V THE- AN EXCELLENT, ADVEIlTISIITGr IIEDIUIX.V Official Organ of Washington County. FIRST OF ALL THE NES. Circulates extensively in tha Counties r Kartis, Washing!: vTyrreil zzi lv Job Printing In ItsVarious Branches. l.OO A YEAR IN AUVAXfX " FOB GOD, FOlt COUXTKV, AM) JOK TRUTH." SIKOT.E COPT, 5 CKN VOL. IX. PLYMOUTH, N. C, FRLDAY. JANUARY :;2J, 1898. NO. .18.i A SONG OF There s a song of a bird in a blossoming ' trev . ': - , ( And songs In wind-trebles above ; - " But the song that is ever the sweetest to me Is a dear little song of her love ! Like fairy bells .ringing Where roses are springing, Is the song of her love that my glad heart is singing ! O the bird in the blossoms with melody charms And the winds sing the blue fields above ; But of rosy-red lips and two little white arms T Creed and The Rev. Wetherby Smiles was rec tor of St. James and occupied a rose t eVnbowered cottage not far from the Church. The cottage, with its atten dant garden, was a dainty, pretty spot, which looked as though a woman's hand had planned and cared for it. But no woman had anything to do with the rectory. The Rev. Mr. Smiles only servant was a dod dering old man; tbo rector prepared hia own meals, except when he was iuvited to tea by some old lady who pitied his lonely, indigestion-breeding existence. Not that the Rev, Mr. Smiles was a woman hater, but Mr. Smiles was very high church indeed. Unfortu nately, St. James' and the parish and the people were very poor. The good people liked the Rev. Mr. Smiles and tried to follow his suggestions upon high church usages. But there are .people, you know, whom you couldn't make hierh church with a lackscrew, 1 "She communicants of St. James' were I lostly farmers and small tradesmen. The rector felt that the clergy, to be able to give their , whole time and thought to their work, should live lives of celibacy. He had felt at times a strong drawing toward some ecclesi astical order in which such vows would be necessary. Then he would wear some outward sign of his vows, and the young women of his parish would not tall in love with him. The rector was young and good looking; he had been in his present pastorate six months, and he had t already had an experience. The young rector lived with -his books, occasionally taking a little rec reation in the garden. The roses dis appeared, the leaves fell and left the clinging vines bare, and the snow cov ered the prim little beds in the rectory garden. Thus a year of his- pastorate ' closed, and the spring drew near. The Rev. Wetherby Smiles, from his study window, could look across his garden plot and see the, brown earth warming in the spring sunshine and the trees and bushes slowly burst ing into leaf. Nature is always most attractive in the spring,, and nature in, a thousand ways, with bud and leaf and warming earth and white-flecked sky and sweet air, wooed him from his books. " He looked across his garden, I say. And across the garden, beyond the low hedge, was another garden, which ia summer was full of color. He had noticed the brilliant-hued beds the year before, but now the only bit of " color was a pale-blue morning robe that flitted about the inclosure. ' To tell the truth, the rector had Beldom noticed that morning gown or the little woman inside it before. But it pleased his fancy now to look across the hedge and watch his neighbor. He recalled that-his old inajor-domo , had told him the cottage next the par 4? sonage was occupied by a widowed lady a lonely creature who had taken up her abode there but shortly before the Rev. Mr. Smiles was settled over St. James. He remembered the little figure in black in one of the side pews, pointed out to him by the clerk as "Mrs. Scorritch," and probably had not given her a thought or a glance forward. -v However, he saw so much of the pale-blue gown that first warm week in spring that he looked for the little widow in her pew the next Sabbath. She had laid aside her weeds and was dressed in some soft, clinging, fawn colored material that made her look like a very demure little moth. And aha had the sweetest face in the world as least, the sweetest face in the Rev. Wetherby Smiles' world. On Monday morning the clerical black appeared in the rectory garden almost as soon as the pretty morning robe appeared over the hedge. The demure little face dimpled and smiled i under its garden hat at the rector's approach, and , the widow nodded brightly. "You r i"Iy at your gardening thH nprf U'P," she re ; expecting Mjr now." V frost VI" HER LOVE. Is the dear little sonar of my love. Of red lips that kiss me . And tenderly bless me. ; 1 - .' And arms like a necklace that clasp and ca ress me. Sing ever, ye birds, to the blossoming tree And. winds, pipe your music above : Her brown curls are brighter than blossoms - to me, And I'm singing a song of her love ; A Like. fairy bells ringing Where roses are springing. Is the song of her love that my glad heart is singing! F. L. Stanton, in Atlanta Constitution, Crocuses. health to work in his garden while the blue gown (flitting like a butterfly from rose tree to vine and from vine to hedgerow) was in evidence in the neighboring yard. Really, alter por ing over musty theological tomes all winter a man. must get some freshness in his soul 'and new blood in. his heart. The gardening went on apace, and the treacherous warm weather continued Many were the conferences held