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e way you can hit snything but PUC D! night. 1 kindly directed | piooy ¢ for o full half minute by pre- way you can hit am; , them on o Mesa, down n the Patnted | yeoqine to stumble and twist ber what you aim at! ! hille yonder.’ “Judith!” exclaimed the invalid. < ankle. she ’ Trey o Hearts ORISR A B R R TR YO0 % 98 v e v e s e e distaiice” to the ground, & scant teb 1 * CSa¥trained to pull up in order to re- | fect, landing without injury. move the obstruction from the track, ' A thought later Alan dropped lightly fthe train crew of the freight choked | to her side, staggered a trifle, recov- down {ts collective wrath on being pre- eented with a sum of money. In the hopes of further largesse it lent which had so frequently proved useful in similar emergencies, of an eloping couple pursued by an unreasoningly vindictive parent; and had its hopes rewarded by the price Alan bargained to pay in exchange for exclusive use of the caboose as far as the next town. 8o that it was not more than ten minutes before Rose was settled to rest in such comfort as the caboose af- forded, while Alan and Barcus sat itg | Went upon his back, but demonstrated common ear to Alan's well-worn tale, | bi8 1ack of injury by immediately pick- ered and dragged her out of the way. Barcus fell with a heavy thump and ing himself up and joining the others in a mad scramble for safety. Overhead the special engine, hur- tling onward like some titanic bolt, struck the caboose with a crash like the explosion of a cannon. It collapsed upon itself like a thing of pasteboard. That it had been comstructed of more solid stuff was abundantly proved by the shower of timbers, splin- ters and broken iron that rained about within its doorway and smoked. Neither he nor any other aboard the freight suspected for an instant that, in the box car next forward of the ca- ‘boose, a woman in man's clothing lay perdue, now and again chuckling fmpishly to herself in anticipation of the time and the event she was biding with such patience as she could mus- ter. i lance. Neither could be trusted, in- ead th The whistle of & locomotive over- "’1"""" ‘:: over"the rampart of o pens to tip the others oft.” deed, to work alone to the desired con- ' StirTuDs: pitched headlong 'oho": taking the freight sounded the signal | fains In the eas The girl swung to face him with ,ground; while Hopi Jim's for her to take action on her cherished plan. Rising, she glanced out of the open door. A curve In the track below the freight, laboring up a steep grade, en- abled her to catch & glimpse of a head- fight, followed by a string of lighted windows, indicating a single car: the special, beyond a doubt. ‘Without hesitation, since the train was not running at epeed, she droppe out to the ballast, wheeled smartly about, caught the handbar at the end of the box car as it passed and swung herself up between it and the caboose. A trifle later the freight gained the g | Wells-Fargo office and a telegraph and the heads of the fugitives. For all that, the gods smiled upon them for their courage: they escaped without a scratch. CHAPTER XXXVI. Detail. Across the plain purple shadows ‘were sweeping, close-ranked, like some vast dark army invading the land, Within the rim of hills that ringed the plain like the chipped and broken flange of a titanic saucer, silence brooded and solitude held eway— dwarfing the town of Detail that oo cupled the approximate middle of the sagebrush waste, to proportions even less significant than might be inferred from the candor of its christening. A platform, a siding, a water tank, a ticket office, backed by three rough | frame buildings; that is Detafl item- ized completely. Shortly after nightfall the steel rib- bons of the Santa Fe began to hum. A E headlight peered suspiciouely round a ! | the flesh. “Where did you drop from?” “From that freight,” plained carelessly, neglecting to eluci- date the exact fashion of her drop. “I judged you'd be along presently, and thought I'd like to learn the news. Well—what luck?” Her father shrugged with his one movable shoulder. Mr. Marrophat grunted indignantly. The others shuf- fled uneasily and looked all ways but one—at the girl in man’s clothing. “None?" Judith interpreted. “You don't mean to tell me that after I had taken all that trouble—cast the ca- boose loose in the middle of that trestle at the risk of my life—you didn't