Jits climate?" " It has a inpre Varied temperature than that of any other state In existence. In that portion of it! called Honey moon the climate is salubrious and healthy. lthe atmosphere laden with the sweets ot tne flowers of Hymen. In some parts the inhabitants experience afree- zing cold reception when they expect most waimth, and in some other parts there is the burning sensation of the torrid zone. j j " Sarah, has John given a correct out line of the state of matrimony?" "Can't say, sir; never was in that state. Bill Simpkins gave me an invi tation the other day to travel in it with him, and when I, returu I'll answer the question." j " Well, Sarah, a you seem to be ig norant in Geography, I will examine you in Grammar. Take the sentence 4 marriage is a civil contract.' Parse marriaere." "Marriage is a noun, because its a name. And though Shakspeare asks what's in a name, and says that a rose by any other name would smell as sweet, yet marrige being a noun, and therefore a name, shows that the rule established by the bard of Avon has at least one exception. For marriage cer tainly is of very great importance, and being a noun, therefore a name, ergo there is somethiug in a name." "Good, what is the case of marriage ?" " Don't know, sir." " Decline it and see." " Don't feel at liberty to decline mar riage after having made Bill the prom ise I have. Had rather conjugate." "Jane, can you tell Sarah in what case marriage is?" " Yes, sir.. It is a very common case, and I wouldn't care if it was a little commoner! I 'spose Sarah won't be married a week before it's in the prin ter's case." "Can yon decline marriage?" Jane blushes extremely, and answers, " Had rather not, sir." " Well, Sarah, what person is mar riage?" "Second person, ;sir, because the per son you speak to is the one that is going to marry." j " What number is marriage?" " Plural number now, sir, because Bill and I are two at the present time. On tne Suez Canal. The idea of a water communication between the Red seja and the Mediterra nean is not of modern origin. The first attempt was made ) the time of the Pharoahs, and finally completed under Ptolemy Philadelpjhus. During Cleo patra's reign this primitive canal had become impassable j; but again it was restored under the jCaliphs in the sev enth century. Onq hundred aud fifty years later it was purpos. ly closed for military reasons; but about A. D. 1000 it was again rendered navigable. Final ly, the old canal j abandoned, and the the channel. Thet was permanently sand allowed to fill pioneer in more modern times to give attention to the project of a canal to unite the two seas was Napoleon. His engineer, M. Lepere, went so far as to survey a route, but the enterprise received its death-blow in the withdrawal of the French from Egypt. In 1846 an ' international com mission was appointed to inquire into the feasibility of constructing a canal; but its labors resulted in nothing, ex cepting to prove that the difference of level between the two seas is but three inches. Finally, in 1855, the master mind of M. de Lesseps presented a plan for a direct route through the Bitter Lakes, Lakes Timsah, Ballah and Men zaleh. In 1856 the: energetic French man secured the necessary permission, in spite of the political opposition of the English government, and in 1853 he opened the list for: subscribers to the capital. The actual work I was com menced in the spring of 1859, and after various vicissitudes, too numerous to detail here, the great undertaking was brought to a successful completion in 1869. On the 17th f November of that year almost all nations including jeal ous, doubting England took part in the ceremony of declaring the Suez canal open to the ships of every nation ality. The entire cost of the work will aggregate about $85,000,000; of which amount Egypt has borne not less than one-nair. Through a stress oi nnanciai difficulties the Suez canal company was compelled to transfer its title to the Khed ive, and he in turn has but lately made the British government the owner. And now .the "visionary canal" at which Britania scoffed has become of such importance to her interests that the Came has also deemed it necessary 11 I to involve her people In a destructive war I The tariff for the passage of ves sels is ten francs and ten francs per (12) per paisenger, ton the latter being rated on the registered capacitv. A vessel sailing from England through the canal to Bombay will save nearly ,000 miles over, the route around the Cape of Geod Hope. The length of the canal Is just 100 miles, of which about one-third was actually cut, and the lakes which comprise the remaining two-thirds were dredged to secure the uniform depth, 'jl'he width of the canal where the banks are low is 328 feet, and where the hanks are high 190 feet. The width on the bottom is 72 feet, and