The Patton courier. (Patton, Cambria Co., Pa.) 1893-1936, January 03, 1901, Image 3

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    | hand to work your will To the st-
4 tack!” : ; §
“Iromaides, stand
| 50 that my voice rose ;
{| bell of sound that broke loose BpOD
| bis urder. And like a living wall of
steel (he First Troop of Cromwell's
Own closed up behind me. Ob, but
ang of their spurred besis on
fast?” 1 shouted
and
+ an instant Ww
th's face went livid
for rage and the Londoners strained |
and surged behind him. A devil he
was and with the devil's own couragt
{sword in band, and ‘his men behind
x Dim.
: 11 Midwsy [I met kim His sword
to make | went whirling hail across the great
wat | Dail My polat stood at kis throat
| Perchance the devil glaring out of hie
| eyes discovered a biscker devil in the
eyes that glared into Bis ;
And Lord Chillingford and hie, aye,
{ to the meanest scallion under his rool
+ | tree, went out of Grafton House under
| safe conduct.
: . ® 9
| 1 sat In the guardhouse, waiting for
the duwn and death Yet 1 was wt
{ peace with fate. Even to die the death
of a mutineer had no sting For 1
{bad laid down my life to save the
{ woman | loved, and 1 thought of the !
morrow’s dswn with a smile.
Cromwsll was iu london on press
§
y
&
now ow, when Wit
med the girl did go with
- ow»
. { ing business with the Parliament. and,
or- | in bis absence. they had given mm
o | short shrift. The deadly mischante of
| It! For had be known he would have |
s | saved me, that | fit in my heart :
doot; the bolts |
a | and shut and a woman's gure stood
| dark in the feeble eandle light No
| need to sak who it was. 1 rose and
| stood staring. 1 could not speak. :
“John Wyeherleigh,” she said, “when 1
© walk in the valley of the shadow
5
3
i
4
¥
i
Reged
et
$
1 8 another time she would not. So it.
{1a that 1 have come to you unhbidden.
ig- | i 1 am not welcome 1 will give you
suck | thanks for the gift of life at your
spd get me gone” Bo low and
red Hepworth. ™ ;
noe, Jord 1 thank Thue”
#. whoever they may be
bis words, for 1 ghesned
1 Bands
usd was her voloe that | scarce knew
it for hers, for Mistress Margaret Ful
lerton was proud womas, holding
herself aloof snd pot given fo a show
of feeling. She went on: he
“For | would pot bave you think,
John, that we were thankless of
{idle In your behalf, Fini we
| sent word to Cromwell. 1 made a way :
{10 Lord Willoughby. 1 told him all
aud 1 asked for your pardon. But the :
most he would grant was (his pass
to the gusrdbouse. And when Crom-
I went to
i
; 2
x
y8E
38
¥
§
«Il came half an hour ago
Ble
“Ha!” I ered. "Cromwell bevel
“Litte” she answered sadly. “He
‘heard me to the end, then questh
me close. He sat silent a space
then strode oup the door without &
word. John, he ix a man of from body |
and sou! and mind of fron—I under
stand him mot”
S80 this was the en
| Bope from my colonel! : ;
“Margaret.” | sald, and 1 knelt down
at her fect “dost know what | was
saying in my heart when you came
in? "Twas this: hough she jis In
some other man’s arms she can never
| forget!’ ” Thers was slience between
| us for a space and then her litle hand
| drew me to my feet sand I took her im
my arms
“Jack” she whispered, “om my
¥nees | begged of Lord Willeughty :
the lite of the man 1 loved If not
you, then none shall— Hark’ What
is that?” .
