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About The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 21, 1920)
PAGE a TAB BRXD nn.liRTIX. OAU.Y EDITION. HWNI. ORKOON, NAT! 'KIAV, I'rlltKl'.llt V Ul, 10'JO "Indians, you h-1 cnCUiia livfvV her pyps "Indians, You Say! Here?" Her Eye Widening in Horror. widening In horror. "Whon do you sup pose this happened? hmftlong nguf "within twelve hours certainly; probably soon after dawn." I caught the rein of her horse, and Elsie, who was now wide awake, and trembling with fear, pressed forward, close to my side, moaning and casting her frightened glances backward. Ken nedy was already started In advance of us on. foot, leading his auimul. and seeking to discover the quickest pas sage to shelter. On a narrow terrace the deputy halted us. "I reckon muybe this yere Is as gud as eny place fer ter stop," he said rather doubtfully. "It'll be mighty dark In an hour, an' then we kin go on ; only my boss is about did up. Whut ye sny. Cap?" "We are probably as safe here as anywhere In the neighborhood. Is that all you have to report, Tim?" He lifted his hat, and scratched gently his thin hair. "Only thet them Injuns went south. I done run onto their trail after yer left It wus plain as the nose on yer face. Thar must'r bin a slew o' 'em, an' sura a hossback; they wus a strikin' straight across yonder, an' I -reckon they fetched a prisoner 'long, suinbody wearln' boots enyhow, fer I saw the tracks In the mud." He hesi tated, as though something was on his mind, glancing toward the girls, and lowering his voice. "I ain't so very dern tired, an' reckon I'll scout 'round a bit. Them red devils might'r over looked a rifle er two back thar In the timber, an' I'd sure like ter git my fin gers on one. I nodded Indifferently, too complete ' ly exhausted myself to care what he did, and then dull-eyed watched him disappear through the trees. No one spoke, even Eloise failing to question me. as I approached where she and Elsie had flung themselves on the short grass, although her heavy eyes followed my movement, and she made nn efTori to smile. "One cun easily see by your face how tired you are," I viilil, compassion ately, looking down at her. "I arn go ing to sleep for an hour or two, and you had both better do the same. Tim Is going to keep guard." She Mijilu wearily at me, her head sinking hack. I did not move speak again; Indeed I had lost con Kclousness almost before I touched the ground. I could not have slept long, for there was a glow of light still visible in the western sky, when a strong grip on my arm aroused me, causing me Inslantly 10 sit up. -inn stood there, a battered. old, long rifle in his hand, and beside Win n boy of eighteen, without a hat lousiea ueaaed, with an ugly red wound showing on one cheek. "Mighty sorry fer ter wake ye, Can, the deputy grinned. "This yere young imp is one r them sojers; an' It strikes me, he's got a d queer tale 14.T tell." . ' I glanced backward across my shoul der toward the others. Both girls were sleeping soundly, while beyond them, down the slope, the three horses were quietly cropping away at the herbage. 1 managed to rise. "Let's move back to the sprin where we will not wake them up," I (suggested, "mw we can talk." . My eyes sought the face of the hid questioningly. Ue wus a loose-lipped, awkward lout, trembling still from a fright he could not conceal. "You belonged to thut squad killed out yonder?" "Yes, seh ; I reckon I'se the only one whut ain't (led," he stammered, so tongue-tied I could scarcely make out his words. "I wus gone afier wnhter, an" when them Injuns begun for ter yell, I never dun nuthln' but Just run, an' hid In the hush." ' "I understand. What Is your name?" "Asa Hall." "Well, Asa, I suppose those were militiamen; you belonged to the com pany?" ' He nodded, Mr ryes dull, his Hps moving, as though it was an effort to tnlk. Quite evidently whatever little Intellect he hud ever jiossussud. now Devil's Own. A Roiminceof tiw Blttcfc Hawk Wcr AntW of&rtiiHili&nd, Siuatf OwIriABajal. refused tiTrespiiiuT ""Rctuany tuukiTih Impatiently. "It takes thet boy 'bout an hour fer ler tell enythlng. Cup," he explained grutlly. "I reckon he's 'skeered half ter death In the furst place, an' then 1 bur's smut hln' wrong with dim eny how. llowsumever. It's whut he seed an' heerd. Cup, thet 'sounds mighty queer ter me. Me hps thar wus more'n fifty bucks lu thet party, an that ol' Black Hawk wus thar hlsself, a leadln' 'em he done saw him," I turned, sin-prised at thts statement, to stare into the hoy's face. He half grinned hnek at me, vacantly. "Black Hawk ! He could scarcely he down here; what did he look like?" "'Bout six feet high, I reckon, with a big hooked nose, an' the blackest pair o' mean eyes ever ye saw. 1 reckon he didn't hnv' no eyebrows, an' he wore a hunch o" eagle feathers, an' a red blanket. Gosh, mister, but the devil rudu't look no worse'n he did." "Wus thet hltu, Cap?" burst In Tim anxiously. "It's not a bnd description." I admit ted, yet not convinced. "I can't K lleve he would be here with a milling purty. If lie was, there must be some important object In view. Is that all?" "No. 