THE THROSE OF T38 BY WILLIAM Author ol Zorolda," tCbprrts-at, IH PARC X, Far wouUs, beyond Uw A Was train lalns, beyond that great Dmlttees plain fcnosm ajra little snderstosd In Euro pean civilization. In the great Sahara where nothing meet the naked eye life today is the same as tt was ten centuries aajo the rame aa It will ever be; free and cnarralnx tn Ita fltmprrdty, yet with many terrors ever present,and un-b leached bones ever reminding tlut lonely traveler that a pricked watr kin or a lama oatnel means the end of all mats. On a recent Sourney from BlBkra to Moui-souk, in Feisan. I foolishly disre garded the injunctions of my old friend Emlle Chandioux, the commandant of the outpoet of Spahls stationed In the Arab town of In Salah, in the Touat Oasta, arrtl was rendered extremely un comforta.M by the astounulnff dis covery that the aunel caravan I had joined In Zouin Tlmassanhi, and with which I hud been traveling for tiwenty days, belonged to the Kul-Izhaban, a tribe of marauders and outla.w whose depredations and relentless butchery of their weaker neighbors caused them to be held in awe from Morocco across to Tripoli, and from Biskra to Lake Tsad. Ii addition, I ascertained that our shaikh, known to me as Sidl El Adil, or '"The Just," was really nono other than the dreaded Abdul Melik, the pirate- of the desert, nfraalnst whom the French government has sent threo expeditions, and upon whoso head, a price had been set. With bronzed, aquiline features, long gray beard, end keen, doep-set eyes; toll, erect, agile and of commanding preeeoce, he was a splendid specimen of the Arab of the plains. Though he expressed Intense hatred for the Infi del, and Invoked curses moot terrible upon the horsemen of the Roumis, In jreneral, and my friend Capt. Chan dioux, In- particular, he nevertheless, treated nre .with haughty courtesy, and extended to me the band or friendship. As to the head of our cavalcade of two hundred armed horsemen and a Ions string of camels, lie rode day by day across the parched wilderness, Inter spersed by small Band-hills and naked ledges of rock, speckled with etliel buhes half overwhelmed by solid, he was truly an imposing figure. His burnouse was of finest white wool.em broldered heavily with silk; the halck surrounding hlB faca was of spotless china silk, nad around his head was wound many yards of brown camel's hair, . The- saddle upon Tvhloh he sat was of crimson velvet, embroidered with gold and set With precious ptones, nnd stirrups and spurs of massive silver completed the trappings of his splen did coal-black horse, which he managed with rare perfection and skill. On my white Ku-luii-lan stallion, I usually rode at his side, chatting to him. In his own tongue, while two hundred of his people, erect in their saddles, and with their long-barreled rifles slung behind, were ready to instantly execute his slightest wish. Those days were breathless and blaz ing. Scorched by the sun, and half-suf focated by the sand-laden wind, our way lay through a wilderness that na ture had forsaken. At night, how ever.when the outlaws of the desert had cast sand upon their feet and prayed their maghrlb, and we had encamped under the palms of the oasis, eaten our dates and krouss-krouss, and slaoked our thirst from our water skins, then commenced the real luxury of the day the luxury of Idleness as, reclining on a mat in front of his tent, with coffee and a olgaretta, the great Abdul-Mellk would relate with slow distinctness stories of paet encounters between his people and the hated Christians. While sentries with loaded rifles kept a vi gilant lookout lest we should be sur prised by the ever watchful Spahls or Chesaeurs, half a dozen Arabs would squat In a semi-circle before the great sheikh, and, twanging upon their guen- lbrk those queer little banjoes fash lolned from tortoise shells over which fkin is stretched, would chant weirdly In a strange staccato, Arab songs of love snd war. At that hour a coolness falls over everything, intense silence reigns, the sky above grows a deeper and deeper blue, end the palms and tal ha trees look mysterious In the half light. Soon the stars shine out like di amond points, and it grew darker and darker, until the chill night breeze of the desert stirs the feathery heads of the date palms. Then the lawless no roads, my companions, would wrap their burnouses .closely about them, scoop oat a hole tn the warm sand, and there repose until the first flush of dawn. About five weeks after I had inadver tently thrown In my lot with the Kel Izaban, and after penetrating a re gion, that as lor as I am aware, has never been explored by Europeans, for It remains a blank upon the moot re cent map issued by the Depot de la Ouerre, we were one evening, at a spot MM CURED IN AN INSTANT. Let Railway's Ready Relief Be Used on the First Indication of Pain or Uneasiness; II -Threatened with Disease or Sickness,, the Cure Will Be Made Before the Family Doctor WouM Ordinarily Reach the House. CUBES THE WOKST PAINS tn from one to twenty minutes. A CURE FOR ALL A half to a te?poonful of Ready Relief In a half