VOLUME XX. CAPE OF Cabo Tormentoso the tailors called it first, And Stormy Cap all mariners shall find it evermore. The passion of the hnrrlcane. on Its Iron rocks Is nursed, Veering winds of huge desire that thwart the plunging bark, Tale witch-Ores glisten on the -ware and beacon from the shore, And shipwrecked rolces bid beware of gramarye accurst. Cape of Good Hope ! We seek It far across the waters dark. But Cabo Tormentoso the sailors named it first. She never' meant to do wrong. She was always modest, unassuming and ladylike. She never flirted In her life. She was too much of a woman, and was shocked at the thought of coquet ry, or flirtation of any kind. Every one knew her to be upright, honest and pure. Everyone, even to Vane Stanley, who for a whole year ad mired her In secret and afar off, be cause he could never approach her or have a moment alone with her, for Madam Clarence and her two unmar ried daughters were always on the qui vive to hear what Mr. Stanley had to say to their pretty cousin, who had neither money nor home, and nothing In the world but her virtue, and beauty, and her accomplishments. !: Mr. Stanley was fully aware ot all these facts, and admired while he ecretly feared her. Women as clever as Lucy Dean did not often marry commonplace men, but he meant to marry her, and he meant o make Miss Dean love him, too. But it was uphill wort, with madam and her two (laughters forever watching, and Mr. Staniey was put to his wits' end for a remedy. " It struck him one evening, while paying them his accustomed visit, that he would employ the language of the handkerchief, knowing full well that Lucv would not notice it even If she understood it, but as constant drop ping will wear away a stone, bo he hop J I to wear away her prejudices. T "ygan that very evening by telling the aid of the handkerchief : loved her, but Miss Dean never on for two weeks, Mr. aklng frantic efforts to se- ttentlon, and Miss Dean re- subllme Indifference, until, ration, al Her Handkercbief Flirtation, Ey ERMINIE C. STRAY. jjf Uth hirn. Vent V GOOD HOPE. By tills wild cape the mariners go to their , . "P'cerle, ... Weather-wasted marine with drcamlnc, - . . 'amln Behind thein toss the sullen leagues of monster-haunted sea ; Before them, oh, before them lift the breathing groves of mace, Xard and clove and cinnamon, where fra grance never dies. Where ember balsam drips from the flame- ' shaped Incense tree. Cape of Good Hope! Year In, year out, the reckless gallor race Throw scorn upon your tempests for a waft of splcerle. Kot ft Clitic Lee Bah$ in TTh Centum. chief over her shoulder, which signi fied: "Follow me," and going out Into the rase garden, she waited with downcast eyes and blushing cheeks. Would he follow her? Did he really want to speak to her, or did he do It to see if she would reply, and was he even low laughing in his sleeve to think what a fool she was? She turned suddenly, determined to flee to her own room, and never see htm again. But Mr. Stanley frustrated that plan by suddenly coming forward, and taking both of her hands, said: "You have pitied me at last, lacy," "What did you want?" she asked abruptly. ''Come with me, and I will tell you," and he drew her arm within his, just as Madam Clarence came up to them, her eyes literally snapping fire, but her face wreathed in smiles, as she said: "Don't you think this is a lovely specimen of the climbing white rose, Mr. Stanley?" "Yes, It is very beautiful," he sild, quietly, determined for once not to be thwarted. He continued: , "Come, I Lucy, I believe you promised to walk with me. f She shrank and started back. She knew full well what Madam Clarence would any when she returned, and she dreaded the terrible Ire of that lady. But Vane Stanley was determined, and drew her on, not at all prepared to bo followed by Madam Clarence, who took Lucy's other arm, saying: "If It will be no intrusion, I would like to go along, too, for I dearly love to walk." ... .. We need not say that that walk was necessarily short, and that they cam back to the parlor again anything but satisfied. But the minds of two, at Ipa ..were maiKun. and from that f flirtation pro-' :he franklin press, unseen, began mechanically using her handkerchief In various signs. She was