Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 18, Number 48, Jasper, Dubois County, 8 December 1876 — Page 6

O.irf ul.i-n ti nfw miMiu glUU-re.1 .. . t)'..T in ll. Vi !, I l..kr. . r uiy hot.l.ter, Au i il t iu siirrrU ui? lrrl. ivcr miv lu! rulit shouMer I i.K.hV I t l mItit hrn. Aril .ii-'l ih l even, l' com lo in iur. Wh.-ii. -r th tie m.n glittertsl x .. n L-r an. I so due. 1 likf 1 .ri niT sii.nii.ler An 1 .ieJ Uii wiln.'l mine. Vw . when Ui W I r.sT . n.i i!.e i-uovo rraiti tluih liMr, At. I "V tin- win!1 . rr-iit ?ink '1v n irl nolt siiil slow, 1 rrtt r 1'H-k over niT slioul.Vr, A 1 u-e 1 K l'Xk Wire; K r in v iie.rl l oiler nt vlU', An i !i"X' 1 :U n- raore. .- .1 r.ir IS' AlUTUMEIW. ttuTf e.isVv into our s til cne 'tV A hi-o-'i.r 1 .mn. With sir 1! nrwic I u. mi l iltin .low n. i. ! i.te to re tule. Ti. tin. e to h-it Arithmetic, Th tea. !h" l : ,,S H KIT heel; Tut tie v..ur t .k n.l tAe vour Uts, Aul'.J Ific uiu whi.li 1 ill rea l." Our l-'k nt in. our '.t came out. An. I t.'ivn tin- U'.tchi-r rea l ih um; AW iricl an I tne.1 an t trip I an-ain. Hut cui tut niikr tne nirr com. An 1 tli. u tin- ! I mm sail to uWiiii .in in.- twinkling iu hiy V ho it.-t llu- nfT llr-t slmll have A .ilver c.iuljrj for .T.." Thon T- u. ny 1 1 rrlvcl torhcat, An'l. -. ' o' l.k;t:Z out h;s 1-.W, When he i-u'ih-iik'-I he w n't seeu, A ha.tv jliaie larl'lv he tK'k. At onr th anwrr Tummy flirts, n. 1 now I'Tf p.t it, nr." rrio; Tti U-a-'l.f r Hunk Toia wi.rki' I th mm. Act lei.t ti-u h ha vn t:.e irn.

lh.w l ,i km g te h l wal ht-l til trick. "tt( I'l t', my t-y." ht- Mil . "y.u n.t m To un.l r-i iii'l Arithmetic. 'B';! n w, !' f ir I r vf th vri1. I'll Ut y.u try a hurl r uic. Another V'r.il 's'lt y-u Hull l ave It you uu le. i Low trial i ! ne." An.l ll.eii. ith kir-let T.i.- an 1 luwk. He p-ntlv .! t Tommy ! ! : 41 VVh .i I it .n.r!t t.i . my la.J, To g.tm tue wori'l auJ ;ue j our oul." Trn Tommy !! liun .lown heal, The tears U )rsn t.i tl.l h. eyr, An.t all th m-hoUr wrtn lerr-l why He woul l bH take the .iiver ,ni. (myrt .atlotudiit .

service, st-Ulfd urnm h'n el:ito ia llir'r.rJshirr, where hi ila'tghtor giv up. At the ae of IS ho beautiful enough to attract the attention if all the neikburin pentry. lut with all her loveliness she Hsse.ssoil eertain train of character which neither eiluc.ition mr asiso-iation couM eradicate or niinlify. Aoeonipliihe.l and refined, she still evinced a curious love of free

dom and a stranpo passion lor ino water. No one in the eouuty could ascend the Malvern hilU as she, and often her father and his companion f .und her, when mill a mere child, worn cAit with fatigue, in the almoct. inaccessible ruins of the " lieaeon." At the H-e of -jo. formal suit was

made to her by Lieut. Cradd.vk Hampden, the sou of one of the wealthiest gentlemen in St. Albans. The match was a prosperous one, aud without impediment ; the young people were passionately attached to each other, and the parents favored the alliance. Archibald Hampden spent much of his time at Sir William llichardson's house.. He appears to have been a rather austere

