Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 18, Number 49, Jasper, Dubois County, 15 December 1876 — Page 6
If I h'l told ln-r in tin' 'r,ltf 1 hr ill , ll Hit y , In u i ? , W.n inrt mul ti'liu t tian I iti, Abii liir u; of r, vliii By I Itat bjut tailrr wnrlc. rl ttir tory twert, I triM it, i!l kn ' it n uyh U'C Tll 1 1 Ti'V 11 ' rein, kl l (i'uIiI U l.t-ul, AiU ttie tin iu l.ui ie fur sruu nig. II ml 1 t? u tld the tultf in Jim, w t i n ti t wit ii ur ijh ttf rti tiUo iug, lDWitl oi it iLkii K it isilu ruo n ix, AtU il.i t! ti.l ttlur tin' uiuwing ! thr I ail 1 Inula il, nut umlrr the , Tlikt 1 Im lory ci lii I tnrn if , I.iiiktru it U ul up ilu- l arlurr lr, tr iu t to uv ttio Uriintl
Knw the I wn i full, ami o ia ttic bin, I '.tit I vi' :n n w in- nlu'iit plory . Sirtr U i il i" rrt ii.-l fnohrrol in t-r n.y rrijihlior U-IJ lur tlit ury ! iap r'$ 7.'tuir.
A M OKY OF TIIK IJiVWLlTIO.N. IIM t.rurial Mutton .ol Ills Itiflra. The t luce of the tear 170 was a tad
period for America. The British held the ccui.try from Charlotcn to the upper Sai tt e, and iu order to complete their conquest had establish? d a chain of posts throughout the State, each of which was strongly fortintd and defended by a good garrison. Organized resistance to the Uritish there w a none. On the American side tko principal actors in the struggle were tho men who composed the innu'ti liglit brigade" of (tvr.eral Mirii n. The favorite reudezvou i f Mat ion was at Suow Island. This ii st pitve of high river swamp, ad j
u u fuiifii in trie L:ioiina., and was surrounded on three sides by water, so as to be aimest impregnable. Here ilariou L u I his camp, r'roru this f ;tt-
ness he lulled range the t luiny
asuagL'iii party of las troop, te-
cure iu Li retreat, he Lad no feur of pursuit. ln the City of Charleston the desprtlaiu of tLe I5i;ti?h was at its height; the
tousiy
" l or heaven's sake, Charles, what is the meaning of this?"
lte younir man did not answer ver- n
proud-spiiited people of that capital
were lield down ly it gnading tyranny, ilany of theui were mil open and urcom promising iu r;cir hostility to the English, while others, thinking tlisy coud b-t 'erve the cause in that way, affected a hearty submission to the conquerors, and were teen.ingly the most Uyl to ad King (itorge's subjects. Yet, wfcile the Knglish baw this anel congratulated themsehes upon the good effect it would have on the ColouiMs, these very "lo)alists" kept the AtLerican ronjuhMder constantly itformedof adl that passed within the British lines, and many a disaster of th Krglish was iu this wiy tiirettly attributed to them. One of U v-e persons was a lady of fine social o?iti.n and great weuith. Indeed, theie weie few perstns in all Charlestui ovi r whose submission lo
the crtwn the British were inure elated 1 the Lieutenant fnund than they w re over that of Alr. Anne mr nts, ai;d the lady
tardtu. Le was a yourg and beauti
IUl WKlOW,
Oli," replied th. lady, laughing, he is my cousin, Kictitt unnt Thoiiia-t Wilson, and, as you will perceive, is in His Majesty's service." " You ?ct in rather careless of your dress, considering tho occasion, ir," said the Colonel tartlv. lie w.-is unm.v.
