pwg 3333333Jii335333attftftettft Hi Hi iti THE NEW SKIPPER 6 OF THE NANCY 933aa39933a335i393333fipeeeeeecee6eeeeeseer66eeee5 She is a beauty Joe and no mis take Yes and fast too Thats her best point in my estima tion With a skillful turn of the wheel that was so little as to seem almost a toy Joe Parsons brought the trim steam launch graeefully around the end of the pier and tip beside the floating stage with a maneuver so clever that the paint on the side of the little craft was not scraped Fred Allen sprang out upon the stage and then running his eye along the lines of the boat repeated his re mark Shes a beauty and as you say fast Jove she cuts the air at such a rate that she carries a cool breeze with her on the hottest night Then with a cordial Good night Allen lightly climbed the ladder that led to the pier while Parsons after a preliminary toot of the little steam whistle backed slowly out into the stream and then kept up the North river at full speed A beauty indeed he kept repeat ing to himself thrilling with a strange pride at the thought of being owner master and crew of such a saucy little marine creature For the Nancy seemed almost alive to him He was a bookkeeper in a down town bank a sober industrious loyal and good hearted fellow who preferred the pleasures that do not appeal to the general run of young men Two years before he had conceived the idea that for at least six months in the year it would give him great pleas ure to spend his evenings and holidays in just such a craft as he now possess ed The Nancy had consumed 1000 of his by no means extensive savings but Joe was happy and what is money compared to happiness First the launch spurted ahead at her best speed then slowed down to hardly more than half speed all the -while her shrill whistle tooted much inore frequently than is required by the laws of navigation Joe was play ing with his boat as some men do with a fine horse as a woman does with her laughing first born In and out among the larger river raft the Nancy glided Several times lie all but got in the way of tugs and ferryboatsr but these experiences only made his miniature voyage the more exciting One of the maneuvers carried him close to the piers on the New York side of the river Suddenly Joe looked ahead just in time to see a human figure shoot from the end of a pier and strike the water with a splash At that moment the Nancy was not more than twenty yards away A suicide burst from Joes lips Then But Ill spoil the game The launch sped quickly to the spot then hesitated and almost stood still binder the influence of a sudden re versal of the engine Tn that pause of an instant Joe lean ed over the side and found himself grasping a young woman The next moment the Nancy began to go backward through the water but Joe had lifted the sylph like form into the boat and now the young lady lay between him and the engine Her wide open eyes stared at him in a peculiar fashion Do you do this often lie queried not knowing what else to say A sigh was the only answer I must scold her thought Joe So he began Miss dont you know that suicide is one of the wickedest things in the world The expression on her face changed to one of relief Yes she answered Then why did you jump into the water So you didnt see me she began but stopped in sudden confusion I saw you just as you struck the water he answered A sigh this time one of unmistaka ble relief escaped her Why did you try to he went on sternly Dont dont ask me she pleaded Dont ask you what Dont ask me anything please I shall be greatly obliged to you if you will humor me Well you are a queer girl he commented You reach the point where life has no further charms for you and then immediately begin to ask favors Under pretense of working at the engine he managed to turn the little lantern so that it shed a fuller light upon her face The cheeks were pallid naturally Vi IHr - it I I Joe inwardly commented but the great tender eyes and inexpressibly sweet face did not belong to a woman who would deliberately end her life It was a face with which any man not wholly a brute would be unable to avoid falling in love See here came suddenly from Joe you didnt really mean to jump into the water Oh but you promised sir to ask me no questions I didnt promise it was you who made the request I make it again she pleaded Surely you will humor me And do everything else that you ask cried Joe suddenly overwhelm ed and conquered by the most wonder ful little face he had ever seen What shall I do first of all Talk about something cheerful she urged with a shiver Well in the first place youre cer tainly wet and you must be cold Oh no the night is too warm for that Wont you take a little taste of this brandy he suggested producing his flask It may save you from catch ing a severe cold She took the flask but only the merest drop passed her lips Then Joe in obedience to her whim branched out into dissertations on the most general topics He felt that he was talking like an idiot but he evi dently pleased her for soon she joined in his talk and displayed not only un common intelligence but a vivacity that Avas hardly to be expected All this time they had been speeding up the North river Joe suddenly awakened from his delicious absorp tion to find that they were opposite Harlem Where shall I land you he asked Anywhere I must be getting home And may I escort you there Oh no not for worlds Her look was both pleading and frightened At least may I call to morrow to