ft - K ,- . .' WC L. WILLIAMS, Tobacco and Cigars, Traits and Nuts of all Kinds. Mmtk C. L, WILLIAMS, We are making Fresh Candies daily. Come and see. V VOL. IX. NORTH PLATTE, NEBRASKA, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1893. NO. 51. MHL T I HOUSE Great Clearing Sale ! FOR CASH ONLY. Mi forth i Goods, Such as Clothing for Men, Boys and Children Gents' Furnishing Goods, Hats, Caps, Boots and Shoes, Will be Sold at 1GTU.L COST-1 Nothing will be reserved in this sale. Every thing goes AT COST FOR CASH. ONLY. Now is your time to buy goods according ro";the rimes. Model ; Cloth ingf House, North Platte National :Bglc, NORTH PLATTE, NEBRASKA. IPaid xip Capital, S75,OOG. w vr limoE, c. r. IDDINOS, A. r. STREITZ, DIRECTQBS: O. M. CARTER, M. C. LINDSAY, H. OTTEN. D. IV. BAKER. M. OBEKST, ,. A. D. BCCKWORTn. All business intrusted to us handled promptly, carefully, and at lowest-rates. I LUMBER, I i .coal, ; Order by telephone from Newton's Book Store. Dr. N. McOABE, Prop. J. E. BUSH, Manager NORTH PLATTE PHARMACY, Successor to J. Q. Tbafcker. " NORTH IPJLTTE, WE AIM TO HANDLE THE .BEST GRADE OF ffOODS, "SELL THEM AT REASONABLE PRICES, AND WARRANT EVERYTHING AS REPRESENTED. - orders from the country and along the line of the Union Pacific Railway Solicited. IT, BROEK R, Merchant Tailor, LARGE STOCK OF PIECE GOODS, embracing all the new designs, kept on hand and made to order. PJBRFBOT FIT GUARANTEED. PRICES LOWER THAN EVER BEFORE Spruce Street, between Fiftb and Sixth. CHAPTER II. Late that night, with jaded steeds, a little troop of cavalry was pushing westward across the desert. The young May moon was sinking to rest, its puro pallid light shining faintly in contrast with the mddy glow of some distant beacon in the mountains beneath. Ever since nightfall the rock buttress at the pass had been reflecting the lurid glare of the leaping flames as, time and again, unseen but busy hands heaped on f resbufuel and sent the sparlcs whirl ing in fiery eddies to the sky. Languid and depressed after a long day's bat tling with the fierce white sunshine, horses and men would gladly have spent the early hours of night dozing at their rude bivouac in the Christobal. Ever since, 9 in the morning, after a long night march, they had sought such shade as tho burning rocks might afford, scooping jip the tepid water from the natural tanks at the bottom of the canyon and thanking providence it was not alkali. ' The lieutenant commanding, a tall, wiry, keenfaced young fellow, had made the rounds of his camp at sunset, care fully picking np and scrutinizing the feet of his horses and sending the far rier to tack on hero :uid there a starting shoe. . Gaunt and sunburned were his short coupled California chargers, as were their toughlooking riders; fetlocks and beards were uniformly ragged; shoes" of leather and shoes of iron riiowed equal wear. A bronze faced sergeant, silently following his young enter, watcnea nwi wrra inqumng'eyGj and waited for tho decision that was to condemn tho command to another night march -across tho desert, or remand them to rest until an hour or so before tho dawn. "How far did. you cay it was to Cer alvo's, sergeant?" "About 22 miles, west." ' "And to Moreno's?" "About 15, sir; off here."- And the sergeant pointed out across tho plain, lying like a duncolorcd L" -ket far toward the, southern horizon. "Wo can get barley and water at both?" "Plonty, sir."- "The men would .rather wait here, I suppose, until 2 or 8 o'clock?" "Very much, sir; they haven't been able to rest at all today. I'vo icd out the last of the barley, though." Tho lientenant reflected- a moment. ,pafflSV studying thoieglJjf fee trum peter a horse. "Is thero any chanco of Moreno's people not having heard about tho Apaches in tho Christobal?" "Hardly, sir; they aro nearer the Tuc son road than we are. The stage must have gone through this morning early. It's nothing new anyhow. I've never known tho time when tho Indians were not in the neighborhood of that range. Moreno, too, is an old hand, sir." The lieutenant looked long and in tently out over tho dreary flats beyond ; the foot hills. Like the bottom of some prehistoric lake long since sucked dry by .tho action of tho. sun, tho parched earth stretched away in mile after mile of monotonous, life