ed at the great interest which the lady I
nail snow ed tl;e new -comer. My business must be my excuse, Colonel," said the young man, respectfully. I am the bearer ef a letter iroui MajorGsincy, and my orders aretolowe no time in delivering it. I have ridden hard all day, sir, and, upon reaching
your headquarters, learned of your
presence here. This lady being my
cousin, I hail no hesitation in connvg here at once, trusting for pardou to the urgency of my mission. " As ho spoke he handed to the Colonel a sealed letter. Watson took it hxstily and treke the seal. As ho read it a smile of satisfaction overspread hisfea- j tures. ' " This is very good," he said, glee-1 lullv. ' (Jainev is picking up locruitsl
by the hundreds. Wants 4) ritles, ,r0 J sabers and some ammunition at once, i
Will I send them? To be sure, I will. Have you wagons, Lieutenant?" "Nt, sir," replied the young man. " MajorCaincy was afraid to send them dowu. There's no knowing when or where one may meet that .swamp Fox and his sneaking cutthroats."
"Verygood'said tie Colonel. "I'll j furuL-h ou with fnur wagons, and a 1 guard of tifty mounted men. Ytu will start at suhum in the iiiorning. Lieu- j ten int. Call at my misrters at mid-1
n glit, and you shall have the necessary I tube public, oni.-r-. 'vv, si:, you had be tier l.tke j '"V!1
rest, a.s you wnl need it.
44 First let nieotlVr him some refresh-
" foi.l i ),.. . ;.i..,., i I.- n .
in:
nt
guest must leave my house in such a
state."
"lit turn ejuiikly, then," said the Colonel. 1 shall be mi-erable w hile jou are gone."
I he voting man offered his arm
MKini:K'S MONTHLY.
I shiHiter, and vL-itori f any kind who
I t ailed upn her were comp iid tu lllutralr4 .f. !.. fly for their lives. Oa p!eaant dn
the walked on the roof of the he.--with a btxl juilt drawn around her fehoulden, and intently reading a look. hhe bought the tn-.t cl.y btMiks, and w ith a ImmA firm here m vie tne bill tf her seltx-ti-iu inc!i:J.ng such works as The M.k&do's F.ujpire," 4Sdnfrev' Hittrv cf Napleon," 44 Schiller' Thirty Vew' War," and others. The proprietor of tLe house, having read art account ia the New York newspaj-r of tLe ant t of a woman there n.tuied Abigail HusU-r,
hj e-orrespon led in Jcn nption with i hi tenant, yesterday entered the pv ! and found that be had Tte I walls were perforated with oui 'rt-L.-s ! in the te little ronii where she hid
lustra! Shraaa laical i: rcrt.
form at pleasure to j nunts," said the w idow quickly
s vrranaries or cantu'-e ; is tir-l an.l hnn.rrv I tn.w
my house in
In I urlvalrd
Win n ibnrr ism d its famout Hid-
mimuier Holiday NuinUr in July, a friendly critic tid of it: " We are nt sure but that Smbntr has touched hirhw.ttcr nmrk. We do not aee what worlds
i aie It-It t it U comnu-r. lJut the nuh.
lih rs do not coiiM.lcr that tbry have i reiichrd the ultinm th tlt of excellcrce I Uiey U-lieve "there are other worlds to conquer, and they projutae to conquer
uieiu. Tlie prospectus fir the new Vdluma
! ghe- the titles of more than fifty papers (iiu.t! v illutrtcd). I'y writers of the hi'liet nu rit. I'nder the head of
vouy ion Titevr i.," we have "A int r on the Nile," by Gen. JlcCbllan; "Sauntering AUmt Constantinople," by Charles Dudley Warner; "Out of My Window at Moscow." bv Eune SlaiUir; "An Auu-rican in Turk i.-tan." etc. Tliree serial stories are aniii ninced : "MCUOLAS MINTMUr." BT DR. UOLI.AM, THE r.KITOR, w!ioe stry of 44 Seveuoaks ' (ra?e the hi,-li".t satisfaction to the readers of the Monthly. The scene of this latest novel is laid oa the banks of the Hudson. The hero is a yiun man w ho has lx-en alw.nys " titd U a tr, tfin'i upron ntn'ngt," but ho. ly UiS death of his mother, is left alone in the world. to drift on the current of life, with a fximio, but without a purpose. Another serial. "His Inheritance," by Mi-s Trafum, will b-rin cn the completion of That I.as o' Lowrie's," bv Mrs. HiKk'xin Huniett. Mrs. Burnett's " storr.
