ft $i.oo a Year, In Advance. "FOR GOD, FOR COUNTRY AND FOR TRUTH. " Single Copy 5 Cents. vol. xvi. PLYMOUTH, N, C FRIDAY, JULY 28, 1905, No. 10 M V MEMORIES OF THE Once more m fancy 1 hear the drone of the long recitation: .Aima yirumque cano." 0 shade of long-Buffering Virgil! Homer s sonorous lines; the Ten Thousand's "Thalatta: Thalatta! uutteral German, narrating how Tell bade the tyrant defiance, stammering accents in French, concerning the coat of my uncle: fcmes and cosines and roots, and "words o Then best remembered of all. the day , la rents and friends are all there, each t-Ommitteemen. Knlfumn mil fr-iTro nr. A x.rt hi j. nenoiu the proud youth the rostrum slowly ascending; fii. I volce tw,st a squeak and a croak, pouring forth the .uiiiuiuua ul x' ranee nave resolved," or Xhe Union now Now a soit rustling 1 hear, as the girls, decked -with ribbons and laces, 4. a 'rinrtol'th- llke whte doves, read faintly their sweet compositions: A Vision, or "bhells of the Sea," or "What is the True Sphere of Woma wiiuuKu ma visia oi years, now clearly beheld is the picture! ru w liUr &'unes each face, even now, in memory's sight ever you l hough the sweet eyelids of some are lifted now onlv in heaven. Ah, never more will the skie3 seem' as bright as were those of our school days! inougti the full noontide is fair, and beauteous the glories of sunset, I'airest oi all is the glow that shines on the wings o the morning. Eugene Harry, in the Albany Press. tto boA FISHER T was :i soft vet brilliant Southern night. The far Q stars seemed to hang clear of the heavens like a pene- G 4 trable veil of radiant dust. The swell of the great, or- ("Hj, av-E, w'v CV V- kO TT Tilt Tit, Hfc ft, t, -"ft L Jingo-colored moon could be plainly -"Seen, with ronie of those hazy veins which scientists say are frost-cracks in her cold surface. Every dune and bit of wreckage on the broad bar stood out distinctly in her, light, and a clump of frowzy-headed palms cast sharp 1 edged shadows on the sand. Those of Iavo boys walking . alone: the hard packed beach below high-water mark hobnobbed in front of them with a friendliness which the youths them selves were not feeling at that moment. "Pick up your feet, Bud!" exclaimed the elder, in a long-suffering voice. "You squitter like a girl in her first " long dress. Think we can catch any thing with you making that squit squeak. , squit-squeak!" He imitated with gross exaggeration the scuffing of his brother's "sneakers." "I reckon I walk as well as you do!" spluttered "Bud," deeply irritated by the other's choice cf similes. John sighed in a patient, virtuous manner very difficult to bear. "It doesn't look like you'd ever make a hunter, Bud," he observed, with a . certain meek unction. Bud halted instantly, straight and defiant. "I'll .go by myself, then," he said, "and bring back as many eggs as you do!" A "Oh, come on!" said his brother, re lenting. But Bud stood his ground obstinately. "No. You're bossing, bossing all the time. I pity Grace Aline if 3 ou get her, that's all." Grace Aline of the romantic name was a most particular friend of John's. Twice a week, he sailed his bluff -bowed lugger across the three-mile stretch be tween the bar and th-j mainland, bring ing an atmosphere of salt nd shyness to the little house among the orange trees. The imputation stung him to the quick. He turned on his heel and strode off, his chin very high. "Huh!" gruntpd Bud, with the air of one superior to the soft passion. "Huh!" He watched his brother until the tall figure could no longer be seen. Then he" picked up his pail and stake and started toward the shelf of the beach. His. lean, shrewd face was no longer smiling. There was a terrier-like con centration in its expression and in the forward thrust of his head, and as he zigzagged swiftly over the stretch of loose snnd his movements had much of the nervous deftness of that gamy little animal. As he trotted back and forth his stick tapped the sand like u blind man's staff. It had made perhaps a hundred little peeks, when presently Bud checked, and lowering the stick as deli cately as if pricking a blister, drew it up and inspected the tip. It was gummy and glistening, and would have offended most people's noses. "O-bo!" chuckled Bud. "Teach a pel ican to fish! Huh!" With det, hollowed hands he uncov ered the leathery eggs. In the moon- light they looked like fat milk pearls; 125 of them in two layers, with a wad ding of sand between. The clutch just filled Bud's pail, and he set it well above high-water mark, and resumed his quartering. When he came to the point where John had turned up from the slope of the beach, he hesitated, considering the chances of his brother having over looked a nest. To get ahead of him he would