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The Huron Expositor, 1917-06-22, Page 72, 1917 KING KAY IN - No. 528 Form ei kadian beed Clydesdale Stale Kay, will stanerfor the ime . of stock thie aeason tre today—Will leave his teva Peter McCantee, Cooceseion e and go 2th miles seutit nceseion, then east 2% ma on con. 4 to his own stable, Tuesday.' Down the concessions, 214e mites east on the Huron Road, to hie for noons—Wednesday .7 miles and east to Arktirtw re, for noon; then north and leech -wood, then to his ohn eight, 'Sphere he will remain. following Monday morning. insure ant, The above nate :Ahmed regularly thrtugheot- m, health and weather Der James Murray, Pronrletor 2580-11 ment No. 1367, Form I. apetted and Approved nel for the miproveinent of the present Reason at _evens stables, Laid i•neessionila, McKillop,njein* sure,payable February id, spring shows at Clinton an tbisar, as well as in 1916, sa Cumberland Gem won first f j. J. MCGAVIII, Proprietor orted !ydesda1e Stallion RIO GRANDE (14442) than Stud Book No. 14940 tend for the improvement of is season as follows: Monday ewe his own stable, Lot 9, on 2, Hulltt, and proceed Arthur Dale's for noon; then the Huron Road and east 344, lien north to his own stable it. Tuesday—Will leave Ads ale and proceed north and east concession 4, to Foster row - noon; then proceed north to en 6 and east miles, then. Fred liZkert's for night. Wed- -Will proceed west to William or noon- then west and south • f Constance to his own stable will remain until the follow- eday morning. Terms to in - 3. Inspected and enrolled. Theodore Dale, Proprietor and r. 2579xS LU1d Bred Troffing Stallion TODD WINTERS 2337 nspected and Approved ent No, 4785 orm L ay—Will leave his own stable, south to the Red Tavern, to room's, for noon; then welt to :arvey's, Stardey, for night. r—North along the 2nd cog - to Mr, Jackson's for noon; r way of the 2nd concession, ,mith to his own stable, for Wednesday—At his own stable. ty---West on the Huron Road, a B.Allen's, Harlock, for night. —East to Isaac McGavizes, ry, for noon; then by way or a-th Gravel Road to his own for night. Saturday—At Ids The above route will be ed throughout the season, and weather vomiting. Terms Pinkney & Son, Pron. i& Man - 2578 MAK1VIRA (15938) Approved and Enrolled.) tistone, Proprietor & Manager, day, May 7th—Will leave- his able, Staffa, Uhd go west, to Jaa. for noon; then south to t.hei - rty line, east to Cromat'y to 17-Xt stable for night. Tueader -South to the Hibbert and' Us - boundary to James Reliant -reds. ;ht. Wednesday --South to vrni- 1, to John Delbridge's, for noon; to William Brock's ilsborney ight.—Thursday—East by Bar o Geo. C.Albin's, Blanshard, for • then north to the Kirkton Linet vest to Taylor's Hotel, Kirkton, gin. Friday—North to Thames at Thomas McCurdie's, for noon; north to the Cromarre line, to Hamilton's for night. Saturday ' st to Cromarty, then north to t, at noon; where he will remain , the following.. Monday morning. k.RL O'CLAY (134581 02035 pected Enrolled, and Approved. . t. Murdock, Prop. and Manager nday—Willleave his own stable, neefield, and go west to the SOC- oncession of Stanley, then north liu Butchard's for noon; then Land west to William Glenn's, for Tuesday—By way of Bannock to Varna, at the Temperance bo- or noon; then by way of Bay - road to the Goshen line, to Al - for .night. Wedae- By side road to the line, the.n south to William FOS - for noon; then to Wm. McKen- second coacessien of Stanley ,for -ght. Thursday—North to the ?id road, to his own stable, for remaining until the following morning. Friday—To Geo. Mc- Ley's, Mill road, for noon; then to „dam's side road, then north to eond concession, H R S , Tuck- Et1, then west to James Carno- K for night Saturday—West by Hoot's bridge, then south to the road, to his own stable, where he enaain until the following Monday 2580 LORD MANSFIELD. 