Devoted to the Protection of Home and the Interests 1 tlio County. ESTABLISHED II 1889. Vol. 5. f J. E. PAGE, ) Editor asd PnormrjTOR. J Gastonia Nj aiBecember 23, 1887J f One Dollar and a IIalf per Annum, V "IVTA K1 in Advance. j ll U U X ESTABLISHED IX 1SS0. Wiiy irl-i io AVronar. Ella Wheeler Wilcox's Letter. Youth is" youth where ever you find it. . Young' ' blood flows swift uud warm through pulsing veins. Young hearts long for companionship, young brains indulge in vague, sweet dreams of pleasure yet to come. A beautiful youiig girl can no mare he content witli prosaic duties, without one day of pleasure to brighten . her life than a meadow lark can be con fined in a cage. To attend faithfully the most commonplace tasks all day, to bear no word of praise for her labors, and to. retire at 8 o'clock on a beauti ' ful moonlight evening is little ' less than fortune to a girl full of sentiment .-t i i i : . , . i I , : ;a the existence of hundreds of country " cirls. The parents regard any hours spent in plearure as so much lost time. They extract industry and obedience from their offspring, invite no con fidence, and object to late hours or merrymaking. The young heart seethes in silent rebellion, and learns to hate its lot, and lives in hope that something will happen to give color to life. If the city idler, or the amorous farm-hand, or the married seducer happens to find her in these rebellious moods, why then we read in the news papers an item about the "Strange Disappearance " or " Uuaccountable Mesalliance" or " Shocking Depravi ty " or a hitherto quiet and respecta ble girl. The heartbroken parents are crushed with shame and sorrow. They can not understand why their beloved daughter should go astray. Ah! if they had only shown her demonstra tion of their love, if they had only sought to know her secret thoughts and longings, if they made an effort once a month to give ber a few hours of pleasure, she need not have gone astray. DARING AND SUFFERING. A History of the Andrews Eailroad Raid Into Georgia in 1862. The Most' Heroic and Tragic Episodo of the Civil "War. Einbraclne a Fall alid Accurate Account .-t ttt the Secret Jonnioy tw the Heart of Kail way Train iu w Confederate Camp, tbe TrrllIe Chase That Followed, and " tlie Subsequent Fortunes of the Lender and Hl Party. The (txneditiou, in the daring; of its inception, hod the W'iUlnews of a romance; while in the Kignntic ami bverwhelmin;; results it sought and wua likely .o obtain it was absolutely sublime. Ji'Do:; Advocate General IIoi-t's Official, Eb pout. It woh all tho iWjjest laid scheme, and on tile grandest Boalo, that ever emanated from the bruin ; of any number of Yankees combined. The SiTHERS Cosfederacv (Atlanta, Ga.), Aih-.I 15. lfcOi Despite it3 tragic termination, it shows what a hnmll'u of -bruve. men could undertake in Amer ica. t'ouTE de Paris" IIibtoiiy of thc Civil V.'ab IX Asn;aicA, vol. 2, p. 17. By WILLIAM PITTENGER, t A mnjUEit OP THE EXPEDITION. ICbpyrijfhted,.18S7, by "War Publishing Co., N. Yn and published by arrangement with them.j CHAPTER X. , OOSTEXAEXA BKIDGE.' The bridge was now just at hand. What should we do To leave it intact was to be thought of only in the direst necessity. Wo had carried our ammuni tionsthe fuel we had gathered into our last car, and while it was not as good as we would have liked, yet in a little time we could make a fire. We now punched a hole in the back end of our car in fact we had done this in passing from one car to another previous to dropping the last one and now began to let ties fall out on the track while we ran. They followed us "end over end," and showed a most per verse disposition to get oil the track, but a few remained. This moderated the speed of the pursuing engine, which was a help that we sorely needed, for it was now evident that they either had a faster engine than ours or better fuel. The latter was certainly the case, for we had been using wood very rapidly without any opportunity for. a long time past to re plenish it. The first feeling of despondency of the whole route took possession of us as we approached the bridge, with onr pursuer close behind. The, situation was in every way unfavorable for us. If we passed by without leaving it in cshes we felt that . one important part of our business would , be undone, even if we were completely successful afterward in evading pursuit and destroying the Chickamauga bridges. Murphy expresses the opinion that we made a'great mistake at this point. There was at this time a long and high wooden trestle by which the Resaca bridge is np- proached. As we came near we "slowed up," and right in the middle of this trestle we dropped tftir last car. Murphy says that if we had but thrown it across the track the bridge would have been at our mercy, as well as all the bridges above. He is right, but tte difficulty in doin this Is greater than ho thinks. To pull or push the car off by means of thc engine involved some risk of getting the engine itself off, which would have been fatal. We had no good means of moving it in any other way, and the element of time was aU important. The pursuers were right behind, and while they could not have fired on us at effective range, they could very quickly have alarmed the town ahtad of tis, and then the track could have been obstructed to prevent our passage. It is easier to imagine what "lnight have