JT * ' " " XT ' " " " ' "ifiTniiitfmirw i iiiiiiMil > > ininifWimiir iii i n rr J - ' $ ; | A SPY'S ADVENTUEE. | B New York Sun. II , "When Halleclc wns bcMolgtig Beau- | | regard at Corinth , or , rather , daily W approaching the confederate lines by If > system of defences , I waB in the ! trenches afternoon when the | g one cap- W % tain of my company sent for mo and 'Jk ordered me to report to the colonel. $ ' : The colonel ordered me to report at r u - p General JXallcck's headquarters , and * * when I made my appearance the Gen- : * " eral said : I. "You have done some scouting ? ' r "Yes , sir. " , , "Will you go as a spy ? " "Where to ? " "Into Corinth. J want information i ' which only a spy yin secure. If you irr return you shall be well rewarded. If . * you are detected you will be hung. " ( "I will try it. " ' ' * "Very good. Return in an hour } and I will give you instructions. When can you set out ? " "By midnight. " "That will do. " I went away wondering how on I enrth General Halleclc had overheard of mo and it was a month later be fore I ascertained the facts. One aft- l ternoon I was "showing off" to a | ! group of soldiers , and the general I and his chief engineer halted on their [ round of inspection and became spec- J tators unbeknown to me. In my ( palmy days I could imitate any voice I hear. I could put my face into al- i most any shape , I could work my ears like a horse ; and could throw a hat off my head by working my scalp ; when I was only twenty-four years I i old I could make my iace look like that of a man of seventy , and , as my face was beardless as a woman's I could dress In female attire and defy any one to detect me by voice or gait. The main thing was to get into Corinth. The general had no sug gestions to make on that point , and the work to be done , when once inside , I seemed easy enough. The way into Corinth by the south and west was j still open , and milk , vegetables , hay and other stuff was being received by * every highway. When I sat out just before sun down I had § 300 in gold in my pocket and a bundle of cloth- • ing in my hand At midnight , when ? ) I had reached the point aimedat , a f | low-backed old man of 70 , lame , ' } gray-haired and toothless , might [ J have been seen sitting in a fence i corner of a highway to await the > l | passage ol time. I was within seven 'II ' miles of Corinth , and my plan was to | | go in with some vehicle. Within two l | miles of me were two great armies getting ready for a death grapple , jl but just then the frogs croaked , the u insects buzzed , and peace spread her | mantle as in a graveyard. Indeed I ijl ] ] " was in a drowse when I heard the rat- jf tie of wheels , and was only on my feet when a young man driving a j horse to an open buggv , camecftlong. j He had six jugs in the vehicle , and \ was bound for town , if ] t "Hey you ! " I called to him. w ] "Can't you give an old man a lift to PJ town ? My boy has run off and mfaf jined the soldiers , and I must see him j { ] and try and get him back. " mt\ \ ' 'Who are you ? " he asked. n | "Judge Levington of Guntown. Bm Started to come by rail , but the en- Ei > gine broke down and in trying to get j § | | ahead I've got lostl reckon , " fijij "I should say you had ! You ain 't Hi anywhere near the railroad. " aFJ "Reckon not. Pretty hard on the Kj old man , but I feel as if I must get K | ' the boy back. " Bl > "Well , jump in. I suppose you've J got a pass ? " Ml "Oh , yes. " S3 He wjis a kind-hearted , simple- Mi minded young man , and had a pass j which enabled him to come and goat Kl pleasure. We had not gone above fl half a mile when I "suddenly discov- II ered" that I had lost the important V document which would admit me in- Sj i to Corinth. He stopped his horse j while I searched anew , but the paper ml could not be found. H ' "And what will they do if I don't Iflj ' have the pass ? " I asked. \m \ "Take you before some of the gen- jfl * crals and they may lock you up , Is They are mighty careful of late. " IX "And I may not get out to see my US boy ? " In "Perhaps not. " IB I "took on" for about hve minutes IB in a pathetic strain , and when I saw IB I had enlisted his sympathies I said. IB" ' * " , "My young friend , I don't want to EBl be delayed. You must help me. When Is f we cvme to the picket post I am to IB I pass as your fatner who has come IV down to look around. Even an IBt hour's delay may take my boy IS' ' away. " Hi "Oh , but I wouldn't dare. " Ml "You'd dare a jrreat deal for these , " | j ( I said , as I put a couple of § 10 gold * J ft. pieces into his hand. | j | " "Why yes I feel sorry for you , | | L and I want you to get in. I might Bf Bay you was my father , but " K 1/ "I'll chance the rest. " . , I K v I don't think he expected any K trouble for the matter did not seem K to trouble him any. When we drove IJ J up to the first picket-post he halted his horse and was fumbling for his pass , when one of the pickets said : ! "Thatls all right drive on. Oh , but who is that with you ? " _ "The old man. He fit in the Mexl- Hi > . , ? ; - - < a jr-t * • < _ -gup * . " - j. can war and wants to see how things look at Corinth. " "And if I were ten years younger I'd shoulder a musket , " I added. "Bully for you ! " shouted the three or lour men on the posts , and they were laughing as we drove on. The inner picket did not stop us at all , and we drove into the town in the gray of the morning. Although the hour was early , everybody was astir and the streets almost blocked with army vehicles. During the last half mile of the drive the young man in spected me very closely , and when I finally left him he did not seem alto gether satisfied as to my identity. He asked mo several questions about Guntown which I had to answer at random , and my account of how "my son" had left homo was not as clear as it might have been. My first move after losing sight of the milk man was to go to a hotel. There I boldly registered as "John William Piicharhson , Mobile , " and dropped a hint to the clerk that I was furnish ing Beauregard with supplies. As soon as I went to my room I peeled off my outer suit , removed my wig and spectacles , took out three of my falso teeth , which were on a plate by themselves , blackened my eyebrows , and in ton min utes I was in a new disguise. I went down to breakfast , and then slipped over to the other hotel and register ed and took a room as "Professor E. G. S. LaDue , New Orleans. " I had the French twist to my speech , and I also had the discovery relating to it new explosive. I had come to the front to put it into practice. It was about ten o'clock when I started out , and who should I run against the very first thing but my friend of the milk business. He had sergeant and three privates with him , and as they passed me he said : "Oh , I can tell him half a mile off. His gray Avig got rumpled up and I saw light hair under it , but he was off before I knew what to do. " I followed them to the hotel where I first registered , and entered it just as they went up statrs to my room. They thought they had their man , but were doomed to disappointment. Two of the men were left in the office , however , while the other two , accom panied by the milkman , went out to look for me on the streets. This was on the 20th of May. Beauregard had concentrated everything on the short line , and the confederates be lieve they had a dead sure thing in case they were at tacked in their ihtrenckments. I picked up the acquaintance of a dozen army officers before night , and the subjects of anew explosive prov ed interesting to alL They pumped me for particulars , of course but my reply was : "In a day or two I hope to make a test and surprise the Yankees. " Through the influence of a Captain Johnson , belonging to Marmaduke's command , and who had been wound ed and carried his right arm in a sling , I secured a pass to carry me about Corinth , and on the second day of my arrival I posted myself in many details. Everything was ex citement and hub-bub , as everybody thought a great battle imminent , and nobody paid any attention to me. At my solicitation Captain Johnson reported my arrival to Beauregard's adjutant , and asked permission for me to experiment. He came back and said ; "I found him upside down and he felt like ordering me under arrest for disturbing him. " On the afternoon of the third day while I was returning from the con federate left , a provost patrol picked me up. My pass was all right and secured my liberation , but it gave me an imeasy feeling to observe that the milkman was among the guard. He had evidently pointed me out for arrest for I heard him mutter to the officer : "I may be wrong , but I can't get shut of the feeling that he's the man. No two men could have such eyes. " I knew I should be under surveil lance now , and the first thing I did after reaching the hotel was to re place mj * teeth , rub the black from my eye-brows , part my hair in the center , and give a new twist to my moustache , and when I descended to supper my left eye had a slight squint. After supper as I sat in the office smoking , I observed the milk man moving about as if looking for me. I went directly up to him and said : "My friend , were you looking for me ? " " No , sir , " was his prompt reply. "But you were the men who ar rested me this evening : . " "What ! are you the feller we picked up near the depot ? " "I am. " He looked me irora tip to toe with a puzzled expression on his face , and I remarked : "I overheard you say something about my eyes. Is there anything wrong with them ? " "No-no , sir. " "But why did you point me out to the guard ? Indeed why are you , a civilian , tramping about with the soldiers ? I presume you hold your self accountable for any trouble you may cause a gentleman ? " He turned pale in an instant , and asking me to step aside , he explained. "There was an old man rode in with me the other morning. He called himself Judge Levington and said he lived at Guntown. No such a man has ever lived there. This man also wore a gray wig to conceal his natural hair , which was a little red dish. " "Well , he told an affecting story , and I passed him as my father. I be lieve he was a spy. " "Yes. " "And the soldiers believe it and ivant to find him. " "JSjod I hope they will. But you , - • - - ' ' " - I my friend , must use more discretion. Ifyou insult a gditleman .you must be prepared to give him satisfaction. I feel that- " "Say , I'm sorry about this thing , and I hope you'll let it drop. Come and have a drink. " I held off for a while and then bridged the yawning chasm , and when he was ripe for it I said : "I have a brother here a citizen who is just able to move about aftex a long illness. I want to get him away before the battle occurs. How far out do you live ? " "About nine miles. " "If paid for it , couldn't you tvike him home for a week or two ? " "I'll take it without pay and bo only to glad to do you a favor. " But I wouldn't have it that way. I bargained with him that he should receive § 10 for this trouble , and that he should call at the hotel the next evening. Nothing was said about a pass , but I intended to see to that. The next day Marmaduke's captain helped me to secure it. What I saw in Corinth satisfied me thero would be no fight. While the con federates were shortening their lines intrenching , and whilethegreatmass of soldiers believed that Beauregard was aching for an attack , the rail road tracks told the story. I saw that ho was sending away guns and stores as fast as possible , and was likewise bringingin and side-tracking all the cars available. Several extra locomotives had come up , and I believed I had good grounds for suspecting a retreat from Corinth. This belief was strengthened on the last day of my stay , by the confi dence of a telegraph operator , who informed me that supplies intended for Corinth had been stopped down the road. "When evening came I had seen to all that was necessary , and half an hour after supper I disappeared. The man who took ray place was an in valid. He was very pale , weak in the legs and spoke in a hollow voice. I chalked my face a bit ; rubbed the black off my eyebrows , cut off the corners of my moustache , put on a different style of collar and hollowed in my cheeks by suction. Jn that way I lengthened my nice and made my cheek bones show very promin ently. It was dusk when the milk man drove up. When he came in I stated that the professor , my broth er , had been called to Beauregard's head-quarters , and that I was already to be moving. "Been powerful sick , I take it , " he said , as he looked me over. "Yes very siek. " "Consumption ? " "I'm afraid so , " I gasped between coughing spells. He offered to treat , but I declined , and after indulging in a horn by him self , ho took up the bundle I had made up and helped me to the buggy. My pass was all right with the pickets , and the young man had enough whisky in him to be jolly. I intended to leave him about where I had found him at first , and in pursuauce of a plan I had formed , I pretended to be very nervous and excited. Every sound made me start , and the further we drove the more nervous I got. Fortune came to my aid when we reached the right spot. We heard a great clatter of hoof's ahead , and I yelled out that the Yankees were upon us and jumped out and over the fence into the woods. He was badly scared for the moment , and ran back about fifty feet before seeking shelter. In a minute or two three cavalry horses , saddled anfS bridled , came tearing down the road , and as a consequence the old horse in the shafts wheeled about and went to Corinth with them. The last I heard of the young man he was try ing to call me and yell "Whoa ! " in one breath. In two hours I was in side the Union lines , and before mid night General Halleck had my report. I was neither rewarded nor believed. Indeed , I was very curtly dismissed after concluding my report. I had my revenge , however , when the gen eral woke up one morning to find Corinth evacuated and the enemy be yond his reach. Then he must have been satisfied of the correctness ot my theories , buthe was too sore and had too much dignity to send for me and to admit it. Indeed , my existence had probably escaped his memory. Why the Students Smiled. A famous college president , a cler gyman , was addressing the students in the chapel at the beginning of the college year. "It is. " he said in con clusion , "a matter of congratulation to all the friends of the college that this yearopens with the largestfresh- man class in its history. " And then , without any pause , he turned to the Scripturelesson for the day , the third Psalm , and began reading in a voice of thunder ; "Lord , howare they increased that trouble me. " This , however , was hardly more unfortunate than the choice of the hymn : "Return , ye ransomed sinners , home , " as the closing selection of a certain American board meeting. . Syracuse Christian Herald. Safety of Dugouts. Mr. De Science ( of New York ) I notice that a writer in the Forum says a poor man is better off in a crowded city tenement house than in a western dugout , exposed to the fury of cyclones. Mr. Quartersection ( of Kansas ) He dees , does he ? Well , j oil just tell that smart indervidual , fer me , that thar is three things a cyclone can't blow away wells , cistern's an' dug outs. Guess he don't know a dug out is a hole in the ground. New York Weekly. - M g j V ii - The - First - National - Bank. - 'ij ' ! CAPITAL AND SURPLUS : ' fflSi | pS : AUTHORIZED CAPITAL : . } $60,000. | E mMM , : $100,000. GEORGE IIOCKNELL , President. . M. FREES , Vice President. W. F. LAWSOX , Cashier. A. CAMFJIELL , Director. S. L. GKEEN , Director. . 1 INCORPORATED UNDER STATE LAWS. 1 Pairl Un Oanifal < 0 OHO 1 Genera ! Banking Business- , I Collections made on all accessible i olnts. Drafts < ) r.4\\n dircctlj ? ! TICKETS FOE SALE TO Al FROM EDROEE , . . FRANKLIN , . . , Vice . | ' V. President. JOHN R. CLARK Prcs. . . . . . . . A. C. EBERT , Cashier. TIIOS. I. GLASSCOTT , As.s. Caslv J • . : . . jj | iNNr' ( Z * sJSSin NEBRASKA PETER PENNER wishes to announce that his stock of Sun Lag Bute ail inlets is complete , and also directs attention to his line of WHITE RUBBER TEIMMED HAENESS , finest ever brought to Western Xebraska. "West Dennison St. MeCOOK , NEBRASKA. $50,000.00 ! TO LOAN ON Improved Farms in Bed Willow County 8i AT SA PEE CENT. 8i McCook Loan and Trust Co , KiPOFFicE in First National Bank. < 3rcf e front ktverij ? tatfe GRAY & EIKENBERRY , Props. The Best Equipment in the Republican Valley. 1 Frees & HocH Lite Co , DEALERS in = LUMBER ! ) Sash , Doors , Blinds , Lime , Cement , ; HARD MD SOFT COAL. I \ C. H. BOYLE , LAND - ATTOENEYv Sis years" experience in Government Laud Cases. Real Estate , Loans and Icsnrance , . XOTAItY PUBLIC. CSTOnicc upstairs in the Scott buildings south of Commercial Hotel , IcCook , Neb. THE • COMMERCIAL - HOTEt GEO. E. JOHNSON , Prop. MeCOOK , - NKBRASKA. This house has been completely renovated and refurnished throughout , and is first-clss ? in every rcspett. ttates rcasouabcl. A. J. IllTTEMIOUSE , "W. E. STAKR , McCook. Indianola ItlTTENHOUSE & STARK , YSATLAW" ATTORNE YS-AT - OFFICES AT MeCOOK antl B ? n > llA. VOa.A. J. BYRON JENNINGS , Attorney - at - Law "Will practice in the state and Tnited State * courts and before the l' . > . Land oNces ! , Careful attention circn to collection " % Olilce o\er the Nebraska Lean and I2aukin Co. , .McCook. THOS. COLFER , Attorney - at - Law1 ANI NOT A BY PUBLIC IJeal Estate Bought and Sold and Collec- i tions made. Money Loaned on real estattt- and iinal prr of. Ac nt Lincoln Land Co _ Oflice in Phillips-Meeker block. HUGHV. . COLE , LAWYER. McCOOK , - XEBBASKA. "Will j ractice In all courts Commercial and Corporation law a specialty. MOINEY TO LOA.V. Rooms 4 and 5 First National Bank Building. - Dr. A. P. WELLES , % HOMEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON , : McCOOK , - NEBRASKA. Special attention jriven to diseases of TVotneQ and Children. The latest improved methods of Electricity used in all cases requiring such treat ment. Office over McMUIen's Drug Store. Res idence , North Main Street. B. B. DAVIS , M. D. , PHYSICIAN and SURGEON McCOOK - XEBR.ISKA. i OFFICE HOURS : 9 to 11 a. m. , 2 to 5 p. m. . . T | to 9 p. m. I have associated with me in practice , § I > r. C. II. JOrVES. 31 . ivho will answer calls promptly in town or : onntry. 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