8 Evans, Proprietor & Manager. nday—Will leave his own stable, iwood, and go to Pat Woods', n, for noon; thence to his own p, for the night. Tuesday — To Murray's concession 11, McKil- for noon; then west to . Ross', Si ;ion 10, McKillop, for one hour; to his own stable for night. ( sday—To Frank Mahar's con - 01 3, Logan, for noon; then to Hotel, Dublin, for the night. ay—To Joseph Nagle's, for then to Joseph Atkinson's .f Friday—To Martin Curl= miles east of Seaforth, for noon; -Cecil Oke's, McKillop, for the Saturday—Will proceed to his stable where he will remain until ollowing Monday morning. Terms conditions same as former years Mansfield has been enrolled, lii ed and approved. Terms to in - $1a. James Evans, Manager. ii•LIVER PILLS FAM, TO DO Gat Mrs. I. Stellsworth, Hain, Nels, writes: "I take pleasuse in wriiit you steetttning the great 'value I 3m" eraied by using your Milburtes Vox - laver Pills for a sluggish liver W1d *es got bad I would have severe I ioei- onbes, but after using a couple ota nab et your pills I have not been bothered with the headaches any more' Matures twit -Live Pills clean away .11 waste and poisonous matter from the system, and prevent as well as cure ita tonoesiats arising from a liver which has !ovine inactive. - Milburn's Lata -Liver Pills are 45c. iaI, or 5 vials for $U% at all dealers, mailed direct on receipt' of price by Vag T. Mn.stnue Co., LIMITED, Toccata, Oat. LEGAL. S. HAYA. Barrister, Solicitor,Conveyancer and *tray Public. Solicitor for the Do - Minion Bank. Office in rear of the . minion Bank, Se,aforth. Money to loan. J. M. BEST. Barrister, Solicitor, Conveya er and Notary Public. Office upsi irs over Walker's Furniture Store, Muir' Street, Sertforth. --F-1101` STED Barrister, Solicitor, Conveyancer and Notary Public, Solicitor for The Canadian Bank ef Commerce. Money to Loan. Fermi for sale. Office in Sears Block, Main Street, Seaforth. PROUDFOOT, KILLORAN AND comcv. Barristers, Solicitors, Notaries Pub- *, etc. Money to lend, In Seaford' Marulay of each week. Office in Xidd Block W. Proudfoot, K. C., J. Killoran, j. D. Cooke.' Insperm Smith by Frask Spea VETERINARY. F. KARBURN, V . S . Honor graduate of Ontario Veterin- ary College, and honorary member of the Medical Association of the Ontario Veterinary College. Treats diseases of sll domestic animals by the niost mod- ern principles. Dentistry and Milk Fev- er a specialty. Office opposite Dick's Hotel, Main Street, Seaforth. Al w- awa left at the hotel will re; .ve prompt attention. Night calls re 4 W- ed at the, office. (Centime& from last week) All that the three before him could ever \afterward recollect—and for ser raI years afterwards they cudgelled their brains pretty thoroughly about that moment—was that Whispering Smith took hold of the left lapel a his coat to take the tobacco out of the breast pocket. An excuse to take that lapel in his left hand was, in fact; all that Whispering Smith needed to put not alone the three men before him but all-Oroville at his mercy. The play of his right hand in erossmg the corduroy waistcoat to pull his revolver from its scabbard and throw it into their faces was all too quick for bet- ter eyes than theirs. They saw only the muzzle of the heavy Colt's play- ing like a snake's tongue under their surprised noses, with the good-natured smile still behind it. "or will one of you roll a cigarette?" naked Whisper- ing Smith, --without a break between the questions. I don't smoke. Now don't make faces; go right ahead.. Do anything you want to with your hands I wouldn't ask a man to keep his hand or feet still on a hot day like this," he insisted, the revolver playing all the time. "You - won't draw? You won't fight? Psliawl Then' disen- gage your hands • gently from your guns. You fellows „really --ought not to pull a gun. in Oroville, and I Will tell you why—there's a reason for it.", He looked 'confidential as he put his head forward to whisper among the crestfallen faces. "At this Altitude it is to fast work. I know you know," he went on as they continued to wilt. "You are Fatty Filber," 'he said to the third chap. "Don't work your mouth like that at me; don't do it. You neem surprised. Ret'illy have you the astlinia? Get over it, because you are wantestVin Pound County for horse -stealing. Virhy,hang it, Fatty, youre good for 10 years, and tables .aniong the regular boarders of of course, since you have reminded me the hostelry was apparent at once. of it, I'll see that you get it. And you, Baxter," said he to the man Appetites began to fail all over the on the right, "I know I spoke to you once when I was inspector, about altering brands; that's five years, you know. You," he added, scrutinizing the third man to scare him to death-- "I think you were at Tower W. No? NO mat- ter; you two boys may go, anyway • JOHN GRIEVE, V .S . 