l. Ss =—T es or daily: Shingle ' S a2 ae we ct LeAr. ie XI. The: reacnea a dangerous | i i 3 mvers a { ] Th an Felix ind no o im 1 what the +? ’ Y it } i \ da i y i ‘ her tl *s H es and he mus oO} \ v ) ] a («S s hie it of - terest in \ I sly cap vat - WW \ ins St 5 irs »y \ Six a tw ty No t! S was s he nai frankness r rey ind warnings concer! Felix’s quct with San- vrad w 1 might have sounded artling a person of the supercivil- zed East Her sentiments and her manner of expressing them were be- coming and natural as well as thor- oughly practical and wise in this girl of the Santa Cruz valley, reared among steel blades and firearms at her fa- rs hacienda in this Indian-haunt- ed, desperado-infested region of the Southwest. To make such words per- fectly fitting and quite the best thing that could be said by a woman of her race unger such circumstances, it needs only the condition that she care great- ly for the man to whom she imparts her confidences. Whether more intimate confidences might have been interchanged between the two had opportunity been given I leave to the inference of the read- er. Beyond the fact that they had reen ‘together in stress of danger where Felix was her protector it may be taken as a principle that the average and properly-constituted man not other- wise engrossed, when thrown into as- sociation with a beautiful Spanish gir) willing to please him, will promptly fall in love with her. And this rule scarcely admits an exception among the -men of the romantic, -dventur- ous, far Southwest. One who knows that country and its people will fully understand why Felix and Carmen, with no prelimin- ary languishments or conventional formulas of approach, with no intro- spections or analyses of medives, were in so brief an acquaintance, with so little said between them, undeniably | and greatly taken up with each other. Already, if appearances were to be trusted, they were on the very verge of lovemaking and had perhaps pass- ed the border. Why not? A ‘hand- some young fellow, brave and de- bonair, knowing well the country and la lengua Espanol, their acquaintance had more than once given him a chance to display before the éyesa of Carmen his address in the time of danger. In manifesting her intesest in him so undisguisedly and in speaking her mind so promptly and frankly she was simply the spontaneous, impetuous Juliet that every one of her country- women is when by some chance the care af the duenna lapses, even if Romeo's bright sword and silken doub- let have been replaced by California jean and revalver at cartridge belt. What most of all made me suspect that the flower of love was biossom- ing by the savage prairie trail was the vehemence of Carmen’s expres- sion of feeling against Gaspar San- grado, whose desperate and .assidu- ous pursuit of her may, before she met the handsome American, secretly have pleased even though it affrighted her. Love and hate alike begin and bloom and ripen all in a day in sunny, semi- tropical Arizona, like the riotous grow- th of verdure, fiowers and poison vines that make the valleys of that region veins of emerald, decked with festal colour as they wind amid the ground- work of bare, beetling mountains and bread arid spaces. Whether love would have burned in ardent werds between the two had Don Ramon’s nap lasted five minutes longer I will not Venture to say. But in Carmen’s face and manner and impression imparted by her pervading magnetism I read the unspoken thought of Lupita’s taunt lo Sangrado—that the senor’s daughter looked kindly upon the young Ameri- Can caballero—and these words she knew Felix must have overheard. it Was this thought, I was sure, which Save her the pleased, hali-bashful look %f self-consciousness she wore as she Raised, with mantling cheek, after (oting so much as she did of the Mexican a ss’ words, and in that bse if ever eyes and smilie carried iNtonsciously a message it was the Message of hers to Felix that Lupita’s rning him were true. on the trail, and now sentiment, but *“ boots and —LG mount ar ride—tnat order of the day. We had and it Was not the time and lingering. The mules were eda 1 Oo l he Carriace. “Ar 7 Were hbridied and saddled as and again we were off upon ’ AS W dre away from Missourian was hitehineg scrotula “Our daughter broke out with scrofula 3 ail over her face and head. She Rew Worse until we gave her Hood’s phate. When she had taken six Mes her face was smooth and the "tala has never returned.’’ SILAS BSooy, West Point, New York. H G? Sarsa- NOGG’S paritia the best ~ in faet the One True Blood Purifier. Keou's Pills c ure all Liver lg. 25 cents. \. oe = ey AS | wae 44) TORN <_S oe ee OF THE SAN SIM two days’ . ; : were , ed, E , peted from them. | them, 'a seriousness | fell upon | titted the butt of his rifle from the bot- a “1 was tant | | { I a! DT ’, : IN Pi Se “ty —— ——— AAG a? Or BYCLARENCE Pv —os Ss Me gh: G4 OK nt Se! wee Cat lt sl OR ADS. At RP os COPYRIGHT, 1897 By THE AUTHOR tinwed. ) i up his team’ for a start, and€ We ex: changed friendly words with the maestro, Whose cavalcade came up at about the same _ time, having made a short nooning on the plain a mile or two behind us. Looking back aft- er a time we could see that the Mis- sourian’s and the maestro's outfits were now travelling together. An hour after our start, with Stein’s | { and flood the arro peak to the northward and Gabilan peak to the southward, behind us, Don |} Ramen, sitting on the froit seat of the carriage with his rifle between hig knees, pointed to a buzzar sailing in great circles high in the air, two or three miles ahead of us. Soon it wag |! joined by amother, and several specks in the distance, growing larver as Icoked, showed that others of the car- rion birds were fiying our way. *“* It’s a bad sign,’ ’said Don Ramon, gravely. “It means Apaches. The i | ee | ~~ _ 7 . a m ou : Felix fellback a little behind the carriage buzzards follow them in their work, for they know they will find plenty of prey.” Soon came another sight which caus- ed us all to rein up and pause for a | time before gzoing forward. We | watched it with weapons held ready | in hand as if to meet instant danger, although what we saw was far away. | We had passed from the Cienaga de | San Simon and now were in the high, ‘ broken eowntrv to the eastward. The mountains were about us, near at hand, although the trail for the most Part stili followed the open plain that lies between and about the ranges in this region. To the right and lieft many eminences were in view, some- times rocky and jagged, mostly round- ed hills or level-topped mesas dot- } ted with aginon trees. Long reaches of plain, on which the mesquite and cactus grew, stretched to the south- ward, limftless seemingly, like the ocean, With solitary peaks rising lke voleanic istands from the sea. All about the southern and eastern hori- zcn the mirage played in similitude of a vast undulating water sheet, in which rocked and floated islands with strange trees and structures and mon- sters. Far off, to the south, where the solid earth seemed first to lift inte the mir- age, looking as unsubstantial as shad- ows or as magic-lantern pictures thrown upon-a screen, a herd of horses, mules and donkeys were galioping scuthward. ‘Behind them rode mourt- ed men, five or six in number, lashing them along and darting to left or right as if to keep them to a course. To one trained in life upon the plains the difference between a white inan and an Indian, even seen too far away to identify more than the outlines and rotion of the ‘bodv, is unmistakable, and the riders we saw were plainly Indians. Whether the horsemen were far away or comparatively near could not be es- timated with any certainty, nor was it necessary that it shoula be. They widenirg the distance between and so far as we were concern- there was no danger to be antici- But the sight of like that of the buzzards, was of what might come, and we had not felt before our party. Den Ramon us, a bad omen al «ai tem of the cerriage, and laid the weap- on across Lis knees. Carmen, realiz- ing the premonition of danger, rather from the feeling that pervaded cur party than from anything she saw or understood, turned to Felix if to gather from his expression what might as be the matter, ard if there were cause for alarm. Her bright face ‘ook on a questioning, anxious look at -the stade of seriousness upen his brow, and ste bent her gaze fixeciv upon ‘ him as if to command an answer to the mute enquiry in her eyes. At | ence the signs of sombre thought teft his face, and he smiled. Instantly the lcck of anxiety vanished from her face, but her eyes still asked : | “Is there anything wrong ?” : afraid the rain was about ll and give us a wetting,” he said, had spoken to him. He to the mountains beyond Stein’s peak, whose tops were dimmed as if with haze, stood against the background of a darkened sky. Carmen sank back in her seat, reassured and satisfied. Presently Felix fell back a little be- hind the carriage, signalling me to do likewise. We still could see the dis- Indians as they receded, becom - ing more and more a part of the mir- age beyond the plain. to fa if she ; x inted | &@&s slightly, and That's not alf of them,” he said. “Tt looks as if the general was right this morning in his idea of what the renegades woule do—that they would break up into littie bands and take the bsck track. for itlexica. =ant we CHAPTER XIII. That th Was a prospect of heavy rains te ¢ us that day would be me re evi nt to < who knew the country well than to a tenderfoot. Off to the sout t] nirage phantoms danced and floated as lightly as they had done at any time before during the day, and from the clear sky the Sun shene in the south-west as bright- | ly as he had beamed throughout the mérning. It was in the north an@ north-west that the thickening sky boded rainclouds, which might linger in the mountains to discharge their contentS among the peaks or might | drive forth above the plain to fall in heavy showers of rain, characteristic of