OCR Text |
Show PLEASANT GROVE REVIEW I i. si J Bathl room, ) ink E(i St liqsi the for t tnunp.j ' i i i 5crv , mil best to: en, M meswfe ichbet: t it irays t hen & by fevel low & te, ttl xe out J wonfe -ay it 1 i whid lates ft yes tit: their rt on, frail table rain aata &f 9m fJfeF ' fa gfpijt" ifjf F JIrvin9 Bache'ler K'Jyei" bu empty "H M-ort help th.l HOMB INDUSTBY. tha eeamtry frown. from town ku empty shlv" sort help th.MlTM. In the fateful month of July, 1775, Colin Cabot, ardent young lover of liberty, bids good-by to bis sweet' heart. Patience "Pat" Fayerweath- er, daughter of a stanch loyalist but herself at heart a "rebel," and escapes from Boston,, then in Brit ish hands, going to Join the Revo lutionary army at Cambridge. CHAPTER I Continued ' 2 While working with flint and tin der, Snoucb said : "I'll send ye barreled bar-reled up with a load o' smoked fish to Morton's pint With this breeze an' the floodtlde, ye'll git there r,1r Church Service . aiore BunuP- P men u IBUi I roii vp. ovprhonrd nn' the rlvpr inr. !nIu5-oW6church.x nt an' the tlde'll take ye on to CoX Mass., known t ome part o' the beach at Winnlsl- t. . .j.' meeting nouse, an in- " i"a s 2Tiem TTia out a' the harrpl find nut off nn tho ; ol wu , I - jrSjry Services oro oiisus iuau iu maiuieucuu. iucico a uig .vstional Society of Friends, j dead pine at the end o' the road. jer days weekly services were The llght'll be dim. but ye can't feted. UK TOUR DRUGGIST FOB ICTERMOUNTATN PBODUCT jPoli lies. y and miss It At the top o' the first line o bluffs is the big wooden house o' Israel Woodbrldge. Stun chimney an' half a dozen gahles. He'll take care o ye an' put ye on yer way, sir." The lantern lighted. Snoach be- Region Vegetation gan to move barrels of smoked fish mosses. Donpy, saxifrage, to the head of a long sloping spin willows, all drawiea, i way down which they rolled to the stunted, grow in the hands of the loaders at the end of the wharf. This done, he said to Colin : "There'll be a guard on the dock. sir. I'll have to roll yon down as if ye was a barrel o' nn' not A hnmnn hpinV Tf pnnvon. JSWEEK'S PRIZE STORY lent, ye may give me a pound to pay the fiddlers. There'll be five a-nlavln for this dance. uw nwe nam M? gnoach st0od over the barrel, as . RRiist onces are the lawcvt and he critically examined tts head, so k I'll not been sacnneea. I that rv,itn m i,.b t hto kani. lJ tanrinr w. hv. the best for factor "a tall brawny sea-god. his 6t ad save ueipot eor personal weathered face covered with a thin, C:f, patronize Home Indoitry as scraggy, " blond beard, his great ktrtiri IntermounUin Prosperity. arms bare to the elbow. A SOD of the misrhtv deen. whose frnits he iLIt gathered, he personified a power beyond that of armies. It may yet win the wa'r for us." "Here are two pounds, and my thanks go with them,'' said Colin. "Much obieeged. sir. Ye're a gen- Excellent Values-Sena far Simple tleman an' no mistake an' good luck to ye, sir. This Is the roof o' Cross Ancient Emblem yer little cabin. Here's a bit o' e cross, as a Christian reli- rope fast to a staple in its center. 1. is probably the most Ye hang on to that to hold It down a adaptation. Tor thou-in bad weather. When safe on years before the Christian board, ve can trive ver lunes an ie cross was of religious eig- airin. Out In the breeze ye can him amon widely separated DtnotivrttATi A rrra arm hk tftflfYl. l, . . m . , I cit ai&iiLcu j ci acta nu vw" U i nd m different ages. Its f taMe Afore they r11 ye ovr iiac uuj a ai yju .uvu eta ' vj iv- edge o the barrel-head to make It watertight Hold her snug till ye touch shore. There Is small holes near its center. They'll give ye air. When ye make port, take the barrel head with ye an' give It to Wood bridge, Old Scholarship The gay young patriot rolled ward university offers the a"own the spinway like a barrel of a scnolarship in the United nsn ana was tumDiea BDoara ana a, according to data gathered stored on deck right end up with JSlla B. Eatcliffe of the of education. The scholar- pven by Lady Mowlson of n, Lngland. was established Ha, UBS. JOHN STUMPP, J& UTAH WOOLEN MILLS BLANKETS Salt Lake City, Utah SEPH M. TAYLOR, Inc. Ita s Leading Kortkiaaj prfs on Time Payment Plan H sa desired m tit;, Itil . :- 'Pish fas. 329 9EB3 'MM' GASOLINE icked With Power re? 1 pip fc?T" j h r Iue North esota claims th hnnnr nf y.the most northern spot of vwiea Dtates. Excluding Alas- f normern part of Lake of "Mds county in that state is V nrth than any place in "GRAINS OF GOLD" P WHOLE WHEAT CEREAL 1 Mm Cream Taste Better" fi Mads For Western Trade a -i w. M - " t-rc" -i Know All About You.