f :.: irT r i 1 1 ' i mi ii ijii.iiLiuii in . j.j mi riiiiiiirnr 1. m.. fin i i tim j. juiMniif Tn inimiiwui i nn miUffTTiw iMmiiiir-TrHrTTiiiiiiiiiii in ul i i nmrv i u " n i i mum -T" r m miiiiiiirr " i Hi ii. nirx- "mil iMnrijirrm nini it mm mm jiirriT rrr wtiiiiiii i iii hi mi' "i Wiliininiiiiriiri"" ill liiTrL.Tnnrri m iwiTMifTrir 11 1 i" ' ri" ""i 'irnw.inian ' i T ' - . . ' Win I U--J r: a.;. "FOR GOD, FOR COUNTRY AND FOR TRUTH." SiagU Copy f Ccat, VOL. XVI. PLYMOUTH, N, C. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27, i905. N0.32. i car, in Advance. A I'' 4 v. EARTHLY ' 6ol om o n h n d gl o ry ,He isn't living iiow; There's wonder in his story lie isn't living now; Caesar mounted" pretty high, Charlemap;no Mas proud and great; "Charles of England, my, O, my! He moved at a rapid rate! There was French King Louis, too, Who had nothing much to do cave bo gay the seasons through They're not living now! firstTid to Ey CARROLL WATSON RANKIN'. mv3 S an ornament, the big, im pressive clock above the city hail was fully -worth its original heavy cost. As a timepiece, however, it was thoroughly exasperat ing; in spite of all efforts to retard its overhasty tuitions, it persisted in keep ing ahead of time. The butcher stand ing near the doorway of the little shop occupying the opposite corner always Teplied when anxious strangers, hurry ing train-ward, paused to ask if the clock was right: "Mine gracious, no: Dot clock vas ' inore as two year fast alretty." Delia Murehison was precisely like the clock, always ahead of time. If she were invited for 3 o'clock tea, she always arrived at half-past 2. If she had an appointment to keep she was invariably to be found, restlessly keep ing it at least twenty minutes too soon. She was small, thin, dark and eager, a vividly enthusiastic young person of fifteen; and just as it was impossible to retard the city hall clock sufficiently, so was it futile to attempt to make an easy, slow-going personage of Delia. In school she was nearly two years ihead of the girls with whom she had graduated from the eighth grade. In the matter of elective studies she had been, during her freshman year, a de cidedly grasping student. As a sopho more, she had been even more enter prising; consequently, at the beginning of her career as a junior, she found that there were no more elective stud ies left to take. She was eager, indeed, to add the regular senior course to -what she was already carrying, to pile physics and .trigonometry, upon geometry, and to cram two years of Latin into one; but to this heroic proposition both teachers iind parents very wisely said no. But this unprecedented forwardness in the matter of learning left Delia with much unoccupied time on her hands 4ind everybody knows what happens Where there are idle hands. Before her .-junior year Delia had been too busy to get into mischief; but now, with so little real work to do, she became a disturbing clement in what Lad hitherto been a strikingly quiet, well-behaved school. Just before Delia Lad become a sophomore a new super intendent of public schools was ap pointed. The first thing Mr. Graham did on taking possession of the schools was io make an appeal to the school board in favor of football for the boys and basketball for the girls. The members of the school board, however, did not take to this innova tion. One declared that he had not played football himself, and that he did not see any good reason why his grandchildren should. The second said that he once possessed a youthful rela tive who had lost a good front tooth playing football, and that he considered piling wood a much safer exercise for bis own stalwart sons. The third, an unatbletie-bachelor of seventy-two, sur prised everybody by siding with the new superintendent, and was very much in favor of both games; but he was only one against two, and at first it looked as if the school would have to get along without either of the pop ular sports. But one of the obdurate board mem bers had two sons with athletic tenden cies, and the other had four equally athletic grandchildren. All these en thusiastic young persons labored stren uously to overcome prejudices; and soon, so far as football was concerned, the board weakened. "When it came to basketball, however, there were stronger prejudices to over come. At last the board grudgingly consented to rent a suitable room for one month, and to endure the game for that brief period of time on trial. If-all went well, the game should stay; but if it killed Cissy Laurence, as Mrs. Laurence was certain it would, or if it interfered with Doris Green's "Caesar," or Anastasia Mallett's asthma,' or Myrtle Howard's ancient history, or Mary Clark's heart the game should be