Regular print version originally published in the U.S. by H. C. Kinsey & Company, Inc.
Summary:
"A dust-covered cowboy read the weather-beaten placard, his fearless gray eyes flaring into a savage glitter. Then he roweled his horse along the trail to Halfway. Happy Day was a stranger in the Powder River section where rustlers stooped to murder and old ranchers were waging a losing fight. He was a marked man when he strolled among the drunken, noisy punchers of Halfway's main street. Ominous silence greeted his arrival at the lunch counter of the Double Eagle Saloon. But Happy Day was no coward. He dared to take a job on the Rocking Chair Ranch where Jack Halliday had been killed. He was not afraid to risk his life driving a thousand head of cattle to summer pasture in another state. In spite of his segundo's frequent hunches -- hunches that always spelled trouble in the form of a dark man -- he dared hell and high water to save that herd."-- Provided by publisher.
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