"""" ' "i 1 . - ' $1.00 a Year, In Advance. "FOR GOD, FOR COUNTRY AND FOR TRUTH." Single Copy 5 Ciits, VOL. X VI. PLYMOUTH, N, C. FRIDAY, JUNeTsii. 1905. NO. I") . ' .A. THE BOY Oft rre envied goodly people that could boast a model boy The kind that will not fight or shout or break each costly toy Who never tracks his muddy boots about the bouse, nor flings Ills playthings on the parlor floor my boy . did all these things ! And whenever I would chide him, and his reckless ways deplore, I would always bid him pattern by the boy that lived next door. Tet the playthings would get broken' In the careless little hand. And my head come nigh to bursting when he broyght his pirate band To tear the house to atoms while I talked and talked In vain, tfo keep the small hot fingers from my shining window-pane. One Remarkable Result of Thirteen Superstition. From the French iiuaiikiUiiuikiuiuiuiuiiwii Absorbed in the telegram which had just been handed to her, Mme. Mar nier did not hear the click of the gate as it was opened and shut nor the approach of her guest, Maxlme Rich ard, the artist. "Am I the first?" he called, gayly. "Country etiquette, you know," he add ed, as he drew nearer. Mme. Marnier glanecd upwith a troubled frown. "Dear me! I am so perplexed," she said. "I scarcely know what to do. 1 have just received a telegram from the Cortots, saying that they cannot come .out from the city for luncheon. It is half past 11 now, and the others will soon be here. What can I do?" "But I fail to see the trouble," began the artist. His hostess interrupted him: "Why, if the Cortots don't come, it will make us exactly thirteen at the table, and Mme. Second would never in the. world consent to such an ar rang'ement, nor would I for that mat ter." . "Would you like me to go away?" asked Maxime, with a smile at the perplexed Mme. Marnier. "Not for worlds I But listen. You have plenty of friends about here. Do go and ask somebody, anybody, to come to luncheon with me.. It's a iu?er thmg to do, I know, but you can explain the circumstances. Get Pierre Deslandes, the novelist He lives near here." "Anything to oblige you, madame," said Richard, with his best bow. "I will bring a guest if I have to hale him with ropes!" " "Good boy, you have saved my life!" and the pretty Mme. Marnier waved him farewell with her brightest smile. Half an hour later Maxlme Richard was wheeling rapidly along the road, returning from the home of his friend Deslandes, where he had found the house tightly closed. "What the dickens will madame say when I come back alone?" he thought ruefully. Absorbed in the problem of his superstitious hostess, he failed to see a pedestrian directly in front of him and before he could stop himself they were both rolling in the warm dust. "What in thunder do you mean by running down an innocent traveler," demanded the stranger wrathfully. "A thousand pardons, monsieur," said the artist, contritely. "It was en tirely my fault." Then, a sudden thought striking him, ha continued rapidly: "May I ask you to do me a great favor, sir? I beg and entreat that you will consider It. "There is a lady in this neighbor hood who will look upon it as an hon or if you will take lunch with her to day. The circumstances are most pressing. -Other guests failing, there remain only thirteen. "Thirteen! Do you understand? Will you take pity upon her and be the fourteenth guest?" "Well, upon my word!" exclaimed the man, surprised at the proposition. "Say yes, I beg you, sir. I haven't the ghost of an idea who you are, but I'm sure you must be presentable. You consent,, do you not?" "It would certainly be a most amus ing adventure and I'm as hungry as a dog, not to mention that I've lost my way; Well, yes, I'll do it!" "Good! 'And listen: Here's an other idea! You shall be my friend whom no one here knows and whom I promised to bring back with me." As they talked, the two men ap proached, the entrance to Mme. Mar nier's summer villa. A moment later, in the presence of his h03tess and her assembled guests, the artist said, seriously: "Allow me to present my friend, M. Pierre Deslandes, the well-known au thor." No one doubted the novelist's iden tity, and, the butler having announced luncheon, the guests went out to the table. The next morning, seated at his desk, Pierre Deslandes, opened his mail, which seemed unusually voluminous. NEXT DOOR. But whene'er his brana-new trousers or his ruffled shirt he tore, lie would say he "didn't want