Greenfield Evening Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 12 October 1895 — Page 4
By ALFRED E. OALEOUN.
1 1
A
SI4ss iNorioii aua ner comsm nsnaniea their journey south at tho cart of enrht ji'i w.r 1 »». tri"'k' \j* ii
0
JIS
of
a
knowledge of the leading Union people tud secessionists in Louisville. True to ois purpose, Raymond, on reaching
met Miss Norton after the fall of Corinth to the hour of his parting with her after the return from Memphis, Captain Leland roY^r heard licr speak of her cousin Tom Raymond, nor did he remind her of a man for whom for many reasons he had formed a strong dislike. But, as subsequent- disclosures proved, Miss Norton was in constant, communication witii her cousin, and the very night of her return from Memphis he -visited her and with her examined the trunk, taking from it such papers as she indic itfjd
innredi'?fe V.IPO.
A low weeks after this the Union situation at Cormth was changed. The Army of the Cumlerlaud and much of the Army of the Tennessee were off •with Buell on the Kentuel^* campaign. Price aiul Vail Dorn, at the head of from ''00 to 5U,000 veteran troops, marphed at will through northern Mlseissii/ Memphis was out off. and the handful of brave ni^n under Rosecriuis in C! u-./ ii!? s:iemed doon.ed.
The Confederate cavalry drove back, and tho Confederate infar.trv occupied every important outpost. General Van Dorn's headquarters were at the Norton niai-.-iiui!, j.ud his boast t»iut ut.x(u'« Hie ^gflr ended there would not be an uncapturGd Yankee in Mississippi seemed about to be re.alized.
Excepting Lookout and Missionary Ridge, if I had to select for the purpose of graphic description the fiercest and inost picturesque battle of the war, I think I should choose the Union defense of Corinth. Not even Corse's magnificent defense of the pass at Slatoma, in the Georgia campaign, equals it, for there the attacking forces, though proportionately superior, were not so continuously persistent.
Here, as on every occasion when he •was brought under fire, Captain Leland's gallantry was conspicuous. In •the sanguinary repulse of Van Dorn and 4hehot pursuit that followed it his tireless efforts won the plaudits of his superior officers, and he was recommended for promotion. But the fates had willed it that he should never wear the .golden leaves of a major.
CHAPTER II.
Love, like murder, will out. Captain Inland's infatuation for the beautiful southern girl, Puss Norton, had long teen the talk of every officers' mess in and about Corinth. Some believed it ••was a case of mutual attachment that sooner or later must result in a match, but there were not wanting those who "believed hit tho young Yankee was boing made tho tool or plaything of a designing woman.
As for myself, when I come dispassionately to consider the young lady's conduct, after the lapse of all these years, I am forced to the inevitable conclusion that she loved Captain Leland, and that it. was only an obstinate adherence to the cause which she and her friends had so warmly espoused that induced her to act as she did.
In the pursuit of Price and Van Dorn, after their crushing defeat at Corinth, Captain Charles Leland was wounded in the arm otherwise he would have gone on to Memphis to join in the preparations there being made for the Vicksburg campaign. As his wound did not prevent his traveling without much discomfort ho might have availed Hnwelf of it, as all lus romradc.* would have done, to visit home on a leave absence, but-Corinth had for him t'ximany attractions.
When Rosecrans went on to relieve Buell after the Kentucky campaign and Corinth had ceased to be a place of great military importance, the fates still held the captain there. During the timo ho was off duty, owing to his wound, he was a constant visitor at the Norton place. At length the wound was healed, and in a few days ho was to leave for Memph's. He now felt that every minute not spent in the company of his enchantress was wasted.
