Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 25, Number 22, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 24 November 1894 — Page 6

6

4

GornaoHT.

There are letters, portraits—homegifts." And Rand said he was going in to see the sheriff then and there.

A month the troops from the plains were kept on duty in and around the railroad centers of the west. Four long weeks the garrison at Ransom consisted of Morgan, the surgeon, the band, the ordnance sergeant and clerk, quartermaster, employes, and so on, with the hospital steward and attendants, the sick and wounded. Schramm, convalescing rapidly now, was assigned to daily duty at theadjutant'soffice. Jeffera, still limping a little, with Treacy anfl others, became the nucleus of a species of running guard, and did patrol and watch duty. The railway company, grateful for the services of the troops in saving their property, sent a sleeper to Butte and an Invitation for such of the officers' families as would like to go to Chicago, Omaha or wheresoever the husband and father might be, as the guests of the rood, and many went, and Rand wrote asking for "Connie and the kids" to come on and pay Mrs. Rand a visit, but Connie wouldn't go. "Who would take care of daddy?*' she asked, nestling her face against that veteran's stubbly oheek and Morgan gave it up.

The sheriff, who had been a frequent visitor, quit coming out to the post, and bogan to talk around town about the way the fort people had behaved from the start in this robbery business. He would hare had the robbers at the time, only the cavalry had Interfered. He and his posse would have nabbed those fellows skipping for Tomahawk range if it hadn't been that tiiose d—d meddlers of troopers drove ffiem beyond his jurisdiction. The Tomahawk was the name given the blackfringed spur that came, down from the mountains west of Wagon gap almost to the valley of the Ska. It was famous for bear, elk and black-tail deer, and all its length, except a few miles at the southern end, lay within the 8iou*

WYffS

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J.B. UPWHCOTT Cow AM PUBUSHBO «y Smew AHMOIM [CONTINUED Schramm's first question was as to the letters and papers where wert they? "Sealed up and safe," said Marpan. "We have the officer's pledgee aa to that. So is the money sealed up." But Schramm didn't seem to care about the money. That was of little consequence. He could explain at onoe where it came from. A draft from the old country had reached him early in Hay at a time when he wished to use money, and Schultz cashed it for him. Bchultz would not put his savings in the Butte banks. His money was in Chicago. He had had money sent out to him by express. This could be verified at the express office, and the draft could doubtless be traced back through B«hultz's Chicago banker. As for their taking the Minden road, it was not much longer, they had plenty of time, »nd the road near the river was pretr tier. Close to the bridge on the south Bide they had seen some horses held by one or two men just as the train pulled away. Then away over by the depot •were some fellows who appeared to be •wearing cavalry overcoats, ranchmen probably who were going to drive out some distance, as troopers wouldn't think of wearing overcoats in June. They were interested in watching the distant train, however, speeding sway westward, and they rode at a brisk lope up the valley, never thinkJng of the party of men and horses again until that afternoon. Then, hearing of the robbery, it flashed upon them that they had seen the perpetrators, and back they went, heard of them down the stream drinking and quarrelling among themselves, were close on their trail opposite Wagon gap,, and decided to follow, thinking they might possibly overhaul and recapture isome of them, at least, with the result Already known. Beyond the cove they came upon Stearns and his boy racing back for their lives, pursued by Indians. No time to ask questions then. It was fight for life against the common foe. The man was killed before he could tell his story, and now Schultz was gone. Schramm had to face it alone. "No, not alone," said Morgan. "We believe you guiltless and mean to see you through." And then Col. Band came out to see him. What Rand wanted was to -know what had been done with the papers, etc., taken from the civilian who died of his wounds at the cove. All Schultz' effects, of course, were in the hands of the officers whose duty it was to take charge of the papers and property of deceased soldiers. Rand said the boy had been taken to an asylum and was recovering, but had neither money nor papers of any kind. Schramm could hardly be persuaded to sit in the presence of an pfficer of such distinction as Rand, but succumbed to orders. A wallet with letters and papers and a little money, a silver watch and a tobacco-box, had been taken from the body before burial. These were all turned over to Capt. Fen ton when he came.. The man's name was Stearns, and his poet office address Minden. And then up jumped Rand with light in his eyea "That's what I wanted to know," said he. "I thought J'd seen that poor boy before. Now, corporal, don't worry about this matter. We could acquit you easily enough, but there's something else to be done. We want to nail the real perpetrators and get that money back if possible so the trial can't come off just yet." "But—pardon,colonel," said Schramm, rising again. "May I not my box have?

