Newspapers / The Catawba County News … / March 13, 1880, edition 1 / Page 1
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Here Sliall tlie Press the People's Ri-lits Maintain, Unawod Ly Influence, and Uiibribed by Grain.'' $2.00 a Year. NEWTON, jST. C, SATUEDAY, MARCH 13, 1880. 5 Cents a Copy. She 3kr;tcu (0ntcrijri.5f, IH-BLIHl' EVERY SATURDAY, r.Y (jKOKGE A. WARLICK. TKK.MS : Q,,,. voir, lil-'lltll. " . . .. . ..i .1M ll $2.00 l.O'l 75 an ex- f. ( ..orsciis who make up clubs of ten, AOVEUTISIXrt 1' TKS : 1 in. - 3 in- I i l''- h c-ol. I I col. i 1 wri'K, 1 it) 2 Mi) l 5 I im I fi im; f 10 i 13 I $11 IS 22 2(1 45 50 80 100 1 ;n I 3 no 4 (hi j s imi I'D j : .)-') I oo I a oo " i-, i on i i; oo u oo lti IS 25 30 45 i0 2 2) : ii'1 4 00 -nths c no j io oo I 14 oo S 00 , 12 00 1H 00 ns oo 2'.; oo ll 12 7 ii.) i 12 00 U Oi) I 15 Oil 20 00 00 Y.Mr. A.iviTtisenuMits changed quartoi-ly if clcsir- . i : ,.,.v.AT.tj .n,-?i).lr in a .1 vn n fo. - V . ,. i h ,11 is.-nn-nt si-mi-auuiilly m a-lvim.-o. ' i '-viii nt .lisi'.intinui'il btl'-T-e J ho time con t.', '.k'lVV h'i'V,:re.l, charged transient rutes for t: !:,:.)-. :f'-.illy iubUshe.l. i !-. -i'.i.'h:- jnserre.l in 1op.1 column, charced t-v " N , ;i'iv.Tti-Min-nt considered less than a square. Al.li v-- .ill letters, XI IK KXTKIlPPvISK," XEwrox, x. c. I'emiuS Ilrenflful i .la.i.iie. Mrs. Cochran of Oroomiah. Persia. who lias been a missionary there for thirty wars, has written Rev. A. II. I'lumb, of lioston, giving details of the iVaifi! famine in Persia, and appeal-' j.-tora'ul. .She says that the C. bris- j tian communities are suiiering iar less j ... i i.i.ii . . A' 1 than the .Mahomme'ian, ami mat me Xi-toi-ians are helping the sufferers t i the extent of their means. !Noth ii at all is done by the government, a:i I hundreds throng the missiona ries" doors daily. Tin; starving also eo to the slaughter-houses and catch an i drink the blood. .Many Iive ; s ..M all they have for bread, parting : with valuables for a mere song. A b!!-he! of coarse wheal meal sold for Januarv 7, while in the former 1 inline it never went above 83. "Bare looted multitudes tread the frozen j street, having-,parted with all but a ; f.-w ras, which offer an apology foi clothing. Parents are selling their chil dren for slaves ; many men have fled, no one knows whither, to avoid see ing the death of those dear to them. Would that I could take you out among the haggard crowd that will come to-morrow, which comes daily to receive a little. Oh ! those sunken eyes! those bony fingers! Tremb lii'f. fainting women and children trod lei. under foot by the stronger (lies as they rush forward to receive the precious piece of bread! If I co iM take you to some of the houses in my villages, where whole families are groveling on the ground floor, some apparent!' near death --all in the deepest dejection, praying for death, merciful death ! Men in this city have poisoned the last food they could procure for their dear ones, and ill have rone together. One man with a family of eight a few days ago pill arsenic into tho flour which was to make their hist little cake, and tluy all died together." Too Mi en of a Good Tiiino. At a party of young people in Paris con versation happened to turn on the subject of kissing and the question vvas aked who of the young men present could boast of bavin' given or being able to rive "his girl" the most hisses. Various were the replies this T"'lin brought out. Finally a young man and the girl to whom he was betrothed bet 200 francs t hat they ("aid kiss 10,000 times in ten hours providing they would be allowed to take an occasional glass of wine "be tween." The persons were appointed :i comrnillce to count the number of hisses, and the work began. During the second hour the kisses were not m arly as numerous.fwr the committee only counted 1.000. After the third hour, during which they managed to seore but 750, further operations were I'l-ought to a sudden stand-still. The 1'1'S of the young man were seized with a cramp, and he was carried off a fainting condition. The girl, a few dayS l;vtcr, was stricken with brain ffver, which nearly