been done, than actually to do it, even if tho circumstances were repeated. There was no opportunity to turn and fight at this poiiit.' The town of Kesaca was within a few hundred yards of thc bridge, and any noise would bring help froin that quarter. Besides our pursuers were armed with guns, and our only chance of getting at close quarters was by an ambuscade. Had the day been dry, we could have flung fagots from tile eii irine upon the roof, but now a lire even on the inside of the large frame 'bridge would require careful nursing. With a suition only a fw hundred feet ahead, where the track might be so easily ob- OOSTEXACLA ISKII'CE. etructed, and with tho guns of the pur suers behind, we could not give time for this; so we slowly and reluctantly passed over the bridge, after dropping the car, and on through the - village of Kesaca. The pursuers took up this car as they had done the other, and pushed them both through the bridge, and left them on the Resaca side track. It may be well to notice here how our ignorance of tlie enemy and. his ignorance of us both inured to his advantage. There had been already many intimations among us that it would be well to turn and fight rather than to be chased any further. Had the real weakness of the enemy on the first train been known, Andrews would have certainly ordered the attack. Ou the other hand, if Fuller's party had known how strong we were he could not have induced them to continue the chase, even if the resolute conductor himself had not been willing to wait for help. It was believed at first that we were but four the number on the engine. The estimate was never raised higher than eight, Mur phy suggesting to Fuller even then that it would be better to wait for the train behind and take on more men. But Fuller resolved to persevere aud at least delay ns at the risk of his own life. Had it. been known that we were twenty, he and his slender band would not have been guilty of the madness of crowding on nearly twice their number, even if better armed, and sure of help at every station. But this madness, this unreasonable pursuit, the result of imperfect knowledge, served them well. After passing Resaca, we again forced our pursuers back by dropping ties on the track, and not knowing whether it was a telegraph station or not, we again cut the wires. No obstructions were placed on the track at this point, but it was on a curve, and taking a rail which had been bent in lifting it I placed one end under the rail at one side and the other project ing diagonaUy toward the train on the other side. The pursuers saw us start. but seeing no obstructions they ran at a good rate of speed ri..rht over this rail! Their escape was marvelous. Persons on the tender jumped a foot high, and one of Fuller's stanchest helpers demanded that the train be stopped to let him off! he wanted no more such running as that! But D uller, though considering1 this the greatest of their dangers, would not stop: and it was iinpossibla for- him to keep a ciifcfr luo&uuii Liiaii lie naq. none. e- - But what conjectures did we form to account for the unexpected appearance of this pursuing train? The Etory as iven to the reader was totaUy unknown then and we were greatly perplexed. She matter had great practical importance. Was the engine started after us by an authority which had also alarmed the" DKOPPIXG TIES OU THE TRACE. whole road ahead of tis? If so, we would do well' to abandon our efforts for the destruction of bridges and seek our own safety. Of one thing we felt sure, it must have been one of the trains we had passed at Calhoun or Adairsville that was following, but why? There were three possibilities only to choose from. The first and less serious was that the sus picious conductor at Calhoun, who had been so unwilling to let us pass, had de termined that we were impostors, and at his own motion had Bet out to follow us. If so, we would have to deal only with him, and might yet accomplish a part of our work. Or it might be that the freight had run to where we had broken up the track, had escaped wreck, and, tiirning back, had telegraphed ahead before we had cut the wire. In this case all the road ahead would be alarmed, and this was probable indeed. Or, once more, a messenger might ' have been sent down to Marietta from Hig Shanty, and a dispatch sent to Atlanta and around the whole circuit of the Confederacy back to Chattanooga, and, before the wires had been cut, to one of the trains we had passed, with orders to follow us closely and prevent us from damaging the road until a train coSld Ihj sent out from - Chattanooga to secure our capture. If either of these latters conjectures were true and they were the most probable our race was almost run! We would be obliged to leave the road, find essay the far more difficult task of escaping ou foot. If Andrews thought cither of these probably true, it would fully account for his 'reluctance in order ing the capture of a pursuing train; for such a capture could do no permanent good, while every one of his party wounded in the fight would be disabled for the in evitable and terrible land journey ahead, and would surely be lost. In view of the almost hopeless situation as it appeared to us then far worse than the reality, for the road ahead had not leen warned as yet tlie. heroic com-tancy of Andrews, who continued to put forth every possible effort