The Huron Expositor, 1917-05-04, Page 7tee
te
Triemes
tw factors eco emene
re to tio must be tone
dig Lab_ or
beesteee they
afreiti ba berme
eiste tee WOWS,
bear*
tir dam hut -11111 IN"
Lg -
Sh
ray.
gat SCrilMIn tb
heir the flatiller SO
ng it eaSy fed' theAR
a yea f�odCM-
uula ger off ibe
ab: 12114 part
ESIBIPIP.
ease Who
010461 *AO
les cat aece point
c of the enemy- the
mercantile assearinet`
esvmey part of ose-
You userintra 041 Una
le' sle strongly' . Every .
fo shortest the oirilW
ty. Evilly itite- ci-ceb
swigs, arid neolkee i‘ --
pre, iss me natilereS
'erela lao ?nem, and as
riuty with ail yoser
lets itt France -21d
ood—let it be said d
Irr greatest need, tbeir
are fighting for us.
, Toronto.
111.111•1=11....
Tendrie,' c.v.a,
ea: Honourable Sir WU-
Ontario; N. W. Rowan,
saw Albert 31.
spent in tie, tag to curean
nicer by sing ord.; rg rery oi::: ,nce t 3, "
writeet.zdeine.
Street, Methuen. -1 ilea I heard
of Zalli.auk, used it, aad am now
compleiely cured, .
nmetetiothree yeare agefh ulcer
ippeared on my mit le, e gred-
ually spread to s'ey
pain was terrific. For years t could
hardly walk and had to ,.. ernain in
the house. For seen la, -five meats
received doctorstreetiment but
got only temporery
'Then 1 heard of some Wonder -
ill cures worked hy Zarnaliuk and
commenced rising it. The relief
I experie n ced was woa de rfT'Tbc
inflammation Wr. 5 gra dually drawn
out. The pain was soon einded
and, at last after thirty-tbree ynar
misery, I was on the road to
recovery. To cut a leria Story
short — persevere n cc W I al tbaS
wonderful halm re,suited in a com- I straight from here to Williams Cache;
plete an pehremomit cure," l Dancing cam go with hirae And tele-,
Zara -link is mem unequalled for 1 phone Gene and Bob Johnson to sit
eC4entaf ringWOrro. abse.esees, bolls, down in the Canadian passetill they
ow te the rocks, but not to let any-
,.
enn
Sifil h
by
Frank H. Spearman
k4 1
(Continued from last week.)
"Tower W—two hundred and seven -
ti -six " Have you ordered up an
eine, ine ?"
f'Where's Kennedy?" e
4. second voice answered: ,"Right
here."
"Strike a light, Farrell. What a-'
bout the horses?"
`They're being loaded." -
"Is the line clear
"Rooney- Lee ,is clearing it.",
"Spike it, George, and leave every
west -bound in siding, with, the engine
eut loose and ° plenty of stOam, till we
get by: It's now or never this time.
Two hundred and seventy-six miles;
they're giving Us our meney's Werth.
Wh'os go:ng with us Farrell?"
"Bob Mitt, Reed- Young and Brill,
if Reed can get him at Sleepy Cat.
Dancing is loading the. horses."
"I want Ed Banks to lead a posse
al
blood -poisoning, 'earns, scds,cuts,
oftd rial skin injuries. All drug.
ter Mam-Biik Go., Toronto,
zi 3 for $1.25•
fora•ourow.r..e.fflegpmearsomisessi,.
PALPITA4ION
OF THE HEART
*SHORTNESS OF BREATH
MUD '
MILBURN'S
HEART AND NERVE PILLS.
Mrs. & Walters, Martapedia,
write: "1 wiSh to let you know how
Emelt good I have received by taking
peer Heart and Nerve Ms. I was
suffering frau palpitsttion of the heart
and shortness of breath. The trouble
with ay heart- was caused by stomach
r -
had tried all finds of medichse, both
ratan am' doctors', but I found none
relieve' Me like tlifiltnam's Heart and
-
Nerve Pins:- I believe anyone suffering
tyke did should use them.. I only used
/ear boxes and now feel like a. different
person,"
ilenirburn's Heart fuld Nerve' Pita lemeM
begt on the market for the past tvventy-
§Ve years and have a most wonderful
reputation as a remedy for all heart and
nerve- trembles.
