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diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6833f05 --- /dev/null +++ b/.gitattributes @@ -0,0 +1,3 @@ +* text=auto +*.txt text +*.md text diff --git a/18874-8.txt b/18874-8.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6a58386 --- /dev/null +++ b/18874-8.txt @@ -0,0 +1,8310 @@ +Project Gutenberg's The Boy With the U. S. Foresters, by Francis Rolt-Wheeler + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: The Boy With the U. S. Foresters + +Author: Francis Rolt-Wheeler + +Release Date: July 19, 2006 [EBook #18874] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BOY WITH THE U. S. FORESTERS *** + + + + +Produced by Steven desJardins and Distributed Proofreaders + + + + + +[Illustration: THE GIANTS OF THE FOREST AND THE MEN WHO SAFEGUARD THEM. + +_Photography by U. S. Forest Service._] + +U. S. SERVICE SERIES. + +THE BOY WITH THE U. S. FORESTERS + +BY FRANCIS ROLT-WHEELER + +With Thirty-eight Illustrations from Photographs taken by the U. S. +Forest Service + +BOSTON + +LOTHROP, LEE & SHEPARD CO. + +1910 + + + + +To My Son Roger's Friend + +WILBUR UFFORD + + + + +PREFACE + + +Much of the wilderness is yet but little trod. Great stretches of virgin +forest still remain within whose dim recesses nothing is changed since +the days the Indians dwelt in them. The mystery and the adventure are +not sped, the grandeur and the companionship still pulse among the +glades, the "call of the wild" is an unceasing cry, and to that call the +boy responds. + +But if this impulse to return to the shelter of the wilds be still so +strong, how greatly more intense does it become when we awaken to the +fact that the forest needs our help even more than we need its sense of +freedom. When we perceive that the fate of these great belts of untamed +wilderness lies in the hands of a small group of men whose mastery is +absolute, when first we realize that national benefits--great almost +beyond the believing--are intrusted to these men, surely Desire and +Duty leap to grip hands and pledge themselves to the service of the +forests of our land. To breathe the magnificent spaces of the West, to +reveal the wealth and beauty of our great primeval woods, to acclaim the +worth of the men who administer them, and to show splendid possibilities +to a lad of grit and initiative is the aim and purpose of + +THE AUTHOR. + + + + +CONTENTS + + +CHAPTER I +ENTERING THE SERVICE + +CHAPTER II +PUTTING A STOP TO GUN-PLAY + +CHAPTER III +THE FIGHT IN THE COULEE + +CHAPTER IV +PICKING A LIVELY BRONCHO + +CHAPTER V +A TUSSLE WITH A WILD-CAT + +CHAPTER VI +IN THE HEART OF THE FOREST + +CHAPTER VII +WILBUR IN HIS OWN CAMP + +CHAPTER VIII +DOWNING A GIANT LUMBERJACK + +CHAPTER IX +A HARD FOE TO CONQUER + +CHAPTER X +A FOURTH OF JULY PERIL + +CHAPTER XI +AMIDST A CATTLE STAMPEDE + +CHAPTER XII +ALMOST TRAMPLED TO DEATH + +CHAPTER XIII +HOW THE FOREST WON A GREAT DOCTOR + +CHAPTER XIV +A ROLLING CLOUD OF SMOKE + +CHAPTER XV +THE FOREST ABLAZE + +CHAPTER XVI +IN THE MIDST OF A SEA OF FIRE + + + + + +ILLUSTRATIONS + + +The Giants of the Forest and the Men Who Safeguard Them +A Forest Fire out of Control +Good Forestry Management +Bad Forestry Management +The Tie-cutters' Boys +Deforested and Washed Away +As Bad as Anything in China +How Young Forests are Destroyed +Where Sheep are Allowed +Cowboys at the Round-up +Patrolling a Coyote Fence +Reducing the Wolf Supply +Where Ben and Mickey Burned the Brush +The Cabin of the Old Ranger +Stamping It Government Property +Wilbur's Own Camp +Just about Ready to Shoot +Train-load from One Tree +Wilbur's Own Bridge +Where the Supervisor Stayed +Measuring a Fair-sized Tree +Running a Telephone Line +Nursery for Young Trees +Plantation of Young Trees +Sowing Pine Seed +Planting Young Trees +What Tree-planting Will Do +The First Conservation Expert +Sand Burying a Pear Orchard +No Water, No Forests. No Forests, No Water +With Water! +"That's One Painter Less, Anyhow!" +"Smoke! And How am I Going to Get There?" +"Keep It from Spreading, Boys!" +"Get Busy Now, When It Breaks into the Open!" + + + + + +THE BOY WITH THE U. S. FORESTERS + + +CHAPTER I + +ENTERING THE SERVICE + + +"Hey, Wilbur, where are you headed for?" + +The boy addressed, who had just come through the swing-doors of an +office building in Washington, did not slacken his pace on hearing the +question, but called back over his shoulder: + +"To the forest, of course. Come along, Fred." + +"But--" The second speaker stopped short, and, breaking into a run, +caught up with his friend in a few steps. + +"You certainly seem to be in a mighty big hurry to get there," he said. + +"We don't loaf on our service," answered the boy with an air of pride. + +His friend broke into a broad grin. He had known Wilbur Loyle for some +time, and was well aware of his enthusiastic nature. + +"How long has it been 'our' service?" he queried, emphasizing the +pronoun. + +"Ever since I was appointed," rejoined Wilbur exultantly. + +"I'm glad the appointment has had time to soak in; it didn't take long, +did it?" Wilbur flushed a little, and his chum, seeing this, went on +laughingly: "Don't mind my roasting, old man, only you were 'way up in +the clouds." + +The boy's expression cleared instantaneously, and he laughed in reply. + +"I suppose I was," he said, "but it's great to feel you've got the thing +you've been working for. As you know, Fred, I've been thinking of this +for years; in fact, I've always wanted it, and I've worked hard to get +it. And then the Chief Forester's fine; he's just fine; I liked him ever +so much." + +"Did you have much chance to talk with him?" + +"Yes, quite a lot. I thought I was likely enough to meet him, and p'raps +he would formally tell me I was appointed and then bow me out of the +office. Not a bit of it. He told me all about the Service, showed me +just what there was in it for the country, and I tell you what--he made +me feel that I wanted to go right straight out on the street and get +all the other boys to join." + +"Why?" + +"Well, he showed me that the Forest Service gave a fellow a chance to +make good even better than in the army or the navy. There you have to +follow orders mainly; there's that deadly routine besides, and you don't +get much of a chance to think for yourself; but in the Forest Service a +chap is holding down a place of trust where he has a show to make good +by working it out for himself." + +"Sounds all right," said the older boy. "Anyway, I'm glad if you're +glad." + +"What I like about it," went on Wilbur, "is the bigness of the whole +thing and the chance a chap has to show what he's made of. Glad? You bet +I'm glad!" + +"You weren't so sure whether you were going to like it or not when you +went in to see about it," said Fred. + +"Oh, yes, I was. I knew I was going to like it all right. But I didn't +know anything about where I might be sent or how I would be received." + +"I think it's just ripping," said his friend, "that it looks so good to +you, starting out. It makes a heap of difference, sometimes, how a thing +begins." + +"It surely does. Right now, the whole thing seems too good to be true." + +"Well," said the other, "as long as it strikes you that way I suppose +you're satisfied now for all the grind you did preparing for it. But I +don't believe it would suit me. It might be all right to be a Forest +Ranger, but you told me one time that you had to start in as a Fire +Guard, a sort of Fire Policeman, didn't you?" + +"Sure!" + +"Well, that doesn't sound particularly exciting." + +"Why not? What more excitement do you want than a forest fire! Isn't +that big enough for you?" + +"The fire would be all right," answered the older boy, "but it's the +watching and waiting for it that would get me." + +"You can't expect to have adventures every minute anywhere," said +Wilbur, "but even so, you're not standing on one spot like a sailor in a +crow's nest, waiting for something to happen; you're in the saddle, +riding from point to point all day long, sometimes when there is a +trail and sometimes when there isn't, out in the real woods, not in +poky, stuffy city streets. You know, Fred, I can't stand the city; I +always feel as if I couldn't breathe." + +"All right, Wilbur," said the other, "it's your own lookout, I suppose. +Me for the city, though." + +Just then, and before Fred could make any further reply, a hand was laid +on Wilbur's shoulder, and the lad, looking around, found the Chief +Forester walking beside them. + +"Trying to make converts already, Loyle?" he asked with a smile, nodding +pleasantly to the lad's companion. + +"I was trying to, sir," answered the boy, "but I don't believe Fred +would ever make one of us." + +The Chief Forester restrained all outward trace of amusement at the +lad's unconscious coupling of the head of the service and the newest and +youngest assistant, and, turning to the older boy, said questioningly: + +"Why not, Fred?" + +"I was just saying to Wilbur, sir," he replied in a stolid manner, "that +a Forest Guard's life didn't sound particularly exciting. It might be +all right when a fire came along, but I should think that it would be +pretty dull waiting for it, week after week." + +"Not exciting enough?" The boys were nearly taken off their feet by the +energy of the speaker. "Not when every corner you turn may show you +smoke on the horizon? Not when every morning finds you at a different +part of the forest and you can't get there quick enough to convince +yourself that everything is all right? Not when you plunge down ravines, +thread your way through and over fallen timber, and make up time by a +sharp gallop wherever there's a clearing, knowing that every cabin you +pass is depending for its safety on your care? And then that is only a +small part of the work. If you can't find excitement enough in that, you +can't find it in anything." + +"Yes--" began Fred dubiously, but the Chief Forester continued: + +"And as for the responsibility! I tell you, the forest is the place for +that. We need men there, not machines. On the men in the forest millions +of dollars' worth of property depends. More than that, on the care of +the Forest Guards hangs perhaps the stopping of a forest fire that +otherwise would ravage the countryside, kill the young forest, denude +the hills of soil, choke with mud the rivers that drain the denuded +territory, spoil the navigable harbors, and wreck the prosperity of all +the towns and villages throughout that entire river's length." + +"I hadn't realized there was so much in it," replied Fred, evidently +struck with the Forester's earnestness. + +"You haven't any idea of how much there is in it. Not only for the work +itself, but for you. Wild horses can't drag a man out of the Service +once he's got in. It has a fascination peculiarly its own. The eager +expectancy of vast spaces, the thrill of adventure in riding off to +parts where man seldom treads, and the magnificent independence of the +frontiersman, all these become the threads of which your daily life is +made." + +"It sounds fine when you put it that way, sir," said Fred, his eyes +kindling at the picture. "But it's hardly like that at first, is it?" + +"Certainly it is! Does the life of a fireman in a big city fire +department strike you as being interesting or exciting?" + +"Oh, yes, sir!" + +"It isn't to be compared with that of the Forest Guard. A city fireman +is only one of a company huddled together in a little house, not +greatly busy until the fire telegraph signal rings. But suppose there +were only one fireman for the whole city, that he alone were responsible +for the safety of every house, that instead of telegraphic signaling he +must depend on his trusty horse to carry him to suitable vantage points, +and on his eyesight when there; suppose that he knew there was a +likelihood of fire every hour out of the twenty-four, and that during +the season he could be sure of two or three a week, don't you think that +fireman would have a lively enough time of it?" + +"He surely would," said Wilbur. + +"Aside from the fact that there are not as many people involved, that's +not unlike a Forest Guard's position. I tell you, he's not sitting +around his shack trying to kill time." Then, turning sharply to the +older boy, the Chief Forester continued: + +"What do you want to be?" + +"I had wanted to be a locomotive engineer, sir," was the boy's reply, +"but now I think I'll stay in the city." + +"It was the excitement of the life that appealed to you, was it?" + +"Yes, sir. I guess so." + +"True, there's a good deal of responsibility there, when you stand with +your hand on the throttle of a fast express, knowing that the lives of +the passengers are in your hand. There's a good deal of pride, too, in +steering a vessel through a dangerous channel or in a stormy sea; +there's a thrill of power when you sight a big gun and know that if you +were in warfare the defense of your country might lie in your skill and +aim. But none of these is greater than the sense of power and trust +reposing in the men of the Forest Service, to whom Uncle Sam gives the +guardianship and safe-keeping of millions of acres of his property and +the lives of thousands of his citizens." + +The Chief Forester watched the younger of his companions, who was +striding along the Washington street, and casting rapid glances from +building to building as he went along, as though he expected to see +flame and smoke pouring from every window, and that the city's safety +lay in his hands. Smiling slightly, very slightly, and addressing +himself to the older boy, although it was for the benefit of his new +assistant that he was speaking, the Forester continued: + +"It's really more like the work of a trusted army scout than anything +else. In the old days of Indian warfare,"--both boys gave a quick start +of increased attention--"the very finest men and the most to be trusted +were the scouts. They were men of great bravery, of undaunted loyalty, +of great wariness, and filled with the spirit of dashing adventure. They +were men who took their lives in their own hands. Going before the main +body of the army, single-handed, if need be, they would stave off the +attacks of Indian foes and would do battle with outposts and pickets. If +the force were too great, they would map out the lay of the land and +devise a strategical plan of attack, then, without rest or food often, +would steal back to the main body, and, laying their information in the +hands of the general, would act as guides if he ordered a forward +movement." + +"But how--" interrupted Fred. + +"I was just coming to that," replied the Forester in response to his +half-uttered query. "A Forest Guard is really a Forest Scout. There have +been greater massacres at the hands of the Fire Tribe than from any +Indian tribe that ever roamed the prairies. Hundreds, yes, thousands of +lives were lost in the days before the Forest Service was in existence +by fires which Forest Scouts largely could have prevented. Why, I myself +can recall seeing a fire in which nearly a thousand and a half persons +perished." + +"In one fire?" + +"Just in one fire. What would you think if you were told that in a +forest in front of you were several thousand savages, all with their +war-paint on, waiting a chance to break forth on the villages of the +plain, that you had been chosen for the post of honor in guarding that +strip of plain, and that the lives of those near by depended on your +alertness? If they had picked you out for that difficult and important +post, do you think that you would go and stand your rifle up against a +tree and look for some soft nice mossy bank on which to lie down and go +to sleep?" + +"I'd stay on the job till I dropped," answered Wilbur quickly and +aggressively. + +"There's really very little difference between the two positions," said +the Chief Forester. "No band of painted savages can break forth from a +forest with more appalling fury than can a fire, none is more difficult +to resist, none can carry the possibility of torture to its hapless +victims more cruelly, none be so deaf to cries of mercy as a fire. +Instead of keeping your ears open for a distant war-whoop, you have to +keep your eyes open for the thin up-wreathing curl of smoke by day, or +the red glow and flickering flame at night, which tells that the time +has come for you to show what stuff you are made of. On the instant must +you start for the fire, though it may be miles away, crossing, it may +be, a part of the forest through which no trail has been made, plunging +through streams which under less urgency would make you hesitate to try +them, single-handed and 'all on your own,' to fight Uncle Sam's battles +against his most dangerous and most insistent foe." + +"But if you can't put it out?" suggested Fred. + +"It has got to be put out," came the sharp reply, with an insistence of +manner that told even more than the words. "There isn't anything else to +it. If you have to get back to headquarters or send word there, if all +the Rangers in the forest have to be summoned, if you have to ride to +every settlement, ranch, and shack on the range, yes, if you have to +rouse up half the State, this one thing is sure--the fire has got to be +put out." + +"But can you get help?" + +"Nearly always. In the first place, the danger is mutual and everybody +near the forest or in it will suffer if the fire spreads. In the +second place, the Service is ready to pay men a fair wage for the time +consumed in putting out a fire, and even the Ranger has the right to +employ men to a limited extent. Sometimes the blaze can be stopped +without great difficulty, at other times it will require all the +resources available under the direction of the Forest Supervisor, but in +the first resort it depends largely upon the Guard. A young fellow who +is careless in such a post as that is as great a traitor to his country +as a soldier would be who sold to the enemy the plans of the fort he was +defending, or a sailor who left the wheel while a battle-ship was +threading a narrow and rocky channel." + +"What starts these forest fires, sir?" asked Fred. + +"All sorts of things, but most of them arise from one common +cause--carelessness. There are quite a number of instances in which +fires have been started by lightning, but they are few in number as +compared with those due to human agency. The old tale of fires being +caused by two branches of a dead tree rubbing against each other is, of +course, a fable." + +"But I should think any one would know enough not to start a forest +fire," exclaimed the older boy. "I'm not much on the woods, but I think +I know enough for that." + +"It isn't deliberate, it's careless," repeated the Forester. "Sometimes +a camper leaves a little fire smoldering when he thinks the last spark +is out; sometimes settlers who have to burn over their clearings allow +the blaze to get away from them; when Indians are in the neighborhood +they receive a large share of the blame, and the hated tramp is always +quoted as a factor of mischief. In earlier days, sparks from locomotives +were a constant danger, and although the railroad companies use a great +many precautions now to which formerly they paid no heed, these sparks +and cinders are still a prolific cause of trouble. And beside this +carelessness, there is a good deal of inattention and neglect. The +settlers will let a little fire burn for days unheeded, waiting for a +rain to come along and put it out, whereas if a drought ensues and a +high wind comes up, a fire may arise that will leap through the forest +and leave them homeless, and possibly even their own lives may have to +pay the penalty of their recklessness." + +"But what I don't understand," said Fred, "is how people get caught. +It's easy enough to see how a forest could be destroyed, but I should +think that every one could get out of the way easily enough. It must +take a tree a long while to burn, even after it gets alight, especially +if it's a big one." + +"A big forest fire, fanned by a high wind, and in the dry season," +answered the Chief Forester, "could catch the fastest runner in a few +minutes. The flames repeatedly have been known to overtake horses on the +gallop, and where there are no other means of escape the peril is +extreme." + +"But will green trees burn so fast?" the older boy queried in surprise. +"I should have thought they were so full of sap that they wouldn't burn +at all." + +"The wood and foliage of coniferous trees like spruce, fir, and pine are +so full of turpentine and resin that they burn like tinder. The heat is +almost beyond the power of words to express. The fire does not seem to +burn in a steady manner, the flames just breathe upon an immense tree +and it becomes a blackened skeleton which will burn for hours. + +"The actual temperature in advance of the fire is so terrific that the +woods begin to dry and to release inflammable vapors before the flames +reach them, when they flash up and add their force to the fiery +hurricane. It is almost unbelievable, too, the way a crown-fire will +jump. Huge masses of burning gas will be hurled forth on the wind and +ignite the trees two and three hundred yards distant. Fortunately, fires +of this type are not common, most of the blazes one is likely to +encounter being ground fires, which are principally harmful in that they +destroy the forest floor." + +"But I should have thought," said Wilbur, "that such fires could only +get a strong hold in isolated parts where nobody lives." + +"Not at all. Sometimes they begin quite close to the settlements, like +the destructive fire at Hinckley, Minnesota, in 1894, which burned +quietly for a week, and could have been put out by a couple of men +without any trouble; but sometimes they start in the far recesses of the +forest and reach their full fury very quickly. Of course, every fire, +even the famous Peshtigo fire, started as a little bit of a blaze which +either of you two boys could have put out." + +"How big a fire was that, sir?" asked Fred. + +"It covered an area of over two thousand square miles." + +"Great Cæsar!" ejaculated Wilbur after a rapid calculation, "that would +be a strip twenty miles wide and a hundred miles long." + +The Chief Forester nodded. + +"It wiped the town of Peshtigo entirely off the map," he said. "The +people were hemmed in, ringed by fire on every side, and out of a +population of two thousand, scarcely five hundred escaped. Flight was +hopeless and rescue impossible." + +"And could this have been stopped after it got a hold at all?" asked +Wilbur seriously, realizing the gravity of the conditions that some day +he might have to face. "Could not something have been done?" + +"It could have been prevented," said the Chief Forester fiercely, "and +as I said, in the first few hours either one of you boys could have put +it out. But there have been many others like it since, and probably +there will be many others yet to come. Even now, there are hundreds of +towns and villages near forest lands utterly unprovided with adequate +fire protection. Some of them are near our national forests, and it is +our business to see that no danger comes to them.[1] Think of a fire +like that of Peshtigo, think that if it had been stopped at the very +beginning a thousand and a half lives would have been saved, and then +ask yourself whether the work of a Forest Guard is not just about as +fine a thing as any young fellow can do." + +[Footnote 1: While this volume was in the press, forest fires of the +utmost violence broke out in Idaho, Washington, and Montana. Over two +hundred lives were lost, many of them of members of the Forest Service, +and hundreds of thousands of acres of timber were destroyed.] + +Wilbur turned impulsively to his chum. + +"You'll just have to join us, Fred," he said. "I don't see how any one +that knows anything about it can keep out. You could go to a forestry +school this summer and start right in to get ready for it." + +"I'll think about it," said the older boy. + +The Chief Forester was greatly pleased with the lad's eagerness to +enroll his friend, and, turning to him, continued: + +"I don't want you to think it's all fire-fighting in the forest, though, +Loyle; so I'll give you an idea of some of the other opportunities which +will come your way in forest work. I suppose both of you boys hate a +bully? I know I used to when I was at school." + +"I think," said Wilbur impetuously, "that a bully's just about the worst +ever." + +"I do, too," joined in Fred. + +"Well, you'll have a chance to put down a lot of bullying. You look +surprised, eh? You don't see what bullying has to do with forestry? It +has, a great deal, and I'll show you how. I suppose you know that a +forest is a good deal like a school?" + +"Well, no," admitted Wilbur frankly, "I don't quite see how." + +"A forest is made up of a lot of different kind of trees, isn't it, just +as a school is made up of a lot of boys? And each of these trees has an +individuality, just in the same way that each boy has an individuality. +That, of course, is easy to see. But what is more important, and much +less known, is that just as the school as a whole gets to have a certain +standard, so does the forest as a whole." + +"That seems queer," remarked Fred. + +"Perhaps it does, but it's true none the less. In many schools there are +some boys bigger than others, but who are not good for as much, and +they're always picking at the others and crowding them down. In the +same way in a forest there are always some worthless trees, trying to +crowd out the ones which are of more value. As the trees of better value +are always sought for their timber, that gives the worthless stuff a +good chance to get ahead. One of the duties of a Forester, looking after +his section of the forest, is to see that every possible chance is given +to the good over the bad." + +"It's really like having people to deal with!" cried Fred in surprise. +"It sounds as if a tree were some kind of a human being." + +"There are lots of people," said the Chief Forester, "who think of trees +and speak of trees just exactly as if they were people like themselves. +And it isn't even only the growing of the right kind of trees, but there +are lots of ways of handling them under different conditions and at +different ages. Thus, a Forester must be able to make his trees grow in +height up to a certain stage, then stop their further growth upwards and +make them put on diameter." + +"But how can you get a tree to grow in a certain way?" asked Fred in +utter amazement. + +"Get Loyle here to tell you all about it. I suppose you learned that at +the Ranger School, didn't you?" he added, turning to the younger boy. + +"Yes, sir. We had a very interesting course in silviculture." + +"But just to give you a rough idea, Fred," continued the Forester, "you +know that some trees need a lot of light. Consequently, if a number of +young trees are left fairly close together, they will all grow up +straight as fast as they can, without putting out any branches near the +bottom, and all their growth will be of height." + +"See, Fred," interjected Wilbur, "that's why saplings haven't got any +twigs except just at the top." + +"Just so," said the Forester. "Presently," he continued, "as these young +trees grow up together, one will overtop the rest. If the adjacent small +trees be cut down when this tallest tree has reached a good height, it +will spread at the top in order to get as much sunlight as possible. In +order to carry a large top the diameter of the trunk must increase. So, +by starting the trees close together and allowing one of them to develop +alone after a certain height has been reached, the Forester has +persuaded that tree first to grow straight and high, and then to +develop girth, affording the finest and most valuable kind of lumber. +That's just one small example of the scores of possibilities that lie in +the hands of the expert Forester. By proper handling a forest can be +made to respond to training, as I said, just as a school might do." + +"I can tell you a lot more things, Fred, just as wonderful as that," +commented Wilbur. + +The Chief Forester nodded. + +"I'd like to hear you myself," he said; "I'd rather listen to something +about trees than eat. But I've got to go now. I'll see you again soon, +Loyle," and with a parting good wish to both boys, he crossed the street +and went on his way. + + +[Illustration: A FOREST FIRE OUT OF CONTROL. + +Conditions which tax man's resources to the uttermost, and where peril +is the price of victory. + +_Courtesy of U. S. Forest Service._] + + +[Illustration: GOOD FORESTRY MANAGEMENT. + +All the smaller wood is used for cord-wood, the brush is in piles ready +for burning, and the young trees are left to grow up into a new forest. + +_Photograph by U. S. Forest Service._] + + +[Illustration: BAD FORESTRY MANAGEMENT. + +Forest cut clear and burned over, all the young growth destroyed, and +nothing left except costly replanting. + +_Photograph by U. S. Forest Service._] + + + + +CHAPTER II + +PUTTING A STOP TO GUN-PLAY + + +Wilbur was sitting in the writing-room of the hotel where he was staying +while in Washington, just finishing a letter home telling of his +good-fortune and his appointment, when a bell-boy came to tell him that +his uncle, Mr. Masseth, was downstairs waiting to see him. This uncle +had been a great inspiration to Wilbur, for he was prominent in the +Geological Survey, and had done some wonderful work in the Canyon of the +Colorado. Wilbur hurried down at once. + +"Congratulations!" the geologist said, as soon as the boy appeared. "So +you came through with flying colors, I hear." + +"Every one was just as fine as could be," answered the lad. "But how did +you know about it, uncle?" + +"You wrote me that you were going to call on the Chief Forester to-day, +and so I took the trouble to telephone to one of the men in the office +who would be likely to know the result of your interview." + +"Isn't it bully?" + +"Yes," said the older man with a quiet laugh, "I think it is 'bully,' as +you call it. But I didn't call only to congratulate you; I thought +perhaps you would like to come with me to-night and meet some of the men +in the Forest Service who are really doing things out West. If you do, +there's no time to waste." + +"You bet I do," the boy replied hastily. "But what is it all about?" + +"It's a lecture on forestry in China, but it happens to come at the same +time as a meeting of the District Foresters, so they're all in town. +Trot along upstairs and get your hat, and we can talk about it on the +way." + +The geologist sauntered over to an acquaintance who was standing in the +hotel lobby near by, but he had hardly exchanged half a dozen sentences +with him when Wilbur reappeared, ready to go. + +"You see," said Masseth as they left the hotel, "it is a good plan for +you to meet as many of the leaders of your profession as you can, not +only because their friendship may be useful to you, nor yet only because +they are all pleasant fellows, but because forestry is a profession, a +very large and complex one, and it is a revelation sometimes to see what +can be made of it. I know myself, whenever I meet a great geologist I +always feel a little better to think I can say, 'I am a geologist, too.' +So you, I hope, may be able to say some day, 'I am a Forester, too.'" + +"I'm one now," said Wilbur elatedly. + +"You're not, you're only a cub yet," corrected his uncle sharply; "don't +let your enthusiasm run away with your good sense. You are no more a +Forester yet than a railroad bill-clerk is a transportation expert." + +"All right, uncle," said Wilbur, "I'll swallow my medicine and take that +all back. I'm not even the ghost of a Forester--yet." + +"You will meet the real article to-night. As I told you, the District +Foresters are East for a conference, and this lecture is given before +the Forestry Association. So you will have a good chance of sizing up +the sort of men you are likely to be with." + +"Will the Forest Supervisors be there, too?" + +"I should imagine not. There may be one or two in town. But the +Supervisors alone would make quite a gathering if they were all here. +There are over a hundred, are there not? You ought to know." + +"Just a hundred and forty-one now--about one to each forest." + +"And there are only six District Foresters?" + +"Yes. One is in Montana, one in Colorado, one in New Mexico, one in +Utah, one in California, and one in Oregon. And they have under their +charge, so I learned to-day, nearly two hundred million acres of land, +or, in other words, territory larger than the whole state of Texas and +five times as large as England and Wales." + +"I had forgotten the figures," said the geologist. "That gives each +District Forester a little piece of land about the size of England to +look after. And they can tell you, most of them, on almost every square +mile of that region, approximately how much marketable standing timber +may be found there, what kinds of trees are most abundant, and in what +proportion, and roughly, how many feet of lumber can be cut to the acre. +It's always been wonderful to me. That sort of thing takes learning, +though, and you've got to dig, Wilbur, if you want to be a District +Forester some day." + +"I'm going to get there some day, all right." + +"If you try hard enough, you may. By the way, there's one of them going +in now. That's the house, on the other side of the Circle." + +The boy looked across the curve and scanned all the men going in the +same direction, quite with a feeling of companionship. One of the men +who overtook and passed them, giving a hearty greeting to Masseth as he +went by, was Roger Doughty, a young fellow who had distinguished himself +in the Geological Survey, having taken a trip from south to north of +Alaska, and Wilbur's companion felt a twinge of regret that his nephew +had not entered his own service. + +Wilbur, however, was always a "woods" boy, and even in his early +childish days had been possessed with a desire to camp out. He had read +every book he could lay hands on that dealt with "the great outdoors," +and would ten thousand times over rather have been Daniel Boone than +George Washington. Seeing his intense pleasure in that life, his father +had always allowed him to go off into the wilds for his holidays, and in +consequence he knew many little tricks of woodcraft and how to make +himself comfortable when the weather was bad. His father, who was a +lawyer, had wanted him to enter that profession, but Wilbur had been so +sure of his own mind, and was so persistent that at his request he had +been permitted to go to the Colorado Ranger School. From this he had +returned even more enthusiastic than before, and Masseth, seeing that by +temperament Wilbur was especially fitted for the Forest Service, had +urged the boy's father to allow him to enter for it, and did not attempt +to conceal his satisfaction with Wilbur's success. + +"Why, Masseth, how did you get hold of Loyle?" asked the Chief Forester +as the two came up the walk together. + +"Didn't you know he was my nephew?" was the surprised reply. + +"No," answered their host as they paused on the threshold, "he never +said anything to me about it." + +The geologist looked inquiringly at his young relative. + +"I thought," said Wilbur, coloring, "that if I said anything about +knowing you, before I was appointed, it would look as though I had done +it to get a pull. I didn't think it would do me any good, anyhow; and +even if it had, I felt that I'd rather not get anything that way." + +"It wouldn't have helped you a bit," said the Chief Forester, "and, as +you see, you did not need it. I'm glad, too, that you did not mention it +at the time." He nodded his appreciation of the boy's position as they +passed into the room beyond. + +The place was thoroughly typical of the gathering and the occasion. The +walls were hung with some magnificent trophies, elk and moose heads, one +stuffed fish of huge size was framed beside the door, and there were +numberless photographs of trees and forests, cross-sections of woods, +and comparisons of leaves and seeds. Although in the heart of +Washington, there was a breath and fragrance in the room, which, to the +boy, seemed like old times in the woods. The men, too, that were +gathered there showed themselves to be what they were--men who knew the +great wide world and loved it. Every man seemed hearty in manner and +thoroughly interested in whatever was going on. + +Masseth was called away, soon after they entered the room, and Wilbur, +left to himself, sauntered about among the groups of talkers, looking at +the various trophies hung on the walls. As he drew near to one of the +smaller groups, however, he caught the word "gun-play," so he edged up +to the men and listened. One of them, seeing the lad, moved slightly to +one side as an unspoken invitation to be one of them, and Wilbur stepped +up. + +The man who was speaking was comparing the present peaceful +administration of the forests with the conditions that used to exist +years ago, before the Service had been established, and when the Western +"bad man" was at the summit of his power. + +"It was during the cattle and sheep war that a fellow had to be pretty +quick on the draw," said one. + +"The Service had a good enough man for that, all right," suggested +another member of the same group, "there wasn't any of them who could +pull a bead quicker than our grazing Chief yonder." Wilbur turned and +saw crossing the room a quiet-looking, spare man, light-complexioned, +and apparently entirely inoffensive. "I guess they were ready enough to +give him a wide berth when it came to gun-play." + +"Talking about the cattle war," said the first speaker, "the worst +trouble I ever had, or rather, the one that I hated to go into most, was +back in those days. I was on the old Plum Creek Timber Land Reserve, +now a portion of the Pike National Forest. A timber trespass sometimes +leads to a very pretty scrap, and a cattle mix-up usually spells 'War' +with a capital 'W,' but this had both." + +"You get them that way sometimes," said a middle-aged, red-headed man, +who was standing by. + +"Had some down your way, too, I reckon?" + +"Plenty of 'em. But go ahead with the yarn." + +"Well, this bunch that I'm speaking of had skipped out from Montana; +they were 'wanted' there, and they had come down and started cutting +railroad ties in a secluded canyon forming one of the branches of West +Plum Creek. They were hated good and plenty, these same tie-cutters, +because they had a reputation of being too handy with their guns, and +consequently causing a decrease in the calf crop. The cattlemen used to +drop in on them every once in a while, but the tie-cutters were foxy, +and they were never caught with the goods. Of course, there was a moral +certainty that they weren't buying meat, but nothing could be proved +against them, and the interchanges of compliments, while lively and +picturesque enough, never took the form of lead, although it was +expected every time they met." + +"Had this been going on long?" + +"Several months, I reckon," answered the former Ranger, "before I heard +of it. This was just before that section of the country was taken over +by the Forest Service. As soon as notice was given that the district in +question was to be placed under government regulations, a deputation to +the tie-cutters loped down on their cow-ponies to convey the cheerful +news. Expressing, of course, the profoundest sympathy for them, the +spokesman of the cattle group volunteered the information that they +could wrap up their axes in tissue paper, tie pink ribbons on their +rifles and go home, because any one caught cutting timber on the +reserve, now that it was a reserve, would go to the Pen for fifteen +years." + +"What a bluff!" + +"Bluff it certainly was. It didn't work, either. One of the tie-cutters +in reply suggested that the cowmen should go back and devote their time +to buying Navajo saddle-blankets and silver-mounted sombreros, since +ornamenting the landscape was all they had to do in life; another +replied that if a government inspector ever set eyes on their cattle +he'd drive them off the range as a disgrace to the State; and a third +capped the replies with the terse answer that no ten United States +officers and no hundred and ten cattlemen could take them out alive." + +"That wouldn't make the cow-camp feel happy a whole lot," remarked the +red-headed man. + +"There wasn't any shooting, though, as I said before, though just how it +kept off I never rightly could understand. At all events they fixed it +so that we heard of it in a hurry. Then both sides awaited developments. +The tie-cutters kept their hands off the cattle for a while, and the +cowmen had no special business with railroad ties, so that, aside from +snorting at each other, no special harm was done. + +"But, of course, the timber trespass question had to be investigated, +and the Supervisor, who was then located at Colorado Springs, arranged +to make the trip with me to the tie-cutters' camp from a small station +about fifty miles north of the Springs. I met him at the station as +prearranged. We were just about to start when a telegram was handed him +calling him to another part of the forest in a hurry." + +"Tough luck," said one of the listeners. + +"It surely was--for me," commented the narrator. "The camp to which we +had intended going was twenty-six miles into the mountains, and going up +there alone didn't appeal to me a little bit. However, the Supervisor +told me to start right out, to get an idea of how much timber had been +cut, and in what kind of shape the ground had been left, and in short, +to 'nose around a little,' as he put it himself." + +"That was hardly playing the game, sending you up there alone," said one +of the men. + +"I thought at the time that it wasn't, but what could he do? The matter +had to be investigated, and he had been sent for and couldn't come with +me. But he was considerate enough, strongly urging me not to get killed, +'as Rangers were scarce.'" + +"That was considerate!" + +"Yes, wasn't it? But early the next morning I started for the canyon +where the outlaws were said to be in hiding. The riding was fair, so I +made good time on the trail and got to the entrance of the canyon about +the middle of the day. A few hundred feet from the fork of the stream I +came to a little log cabin, occupied by a miner and his family. I took +lunch with them and told them my errand. Both the man and his wife +begged me not to go up to the camp alone, as they had heard the +tie-cutters threaten to kill at sight any stranger found on their land." + +"Why didn't you propose that the miner should go up to the camp with +you?" + +"I did. But he remarked that up to date he had succeeded in keeping out +of the cattlemen-lumbermen trouble, and that he was going to keep right +along keeping out. He suggested that if there was going to be any +funeral in the immediate vicinity he wasn't hankering to take any more +prominent part than that of a mourner, and that the title-rôle of such a +performance wasn't any matter of envy with him. However, I succeeded in +persuading him to come part of the way with me, and secured his promise +that he would listen for any shooting, and if I should happen to resign +involuntarily from the Service by the argument of a bullet, that he +would volunteer as a witness in the case." + +"I don't altogether blame him, you know," said the red-headed man; "you +said he had a wife there, and interfering with other folks' doings isn't +healthy." + +"I didn't blame him either," said the first speaker, "but I would have +liked to have him along. A little farther up the canyon I came to a +recently built log cabin, covered with earth. An old man stood at the +door and I greeted him cheerily. We had a moment's chat, and then I +asked him the way to the cabin where the tie-cutters lived. Judge of my +surprise when he told me this was their cabin, and that they lived with +him. By the time I had secured this much information the two younger men +had come out, and one of them, Tom, wanted to know what I was after. I +stated my business, briefly. There was a pause. + +"'Ye 'low as ye're agoin' to jedge them ties,' he said slowly. 'Wa'al I +'low we'll sort 'er go along. Thar's a heap o' fow-el in these yar +parts, stranger, an' I 'low I'll take a gun.' + +"The other brother, who seemed more taciturn, turned and nodded to two +youngsters who had come out of the cabin while Tom was speaking. The +elder of the two, a boy about thirteen years old, went into the shack +and returned in a moment bringing out two rifles. I turned the broncho's +head up the trail, but Tom interposed. + +"'I 'low,' he said, 'that ye'll hev ter leave yer horse-critter right +hyar; thar ain't much of er trail up the mount'n.' + +"I wasn't particularly anxious to get separated from my horse, and that +cabin was just about the last place I would have chosen to leave him; +but there was no help for it, and as I would have to dismount anyway to +get into the timber, I slipped out of the saddle and put the hobbles on. +But when we came to start, the two men wanted me to go first. I balked +at that. I told them that I wasn't in the habit of walking up a mountain +trail in front of two men with guns, and that they would have to go +first and show the way. They grumbled, but, seeing that I meant it, they +turned and silently walked up the mountainside ahead of me. + +"They stopped at an old prospect shaft that was filled to the brim with +water, and wanted me to come close to the hole and look at it, telling +me some cock-and-bull story about it, and calling my attention to some +supposed outcrop of rich ore that could be seen under the water. But I +refused flatly to go a step nearer than I then was, telling them that I +wished to get to those ties immediately. + +"At an old cabin they halted again, and Tom wanted to know which was +'the best shot in the bunch.' I was not in favor of trying guns or +anything of that sort, especially when there seemed no reason for it, +knowing how easy it would be for a shot to go wide, and so I urged them +to lead on to the ties. But Tom insisted upon shooting, and though his +brother did not seem quite to follow the other's plans, still he chimed +in with him, and the only thing I could do was to agree with what grace +I could. But I decided to make this a pretext for disposing of some of +their superfluous ammunition. + +"Pulling my six-shooter, I told Jim to put an old sardine can, that was +lying on the ground near by, on the stump of a tree about twenty-five or +thirty yards distant. Then I told him to lean his rifle against the +cabin while placing the can on the tree. This he did. I stepped over to +the cabin and took the gun as though to look after it. Then I walked +over to where Tom stood, telling him to blaze away at the can on the +tree. While he was doing so I slipped the cartridges out of Jim's gun +and put them in my pocket. + +"By the time that Tom had fired three shots Jim came up and I told the +former to hand over the rifle and let his brother try. Quite readily he +did so. Of course, there were only two cartridges left in the gun, for +it was a half-magazine, but Jim expected to take the third shot with his +own rifle. When he had fired twice, however, and reached out his hand +for the other gun, I handed it to him with the remark that it was empty. +For a minute or two things looked black, because both men saw that they +had been tricked. But I had the drop on them, and since they were both +disarmed I felt considerably easier." + +"How did it end up?" asked the red-haired listener. + +"It was easy enough after that, as long as I didn't turn my back to them +or let either get too near. We went together and counted the ties, +returning to the cabin where I had left my horse. When the tie-cutters +found, however, that the cattlemen had deliberately exaggerated the +penalty for timber trespass in the hope that they would resist and thus +get themselves into serious trouble with the government, their anger was +diverted from me. By joining in with them in a sweeping denunciation of +the cow-camp, and by pointing out that no harsh measures were intended +against them, they came to look on me as friend instead of foe." + +"What was done about the trespass?" + +"It was pretty early in the days of the Service, and, as you remember, +we let them down easily at first so that no undue amount of friction +should be caused. I think some small fine, purely nominal, was exacted, +and the tie-cutters got into harmonious relations with the Supervisor +later. But those same boys told me, just as I was starting for home, +that they intended to drop me in that old prospect shaft, or, failing +that, to pump me full of holes." + +The speaker had hardly finished when a scattering of groups and an +unfolding of chairs took place and the lecturer for the evening was +announced. He won Wilbur's heart at once by an appreciative story of a +young Chinese boy, a civil service student in his native province, who +had accompanied him on a portion of his trip through China in order to +learn what might be done toward the improvement of his country. + +"He was a bright lad, this Fo-Ho," said the lecturer, "and it was very +largely owing to him that I extended my trip a little and went to +Fou-Ping. I visited Fo-Ho's family home, where the graves of his +ancestors were--you know how powerful ancestor-worship still is in +China. Such a scene of desolation I never saw, and, I tell you, I was +sorry for the boy. There was the town that had been his father's home +deserted and in ruins. + +"Two hundred years before, in this same place now so thickly strewn with +ruins, there had been no one living, and the mountains were accounted +impassable because of the dense forests. But in 1708 a Mongol horde +under a powerful chieftain settled in the valley, and the timber began +to be cut recklessly. Attracted by the fame of this chieftain, other +tribes poured down into these valleys, until by 1720 several hundred +thousand persons were living where thirty years before not a soul was to +be seen. The cold winters of Mongolia drew heavily upon the fuel +resources of the adjacent forests, and a disastrous fire stripped +hundreds of square miles. Farther and farther afield the inhabitants had +to go for fuel, until every stick which would burn had been swept clear; +bleaker and more barren grew the vicinity, until at last the tribes had +to decamp, and what was once a dense forest and next a smiling valley +has become a hideous desert which even the vultures have forsaken." + +Masseth leaned over toward Wilbur and whispered: + +"You don't have to go as far away as China. There are some terrible +cases of deforestation right here in the United States." + +The lecturer then launched into a description of the once great forests +of China, and quoted the words of writers less than three centuries ago +who depicted the great Buddhist monasteries hid deep in the heart of +densely wooded regions. Then, with this realization of heavily forested +areas in mind, there was flashed upon the screen picture after picture +of desolation. Cities, once prosperous, were shown abandoned because the +mountains near by had become deforested. Man could not live there +because food could not grow without soil, and all the soil had been +washed away from the slopes. The streams, once navigable, were choked up +with the silt that had washed down. When rains came they acted as +torrents, since there was no vegetation to hold the water and the lower +levels became flooded. + +"Nature made the world a garden," said the speaker, "and man is making +it a desert. Our children and our children's children for countless +generations are to enjoy the gardens we leave, or bewail the deserts +we create." + +Startling, too, was the manner in which the lecturer showed the unhappy +fate of countries which an unthinking civilization had despoiled. The +hills and valleys where grew the famous cedars of Lebanon are almost +treeless now, and Palestine, once so luxuriant, is bare and lonely. +Great cities flourished upon the banks of the Tigris and Euphrates where +were the hanging gardens of Babylon and the great hunting parks of +Nineveh, yet now the river runs silently between muddy banks, infertile +and deserted, save for a passing nomad tribe. The woods of ancient +Greece are not less ruined than her temples; the forests of Dalmatia +whence came the timber that built the navies of the ancient world are +now barren plateaus, shelterless and waste; and throughout a large part +of southern Europe and northern Africa, man has transformed the smile of +nature into a mask of inflexible severity. + +"But," said Wilbur, turning excitedly to his uncle, as soon as the +lecturer had closed, "isn't there anything that can be done to make +those places what they were before?" + +"Not often, if it is allowed to go too far," said the geologist. "It +takes time, of course, for all the soil to be washed away. But wherever +the naked rock is exposed the case is hopeless. You can't grow anything, +even cactus, on a rock. Lichens, of course, may begin, but hundreds of +thousands of years are required to make soil anew." + +"But if it's taken in time?" + +"Then you can reforest by planting. But that's slow and costly. It +requires millions of dollars to replant a stretch of forest which would +have renewed itself just by a little careful lumbering, for Nature is +only too ready to do the work for nothing if given a fair chance." + +By this time the gathering had broken up in large part and a number of +those who had come only to hear the lecture had gone. Some of the Forest +Service men, however, were passing through the corridors to the +dining-room. At the door Wilbur paused hesitatingly. He had not been +invited to stay, but at the same time he felt that he could hardly leave +without thanking his uncle, who at the time was strolling toward the +other portion of the house, deeply engrossed in conversation. In this +quandary the Chief Forester, all unknown to the lad, saw his +embarrassment, and with the quick intuition so characteristic of the +man, divined the cause. + +"Come along, Loyle, come along in," he said, "you're one of us now." + +Wilbur, with a grateful look, passed on into the reception-room. A +moment later he heard his name called, and, turning, came face to face +with a tall young fellow, bronzed and decisive looking. + +"My name's Nally," he said, "and I hear you're going to one of my +forests. Mr. Masseth was telling me that you're his nephew. I guess +we'll start right in by having our first feed together. This is hardly +camping out," he added, looking around the well-appointed and handsome +room, "but the grub shows that it's the Service all right." + +The District Forester motioned to the table which was heaped with dozens +upon dozens of baked apples, flanked by several tall pitchers of milk. + +"There you have it," he continued, "back to nature and the simple life. +It's all right to go through a Ranger School and to satisfy the powers +that be about your fitness, but that isn't really getting to the inside +of the matter. It's when you feel that you've had the chance to come +right in and take the regular prescribed ritual of a baked apple and a +glass of milk in the house of the Chief Forester that you can feel +you're the real thing in the Service." + + +[Illustration: THE TIE-CUTTERS' BOYS. + +Two young members of the outlaw gang which defied the cattle man and +threatened the Forest Service. + +_Photograph by U. S. Forest Service._] + + +[Illustration: DEFORESTED AND WASHED AWAY. + +Example of laborious artificial terracing in China to save the little +soil remaining. + +_Courtesy of U. S. Forest Service._] + + +[Illustration: AS BAD AS ANYTHING IN CHINA. + +Final results of deforestation in Tennessee, due to cutting and to fumes +from a copper smelter. + +_Photograph by U. S. Forest Service._] + + + + +CHAPTER III + +THE FIGHT IN THE COULEE + + +When, a few days later, Wilbur found himself standing on the platform of +the little station at Sumber, with the cactus-clad Mohave desert about +him and the slopes of the Sierra Nevada beyond, he first truly realized +that his new life was beginning. His journey out from Washington had +been full of interest because the District Forester had accompanied him +the greater part of the way, and had taken the opportunity to explain +how varied were the conditions that he would find in the Sequoia forest +to which he had been assigned. In large measure the District Forester's +especial interest, Wilbur realized, was due to the fact that Masseth had +told him of the boy's intention to go to college and thence through the +Yale Forestry School, having had beforehand training as Guard, and +possibly later as Ranger. + +But, as the train pulled out of the station, and Wilbur looked over the +sage-brush and sparse grass, seeming to dance under the shimmering +heat-waves of the afternoon sun, he suddenly became conscious that the +world seemed very large and that everything he knew was very far away. +The strange sense of doubt as to whether he were really himself, a +curious feeling that the desert often induces, swept over him, and he +was only too ready to enter into conversation when a small, wiry man, +with black hair and quick, alert eyes, came up to him with the rolling +walk that betokens a life spent in the saddle, and said easily: + +"Howdy, pard!" + +The boy returned a friendly "Good-afternoon," and waited for the +stranger to continue. + +"She looks some as if you was the whole pack on this deal," was the next +remark. + +"Well," replied Wilbur, looking at him quizzically, "I wasn't conscious +of being crowded here." + +The range-rider followed the boy's glance around the immediate +neighborhood, noting the station agent and the two or three figures in +front of the general store, who formed the sum of the visible +population, and nodded. + +"Bein' the star performer, then," he went on, "it might be a safe bet +that you was sort of prospectin' for the Double Bar J." + +"That was the name of the ranch," said the boy. "I was told to go there +and get a couple of ponies." + +"An' how was you figurin' on gettin' to the ranch? Walkin'?" + +"Not if I could help it. And that," he added, pointing to the desert, "I +should think would be mean stuff to walk on." + +"Mean she is," commented Wilbur's new acquaintance, "but even s'posin' +that you did scare up a pony, how did you dope it out that you would hit +up the right trail? This here country is plumb tricky. And the trail +sort of takes a nap every once in a while and forgets to show up." + +"I didn't expect to find my way alone," said the boy. "If nobody had +been here, I'd have found somebody to show me--" + +"Hold hard," said the cowboy, interrupting, "till I look over that +layout. If you hadn't ha' found anybody, you'd ha' found somebody? +Shuffle 'em up a bit, pard, and try a new deal." + +"But," continued Wilbur, not paying any attention to the interruption, +"I fully expected that some one from the ranch would be here to meet +me." + +"If all your conjectoors comes as near bein' accurate as that same," +said the other, "you c'd set up as a prophet and never call the turn +wrong. Which I'm some attached to the ranch myself." + +"I thought you were, probably," said Wilbur, "and I'm much obliged to +you, if you came to meet me." + +"That's all right! But if you're ready, maybe we'd better start +interviewin' the scenery on the trail. How about chuck?" + +"Thanks," said the boy, "I had dinner on the car." + +"An' you're thirsty none?" + +"Not especially. But," he added, not wishing to offend his companion, +"if you are, go ahead." + +"Well, if you don't mind," began the other, then he checked himself. "I +guess I c'n keep from dyin' of a cracked throat until we get there," he +added. "C'n you ride?" + +"Yes!" said Wilbur decisively. + +The cowboy turned half round to look at him with a dubious smile. + +"You surely answers that a heap sudden," he said. "An' I opine that's +some risky as a general play." + +"Why?" asked the boy. + +"Bein' too sure in three-card Monte has been a most disappointin' +experience to many a gent, an' has been most condoocive to transfers of +ready cash." + +"But that's just guessing," said Wilbur. "I'm talking of what I know." + +"Like enough you never heard about Quick-Finger Joe?" queried the +cowboy. "Over-confidence hastens his exit quite some." + +"No," answered Wilbur quickly, scenting a story, "I never even heard of +him. Who was he?" + +"This same Joe," began the range-rider, "is a tow-haired specimen whose +manly form decorates the streets of this here metropolis of Sumber that +you've been admirin'. He has the name of bein' the most agile +proposition on a trigger that ever shot the spots off a ten o' clubs. He +makes good his reputation a couple of times, and then gets severely left +alone. To him, one day, while he is standin' takin' a little +refreshment, comes up a peaceful and inoffensive-lookin' stranger, who +has drifted into town promiscuous-like in the course of the afternoon. +He addresses Joe some like this: + +"'Which I hears with profound admiration that you're some frolicsome +and speedy on gun-play?' + +"Joe, tryin' to hide his blushes, admits that his hand can amble for his +hip right smart. Whereupon the amiable-appearin' gent makes some sort of +comment, just what no one ever knew, but it seems tolerable superfluous +an' sarcastic, an' instantaneous there's two shots. When the smoke +clears away a little, Joe is observed to be occupyin' a horizontal +position on the floor and showin' a pronounced indisposition to move. +The stranger casually remarks: + +"'Gents, this round's on me. I shore hates to disturb your peaceful +converse on a balmy evenin' like this yere in a manner so abrupt an' +sudden-like. But he had to get his, some time, an' somebody's +meditations would hev to be disturbed. This hyar varmint, gents, what is +now an unopposed candidate for a funeral pow-wow, was a little too +previous with his gun agin my younger brother. It's a case of plain +justice, gents; my brother was without weapons, and he--' pointing to +the figure on the floor, 'he knew it. Line up, gents, and give it a +name!'" + +"What did they do to the stranger?" asked Wilbur eagerly, divided +between admiration of the quickness of the action and consternation at +the gravity of the result. + +"They compliments him some on the celerity of his shootin', and feels a +heap relieved by Joe's perpetual absence. An' the moral o' this little +tale is that you're hittin' a fast clip for trouble when you go around +prompt and aggressive to announce your own virtoos. I'm not advancin' +any criticism as to your shinin' talents in the way of ridin', pard, but +you haven't been long enough in this here vale of tears to be what you +might call experienced." + +"I've ridden a whole lot," said Wilbur, who was touchy on the point and +proud of his horsemanship, "and while I don't say that there isn't a +horse I can't ride, I can say that I've never seen one yet. I started in +to ride pretty nearly as soon as I started to walk." + +"I don't want to mar your confidence none," replied the cowboy, "an' I +likes a game sport who'll bet his hand to the limit, though I generally +drops my stake on the other side. But if some mornin' you sh'd find the +ground rearin' up and hittin' you mighty sudden, don't forget that I +gave you a plain steer. Here's your cayuse." + +Wilbur had been a little disappointed that the cowboy should not have +shown up as ornamentally as he had expected, not wearing goatskin +"chaps" or rattlesnake hatbands, and not even having a gorgeous +saddle-blanket on his pony, but the boy felt partly rewarded when he saw +him just put his toe in the stirrup and seem to float into the saddle. +The pony commenced dancing about in the most erratic way, but Wilbur +noted that his companion seemed entirely unaware that the horse was not +standing still, although his antics would have unseated any rider that +the boy previously had seen. He was conscious, moreover, that his climb +into his own saddle was very different from that which he had witnessed, +but he really was a good rider for a boy, and felt quite at home as soon +as they broke into the loping canter of the cow-pony. + +"I understood," said Wilbur as they rode along, "that I should meet the +Ranger at the ranch. His name was given to me as Rifle-Eye Bill, because +I was told he had been a famous hunter before he joined the Service. I +thought at first you might be the Ranger, but he was described to me as +being very tall." + +"Which he does look some like a Sahaura cactus on the Arizona deserts," +said the range-rider, "an' I surely favor him none. But that mistake of +yours naterally brings it to me that I haven't what you might say +introdooced myself. Which my baptismal handle is more interestin' than +useful, an' I lays it by. So I'll just hand you the title under which I +usually trots, bein' 'Bob-Cat Bob,' ridin' for the Double Bar J." + +"Not having risen to any later title," said Wilbur good-humoredly, "I've +got to be satisfied with the one I started with. I'm generally called +Wilbur." + +"Which is sure unfamiliar to me. I opine it's a new brand on the range." +He flourished his sombrero in salute, so that his pony bucked twice and +then tried to bolt. Wilbur watched and envied him the absolute ease with +which he brought down the broncho to a quiet lope again. + +"I'm going to join the Forest Service," the boy explained, knowing that +according to the etiquette of the West no question would be asked about +his business, but that he would be expected to volunteer some statement, +"and my idea in coming to the ranch was to pick up a couple of horses +and go on to the forest with the Ranger. I understand the Supervisor, +Mr. Merritt, is very busy with some timber sales, and I didn't know +whether the Ranger would be able to get away." + +"I kind o' thought you might be headed for the Forest Service, since you +was goin' along with Rifle-Eye," said the cowboy. "An' if you're goin' +with him, you'll be all right." + +"The Service looks pretty good to me," said Wilbur. + +"I've no kick comin' agin the National Forests," said Bob-Cat, "we've +always been treated white enough. Of course, there's always some +soreheads who want to stampede the range and gets peevish when they're +balked, but I guess the Service is a good thing all round. It don't +appeal none to me, o' course. If I held all the cards, I'd rip down +every piece of barbed wire west of the Mississippi, let the sheepmen go +to the ranges beside the canals o' Mars or some other ekally distant +region, an' git back to the good old days o' the Jones 'n' Plummer +trail. But then, I sure enough realize that I'm not the only strikin' +feature o' the landscape an' there's others that might have a say." + +"I guess the present way is the best in the long run at that, for all I +hear," said Wilbur, "because every one now has a fair show. You can't +have cattle and sheep overrunning everywhere without absolutely ruining +the forests. Especially sheep. They can destroy a forest and make it as +though it had never existed." + +"I'm huggin' love of sheep none," said the cowboy, "an' my mental picter +of the lower regions is a place what smells strong of sheep. But I sure +miss my throw on any idee as to how they could do up a forest of big +trees." + +"They do, just the same." + +"How? Open her up, pard, an' explain. I'm listenin' mighty attentive." + +"This way," began the boy, remembering some of the talks he had heard at +the Ranger School. "When a dry year comes, if the sheep are allowed into +the forest, the grass, which is poor because of the dryness, soon gets +eaten down. Then the sheep begin to browse on the young shoots and +seedlings, and even will eat the leaves off the young saplings that they +can reach, thus destroying all the baby trees and checking the growth of +those that are a little more advanced. When this goes on for two or +three seasons all the young growth is gone. Since there are no saplings, +no young shoots, and no seedlings, the forest never recovers, but +becomes more like a park with stretches of grass between clumps of +trees. Then, when these trees die, there are no others to take their +place and the forest is at an end." + +"How about cattle?" + +"They're not nearly as bad. Cattle won't eat leaves unless they have to. +And they don't browse so close, nor pack down the ground as hard with +their hoofs. If there's grass enough to go round, cattle won't injure a +forest much, but, of course, the grazing has got to be restricted or +else the same sort of thing will happen that goes on when sheep are let +in." + +"Never knew before," said the boy's companion, "why I ought ter hate +sheep. Jest naterally they're pizen to me, but I never rightly figured +out why I allers threw them in the discard. Now I know. There's a heap +of satisfaction in that. It's like findin' that a man you sure disagreed +with in an argyment is a thunderin' sight more useful to the community +dead than he was alive. It don't alter your feelin's none, but it helps +out strong on the ensooin' explanations." + +"Are there many sheep out here?" + +"There's a tidy few. But it's nothin' like Montana. You ought ter get +Rifle-Eye Bill to tell you of the old days o' the sheep an' cattle +war. The debates were considerable fervent an' plenty frequent, an' a +Winchester or two made it seem emphatic a whole lot." + +"Was Rifle-Eye mixed up in it?" + +"Which he's allers been a sort of Florence Nightingale of the Rockies, +has old Rifle-Eye," was the reply. "I don't mean in looks--but if a +feller's shot up or hurt, or anythin' of that kind, it isn't long before +the old hunter turns up, takes him to some shack near by and persuades +somebody to look after him till he gets around again. An' we've got a +little lady that rides a white mare in these here Sierras who's a sure +enough angel. I don't want to know her pedigree, but when it comes to +angels, she's It. An' when she an' Rifle-Eye hitches up to do the +ministerin' act, you'd better believe the job's done right. I never +heard but of one man that ever said 'No' to Rifle-Eye, no matter what +fool thing he asked." + +"How was that?" asked Wilbur. + +"It was the wind-up of one o' these here little differences of opinion +on the sheep question, same as I've been tellin' you of. It happened +somewhar up in Oregon, although I've forgotten the name o' the ranch. +Rifle-Eye could tell you the story better'n I can, but he won't. It was +somethin' like this: + +"There was a big coulee among the hills, an', one summer, when there'd +been a prairie fire that wiped out a lot o' feed, a bunch o' cattle was +headed into this coulee. Three cowpunchers and a cook with the chuck +wagon made up the gang. But this yar cook was one o' them fellers what's +not only been roped by bad luck, but hog-tied and branded good and +plenty. He had been the boss of a ranch, a small one, but he'd fallen +foul o' the business end of a blizzard, an' he'd lost every blamed head +o' cattle that he had. He lost his wife, too." + +"How did she come in on it?" + +"It was this way. She heard, or thought she heard, some one callin' +outside, a little ways from the house. She s'posed, o' course, that it +was the men who had tackled the storm in the hope o' savin' some o' the +cattle, an' she ran out o' the door to give 'em an answerin' hail so as +they could git an idee as to the direction o' the house. But she hadn't +gone but a few steps when the wind caught her--leastways, that was how +they figured it out afterwards--and blew her along a hundred feet or so +before she could catch breath, and then she stumbled and fell. She got +up, sort o' dazed, most like, and tried to run back to the shack. But in +the blindin' snow nothin' o' the house could be seen, an' though she +tried to fight up in that direction against the wind, she must have gone +past it a little distance to the left. They didn't find her until two +days after when the blizzard had blown itself out, an' there she was, +stone dead, not more than a half a mile away from the house. + +"The boss was near crazy when they found her, an' he never was fit for +much afterwards. There was a child, only a little shaver then, who was +asleep in the house at the time his mother run out to answer the shout +she reckoned she heard. So, since the rancher wasn't anyways overstocked +on female relations, an' he had the kid to look after, the one-time boss +went out as a camp cook an' took the boy along. He was rustlin' the +chuck for this bunch I'm a-tellin' you about, that goes into the coulee. + +"By 'n' by, a week or so afterward, a herd o' sheep comes driftin' into +this same valley, bein' ekally short for feed, an' the herders knocks up +a sort o' corral an' looks to settle down. The cowpunchers pays 'em an +afternoon call, an' suggests that the air outside the coulee is a lot +healthier for sheep--an' sheepmen--an' that onless they makes up their +minds to depart, an' to make that departure a record-breaker for speed, +they'll make their relatives sure a heap mournful. The sheepmen replies +in a vein noways calculated to bring the dove o' peace hoverin' around, +an' volunteers as a friendly suggestion that the cattlemen had best send +to town and order four nice new tombstones before ringin' the curtain up +on any gladiatorial pow-wow. When the cowpunchers rides back, honors is +even, an' each side is one man short. + +"Now, this coulee, which is the scene of these here operations, is so +located that there's only one way out. Most things in life there's more, +but in this here particular coulee, the openin' plays a lone hand. As +the cattlemen got there first, and went 'way back to the end o' the +ravine, the sheepmen are nearer to what you might call the valley door. +If the cowpunchers could have made a get-away, it's a cinch that they'd +have headed for the ranch an' brought back enough men with them to make +their persuasion plenty urgent. But the herders ain't takin' any chances +of allowin' the other side to better their hand, an' when, one night, a +cowpuncher tries to rush it, they pots him as pretty as you please. The +cook, who's cuddlin' his Winchester at the time, fires at the flash and +disposes o' the herder, sort o' evenin' matters up. This leaves only one +cowpuncher and the cook. There's still three men at the herders' camp. + +"Then the cook, he indooces a bullet to become sufficient intimate with +one o' the herder's anatomy, but gits a hole in the leg himself an' is +laid up. The other cowpuncher runs the gauntlet an' gits out safe. He +hikes back the next day with a bunch o' boys, an' they follows up the +herders an' wipes out that camp for fair, an' stampedes the herd over +the nearest canyon. Then they circles back to the coulee to pick up the +cook. + +"When they gits there, they surely finds themselves up against evidences +of a tragedy. The cook, he's lyin' on the floor of the shack, dead as a +nail, an' near him is the kid, who's still holdin' a table-knife in his +hand, but who's lyin' unconscious from a wound in the head. The way they +dopes it out, there's been a free-for-all fight in the place between the +two remainin' herders an' the wounded cook, an' it looks some as if the +kid had tried to help his dad by jabbin' at the legs o' the herders with +a knife and been booted in the side o' the head to keep him quiet." + +"How old was the youngster, then, Bob-Cat?" asked Wilbur. + +"Seven or eight, I guess, maybe not so much," replied the other, "a +nice, bright little kid, so I've heard. But there was somethin' broke, I +reckon, by the blow he had, an' he never got over it. The boys took him +back to the ranch an' doctored him the best they knew how, but they was +buckin' fate an' had to quit, lettin' the kid git better or worse as it +might turn out." + +"But where does Rifle-Eye come in?" + +"This way. Just before round-up, Rifle-Eye comes along, showin' he has +the whole story salted down, though where he larned it gits me, and +proposes that sence it was the sheepmen that injured the lad, it's up to +them to look after him. At first the boys objects, sayin' that the kid +was a cowpuncher's kid, but Rifle-Eye convinces 'em that the youngster's +locoed for fair, that he's likely to stay that way for good an' all, and +sence they agrees they can't ever make anythin' out of him, they lets +him go. + +"Then Rifle-Eye, he takes this unfortunate kid to the man that owned +the sheep. He's a big owner, this man, and runs thirty or forty herds. +The old hunter--this was all before he was a Ranger, you know--he puts +it right up to the sheep-owner, who's a half-Indian, by the way, an' +tells him that he's got to look after the boy. The old skinflint says +'No,' and this here, as I was sayin', is the only time that any one ever +turned down old Rifle-Eye." + +"And what happened to the boy?" queried Wilbur. + +"The old hunter tries to shame this here sheep-owner into doin' the +right thing, but he didn't have any more shame in him than a turkey +buzzard; an' then he tries to bluff him an' says he'll make him keep the +kid, but the old sinner jest whined around an' wouldn't give any sort o' +satisfaction at all. So Rifle-Eye, he shakes the dust o' that house +off'n his feet so good an' hard that he mighty nearly shakes the nails +out of his boot-heels, an' hunts up a legal shark. Then an' there he +adopts this half-witted youngster, an' has kep' him ever sence." + +"How long ago was this?" + +"Fifteen years an' more, I reckon. The kid's big now, an' strong as a +bull moose, but he's a long way from bein' right in his head. He lives +up in the woods, a piece back here, an' I reckon you'll find Rifle-Eye +there as often as you will at his own cabin further along the range, +although he never sleeps indoors at either place." + +"Never sleeps indoors?" + +"That's a straight string. He's got a decent enough shack where the boy +is, but as soon as it gits dark, old Rifle-Eye he jest makes a pile o' +cedar boughs, builds up a fire, an' goes to sleep. For fifty years he +ain't slept under a roof summer or winter, an' when once he was in a +town over-night, which was about the boy, as I was tellin' ye, he had to +get up an' go on the roof to sleep. Lucky," added Bob-Cat with a grin, +"it was a flat roof." + +"Fifty years is a long time," commented the boy. + +"Old Rifle-Eye ain't any spring chicken. He shouldered a musket in the +Civil War, an' durin' the Indian mix-ups was generally found floatin' +around wherever the fun was thickest. He was mighty close friends with +the Pacific scout, old 'Death-on-th'-Trail,' who handed in his time at +Portland not long ago." + +"Handed in his time?" questioned Wilbur, then, as the meaning of the +phrase flashed upon him, "oh, yes, I see, you mean he died." + +"Sure, pard, died. You ought ter git Rifle-Eye Bill to spin you some +yarns about 'Death-on-th'-Trail.' He'll deny that he's any shakes +himself, but he'll talk about his old campmate forever." + +The cowboy pointed with his hand to a long, low group of buildings that +had just come within sight. + +"See, Wilbur," he said, "there's the Double Bar J." + + +[Illustration: HOW YOUNG FORESTS ARE DESTROYED. + +Showing the way in which sheep and goats, having cropped the grass +close, will attack undergrowth. + +_Photographs by U. S. Forest Service._] + + +[Illustration: WHERE SHEEP ARE ALLOWED. + +Example of meadow stretches in midst of heavily forested mountain +slopes. + +_Photograph by U. S. Forest Service._] + + + + +CHAPTER IV + +PICKING A LIVELY BRONCHO + + +On seeing the ranch, Bob-Cat and Wilbur had put their ponies to a burst +of speed and in a few minutes they reached the corral. The buildings, +while comfortable enough, were far from pretentious, and even their +strangeness scarcely made up to the boy for the lack of the picturesque. +Then, of course, the fact that the cattle at that time of year were +scattered all over the range and consequently that none of them were in +sight, rendered it still less like his ideal of a cattle ranch, where he +had half expected to see thousands of long-horned cattle tossing their +heads the while that cowboys galloped around them shouting and firing +off pistols. + +In contrast with this, the dwelling, the bunk-house, the cooking shack, +and the other frame sheds, all of the neutral gray that unpainted wood +becomes when exposed to the weather, seemed very unexciting indeed. But +when the lad turned to the corral, he felt that there was compensation +there. Several hundred horses were in the enclosure, of many colors and +breeds, but the greater part of them Indian ponies, or containing a +strain of the mustang, and smaller and shaggier than the horses he had +been accustomed to ride in his Illinois home. + +The boy turned to his companion, his eyes shining with excitement. + +"Do you suppose that I can buy any of those horses that I want to?" he +said. + +"If you're totin' along a pile of dinero, you might," was the reply, +"but there's a few cayuses in there that would surely redooce a big roll +o' bills to pretty skinny pickin's. For example, this little bay I'm +ridin' now ain't any special wonder, an' maybe he's only worth about +fifty dollars, but you can't buy him for five hundred. I reckon, though, +you c'n trot away with most of 'em in there for ninety or a hundred +dollars apiece." + +"I hadn't expected to pay more than seventy or seventy-five," said +Wilbur, his native shrewdness coming to the front, "and I think I ought +to be able to pick up a good horse or two for that, don't you think?" + +"There's allers somethin' that ain't worth much to be got cheap," said +the cowboy, "but I don't look friendly none on payin' a cheap price for +a horse. Speakin' generally, there's somethin' that every feller likes a +whole lot, an' out here, where domestic life ain't our chief play, it's +mostly a horse. Leastways, when I hit the long trail, I'll be just as +sorry to leave some ponies behind as I will humans." + +"A horse can be a great chum," assented Wilbur. "So can a dog." + +"No dogs in mine," said Bob-Cat emphatically, "they reminds me too much +o' sheep. But when it comes to a horse, I tell ye, there's a lot more in +the deal than buyin' an animal to carry you; there's buyin' somethin' +that all the money in the world can't bring you sometimes--an' that's a +friend." + +Wilbur waited a moment without reply, and then the cowboy, deliberately +changing the topic to cloak any strain of sentiment which he thought he +might have been betrayed into showing, continued: + +"How about saddles?" + +"I'd been thinking about that," replied the boy, "and I thought I'd wait +until I got out here before deciding. You can't use an English +saddle-tree, of course, and I hate it anyway, and one like yours is too +big. Those lumbering Mexican saddles always look to me as if they were +as big a load for a little pony to carry as a man." + +"Sure, they're heavy. But you can't do any ropin' without them. If you +try 'n' rope on a small saddle the girth'll pretty near cut a pony in +two. But you ain't got any ropin' to do, so I sh'd think an army +saddle-tree would be about right. There's Rifle-Eye Bill comin' out of +the bunk-house now. Ask him. He'll know." + +Wilbur looked up, and saw emerging from the door of the bunk-house a +tall, gaunt mountaineer. He strolled over to the corral with a long, +loose-jointed stride. + +"Got him, all right, Bob-Cat, did you?" he said in a measured drawl, +then, turning to the boy, added: "Glad to see you, son." + +"I've been hearing all about you, sir," answered Wilbur, "and I'm +awfully glad to meet you here." He was about to dismount, but noting +that Bob-Cat had merely thrown a leg over the horn of his saddle, he +stayed where he was. + +The old Ranger looked him over critically and closely, so that Wilbur +felt himself flushing under the direct gaze, though he met the clear +gray eye of his new acquaintance without flinching. Presently the +latter turned to the range-rider. + +"What do you think of him?" he asked in a slow, curiously commanding +way. + +Bob-Cat squirmed uneasily. + +"You is sure annoyin'," he said in an aggrieved manner, "askin' me to go +on record so plumb sudden. I'm no mind-reader." + +There was a pause, but the Ranger quietly waited. + +"It's embarrassin'," said Bob-Cat, "to try an' trot out a verdic' on +snap-jedgment. I don't know." + +Rifle-Eye, quite unperturbed, looked at him steadily and inquiringly. + +"You know what you think," he said. + +"He's sure green," replied the cowboy, shrugging his shoulders in +protest, "an' he ain't much more humble-minded than a hen that's jest +laid an egg of unusooal size, but I reckon he's got the makin's." + +"It's a good thing to be green," said the old Ranger thoughtfully, +"nothin' grows much after it's dry, Bob-Cat. The heart's got to be green +anyway. Ye git hard to bend an' easy to break when ye're gettin' old." + +"Then it's a cinch you'll never get old," promptly responded the other. + +But the mountaineer continued talking, half to himself: + +"An' he's too sure of himself! Wa'al, he's young yet. I've seen a pile +o' sickness in my day, Bob-Cat, but that's about the easiest one to cure +there is." + +"What is?" + +"Bein' young. Well, son, ye'd better turn the pony in." + +The boy dismounted, and, half in pique at the dubious character given +him by Bob-Cat and half in thanks for the meeting at the station and the +ride, he turned to the cowboy, and said: + +"I'm glad I've 'got the makings' anyway, and I'm much obliged, Bob-Cat, +for all the yarns you told me on the trail. But, next time I come to the +ranch I'll try not to be as green, and I know I'll not be as young." + +The cowboy laughed. + +"It's no use tryin' to dodge Rifle-Eye," he said. "You stand about as +good a chance as if you was tryin' to sidestep a blizzard or parryin' +the charge from a Gatlin' gun. If he asks a question you can gamble +every chip in your pile that you're elected, and you've got to ante up +with the answer whether it suits your hand or no." + +Wilbur, following the suggestion of the Ranger, unsaddled his pony, +turned him into the corral, and hung his saddle on the fence. Then +together they went up to the house, where Wilbur met the boss, and after +a few moments' chat they returned to the corral. + +As the lad had come to the ranch especially for the purpose of buying a +couple of ponies, he was anxious to transact the business as quickly as +possible, and together with Bob-Cat and Rifle-Eye he scanned the horses +in the enclosure, endeavoring to display, as he did so, what little +knowledge of horseflesh he possessed. After the boy had commented on +several, Rifle-Eye pointed out first one and then a second which he had +previously decided on as being the best animals for the boy. But +Wilbur's eye was attracted to a fine sorrel, and, turning to Rifle-Eye, +he said decidedly: + +"I want that one!" + +The old Ranger, remarking quietly that it was a fine horse, but not +suitable to the purpose for which Wilbur wanted the animal, passed on to +the discussion of several other ponies near by, teaching the boy to +discern the fine points of a horse, not for beauty, but for service. + +But as soon as he had finished speaking, after a purely perfunctory +assent, Wilbur burst out again: + +"But, Rifle-Eye, I really want that sorrel most." + +"You really think you want him?" + +"Yes!" + +"You wouldn't if you knew a little more about horses, son," said the +Ranger. "It's all right to be sure what you want, but what you want is +to be sure that what you want is right." + +"Oh, I'm sure I'm right," answered the boy confidently. + +"You can't be too careful choosin' a horse," commented Rifle-Eye. +"Choosin' a horse is a good deal like pickin' out a sugar pine for +shakes. You know what shakes are?" + +"No, Rifle-Eye," answered the boy. + +"They're long, smooth, split sheets of wood that the old-timers used for +shingles. There's lots of sugar pine that'll make the finest kind o' +lumber, an' all of it's good for fuel, but there ain't one tree in a +hundred that'll split naturally an' easily into shakes. An' there ain't +more'n one man in a hundred as can tell when a tree will do. But when +you do get one just right, it's worth any ten other trees. An' the pine +that's good ain't because it's a pretty tree to look at, or an easy one +to cut down, or because of any other reason than that the grain's right. +Same way with a horse. It ain't for his looks, nor for his speed, nor +because he's easy to ride, nor for his strength you want him, but +because his grain's right." + +"Well, I'm sure that sorrel looks just right." + +"Do looks always tell?" + +"Oh, I can always tell a horse by his looks," replied Wilbur boastfully. +"Anyhow, I want him." + +"Persistent?" chuckled Bob-Cat, who was standing by enjoying every word, +"why, cockle-burs ain't nothin' to him." + +"But, supposin'," the old scout began gently, "I told you that the +sorrel was the worst you could have, not the best?" + +"But he ain't," broke in Bob-Cat, who could not bear to hear a friend's +pony harshly criticised, "that's one of Bluey's string, an' he allers +had good horses." + +"There--you hear," said Wilbur triumphantly. + +"I said--for the boy, Bob-Cat," answered the old Ranger firmly. + +"I--I suppose you would have good reasons," said Wilbur, answering the +old scout's question, "but I want him just the same, and I don't see why +I can't buy him, if he's for sale. It's my money!" + +"Sure, it's your money. An' the sorrel's a good horse," said the cowboy, +to whom the persistence of Wilbur was giving great delight. + +The Ranger slowly turned his head in silent rebuke, but although Bob-Cat +was conscious of it, he was enjoying the fun too much to stop. + +"You know he couldn't ride the sorrel, Bob-Cat," said Rifle-Eye +reproachfully. + +"But I can ride him, I know," said Wilbur. "I'm a good rider, really I +am. And he looks gentle, besides. He is gentle, isn't he, Bob-Cat?" + +"He's playful enough," was the reply, "some like a kitten, an' he surely +is plenty restless in his habits. But where he shines is nerves. Why, +pard, he c'd make a parcel of females besieged by a mouse look as if +they was posin' for a picter, they'd be so still by comparison. But he's +gentle, all right." + +"I wouldn't want to try it if he was vicious, Rifle-Eye," said the boy +appealingly, "but I really can ride, and he looks like a good horse." + +"Are you buyin' this horse for your own pleasure or the work o' the +Service? You're goin' to do your ridin' on my range, an' I reckon you'll +admit I have some say." + +"But I can break him to the work of the Service. Do let me try him!" +Wilbur's persistence appeared in every look and word. "I don't see why I +can't try, anyway, and then if I can't do it, there's no harm done." + +"Can you throw a rope?" queried the Ranger. + +"No," returned the boy promptly. "I never learned. But I can try." + +"If you can't rope, how do you expect to saddle him? These ain't farm +horses that you c'n harness or saddle while they eat oats out of your +hand." He turned to the cowboy. "Can the sorrel be saddled without +ropin'?" + +"Bluey does," was the reply, "but I don't know that he'll let me." + +"Won't you saddle him for me, Bob-Cat? I know I can ride him if I have a +fair show." + +The range-rider turned to the old Ranger. + +"How about it?" he said. "The kid'll hunt leather for a while and then +eat grass. But there's nothin' mean in the sorrel, an' he won't get +hurt." + +"I'll ride him," said Wilbur stoutly. + +"You might, at that," rejoined Bob-Cat. "He's a game little sport, +Rifle-Eye," he added, turning to the tall figure beside him, "why not +let him play his hand out? You can't be dead sure how the spots will +fall. Sure, I've twice seen an Eastern maverick driftin' into a faro +game, an' by fools' luck cleanin' up the bank." + +"If a man's a fool who depends on luck, what kind of a fool is the man +who depends on fools' luck? You ain't playin' a square deal, Bob-Cat, in +supportin' the lad to go on askin' to do what ain't good for him. But +seein' you force my hand, why, you'd better go ahead now." + +"I didn't force your hand none," replied the other, "I was merely +throwin' out a suggestion." + +"If I refuse the boy somethin' another man says is all right, doesn't +that make it look as ef it was meanness in me? An' he goin' to work with +me, too! What's the use o' sayin' that you ain't forcin' my hand? Givin' +advice, Bob-Cat, ain't any go-as-you-please proposition; it's got to be +thought out. Feelin's don't allers point the right trail to jedgment, +an', as often as not, the blazes lead the wrong way. You're all right +in your own way, Bob-Cat, but you're shy on roots, and your idees gets a +windfall every time an extra puff comes along. You're like the trees +settlers forgets about when they cuts on the outside of a forest an' +ruins the inside." + +"How is that?" asked Wilbur, anxious to divert the stream of Rifle-Eye's +criticism from the cowboy, who had got himself into trouble defending +him. "I didn't know there was any difference between a tree on the +outside of a forest and one on the inside." + +"Wa'al, then, I guess you're due to learn right now. If there's a tree +of any size, standin' out by itself on a mountain side, with plenty of +leaves, an' a big wind comes along, you c'n see easy enough that she +presents a heap of surface to the wind. An' when a mountain gale gets up +and blows fer fair, there's a pressure of air on that tree amountin' to +several tons." + +"Tons?" queried Bob-Cat incredulously. + +"Tons," answered the old Banger. "A tree needs to have some strength in +order to hold up its end. There's three ways o' doin' it. One is by +havin' a lot more give in the fibers, more elastic like, so that the +tree'll bend in the wind an' not get snapped off; another is by puttin' +out a lot o' roots an' shovin' 'em in deep an' at the same time havin' a +trunk that's plenty stout; an' the third is the thickenin' o' the trunk, +right near the ground, where the greatest part o' the strain comes. An' +all the various kinds o' trees works this out in different ways. But +nothin's ever wasted, an'--" + +"Oh, I see now," broke in Wilbur. "You're going to say that the trees +which don't grow on the outside of a forest don't have to waste vitality +into these forms of resistance." + +"That's right. A tree that grows in a ravine, where there is little +chance of a high wind, an' where light is scarce an' hard to get, such a +tree will have a shallow root system an' a spindlin' trunk, all the +growth havin' gone to height, an' a tree in the center of a forest is +often the same way. The wind can't git through the forest, an' so the +trees don't need ter prop themselves against it." + +"Talk about yer eddicated trees!" ejaculated the cowboy, "which colleges +is a fool to them." + +"It's true enough, Bob-Cat, just the same. But supposin' a belt on the +outside o' the forest is cut down, then the inner trees, thus exposed, +haven't any proper weapons to fight the wind, an' they go down." + +"Doesn't it take a very high wind to blow down some of these big trees?" +asked Wilbur. + +"Some kinds it does," said the Ranger, "but there's others that go down +pretty easy, lodge-pole pine, fer instance. But a tree doesn't have to +be blown down to be ruined. Even if a branch is blown off--an' you know +how often that happens--insects and fungi get into the wound of the tree +and decay follows." + +"But you can't persuade the wind none," objected Bob-Cat. "If she's +goin' to blow, she's goin' to blow, an' that's all there is to it." + +"No, it ain't any use arguin' with a fifty-mile breeze, that's sure. But +you can keep the inside trees from bein' blown down by leavin' uncut the +deep-rooted trees on the outside. If you wanted a good big bit of +timber, an' could cut it from a tree on the outside o' the forest, you'd +take it first because it was handiest, wouldn't you?" + +"I sure would." + +"Yet, you see, it would ha' been the worst thing you could do. An' as I +started out to say, that's where you get in wrong doin' things without +thinkin'. Just like this ridin' idee to-day. By urgin' on the lad's +nateral desire you make it hard fer him an' fer me." + +"All right, Rifle-Eye," said Bob-Cat good-humoredly, "you've got me. I +reckon I passes up this hand entire." He nodded and began to stroll +away. + +But Wilbur called him back. + +"Oh, Bob-Cat," he cried, "aren't you going to saddle him for me now?" + +The cowboy turned and grinned. + +"Which you'd make tar an' feathers look sick for stickin' to a thing." +Then, reading a grudging assent from Rifle-Eye, he continued: "Yep, I'll +go an' saddle," and sauntered into the corral. + +In a few minutes he came back, leading the sorrel. He was saddled and +Bob-Cat had shortened up the stirrups. Wilbur jumped forward eagerly, +put his foot in the stirrup, and was up like a flash. The sorrel never +moved. The boy shook the reins a little and clucked his tongue against +his teeth without any apparent result. Then Wilbur dug his heels into +the pony's ribs. + +Things began to happen. The sorrel went straight up in the air with all +four feet, coming down with the legs stiff, giving Wilbur a jar which +set every nerve twitching as though he had got an electric shock. But +he kept his seat. Then the sorrel began pacing forward softly with an +occasional sudden buck, each of which nearly threw him off and at most +of which he had to "hunt leather," or in other words, catch hold of the +saddle with his hands. Still he kept his seat. + +Finding that these simpler methods did not avail, the sorrel began a +little more aggressive bucking, fore and aft, "sun-fishing" and +"weaving," and once or twice rearing up so straight that Wilbur was +afraid the sorrel would fall over backwards on him, and he had heard of +riders being killed that way. But he stole a glance at Rifle-Eye, and, +seeing that the old Ranger was looking on quite unperturbed, he realized +that there was no great danger. And still he kept his seat. + +But as the sorrel warmed up to his work the boy began to realize that he +had not the faintest chance of being able to wear the pony down. It was +now only a question of how long he could stick on. He knew he would be +done if the sorrel started to roll, but as yet the beast had shown no +inclination that way. But as the bucks grew quicker and more jerky, +Wilbur began to wonder within himself whether he would prefer to pitch +over the pony's head or slide off over his tail. Suddenly, with a bound, +the pony went up in the air and gave a double wriggle as he came down +and Wilbur found himself on the ground before he knew what had happened. +The sorrel, who, as Bob-Cat had said, was a gentle beast, stood quietly +by, and the boy always afterwards declared that he could hear the horse +chuckle. + +The boy got up abashed and red in the face, because several other +ranchmen had come up and were enjoying his confusion, but he tried to +put a good face on it, and said: + +"That's a bucker for fair." + +"No," responded Bob-Cat, "that isn't bucking," and he swung himself into +the saddle. + +The sorrel commenced plunging and rearing again, this time with greater +vigor. But Bob-Cat, taking a little bag of tobacco and some cigarette +papers out of his pocket, quietly poured out some of the tobacco on the +paper, rolled it carefully, and then lighted it, keeping his seat on the +bucking broncho quite easily the while. This done, he dismounted, +turning to the boy as he did so. + +"She's easy enough. There's lots o' the boys, like Bluey, fer example, +who really can ride," he continued, "that 'd just split with laughin' +at the idee o' me showin' off in the saddle. I c'n rope with the best o' +them, but I'm no buster. And some o' these here critters you've got to +ride. See that big roan in there?" + +Wilbur followed the direction of his finger and nodded. + +"They call her 'Squealin' Bess,' an' you couldn't pay me to get on her +back. Bluey c'n ride her; he's done it twice; but you c'n bet your last +blue chip that he doesn't do it fer fun." + +Wilbur turned to the old Ranger who had been standing silently by +through the performance. + +"I'm much obliged, Rifle-Eye," he said, "but I'd like to buy that sorrel +just the same and learn to ride him." + +For the first time the old Ranger smiled. + +"You're somethin' like a crab, Wilbur," he said, "that grabs a stick +viciously with his claw an' won't let go even when he's hauled up out o' +the water. You c'n buy the sorrel if you want to, but he won't be any +use to you up in the forest. Broncho-bustin' is an amusement you c'n +keep for your leisure hours. But I'm thinkin', son, from what I know of +the work you'll have to do, that you'll mostly be tired enough after a +day's work to want to rest a while. But if you're sot, I s'pose you're +sot. An' I'm old enough to know that it's no use hammerin' a mule when +he's got his forelegs spread. Get whatever horses you like, I've got a +saddle for you up at the bunk-house, an' you c'n meet me beyond the +corral sunup to-morrow mornin'." + +He nodded to the boys and turned on his heel, walking off in the +direction of the river. Seeing that the fun was over the boys scattered, +and Wilbur, finding that his friend Bob-Cat was going to stay at the +ranch over-night, attached himself to him. But as soon as supper was +over, the lad, finding himself stiffer than he had expected from his +battle with the sorrel, partly because he had not been riding constantly +for a couple of years, was glad to go to his bunk, listening to the +breezy Western talk of the men and the yarns of cattle and of horses +that they had to tell. He hardly knew that he had fallen asleep when +Bob-Cat shook him, saying: + +"Better tumble up, bub. Rifle-Eye is sure an early bird. He's some +chanticleer, believe me. He's plumb convinced that if he ain't awake and +up to greet the sun, it won't rise." + +Wilbur laughed and "tumbled up" accordingly. + +At breakfast, over the plentiful food served on tin plates and in tin +mugs, Rifle-Eye was entirely silent, uttering never a word and paying no +attention to any allusion about horses. Right after the meal Wilbur went +down to the corral, saddled one of his two new horses, put a leading +bridle on the other, and, after bidding Bob-Cat and the boys "Good-by," +started for the point where he was to meet the Ranger. + +As he rode up, the old frontiersman scanned carefully the two horses the +boy had with him and his face cleared. + +"What horses are those?" he asked. + +"Oh, just a couple I got for the forest work," answered Wilbur with +overdone carelessness. + +They rode on in silence a few rods, then the old Ranger spoke again. + +"Don't ever be afraid o' lettin' on you've made a mistake, son," he +said; "the more mistakes you make the more you'll know. There's only one +thing to remember, don't make the same mistake twice." + +"I'll try not," said the boy. + +The Ranger reined up beside the lad, and, reaching out his long, gaunt +hand, patted the neck of the pony on which Wilbur was riding. + +"They're half-sisters, those two," he said. "I raised 'em from colts +myself. I rode the mother over these very trails, many and many's the +time. This one is called Kit, after her." + +Wilbur flushed at the remembrance of the manner in which before he had +slighted the old scout's choice. + +"Oh, Rifle-Eye," he said penitently, "if I'd only known!" + +"You'll prize them more now," the Ranger said. + + +[Illustration: COWBOYS AT THE ROUND-UP. + +The riders of the Double Bar J Ranch bunching up their cattle in the +National Forest. + +_Photograph by U. S. Forest Service._] + + + + +CHAPTER V + +A TUSSLE WITH A WILD-CAT + + +"Bob-Cat was telling me," said Wilbur, as with the Ranger he rode +through the arid and silvered grayness of the Mohave desert and reached +the foothill country, "that before you entered the Service you were +pretty well known as a hunter." + +"Wa'al, son," the mountaineer replied, "I reckon I've done some kind o' +huntin' for fifty years on end. But there's not much huntin' in this +part o' the country." + +"No," said Wilbur, looking around him, "I guess there isn't." + +The road ran along a little gully with a small stream shaded by scrub +oak, but arising from this and similar gullies, in great rounded bosses, +heaved the barren slopes, the grass already turning yellow and too +sparse to cloak the red earth below. + +"Yet," said Rifle-Eye, pointing with his finger as he spoke, "there's a +desert fox." + +Wilbur strained his eyes to see, but the unfamiliar growth of cacti, +sage-brush, palo verde, and the dusty-miller plants made quick vision +difficult. In a moment, however, he caught sight of the little +reddish-gray animal running swiftly and almost indistinguishable from +its surroundings. + +"But up there?" queried the boy, pointing in front of them. The road +wound onward toward the middle Sierras, thickly wooded with oak and +digger pine, and, of course, the chapparal, and towering to the clouds +rose the mighty serrated peaks of the range, where magnificent forests +of pine, fir, and cedar swept upwards to the limits of eternal snow. "Up +there the hunting must be wonderful." + +"Among the mount'ns!" said the old hunter slowly. "Wa'al, up there, you +see, is home." + +"You certainly can't complain about the looks of your home, then," said +the boy, "for that's just about the finest I've ever seen." + +"'There's no place like home,'" quoted Rifle-Eye quietly, "but I ain't +ever feelin' that my home's so humble. It ain't a question of its bein' +good enough fer me, it's a question o' whether I'm good enough fer it." + +"It makes quite a house," said Wilbur, following the old mountaineer's +line of thought. + +"I've never lived in any smaller house than that," responded Rifle-Eye, +"an' I reckon now I never will. There's some I know that boasts of +ownin' a few feet o' space shut in by a brick wall. Not for me. My house +is as far as my eyes c'n see, an' from the ground to the sky." + +Wilbur was silent for a moment, feeling the thrill of Nature in the old +man's speech. + +"It's to be my home, too," he said gently. + +Rifle-Eye smiled at the lad. + +"I don't know that I'm quite the oldest inhabitant," he said, "but I +sure am the oldest Ranger in the Service, an' all I c'n say is, 'Make +yerself to home.'" + +"All right," said Wilbur promptly, "I'll take that as an official +welcome from the Sierras, and I will. But," he added, "you were going to +tell me about your hunting. I should think it would be great sport." + +"Son," said Rifle-Eye somewhat sharply, "I never killed a harmless +critter 'for sport,' as you call it, in my life." + +"But I thought," gasped Wilbur in astonishment, "that you were hunting +nearly all the time, before you started in as Ranger." + +"So I was," was the quiet reply. + +"But--but I don't quite see--" Wilbur stopped lamely. + +"I said before," resumed the old hunter, "that I never killed a harmless +critter onless I had to. Neither have I. Varmints, o' course, is a +different matter. I've shot plenty o' them, an' once in a while I've had +ter kill fer food. But just shootin' for the sake o' shootin' is the +trick of a coward or a fool or a tenderfoot or a mixture of all three. +It's plumb unnecessary, an' it's dead wrong." + +"You mean shooting deer and so forth?" + +"I mean just that, son, if the shootin's only fer antlers an' what these +here greenhorns calls 'trophies.' If venison is needed, why, I ain't got +nothin' to say. A man's life is worth more than a deer's when he needs +food, but a man's conceit ain't worth more than a deer's life." + +"How about bear, then, and trapping for skins?" asked the boy. + +"I said 'harmless critters.' Now, a bear ain't harmless, leastways, not +as you'd notice it. Bear will take young stock, an' they're particularly +partial to young pig, an' down among these here foothills we've been +passin' through there's a lot o' shiftless hog-rustlers as depends on +pork fer a livin'. As for bearskins, why, o' course you use the pelts. +What's the idee o' leavin' them around? It ain't any kind o' good tryin' +to spare an animal's feelin's when he's plenty good an' dead. But I've +made this here section of the Sierras pretty hot for wolves." + +"I heard down at the ranch," the boy remarked, "that you had bagged +forty-seven wolves last season." + +"I did have a good year," assented the Ranger, "an', of course, I can't +give much time to it. But I reckon I've disposed of more'n a thousand +wolves in my day, one way and another. An' as I look at it, that's +makin' pretty good use of time." + +"Are wolves worse than bear?" queried Wilbur surprisedly. + +"They do a lot more harm in the long run. Cattlemen reckon that a wolf +will get away with about four head a year. Myself, I think that's +pressin' the average some; I'd put it at somewhere between two an' +three. But it's generally figured at four." + +"I didn't know that wolves, lone wolves, would attack cattle." + +"It's calves an' yearlin's mostly that they go for. It ain't often that +you see a wolf tacklin' anythin' bigger'n a two-year-old. But if you +figure that a wolf gets rid o' four head a year, an' inflicts himself on +a sufferin' community for a space of about ten years, that's somewhere +in the neighborhood o' forty head. A thousand wolves means about forty +thousand head of cattle, or pretty nigh a million dollars' worth of +stock." + +"The beef you've saved by killing wolves," commented Wilbur, "would feed +quite a town." + +"Forty thousand is a tolerable sized bunch. An' that's without figurin' +on the wolf cubs there would have been durin' all those years from the +older ones whose matrimonial expectations I disappointed plenty abrupt. +An' it makes a pile o' difference to cattlemen to know they c'n send a +herd grazin' on the national forest, an' be fairly sure they won't lose +much by varmints." + +"It surely must," said the boy. "But I hadn't realized that wolves were +such a danger." + +"I wouldn't go to say that they was dangerous. An old gray wolf, if you +corner him, is surly an' savage, an' will fight anythin' at any odds. +Out on the Barren Grounds they're bad, but around the Sierras I ain't +heard o' them attackin' humans but twice, an' they was children, lost in +the woods. I figure the kids had wandered around till they petered out, +an' then, when they were exhausted, the wolves got 'em. But I've never +heard of a wolf attackin' a man anywhere in the Rockies." + +"But I thought wolves ran in packs often." + +"Not in the United States, son, so far as I've heard of. I knew a +Russian trapper, though, who meandered down this way from Alaska in the +early days. He used to spin a lot o' yarns about the Siberian wolves +runnin' in packs an' breakfastin' freely off travelers. But he seemed to +think that it was the horses the wolves were after chiefly, although +they weren't passin' up any toothsome peasant that happened along." + +"And do wolves attack horses here, too?" + +"Not on the trail, that fashion. But they're some partial to colts." + +"How about coyotes?" + +"They're mean critters an' they give a pesky lot o' trouble, although +they bother sheep more'n cattle. But a few husky dogs will keep coyotes +at a distance, though they'll watch a chance an' sneak off with a +young lamb or any sheep what is hurt an' has fallen behind the herd. But +they don't worry us here such a great deal, they keep mostly to the +plains an' the prairie country." + +Saying this, the Ranger pulled up at the door of a shack lying a short +distance from the road and gave a hail. Immediately there stepped from +the door one of the largest women Wilbur had ever seen. Though her hair +was gray, and she was angular and harsh of feature, yet, standing well +over six feet and quite erect, she seemed to fit in well under the +shadow of the Sierras. + +"I reckon you've some bacon, Susan?" was the Ranger's greeting as he +swung himself off his horse. Wilbur followed suit. + +"There's somethin' awful would have to happen to a pile o' hogs," was +the reply, "when you came by here an' couldn't get a bite." + +By this time a swarm of children had come out, and Wilbur, seeing that +the Ranger had simply resigned his horse into the hands of one of the +larger boys, did likewise and followed his guide into the house. + +"I wasn't sure if I'd find you here, Susan," said the old scout when +they were seated at a simple meal. "I thought you were goin' to move +into town." + +"I did," she replied. "I stayed thar jest two weeks. An' they was two +weeks o' misery. These yar towns is too crowded for me. Now, hogs, I've +been used to 'em all my life, an' I don't mind how many's around. But it +only takes a few folks to make me feel as if I was real crowded." + +"Do you prefer hogs to people?" questioned Wilbur, smiling. + +"Not one by one, bub, o' course," came the slow reply, "but when it +comes to a crowd o' both, I'm kind o' lost with folks. Everybody's busy +an' they don't care nothin' about you, an' it makes you-all feel no +'count. An' the noise is bewilderin'. Have you ever been in a city?" + +Wilbur admitted that he had. + +"Well, then," she said, "ye'll know what I mean. But out here, there's +more room, like, an' I know I'm bigger'n my hogs." Following which, +Susan launched into a long description of her favorite porkers, which +continued almost without cessation until it was time for the two to be +on the trail again. + +"That's a queer woman," said Wilbur when they were in the saddle again +and out of hearing of the shack. + +"She's a good one," answered the Ranger. "Her son, by the way, is a +member o' the legislature, an' a good lawyer, an' she's made him what he +is. But she ain't the city kind." + +"Not with all those children," said Wilbur. "She'd have to hire a block +to keep them all." + +"Those ain't her own children," replied the Ranger, "not a bit of it. If +a youngster gits orphaned or laid up she just says 'Pork's plenty, send +'em to me.' An' I generally do. Other folks do, too, an' quite a few o' +them hev been brought her by the 'little white lady' you've been hearing +about. She's fonder o' children than any woman I ever saw, is Susan. But +she won't talk kids, she'll only talk hogs." + +"That's pretty fine work, I think," said the boy. "But I should imagine +the youngsters wouldn't have much of a chance. It isn't any better than +a backwoods life, away out there." + +The old Ranger, usually so slow and deliberate in his movements, turned +on him like a flash. + +"The meanest thing in this world," he said, "is not bein' able to see or +willin' to see what some one else has done for you. There ain't a home +in all these here United States that don't owe its happiness to the +backwoodsman. You can't make a country civilized by sittin' in an office +an' writin' the word 'civilized' on the map. Some one has got to get out +an' do it, an' keep on doin' it till it's done. It was the man who had +nothin' in the world but a wife, a rifle, an' an ax who made America." + +"I had forgotten for the moment," said the boy, a little taken off his +feet by the sudden energy and the flashing speech of the usually +impassive mountaineer. + +"So does mighty near every one else 'forget for the moment.' But if the +backwoodsman forgot for the moment he was likely to be missin' his +scalp-lock, or if he tried to take a holiday it meant his family would +go hungry. He never forgot his children or his children's children, but +they're none too fond o' rememberin' him. + +"Everythin' you have now, he first showed you how. If he wanted a house, +he had to build it; if he wanted bread, he had to raise the grain, +grind, an' bake it; if he wanted clothin', he had to get skins, cure, +an' sew 'em. But he never had to hunt for honor an' for courage; he +brought those with him; an' he didn't have to get any book-larnin' to +teach him how to make his cabin a home, an' his wife an' his children +were allers joys to him, not cares. They were men! An' what do you +reckon made 'em men?" + +"The hardships of the life, I suppose," hazarded Wilbur. + +"Not a bit of it; it was the forest. The forest was their nurse in +infancy, their playmate when they were barefooted kids runnin' around +under the trees, their work by day, an' their home when it was dark. +They lived right down with Nature, an' they larned that if she was +rugged, she was kind. They became rugged an' kind, too. An' that's what +the right sort of American is to this day." + +"A lot of our best statesmen in early days were from the newly cleared +settlements; that's a fact," said Wilbur thoughtfully, "right up to the +Civil War." + +"An' through it!" added the Ranger. "How about Abe Lincoln?" + +Wilbur thought to himself that perhaps "backwoodsman" was not quite a +fair idea of the great President's Illinois upbringing, but he thought +it wiser not to argue the point to no profit. + +"But it's all different now," continued Rifle-Eye a trifle sadly, +"things have changed an' the city's beginnin' to have a bigger hold than +the forest. An' the forest still needs, an' I reckon it allers will +need, the old kind o' men. Once we had to fight tooth an' nail agin the +forest jest to get enough land to live on, an' now we've got to fight +jest as hard for the forest so as there'll be enough of it for what we +need. In this here country you can't ever get away from the +woods-dweller, whether he's backwoodsman or Forester, or whatever you +call him--the man who can depend on himself an' live his life wherever +there's sky overhead an' ground underfoot an' trees between. + +"They're the discoverers of America, too. Oh, yes, they are," he +continued, noting Wilbur's look of contradiction. "It wasn't Columbus or +Amerigo or any o' the floatin' adventurers who first saw a blue splotch +o' land on the horizon that discovered America. It was the men who +conquered the forest, who found all, did all, an' became all that the +life demanded, that really brought into bein' America an' the +Americans." + +The Ranger stopped as suddenly as he had begun, and, touching his horse +lightly with the spur, went on ahead up the trail. Evidently he was +thinking of the old times and the boy had wisdom enough not to disturb +him. As the afternoon drew on the foothills were left behind and the +open road became more and more enclosed, until at last it was simply a +trail through the forest. The shadows were lengthening and it was +drawing on toward evening, when the Ranger halted beside a little +ravine, densely wooded with yellow pine, incense cedar, and white fir. +Wilbur was tired and his horses, fresh to the trail, were showing signs +of fatigue, so he was glad to stop. + +"I don't know how you feel about it," said the Ranger, "but I reckon +I'll camp here. There's a good spring a couple of hundred feet down +stream. But you ain't used to this sort o' thing, an' maybe you'd better +keep on the trail for another half-mile till you come to a little +settlement. Somebody can put you up, I reckon." + +"No need to," said the boy, "I'll camp here with you." + +"Maybe you ain't used to sleepin' on the ground." + +"I guess I can stand it, if you can," replied Wilbur promptly. + +"Wa'al, I reckon I can," said the Ranger, "seein' that I always have an' +always do." + +Wilbur had never camped in the open before without a tent or shelter of +some kind, but he would not for the world have had his Ranger think that +he was in the least disconcerted. Neither, to do him justice, was he, +but rather anticipating the night under the open sky with a good deal of +pleasure. + +After the horses were unsaddled and hobbled, Rifle-Eye told Wilbur to +get the beds ready. The boy, greatly pleased with himself that he knew +how to do this without being told, picked up his ax and started for the +nearest balsam. But he found himself in somewhat of a difficulty. The +white fir grew to a much larger tree than the Balm-of-Gilead he had +known in the East, and the lower branches were tough. So he chopped down +a young tree near, scarcely more than a sapling. + +A moment later he heard the Ranger call to him. + +"How many trees of that size do you reckon you'll want?" he asked. + +"Oh, they're only just saplings," the boy replied, "five or six ought to +do." + +"They'll make five or six fine trees some day, won't they?" queried the +old woodsman. + +"Yes, Rifle-Eye, they will," answered the boy, flushing at his lack of +thoughtfulness. "I'd better take only one, and that a little bigger, +hadn't I?" + +"An' one that's crooked. Always take a tree that isn't goin' to make +good timber when you're not cuttin' for timber." + +Wilbur accordingly felled a small white fir near by, having had his +first practical lesson of forest economy on his own forest, stripped the +tree of its fans or flattest branches and laid them on the ground. A +thickness of about six inches, he found, was enough to make the beds +wonderfully springy and comfortable. + +In the meantime he found that Rifle-Eye was getting a fireplace ready, +using for the purpose some flat stones which lay conveniently near by. +Wilbur, stepping over a tiny rivulet which ran into the creek, noted a +couple of stones apparently just suited for the making of a rough +fireplace and brought them along. The Ranger looked at them. + +"What kind o' stone do you call that?" he asked. + +"Granite," said Wilbur immediately. + +"An' you took them out o' the water?" + +"Yes," answered the boy. + +"An' what happens when you build a fire between granite stones?" + +"I don't know, Rifle-Eye. What does?" + +"They explode sometimes, leastways, when they're wet inside. Don't +forget that," he added as he put the stones aside. "Now," he continued, +"go down to the spring an' fill this pot with water, an' I'll have a +fire goin' an' some grub sizzlin' by the time you get back. The spring +is about two hundred feet downstream and about twenty feet above the +water. You can't miss it." + +Wilbur took the aluminum pot and started for the spring. He had not gone +half the distance when he noted a stout crotched stick such as he had +been used to getting when he camped out in the middle West for the +purpose of hanging the cooking utensils on over the fire. So he picked +it up and carried it along with him. Presently the gurgling of water +told him that he was nearing the spring, and a moment later he saw the +clearing through the trees. But, suddenly, a low snarling met his ears, +and he halted dead at the edge of the clearing. + +There, before him, on the ground immediately beside the spring, crouched +a large wild-cat, the hairy tips of her ears twitching nervously. Under +her claws was a rabbit, evidently just caught, into which the wild-cat +had just sunk her teeth when the approach of the boy was heard. At first +Wilbur could not understand why she had not sprung into the woods with +her prey at the first distant twig-snapping which would betoken his +approach. But as he looked more closely he saw that this was precisely +what the cat had tried to do, but that in the jerk the rabbit had been +caught and partly impaled on a tree root that projected above the +ground, and for the moment the cat could not budge it. + +Wilbur was utterly at a loss to know what to do. He had been told that +wild-cats would never attack any one unless they had been provoked to +fight, and he found himself very unwilling to provoke this particular +specimen. The cat stood still, her eyes narrowed to mere slits, the ears +slightly moving, and the tip of the tail flicking from side to side in +quick, angry jerks. There was menace in every line of the wild-cat's +pose. + +The boy had his revolver with him, but while he had occasionally fired a +six-shooter, he was by no means a crack shot, and he realized that if he +fired at and only wounded the creature he would unquestionably be +attacked. And there was a lithe suppleness in the manner that the +movement of the muscles rippled over the skin that was alarmingly +suggestive of ferocity. Wilbur did not like the looks of it at all. On +the other hand, he had not the slightest intention of going back to the +camp without water. He had come for water, and he would carry water +back, he thought to himself, if a regiment of bob-cats was in the way. + +The old fable that a wild beast cannot stand the gaze of the human eye +recurred to Wilbur's remembrance, and he stood at the edge of the +clearing regarding the cat fixedly. But the snarls only grew the louder. +Wilbur was frightened, and he knew it, and what was more, he felt the +cat knew it with that intuition the wild animals have for recognizing +danger or the absence of danger. She made another effort to drag away +the rabbit, but failing in that, with an angry yowl, with quick jerks +and rending of her powerful jaws began to try to force the rabbit free +from the entangling root, which done, she could carry it into the forest +to devour at leisure. The ease with which those claws and teeth rent +asunder the yielding flesh was an instructive sight for Wilbur, but the +fact that the wild-cat should dare to go on striving to free her prey +instead of slinking away in fright made the boy angry. Besides, he had +come for that water. + +Wilbur decided to advance into the clearing anyway, and then, if the +creature did not stir, he would be so near that he couldn't miss her +with the revolver. As he grew angrier his fear began to leave him. He +took the pot in his left hand, putting the long stick under his arm, +and, drawing his six-shooter, advanced on the cat. He came forward +slowly, but without hesitation. At his second step forward the wild-cat +raised her head, but instead of springing at him, as Wilbur half feared, +she retreated into the woods, leaving her prey, snarling as she went. +Wilbur went boldly forward to the spring, and, thinking that he would +see no more of the cat, put away his revolver. + +Having secured the water, and as he turned to go, however, the boy felt +a sudden impulse to look up. He had not heard a sound, and yet, on a low +branch a few feet above his head, crouched the wild-cat, her eyes +glaring yellow in the waning light. Once again he felt the temptation to +shoot her, but resisted it, through his fear of only wounding the +creature and thus bringing her full fury upon him. + +But it occurred to Wilbur that it was not unlikely that he might have to +come back to the spring a second time for more water, and he did not +wish to risk another encounter. He thought to himself that if he did +return and interrupted the wild-cat a second time he would not escape as +easily as he had on this occasion, and consequently he tried to devise a +means to prevent such meeting. He figured that if he picked up the +rabbit and threw it far into the woods the cat would follow and the path +to the spring would be open. Forgetting for the moment that he could not +expect the angry creature in the tree to divine the honesty of his +intentions, he stooped down and grasped the rabbit by the leg to throw +it into the forest. As he did so, the wild-cat, thinking herself about +to be deprived of her prey, sprang at him. + +With one hand holding the pot of water, which, boy-like, he did not want +to spill, and the other grasping the rabbit, Wilbur was terribly +handicapped. But, by the greatest good fortune, as he stooped, the +crotch of the stick that he was carrying caught the wild-cat under the +body as she launched herself at him from the tree. The stick was +knocked out of the boy's grasp, but it also turned the cat aside, and +she half fell, landing on Wilbur's outstretched leg, instead of on his +neck, which was the objective point in her spring. As her claws ripped +into the soft flesh of his thigh, Wilbur released his hold of the +rabbit, drew his revolver, and fired full at the creature hanging on his +leg. + +Almost instantaneously with the shot, however, one of her foreclaws shot +out and caught the back of his right hand, making a long but superficial +gash from the wrist to the knuckles. At the same time, too, one of her +hind claws struck down, opening the calf of the leg and making the boy +sick for a moment. His right hand was bleeding vigorously and paining a +good deal, but his finger was still on the trigger and Wilbur fired +again. A moment later, the Ranger came running into the clearing. But +before he reached the boy's side the cat had fallen limply to the +ground. The second shot had gone clear through her skull, and, being +fired at point-blank distance, had almost blown her head off. + +The old Ranger, without wasting time in words, quickly examined the +boy's injuries and found them slight, although they were bleeding +profusely. Wilbur reached out the pot full of water from the spring. + +"Here's the water, Rifle-Eye," he said a little quaveringly; "I hardly +spilled a drop." + +The old woodsman took the vessel without a word. Then he looked down at +the cat. + +"Just as well for you," he said, "that it wasn't a true lynx. But how +did she get at your leg? Did you walk on her, or kick her, just for +fun?" + +Wilbur, laughing a little nervously from the reaction of the excitement, +described how it was that the wild-cat had landed on his leg instead of +on his neck, and the old hunter nodded. + +"It's a mighty lucky thing for you," he said, "that stick was there, +because there's a heap o' places around the neck where a clawin' ain't +healthy. But these scratches of yours won't take long to heal. Where you +were a fool," he continued, "was in touchin' the rabbit at all. It's +just as I told you. When you went quietly forward, you say, the bob-cat +got out of your road all right. Of course, that's what she ought to do. +And if you had filled the pot with water an' come away that's all +there'd have been to it. But jest as soon as you begin ter get mixed up +in the prey any varmint's killed, you've got ter begin considerin' the +chances o' joinin' the select company o' victims." + +"But I wanted her out of the way for next time," said Wilbur. + +"She'd have got out of your way so quick you couldn't see her go," said +the hunter, "if you'd given her a chance. Next time, leave a varmint's +dinner alone." + +"Next time, I will," the boy declared. + +"I guess now," continued the old hunter, "you'd better come back to camp +an' we'll see what we c'n do to improve them delicate attentions you've +received. An' don't be quite the same kind of an idiot again." + +"Well," said Wilbur, "I got the water from the spring, anyhow." + + +[Illustration: PATROLLING A COYOTE FENCE. + +The old Ranger and his hound safeguarding the grazing interests of the +forest. + +_Photograph by U. S. Forest Service._] + + +[Illustration: REDUCING THE WOLF SUPPLY.] + + +[Illustration: REDUCING THE WOLF SUPPLY. + +Sport that is worth while, freeing the National Forests from beasts of +prey. + +_Photographs by U. S. Forest Service._] + + + + +CHAPTER VI + +IN THE HEART OF THE FOREST + + +Towards noon the next day, Wilbur and the Ranger rode up to the shack in +the woods which Rifle-Eye considered as one of his headquarters. As soon +as they reached the clearing they were met by a big, shambling youth, +whose general appearance and hesitating air proclaimed him to be the +half-witted lad of whom Wilbur had heard. He came forward and took the +horses. + +"You've heard about Ben?" queried the hunter as the horses were being +led away. + +"Yes," answered Wilbur, "Bob-Cat Bob told me all about the death of his +father during the sheep and cattle war. He told me when we were riding +up to the ranch, from the station at Sumber." + +"I have thought," said Rifle-Eye, "that perhaps it ain't quite the right +thing to keep Ben here, up in the woods. But I tried sendin' him to +school. It wasn't no manner of use. It only troubled the teacher an' +bothered him, an' I reckon his life will stack up at the end jest as +well, even if he can't read." + +"What does he do while you are away?" asked Wilbur. + +"Oh, a lot of things. He ain't idle a minute, really, an' there's times +that he's as good as them that thinks themselves so wise." + +"What sort of things?" + +"Well, he's done a lot o' work stampin' out the prairie dogs. Of course, +there's very few o' them in these parts, so few that the government has +made no appropriation for this forest. It's in Eastern Montana an' the +Dakotas that you get them, an' there's been a lot o' trouble in the +Custer an' Sioux forests. He's gone there several times, an' there's +been villages o' them here among the foothills that Ben's cleared up +entirely." + +"They poison the prairie dogs, don't they?" + +"Yes, with strychnine, mainly. Grain is soaked in the poison an' a few +grains put outside each hole in a dog town. If this is done early in the +year, before the green grass is up for food, it will pretty nearly clean +up the town." + +"It seems rather a shame," said Wilbur, "they are such fat, jolly little +fellows, and the way they sit up on their hind legs and look at you is +a wonder." + +"It's all right for them to look 'fat and jolly,'" replied Rifle-Eye, +"but when the stock raiser finds hundreds of acres of grass nibbled down +to the roots, an' when the farmer's young wheat is ruined, they don't +see so much jollity in it." + +"But I didn't know that the Forest Service took a hand in that sort of +thing." + +"Only indirectly. But they provide the poison an' the settlers usually +git some one to put it round. As I say, Ben's been doin' a lot of it +this spring." + +"But that sort of work doesn't last long." + +"No, only in the spring. But Ben's busy other ways. Sometimes he goes +down to the valleys an' helps the ranchers with their hayin'. He don't +know anythin' about money, though, an' so they never pay him cash." + +"That's tough on Ben, then," remarked Wilbur. "Does he work all the time +for nothing?" + +"Not at all. They always see that he gits a fair return. Every once in a +while the man he's workin' for will drive up to the shack with some +bacon an' a barrel o' flour an' trimmin's. Often as not, he'll bring +the wife along, an' she'll go over the lad's things to find what he +needs." + +"That's mighty nice," commented Wilbur. + +"Some of 'em are as good to Ben as if he was their own," said the +Ranger. "They'll go over everything he's got, fix up whatever needs +mendin', an' make a list o' things to be bought next time any one goes +into town. You see, he gits his wages that way. He works well, an' so it +ain't like charity, an' at the same time it gives the man he works for a +chance to do the right thing." + +"I suppose if he didn't, you'd get after him," suggested the boy. + +"Never had to yet, an' never expect to," was the prompt reply. "Mostly +folks is all right, an' a lot o' the supposed selfishness is jest +because they ain't been reminded. And then Ben never makes trouble." + +"He seems quiet enough," said Wilbur, with a gesture towards the doorway +where the lad was approaching. He came in and stood looking vacantly at +the two sitting together. + +"What were you doin' yesterday, Ben?" asked the Ranger sharply to rouse +him. + +The lad flung out both arms with a wild gesture. + +"I was away, away, far away," he answered; "away, away over the hills." + +"Where?" + +The half-witted lad passed his hand across his eyes. + +"With Mickey," he said. + +"An' what were you an' Mickey doin'?" + +"Lots of things, lots, lots, lots. Little fires creep, creep, creepin' +on the ground," he moved his hands waveringly backward and forward as +though to show the progress of the flames, "then put them out quick, +so!" he stamped his foot on the ground. + +"Does he mean a forest fire, Rifle-Eye?" queried Wilbur, alert at the +very mention of fire. + +"No, no, no," interrupted Ben; "little bit fires. Pile burn, burn hot, +grass catch fire, put out grass." + +"You mean," said the mountaineer, "that you an' Mickey were burnin' up +brush?" + +"Yes, brush all in piles, burn." + +"It's a pretty risky business," said Rifle-Eye, "this burnin' brush in +the late spring, but Mickey's right enough to have had Ben along. He's +one o' the best fire-fighters that ever happened. He never knows enough +to quit." + +"Did you have any trouble, Ben?" asked Wilbur. + +"One little fire, walk, walk, walk away into the woods. But I stopped +him." + +"Alone?" + +The half-witted lad nodded. Then, coming over to Wilbur, he pointed to +the rude bandages and said questioningly: + +"Tumble?" + +"No, Ben," replied the other boy, "I got into a mix-up with a bob-cat." + +"I fight, too. Wait, I show you something." + +He disappeared for a moment and then came back with two wolf pups, +carrying one in each hand as he might a kitten. + +"I got five more," he said. + +"Where did you get 'em, Ben?" asked the Ranger. + +"Way, way over. Deadman Canyon." + +"Get the old wolf?" + +The half-witted lad nodded his head vigorously several times. + +"Yes," he said, "dead, dead, dead." + +"Was the den just by the Sentinel Pine?" + +"Yes." + +"I reckon that's the wolf that's been givin' such a lot of trouble on +the Arroyo," commented Rifle-Eye. "I went out after that wolf one day +this spring, Ben, but I didn't get her. I waited at the den a long time, +too." + +"Two holes out of den, two. I wait, too. Long, long time. No come out. +Plug up one hole. Long more time waited. Then wolf go in. I go in, too." + +"You went into the wolf's den?" queried Wilbur in amazement. + +"Yes, in. Far, far in." + +"How far?" + +"Don't know. Far." + +"Well, I went in about forty feet myself," said the old hunter, "an' I +didn't see any sign o' the pups, so I backed out again. If you went all +the way in, Ben, I reckon it was a pretty long crawl." + +"But why did you go in the den when the mother wolf was there?" asked +Wilbur. + +"Boy fool," said the half-witted lad, pointing at him. "Why go in if +wolf not there?" + +"Well," said Wilbur, on the defensive, "I should think it a whole lot +safer to go in--that is, if I was going in at all--sometime when I'd be +sure the mother wolf wouldn't be there." + +But the other, still holding the cubs in his hands, negatived this +reasoning with a vigorous shake of the head. + +"Safer, wolf in," he said. + +"I don't see that at all," objected Wilbur. "It can't be safer." + +"You go in, in far, when wolf out. By and by wolf come, eat up legs, no +can turn round for shoot." + +"I hadn't thought of that," the boy said, a little humbled. + +"Ben's nearly right," said the Ranger, "an' it ain't really as dangerous +as it sounds. There ain't room in the passage for the wolf to spring, +an' if you shoot you're bound to hit her somewhere, no matter how you +aim. O' course, a wolf ain't goin' to come along an' 'eat up your legs' +the way he puts it, but you might get a nasty bite or two. It's a lot +better to go after a wolf than have the wolf come after you. It takes +more nerve, but it ain't so hard at that." + +"But how did you kill the old wolf, Ben?" asked Wilbur. + +"I go in, far in. See eyes glitter. Shoot once. Shoot twice. Old wolf +dead. Take out pups, easy. Skin wolf." + +"Where's the skin?" + +"Dryin'." + +But Wilbur was by no means satisfied and he plied the half-witted lad +with questions until he had secured all the details of the story. In the +meantime the Ranger had been getting dinner, and as soon as it was over +Wilbur was glad to lie down on Ben's bed, for he had lost not a little +blood in his tussle with the wild-cat the night before, and riding all +morning with those deep scratches only rudely bandaged had been rather a +strain. By the time that Rifle-Eye was ready to start again Wilbur was +fairly stiffened up, and at the Ranger's suggestion he agreed to stay on +a couple of days in the shack, having Ben cook for him and look after +him, as the Ranger felt that he himself ought to get back to +headquarters. + +It was not until the third day that Wilbur once more got into the saddle +and with Ben to guide him through the forest, started for the +Supervisor's headquarters, or rather the Ranger's cabin where the +Supervisor was staying. The two boys rode on and up, leaving behind the +scrub oak, chapparal, and manzanita, and into the great yellow pine and +sugar pine forests. Shortly before noontime they heard voices in the +woods, and Ben, after listening a moment, turned from the trail. In a +few minutes he reined up beside a tall, sunburned man, walking through +the woods pencil and notebook in hand. At the same time the Ranger, who +was working with him, stepped up. + +"Thanks, Ben," he said. Then, turning to the Supervisor, he said: +"Merritt, here's the boy!" + +Wilbur's new chief stepped forward quickly and held out his hand with a +word of greeting. Wilbur shook it heartily and decided on the spot that +he was going to like him. Wearing khaki with the Forest Service bronze +badge, a Stetson army hat, and the high lace boots customarily seen, he +looked thoroughly equipped for business. + +"You're Wilbur Loyle," he said, "of course. I heard you were coming. +Have you had any experience?" + +"Just the Colorado Ranger School, sir," said the boy. + +"You were to be here three days ago." + +"Yes, Mr. Merritt, but I was delayed, and I put up a couple of days with +Ben, here." + +"He reckoned he had more right to a rabbit what a bob-cat was feastin' +on than the cat had," volunteered Rifle-Eye in explanation. "In the +ensooin' disagreement he got a bit scratched, an' so I looked after him. +I told him to stay at Ben's, an' I guess he's all right now." + +"Being three days late isn't the best start in the world," said the +Supervisor sharply, "but if Rifle-Eye knows all about it and is willing +to stand for it, I won't say any more. Can you cruise?" + +"I've learned, sir, but I haven't done much of it. I think, though, I +can do it, all right." + +"Very well. We'll break off for dinner now, and you can try this +afternoon. Or do you still feel tired, and would you rather wait until +to-morrow?" + +"Thanks, Mr. Merritt," answered Wilbur, "but I want to start right now." + +"Very well," said the Supervisor laconically. Then, turning to the +Ranger, he commenced talking with him about the work in hand, and for +the moment Wilbur was left aside. The lumberman who had been working on +the other side of the Supervisor, however, sauntered up and introduced +himself as "McGinnis, me boy, Red McGinnis, they call me, because of the +natural beauty of me hair." + +"I'm very glad, Mr. McGinnis--" began the boy when the lumberman +interrupted him. + +"'Tis very sorry ye'll be if ye call me out of me right name. Sure I +said McGinnis, jest plain McGinnis, not Misther McGinnis. Ye can call me +'Judge,' or 'Doctor,' or 'Colonel,' or annything else, but I won't be +called Misther by annyone." + +"Very well, McGinnis," said the boy, looking at his height and broad +shoulders, "I guess there's no one that will make you." + +"There is not!" the big lumberman replied. "And are ye goin' to join us +in a little promenade through the timber?" + +"So Mr. Merritt said." + +"I don't see what for," the Irishman replied. "Sure, there's the three +of us now." + +"Is there much of it to do?" + +"There is that. There's three million feet wanted, half sugar pine and +half yellow pine, in this sale alone. An' there's another sale waiting, +so I hear, as soon as this one's through." + +"Maybe it's just to find out whether I can do it?" suggested Wilbur. + +The lumberman nodded affirmatively. + +"That's just about it," he said. "Because ye'll have a big stretch to +cover as Guard, an' there'll be no time for ye cruisin'. You keep the +trees from burnin' up so as we can mark them for cuttin' down." + +"It always seems a shame," said Wilbur, "to have to cut down these +trees. Of course, I know it's done so as to help the forest, not to hurt +it, and that if the big trees weren't cut down the young ones couldn't +get sunlight and wouldn't have a chance to grow. But still one hates to +see a big tree go." + +"It isn't that way at all, at all," said the lumberman. "There's some +that does their best work livin', and there's some that does it dead. A +man does it livin' and a tree does it dead. But what a tree does after +it's dead depends on what kind of a chance it's had when it's been +livin'. Sure ye've been to the schools when all the girls and some of +the boys gets into white dresses, the girls I mean, and sings songs, and +gives speeches and class poems and other contraptions, and graduates." + +"I have," said Wilbur, "and not so long ago at that." + +"And so have I," answered the lumberman. "Sure, me own little Kathleen +was graduated just a month ago from high school. Well, cuttin' down a +tree is like its graduation. It's been livin' and growin' and gettin' +big and strong and makin' up into good timber. Now its schoolin' in the +forest is over, it's goin' out into the world, to be made useful in some +kind of way, and in goin' it makes room for more." + +"You don't take kindly to the 'Oh, Woodman, spare that tree' ideal?" +smiled Wilbur. + +"I do not. But I'd spare it, all right, until there were other young +trees growin' near it to take its place in time. 