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Show PLEASANT GROVE REVIEW 1 i iff! m ifj-y a. tt .ff JRttB mm jHAPTER VI Continued 10 been admitted by a trust- lt0 slave soon after darkness u. had not yet seen Mrs. L, and was awaiting her slg- m . A iiuiiol nrhan ha vd this room, tnere was no - - . I j .L - Jij t Suddenly ne nearu uie which was tne hick or a rchief. The door opened mistress or the mansion sjt have you to ' say?" she sred. rere answered with like cau- H T8 "ELF, Ihe Chief appreciates your hot he wishes me to remind that It Is a perilous kind of and'ttat jou may even lose life in doing It." s! I know," .the lady ex- M "That is war. i wouiu job remind him of quite anting an-ting even greater than war. jou will do" when you say, to nd only to him, that life Is L much to me as It was once ao. That mine Is a failure IsT can inakeHt in some way to him and that I would give it to the cause he There was a note. of sad- la her tone. ached by the sacred character the message, the spy, who had aiarkable memory, applied him- toLthetask of noting in his the ordering of Its phrases. here will be a bombardment," Kent on. "At' the sound of the jiin our friends nre to come and keep indoors. You are to Pat Fayerweather that she her family are to come here, ther points will be in danger." ben will the trouble begin?" T0i Se cannot say, but probably la March."-. jL.,. lijrting more to tell- me?'! you must go. Here are is. Tne ntterman is, waiting." ere descended the servants' 1 Id the darkness to the kitch-ie kitch-ie stepped out of its door and i Into an empty asli barrel on tagon. A sunken top that held uw of ashes was shoved Into barrel above his head. Thus he ! in a wagon behind horses en by an unsuspected patriot Snoacn's yard. Theret if the iff saw no signal, Revere would i a rater route on his way to abridge. The barrel Journey 'to aisimet was now rarely used, to. Shipman was a kind of mistress for the patriots in ja Revere and others in the t service brought letters to the sion and ,rhpr rprplverl a few rag it, mat rorlJ IP! friends of Its mistress to be p beyond the lines. Pat Fayer-per Fayer-per was one of this band of T-ii She came to the mansion to iff chaise next morning. 'I'm going througljthe lines," she 1 "I'm desperate. Can't wait 1 longer. I've got to see that a tit V- Good Lord ! I'm In love." 1 Shipman laughed. "ell! I've had the same trou- I know that restless feeling. fit's a robber. Women have to at or it will deprive them of F sanity. Even greater treas-ptiU treas-ptiU soon, be missing." ieu you tne trutn l am a pss creature. I am not Quite stable." pa wouldn't risk your life try- to break through the lines?" Re apple woman is In town. I P told her to come here at and that I will buy all her at s shilling each. She will e in five minutes. 1 shall buy wstnme and Dot It on with Sag. and make my face as ugly 'erg if I pon onfi en fhrnnph Bnes tonight I shall. reward elL and I have In the chaise ld gown nf nna ef nnw mota f I am sure, " fit "" the "I la madness. Contain yourself. 1 be out of our trouble soon. I ''Sood reason for saying that' things which I cannot tell I m weary of that kind of talk. '"5 go. You know how I feeL Wends in Roxhnr will mpet fight on the road beyond the e firl thrpw h&T arms arniinrl f eck X!t thi K-rTman unit tlacorl v 4 A V" ow yon look as an ap- . un, gaid Mrs. snipman. I -wnue 1 shall think about It' ! "e woman came. She was '4 in" b8rmle idow . red alonp In 'an ahandnnod P Stfn hrrvnk ah,m 9 mllo h. L' k She aw.r. mrriMi with l LEift ot tocklng or mittens ' r own handa tar the nlrk. each ii ltd srir.y. They were all ana they called her 6ojg- CHAOS Irving Bachellet W.N.U. SERVICE. "Mother Enslow." She was said to be a' distant relative of one of the American . brigadiers, whose influence influ-ence had, no doubt, helped her In the beginning of her odd enterprise. She answered every challenge with her own countersign. . It was "My boy, God bless you 1" It was sincere and had become sufficient on both lines. At first the British took her to the guard-house, where she was searched. Later, all suspicion of any motive, save that of earning a few shillings, passed and they welcomed wel-comed her, glad to have her apples and her blessing. The girl and Mrs. Shipman went above stairs with Mother Enslow. Pat began her negotiations with an offer of ten pounds to the old woman wom-an .for her costume and advice.