238 
F () R E S T A N D S T REA M 
April, 1918 
LIMITED SUPPLY »a 
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ijOOOtK3CSG*3t XXXiat 
ZANE GREY’S 
LATEST STORY 
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“No—wot?” says Ted eagerly. “Fried eel 
fritters,” says I. 
Ted groaned like a dying man. I heard 
him stirring uneasily, then one of his shoes 
came flying through the darkness and hit 
the logs a fierce w r allop within a foot of my 
head! I made no further remarks and 
soon we were both asleep. 
* * * * * * 
Next day en route home we were first in 
the Pullman diner when the noon meal was 
announced. “How much is a full meal on 
this boat?” asks Ted of the waiter. “One 
dollah, sah,” says the waiter. “Allright,” 
says Ted, slipping him a five-buck bill, 
“bring us on two and a half meals apiece.” 
THE HILLS AND 
DALES OF WARWICK 
(continued from pace 205) 
hardly follow them, then the gray rushed 
out on an extending limb and sprang for 
another tree and I killed him in mid air, 
“on the wing” as it were, taking the little 
red fiend with the other barrel. 
When our party met at the wood’s edge 
it was near sunset, and we started across 
the pasture fields for the farm house where 
our horses were. As we crossed the last 
field near the barn, Than, John and Tom 
were walking close behind the dogs, while 
I was a little to one side, and in advance 
of them, when from a little tuft of grass 
under the dogs’ noses, out sprang a rabbit 
and away for the stone wall, with the dogs 
in swift pursuit, and loudly giving tongue. 
I threw up the little gun and giving the 
fleeing rabbit a long lead fired, and turning 
three rapid “flip flaps” it lay on its back 
dead, within a yard of the wall and safety. 
When we reached the wagons, the game 
was taken from our shooting coats and 
duly counted, and great was my inward sat¬ 
isfaction to learn, that my last lucky shot, 
made me a “tie” with Knapp on rabbits, 
the bag for the party being thirty-nine rab¬ 
bits, five grouse, nine w-oodcock, three quail, 
seven squirrels and two wood ducks. After 
the game had been counted, Knapp slapped 
me on the back and said, “Neil, for a ‘kid’ 
you are some shot. You have kept me on 
the jump all day, and I am mighty glad to 
quit with a tie.” Soon we were on our 
homeward way tired but happy, Tom and 
I in the lead. Just after passing through 
Florida, we came to a long sloping hill, 
down which the road ran quite straight. 
Here Tom suddenly threw his reins on the 
old horse’s back, gave him a cut with the 
whip and with a loud yell, started him on 
a dead run down the hillside. I now real¬ 
ized w'hy he was called “Dare Devil Tom.” 
He was just trying to scare me so I held 
on with both hands, “swallowed my heart” 
a few times, and as we started up the op¬ 
posite hillside, and Tom had regained the 
reins and held the old horse in, I quietly 
remarked, “The old fellow is pretty nim¬ 
ble footed, isn’t he?” This took all the 
“pep” out of Tom and he never tried my 
nerve again. Poor Tom, he took up rail¬ 
roading, drifted west and became a “cow 
boy,” a genuine “dare devil,” and lost his 
life in some border fray. 
Oh, happy boyhood days! How quickly 
they passed, and all too soon my visit came 
to a close. So John and I decided to have 
