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About Dayton tribune. (Dayton, Oregon) 1912-2006 | View Entire Issue (May 14, 1925)
i In the Days of Poor Richard Helena D’Algy VAIN RED ROSE By IRVING BACHELLER O- i L u CHAPTER duino BACimj m XXVII—Continued. no heart The message w as from Sol omon. He had got word thut the British warship had come back up the river and was two miles above Stony Point with a white Aug at her mast- head. "I went out of doors. Soon I met Merrtwettier coming Into camp. Ar nold had returned. He had ridden at a walk toward the headquarters of the Second brigade and turned about and come back without speaking to any qne. Arnold was looking down us If absorbed In hla own thoughts when Merrtwether passed him In the road. He did not return the latter's salute. It was evident that the general had ridden away for the sole purpose of being alone. “I went back to my hut and sat down to try to And my way when suddenly the general appeared at my door on his bay mare and asked me to take a little ride with him. I mounted my horse and we rode out on the east road together for half a mile or so. “ 'I believe that my wife had some talk with you this morning,' he begun. “'Yes,' I answered. “ ‘A British officer has come up the river In a ship under a white flag with a proposal regarding an exchange of prisoners. In my answer to their re- quest for a conference, some time ago. I enclosed a letter from Mrs. Arnold to Miss Margaret Hale Invit- Ing her to come to our home where she would find a hearty welcome and her lover—now an able and mbit val- ued ofllcer of the staff. A note re- celved yesterday says that Miss Hare Is one of the party. We are glad to be able to do you this little favor.' “I thanked him. “ ’I wish that you could go with me down the river to meet her In the morning,’ he said. ‘But In my absence It will, of course, be necessary for you to be on duty. Mrs. Arnold will go with me and we shall, I hope, bring the young lady safely to headquarters.’ "He was preoccupied. His face wore a serious look. There was a melancholy note In his tone—I had Jack and Solomon exercised unusual care In guarding the camp and organ ising for defense In case of attack. It was soon after Washington's depart ure that Arnold went away on the road to the South. Solomon followed, keep- Ing out of his field of vision, The gen- end retimed two days later, Solomon came tntu Jack's hut about midnight of the day of Arnold's return with Im- porta nt news. Jack was at hfs desk studying a map of the Highlands. The camp was nt rest. The candle in Jack's hut was the only sign of life around head quarters when Solomon, having put out ‘his horse, came to talk with his young friend. He stepped close to the desk, swallowed nervously and began his whispered report. "Suthln' neevarlous be goln' on," he began. “A British ship were lyin’ nigh the mouth o’ the Croton river. Arnold went aboard. An' officer got into his boat with him and they pulled over to the west shore and went Into the bush. Stayed thar till mos' night. If *twere honest business, why did they go off In the bush alone fer a talk?" Jack shook his head. “Soon as I seen that I went to one o' our batteries an' tol* the cap'n what were on my mind. “ 'D—n the ol’ British tub. We'll make 'er back up a little,' sez he. ’She's too clus anyhow.’ “Then he let go a shot that ripped the water front o' her bow. Say. Jack, they were some hoppin' eround on the deck o' the big British war sloop. They h'isted her sails an' she fell away down the river a mile 'er so. The sun were set when Arnold an' the officer came out o’ the bush. I were In a boat with a fish rod an' could jes' see ’em with my spy glass, the light 'were so dim. They stood thar lookin' fer the ship. They couldn't see her. They went back into the bush. It come to me what they was goln' to do. Ar nold were a-goln' to take the Britisher over to the house o’ that ol’ Tory, Reub Smith. I got thar fust an’ hid in the A rnold w < ni bushes front o’ the house. Sure i Y 1 An A y on the • ÍOAO TO THE "nough !—that's what were done. Ar SOUTH. nold an’ t’ other feller come erlong an’ went Into the house. 