by the elder Hampden hail broken loose and disappeared, in consequence, of which the gentleman was foreet to continue the hunt on foot, which he did at the head of the villagers. Atnuit half a mile down the stream was a ford; the place .was known as "St. Alban's Well." Young Hampden, who had preceded his party some distance, reached the well alone, just as the moon emerged from the cloud and lit up the scene brilliantly. No sooner had his horse crossed the little river and approached the blasted oak that overhangs the well than he was struck dumb with amazement and horror, for, lying

if lien.!, wilh the blooI no.mir

' from her white hreat and her long hair I wound about her as if to shield her, : was the daughter of Sir William and ' the woman he was to make his wife. ; For a moment he believed himself to be ; the victim of some cruel incantation, ! but the voices of the approachiug vil- ! lagers warned him. In a few moments 1 they would be upon him. With the j alacrity and courape of a true gallant, i his instinct was at once to save her from

He lit tea her up-

A lloutbshell i:xdolel iu a I'arlor.

ht ormnt-rtinl with ' exposure ami danger. He ltitea

the Hampden stock of Warwickshire, on im mrse, sinppeu umwu v. for he fi.nxrcd etensivilv in what were clothing would answer the purpose.aml known as the hop truubles" of that ! draped and guarded he led his precious year, taking sides vigorously agaiust j but unconscious burden noiselessly away the common people oFthe county and from the pursuers, himself leading a troop of gentry ! Twice the pursuing party came so against a riotous gathering of the hop- ' near them that it was only by the most pfekers. Although these troubles were aJruit maneuvering that he escaped, speedily repressed, a great deal of an- n heard them shouting his name noyance was indicted upon tho land- j through the woods, but ho passed on owners ft r a long time after in revenge, ; aiui succeeded in getting his charge and no one ever suffered more than the Safelv home and in preserving the se-

Ilampdeus. At this time, arose the I cret from the world. Shortly afteri tirst stories of the White Woman of ; WHrd they were married, and the stories I Watford.' They a ere regard- i Gf the white lady" grew, an 1, spreadcd as the lupcrstiticus legions ; ;ug, Ui Wicd th) attci.liu of i of the common people gemr- chrouiclers. ! allv, and no special sign iticaiu e w as j jn;s jn snt,5tauoc is Forse's narrative. , attached to them, until Sir William's , n,i jt jloa.scl tho worl.l to accept i barn was one night burned, and sever -' jt a j,retty sUry of somnambulism. ! al of the hoo-inekers insisted that it ! ...looted the current leireml. and

was set on tire by the White Woman ! reirolced from an old miniature the of Watford," and then it was insisted i .Kirtrait of the Lady Hampden, l or

upon by tne rwer iiauip;en mat u was

THE WHITE L11V OF WATFOKD.

Others, however, w ilh a love of mystery, made patient inquiries long after concerning the white woman, and the re-

! suits my be found in Sheldrake's LeIgendof St. Albans." Here we come j across the ghostly tradition of a beauI tiful spirit that walked the banks of the I Wve at niirht. She was seen by belat-

travelers returning inrounn ine

" l-l 11 ,Wa' he IuriKsci of art and poetry the story , -J ;;'h which I niight be properly enough left where!1" n m ,iiinpf .. " . . '. i. i. .1,. : it., until mi- te

a curious physi-

Of all the thousauds who, passin

il.r.,...). rr.-'.ih pi,"t''ti .n in the ! el

CenteT nia' Ktitt'on of pictures, have ! wood that bordered the Kichardson don.r,l t.A with somethinir like amaze-i main, but she always vanished into thin

men; in their admiration oefore I'ettie's

wonderful work that hangs Wet ween the

three Tad tuas and the portrait of sir Joshua lie nold-, how many know the storv of the picture, or ever, its history?

l ivrr h. mIv ni'ist sttto and eae at it. i eve

and. aith-jii 'b what we technically call informed by his keeper that Le had seen

air on beinrr discovered

One summer night, the older Hampden, while sitting in his library with who had iust ridden over from

