Thursday. July 8. 1937 FINAL INSTALMENT The concussion of that roaring discharge brought a shower of broken glass from the raised win dow, sash, and the recoil upset old Joe aw though a horse had kicked him. The buckskin scream ed wildly, spun around twice then raced away. But it went with an empty saddle. Following horses leaped high as they hurdled the still figure in the street. Five seconds later it was all over. Joe Rooney crawled to his feet, rubbing his shoulder rueful ly. "What a cannon!" he mutter ed "What a cannon! Shore I felt my shoulder blades touch when that damn thing went off that time. I shore musta hit some thin'." "I'll say you did, Joe," grinned Slim. Then he leaned out of the window and yelled, "Hi, Roy! Stoney! 'Yuh all right? This is Slim!" "Shore an' we're coming along, Slim, my lad. Be with yuh in a minute." Roy and Stoney Sheard were soon in the Wild Horse, both un injured. They looked anxiously at Dakota, who was sitting in a chair while Spud Dillon carefully cut away the bloody pants leg. Dako ta grinned dryly. "Keep yore shirts on, yuh two ole ground hawgs. It ain't noth in' to worry about. I could stand a little jolt of liquor, though."' "Git a bottle, Joe," puffed Spud. ."Yuh other boys help yoreselves. f My treat." The liquor steadied them. Ston ey Sheard turned to Slim. "What aay we sashay up the street a bit, Slim? I kinda think I got Brock well when they was ridin' for a getaway. I know I hit him, an' he was beginnin' to wobble just as they went outa sight past the liv ery stable." Slim nodded and they went up the street, picking their way past groups of excited, jabbering townspeople. Sure enough, not twenty yards beyond the northern end of the street, they found Sarg Brockwell. He was sprawled flat on his back, his face to the sky. • |H|: • JK&?' - - SIImmM/- Wj V/A • * HMi Oftw . _ _ # Ws' .. HP^ thanks to my mother! she keeps all my food fresh and pure in her Electrical Refii gera tor ! "You'd be surprised how much better my milk v*"^ tastes and how much more I like my strained vege- ? J ' tables since Mother has been keeping them in the y Ji JL r 1 electric refrigerator." , / I And that goes for you, too. It is very pleasant, indeed, to know that vegetables bought today will n. be as crisp and fresh days from now, all because of proper refrigeration ... or that such other per- " .... ishables as milk, cream, butter and meats will re tain their wholesome goodness. New and beautiful models in 1937 Electrical Re- W frigerators are being offered at extremely low ■ U prices—new convenient features assure satisfac- * » f tion—low rates provide dependable, automatic re- i V J frigeration at a very low cost. ___ _, 1 JC POWEftHfifepANY IA single look satisfied them that there was nothing they could do. As they turned back. Slim re membered George Arthur. "We got to find that crooked lawyer, Stoney. Brockwell cain't talk, but Arthur can an' will, before I get through with him. Yuh didn't see him with that crowd anywhere?" The cowboy chuckled sardonic ally. "Him?" Why he ain't got nerve enough to get within three miles of a gun muzzle! Yuh'll find him holin' up somewhere, scared into fits." They slipped past the Wild Horse, where Roy O'Brien and Spud Dillon were taking turns at explaining to a clamoring crowd, just what it was all about. It was Stoney who spied the crack of light at the bottom of the door leading into Arthur's office. "Looks like somebody might be in there. Slim," he drawled. "We can investigate, anyhow." Slim tried the door, but found it locked. Pressing his ear to the portal he listened intently. From inside sounded thick, measured snores. "Sounds like somebody was sleepin' off a drunk," he mut tered. "Well, we're goin in. Give me a heave with this door." Before the combined weight of them, the door sagged, creaked, then broke open with a crash. George Arthur was sprawled across his desk, his head pillowed on his arms. The air was foul with stale whiskey fumes. Slim nodded with satisfaction. "Close the door an' shove that chair against it, Stoney," he di rected. He crossed to the sleeping man and shook him roughly. Arthur sighed, coughed and tried to push him away. Slim jerked him erect in the chair and slapped him stingingly on both sides of his face. Arthur's eyes opened. "G'way," he murmured guttur ally. "G'way. Lemme sleep." Slim shook him until his heels rattled. The lawyer stared at him vacantly for a moment, his jaw hanging. Then slow