t f0f(i ft fl -4. 1 4l.oo Vear, In Advance. .. FOR GOD, FOR COUNTRY, AND FOR TRUTH." Single Copy, s CenU. ' ' ' ' T VOL. XIII. PLYMOUTH, N. C, FRIDAY, JANUARY 9, 1903. NO. 4.y 0 -t4 .-Hi HER HOUR OF A ROMANCE OF BY MARGUERITE STABLER. A.Y, Mollie, said Nolan, in ,-' an off-hand SX": tJ "what's that I'd . ' The sua had passed the maimer. fellow iu th up here?" meridian, and the shadows wore beginning to : full on Nolan's side. The hop-Held code of courtesy demands that, when a man is picking with a "lady" he give her always the shady side. Put Nolan, In bis perturbation of nilud, forgot his manners. ! "Nothin'," came indifferently from MoiJio, feeling the rays pelting down upon her bead, and remembering the ihoughtfulucss of the fellow; in the leggings in pulling the fullest vines Iown on her side. '"Kay, Mollie," asked-Nolan, persua ?nely, after a half-hour's silence, dur ing "which time several couples had changed sides so that the girl might - have the benefit of t"ie shade, "what was he hangiu' round you all mornin' .for?" 'Nothin:" The black eyes were stubbornly glued to their work, while . brads of perspiration stood out on the round, tanned cheeks. Thereafter, viue after vine was : reached and stripped- in oppressive silence. At length, after baring de- i cided. to adopt a course of moody . Mence, -Avhich .should break the . haughty spirit of this girl, and make tier hang upon bis slightest word. Nolan heard himself say, before he " knew it, in tender, . coaxing tones: .""Say, Mollie, what was he talkin' to ...you about, "anyway?" "Nothin'!" Mollie' s chin went into the nir and her lips snapped together like iho blades of a' jack-knife.' The beads of perspiration had grown into rivulets that, trickled from nose to -ch'm and splashed into the basket. The foreman of the tield rode by sev eral limes, and noticed gratefully there was. less talking and more work being done between the two than usual," and when at last the shadows grew so long it did not matter which side of tiie. row she was on, and the sun began to redden behind a bank of smoke ami -dust, the joyful sound of the quitting bell pealed over the fields. Arms just lifted to reach a vine, hands in the. act of stripping a branch, fingers just crocked to pick a last Imp, .slopped ami fell empty - at the ouud'of that fust tap. The unhappy Nolan could not stop his thoughts so quickly, nor resist a last appealing. "'Say, Mollie, what's the matter with ..you, anyway':" But the maid only threw- a defiant "Nothin'!" over her shoulder as she was joined at the end of the row by a tall fellow in leggings. The black eyes 'lost their defiance,- the lips rippled into smiles as tshe pushed her sun-bonnet back and looked up into the laughing face under the sombrero. , v ;G real place, isn't it?" the tall fel low, said; half to himself, as he watched the pickers filing by China men, Indians. Japs, and wldtes of ov- iry brand, and all sorts of conditions. "There was the .objectionable element of "hobos.". e' .AK.rse. In plentithde. but the lo'iority of the pickers wore ""V-TnT who, after harvesting their iva meagre little bay crops, packed i heir wagons, loaded in their families. whistled io their dogs, and started off for. n three or four weeks' camp in the hop-fields. With these families it is , .3i regular institution, and the one iu 4 cresting occasion of the year. Here new acquaintances' tire made, foot-hill .gossip exchanged for tule district sean- --dnls, flirtations and romances spring up. flourish, and die, with the hops, r.nd most of the back country belles i.Mlo their social debut from the Sat urday night dances. Mollie stole a. one-sided glance at the fellow in the leggings, and took in every detail as his eyes followed the -crowd. She held her head just a trifle higher than usual when familiar faces looked up and saw her chatting with this stylish looking fellow in the cor duroy knickers. In fact, when some of her Coon Creek friends came along, she found it inconvenient to look their way, for kIic felt that in refined society tlsr-ir "Hello Moll" would not be con sidered good form. 'How long have you worked here?" iihe tall .fellow asked her, shortening hb BRIEF TRIUMPH THb' HOP-FIELDS. stride to fall in with her little trip. " Mollie, delighted to be called upon for information, gurgled out everything she knew about the hop-fields; the ad vantage of being paid by the piece instead of the 'day, the amount the .average picker could make a day, the weighing in the baskets, the processing in the kiln, the pressing and baling, and the joys of the dance given every Saturday night. Adding, for she could scarcely believe t his distinguished-looking personage could le a common picker, like Mike Nolan and Tinny Smith, and the rest of them: "Are you visiting at Iloptown?" "No," the fellow laughed, "I'm a cit izen, If I can stand these beastly hours. For the next few weeks I'm a son of the soil in order to till up my coffers for the next semester." This fellow relished the dilating power of the black eyes beside him. and Mollie, having studied Short Primer of Chem istry, felt herself on an intellectual level with this college senior. As they heared the camp she was conscious