Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 26, Number 51, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 13 June 1896 — Page 7
aswi
DESOLATE.
O morning, hasten with your goad Of ceaseless care and tedious task Give me no respite from your load— 'Tis all I ask. O strife and tumult of the day,
O toils and trials manifold. Close in as thickly as ye majr. Loose not yonr hold. To memory leave no briefest space
From earliest ray of dawning light, For all too soon comes on apace— Ah, God 1—the night. —Minnie Loons Upton in Century.
DOWN THE FLUME.
The snow lay deep in the Cceur •d'Alenes—yes, more than that, the mining camps were "snowed in." I had not been long in the camp, and it was all new to me, so I naturally tied to Governor Bill, foreman of the Last Chance, during the exciting days of the great snowstorm. The miners gave him that name because he had gone to college with a governor of one of our eastern states. He was educated for the bar, but drink made him a miner, and now that he was reformed the company made him a foreman. When the storm commenced, the mills were all shut down and the water which furnished the power was turned from the various flumes.
The day following the one of the heaviest snowfall it was reported at the lower end of the gulch that an immense snowslide had occurred during the night at the upper end. I procured a pair of snowshoes and hurried to the scene. The manager and Bill were superintending the working of scores of miners—in fact, all the available men. "What's the matter,Bill?" I inquired.
The men at the upper mill are buried in this mountain of snow,'' he answered. "What! How many?" "Four. You see, the miners at the boarding house there below escaped, but those who slept iu the loft of the mill at the head of the gulch had no chance to leave."
Those who have visited the Ccour tJ'Alenes will recall how steep the burtes rise from the naTow gulchos. At places you can scarcely scale them, and even the hardy pines can barely gain a footing.
The wind was now blowing in gusts, carrying clouds of snow from the buttes above, swirling down the slopes, eddying through the gulches and banking the white powder at the very feet of the miners. Shovels were powerless, but the men worked on iu tho firm belief that thoy would reach their comrades. But no one knew whether tho old building I had stood the attain and that tho poor fellows were alive. "It's uo go, Mr. Bardon," Bill despondently said. "There is uo telling how long the storm will keep up, and even if it soi,n subsides it will be days before wo can reach them. Moreover, they ennnot live long in that small building without air." "I fear you nro right, Bill. But it is all we can do," slowly replied tho manager.
There was momentary lull in the storm, when tho governor remarked, with nn anxious face: "Look at the streak down the butte. That must have been tho path of tho slide." "Yes, it originated on the smooth flume. A blinding rush of snow from over the mountains shut out the view. "The wind keeps the flume bare near the top of tho slopo," added the manager aftvr wo had shifted our positions, for the snow was drifting about us.
All day long tho men toiled, and all that night reliefs were working, but progress in the shaft was slow, as the snow continually cavcd in or was carried in by tho wind. During tho following dny and night there was no lot up in the work. To me affairs looked more hopeful, for tho storm had spent its fury and was now subsiding. That night I asked Bill how deep he thought the snow was where the men were working. "It's a hundred feet if nn inch," he replied, "and we have not made more than 40. Thirty more feet should bring us to the roof, but, you see, it becomes hauler tho deeper we get
Evidently Bill did not take as hopeful a view of affairs. I had moved my bunk to tho office building, and early the following morning I was aroused by a loud knocking nt the door. It was the governor. He looked very determined and hurriedly said that he had planned scheme, aside issue, during the night (and wanted mo to join him. Bill had "not slept or eaten much since the slide, so worried had he been and anxious to rescue the buried men. He had several ^hundred feet of small, strong rope with .in, and after a hurried breakfast at the officers' mem five of us set out on snowshoes. "Which way, Bill?" "To tho flume," was all he said.
I did not urge him it only irritates strong man to ask him to disclose his plans in time of action. I decided to follow ami await developments.
The ascent of the precipitous butte in the gray of morning was no easy task, but by taking a somewhat circuitous route, which followed a "hi^gbaok," we avoided tho itse» per slope ami before long leached the exposed portion of the wooden flume. "And now," said Bill, "we'll move down as far as we can along the flume."
We did so. and after traveling a short distance below the point where the snow first covered the picking we dug several feet and cleared the boards.
