ffif A T 1 it i ii I n iw II I X v SSTABLISHEO IS 1873. ... r i: V. . . , ; HI LLSBQRO, N. C., THURSDAY, MARCH 20, 1902. NEW SRIES--VOL XXL 'N0. 9 THE RIVALS IN THE STREET. 5!? . I. ' LU day in the street there's a jumble, The proua ana the careless and h.ble At many a corner are massed! And many a man in a hurry Goes dodging the trucks and the cars, With no inclination to worry O'er the state of affair on the stag 2 Each hopes to eclipse all the rest Who are pushing and rushing e.long, And the weak and the timid are pressed Aside by the bold and the strong. . II. AH day in the rush and the rattle - jhe contest continues, and ne'er r . .. On the field of the bloodiest battle Were rivals more willing to dare Than are they that go wildly pursuirg The maddening dollar all day, Each ready to work the undoing Of any who stands in the way- V1 Each hoping to pass all the rest Who are pushing and stumbling along Where the weak and the timid are pressed Aside by the bold and the strong. HI. Far away from the racket, the rioty Two men are asleep and serene Where only the birds break the quiet . , That reigns o'er the flowery scene But lately as rivals they hurried Where the proud and the humbh con tend, And each of them watched and was wor ried Lest the other should win in the end Each hoped to outstrip all the rest That galloped or stumbled along And the weak and the halt are still pressed Aside by the bold and the strong. " S. E. Kiser. I gillg Smiths grotherlg PnBSS' . m i A - ILLY SMITH has a Chicago I J newspaper position that is I J neither fish, flesh nor fowl. He goes down to the office early every morning, reads papers for the city editor, answers the telephone and does his best to stand off people who, tightly clutching the morning paper, come up the elevator to have it out. There is no name for Billy's job in the newspaper office, but, named or nameless, it is a job that is joyless. Billy has a brother who is an elec trical expert in New York City, where he works for the biggest concern in the land and makes as many thou sands a year as Billy makes dollars a week. The brother is sent by his -company all over the United States to see about installing plants in dif ferent cities and to pass on the fruit fulness of the ground for electrical operations. Billy's brother passed through the city the other day and calling on Billy said he was on his way to Omaha, where there was a big fight on between his and another com pany for certain municipal rights, and where the city government was di vided between the two parties to the contest, "I hope to win out," said the brother in parting, "but there's a legal fight on as well, and the affair may take some time before a settlement is reached." Four days later, less than half an hour after Billy Smith had reached his desk, a stranger appeared and laid this card before him: : HERBERT M'GOVERN, : CITY ATTORNEY, OMAHA. Billy read the card and looked up at -tne stranger. "What can I do for you?" he assed. "Well," said the Western city official, "I don't know any better place to come for information than to a newspaper office. I did not know but that you might have at your tongue's ond the names of half a dozen electrical experts that I can ii in order to get certain information about the actual cost of installing iecincai plants and the furnishing of vieciricity to consumers. There's t row out in my town in the citv irov eminent itself and betwepn htn Woi - - V w -WAT MA electrical concerns. The mayor and a sooa part of the government, includ ng myself, are with one of the com Panies. We believe that they have a etwr proposition than the other, Which we think is tryiner a sham game. This second comrmnv ninima to have some hold on the city be cause or an ordinance passed three years ago and we've &nt tn itrh if Now, if i can ge.t the opinions of some way up' experts here in Chicago to show that the company which I favor has the best proposition, why it will help secure the franchise for it, and it's a franchise that in the end will be "worth millions to the conmanv. Thp concern has an expert named Smith uow In Omaha, and T'vo hon - suiting with him, and when I get the yert opinions here I shall confer mm nim again on my return and hnd out how best to use them in car rying our case." Silly Smith mused a minute. Here was a chance to hpin hi vv.. , Jf "o uiuiUTl tu wnom he was beholden for many vuiS. "lve been n dhi r Porter for many years, Mr. McGov rnt he said, "and I know personally three or four of the biggest electrical sharps In the