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I U f FEARLESSLY THE EIGHT DEFEND IMPAETUJXTTHE-WE02fO-CONDEMN. LUME II. "; . S A 5 A ' i . t. POLKTON, ANSON CO., ; N. C, THURSDAY, MAY 20, 1875. NUMBER G. Old PuHfiAweHt. ' Old Muter Brown brought bit feral down. And Wat ace looked angry and red. "Go, seat you there now, Anthony Blair,, Along with ttejlrhhe " OhenAthony Blair, with a mortified air. nun tusneaa down on his breast Took hia penitent aeat by the maiden tweet . rut. - .... aum ne wjeo, or all, the beet nd Anthony Blair teemed whimDerinc thr. iu me rogue only made believe 5 , For he peeped at the girl with the beautiful ? curls, . ., And ogled them over his sleeve. DOWN Ilf A COAL-PIT, TnflKoftnrlead " to' great disasters, and it seemed but a trifle tome when, one November morning, a telegram was putinto 5 my friend . Willis' hands as we were preparing for a day's Bhooting. . His presence was demanded in London on some trust business, and he had im , mediately' to give up fell idea of sport. He begged me, however, to take Rover ,., and the keeper, and pursue my recrea- tion as if he were with rae. I was not eager to make a large bag ; so I deter . mined to discard the man, and take a long s ramble on the lonely hills behind , r Bradford, in the hope of picking up a stray woodcock," as well as a brace or two of grouse. Perhaps I was a little tired of partridges amongst the turnips. and wanted an excuse for a walk as much as anything. The day was somewhat B gloomy,' Torn wisps of dark cloud hur t ried over the hills at the back of my friend's house, but I did not mind , wetting; so started with Hover, my ,. ji'uuivd, wuu ixie&cu nuuut 111 as exuiia , rated a state as his master. Soon I . gained Baddon Fell, the highest point u in'the district, and, turned to look on Hhe tall chimaeys and smoky pall . of Bradford. Thence my course lay over hill and valley, succeeding one another " in gontie acclivities. Neither grouse, which, were very wild, nor woodcock, . fell to my gun.' At noon I rested, and 1 - ' 1 a . a - uws a eoupieoi piscuits, by way 01 lunch. Then on again f and 6n rising a slope, I i i ... . . . Doneiu a small scrjsB of brambles, spruce firs, and larch, with a holy or two inter ' mingled, surrounded by a dilapidated fence. It was about a hurfdred yards across, and none of the trees were more than ten feet high ; tut it was in a shel tered spot, and was just the place in - ; , which a woodcock would rest a short time after its flight. Rover divined my intention, and pushed on a few yards before me. No one was. in sight. A lew sheep dotted the face of the oppo site hilL , Rain had begun to fall, and 4 i 1 uie wnoie lantlflc&rifl van rheerlpna tn a V i degree. I olimbed the slight fence, and j lollowed Rover into the brushwood. A f( -.dozen steps, and I suddenly felt myself slip forward. I caught the stem of a larch, and, to my horror, glided down, JL with a crashing of sticks and a howl from ' . Uin trt-riflail I might be for a moment or two, through bush and, WTnyNraTBh awful pinna.'' tiiisariteared into dark- ;, wiiit boshes and earth rattled over me for another few seconds. To this iraooeeded.e crash and a stunning blow, and I knew no more. After what seemed an age, I came to myself, weaJElndaorely numbed; every limb tching, and my Bead splitting with agony, but without any broken bones, discovered nea " ,uma BP a. The fact of my having slid down . . j.Kia hail npnvinnnnu i i-w on the mass 01 mi u saved ray life, births disentangling myself from the boshos and briers which had almost smutuereu me, w y some Uttle tim. Blowiy reoouecucm re turned with tin flow If blood in ita old channels, and after having been frown, .. it bv the shock, It was pitch j.a .ml awful snence reigned around. was evidently the hour of md soon it, too, faded out At ftK I gathered iirjksenaes, anu mi or an instant the vast caverns that seemed to yawn on every aide around me were lit up, and Ioold,iatch a glimpse" 6f huge buttresses reaching up on high like the arms of Atlas. The roof I could not see, owing to the mo mentaiinees of the flash, but the noibe was appalling. The explosion- echoed and reechoed round the dark vault, and then fled away in muttering thunders into the unkdown darkness, seeming to be caught up, and buffeted between the buttresses, and, for; several moments after these repercussions of sound had ceased, to linger like the recurring un dertones of some morfttrous passing bell. I am not superstitious, but it seemed just as well not to be ringing my own knell; so I determined to waste no more powder in utterly futile attempts to make somebody hear. A low moan of pain , at my side now made me