banished. Of course the girls were overjoyed. Nothing serious happened to any of them during the first month, the hall was engaged for another four weeks, and it began to look very much as if the game had come to stay. Mr. Miller was a stern disciplinarian. .During school hours, whenever he was in charge of the assembly room, Delia behaved like a model pupil. In No vember, however, Le was called away GLOnY. There is much regretting By men who live to-day; They want more than they're getting, The men who live to-day; They look across the past and mourn, They bend to labor and are sad; They wish that they might have been born To tilings such as some rnoients had; But better far, it seems to me, Than having immortality And being dust, it is to be Up and 'round to-day. S. E. Riser, in Chicago Record-Herald. the injured r suddenly by illness in his family, and upon little Mr. Peasley, the science teacher, devolved the task of keeping sixty-nine restless young persons in order. .Now Mr. Teasley knew all about bugs and blossoms and queer, evil smelling acids; but he had never learned how to keep even a small class of six or eight pupils from wriggling, twisting and whispering. The task of looking after sixty-nine, with Delia nearly a year ahead of her studies, and consequently dangerously idle, was ut terly beyond him. With all her lessons prepared for the coming five days, Delia was in her most mischievous and least admirable frame of mind that week; and owing to Mr. Miller's absence, the remaining sixty-eight, too, were in a pleasant, relaxed and receptive mood. Never had they been more willing to follow Delia's reckless lead. Near-sighted Peasley, poor man! could not see the blackboard at the back of the room; so when Delia drew an alluring caricature of Robin Hadley, suffering with toothache, instead of the geometrical figure she was sup posed to be drawing, and then pointed with her ferule to one after another of Robin's graphically pictured features as she gravely explained the diagram that was supposed to be there and was not, 'Mr. Peasley could not understand why everybody laughed. He even mild ly rebuked the giggling sixty-eight for embarrassing Delia during her recita tion. After that Delia seemed to take de light in playing endless silly tricks on the unsuspecting little teacher. "Girls," said she, one afternoon, as they were flocking down the steps, "let's dress tip in some ridiculous way to-morrow, just for fun. Let's all curl our hair in Kittie Blaine curls " 'We did that Monday," objected Cissy Laurence, "and I couldn't sleep all night, with my hair done up in rags. "Yes," sympathized Anastasia Mal- lett. "It was just like trying to slum ber on a bushel of door-knobs. No more curls for this damsel." "Well," agreed Delia, "it was a nuis ance, and he didn't notice the curls, anyway. I'll try to think of something really startling by the time basketball's over to-night." That Delia had succeeded was evi dent the next morning. Cissy, leaning on a crutch, limped slowly down the aisle to her seat near the window. An astasia wore her right arm in a sling, and, not being ambidextrous, made fearful and wonderful work of her written exercises. Doris had each sep arate finger swathed in a neat, glar ingly white bandage. Blooming Rose Mitchel was powdered to a ghastly pallor with corn starch and green chalk. Large strips of black court plaster were cris-crossed on Laura Dale's flaw less pink cheek. Adelaide Brown, the doctor's daughter, wore a shade over one eye, and was redolent of iodoform. Ada Gray carried a large bottle labeled painkiller, and a tablespoon. From time to time she sighed deeply, and sadly took carefully measured doses. Lucy Mather's cheek bulged alarming ly, because 'f the huge crab-apple in her mouth. Mary Clark, who painted in water colors, had decorated herself and several of her classmates with astonishingly lifelike cuts, scratches, bruises and black eyes. Delia herself might have been the sole survivor of a particularly disas trous football game. She had pasted black paper over twp of her rather prominent front teeth, and wore one eyelid painfully glued down flat under a circle of flesh-colored court plaster. Both elbows were apparently out of joint, and her limp was ever more dis tressing than Cissy Laurence's. The naughty girls had mumbled, "Basketball last night," when Mr. Peasley, at first mildly astonished, had asked each apparently suffering young woman in turn if she had met with some accident. Now the gentle science teacher was near-sighted and no disciplinarian, but he was not stupid. The bruises and bandages were all exceedingly lifelike, but the crop was far too large to have grown in a single night. It did not seem possible even to unobserving