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suspiciously thrust his closed hand into the breeches pocket over his hip.

"You can come out of hiding now, Sally O'Dowd/exclaimed Captain Ranger, as soon as the last team was safely up the opposite bank.

"I thought it was Dugs they were after," said Mary.


 * ' So 'twas; and me too," cried the grass widow, as she jumped to the ground, surrounded by her three children. "Sam O'Dowd was one o' the posse. I saw him. He couldn't have taken me; but he was after my babies." She hugged her children, as she laughed and wept by turns in a transport of joy.

"Don't cry, Sally," said the Captain, coaxingly.

You're in the Indian country, safe and sound." Before Sam can get a requisition from the Governor of Illinois to reclaim your babies, and before the Governor o' Missouri can give that party o' slave-catchers the power to arrest Dugs and her coon, we'll have you out under the protection of the Indians!" said Mrs. Ranger, with a meaning smile.

THE CAPTAIN MAKES A DISTINCTION

THOUGHT it was arranged that Sally was to join us at Quincy, on the Mississippi," said Captain Ranger, after they were safely landed in the Indians' territory.

"That was the agreement between Jean and myself,'* interposed the frightened fugitive, still holding her babies close; "but I overheard a conversation at St. Louis that changed my plans. I was in hiding, down among the wharf-rats and niggers on the river-bank, in a cheap hash-house, half scow and half log cabin. The walls