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The Wingham Times, 1900-04-20, Page 7eeeeseeeseeee:Peeeeete-'4 seeeeestoefeeeseseee — etaseweste.•.e.c,t••,,e,".e.t erreesreiVe.. SeeRe. r"1"4.",isea " LOVE'S TRIUMP A STORY OF LOVE, AND WAR. BY MARY J. HOLMES, Author of " Lcna Rivers," " Edna Browning," "Tempest and Suashine," Etc., Etc. :=K4-1*A,..iinalICOMMIMr"v4;*W_`"„:',W.M.rann,le, ...Ste sand, with the bot suit termite his life irway. Tell her the geepter. elelown en us, stud the meat and the , Vele knd to him, and brought him ice- , tears runlets' down his fnee, es Ite told wafer ecverel elute, Tell her, toe, of 1 ane all he'd suffetea. It matte my bleed tlit, mete tit whit& he gazed so long as TUE WINGRAN 'MIES, AM 20, 1900, - . night. Don't Ili is your baby, Rose; born Inst his ,eoMpanions was acquainted with hto tzuthfitilmisittle. boya with his father's 111,eolillibYgratitliTerl,yr /1,1;wilit.40/14 re yea mmember iti.„.a real Hume. ItOSO Was the only eegue- 1 t hhi ow', es'ail airmPle6 aimPlem ill". hee;d that dear 11(al meclutitYeredl)hey the Annie hoped, by -mentioning both the "f""e' jesting Up e around him. A. $ t • father ana d nurie„ -to awaken some ju„ horrida suit dirty grey had been giv- i teresin the little • place of the stolen uniform, k•rl: grew larger, and rolutell.c..113114u41,1hosreigLYeeriit' ; ' atuldhililthoughiiiat first he rebelled ;Against W -i as sho whimpered: YJt teiili unite e,I p)Neintlote.P4 "Aly baby, 1 enn't understand, baby, Annie? Briek; it hie Maim, Inasmuch as they were the uow . the elthy garment% he began ere long to think how they might aid him in garb othConfederates. Pay and They brought it to her and laid it in piglit Ite libelled the best means of f e ' her arms, and then stood. watching her cape. until et last the attempt wIla an the iirst tokens of the mother's love zunde, and he stood one (lark, rainy came over her face anti erept into her lliggIt' alit " the IlighwitY 4 Erse Wilt eyes, 'which gradually began to fill with brenthing the pure breath of heaven, Uwe, mall, at lest, at storm of sebo and and ready to sell hie life at tiny emit mewls burst forth, es nose rocked te rather than go back again to the pre aud fro, whispering to tier child.: , son he had left. ITO had put his trust "Poor darling: to be born without a in 'God, and Goa had raised him up. a father, when he would have been so feted at OTlee, W410 had seen blin leave . proud or les Dos. Poor, emeeeeee the privan, nue greatly aided him in Well Poor, fatherless baby! 1 jun hts entitle, just as 110 had flitted others, glad God gave you to me. I did not . knelling the 'while 11" by no d-oing be • deserve D. I've been so thoughtkos was putting his own life in jeopardy. _. and meekest, but I will be better eow. But o staunch iialonist at heart, he . Dear little baby, we will grow good to- was willing to brave everything for the .- gether, so as to go some day where tet -se, and it was through his instru- papa .has gone," mentality and minute directions that Will Mather had -finally reached the She would not let them take the child shelter of the mountains which. separ- from her. It was hers, tale reed. God oto North Carolina from Tenacssee. He had sent it to make her better, mid she had foand friends all along -the route, would here it. There was something in the toutet of its soft. warm hands which true, loyal men, who had periled their kept her heart from breaking. - And so lives for him; brave, tender women. they left it with her, and from the day whose hands had ministered so kindly flirts, and who had no el:worthily that little life came to be one in the to his w heaselited, lteee begat). to amend, and, divided with him their scanty - meals, in her leve for her Me& fargot, in part, . even though hewer was written: tmen - the terrible peen in her heart, Once her their thin, baggara faces, and stared in their sunken yes. And Will hoe taken down each uarne, and registered mether said to her: . "Will you call your baby William'?" And she replied: , a vow that if over he reached the North "Nos there is but one 'Willie for ine", there, noble eelf-deneing people- should and he is in heaven. Baby will be elle be' rewarded, and, if