F02 GOD. i'On COUNTRY AND FOR TRVTJ1" VOL. VI. PLYMOUTH, N. C FRIDAY, JULY (, 1891- Yvr. Fletcher Auabon, Editor and Manager; I ; Tho fin jar .beet industry is being shed in Australia. .There arc 03,000 pofitofiaccs in the Unit- States, and of these 07,000 do tot pny tho expenses of oxeraHn;j and smut aining them, . . '." Tho 'countries of tho world where (fomen already have some suffrage have an area of' over 18,000,000 square miles, au their population is over e;o,ooo,ooo. ' ' . tix-Secretary of the Navy Tracy is quoted as Baying to , a friend that iu tdditiou to the work and worry his cabinet life cost him $30,000 every year above his salary of 3000..-- '' -. - ' . " ' " ::xA . , ! . . ' , .Bays Texas Sittings: Seven out of every ten railroad accidents are settled , with an annual pass. Some men would be run over by a whole freight train, for the Base of a few free rides. ' As the result of statistics showing a iarp'j increase .in the number of youth ful criminals, tho German Ministry of the Interior is, discussing a reorgani zation of the system - of compulsory education. ' i ' ' The New Zealand farmers are the most prosperous in the world. Within the past tea years the agricultural re . sources havo been' developed until the dairy and frozen-meat industries have attained enormous proportions, , If the inheritance tax lawv just en acted in England, had beeu in force ia this country at Jay Gould's death, his estate would have, paid to the Govern ment $3, GOO, 000, ; Mr. Kockfeller's estate- would have to pay $10,000,003; William H. VanderbiltV estate would have paid 816,000,000. - , ' ! An English passenger recently bought a ticket -from London to Vienua. After twentyfour hours' traveling without having had a chance to get any food, the . traveler stopped off at Dresden rather than continue hi journey for the remaining twelve jura in ii "state of starvation. The erman railway company cancelled ii ticket, which contained no atop :ig "privilege, and hie was forced to it another. ' I' ale students do not seem to cart i nuch. for prizes, which take work to get. The ' Yale News says that the ' v competition this year for the John A. Porter prize, tho most valuable offered v lthe . (fliiversity, is very poor, and that the competition for the Tuacher Yrize had to be ' postponed for lack of jompetitors. ; The students, however, show undiminished interest in prizf ' fights; boat races, football, cto. . The New OrleausPicayune says : 'The , cotton interests have had much to complain of during the past few, years j in the way of shrinkage in the price of the fleecy staple ; but the decline in jA-v-icefor the Southern product by no - ..4'. - ;ans compares with the great shrink- """age which . has taken place in wheat. I Wheat has declined fully fifty per I cent, in value, ' while .cotton has not I lost more than a third of its value in f the same time, if that much. And yet there is no discouragement in the West, nor is there- any report (that the wheat growers have been driven to bankruptcy. ' Tho secret of the suc cess with which the wheat growers of the West are able; to resist the ill ef-. fecta of such a heavy shrinkage in VI h:e as their cereal experienced is to jo fwund iuthe system of diversified, or ather',' intensified, farming which rre ails there. ' The Western farmer does not depend entirely on a single crop, but diversifies his products and IB es himself self-sustaining as much as - ssible. Wheat thus becomes Jv his cash crop, and a shrinkage iW value , only means the curtail t, more or less, of his luxuries and -torts, without threatening bank -icy and ruin, as a drop in cotton ;s so often does for the Southern ner. This system of crop diversi ton and intensified far in in jis what in the South, an I if more Vn devoted to this, rather uual extension of cotton onth would b'j mora in it .. ,4 : ,- - - -i f f -it I,enr me, here, those looks of yours! , All those pretty airs ani lures , Flush of chook, and flash of eye t . Yout Hps' sniila and thefrdeep dye Oleatn