carried her (,ft to a land vhcro kissing is un, Known. When the people who had won the bet demanded their money he parents of the girl refused to pay h r share of it. The matter was then ,;ihen to the courts, and there it was diUcd that the bet must be paid. THREE YEARS IN BATTLE AND THREE IN PRISON. BY RANDOLPH A. SHOT WELL. CHAPTER EIGHTH. Personal Narrative continue School "Boy politics, and a taslf- of mob-law Prepar ing to cross thn Rubicon Groat Battle at Bull Pun How North Carolina save. the day A Farewell to youth, and school days Ktartinuf en foot to run the. Block ade YLsit to Thomas Bayard at Wil mington, Delaware. When tho last starlike twinkle had vanished from off shore, and the vessel had gone too far to turn back, I summoned resolution to call upon the captain ; deeming it safer to beard the lion in his den with an air of fearlessness, than to permit him to pounce upon my hack while skulking from him. That it was not . mi iin w ic :i pieasant venture may be inferred from the circumstances ; since if he should treat me indolently, (and naval commanders by habitual exercise of absolute authority are apt i to become small salt-water Casars I dare not resent it ; and if he should prove suspicious I would be complete y jn i,js power, as much so as if un tjor a rcaj Iions r "Well, by the Loud!" Thus qu. it'ti the Autocrat of the Quarter-beck, with almost ludicrous astonishment, on discovering that he had, in Paddy's phrase, 'a passenger aboard that he'd left behind.' In truth it was an unexpected aparition, this tall young man in a broadcloth sujt, Lut larti-i'eotcl. antl carrvin" an 0j Carpet-sack, stepping suddenly out of the murk of tho ni rli L into the full glare of the pilot house, when no such soul was supposed to be on the steam er ! nwl0 are yOU ? I(nv did you get here? Who allowed you to come aboard the boat ?" This interrogatory volley brought up the whole subject in a disagreeable: away in tbe drawer of a Bureau, on i tween the captain and an otre-er on i- . rnii !.i . T7- ? .1..? . ' . ....):... ! ...! manner. Jjiil according to laiiey-jine rand, language is an invention to conceal thought, and lawyers and wo men know that the best way to avoid troublesome questions is by answer ing a great many that were not ask- C'd. "Why, sir," said I deliberately de positing the carpet-sack in one corner, "you will probably recollect me as the you hit man that had the pleasure of "an introduction to you at Chesa peake ; but you were busy, (and I "don't wonder; for that is an ugly "lock to bring through such a fine "ship as this) so I thought I would "call to thank you for the great favor i - At . . 1 . 1-5 "for really captain, as you can see for "yourself, my feet are dreadfully blis "tered, because I wasn't used to walk "in", and 1 don't see how in the world "I could have held out to foot it all "the way to Washington ; besides 1 "had spent all myr money ex'-ept 81.- 50 and of course 1 couldn't expect "much assistance from the Maryland "secesh" in times like this." Despite the frowning and puzzled expression of the captain's face. I pro ceeded to explain that my people wished me to continue on at school, and take a college course, but now that I was sixteen years old. and big for my age, 'don't you think so cap tain?' it seemed a pity to waste four y-ears before making a start in life; so I meant to try to do some- thing for myself; and at any rate, I intended lo call on the Secretary of War to see what he could do for me, etc., etc. Every word of this statement was literally true ; though it must be con- ...... e 1 . .., .!.',. vv 1 1 1 o iw ieSS(Mllll t' ll Hi ..,, - ,.,ii..v. - .i.. Blue" neck-tie, and enormous silver plated Spread-Eagle badge, (worn on the Iappel in accordance with lhe fashion of gushing loyalty at that period) were calculated to make him put a slightly erroneous construction upon it. Fortunately as he was be ginning a gruff rejoinder a clangor of bells called him hastily' to some mat ter connected with the ship, and 1 hastened to the rear, not anxious lo hear his further remarks, or ques tions ! Yet, the unfinished interview left me very uneasy ; because, though