'i!U:RSIAY, MARC!! -f. 1913. PLATTSMOUTH SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL. Pr.E 7. sttpf Copyright, 1314, by CHAPTER XVIII. "Five Hundred Dollars a Potato." ERSUADIXG. bullying, and. at times, by main strength. men were dragged from their bun'is and forced to dress. Smoke selected the mildest cases for the bur jal srjuad. Another squad was told off to supply the wood by which the graves were burned down into tbe fro zen muck-and pravel. Still another squad bad to chop firewood and iin partially supply every cabin. Those wuo were too weak for outdoor work were put to cleaning and scrubbing tbe cabins and washing clothes. One squad brought in many loads of spruce loughs and every stove was used for the brewing of spruce tea. ' Hut. lid matter what tare Smoke and Shorty put on it. the situation was frrim and serious. At least thirty fear ful and impossible cases could net be taken from the heds. as the two men. with nausea and horror. learned, while one. a woman, died in Laura Sibley's cabin. Yet strong measures were nec essary. When the working cattgs enme in at noon they found decently cooked dia llers awaiting them, prepared by tha weaker members of their cabin under the tutelage and drive of Smoke and Shorty. That'll do," Smoke said at 3 in the afternoon. "Knock oft". Go to your bunks. You may be feeling rotten dow. but sou' LI be the better for it tomorrow. Of course it fcurts to net well, but I'm going to get you well." '"Too late." Amos Wentworth sneer ed pallidly at Smoke's efforts. "They ought to have started in that way last falL" "Come along with me. Smoke an swered. "1'ick up those two pails, you're cot a 11 ins. From cabin to cabin the three men went, dosing every man and woman with a full pint of spruce tea. Nor was it easy. "You might as well learn at the start that we mean business. Smoke stated i to the first obdurate, wbj Jay on bis Lack groaning through set teeth. "Stand by. Shorty." Smoke caught tbe patient by the nose and tapped tUe solar plexus section so as to make the rgoutb gasp open. "Now, Shorty ! Down the goesl" Ai.d down she went, accompanied with nnavoidable splutterlngs asd slrangliiigs. ""We're covering this sprnce tea rocte ' four times a day. and there are eighty of you to be dosed each time." Smoke informed Laura Sibley. "So we've uo time to fool. WilJ you take it. or must J bold your nose?" Ilis thumb and forefinger hovered eloquently above Ler. "It's vegetable, so you needn't .bave any qualms. "I'll I'll take it. she quavered "Hurry pr That night, exhausted as by no bard day ot trail. Smoke and Shorty crawl td into their blankets. "I'm lairly sick with it, Smoke con fessed "The way they suffer Is awful. ISut exercise is the only remedy 1 ran think of. and it must be given a thor ough trial. 1 wish we bad a sack ot Taw potatoes." "Sparkbns. he can't wash no more dishes." Shorty sala. "it hurts nim no be sweats Ms pnln. 1 seen him sweat lb 1 cad to put him back in the nunt be was that helpless." "It only we had raw potatoes." Smoke went on. "The rital. essential something is missing from that prepar ed stul. The life has been evaporated out of it." "An' if that young fellow Jones in tbe Drown low cabin don't croak tKffort injnun' 1 miss my cuess." "For heaven's sake ba cheertr.l." Smoke chided. in the morning not enly was Jones dead, but one of the stronger men vrbc bad worked on the firewood squad was found to have hanged himself. A nightmare procession of days set in For a weekv Keeling himself to th task. S mo Le enforced the exercise and tlie spruce tea. and one by one and It twos and threes he was compelled tc liijock off the workers. As he was learning, exercise was the last thing in the world for scurvy patients. The d.iiiinishins tirlal squad was kept ftc-diiy at work, and a surplus halt dozen graves -were always burned down and waiting. One day Smoke fr.iw the t-eeress e-tering Amos Wtnt wurtb's cabin and