Of a sudden the ground shook with
the tread of a horse and the air war |
full of the clink and rattle of stirrug
and word, Then came stiliness again :
1 dragged the oaken bench to the
window and together Wwe glared out
| into the darkness Round the guard.
| house was ranged company upon com: |
rd Ch pany of horse, the fitful light of the
and bade his men lay down their arms, | camplires flashing on headpiece and
g that I was known to him and sword. Ii was the tronsides. :
d grant honorable terms And And as we clung together, staring
‘while T stood there, dumb with | and doubting pur eyes, the door of the
horror of ‘the pit that had been council hall opened and Cromwell
for me, there came the Arst | strode out. Behind him was Lord
the Londoners, shouting: “No | Wiiloughby asd General Crawford and
pT Death to the Paphits! Smite others of the council. In the glare of
Hgnants hip and thigh!” the torches we saw Cromwell point.
: Chillingford,” 1 said lk with outstretched arm 0 his regiment
trance, “you shall have ©of horse. For a moment Lord Wii
Nonorable tre Joughby stood like a stone ‘Then he
| made a gesture of assent and submis.
ision and went off to his quarters
without looking back. :
We sprang to the floor In an agony
of expectation. The door Sew open
| and Cromwell came striding in, booted :
{and spurred and plastered with mad
trom his ride from London
“Pree you are my lad!” he cried
“and still captain of my First Troop.
The fools! They swore you should
{die till 1 showed them our Ironsides ;
hers and told them to take you if they
could. Then they changed their
minds” i Inf
‘And this much 1 will teil you of
| what my colonel sald, but bis her
“speech to me and to the blushing wom-
{an on my breast I will pot set down;
Z
%
And |
i
3
#
dno word of
¥
%
‘Grafton House must be women §
{ldren, but they were soon for-
the fierce joy of the onset, My
) was in the great ball lnside
yabble of musketeers snd pike-
and beyond them the grat sialr-
crowded with retainers and
among them women and
: Midway up the stair stood
d Chillingford, my compunton of
ege days, and clinging to his arm
his bride of a month. And just
Shem stood Mistress Margaret
hitlingford caught sight of me
£
But this [ will say: When the Iron.
sheld us three come forth, for
discipline wna forgot
ent up that minded me
hen the First Troop took
a out
' | gress, and is being 8 good
for tadlormade
puffs from the sihow,
etd with rosettes; the
finished with many shirriugs making
following:
tpthator to the kennel depirtioent of
the paper mentioned the post of ken |
offer'tg another Seid of |
employe :
pwaing a Jarge Kengpel i aliont to RT
Lard tench ber thorpaghiy
may have w
ake College. Sooth H
see Miss (race take her
cand
{
‘a
dif it 1s for my wife and me and none Ob
| others. St ng
walking
Ey "umetal
shades are the |
and castor beige
worn: po trimming is pat vn these
gowns, except larg and handsome
enges usually affect rather a se.
rye of cravat with & corduroy
gown, generally 8
muslin collar only. ;
Given resily good
wear ‘nn ®.
darsle
The rewest undersieeves Jook exceed
odd and o
of these revived accusscrios
ty and small; the later styles are large
full pear-shaped puffs that resch from
wrist to sibow, and the bell sleeve
above is
These aire called Victorian shapes, and
the Queen Anne models
fewer one,
it Ait the wrist with sn expanding nf
beyond reaching over the Band
Raw Decupation For Women.
In an English magazine sppears 1he
“Rone weeks Eo B CoD:
pelwomen us
ut for women, One Wolian
an eertain suggestions made iu he |
and writes to
to take a pupil
paragraph referred fo
say that she wonkd Hike
tie duties of
5 kengelwoman, [he woman in gues
thon hak Deel 8 8
renirer of dogs. and Is ber own ver
Grace McKinley, Ke foohnn im.
