THE TIMES, NEW BL00MFIEL1), PA., SElTEMBElt 13, 1881. WAS IT A VISION ? ON the 2(tth of AugUBt, 18(12, I was la the Union army, and the regiment to which I belonged wan deployed as skirmishers In front of Longst reefs (Confederate) corps, not far from Gainesville, Vft. During the day there was some firing on the part of the opposite forces, but no sustained engagement, although we cotlnued to press upon the enemy until darkness settle! down and put an end to further mana-uvers. At nightfall, I with four or live com panies of niy command, remained In the position occupied by them iluiiug the day, while the rest of the regiment, detailed for picket duty advanced to the front. I was in excellent health and spirits, but being greatly fatigued, full asleep almost Immediately after the arrange ment for the night had been perfected, and soon began to dream. For some considerable time my mind wandered over the events or dwelt upon the scenes which were familiar, aud which, upon awakening 1 found no difficulty in locating. After a while, however, I wandered into a dreamland where all seemed -strange. I fancied myself in a line of battle with my comrades lying In apiece of timber fringing an open field for some considerable extent, the farther side of which sloped geTitly forward form ing a ridge parallel to our frout. Upon the ridge I could distinguish something like a dozen cannons, and could see the Confederate artillerymen resting upon the earth or lounging in little groups with their guns, as distinctly as I could have done with my natural vision. I could almost perceive the puff of smoke from the rilles of the enemy's sharpshooters and hear the reports of their firearms, and the ding aud thud of the bullets. I might here mention as a further description of the field, that the wood in which we lay was quite clear ' -of underbrush ; that we occupied the edge nearest the foe, with a rail fence between us and the cleared space of which I have spoken, aud this fence some three hundred yards, more or less, to our right turned oft' at a right angle aud ran quite up to the Confederate Jine. As was the case where we lay, so it was on our right. The fence separated , the cleared field from the timber, which latter constituted two sides of a paral ellogram, the angle being, as already ob served, not far from the right wing of my regiment. While I was taking in these details, and experiencing meanwhile the pecu liar sensation which sometimes annoy even old campaigners when compelled to remain inactive under a drooping fire, I thought an order came for us to charge the batteries before us. About midway in our line, running parallel with our line, I noticed a de pression commonly called by farmers a "Dead furrrow" it being the "finish ing oft'" place in ploughed fields. We passed over this and continued our charge across the open space and up the slope to the very muzzle of the cannon tionirades falling by scores at every step and then, all at once, we seemed to be enveloped in impenetrable darkness. My senses were left blank. The next moment, however, light returned and I was lying on the ground, fighting still going on about me, but whether wound ed or not, my dream, or whatever it was, did not inform me. While thus prostrate and helpless, I . gazed about me and saw, a short distance in the rear of the guns, a small cabin, and in its gable, which was towards me, & window. About the building were grouped many wounded men, some standing, others lying dowu. In the immediate vicinity of myself there seemed to be hundreds who had fallen in the con test. Casting my eyes in the direction from which we had come, I beheld the rem nant of my command in full retreat. I also noticed the sun, which was shin ing brightly, and appeared to be in the vicinity of an hour above setting. At this point I was awakened from my slumber, and learned the time to be about 2 P. M., of August . 0. Having my dream as I considered it, in my jnind, I made Inquiries and ascertained that during my nap everything had re mained uuusuully quiet, only a few shots having been exchanged on the picket line. An hour after we were on the march to Hauaxsasand the baltletleld-of Grove ton. i I must really confess that the realistic character of my excogitations during sleep affected me considerably, and all the more because the scenery depict ed was altogether strange. My memory though questioned to the uttermost, failed to recall any locality through which I had ever passed that at all re sembled It, Consequently I felt unusu ally gloomy and depressed in spirits, and all the morning carried In my heart a presentlmeut, the nature of which can scarcely be described, of approaching evil. The old battlefield of Bull Hun was reached early In the forenoon, and about 12 M., we were advanced a mile or so to the northward, where we were as signed our position in the line of battle then forming.' The statlou occupied by my regiment happened to be in a timber skirting an open field, which terminated at a dis tance of some 000 or 000 yards in front of us In a ridge crowned with several Confederate battrles, the guns In plain sight. The enemy's sharpshooters lay by their artillery, concealed from view, but the puds of smoke from the mus kets sufficiently Indicated their locality, and disclosed the fact that our opposite lines were parallel. On our left the country was open, but In the opposite direction, beginning at a distance of