"KEEP THE tJPPER HAND. Bear your bur lens manfully, Whatsoe'er the' be; . ievorjet them over you Gain ascendency.- Trover lot them master yoi, "evcr for them wait: Itands of labor strong to bear, ' Ils tj.e Bell of Fate.- . ;, Texas Sift-nja. ON SILVER MOUNTAIN. BY TV L. ST E ALKY. Heavy snows had fallen that season, adding to the never-melted acj-umula tions in the gulches that gashqd the northern slope of silver Mountain. Huge, undulating drift , top. projected along the lofty cret, threatening to break away, ami .start the annihilating avalanche. From the dingy log-dens below, the miners read these snow-signs wdth expe rienced eyes. Stout hearts had those Seekers for silver. ' but fipprehension of the snow-slide could shake -even them, - But from two log-shinties, ' placed-one above the- other in a clump of giant pines well( up on the mountain side, smoke still arose at the morning and evening, and from .the ragged mouths of two tunnels that were being driven in the- slope above, there stilTcaine dally the silvery clink of hammer striking drill, intermitted by a muiHed roar, as giant powder shattered the mountain's . breastp in the upper of these shanties "lived "Uncle Jimmy" Trout, with his son, young Jimmy ; in the lower "old man" Trail, with his son Sam. , These were rival claimants to the same lead, to which old man Trail gave the significant name of "The Last Chance," and which Uncle Jimmv, in more cheer- ! ful snirit. called '-The RImp TSr.l ..i o harbinger - of the spriti" of hone 'in" th I winter of his life - j ' ,' Many were tieVomr,lir.:ltioriS'f;nlrinr ! intricate points of miners' law about this ' disjmted claim, and which claimant had i xue rignr tnereoi no man cou.d tell The listener to Unele Jimmy's wron-s would be linnlv convinced that he must be I right; until he heard old man Trail ex- ! patiate on the equity of "first diskiverv," inai KJii-r eaeu nini ..Willi a Hard tore- rt I--. '.. ',.1. . l . i n . i -i -l finger iii a horny palm, to the utter con - f usion of all previous convictions. - Uacli indignantly rejected all attempts at arbi4t ration ; and as, ; fortunately for : thenise 1 Ves, both were too. poor for the .expensive luxury of litigation,, it only remained, as Uncle '-Jimmy declared, "to sit right thar until they'd sot it ouit, re gyardless of expenses." And thouirh Uncle Jimmy, with his rotund body and j whisker was one of the easiest-oin or ! men, the .energetic and. detennined air i with which.he made this declaration was ; inilicatil e of a protracted "set" on the ! part of the: Blue Bird. ; - s i(r oiu man trail, one look in his , 7 J, , ; V UJ;U'-T"-cavernous eves, as he ran his hand slow,- i hatres aiKi fea;S' .tlia:e 1t1wo were to lv over the angles of his unkempt beard - at t'other, the inevitable, would suffice to show that tliere was at" or a ,tlIne tne funiie?f of the little yield about'him as about one of the l tastrophe sinned both in silence. It granite crags that guarded the entrancli 1. .. 7 .. ... -i . V-i- , T to me iu.si v. nance i unnei. - Jimmy", who was, to use his father's own expression,; "light complected," of his house: strong too of nrnv ninl I shoulder 'from swing -of hammer, ami - every wlut as stoat ot heart. That stalwart son of the Sierras, Sa:.,' Trail, though of leaner build than Jim my, was in s:ze and strength his match, "dark complected." ami in ether re spects like the sombre and self-contained christeher of the Lat Chance. Often when at sundown the two boys, till blUkf't ill "h-liiil nir.t nt A iittln soring that served fnr tliP nu rtf wt, cabins, brows bent in wrnth Wr,. .fleeted in that ervstal ba feud went loyally down from father to ... " in. For the son. Plies lrom the eimn lilnw liooomo ' bud with partisan aninuxitv Each grazed aloof on the bunch-crra -rowing tm i ne ore .1 i . v eey slopes: and? meeting b loors. th,y bit and kicked .)Ve"r the cabin the.J)acon rinds tluiig therefnmi with a Heartiness that ; partook of the spirit' of .their respective masters. - It had been 'Skifting" snow on th'. mountain for a day or" two. But the morning was clear, and the sun, hanging .