1 imJ I jiJLi3 ll'. i I t J I ir v ill r : . f. $I.OO a Year, In Advance. FOR GOD, FOR COUNTRY AND FOR TRUTH." Single Copy 5 Cents. VOL. XVII.. PLYMOUTH, N, C. FRIDAY NOVEMBER 30, 1906. NO. 35. A SONG OF Oh, to come lionip onco more, when the Men and women now they are, standing dusk is lulling. straight and steady. To fw; list; nui'.sery ligliled and the Grave heart, guy heart, fit for Hfo s ihiUIri'n'H tabl spread; emprise; "Mather, mother, mother '" the eager- Shoulder set to shoulder, how should they voices oa'ding, he but ready! "The baby whs ko sluepy that he ImJ The future shines before them with the to k to bed!" light. of their own eyes. Oh, lo ronie home onoc more and see the Still each answers to my call; no good ha 8mllins faees. been denied me. Dark head, britdit head, clustered at the 'My burdens have been fitted to the lit- jiiine; - tie strength that's mine. Much the years have taken, when' the' Beauty, pride and peace have walked by heart its path retraces. day beside me. Hut until time is not lor mc( that The evening closes gently in, and how imag'j will . remain. can I repine? But oh, to see onee more, when the early dusk is falling. The nursery windows glowing and the children's table, spread; "Mother, mother, mother!" the high child voices calling, "He couldn't stay awake for you; he had to go to bed!" Scriftner's Magazine. t THE DANGER OF By LEONARD My confession must begin when 1 was four years old and recovering from swollen glands. As 1 grew well, my iw.in brother, Gregcire, who was some minutes younger, was put to bod with the same complaint. "What a misfortune," exclaimed our mother, "that Silvestre is no sooner convalescent than Gregoire falls ill." The. duetcr answered: "It astonishes me that you were not prepared for it, Madame Lapalme since the children i are twins, the thing was to be fore-"t-een; when the eldr throws the mala H dy off, the younger naturally contracts it. Among twins it is nearly always so." And it always proved to be so with Gregoire and me. No socner did I throw off whooping cough than Gre goire began to whoop, though I was at heme in Vernon and he was stay ing with our grandmother In Tours. If I I had to be taken to a dentist, Gre goire would soon afterward be how ling with toothache; as often as I in dulged in the pleasures of the table, Gregoire had a bilious attack. The in fluence I exercised upon him was so remarkable that once when my bicycle ran away with me and broke my arms, our mother consulted three medical men us to whether Gregoire's bicycle was bound to run away with him, too. r-hideed, my brother was distinctly ap- .... i. ; 10 preneusfive ui it uiuiacu. Again at college. I shall not pre tend that I was a bookworm, or that I shared Gregoire's ambitions; on the contrary, the world beyond the walls looked such a jolly place to me that the mere sight of a classroom would sometimes fill me with abhorrence. But, mon Dieu! if other fellows were wild occasionally, they accepted the penalties, and the affair was finished; on me rested a responsibility my wildncss was communicated to Gre goire. Scarcely had I resigned myself to dull routine again than Gregoire, the industrious, would find himself unable to study a page, and would commit freaks for which he rebuked me most sternly. So far as I had any serious aspira tions at all, I aspired to be a painter, and, after combating my family's ob jections, I entered an art school in Paris. Gregoire, on the other hand, inclined strongly to law. During, the next few years we met infrequently, Imt that, my brother continued to be affected by any unusual conditions of fflybody and mind I knew by his let ters, which seldom failed to contain expostulations and entreaties. Can you blame me if I had no 'love for this correspondent? My Brother: The Circumstances of Our Birth. Your attention is directed to my pre ceding communications on this sub ject, I desire to protest against the revelry from, which you recovered eith er on the 15th or 16th inst. On the afternoon of the later date, while en gaged in a conference of the first mag nitude, I was seized with an over whelming desire to dance a quadrille ;.t a public ball. I found it impossible to concentrate my attention on the case concerning which I was consulted;- I could no longer express myself with lucidity. Outwardly sedate, reliable, I sat at desk dizzied by such visions as pursued St. Anthony to his cell. No sooner was I free than I fled from Ver- non, dined in Paris, bought a false beard, and plunged wildly into the vortex of a dancing hall. Scoundrel! This