have the nerve to go through with the business!” “We went through with it all right,” replied Marrophat defensively; “but as usual, they were too quick for us. They jumped out and dropped off the trestle before our engine hit the ca- boose. We smashed that to kindling ‘wood—but they got away just in time to miss the crash. And by the time we had stopped and calmed down the engineer—well, it was dark and no way of telling which way they had run.” The girl started to speak, but merely dropped limp hands at her sides and rolled her eyes helplessly. “We do our best,” Marrophat ob- served. “We can't be blamed if something — somehow — always hap- blazing eyes. “Just what does that mean?” she demanded in a dangerous voice. Marrophat lifted his shoulders. “Nothing—much,” he allowed. “I am only thinking how strange it is that Mr. Law can’t be caught by any sort of stratagem—when you are on the job, Miss Judith!” The girl's hands were clenched into fists, white knuckles showing through “You contemptible puppy!” she snapped. . . . But on this her voice falled; for her tyes traveled past the person of Mr. Marrophat to the doorway of the draw- Judith ex-! CHAPTER XXXVII, 1 — | Fireplay. Contented with the promise of & thousand dollars advance on his con- tract, providing he returned with ' horses within a stipulated time, Mr. Hopi James Slade drifted quietly away into the desert night. Well content, persuaded that the morrow’s sun would never set upon s ! world tenanted by one Alan Law, that monomaniac, Seneca Trine, forgot his recent i1l temper and set himself diplo- matically to adjust the differences be- | tween his daughter, Judith, and his first lieutenant, Marrophat. It was no facile task: Marrophat could not be trusted to work with a single mind because of his infatuation for Judith; Judith could no more be trusted faithfully to serve out her vow to bring Alan Law to her father’s feet, alive or dead, because—O cruel irony of Fate!—she herself had fallen in love with that same man whose death she had pledged herself to compase. Only when, as now, half mad with jealousy, determined to see Alan dead rather than yield him to the woman . he loved, her sister, might Judith be scounted upon to serve her father iIn his lust for vengeance as he would be served—and even s0 not without Mar- rophat at her elbow to egg her on through her resentment of his surveil- : summation; for Trine had secret rea- son to fear lest Marrophat might, given opportunity, connive at Alan's escape in order that he might marry Rose and so throw Judith back into his, Marrophat’s, arms. Poor, deluded fool! Such was the private comment of Marrophat's master. e | For all that, it was the man and not his daughter, whom Trine designated to lead the expedition, cunningly counting on Judith’s chagrin to work upon her passions and excite her to one last, mad, blind attempt that should prove successful. i ; Smiling his secret smile, Trine an- | hotel to the open, nor yet appreciably | The pursuit was off in In spite of that alleged injury, neyer limped, and wasn't 8 yard be- hind the first who broke from the H d him in vaulting to saddle. ! be:;:“ up the road a cloud of smoky | dust haif obscured the shapes of three | very lives. : who rode for their very g ! and well bunched—Marrophat’s mount leading by a nose, Judith second, Hopl Jim and Texas but little in the rear. And in the first rush they seemed to gain; moment by moment they drew up on the flying cloud of dust. Judith heard an oath muttered be- side her and saw Marrophat jerking a revolver from its holster. The weapol swept up and to a level; but as the hammer fell, Judith’s horse caromed heavily against the other, swinging it half a dozen feet aside, and deflecting the bullet hopelessly. The shock of collision was so great that Marrophat kept his seat with aif- ¢ ficulty. He turned toward Judith 8 face livid with rage. Simultaneously, as if taking the shot as the signal for a fusillade, Judith saw Alan lean back over hie horse’s rump and open fire, An instant later his companion, Bar- cus, imitated his example. & In immediate consequence, Texas dropped reins, slumped forward over | ! the pommel, wabbled weakly in his | saddle for & moment, then losing the , stopped short, precipitating his rider overhead, and dropped dead. CHAPTER XXXVIII. The Upper Trail. In the ten minutes’ delay necesel- tated by this reverse, a number of more or less innocent bystanders