Si.oo a ear, in Advance. FOR GOP, FOR COUNTRY, 'AND FOR TRUTH.' Single Copy, 5 Ccat5. VOL. XIV. PLYMOUTH, N. C FRIDAY. APRIL 24, 1903. NO. 6. OLD T1MRTAVQ ; LONGING. is y ,t a m i:s 11 vbs "Of all Uic myriad .moods of mind, Tk't through the soul came throngins, which was o'er so dear, so kind, So beautiful ns longing? The things we Ions fr that we arc l'or otic tttinscetidenfc moment. Before the proven t poor and bare Can make its sneering comment. . Stiif. through our paltry tir and strife Glows down the wished ideal. 'And longing molds in day what liia "Cai'vcs in the marble real. 1 To- let the new life in, we kno. Oeire must ope the portal; Perhaps the longing to he so Helps make the soul immortal. THE HERMIT OF THE FLATS. ' . IIEUE he lived amid the term ing humanity of the great and populous city, "with the noise, and bustle of traffic and hum -01 human voices always intz'.mg through his solitude, yet always alone and lonely, a hermit of the Hats. The men of his acquaintance spoke to him -or nodded cheerily across the res taurant tables, but. lie -was conscious -of divergent interests-, so he never encouraged their friendly advance!?, hut -went his own way in moody silence. Of "women be never thought vku'e the death of bis hopes seven years before, when the girl of his choice had rejected him for a luckier man. Gradually his solitude hardened him, arid, the hardening process crept into bis stories, which took a pessimistic larn. The editors complained because 'bis otherwise strong, virile work, was ton sombre; others said it lacked natur alness and humanity, but Avhutever the fault was, Ilaswell began to realize 4 hut something was seriously amiss. "Go out among the people; and get freshened up," said his friend Boynton, who had always liked Ilaswell's style of work, "and let yourself live. Then write what you have learned from ihem.'V But Ilaswell declined to take his ad j"viee, saying that the vulgar horde re nclh;d Jiim, and he preferred 1o write in ?hJs own way or not at all, so his stories grew less and less successful, and Has kell's temper soured proportionately. It was a bitter midwinter night. The Icy wind whistled shrilly through the alleys and filtered in between the chinks of Ilaswell's windows, rattling 1i; casements unpleasantly. Ilaswell -was out of temper with his work and Hhe exacting editors, avIio had returned -a batelj of his stories without so much s a rejection slip. lie rose, plugged iho casements, and drew his machine closer to" the glowing hearth, and be gan to revise the rejected copy, when a timid knock at bis door interrupted Jris thoughts. ' A gust of chilly tbe open vestibule hack the hall door, once of a stranger air rushed up from below as he threw revealing the prcs- with an awkwardly wrapped parcel in bis arm. A thin fall of snow hid the tiireadbareness of J5s ..ill-fitting coat, and the drooping rim of Ills battered hat obscured his face, which was very young and dark -and unnaturally thin. "What do you want here?'' Ilaswell idemanded sharply. "Do Mr. Severn no live here?" asked a very soft, childlike voice. "No, he doesn't," Ilaswell answered brusquely. "There are no Italians in this -apartment house. You had better get out before you're put out." "He told my friend be live here," ihe 1oy said, apologetically. "He have promised to let ine play for hint. I need work very bad. Mister." "Oh, I dare say! Home begging game, of course. Well, yon won't, make any llimg here, I can tell you." Then for the first time he saw the violin under ibe .boy's ragged arm. "Do you. play that . thing V" he asked curiously, "'You're not more than a child!" "I am sixteen. Mister." the soft, ap pealing voice answered. "Well, you're man's not here." Ilas well retorted briefly, closing the door and going back to his cheerful hearth. But that last glimpse of the pathetic ittlo face made him uncomfortable, i "!c oprned the door once more, ar.d RITES I nr. r, low e ex, - Longing is God's fresh heavenward will. With our poor earthward striving; We quench it that we may be still Content with merely living. But. would we learn that hearjsjull scope Which we are hourly tvrongiYig, Our lives must climb from hope'to hope And realize our longing. Ah, let us hope that to our praise " Good God not only reckons. The moments when we tread Hi way?, But when the spirit beckons. That seme slight good is also wrought Beyond self-satisfaction. When we are simply good in thought Ilowe'er we fail in action. leaning over the banisters, called down to him: "Come up," he said rather grudgingly, "I may be able to help you find your friend." The boy pattered softly up the steps. Once Within the brightly lighted room his poverty and weariness became pain fully apparent; his trousers and coat were frayed and ragged, and his big. loose shoes were full of gaping holes, ilaswell took the old violin from his numb grasp and bade him throw off his coat, which lie did fumbiugly, for his bands were stiff and blue