thejexiles. j bdssias story. <>At first,” resumed Ladislas, “on turning j j saw one—one only—which did not Jriehten mo much. It trotted along, alwayi maintaining the same distance, lessening 01 increasing its pace according to the speed , the siedge. But a second wolf that 1 noticed on the top of a small hill Joined the .other. A few minutes afterwards, on loot ine in their direction, I counted three ol them! Thcn there wore ,our> then fire, then six, then eight, then ten, then twelve and then twenty. I dare not look again. ] could no longer count them, so largely had their number Increased 1 But I urged oi my reindeer, exciting it by every possible means. At last, 1 saw from a long distance the fire of your encampment I hoped to find beside that fire—but, no matter! You have indeed, saved my life, my friends, and I an very grateful to you!” The young lad spoke with an assurance that delighted these fierce men, deprived o1 all family joys. They set before the child the best provisions they possessed—theh dainties, so to siieak. “Where are you going?” asked Dimitri oi him. The chief of the brigands had a mild anc intelligent countenance which pleased Lad islas. Nevertheless, he hesitated to reply. “You can speak,” said Dimitri, talcing the lad a little aside. “You have nothing t( fear from me, despite my array of sabres and pistols. I belong to an honest family and my father, who died but recently, left behind him a reputation for rectitude. A' Moscow, everybody knows Yormaca worth.' This name struck the lad. “I knew, bearing that name,” said he, “the chief of police of Yakoutsk.” “The chief of police? Well, child, he was my father." “And he is dead!” cried Ladislas, alarmed forNadego and Yegor. “But only throe days ago ho was still with us!” “How?—with you?—with whom?” ” “With my adopted sister and the man who is going to marry her—and with M. Lafleur. Do you not know M. Lafleur, tho dancing mastor?” “I left my father for dead very far from here, near the forest of Ostrovoye, at the foot of the Verkho-Yansk Mountains,” said the chief of the bandits. “Well, it was just there we met him, re vived him, disinterred him—how shall I ex press it?” “Disinterred him, child?” “Oh! it is a strange story! Look! this revolver belonged to him?” “My father alive!” murmured Dimitri, overcome with surprise; and an irresistible desire to see him again in life and obtain his pardon took possession of him. “Do yon know,” resumed he, lowering his voice, “where we can rejoin him—as well as your friends?” “Yes,” said the lad; “in the vicinity ol Nijni-Kolimsk, near the frontier of the coun try of the Tchouktchis.” “Not another word,” said Yermac’s son. “In a moment, when all are asleep, I will tell you what we will do to again see before tong your friends—and my father I” / CHAPTER XXI.—AH ELK HUNT. It was only after every effort had been fruitlessly made to recover the little Pole, that Yegor succeeded in Inducing the weep ing and inconsolable Nadege to consent to ■resume the journey. The succeeding days were of the most sorrowful description. The fugitives de cided that they must follow the left bank of the Kolima. Ladislas had been lost not far from the river. He knew that thoy were going towards the north to reach the Arctic Ocean. If he were still alive, he would, perhaps, perceive the fire that they would light on establishing each encampment and would keep up every night upon an elevated shore. Besides these reasons, Yegor had others for not going too far from the banks of the river. The provisions brought in the sledges had greatly diminished during the forced Journeys across the desert of snow. But there existed on the borders of the Kolima, between the Bolchoy-Aniouy and the Mali Aniouy rivers which flow into it, plains sheltered by lofty mountains from the winds of the north. The vegetation there is in comparably more beautiful. One finds there the aspen, the poplar, the willow, and the cedar; after having crossed the icy and bare toundra, these plains are the oases of these solitudes. The forests which clothe the sides of the mountains are inhabited by herds of reindeer; elk, foxes, and brown and black bears are met there in large num bers. Yegor thought that it would be easy to kill some of these animals, which would furnish them with food for several days. Swift as the lightning, the two sledges, without leaving a trace, glided anew over the icy stretch. Nadege, her eyes rod with weeping and her heart sad, silently and soiv rowfully thought of her dear Ladislas. She oould not believe him lost A secret pre sentiment told her to hope and that she would, perhaps, see him again. M. Laf «ur, usually