start; but on calling to Rover, I found it proceeded from hirn He had fallen with me, but, less fortunate as I found on scrambling to where the moans, proceeded from had broken his back in the descent. It was piteous to feel the poor animal licking my hand, and to know that he was powerless to drag him self a yard. Even in the upper world there would have been no cure for him, and sorry as I was to lose his companion ship in the utter darkness which envel oped me, I knew it was more humane to put an end to his safferintrs. There was agony in the thought, but what could be done ? Immediately, the faithful crea ture was no more, and now I was left ab solutely without a friend in the bowels of the earth. I in a measure encouraged myself, however, by thinking that after dinner had waited an hour, Mrs. Willis would probably become alarmed, and send out to scour the neighborhood. But who would dream of looking for me in a de serted coal pit t s and who could track my steps over the barren moors, to the point where the earth subsided under me t And then once more hope awoke strong and irrepressible within me. - Being greatly exhausted, I could no longer resist sleep, and when'I woke and struck a fuse, I found it was again six o'clock six A. 11., I supposed, of tho day after my. accident. Shortly after, the watch stopped," and I was for the future obliged to guess at the lapse of time, as the watch key had been left on my dress ing table at home. Energy returned after my slumber, and, together with a burning thirst, drove me to leave the mouth of the pit, and search for water. I left my gun and pocketbook behind me, having first scrawled a few words on a page of it, in case rescuers should descend in my ab sence. I walked on boldly from the mouth, where, high above, the circular patch of sky was once more appearing with dawn, and affording me a ray of hope. When fairly in the darkness, I stopped to listen, and the silence was awful Again I pressed on through to speak, of the mine, and turned to one side, where the roof again rose. This I supposed to be the passage leading to the abandoned working from the main adit of the mine..' On the same level and dusty floor, I here kicked something which sounded metallic, and picked up what I made out by feeling to be an old safety lamp. The padlock was still on ita side, and the ring at the top was not eaten away or rendered less easy in its play by rust. Clearly, the pit had not been many yeais abandoned. And then a brilliant thought struck me. With hands trembling from excitement, I opened my pocket-knife, 'and forced off the little padlock with '. some little trouble. Thel I drew out my fuse-box, scarcely daring to allow to myself that there might be sufficient oil left in the lamp to admit of my obtaining a light, if it was but for a short time. There was but on.e fuse left. All my hopes, almost my existence, seemed centered on it At length I plucked up courage enough to try to strikeit. It fizzed for a mo ment, and then went irrecoverably out, dashing all my expectations to the ground, and leaving me once more in utter dark ness, both outwardly and in my heart. Worse still, as I turned the lamp I felt the precious drops of oil pouring over my fingers. I would then have willingly given all I possessed for another match. After this disappointment, I -once more began to despair; and yet, deter mining not to give in without another great struggle, ft went on, blindly hop ing to light upon some clew which might perchance lead me to a working still actively prosecuted, for I knew that much of the district underlying the hills over which I had wandered was honey combed by the operations of the col liers. At all events, this was my only chance, and it seemed well to keep up hope to the last. All at once, I fell over a hard projection, and on stooping down, found it was an iron chair yet in titu. Though the rails and transoms had been removed, here was a discovery (though I would not build too much on it) which kindloj hopo, and I folt iu front uf U till I kicked another, and then another. These successive chain showed" that I was on a track, at all events, along which I could hasten without constant fear of running against the walls of the pit, and which, so long as I was. careful to keep touohing these chairs, might lead me to a frequented part of the pit. The most intense listening disclosed no sound. It was quite possible, I thought, if I purr sued this track, that it ought bring me to a level entrance into the pit I must have rambled on for an hour, pursuing my monotonous task of kicking these iron chairs, which regularly succeeded each other at intervals of four yards, till, to