ridden desert, a Sa hara without sign of an oasis, a sandy barren Bhunncd even by scorpion, and centipede. Already the glow was dy ing from the western sky. Tho red rim of the distant range was purpling. The golden gleam that flashed from rock to rock as tho Bun went down . had van ished from all but the loftiest BummitB, and deep,; dark shadows were creeping .sfowiy otit across the plaiU' Over the great jexpanse hot sonuch as tlie faint-. :est -spark'- could He seen. "'Aloft, the Igreater -stars were fceginning io. peep through "the "veil Of -pallid lilue, wtiilo over tho distant pass the sun's fair handmaiden and trainbearer. with slow, stately mien, was sinking in tho wako of her lord, as though following him to hia rest. Not a breath of air was ast'r. ., - - . . Tho night came on stifl as tho realms of i'olitude. Only tho -sjow'.chatter of ilie" "men; tUd occasional' stamp" of iron 6hod hoof or the munching jaws ot tho tired Bteeds broko in upon tho perfect silence. From their covert in the west ward slopo of tho Christobal tho two sentries of tho little command looked upon a lifeless world. Beneath, them, whiffing their pipes after their frugal rapper, the troopers were chatting in low tones, somo of them already spread ing their blankets among the shelving rocks. The embers from the cook's fire glowed a deeper red as the darkness gathered in the pass, and every man seemed to start oa though stung with sudden spur when sharp, quick and imperative there came the cry from tho lips of the farther sentry : "Fire, sir-out to the west!" In an instant Lieutenant Drummond had leaped down tho rocky canyon, and HE CASINO BILLTABD HALL, J. E. GRACE, Proprietor; SUPERIOR BILLIARD and POOL TABLES. Bar Stocked with the Finest of Liquors. A QUIET AND ORDERLY RESORT Where gentlemen will receive courteous treatmeut at- all times and where they will always be welcome. Our billiard and pool hall is not surpassed in the city and lovers of these games can be accommodated at all times. In an Instant Lieutenant Drummond was standing by the sentry's side fieldglaaa in hand was standing by the sentry't tide. No need to question "Whers away?" Far cnt across the intervening plain a column of flame was darting upward, gaining force and volume with every moment. The lientenant never even paused to raise the glass to his eyes. No magnifying power was needed to m the distant pyre; no prolonged search to tell him what -was meant. The troopers who had spinng to their i feet and were already eagerly follow ing turnert snort in their tracks at his first word. "Saddle up, men. It's the beacon atthe6ignal peak." Then came a scene of bustle. No words were spoken; no further orders given. With the Bkill of long practice the men gathered their few belongings, ! shook out the dingy horseblankets and 1 then, after careful folding, laid them creaseless back of the gaunt withers of their faithful mounts. Tho worn old 1 saddles were deftly set; lariats coiled and swung from thocantle rings; dusty old bits and bridles adjusted; then came the Blipping into carbino slings and thimble belts, the quick lacing of Indian moccasin or canvas legging, the filling of canteens in the tepid tanks.below, while all the time the cooks and packers were flying about gathering up the pots and pans and storing rations, bags and blankets on the roomy apparejos. Drummond was in tho act of swinging into saddlo when his sergeant hastened "Beg pardon, lieutenant, but shall I leave a small guard with the pack train, or can they come right along-?" I "They'll go with us, of course. We i can't leave them here. Wo must head for Cera'lvo's at once. How could those Indians have got over that way?" "It is beyond me to say, sir. I didn-'t know they ever went west of the Santa Maria." "I can hardly believe it now, fc$tH there s no doubting that signal; it is to call us thither at all speed wherever we may bo and means only one thing 'Apachea here.' Sergeant Wing is not the man to get stampeded.. Can they have jumped the stage, do yon think, or attacked somo of Ceralvo's people?" "Lord knows, sir. I don't seo how they could hsro swung around there. There's nothing to tempt them along that rango- until they get to the pass itself. They must havo come around south of Moreno's. ' ' "I think