- v.. , jnuij. treaieii tne opposing siop.. snot ins rays through glittering a vwh ,u uwug nost into the ow v -Even the twV "jacks" one of these 1 Jimm-V' this here aiut a plum' playout : Mexican dt-likeVs beim- owned by eacli lVsje a sl?P 111 thc Pystreak. and we'll claimant, and vised forpacking Hp sup- r stTe lt,a-m aCros5 the " , ' door of the upper cabin. Within, the two Trouts sat at their slab table before a Spartan - breakfast of- slap-jacks and salt ork. "Jimmy, that outfit down thar." said the elder Trout, indicating the cabin be low with his hand as lie spoke "they sent to camp yesterday, suppose you take the jack and go down toTuay, fur bur .grub pile is get tiuv low, .and git the drills sharpened. I'll rustle round and wadi up some clothes while you're gone. The air of the earlv morning was keen, and Jimmy waited until the sun was weil up before he put the 'pack-saddle on the jack, : and started down. Uncle Jimmv, meantime, set the camp-kettle on the coals in the rough" fireplace, 'and I prepared tor wasmng. ; Daily the two io'ld men passed. 'each other on the deep-w6rn paths leading from cabin-; to tunnels, but without a J word or look of "recognition. But, rigid i as was the silence maintained between ;. them, it could be broken by one thing j' want of tobacco. After a few hours' u:i- I satisfied craving for this universal solace j of the miner, cither would yield and ap-'j ply to the other, never-to-be. refused. i On this morning old man Trail, who . had Sent S im to camp the previous day, ; had resisted this craving a whole day. j but at Iat he succumbed, and slowly sauntered up to the Trout cabin. ; "Kin you spar' me a piece of terbackcr ! till my boy gits back V he asked in his deliberate speech, 'disdaining politer forms of salutation, as he paused on the ; doorstep. Uncle Jimmv, in overalls and red ! shirt with rolled up sleeves, was vigor- j ously soaping flannels.. He pointed with '. one suds-dripping hand to the rough mantel . , : "It s on the shelf. Come m an d help yourself," he said, endeavoring vainly to lurm u nospitaDie neartiness into ins ton'V , , . ' , - me o;u man stepped. ' in, urew ins sheath-knife.. aud was about to part the ; coveted plug, when the attention of both j W ?:mght V a sound, loud and strange ; e mun-v noises of the mountain, com"l- ?.bove 4l , , ! - - - - v4 . Almost a spoke the topmost of-the pin-5 snaPPoa hefon; the avalanche, and ; . struck the cabin Stout as this ';as " smverea to me shock, rue logs on . the upper side Were driven party, in, ami the centre roof -logs, '.already burdened bv the weight of the dirt-roof, were sprung down and splintered with an ominous cracking. But the spruce timbers were green and tough, and the cabin hung together. The slide, being partially broken by the trees, tore over it, closed-the stout slab-door, and passed on down with a roar. Then followed darkness and silence.' All their tools were in the tunnels; they had nothing wncrewitn to eftect :;an fcaPe: even were escape possible. For, tunately the hi e had gone out so there , n?, s,"?ko atl 1 their torture, But hidden thus irc-ivall the world, sud- as uroiveu ai lenuiii ov me oia man Trail, whose grulf tones were hardly recognizable in this softened whisper: "Uncle Jimmy, I'm mighty glad the boys is both safe." "I'm with yoii thar, old man,"' Unci;1 'm? TcPlloJ' m a voice equally dued. The minutes, as they- passed,- migh: have been years, so faint and far lv;i" seemed their dispute overithe load. i in boir, om man. vv e mougnt a settled this here business twixt me ami you long go; but. now. I reckon if goin' fur to settle us," and Uncle Jimmy's voice gave faltering indications of break- mg aown. : ' Brace up. Uncle Jimmy ! The b - is both safe, and me and vou w as a-gittiu ld' .l;.couidn m -natur : a belt uu : much Ir.nfrpr nrl nrlpr ol T nc clear' 'as Q l)aufcd , scated; 1Li!,1M if i -omposeiiy.ou ine ouuk. tnc c.jimray. ' ged his . way to him. ami kneeling. f1 hu ll?'1 and shoulders n : tne blankets. Then the hands of tho-e an cient ene::;ies met, a id clung in a 'tirm-' locked elap. reassuring each to ea-h as thev waited lor the end. To s Jimmy, a visit to the camp was a welcome break in the monotony of life on ' Silver Mountain, and his step was a - cor rdinglv light as he prodded tha v xiic uu. uiau s o;ee was woueier.uii down the drifted trail with the pointei end of the scrub-oak stick that served him alike for stajT and goad. As he progressed downward, frostjy clouds passed between him and the sur . giving the air a sudden chill as