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About The Hood River glacier. (Hood River, Or.) 1889-1933 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 1, 1895)
Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report Absolutely pure THE MAID OF MEXICO. To her all things unreal seem. Through her black eyes her bright soul peeps -And sees the world as tn a dream. For with wide open eyeB she sleeps. And what Is Mtvclco today T A nation ever in a doze, Where slumber holds eternal sway Whether or no the eyelids close. Lee Fanchild in Overland. A VENDEAN HEROINE. It was a pretty little windmill, with its big round tower capped ty a weather vane, its long arms or blades whioh rat tied in the west wind like the sails of a boat in stays, and its little round win ' dows looking over the hills of Anjou like the telescopes of an astronomer such was the windmill of Bernardeau, and when it was working all the wind mills arouod the neighborhood looked like white sea gulls pursued by a bird of prey. It was situated on the slope of the Guigne at the end of a little orooked pathway hardly wide enough for the mill donkey, and in wnichone might search in vain for traces of human foot' prints, because it was so dark under its vault of shrubbery, so muddy and rug' ged that the woman of the mill always took to the vines when on her way to Ancenis on foot. , - .: ! And a handsome woman, too, was this lady of the mill. She was 25 years old, with a well rounded form, a little hand, flashing dark eyes, lips as red as wild cherries and a, well turned leg. She was smart in her attire, and there was little in her appearanoe to reveal the faot that she was a widow. When she came into the Village mounted upon the donkey that carried her bags of flour, all the young fellows came out to admire her fine figure and the beautiful limbs which appeared below her short ,-. skirts.- ;, Even the donkey himself seemed proud of his mistress. He traveled along at an easy gait, tossing his head and cocking his ears, as if to say to every body: "Here she is. You have only to look at her. This is la Meuniere of Ber nardeau. There isn't another woman like her in all the country I" And that was the truth. But she was the subject of a great deal of gossip. How the tongues did wag on her account 1 It was said that since the death of her hus band, n poor goose of a fellow who had taken her without a cent from a farm and left her all his property, she fre quently tossed her cap over the blades of her windmill. Whether this was true or not, the blades certainly never told, but one thing is certain, and that is that she did hang up her cap there pub licly on one occasion, and it cost her " her life. Here is her story: The first . thiiig the Vendeans did when they rose in revolt against the re public! was to make use of the wind mills..' Nothing oould be better suited for signaling or more troublesome for the enemy. Where the Blues oould only see white wings turning round in a melancholy fashion, the Chouans pos sessed v a perfect telegraphic- system, whioh told them of the movements of the republican army. . ' The windmill of Bernardean was one of. the prinoipal vedettes on the Loire, i Three . days before the attack - upon '' Nantes, Cathelineau came to the mill of Bernardeau and asked for shelter. It was the 22d of June, 1793. Bonobamp ' was at Anoenis since the 17th awaiting the main body of the army. The weather was magnificent, and . the Vendeans camped in the open air. When Cathe linean at the end of a little road found himself face to faoe with the beautiful woman of the mill, he asked her if she was a royalist ''One might easily become a royalist to serve under so handsome an officer as you," said she. "Good enoughl Then . let me have shelter here tonight. " " The meuniere cheerfully welcomed him, and Cathelineau slept that night in the mill. The next morning when he was leaving she sent to him from the threshold of the mill a perfeot volley of kisses, after whioh she went up to the highest little window in the mill and waved her little white handkerchief. . Eight days afterward Cathelineau, mortally wounded, was coming from Ancensis in a carriage, and as he passed by the mill he oast a long and sad look at it. According to the order, its blades were arranged so as to announce the ap proach of the soldiers of Canolauz. From the 17th of Ootober to the 17th of December, during the 60 days which separated the two retreats of the Ven dean army on the Loire, the mill of Ber nardean continued its signals of intelli gence with those of La Vendee. But the 17th of December was its last day. Harassed by the Mayencais, that crushed them at the battle of Mans, the Vandeens reached Ancenis and endeav ored to cross the Loire, but for want of sufficient rafts a considerable number of them were obliged to abandon the effort and to