....

reservation, and no one could go thither to shoot exoept by previous arrangement with tho agenoy people. Nevertheless old Stearns, the recent victim of Sioux vengeance, had for more than a year kept a shooting-box somewhere in the mountains, where with his half-witted boy he lived a hermit life, coming down to Minden very seldom, yet frequently being seen about the agenoy at the north. Keen sportsmen of Omaha, Yankton and Sioux City, it was said, sometimes made up hunting parties, and, having properly and previously "fixed" the Sioux ohiefs through agenoy interpreters, went up by way of the Indian villages and, with Indian guides, had many a day of famous shooting, and came home, the envied of their kind, with a baggage-car load of carcasses

"HULLO, HE RIFF, WHKN'S THE TRIAL COMING OFF?" they could not always even give away. The strikes and riots ended, it suddenly occurred to Col. Rand that he hadn't shot a bear in years, so he went up around by the all-rail route, taking a couple of friends, and such was his enthusiasm that he could not hear enough about what other parties had been doing in that line. Game laws did not obtain on Indian lands in those days, except such as the Indian and his keepers agreed upon, and even late in May, it seems, some eager sportsmen had come out from the Missouri and gone into the Tomahawk range, guided by a clerk in the agency and "Lame Johnny," a half-bred Sioux. For a man so interested at the start, it must be owned that Rand tired rather soon of the sport. He left his friends at the agency after a day or two of desultory shooting, and went back to headquarters.

Then the troops began to reappear at their station, as their services were no longer needed and the August suns were beating hot and dry oh the valley of the Ska and presently Old Tintop and the Eleventh were once more restored to Ransom, and began the work of straightening out their quarters and stables, and the new first lieutenant of Troop saluted his predecessor, its present captain, and Schramm blushingly invited his brother noncommissioned officers, all that could be spared, one evening after their duties at the post to meet him at Conway's restaurant in town, where a bountiful supper was provided, and where each man was regailed with such drink as he most fancied, and where Schramm in a very effective speech proposed the health of their new captain, which they drank with cheers, and the memory of their gallant comrade Schultz, which they honored in soldier silence. Nothing like this had happened in the annals of the regiment. "Why, it must have cost him sixty or seventy dollars," said Sergt. Bowman, as they rode back to the post that night. One of their number in a jocular mood thought it appropriate to ask Stfhramm had he been "holding up" another paymaster, or was this what was left of the last one? whereat Schramm looked his interrogator full in the face for a few seconds without as much as changing color or saying a word, and then, turning calmly away, resumed his chat with their first sergeant, who as the senior guest at the feast was placed at the right hand of their host. It was evident that Schramm would have no witticism on that head.

But if Schramm took it in dignified silence, the sheriff did not. It grew to be the popular thing for the troopers just then to hail this magnate with the query: "Hullo, sheriff, when's the trial coming off?" The "boys," as they sometimes called themselves, had much resented it that the officials and the public were so ready to accept the theory that only members of the Eleventh cavalry could have planned and perpetrated the deed. Hence, as time wore on and the evidence against Schultz and Schramm wore off and the sheriff seemed drifting further from a solution of the mystery, the boys took keener delight in chaffing the civil authority oft the public streets and inspiring him to mighty blasphemy and portentous threat, "You fellows had better keep civil tongaes in your heads," said he. with many a lurid expletive, the night after the Schramm supper. "You may think it d—d smart to chaff about4his. Perhaps you soldiers can turn to now and catch the fellers that ran off with your money. If it wasn't soldiers that did it, by —, I'll lay any bet no soldier can say who else done it,"

A week later, however, when the story gt the griff's wagert "with weeping

TEKRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING MALL, NOVEMBER 24,1894.

and with laughter?' was being told at Ransom in connection with the liveliest episode in Ransom's annals, there fell from the oraoular lips of Mrs. Whaling, the relict of a former commanding officer and now a prominent figure in Butte society, the memorable words! "Well, I guess he wishes he hadn't been so precipitous."

CHAPTER XXV.