The scheme had gradually unfolded itself to ma I saw all now. Bill was going to have himself lowered dowu the fiuuie and, if possible, through the 34 Inch metallic conduit, which parol the flume at a short distance from :2:» mill. Then he would tra«t to lock at getting through the turWmo and into the building. And this was the ..ft who, dur'"ir the ramaltuoos trouble* vi a ireecdi summer, '.ad stood ioval to the company, and with a few hruv*? men bad kept these same tuiuvrs at the kwrtr end of the gulch away ftron the com
pany's works. Here he was now straining mind and body to rescue them. An ax opened the passageway and revealed a dark space of about 2 feet by 4 feet in dimensions. Bill fastened the rope under his arms and las?aed his revolver to the inner side of his right leg. "It will be a close fit in the conduit said he, "but I will need the pistol to alarm the men, should I get to the milL When the rope is pulled, haul away, and I hope each time you will have a heavy load."
We lowered away, and he disappeared. I felt peculiarly uneasy at seeing the generous fellow leave, though the scheme seemed so feasible that I could not see any danger involved. "If the flume is broken, we will haul him back," I reasoned. I knew he could not use his arms to signal while in the conduit, and I decided to haul away if none came within a reasonable time. The men at work below had suspended operations and stood gazing up at us in wonderment
On arriving at our elevated position overlooking the gulch I had noticed a decided change in the weather. A "chinook" was blowing—those southwesterly winds which temper the climate of the west changing within a few hours winter into spring, snow into water. Instead of the blinding snow of the day before, a drizzling rain at first set in, and within an hour had greatly increased in quantity. Surely those soft, gentle winds that bring life to freezing men and beasts as far east as the Bad Lands never bring destruction in their paths. "This will pack and settle the snow," remarked one of the miners.
We did not then know what effect that would have on the flume. This sluice, which furnished water power for the mill, did not descend in a direct line, but took a diagonal course across the slope.
Bill reached the turbine safely, but had no room to spare the conduit He told the men below that he felt very peculiar while making this part of the descent, fearful that by some chance he might be fastened there.
On reaching the turbine he fired a shot, but no reply of any kind was made. Then he fired two in succession, and soon the joyful answer, in the shape of hammering on the metallic pipe, greeted his ears. The men, poor fellows, thought the first shot was a breaking timber and listened to it grimly. They had braced the building as well as they could, and were awaiting their fate. When tho two reports sounded, they felt sure it was a signal, and Enuna Joe (ho last worked at the. Emma mine) said: "Rouse up, boys. Here is rescue sure."
At first, they afterward told me, it had not occurred to them that any one came down through the conduit. They thought a shaft had been sunk and thut the first object encountered was the conduit. They ran to it and hammered—a dull reply, and there was no mistake as whence it cama Bill could only kick with his boot
Weak and exhausted they worked with desperate eagerness, and after some time removed the turbine. Down dropped Bill among them. "Thank God, it's Governor Bill!" said Emma Joe. And then these rough, reckless men sobbed with joy. "What's that, Bill?" Joo inquired. "It's the snow settling. There is a 'chinook' above. Come, hurry, you fellows, and we will leave this place."
Tho first man to go attached the rope, pulled at it and was hauled upward. And the snow continued to settla
Then two more were rescued and the rope returned. "Go ahead, Bill." "No, you, Joa Hurry!" "Why, old man, so anxious?" "Just because the fellows above want to see you, Joe," he almost pleaded. Joo afterward said that Bill looked pale at this time and assumed indifference. "The heavy snow might crush the flume, Bill." "It won't crush it" "Well, then, here goes. Goodby."
When Bill replied, Joe said that he smiled like a woman. Joe barely passed the point where the wooden flxune was united to the conduit Tho normal strain was separating them, the angle between them was becoming sharper and sharper, but ho bent his body and thus passed through. Then with a horrible feeling he thought of Bill. "And this is%why he hurried us," he groaned.
This was the reason. Bill noticed the b&ak when he descended, and he knew what the creaking sounds from the conduit meant but he never told the others. When Joe reached the surface he barely whispered,
4'Hurry
and lower the rope!''
Too late! The weight at the rope's end lodged. Joe knew where.
