I - ( the spark I OF GENIUS I BY HOWARJ) FIELDING I I CovrrUbt. IXC, by CLarU W. Hooka f nVA8 tbe gentleroaa who Las the back panor." and this la a title H of distinction at Mrs. McAd- drew. One feels like Sir Sorae- bodj. or at least as If on bad the right to rt a few letter after one's name. In fact, la a recect communication to Mr. McAndrew Inclosing tLe amount f ber week! charge for the tccomoo datione I stoned myself John Cban- dicr. a. n. p. Oar landlady la a widow of middle ase. a Rood Learted. simple minded wo man who Urea ever as If In the slgfft cf tLe late Mr. McAndrew and will die triad Ij when ber time ceiuea to Join him. He was a rery superior mansbe say, and so LlsLIy educated tbat she could not understand more tLan half of LU conrersatioii. but she loved every word. She occupies the roall front par lor, which la separated from my room by folding doom with hoary, somber curtain, and I had uned tbat this barrier wan Impervious to sound, but one afternoon when I was dressing for dinner I beard a woman's voice, loud, strained and angry, forcing "ita way through doom and curtains. "How dare you! How dare your It cried. I was Just putting on my coat, and I , panned with an arm through one of the alceves. Again that voice was uplift ed even more strenuously: "How dare you! How dare your Now, upon a question of the rights and safety of such a good woman as Mm. McAndrew I would fight a man nine feet hl;h, or two of them If nec essary. I Hd Into my coat and through tlie curtain seemingly with a single B'.ovement. and my hand was upraised to unite the bavy doom when I beard our landlady's calm voice very close, at If within a yard of me. -I think that was very good," she said. "We'll go back," said a masculine voice wblrh I recognized as that of Horace Wilton, a young man who lives on the top floor. -You didn't tell LI ne? Tou didn't tell tneY Oh. I'll answer you no more! ex claimed !orae one wlmm I now knew not to be Mrs. McAndrew. "Relievo what you please of me. I want no i more of your help. Let me go! Let J me go!" "Keep It op! Keep It up!" said Wilton "excitedly. Iorrt drop down. Let me go! Let me go!" Frantic; you understand. Now try again." I let the curtain fall and stepped back Into the middle of my room. da"eL Not even the violent scene which I had uppojed to U In progress in the huhed and waervd precincts le-j-nd thnxtt doom wniild have surprised me nearly so much as the reality. A theatrical rrfiearatl In my landlady's parlor! The leli which rints when dinner la aI Ctit forth Its kiirmnni I pCZ'ovt tnto tnenan just in nee to meet Mrs. McAndrew. Behind Ler I saw Wilton and a very pretty girl who sits beside him at the table, ' She does not ,11tb In our bouse, but comes here for her meals. I had understood that Wilton- and Mlaa Lee were en gaged, bat I bad never given any espe cial thought to the subject of the young lady's occupation. She had been among us only a week or two, and she was so quiet and modest that r-he suc ceeded In almost effacing ber.'f. ' spits ber good looks. I found It Lnp-, Bible to believe that she was an actreaa. that It waa she whom I had Just heard declaiming hysterical lines under tbe direction of Wilton and with the com plicity, even with the praise, of Mrs. McAndrew. Such waa the fact, 1 how ever. Her eyes were still red from the shedding of emotional tears, and I no ticed daring dinner time that she would be shaken now and then by tremors of excitement. Wilton Is a thin, tall, intense sort of fellow, quite handsome in his own pe culiar way and very much of a gentle man. After dinner he took occasion to say that he hoped I had not been dis turbed, and Miss' Lee added ber own hope that I hadn't heard anything, be cause she bad done it so badly. I tithed up 'some sort of a compliment which did not seem to impress her, but when I confessed my surprise at learn ing what ber profession was she flashed a sharp glance of Interest upon me out of ber pretty brown eyes. It waa the kind of look that goes through a fellow's bead. "You'll be more surprised. I think." said she, lf yon ever learn that I'm a good one." The insight and the truth of this re mark staggered me. It was a fact tha t I had not been Impressed by the little