have to- walk at least half a mile. The night was warm and wind less, and he was sweating profusely under his loose shirt. With a sigh of designation he threw himself down on the sand, his face toward the sea. There had been no wind for several days, and the sea hardly stirred in its sleep. Now and then its bosom lifted in a slow breath that sent a swell roll ing in, to die upon the beach with a drawn-out sigh. A film of stale, iri descent oil seemed to blanket the water thinly, flickering and passing from green to saffron and from saffron to rose as the tranquil heaving presented now surfaces to the moonlight. Right in the midst of this subdued glitter and close in shore something OLD SCIIOOLHOUSE. unknown derivation of the Class Gra watching the k ,'. Graduation, face of some loved one: et anxious. high-flown declamation. and torever! Woman?" thful! only : 4 oTSSP. AMES, black and wedge-shaped presently ap peared. It came without a ripple, like the sodden rise of a water-logged tim ber. Then Bud saw it sink in the same stealthy fashion, as if it had withdrawn to weigh its estimate of the prospect in secret. Only a few moments elapsed, however, hefoi'e it reappeared nearer shore. Bud lay as motionless as the sand it self, and the turtle, after a long and wary inspection of the beach, swished through the shallow water and began to ascend the slope. It was laborious work for the huge turtle, but at last it gained the shelf of the beach and looked round with blear and weary eyes for a suitable resting place. Then it saw Bud risinsr from the sand, and shrank inward into its shell in quivering apprehension. A long, dismal hiss escaped from its horny blow-holes. "Hello, old camel!" mocked Bud. "I'm right glad I was in when you called." Then he rapped the shaking head smartly with his stick, and his high voice broke to a threatening so prano. "You squat still now till 1 stake you down. I don't want to lose you. I'm mighty fond of you well done." lie uncoiled the braided rawhide wound round his waist, and began to knot it about one of the big, musky hind flippers. The loggerhead's baggy throat pulsed. Its round, hard eyes gleamed with an indignation it could not express vocally, "or the great tur tles are mute. It spun suddenly oil its broad breastplate, almost knocking Bud off his feet, and with a powerful forward hunch started for the sea. Bud dropped sitting upon the beach, his heels jammed into the sand, and both hands clutching the rawhide, one end of which was still tied about his body. His weight crippled the flipper to which he was fast, but the logger head seemed quite satisfied with what remained. Without any apparent in crease of effort she dragged the boy steadily down the slope. "John! O John!" bawled Bud. "Come quick! I've got one!" "Pshaw!" he muttered, letting go with one hand and groping in his pock et. "John can't hear anything but what Grace Aline said to him last night, I reckon." He took out his knife and opened it. The turtle was already at the lip of the sea, but Bud hated to cut. Econ omy is inborn among the inhabitants of the bar, and it hurt him to lose so much good meat. It was not yet too late for John to be of service if he should arrive upon the scene. No John came, however, and the log gerhead plunged into the water with a joyous splashing. Bud drew the knife quickly across the line. The next instant he dropped it with cry of pain as the brine struck bitterly into a gash in his finger. Clutching and tearing uselessly at the sand, he was jerked into the water, down, down, down, a crisp singing in his ears and cold fin gers prying at his lips. By one of fate's malicious pranks the knife had somehow turned in his hand, and when he struck, it was the back of the blade that met-the line! At this part of the const the sea lies warm and shoal above a great apron of submerged land fully a mile wide. The loggerhead had hardly be gun its dive when it reached bottom. Its flippers struck violently, and sent up a boiling cloud of sand. Confused and winded by the violence of its fright, it turned and slanted upward to the surface, where it lay puffing like a naphtha launch, its limp flippers swinging with the sway of the water. A few seconds later Bud's streaming yellow head bobbed up close behind it. The boy had the line tightly clutched in his hands, and hardly waiting to take the necessary breath, he pulled himself forward with a strong quick pull. The fore part of the loggerhead sank instantly, but before she had gathered her trailing flippers under her, Bud was on her back, all ten fin gers hooked about the thick front edge of the shell. The loggerhead, for obvious reasons, has no enemy but man, and this partic ular loggerhead had led a long and pottering existence