<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<h1>The Boy Scouts<br/> In the Rockies</h1>
<h2><span class="smcap">By HERBERT CARTER</span></h2>
<h3>THE BOY SCOUTS IN THE ROCKIES.</h3>
<hr />
<h2>CHAPTER I.</h2>
<h3>PERILS OF THE MOUNTAIN TRAIL.</h3>
<p>"How is the cripple crowd coming on these
days? Hello! Step Hen, any more snake bites?
Hope you're not limping with that other leg,
now?"</p>
<p>"I should say not, Thad. But I'm always going
to believe you did a lot to keep the poison from
getting into my system, when you sucked that
wound."</p>
<p>"And how about your game limb, Giraffe—was
it the right, or the left you bruised so badly on the
stones when you fell?"</p>
<p>"The left one, Thad; but thank goodness it's
healing up just prime, now. That magic salve did
the business in great shape, I tell you."</p>
<p>"Allan, I notice that you still have a halt once
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[Page 4]</SPAN></span>
in a while. That old bear trap sure took a nasty
grip on your leg, didn't it, though?"</p>
<p>"It gave me an ugly pinch, Mr. Scout Master;
and only for the fact of the springs being so weak
and rusty that the owners had abandoned the trap,
I might have been lame for three months. The
witch hazel liniment you rubbed on helped a lot."</p>
<p>"Well, I'm glad to see you're all such a grateful
lot, considering the little I was able to do for
you. It's sure a pleasure to be patrol leader and
assistant scoutmaster to such a wide-awake lot of
boys as we have in the Silver Fox Patrol. Don't
you think so, Toby Smathers?"</p>
<p>Thad Brewster turned a smiling face upon the
sole man of the party, a genuine woods-ranger,
such as the Government employs to look after the
great forest reservations in the region of the Rocky
Mountains, and the Coast, away up in the Northwest
region.</p>
<p>"Wall, it strikes me they're a purty lively lot of
scouts, all right; and lucky at that to hev a leader
as leads, and holds the reins tight over 'em. And
I'm glad myself to be guide to such a hefty bunch.
That's what I'm asayin', Mr. Scout Master," the
party addressed replied.</p>
<p>Outside of the guide there were just eight lads
in the party; and from the fact that various parts
of their <SPAN name="attire" id="attire"></SPAN>attire suggested the well known khaki uniform
which all Boy Scouts wear, the world around
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[Page 5]</SPAN></span>
it was evident that these young fellows belonged to
such an organization.</p>
<p>This was the exact fact, since they had come
from far-away Cranford in an Eastern State, and
were known as the Silver Fox Patrol of Cranford
Troop; there being another patrol known as the
Eagles, mustered in during the late winter.</p>
<p>Thad Brewster was the patrol leader; he was also
a First Class Scout, and had qualified for the position
of Assistant Scout Master, receiving his certificate
from Headquarters many moons before.</p>
<p>Second in charge came Allan Hollister, a Maine
boy, who had had considerable actual experience in
wood's life, and to whom the rest of the patrol
naturally turned whenever a knotty problem faced
them during an outing.</p>
<p>The exceedingly fat and good-natured youth was
Bumpus Hawtree, bugler of the troop, even though
just now he was minus the instrument on which
he was accustomed to sound the various calls, such
as "reveille," "assembly," "taps," and so on, the
most popular being the second, as it was usually
associated with meals. Bumpus had been looked
upon as the real tenderfoot scout, up to recently;
but having become lost in the big timber recently, he
had acquitted himself so splendidly, as recorded in
the preceding volume, that his mates now regarded
him as one who had been keeping his light under a
bushel.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Page 6]</SPAN></span>
Then there was Bob White, otherwise Robert
White Quail, a Southern boy, warm of heart, a
faithful friend, and upon whom the leader could
always depend in emergencies; Step Hen Bingham,
whose real name of course was Stephen, but upon
appearing at school for the first time he had insisted
that it was pronounced as though made up of
two syllables; Davy Jones, an athletic lad; Giraffe,
really Conrad, Stedman, but given the significant
nick-name because of a habit he had of stretching
an exceedingly long neck most outrageously; and
last but far from least, a dudish looking boy who
at home answered when they called him Edmund
Maurice Travers Smith; but among his playmates
he was known simply as "Smithy."</p>
<p>These Boy Scouts had seen some pretty lively
times during the past year or so, down in the Blue