make sure that you have not suffered from your exposure Please dont think of doing that either And dont try to find out about me I am a gentleman said Joe with a simplicity that much have touched her The boat had landed by this time She stood up shook out her garments which were almost dry by this time and held out her hand Good by she said and thank you thank you for more than I can tell you We shall probably never meet again but I shall always look back upon you as one of my friends Thank you again most earnestly and good by Joe held her hand for a few seconds longer than he needed to and tipped his hat almost reverently as she glided away No she certainly didnt mean to commit suicide he soliloquized gaz ing intently at her rapidly disappear ing form Confound it if I meet that girl again I shall certainly fall in love with her What is all the mystery back of this affair I wonder The Nancy backed water again then steamed down the river Twenty min utes later the launch was at her berth was drawn and all made snug about her Then Joe wended his way home his pretty craft forgotten in the maze o thought with which the adventure of that evening had filled his head And when in his bed Joe Parsons tried in vain to woo sleep these words kept running through his brain If I meet that girl again I shall certainly fall in love with her But month after month went by and Joe did not once behold the woman that the river had yielded up to him only to let the town swallow her up half an hour later It was only a few weeks ago that Joe had been taken from the books of the bank and established in a small cozy office to attend to the correspond- j once of the institution A typewriter was necessary so he advertised for one There were a host of applicants but many of them had not the necessary knowledge for his kind of work so they were rejected When the door opened to admit still another applicant and Joe looked up he almost shouted in his glee for the newcomer was the young woman of the river episode The recognition was mutual but each strove to ignore the fact and Joe plunged at once into an examination of her Qualifications She gave her name as Nora well and responded to all his questions so satisfactorily that he engaged her on the spot I am sorry the salary is not larger he said apologetically but the bank regulates that and I have no control in the matter a few days ago an observer might have seen Nora gazing with truly feminine delight at a pretty soli taire ring on her finger Joes hand was resting affectionately on her shoul der Tell me he said suddenly and with something of an air of proprietor ship how you happened to be in the river that night I was pushed in she replied turn ing pale at the recollection By whom My husband Your husband Yes he was a fearful brute Thar night he inveigled me out on the pier with the deliberate intention of mur dering me But I am trying to forget all that Please never speak of It again Little girl said Joe with husky tenderness If you are willing to mar ry me after such an experience in mat rimony what a great faith you must have in me I have she replied simply The Nancy has a new skipper now the most delightful skipper imagina ble Minneapolis Tribune DOG SLEEP WALKERS One Canine Struck a Doe Trail and Was Gone for Three Days The story in the Sun of the Denver woman who had been sleep walking in a way to astonish folks reminded a group of sportsmen who were sitting in a Broadway gun store last Monday of several instances when dogs or cats had done things almost as re markable One of the stories was told by a man who had used a pointer in hunting quails in the South He was a fine dog Seth was the sportsman said He could wind a quail further or road one faster than any other dog I ever used and he was so steady that one couldnt see him breathe He was a great dreamer and used to do all sorts of things One night he lay down before the fireplace on a bear skin I got down in Missouri I was sitting over by a table in a com fortable chair reading some but stop ping to think about my hunting trips more The wind outside made a fellow thankful he wras in a house it whistled so cold like The wind quieted down a little and then Seth began to get un easy He began to kick and whistle with his half open lips Pretty quick he got up and began to creep across the floor foot by foot going slower and slower Then he stopped dead still in as pretty a point as ever I saw I spoke to him and he woke up He looked about him then with hanging head he came over to where I was sit ting and put his head onto my lap after Id petted him a little A man who had hunted deer with dogs in Minnesota told about a big white and black spotted hound tht he had used in his sport One night he said we were sit ting or lounging before a big log fire in camp up on a lake I wont say where because theres a lot of game there yet Old Rove was lying a little ways from the fire snoring as all hounds do when he suddenly jumped to his feet and be gan to snuff around We could see he was asleep by his eyes He ran here and there and then -struck the trail Sam my partner had made while dragging a doe in that afternoon and away he went in full cry When he was out of sight in the brush beyond the fire light Bill gave a yell for the dog to come back he was afraid the dog would get lost But the dog kept on and was out of hearing beyond a spur of a mountain in a few minutes Three days later the dog had not yet returned to camp Bill and I