tumbier of water, repeated as often as the discharges continue, and a flannel saturated with Ready Relief placed over the stomach and bowels will afford Immediate relief and soon effect a cure. Internally A ha!f to a teaspoonful In half a tumbler of water will in a few min utes cure Cramps, Sspasms, Sour Stom ach,, Nausea, Vomiting, Heartburn, Nerv ousness, Sleeplessness, Sick Headache, flatulency and all Internal pain. Malaria In lis Various Forms Cured and Pre- vented. There ts not a remedial agent In the world that will cure Fever and Ague and all other Malarious, Dillons and other fevers, aided by RADWAY'8 PILLS, so quick as RADWAY'S READY RED KF. Travelers should always carry a bottle of Radway's Ready Relief with them. A few drops In waiter will prevent sick ness or pains from change of water, It is better than French brandy or bitters as a stimulant. , Prlce 60 cents per bottle. Sold by all Druggists, i wm SU11ER COMPLAINTS 8 IHODSAND TERRORS, LB QUEUX. "Stolen Souls," eta sy WlUtMH Le Qaeax. evidently prearranged, joined by o body ot Ms horsemen, who armed themselves with the rifles obtained from our cam els' packs, and then, leaving the camels in oharge of half a dozen men In a rooky valley, called the Anzoua, we ail con tinued our way In high spirits, jesting, laughing and singing snatches of songs. Throughout that night and during the following Oay we roa at tne same steady pace, with only brief halts that (were absolutely necessary. On the sec ond night darkness fell swiftly, but the moon rose, and under its mystic light we sped forward, until suddeuly the gaunt man, in a dirty ragged burnouse. who acted as our guide, shouted, and we pulled up quickly. Then, in the moonlight, I could just distinguish among the trees of the little oasis a few low, white houses, of what I subse quently learned was the little desert vil lage of Tllouat. inhabited by the Kel Bmoghrl, and distant ten leagues from the town of Ideles. Abdul-Malik shouted an order clear and distinct. Whereupon the horsemen spread themselves out In two long lines, and with their guns carried across their saddles, the first Una crept slowly and silently forward. By this movement I knew that wa were about to attack the village, and held my own rltle ready for purposes of self-defense. Sitting in the second line, I advanced with the others. and the breathless moments that fol lowed were full of excitement. I had become a pirate of the desert, one of a band of lierce outlaws, ruports of whoso terrible atrocities had sent a thrill of horror across Europe on more than one occasion. Suddunly a shot startled us and at the same moment a muttered curse fell from the sheikh's llos as he saw that our presence had b'een detected, for the shot had been llred in the village a sound of warning. Almost In3tantly It was apparent that we had been be trayed, for a great body of horsemen galloped on to meet us, and in a few moments I found myself lying behind my horse pouring forth volley after vol ley from my repeating rltle. The fusillade was deafening, and for fully half an hour it was kept up. About twenty cf our men hud been killed or wounded, when suddenly the first line rose with loud shouts ns If they were one man nnd. mounting rode straight at their opponents, while we dashed at headlong speed upon our enemies almost ero they had time to realize our Intention. The melee wes awful. Swords, rilles and keen, crooked Jamblyahs were used with terlble ef fect, but very soon all resistance was at an end the work of looting the village commenced. Half demented by excitement and success, my companions entered the houses, shot down the women with re lentless cruelty, tore from them what litle Jewelry they possessed and plun dered, wrecked and burned their homes out of sheer delight in destruction. I stood watching the terrible scene, shud dering at the inhuman brutality of my companions, but unable to avert the terrible calamity that had fallen so swiftly upon the peaceful little place. The flendlBhness of the outlaws had alas, not bean exaggerated. Abdul- Melik laughed gleefully, uttering some words as he rode past me swift as the wind. But heeded them not. I loathed, despised and hated him. While dawn spread In saffron streaks the work of plunder still proceeded, but when the sun shone forth only the smoke-blackened walls of Tilount re mained standing. The plunder was quickly packed upon our horses, and soon afterwards we rode off, carrying with us twenty men and women who had been captured. All of whom, I was Informed, would eventually lind their way Into the great slave market fur away at Mourzouk. At sundown, live days afterwards, we descended Into a rocky valley, and sud denly came upon a wonderful muss of scattered ruins, of amazing magnitude and extent, which Abdul-AIellk told me were the remains of a forgoteii city called Tihodayen, and as we approached I saw by the massive walls of hewn stone.the fallen columns half Imbedded in the sand, and, by an Inscription over an arched door.that they were relics of the Roman occupation. When we dis mounted, I found that the ruined city gave shelter