that I had beard. It bad sounded strained and forced. Moreover, Mlsa Lee was not my notion of an actress. The morrow waa Sunday, and Mrs. McAndrew favored me with a brief call in the afternoon, and we talked of Mlsa Lee. "You'd never think she waa an ac tress, would youf said she. "It's such a pity. I asked Mr. Wilton, why he let her go on the stage. They're engaged, trow you know." i "I That's what I say," she interrupted, tnt they both feel that way. They aay she must have her career, and he if "What did he 'say T I inquired with considerable curiosity. "He said that she had genius," re plied Mrs. McAndrew In a quaintly reverential tone. "Now what do this woman know boat genres T" aald I to myself. "What can she possibly care about It?" ."Mr. WTJton has 'genius, don't yon think so 7" she continued. And I waa pleased to reply heartily that I had read some of the gentleman's stories and believed that he was on his way up toward the top of the literary tree. "It must be grand when two people of that kind love each other," she said, with a sigh. "She can be so much more to him." , I So this was the explanation. Foor i little commonplace Mrs. McAndrew was trying to help another woman-to be what she herself had never been. KTia ir nwml tt'rn tier n-tmrif ... . .... . ..y. mi be turned into a dramatic school in the hojve that Mlsa Lee might develop the dirlne spark of genius and so be a fit mate for a man who had It "He's so nice to her." said she. re .. rring to Wilton, "and he has such j crfi'ct confidence. lie never lets her lespr'.ir. .Sometimes she wants to mar--y h'm and give up the struggle. ' - "J.'ut tvhx" I Lesan. ' I KSll'YZl OUT I WTO THE HA LI. says she snail have it first If he has to wait ten years for Ler. I think that's dreadful, to waste your youth like that. Cut if It's the way to bring ber up to him I suppose It's right" Then she came down to the actual news of the matter. It appeared that Mlsa Lee had played only small parts and had had Indifferent success -in them. She had seemed likely to miss an engagement altogether lu the cur rent season and had shed many team about It but Wilton had kept her eplr its irn. Suddenly an unhoped for chance had come to read a leading part in competition with several other ac tresses of much greater reputation. don't think she'll get it" said Mrs. McAndrew, "but Mr. Wilton says that that doesn't make auy difference. It's a question of doing your best, he says." "There may be something In that." I admitted. On the following afternoon I had the pleasure of hearing Miss Lee again. The ease with which sound traveled through those black doors and heavy curtains was amazing and proved to me what a mouse for stllhiess my land lady must have been! I was home rath er earlier than usual that day, and for a full hour I heard a most distressful outcry. When I first came in. Miss Lee seemed to be pleading that somebody shouldn't be told of something. "Don't tell Lionel! Don't tell Lio nel!" she reiterated.; And Wilton was nil the time Insisting that she didn't take It hard enough. Then they went back to a hysterical scene, and it ended In a case of genu ine hysteria, .with Miss Lee weeping upon our landlady's bosom and declar ing that she would never, never, never amount to anything; that she mlght'as well give up and marry Mr. -Wilton if he could sllll care for her. And I could hear Mrs. McAndrew soothing her and telling her that she spoke her lines "perfectly lovely," while Wilton paced tae aoor wren a nji.ti- vv ' morse Iessly called opdnyene poor giri to brace up and try it agaUi. For nay own part this fend subsequent rehearsals convinced m5 that Miss Lee did not possess what tite late Mr. Mc Andrew had called nhV spark." By my way of thinking sh was strained and unnatural, and Wihjou was all the time trying .to make bey more so. n would say constantly "Bulld it op! Hold It up!