ot the white teeth within pimple ef the dovftii chin - ' All the sunshine that you wear .v,. In the euaimar of your bairfv' All the mornlm of your face . ' . All your Azure's wilding grac:, . The flower-posa of your head, the light Flutter of your footsteps' flight i ' , ' I own all, and that glad heart 1 must claim ere you depart. ; ' . Go; vet go'aot unoonsoled U'v , ' Sometime, alter you are old,:- , You shall ootne, and I will takfl . From your brow the sullen aohe, V. From your eyes the twilight gaza . Darkenimr upon winter days, From your feet their palsy pace, And the wrinkles from your face, From your lorlis the snow ; the droop Of your heti, yvjr worn frame's stoop, And that with- n? l:mile within Thekissinjj of the nose nnd ohln; '. 1 own all, and that sad heart I will claim' ere you depart. ' i am ltace, and both are mine, , ' Mortal Age and Youth divine, Minu to grant, hut not in fee; ; Uoth again revert to me ..' From each that lives, that, I may give j .Unto each that yet shall live. t- . ' , W. D. IIowells: iu Harper's Magazine. ' Miss Belinda's Beehives. HEN the city visi- toii: who swarmed around Maple Cen ter and registered their names by the score in the books of the village hotel strolled out on the Maple road, they al ways stopped at the . EubbleyiarmhouRe and cried : "IIcw . cntquisit'e How picturesque t" And for the life of her, Miss Belinda Bubble did not know ivhy. 'It ain't as if I could afford , a coct of paint to the old house,", said , fche. 'It's just a slate brown - with . winter ttorms and summer-suns ; and the grape-arbor's all a-tumblin' , down for lack of a brace or two of solid timber ; and the well-f weep ain't: half as con venient as Mrs. Olaghorn's new chain pump, no way you can fix it ; and the stun wall's- all overgrowed with them pesky runnin' vines and briers t To be inre, the four-o'clocks and ;moruin' glories are sort o' pretty by the fence, and there ain't no prettier hollyhocks in the country than them dark-red and cherry-colored ones jest thia. side of the pear-tree. As for the - beehives, I always did like beehives.. even if it wasn't for tho honey.. , My mother set a heap o' store by them beehives, and there they've stood, nine of. em, in a row, evtr since I can remember. And there ain't no honey in all the county as has got the flavor of ourn. I don t know whether it's Squire Carbuncle's buckwheat-field or that there clover medder of Mr. Darnell's as does it. But you can fairly taste the sunshine and the flowers in it 1" - ' , - ' And it was genuine ' sight, at swarming-time, when Miss Belinda is sued forth into the black and bcoming clouds, all gloved and vailed and tied up in mosquito netting, with a tin pan and a skimmer in her hand. T ginerallv have first-rate good luck with the swarms," said Belinda. 'I don't know when I've lost one, if only folks would let me alone. But it's the meddlin' people that -come to offer their help, that upsets me and the bees. Squire Carbunole,1 now, he s real sensible. He don't never come roiind interferin'. If he sees the bees makin' up their minds to swarm, he iesfc cets Up oft his garden-chair and goes into the house. For bees, they're dreadful sensible. They have their likes and their disliks, jest as human stnra linx-n and thev never could iret along with Squire Carbunole I" Squire Carbuncle was a quiet, griz zle-headed man of fifty, who farmed a model farm, with all the new machin ery patents liberally oiled 'with gold, read the agricultural papers, and was alwavs "just going to" write an article frtr the Gentleman Farmer. -Miss Bub ble herself was not much younger She supported herself in a genteel mav Vi-r vws t -in skin c" for a f actory i i " "V Id ' the neighborhood. "I a'posn," Miss .bubcjC, Suture Carbuncle 11 sret marne.i some diy, nd I hope ho'll clioi:.-,! r sociable, tLat I can take M-" :t with, f--' ' ,' r'Utern'i t. ; 1 tTA A mm tine of an evening over tho garden fence." 