- April 281 192 L "CLAY CHIMNEY TRAIL" by edein legrand sabin Illustration PAUL ROBINSON Copyright By Edwin L. Sabin I u has GONE BEFORE: prank Beeson, from Albany, N. caches Benton, Wyoming, then *IB6B western terminus of the Pacific Railroad. He had been or , j, v physicians to seek a cli- Tate “high and dry.” He is robbed . nIPSt of his money in his hotel ° , i pses his last .twenty dollars at monte in “The Big Tent,” a dance hall and gambling resort in ' rhe “roaring” town of Menton. Edna Montoyo, companion of a ambler, is believed by Frank to ve cajoled him purposely into the m e. Broke, disconsolate over his discovery that “the lady of .the blue pU .< ” as he calls her, is what she ■ and finally humilated over his glaring’ “greenness,” Frank repul ,es Edna when she begs him to go ;t\vay with her, sobbingly telling him* that she had made a mistake in letting him : o.'e his money. He goes to take a joD with P George Jenks, a teamster in a wagon train about to leave for Salt Lake City. o Westward Ho ;! “But I’m not asking you to .mar ry me,” she said. *T mnot asking you to love me as a paramour, sir. Please understand! Treat me .as you will; as a sister, a triend, but anything human. Oh, I’m so tired of myself; I can’t run true, I’m un mger false colors. And there is Mon ■oyo—bullying me, cajoling me, I watching me. But you were dis- I ferent! I foolishly wished to help I you. but last night the play went I wrong. And Montoyo struck me— I me, in public! Oh, why couldn’t I I have killed him. You’ll say Fm in I love with you. Perhaps I am — I quien sabe ? I only ask a kind of I partnership —the encouragement of I seme decent man near me. I have I money; plenty till we both get a I footing. But you wouldn’t live on I me; no! I would be glad merely I to tide you over, if you’d let me. I And I l’d be willing .to wash I floors in a restaurant if I might be I free of insult. You, I’m sure, would I at least protect me. Wouldn’t you ? I You would, wouldn you? Say I something, sir.” She paused, I aquiver. “Shall we go? Will you I help me?” For an instant her appeal, of I swimming blue eyes, upturned face, grasp, breaking voice, sway ed me. But I resolved not to be again. “Impossible, madam,” I utter- I This is final. Good-morning.” She staggered and with magni- I l!C iont but futile last flourish clap- I ped both hands to her face. Gazing I back, as I hastened, I saw her still I there, leaning against a wall. ; M y new boots were burning, my I thigh was chafed raw from the I laying Colt, and my face and I throat were parched with the dust, I w hen I arrived a the encampment ■ Jenks’ train. dozen white-topped wag- I gons were standing grouped in a ■ c,rc 'k- and figures were busily mov ■ ln ? among them, and the thin blue I their fires was a welcom ■ ln t signal. I mar ked women and children. I /he whole prospect they, the I re akfast smoke, the grazing ani- H *** s > the stout vehicles, a line of I clothing was homey, came out to meet me. A a 0i T t ay! ere you are >” he ou fatched oil your out- y ° U see ’” J confessed. I “\v ' t! Td )e d me clean.” ■Yc * 1 * y ° U need * s a blanket. ■*a£ Cail ay tor out °T your ■ the trip°J’ tUrn !t in at the end of |j,L ts !. n ' l " , '; U ' (! rne on > alon e the ■ sijj,, ,j " lC s and heeding out- Uas:on circk ’> and halted man, of face (Hon a except chin, sat up | Istiek Uag&n ' t?m?ue , whittling a ■A(i a^ ak l hands with Cap’n Hyrum ■the tain » Ulik ' H< -’ s the boss of dams offered a thick H* n d fir, t * proved singularly soft I “GladV r Under the callouses. y ° U > stran £ e r,” he “Nm Bd ' Breakfasted ? ” ’°t yet miV t lr e *ch tv Q . r ‘ 1 was anxious to Wl. ine tram,” “Nobody goes hungry from the Adams’ wagon, stranger,” Captain Adams observed. He slightly rais ed his voice, peremptory. “Rachael!. Fetch our guest some breakfast.” There were two women in view, busied with domestic cares. One 1 was elderly, as far ns might be judged by her somewhat slatternly figure. • The other promptly ladled food from a kettle to a platter, poured a tin cupful of coffee from the pot, and moved.them to me; her eyes down, shyly handed them. I thanked her but was not pre sented. To the Captain’s “That will do, Rachel,” she turned dutiful ly away; not so soon, however, hut that I had seen a fresh young face within the bonnet confines —a round rosy face according well with the buxom curves of her as she again bent over her wash board. “Our fare is that of the tents of Abraham, stranger,” spoke the Captain. “Such as it is, you are welcome to. We are a plain peo ple who walk in the way of the Lord, for that is commanded.” “I ask nothing better, sir,” I answered. , JS® " L\Jto^BmuhSs^&ifinmtiiijfi* \ ' wjf? m m \ V mm, 2f L She paused, very '^-iiSiw^' small and alone, ■fiiyHJVi*; |H[Mlvffi/^^H|Bi^ f ,//' ! /j|| viewing us, her eyes '**' ' 11 /< .