my great joy, I reached a rail fixed on the chairs; and a few yards fur ther, finding the rail continuous, I began to feel certain that I was on the right mode of escape. Taking the last tion not to shoot again on a Yorkshire moor were in danger of being shaken by the hospitable invitations of Willis, my nightly dreams would soon force me to abideby my vow. ' i ; v .... The Princess Salm-Sarm, in 'her " Recollections of Me'xioo," says : The French officers treated ' the Mexicans with the utmost insolence and contempt. Gentlemen whom they met on the street were insulted and maltreated; and the ladies dared sot venture - into the street from fear of being subjected to like indignities. Their rapacity was un limited, and . their conduct, when they were on any military expedition, equaled in horrors everything the old historians have recorded. Wholesale butcheries, the execution of innocent persons, and the plundering and burning of houses, were not the worst of their crimes. Their treatment of women, and too, in the presence of their friends and parents, was so bestial that the unvar nished facte would not be believed. Their name will be forever held in exe oration in Mexico, and their recent dis- oomforture by the CJermans has, i am sure, rejoiced ever true- Mexican heart 4 Bazaine carried himself in Mexico as though he were4he emperor, and Maxi millian only his under-strapper. Every' body trembled before him, and even the French despised as well as feared him at least every man of them did who possessed a spark of honor. Hia brutality, arroganoe, and cruelty, are well known to the world; not so, however, his treason and intrigues against Maximilian, whom he. wished to compel to abdicate, because that better suited the policy of Napoleon III. He even furnished the Liberals with muni tions, and surrendered to" them cities; yes, he even went so far as to offer to KXPEBIMKXTA L SrBGKBY. The power of the lower forms of ani mal life to withstand mutilation, says Oxe.SeientiJIe American, is well known. Oat an angle worm in two, and the tail end will reproduce the head and the head a tail Other worms may be cut into manv vieoea ana each fragment win straightway develop complete worm. A volyp will endure decapitation a score of times, a new head growing on every time. In like manner, the stomach of one of these creatures is oapable of de veloping all the other parts. Still lower in the scale, the normal method of mul tiplication is by division, and elementary oells of more highly differentiated, or ganisms seem to retain more- or less of the primitive character. ' By, virtue of this inhentanoe, spiders reproduoe then lost limbs and crabs their claws. In the higher forms of life, the power dimin ishes so far as complex organs are in volved; still it is retained to a much greater degree than is commonly sup posed. 1. , - Full out hair or a finger nau, and it will grow again. Remove a portion of the skin and it will be renewed, unless the wound is too broad or the life of the surrounding parts too feeble. Everrr then it is possible to transplant to the denuded surfaoe minute particles of skin from other parts, and in i short time these epidermic islands will extend their borders until the wound is covered and the sore heals with scarcely a soar. In like manner a severed finger may be made to grow' together again, and an amputated noae built up in form with live flesh from the cheek. Iu such cases muscular fibers as well as skin ore restored or reunited by inter nal growth. This may be observed also where a deep out is healed. It has been found, too, that the muscular tissues A tIBEAT MlSTEBTt rnirranfler the nanitnl to Porflrio Diaz. which ignominious proposition was re- .oh perform involuntary motions in fused. Porflrio Diaz, who is a man of tie. interior of the body possess the same honor and incapable of telling a false hood, told Prinoe Solm-Balm this him self. . ... I have said that Bazaine was low and avaricious. -To justify this accusation I have only to cite what was well known to everybody in Mexico There was nothing he would not st(lM to to enrich himself. Among other things, he hod in the name of others, of coursetwo stores in the city, the one a grocery, the othor a draper house, in which were sold French stuffs almost exclusively. ' In this manner he grew rich very rapidly, for he found means to avoid paying any transportation or duty. In order to account for his rapidly- increasing wealth, or . rather to oonoeal the means by which it was acquired, he gave out that the Mexican lady whom he married was very rich. This was en tirely false; the., girl he married, and who is now his wife, was poor. power