r"r ? m- t h v 5 The Commoner. VOLUME 5, NUMBER 13 2h jthH latfWToTIMl IZJJWS-tU) LUM V-WtLTA JLWrf V- -?- fc r7 ,UoL&?5n dfosBSlh AV tML "iiJ. f. UkvT! & iiM CMAi-3 'S2 feJlYS .'y... ' 1 mi AGR a II frv tixii.niM : x c-- rs.cv ? Hnvi 1 ; s$a legiiteagggig. , immAY I C. C? P: MEMO "Ry$. oyv', v4Tesxvact aYaM oiyWWo jfcoomfaYmaVis 0, TfteWvaV &., xAxxz Wao. "o SoxYoyo, ouvJioBatie,- t&exjT SoUwf, oVwyA( v&oa voaUVws Wivj sVumte .jC xvaWovi? s VvomaXo , Vo , Vm Ya&. SoUvcf , Vtv JjbW "vxrtw oa& ' We , faY Vta "Xtvot; &oa'as ae&taa Wvyvc ooyxy syvoo.Us---w AXtvatY v oTvt Vaa $ox avc 4 se&Ya. Yoaayj.. SavVatvas VaxYevauavaYaYvasvWW' Seep7 SoUvevl 'sVeeoYVvyj , xoaTave s , mws J "WlWWotvsVW t Vwi v W . deep t vvaeoT"AvVvo , &)tQ us Vve ov VvumauWssa i SVettk WW SoaVv&wWU bvasttaaT ftv5oUw sl7i V aj . Viaxvv v 0 ymw awaf u l ava$ v wyMM, SUtpr SoaY,c sXwy.W oxotYS , 0 ', sVyayvWwv( a2 ae oaa otv Wvy o7jaaYYOMW, &axaYa voaa aW xvaWou $. ' Vwbm&I dtaa. 'm; VHjOlXaav ys iWmii AFTER MANY DAYS Colonel Lucius Poindexter was not feeling well. Firstly, lie was far away from his Virginia home and mingling with the, to him, cold and sordid northerners who seemed never to think of anything hut the chaso of dollars. Secondly, because it was Memorial day. and desnlto the larjso of years he had not forgotten how the tide of war had swept back and forth over his beloved state. Business had called the colonel to this little northern village, and poor train service had compelled him to remain over the day . set apart for paying tribute to the men who had fought and marched under Grant and Sherman and Sheridan. He heard the shrill of the fife and the ruffle of the drum; ho saw the children gather ing at the village hall with flowers in their arms; he saw the women gathering, and saw the old veterans marching with feeble steps to the rallying place. And across the little stream, over on the sloping hillside, he saw the village cemetery in which tiny flags floating in the May wind pointed out tne mounds wherein lay sleeping men whom the colonel had met in mortal combat more than a generation before. Despite the fact that Colonel Poin dexter's only son fell before the walls of Santiago, fighting under the flag which floated from tho staff on the village hall, the sight of the gath ering scores made him recall the old days of hardship, of privation, of dis ease and of suffering when ho rode and fought with Lee beneath a ban ner now seldom seen save in memory and through tears. He had nothing personal against the blue-clad men slowly gathering to pay the yearly tribute of flowers to their departed comrades. Quito the contrary. Ho respected them as men, he loved them as fellow citizens, and he was proud that it took men of his own blood and country to bring him and his comrades up standing. But just now Colonel Poindexter did not feel like fraternizing, so he donned his silk hat, reached for his cane and started on a walk to escape tho scenes that brought back memo ries he wished most to escape. Crossing the little bridge and turn ing down a seldom used lane, Colonel Poindexter walked slowly along, breathing fn the clear May air and reveling in the warm sun that re minded him of other days on his own loved Virginia soil. As he walked along with bowed head his ears were greeted by subdued sobs that seemed to come from nowhere in particular. The colonel stopped, alert to find the cause, and he soon discovered a frail little woman dressed in rusty black, and plucking the modest wild flow ers that grew in tho fence corners. "Pardon me, madam," said Colonel Poindexter, lifting him hat, "but von seem to be in trouble. Is there inv thing I can do?" any "No, sir; thank you. I am just gathering some flowers." "There are flowers and to snaro over in the village," said the colonel "I know, sir; but they will not do I want flowers that are all my o.vn I can raise none, so I came out hero to pluck these wild ones, for fimv wtu seem more like mine than any that others could give me." "Allow me, madam," said Colonel Poindexter. And then the gallant colonel, memories of the long ago temporarily forgotten, began search ing for and plucking the violets and sweet Williams that grew so luxuri antly. Little by little the woman's story was told. Two graves on tho hillside one of a husband who had fought under the old flag many years ago; another of a stalwart son who had fallen beneath the same flag on tli9 flame-swept slopes of El Caney; of bitter privation and of a seemingly hopeless future. "You say your husband was with Grant in Virginia?" asked the colonel. "Yes, sir; he was a captain in an Illinois regiment." "His name?" "Mason, sirWilliam G. Mason." The colonel's hands were idle, and his half-closed eyes looked back through four decades and saw tho ebb and flow of warfare .on the soil of Virginia. He saw the fierce charge, the repulse, and the hopeless re treat. He saw the surgeons bending over him; the faces of the nurses, and then lived again the long and weary weeks of suffering. He saw again the last feeble rally, and lived again the heart-breakhur wait at. An- pomattox while Grant and Lee were negotiating. The sad return to a de vastated home, the long years of toil, and the final triumph over ill fortune. "William Mason. Mason, Mason," muttered- the colonel. "An Illinois captain and his name Mason?" "Yes, sir," replied the woman. "I am under obligations to a north ern captain named Mason. I was wounded unto death at Petersburg, and lay for a day and a night with out attention. A northerner, a cap tain in an Illinois regiment, found me, took me to the hospital and saw that I was given attention. When I was able to leave he secured my ex change. I owe my life to him. And I believe his name was Mason." "I know you, sir; I know you. Your name is Poindexter. I" "That is my name, madam," said the colonel. "And it was your hus band who saved me." "Yes, sir. You gave him your watch as a keepsake. He brought it home with him and carried it until the day of his death six years ago. It has your name engraved in it." Little by little the colonel man aged to secure the rest of the little woman's story. It had been hard enough since the loss of husband and son, and Colonel Poindexter peered through the trees and caught more than one glimpse of the old flag for which this little woman had sac rificed so much. The heap of wild flowers grew un til there were enough for both tho colonel and the woman, and they walked in silence down the lane to wards the village. Suddenly the fa miliar "tat, tat, tat-tat-tat" of the drum was heard and the little woman hastened her steps. "We must hurry if we are in lime to join the procession," she said. Colonel Poindexter quickened his (Continued on Page 15) .