across the hedge regarding the proper prun ing of rose trees, the planting of hardy seeds and the preparation of the beds of earth. The rector had never sua pected there w as so much detail to the business of gardening. One moi-ning, just after a warm night rain, the Rev. Mr. Smiles was called to the hedge by a litttle cry from his neighbor. "They are coining!" she cried, in delight. "Seel here is the dearest little blade of green pushing up through the mold -and there is another and another! Just look at them!" The rector found it necossary to leap the hedge (he had been some thing of an athlete at the university, and certainly this spring weather was sending the 4 blood coursing through his -veins quite like old times) and look at the crocus bed near to. "They are such lovely ones," she said, earnestly. "I don't believe you noticed them at all last sijring" (he pronounced maledictions upon him self for having been so blind a3 to miss so much beauty the previous sea son), "but they will be even better this year if we don't have that horrid frost you have been prophesying." She looked at him roguishly, and it suddenly crossed the young rector's mind that several yellowish-green points of crocus blade, breaking the damp soil, made a far prettier picture than the finest rose bush in full bloom which he had ever seen. It was a strange fact and one he had never dis covered before. But when he had returned to hia own lonely domain and entered his study, he stopped and thought seri ously for a minute. Then he cast his flat-crowned ministerial hat upon the floor with great emphasis and ex claimed: "It's my creed, I tell you, that a man in orders should not marry." Now, there was no one visible to argue the question, and yet there seemed to be argument in his own mind, for the Rev. Wetherby Smiles smote his palm with his clenched fist angrily and kicked the flat-crowned hat to the other end of the room. For two days the rector of St. James' rigidly stifled his interest in crocuses; his interest in creeds, however, was not entirely satisfying. On Sunday, after vespers, he overtook on his way home a little figure in a fawn-colored gown. "You must see my crocuses, Mr. Smiles," she said. "The buds will be open before Sunday. " The rector glanced gloomily at the darkening sky and thought that prob ably there would be a frost;, that night. But he could not long think of frost and other unpleasant possibilities under the skillful manipulation of his charmiug little neighbor. He hesi tated at her gate, and again crocuses triumphed over creed. Tbe crocuses were flourishing finely; the creeds took a back seat indeed, a very un obtrusive seat in the rector's ruera- y. His interest in the crocus continued that evening to so late an hour that his old servitor really thought he was not coming tosupper and cleared away the repast. ; - "Never mind, said the 17 'tor, kind ly, "I am not hungry,"anu when the old man had doddered off to bed he sat down before the open window of his chamber and stared out into the still night. He sat there for an hour. A light burned behind the curtain of one of his neighbor's windows. That was her light he knew. Finally it dis appeared, but he sat on, his arms folded upon the sill, his eyes glaring fixedlv into the darkness. Crqeu was making a strong fight for life. It grew rapidly colder, and suddenly the Rev. Wetherby Smiles awoke to the discomforts of the outer man. He j shivered and drew away from the wiu- dow.. There was no breeze and no j louds, but an increasing chill made j iiim close the casement. . j ) Then he slipped on a smoking jacket ; nu weut to tne uoor. mere was u ?iglit haze upon the river and a shini er of frost in tbe air. ." .bad nilit for the farmers aud :wffef". he thought. Then! his mind reverted to those crocuses. "They will be black by morning," ha said. "Too bad! and the little womau thinks so much of them." He hesitated a moment and then went in again, reappearing shortlj with an old mackintosh. "Just the thing to spread over tha bed to defend them from the frost, he muttered and with long strides crossed the rectory garden and leaped the hedge. Feeling a good deal like a night prowler who had no business in the place.he crept through his little neigh bor's garden and approached the cro cus bed near the porch. He started at the slightest sound and glanced about fearfully. Suppose anybody should see him one of his pan diion ers even hisma;or-domo! He forgoi the night was dark; it seemed to his excited imagination that anybody pass ing along' the road could see him the rector of St. James' prowling about beneath a lady's window! Suddenly, just as he spread the cov ering over the crocus bed and was turning hastily to flee, he heard a sound on the porch. He started, and his eyes became fixed upon the vision before him. ' A figure, all in white, and motionless, stood upon the lowez step. The Rev. Wetherby Smiles was startled, but he was not superstitious. For some seconds, however, he stared at the apparition before he recognized it. Then he stepped quickly forward aud began to make excuses in a low voice. "Mrs. Scorritch LyQia I beg your pardon, but I thought " He got no further in his faltering remarks. With a shuddering little cry the figure tottered and would have fallen to the ground had he not sprung forward and caught her in his arms. "Good gracious!" muttered the Rev. Mr. Smiles, the