One stormy evening two days before his departure ho rode out to Norton's through the storm. As he had not been missing a night she should have expected him, but this evening as he neared the house ho noticed that the parlor and .front windows, in which lights had liitherto welcomed him, were dark. lie hitched his horse under a sited and was about to turn to tho house when a black man, whose vo.ee lie recognized, U.:-pire its tremor and terror, whispered "Ait: dat you, Maass Cap'n Leland?" "Yos," was iho reply. "What's up?" "I—1 fink, sah, dah'sa man dar. "In where?" "In rle house. "A soldier?" "Yes, salt, but not of youah kind. "What do you mean, a rebel?" And Captain Leland threw his hand back and drew tho stock oi his pistol withm xeach. '•Ye-yes, all!" gasped Iio negro. "What brought the follow here?" iAnd the captain hesitated and debated .-with himself whether to enter tho house and attempt tiio capture alone or go 4back for assistance. "Don't know, sail," replied the ne4pro, "but lie's been lieiUi oifen." "In uniform?" "Mos* alius not, sah. :vv "Who ia ho?" "Maass Tom Raymond, Miss Puss' consin," said tho man.
Captain Leland started. He drew his pistol, worked the lock and sent tho cylinder whirring to mako suro that all was irf^rder then lio said to tho friglitetuvl negro: "ike, you must get me into tho house without making any disturbance. Do jwm bear
ea, san. xne DiacJc man lea mm In by aside door. In the hall he pointed to a bar of light that indicated a door ilightly ajar and whispered: "Yeh'll fine 'em in dah, sah."
With his cocked pistol in h*s hand, rV-ii-ii ill I f'lnnd sfrof?"
+'-V
."v-r
in uio uuor uiiLi i.iuhCl face to face with Tom Raymond and Mies N®r•l() a »d -ih.v
cloudless sty would be ail too weak, if it had any foundation in fact, to describe the surprise of Raymond and the tw_
women when Captain Leland confronted them. With an impulse born of the pistol carrying habit, the Confederate threw his hand back on his hip, but before he could reach his pistol Lelaud shouted in a voice there was no mistaking "Throw up yoisv hands, sir, or you area dead nutii!"
The women looked v.'hito, but did not scream, and tho Confederate prudently did as lie was commanded. "Keep your hands up and turn your back to me," said Leland.
With a blaci£ scowl tins command was also obeyed. Leland now quickly advanced, and jerking the pistol from the Confederate's belt sprang back and said: "Now, sit down, sir. You are inv prisoner, and if you attempt to move I will fire."
Again Raymond obeyed. Pv this timo Mrs. Norton, a lino but rather nervous ladv. who lied a genuine admiration for tho Union officer, called out: "Oh., don't harm him, Captain Leland. .t»„ juiy cousin, and he canio here at great risk to himself to bring me news of r'y poor
hc5ba:r.:l,
v.ho i. now
dying at Jackson." "He lias made a habit of coming here." said the captain, with what the black man had told him in mind, "and he is a spy. "Who says he has been here before?" asked Miss Norton, speaking for the first time. "I have heard it," said the captain. "But who told you?"
While the captain was hesitating, for he did not want to involve the black man, the prisoner called out: "He heard it from a nigger. Of oourse he would rather believe his friends and aasociates than his enemies."
To this the captain made no response. He was not in the position to bandy bitter words with this man. "My cousin, Major Raymond, hag never been here since ho left with Van Dorn's army," persisted Misa Norton,
hi oiv ii)) your hatuls!''
and with extended hand and an irresistible pleading in her eyes she advanced to Captain Leland. "But lie is hero now, here in citizen's clothes, and so a spy," ^aid the captain. "I am not a spy," retorted the prisoner, and his bronzed face grew ashy. "I carno here armed, as you know, and this is the dress I wear fighting und"r my own colors. We rebels can't afford regulation uniforms like you Yankees. "He came liere," broke in Mrs. Norton as she came to her daughter's side, and so interposed her person between the captain and tho prisoner, "he eame here to le-'.vo me news-from r:v dying husband and to take back my message. For the sake of your own parents, Captain Leland, for the .'.alee ol the legard in which you have professed to hold me and my daughter, for God's sake, I beg you to let this man go. "Nobody but ourselves will know of it," added Miss Norton. "To reloaso him will bo a noble and magnanimous act. Do it for my sake, and till the day I die I shall bless you in my waking hours.''