is past pardon! My sensibilities revolt, and my prudence shudders. Who' shall say but that one night may be recognized? Who can foretell to what blackmail you may expose me? I, Maitre Lapalme, forbid your profligacies, which devolve upon me, I forbid eto. Our mother still lived in Vernon, vhere she contemplated her favorite s-on's success with the profoundest pride. Occasionally I spent a few days with her, sometimes more. One summer when I visited her 1 met Mademoiselle Leuillet. I know very well that no description of a girl ever painted her to anybody yet. Suffice it that she was beautiful as avancel, that her voice was like the Jmlsrlu of the Spheres more than all, l hut one felt allthe time," "How good sshe is, bow good, how good!" TWILIGHT. BEING A TWIN, t MERRICK. Never since I was a boy had I stay ed in Vernon for so long as now, nev er had I repented so bitterly as now the error of my ways. I loved, and it seemed to me that my attachments was reciprocated, yet my position for bade me to go to Monsieur Leuillet and ask boldly for his daughter's hand. While I had remained obscure, artists whose talent was no more re markable than my own, had raised themselves from Bohemia into pros perity. I was an idler, a good-for-nothing. And then well, I owned to Berthe that I loved her! I owned that I loved her and when I left for Paris we were secretly engaged. Alon Dieu! Now I worked indeed! To win this girl for my own, to show myself worthy of her innocent faith, supplied me with the most powerful incentive in life. In the Quarter they regarded me first with ridicule, then with wonder, and, finally, with respect. For my own enthusiasm did not fade. "He has turned over a new leaf," they said, "he means to be famous!" It was understood. No more excursions for Silvestre, no more junketings and recklessness! I was another man my ideal of happiness was now a wife and home. For a year I lived this new life. ' I progressed. Men whose approval was a cachet began to speak of me as one with a future. In the Salon a picture of mine made something of a stir. How I rejoiced, how grateful and sanguine I was! I said that it was hot too soon for me to speak now; I had proved my mettle, and, though I foresaw that her father would ask more before he? gave his consent. I was, at least,jus tified in avowing myself. I telegraph ed to my mother to expect me. On the way to the station I noticed the window of a florist; I ran in to bear off some lilies for Eerthe. The shop was so full of wonderful flowers that, once among them, I found some difficulty in making my choice. Hence, I missed the train; and, rather than walk about until the next, returned to my studio incensed by the delay. A letter for me had been just de livered. It told me that on the previ ous morning Berthe had married my brother. I could have welcomed a pistol shot my world rocked. Berthe lost, false. Gregoire's wife! I reiterated it, I said it over and over, I was stricken by it and yet, I could not realize that ac tually it had happened. Oh, I made certain of it later, be lieve me I was no hero of a feui He ton, to accept such intelligence with out proof! I assured myself of her perfidy, and burnt her love letters one by cue; tore her photographs into shreds strove also to tear her image from my heart. A year before I should have rushed to the cafes for forgetfulness, but now, as the shock subsided, I turned fever ishly to work. For months I persist ed, denying myself the smallest re spite, clinging eo a resolution which proved vainer daily. Were art to be mastered by dogged ' endeavor. I should have conquered; but alas! though I could compel myself to paint, I could not compel myself to paint well. I had fought temptation for half a year, worked with my teeth clenched, worked against nature, work ed while my pulses beat and clamored for the draughts of dissipation, which promised a speedier release. I recog nized that my work had been wasted, that the struggle had been useless 1 broke down. I need say little of the months that followed it would be a record of de gradations and remorse; alternately, I fell, and was ashamed. L shuddered at the horrors I had committed. One afternoon when I returned to my rooms, from which I had been absent since the previous day, I heard from the concierge that a visitor await ed me. I climbed the stairs without anticipation. My thoughts were slug gish, my limbs leaden, my eyes heavy and bloodshot. My visitor was Berthe. I think nearly a minute must have passed while we looked speechlessly in each other's face her's