Newspapers / The Weekly Ansonian (Polkton, … / June 1, 1875, edition 1 / Page 1
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". '' -.-' - "V . t F -- ' . - 1 ' 1 1 1 " -' ii 1.IH.I hi P" .. ii. i .i .hi .I,,,,,, , i - . i ( m i ii mi 11111 ""--' FEARLESSLY THE BIGHT DEFEND IMPARTIALLY THE WRONG CONDEMN. if- YQLUMMI,-- i The Week. Lo, Monday ia the ' weaning day," i,: A iU goad house wires knew, Memorable of dinner hashed i Ana clothee as white as snow; And Tuesday ia the " ironing day," Hid oold, or fog, or beat j And Wednesday ia the "sewing day, To see the clothes are neat ; And Thursday ia a leisure day, And Friday, brooms begin .To swdlp away the household dirt, ' 'Fore Sunday's ushered ln - -Aud Saturday Jfe .! baking day," Pies, puddings, "oakes and bread, " And then, the weary week is done ! And wemay go to bed ! GETTING A LIFT. .. . . Ana ; wha ' kem, Marjory, by that time somebody may gie us a lift." . ' Marjory shook her pretty head. : She had not just now her lover's hopeful ness; Dut sue smiled, as shealways did. ui. uis oooion accent, glancing np archly, and the shake of the head was not very , uiaoouraging. ' , Ihe , twq were standing before' that mossy little cottage at the corner of fhe "lane, jusi where the sweeping shadows of the great elm flickered over it This cottage ;' was . Marjory's day-dream tiny, cozy, flower-clad day-dream, with . a good, substantial wall and a vine-cdv- wd .hedge about it. - In thai distant In , ture when, she and Adam should be fore- nandeai enough to wed, she liked to faney herself mistress of this pretty cot tage, going iu and out of , fhe sunny porch, or waiting for Adam of a summer evening down at the little gate under ', the elm. The plaoe belonged to Sauire Aoton upon the hill; buMbe squire was away ana the place unoccupied, and Marjory was at full liberty, therefore, to tenant it with a dream. She never wass ed the cozy little nest without a longing Kiuuce uutuerwara. The ft by that time "" of which Adam spoke was long in coming, and to Mar " . Jorv it seemed somehow thia . - iwiuor vu man ever. Adam,vtha sturdy young Scotsman, V, .. 110 nse for Jlespair; in this new country, ,witu Hs fertile soil and sun . shine He' was a gardener known in all - the region for his skill and thrift, and he trusted to shape the future with his own -strong -hands.. Yet to-be owner of a r Pretty !Uvce like that, with its low eaves, " Its tidy shell-bordered path, "arid its elm buhuuw was a -thing worth dreaming about, and he let Marjory have her i pretty, dream. . .' . i J '..ttalikothe wee bit place at . liame, said Adam, eyeing it with a lin- l" Well, well, go your ways, AdamH raid fifa-jory.3 "It's long past noon, and I've to stop down the lano with this basket for.Widow Oray." s , And Adnm,' lifting the basket over the Btilo: foe Jior, went his' wny, whistling thoughtfully. . Slowly Marjory, passed up tho lane with her basket, summer odors about ner, ana sjSRnojSoms evervwhnrn bholl-like' petals iu "a ' snow-faJL not whiter nor sweat er than the clean linen she was carrvintr uiuuk ,jor juarjory was i capaj jwork-wyuiaii,' if she did dream f over her takkj sow and than, ' r ' rra ... a, '- icuuou irum tne 1. widowagaftlen with; a goodly freight of vegetables for the houseful of youngsters T vaom tne young girl was purveyor, Ij-aud th afternoon! shodnwa m ' - " " evtiHiu' ening as patient ' went hor way up the lane once mi She paused a moment at the stile t rest. Over the fenmmer fields a soft. J sunlight fell; we meadows were gol in; a veil of im- palpable mint kun i the drowsy air. iaarjory lingered, with her red hood thrown back over her shoulders, looking wismuiy yet wearily at the soene. Her eye wandered to the lulls lying afar voff. 'v'"" u Buaiuiuiug auouow neck i , mg theia. How. Olnnt thoy seemed, Te tpw twfcr and fadTBkr I She had ever visitod thorn", thoughStpy seemed "i near. All her life had lainTfcjng the beaten track o household wuAthe elder awrpatleitlyjeftrin0 for the old folks aniflM little ne,' f i Never, Jmr Mmembranoe, had Ure happened td Marjory such a longing for a Holiday, such a weariness of the okl famfliar duHea, h 'noir, wh, MttinJ "y "u ixtnu nanaev ana taaaea tpoa ma Wf, ana sinking hor eyw with her hand, looked down the winding road. It was aU so balnty, so luring, and quiet, y w and ther alid(nmr wih hia rake on liis shouldef plfkliea lomeward, nod J ding to OJt m h pasted, or creaking f farm wagom, with its sleepy oxen, toiled I up the rise; and pnweotly there rose a tutdit aloud of dust a lillls distance off, and throngn it earns the twinkling of rml-polaJslnW wheels a pretty 4,M floi. aad a yonsg-gsnUe. ariingf