It is seldom that a °F
inl position choores the drudgery and
irksoine duties of a school teacher,
Such a unique specimen of fale Amer
jean maldenbood is found in the ur
phan niece of President MeKinley,
Miss Grare McKlnles,
just June the President sid Nr. Mo
Kinley. with & purty af friends A ab-
inet officers and other preanipent of
tials—-went to that wiaid and distin
guished seat of jesraing. Mount Holy
adler, Mass, fo
A. Miss Grace wood at
ber class, while her record daring the
entire consse hail been ioe of praise
worthy endeavor.
show kis apprecation of her snoiess,
festowed on bis Diece a
mand pin. The gradoation dress. 8
dainty creation of white chiffon and
lace. wax Mra. McKinley's gil
It was after this grest event
the
Grace,
the reigning Delle of the nation ihe
social leader of the capital-ihe only
ang iri in the great Presidential
mansion at Washington,
Fhis was surely a tempting offer.
but ft did pot swerve this beantifal
briliiant girl from a long cher
fahed aspiration She wished fo use
her gifts in a fing way—in
which
fersel! during her long and severe gu
bation at Mount Holyoke Khe chose
profession of 8 we iool
that
the ardoous
| teacher. sud this fall, on ber ows ap,
plication, sustained by her record at
college, she secured a position in the
High School of Muddistown, Conn. Bhe
began ber duties in September. ~300
Tse.
Four Famous Sisters.
Four sisters of American birth have
made reputstives in Frasce thronkh
saried but very positive scoonplish-
ments. Anus Kigmpke bad made a
reputation as an artist hefore Rosa
Bonheur bequéathed so large a legacy
to her ©
rather than
with Rosa
Boakeurs family. Bbe
| {ives ju Rosa Bonheur's former dome |
at Foutaineblean and is continuing Ww
sdvanee in the Seld she selected for
herself. Sine she reovived the ogacy
from the famous animal painter 3
struggles to win a bl eh place in her
profession are said by those who know
her intimately to be
ever.
%..¥
The family cones from € Alifornia
but the daughters have lived fof sige
years io Pari Oae af the other ais
ters studied medicine at the College
of France,
degree entitling
hospitals. This honor had never
fore Deen bDestuwed oO SLY Woman.
For several years she devoted Berself
to practice ‘nn Paris and was then
Awe
married to Dr. “ierins, of 1a Salpe- |
trieve. He 18 +.
{st in pervous LRpuSE = “ree her
marriage Mie Das pio ags
the same subject Bad 5.70 cg coi
siderable attention. Since thu. sae
riage husband and wile have coliabof
vy % special
same subject.
Seven Years ago Dorothea Klumpke
won a degree of doctor af sciences st
the Sorbonne. She bad studied stron.
fy long before it became ber fnten-
tion to devote herself seriously to the |
study of the
oome Ww be
science, Her thesis was a
rings of Saturn, and it has
an suthority on that subject.
came an assistant astronomer
Observatory of Paris soon alter leav:
the Sorbonte. :
bal exumination successtully, snd was
‘the first woman to obtain the degree
Al the menabers of the faculty voted
She be
andard st Bdge HL
Julls Klwmpke, the fourth sister,
| talent within
satty bow and a
‘ {os were dain |
therefore, cat very short. |
have Two,
aecesstnl treeder and |
omany gut who
saith and the highest so |
A yemr go
the head of
The President, to}
weantifel dia
President offered adopt Miss
formally, sud thos make Der
one toi
she had endeavored to train
hat shi surrendered part of It
bei involved In a struggle |
{nore ager then
atid was rewarded with al
Ler 1 practice in the |
ted of several luportant works ou the |
at the
She passed her ver |
of sclence and mathematics. |
shown the possession of the fa
and there are already prophecies
the name of the family will soon be
: in apother field Mise
importaties obtained by some other
women abroad In her profession. But
persons with faith in the family talent
heliere that she will yet becotne as
wall krsiwen in ber Seid as the other
| Kiumpiors are in their fields.
Many af ihe waiter girls in Swiss
hotels belong to well todo families
Fran Nina Anerdach, widow of the
eminent (German novelist, ia dend. Bhe
survived her bushand slghteen TEAL
Fhe Fiaipress of Germany ix narticns
y, and hugs AD
caliection of
| arly fond of photograph
isteresting apd large
| phatogIapis,
Among the 1550 Cubans who took
gu of the island ware many
the cons
Women,
| peruncration of §5 a day.