bcruu in August, has a pathos and dr'a-! malic iNiwer which have been a surmise1
i W .r. ui It. 12, .a ti t ...
i r.5.n. a ii :.xt: .;jm... Ni)tilnpVil, a, iv . ..j .,, u I 4 m l , i:ab r I. hi r-r.,..
I. ,
a wiies t original and 1
exquisitely illustrated paper of 'lViuiku I
Ku-nee," bv Mr. Ilrrriik. each i.ai.er
Conijdi te in itM If. 'I lure aio to be, from various pens, ' bakers n 44 nOMK I.ITK ANI TRATF-t." ! Also, practical sucirestiuns as lo town and i n Uiitry life, Tillage improvcuunts, !., by wcli known specialists. 1 Mr. ll.-.rnard's articles on various indus
tries of Oreat BriUin include the hist
lived, the bed clethirg wis tu:L,b'.ed aliout, empty demijohus anl t.::lrs were scattered atut the pi act-. letters from the Manhattan Savings BitA, . of New York, were foUDd, recognize ng her lraft for large amount., and re- , eeiptcd bills for diamonds, Lvrt-s, cc.. the inut have left here in an early . train for New York on Saturday mora- j ing, as she was seen on Friday even-, ing at one of the window s of the houe. The history of the wouian is a remarkable one. See catne to Washing- : ton twenty odd years ago from New York City with fcer fi'Jitr, Isaac Hunter, who was a baker. He rr. v-d ba k to New York when the girl was 14, ai l she grew iuto a beautiful woman, aud afterwards married a wealthy lek-' ade-runner named Hates, wn was captured -VTlth CUC of L. irsrl.
- r-
f - r .
thrown into
Tounr wife's 1 or.i. and father of in Helfasl,
pns.n, mind
, and was
died. The unsettled a:
r
the
died
tr
the ladv, and they left tho ball-room; i pr 'm, hxperiinents in Co.o.r at ion." J but instead of goirg to the- diirr"--rom : " A ,Sl 'tih ! Factory" in the Noshe led him straight to her chamber, "."'" r; ,nJ ''V''1 I'nnr- U'kx- j and then, locking the door, said an.. &Xn
. .. a. ....... i '.niulUllil JIOUJV, '
Ha'penny a
Dally, but, catching her to his breast kissed her uassionatelv. and. to be !
; frank, the young widow i! id not resist : I him. 44 It i: ar.s," he said at last, in reply i 1 to her repeated questions, "That we' I watt arms, and have t ome for them." i I What else they said matters not how; ' but before they separated Mrs. (iarden 1
seemed very well satisfied with the
yt-ung man's explanation. They then ', repaired to the supper-room, where
anu)Ie refiesh-i
Nation of Shopkeepers,"
eei. lor tlie t Inld. ' etc.
A richlv-illustr.ttcd seriea will 1 zireu
44 American Sports b? F'lood anl
TS; .. - . - .
r inn, vj Tanous wruers, an l taca a a different theme. The subject of " iiorsKnou) and home dkooration" will have a prominent place, whil-t the latest pmluctions of American hunu.rits will appear from month to month. The list of shorter stories, biographical and other sketches, etc., is a long one. The editorial department will continus to employ the ablest pens both at horns and abroad. There will I a scries of letters on literary matters, from London, by Mr. Wei ford.