Mrjr.ry wonderwd how -flld frl to be aWMnlntf nt l" road 1A Ihat, with noardam q earry. MdnvailUtllllUtpeii, AiUulaia. ment oouldshe believe it I that pretty equipage paused in the road, that swift little pony stood stamping impatiently. t ana a pleasant voioe said : "Shall I give you a lift t" Marjory looked at the questioner, doubtful if she were not really dream uig. j.uer sat tne vision spruoe, smiling, and holding out its gloved nan as to help her ia with her basket. Marjory felt herself dusty and untidy in the contrast This might be the young squire, who was coming home to live, she had heard; but she .smiled a shy smile as she found herself actually lifted to the vacant seat,- and the young man thought he had never seen anything quite so bright and summer-like as that smile. He wondered if all country girls were liKe this, with such beaming -eyes and sun-tinted cheeks; and as they rode aiong ne . chatted , pleasantly, just : to evoke that smile again. How fresh and unoontaminated and full of rare sweet ness might not such a irirl be. brought up in the Voods, and breathing in their clean clear air f He was tired o( city people, uity people, both men and women, were so conventional impossi ble to do anything out of the habitual routine in the city. Now a man ought to do some good in the world. He had often thought it his duty to strike, out in a new path, and break through old usages. All the men of his family had marnea fashionable Women; they had wealth, they had position; but not one of them had a smile like that. Now a bright cheery hearth, with a pleasant face beside it that, might incite a man to do something worth while with his hie. Such a girl as this, now-' Marjory, sitting by hia side, blushed a she rode along, seeing all the homely familiar things from a grand distance: and fancying herself a lady riding into town with a gay gallant beside her. What is the prettiest place here about I" asked the squire, rousing from ms reverie. And Marjory told him of the little cottage under the elm that was the prettiest plaoe of all. So they rode along till they came in sight of the grand house-on the hill a big brown housowith a great carriage way and a row of tall poplars. Near the south gate stood the conversatorv and hot-houses. The class doors were onen. The scent of, rare exotics floated on the air, minglod with the earthly odor of tne garden mold. The sun was setting Kil.l 41 1 n i vcjuiiu uie , uouiars, nusauiff every At.? . mmg wim rose-ooior. S . ;,. ' Prettier than this ? " asked the squire. " How would you like to live here ?" r ..... , Ah, to live in a place like- this, with a gardener to work for you, and to bow to the dust, as he brought you a bouquet of thoso wonderful flowers I Marjory did not answer Immediately, for at that moment a man in a tajr-red straw liat. nt work iu the beds, lifted up his heated face, and touched that'raggod hafto the squire. His eye lit up when ho saw Marjory. It was Adam. ,. "Thank ye, Bquire. for fiieinc tlin lassie a lift,' he said, coming forward. " I'll e'en tak' the basket, and walk tho rest o the way wi' her." The young squire woke up.r What strange distinctions there are in life, to be sure. Here was a girl whom he had actually bean contemplating in the light of a wife. In his musing he had dressed her like a queen, and had seen her, sweep gracefully in at the wide portal of hia mansion. But on the thrashold of that door her own familiar friend, it Beemed, must pause, humble and hatless. He could not make a plaoe for Adam ; he pould not imagine Adam in a drawing room. Adam's sturdy bools and brawny figure were not exactlVla stuff that dreams were made of. And, as I have said, the squire woke up. " We have had a very pleasant ride," he said, as, setting Marjory and her Dasket down, he bowed and drove ou to the stable. And as he went he thought that it, was all woll enough to tan pimosopny and dream poetry, but wnen things came to the practical tost. yon must give day-dreams the go-bv. uut wnen Marjory s wedding day came at hut, and tho little cottage was ncrs oy uu own gut. it must have, bee gratifying to him 1-r hairni U -J- T t Jis t ullllled her div-dreams at least, if no Its owu.4 iu1 gfylu'ihor alift. - A HousauOLO WOaww Stop your nniae I Shut up this minute ! Til box rant ears I Hold your tongue I Lot me bet Get out! Behave yourself I I won't! You shall ! f Nfcvor mind! YonH etch it I Put away those things! You'll kill yourself Mind your own business I I'll teU ma !. Yon mean thing I There, I told you so! I did I I will have it! Oh, look -what yon bare done! Twaa you! Won'lyea eaVi ik though I It's my house l Who's afraid f you I, Get out of thli room directly t ' Do you W ms! , pear me, I bevel did suah 1 thing la (A toy bora days, ' ', Bmrm m Jim f'.. The Detroit jFVea iVeat judge haa been after a hackman. Here is the scene in court: "Your name is is what I" .'asked the court. " Davey, sir Oeorge Davey. " , ." And you work at -what " 'Drive hack." ; . ; "Ah ha 1" smiled his honor, acquir ing sudden interest; " this is worth twenty dollars to me. You are one of those men who stand on the edge of the walk at the depots and shout 'Hail' at people." , , . "I have to git passengers, sir."