Trempealeau Representative (Newspaper) - May 4, 1860, Trempealeau, Wisconsin I Vol. TREMPEALEAU MAY 4, 1360, 2XT The EV BUY FRIDAY W. dollar in within 11 I ho ot will RATES OF 20. 00 5, H. T K s -t o h H i; 7 i U i. LA F. M. BOOTS SHOES CLASS THE BRITISH A the H- 13 17 v lii II 12 received n lawn UK AND LA WIS. and A. HA I i-l V I A. K. K iTs CL A A. 11. ihe AC K N t. 1 I V u tu full by vnuto nru lor unit I m- ANDREW Of all and Manufacturer of and 5 you br FIRK AND 31ARINK CO. to or on for three or or 1'roperty. imul in N. 1'reet. W. t. for BY A dark and tempestuous night had rapidly after a bleak and my the bronze clock upon the mantel in the Bitting room of the rich nnd loyalist widow struck It was during the war of the when the lines far above New on both sides of the und the munsi HI was two miles within From the very of the Mrs. had sided with the for she was of English prided herself in the blood that filled her Her a native of New bad flown to arms os the tocsin of war rolled its sonorous summons lo the from the hills of Lexington and true to birth aui had ed into battle shoulder to shoulder with the of the George a widower with one a hud married Alice de a widow with one a son in year 1774. With no fortune save remarkable beauty of had the heart of George incited to the match by a mercenary soul that yearned to share uis great At that time her Rudolph de Vere was in his twentieth and the daughter of in her Iti becoming the wife of ihe de Vere secretly contemplated a future between her son and be ng by thai sellish passion common to the the old which labors to secure wealth and station to its own regardless of all ties and laws of ty and Georgo had long been her husband when lie discovered that no vion warmed her no spurred her action save u cold and un- bending She had wedded first husband because but one life stood between him and an and she seen that husband sink into an ly grave while that hated ouo life by its had increased to Had de followed her her the earldom might have been ere for Alice was us lous us the wile of the Thane ol Opportunity never placed that detested one detested life beneath her or the coronet of o countess would have her criminal Widowed she came to where the royal George had already begun to sprinkle his and sought tho hand ot George lured by the hope that his vast wealth of land und with her keen purchase at u knighthood or a But she found George a nobleman by u of all titles save that of Honest when the war the American secretly welcomed it as a refuge from the ceasless and icy sarcasms At the bloody battle of Long where Washington wept over the slaughter of his George had and even his grave could not be pointed out among the that studded the battle Tho yat in matronly was seated before the crackling lire when tlie clock struck less and her lair face was turned towards the and the rudy light of the atnes seemed to grow chill and aa the black grew rough and wrinkled above the cold and pensive No light save that ol the fire illuminated the spacious and the tall erect form of the clad in table aa motionless aa it carved in Aa the dial ceased to vibrate with the iu We n number last the door opening from the of ninny of whom are iniT lo to 20 dollars u to in this and will 0. L. Publishers anil ford nnd the See ho con- throwing down his heavy military drenched and have brought your than enough to conquer ten were every one Washington said Captain for whom mother's influence had procured a British are sure Hor ace Sinclair it in the summer to Heaven I were as unro that the arch rebel of Mr. Washington were said the have I heard his signal to his the dainly who may have heard it but cannot divino that 'tis her her to a tryst of my The letter I wrote him ho has deemed his imploring him to tven lile meet her night in the lonely summer Have you the chaplain with is the dining ing to poi t and said knows why he is make me a married But mother can you with all your fone Cora to become mv A ill-looking mart in or the whole British will be at onr black brought up tlie bleeds to land a exclaimed We have no time to attend to almost swooning with 'The said Rudolph fierce with u bloody gash that his The rascal has slain two of my best I must remove you from j hour as British soldiers fi and wounded twics shall die the death of a the ao timely vacated by th uniform proves that I am no said Horace BS Ids bright brown full of honor and beamed with unspoken kive upon Cora's agitated I have fallen into a and But he they found Madame lying upon the body o. her and u- as The midden shoch e her ns surely aa if a ride ball had pi her When the war was vears a ft Col. Horace Sinclair his bride am a prisoner of war no with returned to did you write me a summons Hut it wits to Cora hrap of reins relic u- some trick ol tating A noble i l said Madame ihe and in mutual we have no time to I tho of Cora you sec that and in He is the Rev. He is here to make YOU tlie wife of my wife of your son's meanest er shall I sooner than exclaimed said Madame see Horace Sinclair hanged upon the j shall was the cold and firm to secure the tree where you and he have to j me paid taxi's made in and the dare not hang dear lame estate to She loves her horse An act to of Land in Count v of The of S ate of Wisconsin ia Senate mid Assembly i de enact as i Section 1. of land for completed to now ami roil Co nil mill mi I milking grand unbroken CHICAGO AND THE any to roti lie hy