Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 25, Number 21, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 17 November 1894 — Page 7
SSsfftilS
OONT1XUKD FROM SIXTH PA08.
•of them for twenty-nine hours. Then two of the lately-besieged troopers, Fritz and Router, came trotting in among the travels just as the convoy broke camp at the mouth of Pawnee gorge, twenty miles nearer home.
Leaving the cove at dark the previous evening, they had ridden all night with the news of the reseue, had routed out the telegraph operator at Ska Bridge and sent away certain dispatches with which they were charged, had learned that the major and his command had passed on about nine a. m. and would be found 'somewhere to the south along Pawnee Fork, and then pushed ahead with the glad tidings. Everybody, therefore, at Ransom knew the main facts long before Rhett and the wounded got home. Everybody mourned for Schultz, a reteran of nearly twenty years' service in the regiment, and rejoiced for Schramm, who had covered himself with glory. Everybody was proud of Thornton's spirited behavior in his maiden fight, and full of genuine distress over his wounds. Edwards, badly shot and a veteran of many a tough cavalry campaign, wasn't the object of one-tenth the sympathy that was lavished on "Pretty Perry," one of whose hurts—that slit along his neck—was a mere scratch, that would be an ornament to him all the rest of his life, while the hole bored by the little Winchester in his side was something that would soon heal and seldom hurt him. But who can paint the sensation at the Thorntons' happy home? Delight and dismay intermingled! Telegram followed telegram, that which came from the general late in the day blinding Col. Thornton's eyes: "The regiment glories in your gallant boy. We'll send him east on leave at once. Full report by mail."
Then with what eagerness they waited the coming of letters and particulars! with what emotion did they read Perry's modest pencil scrawl, bidding them ascribe all credit to Jeffers and give all gratitude to Schramm! with what fluttering hearts, what tearful eyes, did they strive to read Fenton's letter telling the story of Perry's dash to the rescue of the Imperilled troopers, of his heroic effort to save poor Schultz's body, of the daring and devotion of Trooper Schramm, of the enthusiastic praise the little detachment lavished on their young lieutenant! Here at least was Perry the hero of the Indian campaign, the future leader in many another. Stopping only long enough to drop in upon a little coterie of old campaigners, receive their hearty congratulations, and read them the dispatches from the seat of war, the veteran colonel left by first train for the far west to meet his boy and to bear to that brave and devoted Prussian trooper the blessings, the gratitude and the assurance of the fervent prayers of mother and sisters for his own happiness and prosperity for all the years of his life—and beyond.
Four days and. nights of ceaseless travel it took the colonel to reach Pawnee. By that time the general with Tintop and the regiment was far to the northeast, straightening out another squabble, the army as usual acting as buffer between the Indians and the people and getting hard knocks on both sides. By that time Rhett with his command was back at Ransom, and Fenton with the wounded from Slaughter oove was on the homeward march. They were breaking camp in Pawnee gorge, thirty miles north of the station, just about the time that Hfo. 8 went whistling down the grade, shooting sharp curves of Antelope Fork after leaving the colonel to be received by the quartermaster at Pawnee station. His first question was for sews of his boy, who was doing splendidly, said the officer, when they passed Ska Bridge yesterday. "Fenton's going to send him with one or two others ahead in the ambulances this morning. They'll be here before noon. Schramm comes in at the same time, poor fellow. He's got an ugly touch of fever, Dr. French wires, and they want to get him to the hospital as soon as possible. The death of his friend Sohultz seems to have been a hard blow." "I wish they'd let me take him home with us," said Col. Thornton, with glistening eyes. "I know a little woman who followed the drum many a kmg year with me, and two pretty girls as ever were born under the flag—-if it is their father who says lt*-who would be only too happy to spend nights and days for weeks to oome nursing that young gentleman book to life. Do yot know him at all?" "Only by sight, sir. He was quite a character at the post, owing to his ds•otion to Cept. Morgan, who helped Mm wit of a cloee eaU last year just after he enlisted. Thej ak agree that he is a gentleman bj birth acid breed log, whom some freak oi fortune has landed on oar shores. Ete'd get the Iron Cross at boms for this exploit." "Well, well show htm hers that if we have no decorations to offer, we Americans know how to appcestate heroism and reward it. There's aothky much too good tor sash a fallow, in vm eyes."