'Honor graduate of Ontario Vetu in- i sty College. All diseases ol domestic animals treated. Calls promptly at- tended to and charges moderate. Vett atinary Dentistry a specialty. Office and residence on Goderich street, one door east of • Dr. Stott's office, Sea - Path. MEDICAL. D. W.J. GLANFIELD, M.A., M.B., Physieian, Ete. Honor Graduate of University of Toronto, six years' experience. Brucefield, Ontario. C. J. W. HARN, M.b.c.m, 425 Richmond, Street, London, 0 • Specialist, Surgery and Genito-Ur ary liseases of men and women. DR. GEORGE FLEILEMANN. Osteopathic Physician of Goaeri Specialist in vtomenae and children's diseases, rheumatism, acute, chronic E and nervous disorders; eye ear, nose !end throat. Consultation free. Office in Cady Block, over W.G. Willis' Shoe ; Store, Seaforth, Tuesdays and Fridays 8 a.m. till 1 p.ra. Dr. ALEXANDER MOIR Physician and Surgeon Office and Residence, Main Str Phone 70 Hensa "Eityi you etayi well put some state s 1 cow on your ribs. By the way, are. . I p youi a detectivei Fatty ? Aren't, you? •'lee. tete: I. can ,get you. into an as - elation . For ten deladre, they give yea a Gettaan-silver star, and teach e oationeee inethed of pulling, by IRON EXPOSITOR correspondence. Or you might est n electric battery to handle your gun, g with. Yo can get pocket •dynamos nOW ▪ 14.116 KAly Suffered and front ree ettail-order houses. Sure! How She was Cured. Read the big booki NiThen Gene and NW) Johnson rode into town, Whispering Smith was sito Beeangtone Wis.—“I was very irreg- tingchair outside the Blackbird, filar, and had mine in my side and back, still chatting with Fiber, who stood but after taking with hie arins arotmd a. hitching- ijtH1JiI!IllII 1!!! LyVegetable Com- dia B. Pinkham's Pon hold/lig feet a nmil-orcler 'house cata ogue. modest crowd of hang- iiJ 1i pound Tablets and ers-on had gathered. using two bottles of "Heise we are Gene," exclaimed' the Sanative Wash Smith. to the deputy sheriff. "I was lbu eaking for steers. t some calves goI am fully convinced into the drive. Take him away." that I am entirely While the .Johnsons were laughing, cured of these trou- Smith walked into the Blackbird. He bles, and feel better had lost thirty minutes, and -4i losing all over. I know them had hist his quarry. Sinclair your remedies have bad disareared, and Whispering done me worlds of taking the upsetting of his plans with will give them r a trial." --Mrs. ANNA an unruffled face. There was but one Kann, no Chestriut &oast, Burling - thing more, indeed, to do andnthat te_ Ten was to eat supper and 'ride -away. 4-4411, "1'6. The street, encounter had made so Thernanyconvincing testimonials eon - much tailOroville that Smith de- stantly published in the newspapers dined Gene Johnson's invitation to go ought to be proof enough to women who back to the house. It seemed a con- suffer from those distressing ills pecu- venient time to let any other ambitious liar -to their sextbat Lydia E.Pinkham's rustlers make good if they were dis- Vegetable Compourul is the medicine posed to try, arid Whispering Smith they ved. went for his supper to the hotel where ,sto"tij gooat' old root and herb remedy the Williams Cache men made their headquarter. AND BACK Smith ma e a virtue a necessity bY good and I hope every suffering woman has moved =equalled for these dread - There Wa a rise in the atmospheric ful Oa; it contains what is needed to pressure the moment he entered the restore Woman's health and strength. hotel office door, and when he walked if there it any peculiarity, in into the dining -room, some minutes later, the silence was oppressive. Your cos° reguiring '00°101 04° Smith looked for a seat. The only va- vice, Writm the 14Ydla cant place chanced to be at a table ham —11"111-6111.3 Co. (e°--1141‘ denthd----)0 where nine men from. the Cache sat Linak)fitu, for free advice. busy with ham and eggs. It was a trifle awkcitrani, but the only thing to do was to take tile vacant chair. The nine men were actively engaged with knives and forks and spoons when Whispering Smith drew out the empty chair at the head of the table; but nine pairs of hands dropped mod- estly under the table when he sat down. Coughing slightly to hide his tiebarrassirent and to keep his right hand in touch with his necktie, Whis- pering Smith looked atound the table with ,the restrained air of a man who has bowed his head and resolved to ,ask the blessing, but wants to make Teasonably sure that the family is listening. A movement at the other aseemintiestIMeelh' T DEIGN CHILDREN aver receive the proper hatance,oft food * sufficiently noinish both body and stain during tho growing period when matures demands are greater thin in mature Ilk This is shown it so many pale bees; Aesif 'Vodka, frequent colds, and lade ofambiiion, P ex all siach children we say with launistaltable earnestness: They need Eloott's Utnnision, and need it now. It possesses in concentrated Iform the very isod elements to enrich their blood. it changes weakness to streagth• it makes them sturdy and strong and active.. Scutt & Downs. Tomato. Oat, HOMESEEKERS° EXCURSIONS dining -room. Whispering Smith gave his order genially to the confused waitress: "Bring me two eggs—one fried on one side and one on the other —and coffee." There was a general scraping of chairs on the floor as they were push- ed back and guests not at the moment interested in the bill M. fare, started, modestly, but firmly, to leave the din- ing-roomi At Whispering Smith's table there were no second calls for coffee. To stiinulate the eating. he turned the conversation into channels as reaseuring as possible, Unfor- tunately for ibis endeavor, the man at the far end of the table reached for a tiobthiiickIti seeined,a pleasant. way out of the difficuhy, and when the run on toothpicks had 'once begun, all Whispering Sniffles cordiality could not check it. Every man ap- peared t� want a toothpick, and one after another of Whispering Smith's company deserted ehim. He was ally left alcous with a physician known as `Docd'a forger and a bigamist frOm Denver. Smith tried to engage Doe in medical topics. The doctor was not alone frightened but tipsy, and when Smith went so far as to ask him, as a medical 'man, whether in his opinion the high water in the mountains had any direet.connections with the preva- lence of falling of the spine among old "residetners" in 'Williams Cache, the doctor felt of his head as if his brairrwere turningaturtle, When Whispering Smith raised his knife ostenstatiously to bring out a feature of his story, the doctor raised hie knife higher to admit the force of it; and when Whispering Smith lean- ed his head forward impressively to drive home a point in his assertion, the doetor stretched his neck till his face grew apoplectic, 'Releasing him at length from the strain Whispering Smith begged of the staring maid- servant the recipe for the biscuit. When she came back with it, he sat all alone, pouring catsup over his grid- dle -cakes in an abstracted rnannenand it so flurried her that she had to go out again to ask whether the gasoline went into. the -dough or under it. He played out the play to the end, but when he rode away in the dusk his face was careworn. John Reb- stock had told him why .Sinclair dodg- ed; there were others whom Sinealir wanted to meet first, and Whispering Smith was again heading on a long, hard ride, and after a man on a bettez . horse, back to the Crawling Stone and 'Medicine Bend. "There's others he ' wants to see first or you'd have no trouble in talking business to -day. You nor' no other man will ever get him alive." But Whispering Smith knew that. • "See that he doesn't get you "alive, Rebstoek," was his parting retort. urf he finds out Kennedy has got the Tower W money, the first thing he does will be to put the Doxology all over you." DR, J. W. ,PECK Graduate of Faculty of Medic_ McGill University, Montreal; Member of College of .Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario;Licentiate of Medical Coun- eil of Canada; Post -Graduate Member - of Resident Medical Staff of General Hospital, Montreal, 1914-15; Office, 2 doors east of Post Office. Phone 56, Henson, Ontario. ? • DR. F. J. BURROWS Office and residence, Goderich street east of the Methodist church, Seaforth. Phone 46. Coroner for the County of Huron. DRS. SCOTT & MACKAY J. G. Scott, graduate of Victoria and College of Physicians and Surgeons Ann Arbor, and -member of the Col- lege of Physicians and Surgeons, of •-Ontario. C. Mackay, honor graduate of Trin- ity 1,7niversity, and gold -medallist of • Trinity Medical College; member of the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario. DR, H. HUGH ROSS. Graduatt of University of Toronto Faculty of Mediate, member of Col- lege of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario; pass graduate courses in Chicago Clinical School of Chicago; Royal Ophthalmic Hospital, London, England, University Hospital, London, England. Office—Back of Dominion Bank, Seaforth. Phone No. 5, Night Calls answered from residence, Vic- toria street, Seaforth, . . AIL I IONEERS.. • • . THOMAS BROWN. Licensed auctioneer for the; cora 'is Of Huron and Perth. Correspond CA MAY 4Rh-TO OCTOBER 30th Every ,. TUESDAY "ALL RAIL."- also by THURSDAY'S STEAMER " Great Likes Routei" - • (stow tuvireue) _ Your euture Is In the Wait Th fertile prelim have Put Wedeln Canada on the map. There are stilt thousands of acres waiting for, .the fflen *to wants a home and proisperity. Tie advantage of Loss Rates and travel vis Canadian Pacific W. B. frow4p District Passenger Agent , Toronto. HAD WEAK HEM COULD NOT, WORK COULD NOT SLEEP. "Many women are kept in a state oi fear of death, beconae weak, worn and miserable and are iThable to attend to their households social or badness duties, en account of the inmatural action of the heart. - anieginieree To all such grotierers Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills eve prompt and per- manent relief , Mrs. J. Day, 2.4 John Street South, Hamilton, Ont, writes: "I was so run deiwn with a weak heart I could not even sweep the floor, nor could I sleep at night. I was so awfully sick sometimes I had to stay in bed all day as I was so weak. I used fliree and a half boxes of Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills and I am a cured woman to -day, and as strong anyon.e could be. I am doing my o:vrn mimif ..asombobrommemomummil I glass of beer. Thank you Lance; not 1 aay more. I saw two men with their rifles looking for me. I hollered at them bit, Lance, I'm rough and ready, as all my friends know, and I will let no nian put a drop on in—that I will never do. Ed, before I ever recognized him, named his rifle; that's the wily reasoa 1 frred, Not so full, Lance, not so full, if you please. Well," he shook his Week hair as he threw back his head, "here's to better luck in worse coun- tries." Ile paused as he swallowed, and set the tumbler down. "Lance, I'm saying good-bye to the mountains. "You're not going away for good Murray?" 'inn going away for good. Whitish the use? For two years theserail- road cutthroats have been trying to put something on me; you know that They've been trying to mix nae up with that bridge-burninge at Smoky Creek; Sugar Buttes, they had me thee; Tower W—nothing would do but I was there, and they've got one of the men in jail down 'there now Lance hying to sweat enough perjury out of him to send me up., What show has a poor man got against all the money there is in the country? I wouldn't be afraid of a jury of iny ownineigh- bore—the men that know ine, Lance— any thne. What show would I have with a packed jury ID Medicine 'Bend? I could explain anything I've done to the satisfaction of any reasonable man. I'm human? Lance; that's all I say. I've been nnstreated and I don't forget it. They've even turned my wife against me—as fine a -woman as ever