'Twere so dark I couldn’t see ’em but I knowed ’twere them.” “How?" the young man asked. “ 'Cause they didn’t light no candle. They sot In the dark an’ they didn’t talk out loud like honest men would. | I come erway. I couldn't do no more." ”1 think you've done well," said Jack. "Now go and get some rest. Tomorrow may be a hard day." Jack spent a bad night In the ef fort to be as great as his problem. In the morning he sent Solomon and three other able scouts to look the ground over east, west and south of tbs army. One of them was to take the road to Hartford and deliver a mesr^ge to Washington. After the noon mess, Arnold mount ed bis horse and rode away alone. The young brigadier sent for his trust ed friend. Captain Merrlwether. “Captain, the general has set out on the east road alone,” said Jack. I “He Is not well. There's something wrong with his heart. I am a little observed that In other talks with him worried about him. He ought not to —but It was a friendly tone, It 'be traveling alone. My horse Is In front tended to put my fears at rest. । of th» door. Jump on his back and “I asked the general what he ■ keep In sight of the general, but don’t thought i of the prospects of success Het him know what you are doing." 1 for our cause. A little later Mrs. Arnold entered “ They are not promising,” he en the office of the new brigadier In a swered. ‘The defeat of Gates in the most cheerful mood. ; South and the scattering of Ids army T have good news for you,” she an in utter rout is not an encouraging nounced. “A British offln has come event.’ In a ship under a flag of truce to ‘"I think that we shall get along confer with General Arno <1. I sent better now that the Gates bubble has ■ a letter to Margaret Hare on my own burst,' I answered." I responsibility with the z< neral’s offi This ends the testimony of "the cial communication. I inv ted her to able and most valued oflicer," Jack come with the party ami promised Irons, Jr. ber safe conduct to our house. I ' expect her. For the re t w e look to CHAPTER XXVIII ¡you. Let us have a wed ng at head quarters. On the nlgtit of the twenty- As an Army With Banners. eighth, General Washinrr-o) will have The American army hud been sold returned. He has agree 1 to dine with by Arnold. The noble Ideal It had us that evening.” cherlthed, the blood It had given, the “I think that she mii“t have ob- bitter hardships it had suffered—tor served the shadow on my face for, ture In the wilderness, famine In the while she spoke, a great fear had Highlands, long marches of half come upon me,” ho test-fle<l In the naked men In mid-winter, massacres court of inquiry. “It seemed clear at Wyoming and Cherry Valley—all to me that, if there was a plot, the this had been bartered away, like a capture of Washington himself was shipload of turnips, to satisfy the to be a part of it and my sweetheart greed of one man. Again thirty pieces a helpful accessory. of allver I Was a nation to walk the “ 'You know much that I am eager bitter way to its Calvary? Major to know,’ I said. The general has Andre, the adjutant general of Sir not told me that he is to meet the Henry Clinton's large force In New British. May I know all the good York, was with the traitor when lie news?1 rowed from the ship to the west shore “‘Of course, he will tell you about of the Hudson and went into the bush that,’ she assured me. “He has told under the observation of Solomon me only a little. It Is some negotla- with his spy-glass. Arnold was to re tlon regarding an exchange of prls- ceive a command and large pay In oner«. I am much more Interested In the British army. The consideration Margaret and tli- wedding. I wish had been the delivery of maps show you would tell me about her. I have ing the positions of Washington's men heard that she has become very beau and the plana of his forts and other tiful.’ defenses, especially those of Forts T showed Mrs. Arnold the minia Putnam and Clinton and Battery ture portrait which Margaret had Knox. Much other Information was given me the day of our little ride and put In the hands of the British offl- talk In London and then an orderly cer. Including the prospective move came with a message and that gave ments of the commander In chief. He me an excuse to put an end to this was to be taken In the house of the untimely babbling for which I had man he had befriended. Andre had only to reach New York with hts treasure and Arnold to hold the con fidence of hts chief for a few days and, before the leaves had fallen, the war would end. The American army and Its master mind would be at the mercy of Sir Henry Clinton. Andre would have reached New York that night If The Vulture had not changed her position on account of a shot from the battery below Stony Point. For that, credit must be given tv tho good scout Solomon Blnkus. The ship was not In sight when the two men cnme out In their boat from the west shore of the river while the night was falling. Arnold had