- " Don't boss me back, Mr. Davey I know all about you ! Only the other day, as I returned from a May-day party in the country, there were one million five hundred and sixty-five thousand three hundred and. ninety-two of you on the curbstone, and every one of you yelled "Hax at me. One seized my sachel, another grabbed at my coat, and another pulled me backward by the coat tails. I believe you are that man 1" " Deed, sir, I haint,'.' " Well, it's barely possible that I 'am mistaken; butJiere'sa chargo that yon were lying ou the walk drunk." "I wasn't, sir; I was sitting up along side a house." , - . , . "That's too fine a point to argue Were you drunk f " "Only sprung, sir; only a little sprung." "That's just as bad in the sight of the law, and I ougha to fine you $700. " " Grashus I but I could never pay that !" . " No; my objeet would be to keep you in prisoi all your diys." 'r' Oh, let up on a felle;" pleaded the pnsoner. " This ia the first time, and it shall be fte last. I've a large family, sir, and they need my waires to tret their bread. " ; . His honor took a long time to thihkt and then replied: . " It's wrong to let you off. The citi zens will condemn me, and the news papers will blow at me, but Pbelieye I'll give you a show. " You may-go, but I shall keep watch of you. You must mend your ways riarht off. Instead nf yelling 1 Hax !' at a man, do you smile, and softly whisper: 'Sir, can I have the pleasure of eonveying you to some des ignated point V . Promise me this J" ihe pnsoner promised, and ftl. lowed to disappear, limping sadly with a sore heel. HealtH of Punilm in. th M..UmJ. th Unite htaU; Tlie following is a summary of the re- suit of the investigation in regard tothe health of pupils in public schools, read by Dr. D. P. Linaoln before the Ameri- can Hooial Science Convention : xma. echool-work, if performed in an unsuitable atmosphere, is peculiarly productive of nervous fatigue, irritability and exhaustion. - ? Second. By "unsuitable" is chiefly meant " close " air, or air that is hot enough to flush the face or cold enough to chill the feet, or that is " burnt " or lniected with noxious fumes of sulphur or carbonic oxide... r Third. Very few schools are auita free from these faults.. F ourth. Anxiety and stress of mind de. pendent mostly upon needlessformalities in discipline, or unwise appeals to ambi tion, are capable of doing vast harm. It is hard to sav how mnrh i .nl,.ti done; but a strong sentiment airaint eucn ljuuicious methods is observed to i sTnVruof teach- i. 1.. . . .... . Fifth. The amount of studv rennlri t..- -L . . - - 1 ww not oi ten been found so irreat wouia norm sauoiara whose health is otherwise well cared for. . , ' Sixth. Teachers who neglect exerols and the rules of health seem to be almost oertoin to become sickly or to " break down.- wvenwu Uym nasties are peculiarly neeaea oy gins in large ciUea, but with the pseweut fashion of dress gymoastica n uupiwuoauie i or larger girls. Eighth. The health of rirls at th- mi riod of ih6 deyehmment al thatsMi.trn; al fuVt4on.ugh,to t watched over witu unusftal oare by persons poaaesaed of tact, good judgment, and a personal knowledge of thi ir charactcrs.- Ninth. One of the greatest eouroea of harm is found in ciroumstanoea lying outside of school life. The social halits of many older children are equally Inoon istent with good health and a good edu cation. ;- , ,-; t A Detroit boy oama aoroae some thing the other day which he Ihomrht would five his father a shock of tnrprUe, and he stood before the old man anil ra. marled: M Give me a place lanm levpj and, I, will move the whole world." The father looked at him half a- minute andihtn terdJedt .rn ra0T. 9m if Fon don't eleaa off that haek yard this '-W- The Mtomth f Merhwn. . The offloefwhoae oommand gave rise to so much bitterness in Sherman's army, as we learn from Gen. Sherman's personal history, from .which we quote, was the brilliant young' McPherson, whose death came upon the ueuntry- o grievously at the outset of this "cam paign. Hood had been appointed to