just twenty-five, and for
several jears had been the standing toast of the beaux of the Carolina. When the biiti-h took the city she was one of tho first to sabmit to the King, and since then her house had been the favorite gathering place of the red -coat gentry. Many of Mrs. Gardner's frienus, who were staunch patriot lo the last, quietly t ut her acquaintance, and shtnA their heads in quiet indignation when her naioe was mentioned, and when they dared speak at all it was only to condemn the widow's treachery. In the camp of Marion, however, there was one cheek that kindled with prido and not bbame when the lady's name was mentioned; and as fer (ieneral Marion himself, he could have told tales that would have startlei. the widow's Charleston friends, haul it teen safe to do so. While Marion w as creating so great an excitement beyond the gates of Charleston, Mrs (Jarden resolved U gire a bull. Preparations were made oa an extensive scale, and the loyal elment of the city was in high feather. The splendid mansion of the young widow w as dressed with dowers from cellar to garret, and blazed with lights on the evening appointed for the assembly, and the band of the garrison dLscouised sweet music to the assembled crowds. The entertainment was at its Wight, when the crowd etddenly parted, aud a "ung man came forward hurriedly. He was tall and splendidly formed, ajid carried himself erect, with a proud, martial air. He was drctd in the uniform of an oflictr of the Tory legion, and bis general appearar.ee was that of a man w ho had ridden far and lard dnrirg the day. As the voung
moow saw mm, ner face Bushed and then grew deathly pale, and she sprang forward with a cry cf alarm. "
bat aic you doing here?" she
asked, hurriedly. 44 You w ill st e," he answered quickly, is a low tone. 44 Only for heaven's sake, swear black and blue to what I may sa) !" Then he addtdealn ly. and in lower tone : 44 You see, my dear coo id, 1 have come back to my allegiance." 44 1 am delighted to hear it," she replied, warmly, taking the hint at once. "I never thought your heart would cling- 1o the rebel cause. " 44laith,"he said, laughing, 4ifmy tie art had clung to it, my stomach would have driven me from it. I'm not fond f starving-, u.y fair cousin, and King (k'orge lives well, you know. Hereafter, '1 bourns Yilon lives and dies a loyal oiaa." Colonel Watson had been standing bj, during this conversation, watching the coui.ie cloely. Now he stepped forrward to the lady's side. 44 Who's this gentleman?" he aked, somewhat fharply. "He seems wonderfully fumiliar."
The pa?es of the magazine will lie open,
returned to the as heretofore, so far as limited nae will
onii-room w lie re tjoionei auon im. i permit, lo uie aicusinn or an tio-mes
patiently awaittd ber. At midnight tie Lientonnnt pill..,l
headquarters, and. fAithml t. hi ,,ro,n. , Ul0U!-''1 of the Christian thinkers and
ise, Colonel Watson was there. The i ':h" "ill country. neeP.BRrv or.tr. for ti, ,., .u V e ,u('an tomaku the naffarine tweeter
1 rmn 7 1 i, " ' ! 1 1 ' l,ur". W nobler, more penial
hu imuuiwivii t4 4 Tf t V S 9 L IS
soon afterwarl her bu-band
Itelar.d, and ft h.
fortune of several thousand t-our. 1
sterling to this girl, who made a tour of Ktglaud, France, Ireland, and ;.!- 1 i.nd, in the hope that the barge would settle her ruin 1. Paring ad thi time sue received the tutorship of a coiBp.etent instructor, and returned an intelligent woman. Ikit rer mind was far from beiutr stu-d. h- hvl lucid intervals, and in the trhds conversesi well, and two vears ago while in this state offered to bar a farm
and settle her father upon it, whicts she j did, in Caroline County, Mary land, Lear a place called I!i lg ley. but lxt sum- j mer she tried to cut her father's throat
I and he had lo run for his Lie. She cni tinned to live in the place nntil S-p- ' teaiber, havinc the choie-.t wie ar.d j brandie s sent her from New York, and J remained there until lat Sepmtr, ; when she came here. I . What the Centennial HoilllLjrsBrBtbL J Little or cv.hic Low rnia:n in azy I of the Slate buildings except furn.ture. i and from aome that, Vmj, i one. 1 here
are tweniy-one such buii
Mini's.