heart! the shot und now that the ship had left he feared that his treach ery was suspected. “I may want to get away In that bout myself," he suggested to Andre. Beautiful Miss D'Algy is Ais of ths "She will not return until she gets newest “finds’’ of a popular producing orders from you or me." the Britisher company, and she promises to be seen assured him. to good advantage in the “movies.” "1 wonder what has become of her, She io regarded as one of the moot said Arnold. graceful women In motion pictures. "She has probably dropped down the river for some reason," Andre answered. “What urn I to do?" “I'll take you to the house of a man I know who Ilves near the river and send you to New York by horse with pussports In the morning. You B t ANDREW F. CURRIER. H. D. cun reuch the British Unes tomorrow." "I would like that,” Andre claimed. "It would afford me u wel come survey of the terrain." SHINGLES "Smith will give you a suit of clothes that will fit you well enough," OIIINGI.ES. also known as herpes said the traitor. "You and he are zoster. Is painful and supposed to about of a size. It will be better for be due to some kind of Infecting po|- you to be In citizens' dress.” So it happened that In the darkness It la an acute. Inflammatory disease, of the September evening Smith and usually following the course of some Andre, the latter riding the biased- I nerve distributed over the akin. face mare, set out for King's Ferry, It begins with general discomfort, where they were taken across the : loss of appetite, perhaps with a chill river. They rode a few miles south of and fever (like so many Infectious dis the landing to the shore of Crom pond eases) nnd w ith great sensitiveness in nnd spent the night with a friend of ’ the skin. Smith. In the morning the hitter went I Its constant feature is a hllsterllke <>n with Andre until they had passed eruption along the course of the In« Pine’s bridge on the Croton river. Then he turned back. These blisters are usually only on Now Andre fared along down the ’ one side of the body, become Inflamed, road alone on the back of the mare ' and leave scars which are sometimes Nancy. He came to an outpost of the ] prominent and disfiguring. Highland army and presented his 1 The disease occurs In children. In pass. It was examined and endorsed ‘ young adults, and the aged, often per and he went on his way. He met sisting with the latter for months and transport wagons, a squad of cavalry years. and later, a regiment of militia com The fever, with which It begins, ing up from western Connecticut, but ' lasts three or four days, the pain be no one stopped him. In the faded hat 1 ing sometimes dull und somettmes and coat and trousers of Reuben ! sharp). Sometimes the pain subsides Smith, this man, who called himself after the eruption appears, but recurs John Anderson, was not much unlike from time to time. the farmer folk who were riding This pain Is severer In the old than hither and thither In the neutral terri In the young, and often la Worte at tory, on their petit errands. His face I night. was different. It was the well-kept | The blisters come In successive face of an English aristocrat with ; crops for four, five or six weeks, and handsome dark eyes and hair begin suppurate, discharge, and at length ning to turn gray. scar over. The eruption mny follow exposure A little out of Tarrytown on the highway the horseman traveled, a to draughts of cold air, or mental or group of three men were hidden In the physical 1 exhaustion, nnd mny occur us bush—ragged, reckless, unlettered i nn epidemic. country lads waiting for cows to come I The fluid In the blisters Is first clear watery, then turbid, bloody and down out of the wild land to be nnd । milked. They were "skinners" In the [ 1 purulent, and the resulting sores mny healing a long time. patriot militia, some have said; some resist 1 On the chest the eruption follows that they were farmers' sons not In course of a nerve between two nd- the army. However that «may have the 1 ribs ; on the face It may resid' been, they were undoubtedly rough, jacent . hard-fisted fellows full of the lawless ' In 1 paralysis of the side affected, nnd eye mny be It re spirit bred by five years of desperate the 1 nnd warfare. They were looking for sembles chicken-pox. Tories as well as for cattle. Tories psoriasis, and Is most frequent In < dd were their richest prey, for the latter weather. A patient with this disease sho ild would give high rewards to be ex remain In bed, and should fret and cused from the oath of allegiance. They came out upon Andre nnd chal worry ns little ns possible. The bowels should be kept open lenged him. The latter knew that he had passed the American outposts with castor oil or suits, nnd the diet and thought that he was near the should be simple. Including milk, British lines. He was not familiar soups, eggs, cereals, fruits and no with the geography of the upper east meat. The eruption must be carefully shore. He knew that the so-called neutral territory was overrun by two dressed every day, and the blisters parties—the British being called tho must not be broken If this cun be "Lower” and the Yankees the “Upper.”