. C. L, WILLIAMS. We are making Fresh Candies .daily. Come and see. . bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb rB , - qM 1 VOL. IX. ' NORTH PLATTE, MMASMilRife DECEMBER 20, 1893. BBS. BBBBBBBH r ATTIT VJ-w- i-k mr-mm--m -r si -mw- tt s-w lHsBsM rl . " ' 0 TVj " Vu:7''Wm??1?''' H. iSBBBBBBl 114U1I I III ik I llll il llill 1 Ua sMssssV-rss-. .-..wI -CSS4,.l!iiUl!JJi" " A i ii ii iii' i i i ill 'i lit i' i ii-ii v'i i' ir i mm iir -w mLnv . ?ziftWMMaaiff vk ill ii in i i.i ii h ii. Mill i Mil rr im iri l m mi r n nn I -Great Clearing Sale ! BBsl BBBBBBBBK f SSJT rtMlVBIRUT IfiQinVZ-ilABI PC ISlUi? ' T'flj ibbbbbb- iwaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaatr i i vvr iiiui ii. i u.it J im a i i iriiiuLd l i I ni v , r jl . NO.-50. FOR CASH ONLY. BIO .Worth- of Goods, Such as Clothing for Men, Boys and Children, Gents' Furnishing Goods, Hats, Caps, Boots and Shoes, Will be Sold at 3 -i Nothing will be reserved in this sale. Eveiy- thing goes: AQOyBtCASHONIrfe 2 4C is your time to buy goods according ro the times, Mode! : Clothing ; House, 3a,s: Einstein., ropxietor- North Platte National' Ba7nlc. NORTH PLATTE, NEBRASKA. -TO aid up Capital. cBTo.OOO. ZJJ 1 C. T. IDUIXGS, A. T. STBEITZ, UIRECTOKS: O. M. CARTER, M. C. LINDSAY, ii. OTTEX, D. W. BAKER. , ir.OUERST, A. D. RUCK WORTH- A-irbusinees intrusted to us handled promptly, carefully, and at lowest rates. O F IDDING LUMBER, ; COAL, Order by telephone from Newton's Book Store. , Dr. N. McOABE, Prop. J. E. BUSH, Manager. NORTH PLATTE PHARMACY, Successor to J. Q. Tbacker. ISTOHTH: PLATTE, NEBRASKA. WE AIM TO HANDLE THE BEST GRADE OF GOODS, 3ELITHEM AT REASONABLE PRICES, AND WARRANT EVERYTHING AS REPRESENTED. orders from the country and along the line of. the Union Pacific Railway Solicited. BY J". BROEKEE, Merchant Tailor, OIj U -A. 3NT U 3Et A TJI3 H.SFAIHUH. LARGE STOCK OF PIEOE GOODS. ' embracing all the new designs, kept on band and made to order. PERFECT FIT GUARANTEED. PRICES LOWER THAN EVER BEFORE Spruce Street, between Fifth and Sixth. THE CASINO BILLIARD 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 treatment at all times and where thej will always be welcome. Our billiard and pool hall ii not surpassed in the city and lovers of these gaqies can be accommodated at all times. i 1 CHAPTER I. The sun was just going down, a hiss ing globe of fire and torment. Already, the lower limb was in contact with the jagged backbone of the mountain chain that rimmed tho desert with purple and gold.. Out on the barren, hard baked flatin front of tho corral, just where, it had been unhitched when the paymaster and; his safe wero dumped soon after dawn, a weathcrbeaten am bnlancowas -throwing unbroken a mile long shadow toward tho distant Chris- tobal. Tho gateway to the east through the Santa Maria, sharply notched in the gleaming range, stood a day's march awav a dav's march now only made by night, for this was Arizona, and from the rising of the sun to the going down of tho same anywhere south of that curdling mud bath, the Gila, the only human beings impervious to the fierceness of its rays were the Apaches. "And they," growled the paymaster as ne petulantly snapped tnolockor his little safe, "they're no more human than bo many hyenas. " A big man physically waB the cus todian "and disbiirser of government greenbacks so big that,, as ho stepped forth through the aperture in tho hot adobe wall, ho ducked his head to avert unwilling contact wth upper ;edge. Green' glass goggles, "a broad brimmed straw hat, a pongee shirt, loose tronsers of brown linen and dust colored canvas shoes made up the outer man of a personality as distinctly un military as it was ponderous. Slow and labored in movement, the major was correspondingly sluggish in speech. Ho sauntered out into tho glare of the evening sunshine and became slowly conscious of a desire to swear at what he saw ; that, though in a minute or two the day god would "douso his glim" behind the black horizon, no prepara tion whatever had been made for a start. There Btood tho ambulance, ev ery bolt and link and tire hot as a stove lid, but not a mule in sight. Turning to his left, he strolled along toward