followed after tier. At the dcor he could bear her voice. Trhimperins and pleading. "Just for trie." she was beggin:; as i- U!.i;e entered "1 won t tell a souL" l'.otn glanced guiltily at the intruder. and Smoke was certain that he was on the edgo of something, be knew not! what, and he cursed himself for not Laving eavesdropped. "Out with it!" he commanded harsh ly. "What is it?" -What is what?" Amos Wentworth asked sullenly. And Smoke could 3ot' Lame what was what. j tho Wheeler Syndicate. Grimmer and grimmer grew the situ ation, in that darii uole of a canyon the horrible death list rao-anted up. Each day. in apprehension. Smoke and Shor ty examined each other's mouth for the whitening of the gums and mucou9 membranes the Invariable first symp tom of tbe disease "I've quit." Shorty announced oo') evening. "I've been thlnkin' it over, an 1 quit. 1 can make a go at slave drivin. but cripple drivin" 's too much for my stomach. They go from bad to worse. They ain't twenty men 1 can drive to work. 1 told Jackson this afternoon he could take to his bunk. Ue was gcttln ready to suicide. 1 could see it stJckiu out all over blm. Cxercise ain't no good." "I've made up my mind to tbe same thinjr. Smoke answered. Tbe everlasting miracle of Went worth's immunity perplexed Smoke. Why should be alone not have de veloped scurvy? Why did Laura Sib ley hate him and at the same time whine and snivel j?nd beg from him? On several occasions Smoke made it a point to drop into Wentworth's cabin at mealtime. Hut one thing did be note that was suspicious and that was Wentworth's suspicion of him. Next be tried sounding out Laura Sibley. "Raw potatoes would cure everybody here," be remarked to the seeress. "1 know it. I've seen it work before. The flare of conviction In ber eyes, followed by bitterness and hatred, told blm the scent was warm. "Why didn't you bring in a supply of fresh potatoes on tbe steamer? be asked. "We did. But coming up the river we sold them all out at a bargain at Fort Yukon. We bad plenty of the evaporated kinds, and we knew they'd keep better. They woaldn't even freeze." Smoke groaned. "Now, mightn't there bave been a couple of odd sacks left accidentally, you know, mislaid on the steamer 7" She shook ber bead, as be thought, a trifle belatedly, then added. "We nev er found any. "Dut mightn't there?" he persisted. "How do 1 know?" she rasped angri ly. "I didn't hare charge of the com missary." "Ai:J Amos Wentworth did." he Jumped to the conclusion. "Very good. Now what is your private opinion Just between us two? Do yon think Wentworth has any raw potatoes stor ed away somewhere?" "No; certainly not. Why should be?" Struggle as he would with her. Smoke could not bring ber to admit the possibility. That night, when the camp groaned and 6lept or groaned and did not sleep. Sruoke went to Wentworth's onlighted cabin. "Listen to me, Wentworth," be said. "I've got a thousand dollars In dust right here in this sack. I'm a rich man in this country, and I can afford it. 1 think I'm getting touched. Put a raw potato in my band and the dust is yours. Uere, beft it." And Smoke thrilled when Amos Wentworth put out his hand In the darkness and befted the gold. Smoke heard blm fumble in the blankets and tbeu felt pressed into his hand not the heavy gold sack, but the unmis takable potato, tbe size of a ben's egg, warm from contact with the oth er's body. Smoke did not wait till morning. He and Shorty were expecting at any time the deaths of their worst two cases, and to this cabin the partners went. Grated and mashed op In a cup, skin and clinging specks of earth and all. was tbe thousand dollar potato a thick fluiQ that they fed. several drops at a time, into the frightful orillces that nad once been mouths. Shift by shift through the long nigbt Smoke and Shorty relieved each other at adminis tering the potato Juice, rubbing It into tbe poor swollen gums where loose teeth rattled together