« Said. . Stanched. ite ? mY ye FAK a“ b 22S 4 YF iy be > npc Cx Sy ; : —- +? . Tiler Jowed t toward the trail. They were the two prospectors. a a) SOM STOR Se OS a OF THLE SAN SIMON BLAIN. 5 - YCLARENCE PULLEN, you to select.”’ = oie —— COPYRIGHT , 1897 BY THE AUTHOR r (Continued.) we W not Kept walting tong to , TY,” .me sam. “we snan nave tw jearn cause of the mules’ alarm. {| Palt soon. in any case to give our stock Out bushes rose a man, who | 2 Chance to rest and eat. It would waved bis hat as a stgnal for us to be well, I think, to stop here were stot : then came down to meet us, the grazing is good rather than push carry his rifle, muzzle forward, on forward into the storm. The rain will hie al lider in token of his friendly | ™ost likely be over by sun set.” int ntions Behind him a second man i turned toward Felix, Who nodded appeared, pale and = dishevelled, his | Bis assent to the proposition, « Very aon $ ted by a sling made from | 800d," I.said to Don Ramon. « We a cotton Pandkerchief. He slowly fol- | wit Stop at Wastever oGee © ghens ( We maused at vy after ; : s Os their approach, recognition and Waited to hear What they had to say. Dees any one of you happen to he a surg asked the foremost man. “No,” I answered. “What's the smatter ” ting hurt ? “Nothing but an Apache’s. bullet through his arm. The Indians jump- ed us from ambush, just back of here, we were travelling along the Came pretty near getting us, too. But we got up the hillside, in among the chavdarral, and kept our rifles pumping wherever a _ redskin showed sO much as a glint of an eye. After a few minutes they sneaked to where they'd left their horses and stolen stock, and rode to the south. Our skirmish was pretty hot while it Jasted, though. They killed one of our burros at the first fire, ether two followed us into the brush and stayed as closely by as dogs, so the Apaches culdn’t stampede ‘em, de what they would. They know the Ir- dians too well to let that happen. But Jim's wound here needs dressing. He's kest considerahle blood and feels pretty bad. I don’t think he'll be good for much travelling afoot for a good spell yet, and it’s a bad country to be left in wounded. I was in hopes one of you was a doctor and would find some way of fix up his wound so ’twould do til fe could get into Silver City.” Felix was off his horse at once and was by the wounded man’s side ex- amining the injured arm. That he had been a medical student before he came to the West had often stood us in good stead in the haps and tumbles of our rough life, and I used some- times to call him Dr. Felix. He felt the wounded arm, and had the man move it to and fro and turn it about. “There are no bones broken,” he “TI think we can fix this to do you all right until you strike white Has your partner been get- while trail. settlements and a doctor.” A bit of packing rope tied tightly above the wound had served as tourni- quet. Felix untied it and satisfied himself that the flow of blood was From his cantinas he took a roll of lint cloth. From this he tore several strips, and with them band- aged the wound. “There, you'll do for awhile—until t-morrow morning, if necessary,” he said, when he had completed the op- eration. ““Now take these extra Strips, and you'll have them at hand When you want to renew the bandage. Now about your getting to Silver 'City—"” “He can ride with us,” said Don Ramon, from the carriage. ‘‘ We will make room for him, and he will be very. welcome.” The prospectors looked at each other and shook their heads. “We are obliged to you for your ofer,. sir,” said Jim, the wounded man. ‘But on foot, and with those two burros to drive, my pard can’t keep, along with you, and I reckon we won't separate. Now that my wound’s dressed, we'll get along somehow. I can foot along by easy stages.” ow, better than that,” said 40Uu can do a feiix. “There are teams coming along behind us that left the stage Station this A e } outht and morning—the Pike county the Mexican showman’s. They are travelling at a slower gait than we are. The showman, Senor Trinbajo, is a good fellow, as you know, and will gladly give you a lift. Your partner can keep pace with them While driving along your two burros. And you'll all travel safer and more tomfortable fc being together.” “We'll see you again, I hope, in Sil- Ver City,” he added, as the two men Signified t+} approval of this their “ Good we luck to you: He s himself upon his horse, plan. Wwung and we started on. The interruption had cost us a quarter of an hour’s ume. Now we were off again, heading ‘oward the Burro mountains, the most “ahgerous part of our route, the wood- ““, Crag-bound lurking place of the Apaches in ; i times of foray. As We travelled we talked over the en with bon Ramon, and made Dians for the night journey. He rdially agreed with Felix and me that we had bet the hither : © nad ter halt on Side of this d us ground to rest but the! wt animals, and get our supper, and we t trail again after night had “len. ie darkness would protect Our px . t hy ey r} th: ? Ales and nyons oO ta urable for Apache am- ade, and if all went well the ~orning should find us in the open | , witry beyond, with an open road | “icre us to Silver City. i It evidently was a stormy afternoon | M the my untains all around the north- “i horizon. Stein’s peak now and val the I cloncillos were vi iled .in an oo etrable curtain of mist that for “1 hour past had hidden them from ur View. The Surro mountains ahead e outlined, spectral, against & clou ank, darkened pearl-grey in eat, Which concealed all but the near- > Peaks. This bank was rent al- Rehenie tinuously by zigzag streaks of wa: While the sullen rumblings in oe “nt thunder came to our ears | Ken sound. All the time | fun i was cl ar ove rhe ud, and the the en - he Snly, sete ta ws on twice a. were dimmed for a few | the - and a light sprinkling iHlecked : Oring. °2 the trail and tapped |} 2 St the Carriage top i NE glk eer ee @he- a oe x ne Say vecan | Ss UNtil the rein on ads. lil ‘ i rose in a | \ I uNntains. | With no more. ado, the carriage and team turned sharply off the trail to the right, and stopped at a long smooth slope, where : the buffalo grass was tall and thick. The mules oe unharnessed from the carriage, our horses were unsaddled, and, With our stock picketed out and feeding, Felix and I took the shovel, Which is an in- dispensable part of every Waggon out- fit in Arizona, and went down into the arroyo to-see if we could find a water pool. It was .a pleasing picture ‘that our outfit and its surroundings presented as, before descending into the arroyo I paused .a moment at its verge to view it. At. the carriage. Don Ramon Was seated .on the water keg com- fortably rolling his cigarette, Manuel was adjusting.a, piece. of the harness and Dolores, kneeling: by the little aaa we had ‘kindled from brushwood Picked up in the arroyo as we crossed, was Kneading dough for tortillas. Half way ‘between the carriage and the arroyo Carmen, the central figure in the scene, stood where she had paused to pick some wild flowers which now she was fastening at her throat. With a white blossom shining in her heavy hair, she had turned toward the carriage to call to her: father. and-show him the posy she had gathered. Be- yond her was the green slope, with the feeding mules and horses, and in the background was the cloud pall that covered the mountains, rent by vivid lightning flashes that were accom- panied by the frequent crashes and constant deep-toned mutterings of the sullen thunder. The general course of the arroyo was northwest, leading toward the Gila river. Two hundred yards above the Stage trail crossing by which we de- scended into it the channel made .a Sharp bend, so that upon two sides it inclosed the spot where the carriage had halted. Up:the channel, half way to this bend, was.a moist place in the sand, about which were footprints of antelope, coyotes and -smaller animals leading to and from it. These .tracks were an unmistakable indication that water was near the surface. Digging a hole in this moist spot, we soon had the satisfaction of seeing it fill with water quite up to the level of the river bed, and soon it ran over.and trickled in a rivulet along the sands. “Ah!” exclaimed Felix. ‘ Here's .a sign of high water. There’s a river running through these sands below the surface. We're beginning to hear from those storms in the mountains. When the full head of water gets along, we may have a flood in the arroyo. ““Leok over there,’ jhe continued. “The water’s coming in -sight .al- readv.’’ At a low place im ‘the chammel, where five minutes before we had noticed no moisture, a little pool was forming. In several other places moist -spots were forming by water rising through the sand. And, even while we looked, upon th¢ opposite side of the arroyo a little stream came round the bend, trickling down the channel, seemingly pushed forward by @ growing vclume of water behind. Our outfit was on the safe ‘side of the arroyo, and we certainly were as- sured of water in plenty. Looking up at the turn in the channel I sug- gested :— *‘Wouldn’t it be a good idea to walk up to the bend and take a look be- yond it? It’s just the route a band of Indians or rustlers would choose in sneaking up to within gunshot of our camp.” “Good ! Let’s go, leaving our shovel sticking in said Felix. And the sand J- Sle & BASES yy PV tpsif tS Yo WY i eet! x Nee a te.4 ioe 4S ee is pr 4 ee Just in time to see four horsemen dashing down the valley. by the pool, we started up the chan- nel for the bend. Searcely had we taken our second step when we were brought to a sud- den halt by the sound of pistol shots ringing out beyond the bank in the direction of our encampment. With the firing were mingled the sounds of the swift trampling of horses, shouts of men, and wild screams of terror from a woman’s throat. The steep, crumbling banks of the arroyo offered us no chance of ascent at that point. (With revolvers drawn, we ran down tHe channel to the stage crossing, and up the bank to the prairie level. We arrived at the top of the bank just in time to see four horsemen dashine. down the valley at breakneck speed. All were Mexicans and well mounted. The foremost one, ! t horse of 5 g ». Held b i Vv] to free nerege é C ring for help, Ca a = y Oe EE epee eee a t is little wonder t wild. The bandits’ sudden attack had been as complete a surprise ta the party at the camp as it was to Felix and me, With Manuel,.Don Ramon had &one te a little distance away from the carriage to straighten out a dif- ference between two mules whose pick- et ropes had become entangled. San- grado and his followers had emerged from the arroyo, beyond the bend, and the first notice Don Ramon had of their presence was their shouts.and pis- tol firing as they dashed down past the carriage. Their bullets, evidently aimed to kill, had whistled unpleasant- ly near the Don and his servant; but, the distance being considerable, re- garded at pistol range, and the shots being fired from the backs of horses _ee at a tearing gallop, ne one was iit. ; As Carmer. stood, oP eee S went arranging had picked, between carriage and the arroyo, the sound of rushing heofs and shouts and shoot- ing had caused her to turn in startled dismay. The next moment Sangrado, leading his men, had checked his horse for an instant by her side, had caught her up from the Sround, swung her up from the ground, swung her upon the horse’s shoulders before him and was off like the wind down the valley, with his followers putting their horses at top speed in the endeavour to keep up with him. These details I learn®d later. Felix and I could time, which was all we needed to know, was that the bandits were off and away sand that they had Carmen. What we did was to rush for our horses, catching up our rifles, saddles, &nd bridles, as we passed the place Where they had been laid down. it was the work of but a minute to sad- dle and bridle our trained and docile animals and to cast off the picket ropes. Then, springing to the saddle, we set spurs hard against our horses’ flanks and were off, with a bound, to- gether. The race was one with life or death and Carmen as tke stikes aN: whch we rode (Tu be Contiened.) aot SO Scan oe the she the flowers What perceive at the —_ on LOO LR NNO RO PRED ORO LT Ome SOO SOO SAS SSCS OSS IO TSSs CO IS ‘NOT, as most soaps, made from “soap fat,” the refuse of the kitch- en ot the abattoir, VEGETABLE OILS supply the necessary in- ; OCOCCOOOOS = SOU COSCORC EE COOCOOOC gredients — one of the reasons why it should be used in nurseries and for delicate skins. soae8 The Abert Toilet Scap Co., Mfrs. Montreal. 3 ANADA’S "=r INTERNATIONAL i. HIBITION ST. JOHN, N. B. {4th-24th Sept 1897 GVER $12,000 1% PRIZES For Live Steck, Farm & Dairy Products Competition open to the world. Very Cheap Excursion Rates on all Rail- ways and Steamers. Hates and dates an- nounced later. Special Arrangements are made for the Cheap transport ot Exbibits. A splendid new Poultry Enildingis in eoursre Of erection, and Amausement Hall wil! be enlarsed and improved, In addition to Industrial, Agricultural and Live Stock Exhibits, six nights of HAsD € CO’s Magnificent Pire Werks and an hourly programme of Special High Class Dramatic Effect, will be given in Amuse ment Hall, making together the best and cieanest Special attraction ever brought before the people of the Maritime Provinces. A trip to the Sea Shore, a visit to Canada’s Winter Port, and astay in the cleanest and healthiest eity in Canada, can be combined with a visit to the International Exhibition at the very Low Raies to be later advertised, Arrange Now to Come