Lieutenant Thomas Wilson, of the 44 loyal legion," were ruade out, and the Colonel also placed intheyourg man's hand a sealed letter of instruct tions to Major (iainey. The rest of the ni"ht was spent in procuring the d-
snd rr-nerous in all Its utterances and ia
fluences. and a more welcome visitor than i
ever wore ia homes of refinciufnt and culture. FIFTEEN MO.VrilS FOR FOCB 1U.LARS. Srribhfir for December, sow realr. and
hich contains the oncnia? chanters of
sired articles, and at sunrise the het i " Nicholas Minturn," w ill be rad witk
morning Lieutenant Wilson, with his
wagons and their contents, escorted bv
eager curiosity and intcret. Perhaps no
more readahle number of tnn magazine
guard of fifty men, set out for the b? Jit been issue. 1. Th three nuiiiN-n
44 High Hills td Santee," w here the Torv Malor's head
The wagons and their escort made good time, and br sunset were forty miles from Charleston. The si n was scarce half an hour high when Lieutenant Wilson ordered a halt for the purpose of camping for the night. The mounted men fastened their horses to the trees and removing their saddles prepared to cook their evening meal ; the teams were unhitchod from the wagons and the command busied themselves in preparations for a comfortable night. Kvery one waa busy, and no one noticed that while theo arranjre-
menu were in progress Lieutenaut Wil
son bad
di-appearcd in the woods that bordered
the road. Suddenly there was a crackling in the brusnwood, which caiwd the Itritish trxpers to spring to their feet in alarm. As they did so, a voice, which .under not unlike that of the youne Lieutenant, houted loudly: 44 Surrender, or you are all dead men!" neral Marten secured his prisoner , together with the arms, nnitmini-
tion, wagons, and horses, and set eut, alter a rest of a few hours, for 44 Snow Inland." At the request of the bogus Lieutenant Wilsn, be sent back one of the redcoats to Charleston with a note to Colonel Watson, informing him of the trick that had been played on him by the young officer who, so far from being a Lieutenant in the Tory legi n, was none other than the famous Charles Hampton, a Captain in Marion's Brigade, who planned and carried out the plan successfully thanking the
Colonel for the excellent weapon and other materials he had sent him, and promising to do good service with them. The British commander was furious when he read the note, and saw the hohtof which he had been ruade the victim. He went in haste to Mrs. (Jarden, but the fair widow bad sailed for Knlitnd. He was compelled to swallow his mortification in silence, and a few years later, when the war was over, his chagrin was not a little Increased by the tidings which reached him that Mrs. (iarden had married the young t nicer who had tricked him out of his rifles.
anectinsr the social and rcliiious life of i about a dozen of them are -old. In ad- f
at i ,c "v, "u s-sj..-eiitiij vo ioc irrsnesi ! union ie mose a;reauv ar.coucce-4 as t it,- '!:..: .v i. i. . . , . r ....