. Prim 50 cents. per box, 3 boxes for
at all dealers, or mailed direct on
stexipt of .price by Tree T. MiliBUTLW
141k1MID,, 'Toronto, Ont.
FOr Prices'
ea- toms el sale et the following
brands nitnlY ten
MIL OMR VRAWINEXT
thu'Irsirsehe Vohs
Nom 63 ta Cbehstiles &tom
MONTREAL,
ody through if they want to live a -
tar I see them. They've 'got all the
instructions; all they need is the word.
It's a long chalice, but I think these
are our -friends. You can head BanIts
off by telephone somewhere if we
change our minds -when we get a
trail. Start Brill Young and a good
man from Sleepy Cat ahead of xis,
George, if you can, in a baggage ear
with any 'horses that they can "get
there. They can he at Tower W. by
daybreak and perhaps pick up a trail
before we reach there, and we shall
have fresh horses for them. I'm ready
I guess; let's go. Slain the door,
George!" ; In the hall Whispering
Smith threw a , pocket -light on his
watch. "I Want you to put us there
by seven &dock." ,
"Charlie Sellers is going to pull you"
answered McCloud. "Have you got
everything? Then we're off." The
three tiptoed down the. dark hall,
down the stairs, and across the slreet
on a noiseless run for the railroad
yard.
The air was chill and the sky clear,
with a moon more than half to the
full. "Lord what a night to rider.,
exclaimed Whispering- Smith, loolchig
mournfully at the stars. "Well plann-
ed, well planned, I must admit: _.
The men hastened toward the yard,
where lanterns .were moving about the
ear of the trainguards near the
• Blue -Front stables. The lOading board
had been towered, and the:horses were
;being oare :oily- led .into the ear- From
a switili engine behind the car a shrill
1 cloud ca steam nillowed into the air.
t_ .
. the yard a great passenger en-
gine, its huge white side -red rising
and falling slowly in the still light
of the moon ---one of the -mountain rac-.
ers, thick -necked likean; athlete and
deep-chested—was backiitg down for
the run with a single car almozt across
the west end of the division. Train-
men were running two and from the
Wickhap platform. By the time the
horses were loaded the conductor had
orders. Until the last minute, Whis-
pering Smith was in consultation with
McCloud, and giving Dancing precise
instructions for -the posse in the Cacho
courdry. They were still talking .at
the side door of the car. Mc.;
Cloud and Dancing on the ground
and Whispering Smith squatted on his
haunches, inside the moving car, when
the engine signalled and the special
drew a way from the chute, pounded up
the long rim of the ladder switch, aiad
moved with gathering speed into the
canyon. In the cab Charlie Sollers,
crushing in his hand the tissue that
had brought the news of his brother's
death, sat at the throttle:He had no
speed orders. They had only told him
he had a clear track. .
IND A PA
eressal••••••••••Mgra•g*....•
awe
EXTRA INDIA PALE ALE
BL^CI( HORSE
EX.TRA $TO
BLACK sto PORTER
Leases 2-1ONGSvEER 0..-
HO m EEREW
1 '
...- _—.....—...........
Tb
II4DIA PAL I ALE
PORTER
BOHEMIAN LAGRIA
The above goods aro all INA
strength and ere supplied to
consumer, direct from the
Weewery, ONLY in localities sphere
I too licensed traders reside.
CONSTIPATION
THE COMMONEST ILL.
tin Made Him Feel
As If W Ittig Ona
OuiLLIA, ONT., ov. 28th. 1914.
"For over two years, I was troubled
with Cohstipation, Lfrowsiness, Lack oj
Appetite andHeadaekes. One day I sew
•your sign which read "Fruit-a.tives
make you feel like walking on air."
This appealed to me, so X decided to
try a box. In a Very short time, I
began to feel better, and now I feelfine.
I have a good appetite, relish everything
I eat, and the Headaches are gone
eatirely. 1 reeommend this pleasant
fruit med'uine to all my friends".
DAN MeLEAN.
50e. a box, 6 for $2.50, trial slie, 25e.
At all dealers or sent postpaid by Fruits
retives Liraited, Ottawa.
ty commented on the earlessness with
which it had been left. But twen •e
miles south of the railroad, in an open
and comparatively easy country, it
was swallowed , completely up in the
tracks of a hundred horses. The rail-
road men circled far and wide, only
to find the herd tracks everywhere
ahead of them.