-Work! You've got to suf fer In t:ds part That's what Ifa for. That's vhat genius Is fr to voice the I cry of Uhe human soL; I want to hear year soul sobbing; In agony, and then I'll be satisfied." if This f eemed unkind, fom a man who loved b?r. but tender hlbrtcd Mrs. Mc Andrew approved the intiuient t- One day I , venturedto say to our landlady that I though Miss Lee had mistaken her vocation. jTbe effect waa remarkable and unexpected. Mrs. Mc Andrew looked at-mfe; with a sort of pitiful- distrust, withi pained but-" prise, and from that ftline she never mentioned Miss Lee's Efforts and asp I-, rations. . -fA A few days later tfcf agony in the front parlor seemed toSeulminate, and I beard no more of it f I Judged that Miss Lee had had her reading and had been found wanting. She appeared at the table always withT a look of -despair, and there were dark lines under her pretty eyes. Mrs. McAndrew never passed her chair without laying a caressing band upon her shoulder, and it "&rasori!y at such moments that the poof girl would sn? lie. , As. for Wilton, be wasdarker, thlnf ner, more "upon edge,!,, as .the phrase Is, than ever before. Sometimes I was upon the point of getting him into my room for a good long talk, but his man ner was forbidding. ' ; v And then I got a considerable shock. It came from a morning' newspaper, wherein I beheld a twojcolnmn picture of Mlsa Lee, with some lines beneath It to the effect that on the .following Monday she would replace . a certain well known actress In a certain newly famous role. I -recognized that role. I bad heard it through the black doors a great many times. . I took the earliest opportunity to con gratulate Miss Lee, Mrs. McAndrew and Mr. Wilton, but they were all in a trance." . . It will be guessed that i bad a seat in a certain theater on. Monday even ing, and there sat Mrs McAndrew and Wiltoc Just ahead of me." I -could see our landlady lay her band upon his arm in a motherly fashion now and then before the curtain we"nt up. I had caught tlie Infection' andj was prayer-5 fully nervous. I had, very little idea what was said on the. stage until Miss Le appeared, and then I came to my self. She loosed very charming. I had had no idea that her beauty would "carry" so welh and the surprise was welcome. , . ' ' When she began to speak, I saw tbat she had greatly improved; she seefcned more like a real actres. And when she won her first, applausf , I glanced loy ally at Wilton. lie setscaed to be. sink ing slowly down ' intj; his seat His head was drawing itset slowly in, like a turtle'B. and it had nefrly disappeared by the end of the first tfcet It came out again during the second .and then slow ly subsided. . U In the following Intermission I found him in the smoking mom. He was walking back and forth, and he seemed j to be eating a cigar. I took him by th I hand, and he stared at me. -, , 1 Ue- shook nis xTeSul "She u making a bit,' I Insisted. "They're applauding her all the time." . "Rlast them r be said with f error. handkerchief: '' ; r I was permitted to go around to tha stage door with them after the snow Mlsa Lee took WHton'a hanjaud th n rehnred one tiUick dance. TSen tua - 'hey've switched ber clean off the I . . f n Mr8 McAndivVa atoul- U ck. Tliat flmt Durst or applause ct ifouiKl it! She is thinking of her t .ces. and It la spoiling ber, killing tit A" "Rut surely the encouragements There are two kinds of encourage ment" Le Interrupted. "One Is ' thla sort of thing, and tbe other la the everlasting- dissatisfaction tbat' she's bad from me the dissatisfaction, that never loses confidence, that always shows the j goal, but never falsely saya that It Is i atlitincd." . 4 v ; "How about Mrs. McAndrew'a kind oT encouragement 7 I asked. , The team came into his eyes. "God bless herr he said. -That Isn't encouragement and It isn't discourage ment Ifa Just simply love, and we need it more than anything else. But sho doesn't know It She thinks that she was never of any real use to Mc Andrew."' :V' .. And he laughed with an emotional unsteadiness that did him great credit The third act was beginning, and we hurried back to our seats. It la the great act of the play, and I was afraid of It At the very outset I detected the tone in Miss Lee's work that bad im pressed me in the rehearsals, the nobs of agonized endeavor. She had forgot ten success now; she bad even forgot ten - love: she waa reeling tbe acourse. der and oWod. "I one so i.ueb to yoa, v mtU-h to VOUT rwtf ituiijtir iK'tted her ca the back in h-old. war -and -told ber very ah- surdly that she had "doue splendidly. No Intention of Abdlcrtfng. Vienna. J'tne 22.