To the followers of Ulysses, Circe herself was not moro distinctively fascinating than was Puss Norton to Captain Leland. He never imagined that he could be false to his flag to prove his lovo for her, yet as ho listened he was won, though he did not propovso to yield at once, lest she should underestimate his strength of character. But the young lady understood her own power quite as well is she did his weakness. Site could see by the chant/e in his expression that he was inclined to yield, so with renewed vigor situ continued iter pleading, the mother joining in and si ill opposing her person between tho captain and liis prisoner.
The room in which this meeting was had opened out on a wide piazza such as surrounds tho better class of southern houses. As tho night was stormy tho windows were closed, but as they swung on lunges and vt.ro simply fastened the opening presented no serious difficulties. Wat*tiling his opportunity, the prisoner, with the bound of a tiger, sprang for the nearest window and flung it open. Captain Leland saw tho act, and raising his pistol arm shouted, "Halt!"
On tho instant Miss Norton threw herself on his arm, awl the prisoner, with an oath of defiance, vanished into tho darkness.
Outside the Confederate came uj:on a group of negroes and frightened them by the demand: "Where is tho Yankee's horse?"
They divined his purpose,- but tho habit of obedience to tho white man was too strong to admit of anything but prompt obedience. Ike, the man who had told Captain Leland of Raymond's presence, was just as ready to guide tho Way to the horse. .If LmUukI had followed im
mediately, it is doubtful if he wouin have overtaken and recaptured his pr isoner, but that he should not do so the Women were determined. They clun -j to him, begging him to have mercy, and While they did so, and he hesitated,
ins time. As ne carti"'*' there, wirh tho ., r. »'.•*
UI.I UUUUUB.
A.n instant, and there came a challenge 'repeated by a score of voices: "Halt! Halt! Halt!"
Still Ihe pounding of hoofs, then a rattle of arms, a cry from the darkness, and the horse had ceased his galloping.
The women turned deathly pale and held their breath. What could it mean? The captain recalled that there had been a vedette post abouf two miles down the road. It must be that Raymond, in his effort at escape, had run into the relief and been fired on.
But all doubts were soon set at rest. Outside there were heard hoarse voices and the tramping of men. The steps rang ou the p'srra. O^e o* th° shouted. "Fetch a light!" and other negroes echoed it. Torches flashed below the windows. Captain Leland, much puzzled at this, was about to step through the still open window by which the Confederate had escaped when ho found hims' If 'ace to face with the provost marshal, whom ho knew very well. "What is up?" asked Leland. "Yon should .know." was tho reply. "What do you mean, sir?" asked tho indignant captain. "I mean that you are mv prisoner.
Your prisoner? I don't understand.'' In reply the provost stepped to the wiiidov, and motioned into tne darkness. A sergeant and four men entered and brought their arms to "order." "Sergeant Ford, take this man to the guardhouse and then report to Colonel Fletcher that I want an ambulance sent out here." Then, turning to Leland, "Captain Leland, you must give up any arms you may have on yonr person. "This is an outrage. I protost," said tho captain as he laid on the table his own pistol and the cno ho had taken from the Confederate. "I hope it is, "replied the provost, "but you must protest to somebody else. I am simply doing my duty, and a very unpleasant one it is.
Mrs. Norton and her daughter were unable to gpeak. Both looked weak and faint both wanted to ask what the firing meant, but they did »ot dare to. They let Captain Leland go out without saying a word to him. It may be that they realized his position even moro than he did himself and did not wish to manifest a solicitude that might complicate matters.