a gap in the adobe Avail and entered the dusty interior of the corral. One of tho four quadrupeds drowsing under tho brnsh shelter languidly turned an inquiring eye and interrogative ear in his 'direction and conveyed, ,afer tho manner of the mule, a suggestion as to'supper. A Mexican boy, sprawl ing in the shado of a bale of govern ment hay and clad in cotton shirt and trtmsors well high as brown as the skin that peeped througl. occasional gapsH glanced up at him with languid inter est an instant, and then resumed the more- agreeable contemplation ' of tho writhings of- an impaled tarantula. Under another section of the shed two placid little burros wero dreamily blinking at vacancy, their grizzled fronts xpressive of that ineffable.peace found only in tho faces of saints and donkeys. In the middle of tho inclosuro a rude windlass coiled with ropo stood stretch ing forth a decrepid lever arm. The whippletree, dangling from tho end over tho beaten circular track, seemed cracked with heat and age. Tho stout rope that stretched tantly from tho coil passed over a wooden wheel and dis appeared through a broad framed aper ture into the bowels of the earth. Close at hand in the shade of a brush covered "leanto" hung three or four huge, ollas, earthen water jars, swathed in gunnysack and blanket. Beyond them, warped out of all possibility of future usefulness, stood what had onco been tho running gear of a California backboard. Behind it dangled from, dusty pegs portions of leather harness, which all the neatsfoot oil of tho mil itary pharmacopoeia could never again restore to softness or pliability. A newer edition of tho same class of ve hicle was covered 03' a canvas ' paulin. A huge stack of barley bags was piled at the far end of tho corral, guarded from depredation (quadrupedal) by a barrier of wooden slats, mostly down, and by a tattered biped, very sound asleep. "Where '8 tho sergeant?" queried tho paymaster slowly, addressing no one in -.particular, but looking plaintively around him. Still leaning a brown chin on a near ly black hand, and stirring up his spider with the forked stick he held in tho other paw, the boy simply tilted his head toward the dark opening un der the farther end of tho shed, an aperture that seemed to lead to noth ing but blackness beyond. "What's ho doing?'' "No sa-a-abe," drawled tho boy, never lifting his handsomo eyes from the joys betore him. "Why hasn't he harnessed up?" A shrug of the shoulders was tho only reply. "Hey?" "No sa-a-abe," slowly as before. ' What's your name ? ' ' "Jose." "Well, here, Jose, you go and tell him I want him." The boy slowly pulled himself to gether and found his feet; started re luctantly to obey; glanced back at his captive, now scuttling off for freedom ; turned again; scotched him with his forked stick, and then with a -vicious "huh!" drove the struggling aranoina into the sandy soil. This done, he lounged off toward the dark corner in the wall of the ranch and dove out of sight. Presently there slowly issued from this recess a 6turdy form in dusty bluo blouse, the sleeves of which were dec orated with chevrons in far faded yel low. Under the shabby slouch hat a round, sunbli6tered, freckled face, bris tling with a week old beard,peered forth at the staff official with an expression half of languid tolerance, half of mild irritation. In most perfunctory fash ion the soldier just touched the hat rim with his forefinger, then, dropped the hand into a convenient pocket. It was plain that he felt but faint respect for the staff rank and station of tho man in goggles and authority. "Sergeant Feeny, I thought I told you I wanted everything ready to start at run set." "You did. sir, and then you umdid it," was the prompt and sturdy-reply:1' The paymaster stood irresolpte. -Through the shading spectacles of green his eyes seemed devoid of any espiee- -sion. His attitude remained un changed, thumbs in-tho loWcut-.pockejta: of his wido flapping trousers, shoulder-' "meek and drooping. " w-e-11, ne nnaiiy arawiea,. "yp understood I wanted to get on to Camn ' Stoneman by sunrise, didn't -yon?J Diem t my ciera, Air. uawesvtell you? -V "He did, yes, sir, and yon don't want