some three hundred yards from our right, the timber extended up to and beyond the ridge already de scribed. ' The excitement consequent upon the fighting going on about me and the skirmish firing drove the dream tempo rarily out of my mind, although its im pressions were allowed to remain. About 5 o'clock in the afternoon, as I could judge, we were ordered to charge the position in our front; and the vari rous regiments of the brigade, niy own occupying the second place from the left, advanced to the dangerous under taking. Moving from our place of shelter, we were greeted with a severe shower of grape, cannlster or shell, the first dis charge of which we encountered as we were climbing or in some manner get ting over or past a worm fence of five or six rails high, and which had Interven ed between ourselves and the cleared field beyond. When about half the distance of the ridge had been traversed, one of the men nearest to me fell; aud although going at a double quick, I noticed as I hastily glanced down at him, that he had fallen In a " dead furrow ;" but yet the event of the night previous did not recur to me. I was thinking of some thing else about that time. We charged ahead aud reached the hill. The enemy's gunners had lied. The crest was almost gained, as we (or at least, I) thought, when suddenly I found myself in total darkness. A pressure upon my throat, a ringing in my ears as though my head was plunged in a stream of running water; a sensa tion of dizziness, numbness, suffocation, aud of falling, and then a shock as' I struck the ground ; how well I remem ber it all now. The concussion of the fall seemed to restore my sight (consciousness had never left rue) and to this day the in cidents then transpiring are as fresh as though they had occurred within the year. For instance; While I was momen tarily reeling, just at the time of being hit, preparatory to a fall over backward, I heard a comrade remark ; " There goes " (mentioning my name,) and I remember thinking, even on my way down to the Mother Earth with the back of my head, that I was "gone" instead of going. But to continue : So soon after fall ing as possible, I constituted myself a board of survey to assess the damages sustained, and forthwith entered upon the investigation. I found that as a personal matter the injuries were quite serious a minnie ball having penetrated my throat.passed between the jugular and windpipe, and found an exit at the back cf the nec"k, quite low down, and close by the spine which is slightly fractured. After making up and sending in this report, aud doing what I could to stop the flow of blood by forcing into the wound some lint, and a handkerchief I fortunately had with me, I crawled, as best I could, in my paralyzed condition, to a more sheltered position, which, however, was exceedingly difficult to find. It was the hottest place I was ever in, and hotter than I hope for in the future, The loss was terrible, more than half my command being either killed or wounded, the other regiments of the brigade suffered in proportion. (Speaking of hot places in a battle, one does not cannot understand what they are until he is struck down on the field, there to lie, utterly helpless, while bullets are humming and singing like ten thousand swarms of bees, pattering on the ground and casting up little pull's of dust and dirt.as the rain drops during a heavy shower do on the waters of a lake, or crushing into the bone or strik ing with a dull thud the quivering flesh while grape and cannlster shot and shell are bowling, hissing screaming over and about bis prostrate form I say one must need experience all these things in order to fully understand the meaning of the term " a hot place." Then, if he thinks at all be will be Inclined to believe that the cauldron of bell, with the cover off, Is but an Ice cavern compared to the particular local ity fate has fated him to occupy. The fighting continued only a short time after I fell ; but before It was thorough ly over I dragged myself into a cut of an abandoned railroad, which ran along its lilll-slde almost at its summit, and where the Confederate army had lain. As I did this I caught sight of a small cabin standing Just beyond the batteries we had bo vainly tried to capture. I could perceive the roof, and as low down as the eaves. The gable stood facing me and In it was a small window. At this moment I remembered my visions of the previous night. In stlnctlvely I turned and looked in the direction of my comrades. They were In full retreat, followed rip by the victo rious foe. The sun was low down In the heavens, Just as I seen it In my sleep. Boon afterward the Confederates car ried me back to the cabin. Hundreds of our wounded were there as well as the enemy's besides a large number of men who had died. Everything corres ponded with what I bad gazed upon four hours before. The vision was verified. Now comes the curious feature of the case. The nearest I had ever been to the locality described, previous to the day on which I was wounded, was upon the old Bull ltuu battle-field, some two miles distant, and from which It was absolutely Im possible to get a limited view of the field upon which I lay. I had never seen a sketch or photograph of the coun try. These are facts upon controversy. How then is the matter to he explained V Was it simply a coincidence, or was the circumstance to be properly classed among those strange cases