m ' ' fl Jr (fjj $1.00 a Year, in Advance. " FOR GOD, FOR COUNTRY, AND FOR TRUTH." Single Copy, 5 Cent. VOL. X VI. PLYMOUTH, N, C, FKIDAY, APJRIL 14, 1905. NO.L .1 THE MOUNTAIN 4 i. Bare ytTt ever heard, my laddies, of that wondrous mountain-peak On which we all would like to live, -which even children geek? It has reared its lofty summit ever since the world began. iYou will know it when I name it 'tis the Mountain of the Can. . . It lies beyond the valley where so many people dwell (The Valley of the Can't, it's called. We all know that place well); 'And the pathway is so rugged leading up the mountain side . That few there are who reach the top to dwell there satisfied, II. ... One maystart out some fine morning when the sun. is shining bright, Saying. 'Tooh! That path is easy. I will reach the top by night.", But by noon the storm-clouds gather, and a mist obscures the way. And he stumbles over bowlders and fal ters in dismay. , , He is weary and discouraged; he begins to puff and pant; So. he turns, his footsteps backward to- J ; ward the Valley of the Can't. ' Here lie iio.?ts again the neighbors whom ho thought, to leave behind; 'And honpcforth dwells among them, with he lame and halt and blind. Now, my laddie, where will you d " la. the Valley of the Can't or on t S9 i)y WILLIAM ' 1CS4 T strikes me," began, Hilly jf h llouc-k, judicially squinting IO J; o.liis left eye, "that it is $ about time . that herd of i j53f shinin'. lights fronj. Sar'vis Point "was learniu' how to behave in public." ' - This sentiment -was received with emphatic approval. Several even volunteered- to shed their blood if neces sary, to help-teach that much needed lesson. "Don't get too violent, now, boys; they may come out wonderful when they learn some. If about twenty of you will jine in and toiler directions, we'll help make men of 'em." 10 When Billy proposed a plan there were always plenty of volunteers to carry it out. The "shinin' lights" referred to were six young men from Sarvis Point who had been making life burdensome for' Buckeye llidge for three months., it had begun when these young men cre ated a disturbance at a school exhibi tion and were arrested mid fined 20 apiece and costs. After that they orig inated n more lawful plan for creating disturbance. It had worked very satisfactorily. When there was, a public meeting they simply waited until it was well started and then one, with his spurs dangling, would slowly Walk in and take a seat. In a few minutes another would come in and then another and another until all six were seated. When the meeting was half over, one went out. A few minutes would elapse and then another and another, until the six were out and the meeting spoiled. Their special delight was to disturb the Methodist preacher, for the Justice of the Teace belonged to that church. The minister, was a meek, sweet-spir-r ited little man who suffered long and never upbraided; but it always spoiled his' sfcrmon when they came, and they 4id not often miss. x When Billy explained his plan for a school of instruction on public be havior, some of the timid ones advised against it. . "Let's have them arrested for dis turbing the peace," suggested one. "Aiu't any law again' a man comin' Sn and goin out when he 'pleases," .snapped a friend of the Billy idea. "Maybe," suggested a weak-eyed class leader, "they will get some good out of the meeting. We should not keep the vilest sinner from the house of the Lord." "Well, now, I aiu't overly strong on religion," said Billy, "but it strikes me the circuit rider at Buckeye Bridge has i a right to do his talking without any interference from Sarvis Point. . 1 ain't objectin'. to "these sinners goin' to the house of the Lord. It's on them leav ;in'.it too soon. Educate 'em.. A little ; information on manners won't keep out the grace, and maybe It will act quicker." , Billy prevailed, as he always did, and the school of instruction was set for the following Sunday evening. It was a beautiful night and the little Church was crowded. Buckeye Bridge BsL ! S ssRHnn AND THE VALLEY. ' III. But sometimes a man more venturesome and plucky than the rest Will climb through rocks and bramble till he stands upon the crest. Here he pauses, filled with wonder as he gazes far and wide At the -beauty of the buildings, at the wealth on every side. For behold! the grandest .castles raise their turrets to the sky: Noblest bridges span the waters that go swiftly tumbling by. Sweetest flowers fill the gardens of each stately palace home; And Happiness and Honor dwell beneath each gilded dome. . IV. Here dwell artists, poets, statesmen men , of letters and renown, Who by honest toil and patience have achieved a victor's crown. Here they live and learn and study, and in daily knowledge grow," ' ' While their brethren in the valley pay them homage from below; Pay them homage yet forgetting that should they, too, persevere. They might some day reach the summit with them men whom they revere. Forgetting that each lesson learned, each slight accomplishment, ,. Brings them on just one step farther up the mountain s steep ascent. well when you grow to be a man , he Mountain of the Can? Gertrude Morton, in St. Nicholas. , II. HAMBY. thought a great deal of its church, and when."preaehin' day" was lino, saint and sinner flocked together in crowds. 