Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 24, Number 34, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 17 February 1894 — Page 3
Continued from Second Page.
With rush and tliunder of hoofs a band Of horsemen came tearing up to the spot just as Feeny reached their leader— reached him and went down to earth, Btunned, senseless from a crashing blow, even as Ned Harvey, his legs jerked from under him by the sudden clip of a rawhide lariat, was dragged at racing speed out over the plain, bumping over stick and stone, tearing through cactus, screaming with rage and pain, until finally, battered into oblivion, the last sound that fell upon his ear was the shriek of agony from has sisters' lips, telling him they were struggling in the rude grasp of reckless and infuriated men.
CHAPTER VI.
Harvey could not long have lain unooHacious. No bones were broken, no severe concussion sustained in the rapid drag over the sandy surface, and the awful nense of the calamity that had befallen linn and the dread and doubt as to the fate of his beloved ones seemed to rally his stunned and bewildered facslti(« and bring liim face to face with tho hon yr of the situation. Barely able to breathe, he found himself rudely gaggt'd. Striving to raise his hand to tear the hateful bandage away, he found that he was pinioned by the elbows and bound hand and foot by the very riafa probably that had dragged him thither. No doubt as to the nationality of his unseen captors here. The skill with which he had been looped, tripped, whisked away and bound—tho sharp, biting edges, even the odor of dirty rawhide rope—all told him that, though Americans were not lacking in the gang, his immediate antagonists hailed from across the Sonora line.
Who and what they were mat
tered little, however. The fact that after hours of repulse in open attack tho foe had all on a sudden carried their oastle by a damnable ruse was only too forcibly apparent. Writhing, struggling in miserablo offort to free liimsolf from his bonds, poor Harvey's burning eyes were maddened by tho picture before bim only a couple of hundred yards away.
There in the iierce light of the flames now bursting from every window and roaring and shooting high in air from the brush heaped roof of Moreno's ranch—thero stood the Concord wagon, stalwart men clinging to the heads of tihe plunging and oxcitod mules, a big rnfiian already in tho driver's seat, whip and reins in hand thero beside it was tho paymaster's ambulance, into Khich three of the gang were just shoving tho green painted iron safe—tho Pandora's box that had caused all their Borrows—thero Moreno's California Vuckboard, pressed into sorvico and being used to carry the wounded, drawn bjr the extra mules, and then—God of keaven! what a sight for brother's eyes to see and make no sign!—theu ono big brute lifted from the ground and handed up to a fellow already ensconced within tho covered wagon tho senseless, perhaps lifeless, form of pretty little Ruth, his father's idol. Tho poor child lay unresisting in the ruffian's arms, but not ku jVijuit.T. It took two men, strong and l.nrly, to lift and force her into th il.vi :1"i ior, nntli'in- of tin.se, to th ut(l.-lail o!' his equipment, wns to all appearanee a trooper of the 1'ititvd States cavalry.
Thero stood his panting horse with hanging head ami jaded withers, the •cry steed whose rush they had weloonled with such exceeding joy, saddled. bridled, blanketed, saddlebagged. lariated, side lined, every item complete and exactly as issued by the ordnance department. The trooper himself wore the tield uniform of tho cavalry—the dark blue blouse, crossed by the black carbine sling, whoso big brass buckle Ned could even now see gleaming between the broad shoulders and gathered at the waist by the old fashioned "thimble It'' tho troop saddlers used to make for Held service before the woven girolo was devised. Even more. Harvey in his misery remembered the thrill of joy with which ho had uoti 1, as tho splendid rider reined in and thv- himself from the saddle, the crosv.'d sabers, tho troop letter "C" and the r-'iriinenSal numler gloaming at the frer.t of hi.-a campaign hat.
Who— who conid this be. wearing the houurabl*1 garb of a soldier of the United States, yet figuring as ^ringleader in a band of tobhers and assassins now adding rapine to their calendar of crime? Edward Harvey's heart almost burst with helpless rago and wretchedness wheu he saw his precious sisters dragged within the canvas shelter—saw the tall. unilorn brigand leap lightly after them and heard him shout to the ready driver, "Now, otf with you!"
Crack! went the whip as the men sprang fmm the headset the frantic mules, and with a liomitl that nearly wrenched tho trace hooks from the stout whippletree the Concord went spinning o\er the sand* to the south, whirling so near him that over tho thud of hoofs and whirl of wheels and croak of spring and woodwork he amid hear poor Fanny's despairing cry —tho last sound he was aware of for hours, for now in dead earnest Harvey swooned away.
Half an hour later, the rafters of the ranch having by this time tumbled in and turned the interior into a glowing furnace, there came riding from the west a slender skirmish line of horsemen in tho worn campaign dress of the regulai cavalry. With the advance there wero not more than six or eight, a tall, slender lieutenant leading them on and signaling his instructions. With carbines advanced, with eyes peering out from under the jagged hat brims, tho veteran troopors came loping into tho light of the flames, expectant •very instaut of hearing tho crack of outlaw's rifle or perhaps the bias of feathered arrow of unseen foe. Though
some of tho steeds looked hot and wearied, the big rawboned sorrel that carried the young commander tugged at his bit and bounded impatiently as though eager for the signal—' charge.'' Straight into the circle of light, straight to the southern entrance, now a gate of flame, the soldier rode and loudly hailed "Moreno!"