to hear of that good boy next door." Now at last I've perfect quiet there Is stlTlness every day; And my window-panes so grimy have grown clear and bright for aye ; And I strain mine eyes to find the slight est mud print on the floor But alas ! my house Is spotless as the boy's that lives next door! How I listen till my longing ears do ache to catch a sound ; And If only I could find a shoe or broken toy around ! But, ah, no ! I only hearken, hearken vain ly evermore, And I only hear the laughter of the boy that lives next door. Harper's Bazar. VS. the of F. Berthold. - iikiiijiiiiiiiiiUiiiiiiiuiiiiUiUR The first two letters, begging for autographs, he tossed carelessly aside, but the third he read and re-read with a deepening wonder. It was from a lady thanking him for the honor he had done her the day previous in ac cepting her impromptu invitation to lunch, and expressing her regret for the painful scene which followed and which she hoped had not led to any disagreeable consequences. Pierre Deslandes laid down the let ter in amazed astonishment. He had not accepted any invitation the day previous. "Bah, it is some crazy joke," he thought to himself. But his surprise redoubled at the sight of the next letter, which was signed by an utterly unknown gentle man, who wrote to vow undying grati tude for the novelist's kindness in recommending the writer to the fa mous publisher, Lacroix. The fifth letter was from a lady re minding him of his promise to send her his photograph and the sixth said that the writer would send Immediate ly for the trifling sum he had so gra ciously agreed to lend. Deslandes looked about him help lessly. It was too much.! , The let ters were evidently authentic. What could it mean? He asked himself blindly how in one day he could have done so many things, while retaining absolutely no memory of them. As he sat there, struggling to find some head or tail to the affair, his servant entered, saying two gentle men would like to speak with him. Correct and dignified in their tight ly buttoned coats, the two men en tered the room and bowed. Then one said: "You will have seen from our cards that we come from M. Hardouin." He paused, waiting for Deslandes to an swer. "Well," said the latter, after a mo ment, "pray proceed." "This is not the reception we ex pected," said the second of the gentle men. "It is contrary to all the rules of such affairs of honor. Since you force us to explain, M. Hardouin has charged us to represent him and to demand- " Deslandes bounded to his feet. "Do you mean that you have the impudence to come here and tell me that a M. Hardouin, whom I never be fore heard of, has challenged me to a duel? Tell me. where does this M. Hardouin live?" Furnished with the address, the novelist was off like a shot, leaving the two correct and dignified gentle men victims to the greatest astonish ment. It was not without difficulty that Deslandes succeeded in gaining access to M. Hardouin, and when he finally entered he was greeted with: "Ah, you come, I suppose, from M. Deslandes?" "Not at all! I am M. Deslandes." "You? Impossible!" "What! Do I not know who I am?" "I doubt it, sir. To my regret, I am positive that you are not the man whose name you have borrowed. The man in question is dark-haired, while your hair is light; he wore a mus tache and you have a beard, and, if you will pardon me, you have the air of a gentleman, while he was a wretched scamp!" "Well, if I am not Pierre Deslandes, who am I?" groaned the novelist, feel ing that the days of witchcraft were not yet at an end. Just then M. Hardouin's sister-in- law, a charmingly pretty girl of 18, entered the room. "Why, M. Deslandes," she cried. both hands outstretched, "how glad I am to meet you again! There, I told you, Alfred," she continued, turning to the astonished M. Hardouin, "that it could not have been the real M. Des landes whom you met yesterday. Pray leave us alone and I am sure that I can unravel this mystery much better than you. M. Deslandes and I are old friends." Mile. Lucile waved her brother out of the room and then sat down near the perplexed author. J "You see," she explained, "M. H douin swears that he met you yester day at a luncheon, when you how shall I say it? made evident your ad miration for my sister. I was equally certain that it was not you he had met, but there is only on Pierre Des landes, the novelist. There Is some secret somewhere, and we will soon be able to find it out, but