picked up the man Texas and carried him off to breathe his last beneath a roof; Hopi Jim picked himself up, brushed his person tolerably clear of | elouds of dust and profanity, and de- parted in search of a mount to replace ol g i B P PR e PPPed o o o o BB e o> S PROBBRILPEDIRE DPLBEPPPPIPIOD Armour Star Hams Uncanbassed a 18 Cents This Week Only E. 6. TWEEDELL | PHONE 59 summit of the grade and began to run ing room snd found it framing s B s et L0 Tep Al ¢ shoulder of the eastern range, took . nounced his decision at the last mo- had been i { e . more smoothly. T heart of courage to find the plsaln still ' stranger. ! ‘ ment, while Hopl Jim waited with his | him; and Judith sat her horse calmly, M«AM@ e ;::?.?“! i S HRARAR A -hf“nl::::: ku:e::; ::?o::ht t; 5 ::0:: “Excuse me, friends,” he offered in | horses and an assistant—one Texas— | Smiling sweet insolence into the exae- L ing, which was not yet so dense that she might not discern two heads pro- turn stopped at Detall. “No? Is that so? Seneca Trine, the hotel stood—a rough, unpainted, wood- | For half an hour more they pushed | kb The second bird-of-passage proved rnllroad klnsY' Sure’'s youre born en edifice, mainly veranda and bar- [on at the best speed to be obtained E o i . to be a locomotive drawing a single | YOu'Te him: T've seen your picture room as to its lower floor. from their weary animals, at length | et of Teeth $8.00 Up Crown and Bridge Work} car—a Pullman. in the papers a dozen ttmes. Well, ' Jealously Judith watched the win- |drawing rein at a point where the trail | lillings soc Up $4.00 Up , Judith Uncoupling the Caboose. Hardly had it run past the switch, | NOW, it looks like I'd drawn a full dows of the second floor: and she | crossed the ridge and widened out | " ‘truding from the window of the spe- elal's engine, one on either side. At a venture, ehe snatched off her coat and waved it wildly in the air, An arm answered the signal from one window of the pursuing locomo- tive. ! Marrophat, of course! She turned and peered ahead. The freight was approaching a trestio that spanned a wide and shallow gully. 8o much the better! Dropping down again between the ears, she set herself to solve the prob- Jem of uncoupling the caboose. In this she was successful just as the last car rolled out on the trestle Its own impetus carried the caboose to the middle of the trestle before it stopped. As this happened, Alan and Barcus, already warned of an emergency by the slowing down of the car, and for some time alive to the fact that the special was again in pursuit, leaped out upon the ties and helped Rose to alight. Already the last of the freight was whisking off the trestle, its crew thus far unconscious of their loss. And behind them the special was Plunging forward at unabated speed. There was no time to execute their plan of the first desperate instant—to run along the ties to safety on the solid earth: the distance was too great; they could not possibly make it With common impulse the two men glanced down to the bottom of the gully, then looked at each other with eyes informed by common inspiration. Barcue announced in a breath: “Thirty feet—not more.” Alan replied: *“Can you hold the ‘weight of the two of us for half a min- ute?” Barcus shrugged: *“I can trv. might us well—even if 1 can't ‘While speaking, he was himeelf between the ties. “All right,” he announced b-i With a word to Rose. Alan slipped down beside Barcus, shifted his hold to the body of the latter, and climbed down over him until he was supported solely by the grasp of his two hands on Barcus' ankles. Instantly Rose followed him, slip- ping like a snake down over the twq men till she in turn hung by her grasp We owering i 3 Followed a swift rush of hoofs down heb | il - T s v T TR tn | o mam i | : \_____/ ;ld .fi'«,‘:}p‘; she & b.:::l?e“:c Ui | of that. this day. T go bail that the | “About an honr ago, or maybe an | 16 dusty street, and & chorus of = .