of unbroken peace. To say that It was frightened would do scant justice to its state of mind. Down it went with a rush that tore i. white streaks through the water, but this time it did not strike the sand. It turned as it neared the bottom and skimmed along just above it. , Its pow erful flippers, working with a propeller like motion, drove It along like the wind. As it went it turned on its side, glanc ing this way and that like a scaling stone; but Bud clung to the broad cara pace with the tenacity of a barnacle. He knew that if he were trailed again at the end of the rawhide, he would soon drown. Three generations of gaunt "reefers" had left him a legacy of pluck and coolness that made a man of him, and a strong one, in times of danger. Young as he was. Bud had been in peril before, but never had thinks looked so bad. Something cold and tense seemed to knot within his head. He must, if it were possible, draw up his knees to the centre of the shell and fashion his body into a sort of drag or breakwater. It was a trick which some of the "reefers" declared would invariably force a turtle to come to the surface. It had sounded easy; but in the pens, if one failed, one had only to let go and come up with no worse penalty than a derisive laugh from one's com panions. It is different when one tries it out at sea, when life itself may be the price of a slip. Something, however, must be done. Although in reality Bud had been below the surface but a few seconds, the force with which he was swept through the water and the efforts of the loggerhead to unseat him made it extremely difficult to hold his breath. A pair of iron hands seemed to press with terrible force against his lower ribs. His lungs shook like foul and shodden sponges within him. His legs, always hitching forward, were straight ened again and again by the pressure of the water. But Bud was as much at home in the sea as a South Sea Islander, and at last, favored by a momentary slack ening of the loggerhead's speed, his knee caught under him, and he straightened his body as much as the length of his arms permitted. Either the trick succeeded or the turtle was almost winded, for almost immediately it began a slowing and grudging rise. Bud had enough spirit left in him to grin a tight-lipped, dimpled grin. Owing to the backward tilt of his body, he could see the cheer ful shimmer of moonlight on the sur face. It danced like mercury, grew brighter and more dispersed. Then his head shattered 'the silver film, and he shot the stale air from his lungs in a gulp that almost seemed -to pull them into his threat. "Um-m!" ho panted. "I reckon we were right close to being late for that appointment. The loggerhead, its dome just awash, moved seaward with a sudden acces sion of dignity. It was apparent that it did not intend to exert itself in any fancy diving uitil it was sure of deep water. Bud glanced back over his shoulder, and the cabbage-palms seemed to him to have dwindled to the dimensions of hat pins stuck in n sand cushion. A lively and picturesque little wake cf phosphorescence suggested that' they 1 might look even smaller in time. Clinging to the shell Avith one hand, Bud picked at the knot with the other, but the swollen rawhide resisted his wet fingers. A sudden boyish out break of rage at his impotence swept over him, and he struck the loggerhead savagely on the head. The blows, aimed without intention, did more than skin Bud's knuckles, for the creature swerved confusedly until its course lay parallel to the beach. Bud's temper passed as quickly as it had come. Another blow might undo the good he had gained. As long as they held their present course he was within swimming distance of the shore. His face, pale from fatigue and the cold moonlight, set precociously. He had nothing with AA'hich he could cut the line, nor could he use both hands at the knot and keep his seat. He turned his hot gaze downward. What if he gouged out those blear eyes with his thumb, or tore open the baggy throat! Something desperate Bud ,was pre pared to do. He leaned forward, his face drawn like a Aveasel's, when sud denly the inspiration qame. He caught up the line, and thrusting it under the sullen beak, rasped it A-ieiousiy back and forth. "Bite, you mossback!" he snarled, reckless of the danger his fingers ran. The loggerhead did bite, with a quick venomousness, that Avas uncanny. A gush of fat bubbles gurgled up, and the keen, horny Jravs sliced through the rope as if it were kelp.. The next moment the turtle dived, and Bud, un prepared, found himself gasping, but alone in the Avater. He fell into the stroke, the long side stroke he could maintain for an hour at a time, laying his course by the prim palms. He heard a faint "Halleo!" from