of self-restoration. .It is this re cuperative faculty which , enables, the cattle of Abyssinia to supply their bar barous owners with steaks without losing their lives. The hungry savage throws his ox upon the ground, makes a cross cut in the skin of 'the flank, lifts the skin and outs out atolyuik of beef for his dinner, replaces thS skin, and drives on rejoicing, trusting to internal growth to restore the mutilated part to health and soundness. . In every wound of the skin or muscle, nerves Are severed. The restoration of the functions of feeling and motion, with the progressive healing of the wound, shows that the nerves are like wise capable of reparation. The renewal of nerve connection has been watched in eases where, as is sometimes neoes- A iwiwk Ckml 0Neeta tmrw 40 Certeta int h ffte JTystrH! JHnppr: A few weeks ago there arrived in New - York city from New Orleans, the World says, a dapper little Frenchman named ... w . . a? Paul Uagner. ne nan oeen a practicing chemist in New Orleans, and claimed to be the discoverer of a wonderful process by whioh flax or cotton fiber oould be converted into silk, or into a texture so nearly like silk as to defy all ordinary inspection and tests. The results of this process of whioh the Frenchman alone had the secret had already been ex hibited by sample to a limited circle of manufacturers and experts at the ooutn. So thorough and deceptive was the change whioh it accomplished that the majority of such persons could only im agine a fraud. They smiled with in-. credulity at the' assumption that the specimens submitted to them by the Frenchman were other than genuine silk, which, they insisted, he must liave substituted adroitly fo the flax and cot ton yarns1 that he professed to have transformed. But Paul Magner was a chemist of some reputation. He claimed that he had devoted long, patient months to the analysis of the various fibers. In the oocoou of the silkworm , he had identified certain elements which were wanting in the fibers of the flax and ootton plants. These elements, chemi cally obtained, he claimed to be able to apply to the latter products in suon man ner that they should be converted into an artioie whioh must be regarded as silk in all that the name implies. Parcels of ootton and flax yarns, accurately weighed, distinctively marked and other- wise identified, haa been possea into ms laboratory by the dozen, , and within fifty' minutes he had returned corre sponding ones of lustrous silk t The lat ter had, even been anaiyzeu ty expeis chemists, and certified not to' be real silk, but to be veritable cottou and flax yarns aforesaid. Magner made arrangements wnn a silk house at Patorson, N. J. A quantity of chemicals, prepared for the transmu tation of ootton, flax, etc, into silk, was soon in readiuees, A small parcel bf what seemed light sand, but whkh I well I draught of water which remained, I . . ... "r 1- 11 1 1 1 ! - - knew was ury ooal dust, which invaria bly carpets a pit, and extends up to the ankles of any one walking in it At length I heard the pleasant sound of water trickling down, and immediately I was on the edge of a rill, at which I had a delicious and refreshing draught I I j lor some time by the rill, and left it invigorated, and onoe more, strange to say, hopeful. . .4 f How to find my way back was now my difficulty. Hunger admits of no parley made a mental vow not to lie down, for I felt I should never rise again if I did. Fortunately the end was at hand. Was I dreaming, or out of the body in Hades f Did a dull knocking strike upon my ears, or was it the labored thud of my heart's slow beating that I heard t I shook .off fancies for a moment, and realized as I stood there, leaning against the wall, that repeated blows, smothered by distance, were being struck before me. The knocking continued; two or three ing, and I was now resolved to appease I blowsjbing given, and then 1 momentary fore seemed halt I recognize- "TJJHi0 e0"16 , ' dark, and awf ; High np, I co I sky, but it w J JwiliRht. Wl my appetite on what had before so revolting, the flesh of poor Rover. StaggoriBg back to th'b fot where he lay, th' re was a hurried rush past me of an army of small animals. The truth flashed upon me. Poor Rover's body was being 'gnawed to pieoes and de voured by rats. Strength of mind almost again forsook me. These frightful creatures, I thought, were waiting in the gloom, to pick my as fm t l r : "077. s-l,l nmin me that n , In ih7shaft orW disused bones as welL Though tub were a dis- SI tTtUt too, oueTLted in used working the presence of raU, I felt ' . TaUfT over the wsureo, pomveu tmv uun mere wrn. act ,ou, r. "L,- -isfxtreme- worked