1 KV a 1 s $i.oo a Year, In Advance. FOR QOD, FOR COUNTRY, AND FOR TRUTH." filngle Copy, j ci VOL. XIV. PLYMOUTH, N. C, FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 1903. 1M) ,A r . 111 Iff 3 111 III I v i 1.9 IT I I r I I " A I H 1-4 11 ItV - OLD TIME- THE 'WHIP - BY HENBT , Henry Van Dyke, the noted Presbyter . fnre in Princeton University, was first rep The Song-Sparrow," was printed, with a ' Do you remember, father It seems so long ago The day we fished together Along the Pocono ? ZAt dusk I waited for you, Beside the lumber mill, !And there I heard a hidden bird, .itiat cnantea vwmp-poor-wiu." . t ... The place was all deserted; ' The mill-wheel hung at rest; The lonely star of evening Was quivering in the west; Th3 veil of night was falling: The winds were folded still; And everywhere the trembling air lie-echoed, "Whip-poor-will. Hou seemed so long incoming, 1 felt so much alone; The wide, dark world was round. me, And life was all unknown ; The hand of sorrow touched me. And made my senses thrill "With all the pain" that haunts the strain Of mournful "whip-poor-will." The Capitulation ID I tell you that I had asked auntie to come here, Len?" "No, you certainly did "D t not," replied Leonard Vancourt, bis , .forehead lowering into a frown, as he iielped himself to a second piece of toast, i "Might" I inquire which of the two is going to afford us the delirious -delight of her . presence Clarissa the saturnine, or Amelia the magpie imi tator?" "Len!", The delicately traced eye brows were raised in indignant expos tulation. "I. think that it is particu larly unkind of you to speak 'In that manner of my relations. You used to eay that Aunt Amelia was a shrewd business woman." "I would be the last to deny her that qualification, "Celia," remarked Van court, grimly. "It was positively a stroke of genius the "way the old rep tile ahem lady palmed off on to me that property in Southwark. Fifteen houses, my dear, -with only rudiment ary drainage and a hungry County CJouncil waiting on me to render the same effective. Aunt Amelia ought to have been a compauy promoter. Egad! she would hare made her fortune at "the game, my respected aunt-in-law, has it in her bones. Where is the -Daily Express?" , Cella's lip commenced to quiver. ' I think that you are horrid, Len," he vouchsafed at length, glandng re proachfully at her husband, who sud denly became immersed in the money market column of the paper -which he tiad discovered under the table. "I must say that I think you are particularly unkind to speak of my relations in the way you always do! You should not forget, dear, that Aunt Clarissa has been more than a mother to me, and brought me up since I was ra tiny tot; the first time you ever, met me, Len, was at her house." ' "I know,", replied Vancourt casually. ""But if it hadn't .been for Gus Har- 'rington taking me to Rutland Gate I should never have seen either of you. I remember the evening well. I took n Instinctive dislike to your respected, more than a mother of an aunt! A feeling incidentally which has intensi fied ever since.",. . . : "You used to say that you -were very Tond of her before we "were married, Xn." . , Vancourt coughed dryly. ' "I was diplomatic, Celia," he said quietly, as, laying aside his paper, he buttered a piece of toast. "You see, as I could only see you in her house, I :was obliged, in a sort of a way, to hold the candle to the your aunt." . "She was very fond of ; you, Len." Celia Vancourt's eyes were tent re proachfully on his. , "Ahem! That was very kind of her, ilear. You see, Celia, I had shekels; in Iondon society I was considered rather a, decent match at the time I married you." His accent was irrltatlngly sar Jonic. "Do you mean to insinuate that Aunt Clarissa liked you because you were well off and lria' houie in Park ILane?" deinande. Jclia, her face flush lag an angry pkik . IK " FAVQ POOR - WILL VAN DYKE. ian divine and professor of English litera resented in this eeries when his noem. sketch of his life. What did I know of trouble? An idle little lad, I had not learned the lessons That make men wise and sad. I dreamed of grief and parting, ' And sometimes seemed to fill My heart with tears, while in my ears Resounded, Whip-poor-will." ' 'Twas but a shadowy sadness, That lightly passed away; But I have known the substance Of sorrow, since that day. Por nevermore at twilight, Beside the silent mill, . I'll wait for you, in the falling dew, 1 And hear the whip-poor-will. But if you still remember, In that fair land of light. The pains and fears that touch ua Along this edge of night, X think all earthly grieving, And all our mortal ill, To you must seem like a boy's sad dream, Who hears the whip-poor-will. A Love Story For the Married. "Aun,t Amelia did, anyway," smiled vancourt unreeimgiy. "My spare cash made her Southwark property boom in a manner which brought