lived." Lance swore sympathetically. "There is good stuff in you yet, Murray." "I'm going to say goodbye to the mountains," Sinclair went on grimly, "but Pm going to Medicine Bend to- night and tell the man that has hound- ed me what I think of him .before I big railroad, town Was likewise the centrs of all rumors. Officers and sol- diers to and from the Fort,- stage - drivers and cowmen, homesteaders and rustlers, discussedthe apprehension of Sinclair. Moreover, behind this effort to arrest one Matt who had savagely defied the law Were ranged all of the prejudices, sympathies, and hatreds ef the high country, and practically the whole popclation tributary to Medi. eine Bend and the,Crawling Stone Val- ley were friends either to Sinclair or to his pursuer. Behind Sinclair were nearly all the cattlemen, not alone be- cause he was on good terms with the rustlers and protected his friends, but because he warred citieniy onthe sheepmen. The big range interest, as a, rule. Were openly or covertly friend- ly, to Sinclair, while against him were the homesteaders, the railroad men, the c mon people, and the men who every !here hate cruelty and outrage and t2 making of a lie. Lae Dunning had never concealed his fr; iadliness for Sinclair, even after hard) t iries of bite were konwn to be true, and it was this confidence of fel- lowship that made Sinclair' twenty- four hours after he had leftOroville, ride down the hill trail to Crawling Stone ranch -house. The Morning had been cold, with a heavy' wind and piedull sky. In the afternoon the Arnett lowered ,over the valley and a mistingtrain set in. Plek- sie. had gene into. Medicine Bend on the stage in the morning and, after a stolen,. half-hour with. McCloud, at Marion's, had ridden home to escape the storm. Not less, but much more, than those about her she was alive to the situation in which Sinclair stood and it ; danger to those closest to her. In the miming her one prayer to Me - Cloud was to have ,a _care of him- self, Id to Marion, to have a care of hersel but even when Dicksie• left them I seemed as if neither quite felt the peril as she felt it. In the afternoon,, the ram falling steadily, kept her in the house, and she sat in her room sewing until the light failed. She went downstairs. Puss had lighted the grate in the liv- ingroorre and Dicksie threw herself into a chair. The sound of hoofs a- roused her and she went to the win- dow. To her horror, she saw Sin- clair 'walking With her cousin up to the * ) at doors She ran into the din- ing -rt lin, and the two men entered the h 31 and walked into the office. Choki ir with excitement, Dicksie ran through the kitchen and upstairs to master her agitation. In the office Sinclair was sitting down before the hot stove with a tum - bier of whiskey. "Lance"—he shook his head as he spoke hoarsely ---"I want to say my friends have stood by me to a man, but there's none of them treated me squarer through thick and thin than you have. Virell,I've had some bad luck. It can't be helped. Regards!" He drank and shook his wet hair again. F'our days of hard riding had left no trace on his iron features. Wet to the bone, his eyes .flashed with fire. He held the glassful of whiskey_ in a hand as steady as a spirit -level and tossed it down a throat as cool as dew. a "I want to say another thing, Lance, I had no more intention than a child of hurting Ed Banks. I warned Ed rnonths ago to keep out of this fight, and I never knew he was in it•till it was too late. But I'm hoping he will pull through yet, if they don't kill him in the hospital to spite me. I never recognized the men at all till it was too'late. Why, one of thern used to work for me. A man with the whole railroad gang in these moun- tains. after him has got to look out for himself, or his life ain't worth a ar- lents for sale &tee can be homework, /eveniny gorn was g. leads ceiling up Phone 97, Sent tk V 1 doctored for over two years but got Tbe Iftpositor OfAc'e. Charges heip until I used your Nee per bed, 3 boxes for st25, at all R. T. LUKER dealers cc maned direct on receipt of her Tres T. Mn, CO., LialITM. Oen mate and