recognition pierced through the liquor haze which had deadened his brain. THE ELKIN TRIBUNE, ELKIN, NORTH CAROLINA "Loyale," he murmured. "You— what d'you want?" "Plenty," ' snapped Slim. "Get yore wits together. Yuh've got a lot of explalnln' to do. Stoney pour him another drink. It'll straighten him up for a time." Arthur gulped the liquor greed ily and wiped his lips with the back of a shaking hand. A drunk en truculence took hold of him. "Get out," he growled. "Got no use for you, Loyale, I hate the sight of you. Get out of this of fice." Slim shook him again, half lift ing him from his seat, only to fling him back again with a crash. "I'm tellin' yuh somethin', yuh drunken rat. listen close. Star buck an' both Brockwells are daid. Get that? Daid!" Arthur's head came up. "Huh?" he gasped. "Dead? You're lying." "Don't kid yoreseltf. Starbuck an' Leo Brockwell were killed tryin* to raid my ranch tonight. Sarg Brockwell was killed tryin' to hold up the Standard Bank, not fifteen minutes ago. But be fore he died, Jigger Starbuck talked. He put the tag on yuh, Arthur. Yeah, yuh got a lot of ex plainin' to do." Arthur sat quietly, evidently trying to arrange his hazy thoughts. Presently he looked up. "You haven't got a thing on me—. not a thing. I won't say a word." Slim dragged up a chair and sat down, so that he could stare straight into the lawyer's blood shot eyes. "I think yuh will," he said, a deadly chill in his voice. "Consider my side of the matter. Yuh can clear my name, give written evidence to the world at large that I was railroaded to the pen on false, perjured evidence. "It just happens, Arthur, that I got a funny idee about honor. I don't care to face the rest of my life with a jail stain on it. An' I'm plannin' a powerful lot for some happiness in the future. So if yuh think I won't go to the edges of hell itself to get complete clear ance, yo're badly mistaken. "I made the threat that yuh'd talk an' make a complete written confession, if I had to use Apache methods to wring it outa yuh. I ain't changed my mind. We've cleaned house on this range, Ar thur—cleaned it plenty. We didn't stop at roc kin' off the Brock wells an' Jigger Starbucks. So if yuh think we'll back down from addin' yuh to the list, yo're some mistaken. "I'm admittin' this: In a fair court yuh can probably beat a death sentence, 'cause we got no direct proof of yuh killin' any body. But if yuh ever hope to get in front of that kind of court, yuh better" do as I tell you. -Otherwise it's a rope an' a cottonwood tree for yuh; that is if yuh don't die under a little red-hot iron treat ment. Yo're listenin' to the gos pel truth, Arthur. I'm gonna get what I want, or know the reason why." Still half drunk as he was, Ar thur could not help but read the truth in Slim's words and looks. His head went down again. "If— if Ido as you say, what assur ance have I that you'll play square?" he blurted. "My word; nothin' else. But my word's good an' yuh know it. Are yuh ready to do yore stuff?" Arthur gulped and nodded. "Give me a pen and some paper." In the glowing dawn of a new day, a little cavalcade jogged its way from Pinnacle out to the Cir cle L Ranch. In the lead rode Slim Loyale and Stoney Sheard. Following them was a buckboard, with Roy O'Brien driving. Sitting beside Roy, with his wounded leg cushioned and propped up by wads of blankets, was Dakota Blue. "I suppose Slim'll be after see in' the governor right away?" sug gested Roy. Dakota nodded and grinned. "He's as feverish as a hound pup after its first rabbit. Don't know as I blame him, though. The kid has been eatin' his heart out all along about Mona Hall. He's plumb loco about her. "An' though he's never hinted of it to me, I know he's had some dang-fool idee about honor that's kept him from springin' the question to her. Reckon he's sorta felt that with that prison record on his haid, he had no right to ask her £o marry him." Roy snorted. "As if that'd be after making one bit of difference to Miss Mona. She's knowed, bless her heart, that Slim is innocent, same as the rest of us. Shore, an she's a fine girl. She'd stick to the man she loved regardless. But yuh have to honor the boy for his pride, just the same." At the home ranch Slim wasted no time. He shaved and cleaned up, donning his only suit of store Clothes. Out at the north end of Jeri cho Valley, in company with Sam Tisdale and Abe Fomachon, Mona Hall sat in her saddle and watch ed leaders of long tides