A horseman rode slowly out of a draw and up a steep, lava-covered ridge, singing "The Cowboy's Lament," to the disgust of his horse, which suddenly arched its back and stopped the song in the twenty-ninth verse."Dearly Beloved," grinned the rider, after he had quelled the trouble, "yore protest is heeded. 'Th' Lament' ceases, instanter; an' while you crop some of that grass, I'll look around and observe th' scenery, which shore is scrambled. Now, them two buttes over there," leaning forward to look around a clump of brush, "if they ain't twins, I'll eat-"
Leaving BAR-20 and joining the CL Ranch in search of greater adventure, Johnny Nelson finds more than he bargained for when he discovers a valley containing more than two hundred CL cattle that have been stolen by rustlers. Reissue.
"The Man from Bar-20" (1918) is the seventh of Mulford's novels about Hopalong Cassidy.
It was an incident of the Cattle Trail, that most unique and stupendous of all modern migrations, and its founders must have been inspired with a malicious desire to perpetrate a crime against geography, or else they reveled in a perverse ...
Fourth book in the Hopalong Cassidy western series.
Idaho Norton, laughing heartily, backed out of the barroom of Quayle's hotel and trod firmly on the foot of Ward Corwin, sheriff of the county, who was about to pass the door.
Two tired but happy punchers rode into the coast town and dismounted in front of the best hotel.
Novels originally published separately 1921-1922.
A beautiful edition of Clarence E. Mulford's classic Hopalong Cassidy novel.
Fourth book in the Hopalong Cassidy western series.
A horseman rode slowly out of a draw and up a steep, lava-covered ridge, singing "The Cowboy's Lament," to the disgust of his horse, which suddenly arched its back and stopped the song in the twenty-ninth verse.