'Tis the biggest part +of the work is cuttin' down the trees that make the best timber." + +When they were settled drinking hot tea and eating some trout that the +party had with them, the Supervisor turned to Wilbur. + +"McGinnis is a good man," he began, smiling as the Irishman with +pantomime returned the compliment by drinking his health in a pannikin +of tea, "but he's so built that he can't see straight. If you introduce +McGinnis to a girl he'll want to estimate how many feet she'd make board +measure." + +He dodged a pine cone which the Irishman threw at him. + +"How about Aileen?" he said. + +"I'll take that back," said Merritt; "Mrs. McGinnis hasn't gone to +diameter growth. But," he continued, "she's good on clear length and has +a fine crown." + +By which Wilbur readily understood that the lumberman's wife was slight, +well-built, and neat, and with heavy hair. The lumberman, mollified by +the tribute, returned to his dinner, and the Supervisor continued: + +"McGinnis told you that cutting down the best trees available for timber +is the most important part of forest work. It's not. The most important +thing is keeping the forest at its best. Cutting trees when they have +reached their maximum is a most necessary part, and it's a policy that +helps to make the forest pay for itself. But the value to the forest +lies in its conservation. You know about that?" + +"Yes, sir," said the boy; "it's keeping the watersheds from becoming +deforested, either by cutting or by fire, and so preventing erosion from +taking place." + +"I reckon," put in the old Ranger, "thar's another that pleases me still +better than either of those." + +"And what's that, Rifle-Eye?" asked Merritt. + +"It's the plantin'. When I walk along some of the forest nurseries, an' +see hundreds and hundreds of little seedlin's all growin' protected +like, and bein' cared for just the same as if they was little children, +an' when I know that in fifty years time they'll be big fine trees like +the one we're sittin' under, I tell you it looks pretty good to me. +They're such helpless little things, seedlin's, and they do have such a +time to get a start. Nursery's a good name all right. I've been along +some of 'em at night, when the moonlight was a shinin' down on them, and +they wasn't really no different from children in their little beds." + +"I should think," said Wilbur, "that the changing of a forest from one +kind of tree to another would be the most interesting. I mean getting +rid of the worthless trees and giving the advantage to those that are +finer." + +"And a few sections west," commented the Supervisor, "you would find +that Bellwall, who's the Ranger there, thinks that the most interesting +thing in the whole of the forest work is putting an end to the diseases +of trees and to the insects that are a danger to them. Another Ranger +may be a tree surgeon." + +"A tree surgeon doesn't help so much," put in McGinnis, "the timber is +niver worth a whoop!" + +"There you go again," said the head of the forest, "there's other things +to be thought of besides timber." He turned to the boy. "You don't know +the trees of the Sierras, I suppose?" + +"I think I know them pretty well now," answered Wilbur. "I had to learn +a lot about them at school, and then Rifle-Eye has been giving me +pointers the last few days." + +"What's the difference between a yellow pine and a sugar pine?" queried +the Supervisor. + +"Sugar pine wood is white and soft," said the boy, "yellow pine is hard, +harder than any other pine except the long-leaf variety." + +"That's right enough. But how are you going to tell them when standing?" + +Wilbur thought for a moment. + +"I should think," he said, "that the yellow pine is a so much bigger +tree as a rule that you could tell it by that alone. But I suppose a +younger yellow pine might look like a sugar. The leaves would help, +though, because I should think the sugar, like most of the soft pines, +has its leaves in clusters of five in a sheath, and the yellow being a +hard pine, has them in bundles of three." + +"How about the bark?" + +"Sugar pine bark is smoother," said the boy. + +The Supervisor nodded. + +"All right," he said, "we'll try you at it. You go along with McGinnis +for an hour or so, to see just how he does it, and then you can take one +side, and he the other. Just for a day or two, while Rifle-Eye looks +after some other matters." + +Wilbur accordingly took a pair of calipers and walked with McGinnis back +to where he had originally met the party. Resuming work the lumberman +started through the forest, calling as he went the kind of trees and +their approximate size. As, however, this particular portion of the +forest had never been "cruised," McGinnis not only called and marked the +trees which were to be cut in the sale, but also the other timber. + +Thus he would call, as he reached a tree, "Sugar, thirty-four, six," by +which Wilbur understood him to mean that the tree was a sugar pine, that +it was thirty-four inches in diameter breast high, and that it would cut +into six logs of the regular sixteen-foot length. It probably would be +thirty or fifty feet higher, but the top could only be used for posts, +cordwood, and similar uses. Such a tree, having been estimated and +adjudged fit for sale, the lumberman would make a blaze with a small ax, +by slicing off a portion of bark about eight inches long, then turning +the head of the ax, whereon was "U. S." in raised letters, he would +whack the blaze, making a mark which was unchangeable. No other trees +than those so marked might be cut. + +But as other trees were passed which were not good enough for +merchantable timber, he would call these rapidly, "Cedar, small," +"Engelmann (spruce), eighteen," "Douglas (spruce), fourteen," all of +which were entered by the Supervisor, walking behind, in his cruising +book. At the same time he made full notes as to the condition of the +young forest, the presence of parasitic plants such as mistletoe, of +diseased trees, if any were found, of the nature of the soil, of the +drainage of the forest, and of the best way in which the timber sale was +to be logged in order to do the least possible damage to the forest. + +In a half an hour or so Wilbur dropped back to the Supervisor. + +"I think, sir," he said, "that I can do that without any trouble. But I +can't do it as fast as McGinnis, sir, for he can tell the size of a +tree just by looking at it. I shall have to use the calipers for a day +or two." + +Merritt looked at him. + +"For a day or two?" he said. "McGinnis has been doing it for thirty +years. In these Western forests, too. You take him to an Eastern forest +and even now he wouldn't be sure of estimating correctly. You use the +calipers for a year or two!" + +Wilbur, accordingly, quickened his pace, and, going along a little to +the left and in advance of the Supervisor, took up his share of the +work. He found that he had to depend entirely upon McGinnis for his +compass direction, and that he was only doing about one tree to +McGinnis' six, but still every hour that passed by gave him greater +confidence. The afternoon was wearing away when suddenly they came to a +part of the forest in which some timber seemed to have been cut during +the winter preceding. McGinnis dropped back. + +"Sure, ye didn't tell me that any of this had been cut over," he said +aggrievedly. + +"It hasn't, so far as I know," said Merritt. He put his book in his +pocket and walked on briskly for a few hundred yards. Although the +logging had been done the preceding winter the signs were clear for +those who could read them determining the direction in which the logs +had been taken. + +"That's Peavey Jo's work," said the Supervisor at last. "I reckon this +is where he begins to find trouble on his hands. We'll find out, +McGinnis, how much of this timber he has stolen, measure up the stumps +and make him pay for every stick he's taken." + +"Ye'd better leave Peavey Jo alone. They used to call him 'The Canuck +Brute,'" remarked McGinnis. + +"He will pay," repeated Merritt quietly, "for every foot that he's got. +And I'll see that he does." + +"You'll have the fight of your life." + +"What of it! You don't want to back out?" + +"Back out? Me? I will not! But it'll be a jim-dandy of a scrap." + +The Supervisor turned to Wilbur. + +"Measure," he said, "the diameter of all those stumps and mark with a +bit of chalk those you have measured. We'll talk to Peavey Jo in a day +or two." + + +[Illustration: WHERE BEN AND MICKEY BURNED THE BRUSH. + +Getting rid of slashings which otherwise might feed a forest fire. + +_Photograph by U. S. Forest Service._] + + +[Illustration: THE CABIN OF THE OLD RANGER. + +Where Wilbur stayed a couple of days recovering from the wild-cat's +scratches. + +_Photograph by U. S. Forest Service._] + + +[Illustration: STAMPING IT GOVERNMENT PROPERTY. + +McGinnis marking "U. S." on timber that has been scaled and measured up. + +_Photograph by U. S. Forest Service._] + + + + +CHAPTER VII + +WILBUR IN HIS OWN CAMP + + +"I should think," said Wilbur at headquarters that night, when the +timber theft of Peavey Jo was being discussed, "that it would be mighty +hard to prove that the timber had been taken." + +"Why?" asked the Supervisor. + +"Well, we can see how the logs were drawn, and so forth, but you can't +bring those driveways into court very well, and put them before the +judge as Exhibit A, or anything?" + +"You could bring affidavits, couldn't you? But there are few who want to +go to law about it. A man knows he can't buck the government on a fake +case. We have very little trouble now, but there used to be a lot of +it." + +"Did you ever have to use weapons, Mr. Merritt?" asked the boy, +remembering the story he had heard in Washington about the tie-cutters. + +"No," was the instant reply. "You don't handle people with a gun any +more in California than you do in New York. These aren't the days of +Forty-nine." + +"But I thought the 'old-timers' still carried guns," persisted the boy. + +"Very few do now. But I got into trouble once, or thought I was going +to, when I was a Ranger in the Gunnison Forest. It involved some Douglas +fir telephone poles. This trespass was done while I was in town for a +while in the Supervisor's office. When I came back I happened to pass by +this man's camp, and seeing a lot of telephone poles, I asked if they +had been cut in the forest. The man was a good deal of a bully, and he +ordered me off the place. He said he didn't have to answer any +questions, and wasn't going to." + +"Did you go?" asked Wilbur. + +"Certainly I went. What would be the use of staying around there? But +before I left I got a kind of an answer. He said he had shipped in these +telephone poles from another part of the State." + +"Sure, that was a fairy tale," said McGinnis. + +"Of course it was. I went into the forest and searched around, although +there had been a recent fall of snow, until I found the place where most +of the poles had been cut. Then I went back to the trespasser and told +him, saying I would prove to him that it was on government ground. + +"He agreed, and we rode to the place. He took his Winchester along and +carried it over his shoulder. He wasn't carrying it in the usual way, +but had his hand almost level with his shoulder so that the barrel +pointed in my direction. I noticed, too, that he was playing with the +trigger. It seemed likely that it might suit his purposes rather well if +I was accidentally killed. But each time I cantered up close to him, the +barrel returned to its natural position. + +"Presently, as we rode along, we came to a waterfall, not a big one, but +falling with quite a splashing, and under the cover of the noise I +suddenly came to a quick gallop, overtook the trespasser, and, grasping +his Winchester firmly with both hands, jerked it out of his grasp." + +"Sure, he must have been the maddest thing that iver happened!" said +McGinnis. + +"He was sore, all right. But what could he do? I had the rifle, and we +neither of us had any six-shooters. I showed him that there was no +object in my shooting him, while he would gain by shooting me, so I +proposed to hold the gun. And hold it I did. On my return I put a +notice of seizure on the poles. + +"The report went through the usual way to the Commissioner of the +General Land Office. He wrote me a letter direct about the case and put +it up to me to ask the trespasser what proposition of settlement he +intended to make. I thought the town was the best place for this and +waited at the post-office for a day or two until he came in. There I +tackled him, and told him he would have to notify the Department +immediately. At this, he and his son invited me outside to fight it out. +I told them I did not intend to fight, but that if within thirty minutes +they did not make a proposition of settlement I would telegraph to the +Department and his case would become one for harsher measures. + +"The postmaster set out to convince him that Uncle Sam was too big a job +for him to handle, and in twenty minutes or so back he came with an +offer which was forwarded to the Department. A year or so later the case +was settled by a Special Agent." + +McGinnis added several similar stories of timber difficulties, and, +supper being over, they got ready to turn in. The headquarters was a +most comfortable house, fairly large, having been built by the previous +Ranger, who was married. It was now used by another Ranger, as well as +Rifle-Eye, being near the borders of their two districts, and having +plenty of good water and good feed near. But although it was barely +dark, Wilbur was tired enough to be glad to stretch himself on the cot +in the little room and sink to sleep amid the soughing of the wind +through the pine needles of neighboring forest giants one and two +hundred feet high. + +Early the next morning, Wilbur tumbled up, went out and looked after his +horses, and came in hungry to breakfast. + +"I had intended," said the Supervisor, "to go with you this morning and +show you the part of the range you are to look after. But I want to get +at Peavey Jo, lest he should decide to leave suddenly, and Rifle-Eye +will show you the way instead. I had the tent pitched three or four days +ago, when you ought to have been here. You'll find that to cover your +range takes about six hours' good riding a day. Use a different horse, +of course, each day, and remember that your horse in some ways is fully +as important as you are. You can stand a heap of things that he can't. +A man will tire out any animal that breathes." + +"And what have I to do?" + +"You have three trails to ride, on three successive days, so that you +will have a chance of seeing all your range, or points that will command +all your range at least twice a week. And, of course, quite a good deal +of it you will cover daily. You are to watch out for fires, and if you +see one, put it out. If you can't put it out alone, ride back to your +camp and telephone here, as soon as it is evening. Sometimes it is +better to keep working alone until you know there's some one to answer +the 'phone, sometimes it's better to get help right away. You can tell +about that when you have got to the fire and have seen what it is." + +Wilbur nodded. + +"That's easy enough to follow," he said. + +"If a heavy rain comes, you had better ride back here, because for a few +days after a big rain a fire isn't likely to start, and there's always +lots of other stuff to be done in the forest, trail-building, and things +of that sort." + +"Very well, Mr. Merritt," answered the boy. + +"There are no timber sales going on in that section of the forest, so +that if you see any cutting going on, just ride up quietly and get into +conversation with the people cutting and casually find out their names. +Ask no other questions, but in the evening telephone to me." + +"The telephone must be a big convenience. But," added Wilbur, "it seems +to take away the primitiveness of it, somehow." + +"Wilbur," said the Supervisor seriously, "you don't want to run into the +mistake of thinking that life on a national forest is principally a +picturesque performance. It's a business that the government is running +for the benefit of the country at large. Anything that can be done to +make it efficient is tremendously important. The telephone already has +saved many a fearful night ride through bad places of the forest, has +been the means of stopping many a fire, and has saved many a life in +consequence. I think that's a little more important than +'primitiveness,' as you call it." + +The boy accepted the rebuke silently. Indeed, there was nothing more to +say. + +"As for grazing, there's not much to be said, except that the sheep +limits are pretty well defined. The cattle can wander up the range +without doing much harm here, for the young forest is of pretty good +growth, but the sheep must stay down where they belong. Rifle-Eye will +show you where, and sheep notices have been posted all along the limits. +And if there's anything you don't know, ask. And I guess that's about +all." + +The Supervisor rose to go, but Wilbur stopped him. + +"How am I to arrange about supplies?" he said. + +"The tent's near a spring," was the brief but all-embracing reply. +"There's a lake near by with plenty of trout, there's flour and +groceries and canned stuff in a cache, and the Guard that was there last +year had some kind of a little garden. You can see what there is, and if +you want seeds of any kind, let me know. And there's nothing to prevent +you shooting rabbits, though they're not much good this time of year." + +"I'll get along all right, Mr. Merritt," said Wilbur confidently. + +"I'll ride over on Sunday and see you anyway," added the Supervisor as +he strode through the doorway, meeting McGinnis, who was waiting for him +outside. Wilbur followed him to the door. + +"'Tis all the luck in the world I'm wishin' ye," shouted the big +Irishman, "an' while ye're keepin' the fires away we'll be gettin' +another nicely started for that old logjammer. Sure, we'll make it hot +enough for him." + +"Good hunting," responded Wilbur with a laugh, as the two men +disappeared under the trees. + +Although only a day had passed since Wilbur had met the Supervisor and +McGinnis, it seemed to him that several days must have elapsed, so much +had happened, and he found it hard to believe, when he found himself in +the saddle again beside the old Ranger, that they had started from Ben's +shack only the morning before. + +"I like Mr. Merritt," he said as soon as they had got started. "I like +McGinnis, too." + +"I reckon he wasn't over-pleased with your bein' late?" queried +Rifle-Eye. + +"He wasn't," admitted the boy candidly, "but I don't blame him for that. +I liked him just the same. But I don't think it's safe to monkey with +him. Now, McGinnis is easygoing and good-natured." + +"So is a mountain river runnin' down a smooth bed. The river is just the +same old river when rocks get in the road, but it acts a lot different. +Now, Merritt, when he's satisfied and when he ain't, don't vary, but I +tell you, McGinnis can show white water sometimes." + +"I don't think I'm aching to be that rock," said Wilbur with a grin. + +"Wa'al," said the Ranger, "I ain't filed no petition for the nomination, +not yet." + +"But tell me, Rifle-Eye," said the boy, "what is McGinnis? He isn't a +Guard, is he? and he doesn't talk like a Ranger from another part of the +forest." + +"No, he's an expert lumberman," replied the hunter. "He isn't attached +to this forest at all. He ain't even under the service of the government +all the while. He generally is, because he knows his business an' the +Forest Service knows a good man when it sees one. They engage him for a +month, or three, or four months, an' he goes wherever there's a timber +sale, or a big cut. Often as not, he teaches the Rangers a heap of +things they don't know about lumberin', and the Forest Assistants +themselves ain't above takin' practical pointers from him." + +"But I thought Mr. Merritt said that McGinnis only knew this kind of +forest?" + +"He said McGinnis wouldn't know anything of an Eastern hardwood forest. +That's right. But the government hasn't got any hardwood forests yet, +though I guess they soon will in the Appalachians. But you can't lose +him in any kind of pine. I've met up with him from Arizona to Alaska." + +The old woodsman turned sharply from the trail, apparently into the +unbroken forest. + +"Do you see the trail?" he asked. + +Wilbur looked on the ground to see if he could discern any traces. Not +doing so, he looked up at the Ranger, who had half turned in the saddle +to watch him. As he shook his head in denial he noticed the old +mountaineer looking at him with grieved surprise. + +"What do you reckon you were lookin' on the ground for?" he asked. + +"For the trail," said Wilbur. + +"Did ye think this was a city park?" said Rifle-Eye disgustedly. + +"Well, I never saw a trail before that you couldn't see," responded +Wilbur defiantly. + +The old hunter stopped his horse. + +"Turn half round," he said. Wilbur did so. "Now," he continued, "can you +see any trail through there?" + +The boy looked through the long cool aisles of trees, realizing that he +could ride in any direction without being stopped by undergrowth, but he +could see nothing that looked like a trail. + +"Now turn round and look ahead," said the hunter. + +The moment Wilbur turned he became conscious of what the old mountaineer +wanted to show him. Not a definite sign could he see, the ground was +untrampled, the trees showed no blaze marks, yet somehow there was a +consciousness that in a certain direction there was a way. + +"Yes," he said vaguely. "I can't see it, but I feel somehow that there's +a trail through there." He pointed between two large spruces that stood +near. + +The hunter slapped his pony on the neck. + +"Get up there, Milly," he said, "we'll teach him yet! You see," he +continued, "there ain't no manner of use in tryin' to see a trail. If +the trail's visible, the worst tenderfoot that ever lived could follow +it. It's the trail that you can't see that you've got to learn to +follow." + +"And how do you do it, Rifle-Eye?" asked the boy. + +"Same as you did just now. There's just a mite of difference where folks +have ridden, there's perhaps just a few seedlin's been trodden down, +an' there's a line between the trees that's just a little straighter +than any animal's runway. But it's so faint that the more you think +about it, the less sure you are. But, by an' by, you get so that you +couldn't help followin' it in any kind of weather." And the old hunter, +seeing the need of teaching Wilbur the intricacies of the pine country +forests, gave him hint after hint all the way to his little camp. + +When he got there Wilbur gave an exclamation of delight. The camp, as +the Supervisor had said, was near a little spring, which indeed bubbled +from the hillside not more than ten feet away from the tent, and +gleaming on the slope a couple of hundred feet below, he could see the +little lake which was "so full of trout" glistening itself like a silver +fish in the sunlight. A tall flagstaff, with a cord all reeved for the +flag, stood by the tent, and for the realities of life a strong, +serviceable telephone was fastened to a tree. + +Wilbur turned to the hunter, his eyes shining. + +"What a daisy place!" he cried. + +The old hunter smiled at his enthusiasm. + +"Let's see the tent," he said, and was about to leap from his horse when +the hunter called him. + +"I reckon, son," he said, "there's somethin' you're forgettin'." + +"What's that?" said Wilbur. + +"Horses come first," said Rifle-Eye. "It's nigh dinner-time now. Where's +the corral?" + +But Wilbur's spirits were not to be dampened by any check. + +"Is there a corral?" he said. "How bully! Oh, yes, I remember now Mr. +Merritt said there was. Where is it, Rifle-Eye? Say, this is a jim-dandy +of a camp!" + +A few steps further they came to the corral, a pretty little meadow in a +clearing, and in the far corner of it the stream which trickled from the +spring near the house. Wilbur unsaddled with a whoop and turned the +horses in the corral, then hurried back to the camp. The old hunter, +thinking perhaps that the boy would rather have the feeling of doing it +all himself for the first time, had not gone near the tent. There was a +small outer tent, which was little more than a strip of canvas thrown +over a horizontal pole and shielding a rough fireplace for rainy +weather, and within was the little dwelling-tent, with a cot, and even a +tiny table. On the ground was Wilbur's pack, containing all the things +he had sent up when he had broken his journey to go to the Double Bar +J ranch, and there, upon the bed, all spread out in the fullness of its +glory, was a brand-new Stars and Stripes. For a moment the boy's breath +was taken away, then, with a dash, he rushed for it, and fairly danced +out to the flagpole, where he fastened it and ran it to the truck, +shouting as he did so. His friend, entering into the boy's feelings, +solemnly raised his hat, as the flag settled at the peak and waved in +the wind. Wilbur, turning, saw the old scout saluting, and with stirring +patriotism, saluted, too. + +"And now," said the old hunter. "I'll get dinner." + +"That you'll not," said Wilbur indignantly. "I guess this is my house, +and you're to be my first guest." + + +[Illustration: WILBUR'S OWN CAMP. + +His first photograph; taken the day the Supervisor dropped in to see +him. + +_Photograph by U. S. Forest Service._] + + + + +CHAPTER VIII + +DOWNING A GIANT LUMBERJACK + + +"I don't believe," said Wilbur the next morning as they rode along the +trail that led to the nearest of his "lookout points," "that any king or +emperor ever had as fine a palace as this one." + +The comparison was a just one. Throughout the part of the forest in +which they were riding the whole sensation was of being roofed in and +enclosed, the roof itself being of shifting and glowing green, through +which at infrequent intervals broad streams of living light poured in, +gilding with a golden bronze the carpet of pine needles, while the +purple brown shafts of the trunks of the mighty trees formed a colonnade +illimitable. + +"I reckon every kind of palace," replied the Ranger, "had some sort of a +forest for a pattern. I took an artist through the Rockies one time, an' +he showed me that every kind of buildin' that had ever been built, and +every kind of trimmin's that had been devised had started as mere copies +of trees an' leaves." + +"Well," said Wilbur, his mind going back to a former exclamation of the +old woodsman, "you said this was your house." + +"My house it is," said Rifle-Eye, "an' if you wait a few minutes I'll +show you the view from one of my windows." + +For two hours the hunter and the boy had been riding up a sharp slope, +in places getting off their horses so as to give them the benefit of as +little unnecessary carrying as possible, constantly ascending on a great +granite spur twenty miles wide, between the Kaweah and King's River +canyons. Now, suddenly they emerged from the shadowy roof of the forest +to the bare surface of a ridge of granite. + +"There's the real world," said Rifle-Eye; "it ain't goin' to hurt your +eyes to look at it, same as a city does, and your own little worryin's +soon drop off in a place like this." + +He turned his horse slightly to the left, where a small group of +mountain balsam, growing in a cleft of the granite, made a spot of +shadow upon the very precipice's brink. The boy looked around for a +minute or two without speaking, then said softly: "How fine!" + +Three thousand feet below, descending in bold faces of naked rugged +rock, broken here and there by ledges whereon mighty pines found +lodgment, lay the valley of King's River, a thin, winding gleam of green +with the water a silver thread so fine as only to be seen at intervals. +Here and there in the depths the bottom widened to a quarter of a mile, +and there the sunlight, falling on the young grass, gave a brilliancy of +green that was almost startling in contrast with the dark foliage of the +pines. + +"What do you call that rock?" asked the boy, pointing to a tall, +pyramidal mass of granite, buttressed with rock masses but little less +noble than the central peak, between each buttress a rift of snow, +flecked here and there by the outline of a daring spruce clinging to the +rock, apparently in defiance of all laws of gravity. + +"That is called 'Grand Sentinel,'" said the hunter, "and if you will +take out your glasses you will see that from here you can overlook miles +and miles of country to the west. This is about as high as any place on +the south fork of the King's River until it turns north where Bubbs +Creek runs into it." + +Wilbur took out from their case his field-glasses and scanned the +horizon carefully as far as he could see, then snapping them back into +the case, he turned to the hunter, saying: + +"No fire in sight here!" + +"All right," replied Rifle-Eye, "then we'll go on to the next point." + +That whole day was a revelation to Wilbur of the beauty and of the size +of that portion of the forest which it was his especial business to +oversee. Here and there the Ranger made a short break from the direct +line of the journey to take the boy down to some miner's cabin or Indian +shack, so that, as he expressed it, "you c'n live in a world of friends. +There ain't no man livin', son," he continued, "but what'll be the +better of havin' a kind word some day, an' the more of them you give, +the more you're likely to have." + +Owing to these deviations from the direct trail, it was late when they +returned to Wilbur's little camp. But not even the lateness of the hour, +nor the boy's fatigue, could keep down his delight in his tent home. He +was down at the corral quite a long time, and when he came back +Rifle-Eye asked him where he had been. The boy flushed a little. + +"I hadn't seen Kit all day," he said, "so I went down and had a little +talk to her." + +The Ranger smiled and said nothing but looked well pleased. In the +meantime he had quickly prepared supper, and Wilbur started in and ate +as though he would never stop. At last he leaned back and sighed aloud. + +"That's the best dinner I ever ate," he said; "I never thought fish +could taste so good." + +But he jumped up again immediately and took the dishes down to the +spring to wash them. He had just dipped the plates into the pool under +the spring when the old woodsman stopped him. + +"You don't ever want to do that," he said. "There ain't any manner of +use in foulin' a stream that you'll want to use all the time. Little +bits of food, washin' off the plates, will soon make that water bad if +you let them run in there. An' not only is that bad for you, but ef +you'll notice, it's the overflow from that little pool that runs down +through the meadow." + +"And it would spoil the drinking water for the horses," exclaimed +Wilbur; "I hadn't thought of that. I'm awfully glad you're along, +Rifle-Eye, for I should be making all sorts of mistakes." + +Under the advice of his friend Wilbur washed up and put away the dishes +and then settled down for the evening. He made up his day's report, and +then thought he would write a long letter. But he had penned very, few +sentences when he began to get quite sleepy and to nod over the paper. +The Ranger noted it, and told him promptly to go to bed. + +"I'll finish this letter first," said Wilbur. + +A moment or two later he was again advised to turn in, and again Wilbur +persisted that he would finish the letter first. There was a short +pause. + +"Son," said Rifle-Eye, "what do you suppose you are ridin' from point to +point of the forest for?" + +"To see if there's any sign of fire," said the boy. + +"And you've got to look pretty closely through those glasses o' yours, +don't you?" + +The boy admitted that they were a little dazzling and that he had to +look all he knew how. + +"Then, if you make your eyes heavy and tired for the next mornin', +you're robbin' the Service of what they got you for--your eyesight, +ain't you? I ain't forcin' you, noways. I'm only showin' you what's the +square thing." + +Wilbur put forward his chin obstinately, then, thinking of the kindness +he had received from the Ranger all the way through, and realizing that +he was in the right, said: + +"All right, Rifle-Eye, I'll turn in." + +About half an hour later, just as the old woodsman stretched himself on +his pile of boughs outside the tent, he heard the boy mutter: + +"I hope I'll never have to live anywhere but here." + +The following day and the next were similar in many ways to the first. +Wilbur and the Ranger rode the various trails, the boy learning the +landmarks by which he might make sure that he was going right, and +making acquaintance with the few settlers who lived in his portion of +the forest. On Sunday morning, however, the Ranger told the boy he must +leave him to his own devices. + +"I've put in several days with you gettin' you started," he said, "an' I +reckon I'd better be goin' about some other business. There's a heap o' +things doin' all the time, an' as it is I'm pressed to keep up. But +I'll drop in every now an' again, an' you're allers welcome at +headquarters." + +"I hate to have you go, Rifle-Eye," the boy replied, "and you certainly +have been mighty good to me. I'll try not to forget all the things +you've told me, and I'll look forward to seeing you again before long." + +"I'll come first chance I can," replied the hunter. "Take care of +yourself." + +"Good-by, Rifle-Eye," called the boy, "and I'll look for your coming +back." He watched the old man until he was lost to sight and then waited +until the sound of the horse's hoofs on the hillside had ceased. He +found a lump in his throat as he turned away, but he went into the tent, +and went over his reports to see if they read all right before the +Supervisor arrived. Then, thinking that it was likely his chief would +come about noon, he exerted himself trying to make up an extra good +dinner. He caught some trout, and finding some lettuce growing in the +little garden, got it ready for salad, and then mixed up the batter for +some "flapjacks," as the old hunter had shown him how. He had everything +ready to begin the cooking, and was writing letters when he heard his +guest coming up the trail, and went out to meet him. + +After Wilbur had made his reports and got dinner, for both of which he +received a short commendation, the Supervisor broached the question of +the timber trespass. + +"Loyle," he said, "McGinnis and I have measured up the lumber stolen. +There's about four and a half million feet. You were with us when we +first located the trespass, and I want you to come with us to the mill." + +"Very well, Mr. Merritt," answered the boy. + +"I don't want you to do any talking at all, unless I ask you a question. +Then answer carefully and in the fewest words you can. Don't tell me +what you think. Say what you know. I'll do all the talking that will be +necessary." + +Wilbur thought to himself that the conversation probably would not be +very long, but he said nothing. + +"That is," continued the other as an afterthought, "McGinnis and I. I +don't suppose he can be kept quiet." + +Wilbur grinned. + +"But he usually knows what he is talking about, I should think," he +hazarded. + +"He does--on lumber." Then, with one of the abrupt changes of topic, +characteristic of the man, the Supervisor turned to the question of +intended improvements in that part of the forest where Wilbur was to be. +He showed himself to be aware that the lad's appointment as Guard was +not merely a temporary affair, but a part of his training to fit himself +for higher posts, and accordingly explained matters more fully than he +would otherwise have done. Reaching the close of that subject he rose to +go suddenly. He looked around the tent. + +"Got everything you want?" he demanded. + +"Yes, indeed, sir," the boy replied. "It's very comfortable here." + +"Got a watch?" + +"No, Mr. Merritt, not now." + +"Why not?" + +"Mine got lost in that little trouble I had with the bob-cat, and I +didn't notice it until next day." + +"Saw you hadn't one the other day. Take this." + +He pulled a watch out of his pocket and handed it to the boy. + +"But, Mr. Merritt," began the boy, "your watch? Oh, I couldn't--" + +"Got another. You'll need it." He turned and walked out of the tent. + +Wilbur overtook him on the way to the corral. + +"Oh, Mr. Merritt--" he began, but his chief turned sharply round on him. +The boy, for all his impulsiveness, could read a face, and he checked +himself. "Thank you very much, indeed," he ended quietly. He got out the +Supervisor's horse, and as the latter swung himself into the saddle, he +said: + +"What time to-morrow, Mr. Merritt?" + +"Eleven, sharp," was the reply. "So long." + +Wilbur looked after him as he rode away. + +"That means starting by daybreak," he said aloud. "Well, I don't think +I'm going to suffer from sleeping sickness on this job, anyway." And he +went back into the tent to finish the letter which he had started two +evenings before and never had a chance to complete. + +By dawn the next morning Wilbur was on the trail. He was giving himself +more time than he needed, but he had not the slightest intention of +arriving late, neither did he wish the flanks of his horse to show that +he had been riding hard. For the boy was perfectly sure that not a +detail would escape the Supervisor's eye. Accordingly, he was able to +take the trip quietly and trotted easily into camp a quarter of an hour +ahead of time. He was heartily welcomed by McGinnis, while Merritt told +him to go in and get a snack, as they would start in a few minutes. +There was enough to make a good meal, and Wilbur was hungry after riding +since dawn, so that he had just got through when the other two men rode +up. He hastily finished his last mouthful, jumped up, and clambered into +the saddle after the Supervisor, who had not waited a moment to see if +he were ready. + +Merritt set a fairly fast pace, and the trail was only intended for +single file, so that there was no conversation for an hour or more. Then +the head of the forest pulled up a little and conversed with McGinnis +briefly for a while, resuming his rapid pace as soon as they were +through. Once, and once only, did he speak to Wilbur, and that was just +as they got on the road leading to the sawmill. There he said: + +"Think all you like, but don't say it." + +When they reached the mill they passed the time of day with several of +the men, who seemed glad to see them, and a good deal of good-natured +banter passed between McGinnis and the men to whom he was well known. +The Supervisor sent word that he wanted to see the boss, and presently +Peavey Jo came out to meet them. + +"Salut, Merritt!" he said; "I t'ink it's long time since you were here, +hey?" + +The words as well as the look of the man told Wilbur his race and +nation. Evidently of French origin, possibly with a trace of Indian in +him, this burly son of generations of voyageurs looked his strength. +Wilbur had gone up one winter to northern Wisconsin and Michigan where +some of the big lumber camps were, and he knew the breed. He decided +that Merritt's advice was extremely good; he would talk just as little +as he had to. + +The Supervisor wasted no time on preliminary greetings. That was not his +way. + +"How much lumber did you cut last winter off ground that didn't belong +to you?" he queried shortly. + +"Off land not mine?" + +"You heard my question!" + +"I cut him off my own land," said the millman with an injured +expression. + +"Some of it." + +"You scale all the logs I cut. You mark him. I sell him. All right." + +"You tell it well," commented the Supervisor tersely. "But it don't go, +Jo. How much was there?" + +"I tell you I cut him off my land." + +Merritt pointedly took his notebook from his breastpocket. + +"Liars make me tired," he announced impartially. + +"You call me a liar--" began the big lumberman savagely, edging up to +the horse. + +"Not yet. But I probably will before I'm through," was the unperturbed +reply. + +"You say all the same that I am a liar, is it not?" + +"Not yet, anyway. What does it matter? You cut four and a half million +feet, a little over." + +A smile passed over the faces of the men attached to the sawmill. It was +evident that a number of them must know about the trespass, and probably +thought that Peavey Jo had been clever in getting away with it. The +mill-owner laughed. + +"You t'ink I keep him in my pocket, hey?" he queried. "Four and a half +million feet is big enough to see. You have a man here, he see logs, he +mark logs, I cut them." + +The Supervisor swung himself from his horse and handed the reins to +Wilbur. McGinnis did the same. + +"You don't need to get down, Loyle," he said; "it will not take long to +find where the logs are." + +The big lumberman stepped forward with an angry gleam in his eye. + +"This my mill," he said. "You have not the right to walk it over." + +"This is a National Forest," was the sharp reply, "and I'm in charge of +it. I'll go just wherever I see fit. Who'll stop me?" + +"Me, Josef La Blanc--I stop you." + +Just then Wilbur, glancing over the circle of men, saw standing among +them Ben, the half-witted boy who lived in the old hunter's cabin. +Seeing that he was observed, the lad sidled over to Wilbur and said, in +a low voice, questioningly: + +"Plenty, plenty logs? No marked?" + +"Yes," said Wilbur, wondering that he should have followed the +discussion so closely. + +"I know where!" + +"You do?" queried Wilbur. + +Ben nodded his head a great many times, until Wilbur thought it would +fall off. In the meantime Merritt and Peavey Jo, standing a few feet +apart, had been eying each other. Presently the Supervisor stepped +forward: + +"Show me those logs," he ordered. + +"You better keep back, I t'ink," growled the millman. + +Merritt stepped forward unconcernedly, but was met with an open-hand +push that sent him reeling backward. + +"I not want to fight you," he cried; "I get a plenty fight when I want +him. You no good; can't fight." + +"I'm not going to fight," said the Supervisor, "but I'm going to see +where those logs are, or were. Stand aside!" + +But the big Frenchman planted himself squarely in the way. + +"If you hunt for the trouble," he said, "you get him sure," he said +menacingly. + +"I'm not hunting for trouble, Jo, and you know it But I'm hunting logs, +and I'll find them." + +He was just about to step forward, trusting to quickness to dodge the +blow that he could see would be launched at him, when Ben, who had been +whispering to Wilbur, lurched over to the Supervisor and pulled his arm. + +"Plenty, plenty logs, no mark," he said loudly; "I know where. I show +you. They are up--" + +But he never finished the sentence, for the lumberman, taking one step +forward, drove his left fist square at the side of the boy's jaw, +dropping him insensible before he could give the information which +Merritt was seeking. + +But unexpected as the blow had been, it was met scarcely a second later +by an equally unexpected pile-driver jolt from McGinnis. + +"Ye big murdhering spalpeen," burst out the angry Irishman, "ye think +it's a fine thing to try and shtop a man that's trying to do his duty, +and think yerself a fightin' man, bekass ye can lick a man that doesn't +want to fight. This isn't any Forest Service scrap, mind ye, and I'm +saying nothing about logs. I'm talking about your hittin' a weak, +half-crazed boy. Ye're a liar and a coward, Peavey Jo, and a dirty one +at that." + +"Keep quiet, McGinnis," said Merritt, who was stooping down over the +insensible lad, "we'll put him in jail for this." + +"Ye will, maybe," snorted the Irishman, "afther he laves the hospital." + +"You make dis your bizness, hey?" queried the mill-owner. + +"I'll make it your funeral, ye sneaking half-breed Canuck! How about +it, boys," he added turning to the crowd, "do I get fair play?" + +A chorus of "Sure," "'Twas a dirty trick," "The kid didn't know no +better," and similar cries showed how the sentiment of the crowd lay. In +a moment McGinnis and the Frenchman had stripped their coats and faced +each other. The mill-owner was by far the bigger man, and the play of +his shoulders showed that his fearful strength was not muscle bound, but +he stood ponderously; on the other hand, the Irishman, who, while tall, +was not nearly as heavy, only seemed to touch the ground, his step was +so light and springy. + +The Frenchman rushed, swinging as he did so. A less sure fighter would +have given ground, thereby weakening the force of his return blow should +he have a chance to give it. McGinnis sidestepped and cross-jolted with +his left. It was a wicked punch, but Peavey Jo partly stopped it. As it +was, it jarred him to his heels. + +"Lam a kid, will ye, ye bloated pea-jammer," grinned McGinnis, who was +beaming with delight now that the fight was really started. + +"You fight, no talk," growled the other, recovering warily, for the one +interchange had showed him that the Irishman was not to be despised. + +"I can sing a tune," said McGinnis, "and then lick you with one hand--" +He stopped as Peavey Jo bored in, fighting hard and straight and showing +his mettle. There was no doubt of it, the Frenchman was the stronger and +the better man. Twice McGinnis tried to dodge and duck, but Peavey Jo, +for all his size, was lithe when roused and knew every trick of the +trade, and a sigh went up when with a sweeping blow delivered on the +point of the shoulder, the Frenchman sent McGinnis reeling to the +ground. He would have kicked him with his spiked boots as he lay, in the +fashion of the lumber camps, but the Supervisor, showing not the +slightest fear of the infuriated giant, quietly stepped between. + +"This fight's none of my making or my choosing," he said, "but I'll see +that it's fought fair." + +But before the bullying millman could turn his anger upon the +self-appointed referee, McGinnis was up on his feet. + +"Let me at him," he cried, "I'll show him a trick or two for that." + +Again the fight changed color. McGinnis was not smiling, but neither had +he lost his temper. His vigilance had doubled and his whole frame +seemed to be of steel springs. Blow after blow came crashing straight +for him, but the alert Irishman evaded them by the merest fraction of an +inch. Two fearful swings from Peavey Jo followed each other in rapid +succession, both of which McGinnis avoided by stepping inside them, his +right arm apparently swinging idly by his side. Then suddenly, at a +third swing, he ran in to meet it, stooped and brought up his right with +all the force of arm and shoulder and with the full spring of the whole +body upwards. It is a difficult blow to land, but deadly. It caught +Peavey Jo on the point of the chin and he went down. + +One of the mill hands hastened to the boss. + +"You've killed him, I think," he said. + +"Don't you belave it," said McGinnis; "he was born to be hanged, an' +hanged he'll be." + +But the big lumberman gave no sign of life. + +"I have seen a man killed by that uppercut, though," said the Irishman a +little more dubiously, as the minutes passed by and no sign of +consciousness was apparent, "but I don't believe I've got the strength +to do it." + +Several moments passed and then Peavey Jo gave a deep respiration. + +"There!" said McGinnis triumphantly. "I told ye he'd live to be +hanged." He looked around for the appreciation of the spectators. "But +it was a bird of a punch I handed him," he grinned. + + +[Illustration: TRAIN-LOAD FROM ONE TREE. + +Temporary railroad built through the forest to the sawmill. + +_Photograph by U. S. Forest Service._] + + + + +CHAPTER IX + +A HARD FOE TO CONQUER + + +With the defeat of Peavey Jo, and the evidence that he was not too +seriously hurt by the licking he had received, the Supervisor's +attention promptly returned to the question for which he had come to the +mill. Ben had struggled up to a sitting posture, and Merritt repeated +his question as to the whereabouts of the logs, the answering of which +had brought the big millman's anger upon the half-witted lad. +Accordingly, Ben looked frightened, and refused to answer, but when he +saw his foe still lying stretched out on the ground he said: + +"Logs, near, near. Under pile of slabs." + +"Oh, that was the way he hid them," said the Forest Chief; "clever +enough trick, too." + +McGinnis and Merritt followed Ben, and a couple of the men around +sauntered along also. Wilbur stayed with the horses, watching the +mill-hands trying to bring Peavey Jo to consciousness. They had just +roused him and got him to his feet when the government party returned. + +"I've seen your logs," said the Supervisor with just a slight note of +triumph in his voice, "and I've plenty of witnesses. I also know who +you're working for, so it will do no good to skip out. I'll nail both of +you. Four and a half million feet, remember." + +Suddenly McGinnis startled every one by a sudden shout: + +"Drop that ax!" he cried. + +The lumberman, who was just about to get into the saddle, suddenly +dropped from the stirrup and made a quick grab for Ben, who had been +standing near by. The half-witted lad had picked up an ax, and was +quietly sidling up in the direction of the lumberman, who was still too +dazed from the blow he had received from McGinnis to be on the watch. + +"What would ye do with the ax, ye little villain?" asked McGinnis. + +"I kill him, once, twice," said the lad. + +"Ye would, eh? Sure, I've always labored under the impression that +killin' a man once is enough. 'Tis myself that can see the satisfaction +it would be to whack him one with the ax, Ben, but ye'd be robbing the +hangman." + +"I kill him," repeated the half-witted lad. + +"Not with that ax, anyway," said McGinnis wrenching it from his grasp +and tossing it to one of the men who stood by. "I'm thinkin', Merritt, +that we'd better take the boy away. When he's sot, there's no changin' +him." + +"You fellers had best take one o' my ponies," spoke up one of the +sawyers; "I've got a string here, an' you can send him back any time. +An' I guess it wouldn't be healthy here for Ben right now." + +"All right, Phil," said McGinnis; "I'll go along with you and get him." + +As soon as McGinnis was out of the way, Peavey Jo stepped up to where +the Supervisor was sitting in the saddle. Ben had been standing beside +him since McGinnis took the ax, but now he shrank back to Wilbur's side. + +"You t'ink me beaten, hey?" he said, showing his teeth in an angry +snarl; "you wait and see." + +"I don't know whether you're beaten or no," said Merritt contemptuously, +"but any one can see that you've been licked." + +"You t'ink this forest good place. By Gar, I make him so bad you +ashamed to live here." + +"A threat's no more use than a lie, Peavey Jo," replied the Supervisor +sharply. "I don't bluff worth a cent, and the government's behind me." + +The half-breed spat on the ground. + +"That for your American government," he said. "I, me, make your American +government look sick. I warn you fairly now. You win this time, yes, but +always, no. Bon! My turn come by and by." + +"All right," replied the head of the forest indifferently, turning away +as McGinnis and Ben came up, "turn on your viciousness whenever you +like." Saying which, he rode away without paying further heed to the +muttered response of the millman. + +The ride home was singularly silent. Neither McGinnis nor the +half-witted lad were in any mood for speaking, Ben nursing a badly +swollen jaw, and McGinnis weak from the body blows and the lame shoulder +he had received in the fight. The Supervisor was angry that the trouble +had come to blows, but in justice could not blame McGinnis for the part +he had taken. It annoyed him, especially, to feel that he had been +compelled to take the part of a mere spectator, although this feeling +was partly soothed by the knowledge that he had discovered and proved +the very thing he had set out to find. + +On arriving at headquarters, the four horses were turned into the +corral, and the men went in to get supper. Merritt immediately commenced +a full report to Washington on the case, and McGinnis and Ben were glad +to lie down. At supper Wilbur took occasion to congratulate McGinnis on +the result of the encounter. The Irishman nodded. + +"He's a better man than me," he admitted readily, "and that uppercut was +the only thing I had left. But 'tis a darlin' of a punch, is that same, +when ye get it in right. But I don't think we're through with him. He +looks like the breed that harbors a grudge." + +"He threatened Merritt while you were away," said Wilbur, dropping his +voice so as not to disturb the rest. + +"The mischief he did! The nerve of him! Tell me what he said." + +Wilbur repeated the conversation word for word, and the Irishman +whistled. + +"There, now," he said. "What did I tell ye? Not that I can see there's +much that he can do." + +"Do you suppose he'd set a fire?" asked Wilbur. + +"He's mean enough to," said McGinnis, "but I don't believe he would. No +man that knows anything at all about timber would. Sure, he knows that +we could put it out in no time if there wasn't a wind, and if there was, +why the blaze might veer at any minute and burn up his mill and all his +lumber." + +"But for revenge?" + +"A Frenchy pea-jammer isn't goin' to lose any dollars unless he has to," +said McGinnis. "I don't think you need to be afraid of that." Then, +following along the train of thought that had been suggested, he told +the boy some lurid stories of life in the lumber camps of Michigan and +Wisconsin in the early days. + +Early next morning Wilbur returned to his camp to resume his round of +fire rides, which he found to be of growing interest. On his return to +his camp, although tired, the lad would work till dark over his little +garden, knowing that everything he succeeded in growing would add to the +enrichment of his food supply. Then the fence around the garden was in +very bad repair, and he set to work to make one which should effectively +keep out the rabbits. + +Another week he found that if he could build a little bridge across a +place where the canyon was very narrow he could save an hour's ride on +one of his trails. Already the lad had put up a small log span on his +own account. He went over and over this line of travel, blazing his way +until he felt entirely sure that he had picked out the best line of +trail, and then one evening he called up Rifle-Eye and asked him if he +would come over some time and show him how to build this little bridge. + +There followed three most exciting days in which the Ranger and a Guard +from the other side of the forest joined him in bridge-building. They +not only spanned the canyon, but strengthened the little log bridge the +boy had made all by himself. Wilbur's reward was not only the shortening +of his route, but commendation from Rifle-Eye that he had taken the +trouble to find out the route and that he had picked it so well. That +night he wrote home as though he had been appointed in charge of all the +forests of the world, so proud was he. + +Then there was one day in which Wilbur found the value of his lookout, +for from the very place that the old hunter had pointed out as being one +of "the windows of his house," the boy saw curling up to the westward a +small, dull cloud of smoke. Remembering the warnings of the Ranger, he +did not leap to the saddle at once, but remained for several minutes, +studying the nearest landmarks to the apparent location of the fire and +the surest method of getting there. That ride was somewhat of a novel +experience for Kit as well as the boy. The little mare had grown +accustomed to a quiet, even pace on the forest trails, and the use of +the spur was a thing not to be borne. Wilbur felt as if he were fairly +flying through the pine woods. Still he remembered to keep the mare well +in hand going down the steeper slopes, and within a couple of hours he +found himself at the fire. Then Wilbur found how true it was that a +blaze could easily be put out if caught early. There was little wind, +and the line of fire was not more than a mile long. By clearing the +ground, brushing the needles aside for a foot or so on the lee side of +the fire, most of it burned itself out and the rest he could stamp to +extinction. Here and there he used his fire shovel and threw a little +earth where the blaze was highest. + +That evening he telephoned to headquarters, reporting that he had put +the fire out, but only received a kindly worded rebuke for not having +endeavored to find out what caused the fire, and a suggestion that he +should ride back the next day and investigate. But before he could +telephone himself the next evening, and while he was at supper, the +'phone rang, and he found the Supervisor was on the wire. + +"Come to headquarters at once," he was told; "all hands are wanted." + +"To-night, Mr. Merritt?" the boy queried. + +There was a moment's pause. + +"What did you do to-day?" he asked in answer. + +"I went to find out what started that fire," the boy replied. "It was a +couple of fishermen from the city. They had been here before, and so had +no guide. I followed them up and showed them how to make a fire +properly." + +"That's a pretty long ride," said Merritt; "I guess you can come over +first thing to-morrow morning." + +"Very well, sir," said Wilbur, and hung up the receiver. + +"I certainly do wonder," he said aloud, "what it can be? It can't be a +big fire, or he would tell me to come anyway, no matter what I'd done +to-day, especially as fire is best fought at night. And I don't see how +it can be any trouble over Peavey Jo, because that's in the hands of the +Washington people now. Unless," he added as an afterthought, "they have +come to arrest him." + +Having settled in his mind that this was probably the trouble, Wilbur +returned to his supper. Just as he was finishing it, he said aloud: "I +don't see how it can be that, either. For if it's due to any trouble of +that kind they want big, husky fellows, and Merritt can swear in any one +he needs." So giving up the problem as temporarily insoluble, Wilbur +went to bed early so as to make a quick start in the dawn of the +morning. + +It turned out to be a glorious day, with but very little wind, and +Wilbur's mind was quite set at rest about the question of fire. But when +he reached headquarters he was surprised to see the number of men that +were gathered there. Not laughing and joking, as customarily, they stood +gravely around, only eying him curiously as he came in. The boy turned +to McGinnis. + +"What's wrong?" he said. + +For answer the lumberman held out a piece of wood from which the bark +had been stripped. Underneath the bark on the soft wood were numberless +little channels which looked as though they had been chiseled out with a +fine, rounded chisel. + +"Oh," he said, "I see." Then he continued: "But I didn't know there was +any bark-beetle here." + +McGinnis waved his hand around. + +"Does this look as if we had known very long?" he said. + +"Who found it out?" asked Wilbur. + +"Rifle-Eye," was the reply, "or at least Merritt and he found traces on +the same day and brought the news into camp. Merritt only saw signs in +one spot, but the old Ranger dropped on several colonies at different +parts of the forest, so that it must be widespread." + +The boy whistled under his breath. He had heard enough of the ravages of +the bark beetle to know what it might mean if it once secured a strong +footing on the Sierras. + +"I remember hearing once," he said, "that over twenty-two thousand +acres of spruce in Bohemia were wiped out in a month by the Tomicus +beetle." + +"This is the work of a Tomicus," said McGinnis. "And what such a +critter as that was ever made for gets me." + +"What's going to be done?" asked Wilbur. + +McGinnis pointed to the house whence the Supervisor was just coming out. + +"I have notified the District Forester," he said, standing on the steps, +"and if I find things in bad shape he will send for Wilcox, who knows +more about the beetle than any man in the Service. I don't know how much +damage has been done nor how widespread it is. There are eight of us +here, and we will divide, as I said before, each two keeping about fifty +yards apart and girdling infected and useless trees. Loyle, you go with +Rifle-Eye." + +Wilbur was delighted at finding himself with his old friend again, and +he seized the opportunity gladly of asking him how he happened to find +out that the pest had got a start. + +"I was campin' last night," said the old Ranger, "an' I saw an old dead +tree that looked as if it might have some tinder that would start a +fire easy. So I picked up my ax an' went up to it. But the minute I got +there I felt somethin' was wrong, so I sliced along the bark, an' there +were hundreds of the beetles. Then I looked at some of the near by +trees, an' there was a few, here and there. But the funny part of it was +that although I looked, an' looked carefully, for a hundred yards on +either side, I couldn't find any more." + +"So much the better," said Wilbur, "you didn't want to find any more, +did you?" + +The old hunter stepped over to a spruce and examined it closely. + +"I didn't think there were any there," he said, "but you can't be too +sure." + +They walked all the rest of the morning, without having seen a sign of +any beetles, though once the most distant party whooped as a sign that +some had been found. + +"I remember," said the Ranger, "one year when we had a plague o' +caterpillars. They was eatin' the needles of the trees an' killin' 'em +by wholesale. There was nothin' we could do to stop it. But it got +stopped all right." + +"How?" Wilbur queried interestedly. "Rain?" + +"Rain would only make it worse. Have you ever noticed, son, that when +somethin' pretty bad comes along, there's always somethin' else comes to +sort o' take off the smart? Nothin's bad all the time. Well, this time, +there came a fly." + +"A fly?" + +"Yes, son, a fly, lookin' somethin' like a wasp, only not as long as +your thumb-nail. They come in swarms, an' started disposin' o' them +caterpillars as though they had been trained to the business. They stung +'em an' then dropped an egg where they'd stung. Sometimes the +caterpillar lived long enough to spin a web, as they usually do, but it +never come out as a moth. An' since it's the moth that lays the eggs, +this fly put an end to the caterpillar output with pleasin' swiftness." + +"What did they call the fly?" + +"I did hear," said Rifle-Eye, thinking. "Oh, yes, now I remember; it was +the ik, ik--" + +"Oh, I know now," said Wilbur; "I remember hearing about it at the +Ranger School. The ichneumon fly." + +"That's it. But, as I was sayin'--" he stopped short. Then the old +hunter took a quick step to one side, pointed at a pine tree, and said: + +"There's one o' them." + +Wilbur could only see a few little holes in the bark, but the old +woodsman, slicing off a section, showed the tree girdled with the +galleries that the beetle had made. He raised a whoop, and Wilbur in the +distance could hear the Supervisor saying, "Three," implying it was the +third piece found infected. + +"But I don't quite see," said Wilbur, "how they make these galleries +running in all sorts of ways." + +"I ain't no expert on this here," said Rifle-Eye. "But as far as I know, +in the spring a beetle finds an old decayed tree. She begins at once to +bore a sort of passageway, half in the bark an' half in the wood, an' +lays eggs all along the sides. When the eggs come out, each grub digs a +tunnel out from the big gallery, an' in about three weeks the grub has +made a long tunnel, livin' on the bark an' wood for its food, an' has +grown to be a beetle. Then it bores its way out an' flies away to +another tree to repeat the same interestin' performance." + +"And if there are a lot of them," said Wilbur, "I suppose it stops the +sap from going up." + +"Exactly," said the hunter. "But they generally begin on sickly trees." + +"Wilbur," he called a moment later, "come here." + +The boy hurried over to the old hunter, who was standing by a dead +tree--a small one, lying on the ground. + +"Try that one," he said. + +The boy struck it with the ax and it showed up alive with beetles and +grubs and honeycombed with galleries. + +"Gee," said the boy, "that's a bad one." + +"That's very like the way I found the other," said the old hunter; "one +very bad one lyin' on the ground an' just a few around it bad, while +just a short distance away there was no signs." + +He stood and thought for a minute or two, but aside from the +coincidence, Wilbur could not see that there was anything strange in +that. They worked busily for a few moments, girdling the infected trees, +and also girdling some small useless trees near by, because, as the +hunter explained, when the beetles flew out seeking a new tree to +destroy, they would prefer one that was dying, as a tree from which +all the bark has been cut away all round always does, and then these +trees could be burned. + +"Have you noticed wheel tracks around here?" asked the hunter +thoughtfully. + +"I did think so," said Wilbur, "near that dead tree, but I s'posed, of +course, I was wrong. What would a wagon be doing up here?" + +Suddenly the Ranger dropped his ax as though he had been stung. He +turned to the boy, his eyes flashing. + +"Boy!" he said, "did you see the stump of that dead tree!" + +"I didn't notice," said Wilbur wonderingly. + +The old woodsman picked up his ax, and led the way back to the dead +tree. + +Wilbur looked at the base of the tree. + +"It isn't a windfall," he said; "it's been cut." + +"Where's the stump?" asked Rifle-Eye. + +The boy looked within a radius of a few feet, then looked up at the +hunter. + +"Where's the stump?" repeated the old man. + +Wilbur turned back and searched for five minutes. Not a stump could he +find that fitted the tree. None had been cut for some time, and none at +all of so small a girth. + +"I can't find any," he admitted shamefacedly, afraid that the Ranger +would prove him wrong in some way. + +"Nor can I," said Rifle-Eye. "Well?" + +"Then I guess there isn't one there," said the boy. + +"How did the tree get there?" + +Wilbur looked at him, reflecting the question that he saw in the other's +eyes. + +"It couldn't get there of itself," he said, "and it was cut, too." + +"An' wheel-tracks?" + +"There were tracks," said the boy, "I'm sure of that." + +"When a cut tree is found lyin' all by itself," said the Ranger, "with +wagon tracks leadin' up to it an' away from it, it don't need a city +detective to find out that some one dropped it there. An' when that dead +tree is full of bark-beetle, an' there ain't none in the forest, that +sure looks suspicious. An' when you find two of 'em jest the same way, +with beetle in both, an' wheel-tracks near both, ye don't have to have a +dog's nose to scent somethin's doin' that ain't over nice." + +"But who," said Wilbur indignantly, "would do a trick like that?" + +"The man that drove that wagon," said the old hunter. "I reckon, son, +you an' me'll do a little trailin' an' see where those wheels lead us." + +They left the place where the tree was lying and followed the faint mark +of the wheels. In a few minutes they crossed the line of the +Supervisor's inspection and he called to them. + +"Hi, Rifle-Eye," he said, "you're away off the line." + +"I know," said the old Ranger, "but I've got a plan of my own." + +Merritt shrugged his shoulders, but he knew that Rifle-Eye never wasted +his time, and he said no more. The old hunter and the boy walked on +nearly a quarter of a mile, and there they found the tracks running +beside a tiny gully, and a little distance down this, just as it had +been thrown, was another of these small trees, equally filled with +beetle. + +"I don't think we'll find any stump to this one, either," said Wilbur +gleefully, for he saw that they were on the right track. + +"You will not," replied the other sternly. After they had girdled the +infected trees again the Ranger shouldered his ax and, abandoning the +tracks of the wheels, started straight for headquarters. + +At supper all sorts of conjectures were expressed as to the cause of the +pest, its extent, and similar matters, but Rifle-Eye said nothing. +Wilbur was so full of the news that he was hardly able to eat anything +for the information he was just bursting to give. But he kept it in. +Finally, when the men had all finished and pipes were lighted, the old +Ranger spoke, in his slow, drawling way, and every one stopped to +listen. + +"There's five of ye," he said, "that's found beetle, isn't there?" + +"Yes," answered the Supervisor, "five." + +"And I venture to bet," he continued, "that you found a dead tree lyin' +in the middle of the infected patch!" + +"Yes," said several voices, "we did." + +"An' you didn't find much beetle except just round that one tree?" + +"Not a bit," said one or two. "What about it?" + +"There's a kind o' disease called Cholera," began Rifle-Eye in a +conversational tone, "that drifts around a city in a queer sort o' way. +It never hits two places at the same time, but if it goes up a street, +it sort o' picks one side, an' stops at one place for a while then goes +travelin' on. It acts jest as if a man was walkin' around, an' he was +the cholera spirit himself." + +"Well?" queried the Supervisor sharply. + +The old Ranger smiled tolerantly at his impatience. + +"Wa'al," he said, "I ain't believin' or disbelievin' the yarn. But I +ain't believin' any such perambulatin' spirit for a bark-beetle. +Especially when I finds wagon tracks leading to each place where the +trouble is." + +"What do you mean, Rifle-Eye?" asked Merritt. "Give it to us straight." + +"I mean," he said, "that I ain't never heard of spirits needin' wagons +to get around in. An' when I find dead trees containin' bark-beetles +planted promiscuous where they'll do most good, I'm aimin' to draw a +bead on the owner o' that wagon. An' I'll ask another thing. Did any o' +you find the stumps of them infected trees?" + +There was a long pause, and then McGinnis, always the first to see, +laughed out loud ruefully. + +"'Tis a black sorrow to me," he said, "that I didn't let Ben welt him +wid the ax the other day. Somebody else will have to do it now." + +"You mean," said the Supervisor, flaming, "that those trees were +deliberately brought here to infect the forest, trees full of beetles?" + +"Sure, 'tis as plain as the nose on your face," said McGinnis. "An' it's +dubs we were not to see it ourselves." + +"And it was--?" + +"The bucko pea-jammer that I gave a lickin' to in the spring, for sure," +said McGinnis. "Peavey Jo, of course, who else?" + + +[Illustration: WILBUR'S OWN BRIDGE. + +Light structure made by the boy over stream just below his camp. + +_Photograph by U. S. Forest Service._] + + +[Illustration: WHERE THE SUPERVISOR STAYED. + +The Ranger's cabin where the men gathered to fight the invasion of the +bark beetle. + +_Photograph by U. S. Forest Service._] + + + + +CHAPTER X + +A FOURTH OF JULY PERIL + + +Wilbur stayed but a few days at headquarters, the Supervisor and +Rifle-Eye having succeeded in trailing the wagon that had deposited the +trees from the point of its entrance into the forest to the place it +went out, by this means ensuring the discovery of all the spots where +diseased trees had been placed. One of them was in Wilbur's section of +the forest, and he was required to go weekly and examine all the trees +in the vicinity of the infected spot to make sure that the danger was +over. But, thanks to Rifle-Eye's discovery, the threatened pest was +speedily held down to narrow limits. + +This added not a little to the lad's riding, for the place where Peavey +Jo had deposited the infected tree in his particular part of the forest +was a long way from the trail to the several lookout points to which he +went daily to watch for fires. Fortunately, having built the little +bridge across the canyon, and thus on one of the days of the week +having shortened his ride, he was able to use the rest of the day +looking after bark-beetles. But it made a very full week. He could not +neglect any part of these rides, for June was drawing to an end and +there had been no rain for weeks. + +One night, returning from a hard day, on which he had not only ridden +his fire patrol, but had also spent a couple of hours rolling big rocks +into a creek to keep it from washing out a trail should a freshet come, +he found a large party of people at his camp. There was an ex-professor +of social science of the old régime, his wife and little daughter, a +guide, and a lavish outfit. Although the gate of Wilbur's corral was +padlocked and had "Property of the U. S. Forest Service" painted on it, +the professor had ordered the guide to smash the gate and let the +animals in. + +Wilbur was angry, and took no pains to conceal it. + +"Who turned those horses into my corral?" he demanded. + +The professor, who wore gold-rimmed eyeglasses above a very dirty and +tired face, replied: + +"I am in charge of this party, and it was done at my orders." + +"By what right do you steal my pasture?" asked the boy hotly. + +"I understood," said the professor loftily, "that it was the custom of +the West to be hospitable. But you are probably too young to know. Your +parents live here?" + +"No," replied the lad. "I am a Forest Guard, and in charge of this +station. You will have to camp elsewhere." + +At these last words the flap of the tent was parted and a woman came +out, the professor's wife, in fact. She looked very tired and much +troubled. + +"What is this?" she asked querulously. "Have we got to start again +to-night?" + +Wilbur took off his hat. + +"I beg your pardon," he said, "I did not know there were ladies in the +party." He turned to the professor. "I suppose if it will bother them +I'll have to let you stay. But if it hadn't been for that I'd have +turned every beast you've got out into the forest and let them rustle +for themselves." + +"Yes, you would!" said the guide. "An' what would I have had to say?" + +"Nothing," said Wilbur, "except that I'd have you arrested for touching +U. S. property." He turned to the professor: "How did you get here?" he +said. + +"Up that road," said the older man, pointing to the southwest. + +"And why didn't you camp a couple of miles down? There's much better +ground down there." + +"The guide said there was no place at all, and he didn't know anything +about this camp, either, and we thought we would have to go on all +night." + +Wilbur snorted. + +"Guide!" he said contemptuously. "Acts more like a stable hand!" + +"Well," said the professor testily, "if there's been any damage done you +can tell your superiors to send me a bill and I'll take the matter up in +Washington. In the meantime, we will stay here, and if I like it here, I +will stay a week or two." + +"Not much, you won't," said Wilbur, "at least you won't have any horses +in the corral after daybreak to-morrow morning. I'll let them have one +good feed, anyhow, and if they're traveling with a thing like that to +look after them,"--he pointed to the "guide,"--"they'll need a rest. But +out they go to-morrow." + +"We will see to-morrow," said the camper. + +"In the meantime, I see a string of trout hanging there. Are they +fresh?" + +"I caught them early this morning," answered Wilbur, "before I began my +day's work." + +The professor took out a roll of bills. + +"How much do you want for them!" he asked. + +"They are not for sale," the boy replied. + +"Oh, but I must have them," the other persisted. "I had quite made up my +mind to have those for supper to-night." + +"And I suppose, if I hadn't come home when I did," said Wilbur, "you +would have stolen those, too!" + +"I would have recompensed you adequately," the former college official +replied. "And you have no right to use the word 'stolen.' I shall report +you for impertinence." + +By this time Wilbur was almost too angry to talk, and, thinking it +better not to say too much, he turned on his heel and went to his own +tent. Before going down to the corral with Kit, however, he took the +precaution of carrying the string of fish with him, for he realized that +although the professor would not for the world have taken them without +paying, he would not hesitate to appropriate them in his absence. He +cooked his trout with a distinct delight in the thought that the +intruders had nothing except canned goods. + +In the morning Wilbur was up and had breakfast over before the other +camp was stirring. As soon as the "guide" appeared Wilbur walked over to +him. + +"I've given you a chance to look after your animals," he said, "before +turning them out. You take them out in ten minutes or I'll turn them +loose." + +"Aw, go on," said the other, "I've got to rustle grub. You haven't got +the nerve to monkey with our horses." + +Promptly at the end of the ten minutes Wilbur went over to the "guide" +again. + +"Out they go," he said. + +But the other paid no attention. Wilbur went down to the corral, the +gate of which he had fixed early that morning, caught his own two +mounts, and tied them. Then he opened the gate of the corral and drove +the other eight horses to the gate. In a moment he heard a wild shout +and saw the "guide" coming down the trail in hot haste. He reached the +corral in time to head off the first of his horses which was just coming +through. Wilbur had no special desire to cause the animals to stray, +and was only too well satisfied to help the "guide" catch them and tie +them up to trees about the camp. By this time it was long after the hour +that the boy usually began his patrol, but he waited to see the party +start. As they were packing he noticed a lot of sticks that looked like +rockets. + +"What are those?" he asked. "If they're heavy, you're putting that pack +on all wrong." + +"These ain't got no weight," said the "guide"; "that's just some +fireworks for the Fourth. We've got a bunch of them along for the little +girl. She's crazy about fireworks." + +Wilbur said no more, but waited until the professor came out. Then he +walked up to him. + +"I understand," he said, "that you have some fireworks for the Fourth." + +The man addressed made no reply, but walked along as though he had not +heard. + +"I give you fair warning," said Wilbur, "that you can't set those off in +this forest, Independence Day or no Independence Day." + +"We shan't ask your permission," said the old pedant loftily. "In fact, +some will be set off this evening, and some to-morrow, wherever we may +be." + +"But don't you understand," the boy said, "that you're putting the +forest in danger, in awful danger of fire? And if a big forest fire +starts, you are just as likely to suffer as any one else. You might +cause a loss of millions of dollars for the sake of a few rockets." + +"The man that sold me them," said the other, "said they were harmless, +and he ought to know." + +"All right," said Wilbur. "I've been told off to protect this forest +from danger of fire, and if there's any greater danger around than a +bunch like yours I haven't seen it. I reckon I'll camp on your trail +till you're out of my end of the forest, and then I'll pass the word +along and see that there's some one with you to keep you from making +fools of yourselves." + +He turned on his heel and commenced to make up a pack for his heavier +horse, intending to ride Kit. He then went to the telephone and, finding +no one at headquarters, called up the old hunter's cabin. The Ranger had +a 'phone put in for Ben, who had learned how to use it, and by good +fortune the half-witted lad knew where to find Rifle-Eye. He explained +to Ben how matters stood, and asked him to get word to the Ranger if +possible. Then Wilbur went back to the party and gave them a hand to +get started. + +Although he had been made very angry, Wilbur could see no gain in +sulking and he spent the day trying to establish a friendly relation +with the professor, so that, as he expressed it afterwards, "he could +jolly him out of the fireworks idea." But while this scholastic visitor +was willing to talk about subjects in connection with the government, +and was quite well-informed on reclamation projects, Wilbur found the +professor as stubborn as a mule, and every time he tried to bring the +conversation round to forest fires he would be snubbed promptly. + +That evening Wilbur led the party to a camping place where, he reasoned, +there would be little likelihood of fire trouble, as it was a very open +stand and all the brush on it had been piled and burned in the spring. +But the lad was at his wits' end what further to do. He could not seize +and carry off all the fireworks, and even if he were able to do so, he +couldn't see that he had any right to. It was a great relief to the boy +when he heard a horse on the trail and the old Ranger cantered up. + +"Oh, Rifle-Eye," he said, "I'm so glad you've come. Tell me what to +do," and the boy recounted his difficulty with the party from first to +last. + +The old woodsman listened attentively, and then said: + +"I reckon, son, we'll stroll over and sorter see just how the land lies. +There's a lot of things can be done with a mule by talkin' to him, +although there is some that ain't wholly convinced by a stick of +dynamite. We'll see which-all these here are." + +"I think they're the dynamite kind," the boy replied. + +"Well, we'll see," the Ranger repeated. He stepped in his loose-jointed +way to where the party was sitting around the campfire. Then, looking +straight at the man of the party, he said: + +"You're a professor?" + +The remark admitted of no reply but: + +"I was for twenty years." + +"And what did you profess?" + +At this the camper rose to his feet, finding it uncomfortable to sit and +look up at the tall, gaunt mountaineer. He replied testily that it +wasn't anything to do with Rifle-Eye what chair he had held or in what +college, and he'd trouble him to go about his business. + +Rifle-Eye heard him patiently to the end, and then asked again, without +any change of voice: + +"And what did you profess?" + +Once again the reputed educator expressed himself as to the Ranger's +interference and declared that he had been more annoyed since coming +into the forest than if he had stayed out of it. He worked himself up +into a towering rage. Presently Rifle-Eye replied quietly: + +"You refuse to tell?" + +"I do," snapped the professor. + +"Is it because you are ashamed of what you taught, or of where you +taught it?" the Ranger asked. + +This was touching the stranger in a tender place. He was proud of his +college and of his hobby, and he retorted immediately: + +"Ashamed? Certainly not. I was Professor of Social Economy in Blurtville +University." + +"And what do you call Social Economy?" asked Rifle-Eye. + +The educator fell into the trap thus laid out for him and launched into +a vigorous description of his own peculiar personal views toward +securing a better understanding of the rights of the poor and of modern +plans for ensuring better conditions of life, until he painted a picture +of his science and his own aims which was most admirable. When he drew +breath, he seemed quite pleased with himself. + +The Ranger thought a minute. + +"An' under which of these departments," he said, "would you put breakin' +into this young fellow's corral, and havin' your eight horses eatin' up +feed which will hardly be enough for his two when the dry weather +comes?" + +"That's another matter entirely," replied the professor, becoming angry +as soon as he was criticised. + +"Yes, it's another matter," said Rifle-Eye. "It's doin' instead of +talkin'. I reckon you're one o' the talkin' kind, so deafened by the +sound o' your own splutterin' that you can't hear any one else. It's a +pity, too, that you don't learn somethin' yourself before you set others +to learnin'." + +"Are you trying to teach me?" snapped the traveler. + +The old Ranger leaned his arm on the barrel of his rifle, which, +according to his invariable custom, he was carrying with him, a habit +from old hunting days, and looking straight at the professor, said: + +"I ain't no great shakes on Social Economy, as you call it, and I ain't +been to college. But I c'n see right enough that there's no real meanin' +to you in all you know about the rich an' the poor when you'll go an' +rob a lad o' the pasture he'll need for his horses; an' you're only +actin' hypocrite in lecturin' about promotin' good feelin's in society +when you're busy provokin' bad feelin' yourself. An' when you're harpin' +on the deep canyon that lies between Knowledge an' Ignorance, it don't +pay to forget that Politeness is a mighty easy bridge to rear, an' one +that's always safe. You may profess well enough, Mister Professor, but +you're a pretty ornery example o' practisin'." + +"But it's none of your business--" interrupted the stranger angrily. + +Rifle-Eye with a gesture stopped him. + +"It's just as much my business to talk to you," he said, "as it'd be +yours to talk to me. In fact it's more. You c'n talk in your lecture +room, an' I'll talk here. Perhaps it ain't altogether your fault; it's +just that you don't know any better. You're just a plumb ignorant +critter out here, Mister Professor, an' by rights you oughtn't to be +around loose. + +"An' you tried to threaten a boy here who was doin' his duty by sayin' +that you'd write to Washington. What for? Are you so proud o' thievin' +an' bullyin' that you want every one to know, or do you want to tell +only a part o' the story so as you'll look all right an' the other +fellow all wrong. That breed o' Social Economy don't go, not out here. +We calls it lyin', an' pretty mean lyin' at that." + +He broke off suddenly and looked down with a smile. + +"Well, Pussy," he said, "that's right. You come an' back me up," and +reaching out his brown gnarled hand he drew to his side the little girl +who had come trustingly forward to him as all children did, and now had +slipped her little hand into his. + +"An' then there's this question o' fire," he continued. "Haven't you got +some fireworks for the Fourth, Pussy?" he said, looking down at his +little companion. + +"Oh, yeth," she lisped, "pin-wheelth, and crackerth, and thnaketh, and +heapth of thingth." + +"What a time we'll have," he said. "Shall we look at them now?" + +"Oh, yeth," the little girl replied, and ran across to her father, "can +we thee them now?" + +"No, not now," the father replied. + +The old Ranger called the "guide" by name. + +"Miguel," he said, "the fireworks are wanted to-night. Bring 'em to me." + +The professor protested, but a glance at the sinewy frame of the +mountaineer decided Miguel, and he brought several packages. In order to +please the little girl, Rifle-Eye lent her his huge pocket-knife and let +her open the packages, sharing the surprises with her. Some of them he +put aside, especially the rockets, but by far the larger number he let +the child make up into a pile. + +"Will you give me your word you won't set off these?" queried the +mountaineer, pointing to the smaller pile of dangerous explosives with +his foot. + +"I'll say nothing," said the professor. + +Without another word the Ranger stooped down, picked them up in one big +armful, and disappeared beyond the circle of the light of the campfire +into the darkness. He reappeared in a few minutes. + +"I'm afeard," he said, "your fireworks may be a little wet. I tied 'em +in a bundle, fastened a stone to 'em, an' then dropped 'em in that +little lake. You can't do any harm with those you've got now." He waited +a moment. "You can get those rockets," he said, "any time you have a +mind to. That lake dries up about the middle of September." + +"By what right--" began the professor. + +"I plumb forget what sub-section you called that partickler right just +now," Rifle-Eye replied, "but out here we calls it fool-hobblin'. You're +off your range, Mister Professor, an' the change o' feed has got you +locoed mighty bad. I reckon you'd better trot back to your own pastures +in the East, an' stay there till you know a little more." + +"What is your name and address?" blustered the professor; "I'll have the +law invoked for this." + +"There's few in the Rockies as don't know old Rifle-Eye Bill," the +Ranger replied, "an' my address is wherever I c'n find some good to be +done. Any one c'n find me when I'm wanted, an' I'm ready any time you +say. Now, you're goin' to celebrate the Fourth to-morrow, to show how +fond you are o' good government. You c'n add to your lectures on Social +Economy one rule you don't know any thin' about. It's a Western rule, +this one, an' it's just that no man that can't govern himself can govern +anythin' else." + +He turned on his heel, ignoring the reply shouted after him, and +followed by Wilbur, mounted and rode away up the trail. + +"I've got to get right back," said the Ranger; "we're goin' to start +workin' out a special sale of poles." + +"Telegraph poles?" queried Wilbur. + +"Yes." + +"When you come to think of it," said the boy, "there must be quite a lot +of poles all over the country." + +"Merritt said he reckoned there was about sixteen million poles now in +use, an' three and a half million poles are needed every year just for +telegraph and telephone purposes alone." + +"When you think," said Wilbur, "that every telegraph and telephone pole +means a whole tree, there's some forest been cut down, hasn't there?" + +"How many poles do you s'pose are used in a mile?" + +"About forty, I heard at school," the boy replied, "and it takes an +army of men working all the year round just puttin' in poles." + +The old hunter struck a match and put a light to his pipe. + +"More forest destruction," said the boy mischievously, "I should think, +Rifle-Eye, you'd be ashamed to waste wood by burning it up in the form +of matches." + +"Go on talkin'," said Rifle-Eye, "you like tellin' me these things you +picked up at the Ranger School. Can you tell how much timber is used, or +how many matches are lighted an' thrown away?" + +"Three million matches a minute, every minute of the twenty-four hours," +said Wilbur immediately. "That is," he added after a moment's +calculation, "nearly four and a half billion a day. And then only the +very best portion of the finest wood can be used, and, as I hear, the +big match factories turn out huge quantities of other stuff, like doors +and window sashes, in order to use up the wood which is not of the very +finest quality, such as is needed for matches." + +"How do they saw 'em so thin, I wonder?" interposed the Ranger. + +"Some of it is sawed both ways," the boy replied. "Some logs are boiled +and then revolved on a lathe which makes a continuous shaving the +thickness of a match, and a lot of matches are paper-pulp, which is +really wood after all. There's no saying, Rifle-Eye," he continued, +laughing, "how many good trees have been cut down to make a light for +your pipe." + +The old hunter puffed hard, as the pipe was not well lighted. + +"Well," he said, "I guess I'll let the Forest Guards handle it." He +looked across at the boy. "It's up to you," he said, "to keep me goin.' +Got a match?" + + +[Illustration: MEASURING A FAIR-SIZED TREE. + +Lumberman on the scene of felling operations checking up a timber sale. + +_Photograph by U. S. Forest Service._] + + +[Illustration: RUNNING A TELEPHONE LINK.] + + +[Illustration: RUNNING A TELEPHONE LINK. + +Using the poles planted by Nature for annihilating space in sparsely +settled regions. + +_Photographs by U. S. Forest Service._] + + + + +CHAPTER XI + +AMIDST A CATTLE STAMPEDE + + +Wilbur would have liked greatly to be able to stay at his little tent +home and celebrate the Fourth of July in some quiet fashion, but the +fireworks folly of the professor's party had got on his nerve a little, +and he was not satisfied until he really got into the saddle and was on +his way to a lookout point. Nor was he entirely without reward, for +shortly before noon, as he rode along his accustomed trail, a +half-Indian miner met him and told him he had been waiting to ask him to +dinner. And there, with all the ceremony the little shack could muster, +this simple family had prepared a feast to the only representative of +the United States that lived near them, and Wilbur, boy-like, had to +make a speech, and rode along the trail later in the afternoon, feeling +that he had indeed had a glorious Fourth of July dinner in the Indian's +cabin. + +The week following the Supervisor rode up, much to Wilbur's surprise, +who had not expected to see him back in that part of the forest so +soon. But Merritt, who indeed was anxious to get away, by his +conversation showed that he was awaiting the arrival and conveyance of a +trainload of machinery for the establishment of a large pulp-mill on the +Kern River. The trail over which this machinery would have to be taken +was brushed out and ready, all save about nine miles of it, a section +too small to make it worth while to call a Ranger from another part of +the forest. So the Supervisor announced his intention of doing the work +himself, together with Wilbur. The night preceding, just before they +turned in for the night, the boy turned to his chief and said: + +"What time in the morning, Mr. Merritt?" + +"I'll call you," replied the Supervisor. + +He did, too, for at sharp five o'clock the next morning Wilbur was +wakened to find the older man up and with breakfast ready. + +"I ought to have got breakfast, sir," said the boy; "why didn't you +leave it for me?" + +"You need more sleep than I do," was the sufficient answer. "Now, tuck +in." + +The boy waited for no second invitation and devoted his attention to +securing as much grub as he could in the shortest possible time. +Breakfast was over, the camp straightened up, and they were in the +saddle by a quarter to six. It was ten miles from Wilbur's camp to the +point where the trail should start. The country was very rough, and it +was drawing on for nine o'clock when they reached the point desired. + +"Now," said the Supervisor, "take the brush hook and clear the trail as +I locate it." + +Wilbur, accordingly, following immediately after his chief, worked for +all he knew how, cutting down the brushwood and preparing the trail. +Every once in a while Merritt, who had blazed the trail some distance +ahead, would return, and, bidding the boy pile brush, would attack the +underwood as though it were a personal enemy of his and would cover the +ground in a way that would make Wilbur's most strenuous moments seem +trifling in comparison. Once he returned and saw the lad laboring for +dear life, breathing hard, and showing by his very pose that he was +tiring rapidly, although it was not yet noon, and he called to him. + +"Loyle," he said, "what are you breaking your neck at it that way for?" + +"I don't come near doing as much as I ought unless I do hurry," he +said. "And then I'm a long way behind." + +"You mean as much as me?" + +The boy nodded. + +"Absurd. No two men's speed is the same. Don't force work. Find out what +gait you can keep up all day and do that. Make your own standard, don't +take another man's." + +"But I go so slowly!" + +"Want to know it all and do it all the first summer, don't you? Suppose +no one else had to learn? I don't work as hard as you do, though I get +more done. You can't buck up against an old axman. I haven't done this +for some time, but I guess I haven't forgotten how. Go and sit down and +get your breath." + +"But I'm not tired--" began Wilbur protestingly. + +"Sit down," he was ordered, and the boy, feeling it was better to do +what he was told, did so. After he had a rest, which indeed was very +welcome, the Supervisor called him. + +"Loyle," he said, "you know something about a horse, for I've watched +you with them. Handle yourself the same way. You wouldn't force a horse; +don't force yourself." + +Moreover, the older man showed the boy many ways wherein to save labor, +explaining that there was a right way and a wrong way of attacking every +different kind of bush. In consequence, when Wilbur started again in the +afternoon he found himself able to do almost half as much again with +less labor. Working steadily all day until sundown, five miles of the +trail had been located, brushed out, and marked. + +There was a small lake near by, and thinking that it would be less +fatiguing for the boy to catch fish than to look after the camp, the +Supervisor sent him off to try his luck. Wilbur, delighted to have been +lucky, returned in less than fifteen minutes with four middling-sized +trout, and he found himself hungry enough to eat his two, almost bones +and all. That night they slept under a small Baker tent that Merritt had +brought along on his pack horse, the riding and pack saddles being piled +beside the tent and covered with a slicker. + +The following day, by starting work a little after daybreak, the +remaining four miles of the trail were finished before the noonday halt, +which was made late in order to allow the completion of the work. +Wilbur, when he reviewed the fact that they had gone foot by foot over +nine miles of trail, clearing out the brush and piling it, so that it +could be burned and rendered harmless as soon as it was dry, thought it +represented as big a two days' work as he had ever covered. + +"Will the pulp-mill be above or below the new Edison plant?" queried +Wilbur on their way home. + +"Above," said his companion. "I'll show you just where. You're going to +ride down with me to the site of the mill to-morrow. There's a lot of +spruce here, and it ought to pay." + +"But I thought," said Wilbur, "that paper-pulp was such a destructive +way of using timber?" + +"It is," answered Merritt, "but paper is a necessity. A book is more +important than a board." + +"But doesn't it take a lot of wood to make a little paper?" asked the +boy. "There's been such a howl about paper-pulp that I thought it must +be fearfully wasteful." + +"It isn't wasteful at all," was the reply. "A cord and a half of spruce +will make a ton of pulp. Where the outcry comes in is the quantity used. +One newspaper uses a hundred and fifty tons of paper a day. That means +two hundred and twenty-five cords of wood. The stand of spruce here is +about ten cords to the acre. So one newspaper would clean off ten acres +a day or three thousand acres a year." + +"But wouldn't it ruin the forest to take it off at that rate?" + +"Certainly," the Supervisor answered, "but the sale will be so arranged +that not more will be sold each year than will be good for the forest." + +"Is all paper made of spruce?" asked Wilbur. + +"No. Many kinds of wood will make paper. Carolina poplar and tulip wood +are both satisfactory." + +"Except for the branches and knot-wood," said Wilbur, "almost every part +of every kind of tree is good for something." + +"And you can use those, too," came the instant reply. "That's what dry +distillation is for. All that you've got to do is fill a retort with +wood and put a furnace under it, and all pine tree leavings can be +transformed into tar and acetic acid, from which they can make vinegar, +as well as wood alcohol and charcoal." + +Finding that the boy was thoroughly interested in the possibilities of +lumber, the Supervisor, usually so silent and brief in manner, opened +out a little and talked for two straight hours to Wilbur on the +possibilities of forestry. He showed the value of turpentine and resin +in the pine trees and advocated the planting of hemlock trees and oak +trees for their bark, as used in the tanning industry. + +As the Forester warmed up to his subject, Wilbur thought he was +listening to an "Arabian Nights" fairy tale. Despite his customary +silence Merritt was an enthusiast, and believed that forestry was the +"chief end of man." He assured the boy that twenty different species of +tree of immense value could be acclimatized in North America which are +of great commercial value now in South America; he compared the climate +in the valleys of the lower Mississippi with those of the Ganges, and +named tree after tree, most of them entirely unknown to Wilbur, which +would be of high value in the warm, swampy bottoms. And when Wilbur +ventured to express doubt, he was confronted with the example of the +eucalyptus, commonly called gum tree, once a native of Australia, now +becoming an important American tree. + +All the way home and all through supper the Supervisor talked, until +when it finally became time to turn in, the boy dreamed of an ideal time +when every acre of land in the United States should be rightly occupied; +the arid land irrigated from streams fed by reservoirs in the forested +mountains; the rivers full of navigation and never suffering floods; the +farms possessing their wood-lots all duly tended; and every inch of the +hills and mountains clothed with forests--pure stands, or mixed stands, +as might best suit the conditions--each forest being the best possible +for its climate and its altitude. + +But he had to get up at five o'clock next morning, just the same, and +dreams became grim realities when he found himself in the saddle again +and off for a day's work before six. A heavy thunderstorm in the night +had made everything fresh and shining, but at the same time the water on +the underbrush soaked Wilbur through and through when he went out to +wrangle the horses. Merritt's riding horse, a fine bay with a blazed +face, had a bad reputation in the country, which Wilbur had heard, and +he was in an ugly frame of mind when the boy found him. But Wilbur was +not afraid of horses, and he soon got him saddled. + +"I think Baldy's a little restless this morning, sir," ventured Wilbur, +as they went to the corral to get their horses. But he received no +answer. The Supervisor's fluent streak had worn itself out the day +before and he was more silent than ever this morning. + +Merritt swung himself into his saddle, and, as Wilbur expected, the bay +began to buck. It was then, more than ever, that the boy realized the +difference between the riding he had seen on the plains and ordinary +riding. Merritt was a good rider, and he stuck to his saddle well. But +Wilbur could see that it was with difficulty, and that the task was a +hard one. There was none of the easy grace with which Bob-Cat Bob had +ridden, and when Baldy did settle down Wilbur felt that his rider had +considered his keeping his seat quite a feat, not regarding it as a +trifling and unimportant incident in the day. + +Merritt and the boy rode on entirely off the part of the forest on which +Wilbur had his patrol, to a section he did not know. They stopped once +to look over a young pine plantation. Just over a high ridge there was a +wider valley traversed by an old road which crossed the main range about +five miles west and went down into a valley where there were numerous +ranches. The principal occupation of these ranchmen was stock-raising, +on account of their long distance from a railroad which prevented them +marketing any produce. Just about July of each year these ranchmen +rounded up their stock, cut out the beef steers, and shipped them to the +markets. It was then the last week in July, and the Supervisor expected +to meet some of the herds upon the old road which crossed the mountains +further on. Just as they reached the bottom of the hill they saw the +leaders of a big herd coming down the road from the pass. In the +distance a couple of cowpunchers could be seen in front holding up the +lead of the bunch. + +"I'll wait and talk," said Merritt, reining in. As perhaps he had +exchanged four whole sentences in two hours' ride, Wilbur thought to +himself that the conversation would have to be rather one-sided, but he +knew the other believed in seizing every opportunity to promote +friendliness with the people in his forest and waited their upcoming +with interest. The Supervisor had his pack-horse with him, and as the +herd drew nearer he told Wilbur to take him out of sight into the brush, +so as not to scare the steers, and tie him up safely. That done, +Wilbur rode back to the road. + +By the time he had returned the two punchers had ridden up. One proved +to be the foreman of the outfit, by name Billy Grier, and the other a +Texan, whom Merritt called Tubby Rodgers, apparently because he was as +thin as a lath. + +"I was a-hopin'," said Grier as he rode up, "that you-all was headin' +down the road a bit." + +"I wasn't planning to," said the Forester. "Why?" + +"We had a heavy storm down in the valley last night, which sort of broke +things up badly, an' I had to leave a couple of men behind." + +"Don't want to hire us to drive, do you?" asked Merritt. + +"Allers willin' to pay a good man," said the foreman with a grin. "Give +ye forty and chuck." + +The Supervisor smiled. + +"I'm supposed to be holding down a soft job," he said; "government +service." + +"Soft job," snorted Grier, "they'd have to give me the bloomin' forest +afore I'd go at it the way you do. But, Merritt," he added, "this is +how. A piece down the road, say a mile an' a half, I'm told there's a +rotten bit o' road, an' I'm a little leery of trouble there. I'd have +strung out the cattle three times as far if I'd known of it. But I had +no chance; I've only just heard that some old county board is tryin' to +fix a bridge, an' they're movin' about as rapid as a spavined mule with +three broken legs." + +"Well?" queried Merritt; "I suppose you want us to help you over that +spot." + +"That's it, pard," said the foreman; "an' I'll do as much for you some +time." + +"I wish you could, but I'll never have a string of cattle like those to +turn into good hard coin." + +"Well," said the cowpuncher, "why not?" + +"Nothing doing," replied Merritt; "the Forest Service is an incurable +disease that nobody ever wants to be cured of." + +By this time the head of the bunch of steers was drawing close and the +foreman repeated his request. + +"All right," answered the Forester, who thought it good policy to have +the ranchman feel that he was under obligations to the Service, "we'll +give you a hand all right." + +After riding down the road for about a mile it became precipitous, and +Wilbur could readily see where there was likely to be trouble. Shortly +before they reached the place where the bridge was being repaired the +bank on the right-hand side of the road gave place to a sheer drop forty +to fifty feet high and deepening with every step forward. As the bunch +neared the bridge Merritt and Wilbur, with the cowpunchers, slowed up +until the steers were quite close. Then Grier and Rodgers went ahead +over the bridge, while Merritt waited until about fifty cattle had +passed and then swung in among them, telling Wilbur to do the same when +about another fifty head had passed. + +At first Wilbur could not see the purpose of this, and he had great +difficulty in forcing his horse among the cattle. But they pressed back +as he swung into the road, giving him a little space to ride in, and +thus dividing the head of the drove into two groups of fifty. Following +instructions, Wilbur gradually pressed the pace of the bunch in order to +prevent any chance of overcrowding from the rear. + +It seemed easy enough. Owing to the narrowness of the road and the +precipitous slope it was impossible for the steers to scatter, and as +long as the pace was kept up, there was likely to be no difficulty. But +Kit--Wilbur was riding Kit--suddenly pricked her ears and began to +dance a little in her steps. The steers, although their pace had not +changed, were snuffling in an uncertain fashion, and Wilbur vaguely +became conscious that fear was abroad. He quieted Kit, but could see +from every motion that she was catching the infection of the fear. He +tightened his hold on the lines, for he saw that if she tried to bolt +both of them would go over the edge. Wilbur looked down. + +A hundred yards or so further on the road widened slightly, and Wilbur +wondered whether it would be possible for him to work his way to the +right of the steers and gallop full speed alongside the herd to get in +front of them; but even as he thought of the plan he realized that it +would scarcely be possible, and that unless he reached the front of the +herd before the road narrowed again he would be forced over the edge. +And, as he reached the wider place, he saw Grier and Rodgers standing. +They also had sensed the notion of fear and were waiting to see what +could be done in the main body of the herd. Merritt had worked his way +through the steers, and was riding in the lead. Wilbur wondered how he +had ever been able to force Baldy through. This put Wilbur behind a +bunch of about one hundred steers and in front of five or six hundred +more. + +Below him, to the right, was a valley, the drop now being about one +hundred and fifty feet, and Wilbur could see at the edge of the creek, +pitched among some willows, a little tent, the white contrasting +strongly with the green of the willows. The road wound round high above +the valley in order to keep the grade. Twice Wilbur halted Kit to try to +stop the foremost of the herd behind him from pressing on too close, but +the third time Kit would not halt. She was stepping as though on +springs, with every muscle and sinew tense, and the distance between the +steers before and the steers behind was gradually lessening. + +Wilbur realized that as long as the even, slow pace was kept he was in +no danger, but if once the steers began to run his peril would be +extreme. He could turn neither to the right nor to the left, the little +pony was nothing in weight compared to the steers, and even if she were, +he stood a chance of having his legs crushed. The only hope was to keep +the two herds apart. He wheeled Kit. But as the little mare turned and +faced the tossing heads and threatening horns, she knew, as did Wilbur +instantaneously, that with the force behind them, no single man could +stop the impetus of the herd, although only traveling slowly. Indeed, if +he tried, he could see that the rear by pressure onwards would force the +outside ranks midway down the herd over the edge of the cliff. Kit spun +round again almost on one hoof, all but unseating Wilbur. + +But even in that brief moment there had been a change, and the boy felt +it. The steers were nervous, and, worst of all, he knew that Kit could +realize that he himself was frightened. When a horse feels that the +rider is frightened, anything is apt to happen. Wilbur's judgment was +not gone, but he was ready to yell. The herd behind grew closer and +closer. Presently the walk broke into a short trot, the horns of the +following bunch of steers appeared at Kit's flanks, a rumbling as of +half-uttered bellows was heard from the rear of the herd, and, on the +instant, the steers began to run. + + +[Illustration: NURSERY FOR YOUNG TREES. + +_Photograph by U. S. Forest Service._] + + +[Illustration: PLANTATION OF YOUNG TREES. + +_Photograph by U. S. Forest Service._] + + +[Illustration: SOWING PINE SEED. + +Brush on ground is to shade tender seedlings from the heat of the sun. + +_Photograph by U. S. Forest Service._] + + +[Illustration: PLANTING YOUNG TREES. + +_Photograph by U. S. Forest Service._] + + + + +CHAPTER XII + +ALMOST TRAMPLED TO DEATH + + +The minute the stampede began Wilbur's nerves steadied, and with voice +more than with hand he quieted Kit. It took a moment or two for the +front group to break into the running gallop of the frightened steer, +and two head of cattle not twenty feet from Wilbur were forced over the +edge before the leaders started to run. In this moment the rear bunch +closed up solidly and Wilbur was hemmed in. + +The pace became terrific, and as they hurtled along the face of the +cliff with the precipice below, Wilbur noted to his horror that he was +gradually being forced to the outer edge. Being lighter than the steers, +the heavier animals were surging ahead alongside the cliff wall, and the +little pony with the boy on his back was inch by inch being forced to +the verge, of which there was a clear fall now of about one hundred +feet. Vainly he looked for a tree overhanging the road into which he +could leap; there were no trees. And every few strides he found himself +appreciably nearer the edge. Looking back, as far as he could see the +steers were crowding, and looking forward the road curved, hiding what +might lie before. + +His feet were out of the stirrups and well forward, so that, although he +had received three or four bruising encounters as the cattle lurched and +surged against him, he was unhurt. Several times Kit was hurled from her +stride, but she always picked up her feet neatly again. Wilbur could not +but admire the little mare, although he felt that there was no hope for +them. + +Then suddenly, with an angry bellow, a big black steer which had been +pushing up on the inside turned his head and tried to gore the pony. +There was not room, however, but the action so angered Wilbur that, +pulling his six-shooter, he sent a bullet crashing to his brain. The +steer gave a wild lurch, but did not fall immediately, and in an instant +was forced to the edge and fell into the valley below. Instantly, Kit, +even before Wilbur could speak or lay hand on the rein, gave a sidewise +jump into the hole made by the place the black steer had occupied. In +one stride as much gain away from the dangerous edge had been made as +had been lost in the previous half mile. + +More at his ease, but for the fearful speed and the danger that Kit +might lose her footing, Wilbur looked ahead, talking to the steers +around, endeavoring to quiet them, noting that the road was turning more +sharply in the valley, although the downward grade was steeper and it +was increasingly hard for the little pony to hold up. But as they turned +the curve, there, immediately before them, standing in the middle of the +road, with their fishing poles over their shoulders, were a man and a +boy, evidently entirely ignorant of the danger so rapidly approaching. +The bank above was too steep to climb, and the one below straight ninety +feet sheer to the creek. To Wilbur it looked like sure death, and a most +awful one at that, but he at least was utterly unable to do anything to +prevent it, and he shuddered to think that he himself might be trampling +with his pony's hoofs on what might be below. + +But just as he had in that instant decided that there was no help for +it, he suddenly saw Merritt on old Baldy shoot forward like an arrow +from a bow stretched to the uttermost. The herd of steers was traveling +at a rapid clip, but under the startling influence of combined quirt +and spur, and with no room in which to display his bucking propensities, +Baldy just put himself to running, and only hit the high spots here and +there. + +It seemed incredible to Wilbur that any horse could stop, especially on +a down grade, at the speed that Baldy was traveling, but just before he +reached the man and boy, having previously shouted to warn them, Merritt +pulled up with a jerk that brought Baldy clear back on his haunches. +Like a flash of light he leaped from the horse and half lifted, half +pushed the man into the saddle, tossed the boy up behind him, and then, +grabbing hold of the slicker which was tied behind the cantle, he hit +old Baldy a slap with the quirt, and down the road they went, not twenty +yards ahead of the steers, Baldy carrying on his back the man and the +boy, and Merritt, hanging on like grim death, trying to run, taking +strides that looked as though he wore seven-leagued boots. The speed was +terrific and presently Wilbur noticed that Merritt was keeping both feet +together, putting his weight on the saddle, and vaulting along in +immense leaps. One moment he was there, but the next moment that Wilbur +looked ahead Baldy was still racing down the road with his double load, +but Merritt was nowhere to be seen. It was with a sickening feeling that +Wilbur realized that he must have lost his hold, and was in the same +peril from which he had saved the man and the boy. + +For a few fearful minutes Wilbur watched the ground beneath his horse's +feet, but saw no object in the occasional glimpses he could secure of +the dusty road. Once again Wilbur found himself being forced to the +outer edge of the road, but the cliff was shallowing rapidly, and now +they were not more than twenty feet above the valley with the road +curving into it in the distance. A couple of hundred feet further on, +however, a hillock rose abruptly, coming within four feet of the level +of the road, and Wilbur decided to put the pony at it, seeing there was +a chance of safety, and that even if they both got bad falls, there was +no fear of being trampled. + +Allowing the pony to come to the outside, he reined her in hard and led +her to the jump, swinging from the saddle as he did so in order to give +both Kit and himself a fair chance. The pony, released from the weight +of the rider before she struck ground, met it in a fair stride, and +without losing footing kept up the gait to the bottom of the hillock, +pulling up herself on the level grass below. But Wilbur, not being able +to estimate his jump, because he was in the act of vaulting from the +saddle, struck the ground all in a heap, crumpled up as though he were +broken in pieces and was hurled down the hill, reaching the bottom +stunned. He was unconscious for several minutes, but when he came to +himself, Kit was standing over him, nosing him with her soft muzzle as +though to bring him round. Weakly he staggered to his feet, and seeing +Kit standing patiently, managed to clamber into the saddle. + +The pony started immediately at an easy canter, crossing the valley and +meeting the herd where the road ran into the level. The cattle were +tired from the run, and sick and bruised as he was, Wilbur headed them +off and rounded them up, being aided presently by Rodgers and Grier, who +had found themselves unable to cut into the stampeding herd, and +consequently had waited until the whole herd got by, when they had +ridden back along the trail a little distance, got down to the creek by +a bridle path, and crossed the valley by a short cut. + +In the distance Baldy could be seen grazing, and Wilbur lightly touched +Kit with the spur to find out what had happened. The bay, as soon as he +had stopped running, evidently had bucked off his two riders, who were +still sitting on the ground, apparently dazed. The man, who was +evidently an Eastern tourist, was pale as ashes and dumb with fright, +and could tell nothing. The boy knew no more than, "He had to let go, he +had to let go." + +Together with Grier, Wilbur started back along the road to look for what +might be left of Merritt. The foreman tried to persuade the lad to stay, +for he was bleeding from a scalp wound and his left wrist was sorely +twisted, if not actually sprained, but Wilbur replied that he had said +he was going back to look for Merritt, and go back he would if both arms +and legs were broken. Kit, although very much blown, was willing to be +taken up the road at a fair gallop, when, just as they turned a corner, +they almost ran down the Supervisor, who was walking down the road as +unconcernedly as though nothing had happened. + +"Oh, Mr. Merritt," cried the boy, "I thought you were dead." + +"Cheerful greeting, that," answered the Forester. "No, I'm not dead. You +look nearer it than I do." + +"But didn't you get run down?" + +"Do I look as if I'd been a sidewalk for a thousand steers?" was the +disgusted reply. "Don't ask silly questions, Loyle." + +But the foreman broke in: + +"The boy's right enough to ask," he said; "an' there's no reason why you +shouldn't tell. How did you dodge the steers?" + +"That was easy enough," said Merritt. "I held on to Baldy until I saw a +crack in the rock big enough to hold a man. Then I let go and crawled +into that until the herd passed by." + +The boy breathed a sigh of relief. + +"I sure thought you were gone," he said. + +The Supervisor scanned him keenly, then slapped Kit heartily on the +flank. + +"You've got a good little mare there," he said; "there's not many of +them could have done it. Tell me all about it some time. What started +them?" he added, turning to the cattleman. + +"That fool new bridge gave way just as the last of the bunch crowded on +it. About twenty of them fell over the cliff there, and about thirty +more along the road. But it might have been a heap worse, an' you ought +ter have two life-savin' medals." + +Merritt's only reply was a gesture of protest. + +"An' you, youngster," went on the cattleman, "you kept your nerve and +rode a bully ride. I wish you'd take my quirt and keep it from me as a +remembrance of your first experience with a cattle stampede." + +Wilbur stammered some words of thanks, but the foreman waved them aside. + +"And now," said the Supervisor, with an entire change of tone, "I guess +we'll go back and get the pack-horse and go on to the valley." + +As they rode over the bridge Wilbur noted with a great deal of interest +the breakage of the supporting timbers on the outer side, and looking +down into the valley beneath, he could see the bodies of the cattle who +had been pushed over the edge in the stampede. + +"I read a story once," said the boy, "of a youngster who got caught in a +stampede of buffalo, and when his horse lost his footing he escaped by +jumping from the back of one buffalo to another until he reached the +outside of the herd. But I never believed it much." + +"It makes a good yarn," said the Supervisor, "an' it's a little like the +story they tell of Buffalo Bill, who, trying to get away from a buffalo +stampede, was thrown by his horse puttin' his foot in a badger hole and +breaking his leg." + +"Why, what in the world did he do?" queried Wilbur. + +"He waited until the foremost buffalo was just upon him, then gave a +leap, clear over his horns, and landed on his back, then turning sharply +round so as to face the head instead of the tail, he pulled out his +revolver and kept shooting to one side of the buffalo's head, just past +his eye, so that at every shot the beast turned a little more to one +side, thus cutting him out of the herd. Then, when he was clear of the +herd, he shot the buffalo." + +"What for?" asked Wilbur indignantly. "It seems a shame to kill the +buffalo which had got him free." + +"What chance would he have had against an angered buffalo alone and on +foot?" said Merritt. "He couldn't very well get off and make a bow to +the beast and have the buffalo drop a curtsey?" + +"I hadn't thought of that," said the boy, laughing. + +"I was afraid I might have to try that dodge, but when I saw the crack +in the rock I knew it was all right." + +"Well," said Wilbur as they turned off the road to where the pack-horse +had been picketed, "I think we're both pretty lucky to have come off so +easily." + +Merritt looked at the lad. He was dusty and grimy to a degree, his +clothes were torn in a dozen places where he had gone rolling down the +hill, a handkerchief was roughly knotted around his head, and there were +streaks of dried blood in his hair. + +"You look a little the worse for wear," he said; "maybe you'd better go +home, and I'll go on alone." + +"I won't," said Wilbur. + +"You what?" came the curt rebuke. "You mean that you would rather not." + +"Yes, sir," said the boy. "I mean that I don't feel too used up." + +The Supervisor nodded and rode on ahead. For a couple of miles or so, +they rode single file, and in spite of the boy's bold announcement that +he was not too badly shaken up, by the time he had ridden nearly an hour +more in the hot sun his head was aching furiously and he was beginning +to stiffen up. Accordingly he was glad when a cabin hove in sight, and +he cantered up to ask if they might call for a drink of water. + +"We stop here," was the laconic reply. + +As they rode up a big man came out of the house, which was quite a +fair-sized place, to meet them. + +"Well, Merritt," he said, "what have you got for me this time?" +motioning to the boy. + +"No patient for you, Doc," said Merritt; "one for your wife." + +The mountain doctor laughed, a great big hearty laugh. + +"Violet," he called, "you're taking my practice away from me. Here's a +patient that says he won't have me, but wants you." + +Immediately at his call, a small, slender woman came to the porch of the +house, and seeing the doctor helping Wilbur down from the saddle, +stepped forward. + +"I can walk all right," said Wilbur when the doctor put out a hand to +steady him. "I just wanted a drink of water." + +"Right you are," said the doctor, "we'll give you all the water you +want, just in a minute. Now," he continued as he led the boy into the +house, "let's have a look at the trouble." + +But Wilbur interposed. + +"This Forest Service," he said, smiling, "is the worst that ever +happened for having to obey orders, and Mr. Merritt put me in charge of +your wife, not you." + +The big doctor put his hand on the shoulder of his wife and roared until +the house shook with his laughter. It was impossible to resist the +infection, and Wilbur, despite his headache, found himself laughing with +the rest. But the doctor's wife, stepping quietly forward, took the lad +aside and, removing the handkerchief that Grier had wound around his +head, bathed the wound and cleansed it. She had just finished this when +the doctor came over, still laughing. He touched the wound deftly, and +Wilbur was amazed to find that the touch of this large, hearty man was +just as soft and tender as that of his wife. There was power in his very +finger-tips, and the boy felt it. He looked up, smiling. + +"I guess you're Doctor Davis," he said. + +"Why?" said the doctor; "what makes you think so?" + +"Oh, I just felt it," the boy replied. "I've heard a lot about you." + +"I'm 'it,' all right," said the doctor, "but you've refused to allow me +to attend you. I'll turn the case over to Dr. Violet Davis," and he +laughed again. + +Mrs. Davis smiled brightly in response and continued attending to the +boy. Then she turned to the two men. + +"You've put this case in my charge," she said, "and I'm going to +prescribe rest for a day or two anyway. That is," she added, "unless Mr. +Merritt finds it compulsory to take him away." + +The Supervisor smiled one of his rare smiles. + +"I wouldn't be so unkind as to take any one away from here +unnecessarily," he said, "no matter how busy. But there always is a lot +to do. Ever since the beavers first started forestry, it has meant work, +and lots of it. But if you're told to rest you've got to do it. I know. +I've been sick myself here." + +The doctor slapped him on the shoulder. + +"Beautiful case," he said, "beautiful case. But he wouldn't obey +orders." + +"He always did mine," put in Mrs. Davis. + +"I'm afraid I can't this time," said the Supervisor with one of his +abrupt changes of manner, turning to the door. "I'll call for Loyle on +my way home to-morrow." + +"Oh, Mr. Merritt," began Mrs. Davis in protest, "he ought to have two or +three days' rest, anyway." + +The chief of the forest turned to Wilbur. + +"Well?" he queried. + +The boy looked around at the comfortable home, at the big jovial doctor, +and his charming little wife, and thought how delightful it would be to +have a few days' rest. And his head was aching, and he was very stiff. +Then he looked at the Supervisor, quiet and unflinching in anything that +was to be done, working with him and helping him despite the big +interests for which he was responsible, he thought of the Forest Service +to which he was pledged to serve, he remembered his little tent home and +the portion of the range over which he had control, and straightened up. + +"What time to-morrow?" he said. "I'll be ready." + +"Middle of the afternoon," said Merritt. "So long." + +He bade good-by to the doctor and his wife, and after having seen that +Kit was properly attended to, went on his way to the Kern River Valley, +to visit the Edison power plant erected on the river, and to prepare for +the installation of the new pulp-mill. + +In the meantime, Wilbur, more fatigued by the day's excitement than he +had supposed himself to be, had fallen asleep, a sleep unbroken until +the evening. And all evening the doctor and his wife told him stories of +the Forest Service men and of the various miners, lumbermen, +prospectors, ranchers, and so forth, all tales of manliness, courage, +and endurance, and not infrequently of heroism. But when Wilbur told of +the professor and asked about other greenhorns that had come to the +forest, the doctor turned and asked him if he knew anything of "the boy +from Peanutville." + +"He had just come into camp up here in the Sierras," said the doctor on +receiving the lad's negative reply, "from some little place in the +middle West that was giving itself airs as a city. He had read somewhere +about the forest Rangers, and he himself had been on several Sunday +School picnics in the woods, so he thought that he knew all about it. At +the end of his first couple of days' work he said: + +"'I never supposed that a Ranger had to cut brush and build fence and +grub stumps and slave like a nigger. I don't believe he ought to. I +don't think it's what my people would like to have me do. I always +supposed that he just rode around under the trees and made outsiders toe +the mark.' + +"I said he was a new Guard," the doctor continued, "but he said this in +camp to a group of old-timers with whom he had been working. They hadn't +worried him at all, but had given him a fair show and helped him all +they could. But this was too rich. They glanced at each other with +mingled contempt and amusement, then put on mournful faces, looked on +him solemn-eyed, and regretted the cruelties of the Service. + +"'The boss,' they said, 'just sticks it on us all the time. We are +workin' like slaves--Guards and Rangers and everybody. It's plumb wicked +the way we're herded here.' + +"So the new hand felt comforted by this outward sympathy, and he ambled +innocently on. + +"'That heavy brush tears my clothes, and my back aches, and I burned a +shoe, and my socks are full of stickers. Then I fell on the barbed wire +when I was stretching it--and cut my nose. I tell you what it is, +fellows, if I ever get a chance to get away, I hope I'll never see +another inch of barbed wire as long as I live. If I was only back in +Peanutville, where I used to live, I could be eating a plate of ice +cream this minute instead of working like a dog and having to wash my +own clothes Sundays when I might be hearing the band play in the park.' + +"'Too bad,' shouted the old Rangers in chorus, until a peal of laughter +that echoed through and through that mountain camp showed the indignant +youngster that his point of view hadn't been what you might say warmly +welcomed by the old-timers. + +"But the following day, as I heard the story from Charles H. Shinn," the +doctor went on, "one of the best men in the gang took the lad aside the +following morning as they were riding up the trail, and said to him: + +"'How much of that stuff you was preachin' last night did you mean? Of +course, this is hard work; it has to be. Either leave it mighty pronto, +or wrastle with it till you're a man at the game. I've seen lots of +young fellows harden up--some of 'em just as green an' useless when they +came as you are now. Don't you know you hold us back, and waste our +time, too, on almost any job? But it's the price we have to pay up here +to get new men started. Unless you grow to love it so much that there +isn't anything else in all the world you'd care to do, you ain't fit for +it, an' you'd better get out, and let some one with more sand than you +have get in.' + +"Well, Loyle," the doctor said, "that youngster was provoked. He +wasn't man enough to get really angry, so that his temper would +keep him sticking to the work; he was one of these saucy +slap-'em-on-the-wrist-naughty kind. + +"'I think all of you are crazy,' he said. + +"He walked into the Supervisor's office that afternoon and explained +that the kind of work he had been given to do was altogether below his +intellectual powers. He never understood how quickly things happened, +but he signed a resignation blank almost before he knew it, and went +back to Peanutville. + +"It so happened that one of the Rangers had friends in Peanutville, and +the boys at the camp followed the youth's career with much interest. He +clerked, he took money at a circus window, he tried cub newspaper work, +he stood behind a dry-goods counter, he was everything by turns but +nothing long." + +"What finally happened to him?" asked Wilbur. + +"Last I heard he was a salesman in a woman's shoe store. But he's still +with us in spirit," said the doctor, "as a horrible example. Right now, +down in the heart of a forest fire, when the Rangers are working like +men possessed down some hot gulch, one will say to the other: + +"'Gee, Jack, if I was only back where I used to be, I could be having a +plate of ice cream this minute.' And the other will reply: 'I wish I +might be back in Peanutville and hear the band play in the park.' And +both men will laugh and go at the work all the harder for realizing what +a miserable failure the weak greenhorn had been." + +"I'm thinking," said Wilbur, "that I'll never give them the chance to +talk like that about me!" + +"From what I heard," said the doctor, "I don't believe you will." + +"And from what I see," said the doctor's wife gently, as the two rose +and bade the "patient" good-night, "I know we shall all be glad that you +have come to us here in the forest." + + +[Illustration: WHAT TREE-PLANTING WILL DO. + +Pine plantation fifty years old showing growth of timber. Trunks, +however, should not show so many superfluous low branches. + +_Photograph by U. S. Forest Service._] + + +[Illustration: THE FIRST CONSERVATION EXPERT + +Work of a beaver in felling a tree with which to build a dam for his +home. + +_Photograph by U. S. Forest Service._] + + + + +CHAPTER XIII + +HOW THE FOREST WON A GREAT DOCTOR + + +In the middle of the night the telephone bell rang. Instantly Wilbur +heard the doctor's voice responding. + +"Yes, where is it?" he queried. "Where? Oh, just beyond Basco Aleck's +place. All right, I'll start right away." + +There was some rummaging in the other rooms, and in less than five +minutes' time the clatter of hoofs outside told the boy that the doctor +was off, probably on the huge gray horse Wilbur had seen in the corral +as he rode in that day. It was broad daylight when he wakened again, and +Mrs. Davis was standing beside him with his breakfast tray. It was so +long since Wilbur had not had to prepare breakfast for himself that he +felt quite strange, but the night's rest had eased him wonderfully, and +aside from a little soreness where he had had his scalp laid open, he +was quite himself again. + +"Did Doctor Davis have to go away in the night?" he asked. "I thought I +heard the telephone." + +"Yes," answered the doctor's wife. "But that is nothing new. Almost once +a week, at least, he is sent for in the night, or does not reach home +till late in the night. I've grown used to it," she added; "doctors' +wives must." + +"But distances are so great, and there are so few trails," said the boy, +"and Doctor Davis is so famous, one would think that he would do better +in a city." + +"Better for himself?" came the softly uttered query. + +The boy colored hotly as he realized the idea of selfishness that there +had been in his speech. + +"I beg your pardon," he said. "No, I see. But it does seem strange, just +the same, that he should be out here." + +"He wouldn't be happy anywhere else." + +"Excuse me, Mrs. Davis," said the boy, who had caught something of the +Supervisor's abruptness, "but what brought him here?" + +"Do you not," answered the doctor's wife, giving question for question, +"know the old hunter, 'Rifle-Eye Bill'? I don't know his right name. +Why, of course, you must; he's the Ranger in your part of the forest." + +"Do I know him?" said Wilbur, and without stopping for further question +talked for ten minutes on end, telling all that the old hunter had done +for him and how greatly he admired him. "Know him," he concluded, "I +should just guess I did." + +"It was he," said the woman, "who persuaded us to come out here." + +"Won't you tell me?" pleaded the boy. "I'd love to hear anything about +Rifle-Eye. And the doctor, too," he added as an afterthought. + +"It was long ago," she began, "seventeen years ago. Yes," she continued +with a smile at the lad's surprise, "I have lived here seventeen years." + +"Do you--" began the boy excitedly, "do you ride a white mare?" + +This time it was the doctor's wife who colored. She flushed to the roots +of her hair. + +"Yes," she answered hurriedly, and went on to explain the early +conditions of the forest. But Wilbur was not listening, he was +remembering the stories that he had heard since his arrival into the +forest of the "little white lady," of whom the ranchers and miners +always spoke so reverently. But presently Rifle-Eye's name attracted his +attention and he listened again. + +"We were camping," she said, "in one of the redwood groves not far from +San Francisco for the summer, the doctor having been appointed an +attending surgeon at one of the larger hospitals, although he was very +young. We had been married only a little over a year. One evening just +after supper, Rifle-Eye, although we did not know him then, walked into +camp. + +"'You are a doctor, an operating doctor?' he inquired. + +"'Yes,' my husband replied, 'I am a surgeon.' + +"Then the old hunter came to where I was standing. + +"'You are a doctor's wife?' he queried. You know that direct way of +his?" + +"Indeed I do," Wilbur replied. "It's one you've got to answer." + +"So I said, 'Yes, I am a doctor's wife,' just as if I was a little girl +answering a catechism. + +"'The case is seventy miles away,' he said, 'and there's a horse +saddled.' He turned to me. 