-THE- -JkM EXCELLENT ' ADVERTISING MEDIUM. Official Organ of Washington County. FIRST OF ALL THE NEWS. Circulates extensively in Ihe Counties of WasVinton. Martin. Tyrol! nd Biaafort Job Printing In ItsYarlous Branch!. ') , : : : ; l.OO A YEAR IX ADVANCE. " TOR GOD; FOR COUNTRY, AND FOR TRUTH." " SINOI.E COPT, 6 CENTS. VOL. X. PLYMOUTH, N. C, FRIDAY, AUGUST 2o, 1899. No749. A HIRAM BAKER'S Sometimes, when I read of the men Who're on the tip-top notch ol fame, While every tongas nd erery pen Is pay in' tributes to their name, And when I think how close and small My life and lot is on this earth, I have been fo6l enough to fall Into the blues and hate it all, And envy luckier men their berth. Sometimes, when some chap wins the prize, And writes his name amongst the best, I think, 'spose I'd his chance to rise, His edlcation and the rest, I wonder it I couldn't climb The ladder jest as quick as he, And then it almost seems a crime That he should feast, while, all the time, There's but the hard, dry crusts for me. I M ISS TEROBIA'S FAILURE. BY HELEN WHITNEY CLARK. y "You're a stnnnin'in yer own light, Ferobv." Tiniothv Filbert shook his 'bead solemnly aa he spoke. lie was a large man, with small, light-blue eyes- aud a chronic stoop in the shoulders, suggestive of a too steady application to the plow. "You're a stannin'inyer own light," he repeated, impressively. "Mebbe you're right, Timothy," admitted his sister, meekly. She was not naturally of a meek disposition, but there are times when the most spirited person feels crushed by cir cumstances, and such a moment had iomi to Miss Ferobia. Timothy felt somewhat placated by the unexpected admission. 1 'Tain't too late yet, "he suggested, r- briskly, taking his seat at the break ''''fast table, where his sister was already ' pouring the coffee. "You jest say the word, Feroby, an.' I'll give Jason Small weed a hint that you've changed yer mind." ' His pale-blue eyes glanced inquir ingly at his sister, but Miss Ferobia's momentary meekness seemed to have vanished a3 unaccountably as it had appeared. ... "I haven't changed my mind," she , retorted with much asperity. "I won't marry Jason Srnall.weed, nor nobuddy else." I'll stay right here an' keep house for you the balance of my days." Timothy wriggled uneasily. He had hi3 own. reasons for not appreciating the generous offer. To fortify himself i for the disclosure which must be made he swallowed half his coffee at a gulp. "I I the truth is, Feroby," he stammered, with a crimson counten ance, "I felt so sartin I was a-goin' to lose you, I I asked Nancy Garget, an' she said she'd have me." - The cat was out of the bag now, and V Timothy mopped his face with his handkerchief and breathed a sigh of . relief. But Miss Ferobia, like a sensible woman, bore the shock bravely. "And how soon am I to give up my situation?'' she asked. 11 Timothy grew uncomfortable again. "Hey? Oh! why you needn't to be in a hurry. -t won't come off fur a week yet," he hastened to ex plain. "An", of course, you know I wouldn't hevnothin' again yer stayin' right along, same as ever, only Nancy, she " "You couldn't hire me -to stay," . was the. reassuring answer, and Tim othy congratulated himself on having the matter so easily settled. "It puz zled me consider'ble to know why Tim othy was so sot on me changin' my mind," reflected Miss Ferobia, as she washed up the breakfast dishes and polished the knives and forks. "But it's plain as a pike-staff now. I might o' knowed he was- sayin' one word fur me an' two fur hisself.". " Miss Ferobia was as unlike her brother in appearance a3 she was in disposition. While he was stoop-shouldered she Avas straight as an arrow. And though, ".a she admitted, she was "getting U along" jn years, her bright eyes and . fresh complexion contradicted the as sertion. At her brother's request she re mained at her post until the wedding was over and the bride installed in her uew' home. There was very little congeniality between the two women, aud Mrs. Timothy Filbert was disposed to tri umph over her sister-in-law. "I s'pose you wasn't a-countin' on your brother marryin'," she reniarkel, disagreeably, as she combed out her iuk-black tresses before the square framed looking glass in the best room, v "He had a right to please himself," ..Vejoiued Miss Ferobia, composedly. . "But what are you going to. do?" . persisted the bride. "As I told Tim- othy before I promised to have him, the house wa'n't big. enough fur two fain'lies, an you couldn't expect to stay after I come," "An' as I told him, I wouldn't stay if he paid me for it." retorted Miss Ferobia, emphatically, , "Oh, you're mighty independent," sniffed Nancy, tossing her head. "I