- She Said. U Wealth t. "You Are a Great Lover.- .temPt you to wate- less Important merchandise. He v uo' 1119 age 01 rode at ease half an hour or so . ' nt beware lest you find rat in tha dnrknpsa. bave placed venr forfain. I""ul"b Z7. h; flisnriMi lit inen ne naa w tower ma ura osal of your enemies." . ... BPrved tVTCI Viv W U v-" " w with pitch. The barrel, lifted to the gunwale, fell Into the bay and began Its tossing journey In the hurrying tide. He was riding in the curious craft ?n ffi pr riiibteM I not more than twenty minutes, he t.vj ior th. bwt wor ,.bnnM whpn he bumDed the sand in the shallows at Winnisimet He iieard two voices young and gentle gen-tle voices. They were near him. Some person was out in the shal low water trying to roll the barrel In with a stick. Impatient to be released. Colin decided to take the 4 tive brain is of little ns makes ita n.. ,a;,. geles Times. Jt wek will bt aaM or th best St word i4 ea yov IuBtain aiado . """'let to abovt. 8 -e) 8lt Lak, Ch,. If 7or $5.00 We No. Kit with hands on the chimes shot, out of the barrel into the shallows. A boy and girl a little younger than he stood near, In bathing costumes. Daylight was coming. "The girl had a face and form not easily forgotten," Colin writes. "Although the light was dim I could see clearly after the darkness of the barrel and the first thing I saw was that shapely, beautiful girl" ''"Are you bound for Cambridge?" the boy asked with a friendly smile. "Yes." ' "I am Emory Woodbrldge and this Is my sister Nancy. We come here every day at flood-tide for a swim. We meet many tide-riders. Our house Is yonder on the hill. Go through the pine bush to the road. My father will help you. I'll take care of the barrel-head." Colin with his bag set out for the road, wondering at the strange wa ter-wisdom of Ebenezer Snoach. Mr. Woodbrldge welcomed him and put him to bed abovestairs where he slept until he was called about two o'clock for dinner, at which he sat beside the plump, blond, dark-eyed Nancy. "I know all about you," she said. "You are a great lover. My school friend, Pat Fayerweather, has told me the story." - "Oh, that story I" he exclaimed. "Thinking of it kept me happy in the barreL It would put life In a smoked fish. It was a barrelful of happiness that landed near your pretty feet" They had a merry visit and their theme was mostly Pat When the young man had left them Nancy Woodbridge said to her mother, "What a big, gentle, merry-mouthed boy. I could love him myself." . - - ; Young Cabot spent three days with his family, and "rid his mother out for an airing every day." Then mounting his bay mare, he proceeded proceed-ed to Cambridge with his sword, firelock and pistoL He went first to ; his friend. President Samuel Langdon of the famous college, who gave him almost a father's welcome, saying: "I suppose that you have come to enlist?" "Yes, sir, and I nave a letter to Washington." "I will go with you." Immediately they set out for the headquarters of the army In the big square mansion, long a familiar object ob-ject Washington was at his desk. The president of the college Introduced Intro-duced the young man, summing up In warm words bis history at Harvard, Har-vard, as If conferring an honorary degree. "A good student of an excellent disposition, a born athlete, the best wrestler, the best farmer, the fleetest fleet-est runner of his time at Harvard." These were the phrases he employed. em-ployed. Washington listened with dignity and a benevolent smile. In a letter to Colin's mother is this description de-scription of the person of the Commander Com-mander In Chief: " 'George Washington of Virginia. Those words have been flying around New England since John and Sam Adams returned from Philadelphia. Who has not heard of his wisdom, his "noble