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ttitude and look in one swift glance, "but it ain't here, now. Johnny, get out," he ordered, backing after his companion, and safely outside, the two walked towards Jackson's store, Johnny complaining about the little time spent in the Oasis. As they entered the store they saw Edwards, whose eyes asked a question. "No; he ain't in there yet," Hopalong replied. "Did you look all over? Behind th' bar?" Edwards asked, slowly. "He can't get out of town through that cordon you've got strung around it, an' he ain't nowhere else. Leastwise, I couldn't find him." "Come on back!" excitedly exclaimed Johnny, turning towards the door. "You didn't look behind th' bar! Come on--bet you ten dollars that's where he is!" "Mebby yo're right, Kid," replied Hopalong, and the marshal's nodding head decided it. In the saloon there was strong language, and Jack Quinn, expert skinner of other men's cows, looked inquiringly at the proprietor. "What's up now, Harlan?" The proprietor laughed harshly but said nothing--taciturnity was his one redeeming trait. "Did you say cigars?" he asked, pushing a box across the bar to an impatient customer. Another beckoned to him and he leaned over to hear the whispered request, a frown struggling to show itself on his face. "Nix; you know my rule. No trust in here." But the man at the far end of the line was unlike the proprietor and he prefaced his remarks with a curse. "_I_ know what's up! They want Jerry Brown, that's what! An' I hopes they don't get him, th' bullies!" "What did he do? Why do they want him?" asked the man who had wanted trust. "Skinning. He was careless or crazy, working so close to their ranch houses. Nobody that had any sense would take a chance like that," replied Boston, adept at sleight-of-hand with cards and very much in demand when a frame-up was to be rung in on some unsuspecting stranger. His one great fault in the eyes of his partners was that he hated to divvy his winnings and at times had to be coerced into sharing equally. "Aw, them big ranches make me mad," announced the first speaker. "Ten years ago there was a lot of little ranchers, an' every one of 'em had his own herd, an' plenty of free grass an' water fer it. Where are th' little herds now? Where are th' cows that we used to own?" he cried, hotly. "What happens to a maverick-hunter, nowadays? If a man helps hisself to a pore, sick dogie he's hunted down! It can't go on much longer, an' that's
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