'A woman I know is coming over in a little +while to stay the night with you, so that you will not be lonely. +Come, doctor.' There was a hurried farewell, and they were gone. I can +laugh now, as I think of it, but it was dreadful then. + +"Presently, however, the woman that he had spoken of came over to our +camp. She was a mountaineer's wife, and very willing and helpful. But I +was a little frightened, as I had never seen any one quite like her +before." + +"You couldn't have had much in common," said Wilbur, who was observant +enough to note the artistic nature of the room wherein he lay, the +exquisite cleanliness and freshness of all his surroundings, and the +faultless English of the doctor's wife. Besides, she was pretty and +sweet-looking, and boys are quick to note it. + +"We didn't," she answered, "but when I happened to mention the old +hunter, why the woman was transformed. She brightened up, and told me +tales far into the night of what the old hunter had done until," she +smiled, "I almost thought he must be as nice as Doctor Davis." + +"Doctor Davis does look awfully fine," agreed Wilbur. + +"I always think so," said his wife demurely. "Two days passed before the +men returned, and when I got a chance alone with my husband, he was +twice as bad as the mountaineer's wife. He would talk of nothing but +Rifle-Eye and the need of surgical work in the mountains. + +"'And you, Violet,' he said, 'you're going to ride there with me to-day +and help look after this man.' It did rather surprise me, because I knew +that he hated to have me troubled with any details of his work, for he +used to like to leave his profession behind when he came home. So I knew +that he thought it important, and I went. But I rode the greater part of +the day with the old hunter, and long before he reached the place where +the man was who needed me, all my objections had vanished and I was +eager to begin." + +"That's just the way that Rifle-Eye does," said the boy, "he makes it +seem that what he wants you to do is just what you want to do yourself." + +"When I got to the place," she went on, "I found that it was a Basque +shepherd, who had been hurt by some of the cattlemen. That made it much +more interesting for me, for you know, my people were Basques, that +strange old race, who, tradition tells, are all that are left of the +shepherds on the mountains of the lost Atlantis. So I nursed him as best +I could, and presently, from far and wide over the Rockies I would get +messages from the Basque shepherds." + +"Didn't you put a stop to the feuds at one time?" asked Wilbur. "The old +hunter told me something about 'the little white lady' and the sheep +war." + +"I helped in many of them," she said simply, "and when they came to me +for advice I tried to give it. Doctor Davis was always there to suggest +the more advisable course, and I put it to these Bascos, as they called +them, so that they would understand." + +"How about Burleigh?" asked Wilbur. + +But the doctor's wife disclaimed all knowledge of a sheep-owner called +Burleigh. + +"All right," said Wilbur, "then I'll give my share of the story, as the +old hunter told it to me. That is, if you don't mind." + +"Tell it," she smiled, "if you like." + +"Well," said Wilbur, "one Sunday afternoon a Ranger, whose cabin was +near a lookout point, said to his wife, 'I'll ride up to the peak, and +be back in time for supper.' He went off in his shirt-sleeves, +bare-headed, for an hour's ride, and was gone a week. Up in the brush he +found the trail of a band of sheep, and although he was cold and hungry +and his horse was playing out, he stuck right on the job until it got +too dark to see. The second day he smashed in the door of a miner's +cabin, got some grub, and nailed a note on the door saying who'd taken +it, and kept on. He tired his horse out, and left him in another +fellow's corral, but kept on going on foot. The sheepman was known as +dangerous, but this little Ranger--did I tell you he was Irish--stuck to +it, trusting to find some way out even if the grazer did get ugly. + +"At last he came on the sheep in a mountain meadow, and Burleigh on his +horse by them, a rifle across his saddle bow. The Ranger said little at +the time, and the two men went home to supper. After eating, as they sat +there, the Ranger said his say. He told the grazer what were the orders +he had, and that he would have to live up to them. But the grazer had a +copy of 'orders,' too, and he had hired a lawyer to find out how he +could get out of them. So he lit into the Ranger. + +"'You see, Mac,' he said, 'those orders don't mean anything. They may be +all right in Washington, but they don't go here. You can't stop me, nor +arrest me, nor hurt my sheep. Your bosses won't stand by you if you get +into any mix-up. The best thing you can do is to stay here to-night, and +then go home. Make a report on it, if you like, I don't care." + +"And then the Ranger began," the boy went on. "The old hunter told me +that this little bit of an Irishman told the grazer about his work as a +Ranger. He told him how he had seen the good that was going to be done, +and that having put his hand to the plow, he couldn't let it go again. +He didn't know much about it, and he'd never tried to talk about it +before, but the natural knack of talking which his race always has came +to help him out. Then he began to talk of the sheep and cattle war, and +the shame that it was to have them killing each other's flocks and +shooting each other because they could not agree about the right to +grass. + +"'An' there's one more thing,' he said, ''tis only the other day that I +was talkin' to the "little white lady," and she said she knew that you +wouldn't be the one to start up trouble again.' And he wound up with an +appeal to his better judgment, which, so the old hunter told me the +grazer said afterward, would have got a paralyzed mule on the move. + +"When he got through, Burleigh merely answered: + +"'Mac, take that blanket and go to bed. I'll talk to you in the +morning.' + +"When the Ranger woke, a little after daylight, the grazer sat beside +his blanket, smoking. He began without wasting any time. + +"'Mac,' he said, 'I'm going to take my sheep out to-day. Not because of +any of your little bits of printed orders--I could drive a whole herd +through them; and not because of any of your bosses back in Washington, +who wouldn't know a man's country if they ever got into it, and couldn't +find their way out; and not entirely because, as you say, "the little +white lady" trusts me, though perhaps that's got a good deal to do with +it. But when I find a man who is so many different kinds of a fool as +you seem to be, it looks some like my moral duty to keep him out of an +asylum.' And that's the story I heard about Burleigh. + +"But I interrupted you," the boy continued, "you were going to tell me +about Doctor Davis. Didn't you ever go back to the city?" + +"Oh, yes," she replied. "The doctor had to take his hospital service, +and for three years he spent six months in the hospital in the city, +and six months out here in the mountains. But there were several good +surgeons in the city, and only one on the great wide Sierras, and, as +you know, he is strong enough for the hardest work. So,--I remember well +the night,--he came to me, and hesitatingly suggested that we should +live out here for always, but that he didn't wish to take me away from +my city friends. And I--oh, I had been wanting to come all the time. I +was just one out of so many in the city, paying little social calls, but +here I found so many people to be fond of. I think I know every one on +the mountains here, and they are all so kind to me. And," she added +proudly, "so appreciative of the doctor." + +Wilbur laughed as she gathered up the things on the tray. + +"Well," he said, "I don't believe the old hunter ever did a better thing +when he got Doctor Davis to come to the forest--unless, it was the day +'the little white lady' came with him. Haven't I had a broken head, and +am I not her patient? You bet!" + +But Mrs. Davis only smiled as she passed from the room. + +Wilbur spent the rest of the morning in the doctor's library, and was +more than delighted to learn that these books were there for borrowing, +on the sole condition that they should be returned. He learned, later, +that under the guise of a library to lend books, all sorts of little +plans were done for the cheering of the lives of those who lived in +isolated portions of the mountain range. The boy had not been +twenty-four hours under the doctor's roof, yet he was quite at home, and +sorry to go when the Supervisor rode up. He had been careful to groom +Kit very thoroughly, and she was standing saddled at the door, half an +hour before the time appointed. He was ready to swing into the saddle as +soon as Merritt appeared. + +"Not so fast, Loyle," he said, "this is once that promptness is a bad +thing. I must have a word or two with Mrs. Davis; he'd be a pretty poor +stick who ever missed that chance." + +So, while he went inside, Wilbur looked over the pack to see that it was +riding easily, and led Baldy to where he could have a few mouthfuls of +grass. And when he came out the Forester was even more silent than +usual, and rode for two hours without uttering a syllable. + +"Did you find everything going on all right for the pulp-mill?" asked +Wilbur, finally desiring to give a chance for conversation. But Merritt +simply replied, "Fairly so," and relapsed into silence. He wakened into +sudden energy, however, when, a half an hour later, in making a shortcut +to headquarters he came upon an old abandoned trail. It was somewhat +overgrown, but the Supervisor turned into it and followed it for some +length, finally arriving at a large spring, one of the best in the +forest, which evidently had been known at some time prior to the Forest +Service taking control, but now had passed into disuse. But Merritt was +even more surprised to find beside the spring a prospector of the old +type, with his burro and pack, evidently making camp for the night. + +"Evenin'," said Merritt, "where did you get hold of this trail?" + +"Allers knew about it," said the prospector. "I s'pose," he added, +noting the bronze "U. S." on the khaki shirt, "that you're the Ranger." + +"Supervisor," replied Merritt. "Locating a mineral claim, are you?" + +"Not yet," the other replied; "I ain't located any mineral to claim yet. +I'll come to you for a permit as soon as I do. But I'm lookin' for +Burns's lost mine." + +"You don't believe in that old yarn, surely?" questioned the other +surprisedly. + +"Would I be lookin' for it if I hadn't doped it out that it was there?" + +"Where?" + +"Oh, somewheres around here. I reckon it's further north. But if you +don't take any stock in it, there's no use talkin'." + +"I'm not denying its existence," said Merritt, "but you know dozens of +men have looked for that and no one's found it yet." + +"There can't be but one find it," said the prospector. "I aims to be +that one. I used to think it was further south. Twenty years ago I spent +a lot o' time down at the end of the range. Two seasons ago I got a +hunch it was further north. I couldn't get away last year, so here I am. +I've been busy on Indian Creek for some years." + +"Got a claim there?" + +"Got the only jade in the country." + +"Was it you located that mine in the Klamath Forest?" queried the +Supervisor interestedly. "But that's quite a good deposit. I shouldn't +think you'd be prospecting now." + +"I didn't for two years. But, pard, it was dead slow, an' so I hired a +man to run the works while I hit the old trail again. I don't have to +get anybody to grubstake me now. I've been able to boost some of the +others who used to help me." + +"But what started you looking for Burns's mine? I thought that story had +been considered a fake years ago." + +"What is a lost mine?" asked Wilbur. + +Merritt looked at him a moment thoughtfully, then turned to the +prospector. + +"You tell the yarn," he said. "You probably know it better than I do." + +"I'm not much on talkin'," began the prospector. "Away back in the +sixties, after the first gold-rush, Jock Burns, one of the old +Forty-niners, started prospectin' in the Sierras. There's not much here, +but one or two spots pay. By an' by Burns comes into the settlements +with a few little bags of gold dust, an' nuggets of husky size. He blows +it all in. He spends free, but he's nowise wasteful, so he stays in town +maybe a month. + +"Then he disappears from view, an' turns up in less than another month +in town with another little bundle of gold dust. It don't take much +figurin' to see that where there's a pay streak so easy worked as that, +there's a lot more of it close handy. An' so they watches Burns close. +Burns, he can't divorce himself from his friends any more than an Indian +can from his color. This frequent an' endurin' friendliness preys some +on Burns's nature, an' bein' of a bashful disposition, he makes several +breaks to get away. But while the boys are dead willin' to see him start +for the mountains, they reckon an escort would be an amiable form of +appreciation. Also, they ain't got no objection to bein' shown the way +to the mine. + +"Burns gets a little thin an' petered out under the strain, but time an' +agin he succeeds in givin' 'em the slip. Sure enough he lines up a month +or two later with some more of the real thing. Finally, one of these +here friends gets a little peevish over his frequent failures to stack +the deck on Burns. He avers that he'll insure that Burns don't spend any +more coin until he divvys up, an' accordin'ly he hands him a couple of +bullets where he thinks they'll do most good." + +"What did he want to kill him for?" asked Wilbur. + +"He didn't aim to kill him prompt," was the reply. "His idee was to trot +him down the hill by easy stages, an' gradooally indooce the old +skinflint to talk. But his shootin' was a trifle too straight, and +Burns jest turns in his toes then an' there. This displeases the +sentiment of the community. Then some literary shark gits up and spins a +yarn about killin' some goose what laid eggs that assayed a hundred per +cent., an' they decides that it would be a humane thing to arrange that +Burns shan't go out into the dark without some comfortin' friend beside +him. So they dispatches the homicide, neat an' pretty, with the aid of a +rope, an' remarks after the doin's is over that Burns is probably a heap +less lonesome." + +"Well, I should think that would have stopped all chance of further +search," said Wilbur. + +"It did. But a year or two after that, Burns acquires the habit of +intrudin' his memory on the minds of some of these here friends. When it +gits noised about that a certain kind of nose-paint is some advantageous +toward this particular brand of dream, why, there ain't no way of +keeping a sufficient supply in camp. I goes up against her myself, an' +wild licker she is. But one by one, the boys all gets to dreamin' that +Burns has sorter floated afore them, accordin' to ghostly etiquette, an' +pointed a ghostly finger at the ground. Which ain't so plumb exact, for +no one supposes a mine to be up in the air. But different ones affirms +that they can recognize the features of the landscape which the ghost of +Burns frequents. As, however, they all strikes out in different +directions, I ain't takin' no stock therein. + +"But, two years ago, when I was meanderin' around lookin' for signs, I +comes across the bones of an old mule with the remains of a saddle on +his back, an' I didn't have any trouble in guessin' it to be Burns's. +There was no way of tellin', though, whether he was goin' or returnin' +when the mule broke down, or if he was far or near the mine, but, +anyhow, it gave some idee of direction, an' I reckon I'm goin' to find +it." + +"All right," said the Supervisor as they shook up their horses ready to +go, "I hope you have good luck and find it." + +"I'll let you or Rifle-Eye know as soon as I do," called back the +prospector, "an' you folks can pan out some samples. If I find it, we'll +make the Yukon look sick." + +Merritt laughed as they cantered down the trail to headquarters. + + +[Illustration: SAND BURYING A PEAR ORCHARD. + +Almost too late to save a fine plantation which a suitable wind-break of +trees would have guarded. + +_Photo by U. S. Forest Service._] + + + + +CHAPTER XIV + +A ROLLING CLOUD OF SMOKE + + +The days became hotter and hotter, and each morning when Wilbur rose he +searched eagerly for some sign of cloud that should presage rain, but +the sky remained cloudless. Several times he had heard of fires in the +vicinity, but they had kept away from that portion of the forest over +which he had control, and he had not been summoned from his post. The +boy had given up his former schedule of covering his whole forest twice +a week, and now was riding on Sundays, thus reaching every lookout point +every other day. It was telling upon the horses, and he himself was +conscious of the strain, but he was more content in feeling that he had +gone the limit in doing the thing that was given him to do. + +One day, while in a distant part of the forest, he came upon the signs +of a party of campers. Since his experience with the tourists the boy +had become panic-stricken by the very idea of careless visitors to the +forest, and the chance of their setting a fire, and so, recklessly, he +put his horse at a sharp gallop and started down the trail that they had +left. The signs were new, so that he overtook them in a couple of hours. +But in the meantime he had passed the place where the party had made +their noonday halt, and he could see that full precautions had been +taken to insure the quenching of the fire. + +When he overtook them, moreover, he was wonderfully relieved and freed +from his fears. There were six in all, the father, who was quite an old +man, the mother, two grown-up sons, and two younger girls. They had +heard his horse come galloping down the trail, and the two younger men +had hung back to be the first to meet him. + +"Which way?" one of them asked, as Wilbur pulled his horse down to a +walk. + +"Your way," said Wilbur, "I guess. I just rode down to see who it was on +the trail. There was a bunch of tourists hanging around here a few weeks +ago, and the forest floor is too dry to take any chances with their +campfires." + +"Oh, that's it," said the former speaker. Then, with a laugh, he +continued: "I guess we aren't in that class." + +"I can see you're not," the boy replied, "but I'm one of the Forest +Service men, and it's a whole lot better to be safe than sorry." + +"Right," the other replied. "I think you might ride on with us a bit," +he continued, "and talk to the rest of them. It may ease their minds. +You were headed our way down that trail as though you were riding for +our scalps." + +Wilbur laughed at the idea of his inspiring fear in the two stalwart men +riding beside him. + +"I guess I'd have had some job," he said, "if I had tried it on." + +"Well," the first speaker answered, "we wouldn't be the first of the +family to decorate a wigwam that way. My grandfather an' his two +brothers got ambushed by some Apaches in the early seventies." + +"Your grandfather?" the boy repeated. + +"Sure, son. Most of the fellows that got the worst of it with the +Indians was some one's granddad, I reckon. One of my uncles, father's +brother, was with them at the time, and he got scalped, too. It isn't so +long ago since the days of the Indians, son, an' it's wonderful to think +of the families livin' peacefully where the war-parties used to ride. +That's goin' to be a great country down there. But," he broke off +suddenly, "here's dad." + +The bent figure in the saddle, riding an immense iron gray mare, +straightened up as the three rode close, and the old man turned a keen +glance on the boy. Instantly, Wilbur was reminded of the old hunter, +although the two men were as unlike as they could be, and in that same +instant the boy realized that the likeness lay in the eyes. The +springiness might have gone out of his step, and to a certain extent the +seat in the saddle was unfirm, and the strength and poise of the body +showed signs of abatement, but the fire in the eyes was undimmed and +every line of the features was instinct to a wonderful degree with life +and vitality. After a question or two to his sons he turned to the boy, +and in response to a query as to his destination, replied, in a +sing-song voice that was reminiscent of frontier camp-meetings: + +"I'm goin' to the Promised Land. It's been a long an' a weary road, but +the time of rejoicin' has come. It is writ that the desert shall blossom +as a rose, an' I'm goin' to grow rose-trees where the cactus used to be; +the solitary place shall be alone no more, an' I and mine are flockin' +into it; the lion an' wolf shall be no more therein, an' the varmints +all are gone away; an' a little child shall lead them, an' before I die +I reckon to see my children an' my children's children under the shadow +of my vine an' fig tree." + +Wilbur looked a little bewilderedly at the two younger men and one of +them said hastily: + +"We're goin' down to the Salt River Valley, down in Arizona, where the +government has irrigated land." + +"Oh, I know," said Wilbur, "that's one of the big projects of the +Reclamation Service." + +"Have you been down there at all?" + +"No," the boy answered, "but I understand that to a very great extent +much of the Forest Service work is being done with irrigation in view." + +"They used to call it," broke out the old prophet again, "the 'land that +God forgot,' but now they're callin' it the 'land that God remembered.'" + +Wilbur waited a moment to see if the old man would speak again, but as +he was silent, he turned to the man beside him: + +"How did you get interested in this land?" he asked. + +"I was born," the other answered, "in one of the villages of the +cliff-dwellers, who lived so many years ago. Dad, he always used to +think that the sudden droppin' out of those old races an' the endurin' +silence about them was some kind of a visitation. An' he always believed +that the curse, whatever it was, would be taken off." + +"That's a queer idea," said the boy; "I never heard it before." + +"Well," said the other, "it does seem queer. An' when the government +first started this reclamation work, dad he thought it was a sign, and +he went into every project, I reckon, the government ever had. An' they +used to say that unless 'the Apache Prophet,' as they called him, had +been once on a project, it was no use goin' on till he came." + +"But what did he do?" + +"They always gave him charge of a gang of men for as long as he wanted +it, and Jim an' I, we used to boss a gang, too. We've been on the +Huntley and Sun River in Montana, we've laid the foundation of the +highest masonry dam in the world--the Shoshone dam in Wyoming,--helped +build a canal ninety-five miles long in Nebraska, I've driven team on +the Belle Fourche in South Dakota; in Kansas, where there's no surface +water, I've dug wells that with pumps will irrigate eight thousand +acres, and away down in New Mexico on the Pecos and in Colorado on the +Rio Grande I've helped begin a new life for those States." + +"An' a river shall flow out of it," the old man burst forth again, "an' +I reckon thar ain't a river flowin' nowhere that's forgot. I don't know +where Jordan rolls, but any stream that brings smilin' plenty where the +desert was before looks enough like Jordan to suit me. I've seen it, I +tell you," he added fiercely, turning to the boy, "I've seen the desert +an' I've seen Eden, an' I'm goin' there to live. An' where the flamin' +sword of thirst once whirled, there's little brooks a-ripplin' an' the +flowers is springin' fair." + +"You must have seen great changes?" suggested the boy, interested in the +old man's speech. + +"Five years ago," he answered, "we were campin' on the Snake River, in +southern Idaho. There was sage-brush, an' sand, an' stars, an' nothin' +else. An engineerin' fellow, who he was I dunno, rides up to the fire. +Where he comes from I dunno; I reckon his body came along the road of +the sage-brush and the sand, but his mind came by the stars. An' he +takes the handle of an ax, and draws out on the sand an irrigatin' +plan. There wasn't a house for thirty miles. An' he just asks if he +shall go ahead. An' I knows he's right, an' I says I knows he's right, +an' he goes straight off to Washington, an' now there's three thousand +people where the sage-brush was, and right on the very spot where my +campfire smoked just five years ago, a school has been opened with over +a hundred children there." + +He stopped as suddenly as he began. + +"There was some great work in the Gunnison canyon, was there not?" +queried Wilbur. + +The old man made no reply, and the son answered the question. + +"When they had to lower a man from the top into the canyon, seven +hundred feet below," he said, "Dad was the first to volunteer. I reckon, +son, there's no greater story worth the tellin' than the Uncompahgre +tunnel. And then, I ain't told nothin' about the big Washington and +Oregon valleys, where tens of thousands now have homes an' are rearin' +the finest kind of men an' women. But, as dad says, we're comin' home. +There's four centuries of our history and there's seven centuries of +Moki traditions, an' still there's nothing to tell me who the people are +who built the cliff-town where I was born. Dad, he thinks that when the +water comes, perhaps the stones will speak. I don't know, but if they +ever do, I want to be there to hear. It's the strangest, wildest place +in all the world, I think, and while it is harsh and unkindly, still +it's home. Dad's right there. These forests are all right," he added, +remembering that the boy was attached to the Forest Service, "but for +me, I want a world whose end you can't see an' where every glance leads +up." + +"Do you suppose," said Wilbur, "that in the days of the cliff-dwellers, +and earlier, the 'inland empire' was densely populated?" + +"Some time," the other replied slowly, "it must have been. Not far from +my cliff home is the famous Cheltro Palace, which contains over thirty +million blocks of stone." + +"How big is it?" asked Wilbur. + +"Well, it is four stories high, nearly five hundred feet long, an' just +half that width." + +Wilbur whistled. + +"My stars," he ejaculated, "that is big! And is there nothing left to +tell about them?" he asked. + +The other shook his head. + +"Nothing," he answered. + +"They were, an' they were not," interjected the old patriarch. "I looked +for the place where I should find him, an' lo, he was gone. They were +eatin' an' drinkin' when the end came, an' they knew it not. Like enough +they had some warnin' which they heeded not, an' their house is left +unto them desolate. An' we go in and possess their land. Young man, come +with us." + +Wilbur started. + +"Oh, I can't," he said. "I should like to see some of those projects, +but my work is here. But I'm one of you," he added eagerly; "the rivers +that flow down to enrich your desert rise from springs in our mountains, +and all those springs would dry up if the forests were destroyed. And +all the headwaters of the streams are in our care." + +"You kind of look after them when they're young," Wilbur's companion +suggested, "that we can use them when the time is ripe." + +"That is just it," said Wilbur. Then, turning to the old man, he added: + +"I must go back to my patrol," he said, "but when you're down in that +Garden of Eden, where the river is making the world all over again, +you'll remember us once in a while, and the little bit of a stream +that flows out of my corral will always have good wishes for you down +there." + +The old man turned in his saddle with great dignity. + +"There be vessels to honor," he said gravely, "an' to every one his +gifts. Go back to your forest home an' work, an' take an old man's +wishes that while water runs you may never want for work worth doin', +for friends worth havin', an' at the last a tally you ain't ashamed to +show." + +Wilbur raised his hat in salute for reply and reined Kit in until the +party was lost to view. The afternoon was drawing on and the lad had +lost nearly two hours in following the party, and in his chat with the +old patriarch, but he could not but feel that even the momentary glimpse +he had been given of the practical workings of the reclamation work of +the government had gone far to emphasize and render of keener personal +interest all that he had learned at school or heard from the Forest +Service men about the making of a newer world within the New World +itself. And when he remembered that over a quarter of a million +families, within a space of about six years, have made their homes on +what was an absolute desert ten years ago, and that these men and women +were stirred with the same spirit as the old patriarch, he felt, as he +had said, that the conserving of the mountain streams was work worth +while. + +As it chanced, he passed over the little stream whose channel he had +cleared on one of his patrol rides, and he stopped a moment to look at +it. + +"Well," he said aloud, "I suppose some youngster some day will be +picking oranges off a tree that would have died if I hadn't done that +day's work," and he rode on to his camp greatly pleased with himself. + +For a day or two the boy found himself quite unable to shake the spell +of the old patriarch's presence off his mind, and the more he thought +over it, the more he realized that scarcely any one thing in the whole +of the United States loomed larger on its future than the main idea of +Conservation. It had been merely a word before, but now it was a +reality, and he determined to take the first opportunity he would have, +during his vacation, of going down to the Salt River Valley to see the +old patriarch once again. + +And still the weather grew hotter and the sky remained cloudless. And +now, every evening, Rifle-Eye would telephone over to make sure that +Wilbur was back at camp and that there was as yet no danger. They had +had one quite sharp tussle at a distant point of the forest, and one day +Wilbur had received orders to make a long ride to a lookout point in +another part of the forest, the work of a Guard who had been called away +to fight fire, but so far, Wilbur had been free. Two or three times he +found himself waking suddenly in the night, possessed with an intense +desire to saddle Kit and ride off to a part of the forest where he had +either dreamed or thought a fire was burning, but Rifle-Eye had been +careful to warn him against this very thing, and although the morning +found him simply wild to ride to this point of supposed danger, he had +followed orders and ridden his regular round. + +Although Wilbur's camp was high, the heat grew hard to bear, and when +the boy passed from the shade of the pine along the naked rock to some +lookout point the ground seemed to blaze under him. The grass was +rapidly turning brown in the exposed places, and the pine needles were +as slippery as the smoothest ice. + +Just at noon, one morning, Wilbur turned his horse--he was not riding +Kit that day--into one of these open trails, and taking out his glasses, +commenced to sweep the horizon. A heat haze was abroad, and his +over-excited eyes seemed to see smoke everywhere. But, as he swept round +the horizon, suddenly his whole figure stiffened. He looked long, then, +with a sigh of relief, turned away, and completed his circuit of the +horizon. This done, he directed the glasses anew where he had looked +before. He looked long, unsatisfied, then lay down on the rock where he +could rest the glasses and scanned the scene for several minutes. + +"Be sure," Merritt had once warned him, "better spend a half an hour at +the start than lose two hours later." + +But Wilbur felt sure and rushed for his horse. Half-way he paused. Then, +going deliberately into the shade of a heavy spruce, he half-closed his +eyes for a minute or two to let the muscles relax. Then quietly he came +to the edge of the cliff, and directing his glasses point-blank at the +place he had been examining so closely, scanned it in every detail. He +slipped the glasses back into their case, snapped the clasp firmly, +walked deliberately back to his horse, who had been taking a few +mouthfuls of grass, tightened the cinches, looked to it that the saddle +was resting true and that the blanket had not rucked up, vaulted into +the saddle, and rode to the edge of the cliff. There was no doubt of it. +Hanging low in the heavy air over and through the dark foliage of pine +and spruce was a dull dark silver gleam, which changed enough as the +sunlight fell upon it to show that it was eddying vapor rather than the +heavier waves of fog. + +"Smoke!" he said. "We've got to ride for it." + + +[Illustration: NO WATER, NO FORESTS. NO FORESTS, NO WATER. + +Example of country which irrigation will cause to become wonderfully +fertile. + +_Photograph by U. S. Forest Service._] + + +[Illustration: WITH WATER! + +In the foreground, a field and orchard; in the background, the +sand-dunes of the arid desert. Transformation effected by a tiny stream +and a poplar wind-break. + +_Photograph by U. S. Forest Service._] + + + + +CHAPTER XV + +THE FOREST ABLAZE + + +As Wilbur broke into a steady, if fast pace, it seemed to him that all +his previous experiences in the forest had been directed to this one +end. True, once before, he had seen smoke in the distance and had ridden +to it, but then he had felt that it was a small fire which he would be +able to put out, as indeed it had proved. But now, while there was no +greater cloud of smoke visible than there had been before, the boy felt +that this was in some measure different. + +As his horse's hoofs clattered on the trail, it seemed to his excited +fancy that every inch of ground was crying to the valley below, "He's +coming," the wind that blew past him seemed filled with purpose, every +eddying gust awoke in him a greater desire to reach the place of danger +before the wind should rise to higher gusts, and as the needles of the +pines whispered overhead it seemed to Wilbur that they murmured, "Hurry, +hurry, if you want to be there on time." Over and over again, he found +himself on the point of using the whip or spurs to induce a greater +burst of speed, but as often as he did so, the old short, curtly-worded +counsels of Merritt came back to him, never to press his horse if the +ride was to be of any length, and he grew to believe that the animal +knew as well as the rider the errand on which he was bound. + +He had thought, before starting, of riding back to his camp and +telephoning to Rifle-Eye, but the knowledge that after all it might be a +little fire kept him back. All the tales that he had ever heard about +forest fires rushed through his mind, but he resolutely set them aside +to watch his horse's path, to hold him in where he would be apt to +stumble, to give him his head on rising ground, and to bring him to +speed where the trail was easy to follow. Two hours he rode, his horse +well in hand, until he came to the place where he had decided from his +lookout point that he would have to leave the trail and plunge through +the forest itself. + +This was a very different matter, and Wilbur found himself wondering how +his horse kept his footing. He was not riding Kit, for which he was +glad, as in leaving the trail and plunging downhill he had struck some +parts of the forest where undergrowth was present, and his favorite +mare's slender legs would have been badly scratched. Also the footing +grew dangerous and uncertain. There had been many windfalls in the +forest, and now was no time to take them quietly; a flying leap, not +knowing what might be on the other side, a stumble, perhaps, which sent +the boy's heart into his mouth, a quick recovery, and they were off +again, only to find, perhaps, a few yards further on, a bowlder-strewn +gully which it would have been madness to take at other than a walk. But +the boy chafed terribly at each and every stay to his ride, and he had +to hold himself in hand as much as he had his horse. + +Little by little the exhilaration of the ride stole into his veins. He +was alone in the forest, he and his horse, the world was all before, and +he must ride and ride. He shouted as he rode under the towering pines, +raced across a clearing with a whoop that roused the echoes, and yelled +for sheer delight in the mad ride through the untraveled forest, where, +as the knights of old, he rode forth to conquer and to do. + +But a sudden, sharp, acrid whiff of vapor in his nostrils checked his +riotous impulses. It was one thing to ride out to meet the foe, it was +another matter when the foe was known to be near. A half mile nearer and +the acrid taste in the air turned to a defined veil of smoke, intangible +and unreal, at first, which merely seemed to hang about the trunks of +the mighty trees and make them seem dim and far away. Nearer yet, and +the air grew hard to breathe, the smoke was billowing through the +foliage of the pines, which sighed wearily and moaned in a vague fear of +the enemy they dreaded most. + +A curving gully, too wide to leap, too deep to cross readily, had +deflected the boy in his ride until he found himself to the lee of the +fire, and the heat of it, oppressive and menacing, assailed him. + +Remembering the lay of the land, as he had seen it from his lookout +point, Wilbur recalled the fact that no peak or rise was in the vicinity +up which he could ride to gain a nearer view of the fire, and he did not +dare to ride on and find himself on the windward side of the fire, for +then his efforts to hold it back would be unavailing. He rode slowly +till he came to the highest tree near. Then, dismounting, Wilbur tied +his horse to the foot of the tree, tied him as securely as he knew how, +for the animal was snorting in fear at being thus fastened up when the +smoke was over his head and the smell of the fire was in his nostrils. +Then, buckling on his climbing irons, which he had carried with him that +morning because he had thought, if he had time, he might do a little +repairing to his telephone line, he started up the side of the great +tree. Up and up he went, fifty, sixty, one hundred feet, and still he +was not at the top; another twenty feet, and there far above the ground, +he rested at last upon a branch whence he could command an outlook upon +the forest below. + +The fire was near, much nearer than he had imagined, and had he ridden +on another ten or fifteen minutes, he might have taken his horse in +danger. The blaze was larger than he thought. For half a mile's length, +at least, the smoke was rising, and what was beyond he could not rightly +see, because the branches of a large tree obscured his sight. + +Immediately below him, the little gully, whose curving course had turned +him from the straight path, seemed to be the edge of the flames, which +had not been able to back up over the water. On this side, clear down to +the water's edge the forest floor was burning, but how wide a stretch +had been burned over he could not see. Once on the other side of the +gully he would be able to judge better what to do. + +Below his horse neighed shrilly. + +Looking straight down, Wilbur noted a long rolling curl of smoke steal +swiftly along the ground a few hundred yards away, and he saw there was +no time to lose. Springing from the branch to the trunk of the tree, he +started to climb down. But he was over-hurried, and his feet slipped. It +was only a foot at most, and Wilbur was not easily frightened, but he +turned cold and sick for an instant as he looked below and saw the +height from which he so nearly had fallen. Minutes, nay seconds, were +precious, but he crawled back upon the branch and sat still a moment to +steady his nerves. So startling a shock for so small a slip! He felt +thoroughly ashamed of himself, but it had been quite a jolt. + +Again the horse neighed, and the fear in the cry was quite unmistakable. +Gingerly this time, Wilbur left the kindly support of the branch and +made his way down the trunk of the tree, heaving a sigh of profound +thankfulness when he reached the ground. His horse looked at him with +eyes wild with terror and every muscle atwitch. It was the work of a +moment to unfasten the ropes and vault in the saddle, but Wilbur needed +all his horsemanship to keep the horse from bolting. Indeed, he did +start to run away with the boy, but Wilbur sawed him into a more normal +pace and headed him down the gully. + +Although the weather had been dry, it seemed that not a few springs must +flow above, for there was quite a stream of water, not deep, but rushing +very swiftly, and consequently hiding the bottom of the stream. It was +no time for looking for a ford, and so, after leading the horse down the +bank by the bridle, Wilbur got into the saddle to put the horse across. +He would not budge. Every muscle and nerve was tense, and the fire, +owing to the curvature of the stream, seeming to come from the other +side, the horse refused to move. Wilbur dug in heavily with the spurs. +The horse would not move. Again Wilbur used the spurs. Then, snatching +the quirt that was fastened on his saddle, the quirt the cattleman had +given him after his ride in the cattle stampede, he laid it with all his +will across the horse's flanks. Never before, since Wilbur had owned the +horse, had he struck him. Frantic, the horse leaped into the stream. +It was deeper than the boy had thought, but there was no time to go +back, and indeed, unless it was taken at a rush, the horse would not +climb the other bank. As they struck the water, therefore, Wilbur rose +in his stirrups and lashed the horse a second time. He felt the horse +plunge under him, picked him up with the reins as he stumbled on the +loose stones in the creek bed and almost fell, and though he was +becoming a rider, "hunted leather" by holding on to the pommel of his +saddle, as the horse with two or three convulsive lunges climbed like a +cat up the opposing bank, and reached the top, trembling in every limb. +The gully was crossed. + +But there was no time to pause for satisfaction over the crossing of the +little stream; that was only the beginning. It would have to be crossed +again, higher up, as soon, as they came opposite to the fire. The quirt +was still in his hand, and a light touch with it brought the horse to a +full gallop. Up along the gully, with the blackened forest floor on the +other side, rode Wilbur, until he came to the further end of the fire. +It was almost a mile long. Right where the edge of the fire was, with +little flames leaping among the needles and the smoke rolling, Wilbur +headed the horse for the creek. He expected to have trouble, but the +beast had learned his lesson, and went steadily down the creek and over +to the other side. The return was in nowise difficult, as it was on the +side opposite the fire that the bank was steep. Hastily Wilbur tied up +his horse on the burned-out area, seized his shovel, and started along +the line of the fire, beating it out with the flat of his shovel where +the flames were small, then going to lee of it he made a firebreak by +turning up a narrow line of earth. + +His hands began to blister and his lips grew so parched that he could +endure it no longer, and snatched a moment to go back to the stream and +lave his face and hands. He took off his coat, dipped it in the water, +and came with it all dripping to beat out the fire with that. Foot by +foot and yard by yard he worked his way along the line, every once in a +while running back over the part he had already beaten to make sure that +all was out. The afternoon was drawing on and for about a quarter of a +mile the fire was entirely out, and for another quarter it was almost +under control. + +Madly the boy worked, his breath coming in gasps, his lungs aching from +the smoke, so that it became agony even to breathe, the ground hot +beneath his feet, and his feet beginning to blister, as his hands had +done an hour before, but there was no let-up. He had come to fight fire, +and he would fight fire. Another mad hour's battle, not so successfully, +and, contrary to the usual custom, the wind began to rise at sunset; it +might die down in a couple of hours, but in the meantime damage might be +done. + +Little by little the shadows grew deeper, and before it got entirely +dark Wilbur tried, but vainly, to reach the end of the line, for he knew +well that if a night wind rose and got a hold upon the remnant of the +fire that remained all his work would go for nothing. With all his might +he ran to the far end of the line, determining to work from that end up +to meet the area where he had conquered. Foot by foot he gained, but no +longer was he able to work along a straight line, the gusts of wind, +here and there, sweeping through the trees had fanned stretches, perhaps +only a few yards wide, but had driven them forward a hundred feet. But +as it grew darker the wind began to fall again, though with the darkness +the red glow of the burning needles and the flames of the burning twigs +showed more luridly and made it seem more terrifying. Still he gained +headway, foot after foot jealously contesting the battle with the fire +and the wind. + +So short a space remaining, and though he seemed too tired and sore to +move, still his shovel worked with never a pause, still he scraped away +all that would burn from the path of a little line of flame. The line of +flame grew shorter, but even as he looked a gust came along, which swept +a tongue of fire fifty yards at a breath. Wilbur rushed after it, +knowing the danger of these side-way fires, but before that gust had +lulled the tongue of fire reached a little clearing which the boy had +not known was there, only a rod or two of grass, but that browned by the +sun and the drought until it seemed scarcely more than tinder. If it +should touch that! + +Despite the fact that his shoes were dropping from his feet, the leather +being burned through, Wilbur sped after the escaping fire. He reached +it. But as he reached, he heard the needles rustle overhead and saw the +branches sway. As yet the breeze had not touched the ground, but before +two strokes with the wet coat had been made, the last of the gusts of +the evening wind struck him. It caught the little tongue of flame Wilbur +had so manfully striven to overtake, swept it out upon the clearing, +and almost before the boy could realize that his chance was gone, the +grass was a sheet of flame and the fire had entered the forest beyond in +a dozen places. + +Wilbur was but a boy after all, and sick and heart-broken, he had to +swallow several times very hard to keep from breaking down. And the +reaction and fatigue together stunned him into inertness. For a moment +only, then his persistent stubbornness came to the front. + +"That fire's got to be put out," he said aloud, "as the Chief Forester +said, back in Washington, if it takes the whole State to do it." + +He walked back to his horse and started for his little cabin home. How +he reached there, Wilbur never rightly knew. He felt like a traitor, +leaving the fire still burning which he had tried so hard to conquer, +but he knew he had done all he could. As he rode home, however, he saw +through the trees another gleam, and taking out his glasses, saw in the +distance a second fire, in no way connected with that which he had +fought. This cheered him up greatly, for he felt that he could rightly +call for help for two fires without any reflection on his courage or his +grit, where he hated to tell that he had tried and failed to put out a +blaze which perhaps an older or a stronger man might have succeeded in +quelling. He called up the Ranger. + +"Rifle-Eye," he said over the 'phone as soon as he got a response, +"there's a fire here that looks big. In fact, there's two. I've been +after one all afternoon, and I nearly got it under, but when the wind +rose it got away from me. And there seems to be a bigger one pretty +close to it." + +"Well, son, I s'pose you're needin' help," came the reply. + +"All hands, I think," said the boy. "By the time I can get back there +the two fires probably will have joined, and the blaze will be several +miles long." + +"Surest thing you know," said the Ranger. "Where do you locate these +fires?" + +Wilbur described with some detail the precise point where the fires were +raging. + +"You'd better get back on the job," said Rifle-Eye promptly, "and try +an' hold it down the best you can. I'll have some one there on the jump. +We want to get it under to-night, as it's a lot easier 'n in the +daytime." + +Never did the little tent look so inviting or so cozy to Wilbur as +that moment. But he had his orders. "Get back on the job," the Ranger +had said. He took the time to change his shoes and to snatch up some +cold grub which was easy to get. But he ate it standing, not daring to +sit down lest he should go to sleep--and go to sleep when he had been +ordered out! He ate standing. Then, going down to the corral, he saddled +Kit. + +He rode quietly up past the tent. + +"I guess," he said, "I really never did want to go to bed so much +before, but--" he turned Kit's head to the trail. + +It was well for Wilbur that he had ridden the other horse that day, for +Kit was fresh and ready. The moon had risen and was nearly full, but +Wilbur shivered as much from nervousness and responsibility as from +fatigue. It was useless for him to try riding at any high rate of speed +in the uncertain light, and in any case, the boy felt that his labors +for a half an hour more or less would not mean as much as when it had +been a question of absolutely extinguishing a small blaze. Kit danced a +little in the fresh night air, but Wilbur sat so heavily and listlessly +upon her back that the mare sensed something wrong and constantly turned +her wise face round to see. + +"I'm just tired, Kit," said the boy to her, "that's all. Don't get gay +to-night; I'm not up to it." + +And the little mare, as though she had understood every word, settled +down to a quiet lope down the trail. How far he had ridden or in what +direction he was traveling Wilbur at last became entirely unconscious, +for, utterly worn out, he had fallen asleep in the saddle, keeping his +seat merely by instinct and owing to the gentle, easy pace of his mare. + +He was wakened by a heavy hand being put upon his shoulder, and rousing +himself with a start, he found the grave, kindly eyes of the old Ranger +gleaming on him in the moonlight. + +"Sleeping, son?" queried the old mountaineer. + +"Yes, Rifle-Eye, I guess I must have been," said the lad, "just dozed +off. I'm dog-tired. I've been on that fire all afternoon." + +The Ranger looked at him keenly. + +"Best thing you could have done," he said. "You'll feel worse for a few +minutes, an' then you'll find that cat-nap is just as good as a whole +night's sleep. That is," he added, "it is for a while. What's the fire +like? I tried to get somethin' out of Ben, but he was actin' queerly, +an' I left him alone. But he seemed to know pretty well where it was." + +Wilbur tried to explain the story of the fire, but his tale soon became +incoherent, and before they had ridden another half a mile, his story +had died down to a few mutterings and he was asleep again. The old +hunter rode beside him, his hand ready to catch him should he waver in +the saddle, but Kit loped along at her easiest gait and the boy scarcely +moved. Rifle-Eye woke him again when they left the trail and broke into +the forest. + +"I reckon you better wake up, son," he said, "landin' suddenly on your +head on a rock is some abrupt as an alarm clock." + +Wilbur dropped the reins to stretch himself. + +"I feel a lot better now," he announced, "just as good as ever. Except +for my hands," he added ruefully, as returning wakefulness brought back +with it the consciousness of smart and hurt, "and my feet are mighty +sore, too. We're right near the fire, too, aren't we," he continued. +"Gee, that was nifty sleeping nearly all the way. I guess I must have +felt you were around, Rifle-Eye, and so I slept easily, knowing it would +come out all right with you here." + +"I ain't never been famous for hypnotizin' any forest fire that I've +heard of," said the old hunter, smiling, "but I've got a lurkin' idea +somewhere that we'll get this headed off all right. An' in any case, +there ain't much folks livin' in the path of the fire, if the wind keeps +the way she is now." + +Wilbur thought for a moment over the lay of the land and the direction +in which the flames were moving. + +"There's the mill," he said suddenly and excitedly. + +"Yes, son," said the old hunter. "I'd been thinkin' of that. There's the +mill." + + +[Illustration: "THAT'S ONE PAINTER LESS, ANYHOW!" + +Shooting the mountain lion; a frequent incident in the daily life of a +Ranger. + +_Photograph by U. S. Forest Service._] + + +[Illustration: "SMOKE! AND HOW AM I GOING TO GET THERE?" + +Ranger forced to make a breakneck dash through wild and unknown country +to fight forest fire. + +_Photograph by U. S. Forest Service._] + + + + +CHAPTER XVI + +IN THE MIDST OF A SEA OF FIRE + + +A subdued but fiery inspiration, as of some monster breathing deeply in +the darkness, gradually made itself heard above the voices of the night, +and an eddying gust brought from the distance the sound of twigs and +branches crackling as they burned. As yet the fire was not visible, save +for the red-bronze glow seen through the trees reflected on the sky +above. But before they reached the scene of the fire, Wilbur realized +how different it was from the blaze he had left. Then it was a +difficulty to be overcome: now, it was a peril to be faced. + +"It has run about three miles since I left it," Wilbur said. "I hope +we're not too late." + +"It's never too late to try, son," replied the Ranger, "so long as there +is a tree left unburned. There ain't anything in life that it ever gets +too late to try over. If a thing's done, it ain't too late ever to try +to do something else which will make up for the first, is it?" + +"But I failed to stop it before," said Wilbur. + +"Nary a fail. A fight ain't lost until it's over. An' when this little +scrap is over the fire'll be out. You ain't had but one round with this +fire so far." + +"That's certainly some fire," rejoined the boy as they turned sharply +from a glade to the edge of a hill that looked upon the forest just +below. It was a sight of fear. Overhead, the clouds flying before the +wind were alternately revealing and hiding the starlit and moonlit sky +behind, the dark and ragged wisps of storm-scud seeming to fly in panic +from what they saw below them. The wind moaned as though enchained and +forced to blow by some tyrannic power, instead of swaying before the +breeze, the needles of the pines seemed to tremble and shudder in the +blast, and dominating the whole,--somber, red, and malevolent,--the fire +engulfed the forest floor. In the distance, where some dead timber had +been standing, the flames had crept up the trunks of the trees, and now +fanned by the gusts of wind, were beginning to run amid the tops. + +"Will it be a crown-fire, Rifle-Eye?" asked Wilbur, remembering what he +had heard of the fearful devastation committed by a fire when once it +secured a violent headway among the pines. + +"It's in the tops now," said the old hunter, pointing with his finger, +"but I don't reckon there's enough wind yet to hold it up there. The +worst of it is that it's not long to morning now, an' we shall lose the +advantage o' fightin' it at night. I reckon we'd better get down and see +what we can do." + +In a few minutes the hunter and Wilbur had fastened their horses and +presently were beside the fire. To the boy's surprise the old hunter +made no attack upon the fire itself, but, going in advance of it some +hundred feet, with the boy's hoe, which he dragged after him like a +plow, made a furrow in the earth almost as rapidly as a man could walk. +This, Wilbur, with ax and shovel, widened. The old hunter never seemed +to stop once, but, however curving and twisting his course might be, the +boy noted that the furrow invariably occurred at the end of a stretch +where few needles had fallen on the ground and the débris was very +scant. + +After about a mile of this, the hunter curved his furrow sharply in +toward the burned-out portion, ending his line behind the line of fire. +He then sent Wilbur back along the line he had just traversed to insure +that none of the fire had crossed the guard thus made. Then, starting +about twenty feet from the curve on the fire-guard, he took another wide +curve in front of the floor-fire, favoring the place where the needles +lay thinnest, until he came to a ridge. Following him, Wilbur noted that +the old woodsman had made no attempt to stop the fire on the upward +grade, but had apparently left it to the mercy of the fire, whereas, on +the further side of the ridge, where the fire would have to burn down, +the old hunter had made but a very scanty fire-guard. Then Wilbur +remembered that he had been told it was easy to stop a fire when it was +running down a hill, and he realized that if, in the beginning, instead +of actually endeavoring to put out the fire, he had made a wide circuit +around it, and by utilizing those ridges, he could have held the fire to +the spot where it began. For a moment this nearly broke him all up, +until he remembered that he had seen another fire, and that Rifle-Eye +had told him of a third one yet. + +Wilbur was working doggedly, yet in a spiritless, tired fashion, beating +out the fire with a wet gunnysack as it reached the fire-guard of the +old hunter's making, and very carefully putting out any spark that the +wind drove across it, working almost without thought. But as he topped +the ridge and came within full view of the fire that had started among +the tops, his listlessness fell from him. Against the glow he could see +the outline of the figure of the hunter, and he ran up to him. + +"It's all out, back there," he panted. "What shall we do here?" + +For the first time the Ranger seemed to have no answer ready. Then he +said slowly: + +"I reckon we can hold this bit of it, up yonder on the mountain, but +there's a line of fire runnin' around by the gully, and the wind's +beginnin' a-howlin' through there. I don't reckon we can stop that. We +may have to fall back beyond the river. We'll need axmen, now. You've +got a good mare; ride down to Pete's mine and bring all hands. The +government will pay them, an' they'll come. There's the dawn; it'll be +light in half an hour. You'd better move, too." + +Wilbur started off at a shambling run, half wondering, as he did so, how +it was he was able to keep up at all. But as he looked back he saw the +old hunter, ax on shoulder, going quietly up the hill into the very +teeth of the fire to head it off on the mountain top, if he could. He +reached Kit and climbed into the saddle. But he was not sleepy, though +almost too weary to sit upright. One moment the forest would be light as +a glare from the fire reached him, the next moment it would be all the +darker for the contrast. For a mile he rode over the blackened and +burned forest floor, some trees still ablaze and smoking. Every step he +took, for all he knew, might be leading him on into a fire-encircled +place from which he would have difficulty in escaping, but on he went. +There was no trail, he only had a vague sense of direction, and on both +sides of him was fire. Probably fire was also in front, and if so he was +riding into it, but he had his orders and on he must go. The mine, he +knew, was lower down on the gully, and so roughly he followed it. Twice +he had to force Kit to cross, but it was growing light now, so the +little mare took the water quietly and followed the further bank. +Suddenly he heard horses' hoofs, evidently a party, and he shouted. An +answering shout was the response, and the horses pulled up. He touched +Kit and in a minute or two broke through to them. + +"Oh, it's you, Mr. Merritt," said the boy, "I was just wondering who +it might be." + +"The fire's over there," said the Supervisor. "What are you doing here?" + +"Rifle-Eye sent me to get the men at Pete's mine," he said. + +"They're here," replied the Forest Chief. "How's the fire?" + +"Bad," said the boy. "Rifle-Eye said he thought we would have to fall +back beyond the river." + +"Don't want to," said Merritt, "there's a lot of good timber between +here and the river." + +"Nothin' to it," said one of the miners. "Unless the wind shifts, it's +an easy gamble she goes over the river and don't notice it none." + +The Supervisor put his horse to the gallop, followed by the party, all +save one miner, who, familiar with the country, led the way, finding +some trail utterly undistinguishable to the rest. Seeing the vantage +point, as Rifle-Eye had done, he made for the crest of the hill. + +"Any chances?" asked the Supervisor. + +"I reckon not," said Rifle-Eye. "You can't hold it here; there's a blaze +down over yonder and another below the hill." + +"Who set that fire?" said Merritt suddenly. Wilbur jumped. It had not +occurred to him that the fire could have started in any other manner +than by accident, and indeed he had not thought of its cause at all. + +The old Ranger looked quietly at his superior officer. + +"It's allers mighty hard to tell where a fire started after it's once +got a-going," he said, "and it's harder to tell who set it a-going." + +"I want to stop it at the river." + +The old woodsman shook his head. + +"You ain't got much chance," he said; "I reckon at the ridge on the +other side of the river you can hold her, but she's crept along the +gully an' she'll just go a-whoopin' up the hill. I wouldn't waste any +time at the river." + +"But there's the mill!" + +"We ain't no ways to blame because Peavey Jo built his mill in front of +a fire. An', anyhow, the mill's in the middle of a clearing." + +The Supervisor frowned. + +"His mill is on National Forest land, and we ought to try and save it," +he said. + +"I'm goin' clear to the ridge," remarked the Ranger, "an' I reckon +you-all had better, too. I ain't achin' none to see the mill burn, but +I'd as lieve it was Peavey Jo's as any one else." + +"I'd like to know," Merritt repeated, "who set that fire." + +The Ranger made no answer, but walked off to where his horse was +tethered and rode away. The other party without a moment's delay struck +off to the trail leading to the mill. The distance was not great, but +Wilbur had lost all count of time. It seemed to him that he had either +been fighting fire or riding at high speed through luridly lighted +forest glades for years and years, and that it would never stop. + +At the mill they found a wild turmoil of excitement. All the hands were +at work, most of them wetting down the lumber, while other large piles +which were close to the edge of the forest were being moved out of +danger. The horses all had been taken from the stables, and the various +sheds and buildings were being thoroughly soaked. The big mill engine +was throbbing, lines of hose playing in every direction, for although +the timber around the mill had been cleared as much as possible, +negligence had been shown in permitting some undergrowth to spring up +unchecked. Owing to the conformation of the land, too, the bottom on +which the mill stood was smaller than customary. + +In the early morning light the great form of Peavey Jo seemed to assume +giant proportions. He was here, there, and everywhere at the moment, and +his blustering voice could be heard bellowing out orders, which, to do +him justice, were the best possible. As soon as the Supervisor and his +party appeared he broke out into a violent tirade against them for not +keeping a fit watch over the forest and allowing a fire to get such a +headway on a night when in the evening there had been so little wind, +whereas now a gale was rising fast. But Merritt did not waste breath in +reply; he simply ordered his men to get in and do all they could to +insure the safety of the mill. + +Wilbur, who had been set at cutting out the underbrush, found that his +strength was about played out. Once, indeed, he shouldered his ax and +started to walk back to say that he could do no more, but before he +reached the place where his chief was working his determination +returned, and he decided to go back and work till he dropped right +there. He had given up bothering about his hands and feet being so +blistered and sore, for all such local pain was dulled by the utter +collapse of nerve-sensation. He couldn't think clearly enough to think +that he was feeling pain; he could not think at all. He had been told to +cut brush and he did so as a machine, working automatically, but seeing +nothing and hearing nothing of what was going on around him. + +Presently an animal premonition of fear struck him as he became +conscious of a terrific wave of heat, and he could hear in the distance +the roar of the flames coming closer. Raging through the resinous pine +branches the blaze had swept fiercely around the side of the hill. As +the boy looked up he could see it suddenly break into greater vigor as +the up-draft on the hill fanned it to a wilder fury and made a furnace +of the place where he had been standing with Merritt and Rifle-Eye +scarcely more than an hour before. + +Meanwhile the wind drove the flames steadily onward toward the +threatened mill. It was becoming too hot for any human being to stay +where Wilbur was, but the boy seemed to have lost the power of thought. +He chopped and chopped like a machine, not noticing, indeed, not being +able to notice that he was toiling there alone. It grew hotter and +hotter, his breath came in quick, short gasps, and each breath hurt his +lungs cruelly as he breathed the heat into them, but he worked on as in +a dream. Suddenly he felt his shoulder seized. It was the Supervisor, +who twisted him round and, pointing to the little bridge across the +river which spanned the stream just above the mill, he shouted: + +"Run!" + +But the boy's spirit was too exhausted to respond, though he got into a +dog trot and started for the bridge. Perilous though every second's +delay was, Merritt would not go ahead of the boy, though he could have +outdistanced his shambling and footsore pace two to one, but kept beside +him urging and threatening him alternately. The fire was on their heels, +but they were in the clearing. On the bridge one of the miners was +standing, riding the fastest horse in the party, holding, and with great +difficulty holding, in hand the horse of the Supervisor and the boy's +mare, Kit. Their very clothes were smoking as they reached the bridge. + +Suddenly, a huge, twisted tree, full of sap, which stood on the edge of +the clearing, exploded with a crash like a cannon, and a flaming branch, +twenty feet in length, hurtled itself over their heads and fell full on +the further side of the bridge, barring their way. Upon the narrow +bridge the horses reared in a sudden panic and tried to bolt, but the +miner was an old-time cowboy, and he held them in hand. Merritt helped +the lad into the saddle before mounting himself. But even in that moment +the bridge began to smoke, and in less than a minute the whole structure +would be ablaze. The miner dug his heels, spurred, into the sides of his +horse, and the animal in fear and desperation leaped over the hissing +branch that lay upon the bridge. The Supervisor's horse and Kit followed +suit. As they landed on the other side, however, the head of the forest +reined in for a moment, and looking round, shouted suddenly: + +"The mill!" + +Wilbur pulled in Kit. So far as could be seen, none of the forest fire +had reached the mill; the sparks which had fallen upon the roof had gone +out harmlessly, so thoroughly had the place been soaked, yet through the +door of the mill the flames could be seen on the inside. At first Wilbur +thought it must be some kind of a reflection. But as they watched, +Peavey Jo rode up. He had crossed the bridge earlier, and was on the +safe side of the river watching his mill. + +Suddenly, from out the door of the mill, outlined clearly against the +fire within, came an ungainly, shambling figure. The features could not +be seen, but the gait was unmistakable. He came running in an odd, +loose-jointed fashion toward the bridge. But just before he reached it +the now blazing timbers burned through and the bridge crashed into the +stream. + +"It's Ben," muttered Wilbur confusedly; "I guess I've got to go back," +and he headed Kit for the trail. + +But the Supervisor leaned over and almost crushed the bones of the boy's +hand in his restraining grip. + +"No need," he said, "he's all right now." + +For as he spoke Wilbur saw Ben leap from the bank on the portion of the +burned bridge which had collapsed on his side of the stream. A few quick +strokes with the ax the boy was carrying and the timbers were free, and +crouched down upon them the boy was being carried down the stream. His +peril was extreme, for below as well as above the fire was sweeping down +on either side of the mill, and it was a question of minutes, almost of +seconds, whether the bridge-raft would pass down the river before the +fire struck or whether it would be caught. + +"If the wind would only lull!" ejaculated the boy. + +"I'll stay here till I see him burn," replied Peavey Jo grimly. + +But Wilbur's wish met its fulfillment, for just for the space that one +could count ten the wind slackened, and every second meant a few yards +of safety to the half-witted lad. Though they were risking their lives +by staying, the three men waited, waited as still as they could for the +fear of their horses, until the boy disappeared round a curve of the +river. A muttered execration from Peavey Jo announced the lad's safety. +It angered the usually calm Supervisor. + +"That ends you," he said. "You're licked, and you know it. Your mill's +gone, your timber's gone, and your credit's gone. Don't let me see you +on this forest again." + +"You think I do no more, eh? Me, I forget? Non! By and by you remember +Peavey Jo. Now I ride down river. That boy, you see him? He see the sun +rise this morning. He no see the sun set. No. Nor ever any more. I +follow the river trail. I do not say good-by, like the old song," he +added, scowling his fury; "you wish yes! Non! I say _au revoir_, and +perhaps sooner than you t'ink." + +He wheeled and turned down the river. The Supervisor turned to the +miner. + +"It's not my business to stop him," he said, "and the boy's got the +start. He can't reach there before the fire does, now." + +Then, as though regretting the lull, the wind shrieked with a new and +more vindictive fury, as though it saw its vengeance before it. Almost +at a breath it seemed the whole body of flame appeared to lift itself to +the skies and then fall like a devouring fury upon the forest on the +hither side of the river below, whither Peavey Jo had ridden. + +In the distance the two men heard a horse scream, and they knew. But +Wilbur did not hear. + +They had waited almost too long, for the wind, rising to its greatest +height, had carried the fire above them almost to the edge of the river, +and now there was no question about its crossing. Further delay meant to +be hemmed in by a ring of fire. With a shout the miner slackened the +reins and his horse leaped into a gallop, after him Merritt, and the boy +close behind. Wilbur had ridden fast before, but never had he known +such speed as now. The trail was clear before them to the top of the +ridge, the fire was behind, and the wind was hurling masses of flames +about them on every side. The horses fled with the speed of fear, and +the Supervisor drew a breath of relief as they crossed a small ridge +below the greater ridge whither they were bound. + +Once a curl of flame licked clear over their heads and ignited a tree in +front of them, but they were past it again before it caught fair hold. +The boy could feel Kit's flanks heaving as she drew her breath hard, and +with the last instinct of safety he threw away everything that he +carried, even the fire-fighting tools being released. Only another mile, +but the grade was fearfully steep, the steeper the harder for the horses +but the better for the fire. Kit stumbled. A little less than a mile +left! He knew she could not do it. The mare had been kept astretch all +night, and her heart was breaking under the strain. Any second she might +fall. + +The trail curved. And round the curve, with three horses saddled and +waiting, sat the old Ranger, facing the onrush of the fire as +imperturbably as though his own life were in no way involved. The +miner's horse was freshest and he reached the group first. As he did so, +he swung out of his saddle, was on one of the three and off. The +riderless horse, freed from the burden, followed up the trail. Merritt +and Wilbur reached almost at the same time. + +"I reckon," drawled Rifle-Eye, "that's a pretty close call." + +"He's done," said the Supervisor, ignoring the remark. "Toss him up." + +With a speed that seemed almost incredible to any one accustomed to his +leisurely movements, the old Ranger dismounted, picked Wilbur bodily out +of the saddle, set him on one of the fresh animals, freed Kit, mounted +himself, and was off in less than thirty seconds. For the first half +mile it was touch and go, for the trail was steep and even the three +fresh horses found the pace terrific. But little by little the timber +thinned and the fire gained less hold. Then, with a burst they came into +a clearing along the top of the ridge. The crest was black with workers, +over two hundred men were there, and on every side was to be heard the +sound of trees crashing to the ground, most of them by dynamite. + +Where the head of the trail reached the crest stood the doctor and his +wife, the "little white lady" trembling with excitement as she watched +the fearful race from the jaws of a fiery death. The doctor plucked +Wilbur from his saddle as the horse rushed by him. The boy's senses were +reeling, but before he sank into insensibility from fatigue he heard +Merritt say: + +"Loyle, when you're a Ranger next year, I want you on my forest." + + +THE END + + +[Illustration: "KEEP IT FROM SPREADING BOYS!" + +_Photography by U. S. Forest Service._] + + +[Illustration: "GET BUSY NOW, WHEN IT BREAKS INTO THE OPEN!" + +_Photography by U. S. Forest Service._] + + + +_U. S. SERVICE SERIES_ + +By FRANCIS ROLT-WHEELER + +Many illustrations from photographs taken in work for U. S. +Government ^Large 12mo ^Cloth ^$1.50 per volume + + * * * * * + +THE BOY WITH THE U. S. SURVEY + +This story describes the thrilling adventures of members of the U. S. +Geological Survey, graphically woven into a stirring narrative that both +pleases and instructs. The author enjoys an intimate acquaintance with +the chiefs of the various bureaus in Washington, and is able to obtain +at first hand the material for his books. + + "There is abundant charm and vigor in the narrative which is sure + to please the boy readers and will do much toward stimulating their + patriotism."--_Chicago News_. + + +THE BOY WITH THE U. S. FORESTERS + +This life of a typical boy is followed in all its adventurous +detail--the mighty representative of our country's government, though +young in years--a youthful monarch in a vast domain of forest. Replete +with information, alive with adventure, and inciting patriotism at every +step. + + "It is a fascinating romance of real life in our country, and will + prove a great pleasure and inspiration to the boys who read + it."--_The Continent, Chicago_. + + +THE BOY WITH THE U. S. CENSUS + +The taking of the census frequently involves hardship and peril, +requiring arduous journeys by dog-team in the frozen north and by launch +in the snake-haunted and alligator-filled Everglades of Florida, while +the enumerator whose work lies among the dangerous criminal classes of +the greater cities must take his life in his own hands. + + "Every young man should read this story, thereby getting a clear + conception of conditions as they exist to-day, for such knowledge + will have a clean, invigorating and healthy influence on the young + growing and thinking mind."--_Boston Globe_. + + +THE BOY WITH THE U. S. FISHERIES + +[Illustration: The Boy With the U. S. Fisheries] + +The book does not lack thrilling scenes. The far Aleutian Islands have +witnessed more desperate sea-fighting than has occurred elsewhere since +the days of the Spanish Buccaneers, and pirate craft, which the U. S. +Fisheries must watch, rifle in hand, are prowling in the Behring Sea +to-day. The fish-farms of the United States are as interesting as they +are immense in their scope. + + "One of the best books for boys of all ages, so attractively + written and illustrated as to fascinate the reader into staying up + until all hours to finish it."--_Philadelphia Despatch_. + + * * * * * + +LOTHROP, LEE & SHEPARD CO., BOSTON + + + + +HANDICRAFT FOR HANDY BOYS + +Practical Plans for Work and Play with Many Ideas for Earning Money + +By A. NEELY HALL + +Author of "The Boy Craftsman" + +With Nearly 600 Illustrations and Working-drawings by the Author and +Norman P. Hall ^8vo ^Cloth ^Net, $2.00 ^Postpaid, $2.25 + +[Illustration: Handi-Craft for Handy Boys] + +This book is intended for boys who want the latest ideas for making +things, practical plans for earning money, up-to-date suggestions for +games and sports, and novelties for home and school entertainments. + +The author has planned the suggestions on an economical basis, providing +for the use of the things at hand, and many of the things which can be +bought cheaply. Mr. Hall's books have won the confidence of parents, who +realize that in giving them to their boys they are providing wholesome +occupations which will encourage self-reliance and resourcefulness, and +discourage tendencies to be extravagant. + +Outdoor and indoor pastimes have been given equal attention, and much of +the work is closely allied to the studies of the modern grammar and high +schools, as will be seen by a glance at the following list of subjects, +which are only a few among those discussed in the 500 pages of text: + + MANUAL TRAINING; EASILY-MADE FURNITURE; FITTING UP A BOY'S ROOM; + HOME-MADE GYMNASIUM APPARATUS; A BOY'S WIRELESS TELEGRAPH OUTFIT; + COASTERS AND BOB-SLEDS; MODEL AEROPLANES; PUSHMOBILES AND OTHER + HOME-MADE WAGONS; A CASTLE CLUBHOUSE AND HOME-MADE ARMOR. + +Modern ingenious work such as the above cannot fail to develop +mechanical ability in a boy, and this book will get right next to his +heart. + + "The book is a treasure house for boys who like to work with tools + and have a purpose in their working."--_Springfield Union_. + + "It is a capital book for boys since it encourages them in + wholesome, useful occupation, encourages self-reliance and + resourcefulness and at the same time discourages + extravagance."--_Brooklyn Times_. + + "It is all in this book, and if anything has got away from the + author we do not know what it is."--_Buffalo News_. + + * * * * * + +_For sale by all booksellers, or sent on receipt of postpaid price by +the publishers_ + +LOTHROP, LEE & SHEPARD CO., Boston + + + + +THE BOY CRAFTSMAN + +Practical and Profitable Ideas for a Boy's Leisure Hours + +By A. NEELY HALL + +Illustrated with over 400 diagrams and working drawings ^8vo ^Price, +net, $1.60 ^Postpaid, $1.82 + +[Illustration: The Boy Craftsman] + +Every real boy wishes to design and make things, but the questions of +materials and tools are often hard to get around. Nearly all books on +the subject call for a greater outlay of money than is within the means +of many boys, or their parents wish to expend in such ways. In this book +a number of chapters give suggestions for carrying on a small business +that will bring a boy in money with which to buy tools and materials +necessary for making apparatus and articles described in other chapters, +while the ideas are so practical that many an industrious boy can learn +what he is best fitted for in his life work. No work of its class is so +completely up-to-date or so worthy in point of thoroughness and +avoidance of danger. The drawings are profuse and excellent, and every +feature of the book is first-class. It tells how to make a boy's +workshop, how to handle tools, and what can be made with them; how to +start a printing shop and conduct an amateur newspaper, how to make +photographs, build a log cabin, a canvas canoe, a gymnasium, a miniature +theatre, and many other things dear to the soul of youth. + + We cannot imagine a more delightful present for a boy than this + book.--_Churchman, N.Y._ + + Every boy should have this book. It's a practical book--it gets + right next to the boy's heart and stays there. He will have it near + him all the time, and on every page there is a lesson or something + that will stand the boy in good need. Beyond a doubt in its line + this is one of the cleverest books on the market.--_Providence + News_. + + If a boy has any sort of a mechanical turn of mind, his parents + should see that he has this book.--_Boston Journal_. + + This is a book that will do boys good.--_Buffalo Express_. + + The boy who will not find this book a mine of joy and profit must + be queerly constituted.--_Pittsburgh Gazette_. + + Will be a delight to the boy mechanic.--_Watchman, Boston_. + + An admirable book to give a boy.--_Newark News_. + + This Book is the best yet offered for its large number of practical + and profitable ideas.--_Milwaukee Free Press_. + + Parents ought to know of this book.--_New York Globe_. + + * * * * * + +For sale by all booksellers or sent postpaid on receipt of price by the +publishers, + +LOTHROP, LEE & SHEPARD CO., BOSTON + + + + +MR. RESPONSIBILITY, PARTNER + +How Bobby and Joe Achieved Success in Business + +First Volume of "Business Boys Series" + +By CLARENCE JOHNSON MESSER + +12mo ^Cloth ^Illustrated ^Price, Net, $1.00 ^Postpaid, $1.10 + +[Illustration: Mr. Responsibility, Partner] + +This is frankly a book with a purpose, and its purpose is to teach boys +the fundamental business customs of every-day life, and at the same time +encourage the sound traits of character essential to commercial success +and good citizenship. This is done by a good and interesting story of +some live boys, whose experiences will hold the attention of every one. +The leading spirit is pictured with a healthy boy's human qualities to +be trained, and impulses to be overcome. A companionable and sensible +father aids him judiciously, and leaves success to be worked out on +natural lines. All the stage effects of the cheaper kinds of boys' books +are blissfully absent; there are no villains plotting against the +upright, no nations saved by the precocious intelligence of youth, and +no impossible adventure or accomplishment--just the problems before +average boys, and that can be solved as these boys solve them if "Mr. +Responsibility" is recognized as a partner in all undertakings, and one +learns to see and grasp his opportunities. A book that any boy would +like, and that every boy ought to have. + + "It is an inspiring book to any boy who wants to learn to be a good + business man."--_Buffalo News_. + + "Entertaining, instructive, and just such a book as boys will + love."--_Portland, Me., Press_. + + "For the boys still young enough to revel in "juvenile stories" MR. + RESPONSIBILITY is about as good as is to be found."--_San Francisco + Town Talk_. + + "The story is one that boys will enjoy and that parents can safely + put in their hands."--_Lowell Courier Citizen_. + + "A wholesome, informative, worth-while boy's book."--_N. Y. Press_. + + * * * * * + +_For sale by all booksellers or sent on receipt of postpaid price by the +publishers_ + +LOTHROP, LEE & SHEPARD CO., BOSTON + + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Boy With the U. S. Foresters, by +Francis Rolt-Wheeler + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BOY WITH THE U. S. 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S. Foresters, by Francis Rolt-Wheeler + </title> + <style type="text/css"> +/*<![CDATA[ XML blockout */ +<!-- + p { margin-top: .75em; + text-align: justify; + margin-bottom: .75em; + } + h1,h2,h3,h4,h5,h6 { + text-align: center; /* all headings centered */ + clear: both; + } + hr { width: 33%; + margin-top: 2em; + margin-bottom: 2em; + margin-left: auto; + margin-right: auto; + clear: both; + } + + table {margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;} + + ol { list-style-type: upper-roman; + margin-left: 25%; + font-variant: small-caps; } + + body{margin-left: 10%; + margin-right: 10%; + } + + .linenum {position: absolute; top: auto; left: 4%;} /* poetry number */ + .blockquot{margin-left: 5%; margin-right: 10%;} + .sidenote {width: 20%; padding-bottom: .5em; padding-top: .5em; + padding-left: .5em; padding-right: .5em; margin-left: 1em; + float: right; clear: right; margin-top: 1em; + font-size: smaller; color: black; background: #eeeeee; border: dashed 1px;} + + .bb {border-bottom: solid 2px;} + .bl {border-left: solid 2px;} + .bt {border-top: solid 2px;} + .br {border-right: solid 2px;} + .bbox {border: solid 2px;} + + .center {text-align: center;} + .smcap {font-variant: small-caps;} + .u {text-decoration: underline;} + + .caption {font-weight: bold;} + + .figcenter {margin: auto; text-align: center;} + + .figleft {float: left; clear: left; margin-left: 0; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-top: + 1em; margin-right: 1em; padding: 0; text-align: center;} + + .figright {float: right; clear: right; margin-left: 1em; margin-bottom: 1em; + margin-top: 1em; margin-right: 0; padding: 0; text-align: center;} + + .footnotes {border: dashed 1px;} + .footnote {margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-size: 0.9em;} + .footnote .label {position: absolute; right: 84%; text-align: right;} + .fnanchor {vertical-align: super; font-size: .8em; text-decoration: none;} + + .poem {margin-left:10%; margin-right:10%; text-align: left;} + .poem br {display: none;} + .poem .stanza {margin: 1em 0em 1em 0em;} + .poem span.i0 {display: block; margin-left: 0em; padding-left: 3em; text-indent: -3em;} + .poem span.i2 {display: block; margin-left: 2em; padding-left: 3em; text-indent: -3em;} + .poem span.i4 {display: block; margin-left: 4em; padding-left: 3em; text-indent: -3em;} + // --> + /* XML end ]]>*/ + </style> + </head> +<body> + + +<pre> + +Project Gutenberg's The Boy With the U. S. Foresters, by Francis Rolt-Wheeler + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: The Boy With the U. S. Foresters + +Author: Francis Rolt-Wheeler + +Release Date: July 19, 2006 [EBook #18874] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BOY WITH THE U. S. FORESTERS *** + + + + +Produced by Steven desJardins and Distributed Proofreaders + + + + + +</pre> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 537px;"> +<img src="images/cover.jpg" width="537" height="796" alt="The Boy With the U. S. Foresters" title="The Boy With the U. S. Foresters" /> +</div> +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 470px;"> +<a name="IMAGE_1" id="IMAGE_1"></a> +<img src="images/image-1.jpg" width="470" height="700" alt="THE GIANTS OF THE FOREST AND THE MEN WHO SAFEGUARD THEM." title="" /> +<span class="caption">THE GIANTS OF THE FOREST AND THE MEN WHO SAFEGUARD THEM.<br /> +<i>Photography by U. S. Forest Service.</i></span> +</div> +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> + +<h3>U. S. SERVICE SERIES.</h3> + +<h1>THE BOY WITH THE U. S. FORESTERS</h1> + +<h2>BY FRANCIS ROLT-WHEELER</h2> + +<p class="center">With Thirty-eight Illustrations from Photographs taken by the U. S. +Forest Service</p> + +<p class="center">BOSTON</p> + +<p class="center">LOTHROP, LEE & SHEPARD CO.</p> + +<p class="center">1910</p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h3>To My Son Roger's Friend</h3> + +<h3>WILBUR UFFORD</h3> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2><a name="PREFACE" id="PREFACE"></a>PREFACE</h2> + + +<p>Much of the wilderness is yet but little trod. Great stretches of virgin +forest still remain within whose dim recesses nothing is changed since +the days the Indians dwelt in them. The mystery and the adventure are +not sped, the grandeur and the companionship still pulse among the +glades, the "call of the wild" is an unceasing cry, and to that call the +boy responds.</p> + +<p>But if this impulse to return to the shelter of the wilds be still so +strong, how greatly more intense does it become when we awaken to the +fact that the forest needs our help even more than we need its sense of +freedom. When we perceive that the fate of these great belts of untamed +wilderness lies in the hands of a small group of men whose mastery is +absolute, when first we realize that national benefits—great almost +beyond the believing—are intrusted to these men, surely Desire and +Duty leap to grip hands and pledge themselves to the service of the +forests of our land. To breathe the magnificent spaces of the West, to +reveal the wealth and beauty of our great primeval woods, to acclaim the +worth of the men who administer them, and to show splendid possibilities +to a lad of grit and initiative is the aim and purpose of</p> + +<p style="text-align: right;">THE AUTHOR.</p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2><a name="CONTENTS" id="CONTENTS"></a>CONTENTS</h2> + +<ol> +<li><a href="#CHAPTER_I">ENTERING THE SERVICE</a></li> +<li><a href="#CHAPTER_II">PUTTING A STOP TO GUN-PLAY</a></li> +<li><a href="#CHAPTER_III">THE FIGHT IN THE COULEE</a></li> +<li><a href="#CHAPTER_IV">PICKING A LIVELY BRONCHO</a></li> +<li><a href="#CHAPTER_V">A TUSSLE WITH A WILD-CAT</a></li> +<li><a href="#CHAPTER_VI">IN THE HEART OF THE FOREST</a></li> +<li><a href="#CHAPTER_VII">WILBUR IN HIS OWN CAMP</a></li> +<li><a href="#CHAPTER_VIII">DOWNING A GIANT LUMBERJACK</a></li> +<li><a href="#CHAPTER_IX">A HARD FOE TO CONQUER</a></li> +<li><a href="#CHAPTER_X">A FOURTH OF JULY PERIL</a></li> +<li><a href="#CHAPTER_XI">AMIDST A CATTLE STAMPEDE</a></li> +<li><a href="#CHAPTER_XII">ALMOST TRAMPLED TO DEATH</a></li> +<li><a href="#CHAPTER_XIII">HOW THE FOREST WON A GREAT DOCTOR</a></li> +<li><a href="#CHAPTER_XIV">A ROLLING CLOUD OF SMOKE</a></li> +<li><a href="#CHAPTER_XV">THE FOREST ABLAZE</a></li> +<li><a href="#CHAPTER_XVI">IN THE MIDST OF A SEA OF FIRE</a></li> +</ol> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2><a name="ILLUSTRATIONS" id="ILLUSTRATIONS"></a>ILLUSTRATIONS</h2> + +<ul> +<li><a href="#IMAGE_1">The Giants of the Forest and the Men Who Safeguard Them</a></li> +<li><a href="#IMAGE_2">A Forest Fire out of Control</a></li> +<li><a href="#IMAGE_3">Good Forestry Management</a></li> +<li><a href="#IMAGE_4">Bad Forestry Management</a></li> +<li><a href="#IMAGE_5">The Tie-cutters' Boys</a></li> +<li><a href="#IMAGE_6A">Deforested and Washed Away</a></li> +<li><a href="#IMAGE_6B">As Bad as Anything in China</a></li> +<li><a href="#IMAGE_7A">How Young Forests are Destroyed</a></li> +<li><a href="#IMAGE_8">Where Sheep are Allowed</a></li> +<li><a href="#IMAGE_9">Cowboys at the Round-up</a></li> +<li><a href="#IMAGE_10">Patrolling a Coyote Fence</a></li> +<li><a href="#IMAGE_11A">Reducing the Wolf Supply</a></li> +<li><a href="#IMAGE_12">Where Ben and Mickey Burned the Brush</a></li> +<li><a href="#IMAGE_13">The Cabin of the Old Ranger</a></li> +<li><a href="#IMAGE_14">Stamping It Government Property</a></li> +<li><a href="#IMAGE_15">Wilbur's Own Camp</a></li> +<li>Just about Ready to Shoot</li> +<li><a href="#IMAGE_16">Train-load from One Tree</a></li> +<li><a href="#IMAGE_17">Wilbur's Own Bridge</a></li> +<li><a href="#IMAGE_18">Where the Supervisor Stayed</a></li> +<li><a href="#IMAGE_19">Measuring a Fair-sized Tree</a></li> +<li><a href="#IMAGE_20A">Running a Telephone Line</a></li> +<li><a href="#IMAGE_21A">Nursery for Young Trees</a></li> +<li><a href="#IMAGE_21B">Plantation of Young Trees</a></li> +<li><a href="#IMAGE_22A">Sowing Pine Seed</a></li> +<li><a href="#IMAGE_22B">Planting Young Trees</a></li> +<li><a href="#IMAGE_23">What Tree-planting Will Do</a></li> +<li><a href="#IMAGE_24">The First Conservation Expert</a></li> +<li><a href="#IMAGE_25">Sand Burying a Pear Orchard</a></li> +<li><a href="#IMAGE_26">No Water, No Forests. No Forests, No Water</a></li> +<li><a href="#IMAGE_27">With Water!</a></li> +<li><a href="#IMAGE_28">"That's One Painter Less, Anyhow!"</a></li> +<li><a href="#IMAGE_29">"Smoke! And How am I Going to Get There?"</a></li> +<li><a href="#IMAGE_30A">"Keep It from Spreading, Boys!"</a></li> +<li><a href="#IMAGE_30B">"Get Busy Now, When It Breaks into the Open!"</a></li> +</ul> + + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2><a name="THE_BOY_WITH_THE_UnbspS_FORESTERS" id="THE_BOY_WITH_THE_UnbspS_FORESTERS"></a>THE BOY WITH THE U. S. FORESTERS</h2> + +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_I" id="CHAPTER_I"></a>CHAPTER I</h2> + +<h3>ENTERING THE SERVICE</h3> + + +<p>"Hey, Wilbur, where are you headed for?"</p> + +<p>The boy addressed, who had just come through the swing-doors of an +office building in Washington, did not slacken his pace on hearing the +question, but called back over his shoulder:</p> + +<p>"To the forest, of course. Come along, Fred."</p> + +<p>"But—" The second speaker stopped short, and, breaking into a run, +caught up with his friend in a few steps.</p> + +<p>"You certainly seem to be in a mighty big hurry to get there," he said.</p> + +<p>"We don't loaf on our service," answered the boy with an air of pride.</p> + +<p>His friend broke into a broad grin. He had known Wilbur Loyle for some +time, and was well aware of his enthusiastic nature.</p> + +<p>"How long has it been 'our' service?" he queried, emphasizing the +pronoun.</p> + +<p>"Ever since I was appointed," rejoined Wilbur exultantly.</p> + +<p>"I'm glad the appointment has had time to soak in; it didn't take long, +did it?" Wilbur flushed a little, and his chum, seeing this, went on +laughingly: "Don't mind my roasting, old man, only you were 'way up in +the clouds."</p> + +<p>The boy's expression cleared instantaneously, and he laughed in reply.</p> + +<p>"I suppose I was," he said, "but it's great to feel you've got the thing +you've been working for. As you know, Fred, I've been thinking of this +for years; in fact, I've always wanted it, and I've worked hard to get +it. And then the Chief Forester's fine; he's just fine; I liked him ever +so much."</p> + +<p>"Did you have much chance to talk with him?"</p> + +<p>"Yes, quite a lot. I thought I was likely enough to meet him, and p'raps +he would formally tell me I was appointed and then bow me out of the +office. Not a bit of it. He told me all about the Service, showed me +just what there was in it for the country, and I tell you what—he made +me feel that I wanted to go right straight out on the street and get +all the other boys to join."</p> + +<p>"Why?"</p> + +<p>"Well, he showed me that the Forest Service gave a fellow a chance to +make good even better than in the army or the navy. There you have to +follow orders mainly; there's that deadly routine besides, and you don't +get much of a chance to think for yourself; but in the Forest Service a +chap is holding down a place of trust where he has a show to make good +by working it out for himself."</p> + +<p>"Sounds all right," said the older boy. "Anyway, I'm glad if you're +glad."</p> + +<p>"What I like about it," went on Wilbur, "is the bigness of the whole +thing and the chance a chap has to show what he's made of. Glad? You bet +I'm glad!"</p> + +<p>"You weren't so sure whether you were going to like it or not when you +went in to see about it," said Fred.</p> + +<p>"Oh, yes, I was. I knew I was going to like it all right. But I didn't +know anything about where I might be sent or how I would be received."</p> + +<p>"I think it's just ripping," said his friend, "that it looks so good to +you, starting out. It makes a heap of difference, sometimes, how a thing +begins."</p> + +<p>"It surely does. Right now, the whole thing seems too good to be true."</p> + +<p>"Well," said the other, "as long as it strikes you that way I suppose +you're satisfied now for all the grind you did preparing for it. But I +don't believe it would suit me. It might be all right to be a Forest +Ranger, but you told me one time that you had to start in as a Fire +Guard, a sort of Fire Policeman, didn't you?"</p> + +<p>"Sure!"</p> + +<p>"Well, that doesn't sound particularly exciting."</p> + +<p>"Why not? What more excitement do you want than a forest fire! Isn't +that big enough for you?"</p> + +<p>"The fire would be all right," answered the older boy, "but it's the +watching and waiting for it that would get me."</p> + +<p>"You can't expect to have adventures every minute anywhere," said +Wilbur, "but even so, you're not standing on one spot like a sailor in a +crow's nest, waiting for something to happen; you're in the saddle, +riding from point to point all day long, sometimes when there is a +trail and sometimes when there isn't, out in the real woods, not in +poky, stuffy city streets. You know, Fred, I can't stand the city; I +always feel as if I couldn't breathe."</p> + +<p>"All right, Wilbur," said the other, "it's your own lookout, I suppose. +Me for the city, though."</p> + +<p>Just then, and before Fred could make any further reply, a hand was laid +on Wilbur's shoulder, and the lad, looking around, found the Chief +Forester walking beside them.</p> + +<p>"Trying to make converts already, Loyle?" he asked with a smile, nodding +pleasantly to the lad's companion.</p> + +<p>"I was trying to, sir," answered the boy, "but I don't believe Fred +would ever make one of us."</p> + +<p>The Chief Forester restrained all outward trace of amusement at the +lad's unconscious coupling of the head of the service and the newest and +youngest assistant, and, turning to the older boy, said questioningly:</p> + +<p>"Why not, Fred?"</p> + +<p>"I was just saying to Wilbur, sir," he replied in a stolid manner, "that +a Forest Guard's life didn't sound particularly exciting. It might be +all right when a fire came along, but I should think that it would be +pretty dull waiting for it, week after week."</p> + +<p>"Not exciting enough?" The boys were nearly taken off their feet by the +energy of the speaker. "Not when every corner you turn may show you +smoke on the horizon? Not when every morning finds you at a different +part of the forest and you can't get there quick enough to convince +yourself that everything is all right? Not when you plunge down ravines, +thread your way through and over fallen timber, and make up time by a +sharp gallop wherever there's a clearing, knowing that every cabin you +pass is depending for its safety on your care? And then that is only a +small part of the work. If you can't find excitement enough in that, you +can't find it in anything."</p> + +<p>"Yes—" began Fred dubiously, but the Chief Forester continued:</p> + +<p>"And as for the responsibility! I tell you, the forest is the place for +that. We need men there, not machines. On the men in the forest millions +of dollars' worth of property depends. More than that, on the care of +the Forest Guards hangs perhaps the stopping of a forest fire that +otherwise would ravage the countryside, kill the young forest, denude +the hills of soil, choke with mud the rivers that drain the denuded +territory, spoil the navigable harbors, and wreck the prosperity of all +the towns and villages throughout that entire river's length."</p> + +<p>"I hadn't realized there was so much in it," replied Fred, evidently +struck with the Forester's earnestness.</p> + +<p>"You haven't any idea of how much there is in it. Not only for the work +itself, but for you. Wild horses can't drag a man out of the Service +once he's got in. It has a fascination peculiarly its own. The eager +expectancy of vast spaces, the thrill of adventure in riding off to +parts where man seldom treads, and the magnificent independence of the +frontiersman, all these become the threads of which your daily life is +made."</p> + +<p>"It sounds fine when you put it that way, sir," said Fred, his eyes +kindling at the picture. "But it's hardly like that at first, is it?"</p> + +<p>"Certainly it is! Does the life of a fireman in a big city fire +department strike you as being interesting or exciting?"</p> + +<p>"Oh, yes, sir!"</p> + +<p>"It isn't to be compared with that of the Forest Guard. A city fireman +is only one of a company huddled together in a little house, not +greatly busy until the fire telegraph signal rings. But suppose there +were only one fireman for the whole city, that he alone were responsible +for the safety of every house, that instead of telegraphic signaling he +must depend on his trusty horse to carry him to suitable vantage points, +and on his eyesight when there; suppose that he knew there was a +likelihood of fire every hour out of the twenty-four, and that during +the season he could be sure of two or three a week, don't you think that +fireman would have a lively enough time of it?"</p> + +<p>"He surely would," said Wilbur.</p> + +<p>"Aside from the fact that there are not as many people involved, that's +not unlike a Forest Guard's position. I tell you, he's not sitting +around his shack trying to kill time." Then, turning sharply to the +older boy, the Chief Forester continued:</p> + +<p>"What do you want to be?"</p> + +<p>"I had wanted to be a locomotive engineer, sir," was the boy's reply, +"but now I think I'll stay in the city."</p> + +<p>"It was the excitement of the life that appealed to you, was it?"</p> + +<p>"Yes, sir. I guess so."</p> + +<p>"True, there's a good deal of responsibility there, when you stand with +your hand on the throttle of a fast express, knowing that the lives of +the passengers are in your hand. There's a good deal of pride, too, in +steering a vessel through a dangerous channel or in a stormy sea; +there's a thrill of power when you sight a big gun and know that if you +were in warfare the defense of your country might lie in your skill and +aim. But none of these is greater than the sense of power and trust +reposing in the men of the Forest Service, to whom Uncle Sam gives the +guardianship and safe-keeping of millions of acres of his property and +the lives of thousands of his citizens."</p> + +<p>The Chief Forester watched the younger of his companions, who was +striding along the Washington street, and casting rapid glances from +building to building as he went along, as though he expected to see +flame and smoke pouring from every window, and that the city's safety +lay in his hands. Smiling slightly, very slightly, and addressing +himself to the older boy, although it was for the benefit of his new +assistant that he was speaking, the Forester continued:</p> + +<p>"It's really more like the work of a trusted army scout than anything +else. In the old days of Indian warfare,"—both boys gave a quick start +of increased attention—"the very finest men and the most to be trusted +were the scouts. They were men of great bravery, of undaunted loyalty, +of great wariness, and filled with the spirit of dashing adventure. They +were men who took their lives in their own hands. Going before the main +body of the army, single-handed, if need be, they would stave off the +attacks of Indian foes and would do battle with outposts and pickets. If +the force were too great, they would map out the lay of the land and +devise a strategical plan of attack, then, without rest or food often, +would steal back to the main body, and, laying their information in the +hands of the general, would act as guides if he ordered a forward +movement."</p> + +<p>"But how—" interrupted Fred.</p> + +<p>"I was just coming to that," replied the Forester in response to his +half-uttered query. "A Forest Guard is really a Forest Scout. There have +been greater massacres at the hands of the Fire Tribe than from any +Indian tribe that ever roamed the prairies. Hundreds, yes, thousands of +lives were lost in the days before the Forest Service was in existence +by fires which Forest Scouts largely could have prevented. Why, I myself +can recall seeing a fire in which nearly a thousand and a half persons +perished."</p> + +<p>"In one fire?"</p> + +<p>"Just in one fire. What would you think if you were told that in a +forest in front of you were several thousand savages, all with their +war-paint on, waiting a chance to break forth on the villages of the +plain, that you had been chosen for the post of honor in guarding that +strip of plain, and that the lives of those near by depended on your +alertness? If they had picked you out for that difficult and important +post, do you think that you would go and stand your rifle up against a +tree and look for some soft nice mossy bank on which to lie down and go +to sleep?"</p> + +<p>"I'd stay on the job till I dropped," answered Wilbur quickly and +aggressively.</p> + +<p>"There's really very little difference between the two positions," said +the Chief Forester. "No band of painted savages can break forth from a +forest with more appalling fury than can a fire, none is more difficult +to resist, none can carry the possibility of torture to its hapless +victims more cruelly, none be so deaf to cries of mercy as a fire. +Instead of keeping your ears open for a distant war-whoop, you have to +keep your eyes open for the thin up-wreathing curl of smoke by day, or +the red glow and flickering flame at night, which tells that the time +has come for you to show what stuff you are made of. On the instant must +you start for the fire, though it may be miles away, crossing, it may +be, a part of the forest through which no trail has been made, plunging +through streams which under less urgency would make you hesitate to try +them, single-handed and 'all on your own,' to fight Uncle Sam's battles +against his most dangerous and most insistent foe."</p> + +<p>"But if you can't put it out?" suggested Fred.</p> + +<p>"It has got to be put out," came the sharp reply, with an insistence of +manner that told even more than the words. "There isn't anything else to +it. If you have to get back to headquarters or send word there, if all +the Rangers in the forest have to be summoned, if you have to ride to +every settlement, ranch, and shack on the range, yes, if you have to +rouse up half the State, this one thing is sure—the fire has got to be +put out."</p> + +<p>"But can you get help?"</p> + +<p>"Nearly always. In the first place, the danger is mutual and everybody +near the forest or in it will suffer if the fire spreads. In the +second place, the Service is ready to pay men a fair wage for the time +consumed in putting out a fire, and even the Ranger has the right to +employ men to a limited extent. Sometimes the blaze can be stopped +without great difficulty, at other times it will require all the +resources available under the direction of the Forest Supervisor, but in +the first resort it depends largely upon the Guard. A young fellow who +is careless in such a post as that is as great a traitor to his country +as a soldier would be who sold to the enemy the plans of the fort he was +defending, or a sailor who left the wheel while a battle-ship was +threading a narrow and rocky channel."</p> + +<p>"What starts these forest fires, sir?" asked Fred.</p> + +<p>"All sorts of things, but most of them arise from one common +cause—carelessness. There are quite a number of instances in which +fires have been started by lightning, but they are few in number as +compared with those due to human agency. The old tale of fires being +caused by two branches of a dead tree rubbing against each other is, of +course, a fable."</p> + +<p>"But I should think any one would know enough not to start a forest +fire," exclaimed the older boy. "I'm not much on the woods, but I think +I know enough for that."</p> + +<p>"It isn't deliberate, it's careless," repeated the Forester. "Sometimes +a camper leaves a little fire smoldering when he thinks the last spark +is out; sometimes settlers who have to burn over their clearings allow +the blaze to get away from them; when Indians are in the neighborhood +they receive a large share of the blame, and the hated tramp is always +quoted as a factor of mischief. In earlier days, sparks from locomotives +were a constant danger, and although the railroad companies use a great +many precautions now to which formerly they paid no heed, these sparks +and cinders are still a prolific cause of trouble. And beside this +carelessness, there is a good deal of inattention and neglect. The +settlers will let a little fire burn for days unheeded, waiting for a +rain to come along and put it out, whereas if a drought ensues and a +high wind comes up, a fire may arise that will leap through the forest +and leave them homeless, and possibly even their own lives may have to +pay the penalty of their recklessness."</p> + +<p>"But what I don't understand," said Fred, "is how people get caught. +It's easy enough to see how a forest could be destroyed, but I should +think that every one could get out of the way easily enough. It must +take a tree a long while to burn, even after it gets alight, especially +if it's a big one."</p> + +<p>"A big forest fire, fanned by a high wind, and in the dry season," +answered the Chief Forester, "could catch the fastest runner in a few +minutes. The flames repeatedly have been known to overtake horses on the +gallop, and where there are no other means of escape the peril is +extreme."</p> + +<p>"But will green trees burn so fast?" the older boy queried in surprise. +"I should have thought they were so full of sap that they wouldn't burn +at all."</p> + +<p>"The wood and foliage of coniferous trees like spruce, fir, and pine are +so full of turpentine and resin that they burn like tinder. The heat is +almost beyond the power of words to express. The fire does not seem to +burn in a steady manner, the flames just breathe upon an immense tree +and it becomes a blackened skeleton which will burn for hours.</p> + +<p>"The actual temperature in advance of the fire is so terrific that the +woods begin to dry and to release inflammable vapors before the flames +reach them, when they flash up and add their force to the fiery +hurricane. It is almost unbelievable, too, the way a crown-fire will +jump. Huge masses of burning gas will be hurled forth on the wind and +ignite the trees two and three hundred yards distant. Fortunately, fires +of this type are not common, most of the blazes one is likely to +encounter being ground fires, which are principally harmful in that they +destroy the forest floor."</p> + +<p>"But I should have thought," said Wilbur, "that such fires could only +get a strong hold in isolated parts where nobody lives."</p> + +<p>"Not at all. Sometimes they begin quite close to the settlements, like +the destructive fire at Hinckley, Minnesota, in 1894, which burned +quietly for a week, and could have been put out by a couple of men +without any trouble; but sometimes they start in the far recesses of the +forest and reach their full fury very quickly. Of course, every fire, +even the famous Peshtigo fire, started as a little bit of a blaze which +either of you two boys could have put out."</p> + +<p>"How big a fire was that, sir?" asked Fred.</p> + +<p>"It covered an area of over two thousand square miles."</p> + +<p>"Great Cæsar!" ejaculated Wilbur after a rapid calculation, "that would +be a strip twenty miles wide and a hundred miles long."</p> + +<p>The Chief Forester nodded.</p> + +<p>"It wiped the town of Peshtigo entirely off the map," he said. "The +people were hemmed in, ringed by fire on every side, and out of a +population of two thousand, scarcely five hundred escaped. Flight was +hopeless and rescue impossible."</p> + +<p>"And could this have been stopped after it got a hold at all?" asked +Wilbur seriously, realizing the gravity of the conditions that some day +he might have to face. "Could not something have been done?"</p> + +<p>"It could have been prevented," said the Chief Forester fiercely, "and +as I said, in the first few hours either one of you boys could have put +it out. But there have been many others like it since, and probably +there will be many others yet to come. Even now, there are hundreds of +towns and villages near forest lands utterly unprovided with adequate +fire protection. Some of them are near our national forests, and it is +our business to see that no danger comes to them.<a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> Think of a fire +like that of Peshtigo, think that if it had been stopped at the very +beginning a thousand and a half lives would have been saved, and then +ask yourself whether the work of a Forest Guard is not just about as +fine a thing as any young fellow can do."</p> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> While this volume was in the press, forest fires of the +utmost violence broke out in Idaho, Washington, and Montana. Over two +hundred lives were lost, many of them of members of the Forest Service, +and hundreds of thousands of acres of timber were destroyed.</p></div> + +<p>Wilbur turned impulsively to his chum.</p> + +<p>"You'll just have to join us, Fred," he said. "I don't see how any one +that knows anything about it can keep out. You could go to a forestry +school this summer and start right in to get ready for it."</p> + +<p>"I'll think about it," said the older boy.</p> + +<p>The Chief Forester was greatly pleased with the lad's eagerness to +enroll his friend, and, turning to him, continued:</p> + +<p>"I don't want you to think it's all fire-fighting in the forest, though, +Loyle; so I'll give you an idea of some of the other opportunities which +will come your way in forest work. I suppose both of you boys hate a +bully? I know I used to when I was at school."</p> + +<p>"I think," said Wilbur impetuously, "that a bully's just about the worst +ever."</p> + +<p>"I do, too," joined in Fred.</p> + +<p>"Well, you'll have a chance to put down a lot of bullying. You look +surprised, eh? You don't see what bullying has to do with forestry? It +has, a great deal, and I'll show you how. I suppose you know that a +forest is a good deal like a school?"</p> + +<p>"Well, no," admitted Wilbur frankly, "I don't quite see how."</p> + +<p>"A forest is made up of a lot of different kind of trees, isn't it, just +as a school is made up of a lot of boys? And each of these trees has an +individuality, just in the same way that each boy has an individuality. +That, of course, is easy to see. But what is more important, and much +less known, is that just as the school as a whole gets to have a certain +standard, so does the forest as a whole."</p> + +<p>"That seems queer," remarked Fred.</p> + +<p>"Perhaps it does, but it's true none the less. In many schools there are +some boys bigger than others, but who are not good for as much, and +they're always picking at the others and crowding them down. In the +same way in a forest there are always some worthless trees, trying to +crowd out the ones which are of more value. As the trees of better value +are always sought for their timber, that gives the worthless stuff a +good chance to get ahead. One of the duties of a Forester, looking after +his section of the forest, is to see that every possible chance is given +to the good over the bad."</p> + +<p>"It's really like having people to deal with!" cried Fred in surprise. +"It sounds as if a tree were some kind of a human being."</p> + +<p>"There are lots of people," said the Chief Forester, "who think of trees +and speak of trees just exactly as if they were people like themselves. +And it isn't even only the growing of the right kind of trees, but there +are lots of ways of handling them under different conditions and at +different ages. Thus, a Forester must be able to make his trees grow in +height up to a certain stage, then stop their further growth upwards and +make them put on diameter."</p> + +<p>"But how can you get a tree to grow in a certain way?" asked Fred in +utter amazement.</p> + +<p>"Get Loyle here to tell you all about it. I suppose you learned that at +the Ranger School, didn't you?" he added, turning to the younger boy.</p> + +<p>"Yes, sir. We had a very interesting course in silviculture."</p> + +<p>"But just to give you a rough idea, Fred," continued the Forester, "you +know that some trees need a lot of light. Consequently, if a number of +young trees are left fairly close together, they will all grow up +straight as fast as they can, without putting out any branches near the +bottom, and all their growth will be of height."</p> + +<p>"See, Fred," interjected Wilbur, "that's why saplings haven't got any +twigs except just at the top."</p> + +<p>"Just so," said the Forester. "Presently," he continued, "as these young +trees grow up together, one will overtop the rest. If the adjacent small +trees be cut down when this tallest tree has reached a good height, it +will spread at the top in order to get as much sunlight as possible. In +order to carry a large top the diameter of the trunk must increase. So, +by starting the trees close together and allowing one of them to develop +alone after a certain height has been reached, the Forester has +persuaded that tree first to grow straight and high, and then to +develop girth, affording the finest and most valuable kind of lumber. +That's just one small example of the scores of possibilities that lie in +the hands of the expert Forester. By proper handling a forest can be +made to respond to training, as I said, just as a school might do."</p> + +<p>"I can tell you a lot more things, Fred, just as wonderful as that," +commented Wilbur.</p> + +<p>The Chief Forester nodded.</p> + +<p>"I'd like to hear you myself," he said; "I'd rather listen to something +about trees than eat. But I've got to go now. I'll see you again soon, +Loyle," and with a parting good wish to both boys, he crossed the street +and went on his way.</p> + +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 700px;"> +<a name="IMAGE_2" id="IMAGE_2"></a> +<img src="images/image-2.jpg" width="700" height="449" alt="A FOREST FIRE OUT OF CONTROL." title="" /> +<span class="caption">A FOREST FIRE OUT OF CONTROL.<br />Conditions which tax man's resources to the uttermost, and where peril +is the price of victory.<br />Courtesy of U. S. Forest Service.</span> +</div> + +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 700px;"> +<a name="IMAGE_3" id="IMAGE_3"></a> +<img src="images/image-3.jpg" width="700" height="445" alt="GOOD FORESTRY MANAGEMENT." title="" /> +<span class="caption">GOOD FORESTRY MANAGEMENT.<br />All the smaller wood is used for cord-wood, the brush is in piles ready +for burning, and the young trees are left to grow up into a new forest.<br />Photograph by U. S. Forest Service.</span> +</div> +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 700px;"> +<a name="IMAGE_4" id="IMAGE_4"></a> +<img src="images/image-4.jpg" width="700" height="378" alt="BAD FORESTRY MANAGEMENT. Forest cut clear and burned over, all the young growth destroyed, and +nothing left except costly replanting. Photograph by U. S. Forest Service." title="" /> +<span class="caption">BAD FORESTRY MANAGEMENT.<br /> + +Forest cut clear and burned over, all the young growth destroyed, and +nothing left except costly replanting.<br /> + +Photograph by U. S. Forest Service.</span> +</div> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_II" id="CHAPTER_II"></a>CHAPTER II</h2> + +<h3>PUTTING A STOP TO GUN-PLAY</h3> + + +<p>Wilbur was sitting in the writing-room of the hotel where he was staying +while in Washington, just finishing a letter home telling of his +good-fortune and his appointment, when a bell-boy came to tell him that +his uncle, Mr. Masseth, was downstairs waiting to see him. This uncle +had been a great inspiration to Wilbur, for he was prominent in the +Geological Survey, and had done some wonderful work in the Canyon of the +Colorado. Wilbur hurried down at once.</p> + +<p>"Congratulations!" the geologist said, as soon as the boy appeared. "So +you came through with flying colors, I hear."</p> + +<p>"Every one was just as fine as could be," answered the lad. "But how did +you know about it, uncle?"</p> + +<p>"You wrote me that you were going to call on the Chief Forester to-day, +and so I took the trouble to telephone to one of the men in the office +who would be likely to know the result of your interview."</p> + +<p>"Isn't it bully?"</p> + +<p>"Yes," said the older man with a quiet laugh, "I think it is 'bully,' as +you call it. But I didn't call only to congratulate you; I thought +perhaps you would like to come with me to-night and meet some of the men +in the Forest Service who are really doing things out West. If you do, +there's no time to waste."</p> + +<p>"You bet I do," the boy replied hastily. "But what is it all about?"</p> + +<p>"It's a lecture on forestry in China, but it happens to come at the same +time as a meeting of the District Foresters, so they're all in town. +Trot along upstairs and get your hat, and we can talk about it on the +way."</p> + +<p>The geologist sauntered over to an acquaintance who was standing in the +hotel lobby near by, but he had hardly exchanged half a dozen sentences +with him when Wilbur reappeared, ready to go.</p> + +<p>"You see," said Masseth as they left the hotel, "it is a good plan for +you to meet as many of the leaders of your profession as you can, not +only because their friendship may be useful to you, nor yet only because +they are all pleasant fellows, but because forestry is a profession, a +very large and complex one, and it is a revelation sometimes to see what +can be made of it. I know myself, whenever I meet a great geologist I +always feel a little better to think I can say, 'I am a geologist, too.' +So you, I hope, may be able to say some day, 'I am a Forester, too.'"</p> + +<p>"I'm one now," said Wilbur elatedly.</p> + +<p>"You're not, you're only a cub yet," corrected his uncle sharply; "don't +let your enthusiasm run away with your good sense. You are no more a +Forester yet than a railroad bill-clerk is a transportation expert."</p> + +<p>"All right, uncle," said Wilbur, "I'll swallow my medicine and take that +all back. I'm not even the ghost of a Forester—yet."</p> + +<p>"You will meet the real article to-night. As I told you, the District +Foresters are East for a conference, and this lecture is given before +the Forestry Association. So you will have a good chance of sizing up +the sort of men you are likely to be with."</p> + +<p>"Will the Forest Supervisors be there, too?"</p> + +<p>"I should imagine not. There may be one or two in town. But the +Supervisors alone would make quite a gathering if they were all here. +There are over a hundred, are there not? You ought to know."</p> + +<p>"Just a hundred and forty-one now—about one to each forest."</p> + +<p>"And there are only six District Foresters?"</p> + +<p>"Yes. One is in Montana, one in Colorado, one in New Mexico, one in +Utah, one in California, and one in Oregon. And they have under their +charge, so I learned to-day, nearly two hundred million acres of land, +or, in other words, territory larger than the whole state of Texas and +five times as large as England and Wales."</p> + +<p>"I had forgotten the figures," said the geologist. "That gives each +District Forester a little piece of land about the size of England to +look after. And they can tell you, most of them, on almost every square +mile of that region, approximately how much marketable standing timber +may be found there, what kinds of trees are most abundant, and in what +proportion, and roughly, how many feet of lumber can be cut to the acre. +It's always been wonderful to me. That sort of thing takes learning, +though, and you've got to dig, Wilbur, if you want to be a District +Forester some day."</p> + +<p>"I'm going to get there some day, all right."</p> + +<p>"If you try hard enough, you may. By the way, there's one of them going +in now. That's the house, on the other side of the Circle."</p> + +<p>The boy looked across the curve and scanned all the men going in the +same direction, quite with a feeling of companionship. One of the men +who overtook and passed them, giving a hearty greeting to Masseth as he +went by, was Roger Doughty, a young fellow who had distinguished himself +in the Geological Survey, having taken a trip from south to north of +Alaska, and Wilbur's companion felt a twinge of regret that his nephew +had not entered his own service.</p> + +<p>Wilbur, however, was always a "woods" boy, and even in his early +childish days had been possessed with a desire to camp out. He had read +every book he could lay hands on that dealt with "the great outdoors," +and would ten thousand times over rather have been Daniel Boone than +George Washington. Seeing his intense pleasure in that life, his father +had always allowed him to go off into the wilds for his holidays, and in +consequence he knew many little tricks of woodcraft and how to make +himself comfortable when the weather was bad. His father, who was a +lawyer, had wanted him to enter that profession, but Wilbur had been so +sure of his own mind, and was so persistent that at his request he had +been permitted to go to the Colorado Ranger School. From this he had +returned even more enthusiastic than before, and Masseth, seeing that by +temperament Wilbur was especially fitted for the Forest Service, had +urged the boy's father to allow him to enter for it, and did not attempt +to conceal his satisfaction with Wilbur's success.</p> + +<p>"Why, Masseth, how did you get hold of Loyle?" asked the Chief Forester +as the two came up the walk together.</p> + +<p>"Didn't you know he was my nephew?" was the surprised reply.</p> + +<p>"No," answered their host as they paused on the threshold, "he never +said anything to me about it."</p> + +<p>The geologist looked inquiringly at his young relative.</p> + +<p>"I thought," said Wilbur, coloring, "that if I said anything about +knowing you, before I was appointed, it would look as though I had done +it to get a pull. I didn't think it would do me any good, anyhow; and +even if it had, I felt that I'd rather not get anything that way."</p> + +<p>"It wouldn't have helped you a bit," said the Chief Forester, "and, as +you see, you did not need it. I'm glad, too, that you did not mention it +at the time." He nodded his appreciation of the boy's position as they +passed into the room beyond.</p> + +<p>The place was thoroughly typical of the gathering and the occasion. The +walls were hung with some magnificent trophies, elk and moose heads, one +stuffed fish of huge size was framed beside the door, and there were +numberless photographs of trees and forests, cross-sections of woods, +and comparisons of leaves and seeds. Although in the heart of +Washington, there was a breath and fragrance in the room, which, to the +boy, seemed like old times in the woods. The men, too, that were +gathered there showed themselves to be what they were—men who knew the +great wide world and loved it. Every man seemed hearty in manner and +thoroughly interested in whatever was going on.</p> + +<p>Masseth was called away, soon after they entered the room, and Wilbur, +left to himself, sauntered about among the groups of talkers, looking at +the various trophies hung on the walls. As he drew near to one of the +smaller groups, however, he caught the word "gun-play," so he edged up +to the men and listened. One of them, seeing the lad, moved slightly to +one side as an unspoken invitation to be one of them, and Wilbur stepped +up.</p> + +<p>The man who was speaking was comparing the present peaceful +administration of the forests with the conditions that used to exist +years ago, before the Service had been established, and when the Western +"bad man" was at the summit of his power.</p> + +<p>"It was during the cattle and sheep war that a fellow had to be pretty +quick on the draw," said one.</p> + +<p>"The Service had a good enough man for that, all right," suggested +another member of the same group, "there wasn't any of them who could +pull a bead quicker than our grazing Chief yonder." Wilbur turned and +saw crossing the room a quiet-looking, spare man, light-complexioned, +and apparently entirely inoffensive. "I guess they were ready enough to +give him a wide berth when it came to gun-play."</p> + +<p>"Talking about the cattle war," said the first speaker, "the worst +trouble I ever had, or rather, the one that I hated to go into most, was +back in those days. I was on the old Plum Creek Timber Land Reserve, +now a portion of the Pike National Forest. A timber trespass sometimes +leads to a very pretty scrap, and a cattle mix-up usually spells 'War' +with a capital 'W,' but this had both."</p> + +<p>"You get them that way sometimes," said a middle-aged, red-headed man, +who was standing by.</p> + +<p>"Had some down your way, too, I reckon?"</p> + +<p>"Plenty of 'em. But go ahead with the yarn."</p> + +<p>"Well, this bunch that I'm speaking of had skipped out from Montana; +they were 'wanted' there, and they had come down and started cutting +railroad ties in a secluded canyon forming one of the branches of West +Plum Creek. They were hated good and plenty, these same tie-cutters, +because they had a reputation of being too handy with their guns, and +consequently causing a decrease in the calf crop. The cattlemen used to +drop in on them every once in a while, but the tie-cutters were foxy, +and they were never caught with the goods. Of course, there was a moral +certainty that they weren't buying meat, but nothing could be proved +against them, and the interchanges of compliments, while lively and +picturesque enough, never took the form of lead, although it was +expected every time they met."</p> + +<p>"Had this been going on long?"</p> + +<p>"Several months, I reckon," answered the former Ranger, "before I heard +of it. This was just before that section of the country was taken over +by the Forest Service. As soon as notice was given that the district in +question was to be placed under government regulations, a deputation to +the tie-cutters loped down on their cow-ponies to convey the cheerful +news. Expressing, of course, the profoundest sympathy for them, the +spokesman of the cattle group volunteered the information that they +could wrap up their axes in tissue paper, tie pink ribbons on their +rifles and go home, because any one caught cutting timber on the +reserve, now that it was a reserve, would go to the Pen for fifteen +years."</p> + +<p>"What a bluff!"</p> + +<p>"Bluff it certainly was. It didn't work, either. One of the tie-cutters +in reply suggested that the cowmen should go back and devote their time +to buying Navajo saddle-blankets and silver-mounted sombreros, since +ornamenting the landscape was all they had to do in life; another +replied that if a government inspector ever set eyes on their cattle +he'd drive them off the range as a disgrace to the State; and a third +capped the replies with the terse answer that no ten United States +officers and no hundred and ten cattlemen could take them out alive."</p> + +<p>"That wouldn't make the cow-camp feel happy a whole lot," remarked the +red-headed man.</p> + +<p>"There wasn't any shooting, though, as I said before, though just how it +kept off I never rightly could understand. At all events they fixed it +so that we heard of it in a hurry. Then both sides awaited developments. +The tie-cutters kept their hands off the cattle for a while, and the +cowmen had no special business with railroad ties, so that, aside from +snorting at each other, no special harm was done.</p> + +<p>"But, of course, the timber trespass question had to be investigated, +and the Supervisor, who was then located at Colorado Springs, arranged +to make the trip with me to the tie-cutters' camp from a small station +about fifty miles north of the Springs. I met him at the station as +prearranged. We were just about to start when a telegram was handed him +calling him to another part of the forest in a hurry."</p> + +<p>"Tough luck," said one of the listeners.</p> + +<p>"It surely was—for me," commented the narrator. "The camp to which we +had intended going was twenty-six miles into the mountains, and going up +there alone didn't appeal to me a little bit. However, the Supervisor +told me to start right out, to get an idea of how much timber had been +cut, and in what kind of shape the ground had been left, and in short, +to 'nose around a little,' as he put it himself."</p> + +<p>"That was hardly playing the game, sending you up there alone," said one +of the men.</p> + +<p>"I thought at the time that it wasn't, but what could he do? The matter +had to be investigated, and he had been sent for and couldn't come with +me. But he was considerate enough, strongly urging me not to get killed, +'as Rangers were scarce.'"</p> + +<p>"That was considerate!"</p> + +<p>"Yes, wasn't it? But early the next morning I started for the canyon +where the outlaws were said to be in hiding. The riding was fair, so I +made good time on the trail and got to the entrance of the canyon about +the middle of the day. A few hundred feet from the fork of the stream I +came to a little log cabin, occupied by a miner and his family. I took +lunch with them and told them my errand. Both the man and his wife +begged me not to go up to the camp alone, as they had heard the +tie-cutters threaten to kill at sight any stranger found on their land."</p> + +<p>"Why didn't you propose that the miner should go up to the camp with +you?"</p> + +<p>"I did. But he remarked that up to date he had succeeded in keeping out +of the cattlemen-lumbermen trouble, and that he was going to keep right +along keeping out. He suggested that if there was going to be any +funeral in the immediate vicinity he wasn't hankering to take any more +prominent part than that of a mourner, and that the title-rôle of such a +performance wasn't any matter of envy with him. However, I succeeded in +persuading him to come part of the way with me, and secured his promise +that he would listen for any shooting, and if I should happen to resign +involuntarily from the Service by the argument of a bullet, that he +would volunteer as a witness in the case."</p> + +<p>"I don't altogether blame him, you know," said the red-headed man; "you +said he had a wife there, and interfering with other folks' doings isn't +healthy."</p> + +<p>"I didn't blame him either," said the first speaker, "but I would have +liked to have him along. A little farther up the canyon I came to a +recently built log cabin, covered with earth. An old man stood at the +door and I greeted him cheerily. We had a moment's chat, and then I +asked him the way to the cabin where the tie-cutters lived. Judge of my +surprise when he told me this was their cabin, and that they lived with +him. By the time I had secured this much information the two younger men +had come out, and one of them, Tom, wanted to know what I was after. I +stated my business, briefly. There was a pause.</p> + +<p>"'Ye 'low as ye're agoin' to jedge them ties,' he said slowly. 'Wa'al I +'low we'll sort 'er go along. Thar's a heap o' fow-el in these yar +parts, stranger, an' I 'low I'll take a gun.'</p> + +<p>"The other brother, who seemed more taciturn, turned and nodded to two +youngsters who had come out of the cabin while Tom was speaking. The +elder of the two, a boy about thirteen years old, went into the shack +and returned in a moment bringing out two rifles. I turned the broncho's +head up the trail, but Tom interposed.</p> + +<p>"'I 'low,' he said, 'that ye'll hev ter leave yer horse-critter right +hyar; thar ain't much of er trail up the mount'n.'</p> + +<p>"I wasn't particularly anxious to get separated from my horse, and that +cabin was just about the last place I would have chosen to leave him; +but there was no help for it, and as I would have to dismount anyway to +get into the timber, I slipped out of the saddle and put the hobbles on. +But when we came to start, the two men wanted me to go first. I balked +at that. I told them that I wasn't in the habit of walking up a mountain +trail in front of two men with guns, and that they would have to go +first and show the way. They grumbled, but, seeing that I meant it, they +turned and silently walked up the mountainside ahead of me.</p> + +<p>"They stopped at an old prospect shaft that was filled to the brim with +water, and wanted me to come close to the hole and look at it, telling +me some cock-and-bull story about it, and calling my attention to some +supposed outcrop of rich ore that could be seen under the water. But I +refused flatly to go a step nearer than I then was, telling them that I +wished to get to those ties immediately.</p> + +<p>"At an old cabin they halted again, and Tom wanted to know which was +'the best shot in the bunch.' I was not in favor of trying guns or +anything of that sort, especially when there seemed no reason for it, +knowing how easy it would be for a shot to go wide, and so I urged them +to lead on to the ties. But Tom insisted upon shooting, and though his +brother did not seem quite to follow the other's plans, still he chimed +in with him, and the only thing I could do was to agree with what grace +I could. But I decided to make this a pretext for disposing of some of +their superfluous ammunition.</p> + +<p>"Pulling my six-shooter, I told Jim to put an old sardine can, that was +lying on the ground near by, on the stump of a tree about twenty-five or +thirty yards distant. Then I told him to lean his rifle against the +cabin while placing the can on the tree. This he did. I stepped over to +the cabin and took the gun as though to look after it. Then I walked +over to where Tom stood, telling him to blaze away at the can on the +tree. While he was doing so I slipped the cartridges out of Jim's gun +and put them in my pocket.</p> + +<p>"By the time that Tom had fired three shots Jim came up and I told the +former to hand over the rifle and let his brother try. Quite readily he +did so. Of course, there were only two cartridges left in the gun, for +it was a half-magazine, but Jim expected to take the third shot with his +own rifle. When he had fired twice, however, and reached out his hand +for the other gun, I handed it to him with the remark that it was empty. +For a minute or two things looked black, because both men saw that they +had been tricked. But I had the drop on them, and since they were both +disarmed I felt considerably easier."</p> + +<p>"How did it end up?" asked the red-haired listener.</p> + +<p>"It was easy enough after that, as long as I didn't turn my back to them +or let either get too near. We went together and counted the ties, +returning to the cabin where I had left my horse. When the tie-cutters +found, however, that the cattlemen had deliberately exaggerated the +penalty for timber trespass in the hope that they would resist and thus +get themselves into serious trouble with the government, their anger was +diverted from me. By joining in with them in a sweeping denunciation of +the cow-camp, and by pointing out that no harsh measures were intended +against them, they came to look on me as friend instead of foe."</p> + +<p>"What was done about the trespass?"</p> + +<p>"It was pretty early in the days of the Service, and, as you remember, +we let them down easily at first so that no undue amount of friction +should be caused. I think some small fine, purely nominal, was exacted, +and the tie-cutters got into harmonious relations with the Supervisor +later. But those same boys told me, just as I was starting for home, +that they intended to drop me in that old prospect shaft, or, failing +that, to pump me full of holes."</p> + +<p>The speaker had hardly finished when a scattering of groups and an +unfolding of chairs took place and the lecturer for the evening was +announced. He won Wilbur's heart at once by an appreciative story of a +young Chinese boy, a civil service student in his native province, who +had accompanied him on a portion of his trip through China in order to +learn what might be done toward the improvement of his country.