- avoided. Gauze moistened with alcohol. “What party do you belong tor Andre demanded. any suitable antiseptic lotion, may be “The Lower,” said one of the used to protect the surface. Yankees, When possible, It Is better to hnvc (TO BE CONTINUED.) the ndylm of nn Intelligent physician than to depend on sell treatment. Rare Sea Shell This Is especially Important with the In a specially provided case in the view of obtaining ns little ultimate foyer of the American Museum of scarring as possible. Natural History, there was exhibited (® by Oeorse Matthew Adama.) recently for the first time one of the ----------- o----------- most highly prized cone shaped shells ever found In the world. According to scientific authorities, ft Is properly called “The Glory of the Sea.” It Is about five Inches In length, of ownx peculiarly slender appearance, grace ful proportions, and has a tapering spire. It suggests an unfolding rose bud. The ground color Is pale Ivory, overlaid with a mosaic of thousands of triangular figures ranging from an eighth of an Inch to almost micro scopical size. These triangles are out lined In chrome yellow or deep chest- nut brown. 0XK rimming In a garden there was a little bewdrop thut wanted to get uway from the sun's hot breath that It might stay In the garden all duy. so It nestled dose to a beautiful red rose und whispered: "Hid« ma, beautiful Hose, In the soft petals of your lovely gown," The Bose was very vain nnd thought only of her own beauty, so she told little I>ewdrop to creep clos« Inside and nestle In her heart, for she wanted to keep It until moonlight flooded the garden, when her lover the nightingale would come to sing to her Ids love song. Away down deep In her heart crept little Dewdrop, thinking that lied Rose must love It to let It rest In her heart Your Health shine on one of the beautiful red petals the rose and they would be the most admired of all the garden folks. Hut It did not know the cold, vain heart of the beautiful rose nnd nil dny long she kept Dewdrop from peeping once Into the garden, us It longed to do. for feur of losing the Jewel she wished to adorn her beauty nt night. By nnd by w hen the moonlight crept Into the Karden und made It nhpoat like day th red told upon one of her soft petals. 'Tonight I shall be the loveliest rose When the nightingale flew doser und told the vain rose she WHS Indeed the most beautiful rose In the garden »h« tossed her proud head and down tumbled the pour little dewdrop to the ground. "Now see what you have done!" said the angry rose. “After I sheltered you nil dny you repay my kindness In this word did h I w u«k way about the poor little dewdrop thut lay (wmbllng on the ground below. "Rose, cried the dew- drop, "do bend over und help me to rest again on your soft chmtk !” "Item! the Indeed," rose "Why, you foolish thing, I might break my slender stem. You have spoiled my evening by tumbling off and you expect me to help you." "But don't you love me. Rose, dear?” asked the dewdrop, who hud I.... .. all duy dose to her heart nnd had grown to love her deeply. you!" exclaimed vain rose. "Why, you silly llttl« drop, 1 only saved you from the sun that you might milk« me more beautiful at night when the nightingale cum« to sing to me." The nightingale hail ceased hla sing Ing und had beard what the vain rose said, so be flew down to the dewdrop uni) gently lifted It In Ida bill and car ried It to another rose more fragrant than «led Rose but not so beautiful. Into the very heart of (he pale pink ro>e (he nightingale dropped the dew- drop. "Here you will fimi sweetness that will be worthy of your love," nubi the nightingale. "Here will I como each night and sing my love song, for the red rose haa no heart for love. It Is filled with vanity." For her vanity and cruel treatment of little the proud beauty not only lost her jewel but her by MrCluri By MILDRED MARSHALL Superstitions g 0 V H THELMA I R D1 N q K I N q br Wh««l«r Hyndlral«. Inc ) - 5-0----------- Morpheift and Somnui Morpheus, the ancient Greek god of dreams, was early pictured ns an old man w ith wings. He held In his hands n vial or horn from which Issued the sleep-producing vapor. Morpheus was the son of Sornnus the god of sleep. The name Morpheus Is derived from a form, nnd the name was given to the god of dreams because of the shapes or forms which he calls up before the dreamer.