1 J HI Si.oo a Year, In Advance. " FOR GOP, FOR COUNTRY, AND FOR TRUTH." Single Copy, 5 Cents. VOL. XV. PLYMOUTH, Nr C, FRIDAY, JANUARY 20; 1905, THE CONSERVATIVE At twenty, as you proudly stood And read your thesis, brotherhood, 3 f I remember right, you saw, The fatuous faults of social law. 'At twenty-five you braved the storm And dug the trenches of reform'. "Stung by some gadfly iu your breast Which would not let your spirit rest. 'At thirty-five you made a pause To sum the columns of the cause; "You noted, with unwilling eye, The heedless world had passed you bv. Edmund Vance Cooke, ACTA) IO. yi& were win SSf" is m puny tho summer of 180G the .Isi few ' families living at T Clark's Crossing, in West A pin Wisconsin. were M2M thrown into groat exoi tu rnout bv tho rininsr of a cow-bell. Per- lvaps if it had been an ordinary cow lell, or had been heard in any other field, it would not have caused even a ripple of excitement among the stolid farmers; but that that particular bell should ring in that one field and in no other, just at that partlculav time, ami that no one should ever catch sight of the mysterious ringer, was enough to cause excitement, even in a place where sensations were more common than they were iufthat little back wood settlement jM tD Ciark'sl Cussing had been nanied After fheVealthy owner of the largest farm in the township. It is doubtful Jf this name would have been chosen If the man who had first applied it to- the cluster of houses that, stood near the. spot where the railway crossed , the main road had supposed that' the neighbors would adopt Ihe name, for, Mr. Clark was not popular, .among them.? They distrusted and dis liked him. ',. , . He was an ignorant man, but no one wuld sayirhe was positively dishonest : He was too acute" to be caught in any of the petty meannesses of which they felt sure he had been guilty; therefore, they could only , watch him closely' in ji'.I their dealings;' and; probably be , lieved him guilty, of .: many things he t never thought of doing. Feeling thus toward him, it was not Grange that when Widow Garrett's cow was run over on the track .just below the. crossing, 'where, the railway .fail -through a portion of Mr. Clark's Mfarm, that there should be a number ready to say that he had let. down the fence and driven the animal on' to the track: else, hew did she get there? Not from the road; the cattle guards ..."vi prevented that, and the railway itself ' .was well fenced. The cow was known to have broken 3 n to the wheat-field in the afternoon. She wore a heavy, cracked, peculiar sounding bell that was'well known to all. Two of the neighbors had after ward said that." returning home late from the village, three miles away, they had heard the cow there again. Later still, .when the express train went )y, several had been aroused from sleep by its short, sharp danger iwhistle; but the train had gone on. i find afterward the cow had been found by the section men beside the track, dead. ' They notified Mrs. Garret, and, ' to save her any trouble or expense, buried the carcass where it was found. . Tommy Garrett, freckled, 'under sized, big-eyed Tommy Mrs. Gar rett's dull . .commonplace, fourteen-year-old and only son went over and .watched them, and Mrs. Garrett . grieved, for the cow had been a help to her, nuu sue could not aiiora to replace it. "Did they take the bell off Erindlc?" I she asked Tc A sat staring s "So," he i she asked Tommy that evening, as he solidly into the fire. eplied, "thought it wasn't worth it It's burled, but not deep, though." "Well, wo can't get it, even if it isn't deep," answered his mother. "But I'm sorry it wasn't taken off. The bell and strap would have been worth fiomcthing at the junkshop: int town 'even if no one here wanted them. Fifty cents, maybe." , . Tommy's dull face brightened" some- , ;what, and his wiry figure straightened for a moment. .J . .v The. old beir worth; - fifty: cental a pity lie had mot known it! V This was the way the matter 'stood rr-v' .. ;.i .. L1! .rfT'l rfcht yftrr the cow At forty you had always known 1 ' Man owes a duty to his own. Man's life, is as man's life is made( The game is fair, if fairly played. At fifty, after years of stress You bore the banner of success. All men have virtues, all have sins, And God is with the man who wins. ' At sixty, from your captured jeighis You fly the flag of vested rights. Bounded by bonds collectable, m And hopelessly respectable! in Philadelphia Saturday Evening Post. ysterious Cow-Bell. mmm 8 m S-O ENS is li BETH DAY. had been buried. Mr. Clark heard a cow-bell in his wheat-field. ' He dressed hastily, grumbling mean while about people who allowed their stock to run in the road although he was one of them lit his lantern and hastened out to the field. All the way from the house to the wheat-field fence he could hear the short "clink, clink" made by the bell of an animal feeding. "Get out. jwu