</p> + +<p>"He was a bright lad, this Fo-Ho," said the lecturer, "and it was very +largely owing to him that I extended my trip a little and went to +Fou-Ping. I visited Fo-Ho's family home, where the graves of his +ancestors were—you know how powerful ancestor-worship still is in +China. Such a scene of desolation I never saw, and, I tell you, I was +sorry for the boy. There was the town that had been his father's home +deserted and in ruins.</p> + +<p>"Two hundred years before, in this same place now so thickly strewn with +ruins, there had been no one living, and the mountains were accounted +impassable because of the dense forests. But in 1708 a Mongol horde +under a powerful chieftain settled in the valley, and the timber began +to be cut recklessly. Attracted by the fame of this chieftain, other +tribes poured down into these valleys, until by 1720 several hundred +thousand persons were living where thirty years before not a soul was to +be seen. The cold winters of Mongolia drew heavily upon the fuel +resources of the adjacent forests, and a disastrous fire stripped +hundreds of square miles. Farther and farther afield the inhabitants had +to go for fuel, until every stick which would burn had been swept clear; +bleaker and more barren grew the vicinity, until at last the tribes had +to decamp, and what was once a dense forest and next a smiling valley +has become a hideous desert which even the vultures have forsaken."</p> + +<p>Masseth leaned over toward Wilbur and whispered:</p> + +<p>"You don't have to go as far away as China. There are some terrible +cases of deforestation right here in the United States."</p> + +<p>The lecturer then launched into a description of the once great forests +of China, and quoted the words of writers less than three centuries ago +who depicted the great Buddhist monasteries hid deep in the heart of +densely wooded regions. Then, with this realization of heavily forested +areas in mind, there was flashed upon the screen picture after picture +of desolation. Cities, once prosperous, were shown abandoned because the +mountains near by had become deforested. Man could not live there +because food could not grow without soil, and all the soil had been +washed away from the slopes. The streams, once navigable, were choked up +with the silt that had washed down. When rains came they acted as +torrents, since there was no vegetation to hold the water and the lower +levels became flooded.</p> + +<p>"Nature made the world a garden," said the speaker, "and man is making +it a desert. Our children and our children's children for countless +generations are to enjoy the gardens we leave, or bewail the deserts +we create."</p> + +<p>Startling, too, was the manner in which the lecturer showed the unhappy +fate of countries which an unthinking civilization had despoiled. The +hills and valleys where grew the famous cedars of Lebanon are almost +treeless now, and Palestine, once so luxuriant, is bare and lonely. +Great cities flourished upon the banks of the Tigris and Euphrates where +were the hanging gardens of Babylon and the great hunting parks of +Nineveh, yet now the river runs silently between muddy banks, infertile +and deserted, save for a passing nomad tribe. The woods of ancient +Greece are not less ruined than her temples; the forests of Dalmatia +whence came the timber that built the navies of the ancient world are +now barren plateaus, shelterless and waste; and throughout a large part +of southern Europe and northern Africa, man has transformed the smile of +nature into a mask of inflexible severity.</p> + +<p>"But," said Wilbur, turning excitedly to his uncle, as soon as the +lecturer had closed, "isn't there anything that can be done to make +those places what they were before?"</p> + +<p>"Not often, if it is allowed to go too far," said the geologist. "It +takes time, of course, for all the soil to be washed away. But wherever +the naked rock is exposed the case is hopeless. You can't grow anything, +even cactus, on a rock. Lichens, of course, may begin, but hundreds of +thousands of years are required to make soil anew."</p> + +<p>"But if it's taken in time?"</p> + +<p>"Then you can reforest by planting. But that's slow and costly. It +requires millions of dollars to replant a stretch of forest which would +have renewed itself just by a little careful lumbering, for Nature is +only too ready to do the work for nothing if given a fair chance."</p> + +<p>By this time the gathering had broken up in large part and a number of +those who had come only to hear the lecture had gone. Some of the Forest +Service men, however, were passing through the corridors to the +dining-room. At the door Wilbur paused hesitatingly. He had not been +invited to stay, but at the same time he felt that he could hardly leave +without thanking his uncle, who at the time was strolling toward the +other portion of the house, deeply engrossed in conversation. In this +quandary the Chief Forester, all unknown to the lad, saw his +embarrassment, and with the quick intuition so characteristic of the +man, divined the cause.</p> + +<p>"Come along, Loyle, come along in," he said, "you're one of us now."</p> + +<p>Wilbur, with a grateful look, passed on into the reception-room. A +moment later he heard his name called, and, turning, came face to face +with a tall young fellow, bronzed and decisive looking.</p> + +<p>"My name's Nally," he said, "and I hear you're going to one of my +forests. Mr. Masseth was telling me that you're his nephew. I guess +we'll start right in by having our first feed together. This is hardly +camping out," he added, looking around the well-appointed and handsome +room, "but the grub shows that it's the Service all right."</p> + +<p>The District Forester motioned to the table which was heaped with dozens +upon dozens of baked apples, flanked by several tall pitchers of milk.</p> + +<p>"There you have it," he continued, "back to nature and the simple life. +It's all right to go through a Ranger School and to satisfy the powers +that be about your fitness, but that isn't really getting to the inside +of the matter. It's when you feel that you've had the chance to come +right in and take the regular prescribed ritual of a baked apple and a +glass of milk in the house of the Chief Forester that you can feel +you're the real thing in the Service."</p> + +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 700px;"> +<a name="IMAGE_5" id="IMAGE_5"></a> +<img src="images/image-5.jpg" width="700" height="450" alt="THE TIE-CUTTERS' BOYS." title="" /> +<span class="caption">THE TIE-CUTTERS' BOYS.<br /> + +Two young members of the outlaw gang which defied the cattle man and +threatened the Forest Service.<br /> + +Photograph by U. S. Forest Service.</span> +</div> + +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"> +<a name="IMAGE_6A" id="IMAGE_6A"></a> +<img src="images/image-6a.jpg" width="600" height="445" alt="DEFORESTED AND WASHED AWAY." title="" /> +<span class="caption">DEFORESTED AND WASHED AWAY.<br />Example of laborious artificial terracing in China to save the little +soil remaining.<br />Courtesy of U. S. Forest Service.</span> +</div> + +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"> +<a name="IMAGE_6B" id="IMAGE_6B"></a> +<img src="images/image-6b.jpg" width="600" height="369" alt="AS BAD AS ANYTHING IN CHINA." title="" /> +<span class="caption">AS BAD AS ANYTHING IN CHINA.<br />Final results of deforestation in Tennessee, due to cutting and to fumes +from a copper smelter.<br />Photograph by U. S. Forest Service.</span> +</div> + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> + +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_III" id="CHAPTER_III"></a>CHAPTER III</h2> + +<h3>THE FIGHT IN THE COULEE</h3> + + +<p>When, a few days later, Wilbur found himself standing on the platform of +the little station at Sumber, with the cactus-clad Mohave desert about +him and the slopes of the Sierra Nevada beyond, he first truly realized +that his new life was beginning. His journey out from Washington had +been full of interest because the District Forester had accompanied him +the greater part of the way, and had taken the opportunity to explain +how varied were the conditions that he would find in the Sequoia forest +to which he had been assigned. In large measure the District Forester's +especial interest, Wilbur realized, was due to the fact that Masseth had +told him of the boy's intention to go to college and thence through the +Yale Forestry School, having had beforehand training as Guard, and +possibly later as Ranger.</p> + +<p>But, as the train pulled out of the station, and Wilbur looked over the +sage-brush and sparse grass, seeming to dance under the shimmering +heat-waves of the afternoon sun, he suddenly became conscious that the +world seemed very large and that everything he knew was very far away. +The strange sense of doubt as to whether he were really himself, a +curious feeling that the desert often induces, swept over him, and he +was only too ready to enter into conversation when a small, wiry man, +with black hair and quick, alert eyes, came up to him with the rolling +walk that betokens a life spent in the saddle, and said easily:</p> + +<p>"Howdy, pard!"</p> + +<p>The boy returned a friendly "Good-afternoon," and waited for the +stranger to continue.</p> + +<p>"She looks some as if you was the whole pack on this deal," was the next +remark.</p> + +<p>"Well," replied Wilbur, looking at him quizzically, "I wasn't conscious +of being crowded here."</p> + +<p>The range-rider followed the boy's glance around the immediate +neighborhood, noting the station agent and the two or three figures in +front of the general store, who formed the sum of the visible +population, and nodded.</p> + +<p>"Bein' the star performer, then," he went on, "it might be a safe bet +that you was sort of prospectin' for the Double Bar J."</p> + +<p>"That was the name of the ranch," said the boy. "I was told to go there +and get a couple of ponies."</p> + +<p>"An' how was you figurin' on gettin' to the ranch? Walkin'?"</p> + +<p>"Not if I could help it. And that," he added, pointing to the desert, "I +should think would be mean stuff to walk on."</p> + +<p>"Mean she is," commented Wilbur's new acquaintance, "but even s'posin' +that you did scare up a pony, how did you dope it out that you would hit +up the right trail? This here country is plumb tricky. And the trail +sort of takes a nap every once in a while and forgets to show up."</p> + +<p>"I didn't expect to find my way alone," said the boy. "If nobody had +been here, I'd have found somebody to show me—"</p> + +<p>"Hold hard," said the cowboy, interrupting, "till I look over that +layout. If you hadn't ha' found anybody, you'd ha' found somebody? +Shuffle 'em up a bit, pard, and try a new deal."</p> + +<p>"But," continued Wilbur, not paying any attention to the interruption, +"I fully expected that some one from the ranch would be here to meet +me."</p> + +<p>"If all your conjectoors comes as near bein' accurate as that same," +said the other, "you c'd set up as a prophet and never call the turn +wrong. Which I'm some attached to the ranch myself."</p> + +<p>"I thought you were, probably," said Wilbur, "and I'm much obliged to +you, if you came to meet me."</p> + +<p>"That's all right! But if you're ready, maybe we'd better start +interviewin' the scenery on the trail. How about chuck?"</p> + +<p>"Thanks," said the boy, "I had dinner on the car."</p> + +<p>"An' you're thirsty none?"</p> + +<p>"Not especially. But," he added, not wishing to offend his companion, +"if you are, go ahead."</p> + +<p>"Well, if you don't mind," began the other, then he checked himself. "I +guess I c'n keep from dyin' of a cracked throat until we get there," he +added. "C'n you ride?"</p> + +<p>"Yes!" said Wilbur decisively.</p> + +<p>The cowboy turned half round to look at him with a dubious smile.</p> + +<p>"You surely answers that a heap sudden," he said. "An' I opine that's +some risky as a general play."</p> + +<p>"Why?" asked the boy.</p> + +<p>"Bein' too sure in three-card Monte has been a most disappointin' +experience to many a gent, an' has been most condoocive to transfers of +ready cash."</p> + +<p>"But that's just guessing," said Wilbur. "I'm talking of what I know."</p> + +<p>"Like enough you never heard about Quick-Finger Joe?" queried the +cowboy. "Over-confidence hastens his exit quite some."</p> + +<p>"No," answered Wilbur quickly, scenting a story, "I never even heard of +him. Who was he?"</p> + +<p>"This same Joe," began the range-rider, "is a tow-haired specimen whose +manly form decorates the streets of this here metropolis of Sumber that +you've been admirin'. He has the name of bein' the most agile +proposition on a trigger that ever shot the spots off a ten o' clubs. He +makes good his reputation a couple of times, and then gets severely left +alone. To him, one day, while he is standin' takin' a little +refreshment, comes up a peaceful and inoffensive-lookin' stranger, who +has drifted into town promiscuous-like in the course of the afternoon. +He addresses Joe some like this:</p> + +<p>"'Which I hears with profound admiration that you're some frolicsome +and speedy on gun-play?'</p> + +<p>"Joe, tryin' to hide his blushes, admits that his hand can amble for his +hip right smart. Whereupon the amiable-appearin' gent makes some sort of +comment, just what no one ever knew, but it seems tolerable superfluous +an' sarcastic, an' instantaneous there's two shots. When the smoke +clears away a little, Joe is observed to be occupyin' a horizontal +position on the floor and showin' a pronounced indisposition to move. +The stranger casually remarks:</p> + +<p>"'Gents, this round's on me. I shore hates to disturb your peaceful +converse on a balmy evenin' like this yere in a manner so abrupt an' +sudden-like. But he had to get his, some time, an' somebody's +meditations would hev to be disturbed. This hyar varmint, gents, what is +now an unopposed candidate for a funeral pow-wow, was a little too +previous with his gun agin my younger brother. It's a case of plain +justice, gents; my brother was without weapons, and he—' pointing to +the figure on the floor, 'he knew it. Line up, gents, and give it a +name!'"</p> + +<p>"What did they do to the stranger?" asked Wilbur eagerly, divided +between admiration of the quickness of the action and consternation at +the gravity of the result.</p> + +<p>"They compliments him some on the celerity of his shootin', and feels a +heap relieved by Joe's perpetual absence. An' the moral o' this little +tale is that you're hittin' a fast clip for trouble when you go around +prompt and aggressive to announce your own virtoos. I'm not advancin' +any criticism as to your shinin' talents in the way of ridin', pard, but +you haven't been long enough in this here vale of tears to be what you +might call experienced."</p> + +<p>"I've ridden a whole lot," said Wilbur, who was touchy on the point and +proud of his horsemanship, "and while I don't say that there isn't a +horse I can't ride, I can say that I've never seen one yet. I started in +to ride pretty nearly as soon as I started to walk."</p> + +<p>"I don't want to mar your confidence none," replied the cowboy, "an' I +likes a game sport who'll bet his hand to the limit, though I generally +drops my stake on the other side. But if some mornin' you sh'd find the +ground rearin' up and hittin' you mighty sudden, don't forget that I +gave you a plain steer. Here's your cayuse."</p> + +<p>Wilbur had been a little disappointed that the cowboy should not have +shown up as ornamentally as he had expected, not wearing goatskin +"chaps" or rattlesnake hatbands, and not even having a gorgeous +saddle-blanket on his pony, but the boy felt partly rewarded when he saw +him just put his toe in the stirrup and seem to float into the saddle. +The pony commenced dancing about in the most erratic way, but Wilbur +noted that his companion seemed entirely unaware that the horse was not +standing still, although his antics would have unseated any rider that +the boy previously had seen. He was conscious, moreover, that his climb +into his own saddle was very different from that which he had witnessed, +but he really was a good rider for a boy, and felt quite at home as soon +as they broke into the loping canter of the cow-pony.</p> + +<p>"I understood," said Wilbur as they rode along, "that I should meet the +Ranger at the ranch. His name was given to me as Rifle-Eye Bill, because +I was told he had been a famous hunter before he joined the Service. I +thought at first you might be the Ranger, but he was described to me as +being very tall."</p> + +<p>"Which he does look some like a Sahaura cactus on the Arizona deserts," +said the range-rider, "an' I surely favor him none. But that mistake of +yours naterally brings it to me that I haven't what you might say +introdooced myself. Which my baptismal handle is more interestin' than +useful, an' I lays it by. So I'll just hand you the title under which I +usually trots, bein' 'Bob-Cat Bob,' ridin' for the Double Bar J."</p> + +<p>"Not having risen to any later title," said Wilbur good-humoredly, "I've +got to be satisfied with the one I started with. I'm generally called +Wilbur."</p> + +<p>"Which is sure unfamiliar to me. I opine it's a new brand on the range." +He flourished his sombrero in salute, so that his pony bucked twice and +then tried to bolt. Wilbur watched and envied him the absolute ease with +which he brought down the broncho to a quiet lope again.</p> + +<p>"I'm going to join the Forest Service," the boy explained, knowing that +according to the etiquette of the West no question would be asked about +his business, but that he would be expected to volunteer some statement, +"and my idea in coming to the ranch was to pick up a couple of horses +and go on to the forest with the Ranger. I understand the Supervisor, +Mr. Merritt, is very busy with some timber sales, and I didn't know +whether the Ranger would be able to get away."</p> + +<p>"I kind o' thought you might be headed for the Forest Service, since you +was goin' along with Rifle-Eye," said the cowboy. "An' if you're goin' +with him, you'll be all right."</p> + +<p>"The Service looks pretty good to me," said Wilbur.</p> + +<p>"I've no kick comin' agin the National Forests," said Bob-Cat, "we've +always been treated white enough. Of course, there's always some +soreheads who want to stampede the range and gets peevish when they're +balked, but I guess the Service is a good thing all round. It don't +appeal none to me, o' course. If I held all the cards, I'd rip down +every piece of barbed wire west of the Mississippi, let the sheepmen go +to the ranges beside the canals o' Mars or some other ekally distant +region, an' git back to the good old days o' the Jones 'n' Plummer +trail. But then, I sure enough realize that I'm not the only strikin' +feature o' the landscape an' there's others that might have a say."</p> + +<p>"I guess the present way is the best in the long run at that, for all I +hear," said Wilbur, "because every one now has a fair show. You can't +have cattle and sheep overrunning everywhere without absolutely ruining +the forests. Especially sheep. They can destroy a forest and make it as +though it had never existed."</p> + +<p>"I'm huggin' love of sheep none," said the cowboy, "an' my mental picter +of the lower regions is a place what smells strong of sheep. But I sure +miss my throw on any idee as to how they could do up a forest of big +trees."</p> + +<p>"They do, just the same."</p> + +<p>"How? Open her up, pard, an' explain. I'm listenin' mighty attentive."</p> + +<p>"This way," began the boy, remembering some of the talks he had heard at +the Ranger School. "When a dry year comes, if the sheep are allowed into +the forest, the grass, which is poor because of the dryness, soon gets +eaten down. Then the sheep begin to browse on the young shoots and +seedlings, and even will eat the leaves off the young saplings that they +can reach, thus destroying all the baby trees and checking the growth of +those that are a little more advanced. When this goes on for two or +three seasons all the young growth is gone. Since there are no saplings, +no young shoots, and no seedlings, the forest never recovers, but +becomes more like a park with stretches of grass between clumps of +trees. Then, when these trees die, there are no others to take their +place and the forest is at an end."</p> + +<p>"How about cattle?"</p> + +<p>"They're not nearly as bad. Cattle won't eat leaves unless they have to. +And they don't browse so close, nor pack down the ground as hard with +their hoofs. If there's grass enough to go round, cattle won't injure a +forest much, but, of course, the grazing has got to be restricted or +else the same sort of thing will happen that goes on when sheep are let +in."</p> + +<p>"Never knew before," said the boy's companion, "why I ought ter hate +sheep. Jest naterally they're pizen to me, but I never rightly figured +out why I allers threw them in the discard. Now I know. There's a heap +of satisfaction in that. It's like findin' that a man you sure disagreed +with in an argyment is a thunderin' sight more useful to the community +dead than he was alive. It don't alter your feelin's none, but it helps +out strong on the ensooin' explanations."</p> + +<p>"Are there many sheep out here?"</p> + +<p>"There's a tidy few. But it's nothin' like Montana. You ought ter get +Rifle-Eye Bill to tell you of the old days o' the sheep an' cattle +war. The debates were considerable fervent an' plenty frequent, an' a +Winchester or two made it seem emphatic a whole lot."</p> + +<p>"Was Rifle-Eye mixed up in it?"</p> + +<p>"Which he's allers been a sort of Florence Nightingale of the Rockies, +has old Rifle-Eye," was the reply. "I don't mean in looks—but if a +feller's shot up or hurt, or anythin' of that kind, it isn't long before +the old hunter turns up, takes him to some shack near by and persuades +somebody to look after him till he gets around again. An' we've got a +little lady that rides a white mare in these here Sierras who's a sure +enough angel. I don't want to know her pedigree, but when it comes to +angels, she's It. An' when she an' Rifle-Eye hitches up to do the +ministerin' act, you'd better believe the job's done right. I never +heard but of one man that ever said 'No' to Rifle-Eye, no matter what +fool thing he asked."</p> + +<p>"How was that?" asked Wilbur.</p> + +<p>"It was the wind-up of one o' these here little differences of opinion +on the sheep question, same as I've been tellin' you of. It happened +somewhar up in Oregon, although I've forgotten the name o' the ranch. +Rifle-Eye could tell you the story better'n I can, but he won't. It was +somethin' like this:</p> + +<p>"There was a big coulee among the hills, an', one summer, when there'd +been a prairie fire that wiped out a lot o' feed, a bunch o' cattle was +headed into this coulee. Three cowpunchers and a cook with the chuck +wagon made up the gang. But this yar cook was one o' them fellers what's +not only been roped by bad luck, but hog-tied and branded good and +plenty. He had been the boss of a ranch, a small one, but he'd fallen +foul o' the business end of a blizzard, an' he'd lost every blamed head +o' cattle that he had. He lost his wife, too."</p> + +<p>"How did she come in on it?"</p> + +<p>"It was this way. She heard, or thought she heard, some one callin' +outside, a little ways from the house. She s'posed, o' course, that it +was the men who had tackled the storm in the hope o' savin' some o' the +cattle, an' she ran out o' the door to give 'em an answerin' hail so as +they could git an idee as to the direction o' the house. But she hadn't +gone but a few steps when the wind caught her—leastways, that was how +they figured it out afterwards—and blew her along a hundred feet or so +before she could catch breath, and then she stumbled and fell. She got +up, sort o' dazed, most like, and tried to run back to the shack. But in +the blindin' snow nothin' o' the house could be seen, an' though she +tried to fight up in that direction against the wind, she must have gone +past it a little distance to the left. They didn't find her until two +days after when the blizzard had blown itself out, an' there she was, +stone dead, not more than a half a mile away from the house.</p> + +<p>"The boss was near crazy when they found her, an' he never was fit for +much afterwards. There was a child, only a little shaver then, who was +asleep in the house at the time his mother run out to answer the shout +she reckoned she heard. So, since the rancher wasn't anyways overstocked +on female relations, an' he had the kid to look after, the one-time boss +went out as a camp cook an' took the boy along. He was rustlin' the +chuck for this bunch I'm a-tellin' you about, that goes into the coulee.</p> + +<p>"By 'n' by, a week or so afterward, a herd o' sheep comes driftin' into +this same valley, bein' ekally short for feed, an' the herders knocks up +a sort o' corral an' looks to settle down. The cowpunchers pays 'em an +afternoon call, an' suggests that the air outside the coulee is a lot +healthier for sheep—an' sheepmen—an' that onless they makes up their +minds to depart, an' to make that departure a record-breaker for speed, +they'll make their relatives sure a heap mournful. The sheepmen replies +in a vein noways calculated to bring the dove o' peace hoverin' around, +an' volunteers as a friendly suggestion that the cattlemen had best send +to town and order four nice new tombstones before ringin' the curtain up +on any gladiatorial pow-wow. When the cowpunchers rides back, honors is +even, an' each side is one man short.</p> + +<p>"Now, this coulee, which is the scene of these here operations, is so +located that there's only one way out. Most things in life there's more, +but in this here particular coulee, the openin' plays a lone hand. As +the cattlemen got there first, and went 'way back to the end o' the +ravine, the sheepmen are nearer to what you might call the valley door. +If the cowpunchers could have made a get-away, it's a cinch that they'd +have headed for the ranch an' brought back enough men with them to make +their persuasion plenty urgent. But the herders ain't takin' any chances +of allowin' the other side to better their hand, an' when, one night, a +cowpuncher tries to rush it, they pots him as pretty as you please. The +cook, who's cuddlin' his Winchester at the time, fires at the flash and +disposes o' the herder, sort o' evenin' matters up. This leaves only one +cowpuncher and the cook. There's still three men at the herders' camp.</p> + +<p>"Then the cook, he indooces a bullet to become sufficient intimate with +one o' the herder's anatomy, but gits a hole in the leg himself an' is +laid up. The other cowpuncher runs the gauntlet an' gits out safe. He +hikes back the next day with a bunch o' boys, an' they follows up the +herders an' wipes out that camp for fair, an' stampedes the herd over +the nearest canyon. Then they circles back to the coulee to pick up the +cook.</p> + +<p>"When they gits there, they surely finds themselves up against evidences +of a tragedy. The cook, he's lyin' on the floor of the shack, dead as a +nail, an' near him is the kid, who's still holdin' a table-knife in his +hand, but who's lyin' unconscious from a wound in the head. The way they +dopes it out, there's been a free-for-all fight in the place between the +two remainin' herders an' the wounded cook, an' it looks some as if the +kid had tried to help his dad by jabbin' at the legs o' the herders with +a knife and been booted in the side o' the head to keep him quiet."</p> + +<p>"How old was the youngster, then, Bob-Cat?" asked Wilbur.</p> + +<p>"Seven or eight, I guess, maybe not so much," replied the other, "a +nice, bright little kid, so I've heard. But there was somethin' broke, I +reckon, by the blow he had, an' he never got over it. The boys took him +back to the ranch an' doctored him the best they knew how, but they was +buckin' fate an' had to quit, lettin' the kid git better or worse as it +might turn out."</p> + +<p>"But where does Rifle-Eye come in?"</p> + +<p>"This way. Just before round-up, Rifle-Eye comes along, showin' he has +the whole story salted down, though where he larned it gits me, and +proposes that sence it was the sheepmen that injured the lad, it's up to +them to look after him. At first the boys objects, sayin' that the kid +was a cowpuncher's kid, but Rifle-Eye convinces 'em that the youngster's +locoed for fair, that he's likely to stay that way for good an' all, and +sence they agrees they can't ever make anythin' out of him, they lets +him go.</p> + +<p>"Then Rifle-Eye, he takes this unfortunate kid to the man that owned +the sheep. He's a big owner, this man, and runs thirty or forty herds. +The old hunter—this was all before he was a Ranger, you know—he puts +it right up to the sheep-owner, who's a half-Indian, by the way, an' +tells him that he's got to look after the boy. The old skinflint says +'No,' and this here, as I was sayin', is the only time that any one ever +turned down old Rifle-Eye."</p> + +<p>"And what happened to the boy?" queried Wilbur.</p> + +<p>"The old hunter tries to shame this here sheep-owner into doin' the +right thing, but he didn't have any more shame in him than a turkey +buzzard; an' then he tries to bluff him an' says he'll make him keep the +kid, but the old sinner jest whined around an' wouldn't give any sort o' +satisfaction at all. So Rifle-Eye, he shakes the dust o' that house +off'n his feet so good an' hard that he mighty nearly shakes the nails +out of his boot-heels, an' hunts up a legal shark. Then an' there he +adopts this half-witted youngster, an' has kep' him ever sence."</p> + +<p>"How long ago was this?"</p> + +<p>"Fifteen years an' more, I reckon. The kid's big now, an' strong as a +bull moose, but he's a long way from bein' right in his head. He lives +up in the woods, a piece back here, an' I reckon you'll find Rifle-Eye +there as often as you will at his own cabin further along the range, +although he never sleeps indoors at either place."</p> + +<p>"Never sleeps indoors?"</p> + +<p>"That's a straight string. He's got a decent enough shack where the boy +is, but as soon as it gits dark, old Rifle-Eye he jest makes a pile o' +cedar boughs, builds up a fire, an' goes to sleep. For fifty years he +ain't slept under a roof summer or winter, an' when once he was in a +town over-night, which was about the boy, as I was tellin' ye, he had to +get up an' go on the roof to sleep. Lucky," added Bob-Cat with a grin, +"it was a flat roof."</p> + +<p>"Fifty years is a long time," commented the boy.</p> + +<p>"Old Rifle-Eye ain't any spring chicken. He shouldered a musket in the +Civil War, an' durin' the Indian mix-ups was generally found floatin' +around wherever the fun was thickest. He was mighty close friends with +the Pacific scout, old 'Death-on-th'-Trail,' who handed in his time at +Portland not long ago."</p> + +<p>"Handed in his time?" questioned Wilbur, then, as the meaning of the +phrase flashed upon him, "oh, yes, I see, you mean he died."</p> + +<p>"Sure, pard, died. You ought ter git Rifle-Eye Bill to spin you some +yarns about 'Death-on-th'-Trail.' He'll deny that he's any shakes +himself, but he'll talk about his old campmate forever."</p> + +<p>The cowboy pointed with his hand to a long, low group of buildings that +had just come within sight.</p> + +<p>"See, Wilbur," he said, "there's the Double Bar J."</p> + +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"> +<a name="IMAGE_7A" id="IMAGE_7A"></a> +<img src="images/image-7a.jpg" width="600" height="423" alt="HOW YOUNG FORESTS ARE DESTROYED." title="" /> +<span class="caption">HOW YOUNG FORESTS ARE DESTROYED.</span> +</div> + +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"> +<a name="IMAGE_7B" id="IMAGE_7B"></a> +<img src="images/image-7b.jpg" width="600" height="423" alt="HOW YOUNG FORESTS ARE DESTROYED." title="" /> +<span class="caption">HOW YOUNG FORESTS ARE DESTROYED.<br />Showing the way in which sheep and goats, having cropped the grass +close, will attack undergrowth.<br />Photographs by U. S. Forest Service.</span> +</div> + +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"> +<a name="IMAGE_8" id="IMAGE_8"></a> +<img src="images/image-8.jpg" width="600" height="386" alt="WHERE SHEEP ARE ALLOWED." title="" /> +<span class="caption">WHERE SHEEP ARE ALLOWED.<br />Example of meadow stretches in midst of heavily forested mountain +slopes.<br />Photograph by U. S. Forest Service.</span> +</div> + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> + +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_IV" id="CHAPTER_IV"></a>CHAPTER IV</h2> + +<h3>PICKING A LIVELY BRONCHO</h3> + + +<p>On seeing the ranch, Bob-Cat and Wilbur had put their ponies to a burst +of speed and in a few minutes they reached the corral. The buildings, +while comfortable enough, were far from pretentious, and even their +strangeness scarcely made up to the boy for the lack of the picturesque. +Then, of course, the fact that the cattle at that time of year were +scattered all over the range and consequently that none of them were in +sight, rendered it still less like his ideal of a cattle ranch, where he +had half expected to see thousands of long-horned cattle tossing their +heads the while that cowboys galloped around them shouting and firing +off pistols.</p> + +<p>In contrast with this, the dwelling, the bunk-house, the cooking shack, +and the other frame sheds, all of the neutral gray that unpainted wood +becomes when exposed to the weather, seemed very unexciting indeed. But +when the lad turned to the corral, he felt that there was compensation +there. Several hundred horses were in the enclosure, of many colors and +breeds, but the greater part of them Indian ponies, or containing a +strain of the mustang, and smaller and shaggier than the horses he had +been accustomed to ride in his Illinois home.</p> + +<p>The boy turned to his companion, his eyes shining with excitement.</p> + +<p>"Do you suppose that I can buy any of those horses that I want to?" he +said.</p> + +<p>"If you're totin' along a pile of dinero, you might," was the reply, +"but there's a few cayuses in there that would surely redooce a big roll +o' bills to pretty skinny pickin's. For example, this little bay I'm +ridin' now ain't any special wonder, an' maybe he's only worth about +fifty dollars, but you can't buy him for five hundred. I reckon, though, +you c'n trot away with most of 'em in there for ninety or a hundred +dollars apiece."</p> + +<p>"I hadn't expected to pay more than seventy or seventy-five," said +Wilbur, his native shrewdness coming to the front, "and I think I ought +to be able to pick up a good horse or two for that, don't you think?"</p> + +<p>"There's allers somethin' that ain't worth much to be got cheap," said +the cowboy, "but I don't look friendly none on payin' a cheap price for +a horse. Speakin' generally, there's somethin' that every feller likes a +whole lot, an' out here, where domestic life ain't our chief play, it's +mostly a horse. Leastways, when I hit the long trail, I'll be just as +sorry to leave some ponies behind as I will humans."</p> + +<p>"A horse can be a great chum," assented Wilbur. "So can a dog."</p> + +<p>"No dogs in mine," said Bob-Cat emphatically, "they reminds me too much +o' sheep. But when it comes to a horse, I tell ye, there's a lot more in +the deal than buyin' an animal to carry you; there's buyin' somethin' +that all the money in the world can't bring you sometimes—an' that's a +friend."</p> + +<p>Wilbur waited a moment without reply, and then the cowboy, deliberately +changing the topic to cloak any strain of sentiment which he thought he +might have been betrayed into showing, continued:</p> + +<p>"How about saddles?"</p> + +<p>"I'd been thinking about that," replied the boy, "and I thought I'd wait +until I got out here before deciding. You can't use an English +saddle-tree, of course, and I hate it anyway, and one like yours is too +big. Those lumbering Mexican saddles always look to me as if they were +as big a load for a little pony to carry as a man."</p> + +<p>"Sure, they're heavy. But you can't do any ropin' without them. If you +try 'n' rope on a small saddle the girth'll pretty near cut a pony in +two. But you ain't got any ropin' to do, so I sh'd think an army +saddle-tree would be about right. There's Rifle-Eye Bill comin' out of +the bunk-house now. Ask him. He'll know."</p> + +<p>Wilbur looked up, and saw emerging from the door of the bunk-house a +tall, gaunt mountaineer. He strolled over to the corral with a long, +loose-jointed stride.</p> + +<p>"Got him, all right, Bob-Cat, did you?" he said in a measured drawl, +then, turning to the boy, added: "Glad to see you, son."</p> + +<p>"I've been hearing all about you, sir," answered Wilbur, "and I'm +awfully glad to meet you here." He was about to dismount, but noting +that Bob-Cat had merely thrown a leg over the horn of his saddle, he +stayed where he was.</p> + +<p>The old Ranger looked him over critically and closely, so that Wilbur +felt himself flushing under the direct gaze, though he met the clear +gray eye of his new acquaintance without flinching. Presently the +latter turned to the range-rider.</p> + +<p>"What do you think of him?" he asked in a slow, curiously commanding +way.</p> + +<p>Bob-Cat squirmed uneasily.</p> + +<p>"You is sure annoyin'," he said in an aggrieved manner, "askin' me to go +on record so plumb sudden. I'm no mind-reader."</p> + +<p>There was a pause, but the Ranger quietly waited.</p> + +<p>"It's embarrassin'," said Bob-Cat, "to try an' trot out a verdic' on +snap-jedgment. I don't know."</p> + +<p>Rifle-Eye, quite unperturbed, looked at him steadily and inquiringly.</p> + +<p>"You know what you think," he said.</p> + +<p>"He's sure green," replied the cowboy, shrugging his shoulders in +protest, "an' he ain't much more humble-minded than a hen that's jest +laid an egg of unusooal size, but I reckon he's got the makin's."</p> + +<p>"It's a good thing to be green," said the old Ranger thoughtfully, +"nothin' grows much after it's dry, Bob-Cat. The heart's got to be green +anyway. Ye git hard to bend an' easy to break when ye're gettin' old."</p> + +<p>"Then it's a cinch you'll never get old," promptly responded the other.</p> + +<p>But the mountaineer continued talking, half to himself:</p> + +<p>"An' he's too sure of himself! Wa'al, he's young yet. I've seen a pile +o' sickness in my day, Bob-Cat, but that's about the easiest one to cure +there is."</p> + +<p>"What is?"</p> + +<p>"Bein' young. Well, son, ye'd better turn the pony in."</p> + +<p>The boy dismounted, and, half in pique at the dubious character given +him by Bob-Cat and half in thanks for the meeting at the station and the +ride, he turned to the cowboy, and said:</p> + +<p>"I'm glad I've 'got the makings' anyway, and I'm much obliged, Bob-Cat, +for all the yarns you told me on the trail. But, next time I come to the +ranch I'll try not to be as green, and I know I'll not be as young."</p> + +<p>The cowboy laughed.</p> + +<p>"It's no use tryin' to dodge Rifle-Eye," he said. "You stand about as +good a chance as if you was tryin' to sidestep a blizzard or parryin' +the charge from a Gatlin' gun. If he asks a question you can gamble +every chip in your pile that you're elected, and you've got to ante up +with the answer whether it suits your hand or no."</p> + +<p>Wilbur, following the suggestion of the Ranger, unsaddled his pony, +turned him into the corral, and hung his saddle on the fence. Then +together they went up to the house, where Wilbur met the boss, and after +a few moments' chat they returned to the corral.</p> + +<p>As the lad had come to the ranch especially for the purpose of buying a +couple of ponies, he was anxious to transact the business as quickly as +possible, and together with Bob-Cat and Rifle-Eye he scanned the horses +in the enclosure, endeavoring to display, as he did so, what little +knowledge of horseflesh he possessed. After the boy had commented on +several, Rifle-Eye pointed out first one and then a second which he had +previously decided on as being the best animals for the boy. But +Wilbur's eye was attracted to a fine sorrel, and, turning to Rifle-Eye, +he said decidedly:</p> + +<p>"I want that one!"</p> + +<p>The old Ranger, remarking quietly that it was a fine horse, but not +suitable to the purpose for which Wilbur wanted the animal, passed on to +the discussion of several other ponies near by, teaching the boy to +discern the fine points of a horse, not for beauty, but for service.</p> + +<p>But as soon as he had finished speaking, after a purely perfunctory +assent, Wilbur burst out again:</p> + +<p>"But, Rifle-Eye, I really want that sorrel most."</p> + +<p>"You really think you want him?"</p> + +<p>"Yes!"</p> + +<p>"You wouldn't if you knew a little more about horses, son," said the +Ranger. "It's all right to be sure what you want, but what you want is +to be sure that what you want is right."</p> + +<p>"Oh, I'm sure I'm right," answered the boy confidently.</p> + +<p>"You can't be too careful choosin' a horse," commented Rifle-Eye. +"Choosin' a horse is a good deal like pickin' out a sugar pine for +shakes. You know what shakes are?"</p> + +<p>"No, Rifle-Eye," answered the boy.</p> + +<p>"They're long, smooth, split sheets of wood that the old-timers used for +shingles. There's lots of sugar pine that'll make the finest kind o' +lumber, an' all of it's good for fuel, but there ain't one tree in a +hundred that'll split naturally an' easily into shakes. An' there ain't +more'n one man in a hundred as can tell when a tree will do. But when +you do get one just right, it's worth any ten other trees. An' the pine +that's good ain't because it's a pretty tree to look at, or an easy one +to cut down, or because of any other reason than that the grain's right. +Same way with a horse. It ain't for his looks, nor for his speed, nor +because he's easy to ride, nor for his strength you want him, but +because his grain's right."</p> + +<p>"Well, I'm sure that sorrel looks just right."</p> + +<p>"Do looks always tell?"</p> + +<p>"Oh, I can always tell a horse by his looks," replied Wilbur boastfully. +"Anyhow, I want him."</p> + +<p>"Persistent?" chuckled Bob-Cat, who was standing by enjoying every word, +"why, cockle-burs ain't nothin' to him."</p> + +<p>"But, supposin'," the old scout began gently, "I told you that the +sorrel was the worst you could have, not the best?"</p> + +<p>"But he ain't," broke in Bob-Cat, who could not bear to hear a friend's +pony harshly criticised, "that's one of Bluey's string, an' he allers +had good horses."</p> + +<p>"There—you hear," said Wilbur triumphantly.</p> + +<p>"I said—for the boy, Bob-Cat," answered the old Ranger firmly.</p> + +<p>"I—I suppose you would have good reasons," said Wilbur, answering the +old scout's question, "but I want him just the same, and I don't see why +I can't buy him, if he's for sale. It's my money!"</p> + +<p>"Sure, it's your money. An' the sorrel's a good horse," said the cowboy, +to whom the persistence of Wilbur was giving great delight.</p> + +<p>The Ranger slowly turned his head in silent rebuke, but although Bob-Cat +was conscious of it, he was enjoying the fun too much to stop.</p> + +<p>"You know he couldn't ride the sorrel, Bob-Cat," said Rifle-Eye +reproachfully.</p> + +<p>"But I can ride him, I know," said Wilbur. "I'm a good rider, really I +am. And he looks gentle, besides. He is gentle, isn't he, Bob-Cat?"</p> + +<p>"He's playful enough," was the reply, "some like a kitten, an' he surely +is plenty restless in his habits. But where he shines is nerves. Why, +pard, he c'd make a parcel of females besieged by a mouse look as if +they was posin' for a picter, they'd be so still by comparison. But he's +gentle, all right."</p> + +<p>"I wouldn't want to try it if he was vicious, Rifle-Eye," said the boy +appealingly, "but I really can ride, and he looks like a good horse."</p> + +<p>"Are you buyin' this horse for your own pleasure or the work o' the +Service? You're goin' to do your ridin' on my range, an' I reckon you'll +admit I have some say."</p> + +<p>"But I can break him to the work of the Service. Do let me try him!" +Wilbur's persistence appeared in every look and word. "I don't see why I +can't try, anyway, and then if I can't do it, there's no harm done."</p> + +<p>"Can you throw a rope?" queried the Ranger.</p> + +<p>"No," returned the boy promptly. "I never learned. But I can try."</p> + +<p>"If you can't rope, how do you expect to saddle him? These ain't farm +horses that you c'n harness or saddle while they eat oats out of your +hand." He turned to the cowboy. "Can the sorrel be saddled without +ropin'?"</p> + +<p>"Bluey does," was the reply, "but I don't know that he'll let me."</p> + +<p>"Won't you saddle him for me, Bob-Cat? I know I can ride him if I have a +fair show."</p> + +<p>The range-rider turned to the old Ranger.</p> + +<p>"How about it?" he said. "The kid'll hunt leather for a while and then +eat grass. But there's nothin' mean in the sorrel, an' he won't get +hurt."</p> + +<p>"I'll ride him," said Wilbur stoutly.</p> + +<p>"You might, at that," rejoined Bob-Cat. "He's a game little sport, +Rifle-Eye," he added, turning to the tall figure beside him, "why not +let him play his hand out? You can't be dead sure how the spots will +fall. Sure, I've twice seen an Eastern maverick driftin' into a faro +game, an' by fools' luck cleanin' up the bank."</p> + +<p>"If a man's a fool who depends on luck, what kind of a fool is the man +who depends on fools' luck? You ain't playin' a square deal, Bob-Cat, in +supportin' the lad to go on askin' to do what ain't good for him. But +seein' you force my hand, why, you'd better go ahead now."</p> + +<p>"I didn't force your hand none," replied the other, "I was merely +throwin' out a suggestion."</p> + +<p>"If I refuse the boy somethin' another man says is all right, doesn't +that make it look as ef it was meanness in me? An' he goin' to work with +me, too! What's the use o' sayin' that you ain't forcin' my hand? Givin' +advice, Bob-Cat, ain't any go-as-you-please proposition; it's got to be +thought out. Feelin's don't allers point the right trail to jedgment, +an', as often as not, the blazes lead the wrong way. You're all right +in your own way, Bob-Cat, but you're shy on roots, and your idees gets a +windfall every time an extra puff comes along. You're like the trees +settlers forgets about when they cuts on the outside of a forest an' +ruins the inside."</p> + +<p>"How is that?" asked Wilbur, anxious to divert the stream of Rifle-Eye's +criticism from the cowboy, who had got himself into trouble defending +him. "I didn't know there was any difference between a tree on the +outside of a forest and one on the inside."</p> + +<p>"Wa'al, then, I guess you're due to learn right now. If there's a tree +of any size, standin' out by itself on a mountain side, with plenty of +leaves, an' a big wind comes along, you c'n see easy enough that she +presents a heap of surface to the wind. An' when a mountain gale gets up +and blows fer fair, there's a pressure of air on that tree amountin' to +several tons."</p> + +<p>"Tons?" queried Bob-Cat incredulously.</p> + +<p>"Tons," answered the old Banger. "A tree needs to have some strength in +order to hold up its end. There's three ways o' doin' it. One is by +havin' a lot more give in the fibers, more elastic like, so that the +tree'll bend in the wind an' not get snapped off; another is by puttin' +out a lot o' roots an' shovin' 'em in deep an' at the same time havin' a +trunk that's plenty stout; an' the third is the thickenin' o' the trunk, +right near the ground, where the greatest part o' the strain comes. An' +all the various kinds o' trees works this out in different ways. But +nothin's ever wasted, an'—"</p> + +<p>"Oh, I see now," broke in Wilbur. "You're going to say that the trees +which don't grow on the outside of a forest don't have to waste vitality +into these forms of resistance."</p> + +<p>"That's right. A tree that grows in a ravine, where there is little +chance of a high wind, an' where light is scarce an' hard to get, such a +tree will have a shallow root system an' a spindlin' trunk, all the +growth havin' gone to height, an' a tree in the center of a forest is +often the same way. The wind can't git through the forest, an' so the +trees don't need ter prop themselves against it."</p> + +<p>"Talk about yer eddicated trees!" ejaculated the cowboy, "which colleges +is a fool to them."</p> + +<p>"It's true enough, Bob-Cat, just the same. But supposin' a belt on the +outside o' the forest is cut down, then the inner trees, thus exposed, +haven't any proper weapons to fight the wind, an' they go down."</p> + +<p>"Doesn't it take a very high wind to blow down some of these big trees?" +asked Wilbur.</p> + +<p>"Some kinds it does," said the Ranger, "but there's others that go down +pretty easy, lodge-pole pine, fer instance. But a tree doesn't have to +be blown down to be ruined. Even if a branch is blown off—an' you know +how often that happens—insects and fungi get into the wound of the tree +and decay follows."</p> + +<p>"But you can't persuade the wind none," objected Bob-Cat. "If she's +goin' to blow, she's goin' to blow, an' that's all there is to it."</p> + +<p>"No, it ain't any use arguin' with a fifty-mile breeze, that's sure. But +you can keep the inside trees from bein' blown down by leavin' uncut the +deep-rooted trees on the outside. If you wanted a good big bit of +timber, an' could cut it from a tree on the outside o' the forest, you'd +take it first because it was handiest, wouldn't you?"</p> + +<p>"I sure would."</p> + +<p>"Yet, you see, it would ha' been the worst thing you could do. An' as I +started out to say, that's where you get in wrong doin' things without +thinkin'. Just like this ridin' idee to-day. By urgin' on the lad's +nateral desire you make it hard fer him an' fer me."</p> + +<p>"All right, Rifle-Eye," said Bob-Cat good-humoredly, "you've got me. I +reckon I passes up this hand entire." He nodded and began to stroll +away.</p> + +<p>But Wilbur called him back.</p> + +<p>"Oh, Bob-Cat," he cried, "aren't you going to saddle him for me now?"</p> + +<p>The cowboy turned and grinned.</p> + +<p>"Which you'd make tar an' feathers look sick for stickin' to a thing." +Then, reading a grudging assent from Rifle-Eye, he continued: "Yep, I'll +go an' saddle," and sauntered into the corral.</p> + +<p>In a few minutes he came back, leading the sorrel. He was saddled and +Bob-Cat had shortened up the stirrups. Wilbur jumped forward eagerly, +put his foot in the stirrup, and was up like a flash. The sorrel never +moved. The boy shook the reins a little and clucked his tongue against +his teeth without any apparent result. Then Wilbur dug his heels into +the pony's ribs.</p> + +<p>Things began to happen. The sorrel went straight up in the air with all +four feet, coming down with the legs stiff, giving Wilbur a jar which +set every nerve twitching as though he had got an electric shock. But +he kept his seat. Then the sorrel began pacing forward softly with an +occasional sudden buck, each of which nearly threw him off and at most +of which he had to "hunt leather," or in other words, catch hold of the +saddle with his hands. Still he kept his seat.</p> + +<p>Finding that these simpler methods did not avail, the sorrel began a +little more aggressive bucking, fore and aft, "sun-fishing" and +"weaving," and once or twice rearing up so straight that Wilbur was +afraid the sorrel would fall over backwards on him, and he had heard of +riders being killed that way. But he stole a glance at Rifle-Eye, and, +seeing that the old Ranger was looking on quite unperturbed, he realized +that there was no great danger. And still he kept his seat.</p> + +<p>But as the sorrel warmed up to his work the boy began to realize that he +had not the faintest chance of being able to wear the pony down. It was +now only a question of how long he could stick on. He knew he would be +done if the sorrel started to roll, but as yet the beast had shown no +inclination that way. But as the bucks grew quicker and more jerky, +Wilbur began to wonder within himself whether he would prefer to pitch +over the pony's head or slide off over his tail. Suddenly, with a bound, +the pony went up in the air and gave a double wriggle as he came down +and Wilbur found himself on the ground before he knew what had happened. +The sorrel, who, as Bob-Cat had said, was a gentle beast, stood quietly +by, and the boy always afterwards declared that he could hear the horse +chuckle.</p> + +<p>The boy got up abashed and red in the face, because several other +ranchmen had come up and were enjoying his confusion, but he tried to +put a good face on it, and said:</p> + +<p>"That's a bucker for fair."</p> + +<p>"No," responded Bob-Cat, "that isn't bucking," and he swung himself into +the saddle.</p> + +<p>The sorrel commenced plunging and rearing again, this time with greater +vigor. But Bob-Cat, taking a little bag of tobacco and some cigarette +papers out of his pocket, quietly poured out some of the tobacco on the +paper, rolled it carefully, and then lighted it, keeping his seat on the +bucking broncho quite easily the while. This done, he dismounted, +turning to the boy as he did so.</p> + +<p>"She's easy enough. There's lots o' the boys, like Bluey, fer example, +who really can ride," he continued, "that 'd just split with laughin' +at the idee o' me showin' off in the saddle. I c'n rope with the best o' +them, but I'm no buster. And some o' these here critters you've got to +ride. See that big roan in there?"</p> + +<p>Wilbur followed the direction of his finger and nodded.</p> + +<p>"They call her 'Squealin' Bess,' an' you couldn't pay me to get on her +back. Bluey c'n ride her; he's done it twice; but you c'n bet your last +blue chip that he doesn't do it fer fun."</p> + +<p>Wilbur turned to the old Ranger who had been standing silently by +through the performance.</p> + +<p>"I'm much obliged, Rifle-Eye," he said, "but I'd like to buy that sorrel +just the same and learn to ride him."</p> + +<p>For the first time the old Ranger smiled.</p> + +<p>"You're somethin' like a crab, Wilbur," he said, "that grabs a stick +viciously with his claw an' won't let go even when he's hauled up out o' +the water. You c'n buy the sorrel if you want to, but he won't be any +use to you up in the forest. Broncho-bustin' is an amusement you c'n +keep for your leisure hours. But I'm thinkin', son, from what I know of +the work you'll have to do, that you'll mostly be tired enough after a +day's work to want to rest a while. But if you're sot, I s'pose you're +sot. An' I'm old enough to know that it's no use hammerin' a mule when +he's got his forelegs spread. Get whatever horses you like, I've got a +saddle for you up at the bunk-house, an' you c'n meet me beyond the +corral sunup to-morrow mornin'."</p> + +<p>He nodded to the boys and turned on his heel, walking off in the +direction of the river. Seeing that the fun was over the boys scattered, +and Wilbur, finding that his friend Bob-Cat was going to stay at the +ranch over-night, attached himself to him. But as soon as supper was +over, the lad, finding himself stiffer than he had expected from his +battle with the sorrel, partly because he had not been riding constantly +for a couple of years, was glad to go to his bunk, listening to the +breezy Western talk of the men and the yarns of cattle and of horses +that they had to tell. He hardly knew that he had fallen asleep when +Bob-Cat shook him, saying:</p> + +<p>"Better tumble up, bub. Rifle-Eye is sure an early bird. He's some +chanticleer, believe me. He's plumb convinced that if he ain't awake and +up to greet the sun, it won't rise."</p> + +<p>Wilbur laughed and "tumbled up" accordingly.</p> + +<p>At breakfast, over the plentiful food served on tin plates and in tin +mugs, Rifle-Eye was entirely silent, uttering never a word and paying no +attention to any allusion about horses. Right after the meal Wilbur went +down to the corral, saddled one of his two new horses, put a leading +bridle on the other, and, after bidding Bob-Cat and the boys "Good-by," +started for the point where he was to meet the Ranger.</p> + +<p>As he rode up, the old frontiersman scanned carefully the two horses the +boy had with him and his face cleared.</p> + +<p>"What horses are those?" he asked.</p> + +<p>"Oh, just a couple I got for the forest work," answered Wilbur with +overdone carelessness.</p> + +<p>They rode on in silence a few rods, then the old Ranger spoke again.</p> + +<p>"Don't ever be afraid o' lettin' on you've made a mistake, son," he +said; "the more mistakes you make the more you'll know. There's only one +thing to remember, don't make the same mistake twice."</p> + +<p>"I'll try not," said the boy.</p> + +<p>The Ranger reined up beside the lad, and, reaching out his long, gaunt +hand, patted the neck of the pony on which Wilbur was riding.</p> + +<p>"They're half-sisters, those two," he said. "I raised 'em from colts +myself. I rode the mother over these very trails, many and many's the +time. This one is called Kit, after her."</p> + +<p>Wilbur flushed at the remembrance of the manner in which before he had +slighted the old scout's choice.</p> + +<p>"Oh, Rifle-Eye," he said penitently, "if I'd only known!"</p> + +<p>"You'll prize them more now," the Ranger said.</p> + +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"> +<a name="IMAGE_9" id="IMAGE_9"></a> +<img src="images/image-9.jpg" width="600" height="374" alt="COWBOYS AT THE ROUND-UP." title="" /> +<span class="caption">COWBOYS AT THE ROUND-UP.<br />The riders of the Double Bar J Ranch bunching up their cattle in the +National Forest.<br />Photograph by U. S. Forest Service.</span> +</div> + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> + +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_V" id="CHAPTER_V"></a>CHAPTER V</h2> + +<h3>A TUSSLE WITH A WILD-CAT</h3> + + +<p>"Bob-Cat was telling me," said Wilbur, as with the Ranger he rode +through the arid and silvered grayness of the Mohave desert and reached +the foothill country, "that before you entered the Service you were +pretty well known as a hunter."</p> + +<p>"Wa'al, son," the mountaineer replied, "I reckon I've done some kind o' +huntin' for fifty years on end. But there's not much huntin' in this +part o' the country."</p> + +<p>"No," said Wilbur, looking around him, "I guess there isn't."</p> + +<p>The road ran along a little gully with a small stream shaded by scrub +oak, but arising from this and similar gullies, in great rounded bosses, +heaved the barren slopes, the grass already turning yellow and too +sparse to cloak the red earth below.</p> + +<p>"Yet," said Rifle-Eye, pointing with his finger as he spoke, "there's a +desert fox."</p> + +<p>Wilbur strained his eyes to see, but the unfamiliar growth of cacti, +sage-brush, palo verde, and the dusty-miller plants made quick vision +difficult. In a moment, however, he caught sight of the little +reddish-gray animal running swiftly and almost indistinguishable from +its surroundings.</p> + +<p>"But up there?" queried the boy, pointing in front of them. The road +wound onward toward the middle Sierras, thickly wooded with oak and +digger pine, and, of course, the chapparal, and towering to the clouds +rose the mighty serrated peaks of the range, where magnificent forests +of pine, fir, and cedar swept upwards to the limits of eternal snow. "Up +there the hunting must be wonderful."</p> + +<p>"Among the mount'ns!" said the old hunter slowly. "Wa'al, up there, you +see, is home."</p> + +<p>"You certainly can't complain about the looks of your home, then," said +the boy, "for that's just about the finest I've ever seen."</p> + +<p>"'There's no place like home,'" quoted Rifle-Eye quietly, "but I ain't +ever feelin' that my home's so humble. It ain't a question of its bein' +good enough fer me, it's a question o' whether I'm good enough fer it."</p> + +<p>"It makes quite a house," said Wilbur, following the old mountaineer's +line of thought.</p> + +<p>"I've never lived in any smaller house than that," responded Rifle-Eye, +"an' I reckon now I never will. There's some I know that boasts of +ownin' a few feet o' space shut in by a brick wall. Not for me. My house +is as far as my eyes c'n see, an' from the ground to the sky."</p> + +<p>Wilbur was silent for a moment, feeling the thrill of Nature in the old +man's speech.</p> + +<p>"It's to be my home, too," he said gently.</p> + +<p>Rifle-Eye smiled at the lad.</p> + +<p>"I don't know that I'm quite the oldest inhabitant," he said, "but I +sure am the oldest Ranger in the Service, an' all I c'n say is, 'Make +yerself to home.'"</p> + +<p>"All right," said Wilbur promptly, "I'll take that as an official +welcome from the Sierras, and I will. But," he added, "you were going to +tell me about your hunting. I should think it would be great sport."</p> + +<p>"Son," said Rifle-Eye somewhat sharply, "I never killed a harmless +critter 'for sport,' as you call it, in my life."</p> + +<p>"But I thought," gasped Wilbur in astonishment, "that you were hunting +nearly all the time, before you started in as Ranger."</p> + +<p>"So I was," was the quiet reply.</p> + +<p>"But—but I don't quite see—" Wilbur stopped lamely.</p> + +<p>"I said before," resumed the old hunter, "that I never killed a harmless +critter onless I had to. Neither have I. Varmints, o' course, is a +different matter. I've shot plenty o' them, an' once in a while I've had +ter kill fer food. But just shootin' for the sake o' shootin' is the +trick of a coward or a fool or a tenderfoot or a mixture of all three. +It's plumb unnecessary, an' it's dead wrong."</p> + +<p>"You mean shooting deer and so forth?"</p> + +<p>"I mean just that, son, if the shootin's only fer antlers an' what these +here greenhorns calls 'trophies.' If venison is needed, why, I ain't got +nothin' to say. A man's life is worth more than a deer's when he needs +food, but a man's conceit ain't worth more than a deer's life."</p> + +<p>"How about bear, then, and trapping for skins?" asked the boy.</p> + +<p>"I said 'harmless critters.' Now, a bear ain't harmless, leastways, not +as you'd notice it. Bear will take young stock, an' they're particularly +partial to young pig, an' down among these here foothills we've been +passin' through there's a lot o' shiftless hog-rustlers as depends on +pork fer a livin'. As for bearskins, why, o' course you use the pelts. +What's the idee o' leavin' them around? It ain't any kind o' good tryin' +to spare an animal's feelin's when he's plenty good an' dead. But I've +made this here section of the Sierras pretty hot for wolves."</p> + +<p>"I heard down at the ranch," the boy remarked, "that you had bagged +forty-seven wolves last season."</p> + +<p>"I did have a good year," assented the Ranger, "an', of course, I can't +give much time to it. But I reckon I've disposed of more'n a thousand +wolves in my day, one way and another. An' as I look at it, that's +makin' pretty good use of time."</p> + +<p>"Are wolves worse than bear?" queried Wilbur surprisedly.</p> + +<p>"They do a lot more harm in the long run. Cattlemen reckon that a wolf +will get away with about four head a year. Myself, I think that's +pressin' the average some; I'd put it at somewhere between two an' +three. But it's generally figured at four."</p> + +<p>"I didn't know that wolves, lone wolves, would attack cattle."</p> + +<p>"It's calves an' yearlin's mostly that they go for. It ain't often that +you see a wolf tacklin' anythin' bigger'n a two-year-old. But if you +figure that a wolf gets rid o' four head a year, an' inflicts himself on +a sufferin' community for a space of about ten years, that's somewhere +in the neighborhood o' forty head. A thousand wolves means about forty +thousand head of cattle, or pretty nigh a million dollars' worth of +stock."</p> + +<p>"The beef you've saved by killing wolves," commented Wilbur, "would feed +quite a town."</p> + +<p>"Forty thousand is a tolerable sized bunch. An' that's without figurin' +on the wolf cubs there would have been durin' all those years from the +older ones whose matrimonial expectations I disappointed plenty abrupt. +An' it makes a pile o' difference to cattlemen to know they c'n send a +herd grazin' on the national forest, an' be fairly sure they won't lose +much by varmints."</p> + +<p>"It surely must," said the boy. "But I hadn't realized that wolves were +such a danger."</p> + +<p>"I wouldn't go to say that they was dangerous. An old gray wolf, if you +corner him, is surly an' savage, an' will fight anythin' at any odds. +Out on the Barren Grounds they're bad, but around the Sierras I ain't +heard o' them attackin' humans but twice, an' they was children, lost in +the woods. I figure the kids had wandered around till they petered out, +an' then, when they were exhausted, the wolves got 'em. But I've never +heard of a wolf attackin' a man anywhere in the Rockies."</p> + +<p>"But I thought wolves ran in packs often."</p> + +<p>"Not in the United States, son, so far as I've heard of. I knew a +Russian trapper, though, who meandered down this way from Alaska in the +early days. He used to spin a lot o' yarns about the Siberian wolves +runnin' in packs an' breakfastin' freely off travelers. But he seemed to +think that it was the horses the wolves were after chiefly, although +they weren't passin' up any toothsome peasant that happened along."</p> + +<p>"And do wolves attack horses here, too?"</p> + +<p>"Not on the trail, that fashion. But they're some partial to colts."</p> + +<p>"How about coyotes?"</p> + +<p>"They're mean critters an' they give a pesky lot o' trouble, although +they bother sheep more'n cattle. But a few husky dogs will keep coyotes +at a distance, though they'll watch a chance an' sneak off with a +young lamb or any sheep what is hurt an' has fallen behind the herd. But +they don't worry us here such a great deal, they keep mostly to the +plains an' the prairie country."</p> + +<p>Saying this, the Ranger pulled up at the door of a shack lying a short +distance from the road and gave a hail. Immediately there stepped from +the door one of the largest women Wilbur had ever seen. Though her hair +was gray, and she was angular and harsh of feature, yet, standing well +over six feet and quite erect, she seemed to fit in well under the +shadow of the Sierras.</p> + +<p>"I reckon you've some bacon, Susan?" was the Ranger's greeting as he +swung himself off his horse. Wilbur followed suit.</p> + +<p>"There's somethin' awful would have to happen to a pile o' hogs," was +the reply, "when you came by here an' couldn't get a bite."</p> + +<p>By this time a swarm of children had come out, and Wilbur, seeing that +the Ranger had simply resigned his horse into the hands of one of the +larger boys, did likewise and followed his guide into the house.</p> + +<p>"I wasn't sure if I'd find you here, Susan," said the old scout when +they were seated at a simple meal. "I thought you were goin' to move +into town."</p> + +<p>"I did," she replied. "I stayed thar jest two weeks. An' they was two +weeks o' misery. These yar towns is too crowded for me. Now, hogs, I've +been used to 'em all my life, an' I don't mind how many's around. But it +only takes a few folks to make me feel as if I was real crowded."</p> + +<p>"Do you prefer hogs to people?" questioned Wilbur, smiling.</p> + +<p>"Not one by one, bub, o' course," came the slow reply, "but when it +comes to a crowd o' both, I'm kind o' lost with folks. Everybody's busy +an' they don't care nothin' about you, an' it makes you-all feel no +'count. An' the noise is bewilderin'. Have you ever been in a city?"</p> + +<p>Wilbur admitted that he had.</p> + +<p>"Well, then," she said, "ye'll know what I mean. But out here, there's +more room, like, an' I know I'm bigger'n my hogs." Following which, +Susan launched into a long description of her favorite porkers, which +continued almost without cessation until it was time for the two to be +on the trail again.</p> + +<p>"That's a queer woman," said Wilbur when they were in the saddle again +and out of hearing of the shack.</p> + +<p>"She's a good one," answered the Ranger. "Her son, by the way, is a +member o' the legislature, an' a good lawyer, an' she's made him what he +is. But she ain't the city kind."</p> + +<p>"Not with all those children," said Wilbur. "She'd have to hire a block +to keep them all."</p> + +<p>"Those ain't her own children," replied the Ranger, "not a bit of it. If +a youngster gits orphaned or laid up she just says 'Pork's plenty, send +'em to me.' An' I generally do. Other folks do, too, an' quite a few o' +them hev been brought her by the 'little white lady' you've been hearing +about. She's fonder o' children than any woman I ever saw, is Susan. But +she won't talk kids, she'll only talk hogs."</p> + +<p>"That's pretty fine work, I think," said the boy. "But I should imagine +the youngsters wouldn't have much of a chance. It isn't any better than +a backwoods life, away out there."</p> + +<p>The old Ranger, usually so slow and deliberate in his movements, turned +on him like a flash.</p> + +<p>"The meanest thing in this world," he said, "is not bein' able to see or +willin' to see what some one else has done for you. There ain't a home +in all these here United States that don't owe its happiness to the +backwoodsman. You can't make a country civilized by sittin' in an office +an' writin' the word 'civilized' on the map. Some one has got to get out +an' do it, an' keep on doin' it till it's done. It was the man who had +nothin' in the world but a wife, a rifle, an' an ax who made America."</p> + +<p>"I had forgotten for the moment," said the boy, a little taken off his +feet by the sudden energy and the flashing speech of the usually +impassive mountaineer.</p> + +<p>"So does mighty near every one else 'forget for the moment.' But if the +backwoodsman forgot for the moment he was likely to be missin' his +scalp-lock, or if he tried to take a holiday it meant his family would +go hungry. He never forgot his children or his children's children, but +they're none too fond o' rememberin' him.</p> + +<p>"Everythin' you have now, he first showed you how. If he wanted a house, +he had to build it; if he wanted bread, he had to raise the grain, +grind, an' bake it; if he wanted clothin', he had to get skins, cure, +an' sew 'em. But he never had to hunt for honor an' for courage; he +brought those with him; an' he didn't have to get any book-larnin' to +teach him how to make his cabin a home, an' his wife an' his children +were allers joys to him, not cares. They were men! An' what do you +reckon made 'em men?"</p> + +<p>"The hardships of the life, I suppose," hazarded Wilbur.</p> + +<p>"Not a bit of it; it was the forest. The forest was their nurse in +infancy, their playmate when they were barefooted kids runnin' around +under the trees, their work by day, an' their home when it was dark. +They lived right down with Nature, an' they larned that if she was +rugged, she was kind. They became rugged an' kind, too. An' that's what +the right sort of American is to this day."</p> + +<p>"A lot of our best statesmen in early days were from the newly cleared +settlements; that's a fact," said Wilbur thoughtfully, "right up to the +Civil War."</p> + +<p>"An' through it!" added the Ranger. "How about Abe Lincoln?"</p> + +<p>Wilbur thought to himself that perhaps "backwoodsman" was not quite a +fair idea of the great President's Illinois upbringing, but he thought +it wiser not to argue the point to no profit.</p> + +<p>"But it's all different now," continued Rifle-Eye a trifle sadly, +"things have changed an' the city's beginnin' to have a bigger hold than +the forest. An' the forest still needs, an' I reckon it allers will +need, the old kind o' men. Once we had to fight tooth an' nail agin the +forest jest to get enough land to live on, an' now we've got to fight +jest as hard for the forest so as there'll be enough of it for what we +need. In this here country you can't ever get away from the +woods-dweller, whether he's backwoodsman or Forester, or whatever you +call him—the man who can depend on himself an' live his life wherever +there's sky overhead an' ground underfoot an' trees between.</p> + +<p>"They're the discoverers of America, too. Oh, yes, they are," he +continued, noting Wilbur's look of contradiction. "It wasn't Columbus or +Amerigo or any o' the floatin' adventurers who first saw a blue splotch +o' land on the horizon that discovered America. It was the men who +conquered the forest, who found all, did all, an' became all that the +life demanded, that really brought into bein' America an' the +Americans."</p> + +<p>The Ranger stopped as suddenly as he had begun, and, touching his horse +lightly with the spur, went on ahead up the trail. Evidently he was +thinking of the old times and the boy had wisdom enough not to disturb +him. As the afternoon drew on the foothills were left behind and the +open road became more and more enclosed, until at last it was simply a +trail through the forest. The shadows were lengthening and it was +drawing on toward evening, when the Ranger halted beside a little +ravine, densely wooded with yellow pine, incense cedar, and white fir. +Wilbur was tired and his horses, fresh to the trail, were showing signs +of fatigue, so he was glad to stop.</p> + +<p>"I don't know how you feel about it," said the Ranger, "but I reckon +I'll camp here. There's a good spring a couple of hundred feet down +stream. But you ain't used to this sort o' thing, an' maybe you'd better +keep on the trail for another half-mile till you come to a little +settlement. Somebody can put you up, I reckon."</p> + +<p>"No need to," said the boy, "I'll camp here with you."</p> + +<p>"Maybe you ain't used to sleepin' on the ground."</p> + +<p>"I guess I can stand it, if you can," replied Wilbur promptly.</p> + +<p>"Wa'al, I reckon I can," said the Ranger, "seein' that I always have an' +always do."</p> + +<p>Wilbur had never camped in the open before without a tent or shelter of +some kind, but he would not for the world have had his Ranger think that +he was in the least disconcerted. Neither, to do him justice, was he, +but rather anticipating the night under the open sky with a good deal of +pleasure.</p> + +<p>After the horses were unsaddled and hobbled, Rifle-Eye told Wilbur to +get the beds ready. The boy, greatly pleased with himself that he knew +how to do this without being told, picked up his ax and started for the +nearest balsam. But he found himself in somewhat of a difficulty. The +white fir grew to a much larger tree than the Balm-of-Gilead he had +known in the East, and the lower branches were tough. So he chopped down +a young tree near, scarcely more than a sapling.</p> + +<p>A moment later he heard the Ranger call to him.</p> + +<p>"How many trees of that size do you reckon you'll want?" he asked.</p> + +<p>"Oh, they're only just saplings," the boy replied, "five or six ought to +do."</p> + +<p>"They'll make five or six fine trees some day, won't they?" queried the +old woodsman.</p> + +<p>"Yes, Rifle-Eye, they will," answered the boy, flushing at his lack of +thoughtfulness. "I'd better take only one, and that a little bigger, +hadn't I?"</p> + +<p>"An' one that's crooked. Always take a tree that isn't goin' to make +good timber when you're not cuttin' for timber."</p> + +<p>Wilbur accordingly felled a small white fir near by, having had his +first practical lesson of forest economy on his own forest, stripped the +tree of its fans or flattest branches and laid them on the ground. A +thickness of about six inches, he found, was enough to make the beds +wonderfully springy and comfortable.</p> + +<p>In the meantime he found that Rifle-Eye was getting a fireplace ready, +using for the purpose some flat stones which lay conveniently near by. +Wilbur, stepping over a tiny rivulet which ran into the creek, noted a +couple of stones apparently just suited for the making of a rough +fireplace and brought them along. The Ranger looked at them.</p> + +<p>"What kind o' stone do you call that?" he asked.</p> + +<p>"Granite," said Wilbur immediately.</p> + +<p>"An' you took them out o' the water?"</p> + +<p>"Yes," answered the boy.</p> + +<p>"An' what happens when you build a fire between granite stones?"</p> + +<p>"I don't know, Rifle-Eye. What does?"</p> + +<p>"They explode sometimes, leastways, when they're wet inside. Don't +forget that," he added as he put the stones aside. "Now," he continued, +"go down to the spring an' fill this pot with water, an' I'll have a +fire goin' an' some grub sizzlin' by the time you get back. The spring +is about two hundred feet downstream and about twenty feet above the +water. You can't miss it."</p> + +<p>Wilbur took the aluminum pot and started for the spring. He had not gone +half the distance when he noted a stout crotched stick such as he had +been used to getting when he camped out in the middle West for the +purpose of hanging the cooking utensils on over the fire. So he picked +it up and carried it along with him. Presently the gurgling of water +told him that he was nearing the spring, and a moment later he saw the +clearing through the trees. But, suddenly, a low snarling met his ears, +and he halted dead at the edge of the clearing.</p> + +<p>There, before him, on the ground immediately beside the spring, crouched +a large wild-cat, the hairy tips of her ears twitching nervously. Under +her claws was a rabbit, evidently just caught, into which the wild-cat +had just sunk her teeth when the approach of the boy was heard. At first +Wilbur could not understand why she had not sprung into the woods with +her prey at the first distant twig-snapping which would betoken his +approach. But as he looked more closely he saw that this was precisely +what the cat had tried to do, but that in the jerk the rabbit had been +caught and partly impaled on a tree root that projected above the +ground, and for the moment the cat could not budge it.</p> + +<p>Wilbur was utterly at a loss to know what to do. He had been told that +wild-cats would never attack any one unless they had been provoked to +fight, and he found himself very unwilling to provoke this particular +specimen. The cat stood still, her eyes narrowed to mere slits, the ears +slightly moving, and the tip of the tail flicking from side to side in +quick, angry jerks. There was menace in every line of the wild-cat's +pose.</p> + +<p>The boy had his revolver with him, but while he had occasionally fired a +six-shooter, he was by no means a crack shot, and he realized that if he +fired at and only wounded the creature he would unquestionably be +attacked. And there was a lithe suppleness in the manner that the +movement of the muscles rippled over the skin that was alarmingly +suggestive of ferocity. Wilbur did not like the looks of it at all. On +the other hand, he had not the slightest intention of going back to the +camp without water. He had come for water, and he would carry water +back, he thought to himself, if a regiment of bob-cats was in the way.</p> + +<p>The old fable that a wild beast cannot stand the gaze of the human eye +recurred to Wilbur's remembrance, and he stood at the edge of the +clearing regarding the cat fixedly. But the snarls only grew the louder. +Wilbur was frightened, and he knew it, and what was more, he felt the +cat knew it with that intuition the wild animals have for recognizing +danger or the absence of danger. She made another effort to drag away +the rabbit, but failing in that, with an angry yowl, with quick jerks +and rending of her powerful jaws began to try to force the rabbit free +from the entangling root, which done, she could carry it into the forest +to devour at leisure. The ease with which those claws and teeth rent +asunder the yielding flesh was an instructive sight for Wilbur, but the +fact that the wild-cat should dare to go on striving to free her prey +instead of slinking away in fright made the boy angry. Besides, he had +come for that water.</p> + +<p>Wilbur decided to advance into the clearing anyway, and then, if the +creature did not stir, he would be so near that he couldn't miss her +with the revolver. As he grew angrier his fear began to leave him. He +took the pot in his left hand, putting the long stick under his arm, +and, drawing his six-shooter, advanced on the cat. He came forward +slowly, but without hesitation. At his second step forward the wild-cat +raised her head, but instead of springing at him, as Wilbur half feared, +she retreated into the woods, leaving her prey, snarling as she went. +Wilbur went boldly forward to the spring, and, thinking that he would +see no more of the cat, put away his revolver.</p> + +<p>Having secured the water, and as he turned to go, however, the boy felt +a sudden impulse to look up. He had not heard a sound, and yet, on a low +branch a few feet above his head, crouched the wild-cat, her eyes +glaring yellow in the waning light. Once again he felt the temptation to +shoot her, but resisted it, through his fear of only wounding the +creature and thus bringing her full fury upon him.</p> + +<p>But it occurred to Wilbur that it was not unlikely that he might have to +come back to the spring a second time for more water, and he did not +wish to risk another encounter. He thought to himself that if he did +return and interrupted the wild-cat a second time he would not escape as +easily as he had on this occasion, and consequently he tried to devise a +means to prevent such meeting. He figured that if he picked up the +rabbit and threw it far into the woods the cat would follow and the path +to the spring would be open. Forgetting for the moment that he could not +expect the angry creature in the tree to divine the honesty of his +intentions, he stooped down and grasped the rabbit by the leg to throw +it into the forest. As he did so, the wild-cat, thinking herself about +to be deprived of her prey, sprang at him.</p> + +<p>With one hand holding the pot of water, which, boy-like, he did not want +to spill, and the other grasping the rabbit, Wilbur was terribly +handicapped. But, by the greatest good fortune, as he stooped, the +crotch of the stick that he was carrying caught the wild-cat under the +body as she launched herself at him from the tree. The stick was +knocked out of the boy's grasp, but it also turned the cat aside, and +she half fell, landing on Wilbur's outstretched leg, instead of on his +neck, which was the objective point in her spring. As her claws ripped +into the soft flesh of his thigh, Wilbur released his hold of the +rabbit, drew his revolver, and fired full at the creature hanging on his +leg.</p> + +<p>Almost instantaneously with the shot, however, one of her foreclaws shot +out and caught the back of his right hand, making a long but superficial +gash from the wrist to the knuckles. At the same time, too, one of her +hind claws struck down, opening the calf of the leg and making the boy +sick for a moment. His right hand was bleeding vigorously and paining a +good deal, but his finger was still on the trigger and Wilbur fired +again. A moment later, the Ranger came running into the clearing. But +before he reached the boy's side the cat had fallen limply to the +ground. The second shot had gone clear through her skull, and, being +fired at point-blank distance, had almost blown her head off.</p> + +<p>The old Ranger, without wasting time in words, quickly examined the +boy's injuries and found them slight, although they were bleeding +profusely. Wilbur reached out the pot full of water from the spring.</p> + +<p>"Here's the water, Rifle-Eye," he said a little quaveringly; "I hardly +spilled a drop."</p> + +<p>The old woodsman took the vessel without a word. Then he looked down at +the cat.</p> + +<p>"Just as well for you," he said, "that it wasn't a true lynx. But how +did she get at your leg? Did you walk on her, or kick her, just for +fun?"</p> + +<p>Wilbur, laughing a little nervously from the reaction of the excitement, +described how it was that the wild-cat had landed on his leg instead of +on his neck, and the old hunter nodded.</p> + +<p>"It's a mighty lucky thing for you," he said, "that stick was there, +because there's a heap o' places around the neck where a clawin' ain't +healthy. But these scratches of yours won't take long to heal. Where you +were a fool," he continued, "was in touchin' the rabbit at all. It's +just as I told you. When you went quietly forward, you say, the bob-cat +got out of your road all right. Of course, that's what she ought to do. +And if you had filled the pot with water an' come away that's all +there'd have been to it. But jest as soon as you begin ter get mixed up +in the prey any varmint's killed, you've got ter begin considerin' the +chances o' joinin' the select company o' victims."</p> + +<p>"But I wanted her out of the way for next time," said Wilbur.</p> + +<p>"She'd have got out of your way so quick you couldn't see her go," said +the hunter, "if you'd given her a chance. Next time, leave a varmint's +dinner alone."</p> + +<p>"Next time, I will," the boy declared.</p> + +<p>"I guess now," continued the old hunter, "you'd better come back to camp +an' we'll see what we c'n do to improve them delicate attentions you've +received. An' don't be quite the same kind of an idiot again."</p> + +<p>"Well," said Wilbur, "I got the water from the spring, anyhow."</p> + +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 700px;"> +<a name="IMAGE_10" id="IMAGE_10"></a> +<img src="images/image-10.jpg" width="700" height="461" alt="PATROLLING A COYOTE FENCE." title="" /> +<span class="caption">PATROLLING A COYOTE FENCE.<br />The old Ranger and his hound safeguarding the grazing interests of the +forest.<br />Photograph by U. S. Forest Service.</span> +</div> + +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 700px;"> +<a name="IMAGE_11A" id="IMAGE_11A"></a> +<img src="images/image-11a.jpg" width="700" height="430" alt="REDUCING THE WOLF SUPPLY." title="" /> +<span class="caption">REDUCING THE WOLF SUPPLY.</span> +</div> + +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 700px;"> +<a name="IMAGE_11B" id="IMAGE_11B"></a> +<img src="images/image-11b.jpg" width="700" height="471" alt="REDUCING THE WOLF SUPPLY." title="" /> +<span class="caption">REDUCING THE WOLF SUPPLY.<br />Sport that is worth while, freeing the National Forests from beasts of +prey.<br />Photographs by U. S. Forest Service.</span> +</div> + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> + +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VI" id="CHAPTER_VI"></a>CHAPTER VI</h2> + +<h3>IN THE HEART OF THE FOREST</h3> + + +<p>Towards noon the next day, Wilbur and the Ranger rode up to the shack in +the woods which Rifle-Eye considered as one of his headquarters. As soon +as they reached the clearing they were met by a big, shambling youth, +whose general appearance and hesitating air proclaimed him to be the +half-witted lad of whom Wilbur had heard. He came forward and took the +horses.</p> + +<p>"You've heard about Ben?" queried the hunter as the horses were being +led away.</p> + +<p>"Yes," answered Wilbur, "Bob-Cat Bob told me all about the death of his +father during the sheep and cattle war. He told me when we were riding +up to the ranch, from the station at Sumber."</p> + +<p>"I have thought," said Rifle-Eye, "that perhaps it ain't quite the right +thing to keep Ben here, up in the woods. But I tried sendin' him to +school. It wasn't no manner of use. It only troubled the teacher an' +bothered him, an' I reckon his life will stack up at the end jest as +well, even if he can't read."</p> + +<p>"What does he do while you are away?" asked Wilbur.</p> + +<p>"Oh, a lot of things. He ain't idle a minute, really, an' there's times +that he's as good as them that thinks themselves so wise."</p> + +<p>"What sort of things?"</p> + +<p>"Well, he's done a lot o' work stampin' out the prairie dogs. Of course, +there's very few o' them in these parts, so few that the government has +made no appropriation for this forest. It's in Eastern Montana an' the +Dakotas that you get them, an' there's been a lot o' trouble in the +Custer an' Sioux forests. He's gone there several times, an' there's +been villages o' them here among the foothills that Ben's cleared up +entirely."</p> + +<p>"They poison the prairie dogs, don't they?"</p> + +<p>"Yes, with strychnine, mainly. Grain is soaked in the poison an' a few +grains put outside each hole in a dog town. If this is done early in the +year, before the green grass is up for food, it will pretty nearly clean +up the town."</p> + +<p>"It seems rather a shame," said Wilbur, "they are such fat, jolly little +fellows, and the way they sit up on their hind legs and look at you is +a wonder."</p> + +<p>"It's all right for them to look 'fat and jolly,'" replied Rifle-Eye, +"but when the stock raiser finds hundreds of acres of grass nibbled down +to the roots, an' when the farmer's young wheat is ruined, they don't +see so much jollity in it."</p> + +<p>"But I didn't know that the Forest Service took a hand in that sort of +thing."</p> + +<p>"Only indirectly. But they provide the poison an' the settlers usually +git some one to put it round. As I say, Ben's been doin' a lot of it +this spring."</p> + +<p>"But that sort of work doesn't last long."</p> + +<p>"No, only in the spring. But Ben's busy other ways. Sometimes he goes +down to the valleys an' helps the ranchers with their hayin'. He don't +know anythin' about money, though, an' so they never pay him cash."</p> + +<p>"That's tough on Ben, then," remarked Wilbur. "Does he work all the time +for nothing?"</p> + +<p>"Not at all. They always see that he gits a fair return. Every once in a +while the man he's workin' for will drive up to the shack with some +bacon an' a barrel o' flour an' trimmin's. Often as not, he'll bring +the wife along, an' she'll go over the lad's things to find what he +needs."</p> + +<p>"That's mighty nice," commented Wilbur.</p> + +<p>"Some of 'em are as good to Ben as if he was their own," said the +Ranger. "They'll go over everything he's got, fix up whatever needs +mendin', an' make a list o' things to be bought next time any one goes +into town. You see, he gits his wages that way. He works well, an' so it +ain't like charity, an' at the same time it gives the man he works for a +chance to do the right thing."</p> + +<p>"I suppose if he didn't, you'd get after him," suggested the boy.</p> + +<p>"Never had to yet, an' never expect to," was the prompt reply. "Mostly +folks is all right, an' a lot o' the supposed selfishness is jest +because they ain't been reminded. And then Ben never makes trouble."</p> + +<p>"He seems quiet enough," said Wilbur, with a gesture towards the doorway +where the lad was approaching. He came in and stood looking vacantly at +the two sitting together.</p> + +<p>"What were you doin' yesterday, Ben?" asked the Ranger sharply to rouse +him.</p> + +<p>The lad flung out both arms with a wild gesture.</p> + +<p>"I was away, away, far away," he answered; "away, away over the hills."</p> + +<p>"Where?"</p> + +<p>The half-witted lad passed his hand across his eyes.</p> + +<p>"With Mickey," he said.</p> + +<p>"An' what were you an' Mickey doin'?"</p> + +<p>"Lots of things, lots, lots, lots. Little fires creep, creep, creepin' +on the ground," he moved his hands waveringly backward and forward as +though to show the progress of the flames, "then put them out quick, +so!" he stamped his foot on the ground.</p> + +<p>"Does he mean a forest fire, Rifle-Eye?" queried Wilbur, alert at the +very mention of fire.</p> + +<p>"No, no, no," interrupted Ben; "little bit fires. Pile burn, burn hot, +grass catch fire, put out grass."</p> + +<p>"You mean," said the mountaineer, "that you an' Mickey were burnin' up +brush?"</p> + +<p>"Yes, brush all in piles, burn."</p> + +<p>"It's a pretty risky business," said Rifle-Eye, "this burnin' brush in +the late spring, but Mickey's right enough to have had Ben along. He's +one o' the best fire-fighters that ever happened. He never knows enough +to quit."</p> + +<p>"Did you have any trouble, Ben?" asked Wilbur.</p> + +<p>"One little fire, walk, walk, walk away into the woods. But I stopped +him."</p> + +<p>"Alone?"</p> + +<p>The half-witted lad nodded. Then, coming over to Wilbur, he pointed to +the rude bandages and said questioningly:</p> + +<p>"Tumble?"</p> + +<p>"No, Ben," replied the other boy, "I got into a mix-up with a bob-cat."</p> + +<p>"I fight, too. Wait, I show you something."</p> + +<p>He disappeared for a moment and then came back with two wolf pups, +carrying one in each hand as he might a kitten.</p> + +<p>"I got five more," he said.</p> + +<p>"Where did you get 'em, Ben?" asked the Ranger.</p> + +<p>"Way, way over. Deadman Canyon."</p> + +<p>"Get the old wolf?"</p> + +<p>The half-witted lad nodded his head vigorously several times.</p> + +<p>"Yes," he said, "dead, dead, dead."</p> + +<p>"Was the den just by the Sentinel Pine?"</p> + +<p>"Yes."</p> + +<p>"I reckon that's the wolf that's been givin' such a lot of trouble on +the Arroyo," commented Rifle-Eye. "I went out after that wolf one day +this spring, Ben, but I didn't get her. I waited at the den a long time, +too."</p> + +<p>"Two holes out of den, two. I wait, too. Long, long time. No come out. +Plug up one hole. Long more time waited. Then wolf go in. I go in, too."</p> + +<p>"You went into the wolf's den?" queried Wilbur in amazement.</p> + +<p>"Yes, in. Far, far in."</p> + +<p>"How far?"</p> + +<p>"Don't know. Far."</p> + +<p>"Well, I went in about forty feet myself," said the old hunter, "an' I +didn't see any sign o' the pups, so I backed out again. If you went all +the way in, Ben, I reckon it was a pretty long crawl."</p> + +<p>"But why did you go in the den when the mother wolf was there?" asked +Wilbur.</p> + +<p>"Boy fool," said the half-witted lad, pointing at him. "Why go in if +wolf not there?"</p> + +<p>"Well," said Wilbur, on the defensive, "I should think it a whole lot +safer to go in—that is, if I was going in at all—sometime when I'd be +sure the mother wolf wouldn't be there."</p> + +<p>But the other, still holding the cubs in his hands, negatived this +reasoning with a vigorous shake of the head.</p> + +<p>"Safer, wolf in," he said.</p> + +<p>"I don't see that at all," objected Wilbur. "It can't be safer."</p> + +<p>"You go in, in far, when wolf out. By and by wolf come, eat up legs, no +can turn round for shoot."</p> + +<p>"I hadn't thought of that," the boy said, a little humbled.</p> + +<p>"Ben's nearly right," said the Ranger, "an' it ain't really as dangerous +as it sounds. There ain't room in the passage for the wolf to spring, +an' if you shoot you're bound to hit her somewhere, no matter how you +aim. O' course, a wolf ain't goin' to come along an' 'eat up your legs' +the way he puts it, but you might get a nasty bite or two. It's a lot +better to go after a wolf than have the wolf come after you. It takes +more nerve, but it ain't so hard at that."</p> + +<p>"But how did you kill the old wolf, Ben?" asked Wilbur.</p> + +<p>"I go in, far in. See eyes glitter. Shoot once. Shoot twice. Old wolf +dead. Take out pups, easy. Skin wolf."</p> + +<p>"Where's the skin?"</p> + +<p>"Dryin'."</p> + +<p>But Wilbur was by no means satisfied and he plied the half-witted lad +with questions until he had secured all the details of the story. In the +meantime the Ranger had been getting dinner, and as soon as it was over +Wilbur was glad to lie down on Ben's bed, for he had lost not a little +blood in his tussle with the wild-cat the night before, and riding all +morning with those deep scratches only rudely bandaged had been rather a +strain. By the time that Rifle-Eye was ready to start again Wilbur was +fairly stiffened up, and at the Ranger's suggestion he agreed to stay on +a couple of days in the shack, having Ben cook for him and look after +him, as the Ranger felt that he himself ought to get back to +headquarters.</p> + +<p>It was not until the third day that Wilbur once more got into the saddle +and with Ben to guide him through the forest, started for the +Supervisor's headquarters, or rather the Ranger's cabin where the +Supervisor was staying. The two boys rode on and up, leaving behind the +scrub oak, chapparal, and manzanita, and into the great yellow pine and +sugar pine forests. Shortly before noontime they heard voices in the +woods, and Ben, after listening a moment, turned from the trail. In a +few minutes he reined up beside a tall, sunburned man, walking through +the woods pencil and notebook in hand. At the same time the Ranger, who +was working with him, stepped up.</p> + +<p>"Thanks, Ben," he said. Then, turning to the Supervisor, he said: +"Merritt, here's the boy!"</p> + +<p>Wilbur's new chief stepped forward quickly and held out his hand with a +word of greeting. Wilbur shook it heartily and decided on the spot that +he was going to like him. Wearing khaki with the Forest Service bronze +badge, a Stetson army hat, and the high lace boots customarily seen, he +looked thoroughly equipped for business.</p> + +<p>"You're Wilbur Loyle," he said, "of course. I heard you were coming. +Have you had any experience?"</p> + +<p>"Just the Colorado Ranger School, sir," said the boy.</p> + +<p>"You were to be here three days ago."</p> + +<p>"Yes, Mr. Merritt, but I was delayed, and I put up a couple of days with +Ben, here."</p> + +<p>"He reckoned he had more right to a rabbit what a bob-cat was feastin' +on than the cat had," volunteered Rifle-Eye in explanation. "In the +ensooin' disagreement he got a bit scratched, an' so I looked after him. +I told him to stay at Ben's, an' I guess he's all right now."</p> + +<p>"Being three days late isn't the best start in the world," said the +Supervisor sharply, "but if Rifle-Eye knows all about it and is willing +to stand for it, I won't say any more. Can you cruise?"</p> + +<p>"I've learned, sir, but I haven't done much of it. I think, though, I +can do it, all right."</p> + +<p>"Very well. We'll break off for dinner now, and you can try this +afternoon. Or do you still feel tired, and would you rather wait until +to-morrow?"</p> + +<p>"Thanks, Mr. Merritt," answered Wilbur, "but I want to start right now."</p> + +<p>"Very well," said the Supervisor laconically. Then, turning to the +Ranger, he commenced talking with him about the work in hand, and for +the moment Wilbur was left aside. The lumberman who had been working on +the other side of the Supervisor, however, sauntered up and introduced +himself as "McGinnis, me boy, Red McGinnis, they call me, because of the +natural beauty of me hair."</p> + +<p>"I'm very glad, Mr. McGinnis—" began the boy when the lumberman +interrupted him.</p> + +<p>"'Tis very sorry ye'll be if ye call me out of me right name. Sure I +said McGinnis, jest plain McGinnis, not Misther McGinnis. Ye can call me +'Judge,' or 'Doctor,' or 'Colonel,' or annything else, but I won't be +called Misther by annyone."</p> + +<p>"Very well, McGinnis," said the boy, looking at his height and broad +shoulders, "I guess there's no one that will make you."</p> + +<p>"There is not!" the big lumberman replied. "And are ye goin' to join us +in a little promenade through the timber?"</p> + +<p>"So Mr. Merritt said."</p> + +<p>"I don't see what for," the Irishman replied. "Sure, there's the three +of us now."</p> + +<p>"Is there much of it to do?"</p> + +<p>"There is that. There's three million feet wanted, half sugar pine and +half yellow pine, in this sale alone. An' there's another sale waiting, +so I hear, as soon as this one's through."</p> + +<p>"Maybe it's just to find out whether I can do it?" suggested Wilbur.</p> + +<p>The lumberman nodded affirmatively.</p> + +<p>"That's just about it," he said. "Because ye'll have a big stretch to +cover as Guard, an' there'll be no time for ye cruisin'. You keep the +trees from burnin' up so as we can mark them for cuttin' down."</p> + +<p>"It always seems a shame," said Wilbur, "to have to cut down these +trees. Of course, I know it's done so as to help the forest, not to hurt +it, and that if the big trees weren't cut down the young ones couldn't +get sunlight and wouldn't have a chance to grow. But still one hates to +see a big tree go."</p> + +<p>"It isn't that way at all, at all," said the lumberman. "There's some +that does their best work livin', and there's some that does it dead. A +man does it livin' and a tree does it dead. But what a tree does after +it's dead depends on what kind of a chance it's had when it's been +livin'. Sure ye've been to the schools when all the girls and some of +the boys gets into white dresses, the girls I mean, and sings songs, and +gives speeches and class poems and other contraptions, and graduates."</p> + +<p>"I have," said Wilbur, "and not so long ago at that."</p> + +<p>"And so have I," answered the lumberman. "Sure, me own little Kathleen +was graduated just a month ago from high school. Well, cuttin' down a +tree is like its graduation. It's been livin' and growin' and gettin' +big and strong and makin' up into good timber. Now its schoolin' in the +forest is over, it's goin' out into the world, to be made useful in some +kind of way, and in goin' it makes room for more."</p> + +<p>"You don't take kindly to the 'Oh, Woodman, spare that tree' ideal?" +smiled Wilbur.</p> + +<p>"I do not. But I'd spare it, all right, until there were other young +trees growin' near it to take its place in time. 'Tis the biggest part +of the work is cuttin' down the trees that make the best timber."</p> + +<p>When they were settled drinking hot tea and eating some trout that the +party had with them, the Supervisor turned to Wilbur.</p> + +<p>"McGinnis is a good man," he began, smiling as the Irishman with +pantomime returned the compliment by drinking his health in a pannikin +of tea, "but he's so built that he can't see straight. If you introduce +McGinnis to a girl he'll want to estimate how many feet she'd make board +measure."</p> + +<p>He dodged a pine cone which the Irishman threw at him.</p> + +<p>"How about Aileen?" he said.</p> + +<p>"I'll take that back," said Merritt; "Mrs. McGinnis hasn't gone to +diameter growth. But," he continued, "she's good on clear length and has +a fine crown."</p> + +<p>By which Wilbur readily understood that the lumberman's wife was slight, +well-built, and neat, and with heavy hair. The lumberman, mollified by +the tribute, returned to his dinner, and the Supervisor continued:</p> + +<p>"McGinnis told you that cutting down the best trees available for timber +is the most important part of forest work. It's not. The most important +thing is keeping the forest at its best. Cutting trees when they have +reached their maximum is a most necessary part, and it's a policy that +helps to make the forest pay for itself. But the value to the forest +lies in its conservation. You know about that?"</p> + +<p>"Yes, sir," said the boy; "it's keeping the watersheds from becoming +deforested, either by cutting or by fire, and so preventing erosion from +taking place."</p> + +<p>"I reckon," put in the old Ranger, "thar's another that pleases me still +better than either of those."</p> + +<p>"And what's that, Rifle-Eye?" asked Merritt.</p> + +<p>"It's the plantin'. When I walk along some of the forest nurseries, an' +see hundreds and hundreds of little seedlin's all growin' protected +like, and bein' cared for just the same as if they was little children, +an' when I know that in fifty years time they'll be big fine trees like +the one we're sittin' under, I tell you it looks pretty good to me. +They're such helpless little things, seedlin's, and they do have such a +time to get a start. Nursery's a good name all right. I've been along +some of 'em at night, when the moonlight was a shinin' down on them, and +they wasn't really no different from children in their little beds."</p> + +<p>"I should think," said Wilbur, "that the changing of a forest from one +kind of tree to another would be the most interesting. I mean getting +rid of the worthless trees and giving the advantage to those that are +finer."</p> + +<p>"And a few sections west," commented the Supervisor, "you would find +that Bellwall, who's the Ranger there, thinks that the most interesting +thing in the whole of the forest work is putting an end to the diseases +of trees and to the insects that are a danger to them. Another Ranger +may be a tree surgeon."</p> + +<p>"A tree surgeon doesn't help so much," put in McGinnis, "the timber is +niver worth a whoop!"</p> + +<p>"There you go again," said the head of the forest, "there's other things +to be thought of besides timber." He turned to the boy. "You don't know +the trees of the Sierras, I suppose?"</p> + +<p>"I think I know them pretty well now," answered Wilbur. "I had to learn +a lot about them at school, and then Rifle-Eye has been giving me +pointers the last few days."</p> + +<p>"What's the difference between a yellow pine and a sugar pine?" queried +the Supervisor.</p> + +<p>"Sugar pine wood is white and soft," said the boy, "yellow pine is hard, +harder than any other pine except the long-leaf variety."</p> + +<p>"That's right enough. But how are you going to tell them when standing?"</p> + +<p>Wilbur thought for a moment.</p> + +<p>"I should think," he said, "that the yellow pine is a so much bigger +tree as a rule that you could tell it by that alone. But I suppose a +younger yellow pine might look like a sugar. The leaves would help, +though, because I should think the sugar, like most of the soft pines, +has its leaves in clusters of five in a sheath, and the yellow being a +hard pine, has them in bundles of three."</p> + +<p>"How about the bark?"</p> + +<p>"Sugar pine bark is smoother," said the boy.</p> + +<p>The Supervisor nodded.</p> + +<p>"All right," he said, "we'll try you at it. You go along with McGinnis +for an hour or so, to see just how he does it, and then you can take one +side, and he the other. Just for a day or two, while Rifle-Eye looks +after some other matters."</p> + +<p>Wilbur accordingly took a pair of calipers and walked with McGinnis back +to where he had originally met the party. Resuming work the lumberman +started through the forest, calling as he went the kind of trees and +their approximate size. As, however, this particular portion of the +forest had never been "cruised," McGinnis not only called and marked the +trees which were to be cut in the sale, but also the other timber.</p> + +<p>Thus he would call, as he reached a tree, "Sugar, thirty-four, six," by +which Wilbur understood him to mean that the tree was a sugar pine, that +it was thirty-four inches in diameter breast high, and that it would cut +into six logs of the regular sixteen-foot length. It probably would be +thirty or fifty feet higher, but the top could only be used for posts, +cordwood, and similar uses. Such a tree, having been estimated and +adjudged fit for sale, the lumberman would make a blaze with a small ax, +by slicing off a portion of bark about eight inches long, then turning +the head of the ax, whereon was "U. S." in raised letters, he would +whack the blaze, making a mark which was unchangeable. No other trees +than those so marked might be cut.</p> + +<p>But as other trees were passed which were not good enough for +merchantable timber, he would call these rapidly, "Cedar, small," +"Engelmann (spruce), eighteen," "Douglas (spruce), fourteen," all of +which were entered by the Supervisor, walking behind, in his cruising +book. At the same time he made full notes as to the condition of the +young forest, the presence of parasitic plants such as mistletoe, of +diseased trees, if any were found, of the nature of the soil, of the +drainage of the forest, and of the best way in which the timber sale was +to be logged in order to do the least possible damage to the forest.</p> + +<p>In a half an hour or so Wilbur dropped back to the Supervisor.</p> + +<p>"I think, sir," he said, "that I can do that without any trouble. But I +can't do it as fast as McGinnis, sir, for he can tell the size of a +tree just by looking at it. I shall have to use the calipers for a day +or two."</p> + +<p>Merritt looked at him.</p> + +<p>"For a day or two?" he said. "McGinnis has been doing it for thirty +years. In these Western forests, too. You take him to an Eastern forest +and even now he wouldn't be sure of estimating correctly. You use the +calipers for a year or two!"</p> + +<p>Wilbur, accordingly, quickened his pace, and, going along a little to +the left and in advance of the Supervisor, took up his share of the +work. He found that he had to depend entirely upon McGinnis for his +compass direction, and that he was only doing about one tree to +McGinnis' six, but still every hour that passed by gave him greater +confidence. The afternoon was wearing away when suddenly they came to a +part of the forest in which some timber seemed to have been cut during +the winter preceding. McGinnis dropped back.</p> + +<p>"Sure, ye didn't tell me that any of this had been cut over," he said +aggrievedly.</p> + +<p>"It hasn't, so far as I know," said Merritt. He put his book in his +pocket and walked on briskly for a few hundred yards. Although the +logging had been done the preceding winter the signs were clear for +those who could read them determining the direction in which the logs +had been taken.</p> + +<p>"That's Peavey Jo's work," said the Supervisor at last. "I reckon this +is where he begins to find trouble on his hands. We'll find out, +McGinnis, how much of this timber he has stolen, measure up the stumps +and make him pay for every stick he's taken."</p> + +<p>"Ye'd better leave Peavey Jo alone. They used to call him 'The Canuck +Brute,'" remarked McGinnis.</p> + +<p>"He will pay," repeated Merritt quietly, "for every foot that he's got. +And I'll see that he does."</p> + +<p>"You'll have the fight of your life."</p> + +<p>"What of it! You don't want to back out?"</p> + +<p>"Back out? Me? I will not! But it'll be a jim-dandy of a scrap."</p> + +<p>The Supervisor turned to Wilbur.</p> + +<p>"Measure," he said, "the diameter of all those stumps and mark with a +bit of chalk those you have measured. We'll talk to Peavey Jo in a day +or two."</p> + +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"> +<a name="IMAGE_12" id="IMAGE_12"></a> +<img src="images/image-12.jpg" width="600" height="381" alt="WHERE BEN AND MICKEY BURNED THE BRUSH." title="" /> +<span class="caption">WHERE BEN AND MICKEY BURNED THE BRUSH.<br />Getting rid of slashings which otherwise might feed a forest fire.<br />Photograph by U. S. Forest Service.</span> +</div> + +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 650px;"> +<a name="IMAGE_13" id="IMAGE_13"></a> +<img src="images/image-13.jpg" width="650" height="410" alt="THE CABIN OF THE OLD RANGER." title="" /> +<span class="caption">THE CABIN OF THE OLD RANGER.<br />Where Wilbur stayed a couple of days recovering from the wild-cat's +scratches.<br />Photograph by U. S. Forest Service.</span> +</div> + +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 420px;"> +<a name="IMAGE_14" id="IMAGE_14"></a> +<img src="images/image-14.jpg" width="420" height="600" alt="STAMPING IT GOVERNMENT PROPERTY." title="" /> +<span class="caption">STAMPING IT GOVERNMENT PROPERTY.<br /> +McGinnis marking "U. S." on timber that has been scaled and measured up.<br /> +Photograph by U. S. Forest Service.</span> +</div> + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> + +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VII" id="CHAPTER_VII"></a>CHAPTER VII</h2> + +<h3>WILBUR IN HIS OWN CAMP</h3> + + +<p>"I should think," said Wilbur at headquarters that night, when the +timber theft of Peavey Jo was being discussed, "that it would be mighty +hard to prove that the timber had been taken."</p> + +<p>"Why?" asked the Supervisor.</p> + +<p>"Well, we can see how the logs were drawn, and so forth, but you can't +bring those driveways into court very well, and put them before the +judge as Exhibit A, or anything?"</p> + +<p>"You could bring affidavits, couldn't you? But there are few who want to +go to law about it. A man knows he can't buck the government on a fake +case. We have very little trouble now, but there used to be a lot of +it."</p> + +<p>"Did you ever have to use weapons, Mr. Merritt?" asked the boy, +remembering the story he had heard in Washington about the tie-cutters.</p> + +<p>"No," was the instant reply. "You don't handle people with a gun any +more in California than you do in New York. These aren't the days of +Forty-nine."</p> + +<p>"But I thought the 'old-timers' still carried guns," persisted the boy.</p> + +<p>"Very few do now. But I got into trouble once, or thought I was going +to, when I was a Ranger in the Gunnison Forest. It involved some Douglas +fir telephone poles. This trespass was done while I was in town for a +while in the Supervisor's office. When I came back I happened to pass by +this man's camp, and seeing a lot of telephone poles, I asked if they +had been cut in the forest. The man was a good deal of a bully, and he +ordered me off the place. He said he didn't have to answer any +questions, and wasn't going to."</p> + +<p>"Did you go?" asked Wilbur.</p> + +<p>"Certainly I went. What would be the use of staying around there? But +before I left I got a kind of an answer. He said he had shipped in these +telephone poles from another part of the State."</p> + +<p>"Sure, that was a fairy tale," said McGinnis.</p> + +<p>"Of course it was. I went into the forest and searched around, although +there had been a recent fall of snow, until I found the place where most +of the poles had been cut. Then I went back to the trespasser and told +him, saying I would prove to him that it was on government ground.</p> + +<p>"He agreed, and we rode to the place. He took his Winchester along and +carried it over his shoulder. He wasn't carrying it in the usual way, +but had his hand almost level with his shoulder so that the barrel +pointed in my direction. I noticed, too, that he was playing with the +trigger. It seemed likely that it might suit his purposes rather well if +I was accidentally killed. But each time I cantered up close to him, the +barrel returned to its natural position.</p> + +<p>"Presently, as we rode along, we came to a waterfall, not a big one, but +falling with quite a splashing, and under the cover of the noise I +suddenly came to a quick gallop, overtook the trespasser, and, grasping +his Winchester firmly with both hands, jerked it out of his grasp."</p> + +<p>"Sure, he must have been the maddest thing that iver happened!" said +McGinnis.</p> + +<p>"He was sore, all right. But what could he do? I had the rifle, and we +neither of us had any six-shooters. I showed him that there was no +object in my shooting him, while he would gain by shooting me, so I +proposed to hold the gun. And hold it I did. On my return I put a +notice of seizure on the poles.</p> + +<p>"The report went through the usual way to the Commissioner of the +General Land Office. He wrote me a letter direct about the case and put +it up to me to ask the trespasser what proposition of settlement he +intended to make. I thought the town was the best place for this and +waited at the post-office for a day or two until he came in. There I +tackled him, and told him he would have to notify the Department +immediately. At this, he and his son invited me outside to fight it out. +I told them I did not intend to fight, but that if within thirty minutes +they did not make a proposition of settlement I would telegraph to the +Department and his case would become one for harsher measures.</p> + +<p>"The postmaster set out to convince him that Uncle Sam was too big a job +for him to handle, and in twenty minutes or so back he came with an +offer which was forwarded to the Department. A year or so later the case +was settled by a Special Agent."</p> + +<p>McGinnis added several similar stories of timber difficulties, and, +supper being over, they got ready to turn in. The headquarters was a +most comfortable house, fairly large, having been built by the previous +Ranger, who was married. It was now used by another Ranger, as well as +Rifle-Eye, being near the borders of their two districts, and having +plenty of good water and good feed near. But although it was barely +dark, Wilbur was tired enough to be glad to stretch himself on the cot +in the little room and sink to sleep amid the soughing of the wind +through the pine needles of neighboring forest giants one and two +hundred feet high.</p> + +<p>Early the next morning, Wilbur tumbled up, went out and looked after his +horses, and came in hungry to breakfast.</p> + +<p>"I had intended," said the Supervisor, "to go with you this morning and +show you the part of the range you are to look after. But I want to get +at Peavey Jo, lest he should decide to leave suddenly, and Rifle-Eye +will show you the way instead. I had the tent pitched three or four days +ago, when you ought to have been here. You'll find that to cover your +range takes about six hours' good riding a day. Use a different horse, +of course, each day, and remember that your horse in some ways is fully +as important as you are. You can stand a heap of things that he can't. +A man will tire out any animal that breathes."</p> + +<p>"And what have I to do?"</p> + +<p>"You have three trails to ride, on three successive days, so that you +will have a chance of seeing all your range, or points that will command +all your range at least twice a week. And, of course, quite a good deal +of it you will cover daily. You are to watch out for fires, and if you +see one, put it out. If you can't put it out alone, ride back to your +camp and telephone here, as soon as it is evening. Sometimes it is +better to keep working alone until you know there's some one to answer +the 'phone, sometimes it's better to get help right away. You can tell +about that when you have got to the fire and have seen what it is."</p> + +<p>Wilbur nodded.</p> + +<p>"That's easy enough to follow," he said.</p> + +<p>"If a heavy rain comes, you had better ride back here, because for a few +days after a big rain a fire isn't likely to start, and there's always +lots of other stuff to be done in the forest, trail-building, and things +of that sort."</p> + +<p>"Very well, Mr. Merritt," answered the boy.</p> + +<p>"There are no timber sales going on in that section of the forest, so +that if you see any cutting going on, just ride up quietly and get into +conversation with the people cutting and casually find out their names. +Ask no other questions, but in the evening telephone to me."</p> + +<p>"The telephone must be a big convenience. But," added Wilbur, "it seems +to take away the primitiveness of it, somehow."</p> + +<p>"Wilbur," said the Supervisor seriously, "you don't want to run into the +mistake of thinking that life on a national forest is principally a +picturesque performance. It's a business that the government is running +for the benefit of the country at large. Anything that can be done to +make it efficient is tremendously important. The telephone already has +saved many a fearful night ride through bad places of the forest, has +been the means of stopping many a fire, and has saved many a life in +consequence. I think that's a little more important than +'primitiveness,' as you call it."</p> + +<p>The boy accepted the rebuke silently. Indeed, there was nothing more to +say.</p> + +<p>"As for grazing, there's not much to be said, except that the sheep +limits are pretty well defined. The cattle can wander up the range +without doing much harm here, for the young forest is of pretty good +growth, but the sheep must stay down where they belong. Rifle-Eye will +show you where, and sheep notices have been posted all along the limits. +And if there's anything you don't know, ask. And I guess that's about +all."</p> + +<p>The Supervisor rose to go, but Wilbur stopped him.</p> + +<p>"How am I to arrange about supplies?" he said.</p> + +<p>"The tent's near a spring," was the brief but all-embracing reply. +"There's a lake near by with plenty of trout, there's flour and +groceries and canned stuff in a cache, and the Guard that was there last +year had some kind of a little garden. You can see what there is, and if +you want seeds of any kind, let me know. And there's nothing to prevent +you shooting rabbits, though they're not much good this time of year."</p> + +<p>"I'll get along all right, Mr. Merritt," said Wilbur confidently.</p> + +<p>"I'll ride over on Sunday and see you anyway," added the Supervisor as +he strode through the doorway, meeting McGinnis, who was waiting for him +outside. Wilbur followed him to the door.</p> + +<p>"'Tis all the luck in the world I'm wishin' ye," shouted the big +Irishman, "an' while ye're keepin' the fires away we'll be gettin' +another nicely started for that old logjammer. Sure, we'll make it hot +enough for him."</p> + +<p>"Good hunting," responded Wilbur with a laugh, as the two men +disappeared under the trees.</p> + +<p>Although only a day had passed since Wilbur had met the Supervisor and +McGinnis, it seemed to him that several days must have elapsed, so much +had happened, and he found it hard to believe, when he found himself in +the saddle again beside the old Ranger, that they had started from Ben's +shack only the morning before.</p> + +<p>"I like Mr. Merritt," he said as soon as they had got started. "I like +McGinnis, too."</p> + +<p>"I reckon he wasn't over-pleased with your bein' late?" queried +Rifle-Eye.</p> + +<p>"He wasn't," admitted the boy candidly, "but I don't blame him for that. +I liked him just the same. But I don't think it's safe to monkey with +him. Now, McGinnis is easygoing and good-natured."</p> + +<p>"So is a mountain river runnin' down a smooth bed. The river is just the +same old river when rocks get in the road, but it acts a lot different. +Now, Merritt, when he's satisfied and when he ain't, don't vary, but I +tell you, McGinnis can show white water sometimes."</p> + +<p>"I don't think I'm aching to be that rock," said Wilbur with a grin.</p> + +<p>"Wa'al," said the Ranger, "I ain't filed no petition for the nomination, +not yet."</p> + +<p>"But tell me, Rifle-Eye," said the boy, "what is McGinnis? He isn't a +Guard, is he? and he doesn't talk like a Ranger from another part of the +forest."</p> + +<p>"No, he's an expert lumberman," replied the hunter. "He isn't attached +to this forest at all. He ain't even under the service of the government +all the while. He generally is, because he knows his business an' the +Forest Service knows a good man when it sees one. They engage him for a +month, or three, or four months, an' he goes wherever there's a timber +sale, or a big cut. Often as not, he teaches the Rangers a heap of +things they don't know about lumberin', and the Forest Assistants +themselves ain't above takin' practical pointers from him."</p> + +<p>"But I thought Mr. Merritt said that McGinnis only knew this kind of +forest?"</p> + +<p>"He said McGinnis wouldn't know anything of an Eastern hardwood forest. +That's right. But the government hasn't got any hardwood forests yet, +though I guess they soon will in the Appalachians. But you can't lose +him in any kind of pine. I've met up with him from Arizona to Alaska."</p> + +<p>The old woodsman turned sharply from the trail, apparently into the +unbroken forest.</p> + +<p>"Do you see the trail?" he asked.</p> + +<p>Wilbur looked on the ground to see if he could discern any traces. Not +doing so, he looked up at the Ranger, who had half turned in the saddle +to watch him. As he shook his head in denial he noticed the old +mountaineer looking at him with grieved surprise.</p> + +<p>"What do you reckon you were lookin' on the ground for?" he asked.</p> + +<p>"For the trail," said Wilbur.</p> + +<p>"Did ye think this was a city park?" said Rifle-Eye disgustedly.</p> + +<p>"Well, I never saw a trail before that you couldn't see," responded +Wilbur defiantly.</p> + +<p>The old hunter stopped his horse.</p> + +<p>"Turn half round," he said. Wilbur did so. "Now," he continued, "can you +see any trail through there?"</p> + +<p>The boy looked through the long cool aisles of trees, realizing that he +could ride in any direction without being stopped by undergrowth, but he +could see nothing that looked like a trail.</p> + +<p>"Now turn round and look ahead," said the hunter.</p> + +<p>The moment Wilbur turned he became conscious of what the old mountaineer +wanted to show him. Not a definite sign could he see, the ground was +untrampled, the trees showed no blaze marks, yet somehow there was a +consciousness that in a certain direction there was a way.</p> + +<p>"Yes," he said vaguely. "I can't see it, but I feel somehow that there's +a trail through there." He pointed between two large spruces that stood +near.</p> + +<p>The hunter slapped his pony on the neck.</p> + +<p>"Get up there, Milly," he said, "we'll teach him yet! You see," he +continued, "there ain't no manner of use in tryin' to see a trail. If +the trail's visible, the worst tenderfoot that ever lived could follow +it. It's the trail that you can't see that you've got to learn to +follow."</p> + +<p>"And how do you do it, Rifle-Eye?" asked the boy.</p> + +<p>"Same as you did just now. There's just a mite of difference where folks +have ridden, there's perhaps just a few seedlin's been trodden down, +an' there's a line between the trees that's just a little straighter +than any animal's runway. But it's so faint that the more you think +about it, the less sure you are. But, by an' by, you get so that you +couldn't help followin' it in any kind of weather." And the old hunter, +seeing the need of teaching Wilbur the intricacies of the pine country +forests, gave him hint after hint all the way to his little camp.</p> + +<p>When he got there Wilbur gave an exclamation of delight. The camp, as +the Supervisor had said, was near a little spring, which indeed bubbled +from the hillside not more than ten feet away from the tent, and +gleaming on the slope a couple of hundred feet below, he could see the +little lake which was "so full of trout" glistening itself like a silver +fish in the sunlight. A tall flagstaff, with a cord all reeved for the +flag, stood by the tent, and for the realities of life a strong, +serviceable telephone was fastened to a tree.</p> + +<p>Wilbur turned to the hunter, his eyes shining.</p> + +<p>"What a daisy place!" he cried.</p> + +<p>The old hunter smiled at his enthusiasm.</p> + +<p>"Let's see the tent," he said, and was about to leap from his horse when +the hunter called him.</p> + +<p>"I reckon, son," he said, "there's somethin' you're forgettin'."</p> + +<p>"What's that?" said Wilbur.</p> + +<p>"Horses come first," said Rifle-Eye. "It's nigh dinner-time now. Where's +the corral?"</p> + +<p>But Wilbur's spirits were not to be dampened by any check.</p> + +<p>"Is there a corral?" he said. "How bully! Oh, yes, I remember now Mr. +Merritt said there was. Where is it, Rifle-Eye? Say, this is a jim-dandy +of a camp!"</p> + +<p>A few steps further they came to the corral, a pretty little meadow in a +clearing, and in the far corner of it the stream which trickled from the +spring near the house. Wilbur unsaddled with a whoop and turned the +horses in the corral, then hurried back to the camp. The old hunter, +thinking perhaps that the boy would rather have the feeling of doing it +all himself for the first time, had not gone near the tent. There was a +small outer tent, which was little more than a strip of canvas thrown +over a horizontal pole and shielding a rough fireplace for rainy +weather, and within was the little dwelling-tent, with a cot, and even a +tiny table. On the ground was Wilbur's pack, containing all the things +he had sent up when he had broken his journey to go to the Double Bar +J ranch, and there, upon the bed, all spread out in the fullness of its +glory, was a brand-new Stars and Stripes. For a moment the boy's breath +was taken away, then, with a dash, he rushed for it, and fairly danced +out to the flagpole, where he fastened it and ran it to the truck, +shouting as he did so. His friend, entering into the boy's feelings, +solemnly raised his hat, as the flag settled at the peak and waved in +the wind. Wilbur, turning, saw the old scout saluting, and with stirring +patriotism, saluted, too.</p> + +<p>"And now," said the old hunter. "I'll get dinner."</p> + +<p>"That you'll not," said Wilbur indignantly. "I guess this is my house, +and you're to be my first guest."</p> + +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"> +<a name="IMAGE_15" id="IMAGE_15"></a> +<img src="images/image-15.jpg" width="600" height="398" alt="WILBUR'S OWN CAMP." title="" /> +<span class="caption">WILBUR'S OWN CAMP.<br />His first photograph; taken the day the Supervisor dropped in to see +him.<br />Photograph by U. S. Forest Service.</span> +</div> + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> + +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VIII" id="CHAPTER_VIII"></a>CHAPTER VIII</h2> + +<h3>DOWNING A GIANT LUMBERJACK</h3> + + +<p>"I don't believe," said Wilbur the next morning as they rode along the +trail that led to the nearest of his "lookout points," "that any king or +emperor ever had as fine a palace as this one."</p> + +<p>The comparison was a just one. Throughout the part of the forest in +which they were riding the whole sensation was of being roofed in and +enclosed, the roof itself being of shifting and glowing green, through +which at infrequent intervals broad streams of living light poured in, +gilding with a golden bronze the carpet of pine needles, while the +purple brown shafts of the trunks of the mighty trees formed a colonnade +illimitable.</p> + +<p>"I reckon every kind of palace," replied the Ranger, "had some sort of a +forest for a pattern. I took an artist through the Rockies one time, an' +he showed me that every kind of buildin' that had ever been built, and +every kind of trimmin's that had been devised had started as mere copies +of trees an' leaves."</p> + +<p>"Well," said Wilbur, his mind going back to a former exclamation of the +old woodsman, "you said this was your house."</p> + +<p>"My house it is," said Rifle-Eye, "an' if you wait a few minutes I'll +show you the view from one of my windows."</p> + +<p>For two hours the hunter and the boy had been riding up a sharp slope, +in places getting off their horses so as to give them the benefit of as +little unnecessary carrying as possible, constantly ascending on a great +granite spur twenty miles wide, between the Kaweah and King's River +canyons. Now, suddenly they emerged from the shadowy roof of the forest +to the bare surface of a ridge of granite.</p> + +<p>"There's the real world," said Rifle-Eye; "it ain't goin' to hurt your +eyes to look at it, same as a city does, and your own little worryin's +soon drop off in a place like this."</p> + +<p>He turned his horse slightly to the left, where a small group of +mountain balsam, growing in a cleft of the granite, made a spot of +shadow upon the very precipice's brink. The boy looked around for a +minute or two without speaking, then said softly: "How fine!"</p> + +<p>Three thousand feet below, descending in bold faces of naked rugged +rock, broken here and there by ledges whereon mighty pines found +lodgment, lay the valley of King's River, a thin, winding gleam of green +with the water a silver thread so fine as only to be seen at intervals. +Here and there in the depths the bottom widened to a quarter of a mile, +and there the sunlight, falling on the young grass, gave a brilliancy of +green that was almost startling in contrast with the dark foliage of the +pines.</p> + +<p>"What do you call that rock?" asked the boy, pointing to a tall, +pyramidal mass of granite, buttressed with rock masses but little less +noble than the central peak, between each buttress a rift of snow, +flecked here and there by the outline of a daring spruce clinging to the +rock, apparently in defiance of all laws of gravity.</p> + +<p>"That is called 'Grand Sentinel,'" said the hunter, "and if you will +take out your glasses you will see that from here you can overlook miles +and miles of country to the west. This is about as high as any place on +the south fork of the King's River until it turns north where Bubbs +Creek runs into it."</p> + +<p>Wilbur took out from their case his field-glasses and scanned the +horizon carefully as far as he could see, then snapping them back into +the case, he turned to the hunter, saying:</p> + +<p>"No fire in sight here!"</p> + +<p>"All right," replied Rifle-Eye, "then we'll go on to the next point."</p> + +<p>That whole day was a revelation to Wilbur of the beauty and of the size +of that portion of the forest which it was his especial business to +oversee. Here and there the Ranger made a short break from the direct +line of the journey to take the boy down to some miner's cabin or Indian +shack, so that, as he expressed it, "you c'n live in a world of friends. +There ain't no man livin', son," he continued, "but what'll be the +better of havin' a kind word some day, an' the more of them you give, +the more you're likely to have."</p> + +<p>Owing to these deviations from the direct trail, it was late when they +returned to Wilbur's little camp. But not even the lateness of the hour, +nor the boy's fatigue, could keep down his delight in his tent home. He +was down at the corral quite a long time, and when he came back +Rifle-Eye asked him where he had been. The boy flushed a little.</p> + +<p>"I hadn't seen Kit all day," he said, "so I went down and had a little +talk to her."</p> + +<p>The Ranger smiled and said nothing but looked well pleased. In the +meantime he had quickly prepared supper, and Wilbur started in and ate +as though he would never stop. At last he leaned back and sighed aloud.</p> + +<p>"That's the best dinner I ever ate," he said; "I never thought fish +could taste so good."</p> + +<p>But he jumped up again immediately and took the dishes down to the +spring to wash them. He had just dipped the plates into the pool under +the spring when the old woodsman stopped him.</p> + +<p>"You don't ever want to do that," he said. "There ain't any manner of +use in foulin' a stream that you'll want to use all the time. Little +bits of food, washin' off the plates, will soon make that water bad if +you let them run in there. An' not only is that bad for you, but ef +you'll notice, it's the overflow from that little pool that runs down +through the meadow."</p> + +<p>"And it would spoil the drinking water for the horses," exclaimed +Wilbur; "I hadn't thought of that. I'm awfully glad you're along, +Rifle-Eye, for I should be making all sorts of mistakes."</p> + +<p>Under the advice of his friend Wilbur washed up and put away the dishes +and then settled down for the evening. He made up his day's report, and +then thought he would write a long letter. But he had penned very, few +sentences when he began to get quite sleepy and to nod over the paper. +The Ranger noted it, and told him promptly to go to bed.</p> + +<p>"I'll finish this letter first," said Wilbur.</p> + +<p>A moment or two later he was again advised to turn in, and again Wilbur +persisted that he would finish the letter first. There was a short +pause.</p> + +<p>"Son," said Rifle-Eye, "what do you suppose you are ridin' from point to +point of the forest for?"</p> + +<p>"To see if there's any sign of fire," said the boy.</p> + +<p>"And you've got to look pretty closely through those glasses o' yours, +don't you?"</p> + +<p>The boy admitted that they were a little dazzling and that he had to +look all he knew how.</p> + +<p>"Then, if you make your eyes heavy and tired for the next mornin', +you're robbin' the Service of what they got you for—your eyesight, +ain't you? I ain't forcin' you, noways. I'm only showin' you what's the +square thing."</p> + +<p>Wilbur put forward his chin obstinately, then, thinking of the kindness +he had received from the Ranger all the way through, and realizing that +he was in the right, said:</p> + +<p>"All right, Rifle-Eye, I'll turn in."</p> + +<p>About half an hour later, just as the old woodsman stretched himself on +his pile of boughs outside the tent, he heard the boy mutter:</p> + +<p>"I hope I'll never have to live anywhere but here."</p> + +<p>The following day and the next were similar in many ways to the first. +Wilbur and the Ranger rode the various trails, the boy learning the +landmarks by which he might make sure that he was going right, and +making acquaintance with the few settlers who lived in his portion of +the forest. On Sunday morning, however, the Ranger told the boy he must +leave him to his own devices.</p> + +<p>"I've put in several days with you gettin' you started," he said, "an' I +reckon I'd better be goin' about some other business. There's a heap o' +things doin' all the time, an' as it is I'm pressed to keep up. But +I'll drop in every now an' again, an' you're allers welcome at +headquarters."</p> + +<p>"I hate to have you go, Rifle-Eye," the boy replied, "and you certainly +have been mighty good to me. I'll try not to forget all the things +you've told me, and I'll look forward to seeing you again before long."</p> + +<p>"I'll come first chance I can," replied the hunter. "Take care of +yourself."</p> + +<p>"Good-by, Rifle-Eye," called the boy, "and I'll look for your coming +back." He watched the old man until he was lost to sight and then waited +until the sound of the horse's hoofs on the hillside had ceased. He +found a lump in his throat as he turned away, but he went into the tent, +and went over his reports to see if they read all right before the +Supervisor arrived. Then, thinking that it was likely his chief would +come about noon, he exerted himself trying to make up an extra good +dinner. He caught some trout, and finding some lettuce growing in the +little garden, got it ready for salad, and then mixed up the batter for +some "flapjacks," as the old hunter had shown him how. He had everything +ready to begin the cooking, and was writing letters when he heard his +guest coming up the trail, and went out to meet him.</p> + +<p>After Wilbur had made his reports and got dinner, for both of which he +received a short commendation, the Supervisor broached the question of +the timber trespass.</p> + +<p>"Loyle," he said, "McGinnis and I have measured up the lumber stolen. +There's about four and a half million feet. You were with us when we +first located the trespass, and I want you to come with us to the mill."</p> + +<p>"Very well, Mr. Merritt," answered the boy.</p> + +<p>"I don't want you to do any talking at all, unless I ask you a question. +Then answer carefully and in the fewest words you can. Don't tell me +what you think. Say what you know. I'll do all the talking that will be +necessary."</p> + +<p>Wilbur thought to himself that the conversation probably would not be +very long, but he said nothing.</p> + +<p>"That is," continued the other as an afterthought, "McGinnis and I. I +don't suppose he can be kept quiet."</p> + +<p>Wilbur grinned.</p> + +<p>"But he usually knows what he is talking about, I should think," he +hazarded.</p> + +<p>"He does—on lumber." Then, with one of the abrupt changes of topic, +characteristic of the man, the Supervisor turned to the question of +intended improvements in that part of the forest where Wilbur was to be. +He showed himself to be aware that the lad's appointment as Guard was +not merely a temporary affair, but a part of his training to fit himself +for higher posts, and accordingly explained matters more fully than he +would otherwise have done. Reaching the close of that subject he rose to +go suddenly. He looked around the tent.</p> + +<p>"Got everything you want?" he demanded.</p> + +<p>"Yes, indeed, sir," the boy replied. "It's very comfortable here."</p> + +<p>"Got a watch?"</p> + +<p>"No, Mr. Merritt, not now."</p> + +<p>"Why not?"</p> + +<p>"Mine got lost in that little trouble I had with the bob-cat, and I +didn't notice it until next day."</p> + +<p>"Saw you hadn't one the other day. Take this."</p> + +<p>He pulled a watch out of his pocket and handed it to the boy.</p> + +<p>"But, Mr. Merritt," began the boy, "your watch? Oh, I couldn't—"</p> + +<p>"Got another. You'll need it." He turned and walked out of the tent.</p> + +<p>Wilbur overtook him on the way to the corral.</p> + +<p>"Oh, Mr. Merritt—" he began, but his chief turned sharply round on him. +The boy, for all his impulsiveness, could read a face, and he checked +himself. "Thank you very much, indeed," he ended quietly. He got out the +Supervisor's horse, and as the latter swung himself into the saddle, he +said:</p> + +<p>"What time to-morrow, Mr. Merritt?"</p> + +<p>"Eleven, sharp," was the reply. "So long."</p> + +<p>Wilbur looked after him as he rode away.