do not let us talk about it now. I want to hear about your books, which I have read with the greatest admiration." Entranced by her beauty, Deslandes talked eagerly, feeling that he had at last found the ideal woman he had so often blindly described in his pages. When he finally rose to go, he begged permission to come again, a request which Lucile, blushing pret tily, granted him. A mpnth later Pierre Deslandes re ceived the following letter from his old friend, Maxime Richard: My Dear Boy I have a confession to make to you which I have put off from day to day. Not long ago, I went to your villa to ask you, on the part of a Mme. Marnier, an excellent, though super stitious lady, to take lunch with her as, her guests failing, there were thir teen left to sit at the table. Not find ing you, I was obliged to pick up the first man I met, whom, in a spirit of evil jest, I introduced under your name! But what a terrible double I gave you! 1 bow myself in the dust st your feet. For a while, all went well, but, alas! after a too copious imbib ing of Mme. Marnier's good wines, you pardon me, the false Deslandes became jovial and you can guess the rest from the fact that M. Har douin's seconds called upon you the next day! I tremble at the thought of all that I have brought upon your innocent head, but I did notdare to warn ypu, as your genuine surprise was your best proof of guiltlessness. Write me and tell me if you forgive me, or if I must ever consider myself the most wretched of scoundrels. The artist had not long to wait for his reply. When the return letter came, it said simply: You have given me the happiness of my life! I have not fought with M. Hardouin, nor does Mme. Hardouin consider that I have insulted her since, in two weeks, she is to give me her own sister as my wife. I forgive you because you have repented. But you owe me this in reparation; come and be the best man at my wedding. "Whew!" whistled the artist as he put the letter in his pocket. "There's a marriage that has cost me a good deal of worry! It's astonishing how one sometimes renders ""a man the greatest service possible without the slightest intention of doing so!" Short and Good. A Baltimore man tells a good story of a friend of his who recently became engaged to a charming young girl. The happy lover chance'd to be in a fashionable shop when his eye caught a glimpse of a jeweled belt that seem ed to him an acceptable gift for his fiancee. He asked the clerk to place an assortment of the belts on the coun ter. "Ladies' belts?" queried the polite salesman. "Certainly, sir; what size?" The prospective bridegroom blushed. "Really," he stammered, "I don't know." And he gazed about him help lessly for a moment or so. Finally, a happy thought struck him. "Can't you let me have a yard-stick for a mo ment?" he asked. The yard-stick be ing forthcoming, he placed it along the inside of his arm from shoulder to wrist. Then looking up the clerk, he exclaimed, triumphantly, "Twenty inches!" Westerner's Cause of Complaint. The Coates House had a guest re cently from the far west, who remain ed there three weeks, having a room with a private bath in connection. A few days ago, after paying his bill preparatory to leaving, he ap proached JoV.n M. Egan, who lives at the hotel, and said: "I believe I've been overcharged here." "That so?" replied Mr. Egan. "What makes you think so?" "Well," said the westerner. "the clerk tells me I was charged for that bathroom for every day-: in the entire three weeks, and I've only used the tub once. Kansas City Times. Order. The chairlady rapped sharply. "It ought not be necessary for the Chair to remind members." she said severely, "that under our rules of or der, to say nothing of common cour tesy, only one member may be silent at a time. Any members who becomes sil ent at the same time that another member is silent is distinctly out of order." The ladies of the club visibly cring ed under this merited rebuke. Many of them flushed to the roots of their hair, and several there were who burst into tears. Life. Russian papers state that the Chinese court astronomer predicts that the present war will last 33 years and that four years hence Great Britain will be involved. COST OF SOCIAL PRESTIGE A STUPENDOUS DEVELOPMENT IN FASHIONABLE HOUSEKEEPING. j How "the Wheels Go Round" in the Palace of the Millionaire-Elect Town House, Without Yacht, $200 . 