spirit' his modesty, of his coat torn to rags by bullets, while horses were shot beneath him when he fought with Braddock I I feared It was like the talk we have heard on the king's birthday and was prepared for disappointment. But he has conquered me. I am like a man thrown and stunned who Is trying to think how It happened. He Is a big man at a guess two inches taller than 1 broad at the hip and shouldeis. Looks straight In your eyes. His bead is no better bet-ter shaped than others you have seen in Boston, but 1 swear 1 have never seen one so well set I wondered why I felt a kind of awe in his presence. I know now. The biz thing Is inside of him. It reaches out and tojebes you when you look In his eyes ant. when he moves his hands. It hi' yot agaiJ when you hear bis gentle voice. There are three words that come to me as I think of him. They are Power, Vitality, Kindness. I think that he has a mind as strong as our best pair of oxen and that God Is driving It He has a good-na tured face, a bit weathered, with a pock mark here and there not handsome. His straight nose Is a shade thick and large.. His deep- set blue-gray eyes are wide apart nnrt the look dowr Into you. His brownish hair, brushed back and nowdered and falling in a queue. His moutn is wore his riding boots. His blue-and-buff uniform with golden epaulettes, epau-lettes, and buttons, was spotless and well fitted. A broad blue sash spanned his breast fvom waist to shoulder. From shoe to ruffles every detail of his dress was admirable. ad-mirable. Still it was not bis look nor bis manners, genteel as they were, that reduced me to a sense of smallness. It was the man under un-der It all De has doubled my faith In our cause. , The preliminaries being over, the learned president said : - - . "General, you have had time to survey the army. May I ask for your Impression of It?" "It Is a disorganized mass of Ill-clad, Ill-clad, poorly armed soldiers without a national spirit and with'no knowledge knowl-edge of what is expected of fighting men. The New England troops feel that all men are equal even in a regiment that a uniform cannot create a caste. So there is little order, government, or discipline among them. We have only raw material ma-terial a mound of ore to be fused and slagged and shaped into useful Iron." , Turning to Colin he added: "I am glad to welcome young men like you to the army. You will, I trust, bend your mind to tts problems. I wish you first to go down among the men in the line and get the feel of It. My orderly will now conduct you to the muster master. For the present I will send your horse to my stable." Colin was mustered Intb the company com-pany of Capt Amos Farnsworth from Groton. It was quartered In lodges made of hewn timber, rough boards and sail-cloth. Only ten men in the company were In uniforms and they were of varying colors red, blue and gray to suit the family taste. The most were In shabby farm clothing. There were also ragged men in torn boots. Some were unarmed. The Rhode Island regiment the smartest-looking body of men in the army and well uniformed were in tents op posite the rude quarters of the Massachusetts boys. Captain Farnsworth gave his fel low townsman a hearty welcome. His left arm, broken and slashed at Bunker Hill, was in a sling. Colin remembered the tall, lean. bony, brown-bearded farmer, so often rightly worried as to the con dition of his souL There was a noticeable lack of co-ordination be tween his brain and the Incorporeal part of him. . The buman soul was a trouble some asset In New England. It was menaced, frightened, persecuted by the ablest men schooled in the arts of the orator. It was yelled at berated and cowed by Ignorant, well-meaning pulpiteers In the back country. The Inter and the outer man were often in a quarrel with each other. Amos Farnswortn always looked serious even when other men were laughing. His sad expression was relieved only by a quizzical look in his gray eyes. Menial activity produced pro-duced a singular effect upon his countenance The skin on his brow rolled into deep wrinkles. He had a marked fondness for the word "which," often misplaced In his conversation. 