1 X t' '11 IF 11 $t.oo a Year, in Advance. FOR GOP, FOR COUNTRY, AND FOR TRUTM." Single Copy, 5 Cent. VOL. XIII. PLYMOUTH, N. C, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1902. NO. 38, I REMEMBER," BY THOMAS ""I remember, I remember "The house where I was born, The little window where the sun Came peeping in at morn; x He never came a wink too soon, jffNor brought too long a day; ftut now, 1 often wish the night Had borne my breath away. I rem ember, I remember The roses, red and white; The- violets and the lily-cups, Those ilovvers made of light! . The lilacs where the robin built, And where my brother set The laburnum on his birthday The tree U living yet. The Lsdy of the Red Clover Uncle?' tho big oak by the fifteenth toe Mr. Arthur Glendcnning was sit ting at his ease. He was some ten strokes behind his opponent, Colonel Bogey, but this did not bother him in the least, Bogey not being oik- of those players who tack their score cards in eonr-picuous places on the clubhouse bulletin board and mention their vic tories; to every one they meet. Nor was .Arthur annoyed by the fact that a hun gry bunker had swallowed up his ball indeed, ho hoped that his caddy's -search for it would go unrewarded yet ,.a while, for it was restful here, and, 'incidentally, there was a rather allur ing picture in the lipid just across the "leaf-strewn road that ran by the oak. The picture wasthat of a girl framed in red clover. It was a moving picture, too; that is, the girl was moving, gath ering a big bunch of clover blossoms. Itcsting against the fence Arthur no ticed a bicycle. 'That girl is not a slave to fads, any "how," he commented, lazily, to himself, "'or she would have given up the wheel for ping-pong. The fact that she is out here alone indicates that she possesos independence and a mind of her what! She's looking at that cow as if she were afraid of it!" If Arthur's imagination had been vivid enough to have viewed the cow is the girl viewed it, he would not have "boon so surprised tat the beast should lie causing her to show trepidation. A few minutes before,, when she was sur mounting the difficulty of the fence in quest cf the clover she had assured "herself that she wasn't a bit afraid of that cow. and. as a matter, of fact, she bad felt brave until the cow had sud denly raised Its head from the grass -and began to stare. Stares are always disconcerting. Perhaps the cow re garded her as an enemy browsing upon its clover, perhaps as a friend with a "handful of salt. At any rate, it gazed at her fixedly for a moment, and then lock two steps in her direction. The girl retreated two steps, returning the --cow's stare haughtily. Suddenly the .'latter seemed to make up its mind, and began to advance in a business-like way, with long, swinging strides. A delicate, silvery shriek pierced the afternoon air, and the flight and pur- suit began. In running ability they were quite evenly matched. The girl --fl eared the fence she gained it she be gan to climb. It was a most alluring picture, and Arthur Glendenning sue rambed to a great temptation. He had his weaknesses. One of them bad to do with cameras. The pretty views on the Ferndale links are so many that in this match with Colonel Bogey he had directed his caddy to bring the in strument along. At this instant it lay at his side. He seized it, leveled it; its -ye winked once. Then ho dropped it hastily behind a log. and was across the read, all solicitude, just as the fu gitive fell, a palpitating heap, on the grass on the safe side of the fence. "Are you hurt?" he inquired, anx-In-icly. "No, no, thank you," she panted, "but - t!:;.t that terrible cow!" Arthur glanced in the direction of the cow. It did not have a very terrible arpect. but rather an expression of r.i'Jd surprise, and even injury, as if it were exclaiming to itself: "Dear i:ie, bow vorv disappointing! Where's mv "Let me assist you to your foe;. said Arthur, in his best manner, bending I REMEMBER. HOOD. I remember, I remember Where I was used to swing; And thought the air must rush as fresh' To swallows on the wing; My spirit flew in feathers then, That is so heavy now, And summer pools could hardly cool The fever on my brow. T remember, I remember The fir trees dark and high; iised to think their slender tops Were close against the sky; !t was a childish ignorance. Hut now 'tis little joy To know I'm farther off from heaven Than when I was a boy. By J. Herbert Welch : : over her. She did not move, but ex claimed, distressedly: "Oh, dear, the fence has torn my skirt! You haven't such a things as a pin or two, have you?" There was a beseeching note in her voice, and the young man would have given much to have been able to have produced a pin, but it was impossible. He felt of his clothing hopelessly; he gazed out over the sweeping green of the links, up at the trees, up at the canopy of the heavens, but he saw no pin. The caddy's curly head just then ap peared over the edge of the bunker. "Here, caddy," shouted Arthur, "run over to the clubhouse and get seme