city. I don't mind tew ing you, though It isn't necessary to co into details, that I feel a peculiar Interest in this Omaha case, and if you don't mind I'll go out with you as soon as the city editor gets down and introduce you personally to the men you want to see. Sit down and read the papers for a while." Three hours later Billy and Attorney McGovern were in the office of . a man who knows so much about electricity that you get a shock every time you shake hands with him. The great electrician wanted to please Billy, and so he listened carefully to what the attorney had to say and then gave him a lot of figures. "This is enough of itself," said At torney McGovern after they had left the office, "to carry Smith's and my case against that shark company. They went to three other offices and were given (three other signed expert statements, which Mr. McGovern de clared clinched his case beyond per adventure of a failure. After this business was closed up Billy Smith, in the warmth of his' heart and with the recollection of many brotherly favors in his mind, . took Attorney McGovern to the swellest Chicago res taurant and made him his guest at a luncheon at which several costly up right things stood by the plates. Then they went to a matinee and Billy Smith bought the tickets. It was the happiest coincidence in the world for this newspaper boy that it was the one day of the week when he looked upon the face of the cashier. By the time they were out of the theatre for good and had pledged eternal friendship before saying fare well there was just a solitary dollar note left in Billy Smith's pay en velope. He considered the money and the time well spent, however, in the effort to help out the case of his brother's electrical company against the greedy rival who was trying to grab off tilings in Omaha. Billy had not said one word to McGovern about the reason for his interest in the Omaha case beyond the statement at starting that he did hold such an in terest. "Good-by, Mr. McGovern," he said when the time for oartine came. When you get back to Omaha you tell Expert Smith with whom you've been conferring that a newspaper namesake of his in Chicago did what he could for you. I think very likely Smith will know whom you mean." "I'll do that same," returned McGov ern. "Smith's a miehtv eood fellnw. w tf CP --, Ever since he came from his com pany's headquarters at New Orleans month ago we've been in close touch." "Company's headquarters in New Orleans!" gasped Billy. Yes," said McGovern. "that's whero the company, that he works for hails from. The other, the srrasninc nrn- cern, is located in New York. and. bv the way, now I think of it. thev've got a man named Smith on the ground, too. He's a shrewd cuss and expected to have hard work to down him until you helped me out to-day. Why! Do you know this New York Smith?" "Slightly; he's my brother." Ed ward B. Clark, in the Chicago Record- Herald. The Richest Nation. Some interesting statistics have been prepared by the United States Bureau of Statistics for the London Daily Man Year Book. They are verv far from being exhaustive, or contribu tions to the discussion now going on over the enormous balance apparently due lis from foreign countries as the result of the. commerce of the last ten years. They are Interesting and im portant, however, as far as they go. They put the United States at the head of the nations in point of wealth, estimating our property at $81,750,000, 000; that of the United Kingdom at $59,000,000,000; that of France at $48,000,000,000; that of Germany at $40,000,000,000; and that of Russia at $32,000,000,000. At the same time our public debt is the smallest, and that or France is the largest. The per centage of debt to wealth Is also low est in the United States, being 1.4, while the percentage of debt to wealth in France is 12.3; in Russia, 11.1; in Germany, 8.1. The remainder of the table shows that our wheat qrop In 1001 was nearly 450,000,000 bushels in excess of the crop of Rus sia, which is our nearest competitor, but produces less than half our own product. In 1900 we made , about 5,000,000 more tons of pig-iron than were made in the United Kingdom, and nearly 6,000,000 more tons of steel. Harper's Weekly. Noise a Passport to Popularity. Noise is not usually a passport to popularity. But the Archbishop of Canterbury by CMs stentorian voice won the affections many years ago of a Devonshire farmer, who was over heard to say, admiringly, near the bot torn of a church where the then Bishop of Exeter was preaching: "I du love the beshup, 'cos he hollers proper." What a Fool TlCxiks. ' The fool thinks it is a sign of strength to cherish a grudgo. Chicago .Record 1 Herald. fit -IOTEBEj&T The Style in Chemises. Chemises, the most delightfully feminine of garments, are built on the time-honored lines, only fitted a little closer to the figure wnder the arms and in the back. Chemises to wear with evening bodices are conveniently made with sleeves, but tie on the shoulders with ribbons. An inset of tucked medallions or ones of lace is a novel innovation. The hand em broidered chemises were never so beautiful. A delicate flower design outlines the top and sleeves and eye let holes are furnished for the rib bons. This style are .apt to be un trimmed at the hem, but the chemises with lace yokes are also embellished at the hems with lace or embroidery. Chemises to be becoming and grace ful should only reach to the knees. A Story of George Sand. - The French Academy not long ago placed a tablet upon George Sand's house at Garligsse, which has resulted in a renewed interest in the great French writer, and the recital of stories, old and new, about her. One of these explains how she came to adopt the profession of literature. In 1831 Mme. Dudevant was living alpne with her daughter in Paris, where she earned her livelihood by painting flowers and birds in water colors on a tiny surface of two square inches. One day she showed to Balzac the MS. of a novelette, and was ad vised to go back to her painting. Un- discouraged, she took ttie MS. to Dela touc'-.e, editor of "Figaro," who at once gave her an engagement, so that her earliest work was done on that journal. She wrote her first romance in collaboration with Jules Sand, and the book was published as written by "Jules -Sand." Her next work, "In diana," was entirely her own, and to it she signed the name George Sand, which she never discarded. Costly Trifles. The society woman who solemnly asserted at a ladies' luncheon, in,, con fidence over teacups, that she had on a gown that cost $75, while the small things of dress not her . undercloth ing, but the visible articles cost $800, was no extravagant exception to the rule. The class of women who dress in this manner Is a large one and in eludes not only the magic chain of the women of the 400, but many more. It is an easy matter to put $800 into trifles these days, and from the waist upward it can be done. Beginning with the gold link purse which hangs at one side the size of a dinner plate. to the neck, where dangles a gold chain with its pearls, and its little jeweled tablets there are great pos sibilities. The chou, from being a mere trifle of adornment, has now become some thing handsome. It is made into saucer size and in the centre there rests a rose.. From the middle of the chou, coming from under the rose, there hangs two ribbon ends, and these are tied Into a bow, which is fastened to the side of the belt. Bf ethod in the Perfume of These Charms A famous medical journal has given Its scientific sanction to the using of perfumes. As a preventive of Infec tious diseases perfumes are aspoWer ful as camphor and other so-called "precautionary talismen," says this dignified and learned Journal. The original "scent ball" worn by the ladies of long ago (when infectious diseases raged, as the Board of Health does not allow them to do In these enlightened days) was a ball or hoi low" ornament of gold or silver, which contained a sponge saturated with aromatic liquid. This was worn at tached to a chain round the neck or carried in the pocket. A fashionable jeweler has recently revived these scent balls, and they are in as great demand as are the small mirrors wnicn reflect the whole head in miniature. The old-fashioned name, of these scent balls was pomande. The word means scent ball, and is derived from pomme de aumbre. an apple-shaped ODject hiied with some highly odor ous mixture, probably mainly repre sented by ambergris. Sometimes nutmeg was used, set in silver and decorated with pearls and other lew els an aromatic ornament or rare price now. Then, too, an orange was a favorite preventive of infection, with the inside scooped out and a vinegar- saturated sponge inserted, while in the old pictures will sometimes be seen thie fruit itself, studded with cloves and stuffed with spices, the popular antiseptic of the times. . auyer vinaigrettes were forty or fifty, years ago always found in Hiladj's work basket or were carried la her pocket, and one of the treasures travel era seek for In Norway