.. — ■—;.tv— • ; . 7 ' •- ■ : \ t CHARLOTTE MESSENGER r*4i • i•' » f • » § \ VOL. I. NO. 7. - Reparation. My feet still tread the old familiar ways once I thought so peaceful and so sweet; As brightly as of old the glintiDg rays Os sunshine fall athwart the quaint old street. Reypnd, the purple hills tower to the skies, Unaltered as in childhood’s happy years, When on them oft I gazed with wond’ring eyes— To-day I see them through a mi9t of tears. The peaceful scene, to other eyes so fair, * Bnt jars upon my wbarv, aching heart; The glaring sun but knocks at my despair— I long to sit in solitude apart. And yet it must not be. The work of life Must still go on, though hearts be lone and sad;. No cowardly withdrawal from the strife Gan give us peace or make our hearts glad. ■j You with your bitter, burning sense of wrong, Your disappointment keen, which none can know, The hopes that in your breast rose high and strong Now humble to the dust at one fell blow; I, with my blind mad struggles ’gainst the fate Which, cruel and relentless, bids us part, Repenting humbly, now ’tis all too l£te. The pride and coldness which estranged your heart— We both must labor on -you far away Amid the city a endless toil and din, I in this quiet village, till the day When death shall call us from this world of sin. Life’s mys’ries then will fully be explained, Misunderstandings vanish like a dream; Our long-lost happiness will be regained In fuller, purer measures than we deem. No shadow then of grief, distrust, or pain Shall Aim the brightness of that far-off shore; In perfect peace and unity again Our hearts shall live in love forevermore. c. c. w. JONES & CO. A SAX FBAXCISCO IDYL. I guess pa and ma were pretty rich one time, tor when they came to Cali fornia it was on their wedding-tour, and cost lots—came by the way of New York and Washington and Panama city ingMjHaHTyft, and ma brought a maid to wait j.p her and pa had a servant naSMCDw ; and when w 4 got to Cali fornia—l ■ say we : I’m only fourteen now”;" Wat I was not born then, though that don’t matter, I gness—pa had lots of money. I was born at the Lick honse, and you ought to see my baby clothes, Jones & Co. haven’t the kind of gdods them was, because Mand has drawled'them all to pieces. Maud is the hjiby. Six years old, Maud is, and if won’t die long before she will be a clerk; fbr Jones Sc Co. First babies always have the nioest things. Ma says first babies are like second wives. Well, I am of the opinion that after pa west into his bouse on Van Ness avenue, he went into Stoek, whatever that n4an*. Going into stock mnst be a canons business, and sometimes pa came home looking splendid, and wanted to "buy everything, and langhed at ma for being so mean Bndaot get ting better clothes, and then he wanted to’ dHv4“fn the park and go to the tlieatrtj. -‘One day he came home with, a brand new carriage and a span Os long tail horag, and a cooohman and foot man. Than sometimes pa oame home and looked very bine, ana talked about stocks, and I began to watch pa and noticed that sometimes when he laßgmeilrtJie loudest he looked as if be wantedto cry, and then he sold the hoiSßTßnil then the honse, and the fur niture was sent to the auction and ma felt very bad, and pa wasn’t like him- more and never told me stories nor %nel me ; and once, when Maud wMMatap in his arms he kissed her and cried, and when I told ma she gdiWMijrTß did not feel very well, snd then she rated. After this we went to a boardtotf-imfese—a nasty, musty board ing- hopesT , Everything was well enongbt -only a boarding-honse ain’t likehfonfe.,’ Then the-baby oame, and it died, and ma almost Hied; and I heard jpa say to the min that kept the boarding-honse tbathe was pretty tight up, but it was all coining out right; and the next day, pa"3id«'i have any watch nor any sleeve bbttons I didn't seem to notice it, because I saw that maybe he had sold them to pay board; and I heard pa and ma away in the night, and sometimesnna cried, and pa would look in the mtysing just as if he hadn't slept a wink, sad I don't believe be had. Once.it Wia dreadful. Pa came home tipfyi.Jndl never saw.ma feel ao bad, nsveri aodithen they talked it over, and finally tna-went home to grandpa'a in New York, with Mand, and I stayed CHARLOTTE, MECKLENBURG CO., N. C„ AUGUST 5, 1882. with pa to go to school. Then pa kept getting worse, and worse, and went to live in rooms and eat at restaurants; aud pa stayed out late at nights, and I guess he drank more