5. 36~7L I~n niggsr run, the Paddy Roll will get you Run nigger run, it ‚ a almost day. That nigger run, that nigger flew That nigger tors his shirt into. . ~ Run nigger run, the Paddy Roi]. will get y~ Run nigger run, ‘ 8 almost day. Both Bart Thrner and hi. brothex~ Nat enlisted in the services of the Contederaoy. Nat Turner was a member of the First Arkansas Volunteere, a regiment organized at Helena and of which Patrick R. Cleburne was colonel, Dick Berry and Milt Wiseman, friends and neighbors of the Thrnere, a180 volunteered and enlisted in burn‘ a coimiiand. These three stalwart young men from Thillips County followed Cleburne and. fought under hie battle flag on those bloody fields at ~iloh, ~irfreesboro, Ringgold ~p, and Atla~ta; and they were with him that day in November in front of the old gin house at Franklin as the regiment formed for another and what was to be their lazt charge. ~he dead lay in heaps in front of them and almost filled ~he ditch around the breastworks, but the con~and though terribly cut to pieces waa forming as cooly as if on dress parade. Above them floated a peculiar flag, a field of deep blue on which was a crescent iuoon and stars. It was Cle.burne ‚ s battle flag and well the enemy knew it ; they had seen it so often before. ~I tip my hat to that flag“ said the Federal General Sherm~n years after the war. “Whenever my men saw it they knew it meant fight.“ As the regiment rushed on the Federal breastworks a gray clad figtire on a chestnut horse rode across the front of the moving column and toward the enemy‘ s guns. The horse went down within fifty yards of the breastworka. The rider arose, waved his sword, and led his men on foot to the very ramparts. Then he ataggered and fell, pierced with a dozen balla. It was Cleburne, the peer~~ less field~inarahal of Confederate brigade commandera. The Southern cause stiffered a crushing defeat at Franklin and the casualty list recorded the n~a