II I, i r : I- , r 1 m Mr it ' it i 1 J.1 ff ' . "V It . . I) V A. . $i.ooa Year; in Advance., ,. ' ; ' m FOR GOP, FOR COUNTRY, AND FOR TRUTH." Single Copy, 5 Cent. 7" ; ", . . " ' . ' ' V, ; ' ' ' - ' , , ' ' - r-SLj- , ' ; OL. XIIL ;r : , PLYMOUTH, N. C, FEIDAY, MARCH 14, 1902. NO.K -A 0 V. n 'I: J THE CHARACTER How happy is he born or taught, ' '. ' That eerveth not another's, will; "Whose armor is his strongest thought, And simple truth his highest Bkill. . Whose passions hot his masters are; TVhose soul is still prepared for death; Xot ty'd unto the world with care . Of prince's ear, or vulgar breath. Who hath his life from rumors freed; ?, Whose conscience is his strong retreat; Whese state can neither flatterers feed, :l Nor ruin make oppressors great. . fllERE passed through the gates of Fort Sheridan the other day a man with a coal black face and snow-white liair.. His bearing was military to a degree, notwithstanding the fact that he limped painfully.- His shoulders were well thrown back and his head rect and carried with a "probably un conscious sort of pride. The limp in the gait, however, was so marked that an observer, if he gave the subject any thought at all, would know that this negro would never run a step in his life. The name of this Fort Sheridan vis itor was and Is Henry Johnson, one time of Troop K, Ninth United States Cavalry. If certain of the older officers and enlisted men of this colored outfit cf Uncle Sam had known that the thought that this limping, ex-soldier would never run again had, entered Into an onlooker's mind, he woxild probabiy have said: "No, Johnson never will run again, but if he could have kept up the gait that he once bowed these 100-yard sprinting rec ords that we hear so niuch of in these i : SUDDENLY STUMBLED " .day of sports would be headed by an- other and the name of 'the hoUer ' jrould be Henry Johnson." i There isn't the slightest doubt among cavalry officers who have long mem ories that the .world's champion sprint er was lost to track fame when Henry Johnson, colored trooper, went lame Just twenty-two years ago this month. Johnson was in ; Fort Sheridan only as a casual visitor the other day. There are no colored troop$ at the x post, but this negro" visitor wore a little something pinned to his vest that makes any soldier, black pr white, a welcome and honored guet at any place where tents are pitched or bar racks are reared under the fluttering Stars and Stripes. In the month of November, 1S79, a -j of Ute Indians suri'ounded a f ii command of United States reg r" te.dYs, composed for the greater part Xof Troop K, Ninth colored cavalry. There was for a while'-tho heaviest a& fit righting and at closi quarters. ially the reds retreated a little way, still Hld their Vor(ioDi of braves t. temporary withdrawal v OF A HAPPY .LIFErr . Who envies none, whom chance doth raise .' -Or vice; who never understood .- . . How deepest wounds are given with praise; ,Nor rules of state, but rolei'pf goodV,.. i . Wh'b- God doth late and early pray f i More of His grace than gifts ta And entertains the harmless day : . -, 4 ; . With a well-chosen bobk or friehdi V'.v This man is freed from servile -'bands '' s w Of hope to rise, or fear to fall;.:; ; --i Lord of himself, though not of lands; . And having nothing, yet hath all, . ' . - Sir Henry .Wdttea' for a short distance did not give the troops a breathing spell, for they set to work at once to entrench. They succeeded with their horses and impedi menta,, and by vigorous use of the shovel in forming and in throwing up a fairly strong defense bulwark. After this had been done small parties under cover of the rifles of their comiades went out to a considerable distance from the entrenchment and there dug rifle pits at intervals In a circle about the Inner and stronger defense. For some unknown reason the encircling savages allowed these precautions to be taken by the foe without much at tempt at interference, perhaps think ing that as they had a sure thing of it anyway, they might better attack later under cover of darkness for your true savage has ever a wholesome regard for his skin and scalp. Into these well-covered rifle pits guards were dropped with a plentiful supply of amunition and such ; little water and proventler as could be spared. There was one man in each pit. They were absolutely protected from the front, and they were put