not alone, however, for Laura and Lily came in Immediately, followed by Mr. Stanley and several other friends, who soon went out upon the croquet lawn, bearing Lucy with them. The game was at Its height, Miss Dean, almost unconsciously, dropped her handkerchief, Mr. Stan ley picked it up and handed it to her, whispering: "Will you be nothing but a friend?" She did not reply, but watching him furtively saw his sign of "I love you" again. This time she did not throw him off adroitly, but answered with the same, turning to carnation red as she did so. Two minutes later he was by her side again, upon pretense of sending her ball through an arch, but really to say: "lell me the truth, once and forever, Lucy; do you love me or hate me?" "I do not hate you." "Then you love me, and you will be my wife?" "Yes." The game was up; the handkerchief flirtation ended, and two hearts were made happy at last, much to the dis gust of Madam Clarence and her daughters. New York Weekly. 8WISS ELECTRIC ROADS. Cheap Power Derived from Alpine Streams, Displaces Coal. Owing to the Increase in the price of coal during the last few years, Mr. Thormann, a prominent Swiss en gineer, wished to find out whether It would be an advantaje to use electri cal energy, furnished by hydraulic plants, over the whole of the rail road system of Switzerland. - After investigating the subject he published a report which has awakened consid erable Interest and will no doubt bring about some practical results In this direction. He finds that the substitu tion of electricity for steam on the railroads -is quite practicable and has many advantages, although it will not bring about any considerable reduc tion In the cost of operating the roads. The five main railroads In Switzer land require over iu.OOO horsepower daily. In order to organize a com plete electrical service it will be ne cessary to obtain about 60,000 horse power in the shape of alternating cur rent of high tension, not counting the reserve supply, which Is indlspensa- ble. Not taking into account the con siderable number Of Tails whlctrare not utilized in the country, th. Int already 21 large hydr. which can give a total of r power. These include Slel, near Llnsiedl, whlrf city of 20,000 horsepor mbur Dlnnt. on the 5il2p,000 horsepower! is eacn ouw lid urates -2t play FRANKLIN. N. C WEDNESDAY. JANUARY 25, A LIFE-SAVING MUSEUM NEED OF MORE DEVICES FOR RE DUCING INDUSTRIAL DEATH RATE. More Worklngmen Are Killed While Cn Duty In the United States Than Is the Case In Any Other Large Manufacturing Nation, The effort made to establish in New York a museum of 6afety has attract ed the widespread attention of manu facturers, who are interested In the present high Industrial death rate that prevails in this country through caus es which cduld be largely removed by the adoption of precautionary meth ods, writes George E. Walsh, in the Scientific American. We are the fore most nation of the earth In the Inven tion of safety devices and appliances; but our Industrial death rate Is the highest of all the large manufacturing nations. Either we are careless of the individual life of workmen, or through ignorance or Willfulness we do not take the medicine prescribed by ourselves. Our safety appliances are used In manufacturing plants in all parts of the world, but often their use is neglected right at home. Many of the thousands of devices intended to protect workmen from Injuries in various dangerous employments are merely of local use, and they are of no general advantage to the Industri al world. A more general knowledge of the use and value of safety appli ances should result in safeguarding human life In all departments of work, A museum of safety would form a nucleus for working plans and models ot all devices Intended to protect workmen from their own carelessness or from conditions over which thew have no control. Both manufacturers and employes would have object les sons presented to them In such a col lection of inventions, and there would be few trades or industries that could not draw some valuable results from the exhibition. In Germany manufacturers have un ited In a movement to lower the In dustrial death rate, while in Holland there has been for some time a mus eum of safety, which