Sir William's, where he had spent the 1 1

eveniri? with his intended bride, was i .

a ' nude," it is unlike any other repre

sentation of the female form and cnaraetr that is to b f und in these crowded galleries. The canvas is only 30 by 40 inches, and represents a beautiful . oirl standing upon the edge of a brook fn a dene and tangled grove. It is night, and a smH ray of moonlight falling through the tre'es touches her white face and body, and gl niries theu w ith a luster whieii, thoun purely material, instant lv "'lest in the senses that preternv.urai "shining white " spoken of ia Scrip" ure, and always associated in our min is witn the spiritual liody. You do not ask yourself why the girl is there in the shadows of the wood ur.attired, for it apears eminently proper that she hould oe there. She is indeed

a part ct th-? srene. rn one nana resting uo.jn the bole of an old oak, she leans j.'. 'ht'.y forward as if to look under the interlacing branches into the darkness and d:tance where there glimmers a f r-away light. The night airs lift the ends e'f her long tresses gently and ripple the surface of the black pod. he ia listening. Any thing more beautiful than the attitude and expression of the woman I have n -t i en conveyed in color. Every line in her body is a curve of beauty, indicati: g heahh, elasticity, vigor and grace; but tie aombinition is softened and enriched wiih an ideality that is rare. The unobtrusive innocence and chastity, the luminous poetic atmosfihere, the raytery and romance, aside rom the technical excel ence of the

work, give the picture a character and x ciiai ui al once distinctive and novel. It is a portrait of a woman who lived in the latter part of the eighteenth century, and the artist made au attempt to commemorate an actual incident in her life. The facts of that life have been gathered by that arduous antiquary, William lieckworth Forse, and it is upon the basis of his strange but intensely

interesting narrative that Mr. 1 ettie made his picture. From this narrative we learn that Sir William Kichardson lived in Herefordjhire on an ancestral estate of several hundred acres, which ran to the base of the Malvern hills, and was partly overlooked by the remains of au old Koman fortress, still to re seen, and which is known as the "Herefordshire IJeacon." Sir William lost his wife while visiting the Marquesas islands in 1791, where he had been sent as a government commissioner. The lady had but just arrived and was being brought ashore, when the boats containing her party were attacked by a large lody of naked savages who were in the water, and who had suer-emfully disarmed suspicion by pretending to exhibit their skill as swimmers. Lady Kichardson, who was pregnant at the time, was saved from violence, and the savages were repulsed, but the fright proved too great, and, after giving birth to a female child, she died. Heartbroken, Sir William returned to England, a few months later, with iiis child, and, retiring from public

a convenient muu ui'ou

people foisted their own mischief, i u.se workers have brought it. Hut

. ... 1 !

there is another an ological side to it.

Ladv Hampden died in 182S and it appears that one of her daughters inherited her peculiarities. There is in the " Warwick Kegister " of a succeeding year a curious account of an accident which befell a lady living upon the borders of Warwickshire. Her nude body was found in a neighboring grove, one morning, and the postmortem examination decided that she died of fright. This was the daughter

of Lady Hampden. In preparing the

ape-rs wnicn were xuuj-fiiui-um uo-

shed uader tne title o: me .Mgm

Side of Nature " Mrs. Crowe for some

reason rejected one which, in attempting to throw a new lrht upon " I he White Lady of Watford," brought to the surface a number of extraordinary facts'. Th'S paper, prepared by a physieian who has since become eminent in pycologio science, was afterw ard read before the British pneutu atological society, and is at present a part of their ar-

1 chives. It purports to show that the I origin of the stories of thi; White Lady ! of Watford and the cau of the death

of Lady Hampden s daughter are to be found not in apparition, nor yet in somnambulism, but in what he cails cutimania, aud he proceeds to give a number of cases 'unilar Ui that already narrated, in which an irresistible desire (amounting of'.en to disease) to fre-e the bilyfrom its conventional covering, has given n-e to the most ridiculous and unwarranted stories. He also de

clares that, while this mania ha i oftenest maifested itself in women, it is not necessarily associated with immodesty. It is an organic imnulse which is Rome way connected

with the health of the individual, ami may be transmitted through a whole generation. He says that several members of the Hampden family were well aware of Lady Hurpden's nocturnal excursions, and that they did ne t attempt to interfere with them, but merely took such precautions as prevented her exposure. This reads curiously enough, but. when the doctor declares

i-i ' .