un skilled in reading countenances. I felt the captain was not satisfied and would perhaps turn me over to the j public to give a better account of my self. It must be considered that a great hubbub had been raised only a little m re than a fortnight previous by the capture of the steamer St. Nicholas, of the Ray-Line. The facts were as fol lows : A GALLANT EXPLOIT. Col. R. Thomas, of Baltimore, had been secretly organizing a batlaliion of Zouaves for the Southern service, On the 1st, of July, a party of ten or J twelve poorly dresed men took pas- j sago on the large side-wheel steamer j St. Nicholas, which ran between that! city- and Washington. The men seemed to be countiymen going to various points along the route. A very lively French lady, with her maid, also came on board. When the steamer reached Point Lookout, at the mouth of the Potomac, a number of other countrymen took passage. Among them was Lieut. Alexander, ! and Capt. Geo. N. Ilollins, a Virgin ian, w ho had resigned from the Fed eral navy. These men made a sign to the French lad-, who thereupon slipped her petticoats over her head, and stepped out, the redoubtable little Colonel Thomas, with a big pi.-tol in each hand ! All the countiymen fish ed up their pistols from their boot- tops, and the St. Nicholas became a Confedenue prize. She was headed for Cone river where a Tennessee reg- .ment was to be taken on board, an 1 several Tand exn oils attcmnted. JJut the Tenessecans were too tardy ; so the ship sailed up the river captur- ing three other vessels, with a quarter of a milhon dollars worth ot property and 4o prisoners, all ot which were brought safely Into Federick;-,burg. Unfortunately this success rendered Col. Thomas so rash that two weeks later he attempted another project, and being betrayed was found tucked sieamer n asnaifjion, wnne sue wassailing up the Bay. He was chained down in the dungeon of Fort McIIenry. Naturally these occur- rences kept the officers of merchant vessels, plying the Inland waters in a suspicious condition for some time per s rerry, and Alexandria : lustant-tJ-ereafter, and I had the benefit of it, ; ly. to my dismay, a voice from the boy though ! was. A WOMAN IN THE CASE. That the captain distrusted me, though bewildered in a measure by my frank talk, soon became apparent from his actions. Repeatedly be slip- pel into the cabin on some pretence, 1 ....,r. ul, ...... .r1...w... ..I r.K. and shot many sharp glances at me, curled up on a corner-sofa, simulating 'iimi I- n i i- i v t nwiiM . : it ,r I ho ii n I ' v- - l . . ot Keeping an cy e over me was assign- ed lo a pretty and sprightly young woman who may have been the slew- ardess when the steamer ran as a pas sender-packet ; though apparently she ' of lead were a better swimmer than I. ; tj) v . th;U briln-ry of judges is allowed. lhe f?ni,Ie bo,,ks h:is not t,,e remotest was a near relative of lhe captain. However "all is not necessarialy lot," S stealin, jas;lm.d': tlsat a breath : inception of their object. lie may Unawares, I won her favorable opin-' says the proverb, "because in eat ; f promise to marriage is perndlted th',,k ll,e-v :l,,e out for an early consti ion by bringing her a chair when she ; danger." By sudden impulse, I has-; v;jun the voman .vas rich at tjic.tiinc j tutional. But early constitutionals se came on deck, and offering her a pic- lorial paper w ;hieh Todd had given me. Later, on seeing that I did not go to breakfast, she told me I might get sea-sick ; and when 1 boyishly -x- plained that 1 could only afford to oav for four meals (1.00) during the ! j - v s trip, she brought a tray of breakfast, j and told me to go into one of the j Stale rooms to eat it. Ere noon the kindness was well appreciated ; for the day was exceedingly b!u?lry, and the water near Point Lookout is al most always rough: the Potomac river, seven miles wide, here de bouching into the Bay. causing what the sailors term 'a choppy sea.' Little pt the matter patiently wait until lhe . system of morals is utterly incompati did L dream that in lhe same month regular session, but now, whatever j hie with a government "of the people! .1.1. t ..... .... I. llMl) ..t l.i.i- (f : 1 11 1 ee m. is ueii-., v 1 1 u jij uuiti vi- - - . fleers, packed like sardines in the dark, filthy, and nauseating hold of . " ,, iii ...i ii a much smaller vessel, J should he i tossing on the same waves, at the same point, suffering for air, so griev- ously that dozens of strong men were dragged out in dead faint at every m oment! Of this I shall give account in due season. HISTORIC LOCALITIES. The Potomac soon grew narrower, and lhe young girl called me on deck, to view points rendered famous by re- recent occurrences. She brought lhe captain's large glass and watched me narrowly as she inquired if I wouldn't like to take a look at the "Rebel flag." At another place, the order was passed ; for eveiy person to go inside, and re- ! third generation with the best inter- j will of the American magistrate, and main concealed while running by!esta of the country. There was no i the vole is cast, the decision made, Mathias Point, the spot where Capt. j sounder judgment, no loftier patriot- j the water tax removed, the assess Ward of the gunboat Paicnee had j im, no clearer intellect, in "the times : ment released, at- the dictation of tho been killed only a few days previous. I that tried men's souls," than were priest, who holds that the State ex ile had discovered signs that the j found in John Jay, whose mind and j isis for the Church, and does its duty Rebels were erecting a masked bat tery (all Southern batteries were "Masked'" in these days) amid the spruce thickets at the Point; and at once landed to drive them off. He was killed, and several of his men wounded. But the Confederates, a mere scouting part, also withdrew. T his was singular, inasmuch as the point is the only one at which the Potomac could be blockaded. The current sets in so near the shore that, as I said, we were cautioned to keep out of sight, lest concealed riflemen in the thicket should pick us off. In stead of thus closing the river, the Confederates planted their batteries at Acquia Creek, where no boat could be struck at night and few during the day. PISCOVF.r.ED. And now night descended rapidly. Mountainous masres of clouds piled, Pelion upon Ossa, around the horizon, still showed the ruddy tinge, the i i i. .. . r . l crimson uiusnes oi iuc ; vc i , hut darkness lay upon the lanu-nue ! a fu neral pall. not a light twinkling, , nor even the bark of dog resoundu.g, j horn t he .vooded b.luii. of the u,n- : la shore. Presently the great bell be- i "an a mtiliied toilinir that was in j strange consonance with the hour and j the scene. It was the uual salute ! of honor paid by vessels ' t he tomb of ash.ngton, at .Mount ernon. 1 strained mvevesiocat.cn laineo my ius l" -" i,t ( p::-,...vd a glimpse oi t i t - but 'doom was impenetrable. In a short lini Fort Washington j was reached, and the steamer "',,we(M down' to admit, of a conversation be- . me pai-apei. .laooioii m. u-i". way, looking up at the massive battle- i m-nts, I fell into a familiar school boy j habit of thinking ahmd. 'Wonder ! why under the sun our men didn't j seize t hi f.rt when they took liar- latticed window next to the one airainst whi h I was leaning, respon ded "Why, because OUR men got here first !"' There was no mistaking the signifi oanee .f the emphasis on "our men." My secret stood revealed ! and W ash- il'llftOll WllS IlllllUXt ilt lialld. Ill I C 1 S ,. .- j n.gton was almost at hand, in ie.s ' than an hour I should be delivered up t 1 1 . 4 I. ....,,- t I i ik L'l I II ) I Will A 1 1 1 O L 1 1 V 111 till i ri t . i wn d . ..I...!, M'ul I IiiM1 Mtilf tr 4 W I 111 ; no matter imu j.o,,, . been sprung overboard, trusting to blind fortune tor escape. But a pound tcned around into the saioon. too n! bol d baggag-, and went into the j small caie room, locueo me ' and stayed there. (For reasons, not ! required here, it must sufTiee to say that when Washington was reached I was among the missing.) 1 1 r . I l 1 .!.