so loquacious, was also silent Plunged in his reflections, with lowered head and compressed lips, he internally consoled himself for the present by think ing of the futuro. He was busy mairinp Plans. His mind, with tho rapidity of the electric •Park, sped from Yakoutsk to the ice of the P°lo, from the pole to Paris, upon the Place de la Bastille lighted up by that bright sun Thermldor sung of by Bcranger, and from Paris to Chateau-Thierry, in the little house he had inherited from his maternal hncle. It was in this house that M. Lafleur rinded to found the museum which was “> bear his name and attract, every summer, caravans of visitors to the town which gave birth to the great French fable-writer. The former dancing-master had definitively re nounced his idoa of seizing upon the first occasion that should present itself to return and solicit his pardon, that he might con inue to teach country-dances and good Banners to the daughters of the high Siber ian functionaries. True, tho affairs of his toil linerj- shop remained to be settled, but •hat was not much. He willingly sacrificed r® Profits. Being a man of foresight, M, £aneur had not ke it his savings in a stock JbR in tbe depths o a drawer; neither hac e entrusted them to the Jewish usurers ol e country. Twico a year, at colloctioi too, he had sent, by the hands of a reliablf -Bent, his funds to Paris, to the address ol solid and honorable house—the house ol ' ernes etCe. M. Lafleur, so far as worldly wealth wai concerned, was, therefore, exempt from |'e, and ho was approaching an age whei ..18 Permitted to a man to repose and enjoj , 0 fruit of his toil. He had yet a ver} ' "Sfbhd to travel over to return to Park “ r^tcau-Thlerry; but, at the rate a 118 waa going, the distance was, so t< ■Peak, visibly diminishing. At his side, Yermac, weld wrapped in hli tun, kept hU eyes dosed and seemed asleep He was as motionless and stiff as a frozen corpse. Directed by Yegor, who took bis eyes neither from his compass nor the little map sketched by him at the ostrog from a wall map, prepared by the Esaoule in accordance with the most reliable information he had been able to gather, Tekel drove so admir ably that the fugitives wore enabled to fol low the surest and shortest route. The teams of dogs, furalshod by the Esa oulo of Srednet-Kolimsk, did marvels in the hands of Tekel and Chort. The dogs of tho north of Siberia have long and slenders ears, always erect, and their tails are thick. Some have smooth hair and others curly hair ol different shades. At the head of each team was the most active and best disciplined dog. It kept the others, less intelligent or more stubborn, in the right direction, preventing them, es pecially, from turning aside from the road to follow the tracks of animals. Once, Yegor’s animals precipitated them selves on the footprints of a fox marked upon the snow; already, the dogs were howling with all their might and it seemed as if nothing could arrest them—when the leader, turning in the opposite direction, commenced to bark as if it had seen some animal worthfcr of pursuit. Tekel and Chort encouraged their dogs by whistling and by cries peculiar to them selves, to which the intelligent creatures had soon become accustomed. They drove in the Siberian fashion, without using a whip. The whip is replaced by the ostle, a stout rod four feet long, tipped with iron at its lower end. The drivers hurl tho ostle at lazy or disobedient dogs and pick it up very adroitly as they pass it. Each dog of the teams belonging to the settled tribes of Siberia has a complete little set of harness, consisting of a wide belt across the chest, by means of which it pulls. This belt is kept in place by another strap, fastened to it and passing around the body of the animal. The whole is attached to the principal strap by :» short trace. Tho slodge dogs are accustomod to utter a pro longed howl at the moment of setting out. It was with an ample supply of dried fish that the fugitives fed their dogs. Thoir own food was neither more agreeable nor of bet ter quality. When the sledges stopped that day, Tekel sought for a suitable place in which to pass the rest of the day and the night. He soon returned, making a sign to Yegor to ad vance. The spot was perfectly sheltered, They felled several poplar trees to form a rampart. In the corner of this rampart was erected the pologue intended for Nadego, the interior of which was promptly heated by means of a lamp. They broke the ice of the Kolima to obtain water; this ice was as yet but two feet thick. A great bivouac fire, fed with wood furnished by the neighboring trees, spread warmth about