with cold. His trousers were wet to the knees, and the melting snow oozed steadily from the broken toes of his shoes. HaSAveii stared at bis sad figure helplessly. "Where do you live?" he demanded abruptly. "In Greenwich "Down town. I street, Mister.' presume. Must you go home to-night':" The boy shrugged his shoulders with a. gently depreciating smile. "Nobody don't care if I don't," he answered. "Then you had better stay here, l'ott can sleep on the couch, yonder, when you're all cleaned up. You are wring ing wet and cold as ice. Tell you what. I'll run a lubful of warm water, and you can take your bath while I hunt up some dry things. After that you can tell nie about yourself." . When the strange little figure emerged from the bathroom arrayed in Ilaswell's spacious pajamas, with his black, silken 'thatch washed and curl ing crisply all around his pale face, Ilaswell noticed that his delicate, re fined beauty was quite extraordinary and altogether irreconcilable with his rags and misery. Ilaswell poured out the coffee ho had steeped over his alcohol lamp, and set before his guest a plate of crackers and cheese which he bade hinnoat, -while he finished -his work, but although the host made a creditable feint of writing, he did not for an instant take his eyes from the beautiful, pallid face which the mel low firelight threw into sharp relief. Why did that stranger child interest him so overwhelmingly ? he asked him self grimly; was it because of the pos sible story it held, or had he touched the glossed-over springs of human sympathy which had laiu dormant so long under the stolid indifference that cloaked the hermit of the flats? It was a pathetic little story that the lad had to tell, and he told it in falter ing English, with now and then a word of his Servian mother tongue to offset its pathos: of his immigrant father, a musician in .the old con u try, -who had been obliged to taice work in a factory to avert starvation, whose death oc curred shortly after through :n explo sion of the factory works; of the subse quent wanderings' in a strange city. His only friends had lately been en gaged to travel wllh a concert band, and he was "trying to find a couutry man who had promised him an insig nificant part with his wandering band. He was quite alone in the world, with out kindred or friends or money. His only hope was to obtain work enough to pay his return passage to Servia. Ilaswell asked many questions, but the lad's story never deviated except to add some pathetie detail which showed how much toil and privation his young life had known. "I used to take a great deal of pleas ure in music." said Ilaswell, when the child had finished his story and drawn I A his chair closer to the blazing hearth. "Suppose you play something for me if you are warm enough to handle your violin. I want' to know what you can do." Uhuel tucked hU old violin under his chin and tightened the slack strings, then he dried his how carefully and began to play, very softly and deli cately, a weird little melody unlike anything Haswell had ever heard, more sad, more beautiful, and infinitely sweeter. There was a lack- of tech nique and detinitoness in his touch which -would -bar a successful hearing with the coldly critical public, but to Ilaswell. whose soul was stirred to its inmost depths by the spirit of pure melody, it seemed inexpressibly lovely. It brought new pictures to his mind, of unsuspected beauty, of lives shad owed by want and poverty, toilers in the dark whom such as he, to whom much had been given, should minister comfort and cheer. Ho seated himself before his desk and began to write, without conscious effort or weariness, the story that the child's music in spired. The boy played on unceasing ly, glancing now and then at the hand hurrying across the paper, until at last Ilaswell lifted his head and smiled. "You are tired, I'm sure," he rtiid in a voice of singular gentleness. "Put away your violin and go to hod in my room, yonder; I want to finish my work hjre beside the fire." . . a A week later, when Ilaswell look his story down to P.oynton's 'office, the lat ter glanced it over skeptically, read a few lines of the last page, then began at the start and went through it. word for word, with eager attention. When he had finished be looked up at Ilas well with a queer,' unaccustomed smile. "If you can do a thing like that once." he said, "you can do it again. That's the sort of stuff we want. I'll give you .