brute!" he shouted, as he set Ids lantern on a fence-post and began to climb stiffly into the field. It was a still night. Every sound could be heard distinctly. There was a sharp, "clank" of the bell, as if the animal had passed, startled by" his voice, and raised its head suddenly to. listen, and presently the steady.' half muffled "clink, clink, clink," began again. -- Mrv Clark went out a few yards into the wheat, and, holding his lantern as high as he could, peered Into tho semi-darkness. "Clink, clink, clink.", sounded the bell only a few yards away, it seemed to him, but he could see nothing. "Get out, you trespassing beast!" he shouted again, stamping angrily The bell rattled as if the cow had shaken' her head, and then all -was still. - The field lay beside tho main road. One of the section men, who had been to the village and was late in return ing, called to his neighbor: "What's up. Clark?" "Somebody's cattle in my wheat again," replied the farmer. "Can you see anything?" The man stooped until his eyes were on a eyel. with the top of the wheat and looked .".cross the field. In the silence the "clink, clink" of the bell was distinctly audible. "No," he answered; "I can't see anything. But I can hear her. There's only one, I think." "SQunds like that cow of Widow Garrett's," observed the farmer. "Well, it isn't her." rejoined the man "nor her bell, neither, for we buried them both. But it does sound like it" ' ' "It does that," answered ill? farmer, "and there wasn't another bell like it in the township. Well, I must get the old critter out. or she'll have half the wheat trampled down." Ho shufiled away, following the "clink, clink," of the bell, that seemed to come froit just beyond the circle of light cast by the lantern he was holding. Presently he stopped, for the sound of the bell had ceased. Mr. Clark listened for a moment. Thenhe kicked some of the hard earth loose, gathered a handful, and flung it in the direction in which he had heard the bell. , . , ;. "Whey, you old fool!" he shouted.; A light wind stirred the wheat, but there was no other sound; nor did he hear the bell again that night, although he searched for some time; neither did he find any cattle in the field. He ex amined the fence, but could find no place where an anlma! could have broken in. The more he thought about it the more mystified he became., lie. feared that the bell-ringing would be repeated, nor were his fears In vain. . It began somewhat. earlier than on tho previous evening, and armed with his lantern a stout stick which-he had provided, Mr. Clark sallied out at the first "clink, clink," of the bell, find for nearly an hour fallowed ;'It, about, as he had dtne o.n the previous flight, and to as little purpose., r -. -' 'Two of the nearest neighbors threw up their windows' and listened when ihoy euv.' the lantern ia the licIJ, and the singular affat began to be, talked) of in the neighborhood. t The only result of this second visita tion was to fix the idea firmly in the! minds of Mr. Clark and those who! heard it, that it was really old Brlndle's bell. The next day Mr. Clark called on Widow Garrett. "I came," he began, with assumed confidence, "to buy your cow-bell. I suppose you'd as lief sell it, as you have no use for it now?" "I should be glad to do so," assured the widow, "but they did not think it worth keeping, and so buried it with the cow." "I'd pay you a good price for it,", he continued watching her keenly. "I'm sorry I have not got it," she; replied. "I'd be glad enough to sell it if I could." The man turned a shade paler. - "I I can't always tell my cow-bells when I'm hunting my cows, they're so like the others, aud that was so different" - "I'm sorry," repeated the widow. "Oh, well, it don't matter' con tinued Mr. Clark. "Now I come to think of it, the bell was cracked and wasn't worth much. You'll be buying a new one, I presume? The widow shook her head. "It would be a great help to me," she said, "but I could not raise the money to buy one." That night the farmer decided not to go out to tlie field, but he dis covered, as did his neighbors, that the bell rang just the same, whether he went out or not. Big boys began to whistle when they had to pass the field' after1 sundown, and little f boys would not pass it at all after (darkr , . . t The next nfght'the farmer lay awake, and listenedj'he did not get up until the sound of the bell came" through the field, and went up and down, up and down along his garden., .fence. Then he left his bed, dressed himself and followed it into the field. A num ber of the neighbors stood in the road and shouted out to him. "Why don't you set the dog on it?" called one. Mr. Clark did not keep a dog, but a neighbor brought one, and it was sent into the field. -" . - - - v ' It went in fast enough, but it did not come back. -; Later the owner found that it had sneaked out on the opposite side of the field and gone