Pay-day at the post! Old Curran had ordered an extra stand put up in the barroom, an extra load of keg beer out from Butte, and a ehoioe supply of cabbageros for the defenders of their country's flag, who, on these ocoaalons, deemed it their duty not tb be seen out of ranks without a weed in their teeth, no matter how high in price nor how low in grade. The laundresses, arrayed In their best bib and tucker and smiles, had spread the cloth in their shanties down under the hill, with the bucket of punch and dozen of tumblers in readiness for callers—it being one of the unwritten laws of the rank and file in the good old days to square with the laundress if you didn't square with anybody else. The non-commissioned staff, the band and the troops had all been ordered to hold themselves In readiness—the one function of the military year in which such orders were totally unnecessary, even the siok In hospital manifesting a strong desire to get up and go to duty, on that day at least and Lieut. Phipps with twenty troopers had met Paymaster Graves as he and Mr. Lacy stepped forth from No. 3, bustled them Into the waiting ambulance and around the corner to the express office, where they receipted for the little iron safe, and then at spanking trot set forth across the prairie and were deposited at the hospitable door of Old Tintop, where breakfast awaited the major, where his safe was stored pro tempore under the vigilant eye of the officer of the guard, while Mr. Lacy, pleading previous engagement, begged to be excused and went to take his sustenance under the Currans' roof. Guard was mounted in full dress uniform at the usual hour, everybody being out for to see, and Gray being in his glory. Even more than usually jubilant and stirring were the strains of the band as, to the rollicking airs from "Arrah na Pogue," the yellow-crested column came swinging around in review, for it was "Cavalry Day,"—one of Tin top's fads being that it spoiled the ceremony and ruined the guard to have foot and troopers march on together. "Uniform, arms and manual are all unlike," said he, "so what's, the use? They no more mix than oil and vinegar we're the oil and you're the vinegar." And so, being a favorite at department headquarters, the old fellow had been sustained in his idea of having alternate guard, cavalry one day and infantry the next—a system which worked in with the "percentage" fairly well and which the colonel pronounced' a triumphant success, "and anybody who don't believe it had better not say so."

Then, right after guard mounting, in their full-dress uniforms, with gloves and side arms, the garrison was paraded for payment. Graves sat beside a table in the administration room, big stacks of greenbacks—tens, fives, twos and ones—and cylindrical columns of silver and nickel in front of hie. Off to his left, muster and pay roll of the first detachment, headquarter's staff and band open on the table before him, his keen eyes glancing about the room and studying every face, sat Lacy. The adjutant took a seat at another little table midway between the door with his duplicate roll, and, all being ready, called the sergeant major's name. Mr. Lacy called out the amount due. The paymaster rapidly counted out the money and handed it to the soldier who stood attention in front of the desk. The staff and band were speedily settled with and sent about their business. Then came the senior captain with his company, a change of rolls, and so on for three hours, without incident of any kind, the interesting yet monotonous ceremony went on. Not until near noon did it come the turn of the captain youngest in commission at the post, and then at last troop came swinging across the parade from their barracks, and grayhaired Morgan took the little table just left vacant by Capt. Prime. The windows were open, a soft air was blowing through, and yet it seemed hot and oppressive. "This is the last company, is it?" said Graves. "Thank GodI I'm about tired out now. All ready, captain?" "All ready, sir," answered Morgan, and then called: "First Sergeant Warren."

A buggy drove up in front of the office, and some of the men nudged one another. It was the sheriff who alighted, followed bv Col. Rand. Behind

TfilCKK OONFItONTtNG U1J* STOOD TUB

SHERIFF.

them came another, and a deputy or two in the saddle. troop, standing at ease along the gallery In front of the administration building and from there to the walk leading to the gate, exchanged remarks in an undertone as to the cause of this sudden and suspicious arrival, but no on* within the building