But biasing, snapping woodwork alono replied. Guided by an experienced sergeant, some of the troopers, never halting, rode on into the eastward darJniess, and there were stationed as vedettes to guard against surprise. Returning to where he had passed his lieutenant, the sergeant dismounted, allowing his weary horse to stand, and then began a minute examination. Fol
There in the fierce light of the flames stood the Concord wagon. lowing the freshest hoof tracks, he found the young officer riding about through the thick smoka within the corral. "Any sign of Moreno or his people, sir?" he hailed. "Not yet. Just see what's beyond that doorway. My horse is frightened at something there and I can't see for tho smoke."
Obedient, the sergeant pushed ahead, bending low to avoid the stifling fumes. Between the tumbledown heap of barley sacks and the crumbling wall lay some writhing objects in the sand, and his stout heart almost failed him at the moan of agony that met his ear. "Help! water! Oh, for Christ's sake, water!"
One bound carried him out of sight of his superior. The next instant, dragging by the foot a prostrate form, he emerged from the bank into the fresher air of the center of the corral. Off came his canteen and was held to the parched lips of a stranger in scorched civilian dress, his beard and hair singed bv the flames, his legs and arms securely bound. "Who are you and what's happened? Whose work is this?" demanded the lieutenant, leaping from saddle to bis side. The man eeemed swooning away, but tho sergeant dashed water in his face. "Quick!—tho others!—or they'll burn to death." "What others? Where, man?" exclaimed tho soldiers, springing to their feet. "Oh! somewhere in there—the far end of tho corral—or Moreno's west room," was tho gasping reply.
Another rush into tho whirling, eddying smoke, another search along under the wall, and presently in tho flickering light tho rescuing pair came upon a barrier of barley sacks, burning in place* from huge ilalces of lire falling from the biasing rafters of the overhanging shed, and behind this, senseless, suffocated, helplessly bound, two other forms. Thrusting the sacks aside, tho troopers seized and dragged forth their hapless fellow creatures. Jarred by sudden ssure, a burning upright snapped. There was a crackling, crashing sound and down came tho rafters, Bonding another column of flame to light up the features of men rescued not an instaut too soon from tho death that awaited them. "My God!" cried Sergeant Lee." this is old Feeny-—and yet alive."
Togi!h'T the two raised the senseless form, 1 ore li out into tho open space, laid it tiy beside their first discovery and ran b:i for the next, a big. heavy, bulky shape in loose and bloodstained garments. It took all their strength to lug it forth. Then the lieutenant bent by the side of tho slowly recovering civilian.
Are thero any more we can reach?" he questioned eagerly, his heart beating madly. "No—too late!—others were inside when the roof fell in. More water— more water"'
Sergeant Leo sprang to tho oil as gleaming tuero in the firelight and brought hack a brimming dipper, holding it to the poor fellow's parched lips until ho could drink no more, then slashing away tho thongs with which ho was bound. "This is greaser work." lio cried. "How could they havo left you alive? Where are Moreno's people? Who's done this anyhow?"
Pasqual Morales. Moreno was in it too. 'Twaa the paymaster they were laying for, but they've killed Ned Harvey and got his sisters—old Harvey's children—from Tucson." "What?" cried the officer, leaping to his feet. "Harvey's daughters here? —here? Man, are you mad?" "It's God's truth! Oh, if I had a drop of the whisky that's being burned in ther*1! I'm nigh dead." "Rnnto niv saddlebags, Lee: fetch that flask, quick then call in the men and send one back to hurry up the rest. When? have they gone? What have they done with their captivcs?" "God knows! I could hear them •creaming and praying—those poor girls I Mullan and the pay clerk picked np Feeny after he was stunned, and they rushed him back through here, where the paymaster had dragged himself, to where yon found him. That—that's the paymaster you've got there. Then they tried to save a
girls, but they were shot down inside and must have burned to death if they Wasn't killed. Oh, God, what a night!"
And weak, unstrung, unmanned, the poor fellow sobbed aloud. At this instant there rode into the corral a couple of troopers.
Lieutenant Drunimond here r'' cried one of them.
1'We'vefound
a xhan out
on the plain to the southeast, gagged and bound. Shall we fetch him in?" "You go, Quinn, but get some one else to help von. Patterson, your horse is fresh, gallop back on the trail. Tell Sergeant Meinecke to come ahead for all he's worth. Let the packs take care of themselves. Send Sergeant Lee in here to me again." Then with trembling hands the young officer turned his attention to his other patients. Severing the cords with his hunting knife, he freed them from their bonds, then dashed water over their scorched and blackened faces, meantime keeping up a running fire of questions. Between his sobs, the young civilian told him that the outlaws had hitched in both teams and taken also the spare mules and the buckboard. They had lifted the Harvey girls into the Concord, the safe and Pasqual Morales into the paymaster's ambulance, while the wounded men and Moreno's people probably were put on the open wagon. Then they had all driven furiously away to the south, leaving only two or three men to complete the work at the ranch. ['lobe Continued Next Week.]
