Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 21, Number 49, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 30 May 1891 — Page 3
AN ANECODTE OF THE WILDERNESS
Intfae battles of the Wilderness the Twentieth Maasachnsetts regiment was in the thick of the fight, and one color bearer after another was shpt down al
"TIJK HBMXS 3*AVE DECIDED FOR US." most fUi fast as the tnen could be replaced. Bot such was the eagerness to keep the flag aloft that at one time two men Irishmen—caught hold of the «tandard at once, as it was about to fall, and struggled for it. Just then a shot utrnck the staff, cutting it in two, and leaving one man with the flag and the other with the broken stick. "Bedad!" said the man with the short end of the staff, "tlio rebels have decided for us this timel" and -went to loading and firing again as «coolly as if nothing had happened.—Anecddltes, Poetry and Incidents of the War.
3n«tant3*neoua Dentil* in Battle, Tho fact that a man is down and out of the fight is about all that friend or foe can take account of for the time being. It is seasonable to suppose, however, that some deaths are instantaneous, the men being literally killed in action. One such case I lyid an opportunity to study with unusual care at Fort Haskell, in the Port Stedman battle, in front of Petersburg. Tho aetion there was defensive on our part, the scene very small and tho fight prolonged, hence many things were observed that would escape notice on an open field.
At
0110
time, just in front of me, as 1
looked toward the enemy, there was a soldier of our garrison firing his musket from a gun staging, that raised his head and shoulders above tho parapet. He was tho oldest man Lover saw in battle, and for that reason, doubtless, 1 observed him closely. His hair was white and his form had reached the stage of unsteadiilesH. Ho fired very slowly, and after each shot he would scan the enemy's lines as though watching the result of his last ball or spying out a target for tho next.
Finally when I had my attention almost Wholly on him lie half turned to reload, and I saw his cap fly off smftrtly without any visible help, and the large and bony frame shrunk together and sank down into a heap. There was no spasm, no agitation, whatever. It seemed to mo that ho simply wit down slowly until he rested on his legs bent under th« body, hia head going down to his knee or to the trail of tho cannon. A little stream of blood ran from hia forehead and made a pool on tho plank, and this blood reached tho plank about tho time that his frame settled down motionless.
From tho time that his hat flew off until the Wood appeared on tho staging and the motionless body eaused me to say, "Ho is dead." could not have been more than thirty seconds, and probably was about twenty. 'The fatal ball had penetrated the left temple, or near it This was tho only case tlmt 1 ever saw where a man was kiMed "so quickly that he never knew what hit him," as the saying is.—New York Sun.
A Itnttlo Within a flattie.
Aft officer of the Second Connecticut regiment, in letter to his family, says: "The coolest thing I ever b&urd of happened at the battle of Fair Oaks. Right in the hottest of the battle two of the Second's boys got at loggerheads with each other, threw down fchetr muskets and fell to at fisticuffs, had it out, picked tip their arms and pitched into the rebels again, have heard of a wheel within a wheel, but a battle within a battle is certainly something i»w."--Selected.
Th« Rait Run iUMf
It is well known that John
A.
war
Logan,
who was a member of Congress at the time the
began, left Washington
when he saw there was going to be a fight, and, seistaf a musket, walked all the way to BttU Bun, where he arrived just in time to take part in the tattle. He had on a swallowtail coat, hot he stood tip to the rack long as anybodydid. He was back In Washington next morning a good deal out of breath, and was telling some of his fellow congresstnen all about it "Who gave this account of th* %htr asked a member from tho north woods of NW York. "Why, I wan there mr^f," said I^ogan The Now Yorker c*. ratty had not heard the new*, for he seemed a little mystified, and asiwd, £f wishing to solve the mystery of lagan's «jr~ 1y reappearance, lAn tin* cars txaxn^JT "No." sand Lagan, "the cant ai»t running, but every other blank thing in tfa* state of Virginia is, near a* I could find out."—Chicago Herald.
THE ARMY MULE AGAIN.