has demonstrat ed the value of educating the publlo in the, use of safety appliances, An other such museum is located at Mil an; but the Amsterdam institution has furnished more data for the gen eral public Uhan the smaller one In southern Europe, Every effort Is 1anf mhi r 'e working models of rag for exhibition jjHim, and one v-jindreds of ndre the In gres safety appliances already invented and In use In a limited way. Thousands of these are neglected In mills, fac tories, and mines on account of lack of forethought or Ignorance. Owners of plants do not always -ave the time to study the hundreds of devices In vented for this purpose, and they are not sure that, they would do all thai is claimed for them. MAN WHO NEVER KICKED. Ha Draws a Distinction for the Benefit of the Dissatisfied Looking Person. "What's the nse of complaining about things?" asked the comfortable' looking man. "What's the use of mak ing life a burden to every one around you with incessant kicking? Does it ever do any good? No sir." "I don't know about that," disput ed the dissatisfied-looking person. "If we didn't make an occasional protest when things go wrong I'd like to know how we are ever going to get any re forms?" "Fussing never does any good," maintained the comfortable-looking man. "If you want to see anybody universally detested take a look at the chronic kicker. I tell you, my friend, amiability counts. It counts at home, In business and In all affairs of life." "It's the kickor who brings around improved conditions of things for the rest of us," said the dissatisfied-looking person. "His motive may be sel fish, but we benefit by it nevertheless. Then we show our gratitude by abus ing him. What do you do yourself if you go Into a restaurant and the wait er is inattentive and your food Is bad ly cooked? Do you complain to the manager or do you not?" "I am glad you asked that ques tlcu," said the comfortable-lookllng man. "That happened to me not a woek ago. I waited nearly ten min utes before the waiter took my order, 20 minutes before my dinner was brought to me and then It was cold and the beef I ordered well done was rare. Did I kick? No, sir, I got up from the table and presented my card at the cashier's desk. I said pleas antly, i, of course, decline to pay for uneatable food, which Is the sort that has been served to me. If you wish to recover by process of law, there Is my name and address. If you prefer to call the police I shall go to the sta tion without resistance. In any .case I shall, not patronize the place again, nor shall I recommend my friends to do so. "The proprietor had been attracted to the spot by the sound of my voice, which I made perfectly audible, He asked me what I had to complain of. I replltd that I never complained. Al- o I advised him to sra the waiter to see that those remaining per- their duties properly. Then 43e didn't call the police, and tltuted suit against me." 1905. A SEliMON FOR SUNDAY AN ELOQUENT DISCOURSE ENTITLED, "THE TRAGEDY OF A QUEEN." the He v. F. F. Shannon Draws a Tlmelj Lesson From the Storj of Vanhtl There Aro Few IN nor Exhibition) o Sacrifice In the History of Womanhood Biiookia.,-, N. Y. For his Sunday morning sermon, in Urnee M. E. Church, the pastor, the ltev. Frederick F. Shan non, had for his theme "The Tragedy of a Queen." The text was from Esther i:ll-l2: "Bring Vashti the o.ueen before the king with the crown royal, to show the people and the princes her beauty: for she wjs fair to look on. But the Queen Vashti refused to come at t'.ie king's command ment by his chamberlains." Mr, Shannon said: The Ahasuerus of the book of Esther is the Xerxes of profane, history. By com mon consent ot historians he was one of the most powerful monarch that ever lived. The pastes of Herodotus are filled with his exploits, and lrote and Hoilin, also, dwell upon his power and achieve ments in an interesting manner. But his tawdry greatness is worth while only as it serves to set forth the heroism of Vashti. Already the centuries have tarnished the brilliance of his court, but not the beauty of liis queen. Shuslian. the palace, exists only in name. Ths hundred and four score days d urine which he showed the riches of his glorious kingdom and the honor of his excellent majesty are