—Family I lerald. TT IS an omen of good luck to have A a wren build Its nest near the house. This, with the exception thut It Is also considered In some sections bud luck to kill u wren, appears to be the only survival In this country of the mystic character which pertains to tho wren In Europe nnd has so long at tached to It there that Professor Fra zer considers the ceremonies attend Ing the wren aupenrtltlon have "come down from u very primitiv« paganism.” The ancient Greeks nnd Romans, tho modern Italians, Spaniards, French, I »ani-s, Swedes, English and Welsh, re gard the killing of a wren us sure to bring disaster to the slayer. But not withstanding such belief the annual custom of "hunting the wren" was, to comparatively recent times, universal throughout Europe and a modlfied form In many sections today, ns, for Instance, In the Isle of Man where on St. Stephen's duy a wren Is annually killed and buried after Its body has been tak^n around the vil lage ami shown to the Inhabitants. The ceremony of killing the wren differed slightly In different countries but was everywhere rather elaborate. This annual slaying of an animal con sidered sacred and not to be killed at other times Is a custom found among many peoples still living In a primitive state and was once common to primi tive man. Frazer says: "The wor shipful nnlmul Is killed with especial solemnity once a year and before or after death Is carried from door to door that each of his worshipers may receive a portion,of the divine virtue that Is supposed to emanate from the dead or dying god. Religious proces sions of this sort must have had a great place In the ritual of European peoples In prehistoric times If we mny judge from tho numerous traces of them which have survived In folk lore." <© by McClur« M«w«p«prr Syndlcat« ) A LINE O’ CHEER By John Kendrick Bang*. THE ROSE think of this old f/f < Beauty and fragrance all com bined kind To «very passer-by with wit Enough to paus« and joy In It. (C by MeCIsrs N«w«p«p«r Syndicat«.) <® br MoCtors N«*ip«a«r Syndicats ) $ THE WREN KJO LIST of feminine mimes would ' lie complete without the lovely Thelma. It 1» u Norse name, sug gestive of the mythology of the Land of the Midnight Sun where Valkyries drive their gleaming chariots over the battlefield and conduct the glorious dead to their appointed places in Vai- linlla. Little was known of Thelmn nnd neldom was the name used outside of Scandinavia, until Marie Corelli In her sensational novel of that name pre sented the tragic love story of a beau tiful Norwegian who was transplanted from the land of fjords to the center of London's smartest and most cor rupt society. From that time the number of Thel mas In England ami America were le gion. The name has had particular vogue In this country where the Scan dinavian immigration Is great. As a romantic and poetical name, Thelma Is without equal, but her p<qmlarity lias never extended beyond Scandinavian and English speaking countries. Amber Is Thelma's tallsmanlc stone, it will guard her from all evil, espe cially from contagion. To wear It on a Journey will preserve her from accl- dent. Monday Is her lucky dny and 7 her lucky numlx-r. never earth £ o/ £ 0 •papar Syn<Ur«t« ) Ohe U7hy What’s in a Name? utterly In worth Ro Iona an In noms garden clone I still can find the budding Fair Play A woman bus Just learned that her colored workwoman, Aunt Dinah, hud at the age of seventy, married for the fourth time, "Why, Aunt Dinah,’’ she exclaimed, "you surely haven't married againP "Yesaum, honey, I has," was Aunt Dinah's smiling reply. "Yessum, as ofen us de Lawd takes 'em, so will L" Lifted It In Hit Bill and Carried It to Another Rose. In th« gurdvn. für 1 can uee timt non« of my ulaters wrars « Jewel. llow for- tunate you ar«, little Dewdrop, tu huve me near you I" Just Iben th« sweet tonet of the nlghtlngalo's lov« Mong filled tb« gnr den and Red Hose swayed u little In the breeze that hei Jewel« mlght sparkle In th« moonlight and make her more beautiful In th« eyes »f her CARELESS Jim Crow—My It’s a wonder theie folk« wouldn’t have the grata cut In their front yard!