Newspapers / The Weekly Ansonian (Polkton, … / March 25, 1875, edition 1 / Page 1
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0 H "77 FEARLESSLY THE RIGHT DEFEND-IMPABTIALLY THE "j c - " V -r- ri XJniA--H " ' - . . f ? ' ' t (T ' 'rt .-'.1-' V.. voLUHfift: :l' i r- :f6KT0X ANSON CO., N. C, THtlRSDAT, MAltCH . 25,W75. 20JMBEII 50. '. Ae .Jfore. This U the burden of the heart, ' The ifctoffiwijwf) I Yfe livs to Ifcre ; w meet to part ; And prt to moet oh earth do more , We claup each other to the heart, And (art io pfeet$n earth no n6rt . ; There is a time for toan to start For dews to full an I larkB to soar ; The time fgr tears la when we part T To moe't rn th earth no more i The time forTeare is when we part To meet on this wide earth no more, THE STOltr OI'ifJKViO Twain of Lift JCffiaRf MtSMB on'set me down in tho middle pjUt m the dark, ana not tell me which Ball it 3ipBW-B - JMb knoT?" - "' " Well, you've got to, on the river I' . All right.. Then I'm glad I uever said anything to Mr. W.w I should sav bo. , Why he'-.-haye Blnmmed vou throutrh the window and utterly ruined ahundrod dollars' worthof window nosh and stun'." 1 . , , I. was glad this' damage had been I saved, for it- wealds Lava made rae un- porntjH affile. ?nT87 i Vf y being careless, and injuring things. of "O " T"Dowu see Uiat lpiig slanting Hne !' Now that's a reef. Moreover, its a 'A Sketch 'by Mark . : ' on the Utitsl. Malt Twalnw A itmm Tf. wfu) HO ftAAV work foriiirlto learn..the rivet. it rtfr ff ieef SW- !PU'jW4 f. W iUn .fitcTand in telling under it that is nearly as straight up ana t Mai. iinil tribnla- dowft m tin side of a house. There n-- u.i-,vi. i, , flifflmiUimBbe plenty of water close up to it, butmighty enooued! 4l4 aaysT;- ; f fcV.TjIif , i L ii. u .n I it von w-ouldkhoci theboats brains ont. whUoIlM managed' pack my head Do X. Fft full' of islands, towns, bars, "pointe," at the pA 3 'beguis to fade . and bends j and a curiously inanimate mass of lumber it was, too. However, inasmuch as I could shut my eyes and ' reel off a good long string of these names without leaving 6ui more than ten "miles ot rivecih every fifty, begah to 'feel .that I could ta"ke a boat down to New ' Qrleaus if I could make her skip those .little gaps. .Buof crse toy orpla- -coney could hardly get start enough to lift my 'nose' a trifle into' the air before Mr. B.', my instructor, would think of ' Bome question-to fetch it dowu again. ! Ohe . night we ' had the watch until 1 twelve. Now. it was an ancient river lt. aMMfraiPa ana nsroa ni her I T fled, and still it followed-till it kept right across my bows I I never looked to I m where I wa going1, 1 only fled. The awful crashv was omroinenw why didn't that villain cotne 1 1 ;If I com. mittad the crime of ringing. bell, I miVlit imt thrown overboard. iJUtDawer "r..- - that than kill the boat. So in blind Ues peration 1 1 1 ; startea bucU; i -. rawiaig shiyaree down oeiow . yw astoundea an engineer in this world be- Amid the frenzy of the belli the engines be"gan to back and fill in a furious way, and my reason for wok its throne we were about to crasn auw the woods on the other side of the rm r. Just then Mr. B. stepped calmly into view on the hurricane deck. My soul ... 1 I 11 UaL.1 went out to mm'in'graniuae. mj uu- tress vanished; I would have felt sate on shone likesilver; and, higW above tUeifY . foreste tfaH 'a-tlean-stemmed dead tree vravid. "i&gle'-kiiy bdttgh'- thai j;lowd like a flame in the unobstructed splendor that was flesrinfronktUe, sunK Thep r . m . 1 . .. 1 were goela curves renecien, iujhk"v THE HEBELLIOW Claim Moid fr 0 nd The award in gold of over If 197,000, OX THE LEVOEH, A Htttte Vr lit Their ! mf.LV M Ttlr wayV "Y, sir, ." Well, that is a low place; that is the head of the reef. YMcan climb, over there, and not hurt' anything. 