suppose you're a calculatin' to take up with Jason Smallweed. You wouldn't ketch me marryin' a widder er," sbo added, maliciously. "If I couldcbe the tablecloth I wouldn't be the ttish rag. But I "s'pose he's IIoL -ion's choice with you." MORALIZINC. But, then again, I think, suppose That all our brains was same as his, Who'd plow the furrers, plant the rows, And do the common stints there is? If everyone oould greatness share This world would stop, I guess we'd And: TV'e can't all fancy-work prepare. The few have pleasant tasks and fair, The many'a got to git the grind. God made us all, and put us here As part of His almighty plan; And each one's got his duty clean It's test to do the best he can. And if my place in life ain't what I'd like to have it, nor as great, Why, if I can, I'll change my lot, And, if I can't, whate'er I've got, I'll try to keep my furrer straight. Joe Lincoln. afraid her sister-in-law might still inanaae to retain a place in the house hold by hook or by crook, aud she was determined to provoke an altercation in order to prevent such a sequence. But Miss Ferobia was not to be drawn into a quarrel. "He may be ' Hobson's choice, but he is not mine," she returned, coolly. Nancy, however, was as persistent as a gnat or a gadfly. "I don't doubt but what you'd rather have Felix Byefield," she sug gested, slyly; "but you needn't to count on gittin' him.far he's a-keepin comp'ny with the Widder Cheeseman, an' everybuddy says they're a-goin' to marry after harvest," It was a random shot on Nancy's part, but her black eyes sparkled with malicious triumph as she saw by her sister-in-law's burning cheeks that the poisoned arrow had struck home. Miss Ferobia deigned no reply, how ever, but went coolly about prepara tions for her own departure. She had rented a small cottage and a few acres of ground a mile or two from the old homestead, and Timothy oould do no less than get out the spring wagon and drive her to the new home. It was yet early, in the springtime, and the wild plum trees were white with bloom. The tall maples and elms by the roadside swung their light tas sels in the soft breeze, and 'myriads of buttercups and purple hued pansie3 dotted the grass-grown lanes. "I dunuo what you wanted of so much ground 'round your house," re marked Timothy, reflectively, as the wagon rolled easily along. "Half an acre would have been enough, I should fay." ' "No, it wouldn't," maintained his sister, stoutly. "I'm a-goin' into the gardenin' business, to raise truck far the markets. "" Timothy whistled. "You'll make a failure of it, sure as guns," he declared, ruthlessly. But Miss Ferobia was not to be dis couraged. "There's plenty of men make a livin' at it, an' why not me?" the asked. "I've got a little money laid by to start on. An' I've got a stout pair of arms, and never was sick a day in my life; so why should I make a failure of it?" But Timothy only shook his head aud remarked, vaguely, that it was "onpracticable, and she should find out," and declined to commit himself further. And the couference wa3 cut short by their arrival at the cottage. It was a lonely place, but Miss Fero bia was blessed with strong nerve?, and solitude had no terrors for her. She had accumulated a few odds and ends of furniture from time to time, the gifts of various friends aud relative?, which went a good way toward furnishing her diminutive dwelling. And when they were arranged to her satisfaction, and a square of bright rag carpet tacked down in the centre of the room, Miss Ferobia felt as happy as a king. - She was too tired after her day's work to do more than take a cup of tea and retire to rest. But a comfort able night's sleep on the old-fashioned square-posted bedstead restored her energies, and for the next few days she was as busy as a nailer over her preparations. Lem Dodson was hired to plow the "truck patch," a cow with a young calf was bargained for, and a few fowls of the Plymouth Rock and Dorking species were purchased and were soon cackling vigorously around their new quarters. After a little more help from neigh bor Dodson, and a vigorous use of the hoe on Miss Ferobia's part, the ground was in readiness for j'lanting, and the ambitious market gardener sat up till long past her -usual bedtime looking over her stock of seeds and selecting those requisite for immediate use. . There might still be late frosts, she reflected, and such tender plants as beans and cucumber?, summer squashes and nutmeg melons would be better out of the ground than in it for a few days to come. But beets aud lettuce, spinach and marrowfat peas and ruta bagas would stand anything short of a regular freeze, and might be safely planted at