oommand the army of the South iu plaoe of Joe Johnston, because of his being a I better fighter' McPherson and Hood had been in the same class at West Point, and when it was learned that Hood hod been given the oommand of the opposing army it was agreed Chat we ought to be unusually cautious and pre pared at all times for sallies and hard lighting, for Hood, though not deemed "much of a scholar or of great mental capacity, was undoubtedly a brave, de termined and rash man." It was during the progress of a sally suddenlytjmade by Hood for the purpose of turning Sherman's .xoot that: tho noble young McPherson lost his life. It was in the morning;. about 4 eleven o'clock. Mc Pherson had called on Sherman to talk about the papspects for the day. They walked to a foad a short distauoe, and sat down at the foot of a tree to study a map, ' There was an occasional musketry nnng and artillery, but- suddenly in one part of the line an. occasional shot began to be heard. Sherman asked MePher son what it meant " We took my pocket compass." savs Sherman. which E always carried with me, and by noting. the direction of the sound we became fattened that the firing was too far to our left rear to be explained by known facts, and he hastily colled for hirfliorse, his staff and his orderlies, i , ' McPherson was then in his prime, about thirty-four years old, over six feet high, and a very handsome man in every way," univer sally liked and had many noble quali ties. ; He had on his boots outside lils pantaloons, gauntlets ou his hands, had on his major general's uniform and wore a sword belt but no sword. He hastily gathered his" papers, save one, which I now possess, into a nocketboolc: nnt it Ilr his "breast pocket and jumped on hia horse, saying he would hurry down his line and send me back word what this sound meant. ' " In a few ? minutes Sherman, who in the meantime, had gone back to the house, alarmed by the increase of the mystenojis firing, met one of MoPherson's staffing horse cov ered with sweat, who repoRed that" the general was either killed of a prisoner. McPherson had ridden ahead,'giying an oraer to some troops to hurry forward. and disappeared in the woods, doubtless with a sense of absolute security. The sound of musketiy was there heard, and MCiuorson s horse came back .bleeding, wounded and riderless. An hour after word the body of McPherson was found. A bullet had entered his body near the heart, and McPherson must have died in a few seconds after being hit. Tho remains were sent back to Marietta, aud irom thy nee to his home in Clyde, O., wuore mey wore received with great honor, and are now buried in a small oemetery oloae by his mother's house. which oemetery is composed in part of the orchard in which he used to play wnen a boy, ' ft hnt On State Hon. 8. S. Cox, iu an address bofore the American Silk Association, said i But as we are approaching our .centennial, J think a baby one hundred years old is of prottjagood, size. A year or w ago I went to Connecticut. The purpose of my trip it not worth mentioning, more than to say it was not so much con nected with the moral condition of the State as its political. I found there the most wonderful varieties of Industries. They have boon two hundred and fifty years building thorn up. And what don t they make these I IlegiulrJi g with the Charter Oak' and Working town to the last election, they have every variety you' can 'think of. Tne wiU end you material for a totter, firearms hoop skirts, pins, hooks and eyes, or they send out brawware and brains, but thVy dou't always frrto Congroas. They 1. . i . . ii men; anu mey nave Jmporteil men out of Connecticut to all of the States, at the rate of 10,000 or 18,000 par an num. to build op other States. Referring to an address of Juda Kolley, In favor of protectionMr. Cox saw: ii lan'l Judge Kelley'a fault that he is protectionist: it is his mbifntinne. There has been a reoognJUo to-night of our willingness to naturalise foreigner. From Christopher Columbus down, Ui them come her , freely. .There la no prohibitory" tariff against men at any rate, KeHey. The human body, I am told by iihyaiplngUta. is made UD of very article subject to our tariff. Wa have all the gates, and iron is in oof blood. 