Mr. Tcasley that so many players could have been injured in a single, well conducted game of basketball. A little later, when he read a note handed to him by a pupil from one of the lower grades, his eyes began to twinkle behind his spectacles, quite as if he had stumbled upon some huge joke. At half-past nine, very much to the horror of about thirty-live temporarily disfigured girls, two member of the school board, proudly escorting a dis tinguished out-of-town member of the legislature, marched into the assembly room. Mr. Peasley, :iOt dreaming that the visitors would take this little joke seriously, apologized humorously for the battered appearance of his pupils. "You see," he explained, without for a moment suspecting that he was seal ing the fate of the basketball teams, "an unusually vigorous game of basket ball has left all my young ladies a little the worse for wear." Only a few of the surprised culprits had been able to squirm hastily out of their too-well-securcd bandages. The visitors had just left the sunshine for a schoolroom with half-lowered shades, and they did not suspect Mr. Peasley of levity. They remained only a few moments. After leaving the building they discussed, in all serious ness, the game of basketball and its effect on schoolgirls. "It must be a fearfully brutal game," commented the out-of-town visitor. "I haven't seen it played, but I've heard about it." "Yes," agreed Mr. Black, of the school board, "it's worse than I ever dreamed it could be. Prom the looks of that Clark girl's face, I should say she was pounded black and blue from head to heels." "They've oniy been at it, too," added Mr. Gorman, "for seven weeks, and there Avasn't a girl there who looked real sound. That Mitchell girl used to have the reddest cheeks in town." "I noticed," said the distinguished' visitor, "that several had bandages over their eyes. Any game that en dangers the eyesight ought certainly to be prohibited." "When I see Mr. Graham this after noon," promised Mr. Gorman, "I shall tell him that this board will tolerate no more games of basketball!" , This happened on Thursday. By Monday morning the girls, at first rather ashamed of their childish esca pade, had almost forgotten it; but re membrance returned very forcibly when Mr. Graham announced, just be fore noon, that there would be no more basketball. Afterward an excited group clustered round Delia on the school steps. "It's all your fault!" accused Cissy Laurence, somewhat unjustly. "We'd never have thought of such foolishness if you hadn't put us up to it!" "No," said Doris, "it was Mr. Teas- ley's little speech that finished us. I don't think for a minute that he real ized what he was doing for us, but when he said what he did I said to my self. 'There! That settles our basket ball!' " Couldn't we explain to Mr. Gra ham?" ventured Anastasia, doubtfully. "Or to Mr. Miller, when he gets backV" "Perhaps you'd like to undertake it," offered Mary, with mild sarcasm. "Mr. Graham's just the kind of a man one likes to explain a tiling like that to. now isn't he? And faucy telling Mr. Miller!" "Yes," agreed Ada. "I can just see myself explaining that bottle of imi tation painkiller!" "And that awfully geneuine iodo form," said Adelaide. "And those bandages," added Doris. "I guess the wisest thing we can do is to hope fervently that Mr. Graham Avill never learn the horrible truth. We've lost our basketball, and that's the end of it." It was not the end of it, however. The girls missed the sport, and could not refrain from eying Delia reproach fully whenever the game was men tioned. Sometimes, indeed, their ex cessively frank young tongues aided their reproachful eyes. Then, too. Delia had an' accusing conscience, and altogether, the winter threatened to be an unhappy one. By the middle of De cember Delia hated the very name of basketball. One Saturday morning, when Delia was telephoning, the lines were crossed, and she overheard Mr. Gor man's rather unusual voice asking, "Is that you, Black? There'll be a school board meeting at my cilice at 11 o'clock. Yes, to-day." Delia, her small, dark countenance alight with sudden hope, realized that a glorious opportunity was waiting to be seized. It seemed fairly providen tial. The girls had net thought of ap pealing to the board. Mr. Gorman's office was just a little fenced-off corner of his dry goods store. Delia appeared therein at half-past 10, to find the place vacant. Shortly after the .appointed hour, however, the school board arrived in a body. Delia, very crimson with guilt and speaking with almost feverish baste, made full confession. The elderly school board tried manfully- to maintain its dignity and failed. Delia left its members with mirthful tears standing in their eyes, for, some fifty years previously, they, too, had played pranks. The board had made no promises, but Delia felt distinctly hopeful. She was obliged, however, to live in suspense until 2 o'clock the following Monday, when Mr. Miller, his grave eyes fixed quizzically on Delia, who was turning td and .