§ A woman has built » house with her
| gn bands, bear Fountain Ferry Park,
fad It is 8 ohestory Wooden struc
tare of four rooms, with 5 stone foun
dation,
Phe widow of Justice Rrephen J.
Picld has presented to the United
of Appeals in Ban
od oil portrait
4
%
¥
Qigtes repit Court
| Fransisco a finely execut
af the Jura,
6 some paris of China the yousg
| wronen Went thelr hair in a long. #n-
| ge plait, With which ls intertwined &
bright scarier thread This style of
arpauentation dauwes that the FOLOLK
| woman 8 mar ageable.
Msn Eugesla Vrashingion, great
randy of George Washinglon, ne
of the founders of
Dangihiters of the Anerivan
tint, and President of the Society of
Pounders and Patriots, died tn Wash
ington recently
Dr. Betecca Jobaston,
York £y, 8 2 womas poysiclan who
gives certain hours of her time 0
working tor philanthropy. Three days
af every esl she condneis A free
clini during the Wo
namstnent of bur homie
In a Paris paper the ssseriion in
maddy at one of the cherished cus
rapa of Fragoe—-an institntion pot des
spised in other countries, the Const
of giving a dot marriageabie girle—
iw rupidiy dying our, sod will soob
! take its place with the great auk and
| stner extinet species
The Bosiness Wothen's League of
Atlanta. Ga. has joined the jarge body
of Kmiler asociations that have insti
spied Tunehobt OCDE lately. The
league already bax seventy five men
hors, Ate] Bas Applied to the Legisia-
tare far {neorporation nodes the pane
of ihe Atisnia Business Wornen 's
The worsen s suffrage SEERA Ons
of ihe West Bavieg saereeited in gels
fing worse into the lower bose of the
Legisbatures ike women's oiubs of
Calaradn, ed by those of Denver, Io
tend 1s make an fort to Bave Women
lected to the State Senile, sod have
so far met with enouiizs Gg prospects
of WEooess
From London comes tie interesting
| meeliigemen that a FURR woman's
| cooking cub, formed about a year a0
tn the povthern part of the pity. has
been cumpletely dsarg glged by the
marrispe of all the moambers. The
eink gave weekly dipuers, ordered,
eaciied god served by members in thelr
oh mesaber kad the prive
fromm, and en
E ;
jegm of inviting & Basy bine w"
Sone Ge
ar x
La BATES
Peanh dinpet,
Ladies’ Lox enlf shoes with
7) 28
ghas
wNetrad vellings In very preiiy de
Jack
ti ARE
ois tie hips and
eid very BOT
weoldered in
ohana
wrappers and fqrEeis
% bo ]
brid
Ellindows
psoas] wD
Toilet articles with bhandsomie seb
Ying silver trinus ?
Imitation tortobse shell stray
| tock pins in ail designs.
! Irish point scarfs snd shams a eiad
{arate opeowork patterns
SR
-
oe
bai
fast black for gi ool wear,
2
i
2
%
:
Patent leather belts—patent leathet
soil eldes-—with gold beakd
mented with imitation fewels,
sheer lawn with Venise lace border.
Ladies’ velvet hat in black and all
colors and tu all the leading shapes.
Double bieasted box front coat
French kersey, some with stitobed,
others with strapped, seams.
with sccordion pleating aod pinked
ruching.
| keeping the bow in place. ~Dry Goulds
hak not reached sx yet thed
she Is the youngest of the sisters, and
and they received he regular
the Society of
Revoly-
Khe mam
of New
{dition
har a dk PET
Spb ieg TRYIATE $5
i Children's buslery of heavy tution in
| forks an
: | price,
Rarcttes made of gold plate roa.
x WT :
: Patz a spoon, bieips 5
Marie Antoinette handkerchiefs of
i
id
5
=, a : with the Angers.