While the captain was being marched through tho mire and darkness over to Corinth, a number of soldiers, one of them leading a saddled horse and four of them carrying a body on an extemporized strotcher, made with a blanket and two muskets, came to the front of the house. The stretcher was placed on the floor, and when Mrs. Norton and her daughter heard the men, ignoring the co-.iJ7L''.:.-/l of the provost 'to cciwidor themselves his prisoners, they ran out. By the light of a dozen torches, held in the bands of as many negroes, the mother and daughter saw the ashy face of Major Tom Raymond. Excepting for a slight crimson from about the lips, there was no sign of a wound, but nearly two years' familiarity with the more liorriblo phases of war had given the women abetter knowledge of death symptoms than many surgeons had when the trouble began. It needed no second glance to convince them that their late visitor "was called" to use tho expressivo phraseology of the front
In about an hour the ambulance, drawn by four smoking mules, halted in front of the house. As tenderly as if lie had been a friend instead of a spy and an enemy, the wounded man was lifted in. The women asked to accompany him, and, as they were regarded as prisoners, the officer in charge was more than willing to consent.
The provost marshal, with a half dozen men, remained back, and as soon as the ambulance had left began a careful search of the whole house, from damp cellar to cobwebbed attic.
For a long time the Union authorities in Corinth had suspected that Mrs. Norton ard her daughter were in communication with the enemy, and that Captam Leland was either in their secret or was being used as an unconscious tool. This search tended to couth every suspicion. A small bag containing letters dated at Jackson a few days hefore and addressed to southern sympathizers inside tho Union lines .- found, and it required no powers of penetration to infer that this had been brought in by Raymond on his last visit.
For some time Captain Leland had been receiving packages from Louisville intended for Miss Norton, but addressed to himself. Ho had agreed to this arrangement, believutg that these packages contained only articles belonging to women, but he search that night disclosed the fact that, either knowingly or unknowingly, ho had permitted himself to be as an inteimediaiy between tho Confederates within and without our lines.
All these evidences were gathered up and taken into Corinth the next morning, and when the ".find" became known ail were agreed that the caso against Captain Cnaries Leland looked very black indeed. Among tho unfortunate young soldier's friends in Corinth at that time Ava .s a cadet surgeon named Whipple. Tnis gentleman visited tho guartlhouso tho following morning to see the prisoner whose arrest was tho allc of the garrison and tho surprise of all, even of tho few wise oneH who claimed that sooner or later this must be the result. "Mighty sorry for this, captain," said Dr. Whipplo as he hold tho prisoner's hand and added, "For ono, I don't believo it, and I won't belicvo it if I'm the only ono in Corinth." "What do you mean?" gasped tho
[CONTINUED.)
INSURGENTS WIMN3
Spanish Newspaper Reports of Recent Skirmishes.
A NUMrfi 0-^ A (TIMIENTS.
Iwu liuukaiiiiii bpanisli Troops Drives
From a I'ort Which Wsis Afterward Burned by the Insurgents Nothing Startling: Koported From Havana—Spain Will Ship Torpedoes to Cuba.
TAMPA, Fla., Oct. 12.—Spanish newspapers report an engagement near the city of Santa Clara on Oct. 2. Fifteen hundred regulars under General Valdez were attacked by the insurgents aad routed.
La Quinta, in Remedios, was attacked by the insurgents, who took the fort and set it on fire. Two thousand Spanish troops were quartered there. When the fire reached them they retired from the city.
At Bueccito the Spanish forces were vViiiiw CoLtiu-iUiid^r LiOutenaut Francisco Lujan wi.? absent. In trying to rejoin his companions they mistook and killed him. When the mistake was discovered the troops left the forfi to secure the body. The insurgents rushed in, securing the arms and ammunition, and then retired. in Vuelfca Auajo several small bunds have appeared.
The Spanish column under Lieutenant. Tovar was surprised near El Cura.jo, wime crossing the Bayiao river on Sept. 24. The Spanish loss was considerable. Many were drowned.
Tiie cutter j.txurrili has arrived ia port from a craiise for filibustered.
iy
W iy in havana.