to get there no more than I do, major.. But I told you flatfootedif you let Don ovan and. those other men go back on the trail they'd find some excuse to s,top at Ceralvo's, and, d n 'em, they've done it." "Don't you s'pose they'll be -along: presently?" "S'pose?" and the sun blistered face of the cavalryman seemed to grow a shado redder as he echoed almost con temptuously tho word of his superior. "S'pose? Why, major, look herelt And the short, swart trooper took three quick strides, then pointed through tfee western gap in .the adobe wall to the' gilded edgo of the range where the suri had just slipped froni view. "It's l4 milo, to that rdgeyit'Bjip.ninui since 1 got ine last wigwag 01 in nal flag at the pass. They hadn't through then. What chance, is there of their getting here in time to light out at dark? You did tell me to have ev erything ready to start, and undid it by sending half the escort back. You've been here in hell's half acre three days, and I've- been here three years. You have never been through Canyon Diablo; I have been through a dozen times and never yet without a fight or a mighty good chance of one. Now, you may think it's fun to run your head into an am buscade, but I don't. You can get 'em too easy without trying here. I'm an old soldier, major, and too free spoken perhaps, but I mean no disrespect, only I wis"h to God you'd listen to me next time." "You wouldn't have had me leave those women in the lurch back at the crossing, would you?" queried the pay master half apologetically. "Why, I don't believe that-story at all," flatly answered Feeny; "it's some d d nlant that fellow Donovan's J'vou,, so springing on you a mere excuse 10 ride back go they could drink and WM at that moment lying Jiaae. bunk within the the fate that bad im- lunvtoseek Arizona in March of health." He was indeed of little count, " as the paymaster well knew. I After a moment's painful thought the wottm rose uowiy to ins lips : Well, perhaps you know best, so we stay till tomorrow nieht, or at least until they get back. " One could almost hear the whisper -in the deep recess of the retaining wall sibilant, gasping. Some one cjouch- liaig still farther back in tho black iepths of the interior did hear. Marial" Bnt.when a moment later tho propri etor of this roadsido ranch, this arti ficial oasiB in a land of desolation, strolled into the' big bare room where half a dozen troopers were dozing or gambling it was with an air of confi- pdential joviality that he whispered to Pthe qorporal in charge: Our fren, the major, he nftuse me reelLyou aguardiente mescal, but wait ' "Oh, d n it, Moreno, we'll be half Ijway to Stoneman by that time," in gferrupted the trooper quito savagely. jTWho-s to know where wo got the fituff ? We'll make em believe Dono van's squad brought it in from Cer Jalvo's. Givo me a drink now anyhow, you infernal greaser; I'm all burnt out Mwith such a day aa this. We've got to -start, tne moment they get back, and Jhere won't be any time then." g,"Hush, caballero; they como not to night. You will rest here." a g-" Why, how in blazes do you know?" 4 V Softly! 1 know not I know .noting ; yet, mira ! 1 know. They talk long in the corral the major and that of a sergeant for him I snap my ger. Jjook your And iuoreno ve a flip indicative of combined de- ce and'-disdain. i t you count on his not finding oreao-. , it's all easy enough so tho major's concerned, but that ckguard Feeny's different, I tell you. He'd hear tho gurgle of tho spigot if ho were 10 miles across the then you"4?a on a ere to bust things before yen coma servo out gill a n .-hnb ! 4He's beenkeen enough to put thafftjMlM -singing Yankee on guard ovEjwr'liquor. How are you going tojPSl.it aayhow?" 