it. The most important thing now was to put something comforting and substantial on this fire. Yegor and Tekel took each a gun and, preceded by Wab, plunged cautiously, with watchful eyes, into the bushes and thickets in search of feathered or furred game. The Yakoute, with the instinct of the savage, examined the leaves of the bushes to see if they did not bear marks of the bites of deer or elk. Sometimes he paused and listened attentively, signing to Yogor to re main silent and motionless. Wab, like the docile and intelligent dog it was, held itself in readiness, its paws uplifted, interro gating with a look its master and the Yak oute. Tekel suddenly dropped quickly and, hid ing behind the trunk of a tree, remained mo tionless, squatting in the snow. He wus evi dently watching some animal. Yegor, his finger on the trigger of his gun, stood ready to act at the first signal. . -f ter a minute had elapsed, the Yakouti arose and signed to his master to follow him. They descended towards the river. “Deer tracks)” said Yegor, in a whisper, pointing to imprints on the snow. Tokel shook his head. “These are elk tracks,” answered he, in a low tone. “The hoofs are slender, straight, deeply cleft and united at the top by a mem brane which permits the foot to spread and place itself, without sinking, on the fresh snow or the moist soil.” Yegor knew that elk, like stags, always go in herds of from fifteen to twenty. He ardently hoped that he and his companion might suflOeed in killing, at least, one of the agile and courageous animals. The male elk attains the size of an ox, and weighs as much as twelve hundred pounds. Its huge, elongated head, terminated by a thick and wide muzzle which gives it the face of an ass, is crowned with antlers which widen into a triangular top in the form of a shovel. The elk is, after the reindeer, the animal most useful to the tribes of the north. Its flesh is smoked and preserved, its firm and pliant skin serves to make garments, and its hard and brilliantly white bones are employed to manufacture different in struments. Yegor and Tekel had reached a spot where , the very abrupt bank towered perpendicu larly above the river. A hundred yards from there, they saw through the scattered aspens and cedars a little glade invaded by blackberry bushes, thyme, red heath and heath with black berries called chikcha and bordered with willows. Hidden behind some eglantine bushes, the two hunters, who had noticed that all the footprints con verged to this point, waited. Suddenly, Wab gave a start and was about to leap, but Yegor’s hand restrained the animal in time. An elk, of huge proportions, came out from under the willows, followed by its family numbering seven—an old female without horns, two full-grown animals with hair already thick, two young animals and two fawns: Yegor and Tekol hoard the snow crack beneath their hoofs. Tho malo advanced first; it stopped at the edge of the forest, bent down a birch tree with its antlers, broke off the top and ate the branches. Yegor and the Yakoute, who were not in the direction of the wind, took advantage of this moment to aim their guns and fire sim taneously. A flash lighted up the darkness beneath the branches, Wab bounded forward with a howl, and tho female at which Tekel had aimed fell, uttering a hollow groan. The full-grown animals fled, followed by the fawns. As to tho malo which Yegor had woundod in the shoulder, it ran a short dis tance and then suddenly stopped to attack those who had attacked it. But Wab leaped upon it. Feeling tho dog’s teeth in its throat, the elk leaped among the thickest trees, hoping to make its adversary loosen its hold by dashing it against the trunks. Tho brave Wab would certainly have been crushed, if >'egor, starting suddenly for ward, had nbt fired a second ball into the head of the elk, which fell dead. “The prize is ours!” cried Tokel, running up, armed With his knifo. “And a magnificent prize it is, too!” said > Yegor, measuring the length of the animal with his eye. “We will dairy away only the best «or Hom," said the Yakoute, preparing to out off the cartilaginous head, which, with the ears and tongue, is the part preferred by the people of the north. This operation finished, Tekol skinned the animal and cut off lta hind legs. Yegor did the same for the female; and the two hunters returned Joyously to the en oampment, where their acquisitions were eery highly appreciated. M. Lafleur, who had never partaken of an elk's head roasted on the coals, prom ised himself that he would one day regale his friends with the dish, on his return to France. CHAmW XXII.