advanoe through the coun try, in the hope of escaping the enemy. At sight of this old mill, which they Immediately recognized as an "ally, (.bout 20 men took refuge in it just at the moment when Westermann oaine to the heights of Bel Air. - Suddenly a puff of blue smoke rolled from one of the upper windows of the tn ill. The meuniere herself commenced the fight - "Good shot I" she said. "There is one less now." . ' FowdlF westermann ordered a company or hussars to surround the old nrilL He was in too great a hurry to" finish with La Rochejacquelin to bother himself with windmills." The hussars had hard ly arrived at the mill before bis flying artillery, began to cannonade the few rafts of the Chouans, who were endeav oring to cross the Loira Theoffioerwbo . was in command of the company sum moned the occupants of the mill to sur render. v The meuniere opened a little window, fastened her lace cap on the point of mm nf hn blades and shouted out. "Come and get it, you ill shaped pup- pyl" A volley from the hussars was tht only answer to those insolent words. The window panes were broken to frag ments. The Vendeens inside returned the fire and dropped five of the horse men. The company then dismounted and rushed against the door of the mill, which they broke with the . butts of their guns. " " "Surrender, you scoundrels, or in a few moments you'll all be dead!" shouted the officer. "Yon are the scoundrels!" yelled the woman of the mill. "Let ma see if von are able to get my cap. The hussars entered the lower story, but the ladder was removed by the Ven deens, who now fired upon them from the story above and made terrible rav ages in their ranks. , The woman of the mill busied herself with the work of loading the guns, a .task whioh she performed with aston ishing rapidity. The Chouans, sheltered behind the flour sacks, cared little for the fire of the Blues. "Take good aim I" cried la meuniere. "Don't let a single one escape. " The officer, seeing his men fall all around him, ordered them to come out and take the plaoe by storm, scaling the arms of the mill. It was a magnificent assault ; .Twenty hussars clambered up tho blades. With their carbines thrown across their backs they clambered up like sailors to the story above, and from there fell either killed or wounded under the balls or the bayonet thrusts of the Vendeans. One brigadier man' aged to get tip to the roof by making a rampart of the bodies of his comrades, who held on to the arms like drowning men to planks.. , ' - "We are all right, my friends 1" cried he. "Guard well the entranoe of the milll" After planting the color of the company on -the weather vane he bored a hole in the roof to admit the barrel of his gun. Three times he fired and mor tally wounded . three men. This threw the besieged into a panic. Resistance was becoming impossible, and the Ven deans were already raising the butts of their guns in the air, when la meuniere pushed down the ladder and cut off their retreat "Now die like men I" she shouted. Then there commenced a per fect massacre. Attacked above and be low, the Vendeans fought like impris oned lions. When the ammunition was exhausted, they threw down .the sacks of corn and flour, and, clubbing their muskets,' .jumped down among the Bines, who received them on the points of their bayonets. It was a horrible spectacle ' "Where is la menniere?" shouted the hussars. "Here she is, citizens," said she as she let herself slip along the shaft of the mill. "I have given to you no quarter, and 'I don't want any mercy from fel lows like you!" "All right," said the offloer. "We'll settle your account in short order. Place yourself against that wall. " There was something singularly graceful and proud in her bearing and a glance of withering contempt in her eye as she advanced toward the wall. Her splendid blaok hair was now float ing in disorder upon her shoulders. She gathered it modostly around her breast, so as to hide her torn corsets. Then she stood against the wall. ', . . 7 "Now fire and be d d!" said she. This piece of feminine boldness made the officer hesitate. "How old are you?" he asked. . ., "Twenty-five." " . . "Your name?" , "I am la meuniere du Bernardeau. " 1 "Do you want to live?"' "No, I'd rather die thanreoeive mer cy from you." ' "Come now, simply shout 'Long live the republio!' and I'll let you go free." "Long live the king!" she cried in a vibrating voice. A moment afterward there was the rolling sound of a volley. That was the last of the meuniere of Bernardeau. "She was a plucky pieoe of flesh, all the same," said the soldiers. ' " Westermann's hussars lost in that at tack 23 men and 8 wounded. Since then the mill - has remained abandoned as if it were cursed. Open to all the winds of heaven, without a roof, without arms, it stands. Occasionally a tramp passing through the country takes