-white by. turns, rose, cleared his throat and prepared to make a littld speech. "Young ladies," he announced, "all who consider it safe to play basketball may do so after school this afternoon in the usual place. The board haa withdrawn its objections." Youth't Companion. The "flicker" sometimes noticed in lightning proves to be duo to the fact that several flashes sometimes five or six follow one path too rapidly to be separated by the eye. The trails shown in photographs of very bright flashes are caused by incandescence produced in the air for a very brief period. The new petroleum fuel reported from Switzerland is in the form of briquettes containing four parts cf petroleum to one part of secret mate rial. At fifteen 'cents per gallon for oil, the cost of each briquette was about two and one-fourth cents, but on a large scale would be much less. Four briquettes under a boiler having a heating surface of 400 square feet ig nited the coal in fifteen minutes, the briquettes themselves burning forty five minutes. The rare peculiarity known as haem ophily, or "bleeding sickness," ha been brought to notice anew by Dr. Boehme, a German physician. It con tinues for generation after generation in certain families, and is character ized by an extraordinary tendency to hemorrhage, making the extraction of a tooth a dangerous operation, while even a pin-prick mr-y lead to severe or fatal bleeding. The cause seems to ex ist in an unexplained failure of the blood to coagulate like normal blood. The loss of energy in generating elec tricity and converting it into heat makes electric heating very costly for most purposes. In electric cooking, however, this waste is offset by a greatly increased efficiency of applica tion. A recent determination shows that only two per cent, of the total heat of the ordinary kitchen range is used for cooking the food, twelve per cent, being wasted in obtaining a glow ing fire, seventy per cent, going up the chimnev and sixteen per cent, being radiated into the room. The curious dread of cats that has been studied for three years by Dr. S. Weir Mitchell, of Philadelphia, may open up a wide field for investigation. An advertisement brought 150 replies from different- countries including Germany, Egypt and India and about two-thirds of them mentioned cases of fear of cats, the others referring to asthma from cats. This asthma, due to odors, may bo excited by the pres ence of horses, dogs, cats or sheep, or even of roses, apples, oranges or ban anas. For a Younc 51 an Witli Money. If I were a young man, with a cer tain amount of capital, and desirous to increase it at the expense of fools, I should become a dealer in pictures and in works of art. The prices paid at auctions for such articles by a few dealers bidding against each other are absurd, although a vast number of very wealthy fools who purchase them from dealers are ready to pay still higher. The more fact that some arti cle has been sold in an auction room at a high price attracts them, and they buy it from the dealer at a higher one in order to be able to point to it in their houses, and to tell their friends how much it .cost them. The dealer consequently makes much money by acting as a middleman. Whether there is any arrangement to run up the price among dealers I do not know. But I have always wondered whether this is the case, and whether the original owner always gets the selling price at the auction. London Truth. Curious Clilnopo New. Those characteristic news items ap peared in the Pekin and Tientsin Times: "Nov,- that the hot weather has set in and sleepy Chinamen loo!; on the railway sleepers ns a convenient bed, with the rail for a pillow, we may ex pect to have the usual loss of life along the lir.o. The first head of the season was cut cT a few days ago near Weihui." "It is reported that in trying to raise an indemnity for the. murder of French missionaries at Patang. mining conces sions instead of money have been asked for. But th? Chinese properly point out that mission work and commerce are distinct and refuse the demand." "Some rolls of sill: gauze and a fan have been sent down to the viceroy from the Empress Dowager, who is most anxious that he should keep cool." Chicago News. Tho Four Speed. In the course of a case in an English court the other day one of the counsel said there were four speeds at which motorists traveled. They were (a) the speed the policeman