possible, removed _ ed for brother eimmie." from a neighborhood where they suffer- .Ard So, one bright Sunday moreine ell so much from(privation and front the bands or their former friemds. wile. MS - in 11Tareb, when St. Luke's was decked. peeling their sentiments, heaped upon with . flowers from the Mather hot -house them every pessible abuse. Ragged, and the children of the Sunday scitool - bareheaded, footsore and Weep, he wing their Easter carols, hose Mather, same at • last, at the close or a 3une in her widow's weeds, went up the : day, to the entrance •of a cave in the aisle with her mother, Annie and bre- hills to which he Beat been directed, titer Tow, the letter of whom gave her and where, on the damp corth, he slept bright-eyed, beautiful boy to the roc- so soundly from fatigue and exhaustion tor, who baptiked, him 4,ditmes Cede- that the morning sun Was seining _ tom" And all through the congregation throtigh the entrance to the cave, and a there ran a thrill of pity for the widow- robin, in a 611.mb growing near, was - el mother, whose face, though it had • lost seine of its brillinet color, was trilling its morning song ere he awoke.: more beautiful then evee, The air, though damp from the watee for ebere wee • which trickled through the rocks, wos bile. I've had a little taste of Libby, he had steeled:1: and Bell Isle, too; but they met bold a "It was all the companion I hacLafter candle to this Ow. Mfrs Grimm, you he was pone until Bill Baker mune. ' are the good sort, kinder plus like; but I shall never forget that dny. I had I'll be henged if I don't levee° you'll crawled up to my sand-bankeind •drawn justify me in the thumidn' lies I told my rags around me, and was beginning the corp'rnl that day, to keep his spirits to wish ngain that 1 could die, when " up.: Sees he, 'Have yon ever been to a broad hand was laid upon rny slionl' Rockland oinee Frefleriekebuter and der, and a voice whieh was music to then I tho't a minute ef that night in nm, then. if it never 'lied been before, • the woods when he prayed about Anne: stred to me, cheerily, 'Hallo, old cote else: 1 be$ to ineself, "The ',Newt ate peel! Sueh are the chances • of war! ' you ever told will bv tha 1 you have , (1 ice us your fist!' But when,he saw beeu home, and seen :Met Graam, with whet a sorry, jetted wretch e was, hie ' any other Willie additions you may Min began to milver, and we cried to - think twee; so I told him I had been Other bee two great babies as we hem, ou a furbelow, as the old gal were. . . (meaniu' any mother) cells it. And I . . "Oh, Annie, was it a. lie Bill Baker ' Seen her, too, ses I, Miss Gram, and told are, or aid you really send me she talked an awful sight about you, 1 your love, and any that you meant it? ettitewhen you or'to have 'seen him slily- Ile told me such a story, and I grew er all over, as he got 111) close to me, better in at moment. Have you relent - end asktd, 'Whet did she say?' Then ed, mut if I could ask yen again the I stout on romancine and told him how geestion' I asked n year ago, when .we ' you spent a niiole evenin' at the ole eret together beneath the moonlight, hut, taikin' about him, and how sorry wculd you tell me yes? Darling Annie, you was for him, and how, when I Andersonvilla is not so terrible slice 1 came away, yon said ,to nue on the 613', am keut no bv. that hope. I do not 'William, if you ever happen to meet mind now if my shoes and stockings are Mr. Carleton, give him Airily .Grritains. e ,, au gone, mid my trousers nearly so, • love, and tell him she means fese Great , and 1 wateh for the star so eagerly, Feter! I could almost feel th'e., flesh . ,and make believe that it's you, and ,come back to his bones, and his eeyes - when the da-rk clouds obscure it, and had the old look in 'eue ns he liked,eo the rein is falling upon my unsheltered ' of hugged me to dantb. pa done him :re lend; I say that it is Annie's tears, and 'world of good, hesaid, and for some do not mind that, either. I prey, too, &13it he seemed a's chipper as you ... Annie,—pray with my heart, • I hope, • please; but nobody can sten' a diet of, though my &Ayers have more to do raw meal mid the nastiest water that