HAVANA, Oct. 12.—Further detaii? received from La Kesbalosa, near which place a mixed train of passenger and freight cars was attacked by the insurgents, who threw a dynamite shell between the cars, seriously injuring fivo of the passengers and more or less injuring all of tho others, show that" two of the passengers each lost a leg and both hands the leg of another one has been amputated, and three others are in danger of death. Two of the wounded passengers have already succumbed to their injuries.
Private letters received here from the Yeguita district of Manzanillo state that the insurgent leader, Rabi, has issued a manifesto to Ms followers, placing before them the advantage of peace over armed revolution.
Ex-Queen Isabella, replying to the greeting which Captain General Martinez de Campos sent her upon her birthday, has sent him the following message: "Thank you more than ever for your heartfelt congratulations. You are "aware that I follow you with my heart praying God to protect you and give yon victory."
Alberto Bezabarreo, an American citizen, has been made a political prisoner at Libertad.
A son of the Earl of Carlisle, who has been visitiug in Cuba, has joined the insurgents in the interior.
Captain General de Campos has left Santa Clara for Santiage de Cuba.
Steamer Searched.
ST. JOHNS, N. F., Oct. 12.—The French cableship Pouyer Quertier, was searched Here yuscerday it having been reported that she had a quantity of I arms and ammunition for the Cubans on board. Nothing whatever was found in tho way of firearms.
Sliipniiiiy Torpedoes to Cuba. I
MADUID, Oct. 12.—Tlie government is about to ship a supply of torpedoes to
Cuba for the purpose of forming lines ot defense to prevent the landing of
1895 OCTOBER 1895
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WASHINGTON, Oct. 12. Attorney General Harmon withm the last few weeks lias received a large number of letters making inquiry as to the rights of American citizens under international law with respect to ex Dressing their sympathy with Cuba eituor materially or otherwise in ner present struggle. The following is a reply to one ol tliese letters and is substantial^ the same as all of the replies sent: "I hasten to say in reply to your letter that the organization of a military force of any kind in the United States in aid of the insurrection in Cuba would be in direct violation of Section 5^80 of the revised statutes of the United Stales, which provides for a fine not exceeding $3,000 and imprisonment not more iian three years for every person who in any way takes part in such expedition or enterprise to be carried on from thence against any prince, state, etc., with 'wnoni the United States are at peace.' "As the United States are not only at peace with Spam, but have with her a treaty whereby the extradition of prisoner anu other benefits are secured, it behooves all American citizens who have respect for the laws and obligati'.iis of their country and regard fori its ::)or to observe this law in spirit as I wen is in letter, to be neutral, in word as \\\..'. as in deed. While there is not law to 'irevent American citizens l'roiu speakin..•.•! iu ir sentiments on any subject, sin.:'? or together, taking such action as mention in your letter, I would, i. judgement, be discourseousintnel.. ..r'st degree to a friendly power and uej.d to embarrass the goveminent in cv- '-ring out il.s determination 1'aithini.ly execute the laws and tullill its treaty o. ligations."
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CONDUCTOR I'oculiiii- Accident, on t'.o T«if«*do and OJiio mt,ral
Conductor
James Burns ^vras terribly burned last evening at Arnntage, a place auout a mile ro:ii here, lie runs a water tram on the Toledo anil. Ohio Central fiom hero to Coi ning, where lie and his family iivo.
The water is carried in oil tanks, and while Burns was standing ou tho top of one ho removed the gap and plunged his lantern into tiie hole to see liow near full it was, when in a twinkling the accumulated gas caught lire and blazed up 15 feet, and knocked the conductor olf the train. His clothes took lire, but the flames were extinguished by the brakemen, but liis hands and lace were irned iu a horrible manner, rle was e. rried to a house near by, where modioal aid was summ-mai. His chances for recovery are
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The author of "Helen's Babies," has written a number of other tales that are quite as good as that popular story. One of them is
What Was fie Made For
CL
delightful short story "which trill be published in this paper.
Other Splendid Stories by Famous Writers In Preparation
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