'He was a widower about forty years of age. "How are you?" Colin asked. "Anxious as a painter In a tree with the dogs, barkin', which the fact Is I'm on the run with Satan hold o' my coat tail," the captain answered. He surveyed Colin from head to foot adding: "Say you're a mortal stout-lookln' man which I'm glad you've come. There's goin to be a big wrastle here an all-fired wrastie between the Rhode Islanders Island-ers and our rlgament You're a big, bony, hard-meated cuss an' I'm a giam mistrustful o' them fellers. We'll need ye." The captain took a bite from a plug of tobacco which he called a "Virginia cake" and introduced the young man to various officers In the regiment, after which they went for a walk together through the big camp. An Important recruit was often thus favored. The spirit of Farnnworth'g com pany was for friendship, not for war. Stern discipline excited a degree of resentment The men addressed ad-dressed their officers as if they were all having a noon hour in the hay field. Even the captain was Amos" to every private. It was then probably the most re markable army the world had seen fair of good natured. gossip ing, homesick, peace-loving pioneers quartered In lines of tents and lodges and in public buildings. Outside the tents and lodges they saw numbers of men and jromen at work washing, some with young children playing around the tubs. They had come to look after their husbands to see that they were fed and kept decently rlean. and nursed If wounded. They bad lodgings In the village and came dally Into camp. What a contrast were these to the half-world women who were wont to Infest an nrmy ! There were fourteen thousand iwo hundred men In this great Jolly fair of new-world Dioneers. The churches and the college halls were filled with them. Officers not Droptriy uniformed were distinguishes from privates by bare feet There were beards of many shapes and colors. "I didn't know there was so much hair In the world," ColJn said to Amos. "The poorer the man, the richer the crop." "Well, It takes time an' money to keep 'em mowed off. So they let :em slide," Amos answered. . f And they slide in all directions. up, down, sideways and straight ahead." At a point near the enemy they saw cannon balls from the British batteries thump the side of Prospect hill, throwing dust luto the air and rlcochetting down the slope, bounding bound-ing over rocks and slowing to a long roll. "Ain't that a caution?" said Farnsworth. Farns-worth. "Don't amount to much; they Just shoot at America an' ye know it's a mortal sight blgger'n the army. Don't hurt a hill to be wownded. Boys used to chase them balls till they found out how mean they was, which ye know they can kick a leg off ye, when ye think 'em harmless." They crept behind a broad stone wall on the side of Winter bill where a hole had been prepared a n1!v llotnU a trifle too large and ver, firm when j ribbons on their caps. closed. Yet when be stood up, straight as an arrow, and walked proud as a king to the window, he Amos Farnsworth Always Looked Serious. for observation. Amos took a small telescopic spy-glass from his pocket and peered through the hole at the British line on Bunker bill. "There, take a peek," he said to Colin, "The British ain't more'n a mile off. Ye kin see the redcoats over thar. We call 'em lobsters." "Lobsters?" , . "TJh huh. In our gab, them red boys are all lobsters," Amos went on seriously. "We call a new re cruit 'a long face.' 'cause he's kind o' skeered an' homesick." On their way back they stopped at the parade ground to watch the drilling squads, The air . was full of the shouted orders: ""Half-cock your firelocks. "Handle your cartridge. "Prime your cartridge. "Shut your pans. "Return your rammers. "Poise your firelocks. "Cock your firelocks. "Present- your firelocks." Eighteen motions were needed In loading, aiming and discharging this weapon. "I've heard our guns were dead ly on Breed's hill and Bunker hill." said Colin. "Ch. hub I They was." His graphic description of the fight began be-gan with a little assenting grunt full of good nature. "Like the wrath o' God I Ye see we didn't fire till them lobsters was close up,' 'bout seventy feet off, which ye could almost shake hands with 'em. Tbey had emptied their