Mercerized sateen pettivoats in DICE | our of thie mess 4 wing Or a
abd all the fashionable shades mad soi and present | :
{
Puck of high de
Pretty hair and ribbon clasps for
The Lo
1ROMOTY OF ast of
‘has again Deen revived
SanyeTS
BAYS tha Basten Post
| araounts to nothing mors dudaite than
a hols which is said to he the exact
i beiluved to be the “farthest morta’
yet made in Kidd's record. Of tourse,
howavir a bole cHnaot sustain a Pi
rates reputaticin, and the present
{ treamure trove includes also, 38 a Te
i pent dispatch from Buagor state
ian old-fashioned lip such a8 eoversd
‘ail old-fashi
| key. Trund near the bole.
| narrator naively acds. are “proof of
tha discovery.
Tha tegend that hae existed four
years in this favored lceality, that
soma of the coveted “remiiing’ of the
| great pirate were durisd at her's
Point, in ihe immediate Vicinity Is
| shus proved to have a somewhat mars
od
*
»
by the |
discovery of undoubted relics of his
career ak far north as Busgor, Me,
sned locks, sd a broken
These, the
size of the reported mystaitious Boxes LB
of goid whieh the doughly Captain !
Kidd in believed to have strewn slong | .
the cost of America, and which nave |
{been traced all te Way from South
i Caroliza to the present loration, which
jt is true the present discovery 1ar
laid on an island off ihe
sonst. Northward past the
Kriss of Virgizia—a soB
promisiag spol. 8 being
popaiated in the noid pirate’
apd which fancy seems wo
and the shores
| eredible ambority that x 8
i ¢itizen of Boston crossing the ool
| less than a tweivemonth ago In
{ ehmpany of 8 :
Ee
grable foundation than the craduious | ve
| imagination of several Bipeessive gen
erativms of Maine farmers
: in the Hope of
rhe land iz owned by Wessrs
parties” saya the disputih before re i
feremt to, “hava dug ove the ground |
fading the ireasgure. |
Wound
swan and Buzzell, asd Mr Woodman |
hag Misenversd a hole from which it is
pvident a box 13x18 Insles has hin
camcived” Historie Bole! In addition =
is grasdly stimulating the imagisa- it
tiem of the whole American nation 9
; hyve been wrought tha parsintogysm
face among the press legends
fondly byer Captain
Thess have connected
kp
(whith Rover
Bie place of
-
rniug bours in the
At the smd of the senslon of congrens
Cwhiel
amber of men who have sehieved
mors or lees distinction fn the senaib |
will retire. Semis coptiblicans will Ye |
cesded bY SEMOCIAE, some demi
a
CerRis by repobiicans,
parties by men of their own policient
exith. The stpatom) Who will jenyve
Washington sex March, retivieg io
te are Baker of Kansas, But
joy of North Caroling, Cattery of Lou
sutana. Carter of Momiana, Chilton of
Ea gne KOBSeY of lelaware, Lidmiy
of Kentln
private B
| wawipel, Thurston
of let nd SAY. ApAE will at once take.
say pething of (he plich of frenzy Io :
whieh the dwellers of Eber's Puint
many good
of this grasd cycle of Am
ends ia evidently the
is soon to opel, a considers ralsie |
{ ity for the creator of a
Riding. cir rather thai of wel” :
They have been econuted among
most brilisnt and sloguent
of the npper house, and thelr
ment is a Joss to (he republicans. |
cky. Pertigrer of South De 1
kota Sharp of take, Sullivan of Mis
ol Nepraska, Turley
«f “fennesswe and Wiklootl of Coldrada | &
hare are several ofthe
vege
coraing legtalative wenslons wha mas
alse be ohilgwl to nmamove their sega.
rurial togas, but whose re election BW
probable. Thess ATS %
Hampshire Callom of [iinois amt Neb
som of Minnesota Ficon of Georgia.
ferry of Arkansas, Lied
ginia, Frye at Maine Hosr of Masta
clinsects. Dolliver of lows, McBride of
Oregon, McMillan ot Michigan, Martin
of Virginia. Morgan of Alabama Sew.
el af New Jersey, 1
a PREPS
EAT WITH HPOONS.
shatiis In Cispmereniive Turdinh
Flopselalbds Are kel.