"This i$ a beautiful job," murmured
Whispering Smith as the party rode
together along the edge of a creek -
bottom. "Now who is their friend
down in this- country? What man
would get out a bunch of horses like
this and work them this hard so early
in the morning? Let's hunt that man
up. I like to meet a man that is a
friend in need."
Bob Scott spoke: "I saw a man
with some h'orses in a canyon cross
the creek a few minutes ago, and I
saw a ranch -house behind those buttes
when I rode around them."
"Stop! Here's a man riding right
into our jaws," muttered Kennedy.
"Divide up ainong the rooks." A
horseman froni the south
loping up the cerleek, and K
out with an ivory smile t
The two men parleyed fo
disputed each other snare y, and rode
together back to the rail oad party.
"Haven't seen any men looking for
horses this morning, have you?" ask-
ed Whispering Smith, eyin the stran-
ger, a . squat, square-) ed fellow
with a cataract eye,
"I'm ldoking for horse myself. 1
ain't seen anybody else. What are
you looking Lor?" •
"Is this your bunch of horses that
got loose here?" asked Siith.
"I thought," said Kenn y, smiling,
'you said a minute ago hey were."
The stranger Axed his cataract on
him like a flash -light "I
mind." ,
'Whispering Smith's br
testingly, but he spoke
amiabilityttae he raised , is _finger to
bring the gear eye -his way. "You,
ought to chance your hat When you
Constipation is one a the eammonesi
ills of mankind and one too often allowea
to go neleoked after until some serious
complication sets in.
If the bowels are properly looked aftes
there will be no constipation, jaundice,
sick or bilious headaches, heartburZ1.
coated tongue, sour stomach, floatisia
specks before the eyes, ete.
Milburn's Lama -Liver Pills will kft°,4
the bowels regular and cure sill liver ills.
Mr. Philip McLeod, Tarbot, N.S..
writes: "I suffered from eoustipatioe
ever since 1 can remeraber, and for years
had pains in the left side of the back.
If I walked across. the kitchen floor I
would have to sit down and rest. That
I think was terrible for a nian 01 20 years
of age. The con.didow of my spates:owes
shown by pimples breaking out on my
face. I suffered so much pain and 'tidi-
ness in my bock 1 ani sure my mixtem
W5 s full of 00.0012. Mantas's lease -
Liver Pilis have entirely cured use.
I thoroughly recommend, thee ts
everybody.,
Milburn'; leasaLiver Pills see 9110.
a vhd, 5 vials $1.00, at all deafen as
mailed Swat on receipt of price by Tee
T. Ilinsumes Oa., Laingilp. Tosende.O.
CHAPTER XXVII
af er
"What iS asked his
tormentm Ton' you likethis country,
What de you want te go back to the
penit,entiary feel/Aren't you happy
here? Now tell in•.e one thing—will
you give up the trail?"
"I don't know. the trail."
"I believe you.; we shouldn't follovi
it anyway. Were you paid last night
or this morning?"
"I ain't seen a Man hereabouts for al
w
e
ie‘Tk
li.
e."
11 you can't- tell me wbethei
there were five men or six?"
"You've got one eye as good as
mine, and one a whole lot better."
"So it was fixed up for cash a- week
akb-rt
"Everything is cash in this country"
"Well, Rockstro, I'm sorry, but we'll
have to take you back with us."
The rancher whipped out a revelver.
'Whispering Smith. caught his *rist.
They -struggle lasted only an best -gilt.
Rockstro writhed, and the pistol fell to
the ground.
"Now shall I 'break your arm ?1"
asked Smith as the man cursed and
reeisted. "Or will you behave? We
are going right back and you'll has: e
to tome vrith us. We'll send some
one down to round up your horses and
sell them, and you can serve out your
time --With allowances, of course, for
good conduct, which will cut it down.