'Cross over, now, and follow along close under the reefj-easy water there not : much current. U followed th'e' rf ' along tDl' I ap proached the fringed end. Then Mr. B. said : "' ' . " Now get ready. , Wait till I give the word She won't want to mount the reef; a boat hates shoal water. 'Stand by-wait-wait keep her well in hand. Now "custom foi- the two pilots to eha a bit prorrm her dwi Ugrtcl her ! snak'h i wliavinff nilot Put on his gloves and lit Ho fcehted the other side of the wheel his cigar, his partner, the jetiring pilot, and helped to spin it "ground until it wa-i - would say something like tliisT-" '" ld;3o'apa.thenVe hld it so.,'. The ,' "I iiidire the upper bar is making boat resisted and refused to answer for a ..down a'little at Hale's Point; had qitflr- tcr twain, with the lower lead aud mark twain with the other, Yes, I y toughs i' mating Sdowa, i, a little, Uwt trip. Meet any boats ?" , , , " Met one ftbreasi the head of twenty- 1ob, bn ha m ppwur Over hucrtrin" Mi . bar, and I couldn't makejier out entire;. ly. I tou"k her fc. ,8unny.Sottti-: ;hadui any skylights forward of the , chimneys... . ., ,.,, i. tt 'J , And so on. And as tbecUcviug. pilot '' took tlie wheel his partner would men tion that we were in such-and-such bend, nrl HH.V we were abreast of such-aud- while,; and"; next ehe came surging to starboard, mounted the reef, and sent a long, angry ridge of water foaming away from her bows.'i i H'-i. is. V Now, watch her wateh her: like a cat, or she'll get away from you. When Jittje, in ft jerky t greasy sort of ,.wajv let up on her a little; it ia.the way she tells yon at night that the water is too snoai, liut keep edging her up, little by little, toward the ppiut. You are well upon tho bar now; there is a bar under every hMpftuse the water that comes down around it t onus an eddy aud al- such a riWadbayra'bf lanfet5on?4 lows the sediment to sink. Do you soe the brink of. Niagara, with Mr.; B. on. Iie hurricane itebk. j .HfiplanalJtodHweoay took Jiis toothpick out ofhismoutn. be tween his fingers, as if it were a ci gar we were just in the act of: climbing an overhanging big tree, and the Dasseu gers were scudding astern like rats and lifted up these commands to me ever so gently:. ' ' ' ' ' . " Stop tho starboard. Stop the lar board. Set her; back on potn. , , The boaV hesitated, halted, pressed her nose amoncr the boughs a critical iustant, then reluotantly, began to hack away. ' Ston the larboard. Come ahead on it. Stop the starboard it.. PoMherior-the-ta.S. I f jTv ' I sailed away-aft eesenely iaa bum- mer's morning. Wr. B. came in and I said, with mock simplicity: ' ' When you Jiave jiliailiuflioyOou ought to tap the big bell three times be fore you lane, so that tne engineers can get ready " ... , f ? r r- I blushed uhdet tne sarcasm, ana saw I hadn't had any hail. . "Ah ! Then it was for wood, I sup pose.' The oflioe&o the watch w tell you when he wants to wood up." I went on consuming, and said I wasn't after wood. . wont over here in tie Cend, fTieuY 103 you ever know of a boat following a 1 1 nn.at.nn.m at this stage of the rivarl" ' Tin. sir and I wasn't trying to follow :i t 1 aoitincF awflv from a bluff ranf " "No. it wasn't a bluff reef:, "there 't one within three miles of where yc-u 1. This was courtesy; I supposed it was pecessity. But Mr. W. came on watch full twelve minutes hvta onthia partioular , night a tremendous breach of etiquette; in fact, iw-tha unTmrt'fcurtde Bin among pilots. So Mr; B, gav him, no greeting whatever, buVsimply surrendered tho wheel aruK-lUrchetl Johiof pilol house withoiit.a word. I was appalled ; 'it was a viflain'ou nigh for , blackness, ' we were in aarlacniarly wide and blind part of thoi rivet, whero there was no f shape or sultnce tt anythtag . . seemed incredible that Mr. B. should have left the pgor, fellow to kill the boat tryingJaftuKiout whore he was. But ! resolved that I should standby pim any- Mioha fine lines on the face of the water that branch out like the ribs of a fan? Well, those are little reefs; you want to just miss the ends of them, but run them pretty close. Now, look out look out I Don't you crowd that slick, greasy-look- inar place; there ain't nine feet there; he "wou't stand it' She begins to smell it; look sharp, I tell you I Oh, blazes, there you go ! Stop tho starboard wheel 1 Quick!, Ship tip to back: Ct Her It was as bluff as. that ian 1 1 were. , , .1; "But I saw it. one vonder." . .'. ; ' ' " Just about. Eun over it !" " Do you give it as an order ?" ' " Yes. Bun over it. ... v " If I don't, I wish I may die.". t' All right.; I am taking the responsi bility." , ' I was ' just as anxious tp kill the ( boat now as I liad been to' save kefMoxe. J impressed my orders upon my memory, voodyihtsoit distance!; an o w the wholo .seehei far vand earj the :di solving MghU driftfld steadily, nriohmg it, every passing moment, with new mar vels of ojolojrig; V. -..i;t 'f t I stood like one bewitched, 5 1 1 drank it in,- if- U lipeeoluess' rapture, ! The world VM new to me, and T, had ueyer -.4 . ... .1 1. 1 . - T.A seen anything lute mis ai nome. jjuviw I have said, a day came when began to cease noting theiglories and the charms which the moon and the sun and the twilight : wrought upon the-river'aiaceUv another . day pame when I ceased alto cether to' note them. Then, if that sun set scene had been repeated, I' would have looked upon it without rapture, and would have commented upon it, in wardly,!: after this fashion : This sun means mat we are going, to have wind to-morrow; that floating log means that the river is JriBlhg,' small thanks to it; that slanting mark on tho water refers to a bluff reef which is going to kill somebody's steamboat , one of these nights, if it keeps on stretching out like that; tlose tumbling "boils" show a dissolving bar and a changing ohaunel there; the lines and circles iu the slick wate over vonder are a warninff. that that execrable place is shballng up' dan gerously;! that silver steak in theshodow Come ahead on Lof le forest is the "break " from a now afiag, alio; ne nos locaieu uimseu ui uw .vett beet place he could have found to asn ior((Bieamooais; tuai kuj, ujjuu hot, with a aiugle living branch, is not goiiig to last long, aud then how is a body ever going to. get through this blind place at night without the friendly old landmark? ' : No, the romance and the beauty were all gonejrom the river." All the value any feature 01 11 imu iot mo now who the amount of usefulness it could fur nish toward compassing the safe piloting of a steamboat. Since those days I have pitied doctors from my heart. What does the lively flush in a beauty's cheek ripples'above some deadly disease? Are not all her visible charms, sown linen with what are to "liirn Ihe signs and symbols of hidden decay? 'Does he ever see her beauty ftall, or, doesn't , he simply view her professionally, and com ment upon her nnwholeBytno condition all to himself ? And 1(dot he some; times wonder whether1 he "has gained most or lost most by learning his trade I Wnde by the British and American mixed dminisaion to Augustiuo 1 Mcuonaiu, a subject of Great Britain, but for Borne years a resident of Loiiisville, has been paid b jjthe Junited States government.. This claim was prougnt ior loase biw- tained in the burning of cotton during the late civil war, and was the second largest claim adjudicated by the late committeb. ' The claim was originally for 82,509,000. w Witnesses were ex amined, and the testimony covers 6,000 printed pages of record of the commis