and compelling tbe swallowing of every drop of the precious elixir. By evening of tbe next day the change for tbe better In the two pa tients was miraculous and almost un believable. They were no longer the worst cases. In forty-eight hours, with the exhaustion of tbe potato, tbey were temporarily out of danger, though far from oelng cured. "I'll teU you what I'll do." Smoke said to Wentworth. "I've got holdings in this country. nd my paper Is good anywhere. I'll give you $500 a potato op to .TCVO.Ooo worth. That's 100 pota toes." "Wa that nil the dust you bad?" Wentworth queried. "Shorty and 1 scraped up all we cad. But. straight, be and I are worth sev eral millions between us." " haven't tny potatoes." Wentworth snid finally. "Wish I had. That io tato I save y:n was tbe only one. I'd been saving it all the winter Xorfety I'd "get this scurvy. I only sold it so as to be able to buy n passage out ol the country when the river opens." Despite the cessation of potato Juice, the two treated cases continued to im prove through the third day. The un treated cases went from bad to worse. On the fourth morning three corpses were buried. Then Smoke and Shorty together In vaded Wentworth's cabin, throwing him out in the snow, while they turn ed the Interior upside down. Laura Sibley hobbled In and frantically Join ed them In the seared Though the very floor was dug up. they discovered nothing. Another day passed, during which tbey kept a steady watch ou Went- Til give you $500 a potato up to $50,000 worth." worth's movements. Several times when he started out, water bucket in hand, for tha creek they casually ap proached the cabin, and each time be hurried back without the water. "They're cached right here in bis cabin."' Shorty said. "But wtiere? We sure overhauled it plenty." He stood up and pulled on his mittens. "I'm goin to find em if I have to pull tbe blame shack down a log at a time." Ue glanced at Smoke, wbo. with an intent, absent face, bad not beard blm. "What's eatin you J" Shorty demand ed wrathfuliy. "Just trying to remember something. Shorty." "What's the game?" "Watch me. that's all," Smoke bat fled. "I always told you. Shorty, that a deficient acquaintance with litera ture was a handicap, even in the Klon dike. Now, what we're going to do came out of a book. I read It when 1 was a kid. and it will wort. Comeon!" Several minutes later, nnder a pale gleaming, greenish aurora borealis. the two men crept up to Amos Went worth's cabin. Carefully and noise lessly they ioured kerosene over the logs, extrit-drenching the door frame and window sash. Then the match was applied, and they watched the flaming oil gather headway. They drew back beyond tbe growing light and waited. They saw Wentworth rnsh out, stare wildly at the conflagration and plunge back into the cabin. Scarcely a minute elapsed when he emerged, this time slowly, half doubled over, his shoul ders burdened by a sack, heavy and unmistakable. Smoke and Shorty sprang at him like a pair of famished wolves. They hit him right and left at the same instant Ele crumpled down under the weight of the sack, which Smoke pressed over with his bands to make sure. Then he felt bis knees clasped by Went worth's arms as tbe man turned a ghastly face upward. "Give me a dozen, only a dozen half a dozen and you can have the rest." be squalled. "Just half a dozen," he wailed. "Just half a dozen. 