than was good for him, and I thought something had to be done. So 1 said to pa one day : “Pa, let’s go into business ana open a store.” And he laughed and said, “What kind of a store.” And I said, “Oh, a candy store, or a stationery store, or a thread and needle store, just such as women keep and little girls help in.” And pa langhed and said he wonld think 'of it, and when he came home that night I asked him if he had thought about it, and he said he had not, and I said he had better, and he said he would; and that morning he didn’t go out, but stayed at home and wrote ma a long letter. So next day I went into a store on Polk street, kept by a nice old lady who had a bad husband, where they sold everything, and she said in French they called it lingerie. I did bot know what she meant, because it was French, and I asked her if she did not want to sell her store, and she said : “Do you want to buy a store, little girl?” And I said: “My pa does.” And she smiled and said she guessed the sheriff would have a store to sell in a few days. I said I wonld tell pa, because ho knew Mr. Nunan, the sheriff. It was one of Mr. Nnnan's men that sold pa's honse and furniture for him. And the next day I told pa about the store and what a nice one it was, and he had been a dry-goods man once, and had a large store, and sold silk dress goods, and velvets and furs, and laces worth more than SI,OOO apiece. I don’t exactly know what pa did, but I think something “turned up” a few daTS afterward, for I heard him say he bad made a "raise;" and he showed me more than SI,OOO in gold and notes, and for a day or two he carried them in a side pocket, and mostly kept his hand over them, for fear they wouid jump out and fly away; and pa bought me some shoes and a hat, and stuff for aprons, and I made them myself, and I never saw pa look so happy since ma went away, and one day he said to me:— “Vevie, I have bought the store on Polk street, and you are to be my sales woman and partner.” And sure enough, in a few days we went into the store, and over the door was a great big sign of “Jones Sc Co.” and pa said I was the “Company," And when I said, “And so, pa, you are ‘Jones'?” he blushed, aud I guess he didn’t like his old friends to know that he was selling needles and thread and tape and things. We had two snug little rooms in the back of the store to sleep in, and I made pa’s bed and swept out the rooms and tidied things. At first pa shut up the store when he had to go down town on business, but after a little while I tended it, and when there were two customer* in the store I waited on one, and it wasn’t long before I could make change and sell thing* al most as good as pa oonld; and by and by, when he went down town, I tended store, and we had splendid times. We went out to a nice plaee across the street for our meals; I tended store when pa went, and pa tended store when I went. One day pa came in and looked dread fully troubled, and then I said; “Fa, ain’t I a partner, and don’t partners have a right to know everything, and ain't you hiding something about Jones Sc Company?” ’ And then I found out that pa had bought too many things for the store, and that a note for SI,OOO had to be paid, and that’s what made pa feel bad. And then I thonght and wondered how I could get SI,OOO, and I kept on think ing over everybody that I guessed had SI,OOO, and everyone that I guessed bad it, I guessed would not lend it to pa. And then I thought about the rich Mr. Flood, and said; “I will go down to his bank and get it, for h6'e got more than a thousand millions, and down to the bank of Nevada the cellar is full of gold, and of course he don't use it Ml the time, and before Mr. Flood’wants it ril take it back and pay the interest.” And, then I jumped up snd hurrphed for Jones Sc Co., took my best bonnet and put on my gloves, took off my store apron and. oombed my hair,- and got into a car, went to the Ntvada bank, told the oletk I wanted to borrow SI,OOO. and he langhed<aod said be guessed I had better see Mr. MoLane. I asked who Mr. McLaje Iras, and the clerk said Mr. McLane Was the president, and was in the bsek room, and I went into the back room, and Mr. McLane said: “Well, little girl, what can I do for you?” li Is And I said: “I want to borrow one thousand dollars." Mr. McLane opened his eye* and turned his ahair around and looked at me, and said: “A thousand dollars,” with as much surprise ss though SI,OOO was all the money he had in the bauk. Then I began