the depth 26 feet. The slope of the bank near the water line is one foi in five, and onj the bottom one foot in every two. When about jhalf way between Ismallia and Port ' Said the little steamer halted at a spot called ivaniaran, to enable us to to procure, a meal. And such a meal it was ! Our eight passengers were ushered into a rough, low-ceiling room, which had bar on one side and a bare table on the other. In the centre, under a coal oil lamp, was around table filled with wine bottles, pipes, cigarettes, etc., and sur rounded by as forbidding a set of men as the imagination could picture. They were far worse than! any group of "forty miners" in. California. The sinister looking host and his wife set the table and finally gave us the repast. It con sisted of coffee without miltc, an omelet, and a leathery article dignified with the name of a chop. The only satisfaction I had from the latter was to feed a good natured, half-starved dog, who dis played an inclination to make friends. The poor brute taxed his powers of mastication to the utmost to dispose of that chop, and when it was finally ac complished he looked up with a con sciousness of at least one superiority over man. Daring our meal the round table party regealed us with several rollicking songs of not the most refined character. -Upon calling for the bill the landlady announced that the charge was four francs each. We paid the de mand and left, butciur fellow-travellers 1 demurred and received a reduction of one I franc per person, j So indignant was ; the consideratej hostess tna' exceP" tion should be taken to her tariff that she called to the captain to upset the bat. j ; 1 An Indian Rabbit Drive. i . ' 1 ; The Piutes and lhosohones of this vicinity, says a recent Nevada paper, have inaugurated algrand rabbit drive in Reese River Valley, which will last five days. The valley is teeming with rabbits, and the method pursued by the Indians in killing them insures the slaughter of thousauds of the animals. Their mode of procedure in rabbit hunting is the samejas that pursued by the Irish soldier, who captured a pri soner by surrounding him. The In dians select a piece of ground which they know to be the resort of rabbits, and, each man being armed with a gun or bow and arrow, form j a circle. In side of this circle the women and chil dren are placed, and 'the cattle is grad ually contracted, tlie squaws and pa- fpooses meanwhile D.eating the hush with sticks to start the; rabbits. The bewildered little animals rush hither and thither, finding no escape from the circle of hunters, add being hemmed in on every side, and gradually concentra ted in a smaller anc smaller space, and when the supreme moment arrives, the Indians turu loose their j guns and ar rows on the cenfi sed and affrighted rabbits, slaying large numbers of them at each discharge, and women and chil dren even killing sticks. many with their Mysterious Mounds In Missouri. Excitement prevails atWarrensburg, Mo., over the discovery of the remains and relics of some oi" the ancient monnd builders. Several crypts or Vaults walled in with dressed limestone have been-opened upon the bluffs of Black water river, about two miles from town, in which are founti specimens of pot tery,1 stone pipes, and, various imple ments whose use is iiot known. Twenty-four' skulls were taken out recently, all of which are so frail, howeyer, as to be difficult of remcjval. ( The same is true of the pottery, which is evidently of a very ancient type, and upon some of which are unintelligible inscriptions. The students of the normal school are intensely excited, and a large number of them are now at I the i mounds, con stantly discovering something of inter est. Iheir eagerness Interferes nWith the care necessary to the preservation of the articles disinterred. The vaults so far explored are about ten feet square and six feet bigh. There are a large number of these mounds on the banks of the Blackwater, at that place, some of them covered with very large trees. -Keep stock off pastures wnile they are soft. I The poaching jwill cost tenfold by summer, what the stock may get of the very 'early grass. There is nothing to gain,1 but much to lose, even if only the pasture is concerned. The feed will not be lost if 1 allowed toj grow a little InniMr I 1 V Train Dlpatehing, Dots and pegs of different size and shape; indicate the different trains in motion at the same time, and from the chart; -and an elaborate time-card, the train ,dispatcher is enabled to ' direct pera :ions by telegraph with jas much intelligence: and' absolute knowledge as he cjiild rjosslbl have were he ubiqul tioua and klill to give oral commands in a'htiridreti places at the same time. The I -ain dispatcher is supposed to kJnoWj 'aha ddes jknow, the size of each tjrairi! fijeiglit anjd passenger, On his di Vision , tli e speel and power of each engirt , tlie grade of every mile of the road J and where time can be made up o the beslt advantage when trains arc delayed J He usually works Iwjth the s iiperin tend e lit of $he road, though fre quently he isJpui in charge of his par tlcular department, .and held response Die lor the proper management of the dutieslassigh 11- 1 idm, being given great eftj 'wholly unhampered, atcher keeps a record of latitude iaiid ih eta 131 the tiine each train starts from the end of eaci diyisi&njand from that moment untifi t arrives ai its destination, it is constautlyj; under his eye and guidance, like ci essmen in the hands of a skillful player, 1c ng as trains move on time he is tiot calletl upon to exercise his in genuity much. It is when a train is ditche i,;or meets with some Unavoida ble accident t lat'the dispatcher shows up toj advantage! I )He(s tiefins a field forthe exercise of his full powers. In such emergen cies the j j regular lime-card is of no earth! v account, and he is forned to im provise one f&T the occasion. He is called jupon to decide which trains shal hve the; right of way, where and how they shall jmejt, where to lie on side track, jand ja 1 housand and one other matters that a rise out of the emergency. ' On his presence of mind and accuracy of knowledge, depends the livesof hun dredsiof jtrain men and passengers, and thousands upc n thousands of dollars wWthj bfjpropjrty. An Illustration of nis daily dutids:4-Ten trains all off of time aiid running by telegraphic or ders Mifesued y I the train dispatcher (such!) a thiqg not unfreauently hap pens)?, jpiptjthese trains on a stretch of track sixty ra: les long, and designate where the five going east shall meet the five going west. One of the five west Dounu is a hrough passenger train with no stops to make, and can run at a pertain j rate lof speed ; another is a local passenger making all stops, and can run at a certain rate of speed dif- m 3 a. ' f -i ll i a . . .11 i ! I . -I i ' - ierent irom ine rest; anotner is a freight with alight load ; and another a jTreig a part: vvtithp heavy load. One has the road to run oyer where the grades are not heavy, while another has large; liillsi to climb. All these things have to be: taken into consider ation,; plans;! formed, and executed at orice, and these trains started and kept ... .. .i.lil.!.. ..if 1-1 1 liL . . . A. I gqing Withibiitkle ay and without acci- dent. i A Half-Breed's Coolness and Revenge. The Indian Pfides himself upon taking good or l i in tpe quietest oi ways, ana tale told In Mr. Marshall's from ii Canadi iani Dominion." his civilized half brother wpuld seem to be equally unemotional. Thanks mainly to a cer tain! Metis jorjrialf-breed in the service of the II ud son! Bay Company, a Sioux warrior was found guilty of stealing a horse and condemned to nav the ani-. mal s value byfinstalmenfs at one of the company; forts, j On paying the last inktalnient liel received his quittance from tl e 'man who had brought him to justice aridjeij ttie office. ' A few mo ments! later the j Sioux returned, ad vanced on his npi8eless rnoccasins within a pacc jof the writing-table and leveled his muj ket jfuliat the half-breed's head. Justj a.4 the trigger was pulled the Metis raised liisi hand with which he was wri ting an 1 touched lightly the muzzle of the guii ; the sfiot passed over his head, buit hishaij1 was singed off in a broad mast ' The smoke clearing away, the Indian was! amazed to see that his enemy still livfed. The other looked him full for an instant and resumed injtheyes his tot ting. he Indian silently de- pafted unpursiued, those who' would i rr nave giy en; cnase peing sioppeu oy me half4br$ed with, " Go back to your din ner and leave tlie affair to me." When evening, jcame, a few whites, cu nous j to; see j now tne matter; would end, accompanied the 3Ietis to the Sioux encampment. At a certain distance ne bade them! wait, and advanced alone to ndian ten .li Before one of these ouch d the baffled savage, singing wrjj death hymn to the tom-tom. that he must now say fe and child, to the sun un and the chase. He He com plained good-bye tpfwi: light, to the told pis friends injthe spirit land to ex pect him that night, wnen. ne wouia bring thend all the news of their tribe. Hesivutg his body backwards and for wardjs as! hjchinte'd hfs strange song, hui jievjer joncb looked up not even when ills foe spurned him with his foot. He only sang oh and awaited his fate. the half-breed bent his head and , r 1 , i , I v spat down on the crouching bloux, ana turned leisurely away a crueller re venge tnan!if he Iiad hot him dead. the I sat cr his o If., A :
The Albemarle Enquirer (Murfreesboro, N.C.)
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May 23, 1878, edition 1
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