satisfaction guararteed. milburles Heart and Nerve Pills are Liewased AuctiOneer for he 'Comdr. lam. Sales attended to in le -As et the Cosetn. Soy a yeses' ecr- net limes Irt Mazdtobs sad , MEL. TEM* seasonable. Pfseas 11. lassitsw, Ossitsells1P.:0.4111, It. ..1. WAYS left at Irba Kim OEM, 111,,aiseth. prosptly = Children Ory FOR FLETCHER'S CASTOR IA leave. going to give my wife a chance to do what is right and go with me.. She's been poisoned against me —I know that; but if she does whatia fair and square there'll be no trouble —no trouble at all. All I want Lance, is a square deal. What?" Dicksie with her pulses throbbing at fever -heat heard the words. She stood halfway down the stairs, treinh,, ling .as she listened. Anger, hatred, the spirit of vengeance, choked in her throat at the sinister words. She longed to stride into the room and confront the murdered and call down retribution on his head. It was no fear of him that resinained her, for the Crawling Stone girl never knew fear. She would have confronted him and denounced him, but prudence checked her angry impulse. She knew what he meant to do—to ride into Medicine Betid under cover of the storm, murder the two he hated, an escape in the night; and she .resolved • From this hour forth I will order them he should never succeed. If she eould to go and come when and where I only get to the telephone! But the please!" She stepped toward him. telephone was in the room where he "Henceforward I am mistress here. sat. He was saying eyed -bye., Her cousin was trying to disuade him from riding out into the storm but he was going. The door opened; th,% men went out on the porch, and it dlosed. Dicksie, lightly as a shadow, ran into the office and began ringing Medicine Bend on the telephone. • The inducements offered with conunon soaps cannot make up for the purity et Sunlight Soap. It costs US mbre to rnake pure soap. But it costs YOU less to use it, for Sunlight pays for itself in the clothes it saves. It does not wear and rub the fabrics as common soaps do. Her face hardened. "How dere you speak in that way to ine? Who are you ,that you order me what to do where teeetay? Am I your cowboy, to; be defiltiff with your curses" He looked at her in amazement. She was only eighteen; he would 'still face her. down. "I'll tell you who I am. I am master here, and you will do as I tell you. You will Tide to Medicine Bend to -night Will you?" He struck the. table 'with his clinched est. "Do you hear me? I say, by God, not a horse shall leave this ranch, in this storm to -night to go anywhere for anybody or with anybody." "Then I say to you this ranch is my ranch, and these hbrses are my horses. • CHAPTER XL. A Sympathetic Ear. When Whispering, Smith rode after Sinclair, Crawling Stone Ranch, in common with the whole countryside, Ilad but one itnerest in life and thac was to hear of the meeting; Riders across the mountain valleys met with but one question; mail -carriers broughi nothing in their pouches of interest equal to the last word concerning Sin- clair or his pursuer. It was com- monly agreed through the mountains that it would be .a difficult matter to overhaul any good man riding Sin- ' clair's steel -dust horses, but with Sin- • clair himself in the saddle, unless it pleased him to pull up, the chase was sure to be a stern one. Against this to feed speculation stood one man's record—that of the man vsho had rid- den alone across Deep Creek and , brought Chuck Williams out on a , buckboard. - I Business in Medicine Pend, time, was practically suspended. As the centre of all telephone lines the CHAPTER XLI. Dicksie's Ride. When Lance Dunning entered the room ten minutes later, Dicksie stood at the telephone; but the ten minutes of that interval had made quite an- other creature of his coetsin. The wires were Own and ne one from any quarter gave a response to her frantic ienging. Through the receiver she could hear only the sweep of the rata and the harsh crackle of the wind. Sometimes praying, sometimes faint- ing, and sometimes despairing, I she stood clinging to the instrument, ring- ing and pounding upon it like oae