not, sergeant." Tho words were spoken in a very quiet voice. Drummond turned in sur prise, his foot in tho stirrup, and looked at the speaker, a keen eyed trooper of middle age, whoso hair was already sprinkled with gray. .:- "Why not, Eland?" ' " Because wo havo been along "the' Tango for nearly 50. miles below here. siL and haven't-crossed a si cm- abo- causel understand now what rcdradnifr account for at 2 o'clock what. (I thought must bo imagination." "What was that?" "Smoke, sir, off toward tho Gila, north of Ceralvo's, I should say, just about north of w.st of where wo are." "Why didn't jou report it?" "You were asleep, 6ir, and by the timo I got tho glasses and looked it had faded out entirely, but it's my belief tho Indians aro between us and tho jipf; or were over thero north of Ceralvo's today. If not Indians, who?" "Yon ride with me, Bland. I'll talk wi th you'f urther about this. Come on with the men as soon as you have tho packs ready, sergeant." And so saying Lieutenant Drummond mounted and rodo' .slowly down the winding trail among tho bowlders. At tho foot of the slope, where the water lay gleam ing in its rocky bed, ho reined his horse to tho. left to givo him his fill of the pool, and hero tho troop addressed as Bland presently joined him. "Where was it you enlisted, Bland?" was tho younger soldier's first ques tionr "I understand you aro familiar with: all this country. " "At Tucson, sir, six months ago, aft- i er the stagecompsny discharged me.. "I remember," was tho answer as the lieutenant gently drew rein to lift his horse's head. "I think you were bo frank as to givo tho reason of your quitting their employment." "Well, there was no sense trying to conceal .it. or anything elseLa man.may dqnt here, lieutenants Thej-fired me for drinking too much at the wrong time." Tho section boss said ho couldn't help himself, and I don't Buppose ho could." "As I remember, " said Drummond presently, and with hesitation, for he hated to pry into the past of a man who spoko so frankly and who made no effort to conceal his weakness, "you wero driver of the buckboard tho Mo rales gang held up last November over near the Catarinas." "Yes; that's tho time I got drunk, sir. It's all that saved me from being killed, and between keeping sober and losing my life or getting drunk and losing a job I preferred the latter." "Yet you were in a measure respon sible for the safety of your passengers and mail, were you not ?" "Well, no, sir; not after the warning I gave the company. I told them Ramon Morales was in Tucson the night before we had to pull out, and wherever he was that infernal cutthroat of a brother of his wasn't far away. I told them it was taking chances to let Judge Gillette and that infantry quartermas ter try to go through without escort. I begged to throw up tho job that very night, but they held me to my contract, and I had to go. We were jumped not 10 miles out of town, and before any one could draw a derringer every man of ns was covered. The judge might have known they'd Ehoot him on sight ever since that greaser f rom Hermosillo was lynched. But they never harmed the quartermaster." "Huh! The devil fliey didn't!" laughed the lieutenant. "They took his watch and his money and every thing ho had on except his undercloth ing. How long had you been driving -when that happened?" "Just eight months, sir, between Tucson and Grant." "And did you never servo with the cavalry beforo? You ride as though you had." "Host men hereabouts served on one side or other," said Bland calmly, as his horse finished his long pull at the water. "And your aide was" "Confederate," was the brief reply. "I was born in' Texas'. Here comes the troop, sir." "Come on, then. 1 want to ask you about that trail to Crittenden as we ride. We make first for tho Picacho pass from here." Why, that's south of west, sir, " an swered Bland. " I had thought perhaps the lientenant would want to go north ward toward the Gila to head off any parties of tho Apaches that might bo striving to get away eastward with their booty. They must havo picked up something over at the Bend." "They're more likely to go south ward. Bland, for they know where we' ' been scouting all tho week. No, I'll march straight to the signal. There they must know whero tho Indians have