of "second sight," of which we read V I can understand an ordinary dream, for the visions which it brings to view are almost invariably based upon some Incident of the past. The visions may be grotesque or distorted, but yet, if we search long aud carefully enough, we cau reasonably aocouut for them. As heat will restore the date on a coiu other wise uudistlnguishable, so sleep wlU frequently restore, through the agency of dreams scenes and events long since forgotten aud gone from the recollection during waking hours. But if the coin never bore a date then nothing exists to be restored. But if there be no foun dation in fact, how can a simple dream bring to view scenes through which the dreamer subsequently passes that are verified in every important particular by his actual experience t It Is a knotty problem.aud one I have tried again and again to solve, but with out success. The facts are submitted as they actual ly presented themselves in my case, and let blm who can, or thinks he can, fur nish the key that shall explalu them satisfactorily. A Chapter on Pens. DOUBTLESS the first Instrument ever used by man for writing was a stick, with which marks were made on the earth and next to that a stone for making more durable marks upon bard substances. But in the most ancient periods of civilization we find allusions to the stylus and the sheets of wax. The ancleut Egyptians used a particular kind of reed for writing with ink. Along the shores of the Oriental sea this reed is still found, and is still common ly used as a writing utensil. It is very hard and about the size of a goose quill. Pens made of this reed were well enough adapted to writing the Eastern alphabets, which consist for the most part of straight and thick strokes, with aspringllng of dots. But when the dif fusion of the Latin language demanded finer Instruments, the feathers of the large birds began to be used, such as the swan, the ostrich, the turkey, the goose, and the crow. Of all these, the goose quill was found to be the best, and this became throughout Christeudom the universal writing implement about the year 000 A. D., and held its ground uutil within the recollection of living men. Indeed, there is still a considerable num ber of persons who still prefer the goose quill to any other implement. Both the goose and man have been great gainers by the introduction of metallic pens. The consumption of goose quills lu forty years was enormous. Oreat Britain imported in one year -0000, 000, from St. Petersburg alone,aud in all civilized countries the trade in the article was very large. At the schools the mend ing and making of pens was a serious task to the teacher, every boy being supplied dally with from two to six pens, all of which bad to be mended after being used. I can well remember when teach ers were obliged to spend all the odd moments of the day ia mending pens ; for this was one of the tasks which a boy could not be trusted to attempt. He was extremely likely to waste a quill, and cut two or three fingers, as the knife had to be extremely sharp. The goose was also a great sufferer. It was discovered that the quill feathers could be taken every year from the 11 v- blrd, and so leave room for another crop to grow. The operation was performed by farmers' wives, who first caught the goose, and then thrust Its bead Into a stocking; after which the quills could he drawn without danger from an aveng ing bill. Millions of men aud geese felt the In convenience of the quill pen, which or dinarily had to be changed or mended after twenty minutes of continuous use The first attempt to substitute metallic pens was made In England In 1804; but the attempt was not very successful. The pens then were made In the barrel form, similar to the quill pen in shape, but thick and clumsy, being wholly made by hand. They were kept in a case of bone for carrying in the pocket, and were used to some little extent by commercial travelers. The great objec tlon to them was that they, cost a dollar and a quarter each, and the point was very soon oorroded by the action of the ink. They were not worth their cost and soon fell into disuse. The first American patent for metallic pens hears date 1810, aud was Issued to Peregrlme Williamson, of Baltimore. This patent also seems to have borne no fruit, and little was beard of steel pens until, about the year 18i9, when a cer tain Mr. Perry produced an article that really answered the purpose. What People Say. ONE of the perpetual stumbling blocks in the way of happiness Is that re curring question, "What will people say!1" We would wear our old clothes and be comfortable, live on half our in come and put half aside for a time of need, do without a great many things which are unnecessary but fashionable, and choose for our acquaintances and friends the people we like best, but " what will people say V" as if people, which does not mean the few for whom we really care, but the great abstract world, have any thing to do with it. Do people pay our bills when we buy what we do not want to please them t Do they think any more of us when we have climbed by infinite pains aud in convenience to their standard? Much more likely they see through our foolish tissue of worldllness and toadying, and despise us for the very effort we made. There is nothing so futile and fleeting as popular favor. The people who from a sudden fancy or caprice, may take us up to-day will drop us