perspiration starting on " his brow. "What a situation. Suppose anybody should see me now. To think of me a clergyman in a woman's garden at night, holding that woman in my arms!" He was tempted to lay her down upon the porch and run. But he looked down into tbe little white face, revealed by the faint starlight. The pale lids were drawn over the great eyes, which he thought so glorious. The pouting lips had not entirely lost their redness, but the cheeks were without color. He looked upon her, and then did not lay her down ana flee. Instead he stooped lower and lifted her more closely against his breast and carried his burden into the house. There was a couch in the reception room. He laid her down and lighted the gas. She opened her eyes languidly and saw him. "I have frightened you, Lydia," he said, stooping above her. "Really.I had no intention, you know. I only remembered the crocuses " "I I thought'vou were a burglar," she admitted. "Aud when I heard your voice "Didn t you recognize it? he asked. "You you had never spoken to me in just that way before, and " He bent lower and took her hand. "I was only thinking of the crocuses, Lydia," he said, which was very true. He had quite forgotten the "creed." Chicago Record. The " Whistting Language." Some years ago, while roaming through the mountain ranges of Teneriffe, it fell to the writer's lot to hear the shepherds conversing in the whistling language which is used by the people of Teueriffe and Gomera. Three parties of shepherds were ex changing their hopes aud fears re garding the weather by tins means. On another occasion he heard an in vitation to a " dance sent in the "whistling language" across a stretch of country exceeding four miles in length. The young boys, and even the girls, are adepts at the "lan guage," and the very sheep appear to understand whistled commands at a considerable distance. Bv placing two or three fingers in the mouth, the whistlers contrive to make the whistle carry to a distance of three miles or thereabouts. A French savant has conclusively proved that the whistling is in Spanish. Easy words are taken, and the sounds imitated by the whistlers. . The language dates from 1455. Long practice and heredity have naturally given the shepherds extraordinary skill, and their vocabu lary is now a long one, while in addi tion they have a regular code of graduated notes, which convey tele graphically what they cannot satis factorily reproduce in the ordinary maimer. Waver i e y Magazine. - TheKkhfst Town, The richest town in the United States is Brookline, near Boston, Its population is 17,000 and valuation Si0, 000,000, vet it is governed through the typical New Eugland town meet ing. It has a public library contain ing 45,000 volumes, a $300,000 high school, a $10,000 free bathing estab ishmeut, and spends $100,000 a year on its parks aud well shaded streets. Boston would gladly annex it, but Drookhne prcters to go' on as it is. Among the 53,000,(100 inhabitants -.f Germany, there are only seventy- eight who have passed their one-hun- jredth birthdav. A Leading: Material. Crepe de chine in all the lovely tints ?' i one of the season's leading materials or evening and house dresses. A pretty costume is in a bright shade of pomegranate toned down by panels of black plaited chiffon, two on either side of the skirt over black, and one at the left side of the bodice where it opens, and is fastened with silk cord and small diamond buttons. Both the skirt and bodice are accordion-plaited and the belt and collar band are of black satin. New York Sun.' Woman Physicia- to LI Hung Chang, Miss Hu King Eng, M. D., the only female native of China who has ever graduated from an American medical college, has just received very high honors iu her own country. Follow ing close upon her appointment as sole delegate from China to the Women's Medical convention, to be held in London next June, comes the announcement that Li Hung Chang, China's grand viceroy, has appointed her first physician in his private house hold. Never before has this high of fice been given to a woman. A Fortune With a String. Miss Grace Hartley, a Vassar col lege girl and member of a prominent family in Fall River, Mass., has been bequeathed one of the most unique fortunes on record by her father, Dr. J. W. Hartley. The queer conditions of the will are as follows: First, that she never marry any one within the degree of kinship of son, grandson or great grandson of Cook Borden, late of Fall River, de ceased. Second, that she shall at no time give, bestow, present, loan, en dow or furnish any part of the prin cipal or income of the estate to, for or upon, or for the benefit of any person within the kinship of wife, son, daugh ter, grandson, granddaughter, great grandson or great granddaughter of said Cook Borilen. Help to Keauty. Those of us who have been much in the open air through the summer find ourselves thoroughly tanned and frec kled, and although at first we may be very proud of this acquisition, it will thicken up the complexion in a way that women, at least, find very unbe coming when trying to make them selves presentable for the autumn. Something more potent than lemon juice is required at this season, but as a supplement only; as the latter should be used as much as a matter of course as soap. This needed supplement is close at hand, and is nothing more or less than over ripe cucumbers and