sion. .. : .... . ; This intelliKenoe, ' which wivs flashed over th wires from .Washington was Vather startling bit of news to quite a nnmbor of persous in and about this city. Iu 1864 Augustiftp Balph McDon ald, a British subject, made application in Washington, and received a promise of protection and the necessary permits from the Treasury department of the United States, authorising him to pur chase cotton in the insurrectionary States. He also secured an autograph letter from President Lioln to the offi cers of the army and navy,', directing them to assist him. He appeared to have fabulous wealth, and made enormous purchases of cotton in .Louisiana and Arkansas, then in insurrection against the government. Before he could re move his newly acquired property to market Congress, by a law, prohibited the transfer of cotton from within the Confederate lines. ; In January r, Feb ruary of 1805 General Osborne, of Illi nois, and his 'troops came upon some 7,000 or 8,000 bales of cotton belonging Mr. McDonald in Louisiana aud Arkan sas, over whioh the British flag was fly ing, and tmrued it. Thou the Confed erate soltliors iu turu got hold of Mr. McDonald's person, and,' ns tho story goes, made hiin pay $50,000 for his lib erty. , Mr. Angustmo Balph, McDonald and Crime. 1 One' does not have to go to the far West nor to the Pines to find squatt-ws, a New York paper tells us. Just below . . . the south line of Coaxal F.ark, and ia. .. the very heart of tho city, in a rocky lodge which is covered with a human population a large number bt squat ters. They have built their huta and shanties on the rocks, oomparatiwly ireo , , from domiciliary visitations of t health officers and policemen. Each, squatter has constructed his airy, chateau at the least possible expense to himself ; fur' tive plundei from lumber-yards and piles of dryrgobds boxes have furnished materials for the entire vuiagc v.. rocks. Perched up on these crags live onrious population. "They hang on the edge ot precipices like swallows under the eaves of a barn ; their nests are erowded all along the lodge like queer., parasites. The people themselves are indescribable. They nave no. pw the directory ; no street and number, no ; landlord, and no permanent abode. , They are like the grasshoppers which oomp in the hedges of a cold day, and . when the sun arises they flee away. - As might be expected, this colony ot , , the rooks is not a specially law-abiding one. The hand of the law is lightly felt upon them. Whatever people may think who live in brown-stone houses and pay.-, taxes, water-rates, and gas bills, these colonists cannot say that the wouu governed too much. Very likely there are decent and worthy people among the w squatters. The community, is not altogether bail. But tho police say that when Btolen goods or other plunder can be traced to the upper part of the island, they look ' among the houses on tho rocks. They do not always look iu vain. But in th irregular, ill-kept and squalid i,.w f vilWcui which cover tho lBdge, one may be sure to find the moral . diseases naturally at home with uirt ami 1 1 . ... I..', 1'.: lii.' 1 1. i... nf tlm innnest. and made a The engine b us pngieu anuwo. ,,.u"""u " " 1 , i- we slid over it like oil. ei.lnmns oLAiuarn lu -Qof tr -oiit ef the pipes, but it wo too laws, xue scape boat had "smelt" the bar in-good . way. lie should find that ho as not earnest; the1, f JauvVidges liat tadhi6)d wholly friendless. So I stood orounu and waitod to be asked where we were. But MrW,. plunged on serenely through the solid firmament of block cats that stood fbr, an atmosphere, and' hover 1 J,i' . month. ne. is proud. thoughtlfho would rathersend usall to milerom whero wo ought tolmye beeti, .wniTm tlan nut himself under ob-1 when'we finalljr tl &e uj)pec hand of from her