inn FCTRANTON TUIBT'NTE FRIDAY MORM&'tt-. APBUi 1:5. 18M. . x i in xi i i -v I c. s r w (MIA PTE?. XI. A before stated, Ike Duster belonged to the class (mown at tliat time and still referred to an ''poor whites." Through tho off its of hi wife be bad managed t. bold onto a small farm just outside of Winchester, left bin by bis father, but it ia doubtful if lr nrgu wtmts would have carried the day !':;l nay one inudp a cai ii offer for the fow acres, While K;o always referred to kith ii If m broken down by bard work, ulicmt five days out of every wick bad I on apeut tra&vpiug around the conn-1 try with liis gun or discussing "Van- ! Ues" and "niggers" in the village bar j rooms with others of his ilk. Accord-, I" his own lino of argument, h was u martyr, ill lock liad always followed him, even tc tho birth and death of I triplets. Mrs, Baiter also had a constitntlonal and ready mado grievance, If she had li en allowed to bavo Ijl-i way about j things, siie always argued, they would 1 ma ago have been rich and owned nig gers, '-, sab, real uiggers and mo! or fi wer $73 maw Is. " Il;u Buster bad also been granted a furlough, and according tothestoriea bo (old aft r reaching homo the battle if Bull Ruu would not have bees a vic tory without him. When anything was said about Kenton, ho was prompt ia replying: " urn Ujo Yankee! But wo uns lir.s got our eyes op in now, and ho nn can't play us no mo tricks!" He was so outspoken in bis language, and bis language was so bitter that Lawyer Williums and others were gin n an inkling of the true state of affairs. The lawyer found opportunity to In quire of Ike: " Didn't my nephew nlist of bis own ni cord, and is there a man in the com pany who has exhibited more bravery ami won wore of a reputation?" What did be un ru ih In and rally at Bull Run fur befo' Dnke Wyle could Kit tbarV" demanded Ike in n ply. "He un just wanted to show off and make believe. And Isn't be un givin us away to the Vunks all the time? And Isn't he nn talkln 'bout Glneral Jackson and boldin bend above us? And if he un giit; tlic ehanci won t he nn give up onr bull army to Uinoral McClellan? Ob, ! we uns has our eyes open fur bim!" Mrs. Baxter bad got tho idea from 1 Ike's loiters home that be had not only von a crown of fame under fire, but was holding tho whole federal army in check. She could read and write, but very poorly, she bad picked up most of ber information and all her military terms fi in others scarci ly lesa ignorant. When Ike appeared in sight down the i road, sb rau I i ni icl him and welcomed bim v1 ith: "Hurrah Cm Utnerul Ike Baxter, who fit and lit the Yankees dun run away!" "Don't j o' un know notbiu?" angrily dimauded Ike as be came nearer. "Didn't yo' nn lii and fit':" "Of uo'se i fit, but yo' needn't gab it an over itginny and matte othi t (oiks Jealous!" " Whar'a yo'r Btriper,?" she asked. "What stripes?" "'On yo'r arms yo'rgincral stripes?" "1 hain't no ginerul!" "Vo' hain't? Why, I thought yo' was l ors of the bull army! What 'I the aattcr yo' hain't no glneral?" "What's tho matter yo' hain't get no sense in yo'r In ad?" "But yo' on's a corporal!" "No." "A major?" "A leftenant?" "No." "Hain't yo' nn notbin bat jest com Hon folks?" she jserist-l. "No." "Didn't I alius Hay yo' un bad no Ipoorit ftlinut yo', and that's why we was alios p en and low down? she bitterly exclaimed as they passed into tha boose, "Ike Baxter, yo' hain't shucks! You nn'a low down, and yo' liko tostuy right tbarl Everybody clio SCOraip home with ginorsi'e and cor poral's anil major's strips! on thai wve but yo' has dun let 'eaj walk yo' Inter liio mud and hain't got no i.ji fit to resent it! If i d K.n down tbar, I'd 'a' ronin back m big as anybody! I've dun told everybody yo' nn was a gin eral, and now now yo'aoxtll jest com ia ;.!" .Mrs. Baxter fml down and wept and n ed hi r apron for a handkerchief, l);o had expected just such a ncoption, and he had a plan to develop at the proper tinie, Whilo she continued to weep be helped himself to a bits to eat from tbi cupboard and maintained silence. "And why didn't they tonke a gin (rat of yo'r" asked Mrs. Baxter after kLout 10 minnti s "If yo' nn dun bad any sense in yo' head, i could tell yoV he sullenly re plied. "Ssnsol Bensol If I hain't got sense, who baa? Jf a hadn't bin fur mysem e, we uns would hav bin right down to tater Skin I y'ura ago! it's my Sense that has kept ut outer the porehonso and lot ns bold ear heads up with the best of 'ami Leastwlsi i'vo