a smile to her face! She had me on toasts Celia." She rapped her knife impatiently on the Immaculate damask. "Leonard," she remarked, with dignity," "I would have you remember that you are speaking of my relations," "I have no desire to rob you of their ownership, dear," remarked Vancourt; then added, ' as he commenced his breakfast in real earnest, "I wish to goodness that you would manage to see that we got bacon for breakfast that is not salty enough to skin the Inside of one's mouth. I don't believe that the tradesmen would dare to sell such abominable meat to anybody else but us." Cella's face grew tearful-looking, as she poured herself out a cup of tea; then, glancing across the table at the sombrely annoyed features of her hus band, said, irritably: ." never met such a growling man as you are in my life! The moment anything puts you out you quarrel with your food. Goodness knows, I am fanciful enough, but I don't find this bacon a bit salty." "Of course not! It is quite sufficient for me to say that it is for you to de clare the contrary," said Vancourt, angrily. "I never met such a contra dictory woman as you- are in the whole course of my existence. I am just about sick of it!" . "And I am tired to death of you and your grumbling," retorted Celia, flush ing with anger. "Everything that 1 do is wrong. I can't make out what on earth made you marry me!" "Because I was a victim of the throes of driveling lunacy, that's why," said Vancourt savagely. "I wish now that I had never set eyes on you. Why, ever since my marriage I have never known what it is to have a decent breakfast. If I don't get a high egg I get salt bacon which a . sailor would kick at, and if I get neither of those two things I have a piece of fish which would disgrace an East End cook-shop put in front of me." , J He sniffed indignantly, as, turning in his'chalr, he picked up his discarded paper and, flattening , it out angrily, j commenced to read Its contents. ;. j "Very well, Leonard," said Celia, dig nity struggling with fears for mastery in her voice. "Since you are as sorry to have ever met me as I am to have ever come across you I will ask Aunt Clarissa when she comes here "I tell you she Isn't coming here S" interrupted Vancourt peremptorily. "I won't have the old cat in the house so there! I'm master here kladly re member." - "And I am mistrc "Bo Aunt Clarissa !" retorted Celia. '1 come and " "What?" "And when ' she her that how u: and ask her tr tinned Celia heeding his want to PC" ' OUr very p.hall tell with aa much dignity as he could as sume. "As such is the case, and since I am not allowed to be master of. my own house, we had better separate amicably. I, for one, shall be' very pleased to be freed from . a nagging woman!" "And I, from a brute!" . ."That is a question of opinion," re marked Vancourt easily. "I have been asked by Carstairs to go for a cruise, and as his yacht leaves Southampton the day after to-morrow I may as well go with him until I have decided what I will do. Of course, I shall leave you the house I will clear out." He crossed the room to the door, adding, as he opened it, VThere will be enough money paid into your account to sat isfy your requirements." Then, with out awaiting .a reply, he closed the door behind him, Celia gazing half dis consolately, half defiantly, at the va cant chair on the other side of the table. .' Vancourt had not been gone, long be fore he returned, . dressed in faultless style, a Raglan over his arm and a bowler in his hand. Well, I'll say goodby," he said light ly, extending his hand to his wife. "I've told Job to pack up my duds and to bring them to me at the Carlton. I sliall be stopping there till to-morrow morning, when I shall leave for South ampton," ' " , , " ' "I see.' "We shall be cruising about the Mediterranean for about two months," he continued, eyeing his wife covertly as ne spose. "Alter wnicn 1 may go to South Africa for a few months to do some big game shooting." "You will enjoy yourself, I hope,", said Celia, placing her, slim hand in his. "Of course, if we ever meet In society we need not be dead cuts, need we, Leonard?" , Her deep blue eyes were raised al most' wistfully to his. " ' "Of course not," he said, with a strained laugh, ' as, pressing her cold hand to his, he went toward the door. Addio, little woman; It, is a pity that We should go our several ways, don't you'think so?" "Yes, it Is! Goodby." Her voice faded away into a whisper, adding quaveringly to herself as the door -closed behind her husband, "he might have kissed me before he went. I don't think that he .minded leaving me, and I I oh, I don't care!" she cried angrily, dashing away the tears which had gathered on her lashes. ,4If he had tried to kiss me, I'd have slapped his face for him! I hate Leonard, and now that I am free I shall be as happy as " s The harsh clang of the hall door below