-.. to be contini:eo. ! An American preacher in his pray er said : "I pray that the powt 7 . . ! Just theni Hitter Satan mav bo curtailed.' an old darky in the congregation crieu out: ''Ye:', amen , -r, 1 , ! Lress me ! Cut him right smack smoove off.' "D would have been wise to have .! - I. 1 jieiioii is laivei) iiieoaiix iiiiisL c luiu - y der the responsibility. The Governor has presented it withan elephant, and . . , ., i- jt wih require more than ordinary wisdom lo manage the animal, so that it wiil not injure his keepers. As it is, the matter is now forced upon the party, and as honest men and true representatives, our legi!ators can only look to the good of lhe State and the people the tax payers. Sew Y ork capitalists and railroad rings are dangerous things for unsophisticated 'tar-heel' legislators to deal with." Winston Sentinel. Jo Ei ii J;jy o Education. T . - it is good to see the illustrious name of John Jay identified in the ' pen were employed on the Farewell Address of George Washington. His son, William Jay. a jurist, statesman, scholar and Christian, inherited all the j virtues of his father, an I transmitted them to his son John Jaj', who is now emplo"ing his pen in the almost hope- , . . " men to the importance of preserving , -, their institutions from the wily and destructive approaches of the Jesuits, 1 ' ' the ler.ders of the Roman Catholic conspiracy against education, liberty 1 ' J and human rights. In the last number of the Jlmnn- ttonal JneiC. .Mr. Jay returns to the ; (iisc.n?s;on Gf ti,e Question. rresentinr i sn(.n an array of facts as would j slartle the American people, had not the necessities of politics driven them into a dogged determination not to contend any farther airainst the sect whose votes are now the controlling factor in every contested election. Mr. Jay is showing the mischief . - , , t that springs from the schools voir , s t0,j in tbe Roman Calholi(. j Hmrcnog a listinot from ,l,e miblic hft qnotes Brownsojl, one of.hehreat ant llontis a, saying : t.Tio onn of of term i,atho,ic education is in the fact that we educate not for the present or the future, but for the past, which never can be restored." .Mr. Dexter , Havvk;ns p,.oved (hat in th5s - State the JRojnish parish schools turn j out 3 io times as many paupers as the State schools. Thus the Ii. C. schools beget ignorance and pauper- ism instead of knowled-e and thrift.! ; p)!lt oven more fearful is Mr. Jay's ex- j sure nf the -od of morals taught . - . ! ,n these school-. 1 n showing this he j addlIf.os proofthal no intelligent P.o - j m.in Catholic will dispute, and it is p,.0of that wonU convi(.t nndlM. anv j im nartiai administration of iusiice j Uo presents facts under lhe head of chastity that we cannot cite, but thev show that the doctrine, is held that "Temptation, when irreatlv protract - ! ed. need not be positively withstood continuously, inasmuch as that would be over-irksome, and render one lia- ' innumerable serunles" M r ; iif)f. qnestions p,u ,( j peililents in the confessional i , - , . , A ... x, 1 kn0wn u lhe p.,j)!i for the ; . ron,on lhnt th..ir ni,!;,...,;,,., . 77 1 . J f I 7 T I J t . I ! 'hinder the laws forbidding indecent ! ..uldications." And it is also proved that Ivi...' is snecificallv allowed in ; , , -v . , ; ofljie ..rornise and lost her propei tv tl and it comes le marriage 1 ; homu to the expei.it.i,ce of thousatuls ; o. ,,ousekeepers when Mr. Jay proves i t,mt the Koman Catholic school of j moraU anovvs servants and ail per- I emnIOVed at salaries, who are of . f ----- , 1 the opinion that their wages are les than they ought to be. to increase them by helping themselves to their 01; - employer's property. The same ras ' J ' J . -.i 1 ! - liwf j-inA ij f 11 if tit 111 i.iri ii! Irk ; - - " ' pa nig taxes to tne government, and ; 1 - to importers of goods paying duty. This argument is continued, until ' the conviction is made that such a ' - I ,, 1 , - . - , . ... ,. - - . or r .ft nofin t. .in 11, is wen sn i gested that it ought to be made a 1 ; ' " . . . 'penal offence for a priest or any one v J1 ht Pai,ItlPate in the dance, ! . ,. which is the usual sequel to treadiix' ; else to prevent children by threats of . . 1 " in the wine res -any kind, spiritual or physical, from, v j attending State schools, and compel!