Wow Private Peck Old Not tvftn t» Drive. Everybody knew I had been recom mended for a tsommission, and thev called me *'lieutenant," wit all the same I was doing duty as a private. For two or three days I was detailed to drive mules for the quartermaster, and that was the worst service I ever did per form. I kicked soine at being detailed to drive a six mole team, but the colonel said I might see the time when I could save the government a million dollars by being able «to jump on to a whe^l mule and drive a wagon loaded with ammunition or paymaster's cash out of danger of being captured by the enemy. 80 I went to work and learned to "gee-haw" a six mule team of the stubbornest beasts in the world hauling bacon, but there was no romance in taking care of six mules that kicked so you had to put the harness on them with a pitchfork for fear of having your head kicked off. If I ever geta pension it will be for my loss of character and temper in driving those mules. I have been in some daugeroos places, but I was never in so dangerous a place in battle as I was one day driving those mules. One of the lead mules got his forward foot over the bridle «ome way, «ad I went to fix it, and the team started and "straddled" me.
As soon as I saw that I was between the two lead mules, .and that the team had started, I knew my only safety was in lying down and taking the chances of tho three pairs of mules and wagon going stiraight over me. The attempt to get out would mix them all up, so I fell right down in the mud, which was about afoot deep and like soft mortar. As the mules passed on each side of ine every last one of them kicked at me, but I escaped everything except the mud, and when I got up on my feet behind the wagon the quartermaster, who was ahead on horseback, had stopped the team. He called a colored man to drive and told me I could go back.
I tried to sileak iu the back way and not see anybody, but when I passed the chaplain's tent a lot of oMcers, who had been sampling his sanitary stores, camo out, and one of thom recognized me, and they insisted on my stopping and taking something with them. Honestly, there was not an inch of my clothing but was covered with red mud. They had fun with rme for half an hour and then let me go. I have never to looked at a mule since without a desire to kill it.—How Private Peck Put Down the Rebellion.
'Not Quite Gone.
A soldier of Bates' division of the Confederate army, after tho command had run two days from .Nashville, had thrown away his gun and accoutrements, and alone in the woods sat down and commenced thinking—the first chance he had for such a thing. Rolling up his sleeves and looking at his legs and general physique, ho thus gave vent to his feelings, "I am whipped, badly whipped, and somewhat demoralized, bntnomr.n can say am scattered. "—Moore's Collection.
A Jfalr lSxchange.
The day after the battle of Bull Run (July 32,1861), while burial parties were busy at their then unaccustomed work, Mike Flaherty, a member of the Second 8. C. V., wandered away from his comrades, and while strollmg through the woods came upon a Yank, cold and miff, with a new pair «tf shoes on his feet. Now, Mike's shoes were much the worse for wear, and the poor fellow looked long and wistfully at the new brogans. It would never do to rob the dead, and yet he wanted the shoes.
Finally he Hat him down, untied the strings with many a furtive glance at the dead man's ffece, poflad off the shoes and tried tbemoo. They fitted perfectly, and Mike sat eying them regretfully. Suddenly a brilliant idea flashed into Mike's brain. Why not swap? It was done. The old shoes" took the place of the new, and were secareiy tied on the dead nasal's feet, and Mike, with along drawn sigh, mid in a half apologetic maimer, "Them's pUnty good enough for where you're gowiaV'—Volunteer
Kaapty Slower.
During the war a man, great in his own eye®, was, by some influence, appointed a brigadier general His sense of his own importance was greatly increased. He could hardly speak of anything else bnt his new dignity. Meeting a "homespun" Yankee one day be accosted him thus: "Weil, Jim. I suppose yon know I have been appointed a brigadier generair Yes," said Jha, "t heerd so,* "Well, what do folks say about itT "They don't say ttothin\* refitted James: "they just laugh."—Exchange.
Ow Thwtr Ortm.