gone." "Aye, aye, sir, but then yon can only pursue, and a stern cliaso is a long one." Drummond turned in his saddle as they rode forth upon the darkfalda and gazed long and fixedly at the trooper by his side. Imperturbably -Bland con tinned to look straight ahead. Queer stories had been afloat regarding this new acquisition. Ho mingled but lit tle with tho men. He affected rather the society of the better class of non commissioned officers, an offense not likely, to be condoned in a recruit. Ho was already distinguished for his easy Mastery of every detail of a cavalry man's duty, and for his readiness to go at any or all times on scout, escort or patrol, and tho more hazardous or lonely ihe task the better he seemed to like it. Then he was helpful about tho offices in garrison, wrote ft neat hand, was of ten pressed into service to aid with the qnartermaster or commissary papers, and had been offered permanent daily duty as company clerk, but begged off, saying ho loved a horse and cavalry work too well to be immured in an office. Ho was silenco and reticence itself on matters affecting other people, bnt the soul of frankness apparently where ho was personally concerned. Any- .body was welcome to know his past, ho said. Ho was raised m Texas; had lived for years on the frontier; had been through Arizona with a bull team in tho fifties, and had 'listed under tho banner of the Lono Star when Texas wont the way of all the sisterhood of southern (not border) states, and then, being stranded after the war, had "bull whacked" again through New Mexico; had drifted again across the Mimbrcs and down to the old Spanish-Mexican town of Tucson ; had tried prospecting, mail riding, buckboard driving, gam bling ; liad been ono of tho sheriff's posse that cleaned out Sonora Bill's little band of thugs and cntthroats and had expressed entire willingness to officiate as that lively outlaw's executioner in case of his capture. He had twico been robbed while driv ing the stago across tho divide and had "been left for dead in tho Maricopa jange, an episouo wnicn no said was 'the primal cause of his dissipations later. Finally, after a summary dis- crtargejie naa como to the adjutant at iCampL.owell, presented two or three certificates or goou cnaracter anu Drav ery in tho field from officers who boro famous names in tho southern army, and tho regimental recruiting officer thought he could put up with an occa sional drunk in a man who promised to make as good a trooper under tho stars and stripes, as ho had made under the stars and bars. And so ho was enlisted, and to the surprise of everybody hadn't taken a drop since. Now this, said tho rank and file, was proof positive of something radically wrong, either in his disposition or his record. It was entirely comprehensible and fully in accordance with human nature and tho merits of tho case that a man should quit drinking when he quit the army, but that a man with the blot of an occasional spree on his escutcheon should enlist for any other cause than sheer desperation and should then be come a teetotaler was nothing short of prima facie evidence of moral deprav ity. "Thore's something behind it all, fel lers," said Corporal Murphy, "and 1 mean to keep an eye on him from this out. If he don't dhrink next payday, look out for him. He's a professional gambler laying for your hard earned greenbacks." And so while tho seniors among the sergeants were becoming gradually tho associates, if not tho intimates, of this fine looking trooper, tho mass of the regiment, or rather tho little detach ment thereof stationed at Lowell, looked upon Bland with the cyo of suspicion. Thero was ono sergeant who repudiated him entirely, and who openly professed his disbelief in Bland's account of himself, and that was Feeny. "He may havo testimonials from all Texas, " said ho hotly, "but I'vo noussfor that sort of credentials. Who can vouch for his goings and comings hereabouts before ho joined us ? I think Murphy's right, and if I waa stationed at Lowell and belonged to his troop you bet I'd watch him close. " Now, in all the command it would have been a hard matter to find a sol dier in whoso favor appearances were so unanimously allied. Tall, erect, sinewy and active, he rode or walked with an easy grace that none