went still hunting to another lake ten miles away intending to stay all night but wre didnt We found Rove lying beside a brook seven miles from camp half starved with ribs showing like ones fingers We fed him all the stuff we had to eat and then led him to camp We tied him up nights after then All the sportsmen had seen dogs rise to their feet in their sleep or whine and squeal A few had seen dogs lying on their sides barking as if in full cry after a fox or rabbit and one had a half bull dog that used to have a fight about one night in six doubling up and rolling over by himself or with a rug in its jaws New York Sun Missouri Preachers for London There is a demand from over the ocean for Missouri preachers Not long ago the Rev Mr Briney of the Mober ly Christian Church received a call to a church in London and now it is re ported that the Rev John A Brooks of Memphis Tenn but formerly of Mis souri has been called to the British metropolis Dr Brooks is well known in Missouri where he was the first Pro hibition candidate for Governor in 1884 and great interest would be felt in his success should he accept the London pulpit It would seem that the American style of preaching would be a marked and agreeable improvement on the native London article which is generally impregnated with fog and covered with coal smoke lacking the fluency and vivacity to which Ameri can church goers are accustomed A Missouri divine in London would change the atmosphere for a large dis tance around the sacred desk Kansas City Star Mirror Made of Celluloid A London scientist has invented a mirror of celluloid which accurately re flects every object The celluloid mir ror is unbreakable and is cheaper than glass and lighter People rush around on Monday as though they were ashamed of having been idle on Sunday KffljjaKjJP H 5f I Like HHITTIKSSIU I UtMk So Of all the conspicuous figures of the civil war none perhaps has so varied and romantic an experience as General Jo Shelby Greater Generals than he were in the conflict more distinguish ed commanders have passed into his tory but taking him by and large as a typical American soldier a free lance among the lighter and more dash ing exemplaries of the art of war he stood with Sheridan Jeb Stuart Ros ser Custer and the other dare devils who rode to win in clouds of dust and amid the clatter of sabers That he did not know how or when to surrender is not so much to his discredit as a sol dier as his subsequent action in run ning off to Mexico and offering his sword to a foreign adventurer reflected upon his American citizenship But then his wounds were sore his years were few his ambition boundless and his matured good sense had yet to come When in 1867 after his experi ence with Maximilian he crept back to Fayette County Missouri and saw some beauty yet in the stars and stripes his vision took a wider scope and in spite of himself he had to admit that there was no land like the land of his birth General Shelbys experience in Mex ico at about the close of Maximilians regime sounds like a romance Major John N Edwards who some years ago was the Boswell of Shelbys career dwelt at length upon his experience with the ill starred Austrian It is worth reproducing here Major Ed wards said At the close of the war when Kirby Smith in command of the department was anxious to surrender General Shelby was an advocate of further re sistance French support medicines ammunition and French gold were coming by way of Mexico and upon these be based hope His protest was unavailing and the surrender was made at Shreveport and the army dis banded Before the surrender was made the army became dissatisfied with General Smith and General Shel by was commissioned to ask him to withdraw as direct commander of the army which he did in favor of General Buckner At the surrender of the army Smith surrendered to Buckner and Buckner surrendered to the United States Shelby then gathered about him GOO men They were Missourians for the most part and were willing to follow their leader to the utmost confines of the earth They determined to go into Mexico and take part in the contest then waging between Maximilian and Juarez Shelbys march through Texas is remarkable in many respects Tex as was a vast arsenal of arms and am munition at this time arid his troops were well supplied Some returning and disbanded soldiers at times attempt ed to levy contributions upon the surrounding country but Shelbys stern orders arrested them in the act and his swift punishment of depreda tions left a shield over the neighbor hood that needed only its shadow to insure safety When the first Mexican station was readied General Shelby sold his can non and his men took a vote the same night to decide which of the contending parties in Mexico they should join Shelby Avas decidedly in favor of join ing Juarez who led the revolution well arguing with his usual sagacity and foresight that the United States would never allow a foreign power to gain a foothold on American soil But his men favored the imperial party and he allowed himself to be governed by their wishes They crossed the Rio Grande at Eagle Pass and entered Mexico A few days later Shelby was offered the command of the States of Nueva Leone and Coahuila but the of fer was declined as his men had join ed the imperial forces Historians say that had General Shelby accepted this position he would in all probability have been joined by thousands of Confederates whose for tunes were to be