- It was a large sum to this poor lonely creature, but she would not accept it until the girl had frankly given her motive for wishing to pass the lines. "That's . honest,"' said the old army mother. "Love is a caution. My girl, It's a killin thing an' may the good God help yet-It broke the heart tn my breast years an years ago. I'll stay in Boston town fer good an' all. Ye cross the Neck at seven. If anyone stops ye say, 'My ooyv God bless- ye I! They're all good boys, an' If ye say It with the holy spirit on yer tongue, they'll give ye not a word o' trouble." So It happened that the acknowledged acknowl-edged belle of Boston came into possession of the gown, bonnet shoes and good wishes of old Mother Moth-er Enslow, who, dressed In cast-off garments, presently left the mansion. man-sion. "First we'll try an experiment," said Mrs. Shipman. It would have beendl(Bcult to distinguish Pat from the apple woman whet) she. walked with her friend to the fish market where Mother Enslow bought her supplies. There the girl personated the apple ap-ple woman so successfully that her manner, voice and make-up excited no suspicion In Mr. Snoach or his helpers. Mrs. Shipman laid their plan before him in a whispered conference. "She'll pass!" he exclaimed. "Many's the time Pve sent the apple ap-ple woman to my plaz' to set down an' rest Tell her to go up thar an' wait till I'm goin to the Neck with a load o fish." - At a quarter of seven the grand young lady, looking like the shabby shab-by old apple woman with three white hairs protruding from ;rher chin, set ut for the British line on the Neck, in a fish wagon, Sitting beside the glant-Ehenezer .Snoach. CHAPTER VII In Which Pat Has a Desperate Adventure Ad-venture and Boston Is Evacuated. SOON after she left the wagon that-night the high-born, disguised dis-guised beauty was to feel the spirit spir-it of old Mother . Enslow guiding and protecting her. The appie woman had done much for the comfort com-fort of the rough, hard-minded men In both armies. Her gifts and prayers had smoothed her way and made a host of friends who trusted her. She carried no tales coming or going. The harmless, .kindly woman was a unique figure on the lines. The regiments defending Rox-bury Rox-bury neck had been reviewed that afternoon by General Howe, , who had succeeded Gage as commander of the port The review had been followed by a bull baiting and a dog fight Now a great bonfire was burning. In the light of which hundreds hun-dreds of men were gathered around two soldiers engaged in a boxing match. As the apple woman was passing, an Irish sergeant came and led her aside, saying In a whisper: "Mother, I have Just come off the line. Orders are ont to strip an' search ye. It's a shame. We know that ye are no spy." They were back tn the shadows. Pat was able to Imitate successfully successful-ly the voice of Mother Enslow when she said:. "God bless ye, boy I My THE STORY FROM THE BEGINNING Id July, 17'S, Colin Cabot, ardent young lover of liberty, bids good-by good-by to bia weethert. Patience "Pat" Fayerweather, and escapes from Boatoa to joInTBB BeTulutlunry-army4ie-4-mntered Into the company com-pany of Capt. Amos Farnsworth. Colin tmpreasea Washington, and h makes the young- man his secretary, with the rank of captain. A letter from Pat tells Colin she Is to visit, friends outside the American lines and asks him to meet ber. He sets out. Learning of a British plot to capture Colin, Fsrnswortli, with a ,troop. rides to the rescue. A British patrol, led by Harry Gage. Colin's rival for the band of Pat. threatens the young patriot. Farnsworth and bis troop come up. Gage challenge Colin. Ther flgbt and Gage is wounded Washington, having forbidden dueling, reduces Colin to the ranks, but Mrs. Washington, affectionately known to the army narTady" Washington, remains bis stanch friend. Pat visita beadquartera and is welcomed by "Lady" Washington. Pat returns to Boston, and, restored to his rank for meritorious service Colin Is sen. with CoVSJm" Botis, on a recruiting mission in-the "West He meets a typical Americano pioneer woman. Mrs. Bowlby. With many recruits, Colin goes back to Cambridge. He is sent to aid In the transportation trans-portation of the guns of Ticonderoga to lbs heights of Dorchester, to bombard Boston. clothes are not as clean as my soul I'll spend the night with a friend and come back in the morning. morn-ing. There's an old maxim, boy. The nearer the skin the prouder the woman. Old an' young are all alike. May God love and keep yel" she added, as she gave the boy a shilling shill-ing and left him. She walked slowly at first, but hurried when well away In the darkness. dark-ness. Men were returning from town to the camp In varying stages of intoxication. Some of them stopped her, but the look, dress and name of Mother Enslow gave her ample protection. One of the men walked with her to the gate of.the Ship-man Ship-man house, He left her and she was admitted to the mansion. She told Mrs. Shipman of her failure. They went to the secret chamber above-stairs. above-stairs. The girl