could fail to mark. His features wero fine and clear cut; his eyes a dark hazel, with heavy curling lashes and bushy, low arched brows ; his complexion, naturally dark, was bronzed by sun and sand storm to a hue almost Mexican. Ho shaved clean all but tho heavy mus tache that drooped over his firm lips, and the sprinkling of gray about the brows, temple3 and mustache was most becoming to his peculiar style. One prominent mark had he which the descriptive book of his company referred to simply as "saber scar on right jaw," but it deserved mention more extended, for tho whitish streak ran like a groove from just below the ear tip to the angle of the square, reso lute chin. It looked as though in some desperate fray a mad sweep had been made with vengeful blado straight for the jugular, and, just missing that, had laid open the jaw for full four inches. "But," said Feeny, "what could ho have been doing, and in what position could he have been, sitting or standing, to get a.saber 6troke like that? Whero was his guard ? A bowie knife, now' ' and there the suggestion ended. j But it was the scarred side of Eland's soldierly face that young Lieutenant Drummond was so closely studying as they rode out into tho starlit Arizona night. He, too, had heard tho camp I chat about this apparently frank, opeu- hearted trooper, and had found himself moro- than onco speculating as to his riding in silence Tho other asked real past, not the past of his-imagination or of his easy offhand description. By this time, in perfect silence save for the occasional clink of canteen, the gurgle of imprisoned water, or, onco in a while, tho click of ironshod hoof, tho troop was marching in shadow col umn of twos well out bej-ond tho falda and over tho almost dead level of tho plain. Far ahead the beacon still blazed brightly and beckoned them on. It was time for precaution, j "Sergeant," said Drummond, "send a corporal and four men forward. Let them spread out across the front and keep 300 or 400 yards ahead of us. Better tako thoso with tho freshest horses, as I want them to scout thor oughly and to bo on the alert for tho faiutest sound. Any of our men who know this valley well?" "None better than Blend here, sir," was the half hesitant reply. "W-o-1-1, I need Bland just now. Put somo of the old hands and older heads on, and ;im't let anything escape their notice." "Beg pardon, lieutenant, but what's to bo tho lino of direction ? When wo started it waa understood that wo wero to tako tho shortest cut for Ceralvo's, and now we're heading for tho Pi cacho." "No, wo mako for tho pass first; that's tho quickest way to reach the signal station, then wo learn whero to strike for tho Indians. Bid you ever hear of their being as far west as the Maricopa rango before?" "Never, sir, in tho whole timo we've been here, and sinco tho lieutenant joined they'vo never been heard of crossing tho Santa Maria valley." "What on earth could tempt them out so far? There's nothing to be gained and every chanco of being cut off by troops from Grant and Bowie, even if they do succeed in slipping by us." "That's moro than I can tell, sir: Tho men sa' tho paymaster's coming along this week ; they heard it from the quartermaster's train wo passed at the Cienega thrco days ago." Trooper Bland was on tiio lelt cl tee detachment com mander as he had been directed, sergeant had como up on tho flank. "What men heard this?" Drummond, quickly. "Why, Patterson told me, sir, and Lucas and Qninn, and 1 think Bland hero was talking with tho train escort and must havo heard it. " "Did you, Bland?" asked tho lieu tenant, as ho whirled suddenly in his saddle and faced tho trooper. . "Yes, sir," was tho prompt reply; "several of tho men spoko of it. It'3 about tho most welcoino pieco of news they could give to fellows who had four months' pay due." In tho isolation of this mountain scouting business, when, as often hap pens, one officer is out alono for weeks with no comrades or associates but his detachment, it naturally results that a greater freedom cf intercourse and speech is developed between the com mander and some, at least, of his party than would ever bo tho case in years of garrison lifo; and so it happened that for tho moment Drummond forgot the commander in the man. "It is most