An hour later, the ran test ap over .the eastern verge at the and his huet being eocofarted with early coffee, tbe quartermaster scald not help but note how wistfully the old soldier's eyes kept turning to the nosth era rbad. An inspiration seised hfaa. "Look here, oolonel, It's going to be a hot day, and those fellows wcmld he glad of a little ice. Suppoes we take my backboard and drive out and meet them?" And Thornton, after the proper amount of hesitancy as to taking an officer away from his duties, gladly assented. So the quartermaster ordered out his team, and by six o'clock they were bowling over the magnificent prairie road, with the sun clambering higher every minute, and with a couple of buckets of ice, blanket-swathed, swinging under the rear axle. Two hours later, rounding a bold shoulder
of bluff among the bends of thelWnee gorge, they caught sight of white wagon covers halted at a little dump of willows half a mile ahead. "Hurrahl Yonder they are at the springs," said the quartermaster.
And they found them. Two or three soldiers were passing oups of the oool, sparkling water to the fevered hands under the canvas tereena. The young doctor, dismounted, catching sight of the ooming buokboard, sauntered forward to meet it, in hopes of letters. One glance at the gray-mustaohed soldier by the driver's side was enough.
With extended hand he hastened to help him alight, as the quartermaster reined in his braying mules. "Col. Thornton, I feel oertain,M said he. "Yonder's your boy in the ambulance—jolly as any Mark Tapley you ever heard of." And Thornton, unable at the moment to speak a word, grasped and shook the dootor's hand, bowed his gray head and passed him by, "There's a meeting that would disarm the cynicism of aCarlyle," said the doctor, an instant later, though both men turned their backs and looked away, for under the lifted curtain of his trundling litter Perry .had peeped and seen his father's face—the father whom he had supposed two thousand miles away.
Just before noon that day, under the doctor's careful supervision, the wounded were being lifted from the wagons and borne beneath the canvas flies stretched for them in the coolest and breeziest part of the quartermaster's guarded ooral. Perry, boy like, had insisted on scrambling out on his feet, partly to show how lively he was, partly that he might be close at hand when there was borne with measured tread and gentle hands the prostrate form of a trooper whose flushed face and twitching hands and glittering eyes proved him to be in the clutch of burning fever. About his litter, anxiety in every look, hovered the colonel and
'CAUSE DON'T MJEAJT TO LOSE MY POSITIOK THBOU0H LOSING HIM.'*
his wounded boy, for there lay gallant Schramm, blind to their solicitude, deaf to any word of cheer. "I think we can bring him round in a few days of quiet here," said Dr. French, "but quiet we must have." "Well, sir," said the colonel, decidedly, "we don't leave here until you do. There are mother and sisters hungering at home to get at Perry, but neither my boy nor I can turn a back on a soldier like Schramm. Let me know just what he needs, and every cent we've got is at your service." "It is a serious fever, I fear," said the doctor, "but what he needs most now is absolute repose. We've got to guard him against disturbance of any kind." "Do you mean he can't be moved at all, doctor?" asked a man who, with one or two other civilians, had entered the incloRure despite the efforts of the oorral-master, who, positive at first in his refusal, had stepped back bewildered at sight of a formidable paper. "Certainly," said Dr. French, short* ly, with the "who are you" expression that comes into ^the faces of the most even-tempered of men when disturbed In the midst of their duties. "Then we've simply got to camp here till he can be me and my party." "You have? I'd like to know why." 'Cause I don't mean to lose my position through losing him. Here's my warrant. That man's wanted for the Minden robbery."
