lit n.fllf Vv c 4 $1.00 a Year, in Advance. " FOR GOD, FOR COUNTRY, AND FOR TRUTH." Single Copy, 5 Cents. VOL. XIII. PLYMOUTH, N. C, FRIDAY, JULY 25, 1902. NO. 20. 1 iOFF TO THE BY GENESEE Rest in your cradle, Dreamily sway, Twilight is silver, Hushing the day, Deap little barefoot, Drooping your eyes, Rest till the dawn light Creeps in the skies. Quivering leaflets Softer voice take. Stars step like fairies, Still the blue lake, Birds only listen, Hid in the trees, Lest they may startle Babykm's ease. r. MRS. KA VAN AUG II, a frail little -woman of forty-five, with a few hundred dollars 6 sewed in her dress, and the fire of hope in her bright gray eyes, had come into the strip two years af ter its opening. Of course she got the worst of it, for the choice land was already taken, and the self-satisfied settlers who watched her old gray norse ana clattering Duggy meander across their fields, smiled half-pitying-Jy at the tardy boomer. When at last she set up her little tent and staked out her horse on a bare and rocky quarter section, wlere even the short grass looked stunted, the women pitied her and some of the neighboring men came over to ask her if there was anything they could lend her. But she only thanked them, as she guessed she ''would get along all right," so that the women who passed by her tent every day began to say that she was "stuck up," and the farmers who knew that she was on an almost barren claim, only grinned and mut tered: "She won't last nior'n one sea son." But she fooled them. A tiny shack was built by a half-breed who hauled the lumber from the railway station in her buggy. He built a frail little fence around a few acres of her ground, and left her at home on the desolate hill she had chosen. Then every morning when the sun swung up from the yel low floor of the dry prairie that stretched from her door to the horizon, she was out in her little garden dig ging, planting, cultivating the small pace from which she hoped at least to wring a living. In tbe afternoon she would hitch up her aged nag and, -dressed in her best widow's weeds, set off for the postoffiee five miles away. She brouglit home a few chickens, and in the lengthening evening hours sat knitting at her low back door, watch ing the sun drop down into the path less;, treeless, west. When spring had come and gone and Sirs. Kavanaugh's little garden showed all the squalor of its pinched cabbages and sickly vines the passing neighbors pitied her. If they had known her .simple story perhaps they might have helped her develop her poor land, but ehe confided in none, and came at last to be known as a headstrong, cranky old woman, who would be better off "back East" with her people. Rain or .shine, spring, summer, autumn and winter, she drove to town, tied her horse at the postofiice and asked 'for a letter. The overworked clerk came to know her at last, and with an effort at kindly deception, for there had never come a letter for her, would shuffle over the package of ICs and Say soft ly: "Nothing to-day, Mrs. Hava na ugh." Then she Avould drop the old crepe veil that was growing rusty, draw a letter from her pocket, and drop it into the box. That Avas for her .ou, her runaway bqy, and it was always addressed": "Mr. Tom Kava liaugh. Twenty-seventh Infantry, Ma nila, Philippine Islands." 13 very day she sent him a letter and every day she looked for an answer. But none came, and the nervous old woman went gravely back in her rickety bug gy to the lonely shanty upou the deso DREAM ISLE, BICHABDSON. Bonniest love-bird N All the land wide Nestled for night in . Pale eventide; Cheek warmly tinted, Like a rose, Long, curving lashes Lulled to a close. Drowsily crooning J Forward and fro, Off to the dream isle Babe and I go, Drowsily crooning, Forward and fro. Off to the dream isle Babe and I go. urn late hill to watch the sun set and to hope and pray. Her boy Tom had run away from home before his drunken father had died. He had written her just one line: "Gone to the Philippines with the Twenty-seventh Infantry." He had been gone a year when his father died. She had written to him often, but, knowing what a thoughtless boy he was, first attributed his silence to for getfulness and neglect. When she told him of his father's death, she felt sure - . ralfc.B II' T I I Mr III! ' 1- ML mmML. WMWhMm . '7Zy CALLED EVERYDAY. of some answer, and though none came she continued to write gentle, loving, warning letters to the absent scape grace, lie had been a youth of some spirit, and she knew that his father's dishonor in their home had driven him into the ariny,frwtvith all he? moth er's condoning love, she could not un derstand why he did not at least send her a word. She hated the town which had been the scene of her own and her boy's disgrace and separation, and Aviien the "new country" was opened and the stories of its glowing future reached her she sold her out all her belongings and set forth to find a home that should be her boy'.s home, too. After two years of this eventless life Mrs. Kavanaugh came to be recog nized as one of the characters of the town. Most people thought her harm lessly insane. The sand storms and the careening winds, the burning suns and Avinter snows, had turned her withered checks to parchment. Her old crepe veil Avas broAvn now; her ill made black alpaca