caused her to stop abruptly. For a moment Celia stood silent, then, sinking onto a sofa, she burled her fluffy head amid a bevy of cushions, and cried as if her heart would break. "He's gone!" she muttered in a strangled voice, broken by sobs. "And I made sure that he would come-back." Meanwhile, outside in the street, Leonard Vancourt hailed a hansom. and, stepping into it, was soon bowling in the direction of the Carlton. "I am afraid that I have made a fool of my self," he soliloquized. "I made sure that she would have stopped me before Ileft the house; of course, it's all most unearthly rot to think for a moment that I could live without my little Celia. A day would be bad enough, but two months I have half a mind to turn back and say that I was only bluffing, only I should look such an ass if I did. I might have kissed her before I left, though! Poor little girlie, she half raised her face to mine when I said good-bye and oh, I am going to chuck this fool's game and shall toddle back, and she can stodge me with high eggs and salt bacon as much as she jolly' well likes if she will only take me on again. Cabby, I " His sentence was never finished, for. as he pushed open the trapdoor above his head the pole of a brewer's dray crashed into the side of the hansom. . WBfen Leonard Vancourt came to his senses it was to find himself swathed la bandages lying in bed in a darkened and familiar room, while curled up be- side him on the immaculate counter pane sat Celia, her slim fingers cooling his fevered brow. nullo, girlie!" he exclaimed, with a weak attempt at hilarity. "I haven't gone after all, you see." Are you sorry, Len, that such is not the case?" she queried gently, nestling her tear-stained cheek against his. "Would you mind, dearest I mean Celia if I said tiat I was glad?" he tasked, slowly, j' V'Mlml! Oh, Len, you are the dearest la all tic world!" sbo cried, im- pulslvely. "I thought that, you would have come back, but. when: I found that you did hot I just sat down and wrote to the Carlton to ask you to, dear." .. : " " : "And I hoped that you . would call me back, Celia,' he , said,' delightedly. "And when I found that you did not, girlie, I thought that I would just come back, and say that you might do any mortal thing you jolly well liked, if you would only take, me on again, Celia.? She passed her hand caressingly over his cheek. , . . " "Call me girlie," she whispered, hap pily. "You know, dearest, how I hate Celia." "I don't," Vancourt replied, fondly. "I love her better than the whole world! Kiss me, girlie." New York ' " Preventive Medicine. In looking over the history of the search for a means of cure, one is struck by the great value of the ounce of prevention. Keeping the germs out is in every way preferable to dealing with the matter they have once entere'd the body. This fact scientific medicine is Impressing more and more deeply on the minds of pufiric authorities and the people, and their response in the form of provisions for Improved public and private sanitation's one of the striking features of the social progress of the present time. All the more .en lightened nations, States and cities of the world possess organized depart ments of health which, with varying degrees of thoroughness, deal with the problems presented by the Infectious diseases In the light of the latest disc overies. . Fifty years ago the term preventive medicine was unknown. To-day it rep resents a great body of weli-attested and accepted principles. It has cleaned 'our streets, it has helped to build our model tenements, it has purified our food and our drinking water, it has entered our homes and kept away dis ease, it has prolonged our lives and it has made the world a sweeter place in which to live. Medical News. ' A Queer Centenarian. . There died in New York the other day a most remarkable woman, Mme. Avon de - Vermond. This lady was born in Germany on October 5, 1800. At the age of thirty she married a French soldier, who during the Na poleonic wars, had been quartered in her native town and who had seen her as a little girl and loved her. Quite romantic. Few men take the trouble to go back after the lapse of fifteen or twenty years. But th'e strange and re- imarkable features of Mme. de Ver? mond's case -were not. concerned with her love story. The fact is that she, being 102 years old, didn't die in a poor house. Nor does it appear that she had all her life been addicted to the use of whisky and tobacco. It may be difficult for the reader to be lieve this, but the good old lady seems ;to have had exemplary habits, not withstanding her great age; moreover her declining years were passed with members of her own family instead of upon public charity. After this en couraging case almost any of us may be justified in endeavoring to live a hundred years. Chicago Record-Herald. Hall I the New Woman. The Benchers