with you than myself. ever run; and ses I to myself, corteral "Bill Baker said he should write and * will die as surd as thunder if somethire th tell you about his taking the oath, i IA Mei "r believe he did ahnoststeel for shnims all over it the lesh of new e. • y e e t a bang of things a little, and sem how --.dose mad stitliag, end Will crept -eau- don t turn up; am so, IA got e. forgiven, and, after the .briptiem was tiously out from kis hiding -place, and. - my sake, and greatly have I been ben- joy, the peace which comes trom sees I turn Seeesle though I hate 'em as I do - sitting down upon the gromul, . dranh ' the macheen was - worked, fres I, Tn Med by it. Rough as he is, and et. 4 Plzen.' They wait glad muff to bave me, behe I'm a kind of earpenter • and gusting at times, he seems to have gain- °AO* and the nierning Service read, in the beauty and stillnere of the sum - ell fennel,* outside, and he does us many a kindness, confining his attention most- and Annie to receive for the first time Rose knelt with her mother,, brother riser morning. Exactly. where he Wile pier, and they let me out, end I Went 1y to me, who am his eseefeal care. It the precious symbols et •e• Sttviour's th- he did not know, but he felt certain e s• to work for the corseral. rn bet • I that his face ens toward the lane is a strange Providence that he who Mg. loee. ' told a hundred lies, lust and lase if I hese had ceased to oppose Annie- le . where the Stars and. Stripes were way- : did one. 1 Pllitl he was at heart Secesh; ing, and a thrill of. joy ran through his took me a priooner at Bull 'Run and an- . that he was in the Tette army, and T. STIRS as he though of home and Rose, noyed me so toryibly, should now be her wish to join "Mrs. Simms, who Wale • tauk hbu prisoner at Alsteassas, ;which, whcse •eyee. by this tune had grown so caring for me here at Audersouville, then at Annapolis; and When Tone a 4. 4 • • . and literally keeping the life within •me, Rev dries aftte: the baptism, went back dun with looking for him. "God take again, Annie would go with him as a me safely to her," lie whispered; when of ton chit-iss in had taste wi t hou t knowing it. • • • IP • • "4. - - If you wear Shorey's Clothing you cannot be otherwise than cor- rectly dressed. •-•••••••••••.4.1•.....111,. n _ 9 Snorey s Button Sack .4 • Kiimarnoc Tweed Suits,. ...• etail at $12.00. They are as good as any one wants for a business suit and better than you can get to order for $20.00. Sold only by the best dealers, and guaranteed in every particular. -Not made to order, but made to fit. reeleetetele -,seelesteleettelesiteaeeseeeteeteefeetieseteetsateeeseetelteleleeeserielle you know was true. . hen81110 fliS far I should die without him. esveetheart, minutiae you, beggnl your "I have not written half I want to 'perdue, got up a row, and mete hint ease but my paper is nearly used up, ' jine the Federals, and yeomen never - and not one wtee have I said to mo - to go agin the flag, and that's how he ther or Rose. Tell them they would not came to be nabbed up tit Fr ear. ices - know me now, and tell them, too, that • bur. I -said 'Won't no rise to try to In my dreams, when I era not with you Intake- him wear, for he thought nore I am with them, and mother's face is •I of his gal's good opinion' than he did of like an angers, while Rose's sparkling liberty, and I set you up till I swan if beauty mekeseny heart beat just as it 1 bleeve you'd a knowed yourself, and s used to beat when I first- began to re- . eters- 011e of them fellers WilS 101133' to satire what a darling sister I had. Denr stare by you, and two of 'cm chinked Anne, yon Cid send that message by your teeth with the wust whiskey e Bill Baker, I will believe, and, rem be- -ever 'hsted. One of 'eel aski,d me it lieviug, shall gain otrength maybe to i I Wite a fair steselmen of the Northern bear up until the day of release. -army, end I'll be darned if I didn't "Coed -eye, my darling. Prom my - I tell him no, for I was ashamed to have crowded, filthy, terrible prison, 1 scud . I- 101)1 think the Fedora's -ns all like me. you a hiring good-bye." - • i I guess, though, they liked Inc some; Netwithetanding the sickening