</p> + +<p>"That means starting by daybreak," he said aloud. "Well, I don't think +I'm going to suffer from sleeping sickness on this job, anyway." And he +went back into the tent to finish the letter which he had started two +evenings before and never had a chance to complete.</p> + +<p>By dawn the next morning Wilbur was on the trail. He was giving himself +more time than he needed, but he had not the slightest intention of +arriving late, neither did he wish the flanks of his horse to show that +he had been riding hard. For the boy was perfectly sure that not a +detail would escape the Supervisor's eye. Accordingly, he was able to +take the trip quietly and trotted easily into camp a quarter of an hour +ahead of time. He was heartily welcomed by McGinnis, while Merritt told +him to go in and get a snack, as they would start in a few minutes. +There was enough to make a good meal, and Wilbur was hungry after riding +since dawn, so that he had just got through when the other two men rode +up. He hastily finished his last mouthful, jumped up, and clambered into +the saddle after the Supervisor, who had not waited a moment to see if +he were ready.</p> + +<p>Merritt set a fairly fast pace, and the trail was only intended for +single file, so that there was no conversation for an hour or more. Then +the head of the forest pulled up a little and conversed with McGinnis +briefly for a while, resuming his rapid pace as soon as they were +through. Once, and once only, did he speak to Wilbur, and that was just +as they got on the road leading to the sawmill. There he said:</p> + +<p>"Think all you like, but don't say it."</p> + +<p>When they reached the mill they passed the time of day with several of +the men, who seemed glad to see them, and a good deal of good-natured +banter passed between McGinnis and the men to whom he was well known. +The Supervisor sent word that he wanted to see the boss, and presently +Peavey Jo came out to meet them.</p> + +<p>"Salut, Merritt!" he said; "I t'ink it's long time since you were here, +hey?"</p> + +<p>The words as well as the look of the man told Wilbur his race and +nation. Evidently of French origin, possibly with a trace of Indian in +him, this burly son of generations of voyageurs looked his strength. +Wilbur had gone up one winter to northern Wisconsin and Michigan where +some of the big lumber camps were, and he knew the breed. He decided +that Merritt's advice was extremely good; he would talk just as little +as he had to.</p> + +<p>The Supervisor wasted no time on preliminary greetings. That was not his +way.</p> + +<p>"How much lumber did you cut last winter off ground that didn't belong +to you?" he queried shortly.</p> + +<p>"Off land not mine?"</p> + +<p>"You heard my question!"</p> + +<p>"I cut him off my own land," said the millman with an injured +expression.</p> + +<p>"Some of it."</p> + +<p>"You scale all the logs I cut. You mark him. I sell him. All right."</p> + +<p>"You tell it well," commented the Supervisor tersely. "But it don't go, +Jo. How much was there?"</p> + +<p>"I tell you I cut him off my land."</p> + +<p>Merritt pointedly took his notebook from his breastpocket.</p> + +<p>"Liars make me tired," he announced impartially.</p> + +<p>"You call me a liar—" began the big lumberman savagely, edging up to +the horse.</p> + +<p>"Not yet. But I probably will before I'm through," was the unperturbed +reply.</p> + +<p>"You say all the same that I am a liar, is it not?"</p> + +<p>"Not yet, anyway. What does it matter? You cut four and a half million +feet, a little over."</p> + +<p>A smile passed over the faces of the men attached to the sawmill. It was +evident that a number of them must know about the trespass, and probably +thought that Peavey Jo had been clever in getting away with it. The +mill-owner laughed.</p> + +<p>"You t'ink I keep him in my pocket, hey?" he queried. "Four and a half +million feet is big enough to see. You have a man here, he see logs, he +mark logs, I cut them."</p> + +<p>The Supervisor swung himself from his horse and handed the reins to +Wilbur. McGinnis did the same.</p> + +<p>"You don't need to get down, Loyle," he said; "it will not take long to +find where the logs are."</p> + +<p>The big lumberman stepped forward with an angry gleam in his eye.</p> + +<p>"This my mill," he said. "You have not the right to walk it over."</p> + +<p>"This is a National Forest," was the sharp reply, "and I'm in charge of +it. I'll go just wherever I see fit. Who'll stop me?"</p> + +<p>"Me, Josef La Blanc—I stop you."</p> + +<p>Just then Wilbur, glancing over the circle of men, saw standing among +them Ben, the half-witted boy who lived in the old hunter's cabin. +Seeing that he was observed, the lad sidled over to Wilbur and said, in +a low voice, questioningly:</p> + +<p>"Plenty, plenty logs? No marked?"</p> + +<p>"Yes," said Wilbur, wondering that he should have followed the +discussion so closely.</p> + +<p>"I know where!"</p> + +<p>"You do?" queried Wilbur.</p> + +<p>Ben nodded his head a great many times, until Wilbur thought it would +fall off. In the meantime Merritt and Peavey Jo, standing a few feet +apart, had been eying each other. Presently the Supervisor stepped +forward:</p> + +<p>"Show me those logs," he ordered.</p> + +<p>"You better keep back, I t'ink," growled the millman.</p> + +<p>Merritt stepped forward unconcernedly, but was met with an open-hand +push that sent him reeling backward.</p> + +<p>"I not want to fight you," he cried; "I get a plenty fight when I want +him. You no good; can't fight."</p> + +<p>"I'm not going to fight," said the Supervisor, "but I'm going to see +where those logs are, or were. Stand aside!"</p> + +<p>But the big Frenchman planted himself squarely in the way.</p> + +<p>"If you hunt for the trouble," he said, "you get him sure," he said +menacingly.</p> + +<p>"I'm not hunting for trouble, Jo, and you know it But I'm hunting logs, +and I'll find them."</p> + +<p>He was just about to step forward, trusting to quickness to dodge the +blow that he could see would be launched at him, when Ben, who had been +whispering to Wilbur, lurched over to the Supervisor and pulled his arm.</p> + +<p>"Plenty, plenty logs, no mark," he said loudly; "I know where. I show +you. They are up—"</p> + +<p>But he never finished the sentence, for the lumberman, taking one step +forward, drove his left fist square at the side of the boy's jaw, +dropping him insensible before he could give the information which +Merritt was seeking.</p> + +<p>But unexpected as the blow had been, it was met scarcely a second later +by an equally unexpected pile-driver jolt from McGinnis.</p> + +<p>"Ye big murdhering spalpeen," burst out the angry Irishman, "ye think +it's a fine thing to try and shtop a man that's trying to do his duty, +and think yerself a fightin' man, bekass ye can lick a man that doesn't +want to fight. This isn't any Forest Service scrap, mind ye, and I'm +saying nothing about logs. I'm talking about your hittin' a weak, +half-crazed boy. Ye're a liar and a coward, Peavey Jo, and a dirty one +at that."</p> + +<p>"Keep quiet, McGinnis," said Merritt, who was stooping down over the +insensible lad, "we'll put him in jail for this."</p> + +<p>"Ye will, maybe," snorted the Irishman, "afther he laves the hospital."</p> + +<p>"You make dis your bizness, hey?" queried the mill-owner.</p> + +<p>"I'll make it your funeral, ye sneaking half-breed Canuck! How about +it, boys," he added turning to the crowd, "do I get fair play?"</p> + +<p>A chorus of "Sure," "'Twas a dirty trick," "The kid didn't know no +better," and similar cries showed how the sentiment of the crowd lay. In +a moment McGinnis and the Frenchman had stripped their coats and faced +each other. The mill-owner was by far the bigger man, and the play of +his shoulders showed that his fearful strength was not muscle bound, but +he stood ponderously; on the other hand, the Irishman, who, while tall, +was not nearly as heavy, only seemed to touch the ground, his step was +so light and springy.</p> + +<p>The Frenchman rushed, swinging as he did so. A less sure fighter would +have given ground, thereby weakening the force of his return blow should +he have a chance to give it. McGinnis sidestepped and cross-jolted with +his left. It was a wicked punch, but Peavey Jo partly stopped it. As it +was, it jarred him to his heels.</p> + +<p>"Lam a kid, will ye, ye bloated pea-jammer," grinned McGinnis, who was +beaming with delight now that the fight was really started.</p> + +<p>"You fight, no talk," growled the other, recovering warily, for the one +interchange had showed him that the Irishman was not to be despised.</p> + +<p>"I can sing a tune," said McGinnis, "and then lick you with one hand—" +He stopped as Peavey Jo bored in, fighting hard and straight and showing +his mettle. There was no doubt of it, the Frenchman was the stronger and +the better man. Twice McGinnis tried to dodge and duck, but Peavey Jo, +for all his size, was lithe when roused and knew every trick of the +trade, and a sigh went up when with a sweeping blow delivered on the +point of the shoulder, the Frenchman sent McGinnis reeling to the +ground. He would have kicked him with his spiked boots as he lay, in the +fashion of the lumber camps, but the Supervisor, showing not the +slightest fear of the infuriated giant, quietly stepped between.</p> + +<p>"This fight's none of my making or my choosing," he said, "but I'll see +that it's fought fair."</p> + +<p>But before the bullying millman could turn his anger upon the +self-appointed referee, McGinnis was up on his feet.</p> + +<p>"Let me at him," he cried, "I'll show him a trick or two for that."</p> + +<p>Again the fight changed color. McGinnis was not smiling, but neither had +he lost his temper. His vigilance had doubled and his whole frame +seemed to be of steel springs. Blow after blow came crashing straight +for him, but the alert Irishman evaded them by the merest fraction of an +inch. Two fearful swings from Peavey Jo followed each other in rapid +succession, both of which McGinnis avoided by stepping inside them, his +right arm apparently swinging idly by his side. Then suddenly, at a +third swing, he ran in to meet it, stooped and brought up his right with +all the force of arm and shoulder and with the full spring of the whole +body upwards. It is a difficult blow to land, but deadly. It caught +Peavey Jo on the point of the chin and he went down.</p> + +<p>One of the mill hands hastened to the boss.</p> + +<p>"You've killed him, I think," he said.</p> + +<p>"Don't you belave it," said McGinnis; "he was born to be hanged, an' +hanged he'll be."</p> + +<p>But the big lumberman gave no sign of life.</p> + +<p>"I have seen a man killed by that uppercut, though," said the Irishman a +little more dubiously, as the minutes passed by and no sign of +consciousness was apparent, "but I don't believe I've got the strength +to do it."</p> + +<p>Several moments passed and then Peavey Jo gave a deep respiration.</p> + +<p>"There!" said McGinnis triumphantly. "I told ye he'd live to be +hanged." He looked around for the appreciation of the spectators. "But +it was a bird of a punch I handed him," he grinned.</p> + +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"> +<a name="IMAGE_16" id="IMAGE_16"></a> +<img src="images/image-16.jpg" width="600" height="406" alt="TRAIN-LOAD FROM ONE TREE." title="" /> +<span class="caption">TRAIN-LOAD FROM ONE TREE.<br />Temporary railroad built through the forest to the sawmill.<br />Photograph by U. S. Forest Service.</span> +</div> + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> + +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_IX" id="CHAPTER_IX"></a>CHAPTER IX</h2> + +<h3>A HARD FOE TO CONQUER</h3> + + +<p>With the defeat of Peavey Jo, and the evidence that he was not too +seriously hurt by the licking he had received, the Supervisor's +attention promptly returned to the question for which he had come to the +mill. Ben had struggled up to a sitting posture, and Merritt repeated +his question as to the whereabouts of the logs, the answering of which +had brought the big millman's anger upon the half-witted lad. +Accordingly, Ben looked frightened, and refused to answer, but when he +saw his foe still lying stretched out on the ground he said:</p> + +<p>"Logs, near, near. Under pile of slabs."</p> + +<p>"Oh, that was the way he hid them," said the Forest Chief; "clever +enough trick, too."</p> + +<p>McGinnis and Merritt followed Ben, and a couple of the men around +sauntered along also. Wilbur stayed with the horses, watching the +mill-hands trying to bring Peavey Jo to consciousness. They had just +roused him and got him to his feet when the government party returned.</p> + +<p>"I've seen your logs," said the Supervisor with just a slight note of +triumph in his voice, "and I've plenty of witnesses. I also know who +you're working for, so it will do no good to skip out. I'll nail both of +you. Four and a half million feet, remember."</p> + +<p>Suddenly McGinnis startled every one by a sudden shout:</p> + +<p>"Drop that ax!" he cried.</p> + +<p>The lumberman, who was just about to get into the saddle, suddenly +dropped from the stirrup and made a quick grab for Ben, who had been +standing near by. The half-witted lad had picked up an ax, and was +quietly sidling up in the direction of the lumberman, who was still too +dazed from the blow he had received from McGinnis to be on the watch.</p> + +<p>"What would ye do with the ax, ye little villain?" asked McGinnis.</p> + +<p>"I kill him, once, twice," said the lad.</p> + +<p>"Ye would, eh? Sure, I've always labored under the impression that +killin' a man once is enough. 'Tis myself that can see the satisfaction +it would be to whack him one with the ax, Ben, but ye'd be robbing the +hangman."</p> + +<p>"I kill him," repeated the half-witted lad.</p> + +<p>"Not with that ax, anyway," said McGinnis wrenching it from his grasp +and tossing it to one of the men who stood by. "I'm thinkin', Merritt, +that we'd better take the boy away. When he's sot, there's no changin' +him."</p> + +<p>"You fellers had best take one o' my ponies," spoke up one of the +sawyers; "I've got a string here, an' you can send him back any time. +An' I guess it wouldn't be healthy here for Ben right now."</p> + +<p>"All right, Phil," said McGinnis; "I'll go along with you and get him."</p> + +<p>As soon as McGinnis was out of the way, Peavey Jo stepped up to where +the Supervisor was sitting in the saddle. Ben had been standing beside +him since McGinnis took the ax, but now he shrank back to Wilbur's side.</p> + +<p>"You t'ink me beaten, hey?" he said, showing his teeth in an angry +snarl; "you wait and see."</p> + +<p>"I don't know whether you're beaten or no," said Merritt contemptuously, +"but any one can see that you've been licked."</p> + +<p>"You t'ink this forest good place. By Gar, I make him so bad you +ashamed to live here."</p> + +<p>"A threat's no more use than a lie, Peavey Jo," replied the Supervisor +sharply. "I don't bluff worth a cent, and the government's behind me."</p> + +<p>The half-breed spat on the ground.</p> + +<p>"That for your American government," he said. "I, me, make your American +government look sick. I warn you fairly now. You win this time, yes, but +always, no. Bon! My turn come by and by."</p> + +<p>"All right," replied the head of the forest indifferently, turning away +as McGinnis and Ben came up, "turn on your viciousness whenever you +like." Saying which, he rode away without paying further heed to the +muttered response of the millman.</p> + +<p>The ride home was singularly silent. Neither McGinnis nor the +half-witted lad were in any mood for speaking, Ben nursing a badly +swollen jaw, and McGinnis weak from the body blows and the lame shoulder +he had received in the fight. The Supervisor was angry that the trouble +had come to blows, but in justice could not blame McGinnis for the part +he had taken. It annoyed him, especially, to feel that he had been +compelled to take the part of a mere spectator, although this feeling +was partly soothed by the knowledge that he had discovered and proved +the very thing he had set out to find.</p> + +<p>On arriving at headquarters, the four horses were turned into the +corral, and the men went in to get supper. Merritt immediately commenced +a full report to Washington on the case, and McGinnis and Ben were glad +to lie down. At supper Wilbur took occasion to congratulate McGinnis on +the result of the encounter. The Irishman nodded.</p> + +<p>"He's a better man than me," he admitted readily, "and that uppercut was +the only thing I had left. But 'tis a darlin' of a punch, is that same, +when ye get it in right. But I don't think we're through with him. He +looks like the breed that harbors a grudge."</p> + +<p>"He threatened Merritt while you were away," said Wilbur, dropping his +voice so as not to disturb the rest.</p> + +<p>"The mischief he did! The nerve of him! Tell me what he said."</p> + +<p>Wilbur repeated the conversation word for word, and the Irishman +whistled.</p> + +<p>"There, now," he said. "What did I tell ye? Not that I can see there's +much that he can do."</p> + +<p>"Do you suppose he'd set a fire?" asked Wilbur.</p> + +<p>"He's mean enough to," said McGinnis, "but I don't believe he would. No +man that knows anything at all about timber would. Sure, he knows that +we could put it out in no time if there wasn't a wind, and if there was, +why the blaze might veer at any minute and burn up his mill and all his +lumber."</p> + +<p>"But for revenge?"</p> + +<p>"A Frenchy pea-jammer isn't goin' to lose any dollars unless he has to," +said McGinnis. "I don't think you need to be afraid of that." Then, +following along the train of thought that had been suggested, he told +the boy some lurid stories of life in the lumber camps of Michigan and +Wisconsin in the early days.</p> + +<p>Early next morning Wilbur returned to his camp to resume his round of +fire rides, which he found to be of growing interest. On his return to +his camp, although tired, the lad would work till dark over his little +garden, knowing that everything he succeeded in growing would add to the +enrichment of his food supply. Then the fence around the garden was in +very bad repair, and he set to work to make one which should effectively +keep out the rabbits.</p> + +<p>Another week he found that if he could build a little bridge across a +place where the canyon was very narrow he could save an hour's ride on +one of his trails. Already the lad had put up a small log span on his +own account. He went over and over this line of travel, blazing his way +until he felt entirely sure that he had picked out the best line of +trail, and then one evening he called up Rifle-Eye and asked him if he +would come over some time and show him how to build this little bridge.</p> + +<p>There followed three most exciting days in which the Ranger and a Guard +from the other side of the forest joined him in bridge-building. They +not only spanned the canyon, but strengthened the little log bridge the +boy had made all by himself. Wilbur's reward was not only the shortening +of his route, but commendation from Rifle-Eye that he had taken the +trouble to find out the route and that he had picked it so well. That +night he wrote home as though he had been appointed in charge of all the +forests of the world, so proud was he.</p> + +<p>Then there was one day in which Wilbur found the value of his lookout, +for from the very place that the old hunter had pointed out as being one +of "the windows of his house," the boy saw curling up to the westward a +small, dull cloud of smoke. Remembering the warnings of the Ranger, he +did not leap to the saddle at once, but remained for several minutes, +studying the nearest landmarks to the apparent location of the fire and +the surest method of getting there. That ride was somewhat of a novel +experience for Kit as well as the boy. The little mare had grown +accustomed to a quiet, even pace on the forest trails, and the use of +the spur was a thing not to be borne. Wilbur felt as if he were fairly +flying through the pine woods. Still he remembered to keep the mare well +in hand going down the steeper slopes, and within a couple of hours he +found himself at the fire. Then Wilbur found how true it was that a +blaze could easily be put out if caught early. There was little wind, +and the line of fire was not more than a mile long. By clearing the +ground, brushing the needles aside for a foot or so on the lee side of +the fire, most of it burned itself out and the rest he could stamp to +extinction. Here and there he used his fire shovel and threw a little +earth where the blaze was highest.</p> + +<p>That evening he telephoned to headquarters, reporting that he had put +the fire out, but only received a kindly worded rebuke for not having +endeavored to find out what caused the fire, and a suggestion that he +should ride back the next day and investigate. But before he could +telephone himself the next evening, and while he was at supper, the +'phone rang, and he found the Supervisor was on the wire.</p> + +<p>"Come to headquarters at once," he was told; "all hands are wanted."</p> + +<p>"To-night, Mr. Merritt?" the boy queried.</p> + +<p>There was a moment's pause.</p> + +<p>"What did you do to-day?" he asked in answer.</p> + +<p>"I went to find out what started that fire," the boy replied. "It was a +couple of fishermen from the city. They had been here before, and so had +no guide. I followed them up and showed them how to make a fire +properly."</p> + +<p>"That's a pretty long ride," said Merritt; "I guess you can come over +first thing to-morrow morning."</p> + +<p>"Very well, sir," said Wilbur, and hung up the receiver.</p> + +<p>"I certainly do wonder," he said aloud, "what it can be? It can't be a +big fire, or he would tell me to come anyway, no matter what I'd done +to-day, especially as fire is best fought at night. And I don't see how +it can be any trouble over Peavey Jo, because that's in the hands of the +Washington people now. Unless," he added as an afterthought, "they have +come to arrest him."</p> + +<p>Having settled in his mind that this was probably the trouble, Wilbur +returned to his supper. Just as he was finishing it, he said aloud: "I +don't see how it can be that, either. For if it's due to any trouble of +that kind they want big, husky fellows, and Merritt can swear in any one +he needs." So giving up the problem as temporarily insoluble, Wilbur +went to bed early so as to make a quick start in the dawn of the +morning.</p> + +<p>It turned out to be a glorious day, with but very little wind, and +Wilbur's mind was quite set at rest about the question of fire. But when +he reached headquarters he was surprised to see the number of men that +were gathered there. Not laughing and joking, as customarily, they stood +gravely around, only eying him curiously as he came in. The boy turned +to McGinnis.</p> + +<p>"What's wrong?" he said.</p> + +<p>For answer the lumberman held out a piece of wood from which the bark +had been stripped. Underneath the bark on the soft wood were numberless +little channels which looked as though they had been chiseled out with a +fine, rounded chisel.</p> + +<p>"Oh," he said, "I see." Then he continued: "But I didn't know there was +any bark-beetle here."</p> + +<p>McGinnis waved his hand around.</p> + +<p>"Does this look as if we had known very long?" he said.</p> + +<p>"Who found it out?" asked Wilbur.</p> + +<p>"Rifle-Eye," was the reply, "or at least Merritt and he found traces on +the same day and brought the news into camp. Merritt only saw signs in +one spot, but the old Ranger dropped on several colonies at different +parts of the forest, so that it must be widespread."</p> + +<p>The boy whistled under his breath. He had heard enough of the ravages of +the bark beetle to know what it might mean if it once secured a strong +footing on the Sierras.</p> + +<p>"I remember hearing once," he said, "that over twenty-two thousand +acres of spruce in Bohemia were wiped out in a month by the Tomicus +beetle."</p> + +<p>"This is the work of a Tomicus," said McGinnis. "And what such a +critter as that was ever made for gets me."</p> + +<p>"What's going to be done?" asked Wilbur.</p> + +<p>McGinnis pointed to the house whence the Supervisor was just coming out.</p> + +<p>"I have notified the District Forester," he said, standing on the steps, +"and if I find things in bad shape he will send for Wilcox, who knows +more about the beetle than any man in the Service. I don't know how much +damage has been done nor how widespread it is. There are eight of us +here, and we will divide, as I said before, each two keeping about fifty +yards apart and girdling infected and useless trees. Loyle, you go with +Rifle-Eye."</p> + +<p>Wilbur was delighted at finding himself with his old friend again, and +he seized the opportunity gladly of asking him how he happened to find +out that the pest had got a start.</p> + +<p>"I was campin' last night," said the old Ranger, "an' I saw an old dead +tree that looked as if it might have some tinder that would start a +fire easy. So I picked up my ax an' went up to it. But the minute I got +there I felt somethin' was wrong, so I sliced along the bark, an' there +were hundreds of the beetles. Then I looked at some of the near by +trees, an' there was a few, here and there. But the funny part of it was +that although I looked, an' looked carefully, for a hundred yards on +either side, I couldn't find any more."</p> + +<p>"So much the better," said Wilbur, "you didn't want to find any more, +did you?"</p> + +<p>The old hunter stepped over to a spruce and examined it closely.</p> + +<p>"I didn't think there were any there," he said, "but you can't be too +sure."</p> + +<p>They walked all the rest of the morning, without having seen a sign of +any beetles, though once the most distant party whooped as a sign that +some had been found.</p> + +<p>"I remember," said the Ranger, "one year when we had a plague o' +caterpillars. They was eatin' the needles of the trees an' killin' 'em +by wholesale. There was nothin' we could do to stop it. But it got +stopped all right."</p> + +<p>"How?" Wilbur queried interestedly. "Rain?"</p> + +<p>"Rain would only make it worse. Have you ever noticed, son, that when +somethin' pretty bad comes along, there's always somethin' else comes to +sort o' take off the smart? Nothin's bad all the time. Well, this time, +there came a fly."</p> + +<p>"A fly?"</p> + +<p>"Yes, son, a fly, lookin' somethin' like a wasp, only not as long as +your thumb-nail. They come in swarms, an' started disposin' o' them +caterpillars as though they had been trained to the business. They stung +'em an' then dropped an egg where they'd stung. Sometimes the +caterpillar lived long enough to spin a web, as they usually do, but it +never come out as a moth. An' since it's the moth that lays the eggs, +this fly put an end to the caterpillar output with pleasin' swiftness."</p> + +<p>"What did they call the fly?"</p> + +<p>"I did hear," said Rifle-Eye, thinking. "Oh, yes, now I remember; it was +the ik, ik—"</p> + +<p>"Oh, I know now," said Wilbur; "I remember hearing about it at the +Ranger School. The ichneumon fly."</p> + +<p>"That's it. But, as I was sayin'—" he stopped short. Then the old +hunter took a quick step to one side, pointed at a pine tree, and said:</p> + +<p>"There's one o' them."</p> + +<p>Wilbur could only see a few little holes in the bark, but the old +woodsman, slicing off a section, showed the tree girdled with the +galleries that the beetle had made. He raised a whoop, and Wilbur in the +distance could hear the Supervisor saying, "Three," implying it was the +third piece found infected.</p> + +<p>"But I don't quite see," said Wilbur, "how they make these galleries +running in all sorts of ways."</p> + +<p>"I ain't no expert on this here," said Rifle-Eye. "But as far as I know, +in the spring a beetle finds an old decayed tree. She begins at once to +bore a sort of passageway, half in the bark an' half in the wood, an' +lays eggs all along the sides. When the eggs come out, each grub digs a +tunnel out from the big gallery, an' in about three weeks the grub has +made a long tunnel, livin' on the bark an' wood for its food, an' has +grown to be a beetle. Then it bores its way out an' flies away to +another tree to repeat the same interestin' performance."</p> + +<p>"And if there are a lot of them," said Wilbur, "I suppose it stops the +sap from going up."</p> + +<p>"Exactly," said the hunter. "But they generally begin on sickly trees."</p> + +<p>"Wilbur," he called a moment later, "come here."</p> + +<p>The boy hurried over to the old hunter, who was standing by a dead +tree—a small one, lying on the ground.</p> + +<p>"Try that one," he said.</p> + +<p>The boy struck it with the ax and it showed up alive with beetles and +grubs and honeycombed with galleries.</p> + +<p>"Gee," said the boy, "that's a bad one."</p> + +<p>"That's very like the way I found the other," said the old hunter; "one +very bad one lyin' on the ground an' just a few around it bad, while +just a short distance away there was no signs."</p> + +<p>He stood and thought for a minute or two, but aside from the +coincidence, Wilbur could not see that there was anything strange in +that. They worked busily for a few moments, girdling the infected trees, +and also girdling some small useless trees near by, because, as the +hunter explained, when the beetles flew out seeking a new tree to +destroy, they would prefer one that was dying, as a tree from which +all the bark has been cut away all round always does, and then these +trees could be burned.</p> + +<p>"Have you noticed wheel tracks around here?" asked the hunter +thoughtfully.</p> + +<p>"I did think so," said Wilbur, "near that dead tree, but I s'posed, of +course, I was wrong. What would a wagon be doing up here?"</p> + +<p>Suddenly the Ranger dropped his ax as though he had been stung. He +turned to the boy, his eyes flashing.</p> + +<p>"Boy!" he said, "did you see the stump of that dead tree!"</p> + +<p>"I didn't notice," said Wilbur wonderingly.</p> + +<p>The old woodsman picked up his ax, and led the way back to the dead +tree.</p> + +<p>Wilbur looked at the base of the tree.</p> + +<p>"It isn't a windfall," he said; "it's been cut."</p> + +<p>"Where's the stump?" asked Rifle-Eye.</p> + +<p>The boy looked within a radius of a few feet, then looked up at the +hunter.</p> + +<p>"Where's the stump?" repeated the old man.</p> + +<p>Wilbur turned back and searched for five minutes. Not a stump could he +find that fitted the tree. None had been cut for some time, and none at +all of so small a girth.</p> + +<p>"I can't find any," he admitted shamefacedly, afraid that the Ranger +would prove him wrong in some way.</p> + +<p>"Nor can I," said Rifle-Eye. "Well?"</p> + +<p>"Then I guess there isn't one there," said the boy.</p> + +<p>"How did the tree get there?"</p> + +<p>Wilbur looked at him, reflecting the question that he saw in the other's +eyes.</p> + +<p>"It couldn't get there of itself," he said, "and it was cut, too."</p> + +<p>"An' wheel-tracks?"</p> + +<p>"There were tracks," said the boy, "I'm sure of that."</p> + +<p>"When a cut tree is found lyin' all by itself," said the Ranger, "with +wagon tracks leadin' up to it an' away from it, it don't need a city +detective to find out that some one dropped it there. An' when that dead +tree is full of bark-beetle, an' there ain't none in the forest, that +sure looks suspicious. An' when you find two of 'em jest the same way, +with beetle in both, an' wheel-tracks near both, ye don't have to have a +dog's nose to scent somethin's doin' that ain't over nice."</p> + +<p>"But who," said Wilbur indignantly, "would do a trick like that?"</p> + +<p>"The man that drove that wagon," said the old hunter. "I reckon, son, +you an' me'll do a little trailin' an' see where those wheels lead us."</p> + +<p>They left the place where the tree was lying and followed the faint mark +of the wheels. In a few minutes they crossed the line of the +Supervisor's inspection and he called to them.</p> + +<p>"Hi, Rifle-Eye," he said, "you're away off the line."</p> + +<p>"I know," said the old Ranger, "but I've got a plan of my own."</p> + +<p>Merritt shrugged his shoulders, but he knew that Rifle-Eye never wasted +his time, and he said no more. The old hunter and the boy walked on +nearly a quarter of a mile, and there they found the tracks running +beside a tiny gully, and a little distance down this, just as it had +been thrown, was another of these small trees, equally filled with +beetle.</p> + +<p>"I don't think we'll find any stump to this one, either," said Wilbur +gleefully, for he saw that they were on the right track.</p> + +<p>"You will not," replied the other sternly. After they had girdled the +infected trees again the Ranger shouldered his ax and, abandoning the +tracks of the wheels, started straight for headquarters.</p> + +<p>At supper all sorts of conjectures were expressed as to the cause of the +pest, its extent, and similar matters, but Rifle-Eye said nothing. +Wilbur was so full of the news that he was hardly able to eat anything +for the information he was just bursting to give. But he kept it in. +Finally, when the men had all finished and pipes were lighted, the old +Ranger spoke, in his slow, drawling way, and every one stopped to +listen.</p> + +<p>"There's five of ye," he said, "that's found beetle, isn't there?"</p> + +<p>"Yes," answered the Supervisor, "five."</p> + +<p>"And I venture to bet," he continued, "that you found a dead tree lyin' +in the middle of the infected patch!"</p> + +<p>"Yes," said several voices, "we did."</p> + +<p>"An' you didn't find much beetle except just round that one tree?"</p> + +<p>"Not a bit," said one or two. "What about it?"</p> + +<p>"There's a kind o' disease called Cholera," began Rifle-Eye in a +conversational tone, "that drifts around a city in a queer sort o' way. +It never hits two places at the same time, but if it goes up a street, +it sort o' picks one side, an' stops at one place for a while then goes +travelin' on. It acts jest as if a man was walkin' around, an' he was +the cholera spirit himself."</p> + +<p>"Well?" queried the Supervisor sharply.</p> + +<p>The old Ranger smiled tolerantly at his impatience.</p> + +<p>"Wa'al," he said, "I ain't believin' or disbelievin' the yarn. But I +ain't believin' any such perambulatin' spirit for a bark-beetle. +Especially when I finds wagon tracks leading to each place where the +trouble is."</p> + +<p>"What do you mean, Rifle-Eye?" asked Merritt. "Give it to us straight."</p> + +<p>"I mean," he said, "that I ain't never heard of spirits needin' wagons +to get around in. An' when I find dead trees containin' bark-beetles +planted promiscuous where they'll do most good, I'm aimin' to draw a +bead on the owner o' that wagon. An' I'll ask another thing. Did any o' +you find the stumps of them infected trees?"</p> + +<p>There was a long pause, and then McGinnis, always the first to see, +laughed out loud ruefully.</p> + +<p>"'Tis a black sorrow to me," he said, "that I didn't let Ben welt him +wid the ax the other day. Somebody else will have to do it now."</p> + +<p>"You mean," said the Supervisor, flaming, "that those trees were +deliberately brought here to infect the forest, trees full of beetles?"</p> + +<p>"Sure, 'tis as plain as the nose on your face," said McGinnis. "An' it's +dubs we were not to see it ourselves."</p> + +<p>"And it was—?"</p> + +<p>"The bucko pea-jammer that I gave a lickin' to in the spring, for sure," +said McGinnis. "Peavey Jo, of course, who else?"</p> + +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"> +<a name="IMAGE_17" id="IMAGE_17"></a> +<img src="images/image-17.jpg" width="600" height="403" alt="WILBUR'S OWN BRIDGE." title="" /> +<span class="caption">WILBUR'S OWN BRIDGE.<br />Light structure made by the boy over stream just below his camp.<br />Photograph by U. S. Forest Service.</span> +</div> + +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"> +<a name="IMAGE_18" id="IMAGE_18"></a> +<img src="images/image-18.jpg" width="600" height="414" alt="WHERE THE SUPERVISOR STAYED." title="" /> +<span class="caption">WHERE THE SUPERVISOR STAYED.<br />The Ranger's cabin where the men gathered to fight the invasion of the +bark beetle.<br />Photograph by U. S. Forest Service.</span> +</div> + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> + +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_X" id="CHAPTER_X"></a>CHAPTER X</h2> + +<h3>A FOURTH OF JULY PERIL</h3> + + +<p>Wilbur stayed but a few days at headquarters, the Supervisor and +Rifle-Eye having succeeded in trailing the wagon that had deposited the +trees from the point of its entrance into the forest to the place it +went out, by this means ensuring the discovery of all the spots where +diseased trees had been placed. One of them was in Wilbur's section of +the forest, and he was required to go weekly and examine all the trees +in the vicinity of the infected spot to make sure that the danger was +over. But, thanks to Rifle-Eye's discovery, the threatened pest was +speedily held down to narrow limits.</p> + +<p>This added not a little to the lad's riding, for the place where Peavey +Jo had deposited the infected tree in his particular part of the forest +was a long way from the trail to the several lookout points to which he +went daily to watch for fires. Fortunately, having built the little +bridge across the canyon, and thus on one of the days of the week +having shortened his ride, he was able to use the rest of the day +looking after bark-beetles. But it made a very full week. He could not +neglect any part of these rides, for June was drawing to an end and +there had been no rain for weeks.</p> + +<p>One night, returning from a hard day, on which he had not only ridden +his fire patrol, but had also spent a couple of hours rolling big rocks +into a creek to keep it from washing out a trail should a freshet come, +he found a large party of people at his camp. There was an ex-professor +of social science of the old régime, his wife and little daughter, a +guide, and a lavish outfit. Although the gate of Wilbur's corral was +padlocked and had "Property of the U. S. Forest Service" painted on it, +the professor had ordered the guide to smash the gate and let the +animals in.</p> + +<p>Wilbur was angry, and took no pains to conceal it.</p> + +<p>"Who turned those horses into my corral?" he demanded.</p> + +<p>The professor, who wore gold-rimmed eyeglasses above a very dirty and +tired face, replied:</p> + +<p>"I am in charge of this party, and it was done at my orders."</p> + +<p>"By what right do you steal my pasture?" asked the boy hotly.</p> + +<p>"I understood," said the professor loftily, "that it was the custom of +the West to be hospitable. But you are probably too young to know. Your +parents live here?"</p> + +<p>"No," replied the lad. "I am a Forest Guard, and in charge of this +station. You will have to camp elsewhere."</p> + +<p>At these last words the flap of the tent was parted and a woman came +out, the professor's wife, in fact. She looked very tired and much +troubled.</p> + +<p>"What is this?" she asked querulously. "Have we got to start again +to-night?"</p> + +<p>Wilbur took off his hat.</p> + +<p>"I beg your pardon," he said, "I did not know there were ladies in the +party." He turned to the professor. "I suppose if it will bother them +I'll have to let you stay. But if it hadn't been for that I'd have +turned every beast you've got out into the forest and let them rustle +for themselves."</p> + +<p>"Yes, you would!" said the guide. "An' what would I have had to say?"</p> + +<p>"Nothing," said Wilbur, "except that I'd have you arrested for touching +U. S. property." He turned to the professor: "How did you get here?" he +said.</p> + +<p>"Up that road," said the older man, pointing to the southwest.</p> + +<p>"And why didn't you camp a couple of miles down? There's much better +ground down there."</p> + +<p>"The guide said there was no place at all, and he didn't know anything +about this camp, either, and we thought we would have to go on all +night."</p> + +<p>Wilbur snorted.</p> + +<p>"Guide!" he said contemptuously. "Acts more like a stable hand!"</p> + +<p>"Well," said the professor testily, "if there's been any damage done you +can tell your superiors to send me a bill and I'll take the matter up in +Washington. In the meantime, we will stay here, and if I like it here, I +will stay a week or two."</p> + +<p>"Not much, you won't," said Wilbur, "at least you won't have any horses +in the corral after daybreak to-morrow morning. I'll let them have one +good feed, anyhow, and if they're traveling with a thing like that to +look after them,"—he pointed to the "guide,"—"they'll need a rest. But +out they go to-morrow."</p> + +<p>"We will see to-morrow," said the camper.</p> + +<p>"In the meantime, I see a string of trout hanging there. Are they +fresh?"</p> + +<p>"I caught them early this morning," answered Wilbur, "before I began my +day's work."</p> + +<p>The professor took out a roll of bills.</p> + +<p>"How much do you want for them!" he asked.</p> + +<p>"They are not for sale," the boy replied.</p> + +<p>"Oh, but I must have them," the other persisted. "I had quite made up my +mind to have those for supper to-night."</p> + +<p>"And I suppose, if I hadn't come home when I did," said Wilbur, "you +would have stolen those, too!"</p> + +<p>"I would have recompensed you adequately," the former college official +replied. "And you have no right to use the word 'stolen.' I shall report +you for impertinence."</p> + +<p>By this time Wilbur was almost too angry to talk, and, thinking it +better not to say too much, he turned on his heel and went to his own +tent. Before going down to the corral with Kit, however, he took the +precaution of carrying the string of fish with him, for he realized that +although the professor would not for the world have taken them without +paying, he would not hesitate to appropriate them in his absence. He +cooked his trout with a distinct delight in the thought that the +intruders had nothing except canned goods.</p> + +<p>In the morning Wilbur was up and had breakfast over before the other +camp was stirring. As soon as the "guide" appeared Wilbur walked over to +him.</p> + +<p>"I've given you a chance to look after your animals," he said, "before +turning them out. You take them out in ten minutes or I'll turn them +loose."</p> + +<p>"Aw, go on," said the other, "I've got to rustle grub. You haven't got +the nerve to monkey with our horses."</p> + +<p>Promptly at the end of the ten minutes Wilbur went over to the "guide" +again.</p> + +<p>"Out they go," he said.</p> + +<p>But the other paid no attention. Wilbur went down to the corral, the +gate of which he had fixed early that morning, caught his own two +mounts, and tied them. Then he opened the gate of the corral and drove +the other eight horses to the gate. In a moment he heard a wild shout +and saw the "guide" coming down the trail in hot haste. He reached the +corral in time to head off the first of his horses which was just coming +through. Wilbur had no special desire to cause the animals to stray, +and was only too well satisfied to help the "guide" catch them and tie +them up to trees about the camp. By this time it was long after the hour +that the boy usually began his patrol, but he waited to see the party +start. As they were packing he noticed a lot of sticks that looked like +rockets.</p> + +<p>"What are those?" he asked. "If they're heavy, you're putting that pack +on all wrong."</p> + +<p>"These ain't got no weight," said the "guide"; "that's just some +fireworks for the Fourth. We've got a bunch of them along for the little +girl. She's crazy about fireworks."</p> + +<p>Wilbur said no more, but waited until the professor came out. Then he +walked up to him.</p> + +<p>"I understand," he said, "that you have some fireworks for the Fourth."</p> + +<p>The man addressed made no reply, but walked along as though he had not +heard.</p> + +<p>"I give you fair warning," said Wilbur, "that you can't set those off in +this forest, Independence Day or no Independence Day."</p> + +<p>"We shan't ask your permission," said the old pedant loftily. "In fact, +some will be set off this evening, and some to-morrow, wherever we may +be."</p> + +<p>"But don't you understand," the boy said, "that you're putting the +forest in danger, in awful danger of fire? And if a big forest fire +starts, you are just as likely to suffer as any one else. You might +cause a loss of millions of dollars for the sake of a few rockets."</p> + +<p>"The man that sold me them," said the other, "said they were harmless, +and he ought to know."</p> + +<p>"All right," said Wilbur. "I've been told off to protect this forest +from danger of fire, and if there's any greater danger around than a +bunch like yours I haven't seen it. I reckon I'll camp on your trail +till you're out of my end of the forest, and then I'll pass the word +along and see that there's some one with you to keep you from making +fools of yourselves."</p> + +<p>He turned on his heel and commenced to make up a pack for his heavier +horse, intending to ride Kit. He then went to the telephone and, finding +no one at headquarters, called up the old hunter's cabin. The Ranger had +a 'phone put in for Ben, who had learned how to use it, and by good +fortune the half-witted lad knew where to find Rifle-Eye. He explained +to Ben how matters stood, and asked him to get word to the Ranger if +possible. Then Wilbur went back to the party and gave them a hand to +get started.</p> + +<p>Although he had been made very angry, Wilbur could see no gain in +sulking and he spent the day trying to establish a friendly relation +with the professor, so that, as he expressed it afterwards, "he could +jolly him out of the fireworks idea." But while this scholastic visitor +was willing to talk about subjects in connection with the government, +and was quite well-informed on reclamation projects, Wilbur found the +professor as stubborn as a mule, and every time he tried to bring the +conversation round to forest fires he would be snubbed promptly.</p> + +<p>That evening Wilbur led the party to a camping place where, he reasoned, +there would be little likelihood of fire trouble, as it was a very open +stand and all the brush on it had been piled and burned in the spring. +But the lad was at his wits' end what further to do. He could not seize +and carry off all the fireworks, and even if he were able to do so, he +couldn't see that he had any right to. It was a great relief to the boy +when he heard a horse on the trail and the old Ranger cantered up.</p> + +<p>"Oh, Rifle-Eye," he said, "I'm so glad you've come. Tell me what to +do," and the boy recounted his difficulty with the party from first to +last.</p> + +<p>The old woodsman listened attentively, and then said:</p> + +<p>"I reckon, son, we'll stroll over and sorter see just how the land lies. +There's a lot of things can be done with a mule by talkin' to him, +although there is some that ain't wholly convinced by a stick of +dynamite. We'll see which-all these here are."</p> + +<p>"I think they're the dynamite kind," the boy replied.</p> + +<p>"Well, we'll see," the Ranger repeated. He stepped in his loose-jointed +way to where the party was sitting around the campfire. Then, looking +straight at the man of the party, he said:</p> + +<p>"You're a professor?"</p> + +<p>The remark admitted of no reply but:</p> + +<p>"I was for twenty years."</p> + +<p>"And what did you profess?"</p> + +<p>At this the camper rose to his feet, finding it uncomfortable to sit and +look up at the tall, gaunt mountaineer. He replied testily that it +wasn't anything to do with Rifle-Eye what chair he had held or in what +college, and he'd trouble him to go about his business.</p> + +<p>Rifle-Eye heard him patiently to the end, and then asked again, without +any change of voice:</p> + +<p>"And what did you profess?"</p> + +<p>Once again the reputed educator expressed himself as to the Ranger's +interference and declared that he had been more annoyed since coming +into the forest than if he had stayed out of it. He worked himself up +into a towering rage. Presently Rifle-Eye replied quietly:</p> + +<p>"You refuse to tell?"</p> + +<p>"I do," snapped the professor.</p> + +<p>"Is it because you are ashamed of what you taught, or of where you +taught it?" the Ranger asked.</p> + +<p>This was touching the stranger in a tender place. He was proud of his +college and of his hobby, and he retorted immediately:</p> + +<p>"Ashamed? Certainly not. I was Professor of Social Economy in Blurtville +University."</p> + +<p>"And what do you call Social Economy?" asked Rifle-Eye.</p> + +<p>The educator fell into the trap thus laid out for him and launched into +a vigorous description of his own peculiar personal views toward +securing a better understanding of the rights of the poor and of modern +plans for ensuring better conditions of life, until he painted a picture +of his science and his own aims which was most admirable. When he drew +breath, he seemed quite pleased with himself.</p> + +<p>The Ranger thought a minute.</p> + +<p>"An' under which of these departments," he said, "would you put breakin' +into this young fellow's corral, and havin' your eight horses eatin' up +feed which will hardly be enough for his two when the dry weather +comes?"</p> + +<p>"That's another matter entirely," replied the professor, becoming angry +as soon as he was criticised.</p> + +<p>"Yes, it's another matter," said Rifle-Eye. "It's doin' instead of +talkin'. I reckon you're one o' the talkin' kind, so deafened by the +sound o' your own splutterin' that you can't hear any one else. It's a +pity, too, that you don't learn somethin' yourself before you set others +to learnin'."</p> + +<p>"Are you trying to teach me?" snapped the traveler.</p> + +<p>The old Ranger leaned his arm on the barrel of his rifle, which, +according to his invariable custom, he was carrying with him, a habit +from old hunting days, and looking straight at the professor, said:</p> + +<p>"I ain't no great shakes on Social Economy, as you call it, and I ain't +been to college. But I c'n see right enough that there's no real meanin' +to you in all you know about the rich an' the poor when you'll go an' +rob a lad o' the pasture he'll need for his horses; an' you're only +actin' hypocrite in lecturin' about promotin' good feelin's in society +when you're busy provokin' bad feelin' yourself. An' when you're harpin' +on the deep canyon that lies between Knowledge an' Ignorance, it don't +pay to forget that Politeness is a mighty easy bridge to rear, an' one +that's always safe. You may profess well enough, Mister Professor, but +you're a pretty ornery example o' practisin'."</p> + +<p>"But it's none of your business—" interrupted the stranger angrily.</p> + +<p>Rifle-Eye with a gesture stopped him.</p> + +<p>"It's just as much my business to talk to you," he said, "as it'd be +yours to talk to me. In fact it's more. You c'n talk in your lecture +room, an' I'll talk here. Perhaps it ain't altogether your fault; it's +just that you don't know any better. You're just a plumb ignorant +critter out here, Mister Professor, an' by rights you oughtn't to be +around loose.</p> + +<p>"An' you tried to threaten a boy here who was doin' his duty by sayin' +that you'd write to Washington. What for? Are you so proud o' thievin' +an' bullyin' that you want every one to know, or do you want to tell +only a part o' the story so as you'll look all right an' the other +fellow all wrong. That breed o' Social Economy don't go, not out here. +We calls it lyin', an' pretty mean lyin' at that."</p> + +<p>He broke off suddenly and looked down with a smile.</p> + +<p>"Well, Pussy," he said, "that's right. You come an' back me up," and +reaching out his brown gnarled hand he drew to his side the little girl +who had come trustingly forward to him as all children did, and now had +slipped her little hand into his.</p> + +<p>"An' then there's this question o' fire," he continued. "Haven't you got +some fireworks for the Fourth, Pussy?" he said, looking down at his +little companion.</p> + +<p>"Oh, yeth," she lisped, "pin-wheelth, and crackerth, and thnaketh, and +heapth of thingth."</p> + +<p>"What a time we'll have," he said. "Shall we look at them now?"</p> + +<p>"Oh, yeth," the little girl replied, and ran across to her father, "can +we thee them now?"</p> + +<p>"No, not now," the father replied.</p> + +<p>The old Ranger called the "guide" by name.</p> + +<p>"Miguel," he said, "the fireworks are wanted to-night. Bring 'em to me."</p> + +<p>The professor protested, but a glance at the sinewy frame of the +mountaineer decided Miguel, and he brought several packages. In order to +please the little girl, Rifle-Eye lent her his huge pocket-knife and let +her open the packages, sharing the surprises with her. Some of them he +put aside, especially the rockets, but by far the larger number he let +the child make up into a pile.</p> + +<p>"Will you give me your word you won't set off these?" queried the +mountaineer, pointing to the smaller pile of dangerous explosives with +his foot.</p> + +<p>"I'll say nothing," said the professor.</p> + +<p>Without another word the Ranger stooped down, picked them up in one big +armful, and disappeared beyond the circle of the light of the campfire +into the darkness. He reappeared in a few minutes.</p> + +<p>"I'm afeard," he said, "your fireworks may be a little wet. I tied 'em +in a bundle, fastened a stone to 'em, an' then dropped 'em in that +little lake. You can't do any harm with those you've got now." He waited +a moment. "You can get those rockets," he said, "any time you have a +mind to. That lake dries up about the middle of September."</p> + +<p>"By what right—" began the professor.</p> + +<p>"I plumb forget what sub-section you called that partickler right just +now," Rifle-Eye replied, "but out here we calls it fool-hobblin'. You're +off your range, Mister Professor, an' the change o' feed has got you +locoed mighty bad. I reckon you'd better trot back to your own pastures +in the East, an' stay there till you know a little more."</p> + +<p>"What is your name and address?" blustered the professor; "I'll have the +law invoked for this."</p> + +<p>"There's few in the Rockies as don't know old Rifle-Eye Bill," the +Ranger replied, "an' my address is wherever I c'n find some good to be +done. Any one c'n find me when I'm wanted, an' I'm ready any time you +say. Now, you're goin' to celebrate the Fourth to-morrow, to show how +fond you are o' good government. You c'n add to your lectures on Social +Economy one rule you don't know any thin' about. It's a Western rule, +this one, an' it's just that no man that can't govern himself can govern +anythin' else."</p> + +<p>He turned on his heel, ignoring the reply shouted after him, and +followed by Wilbur, mounted and rode away up the trail.</p> + +<p>"I've got to get right back," said the Ranger; "we're goin' to start +workin' out a special sale of poles."</p> + +<p>"Telegraph poles?" queried Wilbur.</p> + +<p>"Yes."</p> + +<p>"When you come to think of it," said the boy, "there must be quite a lot +of poles all over the country."</p> + +<p>"Merritt said he reckoned there was about sixteen million poles now in +use, an' three and a half million poles are needed every year just for +telegraph and telephone purposes alone."</p> + +<p>"When you think," said Wilbur, "that every telegraph and telephone pole +means a whole tree, there's some forest been cut down, hasn't there?"</p> + +<p>"How many poles do you s'pose are used in a mile?"</p> + +<p>"About forty, I heard at school," the boy replied, "and it takes an +army of men working all the year round just puttin' in poles."</p> + +<p>The old hunter struck a match and put a light to his pipe.</p> + +<p>"More forest destruction," said the boy mischievously, "I should think, +Rifle-Eye, you'd be ashamed to waste wood by burning it up in the form +of matches."</p> + +<p>"Go on talkin'," said Rifle-Eye, "you like tellin' me these things you +picked up at the Ranger School. Can you tell how much timber is used, or +how many matches are lighted an' thrown away?"</p> + +<p>"Three million matches a minute, every minute of the twenty-four hours," +said Wilbur immediately. "That is," he added after a moment's +calculation, "nearly four and a half billion a day. And then only the +very best portion of the finest wood can be used, and, as I hear, the +big match factories turn out huge quantities of other stuff, like doors +and window sashes, in order to use up the wood which is not of the very +finest quality, such as is needed for matches."</p> + +<p>"How do they saw 'em so thin, I wonder?" interposed the Ranger.</p> + +<p>"Some of it is sawed both ways," the boy replied. "Some logs are boiled +and then revolved on a lathe which makes a continuous shaving the +thickness of a match, and a lot of matches are paper-pulp, which is +really wood after all. There's no saying, Rifle-Eye," he continued, +laughing, "how many good trees have been cut down to make a light for +your pipe."</p> + +<p>The old hunter puffed hard, as the pipe was not well lighted.</p> + +<p>"Well," he said, "I guess I'll let the Forest Guards handle it." He +looked across at the boy. "It's up to you," he said, "to keep me goin.' +Got a match?"</p> + +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"> +<a name="IMAGE_19" id="IMAGE_19"></a> +<img src="images/image-19.jpg" width="600" height="382" alt="MEASURING A FAIR-SIZED TREE." title="" /> +<span class="caption">MEASURING A FAIR-SIZED TREE.<br />Lumberman on the scene of felling operations checking up a timber sale.<br />Photograph by U. S. Forest Service.</span> +</div> + +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 700px;"> +<a name="IMAGE_20A" id="IMAGE_20A"></a> +<img src="images/image-20a.jpg" width="700" height="494" alt="RUNNING A TELEPHONE LINK." title="" /> +<span class="caption">RUNNING A TELEPHONE LINK.</span> +</div> + +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 700px;"> +<a name="IMAGE_20B" id="IMAGE_20B"></a> +<img src="images/image-20b.jpg" width="700" height="500" alt="RUNNING A TELEPHONE LINK." title="" /> +<span class="caption">RUNNING A TELEPHONE LINK.<br />Using the poles planted by Nature for annihilating space in sparsely +settled regions.<br />Photographs by U. S. Forest Service.</span> +</div> + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> + +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XI" id="CHAPTER_XI"></a>CHAPTER XI</h2> + +<h3>AMIDST A CATTLE STAMPEDE</h3> + + +<p>Wilbur would have liked greatly to be able to stay at his little tent +home and celebrate the Fourth of July in some quiet fashion, but the +fireworks folly of the professor's party had got on his nerve a little, +and he was not satisfied until he really got into the saddle and was on +his way to a lookout point. Nor was he entirely without reward, for +shortly before noon, as he rode along his accustomed trail, a +half-Indian miner met him and told him he had been waiting to ask him to +dinner. And there, with all the ceremony the little shack could muster, +this simple family had prepared a feast to the only representative of +the United States that lived near them, and Wilbur, boy-like, had to +make a speech, and rode along the trail later in the afternoon, feeling +that he had indeed had a glorious Fourth of July dinner in the Indian's +cabin.</p> + +<p>The week following the Supervisor rode up, much to Wilbur's surprise, +who had not expected to see him back in that part of the forest so +soon. But Merritt, who indeed was anxious to get away, by his +conversation showed that he was awaiting the arrival and conveyance of a +trainload of machinery for the establishment of a large pulp-mill on the +Kern River. The trail over which this machinery would have to be taken +was brushed out and ready, all save about nine miles of it, a section +too small to make it worth while to call a Ranger from another part of +the forest. So the Supervisor announced his intention of doing the work +himself, together with Wilbur. The night preceding, just before they +turned in for the night, the boy turned to his chief and said:</p> + +<p>"What time in the morning, Mr. Merritt?"</p> + +<p>"I'll call you," replied the Supervisor.</p> + +<p>He did, too, for at sharp five o'clock the next morning Wilbur was +wakened to find the older man up and with breakfast ready.</p> + +<p>"I ought to have got breakfast, sir," said the boy; "why didn't you +leave it for me?"</p> + +<p>"You need more sleep than I do," was the sufficient answer. "Now, tuck +in."</p> + +<p>The boy waited for no second invitation and devoted his attention to +securing as much grub as he could in the shortest possible time. +Breakfast was over, the camp straightened up, and they were in the +saddle by a quarter to six. It was ten miles from Wilbur's camp to the +point where the trail should start. The country was very rough, and it +was drawing on for nine o'clock when they reached the point desired.</p> + +<p>"Now," said the Supervisor, "take the brush hook and clear the trail as +I locate it."</p> + +<p>Wilbur, accordingly, following immediately after his chief, worked for +all he knew how, cutting down the brushwood and preparing the trail. +Every once in a while Merritt, who had blazed the trail some distance +ahead, would return, and, bidding the boy pile brush, would attack the +underwood as though it were a personal enemy of his and would cover the +ground in a way that would make Wilbur's most strenuous moments seem +trifling in comparison. Once he returned and saw the lad laboring for +dear life, breathing hard, and showing by his very pose that he was +tiring rapidly, although it was not yet noon, and he called to him.</p> + +<p>"Loyle," he said, "what are you breaking your neck at it that way for?"</p> + +<p>"I don't come near doing as much as I ought unless I do hurry," he +said. "And then I'm a long way behind."</p> + +<p>"You mean as much as me?"</p> + +<p>The boy nodded.</p> + +<p>"Absurd. No two men's speed is the same. Don't force work. Find out what +gait you can keep up all day and do that. Make your own standard, don't +take another man's."</p> + +<p>"But I go so slowly!"</p> + +<p>"Want to know it all and do it all the first summer, don't you? Suppose +no one else had to learn? I don't work as hard as you do, though I get +more done. You can't buck up against an old axman. I haven't done this +for some time, but I guess I haven't forgotten how. Go and sit down and +get your breath."</p> + +<p>"But I'm not tired—" began Wilbur protestingly.</p> + +<p>"Sit down," he was ordered, and the boy, feeling it was better to do +what he was told, did so. After he had a rest, which indeed was very +welcome, the Supervisor called him.</p> + +<p>"Loyle," he said, "you know something about a horse, for I've watched +you with them. Handle yourself the same way. You wouldn't force a horse; +don't force yourself."</p> + +<p>Moreover, the older man showed the boy many ways wherein to save labor, +explaining that there was a right way and a wrong way of attacking every +different kind of bush. In consequence, when Wilbur started again in the +afternoon he found himself able to do almost half as much again with +less labor. Working steadily all day until sundown, five miles of the +trail had been located, brushed out, and marked.</p> + +<p>There was a small lake near by, and thinking that it would be less +fatiguing for the boy to catch fish than to look after the camp, the +Supervisor sent him off to try his luck. Wilbur, delighted to have been +lucky, returned in less than fifteen minutes with four middling-sized +trout, and he found himself hungry enough to eat his two, almost bones +and all. That night they slept under a small Baker tent that Merritt had +brought along on his pack horse, the riding and pack saddles being piled +beside the tent and covered with a slicker.</p> + +<p>The following day, by starting work a little after daybreak, the +remaining four miles of the trail were finished before the noonday halt, +which was made late in order to allow the completion of the work. +Wilbur, when he reviewed the fact that they had gone foot by foot over +nine miles of trail, clearing out the brush and piling it, so that it +could be burned and rendered harmless as soon as it was dry, thought it +represented as big a two days' work as he had ever covered.</p> + +<p>"Will the pulp-mill be above or below the new Edison plant?" queried +Wilbur on their way home.</p> + +<p>"Above," said his companion. "I'll show you just where. You're going to +ride down with me to the site of the mill to-morrow. There's a lot of +spruce here, and it ought to pay."</p> + +<p>"But I thought," said Wilbur, "that paper-pulp was such a destructive +way of using timber?"</p> + +<p>"It is," answered Merritt, "but paper is a necessity. A book is more +important than a board."</p> + +<p>"But doesn't it take a lot of wood to make a little paper?" asked the +boy. "There's been such a howl about paper-pulp that I thought it must +be fearfully wasteful."</p> + +<p>"It isn't wasteful at all," was the reply. "A cord and a half of spruce +will make a ton of pulp. Where the outcry comes in is the quantity used. +One newspaper uses a hundred and fifty tons of paper a day. That means +two hundred and twenty-five cords of wood. The stand of spruce here is +about ten cords to the acre. So one newspaper would clean off ten acres +a day or three thousand acres a year."</p> + +<p>"But wouldn't it ruin the forest to take it off at that rate?"</p> + +<p>"Certainly," the Supervisor answered, "but the sale will be so arranged +that not more will be sold each year than will be good for the forest."</p> + +<p>"Is all paper made of spruce?" asked Wilbur.</p> + +<p>"No. Many kinds of wood will make paper. Carolina poplar and tulip wood +are both satisfactory."</p> + +<p>"Except for the branches and knot-wood," said Wilbur, "almost every part +of every kind of tree is good for something."</p> + +<p>"And you can use those, too," came the instant reply. "That's what dry +distillation is for. All that you've got to do is fill a retort with +wood and put a furnace under it, and all pine tree leavings can be +transformed into tar and acetic acid, from which they can make vinegar, +as well as wood alcohol and charcoal."</p> + +<p>Finding that the boy was thoroughly interested in the possibilities of +lumber, the Supervisor, usually so silent and brief in manner, opened +out a little and talked for two straight hours to Wilbur on the +possibilities of forestry. He showed the value of turpentine and resin +in the pine trees and advocated the planting of hemlock trees and oak +trees for their bark, as used in the tanning industry.</p> + +<p>As the Forester warmed up to his subject, Wilbur thought he was +listening to an "Arabian Nights" fairy tale. Despite his customary +silence Merritt was an enthusiast, and believed that forestry was the +"chief end of man." He assured the boy that twenty different species of +tree of immense value could be acclimatized in North America which are +of great commercial value now in South America; he compared the climate +in the valleys of the lower Mississippi with those of the Ganges, and +named tree after tree, most of them entirely unknown to Wilbur, which +would be of high value in the warm, swampy bottoms. And when Wilbur +ventured to express doubt, he was confronted with the example of the +eucalyptus, commonly called gum tree, once a native of Australia, now +becoming an important American tree.</p> + +<p>All the way home and all through supper the Supervisor talked, until +when it finally became time to turn in, the boy dreamed of an ideal time +when every acre of land in the United States should be rightly occupied; +the arid land irrigated from streams fed by reservoirs in the forested +mountains; the rivers full of navigation and never suffering floods; the +farms possessing their wood-lots all duly tended; and every inch of the +hills and mountains clothed with forests—pure stands, or mixed stands, +as might best suit the conditions—each forest being the best possible +for its climate and its altitude.</p> + +<p>But he had to get up at five o'clock next morning, just the same, and +dreams became grim realities when he found himself in the saddle again +and off for a day's work before six. A heavy thunderstorm in the night +had made everything fresh and shining, but at the same time the water on +the underbrush soaked Wilbur through and through when he went out to +wrangle the horses. Merritt's riding horse, a fine bay with a blazed +face, had a bad reputation in the country, which Wilbur had heard, and +he was in an ugly frame of mind when the boy found him. But Wilbur was +not afraid of horses, and he soon got him saddled.</p> + +<p>"I think Baldy's a little restless this morning, sir," ventured Wilbur, +as they went to the corral to get their horses. But he received no +answer. The Supervisor's fluent streak had worn itself out the day +before and he was more silent than ever this morning.</p> + +<p>Merritt swung himself into his saddle, and, as Wilbur expected, the bay +began to buck. It was then, more than ever, that the boy realized the +difference between the riding he had seen on the plains and ordinary +riding. Merritt was a good rider, and he stuck to his saddle well. But +Wilbur could see that it was with difficulty, and that the task was a +hard one. There was none of the easy grace with which Bob-Cat Bob had +ridden, and when Baldy did settle down Wilbur felt that his rider had +considered his keeping his seat quite a feat, not regarding it as a +trifling and unimportant incident in the day.</p> + +<p>Merritt and the boy rode on entirely off the part of the forest on which +Wilbur had his patrol, to a section he did not know. They stopped once +to look over a young pine plantation. Just over a high ridge there was a +wider valley traversed by an old road which crossed the main range about +five miles west and went down into a valley where there were numerous +ranches. The principal occupation of these ranchmen was stock-raising, +on account of their long distance from a railroad which prevented them +marketing any produce. Just about July of each year these ranchmen +rounded up their stock, cut out the beef steers, and shipped them to the +markets. It was then the last week in July, and the Supervisor expected +to meet some of the herds upon the old road which crossed the mountains +further on. Just as they reached the bottom of the hill they saw the +leaders of a big herd coming down the road from the pass. In the +distance a couple of cowpunchers could be seen in front holding up the +lead of the bunch.</p> + +<p>"I'll wait and talk," said Merritt, reining in. As perhaps he had +exchanged four whole sentences in two hours' ride, Wilbur thought to +himself that the conversation would have to be rather one-sided, but he +knew the other believed in seizing every opportunity to promote +friendliness with the people in his forest and waited their upcoming +with interest. The Supervisor had his pack-horse with him, and as the +herd drew nearer he told Wilbur to take him out of sight into the brush, +so as not to scare the steers, and tie him up safely. That done, +Wilbur rode back to the road.</p> + +<p>By the time he had returned the two punchers had ridden up. One proved +to be the foreman of the outfit, by name Billy Grier, and the other a +Texan, whom Merritt called Tubby Rodgers, apparently because he was as +thin as a lath.</p> + +<p>"I was a-hopin'," said Grier as he rode up, "that you-all was headin' +down the road a bit."</p> + +<p>"I wasn't planning to," said the Forester. "Why?"</p> + +<p>"We had a heavy storm down in the valley last night, which sort of broke +things up badly, an' I had to leave a couple of men behind."</p> + +<p>"Don't want to hire us to drive, do you?" asked Merritt.</p> + +<p>"Allers willin' to pay a good man," said the foreman with a grin. "Give +ye forty and chuck."</p> + +<p>The Supervisor smiled.</p> + +<p>"I'm supposed to be holding down a soft job," he said; "government +service."</p> + +<p>"Soft job," snorted Grier, "they'd have to give me the bloomin' forest +afore I'd go at it the way you do. But, Merritt," he added, "this is +how. A piece down the road, say a mile an' a half, I'm told there's a +rotten bit o' road, an' I'm a little leery of trouble there. I'd have +strung out the cattle three times as far if I'd known of it. But I had +no chance; I've only just heard that some old county board is tryin' to +fix a bridge, an' they're movin' about as rapid as a spavined mule with +three broken legs."</p> + +<p>"Well?" queried Merritt; "I suppose you want us to help you over that +spot."</p> + +<p>"That's it, pard," said the foreman; "an' I'll do as much for you some +time."</p> + +<p>"I wish you could, but I'll never have a string of cattle like those to +turn into good hard coin."</p> + +<p>"Well," said the cowpuncher, "why not?"</p> + +<p>"Nothing doing," replied Merritt; "the Forest Service is an incurable +disease that nobody ever wants to be cured of."</p> + +<p>By this time the head of the bunch of steers was drawing close and the +foreman repeated his request.</p> + +<p>"All right," answered the Forester, who thought it good policy to have +the ranchman feel that he was under obligations to the Service, "we'll +give you a hand all right."</p> + +<p>After riding down the road for about a mile it became precipitous, and +Wilbur could readily see where there was likely to be trouble. Shortly +before they reached the place where the bridge was being repaired the +bank on the right-hand side of the road gave place to a sheer drop forty +to fifty feet high and deepening with every step forward. As the bunch +neared the bridge Merritt and Wilbur, with the cowpunchers, slowed up +until the steers were quite close. Then Grier and Rodgers went ahead +over the bridge, while Merritt waited until about fifty cattle had +passed and then swung in among them, telling Wilbur to do the same when +about another fifty head had passed.</p> + +<p>At first Wilbur could not see the purpose of this, and he had great +difficulty in forcing his horse among the cattle. But they pressed back +as he swung into the road, giving him a little space to ride in, and +thus dividing the head of the drove into two groups of fifty. Following +instructions, Wilbur gradually pressed the pace of the bunch in order to +prevent any chance of overcrowding from the rear.</p> + +<p>It seemed easy enough. Owing to the narrowness of the road and the +precipitous slope it was impossible for the steers to scatter, and as +long as the pace was kept up, there was likely to be no difficulty. But +Kit—Wilbur was riding Kit—suddenly pricked her ears and began to +dance a little in her steps. The steers, although their pace had not +changed, were snuffling in an uncertain fashion, and Wilbur vaguely +became conscious that fear was abroad. He quieted Kit, but could see +from every motion that she was catching the infection of the fear. He +tightened his hold on the lines, for he saw that if she tried to bolt +both of them would go over the edge. Wilbur looked down.</p> + +<p>A hundred yards or so further on the road widened slightly, and Wilbur +wondered whether it would be possible for him to work his way to the +right of the steers and gallop full speed alongside the herd to get in +front of them; but even as he thought of the plan he realized that it +would scarcely be possible, and that unless he reached the front of the +herd before the road narrowed again he would be forced over the edge. +And, as he reached the wider place, he saw Grier and Rodgers standing. +They also had sensed the notion of fear and were waiting to see what +could be done in the main body of the herd. Merritt had worked his way +through the steers, and was riding in the lead. Wilbur wondered how he +had ever been able to force Baldy through. This put Wilbur behind a +bunch of about one hundred steers and in front of five or six hundred +more.</p> + +<p>Below him, to the right, was a valley, the drop now being about one +hundred and fifty feet, and Wilbur could see at the edge of the creek, +pitched among some willows, a little tent, the white contrasting +strongly with the green of the willows. The road wound round high above +the valley in order to keep the grade. Twice Wilbur halted Kit to try to +stop the foremost of the herd behind him from pressing on too close, but +the third time Kit would not halt. She was stepping as though on +springs, with every muscle and sinew tense, and the distance between the +steers before and the steers behind was gradually lessening.</p> + +<p>Wilbur realized that as long as the even, slow pace was kept he was in +no danger, but if once the steers began to run his peril would be +extreme. He could turn neither to the right nor to the left, the little +pony was nothing in weight compared to the steers, and even if she were, +he stood a chance of having his legs crushed. The only hope was to keep +the two herds apart. He wheeled Kit. But as the little mare turned and +faced the tossing heads and threatening horns, she knew, as did Wilbur +instantaneously, that with the force behind them, no single man could +stop the impetus of the herd, although only traveling slowly. Indeed, if +he tried, he could see that the rear by pressure onwards would force the +outside ranks midway down the herd over the edge of the cliff. Kit spun +round again almost on one hoof, all but unseating Wilbur.</p> + +<p>But even in that brief moment there had been a change, and the boy felt +it. The steers were nervous, and, worst of all, he knew that Kit could +realize that he himself was frightened. When a horse feels that the +rider is frightened, anything is apt to happen. Wilbur's judgment was +not gone, but he was ready to yell. The herd behind grew closer and +closer. Presently the walk broke into a short trot, the horns of the +following bunch of steers appeared at Kit's flanks, a rumbling as of +half-uttered bellows was heard from the rear of the herd, and, on the +instant, the steers began to run.</p> + +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 700px;"> +<a name="IMAGE_21A" id="IMAGE_21A"></a> +<img src="images/image-21a.jpg" width="700" height="399" alt="NURSERY FOR YOUNG TREES." title="" /> +<span class="caption">NURSERY FOR YOUNG TREES.<br /> + +Photograph by U. S. Forest Service.</span> +</div> + +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 700px;"> +<a name="IMAGE_21B" id="IMAGE_21B"></a> +<img src="images/image-21b.jpg" width="700" height="372" alt="PLANTATION OF YOUNG TREES." title="" /> +<span class="caption">PLANTATION OF YOUNG TREES.<br /> + +Photograph by U. S. Forest Service.</span> +</div> + +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 700px;"> +<a name="IMAGE_22A" id="IMAGE_22A"></a> +<img src="images/image-22a.jpg" width="700" height="496" alt="SOWING PINE SEED." title="" /> +<span class="caption">SOWING PINE SEED.<br />Brush on ground is to shade tender seedlings from the heat of the sun.<br />Photograph by U. S. Forest Service.</span> +</div> + +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 700px;"> +<a name="IMAGE_22B" id="IMAGE_22B"></a> +<img src="images/image-22b.jpg" width="700" height="499" alt="PLANTING YOUNG TREES." title="" /> +<span class="caption">PLANTING YOUNG TREES.<br /> + +Photograph by U. S. Forest Service.</span> +</div> + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> + +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XII" id="CHAPTER_XII"></a>CHAPTER XII</h2> + +<h3>ALMOST TRAMPLED TO DEATH</h3> + + +<p>The minute the stampede began Wilbur's nerves steadied, and with voice +more than with hand he quieted Kit. It took a moment or two for the +front group to break into the running gallop of the frightened steer, +and two head of cattle not twenty feet from Wilbur were forced over the +edge before the leaders started to run. In this moment the rear bunch +closed up solidly and Wilbur was hemmed in.</p> + +<p>The pace became terrific, and as they hurtled along the face of the +cliff with the precipice below, Wilbur noted to his horror that he was +gradually being forced to the outer edge. Being lighter than the steers, +the heavier animals were surging ahead alongside the cliff wall, and the +little pony with the boy on his back was inch by inch being forced to +the verge, of which there was a clear fall now of about one hundred +feet. Vainly he looked for a tree overhanging the road into which he +could leap; there were no trees. And every few strides he found himself +appreciably nearer the edge. Looking back, as far as he could see the +steers were crowding, and looking forward the road curved, hiding what +might lie before.</p> + +<p>His feet were out of the stirrups and well forward, so that, although he +had received three or four bruising encounters as the cattle lurched and +surged against him, he was unhurt. Several times Kit was hurled from her +stride, but she always picked up her feet neatly again. Wilbur could not +but admire the little mare, although he felt that there was no hope for +them.</p> + +<p>Then suddenly, with an angry bellow, a big black steer which had been +pushing up on the inside turned his head and tried to gore the pony. +There was not room, however, but the action so angered Wilbur that, +pulling his six-shooter, he sent a bullet crashing to his brain. The +steer gave a wild lurch, but did not fall immediately, and in an instant +was forced to the edge and fell into the valley below. Instantly, Kit, +even before Wilbur could speak or lay hand on the rein, gave a sidewise +jump into the hole made by the place the black steer had occupied. In +one stride as much gain away from the dangerous edge had been made as +had been lost in the previous half mile.</p> + +<p>More at his ease, but for the fearful speed and the danger that Kit +might lose her footing, Wilbur looked ahead, talking to the steers +around, endeavoring to quiet them, noting that the road was turning more +sharply in the valley, although the downward grade was steeper and it +was increasingly hard for the little pony to hold up. But as they turned +the curve, there, immediately before them, standing in the middle of the +road, with their fishing poles over their shoulders, were a man and a +boy, evidently entirely ignorant of the danger so rapidly approaching. +The bank above was too steep to climb, and the one below straight ninety +feet sheer to the creek. To Wilbur it looked like sure death, and a most +awful one at that, but he at least was utterly unable to do anything to +prevent it, and he shuddered to think that he himself might be trampling +with his pony's hoofs on what might be below.</p> + +<p>But just as he had in that instant decided that there was no help for +it, he suddenly saw Merritt on old Baldy shoot forward like an arrow +from a bow stretched to the uttermost. The herd of steers was traveling +at a rapid clip, but under the startling influence of combined quirt +and spur, and with no room in which to display his bucking propensities, +Baldy just put himself to running, and only hit the high spots here and +there.</p> + +<p>It seemed incredible to Wilbur that any horse could stop, especially on +a down grade, at the speed that Baldy was traveling, but just before he +reached the man and boy, having previously shouted to warn them, Merritt +pulled up with a jerk that brought Baldy clear back on his haunches. +Like a flash of light he leaped from the horse and half lifted, half +pushed the man into the saddle, tossed the boy up behind him, and then, +grabbing hold of the slicker which was tied behind the cantle, he hit +old Baldy a slap with the quirt, and down the road they went, not twenty +yards ahead of the steers, Baldy carrying on his back the man and the +boy, and Merritt, hanging on like grim death, trying to run, taking +strides that looked as though he wore seven-leagued boots. The speed was +terrific and presently Wilbur noticed that Merritt was keeping both feet +together, putting his weight on the saddle, and vaulting along in +immense leaps. One moment he was there, but the next moment that Wilbur +looked ahead Baldy was still racing down the road with his double load, +but Merritt was nowhere to be seen. It was with a sickening feeling that +Wilbur realized that he must have lost his hold, and was in the same +peril from which he had saved the man and the boy.</p> + +<p>For a few fearful minutes Wilbur watched the ground beneath his horse's +feet, but saw no object in the occasional glimpses he could secure of +the dusty road. Once again Wilbur found himself being forced to the +outer edge of the road, but the cliff was shallowing rapidly, and now +they were not more than twenty feet above the valley with the road +curving into it in the distance. A couple of hundred feet further on, +however, a hillock rose abruptly, coming within four feet of the level +of the road, and Wilbur decided to put the pony at it, seeing there was +a chance of safety, and that even if they both got bad falls, there was +no fear of being trampled.</p> + +<p>Allowing the pony to come to the outside, he reined her in hard and led +her to the jump, swinging from the saddle as he did so in order to give +both Kit and himself a fair chance. The pony, released from the weight +of the rider before she struck ground, met it in a fair stride, and +without losing footing kept up the gait to the bottom of the hillock, +pulling up herself on the level grass below. But Wilbur, not being able +to estimate his jump, because he was in the act of vaulting from the +saddle, struck the ground all in a heap, crumpled up as though he were +broken in pieces and was hurled down the hill, reaching the bottom +stunned. He was unconscious for several minutes, but when he came to +himself, Kit was standing over him, nosing him with her soft muzzle as +though to bring him round. Weakly he staggered to his feet, and seeing +Kit standing patiently, managed to clamber into the saddle.</p> + +<p>The pony started immediately at an easy canter, crossing the valley and +meeting the herd where the road ran into the level. The cattle were +tired from the run, and sick and bruised as he was, Wilbur headed them +off and rounded them up, being aided presently by Rodgers and Grier, who +had found themselves unable to cut into the stampeding herd, and +consequently had waited until the whole herd got by, when they had +ridden back along the trail a little distance, got down to the creek by +a bridle path, and crossed the valley by a short cut.</p> + +<p>In the distance Baldy could be seen grazing, and Wilbur lightly touched +Kit with the spur to find out what had happened. The bay, as soon as he +had stopped running, evidently had bucked off his two riders, who were +still sitting on the ground, apparently dazed. The man, who was +evidently an Eastern tourist, was pale as ashes and dumb with fright, +and could tell nothing. The boy knew no more than, "He had to let go, he +had to let go."</p> + +<p>Together with Grier, Wilbur started back along the road to look for what +might be left of Merritt. The foreman tried to persuade the lad to stay, +for he was bleeding from a scalp wound and his left wrist was sorely +twisted, if not actually sprained, but Wilbur replied that he had said +he was going back to look for Merritt, and go back he would if both arms +and legs were broken. Kit, although very much blown, was willing to be +taken up the road at a fair gallop, when, just as they turned a corner, +they almost ran down the Supervisor, who was walking down the road as +unconcernedly as though nothing had happened.</p> + +<p>"Oh, Mr. Merritt," cried the boy, "I thought you were dead."</p> + +<p>"Cheerful greeting, that," answered the Forester. "No, I'm not dead. You +look nearer it than I do."</p> + +<p>"But didn't you get run down?"</p> + +<p>"Do I look as if I'd been a sidewalk for a thousand steers?" was the +disgusted reply. "Don't ask silly questions, Loyle."</p> + +<p>But the foreman broke in:</p> + +<p>"The boy's right enough to ask," he said; "an' there's no reason why you +shouldn't tell. How did you dodge the steers?"</p> + +<p>"That was easy enough," said Merritt. "I held on to Baldy until I saw a +crack in the rock big enough to hold a man. Then I let go and crawled +into that until the herd passed by."</p> + +<p>The boy breathed a sigh of relief.</p> + +<p>"I sure thought you were gone," he said.</p> + +<p>The Supervisor scanned him keenly, then slapped Kit heartily on the +flank.</p> + +<p>"You've got a good little mare there," he said; "there's not many of +them could have done it. Tell me all about it some time. What started +them?" he added, turning to the cattleman.</p> + +<p>"That fool new bridge gave way just as the last of the bunch crowded on +it. About twenty of them fell over the cliff there, and about thirty +more along the road. But it might have been a heap worse, an' you ought +ter have two life-savin' medals."</p> + +<p>Merritt's only reply was a gesture of protest.</p> + +<p>"An' you, youngster," went on the cattleman, "you kept your nerve and +rode a bully ride. I wish you'd take my quirt and keep it from me as a +remembrance of your first experience with a cattle stampede."</p> + +<p>Wilbur stammered some words of thanks, but the foreman waved them aside.</p> + +<p>"And now," said the Supervisor, with an entire change of tone, "I guess +we'll go back and get the pack-horse and go on to the valley."</p> + +<p>As they rode over the bridge Wilbur noted with a great deal of interest +the breakage of the supporting timbers on the outer side, and looking +down into the valley beneath, he could see the bodies of the cattle who +had been pushed over the edge in the stampede.</p> + +<p>"I read a story once," said the boy, "of a youngster who got caught in a +stampede of buffalo, and when his horse lost his footing he escaped by +jumping from the back of one buffalo to another until he reached the +outside of the herd. But I never believed it much."</p> + +<p>"It makes a good yarn," said the Supervisor, "an' it's a little like the +story they tell of Buffalo Bill, who, trying to get away from a buffalo +stampede, was thrown by his horse puttin' his foot in a badger hole and +breaking his leg."</p> + +<p>"Why, what in the world did he do?" queried Wilbur.</p> + +<p>"He waited until the foremost buffalo was just upon him, then gave a +leap, clear over his horns, and landed on his back, then turning sharply +round so as to face the head instead of the tail, he pulled out his +revolver and kept shooting to one side of the buffalo's head, just past +his eye, so that at every shot the beast turned a little more to one +side, thus cutting him out of the herd. Then, when he was clear of the +herd, he shot the buffalo."</p> + +<p>"What for?" asked Wilbur indignantly. "It seems a shame to kill the +buffalo which had got him free."</p> + +<p>"What chance would he have had against an angered buffalo alone and on +foot?" said Merritt. "He couldn't very well get off and make a bow to +the beast and have the buffalo drop a curtsey?"</p> + +<p>"I hadn't thought of that," said the boy, laughing.</p> + +<p>"I was afraid I might have to try that dodge, but when I saw the crack +in the rock I knew it was all right."</p> + +<p>"Well," said Wilbur as they turned off the road to where the pack-horse +had been picketed, "I think we're both pretty lucky to have come off so +easily."</p> + +<p>Merritt looked at the lad. He was dusty and grimy to a degree, his +clothes were torn in a dozen places where he had gone rolling down the +hill, a handkerchief was roughly knotted around his head, and there were +streaks of dried blood in his hair.</p> + +<p>"You look a little the worse for wear," he said; "maybe you'd better go +home, and I'll go on alone."</p> + +<p>"I won't," said Wilbur.</p> + +<p>"You what?" came the curt rebuke. "You mean that you would rather not."</p> + +<p>"Yes, sir," said the boy. "I mean that I don't feel too used up."</p> + +<p>The Supervisor nodded and rode on ahead. For a couple of miles or so, +they rode single file, and in spite of the boy's bold announcement that +he was not too badly shaken up, by the time he had ridden nearly an hour +more in the hot sun his head was aching furiously and he was beginning +to stiffen up. Accordingly he was glad when a cabin hove in sight, and +he cantered up to ask if they might call for a drink of water.</p> + +<p>"We stop here," was the laconic reply.</p> + +<p>As they rode up a big man came out of the house, which was quite a +fair-sized place, to meet them.</p> + +<p>"Well, Merritt," he said, "what have you got for me this time?" +motioning to the boy.</p> + +<p>"No patient for you, Doc," said Merritt; "one for your wife."</p> + +<p>The mountain doctor laughed, a great big hearty laugh.</p> + +<p>"Violet," he called, "you're taking my practice away from me. Here's a +patient that says he won't have me, but wants you."</p> + +<p>Immediately at his call, a small, slender woman came to the porch of the +house, and seeing the doctor helping Wilbur down from the saddle, +stepped forward.</p> + +<p>"I can walk all right," said Wilbur when the doctor put out a hand to +steady him. "I just wanted a drink of water."</p> + +<p>"Right you are," said the doctor, "we'll give you all the water you +want, just in a minute. Now," he continued as he led the boy into the +house, "let's have a look at the trouble."</p> + +<p>But Wilbur interposed.</p> + +<p>"This Forest Service," he said, smiling, "is the worst that ever +happened for having to obey orders, and Mr. Merritt put me in charge of +your wife, not you."</p> + +<p>The big doctor put his hand on the shoulder of his wife and roared until +the house shook with his laughter. It was impossible to resist the +infection, and Wilbur, despite his headache, found himself laughing with +the rest. But the doctor's wife, stepping quietly forward, took the lad +aside and, removing the handkerchief that Grier had wound around his +head, bathed the wound and cleansed it. She had just finished this when +the doctor came over, still laughing. He touched the wound deftly, and +Wilbur was amazed to find that the touch of this large, hearty man was +just as soft and tender as that of his wife. There was power in his very +finger-tips, and the boy felt it. He looked up, smiling.</p> + +<p>"I guess you're Doctor Davis," he said.</p> + +<p>"Why?" said the doctor; "what makes you think so?"</p> + +<p>"Oh, I just felt it," the boy replied. "I've heard a lot about you."</p> + +<p>"I'm 'it,' all right," said the doctor, "but you've refused to allow me +to attend you. I'll turn the case over to Dr. Violet Davis," and he +laughed again.</p> + +<p>Mrs. Davis smiled brightly in response and continued attending to the +boy. Then she turned to the two men.</p> + +<p>"You've put this case in my charge," she said, "and I'm going to +prescribe rest for a day or two anyway. That is," she added, "unless Mr. +Merritt finds it compulsory to take him away."</p> + +<p>The Supervisor smiled one of his rare smiles.</p> + +<p>"I wouldn't be so unkind as to take any one away from here +unnecessarily," he said, "no matter how busy. But there always is a lot +to do. Ever since the beavers first started forestry, it has meant work, +and lots of it. But if you're told to rest you've got to do it. I know. +I've been sick myself here."</p> + +<p>The doctor slapped him on the shoulder.</p> + +<p>"Beautiful case," he said, "beautiful case. But he wouldn't obey +orders."</p> + +<p>"He always did mine," put in Mrs. Davis.</p> + +<p>"I'm afraid I can't this time," said the Supervisor with one of his +abrupt changes of manner, turning to the door. "I'll call for Loyle on +my way home to-morrow."</p> + +<p>"Oh, Mr. Merritt," began Mrs. Davis in protest, "he ought to have two or +three days' rest, anyway."</p> + +<p>The chief of the forest turned to Wilbur.</p> + +<p>"Well?" he queried.</p> + +<p>The boy looked around at the comfortable home, at the big jovial doctor, +and his charming little wife, and thought how delightful it would be to +have a few days' rest. And his head was aching, and he was very stiff. +Then he looked at the Supervisor, quiet and unflinching in anything that +was to be done, working with him and helping him despite the big +interests for which he was responsible, he thought of the Forest Service +to which he was pledged to serve, he remembered his little tent home and +the portion of the range over which he had control, and straightened up.</p> + +<p>"What time to-morrow?" he said. "I'll be ready."</p> + +<p>"Middle of the afternoon," said Merritt. "So long."</p> + +<p>He bade good-by to the doctor and his wife, and after having seen that +Kit was properly attended to, went on his way to the Kern River Valley, +to visit the Edison power plant erected on the river, and to prepare for +the installation of the new pulp-mill.</p> + +<p>In the meantime, Wilbur, more fatigued by the day's excitement than he +had supposed himself to be, had fallen asleep, a sleep unbroken until +the evening. And all evening the doctor and his wife told him stories of +the Forest Service men and of the various miners, lumbermen, +prospectors, ranchers, and so forth, all tales of manliness, courage, +and endurance, and not infrequently of heroism. But when Wilbur told of +the professor and asked about other greenhorns that had come to the +forest, the doctor turned and asked him if he knew anything of "the boy +from Peanutville."</p> + +<p>"He had just come into camp up here in the Sierras," said the doctor on +receiving the lad's negative reply, "from some little place in the +middle West that was giving itself airs as a city. He had read somewhere +about the forest Rangers, and he himself had been on several Sunday +School picnics in the woods, so he thought that he knew all about it. At +the end of his first couple of days' work he said:</p> + +<p>"'I never supposed that a Ranger had to cut brush and build fence and +grub stumps and slave like a nigger. I don't believe he ought to. I +don't think it's what my people would like to have me do. I always +supposed that he just rode around under the trees and made outsiders toe +the mark.'</p> + +<p>"I said he was a new Guard," the doctor continued, "but he said this in +camp to a group of old-timers with whom he had been working. They hadn't +worried him at all, but had given him a fair show and helped him all +they could. But this was too rich. They glanced at each other with +mingled contempt and amusement, then put on mournful faces, looked on +him solemn-eyed, and regretted the cruelties of the Service.</p> + +<p>"'The boss,' they said, 'just sticks it on us all the time. We are +workin' like slaves—Guards and Rangers and everybody. It's plumb wicked +the way we're herded here.'</p> + +<p>"So the new hand felt comforted by this outward sympathy, and he ambled +innocently on.</p> + +<p>"'That heavy brush tears my clothes, and my back aches, and I burned a +shoe, and my socks are full of stickers. Then I fell on the barbed wire +when I was stretching it—and cut my nose. I tell you what it is, +fellows, if I ever get a chance to get away, I hope I'll never see +another inch of barbed wire as long as I live. If I was only back in +Peanutville, where I used to live, I could be eating a plate of ice +cream this minute instead of working like a dog and having to wash my +own clothes Sundays when I might be hearing the band play in the park.'</p> + +<p>"'Too bad,' shouted the old Rangers in chorus, until a peal of laughter +that echoed through and through that mountain camp showed the indignant +youngster that his point of view hadn't been what you might say warmly +welcomed by the old-timers.</p> + +<p>"But the following day, as I heard the story from Charles H. Shinn," the +doctor went on, "one of the best men in the gang took the lad aside the +following morning as they were riding up the trail, and said to him:</p> + +<p>"'How much of that stuff you was preachin' last night did you mean? Of +course, this is hard work; it has to be. Either leave it mighty pronto, +or wrastle with it till you're a man at the game. I've seen lots of +young fellows harden up—some of 'em just as green an' useless when they +came as you are now. Don't you know you hold us back, and waste our +time, too, on almost any job? But it's the price we have to pay up here +to get new men started. Unless you grow to love it so much that there +isn't anything else in all the world you'd care to do, you ain't fit for +it, an' you'd better get out, and let some one with more sand than you +have get in.'</p> + +<p>"Well, Loyle," the doctor said, "that youngster was provoked. He wasn't +man enough to get really angry, so that his temper would keep him +sticking to the work; he was one of these saucy +slap-'em-on-the-wrist-naughty kind.</p> + +<p>"'I think all of you are crazy,' he said.</p> + +<p>"He walked into the Supervisor's office that afternoon and explained +that the kind of work he had been given to do was altogether below his +intellectual powers. He never understood how quickly things happened, +but he signed a resignation blank almost before he knew it, and went +back to Peanutville.</p> + +<p>"It so happened that one of the Rangers had friends in Peanutville, and +the boys at the camp followed the youth's career with much interest. He +clerked, he took money at a circus window, he tried cub newspaper work, +he stood behind a dry-goods counter, he was everything by turns but +nothing long."</p> + +<p>"What finally happened to him?" asked Wilbur.</p> + +<p>"Last I heard he was a salesman in a woman's shoe store. But he's still +with us in spirit," said the doctor, "as a horrible example. Right now, +down in the heart of a forest fire, when the Rangers are working like +men possessed down some hot gulch, one will say to the other:</p> + +<p>"'Gee, Jack, if I was only back where I used to be, I could be having a +plate of ice cream this minute.' And the other will reply: 'I wish I +might be back in Peanutville and hear the band play in the park.' And +both men will laugh and go at the work all the harder for realizing what +a miserable failure the weak greenhorn had been."</p> + +<p>"I'm thinking," said Wilbur, "that I'll never give them the chance to +talk like that about me!"</p> + +<p>"From what I heard," said the doctor, "I don't believe you will."</p> + +<p>"And from what I see," said the doctor's wife gently, as the two rose +and bade the "patient" good-night, "I know we shall all be glad that you +have come to us here in the forest."</p> + +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 414px;"> +<a name="IMAGE_23" id="IMAGE_23"></a> +<img src="images/image-23.jpg" width="414" height="600" alt="WHAT TREE-PLANTING WILL DO." title="" /> +<span class="caption">WHAT TREE-PLANTING WILL DO.<br /> +Pine plantation fifty years old showing growth of timber. Trunks, +however, should not show so many superfluous low branches.<br /> +Photograph by U. S. Forest Service.</span> +</div> + +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 422px;"> +<a name="IMAGE_24" id="IMAGE_24"></a> +<img src="images/image-24.jpg" width="422" height="600" alt="THE FIRST CONSERVATION EXPERT" title="" /> +<span class="caption">THE FIRST CONSERVATION EXPERT.<br />Work of a beaver in felling a tree with which to build a dam for his +home.<br />Photograph by U. S. Forest Service.</span> +</div> + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> + +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XIII" id="CHAPTER_XIII"></a>CHAPTER XIII</h2> + +<h3>HOW THE FOREST WON A GREAT DOCTOR</h3> + + +<p>In the middle of the night the telephone bell rang. Instantly Wilbur +heard the doctor's voice responding.</p> + +<p>"Yes, where is it?" he queried. "Where? Oh, just beyond Basco Aleck's +place. All right, I'll start right away."</p> + +<p>There was some rummaging in the other rooms, and in less than five +minutes' time the clatter of hoofs outside told the boy that the doctor +was off, probably on the huge gray horse Wilbur had seen in the corral +as he rode in that day. It was broad daylight when he wakened again, and +Mrs. Davis was standing beside him with his breakfast tray. It was so +long since Wilbur had not had to prepare breakfast for himself that he +felt quite strange, but the night's rest had eased him wonderfully, and +aside from a little soreness where he had had his scalp laid open, he +was quite himself again.</p> + +<p>"Did Doctor Davis have to go away in the night?" he asked. "I thought I +heard the telephone."</p> + +<p>"Yes," answered the doctor's wife. "But that is nothing new. Almost once +a week, at least, he is sent for in the night, or does not reach home +till late in the night. I've grown used to it," she added; "doctors' +wives must."</p> + +<p>"But distances are so great, and there are so few trails," said the boy, +"and Doctor Davis is so famous, one would think that he would do better +in a city."</p> + +<p>"Better for himself?" came the softly uttered query.</p> + +<p>The boy colored hotly as he realized the idea of selfishness that there +had been in his speech.</p> + +<p>"I beg your pardon," he said. "No, I see. But it does seem strange, just +the same, that he should be out here."</p> + +<p>"He wouldn't be happy anywhere else."</p> + +<p>"Excuse me, Mrs. Davis," said the boy, who had caught something of the +Supervisor's abruptness, "but what brought him here?"</p> + +<p>"Do you not," answered the doctor's wife, giving question for question, +"know the old hunter, 'Rifle-Eye Bill'? I don't know his right name. +Why, of course, you must; he's the Ranger in your part of the forest."</p> + +<p>"Do I know him?" said Wilbur, and without stopping for further question +talked for ten minutes on end, telling all that the old hunter had done +for him and how greatly he admired him. "Know him," he concluded, "I +should just guess I did."</p> + +<p>"It was he," said the woman, "who persuaded us to come out here."</p> + +<p>"Won't you tell me?" pleaded the boy. "I'd love to hear anything about +Rifle-Eye. And the doctor, too," he added as an afterthought.</p> + +<p>"It was long ago," she began, "seventeen years ago. Yes," she continued +with a smile at the lad's surprise, "I have lived here seventeen years."</p> + +<p>"Do you—" began the boy excitedly, "do you ride a white mare?"</p> + +<p>This time it was the doctor's wife who colored. She flushed to the roots +of her hair.</p> + +<p>"Yes," she answered hurriedly, and went on to explain the early +conditions of the forest. But Wilbur was not listening, he was +remembering the stories that he had heard since his arrival into the +forest of the "little white lady," of whom the ranchers and miners +always spoke so reverently. But presently Rifle-Eye's name attracted his +attention and he listened again.</p> + +<p>"We were camping," she said, "in one of the redwood groves not far from +San Francisco for the summer, the doctor having been appointed an +attending surgeon at one of the larger hospitals, although he was very +young. We had been married only a little over a year. One evening just +after supper, Rifle-Eye, although we did not know him then, walked into +camp.</p> + +<p>"'You are a doctor, an operating doctor?' he inquired.</p> + +<p>"'Yes,' my husband replied, 'I am a surgeon.'</p> + +<p>"Then the old hunter came to where I was standing.</p> + +<p>"'You are a doctor's wife?' he queried. You know that direct way of +his?"</p> + +<p>"Indeed I do," Wilbur replied. "It's one you've got to answer."</p> + +<p>"So I said, 'Yes, I am a doctor's wife,' just as if I was a little girl +answering a catechism.</p> + +<p>"'The case is seventy miles away,' he said, 'and there's a horse +saddled.' He turned to me. 'A woman I know is coming over in a little +while to stay the night with you, so that you will not be lonely. +Come, doctor.' There was a hurried farewell, and they were gone. I can +laugh now, as I think of it, but it was dreadful then.</p> + +<p>"Presently, however, the woman that he had spoken of came over to our +camp. She was a mountaineer's wife, and very willing and helpful. But I +was a little frightened, as I had never seen any one quite like her +before."</p> + +<p>"You couldn't have had much in common," said Wilbur, who was observant +enough to note the artistic nature of the room wherein he lay, the +exquisite cleanliness and freshness of all his surroundings, and the +faultless English of the doctor's wife. Besides, she was pretty and +sweet-looking, and boys are quick to note it.</p> + +<p>"We didn't," she answered, "but when I happened to mention the old +hunter, why the woman was transformed. She brightened up, and told me +tales far into the night of what the old hunter had done until," she +smiled, "I almost thought he must be as nice as Doctor Davis."</p> + +<p>"Doctor Davis does look awfully fine," agreed Wilbur.</p> + +<p>"I always think so," said his wife demurely. "Two days passed before the +men returned, and when I got a chance alone with my husband, he was +twice as bad as the mountaineer's wife. He would talk of nothing but +Rifle-Eye and the need of surgical work in the mountains.</p> + +<p>"'And you, Violet,' he said, 'you're going to ride there with me to-day +and help look after this man.' It did rather surprise me, because I knew +that he hated to have me troubled with any details of his work, for he +used to like to leave his profession behind when he came home. So I knew +that he thought it important, and I went. But I rode the greater part of +the day with the old hunter, and long before he reached the place where +the man was who needed me, all my objections had vanished and I was +eager to begin."</p> + +<p>"That's just the way that Rifle-Eye does," said the boy, "he makes it +seem that what he wants you to do is just what you want to do yourself."</p> + +<p>"When I got to the place," she went on, "I found that it was a Basque +shepherd, who had been hurt by some of the cattlemen. That made it much +more interesting for me, for you know, my people were Basques, that +strange old race, who, tradition tells, are all that are left of the +shepherds on the mountains of the lost Atlantis. So I nursed him as best +I could, and presently, from far and wide over the Rockies I would get +messages from the Basque shepherds."</p> + +<p>"Didn't you put a stop to the feuds at one time?" asked Wilbur. "The old +hunter told me something about 'the little white lady' and the sheep +war."</p> + +<p>"I helped in many of them," she said simply, "and when they came to me +for advice I tried to give it. Doctor Davis was always there to suggest +the more advisable course, and I put it to these Bascos, as they called +them, so that they would understand."</p> + +<p>"How about Burleigh?" asked Wilbur.</p> + +<p>But the doctor's wife disclaimed all knowledge of a sheep-owner called +Burleigh.</p> + +<p>"All right," said Wilbur, "then I'll give my share of the story, as the +old hunter told it to me. That is, if you don't mind."</p> + +<p>"Tell it," she smiled, "if you like."</p> + +<p>"Well," said Wilbur, "one Sunday afternoon a Ranger, whose cabin was +near a lookout point, said to his wife, 'I'll ride up to the peak, and +be back in time for supper.' He went off in his shirt-sleeves, +bare-headed, for an hour's ride, and was gone a week. Up in the brush he +found the trail of a band of sheep, and although he was cold and hungry +and his horse was playing out, he stuck right on the job until it got +too dark to see. The second day he smashed in the door of a miner's +cabin, got some grub, and nailed a note on the door saying who'd taken +it, and kept on. He tired his horse out, and left him in another +fellow's corral, but kept on going on foot. The sheepman was known as +dangerous, but this little Ranger—did I tell you he was Irish—stuck to +it, trusting to find some way out even if the grazer did get ugly.</p> + +<p>"At last he came on the sheep in a mountain meadow, and Burleigh on his +horse by them, a rifle across his saddle bow. The Ranger said little at +the time, and the two men went home to supper. After eating, as they sat +there, the Ranger said his say. He told the grazer what were the orders +he had, and that he would have to live up to them. But the grazer had a +copy of 'orders,' too, and he had hired a lawyer to find out how he +could get out of them. So he lit into the Ranger.</p> + +<p>"'You see, Mac,' he said, 'those orders don't mean anything. They may be +all right in Washington, but they don't go here. You can't stop me, nor +arrest me, nor hurt my sheep. Your bosses won't stand by you if you get +into any mix-up. The best thing you can do is to stay here to-night, and +then go home. Make a report on it, if you like, I don't care."</p> + +<p>"And then the Ranger began," the boy went on. "The old hunter told me +that this little bit of an Irishman told the grazer about his work as a +Ranger. He told him how he had seen the good that was going to be done, +and that having put his hand to the plow, he couldn't let it go again. +He didn't know much about it, and he'd never tried to talk about it +before, but the natural knack of talking which his race always has came +to help him out. Then he began to talk of the sheep and cattle war, and +the shame that it was to have them killing each other's flocks and +shooting each other because they could not agree about the right to +grass.</p> + +<p>"'An' there's one more thing,' he said, ''tis only the other day that I +was talkin' to the "little white lady," and she said she knew that you +wouldn't be the one to start up trouble again.' And he wound up with an +appeal to his better judgment, which, so the old hunter told me the +grazer said afterward, would have got a paralyzed mule on the move.</p> + +<p>"When he got through, Burleigh merely answered:</p> + +<p>"'Mac, take that blanket and go to bed. I'll talk to you in the +morning.'</p> + +<p>"When the Ranger woke, a little after daylight, the grazer sat beside +his blanket, smoking. He began without wasting any time.</p> + +<p>"'Mac,' he said, 'I'm going to take my sheep out to-day. Not because of +any of your little bits of printed orders—I could drive a whole herd +through them; and not because of any of your bosses back in Washington, +who wouldn't know a man's country if they ever got into it, and couldn't +find their way out; and not entirely because, as you say, "the little +white lady" trusts me, though perhaps that's got a good deal to do with +it. But when I find a man who is so many different kinds of a fool as +you seem to be, it looks some like my moral duty to keep him out of an +asylum.' And that's the story I heard about Burleigh.</p> + +<p>"But I interrupted you," the boy continued, "you were going to tell me +about Doctor Davis. Didn't you ever go back to the city?"</p> + +<p>"Oh, yes," she replied. "The doctor had to take his hospital service, +and for three years he spent six months in the hospital in the city, +and six months out here in the mountains. But there were several good +surgeons in the city, and only one on the great wide Sierras, and, as +you know, he is strong enough for the hardest work. So,—I remember well +the night,—he came to me, and hesitatingly suggested that we should +live out here for always, but that he didn't wish to take me away from +my city friends. And I—oh, I had been wanting to come all the time. I +was just one out of so many in the city, paying little social calls, but +here I found so many people to be fond of. I think I know every one on +the mountains here, and they are all so kind to me. And," she added +proudly, "so appreciative of the doctor."</p> + +<p>Wilbur laughed as she gathered up the things on the tray.</p> + +<p>"Well," he said, "I don't believe the old hunter ever did a better thing +when he got Doctor Davis to come to the forest—unless, it was the day +'the little white lady' came with him. Haven't I had a broken head, and +am I not her patient? You bet!"</p> + +<p>But Mrs. Davis only smiled as she passed from the room.</p> + +<p>Wilbur spent the rest of the morning in the doctor's library, and was +more than delighted to learn that these books were there for borrowing, +on the sole condition that they should be returned. He learned, later, +that under the guise of a library to lend books, all sorts of little +plans were done for the cheering of the lives of those who lived in +isolated portions of the mountain range. The boy had not been +twenty-four hours under the doctor's roof, yet he was quite at home, and +sorry to go when the Supervisor rode up. He had been careful to groom +Kit very thoroughly, and she was standing saddled at the door, half an +hour before the time appointed. He was ready to swing into the saddle as +soon as Merritt appeared.</p> + +<p>"Not so fast, Loyle," he said, "this is once that promptness is a bad +thing. I must have a word or two with Mrs. Davis; he'd be a pretty poor +stick who ever missed that chance."</p> + +<p>So, while he went inside, Wilbur looked over the pack to see that it was +riding easily, and led Baldy to where he could have a few mouthfuls of +grass. And when he came out the Forester was even more silent than +usual, and rode for two hours without uttering a syllable.</p> + +<p>"Did you find everything going on all right for the pulp-mill?" asked +Wilbur, finally desiring to give a chance for conversation. But Merritt +simply replied, "Fairly so," and relapsed into silence. He wakened into +sudden energy, however, when, a half an hour later, in making a shortcut +to headquarters he came upon an old abandoned trail. It was somewhat +overgrown, but the Supervisor turned into it and followed it for some +length, finally arriving at a large spring, one of the best in the +forest, which evidently had been known at some time prior to the Forest +Service taking control, but now had passed into disuse. But Merritt was +even more surprised to find beside the spring a prospector of the old +type, with his burro and pack, evidently making camp for the night.</p> + +<p>"Evenin'," said Merritt, "where did you get hold of this trail?"</p> + +<p>"Allers knew about it," said the prospector. "I s'pose," he added, +noting the bronze "U. S." on the khaki shirt, "that you're the Ranger."</p> + +<p>"Supervisor," replied Merritt. "Locating a mineral claim, are you?"</p> + +<p>"Not yet," the other replied; "I ain't located any mineral to claim yet. +I'll come to you for a permit as soon as I do. But I'm lookin' for +Burns's lost mine."</p> + +<p>"You don't believe in that old yarn, surely?" questioned the other +surprisedly.</p> + +<p>"Would I be lookin' for it if I hadn't doped it out that it was there?"</p> + +<p>"Where?"</p> + +<p>"Oh, somewheres around here. I reckon it's further north. But if you +don't take any stock in it, there's no use talkin'."</p> + +<p>"I'm not denying its existence," said Merritt, "but you know dozens of +men have looked for that and no one's found it yet."</p> + +<p>"There can't be but one find it," said the prospector. "I aims to be +that one. I used to think it was further south. Twenty years ago I spent +a lot o' time down at the end of the range. Two seasons ago I got a +hunch it was further north. I couldn't get away last year, so here I am. +I've been busy on Indian Creek for some years."</p> + +<p>"Got a claim there?"</p> + +<p>"Got the only jade in the country."</p> + +<p>"Was it you located that mine in the Klamath Forest?" queried the +Supervisor interestedly. "But that's quite a good deposit. I shouldn't +think you'd be prospecting now."</p> + +<p>"I didn't for two years. But, pard, it was dead slow, an' so I hired a +man to run the works while I hit the old trail again. I don't have to +get anybody to grubstake me now. I've been able to boost some of the +others who used to help me."</p> + +<p>"But what started you looking for Burns's mine? I thought that story had +been considered a fake years ago."</p> + +<p>"What is a lost mine?" asked Wilbur.</p> + +<p>Merritt looked at him a moment thoughtfully, then turned to the +prospector.</p> + +<p>"You tell the yarn," he said. "You probably know it better than I do."</p> + +<p>"I'm not much on talkin'," began the prospector. "Away back in the +sixties, after the first gold-rush, Jock Burns, one of the old +Forty-niners, started prospectin' in the Sierras. There's not much here, +but one or two spots pay. By an' by Burns comes into the settlements +with a few little bags of gold dust, an' nuggets of husky size. He blows +it all in. He spends free, but he's nowise wasteful, so he stays in town +maybe a month.</p> + +<p>"Then he disappears from view, an' turns up in less than another month +in town with another little bundle of gold dust. It don't take much +figurin' to see that where there's a pay streak so easy worked as that, +there's a lot more of it close handy. An' so they watches Burns close. +Burns, he can't divorce himself from his friends any more than an Indian +can from his color. This frequent an' endurin' friendliness preys some +on Burns's nature, an' bein' of a bashful disposition, he makes several +breaks to get away. But while the boys are dead willin' to see him start +for the mountains, they reckon an escort would be an amiable form of +appreciation. Also, they ain't got no objection to bein' shown the way +to the mine.</p> + +<p>"Burns gets a little thin an' petered out under the strain, but time an' +agin he succeeds in givin' 'em the slip. Sure enough he lines up a month +or two later with some more of the real thing. Finally, one of these +here friends gets a little peevish over his frequent failures to stack +the deck on Burns. He avers that he'll insure that Burns don't spend any +more coin until he divvys up, an' accordin'ly he hands him a couple of +bullets where he thinks they'll do most good."</p> + +<p>"What did he want to kill him for?" asked Wilbur.</p> + +<p>"He didn't aim to kill him prompt," was the reply. "His idee was to trot +him down the hill by easy stages, an' gradooally indooce the old +skinflint to talk. But his shootin' was a trifle too straight, and +Burns jest turns in his toes then an' there. This displeases the +sentiment of the community. Then some literary shark gits up and spins a +yarn about killin' some goose what laid eggs that assayed a hundred per +cent., an' they decides that it would be a humane thing to arrange that +Burns shan't go out into the dark without some comfortin' friend beside +him. So they dispatches the homicide, neat an' pretty, with the aid of a +rope, an' remarks after the doin's is over that Burns is probably a heap +less lonesome."</p> + +<p>"Well, I should think that would have stopped all chance of further +search," said Wilbur.</p> + +<p>"It did. But a year or two after that, Burns acquires the habit of +intrudin' his memory on the minds of some of these here friends. When it +gits noised about that a certain kind of nose-paint is some advantageous +toward this particular brand of dream, why, there ain't no way of +keeping a sufficient supply in camp. I goes up against her myself, an' +wild licker she is. But one by one, the boys all gets to dreamin' that +Burns has sorter floated afore them, accordin' to ghostly etiquette, an' +pointed a ghostly finger at the ground. Which ain't so plumb exact, for +no one supposes a mine to be up in the air. But different ones affirms +that they can recognize the features of the landscape which the ghost of +Burns frequents. As, however, they all strikes out in different +directions, I ain't takin' no stock therein.</p> + +<p>"But, two years ago, when I was meanderin' around lookin' for signs, I +comes across the bones of an old mule with the remains of a saddle on +his back, an' I didn't have any trouble in guessin' it to be Burns's. +There was no way of tellin', though, whether he was goin' or returnin' +when the mule broke down, or if he was far or near the mine, but, +anyhow, it gave some idee of direction, an' I reckon I'm goin' to find +it."</p> + +<p>"All right," said the Supervisor as they shook up their horses ready to +go, "I hope you have good luck and find it."</p> + +<p>"I'll let you or Rifle-Eye know as soon as I do," called back the +prospector, "an' you folks can pan out some samples. If I find it, we'll +make the Yukon look sick."</p> + +<p>Merritt laughed as they cantered down the trail to headquarters.</p> + +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 700px;"> +<a name="IMAGE_25" id="IMAGE_25"></a> +<img src="images/image-25.jpg" width="700" height="441" alt="SAND BURYING A PEAR ORCHARD." title="" /> +<span class="caption">SAND BURYING A PEAR ORCHARD.<br />Almost too late to save a fine plantation which a suitable wind-break of +trees would have guarded.<br />Photo by U. S. Forest Service.</span> +</div> + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> + +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XIV" id="CHAPTER_XIV"></a>CHAPTER XIV</h2> + +<h3>A ROLLING CLOUD OF SMOKE</h3> + + +<p>The days became hotter and hotter, and each morning when Wilbur rose he +searched eagerly for some sign of cloud that should presage rain, but +the sky remained cloudless. Several times he had heard of fires in the +vicinity, but they had kept away from that portion of the forest over +which he had control, and he had not been summoned from his post. The +boy had given up his former schedule of covering his whole forest twice +a week, and now was riding on Sundays, thus reaching every lookout point +every other day. It was telling upon the horses, and he himself was +conscious of the strain, but he was more content in feeling that he had +gone the limit in doing the thing that was given him to do.</p> + +<p>One day, while in a distant part of the forest, he came upon the signs +of a party of campers. Since his experience with the tourists the boy +had become panic-stricken by the very idea of careless visitors to the +forest, and the chance of their setting a fire, and so, recklessly, he +put his horse at a sharp gallop and started down the trail that they had +left. The signs were new, so that he overtook them in a couple of hours. +But in the meantime he had passed the place where the party had made +their noonday halt, and he could see that full precautions had been +taken to insure the quenching of the fire.</p> + +<p>When he overtook them, moreover, he was wonderfully relieved and freed +from his fears. There were six in all, the father, who was quite an old +man, the mother, two grown-up sons, and two younger girls. They had +heard his horse come galloping down the trail, and the two younger men +had hung back to be the first to meet him.</p> + +<p>"Which way?" one of them asked, as Wilbur pulled his horse down to a +walk.</p> + +<p>"Your way," said Wilbur, "I guess. I just rode down to see who it was on +the trail. There was a bunch of tourists hanging around here a few weeks +ago, and the forest floor is too dry to take any chances with their +campfires."</p> + +<p>"Oh, that's it," said the former speaker. Then, with a laugh, he +continued: "I guess we aren't in that class."</p> + +<p>"I can see you're not," the boy replied, "but I'm one of the Forest +Service men, and it's a whole lot better to be safe than sorry."</p> + +<p>"Right," the other replied. "I think you might ride on with us a bit," +he continued, "and talk to the rest of them. It may ease their minds. +You were headed our way down that trail as though you were riding for +our scalps."</p> + +<p>Wilbur laughed at the idea of his inspiring fear in the two stalwart men +riding beside him.</p> + +<p>"I guess I'd have had some job," he said, "if I had tried it on."</p> + +<p>"Well," the first speaker answered, "we wouldn't be the first of the +family to decorate a wigwam that way. My grandfather an' his two +brothers got ambushed by some Apaches in the early seventies."</p> + +<p>"Your grandfather?" the boy repeated.</p> + +<p>"Sure, son. Most of the fellows that got the worst of it with the +Indians was some one's granddad, I reckon. One of my uncles, father's +brother, was with them at the time, and he got scalped, too. It isn't so +long ago since the days of the Indians, son, an' it's wonderful to think +of the families livin' peacefully where the war-parties used to ride. +That's goin' to be a great country down there. But," he broke off +suddenly, "here's dad."</p> + +<p>The bent figure in the saddle, riding an immense iron gray mare, +straightened up as the three rode close, and the old man turned a keen +glance on the boy. Instantly, Wilbur was reminded of the old hunter, +although the two men were as unlike as they could be, and in that same +instant the boy realized that the likeness lay in the eyes. The +springiness might have gone out of his step, and to a certain extent the +seat in the saddle was unfirm, and the strength and poise of the body +showed signs of abatement, but the fire in the eyes was undimmed and +every line of the features was instinct to a wonderful degree with life +and vitality. After a question or two to his sons he turned to the boy, +and in response to a query as to his destination, replied, in a +sing-song voice that was reminiscent of frontier camp-meetings:</p> + +<p>"I'm goin' to the Promised Land. It's been a long an' a weary road, but +the time of rejoicin' has come. It is writ that the desert shall blossom +as a rose, an' I'm goin' to grow rose-trees where the cactus used to be; +the solitary place shall be alone no more, an' I and mine are flockin' +into it; the lion an' wolf shall be no more therein, an' the varmints +all are gone away; an' a little child shall lead them, an' before I die +I reckon to see my children an' my children's children under the shadow +of my vine an' fig tree."</p> + +<p>Wilbur looked a little bewilderedly at the two younger men and one of +them said hastily:</p> + +<p>"We're goin' down to the Salt River Valley, down in Arizona, where the +government has irrigated land."</p> + +<p>"Oh, I know," said Wilbur, "that's one of the big projects of the +Reclamation Service."</p> + +<p>"Have you been down there at all?"</p> + +<p>"No," the boy answered, "but I understand that to a very great extent +much of the Forest Service work is being done with irrigation in view."</p> + +<p>"They used to call it," broke out the old prophet again, "the 'land that +God forgot,' but now they're callin' it the 'land that God remembered.'"</p> + +<p>Wilbur waited a moment to see if the old man would speak again, but as +he was silent, he turned to the man beside him:</p> + +<p>"How did you get interested in this land?" he asked.</p> + +<p>"I was born," the other answered, "in one of the villages of the +cliff-dwellers, who lived so many years ago. Dad, he always used to +think that the sudden droppin' out of those old races an' the endurin' +silence about them was some kind of a visitation. An' he always believed +that the curse, whatever it was, would be taken off."</p> + +<p>"That's a queer idea," said the boy; "I never heard it before."</p> + +<p>"Well," said the other, "it does seem queer. An' when the government +first started this reclamation work, dad he thought it was a sign, and +he went into every project, I reckon, the government ever had. An' they +used to say that unless 'the Apache Prophet,' as they called him, had +been once on a project, it was no use goin' on till he came."</p> + +<p>"But what did he do?"</p> + +<p>"They always gave him charge of a gang of men for as long as he wanted +it, and Jim an' I, we used to boss a gang, too. We've been on the +Huntley and Sun River in Montana, we've laid the foundation of the +highest masonry dam in the world—the Shoshone dam in Wyoming,—helped +build a canal ninety-five miles long in Nebraska, I've driven team on +the Belle Fourche in South Dakota; in Kansas, where there's no surface +water, I've dug wells that with pumps will irrigate eight thousand +acres, and away down in New Mexico on the Pecos and in Colorado on the +Rio Grande I've helped begin a new life for those States."</p> + +<p>"An' a river shall flow out of it," the old man burst forth again, "an' +I reckon thar ain't a river flowin' nowhere that's forgot. I don't know +where Jordan rolls, but any stream that brings smilin' plenty where the +desert was before looks enough like Jordan to suit me. I've seen it, I +tell you," he added fiercely, turning to the boy, "I've seen the desert +an' I've seen Eden, an' I'm goin' there to live. An' where the flamin' +sword of thirst once whirled, there's little brooks a-ripplin' an' the +flowers is springin' fair."</p> + +<p>"You must have seen great changes?" suggested the boy, interested in the +old man's speech.</p> + +<p>"Five years ago," he answered, "we were campin' on the Snake River, in +southern Idaho. There was sage-brush, an' sand, an' stars, an' nothin' +else. An engineerin' fellow, who he was I dunno, rides up to the fire. +Where he comes from I dunno; I reckon his body came along the road of +the sage-brush and the sand, but his mind came by the stars. An' he +takes the handle of an ax, and draws out on the sand an irrigatin' +plan. There wasn't a house for thirty miles. An' he just asks if he +shall go ahead. An' I knows he's right, an' I says I knows he's right, +an' he goes straight off to Washington, an' now there's three thousand +people where the sage-brush was, and right on the very spot where my +campfire smoked just five years ago, a school has been opened with over +a hundred children there."</p> + +<p>He stopped as suddenly as he began.</p> + +<p>"There was some great work in the Gunnison canyon, was there not?" +queried Wilbur.</p> + +<p>The old man made no reply, and the son answered the question.</p> + +<p>"When they had to lower a man from the top into the canyon, seven +hundred feet below," he said, "Dad was the first to volunteer. I reckon, +son, there's no greater story worth the tellin' than the Uncompahgre +tunnel. And then, I ain't told nothin' about the big Washington and +Oregon valleys, where tens of thousands now have homes an' are rearin' +the finest kind of men an' women. But, as dad says, we're comin' home. +There's four centuries of our history and there's seven centuries of +Moki traditions, an' still there's nothing to tell me who the people are +who built the cliff-town where I was born. Dad, he thinks that when the +water comes, perhaps the stones will speak. I don't know, but if they +ever do, I want to be there to hear. It's the strangest, wildest place +in all the world, I think, and while it is harsh and unkindly, still +it's home. Dad's right there. These forests are all right," he added, +remembering that the boy was attached to the Forest Service, "but for +me, I want a world whose end you can't see an' where every glance leads +up."</p> + +<p>"Do you suppose," said Wilbur, "that in the days of the cliff-dwellers, +and earlier, the 'inland empire' was densely populated?"</p> + +<p>"Some time," the other replied slowly, "it must have been. Not far from +my cliff home is the famous Cheltro Palace, which contains over thirty +million blocks of stone."</p> + +<p>"How big is it?" asked Wilbur.</p> + +<p>"Well, it is four stories high, nearly five hundred feet long, an' just +half that width."</p> + +<p>Wilbur whistled.</p> + +<p>"My stars," he ejaculated, "that is big! And is there nothing left to +tell about them?" he asked.</p> + +<p>The other shook his head.</p> + +<p>"Nothing," he answered.</p> + +<p>"They were, an' they were not," interjected the old patriarch. "I looked +for the place where I should find him, an' lo, he was gone. They were +eatin' an' drinkin' when the end came, an' they knew it not. Like enough +they had some warnin' which they heeded not, an' their house is left +unto them desolate. An' we go in and possess their land. Young man, come +with us."</p> + +<p>Wilbur started.</p> + +<p>"Oh, I can't," he said. "I should like to see some of those projects, +but my work is here. But I'm one of you," he added eagerly; "the rivers +that flow down to enrich your desert rise from springs in our mountains, +and all those springs would dry up if the forests were destroyed. And +all the headwaters of the streams are in our care."</p> + +<p>"You kind of look after them when they're young," Wilbur's companion +suggested, "that we can use them when the time is ripe."</p> + +<p>"That is just it," said Wilbur. Then, turning to the old man, he added:</p> + +<p>"I must go back to my patrol," he said, "but when you're down in that +Garden of Eden, where the river is making the world all over again, +you'll remember us once in a while, and the little bit of a stream +that flows out of my corral will always have good wishes for you down +there."</p> + +<p>The old man turned in his saddle with great dignity.</p> + +<p>"There be vessels to honor," he said gravely, "an' to every one his +gifts. Go back to your forest home an' work, an' take an old man's +wishes that while water runs you may never want for work worth doin', +for friends worth havin', an' at the last a tally you ain't ashamed to +show."</p> + +<p>Wilbur raised his hat in salute for reply and reined Kit in until the +party was lost to view. The afternoon was drawing on and the lad had +lost nearly two hours in following the party, and in his chat with the +old patriarch, but he could not but feel that even the momentary glimpse +he had been given of the practical workings of the reclamation work of +the government had gone far to emphasize and render of keener personal +interest all that he had learned at school or heard from the Forest +Service men about the making of a newer world within the New World +itself. And when he remembered that over a quarter of a million +families, within a space of about six years, have made their homes on +what was an absolute desert ten years ago, and that these men and women +were stirred with the same spirit as the old patriarch, he felt, as he +had said, that the conserving of the mountain streams was work worth +while.</p> + +<p>As it chanced, he passed over the little stream whose channel he had +cleared on one of his patrol rides, and he stopped a moment to look at +it.</p> + +<p>"Well," he said aloud, "I suppose some youngster some day will be +picking oranges off a tree that would have died if I hadn't done that +day's work," and he rode on to his camp greatly pleased with himself.</p> + +<p>For a day or two the boy found himself quite unable to shake the spell +of the old patriarch's presence off his mind, and the more he thought +over it, the more he realized that scarcely any one thing in the whole +of the United States loomed larger on its future than the main idea of +Conservation. It had been merely a word before, but now it was a +reality, and he determined to take the first opportunity he would have, +during his vacation, of going down to the Salt River Valley to see the +old patriarch once again.</p> + +<p>And still the weather grew hotter and the sky remained cloudless. And +now, every evening, Rifle-Eye would telephone over to make sure that +Wilbur was back at camp and that there was as yet no danger. They had +had one quite sharp tussle at a distant point of the forest, and one day +Wilbur had received orders to make a long ride to a lookout point in +another part of the forest, the work of a Guard who had been called away +to fight fire, but so far, Wilbur had been free. Two or three times he +found himself waking suddenly in the night, possessed with an intense +desire to saddle Kit and ride off to a part of the forest where he had +either dreamed or thought a fire was burning, but Rifle-Eye had been +careful to warn him against this very thing, and although the morning +found him simply wild to ride to this point of supposed danger, he had +followed orders and ridden his regular round.</p> + +<p>Although Wilbur's camp was high, the heat grew hard to bear, and when +the boy passed from the shade of the pine along the naked rock to some +lookout point the ground seemed to blaze under him. The grass was +rapidly turning brown in the exposed places, and the pine needles were +as slippery as the smoothest ice.</p> + +<p>Just at noon, one morning, Wilbur turned his horse—he was not riding +Kit that day—into one of these open trails, and taking out his glasses, +commenced to sweep the horizon. A heat haze was abroad, and his +over-excited eyes seemed to see smoke everywhere. But, as he swept round +the horizon, suddenly his whole figure stiffened. He looked long, then, +with a sigh of relief, turned away, and completed his circuit of the +horizon. This done, he directed the glasses anew where he had looked +before. He looked long, unsatisfied, then lay down on the rock where he +could rest the glasses and scanned the scene for several minutes.</p> + +<p>"Be sure," Merritt had once warned him, "better spend a half an hour at +the start than lose two hours later."