guns. Only a few hit us. A fog o'smoke twlxt them an' us. Aimed too high! They stood loadln' their firelocks. Guess they didn't think we farmers knowed enough to shoot straight, which I swear there wasn't a man In our line who couldn't trim yer hair with bullets bul-lets an never a drop o' blood. When we let go. Goda'mlghtyi How they went down I That blast 'o lead was like a long sword, which It stabbed with the power o' God at their bellies. It cut 'em In two. It tore 'em Into bloody rags. In a minute, I tell ye, boy, thar was files on tbelr livers." Amos was angry and excited. The rage of the battle bad come back to him. His eyes glowed as be went on: 'Them that wasn't aimed at run like a nigger that's seed a ghost They formed an' come back In platoons. They was brave, no mistake, mis-take, which I give 'em credit They behaved proper. Ag'in we mowed 'em down. They kep' a-com In'. They was streamln our way-flank way-flank an middle like a red river runnln up hill, by 0 dl At last they was so dam many we couldn't snuff 'em out They charged with their bayonets which they was that nigh we didn't have time to reload afore they was on us an" shovln the cold Iron Into our guts. Them that hadn't bayonets tit like n I with gun stocks an' heavy stuns which a many wilted down an' died rl'ht thar. By the Heavenly King! I tell ye the rest on us run. We did. We went fast I had a busted arm. Them that wasn't rammed through was nicked consid'able which the firelock Is yer friend : Tt'o a hiir frill chance of showing himself. He was 's"' " " UshZ the head from its place and word not carelessly "hosen. He .. hn It'a Innrioit tint the World It was early July and the dress ' come to an end while yer a was mainly iike that of the hay field and barnyard. There were even men wearing one suspender, an undershirt un-dershirt and rrgged trousers over lfiadfn' of It Then whar be ye? In Heaven er h L Thar's where you be Ch huh!" (TO B CONTINUED.) Cobras Venerated The veneration with which cobras are regarded in India is one of the reasons for their excessive multiplication. multi-plication. There Is a theory that If a cobra visits a hut and meets with an unfriendly reception the Inmates will be ruined. If, on the other band, it Is hospitably handled It will bring good fortune. Consequently, It, is provided with milk and every protection. Even if a man kills a cobra In self-defense his own life is forfeit ' : v Russia's First Railroad Five years after the opening of Euorpe's first railway, the Liverpool Liver-pool & Manchester, the Russian czar, eager to show that Russia was well abreast of the times, determined deter-mined to have a railway of bis own, and ordered one to be built A road, 14 miles long, was built and opened in 1S37. hardly a commercial commer-cial success, however, as It went from the capital to nowhere In particular. par-ticular. Kansas City Times. -New Artistic Idea The latest thing in art has been brought out by Huang Ehrnan, Petping, China, Illustrator. Huang sips a mouthful of black ink, bends over a piece of silk and, using his mouth to regulate the flow of Ink and his tongue as a penpolnt draws flowers and butterflies. The artist has already gained local fame by drawing pictures with Angers, spoons and everything except the conventional brush or pen. Abacas Still Used One survival of the ancient science sci-ence of mathematics which is still In use in modern times is the abacus, aba-cus, the counting frame of the Greeks. It Is the common bead frame of the' kindergarten, with beads strung on parallel wires. It is employed generally by the Per sians and the Chinese for calculat ing. Paganlni's Violin Nlcolo PaganinL Italian virtuoso, I was a musician, not a maker of vio lins. His violin was a very fine Guarnerlus violin, which he be queathed to the municipality of Genoa. Italy, the town where he was born, and it la preserved there as one of its must valuable possessions. Eagloa Wheels ; The main wheels on an engine are usually made of steel At one time wheels with paper cores were used on railway passenger cars to make them rlda quieter. The body, of the wheel was made of rye straw paper.' 