convulsed by entreaty, mine dark with hate. "Forgive me," she gasped, "I have come to beseech your forgiveness! Can you not forget the wrong I did you?" "Do I look as if I had forgotten?" "I was inconstant, cruel, I cannot, ex cuse myself. But, Oh, Silvestre, in the name of the love you once bore me, have pity on us! Reform, abjure your evil courses! Do not, I implore you, condemn my husband to this abyss of depravity; do not wreck my married life!" Now I understood what had pro cured me the honor of a visit from this woman, and I triumphed devil ishly that I was the elder twin. "Madame," I answered, "I think that I owe you no explanations, but I shall say this: the evil courses that you deplore were adopted, not vindictively, but in the effort to numb the agony that you had made me suffer. You but reap as you have sown." "Reform!" she sobbed. She sank on her knees before me. "Silvestre, in mercy to us, reform!" "I shall never reform," I said in flexibly. "I will grow more abandon ed day by day my past faults shall shine as merits compared with the atrocities that are to come. False girl, monster of selfishness, you are dragging me to the gutter, and your only grief is that he must share my shame! You have made me bad, and you must bear the consequences you cannot now make me good to save your husband!" Humbled and despairing, she left me. At this stage I began deliberate ly to contemplate revenge. . But not the one that I had threatened. . Oh, no! I bethought myself of a ven geance more complete than that! She should be tortured with the torture that she had dealt to me I would make him adore another woman with all his heart and brain! It was difficult, for first I must adore and tire, of another woman myself as the passion in me faded, his would be born. I swore, however, that I would compass it. " For some weeks now I worked again, to provide my self with money. I bought new clothes and made myself presentable. When my appearance accorded better with my plan, I paraded Paris, seeking the woman to adore. You may think Paris is full of ador able women? Well, so contrary is hu man nature, that never had I felt such indifference toward the sex as during that tedious quest; never had a pair of brilliant eyes or a well turned neck, appealed to me so little: How true it is that only the unfore seen comes to pass! There was a model, one Therese, whose fortune was her back, and who had long borea me by an evident tenderness. One day this Therese, usually so -constrained in my presence, appeared in high spirits and mentioned that she was going to be married. The change in her demeanor inter ested me A little piqued I invited her to dine with me, but she refused. Before' I parted from her I made an appointment for her to sit to me the next morning. "So you are going to be married, Therese?" I said, as I prepared the palette. "In truth," she answered, gaily. "No regrets?" I asked. "What regrets could I have?" she returned. "He is a very pretty boy, and well-to-do, believe me!" "And I am not a pretty boy, nor well-to-do, hein?" "Oh," she laughed, "you do not care for me!" "Is it so?" I said. "What would you say if I told you that I did care?" "I chouldv say that you tell me too late, monsieur," she replied, with a shrug. "Are you ready for me to pose?" And this changed woman turn ed her peerless back on me without a scruple. A little mortified, I attended strictlj to business for the rest of the morii- ing. But I found myself on the fol lowing day waiting for her with im patience. I remarked that Therese's hands were very well shaped, and indeed happiness had brought a certain charm to her face. "Do you know, Therese, that I am sorry that you are going to marry?" I exclaimed. ."Oh, get out!" she laughed, push ing me away. "It is no good your talk ing nonsense to me now, don't flatter yourself!" Reybaud, the sculptor, happened to come in at the moment. "Oho," he shouted, "what changes are to be seen! The nose of our brave Sylvestre is out of joint now we are affianced, hein?" She joined in the laughter against me, and I picked up my brush again in a vile humor. Well, as I have said, she was not the kind of woman I had contemplat ed, but these things arrange them selves I became seriously enamored cf her. And, recognizing that Fate worked with her own instruments, I did not struggle. For months I was at Therese's heels; I was the sport of her whims, and her slights, sometimes even of her insults. I actually made her an offer of mar riage, at which she snapped her white L fingers, with a grimace and the more