said; (b) the speed the chauffeur told the magistrate; (c) the speed the chauffeur told his friends in a public house, aud (dj the reaJ sjeed. SOUTHERN ' TOPICS OF INTEREST TO THE PLANTER. STOCKMAN ANS TRUCK GROWER, Savinc Pea-Vine Hay. The various methods of saving pea vine hay with the least labor and greatest value demands the best thought of every farmer. Much labor and energy often go to waste by fol lowing the usual plan to cut when the first pods begin to ripen and let them lie ana tedder till cured, or otherwise put in cocks or hang up .on posts till ready for the barn. If rain and dew falls, shattering leaves and stems and taking the aroma and green cast out of tiie vines,, never mind that; toil on; they are well worth the cost, even if the half-grown pods are moldy, minus the leaves at feeding time. But the thought of the enormous labor expend ed or paid for in saving a green pea crop is by no means thrilling or encourag ing. It suggests and clamors for bet ter methods. The very nature of the plant forbids the idea of saving the succulent vines and green, half grown pods for hay except through a dry-kiln. My experience with others proves that there is a cheaper way of saving and increasing the value of the pea crop by letting all the pods ripen fully on the vines before cutting. It is evident that the whole crop of ripe pods (say, five, eight or ten bushels per acre), cut and saved with the dry vines even after frost gives more good feed than the vines and half grown, moldy pods. For several years I have been feeding the dry vines with all the dry pods thereon. It is the most sub stantial roughage I have ever had. It costs less to cut and put in the barn than any I have ever saved. I plant all my oat land in peas in rows, and work them with a view of cutting af ter every pod is fully ripe and stems dry, even after frost. I then cut some fine morning till noon and haul direct to barn in evening. A sheet or tight wagon body will save all the shattered peas, and in rainy days I thresh out seed from this store of vines. The dry vines are interwoven with long. dry pods, so rich and nutritious that you wonder why you had not with com placency watched the showers and heavy dews ripen the crop into greater value to be quickly and safely har vested, instead of worrying when the first pods ripen. Our best farmers who realize the feeding value of dry vines and ripe peas grown in the corn fields, and the quick and cheap manner of saving the same, feed their horses and mules al most entirely on this forage and sell their surplus corn to the more improvi dent. They usually plant corn in four to five foot rows, and at the proper time plant peas liberally in the middle of the corn rows, and after the corn is cut and shocked or otherwise gathered run the mower between the corn rows. In order to do this taue an old mower and cut about two feet off the cutter bar and shorten all up so it will run between the rows without cutting the cornstalk; or new mower, cutting three feet can be bought that will run be tween the corn rows, thereby saving the dry peas and vines both for seed and forage after leaving portions of J the field for pasture if desired. A short j mower that will run between corn rows cutting vines and grass is one of the most valuable farm implements. M. F. B., in Southern Cu!tlvator Killing Inects. A subscriber at McLauren, Miss., asks what should bo done about the plant lice, the aphids. that get upon and multiply to a ruinous degree on many cultivated plants, cucumbers, melons, etc. Professor Smith, in his Economic En tomology, says: "As a general insecticide, nothing is better than kerosene emulsion, which, when diluted ten times Avith water, kills all the j-oung forms and adults of the green species. "It has been found by experiment that the black or brown species are much more difficult to destroy, and one part of emulsion in six or eight parts of water is more likely to be elt'ective. "Fish oil soap docs the work at the rate of one pouifrf in six gallons of water; or, ns against tne Drown spe cies, one pound to lourgauons ot water. "Thoroughness of application is al ways essential. It must be remem bered that thoie poisons act by clog ging the spiracles the openings by which the breathing is done or by en tering into the body through them. "Unless the application is thorough, the insects may be weakened but not killed, or, if rendered helpless for a time, they may recover, and a second dose becomes necessary, where one dose, more thoroughly applied, would have been sufficient. "Where it is not advisable to apply cither of the materials just mentioned, tobacco can be employed with good prospects of success, either as a decoc tion or as a very finely ground