to St. Jetin. Entry Forms will be forwarded to evep; ne who applies personally or ,by letter to CHAS. A. EVERETT, Manager and Sécretary, ST. JOHN, N. B. W. C. PITFIELD, President dywy 42 tf Removal Sale Having to vacatemy premises within ays, .I hereby offer to the fr public regardless of cost, my large stock of clothing, cottons, dress goods, gents’ furnishings, etc. Thisis a genuine sale, Ihave to gowithin 30 days, andmy goods have to gobefore then. I am pre pared to give you the best bargains you ever got in your life, Come in and see for yourself ‘Come early Or you may miss > chance of a lifetime . se Re CUPSU Se TET £3 g’ SES OO a4 he Rw? OF Be dS a Ree © New York Chear Store, PURE WEST INDIA ited Gold And: Silver Watches ETE. PAY EOR orth Side Queen Square. ONLY [Sc A PINT ee ete LOOK AT OUR-——=™ Opposite west end Market. hotel good fishing from Tracadie Harbor of Cod and Mackerel. Good boat, bait and fishing tackle supplied. July 26. EXCURSION Nexi Monday evening the members of Charlottetown Lodge No. 68,1. 0. G. T will hold a Moonlight Excursion, on the Jacques Cartier. McMillan & Hornsby’s, Jenkins & Sone, W.N. Tanton’s, G. F, from a few of the members. number Band will furnisn miusie. Hotel And students who have #uccesfully passed their will | need a good time keeper before examinations taking charge of a school. We bave a ‘large stock of — timed, and ready for delivery at at low prices. Jeweler and Optician, Ralime uce —AT— & Gills New line of Ladies’ Oxford Shoes, be autifully finished and well worth $1.50, which we are selling at $1. This lot was delayed, and will now go quick for this small price, Ladies Fine Button Boots for $1.10, regular price $1,353, YOU WANT a suit of Clothes of all wool tweed, we have 50 suits which will gonow for $4 to $4.50, former prices, $6.75 to $7.75. Reason, the colors are light but if mecessary, will wash and stand it too—get a suit. A cheice hne of Mens Ties, Shirts aud Underclothing at ridiculously low prices, M il : Is l, Tickets for sale only at hnteheson’s and Only a lim- 82nd Batt. will be sold. Acadia CRE BETD | guests are having 1. HALL, Piati , dan ct » a ea Mounted on Aluminum, Celluloid, Vul canite, Watts, Reese and Weston’s Metaj. | numand Combination Plates, Crown Driage i252 Walke-s Corner 134 tC lim I BINDERS, AND RAKES J o = ——- Retrigerators, Lawn Mowers, Ice Cream Freezers, Green Wire Newe,ring Door Hiuges, Garden. TrodSls, Gold Paint, Rubber Hose “Od. ' 3200300808 we oOWN VAT CRABBE STOVES HARDWARE MOW ERS ing twine. in heavy or light hay. stumps, roots, etc. axle. vited, or write us for prices. RAKES.—Tiger and Sthied. with the new steel wheel, having 26 teeth and solid steel Also, angle steel bar to hold teeth. set to rake, not to harrow the ground. perfect Rake made to-day. Inspection of those machines in- shoes, upwards. hand with an ambulance and undertaker. repaired within a year. away ahead of all others MAXWELL BINDER 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- MOWER.—-The lighest cutting and strongest machine Has all the best improvements —foot lifting spring, raising finger bar clear of all obstructions, These Rakes are fitted The teeth are They are the most FINLAYSON & McKINNON TERLIZZICK’S CORNER...... RIGHT IN IT... We are “right in it” as the saying goes in this thing of selling boots and See our $1 ladies’ laced kid boots ; chocolate shoes fat 90c and $1 and Girls’ Buttoa Shoes, 75c, and 90c. W. H. Stewart. & Co London House Ruilding. eens _ To the Burglar who entered our office and broke the Handle of Safe we extend an invitation to call again, promising him a free entry ing him the use of the Stillson wrench. We will! not insure his easy exit, but will be on into the safe, and thereby sayv- At the 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 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 Write for prices. Terms made to suit custome~s. Our Pumps are winning,a vame for themselves at prices to beat any im ET’. Ae MiecLEAN ane Tone The Greatly increases the tone prodacing power of a Piano, Latest and best invention of the musical ace. Call and hear it at wustaining pedal greatest triumph of tae Heintzman & Co. oweceee IOs caeun co eas As Cs ‘tr . Vy sors wD J P Beats ce Aur Eve ‘ HEU SEEL GE, mearnsii a a Stine Se we oe usie House, nw 434%5, Bina RS a SSE TS SA ETERS i 4 . ~~ od ~ oe ae \ > es a * a ra = J > 4 ad i ae H ‘ _ | | % 4 | pe a ued an A aia, fr Fos be ee: ~ pomeaear ar, — — >, hala ane or e o iis eee ey a 1 ae. Fs nN 2 as de f _— is r gceme ay cemmpen o ene an Senne ares ee ve