extraordinary, " ho said, "that just when a paymaster is anxious to keep secret tho date and routo of his coming tho whole thing i3 heralded ahead. Wo havo no telegraph and j-et three days ago wo Imew that Major Plunimer was starting on his first trip. Ho ought to havo been at Ceralvo's last night. By Jupiter! suppose ho was and had but a small escort? What elso could that signal firo mean? Here! get those men out to tho front now at onco; wo must push ahead for all we're worth." And so at midnight, with steeds panting and jaded, with the pass and tho Picacho only four miles ahead, the little detachment was tripping noise lessly through tho darkness, and, all alert and eager, Drummond was riding midway between his scouts and the mam body so that no sound closo at hand might distract his attention from hails or signals farther out. Suddenly ho heard an exclamation ahead, tho snort of a frightened horse, then some" muffled objurgations, a rider urging a reluctant steed to approach somo suspicious ob ject, and, spurring his own spirited charger forward, Mr. Drummond camo presently upon tho corporal just dis mounting in the darknets and striving to lead his boon companion, whom ho could not drive, up to some dark object lying on the plain. This, too, failed. A low whistle, however, brought one of the "other scouts trotting in to the rescue. "Hold the "There's something out hero this brute shied at and I can't get him near it again." With that ho pushed out to tho front while tho others listened ex pectant. A moment later a match was struck, and presently burned brightly in tho black and breathless Then camo tho ptartled crv : "My Gcd, lieutenant, it's Corporal Donovan and his horse both dead." And even there Mr. Drummond noted that Bland was about tho first of tho column to como hurrying forward to tho scene. Ten minutes' investigation threw bnt little light upon tho tragedj'. Somo stumps of candles were found in tho saddlebags and packs, and with these tho men scoured the plain for signs. Spreading well out from the center, they closely examined tho sandy level. From the north camo the trail of two cavalry horses, shod alike, both at tho lope, both draggy and weary. From the point whero lay Donovan and his steed thero was but ono horse track. Whirling sharply around, the rider had sent his mount at a thundering gallop, back across the valley; then 100 yards away, in long curve, ho had reined him to tho southeast. Tho troopers who followed the hoof marks out about an eighth of a mile declared that, uu- wounded, both horse and rider wero making tho best of their way toward Moreno's ranch. Farther search, not CO yards to the front, revealed tho fact that at the edge of a little depression and behind somo cactus bushes threo human forms had been lying prone, and from this point probably had sped the deadly bullet. "Apaches, by God!" muttered one of the men. "Apaches, your grandmother!" was tho sergeant's fierce reply. "Will you never learn sense, Moore? When did Apaches take to wearing store clothes him corporai, a minute, Burke," said handing up tho reins. night. Awarded Highest Honors World's Fair. PRICE'S Q CI n V-l m smi The only Turc Crcaui of Tartar I f'tl;.-. .'o Amiuouia; 2w Ahi:i:. Used in Millions of Homes 40 Years tlie Standard. 8 a here. Move out farther, somo of you fellows, and see whero they hid their horses. Corporal Donovan was with C troop down tho Gila last week, sir. They wero to meet and escort tho pay master mcst like. It's my belief he was ono of tit) guard and that tho am bulanco has been jumped this very aight. Theso are road agents, not Apaches, and God knows what's hap pened if they'vo got away with Patsy. Suro ho was ono of tho nerviest men in tho whole troop, sir." Drummond listened, every nerve a-tingle, oven whilo with hurried hands ho cut open tho shirt at tho brawny throat and felt for fluttering heart beat or faiutest sign of life. Useless. The shot hole under tho left eye told plainly that tho leaden micsilo had torn its way through tho brain and that death must havo been instan taneous. Tho soldier's arms and ac contermeuts, tho horse's equipments, wero gone." Tho bodies lay unmuti lated. Tho story was plain. Separated in somo way from the detachment, Don ovan and hi3 companion had probably sighted the