7jr an answer the Mexican placed the-forefingcr of his left hand upon his lipjTand with that of tho right hand pfited significantly to tho hard beaten ,eaijhen floor. "Ah, I have a mine," he whispered. "You will not betray, eh? Shu-u! Hush ! Ho comes now. ' ' The gruff voico of Sergeant Feeny broke up tho colloquy. '"Corporal Murphy, tako what men you-have here and groom at once. Feed andT water too. Moreno, I want sup peri cooked for eight in 30 minutes. Drpp.thosa cards now, you men. You. efovld have been sleeping as I told " tl x t. .1 r 1. a ua iu uu ii'auy iui wurs iu- The soldier just touched the hat rim with his forefinger. gamble with those thugs at Ceralvo's. They've just been paid off and had no chance for any fun at all beforo they wero ordered out on this escort duty. That money's been, burning in their pockets now for three wholo nights, and they just can't stand it so long as a drop of liquor's to be had by hard rid ing. No soldier is happy till he's dead broke, major leastwise uono I ever sec." - . "What makes 3011 doubt the story, sergeant? It came straight enough." "It came too d d straight, sir; that's just tho trouble. It came straight from Chihuahua Pete's monte mill. It's only a hook to draw 'cm back, and they played it on you because they saw you were new to the countr, and they knew I was asleep; and now, unless Lieutenant, Drummond should happen in with his troop, there's no help for it but to wait for tomorrow night and no certainty of getting away then." "Well, if Mr. Drummond were here, don't you suppose he'd have gone or sent back to protect those people?" "Oh, he'd have gone certainly that's his business, but it isn't yours, major. You've got government money there enough to buy up every rumhole south of the Gila. You're expected to pay at Stoneman, Grant and Goodwin and Crittenden and Bowie, where they haven't had a cent since last Christmas and here it is tho middle 0 May. You ought to have pushed through with all rfpeed, to none of these jayhawkers could get wind of your going, let alone tho Apaches. Every hour you halt is clar gain to them, and here you've simply got to stay 24 hours all along of a cock and bull story about some stageload of frightened women 15 miles back at Gila Bend. It's a plant, ma jor; that's what I believe." Old Plummer kicked the toe of his shoe into the sandy soil and hung a reflective head. "I wish you hadn't shut your eyes," he dnriled at length. "I wouldn't, sir, if 1 hadn't thought you'd keep yours open. You slept all night, sir, you and Mr. Dawes, while I rode alongside with finger on trigger every minute." Absorbed in their gloomy conversa tion, neither man noticed that the wood en shutter in the adobe wall close at hand had been noiselessly opened from within, just an inch or two. Neither knew, neither could see that behind it, in the gathering darkness of the short sum mer evening, s shadowy form was crouching. "Then you think we must stay here, do you?" queried the paymaster. "Think? I know it. Why, the range ahead is alive with Apaches, and we can't stand 'em off with only half a dozen men. Your clerk's no 'count, major." Old Plummer stood irresolute. His clerks a consumptive and broken down mgwi 'fyire jeaia?il we don't go tonight, ser- t "Who says that?" demanded Feeny quickly, whirling upon his subordi nates. The corporal looked embarrassed and turned to Moreno for support. Moreno, profoundly calm, was as profoundly- bbli vi ous. "Moreno there." began Murphy, finding himself compelled to speak. "I?" gravely, courteously protested ho Mexican, with deprecatory shrug t? his shoulders and upward lift of ej-e-brow. "I? What know I? I do but say tho Corporal Donovan is not come. How know I yon go not out tonight?" - "Neither you nor tho likes of you knows," was Feeny's stern retort. "We go when we will and no questions asked. As for 3-011, Murphy, 3ou be ready, and it's mo you'll ask, not any outsider, when wo go. I've had enough to swear at today without you fellows playing off on me. Go or no go, no liquor, mind you. The first man 1 catch drinking I'll tie by the thumbs to the back of tho ambulance, and he'll foot it to Stoneman." No words were wasted in remon strance or reply. These wero indeed days of the empire'"in Arizona r'B soon after the great war of the re bellion, when men drank, and swore and. fought and gambled in the rough life of their exile, but obeyed, and obeyed without question, tho officers appointed over thein. These were the days when veteran sergeants like Feeny men who had served under St. George Cooke and Sumner and Harney on the wide frontier before the war, who had ridden with, the