John, returning down the beacla, and grinned abstractedly. It never occurred to him to ask for assistance. Such a swim was mere play in his two-piece costume. He Aas busy with the lessons of the recent in cident. Youth's Companion. Lecturing at Berlin, Professor von Hansemann scouted the idea that can cer is on the increase. .AFFAIRS PASSING OF THE BED. "This day is witnessing the passing of the bed," said a NeAV York manufac. turer. "Ground space is getting too valuable in New York to use for an old fashioned bed or to devote solely to sleeping purposes. We have the most curious calls for beds made to order. Some people have new beds made to order every time they move, so as to utilize every inch of space," says the New York Tribune. TO PRESERVE CUT FLOWERS. A florist gives -.hese directions for preserving cut flowers. When they can be picked free from a garden it is comparatively easy to preserve them., but when they must bo purchased at the florist's they have lived half their lives already and need tender care. Cut the stems in a long, slanting cut and place in fresh water, taking care that the stems do not quite "touch the bottom of the case. Some flowers, mignonette, for example, are extremely liable to droop Avhen brought from the florist's to a warm living-room. Lay the flowers for a short time in the ice box to freshen before placing in water. Every morning as long as the flowers last cut the stems, and place in fresh water. MISTRESS AND MAID. Many mistresses and maids fail to grasp the fact that the engagement between them is in the nature of a legal contract. Mistress and maid are equals in the eyes of the law, and an agreement is as binding upon one as upon the other. It should be per fectly understood at the beginning for what term the maid is engaged, and at what rates. In some places it is the custom to pay by the week, and the servant is then engaged by that term. In other localities she is en gaged and paid by the mouth, although she ia frequently taken at first on a week's trial, with the understanding that if she gives satisfaction and is suited with the place, che is to con tinue her services by the month. When the latter period is the term of en gagement, it is understood that the em ployer is expected to give not less than a week's notice of discharge to a maid, and that the latter chould an nounce a week before her month is up her intention of leaving. Should the mistress prefer, she can giAre a week's wages in lieu of a week's no tice, but the former method is in more general use. Harper's Bazar. Savory Omelet Beat three fresh eggs, add three tablespoonfuls of milk, some pepper, salt, a little chopped onion and two tablespoonfuls of chopped parsley. Tour into a frying pan in which a little butter has been melted and fry a rich golden brown. Pulled Bread Remove the outside crust from a long loaf of well-baked bread, and Avith two forks pull the crumb apart down the centre of the loaf. Divide these halves into quar ters, and again into eighths, place the strips in a lined baking pan and dry the same as zweiback. Toast Meringue Dip a slice of delicately-browned toast in boiling water, slightly salted, lay in a deep hot plate, and pour over it a cream made of one half cupful of boiling milk, a teaspoon ful of butter and the stiffly beaten white of an egg, added just before re moving from the fire. Set in a hot oven five minutes until just colored. An Uncommon Dish Here is a rather uncommon dish of vegetables, but its excellence is vouched for: Cook string beans and lima beans separately, and when tender place them together in a saucepan with an ounce of butter, salt and pepper. Toss them together, while cooking, for a few minutes, and serve Avith a little chopped parsley sprinkled over them. Mayonnaise Blend well the yolks of two eggs, one teaspoon of mustard, 4 of a teaspoon sugar, one saltspoon salt, four drops garlic and a speck of mace; add one teaspoon of oil drop by drop until thoroughly incorporated, then add one teaspoon of vinegar and bca-t well, then the oil by teaspoons, adding vinegar from time to time until a cup of oil and five teaspoons of vine gar have been used. Sphagetti With Tomatoes Boii half a pound best Italian sphagetti in plenty of boiling salted water until tender; drain, pour cold water over it through a colander and drain again. Make a pint nnd a half of tomato sauce, add ing a minced onion and a clove of garlic; put the sphagetti into a china lined saucepan, pour the sauce over, add a small s's-'e of fat bacon, first browning it sy.iitly and cnoppmg, ana , a scant half cup of grated cheese. I Cover closely, and cook slowly nearly aa hour I'WFrfM r- SOUTHERN : d 1 TOPICS OF INTEREST TO THE PLANTER, STOCKMAN AND TRUCK GROWER, Strong Healthy