the "White Woman of Watf ird," and that two of the ricks were burning. With his usual promptitude tue old man mounted his horse aad.ac -ompaniedby his son and the keeper, nil aruwJ, et out to punish the outlaws. They were reinforced by Mr William on the. way. There was a full moon, but it was ooscured at intervals with c louds. TL y pursued the course of the Wye, which is thickly wooded wh re it passes the Hampden and Kichardson I'arks. On reaching the valley at the foot of tho hills the keej.er, while in a lonesome

place, swore tkat hei saw the White Woman, and warned them to go rio further. The irascible old tnoper rated him soundly for being a superstitious poltroon." but no threats couid

induce him to continue the hunt. His word, a-s preserved by tradi'ion, were: " You're tightin agin heaven, and the blood will be on yourselves!" The warning only served to still further incense the Hampden, who believed neither in wraiths nor fairies,

and he swore to put a bullet into the White Woman that would test her spiritual nature if he came across her. They had not proceeded far when they heard the sound of distant singing. iJiioiounting, they crept through the copse to the stream, and then picked their way as noiselessly a.', possible along its margin. All at once one of the party uttered an exclamation and pointed through the trees: W e are bewitched," he said ; " look

you!" The moon poured Its silvery light through the vista, and they say, or

thought they saw, tne ngure oi a woman intermingling with the light as though it had been born of it. Old Hampden lifted his gun and fired. The apparition vanished, nor could thv discover any traces of it. Satisfied that it was in part an illusion, they set out to retui j. They had not proceeded far.

before the figure reappeared. This time it was at a greater distance, and was leaning apparently against a tree. They stcxid a moment dazed with its lustrous beauty; one only of the party was enable to perceive any thing, and he boldly denied its existence, and when the other described its position and whercatxMits he suddenly and defiantly discharged his heavy weapon at it. As he did &o the moon disappeared, and they were in darkness. They were, however, reinforced almost immediately by a number of the peasantry attracted by the noise of their guns. All the gentlemen were now in favor of abandoning what they be lieved a wildgoose chase. Not so Hampden; he alone insisted upon clearing up what he declared had been too long a mystery and a nuisance to the country. Form-

in" the men into two parties, which

The lavenport (Iowa) (lazettc, of the lnth inst., gives a long accounted the attempted assassination tf a well known citizen by thu exphmion of a bombshell in his "house after he hud retired for the night. Tho outrage created great excitement, but, fortunately, no out) was seriously injured. The intended ictim was William H. Trice, son of the lion. Hiram Trice, both of Davenport. They lived in a large double brick house. Thu north

window of the back parlor is oi wine j bay form, four sashes in width, two j sashes high, each sash having a single i pane of plate glass. In the parlor the previous evening. Mr. nnd Mrs. Trice, i an.l Mis Louisa DulJoss, a young lady from New Orleans, who is visiting Mrs. Trice, sat conversing until after eleven o'clock. The curtains of the bay-win

dow were raised all this time, and any person could have had full view of the parlor ami its occupants from the house

yard, or the enclosure of the First Methodist Church adjoining on the north. If the villain who perpetrated the crime mentioned below intended to harm the family his best opportunity was when they were thus seated about their htiarth enjoying social converse. If Mr. William Trice was the object of the deed a better rh-inoo to !av him occHrrcd wkicn, af-

