Ted Strong in Montana - With Lariat and Spur
Taylor, Edward C.
English
We will print you a perfectly bound paperback of your selected title and send it to you at your nominated address
Below is a summary of Ted Strong in Montana - With Lariat and Spur
Ted Strong in Montana
OR
WITH LARIAT AND SPUR
By EDWARD C. TAYLOR
Author of the Ted Strong Stories
1915
CONTENTS
CHAPTER I. THE BIG SNOW.
CHAPTER II. THE LONG TOM RANCH.
CHAPTER III. THE SIGN-CAMP GHOST.
CHAPTER IV. THE BIG COON TREE.
CHAPTER V. THE PHANTOM LINE RIDER.
CHAPTER VI. CAUGHT IN THE ACT.
CHAPTER VII. A NIGHT RAID.
CHAPTER VIII. THE WAR PARTY.
CHAPTER IX. A BATTLE OF QUIRTS.
CHAPTER X. SILVER FACE.
CHAPTER XI. LOST IN THE WILDERNESS.
CHAPTER XII. WHO WHIPPLE WAS.
CHAPTER XIII. AN UNEXPECTED GUEST.
CHAPTER XIV. CHRISTMAS AT BUBBLY WELL.
CHAPTER XV. THE THUGGEE CORD.
CHAPTER XVI. A LETTER FROM THE DEAD.
CHAPTER XVII. BESIEGED.
CHAPTER XVIII. TED SAVES THE HOUSE.
CHAPTER XIX. HELEN MOWBRAY'S WILL.
CHAPTER XX. KNIFE AND FANG.
CHAPTER XXI. 'WARE THE GRAY WOLVES.
CHAPTER XXII. THE WOLFSKIN.
CHAPTER XXIII. BAGGING THE GRAY WOLVES.
CHAPTER XXIV. WHITE FANG LEADS HOME.
CHAPTER XXV. TED'S INDEPENDENCE.
CHAPTER XXVI. A COMPROMISE.
CHAPTER XXVII. THE BEEF ISSUE.
CHAPTER XXVIII. A SLAP ON THE FACE.
CHAPTER XXIX. RUNNING BEAR'S SQUAW.
CHAPTER XXX. "THE WOOFER" APPEARS.
CHAPTER XXXI. SINGING BIRD'S SECRET.
CHAPTER XXXII. A NIGHT CHASE.
CHAPTER XXXIII. THE LOCOED STEER.
CHAPTER XXXIV. THE BOBWHITE'S CALL.
CHAPTER XXXV. A DUEL WITH LARIATS.
CHAPTER XXXVI. THE MOTHER LODE.
CHAPTER I.
THE BIG SNOW.
"We're going to have snow to-night!"
Ted Strong, leader of the broncho boys, was sitting on the back ofSultan, his noble little black stallion, on the ridge of a prairieswell, looking at a lowering sky.
Out of the northwest a chilling wind, damp and raw, was sweepingdull-gray clouds before it.
Ted had addressed his remark to Bud Morgan, his chum and ablelieutenant, who threw a glance at the clouds and grunted.
"I reckon we be," he muttered, "an' I'm free ter say I'm dern sorry terhear it."
"It's hard luck," resumed Ted. "If we had got away a week earlier, orhadn't been held up by the high water at Poplar Fork, we would have beenat the ranch now, and settled for the winter."
"Thar's no telling whar an 'if' won't land yer sometimes. If we hadn'tstarted we wouldn't hev been here at all. But here we aire, an' we'llhev ter git out o' it."
"Think we better push on, or make camp?" asked Ted.
"Got ter make camp fer ther night somewhere," answered Bud. "But I wishtther storm hed held off till ter-morrer this time; we'd hev been within
Back