she flouted me, the more fascinated 1 grew. In that rapturous hour when her Insolent eyes softened to senti ment, when her mocking mouth melt ed to a kiss, I was in paradise. My ecstasy was so supreme that I forgot to, triumph at my approaching ven geance. So I married Therese; and yesterday was the twentieth anniversary of our wedding. Berthe? To speak the truth, my plot against her was frustrated by an accident. You see, before I could communicate my passion to Gregoire I had to recover from it, and this insolent Therese I have not recov ered from it yet. There are days when she turns her remarkable back on me now gener ally when I a"fh idle but, mon Dieu! the moment's when she turns her lips are worth working for. Therefore, Berthe has been all the time quite happy with the good Gregoire and since I possess. Therese upon my word of honor I do not mind! The Bystander. DAIRY FRAUDS IN ENGLAND. Pure Butter Said to be Difficult to Find in London. The British government has recent ly issued as a parliamentary paper a report o.f the select committee appoint ed to consider the conduct and con trol of the trade in butter and but ter substitutes. The report was ar gued upon unanimously, and makes suggestions to be embodied in legis lation. "The London Times" asserts that genuine dairy butter is a thing past praying for. Four-fifths of the popula tion of London, "The Times" asserts, have never seen it in their lives. Those who know what it is have great difficulty in procuring ic and cannot obtain it in many cases at any price. What is called genuine butter in London, "The Times" says, is blended and reworked butter. Its tough, tenaciousexture is as different as possible from that of real dairy butter, and it is destitute of the sub tle aroma of the genuine unworked butter. "The Times" says that .both, the imported butter and that made at home are generally blended butter. The parliamentary committee proposes that butter factories shall be regis tered, the registration to be renew able annually, and that inspectors shall be empowered to enter all such premises when they suspect that but ter is reworked, blended or adulter ated butter must not be stored on such premises. With adequate pen alties proportioned, as the commit tee proposes, to the magnitude cf the output, ' some real check would be placed upon adulteration. Imported butter is to be met with not less stringent conditions. It was shown before the committee by a firm that was prosecuted for the sale cf adulterated Danish butter that it got off with a nominal penalty up on showing that it had ordered what is known as "control butter." This butter is guaranteed by the Danish government. The committee proposes that the importer shall be held re sponsible for the genuineness of the butter he sells, without any regard fcr anybody else's warranty. No dif ficulty is put in the way of those who manufacture and sell imitations of butter openly and honestly. Those who want margarine will be free to buy it as such. But people who want butter are expected to get butter, and not mysterious mixtures. It is thought probable that the British government will take favorable action on the re port. From Government Consular Re ports. Romance of a Sweet Pea, The parent of nearly all the most beautiful varieties of the American sweet pea is the Blanche Ferry, which has a pretty romance connected with its discoverey. Some fifty years ago, the comely daughter of a welLto-do farmer ran away from home to marry a young quarryman, and her home thereafter was always in a cottage, often but a mere hut, on the very thin soil over lying the limestone ledges where her husband worked. When her baby died she went back to her father's farm to bury it, and took with her on return ing to her cottage some seed of a white sweet pea and seed of the old Painted Lady pink. Thereafter, however great her pov erty, she never failed to grow near her cottage home some of these sweet peas, as a reminder of her happy girlhood and her dead baby. , They were always grown on thin, poor soil, often so thin that they could only be kept alive by constant attention and watering. As a result of such envi ronment for many plant generations the flowers acquired a dwarf growth and a great abundance of bright col ors. Some twenty-five years after the baby died a ssedsman, passing the lit tle home of the mother, noticed the beauty of the sweet peas and obtained a teaspoonful of the seed. This ha multiplied into thousands of pounds, and sold as the seed of the Blanchu Ferry variety, which is now famou?, throughout