began to change her garments. She stood almost naked, telling of her strange adventure adven-ture in the British camp. She had bathed and was drawing on her stockings,' She was now the radiant, radi-ant, merry-hearted Pat Fayerweather. Fayer-weather. "It was a mad venture," said the woman. "If those young men had seen your body, the effect of It would not have been like that of the prayers of Mother Enslow. I do not wonder that Father Jerome forbade Paulina to look at her naked body. Tours would put a saint in jeopardy." "And here it is withering like a picked rose," Pat answered-with a laugh. "What's the use of it? 1 m '-am "D n the British Armyl" D n the British army I It keeps me from the one man the big, dear man I love." She .seized her gold-buckled slipper slip-per and flung It across the room with a pretty indignation in her .eyes, adding, "Must I always. 'be content with - the admiration-- of women?" . - She laughed as she drew the strings oil her widejvalstband,, saying, say-ing, "If I ever get my"nandson him again, he shall not escape." "My soul!" the woman exclaimed. "You are like Richard when he yelled for a horse. Be patient Yob are young yet" ------ , "Young! I am ten years older than I was this morning. I am withering Into old age." Save for the woman spy who was then hiding in the secret passage this Illuminating bit of Eighteenth century frankness, would have been lost to the world, . , "Now 1 shall have to do some lying," ly-ing," said Pat; as, having finished dressing, she sat while a maid was adjusting the pins that held her hair. "You and 1 have spent the afternoon and evening knitting for the dear British soldiers bad luck to them L. Now that It is over, you will not mind how you spend the day so it be in a good cause." "Oh, not at all I'm an obliging liar and may the Lord fprgiye us I There's an old saying that he smiles at the lies of women." "Why not? He knows that we have never had a fair chance In this old world of His. Sometimes I think I'd rather be a cock sparrow spar-row than a woman." "We are a down-trodden- lot" said Mrs., Shipman, "We have to take, what's offered and often live unsatisfied. HI ring for the chaise. It's timeolTwwelfdtng bome. "Home life In the Colonies!" Pat laughed. "Codfish and smelly beef and pious prayers for King George before and after eating 1 Clinton and Howe laughing at Washington's army l I wonder why.they do not fight it" Before Pat went away, two British, Brit-ish, officers called at the mansion looking for Mother Enslow, the apple ap-ple woman. They were told that she had gone. They Insisted on searching the house and were permitted per-mitted to do so. , The sergeant of the regiment of grenadiers bad begun to suspect the Mother Enslow whom he had ihmiw v met that evening. In ber presence he bad missed something. The woman he saw and heard was like Mother Enslow and vet different As he thought of. the meeting, he wondered why his mind would give him' no rest In the matter. What he had missed was a thing not to be seen or heard. It was the spiritual spir-itual aura that surrounded the remarkable re-markable woman known as Mother Enslow. He had begun to tell of bis suspicion, and a man hearing of it had told of meeting the apple woman and of taking her to' the Shipman house and of having a like misgiving. So It came about that Mrs. Shipman and ber home were thereafter closely watched. The consequences might have been serious seri-ous a month earlier. One -day soon after, while visiting visit-ing the British hospital, Pat came upon Mother Enslow, who was nursing the sick. They had a talk together. . The former apple woman won the affection of the fashionable young lady. Within a week the old mother of the armies, shorn, trimmed and neatly dressed, had become a chambermaid in the Fayerweather mansion. Since the war began, wealthy loyalists had lost many servants and their domestic do-mestic affairs were sorely deranged. Thus It was that Pat, feeling the need of wise counsel and friendly consolation -in ber own home, found It In the company of Mother Enslow. Ens-low. ' Soon the peaceful folk of the town were In a panic. A man who lived on the Neck looking through a spy-glassy rom the top of his house, had discovered igns of great activity on Dorchester heights'. The heights had been taken by the Yan-1 tees without loss In a curious and lugenlous manner.. Their column had advanced behind wheelbarrows loaded high with bound bay ,td screen them. Then barrels of sand were hauled to the top of the slopes to be rolled down upon the charging charg-ing British regiments. It was a formidable plan of defense. Rumors of a bombardment were Cyitag through theory. The British Brit-ish army officers gave them no credit cred-it The roar of