there AND WENT TO EARTH. to perform the usual duty expected where troops are thus besieged. Un less the Utes actually succeeded in getting into these pits, the men there were safer than were those behind the extemporized fortification in the cen tre. After the pickets bad been placed in. the pits and the fatigue and post ing parties had returned to the central point of defense the Indians drew in. The red circle was drawn closer and closer, and the bullets from the Ute rifles tore through the frail parts of the barricade, and soldier after soldier was either killed or wounded. :- : Three times the Indians were driven off, only to return again. They had lost heavily, but seemed Jo be roused to" a maddened pitch that made them heedless of caution. For the fourth time they were sent hurtling back ward, and then there came the awful necessity of sending instructions to the men In the outlying pits. The space between the central defense and the outer guards was as level as a bowl ing alley. . The Utes, when they had withdrawn for the fourth time, were still within ensy ran je, though they It came to be a question with the com manding officer as to whether or not communication was posslole with the pits. He did not in his heart believe that any man could live to reach the first one of. the., guards, let alone tho entire circuit. - ; ; ' The captain commanding was just about to give over all idea of attempt ing messenger communication because of the deadly nature of the errand, when Private Henry Johnson came up to him, saluted, and said that he would like to volunteer to make, the round of the guards. . "You can't do it, Johnson," said his commanding officer. "It's death." "Yes, I can, sah; I'm a sprinter. When they shoots afc me running side ways 'round the ' ring they can't do nothing' but cut daylight behind my back. I've beat everything in the regi ment running, and I beat everything in my State before I 'listed." The result of this dialogue and some thought on the captain's . part was that a moment afterward a blue-clad figure was darting in zigzag lines, straight away from the barricade, toward the first rifle pit. How' that negro; did run, notwithstanding the fact that he took a course like the flight of a snipe when it is first flushed. He simply tore. He had not gone thirty yards before a hundred feathered heads were' seen raised and the faces below show ing doubtless in sheer amazement at the sight of that flying figure. Then rifle after rifle spoke viciously, but Johnson, the sprinter, sped on. - He reached the first pit unscathed and fell into it by the side 'of the guard. There he stayed long enough to "breathe" himself and to turn over his ," orders, and then : from the " pit,, jumping like a jack-in-the-box, came his stalwart figure. There was no time lost in scoring. Johnson was away for the next, hole at the first start. , This time his course was practically along the lines of fire. The bullets .marked out his way, but, as it was said behind the barricade, "They'll have to hold a hundred yards ahead of that buck to get him." ' . ; ".:.-v- No one thought in the strain of that awful time, to 'hold a watch" ou the sprinter. There never has been a doubt since that the world's records before and after were smashed. There were eight of the guard pits,; and the race between each was but a repetition of the last, the Indians popping away all'the while at the devoted messen ger, while the soldiers, though with eyes and hearts only for their comrade, did their best by volleys to divert the savage fire. Johnson left the seventh pit and started for the eighth. His pace showed no sign of abating. Some of the Indians, In following the cir cling course of the black, had closed in from left to right along the circum ference of their own' circle in order to mark the messenger's course more perfectly with their sights and shots. The result was a concentration of fire, and Johnson, while speeding, like a scared jack-rabbit, suddenly stumbled and went to earth. He was up again like a flash and on be passed, but his step was lagging a little now. Once more he went down, then up-again, and once; more haltingly and slowly for ten yards, then down again. witJi his face in the sand, and then on for ti& yards more, thia time on his hands and knees, and then he rolled into the last rifle pit. , Everyone knows of the outcome of, the Milk .River