CHAPTER XIII.
It was July before the sheriff of Latimer county would have been allowed the undisputed custody of the person of Trooper Schramm, and by that time the sheriff began Vb wonder whether be really wanted him or not. To begin with, the young German lay at Pawnee for nearly a week in about the hottest fever Dr. French had ever encountered. The infantry went on home to Ransom with most of Thorn ton's little squad sod the wounded, bat OoL Thornton's infliwruw with his old oomrade, the adjutant general of the department, was amply sufficient tc have the doctor and some attendants remain there with his son and Schramm. There were days of delirium in which the young Prussian babbled of the Rhineland, of home and mother, of old days in saddle with the hnsssrs on the sunny slopes beyond Mete, of mad envy at sight of Bredow*r squadrons riding away eastward trot the heights of Tronville, down the sheltering ravine, then np the slopes •gain and, in headlong charge, full on the front of the battling French. Then, exultant, he seemed to hear the longedfor ocder for his own fellows, to recall the keen soldier rivalry between Uhlan, enlrassier and hussar, as the three regiments "lined up" for their charge, with dragoons and Jrassars In support, and with the Aognstson just sinking in the west they swooned down upon the arrayed divisions of Mon tern and derambault to the north of Mare-la-Toor. And then he lived again the perilous hours of his first experience with the Sioux, and poured out his heart in gratitude to the officer who so pluckily saved him. Old Thornton, sitting by bis camp cot, his fr^her-heart yearning! over his own boy 1. gin placid slum- I ber elose at hand, learned enough to
V*
guide him in a letter to the Amerioan legation at Berlin,—a soldier father's letter to another soldier father in a foreign land, angered at and estranged from the son of whose very existence, perhaps, he was In doubt. The latter was posted before Thornton heard him babblo of other names, and tell o# the gnadigo Fraulein, Morgan's oldest child, and with grave faoe the oolonel rose and looked at his sleeping boy, and went out upon the breesy prairie, walking for hours before his return. Many things did Schramm mutter and ma* mur and reveal that Thornton oould not understand at all, but he knaw enough German to divine much of the soldier's past, and to demand of his son what letter was that he sent to Constance Morgan whereat Perry, looking much amazed, answered with all promptitude: "Letter to Connie Morgan? Why,.oertaiQly! I wrote to her the second day out from Ransom to tell her what you told me about promotion and to ask her to send us the measures for her father's belt and helmet. The men of the old troop were bound to send him his captain's shoulder knots, and some one suggested that it might be a pious idea to ohip in and order a complete new outfit, helmet and knots and belt and all—just to surprise him. Some thought he might take offenoe. but old Tintop swore he shouldn't.' And Thornton pore walked out again. Perry had never lied to him in his life. Would it be fair to ask the boy if hi had been making love to Morgan's motherless daughter?
But within the week the crisis was over—Schramm was out of danger. Mother and sisters were clamoring for Perry at home, so eastward went the colonel and his boy, and presently, by easy stapes, westward went Schramm, his escort camping at Alkali, crossing to the north bank and going on to Minden, where camp was made again, and where Mr. Fisk, the agent, came over, ostensibly to see if he could bo of any service, and then went back to his office and said to a deputy sheriff, that if that was one of the men who came in with the dispatch that Friday morning of the 1st of June he'd changed so ho couldn't tell him.