Chicks. Last week Ave devoted most of our space to growing and feeding young chicks. But the subject is by no means exhausted. Thousands of chick ens are hatched every yea,r, only to flrsop and die before they are a month old. "In a multitude of counselors there is a safetj-." We hope by giving the experience of many poultry keep ers to show that much of the loss is aA'oidable and unnecessary. The fol lowing is from The Successful Poul try Journal: The breeding stock and the incubai tor are often wrongly blamed for the chicks being Aveak and puny, many of them dying the first feAv weeks when in fact the trouble is due to the im proper care of the eggs during the pe riod of incubation. If you want good strong, lusty chicks that will go through to maturity, scratching for a living, always in the very pink of con dition, study Avell the conditions that you surround them with, while the tender germs are sprouting into life. Do not allow the temperature of your Incubator room to run below sixty de grees, keep the ventilators wide open from the start, lower the upper sash of the south window all the way down during the day, except when raining or windy, close window at night and open a door leading into an adjoining room or hall, giA-e them all the pure fresh ah possible, but guard against drafts. Hold temperature of egg chamber at 103, mark eggs and turn them half over twice daily, bring the eggs from the outer sides of the trays to the cen tre each time, in order to equalize the heat, air them doAvn to the same tem perature as your hand; they should not feel cool to the touch; test out on the eleventh day, discard all clear eggs and those having streaks running through them. The eggs do not develop uni formly; most of the eggs you have left will be very opaque, a few will be doubtful; these are only somewhat tar dy; mark them plainly, give them ex tra heat by placing them on top of the others in the warmest part of the ma chine, and they will soon catch up with their neighbors. After the eleventh day prolong the airing, gradually in creasing the tim3, allOAV your machine to stand open fh'e minutes with the eggs, exercise the eggs at each time of airing by rolling them under the palms of the hands, give them plenty of air and exercise; action is the very life of animal growth. Test a second time on sixteenth day; notice your tardies; if you haAe given them a little extra care they will be up with the crowd. They will pip at the close of the nineteenth day. Close the ventilators, run at 103 to 10-1, do not open the machine under any circumstances, and in ten or twelve hours they will clean you up a hatch of big strong chicks, that will live through thick and thin. All this talk about weak breeding stock is bosh. It's only an excuse used for the worthless incubators. If the spark of life is present in the egg surround it with proper conditions and it will de velop into a vigorous organism. The fact that the tardy eggs can be hurried along is proof of this. Wood Aftheg and Kainit For Potatoes. R. N. II., Evington, Avrites: "I would like some information as to the value of .wood ashes and kainit for potatoes." Kainit, as you probably know, is potash in its crude form. It is a low grade of potash, as onlyl2 per cent, is actually aA-ailable for plant food, and as it is mixed with considerable quantities of salt and chlorides it is not as satisfactory a potato fertilizer as the sulphate. Besides that, it is so Ioav in available plant food that it is one of -the most costly forms in which potash can be used because you will observe that a large amount of virtually waste material is shipped in every ten. Therefore the cost of pot ash in kainit is relatively higher than in the more concentrated forms. Wood ashes make a satisfactory fer tilizer for gardens and for the potato crop as well. Their value depends a good deal on the source from which they are derived and the treatment they have received. Ashes also con tain considerable amounts of lime and a very small amount of phosphoric acid, so that they are useful in pro viding other forms of plant food. The average analysis of commercial wood ashes shows them to contain about 5 to 7 per cent, of potash, 1 to 2 per cent, of phosphoric acid and from 23 to 30 per cent, of lime. This, of course, is for the unleached form. Leached ashes frequently contain only 1 per cent, of potash, 1 per cent, of phosphoric acid and 25 to. 30 per cent, of lime. Where ashes that have been protect ed from the water can be purchased at a low cost they provide potash in a satisfactory form and should be util ized on gardens and in orchards. Should one desire to provide fifty pounds of available potash for each acre of land, it would be necessary to use about 500 pounds of .wood ashes to the acre. FARM : fOTES. p.. a r As to the amount that should be paid for wood ashes, it is only necessary to state that potash can be bought ia the form of muriate at about 44 to 5 cents per pound for aA-ailable plant food. Therefore 100 pounds of wood ashes are not worth more than thirty five cents at the outside. If they can be bought at 15 to 25 cents they can be used to advantage as a fertilizer. It is for these reasons that in previous communications relative to Irish pota toes the use of sulphate of potash has been suggested, because it provides plant food In a more concentrated form and also is better suited to the production of an Irish potato of high, cooking quality. There is no objec tion to using wood ashes for potatoes The objection to kainit is not serious, and any of these forms of potassic fertilizers can be used to advantage in the production of general garden crops. AndreAV . W. Soule. Preparing Land For Alfalfa. J. K., Farm ville, writes: "I have read and heard much about alfalfa, but have never seen any, as there is none raised here. I want to try it, and would like some information as to how to prepare the land, and when is the best time to sow? Also where can the material be obtained for inoculating the land? Does the soil have to be in oculated for cowpeas?" Land for alfalfa should be very care fully prepared. It is well to start a! year in advance to get the land ready, and unless it is naturally very deep and porous it should be subsoiled, and sub soiling is best done in the fall of the year. It is also well to enrich the land! by groAving a crop of cowpeas and plowing them down before seeding to alfalfa. The seeding may be done ap propriately about the first of Septem ber; not later than this, or the alfalfa will not make a strong enough groAvthi to withstand the freezes of winter. Spring seeding may be practiced about the first to the fifteenth of March, de pending a good deal on climatic con ditions. It is generally best to wait until danger of hard freezing is past. It is well to inoculate your alfalfa be fore seeding. This may be done by; obtaining some of the culture put up by the experiment station and sent at a very small cost to the farmers of the State upon application. As' a rule, it is not necessary to inoculate land in Tennessee for cowpeas or red clover. Sometimes soy beans do much better when inoculated, and.the station hopes; to be in position to furnish the farmers of the State with the necessary germs for inoculating soy beans. Knoxville Journal. Value of Lime For Corn. W. E. G., Charlottesville, Va., writes: Please tell me how to test land' to see if lime is needed. Do you think lime would benefit land for corn? It is an easy matter to test land so as to tell wnetuer it is aem or not. Purchase from your nearest drug store a package of blue litimus paper AA'hich you should be able to get for five cents. Take a handful of the soil to be tested and moisten with rainwater in a tin cup and insert a strip of the litimus paper. If it turns red quickly; it is an evidence that your land is quite acid; if it turns red slowly, that it is onlv slightly acid. In either case lime should be applied. If it is very, acid a heaA-y application would be ad visable, say fifty bushels, applied in the caustic form. Purchase it when freshly burned and distribute in heaps in the field at suitable distances and cover lightly with earth and allow to slake. When thoroughly slaked, scat ter it over the surface of the ground uniformly and incorporate with a har row. Lime is not a fertilizer but is a; stimulant and a corrective of certain objectionable conditions in the soil. It also sets Tree plant food which is held in unavailable forms, and may there fore injure the land if used to excess. An application of lime once in three to five years is ample as a rule. Land intended for corn will be benefited by, an application of lime. The test indi cated is very easily made and it will pay you to ascertain whether your soil is acid or not, and if it is, to make an application of lime. Making: a Lawn, Four things are required to make a good lawn: Time, soil, climate and in telligent labor. In England they have a saying that it requires 100 years to make a lawn, and 200 years to make a good lawn. In this country, where we are trying to make suburban homes while you wait, and where a month or two seems a very long time, people are too impatient. It speaks well for their ambition that they want lawns as soon as they move into their houses, but they are really exacting too much. A the very best, it requires no less than) three years to make a presentable lawn and five or ten years tft make what wa uncritical Americans call a good lawxt. The G arden Magazine. ' " ' '