once. And, lata though sho pat up, the first Miss Ferobia napping the next morn ing, nor for many mornings to come. She was up with the birds, and after a hasty breakfast out she sallied, and hoed and raked, weeded and trans planted, till her back ached and her fingers grew sore and her nose freckled and her cheeks tanned. But garden ing is hard work, at best, and though Miss Ferobia labored with a will, the grass and weeds would creep in here and there, in spite of her vigilance. The purslane "pusly" she called it and horse nettles grew faster than her buttoi-bead lettuce or white spine cu cumbers. Then the weather was not always propitious, and her first planting of sugar corn and early rose potatoes rotted in the ground. But Miss Ferobi;), nothing daunted, replanted the vacant rows with later varieties, . and in due time the seeds sprouted and gave every promise of a luxuriant crop. But fiom that time on it was, as the little woman declared, a "tussle" be tween herself and the. weeds. Wbile she was hoeing her cabbages and kohl robies and weeding her silver-skin onions, the cockle buns and wild morning glories were flouri hing among her sweet corn and potatoes. She worked early and late, however, to eradicate the tenacious interlopers, aud finally succeeded in accomplishing her task. When lo! one unlucky night Farmer Nubbins' pigs forced their way through a broken panel of the fence and played havoc among the growing crops. Small wonder,indeed, if our heroine lost her temper at last and pelted those pigs with clods, or whatever came handiest, and even whacked one of them across the snout with the hoe handle. But with all her efforts it was late in the day when the last one of the marauders was disposed of and the fence patched up, after a fashion. (I will say here, in parenthesis, that I do believe a woman could vote, and even make laws, and execute them, too, as well as a man, under some cir cumstances. When I say "under some circumstances," I mean if 'she were not hampered by prejudiced and un reasonable colleagues. But when it comes to patching rail-fences, the least said about woman's capabilities the better). However, Miss Ferobia's workman ship, if not exactly aitis tic, was suffi ciently ingenious to prevent further inroads in that direction. But for some reason, from that time on the Fates seemed to turn a cold shoulder on her efforts. The rabbits feasted on her early York cabbages aud marrowfat peas, the striped bugs worked destruction on her cucumbers and Cassava melons, the Colorado beetle devastated her potatoes, and the squash bugs ate up her Boston marrows aud atty-pan squashes. The foxes, minks, owls and hawks, to say nothing of opossums and weasels, thinned the ranks of her young Dorkings and Ph mouth Rocks; and, to make matters worse, her cow turned out to be a "jumper" and brought disgrace on herself and trouble on her mistress by daily raids on Farmer Nubbins' cor u field. Thi3 was the last straw, and, like the mythical camel, Miss Ferobia broke dowu under it. "There aiu't no i;se a-tryin', ns I see," she lamented, dolefully as she set out her one cup aud saucer, in readiness for her tea. "A lone woman dou't have no chance at all. An' here I've spent all my money, an' my garden ain't wuth shucks. And Timothy, he'll say he told me how 'twould be, and that I'd better o' mar ried Jascn Smallweed. And I almost b'lieve I would No, I wouldn't, either. I won't tnke up with a crooked stick, if I be nearly through the woods " 'Eveiiin', Miss Feroby, " interrupted a cheery voice, and there, framed in the doorway, stood Felix Byefield, a smile brightening his honest, sun browned face. Miss Ferobia shook hands with her visitor, and drew forth a chair for him, with a secret fluttering at her heart as she remembered her sister-in-law's insinuation. But Felix was evidently bent on making himself agreeable. "An' so you've struck out for your self," he observed. "Gittin along first rate, I opine. You must show me your garden. " ; "I haven't got no garden, an' you sha'n't see it," declared Miss Ferobia, inconsistently. "It's all choked up with weeds I couldn't keep 'em out. An' what with the bugs, an' the rab bits an' pigs I ain't got a cabbage head left skeercely." "Sho' now, you don't say! Why, if that ain't too bad," responded Felix, sympathetically. "An' the varmints has took all my yonngchickeus," continued Miss Fero bia. "An Farmer Nubbins is a-goin' to shoot my cow, an' an' " The 'bought of all her woes was too much for her, and she began to sob hysterically. . "L'oa't cry. Miss Terobv; please don't," urged Felix. "He shan't shoot your cow, I promise you." But Miss Ferobia shook her head aud dried her eyes on the