of a double row of curious eyes peering it her from under tent flaps, but tucking her chin up into the air, she walked along as oblivious of them, apparently, as if i-he and this new friend were alone in a wilderness. Before picking-time the next morn ing it was thoroughly .understood by all the tenters on Mollie's side of the field that Nolan's race was run. and that Mollie had a new "steady" from "below," as the southern counties are termed by the inhabitants of the north ern. Nolan, his wrath cooled Iry a nights repose, became aware of this fact wnen he waited at the usual tryst mg place by the' first row of poles, and saw tka tan sombrero looming tip !n the wake of the bine sun-bonnet. The rest of the day he was pursued by the cheerful jibes of his friends about being thrown down for a city "guy." Poor Mike, even his dauntless good humor went down u"der their clumpy efforts at consolation. But Mike Nolan was not the only ovto suddenly effaced from the girl's tickle memory. There were Pinny, and Spike and Big Terry, into whose young and susceptiblo hearts her black eyes burned big holes, now not even had '.en when they passed her on the row. The eyes under the sombrero lost nothing of the situation. This little girl was undoubtedly pretty after a sort of wild-rose type, sin certainly was the only one in the field who could help- to. make the long hoi. days en durable to him. Her eyes had a way of widening when he talked to her, which was highly agreeable to him. and he spared no opportunity to produce that, effect. Her cheeks, too. had a frank little way of going pink sometimes red when the allusion was direct enough and altogether he;1 open admiration-put a tine gilt edge on r.!s self-esteem. "Is it possible you have never been to San Francisco?" he asked her, one day. "No. I've uever been there." she ad mitted, apologetically, "but," she hastened to add, in order to dispel any idea of rusticity that admission might have given. "I've been twice to Bed Bluff, and we live only nine miles from Coon Creek." "Have you ever thought you might like to live there?" he pursued, reach ing up to pull down a cut vine from the. pole. Ills glance was very direct this time, and his tones full of meaning. It was pretty to see her eyes and cheeks glow with a deeper hue, so in tent was he on noting the effect he could produce with the slightest touch. He did not wait for an answer, but went on. "Wouldn't you like " But just then the Sacramento train thundered by "on the trestle, drowning his words, but not the look in his eye?. And on the the heels of that, the noon bell fang, at which everybody quit work--, and they walked up to the set tlement together in silence little Mol lie's feet touching the ground only in high places, her foolish little head 'way v.p in the clouds, the man's thoughts miles away from the scene about him, and the hope of his heart centred on getting on the 'varsity foot ball team.' . - . v By the end of tlte season Miss Mol lie's social circle had narrowed down to few more than her own family, and one tall man. She had discovered her tastes to be of the climbing variety, and had reached the fatal conclusion that not one of her old friends at Coon Creek possessed a particle of culture or style. And when, before dispersing for another year, the pickers prepared to give a grand ball in honor of the wind-up of the hop-season, Mollie de termined to show them the size of the gulf that now yawned between her self and them. These hop-pickers' dances are open io every one. so there are not many lines of social distinction drawn. The men exchange their bandana neck 'kerchiefs for stiff celluloid collars, and the girls wash out a sprigged lawn frock, and are radiant, and ready for the frolic, lint Mollie, with a .reck less slash into her summer's earnings, burst, upon the scene, on the eventful evening, an nuimated billow of frills, and tlounees. and furbelows. As the frolic progressed, the tali fellow with his sombrero under his arm, watched the scene from the door way with an amused, wondering smile. The big dining room that seated oOO hungry pickers three times a day had been transformed in less than an hour into a dancing hall. The tables had been hoisted to the ceiling by stout bale ropes, when; they were secured to the rafters, while the shelf that, ran the length of the room on both sides, was studded at regular Intervals with empty bottles, into each of which was stuck a tallow candle. After the good old-fashioned custom. Pinny Smith, with a girl in a yellow frock, led otf the grand march, after which there were polkas, quadrilles, schottisekes, and dauo'es ids town-bred feet had forgotten, or never learned. When his eye caught Mollie's, he crossed the room to ask her for a dance. From the opposite doorway Spike had started toward her at the same time. She held her fana gauzy, flimsy thing that represented the price of several long de.ys' picking.