as coolly and quietly as if success had been within his grasp, is made brightly conspicuous. There were'now three chasing trains; first, Fnllrr and his men with, the locomotive of the down freight; second, the Calhoun passenger, which had immediately follower! him and was not ery fir behind; and last, the tratu started from Marietta, and loaded with soldiers. For a time after leaving Resaca we did uot run very fast. It was evident that we could not get away from the eugine be hind us by mere speed; the ouly hope was in some way to disable them, or to ob struct thc track; and we were obliged to be saving of onr fuel. J5ut now we were approaching Green's, a wood station near Tilton, and we wore determined to have a fresh supply at any cost. Ko the last wood in the box, with a. little of our precious oil, va shoved into the furnace, and .Brown, who had now taken the throttle, turned on a full head of steam, and we once more flew along the track. At the same time we who' were in the box car put a line of ties along its floor and kept them moving to the hole in the end, and let them drop as fast as possible on the track. This was rapidly exhausting our ammunition, but it was elf ectual in enforc ing slowness and caution upon our pur suers. Fuller could not run rapidly in thc face of such a succession of obstacles. He did the best he could, giving the sig nal to reverse whenever he saw a tie on the track, jumping off and removing it, and on again, when the engineer would start with a full head of steam, and re duce speed, as the engine gathered head way to such a rate as would admit of stopping in time when another tie was seen. It was fearfully perilous, and the only wonder is that he was not wrecked long before the chase was done. But he probably understood that we were racing for the wood yard ahead. When we reached it there was no linger ing in the work of loading up. The wood was piled in frantically by men working for life; but before we had half filled the tender we again heard our relentless fol lower. So eager were we to get tho larg est possible supply of wood that we did not take their first whistle as a sufficient intimation to start. Then came, scream after scream of the most unearthly char acter, obviously designed to alarm thr ' I AT THE WOOD STATION. keeper of the wood yard that he might hinder ns from getting a full supply. i:ut this did not discourage us, for even whan Andrews reluctantly gave thc word to come on board, Wilson, who as firemen had a great appreciation of the 'r.ctd of uel, lingered still to get a hu.e r.r;::To:id more, and the enemy, oein;; our engine standing there, were actually obliged to "slow up" to avoid the collision il.at seemed inevitable. However we. did .not waifr for them to get. close enough t: use their shotguns at least cot to any cfA-ct, though Wilson is quite positive that eomo guns were fired. He says: "We had, however, secured only a par tial supply when the chasing train cr.nie in sight, loaded with armed sold-ers. Our pursuers were worked up to an infuriated pitch of excitement, and rent the very air with their screeches and yells as they came in sight of us, like dogs when the quarry is spruag. They opened on us at long range with musketry. The bullets rattled around us like hail, but fortu nately none of our party was hit." CHAPTER XI. A DIKIXT RAILROAD CHASE. But we now had a good head of steam, and with a joyful bound our engine, as if refreshed from its rest, sped on again. We had been careful to so obstruct the track that the enemy was obliged to come to a full halt, and thus give us timer to once more get out of sight. We passed Tilton in safety, and the water station, which at that time was at a different place from the wood yard, was soon reached. Our supply of this neces sity was low, and without it our progress would be at once arrested. We stopped, adjusted the pipes, told the powder story although from the battered appearance of our only car, with a hole knocked in each end, that story was no longer plaus ible, but it answered for the moment and we succeeded in getting all the water we needed. Had any objection been made we would have taken it by force, and the assurance with which we went to work aided in securing confidence. Before the tank was full the pursuers came in sight, but seeing r.s they ran slowly, and as a party of our men had run back and put some obstructions on the track, out of gnn shot, they were obliged to come to a full stop there, thus 'giving ns the time needed. Then we mounted and sped on toward Dalton. It was advisable at once to get deci sively ahead othe pursuers before reach ing this town, which might present seri ous difficulties. As there were i:0 bridges to burn now for a considerable distance, the only other thing was to try once more to tear up the track. The "cngk e was again in good running condition, and wo rushed rapidly forward, putting f cqnent obstructions on the track most ly by drop ping ties or sticks of firewood, but in one or two instances by reversing the i I'nine, jumping out and piling up obstructions. At a favorable place we stopped again for a more permanent break. . Long practice had made us skillful in "this matter, and the last two stops had shown us that the enemy could not run upon us without great care. So we divided at once into four parties. Scott and a companion cut' the telegraph; Knight