If I had ever done °you a mean turn
I would not say a word: if you could.
name a friend of yours I had ever done
a mean turn to I would not say a
word. Can you name one? I guess
not. I have left you as free as the
wind here, making only the rule I
make for everybody—to let the rail-
road alone. This its my thanks. Now, I
will ask you just one question. I
haVen't killed you; as I had a perfect
right to do when you. pulled; I haven't
broken your arm, as I would have
done if there had been a doctor with-
in twenty-five miles; and I haven't
started you forthepen—not yet. Now
I ask you one fair question only: Did
you need the money-?"
"Yes- I did need it."
Whispering Smith dropped the man's
wrist. "Then I don't say a Word. If
you _needed the. money I'm not going
to send you back—not for mine."
"Flovi can a man make a living
in this country," asked the rancher,
with a bitter oath, "unless he - picks
up everything that's going.
"Pick up your gun, man! I'm not
came gal- saying anything am 1?"
trinedy rode 1 'But I'm damned if I can give a
meet him. double-cross to any man," added Rock -
a moment, stro, stooping for his revolver,
"I should think less of you if you
did, Rockstro, You don't need money
anyway now, but sometirne you. may
.need a friend'. I'm going to leave you
here. You'll hear no more of this, and
I'm going to ask you a question:
did you go against. this when you
knew yOu'd have to square yourself
with me?"
- "They told me you'd be taken care
of before it was .pulled off."
' "They lied to you, didn't they? No
matter, you've got their stuff. Now I
am going to ask you one 'lair question
that I don't Iment the answer to; it's
a fair question'too. 'Was Du Sang in
the penitentiary. with you at Fort
• I City? Anwer
changed nlY
ve rose proei •
. eyes e
TVS cheaper to raise colts than to
horses. But it's cos/4y if you Tose
the chits. Keel) bottle of Itendall's
Spavin Cure handy. For thirty-five
',years has proved it the safe, reliable
remedy for spahin, splint, curb, ring -
'bone, bony growths and lameness
*th perfect 'Thank you. .Beh4ye youself and keep
your mouth e t. = • sa nothing thi,s-
tithe. lie mat-
ters alone, and ifttletirwoman should
fall sick and you have to have a little
money, corag and see me." Sndth led
the way back t� thcittorses.
"Look here!" muttered Roclottio,fol-
lowing, with his goodi-eye on hia-torn-
pnion. pulled 011 lyou too qniels, I
m
iiess quickerhe ra. gimlet to."
"Don't mention it. You didn't pull
quick enough; it is hitininliating to have
a man that's as slow as you are pull
on me. People that 1101 on me usually
pull and shoot at the same time. Two
distinet movements, goekstro, shotfhl
be avoided; they are fatal to. success.
Come clown.th the Bend sometime, and
glee you a decent gun and give
you a few lessons."
Whispering Smith drew his hand-
kna weerl 4.rt laeasfri andhe
resigned,
nnaette -mettiyi es ad e orne ak ipnayn ittendze.
fas-
hion. like to play, blind-man's-
he- said, wiping- his 'fOrebead,
"but not- so. far from_ good water.
They have pulled tie half -way to the
Grosse Terre Mountairii on a beauti-
ful trail, too beautiful-to'be true, Far-
rell—too beautiful to ..he true. They
have been .baving fun with us, and
they've doubled back through. the To-
-pah Topahs towards the Mission
Mountains and Williams Cache—that
is my judgment. And aren't we five
able-bodied jays, gentlemen? Five
strong-arm suckers ? It is an ietele-
change your mind. I saw
a bunch of horses up th
few minutes ago. Now,
you still drag your left l
The rancher looked ste
new inquisitor but blinked like a goph-
• eat the sudden ,onelaughte "Which
Mit
you -fellows is Whispering Smith,
he demanded.
Tlie man with the dough is Whis-
pering Smith every time, was the
/answer from Smith himself. "You
bane about seven, years to serve
Rockstro, haven't YoU? Seven, I
think. Now what have I ever done
Ito you that you should turn a trick
like this on rne ? I knew you were
here, and you knew 1 knew Siou were
here, and I call this a pretty country;
Iselitle smooth right around here, like
•the people, but pretty. Have I ever
Vothered You? Now ten me one thing
—What did you get for covering this
.trail? I stand to give you two dollars
for everyone you got last night for
the job, if you'll put us right on the
game. Whieh way did they go?"
"What are you talking about?"
