THE ELON C0LLE(;E EEKLY. THE ELON COLLEGE WEEKLY Published every Wednesday dnriug the College year by The Weekly Publishing Company. W. P. Lawrence, Editor. E. T. Hines, R. A. Campbell, Affie Grif&n, Associate Editors. W. C. Wicker, ('irculation Manager. T. C. Amick, Business Manager. CIRCULATION DEPARTMENT. Cash Subsoriptions (-10 weeks), 50 Cents. Time Subscriptions (40 weeks), 75 cents. All matter pertaining to subscriptions should be addressed to W. C. icker, Elon College, N.C. IMPORTANT. The office of publication is Greens boro, N. The officce of the Editor is Elon College, N. C., where all com munications relative to the Weekly should be sent. Entered at the postoffice at Greensboro, N. C., under application for admission as second-class matter. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1910. There are some students who honestly, in a cannot-help-it sort of way, chafe .un der the restraints of college life. For such spirits, the divine declaration that the Great Ruler would have obedience and not sacritice, is a profitable subject for serious contemplation. The feeling that obedience to government, regulations gi(»ver!iing a student body, to be more spe- I'iflt, permanently lessens one’s independ- (y^JHI^often erroneously and unwisely ttiilertainei'i. "Ilie reason ior lue DeVi: i that such a spirit is often unwisely entertained, made a welcome guest in the home of the student’s thoughts, is that, frequently, violations of college regula tions bring such a train of troubles as the violator had not even imagined. But a hopeful indication in such cases is the penitence of the offender. The chief char acteristic of Satan, as represented by Mil ton in “Paradise Lost,” in his unremit ting stubbornness to the idea of penitence or acknowledgment of wrong on bis part in raising an insurrection in heaven. Again, Shakespare represents King Clau dius in “Hamlet” as unable to pray even, so long as he was under the dominion of sin. Whoever has committed a sin, there fore, and finds no inclination in himself to be penitent is most likely in the king dom of sin and is to be pitied, for such a one is far from the happy fields where joy forever dwells. There is a further consideration in con nection with this matter of obedience to authority: the most innocent looking reg ulations when complied with, are a veri table sleeping lion, we find to our sorrow, when stroked the wrong way. The raae and fury of one of these innocent regula tions when disturbed not infrequently rai ses such a storm of bewildering regret and sorrow in the offender’s mind as to remind one of the "sudden terror of a squall that frequently breaks in upon a calm, placid sea. Finally, it should not be borgotten that the ability to obey, especially under pro vocation, or under a trying temptation, is a convincing argument that one has pret ty well mastered one’s own spirit, with out which mastery one is not qualified for "rulership, and to be qualified to rule is as necessai'y in a college-bred man as is the ability to think, for college men rule, in the thought world at least. So, obedience to college regulations, especial ly when it is sweet to disobey, is as much an 'opportunity for a student to learn to control that complex, mysterious, hard-to manage inner impulse, which we call one’s spirit, as the most exacting studies are opportunities for learning mind masteiy. JULIA WARD HOWE, 1819-1910. Last week’s papers brought the news of the death of one of America’s most no fed and most gifted women, Mrs. Julia Ward Howe. She was in her ninety-sec ond year, having been born in New York May 27, 1819. She was the daughter of a banker and wa.s given an excellent pri vate education, being versed in German, French. Italian, Greek and Latin litera ture and a master of these languages. She read also the philosophy of Kant, Spino za and Compt. In 1843 she married Dr. Samuel G. Howe of Boston where she resided thereafter. With her husband, she took an active part in the anti-slavery movement aiding him, 1851-53, in editing an anti-slavery newspaper, the Common wealth. Among iier friends were the most noted American authors of her day, Long fellow, Holmes, Lowell, Phillips, and Ag assiz being among them. She spent mirch time in Europe where she moved in a like circle of intellect and influence. Charles Dickens, Carlyle, Henry Hallam, and Flo rence Nightinaale were among her friends in England. Her husband whom she married when she was twenty-four was eighteen years lipi* «pnior -'-t •aJL’.t was left a widow. The remaining thirty- four years of her life were spent in writ ing, lecturing, and preaching. She occa sionally preached from a Uuifarian pul pit. Mrs. Howe was an ardent, aggressive advocate of woman’s lights, especially the riaht to vote, and of prison reform. She wrote essays, dramas and lyric poetry, most of which died however, before its author. Her Bincipal writings are: (poems) “Passion Flowers,” 1854; “Words for the Hour,” 1857; and “La ter Lyrics,” 1866; (dramas) “The World’s Own,” 1855; and “Hippolytus,” 1858; (prose) “A Trip to Cuba,” I860; “From the Oak to the Olive,” 1868; “Sex and Education,” 1874; “Modern Socie ty,” 1881; “Life of Margaret Fuller,” 1883; “Memoir of S. G. Howe,” 1877 (?) ; and “Is Polite Society Polite?” Mrs. Howe lived a life rather than wrote books. Her fame as an author rests on a single poem written in 1861 upon the mobilizing of Union troops in the Nation al Capitol. It is a sort of a folk-song uttering the feeling of millions who want ed to see the Union stay and slavery go. It is as follows; Battle Hymn of the Republic. Mine eyes have seen the glory of the com- iirg of the Lord; He is trampling