made and with that force he would have been able to save Maximilian or might have become a power in Mexicos affairs However that may be General Shel by and his men had many a bloody and fierce encounter with the brigands that infested Mexico before they reached the City of Mexico One of these was the rescue and liberation of Inez Walk er a beautiful American who had been educated in California She was seen years before by Rodriguez a million aire Spaniard who took a fancy to her and abducted her In the encounter he was killed and the American wom an received the protection of Shelbys men Shelby offered his services to the Emperor but they were refused Max imilian was not willing to trust the Americans in his organized army It is a curious fact that General Shelby when interviewing Maximilians repre sentative predicted the situation that afterward befell that luckless Emper or When Shelby gathered his men about him and announced the decision of the Emperor he said We are not To I P MEpL wanted and perhaps it is best so Those who have fought as you have for a principle have nothing to gain in a -war of conquest I stand ready to abide your decision in the matter of our destiny If you say we shall march to the headquarters of Juarez then we will march You will refuse to day as you refused before because you are imperialists at heart and because poor simpletons you imagined that France and the United States would come to blows Bah the day for that has gone by Louis Napoleon has slept too long It was necessary that the men should have a little money and Ba zaine the French general was applied to He gave each man 50 and then every man went the way it best suited him At the time the famous emigration scheme of Maximilians Government was decided upon and the celebrated colony of Carlotta formed Agents were sent to every place in the South Land was set apart for actual American set tlers each to receive 640 acres Shelby advised his men to give up at once any further idea of service in Maximilians army Many accepted his advice and entered heartily into the duts of the new Kfe A few joined the imperial army in Sonora Gen Shelby with headquarters at Cordova became a large freight contractor Among those in the colony with him were Gen Ster ling Price Gen Stephens of Lees staff Gov Reynolds ex Gor Allen of Lou isiana ex Go v Lyons of Kentucky and Gen McCausland of Virginia Ex Gov Isham G Harris was also a settler Freighting soon proved unprofitable and he went to Vera Cruz and was fitted out with a vessel and instructed to sail for Havana in furtherance of the colonization scheme He loaded his ship with agricultural implements ex ported from America and returned to Mexico But Maximilians forces were meeting with defeat on every hand and Shelby saw that the end wras near At last Maximilian sent for Shelby and asked him how many Americans he could summon to his assistance Not a corporals guard said the General You are too late Referring more particularly to Gen Shelbys intercourse with Maximilian in the winter of 1866 67 Maj Edwards wrote these interesting details When Shelby arrived in Mexico the treasury was empty Maximilian had been ruling for a year The French held everything worth holding except ing that Mexican brigandage ruled and grew No effort of the French could stop it Maximilians Marshal Ba zaine ruled the military with a reign of death Suspected men were shot everywhere without the formality of a trial Maximilian was displeased His heart was with the Mexicans and he remonstrated with the marshal but to no purpose and finally there was an estrangement Shelby saw all these things and planned an interview with the Emper or Commodore Maury and General Magruder arranged it for him and Maximilian met him with evident frankness and sincerity The marshal was uresent and Count de None was interpreter Shelbjs plans as he laid them before the Em peror were to take immediate service in the empire recruit a corps of 40000 Americans encourage immigration de velop the resources of the country con solidate the Government against the withdrawal of the French soldiers and hold it till the people became reconciled to the change The Emperor simply listened with in terest and that was all It is only a question of time your Majesty said General Shelby till the French soldiers art withdrawn Bazaine smiled a little and the Em peror asked Why do you think so Because said General Shelby Mhe Avar between the states is at an end and Mr Seward will insist on a rigor ous enforcement of the Monroe doc trine France does not desire a con flict with the United States I left behind me 1000000 men in arms not one of whom has yet been discharged from the service The nation is sore over this occupation and the presence of the French is a perpetual menace The matter of which I have spoken to you is perfectly feasible I have author ity for saying that the American Gov ernment would not be averse to the enlistment of as many soldiers in your army as might wish to take service and the number need only be limited by the exigencies of the empire I think it absolutely necessary that you should have a corps of foreign soldiers devoted to you personally and reliable in any emergency Commodore Maury and General Ma gruder sustained Shelbys views of the case and he went on I have under my command at pres ent about 1000 tried and experienced soldiers All of them have seen much severe and actual service and all of them are anxious to enlist in support