- l L s 2en for a man you pull 8 | hour and halt” Hopl Jim replied, “a DRSTX.18.Washolcl. baliway:. or Ju akeland Manufacmn'ng Com | | —_ pany ! (To Be Continued,) LAKELAND, FLORIDA wrapped in peace, and trudged stolid- ly toward Detail, the engine whose | eye it was pulling after it a string of freight cars, both flat and box. At Detail the train paused. Its crew alighted and engaged in ani- mated argument. Detall gathered that | the excitement was due to the unac- countable disappearance of the ca- boose; none seemed to have any no- tion as to how it could have broken ! loose; yet missing it conspicuously was, In the pause that followed, while a | report was *elegraphed to headquar- | ters and instructions returned to pro- | ceed without delay, one of the train- men spied a boyish figure lurking in the open door of an empty box car. Cunningly boarding this car from the opposite side, the trainman caught the skulker unawares and booted him vaingloriously into the night. | As the figure alighted and took to its heels, losing itself in the darkness, it uttered a cry of pained surprise and protest which drew a wrinkle of as- tonishment between the brows of the trainman. “Sounded like a woman’s voice,” he mused; then dismissed the suggestion | as obviously absurd. Itwasnot. . . . | Shortly after the freight traln had gone on its way—before, indeed, the; | glimmer of its rear lights had been | | lost among the western hills—a sec- ond headlight appeared in the east, swept swiftly across the plain and in however, when the brakeman dropped down, ran quickly back to the switch | and threw it open. Promptly the train backed on to the l | siding. | As the Pullmah jolted actoss the frogs the brakedian, itterposing him- self between It and the tender, re- leased the coupling. By the time that the Pullman had | comé to a full stop on the siding, the , like a scared jackrabbit—though no such milk-and-watery characterization | and shook impotent fists in the direc- | tion taken by the fugitive engine. When the last of these had run tem- porarily out of breath and blasphemy, a brief silence fell, punctuated by ! groans from each, and concluded by the sound of a voice calling from the ly sonorous of tone as it was curiously querulous of accent. The three men immediately ran back into the car and presented themselves with countenances variously apolo- getic, to one who occupied a corner of the drawing room: a man wrapped in a steamer rug and a cloud of fury. Now when he had drained the muddy froth of profanity from his tem- per it left a clear and effervescent well of virulent humor: the wrath of the valetudinarian began to vent itself upon the hapless heads of the trio who stooc before him. While this was in process, the person of boyish appearance, who had been keeping religiously aloof and in- conspicuous in the background of De- tail ever since that unhappy affair with the trainman, stole quietly up to the rear of the stalled Pullman, | | climbed aboard, and creeplng down the aisle unceremoniously interrupted the conference just as the invalid was polishing off a rude but honest opinion ! of the intellectual caliber of one of the | three named Marrophat, who figured | with this gentleman. | back. a lazy, semi-humorous drawl, “It pains me considerable to butt in on this happy family gathering, but business is business, same as usual, and I got to ast you-all to please put up your hands!” “What do you want?” the invalid de- manded. “Why,” drawled the bandit, “nothing in particular—only your cash. Shell out, if you please—gents all and the lady, too.” He ran an appreciative glance down the figure which Judith’s disguise revealed rather than con- cealed. “If you'll pardon my takin’ notice,” he amended. “Perhaps I wouldn't if the lady’s clothes didn’t fit her so all-fired quick!” “Keep a civil tongue in your head, my man!” Judith counseled, without any show of fear. At the same time her father's voice brought her to her senses. “Judith! Be quiet. Let me deal I am sure we can come to eome arrangement.” “You bet your life,” agreed the gen- tleman as the girl mutinously stepped “I know what I want, and you- all know you got it: so the name of the said arrangement is just ‘shell {out.’” “One minute,” the invalid inter- posed. “Don't misunderstand me: I guarantee you shall be amply satis- fied. I give you my word—the word of Seneca Trine,” The eyes of the bandit widened. house to this pair of deuces, don’t it? You ought to be able to pay something handsome—" “I'll pay you far more handsomely ' than you dream of if you'll do as I wish,” Trine interrupted quickly. “Do me the service I wish—and name your price: whatever it is, you shall have it!” “Nothing could be fairer'n that!" the two-gun man admitted suspicious- here service—like you call it?" “Lieten to me.” Trine bent his head woods?” “How much you got?” “I'll pay you ten thousand dollars for the life of the man I