shelter there and sleeps with the swallows and the bats.' Following its well known habit, the ivy, which seems to be in love with ruins, gradually in twined itself around it, and from a dis tance the uncrowned tower has the as pect cf a ruined fortress.. How many times have I wandered through that seotion of the country seeking for details of the dramatic scene whioh I have endeavored to picture, but la meuniere of Bernardeau had so bad a reputation in that oountry that her he roio death , was not sufficient to cover over, at least in the minds of the peas antry, the faults which she - had or which were attributed to her. Figaro, THE DUDE HAD GRIT. BUT IT WAS A CLOSE CALL FOR THE SCIENTIFIC GENTLEMAN. , He Picked Up a Frozen Rattler, Which Thawed Oat as He Carried It In the Hot August Sun Florida Snake Sharps ' Astounded at the Deed. "I was once on a gunning trip during the month of August in the hammocks along the lower St Johns river. . I came to a hotel- on the river bank that was keeping open for the little business brought to it by the river traffic ' Back of the hotel was a fringe of pines, and beyond the pines was a reach of barren country coveied with a growth of blue palmetto and gallberry. "Among the persons staying at the hotel were two young men whose interest-in the region centered in those things which pertained to natural his tory. Both were well dressed. Their hands were white and smooth. In town they might have been taken for bank tellers. One morning, before the sun had taken the chill put of the air, one of these guests, in a pair of rather gen teel top boots, wandered for a consider able distance through the low palmetto scrub. In hie path he found a rattle snake twice as long as the orange wood stick with which he walked. "The chill of the night air was still in the marrow of the reptile, and it was an easy matter for the young naturalist to clutch the snake just back of his jaws and hold him in a firm grasp with the thumb and circling- forefinger of the right hand.' Carefully lifting the body of the snake with the left hand the nat uralist started for the hotel with his greatly valued prize, carrying his orange wood cane under his left arm. "There is nothing else that so warms the cockles of a rattlesnake's heart as the vertical rays of the sun, and before the young naturalist had made halt the journey to the hotel, the captive snake had managed, unobserved, to twist his tail about his captor's thigh. Thus an chored, he gave an ablebodied pull, which was the naturalist's first intima tion that the snake was putting off his sluggishness. With bis left hand the man was about to unwind the coil from his thigh, but he found that if he let go the snake at its middle the muscle of the reptile would be too much for the right hand grasp' at its throat, which was the only safeguard against a stroke from its deadly fangs. So he tightened his grasp upon the neck and quickened his pace toward the hotel. "The sun mounted toward the zenith and his rays became warmer. .-. They gave strength and quickness to the cap tive reptile. Instead of a steady draw from the tightening coil around the man's thigh came a series of angry wi;ithings which severely tested the strength in the bands and arms unused to endurance. . With each convulsion a change in the tint reflected from the monster's scales ran like a thrill from its head to its tail, and then came the warning rattle that nobody has to hear a second time in order that he may know its meaning. The flag on the cupola of the hotel hung limp in the hazy distance. The orange wood stick had fallen, from beneath the arm of the young naturalist. A numbness was taking possession of the muscles in his arms and wrists. He knew what that meant. Meanwhile thediamond marked reptile was warming up for the strug gle. His eyes from pits of molten lead had become deep set diamonds. His angry writhings were fearful to see. He was venom incarnate. ' ; "It was looking exceedingly serious, not to say desperate, for-the young nat uralist. , ' Cheerfully would he have put aside' his enthusiasm in the cause of soience and cast the, reptile from him, but that he could not do. The rattler's tail was coiled tightly about his leg, and if the man had loosed his hold upon the neck and middle of the reptile its fangs would have .made their, deadly mark upon him while yet the coil was unbroken. . His life depended upon his reaching the hotel before the strength in. his arms gave out, -and how much Strength he had left he knew not, for the numbness in them had driven out the sense of feeling. Again he quick ened his pace. "It must have seemed an endless jour ney to the young naturalist as he hurried along, his eyes fixed upon the writhing monster, except when they were raised for an instant to glance at the flag hang ing above the hotel ; but at last he was within