less than a shadow on the dial. The white, green and blue hangings, .tied with cords of purple and tine linen to silver rings in pillars of marble perished long ago. The gold and silver beds, w.iieh sat upon a pavement of red and blue and white and black marble, have had no occupants for more than 2400 yean. The golden vessels, from which princes quaffed the royal wine, are all one with the golden sand grains of the desert. Time is n respecter of per sons. If it buries the common things in "oblivion, that shadow of darkness." it does not forget to pluck the spangles from the robes of kings, tossing them into the night also. But time cannot dull the beau ty of a great soul. Time cannot quench the flame of a white life. Time cannot stain the snow of a pura heart. And that is why Queen Vashti and the iragedy of her life forever hold our admiration and our tears. Perhaps we shall be more capable of measuring the unfortunate queen by glanc ing at the inoiicvch she opposed. Ahasue rus possessed the almost unlimited power of an Oriental despot. His will was su preme in everything. Wo find him here giving a feast to his lords and princes. Having conceived the idea of making war on Greece, this feast to bis subjects is a step looking to that end. Whatever he undertook usually came to pass. He could dig a canal through the Isthmus of Mount Athos. Ho could build a bridge of ships across .the Hellespont. He could seourgo the sea for its temptstuousncss. He coti.d bedeck the branches of a tree with jewelry as a reward for its fniitmlncss, He could raie an army of more than 2,230,000 men. He could even shed tears when he re flected that in less than a century not one of these men would survive. But we have in our text one thing this monarch could not do, He could not connel a helpless woman to permit him and hit drunken courtiers to make a toy of her beauty. Ho could not drag a hign-toulcd queen dowc. from the pedestal of her stainless puritvl Consider, in the first place, that tho life Itoey of Vashti recalls till fact that palaces have furnished tho actors in tome of the darkest, deepest trngedios in history. When Shakspearo wanted material from which to create his immortal dramas, with Ittferrmg Vision the ) .ghty master began br orobe thi life history of kings and rather than be led a captive princess up the Capitoline Hill," she died by her own hand. Lacking moral sense, she wore a face of brass to the end of the tragedy. Unlike the swcot-souled Vashti, Cleopatrn had no veil of modesty for her face, and he asked none for her soul. Darker than Egyptian night, the has left a dark stain Upon the brow of universal womanhood! Whiter than the whiteness of the daw Vashti, 1'ks Shelley's heroine, "clothed in virtue's adamantine eloquence, paves her path with human hearts!" " Consider, also, that In studying the trag edy of Vashti, wa have to reckon with her beauty, "for ehe was fair to look on." When some genius equal to the task of writing a history of beauty appears, men and women will find a perpetual charm in it w'o'-'ng pa?es. It will contain a page of joy, a page of sorrow, a page of peace, a page of war, a page of love, a page of hate, a page of poetry and a page of art. But it Will contain many pages developing this) thought the tragedy of beauty. But along with her beauty, Vashti pos sessed that other quality which lends beauty an enduring freshness and charm modesty. Vashti owes her place in history not so much to her beauty as to her mod esty. If beauty made her a queen, modes ty made her a woman, which is far better. As queen, Xerxes could banish her; as Woman, he was defied by her. As queen, be could and did dethrone; as woman, she sits upon a throne that has hearts for its cushions and centuries for its pillars. The Dubarrys, thj Pompadours, the Mon tespans have their day and cease to he; but the Vashtis (o on forever. The Cly temnestres, the Astasias, the Clcopatras are meteors flashing through the darkness of eternal night; the Vashtis are golden suns burning though womanhood's end less day! Indeed, modesty is so inherent an ele ment in the great e scntiala making genu ine beauty that without modesty beauty is impossible. Wc are indebted to no hu man law for this truth God has woven it into the fabri? of