of the empire With your permission and authorized in your name to in crease my forces I can in a few J months make good all these promises 1 have made you here to day But the Emperor was silent Aris ing he talked in an aside with De Neue and went It is no use said De Noue to Shel by after the Emperor had left the room the Emperor Is firm on the VJjf of diplomacy He means to try negt tiations and correspondence with the United States His sole desire is to give the Mexicans a good government lenient yet restraining laws and to develop the country and educate the people He believes he can do this with native troops He is an enthusi ast and reasons from the heart In stead of from the head He will not succeed He does not understand the people over whom he rules nor any of the dangers which beset him It is no use General the Emperor will not give you employment I knew it said Shelby from his countenance and I say to you in all frankness Maximilian will fail in his diplomacy He will not have time to work the problem out Jaurez lives a3 surely In the hearts of the people as the snow is eternal on the brow of Popocatapetl and ere an answer could come from Seward to the Emperors Minister of State the Emperor will have no Minister of State History now tells how true was Shelby In his spoken judgment When the struggle came that Shelby had so bluntly and plainly predicted Maximil ian was in the midst of 8000000 sav ages without an army scarcely a guard abandoned deserted and be trayed As Maximilian heard the news of defeat after defeat he turned to the Americans and sent for Shelbyy arho was then at Cordova and Shelby faint at heart answered immediately and presented himself before the Emperor The interview was brief and almost sad How many Americans are there in the country the Emperor asked Not enough for a corporals guard said Shelby frankly and the few who are left cannot be utilized Your Ma i jesty has put off too long I dont know of 200 Americans who could be gather- ed before it would be too late I need 20000 said the Emperor TTou need 40000 said Shelby of all the imperial regiments in your ser vice you cannot count upon one that will stand steadfast to the end There are desertions everywhere As I came in I saw the regiment of the Empress marching out You will pardon me if ij speak the truth but as devoted as that regiment should be I would call upon your Majesty to beware of It Keep with you constantly all of the house- hold troops that yet belong to the pire Do not waste them in doubtful s battles Do not divide them The hour Is at hand when instead of numbers you will have to rely upon devotion It am but as one man but whatever a sin gle subject can do that thing shall be done to the utmost When the Emperor spoke again hisr voice was so sad that it was pitiful It is so refreshing to hear the truth he said and I feel that you have -told itj to me as one who neither fears nor Take this in parting and bpr that circumstances never rundcf impossible the right to die for principle He detached the golden cross of the Order of Guadalupe from his breast and gave it to Shelby who kept it until his death the sole memento of a part ing that was for both the last on earth St Louis Globe Democrat Elizur Sage as n Brave Soldier Elizur Sage whose house and lean to in Channahon is mortgaged for a loan of 50 to his uncle Russell Sage is well remembered by Colonel James A Sexton Of Chicago Colonel Sexton was in command of the company in which Sage served D Company Seventy-second Illinois Infantry The regiment was raised under the auspices of the Chicago Board of Trade and was mus tered in the service at Camp Douglas Aug 21 1862 Colonel Sexton came to the regiment after a years service in the Sixty seventh Illinois When he took command of his company he found1 among his men Elizur Sage a lad parently 13 or 14 years old who had been duly enlisted as a drummer h with the consent of his parents Recall ing him to mind Colonel Sexton said I recollect him Avell He was a sturdy actiAe and industrious boy kindly in disposition and a general favorite among the men being regard ed as a sort of a mascot though Ave didnt know what mascots were in those days Among the officers he was Avell regarded As a soldier he was first class lie serAed AAith the regiment throughout1 the Avar and participated in some of the hardest fought battles of the Avar He was at the siege of Vicksburg and in the battles that preceded its investment by Grant He was with us during the campaign against Atlanta and Avhen detached from the march to the sea he was with us at the battle of Franklin and the rout of Hood at Nashville Drummer boy as he was he had as perilous duties to perform as any man carrying a musket in the ranks In 1S63 as I recollect it the drum corps of every regiment were organized into a stretcher bearers corps That is they were made to go out with stretch ers and bring off the field all the wound ed to the field or some other improvised hospital The drummers and fifers were often between two fires that of their own command and of the enemy and I think it required more nerve and courage to do such duty than to stand in the ranks to be fired at always with the chance of firing back Young Sage as I remember him was as I haAe said a first class sol dier and took part in eleven pitched battles and 200 skirmishes being under fire 147 days out of the three years service of his regiment No man was ever so much deceived by another as by himself i