000 a Year "Martyrdom," a Georgia Visitor Calls It. There is a stupendous development In fashionable housekeeping, the echo f 1 which has not yet reached some small towns. The method and the ex panse of running a millionaire's house at the top notch of styje' is not even grasped by those who are delighted when their two servants are well trained and do not want too many days out. The average town-house expenses range from $2,000 to $4,000 a week. This does not include the stable or yacht, and of course the matter of house rent is not taken into consider ation at all, as most lavish entertain ers own their own houses. The summer house, especially if it be at Newport, takes about as much as the yearly cost of keeping up an establishment is from $100,000 to $250,000, according to the elaborate ness with which the mistress enter tains. One daughter of a well known mil lionaire has $75,000 a year allowance to run her town house for a little less than four months, and this does not Include her personal expenses, such as gowns, or her opera box or stable. This comes pretty near the average of New York establishments. The American woman who assumes this great responsibility must have tremendous executive force. She can not be an ordinary woman. She can not be stupid. If she is unobserving she is a failure. Her house must run on wheels that are oiled, and she is responsible to her multi-millionaire husband for much of his reputation as a successful man. It would astonish the simple-minded woman in a little town to foregather with such women as Mrs. Hermann Oelrichs, Mrs. William K. Vanderbilt, Jr., and Mrs. John R. Drexel in the early morning hours and watch the stupendous amount of fine detail which these women personally super intend. In such houses twenty-four servants are considered enough, although Mrs. Clarence Mackay employs forty-eight in her Long Island house. The wages of these people are set, An additional $5 a month is made to New York prices when any one of these servants is employed outside of New York and Newport. Those who go to Philadelphia and Boston are given a trip once a month to New York, with expenses allowed and ticket paid for. They demand this be cause of the unions and societies to which they belong in Gotham. In the kitchen the cook gets $75 if a woman; if a man, $95 a month, al though a woman is considered the better cook by the greatest house keepers. There are only twenty first class women cooks in New York, and all of the great leaders In society know their names and anxiously await an opportunity to get one. The butler gets $65 a month. When there is a housekeeper, her regulation price is $1500 a year, and she must have a sleeping-room, pri vate sitting-room and dining-room combined, and bath. In the stables the chauffeur gets $125 a month, the head coachman $85, the carriage groom $G0 and the strap per $G0. The butler and the cook in New York assume that their salary Is neces sary for pocket money, and demand, besides, a well-furnished room, three perfect meals a day, a certain guaran teed amount of whiskev or wine, all liveries, every piece of laundry and commissions. This last provides not merely a lit tle extra pocket money, but a snug income. Outside of these great estab-' lishments a mistress would gasp ' at such a condition of affairs. The head of the twentieth century palace shuts her eyes to it. These commissions are handled by the head cook, the butler, the head coachman and the chauffeur. The coachman divides with the strapper, the cook keeps her commissions to herself, the butler makes his divisions according to favoritism. The chauff eur divides with the man who helps him. "Tell me," said a Georgian visitor in a Newport house, "how. the wheels go round in these fairy palace. ( I have a, glimmer that the housekeep ing in them is as different from ours as Buckingham Palace is from a North Sea fisherman's home." "It's as distinctly laid out," said the Newporter, "as a set of army rules. We are like a lot of sheep. We do exactly what the other one does. The exact duties of servants have been firmly fixed by them. The head cook prepares all food for the dining room and has charge of all kitchen accounts. She keeps a personal ex pense book, which I settle once a month. The second cook prepares meals for the servants and makes the bread. The kitchen maid does the lesser work and serves tha servants' j table. "The head laundress does the -perk sonal linen of the family. The second laundress does, the children's clothes, and she and the assistant laundress do the household linen. The servants' laundry is sent out." "One minute," said the Georgian; "what i3 the average amount of linen in a house like this in a "week?" "About five hundred pieces a week," answered the Newporter. And, ignor ing the groan of dismay from her guest, she went on with the "regula tions.'