apparently took aotice thereof. Along hall ran through the building from east to west. The men entered the room by the door at the east end, and, receiving their pay, passed out through the other, and so to the rear of the porch. The paymaster and his clerk sat facing the door at the eastward end of the big room, with their backs to the northern windows, and so took no note of a party passing around on that side of the building. Several officers, clerks, etc., were grouped about the room west of the pay-table, and these were presently reinforced by the new arrivals—Rand entering, followed by the sheriff and others, but signaling to the offioers who greeted him to make no unnecessary to-do. By thin..time Morgan had read down among the names of his corporals. Rand, quietly suppressing the greetings accorded him, made it known that be wished to listen a moment. Corporal Treacy had just picked up his money, faced to his left, and made room for the next man. "Corporal Hugo V. Schramm," called the captain, and, straight as au arrow, quick, lithe, soldier all over, in stepped the man of Slaughter cove, hand at visor in salute as he halted. Lacy glaneed quickly, curiously up, and studied the clear-cut face an instant with his steely blue eyes, then as quickly dropped them. Graves, too, looked up in mingled interest and embarrassment. Here stood tho soldier virtually branded by him and his as a robber, yet pronounced by, officers and comrades a hero. Graves felt that his first Impulse was to hold forth his hand, but it occurred to him that that would hardly be In accordance with military propriety and etiquette. "I should like to see you, corporal, after we finish," said he, in a most conciliatory tone. Schramm thrust his money into the left-hand palm of his glove, saluted precisely,' and, merely saying "Yes, sir," strode away to the west door, but there his name was called in low tone and he halted. An officer beckoned to him to wait, and, wondering not a little, he stopped, then turned to a vacant corner behind Rand.

Rapidly the list was finished, the last man paid. The paymaster stretched his arms and legs and looked around for some one to suggest an adjournment to the clubroom, and the first thing he saw was Rand, with the sheriff in his trail, and Graves' eyes began to dilate. Lacy was repacking coin and paper money at the instant and bending over a leather satchel which he had placed on his chair. A strange and sudden silence had fallen upon the crowded room. Old Tintop from his offioe across the hall, with faithful Gray at his elbow, can? lounging to the door, and, catching sight of the civilian garb, stopped short and glared. Lacy, just snapping the clasp of his bag, felt the sudden fall of a muscular hand on his shoulder, and, with a perceptibly violent start, looked up. The bearded face of Col. Rand was close at his side, the dark eyes sternly fixed upon him, and Lacy turned ashen and hi3 lips began to tremble and quiver, despite his fiercest effort, for there confronting him stood the sheriff of Latimer county, a pair of steel wristlets in bis extended .hands. *5

CHAPTER

The sensation caused by the arrest of Mr. Lacy, the paragon of paymasters'clerks, as he had been described in one of his letters of recommendation, ended not with the going down of the sun that day, nor many thereafter. Graves himself sat in a state bordering on collapse for a few hours after the occurrence. "Why, that gentleman was recommended by half the senate, and almost insisted on by my bondsmen," said he, with tears in his eyes. "What will they say to me? Why, Rand, he actually had to be named as my clerk before I could be confirmed at all." To which the imperturbable inspector general responded: "Yes, no doubt. You see, Graves, they had to get him out of Washington he knew too much and when Graves besought him to say why ho suspected the paragon, Rand serenely answered he didn't he had suspected him a month ago, perhaps, but now he knew so should everybody else just as soon as the case could be brought to trial. But meantime other entertainment was provided for the cavalry. Even while Lacy was frantically sending telegrams and letters to officials of high degree all over the cast, demanding Investigation, vindication, etc., there came an order for the immediate detachment of thiee of Tlntop's companies to take the field far to the northwest. I) troop went as a matter of course. This time Schramm did not have to ask "to go along mlt dem fellers." It was their veteran captain who was left behind.

Just as Perry Thornton had told his father, the men ol the troop, thankful

yfor,

yet declining, the proffered subscription of the officers, had ordered from the east as handsome an outfit of belt, helmet, spurs, shoulder and saberknots as money could buy, Connie alone of the household being in the secret. Her father never again had asked to see Thornton's letter, and she, who once had been so Insistent, ceased all mention of It or of its writer. The glow of delight with which the child had received and read that jolly warmhearted, yet utterly unsentimental note had opened the father's eyes .no more than it had her own, Constance Morgan stepped from girlhood to womanhood in the day and hour which taught her how, little by little, there had been kindled In her heart a tiny flame of tenderness that burned as incense at the altar—au offering at the

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CHOLLY'S CHIMES.

The Critic of Gotham'* Four Hundred Ring* Few Changes. I suppose society will breathe more freely now that it is assured that its soi disant leader's name is not to be dragged through the oourts.

Ward McAllister has wisely decided to settle his son Heyward's affairs with Mrs. MoCall by paying her a lump sum to slump, to levant, to skip.