- TheiTorklah ani lissador he.e declares tha: the rumcr T the shi'vin i l-.t'-tUa tc cb.Icate "it "rral!ccus invcrcri." - !f I'F HITS SSlf. Uxitd Statfs Or Amkrica, EASThiiN Disc. Voani Casolxxa. WhereaS'Tbf Uiltrd Scates Dit. Court for the Eastern LiL of North Carolina at the May term ivt, ha ordered the n !. of certain pr p-riy claimed by '., Longi frei-tl and fclxcd under the In. ternal Rev. Iawsof the United State-.., Including one certain lot. Or tract of land hereinafter dM Hbcd. Now, therefore.! a puruance of tatd order of sale, 1 will proceed oh the frt Mobvlai H julr, the same being the fnh day of Mid month, to sell at - pnhMc auction, at the court boue door in K K-VinHwm, N. C., f.r cati, tin-v'i , lot b'l .land dturihtJ as follow to-n it :- A tract of land lying and being in Bearerdam townhip, Coun and aforesaid. : Beginning at a stake 4 r 1 from the Northwest corner of warehouse, thence East 60 it to a stakr.'thence South 87 feet to a stake, thence west 60 feet to stake, thence North 87 feet to the bepin. ning point, situated in the town of HulT man. N.C. i to commence at u o'clock, j Tl. C. DOCKER Y. y 'I ; U. S,- Marshal. June and, 1003. 'Lha TUEHZISin SUnSTTTUTH ud ri- "Miss Lee is great" sold L EE BEEilED TO BB SIKKTNO SltOWIiT IXTO HIS SEAT. And then suddenly I felt that pain enrj ter my own breast, and in an Instant Miss Lee disappeared, and I beheld tha woman of the play the tortured crea t are whose secret was being wrenched from her hewt to 'her own destruction. In Its proper place I recognized its re ality. It haa been different in Mrs. Mo Andrew's parlor. This was what Wil ton had been whipping out of the wo man he loved. This was what he had tolled anfl grown thin for.. At the end of the act, while they were calling Miss Lee before tbe cur tain, I looked at Wilton. His head had come up from between his shoulders. He was happy,- triumphant t But Mrs. McAndrew was a total wreck. ..and her face was buried in her hands and two II I E OF ID By virtue of power confered in a cer tain mortgage deed execoteiLto me on the 21st day of March 1902 by A, D. Spivey and wife and duly recorded in Be ok 1 . T. T. page 44 et r seqin tbe office of the Register of Deeds of Kich roond connty. delault hrving been made in tne pament of tbe same, I will ex pose to public-sale, to the highest bidder for cash, at the Court House door in the town of Rockingham, H. C ; on Monday, the 6th dav July 1903, at 12 o'clock m. tbe following described tract of !ani, to wit; Lying and being in Richmond ounIy; Slate of North Carolina, in Mineral Springs township ' adjoining tha lands of Noah Richardson and! others ana beginn ing at a 8 take where the Grassy . Island road crosses the Guilford road and runs as the Mineral Spring road 26.75 chains to a stake in the line of. the 160 acre tract a pine pointer: thence as said line S 70 E 24.75 chains to &lake, its corner: thence as its other line 8 17 E-18 85 chains to a stake in the Grassy Island road, small black jack pointers, thence along said road N 60 w 9.59 chains to Richardson's corner, tht-nce as said road to the beginn ing, containing forty two acres.- more or less, being tbe same land as conveyed by Nelson McCaskiH, Commissioner, to A. h ; Loflin and wife by deed dated Decern-! ber the 27th 1888, excepting and deduct ing from the above boundaries, the land heretofore conveyed by A. L. Loflin and wife to A. h. Spivev, M, E. Chance. South, J. T. Hiatt. Dr. K J. Garrett and A. Auman, aggregating in all about 34 acre?, leaving about 8 acres hereby con veyed. - - t . . . ' This let day of June 1903. A. S.DOCKERY, Mortgagee. Tt rsasoa Ons Mtnuta Covck Cm rsBrr 1 couek a om ntnuta, ts bcauM it sets first on tha iruc.xi cMmbniw rlfht where ths couch troublas tn th throat or Aaep tod OA th hire, dtstrortrc u 1 ntcrotxrs or couch forms and cUartni tha phtetm. OooMlnow Couch euro aot only dstror tr " mm consa, sod cloara out tholr potoon, but It elves trencta aad elasticity to tho dalicato mmbrn rhica pfotoct thm throat and lunrs. Opana tha air passaces and pramotas anobatructad brth rf. CauMS the blood to racalra its aafuraT supply 1 Ozrtaiv. thus axhilaratinf tho pulmonary