1 was going to turn them over to yon to morrow. Yes. tomorrow. That, was my idea. They're life! They're lifer Just talf a dozen P "Where's the other sack?" Smoke bluffed. "1 ate it up." was the reply, onlm peacbably fconest. "That sack's all that's left. Give me a few. You can have the rest." "Ate 'em upT Shorty screamed. "A whole sack! An' them geezers dyin for want of 'em: This for you! An' this! An" this! An" this: You swine! You bog!" There was no sleep In camp that night. Hour after hour Smoke and Shorty went the rounds, doling the life renewing potato juice, a quarter of a spoonful at a dose, into the poor ruined mouths of the population. And through the following day while one slept the other kept up the work. There were no more deaths. The most awful cases began to mend with an immediacy that was startling. "Nary a potato." Shorty told the whining, begging Wentworth. "Yon ain't even touched with scurvy. You got outside a whole sack, nn you're loaded against scurvy tor twenty years. Knowin you. I've come t understand God. I alwsys wondered why lie let Satan live. Now I know. lie let him live just as 1 let you live. But It's a cryin' shame, just the same." "A word of advice." Smoke told Wenrwortb. "These men are getting C5- welF fast. SbortVnnd 1 nre leaving in a week, and there will be nobody to protect you when these men go after you. There's the trail. . Dawsoa's eight- j een days travel." "Gentlemen. I beg of you. listen to me." Wentworth whined. "I'm a stran ger In this country. I don't know the trail. Let me travel with you. I'll give you $1,000 if -fou'll let me travel with you." "Sure," Smoke grinned maliciously, "if Shorty agrees." "Wbo? Me?" Shorty stiffened for a supreme effort. "1 ain't nobody. Wood ticks ain't got no thin' on me when it comes to humility. I'm a worm, a maggot, brother to the pollywog an' child of the blowfly. 1 ain't afraid or ashamed of nothin' that creeps or cmwls. But travel with that mistake of creation go way. inanl 1 ain't proud, but you turn my stomach." And Amos Wentworth went away, alone, dragging a sled loaded with pro visions sutlicient to last him to Daw son. A mile down tbe trail Shorty overhauled him. "Come here to me," was Shorty's greeting. "Come across. Fork over Cough up." "I don't understand," Wentworth quavered, shivering from recollection of the two beatings, hand and foot, be had already received from Shorty. "That thousand dollars, d'ye under stand that? That thousand dollars gold Smoke bought that measly potato with. Come through." And Amos Wentworth passed the gold sack over. "Hope a skunk bites yon on you get howlin hydrophoby." were the term! of Shorty's farewell. CHAPTER XIX. A Flutter In Eggs. TTT was In the A. C company's big J store at Dawson that Lucille Ar rj ral beckoned Smoke Bellew over to the dry goods counter. Smoke obeyed ber call with alacrity The man did not exist in Dawson who would not have been flattered by tbe notice of Lucille Arral. the singing soubrette of the tiny stock company that performed nightly, at the Palace Opera House. "Things are dead." she complained. with pretty petulance. "There hasn't been a stampede for a week. There's no dust in circulation. There's always standing room now at the opera house. And there hasn't been a mail from tbe outside for two whole weeks. In short, this burg has crawled into its cave and gone to sleep. We've got to do something. It needs livening, and you and 1 can do lt I've broken with Wild Water, you know." Smoke caught two almost slmulta neous visions. One was of Joy Gas tell, the other was of himself, in the midst of a bleak snow stretch under a cold arctic moon, being pot shotted with accurateness and dispatch by the aforesaid Wild Water. Smoke's re luctance at raising excitement with tbe aid of Lucille Arral was too patent for her to inLss. "I'm not thinking what you are thinking at all. thank you." she chided. with a laugh and a pout. "Take it from roe. Mr. Smoke Bellew, I'm not going to make love to you. and if you dare to make love to rue Wild Water will tafce care of your case. You know him. Besides. I I haven't really bro ken with him. Wild Water thinks I've broken with him. don't you see?" "Well, have you. or haven't you?" "I haven't there! But It's betweeD you and me In confidence." "Where do I come in. stalking horse or fall guy?" "Neither. Too make a pot of money, we put across the laugh on Wild Wa ter and cheer Dawson up. and. best of all and tbe reason for it all. be