are fBoosXi flat silver boxes with a per forated Interior, also in sliver, to keep In place the sponge vinaigrette. These It was once modish to carry to church In company with a clean handker chief wrapped round the prayer book; and no small, comfort must the reviv ing odor have ; been, judging by the absence of fresh air and the conse quent stuffiness encountered in such places of worship even In these en lightened days. New York Commer cial Advertiser. Mrs.; , William Douglas Sloane, the New York society woman, has a won derful collection of fans of all periods. Miss Caroline Phelps Stokes has started with a $3000 contribution a fund to secure protection for Amerir ca's native birds. One of the first Indian women to take up the calling of a trained nurse is an educated girl of the Pueblo tribe, Miss Seicher Atsye. Miss Belle MacKinnon, of Utica, N. Y., has been admitted as a partner by her brother in his big knitting estab lishment, and has charge of 2000 em ployes in the mill. One of the quaintest and most beau ful libraries in New York City is in the home of Mrs. George Jay Gould. Its decorations are Moorish, gold be ing the prevailing color, and its walls and ceilings are ornamented with a rich stucco done in gold. Mrs. Mary Bryan Cobb, who died at New London, Ind., in her ninety-ninth year, was an original Daughter of the Revolution, and a "widow of the War of 1812." Her first husband, Louis H. Bryan, a veteran of the War of 1812, was the great-grandfather of Colonel William Jennings Bryan. Mrs. May Alden Ward, of Cam bridge, who has retired from four years' leadership' of the Cantabrigia Club, of that city, to assume the presidency of the Massachusetts State Federation, has received a beautiful diamond brooch, as a token of the club's recognition of her valuable ser vices. Courses in photography, etching and art needle-work have been introduced this year at the Woman's Educational and Industrial Union of Buffalo, N. Y. The course in photography is de signed to give a practical working knowledge of the art, through the various steps, from the exposure of the plate to the finishing of the print. Mrs. Jessie Benton Fremont, widow of the "Pathfinder," General John C. Fremont, is still living, at the age of seventy-seven, in the pretty cottage in Los Angeles, th gift of the women of California. During the early part of . Queen Victoria's reign she visited England and was presented to the Queen and Prince Albert, and she has known personally every President since Jackson. A pretty hair ornament is a knot made of many loops of narrow white ribbon, with narrow gilding on either edge. j A gay pair of stockings has clusters of flowers, upon the instep, a line of two or three of these showing con spicuously upon the black ground, scarlet flowers, and green foliage. Some of the white felt hats have eyelet holes, through which narrow black chenille is run in close lines, an arrangement which proves good for, tho milliner, a fold of velvet being generally placed beneath. A recent importation from Paris is an exceptionally handsome reception gown of green velvet combined with white, cloth, gold braid and black chenille embroidery; a feature of the bodice was a large fur incrusted col lar. Imported Swiss muslins show Ori ental effects. For instance, a pink muslin has a palm leaf design, the leaves looking something like the back of an India shawl, a medley of colors, but altogether producing a soft effect A stunning waist In dark blue dotted velvet Is fastened down the front with a lacing of white taffeta silk about two Inches wide. The lacing is run through large white crocheted eyelets, and extends to the waist line. The same idea is carried out on a high collar, and ' at the lower edge the taffeta is made up into a large bow. Corset covers are no longer pro tectors of corsets if dark skirt bands are worn, as tney only reach to the waist line. This garment, like all other undergarments, Is built to make the figure look slender. The newest pattern is cut circular without seams under the -arms and quite plain at the waist .line, where -an - embroidered beading is placed through which a rj&bon is run to form a belt MM. Cw ATTAR OP YLANG-TLANG THE PHILIPPINE ISLANDS THE SOURCE ; OF THIS PERFUME. Now in Great Demand-Manila Oil of Tlanjc-Tlanft Sells For From S40 to . SR5 a Pound, and the Demand Ex ceeds the Supply. Among other -things, it appears now that by capturing the Philippines we have captured the chief source of the famous attar of ylang-ylang, almost as costly as attar of