120 to 100 sheets being stuck together with flour paste and subjected to 500 tons hydraulic pressure. These were employed for 25 years or more, but were discon- tlnued with the advent of improved im-proved iron and steel wheels and heavier equipment " Old Territorial Name Norumbega was a region along the northeast coast of North Amer ica, or its capital city, given on oia maps of the Sixteenth and Seven teenth centuries. , The extent of the country varied from a region including in-cluding the entire coast from Cape Breton to Florida to a district in Maine about the Penobscot river. It Is disputed whether the name Is of Indian, Norse, or Spanish origin. Handy Paint Idea When painting ceilings, one-half of a rubber ball slipped over tha handle of the paint brush to form a cup prevents the paint brush from dripping or running down on tha handle. If a ball is not available cut a four-Inch square from an inner in-ner tube, punch a small hole in tha center to slip the brush handla through, then stitch or tie the cor-' ners so as to form a sort of cup. ) Japan Not So Tiny Many of us think of Japan as a small cluster of Islands, whereas the empire of Japan Includes 3,000 Islands. Is-lands. These have an area of 173,-78S 173,-78S square miles, and extend for 2,500 miles. Only 600 of these Islands Is-lands are Inhabited. Late statistics give the population of Japan as 62,938.200, while that of its neighbor, neigh-bor, China, is 411,350,000. Los Angeles An-geles Times. 1 . : Revolutionary Hero Gen, Arthur St Clair, Revolutionary Revolution-ary soldier, member of congress and governor of Northwest territory from 1789 to 1S02, died near his old tome, the Hermitage, near Youngs-town, Youngs-town, Westmoreland county, Pennsylvania, Penn-sylvania, August 31, 1818. and was burled In the Gen. Arthur St Clair cemetery at Greensburg, Pa, Duke Sociology Expert The duke of York Is a student of sociological matters and Industrial welfare work in addition to being a fairly good mechanic, and his study at 145 Piccadilly is being revamped to meet his needs. It Is a plainly furnished room on the third, floor with a big flat-topped office desk flanked by steel filing cabinets. The bookshelves, now being extended, chiefly hold works about Industrial welfare and sociological subjects. Under the bay window Is a work bench fitted with a , small lathe, which the duke uses in making wireless wire-less sets and email mechanical models. If a town can't beautiful Itself otherwise, It can cover all the ugly ground areas with grass. Soldiers' Foreign Brides Of the brides that members of the A. E. F. brought home with them, reported re-ported up to March 15, 1920, were French, 2,295, British, 1,101, Luxem-burgian, Luxem-burgian, 02; Belgian, 79; Italian, 41; German, 31; Russian 23; Spanish 7; Swiss, 5. Polish, 5; Greek, 4; Dutch, 3; Rumanian, 3; Serbian, 2; Jugoslav, Jugo-slav, 2; Czech, 1; Mexican, 1; unknown, un-known, 14; total, 3,709. The husbands hus-bands of these women include men of the army, navy and marine corps. It is understood that a total of approximately ap-proximately 5,000 members of the American expeditionary forces married mar-ried foreigners. The list includes only the brides of whom there is record. Is it harder to get an unprejudiced unpreju-diced Jury in a little town? til Women said: BUT they hadnH tried the amazing New Oxfjdol thent O Richer, longer-lasting suds -50 more Buds that's why the New Oxydol can safely int Airt nnt rt !nf ia nn I-nLItinnr fa needed and still be kind to hands and yA dainty things. Use It for dishes too. J j Rinses clean, leaves no scum, eof- ptf1lrps!s tena water, never balls up. f Zr Procter & Gamble VrfYT-W ate. u. a. oat. err. MADE BT THE HAKEBS OF IVOBY SOAP Abal The comedian smiled roguishly. "When," he said loudly, "Is an actor not an actor V "Nine times out of ten," retorted some one in the gallery. Too Few "Your husband seems to be a man of rare gifts." "He Is. He hasnt given me one since we were married." Stray Stories. For Ydur Quid's Tender Skin : use Ciiliciifa Soap And know that you are laying the foundation for a healthy skin in later life. Pure, gentle and delicately deli-cately medicated, it protects the skin of young and old. Price J3c Proprietors: Potter Drug & Chemical Corp. Maiden. Aiasa. |