gets disciplined Ele needs it. lie's well, tbe best way to put it is he's too turbu lent, lie broke out last night again. Sowed the floor of the M. & M. with gold dust all ot a thousand dollars. You've heard of it, of course." "Yes; this morning. But still I don't get you." "Listen. lie was too turbulent. I broke our engagement, and he's going around making a noise like a broken heart. Now we come to It, 1 like eggs." "But what bave eggs and appetite got to do with It?" Smoke demanded "Everything. I like eggs. There's only a limited supply of eggs In Daw son." "Sure. Slavovitcb's restaurant has most of them. Ham and one egg. JK5; ham and two eggs. $f. That means an egg. retail." "lie Hkes eggs too." sbe continued "But that's not the point. I like them t have breakfast every morning at 11 o'clock at Slavovitcb's. 1 invariably at two eggs." She paused Impressive ly. "Suppose, Just suppose, somebody corners eggs." She waited, and Smoke regarded her with admiring eyes, while in his bean he backed with approval Wild Water's choice of her. "You're not following." she said. "Go on." he replied. "1 give up What's the answer?" "Stupid! You know Wild Water. When he sees I'm languishing for egg, and I know his mind like a book and 1 know bow to languish, what will be do? Why. he'll just start stampeding for th man that's got the corner in eggs. Fle'll buy the corner, no matter what It costs. "Picture: I come int Slavovitcb's nt II o'clock ViV.l WctiT will be at the next table. Fle'll make it his business to be there. 'Two eggs, shirred. I'll say to the waiter. "Sorry. .Miss Arra!.' the waiter will say. 'they nln't no more egg.' Then up spefks Wild Wa ter In that hig bear voice f hl. 'Wal ler, six eggs, sort boiled.' And the waiter say. 'Yes. sir.' and the eggs are brought. 'Picture: Wild Water looks sideways at me. and I look tike a particularly Indignant icicle and summon the waiter. 'Sorry, iliss Ar GlL he says, 'but them eggs Is Mr. Wild waters. Ton see. ml.. he owns 'em.' Picture: Wild Water, trium phant, doing his best to loot: uncon scious while he eats his six eggs. "Another picture: Slavovitcb himself bringing two shirred eggs to me and saying: 'Compliments of Mr. Wild Wa ter, miss.' What can I do? What can 1 possibly do but smile at Wild Water? And then we make up. of course, and he'll consider it cheap if he bas been compelled to pay $10 for each and ev ery egg In the corner." "Go on. go on!" Smoke urged. "At what station do I climb on to tbecboo choo cars or 8t what water tank do 1 get thrown off?" "Ninny! You make that corner In ;ggs. lou start in Immediately, to day. Yoo can buy every egg In Daw son for $3 and sell out to Wild Water at almost any advance. And then afterward, we'll let the inside history come out. Tbe lar.gh will be on Wild Water. Ills turbulence will be some fcubdued. You and 1 6hare tbe glory of It, You make a pile of money. And Dawson wakes up with a grand ha bar "Oey, ShortyT Smoke called across tbe main street to hit partner and crossed over. "I want you to do me a favor." "Sure." Shorty said gallantly. "What is It? Let ber rip." "1 want you to buy eggs for me" "Sure, an' Floridy water an talcum powder. If you say tbe word. lxok here. Smoke. If you want to go In for high livin you go an' buy your own eggs." "I am going to buy, but 1 want yon to help me to buy. Yon go right straight to Slavovitcb's. Pay as high as &J. but buy all he's got." "Three dollars!" Shorty groaned "An" I beard tell only yesterday that he's got all of TOO Ir. stock! Twenty one hundred dollars Tor hen fruit. Say Smoke. I'd sure do anything for you I" you bad u cold In the head an' wa layin' with both arms broke I'd set Ly your bedside day- an' night an' wipe your nose for you. but I'll be evtrlast In'Iy d d If I'll squander twenty-one hundred good iron dollars on hen fruit for you or any other two legged man ' "They're not your dollars, but mine. Shorty. It's a deal I have on. What