dress, threadbare and discolored, hung loosely about her shrunken body. When the third win ter came she sold her horse and buggy for 30, but bought only shoes' that she might trudge to town and stamps and paper that she might send her dally letter to the boy. Silent, bowed, tear less, but with a quenchless light of hope in her mother eyes, each day she stood in line at the window and asked softly for the letter that never came, The postmaster, .who had half guessed her story, tried to whi her con fidence. . He wanted to help her some way, but she evaded all his questions. And then at last there came a day when she did not call at the postoffice. It was quite an event, for the post master and his clerk had come to re gard her visit as the one inevitable and poignant occurrence of each day's busi ness. So that night,, suspecting the worst, he drove in his buggy to her lonely home. She was in bed, quite ill, it seemed, but gentry grateful for his visit. "I did my best," sir, she told him, "but my money is all gone. I killed my last chicken last Sunday, and now, God help me, I must sell my home, his home," and she looked around the wretched, candle-lighted room with dim, wet eyes. "It will be best for you, Mrs. Kava naugh," quoth the postmaster, kindly; "you're too that is, you're no longer young or strong enough to live like this. Have you no relatives? no chil dren?" "Oh,, yes sir," she answered, proudly looking up. "I have a son, sir; a fine boy; but he's away in the army, and it's on his account I don't want to give it up." But he persuaded her to ride to town with him, and assured her that there would be no trouble about sell ing her place. "It's not worth much, I know," she said, as they drove toward town, "but, much as I want to kee) it, I'd rather sell it than take charity." Ho assured her that she "might "board" at his home until he had sold f I . 1 the place, raid she went there only to lapse into a fever that taxed the best ingenuity of the tAo doctors of the town. She was a Avorn, ghostly old Avoman Avhen at last she sat up and the postmaster told her that he had sold her place for ZW. "If you feel able you can ju?t sign the deed; the money is ready down at the bank, and Mr. Rogers; the young felloAV who wants to 'buy it, has gone out to the place to lock it OA-er." So she signed the document, a few Aveak tears dropping upon it, and hand ed it back to the postmaster. He took it and left her alone, but in the CA'en ing, when he came home to supper, lie came quickly into her room and said: "Mrs. Kavanaugh, the man who bought your place, Mr. Rogers, AAants to see you a moment. Shall I show him in?" And when he came in she felt for her glasses, but could not find them, so she bade him sit down and told him that there were a few things in the old shack, her Eible and an eld album, that she wished to take away. And the stranger, a freckled, red-haired giant, took her hand and Whispered- iFi r "Mammy, don't you know me?" "Rogers," she murmured, feeling his face with tremulous hope and fear, "Rogers? If it's you, Tom, why are you Rogers?" "I wasn't of age, mammy, when I enlisted. I was afraid daddy would stop me, so I took Rogers." And as he held her close to his breast and felt the hot tears drip an his hand he did not ask for his father, for on the wall he saAV the weather-beaten widow's cap and the dusty veil of mourning. John H. Raftery, in the Chicago-Record Herald. Mount Etna's Heich,t, The height of Mount Etna, the -famous volcano of Sicily, has long been fixed at 10,866 feet. Its height has re. cently been more accurately measured by trigonometrical processes, and the exact eloAation is found to be 10,753 feet. The difference is not important, but the more exact determination will, of course, be given on the maps here after published. The main crater has a width of 172S feet and a depth of S20 feet. Mount Etna has periods of almost complete quiescence. Six j-ears had elapsed after the eruption of 1S02, when in. the autumn of 1S0S blue flames began to emerge from the mouth of the largest crater, and a great deal of vapor Avas emitted from the lesser orifices. It was then an nounced that Etna seemed to be pre paring for an effusion of laA-a, probably on the south or southwest slopes. The expected eruption, however, did not begin till the morning of July 19. 1800, when great volumes of smoke and lava began to issue from the main crater, but after several days the ac tivity gradually subsided, and Etna soon resumed its peaceful aspect an'd has since seemed' to be in a .slumber ous condition. The I'olson of the Lily. A German botanist has disco ered that the pretty floAver known as the , lily of ihe valley contains a poison of the most deadly kind. Not only the flower itself but also the stem as well contains an appreciable quantity of prussic acid. While injecting a concoc tion of lily of the valley into the ear of a guinea pig he noticed the animal suc cumbed immediately, with all the symptoms of poisoning by hydrocyanic acid, says the Pittsburg Dispatch. Chemical analysis of tbe little plant has disclosed, hoAvever, the presence of this poisonous constituent, to which strange to say scientists attribute pre cisely the penetrating perfume of the lily f the valley. The attention of the German botanist has been drawn by the fact that one of his