Meantime, Rand hal bc?n clear around to the agency by the other route, and turned up again at Butte the day Schramm \va: returned to Ransom. "Don't you disturb liim, Mr. Sheriff," said he, "and just take my advice now, don't go too fast on this trail you may get in so far you can't get back—with credit to yourself." And out at the post the doctor had given strict orders that nobody should breathe in Schramm's hearing what everybody knew—that he was "wanted" for the Minden robbery. "My first duty is to see him restored to health and strength," said he "then the law mijst take its course." And so, with the regiment long miles away, Schramm lay patiently in hospital, tenderly thought for by everyone, frequently remembered through the mails by the distant family of Thorntons, promoted corporal of his troop in regimental orders promulgated, from headquarters in the field and read to the whole assembled command both there and here at Ransom, reciting the heroic nature of his conduct in the affair at Slaughter cove and the skill and bravery with which, his superiors being disabled by wounds, he had conducted the defense. All this was very pleasant to Schramm, whose eyes lighted with joy when Morgan, his captain now, and Jeffers, invalided by wounds, and Treacy ditto, all came in to congratulate him but the sweetest thing life to the convalescing soldier was the sight of Connie Morgan's pretty face when, regularly as the day came round, the gnadige Fraulein appeared with some little bunch of wild flowers, some little dainty or cool drink, but always with her gentle voice and soft brown eyes and sweet, serious smile, to ask how the oorporal was feel* Ing this bright day. The only trouble now was that he began to get well too fast. His fellow non-commissioned officers, Jeffers and Treacy, limping In one day said there was a big row among the railway people all over the east. "Riots and ructions" had followed. The militia and police were whipped. The regiment had been whisked in from the field, piled into passenger cars, and sent away towards Omaha, and they, the'wounded of the Indian war, were losing this trip to civilization and beyond. Next day Rhett and his men were suddenly telegraphed for, and again was Capt. Morgan both ordnance and commanding officer.
And then one beautiful spring day Schramm sent for Mrs. Hinkel and his box, and she, weeping, came to Constance. and together they appealed to Morgan, and then the old man In the new shoulder straps realised that the matter could be no longer hidden, and before nightfall Schramm learned that he was under tbe surveillance of the sheriff, charged with being sooossorv to the robbery of Paymaster Graves, at least to the extent of receiving and oonoeaHng a oertain part of the money. And Sehramm, speechless with wrath and amaze, stood attention to his oaptain on the hospital porch, and simpjf quivered and shook and clenched his hands. Morgan made him sit down, sad prefacing his statement with ths Assuranoe that no one who knew him believed him in ths faintest way connected with the robbery, went on to my there were oertain matters that, unexplained, seemed to point to him with the finger of suspicion. He and Sohults left camp on Bear Fork toward half-past twelve a. tnu, and though they started baok by ths trail of the regiment they had probably left it and borne away over to ths south so ss to rids ths bank of the Ska, In plain view ten minutes after the departure of Ha I and just after ths rob» bery. A Mr. Long had seen two troop* ers on roans riding briskly west at thai time. The operator said the had oome in beforehand with ths dispatch, and hs thought the' have looked like Sohults and So! The paymaster couldn't be sure— oouldu't identify himj but Mr. Lacy,
IE* elerk, had described the iwo w&5 (net thsm at the train and led thsm baok from ths depot while hs lollowed in the rear, and Laoy*s description earreashr fOOS to box, pat a pasb ags In It oount to 1st It fall into other hands, and this box the sheriff had opened In presenoe of ths commanding officer, and ths first thing found was an envelope oontalninjf five hundred dollars In fifties, whion Laoy was ready ta swear was some of the lot taken rrooa the paymaster's valise. Then they were In town together and harried away the moment tlwsy learned that the robbery was known and soldiers suspected, and instead of returning to the regiment they had turned off and gone away northward through Wagon gap until met and run back by the Sioux. This, said Morgan, was ths case against him as far as he knew. [TO BU COHTINUBD.]
tainlv pointsd to thsm. Then on» tng tbs garrison Sehramm had go Mrs. Hinkel, got bis box, pat a
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A NEW CHURCH FAD,
The People of a New York Village Balu Money by Novel Method*. Anew religious fad has been taken ap by the ohurch people here. The people of the Presbyterian and Methodist Episcopal ohurohes are engaged iu a wild scramble for money to swell the treasuries of their respective societies, and the fad is to secure this money by praotioing unusual occupations, economizing in personal and household expeditures and begging.
