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Old Times - A TALK WITH CHAS. WILGUS
HOW THEY LIVED IN THOSE DAYS
Ironton Register,
Thursday, September 8, 1887
The Miller brothers carried the mails from Maysville
to Limestone and for a year from Wheeling, Va. They would
travel sometimes on one side of the river and sometimes on the
other. If they noticed Indian trails on the Ohio side, they
would return on the Virginia side. They camped in the woods
and built fires in a hole dug in the earth so the blaze
wouldn't show. They would scrape the snow away and roll
themselves in their blankets and sleep. Joe was, at one time,
returning on the Ohio side; he had shot a deer and was
skinning it. Hearing a slight noise on the hill above him, he
looked up and saw what he supposed to be elk's horns
glistening in the sunlight. What was his surprise to see about
thirty Indians appear on the bluff above his camp. He hastily
tied his shot pouch to his head, grasped his rifle in his hand
and swam across the river. He reached the other shore,
ascended the bank and got behind a tree. The Indians called
him to come to them, but he knowing them too well, fired his
gun at the crowd and ran as fast as possible on his way
leaving them to enjoy his hard earned supper on the other
side.
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