Washington's cannon can-non had the effect of a merry jest In Howe's army.. The Fayerweathers were aboard the. flagship of the fleet In the har-borWi har-borWi a visit to Admiral Shuldam when he guns of TTlconderoga and others from Dorchester heights to East Cambridge opened a withering wither-ing fire on the defenses in front of them, it was the clever girl Pat who was responsible for this flagship flag-ship party. She had had a hint from Reyere. fat's maid had deserted de-serted her in the panic and so Enslow, as she was then called, went with them to serve in that capacity.. .. That Jif gbt'of JiarclL 4,1778, from dark to daylight, the guns from Ticonderoga bellowed and sheets of flame were leaping upward along the even-miIe-line-ofWash!tigtin, It was a night of terror. Cannon-balls Cannon-balls splashed Into'the harbor. One of them tore through the rigging of a ship and splintered a mast An order was given to weigh anchor and hoist sails and move out of range'- This was done. After day light when the firing had ceased,! Admiral Shuldam returned for observation. ob-servation. At a prudent distance from the town an officer c!lmld to the masthead and with his glass noted the extent of the disaster. A big redoubt bulttjn the night, now crowned the heights of Dorchester. Many of the British works were destroyed. The city Itself had suffered suf-fered little damage But the town and the harbor were at Washington's Washing-ton's mercy. . His artillery had become be-come a menace Instead of a Joke. The admiral Informed " General Howe that unless the enemy was dislodged he could not occupy the harbor. That afternoon Howe took three thousand men to Castle" Island Is-land for an attack but It was held In checkr by a great storm." Before an advance was possible, Washington Washing-ton had so ' strengthened : and ex-, tended his works that Howe abandoned aban-doned his plan. The latter offered to embark his army and. leave the city uninjured if permitted to do w without molestation. The proposal was not signed, but the commander oMhe-patriots, had no dQUhtpfJti sincerity. So, his supply of now der having -been shortened by the cannonade and. . desiring to save the city, he let the British go Iff peace The bombardment had continued three nights. No one on the flat ship tad been allowed to go ashore. The Important loyalists In town came aboard with their luggage and. as soon as the storm abated, the admiral found an anchorage far out of range and lay to while the army was embarking " on other, ships. So It befell that the Fayer-weathers Fayer-weathers and some nine hundred loyalists sailed for Halifax with tffe British army on the seventeenth of March. ; The Captains Amos Farnsworth and Colin Cabot rode Into the almost al-most deserted city with their regl ment the day following the evacua tion to explore It and report to tlie Commander In Chief. , They found large stores of food and ammunl tion which the overcrowded, ships had-not been able to accommodate JTO BB CONTINUED.) New Zealand Giant ; The Kauri pine of New Zealand is a coniferous tree which grow 150 feet high, has lance-shaped leaves and smooth oval cones ' like the cedars. R -close-grained, yellow wood U nsed In cabinet-making. ." American Heroines V LOUISE M. COMSTOCK Ann Maria Lane OUT of musty old records lying tn the archives of the Virginia State library at Richmond has but recently been reconstructed the story of a heroine forgotten since 1808. , .v , In that year, so read the molder Ing records, the state of Virginia granted a pension to one Ann Maria Lane, who fought "In the garb and with the courage of a soldier" sol-dier" In the famous engagement between the British and the Amerl can Revolutionary troop at Ger mantown. Pa., in 1777. We learn further that Ann Maria not only marched with a gun tn the ranks, but "performed extraordinary mill tary services" and. was "disabled by a severe wound." The known facta of this gallant woman's life are few. She has been Identified s the wife of John Lane a satlor In the Virginia navy, who-toofc; part In-1781 In the disastrous dis-astrous encounter In the James river at Osborne's Landing, when the state's . fleet, six ships, eight brigs, five, sloops and two schooners, schoon-ers, met the superior forces of the traitorous Benedict Arnold, Just come from looting Richmond. The state lost Its vessels but few of Its men. In 1708 we find John Lane, bis wife, and two daughters, living at Point of Forks, up the James, an outpost against the Indians, In 1800, when the Insurgent Gabriel was prodding the negroes about Richmond to-'lnsurrectlon, the Lanes were returned to that city and lived at the barracks near the state cap-kol cap-kol Here, it seems, Ann Maria took to nursing the soldiers. In 