details anye ay, they let me carry somethhe to of this letter, the day sueeeeding its the coriernt every now and then, and I receipt W:15 11 brighter one at the 'feta - 1 Wavy° he'd die if I didn't. I've smug - thee mansion than the 'inmates had gled him in some paper turd A pencil. known for a long time. eimmie w -.;s • and he is goin' to weight to you, and I , still alive, end with Bill Baker's care : ! .shall seed it, no matter how. Tim rebs he might survive tire horrors of Ander- ' Won't' see it, and I guess it's pretty suet sonville. and come -1)11011 to them again. i to go safe. I must stop now, mad weight' Amite showed both letters to Mrs. Carle - to the old :woman, -ton, who, when she read them, wound. "Yours to command, • her arms Annies neck ane .. i "WILLIAM BAKER, ESQUARE." whispered, "Isaround ' it wrong fete re,,e to be glad that Bill Baker told that lie, whee I , • It was with. greet difficulty that An- nie could decipher the badly written by the 1008118 our prisoner boy is mo ecrawl; but she made it out at last, and greatly benefited." . . • Annie could not tell. She was not sore regulth hospital nurse. up the mountain side came the sound of among the number of skeletons sent up voices and..the tramp of feet. Creep - It might be that Jimmie would be ing to the furthest side of ihe cave, ana, to "God's land," as the • poor fellows crawling .dowit beneath the shelving &lied it; and Annie's heart throbbed- rock .wheie the cot -waters were &AP - with the pleastee it would be to merle- ping, he hoped to nevoid being seen. lep ter to him, to eel' the life back to his to this moment Will's courage had rev - olden times, mut then, perhaps, whis- , ea:, flagged, but „now, whoa the .Fetteral heare.to awakeu au interest io him for ' lines -were not many miles nway, and per to him that the decision made that Rose and -home seemed certain, 'he felt mcculight night, more than a year end a great pang of fear, and his white lips a halt ago, .had been revokeland where. whispered, "Gott pity me! God help she hed sad no, her answer now was me! Gerd save me, for His own glory, yes. Between herself and Mrs. Carle- is not foe Rose'e sake," then, knee- tonwhicb. Jimmie and the little Pequot deep in the pool of eivater.he Steal wiUi there had been a long teak, of his.body uenely double, while the voices girl were the subjects, and the proud lady had asked ' forgiveneee for the . and tb.e feet came nearer. and at last stepped directly in front of hie hiding wrong done to that girl, if wrong there piece, wore. - There were terrible oaths outside, rind "Something tells Inc you will find my bitter denunciations were breathed boy," she said, "and if you do, tell hint ageinst airy lucklees Union man who how freely I• give him this little Lulu, inight be lurking uear, and then the and ,god bless you both!" T.i. light from the entrance of the cave was A few weeks later turd news mete to "luilly obscured, and Wel Saw tliat a the Mather 1 -louse that. eteeen the bat- reen's back was against the °peeing, aN tle of the Wilderness eves over, Cnp- if Smite one were sitting ,1Inge. Did thin Teen Carleton wns 1101 with his theyesenow of •the eave? e,..Neoald they heedful of men Who clime front the comein there, 'and if thee did would field. "A prisoner of war," Vas the they iiiid him? Will keg asking him - next report, fled then, as if her Inet eelf the4,1 gnestions, IA his breath hope had been taken from her, Mrs. came gailsbegly as 1-16 knew, flint the Carleton broke down entirely, end,se- Man Whos&Imeir ba -ed the entrance to chiding herself from the world, tvithout, his, hiding-p4.4Me I wig the bitterest in his then took Jimmie s lettei next, s u - ry that Jimmie should tbk inof her as :. sae down in her deeolation mourning invective ng Yankees.. anti the elering as she 0011' 111 it marks of . the and praying fon her two boys,—out' ' loners which Bill end &seethed but he did, and that night when the stars west anxious .I8 .find them: Sornethiug came out in the sky ',lie looked tear- e prisoner at Andersouville, and - one in ill hi, vuine „lulu language in,1;,ented faintly, :Ind which were Nile (=robot- Columbia. both educe on and position superior to fully up to them, wonderine which Was . ., .