the worid for its beauty and the many beautiful varieties it has produced. Washington Star. Nstu rally. Do Stylo tins any of your family gone away for the summer? Gunbusta Only the cook. Woman's Home Companion. SOUTHERN FARM ' I0TES. TOPICS Of INTEREST TO THE PLANTER, STOCKMAN ANQ TRUCK GRCWEtU Value of a Cow. In undertaking to place an esti mate on the value of a cow the exact amount of milk and butter fat pro duced should be determined. Most people when estimating the value of a cow will be largely in fluenced by the statements made by the owner of the number of gallons of milk she will produce. This in formation is usuallvery misleading, as most persons do not take into con sideration the foanA in mifk, and again, the party wisning to sell a cow will sometimes exaggerate as to her production as well The milk from a cow, as usually measured, should not be given any consideration, but to know the exact amount of milk a cow gives it should be weighed with an accurate scale; foam adds nothing to the weight of milk. When the milk from a cow is weighed morning and evening, then her daily production can be esti mated, but it is better to know the weight of milk produced for a num ber of consecutive milkings and to take an average of these for deter mining her daily production. After determining the amount of milk produced per day in pounds and ounces, then one should know the av erage butter fat contained therein. This can be determined by taking a sample from each milking, and from about five consecutive milkings, put ting these samples together and de termining the per cent, of butter fat In this composite sample. This will" be an average per cent, of fat for the time during which the samples were taken. From the average daily pro duction of milk and the average per cent, of fat the average amount of fat produced daily can be ascertained. As six pounds of butter fat thus de termined will make about seven pounds of butter, the value of the milk for butter-making purposes can be determined. As butter fat is the , foundation of cream, the value of the milk put into cream can be estimated. While this method does not give any idea of the amount of milk and but ter fat a cow will produce during her milking period, it does show how much she is producing in butter or cream for the time being. No dairyman should be without this record of each one of his cows at any time. It will enable him to know when a cow is not producing an amount which justifies her keep, and she can then be replaced with a bet ter cow. Where records are kept as has been suggested at the end of the milking period the amount of milk and the amount of butter fat from each cow can be estimated and her value for that period pretty closely determined. Wm. D. Saunders, Dairyman Virginia Agricultural Ex periment Station, Blacksburjf, ..jet The Kerry Crop. If j'ou live near a city, nothing Is so profitable as a berry crop. If you live away from a market, nothing is nicer for your own table. We cannot understand how our farmers can do withect strawberries and raspberries. The blackberry also deserves consid eration, everywhere, except where wild ones are plentiful and near at hand. It is time to begin to prepare for your patch of a row or two, or an acre of two, according to your means. You ladies who want some pin money of your own, and have little children to help, gather them. If you cannot do this have a little berry patch. We always think . strawberries the best fruit that grows, until raspberries come in, and then we think they are the best. Both are worthy a place in every garden in our South. They al ways help out a supper and round out a dinner; and we never object to them for breakfast. No one has ever been able to reach the maximum yield of our berry crop of either va riety. Wonderful yields have been made. We saw a blackberry bush at our near neighbor's that yielded ten quarts and brought him in the hand some return of $1.00. Putting the plants at four by six feBt, this would give us 11S5 plants per acre, and a revenue of $1185.00 per acre. No one can say this is an Impassibility, since one bush has made the propor tionate yield. This amount of straw berries has been made. As to rasp berries we are not so well informed, but as they sell at double the price of either of the other berries, we cannot see why a like return' can not be ob tained. There is a good living for the small farmer who will take wife and children into co-partnership and get down to business and learn how to grow the many things our market now demands. Don't