gardeners has felt himself seized with dizziness and vomiting after having inadvertently raised a bunch of lilies of the valley to his mouth, the lips of which were cracked. As Viewed by the Departing Prisoner. The Rev. Samuel S. Searing, chap lain of the House of Correction, South Boston, frequently has amusing ex periences A-ith the prisoners Avho come under his care. He is required by law to have an interview with ev ery man whose time has expired and who is about to leave the house. It is the chaplain's duty to give the de parting prisoner good advice and to exhort him to be a decent and honor able man in the future. In the course of one of these inter Ariews the chaplain said: "Now, mj friend, I hope you'll never have to, come back to a place like this." The prisoner looked at him thought fully and then asked: "I say, chaplain, you draw a salary here, don't you?" When Mr. Searing replied in the af firmative, the prisoner remarked: "Well, say, if me and the other fcl Ioavs didn't keep coming back you'd be out of a job." Boston Herald. Didn't Disturb Anybody. The rude boys of the neighborhood, having learned that there had been a Avedding in the lone brick house near the edge of tOAvn that evening, had been giving the happy couple a ser enade with tin horns, cowbells and other musical instruments for four or five hours, when an upper AvindoAV was raised and a nightcapped head was thrust forth. "Don't stop if you're having a good time, boys," said a voice pertaining to the nightcapped head. "You ain't disturbin' nobody. The young folks that was married here this eveaiu' are deaf and dumb." Then the windoAA' was lowered again, and deep silence immediately began to reign Chicago Tribune. - - - ' . ALPHABETICAL PETE. . Alphabetical Pete was an N V S fellow If U should wear saffron, he'd hanker for yellow; N D D Avas swagger, yet only too true, it Is said, N E bill E could B T would do it. As E Z as mud, when his clothing was C D He'd IRA cab, tho' decidedly needy, And drive to the tailor's (or L C might Avalk it) K A himself swell, and the tailor would chalk it. Alphabetical Tete was C Qr with a lady, an They sighed M T things in love's pastures R K D N, Until she discoA'ered his bankrupt condi tion And said: "You meander and C K posi tion!" Ah! sad was the N D refused to do labor, ' And punctured himself on an O D S sabre:' A way of S K P, could not have found neater That's all I S A to relate about Peter! Baltimore News. "Mrs. Talkington's husband ought to be a good listener." "He is. He can listen to nearly two hundred words a minute." The Smart Set. 4 When a widoAv says the men are all alike she indulges in a mental reser vation in favor of her former hus band. Boston Transcript. "Do you think they'll marry?" "Cir cumstances point in that direction. Her people object, and he's as poor as a church mouse." Detroit Free Press. Oh, what a pleasant Avorld 'twould be ; How smoothly we'd slip through it, , If all the fools Avho "meant no harm" $ Could manage not to do it. New York Times. Joakley "Budds, the florist, has a big inquisitive plant on exhibition."' Coakley "What's an inquisitive plant?" Joakley "Rubber!" Phila delphia Press. "Eating pie, old man? Why, I thought it never agreed with you." "It doesn't. But I don't care; 'it's my turn to take care of the baby to-aight, anyway." Town Topics. ': He "You are worth your weight in gold, dear." She "Oh, that's old; give mo something new." "What shall it be?" "Say I'm worth my weight in beef." Yonkers Statesman. She (proudly) "Oh, Henry, I got the prize at our women's club!" He "Good!" She "Yes, I blackballed more members during the past year than any other member." Ohio State Journal. Knott "I am having an awfully hard time. It's all I can do to keep the wolf from the door." Scott "Why don't you let him in and train him to keep your creditors out?" Tit-Bits. Teacher "Now, Ethel, who wrote the 'Elegy in the Country Church yard?'" Ethel 'Tlease, ma'ara, it was Willie Smif. I. seen him goin in the churchyard at recess, ma'am." Chicago News. Stern Father "What an unearthly Jjour tuat youug felloAV stops till every jight, Dora. What does your mother say about it?" Daughter "She says men haven't altered a bit since she AAas young, pa." GlasgoAV Times. "Beauty's only skin-deep, so they say; Ah, well, that's plenty deep enough for me; They'll never get rne to give myself away While the surface still is beautiful to sec." Chicago Record-Herald. Tommy (tearfully) "If yer don't gimme back them marbles yer nabbed I'll tell my big brother." Patsy "Tell him! He dasu't do nothin'." Tommy "He dasn't? Why?" Pats3--"lle walks out with my sister. See?" Tit Bits. "I feci a presentiment," said the shad, as he passed up the river, "that something terrible is going to happen to me." "Ah!" replied the sturgeon; 'a -ague presentiment, eh?" "Vague nothing. Why, I feel it in my bones." Philadelphia Press. World's Largest Match factory. The largest match factory is in Aus tria, and each year it uses 23,000 pounds of phosphorus, turns out 2,500, 000,000,000 matches, and fcr the boxes 100,000 feet of wood. A Persian Custom. In Persia tho man who laughs is con sidered effeminate, but free license is given t feminine merriment. The biggest castings crfr ordered is a steamship stmt to weight 134,000 pounds, to be made at Chester, Ta. .