carefully inspected the engine; two or three ran back just out of gnn shot, and heaped obstructions on the track, while the remainder worked with might and main in taking up a rail. It was here that a little occurrence took place that has been much misrepresented, A southern account, widely copied. says that Andrews' men almost mutinied against him at this place. Tho facts are these: The writer and the men in the box car had come to feel that there was no need of running so long before the pur suing train, which we could see to be a short one, with probably not mjtch if any greater force than our own'. Now while as many were at tho rail as could find places to work the process of lilting it with our imperfect tools was very slow, requiring more than five minutes I said to Andrews: "We can capture that train, -if you are willing." "How.-"' he asked. I answered: "Find a good place on a curve where there are plenty of bushes" (as the road had numberless curves, and ran mostlv through woods, this was easy); "then let us put on some obstructions and hide; one of our engineers can ran ahead a mile or two and come back after us; when the enemy stop to clear this track we will rush on them, and when we have captured them our other engineer-can reverse their engine and send it iii a hurry down the track to clear the road of any more trains that may be following.'' , - Andrews said, in hiiquiet' way, "It is a good plan. It is wiMrth trying," and looked around in a meditative manner as if weighing the chances. Then the enemy's whistle sounded, we saw them rush up to the obstructions we had placed on the track, stop by reversing, and labor as frantically to clear the road as we were doing in trying to raise the rail. But ' onr efforts were in vain. The stubborn spikes still held, and as they were ready to move on again, Andrews called out, "All aboard," and we dashed away. t That was not the place to make a fight, as we all knew, for revolvers against shotguns and rifles would have had no chance at long range; "but from an am bush we could have been climbing into their engine and cars before they could pick up their guns, ajid tlie conflict would not have been many minutes doubtful. This was the nearest v?e came to what a southern account called "open mutiny" a mere respectful suggestion in the line of our work. No officer was ever more heartily obeyed than was Andrews during the whole of this day,, and none ef us said anything more about this plan for the time, i partly becausS ive felt that our leader was better able to judge what was to Ie done than we, and partly also, I must confess, because we thought he was only waitiug for the best place to turn on our foes, and that ive would soon have all the lighting we wanted. The ful! speed of oilengine was again called into r!quisitf$HJrtS we neared Dal ton, and by the aid jf a few tie3 dropped on the track we were oncmore a respect able distance ahead. We needed this interval badly, for it was by no means certain that the switches at this point would be properly adjusted for our im mediate passage through; and if not, se rious difficulty might arise. We might have a battle with forces in front as well as in the rear, for Dalton was the largest town we had reached since leaving Marietta. Here a road diverged to Cleve land m Tennessee, where it connects with the main line from Richmond to Chatta nooga, thus making a large triangle, or, as a railroad man would say, a great Y. At that time no telegrapli wires were on this cross road; they were not put up till 1877. There were also .numerous side itracks, and a probability that cars might be left standing on seme of them; anil as we had more than made up our hour's delay at Kingston and were . now much ahead of time, there was no certainty of the road being rightly adjusted for us. It was . therefore necessary . to stop at the open ing or the switch, wuich was fortunately a little way down ffom the large passen ger depot, which had a shed over all the tracks, Mud through which we had to pass. ' , TTer tiu enolnfMia find nIiv-nfuoaa et An. drews Klmne out ftiih pre-eminent lusteriCj It is Jikeiy that when we had spoken of fighting a little wafback, his mind was occupied rather. wijjU. -.the problem of pass ing Dulton, and o&idging by what took place t hero whether the enemy was warned. The train was stopped, he ran forward. observed that the track was clear, spoke to one or two bystanders, and was back to his post in an exceedingly short time. To one or two who had come up even in these few seconds, he said: "I am running this train through to Corinth, and have no time to spare;" and nodded to Knight, who once more put on the full force of the engine there was nothing to be gained by care in avoiding alarm any longer, for the distant whistle of the pursuer was heard and we rushed at the depot, which then stood right across the double track, and passed with fearful speed under its roof. Here Knight got his most terrible fright. The darting into the partial dark ness of the shed was bad enough, but just at the far end the main track bends sharply to the left, and the swerve was so sudden, and the speed already so high, that Knight believed he was rushing on another side track, and that in a moment would come the awful crash. But instead the engine instantly righted, and he again saw the track straight before him. But so quickiy had we