I'm after Is to corner every blessed egg in Dawson, in the Klondike, on the Yukon. You've got to help me out. 1 haven't the time to tell you of the in vvardness of the deal. 1 will after ward and let you go half on it If you want to. But the thing riglit now is to get the eggs. Now. you hustle up to Slavovitcb's and buy all he's got. And then keep on. Nose out every egg in Dawson and buy it. Understand? Buy It!" Never was a market cornered more quickly. In three days every known egg in Dawson with the exception ot several dozeu was In the bands ot Smoke and Shorty. The several dozen not yet gathered in were in the hands of two persons One, with whom Shorty was dealing, was an Indian woman wbo lived in a cabin on the bill back of the hospital. "I'll get her today." Shorty announc ed next morning. "I'll be back In a jiffy. If I don't bust myself a-shovin dust nt her." In the afternoon when Smoke re turned to the cabin be fouud Shorty. "What luckT Shorty asked careless ly after several minutes had passed. "Nothing doing." Smoke answered "How did you get on with the squaw?" Shorty cocked bis bead triumphant ly towacd a tin pail of eggs on the ta ble, "Seven dollars a clatter, though." he confessed "I offered $10 finally." Smoke said, "and then the fellow told me ne'd al ready sold his eggs. Now that looks bad. Shorty. Somebody else Is In the market. Those tweuty-elgnt eggs are liable to cause us trouble. You see. the success of the corner consists in holding every last" Qe broke off to stare at his partner. A pronounced change was coming over Shorty one of agitation masked by extreme deliberation. "Do you mind kindly Just repeatin' over how many eggs you said the man didn't sell to you?" he asked. "Twenty -eight." "II urn!" Shorty communed to hlm selL "They's Just exactly, precisely nor nothin" more or anything less'n twenty-eight eggs In that there pail settln' on the table, an' tbey cost, every dinged last one of 'em. Just exactly seven groat big round iron dollars a throw. If you stand in cryin' need ot any further items of information I'm willin and free 'to impart." '"Go on," Smoke requested. "Well, that geezer you was dlckerin' with is a big buck Indian. Am 1 right r Smoke nodded and continued to nod to each question. "lie's got one cheek half gone, where a bald face grizzly swatted blm. Am I right? He's a dog trader right, eh? His name is Sear Face Jim. That's so. ain't it? D'ye get my drirtr "Y'on mean we've been bidding" "Against each other? Sure thing. That squaw's his wife, an' tbey keep bouse on the hill back of the bospitaL I could 'a" got them eggs for two a throw ir you hadn't butted In." "And so could 1." Smoke laughed, "it you'd kept out- But it doesn't amount tc mything. VL'e that we've got the corner. That's the big thing." Shorty spent the next hour wrestling with a stub of a pencil on the margin of n three-year-old newspaper. . "There she stands." he said at Inst "pmme give yon the totals. You an' tue has right now in our possession ex actly 073 eggs. They ctts us exactly S.7G0. If we stick up Wild Water tor $10 an egg we stand to win, clf.-m net an' al! to the good, just exactly Si. 070" At 11 that night Smoke was routed from sound sleep by Shorty. "1 just seen Siavovitca. He says to me: 'Shorty. 1 want to speiT. to yoa about them eggs. I've kept it quiet. Nobody Kuows l sold 'eui to you. Hut if you're speculatin' 1 can put you wise to a good thing.' An' be did, too. Smoke. "Well, maybe it sounds v-cre.Mhle. but that good thing was Wild Water Charley. He's lookin' to buy eggs. goes around to Slavovitcb an' otTers him $5 an egg. an before be quits u s offeriu $S. An' Slavovitcb ain't got no eggs. Last thing Wild Water says to Slavovitcb is that he'll beat tbe heac off en him if be ever finds out Slavo vitcb bas eggs cached away t-oui--wberes. Slavovitcb nad to tell tn ne'd sold the eggs, but that tbe buyer was secret. "Slavovitcb says to let him say the word to Wild Water, who's got the eggs. 