j navmg oeen knos sec Uown are ir.e ijilowing: The Iowa building seld f-r
fbio, to Mr. Hower, of New Jersey, who intend removing it to his farm, abut ten miles from Camden; the Massachusetts buildirr, fur l,5- ', to a gentleman of that State, who will re- rt
it near Hoston : and the Illinois build
ing to Mr. Win. Strorj, who
move it to his land, on the IVnasy Ivania Kailroad, some miles from th's city. Workmen are dismembering some ..f the purchased s'ructures. A West Virginian has offered fl.oi.sj f jT tie building repre-enting his State. Although it cst tfo.Goo, it is believed that his .ffer will le acepted. Nothing deSnit, however, can le known regard-; the disjMHiition t.f this h-jiMin;, nor those of renr.sylvaoia, Arkana, and one or two other State, until their respective legislatures meet. The Arkansas buildirir, a large tentlike structure, cost f.vW. and a gentleman proposes to buy and remove it to Ocean (irove for citn p-meting ai,d Sotday-schoel yur"-. Arkantashas presented part of her mineral exhibit, including two large etrifetionj an'l a stuffed bald eajrle, to the Philadelphia Acadamy of Natural Sciences. Tne Little Uock t Fort Smith IlaTroai ('ompany, which exhibited in the Arkansas building, has preenUl it lare
l collection of mineral. con3priing semi I nt hr'it ivial and tfi.rt.fiyiiu l,e
to the National Institute of Mining Knfineers, for exhibition in Memorial all. Both State and railway have made other large and valuible present of this nature to the Naval Academr at Annapoli. Notre Dame t'niversity in Indiana, and other educational institation.s of the country. lhiltiLlf hn Times.
of .Srribner for Au?ut, Si'teinhcr and
Octolw-r, containing the opeuin- chapters of 44 That La.-so' Lnwrie's," will 1 jriven to every new subscriber (who repn si it) and whose subscription Ixirins wiiii the present volume, '. with tho Noveml-r nunilrt-r. Subeription price, fl a year .T t ents l numlx r. Special terms on Umnd vol. uniea. Suliscribc with the aear si loikS'lh r, or send a chn k or P. O. money ord.-r to St ninsKn A Co.. 743 I'ma lway, N. Y.
in Insane Woman's I'reakn. The Wilmington (I'el.) correspondent of thi I'liilHilelnhit. Tmi.t uritjoa-
tlrawn off from Uie party and j Last September an elegintly h esod
woman applied at the CUvton House, in this city, for board. This was given qer. and she created quite a sensation by her dazzling display of jewelry, sty 1ish dressing and her supri r conversational powers. She registered as Mrs. Abigail FeJIow. nnd said that she was the wife of the II n. Richard Fellows, Assistant Idstrict-Attorney of New York. This increased the interest in the stranger. Put a few days had elated when the prnprieter, Mr. Pyle, noticed that her actions were strange, and he came to the concinslon that his gucxt must I; insane or very much addicted to drink. In a fortnight after her arrival she set fire to her room and came near burning the whole place. The proprietor telegraphed to PUrictAttornej Fellows to know what disposition should made of his wife, and that gentleman telegraphed back that he was a bachelor. She became so much under the influence of liouor that
the hotel proprietor attempted to dispossess her of ten bottles of liquor contained in her trunk, and for this she boxed his ears. Hy instructions f rom a New York lawjer she was put in an insane a)lurn here, and after two weeks' treatment was released. She afterwards haunted the different hotels, and at length rented a house in Shipley Street, where she lived slone, drinking incessantly and startling the ueighrsorhotsd with sen ams and the breaking t.f window gla-s. The neighbors rushed in and were driven out at the point of the pistol, with which she was always armed. Every ring at her door was answered at' the point of a seven-
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A iyb-( atehlrp Spider. Jest lfore the late war I was at Colonel (Kkley Hynum's sprir?, Lawrence Omnty, Ala., near the town e.f Courtland, where I saw a school of minnows placing in the suabir.e nesr the e-Jge of the water. Ail at once a spider a large as the end of try finger dripped down among them from a tree haniriig over the spring. Tke spider seized one . of the minnows near the Lead. TLe' fih thus seized was about three inches :
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captor it swam around swiftly in the ' water, and frequently dived to the bottom ; yet the spider held on to it. Fin-' ally it came to the top, torxed upon its back, and died. It seemed to hav been bitten of wounded en the back of the neck, near where the Lead joins. Wten the fish was desd the spider moved e-ff with it to the shore. The limb of the tree from wlich the spider must Lsve , fallen was b Ueen ten and fifteen fe-t above the water. It success ibowi that it hsd tt e judgment id a practical en-I giwer. Jmtrican .Va.'urai L '
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