bow suddonly disappeared, a great dead swell came rolling forward and swept alirad of Jier; lie careneetVfor over to larboard; and went tearing away inward the other shore as if she wore about scared to death, e We were destruction than put himself under ob-1 when' we finally tt ligations to me, because I m not yet I her again one of the salt of the earth, ana prm . !god to snub captains ami lord it over everytjiing dead and alivo in a steam- boat. I presently climbed up on the bench. I did not think itwas safe to go 'to sleep whilo the lunatie was on Wutck now(Wrf 1 mst-luive (rr o sleep of time, because the next thing, t wits' jwire of was 'the fact . that dnf was breaking,. Mr. W- Khp wd Mr. B. at ktho. wheel agitin. Si it was four o'ojock and all well but me; I felt liko a akinful of dry bones and tdl of , them trying to ache at once. ' " " Mr. If. asked iut what I had sUid ttp foe ' 1 confcsBcd that it was to do ' Mr. W. aWc'voleuy'tellhimwhorehe H took five mintttea tot the entire prcwwUrwirwM of the thing to filter ' 5nto Mr. B.'a ayntem, and then I judge nt filled him nearly up to the chin; be 1m tuuJ.m-i.a AvtatJirncni-rnind not much ok&fr&lM Mr4 " Well, taking you. by-aud-htfgn. vm do seem f 'Jri rftlt Mils it A than any creature I-evor saw b..fore. Durincr tho afternoon watch, Mr. JJ. asked mo if I knew how to run tho next few miles. I said 5 , t "V "Op inst.tljfetfsiiq'arjove the noint. ottsl3e hht 6nAMart,firora f. . - i. tt: ! 1 tho jowei enuoiiiiKK1"B .wuwy" I make a sqnare'croaslng and , ." That's all right I'll be back before you close up on the next point. n , But he wasn't' i lie was 'stOl! brio wtn.n T rnnndnd it and entered upon a Vint " Now don't you see the difference ? Tk wasn't ftiivthimr but a wind reef. The - - j o wind does tliat." ' Bo I see. ' But it is exactly like a bluff reef. How am I ever going to tell them apart 1" "I can't till yon. ill. is' an Instinct, $y-ahd-bye you will just naturally know one from the other, put you never, wui be able to explain why or how you know them apart." It turned out to be true. d The face of the water, in time, boeamo a wonderful dead language Running a Locomotive. ' " ' " If you could run an eugine-on this road you could on any otUfer road, could you not!" asked a reporter of a railroad ensruiecr. . , . " Yes, run the engine, but I couldn't make time. 1 '"Why notl" -: " """ ,li,! Because I wouldn't kuowt tka road. A stranger can't go on to a road he has never ruu over and make time till lio has learned the ins aud outs ,0 )Xf Didn't you notice howwo rnn when we came out of town? Well, we didn't run so fast after that at any time.. That was. our ' race ground.' Thore are spots on all roads where -you have to run. like thunder to make up for lost time at other places. When wo come up ' throe muo grade' we didn't go over ten or twelve miles an liour, so we had to niako it up at other placoa. IHd you never hear m conductor say sometimes when his train was late tnat he had a new Engineer 'who didn't know ttie read tnownghly I That'i all tlu-re is to it, In other rrspeote one engineer ia the same in principle as an other. Bnt thero can't be two of them next appeors m incmnau, .uu j - Uhvsical deadatlon. member' of the firm of . f , V wwxe - ft we heftr-l1 wme VO.f 01 JueinpniB, xeuu., uie n you ttWkfo UlO-IMtjiaktOJ.D.istrict . Coiut H. H. Leavitt presiding,' on the nine teenth day of December, 1869, praying to be adjudged a bankrupt, and offering taMirraider all his assets for the benefit of his creditors. He reports his lwbili ties at &177.380, and his assets conBjHt in a multitude 'of- claims against various parties iu the South, s,jie litigated, but all indorsed cither, " worthless or "doubtful.". On the schedule, chissed in tho firet category, was the following "Claim against