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ENQUIRES-SDN:COLI!MBES, GEORGIA, SCNDAT, SEPTEMBER 28, 18%.
\
THE OLD FARM HOME.
If you've been a happy rover
Through the fields of fragrant clover,
Where life is all a simple round of bliss,
When at eve the sun is sinking.
And the stars are faintly winking
Tou can call to mind a picture such as this:
Hark: The cows are homeward roami
Through the woodland pasture's gloam'
ihg
mfcg;
I can hear them gently lowing through the dells.
And from out the bosky dingle
Comes-the softly tangled jingle
And the oft repeated echo of the bells.
Strange how memory will ding her
Arms about some scenes we bring her,
And the fleeting years but make them stronger
grow;
Though I wander far and sadly
From that dear old horns, how gladly
I recall the cherished scenes of long ago.
Hark: The cows are homeward roaming
Through the woodland pasture's gloaming;
I can hear them gently lowing through the dells,
And from out the bosky dingle
Comes the softly tangled tingle
And the oft repeated echo of the bells.
—Chicago Evening Post.
LIST STRIKE AT OPHIR.
Ophir was the most prosperous mining
camp on the western slope of the Sierra,
and Wash Bonner was the most prosper
ous miner it contained. His claim, the
“Blue Juniata,” was paying enormously,
and Wash had become very popular, for
he gave away his money as fast as he
made it. Wash was a tall, good humored
Missourian, lean, light haired and sleepy.
No one gave him credit for much energy
or ambition, and the accident by which
he had stumbled upon his claim when
the camp was first settled was told far
and wide as a case of “fool luck.”
It happened this way: The camp be
gan as a placer camp, and ail the “claims”
along the stream or on the flat were
taken up, when Wash, a tall greenhorn
of a new comer, drifted in without a
dollar to his name and stood watching
the sailor company of runaways from
ships in San Francisco bay as they took
out their “ounce to the man” from the
best washings in the camp.
“What are you lookin’at, young fel
low?” said the captain of the company.
“Why don’t you stake out a claim?”
“All taken,” said Wash slowly.
“Go up on the top of the hill by them
oaks,” said the man, winking at his com
rades. “More there than here.”
Wash borrowed a pick, went to the
place indicated, and in an hour developed
the most famous mine of the district. It
was a curious pocket mine in a loose,
broken formation, and though every
nne rushed to the place and staked out
the whole hillside, no other claim ever
paid a tenth part as much as the “Blue
Juniata.”
In the course of time, as the region be
came settled and men with families came
jn, Wash fell in love with the pretty
daughter of a fanner in the Sacramento
valley. He reviewed the past, a hundred
thousand dollars had come out of bis
mine, and he had nothing left to show
for it. He resolved that if the girl
would have him he would never waste i
another cent. He went to the claim, j
worked all day, struck a “pocket,” and j
*ook out more than a thousand dollars, i
the largest yield of a single day in the
history of the mine. Then he qujj: work,
went to the town, “spruced himself up,”
tirove down into the valley, called on
the girl, proposed and was itObeptea.
“Jennie,” said Vfasli, “you’ve got to
take me, ef you want me, jest as if I
hadn’t any mine and wasn’t worth a
picayune."
“I do,” said Jennie: “it’s you 1 care
for, Wash.”
A month later they were married, and
began housekeeping in a little house of
white pine built near the mine. Then
Wash began the regular development of
his claim. For six months he kept up
courage, though not a dollar had come
from it in all that time. They lived on
what was left of the $1,000 after the
wedding expenses were taken out. Then
one day Wash said: “Jennie, the boys
think the old mine is played out, but I
don’t. IU never give it up while I live.
I’ll find a bigger pocket in that mountain
side than any man ever yet struck in
California.”
He climbed the hill, and began work
on a tunnel which should strike the
broken, gold bearing ledges at a lower
point than he had yet reached.