will name.” The eyes of the bandit nnrrowed.: . “Hold on, my friend: is that what you call my naming my own price?” interior of the car—a voice as strange- | “Name it, then,” said Trine. “Give me a thousand on the other, “and a pap: pay me nineteen thousa change for it and one dead in erly identified as the one youn signed by you—and your man’s as goed as dead this minute, providing he's in riding distance of this here car.” Trine waved his hand at his secre- tary. “Jimmy, find a thousand dollars for this gentleman. Make out the paper he indicates for the balance, and I'll sign it.” “Aln’t you powerful trustful, Mr. Trine? How do you know I'll do any- thing more'n pocket that thousand and fade delicately away.” “My daughter and this gentleman, Mr. Marrophat, will accompany you.” “Oh, that's the way of it, is it? “Name?” interjected the secretary, writing busily with tne top of his av- tache case {or a desk. “Slade,” said the bandit, “James Slade.” Again Trine puuctured the at- mosphere with his index floger. “The man whose life 1 want is named Alan a8 his right-hand man and familiar ) Law. He is running away with my genius. daughter, Rose, accompanied by a per for whose utter innocence of scruples Mr. Slade unhesitatingly vouched. Sullenly submissive, at least in out- ! ward seeming, Judith bowed to this de- | cision, marched out of the car, and | suffered Marrophat to help her mount | her horse. Now, deliberately, as the little caval- cade rode through the moonlit desert . night, the girl maneuvered her horse i to the side of Hopl Jim, and then dropped back, permitting Marrophat to lead the way with Texas. As deliberately she eet herself to work upon the bandit's susceptibility to her charms. Within an hour she had him ready to do anything to win her smile, In that first rush of golden day a- thwart the land, the party came quietly into the town of Mesa, riding slowly in order that the noise of their approach , might not warn the fugitives, who Hopl asserted confidently would still be sound asleep in the accommoda- tione offered by the town’s one hotel. It was to be termed a town only in courtesy, this Mesa: a straggling strect of shacks, ramshackle re'ics of what had once been a promising com- munity, the half-way station between the railroad and the mining camps secreted in the fastnesses of the Paint- ed hiiis—camps now abandoned, their very names almost faded out of the memory of mankind. Midway in this string of edifices the alone of the four detected the face that showed for one brief instant well back in the shadows beyond one of the bed- room windows—a face that glimmered momentarily with the pallor of a : ghost's against the background of that obscurity, and then was gone. Her eyes alone, indeed, could have | recognized the features of Alan Law | in that fugitive glimpse. ‘Two sentences exchanged between Wcomotive was swinging westward 1y. “But what's the mumber of this Hopl Jim and a blear-eyed fellow whom he roused from sodden slumbers ' behind the bar sealed their confidence of the traitor passed the lips of any , forward and jabbed the air with an : with conviction: the three fugitives one of the three men who presently | emphatic forefinger. “What's the life : were in fact guests of the house, oc- appeared on the Pullman’s platform |of a8 man worth in this neck of the | cupying two of the three rooms that | composed ite upper story. { In the rush that followed up the ' narrow stairway, Judith led with such ! spirit that not even Marrophat sus- pected her revolver was poised solely with intent to shoot from his hand his own revolver the instant he leveled | it at a human target. { Closed and locked doors confronted them; and their summons educed no ! response; while the first door, when broken in by a whole-souled kick, dis- covered nothing more satisfactory than an empty room, its bed bearing the imprint of a woman’'s body, but that woman gone. From the one window, looking down the side of the house, Texas announced | that the woman had not escaped by jumping out. So it seemed that the three must have had warning of their arrival, after all; and presumably were now herded together in the adjoining room, which looked out over the veranda roof, waiting in fear and trembling for the assault that must soon come— and in fact immediately did. But it met with more stubborn re- sistance than had been anticipated. The door had been barricaded from within — re-eniorced