<h3>THE DISMEMBERED "YALLER" DOG.</h3>
<p>Toward the end of December, 1864, the news trickled in of the utter
discomfiture of Confederate General Hood's army at Nashville, by
General Thomas. An enthusiastic friend of the President said to him:</p>
<p>"There is not enough left of <i>Hood</i> to make a dish-rag, is
there?"</p>
<p>"Well, no, Medill; I think Hood's army is in about the identical fix
of Bill Sykes' dog (the application from Dickens is noticeable as
showing Lincoln's eclectic reading) down in Sangamon County. Did you
never hear it?"</p>
<p>As a Chicago man Mr. Medill might be allowed to be ignorant of
Sangamon Valley incidents.</p>
<p>"Well, this Bill Sykes had a long, hungry <i>yaller</i> dog, forever
getting into the neighbors' meat smokehouses, and chicken-coops, and
the like. They had tried to kill it a hundred-odd times, but the dog
was always too smart for them. Finally, one of them got a coon's
<i>innards,</i> and filled it up with gunpowder, and tied a piece of
punk in the nozle. When he see this dog a-coming 'round, he fired this
punk, split open a corn-cake and <i>squoze</i> the intestine inside,
all nice and slab, and threw out the lot. The dog was always ravenous,
and swallered the heap--kerchunk!</p>
<p>"Pretty soon along come an explosion--so the man said. The head of the
animal lit on the stoop; the fore legs caught a-straddle of the fence;
the hind legs kicked in the ditch, and the rest of the critter lay
around loose. Pretty soon who should come along but Bill, and he
was looking for his dog when he heard the supposed gun go off. The
neighbor said, innocentlike: 'William, I guess that there is not much
of that dog left to catch anybody's fowls?'</p>
<p>"'Well, no,' admitted Sykes; 'I see plenty of pieces, but I guess that
dog <i>as a dog</i>, ain't of much account.'</p>
<p>"Just so, Medill, there may be fragments of Hood's army around, but
I guess that army, <i>as an army</i>, ain't of much more account!"</p>
<p>(Joseph Medill was editor of the Chicago <i>Tribune;</i> he was one
of the coterie who claimed to have "discovered" Abraham Lincoln,
and surely added propulsion to the wave carrying him to Washington.
Another version of this anecdote is applied to the breaking up of
General Early's rashly advanced army in July; but it would seem, by
Mr. Medill's name, that this is the genuine; the other is not told
in the Western vernacular of Mr. William Sykes.)
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