The Barnwell people. (Barnwell, S.C.) 1884-1925, September 11, 1913, Image 7
A STUDY
IN SCARLET
Br Hir A. Oonma Doyle.
CHAPTER IX.
The Flower of Utah.
This is not the place to commemo
rate the trials and privations endur
ed by the immigrant Mormons before
they came to their final haven. From
the shores of the Mississippi to the
western slopes of the Rocky Moun
tains they had struggled on with a
constantcy almost unparalleled in
history. The savage man and the
savage beast, hunger, thirst, fatigue,
and disease — every impediment
which Nature could place in the way
—had all been overcome with Anglo-
Saxon tenacity. Yet the long journey
and the accumulated terrors had
shaken the hearts of the stoutest
among them, -mere was not one who
did not sink upon his knees In heart
felt prayer when they saw the broad
valley of Utah bathed in the sunlight
beneath them, and learned from the
lips of their leader that this was the
promised land, and that these virgin
acres were to be theirs for evermore.
Young speedily proved himself to
be a skilled administrator, as well as
a resolute chief. Maps were drawn
and charts prepared, in which the fu
ture cltv was sketched out. All
around farms were apportioned and
allotted in proportion to the standing
of ea< h individual TL'* tradesman
was put to his trade ami the artisan
to hi'- calling In the town streets
and square* sprang up a*- if hy magic
In ttie country there were draining
and hedging, planting and clearing
until the n»xt summer saw ti.,' whole
country gulden with the wheat crop
Kxer>thing prospered In the strange
seMiemrnt Above all the gr< at tern
pie which they had er*>« t1 n t he < en
t<T of tiie City grew taller am* larger
TYott The fmt btnwh of 4*»n
the r! tine of ti. e twilight tie f'a'ler
of the htn -rer and tie ra«p •' the
• aw »• re • e.rr a‘>w«nt fri>"i •! e mon
w h h the m. gran* ere.te j t >
• Vo h»! e-1 t.riu »a'e through
la- f e * •
• a ■ ■ a w a . • J l.n Ker rle r
r • • r r • »* «ta'«tare<lhsi
|
• • » ' ‘ a ! ’ e e n a *. ; • e 1 a • h • I
• » • . a • • ! • h e M i r rtv > r • |
• ’ ' f' > K' I j
*r • A • 9 r A f p ^
€ * s ' • - A f r * * :• • !
ftrltoh flevra Lrtpplmf Ikrooffc tha
whaat talda, or mat bar moaatad ap-
oo har father's maataag. aad
lag It wkk all the aaae and grtca of
a true child of the Weet. So the bud
bloeaomed Into a flower, and the year
which aaw her father the richest of
the farmer* left her as fair a speci
men of American girlhood as oounld
be found on the whole Pacific slope.
It w&a not the father, however, who
first discovered that the child had de
veloped into the woman. It seldom
Is In such cases. That mysterious
change is too subtle and too gradual
to be measured by dates. Least of
all does the maiden herself know It
until the tone of a voice or the touch
of a hand sets her heart thrilling
within her, and she learns, with a
mixture of pride and of fear, that a
new and larger nature has awakened
within her. There are few who can
not recall that day and remember the
one little Incident which heralded the
dawn of a new life. In the case of
Lucy Ferrier the occasion was serious
enought in Itself, apart from its fu
ture inflluence on her destiny and
that of many besides.
It was a warm June morning, and
the Latter-Day Saints were as busy
as the bees whose hives they have
chosen for their emblem. In the fields
and In the streets rose the same hum
of human industry. Down the dusty
highroads defiled long streams of
heavily laden mules, all heading to
the West, for the gold fever had brok
en out in California, and the Over
land Route lay through the City of
the Fleet. There, too, were droves of
sheep and bullocks coming in from
the outlying pasture lands, and trains
of immigrants, men an 1 horses |
equally weary of their Interminable |
Jo irney Through all this motley us !