Table
Cif fate yeurs sothe
Lecnmne cpasideradly mis
eran
LENE
REAL
have
{hele arTEARQPINRG 8,
Turks frown on wach
In 3 conservative |
ve poos. Bo tabla
peal
g the WAYS of Fars
Ga
A
Satan ave GRABONI By-o
Raine Are = #1 better, bu
Sic mia 5
TRAE | re ia
EA BIge
¢ sha room apoah slight
When
sapling
woknten
ye
“gp WE
who will be |
foe peesberiion al the forth.
mamdier of Now |
Wins of West ¥ir- |
the most eritical students of co
sisnal life He is x republics "
smas of Sonth helped
s 4 very uselul thing to have
stock Talser and mine owner
a
a i
wr TE
An sitoman if space will ail
in
feo snd would ook well 38
Turkish hots |
¢ ths bed This ix sasy to make
{very small cost, a8 an ardiasey
| en box can be made to do duty.
| inside. not forgetting the Hd
3,
glazed lining, or mnyihing you 8
| Bave by you will do so long a8 ft
pant for
vias Pumice
to dim cus tne Lid),
clean and tidy. If the box you Are
aging Dewsesses hinges 0 much the
+ if pol you must Fe KUEN
pomslid he useless without,
a seat. The outside should
enimelad (the Dox part, nok
sand 3 fSousce made oug
bo
next
Awa 3
mA anangh to reach the ground.
¢ member BOR | guy to 8x 1008 8 10 WW it on & tape
whieh in iis Turn is sewn fo the
formning a
Taw
R08 :
: sipmd a barge LOA¥
om very WTgv womndiom pial
a¥ gly aedurdiag
int th
and thereon is
tow. ADDIIEN
shiced chevse. AB
swestments, 18-
times are goblets of
nies of hot
boswaml spoona
Yi
Desanitad @ CRDRINS
arranges SRuOeTs
Wh
perspersed Wild
® ¥
bread and
erbet
Raives
hays saedy as A Bapkin spread
Wig Knmess, and every bone, armed
Lak
by presents
+
£
ho orakes TE pikis 3
2rd af gubwmtaniialy
Boa penitton game
The a 41
the cook ils pot
ipped up wilh fue 3
Fiore tae hos!
eed
or
i; Sune 3
Ban EA
sp wich are
wo thal
anf
ios a gues RG
‘gldered A greal comguiment, | ;
gree to roll
Between his” Rogers amd pur
the mouth of a visitor is loud
a8 good manoers
vi
FE
Ly
PAY Ine
od or BUNVEr | grad
othe Snapelal age
5
%
§
A
E
C be
af the box, The Ud must be meas
sad a cushion the exact see
made The stuffing might De of ef=
eisior but it must be very Pull, aml be
Saished off with a frill about four
fnohes wide ts cover the joiat
piece of webbing or a strip of the ma~
| terial neatly doubled, about eighs =
A plates do Bot fzum [a He
%
veal The bowl
babps away and anathes |
tims i Wr 3 modal
8 Laas pak a d a
anlaavened | voohes jong should be nalled 9
side to prevent the lid failing back Wo
far when opeaed. na
i
tn New Zeaisnd there exists a brass
band whose members are wholly
oh bicycles. This band,
which is lopsted ar Christehurch, SoBe
sists of ten players und these not
merely
g Pus
Lr
af a dperin ov ;
wi
©
ide their hioycles tO practios;
pf gil their engagements OR
A: first the band in is
eg
Sit
tha Ww heds
perambulbutines through the towm ats
sre BOW Deotmie § CORMOR
remeted aniversal amweption, BAY IR
opie ke it 33 a mater of on
sirangwrs visiting the town
| band is a source of wonder and
1, wile the music they
| quiskiy places them in high fave