Ute campaign. How the beleaguered men were relieved, and of the march that was necessary to re lieve them. Before those men, almost dying of thirst, would one of them go from the barracks to the sparkling river, they went in mass to rifle pit No. 8 and there picked up Johnson and carried him to 'the water. Henry Johnson, colored private of Troop K. had only three holes in him, but his sprinting days have been over for nearly a quarter of aj'century. It is because the soldiers who saw Johnson run forgot to hold a watch on him that another man now claims the world's sprinting record. Edward B. Clark, in the Chicago Record-Herald. . Knjctnd'a Ixn 1b Territory. It is stated that every year England loses a tract of land the size of Gibral tar, and that on the East coast alone the annual loss equals In territory the Island of Heligoland. In the last 100 years au edge of England equal in area to the county of London Las-Men sub merged. California' Orange Acreage. The oranff groves of California com f prise la area over 83,000 acres. ffilRLSSRiiYS - Sleepy Time. Hushaby, baby-doll, hushaby, dear, Mother will watch you, she's sitting quite near, Her foot on your cradle. Hush, do not weep, - . , . . But close your dear eyelids and fajl fast asleep. The snowbirds have twittered . their, lov , ing good-night, ' '.' Jack Frost has fresh painted the panes, The moonbeams are bathing the night ' world in light, ... .Hush, dolly; the Moon King now reigns. Detroit Free Press. A Happy Meeting. R. B. Cunninghame Graham, the au thor of those traveling experiences in the tropics which he calls "Thirteen Stories," says that in his South Ameri can journeying he one day rode to see a village where, report hinted, pome valuable old books had been -preserved. He adds: .7 ' .' . :'l ;-V;' "I got ' lost and passed the night in a small dealing, where a fat and hand some roan horse was tied. On seeing me the animal broke his picket rope, ran furiously round me four or five times in circles, and . then, advancing, put his nostrils close to the nostrils of my horse and seemed to talk to him. His . owner, an old Paraguayan, told me that the creature had been with him far into the Interior, aifd for a year had never seen another horse. ; " 'But, said be, 'God has given every animal speech after its kind, and he is glad to see your horse. ' No doubt h is asking him the news.' : . "During. the night I cannot say ex-, actly what the two horses talked about, but in the morning my host rode with me a league upon the way, and when we parted his horse reared once or twice and plunged. It was a farewell." Jack Horner. H Jack norner , was a little monkey who lived on shipboard. He wore a sailbr's jacket of scarlet flannel and a cap to match and was very proud of his costume. He looked like a dwarf, old man, for he was brown and wrin kled," and his black eyes peeped out beneath shaggy eyebrows and crinkly gray hair. t ;( ' ; Sometimes, when the' eook was out of eight, he would jump on the flour bar rel and powder his head like a miller. The cook scoldecL-'and shook his roll-, ing-pin at him. ' But in a twinkling Jack was , up the mast. There he would sit In safety, grin and chatters and shake his head and paws to m! . poor old Cato, while the sailors ro. Jack went where he pleased af tne snip, dui nis own corner, w large dry goods : box, turned on one side, and well supplied., with clean straw for his bed. This was left to his own care, and Jack. was a tidy lit tle creature. He had watched th steward about his work until he knew just what to do. Every morning , he snooit up-me struw wnu ms uuvv tuic- paws auu luuue uis ueu iu ssut. miuocu. j 3 J 1 1 i ..t. V.!rfrvl ' He would stand off a little way, and j look at it, shake it ago 'n,, and pat It down. . Then he would run for the broom and sweep out h!s cabin. He washed his face and hands in a basin, as the sailors did, and dried them on a towel. ' Jack norner was very fond of, ; They were often given him for break fast. But he was not as honest as he was tidy, and would sometimes snatch j i herring or an egg, if no one were near and run off to his stateroom to eat it. ! One morning, he burned his fingers j with an egg, and for a long time after- ward would not take one. even when j offered him. V j Twice a- week there was sago pied-" ding with cinnamon on It for dir and Jackjwas always oii'-hatsd' for Inn share. He would 'take