Rem * lag", threading her w ay w h th** j
skill of an accomplished rider the-.- 1
gallop. (1 I.m v Ferrier. Iot fair f.i<e 1
M .. -h.-d with t he exerciee and her long '
i.ientnut hair floating out behind to-r
She hi 1 a commisRion from her fath
Yon ain't even
weald
anyhow
onra "
Th* young hunter'e dark face grew
so gloomy over this remark that Lu
cy Ferrier laughed aloud.
“There, I didn't mean that." ahe
aald; “of course you are a friend now.
You must come and see us. Now I
must push you along, or father won't
trust me with his business any more.
Good-by.’’
“Good-by,” he answered, raising
his broad sombrero and bending over
her little hand. She wheeled her
mustang round, gave it a cut with her
riding-whip, and darted away down
the broad road in a rolling cloud of
duet.
Young Jefferson Hope rode on with
his companions, gloomy and taciturn.
He and they had been among the Ne
vada mountains prospecting for sil
ver, and were returning to Salt Lake
City in the hope pi raising capital
enou^h^to work some lodes which
they had discovered. He had been as
keen as any of them upon the busi
ness until this sudden incident had
drawn his thoughts into another
channel. The sight of the fair young
girl, as frank and wholesome as the
Sierra breezes, had stirred his vol
canic, untamed heart to its very
depths. When she had vanished
from his sight he realized that a cris
is had come in his life, and that nei
ther silver speculations nor any other
questions could ever be of such im
portance to him as this new and all-
absorbing one. The love which had
sprung up in his hea/t was not the
sudden, changeable fanev of a boy,
FREE FOR THREE WNyTES
THAW THEN NAIIBKD BY IMMI
GRATION AUTHORITY RH.
Srvr York State Score* Notable Vic
tory In Fight for Wealthy Lunatic.
Taken From Jail on Judge's Order,
Harry Kendall Thaw pried out of
Sherbrooke jail on a writ of habeas*
corpus obtained by a coup of William j
Travers Jerome enjoyed three min- j
utes of liberty Wednesday afternoon
and then was seized by the Dominion
immigration authorities and hustled
to Coaticook, Que., where Wednesday
night he paced the floor of the Immi
gration detention room. It was gen
erally predicted Wednesday night
that before many hours Thaw would
be back in the Matteawan asylum,
from which he escaped Sunday, Au
gust 17.
The beginning of the end of Thaw%
refuge In Canada came with dramatic
swiftness. A writ of habeas corpus,
sued out Saturday at the direction of
Jerome, with John Boudreau, chief
of police of this village, as petitioner,
was sustained at 2:45 o'clock Wed
nesday afternoon by Matthews Hutch
inson, superior judge of the district
of St. Francis, sitting in chambers at
Sherbrooke. Stolid, pallid, numb.
Thaw sat not five feot from the ; udge
as he read the decision. Wh*n in the
very last paragraph the court rb'clar-
C, •
H ".
n. i:
• r 1
f- ••
'1 * ,
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• nd w -lashing n
I
a 11 in•• b.-f - .re » :' h i
thinking
‘a-
a 1
ha ! or... man x
all tL*' fe*r>*r,**wa of yotrh
. ' x of her ta»k an 1 h--» !* wa» t
pr r'or ti.el T:« t ra . *•! atained
xen’iir*.*^ rwe-1 after her n aster
.ahii.er, t an! rxer. ’.he unetn-.t r.a
!:,!!•"» J• • irne* r.* In » 1 • h t h e r ; ,
•r* r»- i a»«* 1 'heir a<*r ua(.>Dxvd ale,.
• a*
’.he ^a
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hut
r:i f
h»T
■h
e wild.
fim-
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pa
tl of
ed him
a f rt
e man. Thaw s
eemed to
a ti
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of h
t r
nntr xx
11 a
P
1 in
ip»*r
imi -
eru III pit
* up
OH the Inline*'
xx lu re he
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H
♦ *
had t."