Ovrx tWr irravws nusjr aace tf*e c*It The **sm?himr sbrajmei »aA (fcecvasbiagtttllr The shrtHc, UsonlKsci of b«ttk and Uk» neigh
Of horse ttwcrfcsef aagvfefa sad dfamar. And the kmd c*nam*» thoiwk*» tb*t appall.
Hour thrmigti OH r«w"» t&e barters pi»c nwdloa
Tbet—sninrkA»^thwdd»*«»
walk
Over tb«ir£ttmsl
W'^rardmd*lM}«.rs.hftJdtatfar*n-
fl tlwy Qr*xk mm died, attr G*aL Bwt tlwy k«k*udajr
With so r«fwov-. «an«S»ea we «*y, kt o*eta«p yaw )»»&» miH."
Over theit gtasratf
TO SLEEP.
T» «teep! toiQecp! The long blight day Is dona, And darkness rises from the fallen san. To sleep! to elcepl
Whate'er thy Joys, they vanish with the day Whate'er thy priefs in sleep they fade away. To sleep! to sleep!
Sieer*. mournful heart, tsnd let tho past be past! Bleeps happy son!! all lifv' will sleep at last. To sleep! to -Lord Tennysoa ia New York Truth.
I
THE Gofl) NUGGET.
It
wa*« siven to Elffie to take care of. It was not a great prize, for it weighed only seven ounces,,but it represented the only result of a strong man's toil for many weeks, and as nuggets go it was considered by no means a bad "find."
John Archer decided that the nugget would be safer in his little daughter's keeping than in his own. There were thieves and lawless men at this new gold rush, as at all new gold rushes, and they would know of his prize. They would probably try to annex it.
They would search all sorts of cunning hiding places in the neighborhood of his tent they might even creep into the hut at night, to feel under his pillow and among his rough bedding for the yellow earth that folk hated each other for. If he caught the thief he would shoot him, but better not to run the risk of losing his treasure, and so he gave it to Effie to put in her old workbox. The thieves of the diggings would be too cunning to think of examining such an improbable hiding place. "Yon must take'great care of it, darling,'8 said John Archer. "It is for your mother." And Effie stowed the little nugget away in a corner of the old work box—which had been her mother's—under the cotton and the socks she was darning for her father. She felt duly weighted with the responsibility. She knew that this yellow earth was of great value, for her father, leaving her mother, who was very delicate, with some friends in Brisbane, had come a long, weary way to find it, and she had seen hisv sorrow, his despair, as day after day he had eagerly worked with pick and spade without finding what he sought.
Having hidden the little nugget away, Effie came out of the hut to look round and see if any one was near who might have seen her. No. iTo one was near who might have seen her-—only Billy the black—Bang Billy, the aboriginal monarch, who loved rum and tobacco, and who was chopping firewood for her. King Billy evidently had not seen, for he vae wielding the ax with quite exceptional vigor and if Billy had seen it wouldn't have mattered \ery much, for Effie trusted him.
The little girl's ietson for trusting King Billy, the blacK, was somewhat strange, and is worthy of being recorded. She trusted him because she had been kind to him. jn
But Eflie was only twelve. As the child stood in the broad light, her tumbled hay hued hair kissed and illumined by the bold rays of the sun, and her round, trustful blue eyes shaded from tlift glare by two little brown hands, watching King Billy at his work, a flock of laughing jackasses alighted in a neighboring gum tree, and set up a demoniac cachination. What made the ill omened birds so madly merry? What was the joke? Effie's trust? Billy's gratitude? They failed Jo explain, but their amusement was Irage and sardonic., "Drive them away, Billy," cried Effie, and tho obedient king dropped his ax and threw & Maggot of wood at the tree, which stopped the laughter and dispersed the merry makers. "Billy tired now," said the black grin ning "too much work—plenty wood," and he pointed to the result of his labor. "Yes, that will bo enough, thank you. You're a good boy. Fll give you some tobacco." '•Billy's thirsty."