starry guidons in many a wild, whirling charge under Sheridan and Merritt and Custer in tho valley of Virginia held almost despotic powers among the troopers who spent that en listment In the isolation of Arizona. Rare were the cases when they abused their privilege. Stern was their rule, rude their speech, but bj officers and men alike they were trusted and re spected. As for Feeny, there wero not lucking those who declared him spoiled. Twice that day had tho paymaster been on the point of rebuking his apparent in difference. Twice had he withhold his censure, knowing, after all, Feeny to ba in tho right and himself in the wrong. And now in tho gathering shades of night, as he stood in silence watching tho brisk piocess of grooming, and noted how thorough and businesslike, even though sharp and stern, was Fee ny, the paymaster was wishing he had not ventured to disregard tho caution of so skilled a veteran. And yet the paymaster, having a hu man heart in his breast, had been sorely tried, for the appeal that came for help was one he could not well resist. Pass ing Ceralvo's at midnight and pushing relentlessly ahead instead of halting there as the men had hoped, the party was challenged in tho Mexican tongue. "Queviene?" To which unlooked for and uncalled for demand the leading trooper, scorn ing greaser interference in American territory, promp'tly answered: "Go.toh 1!" All the same ho heard the click of lock and was prompt to draw his own Colt, as did likewise tho little squad riding ahead of the creaking ainbu- ! lance. The two leaders of the mules whirled instantly about and became tangled up with the wheel team, and the paymaster was nitched out of a dream into a doubled up mass on the opposite seat. To his startled questions the driver could only make reply that ho didn't know what was the matter; the sergeant had gone ahead to see. Presently Feeny shouted "Forward!" and on they went againj and not until Ceratve's was a.mile behind could the major, learn the, cause of the detention. Some of Ceralvo's people," answered Feeny; "d n their impudence!, They thought to stop us and turn us in there by stories of Indian raids just below us three prospectors murdered 24 miles this side of .the Sonora line. Cochises' people never camo this far west of the Chiricahua range. - It's white cutthroats maybe, and we'll need our whole command. And yet in the glaring sunshine of that May morning, after they had un saddled at Moreno's, and the sergeant, wearied with the vigils of two succes sive nights, had gone to sleep in the coolest shade he could find, there came riding across the sunbaked, cactus dotted plain at the west a young man who had the features of the American and the grave, courteous bearing of the Mexican. "My name is Harvey," said he. "My sisters, who have been in San Francisco at school, are with me on the way to visit our parents in Tucson. Father was to have met us at the Bend with relays of mules. We have waited 48 hours and can wait no longer. For God's sake let half a dozen of your men ride out and escort them down here. There is no doubt in the world the Apaches are in the mountains on both sides, and I'm trembling for fear they've already found our camp. None of my party dared make the ride, so I had to come." . What was Plummer to do ? He didn't want to rouso the sergeant. This wasn't going back to Ceralvo's, but riding northward to tho rescue of imperiled beauty. He simply couldn't refuse, especially when Donovan and others were eager to go. From Mr. Harvey he learned that his father had married into an old Spanish Mexican family at Havana, had been induced by them to tako charge of certain business in Mat amoras, and that long afterward he had removed to Guaymas and thence to Tucson. Tho children had been ed ucated at San Francisco, and the sis ters, now 17 and 13 years of ago re spectively, wero soon to go to Cuba to visit.relatives of their mother, but were determined once more to see tie quaint old home at Tucson beforo so doing; henco this journey under his charge. The story seemed straight enough. Plummer had never 'et been to Tucson, but at Drum Barracks and Wilmington he had often heard of the Harveys, and