1802 Dr. J.' H. Fousbee, city health officer, wrote to Governor Monroe requesting that Ann Maria be allowed some recompense for her services.;' From his letter ' we learn that she was then an old woman, scarcely equal to her self-imposed, self-imposed, task, and lame feom that wound received at Oermantown. It brought . Ann Maria the "moderate consideration" of six dollars a month in addition to food and lodg. IngT 'ln 1804 the state finally gave her an Infirmary for her patients. But In the fall of that same year, Judged too old and- lame for her work. Ann Maria was retifed and her name dropped from the payroll In 1808, however, having Invest! gated her case, Governor Cabell brought- Itlto-the attention of the state legislature. The state at that time eagerly adopted this Revolt tlonary heroine. They granted her a, pension of $200 per year. PocaHontas OUR first American heroine was not a white girl, but an Indian, In-dian, and she Is burled, not near Jamestown, Va., with which are associated her deeds of bravery, but In England, In an alien land, among a people who must hav.e seemed to her very strange.- The register of St George's church, Gravesend, contains this secord: 'Here Rebecca Wrolf, wyffe of Thomas (John) Wrolf, gent, a Virginia Vir-ginia lady borne, was buried In the cbaunsell, 1617." In the history books ' Rebecca Wrolf Is Pocahontas, lovely daughter daugh-ter of Powhatan, big chief of the Virginia Indians,- who played an Important part In the establishment of the first English settlement In this country. In 1607 a small band of colbnlsts settled on the James river, at a spot they called Jamestown James-town In tionor of their king. It was an unfortunate location. The swamps spread disease and grew little food, and the dense forests pressed upon the little colony and made It easy prey for attacking Indians. In-dians. Without the friendship of Pocahontas. Jamestown might never have surVlved the first hard years. Capt John Smith, leader of the polony, managed to secure the good- aiHgHt-ofPowhatan and promises of corn. But Powhatan was a big and temperamental chief, liable to change of mind. Once he held the doughty captain prisoner and was determined to have his brains beaten nut with stout war clubs. And time and again Pocahontas, at the risk of ber father's anger, of her tribe's ill will, even of her own life, proved her friendship for the white man. When provisions ran low she hrought grain from her father's supply; when treacherous ambus-eade ambus-eade was planned, she gave warning; warn-ing; and as Captain Smith lay with his head on a pillow of rock, await Ing bis death. Pocahontas rushed between him and the threatening war club and saved bis life. For all this the Indian girl .was rewarded as are many heroines. Once John Smith had returned to England a new leader determined to make secure the food supply once and for all kidnaped Pocahontas Poca-hontas and beld her hostage." In Jamestown for year. Here, however, how-ever, she was baptized Into the "hrlstian chnrcb and renamed Rebecca, Re-becca, or 'bond of peace,' and mar tied young John- Rolfe. When Rolfe returned to England, she accompanied ac-companied him, was wined and dined In London, and bat a little later fell III and died. . lilt Western Newspaper Cnloa, Stones of Odd Shapes Relics of Bygone Race? Three curious pieces of stone, which may possibly be relics of an ancient people, form part of a Ito-tura Ito-tura (New Zealand) collection. Two of the pieces, one of which Is almost an exact miniature of the other, are shaped almost like solid pitchers. They are rounded as If turned on a potter's evheel and, .although they cannot have been devised as vessels, appear to have been fashioned by some human agency. Both pieces are a species of sandstone, andwere found by Mr, Kean in the Walroa district at the bottom of deep outcrops out-crops of river metal, between 35 and 40 feet below the surface. The third piece Is petrified wood, weighing several sev-eral pounds. On both ends are cuts which have obviously been made with a species of ax: This piece was found with the larger of the two pestles, and from the depth at which It was found must have been biried for a very long period of tim. coios ll L .MUMP OH . Ni,TI WaaissaBab End Colds Quick HE was an easy victim to colds and they hung on so long until she suggested the uss of NR tablets. He seldom catches colds now. When he does they ate quickly broken up. This safe, dependable, all-vegetable corrective Nature's Kemedy trenginen8 sna reguuin bowel action as no other laxative can carries away poisonous wastes which make you eusccp- uoie u coias, amy speus, neaaauKs, uu. ousness, Works pltasantl-iAoa. No griping. 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