alius held my head up, even it yo' hain't!" "It's this way," said Ika as ha con tinued to cat and reflect. "It's cor poral, fii rgeant, orderly sergeant, lef ten ant, captain, major, knrnel and gin erali 'fakes a heap o' time to git up tbarl Everybody has got to begin way down." "Jhit yo's not even a corp corporal yltl" sho exclaimed as one ey filled with tears of disappointmeht. "And what's tho reason 1 hain't? Do yo' nn remember that Yankee lawyer who lived yeie feller named Kenton?" "Seeps tiku I did." "He un'l to blame. Tried to git us nil captnr'd at Bull Him. Tried to put nil the pf3cera down. Clot In with Clin oral Jackson and talked agin US, par tieklarly me, Reckon be nn said a heap 'bout yp' too, wiiile lioun was at it. If it hadn't bin fur be tin, I'd hev hud uliiiieu on my m ms heaps 9' strincs CcPyRi&hTCO :254 Dr amt.-, cj,N n;;1; association. and yo'd bin prouJ o' mo'; It's jest he un th-.t keeps me down. Wcall bate bo un, but hini's .i.t Glneral Jackson on his bide." "The pesky varmint t" she gasped, with uplifted hands, "Ho nn't all to blame then?" "All to blame." "Talked about me to Glneral Jack soul What could he tin say?" "Dunno, but I reckon he un w ent on 'bout yo'r gwino b'arfut to church ami dippin snuff andgaddin 'bout and com pluinin. Ho nn ml. bed it in on both 0' ns powerful bard, moat likely, Befo' that Glneral Jackson was as good as pie to mo, but afterward be un wouldn't dun notice mo tall!" "Then then it's t!e Yankee who dun keeps yo' all back? she asked aft er taking a co'.ipluot minutes for reflec tion. "Jot h" v.n alone." answered Ike as be finished his snack. "A.idyo' all hain't got Bpunkuufl to drive ho un outl Ik Baxter, yo' un alius, did den let folks walk yo' inter the mini, but i didn't reckon it was as bad at tbisl Pur shame on yo'!" "How's we nil to drive be uu when Qlneral Jackson is in tho way?" asked s m ill v SI "Shoo, how won talkl" Ike, "If 1 never git to be 11 ginerul, 1 it's ho nn's fault, If I git killed or ; captnr'd, it's tho same. Duke Wyle would make roe sergeant tomorrer brtt fur that dod blasted Yank!" "Then If yo1 do.-m' pay him out 1 j will!" exclaimed -Mrs. Baxter as sho rose up with a (09k of determination on ; ber face. That's what Ike was waiting to hear, Ilo was now ri ady to develop the littlu plan sketched out in Captain Wyle's tent before leaving camp. "I reckon yo' kin do it better 'o we all If yo' want to try," be finally said, j "Yo1 know them stuck up Percys in town, of co s,'?' " "(Jf co'se." "He nn's in Inv with the gal." "I heard that yistarday." "If we all could brek it np.it would flatten be nn out. Jest think of a south ern gal lu. in a reg'lar Yankee Bpy, and probably goin to marry bim, when she coul I hev Dnke Wylp!" "Shoo, bow yon talk!" "And il we all could flatten bim out I'd s Mi be a glneral and prance around on a boss," continued Ike, "Drat bim, but bo talked about yo'toGinoral Jack son, and that's what hurts me mo tiian t'other!" "How kin I flatten bim out?" she asked, ready to begin work at once. Ike slowly lighted bis pipe and sat down on the doorstep and made room for ber beside bim. He- kept iier wait ing for another minute ami then unfold d his plan. She listened patiently until be was through and then pointed out the obstacles here and there. He re viewed the case and explained how ev erythingwas to bo overcome. Although an ignorant woman, she bad a good deal of natural shrewdness in ber com position, and after the plan bad been gone over in detail for the third or fourth time 'ihc said: "I'll try it anyhow, I hev alius dun bat d Yanks like pizen, and that Per cy gal i-- j St ! 01 tui kup fur anything! Might do her a b ap 0' good to come down a few pegs! If flatten ho un out, that win make yo1 a glneral?" "1 reckon." "And yo'll rido around on 'a critter and w'ar a cocked hat?'' "Yes." ''And bny me two new kaliker drtissco, a bonnet, a pa'r of shoes, " yo'll jest bo rlchaessand wealth ami look like a queen I" said ike as she hesi tated. "Then I'll do it if I hiV to walk : through lire, and p'raps I'll ride around 011 a critter too!" CilAPTEn XIT. I Panic does not always follow defeat, Indeed it si Idom does, A battle is a checkerboard wherein all the spots are inaikcd with blood. Tim checkers a:e men. men lying in reserve, men on the bat ilo lines, men charging on Hanks or ; center. The generals in command wylcli the board, if one makes a move on tho j rhjht or loft, tbo other seeks to take ad VOtntag lOf tt. For the time being