frenzied. Lence looked at her in a- n azement. "Why, God }el:nighty. Dicksie, what's the matter?" He called twice to her before she turned, andher words almost stunned him: "Why did you not detain SM- clair here to -night? Why did you not arrest him?' Lance's sombrero relied heavily te one side of his face, and one end of his moustache running uptetuch higher on the other did not begin to express his astonishment. "Arrest him. Arrest Sinclair? Dicksie, are you crazy ?, Why the devil should I arrest Sin - &Air ? • Do you suppose I am going to mix up in a fight like this? Do .you think I want to get killed? The level headed -man in this country, just as present, is the man who can keep out of trouble, arid the man who succeeds let me tell you, has' got more than plenty to do." Lance,getting no answer, Mit a fierce seerching gaze from Dicksie's wild eyes, laid his hand on a chair, lighted a cigar, and sat down before the fire. Dicksie, dropped the telephone receiv- er, put her hand to her girdle, and looked at him. When she spoke her tone was stinging. "You know that man is going to Medicine Bend to kill his wife!" Lance took the cigar from his mouth and returend her look, "I know no such thing," he growled curtly, "And to kill George McCloud, if he can." He stared without reply. "You heard him say so," persisted Dieksie, vehemently. Lance crosssed his legs and threw back the brim of his hat. "McCloud is nobody's fool. He will look out for hinaself ." "These fiendish wires to Medicine Bend are down. Why hasn't this line been repaired?" she cried, wring- ing her hands. "There is no way to give warning to any one that he is coming, and you have Jet him go!" Lance whirled in his chair. "Dam- nation! Could I keep him from going?' "You did not want to; you are keep- ing out of trouble. What do you care whom he kills to -night!" • "You've gone crazy Dielisie. Your imagination has upset your reason. Whether be kills anybody to -night or not, it's too late now to make a row about it," exclaimed Lance, throwing his cigar angrily away. "He won't kill us." "And you expect me to sit by and fold my hands while that wretch. sheds More blood, do you?" , "It can't be helped." "I say it can be helped! I can help it—I will help it—as you eould have done if you had wanted to. I will ride to Medicine Bend to -night and help it.' ' tor a Horse Save a horse and you won't have to buy one. Don't sell or destroy any horse on account of Spavin, Splint, Ringbone, Curb,Sprains orLarneness. Spend one dollar for a bottle, ,ENDALL'S SPAVIN CURE It 1 t1 saved a great many honres—has put tiro bark to work. even after they have be ; given up. Corer 86 yeazz-cs success bar.. proved its wine. Mellear Crivea, Mares.% Sask., Ir • nvaeravonet eyr yl;otr TIT tact:all r yu4 1:40giveneve ubed your $parta Can fee Get Xestiall's bottle, 6gbogitstiticsi" Treatise on the , ''4waytem Do you hear me? Htieeforward give orders in Crawling Stene House,. and every one under this roof takes others from mei" "Dicksie, what do you mean? For Clod's sake, you're, not going ° to try to ride " She swept from the room. What happened afterward she could never iecall. Who got Jim for her or wheth- er she got the horse un herself, what was said, to her in low, kindly wordie of warning by the man at Jim's neck when she sprang into the saddle, whet the Man was, she could not have told, All she felt as last was that she woe free and out under the black sky, with the rain beating her burning face and her horse leaping fearfully into the wind. (To be Continued Next 'Wet • Lance uraped to his feet ' with a string of oaths. !Weil this is the limit! d He pointed -his finger at her. I"Dicksie Dunning, you won't stir out of this house to -night." 1,) ELSEREs cot fccoo cut...to , Mantic Sugar Refineries Limited Studs -ea ball beg ake All You Preserves with e Cane. Fine Granule OrderbynarnefrOfli yotir grocer. ifoNTREAt 1%w & 109-1b. eacke---2 &5.1b.cea-mus - T% n to the Joy of Your Outdoor Sports • RIDE A HYSLOP BICYCLE To the Golf Links. To the Bowling Green. To the Tennis Court. To the Ball Game. 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