by furniture placed against it. Four minutes and the united efforts of four men (inciud- ing the bleary loafer of the barroom) were required to overcome its inert re- sistance. But even when it was down, the room was found to be as empty as “Amen to that!" the boyish person | yon named Barcus, disguised as Pull- | 08 st ejaculated with candid fervor, loung- ing gracelessly in the doorway. |0 e “The three of them having recent’ “There's many a true word epoken in ' ggcaped from a train wreck up yonder wrath, Mr. Marrophat. Father forgot op the trestie?” Hopl Jim interposed. | flown; and these vanished instantly as only cne thing—your masterly way | “You've met them?” Judith demand- Only the fingers of two hands grip- ping the edge of the veranda roof showed the way the fugitives had the room wae invaded. perated countenance of Marrophat. Incidentally the fugitives disap- peared round a bend in the road that led directly into the wild and barren | heart of the Painted hills. i In the brief interval that elapsed be- fore his return with Hopl Jim, Marro- phat contrived to persuade the bandit that Judith had been, at least indi- rectly, responsible for the catastrophe, with the upshot that, temporarily blinded to her fascinations by the glit- ter of nineteen thousand dollars in the near distance, Mr. Slade maintained hie distance and a deaf ear to her blandishments. The only information as to their purpose that she was able | to extract from either man, when the | pursuing party turned aside from the | main trail, some distance from Mesa, | was that Hopl Jim knew a short cut ' through the range, via what he termed the upper trail, by which they hoped to be able to head the fugitives off be- fore they could gain the desert on the far side of the hills. Only at long intervals did they draw rein to permit Hopi Jim to make re- connolseance of the lower tra'l that | threaded the valley on the far side of the ridge. g Toward noon he returned in haste from the last of these surveys— scrambling recklesgly down the moun- tain-side and throwing himself upon his horse with the advice: “We've headed ’em—can make it now if we ride like all get-out!” upon a long, broad ledge that over- | hung the valley of the lower trail, with ' |k a clear drop to the latter from the ||o brink of a good two hundred feet. One hasty look back and down into the valley evoked a grunt of satisfac- tion from Hopi Jim. “Just in time,” he asseverated. “Here they come! Ten minutesmore . . .”|! His smile answered Marrophat's | with unspeakable cruel significance. “Texas will sleep better tonight || when he knows how I've squared the deal for him!” the bandit declared. “What are you going to do?” Judith demanded, reining her horee in beside Marrophat as the latter dismounted. A gesture drew her attention to a huge boulder poised insecurely on the very lip of the chasm. “We're going to tip that over on your friends, Miss Judith!” Marrophat '| replied, with a smack of relish in his voice. “Simple—neat—efficient—eh? ‘What more can you ask?” She answered only with an irrepress. ! Ible gesture of horror. Marrophat's laugh followed her as she turned away. For some moments she strained her vision vainly, endeavoring to pene- i trate the turbulent currents of super heated air that filled the valley. Then | she made out indistinctly the faintly marked line of the lower trail; and ‘ fmmediately she caught a glimpse of | three small figures, mounted, toiling painfully toward the point where death awaited them like a bolt from the blue. | Hastily she glanced over-shoulder: | Hopl Jim and Marrophat, ignoring her, | were straining themeelves against the | boulder without budging it an lnch.‘ for all its apparent nicety of poise, For | an instant a wild hope flashed through l ber mind, but it was immediately ex- l orcised when Hopl Jim stepped back and uttered a few words of which only I | two—"dynamite” sud “{use"—reached | her ears. | i Knee'ing beside the boulder he dug ' | busily for an instant, then todged the ! stick to his satisfaction, attached the fuse, and breaking off, edged on his belly to the edge of the ol ang | looked down, carefully calculating the ' ln.thotlhehuhymlflmnmo!l the party down below from th where the rock must fall e But while he was so engaged Marrophat aided him, all eager I.n::: | est, Judith was taking advantage of Causes of Unhappiness. 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