they : (hutthalr ears to tfie roar of baftle, i shut their 1 yi , to the sight of dead and I wonnded, Beauregard halted at the 1 threshold of victory at Shilob. So with : McClellan at Antietam, At Fredsr J (oksbnrg Leo permitted Burnside to re j tri at after defeat. At lettysburg Meade l did tiie s:ime with Lee. Jackson bad ; tbrOWn himself against ShieldH at , RernstOWfi on the l ight, OH the left, on j the center. He I onld lot break the lino anywhere. He left his dead along a front of a mile and a half, but tbo sacrifice was in vain. It was military tactics to re treat to fall bach to a strong position and oldiguShieldH tor.ttaek him or give over bis march up tho Valley, Tlnre Is sometimes more goneralsblp ma retreat than in an advance or in fighting a bat tle. The train.! prntt bo saved, the broken and disorganised commands picked tip and l e-forined. the best tvoops sent to the rear to stand OS a Bulwark between the' exhausted army and the en thosJaatio enemy, Jackson h ft nothing behind him ar tillery, wagons 0: muskets worth gath ering up ami reporting. Mostot ins wounded wore Carried np the valley as bo fell back. Shields, followed slowly, and tho rear guard bad no fbjhUug to do. The panic of an army, of an unny cup' even, is a terrible sijlit, but tbo pauio of a town is sometbin;; Which no ono can fitly describe. Tho news of Jackson's defeat preceded him, and when be reached Winchester it was to bail a town w ild with fear and crazed by terror. War was young then, in alter years the old town changed bands without a tremor, gathered up too dead off its sire, ts t.nd buried them as part of the regular programme, "Tho Yankee art coming I Tho town will be given apto sackl Winchester is to be burned, and women und chil dren mast Bee!" 1 So rose the ".y frmn house to house, Some locked their doors und rode away on horseback or Ih their carriages. Others left their doors wide open and took the turnpike to the south 011 foot, carrying whatever they had at first laid hands on as a burden. Furniture WHS brought OUt and piled in the streets and set fire to, and had not Jackson's ad vance arrived ns it did the people of tho town would bare applied tho torch to their own rooftreea, The Yankee 1 il dior was popularly supposed to be with out honor or pity -a ruffian who stopped at no crime. Jackson paused ton fresh his men and allay tbeexdti meat. Tboso who bail not lied decided to n main, tli ingh fearful of consequences, but tho general exefb ment scarcely abated. The Percys wom among the first to hear of Jackson's defeat and the news that the Federal army was following him op and would soon be in Winches ter, They were excited, butnot terrified. "We will remain right here, and we shall not be disturbed, " said Marian to her mot her. " Tbo Federals hove not burned towns elsewhere nor made war on women and children, and they will not do so here. We have 00 CUUBO to bo afraid." Neither had they, but ciieunistanrs s which could not be foreseen soon caused a change in the programme. Among Jackson's troops was the remnant, of the Hhenandoab guards. AH the house servants about tho Percy mansion were colored people and slaves. Likoothors of their color, the general excitement had made them half crazy. They had left the house for the street to see and hear and were ready to catch no and believe the most absurd tales. Then) were two men and four women. Buck, who was a yonng man of 95, joined a party of the fleeing inhabitants harry ing up the valley. Uncle Hen, as be was called, was a man of BO, born and reared in the Percy family, and though sharing to some extent in tin; ge neral excitement he would not leave bis post of duty. He had said to the female servants: "1 nebberdun did Bee no Yankees in all my life, but I hain't gwino to bo afraid an ruu away. I didn't bring on dis wah. I hain't killed nobody, What dem Yankees want to hurt me for? Miss Marian hain't skeerod, Her mud- j der hain't abeered. If (ley hain't skeered, what yo' til want to be skeered for?" The lour women were on a Btn et Cor ner ia a aroun when (Jantnin Wvio ! passed by and recognised them as be longing to the Percy family. He bad beard from the gossips of the town lore; ago that Kenton was to carry off tho prize, Ho had written to Marian with considerable fervor and without men tioning the news, and sho bad replied In a very brief and formal manner. To revenge himself on a woman was quite fori ;;:n to bis nature, but as he saw the foor Servants and noted