r vf Vim us f. A mail 1' M. CHUCKING THROUGH TH mill all Also llw I to I I via Now j i mi: uill this tlie in of nt of jind ilio b l-y 11 o 1111110% oilier of low oilier for sulo lit all tho ticket of- more than the does and values the little linger of Horace Sinclair more than ten know all Rudolph as his pale and dissipated face grew as pale as his shall learn to love me though now she may hute me as 1 hated her hate was gratified my if re- port said the say 'twas sabre lhat clove the head uf George made my dear mother a able laughed ihe young met in and he was j my father only ia also says he had spared you in the of the fool said not you bid 1110 ere we to forget nil ties thai might lead me to spare u no matter who You were chide the hand that fulfilled your sneered the whose lofty poit and courage have clothed ried of the evary sigh told ol your soul's In fair und open battle I freed See gap in my sabre when through steel and gave and Ho bared his sabre as he und held it boastfully before the face his She grew a shade paler than her as passed hfr while fingers along Ihs keen and started visibly as her touch lound a liko spot near the capture Horace she withdrawing her said tho calm voice of the bound i am taken in my and therefore j no Do not be imposed of iho oi No- A. D. and tne j and nil sale bv of said Do not sing so said Madame hould 'The hanging of a uni- formed or is a pleasure to our loyal 31 y son's a- you may see in their fierce will gladly terminate your career with sudden Your rebel general has Landed cur Major worth a score of jor shall not Captain De you if ho sees 1iU' he dares was calm j reply of the as his handsome face blazed with shall see that and said you sec that light bhines bravely upon is now twenty minutes after when the minute hand shades the ure your lips have not you my wedded Horace Sinclair swings as The tearful eyes of the tortured girl wandered from face to in woful and in all and lo ill intents Sec. This act shall lake and afler Approved I follow on a Wood J Correctly Idler sent J. The mat us coti I President noted letter instructions lo Robert J. ex Governor of having been lor has length its way i Ii the 1'resideiii. July U. i the It On all sho read but one Oil the faces of her bul the South and iron strong in eneu ies inflexible resolve to Uu the calm and noble face of the American the undaunted resolve to die as it be- anxiety til to nions came a what A from says that a luul d with a slight him tlm at No the Union liast Water JOHN J. general Freight and 1'iu-scngt-r general West W. Freight no 10 C. C. liN WANTED A more ami men omi find employment by OHM from BOO to for new books not for of giving the i above nnd to and 3 it will receive tiny thiec ol I no low nc of by I of do Life of do Wild Scenes of H of 1 24 1 25 1 25 hall was tapped thrice from and as the widow raised her and said a young men of twenty-four or five said the rose to greet the has gone to her You oome but of said the young who trore the gaudy garb of a British the er When you let the j chaplain be with Cora shall moot and ere you shall be your t shall soon tame Her son left rang a small boll u.s he said to the prompt servant who answered I her presence j The tall stout woman bul trembling in that hurried to soon bearing a and followed by the lovely whose pale and sad as well as her dress of told of grief and but full as lofty in her port as her Com silently bowed her head as she and with a defiant glance seemed to demand why uhe had been was all that the widow and as she loud pistol and the clash of steel reached her Cora glanced uneasily towards the door coin be a political What motives led lo ihe i n i i 01 this letter hut hnt shall 1 lo done in r cried as the stillness i Mr. -s and ihe clicking of the clock seemed lo the grow fearfully me die u thousand times rather than behold you the wife of that who slew his i said i i pity mv said Mini a letter cruel kill him not a but slay me with him atiu i weeping she herself upon her brave lover's Their lifs nioi and clung in desperate i-iv the furious son and mother tear them Cora's quick other armed with the she bore the with her in those hud abdication of II il we a tho that bound ihu popular arms Strike lor life and liberty she who Mid Sinclair snatched a sabre from u screw in of the nearest the lo the t the who went dywn cloven tho crim. chin. Wheeling ihe MI- providing for und violating u t. bre clashed with that of U was he i. sweeping back the shock came to of the bone and down with a mighty slash that ihe of wool hut and the right arm clean and clear poverty is a not pan- from the Shouts and the sharp der lo by such The of sudden strife without smote provided of Rodolph's ear as he and at tie of New the room was tilled A the law they got rican lead by one whom he The provide deemed long George j who could not provide in my Gentlemen tiled to be in the P: who had escaped from 'the slaughter of of such a Jt Long and for purpose of own of uny man to suppose and then to her The bore another name in the American ar- people had the he face was the lips when I would be its expression was and j the decoy letter written by thit pouring of Ere long threw open the she Returning to camp I were represented in mnd was followed by two stout British found ihe letter in your and like to the man who who escorted young clad ing a of your dragoons hastened to Great a in the uniform of n major of we musl hurry would