of cattle flow out across her range, headed north towards those promised lands in the Kicapoo range. As soon as Tisdale had made the agreement as to price with Slim Loyale he had sent word to his trail mates to start the herd mov ingi And the herd was now on its way to the new promised land. Mona turned to Tisdale. "I feel like a robber, Mr. Tisdale, taking a quarter a head for the mere passing of those cattle. I don't see where they can possibly do that much damage." Tisdale grinned. "Don't let that worry yuh. Miss Hall. Me an' the rest 6t the gang are glad to get by with that price. We're quite willin' to pay it. And here comes somebody that looks as if he was in a danged hurry." Mona whirled and followed Tisdale's pointing arm. Sure enough a rider was loping steadily towards them and Mona recog nized Slim. A puncher had ridden from town to tell her of the thwarted bank holdup and the part Slim and his boys had played. But she had heard nothing of Arthur's confession, and, while she had expected that Slim would ride to her when the fight was over, yet she could not help the queer feel ing that came over her now at the sight of him. Slim cantered up, giving a cheery greeting. He shook hands with Tisdale and Abe, then turn ed to Mona. "I got something to explain to yuh, Mona," he drawl ed. "How about a little ride? These boys can watch the cattle." Mona nodded. "I think so, too. You'll excuse us?" "Go 'long, young 'mis," laughed Tisdale, who guessed how things stood between these two. Slim rode for two miles before he reined in. Then he turned to Mona, his eyes glowing. "I've got Arthur's signed and witnessed confession that I was framed," he stated. "And that makes it fair that I should say what I'm goin to say Mona." He reached in one pocket and brought out a tiny, plush bubble of a case. "Back in Jarillo there were times when I thought I'd go -crazy At those times there was just one thing that kept my feet on the ground, an' that thing was think in' of yuh. Lookin' back I can see where yuh've been my guidin' star all my life. "Unconsciously I built my scheme of livin' around yuh. It wasn't whether I wanted to do this or that merely because I wanted to; it was because I al ways did what I thought yuh would approve of. Even when yuh were a little, long-laiged kid with pigtails down yore back, there was 510 greater reward for duty done, than yore smile. "I—l've gotten so used to that standard of reward now, I cain't face the rest of life without it. Before I got this confession, I had no right to ask yuh. Now I can. I've loved yuh forever, it seems like, Mona. Will yuh marry me?" She looked at him, her lips parted, her eyes glistening. "If there was anything that would keep me from saying yes, Slim Loyale, it is because you were so silly in feeling that you could not ask me until your name had been cleared. A woman who would hes itate over such a foolish thing, would not be worth thinking about. Your nam? has always been clear with me, Slim. Til marry you tomorrow, if you wish. I've always loved you, Slim." There was a rather dizzy inter lude, during which a diamond sol itaire that Slim had purchased in town that morning was unearth ed from the plush case and placed on the proper finger. "There's just one argument I've got to settle," said Slim. "Why wouldn't yuh take that money from me to pay Arthur with, honey?" "Because I didn't want to be in debt to the man I was going to marry," replied Mona, daringly. Slim chuckled. "Plumb shore of me all the time, wasn't yuh?" Mona dimpled. "I had hopes." Slim readied for her again. THE END Patronize Tribune advertisers. They offer real values. NOTICE OF SALE Notice is hereby given that the undersigned will sell at public auction for cash to the highest bidder on the 10th day of July, 1937, at 12 o'clock noon all of the stock of goods and certain fix tures belonging to the Yadkin ville Drug Company, and assigned to F. D. B. Harding, Trustee, in a deed of assignment made March 1, 1937, by N. W. Mackie. The building and fixtures may be leased or rented by the pur chaser of the goods. See F. D. B. Harding, Yadkinville, North Car olina, for inventory and partic ulars. - This the 30th day of June, 1937 ltc F. D. B. HARDING. A Refreshing good things Jfcx 1 ■ ———i—— ■■■ i ————■■ i I '■'' I There's something about ice-cold Coca-Cola served with lunch that makes it fit so refreshingly into the family picture. 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