In Apache, Arizona, Patrick Livingston, the owner of the Diamond A Ranch, receives a telegram informing him that his wife Mary and daughter Beatrice are arriving on the three o'clock train. Soon after Mary joins her husband, the couple are killed in an Indian attack engineered by Francis Livingston, Patrick's stepbrother. Francis is then awarded custody of Beatrice, over the protests of Jim Raymond, foreman of the Diamond A, who promised Mary that he would take care of the girl. Soon after, a note written by Patrick blaming Francis for his death is brought to the attention of Pat Garrett, the county sheriff. Before Garrett is able to act, however, Francis is killed by Dick Tracey, a notorious outlaw, and Beatrice disappears without a trace. Years later, Edna Sherwood, whose father was recently killed by the Tracey gang, moves from the small family ranch to a friend's home in Phoenix. Looking for employment, Edna answers a newspaper ad for a schoolteacher at the Diamond A
america loves her. america loves m&ms. america loves maya rudolph. mars is saying let s bring them together for good and we will be able to sell more m&ms. so the spokescandies are on hold. is that why at i should take aw? this is what mars is saying, they are in a holding pattern. we will learn in a few weeks. take a look at the timeline that i think gives you the understanding. we are learning about the fate of them in a few weeks. guess what s also in a few weeks? the super bowl is in a few weeks. it s in three weeks. how coincidental that the two of those joinl up together. wow. you are putting the pieces together. i am like a guy in a basement talking into tinfoil. or perhaps like dick tracey at the candy store, okay? i m putting it together. my father was a former aba. he stofld a case at a candy store and i am solving the case of the m&ms. full circle. like father, like son.
A war correspondent who was lured away from the BBC with the bait of a “company horse” and free hunting, Michael Clayton was Horse & Hound's third editor