to the outlaws, and was their habitual hiding place. An hour later, reclining on mats un der the walls of what had once been a great palace, the outlaw Sheikh and myself ate our eveuing meal of saubu OUR OVIDTC PIIOUTED AND WH FULLED UP QUICKLY. saj, beryseh and luzlnyeh, nnd drank copiously of dushab, that luscious date sirup that Is so acceptable after the heat and burden of the Saharan day. while my companions feasted and made merry, for it appeared that they kept stores of food concealed there. On commencing to smoke, Abdul Mellk ordered that the captives should be brought before him, and when a few minutes later they were ushered Into his presence, they with one exception. fell upon their knees and groveled, and cried aloud for mercy. The single cap. tlve who begged no favor was a young dark- haired girl, of exquisite beauty, with black, piercing eyes, pretty, dimpled cheeks, and a complexion al most as fair as an Englishwoman's. She wore a zouave of crimson velvet heavily embroidered with gold; a heavy golden girdle confined her waist, and her wide trousers were of palest rose-pink silk, while her tiny feet were thrust Into vet vet slippers of green embroidered with gold thread. But her dress had been torn In the fierce struggle with her pltl less captors, and as she stood, erect and defiant, with her hands secured behind her with a lethern thong, Bhe cast at us a. glance full of withering scorn, the Sheikh raised his hand to com marul silence, bit as her fellow captives continued waiting, he ordered the re moval of all but the girl, who apparent- ly set him at defiance. Then turning his keen eyes upon her, he noted how ex tremely handsome she was, and, while she returned his gaze unflinchingly, her beauty held me in fascination. In all my journeys in the Land of the Sun I had never before seen such an abso lutely perfect face. Who art thou?" demanded the dreaded chief, roughly. What is thy name?" I am called Khadldja Fathma. daughter of All Ben iTshaahaml, cadi of Ideles," she answered. In a firm, defiant tone. "All Ben Vshaahami!" echoed Abdul- Ketlk, knitting his brows fiercely. "Thou art his daughter; the daughter of that accursed son of offal who en deavored to betray me Into the hands of the Roumis?" he cried, exultantly. "I have kindled the lights of knowledge at the flambeau of prophecy, and I vowed that I would ere many moons seek vengeance." I have anticipated this thy wrath ever since thy'horde of cowardly ruf fians laid hands upon me," she an swered, with a contemptuous toss of her prety head. "But the daughter of the cadi Iveles craveth not mercy from a servant ot Kbits." "Darest thou insult me, wench?" he cried, pate with passion, and starting up as if to strike her. "Thou art the ohild of the man who would have given me into the hands of the Spahls for the sake of the two bags of gold offered for my head. I will return his good offices by sending him tomorrow a present he will perhaps appreciate, the present of thine own hands. He will then be con vinced that Abel-Mellk knoweth how to repay those who seek to injure him." "Dost thou intend to strike off my hands?" she gasped, pale as death, nevertheles making a strenuous ef fort to remain calm. 'At sunrise the vultures will feast upon thee, and thine hands will be on their way to Ideles," he answered, a sinister smile playing about his hard mouth. "Malec hath already set his curse upon thee," she Bald, "and by each murder thou commlttest so thou createst for thyself a fresh torture in Al-Hawiyat, "WHO ART TIIOU?" DEMANDED THE DREADED CHIEF ROUGHLY. where thy food will be offal nnd thou will slack thy thirst with boiling pitch. True, I have fallen captive into thine hands, having Journeyed to Tllouat to see my father's mother, who was dying: but thinkest thou that 1 fear thee? No," she added, with flashing eyes. "Though the people dread thee as the great and powerful chief, I de-plse thee and all thy miserable parasites. It thou smltest off my hands. It is but the same punishment as thou hast meted out to others of my sex. Thou ai-t.af ter all, a mere cqward who maketh war upon women." "Silence, Jude!" he cried in tu mult of passion, and, turning to the men beside him, commanded: "Take her away, secure her alone till dawn, and then let her hands be struck off and brought to tne." PART II. Roughly the men dragged her away, but ere she went she cust ut us a look of haughty scornfutness, and, shrugging her shoulders, treated this terrible man date with ineffable disdain. "The jade's hands shall be sent to her father, the cadi, us a souvenir of the In terest he tuketh In my welfare," the Sheikh muttered uloud: Her tongue will never iwiuln utera rebuke or insult. Verily, Allah hath delivered Into my hands a wen pun to use against mine enemies." I utered eager words of Intercession, pointing out the cruelty of taking her young life, but he only laughed deris ively, and I was compelled to sit beside him while the other captives were ques tioned and inspected. That night I sought repose tn a shed that had been erected in a portion of the ruins, but found sleep impossible. The