L*
''Then you shall have some W.41 "No tea. Rum." "No, Billy. Rum isnJJ good for you. "Good for miners good for Billy. "No, it's not good for miners," said Effie emphatically: 'it makes them fight and say wicked things." "Makes black feller feel good," declared Billy, rolling his dusky eyes.
This last argument was effective. Effie went into her hut—her father had returned to his work—and poured a little spirits from John Archer's flask into "pfconikin." Billy drank the spirits with rolling eyes, smacked his lips, and then lay down in the shadow of the hut to sleep. ^/l
Tine long afternoon passed very slowly for Effie. Her few trifling duties as housekeeper were soon done. The little hut was tidied and the simjrte evening meal prepared, and same hours must pass before her father returned. How could she pass the time? She had only two books—a Bible and a volume of stories for little girls, which she had won as a prize at school in Brisbane. Bnt the was too young to appreciate the first, especially as the type being
rety
small It was difficult reading, a»d she had grown beyond appreciating the stories for little girls, having known than by heart three yearg before. ghe would like to have slept |g§
Everything around her suggested ana invited the siesta—tho steady heat the brightness of the light without the hut the distant murmur of miners' roioes, which came from beyond yonder belt of wattle gums the monotonous hnm of the locusta in the forest the occasional fretful cry of a sfcrangt) bird, and the regular snores of the fallen king, who slumbered in the shade of the hut* Even tho bass of the annoymg flitw assisted the general effect and
To remain sizfi far a few^mmntes woald have meant inevitably falling Effie felt this, and remembered the little gold nugget If she slept thief might ooaae sad take it Aad so she pat on her hat, and, forsaking the sedactive cool and shade of the hut went oat into the brightness and
AidiS**# htil sfoo& oa edge of taUey. over against the foot of the blue, heavily timbered hill* About fifty
•afds distant from it hidden among tire trees, was a high mossgrownxock. at the base of which Effie had discovered the smallest and sweetest of natural springs. Thither the child ran—looking back often to see that no one approached the hut in her absence—to bathe her face. In a few minutes she returned, drying her face in her apron and shaking bet wet hair in the «u i. No one had come but Kin£ Billy was now awake, aud was slouching lazily olf toward the bush. Effie laughed as she saw him—his great head bent forward, and his thin, narrow shoulders bowed. She laughed to think of bis laziness, and that he should look so tired after, such a^yery, little, wood chopping. :*l
She was still laughing at King. Billy as she opened the old workbox to take another peep at the yellow treasure, and to make quite sure that the heat hadn't melted it away. And it was quite slowly that the laugh died from the pretty eyes.and mouth— quite slowly, because of the moments it took to realize and accept a misfortune so terrible—when she lifted the coarse socks and looked and saw no little gold nugget—saw nothing. Then horror and great fear grew in the blue eyes, and pale agony crept over the childish face and made it old, and the poor little heart seemed to stop beating.
Effie said nothing and made no cry, but she closed her eyes tightly for a moment, and looked in the box again. No, it was no illusion the little nugget was not there—the first gold her fathei had found, which had been intrusted to her care, which was to have been taken to her mother—it was gone. She put down the box quite quietly and walked out into the day, but the sun was-shin ing very strangely and mistily now, and the blue sky had grown black, and the trees seemed to move weirdly, and the locusts had ceased humming from fear, but ther strange bird was somewhere near shrieking brokenly: "What will father say? What will father say?"
But as the child stood there, despairing, her sight grew clearer, and she saw a black figure among the trees and she was conscious of a pair of dusky eyes watching her through the leaves. Then only she remembered, and she knew wlic had done this cruel thing. King Billy And she had baen kind to him. Effie suddenly burst into passionate sobbing. The black figure still hovered among the trees, often changing its position, and the dusky eyes still peered through the leaves, and the laughing jackasses flew down to the old tree again, and laughed more madly than beforelaughed at Effie's trust—at Billy's gratitude! ,,
It was 10 o'clock, and darkness and quiet reigned in John Arche»'s hut. Over among the tents behind the wattle gums a few gamblers and he^vy drinkers were still awake, and their voices, raised in anger or ribald merriment, might occasionally have been faintly heard from the hut. But Archer, who had sown his wild oats, was a true worker and he had his little daughter, ifo"r whoso sake he had built the hut away from the noisy camp.