- Montreal Heard From. R. L. ii.g them lo go to schools where such J principles as these are inculcated in ! the minds of the future citiz.ns of this Republic. In Belgium at this mo ment it is said "that if the magistrate shrinks from deciding in the sense de- sired by the Church, absolution is re- fused to him." And when we note Che subserviency of our officers of the j c ity government and our legislators 1 in voting money to Roman Catholic institution?, we can easilv understand that the priest has his finger on tho onjy when it obeys. A. Y. Observer. Sam Houston's Duel. A correspondent of the Bowling Greene (Ky.) Intelligencer unearths an -.1.1 . i, i i ciu man ui uic vicinity uu remem bers all about the -'sensations of the year ibb. the old man being o i ' , . . i participants m the duel that I , , . , , i vMl tho sensation. lo settle a rfviu a ' . ' . i lit, uiu ( 1 1 .1 . i ueiui one vt. that caus- .... , . . , , , . c, tliat came oi Lot blood. General Sam I Tr , , c j Houston, then a member or Congress r t i i i'i from lennessee, and General White, r x- i -m i .i . e- ot jsashvnle, agreed tliat on Septern- n. sn.-it j i,0r 22, 1S2C, they would "fight a duel I ,, the T.-nnessee line - time snnriw ,IUi-,,.r... fifWn tWt - .-...r,. ter pistols." Ilouston got out of bed at 3:40 a. m. on the 23d, and, sitting, in his night-clothes, molded two bul lets. As the first fell from the mold a dog named "General Jackson" rais ed a triumphant howl under the win dow. When a second bullet dropped j a jr:imo cocic crowed lon- and loud from a neighboring tree. Houston, who was superstitious, cut the figure of a dog on one bullet and the figure j of a (.ock on the other. The pa!s sl0od at lhe5r ts on , i prinei- the sec lead cut j a whitie through the sharp air, but i Houston stood unhurt. At the same ,jme lhe iujet wim the (0r mark 1 n-w.i i-L-m n.mn WL"; , handk;rehief was drav;n ,Vom one sido to the other. A.' j dnel Houston selected as "his c txer the. coat-ol- j arms the famous "chicken cock and d(),r " Pretty Girls in a Wine Vat. A resident in Italy vouches for the 1 n'I,owln : 1,1 llie vineyards near us j lhe ivU n-ount laJ?rs and clip ihe ! bunches, dropping them into the ! !':lskt"ts- With industrious workers j one (!aV is enouSh to clear an aver ! SraP a.a i 41,1 thcred in they are carefully ! !,,ckl'd fr"m Westerns for the press- . Tbi .Iust process is the same '; I"""'""'. 'M"e "P'auon mat was : . i I I 1. - 1 XT I MM ,,,LU u-v lue Ima.cu .oan. j The grapes are thrown into an cnor i ....... mous vat, where thejuiee is tramped : out of them by the bare feet. At this .A ! stage of the vintage you may see bun- ; Jreds of the young ladies of the city n- . I v mart .n-wxwvirk "I iCHia UMilill- UMlll lil " I 1 W7 111 :fl. -. nrnliiff l.-.i r 1 r. y ir n! am en n f ; -' 1 ." t-xcue.ueu nmr ur.i- im, unnse inieueciuai ami . . . 1. . ii.. ? 1 instructive pabulum is rathercd fron : re not lhe rage with Italian ladies. 1 h.aR I tell you the secret of all that - . r rn t ! mystery anu excitement : 1 ney are off to ,1,e country to tread in the wine ! presses. It is a novel holiday for ' l,,em- beinj a most salutary exercise. Even prim old dowagers are known to "wade in" and banish the rheumatism in a half day's exer- (ise in the wine Prcss- A?n fr" .!.. t t. i.r..i - x - - ;l"e 1H JU1"U' "t l, lB 01 tramping. i,i. n,r ,.,J. . t.. lhe new mash acts as a bath to thrt limbs, while the uprising fumes are : considered eminently stomachic. Af ter the treading performances these : ladies wash themselves in hot wine, taking a moderate decoction internal -: ly for the stomach's sake. The effect is pleasant and rejuvenating, and is - . . , . . Mosely, of Montreal, Canada, certified Sept. 27, 1879, that he had suffered terribly from dyspepsia and was corn- ; pletely cured by taking Warner's Safe I Bitters. He says: "My appetite is : good .nd I now suffer no inconven-r ience from eating hearty meals." i These Bitters are also a specific for all skin diseases. Ade.
The Catawba County News (Newton, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 13, 1880, edition 1
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