'Belinda Bubble is a sensible woman," said Squire Carbuncle, in his deep, sonorous voice. "To my certiin knowledge, Bhe has refused one or two shiftless fellows who wanted to marry her merely to be supported. , She s a good deal better off single than mar ried." . . Mis Belinda never said a word when Squire Carbuncle's superb Jiver-col- ored setter ; killed her favorite Mus covy fiucK ana tte squire, on m part, condoned the offense, when Miss Bubble's chickens scratched up all his early lettuce and made' havoc with his seeding pansies and pinks. . t ; ' "Neighbors orter be neighborly," said Miss Belinda.. "And dog's nature is doc's natural " -. MI must stop 'up the cracks under the , fence." said the squire. "OJ , course, Belinda can't help her chick ens getting through I No woman could." - ! Thus- mattors were, when Miss Belinda's cousin, Fannie . Halkett, came to visit her a plump, peach cheeked young woman who was cashier at a glove store in the city. - "Cousin 'Bubble," said Fannie, "why don't you marry Squire Car buncle?" r "La, Fannie !" cried the elderly damsel,- starting back-so suddenly that she stepped on one of the velvet- white paws of tho pet kitten. ' , "Yes, truly, why don't you?" said Fannie." He needs a wife: And it would be very nice for you to have a husband. Now wouldn't it? "Go 'long," said Misa Belinda. "I never thought of such a thing ! Nor him neither. Go out, JJ annie, and pick a mess o' white Antwerp raspberries for tea and don't let, me hear no imorci noh nonsense. "Nonsense 1" echoed Fannie, laugh- ing, as sue went on wuu n uiutj-cugwu 1xwl , in her hand. 'But 1 isn't nonsense at all V thiak it And among the Antwerp raspberry vines she talked the matter over with Julian Hall, Squire Carbuncle's nephew, who had come to the farm for a week's trout fishing, and who had developed a very strong propensity for reading novels under the old pear tree that overshadowed Miss Bubble's garden fence.- . . ! v 1 "Wouldn't it be nice?" said Fannie. 'Splendid I" Julian answered, lean ing over to put a handful of raspber ries into the blue-edged bowel. Whether he leaned too far and lost his footing or how it happened he did not know ; but certain it is that, just at that moment, one of the beehives fell crash I over among the rasp berry' "bushes. Fannie fled in wild fright, and Julian himself, recovering his balance as best he might, was driven to ignominous flight. "Who did that?" said Squire Car buncle, issuing out of the door. Tm afraid I did, sir I" confessed Julian. - . ' ' "And what am I to say to Miss Be linda Bubble?" sternly demanded his uncle. . . I "I'm sure, sir, I don't know!" an swered Julian. "Such a thing never happened be fore in all the years that we have live- as neighbor to each other," said Mr. Carbuncle. ' . "Of couise, the bees have got away and the glass honey-boxea are broken?" " . ' . I am very sorry, sir," said Julian. The squire, an eminently just man, harnessed up his gray pony and drove to town the : next day. That evening he called at the Bubble Farmhouse with a square package, neatly done up in brown paper, in his arms. ' Fannie Halkett came to the door. "My dear," said Squire Carbuncle, "is your' cousin at home?" . . : "Yes, fix 1" said Fannie, fluttering all over ehd showing the way into the best pafW, where the blue-paper tihades w'ere down and the stuffed owl on the rlantel transfixed the chance visitors wth its eyes of glittering, "Tell her I've called on very particu lar business," sali the squire, sonor ously. 1 "Yes, 8i?"said Fannie, and away fchtt ran. V, "Cotiein fcelindn, tke your hair out if ihoHft nriinTinsr-r '.:. ut once," said fI.o; "dnd Ijt f.' ' n t.ji I... -t lu-w at (vour 1 1. r ... -' . .lies ;a t.' r Ilk' c- 'Nonsense, Fannie I" "Buthe has! He as good as told roe so !" cried Fannie, standing on tip tde to kiss Miss BfJinda's withered apple of a 'cheek. ; . "Do made haste ! Don't keep him waiting. Men don't like to be kept waiting.'