$50 for every story of that kind you send me." Ilaswell went back to his hermit flat in an exultant frame of mind. He found his little guest crouching before the fire with his curly head bowed over the violin. "lihuel," he began ab ruptly, "you have given me 'a great deal of pleasure with your "music, and to show you I appreciate the kindness I. have decided to send you home. A week from to-day you shall have your passage ticket." The boy looked up with a start, and his face grew, if possible, paler. He rose, laid down his violin, and took a step toward his benefactor, then paused and looked at him with glow ing eyes. "Are you very glad?" Haswell asked, smiling whimsically. "Yes, Mister, an' no, too. I love my country but I haf no relative; " "Perhaps you would rather have the money?" Ilaswell suggested rather coldly. IMiuel shook his head. Suddenly he put out one thin hand and touched Ilaswell's shoulder with an appealing gesture that thrilled the older man strangely. "Mister, I radcr .stay wid you," he faltered. "If you let me, I jus' love to stay." "Stay with me!" Ilaswell echoed in adequately. Then he laughed and caught the thin little baud in his big Avarm grasp. "I really believe we'd hit it off tine, little lad' he said gayly. "I'm not quite suited with this hermit life, upon my word I'm not. Suppose we try doubling up for a time? -When -you grow tired, you can say so, you know." "No. Mister." the boy contradicted eagerly, "I never grow tired. I love to stay always!" "Stay, then," said Ilaswell. -- And he did. New York Times.. Kxonevated.- The judgment that was pronounced on the manuscript which a playwright had in his possession during the time of King William III. could be applied with equal propriety to the works of sonic modern writers which find pre sentation on the stage. Having been arrested and brought before the Earl of Nottingham on the charge of own ing treasonable papers, he denied at great length all knowledge of the, af fair, sayiug that he was a poet and that the, papers in question were only a roughly sketched play. The Earl, however, examined them carefully, and finally, having settled the thing in his own mind, -turned to the prisoner and said: "I have-heard your statement and road your manuscript, and as I fail to seo any traces of a plot" In either, you may go." Philadelphia Ledger. It is 101 years since the first census wa3 taken in England. FINE CASCADES IN JAPAN. Rome of the Most Uewitcliing; Waterfall of the World Exit There. There is an almost countless number of waterfalls jn the domain of tbo Mikado. Nature was lavish in bestow ing them on the country, and wherever; there chanced to be a deficiency the natives supplied it promptly by arti ficial means. Indeed, no State, largo or small, is complete without its water fall. Every little garden has' a fall or two of its own and it. would not be considered a garden at all without it There are many very beautiful ones in various parts of the country, and they are all of them shrines visited by thousands of pilgrims every year. They do not pray to them as to a statue of Buddha, but they first paste up a little paper prayer on a convenient rock and then sit down in rapt atten tion and gaze at the falling waters for hours, taking an occasional cup of tea at a little tea house, -which always stands close at hand. The Japs are great at making pilgrimages, anyway. When a map. has reached the age of forty-five he is supposed to have raised a family which will in the future take care of him. About the first thing he does on retiring is to start on a series of pilgrimages. Sometimes he joins a band of fellow-pilgrims, or if compara tively wealthy he takes his wife and a minor child and makes the pilgrimages by himself. These pilgrim bauds can always be seen moving about the coun try. They carry little banners with the name of their city and district marked on them, and when they have received good entertainment at a tea house or hotel they hang one of their banners up in a conspicuous place as a testimonial. Often a band of pilgrims will travel from one end of the coun try to the other, visiting every temple and waterfall in the land. -Chicago Chronicle. Hound-Heart People Most Content. "Do you know," said a man to a Journal reporter, "that of the men who have left Spartanburg and settled in other places nearly every one was an oblong-headed man?" This state ment may seem strange, but it is true that it is the oblong-headed people who are generally not content to take things as they happen and make the most of their position in a philosophi cal spirit. This condition is not pe culiar to Spartanburg. It is the ease everywhere. 1 recall many years ago that I was told that the oblong-headed people were .more restless than the round-headed, and some cause was ad vanced for it which I do not now re member. I doubted the story, but since then I have given attention to the matter, and in most cases, of de parture from the several communities in which I have resided from time to time I have found that it is the oblong-headed people who change their places of vocation. I am oblong-headed myself, and I have lived in New York, Jacksonville, Greenville and now I am in Spartanburg. In every one of these, cities -friends and acquaintances with the round heads have remained in the communities, seemingly satis fied or rather averse to moving, while my oblong-beaded friends have pulled out and settled elsewhere, affirming tiie rule