their state of alarm be remembered that he and Ike Baxter had a plan to carry out. Ten minutes later one of bis company was laying to the colored women: "The Yankees are only a eonplo of Dlili I away! if you all don't hurry, you wiil bo taken prisoners, and that means that every one of yon will be be ned at the Btakcl They shoot down white folks a::d burn niggers!" That was sufficient to start them off to join the fieeipg throng, Not one 0:' them returned to the house, Jackson sent out couriers to advise the panic stricken people to return, but hundreds bad gdne too far to be overtaken. Among them were the four women. Bhields entered Winchester without opposition. Within an hour the excitement bad sub sided. The Yankee soldiers had neither bonis nor hoofs. No one was molested nor made afraid, Where timid women requi rted it guards were placed at their doors, and instead of the merchants be ing robbed and ruined, as most of them bad fnlly expected, their properties wa re safely cared for. "Didn't I dun told you all so!" ex claimed Uncle Ben on the street that evening as lie was out looking for tho ml bug servants, " Yankees am jist de same folks as anybody. I'ae bin lookiu at heaps of 'em, nn 1 oan't see no differ ence. All dem folks who got skeered an ron'd away was fools! Yankees hain't, gwlnoter hurt nobody onlsss yo' un behave yo'self fast I" Captain Wyle knew where to find Iko Baxter's wile. Sho bad moved into town two Weeks before, leaving the farm to take can of Itself, That was one of the points in tho plan presented by Ike and accepted by lie r. Sho knew that Jacks m had I sen beaten and was on the retreat, but the did not know of tbo fate of Ike and many of bis comrades. Some of those who escaped both death and capture bad seen Jke go down, and il was certain he had fallen into Fed eral bands. Mrs. Baxter fell to sobbing as she heard the news from the captain, but her sorrow did not last long. "Drat that Iko fur n fool!" she sud denly exclaimed as grief gSVS plai I to indignation. "Didn't ho nn promise me las! thing tx lo' bim went back that if bim ever get Into another foul he 1111 would scrooch down so the bullets would fly over bim! It'a all in bim al ius wantln nnd hevin bis own trayspito of all I Hjn do!" "Iko and tho others Would have bern all right if they had not been betrayed," observed the captain, "Shoo, that's what Ike was sf raid of I Was if that Yankee agin that Lawyer Kenton?" The captain noddi d bis bead. ,flke hates him. So do I. Ifbonn hadn't stood in Ike's way, lk would hev bin a giii'ial befo' lhin. The onevy skunk, to befray his own comrades! If 1 could git hands on ho 1111, I'd kill bim! I'll never rest till I hev his lite, even if ike Ids up!" " Have you seen tho too Percys late ly?" asked tbo captain ns Mrs. Baxter got ready for another Wave of sorrow. "Did Iko tell yo'?" sho whispered, "Partly." "I've bin trviu to do oi we planned, but couldn't fetch It iko thought as 1 might get a place in tho bouse, but they uns hov got too'mauy uiggers fub that. ' ' "All their women liavo cut and ran not one left. If you should happen to oli'or your services there now, I think they'd bo accepted." "Shoo, nigger woman all gon9?" "I know it for a fact." "I'll go over thar this very hour!" said Mrs. Baxter as she reached for her snnbonnet. "Capting, was Iko right when be said this yen Yankee stood ia bis way?" "Yes, bo was." "Was bo right when bo said if we uns conbl get tbo Percy gal to'iato bim be would bother nobody no mi)'?" "Yes." "If 1 he Yankee v.'as shot or killed or sonthln, wonld Ike ride around on a critter and dangle u sword?" "It's quite likely. What plan have you got?" ".lest leao lb.it to me! Mobbo I haven't got any, and mebbe l'vo got a heap of 'em!" "Here Is what you are to remem ber," bo said as bo rose up to go, "If m in V' I -: lilt .: 1 . tone., i'..- "IFouId Ike ride around on aerUterttnd tiunijlc 11 strortlf" it hadn't i : for K( nton, not a man ii: our ompany wonld have been killed 01 captured." 'And what becum of lie un?" "Oh, he was captured, too, but ol course that was all 11 trick. However, I don't want you to say anything 10 coming from me. You needn't evei. say you bave seen inc." "I understand. Ike said ,vo was aftei tho gal too, 1 hope yo'll git her. Do o' reckon Ike was killed?" "I'm quite sine he wasn't," "Then I'll hoe him agin?" "Yes, alter a bit.' "Pore, pore Ike!" wailed the wife as bor apron went up to her oyes. 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