Iterthe ladies had gone up stairs, he

ldt.oii.l to the bay window, with the

j room all lighted behind him, and latchI ed each of the window fastening. So 1 at that time, ten minutes past eleven ! o'clock, noOodv was1 lurking about the house with William Trice as an obje ct j of vengeance. I'uring the evening, l however, tho nerVHMt it'H tuld Mis. j Trice she el id not like the actions of a 'man she saw standing at tho rear of ! the church and engaged in watching ! their house. Mrs. Tru-c said it was , pray er-meeting night, and the girl responded that a man who looked and acted as that man did didn't go to

prayer-meetings. Utit .Airs. 1 rice

more oi tne conversation

terrible occurre nce, hours af

ter, recalled it. 1 he rotu uirecwy over the rear parlor had been occupied by Hon. lliraru Trice and wife since September, when they vacated their former residence for "its new owner. Now, fortunately, they were in St. Ixmis, though whether the villains who attempted the destruction of the household knew it or not is a question which excites the pe'opie of this city. After the family had retired a startling crash was heard in the room be-

low. Mr. Trice arose and starteu i w n stairs, when a terrible explosion followed. The neighbor- rushed out of their houses, and the e-ry of tire was im-erd. The front riKiiu burst into

fl imes, but they were s.n extinguishI ed, and on searching the fragments of j a six-pound shell were fuiind. It bad (rolled under a sofa after crashing through the bay window, and it whs j this sofa that prevented the pieces from crashing through the ceiling andkillir.g the occupants of the chamber almve. I A two-minuts fuse had been u-e l, which gave the assassin time to ooape I before the explosion. A reward of ,- 'iio hn4 U't-n offered for the arrest of

the offender.

A king Ytlio Has Nocr lb a ('run in d.

Though there have 1 een no new ac-

1 cessions recently to European thrones, I excepting in Turkey, theie is likely to ! bo a coroniitiein on the Continent else

where than Constautiiu pie. Though the King of Pemuark, Oiri-tian I X., has Imcii on the throne thirteen years he has never been clowned, the troubles prevailing between (lerinuny uud Henmark in lNid making the tunes inauspicious for a cosily ceremony. The country has prospered Mice tuid thu cost can bo better borne in;v, There is withal a feeling i f political discontent, which the King In p- to allay bybeing formally in v sti d w iili t he rank ho has worn so long. is at the present time .'' years old A curious fa -t in rcard to the li.iu'-li Kings is

' that they must be knon by the name j of Frederick or that of Cliri-ii.m, nnd a Trince acceding to the thn.r. , no mat- ' ter what his baptismal name might be, I would be obliged to take one ot these J names. Christian's predecessor was : Frederick VII. Ht'n J.:nrn-d.

M.f.

Comlorl lor I!'ih'.,j

Tli:' ine. .in; arat'lo aiiti- ' r.tnni'Mt ir uii'l nei'it

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iiu'vIkIiic of

Sneezing Catarrh, Chronic Catarrh, Ulcerative Catarrh, permanently cured by SAWFORD'S RADICAL CURE. tUorr'n rvMPAt Cr rr ( inrrn l K

C'rli.ii.t.'l t'. rii.auruic ir.1 i"r . i 1 ! u.c i ..-t i.rf" t t 'in i'r or. in-lv Xrv-cUtlo Own'.' ' ' a'1'."

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Improved Ymtilatinff Arrangemeiil. The plan has recently been introduced, of securing ventil'ation by placing a strip of board three incle s wide.

and as long as trie lower w nuiow-uar, under the lower hash, thus leaving an opening between the top of the lower ewh and the bottom of the upper sash, through which fresh air may enter.

j A modification l this method has, I however, been proposed, Lrielly as foi-

1 ws : Take two pieces of board a uuarter-

inch thick, one inch wide, and as long

as the lower bar ot tne win. low; wine narrow pieces half an inch thick and one and a half long, one end being tut with the bevel of the window-stool. Nail these pieces -across one of the long slats, one at each end and one in the middle, placing the short side of efi:-h piece even with the lower edge of the slat; nail the other on the opposite-

side of these short pieces, bringing tne

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CHEERFULLY

that she could not have lived if she had i UpM.r Pdge of the slat even witli the not been allowed to take this bath of .n,l ,,f the short pieces This

" . . . : . I I I" . .

frw.l.im. or astonishment is soliened

into pitv for the eccentric invalid. How "far the misadventure with the avages iu the ManpJesa- may have influenced the progeny of the lUmpden can safely be left, to Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes to determine in fiction. yew York World.