passed that we could not certainly determine whethef the people at the sta tion had been warned or not! A mile above Dalton, which was about as soon as the headlong rush of the engine could be checked, we stopped ngain, just opposite to where Col. Jesse Glenn's regi ment of conscripts were encamped in a field. Their position, which was within 200 or 300 yards of us, was probably not seen until we were close to them, and it was better to take the risk of their inter ference thau to lose time by seeking an other place for more pressing work. Again the wire was cut; but it was a second too late, for a message had just been flashed through, no doubt even as Scott was bringing it down. Tho usual obstructions were lwre piled on the track, and we again essayed to take up a rail, for the Chickaniauga bridges were just above, and we wanted time enough to get them ou fire, hoping that Fuller would stop long enough at Dalton for the pur pose of getting his telegram ready, to allow us to finish the track lifting. No men ever worked with more desperate en ergy, but all in vain; long before the rail was loose the pursuers were again upon us.' The race recommenced with all its speed and fury. The great tunnel was a short distance ahead a glorious place for an ambush, where, in the darkness, the guns of the enemy would be of little value. If Andrews was disposed to fight, there would be the place of all others to do it. With the smoke of our train filling the space, with our party in ambush along the sides, success would be comparatively sure, if they had twice our number, for of' course we could not tell how much of a re-enforcement they might pick up at Dalton. But we kept right on through the tunnel : and the village of Tunnel Hill beyond, where wo carefully drew down to conceal our number from the curious eyes of any who might be about the station. At Calhoun Fuller had received a small but very effective re-enforcement only a boy thirteen years old, but worth a dozen of ordinary men by means of one of those apparently small circumstances which often influence the course of great events. At Chattanooga the chief officers of the road had become alarmed by re ceiving no dispatches from Atlanta, or thc stations below Kingston. They there-' fore directed the young assistant operator at Dalton to jump on the passenger train just then leaving that station and go south, seuding them back word at each station passed till the cause of tho trouble was found. He bad only got as far as Calhoun when And -t w s passed, and Fuller in a. moment aftr. The latter hardly came to a stop betore he saw the operator, and called him, and without a word of explanation seized his hand and dragged him on the hrain. In the run up, how ever, he made all the necessary explana tions, and wrote out the following disi patch:.- v . : i .. . . " FULLER'S TELEOilAM, I "To Gen. Leadbctter, commander at Chafc tanooga:. i i . ' . ' "My train was captured this n. m. at Big Shanty, evidently by Federal soldiers in disguise. They are making rapidly; for Chattanooga, possibly with the idupi of burning the railroad bridges in their rear. If I do not capture them in the meantime, see that they do not pass Chattanooga; : "William A. Ft-ller." This he gave to the operator, saying, "Don't speak to anybody or lose a second till you put that through to Chattanooga. Jump for the platf onu, when I slow up, for I must push on and keep those Yankees from getting up a rail or burning the bridges." . ... j . i It was terribly quick work. The opera tor was at home in the office, and almost before Fuller had cleared the shed he was at the desk and the first words were over tlie wires. Whether theyi had time to get the whole message over before the cut is very doubtful, and not material, for ; the first two lines would answer every pur pose. Had Fuller stopped at this point, and himself went into the office long enough to set the operator at work, it is almost certain we would have had the rail up, and then all the bridges above that point would have been burned; though it is still possible that enough of the message might have been pushed through to secure our arrest In Chattanooga. This wns another striking instance of the many narrow margins on which this day hinged. As Fuller pressed on toward the great tunnel, even his resolute heart almost died within him, while all his party began to blame him for foolhardiness. He feared to plunge into its dark depths. It was still filled with 'smoke -from our en gine; and he well knew that if we jumped off at the far end and hurled back ur locomotive at him,: it meant a horrible death to every one on his train; and he was by no means sure that we would not do it. Mr. Murphy, who had so ;ably stood by him all the while, here counseled prudence, pointing out all the perils of an ambush. But Fuller realized as ap parently no one ; else .did the desperate need of pressing on to save the road; and he had made so many escapes and been' so marvelously favored, that a kind of fatalism took hold of him. He deter mined not to lose a minute, no matter what the danger might be. It may as well be said here that no prudent and common sense kind of i pursuit, such as possibly any other man would have em ployed, could have had the slightest chance of success. But even Fuller quailed as they dived into the cloud of smoke that hung around the entrance of the