Donovan swore ho knew them all by sight, cspeciallj" the old man. The matter was settled beforo Plum mer really knew whether to take the responsibility or not, and the cavalry corporal with five men rodo back into the fiery heat of the Arizona day and was miles away toward the Gila before Feeny woke to a realizing sense of what had happened. Then he came out and blasphemed. There in that wretched little green safo wero locked up thou sands enough of dollars to tempt all tho outlawry of the Occident to any deed of desperation that might lead to the capture of the booty, and with Don ovan and. his party away Feeny .saw het had but half a dozen men for defense. ( At his interposition the major had at 1 least done ono thing warned Moreno not to sell a drop of his fiorj" mescal to any one of tho men, and when the Mexican expressed entire willingness to acquiesce Feeny's suspicions were redoubled and he picked out Trooper Latham, a New Englander whom some strange and untoward fate had led into the ranks, and stationed him in the bullet .scarred barroom, of tho ranch, with strict orders to allow not a drop to bo drawn or served to any one with out tho sanction of Sergeant Feeny or his superior officer, the major. Even the humiliation of this proceeding had in no wise disturbed Moreno's suavity. "All I possess is at your feet," he had said to the major, with Ca3tilian grace and gravity, "Tako or withhold it as you will." "Infernal old hypocrite!" swore Fee ny, between his strong, set teeth. "1 believe he'd like nothiug better than to pet the escort drunk and turn us over Dag and baggage to the Morales gang." Thrice during the hot afternoon had Feony suited the premises and striven to find what number and manner of men Moreno might have in concealment there. Questioning was of little use. Moreno was ready to answer to any thing and was never known to halt at a lie. Old Miguel, the half breed, who did odd jobs about the well and the corral, expressed profound' ignorance both of tho situation and Feeny's Eng lish. The Mexican boy had but one answer to all queries, "No sa-a-abe." Other occupants there were, but these even Feen3-'s senso of duty could not prompt him to disturb. Somewhere in the depths of tho domestic portion of the ranch, where the brush on the flat roof was piled most heavily and the walls wero jealously thick, all scouting parties or escorts well knew that Moreno's wife and daughter were hidden from prying eyes, and rumor had it that often there wero more than two feminino occupants; that theso were sometimes joined by three or four others wives or sweethearts of out lawed men who rode with Pasqual Mo rales and all Arizona knew that Pas qual Morales had little moro Mexican blood in his veins than had Feeny himself. Ho was an Americano, a cursed gringo for whom long years ago tho sheriffs of California and Novada had chased in vain, who had sought refuge and a mate in Sonora and whoso swarthy features found no difficulty in masquerading under a Mexican name when the language of love had made him familiar with the Mexican tongue. Slow to action, slow of speech as was the paymaster, ho was not slow to see that Sergeant Feeny was anxious and ill at ease, and if a veteran trooper, whom his captain had pronounced the coolest, pluckiest and most reliable man in the regiment, could be so disturbed over the indications, it was high time to take precaution. What was tho threatened danger? Apaches? They would never assault guard of soldiers, might do in the canyons in tho range beyond. Outlaws ? They had not been heard of for months. Ho had inquired into all this at Yuma, at tho stage sta tions,, by mail of the commanding officers at Lowell and Bowie and Grant. Not for six months had a stage been "held up" or a buckboard "jumped" south of the turbid Gila. True, there was rumor of riot and law lessness among tho miners at Castle Dome and the customary shooting scrape at Ehrenberg and La Paz, but these were river towns, far behind him now as he looked back over the desert trail Awarded Highest Honors World's Fair. PRICE'S nHl Baking Powder The only Pure Cream of Tartar Powder. No Ammouia; No Alun:. Used in Millions of Homes 