- so she might not seem to notice Spike and her breath in fear lest he should reach her first. The fellow in the leggings was act Interested in his surroundings lie walked slowly, and Spike, she saw, was gaining. In a second he would be within speaking rauge and all would be lost. The next instant she rose to her feet, turned her back on the crest fallen Spike, and reached her baud toward the tall fellow, approaching in his leisurely, indifferent manner. When' the accordion began to Avail out "The Blue and the Cray," the man found to his surprise this little back woods beauty could dance. She-didn't hop, nor "scrape marches," nor stiffen like a poker iu his arms; she danced with that lithe free grace with which a bird flies, or a fish swims, because it was the natural expression of her bubbling, lightsome spirits. But, all too soon thy music wa stopped, and there was a mad stam pede for the counter, over which pink lemonade and cookies were sold. The leggined fellow, however, led the ra diant: little girl out into the moonlight, which had transformed the denuded redwood hop-poles iuto endless colon nades. Regardless of her slippers and tlounees, everything but. the dominat ing presence of the man beside her, she strolled down the row on the rough bare ground. When they regained the ball room pro ten)., the music had struck into the long, swinging strains of "Creole Belles," Again they circled 'round and 'round, never pausing for a breath until the music stopped. Happy little Mollie! This was her brief hour of triumph, and she carried it off with a high hand. Her Coou (.'reek friends, who were not too dazzled by her airs and graces', came up as usual and asked her for a dance, but the. next one was always engaged. Nolan looked a moment longingly in her direction when he caught the first bar of "The Honeysuckle and the Bee," but having heard of the treatment ac corded the other fellows, he turned and consoled himself with the Heu essy girls. When at last the dance was over, when the accordion had wheezed out the plaintive strains of "Home, Sweet Home," and the happy dancers paired off in twos for the best part of the evening's fun the walk home in the moonlight Mollie wondered, in her simple 'little soul, if heaven could be any better than this. Her companion did not tell her that he was going away the next morniug until they had reached her oavii tent door. lie had fancied she might be sorry, but had not imagined she would care so much. He was perry tin moon was not brighter, for he knew he was missing much of the tell-tale play of expression in her eyes and cheeks. And when, after repeated protestations of remembering her until his dying day, and promises of coming tip to Coon Creek to visit Uncle Sy's dairy ranch the very first chance he got, he took her band to say "good-by" and bent so low her cheeks flamed up as red as her lips. But ?he could not have been so angry as she pretended to be. be cause, after the lights were out all up and down the line, they were still saying "good-by." It was not a long walk to Iloptown station, and next' day the tall yonng fellow, again in tweeds and a Panama hat, tramped up and down the plat form, impatient to be back into the stir and bustle of the life he had left, and recounting to himself for the hun dredth time his chances of getting on the 'varsity team as half-back. "Hello, old man!" he shouted, as he jumped on the step, wondering at thi? gathering of the clans. "Hello! Hello!" a volley of voices echoed as he entered the car. "Just coming down from Shasta," one of the fellows explained: "my sister and some friends of hers in the car. Come on!" The train moved slowly when it crossed the trestle. Mollie had counted on that, and hurried to- the end of the bop-field so she might get a last smiling adieu from the- car window. Four, five, six windows slipped by,, and her heart began to fail, but at the eighth, there be was. looking toward her, too. The black eyes widened a the window came abreast of her fence-post. Yesr his head was turned in her direction, but why, oli why. did he not see her handkerchief waving wildMy at him? Tiie next moment brought into view a fair-haired girl in the seat behind him. and the same look; the same smile she had lived upon all these weeks were bent upon the new face. It could not be possible that he had forgotten bet already! Still, trusting little Mollie waved her handkerchief, and then her honnet. His head was turned iu her direction, but he had eyes for no one but i his trim-looking girl with the dotted veil. A moment more and the train was gone, the rear end of the baggage car grew smaller and dimmer, till it was out of sight. When the forlorn little figure turned back to the hop-field, a great, dry sob in her throat and an mipiy ache in her heart, the one or two Coon Creek peo ple she met let her see they had learned they were not expected to speak to her. At a turn iu the road she passed a hilarious group of pickers exchanging tin-types with hearty promises of meet ing again next year. Pinny was there, lavishing peanuts and gum on the crowd, and though he saw her, lie -lid not look up. She drew her bonnet down over her eyes and told herself she didn't can-. But as she walked up the long, hot avenue alone, she met Nolan, his high spirits restored, walk ing home witli the red-haired Ilruessy gir!. San Fr.