roses and equally delicious in perfume. The Divisipn of Insular Affairs of the War Department has compiled some information about it Attar of ylang-ylang is obtained from- the flow ers of the ylang-ylang tree, a cultivated and wild tree often attaining a height of sixty feet. It belongs to the custard apple family, and its drooping greenish yellow flowers three inches long are of extraordinary fragrance. The popularity of violet as the latest favorite in the list of perfumes is threatened by the attar of ylang-ylang of the Philippines. Colonla Agrippina, the choice perfume of the Romans, so named in honor of the wife of the Em peror Claudius, after enjoying in mod ern times an unrivaled lead for nearly two centuries as the eau de Cologne, from the city of the Rhine, the first place of its modern manufacture on an extensive scale, yielded to the' more lasting fragrance of the sachet in evi dence In all forms, in all places and among all classes and conditions of women. The attar of roses, the famed es sential oil of the damask rose of 4Ka zanlik on the sunny slope of the Bal kans, finds its equal in perfume in the Philippine product, and the ylang ylang .tree is a better yielder of es sence from the flower, and therefore a less costly basic essence for the per fumers' art. The ylang-ylang, sometimes spelled ilang-ilang, while indigenous to many parts of tropical Asia, reaches its great est perfection in the Philippine Islands, where it Is a faVorite among the na tives. Besides its value as an attar in preparations for the hair and toilet waters, it is also held to possess cura tive virtues in tooth and other aches and pains. In a preparation of cocoa nut oil known to commerce as Macas sar oil, for the hair, attar of ylang ylang Is the perfume. ..... The perfumers of Europe and, to a less degree, of the United States, makes it the base of some of their most costly extracts. The Manila oil is practically without competition in the markets of the Western nations on account of superiority, and even at from $40 to $55 a pound the supply is unequal to the demand. Hitherto the United States supply has come through Germany or France. Together with England those countries have a monopoly of the product, which is generally secured In advance under contract for the entire output. The tree is common to many locali ties south bf Manila. It is found chief ly in the well populated provinces and islands, and the natives say that it thrives best near the habitations of man. The propagation in plantations, by seed or cuttings about twenty feet apart, each way (108 trees to the acre), is easy and the growth rapid in al most .any soil. The first flowers ap pear in the third year, the eighth year yielding often as high as 100 pounds, the bloom occurring in every month. The greatest yield is from July to 'De cember. The process of converting the long, greenish yellow fragrant petals of the flower into essence is by the simplest form of distillation, using merely water and the choicest flowers. No chemicals of .any kind are required. The best quality is clear as distilled water and fragrant. The second quality is yel lowish and smoky. The oil is drawn from the bottom of a glass separator, the water remaining. The oil is then filtered through talcum, and Is ready for the market Seventy-five pounds of flowers yield about one pound of oil. Flowers are worth from eight to fifteen cents gold per pound. The cost of manufacture is placed at $4 a pound. The yield in the case of attar of roses is small, 150 pounds of rose leaves producing but one ounce of oil. There are whole flowering groves of ylang-ylang trees in many parts of Southern, Luzon and the VIsayan Isl ands. New. York Herald. Against lav to Kill Eagles. The discovery has Just been made through the prosecution of a hunter that there is a law on the statute books of Illinois which provides a pen alty of $5 fine and Imprisonment in jail for ten days for any one convicted of killing an eagle or being found with one in his possession. This law was passed by the last Legislature, and is a part of the new game measure. The framer desired to prevent if possible, the danger of these birds becoming wholly extinct. There are compara tively few specimens in the State Chicago Inter-Ocean. When They Get Attention. Some men are like anthills, attract ing notice only when people stumble against them. Chicago Record-Herald. t - r MMa SEA CHARTS OF STICKS. J Marvelous Navigating Feats of Marshall . . Island Natives. The German protectorate of the Mar shall Islands, which lie just east of th Carolines, in the equatorial Pacific, contain the most daring sailors known. They are constantly performing feats In navigation that . European sailors feared to venture, on long after they, had the compass,' which instrument, by the way, the Marshall Islanders reject as useless. The archipelago lies in two widely separated groups, the Radack and the Ralick chains, and in each chain the islands lie, for the most part, at ex tensive intervals. Yet the native pilots conduct voyages all over their own archipelago and to the Carolines in one direction and the Gilberts in another.