to get scared and cried; and then I told Hr. McLane all about pa and “Jones & Co,” and what we wanted to do with the money, and that I would pay it back to him; and he looked kinder pnzzled, and asked me what pa's name was, and I told him and where the store was, and all about ma and Maud, and how the haby died. I guess that was not very much like busi ness, and,l don't know what Mr. McLane wanted to know all that for. Then he looked at me again, and I guess he wasn’t going to let me have the money, when a gentleman at the other desk came up to where I was sitting on a chair, and Mr. McLane said: “Well, Flood, what do yo.u think of this young merohant ?’' And then I knew it was .the rich Mr. Flood, and I looked into his eyes, and he said: “ Let her have the money ; I will en dorse her note.” Then I jumped up and kissed him, and he kissed me; and Mr. McLane made a note for ninety days, and I igaed “Jones Sc C 0.," and Mr. Flood wrote his name on the back of it. I took the money away in a canvas bag that Mr. McLane- said I mnst bring back, and I took the money to pa ; and didn’t he look surprised when I poured out the great big twenty-dollar gold pieces on the counter. Then I told him what had happened at the bank, and when I asked him if he didn’t think I was a pretty good business woman after all, I guess he felt real ashamed. After this I never saw anything like it—such lots of carriages and such nice ladies kept ooming every day, and most all of them traded with me, and pa wag just as happy as he could” be. Jones & Go. was making lots of money. When I took Mr. Flood's money back, I just marched right through the bank, past the big coun ters, into Mr. McLans’s room, and I took very good care to let the clerk that laughed at me before see the bag. Mr. Flood was in there, and Mr. Mc- Lane and I opened the bag. Mr. Flood came up and laughed, and Mr. McLane langhed, and I heard Mr. Flood tell Mr. McLane they would have the lunch to-day. And then Mr. Flood told me if I wanted to borrow money again, not to go to any other banks, but come to his; and I thanked him, and Mr. Mo- Lane brought my note canceled by a great blue “ Paid ” stamped across the faoe, right over where I wrote “ Jones & Co.” Then I told Mr. Flood that when we felt able to send for ma 1 should come over and borrow some more money, because I wanted to buy a house for ma and Maud, so that they Wouldn’t have to go into any more nasty boarding-houses, and Mr. Flood said I should have all the money I wanted. When we sent for ms and Maud, grandpa gave them the money to come and so we didn’t have to borrow any more ; and we took a nice cottage, not very near tbe store, for pa didn't want ma to know about Jonee A Go., though I was just crazy to tel) her. For several days we fooled her. She thought pa had a store down town, and I was going to sohool. I told lots of fibs about being detained at school, going down town, and all sorts of stories to account for being home late. One day who should I see ooming - into the store but ms. . “Have von any pearl shirt bnttons, little girl? ’ said ma. “Yes, ma’am,’’ said I, looking her right square in the eye. “Goodness, gracious I” said ma. “Is that you, Vevie?" I said, “Beg pardon, ma'am, what did you want?” And then'ma looked at me again. I had a store apron.on aad a small cap like a French girl; and because I wasn’t very high pa bought me a pair of wooden” brogans, with felt buttons, into which I slipped my feet, and they made me.four or five inches taller; and ma stared at me, and then laughed and said: “Oh, I beg your pardon, little girl; you look so much like my daughter GenevievJ that I thought you were her." Then I beard pa snicker down behind the counter. He had seen ma eome in and he hid. Just as soon as ma went out pa jumped up and laughed and said : “Snatch off yonr apron and cap, Vieve, and run round the block and get home beiore your mother,” , ' I did so, and when ma got home she was the most surprised person you ever saw. We knew this thing wouldn't last, and so that night we told ma all about the house o 1 “Jones Sc C 0.," and ma kissed pa and Baid be was a noble fel low, and “just as good as gold,” and that she “never wss so proud of him in all her life, and fell to kissing hipa and crying and taking on. I never saw ma aot so foolish in all her life, and pa said she wss “making love to him over again.” Well, now the story is about over. Ma came down to the store to help. At first she looked kinder sheepish, espec