let's, talk cotton until we know of nothing else; but let us give our garden crops due con sideration, and don't forget the berry. Southern Cultivator. The Apple A'phis. My anple trees are badly affectel with a greenish louse and the trees are dying. We are . bothered "with these insects every 'year? and I want to know what they aw.arid how to destroy them. J. Ev J., Hartselle, Ala. Answer. Durjn&- the spring and early summer, "one often finds the leaves and tender twigs of apple coh ered withjsmall jreen lice or aphides. These are the Apple Aphi.'They in jure the trees by sucking the sap through their, tiny beaks. So far as we know it, the life history of these insects 5-. : : follows: The lice hatch, from eggs in spring as soon as the leaf buds begin to expand, and in crease with marvelous rapidity, so that almost as fast as the leaves de velop there are colonies of the plant lice to occupy them. Tney continue broading on apple until" July5, when they largely leave the trees, and mi grate we know not where, but prob ably to some annual plant that i3 suc culent in mid-summer. Here, appar ently, they continue breeding until autumn, when they return to apple, and the winged females may be found establisning colonies of the wingless egg-laying form upon the leaves. The males are apparently developed on the same plant that the winged fe males are. The small, oval egg3 are now laid on the twigs and bud3, and the cycl3 for the year is complete. Remedies. These lice have vari ous natural enemies that destroy them especially the lady-bird bee tles but it la often necessary to spray infested trees with kerosene emulsion, or a strong tobacco decoc tion to get rid of them. The latter may be made by soaking refuse to bacco stems in hot water, and then draining tho liquid off. The South ern Fruit Grower. About Nitrate of Soda, As you are probably aware, nitrate of soda supplies only one constituent of plant-food to the soil and that one is nitrogen or ammonia. If it is per- . sistently used on the same land it will, by stimulating increased growth cause te supply of phosphoric acid and potash in the soil to be more" j heavily drawn upon, than if only, small or moderate yields were prg- duced; hence it might be found such? circumstances that the yields on a soil thus treated would materially de cline. It might be found, too, that under such treatment, unless the store of vegetable matter of the soil were kept up, that the mechanical condition of the soil would probably, become worse, especially if the soil were fine grained, and would be . BQ7 ticed by the soil running together and tending to work hard after each rain. It is not believed, however, that nitrate of soda used properly, t and in reasonable quantities per acre' would injure land. Neither do we think it would be at all hefiessaf y&T materially increase the application per year, unless the yield be much in creased. To secure the best resujs from ttte use of , nitrate of o4t will usually be" necessary to ue wi,hk fertilizing materials containing pnos phoric acid and potash and in some cases lime. The amount and propor tion of these constituents will de pend upon the crop to be grown and the soil in which it is to be planted. The normal plant-food supply of a. soil is being kept up when as much is added to it In the fertilizer or fer tilizing material as is removed by the growing crop and by leaching. C. B. Williams, North Carolina De partment of Agriculture, Raleigh. Mixed and Unmixed Fertilizers. Farmers should now be planning for their small grain crop. Will it be better to buy mixed or unmixed' fertilizer o.' The syndicate controlling; commercial fertilizers and the prices will not sell by the car-load to farm ers. All has to be bought through agents. If the farmers should com bine in an effort to secure goods at first hands, they could do it. The one? who wants a few sacks has to buy at. retail. Let the farmer buy fourteen per cent, acid phosphate and muriate r : potash of kainit, and do his own, mixing. On a good floor, or a hard place In the lot, a hand with a shovel' can mix a ton thoroughly in two rours. 2000 pounds of acid phosphate; ' 200 pounds of muriate of potash. That will give 12.754.50. That: is a high grade. If ammonia is desired, make It this way: 200 0 pounds acid phosate; 200 pounds of muriate of potash; 1000 pounds cottsnseed meal. That would give a fertilizer an alyzing 9 3 2H. That U first class for wheat or oats, and will not cost more than $2 0 a ton. The agents would charge about $2 4. The Greenland whale often lives.. 400 jears.