tunnel, and held his breath for a few seconds (they were still at full speed), till he saw with a sigh of relief a gleam of light ahead and knew that there was no other engine now in the tunnel! On he pressed, for he knew the .value of the Chickamauga bridges ahead as well as we aid. ; i i CHAPTER ;XH. A BURNING CAR. But for the wetness of the day all' his efforts even yet would have been foiled. We now did what had been in the mind of Andrews, doubtless, lor - some time past what he might have tried even at the Oostenaula bridge had not the inter val between that and Calhoun been so fearfully short. Ho ordered us to fire our hist car while wc were running. It was said easily, but was much harder to do. Everything about the car was as wet as it well could be. The rain fell in tor rents, and the wood was drenched in the tender. It was by no small effort and skillful firing that the engine fire could be kept at the heat required for fast run ning. But desperate fingers tore every thing combustible loose from the car, and; smashed it into kindling. Some blazing fagots were stolen from the engine and the fire made to burn. The rapid mo tion with driving rain was an obstacle at first, but as we fed up the blaze and shel tered it as well as possible, it grew rap idly, till soon but one could stay on the car and watch it, and all the others crowded on the tender and locomotive. The steam was now gradually shut off that we might come ; slowly upon the bridge and be able to leave the burning car just at the right place. We came to a full stop at this first Chickamauga bridge, a large one, and well covered. In side it was at least drier than on the out side, and we doubted not that! with time it would burn well. The only ques tion was: "Will that time be given?" We added almost the last of our oil and nearly the last stick of wood knowing that a wood station-was -nob far ahead, and if this bridge could- be made to burn well, we could have all the time we wanted to get wood and everything else. In fact we put life itself .on this last throw, and left ourselves, in case of failure,- hopelessly bankrupt. For a considerable time, as it seemed , to its, though it must ' have been measured by seconds rather than minutes, we remained on the other side of the fire kindling a fire in the eon car. watching. Then the inexorable smoke of the foe was seenj the ;piu connecting the burning car with our I engine was; pulled out and we slowly moved on. Too clearly we saw the ruin of all our hopes! To wait the coming of our foes was vain. Thy weie now near at hand, and we could see their guns, with which they would be able to light us at long range. The car which, if the day had been dry, would long before this have filled the bridge with a mass of roaring flame, was burning faster than the bridge. To take it to another bridge was useless, for the drenching rain would have given it little chance to burn away from the shelter of i the bridge. : Very sadly we left the tall column of smoke behind. The pursuers saw the car, and realizing how serious their loss would be if it was permitted to consume the bridge, they pushed right into the smoke and shoved the burning car on to Ringgold, but a short distance ahead, where it was left to smoke and sputter in " the rain on the side track. ) ., j -: . , .-- . -We were now on what proved to be our last run. I have often been asked if this day was not one; of great fear and terror on the part of those who were engaged in thc race. For my own part," I cannot honestly lay claim to any greater fear than I had often felt in ordinary military scrvicp. No matter what happened, there was the assurance that we still had one resource the power to turn around and attack he pursuing foe. From the be ginning, such a conflict had been present to my mind as a matter of course. Be-i fore leaving camp, this had been reckoned a natural consequence of our po&Ilion.l It had been frequently Talked of among the men, ami not one of them seemed to regard it with any more dread than an ordinary battle. We had been careful to select large revolvers for use, and not for show, and when we found the enemy gaining upon tis, or our leader's plans for their destruction failing, we only felt or said that our time to strike would soon come. We did not have the boastful feel ing that we were an overmatch for a large body of southern, soldiers, for we all knew how desperately they could and of ten did fight; but of the ordinary citi zens gathered up as we presumed our pursuers were, or even of conscripts, we had no great fear That we had "not our accustomed arms was a serious disad vantage, but this could be remedied by getting into close quarters; and we trusted that our leader, who had shown such wonderful skill in management, would be aole to put us withm short range of the pursuing train, where we felt sure that we could quickly give a good account of it. Probably the fact of Andrews having never been in battle, but always engaged in schemes where his own cool daring and sagacious planning counted for every thing, and mere force for nothing, made him hesitate to order an attack which would throw aside all these qualities and determine the issue by simple fighting. A time was near when we would firmly have disputed our leader's command if there had been an officer of any authority among us M'ho could have been substi tut oil for