:".Get off your horse a minute," sug-
gested Whispering Smith, dismount-
ing, "and step over here toward the
creek." The man, afraid to refuse
and unwilling to go, walked haltingly
you driving
t canyon a
oekstro, cia
gr
tidily at his
Pursuit.
Brill Young picked up a trail Sun-
day morning at Tower W before the
special from Medicine Bend reached
there. The wreckeclexpress car, which
had been setout, had ne story to tell.
IIThe only story," said Whispering
Smith, as the men climbed into their
saddles,"ie in the one from the hoofs,
and the' sooner we get after it the
better:"
The country around Tower W, which
is itself an operatingpoint on the wes-
tern end of the division, a mere speck'
on the desert, lies high and rolling.
To the south sixty miles away, rise
the Grosse Terre Mountains and to the
north and west lie the Solitudes of the
Heart range, while ia the northeast
are seen the three white Saddle
peaks of the Missions. The cool,bright
sunshine of a far and lonely horizon
greets the traveller here, and ten miles
away from the railroad, in any direc-
tion, a man on horseback and unac-
quainted with the country would wish
himself --mountain men will tell you
—in hell, because it would be easier
to ride out of it.
To the railroad men the country -
offered no unusual difficelties. The
Youngs were as much' at home on a
a horse as they were on a hand car.
Kennedy, thongh a large and powerful
man, was inured to hard riding, and
Bob Scott _and Whispering Smith in
the saddle were merely a part—though
an important part --of their horses;
without killing their Mounts, they
co-uld gets out of them eveey mile in
their legs. The -five men covered 2')
miles on a road that read like print.
One after anothereof the railroad par
CAST . -R 1A
For 'abuts and: Children.
Us You Nave Alwars
Beers tfisv
signature of
Health Triumphs
over disease every time you
use Lifebuoy Seas,. For its
mild healing and 'oleansing oils
OX e charged with cleansing
properties that make it simply
invaluable.
•
s •
LI ESU
HEALTH
Mild and pure enough for
Baby's skin—therefore emi..
neatly • suitable for yours.
The wild, antievtie odor
vanishes quickly after use.
Lever Brothers
Limited
TORONTO
At all
Grocers
-
sold-'-br here
bottle, 6 betties or Get a free copy of
eur book"A. Treatim on the Horse at your
druggistfa or writeus. ita
Dr. IL J. ZENSAVIXO., Eisthery hat Vl.
white -capped Saddles of the Mission
range afford a land -mark for niore
than one hundred miles and toward
these the party pressed steadily all
. day. The souther pass of the Mis-
sions opens on the north slope of the
range into a pretty valley known as
Mission Spring Valley and the springs
are the headwaters of Deep Creek.
The posse did not quite obey the in-
structions, and following a natural in-
Stinct of safety five of them, after
Banks and his three deputies had scat-
tered, bunched again, at d. at dark
mrossed Deep Creek at some distanc.e
below the springs. It wee afterwards
known that these five men had been
seen htentering the valley from the
east aPsundoven just as four of the
men they wanted rode down South
Mission Pass toward the springs.
gent wotel; it is an inelegant feeling.
No matter,. we know a few tninga.
There are five good men and • a led
horse, we can get out of here by Goose
River, find out when we cross the 'Tail -
road haw much they got, and lpick
them up somewhere around the Saddle
Peaks, if they've gone noi ,h. That's
only a guess, and every man's VeSS is
good now. • 'What do you think, all of
you?"
"If it's the crowd we think it is,
would they mo straight home? That
doesn't look reasonable does - it?"
asked Brill Yotmg.
"If they could put one day between
them and pursuit, wouldn't they be 1
safer at home than anywhere else? 1
And haven't they laid out one day's I
work for us good and plenty? Farrell I
I
remember one thing: there is some-
times a disadvantage in knowing too
much about the men you .are after. i
We'll try Goose River." I
It was teem when they struck the i
railroad. They halted long enough to I
stop a freight train, send some tele-
' ;
'grams and ask for new. They got 1
'orders from Rooney Lee, had an empty •
box car set behind the engine for a ‘
special, and, loading their horses at
the chute, made a helter-skelter run
.for Sleepy Cat. At three o'clock they i
I
struck north for the Mission Moun-
tains. , • 1
.;
The price of LifebouY Soap is net a
terede-ft still retails at fk. per cake.
CHAF'TER XXVIII.