tf Lincoln's Inn, sup posedly the most conservative body of men in England, have given way to the onward march of woman. They have granted permission to an Indian woman, Miss Cornelia Sorabjl, to fre quent their library and consult and use the books therein. Miss Sorabji has -passed the examination for the degree of B. C. L. at Oxford and received the certificate for intellectual fitness for the degree, which is not yet granted to women by the university. In Bombay she obtained the university degree of LL. B., and has been successful in court work. She Is the only woman in the world that can study in the Lln coin's Inns Library. The Archbishop as a Singer. A story is told of the late Archbishop of Canterbury one evening' dropping in at a London church and taking a back seat beside a bricklayer, who proved to be as capable of blurting out his thoughts as the Archbishop "him Self, A hymn was announced which happened to be a favorite with Br. Temple, who sang with great enjoy ment. The bricklayer stood it for a verse or two, and then he said, "You'd .better stow it; you're spilin' the ser vice." The chKCS that begins at home 13 often so wciuthat it stays therfii : . " ) .THE GREATEST THING OF ALL.- That she Ads golden hair divine 'lo me is no great shakes, 1 But I bow doAvn before the fine Plump wafHea that she makes. Her classic ieatures that I see . My thirst for beauty slakes; '.Yet not so much are they to nie . As are the cakes she bakes. I Jove her eyes, whose limpid blue Rivals Norwegian lakes; iYet I forget them so would you'' When browsing on her steaks. G:"rls, if you're pretty, nothing more, '. ,ou are but arrant fakes. , A husband's love flies out the door Whene'er his stomach aches. '' . .. Tom Masson. Jerrold "I took "Dolly .out in my auto yesterday.", Harold "Of course you proposed to her?"; Jerrold "No! Every time I started to. I broke down." Puck. 4 Gladys-4"So he proposed in his auto after a week's acquaintance? What did, you fell him?" Dolly "Told him he was exceeding the speed limit." Puck. She "I would prefer a quiet home wedding, but father is opposed to it." . He "I wonjfler why?" She "Oh he's awfully deaf, you know." Clcago News. '. ' ! Mrs. Fortey "He was pleased to say I held my age very well." Mrs. Snappe "Why shouldn't you? Think of the . years of practice you've had." Phila delphia Press. "I hope you never talk back when, uaughty boys call you bad names?" "No, ma'am. I'm a little tongue tied. I always hit 'em with a rock." Cleve land Plain-Dealer. "I had a mind to buy a steam vehi cle." "You changed your mind?" "Yes; I have now half a mind to buy a gasollner and half a minio buy an electric." Automobile Magazlnef "Where are the songs of yesterday?" 1 Sings the. bard in a ballad of sorrow: While the songs that are driving our sleep away . . Are the songs of to-day and to-morrow. . New York Times. City Friend "In this house occurred New York's most famous murder mys tery." Country Cousin "Indeed? Which doVou mean?" City Friend-' "The one the police solved." Judge. Youngwed (on bridal tdur) "I would . like rooms for myself and wife." Ho tel Clerk "Suite, I suppose?" Young- t wed "That's what. She's the sweet est thing that ever happened." Chica go News. . ,' , :,. ' ; i . First Youth "That was a great trag edy, wasn't it? Did you take your par ents to see it?" Second Youth "Oh,! no! They are too old for that sort of thing. They went to a farce cbmedy.' t -Life. .:. r: V She "It was fortunate that you we, such a fine French scholar. I supPj when, you were in Paris you hSS difliculty In making yourself undei-.. stood?" He "Not when I talked Eng. lish." Boston Transcript, A cook there was kneading her dough, j When in at the door walked her bough, j She said, "I am busy, ; So don't make me dusy j With love talk, but get up and gough: i Baltimore American. Squire (to rural lad) "Now, my boy, tell me how do you know an old par tridge from a young one?" Boy "By teeth,- sir." Squlfe "Nonsense, boyt You ought to know better. A partridge hasn't got any teeth." Boy "No; sir; but I have."r-Punh. , . , ' "I'm afraid. Bobby," said his mother, "that when I tell your father wiat a naughty. boy you've been he wll P-'V -ish you, severely. "Have yi J tell him?" asked Bobby, ( 'nestly.' "Oh, yes, I shall tell him I. dlately after dinner." The look of n oa Bobby's face deepened. i'h' ath-' er," said' he, "give him a be f tor dinner than usual. You raisin de ' ;it rnurh for me." Tit-Bits. I What Paris loctor tarn In Paris there are, according to the London Lancet, 2000 medical practi tioners; of these forty have come of from $40,(XV t , 1 of $20,000, fifty f rom ? 1 ' 200 hxmira from ?-v i . 'ross in- 0, fifty: from fiOOO to $C v ou an. averts ge ?T2." l whole of. France ih, cians'who gain on au year gross. 170 cir: ,-. , In tl.e 1CO0 physi The impecunious like to chop up his f . wood. 'rat wo: : . ? t.r f :