5 The songs and prayers were over, the preacher read his text and began to outline his sermon. The audience was strictly attentive. A heavy step sounded in the vestibule, the familiar clink, clink of a loose spur, and a tall young man stalked down the aisle and took a seat near the front. The minister -was slightly annoyed, for, of course, no one could listen Avhile his attention was being spurred away from the subject.' There was the sound of heavy feet, stamp, stamp, stamp, and the clink, clink, clink of a spur. Another robust citizen of Sarvis Point came dowoi the aisle and took a seat near the front. , Once more the preacher rallied. With a supremo effort he got the attention of the congregation. The sound of feet again, again the clink, clinkety clink of spurs. By the time the third was finally seated the minister "was so dis tracted he gave out a hj'mn and sat down to try to collect his thoughts. No one came in during the singing, but as soon as the minister renewed his attack on the text, another Pointer came dangling his spurred feet down the aisle; a little later another, and finally thet sixth. Fifteen minutes of the time had been wasted. The minister hurled himself nervously at the subject and began to grow eloquent with earnestness. Just as he reached the height of his theme, the tall young man near the front shuffled his feet, rose slowly, picked up his hat and coat, crowded by those In the end of the seat and started leisurely down the aisle, his spurs clinkety clink. As he neared the door two men rose and quietly stepped in front of him. One. of them it was Billy said in an , undertone: "Supposin' we go back to our seats and hear, the rest of the sermon." There was a craning of necks, the preacher paused, and a tingle of excite ment touched the crowd. The other five Pointers sprang up and hurried down the" aisle menacingly. Their faces indicated a determination to de molish the obstruction at the door on quick time. 1 ; Four men on each side rose up quietly and closed In, a solid line across the door. , Four rose up on each side of the aisle, and four came down the aisle after the Pointers. The audience, after it caught its breath, was ready to break into a panic, j "Parson," said Billy in a reassuring tone, "you'll excuse me for sayin' a word. All you people just keep your seats, perfectly quiet, there ain't goin to be a bit of trouble. Now, parson, give out a hymn, and all of you sing good and loud." "I'll be hanged if' there won't be trouble mighty quick if you don't clear that door," said the leader of the Point ers, starting forward. Billy stepped" squarely In front of him. - ' Doa't get excited now, boys," he said, mildly. "You ain't goin' out that door and it'll be better not to make a fuss, and I wouldn't use any cusb words there's women and children here." The audience had caught its cue and was singing with nervous loudness. The Pointers drew close together. They looked ugly. Their hands were at their hip pockets; several revolvers were half drawn. At a nod from Biily the twelve men drew - around in a close circle. They were picked men, cool headed, but obstinate enough to light to the death to enforce their order. "Boys," said Billy, still speaking in an everi tone, "go back and sit down in the front seat and stay till you are told to leave. It'll be better to listen to the preacher now than to have him preachin' over you to-morrow when you can't hear." The rowdies glanced around the cir cle and knew these men were not bluffing, nor were they to be bluffed. They parleyed a minute among them selves. ' "We don't have to go back," said the leader. "Maybe not," said Billy; "then I'm afraid we'll have to carry you." The circle drew a little closer, alert, ready. The rowdies turned about sullenly and walked back to the front seat. Four citizens sat down in the ends of the seat beside them, eight in the seat behind.. The services proceeded with the best of order. : When the congregation arose to be dismissed, Billy leaned forward and said: "Just stay where you are, boys, till all the crowd's gone." Directly all were gono but the Point ers and their guards. There was a few minutes' pause. "Jimmy," said Billy to onep of the younger men, "give us a little poetry. It has a powerful refinin' influence." Jimmy went to the front and recited "Curfew Must Not Ring To-njfeht," and at calls for more gave the "Sailor Boy" and "Bingen on the Rhine." The Pointers stirred in their seats and one of them swore under his breath. . "Quiet," commanded one of the guards. . "Now, Dick," said -Billy, "read us a chapter on Etiket." Dick produced a nine hundred page compendium of universal knowledge and read twenty pages on how to dress, how to care for the nair and nails, how to danced how tp carry on couversation and how to act in public. He read slowly and it was 11.10 when fee fin ished. The whisky was dying out in the Pointers and they began to feel sleepy and mean. "Say," said the leader, in an an at tempt to be friendly, "ain't that about enough V" "Dick," said Billy, "1 see he ain't caught the points in the last chapter. Read it again." There was no further interruption. "Tom," said Billy, "these fellers missed the lesson to-night. They need a little Scripture, seein' it is Sunday. Supposin' you read us a Chronicle or two." It was quarter past midnight when be finished. The Pointers were weary, fearfully weary. They were sleepy, too, and fifteen miles from their beds. They looked around appealingly, but there was no encouragement. "Now," -said Billy, 'these young men need a little history knowledge. Alf, you may read the Declaration of Inde pendence." It was finished at 1.30. The bench was very hard. One of the weary Pointers twisted in his seat. Another dozed, but a terrific jab in the ribs from the elbow of one of the guards brought him back with a grunt. "Give us the Constitution," called Billy. It was half-past 2 when the last sec tion was read. "That'll do, Alf," said Billy. ' We'll save Washington's Farewell speech till the boys come agin. Guess we might adjourn." To date, the Sarvis Point "shinin' lights" are in the dark as to the con tents of Washington's Farewell Ad dress. The Criterion. The final spike in the railroad from Canton to Sarnshul was driven the other day. But before it had been do wn ' twenty-four hours it was stolen by the Chinese. A city firm received no fewer than 998 applications in response to an ad vertisement for a clerk. The salary I offered was thirty shillings ($7.50) a vjeels. London Dally News, Ills Little Dose of Spice. Ko one noticed how it began, but trie elderly little man was disputing with the six-footer for a position at the "L" car door. "There's plenty of room over there," said the giant. "You needn't be crowd ing me.". "I won't budge an inch," came the retort. . "I'll show you if you won't," said the other angrily. "I'll teach you a thing or two." " And at every word he elbowed him j violently away. The little man was like a feather before him and he real ized it. He allowed himself to be hus tled along without offering the slight est resistance. Only a crimson glow flooded his gray-bearded cheeks. A third man sprang angrily in front of the enraged bully and growled into his face: "You ought to be ashamed of your self, sir; yes, heartily ashamed of yourself, a big, heavy man like you!" The man addressed looked sheepishly down and said nothing. But the little elderly man calmly remarked to his ally: "Don't pay any attentio'n to it. sir; we need a little variety in life." New. York Press. Scrambled. . A salesman in a department store who possesses considerable wit entered a restaurant in the central section of the city the other day, and finding the waiter to have boon a recent arrival at the place, told him he wanted two fried eggs. "I want one egg fried on one side, and the other egg fried on the other side, and I want them quick," the salesman added. "Would you .kindly write that on a piece of paper?" said the waiter. "I haven't got time. Be quick, I tell you." ; ' '-' ' " "One fried egg fried on- both sides and the other fried egg on the other side," muttured the waiter as he was leaving the table. In a few minutes the salesman heard much commotion in the kitchen. There were loud words and they were punc tuated with sounds which seemed like blows. Presently the waiter appeared very much excited, and, rushing up to the salesman, exclaimed: 'Say, I had a terrible fight wid the cook about those eggs and j-ou'll have to take them scrambled." Philadel phia Press. f Looking Up. Not many years ago there lived in a small town in Vermont a worthy Dea con Barker, who had managed to put by a tidy sum, the proceeds of the busi ness done at bis notion store. N Now, Deacon Barker thought pretty' well of himself, and as he progressed towards the realization of his ideal, which was to become the richest man. in the town, it was observed by the majority of his neighbors that his self esteem increased in direct ratio to his wealth. So that in time the worthy Barker actually deemed himself the most important personage in the vicin ityalmost, in fact, its patron saint. One day a man from a place near by was visiting the. deacon. Said he: "Deacon, it certainly seems that your townsmen hold you in high esteem." The deacon smiled complacently. "I guess that's right;" replied he. "The people hereabouts do kinder look up to me, friend. And I well, I look up to GodI"-Harper's Weekly. They Are Everywhere. "While I am not what you