—TBS FOLAK REGIONS. Ladislas returned neither that day, nor the next, nor the succeeding days, Yegor, m. lafleur, and even Nadege, whose hope had held out the longest, now felt convinced that the child, lost amid tho icy solitude, without food and exposed to the attacks of bears and wolves, could not have escaped death. Yegor’s heart was filled with sadness whenever he thought of the little Pole. He had nothing, however, with which to reproach himself. He had done all that lay in the power of man to recover him. To dr lay further would have been to imperil not only his own life but also those of Nadege and M. Lafleur, for which he hold himself responsible. The fugitives encamped several times up on the banks of the Kolima, the course of which they were following like a conducting thread. As they advanced towards the Arctio Ocean, tho shores of the river, until then rocky and even stoop, grow lower. The country became more and more level, and soon the glanco embraced but a toundra stretching as far as the eye could reach to wards the sea and traversed by a very great number of small rivers. They kept along an arm of tho Kolima, which does not unite with the principal course of the river until it has formed a low and marshy island, on tho southern shore of which is situated tho ostrog of Nijni-Kol imsk. Nearly a hundred miles further on the Kolima divides itself anew into two arms. The fugitives followed the right arm, which is over live miles wide, and which is called the Kamennnya-Kolima. A little further still is found a third aim which, with the two others, forms the mouth of the Koli ma. This mouth of the huge Asiatic stream covers altogether a space more than sixty miles in width. On the fourth day, Yegor saw a young deer that had lost its way. It was the sea son when these animals emigrate in herds from the frozen regions of the north to more temperate countries. The hair of the deer is of a reddish brown, but it is not rare to see white deer all tho year round. Yegor, who had restrained Wab, always ready to leap forward, admired the graceful hearing and light stop of tho young deer. The deer is much more elegant than the stag. It is distinguished from the latter by having shorter and slenderer legs, a less robust body, and a less elongated neck. When it is alone and one is in the direction opposite to the wind, one can easily approach it, for these animals, always frisky and prone to play, are noither tricky nor wicked. The young fawns, which people raise on goat’s milk, tame very quickly and follow their masters with the fidelity and docility of a dog. As they were in need of provisions to continue the journey, Yegor shot the young deer and carried away the best parts of its flesh. Some hours later, towards the middle of the day and amid terrible cold, the fugitives arrived at the mouth of the Kamennaya Kolima. “The seal the sea!” cried the two natives, drawing themselves up and pointing towards an icy stretch which was lost to the north in the mists of the sky. “The Arctio Ocean I" said M. Lafleur, shivering despite himself as if before some thing feasful and mysterious. “They will not come here to search for us 1" murmured Yegor. The Arctic landscapes are but little varied. In the wan and misty atmosphere there are no shadows; the lines of the horizon are ef faced and vanish. Height and distance do not exist; the land and the sea, equally white with snow, can scarcely be distin guished one from the other; the innumera ble irregularities and windings of the coast seem, in these dead and desolate regions, not to have had the time to assume decided and precise shapes. One might believe him self in the midst of a universe still in pro cess of formation. The silence and immobility of nature, in the vicinity of tho pole, have something jgand and wild about them. Yegor, Nadege Lad M. Lafleur, all three, were seized with a secret terror, as if upon the threshold of an unknown world. Yermao alone, inaccessible to every emo tion, remained impassible and rigid. Ho comprehended that, with the cold and the continuous night Which would shortly begin, the surveillance of which he was the object would necessarily be relaxed. Could he es cape thent Should he strive to flee, or should he wait until some unforeseen event changed the face of things! Around the fugitives ever, thing displayed the lugubrious imprint of polar lethargy. Not a sound, not a cry, not a breath. It was like an empty and depopulated planet destroyed by some horrible cataclysm. Afar, above mountains of ice—cylindrical masses—Jutting out like promontories, white birds vague as shadows floated slowly, sug gesting the wandering souls of those who are no more. The