defiantly beautiful face of the young girl who was to die at dawn kept recurring to me with tantalizing vivid ness, and at length I ruse, determined. If possible, to save her. Noiselessly I crept out, my footsteps muffled by the sand, saddled one ofAbdul-Mellk's own horses, and without attracting the notice of either sentry on duty at each end of the encampment, I entered the ruin, where, confined to an Iron ring in the masonry by a leather band she crouched, silent and thoughtful. "Fi-amanl-llloh!" I whispered, as I approached. "I come to have speech with thee, nnd to assist thee to escape." "Who art thou?" she inquired, strug gling to her feet and pet-ring at me in the gloom. " A Roumt, who Is determined that the outlaw's command shall never be executed," nnd taking the jambiyah from my girdle, I severed the thongs that confined her hands and ankles, and the next second she was free. Briefly I explained how I had sadled a fleet horse and placed a saddle-bag with food upon it. "If I get safely away I shall qwe my life to you, she added, with Intense gra titude, pressing my hand for an instant to her quivering lips. "I know this place, and ere two moons have risen I can travel through the rocky defile and be at my father's house in Ideles. Tell me thy name, so that my father may know who was his daughter's lib erator." I told her, and In the same hasty breath asked for some souvenir. "Alas, I have nothing," she an swered, "nothing but a strange orna ment iwhlch my father's mother gave to me Immediately before she died, an hour previous to the attack being made upon the village," and placing her hand deep Into the breast of her dress she drew forth a rough disc of copper about the size of a crown piece with ahole In it as if It had been strung upon a thread. When she gave It to me she told me It had been in her possession for years, that It was a talisman against terror, and that some curious legend was at tached to it.the nature of which I do not now recollectThere was a strange writ ing upon it in some foreign tongue of the Roumis that no one had been able to decipher." I looked, but unable to detect any thing in the darkness assured her that its possession would always remind me of her and slipped it into the pocket of my gandoura. Then together we crept along under the shadow of the wall, and, gaining the spot where the horse stood In read iness, I held her for a second In my em brace, while she kissed me, uttering a fervent word of thanks and afterwards assisted her into the saddle. Then a mo- WHEN SUDDENLY5 THE SPADE OF ONE OF THE SPAHIS STRUCK SOMETHING HARD. ment later, with a whispered "Allah Iselcmeck!" she sped away, with her unbound hair flying behind her, and was Instantly lost in the darkness. On realizing that she was gone I iwas seized with regret, but feeling that at least I had saved her from a horrible doom, I returned to my litle shed, and, wrapping myself In my burnouse, slept soundly until the sun had risen high in the heavens. Opening my eyes, I nt once remem bered Khadidja's quaint souvenir, and on examining It was astonished to find both obverse and reverse of the rough ly fashioned disc covered with an in scription In English crudely engraved, or rather scratched,- apparently with the point of a knife. Investigating it closely, I was enabled, after some dim curty, to read the following surprising words: "This record I leave for the person In to whose hands It may full, for I am starving. Whosoever reads this let him hasten , to Zemnou, in the Zelus desert, two days from the well of El Amelma,, and from, the Babel-Qued pace twenty steps westward outside the city wall, and under the second bastion let him dig. . There will he be rewarded. John Edward Chatteris, held captive In the Kasbah of Borku by order of the sultan Othmun. Sunday, June 13, im." Chatteris! Instantly it occurred to me that a celebrated English explorer, archaeologist and Fellow of the Royal Geographical society of that name, had years ago been lost, and his fate had re mained a complete mystery. This, then. was a message Inscribed with apparent diftiiculty within the Impregnable cit adel of the warrior sultan of Borku, whose little mountain kingdom was sit uate five hundred miles south of Mour zoiik, between the Tibestl mountains and Lake Tsad, a secret that for half a ciiiitury had been In the keeping of Arabs who could not decipher it. What might not be buried at the spot indicated by this curious relic of the great traveler? My curiosity wus ex cited to the utmost. Impatient to In vestigate the truth, but compelled, nev ertheless, to remain silent until such time as I could escape from my unde sirable companions. I concealed the dl3c In my ganduora and rose to join Abdul Melik at his morning meal. Khndldja's escape caused th" old out law Intense chagrin, and his anger knew no bounds, but luckily no sus picion fell upon me. and, having re mained with them during two whole moons, I succeeded one day, when we were near the town of Rhat, In evading them and getting away. As quickly as possible, I returned to In Salah, where I exhibited the metal disc