Months more passed over the heads of
the miner and his wife. One after an
other their friends deserted them. Then-
credit gave out, and they lived on game,
fish and berries, so that the little money
they bad could all be spent for blasting
powder. Every morning at daybreak
Wash, gaunt and silent, went to his
work, every night -at dark he stumbled
borne to his cabin.
“Jennie,” be said, “I know there is
gold tljere. We will find it soon. I
never before worked a month in the old
mine without taking out something.
This deadlock has lasted more than a
year. It can’t last always. I will find
the lead again, and then we will let the
rest go, and buy a farm in the valley,
where we can forget about this fight.”
She believed every word, for she was
a loving, loyal woman, and she knew
that this great awkward Missourian was
a man among thousands. 'The very boys
in town hooted after him and called him
crazy, but she knew better. Her family
bad once urged her to leave him and
come home, but they never ventured to
suggest it again. Old miners passing
by looked at the claim, and said there
was no gold left. Men who had thou
sands of dollars from her husband, and
owed their entire fortunes to him, at
last refused to give him credit for a sack
of flour or a side of bacon.
“You stick by the mine, Wash; I’ll
stick by you,” was all that Jennie said.
She never told her husband that she had
gone to her brother, who was rich, and
asked him for a little money "to carry
them through the winter. “Not for that
spendthrift Missourian to waste,” was
his answer. “He can clerk in my store
if he will give up his foolishness.”
Wash’s hair grew gray and thin. He
stooped lower and lower. Deep lines
were graven in his face, and his eyes be
came fierce and terrible. Men met Him
in the gulches trapping game, or down
in the streams With his fish nets, and
passed him by without a word. Pros
pectors, climbing over the hills, heard
the sound of his pick as he toiled in his
tunnel, and laughed him to scorn. “Be
cause he found a few pockets he is bor-
j ing right into the granite. Crazy as a
* loon, and his wife as bad. Her relations
| have done everything to help them—
j offered them a farm and the best kind of
I a show down in the valley.”
It was an afternoon in October. The
j saloonkeeper sat on the bench by his
i door reading a newspaper. He heard a
; noise at the head of the street; the vil-
j lage boys were shouting, “Here comes
; the crazy Missourian miner!” Wash,
I ragged and miserable, came into sight,
and after a moment’s hesitation spoke to
; him.
“Evening, Mr. Riley.”
“I can't do anything for yon.”
“Mr. Riley, listen to me. I hain’t a
j cent in the world. We’ve sold all our
goods and worked in the mine together
this month. Jennie’s held the drill while
I drnv it. I can’t get a pound of pow-
! der, but the holes are all set in the face,
ready. Something tells me this time it
! will touch gold. I can feel it just ahead.
I've felt it all along, but now it’s right
thar. within reach of one more blast. I
tell you, Riley, I know it’s thar.”
“You’re crazy, Wash.”
“Riley, you've got money. Give me
I one keg of powder an’ I’ll make you a
rich man. i'll give you half we take out.
You don’t know how I’ve worked this
year. I’ve hammered from daylight to
dark, gone hungry and slept cold, an’
fell down in a dead faint time and time
over. Put your hand thar!” He seized
the saloonkeeper's hand and held it on
hi.** reast. The man felt Wash’s heart
sway several inches, as if it had tom
loose from its place, and its wild, loud
throbbing was like the beating of a
mighty engine. “Thar,” said Wash,
“you see I ain't for long. That mine’s
for my wife. She’s stayed with ,it and
with me. I ought to have dropped it
and put my pride down long ago, but
now it’s too late. Riley, will you let me
have the powder?”
“No.”
Wash looked at his old enemy and
turned away.
No one in all that camp understood
the proud, unyielding soul that had set
itself to wrestle with nature and her
secret. The afternoon wore on into
night, and night into morning, and
morning, noon and afternoon built up
another day. Wash did not come back.
Some boys climbed the hill and went
into the tunnel. There lay Wash, dead,
at the further end of the tunnel, his pick
in his hand. He had gone back to break
his own way into the treasure house, but
his heart had burst in the midst of a
giant stroke, and he had fallen across
his own weapon. There his wife had
found him, and she, too, weak and sick
gnd heartbroken, lay in a faint over his
body.