their shadows darkened the sparkling surfae.1 of the snow. The summit was lost t ) view,1 and. driven by the wind, snow be-' ganto fly, coming partly from the cloud's and partly from the drifts above. Jimmy, however," was' used- to the-e mountain " squalls" and knew that, as longUs th ; nimble-footed jack could keep the trail he was safe to follow. ; A mile or less from the cabin the trai made an abrupt bend around a granite era::. Firm-be'dded in the mountain this thrust its.tapering pinnacle to tin tops of the surrounding pines. ' "Where the trail hugged its base there had beetj a "rutch" of., soft sand conglomerate which, worn away bv action of frost ami air, -had gradually dropped out and been! washed down the slope.-leaving a shelv mg recess. Just as Jimmv reached this recess lid encounteged Sam Trail, coming upward The two inimical jacks, brought sud denly face to face, ahi-gf-hint long ears back and breathed for- defiance in trumpet notes that woke the echoes of the mountain defiles. Behind each pug nacious little beast his equallv pugnacious driver halted s marelv in the middle of the narrow trail. "Turn out.'." er'ed Sam Trail, in such a tone that Jimmy would have shot both jacks head- 'irst down the slope rather than have complied. "Turn out, and let mv iack hug the rock." 1 ''Turn nut T-r coll 7 rotfirtdi .Illlltlir 1 "My jack's 'got as good a right to the in-1 i U1U V'Ub :VJ?.V. v.wwii..: side as yourn. Everybody turns to the right, and I'm a-goin' to." "The pack 'll tip my jack over the slope ef I take the outside,' replied Sam, 'and I ain't a-goin' to do it." Both boys and beasts were by this time half-blinded by the snow, which was being sueked around the crag and whirled in their faces bv the rising wind. Their passions ' kept pace with its fury. Each jack stood ready to rush open mouthed: each driver got a firmer grasp on his oak stick and made a forward stride. Just then, half -broken by the wind, came the sound of muffled thunder from the direction of the shanties. Following i it,, from immediately above them, came a crunching noie .that caused the uplifted sticks to be held in air. The snow-caps above had given way, and gathering momentum -with - increas ing bulk and; velocity.- the slide, to which the onCj at the cabin was but a plaything, came tearing down, carrying along the granite boulders scattered in -its path. Before its rush, the giant pines, with sap hard-frozen, snapped like reeds, 'ch making a sharp report above the cT-Tiler rumble of the mass. Counted "by the beating of their hearts, it was long before it struck the crag. Huge as wa this, it trembled ; but notli ' dug less than an earthquake could have I tumbled that mighty 4 cone from its i'm- bedded ba-e. and the slide broke over it : and p'asied on. Cowerinir in the recess, the boys were covered with, sno-w as the great avalanche .thundered past, swept the pines from the : slope' below, and shot up on the opposite ! side of the gutchi whereat last it settled with a, sound and a shock that seemed to shake the mountain. . ' "0 Sam, my, pa and yourn!" cried Jimmy, in a voice -'.quite different from, his former one. ' 'That first one sounded like it w as at the shanties." . As he spoke, with one accord they dr.ev nearer together. ; Xo 'longer they seemed to be the two who had so lately met on the trail. "' And the slide had' wrought other changes. Even the wind, no more soughing through the broken pines. 'whistled in. altered cadence about the naKCd pinnacle of their bulwark. "We must git out and. git to the x v 1 shanties somehow. Lct'stake the shovel in the snow-bank," said Sam. pointing to a new shovel with its handle slipped through the many turns of rope that held the pack on the saddle of his jack. ; Both, brightened at the prospect of action. Sam, cutting the steps, was out first, -and Jimmy clambering after, they stood looking around. The dark green trees were gone. Some, torn up by the -robots, had -.been carried .bodily dow-n ;.' while here and there the stump of some broken giantstuck up its yellow splinters from the snow. '.