(i> M very blue, her face The pork and beans and the black unsweetened coffee evidently were what I needed, for I began to mend wonderfully ere I was half through the course. “You are from the East, stran ger ? ” he inquired. “Yes, sir. I arrived in Benton only yesterday.” “A Sodom,” he growled harshly. “A tented sepulcher. And it will perish. I tell you, ycu do well to leave it, you do well to yoke your self with the appointed of this earth, rather than stay in that sin-pit of the eternally damned.” “I agree with you, sir,” said I. “I did not find Benton to be a pleasant place. But I had not known, when I started from Omaha.” . “Possibly not,” Adams assented. “The devil is attentive; he is pres ent in the stations, and he will ride in those gilded palaces even to the Jordan, but he shall not cross. In the name of the Lord we shall face him. What good there shall come, shall abide; but the evil shall wither. Not,” he added, “that we stand against the railroad. It is needed, and we have petitioned without being heard. We are strong but isolated, v/e have goods to sell, and the word of Brigham Young has gone forth that a railroad we must have. Against the harpies, the gamblers and all the Gentile vanities we will stand upon our own feet by the help of Almighty God.” At this juncture, a tall double jointed youth of about my age, carrying an ox goad in his hand, strolled to us as if attracted by the harrangue. “My son Daniel,” the captain in troduced. “This stranger travels to Zion with us, Daniel.” “However, I could not help but see that the Captain’s daughter is pleasing to look upon.” “How? His daughter?” “Miss Rachael.” “Whoa, man! She’s his wife, and not for Gentiles. They’re both his wifes; whether he has more in Utah I don’t know. But you’d best let her. alone. She’s been j’ined to him. 7 ” This , took me all .aback. He was twice her age, apparently. “And Daniel, his son—is he mar ried ? ” “That whely? No, he ain’t mar ried, yet. Both he will be, soon as he takes his pick ’cordin’ to law and gospel among them people. You bet you; he’ll be married plenty.” Later in the day as I sat resting upon a convenient wagon-tongue Daniel hulked to me. “You know me?” he asked. “Your name is Daniel, isn’t it?” “No, ’tain’t. It’s Bonnie Brayo on the trail.” “All right, sir,” said I. “Which ever you prefer.” “I ’laow you aim to go through with this train to Salt Lake, do you?” “That’s the engagement *IVe made w ith Mr. Jenks.” “It’s four hundred miles, an’ twenty miles at a stretch, without water. Most the water’s pizen, too, from hyar to the mountings.” “I’ll have a drink what the rest drink, I suppose.” “I ’laow the Injuns are like to get us. They’re powerful bad in that thar desert. Ain’t afeared o’ Injuns, be yu ? ” “I’ll have to take my chances on that, too!” “We don’t think mtich ’© Gen tiles, yonder. We don’t want ’em, nohaow. They’d all better git aout. The Saints settled that country ’an it’s ourn.” “If you’re a sample, you’re wel come to live there,” I retorted. “I think I’d prefer some place else.” “Haow?” he bleated. “Thar ain’t no place as good. All the rest the world has sold itself to the devil.” “We remained in silence for a moment while he waited, provoca tive. “Say, Mister,” he blurted sud denly, “kin yu shoot?” “I presume I could if I had to. Why?” “Becuz I’m the dangest best shot with a Colt’s in this hyar train. Any time yu want to try a little poppin’ yu let me know.” And with this, he left me, with the uneasy impression that he and I were due to measure strength in one way or another. About three o’clock with whips cracking, the Captain Adams wag on in the lead (two pink sunbon nets upon the seat), the valorous Daniel’s next, we toiled creaking and swaying up the Benton road, amidst the eddies of hot, scalding dust. It was a mixed train, of Gentile mules and the more numerous Mor mon oxen; therefore not strictly a “bull” train, but by pace designat ed as such. Trudging manifully at the left fore wheel behind Mr. Jenkins’ four span of mules I played the team ster —although sooth to say there was little of play in the job, on that road, at that time of the day. At sundown, having eaten our suppers, we were sitting by our fires, smoking and talking, when, as a construction train of box cars clanked by on the railroad I THE CHATHAM RECORD chanced to note a figure spring out asprawl, alight with a whiffle of sand, and staggering up hasten for us. First it accosted the hulk Dan iel. I saw him lean from his sad dle; then he rode in, bawling like a calf; “Paw! Paw! Hey, you-all! Thar’s a woman yonder in britches an’ she ’laows to come on. She’s lookin’ for Mister Jenks.” In a storm of rude raillery— “ That’s a boss on you, George!”; “Didn’t know you owned one o’ them critters, George,” “Does she wear the britches, George?” and so forth—my friend Jenks arose, peering, while 'the solitary figure, braving our stares, came on to the fires. Gawd almighty!” -Mr. Jenks de livered. It was My Lady—formerly My Lady—clad in embroidered short Spanish jacket, tightish velvet pantaloons, booted to the .knees, pulled down upon her yellow hair