- And she fairly pushed Belinda Bubble into the best room. . .: -" - :, . "Miss Bubble," .said J the squire, solemnly, rising to his feet, "J have called to ask if you will accept-" ' . -."Yes,. Seth." cried .Miss' Belinda, flinging herself .' into his arms. Luckily he had bethought himself to lay the square package down , on the table. "Yes, dear Setb, I will. , Fan nie told me you was going to propose to me, but I didn't . believe it. And I'll be as good a wife to you as I know how. And oh, Seth, I've always loved you ever since we were young people and went to singing school together." The squire opened and t shut his mouth as if it were some curious piece of machinery. ; . . ' "Eh 1" said he, staring mechanically at the owl. , . r ; "I hope," : faltered Miss Iubble, ;you don't think I've been too hasty in accepting your offer?" t V "No, Belinda, ' no," said Mr. Car buncle, swallowing down a ltynp in his throat. "I am much obliged to you for saying 'yes,' and I am quite con vinced, my dear, that you will bo a good wife to me." And so this autumnal couple became engaged; and the ' squire never told Belinda that ii was the colony of Ital ian bees he had brought her, sat himself, to lay as an offering at her shrine. ... , --; . ' "But it's just ' as well," uaid the squire to himself. "I ought really to be settled ia life", and Belinda is a most worthy woman. It is best at times to abandon onesolf entirely to circumstances." , .' "Didn't I tell you so, Cousin Be linda? id Fannie, exultantly. On Xjing makes many, and Hieitb1 'ders was surprised whejV . mie became en- "Tli a hnm'w bees will be tho sweetest music inaift the world to my ears after this." BaidVulian, fervently. "I always was partial to bees," re- forAtft,! TVUrr Rplinda.--'he Ledger. Mysterious Cavern DiscovereT Great excitement has been ck W?ed thV4 in the vicinity of Bristol, Ind., by discovery of a cave. In digging a well Henry Oswalt came upon a solid bed of brick and mortar at a depth of eighteen feet. The earth was cleared away for a space of two feet square, when the discovery was made that the "brick formed a solid walL With pick and ax Oswalt succeeded in removing a number of the square blocks, and was mystified to find a, large opening below. A closer investigation dis closed the presence of a large cave, and the brick had been used in clos ing up the mouth. The dirt thrown upon it had completely hidden the cavern from detection. The cave is located in the rustic hills north of the village, and may have been mrtde the hiding place for valuables daring tho war. The presenoe of brick in a good state of preservation.; would indicate that the opening . had been closed by white men, but the older residents of the neighborhood have no recollec tion of its existence. A party has been organized, and thq cavern will be in vestigated. The belief is general that the cave has been the headquarters of the band of horsethieves whose opera tions have established a veritable reign of terror. St. Louis Republic. A New Mississippi Bridge. , The Southern Pacific Kailroal Com pany's bridge to be' built across the Mississippi River at New Orleans, L., will, it is . believed, be the largest steel railroad bridge in the world, considering the quantity of metal used in its constr lotion and the length. I will be about 12,503 feet long. The approach spans wil vary from twenty five to 150 feet in' lengthy according to the height of the towers. Tho main river bridge will be built on the canrilrer principle and will be 1070 feet in length, with spans of f.C-S feet on either side.' ' The larg-itt railroad brid completed is over the YiiCx o Forth in Scotland.", The tr..i:'. p!:Ci i:r? U feet long, Ir.t 0. a; 1 ti .- ' fi.-o said to be bY". ir V.. -. 