!' "The head cock is in charge of every person below stairs. She hires, dis charges, pays wages, hunts references, and is responsible for the good be havior of her regiment. The butler has official rank with the cook. Hia regiment Is upstairs. He also hires, pays, controls, discharges and com mands. The head housemaid is in control of the sleeping floors. "It may amuse you very much to know that hot one of our set of house keepers would think of giving an or der to any servant but these three. We do not even know the names of the others. If there is a mistake in the .dining-room the butler is sent for, and he criticises the man who made it. We observe these rules of etiquette as much as we do our visiting and dinner engagements." "Some day I shall write "The Mar tyrdom of a Millionaire," said the Georgian. From Ainslee's Magazine. DRUG DECADENT IN MEDICINE. Due to Increasing Knowledge of the Causes of Disease. Never did the public so be-drug it self as today. The invaluable method of hypodermic Injection, greatly ,faci litating the use of drugs by the medi cal man, has performed a like service usually, in this case, a grave dis service for the public? so that homes for the treatment of drug habits spring up and flourish everywhere. Morphia, cocaine, trional, paraldehyde and many more claim what appears to be a constantly Increasing number of victims. ' In all these relations, then the drug, so far from being decadent, is in full climax. And yet, in sober, scientific medicine, the drug is deca dent. The discovery and use of ac tive principles instead, of the plants that contain them, and the employ ment of hypodermic injection, though greatly facilitating the abuse of drugs, have led also to a better recognition of their legitimate uses and that is chiefly a recognition of their limita tions. The days of the shotgun prescrip tion, containing a dozen different things, of which some two or three might hit the mark, were numbered when scientific study was directed to the normal action of each constituent of every drug. And with the direc tion of individual study to individual drugs came the discovery that drugs, except in a very few and unmistake able instances, are and can be nc more than mere auxiliaries, usually oi not more than doubtful utility in the treatment of disease. When you have mentioned quinine in malaria, mer cury in another disease, iron in anaemia, and sodium salicylate in rheumatic fever, you have practical ly exhausted the list of drugs which have a specific action in disease. But the discovery of the causes ol disease has done even more for the humiliation of the drug. It is found that the active cause needs certain predisposing causes to prepare the soil for the accursed seed. And among such predisposing causes we ob serve the potency of bad air and de ficiency of light. Then there comes that remarkable revelation of the ob vious that fresh air is worth all the drugs In all the pharmacopoeias put together, and multiplied by all the ex ertions of all the German chemists yet unborn. The point I want to make is the inherent improbability that this that or the other plant shall proMe a cure for a disease the cause of whicli has nothing whatever to do with the plant. The only indisputable excep tion to the Irrelevance of plants in the c'ire of disease is furnished by quinine in malaria, and there, as it happens for it is a palpable fluke the drug is directly lethal to the minute animal parasite which causes the disease. World's Work. An Obstruction on the Track. Alipft Brown. 37 years old. a heavy weight seamstress, tied up traffic or 1 1 T 1 j the Crosstown hub at nemura avenue near South Fourth street, early thii morning, and it required the combined efforts of Policeman Smith of the Bed fnrri avenue station, and four musculai volunteers to remove the obstructiot from the tracks. Shortly after 1 o'clocl! Alice placcil herself in the centre o: the down-town tracks, and had beer there but a few minutes when a trollej car arrived. She scorned the entreat lea of the motorman and conductor tt move, so the officer was called upon, j When arraigned oerore :uagistrat Higginbotham in the Iee avenue courJ Aiirp was in a nemieni mooa. bht couldn't remember what had happened and on her promise 10 ao oeuer, sent ence was suspended. Brooklyn Eagle Today Japan has 1500 daily news papers and periodicals. "HE POPULAR POEM: HOW WRITTEN. Sxact no knowledge of the past Nor thought of what's to come. Select your subject from the vast And limitless hnmdrrin I 1 homely theme is best, say like "When Pa Joins In Onr Sport." 