•11 a
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'Ht
uro
d to
sa t A
( iear
stump fell fTeI
11 tiis left
sip
in
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th it h
e lit
1
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11"
bund and fti
m h.'i right hat
d tl tl Mer
s «
r»*
n h
hi-art 1
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li !'!
no*
fa 1
ed t xx n
pay \
It* of ribbon a
rill 1 d had
i n
M,.-
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1
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T'lr’
anti
ht
mati
r. eu >.
! m
But he did IKd
rl-e.
w. \.
•rarp
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( ill] Id
r- 11
l f
r 1
nn
sim-
W K M
K^nxkti. of his
rou nael,
< ***•
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leaned
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and p itMng hi
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A .»«:.•! an l Superintendent Ko'-er'aon
the irnni rratn-n b i r > a i «a 1 aim
t a
P' » Come w ’ h i* M f T
* th-xu* a » -)' -1
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• •
WOFFORD mi i fcf SPARTANBURG *
HENRY N. HNYDKR. Fteeideat.
A REAL COLLEGE WITH HIGH STANDARDS OF SCHOLAR^
SHIP AND CHARACTER. LOCATED IN THE HIGH PIEDMONT
■HCTION OF UPPER SOUTH CAROLINA. SIXTY-NINE MILW
SOUTH OF ASHEVILLE. THIRTY MILES FROM THE CREST OF
THE BLUE RIDGE, HEALTH CONDITIONS UNSURPASSED.
FLtai. COURSES. AMPLE FACILITIES. LIBRARY, SCIENCE
HALL. GYMNASIUM, ATHLETIC GROUNDS, NEW DORMITO
RIES. EXPENSES MODERATE. NEXT SESSION OPENS SEP
TEMBER 17. WRITE FOR C ATALOGUE.
WOFFORD FITTING SCHOOL SPARTANBUR
SITUATED ON WOFFORD CO
EQUIPMENT. TWO MODER
ROOM BUILDING. FIVE TE
TH7 DORMITORIES, INSURI
AND HEARTY CO-OPERATI
A SCHOOL WITH HIGH STA
MOSPHERE. TWO HUNDRE
PENSES FOR THE YEAR, $1
l.LEGE CAMPUS. 8 P L
\ DORMITORIES ANT
ACHERS AND MATRON
NG A HOME-LIKE INFLUENCE
ON OF STUDIES AND FACULTY.
NDARDS AND CLEAN MORAL AT-
O STUDENTS LAST YEAR. EX-
82. FO RCATALOGUE ADDRESS
A. W. HORTON, Head Master.
SPARTANBURG, 8. C.
Orangeburg College
W. W. Rivers, A.'S., A. M.
President
l.\K(.l>r CO-EDl CATION\L .COLLEGE in the state, mill
TARN HHC HONS. HOME SC URol N DINGS FOR GIRLS. LIT
ERARY. Ml SIC, Alt F. EXPRESSION. AND HI SINESS COUKHKH.
COST WITHIN NOl It REACH. WRITE FOR INFORMATION.
W. W. RIVERS, Pres.,
Orangeburg S. C.
i
N * ‘- :
THE 8LACHS70.NE iCHOOL FOR GIRLS
Ha#
InfliMDcee at
RUH'LTi II b kxday wuh Me , _
IU ak^ieot body el 411, and He pleat vortk AAOjUOO
THE LEADING TRAINING BCHOOC FOft GIRLS IN TTRCINIA
|IM pay* aQ rbargae for U» year ineliaflag tefale beard, ronv, Bgfcte. e%M
b*mi, laundry, iDedirai ftileoUon, pAy^oel i idlur*. Md mMaala a| i
SSrepS
&KV- TUOS, ROSSER REEVES, R.