to,morrow ; the man or woman who lives with this end in view will be disappointed and de serves to be, for working for popular praise, or from a fear of what people will say, can never be productive of good. Shakespeare has said, " Be thou as pure as ice and chaste as snow, thou shalt not escape calumny," and the cen sure of the world a light thing so it be undeserved. There are sweet and gentle natures which shrink from its adverse criticism. They believe in "people." iney tuioK tue woriu a kind of alma mater, instead of censorious judge, uutil too late, they find that they have ex pended all their strength and courage in trying to please and failed, and they never rally from the shock. The Blind Miner. About two weeks ago a man came to Warrior Station (a mining region tweu-ty-one miles north of Birmingham, on South and North Alabama Railroad) seeking employment as a miner of coal, When it was discovered that he was blind be was laughed at, and it was thought an impossibility for a blind raau to dig coal. He persisted lu his efforts to secure a place, only asking that a fair test be given blm. After a short time he was ttken to the mine and proved bis efficiency as a miner.' He works without a lamp, as that would be of no benefit to a person deprived of eyesight. The coal mined by this man is said to be as clear of slate and dirt as that of any one employed in the mines, and the yield from his room as great as that of other miners. His little son leads blm to the mines and into bis work room, leaving his father during the day, who digs coal, separates it from the dirt and other substances, keeps the the roof of bis room propped up, loads the small cars aud pushes them out to the main track, as if be possessed the eyesight of two persons. At night the dutiful son returns to the mines, takes bis father by the band and leads him borne. W. A. Graves is bis name, and be is a native of Union County, Ga., was a Confederate soldier, and on April 9, 18G4, at Appomattox Court House had a minnie ball pass through his tem ple, causing the total loss of eyesight. lUrminyham Observer. Skill In the Workshlp. To do good work the mechanic must have good health, IT long Hours or con finment in close rooms have enfeebled bis band or dimmed bis sight, let blm at once, and before some organic trouble appears, take plenty of Hop Hitters. His system will be rejuvenated, bis nerves strengthened, bis sight becomes clear, ana his whole constitution be built up to a better worklug on run ton. 37-!18 'r- St EEnillEDY. FOB E 9 itiBii win r w w Tr mr k m e. ii Nauralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, Backache, Soreness of the Chest, Gout, Quinsy, Sore Throat, Swellings and Sprains, Burns and Scalds, General Bodily Pains, Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frosted Feet and Ears, and all other Pains and Aches. No Prr-psratlon on enrth equals Pt. J On. na ft i,mri', fmfnml rhrttp Kxterrml Remedy. A trial entail but the comparatively trifling outlny of BO Ontn. mid every one fmflerliiK with paiu can have cheap and positive proof of Its claims. Direction! In Eleven languages. BOLD BT AIL DRUGGISTS AND DEALERS IN MEDICINE. A.VOGHLXR & CO., linltimnrr, Sfd., V. 8. A. May 3, 1881 ly jusTalleiT CENTRAL STORE .NEWPORT, PENN'A. Now oiler the public A KAKE AND ELEGANT ASSORTMENT OF DRESS GOODS Consisting of all shades suitable for the season BLACK ALPACCAS AND Mourning Goods A SPECIALITY. BLEACHED AND UNBLEACHED J M U8LINB, AT VARIOUS PRICES. AN KINDLE SELECTION OP PRINTS' We sell and do keen a, ennd duality rtf SUGARS, COFFEES & SYRUPS a 4 -..,..... 1. 1 .. i t ji . a auu ovciwiiug unuer me ueau 01 ? GROCERIES ! Machine needles and oil for all makes ol Machines. To be convinced that our goods are CHEAP AS THE CHEAPEST, IS TO CALL AND EXAMINE STOCK. No trouble to show goods. Don't forRet the CENTRAL STORE, Newport, Perry County, Pa. TJ iS S3 PURE TINTED GLOSS PAINT ! DOi'V'T make experiments on your buildings with untried aud unreliable amides at your expense. for water and benzine fl.CO to I2.C0 per gallon. IiO U Ti the Lucas reliable and guaranteed Tinted Gloss Circulars and Sample Cards of Paint mailed on application. JOHN LUCAS &-' CO.. 141 North Third Street, 13 6m Fhiladelpula, Pa. II pi n Yourselves by makinir money when i (rolden HHI Wchauce in oner!, thereby always keepm lllvL.1 ioverty from your door. Tkoeo who always take advantage ot the mxxl chances fur niakinr mousy that are ottered, Keneraliy hucome wealthy, while tuoeo. who do not improve such chances remain lu poverty. We want many meu, women, boys aud Kirls to work fop us rltrlit in their own localities. The business will pay more ttiau teu times ordinary wskcs. We furnish au expensive outnt aud all that you need, fre. No ou who eiiM-SKee fails to make niouey very rapidly. Ynu cau devote your whole time to the work, or only your spare momenta. Full iiiforiontiou and all that is needed sutfree. Address STINSON CO., Portland, Maine ' ESTATE NOTICE. Notice Is hereby given, that letters of administration on the estate of Rev. 8. 8. Richmond late ot Torone township. Perry Couutv. ha., deceased, have been crauied. to the undersigned. P, O. Address Laudisburg, Perry County. Pa. All persons Indebted to said estate are request, ed to make immediate payment and those having claims will pi osent them duly ftutheulicated lor settlement to ALBHRT E. RICHMOND, Chas. H. Rmilrt, Att'y. Administrator MaylO. 1SS1.