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<h1>The Boy Scouts<br/>In the Blue Ridge</h1>
OR<br/>
<big>Marooned Among the Moonshiners</big>
<h2>By HERBERT CARTER</h2>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<h2>CHAPTER I.</h2>
<h3>THE HIKE THROUGH THE SMOKY RANGE.</h3>
<p>"<span class="smcap">Did</span> anybody happen to see my knapsack
around?"</p>
<p>"Why, you had it just a few minutes ago, Step
Hen!"</p>
<p>"I know that, Bumpus; and I'd take my affidavy
I laid it down on this rock."</p>
<p>"Well, don't whine so about a little thing like
that, Step Hen; it ain't there now, and that's a fact."</p>
<p>"Somebody's gone and sneaked it on me, that's
what. I'm the unluckiest feller in the whole bunch,
for havin' queer things happen to him. Just can't
lay a single thing I've got down anywhere, but what
it disappears in the most <i>remarkable</i> way you ever
heard of, and bobs up somewhere else! I must be
haunted, I'm beginnin' to believe. Do <i>you</i> know
anything about my knapsack, Giraffe?"</p>
<p>"Never touched your old grub sack, Step Hen;<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[4]</SPAN></span>
so don't you dare accuse me of playing a trick on
you. Sure you didn't hang it up somewhere; I've
known you to do some funny stunts that way;" and
the tall boy called "Giraffe" by his mates, stretched
his long neck in a most ridiculous manner, as he
looked all around.</p>
<p>Eight boys were on a hike through the mountains
of North Carolina. From the fact that they were
all dressed in neat khaki uniforms it was evident
that they must belong to some Boy Scout troop; and
were off on a little excursion. This was exactly the
truth; and they had come a long distance by rail
before striking their present wild surroundings.</p>
<p>Their home town of <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'Granford'">Cranford</ins> was located in a
big Northern State, and all the members of the
Silver Fox Patrol lived there; though several of
them had come to that busy little town from other
sections of the country.</p>
<p>Besides two of those whose conversation has been
noted at the beginning of this chapter there was,
first of all, Thad Brewster, the leader of the patrol,
and when at home acting as scoutmaster in the absence
of the young man who occupied that position,
in order to carry out the rules and principles of the
organization. Thad was a bright lad, and having
belonged to another troop before coming to Cranford,
knew considerably more than most of his fellows
in the patrol.</p>
<p>Next to him, as second in command, was <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'Allen'">Allan</ins><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</SPAN></span>
Hollister, a boy who had been raised to get the
bumps of experience. He had lived for a time up in
the Adirondacks, and also in Maine. When it came
down to showing how things ought to be done according
to the ways of woodsmen, and not by the
book, the boys always looked to <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'Allen'">Allan</ins> for information.</p>
<p>Then there was a slender, rather effeminate, boy,
who seemed very particular about his looks, as
though he feared lest his uniform become soiled, or
the shine on his shoes suffer from the dust of the
mountain road. This was "Smithy." Of course
he had another name when at home or in school—Edmund
Maurice Travers Smith; but no ordinary
boy could bother with such a high-flown appellation
as this; and so "Smithy" it became as soon as he
began to circulate among the lads of Cranford.</p>
<p>Next to him was a dumpy, rollicking sort of a
boy, who seemed so clumsy in his actions that he was
forever stumbling. He had once answered to the
name of Cornelius Jasper Hawtree; but if anybody
called out "Bumpus" he would smile, and answer
to it. Bumpus he must be then to the end of the
story. And as he was musically inclined, possessing
a fine tenor voice, and being able to play on "any
old instrument," as he claimed it was only right that
he assume the duties of bugler to the Cranford
Troop. Bumpus carried the shining bugle at his
side, held by a thick crimson cord; and when he tried<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</SPAN></span>
he could certainly draw the sweetest kind of notes
from its brass throat.</p>
<p>Then there was Davy Jones, a fellow who had a
sinuous body, and seemed to be a born athlete.