General US- Everv 1 l,)t ruxntincr his wife to death. ; Ouoe VV(m,... a . ill1 trctttwl'rirt.a mother lilliag het dough-, was murdered in one of tho shanties on the rooks noar the "East river. . The( : j scanty details of this'last incident givo a vivid idea bf Wo ih' the eolony. . Tlw ( man, who was powerful enough to have taken care of himself when souer, v to one of 4 huU where auother man dwelt by himself. Asking shelter for. the night, be agreed to furnish a bottle of whisky for his entertoinmonii. w bargain was concluded, and tho , lar mln n i.iirht of it The host, as be says, woke up from his drunken sleep ucxt'mormngtotmdhiB guest horribly murdered and mangled on the floor of the shanty. This ia all the rest of the world knows about it 1 This single scene i a ,. i.la of life and death iu private side, and tho Identical claim men' the0(,OUy 0f tho rocks a community, tioned above was sold to Mr. .Willuim tlu.t Uvea in tho basest liealhvnism iu Wliits tobacco d"aler on Front street, glto( ie costliwt chnrchcO on the Cincinnati, who liftd had othW bnness ooutuient, and Iry which hundreds of tmniuihptions with Mr. McDonald, for i.i.u weekly roll luxuri ;20. The bankrupt appneu ior nis uis- ftnu1v 4,, i.(yir the GospeL. 1 entry! borne, of the United States army, and others, for the burning iu January or February, 1805, of from 7,000 to 8,000 bales of my. cotton iu Arkansas and Louisiana." An order was granted to sell the supposed worthless claims at book a book that was a .i.4'i- M.nriii iB,! secrets as wicas an uu.j, urmiLifj vn ",, clearly as if it uttered them with a voice. o fcw, when I had mastered the lan guage of this water, and had come to know every trifling feature that oormreu Mi irrnnt river m familiarly as I knew O . " . piece of river which I had aome misgiv rfhe letter, of the alphabet, I had made a ings about' I did not know Vat he was valuable acquisition. But I hail lost i.:js ki..-i k.kl,fc t imoW I omethimf. too. I had lost something ,. JM . ..l .. U t want'iravi ainnir. 1 wuicu cuutu ' would perform. getting prouder and prouder, for he had never left the boat in mysoie cuarge such a length of time U fore. I evengot to','ettitig"hcraud lotting the wheel ..t!.1 wliiln T vninclorionMlv turned mybacV, ah'l bpt U1sUt A Vtoed expanse of the rivei ' i turned .b- ...! lmmifiml a tune, a sort of to uioou. ia uio uuu restored to me while I lived. All the grace, the beauty, the poetry Jiftd gf pot 0 the blajtstio river I l' stil kop ini mind a celtain wonderful sunset which I witnessed wlu-n sUamboatiun . was new to me. Some is as docile ah Aim. and others iilst ntts up like thunder all thehtt.f , Bfflae of 'era will carry water as' steaty as a clockj others will t a lu avln.' it q and down like a sea-sick man. Home fire cany and some light; othera cat np all you fling in, and then 'florft wake anyntoam. '111 lake that engine we, came in with aud ruu her forever, just aa site is. The next man that comes after roe can't do any thing with her, until he fixes her M ho wanU her, and) it goes. He'll ewear the valves are act wrong', or anything, so ho can get a, chance to tinker at her.", charge, and, no objections being urged, he was discharged of his debts ou the ICth of March, 1809, and. tocktU usual oath on the following day. .The month of May, 1871, witness.! tho creation of the treaty between l'Jigland and me United States, nndcr which the mixed commission ou Biiush ,and American claims was organized. To this coinmia nion Mr. Aumnttino lhdph McDonald submitted a claim for identification in the sum of ?A 500,000. It as the some okl ohiim which Mr. While had pur chased fr6m the aswignee for $20, bnt which now appeared again in the hands of Mr. McDonaH. , Mr. McDonald, who hid disappeared from the city, pushed his claim diligently, and in