\l (14. dear Annie," he wrote, "I do not • the :One watched for by the childish his compemens, tetra evidently looked' eited by eitnmie hhuself. know that this' letter will ever retteh . CHAPTER. XXvrr. Yorng man , and the little boy Who tiled . up to latin as their 'tenter, ng him eee 4 ' ! sou. I have but little hope that it Mee Cereeton -had taken it for geteted The sun was just rising, end his red •"Squelle," and negnieseing readily when I Still, it is worth trying for, and that if Jimmm ie cae hack wsummits of the AM" --aft& the lapse of tee or fifteen min will. - be her daughter, and she chute to her ghany ItIOnniatins which in the glory of u4 -he suggested thete,,they go highet so hero in this terrible place, whose with a love tuul tenderness second only the early morning seemed es calm and 1j11" the menet:ft to a Aegorge where deeeritee I em writing to you, who I t0. what she felt for Rem 'Poor It -,c'' peaceful as if their lofty heights had ,- oree of the fugitives bled hosteeore • alicttuts no pen oietongue CA 11 adegnetely . know ehink -Seilletittelf of the poor 1 iSoo had listtned with some degree of never looked down upon swims of car- etaken refuge. . , k Wretch' starving and dying by inches in I nteres o sue 1 pm . ons t t 1 el of Jimmies let- •nage• and strite, or- their tangled pltssel Five minutes more and tlie.feotstepe Andersontelle. Oh, Anuie, you cen note ter ns Annie chose to read to her, but ' •and voices were heard far up t e mute it Mid no power to rouse her from Inc tan end 'Will 'breathed mor .- freely and &Irk ravines sheltered poor, stare, ing, frightened wretches, ilecMg fer their lives, tele braving deitth in any feint rather than be recaptured by thtir merciless pursuers. There were several of these misesible nna hiding :-the mountain passes now, prisonefs es- caped from eallobury and other pointre bat our story 110W has to do with but one, and that a yettlig man, with it look of detenninetion in his eyes, and the conetige of a Samsou in his hettrt. He hi suffered incredible hardshimi since the &is? of his capterce hatl been stripped et once of hie handsome uni form by the brutal Texans, who found hint upon the field. Its gold, which he carried ebout his persou into every bet- tle, haul been taken. from him, and in this condition he hod been sent from elm prison to- another, until .Salisbury received 111m. At first he lind suffered but little meetally. for the ball which struck him down had left hint with his Pensoli imutired, Mut to Min it WOS the tonne whether Mend or for had him in keeping. Deprived of everything whieh could twirl: his rank es an officer. and alwrtys insisting that his mime waS 'Tose," he peesed for a demented creature, whom the breed soldiery de- lighted to torment. Gratinally, how ever,' his mon came WA. end woke to the full horrors of his conditiou. Then. like e caged lion he (dieted and fumed, end resolved to be free. lie vould net die there, kitowhig teat rar (may there VAS blithsome little wo- man waiting for hie touting, if, indeed. she had not cowed to think of him its nloote the tante ef things which. he thought very probitble, tis he tummy ester* el the feet thet on er khcrW wh"'t 1 1"""(' inifkrt'd Cram lum- state or 4ipntily lath which ehe - had again, and, kneeling down in t o pool zer end thirst,. and exposure and -filth, fallen. She never smiled new, andof water, thenked teod who had turned which makes my very blood curdleand 1 rarely -Woke except to answer, a ques- the danger aside, tend kept him a little creep, and from that very Immo siek- ;Aloft, but set all dny by the window in longer. rie did not dare leave the cnee, men Which more thee aught else kills i her own room. turd looked away to the but he came out from muter the rock, the poor boys- around Me. When I first ! outhward, where nil her thoughts were ene etretching Myself upon the ground tome luee I thought 1 mild not maitre i centered. It Ives vete' strange that no- tried to wring and dry the tatters it, 0101 though I hum. 1 wits Dot Pre- thing mild he heard of her husband which hung so loosely upon. 