home. The neighbors were standing outside the fence, and Mr. Clark inside, just in the edge of the wheat. With one accord they seemed to .iave left him to search out the mystery alone, only helping by advice. "Why don't you before it; comes," go into the field asked one, "and watch?" This he decided to do. Near the centre of the field stood a huge stump. The tree had been cut down years be fore, and used for rails, but one cut of the log a mere shell now lay neartthe stump, and beside this Mr. Clark seated himself, in the early twilight, and waited. For some reasou best known to him self, perhaps, he had chosen to seat himself facing the railway and with his back to the farmhouse. His eyes were on a level with the top of the wheat; he could hardly fail to see anything that might como within the fence, either before or on either side of him. All was still; and at last he decided to go back to the house. But. as he arose from his cramped position and turned, with his back to the field, he found he had worked liimself into the condition of a frightened boy. who dares not" look back for fear he will see, something, and dares not quicken his steps for fear that he will run. 5 But' almost at the moment that he turned, th a sound of the bell broke out sharp, . distinct , and aggressively near, behind him. But when he turned at tho fence there was nothing 'in sight; even the wheat was still, except where he had just passed through it. The next day Mr. Clark took one of his best young cows to the widow. "It will be winter soon," he said; "and Vv3 got more than I have stable room . for. It will oblige me if you'll take care other for. the milk and but ter you'll get, and I'll bring a load or two of hay to begin on." The bell rang no more after that, and it was more than a nine days', wonder and talk; but, as has-been' futimated before, sensations vere. scarce ia that primitive neighborhood., Tears afterwards, some one found n rusty cow-bell with a -broken toigue in fc hollow log, and it revived the story of the haunted wheat field. "No." said Tommy Garrett a man grown when they mentioned it to him; "I did not Intend to scare Mr. Clark the first time. I'd got the bell, and was coming through the field, playing that I was Brlndle, when he came out. That made me think of getting him out again. It was easy to take the tongue in my hand when he'd get too close, and it was fun! I'd have rung it again, only I broke the clapper that night I chased him. No. my mother didn't know; she'd have belted me good If she had!" Golden Days. A Ketr Type of Microscope. 'A new type of high-power micro scope invented by Mr. ,T. W Gordon was recently exhibited in London. Says The Scientific American Supple ment: "It is well-known fact that when high magnification is attempted by a series of lenses arranged in con ventional manner, the emergent beam of light which enters the eye of the observer is so small that vision is de ficient, owing to the fact that the pupil of the eye is not entirely filled with light. It is consequently apparent that in order to obtain satisfactory results in excessive magnification the emergent ray should be expanded iu such a way as to fill the .-.)il of the eye. This result is achieved in this microscope of Mr. J. W. Gordon. It comprises an ordinary microscope with an eccentrically rotating glass screen with a finely grained surface placed iu the view-field. This is viewed through a" second, microscope which has an object-glass of half an inch.; by means of which, a further, .magnification -ot 100 diameters is rendered possible. The transmitted emergent beam is ex panded by the ground-glass',? screen ,so that it fills the second microscope, and there are no imperfections whatever in the magnifications. The inventor demonstrated this by magnifying a diatom to 10,000 diameters, and its structure was perfectly clear and de fined right to the edges. A compre hensive idea of the extent of this ex cessive magnification may be gathered from the fact that if the eye of an ordinary house-fly were magnified on the same scale it would cover an area of 312 feet. The idea of the ground grained screen being made to revolve is to prevent the grain thereon Up coming visible and thereby interfering with the magnifying of ' the' subject under observation, while as it is not in contact with either of the micro scopes there is a complete absence of vibration." .l. ;-' - ' ", : Green Lamps Talk to Car Men. The street car lines of New York have their lantern signals the same as steam railways. Different barns they are still called barns, although horseless have different signals with red and green lanterns. On an Eighth avenue car the other night two green lanterns Avere swinging from the rear. A passenger asked why. "Them's the go home lamp-s," ex plained the conductor. "On our down trip the transfer men along the run see the green lights. Then they know that their relief will appear