The Sunday Murder.
Bank's posse, leaving Medicine Ben4
before daybreak, headed, northwest.
Their instructions were explicit; to
scatter after crossing the Frenohman,
watch the trails from Goose River
country and through the Mission
• Mountains, and intercept everybody
riding north until the kosse frora
Sleepy Cat or Whispering-mbould
communicate with them from the
southwest. Nine men rode in the par- I
ty that crossed the Crawling: Stone t
SundaY morning at sunrise wth Ed I
Banks.
After leaving the river the three
gUIMMISIMINIONIENUMEIMMIXIMISM,
That they knew they would soon
tut off or must cut their way through
the line, which Ed. Brink% ahead of
them, was posting at every gateway,
to Williams Cache, was Probably clear
to therm Four inen rode, that evening
' from Tower W through the south pass
.the fifth man had already left the
party. The four men were needed for
Cache and had reason to be-
lieve,until they sighted Banks' men,
that their path was open.
They halted to take counsel on the
suspicious looking posse below them
and while their cruelly exhausted hor-
ses rested, Du Sang, always in Sin-
clair's absence, the brains of the gang,
planned to eseape over Deep -Creek,
at Bagg's crossing. At du,* they di-
vided; two • men lurldng in the brush
along the creek rode as close as the
could unobserved, toward the- eressing,
while Du Sang and the cowboy Karg,
known as Flat -nose, rode down to
Bagg's ranch at the foot of the pass,.
At that point, Dan Boggs, an old
locomotive migineer,had taken a home-
stead, got together a little bunch of
cattle, and was riving with his son, a,
boy of ten years. It was a hard coon -
try and too close to WRliains Cache
for coirdort, but Pan got on with ev-
erybody because lthe toughest man in •
the Cache could get a meal, a feed for
Ids horse, and a place to ,sleep at !.
Bagg's without charge when le need- •
ed it. •
Ed Banks, by hard riding got to
the crossing at five o'clock and told
Boggs of the held -up and shooting of
Olivet Sollers. The news stirred the
old engineman, and his excitement
threw him off his guard. Banks rode
straight on for the middle pass, leav-
ing word that two of his rnen would
be along within half an hour to .wateh
the pass and the ranch crossing afid
'asidng Baggs to put up some kind of
a fight for the erossbig until more of
-
the posse came up—at the least, 15
make sure that nobody got any mesh
horses.
The boy was cooking supper in the
kitchen and Boggs had done his milk-
ing and gone back to the corral, when.
two men rode-, arourid the corner of
the barn and asked if they could get
soraetithig to eat Poor Beggs sold
his life in six words: "Why, yes; be
you Banks' men?"
(To be eontinued next week.)
There are thousands
children who are brig.
but frail-rnot sick but
Underdevelopied—they
play with their food—they
catch colds easily and do
not thrive—they only need
the pure richliquid.tood in
9
to startthein growing and keep
them going. Children relish
scoTrs and it carries rare
nuhitve quahties t flie;rlineNri
streams and gives them iiesh-
food, bone.foed and strength -food.
Nothing harmful in SCOTT'S.
Scott & -Bwne, Tomato, Ont. 6-2
2 and lb. Cartons -
10, 20, 50 end 100 lb. Baas.
has sweetened half a century with
that makes it the favorite to -day. Buy i
and be sure of the genuine.
"Let Resipath Sweeten
Made in one grade o
7111/1INVINSONNWHIMMSNIIISIMMMINS
s?..;,,,af,:.514,/ A/ "1/.74 7i7 VOSPIA';
fiedxs-;o4h.
WEIMAIRMINEMENNEMMMI
Five Good Reasons for Buyi
this Good White Lead
1. It is absolutely pure, ensuring
the brilliancy of any paint in
which it is used.
2. It has great covering capacty
and long life. -
3. It is of unequalled, uiIform
"fineness"—is neva crystal-
line.
4. It works easily un -c_ the
brush.
5. It need not be sc
burned off when, after several
years, the bulleting requires
another pant.
Its Mgh mutation trAs been gained by nearly 200 years continuous
Used and recommended by experiei•ced architects, traders, pain.tel.
SOLD BY LEADING HARDWARE AND
(NFRAL SIRES THROUGHOUT CANADA
e.