him; but not .until Andrews himself had definitely abandoned his au thority. '- - . . . ;-;;- t Many times the question has been aSked: "Why did you not reverse your en gine, and, jumping off, let it drive back at the enemy?" What good could that have done? If their engine and our own had been destroyed, as was very probable, to gether with a considerable number of lives, we would only have been where we were before we captured the engine at all, except that the whole country would have been aroused, and our disguise thrown olr. . -The second train would have been on the ground in a few minutes and the power of pursuit would have been un diminished. We had no wish to sacrifice our own engine until the last effort pos sible had been made. To merely destroy had no charm for us, when that destruc tion could neither promote our escape nor serve a military purpose. s : chapter xrn. . ' THE last itopje. We crouched, dowii as well as we could in the tender while passing Ringgold, that the enemy might not see our number, and when beyond - the town we arose - ami looked about us. The country was mostly woooea ana rougn, Deing mucn cut up by the branches of the swollen Chickamauga " creek. We had no fuel, though we might have taken on " a few water soaked fence raits and orofcen them to Durn mrtr-wliatr would have been the use? Every com bustible scrap was carefully gathered up and thrown into the engine. Worst symp tom of all, a large pair of saddle bags, Which we had never seen Andrews with out from the time of the midnight confer ence, together with his cap and some other pieces of clothing that he did not need for immediate use, were flung re morselessly into the furnace. Various papers went along. These were probably documents that he feared would compro mise himself or others in case of capture. Such preparations were indeed ominous. But his next command the last he ever gave to us as a party was more dreadful stSl, and for the flrst time that day there shot a pang of mortal terror to my heart. Not the crash of the engine down an em bankment nor the coming of ' another train of the enemy from the north, shut ting us between two fires, would have caused such a sense of despair and .hope less misery to steal over me. This was the order which, as intimated before, our party, had they been properly organized, would not have obeyed. i For our situation was still far from des perate. Aside from thc capture of the pursuing train, which would now have been very difficult from the fact that we had neither fuel for rapid running, nor the obstructions on board that were nec essary to place us far enough ahead for an ambuscade, there was another plan to which our leader was virtually pledged, which presented every prospect of saving our own lives, though it was now too late to accomplish our original purpose. We were some five miles beyond Ringgold, within a mile of Graysville, or nineteen miles by the longest railway course from Chattanooga. From that city westward to Bridgeport was tweuty-eight miles fur ther. But the nearest way to Bridgeport was not through Chattanooga, but fur ther south, and by that route it was not distant more than thirty -five or forty miles. The direct course was at right angles with the numerous mountain ranges which here run almost north and south, a route over Which cavalry could not be used, and which was known to more than one of our party. Two com rades had pocket compasses which would have guided us in thick woods or in cloudy weather by day or night. Now. to have left our train in a body, and without delaying to seek concealment, to have struck over the streams and mountains at right angles, a3 rapidly as we could go, would have been our : most hopeful course. Long before night of the next day we would have beeu safe within Mitchel's li.nes! Why not? How could the enemy have, captured us? If they sent cavalry, these would necessarily have made long circuits and have been obliged to adhere to the lines of the road, and thus could not have come near us while clinging to the valleys and f the mountain sides. Even in -thick-woods they could not have overtaken us. If they followed us with a strong party on foot, we fleeing for our lives, would not have deserved to escape, if we could not have held our distance for forty miles or more. If they had ridden ahead land raised the whole country for a general man huut, they would have had only J twenty-tour hours or less to orgamzo it, and no small party then could have ar rested twenty armed men. In fine, .this plan of escape through a mountainous and densely wooded country did not ap pear to me to be iuoi dangerous than a cavalry dash on the lines of the enemy's communications an every day military affair. Even if Mitchel did not prove to be in the neighborhood of Bridgeport wheu we arrived, we would then have boon in the loyal mountainous district Where we would have met as many friend. as foes. All that we needed in tho way of provisions aud guides our' force woul1 have enabled us to command.: and even guns and ammunition could readily have been gathered on our way. . . But all these advantages depended an our keeping together under one head. An army scattered and disorganized Is lost; and our little army . was no exception. . The fatal command which Andrews, now gave as "we were huddled together in the wood lxix of tho tender ,was to jump on!, one by