-Both looked above, but the view was limited by the snow, driven by the furious wind, which, as they stepped from the crag, struck them; with full power: and.! ii-ced them .back. "We can't go up agin it," said Sam. "It'll fall "fore long, I recken. It didn't look like more'n a'squall asT came up the trail. And maybe, Jimmy, the slide didn't strike the'shanties; and ef it did, our pa-s might 'a been in the tunnels." t'My pa wasn't," said Jimmy, sinking his head. "He was just going to wash our clothes when Ideft." j ' ' "Them shanties was both put there to stay, and yoarn was the stoutejst built even pa always 'lowed that." For Sam, though silent enough generally, could speak out on occasion. "Xow, Jimmy.-I was bringing up a coffee pot. 'Taint no use standin' doin' nothin', and we'll melt some snow and have some coffee.." I've got some1 already ground in the pot." "I'll make the tire," said Jimmy, start ing upas Sam unhooked the colTee pot from the. 'crosses of the pack saddle. "There's a bi mountain rat's nest under this rock. I've noticed it every time I passed, and the sticks are good and dry." The fire'" was tjnickly made, and coffee was boiled.' Then, cups being wanting, thp pot was set away in the snow to cool sufficiently to. permit of drinking from it. Sam," meantime, cut slices of salt pork from the piece in his pack, and these, having been singed in the lire, the two ate. and drank alternately from the same spout in loving fellowship. In the background the jacks hung over the feast with pleading eyes. ; Each was rewarded now and then by a tid-ljit of rind from his master's hand. And when the pork was finished Sam got out a small sack of oatmeal, and pouring a little into his hollowed hand, the two . jacks licked it up by brotherly turns. - Soon after the meal the wind began, to fall, and the clouds, breaking away, the sun', now declining, struck into the gulch. Then they Widened the steps sufficiently to permit of the jacks clam bering iip, and set out for the shanties. The trail Was obliterated, but the snowT was packed hard and they had lit tle difficulty in gaining the site of the ! cabins. Then their fears were confirmed. Both had disappeared, and no human suuuu.ujum" iue oitmu a jiv ji had some difficulty,' too, in locating the exact sots Avhere the cabins had stood. This they at length did, however, by the aid of the torn and twisted trees. These, they saw, had broken the force of the slide, and deflected it as well, so that the main shoot had turned and passed directly over the lower cabin. The upper one, inhabited by the Trouts, had been covered but a few feet from the great side-pressure ot the mass. After they had determined the loca ion, Sam paused, and leaning on the Shovel which he had brought up, said, ivith generous self-restraint. "Now. immy, we aint got but one shovel.. Which shantv shall, we go at first;" "Let's draw straws," replied Jimmy, fter a moment's indecision. "All right; you lix 'em.4' Jimmy stooped, and taking two nee dles from a broken pine bough at, his feet, turned his back. : "Short is out shanty, long is yourn.' Draw, Sam," he said, as he faced tibout. j Each knew the minutes now were fraught with life or death to their im-' lrisoned fathers. Jimmy's big hand ttembled as he held the fateful needles ressed between thumb and finger. Sam's lean, brown one never quivered as he reached ami 'drew the short One. "Your shaiity," lie said, with a a long bjreath, and flung off his coat. "I'll take first shift.'. We'd better run in, an in cline, so as to strike the door, ef it's still tliar.' taking short runs, after a couple of hpurs' rapid work, they lieard a mutlled cij from within. Then the door wa3 s on reached, forced open, and there, to eir great joy, each saw his father. t1. To the anxious bovs the faces of tho fathers looked white' and ghastly from tlleir confinement in the stifling place. omt tne ire-li air soon revived them. The ol 1 man Trail. stru'"diiur to hi f,.,.t i..- tlie tirt to soeak. We might er knowed. Uncle J hd said, "that the 1 OVS W1K bonnil t UsOUt." - " 'Old man." Unclp Jimmv rnTj;ri mfcch impressed 'by recent events to think aught else, "this slide has settled it fur .? pose we cut theolaim in tlip mirl. dlj-and you take fust choicer" "I was jest thinkin'," said the1 old n, with lue deliberation, "this here ng of drivin' in two- tunnels side 1 side is kinder foolishness. If we'd m th an co coisoiidate on one we'd strike pay rock all 'That's a fact, nnrdnnr nml i call it the Iist Ch-inm " rr t; responded with if-.lr.n'vinn. . th4 christenin-r rtf ,; n.l i - ,.