a black soft hat, and hanging from the just-revealed belt around her slender waist, a revolver trifle. She paused, small and alone, viewing us, her eyes very blue, her face very white. “Is Mr. Jenks there?” she hailed clearly. “Damn’ if I ain’t,” he mumbled, glowering at me. “I wish to engage passage to Salt Lake,” she said. “We haven’t no place for a wom an, ma’am,” Jenks demurred. “There are other women in the train,” Edna insisted. “Where’s Pedro? Where’s Mon foyo?” asked Jenks. Her eyes blazed. He? That snake? I shot him!” “What! You! Killed him?” Ex clamations broke from the by standers. “No, I didn’t have to! But when he tried to abuse me, I defended myself. Wasn’t that right, gentle men?” “Right or wrong, he’ll be after you, won’t he?” The question held a note of alarm. “I am only an employee, here, madam,” I faltered. “If I had an outfit of my own I certainly would help you.” , She flushed painfully; she did not glance at me direct again, but her unspoken thanks enfolded me. The large form of Captain Ad ams came striding. “What’s this?” he demanded harshly. “An ungodly woman? Get you gone, Delilah!” “I am going, sir,” she replied. “I ask nothing from you or these — gentlemen.” “Them’s the two she’s after, paw; Jenke an’ that greenie,” Dan iel bawled. “Ain’t she purty, though! She’s dressed in britches.” “Get you gone,” Captain Adams thundered. “And these your para mours with you. No brazen hussy in men’s garments shall travel with this train to Zion—no, not a mile of the way.” (To be continued next week) Cobyright by Edwin L. Sabin. B. S. Lawrence who farms in the southern part of Randolph county finds that the daughters of a pure bull purchased three years ago are doubling the milk production of their dams. NOTICE OF SALE UNDER MORTGAGE. Under and by virtue of the pow ers of sale contained in that cer tain mortgage deed executed by Ransom Lambert, on the 20th day of April, 1921, to J. M. Mclver, said mortgage deed being registered in the registry of Chatham county, North Carolina in book FZ page 54 and having been duly transferred to the undersigned, and default having been made in the payment of the indebtedness described in said mortgage deed, the undersign ed will, on Saturday the 28th day of May, 1927, at twelve o’clock noon, in front of the court house door in Pittsboro, N. C., offer for sale all that certain tract or par cel of land lying and being in Gulf township, Chatham county, North Carolina, and lying on the waters of Cedar Creek, and adjoining the lands of J. W. Mclver, on the east, the lands of John Jones and Joe Reaves on the north, and the lands of Robert Lambert on the west, and the lands of Fred Lambert on the south, containing 46 acres, be the same more or less, and being the land on which Ransom Lambert now resides. This the 26th day of April, A. D., 1927. J. M. McIVER, Jr., Assignee of J. M. Mclver, Mort gagee. Siler & Barber, Attorney. LAND SALE By virtue of a deed of trust made and executed to the under signed on the 22nd day of Decem ber by Efland Garner and wife, which deed of trust is recorded in the office of the Register of Deeds of Chatham county in book GH of deeds, at page 558, the undersigned will, on MONDAY, MAY 23, 1927. at twelve o’clock, noon, at the court, house door in Pittsboro,Chat ham county, sell at public auction for cash, A certain tract of land in Oak land Township, Chatham county, North Carolina, beginning at a pine on the south side of Rocky river, running south 40 poles to a white oak; thence south east 210 poles to a post oak on Deep river; thence down the same to the mouth of the Rocky river; thence up the same to the beginning corner, containing one hundred and twenty acres, more or less, and being the same land formerly owned by John A. Williams, and deeded to the grant ors herein by Wade Barber, Com missioner of deed recorded in the office of the Register of Deeds for Chatham County in Book of Deeds GK at page 149. The sale is for the purpose of satisfying the note secured by the said deed of trust, default having been made in the payment thereof, and demand having been made on the undersigned trustee to foreclose the same. This April 19, 1927. C. E. UPCHURCH, Sanford, N. C., Trustee. Corn is a good feed for beef cat tle as well as hogs according to re cent tests by the North Carolina experiment station. Underline each word,. Natural tobacco taste— for each word means a lot to . a Chesterfield smoker —not hy any means! Natu- fo^acco taste * s that ' i* implies in natural good- Chesterfield and yet, they 9 re MILD Liggbtt & Myers Tobacco Co. We Never Close Greensboro, N. C. W. F. CLEGG, Owner and Proprietor. Parking Lot for Patrons LISTEN Before you buy anything in the HARDWARE line for the spring work on the farm, see s and price our goods. We feel that we know what you want and have got it for you at the right price. Also Garden Seed and Cabbage Plants Here. THE CHATHAM HARDWARE CO- Pittsboro, N. C. Subscribe for the Record PAGE SEVEN