'Shorty. be says to me. 'Wild Water!! come a-runuin . You can bold him up for $S. 'Light dollars your grandmother,' I says. "He'll tall for $10 before I'm done with bim.' Any way, 1 told Slavovitcb I d th:nk It over and let him know in the mornm'. Ot course we'll let 'm pass the word to Wild Water. Am I right?" "You certainly are. Shorty. First tbing in the morning tip off Slavovitcti. nave him tell Wild Water that you and I are partners in the deaL" In the morning Smoke chanced upon Lucille Arral 'again at the dry goods counter of the A. C. store. "It's working!" be Jubilated. "If working! Wild Water's been c round to Slavovitcb. trying to buy ot bully eggs out of bim. And by this ti:nf Slavovitcb has told him that Shorty and 1 own tbe corner." Lucille A mil's eyes sparkled with de light. "I'm going to breakfast right now." she cried. "And I'll ask the waiter for eggs and be so plaintive when there aren't any as to melt a heart of stone. And you know Wild Water's heart H anything but stone He'll buy the corner if it costs him on.. of his mines. Hold out for a stiff fig ure. Nothing less than $10 will satisfy me. and if you sell for anything less. Smoke. I'll never forgive you." That noon, up In their cabin. Shorty placed on tbe table a pot of beans, a not of coffee, a smoking platter of moose meat and ba'-on. n plate of stewed dried peacnes and called. "Grub's ready." Smoke opened tbe door for a breath of frosty air atid saw something that made him close the door hurriedly r.'xl dash to the stove. The frying ir.m, still hot from the moose meat and !.t on. lie put ba' i; n t lie from ii.l. Into the frying pan be put a generous dab of butter, then reached for an egg. which be broke and dropped spluttering into the pan. As he reached for a send egg Shorty gained bis side and clutched his arm lu an excited grip. "Hey. what you doiu'?" be demar.ded. "Frying eggs." Smoke informed Mm. breaking the second one and throwing off Shorty's detaining band. "Get out "Shorty and I own the corner, of the way. Shorty. Wild Water's com ing up the bill, and he'll be bere in five minutes." Shorty sat down at the table. By the time tbe exacted knock came at the door Smoke was facing blm across the table, and before caili was a plate con taining three hot fried eggs. "C ome in!" Smoke called. Wild Water Charley, a strapping young glaut, entered and shoon band-. "Set down an' have a bite. Wild Wa ter." Shorty invited. "Smoke, fry Mm some eggs. I'll bet be ain't Bcoffed au egg in a coon's age." Smoke broke three more eggs into tbe hot pan and in several minutes placed them before his guest, who look ed at them with so strange and strabi ed an expression that Shorty confessed afterward his fear that Wild Water would slip them iuto rvcket and tarry them away. "Say. them swells down In the states ain't got nothin' over us in the matter of eats." Shorty gloated. "Here's you an' me an" Smoke gettin' outside $90 worth of eggs an' not bartin an eye." Wild Water stared at the rapidly dis appearing eggs and seemed petrified. "Tbey they ain't worth no $10." Wild Water said slowly. Sherty accepted the challenge. "A thing's worth what you can get for it, ain't it?" he demanded. r I'd "Tes. lit you Van't eat egg like that." Wild Water objeeted. "It-it ain't right." "We just t'oi." on rc-i, S;tc!.c an" me." was Shorty's excuse, j Wild Water finished his own plate In , a half hearied way. "Say. y..ij fdiow i ciin do me a great favor." he began : tentatively. "Sell r.n-. or lend tne. or j five- mo. :il;ut a dn.cu f thciu egirs." "Sure." Saioke ere 1. "I know what a ve ining for i:ie!f. I But we're ; ot so poor tint we have to sell our hospitality. They'll cost you i nothing. Go ahead. Shorty. Cook i j them up for him. Put WiM Water laid n restraining l;.:i:i on the e.'tcr Shorty as b ex plained. "I don't mean cooLci. I wart them with the shells on " "So that you can carry "em away?" "That's the idea." "But that ain't hospitality." Shorty Objected. "It's It's traiiu'." Smoke Drilled concurrence. "That's different. Wild Water. I thoug'.t you j'.:st wanted to eat them. Yoo see. we went into this for a specu' ition.'' The dangerous blue of WiM Water's eyes began to grow mi-re danrerous. "I'll pay you for thc:a." lie said sh.:rj ly. "Hew much;" "Oh. not n d'-zen." Sn-'i - replied. "We couldn't sell a doon. We're i."t retailers; we're sneeul-.tor. We can't uwik our own market- We've g"t a hard and fast corner, ami vhvri we sell out it's the whole coin- r or nothing." "How many have joti :: t ai,,l hjiv much do you wci.t fT them';" "How many have vc. Short V" Smoke inquired Shorty cleared his throit nrd per-forux-i mental arithmetic uloud. "I-m-me see. Nine humlred an' M-venty-three minus r:int. that leave; nine hun dred an' sixty-tw.i. An' ihe w lie!,, shootin" match at Sin : t:in-v wi'l tote up just about i.ine t mas.-rnl s: L;:::Jrcd an' tv.-cnty iron .1 liars, nf cjur: e. WiM Water, vv'i" pl.iyiu" fair, r.n' it's iconey bac : for I ad o: . s. though 1h-y ain't none. That's or e thing I i.ever s;cn In the Klot !;... i bad egg." Wild Water f hook l is her d sadly r, I helped Muise!' t. the U;:ns. -Tint would be too expensive. Sh'Tty. 1 only want a few. I'll give y on for a couple of d jzen. I'll give you S'J". but I can't buy 'em all." "All or none." was Stroke's ultiii.a tum. "Look here, you two." WiM Water said in a burst of conlidenec "I'll l.o inrfcctly honest with ou, an" don't I' t it go any further. Yen know Min Ar ral an' I was etigrned. We'!. sl: -s broken everything off. It's for ber I want them eggs. I v.-ant t" t'te them to ber vu a platter shirred. That's the way she lilies 'em." "Ik you want 'em ninety six hundred an twenty dollars' worth?" Shorty queried. "Aw. listen to reason." Wild Water pleaded. "I only want a couple i f dozen. 111 give yon apiece for Vmi. What do I want with nil the rest of them eggs?" "I should say Mis Arrays wurili tl price of th egg." Smoke- put l:i quietly. "Worih if;" Wild Water st 1 up !n the heat of his eio.piela e. "She's wTili a million iloilai Slip's m ttli t!f dm-t i:i Ulon!i!;e. !l::i t:.at ;:iti't n call for me to ganiMe 1 '.'; i ri a breakfast f r Imr Nov.. Fie got a proposition. I.l-lnl me a rut-p!;- cf !oe;i of them eggs. I'll i.:rn ' m er f Slavovitcb. He'll fed "cm to her with my eomplimei.'s. sir- ;:::i'l srail.il to n;e for a hnm'.-cl yv: is. If th.ni egg- get a smile for im- I'll ta'.e- the wholu boiling oT yorr hands. "' "Will you sign a co-.iract f that ef fect?" S:no!"e q-MfUly, for !j trnew that Lucille Airal had a greet 1 to smiie. Wild Wa'er g-isj) d. "You're ::!:nihry swift with business up li'ie en th Li'.!." he sa'd. with a h t.t of snarl. "We're only accepting your own proposition." S:n !; ar.sv. red. "All right: bring n the p.vper; taa!: It out hard and fast." WPd Water crio.l in the auger of surrender. (To Be Continued. FRECKLE-FACE "ow Is the Tiir.c Ij Get Ifid cf T!i;sc Ugly Spots. Do you know how c-u-y it i . t i -n.ove those ugly fpots .,o tl.:.t :ij .. v'Al call you f ckle-fiit-e ? Sirr.nly get an utcc cf w - n double' sttcngth, from yo-r !ru-i i rnd a few applications ihc.J.,1 . h . v .-ou how easy it is to ri.l your.--Y ' freckles anJ :ct a beau.iilul -oro plcxicn. Ike ;un and v.m.'s of (cm luaty and March have a slryn;.- t !. cency to bring- cul freckles, an-1 -: . :eftii!t more chine i .-old in tb;-; months. He sure to a ,'; for the ! strength othino, as this is o!il v.r.i. gua:antec of money back if it fa.i.. to ltmove the freckles. I OUM). FOUND I'eiv. een I'laltsmowth Wa gon and Juio brit!-g: an 1 thi , city, an auto lamp. Owner may ,v.v same by calling' at tl.i- oJlicc at: 1 paying for ai crti scmcnt, L'-L'I-tfl FOR .SALE Four fic-roo:n, -nv re e:i-roc:r coitarcc.", on c;:sy pay ments. Acreage cb-se-iu for rcn' an-i sale. Windham Investment !w Loan Co. 2-25-diw-tf