7" - 'v Oceana bridge. " ' . " ": Ur -TieoTdi'. v ' : : i , ;;fSM:l& A. TINY rfEi ABIEKICA'.S DiiADLS. is tjii: vn:m:- tt 1 Fonntl In t'.s Kven iiullitn .r.ake . Festrlt-'tU Tluy : . Kills Vry f2uic ENOMOUS things plentiful iu th Lv CBt than ia any 'other, areain the Union. In the" burning deserts,, in the inhabited but arid ex pauses of New Mexico and Arizona, the rattlesnake abounds, and in several varieties, including, the strange and deadly '.'sidewinder," crotolus cerastes. Fhe so-called tarantula raally only a gigantic mlx upider, but noneHhe ess dangerous because of the mia nomer is decidedly common. Scor pions are none too rare in the south jrn portions of the Territories, and in all parts centipedes of seven , to eight Inches long are frequent and neigh borly. But the chief distinction of he region in this respect ia the pres ence of the piehu-cuate, the deadliest make in North America. - The pichu-cuate matches the worst serpent of India. Not only the most highly venomous, but the tiniest and moBt treacherous, he would be also the most dangerouBbut, luckily, he is the rarest. He ia the only true asp on this continent ; and, in the United States is never found outside of New Mexico and Arizona. That he was ilso known to the ancient Mexicans is spparent from his name pichu-coatl, n Aztec word, which was brought up to our territory by the Spanish con querors." . " My first meeting with one was in Valencia County, New Mexico, in Tune, 1890, on the sandy flanks of the Cerro delAire. I was' out hunting Sackrabbits, in company with some ndian friends, and had dismounted lo stalk, leading my pet horse by the jridle. . My eyes were on a small jhapparo bush ahead, when suddenly Uazan snorted, and reared backward to violently as almost to unhinge :ny irra, I looked about in surprise, for Vlazan was too good a horse .to min 1 trifles. As there was nothing to be leen, I started to pull him forward, lgain he protested and with evident - -a -j .i ierr - ry UirrnT. ftTirt: rhancmff tO lOOK at BT r- v n yf ee I ii nderstood his fear, and lelt very grat fceftil that bi n senses were "hr steo etter than mint1 i should have w&'U The only thing visible was'sT'tiny bject, not nearly so large as a good tag beetle merely a head, and'per- laps an inch of neck. But it was the nost frightful object in its kind that I had ever seen. The head, certainly leither so broad nor so long as my thumbnail, had a shape, and an air of )f condensed malignity impossible to leescribe. It seemed the very essence f wickedness and hate, fairly bulging rith deadly 6pite, and growing upon ne until it looked several times its ictual size. The ugly triangle (which s the distinguishing mark of all ve v imous snakes, being tormea uy luo joison gland back of each eye) tob' ne at. once that Alazan was keepinr ip his reputation never did hesh; it a harmless snake and the tir lorns, which added a peculiar $ jrotesque hideousness, left ho, do that this was a pichu-cuate.' JT) Juried himself almost to the' j hep ihe crat sand, asrainst which t is ikin was barely distinguish v ,ol8, ! iiria in ambush was waiting .for ihing to turn up.. ' Turning Alazan loose, I l.'iel? tafe distance of yard tcJ et ' ittle crealure, which' fairly; with murderous rage. ' It r ttruck madly at the chappar ihrust out to it, but at last, liscerning that th-5 blame 1. switch, , actually - folic ind" with such agility V ximp up and back w lime. The idea of re trc ;o enter that til t ie would lie 1 p-. jotent rage, thro-v 1l tide open that n t nust start, and ;oward rae, ;round, with " ; o say : . -Me who ;'. ' Atlavtl fine i spurted i: of two .r ! visible ry. a cobweb .'.Iran swift death toth-. animal that wall- When the huut v Indian chums of ilia i.-1rrt:l flnm nanT i .V v k. v. j J, Knew 01 tue snahe, my; never etn one. and all aniijiisr wire x uww .1 1 n -rm ait'u ri i ., ill, iiiiM- B?it even (.mong theao CUV.L1 . a sacred rattlesnake in a wiLh special priests to at M II ..- t. - 1, .V ftl corns tobe tamed eyen: len oj ! conv the tj.Wv ea,nd tinit No one cvt i cuate bit hii-v once, who kii aif-J so - was brought a pic to the Taeblo t , ha lct'it out ur to it and went t him in the wrist die! ia the time All remembered, Abeita, a young j . to the llano to he he had seen a rabl row and had triea a switch, for.whei was lvinq; there, t black, with his , aril hole ; and in his ot with the grip of crushed pichu-cua -eana, is xiau sirut. J Wi:'1' s w'as re" ' The ' " ft!-p, lr tr