this region. At this time of the year, after weeks of clear weather, the rainy season might be suppesed to have enced, but it often hapvens in New Mexico and Arizona that such days of brightness prove only the pre- mean thict te ey‘are thavie to be crose- ing the stage irail between here and Silver Citv anywhere and at any time, ali headings for the Sierra Madre across the line. li we running into Some of their parties we shall do well, Our salvation is in the fact that the eccuts and soldiers are probably press- ing them too closely to give them time miss to lie round in wait for us.” “Well, whatever is to happen will happen. We can do no better than keep on and get out of the way of Ganger as fast as we can,” I replied. “Of course, and meantime we must keep in readiness against trouble if it ris i 6.tpae thunderstorm that Seems tc be athering in the Pelon- cillo mountains cCoesn’t break on us Vos, we'd better make Silver City. I think Ramon’s idea,’’ a@ night ride that will be into Don luce to @ terrific ruinsterm which gives the grand finale to the rainy season in true melodramatic fashion, with ahe accompaniments of wind, hail, lightning, crashing thunder, and inun- dation. The rainstorms of this arid region ccme from off the mountains, as in the coast regions they come from off the sea. So the increasing haziness about the Peloncillos and the Burro range, though far away, indicated pos- Sible trouble later for us out upon the Plain. The pleasant southern breeze that had blown throughout the morn- ing had fallen, and there was a bod- ing stillness and mysterious electrical quality in the half sultry air that op- pressed the spirits and filled the minds oT all our party with vague uneasiness. So we travelled silently forward over the trail, and when one of our num- ber spoke, what he had to say was said briefly and in monosyllables. Without the appearance of great watchfulness, our eyes closely scan- med the country far and near, from the distant mountains from which Apache smoke spires rose fitfully here "and there to the rocks and eminences and hollows, the yuccas, cactuses, and mesquite clumps closer at hand. Whenever our party drew near a@ pomt where the trail descended an arroyo, as the dry water courses of the coun- try are called, or turned the base of a foothill, Felix or I rode forwaré in advance of the carriage to explore the ground ahead and see that it shelter- ed no Indian ambuscade. Not less we watched well to the rear lest Apaches, lying unseen as we passed, should ‘dash upon us from behind, their chosen method of attacking a travel- ling outfit. One thing which surprised us was that we had seen nothing of the two prospectors. They had started from the station much earlier than we, and we knew how astonishingly far the long, swinging pace of men like these, accustomed to cover long distances on foot, will carry them in the day’s round. Still it seemed that we ought by this time to have sighte@ them somewhere in the distance before us. That they were yet ahead of ws we could tell by their tracks and the hoof prints of their horses upon the trail. The buzzards that we had Seen gathering in the air were now ‘circling above a point we were ap- proaching near at hand. It was evi- ‘dent that they were only waiting for someone to go away and leave them a «lear field before settling dowm upon m prey that they had discovered. Ah, here were signs that might ac- count for the presence of the buz- wards! The tracks of the prespectors and their horses were lost in a con- fusion of hoof prints ef horses and mules which recently had erossed the trail. A little farther along a dead burro, which we recognized as one of those driven by the prospectors, lay dead, shot with a bullet, beside the trail. Cautiously we went on, scruti- nizing every object to left and that might conceal an enemy. ter Of a mile farther along, a recky slope grown up oak, our mules suddenly shied away to the right, swerving so much that it was with difficulty that Manuel held them te the road. (To be Continued. ) The Leading | Bicyclsi useAdams’ Tufti Frutti. Itallays thirst and gives staying power. Some dealers to obtain a big profit try to paim otf imitations. Seo that the trade mark name Tutti Frutti is on each dc. package. Save coupons inside of wrappers for latest books and prizes, right A quar- against with serub 150 TEETIX Mounted on Aluminum, Celluloid, Vul- canite, Watts, Reese and Weston’s Metal. Platinum and Combination Plates, Crown and Bridge Work. DR. J. P. MURRAY, 145 Queen Street. | | | er “OUR LADY OF THE SNOWS” TEA AY ALBERTON. This grandest of ibe seasou’s teas will be held at Alberton, the thriving 3 % > metropolis of the West, on Thursday, August oth The feast of -Our Lady of the Snows.” The time—A feast rendered celebrated recently by Rudyard Kipling—the place, Alberton, is certainly charmingly situated and the centre of western commerce; experience: Aiberton teas have been np i the hum erous in the past and always to the level of the oceasion—the