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arouse the farmer's wrath further. But the girl from the Red Mill stamped her foot and refused to move. "Don't you dare touch it!" she exclaimed. "It isn't your lamb." "What's that?" he demanded, and then broke into a hoarse laugh. "Thet thar's a good one! I raised thet lamb----" "And we have just bought it--paid you your own price for it," cried Ruth. "Crickey! that's so, Ruthie," Tom Cameron interposed. "Of course he doesn't own it. If you want the poor thing, we'll take it along to Fred Larkin's place." "Say!" exclaimed the farmer. "What does this mean? I didn't sell ye the carcass of thet thar lamb; I only got damages----" "You sold it. You know you did," Ruth declared, firmly. "I dare you to touch the poor little thing. It is ours--and I know its life can be saved." "Pick it right up, girls, and come on," advised Tom, starting his engine. "We have the rights of it, and if he interferes, we'll just run on to the next town and bring a constable back with us. I guess we can call upon the authorities, too. What's sauce for the goose, ought to be sauce for the gander." The man was stammering some very impolite words, and Tom was anxious to get his sister and Ruth away. The girls lifted the lamb in upon the back seat and laid it tenderly upon some wraps. Then the boy leaped into the front seat and prepared to start. "I tell ye what it is!" exclaimed the farmer, coming close to the car. "This ain't no better than highway robbery. I never expected ter have ye take the carcass away, when I told ye sich a low price----" "I have paid its full value, and you don't own a thread of its wool, Mister," said Tom, feeling the engine throb under him now. "I'm going to start----" "You wait! I ain't got through with you----" Just then the car started. The man had been holding to the end of the seat. He foolishly tried to continue his hold. The car sprang ahead suddenly, the farmer was swung around like a top, and the last they saw of him he was sitting in the middle of the dusty road, shaking both fists after the car, and yelling at the top of his voice. Just what he said, it was perhaps better that they did not hear! "Wasn't he a mean old thing?" cried Tom, when the car was purring along steadily. "And wasn't Ruth smart to see that he had no right to this poor little sheep?" said Helen, admiringly. "What you going to do with it, Ruthie?" demanded Tom, glancing back at the lamb. "Going to sell it t
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