And then the miners dug with frenzy, for Bill was the pride of the camp. When the shaft, sunk through the snow, reached the mill, it was crashed. The strain upon it due to the watered suow had been too great Governor Bill's body was found revolver in hand, and this told a styiy. Two days later there was as impressive a funeral at the Last Chance camp as was ever seen on the frontier. They buried him.not in wormy earth, but deep in the fragmentary rock of a playixl out stope of the mine.
They will tell yon now among the Cceur d'Aleuemoum.mis the governor hero of the Occur d'H&leiue, "heart of breath."—Lieutenant Herman Hall in Collier's Weekly.
Tww Srrloa* Oftswo.
"Only one thing makes a woman madder than to hrive her husband stay down town to h~ch when he had said he was coming home." "And what is that?" "It is to have him cemt home to lunch when he had said be was going to stay down town. "—Chicago Record^
AM II 1* Spolca.
**They frost* ine out." "How?"' —\v# "Why, they xuade it so hot for me." —Detroit Tribune, "*L-, i«f .r vi
FOR LITTLE FOLKS.
NEW MERRY GO ROUND.
It Mis Like a Small Yacht and Is Great Knn For Yoang People.
Anew kind of merry go round has just been put up in Paris. It has sails just like a small yacht The idea of it is a simple one—-a big beam, with a pivot in the middle, is fitted at each end with miniature sloop rigging, which, as you know, consists of a mainsail and
jibu
Seats to carry one or more riders are slung under each of the big beams. The curious merry go round has automatic brakes, and it can be made to go around fast or slow, no matter how strong the
wind that is blowing. On a breezy day this odd land boat skims around in a way to make you dizzy just to look at it
Each set of the sails is put up in such a manner that they "tack," or change around, all by themselves, so that those who are on the merry go round do not have to bother about "trimming" the canvas of their craft to suit the breeze. At the same time there are ropes by which one can handle the big sails, just as in a real yacht The novelty of this airship—for that's what it really is— delights crowds of young Parisians ev ery day, and it is more than likely that one of these sailing merry go rounds will be put into place down at Coney Island this summer.
14 «,»
A Family Tragedy. -V
[Confided by Polly to her doll Marie.] There are talking dollies with strange insides Thero are babies that squeak and ory There are gauzy, satiny, wonderful brides With trunk and trousseau and a fan besides
That a Christmas purse may buy.
There are china cherubs, dimpled and vnite. They are brittle and can't sit down, But washing, you see, doesn't hurt 'em a mite, And for dollhouse playing the'- is right,
And a scrap will make 'em a gown.
There are dolls that are warranted not to breakThough I never believed that true— And the rag dolls auntieB and mothers make, And dollies that shut thoir ayes and wnke,
And fino French ladies like you. But what do you guess that my grandmother had
When she played with her dolly like me And lived on farm and tho tunes wen.« bud? Poor little grandmother! Oh, but I'm glad
I didn't live then, Mario I
Why, tho dolly Bho cuddleu and put to bou— Dear little grandmother I—years ago Was a crook neck Bquash in a rag of red, With a liandkorchiof shawl tied ovor its liond,
And she loved it, too, you know-
Loved that thing with a stem for a nose And its dreudful neck awry, Kissed it and hugged it, and, 1 suppose, Proudly settled its wraps and bows. *.%.mik
Why, it almost makes mo cry I And then tho horriblo fato of hor child, Marie, my dollykin, long ago— I wonder she didn't go raving wildl They—now stop smiling—thoy had her "b'iled"
And ate her! Grandmother told me so. —F. E. Ellington in Youth's Companion.
Johnny's Natural History.
Teacher—Johnny, what do we call a creature with two legs? Johnny—A biped, sir.
Teacher—Name one. Johnny—A man, sir. Teacher—Are there any feathered bipeds?
Johnny—Chickens and ostriches, sir. Teacher—That's right Willie, what is a quadruped?
Willie—A thing with four legs, sir. Teacher—Name ona Willie-?—An elephant Teacher—Are there any feathered quadrupeds?
Willie—Yes, sir. Teacher—What? W illie—-A feather bed, sir. Exchange.
Junior Indians Dancing.