8 j thera ia enougtf iron otsw U at Cutis Oarda down her avert mootb to make iteajrvship, ' - --T,rv"7 JDMa"reaie Hmrm, i Four deaths from diphtheria, recently ooourring in Brooklyn, N.. Y.. have at tracted the attention of the health an thorities of that city to the oondition of the house in which they took plaoe. The report which a sanitary committee made upon the dwelling sounds a note of warn ing which is oertainly timely at this especial period when moving is every where in progress. The house in ques tion was new, and damp In every room from cellar to attic, for there appears to have been no effort made to dry the walla; This is precisely the oondition of soores of dwellings into which families have entered ou the first of the month; and unless proper precautions be taken, further oases of illness and death will be the cost! of negloet i T . . If any reader of this journal, says the JScimHo A mer 'can, therefore, finds himself located,, in -a-dwelling on the walls of which the moisture oondeusein beads, as on the outside of. an Ice pitch er, or the rooms of which cause a chilly, damp sensation, with a strong odor of plaster, or any portion of which does not, on wall,, ceiling,, or floor, feel per feotly dry to the hand, let him, as he values his own life and that of his family (or hopes to escape from rheumatism, lung and kidney diseases; and the like), start area at once. . . Better waste a few tons of coal; than pay five times the amount iu doctors! bills or a still greater value of the money in suffering. Build a big fire iu the furnace and in every grate, and keep all up night and day; and if the. weather admits, throw open the windows and doors, but. keep out of the drafts. The object of the Area is to toy out the walls, not so much to warm the rooms for comfort, ' Then aa the weather beoomea warm, let all go out but the furnace, retaining that until its use becomes a disoomfori . We offer these suggestions to persona who have already moved into new houses, but of course it ia much wiser net to enter a dwelling that ia not thor oughly seasoned. Ia all oities, blocks of houses are constructed, of the flimsiest saatorials, in incrWyiort ispaoes ef time, for spring occupancy." Many of these have been frozen from top to tot toin during the reoent severe winter; and instead of the water drying out, it has remained in the walls in the condition of ioe. Iu an ordinary three-story house, 80,000 gallons of water are absorbed by the brick and mortaused iu the con struction and this immense4 quantity must all 6r nearly all be got rid of be fore they are safe as dwellings."4 "'" 1 ' Te Government of Cities. . Governor Tildea shows that the twenty- four oities of New York State' have' a local debt of $175,657,267, besides their share of the State and national 'debts. Of the twenty-four, Lockport is the only one free front debt, and in only Jour cities is the dobt less than fifty" dollars for each able-bodied male adult inhabi tant. In three-fourths bf the cities ot the State the aggregate of th yearly State, city, and county taxes la over nity dollars for each voter or head of family, and in tha fottrlarg2al-ttfwfll average more than one hundred. Th simple meaning of this in the oities oi Hew iork, and thoappliatVipwiH apply to the cities o( other Btns, ij high renai and narrow accommodations for the laboring population.-and for busi nesa men, property owners, manufac turers and the like, what they are now eiperiencWg. ' " i"" . Remarking upon this the Tribum ays s If the evil bf violating all sound principles of finanoe and government were matters of fancy and not of fact, then indeed would a change la ths weather, a return of oonfidenoe "or oup of ooffne , cure them. Unfor tunately oonfidenoe, though a irreat service in flontraetlng" debts, ia of very mue in paymg them, ihe boddholdeni, efnos-holders, and others .who drawjhei. inoome from the taxes, do, not live o air, and what they receive tboae wh pay the taxes must Beceaaarily do with! out. Mowtolthe loeal take are paid ia the pities : by thaowaeca. 1 lasid atJ buiUluiga,, who, of .oyurae pauispt.paj them unless they reonive high rents. If they are unable to get high rents (hey top building houses, which helps to make buaiuess dull and inor eases stagna tion. ' 1 , Kmmimg m Hw. " Pop Corn " ia the tame ef a pew town in Osage county, Kansas. Th tendency to -valgar ad Beaatngteas topograpioal daaignatitma wouhl. dia eourage na, did we not knew . the ameliorating effect of time upon these barbarisms. It is eooaolkif to think that " Pop Corn " will not be so forever, Within a quarter of a century 11 will be Tope Kora;" then "Pokornf lnexl " raukero ;" " roorkan ;" " lVkaa "rrkoui" "Farki and finally "rark City," whi h will U ta pretty aarnt iadaaJ. - ' ' JiasaiMffv lat A'eea M0fiaaT. . In the conference on public charities Df. Nathan ' Allen, of Lowell, Mass., - . v l. a f o . t frnmmm, awvs sjaav amaaava aajaa jwbhs Science Convention on "State Medicine and Its- Relations to Insanity and Publio Charity," which contained an