Tho sum paid is not mentioned, but whatever it was yon may be sure that it was a grind on the old man to shell out if*'*

It seems preposterous that such' a Steady going old pacer or loper should have an unregenerate son who is also so attractive that a "beautiful and well known society lady" takes up the cudgels in his behalf and bluffs off the other woman on her own grounds.

It was a curious incident all round, and although I am not always of Mao's way of thinking I am sure that he has done the correct thing in this instance.

So bos Mrs. McCalL Mrs. Robert Abbe, who was Mrs. Courtland Palmer before she married the clever young physician %ho is now her husband, and her daughter, Miss Eva Palmer, are going on a visit to George Vanderbilt at Asheville, N. C.

Tho Palmers, who are all learned and studious, and George Vanderbilt, who is extremely bookish, are old friends, and nothing could be more natural than the proposed visit.

Yet one of those infernal busybodies who make it their business to start false rumors sees in this visit a positive determination on the part of the youngest Vanderbilt to marry Miss Palmer. 80 for about the twentieth time we have this very retiring young fellow engaged to be married, and then the other idiots take the matter up and solemnly argue that it is a very suitable and altogether immense match.

Of course there is not a word of truth in it. The almighty American dollar has received a very severe setback in the case of Thomas Nevins, a newly rich man who went abroad npt long ago with the intention of buying Killeen castle, near Dublin, and of flying the stars and stripes from its turret day and night

The nar! of Fingal, who owns the castle, was in financial straits, and Nevins thought be. coulJ .(|rive a bargain with him: Ij -,

Rather than sell, the earl has raised enough pounds to pay off tho mortgages, and the dollar is not in it

A fine old Irish gentleman is the Earl of Fingal, and the American, Mr. Nevins, is—well, let us say, a failure.— Cholly Knickerbocker in New Yorl: Recorder.

A Hint to Housekeepers.

Housekeepers should remember that it is not in the hottest weather that food spoils the most quickly. If the afcmosphere.is dry, food will keep much better than in damp, muggy weather, even with the m'eicUry showing much lower temper ature. A gentle house mother, who is almost afraid to have any of her little economies printed lest they fail to do for others what they do for her, says that for years she has used the following to keep meat sweet in damp weather, when it ^puld have spoiled in a very short time otherwise, as her icebox would not accommodate it: Have a barrel halt filled with charcoal and lay over the top a strip of joist, to which meat huoks are attached. Put the barrel in as cool a place as can be found and hung from the meat hook the meat to bo preserved. Throw a piece of netting over the barrel to keep insects out The charcoal will keep the atmosphere inside the barrel dry, and thus preserve the meat The charcoal should be changed as often as once a month, and it can be used for lighting fires or for broiling meat as tho uso to which it has been put does not hurt it in the least. If the charcoal is hard to procure, put tho old in the stove and light It with somo chips. When.it looks to be redhot, open the doors and windows, take off the lids of tho stove and let it cool off- When it is cold, you can use it again.

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Benzoin is ono of the best friends of woman. A few drops of it in a basin of water gives a pleasant odor to tho face and hands. It helps to whiton the skin and to tighten it Tan and wrinkles are both removed by Its action, and combined with glycerin or alcohol it is an excellent lotion.

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VETERAN'S VERDICT.

The War fs Over. A Well-known Soldier, Correspondent and Journalist Makes a Disclosure.

Indiana contributed her thousands of bravo soldiers to the war, and no state bears a better record in that respect than it does. In literature It is rapidly acquiring an enviable place. In war and literature &>Iomon Yewell, well known as a writer as "Sol," lias won an honorable position. During the late war he was a member of Co. M, 2d. N. Y. Cavalry and of the I3th Indiana Infantry Volunteers. Regarding an important circumstance he writes as follows: "Several of us old veterans here are using Dr. Miles' Restorative Nervine, Heart Cure uud Nerve and Liver Pills, all of them giving plendid satisfaction. In fact, we have never used,remedies that compare with them. Of the Pills we must say they are the best comLinat ion of the qualities required in a preparation of their nature we nave ever known. We have none but words of praise for them. They are the outgrowth of a new principle in medicine, and tone up the system wonderfully. We say to all, try these remedies." —Solomon Yewell, Marion, Ind., Dec. 5,18fl8.

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