our natures. Art critics tell us that the eighteenth century was pre-eminently Hie century of women. Then, we are told: "Her grace possessed the most prestige, hor conuetry the most disquieting elegance and her beauty the most triumphant authority' It was the age in which Mine, dn Pomnodour reigned in the court of Louis XV. The brushes of Latour i.nd Boucher have pleaded wi h all the eloquence of their genius and art to deify this daring woman. She appointed ministers, she edlcd those who incurred her 111 will, she crutenccd to the Bastile those who ran counter to her imperious wish. She was t!v patroness of philoso phy, art and an. Thw.wh her magic wand Versailles was touched into it dream of splendor, which has not yet vanished. Her collection of pictures, crysta's, cam eos, antiques and gems was unparalleled in the kingdom. She squandered fortunes on her palaces, fetea end ball; and then other fortunes on her tcilet. For twenty years this butcher's daughter held her im perial sway, which was broken on;y by death. But whei the historian tells ns that it was the dream of her girlhood to (educo the king; that her shameless prodi pality makes the cheek of decency burn; that modesty found no hospitality among her sensual charms, we nwy well repeat the question of another, "Was La Pom padour beautiful, or merely pretty?" In stinctively drawing back as we would in the presence of a snake, wo answer, "She Was neither. She was a royal harlot, pa raded in gilded a'lamc. lacking most of all that jewel of modesty which sparkles in the crown of true beauty." Alas for that land whose women forsake their veils of jnodesty to show the people and princes their beauty! . - . , . ., Consider, Anally, the prbe Vashti paid for her modesty. For her refusal to come at the king's command ,waa the immediate cause of her. dethronement. Surely there aro few finer exhibition ot sacrifice in me history of women Kcnj-wp invii to reaa4- MjMBEU 4 WEALTH, THE MAGICIAN. Old Pter Erlggs. of Booglestown, lie had tli queerest gal Tou'd ever strike fer miles aroun'. Met- ramp was "Itrdhead Sal" At i.ust. the iirople called her so fch" l'a.'. r. nic.'chin' air, An' oi ?.vin! :rk,' where'er she'd go 1 Was lliat otillaiulish hair. Old Peley 1'ns ldt oil since then, ' lie owns of hanks a tew: I'm told on naimtmlu' hark again To spend a day or two ; An' nult n ehnnire In Ssl I find; Her manner now Is 'quaint" Her miir is iiH'tiuoiK'd as the kind That "Titian !'ived to iialut." Lu:.irUle Courier Journal JUST FOR FUN Juggs You ain't the only man that gets frightened at his own shadow.- (jnicago journal. Jlggs Every time I go along this road at night I am startled by the ap parition of a jackass. First Mountaineer (to Second Moun taineer, in Switzerland) What a love ly country Holland is. Punch. He (fervently) I would go through anything for you. Sho (sweetly) Well er let's begin on your bank aci count. Puck. "My sister sings Tl Trovatore' In five sharps." "Mine sang it In six flats, but they made her move out of every one of them." Judge. Mrs. Dearborn Did you say that lady and gentleman were distantly re lated? Mrs. Wabash Yes, they're divorced. Yonkers Statesman. In Utah. Client Can you reveal to me the likeness of the woman I am going to marry? Medium can give you a composite photograph. Life. "What did yofr property In Swamp- uuisi vuai juui a uuiuun m foot." "What'll you sell Toff """Oh," I'll let It go for J2 a gallon." Phil adelphia Press. , rM 1-.,.. nM..' gn rD tnava her card? The New Maid Yes 'm, she let' it, an' I had to chase her two blocks to give It back to her. Phila delphia Inquirer. Hoax Joblots has gone into the cioming uusuiess. joax -no uur 'ii. do well. There's money in clothes. Hoax There's never any in mine. Philadelphia Record. - "Hans, how long have you been mar ried?" "Veil, dis is a ting that 1 sel dom don't like to talk about, but ven I does, It seems so long as it never was.'' Chicago Tribune. "Strange," murmured the man, "that I have no appetite for breakfast Hese I've only eaten an ordinary meal. And me to be hung this morning, too." Louisville Courier-Journal. ' - " riun II1KU lHU,!llt.yi HUH UH-i, ot Xeleailla, gift of long; Our fi and shame, from their rarv 'ipcstry tri. In- Shielding his shamelf." the 7 r r