Bei'ieniner, 1873, the award was made mission as stated done, fiivilizatiou iieems to have steppoii i over these outcasts. " Here and there an avenue "or a railway has been forced through the rocky barrier, aud the s colouistalnthe way have fled, howling at modem improvements. They have molted into the great luas ol crime and misery nobody kuows where. But, for the most part, the singular people on, unooteerned with the caws tua w others, and occupied with their goats, pigs, and doubtf id pursuit. H hi- singular anomaly-this unwwiui w..J on the verge of a high civilization. They are squatters 'of such ancient nsage that they seem to have gained a title? to their homestead Sometimes the lawful poe M.r ..f tlm rook finds the tenaivt ao by 'the com- mcvu ta dislodge that the cmiiu ' ' " ' Lraiust bint U not worth all H ormU. .Vtixy udifleruoco whicli I iw prodig- ionsly aduitrea m u.' anr emer pri "plloli. OuOfl I iBspectod rathel kmg, and when I faced to the front again my month auaoemy distance the tod hue. brightened into gold, through which a aoUUryi cWne, fliatingi black and' conspicuous. In one place long, slanting mark lay sparkling upon the water L in another tlie surfaoe was uroaen MM ' The sudden .dMkh oI " At tht V, . Xmrat A4ri. ' The troubles at tlie academy growing out of the treatment ef colored Cadet Baker by members) of the fourth elasi still continue. , Cadet tngineerGordon flLmde. of Annapolis, was ordert! dur ing drill. exercises to fence with the colored midshipman, and this be posi tively refused to do. The superuilcn. deut pf the academy thereupon ioiu young man h must obey orders or re man. trot evea thU failed, and Chiade jMJined to do either. He niMin told to consull hi People crowded out from the lower part of the city take refuge on the rock lik rats driven out by fire or flood. wum llinre- the fonrta i-y-. w u wor Duchesa of Oneida h cluichsl in the The Wter caUed newspaini, thongU w i,yticulari are K .in,,,,, ,4 told him given regardiag the chartx-tor 01 we -r- M , Boatheroer, malady which thus carried off - an lorn-1 , ... . ,lt.u utA Utato do Umthei- Hot. At a dinner party in "toW las! ' August, there were two aUtert preeent, one a widow who bed just emerged from her weed, the other not long married, whose hiwUnd had lately gone to India for a short term. A young banister present was deputed to take tlie widow into dinner. Unfortunately he wna 1 under the impression that his partner was the married lady whose busbf nl had jtt arrived hi ludia. Tho eunver- sjktlon bctwein them eommchoea iy me I..). Mtnarttri how Lot it WOS. Wdidyoane.w knowiori. , ... . . . 1 j . f.i,i w lost it uae of manv-tlntea as an opai. sw i. injry Ui young man wm riw. nwu n'J es . '. Isaidlth.UhtttmgLtUco f;tuo';,IoS,.la,trubg ruddy flush was falntoU wa, a amooth monU old,' vigoro". hJf. JJJ, " .. . iU-U tolum, and headded. with a cheer- veidenceto'lnim ""' ' ; ' ho? f SltJZox7ll suutthat wMOoyfml with grace.d cir- ing well..though totdly nvBWtl Jby lis tw w7. Illliiuii, .-But not so hot alhe plie nvenieneel Dash L Didn't I toll LandtogUnl faU. l'-rlth f,(jn A Oaae-Le.u juice nd a. a to .y,uVi husld ha. goiie.-- Tl.e ( ' vou th-t a man's got to know theriver My Mad wasg Mm . BJ V"J tU J,ore 0Q onr kft-wa. luU n. Dn.'he-died In this country, w u u b, t rrrUf .u , , hy.ichui to Wk wHUUeh tie Udy answer ! apft the afcttiW zi btfjsrsas l w,w owu front, h?,,,,,- ;v . -o wLd down with such ,a4dMrth.t it that fc-Ufrom bW Lotti Xih'ixJf W Wully ud fo, eighteen yan. Uppy yuth Ull lu. death, , , t . hvklMfi wv.hgcrttoBMii- - -r- j 1 1 fit; l v,! !! t. !l 1 US it 1 1 ? . i X:. ( ' 1 s- n -I 1 4 , 1
The Weekly Ansonian (Polkton, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 25, 1875, edition 1
1
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