Archer had come home late and weary, as usual, had eaten his supper afid gone to rest without, to Effie's intense relief, speaking of the little gold nugget. The child was afraid to speak of the loss, and she was not without vague hopes that a beneficent providence would restore the nugget during the darkness and save her from this great trouble.
For this she prayed very earnestly before she lay down to sleep. Or did she sleep at all that night? She never quite knew. But she thinks that it was then that she first experienced that terrible, purgatorial condition which is neithei wakefulness nor sleep, when the body and mind are weary enough to bring the profound sleep which they require, but which the brain is too overladeu and too cruelly active to allow when dreams seem realities and realities dreams. It must have been a dream when she saw something small and yellow float through the tiny window on the ghostly silver moonbeams. And yet, when, having closed her eyes, iBhe opened them agwn, it was still there hovering about in the darkness—less bright now, and with a pale yellow ha'o. But it faded quite away it was a cruel, mocking dream.
Then was it a dream when the old curtain which divided her corner of the hut from her father's moved near the ground —bulged slightly toward herf J& would be curious to see, and she lay still. From under the curtain seemed to come a thin arm, and slowly, cautiously, aftei the arm, a head with a great shock of hair. And the moonbeams j^at touched a face. I think they kissed it, though it was black, for they found in a Mack hand the little yellow object which had floated in the first dream.
It was all so real, set beautiful, that the child lay still, scarce daring to breathe lest the vision should melt away, and when in her dream came the voice of her father, with the words, "Speak or 111 fireT her lips refused to open, t,
Bot it was no dream when the shot came, and the Black King rolled over on the earth, dead, with the little gold nugget he had come to restore prened in the death agony.*-against his heart, where, too, was a little gold.
And the laughing birds in the old tree, startled from their sleep by the shot laughed onoe more, wildly and madly, at Btpy*s honesty but there was bitterness in their merriment far their master, the devil, had been cheated of the sotd of a Black King.—C. Haddon Chambers in Oak Bough and Wkttie Blossom.
js§j) A Queer SopenUUe*. "My father believes in divining roda." said one urchin solemnly to another. "No hottest?" "Yep. Ev^ry Xkm$ he waota me to tees up he takes the rod to me. I guess that most be a divining rod. "—St. Joseph News. _____
r»pa'« OM CoftK.
•My father gave me fits this morning," said Jimpsey. "I wish mine woald give me aceae/* eaid Georgie, who wean irotuKsrs made from the paternal sleeves. "AH I get is misfits. ""--Harper's Bazar.
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TOTICETO KON-REKIDENT.
ftateof Indiana. Otuuty of Vfgo. In lbi* Yigo .Superior Court of vlfo County, Jane term, mi. „.. o. SifSV. Lulu Turner v*. John B. Turner. Divorce.
Re Itkoown, Umtaa the WMidnyof Anril, }W). It was onieml by thf court thatfhtrckrk notify br pubtlestfon mid JTotin IJ. Turner ax nonresldfdHl defendant of I be pendener of this Acti»n axaisuG. him, ftaM defendant 1# tfterpfofe hereby notlHted of said action aaai»«t him, and that the tune will ftsod for trial June 1891, the mrne t*»lnn June t«rm of mid court in the y«ir I8M. JOHN c. WAIWtEX, Clfrrk.
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Railroad Time Tables.
Train rked thus (P) denote Parlor Cam attached. Trains marked thus (S) denote sleeping Cars attached daily. Trains nmTfcoQ thus (13) denote Buffet .Cars attached. Tr«tn» markoa thus {1) run dally. All other tittlna run dally, Sundays nccoptod.
XiX3ST!EJ-
T. H. A I. DIVISION.
LEAVE KOB TItR AV'KST,
No. No. No. No. No. No.