with Its strange inscription to Capt Chandioux, who became at once interested In It, an nouncing his intention to accompany me next day to Investigate the truth of the engraved record. With an escort of twenty Spahls, all well monted and armed, we rode out of In Salah at dawn, and for nine days continued our journey across the desert due eastward, first taking In the caravan route to Tarz Oulll, beyond the French boundary, and continuing through the rocky region of the Ibehaouen and across the Djedld Oasis, until one even ing, at the maghrib hour, the high white walls and three tall mlnarts of the desert city of Zemnou came within view. It was unsafe to take the Spahls nearer, therefore we returned and bivouacked until darkness set in. Then, dressed in the haick and burnouse of the Arab of the plain, Chandioux with myself and three Saphis, carrying spades concealed beneath our Knowing drapery, approached the town and crept under the shadow of the wals until we reached the Bab-el-Oued, or principal gate. Guarded by strong watch towers on either side, the gate was closed, and silently we crept.anxious and breath less, on over the sand westward, until we had counted twenty paces and reached the second bastion. Then, after glancing eagerly around to reassure ourselves that we were not observed, we all five commenced to dig beneath the wall. Discovery, we knew, would mean death, Th sand was loose but full of stones, and for some time we worked without result. Indeed, I be gan to fear that some one had already been able to decipher the record and obeyed Its injunctions, when suddenly the spade of one of the Spahls struck something hard, and he uttered an ejaculation. With one accord we worked with a will, and within ten min utes were unearthing an object of ex- SHE SFwD AWAY, TVITH HER UN BOUND HAIR FLYING BE HIND HER. traordinary shape. At first it puzzled us considerably, but at length, when we had cleared the earth sufflclntly to remove It, we made a cursory examina tion and discovered it was a kind of stool with a semi-circular seat, support ed by six short columns of twisted gold In Imitation of serpents, the seat Itself being of god, inlaid with many precious stones, while the feet consisted of six great yellow . topais, beautifully cut snd highly polished, held In the serf 9 flL''i'&Jw pents' mouths. The gold had become dimmed by long contact with the earth, but the gems, as we rubbed off the sand that dung to them, gleamed and spark led in the tapers' fitful rays. he stool, orthrone was so heavy that it was with difficulty two men dragad It out of the trench, and breath less with anxiety, we all lent a willing hand to carry It over the five miles of open desert to where the men were awaiting ua Our arrival was greeted with cheers, but quickly the strange rellcrwas wrapped In saddle bags and secured upon the back of a spare horse, and we set out on the first stage of our return journey, reaching In Salah in safety ten days later, and learning with satisfaction on our arlval that Abdul-Mellk had, during our absence, been killed in a skirmish with the Spa hls In the Ahaggar. Not until I had brought the Jeiweled seat to England and exhibited It before a meeting of the Royal Geographical society was I aware of Us real anti quartan value. From, the letters sent home by the Intrepid Dr. Chatteris, and still preserved in the archives of the society, it appeared that during 183S Salman, the great Sheikh of Aujila, as-, sembled a formidable following, and having proclaimed himself Sultan of Tunis, led an expedition . through . tho country, extorting money from the peo ple by reason of horrible tortures and fearful barbarities. While sentencing his unfortunate victims, he always used a curiously shaped judgment seat, which for ages had been the. property of the Sultans of Sokoto, and it thus became known and dreaded as the Throne of the Thousand Terrors, It only being used on occasions when he sen tenced the unfortunate wretches to tor ture for the purpose of extracting from them Information as to where their wealth was concealed. Against this tierce rebel the Bey of Tunis was compelled to send a great expedition, and after several sanguin ary encounters at Slnaun, and in the Um-cl-Cheil, he was utterly routed and killed In his own stronghold at Aujila. Dr. Chatteris, In the Inst letter that reached England, mentioned that he had secured the Jeweled throne, but that on account of the superstitions of the Arabs It was an extremely difficult matter to convey it to the coast. Fearing lest he should lose It, he had apparently burled It, and soon after wards unfortunately fell Into the hands of the Sultan of Korku, who held him captive until his death. Khadldja Is still living In Ideles, where she is happily married to the younger son of the governor, but In the seclusion of her harem she Is still In Ignorance that, by the curious little souvenirfvith which she rewarded her lnlidel friend, she added to our national collection of antiquities a valuable and highly In teresting relic. Visitors to the. 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