pow der." A great idea about all this annoyance with plant lice is thatlhey ought to be fought "just as soon as they are no ticed; the longer the delay the weaker FARM 10TES. the plants become and the greater the thoroughness required to reach all the specimens." Home and Farm. . TT.nter Oati. The summer seasons are fraught with uncertainties till farmers are look ing. more and more to winter crops and. the summer crops requiring but a short growing season. This leads to- the- planting of early maturing varieties of cotton, corn and cowpeas and other staple crops. Where these have been planted here this year a fair crop has already been made. Oats are becoming one of the leading feed crops one of the most profitable, in Georgia, for after oats a good crop of cowpea hay can be made or a crop of late cotton. By growing oats a cover crop is kept on the land all winter, pre venting washing and destruction by, rains, and if cowpeas are grown the land undergoes a continual process of improvement. Numerous- experiments have been-made with different methods of planting, and it seems as if we are to see a general idea prevailing that the ridge drill method is befit. It Is argued that it prevents winter killing. But all that is necessary to secure a good stand throughout the winter is to prepare the land thoroughly,, put the oats in the ground early enough and you will succeed nine years in ten, and if you want any more success than, that try something else besides farm ing. Rhea Hayne, of Georgia, ia Home and Farm. How to-Keep Hogg Healtlfcy. Below we give three good cholera prescriptions that our readers would do well to cut out and preserve. Choos one which you will have prepared to give your hogs, say, every . sixty days, and at any time they seem unwell. (1). Wood charcoal, 1 lb.; sulphur, 1 lb., sodium chloride, 2. lbs.; sodium bi carbonate, 2 lbs.; sodium hypohulphite, 2 lbs.; sodium sulphate, 1 lb..;. antimony sulphid, 1 lb. Pulverize thoroughly, mix well, and give one tablespoonful to each 200 lbs. of live weight of hogs treated, one a day for several days. (2) . Sulphur, 2 lbs.;: copperas, 2 lbs.; madder, 2 lbs,; black antimony, lb.; saltpetre, lb.; arsenic, 2 oz. Mix with twelve gallons of waiter and give one pint to each hog. This will be sufficient to dose 100 hogs. (3) . Salt. 4 lbs.; black antimony. 1 lb.; copperas, 1 lb.;- sulphur, 1 lb.; salt petre, i lb.; wood ashes, I peck. Pulverize and mix thoroughly, mois ten and put enough in a trough to pre vent waste, and put where hogs can. have access to it at all times. If dis posed to have cholera they will eat it very freely; at other times they wili eat less or perhaps none at alL, Siloi-Sow Is tho Time to Build. This is a most favorable season for the building of silos upon the farm. and it should be done wherever a con siderable amount of stock is carried or green crops raised. Nothing has ever been invented that is so useful for the saving of green food for the feeding of stock as the silo. In fact, the means of preserving ensilage is of the greatest practical interest to every farmer. stock breeder and dairyman in tho country, and is of commanding impor tance to the agricultural world. This process of preserving vegetation is far more economical than the saving of hay or the growing of corn. The silo furnishes the means of laying by an abundance of forage for season of drought. More cattle can be support ed ed from a given acreage of land by the use of ensilage than in any other way, and the quantity of manure can be proportionately increased. The word ensilage originally meant the act of compressing into pits, trenches or compartments, which are called silos. It now means the materials com pressed. .Those silo may bo built above ground or In part below and in part above the ground. In the South ern States it is the custom to build them wholly above ground. Southern Farm Magazine. ' " , Haioi-BacJ: I'orlc, It is a fact, that can be proved by innumerable witnesses, that the flesh; of a young razor-back pig which has been fattened for a few weeks iq a pen, possesses a flavor that cannot be equalled Ly any Northern grown pork. We believe that if it could once- be introduced to the notice .cf epicures. etc., in Northern markeijptkat the? sup ply would not eqnaUtpe demarKPat' prices that would pagr t good profit.' Florida Agriculturist. '-V.- - - ' . Trt1'1r For tli 3arIe-i In gardens well manured in other re spects, a lack of potash may make them Jess productive than tL-?ir condi tion otherwise will warrant. Wood ashes mlxtd with soil .aid. materially in keeping it moist. Gardens often dry up by an excessive application of coarse stable manure, and something; else is ofttn needed to, couulcract this, effect. Ii X