40 Years the Standard. tho ranch with its whatsoever they and' aloft into the star studded, cloud less sky. Nothing rould be moro placid, noth ing less prophetic of peril or ambush than this exquisite summer night. Somewhere within tho forbidden region of Moreno's harem a guitar was begin ning to tinkle softly. That was all very well, but then a woman's voice, anything but soft, took up a strange, monotonous refrain. Line after line, verse after verse, it ran, harsh, ghange less. He could not distinguish the words he did not wish to; the music was bad enough in all conscience, what soever it. might become when sung by youth or beauty. As it fell from the lips of Senora Moreno the air was a succession of vocal nasal disharmonies, high pitched, strident, nerve racking. Unable to listen after the third repe tition, Plummer slowly retired from the corral and once more appeared at the front, just in time for a sensation. Two troopers, two of the men who had ridden back with Donovan, came lurch ing into the lighted space before the main entrance. At sight of the pay master one o'f them stiffened up and with preternatural gravity of mien ex ecuted the salute. The other, with an en velope in htehanuyreeledoutof the sad dle, failed to catch his balance, plunged heavily into the sand and lay there. Corporal Murphy sprang eagerly for ward, the first man to reach him, and turned the prostrato trooper over on his back. "What'sthe matter?" queriedPlum mer. "Is he sick?" "Sick, is it?" was tho quick retort, as the corporal sniffed at the tainted breath of the sufferer. "Be the pow ers, I only wish. I had half his dis ayse." And then came Feeny, glaring, wrath ful. "Como down off tho top of that horse, Mullan," ho ordered, fiercely. "How how'4 j'o get here? Which way'd ye come? Where's the rest?" With tho ponderous dignity of in ebriety, .Mullan slowly pointed up the desert under the spot where the pole star glowed in the northern skies. "Sarsh'nt," he hiccoughed, "we're wo'retoo late; 'Paches got there first." "Hwat! hwat!" thundered Feeny. "D'ye mean there were women that 'it wasn't a plant?" "Fack." "Hware's 3'our dispatches, you drunken lout? How dare you dhrink when there was fight ahead? Hware's your dispatches? and may heaven blast the souls of 3'ou both!" "Here, sergeant, said Murphy, wrenching the soiled envelope from the loose grasp of the prostrate trooper. "It's to 3'ou, sir," said Feeny, with one glance at the sprawling superscrip tion. "In God's name read and let us know what devil's work's abroad to night." Even Plnmmer's pudgy fingers trem bled as ho tore open the dingy packet Old Moreno came forth with a light, his white teeth gleaming, his black eyes flashing from one to another of the group. Holding the penciled page close to the lantern, the paymaster read aloud : "Camp burned. One jnan killed; others scattered; mules and buckboard gone. For God's sake help in tho pur suit. Strike for Baton Pass. The In dians have run away my poor sisters. "Edward Harvey." Tho major dropped the paper, fairly stunned with dismay. Feeny sprang forward, picked it up, and eagerly icrutinized the page. Mullan, standing insteadily at the head of his wearied and dejected horse, was looking om with glassy ayes, his lips vainly striv ing to frame further particulars. Leav ing their supper unfinished, the other men of the little squad had come tum bling out intcf the summer night. No one paid other heed to the trooper sprawling in the sand. Already in deep, drunken slumber, ho was breath ing stertoronsly. Feeny's eyes seemed fastened to tho letter. Lino by line, word by word, again and again he spelled it through. Suddenly he leaped forward and clutched Mullan at the throat, shaking him violently. "Answer now. Hware'd you get your liquor? Didn't this fellow give it to you?" "On my honor no, sarsh'nt, 'pon my 'on" "Oh, to h 1 with your honor and you with it! Hware'd you get it if it wasn't from him? Shure you've not been near Ceralvo's?" "No, sarsh'nt, no Ceralvo's. We mot couple gen'l'mcn perfec' gen'l' men, ranchers; they were going after the Indians. They gave us jus o-one drink 'piece. Jus' five minutes go. ' ' "How far away was this? Hware were