within a certain time, differing according to the length of the run, and that they caa go home. Men who hand out trans fers on the corners cannot think of going home until they see them green signals in the rear. A green signal ahead notifies them to stay on until further orders." New York Press. Where Women Vote. In four States Wyoming, Colorado. Utah and Idaho women possess the right to vote on equal terms with men at all elections. Either full or partial suffrage for women exists in twenty six States. In eighteen States women possess school suffrage. Iu Kansas they have municipal and school suf frage. Montana aud Io.wa permit them to vote on the issuance of municipal bonds. In 1SDS Louisiana granted them the privilege of voting upon ques tions relating to public expenditures. With this exception, the Southern States have been slow in advancing the woman-suffrage cause. The women of Wyoming. Colorado, Utah and Idaho vote for Presidential elec tors. Kansas City Journal. How Japs Tt Arrows. In Japan archers test their arrows by balancing them oii tho nails of the second 'afid' third fingers of the left hand and rapidly twirling them by the feathered end with the fingers of the right. If the arrows make a whirl ing sound it i-s crooked and must be str3iUtcuel- IN A PRINTING OFFICE.. Through dingy labyrinths that lead When Dragon presses clank and roar, And "Devils" moil that men may read, She trips along the trembling floor. A gleam of joy, a golden ray In Giant Labor's grim domain . The Princess of the olden lay Whom naught could harm and naugh.6 , could stain. So deftly every hazel hair 19 blent to form her shining crown! Ni fleck nor spot is anywhere To mar the trim and dainty gown. The grimy pressmen laugh and nod; Her laiigh resounds across the aisle. The stonemen turn from 'type and quad To catch the sunbeam of her smile. And he the youth whoso dark eyes dar.ee -And sparkle at the sight of her? Oho! She meets his eager glance, : And roses flush where lilies were. Romance? Who know? The Fowler take In wond'rous ways his gentle spoil. All blcsings on the lass who wakes The tender thought that brightens toil! Arthur Guitermaa, ia ihe New York Times. "Are you up on music?" "So down on it. A man in our flat is learning to play a cornet." Cleveland Plain Deal er. . . - - y was knocked senseless :when a small boy." "Well, doesit the doe tor think you'll ever get over" it?" Cleveland riain Dealer. " And now in dreams the urchin sees - In country and in towu, .. A vision which doth hiphlv please A schoolhouse burning down. 1 Philadelphia - luiletin. Fuddy "Benson claims that he once rode a thunderbolt bareback." Duddy "Not bad foi' Bensou, but my friend Titcum rides: a motor cycle every Sun day." . . , , , . , IlT autosraph's not worth a cent, . Vi'is treasured not, you know, Though I've a promissory note ' lie signed some years ago. j Fort Worth Record. Dolly "Nell says that her engage ment ring cost $2130." "" Polly "Per haps 'PMo meant that she spent as mucb'Siv.'thTit entertaining the young man before she got it." Somerville Journal. , Miss Verjuice "I saw Jane Staples last evening. She was with -a mau, ami I'll bet anything he was a married map."VMlss Creamleigh "He is; he's Jane's, husband. I supposed you knew she was married." , r j "What kind of sail are you going to use on your yacht next year;" asked the enthusiast. "Sheriff's, I guess," replied the owner, who had just looked over tho steward's accounts. Cincin nati Commercial-Tribune. "If there's anything I hate it's a con ceited person, and that Bloyley is cer tainly the limit." "What makes you think him conceited?" "He told some one he knew as much as I know." Cleveland riain Dealer. "You'll take a couple of tickets, of course. We're getting up a raffle for a poor cripple in our neighborhood.' "None for me, thank you. I, wouldn't know what to do with a poor cripple if I had him." Philadelphia Press. . "I certainly was gratified at Mr. Crit tick's comment," said D'Auber.';"What did he say?" asked Knox. VW'by, you heard him. Ho said I was unques tionably a deft colorist." "I under stood him to say 'daft.' "Philadelphia Press. Brown (staying at a farm house for his summer holidays) "I like your eggs, Mrs. Cheriton, but fish in the country often has such a strong fla vor." Farmer's Wife "Yes, sir. But l:i London what you lose on the fish you gain in the eggs." Punch - Dunntawburc CastU. Uustanburg castle is about to be of fered for sale by auction. It vvas first a British stronghold, then a Roman fortress, and at a much later, period was garrisoned for Queen Margaret, after the battle of Hexham, when it was besieged and taken after im as- l sault, lasting three days. The legend of "Sir Guy, the Seeker,' told in a bal lad by M. G. Lewis, is connected with the castle. . "Dunstan' diamonds'' are . crystals found in the neighborhood. A deep chasm i ctbe rock at:i&' east of the castle is known rs the Rumblu