light was funereal and so foeble that objects had neither body nor color. At last, the fugitives had reached the spot where they designed to conceal themselves during the winter. They would erect a stout hut, well sheltered from the winds of the north. It was only on the arrival of spring that they could risk traversing the country of the Tchouktchis, on their way to the Gulf of Anadyr. On their hazardous Journey sown with perils of every kind, they hod lost all idea of time. “I would like to know what part of the year it is,” said M. Lafleur; “but we have kept no account of the days.” “This is the 20th of November,” said the chief of police, in a tone of certainty. “Indeed!” said Yegor. “This is the rea son the days are so short Day after to morrow will commence a night of thirty-six days.” “A complete night!” asked Nadege, turn ing pale. “Complete. The sun trill reappear only on the 28th of December. I am fully in formed on that point” “But how shall wo manage to live in tha darkness!” demanded Nadege. fro bb ccMmmjkp.i to the number of MS in China in the last nine years, an average of about one a week. Earthquakes have ocourred and one-half doing On Honor. Little Dot (who doesn't like sleeping with hep sister)—When we gets a new house I’m goln’ to here t room to mjr eelf and a key to the door. Little Ulster—Huh! I Is doin’ to have a room to myself too—an’ two keys to zee door. dirts Not Wonted. Mother—Why don't you want to take your little sister coasting with you? Little Boy—Girls isn’t any good at coasting. Every time they strikes the bumper an’ gets thrown up in the air an' upset an’ run into they eriea Bed taate In the mouth or on unpleasant breath, when resulting from Catarrh, are overcome, and the nosol passages which have been closed for years are mode free by the use of Ely's Cream Balm. I suffered from catarrh for twelve years, experiencing the nauseating dropping In the throat peculiar to thatdlsease, and nose bleed almost dally. I tried various remedies without benefit until last April, when I saw Ely's Cream Balm advertised. I pro cured a bo tie, and since the first day's use have had no more bleodlng—the soreness la entirely gone.— n, G. Davidson, with the Bos ton Budget, formerly with Boston Journal. Apply Balm Into each nostril. It Is Quickly Absorbed, dives Relief at once. Price Me at Druggists or by mall. ELY BROTHERS, 58 Warren St., New York. —The rains have raised the waters of Salton Lake to nearly as great a height as they were last spring. The QUa river is rising, which affects the Colorado river and causes the lAke to till. The Only One Ever Printed—Can You Find the Word? There In a 8-Inch display advertisement In this paper this week which has no two words alike except one word. The same la true of each new one appearing each week from The Dr. Harter Medlolno Co. This house places a “Crescent" on every thing they make and publish. Look for It, send them the namo of tho word, and they will return you hook, ntauTiroa lituo •Hams, or bami'Ls nit —An engineer on the Missouri Pacific has invented a coat of mall so contrived that when a man is held up by robbers he can discharge a revolver while both hands are confined above his bead. Mr. Jons a Ferimaw, Albion, Illinois, writes on Jan. 18th, 1801: “My wife has been a great sufferer from headaches for over 20 years, and your Uradycrotluo Is the only medicine that has ever relieved her. I can get you all the recommenda tions you want from here. We take great pleasure in recommending It on all occa sions.” Of all Druggists. Fifty cento, —This has been a terrible winter for stock on the Idaho ranges. Thousands of animals have died from hunger and ex posure, owing to the heavy snows. When Baby «n sick, wo fare her Castor!*, When she was a Child, she cried for Castorla, When she became Miss, she clung to Castorla, When she had Children, she gave them Castor —The Druids held many plants aacred, as, for Instance, vervain, selago, mistletoe, and, among trees, the oak ana the rowan. The Throat. — “Brown’s Bronchial Troches” act directly on the organa of the vo'ice. They have an extraordinary effect in all disorders of the throat —The time of building the first iron ship Is a matter of dispute, but there is a tra dition that as far back as 1787 an iron vessel was used on the Severn river. Coughing Leads to Consumption. Kemp’s Balsam will stop the Cough at once. Go to your Druggist today and get a FREE sample bottle. Large bottles 60 cents and $L0Q. —Because of the low price of cotton, a farmer in Coffee county, Georgia, burned his crop of it and then committed suicide. 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