pins, safety pins, any kind, and get all they've got in the place. Hun! But don't run so fast," he added, "as to injure your health," for the girl with the pink glowing beneath the white of her rounded cheeks, with the brilliancy of excitement still' in her eyes, and with wayward curlettes straggling from out of her mass of light hair, was certainly a picture even more of a picture than she had seemed to Arthur from a distance and he was too appreciative of the artistic to be willing that such a picture should pass quickly from his view. "May I sit down here on the grass and condole with you until the arrival of thef the. caddy?" asked Arthur. "I presume you may sit on the grass. I don't own It,. you know." The acidity of this reply was tempered by a flitting shadow of a smile. "At all events," answered Arthur, silting down, "you took rather quick possession of a bit of it just now. But it was really very rude of that cow to disturb you. I can't tell you how sorry I am." A pair of soft yet penetrating eyes were studying the young man. "No. I don't believe you can tell me how son-y you are," said the pretty lips beircath the eyes, "and the reason is that you're not sorry at all. You're having trouble to keep from laughing." Arthur could no longer restrain the hilarity that had been welling up be neath a very thin veneer of polite so licitude. They laughed together. "But I must. have done with this lev ity," cried Arthur, suddenly. "I must be up and doing. My lady's hat and flowers still lie within the domain of the fell beast. I must recover them at all hazards. I must face this beast, or else, 'od's boddikins, I were unworthy the name of knight!" Ho approached the fence, leaped over and in a moment Avas bowing low in the act of laying the trophies at the lady's feet. "Marry, now. but you are. forsooth, a brave knight," she laughed. "Ah, lady, my life were but a slight sacrifice in your service, but were I to crave a boon of you I would plead that you take from the heap one small red clover blossom and pin it in my buttonhole with your own fair hands." She laughed again. "Methinks you are a bold knight, toe. But for the sake of the dangers you have passed I will decorate you, Sir Arthur when the pins arrive." The young man came very near los ing his knightly pose. "How under the sun do you happen to know my r.ame?" he was about to inquire, but he perceived, before it was too late, that she had hit upon the name inno cently, as the usual name for knights. "May I be allowed to express a sus picion of you?" he asked. "I hope I am not a suspicious per son," she answered, "but what Is ft?" "Only that you have been reading historical novels." "Worse than that. But It seems to me that your mind also is steeped in the romantic." "It is. I've just finished being thrilled by Miss Mary Malvern's book, 'A Court Cavalier.' The celebrated Miss Mal vern is sojourning for the summer in this vicinity, you know." "Yes, I know," said the girl, hastily, "and what do you think of her book?" "Well." replied Arthur, slowly and judicially, "it is not bad, not half bad. Of course, most of the situations are impossible, and most of the characters have no counterpart in the heavens above, nor the earth beneath, nor the waters under iho earth, but on the whole the story's clever." She smoothed a wrinkle in her skirt, then asked slowly: "Do you really think there is any thing clever in it? What, for in stance?" Arthur liked this deference to his lit erary judgment. a:id he continued, complacently: "Well, in the first place, it is clever because it was, written by so very young a person. They say she is only about twenty or twenty-one. As a mat ter of fact, however, I suppose she Is nearer thirty. And if she is as young as is reported. I think her mother ought to have looked after her better, because she seems to have had an amazing amount of experience in af fairs of the heart. One cannot write of these things as realistically as she does without an intimate knowledge of them. While many of the situations are highly improbable, as I have said, some of the love scenes are life itself. I verily believe that only a veteran co quette could have described as Mary Malvern does the manner in which El vira leads the gallants on and then flouts them. Yret there is a distinct del icacy and charm about it all. This Miss Malvern must be a most interest ing girl. I would give a good deal to meet heiv Do you know, I thought several times when I was reading the book that I could fall ia love with a girl with a mind like hers. I think we would b? very sympathetic and conge nial." "Not really!" exclaimed the. girl on the grass. Her lips and eyes were smiling. She seemed to be taking im mense interest in his conversation, and this encouraged Arthur to go on. - "Yes, really. And another thing 1 like about her is her; ferocity. Why, when she gets a couple of swashbuck lers together in a dark' alley in old Lon don she writes about the encounter so that yo'u can fairly hear their hard breathing in the struggle. She enjoys it