ortana .t!i auch atroocth andvlror that tao lunas and bronchi U tubus haonms bulwarks aralnat tho tnoaptloa ot osaa. Asthma. Branch tu a. La Crlppo, Cold on th Lunrs and alt Pulmonary Complaints that aro curaUe are utcb7 cersd by the ass oi iri COUGU CURE V K. a OoWTTT 90., Chlcace. HE ' Notice is hereby given, that we wiil, . p the first Monday in July, UH)3, the sj being the 6th day of July, at 12 o'cic V, m., oner tor sale to toe nir,best bxi itr f r cash at the court house door in th town of Rockingham, the following . deacril-( lands, the same lying anU being in Ki 1- mond county and in Wolf Pit townuli p. Beginning at the. bridge over the :tn of Black Branch on road leading fr in Mizpah, and runs with said road, tr general direction of which being B 2Cn K 9,62 chains, and thence 8 32 E 4..'ii c! . to a stake on Easterly edge of said n i l near the j fence, thence-N 78 1-2 K 4.94 chs. to a staite, thence N 1 E chains to a gum in the run of said Ii uk Branch, thence with tbe run t mi ! branch to the beginning, containing 1 1 acres of land, m ore oriels. i The above described lands will be under rower of sale ent.inel in moi (.-.. deed executed to Kobrt S. hel belter i Dorcas Led better and dateij Novern' 14, 1885, and recorded in the ollioe of 1 ' h Redater of Deeds of Richmond count v ;i B.ok PP, paces 7 and 8. Thi8tbe5thdayof June, 11K)3. , II, S. LEDIIKTTKR, R;S. LEDliEITER. Executors ot the Ktate of Koli it S- Ied better, Dcc'd. n 3C ale of ninatmei1 1; ! ' - . . . r . ' .. TTKL-l fi - 11 ' Oxfords mid 8 i ..... . V -;- ' . I - i. ... v-i-', ' mm M ei's aid JL adies 9 f.' hoes Is still on the move and will continue until figures,' as hundreds of well meet with hasty patronage. our summer orooas are e:one. uur pleased eostomerfe can testify are right and our sales Here are our ptices on SHOES. Dress Goods, h a Wc will continue our shoe sales until all oxfords are gone All Solid Leather Oxfords worth SIJDOrt&prJce 25c All SoUdLcather Oxfords worth$125 our price 75c All Solid Leather Oxfords sold for SI 50. our priced 5 c. j Alt Solid Oxfords worth S1.75 for SI J00 All Solid Oxfords, SoldforS2X)0 andS225 cur price S1J5 and $1.2 I All Solid Oxfords sold for$250 anjS300 going now for St. 35 and $150. Battle Axe Southern Star Ladies S1S0 Shoe for 85c. Mcdcl Battle Axe Men's 165 Shoe going S1V0. The gratest Shoe you ever saw worth $125 our price as long as they: last 85c. Cut Prices in all Men's and Ladies'. Shoes and Oxfords in same proportions as these quotations. That's selling for cash. ! In fact every Shoe in our store in propotion to these tremendously low prices- Lots of ladles' Shoes, any size from 3 to 8 worth $1,25 going for 60c, V i. in this department we have added several more fabrics which are beauties. Our 38 inch half" wool Serge worth 30c still for He , Our 42 inch all wool serge worth 85c still for 35, .. x I Onr36 inch half wool melrose worth 3 5c still for 14c Our 36 inch all wool melrose worth 75 still for 35. ; -1 Half wool and all wool cashimers for 10c, 12 12c, 15c 20c and 25c- LOOK OUT. 11 CL O THING Mcn'sChy Worsted Suits worth $5J0O for$l:8s- Boy's Knee Pants Suits worth S2-00 for 65c.. We have so many lines of clothing that we can't mention them all but our prices are MORE than right t ! ' We are not selUngat cost, but, "at cost sales" are simply not in it with us- Here are our 'biggest Bargains. Any man's straw hat in the house north from 75c to S3-00 for 25c, Any Lady's straw sailor worth 35c to 95c for 10c and 25c. Boy's Straw hats worth 25c and 50c for 10c. I QPHfTA T I 0 AJLJdJLjg We will offer from how until July 1st any and all fur hats worth from $125 to $250 for 50c to 75c and slJDO- Only these three lots and only these three prices- No old stock but right new goods, and up to this time in style- : j Big lot of boy's and men's wool hats slightly damaged, our prices for these until July 1st or until stock is gone TEN CBNTS . New lot men's and boy's shirts, "craclxr jacks," slightly damaged, worth 'Oc to 7 5c for 20c ; - - ----- n All these goods are now in our store and anyone can get them at these prices. That is buying and selling for cash. WATSON BUILDING vJU UJ 1 ! Ml hi it vl 1 1 u OS (Sd)o OPPOSITE COURT HOUSE. i 4 1