J * * , 1 • ^ • a • •
f ' ; ' ■ ; •
t , . . , • '
I k ' ^ • * r • ■ ' x »• ! • • t ■ >
II d * ' 1 • I ' » -e.' I • x . i - . ' •'
f * '?»•.' % # df-Vg’" Ik; A ,% ) f • '*■ » A
V > ' - * \ r t ' t ' r • ' ' . * «
1' ; ” • • a • 3
If. • ' • ' — . • •
■ ‘ . • . 1 ’ ’ V
,i . \ -. ' - . in • 1 ■ • • • •:- 1 ■
xx " '''it ! - : - ' • '
VI ' ' . XX - ■ , ' t- 'bl •
r- . n- -1 in ’ • \ •• " • ■' • r " *
) 1 • ,|t /.•-•< - n in t 1 u ' ■ 'ef nnM
t - p (‘••v n n ri'" 1 '! eT'r*tmr** with
hi- Er< tn 51 e pep.,, in' rut «.•:» to
(*,. .• .nt \\'.i-;i'i *• litis 'her.-
v.i- i -x i itne bx'tter known than that
of 1 1 n i - rr'< r
T' p-p w is o:io wav, and only ono,
in wlnicii ho ofVn lod :ho susfi'ptihili-
ti.- of the ro religionists. No argu-
m- n! or pprsuasion could over induce
him to g"t up a female establishment
a tier the manner of his companions.
He never gave reasons for this per
sistent refusal, but contented himself
by resolutely and nflexibly adhering
to his determination. There were
some who accused him of lukewarm
ness in his adopted religion, and oth
ers who put it down to greed If
wealth and reluctance to incur ex
pense. Others, again, spoke of some
early love affair, and if a fair-haired
girl who had pined away on the
shores of the Atlantic. Whatever the
reason, Ferrier remained strictly cel
ibate. In every other respect he con
formed to the religion of the young
settlement and gained the name of
being an orthodox and straight-walk
ing man.
Lucy Ferrier grew up within the
log house, and assisted her adopted
father in all his undertakings. The
keen air of the mountains and bol-
eamic odor of the pine-trees took the
place of nurse and mother to the
young girl. As year succeeded to
year she grew taller and stronger, her
cheek more ruddy, and her step more
elastic. Many a wayfarer upon the
highroad which ran by Perrier’s farm
felt long-forgotten thoughts revive la
hlg mind aa he watched her lithe.
1 * * N
\ * i * ' ■ •
• r■ - :- I p.i r I -"’ * r .i '► • -! 1 \ x - •
' V-r < '.bo* •* h’. h a- - .r •! k ■ r '.t-
-; t ■ r. ,• \ • 11.-- m p m"n;"H ’ a s: u
p -a \ b' 11 xv ii I. a ii .1 c i u v 1 t t' i f r *’i - ’.!
"'.»■! horsp by the cur'', and f orm;- a
a ax through tlo- drm*>, soon brought
In r to * ho outskirts
“You r** not h.urf, I hope, miss,
said hor pri sorvor, rosju-i t fully.
Sho looked up at his durk, fHTco
face, and laughed saucily.
“I'm awful frightened,” she said,
naively: “whoever wtfuld have
thought that Poncho would have been
so seared by a lot of cows?”
“Thank God you kept your s^at.”
the other said, earnestly. Ho was a
tall, savage-looking young fellow,
mounted on a powerful ran horse,
and clad in rough dress of a hunter,
with a long rifle slung over his shoul
der. “I guess you are the daughter of
John Ferrier,” he remarked. “I saw
you ride down from his house. When
you see him, ask him if he remembers
the Jefferson Hopes of St. Louis. If
he's the same Ferrier, my father and
he were pretty thick.”
“Hadn’t you better come and ask
yourself?” ehe asked demurely.
The young fellow’ seemed pleased
at the suggestion, and his dark eyes
sparkled with pleasure.