Important Facts For Women.
Abnormally developed waists and hips are invariably the result of undue pressure at these points. The muscles, rendered inactive by the force brought to bear upon them, become weak and flaccid, aud as a result soft, flabby flesh formfc over them. When the pressure is removed and the muscl-is through exercise grow active, superflous flesh naturally disappears, slowly, but surely.
The stout woman can improve her ap pearance by the artistic .study of dress au proper care of the body. The thin, angv. lar, ill developed woman can accomplish wonders by exercise. The cavernous neck, with its ugly hollows, may be made full and shapely by deep breathing exerciser, rotary movements of the head and active position of the chest, but all padding must be discarded to give flabby muscles a chance to reassert themselves. Protruding shoulder blades will be permanently flattened when the active chest becomes habitual. Grace will be imparted to motion when the toes are turned outward, and often increased physical vigor results from correct position of the feet in walking, as it is averred by the doctors that weaknesses of the pelvic region are often traceable to the intoed mannerof walking peculiar to many women.—Jenness Miller Monthly.
Happy and Hungry.
For over live years I was a constant suil'uror with th it most terrible and annoying disease, dyspepsia. After paying out hundreds of dollars, the only medicine I found that would do rre any good was Sulphur Bitters. Six bottles cured me. No.vlcan eat well and am happy and huugry.—[Editor.
Japanese Women In New York.
There is a slow but. steady immigratior of Japanese women into New York. In the past decade they have increased from four or five to over 50. They are trim, bright eyed little creatures, who take a lively interest in everything going on. Their children are just likethe dolls which you buy in Yokohama. They are a trifle awkward in our styles of apparel andfoo--ear and never seem entirely at home in hem. Both women and children dress in the simplest modes aud in dark colors whenever they go out upon the street. In the privacy of their own homes they drop oar fashions and resume the kimono, ii and slipper ot Japan. Here they go to the opposite extreme and wear the most startling designs and brilliant hues imagina ble. Dressed a l'Americaine, they are usu ally plain, but when attired in their national costume they are pretty, graceful and attractive. A number of them live in the neighborhood of Sixth avenue ard Twenty-second street, but the rest are Mattered over the city. In religious mattecs the women are sometimes Christians, more often agnostics and seldom, if ever heathens. They stand our climate well, but do not. have as many children as !o their married sisters at home.—New York Advertiser.
I tried a bottle of Salvation Oil on a wound and wa« cored within several days. I never bad such a good remedy hs Salvation Oil in my hands. Mrs C. Duncan. Lexington, Mo."
Working: Women and Chaperons.
If women must be wage earners ami breadwinners, so far as they aro concern' "chaperons'" are impossible alike in Eng land and America. In most factories workshops and salesrooms, in America at least, women are as carefully guarded against insulting approaches or degrading entanglements as in their own homes. Therefore
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why in America we should, so far as the girls ir« concerned, bother ourselves as to whether they have chaperons or not. If there is danger to tin's class of girls England because they cannot have chaj erons, it might be well for those having the social condition of the mother country at heart to study the methods almost universally in use in the United States, and to the extent of adopting these method? Americanize the working girls of England. But so far as the wealthy classes are con cerued, either in Great Britain or the United States, there is no essential difference nor likely soon to be any. The presence of older women in every company adds to the dignity and variety quite as much as to the decorum and propriety.— Harper's Bazar.
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Address
TERKE HAUTE SATUBDAY EVENING MAIL. FEBRUARY 17,1894. 3
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Branding Criminals In China.
Finding that long terms of imprisonment and flogging do not check robbery and piracy and systematic practice of imposition on strangers in the nature of thievery in the Soochow district, the authorities have resolved to try branding. For the first offense the thief is to be branded on the right cheek, and for the second on the left cheek. The brand is to be the Chinese sign for the word thief. As the Chinese have a superstitious horror of all facial disfigurement, the belief is entertained that the new punishment will check the criminal element.—Sacramento Record-Union.
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In tbe matterof tbeestateof Susan M. Read,
In tbe Vigo Circuit court, February term, 1SML Notice is hereby given that Hugb D. Roq uet, as administrator of tbe estate of Susan M. Read, deceased, has presented and Hied his account and voucher* in final settlement of said estate, and that tbe same will come up tbe examination aud action of said Circuit court, on tbe 5tb day of March, 18M, at wbicb time all heirs, creditors or legatees of said estaU' are required to appear in said court and show tuse, if any there be, why said account and vonchers should not be approved.
HUt-H D. ROQUET. Administrator. Attext: P. a O'REILLY, Deputy Clerk.
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