ially when some lady came in she had known at the Lick house, but she soon got over all tnat and began to make bonnets and we had a millinery store, and then she insisted upon saving the expense of a seperate house, and we moved into a larger store next door with nice rooms fixed to live in and a nice show window for bonnets; and little Maudie is beginning to be handy about, and all of us work, apd we are just as happy as the days are long and have lots of money. I have never seen Flood but once since, when I went down to the 'bauk unbeknown to pa, and told Mr. Flood and Mr. MoLane that any time ‘they wanted to borrow SI,OOO “Jones *& Co.” would lend it to them; and they laughed and said, "Couldn’t tell, stocks might go down.” And then Mr. Flood said, “if all the people he had given and loaned money to would pay it back as I had, he didn’t think he would get busted in a long time.” And then I saw the clerk that langhed at me and I smiled at him and bowed; and since then he has been buying all bis gloves at the store. I told him I ’thought he used a great many pairs of gloves, and he said they wore ont very fast counting money. He is dreaaful particular about his gloves, and if there .s nobody in the store but me, he is ‘sometimes half an hour picking ont just tbe kind he wants. Pa has bought a splendid gold watoh —a real stem-winder ; and we— Jones Sc Go.”—have bought a nice large lot on Governor Stanford’s new cable railroad and it; and if the times are good this stfnSiet, as pa thinks they will be, we shall have a house es our,own again. • . How Japanese Bailies Are Welcomed. One curious custom in vogue, says a Yokohama letter, is tbe exhibition of a fish on every honse where a boy has been bom' to the family daring the year. This showing is made daring the month of May, and on the sth of that month there is a high festival held, the relatives and iriends of the family mak ing it the occasion of presenting gifts and toys suitable for boys, as well as giving clothing fitting for the little chap. All sorts of child’s gear is to be seen on exhibition at this time, and no boy is neglected. The boy is the pride of tho household, the parents testifying their joy in feasting all comers wbe honor them by their remembrances. The (firl babies are not forgotten, but they are accorded another day and a’ separate festival time, this being the third day of the third month —and 3d of March. Then, instead of the fish floating as a symbol, the-doll is to be. keen in abnndance, and all the toys known to the girl world are lavishly displayed. There is very muob of pride exhibited on both of these ohildish fes tivals, as the gifts presented are. osten tatiously displayed by tile fond parents for tbe admiration of their friends. Diminutive suits of armor, tiny swords and bows and arroVs, toy horses, with fall suits of trappings'—in foot, every imaginable thing that goes into the make-up of the Japanese warrior of the olden time are on parade on the sth of May; while the 8d of March brings forth all that is representative of the life and fancies of the feminine gender. There are many who are not content to await the fall advent of tbe time for the dis play of the fish emblem, se that' during the latter part of April it is no uncom mon thing to see an immense fish, sometimes two, so constructed that it is filled by th* breeze, floating from a bamboo pole, heralding the glory that has its lodgment in the house from which it is exhibited. • A Formidable Weapon. A carious piece of artillery has ar rived at Windsor Castle. The weapon, which is -believed to hpve, come from some Eastern country, has seven barrels, -the bores of whioh are rather larger than those of ordinary rides, laid horizon tally upoq a wooden carriage, the cen tral one being longer than the rest. At the breech is a groove for a train of powder to the. touchholes, -ao that all the barrels can be discharged simulta neously. _ ' Haring the year 1881 no less than 1,14$ persons were killed and 8,676 injared; by railway accidents in Great Britain ; but of this great nnmber only forty-two met with their deaths and 1,161 received injuries from causes entirely beyond their own control. Again, of these forty-two persons killed only twenty-three were passengers, tod, as tbe roads carried altogether more than 606,000,000 passengers, there sfas Only ■ one death to- 26,000,000 pad* senders. It is tba crashed grope that gives <Mt the blood-rad wise. It is the suffering soul that breathes the