signal blazing at the pass and come riding hard to reach tho spot, when the unseen foe crouching across and heeled boots? in this, lientenant. There's no Apache Look here, sir, and A match teas struck and burned brightly in the black and breathless night. their path had suddenly fired the fatal shots. Now, whero was tho paymas ter? Whero the escort? Whero the men who fed the signal firc tho fire that long before midnight had died ut terly away ? Whither should the weary detachment direct its march ? Ceral vo's lay a dozen miles off to tho north west, Moreno's perhaps eight or nino to the southest. Why had tho escaped trooper headed his fleeing, steed in that direction? Had there been pursuit? Aye, 10 minutes' senrchover tho still and desolato plain revealed tho fact that two horsemen lurking in a sand pit or dry arroyo had pushed forth at top speed and ridden away fall tilt across the desert, straight :is tho crow flies, toward Moreno's well. Even whilo Drummond. holding brief consul tation with his sergeant, was deliberat ing whether to turn thither or to push for the signal peak and learn what he could from tho littlo squad of blue jackets thero on duty, tho matter was decided for him. Sudden and shrill thero came tho cry from the outskirts of tho now dismounted troop clustered about tho body of their "comrade. ' ' Another fire, lieutenant ! Look ! out hero toward tho Santa Maria." The sergeant sprang to his feet, shouldering his burly way through tho excited throng. Ono moment moro and his voico was heard in louder, fiercer tones; "No signal this time, sir. By God, they'vo fired Moreno's ranch t" CHAPTER IH. Shortly after sunset on this same hot evening tho sergeant in charge of tho littlo signal party at tho Picacho camo strolling forth from his tent puffing at a battered brier root pipe. Southward and a few hundred feet below his perch tho Yuma road came twisting through tho pass, and then disappeared in tho gathering darkness across tho desert plain that stretched between them and the distant Santa Maria. Over to tho east tho loftiest crags of tho Christobal wero still faintly tinged by the last touch of departed day. Southward still, beyond tho narrow and tortuous pass, tho rango rose high and precipi tous, covered and fringed with black masses of cedar, stunted pine and juni per. North of west, on tho lino of the now invisible road and far 'out toward the Gila, a faint light was just twinkling. Thero lay Ceralvo's. and nowhere else, save where the embers of tho cook fire still glowed in a deep crevice among tho rocks, was theie light of any kind to be seen. A lonely spot was this in which to spend one's days, yet tho sol dier in charge seemed in no wise op pressed with sense of isolation. It was his comrade, sitting moodily on a convenient rock, elbows on lmees and chin deep buried in his brown and hairy hands, who seemed brooding over the desolation of his surroundings. Watching him in silenco a moment, a quiet smile of amusement on his lips, Sergeant Wing sauntered over and placed a friendly hand on the broad blue shoulder. "Well, Pikey, are you wishing your self back in 'Frisco?" "I'm wishing myself in Tophet, ser geant ; it may be hotter, but it isn't as lonely as this infernal hole." "No, its populous enough probably," was the response; "and," added he, with a whimsical smile, "no doubt you've lots of friends thero, Pike." "Maybe I have, aud maybe 1 haven't. At all events, I've nono here. Why in ihundcr couldn't you let mo look into that business over at Ceralvo's instead ! of Jackson? He gets everything worth liaving. I'm shelved for his sake day after day." "Couldn't send j-ou, Pike, on any such quest as that. Those greasers have ' sharp eyes, and cue look at your face would convinco them that we'd lost ; our grip or wero in for a funeral. Jackson, now, rides in as blitho as a 1 May morning a May morning out of Arizona, 1 mean. They never get the best of him. The only trouble is he stays too long; ho ought to be back here "Humph! he'll be apt to como back in a hurry with Pat Donovan and those C troop fellows spending their money like water at Ceralvo's." "You still insist they're over there, do yon, Pike? I think they're not. I flagged old Feeny half an hour ago that they hadn't come through here." "Who was that fellow who rode back hero with the noto?" asked Pike. "I don't know his name. 