The junior Indians shown in tho accompanying illustration are the youngest members of Buffalo Bill's traveling tribe of red men. They are clever little hunters, and are as skilled in the various war dances as any of their elders. In the picture they are shown in the
midst of a high festival danca* Their toggery shows how the Indian chieftains are arrayer on great occasions. The old squaw seabed in the center of the group thrums an Indian tambourine, keeping time to each tap of her sievelike instrument with a low. musical cty, which sounds like "Ah, wa. vrado, walla." The boys are full blooded Apaches, and their chief ambition is to be leaders of the tribe some day.—New York Becorder.
"«,• A Party.
A peanut party is great fun for children. Several quarts of peanuts should be hidden about the house and the small guests given little baskets or kinder garten paper boxes in which to place all these they When the signal is given for collecting again in the drawing room from which they started, those who have the most nuts receive prise* and there may be others for the discovery of special peanuts marked by tioiML—New York Timea
TERRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING MAIL, JUNE 13, 1896. 7
TO RECAPTURE RICHMOND. BCDQIOB
of
Confederates to Be Held I Jane SO.
The Confederates are again to take possession of Richmond. About 50,0001 or 75,000 of them will be there June 30 and July 1 and 2 to attend the sixth annual reunion of the United Confederate Veterans. Richmond is expecting the largest number of strangers she has ever had to care for.
For a year past the city has been preparing for this event An auditorium to seat 12,000 people has been built at the exposition grounds. The city council appropriated the money for this purpose, and also $10,000 for the entertainment of the veterans. The railroads east of the Mississippi river have given the best rates they have ever offered for an occasion of this kind, and from all parts of the south whole camps of old soldiers will coma
The great feature of the reunion will be the laying of the cornerstone of the Jefferson Davis monument This will take place July 2, and there will be a monstrous parade of veterans and soldiers. It is expected to have 75,000 people in lina General John B. Gordon will be the chief marshal, and he will have for his aids many of the most distinguished former Confederates.
The oration is to be delivered by General Stephen D. Lee of Mississippi, who was a lifelong and an intimate friend of Davis. The monument is to be in lovely Monroe park, which is in the fashionable part of the oity. It is proposed to spend $200,000 on the memorial Much of the money is already in hand. The designs are all in, but a selection has not been mada V}_
An important question to ^settled in the reunion will be the site for the Charles Broadway Rouss Confederate museum or Battle Abbey of the South. Mr. Rouss, who is an ex-Confederate, is a millionaire New York merchant He has offered to give $100,000 to the museum, provided the amount can be duplicated. i"
Richmond," Atlanta, New Orleans, Nashville and Washington are asking for the museum. Nashville is prepared to pledge $65,000 and a splendid site, which will probably be the best offer, from a financial point of view, that will be made. Richmond can offer her Confederate museum as a nucleus upon which to build. New York World.
Will Alix gland training?
Now that Morris J. Jones has purchased Monroe Salisbury's interest in Alix, 2:03%, the Iowa horseman is talking about beating her champion record of 1894 with the bloodlike daughter of Patronaga Few, if any, of the horsemen who saw tho little mare when she was at Fleetwood park last season will look to see her equal her old record, much less lower it, in 1896. To all appearances Alix was last season in about the same condition that Nancy Hanks was in when J. Malcolm Forbes withdrew her from the turf in 1898 absent her to the stud. Her front ankles were then badly mussed up, and ninetenths of the horsemen who looked her over closely were of opinion that her campaigning oareer was virtually at an end. Monroe Salisbury having failed to bring Alix back to her old form in 1895, Morris Jones essays a difficult task when he attempts to do so in 1896. Everybody in the horse world will wish him success, however.—New York Sun,
The Big Hat Affafn.
The big hat has again begun to intrude itself aggressively upon public notica For months we have patiently dodged its feathery, flowery expanse and viewed our plays "as through a glass darkly." But the Louisiana legislature is sitting upon it, not literally, but in solemn metaphor, and its banishment from the theaters is the consummation hoped for.—New York World.
Plausible, but Improbable.
A man in Oklahoma heard a noise at his office door, and thinking that it was some one peeping through the keyhole he injected a little pepper sauce into it When he went home, his wife told him she had been cutting wood and a chip flew up in her eye.—Washington Times.
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Dr. Pierce, chief consulting physician to the Invalids' Hotel and Surgical Institute, of Bufialo, N. Y., in bis long and active experience, met many cases of this kind, for which he used a prescription which was found to cure such difficulties permanently in ninetyeight per ceni. of all cases. Having proven so successful, Dr. Pierce out his Favorite Prescription on the market, and it is to-day sold more largely than any other medicine for the ills of woman.