herself. I'll venture to guess that Miss Malvern has plenty of grit, and would stand her ground in the face of danger." "l'cu don't think she is afraid of cows, then? f rom unaer ner eye lashes the girl on the grass glanced up at him with a quizzical look of inquiry. "Oh, I beg your pardon," laughed Artlu;r; "I wasn't thinking of compari sons. To be a f raid of cows is perhaps more charming than not to be afraid of them. But, referring again to Miss Malvern, do you suppose she will marry, and become more or less com monplaceit's an effect matrimony has, you know or do you imagine she'll re main true to literature? Tell me. just for the sake of discussion, what you think the probabilities are. As a wom an, you can, of course, weigh them bet ter than I can." "Well, I don't know," said the girl, thoughtfully. "I don't believe that marriage need be commonplace, and but here come the pins." Arthur followed her glance, and saw with displeasure that the pins were, in deed, arriving. He uttered silent male dictions upon the caddy's short, sturdy legs that were comingover the green so rapidly and conscientiously. Ho busied himself with the young woman's bicycle when she was closing the rent made by the fence rail, and when he had reluctantly led the machine out into the road because she said she posi tively must be going be remarked, as- uming again his knightly tone: "If my lads should chance to pass this way on the morrow at the same hour, she will find a knight to tilt a lance in her protection, if need be, against the cow. or airy other peril." "The knight has been very kind," she milinaly replied, "and I thank him, and I will say that I have enjoyed his conversation more than he can imag ine, but I could not ask him to risk Ids life again for ine" "But is he not to have a name to dream on, nor any hope of the future?" "He should be- full of hope for the future," she called back, after she had mounted, "and as for the name, 'the lady of the red clover' should bv a good name to dream on.'T Arthur watched her till her figure grew small on the road and disap peared around a turn- That night in his dark room her rocked a photo graphic plate to and fro in the develop ing fluid with great care anel mnch anxiety, and felt the amateur's glow of enthusiasm in triple quantity when th3 picture began to take distinct form be neath his eyes. First there was a bit of road, then the grass, then the fence, and, finally, rising in triumph on the uppermost rails, the lady of the red clover, while behind her peered the mildly surprised face of a cow and an expanse of field. "It is a very well-balanced picture; the composition is nearly perfect," murmured Arthur, the amateur photo grapher, as he bent over the plate. "She's' a stunning looking girl," mur mured Arthur, the young man, as ho held the plate to the light. After ex pending much time and labor on the prints he framed one of the best of them and gave it the place of honor among the divinities on his mantel piece. "And here's the picture of the girl." he remarked to Bob Wilton a night or two afterward, as he finished the reci tal of his interesting experience. Bob glanced at the photograph. "Wh at!" he cried, bursting into a great laugh. "My dear fellow, pre pare yourself to bear up beneath a blow. This lady of the red clover, with whom you talked about Miss Mary Malvern, and with -whom you tried to make an appointment for the next afternoon, is no less a personage than Miss Mary Malvern herself." Bob lost 110 opportunity to tell the story at the golf clubhouse. It very speedily reached the drawing rooms, and cne morning Arthur received a faintly perfumed letter on a delicately tinted blue paper. Its contents were as follows: "My Dear Sir It seems that the knight Is a very modern kind of knight, who, when he is succoring ladies in dis tress, takes snapshots of them. Was the deed quite knightly? Since the lady of the red clover has no desire to remain perpetually in distress on a fence, she must ask that the prints be surrendered to her and that the plate be destroyed. Very truly yours, "MARY MALVERN. T. C Since the knight's act of de ception has rhade his trustworthiness appear to bc a somewhat uncertain quantity, the lady considers it a wise precaution to be a spectator to the de struction of the plate. She will be at the golf clubhouse, with a mutual friend, tomorrow afternoon at 4 o'clock." "But why," asked Arthur, in a tone of mock complaint, "did you allow me to go on so foolishly about Miss Mal vern and her book?" "Oh, I was not responsible," laughed Miss Malvern. "It was fate, who had witnessed the snapshot, helping me to get even." "Well, then," said Arthur, "we start fair. Will yon drive first?" "No; I prefer that you be in the lead. There may be a cow on the coui'se, you know." New York Times. Medicine in Uombay. A Swedish Consul at Bombay says that "because of their fear of sanitary inspection and modern methods of pre venting and curing disease the natives of India in vast numbers are the vic tims of plague. In consequence of the