would call a widely traveled man," observed the deacon, '! have noted that every town has Its liar, its sponger, its smart Alec, its blatherskite, its richest man, a few. pretty girls, its weather prophet, its neighborhood feud, a considerable number of 'lunatics, its woman w"ho tattles, Its justice of the peace, its man who knows it all, its boy who carries on in church, its meddlesome old women, .its widower who is too gay for his age, Its girl who goes to Ibe postotHce every time the mail comes In, its legion of bright raen who know how the editor should run his paper, its woman who thinks she could cut a dash in society if she were only East,' and its man who laughs at Lis own jokes." New York Tress. " During last year sixty-six of the mu-J nicipal bodies in the. British isles which supply electricity showed a de ficit totaling 7G,201. In Lapland the crime which is pun ished most severely, next to- murder, is the marrying of a girl against the ex press wish of her parents. SCIENCE NOTES. A German physicist, Herr LlebenoWf puts forth the theory that there, is ra dium enough in the crust of the globe to account for all the earth's internal heat. What Is claimed to be the longest overland wireless message ever sent was dispatched - a few days ago from Kansas City to Cleveland, a distance of 725 miljs. Ocean bner3 do not commonly both er with casting "oil on troubled wat ers" inorder to calm the waves. But the captain of the Hamburg-American liner Pretoria testifies that on his re cent trip to New York city the scheme of letting oil trickle slowly down the bows of the vessel kept the 'waves' from breaking and greatly decreased the effects of the storm. It took only six gallons of oil a day. Robert Chambers of Scotland is the Inventor of an' unsihkable life-saving raft for passenger ships. It is built of wood and is 20 feet long, 6 feet broad and 22 inches deep, being divid ed into 32 air-tight compartments. It will carry 40 to 50 passengers; and life lines round the edge will support as many as can hang ou. The raft has been severely tested, and been ap proved by the British authorities. ' The completion last May of the de termination of the difference of longi-' tude between San Francisco and Ma nila, by means of the new Pacific cables, finishes the "longitude girdle" of the earth. In other, words, the whole globe has now been circled with . electric time signals, by, means of which the exact longitudes of impor tant points round its entire circum-, ference are known. The accuracy of the work is so great that the distance between the observatory in Green wich, England, and in the dome of the cathedral in Manila, measuring across the Atlantic ocean, the American con tinent and the ' Pacific ocean, is known within a possible error of about 60 feet. ' Museums of language will be of great Importance to the future histor ian. The idea was suggested in Vi enna six years ago, but has only re cently taken shape, although it ha3 already resulted in a collection of four hundred phonograph records on dura ble metal. The purpose is to record the languages of Europe, and eventu ally of the world, the music of the different countries and speeches of notable personages. The collection now embraces the Slavic, Servian, Modern Greek, Portuguese and Bra zilian languages, with songs and dia lects of natives of India and of Ara bians and Bedouins. An 4xpediti6n under Dr. Poech has penetrated New Guinea to reproduce the speech of the Papuans. 1 Russian Ministers' Salaries. The salary attached to the fost o minister oi the interior iu ituatiia is . the same as that received by all the v other Russian ministers namely 18, 000 roubles a year a rouble being 44 cents but a further sum of 200,000 . roubles Is annually put at the disposal , -of the minister of the interior, of which he is not called on to render any account. This is in addition to the ordinary secret service money, the amount of which is practically unlim ited. Another minister who receives an addition to his salary is the min ister of finance, who Is paid a percent age, sometimes amounting to 50,000 roubles a year, on all unpaid taxes . and debts to the Crown which he may suceed in recovering during his term of office. It is noteworthy that even i!f a minister should hold his ' portfolio . only for a few months his salary is paid to him for life. Waverley Maga- . zine. ' All the five planetary satellites dis covered since 1846 have been found hv Americans. They include Hiperion. the seventh satellite oi Saturn ; Diemos and Phoebus, the little moons of Mara and Phoebe, the ninth moon of Saturn. DATE BISCUITS. Make a milk sponge and set to rise.; A.dd two tablespoonfuls or sugar and two of molasses, '.three cups of sliced, dates and oough entire wheat flour to make a r&tber stiff dough. Set to risa again, theft turn into pans and bake1 tor tfxree-quarters o an hour. Set he I Irrultt ashie for twelve hours, er thv .a bk4 cutting. .