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FITS CURED
(From U. S. Journal qf Medicine.)
Prof.
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£)R L. H. BARTHOLOMEW Dentist. 171
Main St. Terre Haute, Ind.
Mr. ft Mr*. Hetry Kitititad,
Funeral Directors
'And Embalmers. Lirery and Board'
DR. R. W. VAN VALZAH,
Dentist,
Office, No. South Fifth Strati,
RAILKIIAII TIME TABLE
Trains marked thus run daily.
VANDALIA LINE. MAINLINE. dMLii*
Arrive from the East.
7 West. Ex*. 1.30 am 15 Mall & Ac* 10.00 a 5 St. L. Lira* 10.00 SI St. L. Ex*.. 2.38 3 Mall & Ac. 6.30 11 Fast Mall*. 9.00
Arrive from the West.
ISCln. Ex*... 1.00am 6 N. Y. Ex*.. 3.30 a 14 Eff. Ac 9.30 a 80 Atl'c Ex*..12.S3p 8 Fast Line*. 2.05 tu 2 N. Y. Lim*. 5.05
&
EVANSVILLE & INDIMN
6 & N Lim* 4.50 a 2 T11 & Ex.11.20 am 8 Local Pass JUX) 4 E & Kx*. 11.35
88 N Ex*.... 1.31 am 4 IT & EX.h.00 a 8 Ex & Mail*.3.05 18 Knlckb'r* ..4.H1 pin
PROM TH« NORTH OVBR VMS
to parties of seven or more on the Third Tuesday of each month, to nearly all gints In the South and on special dates zcursion Tickets are sold at a little more than One Pare for the round trip.
For full information write to
1.1. RIDOELY, N. f. Pass. Agent, Chicago, E C. P. ATMORE, Qen'l Pass.
'W
Leave for the West. C^'
7 West, Ex*. 1.40 a mfe 15 Mall vt Ae*10.15 a m" 5 St. L. LimMd.05 a 21 St. L. Ex*., -'..ttpui 13 Eff. At! 4.05 m^:» 11 Fast Mall*. 9.04 ma
Leave for the East.
MICHIGAN DIVISION.
Leave for the North.
-W Vs
12Cin. Ex*... 1.10 mft fi N. Y. Ex*.. H.25 a ia&4 Mail & Ac. 7. am 30 Atl'c EX*..12.:!7 8 Fast Line* 2.10 2 N. Y. Lira* 5.10
Ar. from tho North 51 T. 11. Ex...
52 St Joe Mail.6.20 am 54 S. Bend Ex.4.00
11.'.0am
5 3 a 7 0 0
PEORIA DIVISION.
Leave for Northwest.
75 Peoria Mail 7.05 a 77 Decatur Ac 3.55
Ar. from Northwest.
78 Decat'r Ac.11.00 am 76 Peoria Mail 7.00
EVANSVILLE & TERRE HAUTE. NASHV1LUB LINK. •Leave for the South. 5 & N Lim*. 11.40 3 & Ev Ex*. 5.38 a 7 Ev Ac 10.10 a ni 1 Ev & I Mail* 3.15 iu
Arrive from South.
6 & N Lim* 4.45 am 2THE&X* ,11.00am 80 Mixed Ac.. 4.45 4 C& Ind Ex*11.10
O.r'uLIS.
Leave for South. Arrive Irom South.
33 Mail & Ex..9.00 49 Worth. Mix.3.30
48 T11 ixed. 10.15 a 32 Mall & Ex. 3.15
CHICAGO & EASTERN ILLINOIS.
Leave for North.
Arrive from North.
3 & E Ex*.. .5.30 am it Local Pass .9.25 am 1 & Ev Ex...3,10 5 & N Lint*. 11 o5
C. C. C. & I -BIG FOUR.
Going East.
Golntf West.
35St Ex*... 1.32am 9 Ex & Mai 1*10.03 am 11 S-W Llui*.. 1.33 ra 5 Mill toon Ac 7.05 pm
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SOUTH
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At Cents a Mile
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Aft,
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Write for County Map of the South to either
of
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or to P.
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