Davy could do all sorts of "stunts," and was never
so happy as hanging by his toes from the high
branch of some tree; or turning a double somersault
in the air, always landing on his nimble feet,
like a cat. Davy had one affliction, which often
gave him more or less trouble. He was liable to be
seized with cramps at any time; and these doubled
him up in a knot. He carried some pills given to
him by the family doctor at home, and at such times
one of the other boys usually forced a couple between
his blue lips. But some of the fellows were
beginning to have faint suspicions concerning these
"cramps;" and that the artful Davy always seemed
to be gripped nowadays when there was a prospect
of some extra heavy work at hand.</p>
<p>The last of the eight boys was a dark-haired lad,
with a face that, while handsome, was a little inclined
to be along the order of the proud. Robert
White Quail was a Southern-born boy. He came
from Alabama, but had lived many years in this very
region through which the Silver Fox Patrol was
now hiking. Indeed, it had been at his personal solicitation
that they had finally agreed to take their
outing in climbing the famous Blue Ridge Mountains,
and tasting some of the delights of a genuine<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</SPAN></span>
experience in the wilderness. Among his companions
the Southern lad went by the name of "Bob
White;" and considering what his last name happened
to be, it can be easily understood that nothing
else in the wide world would have answered.</p>
<p>Of course Step Hen had another name, which was
plainly Stephen Bingham. When a mite, going to
school for the first time, on being asked his name by
the teacher, he had spelled it as made up of two distinct
words; and so Step Hen he was bound to be
called by his comrades.</p>
<p>Giraffe also was known in family circles as Conrad
Stedman; but if any boy in Cranford was asked
about such a fellow, the chances were he would
shake his head, and declare that the only one he
knew by the name of Stedman was "Giraffe," For
some time he had gone as "Rubberneck," but this
became so common that the other stuck to him. Giraffe
loved eating. He was also passionately fond
of making fires, so that the others called him the
fire fiend. When Giraffe was around no one else
had the nerve to even think of starting the camp-fire;
though after that had been done, he was willing
they should "tote" the wood to keep it running.</p>
<p>The day was rather warm, even for up in the
mountains, and if the signs told the truth they might
look for a thunder storm before a great while.</p>
<p>As the scouts had no tents along, and were marching
in very light order, they would have to depend<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</SPAN></span>
upon their natural sagacity to carry them through
any emergencies that might arise, either in connection
with the weather, or the food line. But they
knew they could place unlimited dependence on
their leaders; and besides, as Bob White had spent
many years of his young life in this region, he must
know considerable about its resources.</p>
<p>They were now in what is known as the Smoky
Range, a spur of the Blue Ridge Mountains, which
borders on Tennessee. Not a great many miles
away was Asheville, a well-known resort; but few of
the society people frequenting that place had ever
ventured up in these lonely localities; for they did
not have the best reputation possible.</p>
<p>Among these wild peaks dwelt men who, in spite
of the efforts of revenue officers, persisted in defying
the law that put a ban on the making of what has
always been known as "moonshine" whiskey. Occasionally
an arrest might be made; but there was
much danger attached to this thing; and the country
was so rugged, that it would take an army of
United States regulars to clean out the nests of
moonshiners holding forth there.</p>
<p>It would seem as though this might be a rather
strange region for the hike of a Boy Scout patrol;
and had the parents or guardians of the boys known
as much about it as those living in Asheville, they
might have thought twice before granting the lads
permission to come here.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>But it had been partly on the invitation of Bob
White that the expedition had been planned and
mapped out. He seemed to have a strange yearning
to revisit the region that had been his former home;
and when some one proposed that they explore some
of the mysteries of the famous Blue Ridge, Bob
eagerly seconded the motion, in his warm Southern
way. And that was how it started. Once boys get
an idea in their heads, it soon gains weight, just like
a rolling snowball.</p>
<p>And now they were here, with the grim mountains
all around them, silence wrapping them about,
and mystery seeming to fill the very air. But
healthy boys are not easily impressed or daunted by
such things; and they cracked jokes and carried on
as boys will do with the utmost freedom.</p>
<p>The conversation between Step Hen, Bumpus and
Giraffe having attracted the attention of the scoutmaster,
he called out at this juncture:</p>
<p>"Whose knapsack is that you've got strapped on
your back right now, Number Eight?"</p>
<p>A shout went up as Step Hen, quickly turning the
article in question around surveyed it blankly; but
apparently both Bumpus and Giraffe had known of
its presence all the while, though pretending ignorance.</p>
<p>"Who strapped that to my back?" demanded the
owner. "I don't remember doing it, give you my
word for it, fellers. Mighty queer how things always<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</SPAN></span>
happen to <i>me</i>, and nobody else. But anyhow,
I'm ready to continue the march, if the rest of you
are."</p>
<p>Five minutes later, and the boys were straggling
along the rough road that wound in and out, as it
pierced the valleys between the peaks looming up
on either side. There was no attempt at keeping
order on the march, and the boys, while trying to
remain within sight of each other, walked along in
groups or couples.</p>
<p>Giraffe and Bumpus, a strange combination always,
yet very good chums, were at some distance in
the lead. Bringing up the rear were Thad and
Allan, examining some chart of the region, which
Bob White had drawn for them, and talking over
what the plan of campaign should be.</p>
<p>In the midst of this pleasant afternoon quiet there
suddenly arose the piercing notes of the bugle, followed
by a loud and hoarse shout; and looking up
hastily, Thad Brewster was surprised to see Bumpus
wildly waving both his arms. Although he was at
some little distance away, and at the bottom of the
decline, what he shouted came plainly to the ears of
the young scoutmaster, giving him something of a
thrill:</p>
<p>"Hey! come along here, you fellers; Giraffe, he's
got stuck in the crick, up to his knees, and he says
it's quicksand!"</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</SPAN></span></p>
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