-incisco Argonaut. How Ife Saved Uimuclf. A prominent clergyman used to tell of one of his parishioners who had been very sick: A physician had given him some medicine and told him he could got out, but under no circum stances was he to get wet. The man went out on the farm and a shower of rain came up suddenly. There was no shelter near, and to save" himself lie crawled into a hollow log. The action of the rain caused the log to shrink so as to endanger his life. He could not move, and being brought face to face with death the whole of his past life came before him as in a panorama. He remembered the days of his childhood, his entrance upon life, bis successes and his sins, then he remembered, last of all, that when he p'ft homo that morning he re-f-.'.sed his wife, when she asked him for fifty -cents for the church, and the thought made him feel so small that he had no dnTicuhy in getting out of the ig.draee Church Bells. r A Changed Man. A Scotchman had reached the sum mit of his ambitions, says Everybody's Magazine, in attaining to the magiste rial bench. The honor seemed to him u great one, and he tried to live up to it. With his head high in the air be swaggered along till he went bolt up against a cow which had not the man ners to get out of the way, but contin ued to browse by the roadside in mild unconcern. "Men," cried the indignant owner, "mind my coo!" "Woman," he replied, with fine dig nity, "lm lio longer a won. I'm a bail-lie.' THE DESK SLAVE'S SONG. , . -i O this i the song of tits man who'i chained All day to a roll top desk; -. . ' ' Who, sweltering over a type-machine, Assumeth a shape grotesque, The breeze and the sunshine arc not lof him. The sky is- a mere hearsay ; , He sits and grind 'mid tin? rustling 'sheets Through all of the dull, dull day. He thinks of the years when hw hand were hard, His arms like tlie best of steel; He thinks of the day when his lithe hmb made Good time on a racing wheel; He thinks of the day when he held lins own In harvesting hay or grain Then emiles at the thought that a croquet game Can give him a next-day pain. Hp sighs to remember the mighty brawn lie showed on the college track; He thinks of the davs when her played bae oall. And wishes those days were back; He thinks of himself in a- football suiC Well padded and picturesque, Then weeps o'er recalling the flabby form That's chained to the roll top desk. O man in the field, with the hoe or plow, Oman with the ditching spade! Yeirn nnt for tiie "easy, white-handed job" Instead of your sturdy trade.. There's money sometimes in the oOiee grind . There's life in the work you do! You are fanned and warmed by the breew and sun And arched with a roof of blue.. Your food is the food of a hungry man,. You sleep like the dead at night; Your muscles are firm, and your heart i good,. Your cause is the cause of right; We slaves of the desk would renounce-our hope . Of wealth or a "raise" in pay If we could but feel as we used to feci F.ack there in our "husky" day. S. W.. Gillilan, in the Los Atigele3 Hefi aid. . 1 "There's only one trouble a bout that new author." "And what's that?" "Why, every time a book of his Is'suc cessful ho whirls right in and writer another I" Atlanta Constitution.. The chap who says he.loves a girl . Far more than tongue can tell His pur-Te might show, for he should kne-wr. That money talks as well. Philadelphia Record Judge "Of course, I might let yoir off, Casey, if you had an alibi." Casey "Shure, yt-r Honor. Oi haven't wan about me, but here's nie lasth quarter, if that'll timpt ye." Philadelphia Bul letin. "You sell ladies' hats here?" began the sour looking man. "Certainly' replied the milliner, repressing a smile. "You want to buy one for your wife?" "No, I don't, but it looks as if Pd have to." Philadelphia Press.. The Wife "Really, my dear, yoti are awfully extravagant. Our neighbor. Mr. Flint, is just twice as self-denying as you are." The Husband "But he has just twice as much money to be self-denying with." Brooklyn Life. j "Our magazines," complains the dis satified person, "show a decided falling; off in the inventiveness of our writers of fiction." "Why," responds the up-to-date reader, "you do not seem to keep up with the advertisements." Let us then be up and doing? "All or nothing's'" wut of date; ' Those achieving srnd pursuing Arc the ones who. arbitrate. Chicago Record-IIeralu. Financier (tenant of our forest, after . a week's unsuccessful stalking) "Now.1 look here, my man. I bought and paid for ten stags. If the brutes can't be shot you'll have to trap them! I've promised the venison and I mean to have it!" Punch. Orpheus had just been boasting fo lds wife of his ability to move inani mate things by mnsie. "So cau our cat," teplied Eurydice; "I saw your, brush and bootjack going his way last night." Angered beyond measure by; this suggestion he went forth and slew his rival. Brooklyn Life. CIiIuh'b Confession. The action of the Chinese Govern ment in sending a number of young Mongolians to different universities in America would seem to imply ;that some things may be learned . in, this country which have not been known in Chiua C0O0 years. Kansas City Star. Mushrooms generally consist of nine, ty per cent, water, but the remaining; ten per cent, is more nutritious tban bread. 4.