they? Answer or, d n you, I'll shako tho truth out of you I" shouted Feenj, suiting action to word. "Spake beforo you, too, are lying like that other hog. Did you over see the camp? Did you ever get to the crossing at all? Douso a dipper of water over him, you Latham, quick. Wake up, I say, Mul lan. For tho love of God, major, I be lieve they're both drugged. I believe it's all a d d lie. I believe ita only a skamo to get you to send out the rest of your escort, so they can tackle you alone. Kick him, Murphy, kick him; throt him round: don't let him get to sleep. Answer me, you scoun drel!" he "fairly yelledfor Mullan's fieaa was drooping on his breast and every lurch promised to land him on his face. Twice his knees doubled up like a foot rule and the stout little sergeant had to jerk him to his feet. "Search 'em both. See if they've a flask be tone 'cm, Latham. Answer me, Mullan, did you see the burned camp? Did you see the dead man? Did Oh, murtherl Now he's gone 1 There's never a word to be got out of either of them this night. But don't you believe that letthert major. Djgn't Holding the penciled page dote to tk$ lantern, the pavmatler read aland. you trust a word of it; it's false asaelL It's only a plan to rob ye of your es cort first and your life and mosey later. That's it, men. douse them, kick theta, xnurther them both if you like the curs! and they'd drink when thej knowed every man was needed." AnA adding force to his words Feeay drove a furious kick at the luckless Mulla. "Do you mean there is bo truth ia this? Do you mean you thiakit all a fraud, a trick?" at last queried the major. "Why, it seems incredible!" ' ' I say just what I mean, major. It's a plot to rob you. I mean the gacf has gathered for that very purpose. 1 mean that every story told us about the Apaches west or south of here or between us and the Gila is a bloody lie. The guard at the signal statioa, hadn't seen or heard of them. They laughed at me when I told them what they tried to make us believe at Ceral to's. 'Twas there they wanted to have you stop, for there you'd have no chanoe at all. Shure, do you suppose if the Apaches were out if this story was true they wouldn't have keard it and investigated it by this time, and the beacon fire would have been bla-dmg at the Picacho?" Then Murphy turned and ran around the corner of the corral to a point where he could see the dim outline of the range against the western sky. The . next moment his voice rose upon the night air, vibrant, thrilling: "Look! God be good to us, nujeri It's no lie. The signal fire's blazinf at the peak." j . to bk cosenxvn. I Mr. J. P. Blaize, an extensive real estate dealer in Des Moines, Iowa, narrowly escaped one of the severest attacks of pneumonia while in the northern part of that state during a recent blizzard, says the Saturday Review. Mr. Blaize had occasion to drive several miles dur ing the storm and was so thoroughly chilled that he could not get warm, and inside of an hour after his re turn he was threatened with a severe case of pneumonia or lung fever. Mr. Blaize sent to the near est drug store and got a bottle of Chamberlain's Cough .Remedy, of which he had often heard, and took a number of large doses. He says the effect was wonderful and in a short time he was breathing quite easily. He kept on taking the medicine and the next day was able to come to Des Moines. M. Blaize regards his cure as simply wonder ful. For sale by A. F. Streitz and North Platte Pharmacv. In the case of. Mrs. Wilson o Custer countv, alleged to be insane, the Broken Bow Republican thinks the witnesses who appeared against her were nearer bereft of reason than the one they want sent to the asvlnm. Sintr a song of sixpence, Pocket full of rye. Four and twenty blackbirds I'aked in a pie; When the p?e was opened And the birds began to sing: Buy a bottle of Hnller's cough syrup It's just the proper thing. For Mile by F. II. Longley. The cause of the failure of the Rushville bank of which Lew May is president was the beginning of a suit by the bank to recover from the estate of the late cashier $ 10.000 owed by him to the concern. 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