hatred and fear of hospitals and medi cal men the population of Bombay has decreased 40,000 in the last ten years, while the increase In the whole of In elia in the same time was about fifteen per cent. Bombay now has 700,000 people. The hospital and general med ical service in India are of the best aud do much good in the affected districts in spite of the prejudice which pre vails against such things. The plague is generally fatal without the most skillful medical attention. The na tives ia their ignorance seek only tc be left to die in 'peace. The ancient traditions of the country arc extremely difficult, almost impossible, to eradi cate." Love of Truth. The love of truth, with the power to prove it, gives one the courage tc bo sincere. New York News. MILLION DOLLAR FRUIT FARM. , CJg Apple Orchard In Missouri to Coye GOOO-Aere Tract. Missouri is to have a 5000-acre apple orchard, the largest in the world. Tbc 'Frisco road will build a track through, it from end to enJr and depots aud warehouses will be erected fr the stor age of the product. An evaporating plant, a vinegar and cider plant and a canning establishment will bcr erected, and facilities provided for caring for every portion of the orchard's product on a business basis, the keynote to which is like that of the packinghouses not a thing shall be wasted. The big orchard is to be- located in Laclede County, about three miles from Lebanon, on a tract occupying a north ern plateau, nearly the whole of the 5000 acres sloping to the north, a con dition much sought for by orehardists. It is owned by a company officered by Iowans, and which expects to make an investment on the property of $1,000, 000. It is proposed to set about 4800 acres of the tract to apples, the remaining 200 acres being reserved for buildings and other necessary purposes. Two-year-old apple trees are to be planted on 1000 acres next spring aud 2.30 acres of peach trees are to be planted,, these to afford quicker returns than can be expected from the apple trees. The peach trees will be supplanted by apple trees later, however. From the peach orchard returns are expect ed in three years, while for the apple trees six years are allowed. While the trees are growing the company wili plant the land to corn, berries and other crops in order to get a return from year to year. Stump pullers and steam plows are already at work, and. the contract has been let for clearing: the entire tract. The apples to be grown will bo chiefly of the Ben Davis and Jonathan varieties, which have been shown to be adapted to that soil aud which will keep well, remaining in cold storage for two or three years. It is intended that the orchard company shall market not only the fruit of its own farm, but shall buy and ship fruit from surround ing growers, thus keeping constantly in closest touch with the markets and in position to take advantage of every favorable condition. The Ozark country is yearly taking higher rank among the apple produc ing sections, and one of the promoters of the big orchard said he was advised the apple growers of New York and" other of the older States were not re planting their trees owing to tho high! values of land in those sections. H says that with the cheap lands of Mis souri so well adapted to apple growing- . and so centrally located as to the best apple markets, the Ozark region will soon become the apple producing cen tre of the world. Kansas City Journal. The Pins-Von Watch. ( There is one class of the community other than the players which blesses ping-pong. This is the watchmaker and jeweler, for I am told that there is nothing so hard on one's watch as in dulgence in the game of the moment. The reason is that most men do not take off their coats and waistcoats, and so play with their watches on. In the excitement the watches are jerked out of the pocket and fall on the ground or on the table, or any way get a nasty jar. A great many girls play with their watches fastened to their bodices, says Woman's Life, the pin gets opened and down the watch falls. Even if it docs not, the constant jump--ing about and swinging of the arms disturbs the machinery so that the watch does not keep time and has to be sent to be regulated. Since my watch maker told me of this I have watched (don't think I intended a wretched pun) many girls play, and the way their watches bumped about on their chests has been extraordinary. I can quite underand how it is that my watchmaker says he has more than doubled his income of late repairing the watches of ping-pong players. 9100,000,000 of BeeT. The total annual export value of United States meat of which beef forms the principal item is ia round figures .$100,000,000. If we add to this tho distributive sales of the various packing establishments in the United States for the domestic market as well, wc find that it reaches the enormous total of 1,000,000 carlcads. valued at $2,000,000,000. Added to this is tho value of the many by-products of the packing house, which amount to many; millions oore, Leslie's Monthly. t