Western Express (SAV). Mail Train Fast. Line (P&V)
12
0
Compound
goes to the root of all female complaints, renews tho waning vitality, and invigorates, the entire system. IntclHge|| women of middle age know well its wonderful powers.
New York Express
1.42 a nf 10.21 a in '2.15 pm 8.10 pm 0.04pm 4.05 nt
Fast. Mall ......... Efllngliam Acc S ." l.KAVK Kon Tills KAST. Cincinnati Express* (S) New York Kxpress (SitV). Mall and Accommodation Atlantic Express (P£V), J'ast lit no*.
No. No. No. No. No. No.
1.20 Din 1.51» 7.15n 12.47 2.!t0 i» 5.06 rti
AlllMVB FROM TllR^CAST. Western Express® (S&V). Mall Train Fast Line* (P&V).
No. No. No. No. No. No.
1.20 am* 10.15 a an 2.00 pm. 8.05 0.45 0.00 tan
Mall anil Aocommodntlon Fast Mall AltlUVK FROM TIIK WEST. Cincinnati Express *1
No. No. No. No. No. No.
1.12 A mr 1.42 a an 12.42 2.15 fi.00 0.90
0
(i-&V).
20 8 2 14 Efllng'nnm At
Atlan 11 Ex press(P& V) Fast LI up*
T. 11. & L. DIVISION.
I.KAVK FOIt TIIK NORTH.
No. 52 South Bend Mall 8.00 a No. 54 South Bend Express 4.00 AltlUVK FROSt TJtK HfOllTH. No. 61 Terre JIaute Exjiross ..... lZVO mNo. 68 South Bene! Mail ....... 7.80 iro
IB. &c T. AUKIVIS FROM SOUTH.
No. 0 Nasli A V. Ex* (S A B). .... 5.10 »«w No. 2 T. H. A East Ex 11 Wl« No. 4 Ch & Ind 15^(8) ... 10X0 nfc tiKAVK FOR SOUTH. No. .1 Ch Ev Ex (S) (1.00 a am No. 1 Ev A Iiul Mall 3.15 psn No. 5 Ch AN Ex*iS ..... .lO.OOpw*
E. Sz. I.
AKKIVK FROM BOUTIf.
No. Worlh Mixed lO.iWn im No. .12 Mall A Ex 4.0S pJB* I.BAVK KOKBOl'Tir. No. Xi Mall A l!x 8.10 am No. 10 Worih'ii Mixed ....... 4.05 pm
AltlUVK FROM NORTH.
No. iSCIt&Nnsh .... K.4rum* No.47TH Acc ..... 10.15am* No. lCli&Kvtx Mfrpm* No. 6 A N ExnS&B) »m. l.KAVK FOE ICO»('*!/. No. flNACEx'lHAB) 5.20*aw No. 2T A Ch Ex 12.10i»» No. 48 Wat^ekft Acc 8Mpm NO. 4 Nash A Ex^(8). 10.»^«B
T. KC. & T.
ARRIVE FROM NOKTIIWRMT.
No. 4 Pass Ex ...ll.JWaa No. 2 Pass Mat! &Kx 7.10 pi I,RAVE FOB KORTUWEST. No. 1 Pass Mall A Ex 7.K*i No. 3 Pass Ex 8.15pi
X. & ST. L.-BIG 4.
OOIN0 KAST.
No. 10 Ib^ton A N Kx». ... l.Wai No. 2Cleveland Acc. H.02m No. ISKoutliwcst-' rn Llmitwl* I.lOpj No. 8 Mat! train* 8.48 pi r-1, UOllM Wf»T. No. 7Hi. TxjuUKx' f.ItTaj No. 17 Limited* I.lOpi No, 3 Accommodation 7,Wpi No. 9 MaJI Train* 10.0# »J
VALE NTINE'SS^-'^
£r
1^then
Marts them-
SCHOOL OF )n railroad ,-%f |/ia U/ttir)
TELEGRAPHYSm
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