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      "Shust come und see me, mine friendt, und I vill profe dat your mouth vas der piggest bart uf you."

      "I ain't goin' ter touch yer with my hands," declared the man from 'Rapahoe, once more producing the long-barreled revolver; "but I'll shoot yer so full o' holes thet ye'll serve fer a milk-skimmer! Git down on yer marrerbones an' pray!"

      "Look here, mine friendt," calmly said the Jew, as the crowd began to scatter to get out of the way of stray bullets, "uf you shood ad me, id vill profe dat you vas a plowhardt und a cowart. Uf you shood ad me, der beople uf dis blace vill haf a goot excuse to holdt a lynchings."

      "Wa'al, I'm good fer this hull derned county! This town is too slow ter skeer me any ter mention. Git down!"

      "Uf I don'd do dat?"

      "I'll shoot yer legs out from under yer clean up ter ther knees!"

      "Vell, then, I subbose I vill haf to—do this!" Solomon had seemed on the point of kneeling, but, instead of doing so, he ducked, leaped in swiftly beneath the leveled revolver, caught Buckhorn by the wrist, and wrenched the weapon from his hand, flinging it aside with the remark:

      "I don'd vant to peen shot alretty, und, if you try dat again, you vill ged hurt pad, vid der accent on der pad!"

      Buckhorn seemed to be stupefied, and then, uttering another roar, he lunged at the Jew, trying to grapple Solomon with his hands.

      "I'll squeeze ther life out of yer!" snarled the ruffian.

      "Oxcuse me uf I don'd lofe you vell enough to led you done that," said the Jew, nimbly skipping aside. "Your nose shows you vas a greadt trinker; shust dry my electric punch."

      Crack! The knuckles of the Jew struck under the ear of the man from 'Rapahoe. It was a beautiful blow, and Buckhorn was knocked over in a twinkling, striking heavily on his shoulder in the dust of the street.

      The fall seemed to stun the man in leather breeches, but he soon sat up, and then, seeing Solomon waiting for him to rise, he asked:

      "Whar is it?"

      "Vere vas vat?"

      "Ther club you struck me with."

      "Righd here," said the Jew, holding up his clinched hand.

      "Haw! Ye don't mean ter say you didn't hit me with a club, or something like a hunk o' quartz?"

      "Dat vas der ding vat I hit you vid, mine friendt. Shust ged up, und I vill profe id py hitting you again."

      "Say!"

      "Vell?"

      "I don't allow thet I'm as well as I might be, an' I ain't spoiling' fer trouble none whatever. I'm onter you. You're a perfessional pugilist in disguise. If you'll let me git up, I'll go right away and let you alone."

      "Vell, ged up."

      "You won't hit me when I do so?"

      "Nod if you don'd tried some funny pusiness."

      Buckhorn struggled to his feet, keeping a suspicious eye on Solomon all the while. He then picked up his revolver, but made no offer to use it, for the Jew was watching every movement, and he noted that Solomon had one hand in his pocket.

      "A critter thet knows tricks like he does, might be able ter shoot 'thout drawin'," muttered the man from 'Rapahoe. "I don't allow it'd be healthy ter try a snap shot at him."

      A roar of laughter broke from the spectators, as they saw the ruffian put the revolver back into its holster, and turn away, like a whipped puppy.

      "Hayar, you mighty chief from 'Rapahoe," shouted a voice, "do yer find this yar town so dead slow as yer did? Don't yer 'low yer'd best go back ter 'Rapahoe, an' stay thar? Next time, we'll set ther dude tenderfoot on yer, an' he'll everlastin'ly chaw yer up!"

      "How low hev ther mighty fallen!" murmured Buckhorn, as he continued to walk away.

      CHAPTER VII.

       IN JAIL.

       Table of Contents

      Great was the disgust of the crowd when it was found that Hank Kildare had taken his prisoner to jail without passing along the main street of the town. It was declared a mean trick on Hank's part, and some excited fellows were for resenting it by breaking into the jail at once and bringing the boy out and "hangin' him up whar everybody could see him."

      The ones who made this kind of talk had been "looking on the bug-juice when it was red," and they finally contented themselves by growling and taking another look.

      In the meantime, Frank found himself confined in a cell, and he began to realize that he was in a very bad scrape.

      Throughout all the excitement at the railroad station, he had remained cool and collected, but now, when he came to think the matter over, his anger rose swiftly, and he felt that the whole business was most outrageous.

      Still, when he remembered everything, he did not wonder that the mob had longed to lynch him.

      Black Harry was a youthful desperado of the worst sort. He had devastated, plundered, robbed, and murdered in a most infamous manner, his last act being the shooting of Robert Dawson, the Eastern banker.

      And Lona Dawson, the banker's daughter, had looked straight into our hero's face and declared that he was Black Harry!

      "It is a horrible mistake!" cried Frank, as he paced the cell into which he had been thrust. "She believed she spoke the truth. This young outlaw must resemble me. I cannot blame her."

      The manacles chafed his wrists.

      "Are they going to leave those things on me, now that they have me safe in jail?" he cried.

      His door opened into the corridor, and he called to the guard, asking that the irons might be removed.

      "I believe Hank has gone fer ther key," said the guard "He didn't take it from ther detective what put them irons on yer."

      "Will they be removed when he returns with the key?"

      "I reckon."

      "Then I hope he will hurry. I am tired of carrying the things."

      He turned back, to pace the cell once more.

      "This is a flimsily-constructed building," he said. "It would be an easy thing to break in here and drag a prisoner out. I escaped death at the hands of the mob because I had friends at hand to fight for me, and because Hank Kildare is utterly fearless, and was determined to bring me here. But the whole town may become aroused, and to-night—— What if Robert Dawson should die!"

      The thought fairly staggered him, for he knew the death of the wounded banker would again inflame the passions of the citizens, and a night raid might be made on the jail.

      "They would stand a good show of forcing their way in here, and then it would be all up with me."

      It was a terrible thing to stand in peril of such a death. Frank felt that he could not die thus; he would live to clear his honor.

      But what could he do? He was helpless, and he could not fight for himself. Must he remain impassive, and let events go on as they might?

      "I do not believe fortune has deserted me," he whispered. "I shall be given a chance to fight for myself."

      It seemed long hours before the sheriff appeared, accompanied by Burchel Jones, the foxy-faced private detective.

      "Has he been disarmed?" cautiously asked Jones, as he peered at the boy through the grating in the door.

      "Yep," replied Kildare, shortly. "Do you think I'm in ther habit o' monkeying with ther prisoners yar?"

      "H'm! Ha! No, no—of course not! But, you see, this fellow is dangerous—very dangerous. He is not to be trusted."

      "Wa'al, he's been mild as

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