Experience meetings are held, and as eaoh person makes his or her contribution they explain how they got the t.fJTTS5? money.®!
An experience "meeting was held in the Methodist Episcopal ohurch Friday night. Ten oents admission was charged, and there was a large number of persons present. Musio was furnished by a volunteer orchestra, composed of members of the Epworth league, tinder whose auspices tbe meeting was held. Howard Wilcox presided.
Dr. 0. H. Ganse said that he saved a dollar for the church by not giving his wife bananas, of which she was very fond. Mra Harry Maynard charged a man 50 cents for lodging, supper and breakfast and made the rest of tbe dollar by painting. J. W. Feeter saved a dollar by depriving his wife of popcorn at Ocean Grove. Mrs. Vernon Anderson made dresses for her mother. Mrs. J. W. Feeter washed wagons. Miss Mollie Elmore made a dollar by brushing the clothes of guests, at her house. Howard Wilcox saved 60 cents by shaving himself six times.
The economies and employments of Mrs. C. H. Ganse were put in verse by Miss Belle Brinckerhoff and sung by her olasa She made a carriage cover for her husband, also a necktie, and he paid her 60 cents for killing two fliea Miss Maggie Elting made her money by writing letters, blacking shoes and doing housework. Miss Maggie Oakley made and sold jelly. Miss Belle Brinckerhoff told fortunes. Miss Grace Adams cleaned her brother's bioyole and copied insurance polioies. Miss Susie Gent made and sold pincushions. Miss Carrie Freer sold peanuts. Miss Tona Reynolds made napkins and sold them to Mr. Fent. Florence Clearwater sold peanuts. Mamie Mundon packed grapes. Misses Alioe and Helen Palcer told in song how they churned and sold butter and spring chickens, shaved, out hair, did housework and worked outdoors— all for the church. Miss Nettie Bruyn read a practical effusion, relating how she mended gloves and sold old music.
The meeting closed with the report of A. D. Dent, who made his contribution by paying 10 oents for services worth 5 cents. If the new fad does not die out soon, the whole village will be bankrupt.-—Highland(N. Y.) Telegram
Driven to Suicide by Women. The faot is oarefully suppressed by the JBnglish press that Visoonnt Drumlanrig, the eldest son of the Marquis of Queensberry, whose death was announced last week, committed suicide. Tbe young man was recently engaged, and the announcement caused two other women with whom be had relations to threaten him. The young man blew his brains out.—Vogue.
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The dantoherknow fellows in New York city and Boston will, as a matter of course, defend England in any little trouble she may have with France.— Buffalo Nowa. tf-i-
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He Fljred Bella a Negro'. Head, Imt Couldn't Hit It. In a description of tbe Hawkinsville (Ga.) fair the Atlanta Constitutionsays "The head of a Pulaski negro, stuck through tbe bole of a canvas, on which was painted a large cut watermelon, with tbe negro's bead in the heart, was too much of an attraction for even Speaker Crisp, Major A. O. Baoon and Senator Pat Walsh to resist They had just finished their political speeches and were taking in the side shows when the eloquent fakir who manages the imitation melon/ and read negro with a skull appartftitly of steel, sang: 'Gome up, gentlemen, and try three throws each at the head of tbe Georgia coon! Three throws for 6 oents I Every time yon hit the negro yon get a good cigar. Ah, gentlemen, there's luck to the man who hits that negro's head. The man who can do it can go to the United States senate. Gentlemen, I'll guarantee the seuatorship to the lucky thrower!' 'Well, Pat, I'll try it with you,' Baid Major Bacon. 'And, Crisp, you must UJ in this.' "The statesman didn't shuck their coats, but they chucked balls at that negro's head with as much enthusiast*} and good natured jollity as they have canvassed the 6tate for the Democracy. The negro proved an expert dodger, however, and not a ball touched the senatorial goal, but the statesmen had lots of fun out of it, and one of them may do some luckier throwing when the legislature meets."
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