portions of the mine at no great wE rem! disUnceTlf they did not poster up 13 ,rrJ,'nt!onedUoseoldaliafUto courage enough to overwhelm me by T (had loldm. that numbers, I might yet be saved. Now I ms 1 vw ;"7 , M -.li, nUnt. took np my gun as a protection, and re- r , i T. v Ji;l tWm: or eomsrough solving to give up what I had previously lamps. edevrt tw,,, regarded as a trefcror. of inestimable trU me, ..Iguana uin""- . ' i. Hu, rill of runnin water. nmrtartKl I iA 01 r - . . . ; I lOntiin Ut be thrown away! ' .att w'" i e tna- s- k tLa rinrnr ue sw 1 -- onM'.wT" 7-vbhi to strike boldly into an opposite work ing, and take my chance. .' My flask was full of water, and with it I might sup port life for a couple of days, if the worst came to the worst I tightened my waistband plan to appease the picks? and thankfully strove to penetrate to them, but my knees would no longer support me; I staggered on, and fell prostrate. Still, ft seemed so awful ft death to die within reach of uccor, that I shouted as loud as I could, and was en tranced when the knocking' ceased, as though the oolliers were listening. The revulsion of hope was too much ; my faculties all beoama dim and hasyj I fired off in succession the two barrels of my gun. My next recollection is that of ft knot ef oolliers, in semi-nudity, who had just left their workings, and come through the brattice which divided their portion of the pit from the disused part, and were standing round with their tafety They had fled, they afterwards at first, tli Inking an explosion taken place in the abandoned A Ieulter'i Uld.'y Ten years ago Charles Windsor was cashier of the Mercantile Bonk, New York. He became ft defaulter to that institution to the amount of $160,000, and fled to Europe, where, it is believed, he still remains. - Previous to his defal cation and flight he lived at Faotoryville, owning and occupying premises now the property of Mr. Albert Bodirie, and which for considerable of the inter vening time have been unoccupied. Reoeutly Mr. Bodine made, arrange i menta to have the place put in order for tenant, and while three men were at work clearing out ft cesspool they came upon ft large amount of gold coin, vari ously stated at from $20,000 to $30,000, which is doubtless part of the $160,000 taken by Windsor from the bank and placed by him in the cesspool for safe keeping until such time as he might have the opportunity to secure it The matter was kept quiet until the bank officers were informed of the discovery, and have, it is understood, made arrage menU to claim the gold, although there is some doubt about their ability to identify it J A good old minister of ft New Eng land Baptist church was agreeably surprised by the Intelligence from one of sary, a section of ft large nerve has been cut out In a couple of months after the nerve Is cut, ft gray lump appears on one extremity of the ' severed nerve, Growth proceeds towards the opposite nerve end until ft hew connection is made, at first more slender than the original; but by degrees the nerveele- menta increase in size and whiteness, uutiL in from four to six months, the nervous cord is fully restored. The process, it is said, goes on even when two inohes of nerve haa been excised. About a dozen years ago it was demon strated that cartilage, formerly supposed to be incapable of renovation, was also subject to the same laws. The cartila ginous tissue of dogs and rabbits was divided, and at the end of two months was found to be completely restored. Similarly the tendons by whioh muscles' are attached to bones are able to reunite when severed or torn out: a fortunate circumstance for a prominent clergyman of this city, whose Undo achiuu suddenly snapped while walking along the street one dav last winter, thus making his foot temporarily useless. Thanks, however, to the gradual reunion of the tendon, the crippled limb will in time be be restored to usefulness. Still more remarkable is the restorm tion of bones, and even the development of bones in abnormal positions by the transplanting of ths periosteum, the membrane surrounding bony structures flax yarn jpaa operated on; woven into ribbon by' the machinery; enme out as frlossv as the purest silk. All ooncerned were in eostacies. " There's minions 111 it," was the unanimous cry, and it was thereupon baptised, ftftd it was to bo known in commeroe by the name oi loiene. . But now comes ft most singular story from Paterson. Suddenly thexrench- man disappeared. The friends of Mag ner could not account for his absence. The proprietor of the factoty still main tains perfect faith in the x rencuman s . l A. S It . MAM . process,, aud im, integrity uiw uu