corner of her aprou, "I'il sell the cow," she dcared.so- somewhere. I can cook if I can't make a garden." "No need to hire out," put in Felix, eagerly. "I want somebody to cook fur me. Say you'll marry me, Fero by!" But Miss Ferobia in her surprise stared at him, then hung her head, blushing like a girl. "It's so sudden," she whispered. "What's the odds?" asked Felix, boldly. "I wanted you loug ago, only I couldn't somehow git the courage to ask you. Say yes, won't you,Feroby?" And after a little more urging Miss Ferobia did say yes, and felt very well contented with her future prospects.in spite of her weedy garden. "Timothy will say the truck busi ness was a fail are after all," she re flected, as she washed up her suppet dishes at night, with a very light heart, "but he can't say it wasn't e successful failure, anyhow." Waver ley. THE CENTRE OF POPULATION. WhereltHaa Been and Where the Nexl Censn May Show It lo Ie. By the first national census taken ir 1790, when the population of the coun try was not much greater than of New York city today, says the Sun, the centre of population was twenty-three mile3 east of Baltimore. It was still in the neighborhood of Baltimore, though to the west of that t ity, in 1800. In 1810 it was near Washing ton. In 1820 it was at Woodstock, Ya., aud 1830, 1840 and 1850 in the pres ent state of West Virginia. In 1860 it was a little to the south of Chili cothe, Ohio, this being the first of ficial appearance of Ohio as the centre of population, though it has remained the political centre of population steadily ever since. In 1870 the centre of population was on a Hue in Ohio between Chilicothe aud Cincinnati; in 1880 it was in the neighborhood of Cincinnati, and in 1890, the year of the last national census, it was in Decatur county, Ind., near the Ohio boundary, and on a line between Cincinnati and Indian apolis. The government estimate of the present population of the United States, exclusive of countries over which its sovereignty has been ex tended, was 75, 000, 000 on June 1, and all sections of the country have par ticipated, though not . equally, in the growth of population since 1890, when it was 62,600,000. By the coming census the Ohio and Mississippi Valley states will probably be shown to have gained less from di rect foreign immigration than in any previous decade, while the citizens of the Middle and New England states have, relatively, gained more. There has been a substantial increase in population, larger, probably, than -in any period since the close of the civil war, in the southern and south border states, aud a mnch larger increase in those of the southwest,-most notably in Texas, the total vote of which in creased from 230,000 in 1880 to 340, 000 in 1890 and 550,000 iu 189l The population of Texas (2,20:000 in 1890) is probably near 3,600,000. A state census taken of Kansas in 1895, on the other hand, showed the population of that state to be less than in 1890, while in the same period the population of New Jersey had in creased 16 per cent. Between 1890 and 1895 the populaton of Florida in creased from 390,000 to 465,000, while the population of South Dakota (328, 000 in 1890) was returned as 330,000 five years later. The growth of population in Ameri can states between 1890 and 1900 will be in accordance with the inciease of the urban population in each rather than with the gaiu in agricultural dis tricts. As a majority, of the cities are iu the north, it appears likely that the "centre of population" iu 1900 will be on or near the banks of the Wabash in the state of Indiana, at some point northwesterly from the present cen tre and nearer the Illinois than the Ohio state line. A Mixed Itelat ionwlilp. Over the line in Ohio county, a man named Miller married a widow whe had a grown-up daughter. His fathet fell in love with the step-daughter. The father became the sou's son-in-law and the step-daughter became his mother. Recently the son's wife had a child. The child was Miller's father's brother-iu-law and Miller's own uncle, for he was a brother of hi? step-daughter. Miller's father's wife his step-mother also bad a son.whc was, of course, Miller's brother, anc incidentally Miller's grandchild, foi he was the sou of Miller' a daughter. Thus Miller's own wife was his mother's mother and Miller became his w ife's grandchild at the same time. And then, to top the whole thing off, as the husband of his giaudmother he was his own grandfather. The Path finder. lie Had a Strong; Argument.' A youn? Irishman once went to i kind-hearted old squire for a recom mendatiou. An elaborate one wai written and read to him. He took i' with tbanks, but did not move. "What's the matter with it?" roarec the squire. "Oh, uothin,' sorr," saic the lad, quickly. "Well, then, whj don't you go?" 