The Rlark Hills Miner. Where can the miner of olden times have gone? I see no Star bottles nor John Oakhursts here. The miner of to

day is a bitter disappointment to Hret Harte'a readers. Common matter-of-fact fellows; 1 prievo to say that even buckskin shirts, long hair and bowieknives are falling into disuse. One sees no eight-foot neck-chains nestling against coarse wiollen shirts, no threeounce nugget breast-pins, no betting of ovster-cans of trold on the sex of a horse

three blocks oil. It is true the miner of to-day loves whisky and cards and women; but, as compared with the fortyniner of California, or the fifty-niner of

Colorado, he is a hollow mockery and a

He is cloie and calculating, re-

will make a compound bar with half an inch higher than the other when the whole is turned upon its edge. No,

place the whole under the lower window-sash, with the higher slat on the outside. The air c in then pass under the outer slat, between th? two slatu, and enter the room over the t p of the inside slat, having an upward motion, which will cause it to mingle rapidly with the warm air of the room ami thus prevent any sensible draught. liy thus raising a lower sash, a space is left between the top of the lower sash and the bottom of the upjHT one, through which another thin layer of air mav enter tho room at some dis-

EVERYBODY

REC0MMEI.D3

COLLINS' VOLTAIC JPLfiSTERS, n'HT.V c-.r,U!n tt. jrrr..t rinaliv fl. : '-.t. Fl -I HI' ITT.ci;; t !:. J ,' !i t . f ' t 1 ;. I I l-ic li :nal .ii;. rvr u:..t. t" .. -i. Il i.'r'f. it i'ait l:ii." ' f r tt.i m to f.'.ln iIji ; j-rcia;.! Tell, f fr '.l j. i.i. a:iJ i''t.

H THE BEST PLASTER."

tr 1 o i r uci

Mfrnrt. W"lt .f U'r, f.mUf

tnc-:i'iii''V"irO'1 ri . -ttu ill. 1 t i.t ic Itirv I -B UH 1

I A: kK.l LL 13. MiLF..P. T'fL.. July 1. W "AH EXCELLENT FLASTEFl," . rr. H'.vJ, . Il-IIT, ',,f'ii". - II. 1" trvt r r n.ilh'r 1 ..I I .! '.i rio 'i iiikb. I r.r.l On in l t.. I rn ll.-i.t l '-'r, t'l" l"-l r t I I. ' rt. I ii"l. 1 i.i mrrjf t'il t.ie Uru.;.f t I r d i ' I t'4 t,Tn. M. .-Nil'l.U iioDWAT,0.. July, WX. f 0I.I HT ALL Pf.l'OOIsTS. Trir. rnl. Srt br m'l, orrM'f wn-'-.M. rriu ! V. :. f r f .r . r ! J l"t w-l,ty VU-k-H ii J"Utli.i,l'ojioe'. "'u THE "FARM" COLUMN. t rnal ttul rnl l wnd iir t-

trrs ti rrd to llii-r h.i erllxr 111 I 111- rclnmn. Ilh rMiirl for f urlbrr lnlwraiallna rnr ruln t0 lrorlr idfriU4. FARMS FOR 'SALE.

4 VM.IKTY OK

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the window. The air niut also enier with an upward current, causing it to speedily mix with the hot air in the upper portion of the room. This arrangement, if properly constructed and put in position, will prevent any and all sensible currents in the b dy of a room, except when strong winds prevail.

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fraud.

.?- irr.m nniuwiin uo nf I fuses to be sw indled, and, as a rule, ex

the stream a half-mile lower dow n, they I pect his money's worth when out for a set out once more. Another incident, lark. hlick Hills UUtr.

however, molified the leader's plan.

and added to the elisinclination

of the men to go on. When they returned to their horses tt was found that the animal which had buen ridden

The Kpiscopal Hishop of Albany is nnsati-fii d with the kind of music now fashionable in the church, lie calls it a wretched degradation of church music," intended to draw a multitude of listeners who come to have ther "rs tickled bv the same kind of music they

i . . . .

A trno,l manv irritable men have are accustomed to in the opera ami con-

been looking round after the individual ! cert hulls. His remedy is precentors, who asserted that "figures won't lie." ' when they can be obtained.

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FARMS

II

WANTED.

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