himself. He thinks mat we lawervnw worried and overwrought, perhaps be came entirely crazy, and fled to Europe to escape imaginary evils. A box of ribbons, woven from common flax yaru, but brilliant as from the looms of Lyoua, remains at his offtoe to testify to what might have been. . ' " Th f rejiM. It is singular,' says the Danbury Xaci , the influence stovepipe baa upon a married man. There is nothing in this world he respects so much. A passing load of furui.ure may, in its general ap pearance, be so grotesque as to call forth the merriment of tne thoughtless young, but if there is piece of stovepipe in it no larger than a hat, he will not laugh. We don't oars who the man is, how he has been brought up, what is his posi tion, wealth or influence, there is that about ft length of stovepipe which lakes hold upon his very soul with ft force that he is helpless to resist And the mar ried man who can stand within reaching distance) of ft stovepipe without feeling his heart throb, his hands clinch, his hair raise, and his throat grow dry apd husky, is an anomaly which does not exist Stovepipe has only one in gredient, ftn4 that is contrariness. It is the most perverse article in existence. Ik has dons mors to create heartache. AtntJtbnr lives, break up homes, and . mm f ft mti,md " MTLus mt blood, and cravings or hunger, wnicn 1 nau le.rneu j nit 1 to "L Tht I U-o from the Red Indions-nd dipping , a, attain ml full powsri to give iu it was w lo whici Ud fallen dusu-- by Inch Xrwi VTimmP wbrrs I was. : to "T :- 1. the direction a finger of my kid glove in the flask, by dint of chewing itmade sorry meal, but yet on that greatly relieved my pangs, and opened th salivary glands to my wonderful ranhmBt My new track led U flx of very uneven nature, and over which th roof could be fcjt I eonrlttilM that this was rather ft lot- akea working than ft UwrovglJare, so his flock that . five individuals had ex- workings; and it was long before th pressed ft desire on thenext funday to I " butty could persusda any of them have vlA baptismal rit performed upon to follow him. But when they onoe saw my deplorable condition, agonised with hunger and thirst, grimy from head to font with coal dust, thin and cadaverous with anxiety, no sisters of charity could have been more tender in their mlnlstrft- Uons, Harm tea ana bread la spar morwls were given me; and then I was raised, and carried to th working, put in wagon, and drawn by on of tit plf horses to th pit-head. Never shall I forget ths delight of being brought np to " lnk,M and one mors feeling th Mivnnd air of heaven Mow on my hag gard cbsfkai And If any day my rssolu- them. Formerly, in cm of ft badly article together. Th other domestic shattered or diMed bone, th amputa- screwdriver pl 1 in tion of th. limb was th only resource, th presenos of ft stovepipe, and the Now th skillful surgeon excavates th fsmUy hammer Just pawa in th dust ,!.,.! narts: and in ft few months th nd weeps. W don t oar bow much themselves. After it performance, how- ..V.u'j. vmm never lost its form, r- Pbs ftr taken to remember and keep ever, h was somewhat, chagrined that , ' lu anj regain ita strength, in order th links, they will not com only on of th flv joined th society of Attempt have also bora mad to graft together ft they cam apart This U which hs was pastor. hmliiX u, u, place of diseased ones, not ft Jok,'thUU tot exaggeration; it U A fw Sundays aftr th same worthy tet fallen short of perfect pimply ths) solemn, heaven-born truth. at. - 1-1 111 I ITS - a. .11 a.-: ft. M I al. I elder waited on him with th bUdli- genc that ten mors desired immersion. " And how many of them will join ths society I" queried th minuter. "Two, I regret lo say, are a1! we sail depend on, was th elder's reply, ' " Very well, ' said tit good old man, " yon may as well inform ths othrr sight that this churvh doesn't tsUi In weak suooess. It may be Interesting to know that th nfiVl of this country consumed last vear1 l,3rt,838 pounds of ftrsenk, 780, 737 pounds of camphor, 116,053 poufids of lalsp. 36,203 pounds of ipecac, 397,213 pounds of cux vomica, and $3W,399 worth of vacciu vlin all of whkU iu parted. It w appear unduly excited In this mat let w ar sorry for It, but w cannot help it W cannot writ upon th sub ject at all withonj Ming th blood tingU at our very fingers ud. mm 111 I I I . HiuC th Ic has tllwkiipeeml from Great HoutU bay, L. L, it is tAuud that about hall th o rulers left on the beds urit)g th wUiWr sve dead. , 1 I it M i 1 1 if r
The Weekly Ansonian (Polkton, N.C.)
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May 20, 1875, edition 1
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