'taln't ; the boy swears thar was a white man 'long with 'em, 11 feller with a short mustuche, nn' dressed In store clothes. He wun't no prisoner mil her. but hed a gun. an' talked ler Black Hawk, most like he wus n chief hlsself. After the klllln' wus nil over, he wns the one whut got 'em ter go off thar to the south, the whole kit an' knhoodle." "I don't doubt that. There have al ways been white renegades among the Sacs and plenty of luilf-brceds. If Black Ilatfk, and this other fellow arp leading this band, they are after hlg game somewhere, and we hud better keep out of their way. I fnvor sad dling up immediately, and traveling all night." "So do I." and Tim flung n half filled bag from his shoulder to the ground. "But I vote we eat furst. Taln't much. only a few scraps I found out ttinr; hut It's a way better then nuthln'. Here you, Hull, give mo u hand, an' then we'll go out, ah' round up thehi bosses." If the party of raiding Indians, whose foul deed .we had 'discovered, hud departed, in a southerly direction, as their trail would plainly seein to In dicate, then our safest course would seemingly be directed eastward up the volley. This would give us the pro tection of the bluffs, and take us more and more out of the territory they would be likely to cover. Within twenty inkiutes we were In saddle, de scending the steep hillside through the darkness, Tim walking ahead with the lad, his horse trailing behind, and the long rifle across his shoulder. I do not recall feeling any special fear. In the first place I wus convinced that we must already he at the ex treme limit of Black Hawk's radius, and that, traveling as we were east ward, must before morning be well be yond any possible danger of falling into the hands of his warriors. The other pursuers I hail practically dis missed from thought. Shortly after midnight my horse strained a tendon, and could no longer uphold my weight. On foot, with the poor beast limping painfully behind me. I pressed 011 be side Lloise, both of us silent, too ut terly wearicil with the strain for any attempt at speech. The rising sun topped the summit of the bluff. Its red rays seeming to bridge with spans of gossamer the lit tle valley up which we tolled. I had lost my interest, and was walking dog gedly on, with eyes bent upon the ground, when the girl beside me efied out suddenly, a new excitement in her voice. "Oh, there is a cabin 1 See! Over yonder; Just beyond that big oak, wnere the bluff turnu." Her eager face' wus aglow, her out stretched hand pointing eagerly. The logs of which the little building nna neen constructed, still in their na tive bark, blended so perfectly wiih the drab hillside beyond, that for the moment none of us caught the distant outlines., Tim possessed the keenest sight, and his voice was first to speak. "Sure, miss, thet's a cabin, all right," he said grimly. "One room, an' new built; likely 'noiigh sum settler Just coin' iu yere. 1 don't see no move ment, tier smoke." 'Tied to the nearest fort probably, I replied, able myself by this time to decipher the spot. "Be too risky to stay out here alone. We'll look it over; there might be food left behind, even if the people have gone." We must have been half 11 11 hour In covering the distance. The cabin stood well up above the stream, within the shade of the great oak, and we were confirmed, long before we miehed It, in our former Judgment that It was uninhabited. No slpfn of life was visi ble about the place j it had the ap pearance of desertion, no smoke even curling from out the chimney. A faint frail, evidently linle used, led down toward the creek, and we followed this as It wound uround the base of the big free. Then it was that the truth Ojiwaefl, suddenly: uuoti us Uioru to our right iuy"a iTeiiiF imihT I'uTriTesse for work, but with throat cut ; while directly 111 front of the cuhlii door wa a dog, 11 n ugly, massive brute, hi mouth open, prone 011 his hnek. wll stiffened legs pointing to (ho sky. dropped my relit, and wruili forward. "Wall where you arc," I culled buck "There have been savages here; I mo see first what has happened In side." The dog had been shot, strlckeu by two bullets, anil I wns obliged to drn his huge body to one side, before could press my way In through tit door. The opou doorway and window afforded maple, light, ami 11 slngl glance wns sultlcleut to reveal most of the story. 'ilie table bad been smashed us by the blow of nn ax, anil pewter dls.-.es were everywhere. The bed lu one corn it hud been stripped o Its coverlets, many of them slasher by a knife, and the straw tick lint! been ripped open In a dozen place Coals from the fireplace lay wide spread, some of them having enlcu deeply Into the hard wood before they ceased smoldering. 