ripe tomatoes. When the former are close and crisp for table use, they are useless for the toilet. When turning yellow they are soft and spongy. The face, neckband hands, after thorough washing, should be well rubbed alter nately each day for a week or more with slices of soft cucumber and red tomatoes, then well rinsed in warm, soft water. It is taken for granted that the skin is thoroughly massaged every night with some simple emolient; this is as much exercise for the complexion as calisthenics for the muscles, and will wake it up and make the countenance lively and expressive as nothing else will. After this treatment over night the cucumber and tomato will work wonders aud need only to be used for the first week or two after indoor life is resumed once more. A cucumber cream for occasional winter use may be made by squeezing the pulp of the cucumber through a coarse seive and mixing through a tea cup of this a teaspoonful of glycerine and five drops of salicyclate of soda; the two latter are preservatives, but if glycerine does not agree with the skin it may be omitted. Sirs. Frldtjof Nannen. The wife of the world famous Arctic explorer is a great favorite in Nor wegian society on her own accouut, beside being, of course, now a kind of queen as the wife of her husband. But before she was married she was much sought after in Christiania, because, for one thing, she is one of the finest musicians in Norway, the possessor of an extraordinary and highly cultivated voice, and an unusual combination an accomplished pianist as well. When in England a year ago, Mrs. Nansen played and sang before Queen Victoria at Windsor, aud the queen was very gracious in her expressions of pleasure iu the occasion, and though bo much could hardly be said iu re gard to any other art, a compliment from the queea on ti.iu musical is a geuuiie iriuuiph, for si a loves uiuaic ( deeply, and really knows a great dea' about it. , Mrs. Nansen is considered deeidedlj intellectual; her family has been dis tinguished for generations for the numberof professors it has contributed to Norwegian institutions of learning, particularly to the university at Chris tiania. Such a family history confers distinction anywhere, but particularly is this so in Norway, where there ie neither aristocracy nor plutocracy. But perhaps Mrs. Nansen's good looks and love of outdoor sports are for her hus band as decided attractions as her musical or mental gifts. She is just the contrast in coloring to him that she should be dark haired and dark eyed, and a contrast in size, too, for she is decidediy a little woman. Running over hill and dale on Nor wegian snowshoes is the great winter sport of Scandinavia, and Mrs. Nansen is an expert at skilobning, as they call it; but once when she was skilob ning in the mountains with her hus band she did too much, and became exhausted; she was wearing a short dress and a long coat and high boots. Her husband picked her up and sought help. At last he found a peasant's hut, and from it issued its owner before he reached the door, pro testing volubly: "Oh, sir, you ought not to bring a little boy like that out so far. The country here is too rough for a child to skilobn in." It is a pet trick of Dr. Nansen to set her on his outstretched arm and parade up and down the room with her; but that really to one that knows him does not indicate much about her size, for at a banquet given in Chris tiania after his return from Green land he picked up Captain Luerdorf, who has since commanded the Fram, and, holding him by the arms high from the floor, cried: "There is the man I place above us all." Chicago Record. Fashion Notes. Jacqueminot velvet hats are much favored by brunette beauties. Amethysts and emeralds seem to be favorite stones for gold hatpins. Very lovely tea gowns are of Roman striped silk, with lace garniture. For yokes and skirt borders there are beautiful lace applique insertions. Three kinds of fur utilized in one garment is no t unusual sight these days. . , Long black lace scarfs in the style of days gone by are now used as sashes. The latest French skirt models grow narrower and closer on the front and sides. Some French house dresses are trimmed with two shades of ribbon of the same color, artistically arranged. Daggers for the hair are again in fashion in gold, aluminum, filigree, silver and amber set with mock jewels of every color and device. Many of the new skirts are cut with the narrow tablier front, as it serves to display the trimming which covers it entirely or extends up either side in elaborate designs. There seems to be a veritable epi demic of tiny waists. The athletic girl has broad shoulders, but she doesn't run much to waist to indulge at once in a pun aud an honest state ment. The fashionable photograjdier jxs sesses such an assortment of laces, neck jewels and fancy head wear that the woman anxious to be posed artis tically has a wide range of choice in the matter of her adornment. Very many of the new fur boas are long enough to reach the bottom of the skirt in front. Some are made en tirely of Russian sable, Hudson's bay or stone marten tails. With these lace aud jewels are often introduced. When silks are packed away they are likely to become yellow unless care is used. To prevent this, break up a few cake3 of white beeswax, fold them loosely in old handkerchiefs aud place these among the folds of silk. White