Ridge Mountains of North Carolina, where they
visited the former home of Bob White, and found
themselves mixed up with the moonshiners of that
wild, inhospitable region; and later on up in Maine,
where they had gone partly on business for Thad's
adopted father and guardian, and to enjoy an outing,
with a little hunting thrown in.</p>
<p>It happened that here among the pine woods of
Maine, they were instrumental in recovering some
valuable bonds and other papers that had been
stolen from a bank, and for which a large reward
had been offered. With this money in the treasury
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Page 7]</SPAN></span>
of the troop, they were able to lay out a great trip
to the Rocky Mountain region for the following
summer. As the money really belonged to the eight
lads individually, they felt justified in using it in
this manner; for the second patrol had only been
formed after the Cranford boys learned what glorious
times the Silver Foxes were having right along.</p>
<p>One guide who had been hired had gone off with
a party of big-horn hunters, who lured him with
better pay, and the other had been taken down sick;
so it came that the boys actually started toward the
mountains without a convoy, their tents and camp-duffle
being loaded on a couple of comical pack
mules known as Mike and Molly, which animals
afforded more or less amusement and excitement
from time to time.</p>
<p>They had heard of Toby Smathers, and only
good words. In coming to this particular region
they had hoped to run across the ranger, and secure
him for their service while in the valleys and mountains;
for he was said to be patrolling the big timber
country, on which some thieving lumbermen
were suspected of having set envious eyes.</p>
<p>And by great good luck the boys had happened
to meet up with Toby, after passing through a
great variety of thrilling experiences, connected
with the hunt for the tenderfoot who had "gone
out to find his bear." And as the ranger was able
to engage with them for the balance of their stay
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Page 8]</SPAN></span>
in the mountains, Thad and his companions now
felt that they need hesitate no longer, but might
strike boldly into the heart of the Rockies.</p>
<p>They had various objects in wanting to come out
to this far distant region. Several who had the
hunting fever burning in their veins, had sighed
for a glimpse of big game, grizzlies and such;
then another, who was rapidly being taken with
the photographic craze, being Davy Jones, expressed
a wish to snap off wild animals and birds
in their native haunts, the famous big horn sheep
for instance taking one of his amazing plunges over
a precipice; Smithy was interested in wild flowers,
and had heard great stories concerning the pretty
ones that were to be found out here; and then
there were several others who yearned for excitement
in any shape or style, so long as it thrilled
their pulses—which was the natural boy spirit, always
feeding on action.</p>
<p>Some days had passed since the coming of the
guide, and the breaking up of the camp at the foot
of the noisy rapids, where three of the boys had
remained while their companions were off for
days, tracking the wandering Bumpus.</p>
<p>They had started into the mountains, and were
at the time this conversation took place surrounded
by the wildest scenery that any of them had ever
looked upon.</p>
<p>The trail led along precipitous paths, often with
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Page 9]</SPAN></span>
a wall of rock on one side, and a yawning abyss on
the other, down which the boys could look and see
trees growing that seemed to be dwarfed, but which
the guide assured them were of fairly respectable
size.</p>
<p>As a rule the scouts were a rollicking set, full
of jokes, and even playing innocent little tricks
upon each other; but somehow the grandeur of
the scenery, as well as the dangers of that mountain
trail, rather stilled their spirits. Thad had
also taken pains to warn them that practical pranks
would be out of order during their stay in the
mountains. He had heard of several that had
turned out tragedies; and wanted to carry no ill
tidings home to dear old Cranford, when the patrol
set their faces that way.</p>
<p>Step Hen had one trait from which nothing
ever seemed capable of breaking him. He was exceedingly
careless by nature, and forever misplacing
things that belonged to him. And the fun of it
was, that he could never see how the fault lay
with himself; but kept bewailing the misfortune
that always picked him out as a victim; just as
though some invisible little imp were haunting his
footsteps forever, and watching for opportunities