his sancer in. one paw, his spoon in tne other, and eat as the sailors did. Sometimes there were raisins in his pudding, and thon Jack was pleased. He' would pull one out with ls finger and thumb, hold it up, and chatter about it in great glee., At Christmas th? sailors filled a stocking for him with nuts and lumps of sugar, and he had -mince pie and plum pudding. Mary Johnson, - in' Home Journal. Hippocrates is said to hava greatly allayed the violence cf the plague at Athens by a literal usa of perCa2 ia tho streets and houses. WAITING' ' ' 8.00. Herei in the parlor 1 sit; : "In a moment or two she'll be down; Of course, she must prink just a bit The prettiest girl in town! t I mark her light step overhead . .. , , As she gives at the glass a last touch. Yet I'll wager, be cheeks ne'er so red, v She's guiltless of rouge jar, or such. 1 ' ' . 8.15. . . " Ileigh-ho! .Tis a quarter .past, now! bhe knew that I d call sharp at eight; It's a little vexatious, I vow. I hope we're notdoomed to be late! ' But, then tho' a goddess, a queen A woman, at best, is she, still, ' Predestined tp make, all serene, . Man wait or bestir, at her will. 8.30. Evht-thirty! Great Caesar! Come on. "JCung lady; we're missing the fun.. A rouvd dozan garbs could I don WhiJeVou have been fussinz with one And this 13 'a moment or two!" 1 Don't hurry, lt beg or deem that I had other amusements in view Than sitting hem twirling my hat! . - . . . 8.4. A quarter to nine! Faithand love!' It's more than I'll standI declare! I Ah! . There's a niatle abcrC A froufrou of silk on the stair . She's eoming a quarter to nine! I must smile and pretend, I suppose, But 'I'll never By Jove! She's divine. God bless her! As sweet as a rose! ' ' Edwin L. Sabin, in Puck; The 1MiUionairer'After . all,' rer money hasn't brought us happineps. His AVlfe "But; it has made , us oi- jects of envy."-Llfe ' , , " Who does not fear to tell the truth Is pretty brave, but, my! , More brave is he who s not, forsooth, , ' Afraid to tell a-lie. " -rPhiladelphia Presi. She "Mr. Niblack is a very, skill ful golfer, isn't he V He "1 don't know about that but he certainly i a very : fluent golf er." Philadelphia Press. : r '.. v :- , " Hewitt "Hal .the world doesn't know. how the other half lives," Jew ett "I think .you overestimate- the number of people who mind their own business." Brooklyn Life. , "I Wonder who this man . is who wants to know whether or not life i worth living V' "Oh, probably some fellow who has more money than he knows ,what .todo with." Life. : Laura "Yes, you., see she told 'blur her father hau lost all' bis wealth, just to test his love for her."v"A6a "And then?" Laura-" Well, she' will know . better ne.xt time." The Smart Set. 1 Mrs. A. "I sent my daughter to a -oking school to fit her for marriage." . 'ilrs. B."Was the exrprlmnt n sue , . ;. engaged to found it out." Judge. ; If "Miss Minerva learned to play Football, 'midst other studious cares, These bargain rushes, shopmen say. Would 'soon'be serious affairs. . . . -Washington Star. Miss Gushlere "How torturing, io fearful the thought mrst be for a great tIn to know hA-has lost hor vniPr Mr. Praclere "It's much mo e- tortur ing when .she doesn't know it!" Tit-. Bits." . - ' . Mi' . Rangle "I've ai'yertised for a servant for a whole week with no result." Mrs. Cumso "Well, I adver tised for a good-looking, lady-help, and had thirty-four to select from the fir4 day." Tit-Bits. , ' Her Father "Aha ! I C caught kissing mv daughter, cir. Wha you-mean, by that sort of busirt . He "I don't consider business at .;;! sir, but pleasure, purely pleasuio." Philadelphia Press. f' Softly (who fell overboard and was dramatically .rest... !) '"Did you aw faint, when yoa beard them velL "Man overboard V " ; Helen (sobbinf" "No no, Choily. I never once pected they couid mean you." Tlt-L ; Tbe Yi?!tor-"Horrors! The ligLc nlflf express wrecked antrotally de-4 stroyed by fire!" Young Artist "IIujs rah! Good!" "Are you crazy?" "Nr. but I expressed a drawing on that Xxw'.n. and I valued It at $30. Now the ex press company will hav to pay for it. Life. Backstop "I'm glad to see that you ,are making a name for yourself as r : '"author, old man." Scriblet (modestly) "Yes. Honors are being heaped on me. Why, it was 1.. !y yesterday tl -.t I learned that my latest book had b- , thrown out of the Boston library. Harper's Bazar. r f ! I l A I '1