'Dutchy' they call him in C troop. He's on his second enlistment.'" "Moro fool he! Tho nan who re-enlists in this territory must bo either drunk or Dutch." And Pike relapsed into gloomy silenco again, his eyes fixed upon tho faint flicker of tho bar lights at Ceralvo's miles away, but Wing only laughed again, and still puffing away at his pipe went on down tho winding trail to whero in the deep shelter of tho rocky walls a pool of water lay gleaming. Hero he throw himself flat, and lying aside his pre rious pipe drank long and eagerly; then with a sudden plunge ho doused his hot face in tho cooling flood and camo up dripping. "Thank tho Lord 1 have no desert march to make today all on a wild gooso chase," was his pions ejacula tion. "What on earth could havo in duced tho paymaster to send a detach ment over to the Gila?" He took from his pocket a penciled note and tlowly twisteditin his fingers. It was too dark to read, but in its soldierly brevity ho almost lenew it by heart. "Tho major sent Donovan with half the escort back to tho Gila on an Apacho scare this morning. They will prob ably return yonr way. empty handed. Signal if they have passed. Latham knows your code and we havo a good glass. Send man to Ceralvo's with orders for them to join at once if they haven't come, and flag or torch when they pass you. It's my belief they've gono there." This was signed by Feeny and over and again had Wing been speculating as to what it all meant. When the es cort with the ambulance and paymaster went through before the dawn, Feeny had roused him to ask if anything had been heard of Indians on the warpath "between them and the Sonora line, and the answer was both prompt and posi tive, "No." As for their being north or north of west of his station, and up toward the Gila, Wing scouted the sug gestion. Ho wished, however, that Jackson wero back with such tidings as he had picked up at Ceralvo's. It was always best to be prepared, even though this was some distance away from tho customary raiding ground of the tribe. Just then there came a hail from aloft. Pikey was shouting. "All right," answered Wing cheer ily; "be there in a minute," and then he went springing up the trail as though the climb of 400 feet were a mere bag atelle. "What's up? Jackson here?" he asked, short of breath, as ho reached tho littlo nook in which their brush covered tents wero pitched. Thero was no reply- "Pike! OPike! Where are you?" he called. And presently, faint and-far, some- whero down in the dark canyon to the south, a voice replied : "Down hyar. Something's coming up tho road." Surely enough. Probably a quarter mile away a dim light as of a swing ing lantern could be seen following the winding of tho rough and rock ribbed road. Then came the click of ironshod hoofs, tlie crack of the long mule whip. and a resonant imprecation" in Spanish leveled at tho invisible draft ani mals. Bounding lightly down the southward path. Sergeant Wing Boon reached tho roadside, and there found Pike in converse with a brace of horse men. "It's old Harvey's outfit, from Yuma, making for Moreno's," vouchsafed tho soldier. "Oh, is that you, Sergeant Wing? I ought to havo known you were here. I'm Ned Harvey." And the taller horseman held out a hand, which Wing grasped and shook with cordial fervor. "Which way, Mr. Harvey, and who are with you?" "Home to Tucson. My sisters are in Concord behind us, going to visit tho old folks for a few weeks before their trip to Cuba." "You don't tell me!" exclaimed Wing. "They're the first ladies to pass through hero sinco I came on duty at the station two months ago. You stay at Moreno's, I suppose-?" "Yes; tho governor meets us there with relays and four or five men. W knew thero would be no danger weal of the Santa Maria." "W-e-1-1, did you stop at Ceralvo's or see any of their people?" ''No, I never put in there. Father's very suspicious of that gang. Why dc you ask, though?" Wing hesitated. "There was some story afloat about Apaches," he finally said. "The paymaster's escort threw The taller horseman held out his hand, ichich Wing shook with cordial fervor. off a detachment toward tho Gila this morning, and I sent one of my two men (CONTINUED OX FOURTH PAGE.