1 saw all this, yet my eyes rested upon something else. A man lay, bent double across uu overturned bench, In a posture which hid his face from view. Ills body was there alone, nl though a child's shoe lay on the floor, and 11 woman's llusey dress dangled from a hook against Hie wall I crept forward, my heart pounding nuully, until I could gain sight of III face. He was n hlg fellow, not more than thirty, with sandy hair and beard and a pugnacious Jaw. bis roursi hickory shirt slushed Into ribbons, a bullet wound In the center of bis fore head, anil one arm broken by a vicious blow. His calloused hands yet gripped the haft of an ax, Just as he hud died fighting. Tim's voice spoko from the door way. "Injuns. I reckon?" . "Yes, they have been here; the man Is dead. But there must have been others, a woman and child also se that shoe on the floor, and the dress hanging over there. The poor devil fought ha id. Kennedy stepped Inside, stnrlng about him. "Ho you think H best to stop here?" "Why not? 'Taln't likely them devils will he back agin. Thnr sure must be souieihin' fer us ter eat in the place, an' the Lord kno's we can't go on as we are. Them gurls be mighty nigh renily ter drop, an' two o' the bosses has plum glv" out. I'm fer set- tlln' down fer a few hours enyhow sny till It gits middling dark." Undoubtedly this was the. sensible view. We would be In far less danger remaining there under cover than In any attempt to continue our Journey by daylight. Together we curried the body out, und deposited It In a thicket behind the cabin, awaiting burial; uuil then drugged the dead dog also out of sight. The disorder wiihln was easily remedied, and, after this had been in tended to. the girls were permitted to enter. Klolsc sunk hark on the bon.-h, her head supported against the wnll. the lushes of her half-closed eves showing dark against the whltcncs-i of her cheeks. She looked so pitifully I iireo, uie very Heart choked iu my throat. The rest of us found a small stock of provisions, and Klsle, with Tim to nld her. built a fire and prepared breakfast. A half-filled bottle of whisky discovered In the cupboard, helped to revive nil of us slightly, end gave Asa sufficient courage to seek outside for a spring. Tim, compara tively unwearied himself, and restless, located a trapdoor In the floor, rather ingeniously concealed, which disclosed the existence of a small cellar below. Cnndle In hand he explored I his. re turning with two guns, together with a quantity of powder and ball, und In formation that there remained a half keg of the explosive hidden below. iiisi u 0111 ainiiii ter mow up i stumps, I reckon," he coiiiinciiicd. ex- i hihltlng a snmnle. "Coarsest I ever Hntl" etifln'f l,,,r,ll,r ua ,I.a, I I , ........ . ut. )hi:i jii uu KUIJ, btit It's powder alright." To remove the debris out of our way, I was gathering up the straw tick atid slit blankets, and piled them all to gether buck nn tho liu.t Ml... nna ftf lha lilunbnlo '..... I.. i.-t.l't '". ,uuKui uiiii oeiii by Its pin, was a pecullur emblem, and I stood for a moment with It In my nana, curiously examining flie odd de- i sign. Eloise unclosed her eyes, and started to her feet. ' "What Is that you have?" she asked. 1 "A pin of some kind a rather I strange design; I Just found It here, i entangled In this t.lnnl-at". ' "Why," she exclaimed in surrirlse. "I have Seen one exactly like It. before Kirhy wore It In his tie." MARINE WILL NEVER FORGET MULE'S KICK (To Be Continued.) I T Car Owners ! If your car needs repair ing, why not have it done by an experienced mechanics-one who has had., years of experience. My aim it to have every customer mis tied. Give me a trial. A. W. BONTRAGER 135 Greenwood Ave. Phone Red 381 Sustains Operation lis KpmiiII, (mil Hem- llt'iii'H I.egeud, "Opened by MlMnke." Illy ttiillr.1 I'lxw to TV IUmiiI llulli'tlnt HOUSTON, Tex. Koh. SI. A kick from a inula In miiiiuiitoiil to make just about as much impression on the memory us It does ou the anatomy. Yet Clyde 1). JiiivIh has mailo Bine that lie. will not forgot the kick ho received from 11 Missouri beast of bunion for the rest of his nuturul life. Jurvls applied for enlistment lu the Marino corps huro today und was accepted. Uu exhibited a scar about six Inches long on the left sldo of Ills abdomen, und explained It was Iho result of an operation ho hud under gone, soma Hix months before, for supposed ruptured spleen, following tho kick from tho mulo. Tho operating surgeon had made tlm wrong diagnosis, however, mid found that Jarvls' spleen wus O. K Tattooed above the scar In large le.t tors were tho words, "Opened by mis take. criticism should Ineliulu tlm oilier grade schools of Iho idly. CM.'.IV I P NOTICK. All persons are liotllled lo Inliu steps, lo clean up Iholr properly at ouco. iiiick- yarns ami alleys ad Joining should he, cleaned und all KurhiiKu and wuslo collected for re moval. A roasouablo llmu will hu allowed lu which (Ills work may ho douo and If nut atteuded to lu thut tlmo tho olty will pioewd with the work an 1 cliargo IIh cost to thu pro perly owners ulTnetiid. 1-. A. W. 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