'Sure, sorr, I though' iu ihe strintb. o' a reeommind likt that you'd be wauting t hi o n:2." DEVOTION OF A FISH. It Follows its Owner Arountl After the Manner of Dor. A gentleman walking one evening in the park at Durham, England, the seat of the "Earl of Stamford and Warring ton, came to a pond where fish in tended for the table were temporarily kept He took particular notice of a fine pike, of about six pounds weight, which,'.' when it observed him, darted hastily away. In . so doing it struck its head against a tenter hook in a port (of which there were several in the pond, placed to prevent poaching) and fractured its skull, thereby turning the optic nerve on one side. ,.' The anguish evinced by the fish ap peared most horrible. It iushed to the bottom, and boring its head into the" mud, whirled itself around with such velocity that it was almost lo-t to sight for a short interval. It then plunged about the pond, and at length threw itself completely out of the water on to the bank. The doctor caught the fish and up on examination found that a very small portion of the brain was pro truding from the fracture in the skull. He carefully replaced this, and with a small silver toothpick raised the in dented portion of the skull. The fish remained still for a short time, and he theu put it agaiu into the pond. It appeared at first a good deal re lieved, but in a few minutes it again darted aud plunged about until it threw itselt out of the water a second time. A second time the gentleman did what he could to relieve it, aud again put it into the water. The pike continued for several times to throw itself out of the poud, and, with the assistance of the keeper, the doctor at length made a kind of trepan for the fish, which was then left in the pond to its fate. Upon making an appearance at the pond the followiug morning, the pike came to the edge of the water and ac tually laid its head upon the physi cian's foot. The doctor thought this most extraordinary, but he examined the fish's skull and found it going on all right. He then walked backward aud forward along the edgo of the pond for some time, and the fish con tinued to swim up and down, turning whenever he turned, but being blind oh the wounded side of his skull, it always appeared agitated when it had that side toward the bank, as it could not then see its benefactor. Next day the doctor took some yoang friends down to see the fish, which came to him as before, and at length he actually taught the pike to come to him at hir whistle and feed out of his hands. With other persons it continued as shy as fish usually are. This was a most remarkable case of gratitude iu a fih for a benefit re ceived. Largest Moose Known. At the Academy of Science in Lin coln park, Professor Woodruff and an assistant are setting up what is with- out doabt the largest moose ever killed. It will be on exhibition within a month, and the public will have a chance to see this giant of the north ern woods. Thi3 moosa was killed the latter part of October, 1898, by an Alaskan Indian named Shopuegou and a squaw man, Ripstein, about thirty-five miles back of Valdies, just over the big glacier near the Copper river. It was purchased by C. F. Periolat of this city, and brought to Chicago last November, where it was sold for $1000. The immense size of this animal caa be better judged when a g'ance is taken at the following measurements: The spread of the autlers, 73 1-4 iuches; height of moose from hoof to top of antlers, 8 feet 6 inches; height from hoof to top of foresboulder. 6 feet 4 inches; length from tip of nose to ho -k of rear leg, 16 feet; weight when killed, 2000 pounds. No other such moose was ever heard of in this country or auy other, and the academy is proud of its possession. Chicago Chronicle. Diminutive Iticyrle. In these days of mammoth under takings, monster buildings, gigantic everything, it is refreshing to turn aside to the Lilliputian land and study the smallest things in ex- j tstence. isiggest uoes uot a'ways mea i best, as the owner of the small est bicycle in the world will tell you. This diminutive bike is owned by a youug Briton, whise home is at Ka rachi in India. The frame of the wheel is 9 iuches, the wheels are 12 inches, the gear 40 aud the weight I 1-2 pounds. The smallest working model of a bicycle was made by an Ameriian diamond cutter. It is a f.retty novelty. The frames, rims and preumatic tires are of silver, the spokes of the thinnest gold wire, the chain is of steel, each link bnng forged and put together separately. The whole machine is barely two inches