sweetest, mala dies here below. fe. ... ...... *»#•»-$ lif "*** ■ W, C. SSITB, h&lafer. ITEMS OF IMERBBT. A-cloud of flies so swarmed about the steeple of a church in Detroit the other day as to produce the appearance of smoke, and tbs Mm engines warn sailed out. With twenty nawjsilzpa(ts,in process of building and additions being made to the passenger and freight steamers on her riven, Florida bants a remark* able season of prosperity. Lake Worth, in Florida, is only 200 yards distant from the Atlantic, and extends parallel with it for a distance of thirty-five miles. A tea plant is imported in Georgia which has thriven through all sorts of seasons, yielded three or four annual crops of good leaves; and is now a thrifty shrub seven and shall feet high, with eight Jeet sprsai of limb. The Valley Falls flax mills of How York have"contract< cf with the Govern ment for 503,000 pounds es twist, which is to be used in the Postoffice Depart ment, This is thp largest contract male by the Government for twine at one time, and is sufficient to last a year. A *• - Fifty miles from the junction of Salt river, Arizona, with the Gela,there comes into it a stream of salt water. It is supposed that the interior of the mountain, out of which the stream flows, is largely composed of salt. If there were appliances for evaporation sufficient salt to supply the markets of the world could be manufactured here. There are several beautiful examples of hinges in the natural world. Among -them we may cite the maSon spider of the tropics of Booth America. The fubterraneaa cell of this animal is tapestried with silk and closed by an ; earth-kneaded door, hung upon a silken .hinge, and self closing with an elastic spring after each entrance or exit of tho cavern’s occupant. Governor Stone, of Mississippi, has pardoned one Thomas H- Cook, who was under a ten years’ sentence for manslaughter, upon his written promi~' to abstain from the use cf intoxicating liquors aud the carrying of concealed deadly weapons for the term of ten ' years from January 28, 1880. The par don is to be void if Cook shall, within the time specified, nse as a beverage intoxicating drinks or carry upon has person concealed deadly weapons. • HIMOKOIK. He had lost his knife, and they aske<r him the usual question, “Do you know where yon lost it?” “Yes, yee,” he re plied, of course I do. I’m merely hunt ing in these other places to kill, time.” Indianapolis has a reporter who can write np the proceedings of the police court in such a laughable manner that people get themselves arrested to give -him plenty to write about. Here it is: A wealthy oil merchant in Chin-a-Kha, China, has become a Christian. If he is like some Ameriem •Christians we know of, bis customers had-better begin to measure the oil they buy. “Father, when a hen sets on an egg three weeks and it don’t hatch, is the egg spoiled?" “As”*n article of diet the egg is henceforward a A#ore; hast a* a .species of testimonial it iq striking aromatic and expressive.” They’re not wholly bad ont HfcaHvffie way. While they win* fixing tbe repe to lynch a man two dogs got into a caucus, and the lynchers kindly paused in their work to let the viothn see •which animal got linked. r The political season is walking np a i trifle, and the women of the land find their husbands very busy “caucusing.'* There is nothing tike it. When a man gets caucus struck it is all day and good-bye to-his family, * ’” “ A I wouldn’t Be fn Egypt,* said Mfs. McGill, last week, “for all the wealth of Creosote. ” Seeing a look cl as ton; ishment on the face of her auditors, she added, “Creosote, you know, was an old Boman god, and everything he touched turned into gold*” ‘ But why did you leave her so hasttfj?” asked a sympathizing friend who was trying to console a laser for his separation from tho object of hie ; idolatry. “Oh, it was m sudaen impulse.” “What sort of an impulse?’ “I don't know, exactly,” returned the sbßmw. thoughtfully, “but it mnst have been at least a No. 12.” ' “Mamma, dear,” said a New Haven girl just- inthe flush of aariy woman hood, “I have something to tail jop» ’George has proposed, and I have ac cepted.” “My cbftd, i cannot think <* you disgracing vonrseif. Gamas i* not a suitable match for yon. Besides, fais wonld make him it ohe of the bmily, and he wonld'pay ao Ssor* poard.” Thus will bo seen the ineom sstihllitj nl a bnmdim Inman till I*ll - love with on* of th* boarder*.

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