one, scatter in the woods, and each man strive to make his owtfway back to the Union 'army! We hesitated, bat had no concert of action,no leader, no. time for council, and the instinct of obedience was still strong Upon us; but it was a fatal order, and led directly to the calami ties that followed. It transformed us in a moment from a formidable body ot picked soldiers, ready to fight to death, into a scattered mass of fugitive boys, be wildered aud hopeless in an enemy's country. Yet no one of us felt like censuring our lender for this order, which every one at the moment believed to be a terrible mis take. Probably he thought that .each man of the party would find relief in being cast ent irely on his own resources. It must further be remembered, in ex planation of this mistaken order, that Aiidrews had slept none the night before, that he had been nearly twenty-four hour without food, and that he had spent nearly two days and a night in the most exhaust ing labors, both mental and physical, that it is possible to conceive. . He had seen his cherished plans, when on thebrink of buc- cess, overthrown by what seemed the re morseless hand of destiny. To the many failures and sorrows of his past life had beeu added the crowning misfortune of this defeat. Perhaps under his calm brow he realized this with an intensity ot anguish, and felt that the greatest favor lie could do those he had led within sight of a horrible death, and into the presence of an enraged and triumphant foe, was to senarate 1 hem at nnm from bis own dart and shadowed destiny.' If so, that was the most fearful mistake of all; and as this order was given, we could almost, as w looked southward through the ' driving rain and the storm clouds, behold already the dark outline of the Atlanta scaffolds! It was pitiful! The General had served us well ever since the morning honr in fearful speed and patient waiting, in ex ulting rapt ures and in almost despair. It was hard to abandon ner now. She was substantially uninjured. The engineers, Brown and Knight, had taken good care of her, and with wood and oil in abund ance, there would have been no difficulty on her part in completing the run to Huntsville. She was still jogging along at the ratetf eight or ten miles an hour, -and could maintain that pace a little longer. The pursuers had also dxminiehed their speed, so as to just keep ns in sight, having apparently no wish to press upon what may have seemed to them like a wounded and dying lion. The command to "jump off and scatter" was repeated with the injunction to be quick about it, as the engineer wished to reverse the en gine and drive it back upon the enemy. With such a reason there could be no more hesitation. It is said that some three or four had already got off at the first word of command; but the most of ns had hesitated, not on account of tho still rapid motion of the train, but in tho idle hope that In some way this terrible parting might bo averted. Now one oiivr (UlUlIll 1 uuimuucu uuwu oil ui Lep and swung off. I was neither among the first nor the last, and jumping unskUl fully out from-the step, instead of for ward, whirled over and over on hands and feet for several revolutions. Rising in- a dazed condition, though unhurt, with the exception of a few scratches from tho briers with which the place abounded," I -looked over the animated scene with the deepest interest. . The men who jumped off were, according to instructions, flying; ' in different directions, a few others were same way that I had done, while the en- . gineers were attempting to carry out their scheme of reversing the engine, which could do no good now, except possibly to LEAVING THE LOCOMOTIVE. delay the inevitabla pursuit a little, and give us - a better opportunity to organize - nlna rPV.n V. 1. . 4-1. A .1 the reversal was made. Here is a slight conflict of authority. The pursuers say that the brakes were not loosed again; but our engineers are equally positive that they were. It is not material, for the re sult is -the same. The steam-power was so -low, that though the engine moved back' it was with moderate velocity, and I saw the pursuers reverse also, and conung to a full stop, whistle two or three times as it approached a seeaiing whistle of alarm, " though there was little ift the approach of our poor General to fear; and then they moved slowly before it for a short distance till', the two were In contact, when the' weaker stopped and the, steam was shut off. The great railroad chase was overl TO BE CONTINUED IN OCR NEXT. - FOR TORPID LIVER. A torpid liver deraasres tbe Wtiole sys tem, and produces Sick Headache, Dyspepsia, Costiveness, Rheu matism, Sallow Skin and Piles. There is no better remedy for these common diseases than Tutt's Iiver PiUst as a trial will prove. Price, 23c Sold Everywhere. IP ATTEMPTS Caveats, and Trade Marks obtained, and nil Pat'-nr. business conducted -for MODERATE OUR OFFICE IS OPPOSITE TT S PATFVT OFFICE. Wo have no suh-asrenctes. all busi ness direct, hence can transact patent business mote from Washington. SV-nd moilul, drawing, or photo, with de-, soript ion. We adviso if rmtentablo or no, f rn of charge. Our fee not due till patent is se--enved. : A book. " How to Obtain Patents," with mf. n-enees to actual clients in vour state, county, oi-town, sent free. Address C. A. SUV & CO.. Opposite Pulrnt OUHV, wnsiiinsy-'U.ll.C. Tiffs n