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Enclosed find 60¢ (cash or stampa) for which send me your special introductory combination. © Alan Le May WNU Service CHAPTER VII—Continued « Walt Amos turned his back on them, and stood staring out into the sun-blasted street. That street was curiously empty — unwholesomely empty, so that nobody who had seen the crowd there could look at that street now without knowing that something was irregular, something WTOong. ‘““Move out, then," the sheriff said. “Drag your freight and drag it quick. Keep going. Five minutes town." Horse Dunn chuckled in his short beard and hitched his belt up. Slow- ly he sauntered past the deputies, staring at each of them with open insolent amusement as he passed; then he huge hulk that frame of the door. Unhurrying, the 9% men made their way along the main street of Inspiration, around the corner to their car. But as the dust kicked out from und they knew that they | 1 x the out, a whole shouldered filled the little empty corral house by the barns to climb the fence Billy Wheeler, around him, went got his razors out beside tired « to his re Here Horse presently came ing for him. The walked in slowly, door after him. and closed He sat down ments of a man a old; and he co his hands. “You know what she said he demanded. ‘““Nope."’ “1 went out to where she's on that corral. I just her about Rufe Deane vered his face with to me?" wanted to tell throwing they cleared the maybe if she'd seen it all she'd know we're So 1 went out there and said, * That was all I said looked at me. Anc savs—‘You're } run red.’ ” Suddenly Billy tached pity for ti girl. He wa Dunn curiously depender 1 street what 5 able man, who looked like was dependent than she upon was 1 were deeply they could each other, He could not chance that the girl would learn to under- stand either Horse Dunn or the dry country men whom he faced Dunn was what the dry country had made him; and there was no longer anything in the old man's life ex- cept the cow kingdom he had dreamed, and tried to build, for her. A slight noise was heard and Old Man Coffee came in gloomily and threw his coiled dog whip on the floor. “1 haven't actually hit a dog with that thing for over nine days,” he offered. ‘But I swear I come close to hitting one tonight. That old fool makes me so cussed" “Coffee,”’ Dunn interrupted, ‘you haven't been here long; but you've trailed and back-trailed, and pro- moted all over this place with those long-eared hounds. Now tell me one thing: do you see any show of find- ing out who killed Lon Magoon?" Old Man Coffee dropped into a chair and considered for several long moments. ‘‘No,” he said at last. “Why?” Dunn demanded. “Somebody, some place, may have killed Lon Magoon, for all I know. But he sure wasn’t killed at Short Crick.” For once in his life old Horse Dunn's jaw dropped. “Look here! You wouldn't go to fooling with me?" “I don't always know what I'm talking about. This time I know.” “But the saddle—"' “I don’t question it was Magoon’s saddle; I only say it was a different man was killed in it.” Again Horse stared at Coffee; then he relaxed a little, and sat down on the bunk. “Coffee,” he said, “if you're so dead sure, in God’s name tell us what you know!” Coffee squinted his deep-set eyes at Dunn. “I sore-footed a good dog, and like to killed a mule, getting over here to help you with this case. I don’t ask for that to be appre- ciated. But I'm getting a little tired of answering all the questions around here!” Horse looked baffled. “What's the matter with you?" hurt, cause not see much “I'm tired of being lied to, for one thing." “Who's lied to you?” “More than one, right here on this place. Dunn, there's too many things not open to the eye around here to suit me!” “Coffee,” said Horse Dunn with- out belligerence, “what in all hell do you mean by that?" “I'll just give you one sample.” Old Man Coffee picked up his dog whip from the floor and sorted out its coils with bony old fingers. “There's been a horse in this case that's been known as the killer's horse, because he left his trail at Short Crick, mixed up in the sign of the killing. You know I took old Rock and we trailed that horse; though it come to nothing, then. Now, since we've been back here this afternoon, I've seen a funny thing. Rock's been working around the horse corrals, by himself; try- ing to work out a trail. Dog voices is peculiar—they call different trails in different ways. And I heard Rock's voice, I knew he was ying the trail of the horse." as soon as 1 Never Heard the Beat.” rae has owl of a wat right » on a trail he had hou and you here among u that he completel t when straight run the CHAPTER VIII The mountains were throwing their early lucid twilight across the range of the 94 by the time the cow- boys cleared their supper plates. They had eaten in silence. But somehow in the interval since the conference in Billy Wheeler's room, everybody there had learned that a between Old Man Coffee So now loafed in mess shack, and nobody spoke of seven-up. They rolled cigarettes and lighted pipes, and a couple of lamps were lit, throwing tall, huge shadows of the men on the walls behind. They all knew that the 94 was up against a thrash-out, with- in itself. Horse Dunn broke the silence im- patiently. ““There sure ought to be enough scrapping on this range without hunting up trouble among ourselves. In ordinary times this whole killing case wouldn't amount to a tinker's dam to begin with.” “I'm not so sure,” said Old Man Coffee. “What kind of a case have they got?" Horse demanded. “They can’t even find their everlasting stiff!” “They're pretty liable to find it,” Old Man Coffee thought. “When they find it, it'll be about all they need. If it's Magoon, like you claim, they can show motive—you said openly that you'd kill Magoon if you caught him on 94 range. They've got opportunity-—by your own state- ment you were riding alone on Red Sleep Ridge that day, and the Red Sleep is within striking distance of Short Crick. They can prove you hid the dead man’s saddle—which they can stretch to make look like a concealment of the crime. And all this says nothing about the killing of Cayuse Cayetano.” “What's known about the killing of Cayuse?”’ “How do I know? We're so popu- lar around here we can't even go look over Ace Springs without get- ting into a scrap with officers of they still the peace—same as Billy got into at Short Crick.” Dunn slumped down in his chair and went to growling into his war- like beard. ‘I don't believe you know any more about it than the rest of us do.” “I'll put it stronger than that. Maybe—" Old Man Coffee made each word separately heard— “someone in this room knows a whole lot more than I know!" Horse Dunn sat pertectly still, ex- cept for his eyes; his head did not raise and no muscle of his face changed, but his eyes whipped to the old lion hunter's face. moment he remark you're sure going to have yack up.” ‘I'll say just one thing more. There's scarcely a man in this room that hasn't lied to me at least once, in the little time I've been here.” ing himself square in his chair. where they've been, and when. No what he's up Gil, here—the knows re Take man against sheriff the voice NT mean “To hell witl “You'll either Horse swaller outraged you'll whole!" “That said For I won't do either," Coffee a moment Horse Dunn stared wn, ng ugly. “I stand for that, Coffee.’ he said. “You know I can't stand for sian. “l can't help that.” “You don't give n Horse Dunn offee stood up if, a queer smile send me a che 5, he said. He s the dark s after Old Man sat silent, unable to realize that the old lion iter was no longer of heir number. always heard he was cracky now he's gone cracked altogether. I suppose the old fool won't even stay the night-—he’'ll go sleep in the brush somewhere. Well, enough! Somebody go catch him his mule.” Two or three of them moved, but he took it Coffee saddled his black mule two old men together again, but he felt that it was one of those things that a man has to try. He kept trying to think of an angle of ap- proach, but Old Man Coffee, whose packing up was easily done, was ready to move out before Wheeler had thought of a way. Old Man Coffee extended his hand. “Well, so long, son.” ’ “I'm almighty sorry,” Wheeler said, ‘to see you leave this case. You're needed here, if ever a man was.” “Tough,” said Old Man Coffee. He swung aboard the black mule and sat looking down at Billy Wheeler the saddle. “I kind of like you, son. You seem to have a lit tle more s: than the others. here's something for you to keep under yc I'm not out of this n going to do one more job before 1 go. I'm going to find man. So et. ‘You think you can?" “Looks like I might. Horse Dunn ain't in his. He ma: f fool of me, and himself too, when he got bullheaded anc n'a ¢ i » goon's saddle ~he on 1 de Then a strang illy Wheeler had ice of it. As he sa he dark he now found y aware of the peopled aware of the ex- act location of the men in the bunk house, of the ponies in the corrals It was a peculiar sensation, as if he were suddenly more awake than before, as awake as a man in a ring battle, or a man in danger, And especially he was aware of the dark, brush country at most a fc silent juniper stood thick behind the Somewhere out there a twig cracked, and his nerves jerked. Something in that black mile of brush was as awake as he, Then abruptly the silence broke, definitely, once-and-for-all, as if shell of stillness had cracked (TO BE CONTINUED) Wood has found a wide variety of uses as a raw material in the past, but it seems forever doomed to be replaced by something else, writes Dr. Thomas M. Beck in the Chicago Tribune. It was the first fuel that men burned, but now it has been largely replaced by coal and petroleum. The first houses were made of wood, but now brick, glass, concrete, and steel are grad- ually taking its place. The wooden ships of a century ago have given way to the iron ships of today. So it has been in the chemical industry, but with one important difference. Wood has been the source of a number of important raw materials which have later been produced more economically from other sources. However, the chemical importance of wood itself has not declined, for new uses have continually been discovered to take the place of the old ones. For example, the first chemical reagent to be made from wood prob- ably was charcoal, which is the fairly good grade of carbon left when the other elements of wood which means that it can readily combine, when hot enough, with the oxygen of metallic ores to form gas- eous carbon oxides, thereby leaving the metal in a free state. At one time practically all the iron pro- duced was done so with the help of charcoal. Now coke has taken its place almost completely. Almost simultaneous with the de- cline of the metallurgical applica- tion of charcoal has been the devel- opment of another important use, although one more limited in vol- ume. Carbon has an unusual ability to absorb organic matter on its sur- face. The porous nature of wood charcoal gives it a great amount of exposed surface, so that it possesses this absorptive power to an unusual extent. College Football Started in "69 The first football game between colleges was played at New Bruns wick, N. J., November 13, 1869, be tween teams representing Princeton and Rutgers. Rutgers won. Smil Two Sides to thinks no enough for her.” “Well, she may “She may be. left, too.” “She It’s No Use “Every time I look at you, Mag- gie, I think of Ginger Rogers.” “Do you, David?” “Yes, but a chap like me Resourceful: The man who promised his wife a circular tour ~and took her on a merry-go- round. A Mean Eye Little Joan was learning ad been try to sey CARRY YOUR ALKALIZER WITH YOU | IF OVER-EATING CAUSES ACID vow / INDIGESTION— ~HERE'S THE SENSIBLE THING TO DO Do something about Periodic Pains Take Cardul for functional pains of menstruation. Thowsands of wom- en testify it has helped them. If Cardui doesn’t relieve your monthly consult a physician, and put he trouble, discomf Don't just off trea gO on suffer 4 tment to prevent des easing certain pains, Car- dul aids Idis gystem more strength from their food ly vegetable medicine at the drug store and ced “Card-ud™ the whole men to get Room for Courtesy Life is not so but that there is always room for courtesy. — Emerson. short checks MALARIA