to hide his belongings in the most unheard-of
places. It did not matter that they were usually
found just where Step Hen had himself dropped
them in a moment of absent-mindedness; he would
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Page 10]</SPAN></span>
grumble to himself, and observe his companions
suspiciously, as though he really believed they had
been playing a little joke upon him after all.</p>
<p>Thad had even lain awake nights, figuring on
how the other might be radically cured of this
failing; for Step Hen had many admirable traits
of character, and it seemed a great pity that his
record as a scout should be marred by so tenacious
a fault. But up to the present the scoutmaster had
not been able to build up a scheme that promised to
effect a cure. And every once in a while the complaining
voice of Step Hen might be heard in the
land, wondering "where in Sam Hill that knife
of mine has disappeared to; last time I had it I
was mighty careful to put it away in the sheath;
and now it's gone like magic. Who sneaked it off
me, tell me that? Funny how it's only <i>my</i> things
that disappear all the time. Oh! is that it sticking
up there in the tree, Giraffe? You say you saw me
put it there? Well, I don't remember the least
thing about that. Guess you must have been dreaming;
but of course I'm glad to find it again. I wish
people would use their own knives."</p>
<p>Perhaps, some time or other Step Hen might
be given a lesson that would make so lasting an
impression on him that he would begin to see the
absurdity of being careless. Thad often felt that
he would like to help the good work along, if ever
the chance arrived.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Page 11]</SPAN></span>
Smithy was more than a little curious in his
way. He possessed a kindly nature, too, and had
made friends with Mike, one of the pack mules.
Often in the goodness of his heart the dude scout
would walk alongside the burden bearer, talking to
him, and patting the animal's nose. Sometimes
Mike resented these attentions, for he was only a
mule after all, and all scouts looked alike according
to his manner of thinking.</p>
<p>Smithy was walking there now, having the leading
rope that was connected with Mike in his hand;
in fact, he had wrapped it around his wrist absent-mindedly.
And as he talked confidingly to the
animal, he was also engaged in rubbing Mike's
nose. Twice the mule had plainly given him to
understand that he preferred to be let alone while
staggering along these mountain trails, bearing
that big pack on his sturdy back; but Smithy was
really thinking about some wonderfully beautiful
wild flowers he had seen clinging to the face of a
precipice further back, and wishing he might be
so lucky as to get hold of such a prize; so that he
paid no attention to the impatient thrust from the
mule's nose.</p>
<p>It happened just then that Thad, Allan and the
guide were in the advance. Something engrossed
their attention, and they were holding an earnest
talk-fest among themselves. Had it been otherwise,
Toby Smathers, who knew mule nature like
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Page 12]</SPAN></span>
a book, must surely have warned the kindly Smithy
that Mike was in a most irritable frame of mind,
and that he would do well to leave him severely
alone for the present.</p>
<p>Behind Smithy and Mike came Davy Jones, carrying
his little camera, and looking for new worlds
to conquer. He had snapped off the procession
several times, and of course the mules always occupied
posts of honor in the pictures. Back of him
Bob White and Step Hen were sauntering along,
telling stories, and observing things in general;
after them came Bumpus, puffing and blowing with
the exertion; while Giraffe brought up the rear,
leading the other pack animal, known as Molly;
and just about as full of tricks as Mike ever
dreamed of being.</p>
<p>Thad was in the act of pointing toward the valley,
glimpses of which they could obtain from their
lofty position, when he heard a tremendous outcry
from the rear that gave him a bad shock. Turning
like a flash, the scoutmaster discovered that one of
the patrol was missing. There was no need to ask
who it was, for there he saw Mike, the pack mule,
with his feet pushed out to keep himself from being
pulled over the edge of the shelf of rock; while
the taut rope told that poor Smithy must be dangling
at the other end, with an ugly fall threatening
him if by chance the rope came loose from his
wrist, where he had wrapped it!</p>
<hr />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Page 13]</SPAN></span></p>
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