out the vintage where the grapes of wrath are stored; He hath loosed the faithful lightning of his terrible swift sword; His truth is marching on. I have seen him in the watch-fires of a hundred circling camps; They have builded Him an altar in the evening dews and damps; I can read his righfeorrs sentence by the dim and flickering lamps. His day is marching on. I have read a fiery gospel, writ in bur- rrished rows of steel; . “As ye deal with my contemners, so with you my grace shall deal; Let the Hero,'boitr of woman, crush the serpent with his heel. Since God is marching on.” He has sounded forth the trimrpet that shall never call retreat; He is sifting out the hearts of men be fore the judgment seat; Oh be swift my soul to answer! be jubi lant my feet; Our God is marching on. In the beauty of the lilies Christ was born across the sea. With a glory in his bosom that transfigur es you and me; As he died to make merr holy, let us die to make them free While God is marchirrg on. THE WINNING OF WINONA. CHAPTER IV. The village was again afire with an awe-inspiring excitement. They knew too well the meaning of the final picture up on the piece of bark. He had escaped, or had the fierce mountain lions devoured him? No one knew, and there was no visible means of finding out. Time alone could tell. The council met and the village gath ered in assembly, about the governmental wigwam, once more. But nothing could bp done further than to reread and re count the stoi-y told upon the piece of ba'tk. The Ions' hot .lulv dsy was gradually movirrg toward its close. Already the sky had doffed its dress of dainty blue, and donned a suit of ruddy hue. Finally the sun passed lower and then passed fron. view, and the sky which a little while ago had been red assumed a hue almost like that of the skin of the tribe over which it seemed to hang. A cricket had left his day-time haunt and was tiding a bit of song, to cheer his evening hours. In the distance could be heard the melancholy inquiry of an owl, “Who, who?” and in the adjacent under brush an old timber-wolf had set up a suppliant howl. To arr observer it was a very remarka ble evening, but to the savage it was not so very different from the others. As the darkness began to thicken about the wigwams, the old dog wlhich had brouaht the message frrtm Occonough, be gan to grow petulant, and lonely. He had been given a goodly share of food during the day, and had spent the greater part of the time quietly dozing in the shade of the neighboring trees. But as the evening scenes approached he longed aaain for the companionship of his mas ter. Just then a squaw came by and tossed to him a piece of fresh venison; the old dog seized it eagerly, wagged his tail thankfrrlly, turned his nose toward the light which was gradually fading in the western sky, and slowly trotted away still holding firmly between his teeth the piece of venison. W’'here he meant to carry it, no one knew. But “Crow Foot” imagined that he intended to return to his master. And impelled by this belief. October 26, 1910. he summoned hastily a band of twenty- five of his braves and pushed out in the direction indicated by the old dog. Ex cept for the occasional breaking of a stick which happened to be iit the way, their advance was almost noiseless. Cau tiously yet stealthily this little band went further and further into the depths of the forest, with ears and eyes ever aleut for any impending danger. The night was almost spertf, and they had gone steadily on, following whithersoever the old dog might lead them. The light of the new day crept in apparently just as reluctantly as the light of yesterday had yielded to the shadows of the lirrgering darkness. The stars and the silvery moon, whose noiseless music had lulled to sleep * a multitude of heavy eyes the night be fore, blinked a little, just as we do some times when we come from darkness into light, and bade the sleej)e.r “Aufweider- sen. ’ ’ Suddenly the ears of the savages caught sornid of something ^hich startled them. —something weird and gjruesome. Just then they passed round a little bouldei and into the mouth of a narrow ravine. The suir had kissed away the shadows of night, and it was day again. The old dog quickened his pace now, and there seemed to be a new gleam iir his eye. Then he suddenly assrrmed an attitude of indig nant anger. G-r-r-r-! G-r-r-r-! It was the most neive-racking noise to which I have ever listened. A few steps further and the little band of twenty-flve were in full view of two fierce-looking mountain lions, at the foot of a much-scarred tree, and high above them among the branches ■.. MVijg ttiVcl, wan 'aTi«V haggard, due to the l>orrible fatigue re sulting from three awful days in the tree. In his hands he held a sharpened .stick which I guessed that he had used to keep the lions from reaching and de- \ ouring him. A hasty flight of the lions ensued and the happy savages rushed up and assisted the much-exharrsfed chief in descending to the ground. As he set his exhausted limbs once more upon the ground the old dog came up and placed the piece of ven ison, which the squaw had given him, at his master’s feet, and wagged his tail to show his happiness. The braves supplied the chief with fresh food and water, then he was able to talk a little. He had seen Winona and knew where she was now. (To be continued.) It’s Good Work That Counts. See if the SANITARY BARBER. RHOP Can Please Y’ou. BRANNOCK & MATKINS, Prop’s. G. E. Jordan, M. D, Office Gibsonville Drug Co., GIBSONVILLE, ------ N. C. CALL ON Burlington Hardware Cumpany For First Class Plumbing, Builders’ Hardware, Farm Implements, Paints, Etc., Etc. BURLINGTON, N. C.