</p> + +<p>But Wilbur felt sure and rushed for his horse. Half-way he paused. Then, +going deliberately into the shade of a heavy spruce, he half-closed his +eyes for a minute or two to let the muscles relax. Then quietly he came +to the edge of the cliff, and directing his glasses point-blank at the +place he had been examining so closely, scanned it in every detail. He +slipped the glasses back into their case, snapped the clasp firmly, +walked deliberately back to his horse, who had been taking a few +mouthfuls of grass, tightened the cinches, looked to it that the saddle +was resting true and that the blanket had not rucked up, vaulted into +the saddle, and rode to the edge of the cliff. There was no doubt of it. +Hanging low in the heavy air over and through the dark foliage of pine +and spruce was a dull dark silver gleam, which changed enough as the +sunlight fell upon it to show that it was eddying vapor rather than the +heavier waves of fog.</p> + +<p>"Smoke!" he said. "We've got to ride for it."</p> + +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"> +<a name="IMAGE_26" id="IMAGE_26"></a> +<img src="images/image-26.jpg" width="600" height="385" alt="NO WATER, NO FORESTS. NO FORESTS, NO WATER." title="" /> +<span class="caption">NO WATER, NO FORESTS. NO FORESTS, NO WATER.<br /> +Example of country which irrigation will cause to become wonderfully +fertile.<br /> +Photograph by U. S. Forest Service.</span> +</div> + +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"> +<a name="IMAGE_27" id="IMAGE_27"></a> +<img src="images/image-27.jpg" width="600" height="381" alt="WITH WATER!" title="" /> +<span class="caption">WITH WATER!<br /> +In the foreground, a field and orchard; in the background, the +sand-dunes of the arid desert. Transformation effected by a tiny stream +and a poplar wind-break.<br /> +Photograph by U. S. Forest Service.</span> +</div> + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> + +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XV" id="CHAPTER_XV"></a>CHAPTER XV</h2> + +<h3>THE FOREST ABLAZE</h3> + + +<p>As Wilbur broke into a steady, if fast pace, it seemed to him that all +his previous experiences in the forest had been directed to this one +end. True, once before, he had seen smoke in the distance and had ridden +to it, but then he had felt that it was a small fire which he would be +able to put out, as indeed it had proved. But now, while there was no +greater cloud of smoke visible than there had been before, the boy felt +that this was in some measure different.</p> + +<p>As his horse's hoofs clattered on the trail, it seemed to his excited +fancy that every inch of ground was crying to the valley below, "He's +coming," the wind that blew past him seemed filled with purpose, every +eddying gust awoke in him a greater desire to reach the place of danger +before the wind should rise to higher gusts, and as the needles of the +pines whispered overhead it seemed to Wilbur that they murmured, "Hurry, +hurry, if you want to be there on time." Over and over again, he found +himself on the point of using the whip or spurs to induce a greater +burst of speed, but as often as he did so, the old short, curtly-worded +counsels of Merritt came back to him, never to press his horse if the +ride was to be of any length, and he grew to believe that the animal +knew as well as the rider the errand on which he was bound.</p> + +<p>He had thought, before starting, of riding back to his camp and +telephoning to Rifle-Eye, but the knowledge that after all it might be a +little fire kept him back. All the tales that he had ever heard about +forest fires rushed through his mind, but he resolutely set them aside +to watch his horse's path, to hold him in where he would be apt to +stumble, to give him his head on rising ground, and to bring him to +speed where the trail was easy to follow. Two hours he rode, his horse +well in hand, until he came to the place where he had decided from his +lookout point that he would have to leave the trail and plunge through +the forest itself.</p> + +<p>This was a very different matter, and Wilbur found himself wondering how +his horse kept his footing. He was not riding Kit, for which he was +glad, as in leaving the trail and plunging downhill he had struck some +parts of the forest where undergrowth was present, and his favorite +mare's slender legs would have been badly scratched. Also the footing +grew dangerous and uncertain. There had been many windfalls in the +forest, and now was no time to take them quietly; a flying leap, not +knowing what might be on the other side, a stumble, perhaps, which sent +the boy's heart into his mouth, a quick recovery, and they were off +again, only to find, perhaps, a few yards further on, a bowlder-strewn +gully which it would have been madness to take at other than a walk. But +the boy chafed terribly at each and every stay to his ride, and he had +to hold himself in hand as much as he had his horse.</p> + +<p>Little by little the exhilaration of the ride stole into his veins. He +was alone in the forest, he and his horse, the world was all before, and +he must ride and ride. He shouted as he rode under the towering pines, +raced across a clearing with a whoop that roused the echoes, and yelled +for sheer delight in the mad ride through the untraveled forest, where, +as the knights of old, he rode forth to conquer and to do.</p> + +<p>But a sudden, sharp, acrid whiff of vapor in his nostrils checked his +riotous impulses. It was one thing to ride out to meet the foe, it was +another matter when the foe was known to be near. A half mile nearer and +the acrid taste in the air turned to a defined veil of smoke, intangible +and unreal, at first, which merely seemed to hang about the trunks of +the mighty trees and make them seem dim and far away. Nearer yet, and +the air grew hard to breathe, the smoke was billowing through the +foliage of the pines, which sighed wearily and moaned in a vague fear of +the enemy they dreaded most.</p> + +<p>A curving gully, too wide to leap, too deep to cross readily, had +deflected the boy in his ride until he found himself to the lee of the +fire, and the heat of it, oppressive and menacing, assailed him.</p> + +<p>Remembering the lay of the land, as he had seen it from his lookout +point, Wilbur recalled the fact that no peak or rise was in the vicinity +up which he could ride to gain a nearer view of the fire, and he did not +dare to ride on and find himself on the windward side of the fire, for +then his efforts to hold it back would be unavailing. He rode slowly +till he came to the highest tree near. Then, dismounting, Wilbur tied +his horse to the foot of the tree, tied him as securely as he knew how, +for the animal was snorting in fear at being thus fastened up when the +smoke was over his head and the smell of the fire was in his nostrils. +Then, buckling on his climbing irons, which he had carried with him that +morning because he had thought, if he had time, he might do a little +repairing to his telephone line, he started up the side of the great +tree. Up and up he went, fifty, sixty, one hundred feet, and still he +was not at the top; another twenty feet, and there far above the ground, +he rested at last upon a branch whence he could command an outlook upon +the forest below.</p> + +<p>The fire was near, much nearer than he had imagined, and had he ridden +on another ten or fifteen minutes, he might have taken his horse in +danger. The blaze was larger than he thought. For half a mile's length, +at least, the smoke was rising, and what was beyond he could not rightly +see, because the branches of a large tree obscured his sight.</p> + +<p>Immediately below him, the little gully, whose curving course had turned +him from the straight path, seemed to be the edge of the flames, which +had not been able to back up over the water. On this side, clear down to +the water's edge the forest floor was burning, but how wide a stretch +had been burned over he could not see. Once on the other side of the +gully he would be able to judge better what to do.</p> + +<p>Below his horse neighed shrilly.</p> + +<p>Looking straight down, Wilbur noted a long rolling curl of smoke steal +swiftly along the ground a few hundred yards away, and he saw there was +no time to lose. Springing from the branch to the trunk of the tree, he +started to climb down. But he was over-hurried, and his feet slipped. It +was only a foot at most, and Wilbur was not easily frightened, but he +turned cold and sick for an instant as he looked below and saw the +height from which he so nearly had fallen. Minutes, nay seconds, were +precious, but he crawled back upon the branch and sat still a moment to +steady his nerves. So startling a shock for so small a slip! He felt +thoroughly ashamed of himself, but it had been quite a jolt.</p> + +<p>Again the horse neighed, and the fear in the cry was quite unmistakable. +Gingerly this time, Wilbur left the kindly support of the branch and +made his way down the trunk of the tree, heaving a sigh of profound +thankfulness when he reached the ground. His horse looked at him with +eyes wild with terror and every muscle atwitch. It was the work of a +moment to unfasten the ropes and vault in the saddle, but Wilbur needed +all his horsemanship to keep the horse from bolting. Indeed, he did +start to run away with the boy, but Wilbur sawed him into a more normal +pace and headed him down the gully.</p> + +<p>Although the weather had been dry, it seemed that not a few springs must +flow above, for there was quite a stream of water, not deep, but rushing +very swiftly, and consequently hiding the bottom of the stream. It was +no time for looking for a ford, and so, after leading the horse down the +bank by the bridle, Wilbur got into the saddle to put the horse across. +He would not budge. Every muscle and nerve was tense, and the fire, +owing to the curvature of the stream, seeming to come from the other +side, the horse refused to move. Wilbur dug in heavily with the spurs. +The horse would not move. Again Wilbur used the spurs. Then, snatching +the quirt that was fastened on his saddle, the quirt the cattleman had +given him after his ride in the cattle stampede, he laid it with all his +will across the horse's flanks. Never before, since Wilbur had owned the +horse, had he struck him. Frantic, the horse leaped into the stream. +It was deeper than the boy had thought, but there was no time to go +back, and indeed, unless it was taken at a rush, the horse would not +climb the other bank. As they struck the water, therefore, Wilbur rose +in his stirrups and lashed the horse a second time. He felt the horse +plunge under him, picked him up with the reins as he stumbled on the +loose stones in the creek bed and almost fell, and though he was +becoming a rider, "hunted leather" by holding on to the pommel of his +saddle, as the horse with two or three convulsive lunges climbed like a +cat up the opposing bank, and reached the top, trembling in every limb. +The gully was crossed.</p> + +<p>But there was no time to pause for satisfaction over the crossing of the +little stream; that was only the beginning. It would have to be crossed +again, higher up, as soon, as they came opposite to the fire. The quirt +was still in his hand, and a light touch with it brought the horse to a +full gallop. Up along the gully, with the blackened forest floor on the +other side, rode Wilbur, until he came to the further end of the fire. +It was almost a mile long. Right where the edge of the fire was, with +little flames leaping among the needles and the smoke rolling, Wilbur +headed the horse for the creek. He expected to have trouble, but the +beast had learned his lesson, and went steadily down the creek and over +to the other side. The return was in nowise difficult, as it was on the +side opposite the fire that the bank was steep. Hastily Wilbur tied up +his horse on the burned-out area, seized his shovel, and started along +the line of the fire, beating it out with the flat of his shovel where +the flames were small, then going to lee of it he made a firebreak by +turning up a narrow line of earth.</p> + +<p>His hands began to blister and his lips grew so parched that he could +endure it no longer, and snatched a moment to go back to the stream and +lave his face and hands. He took off his coat, dipped it in the water, +and came with it all dripping to beat out the fire with that. Foot by +foot and yard by yard he worked his way along the line, every once in a +while running back over the part he had already beaten to make sure that +all was out. The afternoon was drawing on and for about a quarter of a +mile the fire was entirely out, and for another quarter it was almost +under control.</p> + +<p>Madly the boy worked, his breath coming in gasps, his lungs aching from +the smoke, so that it became agony even to breathe, the ground hot +beneath his feet, and his feet beginning to blister, as his hands had +done an hour before, but there was no let-up. He had come to fight fire, +and he would fight fire. Another mad hour's battle, not so successfully, +and, contrary to the usual custom, the wind began to rise at sunset; it +might die down in a couple of hours, but in the meantime damage might be +done.</p> + +<p>Little by little the shadows grew deeper, and before it got entirely +dark Wilbur tried, but vainly, to reach the end of the line, for he knew +well that if a night wind rose and got a hold upon the remnant of the +fire that remained all his work would go for nothing. With all his might +he ran to the far end of the line, determining to work from that end up +to meet the area where he had conquered. Foot by foot he gained, but no +longer was he able to work along a straight line, the gusts of wind, +here and there, sweeping through the trees had fanned stretches, perhaps +only a few yards wide, but had driven them forward a hundred feet. But +as it grew darker the wind began to fall again, though with the darkness +the red glow of the burning needles and the flames of the burning twigs +showed more luridly and made it seem more terrifying. Still he gained +headway, foot after foot jealously contesting the battle with the fire +and the wind.</p> + +<p>So short a space remaining, and though he seemed too tired and sore to +move, still his shovel worked with never a pause, still he scraped away +all that would burn from the path of a little line of flame. The line of +flame grew shorter, but even as he looked a gust came along, which swept +a tongue of fire fifty yards at a breath. Wilbur rushed after it, +knowing the danger of these side-way fires, but before that gust had +lulled the tongue of fire reached a little clearing which the boy had +not known was there, only a rod or two of grass, but that browned by the +sun and the drought until it seemed scarcely more than tinder. If it +should touch that!</p> + +<p>Despite the fact that his shoes were dropping from his feet, the leather +being burned through, Wilbur sped after the escaping fire. He reached +it. But as he reached, he heard the needles rustle overhead and saw the +branches sway. As yet the breeze had not touched the ground, but before +two strokes with the wet coat had been made, the last of the gusts of +the evening wind struck him. It caught the little tongue of flame Wilbur +had so manfully striven to overtake, swept it out upon the clearing, +and almost before the boy could realize that his chance was gone, the +grass was a sheet of flame and the fire had entered the forest beyond in +a dozen places.</p> + +<p>Wilbur was but a boy after all, and sick and heart-broken, he had to +swallow several times very hard to keep from breaking down. And the +reaction and fatigue together stunned him into inertness. For a moment +only, then his persistent stubbornness came to the front.</p> + +<p>"That fire's got to be put out," he said aloud, "as the Chief Forester +said, back in Washington, if it takes the whole State to do it."</p> + +<p>He walked back to his horse and started for his little cabin home. How +he reached there, Wilbur never rightly knew. He felt like a traitor, +leaving the fire still burning which he had tried so hard to conquer, +but he knew he had done all he could. As he rode home, however, he saw +through the trees another gleam, and taking out his glasses, saw in the +distance a second fire, in no way connected with that which he had +fought. This cheered him up greatly, for he felt that he could rightly +call for help for two fires without any reflection on his courage or his +grit, where he hated to tell that he had tried and failed to put out a +blaze which perhaps an older or a stronger man might have succeeded in +quelling. He called up the Ranger.</p> + +<p>"Rifle-Eye," he said over the 'phone as soon as he got a response, +"there's a fire here that looks big. In fact, there's two. I've been +after one all afternoon, and I nearly got it under, but when the wind +rose it got away from me. And there seems to be a bigger one pretty +close to it."</p> + +<p>"Well, son, I s'pose you're needin' help," came the reply.</p> + +<p>"All hands, I think," said the boy. "By the time I can get back there +the two fires probably will have joined, and the blaze will be several +miles long."</p> + +<p>"Surest thing you know," said the Ranger. "Where do you locate these +fires?"</p> + +<p>Wilbur described with some detail the precise point where the fires were +raging.</p> + +<p>"You'd better get back on the job," said Rifle-Eye promptly, "and try +an' hold it down the best you can. I'll have some one there on the jump. +We want to get it under to-night, as it's a lot easier 'n in the +daytime."</p> + +<p>Never did the little tent look so inviting or so cozy to Wilbur as +that moment. But he had his orders. "Get back on the job," the Ranger +had said. He took the time to change his shoes and to snatch up some +cold grub which was easy to get. But he ate it standing, not daring to +sit down lest he should go to sleep—and go to sleep when he had been +ordered out! He ate standing. Then, going down to the corral, he saddled +Kit.</p> + +<p>He rode quietly up past the tent.</p> + +<p>"I guess," he said, "I really never did want to go to bed so much +before, but—" he turned Kit's head to the trail.</p> + +<p>It was well for Wilbur that he had ridden the other horse that day, for +Kit was fresh and ready. The moon had risen and was nearly full, but +Wilbur shivered as much from nervousness and responsibility as from +fatigue. It was useless for him to try riding at any high rate of speed +in the uncertain light, and in any case, the boy felt that his labors +for a half an hour more or less would not mean as much as when it had +been a question of absolutely extinguishing a small blaze. Kit danced a +little in the fresh night air, but Wilbur sat so heavily and listlessly +upon her back that the mare sensed something wrong and constantly turned +her wise face round to see.</p> + +<p>"I'm just tired, Kit," said the boy to her, "that's all. Don't get gay +to-night; I'm not up to it."</p> + +<p>And the little mare, as though she had understood every word, settled +down to a quiet lope down the trail. How far he had ridden or in what +direction he was traveling Wilbur at last became entirely unconscious, +for, utterly worn out, he had fallen asleep in the saddle, keeping his +seat merely by instinct and owing to the gentle, easy pace of his mare.</p> + +<p>He was wakened by a heavy hand being put upon his shoulder, and rousing +himself with a start, he found the grave, kindly eyes of the old Ranger +gleaming on him in the moonlight.</p> + +<p>"Sleeping, son?" queried the old mountaineer.</p> + +<p>"Yes, Rifle-Eye, I guess I must have been," said the lad, "just dozed +off. I'm dog-tired. I've been on that fire all afternoon."</p> + +<p>The Ranger looked at him keenly.</p> + +<p>"Best thing you could have done," he said. "You'll feel worse for a few +minutes, an' then you'll find that cat-nap is just as good as a whole +night's sleep. That is," he added, "it is for a while. What's the fire +like? I tried to get somethin' out of Ben, but he was actin' queerly, +an' I left him alone. But he seemed to know pretty well where it was."</p> + +<p>Wilbur tried to explain the story of the fire, but his tale soon became +incoherent, and before they had ridden another half a mile, his story +had died down to a few mutterings and he was asleep again. The old +hunter rode beside him, his hand ready to catch him should he waver in +the saddle, but Kit loped along at her easiest gait and the boy scarcely +moved. Rifle-Eye woke him again when they left the trail and broke into +the forest.</p> + +<p>"I reckon you better wake up, son," he said, "landin' suddenly on your +head on a rock is some abrupt as an alarm clock."</p> + +<p>Wilbur dropped the reins to stretch himself.</p> + +<p>"I feel a lot better now," he announced, "just as good as ever. Except +for my hands," he added ruefully, as returning wakefulness brought back +with it the consciousness of smart and hurt, "and my feet are mighty +sore, too. We're right near the fire, too, aren't we," he continued. +"Gee, that was nifty sleeping nearly all the way. I guess I must have +felt you were around, Rifle-Eye, and so I slept easily, knowing it would +come out all right with you here."</p> + +<p>"I ain't never been famous for hypnotizin' any forest fire that I've +heard of," said the old hunter, smiling, "but I've got a lurkin' idea +somewhere that we'll get this headed off all right. An' in any case, +there ain't much folks livin' in the path of the fire, if the wind keeps +the way she is now."</p> + +<p>Wilbur thought for a moment over the lay of the land and the direction +in which the flames were moving.</p> + +<p>"There's the mill," he said suddenly and excitedly.</p> + +<p>"Yes, son," said the old hunter. "I'd been thinkin' of that. There's the +mill."</p> + +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 700px;"> +<a name="IMAGE_28" id="IMAGE_28"></a> +<img src="images/image-28.jpg" width="700" height="450" alt=""THAT'S ONE PAINTER LESS, ANYHOW!"" title="" /> +<span class="caption">"THAT'S ONE PAINTER LESS, ANYHOW!"<br />Shooting the mountain lion; a frequent incident in the daily life of a +Ranger.<br />Photograph by U. S. Forest Service.</span> +</div> + +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"> +<a name="IMAGE_29" id="IMAGE_29"></a> +<img src="images/image-29.jpg" width="600" height="385" alt=""SMOKE! AND HOW AM I GOING TO GET THERE?"" title="" /> +<span class="caption">"SMOKE! AND HOW AM I GOING TO GET THERE?"<br />Ranger forced to make a breakneck dash through wild and unknown country +to fight forest fire.<br />Photograph by U. S. Forest Service.</span> +</div> + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> + +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XVI" id="CHAPTER_XVI"></a>CHAPTER XVI</h2> + +<h3>IN THE MIDST OF A SEA OF FIRE</h3> + + +<p>A subdued but fiery inspiration, as of some monster breathing deeply in +the darkness, gradually made itself heard above the voices of the night, +and an eddying gust brought from the distance the sound of twigs and +branches crackling as they burned. As yet the fire was not visible, save +for the red-bronze glow seen through the trees reflected on the sky +above. But before they reached the scene of the fire, Wilbur realized +how different it was from the blaze he had left. Then it was a +difficulty to be overcome: now, it was a peril to be faced.</p> + +<p>"It has run about three miles since I left it," Wilbur said. "I hope +we're not too late."</p> + +<p>"It's never too late to try, son," replied the Ranger, "so long as there +is a tree left unburned. There ain't anything in life that it ever gets +too late to try over. If a thing's done, it ain't too late ever to try +to do something else which will make up for the first, is it?"</p> + +<p>"But I failed to stop it before," said Wilbur.</p> + +<p>"Nary a fail. A fight ain't lost until it's over. An' when this little +scrap is over the fire'll be out. You ain't had but one round with this +fire so far."</p> + +<p>"That's certainly some fire," rejoined the boy as they turned sharply +from a glade to the edge of a hill that looked upon the forest just +below. It was a sight of fear. Overhead, the clouds flying before the +wind were alternately revealing and hiding the starlit and moonlit sky +behind, the dark and ragged wisps of storm-scud seeming to fly in panic +from what they saw below them. The wind moaned as though enchained and +forced to blow by some tyrannic power, instead of swaying before the +breeze, the needles of the pines seemed to tremble and shudder in the +blast, and dominating the whole,—somber, red, and malevolent,—the fire +engulfed the forest floor. In the distance, where some dead timber had +been standing, the flames had crept up the trunks of the trees, and now +fanned by the gusts of wind, were beginning to run amid the tops.</p> + +<p>"Will it be a crown-fire, Rifle-Eye?" asked Wilbur, remembering what he +had heard of the fearful devastation committed by a fire when once it +secured a violent headway among the pines.</p> + +<p>"It's in the tops now," said the old hunter, pointing with his finger, +"but I don't reckon there's enough wind yet to hold it up there. The +worst of it is that it's not long to morning now, an' we shall lose the +advantage o' fightin' it at night. I reckon we'd better get down and see +what we can do."</p> + +<p>In a few minutes the hunter and Wilbur had fastened their horses and +presently were beside the fire. To the boy's surprise the old hunter +made no attack upon the fire itself, but, going in advance of it some +hundred feet, with the boy's hoe, which he dragged after him like a +plow, made a furrow in the earth almost as rapidly as a man could walk. +This, Wilbur, with ax and shovel, widened. The old hunter never seemed +to stop once, but, however curving and twisting his course might be, the +boy noted that the furrow invariably occurred at the end of a stretch +where few needles had fallen on the ground and the débris was very +scant.</p> + +<p>After about a mile of this, the hunter curved his furrow sharply in +toward the burned-out portion, ending his line behind the line of fire. +He then sent Wilbur back along the line he had just traversed to insure +that none of the fire had crossed the guard thus made. Then, starting +about twenty feet from the curve on the fire-guard, he took another wide +curve in front of the floor-fire, favoring the place where the needles +lay thinnest, until he came to a ridge. Following him, Wilbur noted that +the old woodsman had made no attempt to stop the fire on the upward +grade, but had apparently left it to the mercy of the fire, whereas, on +the further side of the ridge, where the fire would have to burn down, +the old hunter had made but a very scanty fire-guard. Then Wilbur +remembered that he had been told it was easy to stop a fire when it was +running down a hill, and he realized that if, in the beginning, instead +of actually endeavoring to put out the fire, he had made a wide circuit +around it, and by utilizing those ridges, he could have held the fire to +the spot where it began. For a moment this nearly broke him all up, +until he remembered that he had seen another fire, and that Rifle-Eye +had told him of a third one yet.</p> + +<p>Wilbur was working doggedly, yet in a spiritless, tired fashion, beating +out the fire with a wet gunnysack as it reached the fire-guard of the +old hunter's making, and very carefully putting out any spark that the +wind drove across it, working almost without thought. But as he topped +the ridge and came within full view of the fire that had started among +the tops, his listlessness fell from him. Against the glow he could see +the outline of the figure of the hunter, and he ran up to him.</p> + +<p>"It's all out, back there," he panted. "What shall we do here?"</p> + +<p>For the first time the Ranger seemed to have no answer ready. Then he +said slowly:</p> + +<p>"I reckon we can hold this bit of it, up yonder on the mountain, but +there's a line of fire runnin' around by the gully, and the wind's +beginnin' a-howlin' through there. I don't reckon we can stop that. We +may have to fall back beyond the river. We'll need axmen, now. You've +got a good mare; ride down to Pete's mine and bring all hands. The +government will pay them, an' they'll come. There's the dawn; it'll be +light in half an hour. You'd better move, too."</p> + +<p>Wilbur started off at a shambling run, half wondering, as he did so, how +it was he was able to keep up at all. But as he looked back he saw the +old hunter, ax on shoulder, going quietly up the hill into the very +teeth of the fire to head it off on the mountain top, if he could. He +reached Kit and climbed into the saddle. But he was not sleepy, though +almost too weary to sit upright. One moment the forest would be light as +a glare from the fire reached him, the next moment it would be all the +darker for the contrast. For a mile he rode over the blackened and +burned forest floor, some trees still ablaze and smoking. Every step he +took, for all he knew, might be leading him on into a fire-encircled +place from which he would have difficulty in escaping, but on he went. +There was no trail, he only had a vague sense of direction, and on both +sides of him was fire. Probably fire was also in front, and if so he was +riding into it, but he had his orders and on he must go. The mine, he +knew, was lower down on the gully, and so roughly he followed it. Twice +he had to force Kit to cross, but it was growing light now, so the +little mare took the water quietly and followed the further bank. +Suddenly he heard horses' hoofs, evidently a party, and he shouted. An +answering shout was the response, and the horses pulled up. He touched +Kit and in a minute or two broke through to them.</p> + +<p>"Oh, it's you, Mr. Merritt," said the boy, "I was just wondering who +it might be."</p> + +<p>"The fire's over there," said the Supervisor. "What are you doing here?"</p> + +<p>"Rifle-Eye sent me to get the men at Pete's mine," he said.</p> + +<p>"They're here," replied the Forest Chief. "How's the fire?"</p> + +<p>"Bad," said the boy. "Rifle-Eye said he thought we would have to fall +back beyond the river."</p> + +<p>"Don't want to," said Merritt, "there's a lot of good timber between +here and the river."</p> + +<p>"Nothin' to it," said one of the miners. "Unless the wind shifts, it's +an easy gamble she goes over the river and don't notice it none."</p> + +<p>The Supervisor put his horse to the gallop, followed by the party, all +save one miner, who, familiar with the country, led the way, finding +some trail utterly undistinguishable to the rest. Seeing the vantage +point, as Rifle-Eye had done, he made for the crest of the hill.</p> + +<p>"Any chances?" asked the Supervisor.</p> + +<p>"I reckon not," said Rifle-Eye. "You can't hold it here; there's a blaze +down over yonder and another below the hill."</p> + +<p>"Who set that fire?" said Merritt suddenly. Wilbur jumped. It had not +occurred to him that the fire could have started in any other manner +than by accident, and indeed he had not thought of its cause at all.</p> + +<p>The old Ranger looked quietly at his superior officer.</p> + +<p>"It's allers mighty hard to tell where a fire started after it's once +got a-going," he said, "and it's harder to tell who set it a-going."</p> + +<p>"I want to stop it at the river."</p> + +<p>The old woodsman shook his head.</p> + +<p>"You ain't got much chance," he said; "I reckon at the ridge on the +other side of the river you can hold her, but she's crept along the +gully an' she'll just go a-whoopin' up the hill. I wouldn't waste any +time at the river."</p> + +<p>"But there's the mill!"</p> + +<p>"We ain't no ways to blame because Peavey Jo built his mill in front of +a fire. An', anyhow, the mill's in the middle of a clearing."</p> + +<p>The Supervisor frowned.</p> + +<p>"His mill is on National Forest land, and we ought to try and save it," +he said.</p> + +<p>"I'm goin' clear to the ridge," remarked the Ranger, "an' I reckon +you-all had better, too. I ain't achin' none to see the mill burn, but +I'd as lieve it was Peavey Jo's as any one else."</p> + +<p>"I'd like to know," Merritt repeated, "who set that fire."</p> + +<p>The Ranger made no answer, but walked off to where his horse was +tethered and rode away. The other party without a moment's delay struck +off to the trail leading to the mill. The distance was not great, but +Wilbur had lost all count of time. It seemed to him that he had either +been fighting fire or riding at high speed through luridly lighted +forest glades for years and years, and that it would never stop.</p> + +<p>At the mill they found a wild turmoil of excitement. All the hands were +at work, most of them wetting down the lumber, while other large piles +which were close to the edge of the forest were being moved out of +danger. The horses all had been taken from the stables, and the various +sheds and buildings were being thoroughly soaked. The big mill engine +was throbbing, lines of hose playing in every direction, for although +the timber around the mill had been cleared as much as possible, +negligence had been shown in permitting some undergrowth to spring up +unchecked. Owing to the conformation of the land, too, the bottom on +which the mill stood was smaller than customary.</p> + +<p>In the early morning light the great form of Peavey Jo seemed to assume +giant proportions. He was here, there, and everywhere at the moment, and +his blustering voice could be heard bellowing out orders, which, to do +him justice, were the best possible. As soon as the Supervisor and his +party appeared he broke out into a violent tirade against them for not +keeping a fit watch over the forest and allowing a fire to get such a +headway on a night when in the evening there had been so little wind, +whereas now a gale was rising fast. But Merritt did not waste breath in +reply; he simply ordered his men to get in and do all they could to +insure the safety of the mill.</p> + +<p>Wilbur, who had been set at cutting out the underbrush, found that his +strength was about played out. Once, indeed, he shouldered his ax and +started to walk back to say that he could do no more, but before he +reached the place where his chief was working his determination +returned, and he decided to go back and work till he dropped right +there. He had given up bothering about his hands and feet being so +blistered and sore, for all such local pain was dulled by the utter +collapse of nerve-sensation. He couldn't think clearly enough to think +that he was feeling pain; he could not think at all. He had been told to +cut brush and he did so as a machine, working automatically, but seeing +nothing and hearing nothing of what was going on around him.</p> + +<p>Presently an animal premonition of fear struck him as he became +conscious of a terrific wave of heat, and he could hear in the distance +the roar of the flames coming closer. Raging through the resinous pine +branches the blaze had swept fiercely around the side of the hill. As +the boy looked up he could see it suddenly break into greater vigor as +the up-draft on the hill fanned it to a wilder fury and made a furnace +of the place where he had been standing with Merritt and Rifle-Eye +scarcely more than an hour before.</p> + +<p>Meanwhile the wind drove the flames steadily onward toward the +threatened mill. It was becoming too hot for any human being to stay +where Wilbur was, but the boy seemed to have lost the power of thought. +He chopped and chopped like a machine, not noticing, indeed, not being +able to notice that he was toiling there alone. It grew hotter and +hotter, his breath came in quick, short gasps, and each breath hurt his +lungs cruelly as he breathed the heat into them, but he worked on as in +a dream. Suddenly he felt his shoulder seized. It was the Supervisor, +who twisted him round and, pointing to the little bridge across the +river which spanned the stream just above the mill, he shouted:</p> + +<p>"Run!"</p> + +<p>But the boy's spirit was too exhausted to respond, though he got into a +dog trot and started for the bridge. Perilous though every second's +delay was, Merritt would not go ahead of the boy, though he could have +outdistanced his shambling and footsore pace two to one, but kept beside +him urging and threatening him alternately. The fire was on their heels, +but they were in the clearing. On the bridge one of the miners was +standing, riding the fastest horse in the party, holding, and with great +difficulty holding, in hand the horse of the Supervisor and the boy's +mare, Kit. Their very clothes were smoking as they reached the bridge.</p> + +<p>Suddenly, a huge, twisted tree, full of sap, which stood on the edge of +the clearing, exploded with a crash like a cannon, and a flaming branch, +twenty feet in length, hurtled itself over their heads and fell full on +the further side of the bridge, barring their way. Upon the narrow +bridge the horses reared in a sudden panic and tried to bolt, but the +miner was an old-time cowboy, and he held them in hand. Merritt helped +the lad into the saddle before mounting himself. But even in that moment +the bridge began to smoke, and in less than a minute the whole structure +would be ablaze. The miner dug his heels, spurred, into the sides of his +horse, and the animal in fear and desperation leaped over the hissing +branch that lay upon the bridge. The Supervisor's horse and Kit followed +suit. As they landed on the other side, however, the head of the forest +reined in for a moment, and looking round, shouted suddenly:</p> + +<p>"The mill!"</p> + +<p>Wilbur pulled in Kit. So far as could be seen, none of the forest fire +had reached the mill; the sparks which had fallen upon the roof had gone +out harmlessly, so thoroughly had the place been soaked, yet through the +door of the mill the flames could be seen on the inside. At first Wilbur +thought it must be some kind of a reflection. But as they watched, +Peavey Jo rode up. He had crossed the bridge earlier, and was on the +safe side of the river watching his mill.</p> + +<p>Suddenly, from out the door of the mill, outlined clearly against the +fire within, came an ungainly, shambling figure. The features could not +be seen, but the gait was unmistakable. He came running in an odd, +loose-jointed fashion toward the bridge. But just before he reached it +the now blazing timbers burned through and the bridge crashed into the +stream.</p> + +<p>"It's Ben," muttered Wilbur confusedly; "I guess I've got to go back," +and he headed Kit for the trail.</p> + +<p>But the Supervisor leaned over and almost crushed the bones of the boy's +hand in his restraining grip.</p> + +<p>"No need," he said, "he's all right now."</p> + +<p>For as he spoke Wilbur saw Ben leap from the bank on the portion of the +burned bridge which had collapsed on his side of the stream. A few quick +strokes with the ax the boy was carrying and the timbers were free, and +crouched down upon them the boy was being carried down the stream. His +peril was extreme, for below as well as above the fire was sweeping down +on either side of the mill, and it was a question of minutes, almost of +seconds, whether the bridge-raft would pass down the river before the +fire struck or whether it would be caught.</p> + +<p>"If the wind would only lull!" ejaculated the boy.</p> + +<p>"I'll stay here till I see him burn," replied Peavey Jo grimly.</p> + +<p>But Wilbur's wish met its fulfillment, for just for the space that one +could count ten the wind slackened, and every second meant a few yards +of safety to the half-witted lad. Though they were risking their lives +by staying, the three men waited, waited as still as they could for the +fear of their horses, until the boy disappeared round a curve of the +river. A muttered execration from Peavey Jo announced the lad's safety. +It angered the usually calm Supervisor.</p> + +<p>"That ends you," he said. "You're licked, and you know it. Your mill's +gone, your timber's gone, and your credit's gone. Don't let me see you +on this forest again."</p> + +<p>"You think I do no more, eh? Me, I forget? Non! By and by you remember +Peavey Jo. Now I ride down river. That boy, you see him? He see the sun +rise this morning. He no see the sun set. No. Nor ever any more. I +follow the river trail. I do not say good-by, like the old song," he +added, scowling his fury; "you wish yes! Non! I say <i>au revoir</i>, and +perhaps sooner than you t'ink."</p> + +<p>He wheeled and turned down the river. The Supervisor turned to the +miner.</p> + +<p>"It's not my business to stop him," he said, "and the boy's got the +start. He can't reach there before the fire does, now."</p> + +<p>Then, as though regretting the lull, the wind shrieked with a new and +more vindictive fury, as though it saw its vengeance before it. Almost +at a breath it seemed the whole body of flame appeared to lift itself to +the skies and then fall like a devouring fury upon the forest on the +hither side of the river below, whither Peavey Jo had ridden.</p> + +<p>In the distance the two men heard a horse scream, and they knew. But +Wilbur did not hear.</p> + +<p>They had waited almost too long, for the wind, rising to its greatest +height, had carried the fire above them almost to the edge of the river, +and now there was no question about its crossing. Further delay meant to +be hemmed in by a ring of fire. With a shout the miner slackened the +reins and his horse leaped into a gallop, after him Merritt, and the boy +close behind. Wilbur had ridden fast before, but never had he known +such speed as now. The trail was clear before them to the top of the +ridge, the fire was behind, and the wind was hurling masses of flames +about them on every side. The horses fled with the speed of fear, and +the Supervisor drew a breath of relief as they crossed a small ridge +below the greater ridge whither they were bound.</p> + +<p>Once a curl of flame licked clear over their heads and ignited a tree in +front of them, but they were past it again before it caught fair hold. +The boy could feel Kit's flanks heaving as she drew her breath hard, and +with the last instinct of safety he threw away everything that he +carried, even the fire-fighting tools being released. Only another mile, +but the grade was fearfully steep, the steeper the harder for the horses +but the better for the fire. Kit stumbled. A little less than a mile +left! He knew she could not do it. The mare had been kept astretch all +night, and her heart was breaking under the strain. Any second she might +fall.</p> + +<p>The trail curved. And round the curve, with three horses saddled and +waiting, sat the old Ranger, facing the onrush of the fire as +imperturbably as though his own life were in no way involved. The +miner's horse was freshest and he reached the group first. As he did so, +he swung out of his saddle, was on one of the three and off. The +riderless horse, freed from the burden, followed up the trail. Merritt +and Wilbur reached almost at the same time.</p> + +<p>"I reckon," drawled Rifle-Eye, "that's a pretty close call."</p> + +<p>"He's done," said the Supervisor, ignoring the remark. "Toss him up."</p> + +<p>With a speed that seemed almost incredible to any one accustomed to his +leisurely movements, the old Ranger dismounted, picked Wilbur bodily out +of the saddle, set him on one of the fresh animals, freed Kit, mounted +himself, and was off in less than thirty seconds. For the first half +mile it was touch and go, for the trail was steep and even the three +fresh horses found the pace terrific. But little by little the timber +thinned and the fire gained less hold. Then, with a burst they came into +a clearing along the top of the ridge. The crest was black with workers, +over two hundred men were there, and on every side was to be heard the +sound of trees crashing to the ground, most of them by dynamite.</p> + +<p>Where the head of the trail reached the crest stood the doctor and his +wife, the "little white lady" trembling with excitement as she watched +the fearful race from the jaws of a fiery death. The doctor plucked +Wilbur from his saddle as the horse rushed by him. The boy's senses were +reeling, but before he sank into insensibility from fatigue he heard +Merritt say:</p> + +<p>"Loyle, when you're a Ranger next year, I want you on my forest."</p> + + +<h4>THE END</h4> + +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"> +<a name="IMAGE_30A" id="IMAGE_30A"></a> +<img src="images/image-30a.jpg" width="600" height="381" alt=""KEEP IT FROM SPREADING BOYS!"" title="" /> +<span class="caption">"KEEP IT FROM SPREADING BOYS!"<br /> +Photography by U. S. Forest Service.</span> +</div> + +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"> +<a name="IMAGE_30B" id="IMAGE_30B"></a> +<img src="images/image-30b.jpg" width="600" height="429" alt=""GET BUSY NOW, WHEN IT BREAKS INTO THE OPEN!"" title="" /> +<span class="caption">"GET BUSY NOW, WHEN IT BREAKS INTO THE OPEN!"<br /> +Photography by U. S. Forest Service.</span> +</div> + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> + +<h3><i>U. S. SERVICE SERIES</i></h3> + +<h4>By FRANCIS ROLT-WHEELER</h4> + +<p><b>Many illustrations from photographs taken in work for U. S. +Government Large 12mo Cloth $1.50 per volume</b></p> + +<hr style='width: 45%;' /> + +<h3>THE BOY WITH THE U. S. SURVEY</h3> + +<p>This story describes the thrilling adventures of members of the U. S. +Geological Survey, graphically woven into a stirring narrative that both +pleases and instructs. The author enjoys an intimate acquaintance with +the chiefs of the various bureaus in Washington, and is able to obtain +at first hand the material for his books.</p> + +<blockquote><p>"There is abundant charm and vigor in the narrative which is sure +to please the boy readers and will do much toward stimulating their +patriotism."—<i>Chicago News</i>.</p></blockquote> + + +<h3>THE BOY WITH THE U. S. FORESTERS</h3> + +<p>This life of a typical boy is followed in all its adventurous +detail—the mighty representative of our country's government, though +young in years—a youthful monarch in a vast domain of forest. Replete +with information, alive with adventure, and inciting patriotism at every +step.</p> + +<blockquote><p>"It is a fascinating romance of real life in our country, and will +prove a great pleasure and inspiration to the boys who read +it."—<i>The Continent, Chicago</i>.</p></blockquote> + + +<h3>THE BOY WITH THE U. S. CENSUS</h3> + +<p>The taking of the census frequently involves hardship and peril, +requiring arduous journeys by dog-team in the frozen north and by launch +in the snake-haunted and alligator-filled Everglades of Florida, while +the enumerator whose work lies among the dangerous criminal classes of +the greater cities must take his life in his own hands.</p> + +<blockquote><p>"Every young man should read this story, thereby getting a clear +conception of conditions as they exist to-day, for such knowledge +will have a clean, invigorating and healthy influence on the young +growing and thinking mind."—<i>Boston Globe</i>.</p></blockquote> + +<h3>THE BOY WITH THE U. S. FISHERIES</h3> + +<div class="figleft" style="width: 287px;"> +<img src="images/image-31.jpg" width="287" height="360" alt="The Boy With the U. S. Fisheries" title="" /> +</div> + +<p>The book does not lack thrilling scenes. The far Aleutian Islands have +witnessed more desperate sea-fighting than has occurred elsewhere since +the days of the Spanish Buccaneers, and pirate craft, which the U. S. +Fisheries must watch, rifle in hand, are prowling in the Behring Sea +to-day. The fish-farms of the United States are as interesting as they +are immense in their scope.</p> + +<blockquote><p>"One of the best books for boys of all ages, so attractively +written and illustrated as to fascinate the reader into staying up +until all hours to finish it."—<i>Philadelphia Despatch</i>.</p></blockquote> + +<hr style='width: 45%;' /> + +<p style="text-align: center;"><b>LOTHROP, LEE & SHEPARD CO., BOSTON</b></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h3>HANDICRAFT FOR HANDY BOYS</h3> + +<p style="text-align: center;"><b>Practical Plans for Work and Play with Many Ideas for Earning Money</b></p> + +<h4>By A. NEELY HALL</h4> + +<p style="text-align: center;"><b>Author of "The Boy Craftsman"</b></p> + +<p style="text-align: center;"><b>With Nearly 600 Illustrations and Working-drawings by the Author and +Norman P. Hall 8vo Cloth Net, $2.00 Postpaid, $2.25</b></p> + +<div class="figleft" style="width: 331px;"> +<img src="images/image-32.jpg" width="331" height="394" alt="Handi-Craft for Handy Boys" title="" /> +</div> + +<p>This book is intended for boys who want the latest ideas for making +things, practical plans for earning money, up-to-date suggestions for +games and sports, and novelties for home and school entertainments.</p> + +<p>The author has planned the suggestions on an economical basis, providing +for the use of the things at hand, and many of the things which can be +bought cheaply. Mr. Hall's books have won the confidence of parents, who +realize that in giving them to their boys they are providing wholesome +occupations which will encourage self-reliance and resourcefulness, and +discourage tendencies to be extravagant.</p> + +<p>Outdoor and indoor pastimes have been given equal attention, and much of +the work is closely allied to the studies of the modern grammar and high +schools, as will be seen by a glance at the following list of subjects, +which are only a few among those discussed in the 500 pages of text:</p> + +<blockquote><p>MANUAL TRAINING; EASILY-MADE FURNITURE; FITTING UP A BOY'S ROOM; +HOME-MADE GYMNASIUM APPARATUS; A BOY'S WIRELESS TELEGRAPH OUTFIT; +COASTERS AND BOB-SLEDS; MODEL AEROPLANES; PUSHMOBILES AND OTHER +HOME-MADE WAGONS; A CASTLE CLUBHOUSE AND HOME-MADE ARMOR.</p></blockquote> + +<p>Modern ingenious work such as the above cannot fail to develop +mechanical ability in a boy, and this book will get right next to his +heart.</p> + +<blockquote><p>"The book is a treasure house for boys who like to work with tools +and have a purpose in their working."—<i>Springfield Union</i>.</p> + +<p>"It is a capital book for boys since it encourages them in +wholesome, useful occupation, encourages self-reliance and +resourcefulness and at the same time discourages +extravagance."—<i>Brooklyn Times</i>.</p> + +<p>"It is all in this book, and if anything has got away from the +author we do not know what it is."—<i>Buffalo News</i>.</p></blockquote> + +<hr style='width: 45%;' /> + +<p style="text-align: center;"><i>For sale by all booksellers, or sent on receipt of postpaid price by +the publishers</i></p> + +<p style="text-align: center;"><b>LOTHROP, LEE & SHEPARD CO., Boston</b></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h3>THE BOY CRAFTSMAN</h3> + +<p style="text-align: center;"><b>Practical and Profitable Ideas for a Boy's Leisure Hours</b></p> + +<h4>By A. NEELY HALL</h4> + +<div class="figleft" style="width: 281px;"> +<img src="images/image-33.jpg" width="281" height="360" alt="The Boy Craftsman" title="" /> +</div> + +<p><b>Illustrated with over 400 diagrams and working drawings 8vo Price, +net, $1.60 Postpaid, $1.82</b></p> + +<p>Every real boy wishes to design and make things, but the questions of +materials and tools are often hard to get around. Nearly all books on +the subject call for a greater outlay of money than is within the means +of many boys, or their parents wish to expend in such ways. In this book +a number of chapters give suggestions for carrying on a small business +that will bring a boy in money with which to buy tools and materials +necessary for making apparatus and articles described in other chapters, +while the ideas are so practical that many an industrious boy can learn +what he is best fitted for in his life work. No work of its class is so +completely up-to-date or so worthy in point of thoroughness and +avoidance of danger. The drawings are profuse and excellent, and every +feature of the book is first-class. It tells how to make a boy's +workshop, how to handle tools, and what can be made with them; how to +start a printing shop and conduct an amateur newspaper, how to make +photographs, build a log cabin, a canvas canoe, a gymnasium, a miniature +theatre, and many other things dear to the soul of youth.</p> + +<blockquote><p>We cannot imagine a more delightful present for a boy than this +book.—<i>Churchman, N.Y.</i></p> + +<p>Every boy should have this book. It's a practical book—it gets +right next to the boy's heart and stays there. He will have it near +him all the time, and on every page there is a lesson or something +that will stand the boy in good need. Beyond a doubt in its line +this is one of the cleverest books on the market.—<i>Providence +News</i>.</p> + +<p>If a boy has any sort of a mechanical turn of mind, his parents +should see that he has this book.—<i>Boston Journal</i>.</p> + +<p>This is a book that will do boys good.—<i>Buffalo Express</i>.</p> + +<p>The boy who will not find this book a mine of joy and profit must +be queerly constituted.—<i>Pittsburgh Gazette</i>.</p> + +<p>Will be a delight to the boy mechanic.—<i>Watchman, Boston</i>.</p> + +<p>An admirable book to give a boy.—<i>Newark News</i>.</p> + +<p>This Book is the best yet offered for its large number of practical +and profitable ideas.—<i>Milwaukee Free Press</i>.</p> + +<p>Parents ought to know of this book.—<i>New York Globe</i>.</p></blockquote> + +<hr style='width: 45%;' /> + +<p style="text-align: center;"><b>For sale by all booksellers or sent postpaid on receipt of price by the +publishers,</b></p> + +<p style="text-align: center;"><b>LOTHROP, LEE & SHEPARD CO., BOSTON</b></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h3>MR. RESPONSIBILITY, PARTNER</h3> + +<p style="text-align: center;"><b>How Bobby and Joe Achieved Success in Business</b></p> + +<p style="text-align: center;"><b>First Volume of "Business Boys Series"</b></p> + +<h4>By CLARENCE JOHNSON MESSER</h4> + +<p style="text-align: center;"><b>12mo Cloth Illustrated Price, Net, $1.00 Postpaid, $1.10</b></p> + +<div class="figleft" style="width: 257px;"> +<img src="images/image-34.jpg" width="257" height="360" alt="Mr. Responsibility, Partner" title="" /> +</div> + +<p>This is frankly a book with a purpose, and its purpose is to teach boys +the fundamental business customs of every-day life, and at the same time +encourage the sound traits of character essential to commercial success +and good citizenship. This is done by a good and interesting story of +some live boys, whose experiences will hold the attention of every one. +The leading spirit is pictured with a healthy boy's human qualities to +be trained, and impulses to be overcome. A companionable and sensible +father aids him judiciously, and leaves success to be worked out on +natural lines. All the stage effects of the cheaper kinds of boys' books +are blissfully absent; there are no villains plotting against the +upright, no nations saved by the precocious intelligence of youth, and +no impossible adventure or accomplishment—just the problems before +average boys, and that can be solved as these boys solve them if "Mr. +Responsibility" is recognized as a partner in all undertakings, and one +learns to see and grasp his opportunities. A book that any boy would +like, and that every boy ought to have.</p> + +<blockquote><p>"It is an inspiring book to any boy who wants to learn to be a good +business man."—<i>Buffalo News</i>.</p> + +<p>"Entertaining, instructive, and just such a book as boys will +love."—<i>Portland, Me., Press</i>.</p> + +<p>"For the boys still young enough to revel in "juvenile stories" MR. +RESPONSIBILITY is about as good as is to be found."—<i>San Francisco +Town Talk</i>.</p> + +<p>"The story is one that boys will enjoy and that parents can safely +put in their hands."—<i>Lowell Courier Citizen</i>.</p> + +<p>"A wholesome, informative, worth-while boy's book."—<i>N. Y. Press</i>.</p></blockquote> + +<hr style='width: 45%;' /> + +<p style="text-align: center;"><i>For sale by all booksellers or sent on receipt of postpaid price by the +publishers</i></p> + +<p style="text-align: center;"><b>LOTHROP, LEE & SHEPARD CO., BOSTON</b></p> + + + + + + + + +<pre> + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Boy With the U. S. Foresters, by +Francis Rolt-Wheeler + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BOY WITH THE U. S. 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S. Foresters, by Francis Rolt-Wheeler + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: The Boy With the U. S. Foresters + +Author: Francis Rolt-Wheeler + +Release Date: July 19, 2006 [EBook #18874] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BOY WITH THE U. S. FORESTERS *** + + + + +Produced by Steven desJardins and Distributed Proofreaders + + + + + +[Illustration: THE GIANTS OF THE FOREST AND THE MEN WHO SAFEGUARD THEM. + +_Photography by U. S. Forest Service._] + +U. S. SERVICE SERIES. + +THE BOY WITH THE U. S. FORESTERS + +BY FRANCIS ROLT-WHEELER + +With Thirty-eight Illustrations from Photographs taken by the U. S. +Forest Service + +BOSTON + +LOTHROP, LEE & SHEPARD CO. + +1910 + + + + +To My Son Roger's Friend + +WILBUR UFFORD + + + + +PREFACE + + +Much of the wilderness is yet but little trod. Great stretches of virgin +forest still remain within whose dim recesses nothing is changed since +the days the Indians dwelt in them. The mystery and the adventure are +not sped, the grandeur and the companionship still pulse among the +glades, the "call of the wild" is an unceasing cry, and to that call the +boy responds. + +But if this impulse to return to the shelter of the wilds be still so +strong, how greatly more intense does it become when we awaken to the +fact that the forest needs our help even more than we need its sense of +freedom. When we perceive that the fate of these great belts of untamed +wilderness lies in the hands of a small group of men whose mastery is +absolute, when first we realize that national benefits--great almost +beyond the believing--are intrusted to these men, surely Desire and +Duty leap to grip hands and pledge themselves to the service of the +forests of our land. To breathe the magnificent spaces of the West, to +reveal the wealth and beauty of our great primeval woods, to acclaim the +worth of the men who administer them, and to show splendid possibilities +to a lad of grit and initiative is the aim and purpose of + +THE AUTHOR. + + + + +CONTENTS + + +CHAPTER I +ENTERING THE SERVICE + +CHAPTER II +PUTTING A STOP TO GUN-PLAY + +CHAPTER III +THE FIGHT IN THE COULEE + +CHAPTER IV +PICKING A LIVELY BRONCHO + +CHAPTER V +A TUSSLE WITH A WILD-CAT + +CHAPTER VI +IN THE HEART OF THE FOREST + +CHAPTER VII +WILBUR IN HIS OWN CAMP + +CHAPTER VIII +DOWNING A GIANT LUMBERJACK + +CHAPTER IX +A HARD FOE TO CONQUER + +CHAPTER X +A FOURTH OF JULY PERIL + +CHAPTER XI +AMIDST A CATTLE STAMPEDE + +CHAPTER XII +ALMOST TRAMPLED TO DEATH + +CHAPTER XIII +HOW THE FOREST WON A GREAT DOCTOR + +CHAPTER XIV +A ROLLING CLOUD OF SMOKE + +CHAPTER XV +THE FOREST ABLAZE + +CHAPTER XVI +IN THE MIDST OF A SEA OF FIRE + + + + + +ILLUSTRATIONS + + +The Giants of the Forest and the Men Who Safeguard Them +A Forest Fire out of Control +Good Forestry Management +Bad Forestry Management +The Tie-cutters' Boys +Deforested and Washed Away +As Bad as Anything in China +How Young Forests are Destroyed +Where Sheep are Allowed +Cowboys at the Round-up +Patrolling a Coyote Fence +Reducing the Wolf Supply +Where Ben and Mickey Burned the Brush +The Cabin of the Old Ranger +Stamping It Government Property +Wilbur's Own Camp +Just about Ready to Shoot +Train-load from One Tree +Wilbur's Own Bridge +Where the Supervisor Stayed +Measuring a Fair-sized Tree +Running a Telephone Line +Nursery for Young Trees +Plantation of Young Trees +Sowing Pine Seed +Planting Young Trees +What Tree-planting Will Do +The First Conservation Expert +Sand Burying a Pear Orchard +No Water, No Forests. No Forests, No Water +With Water! +"That's One Painter Less, Anyhow!" +"Smoke! And How am I Going to Get There?" +"Keep It from Spreading, Boys!" +"Get Busy Now, When It Breaks into the Open!" + + + + + +THE BOY WITH THE U. S. FORESTERS + + +CHAPTER I + +ENTERING THE SERVICE + + +"Hey, Wilbur, where are you headed for?" + +The boy addressed, who had just come through the swing-doors of an +office building in Washington, did not slacken his pace on hearing the +question, but called back over his shoulder: + +"To the forest, of course. Come along, Fred." + +"But--" The second speaker stopped short, and, breaking into a run, +caught up with his friend in a few steps. + +"You certainly seem to be in a mighty big hurry to get there," he said. + +"We don't loaf on our service," answered the boy with an air of pride. + +His friend broke into a broad grin. He had known Wilbur Loyle for some +time, and was well aware of his enthusiastic nature. + +"How long has it been 'our' service?" he queried, emphasizing the +pronoun. + +"Ever since I was appointed," rejoined Wilbur exultantly. + +"I'm glad the appointment has had time to soak in; it didn't take long, +did it?" Wilbur flushed a little, and his chum, seeing this, went on +laughingly: "Don't mind my roasting, old man, only you were 'way up in +the clouds." + +The boy's expression cleared instantaneously, and he laughed in reply. + +"I suppose I was," he said, "but it's great to feel you've got the thing +you've been working for. As you know, Fred, I've been thinking of this +for years; in fact, I've always wanted it, and I've worked hard to get +it. And then the Chief Forester's fine; he's just fine; I liked him ever +so much." + +"Did you have much chance to talk with him?" + +"Yes, quite a lot. I thought I was likely enough to meet him, and p'raps +he would formally tell me I was appointed and then bow me out of the +office. Not a bit of it. He told me all about the Service, showed me +just what there was in it for the country, and I tell you what--he made +me feel that I wanted to go right straight out on the street and get +all the other boys to join." + +"Why?" + +"Well, he showed me that the Forest Service gave a fellow a chance to +make good even better than in the army or the navy. There you have to +follow orders mainly; there's that deadly routine besides, and you don't +get much of a chance to think for yourself; but in the Forest Service a +chap is holding down a place of trust where he has a show to make good +by working it out for himself." + +"Sounds all right," said the older boy. "Anyway, I'm glad if you're +glad." + +"What I like about it," went on Wilbur, "is the bigness of the whole +thing and the chance a chap has to show what he's made of. Glad? You bet +I'm glad!" + +"You weren't so sure whether you were going to like it or not when you +went in to see about it," said Fred. + +"Oh, yes, I was. I knew I was going to like it all right. But I didn't +know anything about where I might be sent or how I would be received." + +"I think it's just ripping," said his friend, "that it looks so good to +you, starting out. It makes a heap of difference, sometimes, how a thing +begins." + +"It surely does. Right now, the whole thing seems too good to be true." + +"Well," said the other, "as long as it strikes you that way I suppose +you're satisfied now for all the grind you did preparing for it. But I +don't believe it would suit me. It might be all right to be a Forest +Ranger, but you told me one time that you had to start in as a Fire +Guard, a sort of Fire Policeman, didn't you?" + +"Sure!" + +"Well, that doesn't sound particularly exciting." + +"Why not? What more excitement do you want than a forest fire! Isn't +that big enough for you?" + +"The fire would be all right," answered the older boy, "but it's the +watching and waiting for it that would get me." + +"You can't expect to have adventures every minute anywhere," said +Wilbur, "but even so, you're not standing on one spot like a sailor in a +crow's nest, waiting for something to happen; you're in the saddle, +riding from point to point all day long, sometimes when there is a +trail and sometimes when there isn't, out in the real woods, not in +poky, stuffy city streets. You know, Fred, I can't stand the city; I +always feel as if I couldn't breathe." + +"All right, Wilbur," said the other, "it's your own lookout, I suppose. +Me for the city, though." + +Just then, and before Fred could make any further reply, a hand was laid +on Wilbur's shoulder, and the lad, looking around, found the Chief +Forester walking beside them. + +"Trying to make converts already, Loyle?" he asked with a smile, nodding +pleasantly to the lad's companion. + +"I was trying to, sir," answered the boy, "but I don't believe Fred +would ever make one of us." + +The Chief Forester restrained all outward trace of amusement at the +lad's unconscious coupling of the head of the service and the newest and +youngest assistant, and, turning to the older boy, said questioningly: + +"Why not, Fred?" + +"I was just saying to Wilbur, sir," he replied in a stolid manner, "that +a Forest Guard's life didn't sound particularly exciting. It might be +all right when a fire came along, but I should think that it would be +pretty dull waiting for it, week after week." + +"Not exciting enough?" The boys were nearly taken off their feet by the +energy of the speaker. "Not when every corner you turn may show you +smoke on the horizon? Not when every morning finds you at a different +part of the forest and you can't get there quick enough to convince +yourself that everything is all right? Not when you plunge down ravines, +thread your way through and over fallen timber, and make up time by a +sharp gallop wherever there's a clearing, knowing that every cabin you +pass is depending for its safety on your care? And then that is only a +small part of the work. If you can't find excitement enough in that, you +can't find it in anything." + +"Yes--" began Fred dubiously, but the Chief Forester continued: + +"And as for the responsibility! I tell you, the forest is the place for +that. We need men there, not machines. On the men in the forest millions +of dollars' worth of property depends. More than that, on the care of +the Forest Guards hangs perhaps the stopping of a forest fire that +otherwise would ravage the countryside, kill the young forest, denude +the hills of soil, choke with mud the rivers that drain the denuded +territory, spoil the navigable harbors, and wreck the prosperity of all +the towns and villages throughout that entire river's length." + +"I hadn't realized there was so much in it," replied Fred, evidently +struck with the Forester's earnestness. + +"You haven't any idea of how much there is in it. Not only for the work +itself, but for you. Wild horses can't drag a man out of the Service +once he's got in. It has a fascination peculiarly its own. The eager +expectancy of vast spaces, the thrill of adventure in riding off to +parts where man seldom treads, and the magnificent independence of the +frontiersman, all these become the threads of which your daily life is +made." + +"It sounds fine when you put it that way, sir," said Fred, his eyes +kindling at the picture. "But it's hardly like that at first, is it?" + +"Certainly it is! Does the life of a fireman in a big city fire +department strike you as being interesting or exciting?" + +"Oh, yes, sir!" + +"It isn't to be compared with that of the Forest Guard. A city fireman +is only one of a company huddled together in a little house, not +greatly busy until the fire telegraph signal rings. But suppose there +were only one fireman for the whole city, that he alone were responsible +for the safety of every house, that instead of telegraphic signaling he +must depend on his trusty horse to carry him to suitable vantage points, +and on his eyesight when there; suppose that he knew there was a +likelihood of fire every hour out of the twenty-four, and that during +the season he could be sure of two or three a week, don't you think that +fireman would have a lively enough time of it?" + +"He surely would," said Wilbur. + +"Aside from the fact that there are not as many people involved, that's +not unlike a Forest Guard's position. I tell you, he's not sitting +around his shack trying to kill time." Then, turning sharply to the +older boy, the Chief Forester continued: + +"What do you want to be?" + +"I had wanted to be a locomotive engineer, sir," was the boy's reply, +"but now I think I'll stay in the city." + +"It was the excitement of the life that appealed to you, was it?" + +"Yes, sir. I guess so." + +"True, there's a good deal of responsibility there, when you stand with +your hand on the throttle of a fast express, knowing that the lives of +the passengers are in your hand. There's a good deal of pride, too, in +steering a vessel through a dangerous channel or in a stormy sea; +there's a thrill of power when you sight a big gun and know that if you +were in warfare the defense of your country might lie in your skill and +aim. But none of these is greater than the sense of power and trust +reposing in the men of the Forest Service, to whom Uncle Sam gives the +guardianship and safe-keeping of millions of acres of his property and +the lives of thousands of his citizens." + +The Chief Forester watched the younger of his companions, who was +striding along the Washington street, and casting rapid glances from +building to building as he went along, as though he expected to see +flame and smoke pouring from every window, and that the city's safety +lay in his hands. Smiling slightly, very slightly, and addressing +himself to the older boy, although it was for the benefit of his new +assistant that he was speaking, the Forester continued: + +"It's really more like the work of a trusted army scout than anything +else. In the old days of Indian warfare,"--both boys gave a quick start +of increased attention--"the very finest men and the most to be trusted +were the scouts. They were men of great bravery, of undaunted loyalty, +of great wariness, and filled with the spirit of dashing adventure. They +were men who took their lives in their own hands. Going before the main +body of the army, single-handed, if need be, they would stave off the +attacks of Indian foes and would do battle with outposts and pickets. If +the force were too great, they would map out the lay of the land and +devise a strategical plan of attack, then, without rest or food often, +would steal back to the main body, and, laying their information in the +hands of the general, would act as guides if he ordered a forward +movement." + +"But how--" interrupted Fred. + +"I was just coming to that," replied the Forester in response to his +half-uttered query. "A Forest Guard is really a Forest Scout. There have +been greater massacres at the hands of the Fire Tribe than from any +Indian tribe that ever roamed the prairies. Hundreds, yes, thousands of +lives were lost in the days before the Forest Service was in existence +by fires which Forest Scouts largely could have prevented. Why, I myself +can recall seeing a fire in which nearly a thousand and a half persons +perished." + +"In one fire?" + +"Just in one fire. What would you think if you were told that in a +forest in front of you were several thousand savages, all with their +war-paint on, waiting a chance to break forth on the villages of the +plain, that you had been chosen for the post of honor in guarding that +strip of plain, and that the lives of those near by depended on your +alertness? If they had picked you out for that difficult and important +post, do you think that you would go and stand your rifle up against a +tree and look for some soft nice mossy bank on which to lie down and go +to sleep?" + +"I'd stay on the job till I dropped," answered Wilbur quickly and +aggressively. + +"There's really very little difference between the two positions," said +the Chief Forester. "No band of painted savages can break forth from a +forest with more appalling fury than can a fire, none is more difficult +to resist, none can carry the possibility of torture to its hapless +victims more cruelly, none be so deaf to cries of mercy as a fire. +Instead of keeping your ears open for a distant war-whoop, you have to +keep your eyes open for the thin up-wreathing curl of smoke by day, or +the red glow and flickering flame at night, which tells that the time +has come for you to show what stuff you are made of. On the instant must +you start for the fire, though it may be miles away, crossing, it may +be, a part of the forest through which no trail has been made, plunging +through streams which under less urgency would make you hesitate to try +them, single-handed and 'all on your own,' to fight Uncle Sam's battles +against his most dangerous and most insistent foe." + +"But if you can't put it out?" suggested Fred. + +"It has got to be put out," came the sharp reply, with an insistence of +manner that told even more than the words. "There isn't anything else to +it. If you have to get back to headquarters or send word there, if all +the Rangers in the forest have to be summoned, if you have to ride to +every settlement, ranch, and shack on the range, yes, if you have to +rouse up half the State, this one thing is sure--the fire has got to be +put out." + +"But can you get help?" + +"Nearly always. In the first place, the danger is mutual and everybody +near the forest or in it will suffer if the fire spreads. In the +second place, the Service is ready to pay men a fair wage for the time +consumed in putting out a fire, and even the Ranger has the right to +employ men to a limited extent. Sometimes the blaze can be stopped +without great difficulty, at other times it will require all the +resources available under the direction of the Forest Supervisor, but in +the first resort it depends largely upon the Guard. A young fellow who +is careless in such a post as that is as great a traitor to his country +as a soldier would be who sold to the enemy the plans of the fort he was +defending, or a sailor who left the wheel while a battle-ship was +threading a narrow and rocky channel." + +"What starts these forest fires, sir?" asked Fred. + +"All sorts of things, but most of them arise from one common +cause--carelessness. There are quite a number of instances in which +fires have been started by lightning, but they are few in number as +compared with those due to human agency. The old tale of fires being +caused by two branches of a dead tree rubbing against each other is, of +course, a fable." + +"But I should think any one would know enough not to start a forest +fire," exclaimed the older boy. "I'm not much on the woods, but I think +I know enough for that." + +"It isn't deliberate, it's careless," repeated the Forester. "Sometimes +a camper leaves a little fire smoldering when he thinks the last spark +is out; sometimes settlers who have to burn over their clearings allow +the blaze to get away from them; when Indians are in the neighborhood +they receive a large share of the blame, and the hated tramp is always +quoted as a factor of mischief. In earlier days, sparks from locomotives +were a constant danger, and although the railroad companies use a great +many precautions now to which formerly they paid no heed, these sparks +and cinders are still a prolific cause of trouble. And beside this +carelessness, there is a good deal of inattention and neglect. The +settlers will let a little fire burn for days unheeded, waiting for a +rain to come along and put it out, whereas if a drought ensues and a +high wind comes up, a fire may arise that will leap through the forest +and leave them homeless, and possibly even their own lives may have to +pay the penalty of their recklessness." + +"But what I don't understand," said Fred, "is how people get caught. +It's easy enough to see how a forest could be destroyed, but I should +think that every one could get out of the way easily enough. It must +take a tree a long while to burn, even after it gets alight, especially +if it's a big one." + +"A big forest fire, fanned by a high wind, and in the dry season," +answered the Chief Forester, "could catch the fastest runner in a few +minutes. The flames repeatedly have been known to overtake horses on the +gallop, and where there are no other means of escape the peril is +extreme." + +"But will green trees burn so fast?" the older boy queried in surprise. +"I should have thought they were so full of sap that they wouldn't burn +at all." + +"The wood and foliage of coniferous trees like spruce, fir, and pine are +so full of turpentine and resin that they burn like tinder. The heat is +almost beyond the power of words to express. The fire does not seem to +burn in a steady manner, the flames just breathe upon an immense tree +and it becomes a blackened skeleton which will burn for hours. + +"The actual temperature in advance of the fire is so terrific that the +woods begin to dry and to release inflammable vapors before the flames +reach them, when they flash up and add their force to the fiery +hurricane. It is almost unbelievable, too, the way a crown-fire will +jump. Huge masses of burning gas will be hurled forth on the wind and +ignite the trees two and three hundred yards distant. Fortunately, fires +of this type are not common, most of the blazes one is likely to +encounter being ground fires, which are principally harmful in that they +destroy the forest floor." + +"But I should have thought," said Wilbur, "that such fires could only +get a strong hold in isolated parts where nobody lives." + +"Not at all. Sometimes they begin quite close to the settlements, like +the destructive fire at Hinckley, Minnesota, in 1894, which burned +quietly for a week, and could have been put out by a couple of men +without any trouble; but sometimes they start in the far recesses of the +forest and reach their full fury very quickly. Of course, every fire, +even the famous Peshtigo fire, started as a little bit of a blaze which +either of you two boys could have put out." + +"How big a fire was that, sir?" asked Fred. + +"It covered an area of over two thousand square miles." + +"Great Caesar!" ejaculated Wilbur after a rapid calculation, "that would +be a strip twenty miles wide and a hundred miles long." + +The Chief Forester nodded. + +"It wiped the town of Peshtigo entirely off the map," he said. "The +people were hemmed in, ringed by fire on every side, and out of a +population of two thousand, scarcely five hundred escaped. Flight was +hopeless and rescue impossible." + +"And could this have been stopped after it got a hold at all?" asked +Wilbur seriously, realizing the gravity of the conditions that some day +he might have to face. "Could not something have been done?" + +"It could have been prevented," said the Chief Forester fiercely, "and +as I said, in the first few hours either one of you boys could have put +it out. But there have been many others like it since, and probably +there will be many others yet to come. Even now, there are hundreds of +towns and villages near forest lands utterly unprovided with adequate +fire protection. Some of them are near our national forests, and it is +our business to see that no danger comes to them.[1] Think of a fire +like that of Peshtigo, think that if it had been stopped at the very +beginning a thousand and a half lives would have been saved, and then +ask yourself whether the work of a Forest Guard is not just about as +fine a thing as any young fellow can do." + +[Footnote 1: While this volume was in the press, forest fires of the +utmost violence broke out in Idaho, Washington, and Montana. Over two +hundred lives were lost, many of them of members of the Forest Service, +and hundreds of thousands of acres of timber were destroyed.] + +Wilbur turned impulsively to his chum. + +"You'll just have to join us, Fred," he said. "I don't see how any one +that knows anything about it can keep out. You could go to a forestry +school this summer and start right in to get ready for it." + +"I'll think about it," said the older boy. + +The Chief Forester was greatly pleased with the lad's eagerness to +enroll his friend, and, turning to him, continued: + +"I don't want you to think it's all fire-fighting in the forest, though, +Loyle; so I'll give you an idea of some of the other opportunities which +will come your way in forest work. I suppose both of you boys hate a +bully? I know I used to when I was at school." + +"I think," said Wilbur impetuously, "that a bully's just about the worst +ever." + +"I do, too," joined in Fred. + +"Well, you'll have a chance to put down a lot of bullying. You look +surprised, eh? You don't see what bullying has to do with forestry? It +has, a great deal, and I'll show you how. I suppose you know that a +forest is a good deal like a school?" + +"Well, no," admitted Wilbur frankly, "I don't quite see how." + +"A forest is made up of a lot of different kind of trees, isn't it, just +as a school is made up of a lot of boys? And each of these trees has an +individuality, just in the same way that each boy has an individuality. +That, of course, is easy to see. But what is more important, and much +less known, is that just as the school as a whole gets to have a certain +standard, so does the forest as a whole." + +"That seems queer," remarked Fred. + +"Perhaps it does, but it's true none the less. In many schools there are +some boys bigger than others, but who are not good for as much, and +they're always picking at the others and crowding them down. In the +same way in a forest there are always some worthless trees, trying to +crowd out the ones which are of more value. As the trees of better value +are always sought for their timber, that gives the worthless stuff a +good chance to get ahead. One of the duties of a Forester, looking after +his section of the forest, is to see that every possible chance is given +to the good over the bad." + +"It's really like having people to deal with!" cried Fred in surprise. +"It sounds as if a tree were some kind of a human being." + +"There are lots of people," said the Chief Forester, "who think of trees +and speak of trees just exactly as if they were people like themselves. +And it isn't even only the growing of the right kind of trees, but there +are lots of ways of handling them under different conditions and at +different ages. Thus, a Forester must be able to make his trees grow in +height up to a certain stage, then stop their further growth upwards and +make them put on diameter." + +"But how can you get a tree to grow in a certain way?" asked Fred in +utter amazement. + +"Get Loyle here to tell you all about it. I suppose you learned that at +the Ranger School, didn't you?" he added, turning to the younger boy. + +"Yes, sir. We had a very interesting course in silviculture." + +"But just to give you a rough idea, Fred," continued the Forester, "you +know that some trees need a lot of light. Consequently, if a number of +young trees are left fairly close together, they will all grow up +straight as fast as they can, without putting out any branches near the +bottom, and all their growth will be of height." + +"See, Fred," interjected Wilbur, "that's why saplings haven't got any +twigs except just at the top." + +"Just so," said the Forester. "Presently," he continued, "as these young +trees grow up together, one will overtop the rest. If the adjacent small +trees be cut down when this tallest tree has reached a good height, it +will spread at the top in order to get as much sunlight as possible. In +order to carry a large top the diameter of the trunk must increase. So, +by starting the trees close together and allowing one of them to develop +alone after a certain height has been reached, the Forester has +persuaded that tree first to grow straight and high, and then to +develop girth, affording the finest and most valuable kind of lumber. +That's just one small example of the scores of possibilities that lie in +the hands of the expert Forester. By proper handling a forest can be +made to respond to training, as I said, just as a school might do." + +"I can tell you a lot more things, Fred, just as wonderful as that," +commented Wilbur. + +The Chief Forester nodded. + +"I'd like to hear you myself," he said; "I'd rather listen to something +about trees than eat. But I've got to go now. I'll see you again soon, +Loyle," and with a parting good wish to both boys, he crossed the street +and went on his way. + + +[Illustration: A FOREST FIRE OUT OF CONTROL. + +Conditions which tax man's resources to the uttermost, and where peril +is the price of victory. + +_Courtesy of U. S. Forest Service._] + + +[Illustration: GOOD FORESTRY MANAGEMENT. + +All the smaller wood is used for cord-wood, the brush is in piles ready +for burning, and the young trees are left to grow up into a new forest. + +_Photograph by U. S. Forest Service._] + + +[Illustration: BAD FORESTRY MANAGEMENT. + +Forest cut clear and burned over, all the young growth destroyed, and +nothing left except costly replanting. + +_Photograph by U. S. Forest Service._] + + + + +CHAPTER II + +PUTTING A STOP TO GUN-PLAY + + +Wilbur was sitting in the writing-room of the hotel where he was staying +while in Washington, just finishing a letter home telling of his +good-fortune and his appointment, when a bell-boy came to tell him that +his uncle, Mr. Masseth, was downstairs waiting to see him. This uncle +had been a great inspiration to Wilbur, for he was prominent in the +Geological Survey, and had done some wonderful work in the Canyon of the +Colorado. Wilbur hurried down at once. + +"Congratulations!" the geologist said, as soon as the boy appeared. "So +you came through with flying colors, I hear." + +"Every one was just as fine as could be," answered the lad. "But how did +you know about it, uncle?" + +"You wrote me that you were going to call on the Chief Forester to-day, +and so I took the trouble to telephone to one of the men in the office +who would be likely to know the result of your interview." + +"Isn't it bully?" + +"Yes," said the older man with a quiet laugh, "I think it is 'bully,' as +you call it. But I didn't call only to congratulate you; I thought +perhaps you would like to come with me to-night and meet some of the men +in the Forest Service who are really doing things out West. If you do, +there's no time to waste." + +"You bet I do," the boy replied hastily. "But what is it all about?" + +"It's a lecture on forestry in China, but it happens to come at the same +time as a meeting of the District Foresters, so they're all in town. +Trot along upstairs and get your hat, and we can talk about it on the +way." + +The geologist sauntered over to an acquaintance who was standing in the +hotel lobby near by, but he had hardly exchanged half a dozen sentences +with him when Wilbur reappeared, ready to go. + +"You see," said Masseth as they left the hotel, "it is a good plan for +you to meet as many of the leaders of your profession as you can, not +only because their friendship may be useful to you, nor yet only because +they are all pleasant fellows, but because forestry is a profession, a +very large and complex one, and it is a revelation sometimes to see what +can be made of it. I know myself, whenever I meet a great geologist I +always feel a little better to think I can say, 'I am a geologist, too.' +So you, I hope, may be able to say some day, 'I am a Forester, too.'" + +"I'm one now," said Wilbur elatedly. + +"You're not, you're only a cub yet," corrected his uncle sharply; "don't +let your enthusiasm run away with your good sense. You are no more a +Forester yet than a railroad bill-clerk is a transportation expert." + +"All right, uncle," said Wilbur, "I'll swallow my medicine and take that +all back. I'm not even the ghost of a Forester--yet." + +"You will meet the real article to-night. As I told you, the District +Foresters are East for a conference, and this lecture is given before +the Forestry Association. So you will have a good chance of sizing up +the sort of men you are likely to be with." + +"Will the Forest Supervisors be there, too?" + +"I should imagine not. There may be one or two in town. But the +Supervisors alone would make quite a gathering if they were all here. +There are over a hundred, are there not? You ought to know." + +"Just a hundred and forty-one now--about one to each forest." + +"And there are only six District Foresters?" + +"Yes. One is in Montana, one in Colorado, one in New Mexico, one in +Utah, one in California, and one in Oregon. And they have under their +charge, so I learned to-day, nearly two hundred million acres of land, +or, in other words, territory larger than the whole state of Texas and +five times as large as England and Wales." + +"I had forgotten the figures," said the geologist. "That gives each +District Forester a little piece of land about the size of England to +look after. And they can tell you, most of them, on almost every square +mile of that region, approximately how much marketable standing timber +may be found there, what kinds of trees are most abundant, and in what +proportion, and roughly, how many feet of lumber can be cut to the acre. +It's always been wonderful to me. That sort of thing takes learning, +though, and you've got to dig, Wilbur, if you want to be a District +Forester some day." + +"I'm going to get there some day, all right." + +"If you try hard enough, you may. By the way, there's one of them going +in now. That's the house, on the other side of the Circle." + +The boy looked across the curve and scanned all the men going in the +same direction, quite with a feeling of companionship. One of the men +who overtook and passed them, giving a hearty greeting to Masseth as he +went by, was Roger Doughty, a young fellow who had distinguished himself +in the Geological Survey, having taken a trip from south to north of +Alaska, and Wilbur's companion felt a twinge of regret that his nephew +had not entered his own service. + +Wilbur, however, was always a "woods" boy, and even in his early +childish days had been possessed with a desire to camp out. He had read +every book he could lay hands on that dealt with "the great outdoors," +and would ten thousand times over rather have been Daniel Boone than +George Washington. Seeing his intense pleasure in that life, his father +had always allowed him to go off into the wilds for his holidays, and in +consequence he knew many little tricks of woodcraft and how to make +himself comfortable when the weather was bad. His father, who was a +lawyer, had wanted him to enter that profession, but Wilbur had been so +sure of his own mind, and was so persistent that at his request he had +been permitted to go to the Colorado Ranger School. From this he had +returned even more enthusiastic than before, and Masseth, seeing that by +temperament Wilbur was especially fitted for the Forest Service, had +urged the boy's father to allow him to enter for it, and did not attempt +to conceal his satisfaction with Wilbur's success. + +"Why, Masseth, how did you get hold of Loyle?" asked the Chief Forester +as the two came up the walk together. + +"Didn't you know he was my nephew?" was the surprised reply. + +"No," answered their host as they paused on the threshold, "he never +said anything to me about it." + +The geologist looked inquiringly at his young relative. + +"I thought," said Wilbur, coloring, "that if I said anything about +knowing you, before I was appointed, it would look as though I had done +it to get a pull. I didn't think it would do me any good, anyhow; and +even if it had, I felt that I'd rather not get anything that way." + +"It wouldn't have helped you a bit," said the Chief Forester, "and, as +you see, you did not need it. I'm glad, too, that you did not mention it +at the time." He nodded his appreciation of the boy's position as they +passed into the room beyond. + +The place was thoroughly typical of the gathering and the occasion. The +walls were hung with some magnificent trophies, elk and moose heads, one +stuffed fish of huge size was framed beside the door, and there were +numberless photographs of trees and forests, cross-sections of woods, +and comparisons of leaves and seeds. Although in the heart of +Washington, there was a breath and fragrance in the room, which, to the +boy, seemed like old times in the woods. The men, too, that were +gathered there showed themselves to be what they were--men who knew the +great wide world and loved it. Every man seemed hearty in manner and +thoroughly interested in whatever was going on. + +Masseth was called away, soon after they entered the room, and Wilbur, +left to himself, sauntered about among the groups of talkers, looking at +the various trophies hung on the walls. As he drew near to one of the +smaller groups, however, he caught the word "gun-play," so he edged up +to the men and listened. One of them, seeing the lad, moved slightly to +one side as an unspoken invitation to be one of them, and Wilbur stepped +up. + +The man who was speaking was comparing the present peaceful +administration of the forests with the conditions that used to exist +years ago, before the Service had been established, and when the Western +"bad man" was at the summit of his power. + +"It was during the cattle and sheep war that a fellow had to be pretty +quick on the draw," said one. + +"The Service had a good enough man for that, all right," suggested +another member of the same group, "there wasn't any of them who could +pull a bead quicker than our grazing Chief yonder." Wilbur turned and +saw crossing the room a quiet-looking, spare man, light-complexioned, +and apparently entirely inoffensive. "I guess they were ready enough to +give him a wide berth when it came to gun-play." + +"Talking about the cattle war," said the first speaker, "the worst +trouble I ever had, or rather, the one that I hated to go into most, was +back in those days. I was on the old Plum Creek Timber Land Reserve, +now a portion of the Pike National Forest. A timber trespass sometimes +leads to a very pretty scrap, and a cattle mix-up usually spells 'War' +with a capital 'W,' but this had both." + +"You get them that way sometimes," said a middle-aged, red-headed man, +who was standing by. + +"Had some down your way, too, I reckon?" + +"Plenty of 'em. But go ahead with the yarn." + +"Well, this bunch that I'm speaking of had skipped out from Montana; +they were 'wanted' there, and they had come down and started cutting +railroad ties in a secluded canyon forming one of the branches of West +Plum Creek. They were hated good and plenty, these same tie-cutters, +because they had a reputation of being too handy with their guns, and +consequently causing a decrease in the calf crop. The cattlemen used to +drop in on them every once in a while, but the tie-cutters were foxy, +and they were never caught with the goods. Of course, there was a moral +certainty that they weren't buying meat, but nothing could be proved +against them, and the interchanges of compliments, while lively and +picturesque enough, never took the form of lead, although it was +expected every time they met." + +"Had this been going on long?" + +"Several months, I reckon," answered the former Ranger, "before I heard +of it. This was just before that section of the country was taken over +by the Forest Service. As soon as notice was given that the district in +question was to be placed under government regulations, a deputation to +the tie-cutters loped down on their cow-ponies to convey the cheerful +news. Expressing, of course, the profoundest sympathy for them, the +spokesman of the cattle group volunteered the information that they +could wrap up their axes in tissue paper, tie pink ribbons on their +rifles and go home, because any one caught cutting timber on the +reserve, now that it was a reserve, would go to the Pen for fifteen +years." + +"What a bluff!" + +"Bluff it certainly was. It didn't work, either. One of the tie-cutters +in reply suggested that the cowmen should go back and devote their time +to buying Navajo saddle-blankets and silver-mounted sombreros, since +ornamenting the landscape was all they had to do in life; another +replied that if a government inspector ever set eyes on their cattle +he'd drive them off the range as a disgrace to the State; and a third +capped the replies with the terse answer that no ten United States +officers and no hundred and ten cattlemen could take them out alive." + +"That wouldn't make the cow-camp feel happy a whole lot," remarked the +red-headed man. + +"There wasn't any shooting, though, as I said before, though just how it +kept off I never rightly could understand. At all events they fixed it +so that we heard of it in a hurry. Then both sides awaited developments. +The tie-cutters kept their hands off the cattle for a while, and the +cowmen had no special business with railroad ties, so that, aside from +snorting at each other, no special harm was done. + +"But, of course, the timber trespass question had to be investigated, +and the Supervisor, who was then located at Colorado Springs, arranged +to make the trip with me to the tie-cutters' camp from a small station +about fifty miles north of the Springs. I met him at the station as +prearranged. We were just about to start when a telegram was handed him +calling him to another part of the forest in a hurry." + +"Tough luck," said one of the listeners. + +"It surely was--for me," commented the narrator. "The camp to which we +had intended going was twenty-six miles into the mountains, and going up +there alone didn't appeal to me a little bit. However, the Supervisor +told me to start right out, to get an idea of how much timber had been +cut, and in what kind of shape the ground had been left, and in short, +to 'nose around a little,' as he put it himself." + +"That was hardly playing the game, sending you up there alone," said one +of the men. + +"I thought at the time that it wasn't, but what could he do? The matter +had to be investigated, and he had been sent for and couldn't come with +me. But he was considerate enough, strongly urging me not to get killed, +'as Rangers were scarce.'" + +"That was considerate!" + +"Yes, wasn't it? But early the next morning I started for the canyon +where the outlaws were said to be in hiding. The riding was fair, so I +made good time on the trail and got to the entrance of the canyon about +the middle of the day. A few hundred feet from the fork of the stream I +came to a little log cabin, occupied by a miner and his family. I took +lunch with them and told them my errand. Both the man and his wife +begged me not to go up to the camp alone, as they had heard the +tie-cutters threaten to kill at sight any stranger found on their land." + +"Why didn't you propose that the miner should go up to the camp with +you?" + +"I did. But he remarked that up to date he had succeeded in keeping out +of the cattlemen-lumbermen trouble, and that he was going to keep right +along keeping out. He suggested that if there was going to be any +funeral in the immediate vicinity he wasn't hankering to take any more +prominent part than that of a mourner, and that the title-role of such a +performance wasn't any matter of envy with him. However, I succeeded in +persuading him to come part of the way with me, and secured his promise +that he would listen for any shooting, and if I should happen to resign +involuntarily from the Service by the argument of a bullet, that he +would volunteer as a witness in the case." + +"I don't altogether blame him, you know," said the red-headed man; "you +said he had a wife there, and interfering with other folks' doings isn't +healthy." + +"I didn't blame him either," said the first speaker, "but I would have +liked to have him along. A little farther up the canyon I came to a +recently built log cabin, covered with earth. An old man stood at the +door and I greeted him cheerily. We had a moment's chat, and then I +asked him the way to the cabin where the tie-cutters lived. Judge of my +surprise when he told me this was their cabin, and that they lived with +him. By the time I had secured this much information the two younger men +had come out, and one of them, Tom, wanted to know what I was after. I +stated my business, briefly. There was a pause. + +"'Ye 'low as ye're agoin' to jedge them ties,' he said slowly. 'Wa'al I +'low we'll sort 'er go along. Thar's a heap o' fow-el in these yar +parts, stranger, an' I 'low I'll take a gun.' + +"The other brother, who seemed more taciturn, turned and nodded to two +youngsters who had come out of the cabin while Tom was speaking. The +elder of the two, a boy about thirteen years old, went into the shack +and returned in a moment bringing out two rifles. I turned the broncho's +head up the trail, but Tom interposed. + +"'I 'low,' he said, 'that ye'll hev ter leave yer horse-critter right +hyar; thar ain't much of er trail up the mount'n.' + +"I wasn't particularly anxious to get separated from my horse, and that +cabin was just about the last place I would have chosen to leave him; +but there was no help for it, and as I would have to dismount anyway to +get into the timber, I slipped out of the saddle and put the hobbles on. +But when we came to start, the two men wanted me to go first. I balked +at that. I told them that I wasn't in the habit of walking up a mountain +trail in front of two men with guns, and that they would have to go +first and show the way. They grumbled, but, seeing that I meant it, they +turned and silently walked up the mountainside ahead of me. + +"They stopped at an old prospect shaft that was filled to the brim with +water, and wanted me to come close to the hole and look at it, telling +me some cock-and-bull story about it, and calling my attention to some +supposed outcrop of rich ore that could be seen under the water. But I +refused flatly to go a step nearer than I then was, telling them that I +wished to get to those ties immediately. + +"At an old cabin they halted again, and Tom wanted to know which was +'the best shot in the bunch.' I was not in favor of trying guns or +anything of that sort, especially when there seemed no reason for it, +knowing how easy it would be for a shot to go wide, and so I urged them +to lead on to the ties. But Tom insisted upon shooting, and though his +brother did not seem quite to follow the other's plans, still he chimed +in with him, and the only thing I could do was to agree with what grace +I could. But I decided to make this a pretext for disposing of some of +their superfluous ammunition. + +"Pulling my six-shooter, I told Jim to put an old sardine can, that was +lying on the ground near by, on the stump of a tree about twenty-five or +thirty yards distant. Then I told him to lean his rifle against the +cabin while placing the can on the tree. This he did. I stepped over to +the cabin and took the gun as though to look after it. Then I walked +over to where Tom stood, telling him to blaze away at the can on the +tree. While he was doing so I slipped the cartridges out of Jim's gun +and put them in my pocket. + +"By the time that Tom had fired three shots Jim came up and I told the +former to hand over the rifle and let his brother try. Quite readily he +did so. Of course, there were only two cartridges left in the gun, for +it was a half-magazine, but Jim expected to take the third shot with his +own rifle. When he had fired twice, however, and reached out his hand +for the other gun, I handed it to him with the remark that it was empty. +For a minute or two things looked black, because both men saw that they +had been tricked. But I had the drop on them, and since they were both +disarmed I felt considerably easier." + +"How did it end up?" asked the red-haired listener. + +"It was easy enough after that, as long as I didn't turn my back to them +or let either get too near. We went together and counted the ties, +returning to the cabin where I had left my horse. When the tie-cutters +found, however, that the cattlemen had deliberately exaggerated the +penalty for timber trespass in the hope that they would resist and thus +get themselves into serious trouble with the government, their anger was +diverted from me. By joining in with them in a sweeping denunciation of +the cow-camp, and by pointing out that no harsh measures were intended +against them, they came to look on me as friend instead of foe." + +"What was done about the trespass?" + +"It was pretty early in the days of the Service, and, as you remember, +we let them down easily at first so that no undue amount of friction +should be caused. I think some small fine, purely nominal, was exacted, +and the tie-cutters got into harmonious relations with the Supervisor +later. But those same boys told me, just as I was starting for home, +that they intended to drop me in that old prospect shaft, or, failing +that, to pump me full of holes." + +The speaker had hardly finished when a scattering of groups and an +unfolding of chairs took place and the lecturer for the evening was +announced. He won Wilbur's heart at once by an appreciative story of a +young Chinese boy, a civil service student in his native province, who +had accompanied him on a portion of his trip through China in order to +learn what might be done toward the improvement of his country. + +"He was a bright lad, this Fo-Ho," said the lecturer, "and it was very +largely owing to him that I extended my trip a little and went to +Fou-Ping. I visited Fo-Ho's family home, where the graves of his +ancestors were--you know how powerful ancestor-worship still is in +China. Such a scene of desolation I never saw, and, I tell you, I was +sorry for the boy. There was the town that had been his father's home +deserted and in ruins. + +"Two hundred years before, in this same place now so thickly strewn with +ruins, there had been no one living, and the mountains were accounted +impassable because of the dense forests. But in 1708 a Mongol horde +under a powerful chieftain settled in the valley, and the timber began +to be cut recklessly. Attracted by the fame of this chieftain, other +tribes poured down into these valleys, until by 1720 several hundred +thousand persons were living where thirty years before not a soul was to +be seen. The cold winters of Mongolia drew heavily upon the fuel +resources of the adjacent forests, and a disastrous fire stripped +hundreds of square miles. Farther and farther afield the inhabitants had +to go for fuel, until every stick which would burn had been swept clear; +bleaker and more barren grew the vicinity, until at last the tribes had +to decamp, and what was once a dense forest and next a smiling valley +has become a hideous desert which even the vultures have forsaken." + +Masseth leaned over toward Wilbur and whispered: + +"You don't have to go as far away as China. There are some terrible +cases of deforestation right here in the United States." + +The lecturer then launched into a description of the once great forests +of China, and quoted the words of writers less than three centuries ago +who depicted the great Buddhist monasteries hid deep in the heart of +densely wooded regions. Then, with this realization of heavily forested +areas in mind, there was flashed upon the screen picture after picture +of desolation. Cities, once prosperous, were shown abandoned because the +mountains near by had become deforested. Man could not live there +because food could not grow without soil, and all the soil had been +washed away from the slopes. The streams, once navigable, were choked up +with the silt that had washed down. When rains came they acted as +torrents, since there was no vegetation to hold the water and the lower +levels became flooded. + +"Nature made the world a garden," said the speaker, "and man is making +it a desert. Our children and our children's children for countless +generations are to enjoy the gardens we leave, or bewail the deserts +we create." + +Startling, too, was the manner in which the lecturer showed the unhappy +fate of countries which an unthinking civilization had despoiled. The +hills and valleys where grew the famous cedars of Lebanon are almost +treeless now, and Palestine, once so luxuriant, is bare and lonely. +Great cities flourished upon the banks of the Tigris and Euphrates where +were the hanging gardens of Babylon and the great hunting parks of +Nineveh, yet now the river runs silently between muddy banks, infertile +and deserted, save for a passing nomad tribe. The woods of ancient +Greece are not less ruined than her temples; the forests of Dalmatia +whence came the timber that built the navies of the ancient world are +now barren plateaus, shelterless and waste; and throughout a large part +of southern Europe and northern Africa, man has transformed the smile of +nature into a mask of inflexible severity. + +"But," said Wilbur, turning excitedly to his uncle, as soon as the +lecturer had closed, "isn't there anything that can be done to make +those places what they were before?" + +"Not often, if it is allowed to go too far," said the geologist. "It +takes time, of course, for all the soil to be washed away. But wherever +the naked rock is exposed the case is hopeless. You can't grow anything, +even cactus, on a rock. Lichens, of course, may begin, but hundreds of +thousands of years are required to make soil anew." + +"But if it's taken in time?" + +"Then you can reforest by planting. But that's slow and costly. It +requires millions of dollars to replant a stretch of forest which would +have renewed itself just by a little careful lumbering, for Nature is +only too ready to do the work for nothing if given a fair chance." + +By this time the gathering had broken up in large part and a number of +those who had come only to hear the lecture had gone. Some of the Forest +Service men, however, were passing through the corridors to the +dining-room. At the door Wilbur paused hesitatingly. He had not been +invited to stay, but at the same time he felt that he could hardly leave +without thanking his uncle, who at the time was strolling toward the +other portion of the house, deeply engrossed in conversation. In this +quandary the Chief Forester, all unknown to the lad, saw his +embarrassment, and with the quick intuition so characteristic of the +man, divined the cause. + +"Come along, Loyle, come along in," he said, "you're one of us now." + +Wilbur, with a grateful look, passed on into the reception-room. A +moment later he heard his name called, and, turning, came face to face +with a tall young fellow, bronzed and decisive looking. + +"My name's Nally," he said, "and I hear you're going to one of my +forests. Mr. Masseth was telling me that you're his nephew. I guess +we'll start right in by having our first feed together. This is hardly +camping out," he added, looking around the well-appointed and handsome +room, "but the grub shows that it's the Service all right." + +The District Forester motioned to the table which was heaped with dozens +upon dozens of baked apples, flanked by several tall pitchers of milk. + +"There you have it," he continued, "back to nature and the simple life. +It's all right to go through a Ranger School and to satisfy the powers +that be about your fitness, but that isn't really getting to the inside +of the matter. It's when you feel that you've had the chance to come +right in and take the regular prescribed ritual of a baked apple and a +glass of milk in the house of the Chief Forester that you can feel +you're the real thing in the Service." + + +[Illustration: THE TIE-CUTTERS' BOYS. + +Two young members of the outlaw gang which defied the cattle man and +threatened the Forest Service. + +_Photograph by U. S. Forest Service._] + + +[Illustration: DEFORESTED AND WASHED AWAY. + +Example of laborious artificial terracing in China to save the little +soil remaining. + +_Courtesy of U. S. Forest Service._] + + +[Illustration: AS BAD AS ANYTHING IN CHINA. + +Final results of deforestation in Tennessee, due to cutting and to fumes +from a copper smelter. + +_Photograph by U. S. Forest Service._] + + + + +CHAPTER III + +THE FIGHT IN THE COULEE + + +When, a few days later, Wilbur found himself standing on the platform of +the little station at Sumber, with the cactus-clad Mohave desert about +him and the slopes of the Sierra Nevada beyond, he first truly realized +that his new life was beginning. His journey out from Washington had +been full of interest because the District Forester had accompanied him +the greater part of the way, and had taken the opportunity to explain +how varied were the conditions that he would find in the Sequoia forest +to which he had been assigned. In large measure the District Forester's +especial interest, Wilbur realized, was due to the fact that Masseth had +told him of the boy's intention to go to college and thence through the +Yale Forestry School, having had beforehand training as Guard, and +possibly later as Ranger. + +But, as the train pulled out of the station, and Wilbur looked over the +sage-brush and sparse grass, seeming to dance under the shimmering +heat-waves of the afternoon sun, he suddenly became conscious that the +world seemed very large and that everything he knew was very far away. +The strange sense of doubt as to whether he were really himself, a +curious feeling that the desert often induces, swept over him, and he +was only too ready to enter into conversation when a small, wiry man, +with black hair and quick, alert eyes, came up to him with the rolling +walk that betokens a life spent in the saddle, and said easily: + +"Howdy, pard!" + +The boy returned a friendly "Good-afternoon," and waited for the +stranger to continue. + +"She looks some as if you was the whole pack on this deal," was the next +remark. + +"Well," replied Wilbur, looking at him quizzically, "I wasn't conscious +of being crowded here." + +The range-rider followed the boy's glance around the immediate +neighborhood, noting the station agent and the two or three figures in +front of the general store, who formed the sum of the visible +population, and nodded. + +"Bein' the star performer, then," he went on, "it might be a safe bet +that you was sort of prospectin' for the Double Bar J." + +"That was the name of the ranch," said the boy. "I was told to go there +and get a couple of ponies." + +"An' how was you figurin' on gettin' to the ranch? Walkin'?" + +"Not if I could help it. And that," he added, pointing to the desert, "I +should think would be mean stuff to walk on." + +"Mean she is," commented Wilbur's new acquaintance, "but even s'posin' +that you did scare up a pony, how did you dope it out that you would hit +up the right trail? This here country is plumb tricky. And the trail +sort of takes a nap every once in a while and forgets to show up." + +"I didn't expect to find my way alone," said the boy. "If nobody had +been here, I'd have found somebody to show me--" + +"Hold hard," said the cowboy, interrupting, "till I look over that +layout. If you hadn't ha' found anybody, you'd ha' found somebody? +Shuffle 'em up a bit, pard, and try a new deal." + +"But," continued Wilbur, not paying any attention to the interruption, +"I fully expected that some one from the ranch would be here to meet +me." + +"If all your conjectoors comes as near bein' accurate as that same," +said the other, "you c'd set up as a prophet and never call the turn +wrong. Which I'm some attached to the ranch myself." + +"I thought you were, probably," said Wilbur, "and I'm much obliged to +you, if you came to meet me." + +"That's all right! But if you're ready, maybe we'd better start +interviewin' the scenery on the trail. How about chuck?" + +"Thanks," said the boy, "I had dinner on the car." + +"An' you're thirsty none?" + +"Not especially. But," he added, not wishing to offend his companion, +"if you are, go ahead." + +"Well, if you don't mind," began the other, then he checked himself. "I +guess I c'n keep from dyin' of a cracked throat until we get there," he +added. "C'n you ride?" + +"Yes!" said Wilbur decisively. + +The cowboy turned half round to look at him with a dubious smile. + +"You surely answers that a heap sudden," he said. "An' I opine that's +some risky as a general play." + +"Why?" asked the boy. + +"Bein' too sure in three-card Monte has been a most disappointin' +experience to many a gent, an' has been most condoocive to transfers of +ready cash." + +"But that's just guessing," said Wilbur. "I'm talking of what I know." + +"Like enough you never heard about Quick-Finger Joe?" queried the +cowboy. "Over-confidence hastens his exit quite some." + +"No," answered Wilbur quickly, scenting a story, "I never even heard of +him. Who was he?" + +"This same Joe," began the range-rider, "is a tow-haired specimen whose +manly form decorates the streets of this here metropolis of Sumber that +you've been admirin'. He has the name of bein' the most agile +proposition on a trigger that ever shot the spots off a ten o' clubs. He +makes good his reputation a couple of times, and then gets severely left +alone. To him, one day, while he is standin' takin' a little +refreshment, comes up a peaceful and inoffensive-lookin' stranger, who +has drifted into town promiscuous-like in the course of the afternoon. +He addresses Joe some like this: + +"'Which I hears with profound admiration that you're some frolicsome +and speedy on gun-play?' + +"Joe, tryin' to hide his blushes, admits that his hand can amble for his +hip right smart. Whereupon the amiable-appearin' gent makes some sort of +comment, just what no one ever knew, but it seems tolerable superfluous +an' sarcastic, an' instantaneous there's two shots. When the smoke +clears away a little, Joe is observed to be occupyin' a horizontal +position on the floor and showin' a pronounced indisposition to move. +The stranger casually remarks: + +"'Gents, this round's on me. I shore hates to disturb your peaceful +converse on a balmy evenin' like this yere in a manner so abrupt an' +sudden-like. But he had to get his, some time, an' somebody's +meditations would hev to be disturbed. This hyar varmint, gents, what is +now an unopposed candidate for a funeral pow-wow, was a little too +previous with his gun agin my younger brother. It's a case of plain +justice, gents; my brother was without weapons, and he--' pointing to +the figure on the floor, 'he knew it. Line up, gents, and give it a +name!'" + +"What did they do to the stranger?" asked Wilbur eagerly, divided +between admiration of the quickness of the action and consternation at +the gravity of the result. + +"They compliments him some on the celerity of his shootin', and feels a +heap relieved by Joe's perpetual absence. An' the moral o' this little +tale is that you're hittin' a fast clip for trouble when you go around +prompt and aggressive to announce your own virtoos. I'm not advancin' +any criticism as to your shinin' talents in the way of ridin', pard, but +you haven't been long enough in this here vale of tears to be what you +might call experienced." + +"I've ridden a whole lot," said Wilbur, who was touchy on the point and +proud of his horsemanship, "and while I don't say that there isn't a +horse I can't ride, I can say that I've never seen one yet. I started in +to ride pretty nearly as soon as I started to walk." + +"I don't want to mar your confidence none," replied the cowboy, "an' I +likes a game sport who'll bet his hand to the limit, though I generally +drops my stake on the other side. But if some mornin' you sh'd find the +ground rearin' up and hittin' you mighty sudden, don't forget that I +gave you a plain steer. Here's your cayuse." + +Wilbur had been a little disappointed that the cowboy should not have +shown up as ornamentally as he had expected, not wearing goatskin +"chaps" or rattlesnake hatbands, and not even having a gorgeous +saddle-blanket on his pony, but the boy felt partly rewarded when he saw +him just put his toe in the stirrup and seem to float into the saddle. +The pony commenced dancing about in the most erratic way, but Wilbur +noted that his companion seemed entirely unaware that the horse was not +standing still, although his antics would have unseated any rider that +the boy previously had seen. He was conscious, moreover, that his climb +into his own saddle was very different from that which he had witnessed, +but he really was a good rider for a boy, and felt quite at home as soon +as they broke into the loping canter of the cow-pony. + +"I understood," said Wilbur as they rode along, "that I should meet the +Ranger at the ranch. His name was given to me as Rifle-Eye Bill, because +I was told he had been a famous hunter before he joined the Service. I +thought at first you might be the Ranger, but he was described to me as +being very tall." + +"Which he does look some like a Sahaura cactus on the Arizona deserts," +said the range-rider, "an' I surely favor him none. But that mistake of +yours naterally brings it to me that I haven't what you might say +introdooced myself. Which my baptismal handle is more interestin' than +useful, an' I lays it by. So I'll just hand you the title under which I +usually trots, bein' 'Bob-Cat Bob,' ridin' for the Double Bar J." + +"Not having risen to any later title," said Wilbur good-humoredly, "I've +got to be satisfied with the one I started with. I'm generally called +Wilbur." + +"Which is sure unfamiliar to me. I opine it's a new brand on the range." +He flourished his sombrero in salute, so that his pony bucked twice and +then tried to bolt. Wilbur watched and envied him the absolute ease with +which he brought down the broncho to a quiet lope again. + +"I'm going to join the Forest Service," the boy explained, knowing that +according to the etiquette of the West no question would be asked about +his business, but that he would be expected to volunteer some statement, +"and my idea in coming to the ranch was to pick up a couple of horses +and go on to the forest with the Ranger. I understand the Supervisor, +Mr. Merritt, is very busy with some timber sales, and I didn't know +whether the Ranger would be able to get away." + +"I kind o' thought you might be headed for the Forest Service, since you +was goin' along with Rifle-Eye," said the cowboy. "An' if you're goin' +with him, you'll be all right." + +"The Service looks pretty good to me," said Wilbur. + +"I've no kick comin' agin the National Forests," said Bob-Cat, "we've +always been treated white enough. Of course, there's always some +soreheads who want to stampede the range and gets peevish when they're +balked, but I guess the Service is a good thing all round. It don't +appeal none to me, o' course. If I held all the cards, I'd rip down +every piece of barbed wire west of the Mississippi, let the sheepmen go +to the ranges beside the canals o' Mars or some other ekally distant +region, an' git back to the good old days o' the Jones 'n' Plummer +trail. But then, I sure enough realize that I'm not the only strikin' +feature o' the landscape an' there's others that might have a say." + +"I guess the present way is the best in the long run at that, for all I +hear," said Wilbur, "because every one now has a fair show. You can't +have cattle and sheep overrunning everywhere without absolutely ruining +the forests. Especially sheep. They can destroy a forest and make it as +though it had never existed." + +"I'm huggin' love of sheep none," said the cowboy, "an' my mental picter +of the lower regions is a place what smells strong of sheep. But I sure +miss my throw on any idee as to how they could do up a forest of big +trees." + +"They do, just the same." + +"How? Open her up, pard, an' explain. I'm listenin' mighty attentive." + +"This way," began the boy, remembering some of the talks he had heard at +the Ranger School. "When a dry year comes, if the sheep are allowed into +the forest, the grass, which is poor because of the dryness, soon gets +eaten down. Then the sheep begin to browse on the young shoots and +seedlings, and even will eat the leaves off the young saplings that they +can reach, thus destroying all the baby trees and checking the growth of +those that are a little more advanced. When this goes on for two or +three seasons all the young growth is gone. Since there are no saplings, +no young shoots, and no seedlings, the forest never recovers, but +becomes more like a park with stretches of grass between clumps of +trees. Then, when these trees die, there are no others to take their +place and the forest is at an end." + +"How about cattle?" + +"They're not nearly as bad. Cattle won't eat leaves unless they have to. +And they don't browse so close, nor pack down the ground as hard with +their hoofs. If there's grass enough to go round, cattle won't injure a +forest much, but, of course, the grazing has got to be restricted or +else the same sort of thing will happen that goes on when sheep are let +in." + +"Never knew before," said the boy's companion, "why I ought ter hate +sheep. Jest naterally they're pizen to me, but I never rightly figured +out why I allers threw them in the discard. Now I know. There's a heap +of satisfaction in that. It's like findin' that a man you sure disagreed +with in an argyment is a thunderin' sight more useful to the community +dead than he was alive. It don't alter your feelin's none, but it helps +out strong on the ensooin' explanations." + +"Are there many sheep out here?" + +"There's a tidy few. But it's nothin' like Montana. You ought ter get +Rifle-Eye Bill to tell you of the old days o' the sheep an' cattle +war. The debates were considerable fervent an' plenty frequent, an' a +Winchester or two made it seem emphatic a whole lot." + +"Was Rifle-Eye mixed up in it?" + +"Which he's allers been a sort of Florence Nightingale of the Rockies, +has old Rifle-Eye," was the reply. "I don't mean in looks--but if a +feller's shot up or hurt, or anythin' of that kind, it isn't long before +the old hunter turns up, takes him to some shack near by and persuades +somebody to look after him till he gets around again. An' we've got a +little lady that rides a white mare in these here Sierras who's a sure +enough angel. I don't want to know her pedigree, but when it comes to +angels, she's It. An' when she an' Rifle-Eye hitches up to do the +ministerin' act, you'd better believe the job's done right. I never +heard but of one man that ever said 'No' to Rifle-Eye, no matter what +fool thing he asked." + +"How was that?" asked Wilbur. + +"It was the wind-up of one o' these here little differences of opinion +on the sheep question, same as I've been tellin' you of. It happened +somewhar up in Oregon, although I've forgotten the name o' the ranch. +Rifle-Eye could tell you the story better'n I can, but he won't. It was +somethin' like this: + +"There was a big coulee among the hills, an', one summer, when there'd +been a prairie fire that wiped out a lot o' feed, a bunch o' cattle was +headed into this coulee. Three cowpunchers and a cook with the chuck +wagon made up the gang. But this yar cook was one o' them fellers what's +not only been roped by bad luck, but hog-tied and branded good and +plenty. He had been the boss of a ranch, a small one, but he'd fallen +foul o' the business end of a blizzard, an' he'd lost every blamed head +o' cattle that he had. He lost his wife, too." + +"How did she come in on it?" + +"It was this way. She heard, or thought she heard, some one callin' +outside, a little ways from the house. She s'posed, o' course, that it +was the men who had tackled the storm in the hope o' savin' some o' the +cattle, an' she ran out o' the door to give 'em an answerin' hail so as +they could git an idee as to the direction o' the house. But she hadn't +gone but a few steps when the wind caught her--leastways, that was how +they figured it out afterwards--and blew her along a hundred feet or so +before she could catch breath, and then she stumbled and fell. She got +up, sort o' dazed, most like, and tried to run back to the shack. But in +the blindin' snow nothin' o' the house could be seen, an' though she +tried to fight up in that direction against the wind, she must have gone +past it a little distance to the left. They didn't find her until two +days after when the blizzard had blown itself out, an' there she was, +stone dead, not more than a half a mile away from the house. + +"The boss was near crazy when they found her, an' he never was fit for +much afterwards. There was a child, only a little shaver then, who was +asleep in the house at the time his mother run out to answer the shout +she reckoned she heard. So, since the rancher wasn't anyways overstocked +on female relations, an' he had the kid to look after, the one-time boss +went out as a camp cook an' took the boy along. He was rustlin' the +chuck for this bunch I'm a-tellin' you about, that goes into the coulee. + +"By 'n' by, a week or so afterward, a herd o' sheep comes driftin' into +this same valley, bein' ekally short for feed, an' the herders knocks up +a sort o' corral an' looks to settle down. The cowpunchers pays 'em an +afternoon call, an' suggests that the air outside the coulee is a lot +healthier for sheep--an' sheepmen--an' that onless they makes up their +minds to depart, an' to make that departure a record-breaker for speed, +they'll make their relatives sure a heap mournful. The sheepmen replies +in a vein noways calculated to bring the dove o' peace hoverin' around, +an' volunteers as a friendly suggestion that the cattlemen had best send +to town and order four nice new tombstones before ringin' the curtain up +on any gladiatorial pow-wow. When the cowpunchers rides back, honors is +even, an' each side is one man short. + +"Now, this coulee, which is the scene of these here operations, is so +located that there's only one way out. Most things in life there's more, +but in this here particular coulee, the openin' plays a lone hand. As +the cattlemen got there first, and went 'way back to the end o' the +ravine, the sheepmen are nearer to what you might call the valley door. +If the cowpunchers could have made a get-away, it's a cinch that they'd +have headed for the ranch an' brought back enough men with them to make +their persuasion plenty urgent. But the herders ain't takin' any chances +of allowin' the other side to better their hand, an' when, one night, a +cowpuncher tries to rush it, they pots him as pretty as you please. The +cook, who's cuddlin' his Winchester at the time, fires at the flash and +disposes o' the herder, sort o' evenin' matters up. This leaves only one +cowpuncher and the cook. There's still three men at the herders' camp. + +"Then the cook, he indooces a bullet to become sufficient intimate with +one o' the herder's anatomy, but gits a hole in the leg himself an' is +laid up. The other cowpuncher runs the gauntlet an' gits out safe. He +hikes back the next day with a bunch o' boys, an' they follows up the +herders an' wipes out that camp for fair, an' stampedes the herd over +the nearest canyon. Then they circles back to the coulee to pick up the +cook. + +"When they gits there, they surely finds themselves up against evidences +of a tragedy. The cook, he's lyin' on the floor of the shack, dead as a +nail, an' near him is the kid, who's still holdin' a table-knife in his +hand, but who's lyin' unconscious from a wound in the head. The way they +dopes it out, there's been a free-for-all fight in the place between the +two remainin' herders an' the wounded cook, an' it looks some as if the +kid had tried to help his dad by jabbin' at the legs o' the herders with +a knife and been booted in the side o' the head to keep him quiet." + +"How old was the youngster, then, Bob-Cat?" asked Wilbur. + +"Seven or eight, I guess, maybe not so much," replied the other, "a +nice, bright little kid, so I've heard. But there was somethin' broke, I +reckon, by the blow he had, an' he never got over it. The boys took him +back to the ranch an' doctored him the best they knew how, but they was +buckin' fate an' had to quit, lettin' the kid git better or worse as it +might turn out." + +"But where does Rifle-Eye come in?" + +"This way. Just before round-up, Rifle-Eye comes along, showin' he has +the whole story salted down, though where he larned it gits me, and +proposes that sence it was the sheepmen that injured the lad, it's up to +them to look after him. At first the boys objects, sayin' that the kid +was a cowpuncher's kid, but Rifle-Eye convinces 'em that the youngster's +locoed for fair, that he's likely to stay that way for good an' all, and +sence they agrees they can't ever make anythin' out of him, they lets +him go. + +"Then Rifle-Eye, he takes this unfortunate kid to the man that owned +the sheep. He's a big owner, this man, and runs thirty or forty herds. +The old hunter--this was all before he was a Ranger, you know--he puts +it right up to the sheep-owner, who's a half-Indian, by the way, an' +tells him that he's got to look after the boy. The old skinflint says +'No,' and this here, as I was sayin', is the only time that any one ever +turned down old Rifle-Eye." + +"And what happened to the boy?" queried Wilbur. + +"The old hunter tries to shame this here sheep-owner into doin' the +right thing, but he didn't have any more shame in him than a turkey +buzzard; an' then he tries to bluff him an' says he'll make him keep the +kid, but the old sinner jest whined around an' wouldn't give any sort o' +satisfaction at all. So Rifle-Eye, he shakes the dust o' that house +off'n his feet so good an' hard that he mighty nearly shakes the nails +out of his boot-heels, an' hunts up a legal shark. Then an' there he +adopts this half-witted youngster, an' has kep' him ever sence." + +"How long ago was this?" + +"Fifteen years an' more, I reckon. The kid's big now, an' strong as a +bull moose, but he's a long way from bein' right in his head. He lives +up in the woods, a piece back here, an' I reckon you'll find Rifle-Eye +there as often as you will at his own cabin further along the range, +although he never sleeps indoors at either place." + +"Never sleeps indoors?" + +"That's a straight string. He's got a decent enough shack where the boy +is, but as soon as it gits dark, old Rifle-Eye he jest makes a pile o' +cedar boughs, builds up a fire, an' goes to sleep. For fifty years he +ain't slept under a roof summer or winter, an' when once he was in a +town over-night, which was about the boy, as I was tellin' ye, he had to +get up an' go on the roof to sleep. Lucky," added Bob-Cat with a grin, +"it was a flat roof." + +"Fifty years is a long time," commented the boy. + +"Old Rifle-Eye ain't any spring chicken. He shouldered a musket in the +Civil War, an' durin' the Indian mix-ups was generally found floatin' +around wherever the fun was thickest. He was mighty close friends with +the Pacific scout, old 'Death-on-th'-Trail,' who handed in his time at +Portland not long ago." + +"Handed in his time?" questioned Wilbur, then, as the meaning of the +phrase flashed upon him, "oh, yes, I see, you mean he died." + +"Sure, pard, died. You ought ter git Rifle-Eye Bill to spin you some +yarns about 'Death-on-th'-Trail.' He'll deny that he's any shakes +himself, but he'll talk about his old campmate forever." + +The cowboy pointed with his hand to a long, low group of buildings that +had just come within sight. + +"See, Wilbur," he said, "there's the Double Bar J." + + +[Illustration: HOW YOUNG FORESTS ARE DESTROYED. + +Showing the way in which sheep and goats, having cropped the grass +close, will attack undergrowth. + +_Photographs by U. S. Forest Service._] + + +[Illustration: WHERE SHEEP ARE ALLOWED. + +Example of meadow stretches in midst of heavily forested mountain +slopes. + +_Photograph by U. S. Forest Service._] + + + + +CHAPTER IV + +PICKING A LIVELY BRONCHO + + +On seeing the ranch, Bob-Cat and Wilbur had put their ponies to a burst +of speed and in a few minutes they reached the corral. The buildings, +while comfortable enough, were far from pretentious, and even their +strangeness scarcely made up to the boy for the lack of the picturesque. +Then, of course, the fact that the cattle at that time of year were +scattered all over the range and consequently that none of them were in +sight, rendered it still less like his ideal of a cattle ranch, where he +had half expected to see thousands of long-horned cattle tossing their +heads the while that cowboys galloped around them shouting and firing +off pistols. + +In contrast with this, the dwelling, the bunk-house, the cooking shack, +and the other frame sheds, all of the neutral gray that unpainted wood +becomes when exposed to the weather, seemed very unexciting indeed. But +when the lad turned to the corral, he felt that there was compensation +there. Several hundred horses were in the enclosure, of many colors and +breeds, but the greater part of them Indian ponies, or containing a +strain of the mustang, and smaller and shaggier than the horses he had +been accustomed to ride in his Illinois home. + +The boy turned to his companion, his eyes shining with excitement. + +"Do you suppose that I can buy any of those horses that I want to?" he +said. + +"If you're totin' along a pile of dinero, you might," was the reply, +"but there's a few cayuses in there that would surely redooce a big roll +o' bills to pretty skinny pickin's. For example, this little bay I'm +ridin' now ain't any special wonder, an' maybe he's only worth about +fifty dollars, but you can't buy him for five hundred. I reckon, though, +you c'n trot away with most of 'em in there for ninety or a hundred +dollars apiece." + +"I hadn't expected to pay more than seventy or seventy-five," said +Wilbur, his native shrewdness coming to the front, "and I think I ought +to be able to pick up a good horse or two for that, don't you think?" + +"There's allers somethin' that ain't worth much to be got cheap," said +the cowboy, "but I don't look friendly none on payin' a cheap price for +a horse. Speakin' generally, there's somethin' that every feller likes a +whole lot, an' out here, where domestic life ain't our chief play, it's +mostly a horse. Leastways, when I hit the long trail, I'll be just as +sorry to leave some ponies behind as I will humans." + +"A horse can be a great chum," assented Wilbur. "So can a dog." + +"No dogs in mine," said Bob-Cat emphatically, "they reminds me too much +o' sheep. But when it comes to a horse, I tell ye, there's a lot more in +the deal than buyin' an animal to carry you; there's buyin' somethin' +that all the money in the world can't bring you sometimes--an' that's a +friend." + +Wilbur waited a moment without reply, and then the cowboy, deliberately +changing the topic to cloak any strain of sentiment which he thought he +might have been betrayed into showing, continued: + +"How about saddles?" + +"I'd been thinking about that," replied the boy, "and I thought I'd wait +until I got out here before deciding. You can't use an English +saddle-tree, of course, and I hate it anyway, and one like yours is too +big. Those lumbering Mexican saddles always look to me as if they were +as big a load for a little pony to carry as a man." + +"Sure, they're heavy. But you can't do any ropin' without them. If you +try 'n' rope on a small saddle the girth'll pretty near cut a pony in +two. But you ain't got any ropin' to do, so I sh'd think an army +saddle-tree would be about right. There's Rifle-Eye Bill comin' out of +the bunk-house now. Ask him. He'll know." + +Wilbur looked up, and saw emerging from the door of the bunk-house a +tall, gaunt mountaineer. He strolled over to the corral with a long, +loose-jointed stride. + +"Got him, all right, Bob-Cat, did you?" he said in a measured drawl, +then, turning to the boy, added: "Glad to see you, son." + +"I've been hearing all about you, sir," answered Wilbur, "and I'm +awfully glad to meet you here." He was about to dismount, but noting +that Bob-Cat had merely thrown a leg over the horn of his saddle, he +stayed where he was. + +The old Ranger looked him over critically and closely, so that Wilbur +felt himself flushing under the direct gaze, though he met the clear +gray eye of his new acquaintance without flinching. Presently the +latter turned to the range-rider. + +"What do you think of him?" he asked in a slow, curiously commanding +way. + +Bob-Cat squirmed uneasily. + +"You is sure annoyin'," he said in an aggrieved manner, "askin' me to go +on record so plumb sudden. I'm no mind-reader." + +There was a pause, but the Ranger quietly waited. + +"It's embarrassin'," said Bob-Cat, "to try an' trot out a verdic' on +snap-jedgment. I don't know." + +Rifle-Eye, quite unperturbed, looked at him steadily and inquiringly. + +"You know what you think," he said. + +"He's sure green," replied the cowboy, shrugging his shoulders in +protest, "an' he ain't much more humble-minded than a hen that's jest +laid an egg of unusooal size, but I reckon he's got the makin's." + +"It's a good thing to be green," said the old Ranger thoughtfully, +"nothin' grows much after it's dry, Bob-Cat. The heart's got to be green +anyway. Ye git hard to bend