“I’ll do so,” he said: “we’ve been
in the mountains for two months, and
are not over and above In visiting
condition. He must take us as he
finds us.”
“He has ft good deal to thank you
for, and so have I,” she answered;
“he’s awful fond of me. If those cows
had jumped on me he’d have never
got over It”
“Neither would I," aald her eom-
^“Toa? Well, I don’t eeo
e i
v
\
,, • . 1 ■ , !
j XX
> .f , 1 , , \ • ■ t •• ■ 1 1 - '
' T! a-.k < ■ " !.* !. * - • * * x
^•nyvning rr 1 k » !*:•' b’" “D i« e '’t-
t\ d t! i n Th 'm • -t 1 ,x hard
. r it will ?. r ’■ •• *•» go T’a . ar<
v :< i! Ml L’ r I" - l ’ * i ' ' on Ho. IP'
y own ! :• rl I a w id ’ > ’ In t w )
•iH>ntIr you shall ^' O rno
Ho toro himso'f from hor as ho
srioko, and flinging himr If uiion hi-
horso. gallojio 1 furiou-dy away: nov-
or evon looking around, as though
afraid 'hat his resolution might fail
him if ho took one glance at what ho
was leaving. She stood at he gate,
gazing after him until he vanished
from sight. Then she walked hack
into the house, the happiest girl in all
Utah.
fTo he continued.)
This Yankee Government, as Gov
ernor Please calls it, lias actually ap
pointed' Congressman Francis T.ur-
ton Harrison, the son of Jefferson
Davis’ private secretary when he was
president of the Confederacy, Gov
ernor of the Philippines. Mr. Harri
son has represented a New York City
District in Congress as a Democrat
for years.
Man and Wife Guilty.
Will Young, of Greenville, and hie
wife, Alberta Young, were found
guilty of the murder of John Greer,
a negro, about four-months ago. A
recommendation to mercy was made
for Alberta.
Dog I/cade to Murder in Florida.
Charley Morgan, a negro, murder
ed Turner Camp at Lake Alfred, Fla.,
aftar a quarrel over a do*.
TD.l U-
' IX '
Ii X
’ * ' ' ■ I ’ X , . , X , if ' '
i • : •! '
■' "(• O c • • r p f’o ‘ - n — l -r r *■ X • 1 *r j i
’ •-) ..; f . J !..' -I I
j - 1 ■ \ : x mi Ti 1 ia'ioi i '
t ’ > r • •! »■, u : x b ': ! ! • r- -a ! ••
., i- * r i i pi*. r,i- :i h r > < • < f
• , - pr- dt s <i f 1 1 i r hi i: f : . b u! xx Pi i
■a ii ; !d x- ri'M's' x think li* f i ir.- r 11." i
i'it* r<if a t h:• in,■ a:u: -fi:!> ’u e. \>-
Tho Gri'-nvil!" PitiBni nt. ("innifHt-
ini r favnnibb* on t'i<‘ .Iuih'‘''s words,
says; “A flgt-r would much prefer
paying $5PP to a sentence of si\t\'
days. The f.ue doesn't worry him at
all But when you deprive him of his
liberty, force him into convict garb
and to work on the roads or confine
ment in the jail, you hit him a lick
that hurts. He thinks thrice before
sinning nga : n.” The Orangeburg
Times and Democrat.
4.
Ilody in Paddle Bov.
The pilot of the City- of. Louisville
complained, after docking the boat
at Cincinnati, that it would not steer
properly. A search disclosed the
body of Edward S. Willis wedged in
the paddle box. Willis had fal’en off
a passing steamer and his body had
been picked up while the boats were
passing.
— » ♦ ♦
Some folks give us an excuse for
voting for the dispensary the preva
lence of blind tigers. Blind tigers
and the lawlessness that result there
from are flagrant evils that are a
stench In the nostrils of law abiding
citizens, but they exist only because
these same law abiding citizens en
dure them and in effect, endorse
them aad wink at them.
blackstonk. V/ .