'him. but n little drummer hey from :Weld- : &wee corroborated that fact, but his It was two daya shIce he bed tasted i _pared, I used to wish that I might die; i c' pt that he wns allot down dead. A ,gan, Who took to Inv from the first, sale ' body had not been foetid en the field, Cones and the long fast began to make ilia Prayers one nlght beside me, and 1 nor WftS any Menden over 11,111de of him itself felt in the keen imps of hunger. • the letehing to him carried me back to t Surely he eould ventnre out toward the in any °Mein' accounts. 0110e Rose heti eleee of the day. he thought, and see •I emelt, with a deem •to live end see peer hr sbend in one of the Southern .prisons, :each tiny. And so hope came back, I dier. wife pretended to have. seen 1101 it .there were not berries growing in the, teepee and when the sue was settlug you, who, I felt sure, prayed for Inc 1 been -startled from her stupor by a so!. deur face On00 more, 11Iy little 41.111.11- 1 but a Outer examination proved that he -crawled to the mouth of the cavern, 1 nue. boy, lohnny, was ell the world to ! where, just in the beet place for him to me, and when he gi.ew too sick to sit , what he did in the 1101)4 that money see it, lay a huge corn -oho end slice the man WAR intoxicated, end had told I. or !tend, I held lit poor head lit my ; might be given him for the intelligenve, of late011,- *Wrapped 1110013 in n bit el eel er. How it time there he did not stop . lee he wee almost fautheuel, end ote i cometion, Ole rums hopeless look iu Iter I Dm; ntni ),11'. 4' up my teak:11e to hilli, ' and tium Ibis(' sank back into her foimer tight to ns. : oyes whit& had been there from the to ask. Met it was there Wag Milli- ! IV' 0 esed to say the Leers Prayer to- • ntomeitt she heard her husband's mime clunt tot him then, end never bed the t vegerly WlitIteVer W115 bro ,gtther mete- flight, whorl a eerteiti sine ameng the Mile& end Lite mime look of enetliest &neer, servee on nuieelve tel- . arpeared, which he playfully veiled his neguleh upon her face, which never re. Ver. faked to him half SO Well all Cid 'MOUT,' saying it Watt her eye wetele- : 'hued a muet.le, as she *Watched intliffilt‘ that bit of bacon wIth the coarse corn. broad. but we grow Childish here, eml I, tee,Refresh<4 mid enrouraged. he went ing over him. It WOR 11. elintliS11 1' 111(1, 1 mtly the preparationS mule by her mo- lieve gtvoli that star a 110110. t (ell it bark to his hitling-plare, interelIng to i titer nue Amite for alt event whieh rar- e:Unice' and Watch Ith milling (IM eiwor- 1411 cd tyers Wit aka .of her hearts sleet egaitt (111 his petilous jotrney der other eirentitstances Would have iy es did the little boy, wbo (111(1 jeot Illtt When olt Christmas mornieg the whet the MOuhtain 1)11111 grew dark as the War reached the zenith, end was hell on Rt. tulte's enough to Warrant hitt in doing w1. ehiniee down upon him. Itis head 'WOR its joyous peel for the -child, born in But soon after the suresetting a fear - wen sending forth in my lap. and all there was lett of my Dvililpliem 111(We tlimi eighteen hUndred fid -storm eorne up. and in the pitchy icoat 1 meth, into it pillow for him, end years ago, there eante a softer, mere ditekeees of the ('31(1 - Will Hefted to held him till he $11ed. Itio mother's ntl- retinrel look to ltose's °Yea. 1111d ter litt tho bellowing thuutlet leering through • dress lot .-----, Michigan. Write to 1161', quivered a little es she Said to Andres the- mountain- gorge% and San• from the Awde, end tell her how ;tallow died in who rens hmuung mot, hu' uwbra, is, 'ouenimt. the forked lightning witi.cdt 'the firm hope of meeting her fri heft- thur terra in the next room Me the struele Mere than one tan trve noor the. -• 41, —*list tt IrttaltrON . nth , 43, rata w:EL:111 e.seeeteljen in toirelite, the elate of his concealment yeti by the von, Tell her be did tat StrWer wave& entr% er o bolz,rf". • • . . In Office Stationery THE TIMES is Up -to -Date. A superior stock of BILL ELPADS, MEMORANDUMS STATITYilqiNTF4, ENVELOPES SHIPPING TAG -S, CARDBOARDS, ETC. ALWAYS ON HAND. We employ skilled workmen, have the 00 latest designs in type, execute first-class work $ and charge reasonable prices. 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