elaborate statistical review of the present state of the4 insane in the six New England States. Maine haa twelve hundred in sane persona, the ensus returns said seven hundred and ninety-two, with but one asylum, accomodating four hundred, nine-tenths of whom are incurable. New Hampshire haa about seven hundred lunatios. About three hundred and seventy are in the asylriin at Conoord, one hundred and ; fifty in the county almshouses, one hundred in town alms houses, and the rest, whatever their number may be, are supported in pri vate families. Of these nothing is known. Vermont has eight hundred insane, with one aaylam; -' Connecticut more than thirteen hundred, with two. , Iu Rhode Island there are five hundred insane persons. The separate provision for the chronic insane in this State isdeserviug special' notiee as comparatively a new thing and an experiment which has been called ingestion. Within ten miles of the hospital may be found an asylum containing a" larger number of patients than the hospital itself has. Besides, by the removal of chronic oases the trustees deolare that its result is to enlarge tho capacity of the hospital for the treatment of recent case of insanity, and thereby to inorease its beneficial agency as a curative institution. Massachusetts has font thousand insane, of whom twenty four hundred are instate institutions. One of the most important steps taken in legislation in Massachusetts is the provision made for the support of the . chronic insane by themselves. This ex periment was begun in 1866 by erecting a large building, oonneoted with the State almshouse at Tewkabnry, in which three hundred chronic insane-all paupers have been supported at an expense of $2 each per week, saving thereby over $25,000 annually ,to the State. In the SiaUei of eomnutUna; persona in Massa- hwhmh, ww iiTtuni that it can.be done by friends, by officers of oities and towns, and by the judges of oourts. But in aU cases a oertiflcatu must be signed . by two persons, one of whom should be the family physician. Comphuila have been made that it was too easy tq commit persons. From 1850 to 1870, there was a decided increase of insanity in Massachusetts over that of population, amounting to twelve per cent.' The same is true, to a certain ex tent, of the other - New England States. Insane hospitals have never put any check on the inorease of insanity. . . , An OI attary Mtetot A Washington correspondent of the Chioago pi6una tells this story: An incident in the early life of BPlon Key, killed by Dan Sickles, is a key-note to every after ooourrenoe. He had an inti mate friend in the army, now living (and who wlli reoogniM the sad truthfulness o( this tale), who was engaged to a moat beautiful girL the prjde and idol of her flaneea, and the general admiration of all who' knew her. To her personal loveliness she added a thousand nameless charms, which captured the ever-roving fancy of Barton Key, aud added him to her list of lovers, although he was subtle enough to know hit affection was doomed to receive no return, and that his bosom friend was the raooessful suitor. Im perative army orders sent the friend far away, and be entreated Key with hia farewell breath to look after hia sweet heart, and to see that aha wanted noth ing during hia involuntary absenoe. K7 obeyed hia friend beyond the let ter for more delicate attentions war never before received by any woman, and as ha aaooaedod In .intercepting letter between the levers, he ,aooa aja.nl the miaaior of pnaforte? , to his other duti. s. ' fly atU-oitneaa and, a.TJreM,' he made each believe Iheotbw faith!, and when the seed of diMrust were most thorough ly BOrrdtth fading of pique and resentment crushed the first throba' of sorrow nj agony, hoprvd his suit, and won" "au. unloving aud "indifferent bride to his arm. Hia efforts to kindle one spark of interest or enthusiasm in the breast e4 hk wife proving utumc- eeaafnl, ia a fit of rage and disappoint ment he told her that ha had been the medium which had sown disoord be tween herself and her only lover, that he had dVwtroyml their mutual onrreapoud- noa, and aha had been fool eaouf h to beliavaall that. had been told to her. From the time of. this disclosure the beautiful woman grew whiter and morw lily-like, nnW one day" aha folded lr akudef hands ami closed her tired ayea, and awoke in that hasten wbara Lha weary are at real. Both Oreea 's htt'a shad, riant! ia the upper MUWprl Uuws yrart ir, art cgUBi t tema ip
The Weekly Ansonian (Polkton, N.C.)
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June 1, 1875, edition 1
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