—-
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!•*’!***• • • | I f t«*x« t>«
' 1 : !: • »' •• K f.* x > 1 m 1. * \\ **r,
: !.p b« -i t 1 »t n i*» pr. u t •'•* 1 'ir a
r»'fx 1 u r . No ti'lle* pi-rr in r*-*ip-
• rn ’ <■ F'tr.»* • r'.m m "I r in 1 • H itee
r-.i • n xM** Wriif ' r pirtli-'i ,rs.
B.'i-a Sprlnica . 1(1.< a S, n iga,
T*-n" 1
I>i< <x \\ i(ti
\\ t. 1 n J i' k Hxmiii- »>lk:!it yi-ar* "Id.
* ii A I I' xxl-li’- I>()'" - Px HC' d I »’ r ug-
v'.; •’ b'-x u.d In r '• pth iu lb** Araan-
* riX'f mar Little It'ick. \\>d:ies-
,d.i', he went to her assistance. Iie-
■ fure n f'lerman who had been
wat(!.;rig the children paddling In
'tbe shallow water near the river
:hank. could reach them, both had
i r ox. m d.
I" -. ■ r ir d u;,; 1 '.in
forty do!! ts ’ 1 r ac : e
• 1 !l j How easy it is, and how presurnp-
sotn ■ h *i'-/ tuni’s, to dei lare with cocksurei.ess
cititis. Addn-s Box 44!, Greer,
wood, S. G.
can be relieved at one*'—Sen
15c for liberal sample, ‘‘Lino Pth
Remedy,” and lie convinced. I.arg<
size, f,o c , 6 for $2.50. H. M. Knight
and Co., Manufacturing Pharma
cists. Lancaster, Penn.
MarVy if you are lonely. The Reliable
t onfldential Successful Club ha.‘
' nee number of wealthy eligible
m< mhers, both sexes wishing early
nmrriace. Descr’ptlons free. Mrs.
\x ruh d, Box 2R, Oakland, Cal.
For Sale—1 1<'x!2 Lidde’l-Tump-
kins just overhauled; 1 Boss cotton
press and 1 7 0-saw gin, both in
pad condition. Also a full line of
that dry spells a idenfs, etc., are
pmiMiments meted out to men for
some alleged wrong-doing. In all
such catastrophes the good Buffer
along with the bad, and God would
hardly punish good people In order
to punish bad ones. God in his good
ness protects his people from harm
but never afflicts them.
- . — ♦ ♦ ♦ ■ —
Finds Husband Dead.
Two weeks ago Mrs. John Britz of
Oshkosh, Wis., found her fatber-ln-
laxv dead in his bed, a victim of heart
disease. Thursday she discovered
her husband had succumbed, to the
same ailment during the night. Her
rendition, due to shock, is such ihat
local physicians have only small Lope
v:n and saw mill re- air {'arts.
nnp'*hurg Machine Shop.
p r . jof her recovery.
j A grim echo of the war in the
il-
1>« u*—Wanted to buy trained bird
(logs f or eakh, Write E. C. Stark,
Comm •rcr, Ga.
Wanted—Hv every familv. Return
if not delighted. Yours fo&flve one-
cent stamps. 8. D. Jones & Co.,
Melrose, Fla.
Ye*. Rhea Springs has music and
dancing. The place yon can piny
golf, tennis, croquet, go ffnhlng,
swimming, bontlaf, riding and drtv-
. wr v - **' ^
kans comes from an advertisemea* in
; a Cerman newspaper "that threo
I thousand artificial legs are want'd by
a nation now at war ”. The advertise
ment said these artificial logs e ere
! wanted at once,
The murder of Chief of Pollen Hot
ter, of Allendnln, by Wnlknr
eon. st Lena Sunday,
been a cold-blooded,
fair. Too 1
that it