gloves stitched with black are only de rigueur for day wear when accompanying a costume in black and white effects. The more fashionable shades are doe color, biscuit, mush room, almond, pale brown and tan. Spangled belts are entirely out of date. Ribbon belts with loops aud enJs are still iu favor. Russia leather belts, fastened with solid silver links, are expensive, but "much neater and more useful than the white belts which so many wear unthinkingly. White belts only look well on slender women, as has been said before in this department. EACH MAN FOE IIIMSKI THF OLD PROVERB IS LITER FOLLOWED IN THE KLONDIH , . . .; . A Returned Miner Declare Thro' Greed for Gold I-eartft Them t-f Suspiviou of i:ch Other and !' the Verge of Cruelty A BiT"" "Nobody who has spent! in the Klondike will ever I it again," said Thomas Haj Deliver (Col.) Mining Bun is. unless he has a certain! ing enough money to part! him for suffering bardshjft weia never enuureu. ins any lurriv camn on earth hfifore. .- ' Ir Mr, Harmer went into Alaska two years ago and says that he left there last August never to return. "I would not go back there aud remain live years for $230,000," he con tinued. "When I speak of suffering I do not mean actual bodily pain or sickness, because I think if a man goes there prepared as he should and abstains from excesses he can keep in reasonable good health, but - to .'live nun g the winter season m tnose close-cabins and see the horrible sel fishness and cruelty of human beings tow arda each other, the result of the rush for gold, which many of them, even after they have secured it, do not h?sitate to throw away, is enough to make one lose all faith in the fit ness of men to live on the earth. When I was coming out I saw men re fuse a nail or the use of an axe, or even the use of a tin cup to men who were in need of these trifles. Every man there seems to be afraid of his fellows afraid that they will steal something or have better success in finding gold. I spent last winter from September to April with eight ether men, we having gone together to save labor in keeping warm. "Each of us had a claim or a part of a e'.akii, and went out every day that the weather was not too cold to work our claims. Iu melting the frozen gravel we nearly always found one or more nuggets in the dirt, but during the entire eight months that we worked together I do not remem ber of a single occasion when one of us acknowledged that he had found any gold. Each of us had a buckskin bag, which was carried on the person, and the ingenuity of all was taxed to the utmost to devise some scheme whereby the bag could be concealed from the rest. There was no stealing in the camp. A man caught stealing would have had a rough time of it, but every man seemed to think that every other man wanted to steal from him, and I do not think that a single one of us knew where any other man carried his gold. I remember one night lying awake and seeing five men of our company at different times put ting away nuggets found during the day, and in every case after putting them in the little buckskin bag they would thrust the bag under the blan kets, and I could see from the fum bling that they were concealing it about their persons. We always had a man sitting up to keep the fires, and the men were afraid that he might see where they put 'their gold. There was no absolute cruelty, but the total in difference to the welfare of others that characterized everybody was simply horrible. I was in the cabin one day reading with two men, one of whom was sick, the rest being at work. The sick man had a terrible cold and fe'ver' and asked one of us to hand him a drink. "The other man went over to the bucket in which we kept our melted snow, and with the remark, 'There is no more than I want myself,' drank it all. This, of course, was excep tionally brutal, bat there were many instances almost as bad. Every man is for himself, and many of them are so constantly thinking of their gold that they become insane, or j'artially so. I came out with one man who was so excited over about $10,000 worth of gold that by the time we got to Sau Francisco he was almost an idiot, and it was with difficulty that we could induce him to deposit his gold in a bank and go to a hotel. There is plen ty of gold there, aud I think more fields will be found, but all a man is likely to get will not pay him for the horrible experiences he is called upon to endure. was not particularly lucky, though I brought out enough to pay me fairly well for my two years in Alaska, but if I was assured ol $50,000 a year I would not go back there." Killed a Two-Headed Sparrow. A very curious ornithological freali has been discovered in Columbus by Olher P. Davies, a well-known orni thologist and the author of a book on the subject. Some time ago Mr. Da vies' attention was attracted by the apparent possession of two heads by a little English sparrow. The bird seemed especially tame, and, after sev eral futile attempts to catch it, a boy iu Mr. Davies' employ finally man aged to kill it. One of the heads was set on ail usual in the bird line, while the other seems to have a windpipe running through the neck down to the lungs, but to have no other arrangements for eating or drinking. Mr. Davies ha come to the conclusion that the bird whistled with one head and ate with the other. He has mounted it. Cleveland Plain Dealer... v