an' easy to break when ye're gettin' old." + +"Then it's a cinch you'll never get old," promptly responded the other. + +But the mountaineer continued talking, half to himself: + +"An' he's too sure of himself! Wa'al, he's young yet. I've seen a pile +o' sickness in my day, Bob-Cat, but that's about the easiest one to cure +there is." + +"What is?" + +"Bein' young. Well, son, ye'd better turn the pony in." + +The boy dismounted, and, half in pique at the dubious character given +him by Bob-Cat and half in thanks for the meeting at the station and the +ride, he turned to the cowboy, and said: + +"I'm glad I've 'got the makings' anyway, and I'm much obliged, Bob-Cat, +for all the yarns you told me on the trail. But, next time I come to the +ranch I'll try not to be as green, and I know I'll not be as young." + +The cowboy laughed. + +"It's no use tryin' to dodge Rifle-Eye," he said. "You stand about as +good a chance as if you was tryin' to sidestep a blizzard or parryin' +the charge from a Gatlin' gun. If he asks a question you can gamble +every chip in your pile that you're elected, and you've got to ante up +with the answer whether it suits your hand or no." + +Wilbur, following the suggestion of the Ranger, unsaddled his pony, +turned him into the corral, and hung his saddle on the fence. Then +together they went up to the house, where Wilbur met the boss, and after +a few moments' chat they returned to the corral. + +As the lad had come to the ranch especially for the purpose of buying a +couple of ponies, he was anxious to transact the business as quickly as +possible, and together with Bob-Cat and Rifle-Eye he scanned the horses +in the enclosure, endeavoring to display, as he did so, what little +knowledge of horseflesh he possessed. After the boy had commented on +several, Rifle-Eye pointed out first one and then a second which he had +previously decided on as being the best animals for the boy. But +Wilbur's eye was attracted to a fine sorrel, and, turning to Rifle-Eye, +he said decidedly: + +"I want that one!" + +The old Ranger, remarking quietly that it was a fine horse, but not +suitable to the purpose for which Wilbur wanted the animal, passed on to +the discussion of several other ponies near by, teaching the boy to +discern the fine points of a horse, not for beauty, but for service. + +But as soon as he had finished speaking, after a purely perfunctory +assent, Wilbur burst out again: + +"But, Rifle-Eye, I really want that sorrel most." + +"You really think you want him?" + +"Yes!" + +"You wouldn't if you knew a little more about horses, son," said the +Ranger. "It's all right to be sure what you want, but what you want is +to be sure that what you want is right." + +"Oh, I'm sure I'm right," answered the boy confidently. + +"You can't be too careful choosin' a horse," commented Rifle-Eye. +"Choosin' a horse is a good deal like pickin' out a sugar pine for +shakes. You know what shakes are?" + +"No, Rifle-Eye," answered the boy. + +"They're long, smooth, split sheets of wood that the old-timers used for +shingles. There's lots of sugar pine that'll make the finest kind o' +lumber, an' all of it's good for fuel, but there ain't one tree in a +hundred that'll split naturally an' easily into shakes. An' there ain't +more'n one man in a hundred as can tell when a tree will do. But when +you do get one just right, it's worth any ten other trees. An' the pine +that's good ain't because it's a pretty tree to look at, or an easy one +to cut down, or because of any other reason than that the grain's right. +Same way with a horse. It ain't for his looks, nor for his speed, nor +because he's easy to ride, nor for his strength you want him, but +because his grain's right." + +"Well, I'm sure that sorrel looks just right." + +"Do looks always tell?" + +"Oh, I can always tell a horse by his looks," replied Wilbur boastfully. +"Anyhow, I want him." + +"Persistent?" chuckled Bob-Cat, who was standing by enjoying every word, +"why, cockle-burs ain't nothin' to him." + +"But, supposin'," the old scout began gently, "I told you that the +sorrel was the worst you could have, not the best?" + +"But he ain't," broke in Bob-Cat, who could not bear to hear a friend's +pony harshly criticised, "that's one of Bluey's string, an' he allers +had good horses." + +"There--you hear," said Wilbur triumphantly. + +"I said--for the boy, Bob-Cat," answered the old Ranger firmly. + +"I--I suppose you would have good reasons," said Wilbur, answering the +old scout's question, "but I want him just the same, and I don't see why +I can't buy him, if he's for sale. It's my money!" + +"Sure, it's your money. An' the sorrel's a good horse," said the cowboy, +to whom the persistence of Wilbur was giving great delight. + +The Ranger slowly turned his head in silent rebuke, but although Bob-Cat +was conscious of it, he was enjoying the fun too much to stop. + +"You know he couldn't ride the sorrel, Bob-Cat," said Rifle-Eye +reproachfully. + +"But I can ride him, I know," said Wilbur. "I'm a good rider, really I +am. And he looks gentle, besides. He is gentle, isn't he, Bob-Cat?" + +"He's playful enough," was the reply, "some like a kitten, an' he surely +is plenty restless in his habits. But where he shines is nerves. Why, +pard, he c'd make a parcel of females besieged by a mouse look as if +they was posin' for a picter, they'd be so still by comparison. But he's +gentle, all right." + +"I wouldn't want to try it if he was vicious, Rifle-Eye," said the boy +appealingly, "but I really can ride, and he looks like a good horse." + +"Are you buyin' this horse for your own pleasure or the work o' the +Service? You're goin' to do your ridin' on my range, an' I reckon you'll +admit I have some say." + +"But I can break him to the work of the Service. Do let me try him!" +Wilbur's persistence appeared in every look and word. "I don't see why I +can't try, anyway, and then if I can't do it, there's no harm done." + +"Can you throw a rope?" queried the Ranger. + +"No," returned the boy promptly. "I never learned. But I can try." + +"If you can't rope, how do you expect to saddle him? These ain't farm +horses that you c'n harness or saddle while they eat oats out of your +hand." He turned to the cowboy. "Can the sorrel be saddled without +ropin'?" + +"Bluey does," was the reply, "but I don't know that he'll let me." + +"Won't you saddle him for me, Bob-Cat? I know I can ride him if I have a +fair show." + +The range-rider turned to the old Ranger. + +"How about it?" he said. "The kid'll hunt leather for a while and then +eat grass. But there's nothin' mean in the sorrel, an' he won't get +hurt." + +"I'll ride him," said Wilbur stoutly. + +"You might, at that," rejoined Bob-Cat. "He's a game little sport, +Rifle-Eye," he added, turning to the tall figure beside him, "why not +let him play his hand out? You can't be dead sure how the spots will +fall. Sure, I've twice seen an Eastern maverick driftin' into a faro +game, an' by fools' luck cleanin' up the bank." + +"If a man's a fool who depends on luck, what kind of a fool is the man +who depends on fools' luck? You ain't playin' a square deal, Bob-Cat, in +supportin' the lad to go on askin' to do what ain't good for him. But +seein' you force my hand, why, you'd better go ahead now." + +"I didn't force your hand none," replied the other, "I was merely +throwin' out a suggestion." + +"If I refuse the boy somethin' another man says is all right, doesn't +that make it look as ef it was meanness in me? An' he goin' to work with +me, too! What's the use o' sayin' that you ain't forcin' my hand? Givin' +advice, Bob-Cat, ain't any go-as-you-please proposition; it's got to be +thought out. Feelin's don't allers point the right trail to jedgment, +an', as often as not, the blazes lead the wrong way. You're all right +in your own way, Bob-Cat, but you're shy on roots, and your idees gets a +windfall every time an extra puff comes along. You're like the trees +settlers forgets about when they cuts on the outside of a forest an' +ruins the inside." + +"How is that?" asked Wilbur, anxious to divert the stream of Rifle-Eye's +criticism from the cowboy, who had got himself into trouble defending +him. "I didn't know there was any difference between a tree on the +outside of a forest and one on the inside." + +"Wa'al, then, I guess you're due to learn right now. If there's a tree +of any size, standin' out by itself on a mountain side, with plenty of +leaves, an' a big wind comes along, you c'n see easy enough that she +presents a heap of surface to the wind. An' when a mountain gale gets up +and blows fer fair, there's a pressure of air on that tree amountin' to +several tons." + +"Tons?" queried Bob-Cat incredulously. + +"Tons," answered the old Banger. "A tree needs to have some strength in +order to hold up its end. There's three ways o' doin' it. One is by +havin' a lot more give in the fibers, more elastic like, so that the +tree'll bend in the wind an' not get snapped off; another is by puttin' +out a lot o' roots an' shovin' 'em in deep an' at the same time havin' a +trunk that's plenty stout; an' the third is the thickenin' o' the trunk, +right near the ground, where the greatest part o' the strain comes. An' +all the various kinds o' trees works this out in different ways. But +nothin's ever wasted, an'--" + +"Oh, I see now," broke in Wilbur. "You're going to say that the trees +which don't grow on the outside of a forest don't have to waste vitality +into these forms of resistance." + +"That's right. A tree that grows in a ravine, where there is little +chance of a high wind, an' where light is scarce an' hard to get, such a +tree will have a shallow root system an' a spindlin' trunk, all the +growth havin' gone to height, an' a tree in the center of a forest is +often the same way. The wind can't git through the forest, an' so the +trees don't need ter prop themselves against it." + +"Talk about yer eddicated trees!" ejaculated the cowboy, "which colleges +is a fool to them." + +"It's true enough, Bob-Cat, just the same. But supposin' a belt on the +outside o' the forest is cut down, then the inner trees, thus exposed, +haven't any proper weapons to fight the wind, an' they go down." + +"Doesn't it take a very high wind to blow down some of these big trees?" +asked Wilbur. + +"Some kinds it does," said the Ranger, "but there's others that go down +pretty easy, lodge-pole pine, fer instance. But a tree doesn't have to +be blown down to be ruined. Even if a branch is blown off--an' you know +how often that happens--insects and fungi get into the wound of the tree +and decay follows." + +"But you can't persuade the wind none," objected Bob-Cat. "If she's +goin' to blow, she's goin' to blow, an' that's all there is to it." + +"No, it ain't any use arguin' with a fifty-mile breeze, that's sure. But +you can keep the inside trees from bein' blown down by leavin' uncut the +deep-rooted trees on the outside. If you wanted a good big bit of +timber, an' could cut it from a tree on the outside o' the forest, you'd +take it first because it was handiest, wouldn't you?" + +"I sure would." + +"Yet, you see, it would ha' been the worst thing you could do. An' as I +started out to say, that's where you get in wrong doin' things without +thinkin'. Just like this ridin' idee to-day. By urgin' on the lad's +nateral desire you make it hard fer him an' fer me." + +"All right, Rifle-Eye," said Bob-Cat good-humoredly, "you've got me. I +reckon I passes up this hand entire." He nodded and began to stroll +away. + +But Wilbur called him back. + +"Oh, Bob-Cat," he cried, "aren't you going to saddle him for me now?" + +The cowboy turned and grinned. + +"Which you'd make tar an' feathers look sick for stickin' to a thing." +Then, reading a grudging assent from Rifle-Eye, he continued: "Yep, I'll +go an' saddle," and sauntered into the corral. + +In a few minutes he came back, leading the sorrel. He was saddled and +Bob-Cat had shortened up the stirrups. Wilbur jumped forward eagerly, +put his foot in the stirrup, and was up like a flash. The sorrel never +moved. The boy shook the reins a little and clucked his tongue against +his teeth without any apparent result. Then Wilbur dug his heels into +the pony's ribs. + +Things began to happen. The sorrel went straight up in the air with all +four feet, coming down with the legs stiff, giving Wilbur a jar which +set every nerve twitching as though he had got an electric shock. But +he kept his seat. Then the sorrel began pacing forward softly with an +occasional sudden buck, each of which nearly threw him off and at most +of which he had to "hunt leather," or in other words, catch hold of the +saddle with his hands. Still he kept his seat. + +Finding that these simpler methods did not avail, the sorrel began a +little more aggressive bucking, fore and aft, "sun-fishing" and +"weaving," and once or twice rearing up so straight that Wilbur was +afraid the sorrel would fall over backwards on him, and he had heard of +riders being killed that way. But he stole a glance at Rifle-Eye, and, +seeing that the old Ranger was looking on quite unperturbed, he realized +that there was no great danger. And still he kept his seat. + +But as the sorrel warmed up to his work the boy began to realize that he +had not the faintest chance of being able to wear the pony down. It was +now only a question of how long he could stick on. He knew he would be +done if the sorrel started to roll, but as yet the beast had shown no +inclination that way. But as the bucks grew quicker and more jerky, +Wilbur began to wonder within himself whether he would prefer to pitch +over the pony's head or slide off over his tail. Suddenly, with a bound, +the pony went up in the air and gave a double wriggle as he came down +and Wilbur found himself on the ground before he knew what had happened. +The sorrel, who, as Bob-Cat had said, was a gentle beast, stood quietly +by, and the boy always afterwards declared that he could hear the horse +chuckle. + +The boy got up abashed and red in the face, because several other +ranchmen had come up and were enjoying his confusion, but he tried to +put a good face on it, and said: + +"That's a bucker for fair." + +"No," responded Bob-Cat, "that isn't bucking," and he swung himself into +the saddle. + +The sorrel commenced plunging and rearing again, this time with greater +vigor. But Bob-Cat, taking a little bag of tobacco and some cigarette +papers out of his pocket, quietly poured out some of the tobacco on the +paper, rolled it carefully, and then lighted it, keeping his seat on the +bucking broncho quite easily the while. This done, he dismounted, +turning to the boy as he did so. + +"She's easy enough. There's lots o' the boys, like Bluey, fer example, +who really can ride," he continued, "that 'd just split with laughin' +at the idee o' me showin' off in the saddle. I c'n rope with the best o' +them, but I'm no buster. And some o' these here critters you've got to +ride. See that big roan in there?" + +Wilbur followed the direction of his finger and nodded. + +"They call her 'Squealin' Bess,' an' you couldn't pay me to get on her +back. Bluey c'n ride her; he's done it twice; but you c'n bet your last +blue chip that he doesn't do it fer fun." + +Wilbur turned to the old Ranger who had been standing silently by +through the performance. + +"I'm much obliged, Rifle-Eye," he said, "but I'd like to buy that sorrel +just the same and learn to ride him." + +For the first time the old Ranger smiled. + +"You're somethin' like a crab, Wilbur," he said, "that grabs a stick +viciously with his claw an' won't let go even when he's hauled up out o' +the water. You c'n buy the sorrel if you want to, but he won't be any +use to you up in the forest. Broncho-bustin' is an amusement you c'n +keep for your leisure hours. But I'm thinkin', son, from what I know of +the work you'll have to do, that you'll mostly be tired enough after a +day's work to want to rest a while. But if you're sot, I s'pose you're +sot. An' I'm old enough to know that it's no use hammerin' a mule when +he's got his forelegs spread. Get whatever horses you like, I've got a +saddle for you up at the bunk-house, an' you c'n meet me beyond the +corral sunup to-morrow mornin'." + +He nodded to the boys and turned on his heel, walking off in the +direction of the river. Seeing that the fun was over the boys scattered, +and Wilbur, finding that his friend Bob-Cat was going to stay at the +ranch over-night, attached himself to him. But as soon as supper was +over, the lad, finding himself stiffer than he had expected from his +battle with the sorrel, partly because he had not been riding constantly +for a couple of years, was glad to go to his bunk, listening to the +breezy Western talk of the men and the yarns of cattle and of horses +that they had to tell. He hardly knew that he had fallen asleep when +Bob-Cat shook him, saying: + +"Better tumble up, bub. Rifle-Eye is sure an early bird. He's some +chanticleer, believe me. He's plumb convinced that if he ain't awake and +up to greet the sun, it won't rise." + +Wilbur laughed and "tumbled up" accordingly. + +At breakfast, over the plentiful food served on tin plates and in tin +mugs, Rifle-Eye was entirely silent, uttering never a word and paying no +attention to any allusion about horses. Right after the meal Wilbur went +down to the corral, saddled one of his two new horses, put a leading +bridle on the other, and, after bidding Bob-Cat and the boys "Good-by," +started for the point where he was to meet the Ranger. + +As he rode up, the old frontiersman scanned carefully the two horses the +boy had with him and his face cleared. + +"What horses are those?" he asked. + +"Oh, just a couple I got for the forest work," answered Wilbur with +overdone carelessness. + +They rode on in silence a few rods, then the old Ranger spoke again. + +"Don't ever be afraid o' lettin' on you've made a mistake, son," he +said; "the more mistakes you make the more you'll know. There's only one +thing to remember, don't make the same mistake twice." + +"I'll try not," said the boy. + +The Ranger reined up beside the lad, and, reaching out his long, gaunt +hand, patted the neck of the pony on which Wilbur was riding. + +"They're half-sisters, those two," he said. "I raised 'em from colts +myself. I rode the mother over these very trails, many and many's the +time. This one is called Kit, after her." + +Wilbur flushed at the remembrance of the manner in which before he had +slighted the old scout's choice. + +"Oh, Rifle-Eye," he said penitently, "if I'd only known!" + +"You'll prize them more now," the Ranger said. + + +[Illustration: COWBOYS AT THE ROUND-UP. + +The riders of the Double Bar J Ranch bunching up their cattle in the +National Forest. + +_Photograph by U. S. Forest Service._] + + + + +CHAPTER V + +A TUSSLE WITH A WILD-CAT + + +"Bob-Cat was telling me," said Wilbur, as with the Ranger he rode +through the arid and silvered grayness of the Mohave desert and reached +the foothill country, "that before you entered the Service you were +pretty well known as a hunter." + +"Wa'al, son," the mountaineer replied, "I reckon I've done some kind o' +huntin' for fifty years on end. But there's not much huntin' in this +part o' the country." + +"No," said Wilbur, looking around him, "I guess there isn't." + +The road ran along a little gully with a small stream shaded by scrub +oak, but arising from this and similar gullies, in great rounded bosses, +heaved the barren slopes, the grass already turning yellow and too +sparse to cloak the red earth below. + +"Yet," said Rifle-Eye, pointing with his finger as he spoke, "there's a +desert fox." + +Wilbur strained his eyes to see, but the unfamiliar growth of cacti, +sage-brush, palo verde, and the dusty-miller plants made quick vision +difficult. In a moment, however, he caught sight of the little +reddish-gray animal running swiftly and almost indistinguishable from +its surroundings. + +"But up there?" queried the boy, pointing in front of them. The road +wound onward toward the middle Sierras, thickly wooded with oak and +digger pine, and, of course, the chapparal, and towering to the clouds +rose the mighty serrated peaks of the range, where magnificent forests +of pine, fir, and cedar swept upwards to the limits of eternal snow. "Up +there the hunting must be wonderful." + +"Among the mount'ns!" said the old hunter slowly. "Wa'al, up there, you +see, is home." + +"You certainly can't complain about the looks of your home, then," said +the boy, "for that's just about the finest I've ever seen." + +"'There's no place like home,'" quoted Rifle-Eye quietly, "but I ain't +ever feelin' that my home's so humble. It ain't a question of its bein' +good enough fer me, it's a question o' whether I'm good enough fer it." + +"It makes quite a house," said Wilbur, following the old mountaineer's +line of thought. + +"I've never lived in any smaller house than that," responded Rifle-Eye, +"an' I reckon now I never will. There's some I know that boasts of +ownin' a few feet o' space shut in by a brick wall. Not for me. My house +is as far as my eyes c'n see, an' from the ground to the sky." + +Wilbur was silent for a moment, feeling the thrill of Nature in the old +man's speech. + +"It's to be my home, too," he said gently. + +Rifle-Eye smiled at the lad. + +"I don't know that I'm quite the oldest inhabitant," he said, "but I +sure am the oldest Ranger in the Service, an' all I c'n say is, 'Make +yerself to home.'" + +"All right," said Wilbur promptly, "I'll take that as an official +welcome from the Sierras, and I will. But," he added, "you were going to +tell me about your hunting. I should think it would be great sport." + +"Son," said Rifle-Eye somewhat sharply, "I never killed a harmless +critter 'for sport,' as you call it, in my life." + +"But I thought," gasped Wilbur in astonishment, "that you were hunting +nearly all the time, before you started in as Ranger." + +"So I was," was the quiet reply. + +"But--but I don't quite see--" Wilbur stopped lamely. + +"I said before," resumed the old hunter, "that I never killed a harmless +critter onless I had to. Neither have I. Varmints, o' course, is a +different matter. I've shot plenty o' them, an' once in a while I've had +ter kill fer food. But just shootin' for the sake o' shootin' is the +trick of a coward or a fool or a tenderfoot or a mixture of all three. +It's plumb unnecessary, an' it's dead wrong." + +"You mean shooting deer and so forth?" + +"I mean just that, son, if the shootin's only fer antlers an' what these +here greenhorns calls 'trophies.' If venison is needed, why, I ain't got +nothin' to say. A man's life is worth more than a deer's when he needs +food, but a man's conceit ain't worth more than a deer's life." + +"How about bear, then, and trapping for skins?" asked the boy. + +"I said 'harmless critters.' Now, a bear ain't harmless, leastways, not +as you'd notice it. Bear will take young stock, an' they're particularly +partial to young pig, an' down among these here foothills we've been +passin' through there's a lot o' shiftless hog-rustlers as depends on +pork fer a livin'. As for bearskins, why, o' course you use the pelts. +What's the idee o' leavin' them around? It ain't any kind o' good tryin' +to spare an animal's feelin's when he's plenty good an' dead. But I've +made this here section of the Sierras pretty hot for wolves." + +"I heard down at the ranch," the boy remarked, "that you had bagged +forty-seven wolves last season." + +"I did have a good year," assented the Ranger, "an', of course, I can't +give much time to it. But I reckon I've disposed of more'n a thousand +wolves in my day, one way and another. An' as I look at it, that's +makin' pretty good use of time." + +"Are wolves worse than bear?" queried Wilbur surprisedly. + +"They do a lot more harm in the long run. Cattlemen reckon that a wolf +will get away with about four head a year. Myself, I think that's +pressin' the average some; I'd put it at somewhere between two an' +three. But it's generally figured at four." + +"I didn't know that wolves, lone wolves, would attack cattle." + +"It's calves an' yearlin's mostly that they go for. It ain't often that +you see a wolf tacklin' anythin' bigger'n a two-year-old. But if you +figure that a wolf gets rid o' four head a year, an' inflicts himself on +a sufferin' community for a space of about ten years, that's somewhere +in the neighborhood o' forty head. A thousand wolves means about forty +thousand head of cattle, or pretty nigh a million dollars' worth of +stock." + +"The beef you've saved by killing wolves," commented Wilbur, "would feed +quite a town." + +"Forty thousand is a tolerable sized bunch. An' that's without figurin' +on the wolf cubs there would have been durin' all those years from the +older ones whose matrimonial expectations I disappointed plenty abrupt. +An' it makes a pile o' difference to cattlemen to know they c'n send a +herd grazin' on the national forest, an' be fairly sure they won't lose +much by varmints." + +"It surely must," said the boy. "But I hadn't realized that wolves were +such a danger." + +"I wouldn't go to say that they was dangerous. An old gray wolf, if you +corner him, is surly an' savage, an' will fight anythin' at any odds. +Out on the Barren Grounds they're bad, but around the Sierras I ain't +heard o' them attackin' humans but twice, an' they was children, lost in +the woods. I figure the kids had wandered around till they petered out, +an' then, when they were exhausted, the wolves got 'em. But I've never +heard of a wolf attackin' a man anywhere in the Rockies." + +"But I thought wolves ran in packs often." + +"Not in the United States, son, so far as I've heard of. I knew a +Russian trapper, though, who meandered down this way from Alaska in the +early days. He used to spin a lot o' yarns about the Siberian wolves +runnin' in packs an' breakfastin' freely off travelers. But he seemed to +think that it was the horses the wolves were after chiefly, although +they weren't passin' up any toothsome peasant that happened along." + +"And do wolves attack horses here, too?" + +"Not on the trail, that fashion. But they're some partial to colts." + +"How about coyotes?" + +"They're mean critters an' they give a pesky lot o' trouble, although +they bother sheep more'n cattle. But a few husky dogs will keep coyotes +at a distance, though they'll watch a chance an' sneak off with a +young lamb or any sheep what is hurt an' has fallen behind the herd. But +they don't worry us here such a great deal, they keep mostly to the +plains an' the prairie country." + +Saying this, the Ranger pulled up at the door of a shack lying a short +distance from the road and gave a hail. Immediately there stepped from +the door one of the largest women Wilbur had ever seen. Though her hair +was gray, and she was angular and harsh of feature, yet, standing well +over six feet and quite erect, she seemed to fit in well under the +shadow of the Sierras. + +"I reckon you've some bacon, Susan?" was the Ranger's greeting as he +swung himself off his horse. Wilbur followed suit. + +"There's somethin' awful would have to happen to a pile o' hogs," was +the reply, "when you came by here an' couldn't get a bite." + +By this time a swarm of children had come out, and Wilbur, seeing that +the Ranger had simply resigned his horse into the hands of one of the +larger boys, did likewise and followed his guide into the house. + +"I wasn't sure if I'd find you here, Susan," said the old scout when +they were seated at a simple meal. "I thought you were goin' to move +into town." + +"I did," she replied. "I stayed thar jest two weeks. An' they was two +weeks o' misery. These yar towns is too crowded for me. Now, hogs, I've +been used to 'em all my life, an' I don't mind how many's around. But it +only takes a few folks to make me feel as if I was real crowded." + +"Do you prefer hogs to people?" questioned Wilbur, smiling. + +"Not one by one, bub, o' course," came the slow reply, "but when it +comes to a crowd o' both, I'm kind o' lost with folks. Everybody's busy +an' they don't care nothin' about you, an' it makes you-all feel no +'count. An' the noise is bewilderin'. Have you ever been in a city?" + +Wilbur admitted that he had. + +"Well, then," she said, "ye'll know what I mean. But out here, there's +more room, like, an' I know I'm bigger'n my hogs." Following which, +Susan launched into a long description of her favorite porkers, which +continued almost without cessation until it was time for the two to be +on the trail again. + +"That's a queer woman," said Wilbur when they were in the saddle again +and out of hearing of the shack. + +"She's a good one," answered the Ranger. "Her son, by the way, is a +member o' the legislature, an' a good lawyer, an' she's made him what he +is. But she ain't the city kind." + +"Not with all those children," said Wilbur. "She'd have to hire a block +to keep them all." + +"Those ain't her own children," replied the Ranger, "not a bit of it. If +a youngster gits orphaned or laid up she just says 'Pork's plenty, send +'em to me.' An' I generally do. Other folks do, too, an' quite a few o' +them hev been brought her by the 'little white lady' you've been hearing +about. She's fonder o' children than any woman I ever saw, is Susan. But +she won't talk kids, she'll only talk hogs." + +"That's pretty fine work, I think," said the boy. "But I should imagine +the youngsters wouldn't have much of a chance. It isn't any better than +a backwoods life, away out there." + +The old Ranger, usually so slow and deliberate in his movements, turned +on him like a flash. + +"The meanest thing in this world," he said, "is not bein' able to see or +willin' to see what some one else has done for you. There ain't a home +in all these here United States that don't owe its happiness to the +backwoodsman. You can't make a country civilized by sittin' in an office +an' writin' the word 'civilized' on the map. Some one has got to get out +an' do it, an' keep on doin' it till it's done. It was the man who had +nothin' in the world but a wife, a rifle, an' an ax who made America." + +"I had forgotten for the moment," said the boy, a little taken off his +feet by the sudden energy and the flashing speech of the usually +impassive mountaineer. + +"So does mighty near every one else 'forget for the moment.' But if the +backwoodsman forgot for the moment he was likely to be missin' his +scalp-lock, or if he tried to take a holiday it meant his family would +go hungry. He never forgot his children or his children's children, but +they're none too fond o' rememberin' him. + +"Everythin' you have now, he first showed you how. If he wanted a house, +he had to build it; if he wanted bread, he had to raise the grain, +grind, an' bake it; if he wanted clothin', he had to get skins, cure, +an' sew 'em. But he never had to hunt for honor an' for courage; he +brought those with him; an' he didn't have to get any book-larnin' to +teach him how to make his cabin a home, an' his wife an' his children +were allers joys to him, not cares. They were men! An' what do you +reckon made 'em men?" + +"The hardships of the life, I suppose," hazarded Wilbur. + +"Not a bit of it; it was the forest. The forest was their nurse in +infancy, their playmate when they were barefooted kids runnin' around +under the trees, their work by day, an' their home when it was dark. +They lived right down with Nature, an' they larned that if she was +rugged, she was kind. They became rugged an' kind, too. An' that's what +the right sort of American is to this day." + +"A lot of our best statesmen in early days were from the newly cleared +settlements; that's a fact," said Wilbur thoughtfully, "right up to the +Civil War." + +"An' through it!" added the Ranger. "How about Abe Lincoln?" + +Wilbur thought to himself that perhaps "backwoodsman" was not quite a +fair idea of the great President's Illinois upbringing, but he thought +it wiser not to argue the point to no profit. + +"But it's all different now," continued Rifle-Eye a trifle sadly, +"things have changed an' the city's beginnin' to have a bigger hold than +the forest. An' the forest still needs, an' I reckon it allers will +need, the old kind o' men. Once we had to fight tooth an' nail agin the +forest jest to get enough land to live on, an' now we've got to fight +jest as hard for the forest so as there'll be enough of it for what we +need. In this here country you can't ever get away from the +woods-dweller, whether he's backwoodsman or Forester, or whatever you +call him--the man who can depend on himself an' live his life wherever +there's sky overhead an' ground underfoot an' trees between. + +"They're the discoverers of America, too. Oh, yes, they are," he +continued, noting Wilbur's look of contradiction. "It wasn't Columbus or +Amerigo or any o' the floatin' adventurers who first saw a blue splotch +o' land on the horizon that discovered America. It was the men who +conquered the forest, who found all, did all, an' became all that the +life demanded, that really brought into bein' America an' the +Americans." + +The Ranger stopped as suddenly as he had begun, and, touching his horse +lightly with the spur, went on ahead up the trail. Evidently he was +thinking of the old times and the boy had wisdom enough not to disturb +him. As the afternoon drew on the foothills were left behind and the +open road became more and more enclosed, until at last it was simply a +trail through the forest. The shadows were lengthening and it was +drawing on toward evening, when the Ranger halted beside a little +ravine, densely wooded with yellow pine, incense cedar, and white fir. +Wilbur was tired and his horses, fresh to the trail, were showing signs +of fatigue, so he was glad to stop. + +"I don't know how you feel about it," said the Ranger, "but I reckon +I'll camp here. There's a good spring a couple of hundred feet down +stream. But you ain't used to this sort o' thing, an' maybe you'd better +keep on the trail for another half-mile till you come to a little +settlement. Somebody can put you up, I reckon." + +"No need to," said the boy, "I'll camp here with you." + +"Maybe you ain't used to sleepin' on the ground." + +"I guess I can stand it, if you can," replied Wilbur promptly. + +"Wa'al, I reckon I can," said the Ranger, "seein' that I always have an' +always do." + +Wilbur had never camped in the open before without a tent or shelter of +some kind, but he would not for the world have had his Ranger think that +he was in the least disconcerted. Neither, to do him justice, was he, +but rather anticipating the night under the open sky with a good deal of +pleasure. + +After the horses were unsaddled and hobbled, Rifle-Eye told Wilbur to +get the beds ready. The boy, greatly pleased with himself that he knew +how to do this without being told, picked up his ax and started for the +nearest balsam. But he found himself in somewhat of a difficulty. The +white fir grew to a much larger tree than the Balm-of-Gilead he had +known in the East, and the lower branches were tough. So he chopped down +a young tree near, scarcely more than a sapling. + +A moment later he heard the Ranger call to him. + +"How many trees of that size do you reckon you'll want?" he asked. + +"Oh, they're only just saplings," the boy replied, "five or six ought to +do." + +"They'll make five or six fine trees some day, won't they?" queried the +old woodsman. + +"Yes, Rifle-Eye, they will," answered the boy, flushing at his lack of +thoughtfulness. "I'd better take only one, and that a little bigger, +hadn't I?" + +"An' one that's crooked. Always take a tree that isn't goin' to make +good timber when you're not cuttin' for timber." + +Wilbur accordingly felled a small white fir near by, having had his +first practical lesson of forest economy on his own forest, stripped the +tree of its fans or flattest branches and laid them on the ground. A +thickness of about six inches, he found, was enough to make the beds +wonderfully springy and comfortable. + +In the meantime he found that Rifle-Eye was getting a fireplace ready, +using for the purpose some flat stones which lay conveniently near by. +Wilbur, stepping over a tiny rivulet which ran into the creek, noted a +couple of stones apparently just suited for the making of a rough +fireplace and brought them along. The Ranger looked at them. + +"What kind o' stone do you call that?" he asked. + +"Granite," said Wilbur immediately. + +"An' you took them out o' the water?" + +"Yes," answered the boy. + +"An' what happens when you build a fire between granite stones?" + +"I don't know, Rifle-Eye. What does?" + +"They explode sometimes, leastways, when they're wet inside. Don't +forget that," he added as he put the stones aside. "Now," he continued, +"go down to the spring an' fill this pot with water, an' I'll have a +fire goin' an' some grub sizzlin' by the time you get back. The spring +is about two hundred feet downstream and about twenty feet above the +water. You can't miss it." + +Wilbur took the aluminum pot and started for the spring. He had not gone +half the distance when he noted a stout crotched stick such as he had +been used to getting when he camped out in the middle West for the +purpose of hanging the cooking utensils on over the fire. So he picked +it up and carried it along with him. Presently the gurgling of water +told him that he was nearing the spring, and a moment later he saw the +clearing through the trees. But, suddenly, a low snarling met his ears, +and he halted dead at the edge of the clearing. + +There, before him, on the ground immediately beside the spring, crouched +a large wild-cat, the hairy tips of her ears twitching nervously. Under +her claws was a rabbit, evidently just caught, into which the wild-cat +had just sunk her teeth when the approach of the boy was heard. At first +Wilbur could not understand why she had not sprung into the woods with +her prey at the first distant twig-snapping which would betoken his +approach. But as he looked more closely he saw that this was precisely +what the cat had tried to do, but that in the jerk the rabbit had been +caught and partly impaled on a tree root that projected above the +ground, and for the moment the cat could not budge it. + +Wilbur was utterly at a loss to know what to do. He had been told that +wild-cats would never attack any one unless they had been provoked to +fight, and he found himself very unwilling to provoke this particular +specimen. The cat stood still, her eyes narrowed to mere slits, the ears +slightly moving, and the tip of the tail flicking from side to side in +quick, angry jerks. There was menace in every line of the wild-cat's +pose. + +The boy had his revolver with him, but while he had occasionally fired a +six-shooter, he was by no means a crack shot, and he realized that if he +fired at and only wounded the creature he would unquestionably be +attacked. And there was a lithe suppleness in the manner that the +movement of the muscles rippled over the skin that was alarmingly +suggestive of ferocity. Wilbur did not like the looks of it at all. On +the other hand, he had not the slightest intention of going back to the +camp without water. He had come for water, and he would carry water +back, he thought to himself, if a regiment of bob-cats was in the way. + +The old fable that a wild beast cannot stand the gaze of the human eye +recurred to Wilbur's remembrance, and he stood at the edge of the +clearing regarding the cat fixedly. But the snarls only grew the louder. +Wilbur was frightened, and he knew it, and what was more, he felt the +cat knew it with that intuition the wild animals have for recognizing +danger or the absence of danger. She made another effort to drag away +the rabbit, but failing in that, with an angry yowl, with quick jerks +and rending of her powerful jaws began to try to force the rabbit free +from the entangling root, which done, she could carry it into the forest +to devour at leisure. The ease with which those claws and teeth rent +asunder the yielding flesh was an instructive sight for Wilbur, but the +fact that the wild-cat should dare to go on striving to free her prey +instead of slinking away in fright made the boy angry. Besides, he had +come for that water. + +Wilbur decided to advance into the clearing anyway, and then, if the +creature did not stir, he would be so near that he couldn't miss her +with the revolver. As he grew angrier his fear began to leave him. He +took the pot in his left hand, putting the long stick under his arm, +and, drawing his six-shooter, advanced on the cat. He came forward +slowly, but without hesitation. At his second step forward the wild-cat +raised her head, but instead of springing at him, as Wilbur half feared, +she retreated into the woods, leaving her prey, snarling as she went. +Wilbur went boldly forward to the spring, and, thinking that he would +see no more of the cat, put away his revolver. + +Having secured the water, and as he turned to go, however, the boy felt +a sudden impulse to look up. He had not heard a sound, and yet, on a low +branch a few feet above his head, crouched the wild-cat, her eyes +glaring yellow in the waning light. Once again he felt the temptation to +shoot her, but resisted it, through his fear of only wounding the +creature and thus bringing her full fury upon him. + +But it occurred to Wilbur that it was not unlikely that he might have to +come back to the spring a second time for more water, and he did not +wish to risk another encounter. He thought to himself that if he did +return and interrupted the wild-cat a second time he would not escape as +easily as he had on this occasion, and consequently he tried to devise a +means to prevent such meeting. He figured that if he picked up the +rabbit and threw it far into the woods the cat would follow and the path +to the spring would be open. Forgetting for the moment that he could not +expect the angry creature in the tree to divine the honesty of his +intentions, he stooped down and grasped the rabbit by the leg to throw +it into the forest. As he did so, the wild-cat, thinking herself about +to be deprived of her prey, sprang at him. + +With one hand holding the pot of water, which, boy-like, he did not want +to spill, and the other grasping the rabbit, Wilbur was terribly +handicapped. But, by the greatest good fortune, as he stooped, the +crotch of the stick that he was carrying caught the wild-cat under the +body as she launched herself at him from the tree. The stick was +knocked out of the boy's grasp, but it also turned the cat aside, and +she half fell, landing on Wilbur's outstretched leg, instead of on his +neck, which was the objective point in her spring. As her claws ripped +into the soft flesh of his thigh, Wilbur released his hold of the +rabbit, drew his revolver, and fired full at the creature hanging on his +leg. + +Almost instantaneously with the shot, however, one of her foreclaws shot +out and caught the back of his right hand, making a long but superficial +gash from the wrist to the knuckles. At the same time, too, one of her +hind claws struck down, opening the calf of the leg and making the boy +sick for a moment. His right hand was bleeding vigorously and paining a +good deal, but his finger was still on the trigger and Wilbur fired +again. A moment later, the Ranger came running into the clearing. But +before he reached the boy's side the cat had fallen limply to the +ground. The second shot had gone clear through her skull, and, being +fired at point-blank distance, had almost blown her head off. + +The old Ranger, without wasting time in words, quickly examined the +boy's injuries and found them slight, although they were bleeding +profusely. Wilbur reached out the pot full of water from the spring. + +"Here's the water, Rifle-Eye," he said a little quaveringly; "I hardly +spilled a drop." + +The old woodsman took the vessel without a word. Then he looked down at +the cat. + +"Just as well for you," he said, "that it wasn't a true lynx. But how +did she get at your leg? Did you walk on her, or kick her, just for +fun?" + +Wilbur, laughing a little nervously from the reaction of the excitement, +described how it was that the wild-cat had landed on his leg instead of +on his neck, and the old hunter nodded. + +"It's a mighty lucky thing for you," he said, "that stick was there, +because there's a heap o' places around the neck where a clawin' ain't +healthy. But these scratches of yours won't take long to heal. Where you +were a fool," he continued, "was in touchin' the rabbit at all. It's +just as I told you. When you went quietly forward, you say, the bob-cat +got out of your road all right. Of course, that's what she ought to do. +And if you had filled the pot with water an' come away that's all +there'd have been to it. But jest as soon as you begin ter get mixed up +in the prey any varmint's killed, you've got ter begin considerin' the +chances o' joinin' the select company o' victims." + +"But I wanted her out of the way for next time," said Wilbur. + +"She'd have got out of your way so quick you couldn't see her go," said +the hunter, "if you'd given her a chance. Next time, leave a varmint's +dinner alone." + +"Next time, I will," the boy declared. + +"I guess now," continued the old hunter, "you'd better come back to camp +an' we'll see what we c'n do to improve them delicate attentions you've +received. An' don't be quite the same kind of an idiot again." + +"Well," said Wilbur, "I got the water from the spring, anyhow." + + +[Illustration: PATROLLING A COYOTE FENCE. + +The old Ranger and his hound safeguarding the grazing interests of the +forest. + +_Photograph by U. S. Forest Service._] + + +[Illustration: REDUCING THE WOLF SUPPLY.] + + +[Illustration: REDUCING THE WOLF SUPPLY. + +Sport that is worth while, freeing the National Forests from beasts of +prey. + +_Photographs by U. S. Forest Service._] + + + + +CHAPTER VI + +IN THE HEART OF THE FOREST + + +Towards noon the next day, Wilbur and the Ranger rode up to the shack in +the woods which Rifle-Eye considered as one of his headquarters. As soon +as they reached the clearing they were met by a big, shambling youth, +whose general appearance and hesitating air proclaimed him to be the +half-witted lad of whom Wilbur had heard. He came forward and took the +horses. + +"You've heard about Ben?" queried the hunter as the horses were being +led away. + +"Yes," answered Wilbur, "Bob-Cat Bob told me all about the death of his +father during the sheep and cattle war. He told me when we were riding +up to the ranch, from the station at Sumber." + +"I have thought," said Rifle-Eye, "that perhaps it ain't quite the right +thing to keep Ben here, up in the woods. But I tried sendin' him to +school. It wasn't no manner of use. It only troubled the teacher an' +bothered him, an' I reckon his life will stack up at the end jest as +well, even if he can't read." + +"What does he do while you are away?" asked Wilbur. + +"Oh, a lot of things. He ain't idle a minute, really, an' there's times +that he's as good as them that thinks themselves so wise." + +"What sort of things?" + +"Well, he's done a lot o' work stampin' out the prairie dogs. Of course, +there's very few o' them in these parts, so few that the government has +made no appropriation for this forest. It's in Eastern Montana an' the +Dakotas that you get them, an' there's been a lot o' trouble in the +Custer an' Sioux forests. He's gone there several times, an' there's +been villages o' them here among the foothills that Ben's cleared up +entirely." + +"They poison the prairie dogs, don't they?" + +"Yes, with strychnine, mainly. Grain is soaked in the poison an' a few +grains put outside each hole in a dog town. If this is done early in the +year, before the green grass is up for food, it will pretty nearly clean +up the town." + +"It seems rather a shame," said Wilbur, "they are such fat, jolly little +fellows, and the way they sit up on their hind legs and look at you is +a wonder." + +"It's all right for them to look 'fat and jolly,'" replied Rifle-Eye, +"but when the stock raiser finds hundreds of acres of grass nibbled down +to the roots, an' when the farmer's young wheat is ruined, they don't +see so much jollity in it." + +"But I didn't know that the Forest Service took a hand in that sort of +thing." + +"Only indirectly. But they provide the poison an' the settlers usually +git some one to put it round. As I say, Ben's been doin' a lot of it +this spring." + +"But that sort of work doesn't last long." + +"No, only in the spring. But Ben's busy other ways. Sometimes he goes +down to the valleys an' helps the ranchers with their hayin'. He don't +know anythin' about money, though, an' so they never pay him cash." + +"That's tough on Ben, then," remarked Wilbur. "Does he work all the time +for nothing?" + +"Not at all. They always see that he gits a fair return. Every once in a +while the man he's workin' for will drive up to the shack with some +bacon an' a barrel o' flour an' trimmin's. Often as not, he'll bring +the wife along, an' she'll go over the lad's things to find what he +needs." + +"That's mighty nice," commented Wilbur. + +"Some of 'em are as good to Ben as if he was their own," said the +Ranger. "They'll go over everything he's got, fix up whatever needs +mendin', an' make a list o' things to be bought next time any one goes +into town. You see, he gits his wages that way. He works well, an' so it +ain't like charity, an' at the same time it gives the man he works for a +chance to do the right thing." + +"I suppose if he didn't, you'd get after him," suggested the boy. + +"Never had to yet, an' never expect to," was the prompt reply. "Mostly +folks is all right, an' a lot o' the supposed selfishness is jest +because they ain't been reminded. And then Ben never makes trouble." + +"He seems quiet enough," said Wilbur, with a gesture towards the doorway +where the lad was approaching. He came in and stood looking vacantly at +the two sitting together. + +"What were you doin' yesterday, Ben?" asked the Ranger sharply to rouse +him. + +The lad flung out both arms with a wild gesture. + +"I was away, away, far away," he answered; "away, away over the hills." + +"Where?" + +The half-witted lad passed his hand across his eyes. + +"With Mickey," he said. + +"An' what were you an' Mickey doin'?" + +"Lots of things, lots, lots, lots. Little fires creep, creep, creepin' +on the ground," he moved his hands waveringly backward and forward as +though to show the progress of the flames, "then put them out quick, +so!" he stamped his foot on the ground. + +"Does he mean a forest fire, Rifle-Eye?" queried Wilbur, alert at the +very mention of fire. + +"No, no, no," interrupted Ben; "little bit fires. Pile burn, burn hot, +grass catch fire, put out grass." + +"You mean," said the mountaineer, "that you an' Mickey were burnin' up +brush?" + +"Yes, brush all in piles, burn." + +"It's a pretty risky business," said Rifle-Eye, "this burnin' brush in +the late spring, but Mickey's right enough to have had Ben along. He's +one o' the best fire-fighters that ever happened. He never knows enough +to quit." + +"Did you have any trouble, Ben?" asked Wilbur. + +"One little fire, walk, walk, walk away into the woods. But I stopped +him." + +"Alone?" + +The half-witted lad nodded. Then, coming over to Wilbur, he pointed to +the rude bandages and said questioningly: + +"Tumble?" + +"No, Ben," replied the other boy, "I got into a mix-up with a bob-cat." + +"I fight, too. Wait, I show you something." + +He disappeared for a moment and then came back with two wolf pups, +carrying one in each hand as he might a kitten. + +"I got five more," he said. + +"Where did you get 'em, Ben?" asked the Ranger. + +"Way, way over. Deadman Canyon." + +"Get the old wolf?" + +The half-witted lad nodded his head vigorously several times. + +"Yes," he said, "dead, dead, dead." + +"Was the den just by the Sentinel Pine?" + +"Yes." + +"I reckon that's the wolf that's been givin' such a lot of trouble on +the Arroyo," commented Rifle-Eye. "I went out after that wolf one day +this spring, Ben, but I didn't get her. I waited at the den a long time, +too." + +"Two holes out of den, two. I wait, too. Long, long time. No come out. +Plug up one hole. Long more time waited. Then wolf go in. I go in, too." + +"You went into the wolf's den?" queried Wilbur in amazement. + +"Yes, in. Far, far in." + +"How far?" + +"Don't know. Far." + +"Well, I went in about forty feet myself," said the old hunter, "an' I +didn't see any sign o' the pups, so I backed out again. If you went all +the way in, Ben, I reckon it was a pretty long crawl." + +"But why did you go in the den when the mother wolf was there?" asked +Wilbur. + +"Boy fool," said the half-witted lad, pointing at him. "Why go in if +wolf not there?" + +"Well," said Wilbur, on the defensive, "I should think it a whole lot +safer to go in--that is, if I was going in at all--sometime when I'd be +sure the mother wolf wouldn't be there." + +But the other, still holding the cubs in his hands, negatived this +reasoning with a vigorous shake of the head. + +"Safer, wolf in," he said. + +"I don't see that at all," objected Wilbur. "It can't be safer." + +"You go in, in far, when wolf out. By and by wolf come, eat up legs, no +can turn round for shoot." + +"I hadn't thought of that," the boy said, a little humbled. + +"Ben's nearly right," said the Ranger, "an' it ain't really as dangerous +as it sounds. There ain't room in the passage for the wolf to spring, +an' if you shoot you're bound to hit her somewhere, no matter how you +aim. O' course, a wolf ain't goin' to come along an' 'eat up your legs' +the way he puts it, but you might get a nasty bite or two. It's a lot +better to go after a wolf than have the wolf come after you. It takes +more nerve, but it ain't so hard at that." + +"But how did you kill the old wolf, Ben?" asked Wilbur. + +"I go in, far in. See eyes glitter. Shoot once. Shoot twice. Old wolf +dead. Take out pups, easy. Skin wolf." + +"Where's the skin?" + +"Dryin'." + +But Wilbur was by no means satisfied and he plied the half-witted lad +with questions until he had secured all the details of the story. In the +meantime the Ranger had been getting dinner, and as soon as it was over +Wilbur was glad to lie down on Ben's bed, for he had lost not a little +blood in his tussle with the wild-cat the night before, and riding all +morning with those deep scratches only rudely bandaged had been rather a +strain. By the time that Rifle-Eye was ready to start again Wilbur was +fairly stiffened up, and at the Ranger's suggestion he agreed to stay on +a couple of days in the shack, having Ben cook for him and look after +him, as the Ranger felt that he himself ought to get back to +headquarters. + +It was not until the third day that Wilbur once more got into the saddle +and with Ben to guide him through the forest, started for the +Supervisor's headquarters, or rather the Ranger's cabin where the +Supervisor was staying. The two boys rode on and up, leaving behind the +scrub oak, chapparal, and manzanita, and into the great yellow pine and +sugar pine forests. Shortly before noontime they heard voices in the +woods, and Ben, after listening a moment, turned from the trail. In a +few minutes he reined up beside a tall, sunburned man, walking through +the woods pencil and notebook in hand. At the same time the Ranger, who +was working with him, stepped up. + +"Thanks, Ben," he said. Then, turning to the Supervisor, he said: +"Merritt, here's the boy!" + +Wilbur's new chief stepped forward quickly and held out his hand with a +word of greeting. Wilbur shook it heartily and decided on the spot that +he was going to like him. Wearing khaki with the Forest Service bronze +badge, a Stetson army hat, and the high lace boots customarily seen, he +looked thoroughly equipped for business. + +"You're Wilbur Loyle," he said, "of course. I heard you were coming. +Have you had any experience?" + +"Just the Colorado Ranger School, sir," said the boy. + +"You were to be here three days ago." + +"Yes, Mr. Merritt, but I was delayed, and I put up a couple of days with +Ben, here." + +"He reckoned he had more right to a rabbit what a bob-cat was feastin' +on than the cat had," volunteered Rifle-Eye in explanation. "In the +ensooin' disagreement he got a bit scratched, an' so I looked after him. +I told him to stay at Ben's, an' I guess he's all right now." + +"Being three days late isn't the best start in the world," said the +Supervisor sharply, "but if Rifle-Eye knows all about it and is willing +to stand for it, I won't say any more. Can you cruise?" + +"I've learned, sir, but I haven't done much of it. I think, though, I +can do it, all right." + +"Very well. We'll break off for dinner now, and you can try this +afternoon. Or do you still feel tired, and would you rather wait until +to-morrow?" + +"Thanks, Mr. Merritt," answered Wilbur, "but I want to start right now." + +"Very well," said the Supervisor laconically. Then, turning to the +Ranger, he commenced talking with him about the work in hand, and for +the moment Wilbur was left aside. The lumberman who had been working on +the other side of the Supervisor, however, sauntered up and introduced +himself as "McGinnis, me boy, Red McGinnis, they call me, because of the +natural beauty of me hair." + +"I'm very glad, Mr. McGinnis--" began the boy when the lumberman +interrupted him. + +"'Tis very sorry ye'll be if ye call me out of me right name. Sure I +said McGinnis, jest plain McGinnis, not Misther McGinnis. Ye can call me +'Judge,' or 'Doctor,' or 'Colonel,' or annything else, but I won't be +called Misther by annyone." + +"Very well, McGinnis," said the boy, looking at his height and broad +shoulders, "I guess there's no one that will make you." + +"There is not!" the big lumberman replied. "And are ye goin' to join us +in a little promenade through the timber?" + +"So Mr. Merritt said." + +"I don't see what for," the Irishman replied. "Sure, there's the three +of us now." + +"Is there much of it to do?" + +"There is that. There's three million feet wanted, half sugar pine and +half yellow pine, in this sale alone. An' there's another sale waiting, +so I hear, as soon as this one's through." + +"Maybe it's just to find out whether I can do it?" suggested Wilbur. + +The lumberman nodded affirmatively. + +"That's just about it," he said. "Because ye'll have a big stretch to +cover as Guard, an' there'll be no time for ye cruisin'. You keep the +trees from burnin' up so as we can mark them for cuttin' down." + +"It always seems a shame," said Wilbur, "to have to cut down these +trees. Of course, I know it's done so as to help the forest, not to hurt +it, and that if the big trees weren't cut down the young ones couldn't +get sunlight and wouldn't have a chance to grow. But still one hates to +see a big tree go." + +"It isn't that way at all, at all," said the lumberman. "There's some +that does their best work livin', and there's some that does it dead. A +man does it livin' and a tree does it dead. But what a tree does after +it's dead depends on what kind of a chance it's had when it's been +livin'. Sure ye've been to the schools when all the girls and some of +the boys gets into white dresses, the girls I mean, and sings songs, and +gives speeches and class poems and other contraptions, and graduates." + +"I have," said Wilbur, "and not so long ago at that." + +"And so have I," answered the lumberman. "Sure, me own little Kathleen +was graduated just a month ago from high school. Well, cuttin' down a +tree is like its graduation. It's been livin' and growin' and gettin' +big and strong and makin' up into good timber. Now its schoolin' in the +forest is over, it's goin' out into the world, to be made useful in some +kind of way, and in goin' it makes room for more." + +"You don't take kindly to the 'Oh, Woodman, spare that tree' ideal?" +smiled Wilbur. + +"I do not. But I'd spare it, all right, until there were other young +trees growin' near it to take its place in time. 'Tis the biggest part +of the work is cuttin' down the trees that make the best timber." + +When they were settled drinking hot tea and eating some trout that the +party had with them, the Supervisor turned to Wilbur. + +"McGinnis is a good man," he began, smiling as the Irishman with +pantomime returned the compliment by drinking his health in a pannikin +of tea, "but he's so built that he can't see straight. If you introduce +McGinnis to a girl he'll want to estimate how many feet she'd make board +measure." + +He dodged a pine cone which the Irishman threw at him. + +"How about Aileen?" he said. + +"I'll take that back," said Merritt; "Mrs. McGinnis hasn't gone to +diameter growth. But," he continued, "she's good on clear length and has +a fine crown." + +By which Wilbur readily understood that the lumberman's wife was slight, +well-built, and neat, and with heavy hair. The lumberman, mollified by +the tribute, returned to his dinner, and the Supervisor continued: + +"McGinnis told you that cutting down the best trees available for timber +is the most important part of forest work. It's not. The most important +thing is keeping the forest at its best. Cutting trees when they have +reached their maximum is a most necessary part, and it's a policy that +helps to make the forest pay for itself. But the value to the forest +lies in its conservation. You know about that?" + +"Yes, sir," said the boy; "it's keeping the watersheds from becoming +deforested, either by cutting or by fire, and so preventing erosion from +taking place." + +"I reckon," put in the old Ranger, "thar's another that pleases me still +better than either of those." + +"And what's that, Rifle-Eye?" asked Merritt. + +"It's the plantin'. When I walk along some of the forest nurseries, an' +see hundreds and hundreds of little seedlin's all growin' protected +like, and bein' cared for just the same as if they was little children, +an' when I know that in fifty years time they'll be big fine trees like +the one we're sittin' under, I tell you it looks pretty good to me. +They're such helpless little things, seedlin's, and they do have such a +time to get a start. Nursery's a good name all right. I've been along +some of 'em at night, when the moonlight was a shinin' down on them, and +they wasn't really no different from children in their little beds." + +"I should think," said Wilbur, "that the changing of a forest from one +kind of tree to another would be the most interesting. I mean getting +rid of the worthless trees and giving the advantage to those that are +finer." + +"And a few sections west," commented the Supervisor, "you would find +that Bellwall, who's the Ranger there, thinks that the most interesting +thing in the whole of the forest work is putting an end to the diseases +of trees and to the insects that are a danger to them. Another Ranger +may be a tree surgeon." + +"A tree surgeon doesn't help so much," put in McGinnis, "the timber is +niver worth a whoop!" + +"There you go again," said the head of the forest, "there's other things +to be thought of besides timber." He turned to the boy. "You don't know +the trees of the Sierras, I suppose?" + +"I think I know them pretty well now," answered Wilbur. "I had to learn +a lot about them at school, and then Rifle-Eye has been giving me +pointers the last few days." + +"What's the difference between a yellow pine and a sugar pine?" queried +the Supervisor. + +"Sugar pine wood is white and soft," said the boy, "yellow pine is hard, +harder than any other pine except the long-leaf variety." + +"That's right enough. But how are you going to tell them when standing?" + +Wilbur thought for a moment. + +"I should think," he said, "that the yellow pine is a so much bigger +tree as a rule that you could tell it by that alone. But I suppose a +younger yellow pine might look like a sugar. The leaves would help, +though, because I should think the sugar, like most of the soft pines, +has its leaves in clusters of five in a sheath, and the yellow being a +hard pine, has them in bundles of three." + +"How about the bark?" + +"Sugar pine bark is smoother," said the boy. + +The Supervisor nodded. + +"All right," he said, "we'll try you at it. You go along with McGinnis +for an hour or so, to see just how he does it, and then you can take one +side, and he the other. Just for a day or two, while Rifle-Eye looks +after some other matters." + +Wilbur accordingly took a pair of calipers and walked with McGinnis back +to where he had originally met the party. Resuming work the lumberman +started through the forest, calling as he went the kind of trees and +their approximate size. As, however, this particular portion of the +forest had never been "cruised," McGinnis not only called and marked the +trees which were to be cut in the sale, but also the other timber. + +Thus he would call, as he reached a tree, "Sugar, thirty-four, six," by +which Wilbur understood him to mean that the tree was a sugar pine, that +it was thirty-four inches in diameter breast high, and that it would cut +into six logs of the regular sixteen-foot length. It probably would be +thirty or fifty feet higher, but the top could only be used for posts, +cordwood, and similar uses. Such a tree, having been estimated and +adjudged fit for sale, the lumberman would make a blaze with a small ax, +by slicing off a portion of bark about eight inches long, then turning +the head of the ax, whereon was "U. S." in raised letters, he would +whack the blaze, making a mark which was unchangeable. No other trees +than those so marked might be cut. + +But as other trees were passed which were not good enough for +merchantable timber, he would call these rapidly, "Cedar, small," +"Engelmann (spruce), eighteen," "Douglas (spruce), fourteen," all of +which were entered by the Supervisor, walking behind, in his cruising +book. At the same time he made full notes as to the condition of the +young forest, the presence of parasitic plants such as mistletoe, of +diseased trees, if any were found, of the nature of the soil, of the +drainage of the forest, and of the best way in which the timber sale was +to be logged in order to do the least possible damage to the forest. + +In a half an hour or so Wilbur dropped back to the Supervisor. + +"I think, sir," he said, "that I can do that without any trouble. But I +can't do it as fast as McGinnis, sir, for he can tell the size of a +tree just by looking at it. I shall have to use the calipers for a day +or two." + +Merritt looked at him. + +"For a day or two?" he said. "McGinnis has been doing it for thirty +years. In these Western forests, too. You take him to an Eastern forest +and even now he wouldn't be sure of estimating correctly. You use the +calipers for a year or two!" + +Wilbur, accordingly, quickened his pace, and, going along a little to +the left and in advance of the Supervisor, took up his share of the +work. He found that he had to depend entirely upon McGinnis for his +compass direction, and that he was only doing about one tree to +McGinnis' six, but still every hour that passed by gave him greater +confidence. The afternoon was wearing away when suddenly they came to a +part of the forest in which some timber seemed to have been cut during +the winter preceding. McGinnis dropped back. + +"Sure, ye didn't tell me that any of this had been cut over," he said +aggrievedly. + +"It hasn't, so far as I know," said Merritt. He put his book in his +pocket and walked on briskly for a few hundred yards. Although the +logging had been done the preceding winter the signs were clear for +those who could read them determining the direction in which the logs +had been taken. + +"That's Peavey Jo's work," said the Supervisor at last. "I reckon this +is where he begins to find trouble on his hands. We'll find out, +McGinnis, how much of this timber he has stolen, measure up the stumps +and make him pay for every stick he's taken." + +"Ye'd better leave Peavey Jo alone. They used to call him 'The Canuck +Brute,'" remarked McGinnis. + +"He will pay," repeated Merritt quietly, "for every foot that he's got. +And I'll see that he does." + +"You'll have the fight of your life." + +"What of it! You don't want to back out?" + +"Back out? Me? I will not! But it'll be a jim-dandy of a scrap." + +The Supervisor turned to Wilbur. + +"Measure," he said, "the diameter of all those stumps and mark with a +bit of chalk those you have measured. We'll talk to Peavey Jo in a day +or two." + + +[Illustration: WHERE BEN AND MICKEY BURNED THE BRUSH. + +Getting rid of slashings which otherwise might feed a forest fire. + +_Photograph by U. S. Forest Service._] + + +[Illustration: THE CABIN OF THE OLD RANGER. + +Where Wilbur stayed a couple of days recovering from the wild-cat's +scratches. + +_Photograph by U. S. Forest Service._] + + +[Illustration: STAMPING IT GOVERNMENT PROPERTY. + +McGinnis marking "U. S." on timber that has been scaled and measured up. + +_Photograph by U. S. Forest Service._] + + + + +CHAPTER VII + +WILBUR IN HIS OWN CAMP + + +"I should think," said Wilbur at headquarters that night, when the +timber theft of Peavey Jo was being discussed, "that it would be mighty +hard to prove that the timber had been taken." + +"Why?" asked the Supervisor. + +"Well, we can see how the logs were drawn, and so forth, but you can't +bring those driveways into court very well, and put them before the +judge as Exhibit A, or anything?" + +"You could bring affidavits, couldn't you? But there are few who want to +go to law about it. A man knows he can't buck the government on a fake +case. We have very little trouble now, but there used to be a lot of +it." + +"Did you ever have to use weapons, Mr. Merritt?" asked the boy, +remembering the story he had heard in Washington about the tie-cutters. + +"No," was the instant reply. "You don't handle people with a gun any +more in California than you do in New York. These aren't the days of +Forty-nine." + +"But I thought the 'old-timers' still carried guns," persisted the boy. + +"Very few do now. But I got into trouble once, or thought I was going +to, when I was a Ranger in the Gunnison Forest. It involved some Douglas +fir telephone poles. This trespass was done while I was in town for a +while in the Supervisor's office. When I came back I happened to pass by +this man's camp, and seeing a lot of telephone poles, I asked if they +had been cut in the forest. The man was a good deal of a bully, and he +ordered me off the place. He said he didn't have to answer any +questions, and wasn't going to." + +"Did you go?" asked Wilbur. + +"Certainly I went. What would be the use of staying around there? But +before I left I got a kind of an answer. He said he had shipped in these +telephone poles from another part of the State." + +"Sure, that was a fairy tale," said McGinnis. + +"Of course it was. I went into the forest and searched around, although +there had been a recent fall of snow, until I found the place where most +of the poles had been cut. Then I went back to the trespasser and told +him, saying I would prove to him that it was on government ground. + +"He agreed, and we rode to the place. He took his Winchester along and +carried it over his shoulder. He wasn't carrying it in the usual way, +but had his hand almost level with his shoulder so that the barrel +pointed in my direction. I noticed, too, that he was playing with the +trigger. It seemed likely that it might suit his purposes rather well if +I was accidentally killed. But each time I cantered up close to him, the +barrel returned to its natural position. + +"Presently, as we rode along, we came to a waterfall, not a big one, but +falling with quite a splashing, and under the cover of the noise I +suddenly came to a quick gallop, overtook the trespasser, and, grasping +his Winchester firmly with both hands, jerked it out of his grasp." + +"Sure, he must have been the maddest thing that iver happened!" said +McGinnis. + +"He was sore, all right. But what could he do? I had the rifle, and we +neither of us had any six-shooters. I showed him that there was no +object in my shooting him, while he would gain by shooting me, so I +proposed to hold the gun. And hold it I did. On my return I put a +notice of seizure on the poles. + +"The report went through the usual way to the Commissioner of the +General Land Office. He wrote me a letter direct about the case and put +it up to me to ask the trespasser what proposition of settlement he +intended to make. I thought the town was the best place for this and +waited at the post-office for a day or two until he came in. There I +tackled him, and told him he would have to notify the Department +immediately. At this, he and his son invited me outside to fight it out. +I told them I did not intend to fight, but that if within thirty minutes +they did not make a proposition of settlement I would telegraph to the +Department and his case would become one for harsher measures. + +"The postmaster set out to convince him that Uncle Sam was too big a job +for him to handle, and in twenty minutes or so back he came with an +offer which was forwarded to the Department. A year or so later the case +was settled by a Special Agent." + +McGinnis added several similar stories of timber difficulties, and, +supper being over, they got ready to turn in. The headquarters was a +most comfortable house, fairly large, having been built by the previous +Ranger, who was married. It was now used by another Ranger, as well as +Rifle-Eye, being near the borders of their two districts, and having +plenty of good water and good feed near. But although it was barely +dark, Wilbur was tired enough to be glad to stretch himself on the cot +in the little room and sink to sleep amid the soughing of the wind +through the pine needles of neighboring forest giants one and two +hundred feet high. + +Early the next morning, Wilbur tumbled up, went out and looked after his +horses, and came in hungry to breakfast. + +"I had intended," said the Supervisor, "to go with you this morning and +show you the part of the range you are to look after. But I want to get +at Peavey Jo, lest he should decide to leave suddenly, and Rifle-Eye +will show you the way instead. I had the tent pitched three or four days +ago, when you ought to have been here. You'll find that to cover your +range takes about six hours' good riding a day. Use a different horse, +of course, each day, and remember that your horse in some ways is fully +as important as you are. You can stand a heap of things that he can't. +A man will tire out any animal that breathes." + +"And what have I to do?" + +"You have three trails to ride, on three successive days, so that you +will have a chance of seeing all your range, or points that will command +all your range at least twice a week. And, of course, quite a good deal +of it you will cover daily. You are to watch out for fires, and if you +see one, put it out. If you can't put it out alone, ride back to your +camp and telephone here, as soon as it is evening. Sometimes it is +better to keep working alone until you know there's some one to answer +the 'phone, sometimes it's better to get help right away. You can tell +about that when you have got to the fire and have seen what it is." + +Wilbur nodded. + +"That's easy enough to follow," he said. + +"If a heavy rain comes, you had better ride back here, because for a few +days after a big rain a fire isn't likely to start, and there's always +lots of other stuff to be done in the forest, trail-building, and things +of that sort." + +"Very well, Mr. Merritt," answered the boy. + +"There are no timber sales going on in that section of the forest, so +that if you see any cutting going on, just ride up quietly and get into +conversation with the people cutting and casually find out their names. +Ask no other questions, but in the evening telephone to me." + +"The telephone must be a big convenience. But," added Wilbur, "it seems +to take away the primitiveness of it, somehow." + +"Wilbur," said the Supervisor seriously, "you don't want to run into the +mistake of thinking that life on a national forest is principally a +picturesque performance. It's a business that the government is running +for the benefit of the country at large. Anything that can be done to +make it efficient is tremendously important. The telephone already has +saved many a fearful night ride through bad places of the forest, has +been the means of stopping many a fire, and has saved many a life in +consequence. I think that's a little more important than +'primitiveness,' as you call it." + +The boy accepted the rebuke silently. Indeed, there was nothing more to +say. + +"As for grazing, there's not much to be said, except that the sheep +limits are pretty well defined. The cattle can wander up the range +without doing much harm here, for the young forest is of pretty good +growth, but the sheep must stay down where they belong. Rifle-Eye will +show you where, and sheep notices have been posted all along the limits. +And if there's anything you don't know, ask. And I guess that's about +all." + +The Supervisor rose to go, but Wilbur stopped him. + +"How am I to arrange about supplies?" he said. + +"The tent's near a spring," was the brief but all-embracing reply. +"There's a lake near by with plenty of trout, there's flour and +groceries and canned stuff in a cache, and the Guard that was there last +year had some kind of a little garden. You can see what there is, and if +you want seeds of any kind, let me know. And there's nothing to prevent +you shooting rabbits, though they're not much good this time of year." + +"I'll get along all right, Mr. Merritt," said Wilbur confidently. + +"I'll ride over on Sunday and see you anyway," added the Supervisor as +he strode through the doorway, meeting McGinnis, who was waiting for him +outside. Wilbur followed him to the door. + +"'Tis all the luck in the world I'm wishin' ye," shouted the big +Irishman, "an' while ye're keepin' the fires away we'll be gettin' +another nicely started for that old logjammer. Sure, we'll make it hot +enough for him." + +"Good hunting," responded Wilbur with a laugh, as the two men +disappeared under the trees. + +Although only a day had passed since Wilbur had met the Supervisor and +McGinnis, it seemed to him that several days must have elapsed, so much +had happened, and he found it hard to believe, when he found himself in +the saddle again beside the old Ranger, that they had started from Ben's +shack only the morning before. + +"I like Mr. Merritt," he said as soon as they had got started. "I like +McGinnis, too." + +"I reckon he wasn't over-pleased with your bein' late?" queried +Rifle-Eye. + +"He wasn't," admitted the boy candidly, "but I don't blame him for that. +I liked him just the same. But I don't think it's safe to monkey with +him. Now, McGinnis is easygoing and good-natured." + +"So is a mountain river runnin' down a smooth bed. The river is just the +same old river when rocks get in the road, but it acts a lot different. +Now, Merritt, when he's satisfied and when he ain't, don't vary, but I +tell you, McGinnis can show white water sometimes." + +"I don't think I'm aching to be that rock," said Wilbur with a grin. + +"Wa'al," said the Ranger, "I ain't filed no petition for the nomination, +not yet." + +"But tell me, Rifle-Eye," said the boy, "what is McGinnis? He isn't a +Guard, is he? and he doesn't talk like a Ranger from another part of the +forest." + +"No, he's an expert lumberman," replied the hunter. "He isn't attached +to this forest at all. He ain't even under the service of the government +all the while. He generally is, because he knows his business an' the +Forest Service knows a good man when it sees one. They engage him for a +month, or three, or four months, an' he goes wherever there's a timber +sale, or a big cut. Often as not, he teaches the Rangers a heap of +things they don't know about lumberin', and the Forest Assistants +themselves ain't above takin' practical pointers from him." + +"But I thought Mr. Merritt said that McGinnis only knew this kind of +forest?" + +"He said McGinnis wouldn't know anything of an Eastern hardwood forest. +That's right. But the government hasn't got any hardwood forests yet, +though I guess they soon will in the Appalachians. But you can't lose +him in any kind of pine. I've met up with him from Arizona to Alaska." + +The old woodsman turned sharply from the trail, apparently into the +unbroken forest. + +"Do you see the trail?" he asked. + +Wilbur looked on the ground to see if he could discern any traces. Not +doing so, he looked up at the Ranger, who had half turned in the saddle +to watch him. As he shook his head in denial he noticed the old +mountaineer looking at him with grieved surprise. + +"What do you reckon you were lookin' on the ground for?" he asked. + +"For the trail," said Wilbur. + +"Did ye think this was a city park?" said Rifle-Eye disgustedly. + +"Well, I never saw a trail before that you couldn't see," responded +Wilbur defiantly. + +The old hunter stopped his horse. + +"Turn half round," he said. Wilbur did so. "Now," he continued, "can you +see any trail through there?" + +The boy looked through the long cool aisles of trees, realizing that he +could ride in any direction without being stopped by undergrowth, but he +could see nothing that looked like a trail. + +"Now turn round and look ahead," said the hunter. + +The moment Wilbur turned he became conscious of what the old mountaineer +wanted to show him. Not a definite sign could he see, the ground was +untrampled, the trees showed no blaze marks, yet somehow there was a +consciousness that in a certain direction there was a way. + +"Yes," he said vaguely. "I can't see it, but I feel somehow that there's +a trail through there." He pointed between two large spruces that stood +near. + +The hunter slapped his pony on the neck. + +"Get up there, Milly," he said, "we'll teach him yet! You see," he +continued, "there ain't no manner of use in tryin' to see a trail. If +the trail's visible, the worst tenderfoot that ever lived could follow +it. It's the trail that you can't see that you've got to learn to +follow." + +"And how do you do it, Rifle-Eye?" asked the boy. + +"Same as you did just now. There's just a mite of difference where folks +have ridden, there's perhaps just a few seedlin's been trodden down, +an' there's a line between the trees that's just a little straighter +than any animal's runway. But it's so faint that the more you think +about it, the less sure you are. But, by an' by, you get so that you +couldn't help followin' it in any kind of weather." And the old hunter, +seeing the need of teaching Wilbur the intricacies of the pine country +forests, gave him hint after hint all the way to his little camp. + +When he got there Wilbur gave an exclamation of delight. The camp, as +the Supervisor had said, was near a little spring, which indeed bubbled +from the hillside not more than ten feet away from the tent, and +gleaming on the slope a couple of hundred feet below, he could see the +little lake which was "so full of trout" glistening itself like a silver +fish in the sunlight. A tall flagstaff, with a cord all reeved for the +flag, stood by the tent, and for the realities of life a strong, +serviceable telephone was fastened to a tree. + +Wilbur turned to the hunter, his eyes shining. + +"What a daisy place!" he cried. + +The old hunter smiled at his enthusiasm. + +"Let's see the tent," he said, and was about to leap from his horse when +the hunter called him. + +"I reckon, son," he said, "there's somethin' you're forgettin'." + +"What's that?" said Wilbur. + +"Horses come first," said Rifle-Eye. "It's nigh dinner-time now. Where's +the corral?" + +But Wilbur's spirits were not to be dampened by any check. + +"Is there a corral?" he said. "How bully! Oh, yes, I remember now Mr. +Merritt said there was. Where is it, Rifle-Eye? Say, this is a jim-dandy +of a camp!" + +A few steps further they came to the corral, a pretty little meadow in a +clearing, and in the far corner of it the stream which trickled from the +spring near the house. Wilbur unsaddled with a whoop and turned the +horses in the corral, then hurried back to the camp. The old hunter, +thinking perhaps that the boy would rather have the feeling of doing it +all himself for the first time, had not gone near the tent. There was a +small outer tent, which was little more than a strip of canvas thrown +over a horizontal pole and shielding a rough fireplace for rainy +weather, and within was the little dwelling-tent, with a cot, and even a +tiny table. On the ground was Wilbur's pack, containing all the things +he had sent up when he had broken his journey to go to the Double Bar +J ranch, and there, upon the bed, all spread out in the fullness of its +glory, was a brand-new Stars and Stripes. For a moment the boy's breath +was taken away, then, with a dash, he rushed for it, and fairly danced +out to the flagpole, where he fastened it and ran it to the truck, +shouting as he did so. His friend, entering into the boy's feelings, +solemnly raised his hat, as the flag settled at the peak and waved in +the wind. Wilbur, turning, saw the old scout saluting, and with stirring +patriotism, saluted, too. + +"And now," said the old hunter. "I'll get dinner." + +"That you'll not," said Wilbur indignantly. "I guess this is my house, +and you're to be my first guest." + + +[Illustration: WILBUR'S OWN CAMP. + +His first photograph; taken the day the Supervisor dropped in to see +him. + +_Photograph by U. S. Forest Service._] + + + + +CHAPTER VIII + +DOWNING A GIANT LUMBERJACK + + +"I don't believe," said Wilbur the next morning as they rode along the +trail that led to the nearest of his "lookout points," "that any king or +emperor ever had as fine a palace as this one." + +The comparison was a just one. Throughout the part of the forest in +which they were riding the whole sensation was of being roofed in and +enclosed, the roof itself being of shifting and glowing green, through +which at infrequent intervals broad streams of living light poured in, +gilding with a golden bronze the carpet of pine needles, while the +purple brown shafts of the trunks of the mighty trees formed a colonnade +illimitable. + +"I reckon every kind of palace," replied the Ranger, "had some sort of a +forest for a pattern. I took an artist through the Rockies one time, an' +he showed me that every kind of buildin' that had ever been built, and +every kind of trimmin's that had been devised had started as mere copies +of trees an' leaves." + +"Well," said Wilbur, his mind going back to a former exclamation of the +old woodsman, "you said this was your house." + +"My house it is," said Rifle-Eye, "an' if you wait a few minutes I'll +show you the view from one of my windows." + +For two hours the hunter and the boy had been riding up a sharp slope, +in places getting off their horses so as to give them the benefit of as +little unnecessary carrying as possible, constantly ascending on a great +granite spur twenty miles wide, between the Kaweah and King's River +canyons. Now, suddenly they emerged from the shadowy roof of the forest +to the bare surface of a ridge of granite. + +"There's the real world," said Rifle-Eye; "it ain't goin' to hurt your +eyes to look at it, same as a city does, and your own little worryin's +soon drop off in a place like this." + +He turned his horse slightly to the left, where a small group of +mountain balsam, growing in a cleft of the granite, made a spot of +shadow upon the very precipice's brink. The boy looked around for a +minute or two without speaking, then said softly: "How fine!" + +Three thousand feet below, descending in bold faces of naked rugged +rock, broken here and there by ledges whereon mighty pines found +lodgment, lay the valley of King's River, a thin, winding gleam of green +with the water a silver thread so fine as only to be seen at intervals. +Here and there in the depths the bottom widened to a quarter of a mile, +and there the sunlight, falling on the young grass, gave a brilliancy of +green that was almost startling in contrast with the dark foliage of the +pines. + +"What do you call that rock?" asked the boy, pointing to a tall, +pyramidal mass of granite, buttressed with rock masses but little less +noble than the central peak, between each buttress a rift of snow, +flecked here and there by the outline of a daring spruce clinging to the +rock, apparently in defiance of all laws of gravity. + +"That is called 'Grand Sentinel,'" said the hunter, "and if you will +take out your glasses you will see that from here you can overlook miles +and miles of country to the west. This is about as high as any place on +the south fork of the King's River until it turns north where Bubbs +Creek runs into it." + +Wilbur took out from their case his field-glasses and scanned the +horizon carefully as far as he could see, then snapping them back into +the case, he turned to the hunter, saying: + +"No fire in sight here!" + +"All right," replied Rifle-Eye, "then we'll go on to the next point." + +That whole day was a revelation to Wilbur of the beauty and of the size +of that portion of the forest which it was his especial business to +oversee. Here and there the Ranger made a short break from the direct +line of the journey to take the boy down to some miner's cabin or Indian +shack, so that, as he expressed it, "you c'n live in a world of friends. +There ain't no man livin', son," he continued, "but what'll be the +better of havin' a kind word some day, an' the more of them you give, +the more you're likely to have." + +Owing to these deviations from the direct trail, it was late when they +returned to Wilbur's little camp. But not even the lateness of the hour, +nor the boy's fatigue, could keep down his delight in his tent home. He +was down at the corral quite a long time, and when he came back +Rifle-Eye asked him where he had been. The boy flushed a little. + +"I hadn't seen Kit all day," he said, "so I went down and had a little +talk to her." + +The Ranger smiled and said nothing but looked well pleased. In the +meantime he had quickly prepared supper, and Wilbur started in and ate +as though he would never stop. At last he leaned back and sighed aloud. + +"That's the best dinner I ever ate," he said; "I never thought fish +could taste so good." + +But he jumped up again immediately and took the dishes down to the +spring to wash them. He had just dipped the plates into the pool under +the spring when the old woodsman stopped him. + +"You don't ever want to do that," he said. "There ain't any manner of +use in foulin' a stream that you'll want to use all the time. Little +bits of food, washin' off the plates, will soon make that water bad if +you let them run in there. An' not only is that bad for you, but ef +you'll notice, it's the overflow from that little pool that runs down +through the meadow." + +"And it would spoil the drinking water for the horses," exclaimed +Wilbur; "I hadn't thought of that. I'm awfully glad you're along, +Rifle-Eye, for I should be making all sorts of mistakes." + +Under the advice of his friend Wilbur washed up and put away the dishes +and then settled down for the evening. He made up his day's report, and +then thought he would write a long letter. But he had penned very, few +sentences when he began to get quite sleepy and to nod over the paper. +The Ranger noted it, and told him promptly to go to bed. + +"I'll finish this letter first," said Wilbur. + +A moment or two later he was again advised to turn in, and again Wilbur +persisted that he would finish the letter first. There was a short +pause. + +"Son," said Rifle-Eye, "what do you suppose you are ridin' from point to +point of the forest for?" + +"To see if there's any sign of fire," said the boy. + +"And you've got to look pretty closely through those glasses o' yours, +don't you?" + +The boy admitted that they were a little dazzling and that he had to +look all he knew how. + +"Then, if you make your eyes heavy and tired for the next mornin', +you're robbin' the Service of what they got you for--your eyesight, +ain't you? I ain't forcin' you, noways. I'm only showin' you what's the +square thing." + +Wilbur put forward his chin obstinately, then, thinking of the kindness +he had received from the Ranger all the way through, and realizing that +he was in the right, said: + +"All right, Rifle-Eye, I'll turn in." + +About half an hour later, just as the old woodsman stretched himself on +his pile of boughs outside the tent, he heard the boy mutter: + +"I hope I'll never have to live anywhere but here." + +The following day and the next were similar in many ways to the first. +Wilbur and the Ranger rode the various trails, the boy learning the +landmarks by which he might make sure that he was going right, and +making acquaintance with the few settlers who lived in his portion of +the forest. On Sunday morning, however, the Ranger told the boy he must +leave him to his own devices. + +"I've put in several days with you gettin' you started," he said, "an' I +reckon I'd better be goin' about some other business. There's a heap o' +things doin' all the time, an' as it is I'm pressed to keep up. But +I'll drop in every now an' again, an' you're allers welcome at +headquarters." + +"I hate to have you go, Rifle-Eye," the boy replied, "and you certainly +have been mighty good to me. I'll try not to forget all the things +you've told me, and I'll look forward to seeing you again before long." + +"I'll come first chance I can," replied the hunter. "Take care of +yourself." + +"Good-by, Rifle-Eye," called the boy, "and I'll look for your coming +back." He watched the old man until he was lost to sight and then waited +until the sound of the horse's hoofs on the hillside had ceased. He +found a lump in his throat as he turned away, but he went into the tent, +and went over his reports to see if they read all right before the +Supervisor arrived. Then, thinking that it was likely his chief would +come about noon, he exerted himself trying to make up an extra good +dinner. He caught some trout, and finding some lettuce growing in the +little garden, got it ready for salad, and then mixed up the batter for +some "flapjacks," as the old hunter had shown him how. He had everything +ready to begin the cooking, and was writing letters when he heard his +guest coming up the trail, and went out to meet him. + +After Wilbur had made his reports and got dinner, for both of which he +received a short commendation, the Supervisor broached the question of +the timber trespass. + +"Loyle," he said, "McGinnis and I have measured up the lumber stolen. +There's about four and a half million feet. You were with us when we +first located the trespass, and I want you to come with us to the mill." + +"Very well, Mr. Merritt," answered the boy. + +"I don't want you to do any talking at all, unless I ask you a question. +Then answer carefully and in the fewest words you can. Don't tell me +what you think. Say what you know. I'll do all the talking that will be +necessary." + +Wilbur thought to himself that the conversation probably would not be +very long, but he said nothing. + +"That is," continued the other as an afterthought, "McGinnis and I. I +don't suppose he can be kept quiet." + +Wilbur grinned. + +"But he usually knows what he is talking about, I should think," he +hazarded. + +"He does--on lumber." Then, with one of the abrupt changes of topic, +characteristic of the man, the Supervisor turned to the question of +intended improvements in that part of the forest where Wilbur was to be. +He showed himself to be aware that the lad's appointment as Guard was +not merely a temporary affair, but a part of his training to fit himself +for higher posts, and accordingly explained matters more fully than he +would otherwise have done. Reaching the close of that subject he rose to +go suddenly. He looked around the tent. + +"Got everything you want?" he demanded. + +"Yes, indeed, sir," the boy replied. "It's very comfortable here." + +"Got a watch?" + +"No, Mr. Merritt, not now." + +"Why not?" + +"Mine got lost in that little trouble I had with the bob-cat, and I +didn't notice it until next day." + +"Saw you hadn't one the other day. Take this." + +He pulled a watch out of his pocket and handed it to the boy. + +"But, Mr. Merritt," began the boy, "your watch? Oh, I couldn't--" + +"Got another. You'll need it." He turned and walked out of the tent. + +Wilbur overtook him on the way to the corral. + +"Oh, Mr. Merritt--" he began, but his chief turned sharply round on him. +The boy, for all his impulsiveness, could read a face, and he checked +himself. "Thank you very much, indeed," he ended quietly. He got out the +Supervisor's horse, and as the latter swung himself into the saddle, he +said: + +"What time to-morrow, Mr. Merritt?" + +"Eleven, sharp," was the reply. "So long." + +Wilbur looked after him as he rode away. + +"That means starting by daybreak," he said aloud. "Well, I don't think +I'm going to suffer from sleeping sickness on this job, anyway." And he +went back into the tent to finish the letter which he had started two +evenings before and never had a chance to complete. + +By dawn the next morning Wilbur was on the trail. He was giving himself +more time than he needed, but he had not the slightest intention of +arriving late, neither did he wish the flanks of his horse to show that +he had been riding hard. For the boy was perfectly sure that not a +detail would escape the Supervisor's eye. Accordingly, he was able to +take the trip quietly and trotted easily into camp a quarter of an hour +ahead of time. He was heartily welcomed by McGinnis, while Merritt told +him to go in and get a snack, as they would start in a few minutes. +There was enough to make a good meal, and Wilbur was hungry after riding +since dawn, so that he had just got through when the other two men rode +up. He hastily finished his last mouthful, jumped up, and clambered into +the saddle after the Supervisor, who had not waited a moment to see if +he were ready. + +Merritt set a fairly fast pace, and the trail was only intended for +single file, so that there was no conversation for an hour or more. Then +the head of the forest pulled up a little and conversed with McGinnis +briefly for a while, resuming his rapid pace as soon as they were +through. Once, and once only, did he speak to Wilbur, and that was just +as they got on the road leading to the sawmill. There he said: + +"Think all you like, but don't say it." + +When they reached the mill they passed the time of day with several of +the men, who seemed glad to see them, and a good deal of good-natured +banter passed between McGinnis and the men to whom he was well known. +The Supervisor sent word that he wanted to see the boss, and presently +Peavey Jo came out to meet them. + +"Salut, Merritt!" he said; "I t'ink it's long time since you were here, +hey?" + +The words as well as the look of the man told Wilbur his race and +nation. Evidently of French origin, possibly with a trace of Indian in +him, this burly son of generations of voyageurs looked his strength. +Wilbur had gone up one winter to northern Wisconsin and Michigan where +some of the big lumber camps were, and he knew the breed. He decided +that Merritt's advice was extremely good; he would talk just as little +as he had to. + +The Supervisor wasted no time on preliminary greetings. That was not his +way. + +"How much lumber did you cut last winter off ground that didn't belong +to you?" he queried shortly. + +"Off land not mine?" + +"You heard my question!" + +"I cut him off my own land," said the millman with an injured +expression. + +"Some of it." + +"You scale all the logs I cut. You mark him. I sell him. All right." + +"You tell it well," commented the Supervisor tersely. "But it don't go, +Jo. How much was there?" + +"I tell you I cut him off my land." + +Merritt pointedly took his notebook from his breastpocket. + +"Liars make me tired," he announced impartially. + +"You call me a liar--" began the big lumberman savagely, edging up to +the horse. + +"Not yet. But I probably will before I'm through," was the unperturbed +reply. + +"You say all the same that I am a liar, is it not?" + +"Not yet, anyway. What does it matter? You cut four and a half million +feet, a little over." + +A smile passed over the faces of the men attached to the sawmill. It was +evident that a number of them must know about the trespass, and probably +thought that Peavey Jo had been clever in getting away with it. The +mill-owner laughed. + +"You t'ink I keep him in my pocket, hey?" he queried. "Four and a half +million feet is big enough to see. You have a man here, he see logs, he +mark logs, I cut them." + +The Supervisor swung himself from his horse and handed the reins to +Wilbur. McGinnis did the same. + +"You don't need to get down, Loyle," he said; "it will not take long to +find where the logs are." + +The big lumberman stepped forward with an angry gleam in his eye. + +"This my mill," he said. "You have not the right to walk it over." + +"This is a National Forest," was the sharp reply, "and I'm in charge of +it. I'll go just wherever I see fit. Who'll stop me?" + +"Me, Josef La Blanc--I stop you." + +Just then Wilbur, glancing over the circle of men, saw standing among +them Ben, the half-witted boy who lived in the old hunter's cabin. +Seeing that he was observed, the lad sidled over to Wilbur and said, in +a low voice, questioningly: + +"Plenty, plenty logs? No marked?" + +"Yes," said Wilbur, wondering that he should have followed the +discussion so closely. + +"I know where!" + +"You do?" queried Wilbur. + +Ben nodded his head a great many times, until Wilbur thought it would +fall off. In the meantime Merritt and Peavey Jo, standing a few feet +apart, had been eying each other. Presently the Supervisor stepped +forward: + +"Show me those logs," he ordered. + +"You better keep back, I t'ink," growled the millman. + +Merritt stepped forward unconcernedly, but was met with an open-hand +push that sent him reeling backward. + +"I not want to fight you," he cried; "I get a plenty fight when I want +him. You no good; can't fight." + +"I'm not going to fight," said the Supervisor, "but I'm going to see +where those logs are, or were. Stand aside!" + +But the big Frenchman planted himself squarely in the way. + +"If you hunt for the trouble," he said, "you get him sure," he said +menacingly. + +"I'm not hunting for trouble, Jo, and you know it But I'm hunting logs, +and I'll find them." + +He was just about to step forward, trusting to quickness to dodge the +blow that he could see would be launched at him, when Ben, who had been +whispering to Wilbur, lurched over to the Supervisor and pulled his arm. + +"Plenty, plenty logs, no mark," he said loudly; "I know where. I show +you. They are up--" + +But he never finished the sentence, for the lumberman, taking one step +forward, drove his left fist square at the side of the boy's jaw, +dropping him insensible before he could give the information which +Merritt was seeking. + +But unexpected as the blow had been, it was met scarcely a second later +by an equally unexpected pile-driver jolt from McGinnis. + +"Ye big murdhering spalpeen," burst out the angry Irishman, "ye think +it's a fine thing to try and shtop a man that's trying to do his duty, +and think yerself a fightin' man, bekass ye can lick a man that doesn't +want to fight. This isn't any Forest Service scrap, mind ye, and I'm +saying nothing about logs. I'm talking about your hittin' a weak, +half-crazed boy. Ye're a liar and a coward, Peavey Jo, and a dirty one +at that." + +"Keep quiet, McGinnis," said Merritt, who was stooping down over the +insensible lad, "we'll put him in jail for this." + +"Ye will, maybe," snorted the Irishman, "afther he laves the hospital." + +"You make dis your bizness, hey?" queried the mill-owner. + +"I'll make it your funeral, ye sneaking half-breed Canuck! How about +it, boys," he added turning to the crowd, "do I get fair play?" + +A chorus of "Sure," "'Twas a dirty trick," "The kid didn't know no +better," and similar cries showed how the sentiment of the crowd lay. In +a moment McGinnis and the Frenchman had stripped their coats and faced +each other. The mill-owner was by far the bigger man, and the play of +his shoulders showed that his fearful strength was not muscle bound, but +he stood ponderously; on the other hand, the Irishman, who, while tall, +was not nearly as heavy, only seemed to touch the ground, his step was +so light and springy. + +The Frenchman rushed, swinging as he did so. A less sure fighter would +have given ground, thereby weakening the force of his return blow should +he have a chance to give it. McGinnis sidestepped and cross-jolted with +his left. It was a wicked punch, but Peavey Jo partly stopped it. As it +was, it jarred him to his heels. + +"Lam a kid, will ye, ye bloated pea-jammer," grinned McGinnis, who was +beaming with delight now that the fight was really started. + +"You fight, no talk," growled the other, recovering warily, for the one +interchange had showed him that the Irishman was not to be despised. + +"I can sing a tune," said McGinnis, "and then lick you with one hand--" +He stopped as Peavey Jo bored in, fighting hard and straight and showing +his mettle. There was no doubt of it, the Frenchman was the stronger and +the better man. Twice McGinnis tried to dodge and duck, but Peavey Jo, +for all his size, was lithe when roused and knew every trick of the +trade, and a sigh went up when with a sweeping blow delivered on the +point of the shoulder, the Frenchman sent McGinnis reeling to the +ground. He would have kicked him with his spiked boots as he lay, in the +fashion of the lumber camps, but the Supervisor, showing not the +slightest fear of the infuriated giant, quietly stepped between. + +"This fight's none of my making or my choosing," he said, "but I'll see +that it's fought fair." + +But before the bullying millman could turn his anger upon the +self-appointed referee, McGinnis was up on his feet. + +"Let me at him," he cried, "I'll show him a trick or two for that." + +Again the fight changed color. McGinnis was not smiling, but neither had +he lost his temper. His vigilance had doubled and his whole frame +seemed to be of steel springs. Blow after blow came crashing straight +for him, but the alert Irishman evaded them by the merest fraction of an +inch. Two fearful swings from Peavey Jo followed each other in rapid +succession, both of which McGinnis avoided by stepping inside them, his +right arm apparently swinging idly by his side. Then suddenly, at a +third swing, he ran in to meet it, stooped and brought up his right with +all the force of arm and shoulder and with the full spring of the whole +body upwards. It is a difficult blow to land, but deadly. It caught +Peavey Jo on the point of the chin and he went down. + +One of the mill hands hastened to the boss. + +"You've killed him, I think," he said. + +"Don't you belave it," said McGinnis; "he was born to be hanged, an' +hanged he'll be." + +But the big lumberman gave no sign of life. + +"I have seen a man killed by that uppercut, though," said the Irishman a +little more dubiously, as the minutes passed by and no sign of +consciousness was apparent, "but I don't believe I've got the strength +to do it." + +Several moments passed and then Peavey Jo gave a deep respiration. + +"There!" said McGinnis triumphantly. "I told ye he'd live to be +hanged." He looked around for the appreciation of the spectators. "But +it was a bird of a punch I handed him," he grinned. + + +[Illustration: TRAIN-LOAD FROM ONE TREE. + +Temporary railroad built through the forest to the sawmill. + +_Photograph by U. S. Forest Service._] + + + + +CHAPTER IX + +A HARD FOE TO CONQUER + + +With the defeat of Peavey Jo, and the evidence that he was not too +seriously hurt by the licking he had received, the Supervisor's +attention promptly returned to the question for which he had come to the +mill. Ben had struggled up to a sitting posture, and Merritt repeated +his question as to the whereabouts of the logs, the answering of which +had brought the big millman's anger upon the half-witted lad. +Accordingly, Ben looked frightened, and refused to answer, but when he +saw his foe still lying stretched out on the ground he said: + +"Logs, near, near. Under pile of slabs." + +"Oh, that was the way he hid them," said the Forest Chief; "clever +enough trick, too." + +McGinnis and Merritt followed Ben, and a couple of the men around +sauntered along also. Wilbur stayed with the horses, watching the +mill-hands trying to bring Peavey Jo to consciousness. They had just +roused him and got him to his feet when the government party returned. + +"I've seen your logs," said the Supervisor with just a slight note of +triumph in his voice, "and I've plenty of witnesses. I also know who +you're working for, so it will do no good to skip out. I'll nail both of +you. Four and a half million feet, remember." + +Suddenly McGinnis startled every one by a sudden shout: + +"Drop that ax!" he cried. + +The lumberman, who was just about to get into the saddle, suddenly +dropped from the stirrup and made a quick grab for Ben, who had been +standing near by. The half-witted lad had picked up an ax, and was +quietly sidling up in the direction of the lumberman, who was still too +dazed from the blow he had received from McGinnis to be on the watch. + +"What would ye do with the ax, ye little villain?" asked McGinnis. + +"I kill him, once, twice," said the lad. + +"Ye would, eh? Sure, I've always labored under the impression that +killin' a man once is enough. 'Tis myself that can see the satisfaction +it would be to whack him one with the ax, Ben, but ye'd be robbing the +hangman." + +"I kill him," repeated the half-witted lad. + +"Not with that ax, anyway," said McGinnis wrenching it from his grasp +and tossing it to one of the men who stood by. "I'm thinkin', Merritt, +that we'd better take the boy away. When he's sot, there's no changin' +him." + +"You fellers had best take one o' my ponies," spoke up one of the +sawyers; "I've got a string here, an' you can send him back any time. +An' I guess it wouldn't be healthy here for Ben right now." + +"All right, Phil," said McGinnis; "I'll go along with you and get him." + +As soon as McGinnis was out of the way, Peavey Jo stepped up to where +the Supervisor was sitting in the saddle. Ben had been standing beside +him since McGinnis took the ax, but now he shrank back to Wilbur's side. + +"You t'ink me beaten, hey?" he said, showing his teeth in an angry +snarl; "you wait and see." + +"I don't know whether you're beaten or no," said Merritt contemptuously, +"but any one can see that you've been licked." + +"You t'ink this forest good place. By Gar, I make him so bad you +ashamed to live here." + +"A threat's no more use than a lie, Peavey Jo," replied the Supervisor +sharply. "I don't bluff worth a cent, and the government's behind me." + +The half-breed spat on the ground. + +"That for your American government," he said. "I, me, make your American +government look sick. I warn you fairly now. You win this time, yes, but +always, no. Bon! My turn come by and by." + +"All right," replied the head of the forest indifferently, turning away +as McGinnis and Ben came up, "turn on your viciousness whenever you +like." Saying which, he rode away without paying further heed to the +muttered response of the millman. + +The ride home was singularly silent. Neither McGinnis nor the +half-witted lad were in any mood for speaking, Ben nursing a badly +swollen jaw, and McGinnis weak from the body blows and the lame shoulder +he had received in the fight. The Supervisor was angry that the trouble +had come to blows, but in justice could not blame McGinnis for the part +he had taken. It annoyed him, especially, to feel that he had been +compelled to take the part of a mere spectator, although this feeling +was partly soothed by the knowledge that he had discovered and proved +the very thing he had set out to find. + +On arriving at headquarters, the four horses were turned into the +corral, and the men went in to get supper. Merritt immediately commenced +a full report to Washington on the case, and McGinnis and Ben were glad +to lie down. At supper Wilbur took occasion to congratulate McGinnis on +the result of the encounter. The Irishman nodded. + +"He's a better man than me," he admitted readily, "and that uppercut was +the only thing I had left. But 'tis a darlin' of a punch, is that same, +when ye get it in right. But I don't think we're through with him. He +looks like the breed that harbors a grudge." + +"He threatened Merritt while you were away," said Wilbur, dropping his +voice so as not to disturb the rest. + +"The mischief he did! The nerve of him! Tell me what he said." + +Wilbur repeated the conversation word for word, and the Irishman +whistled. + +"There, now," he said. "What did I tell ye? Not that I can see there's +much that he can do." + +"Do you suppose he'd set a fire?" asked Wilbur. + +"He's mean enough to," said McGinnis, "but I don't believe he would. No +man that knows anything at all about timber would. Sure, he knows that +we could put it out in no time if there wasn't a wind, and if there was, +why the blaze might veer at any minute and burn up his mill and all his +lumber." + +"But for revenge?" + +"A Frenchy pea-jammer isn't goin' to lose any dollars unless he has to," +said McGinnis. "I don't think you need to be afraid of that." Then, +following along the train of thought that had been suggested, he told +the boy some lurid stories of life in the lumber camps of Michigan and +Wisconsin in the early days. + +Early next morning Wilbur returned to his camp to resume his round of +fire rides, which he found to be of growing interest. On his return to +his camp, although tired, the lad would work till dark over his little +garden, knowing that everything he succeeded in growing would add to the +enrichment of his food supply. Then the fence around the garden was in +very bad repair, and he set to work to make one which should effectively +keep out the rabbits. + +Another week he found that if he could build a little bridge across a +place where the canyon was very narrow he could save an hour's ride on +one of his trails. Already the lad had put up a small log span on his +own account. He went over and over this line of travel, blazing his way +until he felt entirely sure that he had picked out the best line of +trail, and then one evening he called up Rifle-Eye and asked him if he +would come over some time and show him how to build this little bridge. + +There followed three most exciting days in which the Ranger and a Guard +from the other side of the forest joined him in bridge-building. They +not only spanned the canyon, but strengthened the little log bridge the +boy had made all by himself. Wilbur's reward was not only the shortening +of his route, but commendation from Rifle-Eye that he had taken the +trouble to find out the route and that he had picked it so well. That +night he wrote home as though he had been appointed in charge of all the +forests of the world, so proud was he. + +Then there was one day in which Wilbur found the value of his lookout, +for from the very place that the old hunter had pointed out as being one +of "the windows of his house," the boy saw curling up to the westward a +small, dull cloud of smoke. Remembering the warnings of the Ranger, he +did not leap to the saddle at once, but remained for several minutes, +studying the nearest landmarks to the apparent location of the fire and +the surest method of getting there. That ride was somewhat of a novel +experience for Kit as well as the boy. The little mare had grown +accustomed to a quiet, even pace on the forest trails, and the use of +the spur was a thing not to be borne. Wilbur felt as if he were fairly +flying through the pine woods. Still he remembered to keep the mare well +in hand going down the steeper slopes, and within a couple of hours he +found himself at the fire. Then Wilbur found how true it was that a +blaze could easily be put out if caught early. There was little wind, +and the line of fire was not more than a mile long. By clearing the +ground, brushing the needles aside for a foot or so on the lee side of +the fire, most of it burned itself out and the rest he could stamp to +extinction. Here and there he used his fire shovel and threw a little +earth where the blaze was highest. + +That evening he telephoned to headquarters, reporting that he had put +the fire out, but only received a kindly worded rebuke for not having +endeavored to find out what caused the fire, and a suggestion that he +should ride back the next day and investigate. But before he could +telephone himself the next evening, and while he was at supper, the +'phone rang, and he found the Supervisor was on the wire. + +"Come to headquarters at once," he was told; "all hands are wanted." + +"To-night, Mr. Merritt?" the boy queried. + +There was a moment's pause. + +"What did you do to-day?" he asked in answer. + +"I went to find out what started that fire," the boy replied. "It was a +couple of fishermen from the city. They had been here before, and so had +no guide. I followed them up and showed them how to make a fire +properly." + +"That's a pretty long ride," said Merritt; "I guess you can come over +first thing to-morrow morning." + +"Very well, sir," said Wilbur, and hung up the receiver. + +"I certainly do wonder," he said aloud, "what it can be? It can't be a +big fire, or he would tell me to come anyway, no matter what I'd done +to-day, especially as fire is best fought at night. And I don't see how +it can be any trouble over Peavey Jo, because that's in the hands of the +Washington people now. Unless," he added as an afterthought, "they have +come to arrest him." + +Having settled in his mind that this was probably the trouble, Wilbur +returned to his supper. Just as he was finishing it, he said aloud: "I +don't see how it can be that, either. For if it's due to any trouble of +that kind they want big, husky fellows, and Merritt can swear in any one +he needs." So giving up the problem as temporarily insoluble, Wilbur +went to bed early so as to make a quick start in the dawn of the +morning. + +It turned out to be a glorious day, with but very little wind, and +Wilbur's mind was quite set at rest about the question of fire. But when +he reached headquarters he was surprised to see the number of men that +were gathered there. Not laughing and joking, as customarily, they stood +gravely around, only eying him curiously as he came in. The boy turned +to McGinnis. + +"What's wrong?" he said. + +For answer the lumberman held out a piece of wood from which the bark +had been stripped. Underneath the bark on the soft wood were numberless +little channels which looked as though they had been chiseled out with a +fine, rounded chisel. + +"Oh," he said, "I see." Then he continued: "But I didn't know there was +any bark-beetle here." + +McGinnis waved his hand around. + +"Does this look as if we had known very long?" he said. + +"Who found it out?" asked Wilbur. + +"Rifle-Eye," was the reply, "or at least Merritt and he found traces on +the same day and brought the news into camp. Merritt only saw signs in +one spot, but the old Ranger dropped on several colonies at different +parts of the forest, so that it must be widespread." + +The boy whistled under his breath. He had heard enough of the ravages of +the bark beetle to know what it might mean if it once secured a strong +footing on the Sierras. + +"I remember hearing once," he said, "that over twenty-two thousand +acres of spruce in Bohemia were wiped out in a month by the Tomicus +beetle." + +"This is the work of a Tomicus," said McGinnis. "And what such a +critter as that was ever made for gets me." + +"What's going to be done?" asked Wilbur. + +McGinnis pointed to the house whence the Supervisor was just coming out. + +"I have notified the District Forester," he said, standing on the steps, +"and if I find things in bad shape he will send for Wilcox, who knows +more about the beetle than any man in the Service. I don't know how much +damage has been done nor how widespread it is. There are eight of us +here, and we will divide, as I said before, each two keeping about fifty +yards apart and girdling infected and useless trees. Loyle, you go with +Rifle-Eye." + +Wilbur was delighted at finding himself with his old friend again, and +he seized the opportunity gladly of asking him how he happened to find +out that the pest had got a start. + +"I was campin' last night," said the old Ranger, "an' I saw an old dead +tree that looked as if it might have some tinder that would start a +fire easy. So I picked up my ax an' went up to it. But the minute I got +there I felt somethin' was wrong, so I sliced along the bark, an' there +were hundreds of the beetles. Then I looked at some of the near by +trees, an' there was a few, here and there. But the funny part of it was +that although I looked, an' looked carefully, for a hundred yards on +either side, I couldn't find any more." + +"So much the better," said Wilbur, "you didn't want to find any more, +did you?" + +The old hunter stepped over to a spruce and examined it closely. + +"I didn't think there were any there," he said, "but you can't be too +sure." + +They walked all the rest of the morning, without having seen a sign of +any beetles, though once the most distant party whooped as a sign that +some had been found. + +"I remember," said the Ranger, "one year when we had a plague o' +caterpillars. They was eatin' the needles of the trees an' killin' 'em +by wholesale. There was nothin' we could do to stop it. But it got +stopped all right." + +"How?" Wilbur queried interestedly. "Rain?" + +"Rain would only make it worse. Have you ever noticed, son, that when +somethin' pretty bad comes along, there's always somethin' else comes to +sort o' take off the smart? Nothin's bad all the time. Well, this time, +there came a fly." + +"A fly?" + +"Yes, son, a fly, lookin' somethin' like a wasp, only not as long as +your thumb-nail. They come in swarms, an' started disposin' o' them +caterpillars as though they had been trained to the business. They stung +'em an' then dropped an egg where they'd stung. Sometimes the +caterpillar lived long enough to spin a web, as they usually do, but it +never come out as a moth. An' since it's the moth that lays the eggs, +this fly put an end to the caterpillar output with pleasin' swiftness." + +"What did they call the fly?" + +"I did hear," said Rifle-Eye, thinking. "Oh, yes, now I remember; it was +the ik, ik--" + +"Oh, I know now," said Wilbur; "I remember hearing about it at the +Ranger School. The ichneumon fly." + +"That's it. But, as I was sayin'--" he stopped short. Then the old +hunter took a quick step to one side, pointed at a pine tree, and said: + +"There's one o' them." + +Wilbur could only see a few little holes in the bark, but the old +woodsman, slicing off a section, showed the tree girdled with the +galleries that the beetle had made. He raised a whoop, and Wilbur in the +distance could hear the Supervisor saying, "Three," implying it was the +third piece found infected. + +"But I don't quite see," said Wilbur, "how they make these galleries +running in all sorts of ways." + +"I ain't no expert on this here," said Rifle-Eye. "But as far as I know, +in the spring a beetle finds an old decayed tree. She begins at once to +bore a sort of passageway, half in the bark an' half in the wood, an' +lays eggs all along the sides. When the eggs come out, each grub digs a +tunnel out from the big gallery, an' in about three weeks the grub has +made a long tunnel, livin' on the bark an' wood for its food, an' has +grown to be a beetle. Then it bores its way out an' flies away to +another tree to repeat the same interestin' performance." + +"And if there are a lot of them," said Wilbur, "I suppose it stops the +sap from going up." + +"Exactly," said the hunter. "But they generally begin on sickly trees." + +"Wilbur," he called a moment later, "come here." + +The boy hurried over to the old hunter, who was standing by a dead +tree--a small one, lying on the ground. + +"Try that one," he said. + +The boy struck it with the ax and it showed up alive with beetles and +grubs and honeycombed with galleries. + +"Gee," said the boy, "that's a bad one." + +"That's very like the way I found the other," said the old hunter; "one +very bad one lyin' on the ground an' just a few around it bad, while +just a short distance away there was no signs." + +He stood and thought for a minute or two, but aside from the +coincidence, Wilbur could not see that there was anything strange in +that. They worked busily for a few moments, girdling the infected trees, +and also girdling some small useless trees near by, because, as the +hunter explained, when the beetles flew out seeking a new tree to +destroy, they would prefer one that was dying, as a tree from which +all the bark has been cut away all round always does, and then these +trees could be burned. + +"Have you noticed wheel tracks around here?" asked the hunter +thoughtfully. + +"I did think so," said Wilbur, "near that dead tree, but I s'posed, of +course, I was wrong. What would a wagon be doing up here?" + +Suddenly the Ranger dropped his ax as though he had been stung. He +turned to the boy, his eyes flashing. + +"Boy!" he said, "did you see the stump of that dead tree!" + +"I didn't notice," said Wilbur wonderingly. + +The old woodsman picked up his ax, and led the way back to the dead +tree. + +Wilbur looked at the base of the tree. + +"It isn't a windfall," he said; "it's been cut." + +"Where's the stump?" asked Rifle-Eye. + +The boy looked within a radius of a few feet, then looked up at the +hunter. + +"Where's the stump?" repeated the old man. + +Wilbur turned back and searched for five minutes. Not a stump could he +find that fitted the tree. None had been cut for some time, and none at +all of so small a girth. + +"I can't find any," he admitted shamefacedly, afraid that the Ranger +would prove him wrong in some way. + +"Nor can I," said Rifle-Eye. "Well?" + +"Then I guess there isn't one there," said the boy. + +"How did the tree get there?" + +Wilbur looked at him, reflecting the question that he saw in the other's +eyes. + +"It couldn't get there of itself," he said, "and it was cut, too." + +"An' wheel-tracks?" + +"There were tracks," said the boy, "I'm sure of that." + +"When a cut tree is found lyin' all by itself," said the Ranger, "with +wagon tracks leadin' up to it an' away from it, it don't need a city +detective to find out that some one dropped it there. An' when that dead +tree is full of bark-beetle, an' there ain't none in the forest, that +sure looks suspicious. An' when you find two of 'em jest the same way, +with beetle in both, an' wheel-tracks near both, ye don't have to have a +dog's nose to scent somethin's doin' that ain't over nice." + +"But who," said Wilbur indignantly, "would do a trick like that?" + +"The man that drove that wagon," said the old hunter. "I reckon, son, +you an' me'll do a little trailin' an' see where those wheels lead us." + +They left the place where the tree was lying and followed the faint mark +of the wheels. In a few minutes they crossed the line of the +Supervisor's inspection and he called to them. + +"Hi, Rifle-Eye," he said, "you're away off the line." + +"I know," said the old Ranger, "but I've got a plan of my own." + +Merritt shrugged his shoulders, but he knew that Rifle-Eye never wasted +his time, and he said no more. The old hunter and the boy walked on +nearly a quarter of a mile, and there they found the tracks running +beside a tiny gully, and a little distance down this, just as it had +been thrown, was another of these small trees, equally filled with +beetle. + +"I don't think we'll find any stump to this one, either," said Wilbur +gleefully, for he saw that they were on the right track. + +"You will not," replied the other sternly. After they had girdled the +infected trees again the Ranger shouldered his ax and, abandoning the +tracks of the wheels, started straight for headquarters. + +At supper all sorts of conjectures were expressed as to the cause of the +pest, its extent, and similar matters, but Rifle-Eye said nothing. +Wilbur was so full of the news that he was hardly able to eat anything +for the information he was just bursting to give. But he kept it in. +Finally, when the men had all finished and pipes were lighted, the old +Ranger spoke, in his slow, drawling way, and every one stopped to +listen. + +"There's five of ye," he said, "that's found beetle, isn't there?" + +"Yes," answered the Supervisor, "five." + +"And I venture to bet," he continued, "that you found a dead tree lyin' +in the middle of the infected patch!" + +"Yes," said several voices, "we did." + +"An' you didn't find much beetle except just round that one tree?" + +"Not a bit," said one or two. "What about it?" + +"There's a kind o' disease called Cholera," began Rifle-Eye in a +conversational tone, "that drifts around a city in a queer sort o' way. +It never hits two places at the same time, but if it goes up a street, +it sort o' picks one side, an' stops at one place for a while then goes +travelin' on. It acts jest as if a man was walkin' around, an' he was +the cholera spirit himself." + +"Well?" queried the Supervisor sharply. + +The old Ranger smiled tolerantly at his impatience. + +"Wa'al," he said, "I ain't believin' or disbelievin' the yarn. But I +ain't believin' any such perambulatin' spirit for a bark-beetle. +Especially when I finds wagon tracks leading to each place where the +trouble is." + +"What do you mean, Rifle-Eye?" asked Merritt. "Give it to us straight." + +"I mean," he said, "that I ain't never heard of spirits needin' wagons +to get around in. An' when I find dead trees containin' bark-beetles +planted promiscuous where they'll do most good, I'm aimin' to draw a +bead on the owner o' that wagon. An' I'll ask another thing. Did any o' +you find the stumps of them infected trees?" + +There was a long pause, and then McGinnis, always the first to see, +laughed out loud ruefully. + +"'Tis a black sorrow to me," he said, "that I didn't let Ben welt him +wid the ax the other day. Somebody else will have to do it now." + +"You mean," said the Supervisor, flaming, "that those trees were +deliberately brought here to infect the forest, trees full of beetles?" + +"Sure, 'tis as plain as the nose on your face," said McGinnis. "An' it's +dubs we were not to see it ourselves." + +"And it was--?" + +"The bucko pea-jammer that I gave a lickin' to in the spring, for sure," +said McGinnis. "Peavey Jo, of course, who else?" + + +[Illustration: WILBUR'S OWN BRIDGE. + +Light structure made by the boy over stream just below his camp. + +_Photograph by U. S. Forest Service._] + + +[Illustration: WHERE THE SUPERVISOR STAYED. + +The Ranger's cabin where the men gathered to fight the invasion of the +bark beetle. + +_Photograph by U. S. Forest Service._] + + + + +CHAPTER X + +A FOURTH OF JULY PERIL + + +Wilbur stayed but a few days at headquarters, the Supervisor and +Rifle-Eye having succeeded in trailing the wagon that had deposited the +trees from the point of its entrance into the forest to the place it +went out, by this means ensuring the discovery of all the spots where +diseased trees had been placed. One of them was in Wilbur's section of +the forest, and he was required to go weekly and examine all the trees +in the vicinity of the infected spot to make sure that the danger was +over. But, thanks to Rifle-Eye's discovery, the threatened pest was +speedily held down to narrow limits. + +This added not a little to the lad's riding, for the place where Peavey +Jo had deposited the infected tree in his particular part of the forest +was a long way from the trail to the several lookout points to which he +went daily to watch for fires. Fortunately, having built the little +bridge across the canyon, and thus on one of the days of the week +having shortened his ride, he was able to use the rest of the day +looking after bark-beetles. But it made a very full week. He could not +neglect any part of these rides, for June was drawing to an end and +there had been no rain for weeks. + +One night, returning from a hard day, on which he had not only ridden +his fire patrol, but had also spent a couple of hours rolling big rocks +into a creek to keep it from washing out a trail should a freshet come, +he found a large party of people at his camp. There was an ex-professor +of social science of the old regime, his wife and little daughter, a +guide, and a lavish outfit. Although the gate of Wilbur's corral was +padlocked and had "Property of the U. S. Forest Service" painted on it, +the professor had ordered the guide to smash the gate and let the +animals in. + +Wilbur was angry, and took no pains to conceal it. + +"Who turned those horses into my corral?" he demanded. + +The professor, who wore gold-rimmed eyeglasses above a very dirty and +tired face, replied: + +"I am in charge of this party, and it was done at my orders." + +"By what right do you steal my pasture?" asked the boy hotly. + +"I understood," said the professor loftily, "that it was the custom of +the West to be hospitable. But you are probably too young to know. Your +parents live here?" + +"No," replied the lad. "I am a Forest Guard, and in charge of this +station. You will have to camp elsewhere." + +At these last words the flap of the tent was parted and a woman came +out, the professor's wife, in fact. She looked very tired and much +troubled. + +"What is this?" she asked querulously. "Have we got to start again +to-night?" + +Wilbur took off his hat. + +"I beg your pardon," he said, "I did not know there were ladies in the +party." He turned to the professor. "I suppose if it will bother them +I'll have to let you stay. But if it hadn't been for that I'd have +turned every beast you've got out into the forest and let them rustle +for themselves." + +"Yes, you would!" said the guide. "An' what would I have had to say?" + +"Nothing," said Wilbur, "except that I'd have you arrested for touching +U. S. property." He turned to the professor: "How did you get here?" he +said. + +"Up that road," said the older man, pointing to the southwest. + +"And why didn't you camp a couple of miles down? There's much better +ground down there." + +"The guide said there was no place at all, and he didn't know anything +about this camp, either, and we thought we would have to go on all +night." + +Wilbur snorted. + +"Guide!" he said contemptuously. "Acts more like a stable hand!" + +"Well," said the professor testily, "if there's been any damage done you +can tell your superiors to send me a bill and I'll take the matter up in +Washington. In the meantime, we will stay here, and if I like it here, I +will stay a week or two." + +"Not much, you won't," said Wilbur, "at least you won't have any horses +in the corral after daybreak to-morrow morning. I'll let them have one +good feed, anyhow, and if they're traveling with a thing like that to +look after them,"--he pointed to the "guide,"--"they'll need a rest. But +out they go to-morrow." + +"We will see to-morrow," said the camper. + +"In the meantime, I see a string of trout hanging there. Are they +fresh?" + +"I caught them early this morning," answered Wilbur, "before I began my +day's work." + +The professor took out a roll of bills. + +"How much do you want for them!" he asked. + +"They are not for sale," the boy replied. + +"Oh, but I must have them," the other persisted. "I had quite made up my +mind to have those for supper to-night." + +"And I suppose, if I hadn't come home when I did," said Wilbur, "you +would have stolen those, too!" + +"I would have recompensed you adequately," the former college official +replied. "And you have no right to use the word 'stolen.' I shall report +you for impertinence." + +By this time Wilbur was almost too angry to talk, and, thinking it +better not to say too much, he turned on his heel and went to his own +tent. Before going down to the corral with Kit, however, he took the +precaution of carrying the string of fish with him, for he realized that +although the professor would not for the world have taken them without +paying, he would not hesitate to appropriate them in his absence. He +cooked his trout with a distinct delight in the thought that the +intruders had nothing except canned goods. + +In the morning Wilbur was up and had breakfast over before the other +camp was stirring. As soon as the "guide" appeared Wilbur walked over to +him. + +"I've given you a chance to look after your animals," he said, "before +turning them out. You take them out in ten minutes or I'll turn them +loose." + +"Aw, go on," said the other, "I've got to rustle grub. You haven't got +the nerve to monkey with our horses." + +Promptly at the end of the ten minutes Wilbur went over to the "guide" +again. + +"Out they go," he said. + +But the other paid no attention. Wilbur went down to the corral, the +gate of which he had fixed early that morning, caught his own two +mounts, and tied them. Then he opened the gate of the corral and drove +the other eight horses to the gate. In a moment he heard a wild shout +and saw the "guide" coming down the trail in hot haste. He reached the +corral in time to head off the first of his horses which was just coming +through. Wilbur had no special desire to cause the animals to stray, +and was only too well satisfied to help the "guide" catch them and tie +them up to trees about the camp. By this time it was long after the hour +that the boy usually began his patrol, but he waited to see the party +start. As they were packing he noticed a lot of sticks that looked like +rockets. + +"What are those?" he asked. "If they're heavy, you're putting that pack +on all wrong." + +"These ain't got no weight," said the "guide"; "that's just some +fireworks for the Fourth. We've got a bunch of them along for the little +girl. She's crazy about fireworks." + +Wilbur said no more, but waited until the professor came out. Then he +walked up to him. + +"I understand," he said, "that you have some fireworks for the Fourth." + +The man addressed made no reply, but walked along as though he had not +heard. + +"I give you fair warning," said Wilbur, "that you can't set those off in +this forest, Independence Day or no Independence Day." + +"We shan't ask your permission," said the old pedant loftily. "In fact, +some will be set off this evening, and some to-morrow, wherever we may +be." + +"But don't you understand," the boy said, "that you're putting the +forest in danger, in awful danger of fire? And if a big forest fire +starts, you are just as likely to suffer as any one else. You might +cause a loss of millions of dollars for the sake of a few rockets." + +"The man that sold me them," said the other, "said they were harmless, +and he ought to know." + +"All right," said Wilbur. "I've been told off to protect this forest +from danger of fire, and if there's any greater danger around than a +bunch like yours I haven't seen it. I reckon I'll camp on your trail +till you're out of my end of the forest, and then I'll pass the word +along and see that there's some one with you to keep you from making +fools of yourselves." + +He turned on his heel and commenced to make up a pack for his heavier +horse, intending to ride Kit. He then went to the telephone and, finding +no one at headquarters, called up the old hunter's cabin. The Ranger had +a 'phone put in for Ben, who had learned how to use it, and by good +fortune the half-witted lad knew where to find Rifle-Eye. He explained +to Ben how matters stood, and asked him to get word to the Ranger if +possible. Then Wilbur went back to the party and gave them a hand to +get started. + +Although he had been made very angry, Wilbur could see no gain in +sulking and he spent the day trying to establish a friendly relation +with the professor, so that, as he expressed it afterwards, "he could +jolly him out of the fireworks idea." But while this scholastic visitor +was willing to talk about subjects in connection with the government, +and was quite well-informed on reclamation projects, Wilbur found the +professor as stubborn as a mule, and every time he tried to bring the +conversation round to forest fires he would be snubbed promptly. + +That evening Wilbur led the party to a camping place where, he reasoned, +there would be little likelihood of fire trouble, as it was a very open +stand and all the brush on it had been piled and burned in the spring. +But the lad was at his wits' end what further to do. He could not seize +and carry off all the fireworks, and even if he were able to do so, he +couldn't see that he had any right to. It was a great relief to the boy +when he heard a horse on the trail and the old Ranger cantered up. + +"Oh, Rifle-Eye," he said, "I'm so glad you've come. Tell me what to +do," and