1 When Sister First Began to Bike," "When Ma Beffin to Snort !" ind Tf you have a conscience hard And ripe for all em prize. Desire a lightning-quick reward. Of fame an extra size. 1 lust drop a tear or two for shame I The public won't snspeet inrt straightway then express tue samt in. rotten dialect ! As to your style : Be gnre that U'a Much plainer than In prose; tJ ' i trope or other play of wits, Bemember. never goes I nd last and gravest thing of all ien'! let your muse cavort Too long a time '. The rule recall And cut It very short! Then will your name on many Hps He, s.nil your fame Increase; 3n walls will pasted he the slips That hold each moving piece ! ind folk will say : 'That . Browning, now. Is crazy, lacking pith: The fool, he can't compare nohow With Beresford J. Smith :" New Orleans Times-Democrat. JUST FOR FUN "Watch out," warned the pick-pock et, as he palmed the gentleman's time aiece. Princeton Tiger. "It your husband were to die, would pou pray for him?' "Of course, but at the same time, I'd pray for another." Town and Country. Physician I have made a new man Df you. Bocker Thanks; but you will have to find the old man for. pay ment. Harper's Bazar. Knocker A fool and hi3 money are very soon parted. Bocker Yes; but it's awfully, hard to part ' two fools without any money. Puck. Denham A man can't serve two masters. Nagger No. The only thing for him to do is to secure a di vorce or get rid of his mother-in-law. Brooklyn Life. "I notice that Russia is groaning un 3er a debt of $3,000,000,000." "Isnt that foolish? Why doesn't she let the Dther fellows do the groaning?" Cleveland Plain Dealer. "It's all right for a man to be cool In the face of danger," remarked the Observer of Events and Things; "but it is not to nis credit if the coolness is all in his feet." Yonkers States man. Tramp Kin I hev free transporta tion, boss? Conductor If you are willing to take a Tie Pass. The walk ing is good. Tramp I alnt no Jap, boss; honest, I ain't. Cincinnati Com mercial Tribune. Smith You remember Muggins, who used to bore us with his long winded stories? Jones Yes; what of him? Smith He was arrested yes terday for being short in his accounts. Chicago Daily. f "Our poets are beginning to exercise more influence," said the literary op timist. "Yes," answered Mr.' Cumrox; "they are certainly helping to sell a great deal of soap and patent food." Washington Star. Hoskins I don't object so much to Fanny kissing her dog, but I prefer her to kiss me before and not after." Wilklns I know; but don't you sup pose the dog has his preference, too? Boston Transcript.. Towne So you are learning the Jiu jitsu method of defence? Browne Yes ; it's necessary in these auto days; teaches a man how to be knocked down without being hurt, you know. Detroit Free Press. Prisoner I don't think there wlHbe any need for you to address the jury. Counsel Why not? Prisoner My in sanity will be immediately plain to them when they see that I have re tained you to appear for me. Plck-Me-Up. Reggie Ripper D'ye know. Miss Twipper, I sometimes wish I could be appointed foolklller faw a while, ye know. Tessle Tripper WTiy, Reggie, you shouldn't let your er thoughts run on suicide so much! Cleveland Leader. "Don't you sometimes think that you are too much attached to money." "No," answered Mr. Dustin Stax. "If you knew all the schemes to pry a man loose from it. you'd realize thrat he has to be closely attached." Washington Star. "It is pretty hard," said the czar; suddenly arousing himself from a brown study. "What does your majes ty mean?" asked the courtier. "It's pretty hard to think of suing for. peace when you feel as if you ought to be suing for damages." Washington Star. Marietta Such a joke on Mr. Gay boy! We were out on the balcony be tween the dances, and he got tof : sleeve of his dresscoat all over rc paint from one of the posts that we? just painted. Papa And did you .--3 near the post? No, Why? Because; you have red paint, all over the bacli of your waist. New Yerk Weekly.