- For this voyage they rely upon charts of their own construction, the knowledge having been handed down from' remote antiquity. These charts are generally about a yard square and are constaructed of slender sticks tied together. At some intersections of the sticks are fastened small . shells, which stand for the different islands. The pilot posts himself; in the bow of the vessel with his chart before him. He begins by establishing the partic ular shell corresponding to the island frbm which he is just sailing. He sets the course as indicated by one of the stlcks radiating from that shell in the proper direction. Thereafter he watches .the course of the sea with very slight use of the heavenly bodies for the de termination of direction. - j They make no secret of their art They are of ten at great pains to teach it to. white men, and wonder that no one has yet been found capable of grasping it. Their explanation is that each stick on the chart shows tha course of a stream in the sea, and that by following the streams they ' can find their way to their destination. They claim to see these streams with their intersections just as shown by. the sticks. Whatever may be the ex planation, it is certain that they navi gate hundreds of miles of empty ocean with neither compass nor chronometer, nor other instruments save a chart of sticks. If by . any accident they go astray they make no attempt to con tinue the voyage, but run at once down to leeward until they make a familiar landfall. San Francisco Chronicle. wise Words. Give honest worth its honest praise. There are no fruitless deeds; all, bear either good or ill; 'As a man advances in years-he real izes the limits of his ability. j It is better to fall in one major ef fort than in all minor ones. The finger of suspicion is not nearly as true as the weather vane. I The strength of woman is a mors subtle force than that of man. I The trinity of womanliness consists of virtue, modesty and affection. Confidence is an asset which hus band and wife should not fritter away. Young knowledge is a braggat, but aged wisdom teaches the creed of hu mility., ! The semi-literate are loudest in their denunciation of Ignorance. The learned pity the unlettered and try to aid them. . Carry Your Wealth With Ton. ; This greatest riches In fact, all the wealth that is of real value must centre, in yourself. You must' be rich within, not outside of yourself; rich in the .things that financial panics, fluctuations of trade, accidents by flood or fire, dishonesty of business associates, or errors of judgment can not rob you of. Your greatest invest ment must be self-investment; invest ment in health, in courage, in kindli ness in nobility of manhood or wo manhood. Whoever you come In contact with should be conscious of your wealth; its influence should radiate from, every pore; It should look out of . your eyes; it should exhale fragrance In your speech; it should manifest itself in your deeds; it should shed ,w2mth light and comfort within its radius; It should reach your whole com munity. Real riches should be like the wealth of the rose, which flings out its beauty and fragrance to every passer-by. Thsce is no stinting of its favors, no reserve of selfishness; all it has it gives. This is true wealth. O. S. Marden, In Success. , A Forgotten Street. 'A queer discovery has been made In Paris in the shape of. a street unin habited and ignored by all, says the Paris Messenger. In the course of the work In progress for widening the Rue Vaneau, this roadway which it would be Incorrect to describe as a thoroughfare, considering that the ends were blocked up was discovered. It had neither paving stones nor pave ment was two metres wide, and an old inscription showed that It was formerly called Rue d'Olivet. It would be useless to seek the name in a direc tory, for it is certain that until a tew days ago no one knew of the existence of the Bue d'Olivet