the boy recounted his difficulty with the party from first to +last. + +The old woodsman listened attentively, and then said: + +"I reckon, son, we'll stroll over and sorter see just how the land lies. +There's a lot of things can be done with a mule by talkin' to him, +although there is some that ain't wholly convinced by a stick of +dynamite. We'll see which-all these here are." + +"I think they're the dynamite kind," the boy replied. + +"Well, we'll see," the Ranger repeated. He stepped in his loose-jointed +way to where the party was sitting around the campfire. Then, looking +straight at the man of the party, he said: + +"You're a professor?" + +The remark admitted of no reply but: + +"I was for twenty years." + +"And what did you profess?" + +At this the camper rose to his feet, finding it uncomfortable to sit and +look up at the tall, gaunt mountaineer. He replied testily that it +wasn't anything to do with Rifle-Eye what chair he had held or in what +college, and he'd trouble him to go about his business. + +Rifle-Eye heard him patiently to the end, and then asked again, without +any change of voice: + +"And what did you profess?" + +Once again the reputed educator expressed himself as to the Ranger's +interference and declared that he had been more annoyed since coming +into the forest than if he had stayed out of it. He worked himself up +into a towering rage. Presently Rifle-Eye replied quietly: + +"You refuse to tell?" + +"I do," snapped the professor. + +"Is it because you are ashamed of what you taught, or of where you +taught it?" the Ranger asked. + +This was touching the stranger in a tender place. He was proud of his +college and of his hobby, and he retorted immediately: + +"Ashamed? Certainly not. I was Professor of Social Economy in Blurtville +University." + +"And what do you call Social Economy?" asked Rifle-Eye. + +The educator fell into the trap thus laid out for him and launched into +a vigorous description of his own peculiar personal views toward +securing a better understanding of the rights of the poor and of modern +plans for ensuring better conditions of life, until he painted a picture +of his science and his own aims which was most admirable. When he drew +breath, he seemed quite pleased with himself. + +The Ranger thought a minute. + +"An' under which of these departments," he said, "would you put breakin' +into this young fellow's corral, and havin' your eight horses eatin' up +feed which will hardly be enough for his two when the dry weather +comes?" + +"That's another matter entirely," replied the professor, becoming angry +as soon as he was criticised. + +"Yes, it's another matter," said Rifle-Eye. "It's doin' instead of +talkin'. I reckon you're one o' the talkin' kind, so deafened by the +sound o' your own splutterin' that you can't hear any one else. It's a +pity, too, that you don't learn somethin' yourself before you set others +to learnin'." + +"Are you trying to teach me?" snapped the traveler. + +The old Ranger leaned his arm on the barrel of his rifle, which, +according to his invariable custom, he was carrying with him, a habit +from old hunting days, and looking straight at the professor, said: + +"I ain't no great shakes on Social Economy, as you call it, and I ain't +been to college. But I c'n see right enough that there's no real meanin' +to you in all you know about the rich an' the poor when you'll go an' +rob a lad o' the pasture he'll need for his horses; an' you're only +actin' hypocrite in lecturin' about promotin' good feelin's in society +when you're busy provokin' bad feelin' yourself. An' when you're harpin' +on the deep canyon that lies between Knowledge an' Ignorance, it don't +pay to forget that Politeness is a mighty easy bridge to rear, an' one +that's always safe. You may profess well enough, Mister Professor, but +you're a pretty ornery example o' practisin'." + +"But it's none of your business--" interrupted the stranger angrily. + +Rifle-Eye with a gesture stopped him. + +"It's just as much my business to talk to you," he said, "as it'd be +yours to talk to me. In fact it's more. You c'n talk in your lecture +room, an' I'll talk here. Perhaps it ain't altogether your fault; it's +just that you don't know any better. You're just a plumb ignorant +critter out here, Mister Professor, an' by rights you oughtn't to be +around loose. + +"An' you tried to threaten a boy here who was doin' his duty by sayin' +that you'd write to Washington. What for? Are you so proud o' thievin' +an' bullyin' that you want every one to know, or do you want to tell +only a part o' the story so as you'll look all right an' the other +fellow all wrong. That breed o' Social Economy don't go, not out here. +We calls it lyin', an' pretty mean lyin' at that." + +He broke off suddenly and looked down with a smile. + +"Well, Pussy," he said, "that's right. You come an' back me up," and +reaching out his brown gnarled hand he drew to his side the little girl +who had come trustingly forward to him as all children did, and now had +slipped her little hand into his. + +"An' then there's this question o' fire," he continued. "Haven't you got +some fireworks for the Fourth, Pussy?" he said, looking down at his +little companion. + +"Oh, yeth," she lisped, "pin-wheelth, and crackerth, and thnaketh, and +heapth of thingth." + +"What a time we'll have," he said. "Shall we look at them now?" + +"Oh, yeth," the little girl replied, and ran across to her father, "can +we thee them now?" + +"No, not now," the father replied. + +The old Ranger called the "guide" by name. + +"Miguel," he said, "the fireworks are wanted to-night. Bring 'em to me." + +The professor protested, but a glance at the sinewy frame of the +mountaineer decided Miguel, and he brought several packages. In order to +please the little girl, Rifle-Eye lent her his huge pocket-knife and let +her open the packages, sharing the surprises with her. Some of them he +put aside, especially the rockets, but by far the larger number he let +the child make up into a pile. + +"Will you give me your word you won't set off these?" queried the +mountaineer, pointing to the smaller pile of dangerous explosives with +his foot. + +"I'll say nothing," said the professor. + +Without another word the Ranger stooped down, picked them up in one big +armful, and disappeared beyond the circle of the light of the campfire +into the darkness. He reappeared in a few minutes. + +"I'm afeard," he said, "your fireworks may be a little wet. I tied 'em +in a bundle, fastened a stone to 'em, an' then dropped 'em in that +little lake. You can't do any harm with those you've got now." He waited +a moment. "You can get those rockets," he said, "any time you have a +mind to. That lake dries up about the middle of September." + +"By what right--" began the professor. + +"I plumb forget what sub-section you called that partickler right just +now," Rifle-Eye replied, "but out here we calls it fool-hobblin'. You're +off your range, Mister Professor, an' the change o' feed has got you +locoed mighty bad. I reckon you'd better trot back to your own pastures +in the East, an' stay there till you know a little more." + +"What is your name and address?" blustered the professor; "I'll have the +law invoked for this." + +"There's few in the Rockies as don't know old Rifle-Eye Bill," the +Ranger replied, "an' my address is wherever I c'n find some good to be +done. Any one c'n find me when I'm wanted, an' I'm ready any time you +say. Now, you're goin' to celebrate the Fourth to-morrow, to show how +fond you are o' good government. You c'n add to your lectures on Social +Economy one rule you don't know any thin' about. It's a Western rule, +this one, an' it's just that no man that can't govern himself can govern +anythin' else." + +He turned on his heel, ignoring the reply shouted after him, and +followed by Wilbur, mounted and rode away up the trail. + +"I've got to get right back," said the Ranger; "we're goin' to start +workin' out a special sale of poles." + +"Telegraph poles?" queried Wilbur. + +"Yes." + +"When you come to think of it," said the boy, "there must be quite a lot +of poles all over the country." + +"Merritt said he reckoned there was about sixteen million poles now in +use, an' three and a half million poles are needed every year just for +telegraph and telephone purposes alone." + +"When you think," said Wilbur, "that every telegraph and telephone pole +means a whole tree, there's some forest been cut down, hasn't there?" + +"How many poles do you s'pose are used in a mile?" + +"About forty, I heard at school," the boy replied, "and it takes an +army of men working all the year round just puttin' in poles." + +The old hunter struck a match and put a light to his pipe. + +"More forest destruction," said the boy mischievously, "I should think, +Rifle-Eye, you'd be ashamed to waste wood by burning it up in the form +of matches." + +"Go on talkin'," said Rifle-Eye, "you like tellin' me these things you +picked up at the Ranger School. Can you tell how much timber is used, or +how many matches are lighted an' thrown away?" + +"Three million matches a minute, every minute of the twenty-four hours," +said Wilbur immediately. "That is," he added after a moment's +calculation, "nearly four and a half billion a day. And then only the +very best portion of the finest wood can be used, and, as I hear, the +big match factories turn out huge quantities of other stuff, like doors +and window sashes, in order to use up the wood which is not of the very +finest quality, such as is needed for matches." + +"How do they saw 'em so thin, I wonder?" interposed the Ranger. + +"Some of it is sawed both ways," the boy replied. "Some logs are boiled +and then revolved on a lathe which makes a continuous shaving the +thickness of a match, and a lot of matches are paper-pulp, which is +really wood after all. There's no saying, Rifle-Eye," he continued, +laughing, "how many good trees have been cut down to make a light for +your pipe." + +The old hunter puffed hard, as the pipe was not well lighted. + +"Well," he said, "I guess I'll let the Forest Guards handle it." He +looked across at the boy. "It's up to you," he said, "to keep me goin.' +Got a match?" + + +[Illustration: MEASURING A FAIR-SIZED TREE. + +Lumberman on the scene of felling operations checking up a timber sale. + +_Photograph by U. S. Forest Service._] + + +[Illustration: RUNNING A TELEPHONE LINK.] + + +[Illustration: RUNNING A TELEPHONE LINK. + +Using the poles planted by Nature for annihilating space in sparsely +settled regions. + +_Photographs by U. S. Forest Service._] + + + + +CHAPTER XI + +AMIDST A CATTLE STAMPEDE + + +Wilbur would have liked greatly to be able to stay at his little tent +home and celebrate the Fourth of July in some quiet fashion, but the +fireworks folly of the professor's party had got on his nerve a little, +and he was not satisfied until he really got into the saddle and was on +his way to a lookout point. Nor was he entirely without reward, for +shortly before noon, as he rode along his accustomed trail, a +half-Indian miner met him and told him he had been waiting to ask him to +dinner. And there, with all the ceremony the little shack could muster, +this simple family had prepared a feast to the only representative of +the United States that lived near them, and Wilbur, boy-like, had to +make a speech, and rode along the trail later in the afternoon, feeling +that he had indeed had a glorious Fourth of July dinner in the Indian's +cabin. + +The week following the Supervisor rode up, much to Wilbur's surprise, +who had not expected to see him back in that part of the forest so +soon. But Merritt, who indeed was anxious to get away, by his +conversation showed that he was awaiting the arrival and conveyance of a +trainload of machinery for the establishment of a large pulp-mill on the +Kern River. The trail over which this machinery would have to be taken +was brushed out and ready, all save about nine miles of it, a section +too small to make it worth while to call a Ranger from another part of +the forest. So the Supervisor announced his intention of doing the work +himself, together with Wilbur. The night preceding, just before they +turned in for the night, the boy turned to his chief and said: + +"What time in the morning, Mr. Merritt?" + +"I'll call you," replied the Supervisor. + +He did, too, for at sharp five o'clock the next morning Wilbur was +wakened to find the older man up and with breakfast ready. + +"I ought to have got breakfast, sir," said the boy; "why didn't you +leave it for me?" + +"You need more sleep than I do," was the sufficient answer. "Now, tuck +in." + +The boy waited for no second invitation and devoted his attention to +securing as much grub as he could in the shortest possible time. +Breakfast was over, the camp straightened up, and they were in the +saddle by a quarter to six. It was ten miles from Wilbur's camp to the +point where the trail should start. The country was very rough, and it +was drawing on for nine o'clock when they reached the point desired. + +"Now," said the Supervisor, "take the brush hook and clear the trail as +I locate it." + +Wilbur, accordingly, following immediately after his chief, worked for +all he knew how, cutting down the brushwood and preparing the trail. +Every once in a while Merritt, who had blazed the trail some distance +ahead, would return, and, bidding the boy pile brush, would attack the +underwood as though it were a personal enemy of his and would cover the +ground in a way that would make Wilbur's most strenuous moments seem +trifling in comparison. Once he returned and saw the lad laboring for +dear life, breathing hard, and showing by his very pose that he was +tiring rapidly, although it was not yet noon, and he called to him. + +"Loyle," he said, "what are you breaking your neck at it that way for?" + +"I don't come near doing as much as I ought unless I do hurry," he +said. "And then I'm a long way behind." + +"You mean as much as me?" + +The boy nodded. + +"Absurd. No two men's speed is the same. Don't force work. Find out what +gait you can keep up all day and do that. Make your own standard, don't +take another man's." + +"But I go so slowly!" + +"Want to know it all and do it all the first summer, don't you? Suppose +no one else had to learn? I don't work as hard as you do, though I get +more done. You can't buck up against an old axman. I haven't done this +for some time, but I guess I haven't forgotten how. Go and sit down and +get your breath." + +"But I'm not tired--" began Wilbur protestingly. + +"Sit down," he was ordered, and the boy, feeling it was better to do +what he was told, did so. After he had a rest, which indeed was very +welcome, the Supervisor called him. + +"Loyle," he said, "you know something about a horse, for I've watched +you with them. Handle yourself the same way. You wouldn't force a horse; +don't force yourself." + +Moreover, the older man showed the boy many ways wherein to save labor, +explaining that there was a right way and a wrong way of attacking every +different kind of bush. In consequence, when Wilbur started again in the +afternoon he found himself able to do almost half as much again with +less labor. Working steadily all day until sundown, five miles of the +trail had been located, brushed out, and marked. + +There was a small lake near by, and thinking that it would be less +fatiguing for the boy to catch fish than to look after the camp, the +Supervisor sent him off to try his luck. Wilbur, delighted to have been +lucky, returned in less than fifteen minutes with four middling-sized +trout, and he found himself hungry enough to eat his two, almost bones +and all. That night they slept under a small Baker tent that Merritt had +brought along on his pack horse, the riding and pack saddles being piled +beside the tent and covered with a slicker. + +The following day, by starting work a little after daybreak, the +remaining four miles of the trail were finished before the noonday halt, +which was made late in order to allow the completion of the work. +Wilbur, when he reviewed the fact that they had gone foot by foot over +nine miles of trail, clearing out the brush and piling it, so that it +could be burned and rendered harmless as soon as it was dry, thought it +represented as big a two days' work as he had ever covered. + +"Will the pulp-mill be above or below the new Edison plant?" queried +Wilbur on their way home. + +"Above," said his companion. "I'll show you just where. You're going to +ride down with me to the site of the mill to-morrow. There's a lot of +spruce here, and it ought to pay." + +"But I thought," said Wilbur, "that paper-pulp was such a destructive +way of using timber?" + +"It is," answered Merritt, "but paper is a necessity. A book is more +important than a board." + +"But doesn't it take a lot of wood to make a little paper?" asked the +boy. "There's been such a howl about paper-pulp that I thought it must +be fearfully wasteful." + +"It isn't wasteful at all," was the reply. "A cord and a half of spruce +will make a ton of pulp. Where the outcry comes in is the quantity used. +One newspaper uses a hundred and fifty tons of paper a day. That means +two hundred and twenty-five cords of wood. The stand of spruce here is +about ten cords to the acre. So one newspaper would clean off ten acres +a day or three thousand acres a year." + +"But wouldn't it ruin the forest to take it off at that rate?" + +"Certainly," the Supervisor answered, "but the sale will be so arranged +that not more will be sold each year than will be good for the forest." + +"Is all paper made of spruce?" asked Wilbur. + +"No. Many kinds of wood will make paper. Carolina poplar and tulip wood +are both satisfactory." + +"Except for the branches and knot-wood," said Wilbur, "almost every part +of every kind of tree is good for something." + +"And you can use those, too," came the instant reply. "That's what dry +distillation is for. All that you've got to do is fill a retort with +wood and put a furnace under it, and all pine tree leavings can be +transformed into tar and acetic acid, from which they can make vinegar, +as well as wood alcohol and charcoal." + +Finding that the boy was thoroughly interested in the possibilities of +lumber, the Supervisor, usually so silent and brief in manner, opened +out a little and talked for two straight hours to Wilbur on the +possibilities of forestry. He showed the value of turpentine and resin +in the pine trees and advocated the planting of hemlock trees and oak +trees for their bark, as used in the tanning industry. + +As the Forester warmed up to his subject, Wilbur thought he was +listening to an "Arabian Nights" fairy tale. Despite his customary +silence Merritt was an enthusiast, and believed that forestry was the +"chief end of man." He assured the boy that twenty different species of +tree of immense value could be acclimatized in North America which are +of great commercial value now in South America; he compared the climate +in the valleys of the lower Mississippi with those of the Ganges, and +named tree after tree, most of them entirely unknown to Wilbur, which +would be of high value in the warm, swampy bottoms. And when Wilbur +ventured to express doubt, he was confronted with the example of the +eucalyptus, commonly called gum tree, once a native of Australia, now +becoming an important American tree. + +All the way home and all through supper the Supervisor talked, until +when it finally became time to turn in, the boy dreamed of an ideal time +when every acre of land in the United States should be rightly occupied; +the arid land irrigated from streams fed by reservoirs in the forested +mountains; the rivers full of navigation and never suffering floods; the +farms possessing their wood-lots all duly tended; and every inch of the +hills and mountains clothed with forests--pure stands, or mixed stands, +as might best suit the conditions--each forest being the best possible +for its climate and its altitude. + +But he had to get up at five o'clock next morning, just the same, and +dreams became grim realities when he found himself in the saddle again +and off for a day's work before six. A heavy thunderstorm in the night +had made everything fresh and shining, but at the same time the water on +the underbrush soaked Wilbur through and through when he went out to +wrangle the horses. Merritt's riding horse, a fine bay with a blazed +face, had a bad reputation in the country, which Wilbur had heard, and +he was in an ugly frame of mind when the boy found him. But Wilbur was +not afraid of horses, and he soon got him saddled. + +"I think Baldy's a little restless this morning, sir," ventured Wilbur, +as they went to the corral to get their horses. But he received no +answer. The Supervisor's fluent streak had worn itself out the day +before and he was more silent than ever this morning. + +Merritt swung himself into his saddle, and, as Wilbur expected, the bay +began to buck. It was then, more than ever, that the boy realized the +difference between the riding he had seen on the plains and ordinary +riding. Merritt was a good rider, and he stuck to his saddle well. But +Wilbur could see that it was with difficulty, and that the task was a +hard one. There was none of the easy grace with which Bob-Cat Bob had +ridden, and when Baldy did settle down Wilbur felt that his rider had +considered his keeping his seat quite a feat, not regarding it as a +trifling and unimportant incident in the day. + +Merritt and the boy rode on entirely off the part of the forest on which +Wilbur had his patrol, to a section he did not know. They stopped once +to look over a young pine plantation. Just over a high ridge there was a +wider valley traversed by an old road which crossed the main range about +five miles west and went down into a valley where there were numerous +ranches. The principal occupation of these ranchmen was stock-raising, +on account of their long distance from a railroad which prevented them +marketing any produce. Just about July of each year these ranchmen +rounded up their stock, cut out the beef steers, and shipped them to the +markets. It was then the last week in July, and the Supervisor expected +to meet some of the herds upon the old road which crossed the mountains +further on. Just as they reached the bottom of the hill they saw the +leaders of a big herd coming down the road from the pass. In the +distance a couple of cowpunchers could be seen in front holding up the +lead of the bunch. + +"I'll wait and talk," said Merritt, reining in. As perhaps he had +exchanged four whole sentences in two hours' ride, Wilbur thought to +himself that the conversation would have to be rather one-sided, but he +knew the other believed in seizing every opportunity to promote +friendliness with the people in his forest and waited their upcoming +with interest. The Supervisor had his pack-horse with him, and as the +herd drew nearer he told Wilbur to take him out of sight into the brush, +so as not to scare the steers, and tie him up safely. That done, +Wilbur rode back to the road. + +By the time he had returned the two punchers had ridden up. One proved +to be the foreman of the outfit, by name Billy Grier, and the other a +Texan, whom Merritt called Tubby Rodgers, apparently because he was as +thin as a lath. + +"I was a-hopin'," said Grier as he rode up, "that you-all was headin' +down the road a bit." + +"I wasn't planning to," said the Forester. "Why?" + +"We had a heavy storm down in the valley last night, which sort of broke +things up badly, an' I had to leave a couple of men behind." + +"Don't want to hire us to drive, do you?" asked Merritt. + +"Allers willin' to pay a good man," said the foreman with a grin. "Give +ye forty and chuck." + +The Supervisor smiled. + +"I'm supposed to be holding down a soft job," he said; "government +service." + +"Soft job," snorted Grier, "they'd have to give me the bloomin' forest +afore I'd go at it the way you do. But, Merritt," he added, "this is +how. A piece down the road, say a mile an' a half, I'm told there's a +rotten bit o' road, an' I'm a little leery of trouble there. I'd have +strung out the cattle three times as far if I'd known of it. But I had +no chance; I've only just heard that some old county board is tryin' to +fix a bridge, an' they're movin' about as rapid as a spavined mule with +three broken legs." + +"Well?" queried Merritt; "I suppose you want us to help you over that +spot." + +"That's it, pard," said the foreman; "an' I'll do as much for you some +time." + +"I wish you could, but I'll never have a string of cattle like those to +turn into good hard coin." + +"Well," said the cowpuncher, "why not?" + +"Nothing doing," replied Merritt; "the Forest Service is an incurable +disease that nobody ever wants to be cured of." + +By this time the head of the bunch of steers was drawing close and the +foreman repeated his request. + +"All right," answered the Forester, who thought it good policy to have +the ranchman feel that he was under obligations to the Service, "we'll +give you a hand all right." + +After riding down the road for about a mile it became precipitous, and +Wilbur could readily see where there was likely to be trouble. Shortly +before they reached the place where the bridge was being repaired the +bank on the right-hand side of the road gave place to a sheer drop forty +to fifty feet high and deepening with every step forward. As the bunch +neared the bridge Merritt and Wilbur, with the cowpunchers, slowed up +until the steers were quite close. Then Grier and Rodgers went ahead +over the bridge, while Merritt waited until about fifty cattle had +passed and then swung in among them, telling Wilbur to do the same when +about another fifty head had passed. + +At first Wilbur could not see the purpose of this, and he had great +difficulty in forcing his horse among the cattle. But they pressed back +as he swung into the road, giving him a little space to ride in, and +thus dividing the head of the drove into two groups of fifty. Following +instructions, Wilbur gradually pressed the pace of the bunch in order to +prevent any chance of overcrowding from the rear. + +It seemed easy enough. Owing to the narrowness of the road and the +precipitous slope it was impossible for the steers to scatter, and as +long as the pace was kept up, there was likely to be no difficulty. But +Kit--Wilbur was riding Kit--suddenly pricked her ears and began to +dance a little in her steps. The steers, although their pace had not +changed, were snuffling in an uncertain fashion, and Wilbur vaguely +became conscious that fear was abroad. He quieted Kit, but could see +from every motion that she was catching the infection of the fear. He +tightened his hold on the lines, for he saw that if she tried to bolt +both of them would go over the edge. Wilbur looked down. + +A hundred yards or so further on the road widened slightly, and Wilbur +wondered whether it would be possible for him to work his way to the +right of the steers and gallop full speed alongside the herd to get in +front of them; but even as he thought of the plan he realized that it +would scarcely be possible, and that unless he reached the front of the +herd before the road narrowed again he would be forced over the edge. +And, as he reached the wider place, he saw Grier and Rodgers standing. +They also had sensed the notion of fear and were waiting to see what +could be done in the main body of the herd. Merritt had worked his way +through the steers, and was riding in the lead. Wilbur wondered how he +had ever been able to force Baldy through. This put Wilbur behind a +bunch of about one hundred steers and in front of five or six hundred +more. + +Below him, to the right, was a valley, the drop now being about one +hundred and fifty feet, and Wilbur could see at the edge of the creek, +pitched among some willows, a little tent, the white contrasting +strongly with the green of the willows. The road wound round high above +the valley in order to keep the grade. Twice Wilbur halted Kit to try to +stop the foremost of the herd behind him from pressing on too close, but +the third time Kit would not halt. She was stepping as though on +springs, with every muscle and sinew tense, and the distance between the +steers before and the steers behind was gradually lessening. + +Wilbur realized that as long as the even, slow pace was kept he was in +no danger, but if once the steers began to run his peril would be +extreme. He could turn neither to the right nor to the left, the little +pony was nothing in weight compared to the steers, and even if she were, +he stood a chance of having his legs crushed. The only hope was to keep +the two herds apart. He wheeled Kit. But as the little mare turned and +faced the tossing heads and threatening horns, she knew, as did Wilbur +instantaneously, that with the force behind them, no single man could +stop the impetus of the herd, although only traveling slowly. Indeed, if +he tried, he could see that the rear by pressure onwards would force the +outside ranks midway down the herd over the edge of the cliff. Kit spun +round again almost on one hoof, all but unseating Wilbur. + +But even in that brief moment there had been a change, and the boy felt +it. The steers were nervous, and, worst of all, he knew that Kit could +realize that he himself was frightened. When a horse feels that the +rider is frightened, anything is apt to happen. Wilbur's judgment was +not gone, but he was ready to yell. The herd behind grew closer and +closer. Presently the walk broke into a short trot, the horns of the +following bunch of steers appeared at Kit's flanks, a rumbling as of +half-uttered bellows was heard from the rear of the herd, and, on the +instant, the steers began to run. + + +[Illustration: NURSERY FOR YOUNG TREES. + +_Photograph by U. S. Forest Service._] + + +[Illustration: PLANTATION OF YOUNG TREES. + +_Photograph by U. S. Forest Service._] + + +[Illustration: SOWING PINE SEED. + +Brush on ground is to shade tender seedlings from the heat of the sun. + +_Photograph by U. S. Forest Service._] + + +[Illustration: PLANTING YOUNG TREES. + +_Photograph by U. S. Forest Service._] + + + + +CHAPTER XII + +ALMOST TRAMPLED TO DEATH + + +The minute the stampede began Wilbur's nerves steadied, and with voice +more than with hand he quieted Kit. It took a moment or two for the +front group to break into the running gallop of the frightened steer, +and two head of cattle not twenty feet from Wilbur were forced over the +edge before the leaders started to run. In this moment the rear bunch +closed up solidly and Wilbur was hemmed in. + +The pace became terrific, and as they hurtled along the face of the +cliff with the precipice below, Wilbur noted to his horror that he was +gradually being forced to the outer edge. Being lighter than the steers, +the heavier animals were surging ahead alongside the cliff wall, and the +little pony with the boy on his back was inch by inch being forced to +the verge, of which there was a clear fall now of about one hundred +feet. Vainly he looked for a tree overhanging the road into which he +could leap; there were no trees. And every few strides he found himself +appreciably nearer the edge. Looking back, as far as he could see the +steers were crowding, and looking forward the road curved, hiding what +might lie before. + +His feet were out of the stirrups and well forward, so that, although he +had received three or four bruising encounters as the cattle lurched and +surged against him, he was unhurt. Several times Kit was hurled from her +stride, but she always picked up her feet neatly again. Wilbur could not +but admire the little mare, although he felt that there was no hope for +them. + +Then suddenly, with an angry bellow, a big black steer which had been +pushing up on the inside turned his head and tried to gore the pony. +There was not room, however, but the action so angered Wilbur that, +pulling his six-shooter, he sent a bullet crashing to his brain. The +steer gave a wild lurch, but did not fall immediately, and in an instant +was forced to the edge and fell into the valley below. Instantly, Kit, +even before Wilbur could speak or lay hand on the rein, gave a sidewise +jump into the hole made by the place the black steer had occupied. In +one stride as much gain away from the dangerous edge had been made as +had been lost in the previous half mile. + +More at his ease, but for the fearful speed and the danger that Kit +might lose her footing, Wilbur looked ahead, talking to the steers +around, endeavoring to quiet them, noting that the road was turning more +sharply in the valley, although the downward grade was steeper and it +was increasingly hard for the little pony to hold up. But as they turned +the curve, there, immediately before them, standing in the middle of the +road, with their fishing poles over their shoulders, were a man and a +boy, evidently entirely ignorant of the danger so rapidly approaching. +The bank above was too steep to climb, and the one below straight ninety +feet sheer to the creek. To Wilbur it looked like sure death, and a most +awful one at that, but he at least was utterly unable to do anything to +prevent it, and he shuddered to think that he himself might be trampling +with his pony's hoofs on what might be below. + +But just as he had in that instant decided that there was no help for +it, he suddenly saw Merritt on old Baldy shoot forward like an arrow +from a bow stretched to the uttermost. The herd of steers was traveling +at a rapid clip, but under the startling influence of combined quirt +and spur, and with no room in which to display his bucking propensities, +Baldy just put himself to running, and only hit the high spots here and +there. + +It seemed incredible to Wilbur that any horse could stop, especially on +a down grade, at the speed that Baldy was traveling, but just before he +reached the man and boy, having previously shouted to warn them, Merritt +pulled up with a jerk that brought Baldy clear back on his haunches. +Like a flash of light he leaped from the horse and half lifted, half +pushed the man into the saddle, tossed the boy up behind him, and then, +grabbing hold of the slicker which was tied behind the cantle, he hit +old Baldy a slap with the quirt, and down the road they went, not twenty +yards ahead of the steers, Baldy carrying on his back the man and the +boy, and Merritt, hanging on like grim death, trying to run, taking +strides that looked as though he wore seven-leagued boots. The speed was +terrific and presently Wilbur noticed that Merritt was keeping both feet +together, putting his weight on the saddle, and vaulting along in +immense leaps. One moment he was there, but the next moment that Wilbur +looked ahead Baldy was still racing down the road with his double load, +but Merritt was nowhere to be seen. It was with a sickening feeling that +Wilbur realized that he must have lost his hold, and was in the same +peril from which he had saved the man and the boy. + +For a few fearful minutes Wilbur watched the ground beneath his horse's +feet, but saw no object in the occasional glimpses he could secure of +the dusty road. Once again Wilbur found himself being forced to the +outer edge of the road, but the cliff was shallowing rapidly, and now +they were not more than twenty feet above the valley with the road +curving into it in the distance. A couple of hundred feet further on, +however, a hillock rose abruptly, coming within four feet of the level +of the road, and Wilbur decided to put the pony at it, seeing there was +a chance of safety, and that even if they both got bad falls, there was +no fear of being trampled. + +Allowing the pony to come to the outside, he reined her in hard and led +her to the jump, swinging from the saddle as he did so in order to give +both Kit and himself a fair chance. The pony, released from the weight +of the rider before she struck ground, met it in a fair stride, and +without losing footing kept up the gait to the bottom of the hillock, +pulling up herself on the level grass below. But Wilbur, not being able +to estimate his jump, because he was in the act of vaulting from the +saddle, struck the ground all in a heap, crumpled up as though he were +broken in pieces and was hurled down the hill, reaching the bottom +stunned. He was unconscious for several minutes, but when he came to +himself, Kit was standing over him, nosing him with her soft muzzle as +though to bring him round. Weakly he staggered to his feet, and seeing +Kit standing patiently, managed to clamber into the saddle. + +The pony started immediately at an easy canter, crossing the valley and +meeting the herd where the road ran into the level. The cattle were +tired from the run, and sick and bruised as he was, Wilbur headed them +off and rounded them up, being aided presently by Rodgers and Grier, who +had found themselves unable to cut into the stampeding herd, and +consequently had waited until the whole herd got by, when they had +ridden back along the trail a little distance, got down to the creek by +a bridle path, and crossed the valley by a short cut. + +In the distance Baldy could be seen grazing, and Wilbur lightly touched +Kit with the spur to find out what had happened. The bay, as soon as he +had stopped running, evidently had bucked off his two riders, who were +still sitting on the ground, apparently dazed. The man, who was +evidently an Eastern tourist, was pale as ashes and dumb with fright, +and could tell nothing. The boy knew no more than, "He had to let go, he +had to let go." + +Together with Grier, Wilbur started back along the road to look for what +might be left of Merritt. The foreman tried to persuade the lad to stay, +for he was bleeding from a scalp wound and his left wrist was sorely +twisted, if not actually sprained, but Wilbur replied that he had said +he was going back to look for Merritt, and go back he would if both arms +and legs were broken. Kit, although very much blown, was willing to be +taken up the road at a fair gallop, when, just as they turned a corner, +they almost ran down the Supervisor, who was walking down the road as +unconcernedly as though nothing had happened. + +"Oh, Mr. Merritt," cried the boy, "I thought you were dead." + +"Cheerful greeting, that," answered the Forester. "No, I'm not dead. You +look nearer it than I do." + +"But didn't you get run down?" + +"Do I look as if I'd been a sidewalk for a thousand steers?" was the +disgusted reply. "Don't ask silly questions, Loyle." + +But the foreman broke in: + +"The boy's right enough to ask," he said; "an' there's no reason why you +shouldn't tell. How did you dodge the steers?" + +"That was easy enough," said Merritt. "I held on to Baldy until I saw a +crack in the rock big enough to hold a man. Then I let go and crawled +into that until the herd passed by." + +The boy breathed a sigh of relief. + +"I sure thought you were gone," he said. + +The Supervisor scanned him keenly, then slapped Kit heartily on the +flank. + +"You've got a good little mare there," he said; "there's not many of +them could have done it. Tell me all about it some time. What started +them?" he added, turning to the cattleman. + +"That fool new bridge gave way just as the last of the bunch crowded on +it. About twenty of them fell over the cliff there, and about thirty +more along the road. But it might have been a heap worse, an' you ought +ter have two life-savin' medals." + +Merritt's only reply was a gesture of protest. + +"An' you, youngster," went on the cattleman, "you kept your nerve and +rode a bully ride. I wish you'd take my quirt and keep it from me as a +remembrance of your first experience with a cattle stampede." + +Wilbur stammered some words of thanks, but the foreman waved them aside. + +"And now," said the Supervisor, with an entire change of tone, "I guess +we'll go back and get the pack-horse and go on to the valley." + +As they rode over the bridge Wilbur noted with a great deal of interest +the breakage of the supporting timbers on the outer side, and looking +down into the valley beneath, he could see the bodies of the cattle who +had been pushed over the edge in the stampede. + +"I read a story once," said the boy, "of a youngster who got caught in a +stampede of buffalo, and when his horse lost his footing he escaped by +jumping from the back of one buffalo to another until he reached the +outside of the herd. But I never believed it much." + +"It makes a good yarn," said the Supervisor, "an' it's a little like the +story they tell of Buffalo Bill, who, trying to get away from a buffalo +stampede, was thrown by his horse puttin' his foot in a badger hole and +breaking his leg." + +"Why, what in the world did he do?" queried Wilbur. + +"He waited until the foremost buffalo was just upon him, then gave a +leap, clear over his horns, and landed on his back, then turning sharply +round so as to face the head instead of the tail, he pulled out his +revolver and kept shooting to one side of the buffalo's head, just past +his eye, so that at every shot the beast turned a little more to one +side, thus cutting him out of the herd. Then, when he was clear of the +herd, he shot the buffalo." + +"What for?" asked Wilbur indignantly. "It seems a shame to kill the +buffalo which had got him free." + +"What chance would he have had against an angered buffalo alone and on +foot?" said Merritt. "He couldn't very well get off and make a bow to +the beast and have the buffalo drop a curtsey?" + +"I hadn't thought of that," said the boy, laughing. + +"I was afraid I might have to try that dodge, but when I saw the crack +in the rock I knew it was all right." + +"Well," said Wilbur as they turned off the road to where the pack-horse +had been picketed, "I think we're both pretty lucky to have come off so +easily." + +Merritt looked at the lad. He was dusty and grimy to a degree, his +clothes were torn in a dozen places where he had gone rolling down the +hill, a handkerchief was roughly knotted around his head, and there were +streaks of dried blood in his hair. + +"You look a little the worse for wear," he said; "maybe you'd better go +home, and I'll go on alone." + +"I won't," said Wilbur. + +"You what?" came the curt rebuke. "You mean that you would rather not." + +"Yes, sir," said the boy. "I mean that I don't feel too used up." + +The Supervisor nodded and rode on ahead. For a couple of miles or so, +they rode single file, and in spite of the boy's bold announcement that +he was not too badly shaken up, by the time he had ridden nearly an hour +more in the hot sun his head was aching furiously and he was beginning +to stiffen up. Accordingly he was glad when a cabin hove in sight, and +he cantered up to ask if they might call for a drink of water. + +"We stop here," was the laconic reply. + +As they rode up a big man came out of the house, which was quite a +fair-sized place, to meet them. + +"Well, Merritt," he said, "what have you got for me this time?" +motioning to the boy. + +"No patient for you, Doc," said Merritt; "one for your wife." + +The mountain doctor laughed, a great big hearty laugh. + +"Violet," he called, "you're taking my practice away from me. Here's a +patient that says he won't have me, but wants you." + +Immediately at his call, a small, slender woman came to the porch of the +house, and seeing the doctor helping Wilbur down from the saddle, +stepped forward. + +"I can walk all right," said Wilbur when the doctor put out a hand to +steady him. "I just wanted a drink of water." + +"Right you are," said the doctor, "we'll give you all the water you +want, just in a minute. Now," he continued as he led the boy into the +house, "let's have a look at the trouble." + +But Wilbur interposed. + +"This Forest Service," he said, smiling, "is the worst that ever +happened for having to obey orders, and Mr. Merritt put me in charge of +your wife, not you." + +The big doctor put his hand on the shoulder of his wife and roared until +the house shook with his laughter. It was impossible to resist the +infection, and Wilbur, despite his headache, found himself laughing with +the rest. But the doctor's wife, stepping quietly forward, took the lad +aside and, removing the handkerchief that Grier had wound around his +head, bathed the wound and cleansed it. She had just finished this when +the doctor came over, still laughing. He touched the wound deftly, and +Wilbur was amazed to find that the touch of this large, hearty man was +just as soft and tender as that of his wife. There was power in his very +finger-tips, and the boy felt it. He looked up, smiling. + +"I guess you're Doctor Davis," he said. + +"Why?" said the doctor; "what makes you think so?" + +"Oh, I just felt it," the boy replied. "I've heard a lot about you." + +"I'm 'it,' all right," said the doctor, "but you've refused to allow me +to attend you. I'll turn the case over to Dr. Violet Davis," and he +laughed again. + +Mrs. Davis smiled brightly in response and continued attending to the +boy. Then she turned to the two men. + +"You've put this case in my charge," she said, "and I'm going to +prescribe rest for a day or two anyway. That is," she added, "unless Mr. +Merritt finds it compulsory to take him away." + +The Supervisor smiled one of his rare smiles. + +"I wouldn't be so unkind as to take any one away from here +unnecessarily," he said, "no matter how busy. But there always is a lot +to do. Ever since the beavers first started forestry, it has meant work, +and lots of it. But if you're told to rest you've got to do it. I know. +I've been sick myself here." + +The doctor slapped him on the shoulder. + +"Beautiful case," he said, "beautiful case. But he wouldn't obey +orders." + +"He always did mine," put in Mrs. Davis. + +"I'm afraid I can't this time," said the Supervisor with one of his +abrupt changes of manner, turning to the door. "I'll call for Loyle on +my way home to-morrow." + +"Oh, Mr. Merritt," began Mrs. Davis in protest, "he ought to have two or +three days' rest, anyway." + +The chief of the forest turned to Wilbur. + +"Well?" he queried. + +The boy looked around at the comfortable home, at the big jovial doctor, +and his charming little wife, and thought how delightful it would be to +have a few days' rest. And his head was aching, and he was very stiff. +Then he looked at the Supervisor, quiet and unflinching in anything that +was to be done, working with him and helping him despite the big +interests for which he was responsible, he thought of the Forest Service +to which he was pledged to serve, he remembered his little tent home and +the portion of the range over which he had control, and straightened up. + +"What time to-morrow?" he said. "I'll be ready." + +"Middle of the afternoon," said Merritt. "So long." + +He bade good-by to the doctor and his wife, and after having seen that +Kit was properly attended to, went on his way to the Kern River Valley, +to visit the Edison power plant erected on the river, and to prepare for +the installation of the new pulp-mill. + +In the meantime, Wilbur, more fatigued by the day's excitement than he +had supposed himself to be, had fallen asleep, a sleep unbroken until +the evening. And all evening the doctor and his wife told him stories of +the Forest Service men and of the various miners, lumbermen, +prospectors, ranchers, and so forth, all tales of manliness, courage, +and endurance, and not infrequently of heroism. But when Wilbur told of +the professor and asked about other greenhorns that had come to the +forest, the doctor turned and asked him if he knew anything of "the boy +from Peanutville." + +"He had just come into camp up here in the Sierras," said the doctor on +receiving the lad's negative reply, "from some little place in the +middle West that was giving itself airs as a city. He had read somewhere +about the forest Rangers, and he himself had been on several Sunday +School picnics in the woods, so he thought that he knew all about it. At +the end of his first couple of days' work he said: + +"'I never supposed that a Ranger had to cut brush and build fence and +grub stumps and slave like a nigger. I don't believe he ought to. I +don't think it's what my people would like to have me do. I always +supposed that he just rode around under the trees and made outsiders toe +the mark.' + +"I said he was a new Guard," the doctor continued, "but he said this in +camp to a group of old-timers with whom he had been working. They hadn't +worried him at all, but had given him a fair show and helped him all +they could. But this was too rich. They glanced at each other with +mingled contempt and amusement, then put on mournful faces, looked on +him solemn-eyed, and regretted the cruelties of the Service. + +"'The boss,' they said, 'just sticks it on us all the time. We are +workin' like slaves--Guards and Rangers and everybody. It's plumb wicked +the way we're herded here.' + +"So the new hand felt comforted by this outward sympathy, and he ambled +innocently on. + +"'That heavy brush tears my clothes, and my back aches, and I burned a +shoe, and my socks are full of stickers. Then I fell on the barbed wire +when I was stretching it--and cut my nose. I tell you what it is, +fellows, if I ever get a chance to get away, I hope I'll never see +another inch of barbed wire as long as I live. If I was only back in +Peanutville, where I used to live, I could be eating a plate of ice +cream this minute instead of working like a dog and having to wash my +own clothes Sundays when I might be hearing the band play in the park.' + +"'Too bad,' shouted the old Rangers in chorus, until a peal of laughter +that echoed through and through that mountain camp showed the indignant +youngster that his point of view hadn't been what you might say warmly +welcomed by the old-timers. + +"But the following day, as I heard the story from Charles H. Shinn," the +doctor went on, "one of the best men in the gang took the lad aside the +following morning as they were riding up the trail, and said to him: + +"'How much of that stuff you was preachin' last night did you mean? Of +course, this is hard work; it has to be. Either leave it mighty pronto, +or wrastle with it till you're a man at the game. I've seen lots of +young fellows harden up--some of 'em just as green an' useless when they +came as you are now. Don't you know you hold us back, and waste our +time, too, on almost any job? But it's the price we have to pay up here +to get new men started. Unless you grow to love it so much that there +isn't anything else in all the world you'd care to do, you ain't fit for +it, an' you'd better get out, and let some one with more sand than you +have get in.' + +"Well, Loyle," the doctor said, "that youngster was provoked. He +wasn't man enough to get really angry, so that his temper would +keep him sticking to the work; he was one of these saucy +slap-'em-on-the-wrist-naughty kind. + +"'I think all of you are crazy,' he said. + +"He walked into the Supervisor's office that afternoon and explained +that the kind of work he had been given to do was altogether below his +intellectual powers. He never understood how quickly things happened, +but he signed a resignation blank almost before he knew it, and went +back to Peanutville. + +"It so happened that one of the Rangers had friends in Peanutville, and +the boys at the camp followed the youth's career with much interest. He +clerked, he took money at a circus window, he tried cub newspaper work, +he stood behind a dry-goods counter, he was everything by turns but +nothing long." + +"What finally happened to him?" asked Wilbur. + +"Last I heard he was a salesman in a woman's shoe store. But he's still +with us in spirit," said the doctor, "as a horrible example. Right now, +down in the heart of a forest fire, when the Rangers are working like +men possessed down some hot gulch, one will say to the other: + +"'Gee, Jack, if I was only back where I used to be, I could be having a +plate of ice cream this minute.' And the other will reply: 'I wish I +might be back in Peanutville and hear the band play in the park.' And +both men will laugh and go at the work all the harder for realizing what +a miserable failure the weak greenhorn had been." + +"I'm thinking," said Wilbur, "that I'll never give them the chance to +talk like that about me!" + +"From what I heard," said the doctor, "I don't believe you will." + +"And from what I see," said the doctor's wife gently, as the two rose +and bade the "patient" good-night, "I know we shall all be glad that you +have come to us here in the forest." + + +[Illustration: WHAT TREE-PLANTING WILL DO. + +Pine plantation fifty years old showing growth of timber. Trunks, +however, should not show so many superfluous low branches. + +_Photograph by U. S. Forest Service._] + + +[Illustration: THE FIRST CONSERVATION EXPERT + +Work of a beaver in felling a tree with which to build a dam for his +home. + +_Photograph by U. S. Forest Service._] + + + + +CHAPTER XIII + +HOW THE FOREST WON A GREAT DOCTOR + + +In the middle of the night the telephone bell rang. Instantly Wilbur +heard the doctor's voice responding. + +"Yes, where is it?" he queried. "Where? Oh, just beyond Basco Aleck's +place. All right, I'll start right away." + +There was some rummaging in the other rooms, and in less than five +minutes' time the clatter of hoofs outside told the boy that the doctor +was off, probably on the huge gray horse Wilbur had seen in the corral +as he rode in that day. It was broad daylight when he wakened again, and +Mrs. Davis was standing beside him with his breakfast tray. It was so +long since Wilbur had not had to prepare breakfast for himself that he +felt quite strange, but the night's rest had eased him wonderfully, and +aside from a little soreness where he had had his scalp laid open, he +was quite himself again. + +"Did Doctor Davis have to go away in the night?" he asked. "I thought I +heard the telephone." + +"Yes," answered the doctor's wife. "But that is nothing new. Almost once +a week, at least, he is sent for in the night, or does not reach home +till late in the night. I've grown used to it," she added; "doctors' +wives must." + +"But distances are so great, and there are so few trails," said the boy, +"and Doctor Davis is so famous, one would think that he would do better +in a city." + +"Better for himself?" came the softly uttered query. + +The boy colored hotly as he realized the idea of selfishness that there +had been in his speech. + +"I beg your pardon," he said. "No, I see. But it does seem strange, just +the same, that he should be out here." + +"He wouldn't be happy anywhere else." + +"Excuse me, Mrs. Davis," said the boy, who had caught something of the +Supervisor's abruptness, "but what brought him here?" + +"Do you not," answered the doctor's wife, giving question for question, +"know the old hunter, 'Rifle-Eye Bill'? I don't know his right name. +Why, of course, you must; he's the Ranger in your part of the forest." + +"Do I know him?" said Wilbur, and without stopping for further question +talked for ten minutes on end, telling all that the old hunter had done +for him and how greatly he admired him. "Know him," he concluded, "I +should just guess I did." + +"It was he," said the woman, "who persuaded us to come out here." + +"Won't you tell me?" pleaded the boy. "I'd love to hear anything about +Rifle-Eye. And the doctor, too," he added as an afterthought. + +"It was long ago," she began, "seventeen years ago. Yes," she continued +with a smile at the lad's surprise, "I have lived here seventeen years." + +"Do you--" began the boy excitedly, "do you ride a white mare?" + +This time it was the doctor's wife who colored. She flushed to the roots +of her hair. + +"Yes," she answered hurriedly, and went on to explain the early +conditions of the forest. But Wilbur was not listening, he was +remembering the stories that he had heard since his arrival into the +forest of the "little white lady," of whom the ranchers and miners +always spoke so reverently. But presently Rifle-Eye's name attracted his +attention and he listened again. + +"We were camping," she said, "in one of the redwood groves not far from +San Francisco for the summer, the doctor having been appointed an +attending surgeon at one of the larger hospitals, although he was very +young. We had been married only a little over a year. One evening just +after supper, Rifle-Eye, although we did not know him then, walked into +camp. + +"'You are a doctor, an operating doctor?' he inquired. + +"'Yes,' my husband replied, 'I am a surgeon.' + +"Then the old hunter came to where I was standing. + +"'You are a doctor's wife?' he queried. You know that direct way of +his?" + +"Indeed I do," Wilbur replied. "It's one you've got to answer." + +"So I said, 'Yes, I am a doctor's wife,' just as if I was a little girl +answering a catechism. + +"'The case is seventy miles away,' he said, 'and there's a horse +saddled.' He turned to me. 'A woman I know is coming over in a little +while to stay the night with you, so that you will not be lonely. +Come, doctor.' There was a hurried farewell, and they were gone. I can +laugh now, as I think of it, but it was dreadful then. + +"Presently, however, the woman that he had spoken of came over to our +camp. She was a mountaineer's wife, and very willing and helpful. But I +was a little frightened, as I had never seen any one quite like her +before." + +"You couldn't have had much in common," said Wilbur, who was observant +enough to note the artistic nature of the room wherein he lay, the +exquisite cleanliness and freshness of all his surroundings, and the +faultless English of the doctor's wife. Besides, she was pretty and +sweet-looking, and boys are quick to note it. + +"We didn't," she answered, "but when I happened to mention the old +hunter, why the woman was transformed. She brightened up, and told me +tales far into the night of what the old hunter had done until," she +smiled, "I almost thought he must be as nice as Doctor Davis." + +"Doctor Davis does look awfully fine," agreed Wilbur. + +"I always think so," said his wife demurely. "Two days passed before the +men returned, and when I got a chance alone with my husband, he was +twice as bad as the mountaineer's wife. He would talk of nothing but +Rifle-Eye and the need of surgical work in the mountains. + +"'And you, Violet,' he said, 'you're going to ride there with me to-day +and help look after this man.' It did rather surprise me, because I knew +that he hated to have me troubled with any details of his work, for he +used to like to leave his profession behind when he came home. So I knew +that he thought it important, and I went. But I rode the greater part of +the day with the old hunter, and long before he reached the place where +the man was who needed me, all my objections had vanished and I was +eager to begin." + +"That's just the way that Rifle-Eye does," said the boy, "he makes it +seem that what he wants you to do is just what you want to do yourself." + +"When I got to the place," she went on, "I found that it was a Basque +shepherd, who had been hurt by some of the cattlemen. That made it much +more interesting for me, for you know, my people were Basques, that +strange old race, who, tradition tells, are all that are left of the +shepherds on the mountains of the lost Atlantis. So I nursed him as best +I could, and presently, from far and wide over the Rockies I would get +messages from the Basque shepherds." + +"Didn't you put a stop to the feuds at one time?" asked Wilbur. "The old +hunter told me something about 'the little white lady' and the sheep +war." + +"I helped in many of them," she said simply, "and when they came to me +for advice I tried to give it. Doctor Davis was always there to suggest +the more advisable course, and I put it to these Bascos, as they called +them, so that they would understand." + +"How about Burleigh?" asked Wilbur. + +But the doctor's wife disclaimed all knowledge of a sheep-owner called +Burleigh. + +"All right," said Wilbur, "then I'll give my share of the story, as the +old hunter told it to me. That is, if you don't mind." + +"Tell it," she smiled, "if you like." + +"Well," said Wilbur, "one Sunday afternoon a Ranger, whose cabin was +near a lookout point, said to his wife, 'I'll ride up to the peak, and +be back in time for supper.' He went off in his shirt-sleeves, +bare-headed, for an hour's ride, and was gone a week. Up in the brush he +found the trail of a band of sheep, and although he was cold and hungry +and his horse was playing out, he stuck right on the job until it got +too dark to see. The second day he smashed in the door of a miner's +cabin, got some grub, and nailed a note on the door saying who'd taken +it, and kept on. He tired his horse out, and left him in another +fellow's corral, but kept on going on foot. The sheepman was known as +dangerous, but this little Ranger--did I tell you he was Irish--stuck to +it, trusting to find some way out even if the grazer did get ugly. + +"At last he came on the sheep in a mountain meadow, and Burleigh on his +horse by them, a rifle across his saddle bow. The Ranger said little at +the time, and the two men went home to supper. After eating, as they sat +there, the Ranger said his say. He told the grazer what were the orders +he had, and that he would have to live up to them. But the grazer had a +copy of 'orders,' too, and he had hired a lawyer to find out how he +could get out of them. So he lit into the Ranger. + +"'You see, Mac,' he said, 'those orders don't mean anything. They may be +all right in Washington, but they don't go here. You can't stop me, nor +arrest me, nor hurt my sheep. Your bosses won't stand by you if you get +into any mix-up. The best thing you can do is to stay here to-night, and +then go home. Make a report on it, if you like, I don't care." + +"And then the Ranger began," the boy went on. "The old hunter told me +that this little bit of an Irishman told the grazer about his work as a +Ranger. He told him how he had seen the good that was going to be done, +and that having put his hand to the plow, he couldn't let it go again. +He didn't know much about it, and he'd never tried to talk about it +before, but the natural knack of talking which his race always has came +to help him out. Then he began to talk of the sheep and cattle war, and +the shame that it was to have them killing each other's flocks and +shooting each other because they could not agree about the right to +grass. + +"'An' there's one more thing,' he said, ''tis only the other day that I +was talkin' to the "little white lady," and she said she knew that you +wouldn't be the one to start up trouble again.' And he wound up with an +appeal to his better judgment, which, so the old hunter told me the +grazer said afterward, would have got a paralyzed mule on the move. + +"When he got through, Burleigh merely answered: + +"'Mac, take that blanket and go to bed. I'll talk to you in the +morning.' + +"When the Ranger woke, a little after daylight, the grazer sat beside +his blanket, smoking. He began without wasting any time. + +"'Mac,' he said, 'I'm going to take my sheep out to-day. Not because of +any of your little bits of printed orders--I could drive a whole herd +through them; and not because of any of your bosses back in Washington, +who wouldn't know a man's country if they ever got into it, and couldn't +find their way out; and not entirely because, as you say, "the little +white lady" trusts me, though perhaps that's got a good deal to do with +it. But when I find a man who is so many different kinds of a fool as +you seem to be, it looks some like my moral duty to keep him out of an +asylum.' And that's the story I heard about Burleigh. + +"But I interrupted you," the boy continued, "you were going to tell me +about Doctor Davis. Didn't you ever go back to the city?" + +"Oh, yes," she replied. "The doctor had to take his hospital service, +and for three years he spent six months in the hospital in the city, +and six months out here in the mountains. But there were several good +surgeons in the city, and only one on the great wide Sierras, and, as +you know, he is strong enough for the hardest work. So,--I remember well +the night,--he came to me, and hesitatingly suggested that we should +live out here for always, but that he didn't wish to take me away from +my city friends. And I--oh, I had been wanting to come all the time. I +was just one out of so many in the city, paying little social calls, but +here I found so many people to be fond of. I think I know every one on +the mountains here, and they are all so kind to me. And," she added +proudly, "so appreciative of the doctor." + +Wilbur laughed as she gathered up the things on the tray. + +"Well," he said, "I don't believe the old hunter ever did a better thing +when he got Doctor Davis to come to the forest--unless, it was the day +'the little white lady' came with him. Haven't I had a broken head, and +am I not her patient? You bet!" + +But Mrs. Davis only smiled as she passed from the room. + +Wilbur spent the rest of the morning in the doctor's library, and was +more than delighted to learn that these books were there for borrowing, +on the sole condition that they should be returned. He learned, later, +that under the guise of a library to lend books, all sorts of little +plans were done for the cheering of the lives of those who lived in +isolated portions of the mountain range. The boy had not been +twenty-four hours under the doctor's roof, yet he was quite at home, and +sorry to go when the Supervisor rode up. He had been careful to groom +Kit very thoroughly, and she was standing saddled at the door, half an +hour before the time appointed. He was ready to swing into the saddle as +soon as Merritt appeared. + +"Not so fast, Loyle," he said, "this is once that promptness is a bad +thing. I must have a word or two with Mrs. Davis; he'd be a pretty poor +stick who ever missed that chance." + +So, while he went inside, Wilbur looked over the pack to see that it was +riding easily, and led Baldy to where he could have a few mouthfuls of +grass. And when he came out the Forester was even more silent than +usual, and rode for two hours without uttering a syllable. + +"Did you find everything going on all right for the pulp-mill?" asked +Wilbur, finally desiring to give a chance for conversation. But Merritt +simply replied, "Fairly so," and relapsed into silence. He wakened into +sudden energy, however, when, a half an hour later, in making a shortcut +to headquarters he came upon an old abandoned trail. It was somewhat +overgrown, but the Supervisor turned into it and followed it for some +length, finally arriving at a large spring, one of the best in the +forest, which evidently had been known at some time prior to the Forest +Service taking control, but now had passed into disuse. But Merritt was +even more surprised to find beside the spring a prospector of the old +type, with his burro and pack, evidently making camp for the night. + +"Evenin'," said Merritt, "where did you get hold of this trail?" + +"Allers knew about it," said the prospector. "I s'pose," he added, +noting the bronze "U. S." on the khaki shirt, "that you're the Ranger." + +"Supervisor," replied Merritt. "Locating a mineral claim, are you?" + +"Not yet," the other replied; "I ain't located any mineral to claim yet. +I'll come to you for a permit as soon as I do. But I'm lookin' for +Burns's lost mine." + +"You don't believe in that old yarn, surely?" questioned the other +surprisedly. + +"Would I be lookin' for it if I hadn't doped it out that it was there?" + +"Where?" + +"Oh, somewheres around here. I reckon it's further north. But if you +don't take any stock in it, there's no use talkin'." + +"I'm not denying its existence," said Merritt, "but you know dozens of +men have looked for that and no one's found it yet." + +"There can't be but one find it," said the prospector. "I aims to be +that one. I used to think it was further south. Twenty years ago I spent +a lot o' time down at the end of the range. Two seasons ago I got a +hunch it was further north. I couldn't get away last year, so here I am. +I've been busy on Indian Creek for some years." + +"Got a claim there?" + +"Got the only jade in the country." + +"Was it you located that mine in the Klamath Forest?" queried the +Supervisor interestedly. "But that's quite a good deposit. I shouldn't +think you'd be prospecting now." + +"I didn't for two years. But, pard, it was dead slow, an' so I hired a +man to run the works while I hit the old trail again. I don't have to +get anybody to grubstake me now. I've been able to boost some of the +others who used to help me." + +"But what started you looking for Burns's mine? I thought that story had +been considered a fake years ago." + +"What is a lost mine?" asked Wilbur. + +Merritt looked at him a moment thoughtfully, then turned to the +prospector. + +"You tell the yarn," he said. "You probably know it better than I do." + +"I'm not much on talkin'," began the prospector. "Away back in the +sixties, after the first gold-rush, Jock Burns, one of the old +Forty-niners, started prospectin' in the Sierras. There's not much here, +but one or two spots pay. By an' by Burns comes into the settlements +with a few little bags of gold dust, an' nuggets of husky size. He blows +it all in. He spends free, but he's nowise wasteful, so he stays in town +maybe a month. + +"Then he disappears from view, an' turns up in less than another month +in town with another little bundle of gold dust. It don't take much +figurin' to see that where there's a pay streak so easy worked as that, +there's a lot more of it close handy. An' so they watches Burns close. +Burns, he can't divorce himself from his friends any more than an Indian +can from his color. This frequent an' endurin' friendliness preys some +on Burns's nature, an' bein' of a bashful disposition, he makes several +breaks to get away. But while the boys are dead willin' to see him start +for the mountains, they reckon an escort would be an amiable form of +appreciation. Also, they ain't got no objection to bein' shown the way +to the mine. + +"Burns gets a little thin an' petered out under the strain, but time an' +agin he succeeds in givin' 'em the slip. Sure enough he lines up a month +or two later with some more of the real thing. Finally, one of these +here friends gets a little peevish over his frequent failures to stack +the deck on Burns. He avers that he'll insure that Burns don't spend any +more coin until he divvys up, an' accordin'ly he hands him a couple of +bullets where he thinks they'll do most good." + +"What did he want to kill him for?" asked Wilbur. + +"He didn't aim to kill him prompt," was the reply. "His idee was to trot +him down the hill by easy stages, an' gradooally indooce the old +skinflint to talk. But his shootin' was a trifle too straight, and +Burns jest turns in his toes then an' there. This displeases the +sentiment of the community. Then some literary shark gits up and spins a +yarn about killin' some goose what laid eggs that assayed a hundred per +cent., an' they decides that it would be a humane thing to arrange that +Burns shan't go out into the dark without some comfortin' friend beside +him. So they dispatches the homicide, neat an' pretty, with the aid of a +rope, an' remarks after the doin's is over that Burns is probably a heap +less lonesome." + +"Well, I should think that would have stopped all chance of further +search," said Wilbur. + +"It did. But a year or two after that, Burns acquires the habit of +intrudin' his memory on the minds of some of these here friends. When it +gits noised about that a certain kind of nose-paint is some advantageous +toward this particular brand of dream, why, there ain't no way of +keeping a sufficient supply in camp. I goes up against her myself, an' +wild licker she is. But one by one, the boys all gets to dreamin' that +Burns has sorter floated afore them, accordin' to ghostly etiquette, an' +pointed a ghostly finger at the ground. Which ain't so plumb exact, for +no one supposes a mine to be up in the air. But different ones affirms +that they can recognize the features of the landscape which the ghost of +Burns frequents. As, however, they all strikes out in different +directions, I ain't takin' no stock therein. + +"But, two years ago, when I was meanderin' around lookin' for signs, I +comes across the bones of an old mule with the remains of a saddle on +his back, an' I didn't have any trouble in guessin' it to be Burns's. +There was no way of tellin', though, whether he was goin' or returnin' +when the mule broke down, or if he was far or near the mine, but, +anyhow, it gave some idee of direction, an' I reckon I'm goin' to find +it." + +"All right," said the Supervisor as they shook up their horses ready to +go, "I hope you have good luck and find it." + +"I'll let you or Rifle-Eye know as soon as I do," called back the +prospector, "an' you folks can pan out some samples. If I find it, we'll +make the Yukon look sick." + +Merritt laughed as they cantered down the trail to headquarters. + + +[Illustration: SAND BURYING A PEAR ORCHARD. + +Almost too late to save a fine plantation which a suitable wind-break of +trees would have guarded. + +_Photo by U. S. Forest Service._] + + + + +CHAPTER XIV + +A ROLLING CLOUD OF SMOKE + + +The days became hotter and hotter, and each morning when Wilbur rose he +searched eagerly for some sign of cloud that should presage rain, but +the sky remained cloudless. Several times he had heard of fires in the +vicinity, but they had kept away from that portion of the forest over +which he had control, and he had not been summoned from his post. The +boy had given up his former schedule of covering his whole forest twice +a week, and now was riding on Sundays, thus reaching every lookout point +every other day. It was telling upon the horses, and he himself was +conscious of the strain, but he was more content in feeling that he had +gone the limit in doing the thing that was given him to do. + +One day, while in a distant part of the forest, he came upon the signs +of a party of campers. Since his experience with the tourists the boy +had become panic-stricken by the very idea of careless visitors to the +forest, and the chance of their setting a fire, and so, recklessly, he +put his horse at a sharp gallop and started down the trail that they had +left. The signs were new, so that he overtook them in a couple of hours. +But in the meantime he had passed the place where the party had made +their noonday halt, and he could see that full precautions had been +taken to insure the quenching of the fire. + +When he overtook them, moreover, he was wonderfully relieved and freed +from his fears. There were six in all, the father, who was quite an old +man, the mother, two grown-up sons, and two younger girls. They had +heard his horse come galloping down the trail, and the two younger men +had hung back to be the first to meet him. + +"Which way?" one of them asked, as Wilbur pulled his horse down to a +walk. + +"Your way," said Wilbur, "I guess. I just rode down to see who it was on +the trail. There was a bunch of tourists hanging around here a few weeks +ago, and the forest floor is too dry to take any chances with their +campfires." + +"Oh, that's it," said the former speaker. Then, with a laugh, he +continued: "I guess we aren't in that class." + +"I can see you're not," the boy replied, "but I'm one of the Forest +Service men, and it's a whole lot better to be safe than sorry." + +"Right," the other replied. "I think you might ride on with us a bit," +he continued, "and talk to the rest of them. It may ease their minds. +You were headed our way down that trail as though you were riding for +our scalps." + +Wilbur laughed at the idea of his inspiring fear in the two stalwart men +riding beside him. + +"I guess I'd have had some job," he said, "if I had tried it on." + +"Well," the first speaker answered, "we wouldn't be the first of the +family to decorate a wigwam that way. My grandfather an' his two +brothers got ambushed by some Apaches in the early seventies." + +"Your grandfather?" the boy repeated. + +"Sure, son. Most of the fellows that got the worst of it with the +Indians was some one's granddad, I reckon. One of my uncles, father's +brother, was with them at the time, and he got scalped, too. It isn't so +long ago since the days of the Indians, son, an' it's wonderful to think +of the families livin' peacefully where the war-parties used to ride. +That's goin' to be a great country down there. But," he broke off +suddenly, "here's dad." + +The bent figure in the saddle, riding an immense iron gray mare, +straightened up as the three rode close, and the old man turned a keen +glance on the boy. Instantly, Wilbur was reminded of the old hunter, +although the two men were as unlike as they could be, and in that same +instant the boy realized that the likeness lay in the eyes. The +springiness might have gone out of his step, and to a certain extent the +seat in the saddle was unfirm, and the strength and poise of the body +showed signs of abatement, but the fire in the eyes was undimmed and +every line of the features was instinct to a wonderful degree with life +and vitality. After a question or two to his sons he turned to the boy, +and in response to a query as to his destination, replied, in a +sing-song voice that was reminiscent of frontier camp-meetings: + +"I'm goin' to the Promised Land. It's been a long an' a weary road, but +the time of rejoicin' has come. It is writ that the desert shall blossom +as a rose, an' I'm goin' to grow rose-trees where the cactus used to be; +the solitary place shall be alone no more, an' I and mine are flockin' +into it; the lion an' wolf shall be no more therein, an' the varmints +all are gone away; an' a little child shall lead them, an' before I die +I reckon to see my children an' my children's children under the shadow +of my vine an' fig tree." + +Wilbur looked a little bewilderedly at the two younger men and one of +them said hastily: + +"We're goin' down to the Salt River Valley, down in Arizona, where the +government has irrigated land." + +"Oh, I know," said Wilbur, "that's one of the big projects of the +Reclamation Service." + +"Have you been down there at all?" + +"No," the boy answered, "but I understand that to a very great extent +much of the Forest Service work is being done with irrigation in view." + +"They used to call it," broke out the old prophet again, "the 'land that +God forgot,' but now they're callin' it the 'land that God remembered.'" + +Wilbur waited a moment to see if the old man would speak again, but as +he was silent, he turned to the man beside him: + +"How did you get interested in this land?" he asked. + +"I was born," the other answered, "in one of the villages of the +cliff-dwellers, who lived so many years ago. Dad, he always used to +think that the sudden droppin' out of those old races an' the endurin' +silence about them was some kind of a visitation. An' he always believed +that the curse, whatever it was, would be taken off." + +"That's a queer idea," said the boy; "I never heard it before." + +"Well," said the other, "it does seem queer. An' when the government +first started this reclamation work, dad he thought it was a sign, and +he went into every project, I reckon, the government ever had. An' they +used to say that unless 'the Apache Prophet,' as they called him, had +been once on a project, it was no use goin' on till he came." + +"But what did he do?" + +"They always gave him charge of a gang of men for as long as he wanted +it, and Jim an' I, we used to boss a gang, too. We've been on the +Huntley and Sun River in Montana, we've laid the foundation of the +highest masonry dam in the world--the Shoshone dam in Wyoming,--helped +build a canal ninety-five miles long in Nebraska, I've driven team on +the Belle Fourche in South Dakota; in Kansas, where there's no surface +water, I've dug wells that with pumps will irrigate eight thousand +acres, and away down in New Mexico on the Pecos and in Colorado on the +Rio Grande I've helped begin a new life for those States." + +"An' a river shall flow out of it," the old man burst forth again, "an' +I reckon thar ain't a river flowin' nowhere that's forgot. I don't know +where Jordan rolls, but any stream that brings smilin' plenty where the +desert was before looks enough like Jordan to suit me. I've seen it, I +tell you," he added fiercely, turning to the boy, "I've seen the desert +an' I've seen Eden, an' I'm goin' there to live. An' where the flamin' +sword of thirst once whirled, there's little brooks a-ripplin' an' the +flowers is springin' fair." + +"You must have seen great changes?" suggested the boy, interested in the +old man's speech. + +"Five years ago," he answered, "we were campin' on the Snake River, in +southern Idaho. There was sage-brush, an' sand, an' stars, an' nothin' +else. An engineerin' fellow, who he was I dunno, rides up to the fire. +Where he comes from I dunno; I reckon his body came along the road of +the sage-brush and the sand, but his mind came by the stars. An' he +takes the handle of an ax, and draws out on the sand an irrigatin' +plan. There wasn't a house for thirty miles. An' he just asks if he +shall go ahead. An' I knows he's right, an' I says I knows he's right, +an' he goes straight off to Washington, an' now there's three thousand +people where the sage-brush was, and right on the very spot where my +campfire smoked just five years ago, a school has been opened with over +a hundred children there." + +He stopped as suddenly as he began. + +"There was some great work in the Gunnison canyon, was there not?" +queried Wilbur. + +The old man made no reply, and the son answered the question. + +"When they had to lower a man from the top into the canyon, seven +hundred feet below," he said, "Dad was the first to volunteer. I reckon, +son, there's no greater story worth the tellin' than the Uncompahgre +tunnel. And then, I ain't told nothin' about the big Washington and +Oregon valleys, where tens of thousands now have homes an' are rearin' +the finest kind of men an' women. But, as dad says, we're comin' home. +There's four centuries of our history and there's seven centuries of +Moki traditions, an' still there's nothing to tell me who the people are +who built the cliff-town where I was born. Dad, he thinks that when the +water comes, perhaps the stones will speak. I don't know, but if they +ever do, I want to be there to hear. It's the strangest, wildest place +in all the world, I think, and while it is harsh and unkindly, still +it's home. Dad's right there. These forests are all right," he added, +remembering that the boy was attached to the Forest Service, "but for +me, I want a world whose end you can't see an' where every glance leads +up." + +"Do you suppose," said Wilbur, "that in the days of the cliff-dwellers, +and earlier, the 'inland empire' was densely populated?" + +"Some time," the other replied slowly, "it must have been. Not far from +my cliff home is the famous Cheltro Palace, which contains over thirty +million blocks of stone." + +"How big is it?" asked Wilbur. + +"Well, it is four stories high, nearly five hundred feet long, an' just +half that width." + +Wilbur whistled. + +"My stars," he ejaculated, "that is big! And is there nothing left to +tell about them?" he asked. + +The other shook his head. + +"Nothing," he answered. + +"They were, an' they were not," interjected the old patriarch. "I looked +for the place where I should find him, an' lo, he was gone. They were +eatin' an' drinkin' when the end came, an' they knew it not. Like enough +they had some warnin' which they heeded not, an' their house is left +unto them desolate. An' we go in and possess their land. Young man, come +with us." + +Wilbur started. + +"Oh, I can't," he said. "I should like to see some of those projects, +but my work is here. But I'm one of you," he added eagerly; "the rivers +that flow down to enrich your desert rise from springs in our mountains, +and all those springs would dry up if the forests were destroyed. And +all the headwaters of the streams are in our care." + +"You kind of look after them when they're young," Wilbur's companion +suggested, "that we can use them when the time is ripe." + +"That is just it," said Wilbur. Then, turning to the old man, he added: + +"I must go back to my patrol," he said, "but when you're down in that +Garden of Eden, where the river is making the world all over again, +you'll remember us once in a while, and the little bit of a stream +that flows out of my corral will always have good wishes for you down +there." + +The old man turned in his saddle with great dignity. + +"There be vessels to honor," he said gravely, "an' to every one his +gifts. Go back to your forest home an' work, an' take an old man's +wishes that while water runs you may never want for work worth doin', +for friends worth havin', an' at the last a tally you ain't ashamed to +show." + +Wilbur raised his hat in salute for reply and reined Kit in until the +party was lost to view. The afternoon was drawing on and the lad had +lost nearly two hours in following the party, and in his chat with the +old patriarch, but he could not but feel that even the momentary glimpse +he had been given of the practical workings of the reclamation work of +the government had gone far to emphasize and render of keener personal +interest all that he had learned at school or heard from the Forest +Service men about the making of a newer world within the New World +itself. And when he remembered that over a quarter of a million +families, within a space of about six years, have made their homes on +what was an absolute desert ten years ago, and that these men and women +were stirred with the same spirit as the old patriarch, he felt, as he +had said, that the conserving of the mountain streams was work worth +while. + +As it chanced, he passed over the little stream whose channel he had +cleared on one of his patrol rides, and he stopped a moment to look at +it. + +"Well," he said aloud, "I suppose some youngster some day will be +picking oranges off a tree that would have died if I hadn't done that +day's work," and he rode on to his camp greatly pleased with himself. + +For a day or two the boy found himself quite unable to shake the spell +of the old patriarch's presence off his mind, and the more he thought +over it, the more he realized that scarcely any one thing in the whole +of the United States loomed larger on its future than the main idea of +Conservation. It had been merely a word before, but now it was a +reality, and he determined to take the first opportunity he would have, +during his vacation, of going down to the Salt River Valley to see the +old patriarch once again. + +And still the weather grew hotter and the sky remained cloudless. And +now, every evening, Rifle-Eye would telephone over to make sure that +Wilbur was back at camp and that there was as yet no danger. They had +had one quite sharp tussle at a distant point of the forest, and one day +Wilbur had received orders to make a long ride to a lookout point in +another part of the forest, the work of a Guard who had been called away +to fight fire, but so far, Wilbur had been free. Two or three times he +found himself waking suddenly in the night, possessed with an intense +desire to saddle Kit and ride off to a part of the forest where he had +either dreamed or thought a fire was burning, but Rifle-Eye had been +careful to warn him against this very thing, and although the morning +found him simply wild to ride to this point of supposed danger, he had +followed orders and ridden his regular round. + +Although Wilbur's camp was high, the heat grew hard to bear, and when +the boy passed from the shade of the pine along the naked rock to some +lookout point the ground seemed to blaze under him. The grass was +rapidly turning brown in the exposed places, and the pine needles were +as slippery as the smoothest ice. + +Just at noon, one morning, Wilbur turned his horse--he was not riding +Kit that day--into one of these open trails, and taking out his glasses, +commenced to sweep the horizon. A heat haze was abroad, and his +over-excited eyes seemed to see smoke everywhere. But, as he swept round +the horizon, suddenly his whole figure stiffened. He looked long, then, +with a sigh of relief, turned away, and completed his circuit of the +horizon. This done, he directed the glasses anew where he had looked +before. He looked long, unsatisfied, then lay down on the rock where he +could rest the glasses and scanned the scene for several minutes. + +"Be sure," Merritt had once warned him, "better spend a half an hour at +the start than lose two hours later." + +But Wilbur felt sure and rushed for his horse. Half-way he paused. Then, +going deliberately into the shade of a heavy spruce, he half-closed his +eyes for a minute or two to let the muscles relax. Then quietly he came +to the edge of the cliff, and directing his glasses point-blank at the +place he had been examining so closely, scanned it in every detail. He +slipped the glasses back into their case, snapped the clasp firmly, +walked deliberately back to his horse, who had been taking a few +mouthfuls of grass, tightened the cinches, looked to it that the saddle +was resting true and that the blanket had not rucked up, vaulted into +the saddle, and rode to the edge of the cliff. There was no doubt of it. +Hanging low in the heavy air over and through the dark foliage of pine +and spruce was a dull dark silver gleam, which changed enough as the +sunlight fell upon it to show that it was eddying vapor rather than the +heavier waves of fog. + +"Smoke!" he said. "We've got to ride for it." + + +[Illustration: NO WATER, NO FORESTS. NO FORESTS, NO WATER. + +Example of country which irrigation will cause to become wonderfully +fertile. + +_Photograph by U. S. Forest Service._] + + +[Illustration: WITH WATER! + +In the foreground, a field and orchard; in the background, the +sand-dunes of the arid desert. Transformation effected by a tiny stream +and a poplar wind-break. + +_Photograph by U. S. Forest Service._] + + + + +CHAPTER XV + +THE FOREST ABLAZE + + +As Wilbur broke into a steady, if fast pace, it seemed to him that all +his previous experiences in the forest had been directed to this one +end. True, once before, he had seen smoke in the distance and had ridden +to it, but then he had felt that it was a small fire which he would be +able to put out, as indeed it had proved. But now, while there was no +greater cloud of smoke visible than there had been before, the boy felt +that this was in some measure different. + +As his horse's hoofs clattered on the trail, it seemed to his excited +fancy that every inch of ground was crying to the valley below, "He's +coming," the wind that blew past him seemed filled with purpose, every +eddying gust awoke in him a greater desire to reach the place of danger +before the wind should rise to higher gusts, and as the needles of the +pines whispered overhead it seemed to Wilbur that they murmured, "Hurry, +hurry, if you want to be there on time." Over and over again, he found +himself on the point of using the whip or spurs to induce a greater +burst of speed, but as often as he did so, the old short, curtly-worded +counsels of Merritt came back to him, never to press his horse if the +ride was to be of any length, and he grew to believe that the animal +knew as well as the rider the errand on which he was bound. + +He had thought, before starting, of riding back to his camp and +telephoning to Rifle-Eye, but the knowledge that after all it might be a +little fire kept him back. All the tales that he had ever heard about +forest fires rushed through his mind, but he resolutely set them aside +to watch his horse's path, to hold him in where he would be apt to +stumble, to give him his head on rising ground, and to bring him to +speed where the trail was easy to follow. Two hours he rode, his horse +well in hand, until he came to the place where he had decided from his +lookout point that he would have to leave the trail and plunge through +the forest itself. + +This was a very different matter, and Wilbur found himself wondering how +his horse kept his footing. He was not riding Kit, for which he was +glad, as in leaving the trail and plunging downhill he had struck some +parts of the forest where undergrowth was present, and his favorite +mare's slender legs would have been badly scratched. Also the footing +grew dangerous and uncertain. There had been many windfalls in the +forest, and now was no time to take them quietly; a flying leap, not +knowing what might be on the other side, a stumble, perhaps, which sent +the boy's heart into his mouth, a quick recovery, and they were off +again, only to find, perhaps, a few yards further on, a bowlder-strewn +gully which it would have been madness to take at other than a walk. But +the boy chafed terribly at each and every stay to his ride, and he had +to hold himself in hand as much as he had his horse. + +Little by little the exhilaration of the ride stole into his veins. He +was alone in the forest, he and his horse, the world was all before, and +he must ride and ride. He shouted as he rode under the towering pines, +raced across a clearing with a whoop that roused the echoes, and yelled +for sheer delight in the mad ride through the untraveled forest, where, +as the knights of old, he rode forth to conquer and to do. + +But a sudden, sharp, acrid whiff of vapor in his nostrils checked his +riotous impulses. It was one thing to ride out to meet the foe, it was +another matter when the foe was known to be near. A half mile nearer and +the acrid taste in the air turned to a defined veil of smoke, intangible +and unreal, at first, which merely seemed to hang about the trunks of +the mighty trees and make them seem dim and far away. Nearer yet, and +the air grew hard to breathe, the smoke was billowing through the +foliage of the pines, which sighed wearily and moaned in a vague fear of +the enemy they dreaded most. + +A curving gully, too wide to leap, too deep to cross readily, had +deflected the boy in his ride until he found himself to the lee of the +fire, and the heat of it, oppressive and menacing, assailed him. + +Remembering the lay of the land, as he had seen it from his lookout +point, Wilbur recalled the fact that no peak or rise was in the vicinity +up which he could ride to gain a nearer view of the fire, and he did not +dare to ride on and find himself on the windward side of the fire, for +then his efforts to hold it back would be unavailing. He rode slowly +till he came to the highest tree near. Then, dismounting, Wilbur tied +his horse to the foot of the tree, tied him as securely as he knew how, +for the animal was snorting in fear at being thus fastened up when the +smoke was over his head and the smell of the fire was in his nostrils. +Then, buckling on his climbing irons, which he had carried with him that +morning because he had thought, if he had time, he might do a little +repairing to his telephone line, he started up the side of the great +tree. Up and up he went, fifty, sixty, one hundred feet, and still he +was not at the top; another twenty feet, and there far above the ground, +he rested at last upon a branch whence he could command an outlook upon +the forest below. + +The fire was near, much nearer than he had imagined, and had he ridden +on another ten or fifteen minutes, he might have taken his horse in +danger. The blaze was larger than he thought. For half a mile's length, +at least, the smoke was rising, and what was beyond he could not rightly +see, because the branches of a large tree obscured his sight. + +Immediately below him, the little gully, whose curving course had turned +him from the straight path, seemed to be the edge of the flames, which +had not been able to back up over the water. On this side, clear down to +the water's edge the forest floor was burning, but how wide a stretch +had been burned over he could not see. Once on the other side of the +gully he would be able to judge better what to do. + +Below his horse neighed shrilly. + +Looking straight down, Wilbur noted a long rolling curl of smoke steal +swiftly along the ground a few hundred yards away, and he saw there was +no time to lose. Springing from the branch to the trunk of the tree, he +started to climb down. But he was over-hurried, and his feet slipped. It +was only a foot at most, and Wilbur was not easily frightened, but he +turned cold and sick for an instant as he looked below and saw the +height from which he so nearly had fallen. Minutes, nay seconds, were +precious, but he crawled back upon the branch and sat still a moment to +steady his nerves. So startling a shock for so small a slip! He felt +thoroughly ashamed of himself, but it had been quite a jolt. + +Again the horse neighed, and the fear in the cry was quite unmistakable. +Gingerly this time, Wilbur left the kindly support of the branch and +made his way down the trunk of the tree, heaving a sigh of profound +thankfulness when he reached the ground. His horse looked at him with +eyes wild with terror and every muscle atwitch. It was the work of a +moment to unfasten the ropes and vault in the saddle, but Wilbur needed +all his horsemanship to keep the horse from bolting. Indeed, he did +start to run away with the boy, but Wilbur sawed him into a more normal +pace and headed him down the gully. + +Although the weather had been dry, it seemed that not a few springs must +flow above, for there was quite a stream of water, not deep, but rushing +very swiftly, and consequently hiding the bottom of the stream. It was +no time for looking for a ford, and so, after leading the horse down the +bank by the bridle, Wilbur got into the saddle to put the horse across. +He would not budge. Every muscle and nerve was tense, and the fire, +owing to the curvature of the stream, seeming to come from the other +side, the horse refused to move. Wilbur dug in heavily with the spurs. +The horse would not move. Again Wilbur used the spurs. Then, snatching +the quirt that was fastened on his saddle, the quirt the cattleman had +given him after his ride in the cattle stampede, he laid it with all his +will across the horse's flanks. Never before, since Wilbur had owned the +horse, had he struck him. Frantic, the horse leaped into the stream. +It was deeper than the boy had thought, but there was no time to go +back, and indeed, unless it was taken at a rush, the horse would not +climb the other bank. As they struck the water, therefore, Wilbur rose +in his stirrups and lashed the horse a second time. He felt the horse +plunge under him, picked him up with the reins as he stumbled on the +loose stones in the creek bed and almost fell, and though he was +becoming a rider, "hunted leather" by holding on to the pommel of his +saddle, as the horse with two or three convulsive lunges climbed like a +cat up the opposing bank, and reached the top, trembling in every limb. +The gully was crossed. + +But there was no time to pause for satisfaction over the crossing of the +little stream; that was only the beginning. It would have to be crossed +again, higher up, as soon, as they came opposite to the fire. The quirt +was still in his hand, and a light touch with it brought the horse to a +full gallop. Up along the gully, with the blackened forest floor on the +other side, rode Wilbur, until he came to the further end of the fire. +It was almost a mile long. Right where the edge of the fire was, with +little flames leaping among the needles and the smoke rolling, Wilbur +headed the horse for the creek. He expected to have trouble, but the +beast had learned his lesson, and went steadily down the creek and over +to the other side. The return was in nowise difficult, as it was on the +side opposite the fire that the bank was steep. Hastily Wilbur tied up +his horse on the burned-out area, seized his shovel, and started along +the line of the fire, beating it out with the flat of his shovel where +the flames were small, then going to lee of it he made a firebreak by +turning up a narrow line of earth. + +His hands began to blister and his lips grew so parched that he could +endure it no longer, and snatched a moment to go back to the stream and +lave his face and hands. He took off his coat, dipped it in the water, +and came with it all dripping to beat out the fire with that. Foot by +foot and yard by yard he worked his way along the line, every once in a +while running back over the part he had already beaten to make sure that +all was out. The afternoon was drawing on and for about a quarter of a +mile the fire was entirely out, and for another quarter it was almost +under control. + +Madly the boy worked, his breath coming in gasps, his lungs aching from +the smoke, so that it became agony even to breathe, the ground hot +beneath his feet, and his feet beginning to blister, as his hands had +done an hour before, but there was no let-up. He had come to fight fire, +and he would fight fire. Another mad hour's battle, not so successfully, +and, contrary to the usual custom, the wind began to rise at sunset; it +might die down in a couple of hours, but in the meantime damage might be +done. + +Little by little the shadows grew deeper, and before it got entirely +dark Wilbur tried, but vainly, to reach the end of the line, for he knew +well that if a night wind rose and got a hold upon the remnant of the +fire that remained all his work would go for nothing. With all his might +he ran to the far end of the line, determining to work from that end up +to meet the area where he had conquered. Foot by foot he gained, but no +longer was he able to work along a straight line, the gusts of wind, +here and there, sweeping through the trees had fanned stretches, perhaps +only a few yards wide, but had driven them forward a hundred feet. But +as it grew darker the wind began to fall again, though with the darkness +the red glow of the burning needles and the flames of the burning twigs +showed more luridly and made it seem more terrifying. Still he gained +headway, foot after foot jealously contesting the battle with the fire +and the wind. + +So short a space remaining, and though he seemed too tired and sore to +move, still his shovel worked with never a pause, still he scraped away +all that would burn from the path of a little line of flame. The line of +flame grew shorter, but even as he looked a gust came along, which swept +a tongue of fire fifty yards at a breath. Wilbur rushed after it, +knowing the danger of these side-way fires, but before that gust had +lulled the tongue of fire reached a little clearing which the boy had +not known was there, only a rod or two of grass, but that browned by the +sun and the drought until it seemed scarcely more than tinder. If it +should touch that! + +Despite the fact that his shoes were dropping from his feet, the leather +being burned through, Wilbur sped after the escaping fire. He reached +it. But as he reached, he heard the needles rustle overhead and saw the +branches sway. As yet the breeze had not touched the ground, but before +two strokes with the wet coat had been made, the last of the gusts of +the evening wind struck him. It caught the little tongue of flame Wilbur +had so manfully striven to overtake, swept it out upon the clearing, +and almost before the boy could realize that his chance was gone, the +grass was a sheet of flame and the fire had entered the forest beyond in +a dozen places. + +Wilbur was but a boy after all, and sick and heart-broken, he had to +swallow several times very hard to keep from breaking down. And the +reaction and fatigue together stunned him into inertness. For a moment +only, then his persistent stubbornness came to the front. + +"That fire's got to be put out," he said aloud, "as the Chief Forester +said, back in Washington, if it takes the whole State to do it." + +He walked back to his horse and started for his little cabin home. How +he reached there, Wilbur never rightly knew. He felt like a traitor, +leaving the fire still burning which he had tried so hard to conquer, +but he knew he had done all he could. As he rode home, however, he saw +through the trees another gleam, and taking out his glasses, saw in the +distance a second fire, in no way connected with that which he had +fought. This cheered him up greatly, for he felt that he could rightly +call for help for two fires without any reflection on his courage or his +grit, where he hated to tell that he had tried and failed to put out a +blaze which perhaps an older or a stronger man might have succeeded in +quelling. He called up the Ranger. + +"Rifle-Eye," he said over the 'phone as soon as he got a response, +"there's a fire here that looks big. In fact, there's two. I've been +after one all afternoon, and I nearly got it under, but when the wind +rose it got away from me. And there seems to be a bigger one pretty +close to it." + +"Well, son, I s'pose you're needin' help," came the reply. + +"All hands, I think," said the boy. "By the time I can get back there +the two fires probably will have joined, and the blaze will be several +miles long." + +"Surest thing you know," said the Ranger. "Where do you locate these +fires?" + +Wilbur described with some detail the precise point where the fires were +raging. + +"You'd better get back on the job," said Rifle-Eye promptly, "and try +an' hold it down the best you can. I'll have some one there on the jump. +We want to get it under to-night, as it's a lot easier 'n in the +daytime." + +Never did the little tent look so inviting or so cozy to Wilbur as +that moment. But he had his orders. "Get back on the job," the Ranger +had said. He took the time to change his shoes and to snatch up some +cold grub which was easy to get. But he ate it standing, not daring to +sit down lest he should go to sleep--and go to sleep when he had been +ordered out! He ate standing. Then, going down to the corral, he saddled +Kit. + +He rode quietly up past the tent. + +"I guess," he said, "I really never did want to go to bed so much +before, but--" he turned Kit's head to the trail. + +It was well for Wilbur that he had ridden the other horse that day, for +Kit was fresh and ready. The moon had risen and was nearly full, but +Wilbur shivered as much from nervousness and responsibility as from +fatigue. It was useless for him to try riding at any high rate of speed +in the uncertain light, and in any case, the boy felt that his labors +for a half an hour more or less would not mean as much as when it had +been a question of absolutely extinguishing a small blaze. Kit danced a +little in the fresh night air, but Wilbur sat so heavily and listlessly +upon her back that the mare sensed something wrong and constantly turned +her wise face round to see. + +"I'm just tired, Kit," said the boy to her, "that's all. Don't get gay +to-night; I'm not up to it." + +And the little mare, as though she had understood every word, settled +down to a quiet lope down the trail. How far he had ridden or in what +direction he was traveling Wilbur at last became entirely unconscious, +for, utterly worn out, he had fallen asleep in the saddle, keeping his +seat merely by instinct and owing to the gentle, easy pace of his mare. + +He was wakened by a heavy hand being put upon his shoulder, and rousing +himself with a start, he found the grave, kindly eyes of the old Ranger +gleaming on him in the moonlight. + +"Sleeping, son?" queried the old mountaineer. + +"Yes, Rifle-Eye, I guess I must have been," said the lad, "just dozed +off. I'm dog-tired. I've been on that fire all afternoon." + +The Ranger looked at him keenly. + +"Best thing you could have done," he said. "You'll feel worse for a few +minutes, an' then you'll find that cat-nap is just as good as a whole +night's sleep. That is," he added, "it is for a while. What's the fire +like? I tried to get somethin' out of Ben, but he was actin' queerly, +an' I left him alone. But he seemed to know pretty well where it was." + +Wilbur tried to explain the story of the fire, but his tale soon became +incoherent, and before they had ridden another half a mile, his story +had died down to a few mutterings and he was asleep again. The old +hunter rode beside him, his hand ready to catch him should he waver in +the saddle, but Kit loped along at her easiest gait and the boy scarcely +moved. Rifle-Eye woke him again when they left the trail and broke into +the forest. + +"I reckon you better wake up, son," he said, "landin' suddenly on your +head on a rock is some abrupt as an alarm clock." + +Wilbur dropped the reins to stretch himself. + +"I feel a lot better now," he announced, "just as good as ever. Except +for my hands," he added ruefully, as returning wakefulness brought back +with it the consciousness of smart and hurt, "and my feet are mighty +sore, too. We're right near the fire, too, aren't we," he continued. +"Gee, that was nifty sleeping nearly all the way. I guess I must have +felt you were around, Rifle-Eye, and so I slept easily, knowing it would +come out all right with you here." + +"I ain't never been famous for hypnotizin' any forest fire that I've +heard of," said the old hunter, smiling, "but I've got a lurkin' idea +somewhere that we'll get this headed off all right. An' in any case, +there ain't much folks livin' in the path of the fire, if the wind keeps +the way she is now." + +Wilbur thought for a moment over the lay of the land and the direction +in which the flames were moving. + +"There's the mill," he said suddenly and excitedly. + +"Yes, son," said the old hunter. "I'd been thinkin' of that. There's the +mill." + + +[Illustration: "THAT'S ONE PAINTER LESS, ANYHOW!" + +Shooting the mountain lion; a frequent incident in the daily life of a +Ranger. + +_Photograph by U. S. Forest Service._] + + +[Illustration: "SMOKE! AND HOW AM I GOING TO GET THERE?" + +Ranger forced to make a breakneck dash through wild and unknown country +to fight forest fire. + +_Photograph by U. S. Forest Service._] + + + + +CHAPTER XVI + +IN THE MIDST OF A SEA OF FIRE + + +A subdued but fiery inspiration, as of some monster breathing deeply in +the darkness, gradually made itself heard above the voices of the night, +and an eddying gust brought from the distance the sound of twigs and +branches crackling as they burned. As yet the fire was not visible, save +for the red-bronze glow seen through the trees reflected on the sky +above. But before they reached the scene of the fire, Wilbur realized +how different it was from the blaze he had left. Then it was a +difficulty to be overcome: now, it was a peril to be faced. + +"It has run about three miles since I left it," Wilbur said. "I hope +we're not too late." + +"It's never too late to try, son," replied the Ranger, "so long as there +is a tree left unburned. There ain't anything in life that it ever gets +too late to try over. If a thing's done, it ain't too late ever to try +to do something else which will make up for the first, is it?" + +"But I failed to stop it before," said Wilbur. + +"Nary a fail. A fight ain't lost until it's over. An' when this little +scrap is over the fire'll be out. You ain't had but one round with this +fire so far." + +"That's certainly some fire," rejoined the boy as they turned sharply +from a glade to the edge of a hill that looked upon the forest just +below. It was a sight of fear. Overhead, the clouds flying before the +wind were alternately revealing and hiding the starlit and moonlit sky +behind, the dark and ragged wisps of storm-scud seeming to fly in panic +from what they saw below them. The wind moaned as though enchained and +forced to blow by some tyrannic power, instead of swaying before the +breeze, the needles of the pines seemed to tremble and shudder in the +blast, and dominating the whole,--somber, red, and malevolent,--the fire +engulfed the forest floor. In the distance, where some dead timber had +been standing, the flames had crept up the trunks of the trees, and now +fanned by the gusts of wind, were beginning to run amid the tops. + +"Will it be a crown-fire, Rifle-Eye?" asked Wilbur, remembering what he +had heard of the fearful devastation committed by a fire when once it +secured a violent headway among the pines. + +"It's in the tops now," said the old hunter, pointing with his finger, +"but I don't reckon there's enough wind yet to hold it up there. The +worst of it is that it's not long to morning now, an' we shall lose the +advantage o' fightin' it at night. I reckon we'd better get down and see +what we can do." + +In a few minutes the hunter and Wilbur had fastened their horses and +presently were beside the fire. To the boy's surprise the old hunter +made no attack upon the fire itself, but, going in advance of it some +hundred feet, with the boy's hoe, which he dragged after him like a +plow, made a furrow in the earth almost as rapidly as a man could walk. +This, Wilbur, with ax and shovel, widened. The old hunter never seemed +to stop once, but, however curving and twisting his course might be, the +boy noted that the furrow invariably occurred at the end of a stretch +where few needles had fallen on the ground and the debris was very +scant. + +After about a mile of this, the hunter curved his furrow sharply in +toward the burned-out portion, ending his line behind the line of fire. +He then sent Wilbur back along the line he had just traversed to insure +that none of the fire had crossed the guard thus made. Then, starting +about twenty feet from the curve on the fire-guard, he took another wide +curve in front of the floor-fire, favoring the place where the needles +lay thinnest, until he came to a ridge. Following him, Wilbur noted that +the old woodsman had made no attempt to stop the fire on the upward +grade, but had apparently left it to the mercy of the fire, whereas, on +the further side of the ridge, where the fire would have to burn down, +the old hunter had made but a very scanty fire-guard. Then Wilbur +remembered that he had been told it was easy to stop a fire when it was +running down a hill, and he realized that if, in the beginning, instead +of actually endeavoring to put out the fire, he had made a wide circuit +around it, and by utilizing those ridges, he could have held the fire to +the spot where it began. For a moment this nearly broke him all up, +until he remembered that he had seen another fire, and that Rifle-Eye +had told him of a third one yet. + +Wilbur was working doggedly, yet in a spiritless, tired fashion, beating +out the fire with a wet gunnysack as it reached the fire-guard of the +old hunter's making, and very carefully putting out any spark that the +wind drove across it, working almost without thought. But as he topped +the ridge and came within full view of the fire that had started among +the tops, his listlessness fell from him. Against the glow he could see +the outline of the figure of the hunter, and he ran up to him. + +"It's all out, back there," he panted. "What shall we do here?" + +For the first time the Ranger seemed to have no answer ready. Then he +said slowly: + +"I reckon we can hold this bit of it, up yonder on the mountain, but +there's a line of fire runnin' around by the gully, and the wind's +beginnin' a-howlin' through there. I don't reckon we can stop that. We +may have to fall back beyond the river. We'll need axmen, now. You've +got a good mare; ride down to Pete's mine and bring all hands. The +government will pay them, an' they'll come. There's the dawn; it'll be +light in half an hour. You'd better move, too." + +Wilbur started off at a shambling run, half wondering, as he did so, how +it was he was able to keep up at all. But as he looked back he saw the +old hunter, ax on shoulder, going quietly up the hill into the very +teeth of the fire to head it off on the mountain top, if he could. He +reached Kit and climbed into the saddle. But he was not sleepy, though +almost too weary to sit upright. One moment the forest would be light as +a glare from the fire reached him, the next moment it would be all the +darker for the contrast. For a mile he rode over the blackened and +burned forest floor, some trees still ablaze and smoking. Every step he +took, for all he knew, might be leading him on into a fire-encircled +place from which he would have difficulty in escaping, but on he went. +There was no trail, he only had a vague sense of direction, and on both +sides of him was fire. Probably fire was also in front, and if so he was +riding into it, but he had his orders and on he must go. The mine, he +knew, was lower down on the gully, and so roughly he followed it. Twice +he had to force Kit to cross, but it was growing light now, so the +little mare took the water quietly and followed the further bank. +Suddenly he heard horses' hoofs, evidently a party, and he shouted. An +answering shout was the response, and the horses pulled up. He touched +Kit and in a minute or two broke through to them. + +"Oh, it's you, Mr. Merritt," said the boy, "I was just wondering who +it might be." + +"The fire's over there," said the Supervisor. "What are you doing here?" + +"Rifle-Eye sent me to get the men at Pete's mine," he said. + +"They're here," replied the Forest Chief. "How's the fire?" + +"Bad," said the boy. "Rifle-Eye said he thought we would have to fall +back beyond the river." + +"Don't want to," said Merritt, "there's a lot of good timber between +here and the river." + +"Nothin' to it," said one of the miners. "Unless the wind shifts, it's +an easy gamble she goes over the river and don't notice it none." + +The Supervisor put his horse to the gallop, followed by the party, all +save one miner, who, familiar with the country, led the way, finding +some trail utterly undistinguishable to the rest. Seeing the vantage +point, as Rifle-Eye had done, he made for the crest of the hill. + +"Any chances?" asked the Supervisor. + +"I reckon not," said Rifle-Eye. "You can't hold it here; there's a blaze +down over yonder and another below the hill." + +"Who set that fire?" said Merritt suddenly. Wilbur jumped. It had not +occurred to him that the fire could have started in any other manner +than by accident, and indeed he had not thought of its cause at all. + +The old Ranger looked quietly at his superior officer. + +"It's allers mighty hard to tell where a fire started after it's once +got a-going," he said, "and it's harder to tell who set it a-going." + +"I want to stop it at the river." + +The old woodsman shook his head. + +"You ain't got much chance," he said; "I reckon at the ridge on the +other side of the river you can hold her, but she's crept along the +gully an' she'll just go a-whoopin' up the hill. I wouldn't waste any +time at the river." + +"But there's the mill!" + +"We ain't no ways to blame because Peavey Jo built his mill in front of +a fire. An', anyhow, the mill's in the middle of a clearing." + +The Supervisor frowned. + +"His mill is on National Forest land, and we ought to try and save it," +he said. + +"I'm goin' clear to the ridge," remarked the Ranger, "an' I reckon +you-all had better, too. I ain't achin' none to see the mill burn, but +I'd as lieve it was Peavey Jo's as any one else." + +"I'd like to know," Merritt repeated, "who set that fire." + +The Ranger made no answer, but walked off to where his horse was +tethered and rode away. The other party without a moment's delay struck +off to the trail leading to the mill. The distance was not great, but +Wilbur had lost all count of time. It seemed to him that he had either +been fighting fire or riding at high speed through luridly lighted +forest glades for years and years, and that it would never stop. + +At the mill they found a wild turmoil of excitement. All the hands were +at work, most of them wetting down the lumber, while other large piles +which were close to the edge of the forest were being moved out of +danger. The horses all had been taken from the stables, and the various +sheds and buildings were being thoroughly soaked. The big mill engine +was throbbing, lines of hose playing in every direction, for although +the timber around the mill had been cleared as much as possible, +negligence had been shown in permitting some undergrowth to spring up +unchecked. Owing to the conformation of the land, too, the bottom on +which the mill stood was smaller than customary. + +In the early morning light the great form of Peavey Jo seemed to assume +giant proportions. He was here, there, and everywhere at the moment, and +his blustering voice could be heard bellowing out orders, which, to do +him justice, were the best possible. As soon as the Supervisor and his +party appeared he broke out into a violent tirade against them for not +keeping a fit watch over the forest and allowing a fire to get such a +headway on a night when in the evening there had been so little wind, +whereas now a gale was rising fast. But Merritt did not waste breath in +reply; he simply ordered his men to get in and do all they could to +insure the safety of the mill. + +Wilbur, who had been set at cutting out the underbrush, found that his +strength was about played out. Once, indeed, he shouldered his ax and +started to walk back to say that he could do no more, but before he +reached the place where his chief was working his determination +returned, and he decided to go back and work till he dropped right +there. He had given up bothering about his hands and feet being so +blistered and sore, for all such local pain was dulled by the utter +collapse of nerve-sensation. He couldn't think clearly enough to think +that he was feeling pain; he could not think at all. He had been told to +cut brush and he did so as a machine, working automatically, but seeing +nothing and hearing nothing of what was going on around him. + +Presently an animal premonition of fear struck him as he became +conscious of a terrific wave of heat, and he could hear in the distance +the roar of the flames coming closer. Raging through the resinous pine +branches the blaze had swept fiercely around the side of the hill. As +the boy looked up he could see it suddenly break into greater vigor as +the up-draft on the hill fanned it to a wilder fury and made a furnace +of the place where he had been standing with Merritt and Rifle-Eye +scarcely more than an hour before. + +Meanwhile the wind drove the flames steadily onward toward the +threatened mill. It was becoming too hot for any human being to stay +where Wilbur was, but the boy seemed to have lost the power of thought. +He chopped and chopped like a machine, not noticing, indeed, not being +able to notice that he was toiling there alone. It grew hotter and +hotter, his breath came in quick, short gasps, and each breath hurt his +lungs cruelly as he breathed the heat into them, but he worked on as in +a dream. Suddenly he felt his shoulder seized. It was the Supervisor, +who twisted him round and, pointing to the little bridge across the +river which spanned the stream just above the mill, he shouted: + +"Run!" + +But the boy's spirit was too exhausted to respond, though he got into a +dog trot and started for the bridge. Perilous though every second's +delay was, Merritt would not go ahead of the boy, though he could have +outdistanced his shambling and footsore pace two to one, but kept beside +him urging and threatening him alternately. The fire was on their heels, +but they were in the clearing. On the bridge one of the miners was +standing, riding the fastest horse in the party, holding, and with great +difficulty holding, in hand the horse of the Supervisor and the boy's +mare, Kit. Their very clothes were smoking as they reached the bridge. + +Suddenly, a huge, twisted tree, full of sap, which stood on the edge of +the clearing, exploded with a crash like a cannon, and a flaming branch, +twenty feet in length, hurtled itself over their heads and fell full on +the further side of the bridge, barring their way. Upon the narrow +bridge the horses reared in a sudden panic and tried to bolt, but the +miner was an old-time cowboy, and he held them in hand. Merritt helped +the lad into the saddle before mounting himself. But even in that moment +the bridge began to smoke, and in less than a minute the whole structure +would be ablaze. The miner dug his heels, spurred, into the sides of his +horse, and the animal in fear and desperation leaped over the hissing +branch that lay upon the bridge. The Supervisor's horse and Kit followed +suit. As they landed on the other side, however, the head of the forest +reined in for a moment, and looking round, shouted suddenly: + +"The mill!" + +Wilbur pulled in Kit. So far as could be seen, none of the forest fire +had reached the mill; the sparks which had fallen upon the roof had gone +out harmlessly, so thoroughly had the place been soaked, yet through the +door of the mill the flames could be seen on the inside. At first Wilbur +thought it must be some kind of a reflection. But as they watched, +Peavey Jo rode up. He had crossed the bridge earlier, and was on the +safe side of the river watching his mill. + +Suddenly, from out the door of the mill, outlined clearly against the +fire within, came an ungainly, shambling figure. The features could not +be seen, but the gait was unmistakable. He came running in an odd, +loose-jointed fashion toward the bridge. But just before he reached it +the now blazing timbers burned through and the bridge crashed into the +stream. + +"It's Ben," muttered Wilbur confusedly; "I guess I've got to go back," +and he headed Kit for the trail. + +But the Supervisor leaned over and almost crushed the bones of the boy's +hand in his restraining grip. + +"No need," he said, "he's all right now." + +For as he spoke Wilbur saw Ben leap from the bank on the portion of the +burned bridge which had collapsed on his side of the stream. A few quick +strokes with the ax the boy was carrying and the timbers were free, and +crouched down upon them the boy was being carried down the stream. His +peril was extreme, for below as well as above the fire was sweeping down +on either side of the mill, and it was a question of minutes, almost of +seconds, whether the bridge-raft would pass down the river before the +fire struck or whether it would be caught. + +"If the wind would only lull!" ejaculated the boy. + +"I'll stay here till I see him burn," replied Peavey Jo grimly. + +But Wilbur's wish met its fulfillment, for just for the space that one +could count ten the wind slackened, and every second meant a few yards +of safety to the half-witted lad. Though they were risking their lives +by staying, the three men waited, waited as still as they could for the +fear of their horses, until the boy disappeared round a curve of the +river. A muttered execration from Peavey Jo announced the lad's safety. +It angered the usually calm Supervisor. + +"That ends you," he said. "You're licked, and you know it. Your mill's +gone, your timber's gone, and your credit's gone. Don't let me see you +on this forest again." + +"You think I do no more, eh? Me, I forget? Non! By and by you remember +Peavey Jo. Now I ride down river. That boy, you see him? He see the sun +rise this morning. He no see the sun set. No. Nor ever any more. I +follow the river trail. I do not say good-by, like the old song," he +added, scowling his fury; "you wish yes! Non! I say _au revoir_, and +perhaps sooner than you t'ink." + +He wheeled and turned down the river. The Supervisor turned to the +miner. + +"It's not my business to stop him," he said, "and the boy's got the +start. He can't reach there before the fire does, now." + +Then, as though regretting the lull, the wind shrieked with a new and +more vindictive fury, as though it saw its vengeance before it. Almost +at a breath it seemed the whole body of flame appeared to lift itself to +the skies and then fall like a devouring fury upon the forest on the +hither side of the river below, whither Peavey Jo had ridden. + +In the distance the two men heard a horse scream, and they knew. But +Wilbur did not hear. + +They had waited almost too long, for the wind, rising to its greatest +height, had carried the fire above them almost to the edge of the river, +and now there was no question about its crossing. Further delay meant to +be hemmed in by a ring of fire. With a shout the miner slackened the +reins and his horse leaped into a gallop, after him Merritt, and the boy +close behind. Wilbur had ridden fast before, but never had he known +such speed as now. The trail was clear before them to the top of the +ridge, the fire was behind, and the wind was hurling masses of flames +about them on every side. The horses fled with the speed of fear, and +the Supervisor drew a breath of relief as they crossed a small ridge +below the greater ridge whither they were bound. + +Once a curl of flame licked clear over their heads and ignited a tree in +front of them, but they were past it again before it caught fair hold. +The boy could feel Kit's flanks heaving as she drew her breath hard, and +with the last instinct of safety he threw away everything that he +carried, even the fire-fighting tools being released. Only another mile, +but the grade was fearfully steep, the steeper the harder for the horses +but the better for the fire. Kit stumbled. A little less than a mile +left! He knew she could not do it. The mare had been kept astretch all +night, and her heart was breaking under the strain. Any second she might +fall. + +The trail curved. And round the curve, with three horses saddled and +waiting, sat the old Ranger, facing the onrush of the fire as +imperturbably as though his own life were in no way involved. The +miner's horse was freshest and he reached the group first. As he did so, +he swung out of his saddle, was on one of the three and off. The +riderless horse, freed from the burden, followed up the trail. Merritt +and Wilbur reached almost at the same time. + +"I reckon," drawled Rifle-Eye, "that's a pretty close call." + +"He's done," said the Supervisor, ignoring the remark. "Toss him up." + +With a speed that seemed almost incredible to any one accustomed to his +leisurely movements, the old Ranger dismounted, picked Wilbur bodily out +of the saddle, set him on one of the fresh animals, freed Kit, mounted +himself, and was off in less than thirty seconds. For the first half +mile it was touch and go, for the trail was steep and even the three +fresh horses found the pace terrific. But little by little the timber +thinned and the fire gained less hold. Then, with a burst they came into +a clearing along the top of the ridge. The crest was black with workers, +over two hundred men were there, and on every side was to be heard the +sound of trees crashing to the ground, most of them by dynamite. + +Where the head of the trail reached the crest stood the doctor and his +wife, the "little white lady" trembling with excitement as she watched +the fearful race from the jaws of a fiery death. The doctor plucked +Wilbur from his saddle as the horse rushed by him. The boy's senses were +reeling, but before he sank into insensibility from fatigue he heard +Merritt say: + +"Loyle, when you're a Ranger next year, I want you on my forest." + + +THE END + + +[Illustration: "KEEP IT FROM SPREADING BOYS!" + +_Photography by U. S. Forest Service._] + + +[Illustration: "GET BUSY NOW, WHEN IT BREAKS INTO THE OPEN!" + +_Photography by U. S. Forest Service._] + + + +_U. S. SERVICE SERIES_ + +By FRANCIS ROLT-WHEELER + +Many illustrations from photographs taken in work for U. S. +Government ^Large 12mo ^Cloth ^$1.50 per volume + + * * * * * + +THE BOY WITH THE U. S. SURVEY + +This story describes the thrilling adventures of members of the U. S. +Geological Survey, graphically woven into a stirring narrative that both +pleases and instructs. The author enjoys an intimate acquaintance with +the chiefs of the various bureaus in Washington, and is able to obtain +at first hand the material for his books. + + "There is abundant charm and vigor in the narrative which is sure + to please the boy readers and will do much toward stimulating their + patriotism."--_Chicago News_. + + +THE BOY WITH THE U. S. FORESTERS + +This life of a typical boy is followed in all its adventurous +detail--the mighty representative of our country's government, though +young in years--a youthful monarch in a vast domain of forest. Replete +with information, alive with adventure, and inciting patriotism at every +step. + + "It is a fascinating romance of real life in our country, and will + prove a great pleasure and inspiration to the boys who read + it."--_The Continent, Chicago_. + + +THE BOY WITH THE U. S. CENSUS + +The taking of the census frequently involves hardship and peril, +requiring arduous journeys by dog-team in the frozen north and by launch +in the snake-haunted and alligator-filled Everglades of Florida, while +the enumerator whose work lies among the dangerous criminal classes of +the greater cities must take his life in his own hands. + + "Every young man should read this story, thereby getting a clear + conception of conditions as they exist to-day, for such knowledge + will have a clean, invigorating and healthy influence on the young + growing and thinking mind."--_Boston Globe_. + + +THE BOY WITH THE U. S. FISHERIES + +[Illustration: The Boy With the U. S. Fisheries] + +The book does not lack thrilling scenes. The far Aleutian Islands have +witnessed more desperate sea-fighting than has occurred elsewhere since +the days of the Spanish Buccaneers, and pirate craft, which the U. S. +Fisheries must watch, rifle in hand, are prowling in the Behring Sea +to-day. The fish-farms of the United States are as interesting as they +are immense in their scope. + + "One of the best books for boys of all ages, so attractively + written and illustrated as to fascinate the reader into staying up + until all hours to finish it."--_Philadelphia Despatch_. + + * * * * * + +LOTHROP, LEE & SHEPARD CO., BOSTON + + + + +HANDICRAFT FOR HANDY BOYS + +Practical Plans for Work and Play with Many Ideas for Earning Money + +By A. NEELY HALL + +Author of "The Boy Craftsman" + +With Nearly 600 Illustrations and Working-drawings by the Author and +Norman P. Hall ^8vo ^Cloth ^Net, $2.00 ^Postpaid, $2.25 + +[Illustration: Handi-Craft for Handy Boys] + +This book is intended for boys who want the latest ideas for making +things, practical plans for earning money, up-to-date suggestions for +games and sports, and novelties for home and school entertainments. + +The author has planned the suggestions on an economical basis, providing +for the use of the things at hand, and many of the things which can be +bought cheaply. Mr. Hall's books have won the confidence of parents, who +realize that in giving them to their boys they are providing wholesome +occupations which will encourage self-reliance and resourcefulness, and +discourage tendencies to be extravagant. + +Outdoor and indoor pastimes have been given equal attention, and much of +the work is closely allied to the studies of the modern grammar and high +schools, as will be seen by a glance at the following list of subjects, +which are only a few among those discussed in the 500 pages of text: + + MANUAL TRAINING; EASILY-MADE FURNITURE; FITTING UP A BOY'S ROOM; + HOME-MADE GYMNASIUM APPARATUS; A BOY'S WIRELESS TELEGRAPH OUTFIT; + COASTERS AND BOB-SLEDS; MODEL AEROPLANES; PUSHMOBILES AND OTHER + HOME-MADE WAGONS; A CASTLE CLUBHOUSE AND HOME-MADE ARMOR. + +Modern ingenious work such as the above cannot fail to develop +mechanical ability in a boy, and this book will get right next to his +heart. + + "The book is a treasure house for boys who like to work with tools + and have a purpose in their working."--_Springfield Union_. + + "It is a capital book for boys since it encourages them in + wholesome, useful occupation, encourages self-reliance and + resourcefulness and at the same time discourages + extravagance."--_Brooklyn Times_. + + "It is all in this book, and if anything has got away from the + author we do not know what it is."--_Buffalo News_. + + * * * * * + +_For sale by all booksellers, or sent on receipt of postpaid price by +the publishers_ + +LOTHROP, LEE & SHEPARD CO., Boston + + + + +THE BOY CRAFTSMAN + +Practical and Profitable Ideas for a Boy's Leisure Hours + +By A. NEELY HALL + +Illustrated with over 400 diagrams and working drawings ^8vo ^Price, +net, $1.60 ^Postpaid, $1.82 + +[Illustration: The Boy Craftsman] + +Every real boy wishes to design and make things, but the questions of +materials and tools are often hard to get around. Nearly all books on +the subject call for a greater outlay of money than is within the means +of many boys, or their parents wish to expend in such ways. In this book +a number of chapters give suggestions for carrying on a small business +that will bring a boy in money with which to buy tools and materials +necessary for making apparatus and articles described in other chapters, +while the ideas are so practical that many an industrious boy can learn +what he is best fitted for in his life work. No work of its class is so +completely up-to-date or so worthy in point of thoroughness and +avoidance of danger. The drawings are profuse and excellent, and every +feature of the book is first-class. It tells how to make a boy's +workshop, how to handle tools, and what can be made with them; how to +start a printing shop and conduct an amateur newspaper, how to make +photographs, build a log cabin, a canvas canoe, a gymnasium, a miniature +theatre, and many other things dear to the soul of youth. + + We cannot imagine a more delightful present for a boy than this + book.--_Churchman, N.Y._ + + Every boy should have this book. It's a practical book--it gets + right next to the boy's heart and stays there. He will have it near + him all the time, and on every page there is a lesson or something + that will stand the boy in good need. Beyond a doubt in its line + this is one of the cleverest books on the market.--_Providence + News_. + + If a boy has any sort of a mechanical turn of mind, his parents + should see that he has this book.--_Boston Journal_. + + This is a book that will do boys good.--_Buffalo Express_. + + The boy who will not find this book a mine of joy and profit must + be queerly constituted.--_Pittsburgh Gazette_. + + Will be a delight to the boy mechanic.--_Watchman, Boston_. + + An admirable book to give a boy.--_Newark News_. + + This Book is the best yet offered for its large number of practical + and profitable ideas.--_Milwaukee Free Press_. + + Parents ought to know of this book.--_New York Globe_. + + * * * * * + +For sale by all booksellers or sent postpaid on receipt of price by the +publishers, + +LOTHROP, LEE & SHEPARD CO., BOSTON + + + + +MR. RESPONSIBILITY, PARTNER + +How Bobby and Joe Achieved Success in Business + +First Volume of "Business Boys Series" + +By CLARENCE JOHNSON MESSER + +12mo ^Cloth ^Illustrated ^Price, Net, $1.00 ^Postpaid, $1.10 + +[Illustration: Mr. Responsibility, Partner] + +This is frankly a book with a purpose, and its purpose is to teach boys +the fundamental business customs of every-day life, and at the same time +encourage the sound traits of character essential to commercial success +and good citizenship. This is done by a good and interesting story of +some live boys, whose experiences will hold the attention of every one. +The leading spirit is pictured with a healthy boy's human qualities to +be trained, and impulses to be overcome. A companionable and sensible +father aids him judiciously, and leaves success to be worked out on +natural lines. All the stage effects of the cheaper kinds of boys' books +are blissfully absent; there are no villains plotting against the +upright, no nations saved by the precocious intelligence of youth, and +no impossible adventure or accomplishment--just the problems before +average boys, and that can be solved as these boys solve them if "Mr. +Responsibility" is recognized as a partner in all undertakings, and one +learns to see and grasp his opportunities. A book that any boy would +like, and that every boy ought to have. + + "It is an inspiring book to any boy who wants to learn to be a good + business man."--_Buffalo News_. + + "Entertaining, instructive, and just such a book as boys will + love."--_Portland, Me., Press_. + + "For the boys still young enough to revel in "juvenile stories" MR. + RESPONSIBILITY is about as good as is to be found."--_San Francisco + Town Talk_. + + "The story is one that boys will enjoy and that parents can safely + put in their hands."--_Lowell Courier Citizen_. + + "A wholesome, informative, worth-while boy's book."--_N. Y. Press_. + + * * * * * + +_For sale by all booksellers or sent on receipt of postpaid price by the +publishers_ + +LOTHROP, LEE & SHEPARD CO., BOSTON + + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Boy With the U. S. Foresters, by +Francis Rolt-Wheeler + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BOY WITH THE U. S. 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