which I heard when I was a yomg "mail." Spartanburg (S. C.. Jpurnal. Oil-Time Journalism. , Herbert Asquith paid a pivity com pliment to the press at the. London Newspaper Society's dinner in regard to its rapid collection of news. Nowa days the editorial task is winnowing rather than gathering. It was other wise in the eighteenth century, when file Leicester Journal, for instance, had to send all its copy by coach o London for printing, so that its news was at least a week laic avIicji it ap peared. It Mas sometimes later. For i;t one dry season the editor was re duced to printiug'the Bible as a serial and had reached the tenth chapter of Exodus before any. news more recent than the Pentateuch had reached the oil ice. Useful mnl Int erestins;. The readers of newspapers have rea son to feel much gratified by the im provement which has taken place in the business and art of advertising. More and more "the advertising col umns' of a paper of high class have become both useful and interesting. Its advertising Is now an important feature of the chronicles of the day, a valuable directory, which is tending to grow still more attractive as reading. New York Stiu. Many a life hajt been wrecked by disregarding tkcifinger signals. IMPORTANT QUESTIONS. There once Was a creature whose long busby tail Was tiail up with a pink ribbon Low, Mow, was it a whale? Or was it a snail? O was it a crockery crow? There once was a tree who was making at speech 51 To a Jacly who wore a white sash. Now, wa3 it a beech? Or was it a peach? Or was it a gold-headed ash? There once was a bird who wrote with m pen And ate up a whole lot of hay. Now, was it a wren? Or was it a hen? Or was it a gingerbread jay? There once was a fruit who was ignorant very. ' Because it would not go to school. Now, was it a cherry? Or was it a berry? Or was it a Gooseberry Fool? Carolyn Wells.in Puck. ; Auntie "Are you getting any marks at school, Freddie?" Freddie "Yes, aunty on'y I can't show 'cm to you." Tit-B'-ts. Mrs. Ilenpecque "Married men live Iorer than single men." Ilenpecque "Yes, and it serves them right." De troit Free Press. First Boarder "This hash must be a review of the week." Second Board er "No, it isn't. It's a review of re views." Chaparral. The Doctor "Ar you sure you nevec buried any one alive?" The Undertak er "Well, none of-yptir patients, at least." Chicago News. The world's work aye, it must be done ' By many men. But scores - J Of us ne'er reach such dignity, And merely do its chores. Puck. Merchant (to new hoy) "Has the bookkeeper told you what to do in the afternoon?" Youth "Yes, sir; I am to wake him up when I see you coming." Piek-Me-Up. "Name the world's greatest com poser," said the musical instructor. "Chloroform," promptly replied the young man wiio had studied medicine. Chicago News. Uncle John "Why. my girl, you've grown like a cucumber vine! What progress are you making toward matri mony?" Clara" Well, uncle. I'm on the fifth lap." Tit-Bits. "I guess we would be amused if we could see ourselves as others see tis." "But think how amused others would be if they could see us as we see our selves." Philadelphia Press. Forgiving and forgetting might : Be practiced oft in debt,. Were lenders Avilling to forgive As borrowers to forget. The Smart Set. Mrs. Mann "Hannah, didn't I heat something break in your room this morning?" Hannah "It was only one of your china vases, inarm. I suppose 301; thought it was something that be longed to me." -Boston Transcript. "Will your employer be in after din ner?" inquired the visitor of the office boy., "Nope," was the laconic reply. "What makes you think so?" was the net query. "Coz," 'replied the boy as he prepared to dodge, "that's what he went out after.' Judge. "In your vermiform appendix," the surgejLui toht him after the operation ! was over. "Ave fouml, strange to say, a j small brass tack." "That proves I was I right," feebly answered the sick man, "when I said it was something I had eaten in mim c pio." Chicago Tribune. "What is'your name?" inquired the justice. "Pete Smith," responded ihe vagrant. "What occupation?" contin ued th? court. "Oil, nothing much at present; just circulatin' round." "Ue vired from circulation for thirty days." pronounced t he court dryly. "The Green Bag. A Town Without Graveyard. According to the Oklahoman. Ahcr :s probably the only town in the Terri tory of its s'.v.e and age that has no graveyard. Asher is a year old and has a population of over .1000 people, and. the place is built up with substantial' business blocks ar.d modern residences, but has no burial place. The few peo ple that have died in the section have been buried at oiher points. Owing to its high location, line drainage ami abundance of artesian water. Asher i said to be one of if not the lieabb;cst locations in Ike Territories. A local doctor recently made the remark that if it had not hecn 1 he 'obstetrical cases at this point. Ahcr, ho would l!:na th'rved to d'-ath. J