Ophir camp woke with a start to some
dim sense of its crime. Tender hands
carried Wash and his wife out of the
tnnnel, and did all that could be done
for the poor woman.
A dozen men went back into the tun
nel from which they had taken the dead
..iin, and looked at the place where his
1 t faltering shock had glanced off thp
flinty rock.
“Boys,” said one, “I’ll never forget
that I told Walsh he couldn’t have any
ihofe powder, not if he died in his tnn
nel. We’ll set off them last blast holes
jest as he wanted, and then we’ll bury
him in here where he dropped,”
There was plenty of blasting powder
notv to be had for the asking, and in a
few minutes the face of the drift was
ready for the blast, the fuses set and
lighted, word had got around the camp
and every man was gathered at the
mouth of the tnnnel. A few women
were in the old cabin caring for the dy
ing wife. A long silence followed the
lighting of the fuses, and suddenly the
dull noise of the shock and the fall of
heavier masses of rock than usual star
tled the miners outside.
They ran into the tunnels with their
lights. The blast had opened a wide
path into an irregular cavern gleaming
with gold. Above, below and on all
sides was the shining, precious metal
The last blast for which Wash had strug
gled so bravely had revealed a fortune.
The excited miners rushed out again
with a wild shout. A woman met them
with flushed and frightened face.
“How can you make such a noise?”
she said. “The poor thing’s gone, cry
ing like a baby for her dead man.”
The miners drew close together,
ashamed and profoundly affected. Af
ter a little a few of them went back to
the tunnel and secured Wash's pickax,
which had been lying against the wall.
“We can’t bury them here, now,” said
one, “the mine will be worked again.
They must lie on the hillside, where all
his old friends of twenty years ago are
laid.”
Wash had no relatives. His wife’s
brother came up and took possession of
the claim, which the miners had protect
ed against all intruders. In a few weeks
it became generally understood in the
region that the wealth of the “Blue Ju
niata’s last and greatest pocket” was esti
mated by conservative miners at a quar
ter of a million.
But from the day that Wash fell dead
in his tunnel a blight seemed to fall on
the little camp of Ophir. Mine after
mine gave out; miner after miner moved
away. A land slide swept off the cabin
where Wash had lived, and though, as I
have said, the “Blue Juniata” yielded all
that was expected, and even more, and
founded one of the great Pacific coast
fortunes, none of its treasures brought
happiness to those who worked it. To
day the camp is deserted and its very
name a memory.—Charles Howard Shinn
in Detroit News.
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r 05 a :
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Arrive Griffin ! 3 50 p m 8:5*
Arrive Atlanta i 5 40 pm 10 :• r :
Through day coach Columbus to Allan’...
1 p m train. '
Leave Comm bus 2 45 p m
Arrive Greenville 6 15 p m
Arrivals of Trains at Columbus.
To Montgomery, Mobile and New Orleans, via
Union Springs.
Leave Columbus 7 10 a m 3 30 p m
Arrive Union Springs 9 1 *aia 5 35pm
Arrive Montgomery — 10 50 a m 7 05 p m
>ile
Arrive Mobi
Arrive New Orleans
2 05 a m
7 00 a in
From Macon 1130am! i —
From Americus 10 15 p m 9 30 p m —
From Birmingham 3 25pm. 5 30ani
From Opelika I 3 25 p m 13 58 a m 5 aC
From Montgomery
and Troy , 11 20 a m: 7 45 p m j
From Greenville 10 25 a m ' —
From Atlanta via'
Griffin 1130am 7 10pm
From Atlanta via I
Opelika 3 25pm 5 3^
•Daily, tDaily except Sunday.
For fn *" * * '
urther information relative to tickets, best routes, etc., apply to F. J. Robinson, Ticte
Agent. J. C. Haile, Agent. Columbus, Ga. D. H. Bythewood, I), i*. A., Columbus, Ga. . E. 1
Charlton. G. P. A.. Savannah. Ga