determination: to make this in point of numbers, at- tractions and = excellent refreshinents ahead of the best. All these circumstan- ces warrant us jo inviting the whole Prov lace to come to Alberton and assist at a tea worth attending. Let neither haying nor anything else interfere. There wili be lets of time haymaking when yon are dead. You require a day off. You’! sure to mect everybody and see everything nt Alberton. Onsuch occasions the renew long made acquaintances, and young make new ones which often ripen iuto happy alliances. Avd an arrange ment of relief to the bashfa! bachelor will be affected. Come one and al! to Albert- on onthe Sth then, and see the country, evjov the sigkts and hospitality of the people, bear beautiful masic discoursed, and be made supremely bappy yourself. Besides the usual well supptied Tea Tables, a first-class meat and Vegetable Table wili be provided. The refresh- ments and delicacies will beat the best. Two Brass Bands will discourse sweet music throughone the dav. There will be Swings and Wheels of Fortune, and Dancing Booths and sports of all kinds, The best speakers on both sides of poiitics wili address the gatherirg. Train Arrangements. (Local Time). Leave Charlottetown at | ye oid the 7.30 a. m. “North Wiltehire at sig“ “ Hunter River 8.28 * * Bradalbane S63 * ‘© Vmerald 84s * “Freetown 9.08 “ “Kensington 9.22 “ * Summerside 945% * — Miscouche sie * Wellington 1000 “ © Port Hill 10.25 “ “© O’ Leary 1055 * “ Bloomfield Lue.” *§ Alberton ia “ Tignish 6.00 “ Fares. Charlottetown ts Milton, inclusive $1.25 Colville tu Fredericton, " 115 Elliot’s to Blueshank, ” 95 Kensington to Miscouche, “ 85 St. Nichoias to Northam, * 15 Port Hill to Portage, “ 60 West Devon te O’Leary, ° AS Howlan to Alberton, single first-c’ass fare. Tickets issued by all trains leaving Tiguish and intermediate stations at first class fare; good for return. Children be- tween five and twelve, half of the above fares, Parties east of Charlottetown wishiug to connect with Speeial Train carn do eo by taking train the day previous, to Char- lottetown, at a single first class fare, to Chariottetown with the special Excursion Ticket therefrom. Returning will leave Alberton at 5 o’clock, p. m.,the evening of the tea JNO. P. BRENNAN, Secretary. Aug 2, 3, 4 Teachers their examinations will need a good time keeper before taking charge of a school. We pave a 'arge stock of Gold And Silver Watches timed, and ready for delivery at at low prices. % Hk. TRYEOR Jeweler and Optician. ‘orth Side Queen Square. passed PURE WEST INDIA Lime Juice ONLY (5c A PINT amie Twine I & blll And students who have succesfully & = Spring Specialties. Retrigerators, Lawn Mowers, Ice Cream Freezers, Green Wire NeS pring Door Hinges, Garden. Trowels, Gold Paint, Rubber Hose £68. ' O28 tt WLLON VW CRABBE Walke-s Corner ~ 133 STOV ES BINDERS, MOWERS AND RAKES MAXWELL BINOKR isrecognized to be the best im- plement on the marked. Itis trne only right hand cut, and also the simplest and surest knotting machine, never break- ing twine. MOWER.—The lighest cutting and strongest machine in heavy or light hay. Hasall the best improvements —foot lifting spring, raising finger bar clear of all obstructions, stumps, roots, etc. RAKES.—Tiger and Sthied. These Rakes are fitted with the new steel wheel, having 26 teeth and solid steel axle. Also, angle steel bar to hold teeth. The teeth are set torake, nottoharrow the ground. They are the most perfect Rake made to-day. Inspection of those machines in- vited, or write us for prices. FINLAYSON & McKINNON CORNER...... RICHT IN IT... We are “right in it” as the saying goes in this thing of selling boots and shoes, chocolate shoes Jat 90c and $1 and HARDWARE SS a TERLIZZICK’S ——= See our $1 Ladies’ laced kid boots ; npwerds. Girly Button Shoes, 75c, and 90c. W.H. Stewart. & Co London House Ruilding...... oe mene BURGLARS WANTED. To te Burglar who entered our office and broke the Handle of Safe we extend an invitation to call again, promising him a free entry into the safe, and thereby sav- ing him the use of the Stillson wrench. We will not insure his easy exit, but will be on hand with an ambulance and uodertaker. At (he same time we give the Dairymena guarantee for one year with our twelve gang Cheese Presses. Nearly al that were imported herein the past required to be repaired within a year. Our improved Cheese Vat is the most popular in the market. Our Babcock Testers never break the bottles. The press hoops are right for eighty lbs of curd. And best of all the “ ALPHA de LAVAL SEPARATOR” is on f th fi away ahead of al! others Write for prices. Terms made to suit customers, Our Pumps are winning,a vame for themselves at prices to beat any im TT. A. MecLEAN che Tone ‘ sustaining pedal greatest triumph of tae Heintzman & Co. cove o FIMO asians The Greatly iacreases the tone producing power of a Piano. Latest and best invention of the musical age. Call and hear it at The P. E. Island Musie House. Are Sole Agents on P. E. Island for this Piano