iu height, aud i3 richly en 3i uste l with diamonds. A ' ere t X-nIve I nl. ? he 1 a gr;int ll.at your income would le enough for ns to marry, if onlv you didn't have such expensive l a.K - Ke I? Expe-sivo fads? What ex pensive fad have I? ) !he !e, for instance. '"Lustigw A VICTIM TO ADVICE. A wise old man was Ebenezer Barr, Who always tried to do as he was bid; They said, '"Go, hitch your wagon to a star" And Ebenezer did. But, oh! what trials he had to endure When that cantankerous star he tried to drive! It would have been a marvel, I am sure, Had bo come out alive. For of the science of astronomy So ignorant was Ebenezer Barr, He made an awful blunder, and, you sea, He chose a shooting star. And though he sat up firmly In his place. Determined he would conquer his wiU steed, That star went plunging madly into space At more than lightning speed. Of course the poor old fellow was thrown out; His was a fearful fate; ana they do say That EbenHzer wns without a doubt, Drowned in the milky way. Carolyn Wells in Panl HUMOROUS. Teacher What can you tell tag about the rabbit? Pup.l Its loft hind foot is lucky. "What a sanguine disposition your wife has!" "l'es; she never lets up when she has decided what I ought to do." "Beverly, did you enjoy your Euro- riann trii-kV" 4Vm iIwIt' moat a cahI who succeeded in borrowing mouey ot me." He Miss Putnam is in her declin ing years, I take .it V Her Rival Well, if 1 were a man I wouldn't run the risk of jroposing to her. "No," said the corn-fed philosojjher, "a man should not tell a woman he will love her always, unless both of them are young enough to believe it." Clara I never sing except for my very dear friends. Maude There's where you make a mistake.. You should sing only for your worst ene mies. "Dear Tim I'm sending you my old coat by panel post, so I've cut the buttons off to make it lighter. But you will find them in the inside pock et, Yours truly, Pat." "Do.'t you think, Mrs. Spitely, that this hat is a little too gay for a ma tronly woman like me?" "Not at all, my dear. You know that you're years younger than you look." Sister (meditatively) All geuinse3 seem to be absent-minded. Why is it you never hear of dull peojle being so? Bobby (promptly) Pshaw, it's just because they haven't got the minds to be absent, "Of conrse, as a general thing," she said, "I don't believe in marrying a man for money. But marriage is such a lottery, you see.and it's just as well to know for sure that there's something about him you'll like.". .. Miss Quickstep What part of town are we driving through, Mr. Fibble? Fweddy I haven't the least idea. Miss Quickstep I was aware of that. Still, I thought it possible you might know whatpart of town we are driving through. "Oh!" sighed the poetic lady, "had I the wings of a bird!" "Don't!" protested her husband. "Don't wish for the wings of a bird. If you had them some other woman would prob ably be wearing them on he:- hat be fore the season is over." Old Lady (on ocean steamer) Mercy me! Is this all one ship? Trav eled Granddaughter Why, yes, grandma, and we haveu't walked a quarter the length of it yet. Old Lady Gracious! How near will we be to the laud when we get to the other end? Mrs. Teller She told me the whole story word for word, just as I have repeated it tJ you, and she made me promise not to whisper a word of it to anybody, Mr. Teller But you told me, my dear. Mrs. Teller Yes of course, but I didn't whisper, did 1? Chicago News. He What sort of a footstool was that you gave your husband? She What are you talking about? I didn't give him any footstool. I gave him a beautiful band-worked cover for the mantelpiece. He Ob, that was it. I know be told me it was something he could put his feet on. "It is only right that I should tell you," she said, "that father has lost all." i'N'otall!" be exclaimed. "Yes, all," she asserted. "No," he said firmly; "not ail. Yo:i are still left him. I could not be so cruel as to add to bis misfortunes. Tell him -tell him for me that my generosity im pels me to leave him what little lies in my power." I'our Onw Nantes. A man registered iu a Cleveland hotel the other day, giving his place of ' residence as Sleepy Eye, Minn. Half an hour later another guest reg istered from Painted l ost, Iowa. The clerk paid no especial attention to this, but w hen the next man to regis ter boldly wrote " White Pigeon, 3Jieh.," alter bis name, both the clerk and the bookkeeper began to get in terested, bile they were talking about the queer names that had beeu given to some of our western towns a oigniried looking man stepped up t the office, whirled the register around and Rcrmvled ".Ho;seheads, N. Y." -"..- ' 1 yi . ; f - 1 1 - -