the grounds. His. friend rushed forward from the little group on the veranda, but turned and ran back when he saw the look on the young natu ralist's face. In a moment he appeared with a strong cord and a cane, which he had caught up. in the hallway. While he was tying a slip noose in the cord neither of the men spoke, but it was easy to see that both knew there was no time to waste, j : . I "As the noose was slipped over the reptile's head and tightened by means of the cane a convulsion stronger than : any that had preceded it drew together the benumbed hands - which held the writhing creature, and they yielded to the force that drew them toward the coil, which now twice encircled the man s thigh. " 'I've got him,.' said the man who held the noose. " 'Well, kindly untwist his tail. My hands are a trifle tired,' said the other. "This service was done quickly, and the two young naturalists went to their rooms with their captive. "Among those who had stood speech less while these things were going on was Rattlesnake Bob, a local snake ex pert from up the creek. As the young men disappeared he said, without shut ting his mouth: "'Waal, I'll bo; if them dudes. hain't got grit !' " -, -,.-.?:v "'Yes,' said 'one. of .the guests. They're catching snakes for the Smith-. onian institution to experiment with. ' " --New York Sua. . AN ARGENTINE SENSATION. A Deadly Duel That Has Greatly Excited the Southern Republio. The mails from the Argentine Repub lio bring news of a terrible tragedy which has caused an unprecedented sen sation in that country. Dr. Lucio de Lopez, one of the lead' ing financiers and most influential men in the republio, who was appointed by the government to investigate the at fairs of the Provincial bank of Buenos Ayres, made a report to the courts which caused the arrest of Colonel Sar mien to, a son of the late President Sar- miento, whose memory is revered like that of Linooln in this country. He was once minister to the United States and is said to have afterward Americanized the Argentines Colonel Sarmiento was convioted in the court of the first in stance and appealed to the superior oourt, where there was a mistrial, two judges voting to confirm and two to re verse the decree of the lower court He then published a bitter personal attack upon Dr. Lopez in La Prensa, one of the leading newspapers. . Acting under the advice of foolish friends, Dr. Lopez sent him a challenge, and on Deo. 27 a duel was fought at the Belgrano hippodrome in the suburbs of Buenos Ayres. Dr. Lopez was attended by General Mansilla of the Argentine army , and Francis Beazley, assistant -secretary of state. .Sarmiento was at tended by General Bosch of the army and Rear Admiral Soliar of the navy. Shots were twice exchanged at a dis tance of 12 paces. At the seoond dis charge Dr. Lopez fell wounded, the ball passing through his abdomen. He was taken : in an ambulance to his house, where more than 200 of the leading citi zens of Buenos Ayres were assembled anxiously awaiting the result of the duel. The wounded man died next day, but Colonel Sarmiento had not been ar rested when the steamer left Buenos Ayres. . Eighty years ago a decree was issued making dueling a capital offense, but it has been a dead letter for many years, althongh appeals to the code have been common. - The prominence of the parties engaged makes the sensation the greater, and there is as much excitement in the Ar gentine Republio today as there was in the Unikd States when Aaron Burr shot Alexander Hamilton.- Redheaded at the Age of 103. General M. Scott, who resides in the township of Shieldsville, Rice oounty, is 103 years of aga For upward of 80 years be has been a Rice county farmer He had some business transactions in Faribault yesterday that required his presence, and he : came to the. city on horseback, a distance of 12 miles. Mr Scott never wears an overcoat nor over shoes, he walks as briskly as a man in middle life, and never wears glasses. His hair, which was always red, has not turned gray, but his whiskers and mustache are ' white. Minneapolis Tribune. ' A BIG REGULAR ARMY. The mightiest host of this sort is the army of invalids whose bowels, livers and stomach have been regulated by Hostetter s Siomach Bitters. A regular habit nf body Is brought about through using the Bitters, not by vio lently anlta'ing and griping the Intestines, but by reinforcing their energy and causing a flow of the bile into its proper cnannei. Malaria, la grippe, dyspepsia, and a tendency to inactivity 01 me Kianeys, are conquered By me enters. An argument: Parishoner Do ' you think there is any valid objection to fishing on Bun day ? Pastor I do. A man who goes fishing on Sunday often finds it hard to tell the truth on Monday. ' After six years' suffering, I was cured by Piso's Cure. 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